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10--The Daily Sentinel

Monday, S.plamhr 19, 1983

Farm losses high
from '83 drought

Miss America title
goes to firSt black

ByDAVIDLJANGFORD
record, with 17.16 Inches from
Press Writer
March through May, as flash tloods
It was over the Fourth of July
drove thousands from their homes
weekend, when 3 mllllon chickens
along the bloated Mississippi and
perished In their coops, Utat Ute
Missouri rivers.
But with the ohange of season, St.
Drought of 1983 started firing up. Its
stove In earnest.
LouiS was brought to a boU, with 58
After fanners and gardeners tn days above 90 degrees, Including 14
much of the East were stung by an
days with temperatures above 100.
unusuaUy wet and cold spring, Ute
· · St. Louis officials opened cooUng
mercury shot as high as 107 as far shelters for Ute poor and elderly as
north as WWtston, N.D., on July 16 more than 40 people died from Ute
and 110 In the rural community of . beat In the area.
Cheraw, S.C.,onJuly 21.
The drought was unmerciful
It jumped up to 1(8 on Aug. 17 at across the vast corn and soybean
Des Moines, Iowa, where 11 was fields of the Midwest. It shrtveled
Senior Citizens Day at the state fair. crops from the tomato fields of New
More Ulan 50peopleweretreatedfor Jersey and the tobacco fields of
beat exhaustion.
Kentucky to the peanut fields of
The 110 degrees In Fayetteville, Georgia and the cotton fields of
N.C., on Aug. 21 was an aU-time Alabama.
MUUons of chickens died tn
record for the state and the hottest
reading In the country on that day.
Malyland, Virginia, Georgia and
When summer C\)mes to an across to Arkansas.
offlci!ll end at 10:42 a .m . EDT on
Catfish farmers In Mississippi
Friday. Sept. 23, It wiU go Into the and elsewhere In Dixie said ·
record books as one of the hottest hundreds of thoUsands of commerand driest ever seen, producing the cia! fish died because the heat
worst drought In the Midwest and cooked the oxygen out of the ponds.
Ohio VaUey slnoo the Dust Bowl Mississippi produces about 100
days of the 19:lls.
mUUon pounds of catlsh a year.
At least 231 people dted and losses
Ac=s Ute Southeast from South
tofarmersareestlmatedbytheU.S. Carollna to Alabama, which was
Department of Agriculture at fl also hit by droughts In 1977,1978 and
bUUon, with the com crop expected 1911l, farmers . were ·losing· their
to yield the smaUest harvest tn 13 farms.
· ·
years, just over half of last year's ·
In Georgia, Tal C. DuVaU, state
record 8.4 bUllon bushels.
director of the Agrtcultural E~nThousartds of farmers have gone sion Service, estimated that 6,000
broke, with many losing" their Georgia farmers were "Insolvent."
farms, and the cost of food at Ute
Many of the hardest hit were
grocery counter Is expected to among the 16,000 growers of the
Increase about 6.5 percent next state's $370 mllllon peanut crop,
year.
which provides 40 percent of the
"It was something that we nation's supply.
wOuldn't expect to hapPin ·more:
"The, situation is unprecedented ·
thanonceinageneratlon,"sakiPhU In Georgia," saidJlmmy Jackson,
Shideler of the National Weather the assistant director of the extenServloo In Topeka, Kan. He said that slon service. "It's a crisis of Ute
although there were more days In greatest magnitude."
1934 and 19:ti when temperatures
Many farmers are expected to be
cllmbedabove100deg:rees, this year unabletorepaythelrloansthtsyear.
"Ute combination of heat and The Farm Credit Administration
dryness probably made 11 worse."
doesn't yet have figures for late
··- NearBowrnan,S.C.,HughWeaUt· . summer, but the agency reported
ersrtggedup!ansandwaterhosesto last week that as of June 30, even
drip on Utetlnroofofhls bamtotryto before the drought setln, there were
keep his famUy's 850 dairy cows 20,537 delinquent loans to farmers.
from keeling over. Some dled That was about 3.1 percent of the
total $50.9 bUUon In outstanding
anyway.
Under the ·blazing sunshine, loans, as against 2.5 percent Utat
farmlands dried .out and cracked were dellnquent at the same tlme
open In giant checkerboard last year.
patterns.
The Agrteulture Department re"It wruld take three days of rain ports Utat com prtoes are expected
just to fU1 up the cracks around toaverage$3.50to$3.75perbua:helin
here," Nolan Duke of the National 1983-&amp;1, compared to an average
·weather Service In Kansas Ctty, $2.65 last season. The price of
soybeans, another staple tn the food
Mo., said In early September.
St. Louis, pracllcaUy In Ute dead chain, is expected to reach from
center of the country, was typical. It . $8.50 to $9.50 a bushel, as compared
had one of the wettest springs on with $5.65 last season.

A""""'e""'

:k~tth~

separateweekendaccidentstnvesti·
gated bytheGaJUa-Melgs postoiUte
state highway patrol.
In the first accident, Gregory T.
Hayman, 21, Rt 1, Long Bottom,
was ticketed for !aUure to control
after his vehicle struck an embank·
ment on . County Road 28 at 12: 57
a.m: Saturday.
The patrol said Hayman was
northbound, twoandfour-tenthsofa
mUe south of Ohio 248, when his
vehicle weitt off Ute right side of the
road, struck the embankment and
overturned.
Hayman's vehicle was severely
damaged.
A vehicle driven by Johnny M.
Brown, 20, Rt. 1, Langsvllie, was
southbound on County Road 7 at 8

Southern Band Boosters w!Umeet
In special session Wednesd
Sep
ay,
t.
~· at 6: lJ p .m . In the band room at '
· e high school.

At University Hospital
Raymond Larkins is a patient at
University Hospital. His address Is
University Clinic, Room 788, Seven
West. Columbus, Oh.

Sunday caDs Included Pomeroy at

The first weather that took Ute
blush off the apple crop was a late
spring !mit Utat hurt some varletles, prlmarUy Red IleUclous. Then
tllere was the summer drought.
"Apples stopped growing about
three weeks ago," said Chuck
Barnhart, managerofHenry Broth·
ers Orchard at the south edge of
Jackson. Growers said It Is too late
for rain to bel)i the fruit.
The hot weather also means that
apples that should be deep red are
pink Instead, said Horton Dempsey,
owner of Hortondale Fruit Farm
near Oak HIU. '
And the dry weaUter has brought
another problem. "Trees are shedding fruit 1D save Uteir own llves,"
said Dick Brown, owner of an
orchard southwest of Jackson.
The !estlval wiU begin Tuesday
evening, wiUt a parade of school
floats scheduled for Wednesday.

WUI view game film
Meigs Athletic Boosters wiU meet
Tuesday at 7: :JJ p.m. at Ute high
school. A film of Ute WeUston game
wiU be shown.
The boosters are taking orders tor
Marauder jackets. A sample jacket
may be sem at the booster's
~stand at home volleyball
and football games.A jacket Is also
on display at Marguerite's Shoe
Store, Pomemy.

.,

Maniagelicell8e8
1bree marrtpge licenses were
issued In Meigs Coonty Probate
Court to Craig Edward Venoy 24
Long Bottom, and Brenda
Bailey, !ll, Rt. 3, Pcmemy; Robert
Michael Bowles, 21. Pomeroy, and
Diana Kay Dillon, !ll, Pomeroy;
RDbert Jolin Reeve, 49, Albariy,
ands Freda Eloise Wooten, 45, Rt 3,
Albany.

Kay

-- --- ·- --

-

a,:

or:

lease.

.

FUing for divorce were David·
Hess,Rt.3,Albeny,agalnstPamela:
Denise Hess, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and;.·
nne Owens, Middleport, against·
Patrick Owens, Middleport.
:

.

New from Playtex ·!

$.2~0

Off ;:.~i

-

•

2 p.m. - 6 p.m.

'

TheSaUsburyEJementruySchool
PI'A w!Umeet at7: llp.m. Tuesday
at the school. Teachers and staff
members·w!U be Introduced.

I Area death
Melvinia Davidson
MeivlnlaDavldson, 77,32565Dark
Hollo)v Road, Pomeroy, died Sun·
day evening at Veterans Memorial

Pleasant Valley Hospital
J

..

EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
THE STAFF OF PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL'S EMERGENCY
ROOM INVITES 'tHE PUBLIC TO STOP iY FOR A.TOiiR
OF THEIR EMUGENCY ROOM FACILITY.

*Free Blood Prauure Check

PlEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Vall~

Drive

.

Ohio, Tuesday, September 20, 1983

.

...

·;

.

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP staff
By ,unanimous vote, Ute GaWa-Jackson-Melgs
Mental Hea)th 648 Board appointed its chairman, .
. John c. ruce; to serve as the board's acting directOr
untU a replacement is found for Maxine S. Plummer,
who was dismissed as executive dlrecto~ last week.
Rice's first offldal duty In his new capacity was to
appoint a search committee to find a permanent
director. 1
Rice accepted the board's appointment Monday
night after Dan Schwendeman, the board's planning
administrator, declined to take the job after being
nominated by board member Ralph McComnick.
SChwendeman, who has been inhlspresentpositlon
since February 1982, ·declined to take the job-even H
it meant a possible fun-time appointment- because
he felt he could serve the board better In his present
job.
He also Indicated he might leave the area In the

near future, but didn't elaborate.
1
"I think I've trted to he up front with tile tpoard,"
Schwendeman said. "It's not a problem, but t;t&gt;Ere is
. the pote.nllal of myseH facing transltloll frqrn Ute
· community. It CQU!d be a short-term transltlol.1, but I
don't think it would be fair to the board." ~
·
sChwendeman add.ed that the .a cting dlrecti r's job
would beprlmarUyto"affb&lt;aslgnaturetokeet things
going. '
"In terms of the direction I feel the board is'k ovlng
in the longterm, ltwould be In its beSt lnteres1[~ stay
In my position," he said.
.
~
After lxlard member Warren Sheets 1 briefly
board
reviewed quaUflcat!ons set by the state for a
executive director, Schwendeman agreed ~ met
requirements for the job.
.
I
·
Among the requirements, he holds a master's
degree IIi soclal work from the University Of l ltah and
obtained clinical experience wiUt mentaUy ~turbed
subjects at Ltma State Hospital over a ifY,-year

period.
Dr. Edward Berklch, another board member,
asked Schwendeman if he would consider staying In
Ute area if he was. otfered the .. executlve dlrector's
postt!On.
·' •
.
"I don'tthlnk the board can make that guarantee, "
Schwendeman replied.
Schwendeman recommended that Ute board select
a candidate froin outside the staff and the area.
He said the board wtU face "difficult" situations in
Ute next two years and needs "honest, objective Input
from a person who knows mental h ealUt and
eUm!nates any kind of vested Interest."
Rice said he would fUHW aU obligations In keeping
the board operating; but said he would rely on ..
SchwendeMan's advice.
·
· For the search committee, Rice· appointed
McCormick, Dr. David E vans and Jim Mourning to
serve, wiUt Schwendeman acting as consultant and
Sheets as legal counsel. Rioo urged committee

1 Section, 10 Pag e•
20 C.nh
A Multimedia lnc.,Newspap«

I

members to start work immedia tely by drawing up a
job description and notify tile Ohio Department of
Mental Health of the vacancy .
. The board also agreed .to the wording of &lt;!- public
statement drawn ·up· by Rl6e and w, Joseph·Strapp;'
Ute attorney It retained In Its actions to remove Mrs.
Plummer as executive director, to assure uninterrupted service following her dismissal.
· "Now that the hearing concerning our executive
director is behind us, Ute board would Uke io say we
are stW concerned about mental health care In the
three-county area, " the statement read. " Our
concern Is efficient, quality mental health care in
GaWa, Jacl&lt;.son and Meigs counties. We will continue
to monitor, evilluate and assist our contract agencies
In every way possible."
.
The board voted, J.0.2, with one abstention, to
dismiss Mrs. Plummer last Thursday following three
nights of publlc hearings detaUlng aUeged misconduct
In her job over a 12-year-perlod.
(Continued on page 10)

Couple dies iti·head-on crash
Danner said this morning that th~
accident 1s sUIJ under Investigation.
Peckham was subsequently cited
for faUure to yield, and additional
charges In the Incident
pending,
Danner said.
Peckham was Injured In the
accident, but not treated, the patrol
said. A passenger In his truck, Dale
Uttle, 45, Rt. 2, Pomeroy , was
Injured and was treated at the scene
by the Meigs Emergency Medical
Sei'VIce.
·
Both vehicles Involved were
severely damaged, the patrol said.
Dr. R.R. Pickens, Meigs County
coroner, pronounced the HeUrnans
dead at the scene. The bodies were
later released to Ewing Funeral
Home.
·

are

I

I

The double fatallty Is the second
area tra!!lc death within a week.
TirnoUty A. Gore, 20, Rt.l, Rutland,
died from lnjurtes he I"I'CI;!ived In a
coUislon wiUt a bread truc.k on Ohio
325 near Rio Grande
Sept. 13.
Myles R. Blake, 26, Rt. 1; '!CoolviUe,
dledlnaone-carcrasbonQhio7near
Tuppers Plains on Aug.~ .
The patrol.rworted a Middleport
manwasinjuredtnacrasllOnGallla
County Road 2 Monday nlijght.
Michael R. Bareswllj , 27, was
westbound at 7:40 p.m., when his
vehicle struck and killed .a dog. His
car was moderately damaged.
Bareswllt was taken.l to Holzer
Medlca!CenterbytheGa;'iliaCounty
Emergency Medical SE~rvice . He
. was treated and re~~ased lor
multiple trauma and brullses.

on

TWO KB JEll - An elderly Melp CowJty couple
died Mondl\v aflemooa In a head-on coHislon on Ball
Run Rd. Dead are Lelia M. Helbnan, Ill, and her

113-year old husband, Walier R . HeUman. The Ohio
state Hlgltway Patrol Is still Investigating the
collision. Two others In the truck Involved were

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

•

----·\"
'

.

Despite a slight hinderance,
Pomeroy Council Monday night
agreed to take advantage or a
matching grant and proceed with a
mini-park located between Mechalllc Street and Butternut Ave.
Fred Crow, vUJage sollcltor has
a(!vtsed offlclals that a portion of the
park, located behind the Sugar Run
Mill, was not Included in the grant.
That exclusion has been acknowl·
edgEd by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resouoes.
Harold Brown, councUman, notIng he was In favor of pmceedlng
with the project, piTopO!Ied that
councU borrow the money. He said
be had talked to Ute office of Ute
ODNR and the matching grant of
$19,926 could not be extended.
CouncU has untU Ute end of the year
to act.
Brown proposed that councU
borrow the money and pay It back
over a seven year period, $1,000
from the gen,eral lund and $2,000

e

from Ute amusement lund.
Anderson also noted Uti t most of
Mayor Clarence Andrews re- said.
the
expense Is the fW d
that Is
minded council it , was going to
needed.
He
felt
coun
U
could
borrow too much money and be
are
unable to pay it back. Andrews · estabUsh the park Itself.
reminded councU It is borrowing people wiUt expertise ava ble.free
$50,000 for the paving, $11Xl,OOO to of charge," Anderson sta
Brown said, "I'm not or Jetting
remodel the second floor of city haU
favor of
and wiU have to borrow money to the grant expire, not
letting the vlllage get a sttgma
tear down thetwobuUdlngsonCourt
placed on it."
Street. .
Council agreed that
greatest
Bernadette Ande~son. clerk·
expense
was
putting
in
til
dirt
and it
treasurer, said she had talked to
was
noted
that
the
ball
rk
would
Kim Shields and he advised that
cost approxlmately $!ll,
none of the previous bUis (money
Reedsald,"Letusdo methlngto
spent on the park) could be applled
show • the community we · are
toward park expenditure.
for Ute
Brown said he felt the money is tnteresed indolngsom
conununlty.' '
Utere and councU should make a
It was agreed to mate $10,000 of
decision.
Utematchlnggrant.
cUwtUuse
John Anderson said he would not
Ute
$3,200
it
has
in
tile
park
fUnd and
feel comfortable wiUt any other
borrow
f/,000.
This
give It
money being used other than funds
Utrough
the
matching
total
from the amusement tax and the
rental money. Anderson further
stated that there Is more to 11 than
paying for lt. "We have to maintain
lt. I don't think we should blOw
eilerthlng that comes tn, " Anderson

''ITII!!re

of $!ll,OOO.
It was agreed to contact architect
David Bassett, regarding councU's
decision and to proceed on Ute park,
and to also determine H aU the land
can be used under the grant.
Tear down notices
Reed reported tear down orders
on the buildings owned .by Amy
Kingsland Jones,Jackson had been
posted and at Ute end of 30 days
councU Is obligated to proceed with
the tear down.
"It is not going to be an easy task
we must act Immediately and look
lor an engineer. U the buUdlngs are
not down In 30 days Ute exiiense lor
tear down wlll not be placed on
Jones' tax duplicate untU 1984, "
Reed stated.
Anderson opinioned thatslncethe
state was the first 1D condemn Ute
buUdtngs, if the state should not
proceed In tearing them down .

Betty Baronick said the school
zone should be recognized to show
school Is In session. Mayor Andrews
said the vWage has a speed zone In
effect from Ute time school opens
until it closes.
Request dm1ed
A request to transfer a Uquor
license from Thomas L. Goett, dba,
Sexy's !rom !!7il E. Matn to Thomas
L.Goett, dba, Sexy Toms to 830 'h
East Main Street was denied. They
also requested that the hearing on
the Issue be held In Meigs County.
A resolution to accept the amount
and rates certified by the budget
commission was approved.
The clerk-treasurer. Anderson,
stated that she had contacted the
Ohio Department of Transportation
concerning a traffic count at Ute
bridge and traffic now. A represen·
tatlve will meet with councU on Oct.

3.

Reserve coaches
hired at Southern

IN CONJUNCTION WITH EMERGENCY MEDICINE WEEK,

Hospital.
A homemaker, she was born In
Pomeroy on Nov. 10, 1900, a

•

Po~er~y-Middlepo:f"

Rice chosen as ipterim 648 director

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff

Wednesday, Sept. 21st

PTA meets Tuesday

Yoi.32,No.112

y """"" e n t 1n e

Pomeroy council co$tinues mirli p;i.k .project

+_::::::::____1~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~:'

CaUs on Saturday Included 8:,40
a.m., Rutland to HarrtsonviUe lor
Lawrence Donahue, to Veterans
Memorial, later taken to the
Veterans Administration Hospital

•

•
at~~

c.pynghlod 19.'3

The GaWa-Meigs post of the state
highway patrol said the HeUmans'
l9Eii &lt;lleyrolet coWded with a 1979
Chevrolet truck driven by Steven R.
Peckham, 23, Rt. 1, Middleport, at
!2:43p.m .
ThepatrolsaldtheHellmaJiswere
southbound, about 9 half-mOe from
Ohio 143, when they met Peckham's
truck on a curve. Trooper Tom

Special Introductory Price

Story oo Page 6

-e

.. ~Uman UDilcl.

with delicate
floral embroidery

Handicap parking

onPage4

An elderly Pomeroy couple died
from Internal lnjurtes suffered tn a
head-&lt;JncolltsionwlthatruckonBaU
Run Road near Pomeroy Monday
afternoon.
The victims were identlfied as
Lelia M. HeUman, 69, and her
113-year-&lt;Jid husbanp, Walter R.
HeUman. Botll resided at 38811

NoBodys
Perfect

Pomeroy
at 6:Center
54a.m. for
to Pomeroy
Health Care
Melvina , .
Davidson, to Veterans Memorial;
MlddJeport at 4:51 p.m. for .F1oyd
MCC!eUand, to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy at 5:12 p.m. to former
Rnute33forTracleAbbott. toHolzer
Medical Center; Pomeroy at 10: 17
p.m. to Eagle Ridge Road for Veda
Cundltf, to Veterans Memorial.

daughter of the late James E. and
Mary Ann Justice Davidson. SwvlvSaturday Admlsslons--Macle
lng are two sisters, Mn. Pete
Priddy, Rutland; C!Hford Rock(Lavada) Wheeler, Pomeroy, and
hold, ReedsvUJe; Eunice Nutter,
Mrs. Harry (!"aomi) Wyatt, RaReedsvllle; Martha Roush,
cine, and several nieces and
Rutland.
nephews. She was ptecededlndeath
Saturday Dlscharges--Dorotha
by her parents, three brothers aDd
Handley, Eura Largent
lour 8laters. She was a member of
Sunday Admissions- Melvina Da· the Enterprise United Methodist
vldson, Pomeroy; Rap.dall Church.
Kennedy, Rutland; James Nelson,
Services wiU be beld at 2 p.m.
Pomeoy; Amy Merle Varney,
Wednesday at the Ewing F'lml!raJ
Long Bottom.
· . Home whm! friends may can
Sunday Dilcbarges-Linda Ste- · anytime m Tuesday. Burlal w1U be
wart, Paul Michael.
• In Rock Springs Cemetety.
-

...

Pllge5

BQckeyes rated No.

.·

12: 37 a.m. to E. Main St., for Harold
,Jeffers, taken to Veterans Memortal Hospital; Mlddleportat2:00a.m .
to North Second Ave. for Gene
Young, to Veterans Memorial·, · p.m. tollepotStforMarthaRoush,
to Veterans Memorial.
·

bushels.

1Pwre3

m

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

In Daywn by the transfer unit; 12: 47
p.m.. Pomeroy to E. Second lor
Chad Fallow, taken to Veterans
Memorial; Middleport at 1: 04 p .m .
to RaUroad St. for Alloo Plantz, to
Ve terans Memorial; Tuppers
Plains at 5: 23 p.m. for Marvin
Darst, to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland all: 06p.m. toHarrlsonvUle
for Charles EUis, to Veterans
Memorial, and Middleport at 6:03

Local emergency units were kept
the move over the weekend
answering numerous calls, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.

on

the yield will be less than 25,000

Veterans Memorial

The patrol went to the scene of a
two-vehicle accident at the lntersec·
tion of Ohio 7 and 124 Sunday
afternoon.
TrooperssaldArthurL.MIUer,57,
Rt. 1, Rultand, was northbound on 7
at 4:45p.m. and prepared to make a
left tum onto 124. Another northbound vehicle driven by Jerome K.
Howard, 21, Cheshire, attempted to
pass Howard's vehicle and both
aulas sideswiped.
Moderate damage was listed to
boUt vehicles and Howard was cited
for passing in a hazardous zcine.

She added, "This Is slgni!lcant
because I am making waves, but I
amreadytohalldlethatandreadyio
tacewhateverctisesihavew."
She showed Ill!! would not shy
awaytromcontroverslaltoplcs.She
said she supports the Equal Rights
Amendment and beUeves abortion
Is "a rtsht that a woman a:hould
have."
0! the Soviets: "They have to be
watched. " Of dyelni her halt:
" No."
In a phone caU Sunday, President
Reagan told Miss WUUams her
selection was "a wonderful Uttngfor.
our nation," the White House said.
Another black woman, Miss New.
Jersey,SuzetteCharles,!ll,nnlshEd
as first l'U1lllef·Up. Before this year;
the highest black finisher
Lencola Sullivan, Miss Arkansas,:
who was tifth In l!l!ll.
.
"There's no significance to the'
fact sbe's black," said Miss WUU~
ems' mother, Helen, on Sunday:
morning. "She's sUIJ Vanessa, and;
she's sUIJ our Uttle girl."

A suit for money and two divorces: ·
haVe been !lied In Meigs CountY:
Common Pleas Court. .
.•
Robert Fife and Gladys rue,;
Middleport, !lied sultln the amount·
of $10,31 against WlUiam
Capehart, Middleport and WUJiam;
R. Capelwrt. Jr., Middleport, fa~·
amount due on lease agreement,:
damages and viol!itlon of teniis

Miss WUUams, a Syracuse Unl·
verslty student of musical theater
who hopes toperformmBroadway,
saki Inquiries about betni a black
.Mfss America began when she Willi
the Miss New York pageant last
spring after being recruited by
pageant cif!icials who had seen her
perform.
"At times, I get angered by Ute
questions. It seems that people and

Emergency squads kept busy

Meigs County happenings.. .·
Meets Wednesday

p.m. Saturday when he reportedly
lost control, struck a maUbox and
overturned In a creek.
Brown's vehicle was severely
damaged and he was cited for
faUure to control.

mentsasaperut.'lbey'refocuslna

on my being black."

m~=~;~ ·.·COurt aetions filed :·

cause," she said.

Three drivers cited
after separate wrecks
Three drivers were cited In

·=

reign, Miss WUUams made It clear
she is "an Individual with my own
opinions."
"Just because I'm black d&lt;;lesrt't
meanl'mgolngtofavoreveryblack

ADJUSTS NEW CROWN - Vane&amp;~~a WIDiams !rom New York
ad.JUI!ts her crown after being named Miss America lor 1.984. She Is the
lint black Ill gamer the twe. (AP Lpserphoto) ,

go

DaleRichardsatRJchardsBroth·
ersOrchardtntheeastempartofthe
county said his groves normally
produoo from 40,000 to 50,000
bushels, but this year he estlmated

thepressarenotfocuslngonll!yself,

my IIOCOOlpllsbments aDd achieve-

wbethershedyesherbalr.Butasthe
flrst black to reign, Vanessa
WUUamsalsoexpectsquerlesabout
her raoo "because I am making
waves."
The 20-year-old from MIUwood,
N.Y., said she has a goal for her year
asthe571hMlssAmerlca: "I want to
shOwthereisnodlfferencebetween
a black and white Miss America."
Black leaders across the country
haUed her historic victory tn the
pageant, a 62-year-old American
tradition that barred minority
participation for Its flrst three
decades.
''It's good that another of Arnerl·
ca' s cultural and sOctai lnstltutlons
has ripped down a ' curtain that
excluded American women who
were young, gltted and black," said
the Rev. Joseph Lowery, president
of the Southern Chrlsltan Leader·
ship Conference.
"My flrst reactlm is that the
inherentraclsmlnAmerlcamustbe
dUutlng ltseH," said Shirley Chi·
sholm, a former black congresswomantromNewYork.

Fewer apples, but
show must on
JACKSON, Ohio (AP)- Despite
a bad year for the apple crop, It's
tlme lor the annual Apple Festival in
JacksonCounty-andtheshowwiU
goon.
. This year' s fickle weather has cut
Ute county's apple crop by more
than half, growers said. They
·nonetheless promise to find enough
of the fruit lor festival street
displays.
The number of orchards in
Jackson County has declined from
50 years ago, when It was a pr1mary
apple-growing areaofthestate, but
apples are stW significant to the
economy.
The county's seven orchards now
produce an estimated 125,000 to
150,000 bushels a year.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)-

Uke her predecessors, Miss Amel"·
lea lllll!l wiU face many questions,
tram her opinion of the Soviets to

.,

Reserve girls sports personnel
were hired Mooday night when the
Southern Local Board of Education
met In regular session .
The board named Kimberly
Grueser as girls reserve 'basebaU
coa~ and Suzanne Wolfe 8ll girls
resei'Ve voUeybaiJ coach. The resignation of Daisy Franz as yeatbook
1ldvf8Dr was accepted and Tarrlsa
BeaW!'J' was named to fU1 that
jjasltlon. Linda Diddle was named
junior high cheerleadel" advisor and
~ and .regulations for thoile
cbeerleaderl were approved.
•• The board ext.,.,., a vote of
~ to Mn. Margaret Houde·
iilae!tfortheliftofadlctlonarytothe
)11gb IChool aDd named 1D the
jjjatltute teacher list were Julie
~~ Diane , Rice, Lori .Withee,

.Belly Hutchinson and Susan

Han:

num. The board agreEd to provide

transportation for two spectal
education students. Sue LaudeiT1)1Jt
and Milford Frederick were named
subatltute bus drive~. FigureS for
Ute lllll!l bud&amp;et from the county
budget commlsskm were apprcl'led
aloni wltll actMty accounts. The
board agreed to help the band
boosters with the cost of new
unlfonns after the tint the )1!111'
and planl were made to attend the
Southeiastem Ohio Regional Board
of Educatloo meeting In Athena on
Sept. 29.
Atti!Ddlng the meeting were Supt.
Bobby On!; Treasurer Dennie HlU

vt

aDd boardmemberii,DennleEvans.
Charles Pyles, Sue Grueser, Don .
!!mlth and David ifiU..

l!lllploJed.., Trl-\'llait!
were buly
boll!ll u a ·put al the
Colllmbul,

pr•wu. 'ftlere are II
~.lomita-

were expected Ill be planted In them. 'lbere wiU also
be plantlnp II&amp; the button-hole park oo Pearl st. and at
a-.1 1111rimpr Park 11 part of a 111,000 pwlt
pwa MJMiepO!i b)' lbe Oldo Depadrnellt of Natural
Be1ource1. Worll mill&amp; be llOIIIPllted by OIL 1.

Meellng w!Ut council was a
representative of General Telephone Company concerning add!·
tiona! poles on Lincoln Heights,
aci'QSS the street from the present
poles, In order to up grade l)1e area.
The representative was asked
about burying lines . He said General
Is looking at SQXJa manholeand$40a
foot to go under paveme nt noting, Jt
was too expensive.
Larry Wehrung asked if General
had to get an easement from
property owners. The rep resentative stated that all property owners
wtU be contacted.
He also added that it Is very
expensive to cross the street and
IIley can'tget thepresentpoies high
enough. The poles that will be set
accross Ute street wUJ help In
appearance. He also added that the
safety code calls for a pole to be 18
feet In Ute air. The existing lines
have been Uteresince 1952hestated.
He also added that Ute street in
question was Ute worst In the village
as far as telephone lines are
concerned.
The representativeadded that Ute
phone company had spent $3 million
dollars In Meigs County over the
past several years .
Ande rson said he wants to hear
what Ute residents of Lincoln
Heights, have to say regarding the
matter.
Wehrung added residents don't
want the poles In front of their
homes. The representative said Ute
poles wiD be placed between tile
homes and won 't take up parking or
play space.
Ma yor Andrews suggested tha t
the representative talk to the
residents and meet with council at
its next regular meeting.
Young reported the second floor
city buUdlng remodellng project is
lJ percent complete.
CouncU Is now waiting .on electrl·
cal and heating bids. He said he
personally picked upntneflredoors
•at a cost of $273 each.
Young also reported that he has
approved plans from the state along
with· a buDding permit. He also
(Contlnupl Qn page 10)

�Comment
Ill Court S1reet
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOO'ED To THE ()I,'TEREST OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA
11~

~m~
~v

.
I""T""\....L--.-.

rT"E::!d•t=~ .

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

BOB HOEFUCH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher 'Controller

""••nl'f
Tu.tda~5ephM•~•r20, 1983

General Manager

DALE ROmGEB, .JR.
News Editor
r\ MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Auocla·
tlon and t.~ American Newspaper Publisher AssoCiatiOn,

'
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be le88 thtUllOO words
· IGIII. All letters are subject 'o ed ltlnc aad musl be signed with name, addrms and
t~ep11.0n ~ number. So uns igned letters wUI be published. Letters M·ould he In
10od taste, addres!-ilnr l&lt;osue:s, not personalllle8.

Child-care center for
Senate moms, dads
The Senate·is instituting a child..:are center-to alldw capitol Hill moms
and dads to concentrate on the nation's business instead of searching for
baby sitters.
The center, tentatively sch~ul~ to open in January, willbekey~tothe
hours of the Senate. It would be open to children of all Senate employees,
not just senators' offspring.
.
Senators are elq)eeted to eannark $aJ,!XXl from their own budget to get
the center started. Alter that, tultion and fees will cover the costs.
The center "has taken on a life of Its own since I got the Idea because I
was fa~ with the prospect of finding day care," said Marge Baker, a
lawyer who works ·for the Senate, Judlclluy Committee and who Is on
maternity' leave with a :&gt;.-week-old son.
·
Some 145 Senate parents have exp~ interest in putting their
children in the center, even though there is only room for 40 youngsters the
first year, saki Ms. Baker, the drlvlng force behind the project and the
president of the center's commlttee.
A lottery may bave to be held to decide whlch children can be admitted,
she sald.
The center will be hou~ In a 3,500-square foot rQOrD In a Capitol Hill
oftlce bulldl!lg, about two blocks from the Capitol Itself.
Susan DeConcinl, the wife of Sen. Dennis DeConclnl, D-Arlz., and a
protessiOnal social worker with experience In day care cetlters at
worksltes, Is putting together an advisory committee of experts and
parents.
Should the Senate be bankrolling Its own day..:are center at the same
time federal spending for day&lt;are centers around the country Is being
cut?
"Maybe a firsthand view of what day care can mean in terms of worlter
productivity will be instructive," Ms. Baker said.
Meanwhile, the Senate, It appears, has a vacancy: It needs a new poetiy
oonsultant.
For months Senate Major,tty Leader Howard Baker, R-Te!UI., has been
starting off each week's business with a poem. Balter said !twas "to soothe
our jangl~ netveS and clvtllze our legislative proceedings." .
But Baker info~ colleagues the other day that he wasn't the one whO
had the Idea or selected the weekly verse. It was alde-speechwrlter Jim
MUler, who is leaving his Senate post to attend Oxford University in
England.
. "I am sure that the British will do nothing to stultify the remarkable
talents tluit already reside in that young man's head,"· Baker said In a
Senate speech.

Berry's World

~mors

Washington, as we all know, Is
of rumors. Rumors, It Ls
generally and accurately assu~.
are usually wrong. Rumors, It Is
less generally recognized, are
sometlmes correct. In relaying a
rumor, 1s the party actually
merchandising It? Has he a motive
1n mind? "It 1s not true that
presidential candidate Jones is
suffering from terminal syphilis" Is
a well-known rhetorical device not
for contradicting the news tbat
Jones 1s suffering from syphilis, but
for advertising it. "Parallpsls," the
rhetoric people cail that Duling
World Warn the device was widely
used. The British, operating an
.underground radio station al·

full

rlftr)r&amp;~J ' 11tt.IWIItll' '*~""''~
l&lt;f1'f1\,jl\

expectation ot a brief post-PD\)ttcal
life. A second reason (the rumor
continues) Is that Reagan antlcl·
pated that the next Senate will be
dominated not.by friendly Republlcall$, but by most unfriendly
Democrats. If the Democrats pick
up the Senate in 1984, as the odds
favor their doing, the majority
leader would be Sen. Robert Byrd,
and the Democrat in charge of the
two most powerful committees
engag~ in domestic affairs would
be Sen. Edward Kennedy. The
House, meanwhile, would sWI have
Tip O'Ne111. The prospect of four
years working with a Congress
dominated by these three gentJe.
men would discourage a 34-yesrold, let alone a 74-year-old (Tip
continues).
Now there are the usual reasons
tor delaying an announcement. To
say you are not. going to run Is to
invite the condescension given to
lame ducks. There ts that. But there
Is something more Important right
· now, the story goes. And that Js the
· matter of a sUccesSor. According to
this view, the president believes
that the successor would be either
Rep. JackKempfromNewYorkor
VIce President George Bush, the
Prince of Wales. Now If the
piesldent were to announce early
on -in September, say, or October
- that he was pulling out, that
would give l))e Kemp forces plenty
of . time to m6butze, and the
' posslbUitY would be high that In the · "
primaries, Kemp . would knock
Bush out, Kemp being a slugger,
Bush a fighter more in the genteel
tradition.
Reagan would not like to see this
happen, the rumor continues, for
two reasons. The llnit Is that, after
all, be select~ Bush as his running
mate, and In dplng so tn effect
validated Bush's claim to ascendancy within the party. A second
reason (Tip says) Is that Reagan
doesn't like Kemp.
·

"You look so he1a1thy, I could just hug you!".

•

Jack Anderson

surpnse---:-------'-----

~. o
•

WASHINGTON - Loc~ · in
govel'llfllent files is some startling
Information that deepens the mys·
tery of lll·fa~ Flight
the
South Korean passenger plane that
was blasted out of the skies by the
Soviets.
My associate Dale Van Alta and
Michael B!nsteln have had access
to secret and top-secret CIA, State
Department and Defense Intelligence Agency material that provides Important tntormatlon on the
incident. Here are tbe highlights:
- The Russians routinely try to
Jure U.S. MU!tary and intelligence
aircraft into Soviet airspace so they
can "legally" shoot them down .
This Is done by a jamming
technique, call~ "meaconnlng,"
which confuses pilots trying to
follow radio signals !rom the
ground.
The Soviets frequently scramble

r:m -

I

the navlg:atlonal signals along their the presence of fervently anti·
borders, jlnd several planes have community Rep. Larry McDonald,
been shot at after .being "mea- O.Ga., on the doo~ filght had
conn~" Into Soviet skies. The
inspired the shoot-down. The CIA
technlqUE· 1 is so widely ~ that · reported that the Soviets could
pilots who~ fiy near Soviet borders ··easDy have Intercepted telex com·
are issueo~ navigational maps with munlcatlons indicating that other
special w1rnlngs. They are told that tempting targets mlglrt have been
they can '·q trust radio signals along on the KAL filght, Including Sen.
the bordel!iS and "would be !Ired on" Jesse Helms, R -N.C.
If they sta. ed over Soviet territory.
But the State Department cable
- Tho gh President Reagan to Seoul said: "We have no repeat
insisted fr
the beginning that the
no evidence that the presence of
Soviets kl
they were firing at a
Rep. McilofU!)d aboardKALr:m (or
civilian
Uner, the State Depart- the pl~ travel of Sen. Helms
ment doul~ted this at first. A hlghly and others aboard that filght) was a
contldent1!~-l memo of Sept. 2 says
factor in the Soviet attack on the
that the State Department's special aucratt."
task fore was "convin~ the
- The Soviets may have had an
Soviets WI e sure they were flrtng
agent among tbe crew of tbe KAL
on an Am rican mllltary plane."
airliner that stra~ deep Into the
- The tate Department, In a
U.S.S.R. In 1978. It was fired at and
secret cat e to Seoul the day after
forced down near Munnansk, The
the tragee , said It didn't believe
Korean co-pilot S.D. Cha explain~

My Aunt Pauline knows I own a
personal computer. So sbe came
over to the bouse the other night and
said, "I understand with those
machines you can break Into other
computers and tell !hem to do
things."
"It's not that easy, Aunt Pau·
. line," I said. "I know there are a lot
of stories In the newspapers that
kids have been doing It, and you
probably saw 'War Games.' But
you have to be awtuUy lucky with
the code word before the other
compUter will talk to yours. Why do
you bring up the subject?"
"If you don 't stonewall it, you might disappear
"I want you to get Into the SelifS
like that South Korean airliner!"
Roebuck computer and teti ·It I
already ~aid for tbe sUpcovers they
keep billlng me for every month."
uThat's a taU order," I said.
" And while you're at It, give me a
S50 credit for all the anguish and
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 20, the 263rd day ot 1983. There are 102 days le!l
agony I've suffered trying to
In the year.
straighten It out.''
Today' s highlight in history:
"I'U try," I said. I turned on my
On Sept. 20, 1881, Chester A. Arthur was sworn in as the 21st president of
machine and dialed Into the
the United States, succeeding the assassinated James A. Garlleld.
system. Then I asked her, "What
On this date: .
code word do you tlllnk titey WQU)d
In 1519, Ferdinand Magellan, the Portuguese navigator, 11et out !roll!
use for people whQ don't pay their
Spain on a veyage to find a western passage to the Indies. One of his ships
bills?"
eventually clrcl~ the world.
"Try DEADBEAT," she
In 19ll, a hlinicaneswept overpartso!New York, New Jersey and New
sutmesledEngland, killing nearly 700 people.
1 typed In DEADBEAT. "Any
In 1963, President John F . Kennedy went before the United Nations to
luck?" she asked.
propose a joint U.S.·Sovlet expro!tlon to the moon.
"No, but I think I broke Into the
And In 1982, President Ronald Reagan announced that the
Marines
computer at the Intemational
who had lett Belru~ Lebanon, 10 days earller wruld be returning there to
Monetary Fund. I better tiy
share peacekeeping dulles with French and Itallan troops.
another code name."
Ten years ago: The Watergate special )li'OSI!CiiiDr and lawyers tor
"Walt! As long as you're In the
Presklent Richard Nixon told anappealscoort In Washlngtoa that they had
International Monetary Fund why
nOt been able to reach a settlmlent on the Issue of access to the White House
don't you canoe! Mexico's foreign
tapes.
debl? I'm going there this wlnll!r
F1ve years ago: Sq:th A!rlcan Prime Mlnlsll!r John Vorsller 8IIIIOIU1CEd
aDd It wwid be nice If they weren't I.
hJs resignation.
so WOITied about money?"

at the time that the crew somehow
became dlsorlent~ while fiytng.
Their Instruments indicated they
were in a safe filght path outside
Soviet airspace. A top-secret CIA
report suggests that a Soviet agent '
in the crew may have been involved
in the disorientation.
- An unreport~ attempt to shoot •
down without warning an unarmed
Japanese P2-V reconnaissance
plane on April 2, 1976, In the same •
area where KAL Flight
went ·
down "reflects the traditional Soviet determination to protect their
,borders and air space against •
intrusions, whether real or percelv~." declares a DIA report
classHI~ "Secret Spoke."
So It came as no surprise to the
U.S. intelligence community when
the Sovlets sent a mlsstle hurtling at :
a civilian airliner pack~ with 269
helpless passengers_

r:m

• ____________~___A_rt_B_~
lllS
__
hwa
__W_

Computer

we

"I've done It. But
still haven't
cancel Mexico's debt
hooks won't balance. I solved your Sears Roebuck
It to another countiy." . problem."
"So
"Try the password SLIPCOVIt to Marcos. He
deserves for wbat be did to the ERS just for a long shot"
I did and found myself talJclng to
Manila."
opposition
put Mexico's debt in the U.S. Navy'smastercomputer.in
"Okay.
the Phlllp~line account. Now Mar· the Mediterranean. When I told
cos owes
IMF $120 billlon. Let's Aunt Pauline where we were she
get back
Sears Roebuck. You became very excited. "Let's glvfO
have any
code words their Colonel Kaddafl a bloody nose."
"Now look." I said. "Giving
charge peoj:lle
Diane Sawyer a raise Is one thing.
But I'm not about to start a war for

the hell of lt."
"Your cousin MUton always said '
your Apple was all talk."
"Look, I don't think we're going
to break Into the Sears Roebuck
computer tonight, and 1 could get In '
trouble for this."
uno me one more favor before
you turn off your system. Get into
the Social Security computer."
"What lor?"
"I want to tell the girls at my ·
bridge game how old Raquel Welch ·
really Is."

Mof&gt;LgH~
(3'7o)

Today in history

u.s.

_______w_it_'ia_m_F_._B_uc_kley_J_r:

legedl ¥, 1ft . Nazl«cup!E&gt;d France,
not be kept. "Let me see now," as
sever;d times a day over a
caut~s a~ venerable old bus!protract~ period denounced the
nessman In llllnols ~ to say.
"perni'flous rumor" that General
"How many people know this? " He
Rommel was a homosexual. And
would grab a ptece of paper. "John
the nlmor-mongers scored. Gen·
knows It (one mark on the paper),
eral Hommel lost much of his
Jim knows It (l\ second mark) , Bill
prestlj!e.
knows It (a third mark ), and Eric
Having said all of this, 1 report knows It (fourth). Hmm. that
that the majority leader of the makes - pau.Se, as he looks down
House {:A· Representatives Is "con· on his worksheet - "l.ill people
fidlng" , to frtends that Ronald who know 11."
Reaga~ has seci'etly decided not to
So wbat Is going on? Tip O'Neill
run again for preslderitinl.984. I say expands em the story. Reagan has
"conflc ~" because the pasSage of ·decided not to run, the rumor goes,
such a report from Tip O'Neill to for several reasons. One of them Is
such p rsons as he has passed the that he wishes to live a few years
report along to Is very nearly a · having enjoyed the presidency,
guru:an ee that the confidence will rather than run a second term, In

·KAL 007:

h~•""

make?"

"I typed
$UXI,!Ola
She w!Wi' ~the news?
Sawyer

til talre $350,101

and giYe It' . io

i
'-------------~

JEFF HAWK

5-8, 11!0 PGUI!d

ii-10, 1110 pound
Sopbomore end

Sopbomore End

Hodges' single delivered the tying

streak and reduce their · "magic
lim.
.
.
number" for winning the West to 10
games.
The Dodgers have 12 games
Expos~. Cardinals 0-3
In Montreal, Bryn Smith tossed a left.
Bob Welch, 1$-12, earned his
five-hltter and Bryan Little and
DOug ·FlYnn each knocked In a run, seventh-win lri his 1Rst elgllt starts,
leadtog tbe Expos over St. Louis in giving up five hlts over six Innings.
theflrstgameotthelrdoubleheader. Two of the hlts . off Welch were
Pinch-hitter Terry Crowley first -Inning conseCutive home nii1S
by Terry Puhl, his eighth, and
singled home Argenis Salazar from
third base with noneoutintheelghth Dickie Thon, his~Joe Nlekro, 14-13, took the loss.
inning for the go-ahead run tn a
Padres 4, Giants 2
three-run rally that gave the Expos
In San Francisco, GarryTemplet·
their second-game victory.
"We needed a mlraci!!, and . on's run-s'cortng groundout In the
obviously we're .not going to get · fourtb Inning broke a 2-2 tie and
one," said 'St. Louis Manaj!er !Jiggered SanDiegoovertheGiants.
Tony Gwynn knocked in one of
Whitey Henog, whose defending
world champions drop~ seven San Diego's runs, but his season·
high major league hitting streak of
games off the Phlllles' pace.
25gameswassnap~whenhewent
Dodgers9, Aslro...Z
In Los Angeles, Ken Landreaux 0-for-3.
Right-bander Ed Whitson, 5-7,
drill~ three singles and Pedro
Guerrero slug~ his 29th home run who blan~ the Giants 'for four ·
innings after they scored twice in the
to lead the Dodgers over Houston.
'The Dodgers trail~ 2·1 entering first , was thewinnerwlthrellef from
·
the sixth inning, but erupt~ for six Sid Monge and Floyd Chlffer.
runs to snap a three-game Iostng

Orioles' rally eliminates Brewers from race
By~R.BARNABD

The White Sox, who bave already losing streak With a five-run seventh
cUnch~ the AL West title and had !nntog against Toronto highlighted
won 17 consecutive games at home, by Darnell Coles' two-run single.
havenowlost.flveofllgamestothe
AI Cowens and Dave Henderson
.Twins, who are 24 gam~ behlnd aisocontrlbutedrun·scoringslngles
Chicago. No other West team has to the winning rally that made a
beaten the White Sox more than wlnnero!MattYoung,ll-15.
three times.
Buck Martinez hlt his lOth homer
The two-run shot gave rookie for the Blue Jays.
Mlke Walters, who came on in the
RoyalsS-7, Angels«!
fourth, his first major-league win In
Kansas City had to rally In the late
two decisions.
inntogs of both games to sweep a
Brunansky also had a two doubleheader from California.
run-single tn the fourth, but the
With the Royals trailing 6-51n the
White Sox made It 5-3 in the fifth on · ninth of the second game, Willle
rookie Ron Kittle's 33rd hOmer, a Wllsondoubl~lnthetyingrunwith
drive of at least470feet onto the roof two outs then ra~ home when Pat
In left field. It was Kittle's second
Sheridan hlt an Infield single.
roo!topblastthisseason.
TheRoyalSwontheopenerasDon
Red Sod, l'ankees 3
Slaugh! trtpled home twO runs to key
Bob Stanley earn~ his :JJih save a six-run rally In the eighth. Kansas
and sttned a home-rull hltting City got two runs on shortstop Rlck
contest between Boston and New Adams' throwing error, and Frank
York with three Innings of one-hlt Whltehltasacrlflcefiytomakelt5-4
pitching.
beforeSiaughttrlpledandscoredon

94.

The winner was Tim Stoddard,
4-3, who pltchoid one Inning.
Joe Nolan's RBI single and AI
Bumbry's two-run single gave
Baltimore a J.O lead in the second
innlng,andasinglebyRipkenmade
It 4.0 In the third.
Milwaukee pulled to wlthto 4-3 in
the fifth when Randy Ready's
'
bases-loaded RBI single got past left
fielder Roenlcke for an error,
On Monday night, Stelero, who
clearing the bases.
has pla~ In six major-league
.
games with five hits in lOat-bats, did
In the bottomoftheH!th,Singleton
ltagain.Hecllmax~a two-runrally · gottheflrsttwoofhisthreeRBiwith
in.the 11th inning with another RBI a two-run single for a 6-3 Baltimore
single, giving the Orioles an 8-7 lead.
victory over the Brewers and a
Mark Brouhard cut the deficit
7Y.,-game lead over second-place with a solo homer In the sixth and the
Detroit in the American League Brewers' tied It with two runs in the
East.
eighth on an RBI single by Rick
Manning and a groundout by.Jim
Gantner.
Meanwhile, the Orioles' comeBaltimore's four-game sweep of
back ability is starting to look unreal
even to their own players. They have
the
Brewers
mathematically
ellmlBefore Jim
Stanley
cameand
in, Dwight
nated
the defending
division chamEvans,
Rice
Glenn
35 come-from-behind victories this
pions,
who
suffered
a
club
record
Ho!fnnan
belted
homers
for
the
Red
season and have a 33-11 record in
10th
consecutive
toss.
Sox
and
Steve
Balboni
and
Roy
games decided in the seventh !nnlng
Twins
7,
While
Sox
5
Smalley
connected
for
theY
ankees.
or later.
Minnesota continued Its success
The Boston homers ruined the bid
The Orioles have won 10 of their over runaway division champion
of Ron Guidry, 19-9, to win hls
lastllgamesandare23-4slnceAug. Chicago as Tom Brunansky
game.Stanleysavedthevlctoryfor
24. They have a chancetowrap .u p knock~ in tour runs, two of them
JohnTudor,12-11.
the division this week, starting with a homer in the top of the eighth
Mariners 9, Blue J83'!16
tonight when they open a four-game .--in-nin-g._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Se_a_t_tle_._s_na_P_~
__a_seven
__-_g_am-je
series against the Tigers in Delrolt.
In otlier AL games, Kansas City
.Wept a doubleheader from CaUfor84 and 1-6; Boston trlnun~
New York 5-3, Minnesota ·tJipped
Chicago 7-5 and Seattle beat Torgnto

AP Sports Wrller ·
Don't tell the Milwaukee Brewers
that lightning doesn't strtke twice in
the same place.
Alter trailing the Brewers 7.0 on
Sunday, the Orloles ralll~ and
finally won the game in the ninth
inning on a game-winning single by
rookie catcher John Stefero.

CINCINNATI (AP) -TheCincinnatl Reds, although stU! in last place
In the National League West, have
lmprov~ on last year' s61-101 finish
and may be only a few players !rom
contention, says Manager. Russ
Nixon.
The Reds' lOllosses in 1982 were
the most in the club's 114-year
history. The team, Idle Monday,
trail~ the fifth. place San Francisco
Gtants by three games going into
Monday night's play.
Clnclnnatr has 13 games left to
play, six on the. road beginning
tonlght at Atlanta.
"I'm inc~ to disregard stahd·
lngs," said Nixon. "We're in the
toughest division in baseball and but
for five games we'd be at .500."
Nixon cone~~ that Is not
champ!Qnshlp play. But he has bee!l
encouraged by Improvement
among some players.
"We set out this year,.declding to
go with youth. And we think there
has been definite Improvement and
in some cases even better than we
had anticipated," Nixon said.
Among those who lmprov~ were

Tidewater captures
Triple A crown

-·

catcher Dann BUardello, outfielders
Gary Redus and Eddie Milner, and
third baseman Nick Esasky, he
said.
"The pressure au fell on the kids"
when Cesar Cedeno faU~ to
produce, said Nixon.
"They've done a good job. I'm not
ooncern~ ahoui ·his numb&lt;irs,
Redus has been outstanding aU the
way. Esasky came up at a tough
time and adjust~" in June. "The
big· thing is the experience," said
Nixon.

.
;
:
:
:
:
·

r--------..,.....---Your Insurance

IS ITA
POLICY?
GRAN
ACCOUNT?
To us . you re far more than
JuSt a pohcytlolder You are
an tnsurance account.

By handling all your prolecuon needs - persona l or
. • busu~ess~a:s an account.
we'll se!e that 11 IS i:iiWays'

up to date . And that you
aren 't paytng for unnec-

essary or overlapping
coverages .

LOUISVilLE, Ky. (AP) -Marv
We 'll revte-.v your account
Foley said he wanted tomakeagood
regularly to meet changing
showing before the home folks in the
c~rcumstances and needs .
final game of the Triple A World
And we II see lhat claims
are promptly and fairly
Series.
sellled
Hedld.
-·
.FJKaccoU nlabil lty . .count,
Foley,., a Lel&lt;lngton native and
on us. You ·u find we are
fortner standout at ihe University of
lnends
can·depimd on .
Kentucky, had aliomerun, a double,
drove In two runs and scored twice
Monday night as Denver defeat~
Portland 5-4. The loss eliminated
Portland from the double-roundrobin tournament and gave Tidewater the champlonshlp of minor j
leaguebaseball.
I
Portland had a 2·1 record and
needed a victory against Denver to
set up a tie-breaker game with
Tldewall!r, champion of the International League, whlch finish~ 3-1.
Portland, the Pacific Coast
Rep1e sen1mg
League titleholder, finish~ 2-2.
Denver, the American Association
champ, finished 1-3.
Tldewate~·s Gary Rajslch,
State Auto lnsuranc•
nam~ the series' most valuable
...
player, said his teammates didn't
mind that Denver decided things.

___ ________

.._

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER
SINCE 1949....
Our primary concern has
been to provide good
hearing through amplifiestion,

for

thousands

individuals
'problems.

with

of

hearing

PH. 594-3571

,-:a:sin:g:l=e~by~Onlx==Conce==pc=·~lb=n~.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~4~4~4~W;·~~~~A~T~H~E~N~S~~

ro

rua,

9-6.
Despite his heroics the last two
games and the paucity of his
big-league experience, Stefero says
the highlight of his career was a
two-run double ott. New York's
!Goose Gossage to tie a game in New
ork on June 30.
' Alter Milwaukee took a 7-6lead In
;
'
:tJte top of the 11th on Ted SimmOns
;single, Cal Rlpken s)llg)ed on a
ochopper in front of the rfate. Eddie
!Murray flew out, butGary Roen1cke
lstngled, Ken Singleton tied It with
lanother single and Slefero got the
lgame-w!nnlng hit off Tim Teuman,

: "A nine-year lll!ll!raD was leaving
~ I was stay(Qg,'' he Ald. "It
inade me feel like a four-year man
ttth ~years of expaleJ.ce." ·

•

'•

. IN ORDER TO VOTE IN 'THE
NOVEMBER 8 GENERAL ELECTION

Wednesday, Sept. 21st
2 p.m. · 6 p.m.

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCTOBER 11TH

Pleasant Valley Hospital

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

• ~ When the 76ers traded an established s.tar like Uonel Hoiiins before
the season began, Rlchardsm, then
~. was certaln he wwid
(nove up on the 76er roster.

woman.

the ' ~exes

Inning, made a winner o! reliever
Ron Reed, 8-1. The blast was
Morgan's 16th of the season, but his
lOth stnce the All-Star break. He hlt
his 15th hQmer In the fourth Inning, a
bl,rthday. .
'
.
Turning 40, the Philadelphia two-ruli shot, and also had a single
second baseman sl~ four hlts, and a double.
Including two home runs, and drove
Morgan's g81'1'le-winning blast
in four runs to power the Phlllles to a was set up by a Phillles' ral)y in the
7-6 victory over the ChlcagQ Cubs seventh .that tied the game 6-6 on
Ivan DeJesus' two-run single.
Monday night.
The victory boosted the Phillles'
Met1!15, Plrales 4
lead In the National League East to
In New York, Huble Brooks
two games over the Pittsburgh singled home the winning run in the
Pirates and Montreal Expos. The lOth Inning to lead the Mets r:Ner the
.·
-Pirates drop~ a 54 decision to the Pirates. ~· : · · ·
With one out; Mookle WUson
New York Mets In 10 Innings and the
Expos climbed Into a second-place started the Mets' winning rally with
tie with Pittsburgh with a 3-0, 6-3 aslngleoffKentTekulve, 7-5. WUson
sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals.
then stole second just ahead of a
The Los Angeles Dodgers, mean- strongthrowbycatcherTonyPena.
.
.
while, beat the Houston Astros 9-2
·BrooksthenfoU~with.asingle
and lmprom uielr lead tn the West
to
short center field, scoring WUson
to four gamf;,'S over the Idle Atlanta
from
second and making a winner of
Braves. In other NL action, San
reliever
Carlos Olaz, 3-1.
Diego trlp~ San Francisco 4·2.
Losing
4-2, the Mets had tl~ the
Morgan's second homer ot the
score
with two runs In the ninth. Ron
game, a leadoff shot In the eighth
By KEN RAJ?'OPORT
AP Sports Writer
Joe Morgan Is one person who
really knows how to celebrate a

;Richardson, one of the heroes of the ·
J'hUadelphla 76er NBA title in 1983, i
~ things were golngrlght before
~season even opened In tile fall c#.

''The cor~t&gt;tlterhas her down for
$!500,(0)."
AWit
was furious. t'Sbe•s

BOB EPLING

Morgan celebrates birthday in big way

';cuna's hunch
I PHILADELPIDA (AP) -Clint,

does Dan 'Rather

up the wall when he
paycheck."
''Toogh,"
"Someo11e bas
to strlke a I*Jw tor equal pay

CHRi~Ti~~

JOHN RICE
IHl, 170 pound
Sophomore fullback

Senior !!Uard

:

klddt...." Aunt Paullne saki.

getting

ROB JACKS
5-8, 1110 poWid

lY

(5%)

say,AuntPaullne.
in the password
boy, now I've done II.
into the ·CBS payroll

Tell the
off Dan's

Reds' manager·feels
team has improved

Meet the 1983 Eastern Eagles squad

Page 2-The Daily s.rttinel
Middleport, Ohio

Rumors,

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt, Ohio

Tuesday, September 20, 1983

•

'

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VISIT THE
BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON - OR PHONE THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS - OR MAIL THE BOARD A CARD.
Also. if you move you must notify the county
office. Of if you are in doubt 11 to whether you
are properly registered, phone the board.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF ELECTIONS

EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
..

.

IN CONJUNCTION WITH EMERGENCY MEDICINE WEEK,
THE STAFF OF PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL'S EMERGENCY
ROOM INVITES THE PtiB'LIC TO STOP BY FOR ATOUR
Of THEIR EMERGENCY ROOM FACILITY.

*Free Blood Pressure Check

MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING
P.O. BOX 488. POMEROY. OHIO 46789
PHONE 882-2897
Regular Houre: 8:30-4:30 Monday through Friday
ADDinONAL HOURS FOR REGISTRATIOfli
Sept. 23, Sept. 30 • Oct. 7
8 P.M. To 8 P.M.

Fildey Ev111lnga -

Seturdeya - Sept, 24, Oct. 1 • Oct. 8
8 A.M. to 12:00 Noon
Ju81dliy- 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITA~
Valllf Drive

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

�Page

The l)aily Sentinel

4

Tuetday, Seprember 20, 1983

Unbeaten Raiders
defeat Dolphins

Hanover gets
favorite nod

LOS ANGELES (AP) - By hiS their Incredible Monday night
own admittance, Lyle Alzado is a · reconl to 20-2-1 since prime-time
little different, as are his teammate$
footbau came Into belng'ln 1970.
on the Los Angeles Raiders'
Prob&lt;.bly the key play o(thegame
defense.
occurred late In the thlnl quarter.
Different, perhaps, but very, very Naturally , It was provided by the
gOOd .
Los Angeles defense.
If the Mlaml Dolphlnsdidn'tknow
The Raiders led
but the
how good, they do now.
Dolphins were irr a thlnl-and-s!X
The Raiders blankeQ.,MiamJ unw situation at the Los Angeles 21-yard
the issue was no longer Iii doubt llne. Miami quarterback David
Monday night as Los Angeles joined Woodley went back to pass, but was
the Dallas Cowboys as the National separated from the ball by blitzing
Football League's only unbeaten llnebacker Rod Martin.
teams with a decisive Z7-14 victory
Rooide Los Angelesdefenslveend
over the Dolphins.
Greg Townsend scooped the ball up
''Each of the guys on the defense Is at the Raiders' 34-yard llne and
a little otr-center and there's a great dashed 66 yards for a touchdown,
deal of prtde, " said Alzado, a
making It 2().0 and all but sealing the
34-year-&lt;&gt;ld ~enslve end. " Your outcome.
teammates beat you uptrytngtoget
"I saw all these black jerseys (his
to the ball. It's a veryoverpawertng teammates) and the ball and
defense.··
somebody yelled 'Pick It up,"'
Indeed, It Is. The Raiders have recalled Townsend, a fourth-round
given up only three touchdowns and draft choice of the Raiders who .
just 30 points overall In beating attended Texas Christian UniverCincinnati, HouS!Dn and Miami. All sity. "And I did
three of those TDs came after Los
"I guess they gave It to me
Angeles had assured Itself of because! runa4.6240.AIIIsawthen
victory.
.
were the goalposts and I just ran."
The Dolphins, who had only nine
"We CO!IIdn't generate anythillg
.. first. downs ·tintfi tile f!nal
. off~lvely and our defense couldn't·
minutes Monday night, got their stop thein," said Miami Coach Don
touchdowns on a 6-yard pass from Shula. "That's about as thorough as
rookle .quarterback Dan Marino to youcangetbeat.TheRalderswerea
. tight end Joe Rose with 2: 29 much bettet team than we were
remalnlr),g and a 2-yard pass from · tonight."
Marino to Mark Duper with 20
"It's beell a good night," said Los
seconds left.
Angeles Coach Tom Flores. "I wish
Before that, nothing. As a resUlt, wecruldgettheCommisstonertolet
the defending American Football · us play all of our games on Monday
Conference champion Dolphins fell nights."
lei 2-1
the Raiders ImProved

m,

tew .

&lt;

am

0

Scoreboard ...
·-"'-

Majors

BalUmre

""'""

92

56

.tm -

!!I

64
66

.570

B3

82 Q}
19 11
73 78
66 &amp;1
IODTDMlJON
JC-c1dcaRO
89 61
Kansas Clly
13 'm
Texas
71 7!1

Mllw•-

""'""'
"""""""'

Oakland

caJJfornJa
Mlnneoola

82
!II

- .......
-·
fll
Ell
1!1

ill

Seattle
56 93
Hllnel'll!d dlvb.!on d~

l"ranct.n
Chtnnatl

a.~

.+L'J 26~

-~

15

1.8%

!Grou t-61

.&lt;13 "
.&lt;13 "

St Louil Wll'lll"h 8-111 at Mo:niHI
ICu.Jllckson J5.-ll) , {D)
CndMatl (Pukn s.t2) at Atlwlta
(N~ 10-9), (n)
Ho.laon (Ryan 1J.8) at Los Angft!s

.376 32~

(PmalU),Inl
San ~ !Show lt-10) at !lan Frandsco ( M . Calver1M), (D)

'I'

I

z

·.a.m.

Plttllknth at CtUcaao

San ~at Sari F'Tancl«o
Ctnclnnatl II Atlantll
Ptlll.ldelpiU at Montftal, rn1
New Yort at St J..ouls, l nJ
Hwsttll II Lol An8eleL lnl

Transactions

Bolton

......

Mllwaukft at~ (n )
New Yof-k ill ao.tm, (n I

Seattle at Toronto, 1n1
Mlnnelota at Chieql), 1n1
Callt)mla at Kan&amp;as CUy, In I
QakJand at Texas, !nl
N-'110Nt\L IZAGUE
&amp;\BT DIVIIJON

Chkago

.m

Ytwk ILYI'lt'h IIJ.9J
OUcap {'JmJt '-141 at Pbila*iphla

Baltimore at ~t, (nl

Sl. """"

81

XI~

New York fMon~ 2-a1 at

,

·--.....

ARIZONA WRANGLERS-Flred Da.11

ShJvely, head

ca~eh.

HO&lt;IIE\'

BOSTON BRUINS-Cut Soon Bradley,"
KO&amp;IICnder. Paw fWpe and Joe Hll8ht'l.
OOfensemm. and Oluck Mal"'ttall and
SCeve M\lll)IIY, forwards.Rel\lrned juniOr·
players Allan l.aa'ocN!Ue, aoa:J~. to
Sukatlnl. Jan Armltronc, d!rfmeman,
ta ~ John Meulalt.a!ltl, •
ff"'))ft''UUIl , to Bra.nttlrd. Bob Nkilollon,
defenteman, to Lordln, Aam PMmen.
defememan. to Medlclne Hit,
John•ton. lorwanl to Ton:mto. aDd GR!V ~
halsld. ft:xward, 1o KJtchener.
NEW JERSEY DEVUS-BIUy MacMU·
lan, Kmm1 rnllllll't!l' and coach, qreed
to tem11 " a nalltb'et.r c:o~KrKt Released Bob Barich, pltermr, and KW1
Dade and Dan L.ane, 11Chl Wln81-

. ~2
,5:1)
2

.fBl 1
.tt713

High school football ratings
COLUMBUS, Oh1o !AP) - How a 11a!MWide panel or sporU wrtten and broad·
eastenJ rates Ct1io hlP IC.'hool roctbaU
teams tNs 'Neek m tne QPelllne AIIOc't-ated Prcu J)Gll Cl. the 1983 IMIOn. wUh
names ~ act~ooll, playoft' diV\s»tw 1r1 parmtheles. woo-kist recordl and total
points:

OA88AM
1. andnnaU MoeDer (1), W, 24.1 pdr\11
2, Akm!. G4rfteld Ill, W , ll8
3, Mld:Udown {1) , 3-6, i ll
4, Upper Arlklgtm (1), 2·1. 107
~. ClndffUltl Pri.ncetOII (I) , 2-1, 92 .
6, Austintown Fttch (1), J.O, 73
7, ~ I I ), 3-(), 6'J
8, Bl!ree (1), J.&lt;l, Sot
9, YCliJIWIUJMI U~llne !D), 3-0, ~
10, Cmten1Ue {f), 3-Q, !'A)
Other IChOOI8 With 10 or ~ points:
u. warren western Reten-e Ci. 12. Maa·
lllkm 34. 13. Dayton Du~ Zl. 14 (tie),
Columb.ul Walad RldBf' and AlllAne'e 23.
tb, Ordnnati .Bacm ~: 17 (tit-), Bn!f;k&amp;.
vUk and Tolfda St. F'randll 19. 1!, C!Jina
18. :ll, Nonh Cantoo Hooao.w 17. Z1 (tie),
Young s t o wn MoanPy and Canton
McKinley 16. 23. Shell7( lt M. Kl'ttmna:
Alter 13. 2:5 (~). Llow Senkx-, Winter.
vWe and Gahwma U. :a {I»), Tolem
Central cathOUc, Lorain !dna. Clndnnlli
FOrest Park and Dayton Waynt 10.

a.&lt;IIOM
1, Urtlar'la liD), 3-0. 113 P&lt;*!ta
2. Etyr1a C.tmUc (ffi J, 3-0. 100

a. ~r~~~~M em 1. ..... •

.,

4., Akron St. Vlncmt-Sl Mary, lffi) , 2·1,

5, FOIJkJia (ID ), 3.4, 74
6 tile\, Cadiz ( IV), 3-.a. and SCt&gt;ubPnvWe
t fl)' 3-(), t7
8, M1lltntP.1rJ West Holmes liD ), 3-0,

.,

9, Coklwater (tv). 3-0, 33
10, HamUton Badin liD), :1-1.0, 3)
CJtMor schOOls fecetvtq W Cl' r'I'W:ft
points: 11, CCinal Fuii£Jn NorthwHt ~. 12,
Leavlruburg LaBrae :at. lJ, Dowr 21.. 14
ftlel . Ra'-Uina So.lthtatt. ~ and
CArllSle :ll. 17 fde), Wamn Kmned)t Md
Clevelan~ Eeedlctine l8. 19, Cuiln ~
tral C.th::llll' 17. '.rl (tie), ~
Nrrt.beastt&gt;rn, Campbell Memart.a 1ft(!
UYaln Catrolk 16. 1l (1»1, Phib and
Bellft 1.'! . 25. 1..orUI CaUxlllc 14.
New
l.eJdn&amp;too 12. '11, Ctndnnatl l.o¥ellnd 11.
29 (Ue), Ct&amp;lmtl.l.s Whitetlal.l and Lou.ltvDle Aquinas 10.

a.

OA88A

l,
2,
3,
•·

Newark CattoUc fVI. :HI, 162 p00tt1
Mopdore fV), J.{), lJ9
FOIUI'\8. St. Wmdetl.n (V), :HI. lfM
Mlnf) Jurw:Hon (V). ~Ill

~; 1UDn C&amp;Jvrrt {V) . 34, 87
6, New Phlladriphla 'f'wlcarawu C.U.
lk {VI. J.D. 74
7, McDollald !V), 3-0, M
B. Sooth Charleston Sootheastern (VI , l0,.,

9, Mt:Comb (V), 3-0. 47
10, Arehmk! (V), J.O, 39.

Other dKJOII wtlh 10 or more I)Olntl:

11. Cedarvt1le lt. 12, canal Wl.ncbelter 33.
13, A~ Crestvkw 29. It, PlyrN:uth
28. 15, Wa}'l'eiYWe rr. 16. Clndnnlotl
Capt X. )7, ~ CatmHc 'Zl 18.
Howard East Kmx 21. li (ti!), Ch:~Matl
SWnmtl Country O.y and ~
Nonh Lina SWitl Ranp 19. 21, A«111um
17. 22 (tlr), Well ~and Lanc..ter
Flaher 16. 25. Sbubura 15. ~ (till), Lafa.
~ lill!!l Ebt and Bndturd 14. 27, eo.
lu.rnb.w Wehril! L1 • a..tllrt Knw

Owta 11 II

(til&gt;) ,

Mimter, Gites MUll "

...."
10." ' ....... Rl... ll . ... -

-

Big Ten's top player
. CIDCAGO (AP) - Cornerback
Nate Bonlers of Indiana has been
selected Big Ten Player of the Week
on defense by the Associated Preaa
for his etrorts Ill Satunlay's ~10
victory over Duke.
Bon:lers, a W, lll5-pound Junior '
ftom Fombell, Pa.. was credited .
with 13 tackles, 12 of them sobs
including one lor a loos of 9 yards.
Borders also broke 0up a J)ass and .

had one touchdown save.
· Among others considered for the ·
honor was HnebackerCralgWhlteof
Mbmealla. White had eight tackles ·
IUidrecovered lwollunbleslna21-17
tr1umplrover Rloe.

Earllei', Mike Tlmc2ak of Oblo
statewasnamedPiayeroftheWeek
oo otrpn,.., Tcmczakcompleled2lot
25 passes tor 273 yards BDd tour 1 .
loucbdowns Ill a 31-' vlctDry 1M!!'

;Qreaoa.

1.

Qy The Bend

Salem PTO sets goals
Goals and expectations tor the
school year were discussed at the
recent meeting of the Salem Center
PTO presided over by L11e Shenefield, president. Committee memberships were
wererequested
discu ssed
and
members
to sign-up
for the ways and means, refreshments and publicity committees.
The 1983-84 teaching staf1 was
Introduced as were tbe officers for
the year.
Charles Holliday , building prtnclpal, discussed buDding hours and
schedule, the use of Discovery
Machine purchased by the PTO.
texts and related learning matertals and needs of the school.
Much discussion centered on the
school district's newly adopted
transportation
system.
students
who received
prtzeBuilding
ribbons
at the MeigS County Fair school art
show were presented the artwork,
ribbon and cash awards.

. BESTOFSiiOW- Mrs. EvaRoiJsoowllhherarrangemen!!Jlnthe
class, "Reynoldsburg Tomato Festival," an interPretive de~~lgn, won
the best of show al the Rutland Garden Club's annual Dower show.

Buckeyes
jump to th~d AP ratings
.

.

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

Calendar

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

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP)- Cblc!nnati Moeller shows no signs of
letting up as Ohio's dominant large
school football team.
TheCrusadersareotrtoa:l-nstart
this fall with victories over Toledo
Whitmer, Canton McKinley and
Lancaster. That has earned their
accustomed spot as The Associated
Press' No.1 class AAA power.
Moeller, the big-school state poll
champion the last four years and
seven of the last nine, risks Its rating
Satunlay afternoon against visiting
Barberton.
A statewide panel of sporis
wlr1ers and broadcasters selected
Moeller, Urbana b1 Class AA and
Newark Catholic In Class A as the
statewide leaders Monday In the

!lrStbaDotingofthe1983season.
Moellerownedtheblggestmargln
over the runnerup team in any of the
threeclasslflcatlons. The Crusaders
had 241 points to 118 for secondranked Akron Garfield and ill for
No. 3-rated Middletown.
Urbana, a defending poll champion like Moeller, paced the Class
AA rallngs with 113 points. Elyria
Catholic was second with 100 and
Ironton third with 95.
Newark Catholic collected 162
points In Class A with Mogadore
running second with 139 and
Fostorta St.Wendelln third with 104.
Upper ArHngton, which knocked
Clnc1nnatt Princeton from the
unbeaten ranks last week, was
fourth In Class AAA, one spot ahead

TIIESDAY
CHESTER- Chester Councn
323, Daughters of America, will
meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
hall. Quarterly birthdays will be
obServed and a silent auction will
lie beld by the good of the onler
committee.

"'

POMEROY - Group 2 of the
Middleport Presbyterian
Chureh wlll meet Tuesday at the
church with Jean Moore to have
devotions.

PRICES

DaUy ............ ....... ............... 20 Cents

Crusaders, Urbana top prep ratings
ofPrtnceton. Austintown Fitch was
sixth, Sandusky seventh Berea
eighth, youngstown
ninth
and Centerville lOth among the
large-school powers.
In Class AA, Akron St Vincent.
StMary was fourth, Fostorta fltth,
CadlzandSteubenvllletiedforslxth,
Mlllersburg West Holmes eighth,
Coldwater ninth and Hamilton
Badin lOth.

ursuline

.

-

Eva Robson captured both the
· best of show and reserve best of
show In the annual fall flower show
of the R1,1lland Garden Club staged
over the weekend at the Rutland
• United Methodist Church.
Other top .awards of the show
went to Rev a Snowdeq, horticulture
sweepstakes, and Cheryl Lynn
Jewell, junior best of show, and
junior horticulture sweepstakes.
Janet Bolin jud~d the show and
awarded rtbbons In tbe artistic
arrangements divisions In four
places, as · follows , listed first
through fourth respectively:
"Circleville Pumpkin Festival,"
a mass arrangement: Mr~. Robson, Binda Diehl, Anna Turner, and
Reva Snowden.
"Jackson Apple Festival," feat-

...,...

"·""""' """"""

Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
rler may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Credit wUI be given carrier each

mont b.

MIDDLEPORT - Girl Scout

No subscriptions by mall permitted In ,
towns where home carrier service is

Troop 1123 wlll be organized

available.

Tuesday at3: 30p.m. ~tthehome
of Sandra Luckeydoo, 291 Walnut
St., Middleport All seventh and
·eighth graders bl the Middleport,
Pomeroy and Rutland communi·
ties are Invited to attend.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Oldo
13 Weeks ................................. $1f.(N

1

26 Weeks ....... ................ ........ .. 127.30
52 Weeks .................... ............. $51.48 ·
Outside Oltlo

I~ ~eeks ................................. 115.21
2 eeks .................. ............... $29 6t

The second grade won the room
count prize of $10 with 79 percent of
the second grade parents present.
NeKI meeting will be held on
Monday, Oct . 3, 7:30p.m.

r;==========~

HOUSE
FOR SALE
IN MIDDLEPORT
7 rooms,

'

52 Weeks ... .............................. 156:21

SALISBURY - The Sallsbury
PTOwlll meetT\Jesday, 7:30p.m. at
the Salisbury Elementary School.
The program wlll feature the
bltroduction of teachers and staff.

·'
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new kitchen, carpet

downstairs, woodbumer.

992 6028
-

.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;
Owner is Being Transferred

HOR11CULTURE SWEEPST~ - Ml'll. Reva Saewden was
the holticullure sweepstaltes winner
weekend flower show.

at

the Rutland Garden Club's

Nobody gives you
more quality and
more colors tnan

Rutland ..Garden Club_announces :winners ..

-~

...."""

Tuesday, September 20, '1983
Puge-5

DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) Ralph Hanover, trying to becane
pacing's seventh Triple Crown
winner, drew the second post
position In the thlnldlvlslmMonday
and was established an early 8-to-5
tavortte to win the Uttle Brown Jug
Thursday'
The thlnl jewel of the Triple
Crown drew Its second lai'gm field
In Its 38-year histOry, 24 p!IOO'S. That
forced ~ divisions BDd created a
reconl purse of $Ji8,1lll.
Fortune Teller and CrosscwTent
were listed as the early 2-1 betting
choicEs bl the ftrst two divisions for
the fall classic over the Delaware
(Ohio) County F~' balf.
mlletrack.
•
Fortune Teller will start from the
etghth post posltlonbl theopenlngdlvlslon. CrosscuiTetll has the rallln
the second division.
Stew Flrlotte, the trainer and
CO-&lt;lWIIeJ' of Ralph Hanover, was
happy over the draw, saying,
"There's an advantage to being that
close the ran. 1 tee! this is the
strongest Jug field ever. They all
have such outstanding times."
Ralph Hanover, purchased for
. $5'!,00) as a . yearling and being
syndicated for $7 million, is the
rtcbest harness horse bl a single
season. His 1983 bankroll has
surpassed $1,531,(0), beating NlaRAIDER GAJN - L&lt;l8 Anples Rlliders' nmnlng
a short gain Monday nlgbt durlug'second-half action
tross' old record. by more tluln
llodl Marcus Allm (32) · moves over the Miami
in L&lt;l8 ~- 'l1le Raiders defeated the Dolphins.
$100,(0).
·Dolpldns'llaebaeker Mark Brown (51) as he nms for
2'7·U to remain V"beeten UUs sea-. (AP
The Meadow Skipper colt, with
IBilerphoto).
Ron Waples driving, has won all but
four ort9starts this year. Included In
his 1983 victory total are h1Wllphs In
the firSt legs pf the Triple ·Crown,
.
The Messenger Stalre and The Cane
By The 4-x-tet..l Press
48-17 and went from lOth to llfth with
Michigan, Southern Methodist, Bos- Pace.
Texas made an Impressive debut 847polnts.
ton College and Florida State.
From the rail out; with thetr
this season by dowirlng fltth. ranked
Among the disappointed on SaturLast week, It was Georgia, drivers, here are the Jug entries:
Auburn In Its season opener. That
day were while Notre Dame,
Alabama , Iowa, USC, Florida,
First divlskm - 8-1 Del Cavallo,
victory boosted . the longhorns to
Auburn, Michigan and F1oi1da Washington, Maryland, SMU, Pitt Doug Ackerman: 9-2TimeToCash,
second place in The Associated
State, all of whom fell out of the Top and West VIrginia .
Jef1 James; 3-1 Savvy Almahurst,
Press coll€ge football poll- but far
Ten.
Boston College, 3-0, moved Into Jolm Campbell; 8-1 F. Troop,
behind top- ranked Nebraska.
Auburndroppedfromfltthtollth. the ratings for the first time this Waples; 15-1 Ticket To Ride, Billy
Nebraska, which routed MinneNotre Dame skidded from fourth to season with a 42-22 victory over Haughton; 8-1 Wind Damage; Dick
sota 84-13 was a near-unanimous 13th following a 28-23 upset loss to Rut~rs. The Eagles replaced
Farrtngton; 1().1 Elwood Hanover,
choice Monday as the nation's top
Michigan State. Michigan was Maryland In the Top·Twenty. The nodrl\oerasslgnedyet; and Fortune
college football team.The Corn·
edged by Washington 25-24 and went Terrapins had been 17th but were Teller, RayRemmen.
huskers' lopsided victory gave them
from No. 8 to 17th, while Florida beaten by West VIrginia 31-21.
a 3-0 record and a 184-.39scortngedge
State was beaten by Tulane 34-28
on their opponents.
and dropped fell from ninth to No. 20.
It also gave • the Big Eight
Alabama moved Into the Top Ten
The Daily Sentinel
powerbouse 57 of59tirsl-place votes
for the ftrsl time under Coach Ray
Top Twenty
and 1,178 of a possible 1,00 points
(USPSIG-. .)
Perkins. The Crlmson Tide clobThe Top 'tWenty teams 1n the AsSoCI·
A. Dlvlalon of Mllltlme41a, lac.
from a nallonwlde panel of sporls
bered Mlsslsslppl40-0 and rose from
ated Pres1 coUere IOotball poU, with ni'SI·
place voltS in parentheses, !le810n
wrtters and sportscasters. The two
Publlshed every afternoon. Monday
12th to sixth with 'l'JO points.
records and total points. Points build 011
through Friday, 111 Coun Street, by the
voters who did not rank the
:11-19-18-17-16-~l+-1J.12-ll-10-9-S-7~S+J -2Iowa, which handed defending
Ohio Valley Publishing Company · Mu1·
1,
ComhuskersNo.lhadthemsecOnct,
tlmedla, Jnc., Pomeroy, Ohlo45769, 992·
national champion Penn State its
lNetnska {57)
1,178
2156. Second class postage paid at Powith Texas first.
thlnl straight setback 42-34, jumped
2.Te.us (2)
1...
LU2
meroy, Ohlo.
lOtm State
L!IIl
'l1le Longhorns had 1,112 Points
from 13th to seventh with 732 points.
~. Arizona
Member: The Associated Press, Jn.
and replaced Oklahoma, which
The Hawkeyes were followed by
5.Ncrth C&amp;rollna
land Dally Press Assocla ton and the
• Alaboma
dropped trom second toetghth after
Oklahoma, with 700 poblts.
American N~spaper Publishers As1.1awa
losing to Ohio State 24-14. The
soclallon, National Adv~rtlslng RepreRounding out the Top Ten were
8.01dahoma
l -Ul
11XI
sentatlv~. Branham Newspaper Sales,
9.Washington
Buckeyes' victory vaulted them
Washington and Southern CaUfor733 Third Avenue, New York, New
IO.SOUthem Cal
1-1&gt;1
from sixth to third with 1,038 points.
York 10017.
·
H(l
nla. Washington shot from 16th to
ILA""""'
Theothermembersofthetopflve
12.
W
tst
V1re1n1a
ninth with 662 points.
POSTMASTER: Send address to The
1-l&lt;l
IJ.Notre Dame
were Arizona, whose seventh-place
Dally Sentinel , 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
II.Goorgla
Southem Cal cllmbed from 14th to
1-1&gt;1
Ohio 45769.
2-1&gt;1
ranking last week was Its highest
10th with 535 points by beating
16Pilbburgh
J47
ever, and North Carolina. Arizona
SUBSCRIP'l10N RATI!B
Oregon State 33-10.
1·1.(1
17.Mich!pn
319
l8.So. Methx!ist
By CUTler ar Motor Route
jumped to fourth with 9l'l points by
The Second Ten consists· of
11!1
One Week :.... ........................ ..... $!.()()
trouncing Washington State 45-&lt;&gt;.
2-1-(1
Auburn, West VIrginia, Notre
Zl.Fiorlda State
15'1
One Month ....... ......................... $4.&lt;10
North Carolina beltedMiamiotohlo
One Year .......... ..................... . $52.80
Dame, Georgia, F1or1da, Pitt,
SINGLECOPV

"·""""'

POOl1IALL
v...d . _ Foadliii.M&amp;Ite

l

area

WLPU.GI
Ill 10
.M3 72
73 T1
111&amp;l

IE

.e.7

·"' "

!Hunt 12-10) , tn l
MJnne5Qta (Wllliams 10.131 at Chicago
!Hoyt Jl.11}1, (n)
California {Jolwl )().}2) II KaNaB C11Y
! SpUttortr ll-7). In)
OtUtland !McCatty 6-8) Bl 'f'exu CHwgll
U -12 ), In/

711

..523 7~
!U7 10

r..day'aG~

bott 7-41, 2, lt· nl
Seattle !Moore ~71 at Tll"mto !S~
15-12 ), 1n1
MJJwallkte 1ca~u U-UI at ~
t.!d iSUtclllle 16-10), (n )

Pittsburgh

n

74
79

Pttutwp tMcWtWams \f-i l at New

......

1872

71

M

B\o!l

BaJUm;n (0. M.arttnm 7-14 and SW&amp;c·
gerty 1~1 at Dl!n'olt (Petry 17·9 and Ab-

PhlladelpNa
.......a!

78

.8

ac hedull!d

w~.G

.573 ..5f7 f

ON;y game~acbedulecl

·"" -

Boston 5, N~ von 3
Seattle 9, TOI"'ntO 6
Mt~ 7, OllcagQ 5
Baitlrn:n&gt; 8, Milwaukee 1, U trtlllags
Kansa.. Clly 8-7, Calltornla f-6
~ g~me~;

64
67

New Ya-k 5, Plttsburgb 4
· f'tUiadetphia 7. Chlaco 6
Montreal ~ Sl l..ouis 1).3
l..ai Anples !1, Jfou.u.-1 2
San Dqo .. San Frandlro 2

.M.1 ll Y.t
!111 14

.t n

8l

-·-

s.n

7~
9~

.fJ5l

lti

Lcs Angeles
Atlanta
liOustCl'l
San ~

4

Nt&gt;W Yor-k
T&lt;&gt;unto

.OJ 1B

Wflrr DIVIIION

d ... .,.,_
AIIJIBJaN L.&amp;Wi.r!:
EMTDMliON
W L Pet. Gl

. , The

62 · fll

New York

The Daily Sentinel

. .

.

.

.

'I.EVOLOR·

·.

urlng red, shades and tints: Mrs.
Robson, Stella Atkins, Pautlne
Atkins, and Mrs. Snowden.
"New StraltsvUle Moonshine
Festival," Interpretive: Mrs. J1obson, Pautlne Atkins, Neva Nicholson, Pearle Canaday.
'-'Nelsonville Parade of the H1lls,"
showing motion: Mrs. · Robson,
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Nicholson,
Anna Turner.
"Reynoldsburg Tomato Festl·
val," a modern design: Mrs.
Robson, Mrs. Canaday, Binda
Diehl, Pauline Atkins.
"Mlllersburg Corn Festival,"
modem design, International: Mrs.
Robson, Sharon Jewell, Octa Ward,
Mrs. Turner.
"Rio Grande Bob Evans Farm
Festival," Interpretive: Pat Holter,
Mrs. Robson, Pauline Atkins, Mrs .
Nicholson.
Winners In the junior division of
artistic arrangements were:
Cheryl Lynn Jewell, Apr11 Clark,
Mickey Stewart and Robin Smith,
bl both "Pomeroy's Regalia Frog
Jump," Including a frog figurine;
and "Roseville Pottery Festival,"
arrangement in a pottery

..

·,.

500/o OFF
lit us pnMde you with the fol.

lowitW
- · - shown in your
1. Semj;les
holle.
2. llelsurina windows and
dools.
3. lnsllllltion

WALLPAPER
SUPER MARKET

Auxiliary scholarship winner
The Cora Bennett Memorial
Scholarship of $lXI was awanled to
Paula Cunningham at the recent
meeting of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post.
128, Middleport.
The charter was draped In
memory of Margaret Cia!Worthy,
and the unit voted to make a $10
donation to the Meigs County
Muscular Dys(rophy Association,
and to send a gift ot $25 to Helen
Hanson, Eighth Distrtct president
for special proJects.
Several members attended a
recent party for patients at the
Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolvllle,
with 35 patients a~tendlng. Holding
the party were Ethel Hawk, Etta
Wlll, Erma Hendricks, Nettie
Hayes, Becky TYree. Grace Welsh,

and Gerrt Parsons.
II was noted that the Eighth .
District fall conference wll be held
on Oct. Gat Junction City.
Etta Will presided at the meeting
with Katie Gilmore giving the
prayer. Reported lll were Justin
Roush and Lelab Winebrenner with
Kenneth Madden, BobGllmoreand
Bob Hunnel, all patients at Holzer
Medical Center.
Buckeye Girls State delegates
Pam Reibel, Chris Wilson and
Bernita Deeter reported on thetr
week at the workshop in democracy
at Ashland College.
Guests at the meeting were Gail
Eichinger, Beretta Deeter, and
Glenna Reibel. The door prize
brought by Erma Hendricks was
won by Callie Richmond.

\

•

'.

,.
'

WE WELCOME

,•

..

YOU TO TRY
OUR NEW

'o'

.

,•

SPECIALTIES

WANTA
REAL ESTATE
·LICENSE?

verTheJob1

·eanCutlt
·Guess what just happened

It's 10 IIUV to be a member
of a growing profeaion.
Start now, by studying at
GBC. two aveninga a

FROM OUR
NEW NIGHT

to our interest rates.
If you've been waiting to take out a peoonalloan, a home
I~ loon. an automobile loan, a home equity loan,
or even establish a personallinedaedlt. your patience has
been rewarded. 0.Jr Interest rates a.e IO'Nefthan they've ·
been lnsome~me. CaU or visit the Otyloan and Savings
branch nearest you.

week.
We offer the IICCredhed
of class work you
.,. required to completa
befont 1lldng the Ohio
progRim

MENU.
· ENJOY THE GREAT FOOD
AND FINE ATMOSPHERE
TUESDAY- S·ATURDAY
5 P.M. • 10 P.M.

''
Rec. '2239 SALE

'1680

WI h . EnroU nowl CIIJ-1

will begin October 3. For

.•

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more

'I
••

Comw Stcond It Grape in Gellipolis

•

0 EARANa SALE .
ON TRULY FINE RJRNITURE

•

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-NOW IN PROGRESS
SAUl INDS

s.T._ 24)

information,

Contllet....

FURNITURE
GAUERIES

.,

State Board Eumlnatlon.
Completa in only 11

..,

rI

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
446-4367
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
No. 711·02·0472-B

STIHL's new mid-size saw Is right lor homeowners,

farmers and professionals. With electronic Ignition,
anti-vibration and a fully automatic oller for light·
weight high performance. Try one today.

POMEROY HOME llf AUTO

(52)
CITY LOI\.N &amp;. SAVINGS
a Control Data Company

llN DU'

600 hat Main S-1

Phone l6H) 992-2094

Pomeroy, 0. 45769

WE DO BRAKE SE~ICE; ALIGNIIENT-IIOST CARS 113.75

ST/HJ:.

Ttilii _,,, UJ~-T , . ,

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GALLIPOUS: 358 Seoond Ave, 446·1973
POMEROY: 125E. Main St.,992·2171

•'

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

6-The Daily

1983

Ohio

The Daily _Sentinel·

No handicap parking spaces
.q uestioned by bar operator
&lt;

Or Wtitt D1tll7 Stnltnel Cltsst~ted Dept

111 Court Sl . PorMIO)'. Ohto 45769

Betzmg said cons ideration is
given In every job and there is no
place for handicapped parking in
the vlllage except at village halL
Betzlng also noted that five
meters are roped off on Court Street
due to neglect by the owner. She felt
that she should beabletodriveupto
her place of business to pick up
money or deUver items.
Hartenbach, who was present,
when questioned said no one was in
the car when he placed a ticket on
the vehicle.
Betzlng said it was matter of
principle. Brown said that we
(council) should accomodate haneli·
capped people.
Hartenbach explained that as he
came up East Main Street •and

rounded the corner on Court Street
he saw the car and truck parked in
the yellow ioneand placed tickets on
both vehicles as he has been told to
do.
II was pointed out that there Is a
taxi space on Court Street, but there
Is no taxi service as the man that had
the service died. Council stated that
this is the case but the space was
paid for for one year.
Betzing again stated that the man
who Is crtppled Is let out of a car and
the driver pulls away and parks at a
parking meter. She stated ''It Is a
complete matter of principle."
Mayor Andrews said he would
void the ticket this time, but not In
the future. Betzlngreplled, "I'll pay
the ticket that Isn't the point."

.-

~

:f iscal account to he rotated
· In what may he the beginning of a
major house-cleaning move, the
•Gallla -Jackson-Me lgs Mental
'Jlealth 648 Board's fiscal account
,.wJJJ be rotated to auditor's offices in
'ail' three counties.
• The account will be transferred
from Meigs County to GaUia County
·on Jan. I, accoi'CIIngtotheresolution
apProved by the board.
; The resolution, introduced by
board member Warren Sheets,
deCreed that the account wt11
_r;emaln In Gallla County for two
.years and then he transferred to
_JackSon Cpunty for two years, at
.which time it wlll·go'baok to Meigs.
,." "The account has been With the
Meigs auditor for the past four
years. It had been filed with the
Gallla auditor's office for several
~ars until a conflict between
Maxine Plummer, the· thenexecutive d!Jmor, and theil-audltor
-Dorothy Candee resulted in the
¥count being transfelTed to Meigs

In 1979.
Sheets said he understood the
!lroblem arose over the legitimacy
of bills presented to Mrs. Candee for
payment.

~oviets
.

The Rev. Frank Hayes, &lt;mother
board member, said there had been
discussion of making a transfer, but
the conflict "played heavily" in the
eventual mov~ to Meigs :
·
"The primary customer Is Woodland Centers," Sheets said. "I don't
know why we shouldn't function In
the same county."
"The very fact your central
location Is here, you're going to
expedite It (llips to Pomeroy) and
save the taxpayers money," Sheets
argued later.
The board also agreed to make
copies. of the agenda. p~ousl
.meetingsmlilutesandpendlngbllls on hand available to board
members five days prior to lt.l
regular meeting.
It also agreed to review Its
contractural labor situation; lt.l
present financial status with Brei!·
Tru Press, publishers of 'The Hills
and Valleys are Mine: A Symposium on Rural Mental Health,"
which Mrs. Plummer arranged to
have published; and seek additional
accountability In the future of trlps
takm by board members and stalf.
The board also discussed the

possibility of dropping a lawsuit·
!lied In January against the Gallla
County commissioners and ' the
budgl't commisSion. The suit alleges
both ·.panels retused to- co11ecr the
county's ~ of .2-mlll operating
levy for 648 board functions In 1\181.
The levy W!IS defeated In a
renewal election in Gallla and
Jackson counties in November 1981,
but Is still In operation In Meigs,
where It passed.
Dr. Edwartl Berklch recom·
mended that If the board's budget
wasn't dependent on the 1981
revenue, It shouldn't pursue the
matter. .
·
· ·
·
Board Cha!Iman John Rice urged
the board to walt ontll Its next
meeting, wnen Hamlin King, the
attorney representing them, could
discuss the sult'sstatus. The matter
was then tabled.
The board also agreed to walt unW
October for an update on a suit
challenging the Ohio Department of
MentalHealth'smethodofdistrlbut·
lng Title XX funds.
The G.J·M board Is a co-plaintiff
In the suit, along with the648boards
of Franklin and Clark counties.

will tum over plane debris

WAKKANAI,Japan (AP) -The
Soviet Union Informed the.Japanese
Embassy In Moscow today that on
Sf!pt. 261t will hand over ''items and
dOcuments" from the South Korean
pa:§senger plane shot down by a
&amp;Met inteceptor, a Foreign Mlnistiy official said.
,; 1be offtcial, who asked not to be
Identified, said the Sovjets did not
e\liborate on the kind of material to
be_glven to the Japanese.
:lie said the Soviet government
aliked the Japanese to come to
·' '
Nevelisk,
on the west coast of
Sakhalin Island near the area where
tile -Korean Air Lines jetliner is
t!Jbught to have gone down, to
receive the material. The Sovtets
a&amp;&gt; specified that the Japanese are
no't to use a warship . The kind of
vessel to be used In the transaction is
Ullller dlscu'sslon, he said.
·:,The Soviet ambassador tn Japan,
¥1edJmlr Pavlov, said Sept. B that
the Soviet Union would turn over
1\ems from the downed Korean
alrCrafl "In the near future," and
tliat his country would report on Its
!;!!arch In accordance with "International practices.''
-·However, the Soviet Union has
stftce provided no details of Its
eXhaustive search of waters off
Sakhalin.
~ In those northern waters today,

Q.S. and Soviet vessels weathered a
storm that momentartly halted
search operations for the plane,
whlch was sbot down Sept. I witlj a
Joss of 269 Jives.
-·rn Washington, U.S. Navy sources
~ld the search vessel Narragansett
piCked up "pings" from the Korean
jetliner's "black. box" Monday but

Officials hope the recorders would
shed light on the Incident, perhaps
explaining why Fllght007, on a flight
from Anchorage, Alaska, to Seoul,
new Into restricted Soviet territory.
The jeWner was hit by air-to-air
missiles and crashed In the Sea of
Japan near tiny Moneron Island, off
the Soviets' Sakhalin Island.

laler lost the slgiw. They said the
ship heartl the sounds on an
undetwater microphone trailing In
the water.
U.S., Japanese and ·South Korean
vessels are taldrig part In what
appears to be an Increasingly
frenetic search for the "black box"
~ the flight recorders - of the
Boelng747 jetliner.

Meigs County happenings •.•
Emergency runs

Weekly winners

Five calls were answered Monday by local units, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service

Winners of the weekly drawing
held at the Dairy Isle, Middleport,
were Lorraine Hugle, Don King,
MOdred Riley, Judy JeweU, Dave
Roush, Neal Richmond, Patrlck
Mullen, BelindaRooe, Peggy Lewis,
and Thomas Roush.
Gifts were p~nted to the
winners. No purchase Is required to
participate.

reports.
At 12:33 p.m ., the Pomeroy Unit
wenttotheBallRunRoad, the scene
of a fatal accident; at 1: 10 p.m ..
Pomeroy took Fritz Buck from
Pomeroy to the Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 9:32p.m. took
Charles Lewis from Route 7 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid·
dleport at 3:45p.m. treated Barbara
Smith at 107 Park St., ani! at 9:21
Tuppers Plains treated Edla Dailey
at the Pit Stop Game Room.

Veterans Memorial
Admltted..Adam Bullington, Ru·
!land; Frank McElwalne, Pomeroy; Joyce Smith, Rutland; Freda
Henderson, Pomeroy; Otarles Lewis, Jr., Pomeroy.
Discharged--Harley Whaley,
Amy Varney, Adam Bullington.

Mee18 Wednesday
The Syracuse third Wednesday
clubv wt11 meet tomorrow at 10 a.m.
In the Municipal Building. Follow·lng the meeting, a picnic will be held
at the State park on U.S. 33.
Yearbooks wtll be!llledout. Persons
are to bering a covered dish and
table service.

Banquet set tonight
Middleport Lodge No. 363wtll hold

Its annual father and son banquet
this evening.
:

· Joyce E. Seelig to Charles J.
l'jilece. Barbara J. Neece, 1 acm,
Rutland.
•Franklin Real Estate Company
tO E. S. Villanueva , Lydia Villanueva, Lot 4, Pt Lot 3, Pomeroy
Village.
Laura S. Chalfant to William S.
~anning, Debra J . Fanning, 8.2122
acres, Scipio.
Clayton E : Green to Thomas L.
~rroughs Jr .. Carl E . Reed, Pt.
Lots 9-ICJ, Orange.
;Dennis J . Meier, Marsha H.
Ml'ler to Donald H. Maxson,
Geneva C. Maxson, Lots lB. 19,
Tuppers Plains.
Lulu M. Curry to Judith A.
Murphy, 100 acres, &amp;llem.
· Terry L. Smith, Rebecca J . Smith
It! Ohio Powef' Co., Right of Way,
Sutton.
John Easllet day to Ohio Power
co; Right of Way, Sution.
Frank W. Houser, Terrie L.
Houser to Ohio Power Co., Right of
l Way, Rutland.
'•

Paul A. English, Brenda L.
English to Secretary of Housing
and Urban Dev., Lot 14, Orange.
Richard Lee Stewart, Donna
Darlene Stewart to Charles E.
Shoemaker, VIrginia L. Shoemaker, Parcel, Salem.
Alan Lee Pugll, JUJ Pugll to
Bernard E. Rolltns, Clara F.
Rolltns, 9.90 acres, Bedford.
Roy Grueser, Opal Grueser to
William J . Pooler, Jr., Sharon A:
Pooler, 11.02 acres, Chester.
Arlie E. Collins, Nancy Collins to
Stephen Mendelson, Jeffrey Mendelson, Stanley Bohrof, Parcels,
Oltve.
Lawana F . Hoboclenskl, Walter
F. HoboclenSkl to Equitable Life
Assurance Society, Parcel,
Rutland.
Equitable Life Assurarice Society,
of the U.S. nka Equitable Relocation Management Corporation to
Malcolm Ingram, Mildred Ingram, •
9
Parcel, Rutland.

Harold M. Smith to Dana s.
Turner, Phyllis M. Turner, Lot 13,
Syracuse.

~

Laura Mae Nice, Harold T. Nice
to Edgar J. Hartung, Kenneth L.
Hartung, 1.2 acres, Chester.
Sara R. Rupe, deceased, Gerald
V. Rupe, affidavit, Sallsbw'y.
Kenneth White to Columbus &lt;md
Southern' Ohio Electrlc Company,
Right of Way, Chester.
· Trustees of M. E. Church to
Columblii and Sou1hern Ohio Electric Co., Right of Way, Chester.
Carl Nottingham, Mazy F. Nottingham to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electrlc Co., Right of Way,
Chester.
Robert H. Beymer, Barbara W.
Beymer to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., Right of Way, .
ScipiO.
Nathan L. Brady, Roberta R.
Brady 10 Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., Right ot Way.
Sclplo.

8

Business Services

~

Senlinei-'-Page 'f.

Public Sale
8t Auction

11

Help Wanted

Auction
Tuesday
n!ght, Pt. •v•rv
Plueant.
wva. Cterfcal Ellecutlve Part time
to t960 mo . lnterntitional
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth

film corp . has one loCIII

Ctnter Bldg .. Camden St. position .

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

or

Public Notice

Public Notic:e

Public Notice

Public Notice

REAL ESTATE SALE
UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA
ATHENS COUNTY
PROPERTY\ 140 acres. more

as requtred by the Qh1o Rules of
Crvrl Procedure. tudgment by
default will be rendered aga1 nst
you fo r the relief demanded rn
the co mpla1n1

wrn M l Corwrn Also kn own
as Mary l Corwrn deceased
Nell te 1 Bond, also known as
Nellie Isabell e Corw1 n Wdlta m
Moore Corwrn. Anna l ou rse
Bond. also known as Ann a
l oUise Rrbl en. also known as
l ourse Rrbl ett Wrlham C Bond
decease d . Harmo n Boothe
Borfd also known as Harmon
Bond deceased. Mary Isabelle
Bon d also kn own as Mary 8
Calvert Ar chard Clayton. Calvert. deceased Mar gar et R
Calvert. also known as Mar garet R Calvert Galloway
deceased
James Galloway
JoHn Galtowav Wilh am Carl
Galloway and Patnck F Galloway , rf deceased . add resses
unknown you are hereby not1·
Ired th at you have been' named
defendants rn a leg al ac!IOn
entitled John V Bogard. Sr
Pl arntrf1 vs W H Corwrn also
known as Wrllram Henry Corwm. et al Defendan t s Th ts
actron has been ass 1gned Case
Number 83 CV 130 and rs
pendmg 1n th e Court ol Com mon Pl eas of Met!lS Cou n1y
Pomeroy Ohr o 4 576 9
The OJeCt ot the Comp la1n t 1S
a part!tton acuon concernrn q
thP. orl and gas undertytn.g the
followrng descnbed raal as tate
Srtated rn the Townshtp or
l ebanon . Countv ol Mergs and
State of Ohto anQ known as
a part of SectiOn 2 1
3 Range 11 of the Ohro
Company 's Pu rcha se. co mmencmg on the line of adJOtntng land formerly owned by H
S lawrence at a stone co rner
on an agreed line between H C
Smrth and W S Sm rth the nce
west 75 deg ree S 6 1 rod's to a
II run and l M Smtth s lrne
thence N 21 degreA W down
the run- ·~lb nq l M Srnrth s lrn.p.
'to:the DeW !Its Run and Bashan·
Rt;~a d . thence rn an ~asterl~·
drrectro n alona the lrne of l a nd~
formerly owned by Freda reca
Bentz to the cen ter ot old road
thencf! 111 an eastP. rlydl rP.c lron 2
charns and 52 hnks tu a stake
th ence m an easterly dtrect1on 1
cham and 97 lrnks dovvn the
west stde o f School House Ru n
pu bl1 c roa d. thP.nce down
sard roa d one chiJ rn anti 80
lrnks to the line of lands ownHd
by l M Ft1ch thence E 80
dP.firee N along L M Frtch s
land to the Northwest corner of
lands known as the FtshP.r, lot.

less

consrstmg

of

two

PARCEL NUMBER ONE Comprt smg approxrmately 14
a cr P.~ 1S mostly rolhng wrth
consrde rable road frontage
Th1S parcel prevrouslywas used
for mobile home Sties and 1s
located JUSt behtnd Dow Lake

PARCEL NUMBER 1WO Compnsmg approxrmately 90
acres wrth 30 acres cropl and
and balance pasture and wood land A creek and gravel road
separate the cropland from
bBiance of'farm Improvements ·
1nclude three bedroom. 1 'h
story fra me dwellmg and a
good lwestock barn Buy one or
both to be olfered separately
and together
LOCATION One rnrle west off
SA 690 on County Road 34

INSPECTION AND INFORMA·
TION: The propeny will be
avarlable for mspectron o n
Septernber 2 1, 1983 from
200 pm to 400 p m For
addrt1onal rnfor matron contact
Farmers Home Adm1nrstratron
(FfTlHA) 22 1 West Second
·street Pomeroy Ohro 45769
or Telephone 614 -992 -6644
POSSESS ION PosseSSIOn at
t•m e of senlement

TEAMS OF SALE

1983

DATED August

18130 (9) 6 13 20, 27 (10)
6tc

Public Notice,
PIJBUC NOnCE
The Trustees of Rutland
.
Tow'nshrp wtlf offer for saiP. by
sealed· brds the fo ltowtn g used
eq u1pment
One 197 1 ln ter natron al
Dump Tru ck wrth 9 dump and

Ser No 416080H093836
One Home lrte 1 50 Charn
Saw

autom atr c

Ser

No

43232234
One
Ho1st
One
Sate
Brd s

1o· Dump Bed With

Gravely Mowrng Trac to r
wrll be as IS
wrll be accepted until

Sept 29 1983 at 6 30 p m
Btds w rll be opened Sept 29 .
1983 at 6 30 p m, at Rutland
Ftre House
(9) 13,. 2Q 2tc

Public Notice

Sealed

brds. on the forms prov1ded by
Farmers Home Admtnrsuatron
wil l be recetved untrl 2 00 p.m
on October 13. 1983 at whrch
trme they w ill be publrcly
opened
All brd s must be marled or
delrvered to Farmers Home
Adrntnrstratron Room 507
200 N_orth Hrgh St reet. F~d era l
Bu.ildmg ' Columbl[s Oh1o
43215 before the tr me of bid
openmg All brds must be
accompan1ed by a brd depoSit
10 •he amount of frve percen t (5
pe• cent) of the b1d ·
In order of preference to the
Governmen t the property w rll
be sold
1 for CASH
2 On ter ms of I 0 percent
down and balance ot the
purchase pnce pard rn 20
annual or 240 monthly amor tized payment s.
The government reserves the
nght to reJect any or all b1ds or
to watve any rnformaltty or
trregular rt y rn any b1ds
The property wrll be sold
Without reg ard to race color
relrgron. sex, age natrona!
orro rn or mantal status

191 16. 19. 20 3tc

. Public Notice
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
WILBUR OAtLEY.

....

Plaintiff

ANNIE OUN8AR. H living oncl
her hutbond If ony, ond to tho
widower, heirs, ....._, ond
next of kin of - 1 t Ill of
whose nemee or lddi'II8M are
unkmwn to tho plaintill.
OofendOnll
C.. No. 83-CV-227
NOTICE 8Y
PUBUCATION
To Annre Dunbar 1f lrvtng and
her husband tl any. and to
wr dower herrs devrsees and
next of k.111 of decedent. all of
whose names or addr esses are
unknown, you are hereby notl·
fred that you have been named
defendants tn a legal actro n
entrtl ed Wrlbur Oatley Platntrff
vs Ann1e Dunbar. rf lrvtng and
her husband rf any, and to the
w 1dower herrs devrsees. and
next of ktn at decadent. Defendants Thts actton has been
as srgned case number 83 -CV2 27 and IS pendrng rn the Court
of Common Pleas of M e1 gs
County Pome roy Ohro 4576 9
The Object ot the comp larnt rs
to parlrtton you Interest rn rea l
estate located rn Sect10n 6
Town 9 Range 15. Columbia
Townshrp. Metgs County, Ohro
an d the prayer IS to panl!ton
your rnterest for Judgment tor
Improvements made and taxes
pard and to setoft th at1 udgment
agarnst your rnterest rn the real
es tate and to have your •nt eres ts fore closed'
You are requrred to answer
the complarnt wrthrn 28 days
after the last pubhcat1on of tht s
notrce wh1c h wrH t)e publrshed
once each week for srx successrve vveeks The last pUEikat10n
wilt be made on October 4 and
th e 28 days for answer w rll
commence on that date
!n case of your failure to
ans...ver or otherwrse respo nd

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Cue No. 83 CY 130
John Y. Bogard, Sr.

...

Pleinllll

W. H. Cotwin,aloo known oo
Wlllem Henry Corwin. 01. ol.

DlifondonU

.

NOTICE ·
BY PUBUCAliON'
ToW H Corwrn also known
as Wtll1am Henry Corwrn .
whose last known address was
2 13 1h North Chestnut Street.
Clarksburg West Vrrgrnta. M L
Corwtn also known as M ay L
Corwrn, deceased whose last
known address was Clarks ·
burg. West V1rqrnr a, Nell re I
BOnd al so known ·as Nellie
Isabelle Corwm Bond deceased. whose last known
address wa s Rou1e 1 Mount
Clare W est V1rgrnra Wrlham
Moore C01\N1n. whose last
known address was Herrr ck. PA,
Anna lourse Bond also known
as Anna lourse R1blett. also
known as l ou tse Rrblell whose
last known address was Burton
Avenu e. Nutter Fork West
Vr rg1nta. Wtllram C Bond
deceased whose last known
address was 1281 Kansas
Avenu e. Akron Ohro Harmon
Boothe Bond • atso known as
Har mon Bond. rlece ased
wt10se last known address wa '"
Weston State Hosp1tal. Weston
West Vrrgrn1a Mary Isabelle
Bon d also known as Mary B
Calve!. whosP. lost known
add ress was 128 1 Kan sas
Avenu e. Akron Oht o R1chard
Clayton CalvP.rt necoased . ad dress unknown. M.Jrqaret A
CaiVen also known as Margaret A Calve rt Galloway
deceased whose lost known
addr ss rs unknown. James
Galloway whose last known
address was 1248 Florrda
Avenu e. Akron Ohro 44314
John Galloway. whose last
known address was 857 M 1d
dleturnprke Storrs Connect r·
cu t, W1tlram , Carl Galloway
whose last known address was
179 Pastors Walk Monroe
c6n
ut 06468whose
and last
Pa trr ck nectrc
F ,Galloway,
known address was Box 916
San lean dro. Ca lrf or n1 a
94577
rf hvtng and the
unknown her rs next of krn .
dev rsees l egatees l he u
spouses tf any th e executors.
the admrn1strator s and th e
ass1gns ol W H Corwrn, also
known as Wtlham Henry Cor -

54 Miec. Merchandiae

Special Discount
Prices At
POMEROY
LANDMARK
Alum. Asphalt Roof COllin&amp;
BliCk Asphllt Roof COllin&amp;

Roll Roofi~g
Aluminum Roofina
in All Llncths

Pomtnly Llndmat
614-992·2181

11

Help Wanted

then ce 1n a south ~ aste rlv d~rec­
t•on along F1shcr s line 20 rods

to a s t ak.~ thence m an easterlv
Qu echon alonq sa1rl F1 sher l1ne
36 rods nnd 9 lmks to a ledge ol
rocks. thP. sou theast corner of
F1st)er lo t thencA1n il ~outh e as­
terly d'rect1on to th e Oh1o A1ver
then ce down lhe.rJver to mouth
of Cf!mp Run thonce 111 a
Westerly cou rsf' up SHtrl ru n
wr th th e mPandennqs thereof
23 rods thence Sou th 30
rlegrPP. W 7 rod~ to O&lt;tr ley's
li ne t11ence S 44 dP. gree E 11
rods th F! ncR S 28 deqree E
along Oailpy's lin» 36 rods
th ence S 18 deQrP.P E alan~
A Bogard's lu1e 14 rods to a
beec h St\Jmp on the hank of a
run thence S 8 deqrep E i.llong
C A Bogard's tme to thP. place
of hegmnm g co ntat nmq 60 5
Acres more or less
Except\Il Q all the coal and
one-h alt of the mtnerals and
r1q ht tp m1ne and operat e ior
the snmn
At so P.xcep t1 ng a smal l parcel
all and hereto fore conveyed to
C A Bogard
RefP.rence OP.eds Volume
139 Paqe 5 11 Vo lume 193.
Page 808 M etqs Counrv Def!d
Records
and the pra yer rs that lhP.above
descrrt;led real-est ate tlr=; pa·r!ftl·
oned or orde n~d sold 1f rt canno t
be parlltroned th .:U nll rnterests
be set forth or be torfwe r barred
frorn assertma the samo for em
allowpnce o f atr ornPy fees
her em and co~ t ~
You arF rRqu ued to answer
the Compla1nt w1th1 n twen ty erght t28J duys aft er th e lilSt
publ rcatron of th1s llO!IC€ wh tch
wr it bn publrS il0d once each
week lor St&gt;- (6) success1ve
weeks The last oubl1catr on wrll
be mDQf' .on sept ember ' 20
1 9'83 · &lt;ind · lhf twenty erght
178! Hay s fo r snswer W11t
uornrn ence un th&lt;~l du1e
In cas e ot you r fntlllr A to
answf'lr or o1heMrse respond
JS requrrP.d by th P. Ohro Ru les of
Crv1l Pr ocf!fi ure tudqll1Hn t by
dclautl writ bFJ rendered aqarnst
you tor thA relrel dAmanded rn
th e Comp lc11nt

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes
•Walhera •DI•hwaahera
Rangea
•R efrigerator•
•Dryers •Freezers

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE '
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Dur,

New Holland. Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer

, . '· · Farm Equipment ·.
Parts &amp; Service

6'x6'

Up

S&amp;W TV
A'ND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
&amp; Scottie Smith
All Makes tnd loclels
Antenna Installation
House , Calls and Shop
Service Avoiltble
9-15·1 mo.

, .1.

Ph:614_,.3-Sl9i

CONTRACTING RECLAMATION
"Excavating

'Ponds
'Septic Tanks
'Hauling
949-2293

$3()0° A

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

_,-"

TON

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PH, 992-2280
2 2311C

Bill Gena Johnaon

Phone:
9151mOPd

I I 26-lfc

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Al TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Lowest Ratas

St. Rt.

124,

Pomeroy, OH.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Around
•Dump Truck

SeiVice
SEPTIC TANK$
• A SPECIALTY

Also Transmission

:PH. 992·5682 .
or 992-7121

742-2328

:~t~~~DJvsmis

JapaneH Sworda Wentedl
Poying UOO.OO min. Tom

Winter, 824 Patton, Springfield, Ill. 62702 (217) 644·
1811.
'

•LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
.
•LAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

ARROW FLASHING
SIGNS
FOR &amp;ALE OR RENT

8EOS -IRON, BRASS, old

furniture, gold, lllver dol·
l1r1, wood Ice boxat. atone
jart, entlquel, etc., Complete houaeholda. Write:

Wanted to buy. Now, uaed

6" 8t 8"·

Replacement Letters

JOHN'S AUTO SALES

,, ull

quiltty used cars.

1-61~82

Golllrolls

BONDED l WDRl OUMANTEED
PHON£ JIM CLIFFORD

JEWELL'S
On Siding
Gutter and Downspouts.
"Free Eatimatee"

PLUMBING and
HEATING
•Exporianced
•RIIHOIIIIble

•Woo1t Gueronteed

"12 Y-. Exp.... ,.."
''Work Guaranteed''

JOB -

R. E. HOME

BIG

OR SMALL

992·6030
Minersville, OH.

8119/tmo pd

THE
TROPHY
KING

v:1\ALLEY
l

Trophy

Manufacturers

$2 50 Each

PlAQUES

ENGRAVING
320 JERICHO RD.
PT.

1

AIR CONDITIONERS

RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
HEATING • PLUMBING

NATIONALINE

Plumbing &amp; Heating Supplies

11 You Want a
Plumber 8arl
You Wont Him Good"
I'LICIIIC IlL SlWIR ClEANER
11

....--=-·-iDIAI:.---.,
1
. 992·2036
AP-one Coli brinp

Ptompt Courtoous Sorvico
232 E.' 2nd
Pomoroy, 0.
Now's the tlltotoctt your lurnm reocly lor cold ftoltr, 10%
Discount on tny now fumm purchosod btloro Oct. 15.

USED
APPLIANCES
Washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

P.ULLINS
EXCAVATING
- Doz. .
- Boc;lthoeo
- DtJ1111TNcill
-Lo·Bov
- Tronchor

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
'
*Stainless Steel

-Witer
- SOwer
-GuUnoo

'

-Septic Syetomo
LARGE OR SMALL JOBS

P11. 992-2478
8-18·1 mo.

742-2352

PH: 1-304-773-5634
Mason, W. Va.
C. L. Kitchen'

3 Announcemanta

9 1HFC

A . Monin 814·992·6370 ,

Real Estate General

We Are Now Accepting Applications for Motor Route Drivers.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lneulltlon
•Storm Doort
•Storm Wr"dOWI
•Repla....,... Window•

Indiana

46616 .

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:

•N- Roaflng ,

,
FREE ESTIMATES

Georgoo CrHk Rd.
448-0294.

11

Cell

Complete Ettatea, bought or
-oloed. Phono 814·246·
9448.

4

Giveaway

THE DAILY SENTINEL

JAMES I&lt;EESEE
PH. 992-2772

992-2155

9-9-1 mo

Wt

CARRIER WANTED

PriA\Ifi!iliiytltlfll
~

CUSTOM

Position• avlileble no~ for
Regittered Nurtel and li·
cenHd Practical Nurse1.
Extonolve Employee benefit

programs. Contect Penon·
nol Office. t304) 875-3230

or write Lakin Hoapital,
Lokln, WY 25250.

Secreterv needed apply at
Ho-Med Service•. 2416
IJo1cktiO~ Avenue, Point PI••·
aant, Monday, Tueadey,
Wodnelldoy, 1· 4, 304· 876·
8998.

Wanted

Help Wanted

TrH trimming and removal.
FrH utlm•tea. 814·992-

949-2358

Owner laaviqllelp Co .. must sacrifice their homel
Neat and wtll kept in epod location . Two bedrooms
with room for IIOrt, full blsement and fenced lot
CALL TODAYI At this price it should be sold by to:
morrow.

$23.500.

CLELAND REALTY

CUSTOI WOIIIC - AIR 81US1t
JACKETS

QUANTITY IPECIALB
ANI Filii-LITTERING

6011. MAIN

POMEROY,OH.

I

CATALOG
MERCHANT

UNIFORMS
·8HIRT8
DPHIES

S-22·1 1111. pd.'

0Ngg • Patty Glbbi-Owtltn .

PH. 992·2178

1612)

BB8

·'

or Edison Hoblitetter-1 14192·2484.

For ule in Syrecull on
1 00•200 lot. 2 oulbulld·

ing•. room for lerge garden,

3 or 4 bedroom older horne.
need1 Npalr. *10.000. or
boot offor. 114-992·101141..
HOUSE and 3 loto for oalo,
112.000. Coli 304-8B2-

.. .._

283~ .

HOME LOANS Low flaod

rate. leaC:Ier Mortgage, 77 E.
State, Athono. Ohlo.1-114·
592· 3061 .

BRICK hou ... lerge cornar
lot, 20114 Moyo Drive, Now
Heven . Toseeeall304-882·
2 407.

------"""':HouM. 3 ec,.1 of lantt. 1
mHo from town. 304-1711·

1714,

23

Professional
Servicea

THREE bedroom modular
home, full b..·e ment with
fireplace in be•ement, on .1

PIANO TUNING B'ck to

aero of lond. Call 304·372·
96119 or 304-81111-34181

3824.

32 Mobile Homes

School Specie! •26 normal
tuninga. September only.
Ward's Keyboerd, 304-876·

for Sale

6040 or 814-949·2128.

I - - - - - -- - - -

-:1-:9::7-:4-:C::-h-am_p_lo_n_1_4_x_l_6-tu-r. ':

LPN 'o oppllcotlona cen bo

Sabyaitting in my home.
Racine area. have referen-

nlshed. with m•nv exlrea, on
large lot at Quell Creek Pt1H
Park. French City Brokerlng

1• now hiring staff RN'1 8r
obtained at Scenic Hlllt
Nuraing Center. Monday
thru Friday, 8AM to 4PM.
Coli 448-7160.
bettor limo to be en AVON

Puppy I moo. old, good with
kldo. Cell 814-246·6408.

3358.

Adult male Cockapoo to
good home . After 3 p .m. call
814· 9B6·4488.

Female dog. 7 month1 Collie. Black 6 white . Good
with children. John lambert
residence on New lima Rd .
Between Forest Acre1 P•rk
&amp;. Harritonville .
Clothing, 304-458· 1 823.

Large tree blocking driveway. cut down and remove
lor wood. 304·882·3188

ce•.

814- 949-2779 for

informetion.
Experienced care for
In mv home. Good meals.
Price beaed on care given.
814-992-8022.

Repr... ntatlve. Cell 446· 1~~~========

13_ _ _
Insurance
Foreat Products Marketing t _
_ _ _ _ __

Commlaaion wouk:l like to aurance Co. hll offered
announce an opening for 1 "rvicea for fire lnaur•nce
Forest Product• Marketing coverage In Galli• County
Specialiat . Thia per ton for almoet a century. Farm.
be responsible for home end personal property
op•orll!:ing a one·year re·
11 bl
program resource• of cover.-• are ava • • to
erN both inside and meet individual nHdt. Con·
outalde Ohio. The Speclelltt tact Kall Burleaon, agent.
will oloo o11iol OYROC in

_Ph_o_n_o_4
_4_&amp;_·_2_9_2_1_.- - eco· 1

other buainn1 and
nomic development promotion efforta. The ideal candl·
dlte will heve: a college
degrM timber or woodrelated buainna. Experience
In 1 local community or
economic development program Ia elao acceptable. The
1&gt;11ndldeto ohould have good

puppy, 3 month a old, 3041176·1 894.

To Oood Home - 8 puppi11.
four melea, two famelea,
mother labrador Retriever.
304·871-8830.

Need aomeona to tHr down
old gerege end keep lumber
11 poym- . See II 2006
Nonh Main St.. beoldo

Larry' a.
A couch and chair, nMda
wort., 304·1711· 77113.

mlrki-.ga, very

I.

4 bdr. ranch home. large LA.
full beaement. with gerage,
wood burner Included, city
1choola, 2 miles from town.
Coli 446·0278.

By owner HouH w;th 2
acrea more or leat. been
remodeled. orcherd, 87 ft.
woll, 122,000. Cell 814388-9063.

OVR DC.

740

Sooond

Str.. t. Portamouth, Ohio

Experienced mother of 2 will
do bebyolttlng In my homo.
Coli 448·0082.

46882. An Equal Opponun·
lty Employer.

WELDING, goo, electric,

Ptonner I Tho Ohio Yolloy

largo lobo. 304-875·38n.

Regional Development
Commlaalon ia ICDiptlng
eppllcatfons far en entry·
level potltlon •• Planner I

Loet and Found

Bachelor's degree II\. plan·
ning. buline11 or public
ldminlltretion Ia required,
Knowledge ar ex.,.lence
wHh o verlotv of 11010 ond-or

Coll814·992-8941.

federal grant or loan program• Ia diiii'Nble. Expe·
rlance In community planning It profarrod. Appllconto
wll bo requlrod 10 travol

throughout an eleven county
dlotrlot In ooutharn Ohio.
A11ume• art to be mailed to

Executive Director,

OYRDC, 740 8ocond
Stroot, Ponomouth, Ohio
41112. Doo. .no lor appll·
cation• II loptambor 30,
1983. An Equal Opponunily
Employer.
Wonted MIITERY CUSTO·
MER Un&lt;lor aovw pl1u

oonaumer to evelu1te dillY·
..., HI'Vtaa 6 produot on a
monthly boola. Muot live
whhln tho dollvaoy .... ' of
our new Domlno"l P1zu
ltoro located It 100 Znd.
Ave .. Galllpolla. Muot enjoy

1 frH plae once • manth.
Call toll froo OD Sept. 2111.
1·100·821-3174. Ooml·

no'e Piau, Inc.

14x70,.. 2

bdr ., totel electric. central
eir. exc. cond. Can be left on

or beat offer. Call 441....
2798.

.

1979 12x85 Uberty mobllll

home pertlyfurn., very good
cond. Mull ooll , Coli e14·
245·9294 or e14·24$.'
5175.
• .
1981

Klngoley

mobile

Schuhz· The oil new Schuhz

underpinning,. reaaon fo,r
selling mutt relocate :·

modular home. quellfled for
W.VA. houalng money. See
et French Cltv Mobile
Homoa. Inc .. 44e-1340.

Johnoono Rldgo Rd. For
moro Information, 441·

duced . Coll814-992·8941.

Located In SyracuH·Near

ochool &amp; owlmmlng pool . 3

bedroom 11tueted on onethird aero lot. 124,500. or

will rent for *275 mo.
3o4-8B6·3834 ,
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· Ranch typo (Brick! . 3 bod·
LISHING CO. racommenclo rooma. flreplece. tlttaahed
thot you do buolneoo with gerage, full baaement,
pooplo you know, and NOT newly ohlngllld roof. wolklng
to oond monev through tho dlatance .co PcHneroy Ele·
mell until you h•v• lnvaltl· montary School. 140.000.
Call814-992-8143.
goted tho offering.

For lean. Auto Bervlot
Center, Muon, wv. 3 bays,
2 holata. exceUant locetlon,
aucculful bualn•• for over

1979 Sterling

I

air, 2 bdr. flropleco, utUitv
room, 1 V. bolho, owning,.

Waah end wu cara, • 1 0 and 7630.
supply wax. 1110 mobile
homea. campeJ'I, RV'a. 304· Mlddlepon. remodoled, flve
rooma end bath. gu fur178- 2517 .
nence, co1y flreplaoe. good
neighborhood. Prloe re-

Business
0 pportu nlty

'

appointment only. Coll448·
9340, 448-7Q01 or 814·
21e·l413.

porteble. exp~rlenced de- 3 bdr. houH, llvlngroom,
pendable. low rate1, smell or kitchen. a. bath. 9 ecraa on

21

Mobile Homeo. Inc., 448-

9340.

1982 Ylndela mobllo homO&gt;
1 Ox80 with rongo. 13,000

hmo. Cell 446-4047.

Ploooa

Ceah dlacount1, 24x40~
Clayton sectional. 3 bdr ..
1 lh baths, flrephtca, patio·
door. Cathedral ceiling. Del·
ivered in set. French Clty.i

dlolo potoolllon. Cell 814·
245·6281

e14.000-t17,000.

submit resume and thrM
references by September 30
to: Executive Director.

MOthlr will babysit in own

• ••

ronlod lot. French Cltv Brok•
oring Sorvlco, 448-9340 . .. ,

General Hauling end Traah deled home wtth fireplace,
removal Service . Rellebla po11lble woodburner, cloH
and dependeble. C•ll 446· to IChOOII end lhopping .

448-3169, 9 to 6 ,

9340.

3 bedroom houae with firepiece. centre! air. 2 fuM
betha. in city limits. lmme-

In Mlddlopon, newly remo-

3111 between 9 ond 6.

·

Newly remodeled 2 1tory Free central air, 1 983 Red-..
freme. 1 '!1.1 beth. 3"h acr11, men 14a70, 3 bdr .. 2 tutf
city achoolt. riverview. baths, cathedral ceiling, del·
132,000, Cell 446·4222 ivered In aet. French City;_
between
e.Mobile Homes. Inc .• 448 -:

Llwn Mowing no vard to big Extra nice hou11 on Rt. 15154,
or amall . Reliable end depen· approx. 3 mi. Eaat af Poner.
dable. For eatimate call price reduced. Shown by

whh o .. lory range of
110,000- 112,000 , A

LOST: 1 largo brown dog . 1
omaU brown doe. 1 oman
block 6 brown clog. Stlvora·
vMio a.... II found contact
62338 Bald Knob·
ltlverovllla Rd.

18 Wanted to Do

Serviceo, 448-9340.

written and orel preHnte·
akiUa ond be willing to
travel extenalvely. A kr'lowl·
edge of ttate and federal
bualneaa loan program• 11
deaireable. Selery range

playful. 304·871·5203 .

Pomeroy.

CAPS

Mr. Loughlin
6666 .

room, sitting room, lerge
kitchen, bath, ~II furn.C.,

Scenic Hlllo Nurolng Contar

Call 814-246-54113.

Doberman.
tall, approxl·
laturdoy on

PRINT

e7,900 lo ,e24,900. invon·

22 Monfly to' Loan

' '"

6·8 wk. old. kitten. 2 · 4 mo.

Installed And
War11nted by Sears
For 5 Yurs.

On

Venderbllt , lzod , Gunne
S11x. Eaprit. Brittania. Calvin
Klein,Oceen Peciflc, h•n
Picone. Haberdashery.
Healthtex. 300 othera .
tory, airfare. training, fix.
turea, grand opening, etc.

...........
....
.. "" .... .. .

old female kitten 8r mother. There haa never .been a

FOUND block Groot Dane.
Call14·245-11474.

*CHAIN LINK
FENCING,

Jordocho. Chic. Leo. Levi.

HAVE a Merri-Mac Party or
pu• • catalog and earn
Christmas presantl FREE.
Guaranteed glftl, toys,
home decor. Call 304-675·
57.&amp;8 for information~

oliver

Phone 814-246-9448 . ·

6

"FREE ESTIMATES"

born.ond 1 aero. C.ll Goorgo
H obotoller-8"1 4-982·217..8

1.~··~~a . Apparel , Combfno-

1---------colnl, rlnga.jawelry, sterling Lalit chance, lalt week of
gold,

SWEEPER and aewlng m•·
chine repair, parta, and
aupplle1.
Pick up end
delivery, D•vla Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

w~ white

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

,eccallorle.l or llrSHJ
Size Store. National brands:

Hobatetter home on Ao...

Wanted To Buy quOta. hendltitched only.

8 month old puppy, black

4, Pomeroy

Hlll- 2 bodroomo. Iorge living

of · December. No lnvoll·
mont. Coli 814-992-6691
or 814-387·7no or 304·
OLD 773· 5111 or 773-5224,

Part Alaakan Spitz, female

PERSONAUZED
POOLS

your own JeanSp•OnliWIIBr. Infant-Preteen,

Mldcllopon, oh. 814- 9823478.

eftor 4 p.m.

9 9 l 1110

Own

;=========;,f.;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;

addl·

ware, old coins, large cur· hiring, ladlea for Houae of
rancy. Top pricea. Ed. Bur- lloyd. *6 per hour. frat
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave. 83DO kit, juat work till flrat:

IHO;Uc

pel

lor

a. 1----------

antiqua furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete hpuaeholda . Alao ~omplate Auctlonaering aervlce. Call Otby
Buying dally

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
Lon&amp; Botto{ll. OH. 45743
98Hl93 or 992-3067

Galllpoll1 Ferry. 21tl · •
22nd, 9 -6. Tum leh It
Berber Shop .

tional lnformetion.

equipment. Coli 614-379·
2409 after &amp;PM .

I ll He

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
inc - Sldln1 - Concrete
Patios Sldewelks - ·
New Construction - Ra·
modelin&amp; - Custom Polo
B1rns.

follow algns. Baby items.
clothe•. dlthea, a little bit of
everything Ia 2 Browning
shot guns. aweet 18 Hght
12. Call 446·0082.

Miller, Melgo High SQhool 1
Principal,
at the achool or et )I"

Cub or A Farm all tractor and Blvd . , Elkhart,

PAT' Kill FORD-

4·21-tk

leather coat, boott, etc.

&amp; Vicinity

&amp;
Sot of good quilting fremes. tween
Call 304-458·1818 oflor son. If you meat above
qualification• plea•• write
6PM,
for Interview, 541 Copltol

Wa can rapelr and ,.... •
•COfll radiltonl and haa·
tar cores. We can 8110
acid boll and rod outrs·
dlatorl. We aleo rspalr
O,.Tirics.

Thurodoy, ~rldoy. Boby bod,

drapet, bedtpreada. clo ·
thing and much mor'e.
•·

·.... "fif i'iiei:isiirif ...:.

Olive St., Golllpolla, Oh .

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Vard a~le·Hereld Osborn
realdence . Wednead•y.

22,23,24 7:30-7:00. Toke
At. 7 . toward Addison &amp;

oond , Coli 814-387-05to,

992-2196

Thurodoy - Frldoy, 9 · 5 .

reald.,.ce,

Rutland . Wed., Sept. 21 6
Thura.. Sept . 22 .

4 Family Garage Sale Sept.

Washert It dryer. Moat any

Mlddloport, Ohio

4 Femlly Yard Sale 2nd,
houte Turkey Run Rd .

Wanted to buy uaed coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furnl·
tura, 446· 3169. 3rd. &amp;

Reaidence: 985-3137
Warehou1e: 985 -3509

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Herman,, Gr•t•
Yard Sale Fri.. only. Adultl
•nd children• clothing. toya,
furn ., mlac. Maple St Rio
Gl'lnde, 9·5 .

Melgt local School

81~·912-2188

446·3672

·----······ · ··· ······~·· ·· ····

Dlotrictlo aooklng oppilconto

tor • part·tlme cla..room
lnltructor for Driver Educe·
9 Wan1ed To Buy
tion . Atly pel'lon certified by
the State of Ohio interelted
We pey cash for late model lnthlapositlonahouldcontln
thi1 potitlect Mr. J1m11
clean uud cart.
Jim Mink Chov. ·Oido' lnc.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

rodo, mloc. Cell 448-2946 .

Box 721-0. c-o The Dolly

Ball AuctionMr. 304-428· The

8177.

'Drips

(fr• E1timat11)

ren clothing, 2· 24 montha.
amall appliances. cunaina,

1 :00 till oole limo. Emma

*Water Pipe
'Gas Pipe
*Regulators
*Fittings

Rwflt. and .,..., warl&amp;:
....r--OOuale wed
_,. ...... and

11 -ll·lfc

&amp; labor

Blown Insulation

992·2259

MI. Alto

...... Pom&amp;rov .........

Sept. 19· 21. Mon. 9-6 .
Tuoo. 2-8. Wed. 9-4. Child·

training . Manegem.nt poswelcoma. Richard Reynolda alble whhln 1 few months.
Earn while you l11rn. Full or
Auctioneer. 275·3089 .
111111 time . For personal inter·
AUCTION every Seturday view send resume to' P.O.
6 p.m.

Yard SalaAcro.n from Rio ·
Grondo Coli- on Rt. 326.
Tue. • Wad. Refrlgeretor &amp;
Furniture .

1- - - - - -

Y•rd S•le Johnaon Ridge
Rd ., Firat houae on right

t200 to t400 1 week
poaeible after company

Speclollll The Ohio Velloy ,Regional Oovolopmenl SANOY AND BEAVER in·

J&amp;l

Route

949•226~

· G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

-Addonoandromodolint

PH. 992·7583
or 992-2282

Also Blown Insulation

B l ·llt

PART-TIME HELP IN MIDDLEPORT
NEEDED AT ONCE.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY
GOOD PAY
CONTACT 992-2156

STRIP
COAL

•DOZER

15 Yean Experience
GREG ROUSH

PH . 992-2772

M.L

MINE RUN

CONTRACTING

New Homes - Extensive
Remodeling.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bides.
&amp; Garaces
•Roofing Work
tAI11rtinum &amp; Vinyl Sidin&amp;S

Vinyl Replacement
Windows

1{] -6-tft

Call:

or ,949-3091~ 10 ,,

No Sunday

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

"free Esf;mates "

P&amp;S Recine,
BUILDINGS
Oh.

W01k Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

I

&amp; Vicinity
- ~ - --···-··-······-···· · ·- -···

w.....1-----------

All

or

814-985-4134 . We need
dealers In your area .

Auction Bern. Consign · Sentinel, Pomeroy , Oh.
mentJ. taken ~tYerv Saturdey 45789.

J&amp;F

Ph. 9815-4289

Certainteed

As low As

· to 24'136'

9 12-1 mo

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckload• of new
merchendiM every
Conalgmenta of new end
uud merchandise alwaye

M.O. Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Oh . Or 992-7780.

tr=========:;-r,:::::::::::::::::::;

Sizes from

949·2801
949-2860.

CHESTER, OH .

1·3·tlc

Business Senices

Material

REPAIR

.. ... ·Gaiiiiioiis ·· ..... ·

t714)821·8900

Ucenaed 8a bond td tn Ohio &amp; unlimited earning potential.
WVo , 304 -773-'785 or Sal Lingerie at home per·
304-773·918C
ties . No delivery, ' ' " treln·
lng. Call 304-295-9787 or

01 repair, gutterS and
downspouts, gutter clean·
ing and paintillll, stonn
doors and windows.

tree sidinces·

Call for
timates,

~-....'ll

Call today .

A lck Pearson Auctioneer ladle•E•m extra money for
Service . Ettate, Ferm, An- tho holldayo. Become on
11que II llquldetl '" ules. undercover wear agent with

,._

1----------_.,__________

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Buill

4·5 1fc

The Daily Sentinel

12'116'

"Beautiful, Custom
Garages"

AND

PARTS end SERVICE

(8) 16, 23. 30: (9) 6. 13, 20.
6tc
166-1120

.,

Sizes start from

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

814-367· 7101 .

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING
All cypes of roof work. new

night.

Dewevne William•

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

SIDING

AUTO
PARTS

3 7 tfc

Date Aug 1 2, 1983.
Lony E. Spencer.
Cleric. of Courts, Meigs Co.
Common Pleas Court

R1cine, OH.

ATTENTION

For all your wiring
neads; furnaces re· · ,
pair service and inatallation.
Residantial
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3196

c

SUCCESSFUt
BUSINESS
IS A CI.NCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH!

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

CHESTER

If No Answer, Coli 985·4382

lnsulatd Doe Houses

-:-:-...,..,:..-:--7:-:---:--

Meigs County property transfers.•

Ohia

_______...;.__T""___...,_____'"'T_ _ _ _.:.,._ _ _ _ _"T"_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

•

The lack of handicap parking
spaces In Pomeroy near a village
bar brought forth a protest at
Monday ' s Pomeroy Cou ncil
meeting.
Barbara ~tzlng, owner and
operator of The Stag Bar. Pomeroy,
notro a customer, who Is unable to
.walk without the support of two
canes, was drive n to her establish·
,ment by a lady. who parked on Court
Street and took the man in and then
came back to her car a nd moved it to
a 'parking place.
• On one occasion while the lady
was helping the man in, village
meterman Steve Hartenbach saw
the car parked on Court In a yellow
·zone and placed a ticket on the car '
•
P,S well as, a delivery truck.

'

PHONE 992-2156

1983

home. All electric. centr'al

118.0 0. Cell 814-248"·
51172 or 814·245·8500.

Houae trailer by ••led bldt

to;

1989 modol. 3 bdr.,
Information coil 814·2BB,
11061.

1-----------'1972 14x88 Callie with 82

•

Vemco roomette 10K20, atr;
flroploco. Coli 81(..

II·~~~~~=~=~=
·

Reduced from 118,900 to
117.600. Excellent buy on

1980 Wlndoor 14•70 whh"
oapendo , 3 BR, 2 bothl.' ·

centr•l efr and much more.
Rodney-Cora Rd. noar GaUlpoll a. Previous "lookera.. -~
wolcomo.

for Info.

304·178 · 1721 .

11118 1 Ox60 Pontloc Chlof

trailer. good cond .• retaon ......
blo price. Call 441· 7813.

•

12a88 Ylndalo mobllo

home. I' exp•ndo living '&lt;
room, ell el.ctrlc whh WOOd ~
burning ltOVIt, large con· •
crete petlo lncludlng1 room

3 bedroom, 2 bath. r1nge. ' ramodolod achool bulldlni •
r-'rlgerator. washer a dryer, with wood burning nave. •.
freezer. ga1 or wood bwning carpon 6 wood llorage , •
furnaco . 132,000. 114· building on 2 ec,.,, Ham- ~

30 y..ro. available aflar 848-2138.
Aug . 8 . 1983. Call aftor I
roome. 2 beclroorne, 01r·
p.m., 1·304·171·2182.
poted, nllurol goo, city
OPEN A BEAUTIFUL wa,lor and ,ewago, wHh
JEAN I, lporuwaar or oatrolot·100x102. locllod
Chlldron'l 8hop. FREE lnMaaonllthocomoroflth
BROCHURE. Top lrandol • Brown. For more info, ooll
Low Prlcool 113.171 to ,114-948-2815.
e1 1.875 10 aomplotaly lot
you up. Call 1·404·411· HouM and 3 lou for oalo.
'4 438.
1
112,000. 304-882·2831.

e

lock Orova. 114· 941·3051

after 15 for more Info.

.

197412x80 Kirkwood with
12x1e room edded on. n '
80x120 lot . 814·247 · ··,
3895.
1~=-:--:------,-1974 mobllo homo . 14•70. 3 bedroom, total oloatrla.
814·812·1887 oflor 8 :30

�Sentinel
32 Mobile Homes ·
for Sale

· They'll Do It Every Time

1966 SCHULTZ mobile
home, 10x50 with tipout.
new carpet, pricud $2700.
1962 ·Jaguar XKE· 85 per -

New Oak Furniture, tables.
c:halra. cupboards. pie safe.
dry 1in1.s. Paul Conkel•
Antiquet, "1 upperl Plains.

cent restored. e•cellent condition, S9 ,000 . Call 3 04-

675 -1578.

Will ·t:' u. l

Mobile hom e . 304 -675 3862 or 675-23 39 after 6 .

Building 24x24 , 4 roomt,
furnance. bath, paneled &amp; ·
carpeted . Excellent building
for office. Can be moved ua
double wida. Cal1448-3417

~+• 7i
"'
Wlt.P: 61L.l..:'

or 448-4188.

SPRI~G LAI'e:,
N•.J.

· 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
·3Watson
6 acres Rd
at .Rodney
W.T.
Owner on
flnanc·
ing available. Call446·8221
altar 6 weekdays.
One house
acre lotand
within-ground
platform
for
pool, for Information, 813686-1232.

'

Nice lot-on Raccoon Creek
with 19 ft . travel trailer
awning 8t deck. priced to
sell. Cell 446-9340, 446·
7901 or614-256·6413.
1 acre or more lots for .ale,
on old Rt. 160 near Porter.

_Coli 614-388-B801 . .
. .

44

Apartment

for Rent
Forloooemodern,unfurn .. 2
bdr . apt. Overlooking city
park. Include• range &amp; re·
trig.
mo. Cell 446 .
8176
or evenings 446
.
1819.
4426
1---------Fumished apt. 1 bdr .. adutts,
607 2nd. Ave .. Gallipolis..
$200 mo. utilities paid.
44:8-4418 aft.;tr 7 p.rh . ._ .

1.2 acres land with two Furnished efficiency aptt.
rental trailer. For IBie Good location in town, no
pets. dep. 8t references req.
U6.000. call 448-8683.
'Call Mr. Dobson 446 . 2046
Lot for ~ale In Gallipolis dayt. 448·2 8 02 evet.
Ferry. 304·675-5356.
Furnished 3 rooms, with
private bath . Reference preferred. Call 446- 221 IS .

E.tate Apartmenta
41 Houses for Rent Jackson
~36 Jack,~;~n · Pjke (Equal
Housing OpportUnity) has
one . bedroom apartmenti
4 bdr ...house 6 acres of land rent starting at f167 and
on Rt. 160 In Vinton . Central two bedroom rent starting at
air, $360 mo ., sec. dep. &amp; 8193. *200 depooit. col
ref. call 448-3175.
446·2745 or leave mel8age
on answering service.
Houle, 3 bdr. , unfuml1hed,

51

Household Goods

Water heater 62 gal. electric
used 2 months. $160. Call
446-8168.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, otto·
man, 3 tablee, (extra heavy·
by Frontier). $886 . Sofa,
chair and loveseat. $276.
Sofa. and Ch.lror.lc.d from
$285. to $895. eblao. $45
and up to $126. Hide-ab1Pdt,.8440. and up to
$626., Recliners. 817&amp; . to
8360., Lamps from 828. to
876 · 6 pc. ·di"nettes from
8 9 9 ·· to 84 36. 7 pc., $189.
aod up. Wood table" with eix
chain 8425. to 8746. Desk
$110 up to 8226. Hutch••~
$&amp;SO. and up. maple or pine
finish, Bunk bed complete
with manresaes, 8260. and
up to U96. Baby bodo.
$110. Mattresaes or box
springs, full or twin, t&amp;S..
firm, t88: end $78. OuMh
aets, 8196. 4 dr. ch8eta.
f42 . 5 dr. cheoto, f64. Sed
framet. 820 .and 826 .• 10
gun • Qun cabinetl, 8360.,
dinenechaira •20.and $2" .
u
Gas or electric ranges, 8326
up to •376. Baby matresMa.
U5 &amp; t35, bad fremeo 820.
$25. • $30. king frame f50.
Good selection of bedroom
tuitet, cedar cheats.
rockers, metal cabinet•.
swivel rockers.
U1ed Furniture ·• bookcaH.
ranges, chairs. dlnnett set,
wood table and chairs, dry·
era. refrigerators and TV's . 3
miles out Bulaville Rd . Open
9am to 8pm, Mon. thru Fri .,
9am to 6pm. Sat.
446-0322

Rodney Village II. $276 mo. FurnltheCI upstairs apt ., 2
Call 446-4418 after 7 p.m. rooms &amp;. bath, clean, aduhs
only. no pets, ref. req . Call
Modern 3 bdr. ranch with 448 -1519.
basement. North At. 160.
Rof. • dep. Coli 446-0696. Apt. for rent" partially turn ..
Small1 bdr. cottegelocated tuitable tor adultt, no pets.
on Neighborhood Rd. Ref. • g~~1 446·3733. eve. 446•ec. dap. required. Callevee. 1 - - - - - - - - - 446-0264.
1 bed room Apt. 8196. mo.
including utilities. Equal
2 bdr. house on At. 7 houelng opportunity. Con·
unfurnished .260 mo. plu~ 1act VIllage Manor Apts.
sac. dep. Call 614-256- 614-992-7787.
TV &amp;. Appli1ncas. 627 Third
1413.
Ave., Gallipolia, 448-1899.
1 room &amp; bath, furnished Spin
weshars, gaa &amp; electric
Full basement 1 Vz story with efficiency Apt. in Langsville,
city water. dbl. garage, Oh. 8100. month. 614-982- dryers, auto washers, gas 8t
electric ranges, rafrigera·
garden. small child ac- 5692.
ton. TV sets.
cepted . references . 304·
675: 1076.
Furnished efficiency and 2 REBUILT APPliANCES
bedroom Apt. in Middleport,
NEW HAVEN. 1paclous, 3 Oh . No pett. Months rent Wathere. dryare, rangee,
bedroom home, new kitchen plus $100 security. 814· rafrigeratort. Shop repair,
bring it in • Seve. Call
with JennAir, famll'y room. 992-3874.
446-8181 .
fireplaca. 2 baths. patio.
nice yard. 304-SS2-2405. 1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
304-876-6540. 304-SS2- apto. 614-992-5434, 614- *65.00 II up good uoed
washers • dryera. 30 day•
2447.
992-5914 or 304-882- warrenty, good number to
2566.
chooae from . Call 614·2661207.
42 Mobile Homes
Apartments . 304·675·
for Rent
6548 .
SWAIN
APARTMENTS, mobile AUCTION • FURNITURE
2 Olive St.. Galllpollo. 8
3 bdr. doublewide in John- homes, houtes. Pt. Plea~al'lt 8_
Piece
living room aultl
sons Mobile H.ome Park. and Gallipolis. 614-446· with 6wood
Inch flet arms $399
Private yard. $300 per mo.. 8221 .
bunk bedt complete with
includes water, tewage, gar· 1 -=:~:-:-~~--,--­ bunkie• $199, 2 piece anoge pickup. gas. Hao gao TWIN RIVERS TOWER. tron livingroom auittt 1199.
range, water heater. Electric Apartment• now availeblelo
recliners 899, other
not Included, no pats. Li· elderly &amp; disabled with an an1ron
recliners
eao. maple dinette
mlted to 2 children, c:lty income of leaa then aets $179,
love seats 870
achool. clo18 to K·Mart • •12.300. Renting for 30 hi~e-a
bed
• 260 , bo~
Silver Brldgey Shopping percent of adjusted income- apnngs &amp; manre11
twhi or
Center. Call 446-3647 or .Phone 304·676-6879.
$1 00 let reguler-firm
446-4028 altar BPM.
I - - - - - - - - - full
FURNISHED apartment, 8120. maple dinette chalre
836. wash stands $34,
12x60 2 bedroom trailer adulu. no pets. phone 304· meple rockert $69, 7 piece
676-14~3
.
furnithed. *260 mo. Gas &amp;
dinette eat 8149, 5
water paid, $100 deposit. 1 - - - - - - - - - - chrome
place
dinette
aet $89. used
Call "46-61583.
TWO bedroom apartment in
Henderson , phone 304· bedroom suite•. reflrgeraton, ranges. cheat, dre11ers,
2 bdr. unfurn. mobile home, 876-1972.
wringer wuhere, rv· •.
on Rt. 31!5. Oe~. &amp;. ref. req.
dryerea, &amp; 1hoes. Call 446·
Three
room
furnished
apartColi 448-4229 .
ment. outskirts Henderson. 3159.
12x50 Mobile Home 8140. Ground floor~ all utilitieal::;:~=========
month plus utilitiea. $60. included. f246.00 month 54 Mt'ac. Merchandt'se
dapooit. No peto. 614· 992· Phone 304·675-6730.
11284 ~r 614-992-5732.

Mobile home Iota for rent,
weter sewer furn.ished, 1
email child accepted. 3041171-1076.

44

Guna-600 guns, new and
used . HaJ!d guns. rifles,
shotguns. extra bai"rels.
priced f.r below current
marfcet. 26 p8rcent will lay
away . Will trade for boats or
most anything. Shot shells·
high power $6.00, slugs
•2 .26. other ammo below
coat. 9-6 except Sunday.
814-992-7484 for evening
appointment. FIFE'S . 3rd.
St. Middleport. Oh.

~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~ cloHup
33mm Petri
Flash.
lenacamera.
&amp; case
in·

'

12x60 Mobile Home. 8160.
month plut utllltiea. 850.
deposit. No petl . 614-992 :
62S4 or 614-992-6732.

s .oker furnance

24', gn'ld cond . Call 446·
1572.

Business
Buildings

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 448-0758 .
Sleeping room •116. utilities paid, range &amp; refrig.
Share bath. Man only, 4484418 alter 7 p.m.

Apartment
for Rent

Romm e. board in 1 nice
private home to e retired
gentleman . Anewer to box
In care of the Gallipolis
2 bdr . Regency Inc. Apart· 300
Daily
Tribune, 825 Third
menta Utilties partly furn ..
apartments available now. Ave .. Gollipollo, Oh 45631 .
8200 per mo. A-One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager, Reel- 46 Space for Rent
tor. Call 304-875-5104 or
304·676-7388.

Knauff Coal&amp; Firewood Buy
now for Masoned wood thia
winter . Coli 614-258-6245.
Umestone, Send, Onvel.
Delivered In Maeon, Meigs,
G•llla or pick up at Richardt
• Son . Call448· 7785.
Slightly Irregular carpete.
remantl and whole houl8
aile. Ideal for rentallnc:oma.
ecc. Pric:etltarting at *2.99,
83.99 oq.yd. Call 814-9926173,

by Larry Wright

54 Mise . Merchandise -:5:-:6~--::P,-et_s_f-:-0-r-:S-:-a-1-11- KIT 'N' CARLYLE••

______.,1 Pink thag carpet 18 ft .x19
ft., air conditioner 14,500
BTU. 10 ft . electric b«1e·
board heatera-220 volt, fuel
oil furnance, Simmont rolla-way bad. Call 448-7339
or 446-48S9.

USED MOBIL E HOME IN
GOOD SHAP E. 304 -S76271 1.

34

· Tuesday,

Ohio

eluded. 614-992·fS879.
B&amp;arcat 111 Scanner with
outside
Cobra 23
ch•nnal antenna.
base C. B., turner
end 2 mikes. Also ground
plene. Coli 814- 742 _2777 ,
EXTRA good top soil. deli·
verad, phone 304 _675 •
7771 .

Puppies. $10. each. Mother
is full German Shepherd. 4
blue eyes. Cell 614·843·
5319 .

1'1'. ieu;~4

Peoll\-e

~~~~

AKC regieterad Beegl- pups;
f50 . 304-876-2597 . .

----------·.'

AKC Shih-tzu puppleo. 1
female. 2 meln. after 5
p.m . 304-876-3838.

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured c8itings commercial and residential. free
estimatea. Call 614-2&amp;611S2.

57

Musical
lnstrumen1s

Clarlneta. flu tea. aaxa Phon a • . t rom b o
trumpeta. Frank• a.~"-"'
I-:S-ho_p_._4_4_8_-_o_84_o_._ _ _ _
Splnet-Contole Plano Blr·
geln. Wonted: Reoponolble
party to ..ke oveor low
monthly
peymentl
apinet
plano. Can
be nenonloCally.
Write Credhe Menagar, P.O.
Sox 637, Shelbyville. IN
41178.

-!...

~~·:-::":""'::'":":'":"'::":'·'"::·•:'":":·:::;~~=~~~~;~~J

IN Ford trlctor with buth
hog, good condition .
$1,800. Call 4.a8-34815 af·
ter 8PM.
1'a
- : : -1- : - - - - - : - - rave Y tractor, with ro.. ry
mower. 30 in. cut, ocr•per
~~;;;[;;-A,:;;;;~;;-~~:;-- blade, ·. cuttivltora. · eeoo,
Acoustic; Guitar. Cell446-7771. · · ·
Heevy duty case. superior
cond. After 7 p.m. cell
Deere ~rector. modal
1 4_·_4_4_6_-7_2_2_1_._ _ _ _
,_8_
rune· good, tricycle front
'
end, t450. 304-1571-2870.
Traynor 6 channel mlxin·g
amp. with equalizer, for PA
lAFF-A-DAY
ayltem. 304~676-3978.

Bundy trumpet ueed 8 wka.,
like new, t226. Call 446·
7317.
Two dio' cont•'nuad do'oplay 1
---------kitchens . Dales Kitchen Trom bo ne~ exc. cond. Call
Center. 304-67 5 -23 18,
814-388-8488_.
fall hunting .' Ciinic Sund8y
Sept. 25th, 12-&amp; p.m. Feetory rep. from &amp;even companiea, door prizes. erchery
shoot•. spacial 1 day clinic,
let us help you get into
archery or hunting. Tri
County Sport Shop, next
M&amp;~on Co. Fairground, Pt.
Ple,tant. Watch this neWtpaper for Hunting Specials.
For Sale: Lumber 1 .. and 2 ..
dimenlion. poplar. oak or
pine. Fol' price• end availability. Contact Millwood
Inc .. 304·273-2522. Rt. 2
at Evergreen Hlllt Road,
M d
F
on av· riday, 8-4:30 ;
Saturday, 8·3:00.
Zenith eterao, receiver, turn·
tabla. 8 track, and speakers,
$90. Baby bed with mattroll. e40. 304-S95-3677.
Dinette set. smoked q)ass
table. 4 chairs, 10 tpeed
bike, both excellent condi~
lion. 304-676· 7524.
25 foot metal awning, good
condition, 8160, 304·6766893.
Firewood. big pickup load
•3&amp;.00delivered, t26 .00ai
farm, Phone 304-895 3396.

Small bed topper •30.
couch &amp;. chair, 2 and tables
$100. 304-675-7763.

66 Building Supplies
Building materialt
brick, sewer "plpll,
w1ndows, lintels, etc .
Claude Wlnlere. Rio Grande.
0 . Call '814-245-5121 .
bl~ck,

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Bording all breede. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppiet: Stud
Service. Call 448· 7796.

·---- . --.....

Yamaha Trumpet, two
mouth pieces, caea. books
and otand, $150.00 caoh.
like new. 304-176-7171.

58

~!»

Oelicioue red reapbarrlet.
"·"
lucky. His wile always
Taylort Berry Patch. coli
Igi'""him an argument before 1
448-S892 .
-=~=:-:----~puts him in lhe proper
YELLOW frMstone canning
mind."
peachea now available. tell·
onabla pricea. PleaM brlna
Livestock
your own b.uahel containers.
14th year of serving the
area. Bob'l Market, M81on, 2 ,yr; old JerHy milk cow&amp;.
304·773-5721 . Open 7 coif. Coli 4411·4423.
days, till dark.
1-=;;::;:=;;:=:;:== Horsaa tor aale. Palamino
1white gelding &amp; 1 ' eorrel.
59 For Sale or Trade
814-982-11102.

'

2bdr .. 2 both. 1 1 Court St.
Rof . • dop. U25 mo. coli
4411-4928.
3 room apartment, furn .•
adults onlv. ,no pets. Cell
41'8-0952 .
Small furn . house 1 or 2
adultt only, no pete. Call .
' 448-0338.
)

1971 Pontiac Catalln1 .
Good wortl: car. 61•-9492149.

1971 Ford Pinta. 1978
Kawaaakl . K£100. 1•· ft.
camper tn~ller puiJ tfpe.
814-982-3812.
1177 Hondo Civic. 3S.OOO
actual mlleo. 11.760. 304·
676·2484.

78 Ford couriO&lt; 36,000

mila pn overhauled, topper,

ca. AM c•a.eene. good tiree.
11 ,600. Col1448-1028.

19711 GMC 'h ton PU, good
oond .. tlnt .glou. Call 814379-2321.
1880 GMC 4•4 ~ ton.
auto .. PB. P9. 30.000 mi ..
18.200. Coli 446·2403.

.

1982 Yo ton plekup truck. 4

SEAMLESS GUITERS. O'ne
piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·
tor, (Dey 614-592-4068.1
(night 814-898-8206.1

•

•

.,

AKC Reg. Old Englloh
Sheepdog · pupa. Wormed,
ohoto, *200. Call 446· 7905
alter 6:30PM .
B.aautlful AKC Reg . Poodle
pupplet. Good quality &amp;.
bread. low prlcet. Ph. 4•6·
085?.

1981 Flreblrd V-8. air, I!S,
PB. tilt, cruloe, AM·FM.
caaHtte. rnr window def~ger. con 448-3200 after
5:00.

1982 C8 11&amp;0 Hondo 3
months old, like new, 1400
mlloo. 11100. 304-11752508.

Meiga Excavating. Bulldozer
&amp; backhoe service. Bilemanti, footen, landSGaping.
driveways, farm ponds .
814-742·2407 or614· 7422088.

14 ft. ftborglooo V bottom •
tilt troller. coli 814-246·
1675.

Auto Parta
&amp; Aoceuorlea
Motor and 1uto tt1namil·
alan for .1 178 Cho-.
378·1348.

1882 Dot.Un 280ZX. llectt
with gold trim. Loaded·
leather upholatery, new
tlru . . Exc. cond. 114-7422844.

79

1878 Unoaln Merit v. All
optlono. liN 11- deolgner
Mrloo. leoutlful,muot-to
op-law. ·wu1 t-.
814·848-271:1.
•

-.1 oond. Call 114-371-

Moto~• Home•

24 ft.

1:313.

• camper~

84

I 5EE NO REASON

AND PAW CAN'T STAY

I

I I I XX l )
(AnsweroiOmorrow) ·

Yesterday's

I

Jumbles: YEARN ONION STUDIO THEORY
Answer: What haepen.ed to the farfTler's cattte?NO ONES. HERD

Cl) Tic Tac Dough

MOVIE:
'S.O.S.
Titanic'
Cll DoiMe GUllo
(!) 8aturdoy Night at the
Flghtl: ·
(I) Major Loaguo BIHboll:
Cincinnati at Atlanta
.(1) IIJ Cll Family Feud
® Whael of Fortune
Entar'talntnent
Tonight
One Day ot a Time
8:00 II Cl) (I) A Toam Tho A
Team goes to South America to confront some intru·
ders who are trying to take
over a diamond mine. (60

,..

BRIDGE

())

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

a

'Big

Super defense
tricks. The twelfth · must
come from his fourth heart
: or dummy's fourth-diain6nd, .
II either suit breaks 3•3, he
'
9·20·1!
NORTH
is home . An opponent hold+AKJ
ing lour cards in both of
'K76
them is automatically
+A 764
squeezed. Or is he?
+QJ6
South wins the diamond
EAST
WEST
and
leads a club toward
+108653
+H
dummy- East takes his ace
,92
'J1084
and leads back a diamond.
t53
tJI098
(He can also let dummy hold
+A 10 9 4
+7S2
the first club and then take
SOUTII
the second.)
+Q92
Either way, South simply
'AQ53
cashes his black s uit
+KQ2
winnen. West has to chuck a
+KB5
red card on the last spade.
Chucking
a heart establishes
Vulnerable: Neither
South's
fourth
heart; chuck·
Dealer: South
ing a diamond establishes
Soatll
Wtlt North Eoot
dummy's fourth diamond.
1 NT
Now let's look at super
p..,.
Pa.s
tiNT Pass
defense. West follows with
p...
his deuce to the first club to
show an odd number. East
lets the first club hold and, if

Bad

CIJ II ()) Just Our Luck
(PREMIERE) The lifo of a
TV weatherman is turned
upside down by the appearance of a genie.
Ill I]) (jJ MOVIE: 'Tho
Wlz'
Cll (Jj) Nova ·Asbestos: A
Lethal Legacy.' The tragic
consequences of asbeStos
use and the debate over
who is responsible are examined . (Rl (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
MOVIE: 'BI~man of
Alcatroz'
8:30 C1J
G)
ffZ 111\0VIE:
'Saturday Night Fever'
9:00 8
(I) (I) Remington
Steele Laura tries to solve a
murder case wi1h a customs
agent on her heels and Re~
mington is mistakenly idan·
!)lied as a fug~ive . (2 hrs .)
(1)700 Club Special: Hope
for the Nation•
(J) Ufelina 'Dr. Roger Free·
man.' Dr. Freeman shows
how the rate of infant delivery has improved tremendously over the past ten i'
years . (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned}
(Jj) Packaging American
Wero
9:30 Cl) MOVIE: 'Uoed Cars'
10:00 (I) When Women Kill Si•
women serving time for
murder are interviewed. ·
(!) Billiards: Women's
World Invitational Coverage of tho Women's World
Invitational 7-Ball Cham~
pionship is presented from
the Playboy Club, Atlantic
City. NJ . (80 min .)
· Cll Firing Uno
Ill&gt; Newt1
-10:30' (1J Star Time
(I) TBS Evening News
II CIJ ®Adamo Houoo A
social worker tries to solve a
corntnunity"s problems as
wall as his own .
(Jj) lnolde Waahlngton
eiNN Newt
11 :00 • Cll CIJ (I) Ill Cll ® •
Ill Newo
-(1) MOVIE: 'Mod Max'
(!) Spor11Centar
CIJ Dr. Who
Bonny Hill Show
-11:16 (!)NCAA Football: G--

Opening lead:

'1:

General Hauling

,•

15 THAT
'IOU IN THAR?

HIS BATH·-WHAR DID
HE DfSAPPEAR TO?

ACROSS
1 Type size '
5 Plant

Need something hauled
ewey or eomlthina moved?
Wo'll do lt. Coli 448-3169
b o - 9 .. d5.
Water hauling, Fast Service,
low roteo. Call 814-2581743.

•
PEANUTS

-

~~

do water hauling for
tlaternl end ewimming .,.
poolo. 814-892·5858.

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Coli Jim Lanier. 304-676· ,
7387.

----------------- ~••
TRISTATE
•
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
•'
1183 lac. Ave .. Golllpollo. '.~
448· 7833 or 4411-1133. f ~

YES. Mti.AM ..
TAAI\K YOU ...

TI-llS 15

IT, SNOOPY...

51-lE sAl D, "60 DOWN

TI-lE HALL AND TURN
TO TI-lE

RI61-1T "

3 Unable to

11 Set in
motion ·

4 Wooden

believe

1Z MaUl ratio

5 Mountain

girl's
protection,
in song
14 Cargo weight

6 - green
H.ack

ridge

Yesterday's Answer

1t Pheasant

live

28 Late
"Papa
Doc's"

21 Valley
imagination 22 Least

1S lngoodsbape 8 Ust

glo8ta.n-n

9 Uncovered
11 Vegetable

15 Penalty
18 Wheel

brood
Fork prong

original
Z3 Mount -

country
Calif,
29 Bizarre
Z4 Evert's tenn 30 Dutch %8 Philippine 35 Ullmann

island

covering

38 Dance step · .

Z1 Sleep

(J)Soap
IIJ I]) M110num P.l. Magnum acceptl as elMs five
little girls who want him to
find their miaaing 1eac:her.
(RI (80 min.)
. Cll Latenlght America
® M'A"S'H
Nlghtllne
Twilight Zone
12:00 Cll Bunw • Allen
I]) MOVIE: 'Forty Gunt'
I]) Niahtllne
·
&lt;m MOVIE: 'Frankanoteln.
The True Story' Port 2
e Thlcke of the Night
12:30 e Cll (!) lAte Night with

MOVIE:

core

13 Working

e

w-·

JONES 80YSWATER SER·
VICE . Coli 814-387-7471
"'1114-3117-0591.

expression

10 First name

16 Aust. bird
17 Demonstra-

Cl)

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

DOWN
1 Adhesive
! An

insect

Devkl t.tterman

•

West has his last club lo dis·
card and can keep all eight
of his red cards.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

I ())

.TATER !!

THAT 'YOUNG-UN
KNOWS IT's TIME FOR

cashes his three spades, but

-6lev••"*"

Cll Catllna

Electrical
&amp; Rafrigeretion

lets the second .club llold
also. South can't lead a third
club or East will get two
quick clu~ tricks. South

Here is the sort of slam
that almost any declarer
will make. He starts with 11

W.-.wolf In London'
()).A-Lit.

,.

....

he is a wide-awake expert,

+J

By Oswal&lt;l Jacoby
ami James Jacoby

Cll (!) Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE: 'An American

;;:~;:;:::::::::~ ·,,.
Royal HlahlondO&lt; ~87
Upholstery
• I'
'
ft. oolf

Now anange ·the drded letters to
lorm the surpriae answer, as suo·
gested by the abOve cartoon.

Print answer here: [

1 1 :30 e

SEWING Machine repairs,
Mrvica. Authorized Singer
8al11 &amp;. Service Sharpen
Sciuon . Fabric Shop, '- ·,
Pom.-oy. 192·2284.
'

85

THE UNDERTAKE~ '
ANNUAL SHINDIG.

IVOCENXj

a

J .A.R . Construction Co .
Weier lines. Footers.
Dra,ns. All kinds of Ditching.
Rutland. Oh. 814-7422903.

w-•·

BETIER MOVE FIIST.1
SEEit\5 Lll'oE I'VE GOT

Roofing and Carpentry
work, general repairs. call
Anthony Williamson. 814··
387-0194.
• .•

1982 Hondo Aopencede GL
1100. lncludoo 111 IIValloble
options. Two tone lilver,
loA IMn 3,000 mlloo. Uke
new condition. •s.aoo.
Phone 1114-192-1811.

Boeta and
Motor• for Sale

HOW 'THEY ACIED AI

KJ I

Mama'
(IJ I Spy

. HOT "(ET, BUT I'D

OLIVEfl

1980 Corvette under
10.000 mi. T-top leather
lnteriO&lt; loaded. Cell 4484883 doytlmo"' 448·2800
ave. • WMkende.

1171 F - . All outo1111.
matlc. Sport
114-742·301:1.

....

61'01\EH 10
Ml% PEA5E,
A Rfii(IL FOfl TH' FAIR
lflfl, HIN6 '?
~ADY'S HAND~ AH' IT'~­

Dozer WOfk, ground c:lnring
• axc:avatlon. $215 hour. Call
448-9838.

Antique metal trunk, 3x4
mirror, pole lamps. Cell

.. :

6
-~AVE ~OU

1974 Hondo Chopper 30 ln.
over front end. CB 760 F.
Coll614-949-2737.

Reg . Siame11 kitten• elso
mother &amp; father cat1. Call
448-8608.

~

8

·... min,)
Cl) MDVI~:.

1870 VoiUwagon 118tionw•gon, wtth lots of extra
parts. Will Hll cheap. Call
814-318-81134.

75

IYOMARRI

·Ja

Brierpatch' Kennela Prof••·
sional All -breed grooming.
Indoor~ outdoor boarding fa·
cllitiH. English Cocker Spaniel puppiet. Call 814-388·
9790.

2 ADBA Reglated American
Pit Bull Tarrier pups. Exc.
blood line, 2 mot. old. Call
alter 6PM. 446-3978.

..

Water Well1. Commercial
and Domelllc. Test hole1.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-S95-3802.

Oet Vour Carpet IN SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
STEAMER, water removal,
furniture cleaning. FrH Eati·
ma-. 814-446-2107.

J

I KJ

Cl)

speed. otondord ohllt. 814·

51 Household Goods

.e

ONE

E • R Tree Servic;O, fu.lly
Insured, free estimates.
Plii&gt;ne 81 4· 3&amp;7-0636, cali
·
eltor 6.

Trucks for Sale

7:30

RINGLE'S SERVICE experiencad roofing. Including
hot 1ar app 11 catlon, carpenter, electrician, m11on. Call
304·875-20S 8 or , 875 _
466"0 .
..
·
.~.

1887 C1mero, axe. cond.
·~100. am-fm 8·tr.ac;.k.
304-1178-1781 or 876223'1'

12 ft. aluminum boot. 30411711·2228. .
.

,1 almost new chain NW 18
in. out. Cell4411-7273ifter
15 cu.ft. '-:!Prlght frH1er, 5 PM ar 1nytima weekends.
axeeUent condition, 32 ln.
wide outlide door. Call after Newwood
8. 446-2388.
hooter, holdo 300 lb. of
wood. Auto lhermaatet
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 1480. Call 114-2111-1218.'
· washers, dryere, refrigerator~. ranges. Skaggs Ap·
MUST SELL 8 new oawlng
pliancea, Upper River Rd., m1chlnee ecrltched In ship·
beside Stone Crett Motel. ping were •210 now •11 or
448-7388.
coil 448-93p1.

BORN LOSER

81 Escort. em~tm. p.b., e.c.
4-epMd, new radiale. rust
proofed, exc. cond. $4350.
304-675-1311 .

72

r J

a ())

Get your: carpet in ship .,
shape. Wlterremoval, FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE ,
CLEANING . CAPTAIN '
STEAMER 814-448-2107.

1 7' Sao Ster old boat, 140
HP, 10, IICCeaaorlls. excellent aondltlon. Trailer.
15,100. Coli 448-3481 oft0&lt;8PM.

,e_1_4_-2_5_e_-1_7_8_B~-----

specl
.. lzlng In built up roof.
Calll14-388·9857.

1974 Hondo 350. 7,400 Good· 1 Excavating, beae·
octuol mllao. Coil 814· 388- menta. foote"· drlvewaya• .,•
•ptlc tanka. landscaping.
97&amp;5. '
call anytime 446-4637.
1974 Yomoho 100 pluo James L. Davison. Jr.
troller. Coli 448·3&amp;3;,
owner.

3 bdr. apt .. 2nd Ave ..
Gelllpolls. $190 mo. Call
448-4222 between 9 • 5.

Furnished apt. 2 bdr., near
HMC. $235 utilities paid .
243 Jackson Pike. Gallipo·
Its. 448 ·4416 after 7 p .tn.

J-____::.;_:.:,_____

Wanted to buy. Semi V
llhope 1 2 or 14ft. aluminum
boOL Coli 114·2&amp;1·11182.

Kenmore Washer-dryer 1nd
porteble dlah w1aher. Power
lawn mower. Exc. cond.,
Cuh • terry. Coli 4483294.

WITH THE WJlON6 MA&gt;J ,
TIN FACS!

Marcum Roofing a.. Spouting. 30 yeara experience.

992-6434 or 614-892- B2
Plumbing
.
Regiltared Tenneaeee 6914.
&amp; _Heating
Wilker Bay mara. 10 years
old. 12 Inches t..l. Gentle. 1973 Ford F250. Heavy
t5&amp;0. 814-742-2023.
duty. A.C .. dual goo tanko.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
114-949-2503 or 814-892AND HEATING
Single .-glstared walking 2717.
Cor. Fourth and Pine
mare. Bred to e double
446-3BS8 or 448·
registered atalllon. 8100. 1978 Ford F160 4•4. 304· Phone
4477
Unreglatared roen walking 671·2623.
horee colt UOO. 814-982·
JIM'S PLUMBING. HEAT·
7263.
lNG . Fomerly Dewitt'•
73 Vena&amp;4W.D.
Plumbing. Call 614-3871 registered Angue bull
t800 .. 1 oarrel pony ...tdlo 1916 Gille School buo 30 0578.
and bridle •zoo .. 1 mini•· pil~~~tngar, 282 engine, 4
ture stallion hor• 3 years apd., ••c. running cond., 83
Excavating
old. t250. 614-986-3881,
good body, 12.200. C a l l l - - - - - - - - 441-28311 alter I.
Plgo, 304·882-3448.
DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna.
Pondt. ditches.
1978 Chavy 4 whael drlvo basements.
etc. Call 44864
pickup. Oood cond. Sh1rp. 4907. Carter
&amp;. Evans
814-892-7810.
Transportation.
1980 Cu1tomi1ed Ford van. Lonnie Bogg1 Excavating.
F1&amp;0, 302 engine. 4 opeed l;)o1er,
backhoe, dumptruck.
overdrive, P.B .• P.S ., am-fm Work by
or job. Cell
8 track 11ereo system. Call 448-7903hour
.
814-742-3058.
Cat 21 &amp; hoe, dozen, crane,
loadare, dump truck. Call
74 Motorcycles
814-448-1142 between
7:00AM • 5:00PM.

Furnished ap• . 8186 . Water
paid. 2 bdr., 131 V2 4th.
Gallipolis. 446-4418 after 7
p.m.

Unfurnished, downttllirs, 3
room apt. , 1 bdr., no pelt.
Inquire at 87 Vine St.,
Galllpolit.

WI'LI.o 'IOU 60T I&gt;JVOLVED

TOP CASH paid for late
modal ul8d c.rs. Smith
Bulck-Pontltte, 1911 Eastern Ave., Galllpolla. 4•6·
2282.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
814-367-7220.

Sha'o Mine'
Cll Tic Toe Dough
(I) Ut11e House on the
Prairie
Cll (Jj) 0ye WIIHe
ll&lt;lck llogero
1:30 II tD (I) NBC News
Cll Lova That Bob
(!) ESPN'o SportaForum
Cll e ()) ABC Newo
IIJ (I) ® CBS Nowo
Cll Buol.,.. Report
(Jll Over Eaty
7:00 . e Cl) PM M-Ine
(I) Bum• It Allen
(!) &amp;ponaCentor
Cll Good Newo
CIJ Entartolnment Tonight
(!) Charlla'o Angelo
Ill I]) Whael of Fortune
Cll ilJ) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newohour
®Newo
People'o Court

e

Autoa for Sale ' RON'S Tolevioion Service. ·
--------:----11 Speclellzing in Zenith an.d ,"'
Mqtorola
; Cell
Quaur,
and '·''~
1870 Hot Aad Camaro. houu
cella.
676-2398
EKcellent runnlilg con'clltion. or 446-~464.
'"
Body In good IMpe. FO&lt; - - - - - - - - - - "
Info. cell 114·992·3187 or F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump
814·192~2880.
remov81. Call676·1331 .

&amp; Vegetables

4.6 acrae, city schoole, 3 mi.
from Holzer. 3 from town ,
Rutricted. t14,900. Call
446-34S5 oltor RPM. .

...••

71

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

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·

0_,_ _ _ ...

()) Newo
(l) MOVIE : 'Time Rider'
(l) MOVIE: 'Takil .Her •

PAINTING · interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing, _,
soma remodeling. 20 yrs. '
exp. Call 814-388·9652.

•=-

I I

II tD ell rn Ill Cll &lt;m G

8:00

•

Home
Improvements

lour ordinary~··

EVENING

.•

61

Untc:t'amble thelllour Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to form

9/20/83

•

Registered 3 male miniature
P90dlee. 8&amp;0 each, 304882-3672.

~ ~ ~~ .,

TUESDAY

- - - - - - - '··•

I.:.TfeN A !lATH _

lfftl}~ ~'ft ~THAT SCRAMBlED WORD GAME
byHannAmoldandBobLee

Television
Viewing

79 Motor• Homes
Starcraft. Surletta XL
aamper, gas .tove, ice box,
aleepa tlx. Ught weight, like ·
now. $1,500. Coll814-245· ·;
5228.
••

ThAT

The

Ohio

20, 1983

&amp; Campers

')&lt;&gt;lrle -;..up l!&gt;o;~~ dleR. ~
M~ Sli:';'e, M WHAT ReALLY
AAPP~ep W~ I "TRieD To 6i~e

AKC Pekingese whl•e mele,
thota, wormed, 8 wka.
$125. 304-876-6030 .

1983

-~- ,Road

zz

USplked

the punch
Z5Subdue

MMarco-

17 Carte tenn

''

·6-+--+-

ZBOneinneed
n CUt timber
:sz Donkey(Fr

:a Mongrel
Role in

.'

U()tello"

"-and
Tillie"

S7 Normalcy
as - Ha,rbor,

Guam
DRoman
fountain

CJ) Jack Benny Show
Editor's
G I]) McCloud 'Give My
Flograto
to Broadway.'
mark
McCk&gt;ud inveatigltel an exploolon that kUied o fellow
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work ll:
officer. (R) (90 min.l
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1:00 (J) I Merrled Joan
Cll Entartalnmorn Tonight
One letter oimply otonds for another. In thlo 10mple A II
8())CNNHn ..neNeW8
for tbe lhret L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
1:11 (J) MOVIE: 'P"''doy'
. · apoltrophet, the lenJth and formation of the wortlo are all
1:30 e
Cl)
NBC
N_.
blatt. Bach doy the code letters ore dlll'erent.
Qvwnlght
CRYrroQUOTES ··- - ·
1:411

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2:00 (J) MOYIE: 'Green lcoo'
()) II DttiDI' Fether
()It CIS H-. Nlalttwatch
2:18
2:30 (J)
of Rl~.. _ . •
({) N
Football: ArllOIIII
8-atUCLA
3:00 Cll MOVIE: 'Big Bad
Melllll'

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Yetterdlly's Cryptoquote: TO HIS
~LEON; HENCE THE

-ALDOUSHUXIEY

..

G V X S Q 0 G ·-·.
ACVFGOXV

RZSCTXVJ.

DOG, EVERY MAN IS _
POPULARITY

'

OF• :

'

�•

Additional
plea delays
Lee trial
A trial slated to begin Wednesday
'for Charles Lee II, indicted for the
murder of a Gallla County teenager,
has been delayed with theentry of an
additional plea on Lee's behalf.
Judge Richard C. Roderick accepted a plea of not guilty by reason
,of Insanity In common pleas court
Monday.
Roderick has ordered a pgychiatric examination be performed on
Lee, 17, of 73 Burdette Addition,
Point Pleasant, by Shawnee Forensic Center. Portsmouth. Roderick
stipulated that the examination can
be done either In Portsmouth or in
theGallla CountY Jail. where Lee is
currently being held on $225,&lt;XXl
bond.
Lee was returned to local custody
last -week after Roderick revoked
Lee· s original $150,&lt;XXlbond.Lee had
been free on tbat bond since May.
Roderick said the examination
usually takes 30 days to complete.
and a re-scheduling of the trial is
pending. Had the trial started
Wednesday, officials were expectIng itto last neilfly a ~¥eek, .. · ·
' Lee pleaded not guilty to the
murder Indictment May 19. three
days after a Gallla County grand
·

~~Zins[~m~is:C~~~:'~~~

Area deaths
Eunice Eblin
Mrs. Eunice E blin, 59, Union
Ave., Pomeroy. died Monday at the

license plates.
Dr. Nick Capum&gt;, Clermont
Cowtty Coroner. has ordered an
autopsy.

Farm review opens
LONDON, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State's 21st Farm Science Review
got under way today with lots more
breathing room 'for an expected
ioo,ooo spectators, thanks to a gift
worth $1.7 million.
instead of the traditional location
at the university's Don Scott Field ·
airport in Franklin Cowtty, the show
took Its farm equipment to a
~acre farm ' In Madison County,
just nqrth of London. ·

Three ,killed in Texas floods
By Assoclaled Press
Wintry weather drOpped temperatures to the teens and snowed In
mountain passes In the northern
Rockies today, but the cold front
promised to relleve the sweltering
East as floods and up to 7inches of
rain swamped Texas; kllllng three
people.
Tbe mercury plungEd to 13
degrees today at West Yellowstone,
Mont., after a storm Monday
dumped up to 17 Inches of snow.
Late-summer campers at Wyoming' s Yellowstone National Pari\,
il!st to the south, had to cope with
snow-blocked roads and·passes.
It was a different story back East
as air conditioners switched on to
cope with record-breaking hlghs,
hitting 94 In New York City· and
Baltimore and 931n Alleptown, Pa.

The front, stretching today from young and weak animals overnight
the Texas Panhandle· !o the Great
from cold rain and wind.
Lakes, was being preceded by rain
Backyard gardeners scrambled
and thunderstorms, said Hugh to cover
plants, stores broke
Crowther of the National Weather out snow shovel displays and city
Service In Kansas City, Mo.
street crews across the state
"It's not movingthatqulckly, but checked snow-reniOval equipment
It brmgs . a sharp contrast In .lnadvanceofanothetwinterseason.
temperature behind It, '' Crowther · In Houston, swamped Monday by :
kid. On Monday, the reading In 71ncl&gt;esofrain,searchersf0Ull!llbe .·
Denver drOpped from 86.degrees In bodies of GuStavo Meza, 9, and'
lbe afternoon to 35 just seven hOurs Terry AndrOin, 16, In bayous where'
later, henotedd.
they had been swept after falling
Behind the front a travelers' Into drainage ditches.
advisory was issued In northern and
Temperatures were st1llln the 70s
central Colorado as strong gusiy early today from the Gulf Coast ~
Winds In the sheer mountain passes states through Kentucky to southern •
produced drlftlng snow.
Lower Michigan. Readings were ~:
Hunters were warned to be alert generally below 40in the Rockies.
for suddenly cOlder weather and · The hottest spot .In the nation
ranchers were advised to protect Monday was Lake Havasu City,
Artz., at 100.

heat•was
expectedforecast
to easeina
bitThe
today,
with readings

r;~~;:;;;~~~~;;;;~~;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;~.

the 80s from !be Qulf Coast to New
England . and . drOpping steeply
toward the end of the week as a cold
frontmovedeast.

HJG'·H SCHOOL SENIORS

,

Now Is The Time To ...
.

repart by Dr. Gordon W. Powell of
Ohio State University Is Included
with the latest report, !be newspaper said.
PoweU, who blamed neither
inspectors nor Pugh Shows Inc. of
Lancaster, operator of the ride, said
the ride's radial' arm had three
cracks in it before it broke. The
cracks, Powell concluded, should
have been seen ''with the unaided

eye."
"Numerous repair welds to the
Flying Coaster constituted a warnIng that tbe structure was In a
hazardous condition," Powell said.

parking lot and added they can't
keep meters In lbedlp.
George Stitt, police chief, told
council that there are people loafing
on the parking lot but there was not
much the pallce department cou.ld
do unless they became disorderly.
Stitt asked cowtcll for winter
clothing for o!flcers and dispatchers. He asked for three
jackets, threepairofpantsandthree
shirts for the fulltlme employes and
two pair of pants and two shirts lor
part time employes which totaled
$1,500. He also aSked for $100 each
for the three ladles a total ofUXJfor
fulltlme employes and $50 for part
time. He also asked for a rechargeable light for !be dispatcher's office.
Council approved the request.
Don Ward. of the street department, told coucil that tires for the
village truck are needed. Ward
quoted a price of $13leach making a
total of $520 for ·four tires. Council.
suggested that additional prices be
obtained and report back to council.
Council discussed the proposed
grant application for upgrading
buildings In downtown Pomeroy.
Council also discussed the hltlng.
by the Board of PUblic Affairs, a fuL
time employe when councll feels a
part time ·employe Is sufficient.

Weather forecast
lncreaslng cloudiness with scat.tered showers and thunderstonns
Tuesday. Highs tn the upper 70s to .
near 90. Showers and thunderstorms Tuesday nlgh t. Lo ws In the
mid-50s to mid-60s. Cooler with
showers UkelyWednesday. Highs In
the 60s to mid-70s.
By 'ilte ~lat!ld PresS
'l'hunolay through Saturday - A
chance of .showenl northeast Friday, otherwise fair and cool through
tlie per~. Dail;): highs geperally In
the lo\ver 60s and nlgh~e 1\lws.
mainly In the 408.

I ~WI·-

. . ,:::a#:;. ·.

__

, ·.

.

' · : I09 High ·sr. '

· ·P~meruy,OH. .

HEATING
SPECIALS

O'DELL LUMBER

/Bann /Doming
Deluxe Circulator
Patented Four-Flue
Firebrick Lining - .
get up to 48 hours
operation on pod
filling of coal
Beautiful life time
porcelain en_amef
finish
·
They'll heat up to 5

. or6 rooms

$399

95 You11maklfewcrtrips
Blower to the woe- h~le

·INSTALL YOURSELF AND SAVE
COMPLETE LINE OF TRIPLE WALl
PIPE • STOVE PIPE • AND STOVE
BOARDS IN STOCK

FOR

MONEY

WE ALSO SERVICE
KERO-SUN - CORONA
AND HEATMATE
KEROSENE HEATERS

LISTED

4946

THE

I

-·cosmetic."

runs

•.:

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•

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~

.~

'

by

Meigs County Sheriff [)eputies encountered some problems Friday
in a search for marijuana In northeastern Meigs County.
Deputies discovered steel bear traps and guards as they searched
·for the mar!juana . Deputies managed to elude four bear traps and a
guard dog before locating 63 marijuana plants In Orange Township.
While walking through the field Gary Wolfe, Investigator, \vas told
by one of !be deputies to stand stlll. The landowner appeared and
stated the be did not want anYone to get hurt but the land was
booby·trapped. Wolfe sa!d that he took the owner around thel'leldwith
his gun (Wolfe's gun} In the landowners back.
No one has been charged.
.

Tbe recent

PupilS ~~ape serious injury
.

.

-~

Twenty-four elementary students on a Meigs Local School bus,
which overturned Tuesday morning on Hoof Hollow Road near
Harrlsonvllle, escaped serious Injury according to DanM.orrls, Meigs
Local School District superintendent. ·
Mortis reported lhl!t none of the children nor the driver had visible
Injuries, although some did complaln of "bumps and bruises.'
All were taken to Veterans Memorial Hosplta.l where theywerest111
being eXamined at 11 a.m.
·
The State Highway Patrol is Investigating lbe accident, Morris said
lt appeared the bus slid on the wet clay and gravel road over an
embanlanent and then turned over on Its side. ·
Mortis said be received the call at8: 50 a .m ., the regular route time
for the bus which wasenrouteto theHarrlsonvllle Elementary School.

HEAVY fighting continued tn
Le~nTu~y.Here,a~~

oi the American trained 8lh
Brigade ot the Lebanese Army
carries rocket launcher In bat-

ler

Monday afternoon.
Charles Legar, chief of !be Pomeroy Fire Department which
responded to the call at 4:24p.m. reported that a five gallon can oU
which the company used for tempering metal, caught on l'lre.
The rtames shot to the ceiling In the room, resulting In ceiling
damage and heavy smoke damage. The department was im thescene
for about an hour, Legar said.
·
Earlier In the afternoon, the Pomeroy flredepartmentwaScalled to
theCrossroa&lt;js, Route 124, for a brush l'lre; Fighters were on thescene
tor about two hours. Tbe· l'lre burned more than an acre, Legar
reported. Later, whllethePomeorydepartmentwasonthe~Clty
fire, the brush l'li-e started up again and the Middleport department
responded

Ue.(JW~).

Beirut hit
hard after
shelling

SAVE $70
' DELUXE

efficiency trom wo'Od or coal~ have
the convenience of-oil, gas or electric
heat when ~u Wllt'lt it. Ask us about

0 - Dtotlr 7oiD A.M.

-

moae

Ohio forecast

AS
LOW
AS

Partly cloUdy tonight. Low In the mld-4tls. Winds northwesterly
]1).15 mph. Mostly sunny Thursday. High near 62.

Extended forecast

O'DELL .7i«Wa6e lUMBER
Vlnell,..t •t rhlnl Avonue

Warm-

the completely 'automatic Yukon
furnaces soon .

#9901

Pl11l PAIIK..O

5 P.M~ ......,

Mltlht Til -

2 Sec:tlorn, 20 Pages
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NitVI!IpOper

Beta w ONo , . _ · J1 -Friday through Sunday: Fair through
tbe perkld. Hlgbs ,Friday and S!atumay mostly In tile 6CB. Highs
Sunday tn the '101. Lows genetally In the 41111.

contract provides that extra work
for non-certlfled employes at the
high school will be on the rotation
gystem and hus drtvers will receive
$5 per hour rather than$4 an hour for
extra'assignmentjobs.
They w1ll have two year recall
privileges lf they are la!d off and
vacations for 12 month employes
canbetakenotherthanthesummer
mooths with some re$triCtlons, .
The non-certified employes con. ·
tract is retroac\Jve to Sept. 1, this
year and runs untU Aug. 31,-l!)lfi. .
The new contract gives all
non-certified employes an across
the board 40 cent an hour increase
with Increments of eight cents
additional an hour for periods from ·
five through 15 years. As an
example, an employe with 15 years
·· will receive 48. cents per hour.
'

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The commissioners asked
Swisher for an update on Childrens
Services program. He was asked In
particular about the status of the
crisis ·Une, homemaker program,
duties of new help and what new
steps are being taken to Improve the
program.
,
Swisbetreported thecrlslsllnefor
abuse and neglect reports has been
Installed ~d that the telephone
number w1ll probably be released
next week.
A recording device w1ll give
Instructions as to what the caller
should do and a caseworker will be

-·

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)
Syrlan-backed insurgents 'today
unleashed a heavy bombardment
on Beirut and Its outskirts, hours
after their Shelling ot the U.!\.
· ambassador's residence prompted
a retaliatory barrage from U.S.
Navy wi!I'Shlps.
Lebanon's state radio and thEi
Independent Beirut newspaper AnNahar said lbe U.S. ambassador's
residence in suburtlan Yarzeeastof
!be capita.! wasevacuatedovernlght
as shells from Druse mtlltta
balterES rained around lt.
The reix&gt;rls said one shell struck a
garden gate. and another hit the
. _s wtnunlng pool. Personnel In the
'mansion were taken to the aearby
palace of Lebanese President Amln
Gerilayel and no one was injured,
lbe radio and the newspaper said.
No comment on the report was
lmmedlately available from the
u.s. Embassy. But White House
spokesman Larry Speakes COD·
flnried Tuesday night that the
residence of Arnbassadm' RObert
Dillon came under
l'lre,
. prompting a parU8J evacuation of
lbe rompound.
Speakes said Dlllon and Richard
Falrbanka, assistant to special
Middle East envoy Robert C.
McFarlane, were at the residence
when sbells struck, but McFarlane
• W&amp;jl not Jn Beirut.
American warships responded to
tile shel1tng with a ]l).mlnute
barrage against the antlguvermnent gunners In the hills
Ollel'looldng the capita.!.

artlllery

Steps to Improve the public Image
of the Meigs eounty Health Depart- ·
ment W!'re taken Tuesday night
when the Meigs Cowtty Board of
Health met In special session.
Action by the board followed
comments by Dr. James Witherell,
board president, who said that he
had talked to a number of residents,
members of the MeigS' County
Budget Commission and members
of the Pf\!SS In the past week and was
disturbed by the breadth and depth
offeellngs he had encountered about
the health department. Dr. With·
erell said he had talked at length
with Meigs Cowtty Treasurer
George Collins, a member of the
budget commission, about the
budget commission's recent action
In turning down the 1984 l&gt;eallh
department budget and rerumlng It
to the board of health for revision.
Dr. Witherell Indicated that he
feels that there are legitimate
complaints against lbe health
department and that he had not
realized earlier ''where lbe budget
Commission was coming from".
At the suggestion of Dr. Witherell
the firSt topic to come up for
suggestiOn was thewotkschedl!]eof
employes of the health department.
Dr. Witherell pointed out that
employes otl'lclally now work 291,2
hours a week as provided by board
policy established some years ago.
Dr. Witherell terms this 29% work
week a "bone of contention In the
community".
Dr. Witherell said that he had
ialked to Deputy Health Commis·
s!Oner John Jacobs about the hours
and !t was agreed that hours cou.ld
be expanded. Hawever, the discus·
s!On brought out the employes cou.ld
not be required by the board of
health to work longer how's without
workers receiving additional compensation ai their present rate of
pay.
Dr. Witherell pointed out that
Jacobs and Norma Torres, R.N.,
supervllor of nurses tor the health
department, worked longer than the
designated hours. He stated that
there should be no problem In
extending hours of the department
ofllces are open to create a better

Image. Jacobs indicated that the
average hours for health departments in Ohio are 35 per week.
Two employes of the depa.rtlnent
·stated that they could not work
longer than lbe29~ hoursforwhich
they were hired to work. One said
she had planned her schedule and
acllvitles arowtd the 29¥., hours for
which she was hired to work and
could not take on more hours
without compensation. Another said
that she also was hired for29~ hours
and had to pay a baby sitter. She
stated she could not accept a longer
hour schedule with the costs
Involved In hiring a sitter. Another
employe speaking on the 29% hour
schedule said that employes of the
t!Etpartment do work hard and that
no consideration Is gtven for the
many contacts made by the public
with department employes when
they are shOpping, eating lunch or
even called after hours at their
homes.
.
It was painted out that these
employes were not being asked to
work additlonal hours.
The board agreed as of Oct. 1 to
extend hours of the department
being okpen to 35, from 8 a .m . to 4
p.m.. Mondays through Fridays
wit)! Jacobs, MS. Torres, and Joe
Young, new assistant sanitarian, to
absorb the additional hours while
other employes will not put In any
extra hours over the designated

291,2.
Hitting again upon !be pubUc
Image of the health department, Dr.
Witherell said that "the Image has
!;lplk". He stated that ltlshlsoplnlon
that It is not thenumberofprograrns
being carried oot by lbedepartment
but the actual help which Is being
provided to people. Dr. Witherell
saki he had discussed the tax
millage of the department with
Treasurer Collins and understands
that it can be adjusted. Dr. Wllberell
said he Is not upset at this
manipUlation.
The groop discussed the recent
request of JacQbs for an additional
$11,&lt;XXl to the 1!IB3 budget. Jacobs
said that money was needed for the
salary accoont, other expenses, and
!he suPPly _at:COUIIt. The budget

(e141 ......1276

P.M.

·•.
t

However, at the 20 year level, ·an
additional eight cents per hour Is
added so that employe will receive a
total of 56 cents more per hour. Bus
drivers Wlll receive an addltional10
centsanhouroverotheremployes'
Increases under the new contract.
These are the provisions from Sept.
1, 1983 toAug. 31, 1984.
Under the new contract, noncertified employes will recelv~ an
additional 40 cents an hour begin,··
nJng Sept. 1. 1984 through Dec. 31,
1984 and an eight cent an hour
Increment will be ad~ed for those
employed for three years. Bus
drivers wUI receive an additional10
cents an hour. From Jan. 1, 1985 to
Aug. 31,1985 employes will receive a
10 cent an hour across the board
increase.
.' • (Continued on page 12)
.,..-

contacted by a paging system for
Immediate help. .
The Meigs Cciwtty EMS will
receive calls and page the Chlldrens
Services personnel when the system
Is put Into operation.
Swisher also reported a homemaker contrat was made with
Community Action Agency In July
which employed two people from
Meigs Cowtty for Chlldrens Services. Tbe tota.l program contract is
for $:M,001.28 of which the county
commissioners provided $1,500. ·
Under the program the Childrens
(Continued on page 12) ·

Steps·taken to improve imag~
of Meigs health ·department

Fire causes $2,000 damage

WEATHER FORECAST - 'lbe Nallonal WeMher Service
lorecl1llla IUJmY, colder wea&amp;ber for
Gl the nMion for'lllunday.
Sbowess are forecllll&amp; r... N"'" Enlland, oentraJ Florida and lbe
nortbenl Ca1!fomla cout; (AP w-photo).

news release pub-

lished In lbe paper concerning the
percentage of food stamp increase
In Meigs County was discussed
when Mike Swisher. Welfare Dlrec·
tor met with .the county board of
commissioners Tuesday.
Swisher stated that th~ Ohio
DepartmentofWelfarewaslnerror
111 -lts calculations and be had
Informed them ot this.
Swisher stated the actual increase
in food stamp distribution In Meigs
Cowtty for 1983 was 12.7 percent
rather than the 54 percent Increase
that was released by the State.

:U pright 1/4

OUR REGULAR PRICE '24911

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Discover traps in.pot search

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Replace your old furnace with a Yukon
and watch those heating bills go
down. Get maximum heating

.

•Swisher says · state ill
error on calculations

OU/\LI TY SINC[ 1896

with a
Yukon Combination
Fuel Furnace

p~isional contract and provides
changes for teachers wishing to
increase while in 1981-85 the apply for continuing contracts. The
Increase will be six percent. ln new contract provides that teachers
explaining the contract provisions, · be notified by July 1 each year of the
Supt. Dan Morris said the state type of Insurance coirerage they
minimum for a beginning teacher have_in the district and a language
with no experience for the re- ehange ~&lt;(as provided on complaint
rnainder of this year is $12,100. Next procedure processes.
year's state minimum for that
In their new rontract, nonteacher. will be ·$12,700 &gt;Ylth that .. certified employes .w~re given the
teaCher re(.oe!Ving $13;000 under tl!e · right of · binding arbitration on
new contract In !lie Meigs Local grievances ratberthari the advisory
D~,strict.
arbltatlon provided In their last
Another language change makes contract. Theirpersonalleavemust
it uniform that teachers wlll be at · be taken In time periods of no less
their schools for seven and one-half than on,..half day and on major
hours. Last year, longer hOurs were medical the employes w111 pay
required for teachers of the Salem one-half less than on their last
center School. Under the new contract. Under the new contract,
contract, teachers will be given they pay $00 for the single plan and
credit for all years taught under a .. $_100 ·for !be ·family -pl~c . The

tary contracts for the 1983-84,school

Local news briefs.~.

MONARCH~

- Vlbra-Groomer II
· Beater Bar DHp Cleans
- Regulator • Adjusts to
carpet holght
- Brilliant H...dlight
- Wide Furnltvre Guard

'

yearwillrecelvea6.5percent~

•

Adci-A-Furnac:e®

The Dispatch said a metallurgical
welds made to several cracks in the
rtcle's steel support arm were only

New contracts with lbe Meigs ·rest of 1983 while under the new
LocaiTeachersAssociattonandthe
Cf)ntact the new teacher with a
Meigs Chapter of the Ohio Assocta- . bachelor's degt;ee will receive
tlonofPubllcSchoolEmployeswere
$12,600 for the remainder of 1983;
apProved 1'uesday night when the
$13,&lt;XXl from Jan. 1, 1984 to Aug. 31,
Meigs Local Board of Education
1984and$13,600fromSept. l,198'lto
·met In regular session.
Jan.15, 1985.
Both members of the teachers
Tbe figures refiect the .yearly
asSOCiation and the non-certified
salary for such a teacher and that
employes organization had ap·
wtllbeproratedbythemonth.There
proved the contracts earlier,
. .
were .s ome language c~ In the .
.. The neW contract for teachers .o f · eont:i-act Wiih'the teachers. , · ·
lbe dlstt1ct Is retroactive to Sept 1, . · One of these changes provides
this year and runs wttll January 15;
that vacancies In the .d istrict which
1985. Tbe Increase In salary for mlghtbeoflnterestfortransferswill
be published after June In the news
teachers for the 198:1-M school year
granted In the contract
about
media so teachers may apply at
6.5 percent and about 6 percent for
once ~ If Interested. lnvoluntary
!be 1984-85 year. ·
transfers of teachers must take
A beginning teacher with no placebyJuly1, ratherthantheSept.
.experience before the new contract 1 date of an earUer contract.
·.wouJd have receiyed$12,300 fot.the .
Teachers accepting ~pplemeJV

Weather:

CONtROLLED COMBUSTION

enttne
•

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedn,esday, September 21, 1983

~ were set at $2,&lt;XXlln a fire at the Twin City Machine Shop

Locker said that, partly due to the
report, the department beefed up
Inspections at the 1983 state fair by
adding Inspectors and L•tensltylng
Inspections.
study on the ride found that repair

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at y

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Meigs Local contracts are ·approved

For Your Appointment or More Information CALL ,
BOB AND CHARLENE HOEFLICH
(After 5 P .M . Or On Weekends)

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Voi.32,No.l -13 ·

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Deaths_... :.. ...............

. Copy&lt;!ghtod 1983

treasured "milestone" senior portraits.
You'll' like the individualized attention you receive at The
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. Your preview set will include9 to 12 di.f ferentposesbeforetra· ..
ditional 0~ backdrops and before sevel'al newly created.:o utdoor settings. We give you i variety from which to make ;.our final selection.

WOOD or COAL

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teams:resume

By lbe Bend ...... ...... Pa&amp;e&amp; S.7
Cla8lllled8 ..•...•...•. Pages 8-8-10
Comics, TV . ..... ..........Page l9
:Editorial .............. ........ Page.2 .

Congratulations...

Call The Phoro Place and make your appointment for those

_(Co_n_un_ued_fr_om_pa_ge_1_)_ _ _ __

to where the railroad tracks were
was a good move as It wUI save
damage to the meters.
Reed said a big problem with
broken meters on !be parking lot.
Hartenbach added there are several
meters broken on the street and

Today's
· Sentinel

their

COAL HEATERS

Report ties state fair
death to inspections

But it says the department may
"bear some of the responsibility In
that It may have negligently
disregarded its responsibilities as to
proper Inspection of the portable
amusement rides."

Pomerov area businesses. was born

Fann hand charged in murder

.;Pomeroy council~.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Slack
Inspection procedures for Ohio State
Fair amusement rides may have
contributed to a falal&lt;!ccldent at the
1981 fair, a state Department of
Agriculture report says.
The Columbus Dispatch, which
obtained a copy of the report,
reported Monday that thedocument
quotes former Inspector Lydia
Hartoas saylnginspectorsweretold
to avoid shutting down rides In 1981
"because the governor did not want
the rides down because of the bad
PR (pubUcrelatlons).''
MS. Harto, an inspector for elglit
years, told Investigators that 1981
ride inspections •'were not as tight as
they had been In years past." · ·
Former Gov. James A. Rhodes,
whO held office during 1981,'decllned
to comment on !be report.
B.J. Hoover, chief of the department's inspection division at the
tlmeoflbe 1981 state fair, denied lbe
allegations, The Dispatch said.
The report was compiled In June
at the request of current Agriculture
Director Dale Locker. It summarizes Information about the death of
Ron W. Edwards, 21. Dublln, who
died of head Injuries after a suppart
arm snapped on the Flying Coaster,
which 1\e was riding.
The June report, based on 1981
reports and Interviews with officials
Involved In the original lnvestiga·
tion Into the death, says no evidence
was found to Indicate any ImproprIeties on the part of Agriculture
Department employees.

Home.
Mrs. Heilman. 69, who had
worked as a housekeeper ·for

at DarWin on June 3, 1914, a
Holzer Medical Cent!"r.
A housewife, Mrs. E blin was born daughter of the late George and
In Pomeroy on J une 8. 1924. a Emma St. Clair McCumber.
She ·is survived by two nephews,
daughter of Mrs. Janie VIning,
George
Keith McCumber and
. Pomeroy, and the late Bart Wise.
Jackie
McCumber.
both of Spctng·
She is survived, in addition to her
fi
eld,
and
several
cousins.
mother. by her husband , Walter
She was preceded in death by,her
Eblln. Pomeroy; &gt;two sons, Larry
parents
and a brother.
Eblln of Opelika, Ala. , and Roger
Mr.
Heilman,
83. was born In
Eblin, Route1,Rutland; a daughter,
Meigs
County
on
May
14,1900, a son
Sandra Morris, Pomeroy , and nine
of
the
late
Philip
and
Hanna Kalb
grandchildren.
Hellman.
He
was
a
farmer and
Services will be held at 3 p.m.
timberman.
.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Surviving
are·
two
sisters,
Felicia
Hol'(le with the Rev. Robert Miller
officiating. BurialwillbeintheRock Grueser and Florence Hellmiln,
Springs Cemetery. Friends may . both of Pomeroy. and several nieces
call at the funeral home anytime at 1 and nephews. He was preceded In
(leath by his parents, a brother and
p.m, Wednesday.
three sisters . .
Mr. and Mrs. Hellman resided at
38811 Heilman Road, Pomeroy,
Walter Heilman
near where they lost their Uves In the
automobile accident.
Lelia N. Heilman
Officiating at services.wUI be the
Joint funeral services for Walter Rev. RobertPutrell. BurialwUI be in
the Rock Springs Ceineteiy. .
R an.d Lelia N:. Hellman, kllled In an
auto aeclderit _o n Ball J'l.U)I Road •·.Frlendl;· may caJr at ·!he. funer.;J:l ·
Monday afternoon, will be held at 1 homefrorn2:00fu5andir'om7t0 9
p.in. Thursday at Ewing Funeral p.m. on Wednesday,

shootlngdeathofBarbaraTwyman,
17, Rt.1, Ewlngton.
Hll..lSBORO, Ohio (AP)- Terry ·
Twyman, a student at Buckeye L. Robinson, 28, a farm hand, has
H!ils Career Center, was reported been chargEd with aggravated
missing_ to the sheriff• s department .. mt~rder .in the Friday death of
·on March 20. Acting on a lip, · Donald L. Jewe.tt. 29, H!Usboro.
ln\lesti!iators . began . searching·
JeWett's'body was foimd In a field
abandoned wells in the Allee Road near a burned out car, !he Highland
area near Ewlngton on Aprll5 and County Sheriff's office said. Jewett
foundberbodYinaweUlatethenext was last seen with RObinson,
afternoon. Sl&gt;e had repartedly been deputies saldcThe victim had been
shot twice, once in the head and once shot In the head. Robinson was
in the chffit.
charJ!ed Monday.
Meanwhile at Moscow Ohio. a
Lee was arrested In connection
withTwymah'sdeaththesameday, human skeleton has been found In
andheenteredanotgulltypleatothe the trunk of a car pulled from the
charge In juvenile court April 7. He Ohio River on Monday, said Pollee
was bound over to the adult division Chief Deruiis Skeene.
Skeene said he spatted the
of common pleas court - the first
time such a commliment had been submerged car whlle scuba diving.
made for a juvenile, officials said.
The 1981 Chevrolet had Georgia

added that he has supplles for the
other portion of the second floor al)d
is need of a labor bid.
Melennan's 'report
Steve Haitenbach, meterman,
reported that he issued 605 tickets.
He also s.t ated that moving of
parking meters from the parking lot

Tuesday, September 20, 1983

Pomeloy-Midclleport, Ohio

Page-:--10-- The Daily Sentinel

-~

conunlsslon denied that request ·at
the same time It turned down the
1984 budget. Several employes
during the discussion painted out
that they had personally paid for
items o'ut of their personal funds
such as sugarless suckers for
children attending cllnlcs and
detergents for washing gowns used
by the department.
Tl)e failure to the budget conunlsslon for the additional $11,001 puts
the health department on a very
close budget for the rest of 1~.
Jacobs commented, and said that
nothing is to be ordered unless lie
okays lt. "This Includes paper
clips", Jacobs stated.
The board of health moved tnio
executive session todlscuss salaries
and after that session reparted that
the 1984 salary request In the budget
has been reduced by $3,000 bringing
the total for 198t down to $90,!1l6.4L
The salaries of Jacobs, Young al\d
Torres lor 1984 were reduced by
$1,&lt;XXl each to bring about lbe
revised salary request figure, the
board reported.
,
Also revised was a request for
$10,tm for health insurance for
employes In 198t. Jacobs said that·
the health ·Insurance on some
employes will be paid by the state
and the 1984 request as a resultwas
reduced to $6500. Adjustments will
be made downward In public
retirement moneys, workmen:s
compensation and Jacobs voluntar·
ilygaveup$200ofmoneyherecelves
from the food services account io
provide further reductions In the
1984 budget figures .
Jacobs said the budget will be
·redone and presented to each board
rnemberforapprovalandslgnature
and It was agreed thatJacobswillbe
accompanied by Dr. Witherell when
the 1984 budget is again presented !o
the budget commission. This will be
sometime away since the budget
must be redone to Incorporate the
new figures.
Attending the meeting were other
board members, Mary Birchfield,
Lester Hart, Gene Jetters and
Albert Hill. Jr .. along with ~
Health Commissioner, Dr. Sellin

Blazew!cz.

..

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