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DaJI

12-The Daily Sentinel

Council okays .....___::n.:.:.....!:::=:..:::...

Cooke given
last respects

1&gt; ·

at the fire station, asking woo pays Holtman also reported that it
for the water used? Mayor Hot- appears that Mlddlepoit Is hlgh on
tman said the village Is not bflled for the prtority USt to receive an
water and Counctiman Horton lntoxillzer probably In December.
pointed out that firemen are' a
CouncU, upon the recommendavolunteer ~P wlih members tion of the Middleport Board of
putting In many hours every week Public Affairs, agreed to transfer
In serving the community. He sees $6.lXlfrom the water tank fund to the
nothing wrong with them washing village general fund. This money Is
their vehicles at the station. He the Interest paid on unused water
added that the department even tank fUnds. Mayor Hoffmarl said at
raised money to purchase equip- · the next meeting the board of public
ment rather than to ask the village affairs wlll consider 1-econunendlng
to make such purchases.
ihe trans!er of more Interest money
Hudson said he thinks the to the general fund .
firemen do a gOOd job and .that he
Coimcllman Horky reported that
would jump at the chance to be a a surveyor wlll probably begin work
member. Horton and Gtlmore said In the Hudson St. area next week.
they wouldlook Into the posslblllties
Mrs. Yvonne Scauy, president of
of hls joining the department.
the Middleport Chamber of CoinAppUcatlon tulned down
.merce, met with council and
Mayor Hoffman advised council presented an updated report on
a vlllage appUcation for an approxi- plans for a Halloween party on Oct.
mate $11l,OOJ Economic Develop- 31. The party, at the suggestion of
ment Act grant for new water Jines council, wUI replace trick or treat
has been turned down. A letter from
night In the community. It will be
EDA personnel Indicated there held at the Meigs Junior High
applications lor grants, football field. The public has been
were
some not even falling within the quite receptive to the party plans
guidelines. The. applications _11sked . and Is making contributions for the
for a total of $1.6 bUUon whUe just event since It ddes replace trick or
$100,000,000 was available for the treat night. Council voted a $400
program.
contribution to the party expenses. ·
Scauy stressed the party Is open to
However, the mayor reported the public and that refreshments of
that the Middleport Police Depart- cider and donuts wUI he served to au
ment has been selected to partici- persons attending and youngsters In
pate In the safety and accident costume wUI each receive a bag of
conlrol program of the Ohio candy.
Department of Highway Safety.
Council approved the report of
Through the program one officer
Mayor Hoffman showing receipts of
can be employed for 16 hours on $6!01.32 In fines and lees for the
Friday and Satursday each week as month of September.
an extra step In conlrollng drunken
Atlendlng last night's session
driving. The department wlll pay!J&gt; were Mayor Hoffman, Clerkpercent of the Costs Involved, $5200 TreasUrer Jon Blick, and Council- •
whfle the village will be responsible men Horton, Horky, William Wal·
for W percent of tl!e yearly cost for ters, Jack Satterfield and Robert
such an officer. $l.JIO. Mayor Gilmore.

m

Impasse continues
GAU.IPOJI.IS - A negotiating
session with the Gailla County Local
Educa tlon Associa tlon and the
board of education stalemated
Monday night, and teachers may
meet this later this week or early
next week 10 discuss a possible
strike vote .
Don Lloyd, Ohio Education Association representative, said GCLEA
made some "major concessions"
that Lloyd called "our last move."
OEA membership meetings were
scheduled to be held In all buildings
throughout the district today. l.loyd
said membership was to be informed on status of negilliations and
of a pending general membership
meeting to held for a single purpose
- tl)e posslbUity of authorizing a
strike vote.
"We don't have time to waste,"
Lloyd said this morning of negotiations. The association has been
working without a contract since
July 31, when. its three-year master ·
agreement expired. Both sides have
been at Impasse since Aug. 26.
Lloyd said last night's session,
held at !he Holiday Inn and lasting
nearly five hours. snagged on two
outstanding issues - final and
binding arbitration and bargaining
on all wages .
The association has made conces-

slons on those issues, Lloyd said, but
he charged that the board wUI only
discuss base salary discussion in
contract reopener negotiating. The
association wants to discuss Indexes, salary steps and columns;
l.loyd added that !he board
suggested a separ"!te agreement
ailowing for fact -finding in negotiatlng. but outside of the master
contract and unrelated to coUectlve
bargaining. The association wants
negotiations to continue beyond the
mediation stage.
The hoard's proposal lor an
outside agreement Isn't enforceable, Lloyd continued, and the
association's negotiating team rejected it.
Negotiations had stalled on the
length of the master contract, but
were apparently resolved in a
September session.
The association wanted a oneyear contract to allow negotiations
to be held when collective bargainIng takes effect next year, but the
board pushed for a three-year
contract, claiming It didn't want to
participate when the law was only
beginning to take effect.
Both Superintendent Gary Toothaker and Assistant Superintendent
David Campbeil were unavailable
for comment this morning.

Meigs County happenings.•
Meet tonight
The Meigs County Athletic Boosters will meet at 7:30 p.m.wlll meet
this evelng at the high school. Films
of the Meigs-Warren game will be
shown. AU boosters are urged to
attend.

End marriages
Pamela J. Salser, Pomeroy and
Henry AnthOny Salser, Jr .. Syracuse Wed fordissolution of marriage
1n Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Marriages dissolved were Patrtcla Custer and Philip Joseph
Custer; Sheila Irene Demosky and
David Matthew Demosky; Carter
Michael and Sheila Kay Michael.
Sheila Kay Michael was restored to
her malden name of Sheila Kay
Anderson.
Granted a djvorce was Pansy
Ohlinger from Dorsey Ohlinger.

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial
Aclmltted: Homer Graham, Racine; Anna Marie Mohler, Middleport; Eunice Nutter, Reedsvllle;
Keith Oiler, Langsvllle; Barbara
Hendrix, Syracuse; Bertha Diehl,
Pomeroy, and Yolan Salterfleld,
Mlnersvllle.
•
Discharged: James Fisher.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHAJWES ocr. 10
DeanAdklns,JustlnCall,Dougtas
Detly, Katherine Eberts, Mrs.
Douglas Enoch and son, Edgar
Griffith, Jessie Jeffers, Frederlck
Lanier, John McGuire Jr.. Mrs.
David MUis and daughter, Mrs.
Jeffery Edward
Needs and
son, Maudie
Steven
Oliver,
Parkins,
Persinger, Karen Stanley, Gary
Thompson, Rebecca Tywman.

NEW YORK (AP)- Tlie pope's
personal representative called Car·
dlnal Terence Cooke "a priest's

priest," but ot11ers had dltferent

Impressions, ranging fran "street
priest" to anti-abortion actiVIst.

St. Patrick's Cathedral
where a tuneral Mass was said for
Cooke on Monday, mourners sat tn
pews and listened to the Choir 8DCI

MISSING CHILDREN - An eetlmaled half mlulng from LG8 ADgeles; a.ylene Susan Jlelaley,
mlllloD children reported m18111ng In the ._,. decade mlulng from Marton, La.; and Nyleea Ka.v Manhall,
are oiiJI missing. ChDdFind of New Paltz, N.Y., hopes
mlulng from Clancy, Moal. From leftlo ..... bollom
to l'l!lllllte younpiers with lhelr families by llhowtng row are 1lsa ~heBe Stock, .......,, frOm SaD
photoo to a national television audleuce after a movie . Aalonlo; Robert JOIIellh Fritz, mllll!llng from Foad du
aboul missing phiJdren was aired. Among lhe photoo Lac, Wis.; CharioUe JUM Klnaey, mioldog from
Oldahoma Cliy; Ryan Burioa, mlalllng from
· sbown oa lelevlslon were b'om left 1o right on top row,
·
Ctnda Leaan PalleU, ml88tng from OldaboJn!l city; Breckenrldse, Tx.; and Richard Ray . BameU,
John G08Ch, mlss!ng from Des Molues; Beclcy ScoU, mloldog from Idaho. {AP Ll!sei'Jihtl'o)

.

'

Lost children's photos draw
response from TV audience·
cases are never solved, estimates
Child Find.
Ms. Otlo has done other work to
help findmlsslngchfldren, Including
producing a segment lor the
ABC-TV news magazine "W-~."
"I've always been of an oldfashioned opinion - If you make a
good Informative movie about an
Important Issue, people wUI want to

. NEWPALTZ,N.Y.(AP)-ATV

movie about a lost boy drew a
ringing response from viewers:
after tlie races of55mlsslngchfldren
fiashed on the screen, cauers llt ·up
theswttchboardatChlldFindinc.to
otfer clues about lost youngsters.
Even before the broadcast, one
mlsslngchildwhosawherplctureln
a magazine story on the show caued
and said she wanted Iosee her lather
again.
Child Find, which works to
recover an estimated 2,&lt;XXl missing
American children. joined forces
with NBC-TV on Monday night lor
the broadcast of" Adam," the story
of a 6-year-old who disappeared on
July '1:1, 1981, from a store .tn
Hollywood, Fla.
Adam Walsh's severed head was
found two weeks tater, but the rest of
his body was never found.
The fllrll was supposed to ''speak
for the children," said the show's
producer, Linda Otto. Ms. Otto and
executive producer Joan Barnett,
were at Child Find's office here to
assist the 30 or so volunteers who
answered phones and coordinated
Information that poured In after the
fUm.
Since Its founding In 1!*11, Child
Find has located 5\6 missing
children. Nationwide, about 150,(0)
children . are reported missing
annually. Roughly 50,00) of those

watch It," she said. She predicted
about 40 mUilon viewers.
The movie dramatized the lives of
Jolm and Reve Walsh, j whose
attempts to find thelrsonledthem to
persuade Congress to change laws
to ease the search for other parents
of missing children.
At the end of the two-h&lt;iur fUm,
photos of 55 missing children were
shown as-Walsh read the childrens'
names. At the end of that twominute segment, Child Find's
toll-free number was fiashed on the
screen . .
Less than a minute later, caUers
who thought they recognized faces
on the screen Ut up au 10 of Child
Find's Incoming telephone Unes.
It wasn't Immediately clear If the
cails would provide Information that
would lead to recovery of a missing
child.
But before the movie started, a
teen-age gjrl cauedtoreport that she
wasoneofthosewhosephotographs
were carrled In a TV Guide story

Pumpkins not ideal crop this year
CIRCLEVILLE. Ohio {AP) The prtce of this year's Halloween
Jack-o' lantern may be inflated, but
It's likely that It's size won' t be.
much of the area's other crops had
organizers
tl!e annual
The dry ofsummer
thatPumpkin
stunted
Festival scurrying to find enough
W-to 30-pound pumpkins to build the
traditional pyramid in time for the
Oct. 19 opening of the event.

southern Michigan was pretly good
because they had a belter ralnfau
than central Ohio," a market clerk
said.

Revival slated
A revival Is tn progress at Hysell
. Run HolineiS Church now through
Oct. 15 beginning each evening at
7:!1 p.m. Pastor Theron Durham·
Invites~ to attend.

about missing chUdren. She told
Child Find that she wanted to be
reunited with the father who was
looking for her.
Child Find askEd that the name of
the girl not be released, nor the
circumstances of her disapPearance, until her Identity was
confirmed.

the organ. OUtside, tlleystood on the
curb and listened to portable radios
- as the cetemony evokEd varied
memories fran variOIJ.Sadmlrers~
the cardinal.
"It was hls tasl!. to guide the
·archdiocese of New York during .•.
tension, confllct and trlals," said
Cardinal WWlam Bawn of a 15-year
tenure that saw race riots, anti-war
protest and ·the transtonnatlon ol
Roman CathoUc worship after the
Second Vatican Council.
Bawn, PqJe Jolm Paul ll's
personal representative at the
fUneral, euJoglzed Cooke, who dJed
last Thursday of leUkemia, as "a
priest's prtest."
Former President Richard
Nixon, among the . 2,im who
attended the Mass, ' said Coo)le
"could make anybody feel bet·
ter ...Hehad a wonderful ability with
that twinkle In hls eye and a warmth
In hls heart."
Irish Republican Anny sympathizer Michael Flannery, whose
electionasgrlll)dmarshalofthe1983
St. Patrick's Day Parade had
prompted Cooke to stay Inside St.
Patrick's untfl F1annerywalked by,
attended the Mass "out of respect
for him... We agreed to dlf!er."
Cooke 'llved· 1n a mansion on
Madison Avenue and headed as
many as"!loocorporatlons, Including
the archdiocese's 4ll parishes.

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;.

CUSTOM-MADE

DRAPERY SAL-E
.

Fabulous selection of beautiful drapery·
fabrics to compliment any room in your
home. Satins, Brocades, Casements and
Prints.
Choose From
Standard, Deluxe or Ultra-Full Pleats

SAVE 30°/o
Don't Delay-

Sal~

Ends October 22
-~

r~~Th~e~co~sts:~of~tr~ans~po~rta~tlo:n~ln~-Ub:::::~~=~~~~~~~;;~~-~-~-~d~
creases market prices, marketers
say.

"It wasn't an Ideal crop," said
Ruth Renick of Renick's Family
Market outside Circlevllle. "We had
the same amount, but last year
many were 50 to 60 pounds. There
aren't many of tl!ose this year."
Kerns Farm Market In Columbus
has plenty of pumpkins, but that's
because It hauls them in from
•
northern Ohio.
"The crop up In northern Ohio and

Weather forecast
Sixty percent clw1ce of rain
tonight. Low 52-57. Winds southeasterty about 10 mph. Wednesday,
cloudy with 50 percent chance of
showers. High Th8l.
Elteoded Ohio Forecast
ThiiJ'I!da.ythroupSaturday:
Good cllance for ra1n each day.
6S-"13.l.ow114S-58.

See leiter on Page 2

story on Page 6

Chronic lung disease.·
Famll:v Medicine P .9

e
Voi.32,No.128
Copyrightod 1983

•

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~~HigiJ!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~

CABINETS
ofREE EIITlMATEI
•TRAINED INSTAL.i,ERS

RAONE .

PlANING MILL
r.. ti2·H71-

lt. 124. hncne

'1Ufi1MI -llllCI 1Mr

•

,_,

.
enttne
'

14 Pagea
20 C:.nh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 12, 1983

Unidentified man
gunshot victim
.

I

According to a preUmlnary report
received from a Columbus pathologist, a gunshot wound to the head
was the cause of death for an
unidentified man whose body was
found Monday In a mobile home on ·
Forest Run Rd. In Meigs County.
Gary Wolfe, Investigator for the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department, said today no positive
Identification has been made of the
body and no arrests have been
made. Wolfe also reported that
Mary Edith Taylor and her son,
Undsey Taylor have been located.
The traDer home where the
decomposed body found had been
occupied by Mrs. Taylor, her son
and daughter, Freda MUhoun.
Mllhoun had moved from the
trailer sometime last week. Jack
Scarbrough, Stlversville, a friend of
the Taylors went to the trailer
Monday to get some clothing lor
MUhoun when he discovered the

Spencer, 23, Syracuse, on A1,1g.1, to
supress statements given by
was seated on a couch and was Spencertolawenforcementofflcers
covered with a blanket. It WI!S also and evidence seized by the state
reported the man had been dead following her Indictment by the
several days.
.
grand Jury on charges of endangerThe body was removed by Ewing lng children and Involuntary mansFunera!Homeandlatertakentothe laughter. Spencer has been deoffice of the Frank!hi County clareo competent to stand trial.
She was Indicted by the grandjury
Coroner tn .Coliunbus lor an
autopsy. Investigation Is continuing on June 16 on the two charges.
by the sheriff's department.
The case began when a baby boy,
Rules against suppression
found on May 30wrapped In a plastic
Meanwhile, Meigs County Com- bag In a car In Meigs County was
mon Pleas Judge Charles Knight taken to Holzer Medical Center.
has ruled against suppression of
According to a pretlmlnary autoceita.ln evidence In the Pamela P. psy report at the time from Gailla
Spencer case.
County Coroner Dr. Donald R.
Judge Knight; In hls ruling Warehime, the baby was not
Tuesday, noted that statements and stillborn.
the consents to search were knowIt was reported that the baby was
lngly and voluntarily g!ven and as a born In a car In Syracuse and placed
result the motion to suppress was . tn a plastic bag before being taken to
denied.
Holzer Medical Center where !twas
A motion waS made by Steven pronounced dead.
Story, atlorney for Pamela Phyllis
body.
According to reports, the body

Gallia conimissioners
end airport agreement
•

GALLIPOLIS - Galila County officially ended Its
contractual arrangement for the operation of the
GaUl a-Meigs Regional Airport with Foothlllsi\vlation
last night.
Foothills - the firm that held the contract for the
facUlty through Sept. 30- was seeking to renegotiate
terms of the originalS-year agreement entered Into In
1981. A clause In In that lease arrangement caued lor
renegotiation after two years.
The commission and Foothllls had untfl Sept. 30 to
renew, modify or reject the then existing contract.
The county commission Informed Foothllls co-owner
Geareld Hitchcock last night of their Intention to
" ... bid the operation of the Gauta-Meigs Regional
Airport." .
In so doing, the county effectively ended Its
cont.nactual link with the firm for operation of the
ajrport. Hitchcock had proposed a new contractual
relationship between the county and Foothllls.
· In substance, that proposal called for an additional,
yearly $lb,OOJ appropriation to help operate the
facllity. Under terms of the 1981 contract, the county
allocated $5,00) per year to the operation of the joint
county facUlty.
On Sept. 30, Commission President Paul D. Niday
Issued a letter to Foothills Aviation calling the
proposal "Totally unacceptable."
The commission met with representatives of
Foothllls Aviation for nearly two hours last week to
further discuss the operation o! the ajrport. That
session ended with a pledge by the commission to
continue consideration of the matter.
In a written statement handed to Hitchcock last

night, the commissioners asserted, "The purpose of
teasing the landflll and the airport was togetoutofthe
operational facUlties follOwing the courthouse fire and
subsequently the financial dilemma."
"The commission wUI publicly advertise over the
next few weeks and Foothills Is encouraged to submit
a proposal as are other Interested parties. The
commission wlll award the operation to the most
responsible and best lor the good of Gallla County
using the state code as our guide." The letter
continued.
Hitchcock ·accepted and read the letter during last
night's brief meeting. He left without c01nment.
In a statement Issued Sept. 26 by G-M Regional
AirpOrt Authority Larry Beebe, the Foothill's
proposal was described as ''not In the best Interest of
the taxpayer."
"Both the county commissioners and the airport
authority beUeve that continued growth Is possible
with proper management ...contlnued operation of the
airport can be, we believe, achieved on a
self-supporting basis," Beebe's statement concluded.
In addition to the question of the county's financial
support of the airport under Foothlll's proposed
agreement, the commission -objected to the firm's
proposal to lease additiotialland to construct hangars.
Last ntght's letter to Hitchcock stated, "We are
charging responsibility for the construction of
approximately 10 hangars to the ajrpori authority.
The authority will work with our architect,
Community Improvement Corporation and the
commissioners to see these hangars are built."

Jobs program gets funding

YARD SALE
Weds .• Oct 12
9 til Dark

Due to recent move,
Clarence Hill Residence.
Located; Turn left on Hill
Rd .. before Racine Dam,
1st house on left. 1year
old air conditioner, 7
mo. old alee. 30 inch
ran1e, 23" color TV,
clothinl all sizes, children's, drapiS, sheers
and curtains, small kitchen appliances, toys,
and many other Items.
Clll 247-4134aftll 5;00

Point road races•••

Inside

Minor brush ftreS
Meigs County had tWo brush fires
Monday whic)] were extinguished
by local !Ire deparlrnents. At 1:42
p.m. the Middleport Fire Department went .to Poplar Rldge and at
6: 30 p.m. the Rutland firemen went
to Side Hill Road. The Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service also
repo~ that Shirley Frazier was
transported from the Stonewood
APartments · In Middleport by the
Middleport squad to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Celeste's help sought

CHESHIRE - A regional Jobs
Training Partnership Act program,
which Includes Galila and Meigs
counties, has ~lved an $87 ,OOJ
from the state to start Its program.
' DougtasPhUabaUI\,JTPAR.egton
24 administrator, predicted 200
unemployed residents locally and In
Athens, Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs,
Perry and VInton counties will be
enrolled In the program bY the end of
themontl!.
• Slnl;e JTPA took effect Oct. 1,
Galila-Meigs Community Action
Agency, the servtce outlet for the
program, has accepred several
referrals from the Ohio Bureau of
~mplayment ServiceS office and
expects more to come In the fUture.
CM Executive Director Sidney
Edwards said the agency Is now.
putting features of Its on-the-Job
training program together while
sorting through QBES referrals,
which Edwarci; saki the agency Is
picking up dally.
"We're really trying to aet off the
IIJ'OIIIId," Edwards saki, a4dlngthat
final touches are being put on
pbulnl out the Cociljliel&amp;iiiW
Employment and 'l'ralnllllr Act

(CETA) program.
Phllabaun has urged all employPhllabaun" said Region 24 t5 to ers In southeastern Ohio to contact
their klcal OBESofflcesorcommunreceive $2.35 ml1llon between now
and theendoftheflscalyeartocarry
tty action agencies for more
out the program for 1.200 unemInformation on Incentive programs
played people.
for htrlng the unemployed.
'
Local community action agencies
· JTPA replaced the CETA and Is
considered a "major departure" have the authority to wrtte 254
from the old program because 7!l on-the-job training contracts with
percent of local fUnding goes to . the region's employers. The protraining actMtles to help the gram can subsidize up to ~percent
U111!1J1Pioyed find Jobs In private of the employee's salary during the
Industry and business. CETA pro- training program.
vlded IUDds for public sector jobs.
{Continued on page 14)

Injuries fatal to elderly Woman
PI'. PLEASANI' - An 87-year.old Point Pleasant woman died
Tuesday nliht after being struck by
an autllnol!fle Tuesday night on
JacbonAVI!IIue, aspola!spenonfor
the Point Pleaaant Pollee Depart.
ment u:pm1.ed.
•
UJIIe Rodgers, · fm 21st Street,
died at ll: ll p.m. trcm massive
heed and Internal Injuries at
J&gt;le!IIIDI Valley HQIIPitaJ a(ter
emes iEDi-1' room pes 101wel fouaht
10 IIW bl!r Ufe,

' Pollee saki Rodgers was crossln"
the street In front of Jlmbo's, 2412
Jackson Avenue, toward the west
side at 8:07p.m. wbenshewalkedtn
front of a car driven by Jolm J.
Morris m, 33, Pittsburgh, Pa.
· Morris was unable to stop.

Point Pleasant ~ transported
Rodge! s to PVli. :r
No citations were Issued tn the
Incident, and Morris had no appar·
ent damage to hls car.

,.

GALLIA CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL The current
home of the Ga.lllii Christian
School which sen'es Meigs,

GaWa and Mason Cmmtles
prlmarfly Is shown above. It
Is comprised of four mobUe
Wilts which were designed to
serve as the classroom facUl-

ties. The structure Is located
near Cheshire. At bottom
right, Merl Miller, a student
at the Gallla Christian '

•

School, points up the variety
' of classroOm work oHered as
she works with a microscope.
She Is a freslunan at the
school which she has attended for several years.

School continues
despite big obstacles
By BOB HOEFLICH
CHESHIRE - Despite such
obstacles as the lack of state aid
monies, small enrollment, and
the lack of a student transportation system, the Gauta Chrlstlljll
School School Is forging right
ahead.
Mrs. Biubara Sheridan,
school adminiStrator, says the
school Is not against public
education, but offers an alternative to parents and students.
Enrollment at the school,
which started In 1976 Is 47 this
year but the State of Ohio
recommends the facility could
accommodate 90 students. How·
ever. Mrs. Sheridan says she
would be more comfortable with
only 70 to 75 enroll~s.
Currently, most of tl!e students come from Meigs and
Gauta Counties. Some students
live tn Mason and one commutes·
daily from Jackson County,
Ohio.
Attending a Chflstlan school
such as that In Cheshire Is not
especially easy. In the first
place, there are tuition fees to
deal with. The fee Is now $750
annually for the first child In a
family, hut a reduced rate Is
offered for the second, or even
more children !rom the same
family.
Getting to classes ~ another ·
problem. There ' 'is no public
transportation. Transportation
must be provided by parents and
many of these "car pool" In
order to make the to and from
trips a little more toleral?),!?, _
The Gallla Christian .School is
non-denominational, but there
are classes dealing with religion.
For the first 10 minutes each
morning students have a "God

•

and Country" session and there
are 20 minute classes later each
day using the Bible as a text.
Any student having a doctrinal
question Is referred to the
parents for an answer.
The school Is supervised by a
board of trustees composed of
seven members elected each
January. These are selected by
all parents of children attending
the school. The curriculum
followed goes along state guidelines and classes are conducted
180 days a year. the same as
pubic schools.
Offertng classes from kindergarten through grade 12, the
Gauta Christian School staff
feels It can move students along
at a relatively rapid pace since .
classes are quite small and
Individualized attention can be
stressed. A wide variety of
subject matter Is offered high
school students woo can generally complete the four year
requirements In three years .
A location I • the school has
been a problem since Its lncepUon In 1976. The school was first
located in the VInton Fellowship
Chapel. In 1979 the Gilman
building In Gallla County was
used, later at tl!e White Oak
Baptist Youth Camp In Cheshire
Twp. Things are looking.up now,
however.
The school Is located near
Cheshire In four mobile trailer
units which were assembled hy
the parenU;. The consolidated
units provide seven classrooms,
.n office and a large . multipurpose room In the center. It Is
located on an acre of ground and
there Is a playground for
recesses each day.

Teachers tl!ere are dedicated
people. They workforconslderably less than they could receive
In a public school situation.
Parents, too, must be dedicated,
no1 only from the standpoint of
tuition involved and the transportation of students, but with
problems that must be solved
such as putting together the new
school and seeing that their
children have lunches each day
as the school has no established
lunch program as In public
schools.
The Gallla School Is quite
dependent on volunteer help, to
say the least.
Mrs. Sheridan and members
of the staff, while handling a
wide age range In their smail
school, are pleased with the
Inter-reaction among students
and younger students often
become familiar with work
which they wlll tackle In the
future .
·
To enter the school, an
application must be completed.
Often the parents. as well as the
student. undergo Interviewing to
Insure that both wantto be a part
of the Chlistlan School.
Mrs. Shelidan points out that's
a major step. The school cannot
be used as a see-saw or a tool to
be In and out of the public school ·
system. In · other words, the ·
students and parents must )IE'
dedicated.
Have there been problems
with ~tudents? Mrs, Sheridan
recalls only two over the years.
No one was dismissed from the
school, however. The two students ended up leaving the
school and that, of course, solved
the problem.

�'

-...

Wednesday, October 12, 1983 .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio .

The Daily Sentinei-Poge--3

'

Comment

I

Pap--2-The Daily Sentinel
:
Pamervr-Middleport, Ohio
.;
1
Wedue . k y, October 12, 1983 · ~~
•

· The Daily Sentinel
Ill Cou·rt Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN'fEUEST.OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARL\

'·

RO BERT L. WINGETI
P ublisher .
PAT WHI'fEHE&lt;\0

BOB HOEFLICH

Assis t a nt P ublisher/ Controller

Gcnerjl-1 Manager

DALE ROTHGEB , JR.
News Ed itor
A ME J\1BE R of The Associated P ress , In land Daily Press Associa·
tlon a nd the Am erican Ne wspa per P~ bll s h e r Assoc iation.
'--

LETrERS OF OPINIQN a r c wt&gt;lconwd . T h t.-l' sho uld bt' less tha n 300 "''ord.o;
long , All letters are subj ect t o e ditin g an'd mus l hP !ilgned with name, a d dres.'lo and
teleph one num ber , No un si gned letter s will be published. L etter s should be In

good taste,

addres~ln g

Iss ues, not personalities.

·· ·Letters to editor

'

Enter Neil Kinnock
. You certainly won't be able to say for this century.
about the new leader of the Brttlsh
It is - In my judgment - a very
Labor Party that he is an ambigu- good thing that the labor party
ist. He looks forwa rd, he says, to be elected as Its new leader a
a completely denuclearlzed Great . gentleman whose views are so
Britain. He made this commitment
kooky-lett. I say this as a friend of
· - prediction wltnout any reference
Great Britain, believing that the
to 'whether there would be denu- progressive Identification of the
c\earlzation of the Soviet Union, Labor Party with the far left
which of course there would not be. guarantees that the party will be
Oh yes, and he added that not only progressively less threatenllig.
What Mr. Klnnock has said is the
would be the Labor Par!JI. sl!f to It
that there shou ld be 'no nuclear equivalent of Mrs, Thatcher's
pledging that four years from now
bombs owned and controlled by the
British, neither would there be any the Conservative Party would
in Great Britain owned and con- preside over the liquidation of all
trolled by NATO, or by the United forms of British welfare. Faced
States. I think that means that Mr. with such a polarization, the Brtt!sh
Neil Klnnock Is saying In effect that voters would flock to center parties
Great Britain does not desire the in search of a little sanity.
military protection of the United
Four y ears ago, Nell Klnock
. States. a nd that is certainly a first spent an hour on television with two

'

other Brjtlsh MPs and an American
journatist. He touched on a number
of subjects, one of them his belle!
that totalitarian societies tend to
manage because, after all, they
look after the essential needs of the
people. "The system of totalitarianism could not and would not have
survived as long as they have - "
Q: Wltoout a gulag?
Kinnock: No, without slmulatenously - Yes, a system of organized
repression, but at the same time,
that system of organized repression
couldn't ensure the conformity of
millions of hundreds of millions
were It not for the additional
prov~on of some kind of economic
or vicarious satisfaction that keeps
people In their places.
Q: How do you !mow?
,
Klnnock: WeD, for the very - I -

spinning the gravel and covering
everythlng with dust.
My opinion - I think it was a
~vaste of time and money . We the
people on this road would like to
have something done a bout it. Mr . and Mrs Clyde Davis, Mr. and
Mrs, E lmer Har mon, Mr. and Mrs.
!l.lck Bolin , Lillie Robinson,
Sa mmy Robinson, J oe Oidisse.
DLxie Oidisse, Mr. and Mrs. James
Priddy, Mary McKinney, Sherry
McKinney.

.

'

Tra nsportat!on ot heavy loads of
this nature is vety hard on our
township roads, and although the
State of Ohio has assisted at til)1es
to aid in the restoration of these
roads after the timber harvest was
com pleted , the township Is totally
responsible for keeping the roads
properly maintained for the safe
.oper ation of scnool buses during tne
harvest.
Also, there are several gas wells
located on the a bove referred to
lands , tnat natural gas is pumped
and sold from.
I would appreciate your investigation of the above situa tion, and
advising me as to whe ther there is
any method by which Olive Township could qualify for some assist·
ance in the way of taxes ·from the
sale of timber and natural gas from
wells located on this land. Francis H. Andrew. Chairman,
Olive Township Trustees, Long
Bottom , Ohio,

.

50th anniversary
During 1983. the National Assoclatlon of CivUlan Conservation
Corps Alumni (NACCCA) Is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the
Establlshmen t of the Civ!lian Conserva tlo n Corps (CCC) .
The NACCCA Is !lying to locate
about two million former members
and persons who were connected or
affillated with the CCC during the
1930s and 1940s . It is a known fact
tha t many of these persons reside In
Ohio a nd areas serviced by your
publication.
I a m sure that many or your
reader s have often wondered wh at

became of the CCC. You can tell
them the CCC lives again In the

NACCCA. It is a young and growing
organization with chapters In many
of the sta tes throughout the nation,
and one of Its m ajor objectives Is to
have the CGC reactivated .
A Commemorative CCC Postage
Stamp has been available for
purchase since April, 1983.
Anyone Interested in the organ~
zatlon can write to NACCCA,
Loehmann's P laza, 7245 Arlington
Blvd ., Suite 318, Falls Church,
VIrginia 2200, for more Information and literature . - Victor
Vengrouskie , 2212 Argola Ave.,
Silver Spring, Md. W902. (301 )
942-5180.

Woman veep: GOP
has candidates, Denis
have opportunity
The irony In the woman-for-vice president boomiet Is that It's the
Democrats wno have the opportunity but the Republicans who have the
candidates.
The nationally known, office-holding women in America happen to be
Republicans. The two wom en whq sit in the Senate are Republicans. The
first and only woman on the Supreme Court is a Rep11bllcan. And Ronald
Reagan has two women in his Cabinet, one at the United Nations.
All have the credentials to serve as his running mate, but Reagan
already h as one, and It would look cynical to dump George Bush in favor of

a woman. ~
He couldn't get away with It even if he selected Mrs, Bush.
But while the Democrats have plenty of brainy, experienced and
energetic women, they don't have a woman governor or senator, and no
one woman stands out as a compelling vice presidential choice.
It just worked out that way. Democratic women ran for the governorship
of Iowa and a Senate seat in Missouri In lim, but lost. A Qernocratlc
woman gubernatorial candidate lost earlier this year In Mlsslsslppt
KentuckY elects a g()vemor next month, choosing between a Democratic
wooman and -11 Republican man.
Customarily, the vice presidential nomination goes to someone who
holds high ottice and brings geographical or ideological balance to the
ticket.
"There are an awful lot of guidelines for choosing the vice presidential
candidate - experience, bringing in a certaln state," says Pamela
Harriman, Democrat, femln!st and party lund-raiser. "Let'~ be realistic, .
I'm not sure we have a Democratic woman who would fit the criteria.
TradJtiDnally, you choose a vice president for electoral votes."

....

Morgan found two of Scott McGregor 's 83 pitches to their liking and
the resulting home runs p~ved
decisive in the opening game of the
1983 World Series.
MeG
d wlnnln
Itch
regor an
g P
er
JohnDenny weresuperblnaclasslc
pitching duel, neither making many
mistakes in the strike zone and
fewer out of it In the first walkless
.•
Series game since 1967
So sharp was MeGregor that he
threw ulabodut 40 fewiner pllghtches than
~co
expecButt Moanrgan
e 't-inning
""' .ormance,
s gametying homer In the sixth Inning and
Maddox'
wlnn
111 the 1g

.: ~!

...

z

Nell Kinnock Is everywhere'&gt;
hailed as a young man of great•: ·
personal charm and of lively" •
polemical wit. But you see the
difficulties people get Into who find
themselves In such Orwellian
binds, He has just declared that he :
"could not live" under such · re-,' ;
gimes as Hitler's or Anilropov's. ;.
Andfouryearslater,hesaysthathe :;
·-Intends to denuclearize. Great Brt· ·:
taln. Leaving then the question: ::-:
What Is it that would prevent the • ·
Soviet Unlon from extending Its •
empire Into Great Britain? Polson
Jvy?
The nature of freedom eludes
men of the hard socialist stripe of
Neil Klnnock, Hv was asked by the
American whether, if Mrs .
Thatcher's government enacted· :
laws to regulate the behavior of the :
labor unlons, these laws would be; :•
r espected.
.,
. ....,.
Such laws, he said, would "invoke ·}
social co
. nfilct.' 1
'~
Q: Is this a threat, by the way?
Klnnock: Oh no, no, no. I think
this Is just a fact pf life.
Q: Do you think that the law
issued by government would be
obeyed by the trade unions?
Klnnock: No, beca)ISe f1 the fact ;
that they were malevolently coined, ~
that they were superficially thought
out..
,

~r

JASON HilL

6-1, 181 pound
Senior End

MARK JARREL.L
iHI, l2f pound
Soplllomc•re Back

denc\es, the kids would be checked
for such physical anomalies as
" malformed ears, low-set ears,
asymmetrical ears, soft pliable
ears, no ear lobes, high steepled
palate, furrowed tongue, smooth
tongue with rough spots, curved
fingers, wide gap between fist and
second toes, and third toe longer
than the second."
- Dry or sweaty palms are
almost as significant as the shape of
the ears, apparently. The youngsters would be hooked up to
sliver-chloride electrodes to measure their emotional reaction to
various stimuli, "The prisoner, the
criminal and the dellquent," the
proposal stas, snow below-normal
emotion when subjected to "simple
tones, loud noises, electrical
shocks, Insertion or hypodermic
needles, and slide of horrible facial
Injuries. "
·
-The amount of the male

~

KEI'l11COOK
6-1, 165 Pound
Sopoomore Back

__________t.:__--,----- - - - - - - - 4 - -- - - - -

are 20 times the number of
handguns in Amertcan homes as
there are rifles and most of them '
are unregistered and unlicensed.'
Their possession Is a direct invila- ·
tion to mayhem and murder_There
Is no other excuse for their '
existence.
It will be Interesting to observe
just what steps NRA takes to "·
combat this threat to thelrorganlza.
tion. When push comes to above,
will they have more power In
Amertca than the federal courts? ·
With the Indiscriminate dally ·
slaughter in the homes and on the'
streets, something's got to give and - '

..

soon.
I bet I will be handguns!

-----

~

BRIAN CONNOWY
6-0, 180 pound
Junior Guard

Expos hire Nixon

honnone testosterone produced by and sweat measurements- might
the boys' tests will be measured as strike the squeamisb as something
a clue to future aggressive behav- cooked up by tre Nazis' Dr_
lor. But at least th&lt;l little guys won't
Mengele. Not at all, the proposal
be castrated if their testosterone says reassuringly: "The process
co1_1nt is too high. "The use of · will be an Interesting one for the ·
testosterone-lowering drugs has
participant. It will also be fun for:
been used to reduce aberrant
the subjects."
sexual behavior in men with
The Initial test group would be : .
antisocial tendencies," the report made up of 2,!XXJ boys aged 9 to l2
notes. The drugs have "replaced
"~ho have had their first contact :
·
surgical castration as a way of with the pollee."
lowering circulating testosterone
The Justice Department proposal .
levels. "
does draw the line at testing · ·
-The boys will be wired to 6-year.olds for suspicious-looking
electroencephalographs to mea·
ears, dcy palms and lefthanded· ·
sure the alpha waves emitted by
ness, because "we would have a '
their l&gt;ralns. "Individual case remoral, legal and political problem
ports of EEG abnormalities in
In attempting to impose preventive
violent criminals have been a peartreatment at this age."
ing since the 1940s," the proposal
Footnote: A Justice Department '
explains.
spokesman confirmed that the
The battery of proposed tests proposed study Is "a piece of the '83
electric shocks, sticking witn neeprogram plan."
dies. hormone counts, brain-wave

arms . .The Surpeme Court, by will make enough noise to scare any
declining to review the issue, has
Intruder away.
indicated It sees no reason to
question that interpretation. This
If the NRA lobbyists are so
being America where you are as
powerful In Congress, just what do
free to be as Irresponsible as you
they fear from some sort of national
can get away with, reacted to the
legislation to regulate handguns? Morton Grove ordinance by going
The mere whisper of proposed
hog-wild In favor of guns. Ken·
legislation to control hand held
nesaw, Ga. and at least seven otner
firearms 1s enough to start them
communities In the country.passed
baying in pursuit of the congressordinances requiring that each
man sponsoring the bill. I have
home be equipped with a firearm.
never heard of any propqsed
This' may have pleaded the NRA
legislation against the ownership of
but It will be interesting to see the ·
shotguns and rifles or heard · that
result H some 80 year old spinster
any was wanted or needed. If they
complains to a high court that she Is
exist as an organization, let th&lt;lm
being forced by aw to acquire a
call themselves by their true name,
firearm about which· she knows
the Amertcl\D.-l{andgun Assocla·
nothing and is afraid to have In her
tlon.
They would enlarge their
homne. You can be sure that gun
membership as I would gueSs there
control proponents will see that
such a case reaches the courts. It Is
high time the Surpeme Court Is
forced to clarity the Second
Amendment.
Of all the sporting equlment
being sold In the stores today there
is nothing so useless as a handgun,
especially one of the cheap Saturday night specials, Tbert; Is nothing
sporting. about standing three or
lour feet from a victim and blowing
him to Kingdom Come with a
handgun. Yet the NRA has defended handguns in the name of
sport for years. It's about as
sporting as shooting fish in a baJTel!
I have hunted most of my IIIR and
have owned various shotguns and
rtfles but at no time have I i!ver
needed or wanted a l'I!Yolver. To
have one even lor protection Is a
myth. Most hunters I know couldn't
hit the side r1 a bam with a halidgun
but can knock a squtrrel out of the
tallest tree with a .22 rifle. They can
!mock the fastest running rabbit or
• deer over with a sootgun but
anything speedier than a turtle Is
safe from a handgun. If you feel the
need for protection In your rome,
.stick with the sootgun. t\1 least It

thePhlllles Mike Schmidt heat Los
Angeleswlthaflrst-lnning homerln
the OP.,elling game of the National
League Champ\onship Series.
Most 40-year.old players watch
the World Serles on television. But
Morgan laughs at the suggestion
that he ought to be doing tha( just
becausethereweresomanycandles
hlslastblrthda ak
on" Ftrst I was Ys~orte _to Ia this
.. ld M
~E Y
all f
game, sa
organ , Wuu s
o
5-foot-7. "Now I'm too old. I don't
worry' a""ut that ..
uu
•
He ha(l supplied the Phlllles with
their first hit ott McGregor in the
fourth inning and this time, he tied
the score. .
"Any time I come to the plate

at-bat ·
through fl
The run stood up
ve
Innings as McGregor pitched airtight baseball The Oriole lefthanderhadtw~outlntheslxthand
on the Phillie bench, Owens started
to __, _

when we're
onetorun
tiy to
drive
the ball
thedown,
rightI side
"
•
Morgan said. "Idon'treallytry tohlt
theballout, justgofor theextrabase
hit.Youcan'tthink. Tvegot to hlta
home run and tlethescore.' ljusttry
to hit the ball hard to right center ."
he
fthe ight" Denn
In t oottom o
e
u,
y

SQuenl!.

·-

-.

Just a weeli ago .Qwens had seen

e orne

The Ken Amsbury Chapter of
Izaak Walton held Its annual
National Hunting and Fishing Day
activities recently at Royal Oak
Park, tetmlng the day's workshops
and activities a success.
Nearly ~ young people were
Instructed on and participated 111,
various types of hunting and fishing
demonstrations. The .day was
: highlighted by a fine meal, which
was provided to all participants,

Controlling handguns.....______Lawe_u_w_in,.:;;_ge_u
A year or so ago, after some
particularly gruesome murder, I
wrote a column advocating the
control of handguns. Being a very
smail voice in a very large
wilderness . I didn't expect any
results and didn't get any. Handguns are still slaughtering thousands of people a year and we seem
content to let the National Rife!
Association call the political shots
as well as the more lethal kind. But
tlllngs are changing!
. Two years ago the village of
Morton Grove, a Chicago suburb,
made it illegal for residents other.
than law enforcement officers and
military personnel to !iossess handguns. The ordinance was upheld by
the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of
Appeals. Last week, the Supreme
Court, by refusing to review the
Issue, made it poslbleforthe federal
government, the states and local
jurisdictions of the states ot ll!gts.
late an Individual gun ownership.
This Is a definite boost to proponents of handgup control and a
defeat for the NRA which has for
years fought any e!fort at gun
control no matter the type of
weapon. They have for years basl:d
their legal objections to any gun
control law on the Second Amendment to the Constitution which
says: " A well regulated milltia,
being necessary to the securtty of a
free State, the right of the people to
keep and bear Arms shall not be
Infringed ." I copied that amend·
ment directly from a copy of the '
ConstitutiOn.
In the Morton Grove case the
appeals court ruled that the
!ramei'S of the Second Amendment,
In declaring that a weD regulated
mUitla' Is necessary, intended only
to forb!«!&lt; the federal government
from Interfering with th&lt;l rlgh of the
states In main~ organized arm
forces . The court found the Second
Amendment dose not protect any
Individual's tight to keep and bear

o es, w o ve

rul', scored their only run In that
fashlon when J imDwyerconnected
in the first Inning. But Denny was
clearly In control untU t he first hint
of late trouble.
That came in the eighth, btit
vanished quickly when Manager
PaulOwensreachedintohisbuUpen
for AIHoUand.TheacePhiladelphia
reliever mowed down the last four
Oriole hitters .to nail down the
wind night
victocyon a rainy,
,Y
more
suited for football thOrtan b13SI'ball·
Dwyer was the
o es second
batterofthe gameandhejumpedon
a pitch down the middle sending It
soaring over the right fl~ld fence to
become the 18th man In history to hit
a home run In his first World Series

'

...

CINCINNATI (AP) - ·Former
Reds Manager Russ Nixon , hired as
an assistant coach by the Montreal
Expos, sayshefeelshe'llgetanother
chance to manage in the big leagues.
Nixon, who was with 'the Cincln·
nat! organization 15 years, the last
1~ years as manager of the Reds,
was fined Oct. 4.
"I feel I proved I was a good
manager," he said of his two
seasons In which Cincinnati finished
last In the National League Western
Division. The Reds traded away or
lost many players to tree agency
and elected to rebuUd with young
players.
Nixon, a Cincinnati native, indicated he will give up his farm near
Williamsburg, Ohio.

. " My wife and I have a lot of things
to run through, and I would say there
Is a good chance we'D relocate.
'There's not much reason to stay
here;.· Nixon said Tuesday.
"Montrealcalledmethedayafter
I was !Ired, There were a few other
clubs Interested In me, and I wanted
to check out all the offers. I felt
Montreal was the best club, as far as
personnel and management. I;ve
always had a lot of respect for the
organization," he said.
Nixon said that In addition to his
third-base coaching duties, he will
be In charge of the calchers.
He was a catcher In the Amertcan
League for l2 years with Cleveland,
Boston and Minnesota.

and a grand prize dri!Wing at ttui
end of the day.
• The chapter would lfke 'to thank
the following people for donating
their time for presentations and
demonstrations: Keith · Woods,
Meigs County Game Protector,
Gun Safety; Jim Spleet, Wildlife
Investigator, Turkey Calling; John
Epple, Ice Fislllng; John Hetzer,
trapping; Harry Bailey and Bcyan
Yonker, canoeing; Terry Brown,
Taxidermy; Owen Damewood and
son, Muzzle loading; Bill Neutzling,
Archery ; John and Wendell
Jeffers,.Trap SIK!!&gt;ting; and Darrell

Hawthorne, reloading_
Throllgh the efforts of c these
Individuals, sponsors and partie!·
pants chapter spokesmen termed
the event a success. The chapter
expressed Its appreciation to those
Involved , and felt the day proved to
be quite rewarding. Throughout the
year other activities will be planned
with the purpose of training
Individuals, especially young· peopie, on the proper · and safe

SVAC teams battle
again Friday night
If opening night Is an indication, downs. Tailback Shane Stover had a
the championship of tbeSVACwon't 15 yard TD jaunt and anthony
be decided again this season until Kitchen picked off a pass and
the final game of the year.
rambled 55 yards for another score.
That's at least what mostfansare
Southwestern's only threat came
speculating after last weekend's in the third period when Steve
results which saw the defending Pelfrey connected with Jeff Burle·
champion North Gallla Pirates and son for.a 64 yard play. However, the
second place Kyger Creek Bobcats drive ended at the four.
win by big margins while Hannan
A first haH scoring threat by
Trace and Eastern battled to a 6-6 Hannan Trace ended at the goal line
tie. '
when a pass was intercepted by
North Gallia dumped Southern, Easiern.
49-14 while Kyger Creek rolled over
The Eagles got on the scoreooard
Southwestern, 40-0.
in the third quarter after blocking a
Friday's -schedule finds North punt at the four. Mike Lance
Gallia going to Eastern; Hannan rambled over for the score. A kick
Trace at Kyger Creek and Southern for the EP was stopped. A short
pla~s at Southwestern.
time. iater, Hannan Trace tied the
At Vinton last week, Eric Penick score when J eft Barnes zoomed Into
had another great offensive night the end zone. A final attempt by
rushing for 209 yards while scoring Eastern to win the game ended as
four touchdowns on runs of 71, 45,34 time ran out with the Eagles having
possession at the seven yard line.
and 20yards.
Teammate Mark Foreman had65
SVACSt,....np
yards in 23 carries. ·
ADGunm
Southern scored in the second half Team
WLPTOP
on runs by Wade Connolly. A third Kyger Creek.. .... .... .. .......... 4 1 0 11)2 :ll
GalUa ..... .... .. ...... ..... 4 1 0 U9- 57
TD attempt set up on a blocked punt · North
Hannan Trace ......... ...... .... 3 3 1 112 . 99
fell short.
Soutbwestern .. ..... ... ....... .. .. 1 5 o 41 163
Coach Mark Hartman's Kyger Eastern ......... ..... ..... ... .... .. 0 5 1 12 -173
SVAC Only
Creek Bobcats sporting the area's Kyger Creek.. .. .... .. .. .. ........! 0 0 10 0
top defense recorded · their third North Gallla .. .. ...... ....... .. ... ] 0 0 4.9 u
Eastern ....... .. ............. .... ..0 o o 6 6
shuiout In five games against Hannan
Trace-ulO
0 0 1 6 6
Southern ...... .. ...... ............. 0 I 0 14 49
Southwestern.
..-................ ... 0 1 0 o 40
Junior fullback Steve Waugh led Southwestern
. F'rtelq'•
by way by rushing for more than 100
North Gallla at Eastern; Hannan Trace at
yards while scoring three touch· Kyger Creek and Southern at Southwestern.

•
I

i
t
•'

••

•

~

1

OCTOBER 7 thru 13
FRIDAY 1/pru r HURSDAY I

Now . hll' s
found •

r.!a~·;ro;a;C;;;hes;;;o;n~hu;n;tin;:;;;a;n;d~fis~hi;;;n:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii'i

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STEEL TOED -ALL SIZES

Tllt tut t1ne Jlf!Silwte
$he was a l.lOi~IJ'e

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'llleWOOhoS

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\

Tilt ser.:OIId tO!I!
she..ashtsl:lesllrll!ros ..dt
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JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

•••

~·fli~i~~~~~~i

·SPORTS CAP

'

•"'•
i•
!

retlred the flrst two ba~rsandthen

memoos.
chapter urges more
participation In these fie lds, so that
all may enjoy hunting and fishing
recreation.
Sponsoring the event were Betsy
Ross , RC Bottling Company, Seaman' s M a rk e t of Ath e ns,
Gloeckner's Restaurant and Grill of
Pom eroy, Cline's Fruit Farm, Gold
River, Racine Gun Club, Ro!l
Hubbard, and Jim Milliron of Shade
River State Forestry Department

a...,..,,

•

WID

gave up a llouble to AI Bumlxy.
Owens beat a quick path to the
mound, and in came Holland .
.. "Iwasn'toutofgas," saldDenny,
but I understood what had to be
done."
" He's a (Goose) Gossage type,"
Ow
ld f H lland "M bull
·
ens sa 0 0
Y
pen
Is great. When we get into the ~ll&lt;th
Inning, I know which way I'm
going."
·
When Holland arrtved, the Orioles
went south for the nlght .
"I threw them nothhlng but
fastballs ," ' the lett-handed. reliever
said. ." There was nothing fancy
about it. They knew It was coming. It .
wali just 'HI tit if you can," '

100

80 attend Isaac Walton event
me

Orwellian testing___________.J._a~_k_A_nd_er_so_n
WASHINGOTN With the
World Series In full swing, baseball
fans should be fascinated to learn
that the J ustice Department suspects lefthandeness Is a telltale sign
of Innate criminal tendencies, No
opinion Is expressed on switch·
hitters.
The foreboding potential of lef!handedness Is only one of several
criteria listed in a n incredible
Justice Department document. It
proposes testing thousands of
American adolescent boys for
"EarlyidentiflcationoftheChronlc
Juvenile Offender ." The intilal cost
of the proposed program is estlmated at $500,mJ.
My associate Indy Badhwar olr
tained a copy of the proposal, and It
makes fascinating, Orwellian re.ad1ng, Here are some of the voodoo
tests the department wants to
subject preteen boys to:
- In addition, to southpaw ten-

game-those number
e hths
rendered
inconsequential
·
All t)lat really mattered was that
the Phlllles had a 1-0 lead In the
best-of-seven series on the strength
of a 2-1 viclnry Tuesday night over .
theBaltlmoreOrloles.
....__art 1 h u by th h
,.&amp;.!a:

&lt;
.

Requests Governor's help
Dear Governor Celeste:
As Trustee of Olive Towns hlp and
Dem ocratic Committee Member of
Long Bottom, Ohio, l would like to
inquire rega rding the possibility of
obta ining som e monetary assistance In the for m of taxes for Olive
Township , Meigs County, Ohio.
As you are no doubt aware. Olive
Township has very limited resour·
ces in the form of taxes pa id to the
township fro m Industrial/commercial corporations to a id In the
s upport of normal township
obligatio ns,
Presently , there are severa l
thousand acres of land located in
Olive Township, which is owned by
the State of Ohio and the Pulp and
Paperwood Company of West
Virginia , respectively. There is a
large amount of Umber narvested
from this land during the winter
and spring m onths of eacn year,
and township roads are used as
means of ingress and egress for
vehicles conducting this harvest.

, BALTIMORE (AP ) _ Phlladel-

mean , history speaks for Itself.
.
Q: AU thecampslnRusslaandall. ;~
the concentration camps in Ger- ·"
many, the starvation In China, the
starvation In Russia?
Ktnnock: Yes, yes, OK Walt a
. minute- throwing those Instances ..
around - W~re It not for the !.let .
that the Soviet and Chinese commu: ~:
n!st system, which I abhor and I •:
couldn't llve under ..:..."

Long ball · gives Phils 2-1
phla's Garry Maddox and J oe

~t

William F. Buckley Jr.::;

Beech Grove Road residents upset
. Why mess up a good tlllng?
That's just wha t th&lt;l county com·
missioner s did to the Beech Grove
Road In Rutland .
We had a real good hard blacktop
road with no holes or dust at all . But
•
what do they do?
They com e along and dump a
· buncn of dirt and gravel bn it and
call It a road sealer.
If this is supposed to seal tne holes
It Isn't doing a very good job. Cars
'come s peeding down the road

Meet the Tornadoes

•

POINT PLEASANT AUTO PARTS
515 Main St.
675·1520

2611 Jackson Ave.
675-2731

•AUTO PARTS
PIIOfESSIOIALS
•

�Page

Wednesday, October 12, ,1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4-The Daily Sentinel .

·Har-rumph!

By Major Amos B. Hoople
The original Man-In-motion
E;gad, friends, there are so many
·excellent conference matchups this
week In college football that yourheh-heh - favorite corr~pondent
harldy knows where to · start.
Um·kumph!
· The billing in the Big Ten features
giant·klller lllinois hosting the
tough Ohio State Buckeyes, The
Flghtln' .Illini upset the favored
Iowa Hawkeyes, 33-0, the week
· alter Iowa upset the Bucks, 20-14.
So, this contest could decide the
loop's Rose Bowl representative. In
a llercely fought battle the Hoople
Sy•!~m pegs the Buckeyes to
prevail, 31·28. Har·rumph!
Other Big Ten engagements:
Michigan 3().17 over Northwestern:
Iowa 35-15 over Purdue; Michigan
State 24-7 over Indiana; and
Wisconsin 35-14 over Minnesota .
In the rugged Big Eight, mean·
while, No. 1 Nebraska takes on the
Missouri Tigers. In this series ,
.Nebraska has recorded 41 victories
to 32 lor Mlzzou, with three
standoffs. The Cornhuskers won the
last two by close margins, &amp;-0 in '81
and 23-19 last year. But look out
Saturday!
Nebraska's (heh·heh ) · unholy
three -Mike Rozier, Irving Fryar
and TUrner Gill- are on a roil. The
'Huskers will down the Tigers,
49·14 . Har-rumph!
Elsewhere in the Big £ight,
Oklahoma and Oklahoma State
butt heads lor the 78th i'ime - with
Oklahoma rating the Hoople nod to
win, 28-16. AlsQ, Kansas over

Kansas State, 28-24; and Colorado
over Iowa State 208.
In their 66th renewal, Texas and
Arkansas are the highlight of SWC
action. The Longhorns, with junior
QB Rob Moerschell leading the
way, will prvaU over !he Arkansas
Rl\Zorbacks, 28-24, in an old·
fashioned barnburner. Kall-kaff!
In other SWC clashes, the Baylor
Bears will dumpTexas A&amp;M, 21·17;
and Texas Tech· s Red Raiders wlll
s.;,allow Rice, 31).7.
The Atlantic Coa~t spotlight is on
the Tar Heel State. Next door
neighbors Nonh Carolina and
Northern Carolina State get together in Raleigh lor the 73rd lime.
Dick Crum's Nonh Carolina club
owns the edge in the series 48-16-6.
His team is our odd·on choice to w in

Saturday, 3&amp;-21.
Other games in the ACC will' see
Clemson dealing the Duke Blue
DevUs another loss, 30-18; and
well-regarded Maryland finishing
ahead of Wake ~orest by a 3&amp;-6
count.
In the SEC; the high-flying
Alabama Crismon Tide will stay on
track with a 41·22 &gt;ictory over the
outmanned Tennessee Vols; lhe
talented Georgia Bulldogs will keep
pace as they outlast dangerous
Vand,!'rbilt, 2-20; and Sl,jprlslng
Kentucky wUI shock host LSU,
33·28. Um-kumph!
The Pac 10 boasts a lull slate.
Alrzona State is our choice to hang
it on Southern Caillornla , 21·14;
Arizona to take Oregon, 34·21;
Washington to trip Stanford, 21-13;

From the Wild•...
By KErtH WOOD
Meigs County
• , Game Protector
Recently, the 1983 Deer Season in
Ohio tor bowhunters began. Harv·
est lor the opening day was very
low. The main cause tor a low
harvest opening
day . was poor 1
weather condi· ~V,.--.:)1,1
· lions tor deer
hunting.
The successful
OOwhunter must

check his deer in at a deer checking
station within 24 hours ofthetlmeol
harvest. Deer Bow Check Stations
tor Meigs County are: rH Jim's
Gulf Station, U.S. Rt. 33 and S.R. 7,
Pomeroy; (21 Forked Run State
Park, S.R. 124 south of Reedsville;
(3) Brown's Taxidermy, Co. Rd. 25,
two miles east of M&lt;i'igs High; (4).T .
J .'s Pennzoil, 3rd St., Racine.

submit one application. Those in
Zone 4 may request ' on the
application for a second antlerless
deer permit. Meigs County is in
Zone 4. The landowner's appllca·
lion does not include those that rent
or are tenants. 'fhe landowner
application. is only tor that Jan·
downer, his or her spouse and their
children.
Those who a.r e tenants or rent,
including !heir spouse and children,
can take a buck on that land without
a special deer permit or hunting
license. They can also apply lor the ,
Public Antlerless Deer Permit
Drawing.
I hope this answers some ques·
tions concerning the antlerless
permit. If you have any questions
concerning this contact me.

Last Remintler: Ohio Hunter
Safety class began last night and
will continue tonight and Thursday
Last weekend, the 1983·84 Grouse at 6: 30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Season In Ohio got underway. The Fairgrounds, Coon Hunters Bldg.
grouse popu Ia lion this year in Enrollees must attend each nlght.
Meigs County appears to be .
Don't turn your head, turn in a
somewhat at low to moderate P,acher. Call ·my residence at
numbers: From talking to various 9854400 or the Meigs County
squirrel hunters and deer hunters
Shertlf, 992·3371.
not as many grouse are being seen
this year as to last 'year's grouse
"From the Wild" Is a series of
population. Grouse season runs
articles lor the purpose of keeping
through Feb. 29, 1984.
the public informed of happenings
within the Division of Wlldute and
To clarify some questions I have
Meigs ·County. Items or articles of
been receiving regarding the Lan·
interest from you lor this column
downers Antler less Deer Permits; I
would be helpful in making "From
offer the following observations:
the Wild" a more complete article
Any person who owns 10 or more of happenings In Meigs County
acres In one continuous block in an
Outdoors. Write me at Rt. 1 Long
antlerless deer hunting county may
Bottom, 45743 or-call.

Domed stadium gets endorsement
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- Mayor
Dianne Feinstein has endorsed
plans for· the largest retractable
domed sports stadium in the United
States, warning that without It the
city could Jose the San Francisco
Giants.
The stadium, previewed in plans
to be fotmally released today, would
seat 70,!XXJ and cost up to $227.4
million, depending largely on
whether it Is publicly or privately
financed, !he mayor sa id.
-It would become home for the f
Giants ar)d the San Francisco 49ers,
which nowplayinCandlestlckPark,
and also be available for basketball

Players of week
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
,
Northern Illinois quarterback Tim,
Tyrell and Toledo defensive end
Mike Russell are the Players of !he
Week In Mid-American Conference,
football.
Tyrell, ' a senior from Hoffman
Estates, Ill., won the offensive
laurels for completing 9 of 13 passes
for 226 yards and a touchdown In the
Husldes' 27-3 victory over Western .
Michigan. His touchdown pass was
from 41 yards out and he also
completed passes ol52 and 47 yards
to set up two other scores.I;lescored
a touchdOwn.
Russell, a senior from Lawbridge,
Ohio, earned the defensive award.
He helped hold Bowling Green to a
tleld goal in the Rockets' 1).3 triumph
aver the Falcons. He was in on nine
tackles, Including three for losses of
18 yards. He also recovered a ,
tumble and deflected two passes.
'v

games and additional exhibition

space.

UCLA to beat Washington State, •
23·21; and California to defeat
'Oregon State, 28-14.
Brlngham Young will contlnue to
dominate !he WAC with an easy
49-13 thumping of New Mexico. The
Air Force will win, 36·14 over Texas
Ei Paso; Wyoming will win a
clllf·hanger from Utah, 21·19, and
San Diego State wUJ vanquish
Colorado State, 33·27.
A quartet of' big ones down south
w!Jillnd Auburn "burning" (;ecrgla
Tech, 35-14; the high-scoring Miami
Hurricanes blowing over MisslS"'--·"s!ppl State, 42·21; VIrginia dumping
the old foe VMI, 4().12; and powerful
West VIrginia: 11'11 by remarkable
QB Jeff Hostetler, doubling tlie
score on VIrginia Tech, 38-19.
In other games, Florida StatewUI ·
defeat Cincinnati, 28-21; Notre
Dame will win the 45th contest in Its
long series .. wlht Army, 42-10, at
Giants Stadium; and resurgent
Penn State \\111 edge Syracuse,
28-21, In their 61st repeat perlor·
mance. Har-rumph!
Now go on with my forecast:
SAn!RDAY, OCT. 1$
Alr Force 36 Texas-El Paso 14
Alabama 41 Tennessee 22

Furman 'll w. Carolina 1
GEOrgia :1Jl Vanderbilt :JJ
GramtXJng 16 Miss. Valley St. 10
Ha.l"ard 24 Dan.mouth 21
Holy Cross 28 Connecucut 21
Iowa ~ Purdue 15
James Madison 37u Wm. &amp; Mary XI
Kansas 28 Kansas St. 24

Pittsburgh 42 LoWville 14

Rutgers 21 Cotgage a!
San Diego St. 33 Colorado St. 'II
San Jcu St. 31 Fullerton St. 20

•

S. Misslsslppl 24 Memphis St. 18
•Texas 28 Arkansas 24
Texas Tech l) Rice 7
Tol&lt;d&gt; 34 Miami (0.)14
•
Tulane 27u SW Louisiana 10
Tulsa 17 Illinois St. 15
UCLA 21 Washington St. 21
VIrginia 40 VMI 12
Washington 21 StanfQrd 13
W. Virgtn1a 38 Virglnia Tech 19
Wls&lt;onsln :li Minnesota 14
Wyoming 21 Utah 19
Yale 14 Columbia 13
FRIDAY IOGH SCHOOL GAMES

..

Meigs ~ Alexander 0

Belpre oW Federal Hocking 6

Appalachian St. 25 Gardner-Webb 7
Arizona 34 Oregon 21

Wellston Zl MWt!f' 8

Nelsonvtlle-York 'Il Vinton County 0
LocaJ 7 'ITtmble 6
Ironton 44 Jackson W
CoaJ Grove ~ Chesapeake 6

Ari1.ona St. 21 Southern Cal. 14

Wan-en

Auburn :f&gt; Georgia Tech 14
Ball State 22 Kent St. 10

Baylor 21 Teas A&amp;M 17
BowUng Green 22 W. Michigan 13

Rock Hill 22 Fairland aJ
Logan 12 Athens 8

Brigham Young 49 NeYV Mexlco 13
Callforn.ta 28 Oregon St. 14
Cent. Mlchgan 18 Ohio U. 14
Clemson :ll Duke 18
Colorado 24 Iowa $t. 18
Delaware 46 Towson St. '1
E. Carolina 38 Temple 14

Wheelersbw-g 14 Northwest 7
Gallipolis 14 R1pl£Y 13
Boyd Cou nty 00 Greenup 0
Pt. Pleasant 21 Huntington High 13
Kyger Creek 21 Hannan Trace 0
N'orth Gallla 'Il Eastern 6
Southern 28 Southwestern 6
Wahama 22Ft . Gay~

Florida St. 28 Clnclnnatl 21

N...,_.llodtef l.ea~Ue

By'hle~p,_

._..._

w-.c1~:aw:e

maker but Schllehter
the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
newspaper. reported.
National Football League:ssecurtty
The man said he then contacted
chief Is Investigating a report that
Tom Ryan, an anchorman at
suspen~ Baltimore Colts quarter·
~-TV, in hope of alerting the
back Art Schlichter, using a friend's
NFL, the newspaper reported.
secret betting code, lost nearly
The televisjon staUon also re$:al,OOJ betting on games the first
ported TUesday evening that the
week of the NFL season, the
NFL ·Investigation was under way.
Columbus Qtlzen.Journal reported
The newspaper said also that the
today.
mangaveWelshacopycifayew-old
The newspaper reported In a
tape recording of a conversation
copyright article that the NFL's
between
Schlichter and himself in
Warren Welsh was in Columbus
which thetwoarguedoveraccumu;
TUesday and listened to allegat!ons
latlng gambling debts.
made against Schlichter by a friend
who Is an official with a local food ~----------­
dealership.
The' newspaper said It contacted
the friend TUesday night and that he
The Doily Sentinel
asked not to be ldentlfted. He said he
I USPS 145·960 I
met with Welsh for about ·li
A Dlvl!Jion of Multimedia, Inc.
minutes, the newspaper reported.
P~bliShed every afternoon, Monday
The friend said he told Welsh that
through Friday, I ll Court St~t. by the
Schlichter entered hls home someOhio Valley Publishing Company· Mul·
· tlmedla, Inc.. Pomeroy, Ohio45769, 992time before Sunday, Sept. 4, anct
2156. Second class postage paid at Potook some secret code numbers the
meroy, Ohio.
··
man used to place bets with bookies
Member: The As~oclated Press, InSchlichter then used the friend's
land Dally Press Assoclaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·
phone to place large betsWlthalocal
soctat!on, Nattorial Advertising Reprebookmaker, the newspaper quoted
sen tative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
the man as saying.
733 Third i\venue, New York, New
York 10017 .
·
The man returned hOme the week
of Sept. 4, he said, and his
POSTMASTER : Send address to The
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St .. Pomeroy,
housekeeper told him what Schlich·
Ohio 45769.
ter had done, the Citizen-Journal
SURSCRrPTroN RATE'!
reported.
By Carrl~r or Motor Route
The man's bookmaker called him
One Week ...... .......................... .. S1.00
One Month ..................... .. ......... ~.40
and asked him how he was going to
One
Year ...... ............. ........ ..... $.52.80
settle the $:al,OOJ debt. The man
SINGLE COPY
asked Schlichter to pay the bQokPRICE'!

a splint Tuesday, but said, "It'sOK. I
did It before halftbne. I got hit hard
and jammed it on the turf.''
Lane has been converted from a
high school quarterback, In his
senior seasonatYoungstownSouth,
he ran for 1,013 yards and 14
touchdowns. In his quarterbacldng
debut, he scored five touchdowns .
"When I came here, nobody had to
tell me I was1;1' t going to be a
quarterback. I was too small - I
only weighed 154 pounds," said
Lane, moved tothedefenseprlorto
his sophomore season. He's been a
starter for the last three seasons.
It comes as no surprise to Earle
Bruce, OhioState'scoach. "He's !he
kind of ldd you'd like to take home
with you," Bruce said. uHe's so full
of confidence and energy. He's the
type of kid that does everything
right. I don't think he's mlssed a
practice ever in his fouryearshere."

•

a dally averageof4,700patronswho
wageredanaverageol$551,024,\he
track said.
That compared to last fall's total
olll2,0J:Jpatrons,adaUyaverageof
4,481. The total betting for 1982's fall
meeting was $12,929,62, an average
$517,186 per day.

r---:-----------------------...j

FRU·TH PHARMACY
OF OHIO, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

HOURS· MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
.

• SUNDAY 11:00 TO 3:00
PH. 992-6491 OR 992-31 0.6

~GENU\NE

RUTLAND

DEPARTMENT STORE
Phone 742-2100

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Wlnn!JI!!8 at PIW.bW'gtl
Buffalo at Toronto
VIIDCOLiver at Chk:ago

catga,y at MWiesota
Deuott at Edmontoo

'rlau.tat• G.na

Monb'tfll at Boston
~

at Hartford
Wuhlngtat at N.Y. Ra!J~

Wlnnlpea at Philadelphia
Lm Anleles at s,. l..o.ll!l

GRADE A, WHOLE

Transactions
MSE&amp;UL
N-..
......

¢

Chicken s........... ~B

••

MONTREAL E&gt;&lt;POl-Add&lt;d Ru.u N~·
on to the coachlni stall'.

sr. LOU1S CARDINALS-Named Mike

Roarb! pl1d'Jttc coach. Onrl: Hiller man·
IIi"' of Jolmson CitY 01 tbe AppB.Jaclllan
lngue. Designated Hub Kiltl@, coact\, for

""""""""''"""""""-W
Nl6all, I

I

I

........

$ 19
Butt Steak ....... ~8~

FRESH PORK

rtlea

NEW JERSEY NETS--Waived Mldlael

""Y~NEW YORK NFI'S-Staned

O!UWID

Cook. IU&amp;I'CL lo a four·)Hf rontract.
I'OI1mU.L

N-P- ......

HOOSIW . OILERS--:-Named

·

•••

WASHINGTON Bl1U.E'T'S-Slgne .ieft

Malone. """"

Chuck

OOUJ!XIE
IOWA SfATE-Extatcrd the- contract

o1 JOIWU\v On', buaetball coach, through
tbe end of the 1989 ......

WILSON'S SAVORY

CIIRISTIAN-~ Mlke
n!UCII!I.

Bacon
.............
~
...
:~
19

!!art, w~ Mixod Le..,..
Sept. Ill, 11113

Teun

Pfa.
Roach's Gun Shop .......... ....................... 20
Smlth-Ne~n Motors ............................. 20
Eag],. Club ................... ....... ................ IB
Tony'sGarryOul ... ............... ... .... ......... tG
No.5 .. ... ..... ,............ ........... ..... ............ 14
No.3 .. ................... ........... ... ................. 8
High sertes - Charlie Van Meter 5.'1J.
Dobbie llenllley 496; Jtm Hawley 521, 1sabeUe
Couch 481..
High game - Jim Hawley 198. Isabelle
Couch 182; Russ Carsoo 190, Debt Hensley 170.
Team series - No. :11925.
Team game- No. 3 669
'yM!xodLeque
Sept. Zl, 1:111
I

Pfa.
RDaclt's Gun Sbop ................................. IB
No. 1 .. ... ......... ... ........... ......... .............. 16

No. l ..................... ..................... ......... ll
Tony's Cany Out ................ .................. 10
No.5 ........................................... ,........ 8
No.3 ................... ............. ................. ... 6
High oerles - Speed RusseU :16:1, Betty
Smith 533; Russ Carson 5t8, Pat Carson 512.
High gamo - Speed RusseU 213, Betty
Smith 192; Bob Hensley and Russ Canon B,
Pat Carson 187.
Team series - Roach's Gun Shop Jn4.
Team game - Roach's Gun Shop 728.

HAM LOAF .............. ..L~;Sl.99
ECKRICH
OLD FASH~ LOAF ...... ~~~ SI.89

•

N.Y. lslantEn 5, l...o5 Anpoles 2
St. Louis 3, Vanro..~ver 'l

T.m

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DC!. 15. 1983
tKIUK BREAKFAST

PRICES EFFECTIVE T~RU SAT., OCT. 15, 1983

(I
4 22 21
10136~

EarlyW

$ 29
Cube Steak ...•..L!~ ••
39
Ground Chuck.~!-~.
BUCKET

ECKRICH PICKLE &amp;

PIMENTO LOAF ........ ~~-. Sl.79
HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD.~ .......... }~; l1.59
3 LB. BAG YELLOW

K131t Hb. Parkay Qtrs.

MARGARINE.. ...... -~~.~-. 89 1

ONIONS ..... ,........ ~~ .. 89'
10 LB. IDAHO BAKING

16 Oz. Kraft ~Ingles
24 Slice Processed

POTATOES... -.....~~. '2.59
HEAQ

PKG .

AMER: CHEESE ... :.. '2.49

.

LETIUCE ........ -....~~ . 79 1

1-LB. BOOTH

PERCH FILLETS .................. !.~~:. '1.99
8 OZ. BIRDS-EYE

COOL WHIP ............... ~!~·. 97¢.
32 OZ. GOLDEN ISLE WHOLE

SWEET PICKLES ...... ~~~. Sl.59
24 OZ. LIGHT AUNT JEMINA

SYRUP .....·.............. ~~T.L; $1.89
0

PANCAKE MIX .........~ ~. Sl.19

10 oz. TROPICAN.NA

'

PUNCH, ORANGE, APPLE. GRAPE

'

CORNED BEEF HASH~~.2/S2.19
wOAK -

210
4llll
120
214~
02111517
0 2 ).-._, 1 13 18

, Vancouwr
Calgary

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

· 6L"i10

Local bowling

15 OZ. ARMOUR w/7' OFF

c~~sT A

~ ' 10

MAIL SUBSCR[P'f[QNS
InstdeOhlo
13 weekS ...............
.................. m .ll4
26 Weeks .. ,... ...... ... ....... .... 127.30
52 Weeks ... ~!;i;;~·oi.i~ .......... 151A8
].1 weeks ............... ......
. .... $15.21

'

*~u;:-::::_

1202,812

Compbel~

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROy
CALL 992-3381

DRINKS .................. ~!~· 3/85¢

I. cL.EAfl,

--...-

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

123'11
2 l.l 17

MULLEN INSURANCE

32 OZ. AUNT JEMIMA ORIGINAL

_,, _.. ,l4_A Proven Energy Saver!
1

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TEXAS

-------Latonia results-------

786 N. 2ND AVE. ·

2104168

TallJerro, taclde. lor- dbdpltwy

·~

Giants owner Bob Lurte has
threatened to move the team from
San Francisco when his Candlestick
lease expires in 1994 unless a new
stadium Is built closer to central San
Francls&lt;;o than Candlestick, which
Is about 6 mUes from the business
district.
The new stadium, which could
seat 70,00llor football games and
64,!XXJ lor baseball, would be located
in the China Basin area on 15 acres
owned by the California Department of Transportation and the San
Francls&lt;;o Port Commission.

0300518

No subscriptio ns by mall permitted In
town~ where home carrier service Is
available.

992-2342
~ ::::::~: ::::: :::. :::: :::::: ::::::~
ingwlth
a chipped
finger onithis
right
haQd.
He waslittle
still wearing
In L~==========~==========::::

Umit Quantities .

....... ..._

Studley hl'ad roach.

AND

We Reaeove The Right To

120
2
912
03001017

Subscribers not desiring to pay th e carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basi~. Credit will be given carrier each
month.

DOWNING-CHILDS

"I really couldn't believe it," he
said of the two returns. "But once I
turned up the field, J could set;! them
coming. I don't fair catch much.
}here are only acoupleofguysdown
on coyerage, and I've got . two
blockers back with me." ·
Lane accomplished his feat play-

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Latonla Race Course reported a 6.5
percent increase in average dally
wagering and a 4.9 percent jump in
average dally attendance in the
25-day fall meeting that concluded
last week.
The ll7,506 ~ans bet$13,775,589 for

WL1PtaGFGA
4008175
3006175
llO
62331

Dally .................... .' ............. 20 Cents

Lane feels OSU win
very important
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gar·
cia Lane, sixth· ranked Ohio State's
record-setting cornerback, says the
Buckeyes' football season depends
on beating Illinois Saturday.
He knows his life-long dream of
playing in the Rose Bowl wUJ
evaporate If the Buckeyes lose at
Iillnois.
"It's been my biggest disappoint·
ment in college. That's why I came
here," the senior from Youngstown,
Ohio, said TUesday of no chance, at
least yet, to play in the oldest of the
post-season bowls.
Ohio State already has lost a !Iowa
in the Big Ten. U the Buckeyes lose
to the Illlnl, they will be two games
out of the conference lead with five
Big Ten contests left.
"This is our season, right here/'
he said.
Lane has blossomed !rom a
!54-pound lreshman wide receiver
into a 176-pound record maker. His
punt returns for touchdowns of 71
and 63 yards against Purdue last
week tied an NCAA single-season
record and broke two Ohio State
marks.
He became the llrst player at the
Big Ten school to score on two punt
returns in one game and the first to
collect three career touchdowns on
punt returns.

Hoekey

rerusea.

Kentucky lll.SU 2fl
Lafayette 35 Pennsylvania 24
~&lt;\ryland 36 Wake Forest 6
Miami (F) 42 Mississippi St. 21
Michigan :II Northwestern 17
Michigan St. 24 Indiana 7
Mlssls~ppt 19 TCU 14
Montana 28 Nevada-Reno ~
Navy J6 Princeton 7
Netraska 49 MLssourl 14
N. Carolina 36 N. Car&lt;&gt;\lna ·St. 21
N. Illinois 22 E. Mld).lgan 20
Notre Dame 42 Army 10
Ohio St. 31 Dllnolus 28
Oklahoma 28 Oklahoma St. 16
Penn St. 28 Syracu!i@' 21
·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio'

Scoreboard

Schlichter object
of another probe

·Buckeyes will edge Fighting Illini

Wednesday, OCfiibet 12, 1983

16 OZ. IDAHOAN

INSTANT POTATOES .... ~~.99'
10¥, OZ. CAMPBELL'S BEEF

NOODLE SOUP .•..... ~~. 2/97¢
16 OZ. DEL MONTE TROPICAL

'

FRUIT SALAD .............~~. 79¢
JUMBO VIVA
'
PAPER
ELS •.·........~L~. 89'
\

Geronimo released
KANSAS CITY,....Mo. (AP) -

Cesar Geronimo, whose Gold Glove
In center tleld helped the Cincinnati

Reds win two world championships
In the mld·19'1!B, was released
'1\resday by the Kansas City Royals
after three seasons as a reserve
autflelder with the American

teague club.
Geronimo, 35, hit .'M/In 87 at-bats
with the Royals in 1983. He batted
.211 in U9 at-bats In 1ll82 and hit .246
in 118 at-bats in 1981.
:.Geronimo, wbo was acquired by
the Royals before the 1981seasonfor
ijtllity lntlelder Gennan Barranca,
was the third veteran recently
released by Kansas Qty, which

Cab bage.............L~~
KRAFT MIRACLE "~ STICK POUND

Margarine ...... ~.

flnlshed a disappointing 20 ~
behind the Chicago White Sox In the
AL West In 1983.
In September, the Royals anIICWICed the contract of out11elder
Amos Otis would not be renewed.
Pitcher Steve Renko was released
Oct. 6. Pitche!' Gaylord Perry
retired just before before the end of
the season.

~~·rain tc)night
' BALTIMORE (AP) - 'The Natk&gt;nal Weather Service says there's
a good chanCe tonight's World
Series game between the Orioles
and Phlladelphla PhUUeS will be a

wet one again.
The forecast calls for cloUdy skies
with a !!OpeL-eutcllanOeolllghtrain
or drizzle. Temperatures dur1ni the
pme will be in the mld.Qis. WindS
wDl bl!outal thesootheast atlOtolS
mpb.
TuesdaY night's game- WOI! by
the Phlllles, .2·1 -was pia~ In a
cold, steady rain.

JIO(PY

. NEWVORK(AP)-GoallePelle
Llndbaljb, who allowed only live
pll Ill leed'DI the PhiJade)pbla
~'!fen " tllree ltrBI&amp;ht vlctllrleB.
-IIIUIII!d 111 tlleNHLI'iA)'eraltlle
Week fllr the :19838' INIIIOII·

·'

SANDWICH MATE IND.

$ 39 Cheese Sl ices.~:.o;.

TH~NK YO~ LI~E CHERRY

P1e F1lltng ....~o~~2~ ..•
WAGNER'S

¢

'

Orange Drink

54

•

oz.

MR. P's FROZEN

.
'
'
.
.
.
oz.
PIZZa •.•••.•. ~ ........... .
9.5

~~~~~~~~~

RAVORITE COFFEE

·.

3-LB. CAN

$499

Limit One Per Cuatomer
Good Only At Powell'•
Offer.Expha Oct. 16, 1983

·'

otARMIN

BATHROO.M TISSUE
4 ROLL PKG.

99¢

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
LB.

BAG

89¢

Per eu.tomar ·
At Powell'a
Oat. 1&amp;, 1983

TIDE DETERGENT
171

oz.

$6 59

Umit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Oflar
Oct. 1!i. 1!}~3

·'

�-- i'

. .•

,•'

Page

6

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 12, 1983

Bruce has respect for Illini
CHICAGO (AP) - Coach Earle
Bruce of Ohio State's sixth-ranked
SV,ckeyes wasn't ei&lt;actly shudderlnjr over the thought of going to
J.9tll-ranked Illinois Saturday, but he
Is viewing the l1llnl with respect. .
"This Is a different llllno!s team,''
Bruce told the Chlcao Football
Writers In a telephone Interview
Tyesday when was asked If he
expected an aerial bombardment.
"IUino!s' real strength Is defense," said Bruce. "They blend the
pass and run and use up the clock.
They have seven senior starters on
defense. They dOil)lnate the line of
scrimmage both offensively and
defensively."
Although Ohio State Is a sl!gl) t
favorite over Illinois, the llllni wll!
not be looking up to the Buckeyes, at
least not In the Big Ten standings.
llllnois at W Is tiro for first place
with Michigan. Ohio State at 2-1 is
tied for third with Iowa.
"Basically, the formula for winning Is a sound defense," said
Earle. "Illinois Is ranked No. 1 and if

Calendar
WEDNESDAY

you put points on the board you wUI
win football games. When you live
by the pass, you die by the pass.
When you run the ball, your defense
rests, it takes the pressure o!f and
there's no way the other team can

erly and a freshman named Ray
Wilson, we have the capabilities.
"The rwmlnj~ game balled us out
against Wisconsin," he said of last
week's 27·15 victory after the llllnl
trailed 9-3 at ·the half. "We have
score.''
emphasized the run and we will
Bruce said he expects the Ohio continue todoso. In this conference,
State-illinois game to be '.'four if you don't have defense and a
quarters of solid, hard-knocking · running game, you are in trouble."
football."
White agreed with Bruce on
It has been 16 years since llllnois lllinols' defenSe, which ranks first In
has defeated Ohio State but Illlnl the Big Ten against the rush and
coach Mike White figures his team SCOring and second In overall
has a chance this time around.
defense.
"It'll be a tough game," said
,"This had to be the year of llllnois
White, "no question aboutthat. Ohio on defense and ithasworkedoutthat
State Is diversified ,11nd has no way," said White. "We are a
weaknesses. ••
defense-oriented team and it au
But White has developed an starts with our tackles. Don Thorpe
excellent defense and running game and Mark Butkus both have been
to go with his usual strong passing with us four years and they have
'
'
attack.
improved every year.
"We've been talking about a
"Thorpe Is the b!g 11lay guy and
halanced offense for a couple of Butkus (nephew of ·Dtck Butkus)
years," said the llllni coaoh. "But has theadvantageof a b!gnameand
we didn't have the tools. This year the disadvantageofplaylngup to it,''
with (Tom) Rooks, (Dwight ) Bev- said White.

CHESTER - Past councilors
of Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, wU! nieet at
7:30 Wednesday at the home of
Ethel Orr. Inzy Newell will be
the co-hostess.

• Pomeroy
Mrs. Errol! ConrO)' will b(o t h~
assisting hostess The program
wUI be a ''show and tell" session
with all members to participate.
POMEROY Pomero)·
chapter 80, Royal Arch Mason s
and Bosworth Council 46 , Royal
and Select Masters meeting 7: W
p.m. Wednesda y at temple: all
members asked to attend.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
meet at the home of Mrs. Rose

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Middleport, Ohio

at Rutla~d from Bank One' s
parking lot. Following the parade through Rutland , Middleport and Pomeroy a bonfire will
be held in front of Marauder
'
Stadium at Pomeroy.

11-:IURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS- The 50th
annil"ersary of the Rock Spiings
Grange will be observed Thurs dal" night at the hall. A poliuck
di~n~r wit! be se!Vcd at noon and
a meeting will follow at 7:30p.m.

recognized.

Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
SororitY wtll meet at 7: :lJ p.m.
' ~rsctaY In the Rlverboa
. !Room ~
of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co.

POMEROY - Evangeline
Chapter 172. Order or tl)e
Eastern Star, will meet In
special session Thursday at 7: :ll
p.m. at the Temple. Three
candidat!!S will be initiated.
Members are to take either
sandwiches or salad for refreshments. Officers are to wear
chapter dresses.

MIDDLEPORT _ Eleanor
CircleofHeathUnitedMethod!st
Church, Middleport,~ meet at
::ll Thursday ,at the Church. A
7housewares
party will be held
, and all women of the church are
invited to attend.

7

-.

FRIDAY

POMEROY - .Return ·Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the . •
Daughters of . the Amerlcari .
Revolution wll! meet Frtday at, ,
the home of Mrs. George_:
Hackett, Jr., Middleport, 1:00~·
' p.m. The program wlll be
presented by Roger and Mary·.
Gilmore, Athens. Hostesses are •
Mrs . George Morris, Mrs. Hackett, Mrs. James O'Brien, and ,
, ·Mrs. Joseph Struble.

RUTLAND _ Meigs High
School homecoming para(le
Wednesday beginning at 7 p.m .
~~:y~n~o~lds~W~ed~n=sda~~~e~ve~n~ln~g~-----~~~~~~~~i£~--~F~i~
ve~ch~a~r~te:r~m~Mn~be~ro~"~'ll~l~be:_____PO~~ME~R~O:Y::~~~~pt~o~rBe~ta~--~::~::::~~----~--~----------~--~----~--

-

r•

•

CO,YRIGHT ltU · THE IIIOGEI CO . ITEMS AND
,IICES GOOD SUNDAY , OCT. t, THIOUGH SATURDAY , OCT . 15, !-t U, IN GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY STORES.
WE IESEIVE THE l iGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DIAUIIS.

.'

Studley named interim coach ·
HOUSTON (AP) - Chuck Studley, who became defensive coordi·
nator of the Houston Oilers In
January, stepped up a notch to
Interim head coach Tuesday, replacing Ed Biles, who resigned
Monday In the midsl of .a 13-game
losing streak.
"I didn 'tlookup theword 'interim'
but I think it means temporary,"
Studley said in his first meeting with
the media: "If we continue to play
Inconsistently, it's adios (goodbye)
at the end of the season.''
Studley, getting his first pro head
coaching experience, enters the job
fully aware of the task that lies
ahead in breaking the losing streak
and the team's 0-6 record this

season.

~!~ "Right now I'm wearing two
bats," Studley said. " I'm still the

defensive coordinator and I know
what that involves plus I have the
duties of the heard coach and at this
point I'm not sure what that
involves. "
Oiler General Manager Ladd
Herzeg said Studley and offensive
coordinator Kay Dalton were consl·
dered for the job,__..
"It was an extremely difficult
decision for me and one that I
wrestled with most of last night,"
Herzeg said. "I felt b(Jth Chuck and
Kay Dalton had superb qualificlations and both were highly qualified
to be successful head coaches in the
NFL."
The Oilers will try to break their
losing string Sunday against the
Minnesota Vikings.
In naming Studley, Oiler management followed the same path as

when they nanned Biles to replace
Bwn Philllps, who was fired in '
January 1981. Biles had been
defensive coordinator under
PhiU!ps.
BUes' resignation came Monday
following a 2~14loss to the Denver
Broncos on Sunday. Biles was booed
lustUy during the game when his
plcturewasflashed ona hugescreen
In the Astrodome.
· The Oilers have not won a game
since Sept. 19, 1982 when they
defeated Seattle 23-21.
Studley came to the Oilers in
January after serving as defensive
coordinator of the San Francisco
49ers for three years, including a
march to the 1981 Super Bowl.

Point Pleasant races set Saturday
By Jeff Morris
"Racing" IS usually not condoned
on Point Pleasant's streets, but
when Saturday rolls around "rae·
ers" will be applauded rather .than
ticketed.
The racing, however, wU! be of a
different nature as the city of Point
Pleasant and Citizens National are
sponsoring a one-mile fun run a nd 5
and 10-K road races in cotu1ect!on
" "th the city's Battle Days
celebnitlon.
Persons may register for the race
at a cost of $7 until 9:30 a.m ..
Saturday.
In Point Pleasant, entry forms
may be obtained at the city building,
Citizens National, Point Pleasant
Register, Mr. Donut , Western Auto,
BrumfleldandStoversandRardin's
Shoe Center.
Entry forms may also be obtained
~-tlle Sportmart in Charleston, the
~rt About in Gallipolis, Ohio and
il_t~ Huntington Mall sites· ztde'~·
"fhe Foot Locker and The Athlete s
f,oot
• The one-mlle fun run and the 5-K
i8ce wUI begin at 10 a.m. and the
lll-K at 10: 15 a.m.
; Awards (trophies) will be given to
lbe first five male and female
~hers ineachrace. The first three
11taJe and female runners in the
~,~&gt;Uowtng age groups wU! also
,leceive awards: 19 and under, 29
and under, 39 and under and 40 and

over.
;. First -place age group rutu1ers wUI
leceive a lrOphy -a nd second and
tillrd age group finishers wU! be
aj&lt;rarded medallions. The first
Mason Couniy runner In each race
wlll also be awarded a trophy.
. Each fun run runner will receive a
~lcipation ribbon.
"1-shirts decorated with a logo wlll
be given to the first 300 rutu1ers who
register for the race.
All three races will start behind
tae.Heck' s and Super Valu buil-ding
&lt;)ir l&lt;ennedy Avenue and will finish
~Main Street tothefloodwallat
'N-EJ\die-Wei Park.
.• Participants wU! run from the
starting line west toward the Ohio
~ver on Ketu1edy to the Viand
ilitersectton where they wU! cross to
the far s ide of Viand (west side) .
. io The run will proceed north on
Viand to 6th Street and rwmers wUl

tum left at the Mason County
Courthouse. Runners then wUI tum
right at Shop-A-Mint!' onto Main
Street.
The one-mile fun run partlcpants
will turn around at the Intersection
of 8th and Main streets at the Taylor
Chiropractic Clinic and head back to
the floodwaU finish at Tue-EndleWei Park.
Five . and 10-K courses continue
north on Main Street past the 8th
Street-intersection. Thecourseturns
right on 12th Street for one block and
then left on Ohio Street for three
blocks to 15th Street.
The one-mile mark is at the
Intersection of Ohio Street and 14th
Street. At 15th Street, the course
· turnsr!ghtforoneblocktoKanawha
Street. Runners wU! then proceed
left on Kanawha Street to the
Intersection of Kanawha and
Camden Avenue.
The water station for both races
wU! be located here. At this point,
runners in the 5-K race wU! turn
around and proceed south on
Kanawha back to 15th Street where
they will tum rig)lt on 15th for one
block and then left on Ohio Street for
another block.
•
Runners wU! turn rtght on 14th
Street for one block, go over the
railroad tracks and make an
Immediate left onto Main Street.
The finish wlll be south the e ntire
length of Main Street tothefloodwall
atTu-Endi-Wei Park.
The course for 10-K runners wUl
continue straight ahead (at the
!ntersectioJ&gt; ... of Kanawha and
Camden avenues) on Kanawha up
the Popular Street hll!, across the
railroad tracks andr!ghtontoNorth
Main Street.
Continuing north on North Main
Street, the course turns right on
High Street. High Street bears left
Into Oak Street, and runners wU!
tum right o!f ofOakStreetafterone
block, cross the railroad tracks and
make an immediate left onto
Madison · Avenue (the two-mile
point)'
length of Madison Avenue, turning
right onto 26th Street. From 26th
Street, 10-K participants will tum
left onto Llncoin Avenue and
proceed to its end, bearlngrightonto
Chandler Drive (the three-mile

Try Our Daily

:LUNCHEON &amp;' DINNER SPECIALS ........... $2.99
.BREAKFAST SPECIALS ......................... $1.99
•

The Eastem

many young players on the roster. Pictured are
Eagleftes, front, 1-r, Tara Guthrie, Dee Dalley, I.Ala

Ann Gaul, Terre Wood, and Susan Bailey. Back row
- AJeshia Holsinger, Krlstt Gaddis, Margaret
Homer, Kim Dent, and Michelle Wilson. 'l1le
Eagleftes are coached by Pam Douthitt.
Ad~rriiM&gt;mtnl

Eaglettes beaten twice
EAST M~IGS - The Eastern
Eaglettes recently dropped two
consecutive matches to league foe
North Gauta and non-league Fort
Frye In high s~hool volleyball
action. Eastern IS now 3-10 at the
varsity level.
Eastern played to tts potential tn
the first game and claimed a 15-11
triumph over North Gall!a. Eastern
faltered in the next two games and
dropped the match with 3-15 and
5-15 losses to the Pirates
·
Lee Ann Gaul led Eastern
with
six points, Krist! Gaddis had five,
Tara Guthrie four, Aleshia Holslnger five, Te~re Wood two, and Kim
Dent one.
Against Class "AA" Fort Frye,
Eastern lost 15-4 and 15-8 battles ·
with the
the winners
Lady Cadets.
King
led
with Jandy
12 serving
points, Cathy Clark netted eight,
andBeckyLangfour. Kr!stiGaddls
led the Eagles with seven points,
Dee Dailey had three, Guthrie one
and Susan Bailey one.
Eastern looked good In the
reserve contest at North Gallia,
whipping the young Pirates 15-4and
15-13. The reserve squad Is now 4-8
on the season.
Arlen Ritchie, Deleah Sanders,
and Ertca Kessinger led the
Eaglettes
six serving
points
each.
That with
trio played
very well
and
sparked the EHS wins. Susie Swain
added four a nd Michelle Wilson

If You Lost Your
Hearing Tomorrow,
Would YOU Do
Somethl"ng Abou·t It?.

three.
At Fort Frye Eastern shot out of
the game to claim the first game,
but later falteretl and lost con.secutlve 15-11 and 17-15 contests. The
Chi cago, ill. -A free offer of
smaller Eagles held their own
against the bigger foes , but Fort
specia l interest to those who hear
Frye's strength finally overcame but do not understand words has
the spirited Eaglettes. Aleshia
been announced by Bellone. A
Holsinger _led Eastern with 10 · non-operating model of one of
points, Kr!sti Hawk had nine,
the smallest Belt one aids of its
Wilson six, Ritchie nine, and
kind will be given absolutely free
Beverly Wigal four. Brenda Keffer
to anyone requesting it.
and Anissa Binegar led the Cadets.
Eastern faces Hannan Trace
It 's yours for th e asking , so
Thursday before entering sectional send for it now. It is not a real
tournament play Saturday, Oct. 22, hea ring aid. hut it wiil show you
at 9 a.m. when It faces MUier at ho" tiny hear in g help can be. The
Nelsonvllle-York High School In ac tua l aid weigh s less than a
Buchtel.
fourth of an ounce, and it's all at

r;:=========~;i

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING
Route 7
Old VFW ·Hall
Tuppers Plains

667 64 8S

car level, in one unit.
,
These mode ls arc free, so we
sugge" •you write for yours now .
"Aga in , we repeat, there is no
cost, and cer tainly no obligation .
All hearing problems are not
aljkc a nd some ca nn ot be helped
by a hearing aid bui many can,
T housand\ have already been

~:,':ha~::.

wendor coupon will 1M DCCfpfed p_e r Item"'

. kfastonus

....

area

se·rv. e

These Items
With Your Purchase
Of A 12" wearever

.
TOTAl SATISfACTION GUARANTEE
Everything you lt-.,y at l(rog•r 11 tuoront..cl for your te.. l
totltfoctlon r~arclleu of monufodurer. ff 1 you are nat
totllflatl . ICrot•r will ra,lace your Item with the tame
ltrantf or a comparable brantf or ref~o~Rd yo~o~r purch•••
prlca .

Silverstone Fry Pan

KROGER
GLADLY
WELCOMES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

• 12-oz. Kwlck Krlsp Bacon
• 1·Loaf Kroger White Bread
• &amp;-oz. can Avondale Frozen
orange Juice
• 1·Doz. Kroger Large Eggs
e 1·1 0-oz. Jar Kroger Grape
Jelly

Kroger 0.5%
Lowfat Milk
Gal.

DINING ROOM CLOSES AT 7 MONDAY·SATURDAY
DINING ROOM CLOSES AT 4 ON SUNDAY

48

99

Jug

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
HAMBURGER

5

64(

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With Fries .... s1.09

WITH
COUPON
BELOW

Red or Golden
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FREE!

28

12·0Z. PKG.

Kroger Zips Crackers

Bag

WHEN YOU BUY ONE
12·0Z. PKG.
KRO.GER ZIPS CRACKERS
AT THE REGULAR PRICE

~~~~IN STORE PACKAGED
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Country Style
Sliced Bacon .

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OPEN
FRIDAY TILL 8 II/"
'
'

Middleport Book Store
I

Ph. 992-2641

...,....

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WHEN YOU BUY
ONE SILVERSTONE .

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SIIIICT TO afPUCULI STATI &amp; IJCal TUIJ

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IN THE PRODUCE DEPT .

·Kroger
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RGISIRS .... .... .

Campbell's
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15·01 .
Box

99c

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOtt

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NEW SHIPMENT OF
INSPIRATIONAL PlAQUES
AND PICTURES
INCLUDING NEW
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ALSO NEW SHIPMENT OF
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GIVING....

NEW FAIL HOURS

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

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JUST ARRIVED

5:30 a.m.-7:00p.m. Weekdays
8:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Sunday

.Receive

mailed. ;u write today to Dept.
39662 . Bcltone Electronics
Corp. , 4201 W . Victoria St.,

L======·=====:!J~C~h:ic:a~go~,~i:ll:in~o:is~6064=:6~,- - -

South Africa
considered
as fight site

ADVliTISED ITEM POLICY
ICKh of th ... odwertlted Item• I• r•qulred to M rHiltlly
awollor.l• for sale I" eoch Kro . . r Store , ••cept ••
tpKiflcolly rtoted In thl1 ed. tf we do rvn out of an
oclwei11ted Item.. we will oHer youJour chok• of •
com,.rotde Item , wtlen avalloltle , r IKtlng tt.e tam.
tawlnla or o ralnchMir. whl~h will entitle yo" to purchaM
the odwertlted Item ot tha adwertlted price within JO clap.

•
mlle."
The course then follows the entire r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

WNCHEON SPECIAL
BAKED STEAK, CHOICE OF POTATOES
AND CHOICE OF VEGETABLE

"

point.)
At the intersection of Chandler
Drive and Parrish Avenue, hmners
wU! turn right, and t)len turn righl
again at Parrish Avenue and 28th
Street. Following 28th Street !o
Lincoln Avenue, runners will make
a lefi.
The race wU! continue down
Lincoln Avenue to 22nd Street (the
!ow--mile point Is between 22nd and
23rd streets) . Runners wU! make a
left off Lincoln Avenue onto 22nd
Street and continue for one block
before ttimtng right_ onto Mount
Vernon Avenue.
Proceeding on the right side of
Mount Vernon (with traffic) for one
block, runners will then tum right
onto 21st Street. At the T·
Intersection of Monroe Avenue and
21st Street, runners will turnlefiand
ctJntlnue ·down the hill through
Harmon Park to the water station at"
Camden Avenue and Kanawha
Street.
From this point on, the finish wlll
be the same as the 5-K race. The
five-mile point is on Kanawha Street
right before Southern States.
Spllts wUI be given at the one-mile
mark for the 5 and 10-Ks and at the
three and five-mile marks for the
10-K.
Theraceconunlttee, composedof
Dennis Brumfield, Dennis Park and
Lisa Clay (designers of the race
course), Dr. Jim Wagner, Steve
Safford, Lilly Faye Lanham, Morgan Bragg, Chris Stover, Georgt-anna Sommer, Marto Liberatore
and Vicky Schepis, has been
working on race plans for six
months. ·
Mayor Jimmy Joe Wedge, who
wllllle participating In the one-mile
fun run, has made a challenge.
"Anybody who would like to
challenge the mayor in the one-mile
fun run be at the starting line and be
ready to run," Wedge said. "I want
au the people who are receptive to
the Idea to come and root the mayor
on In his quest for a 5¥., minute

EASTERN VOlLEYBALL -

Van~lty voUeyball team haa blien enjoying an
Improved season during this rebuDding year that lists

Mld ....port

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTlES

RC 100 or
RC Cola

88
PlUS
DEPOSIT

KROGER HOT .DOG OR

2 99 C~\

Hamburger
Buns ... ...........

.

8-Ct.

·

·•

Pkgl.

KROGER INDiVIDUAllY WRAPPED SliCE

.American
Cheese Food ..... ':i:e~·

:

•

-

~~
9 ..-.
-~

�.I
I

•

The Oaily Sentinel

By The Bend

Beat of the bend

~9t dog -:20 feet worth

Chester Council plans inspeaion
Plans for Inspection to be held Oct
18 at7: ll p.m. at the hall were made
when Chester CouncU 323, Daughters of America, met Tuesday night
at the hall.
Officers and members are asked
to wear white for Inspection. Read at
the meeting was an invitation from
th&lt;! Belle Prairie Council, Belpre, to
its inspection Monday night.
Mary K. Holter, councilor, presided at the meeting. Reported
home from the hospital were Nina
WIDdle, Linda Beasley, and Thelma
McMannis. A practice for the
inspection was held.

. Three more contestants , in ihe · High SchllOI will present a dance to
Meigs County Junior Miss Scholar- "Beat It" for tb&lt;! creative and
ship Program have been performing arts division o! the
announced.
program. She was the Christmas
. They are Terre Annette Wood,
queen attendant; cheerleader,
daughter of Robert and Catllerlne member of the French Club, Pep
Wood, Long Bottom; Aruie Lowry Club, and was the 1983 homecoming
Adams,daughterofRickandLynne quEeR at Southern.
Crow, Syracuse, and Lynn Marie
MlssEpple,asenloratMeigs,has Epple, daughter of Frank and been a member of the band, rlfle '
MarUyn Epple, Middleport,
corps, Pep Club, Spanish Club, an
Miss Wood has been a class office assistanCe and a varsity
officer, a member of the student cheerleader. For the cl'j!atlve and
counctl, delegate to Buckeye Girls -· perfonldng arts she WID present a
State, member of the yearbook modernjazzdanc-e.
The first two entries announced
staff, and a cheerleader. Soo has
played on th&lt;! volleybaD team, 'bee!! earlier were Pam Riebel, a settor at
statlstlctan, setved on the prom Eastern. and Jennifer Meadows, a
C&lt;mrnlttee, worked as an office senior at Meigs.
-~
aldfl, and been in the concert band ·
The 1984 finals wD be held Oct. 22 :.
and French Club.
at Southern High School beginning y
She Is a senior at Eastern High at 7: 30 p.m. The winner of the local ..
School and for h&lt;!r creative and program w1ll represent Meigs !
perlonning arts WID sing ''Tomar- County at the Ohio Junior Miss "";'
row" from Annie. .
Finals in Mt. Vernon in early :~
Miss Adams, a senior at Southern February.
••

""

::

{(

MEN'S LEE OR LEVI JEANS

~}
{~~ ~'-'- '-'-"-'-' ~'-'-. . }
f.(

"ToWhomDoWeListen"wasthe
program topic wtth Kathryn Baum
and Esth&lt;!r Mays as leaders.
Scripture was taken from Matthew
22 and James 2.. Purpose of the
program was to exam!Jie the
prespective on the world as we seek
to relate to all persons: The group
sang "Give Me Thy Heart" accom-

...-.

t •••

' ''"'' ' '''''"'''"'' lu '''"'''"' •u1i1 11 oliUi ''"'' '"'''" ,

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

•

MIDDLEPORT

..

~~panl~ed~by~M;rs;.;·Ba~um;;a;t;th;e;p;lan;;o;.~~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~~~~~

WATERBED' SALE

Bill on

,.ather.

'

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•'
Your Waterbed
Hudquarters

InClude~

Headltoarcl and
"-""· .....tal. Dldc, Heater
u,.., 1'\AI Wavo - , Ali
Kil, Patd. Kit. DoiMood &amp; Set
Up.

-1. Doct.,
¥1... Mo-.

lndudeo Hoa.._..l ond Frame,

u.,..,

Full

~ I'

n

d and flame

Rll Kil, l'atch Kil. Doi'-od

"
'- ·
Doil-.d
....
SotAll
Up./(11, """" Kit.

and Sot Up..

•

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'

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1

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Ill.~~~
r
n~ ~~~.

tl!f'

'ns

1

ll'

/

-

lncludeo

-w

Vaughan, and Robert Snowden.
Harold Gramlham, also a candidate,
forwarded a tape for the audience to
listen to because ol a prinr
commitment The candidates there
were given an opportunity to speak
br1efly to the group and then to
answer questions from the
audience.

d .... • Drldc, ....... Unit, "'"'
- . 1111 101, lOt.
...........
H

I

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CHAPMAN
SHOES
NEXT TO
IN POMEROY
ELBE~FELDS

. 90
DAY SAME
AS.
CASH

3 PC. VINYL CAPS
·~9!15

,.
LAYAWAY

241 Third ~ve.

·

·

CHRISTMAS

.

Gallif»olis, Ohio

,.,
"
•1 '

"'

.

•

Committee chairmen named for
the 1983-84 school year are Carol
Darllels and Debbie Moore, ways
and means· Carol Ogdin and Carla
reb-estunenlll; VIcky Metheny and ~ Might, publicity.

L.arae.

FOR

Open Friday &amp;Monday Till 8:00 P. M.

••
'

I

... .

prizes at the

.1be annual schOOl 1talloWeeD
daJice was announced !or Oct. 29
from 1 to 9 p.m. ThOse wtWng to
contribute relreiJunelllll are uked
to lllllWII*n at the sc:bOOI after 5: :.1
thatdl,y. '111ef&amp;llfl!llfVIIwlll beheld

em Nov. 111 truil5 to 9 p.m. Plana
will tJI eompleted at the Oct. :Kl
committee meetllli and the Nov. 7

I'

Twig bazaar in Columbus, Nov. 13.
Mrs. Riffle; vice president, presented pins and cert11lcates to new
members, Debbie Betzing, Joyce·
91JU1en, and Joanna Shuler._Lynn
Crow, also a new member of the
chaptE-r, willrecelvehersatanother
meeting.
Cultural report was given by
Carol McCullough, Nancy Htll and
Carolyn Grueser on popular music.
A wiener roast was · held following
the meeting. The next meeting wUI
be held at the QuUlen home.

Salem Center PTO meets
Candidates for the Meigs Local
School District Board rl Education
were Introduced at the Oct. 3
meetingo!theSalemCenterPTO.
The candidates atiending the
meeting were Charles Jones, Roy

BLACK
WINE
TAUPE

Six members attended the 45th
anniversary celebration of ·,the
WUdwood Garden Club on Oct. 4 at
the Forest Run Methodist Church.
A thank you note was l'ead from
Mrs. Joe Eblin along with a
communication from Mrs. Ernest
Covert, Region i1 director, asking
lor a poll of members as to time
preference lor regional meeting.
Mrs. Covert send a time schedule
for the faD regional meeting and
asked that reservations be sent to.
_ Mrs. Wallace Fetty, Pomeroy,
before Nov. 7, checks to be.payable
to Region 11, Ohlo Association of
Garden Clubs.
A letter from Mrs. Fred Schuster,
state OAGC president, roncetntng
the handbook revision and contest

I

..

J'eliUlar P,rO meeting.
Arrangements for child care
during the meetings were made.
The second grade won th&lt;! room
count with 50 percent
representation.

fl!les was read. Also read was a
letter from Lucy Earwood, volunteer director at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center, requesting
the club to sponsor the March, 1984
meettDg of the Nature's Garden
Club.
Margaret EDa Lewis handed ou I
programs for the Meigs county
Christmas flower show, Dec. 3 and 4
at the Senior Citizens Cenl(!r.
It was noted that Ruby Diehl,
Mrs. Atkins, Mrs. Chris Diehl and
Mrs. James Nicholson attended the
OAGC state convention. Miss Diehl
reported
cllnlcs,
sales concerning
tables, and officers,
on the flower
show and awards, with Mrs.
Nicholson presenting the three
superior awards issued to the
Rutland Club.
Mrs. Jack Robson, Mrs. Ernest
Ward, and Mrs. Lewis attended the
Dower show at th&lt;! Ohio State Fair.
Flower arrangements for various
meetings have been made during
the past · month by Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine, Mrs. Robert &lt;i:anaday,
' Mrs. Denison, Mrs. Ward, Mrs.
Robson, Mrs. Marvin wnson, Mrs.
Nicholson, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Atkins
and Miss Diehl. Mrs. Dayton
Parsons won the traveling prize
donated by Mrs. Bernard Ledlle.
Mrs. Virgil Atkins displayed an
·. arrangement of the last flowers of

.

'

BREAKFAST HOURS:
MON.-SAT. 6:30 TO 10:30
SUNDAY 7:30 TO 11:00
FOR A FAST BREAKFAST
TRY A SANDWICH &amp; PLATTER
('}
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!
Bun.Jer

&lt;nit

McCLURE'S
3-IN.;ONE

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DAIRY ISLE

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~r:=~

FREE

SAVE S450

CHEF

.

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R.B.C. MOTOR
DRIVE SYSTEM

Perso'nal note
Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Davis of
Phoenix, Ariz. were recent visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Baughman and
son, Jeffrey, Murray Hill Road. It
was the first time the couples_had
seen each other since the Baughmans moved from Phoenix In 1966 •

FREE DB.JVERY -

RNANONG AV AILAB!E •

' '

5\TELLITE ~ 5YSfEMS
145- N.
Columbus
Road- Athens, Ohfo
- --·--·--- --~ --:: -;....:.::-:. -=~.

11 Alia St4-2S24 • II 01110 1-IGO-J92·19Sl

.

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Wayside ·Furnit_ure

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NOW!

$500
PEA YARD

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$1Q99

Cut and Loop Suony antistatic treated . Heat set nylon.
You save 15.00 per yard .

Sq. Yard
Installed
Over Pad

$1499
Sq. Ylfd
Instilled Over
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Carpet of new An so IV Nylon with Halo Fresh. the
carpet tiber that gives per• manent freshness protection against odors .

$1399
Sq. Yard

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You save 14.50 per yard.

ARMSTRONG VINYL ARMSTRONG VINYL.
FLOOR COVERING FLOOR COVERING

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Cash &amp; Carry

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"HUNTERS WELCOME"

BURGER

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$179500

1-:;::;;;::;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:::;;;::;;;;;;;;;~lo~w~ing~t~he~m~ee~tln~g~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
ANNOUNCING OUR

SHAKES

~- ,,.,.,.,.,,.~

Dues were payable and tre 1984
· program books distributed. For the
program Mrs. Canaday gave a
report on "Those Golden Leaves"

1

APPLE CIDER

~

summer.

from Flower and Garden. Mrs.
Nicholson commented on "How to
Rescue the Last Flowers of
SUmmer," and Mrs. Leslie gave
tips for fall gardening.
Re!restunents were served fol-

DELICtOUS -

~. ~;;l:4

Rutlan9 garden club has meeting

A craft workshop in preparation
for the annual holiday gilt shop was
held foDowlng a meeting of the XI
Gamma Mu ·c hapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority Tuesday night at the
homeofLindaRiffle.
Thelilftshopwill be held on Nov. 5
with the place to be announced later.
Charlotte Hanning presided a! the
meeting and announced that the
NewYear'sdtnnerwillbeheldatthe
Down Under in Gallipolis.
Plans were made for some
members to go with a group to the

,.._.,, Dedi. Hloter, Uner, ,.,.j

Hoa,..

ageilf3.5outof4. orlettergradesofB
plus or A minus or better, and high
scoresonstandardlzedtestss\lchas
the SAT or Acr, and class rank in
the top 10 percent, and significant
personal accomplishments In
school and community activities.
Students ruusts authorize for the
release of their SAT or ACf test
results by Nov. 11 . . Guidance
eounselors have details on how to do
thts as weD -as answers to other
questions aboutthe program.
1n . th&lt;! second stage of selection,
·. those seniors designated finalists
,•'
w111 be asked to provide detaUed
. "
biographical information, secondary school transcrips, and recommendatlons. An lndepend committee of college admissions
POMEROY, PH.992-6292
professionals wUI select winners
"
based on academic merit, taking
Into account performance, patentlal, goals and personal characllstics. Winners wUl be announced In
May. NCR Corporation, Dayton, Is
'··.
one of the world's largest computer
MIDDLE PORT, PH. 992-5248
Test (SAT) of the College Board's r~com::~p:an:les~._ _ _ _ _ _ _j_~~~~~~~~~~~
Admissions Testing Program or
from too American College Testing
"·
Program's ACf assessment will be
I" ·
used for the first screening. A small
"'
number of participants, approxi8 COMMANDER DISH
mately 25 males and 25 females
ARUNTA RECEIVER
.'
from each test, will be designated as
finallsts as a result to the first
",'
screening.
Seniors who meet the following
Salelite Reception Systems·
•,
criteria are encouraged to have
-nN
..
ONLY
their SAT or Acr results submltteQ
for consideration: cumulative sePLUS RECEIVE
condary Uschool grade point aver-

and left to rflbt, Sherry Cooper, Jodie Ervtn, and
~£ora Cobb wllh Dena Manley on top. Advisor of lhe
groop Is Marla Grimes.

llllh

Xi Gamma Mu workshop held

s19999.

J&lt;eDda Wll1lams, Jona!han!Wberts
. aqd Ryan Roberts. Wirlnell may
pick up tbeU'
establlshrnellt.

''

Meigs Junior

Participation of club members in
the fall regional meeting to be oold
Nov. 12 at the Senior Citizens Center
was discussed at a recent meeting
of the Rutland Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs. Eugene Atkins
and Miss Ruby Diehl.
. Mrs. Carl Denison noted that the
Rutland and Star Garden Clubs wUl
he responsible lor favors at the
regional meeting. Several volunteered to provide dOOr prizes.
It was announced that the fall
county meeting wiD be held Tuesday night at Trinity Church. Eight
members of the club attended the
Shade VaDey CouncllofF1oraiArts'
open meeting recently. Mrs. Eva
Robson also attended the Wildwood
Club's flower show.

I

I

.

ScboolcJJeerleadersshowlllglhelrpyrarnld!onnatlon
arefront,UsaF'rymyer,wHbKlmCalvertbehlndher,

snrall on price.

SJ299

-·;.·

CHEERLEADERS - 'lbe8e

Winners announced
..
Winners of the weekly prizes
being given away at the Dairy Isle in
Middleport without any purchase
necessary are being announced. ·
1be10winnersforthethreeweeks
include: Sept.' 26, Bellnda Ross,
· Sarah JohnSon, .Pauline Taylor,
Cindy Birt, Charlene Yonker, Linda
JaCks, Neal RlchmQnd, Jackie
Pratt, Mlck Barr, Sherry Kennedy;
Oct. 3, Krls crea:rneans, Myrtle St.
ClliJr, Gina Anspach, Jamie Harris,
Clridy Rowe, Joey Pridemore, ·
Do!lft8 Hill, Annie Knight, Mrs.
VlctorYoungJr.,CiydeHUl; Oct.lO,
Art Pazzle, Sam Canon, Shelley
Smith, Sandy Haning, Lisa Thomas,
Neal Rlctunond. Amanda Sauvage,

' ~:·

' ........ 4

Wayside Fumiture

Grace Church
sets program

A dinner party In oOO.rvance of
Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds also spent
tb&lt;!weddlng anniversary of Mr. and a few days in West Virginia, and
Mrs. Carl Moore and the birthday-of
were joined by Mr. and Mrs.
Otbo Mortzfeld of Kenosha, Wise.
Mortzfeld for a visit to the Fenton
was held Oct. 6 at the home of Mr. Glass Co. in Williamstown, W.Va.
and Mrs. Carl Moore.
Other r€Cent visitors of the
Attending the oOO.rvance were
Moores were Mrs. F1ora Eulenbach
Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Reynolds of Jupiter, Fla.; Mrs. Deanna
(Lily Wickham) o!Hebron, Ill.; Mr.
Brown, Clovis, N. M.; and Mr. and
and Mrs. Mortzfeld, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Paul Saunders, Bidwell.
Jeff Wilson, Kelly and TerriJo, Jake
Roush, Linda and Lisa Jell.
r--~-------.:----------~--__.j
Cake and Ice cream were served
In the evening. Cards and gilts were
presented to the honored guests.
Friday Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds
and Mr. and Mrs. Mortzfeld left for
tlrlr homes alter spending the past
week here with the Moores.

...-·

~ -~

During the meeting plans were
made for an Election Day dinner
and bazaar to be held Tuesday, Nov.
8, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The 16
members attending reported 29sick
calls made during the month of
September,

Grace Episcopal Church In Pomeroy will present a program on
"Death, the Universal, Hum?.n
Experience" at 6:ll p.m. Thursday
at the church.
Fllms, "On Death and Dying" by
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross who spends
her life counseling the dying and
their famUles will be shown.
Through the fUrns, via In-depth
interviews, she will discuss her
theories In helping the dying face
death without fear. According to Dr.
Kubler-Ross, the dying go through
three stages emotionally and desire
to Communicate with those around
them. Father Lee Miller rector of
Grace Church, is ·in ch.;.ge of the
program which Is open to the public.

,.

·.:"~

historian.

Anniversary, birthday observed

...

"~

r;:::::::::::::::::::;:::;;

Meigs CoUnty ·high school seniors
are being encouraged to compete
for a $3,(XX) four year college
scholarship and an NCR personal
computer !hat will be awarded this
spring to approximately 100 students In the country.
The scholarShips and personal
computers are being offered
thtough the NCR Centennial SchoIars Program, established by NCR
Corporation as part of th&lt;! company's 100th anniversary celebration for 1984.
The program provides an opp()rtunlty for two seniors, a male and a
female, in each state to win a $750
cash scholiU'shlp !or each of four
years of college. Each winner wUl
also receive an NCR personal .
computer valued at more than
$3,00J.
Winnerswlllbeselectedthrougha
two-stage screening process. Test
resuitsandselfreporteddescrlptive
information released . to the program from the SchOlarship Aptitude

$5 Off

ff(
-:..(

·J

Scholarship competition
b,egins throughout country

• - )E
)~
With Coupon
)_~
PREWASHED &amp; NON-WASHED
)_}
Reg. 118.99 to '20.99
)j
Sale Priced $!]99- re.ll599

[(

Chester UMW meets

Attending were Margaret Tuttle,
Mary Showalter, Fern Morris, Ada
Morris, Ada Neutzllng, Iva Powell,
Genevieve Ward, Jo Ann Baum,
Ruth Smith, Thebna White, Penny
Smith, Doris Grueser, Elizabeth
Hayes, Mary Hayes, Betty Roush,
Erma Cleland, Carolyn Holley,
Sadie Tn!ssell, Opal Hollon, Ethel
Orr, Marcia Keller, Beulah Maxey,
Charlotte Grant,, Everett Grant,
Virginia Lee, Esther Smith, Zelda
Weber, Virginia Newlun, Ada
Bissell. Leona Hensley, Mae
McPeek, Dorothy Ritchie, Alta
·
Ballard.

produce more mucus fn their
encompasses many -types of lung
many advalces In medical therapy
aliments. Some of the diseases that
and care, mortailty for these . airways, and It Is harderforthemto
move too mucus up and out of their
patients remains quite high.
come under this title are chronic
Ohio University College
asthma, chronic bronchitis and
QUESTION: Why did my doctor lungs. The mucus serves as a good
ol Osteopathic Medlcbie
tell me to stay away from people media for bacteria to grow, increasemphysema - therefore bolh of
QUESTION: My new doctor said your doctors . really told you the
Ing t!le chance of Infection.
with colds or the flu?
I have chronic obstructive lung same thing. Some less common
ANSWER: Because people with -· QUESTION: What else can I do
disease. My other doctor called my forms are cystic fibrosis, disorders
to prevent t11ese Infections?
chronic lung disease already have
problem emphysema.
the of the hair-like cells that line the
ANSWER: Although so~e respidifficulty breathing, any extra
same thing, or .
--- . windpipes, and work-related dis·
bunden may be enough to cause ratory aliments are triggered by
am I getting
exposure to Industrial or urban air
eases like black lung disease. All of acute esplratory distress and death.
worse?
these diseases cause a person
One of the most feared compllca- pollution, the great majority of
ANSWER:
extreme d11flculty In exhaling, or ·!Ions Is acute infection of the lungs chronic lung diseases are caused by
cigarette smoking. People with any
· or respiratory tract.
blowing ihe air out of his lungs.
Chronic lung dis- . \ "'" '•
~
ease, or chronic
More than eight million AmenSufferers of chronic lung disease lung problem should make eY.e ry
obstructive pul'- •
are more susceptible to pulmonary effort to stop making, even 11 that Is
cans are thought .to have chronic
monary disease as It Is sometimes obstructive lung &lt;jtsease; Of these,
Infection because they are less able very difllcult to accomplish.
called, Is really not a disease 1n near1y one half mUllan are disabled
to clear bacteria from their lungs
ltseU but rather a 'term that with advanced !llsease. Despite
than healthy people, They also

~

€(

You also shOuld avoid any other g~ Into th&lt;! ai!Ways.
Frequently patients Inhale these •
Irritants to the respiratory pas- ·
sages", Including ordinary smoke, aerosols at the wrong time in the .-'
dust and air pollutants. Increasing breathing cycle and none of the
your Intake of water also wUl help medication Is deposited In the
by thinning th&lt;! secretions in your respiratory tract where It should .
airways and making them easier to be. Sometimes aerosol medication
Is given by machines known as
move up and out of the lungs.
Intermittent positive pressure brea- ,·
QUESTION: My doctor gave am thing machines and nebulizers. · .
Your physician will guide you In the
an inhalE'r to use. How's It work?
best
use_of these pieces of equip- . ..
ANSWER: Inhalers contain aero·
ment.
These machines must be ...
sol forms of drugs called bronchodlkept
meticulously
clean so that you . ·
lators which oolp open the air
do
not
acq
ulre
an
Infection
from an .
passages. It Is bnpor1ant that you
unhygienic
machine.
'
follow your doctor's instructions
Chronic obstructive pulmon&lt;'ry .
carefully so that the medication
disease IS a serious condition which .· ~
is easier to prevent than to treat.
People can protect themselves by ·. ·
not smoking, by avoiding otner
people's smoke and trying to stay
away from industrial air pollutant~ ..•
as much as possible~

By Edward W. Schredk, D.O.
. Assistant Professor
of Family Medicine

,,•

F1VE GENERATIONS - 'l1ds llv'e gmerat1on famlJy recenOy
gathered allhe borne of Bulah Maxey and her moU!er, stella Adldns.
The live generatloll'l are (seated) Mrs. Adldns holding her great--great
granddaughter, Paige Elt.abeth Golf, six-weeks old. Standing are lhe
Infant's great grandmother, Bulah Maxey, her grandmoUier, Zenola
Harvey, I.;vnco, W.Va.: and her molher, Dlauna Golf, KopperSooe,
' ·
W.Va.

_personhood,
resources; Altona
BerihaKarr,
Smith,Christian
supportive community;
Kathryn Windon, Christian ~lal
involvement: Helen WoUe;·Dayleen
Bahr, Christian global · concerns;
Jackie Frost, Elizabeth Hayes,
Ruth Karr, Betty Lue Moore,
committee on nominations; · Clara
Conroy, Eva Hollon, membership,
and Clar1ce Allen, Ada Morris,
Mildred Gaul, public relations and

:

Chronic_pulmonary disease has various forms

Page 8

Junior Miss contestants announced

New officers were elected at a
recent meeting of the Chester
United Methodist Women at th&lt;!
church.
Elected were Kathryn Mora,
president; Marie Probert, vice
president; Betty Roush, secretary;
MarUyn Speneer, treasurer; Ka·
thryn Baum, secretary of program

Family Medicine

Monday, Otlober 10; 1983
'

By BOB HOEFLlCH
- fellowship dinner and "Happy
OVPStatt
Birthday" will be sung as candles
Did the young people of · the are blown out on a giant birthday
Middleport Church of Christ have cake being made for the occasion.
the longest hot dog in ihe world at The public Is Invited to attend the
tb&lt;!ir recent fall kick-off session?
observance.
•
Well, . I
know but it
A program on "Death, the
be. The hot dog
Universal Human Experience" wUl
was 20 feet , five
be conducted by the Rev. Lee
inches in length
MOler, rector, at Grace Episcopal
and was secui-ed
Church In Pomeroy ,ilt 6:30 p.m.
for the youth by
Thursday.
Dlnnerbell Meats
Films on death anct dying .bY
CardinaL There wasn't any way Elizabeth Kubter-Ross who spends
that a bun could be made In one her life counseling the dying and
piece for the sandwich so a series of their .famllles will be shown and
small ones were used. Alter through the films Dr. Kubler-Ross
everyone had enjoyed the novelty of wUl discuss her theories in helping
the situation, the huge wiener was the dying face death without fear.
sllced up to serve to all those
Not the most pleasant topic In the
.
·
attending.
world, but death Is reality which
, That's quite an · active youth must be faCed.
group. Meetings are held at the
church every Sunday at6 p.m. and
At Ohio University on Oct. 21-22, a
are open to all youngsters from age conference wUl be held on human
three through high school. Those values and the computer
attending, of course, are broken revolution.
into age categor1es for their
The COnference will be held on
meetings.
Friday afternoon .Wd evening and
all day on Saturday. On hand for the
Because of an lmponant Athens presentations w1ll be John Strange,
District United Methodist Church professor ol public and community
meeting held in Atb&lt;!ns Monday, the service, University of" MassachuMeigs County CouncU on Ministries
setts, Boston; Walter Tevis, author
wUl hold Its next regular meeting on and lecturer, and Joseph WelzenOct. 17 at the Pomeroy United baum, professor of computer
Methodist Church. The postponed science, Massachusetts Institute of
session will be held at7: 30 p.m. and Technologx.
all representatives and committee
· The conference (s sponsored by.
members are asked to be present the department of philosophy, the
since the program planning for 1984 English department and the office
wUl be started.
of continuing education. For information 11 you're Interested call
The Middleport Church of the 614-594-liBSl.
Nazarene will celebrate the 75th
birthday of the denomination, along
Friday from 9 a.m. to noon and
with 1.25 mllllon other Nazarenes from 1 to 4 p.m. you can receive a
around the world this Sunday.
free flu shot at the Meigs CoUnty
Nursery age chUdren through Department of Health. otfices are
senior adult age people will send up located In the multi-purpose buUdsome 200 bellum filled balloons ing on Mulberry -Heights. Take
during the Sunday School hour
a~vantage of the offer.
which starts at 9:30a.m.
Music will be presented by the
Preventive Medicine Is a good
SUllli;;e Quartet and the Rev. Roy
practice- and, or course, you need
Wolford will deliver the morning
no practice to keep smiling.
message. At noon . there wUI be a

_.~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

POmeroy-Middleport, OhiD

Wednetdoy, October 12, 1983

Wayside Furniture

241 THIRD AVE.
GALLIPOLIS
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9 to I; Tun.·Wed .. -Th~r.-511. 9 to 5

POr,tEROY. OH.

'

�..
. '

\

1

,0

Paga

•

10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Civic pride becomes
three day celebration'
goal in Point Pleasant
'·

By Jeff Morris
Point Pleasant Mayor Jl.rnmy Joe
Wedge Is hoping theclty' supcomlng
three-day Battle Days celebration
will help city residents take to h!'art
a slogan the city has stamped on
T·shlrts and pins, 'I love Point
Pleasant. '
"We have to make local people
aware of how nice their community
Is," Wedge said. "We have to
establish pride In our local people of
where they live. Once that Is done, It •
will benopn&gt;blemdrawingpeopleln
fn&gt;m the outside."
Battle Days, which recognizes the
first battle of the American Revolu. tlon · the Battle of Point Pleasant
fought October 10, 1774, will be
Celebrated by th!' city Friday,
Saturday and Sunday.
Events will get underway Friday
at 1 p.m . withahomeeomlngparade
that starts at Point Pleasant High
School. PPHS will use Battle Days
' as Its theme.
· Friday night Battle Days festiviUes wtll continue as the Big Blacks
will meet the Huntington High Pony
Express In a homecoming game at
Sanders Memorial Field. Kickoff is
scheduled lor 7:30p.m.
Wedge said a Ilea market will be
held !rom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
r.fernorial parking lot on Sixth
Street.
"Thqt's something we just added
and will have to see how It goes," he
said.
Saturday It will be "racing"
through the city's streets as Point
Pleasant and Citizens National are
sponsoring the Point Pleasant
Distance Runs - a one-mile fun run, 5
and 1G-K road r aces.
·The one-mile fun run and 5-K
races will begin at 10 a.m. and the
10-K race at 10 a.m.
All thre€ races will begin behind
the Heck's and Super-Vatu building
on Kennedy Avenue and will tlnlsh
down Main Street to the floodwall at
Tu-Endie-Wei Park.
' Wedge said he encourages city
residents to line the race course and
cheer the runners on. The mayor,

Ohio's grape
harvest good
By The Assoclaled Press
Hot and dry weather that causect
tmvoc for some of Ohio's other crops
was a sunny blessing for the state's
grape growers, who say their
pickings are the best they've seen in
at least 10 years.
Most of those grapes will go Into
juices and jellies, but there also Is
some fine wine coming !rom them,
said Donnie Winchell, executive
secretary of the Ohio Wine Produc·
ers Association.
. " What makes a good wine Is the
sugar, acid and alcohol balance, and
the extra sunshine ·m oved til&lt;:
sugars up," Mrs. WincheDsaid.
Grapes grown in the East
typically have plentyofacldbutlack
the sugar content common to the
grapes grown In California sun.
The grape harvest wraps up this
month. The use of mechanical
harvesters Is boosting the take fn&gt;m
the state's 242 vineyards.
The harvesters have paddles that
slap the grapes !rom the bunches,
leavl!1g behind most of the stems
and their bitter-tasting tannin.
Enough sterns stU! accompany the
grapes to provide for proper settling
during processing, said Richard
Johiln 0! Johlln Century Winery In
Oregon near Toledo.
Ohlo's45wineries place It third In
the nation, and lOmoreareexpected
to open by !9a8, Mrs. WincheD said.
The state ranks sixth In wine
production, with a totalofmorethan
1 million gallons of 170 different
varieties produced annually. Ohio Is
eighth In grape production with
about 9,1XXl tons grown a year on
some2 ,900acres.
Concord gra'pes make up ~
percent of the Ohio productlon.
Primary wine grapes are the
vlnl!era and the French-American
varieties.
:smce a state grape industries
pl'ogrwn began two years ago, the
Ohio wine Industry has been
growing, Mrs. Winchell said. The
progrwn increased the tax on wine
sales and is provtdlngforresearch In
gTa~ giowlng, -marketing and
promoUon.
· The t~nts·a·gallon tax gen·
about $.'m,rol a year,
two-thirds of which goes lor
l1!lleal'Ch at Ohio State University
and the rest for campaJgns to push
ohlo grape products in their various

litates

1111U'kets.

• One ol the fruits of research Is the
Rellalllle, a pink seedless table
II'8PI! that Mrs. WIDcbell said ''will
cnupete very lalllll'llbly with
~ r !J•• and other
(;ailfoi1lla varJedes,"

•

who will be participating In the
one-mile !un run, also made a time
prediction.
"! can probably run 5'h to 6
minutes, but if necessary I can
stretch ·lt out to 15," Wedge joked.
" I'd be more than happy to take on
any challengers."
At the city's council meeting
Monday night Wedge joked,
"(CouncUman) George (Sixt· is
going to try to win the fun run, but I
th(rudie's'a'ilark horse."
GeorglannaSommer,cltyrecreationdlnector,saldtheracecommit·
tee decided to have three different

business owners to dress In colonial·
type clothing to create the Battle
Daysatmosphere.
OthereventsSaturdaylncludeth!'
contlnuation ofthefleamarket fn&gt;m
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Memorial
parking lot. Concessions will also be
available at various locations.
"Therewtllbe noparkJngonMaln
Street, and we are trying . to
encourage people to mlr)gle there.
Once the race Is over, we will have
concessions there."
Another Saturday event will be
square dancing and clogging. No
time has been set· on this event and

O.:lober 12, 1983

Wednesday,

The. Daily Sentinel

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write DaiiiJ Sentinll Classified Otpt.
lll Co11rt St.. PonreJ. Ohio ~5769

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75 lkl oul Mo10&lt;t
7 6 A wt&lt;&gt; Po •ll &amp; Atce u .o•••
11 "'"' " Aopo•
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TfttHdoY&gt;n--

··--·-&lt;to-'""••

Upta \J W"' M

... a&lt;ILOytll-100"-

Shotguns
Only
1().1().1 mo..

IMPROVEMENTS
Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992·6799230·1mo

Factory Choke

Gauge

!---------"'-----------"---------.1---------B •
•

usmess Services

OHIO VALLEY Plumbin~A~~~~~f~~~upplies

'PERSONALIZED POOLS"

SPORTSMEN

BOGGS

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

CENTURY 21

$J295

INSTALLED
WITH PAD

NEAT AND NICE - Describe
one ftoor plan home. House
has a full base1nent with utility
room and a 12x20 storage
building a~o. There is plenty of
garden space on this 2 acres.
t h~

$29,000.

513.95
Good Selection Of
GOLD SEAL

CONGOLEUM

Sq. Yd. Installed

ANSO IV NYLON
515 .95
Sq. Yd . Installed

RUBBER-BACK TWEED
$399 ~A~rRRY
1 ROLL ONlY IN BROWN

IF YOU have been looking for a
spaCioi.IS home wtth 3 bed·
rooms, large family room, nice
knchen, in lhe country air, this
is it Large 1'.1 acre ~ 2
garages, woodburner and pool
table. $53.000.

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
GAl 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949· 2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692
Office 992·2259

A
•

•

HOM ELITE
CHAIN SAW
SERVICE
AT
POMEROY
LANDMARK
614-992-2181
SERVICEMAN ON DUTY
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 to 12 and 1 to 5
SATURDAY 8:30a.m. to 12 Noon
ALSO COMPLETE SERVICE ON ALL HOTPOINT AND
GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES.

Other Makes Also Serviced and We Also Service Kerosene Heaters

EVERYONE.

· POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W. Car11y, M11.

Drive
·

a little 111d uve a lot-fl'll dallvtly wllll Mlnilllllll order within 75 miln
Yts. we nrvlct w11at .. ••II. Wt are your loctl Hotpollll Dtaltr.
Store Hoan: 1:30 to 5:30. 1111 Closed Ill 5:00P.M.
Strylnc lelp, Gallla and llaon Coullllts

PH. 614·992·2111

216

ID·H mo. D&lt;L

· As Low As

$250 Each

"Free Estimates"

Also Blown Insulation

J&amp;l
Blown Insulation
PH. 992-2772
9·9·11110.

r. . 2nd St.

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325
NEW LISTING - Traier lot
near Sears ioJ $1,500.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

- Dozers

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Material &amp; Labor

- Backhoes

NEW LISTING-I.&amp; 2 family
home next to telephone
b!Jiding and Craw's. Hot water
ho!aling. paneled down, nice
woodwork and lg. rooms.
Alking $38,000.
RACINE

-

We have 5

pr~ O.h0ne,1flree. five
and 6 brJ'I'" ( oes. All with

.

Authorized John Deer,
Ntw Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

'

F_a rm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

- Dump Trucks

- Lo-Boy
'
-Trencher
- Water

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

- Sewer
-G as Lines
- Septic Systems
LARGE

I·J.lft

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

$3()00 ATON
.PH.

992-2280
2·23·t1t

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
in&amp; - Sidin&amp; - Concrete 1
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - At·
modeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

or

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682

SMAll JOBS

or

PH. 992-2478

992-7121

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

•water Pipe
•Gas Pipe
"Regulators
"Fittings
"Drips

WOODS - Want to have
privacy and l~e among the
wikl. Just the thing 001.

All Makos and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls-and Shop
Sarvica Available
.

12-ZIJ.tlc

"CUT OUT

Residence : 985-3837
9-IS·I mo. pd

Dewayne Williama
&amp; Scottie Smith

CHESTER

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AUTO
PARTS

985-3561
All Makes

AND

•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •Freelera
PARTS end SERVICE

Ali -Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

• Call: 949-226~
or 949-309~ "'"

CHESTER. OH.
9-12·1 mo.

M.L

CONTRACTING~

RECLAMATION

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS
Sizes start .from 12'x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'

•Excavating
"Ponds
'Septic Tanks
'Hauling

· Around
•Dump Truck

Insulatd Doc Houses

949·2293 .
Racine, OH.

P&amp;S R•cint,
BUILDINGS
Oh. ·
flh. 614~l·~!~l

~·

..

10·6-tfc

8·1-tfc

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Lowest Ratas
Setvice
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

..., buys.

Huu~lll•l
Ill'./( lt/lfdf ,,., ·,

To take care oisomeonesick
or needt home care. Days
only, Point Plea ~ant or Gallipolis area . Good refereni:as.

Root. Also new shipment of
trapping suppliea. Hip boots
&amp; waders. George Buckl!)'

Call304-458-1818. ·

Want to do brush hogging.
S15 8n hour . Call614-256-

1·9 p.m. S'!t· • Sun. 1·9

1427.

p.m .

742-2352

9· 12-Tf

Registered nurse wants to
do babyaitting 2 or 3 daya
per Wf'l'tk for 1 child in my
home . Vicinity of Holzer
Medical Center. Call 448-

One twin siza Penny ' s
Strawberry Shortcake beds-

RADIATOR

3376.

SERVICE

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

742-2328

I· IHlc

.f·21·ttc

Will baby sit In home morn-

3 Announcements
11
SWEEPER and sewing machine repair, . parts. and
.uppllea.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd .

Call

446·0294.
Racine Gun Club dues are

duo. U6.00. Musl be paid
before Jan. 1, 1984.

MILLS'
ELECTRIC
Residential-New and
re-wmnc; Commercial
and Industrial.
BONDED-AII .Work
Guaranteed
Call 614·742-2214
After .5 P.M.
9-22· I mo. pd.

D&amp;J
SAVEMORE·MART

Coal 8t Kerosene
Heaters

$99ro $189

Also Army Supplies,
Radios. Watches &amp;
General Variety
2nd St. across from

Pott Office

Meeon. w. Vo .

773-5040

lO·l ·l mn. pd.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

New Homes
Extensive Remodeling
•Roofing
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
and Garages
•Electrical &amp;.
Plumbing
•Aluminum &amp;. Vinyl
Sidings

-Addom and ..modeling

:...-ng and guttor w..r.
~nuolo

'NDt'k

-l'lurrhing and
•oloctricalwooli
(Fr" Estimates}

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or

Pomeroy,

15 YEARS EXPERIENCE

4

GREG ROUSH

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club .
Every Sunday starting 1
p.l'n . Factory choked guns

onJt.
=

NO hunting in

farm

Jeffriet

Ridge.

th~

Delmas

on

locust

No Hunting and trespa11ing
on Edael Hughes Farm. Point

Pleasant.
NOTICE Revival Mt. Tabor
Church, all this week by The
Rev. Joe Gwinn .

992·7583 or 992·2282

FIREPLACE INSERTS
FIT FROM 30'' TO 48"
OPENINGS

STOVES TO
HEAT YOUR
ENTIRE HOUSE

NO DEALERS PLEASE
SORRY, NO DELIVERY

SAVE!
To

45%

APPROVED FOR BITUMINOUS COAL

Damper Control Aod

HI·Temp glass by
Coming, optional

Heavy duly double
I construction

..J..-- rilaw1re.s
1/• inch
bOilerplate steel fire
chamber and sturdy,

-

lo&lt;
olwood.

heavy gauge steel
outer shell.
.
Ultrasonically tested
for leaks.

weeki old . 1·8 woek old .
81 4·986-4382.
Blond female long haired
dog. epprox .· 2Vz years old.

Very playful. a14·992·
3283.

3891.
Border Collie. female. male
end one 8 week old puppy.

304·676-271 4 and 304·
676-1677.

$50

DEPOSIT WI.LL
HOLD FOR 30 DAYS

children , female. black.

304-876-1989.
One mole dog, port lri1h
Setter. one female German
Sheperd. all ahotl and
•a-pd. each 18 months old ~

mon. Big, friendly, whh
collar. Longovllla, Rt.124.
814-742-2830.

Till
DARK

LISHING CO. recommends
that you do busine11 with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have invaati·
gated the offering.

22 Money to loan
HOME LOANS Low fixed

Call 446-3368.

rate. Leader Mortgage, 77 E.
State. Athans, Ohio . 1-614-

692·3061 .

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

replace 6 who don't. Call
304-676· 1429. 5·9 houro.
LAST chance this year.
Apply now to earn $1,000.
by Chriatmu. Houae of
Uoyd. toya &amp; gitta. No
experience needed. no ·investment ever, free 8300 .

Loat reglltered miniature
Daahund. Cornetock area.
Southaide. Antwera 'Red.

R-ord. 304-878· 7172.

LOST: Ferron bllck. brown,
yellow In color. with blue.

homoH. 1il-13 Jofferoon
Avo. 304·1178·7730:

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING lower

ices-regular tuning• ·

l ·disco•unta to Senior _t.ilizena,
Churches&amp;. achools. Ward'•
Keyboard, 304· 876-3824 .

kit, no collection, no dollv· PIANO TUNING-LANE DA·
ery. Lost file dote. October NIELS : 742 "2961 . -AIIo
14th. Call now 304-n3· ·cuh for Spinet or Grond
6224 M11on Co., 614-992·

piano' . (Even 'damaged con;-

6691 Meigs Co., 614-367· ditionl.
7770 Gollio Co.

1----------

12

Situations
Wanted

31

Fill Dirt. 304-678·2468.
COCK·A·POO. friendly wllh

Opportunity

I NOTICE I
.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB -

WANTED : 6 glrlllowork, to 23

Found· Adurt male Dober-

DIRECTIONS: South of Rt. 7, II
mllea below Galllpolla cro• over
Raccoon Crk. Bridge. follow ~gna.

21

There haa never been a
beUer time to sell AVON .

Tree trimming and removal .
Free estimetaa. 614-992-

8040 or 6t4-949·2129.

Beat of care for Invalids or
elderty who need room and
board . 614-992-6()22.

Homes for Sale

Middleport, remodeled. five

·-------

6 ..room hou11 on acre lot.
Pomeroy. Firat t4,7&amp;0. or
best offer takes it. 614-692:-

6778.

three bedroom 2 story house
on Park Dr. New furnance It
air conditioning , dream kh·
chen with all appliances.
Owner will carry second or
all. Small down paymant.

304-676-2192.

20 Acraa . 2 · bedroom houaa .
hardwood floora under
carpet. city water. Alao han
barn. On Rt. 87. juat aero••
Jackson County line in Mason County . 304 - 896-

3898 . 835.000.

House and 3 loti on Weai
Point Rd. in Hartford, WVfor

4616.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED· CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES . CAl(
446-7672.
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES·.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
AT 36. PHONE 446· 7274.
14.-79 2 bdr. unfrun., mo~
bile home, carpeting, appliances. central air &amp;. heat.

01 1.000. Call 614· 266·
6036, otter 7PM 614·258·
1672.

1974 Shultz 12x65. 2 Iorge
bdr .. with buih-in cabinet8.
2 baths. air cond., underpin:
ning. intercom, new ruga~oo
drapet, furniture, outlkl•
entrance bo", 2 seta of extra
steps. fire alarm. gea alarm:
first aid kit. fire extinguisher,

$6,900. 1·304·882-2237.

1972 12x80 mobile hom•.
greet shape, turn., waaher;
dryer. diahwaaher. fully ear·

poled. Coll614-367-7176 ..

Windsor 14x70 with ex-'
pando , 3 bdr .• 2 bath, priced
at approx. payoff. Rodney,

Oh . 304 -676· 172a for
information.
1970 Vindela expando,
12x63, 2 bdr .. central air.
total electric. unfurniahed,

19.000. Call 6'14· 248 ·
9222 .

Bayview Oalullla 14x70. £x.n
cellent condition. Central
air. 2 bedroom. dan. under·

614·246·6281

Insurance

2 houses cloe to M«Mgl
High School . Mult sell.
Make us an offer. CaH
61 4-992· 7724.

Or will trade for anything of

hour. Oallipolla Ferry and tun batha, in city limits.
Point Pleaunt, 304-876- Immediate po...aaion. Call

13

$46,000. 614-992·6868.

4 mobile homes. 1 o· and ,1 2'
ft . wide. 2 bedroom furnished. Low priced .
Brown 's Trailer Park. 614-

IV~i;h;;;;,;;;;;i;;t3.0;o.~
value. 3 bedroom hou•
Will do houHwork,
with fireplace, central air, 2
8329.

3 bedroom ranch atyle;
home. carpeled, full aize
basement. 1 car garage, In
ground pool 11h32.

4 bdr. ranct- home, largelR.
full basement. with garage.
wood burner included. city
school&amp;, 2 milea from town.

Call 446·0278.

I

304-866·3934.

Six room frame houae. to be
moved from property. Reasonable . Phone 304-876-

Will do houae cleaning.
826 .00 8 house. Phone
304-676 -2754 or 5762184.

1983.

lo-cated in SyracUae· N••r
•chool &amp;. swimming pool. 3
bedroom situeted on one·
third acre lot . 824.&amp;00. or
will rent for $276 mo.

304-676-3190.

304-6.76-6806.

4 kiUenl. 2 black and 2 muhi
colored. All female . 3 ~ 8

jewel 0ry, glaoaoa and pota.

$11.000. 304·882-2831 .

ectivitiea~;~ii~~~~ii

NEED babysitter to coma to
home. If interested call

Ploaean1. Men 's ouito. Size
40. winter coati, curtaina.

Dump truck for hire. will
haul coal, und, gravel. etc .

3 kittens . All white. Around

6 lost and Found

hlal dlllrlbutlon -

tor 6:00PM, 446 -8069.

8 weeki old. 614-992·
3690.

304-876-11674.

lluol. variable speed
bloWIIIIor ...n. flnorod

BBbyaiUing in my home at
Centenary. Call anytime af·

ataged
at the park sites.
wide recreation
Requirements: Training and
experience in park management, grounds and facility
maintenance . forestry or
related field . Drivers licente
required. In addition to
resume'. applicant• are required to complete county
~~~tmploymant application
available at the Park District
Office. Galli a County Court-

Cigarette packs. Call 614·
246-9161 .

Puppiea. Half blue tick. Free
to good home. 614-986Five Year
Umi1ed
Wananty ·

Wanted to do babysitting in
my home". Call 446-0390.

sible to the director of Parks
&amp;. Recreation. D•1tie~ include managoro~tent, mainte nance. and operatiiJn of
county park and recreation
facilitias . Supervision of full;
time, part-time seaaonal
ltaff, and manpower pro·
grams . Responsible for perk
administration. maintenanca standards and site
operations, park security,
and coordination of county-

ell:t . 68 . The 0 .0 . Mcintyre
Park District is an equal
opportunity employer .
Deadline : October 14,

father. 61 4· 742·2660.

enced. Call 446-1678.

PARK MANAGER Respon -

house , Galllpoll•. Oh
46631 . (614) 446·4612.

Puppiea. 1 male-1 female. Vz
doberman, 1h german she·
phard. 9 weeka old . Been
wormed and weaned. Reedy
to go. Have mother and

ings or afternoons. For kin·
dergarden children. Live
near school and i1 experie-

Help Wanted

Giveaway

4

LIQUIDATION
ALL 1983 STOV~S &amp; FIREPLACE INSERTS

Yard aale- Thursday, Friday:
2903 Parrish Ave .. Point

lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small. Reliable and dependable. For estimate call
446 -3169. 9 to 6.

Middleport, oh. 61 4-992·
3476.

Rouje 4, Pomeroy

PAT HILL FORD

----- -- ·- ·· -.. ·-- ·-· -· · --· · ·--

fL~~~~:::~:::;:::~h~~~~~~~~~

Buying daily gold, ailvar
coin•. ring1, jewelry, aterling
ware. old coina. large currency. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Berber Shop, 2nd . Ave .

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

We can repair and recore radiaW.. and hea·
ter c:on~~~ .' We can also
acid boil and rod out radiators. We also repair
G8sTai)Q.

1006 Simpaon Place, Pt. Pl.
Gibba . Oct, 12, 13, 14th.
Remnant• of eatate.

ond dependable. Call 4463169 between 9 and 5.

FREE ESTIMATES
9 - ~ · 1 m~

Garege Sale Thurs. &amp; Fri.
Uncoln Pika to Northup
Patriot Rd .

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable

664-4871.~',---Monday~ Friday

Yicinity

-- - -------·· ··· · ·--- - -·-· .. ···
2 family. Thursday, Friday. large yard tala, 203 Joa~
Saturday. 'AmileoffRt.7on Pine , New Haven. W.V.,
SR .143.
Oct., 13. 14, 16.

M.D
()h. Or
. Miller.
992-7780.
Rt. 4, Pomerpy,

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

8t

Large family . Oct. 12. 13.

BEDS·IROII!. BRASS, old
1

992-2428.

3 Family Vard Sale Oct. 13,
14, 16.· 9 to 5. At interaec·

. ,
&amp; V•tCtnlty

furniture, gold. ailver dolIars, wood ice box~;tl, stone
jara, antiques, etc., Complate households . Write:

WANTED: Gin sing. Yellow

•New Roofing

.......Pt.Piiiiiiint .....

Middleport

Washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners

•Insulation"

.Vord Solo Oct.13, 14, •15.

614-446-0176. ·

USED
APPLIANCES

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows

Girls clothing. gOod dre..., ,
2 coati, aize 4 &amp;. 6 . All for
$20 . or separately. 814-

Pomeroy

3·7·tft

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

REPAIR

Wanted to buy U1ed mobile
home• B. truck camper. Call

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re·
pair service and in·
stallatiol).
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

FARIS - 5 acres in Southern
~nh hoUse; 76 acres with
house, bam, near ungsville;
58 acres with bank bern and

RIVER VIEW- 3 houses with
this. One 2 bedruomer on 124
above liMn, a nice one In !he
upper pert of l'otnenrt, and
one in the IMr l*t M1111

MILLER
ELECTRIC.
SERVICE

13th and Friday the 14th,

14, 16th.,9 to 6. Old Bianll
tlon of Rt. 325 and Rt. 141 . Store, Rt.'U S. Pl. Pleo10n1.

Wanted to buy uaad coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni-

lll ·tfc

Yard aale forat road on the

loft p..t WMPO Thuro the .

Huge 3 Family Yard Sale
Dna mile aut of Porter on
St. Rt. 664. Something for
everyone tnd every size.
Newborn to large aizet in
men S. womana clothing.
Priced to Iaiii Coleman &amp;.
McGuire re1identa.
Swing 1et, clothea, beaeCB ..
popaicle Stick lamps , knick
knacks. just out of Evergreen. Watch for ligna.

pread. 304-675-6886.

scrHn available.

house in Nnse Setlleroent;
145 Acres ,_ Harrilonvileon
Ill 143, and 96 ICr8S , _
Rutland.

No Sunday Callo

Writesel

All types ohoof work, new
or :·- ~paifr g~~tters and
downspouts, gutter cleaning and painting, storm
do~J~S and windows.

9·15-1 mo. pd

FOR FUTURE USE"

SYRACUSE - Modem 3
bedroomer on a nice lg. lot. One

lloii plan, carfletin&amp; prage,
shrubbery, out of tlood. Only
$34,rol.

Boll Auctioneer, 304·428·
8177.

9 Wanted To Buy
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
We pay caah for lata modal
Call for free siding esclean ua8d carif,
Mink Chev. -Oids .Inc.
timates, 949-2801 or ' Jim Bill
Gene Johnson
949-2860.
446-3672

ROOFING

Route 1
Long Bottom. OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992-3067

Rangea

Warehouse: 985-3509

H. L

Ph. 986-4269
If No Answer, Call 915-4382

•Washers •Dishwashers

Phone ;

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

Rut~nd.

RUTIAHD - 5 to pick from.
Starting at $19,500 to $32,500.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

3-Rtic

9-22-1 mo. pd.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

baths ....~(/) ~ilies. Pick
whal you w-••.
LAND - Some level near
Racine, so~ne pasture near

nic nacs.

Auction Barn . Conalgn·
mente t aken every Saturday
1 :00 till sale time. Emma

SIDING

St. At 124, Pomeroy, OH .

NEW LISTING - Bu~ness
bldg. Business section Of
Middleport
NEW LISTING - Nice looking
3 bedroomer wnh view of r~er.
Cook and bal&lt;e units, 117 baths, .
hot water heat. $40s.

Garage Sale Thurs. &amp; Fri. 48
Spruce St. Furn .• cl01hlng,

AUCTION avery Sotuodoy
night, 6 p.m. Mt. A!to

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

' .
'

.·

Yard 1olo Fridoy Oct. 14.10
Garage Sale Thurs .• Fri. 81 a .m . to 3 p .m . at 34705
Sat. 2 mi. from HMC, At . Whltea Hill Rd. Rutloncl .
160.
Arthur Miller relldence.

ture, 446·3169, 3rd. •
Olive St .. Galllpolll, Oh.

CENTRAL REALTY

STARTING AT

Minersville, OH.

•.m.

9-4. Oct: 14, 9·12.

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckload• of new
merchandl" ev-v week.
Coneigmenta of new and
used merchandlae always
welcome. Richard Reynold a

JOB-BIG OR SMALL
992-6030
'.

Certainteed

CARRIER WANTED

CARPET

•Reasonable

•Work Guaranteed

parts. Five Pointe. 814·882-

6344.

and

Auctioneer. 276·3069.

CONSTRUCTION

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

•Experienced

Yord oole-Thurwdoy, • Fr(:
doy. Clothes. BowllngbiiiO',
camer... tirH, · car • car

Yerd 1110 Oct. 11 -13. 9
miacelleneoua item1 . to 6 p.m . on Rt. 124golng
708 Second AVo. Oct. 13, towarda Rudand.
~-·

Ucenoed • bonded In Oh\&lt;&gt; &amp;
wve . 304-773·5786 or
304· 773·9185.

t70(1

Largest SelectiOn In Soulheastern Oh111

614·557-3411

JERICHO RD .
PT. PLEASANT, W.

6 : 30 P.M.

•liMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS. REClAMATION
WORK
•LAND

UOCI
tiOO

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.'S
CARPET SHOP

NothiRJ shown blfore day of sale. Not responsible for
lOll 01 ICC!dtnts.
TERMS: Cnh 01 Check wfth Positive ID
Lunch 01 pnmisas
MARLENE WORK-Gqrdian of Mollie Monroe
AUCTIOIEEI-IILL JANES

PlAQUES
ENGRAVING

Vinyl Replacement
Windows

KITCHEN &amp; SON

12

Gutter and Downspouts
" Free Eatrmotoo"
.. , _2 Yoaro Experience"
" Work Guaranteed"
R . E• HOME .

.. SAT. NIGHT

1·304, 676-1

O~aa..,.,_,_

PUBLIC AUCTION

Selling personal property of Mollie Monroe and the late
Kennard Monroe. Antiquo furniture, china , glass, coin
collection, cuns. farm machinery, and old items.
ANTIQUE FURNITURE: oak cupboard, iron beds, walnutdro·
pleat table, old chairs, old license plates, old lanterns. 1ce
hooks, copper boiler , brass _. and iron kettles. wooden
buckets, barrel churn, crocks, jugs, jars, old porch posts.
wooden trunks , record players, ta bles, rad ios, wooden beds,
rockers, Boston rocker, press back chairs Bentwood chairs
oak chairs, picture frames. Weller plate 1919, flat irons:
antique bookends, oil lamps. cupboard, washstand, oak table. 1ron planters, a lot of primitive pieces, drop front desk,
Windsor cha~rs. hand painted dishes, fenton, depression
glass, cane chairs, Victorian stand. other rockers. spind le
desk, lamps, Weller vases, Eoran Weller vase oak side board
antique mirrors, ext. nice 6 drawer spool cabinet, trunks, old
dressers, chest ol drawers, hall trees, spool bed, several
p1eces of overstuffed furniture, old dishes and plates quilts
other items.
'
'
MODERN FURNITURE: Hoover washer, Hoover sweeper,
elec. range, Whirlpool refrig.. stereo w/ built-in speakers,
cassette, camp . (new), AM I FM radio, TV, Sears heater, wall
clocks, camera, several elec. fans, sewing machine, twin
beds. end tables, lamps, a lot at linens, elec. appliances,
pressure cookers, iron skillets, pots and pans, dishes, silver·
ware, Tupperware, a lot ol rug material, storm doors and win·
dows, 200 new 8-track tapes (Through the Bible), etc.
GUNS: Remington 12 gas. pump, Marlin 22 rifle boll action
w/clip and Weaver scope, ott 22 auto. 2 in. barrel, lven John·
son 32, 6 shot, 3 in. barrel, Oaisy air rifle, several bo"s of
shells.
SHOP , FARM , HAND, GARDEN TOOLS, ETC.: 2ton floor jack
a lot of garden tools, hoes, shovels, rakes, forks, a~es, mattox:
etc., coal and wood heater, dinner bell. act. hose and gauges,
sledges and wedges, post hole diggers, bits, levels, brate and
b1ts,p1pe threader, hand wrenches, wood wis7 wrenches ol
all SIZes, VISe, saws, draw knives, crosscut s,ws, hammers,
hatchets, Crescent.wrenches, screw drivers( pliers, air com·
pressor, bench grmder, elec. drills, B&amp;D tOG!s, Craftsman
tools, Clinton 2.0 h.p. motor for boat, a lot of bolts and
screws, uhaust fan, fire ext., oil drums, steel wheel cart 2
wheel trailer, t,arps, belt pully, l rail barb wire. chicken wi~e,
stepladders, wooden bench, copper tubing, boat oars, ext.
cords, welding rod, battery charger, rotary mowers, 16 in.
snow blower, log chains, alum. ext. ladders, house jacks,
sausage grinder, elec. motors, tire chains, pitcher pump car
vac ., hand saws, one building full of odds and ends too numerous to mention, Craftsman sabre saw , tool box, tapes, etc.
FARM MACHINERY: 8 N Ford tractor w/ fronl end loader 14
in. plows, 6 ft. d~c. Oliver bulldozer w/ 6 ft. blade (old), 'Ho·
bart welder on trailer w/6 cyl. enKine, 1975 Toyota station
waron 4-cll, 21 ft. house trailer, 14ft. alum. boat, etc.
CO N COL ECTION: 255 wheat pennies 175 lincoln pen·
nies, silver dollars 1886 Molgan, 1882 Moraan, 1934 Peace,
1893 Columbian haH dollar, other old coins ower 100 nickels
1886 to 1864, over 500 dimes 19242·1954 mostly d t. s
over 600 quarters 1932·1965 mostly d&amp;s, 45 half dollars
from 1940.1967.
COINS TO BE SOLD AT 1:00
THIS IS A VERY LARGE ALL DAY SALE. SOMETHING FOR

Public Sale
8o Auction

every Tu11day
r~~r:::~;;;:~::;r~~~;;:;~~;;;:~~:::::::::::::::::1::::::::::::::::::~-------------------1Auction
THE
GUN SHOOT
night, Pt. Pl..unt. ·WYo .
Vinyl Siding &amp;
J&amp; F
Auct. Lonnie Nool. Youth
······c;&amp;iifiioiis.........
·
Y
RAONE
floofing
'
"
JEWELL'S
Canter Bldg.. Camden St.
SALE
CONTRACTING
814·387-710t .
TROPH
&amp; Vicinity
RRE DEPT·.
DEAL DIREcT &amp;
•DOZER
PLUMBING
and
RICk
Auctioneer
KING
Bashan Building
SAVE 30% OR MORE
•BACKHOE
Service. Eatate. Farm. An On Sidin&amp;and Roofinc.
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
HEATING
tique &amp;. ljquidetion aelea. Porch Sale Winter clOthing •
EVERY

"'-

IU N - I t 1M lei.,

LMan Folll

Jll

.....

Rl h eo • ••"'fl
14 (loc l,.ct ll ~ ....go•• ••&lt;&gt; •
81

!l oft&lt;

,.,.

ll!i -~
Clwoo•

o....•

lM

I

11

~ ...

....._..,.

the tentatlvesltelsSixthStreet. The f-~--------,----------,---------"T"--------• Charlie Butler band will provide the,
music and JjmmyWalkerwiUserve
as emcee.
On Sunday, the antique show and
" II You Want a
sale will continue fn&gt;m 1 p.m. to 6
Plumber Bad
p.m. at the O.J. Morrison Building.
You Want Him Good"
The flea market will continue !rom I
IELICTRIC IEl SIWER ClEAIIER
p.m. to 6 p.m . at the Memorial
..----iDIAL,...---,
parking lot.
AIR CONDITIONERS
992-2036
The final BattleDayseventwillbe
PH. 1-304-773-5634
RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
A Phone Call brines
a memorial service held at Tu·
HEATING • PlUMBING
MASON, W.VA.
Prompt Courteous Serwice
Endle-Wei Park by the Col. Charles
Z3Z E. Znd
Pomwoy, 0.
Lewis Chapter of the Daughters of
C. L. KITCHEN
Now's the time to get your furnace read~ for e·otd weater, 10%
the American Revolution.
Discount on any neW furnace purchased before Oct. 15.
10·3·1 mo
Wedge said the serVIce will get
underway at 3 p.m. Mrs. Cliarles
11 Help Wanted
Proffitt, regent, and Mrs. Ray
Proffitt, chaplain, will conduct the
ceremony.
Have Your
The American Legion wm per·
Trophies
form flag raising duties, and a
Professionally
representativefn&gt;m thePPHSband
Mounted by
will play taps. Jack Burdett will
read a list of those who gave their
lives tn the Battle of Point Pleasant.
Wedge said he would !Ike to have
four activities In the city such as
New Lima Road
Battle Days each year. The city
Rutland. Ohio
already holds July-Fourth, Labor
PH . 742·2226
S-29·1 mo.
Day and Battle Days celebrations.
He said he would also like to hold a
springtime event.
BUY·.f£/.J.
"Point Pleasant has got the
Real Estate General
11£KT•TIIA/IF
history here, we've just go~ to start
POMEROY,O.
making people aware of It," Wedge
992 -2259
said.
As!arasBattleDaysgoes,Wedge
NEW LISTING - EASTERN
3 ACRES IN RACINE -Surveyed tlal land , private and pea·
said he does have a specific goal he
DISTRICT Mini farm!
cefullocation . Owner will help finance.
Approx. 33 acres wnh new
would like to see the event achieve.
ranch home, 3 bedroom~ 2
"I would like for the people of
NEW LISTING - Rustic home in cou ntry, 3 bedroom , fully
Jim Owen &amp; Co .. Inc.
baths. ,main kitchen and
Point Pleasant to think we've laid
carpeted throughout, sets on wooded lot, strea1n in lro nt
summer kitchen in basement
yard viewed from comforta ble porch, has hookup for trailer
the groundwork for a meanlng!ul
Large metal barn. All this for
"OWNER SAYS TO SELL" this 8
extra
income.
All
of
Jhis
can
be
bought
for
$34,000.
or
traile;
activity that they would be happy to
only
$47,500.
rm., 3 bdrm, with I balh ho1ne
can be sold .
participate In,'' he said.
on I acre mil on 37535
PRICE REDUCE!: - POR·
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Hemock Grove Rd. Nice
TIAN D- Th'.. ),} 2 bedroom
Nancy Jaspers - Associate
kitr.hen and dining area, ~rge
home wn~ tv'lsement on a I
Phone: 949·2901
bdrms., with huge clooets, I car
acre lc' ":{""a real buy at
Or 992-2751 To leave A Message
garage and lhe home carries a
$25,000.
one year home warranty.
Call Warren JeHors (Cotlect)
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15
HARRISONVILLE·- Approx 6
54 Misc. Merchandise
At 797· lll0 tor more
AT 10:00 A.M. AT EAGLEPORT, OHIO
acres of fenced cleared ground
information.
lake St. Rt. 669 out of Malta, Oh. upriver to Eagleport,
and a cute 2 bedroom with an
then on Co. Rd. 2 for 17 mile (known as Eagle bend) to the
equipped knchen. Several
Monroe farm on river. or from Zanesville, Oh . cross bridge
building; for chickens, cows,
1n Gays port, stay on Co. Rd. 2, on river south tor 7 miles to
a pond and a big garden
hglobend, signs posted.
area. $26,900

races so everyone could get In on the
action.
~
"We wanted to have a short run so
local people and other novices could
get In," Sonuner said, "but we also
wanted to have a bigger distance
runsorunnersoutot thearea andall
Skill levels could partlcpate."
Noracesarescheduledlnthearea
Saturday so the turnout should be
good. Wedge said over 100 appllcationsfortheeventbavealreadybeen
received. Sommer said she hoped at
least :;ro partclpants would run In
the event whi~il-Will be held
annually.
" I'dllke to forustoslibackandsee
wbat we did right and IYI'Ong and
have It again next year," Sommer
said.
About 60 volunteers will help
make sure the races go smoothly.
FoUowlng the races, an awards
assembly will be- held at Tu·EndleWet Parkat12::llp.m. Trophies will
be presented to top finishers In age
groups, the first Mason County
!lnlshers and top performers
overall.
Anllqueshow
Anantlqueshowandsalewillalso
be held Saturday at the O.J.
Morrison Building on Main Street
fn&gt;m10a.m . to6p.m . Wedgesaldslx
to eight dealers plus local people will
be exhibiting and selling Items.
"It's gclng to he pretty crowded
we think,'' he said. · "H you get a
dozen people to bring In 10 pleces,lt
will be pretty good size."
Wedge said the Mason County
Farm Musewn will also have
different Items on display at various
locations.
He encourages city residents and

Business .Services

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

rooma and Hth. g11 furnance. cozy fireplace. good
neighborhood. Prica re-

SANDY AND BEAVER ln- duced. Coll814·992-894t.

eurance Co . h11 offered
•rvlcea for flra lnauranc. 10% lnterlt owner financcoverag--. in Oallie County ing. new 2Y.a: atory, 1760
for almost a cenlury. Farm, oq.ft . nv. 1poce, 1 Y.o botho.
home and pertonel propeny Coli 304-895·307·1.
coverages are available to 1·----ro_o_m_h_o_u_•_w_H_h3
meet lndtvtdual nHdl. Con - 3
,_
t acrea ground. nNr Porter.
K
II
B
1
toct
ur~lon, ogen ' old Rt. 180. Coli 448·4202

_P_h_on_•_4_4_8_-2.:_
.9_2_1_. --'--- or 4411 • 2e 87 _

------

992-3324.

pinned. 111 ,700. 614·9927360 alter 8 p.m.

14x70 SkyUne. t15,000. 2
bedroom luxury model, circular k;tchen, dining roo"'
with bow wlndowt bath with
garden tub, 1aperat11
1hower, carpet. Wlaher.
dryer, stove. frlge . covered '
patio, C::entr1l air, uncktr: •

pinned utillly building , Nice
lot. 1114·992-3083.
1981 3 bedroom 14x70 ·
Shullz Mol!ile Homo. 1 Y.o ,
baths with fron1 "Po;ch -

12x16. e14,000. 1114·247.'
21184.
•

�12-The

n..11v

Sentinel

32 Mobile Homes

They'll Do _
It Every Time-

for Sale
USED MOBILE HOME. IN
GOOD SHAPE. 304·676·
2711 .
19711 mobile home 14x60
unfurn. 'h acre lot. Chlin link
t.nce in Ohio. n3.5oo.
304-875· 1297.
.
197.6 14x70 troller. 3 bed·
room, 2 betha. l1rge kitc;:hen,
t10, 000. 304· 773· 6023 .
1981 Schultz, both &amp; 'A.
eat111 nice. with central air.
304·876-6376.
For sale ~Y qw~r .ih HillvieW
~~ Dlv,•GtHr ftd . v. mile
off Rt. 2 . Mobile home with
add rooma. 3 br, living room
12x24, kitchen 12x12, d .r.
12x1.1 , utility r. 12x12.
241l112 outbuilding 1 · 24x10
outbuilding.• fru it . .~.house
10x10 on three large lots.
GoOd water. elec stove.
frig ., air cond., dryer. 304773-15282.
"981 14x70, Shultz.limited
mo.blle home, microwave,
diahwesher. central air. underpenning , three bed rooms, 1 'h bathe, e:w:cellent
condition , e 1 6,600. Call
304-.675· 6049 •fter 6 p.m .

. wed..

Ohio

~~

"WHE:EbATE;s,•
J E:Ft'SE:'f' 10
ATt..ANTA ,

51 Household Goods

64 Misc . . Merchandiee

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker, ottoman, 3 tables. (extra hea vy
by Frontier). $685 . Sofe ,
c hair and loveseet, $27 6 .
S ofas and chairs priced
1 285. to 8B95 . Tablu.
and up to $ 125. Hide-a be d s . $440 . and up to
S525 ., Recliners, $175. to
8360 ., Lamps from t 28 . to
$75 .5 pc . dinettes from
199 .. to 435. 7 pc. 8189
and up . Wood table with silll
c hairs 8425 to $745 . Desk
$110 up to $ 225 . Hutches.
$550. end up. maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed ·complete
with mattresses. $260. and
up to $395. Baby beds;
$110 . Mattresses or bolll
s pring s, full or twin . 858 .,
firm , $68 . and $78. Queen
sets , $196. 4 dr. chest s,
$42 . 5 dr. c hests, $64 . Bad
fram es. $20 .and 8 26 ., 10
gun · Gun cabinita . •_.,~_uc - 1
Gas or electric ranges,
up to $376 . Baby mat·
tresses. S25 &amp; $35, bed

Gas range, washer • dryer,
refr igerat or . stereo . Call
992·3238 or 742·2362 .

l~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~eA~=·~=~ frame s

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

by Larry Wrlghl

•1,, Oclaber

October 12, 1983

1983

The Daily Sel'!li_nei-Page-13 ·':

DICK TRAC Y

79 Motora Homes ·
&amp; Campers

Television
Yiewing

Buy Factory Direct. Lightweight. fibergl111 Scamp
13' and 18' travel tr•ilerl a
now 19'15th wheel . Call now
toll lreo 1 -800-348-496&lt;t ' ·
for tree brochur• and SAVEl

Nice wood rocker, ponable

TV with am-fm rad io, ba•tery · or electric operated.
large po p cooler. • Sell or
trede for full blooded poodle
pup . 614-992-5349.

WEQ.N_ES!lAY

81

STUCCO PLASTERING · \
textured ceilings commer- , .
cial and residential, frH
ollimatoa. Coli 6.1 4-2681182.
.
.

like new electric furnace .
58.000 BTU u..d only 2
montho. $250. 614 -9927268.

CAPTAIN E A SY
PROMI!&gt;E ME . WM•H,

•
/HJ.

U

PLE'ASE- MAYOR- OFFICERS ...
DO WHAT HE 'f-AYs. f)ON'r

WflAT EVER IT TA I&lt;E7,
DON'T I.ET THEM

PAINTING . - interior and
exterior. plumbing. roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yra.
exp. Call 814-388-9662 .

35 mm Camer• includesclose up lens. can, fl .. h.
Call 614· 992-&amp;879 alter 4
p.m.
~----~----For sale-40,000 BTU Warm
Morning heater with blower..
2 t olid oak doors with

8:00 • ill (J) (D • (J) &lt;II •
(jJ NOWII
ill MOVIE: 'Five Days One
Summer' - 1
ill MOVIE' 'Pief'
(I) New ,T,..ure Hunt
CD Play ,Your Beat Tennle
This show features 'Specialty Shots.·
(]) Uttie Houae on the
Prairie
(I) (jj) Y.E.S . Inc.
•Buck Rogero
·6':30 0 ill (D NBC Newt1
(I) Rllloman
CD ESPN'o Horse Racing

· Home
lmp.r ovements

FOLLOW HIM!

FOLLOW ME.

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. 30 yeara e~Cperlence.
specializing in built up root.
Coli 614· 388-9867.

hardware. 614-992-3079.
tl!Mn, ,..,..n. . TN"'-11 us ,., 1 1., orr
~;~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~
Appliance
All makes,
Ki"g heater. new firebrick
&amp;
modelsService
refrigerators
and grating, wood burner
Sale
was hera. dryers. ranges,
Autos
for
71
only . $200. Call Tom 68
Pats for Sale
compactors, dishwashers,
42 Mobile Homes
Spencer at 614-986 -4256.
microwaves . Heating &amp;
for Rent
-lc1969 4 door udan Oevill Cooling, Sheet Metal Wortc..
RCA 6 inch BS.W TV am-fm Bird for sale (grey head) Cadillac. good condition . Gallia Refrigeration Co. Call
·radio combination, banery Senegal parrot, 304-676- Call 814·446-2701. 1099 614-448-4066.
or ac-dc curr..-t. 814-992- 2&amp;36 .
Taodora AVe.. Oelllpolis,
1978 14x70 TRAILER . 3 · 1979 2 bdr .. fully carpeted
2060.
Oh.
RON 'S Television Service.
FOR SALE or Trade AKC
Specializing In Zenith and
bedroom, 2 beths, large with waaher a. dryer, on 2
kitc hen, $10.000 . 304 - acre lot Porter area . $200
For Sale: lumber 1" and '2" Regllttrad Doberman pup1. 19
Electra 22&amp; IOII.d ed, Motorola , Ou.azar , and
773-6023;
mo-. Call614-388 -8801 .
APARTMENTS . mobil e TV&amp;Appliances, 627Third dimension, poplar. oak or e7&amp; .00 or 10mething of 11 ,76
o.cau
houncalla. Call&amp;76-2398
90
448 .8234 .
homes, houses. Pt . Ple•sant Ave., Gallipolis, 446-1699. pine. For prices and availa- equal value, 304 -882·
or 446-2454.
Furnished 2 bdr., clean. city end Gall ipolis . 614 -446 - Spin weshers, gia&amp;electrlc bility . Contact Millwood 2230 .
utilities. 2 mi. out private lot. 8221 .
VW Beetle 1972 runo good,
33
Farms for Sale
dryers. auto wuhers, gas &amp;. Inc ., 304- 273 ~ 2622. At. 2
F &amp; K Tree Trimming. stump
Trash &amp;. water paid , one
electric ranges. refrigera- at Evergreen Hills Road, AKC raglttered Dachohund t600. Call 446-9838.
removol.
Coli 875-1331 .
small c hild, no pets. 8 185 TWIN RIVERS TOWER . tors, TV sets.
Monday - Friday. 8 -4 : 30 : pupo, 304-896-3968 .
Anumable 8 1h percent loan mo. Call 446-0939 .
1969 Chevy 360 eng., 300
Apartments
now
available
to
1
---Saturday,
8
-3:00.
on this 20 acres. nice barn. l- - - - - - -- - - elderly &amp; disabled with an
HP, AT. PS, PB, good tlreo. RINGLE' S SERVICE expe(24x32), outbuilding and 2 bedroom mobile home, income of less than
Call
446 - 0677 oftar rienced roofing. including
Musical
workthop, cellar house and unfurnished. Call 614-~ 88- $12,300. Renting for 30 1-::-:-=:----::-:-- : -- :-:-- Dry firewood , deliverd , 57
hot tar application, carpen6:00PM .
• 3 bedroofll, 2 bttha.
Instruments
ter, electrician, ma1on. Call
percent of ·edjusted income· 54
Merchandise phone 304-876:.?:!71 .
woodburner in living room . _9_7 _60_ ·_ _ _ _ _ _ __
1973 VW Super .Battle. 304 -676 - 2088 or 676.Phone 304-675 -8679 .
1 - - - - - - -- - - Seasoned oak firewood ,
Drilled wall. Coli 304-676- 1
Am-Fm stereo, new steel 4680.
30JO or 876-3431 . Ma.y 1 bedroom 12~C60 fur ·
304-676·
2767
after
4
p.m.
nished. Washer &amp; Dryer, TWO bedroom apartment in Knauff Firewood Pickup or
AKC Registered Poodle pup- belt radials. low mileage.
contider trade .
11.80. plus utilities &amp; dep- Mason, adults only, no pets. Delivered. 1 2' '·22'' stocked
piaa. Ready to _g o. Call ohorp 118911. 1972 Super Water Wells. Commercial
new
onmy
CAMOUFfi.GED
osit. No "pet1 . 614-992· 304-875-1452.
Beetle. Good cond~ f1496 . and Domestic. Teat hole~.
in yard . HEAP vender, clothing, lurplua rental clo- 448·0857.
7479.
814-448·'7389 or olter 5 Pumps Salea and Service.
prompt delivery, 814-266- thing, denim pants, 14 oz.
304·895·3802..
Unfurnished, 1 bedroom, &amp;II 6245 .
&amp; Cia"'- console piano, 814-992-3517.
e10 .. jacketl, Sail' Some· Story cond
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 bedroom home in Lang•· utilities p&amp;id except electric. 1-------~-­
. Call 446·8271
rville's,
7
miles
east
Ravensville area. Deposit and refer- Goll. Ferry. 304-675-1371 limestone, Sand, Gravel. wood, open Friday, SacurForeman'• For Leas Expen- E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
8PM.
ence required . 614-742 · or 675 ·3B12 .
cars Ia trucka. Langs- inaured . free estimates .
alve
Oelivered in Maton, Meigs, day, Sunday. 1:00 · •7:00
Phone 614-367-0838, call
3&amp; acre• at Rodney on W .T. 2541.
Gallia or pick up at Richards p.m. (Thia weak eiCtra extra Piano for aale, good cond. ville. 814-742-2734.
efter 6 .
Wataon Rd. Owner financ FURNISHEO efficiency 6 Son. Coll446-7786.
6 :00 - 8 :00p .m. Monday to Coli 446-7636.
ing ovtiloble . Coll446-8221 5 room mobile home. 614- apartment. utilitiet paid. 1
1976 Ford Gran Torino,
- - - - - - -- -Thursday,
SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One
949-2424.
after 6 weekdays.
deposit required. 304-896 - Firewood - c ut up. . slabs. l .'j;,;jtl;'~vn~~;;;:G~ Wanted old Pianos. Paying P.S ., p .b., body exc. cond. piece
custom fit your home.
3460 . ·
S15 pickup load . Call 614- t
TV 23 " color. GE $20.00 and f40 .00 oach . $760. Will consider trade.
Guaranteed . Advanced GutOne acre lot with platform 3 bedroom furnished or
First
floor
only.
Write
giving
304-773-&amp;013
altor
5
p.m.
245-5804.
. both 8100. Collolter
ter, !Day 814-692-4088,}
for house and in-ground unfurnished. Camp Conley. 2 bedroom apt . at Gall.
direction•. Witten Palnos.
6 p.m. 304-876-2658.
304
-676
1371
or
676
pool. for i_
n formation. 813Box 188 Sordio Ohio . 1980 new amall al1e LTD !night 814-898-8205.}
Ferry. 304-675·2648.
1----665·1 232 .
3812.
. Phone 614-4B3- 302. pe, pb. am, fm, 4 door,
Fireplace insert-still in fac- Refrigerator $36 . 30:4-882- 43946
1805.
.
Small furnished apartrment t ory carton - automatic 2428.
2 tone gokt. A-1 ahape Rooting and Carpentry
Lot for ule 4 mi . from town 44
in
Point
Pleasant,
304
-67540
, 000 milat . 84 ,000. work, gener•l repairs, celt
controls-2
blowers-glass
Apartment
on St. Rt. 141. Call alter
1366 .
:
Antique
upright
Plano
.
Books
over *6,200. 614- Anthony Williamson, 614door-ash pan-fits 30 in . to Rollaway bed with mettre11.
for Rent
6PM, 446-8197.
367-0194.
130.00. 814·742·2987 or _7_4_2_-3_o_,_o_.__• _ _ __
48 in . fireplace-burna wood Caii304-882-31B6.
614-742-31
&amp;0
tllloon•eo1ne
.l
coal. 1690. Call 6142 lots for 1ale in New Haven.
46 Furnished Rooms or
1978 Ford Pineo, 2 door. GET your carpet SHIP
266 -1216.
14K White gold wedding answers.
(Twin Cedar Addition} Chy 2 bdr . Regency Inc . Apart·
ltandard trana., red end SHAPE WITH: CAPTIAN
set.
$260
.00.
Homolleod
tawer and water. Phone menta HU 0 Available Util- For rent Sleeping Rooms Used Ditch witch trencher
white. Good condhlon. 614· STEAMER. Water removal.
(304} 882·3196.
ties partly fum ., apartments and light house keeping model 2300 . 1-814-694- coal and wood burner. 58
furniture clean,ng, free eati·
Fruit
992·7403.
$200.00. Alto Sox and
mateo. 814· 448 -2107.
available now. 8200 permo . rooms . Park Central Hotel. 7B42 .
.
&amp; Vegetables
musio
stand,
1250.00.
Call
4 room apt: utilities partially Call 446-0766 .
1973 Camero. good cond.l ;::;:=~;::::::;:;::::===
304-876-7890. •
paid t160 . A-One Real
vary cleon, t2,000. 304·
T.roybilt Tillers Sales &amp;·Ser.,
82 _ Plurobl'ng
Estates, Carol Y&amp;ager, Real- Sleeping room 81 1 6 , utili· vice. Swishers Implement,
876·1839
alter 6 p.m ..
tor . Call 304-676 -6104 or t ies paid, range &amp; refrig. St. Rt. 7, North, Gallipolis. SEASONED oak flr 0wood. German Ridge Apples tree&amp; Heating
304-676 -2767 aher 4 :00 ripened, elder. Call 446·
41 Houses for Rant 304-675 -7388 .
Share bath . Man only . 446- 614-446-0476 .
1889 Volkowogen Bug, 1- - -- - - - - - p.m .
8698 or 814·379-2303 .
4416 after 7 p.m.
priced 8660. 304-1178 ·
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Furnished apt. $186 . Water
AND HEATING
Firewood $36 pickup load 1978 CHARGER for pone. Registered Appeloo• nal- 21178 .
41. bdr. house 6 acres of land paid, 2 bdr .. 131 'h 4th,
•25
if
picked
up
at
Cor,
Fourth and Pine
delivered
.
good
engine.
transmission.
llon.
"Go-Man-Go"
bloodon Rt. 160 in Vinton . Central Gallipolis . 446-4416 after 7 46 Space for Rent
the farm . Call 614-266- Marballa vanity sink. fiber- line. excellent contorma- 1974 Volkewag.n Super Phone 446-3888 or 448air, $360 mo ., aec . dep. It p.m.
1427.
glass tub · surround. Phone .tion . Cell after 6:00. Bootie. Call alter &amp;. 304- 4477
ref. Call 446-3176.
876 -1390.
304-676-1459.
304-875·6028.
2bdr .. 2 bath. 11 Court St.
21 . cu .ft . Hotpoint upright
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATPrivate
trailer
lpt
located
1
Yz
1 or 2 adults. 16 minutes Ref. &amp; dep. 8326 mo . Call
73 Plymouth. $300. 304- ING . Fomerly Dewitt ' s
freezer,
used
only
6
mos.
miles
from
Ciry
Limits
on
At.
Chest
of
drawera.
walnut,
from Gallipolis. Call 614- 446-4926 .
876-6108.
Plumbing . Call 614 -3671475. Coi1614-266-1658. large five drawers, very nice
588 . Call 446-3870.
. 266 · 1198.
0678 .
condition
.
109
Pleasant
Small furo . house 1 or 2 Trailer space for rent. Call My collection of flouse Stroot, 304-676-3938.
80 Plymou'th Horizon ,
Nice 3 bdr . home 8226 mo., adults only, no pets. Cell
e4,000.00 . Phone 304·
plants for sale . 438 Hedge448-4266
or
446-4736
.
preferably adults. Located 4 446-0338 .
876· 54B9.
wood Dr., Gallipolis. Call OAK firewood. $30.00 a
83 Excavating
mi. Nonh of Holzer on Rt.
446-2494.
Furnished
office
for
rent.
pick
-up
load
.
304·676For lease modern, unfurn ., 2 Clout to city building and
19&amp;6 or 56 Ma11ey Fergu180. Call 446-7322 .
4218 .
DOZER WORK By Tad
bdr. apt. Overlooking city court house. Call 448-0865 4 lg . picture windows, with
son T? 36 tractor, 1 set of 72
Trucks for Sale
Hanna, ponds, ditches,
3 bedroom. Syrecuse. Ref. park . Includes range &amp; re- days, $125. mo .
2·14" bottom plows. 1-one
storms. other misc . items .
basements, etc. Call 448ere.ices required. 614-992· frig .· e 175 mo. Call 446row
cuhlvator.
1-5'
disc.
See at 729 Second AVe .. 56 Building Supplies
Dodge 1 ton 1960 truck, 4907. Carter • Evans
1819 or evenings 446$3,000
.
Call446-4120.
2128 ..
Trailer space 165 per . Galllpolio .
new bed a tires, 1600. Call Transportation.
2325 .
448-9838.
I .:_.:__:.::..:_.:..:...__ _ _ __
month . Call614-388 -9760 .
Building materiels
3 bedroom In the country.
One row corn picker, NeW(''- - - - - - - - - - 1"
large natural gas heater, as
lljge yard. partlelly fenced . Furnished 3 rooms, with Office space for rent . Call is, without automatic con · block, brick. sewer pipes. Idea. good cond .. Call 114: 1977 Chev pickup, 47,000 lonnie Bogge E~Ccaveting.
38B-8701,
Dozer, backhoe, dumptruck.
Ofii!DSit and references re- private bath. Reference pre- 446 -0696. reasonable.
trois, $60. Call in evening, windo.ws, lintels , etc .
Work by hour or job. Call
mileo. 304-876·1280.
ferred . Coll448-2216 .
Claude
Winters.
Rio
Grande,
qu!!Od· 614-992 -7201 .
446·2917 .
448-7903.
0.
Call
814-246.
5121
.
John
Deere
4
row
corn
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
•235. month . 3 bedroom . Jackson Eltate Apanments Park. Route 33, Nonh of Child's car seat, youth bed,
plonter . Coli 448-0198.
73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O. C•t 216 hoe, dozers, cr•na,
Fully carpeted. gerdener fur· 636 Jackton Pike (Equal Pomeroy. Large lots. Call typewriter. Call 446-4944 .
loaders. dump truck. Call
56.
Pats for Sale
ni.had. Stove and refrig, Housing Opportunity) has ~92 - 7479 .
ENCO self unloading corn
614-992-2816 from 9 to 6 one bedroom apartments
wagon, naw, only $660. 1980 GMC 4 wheel drive, 614-446-1142 between
1976 Ford Torino and spinet
PS. PB, lock out hubo. 'A 7:00AM 6 5 :00PM .
or 614·992 -2362 from 6 to rent ataning at $157. and Mobile home lots for rent, piano. Call after 4 :-go, 614614-742· 3010.
ton. long bod, 30,000 mil01,
two bedroom rant starting at water and aewer furnished. 266·1100.
7 p.m.
HILLCREST KENNELS
axe. cond ., •15.800. Call Good -1 Excavating. baae1193. 1200 deposit. Cal
Barding all breeds. Selling WD Allio-Chalmeu. A-1 448 ·2403.
small
child
accepted.
1
m•nts, footers, driveways,
2 bedroom conage, new 446-2746 or leave mesnge 304-875-1076 .
shape
with
plowa
and
corn
Happy
Jock
Dog
Food.
1967 GMC 1 'h ton ltake
septic
tanka, .. ndacaping.
carpet, good location, in on answ8ring 11rvice.
plowo.
11,1500.
614·742·
bed truck, 8 ely .• 2 spd . 1 Doberman pupplea: Stud
1885 Superior 30 puoongor Coli onytlme . 448-4637,
3010.
town, 304-676-7634 after
Homelite Xl12 chain saw. Service. Call 448-7796.
bua, good cond., low ml· Jamea L. Davison. Jr .
2 bedroom apt., furnished.
5'. ·
Coil 814-388-9367.
leage,. new brakes. Call owner.
utllities paid , $276 , $100 49
ALLIS
Chalmera
tractor,
8
For Leese
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
Nice 3 bedroom home. 2 dep., adults only, no pets.
HP lawn tractor. '360.00. 448·2B38. or &amp;7&amp;·2432.
Huffy riding mower one 814-387-7220.
J.A.R. Construction Co .
baths, 2 fireplaces , heat Call 446-0962.
304-875
-3424.
warm moring coal stove, 1
Water Linea , Footen .
pump, large kitchen, gtrlge
For lease with option to buv. Amono ref. Coil 814-246- Brierpatch Kennell Prof••· I;;::=;:;:=====::.
Drolno. All kin do of Ditching.
p•lllq '. • .325 . par Furnished upst.airs apt., 3 Nice 3 bdr. brick home, 1 Va 5620.
atonal
All-bread
grooming.
&amp;3
•
74 Motorcycle•
Rutlond. Oh . 814· 742 ·
•Moritii'.882 - 240'II : ·Bat• rooms &amp; beth, clean , aduha bath. large family room,
Indoor-outdoor boarding toLivestock
2903.
only, no pets, ref. req. w-fireplace, central air, ell Fuel oil tank, uaed carpet, cilltlea. Engliah Cocker Spa·
2A47 or 875-6640.
Utilities paid . Call 446- carpeted, swimming POQ,I. 1 CB radio. Cell 814-245- nial pupplao. Call 614·388·
1974 Hondo Chopper 30 in. Molgo Excovatlng. Bulldozer
Au ult by owner in Hillview 1619 .
9790.
acre lot, overlooking Ohio 5281.
3 Sh01tl. 2: IOWI. 1 boar, 1
sUb dlv . Greer Rd. ,;.. mi .. off
River . Call 446-2673 or
rubber tired farm wagon. over front end. CB 7150 F. • backhoe Hrvice. 811e·
At... 2. Mobile home with add Completely furnished up- 446-1171 .
Colll14·949·2737.
monto, footero.londocoplng ,
60 lb. compound bow with Dngonwynd Cattery - &amp;14-949-2237.
drlvewaya. farm ponda.
rOoms. 3 b.r .. liying room lfttolri one bedr. apartment.
arrows I 100. 22 rifle with Kennels. AKC ..Chow pup1~d4, kitchen 12x12, d .r. newly
decorated, adults,
ocope f150 . Coil 446 - pies. CFA Himalayan. Per- Regllloted polled Hore1ord 187&amp; Kowuoki 2&amp;0. ow 814·742-2407 or614-742·
1.21l111, utility r. 12x12. references . Centrally lo ·
..
sian and Siameae kltten1. cattle, calvea (heifera It
9U8 .
bottlry, n - polnta • plugo.
:::;;:=:;::::::;::===
24x1 2 outbuilding. 1 - cataq, $200 mo. plua dop.
Call 446-3844 oltor 4 .
bullo} • herd bull oppro•. ExCIIIont condition . U&amp;O.
2)1110 outbuilding, fruit Call 448-2238 ·or 446·
51 Household Goods New Oak Furniture, tables,
1700 lbo. 304· 117&amp;-231 0 114 ' 141-3013 ·
84
Electrical
house 10x10 on three large _2_15_8_1 _. - - -- - - chairs, cupboards, pie safe, AKC Reglatered Brhtany day; 773-5406 evenings.
lots. Good water. Elec stove,
83
Hondo
XRBO.
t800.00.
•
Refrigeration
dry ainka. Paul Conkela Spaniel, fe,nale, orange a
f~g . olr cond . dryer. 304· Apt. 1 bedroom trailers 2
white, 14 moa. old. hlttoed, Ragiotered Horeford bull 6 Call 304-878·3031 .
Large wood burning edd-on Antiques, Tuppers Plains.
bedroom,
overlooking
Ohio
T.',l-5282 .
shots and wormed. I 1 &amp;0. hoy for aale . 304·87&amp;·
furnace
-brand
new·
heatl
Pasquale Electric Co. •II
River. Kanauga . .Fosters
Will-Burt atoker furnence Call 448-4472.
\991.
hot
water
automatic
phesea of electric Work, all
3'·oi' 4 br. new ctrpet and Trailer Park, 448-1602.
76
Boata and
controls -firebrick lined. 24', good cond. Call 446- 1- -- --,-- - - - work guaranteed . Aeriel
pifilt, garden space, 2618
1572.
3 yr. old Englioh ShHp Dog
$690.
Call61.4·2118·
1216.
Motors
for Sale
truck rontol. Coli 814-448Unfurnished
2
bdr.
in
Crown
Madison Ave. Pt . Pl. Lease,
puppiel . Wormed
ahots,
2716 .
=~
.·~·;,
...1:1rlty deposit and ref. City, Ohio. Coil 614-268- Washer &amp; dryer, exc. cond. King Size bedroom suite. $200. Call 446-790&amp; .
8620
.
304·883-6467.
Exc. cond .' 614· 992· 3955.
Coll614-387-7141 .
Chris Craft 19&amp;7 conatella- SEWING Machine repairs,
Registered Pointer pupa, 8 71
Autoa for Sale
don cabin crul•r, 38 ft,, Hrvice. Authoriaed Singer
TOTAL electric home, call Furnished apt . 2 bdr .• 1138 I -W
-H
_I_T_E_· b_ u_n_k- bo_d_ be_d.,ro_o_m 14ft, CB Antenna. Approx. wko. old . Call 614-2411&gt;
whh trellor,' t1 2.800. Coli Solao 6 Service Sherpen
olter6p.m . 304-875-5711 . Znd .. Avo .. Gallipolis. 1196 ouito, 8150 . Playpen, f10 . 100 ft. heavy dilly CO•OX . 9439 .
woter paid. Call 446-4418 Twinbod, l46. 304-87&amp; • •3o. Call 814-992-33261----- - - - - - TOP CASH pold for loto 8 .1 4·387·0378 betwoen lciuoro. Fobric Shop.
TWO bedroom. large kit· efter 1 p .m.
2171 aher 12:00 noon .
betore 4 p .m .
Registered male blue tick. modol uood c1r1. Bmhh I1 0·3.
814·441·1343 ohor
.
c.en, full · basement and 1---.:._______
614·985· 3540.
Bulck·Pontloc,
1911
!ottyard, t1715. a month, dep- (Mercerville) new 1 bdr.
ern Ava., Oollipollo, 446SWAIN
o'lil . 304 - 876 - 2264 •175 per mo. Call 4482282.
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE
~nlnga .
1241. Mon .- Fri. , 8 -6 .
82 Olive St., Gallipolla. G
19&amp;8 buick 2 dr. Sodon
JONES BOYS WATER SER·1UPARKdrive,9roomo,2 1 bedroom Apt. f196 . mo. piece wood living room suite
mechanfcelly good, needa Booo boot. 1138 Forcl. 304· VICE . Coil 114·367-7471
baths, patio, 18.11.20 build· Including utilities . Equal with 6 inch flat erma e399,
oomo body-· 1600. Coli 8711· 7240.
or 1114·387·0&amp;91 .
lng, axcellent condition. housing opportunity. Con- bunk bed1 complete with
448·1113 doyo ukfor
•325 . month . Phone 304· tact Village Manor Apts. bunkies e199. 2 piece an·
Donny, 448-00&amp;7 ow.
tron livingroom suitea $199,
12 FT elumlnum uml V Need 1omething h1uled
87~·20&amp;3 .
e14-992-7787.
antron recliners •ea....other
boat. ~ HP motor, new away or aomethtng moved7
1980
Aopon IUIO, trolllr, olootrlc tooling mo- We'll do h . Coil 448-31&amp;8
TWO yeor old. 3 bedroom 3 &amp; 4 room furniehed apts. recliners 180, maple dinette
PS. PB.
cyl.. Mlnrool. tor. t760.00. 304-773- botweon 9 ond 11. ··
horiia, 2 bethe. 2 car garage, 814-992-6434, 814· 992· Mts *179, love aeats 170.
Johnt Auto ...... 446· 11324.
hide-a-bed I 2150. box
1-~------hoot pump, 304·1715·1111411. &amp;914 or 304-882-21188 .
4782. lulavlh Rd. RNII
epring1 a manreea twin or
wetar hauling, felt Service.
niGI. 12.1111.
low rotoo. Coli 814-2&amp;&amp;TWO or thr" bedroom Furnished efficiency and , 2 full t1 00 set regular-firm
78 Auto P8rta
1743.
houM, 2 bedroom apart- bedroom Apt. in Middleport, f120. moplo dlnene cholro
1980 Ronoult LoCor -4 opd.
ment. Both ucell.,t condi· Oh. No pets. Monthfll rent 136. wesh stands 134.
•
Acce11orleo
AM·FM tope, full ounroof,
Now Hauling Good lump or
don, good nolghborhood. pluo t100. oocurhy. 814- -meple rockers tl59, 7 piece
rool ohlrp. U.2811. Johno
chrome
dinette
oet
f149,
II
Stoker Coal. Minimum 4
_99_2_·_3&amp;_7_4_._ _ _ __
304-8711· 1882.
Auto &amp;oleo. 448-4782. Bupiece dlnono " ' •ea. u11d
1
Topper for I' tnrck bod. Lto-:=n::
. 8:--1-4::':·3-::-8:-7:·:7-1~0~1.:_,- llvillo Rd.
Apto. lor rant. 114·992· bedroom auhea, refirgereUclnglrontwln-.TI-1
tors.
rangtll,
cheat.
dreuera.
&amp;908.
lido giato. Uaec1 3 montho. JIMS WATER SERVICE .
C2 Mobile Homei
1978 Plymoutlt Anow outo C•l
Wringer wuhan, TV'a.
448-34811.
Coli Jim Lonlor. 304-17&amp;·
fOr Rent
Pl.
PB.
AM-FM
topo,
oun1 bedroom Apt. In Point dryereo, 6 ohoeo. Coli 446- ·
7397.
root. t2,118&amp;. Johno Auto
Pleo11nt. W.VA . 614· 992- (-3-15_9_._ _ _ _ __ _
, ..... 441-4712. lulovHio
&amp;858.
77 Auto Repelr
Rd.
87 Uphollltery
211dr. iraN.,, turnllhod. Coli (- -- - -- - - - GOOD USED APPLIANCES
.....mf.
Unlurnlohod Apt' o, ~ whh • woohoro, dryoro, relrlgoro1171 Oldiomoblle ltorftre
tloveond refrlg. Mlddlepon, toro. rangoo. Skaggo Ap·
V-8. outo, PS, 'PB, AM·PM Attention Auto · l'ointlng
2 ..._... 111CJ1111e home w - a Pom•oy a N- Haven. plloncoo, Upper .River Rd ..
1'RIITATI
...... rill oporty,
111. 1110 ond up. leidy worlc,
tumlellecl Qal 4441· Dopolllt ond ,.,...n_ ,.. boolde Stono Creet Motol.
UPHOL8TIIIY IHOP
• %
Johno A,., IIIH. 448· oatre pen ttrlplne, - - 1183 ..... ....... Clallipollo.
·-~
'
448-7398.
0101.
~uirecl. 814-992-7&amp;11 .
ttrlpoe. Coli 441.0.8.
4712. 1u1av1He Rd.
448-71Uor448-1133.

$20 , $25, &amp; $30.
king
frame
$60. Good. suites.
aelection of bedroom
cedar chests. rOckers," metal
cabinets, swivel rockers.
44 . Apartment
Used Furniture -- bookcase.
for Rent
ranges , chairs. dryers, re·
frigerators and TV' s. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri., 9am
Apartm e nts . 304 -876 - to 5pm, Sot.
5648 ,
446-0322

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IN "fl..AT CASE ... I
THINK I'LL 00
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TOMORROW ...

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WINNIE

1 FEEL FOOliSH
AL.ONE wiTH THAT
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................
.. ... ... ... ..

.. but these mania~s
who ink the4 owntne
street that cause all
the accidents! ....,.....--"~1

To hear Skeezix tell it
l'm a menace
behind

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PEANU'I'S

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Yesterday's 1 Answer: What she told her co wboy friend not to
do- HORSE AROUND

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BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A problem hand
i
NORm
+K71
.A2
IKJ872
+Q83

WEST
• Qs
.KJH53
+A 3
+1065

10. 12~

EAST
+to 9 53
.Q76
t Q tO 54
+97

SOUTH
+t.J62

••o•
+96

+AKJ42
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South ·

West

North East

1•

2+

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

3+
Pass

Sou

••
2•

1+

Opening lead: +A

By O.wald Jacoby
aud James Jacoby
The bidding in the special
Cavendish rubber bridge
game is sort of catch as
catch can. One thing about it
is that when a pair gets to
one trick below the game,

the game is going to be bid. ·
West's heart overcall gave
North a tough problem at his

-,

second l urn to bid. He didn't

:'"!

frob-

·

like the Idea of ~- - trump , ~g,iost ~
'
and 'flqally raised ,. 10
·
partner'• f9Qr-card spade
suit. N"'l'UIIliS to say, South
conUnued to game .
West made the ~elpful
lead of th.e diamon~ ~ce and . ..-,:
continued with the trey.
,'
South studied dummy for
some time . His whole
lem was the play o the · '
trump suit. If trumps were ·: _ ",
going to behave nicely and •
break 3-3, everything would , ~ be hunky-dory, but they
:,
break 3-3 o0ly 36 ~t of" - ,;
the time.
How abolll i 4-2 ..break' ·,
Give W~t four to the queen
and tbe contract was nol · . ·
going to come home. Give ·· 'East that same holding and
a finesse would make thing!!
easy, but finally South saw
that he could handle that
holding anyway .
Now he led a spade to his
ace and a second one back to
dummy's king with every , ' •
intention of leading a third ' .. ~
spade from dummy if the :
queen failed to drop . It did
drop and now South had his
10 tricks. game and rubber . . ,
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) .. ;.. ~

t~~'f!Hd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Yearn
Sljighest
poinls ;
tops
11 Old-time
· dance
· 12 Business
deal
13 Biblical
name
14 Peanut
IS Zoroastrian
demon
18 Tutor
17 ...: bee n had!
18 Ame rican
saint
20 Judah's son
21 Anais 22 Hackneyed
23 Scrutinize
24 Diminish
25 Horrify
26 Formic acid
producer
.Indian
buffalo
28 Lissome
30 JFK's
- Frontier
31 "- and Bill"
32 Building
section
34 Churc h
official
at Afr . fo&gt;&lt;
37 Fly
38 Flail
3t To the (perfectly l
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11 :15 CD Auto Racing '83: ASA
Stock Cart fnJm Brooklyn,
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11 :30 IJ ill Cil Tonight Show
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D (J) &lt;II CBS Newt1
(I) Buolneoo Report
Gil Over Easy
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(I) Carol Burnett
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(I) Chlr1ie'o Angela
D (I) Wheel of Fortune
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Pocket Billiards Start Tonight's show features Minnesota Fats vs. luther
Lassiter. (60 min.)
(I) Good Nowo
Cll D (]) family Feud
® Wheel ol Fortune
Ill I1J Entertainment
Tonight
Ill Ona Day at a Time
B:OO IJ ill (D Reo I People Tonight' s program fea~ures cohost Skip Stephenson being
'mailed' to Mill Valley, CA.,
a student who brings Mozart's musio. to New Guinea
and a visit to a ranch and rodeo. (60 min.}
ill MOVIE: 'Jinxed'
ill MOVIE: 'The Toy'
(I) I Spy
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MOVIE: ' Goodbye
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Cll Gl I1J World Series
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f11 MOVIE: 'Voldez Ia
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Mike Ramsey, Jim Craig and
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9:00 1J (]) (D Facta of Ufe Jo
discovers that the boy she
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9,30 IJ ill (D Family Tleo Mallory's
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Karate
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and Angie Dickinson host
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ill MOVIE' 'The God-or'
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10:30 ()) Ozzia and Harriet
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EVENING

Large 46 gallon fish aquarium, black wrought Iron
stand and trim. All acceiiO·
riea. First •so. takes all.
614-992-3789.

a
1-::--- --.....:.____

SASIB

~0/1'2/83

DOWN
I Romanian
city
2Goddess of
agriculture
3 Lubilsch
film (1943)
4 - C ity
(New Have n)
5 Display sig n
• element
6 Laborer
7 Equal
(prefix )
8 Ethel
Waters film
9 Ennoble
10 Tranquil
16 Eng Us h poet

Yesterday's Answer

19 Headwear

28 Ship

20 Praying

29 Famous cow.
31 Speck
33 Afford
35 Hipster ' '
36 Gynt's

figure
in art
22 Mark 33 Doodle
25 Footwear

mothe r

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Page- 14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomen~y-Middleport,

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

Wealher forcast

Area deaths
Edgar C. Wolfe
Edgar C.· Wolfe, 93, Grant St. ,
Middleport, died Tuesday at Veterans Memorial Hospital following a
lingering Illness.
Mr. Wolfe was born In Cabell
County, W.Va., on AIJI:. 10,1890, a
son of the late John a nd VIola Wise
Wolfe. Besides hts parents, he was
preceded In -death by a daughter,
J uanita P ierce; a granddaughter,
Anita Lynn Martin; four brothers,
Wllllam, Pear ley, Gordon and Dave
Wolfe , and a sister, Annie Wildman.
A member of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, Mr. Wolfe was a
retired car Inspector for the New
York Central Railroad. He retired
In 1955 folloWing 44 years service.
He m arried Blanche E . McElhinney Wolfe, who survives, 72 years
ago on Oct. 2, 1911.
Other survivors are two sons and
daughters-in-law, Joe a nd Mildred
Wolfe, Middleport, and Frank and
Edna Wolfe, Orlando, Fla.; two
daughters and sons-in-law, Lena
and Carl Martin, Middleport, and
Audrey and James Haley, Rutland;
a brother, Shirley Wolfe, Pomeroy,
11 grandchUdren , 18 greatgrandchildren; 24 great-greatgrandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Services will be held a t 2 p.m .
Friday at the Rawlings- Coats-

BlowerFuneralHomewlththeRev.
Mark McClung offlclatbtg. Bw1al
wtll be bt the Gravel Hill Cemetery
at Cheshire. FriE!!ldsmaycall at the
fu neral home from 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday.

Walter M. Crickman

Eighty percent chance of rain
tonight. Low 52·57. Winds light a nd
southerly. Sixty percent chanee of
rain Thursday. High 62-67.
Extellded Ohio Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
ChanceolralnFrlday, bl&amp;lalrlor
the weekend. Hips In the 80s. Lows

Speed ordinance
·will be enforced
Pom eroy Mayor Clarence An·
drews announced today that a 20
mile per hour speed llrnltexists at all
times whe n traveling through the
school zone In the vWage of
P.omeroy.
Mayor Andrews reported that the
village has an ordinance to this
effect and it wW be enforced.
The ordinance also states that a 35
mile per hour speed limit exists on
all state routes East of Sycamore
Street and West of Butternut
Avenue, except through school
districts and a 25 mile per hour zone
exists on all other streets In the
village of Pomeroy, except ttu:ough
school districts.

p.m ., the Rutland Squad went to
Happy Hollow Road lor Walter
Crickman who was dead on the
unit 's arrival.

Veterans Memorial
Admltted..KUty Lowe, Middleport; Ofle Henderson, GuysvWe.
Dlscharged .. John McDaniel ,
Dara Warth, Hollie Green.

The Norwalk Factory Representative Will Be In Our
Store Friday, O:ct. 14 from 9:30-4:00

30 Day
Delivery

at y

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 13, 1983

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Contending that legal
advertising for Issues 1, 2 and 3 laDed to meet a
constitutional requirement, a Columbus lawyer has
asked Ohio's Supreme Court to delay the Nov. 8
election.
The request Wednesday came from Philip Cramer.
It Is an addition to an earUer complaint In which he
asked the court to order Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown to separa te the "multitude of Issues
contained" in Issue 3 - the tax repeal measure - or
strike It from the ballot.
.
In his latest flltng, ~ramer said newspaper ads
placed by Brown for all the Issues faUed to meet a
constitutional r equirement · ror Including
explanations.
David Shutt, Brown's spokesman , said he

-.-

*ALL FABRICS
CARRY A 2 YEAR
WARRANTY.
*ALL FRAMES
CARRY A
LIFETIME
WARRANTY

understood the explanations were requlrecj only for
amendments submitted by the General Assembly.
Issues· i, 2 and 3 were placed on the ballot through
petitions.
·
Shutt said Brown's office used the m aterial wllich
supl&gt;orters and opponents of the Issues provided.
"We prtnted exactly what they gave us in exactly
. the manner they gave It to us and It amounted to
arguments tor and against the Issues. We' re In
compliance with the constitution and the law, " Shutt
said.
The legaj advertising contains ballot language,
arguments for and against each measure and the full
text of the amendments.
"Without the explanations, how are t he penple to
know what the proposed amendment does . The

20 Cen h

A Mul ti media Inc. Newspaper

Although positive Identification of a man's body found ln a trailer borne on
the Forest Run Road has not been completely verUied, a family ln
BatesvWe, Arkansas has accepted the body and funeral services were held
this week, Gary Wolfe, special btvestlgator lor the departmE!!lt of .Sherlff
James J. Proffitt reported thts morning.
Wolfe said that the subject who was found seated on a couch and covered
with a blanket on a couch In the trailer home Monday was taken to the
Franklin Coonty Coroner In Columbus. The bod)i was sent from Columbus to
BatesvWe, Ark., to the family of the man believed to be the victim of a
shooting.
A bWfold and drtver's license were found near the body, thus relatives
apparently clatmed the bOdy as a result of these Items. Wolfe stressed that
although there Is a strong possibility that the victim Is the same as the name
listed on the driver's license and In the blllfold, the sheriff's department is
stW waiting for fingerprint Information on the victim.
Herman Henry of the Bureau of Criminal Investigation was In Pomeroy
Thursday morning to confer .with Wolfe on securbtg the fbtgerprlnt
btformation bt order to be lOOpercent correct on the Identification. Arkansas
pollee have not forwarded the Information requested so Henry Is currently
taking the request through the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Wolfe
reported that the Investigation has disclosed that the victim was shot in the
left eye area by a 410 guage shotgun.
ACcording to latest Information, the man, believed to be the vtcttm, has a
wife In Canton who has been lli touch with Wolfe. She reported that her
husband left Canton !~weekend of Oct. 8 to help friends move Into Meigs
County. She had not beard from him since. The victim found In the Forest
Run Road trailer had been deadforseveral days andthe body was beginning
to decompose.
Wolfe reported that even though positive Identification, beyond a doubt,
has not been established, an obituary appeared In an Arkansas newspaper
for the person whose bWfold and drtver's license were found near the bOdy.
Several persons have been questioned on the llndbtg of the bOdy In the
trailer home, but no one has been arrested.

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RATHER THAN THE USUAL
8 TO 10 WEEKS.

FREE PARKING
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'

Nature's Own breads are soft and light-textured, yet full of the wholesome natural goodness ·
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&gt;

ATHENS, Ohio (AP ) - Olllo
University wW use a $150,000,
one-year federal grantto promote
econoinlc development In 20 sou·
theaSt Ol!lo counties.
Two ecdnomlc development professionals wui be htred and a data
bank needed for things like grant
applications and planning wW be
developed with the money from the
U.S. Department of Housbtg and
Urban Development, according to
Mark L. Weinberg, direCtor of the
Institute of Local Government
Administration and Rural
Developmnt.
Weinberg said the Idea Is to "get
the Idea penple, the business penple"
together with the local government
officials who can get state and
federal grants and loans lor
developmE!!lt projects.
One of the economic development
professionals wt11 work with com-

' Issue 11 would raise the minimum beer·drlnklng
age from 19 to 21. Issue 2 would require a three-fifths
legislative vote to raise taxes Instead of a s imple
majority . Issue 3 would repeal all tax laws enaded
since J anuary, chiefly the 90 percent income tax
boost.
In related developments Thursday:
- The Ohio Welfare Directors' Association said It
opposes Issues 2 and 3. President R ussell Pi'yne of
Licking County said the group felt passage would hurt
Ohioans who depend on help for necessities.
- The Center for Public Ed\l.Catlon , Franklin
County, said Its trustees voted una-ni mously to oppose
both anti· tax measures. It said they would hurt school
funding.

'

.

DAVID L. GLEASON

Gleason
accepts
Shawnee
• •
position

CINCINNATI (AP) - Federal
regulators summoned officials of
Cincinnati Ga s &amp; Electric Co. today
to learn how CG&amp;E will carry out a ·
required quality-assurance inspec·
tlon of the Zimmer nuclear power
plant.
The utility Is already under fire for
Its announced plan to charge
cu stomers and ratepayers for the
cost of building Zimmer If CG&amp;E
and Its two partner utilities decide to
abandon the stalled, problem ·
plagued plant. No deelslon has been
made on t he fate of the singlereactor plant, located near Moscow .
Ohio.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
officials scheduled a meeting this
afternoon with CG&amp;E represents·
lives at NRC offices In Bethesda,
Md.
Officials of the three Ohio partner
utilities are still reeling over a
co nsultant ' s es tim a t e t h a t
Zimmer' s cost, estimated by CG&amp;E
last spring at $1.7 billion, now wUI
range from $2.8 billion to $3.5 billion.
Opponents of the project' accuse
CG&amp;E of mismanaging It and t!ley
say customers and stockholder s
should not be penalized.
Gov. Richard Celeste last week
as ked the Public Utilities Commls·
sian, which regulates the state 's
ut ilities, to btvestlgate Zimmer's
costs.

The NRC last November ordered
a halt to aUsafety-rela ted construe·
tlon at Zimmer, 27 miles uptheOlllo
River from Cincinnati, because the
agency found problem s with a
quality-assurance program. The
NRC had ordered the quality·
control review because of reports
a haul thousands of possibly defec·
tlve pipe welds and other problems .
The NRC has set no deadline for
lifting the moratorturn on safetyrela ted consu·uction, agency spokesm an F rank Ingram said.
CG&amp;E President William Dick·
honer said publicly on Oct. 6, for t he
first time, that the utility Is
considering alternatives tocomplet·
lng :t;lmmer , including a bandoning
the project.
But that decision won't be made
until CG&amp;E officials confer with
executives of the two partner
uWitles, Dayton Power and Light
Co. a nd Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., a subsidiary of
Ame rican Electric Power Co. The
three Investor-owned utilities serve
about 1,091,00J electricity customers In parts of Ohio and areas of
Ken l ucky and Indiana near
Cinc innati.
Before the decision Is made,
Bechtel Power Corp. ,aconsuliantto
CG&amp;E, must give the utilities more

PORTSMOUTH - A fo rmer
Meigs superintendent has been
named coordinator of special programs, Office of Continuing Education at Shawnee State Community
College here.
David L . Gleason wtll be respon·
slble for deslgnbtg special programs tailored to the continuing
education needs of groups, organ!·
zatlons or businesses tn .the community. Gl~ason wt11 supervise
instruction for special continuing
education courses or programs,
recruit, interview and recommend
munltles recelvbtg community deinstructors and develop curricula
responsive to community needs and
velopment block gr11nts, while the
surveys.
other wtll focus on hlgh·technology
A Scioto County native, he holds a
development.
Weinberg said the census tnfor· B.S. degree In Education from Olllo
rna tlon that wlllform the coreofthe
University and a M.A. degree In
data bank already exists at the Educational Administration from
state-runOl!lo Data Users Resource The Ohio State University. Pres·
Center tn Columbus. But he said ·the ently, Gleason is working on a
center Is often overloaded With Ph.D. bt Educational Admlnlstra·
requests.
tion at Ohio University.. ·
Most recently, Gleason served as~
" The difficulty someftmes Is not
that the data Is not there, but rnakbtg a superbttendent In !lie Meigs Local
the data·accesstble to the communi· Schools. Gleason has been a
ties," he said. "Overthepertodofthe teacher and coach In both the
Northwest Local and Minford Local
grant we wt11 be a.ddbtg other
tnfonniltion that won't be avatlable School Systems. He served as , a
teacher and coach in the Stluth· •
to these communities," llke data on
labor costs and government · Western City Schools in Grove City,
and a prbtclpal bt the Logan Elm
expenditures.
He said the development profes·
Local Schools bt ClrclevWe.
stonals also wtll be available to
Gleason Is a member 9! the
oversee projects for cities and towns American Association of School
Administrators, Phi Delta Kappa,
that don't have development statts.
SoutheaStern Ohio School Admlnls·
.trators Association and the World
Future Society.
.
Gleason has wtitt€!1 for several
p~bllctlons, and served as a
:r.sues 2 and ..a. Tbe passage of · consultant to the Ohio Valley Local
School Dlstrlct and the WheelersIasue&amp; 2 and 3 would creati! great
burg Local School Dlstrlct.
financial problems lor the schools
Gleason served as Cl!lef Negotla·
of Meigs County, the board reports.
tor
lor the Lopn Elm School
Approved for bus drivers' certlfl·
District
and the Melp Local School
i~:;..­
catloa were Elmer J, Snider, Don
District.
GleQIIIIs
certified
In
Ohio
Smith, Hilton Wolfe, Jr., and Elmer
NBC SETS BEARINGS - Cinc!pnatl Gas lo:
Newell, pending receipt of a elmer, aa a city superlntelldent, local
·
Eleddc.
~ wD1 meet In Washlnpon wKh
superlntelldent, aeconctary prtncl·
abstract.
Nuclear
Repdatory
Comm' don Mall on Thlll'Oday to
pal and teacher.

Designate grant for
development :p romotion

\

explanation is an essential elem ent of am endatory
process, the submission to the pen pte wl thout the
explanation fa tally destroys the process," Cramer's
complaint said.
It alleged " that the !allure of t he secretary of state
to publish the constitutionally required explanation Is
suc h a fatal flaw bt the election process that no valid
election on Issues 1, 2, and 3 scheduled to be held on
, Novem ber 8, 1983, can be held. "
Cramer asked the court to postpone the election
until Brown complied with the explan ation
.
r equirement.
A court s pokesman said a· dec!slon on w hether· to
bear the case was expected today.
All three Issues . are proposed constitutional
amendments .

'F eds seek iOforn1ation
on .Zimmer inspection

Arkansas family
claims shooting
victim's.remains

Emergency runs

information about Zim mer's costs.
Bechtel trtggered the newest con·
troversy over Zimmer by estlmat·
tng t hat It wtll cost between $2.8
billion a nd $3.5 billion to finish.
Officials of Dayton Power and
Light a nd American E lectric Power
say they arere-evalu atllig thetr cost
commitm ents to.the..project before
meeting with CG&amp;E officials .
"Any decision will have to be
made by all ,three companies
jointly ," CG&amp;E spokesman Bruce
Stoecklln said.
Dlc khoner said last spring that
Zimmer would cost Sl. 7 billion.
CG&amp;E says $1.6 billion has been
spent on Zimmer and that It Is 9S
percent complete. Peter F orester,
president of Dayton Power and
Light, said his uilllty would exa mine
the 98 percent claim in light of the
new estim ate.
Meanwhile, Cincinnati City Coun·
ell a pproved a resolution· Wednesday calllng!or a five- member public
over sig ht commission td report on
and m ake recommendations for
com pletion of Zimmer.
The resolution calls for a ppoint·
ments to the com misssion by the
governors of Ohio a nd Kentucky ;
Cincinnati , Clermont County, Ky.;
and the Miami Valley Power
Project, Intervenors in the Zimmer
NRC licensing hearingS.

County board opposes is~ues

reports.
At 3:14 p.m ., Pomeroy went to
East Second St., tbr John Carr,
tak€!1 to Veterans Memortal Hospl·
tal; at 12:25 a .m., J'i!lddleport took
Ann Bailey of Vine St., to Veterans
Memortal; RutJanc!1 at 1:00 p.m .
-took Don Roshlne from County Road
1 where the semi he was driving had
overturned toO'Bieness Hospital-in
AthenS; Rutland at 6:25 p.m. 'took
Jerry Rowe from Meigs Mine 2 to
Veterans Mernor)al and at 9: 51

•

Action filed to d'elay Nov. 8 election

The Exact Color

OVER 300,000
DIFFERENT
COMBINATIONS OF
FABRICS AND
FRAMES TO
CHOOSE FROM

'

l Se ctio ns, 12 Pages

Voi.32,No.129
Copyrighted 1913

The Exact ·Pattern

The Exact Frame

e

•

Don't Compromise....Get Exactly
What You Want

Nature Gives
er Best ToYou.

Five calls were answered by local
units Tuesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services

See photo.on Page 12

Stories on Pages 3, 4

A marrtage license was Issued bt
Meigs County Probate Court to
David AJ1an Ferry, 27, Middleport
and Gall Ellen Tobias, 30,
Mlck!leport.

was5376.
The lottery reported earnings of
$428,6:JJ.50 from the wagering on Its ·
dallygarne.Earningscarneonsales
of $931,074.50, . whll!! holders o!
wJnrUng tickets were entitled to
share $502,444, offlclals said.

Hayes receives degree

Local football roundu

Jobs ••••.

CLEVELAND (AP) The
wtnnbtg number drawn Tuesday
night tn the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "TheNurnber,''wasSOi.
In the " Pick 4" game, played five
times a week, the winning number

See Wba*'s Cooking ~n page 6 .

See letters on page 2

Marriage license

·Meigs County happenings

Apple .recipes

Public speaks out

S·ALE

lnthe441s.

-The first defendant was fined In Cllf!ord Plantz, Middleport, $10 and Correction
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred · costs, failure to yield the rtght of
The 50th anniversary of the Rock
Hoffman Tuesday night under way.
•
.
brand new legisla tion passed by
Forfeiting bonds in the Middle- Sprbtgs Grange wtll be observed
Middleport Village Council Monday
port Court were Dwayne Barley, Thursday night at the hall. A potluck
night In an attempt to curtail
P omeroy, $425,postedonachargeof dinner wt11 be served at 6 p.m. with a
driving while Intoxicated, and $50 meeting to follow at 7: :lJ p.m. Five
loitering a nd resulting vandalism
and haraSsment.
for not having an operator's license, chartermemberswllberecognlzed.
Fined $100 and costs and glven a 10 and Marlin Heater, Middleport, The meetbtg Is open to the public.
day jail sentence In the court
$450, driving while tntoxlcated.
Court action filed
Tuesday night was Donald Hood,
Pomeroy, charged with sitting on a
Four defendants forfeited bonds
A suit In the amount of $7,504.71
wall without the property owner's
In the court'of Pomeroy Mayor
was flied in Meigs County Common
consent. Hood was also lined $50 and Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
Pleas Court by the Farmers Bank
costs on a disorderly manner
They are Michael Scott, Bucyrus, and Savings Co., against James
charge.
$43, posted on an assured clear Neutzlbtg and Janice Neutzlbtg,
Others fined In Tuesday night's distance charge, and$63onacharge Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy and
court were James A. Grady, of havbtg an expired operator's George Collins as county treasurer.
Pom eroy, $425 and costs, and three license; Timothy Bishop, Syracuse,
.days in jail , dri\1ng while intoxl· $48, speeding; Wayne Peck, PomeParade sel if???
cated and $50 and costs, driving roy, and Aaron Morris, Rutland,
under suspension; Harry D. Barton, . $213 each, posted on assault
In the event of rain, the Meigs high
Syracuse, $425 and costs and three charges.
·
school
homecoming parade wtll be
Fined In the court were James
days in jail, driving while lntoxl·
cancelled.
A bonfire wW be held at
cated and $100 and costs, drivbtg Fisher, Middleport, $63 and costs,
Marauder
Stadium
Thursday night.
while under suspension; David C. failure to stop at a traffic light; $43
If
the
parade
ts
held,
It wtllleave
Fisher , Middleport, $425 and cosls and costs, lefto~center , and$313and
Rutland
at
7
p.m.
this
evenbtg
and
and three days In jail, drivingw hile costs, failure to stop for a pollee
travel
through
Middleport
and
Intoxicated; Rick D. Sargent, Vln· officer; Richard Friley, Pomeroy,
Pomeroy.
ton, $50 and costs, no operator's $113 and costs, intoxication, and
license; J eff Whlttbtgton, Middle· Richard Warnecke, Middleport,
Ohio lottery winners
port, $50 and costs, intoxlcation: $113 and costs, reckless operation.

One man was treated for llijuries
and a second was charged with
assault as the result of a fight on E .
Second St., in Pomeroy Tuesday
afternoon.
P omeroy Police said J ohn Carr ,
Ctnctnna ti, employed as a secured
guard at Foote Miner al Co., and
Ernelt Ward, Point Pleasant, were
Into a fight at the rear of the Meigs
Inn. Carr was taken to Veterans.
Memorial Hospital for treatment of
injuries by the Pomeroy Emer·
gency Squad. Ward .was charged
with assault and poSted a $250bond.

! . . - INTRODUCTORY

,,.

(Continued from page 1)
Whlter M. Crickmim, 78, died
"Thts Is a profit-making Incentive
Tuesday even ling at his home on the
to local businesses and Industry to ·
Happy Hollow Road In the Rutland
expand their operations and create
area.
new jobs," Philabaun said.
He was bom "Ckt . 9, 1900 atWelch,
Other Incentives Include tax
W. Va., a son o( the late Henry and ·credits to employers that hire
Maude Cricklnan. He was a retired
unemployed Vietnam veterans,
electrician for the Omar Coal Co., minorities, displaced homemakers .
where he was employed for over 40 and other groups .
·
years. He was a veteran b f World
"We're banking on the priva te
War II havbtg served bt the U. S.
sector to make this program work,''
Army.
Philabaun commented.
Survlvbtg are hts wife, Mary Hall
Ironton-Lawrence Community
Crlckson; a stepdaughter, Margie Action Agency has been hired by the
Rowe, Rutland, six grandchildren Region 24 Prtvate Industry CouncU
a nd l2 great- grandchlldren . He was (PIC) to administer JTPA In
preceded in dea th byhts parentsand southeastern Ol!lo.
a son, Richard.
Philabaun said the agency is
Sertvces wW be held at 2 p.m . preparing to send questionnaires to
Thursday at Highland Memory all businesses bt the region to get
Gardens bt Gabby Heights, W.Va .. data on job openings and the kbtdof
with the Rev. Paul Taylor of the trabtbtg the region needs.
Rutland FreewW Baptist Church
"We hope to get the question·
offlclatbtg. The Hunter Funeral nalres out In late November In order
Home In Rutland has charge of to have the Information by theendof
There are no calling the year," he noted .
services.
hours.

First defendant fined
under new loitering law

Man hurt in fight

Wednesday, October 12, 1983

Ohio

'l'he reslgnapon of Candyce
Y ocbem as speech therapia! waa
when ,the Meigs Coonty
Board rt Education met In regular
se 1lon Tuelday night.
'1be board employed Nancy L.
Hall to ~ Ma. Yocbem ID the
poat 81111 puii!CI a J"'!!IOutton
Sllpput tbii the State Departmelll rt
Education pollltton of CJiliiOilng

accePted

72250 1091168

\

.-

.......J
dlllculli. CGio:E's

plans to complete the Zimmer
nuclear plant bt MOIIOOW, Ohio. The NRC ~aa set two
public hearlnp to be held on Nov. l. ( 1\P LaaerphoCo),

.

.

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