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10-The Daily Sentinel

I

Area deaths

Evelyn V. Faudree
Evelyn Virginia Faudree, 76, of

Mason, died Saturday In the
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
She was born Jan. 26, 1907, In
Mason, to the late John and Ethel
FoxEUasSr.
.
She is a retired employeelroin the
lakin State Hospital and was a
member of the Mason United
Methodist Church.
She was preceded in death by a
brotber. John Ellas Jr.
SulV!vlng are her son and
daughter-In-law, Conley D. and
Bernice Dudley, of Mason; three
sisters, Mrs. Ernestine Folden and
Mrs. Laura Will, both of Mason, and
Mrs. Marjorie McDaniel, of Clifton;
one brother, William Elias, of
Mason; five grandchildren, Rebecca, Marianne, Janet, VIrginia,
and Conley Dudley Jr. ; and one
great grandson, Conley David
Dudley In.
Graveside services were held
today at 11 a.m. at the Graham
Cemetery: Rev. Bennie Stevens
officiated.
In lieu of .flowers the family
request contributions to the Mason
County Cancer Society.
Funeral arra ngements were
under the director of the Foglesong
Funeral Home of Mason.

Lawrence M. Withers
Lawrence M. ( Jiggs) Withers,I!J,
Boise, Idaho, formerly of Pomeroy.
died Wednesday in Idaho .
Mr. and Mrs. Withers had retired
In January and had recently sold
their home in Boise. They were
enroute to Bristol, R. 1., where they

..

.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, a,io

I

Election of officers for the newly
formed Meigs County Jaycee
Women' s Chapter will be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday when the group meets
at the Meigs Jaycee Headquarters ,
E. Main St.. Pomeroy.
Mary Beth Feid, . Re~on 8
director, met with the group
recently and explained functions of
the new organication. Attending the
session were Missy Conde, Marla
Grimes, Debbie Meadows, Jeannie
. Oween, Cathy First, Robin Harris,
Lynn Bookman, Suzanne Weaver
and Joshua.
All women between the ages of 18
and 35 and all wives of Jaycees are
invited to attend tomorrow night 's

session.
'

Public meeting will
be "well-controlled'
Racine's public meeting at 7:30
tomorrow night in the village hall,
will be well-controlled and is open to
a ll residents of the Racine area, E.
A. Wingett. former Racine mayor,
who has called the session said
today .
The meeting has been called to
discuss the large number of
mlsdeameanors which are occurring in the Racine area, Wlngett
said. Problems heing encountered
will be aired Tuesday evening and
the public will be asked to come up
with solutions on handling those
problems, Wingett commented . He
asks that people "get involved"
before incidents of a more serious
nature take piaee in the town.

Sarah Gibbs baked
•
•
•
•
pnze
wmnmg
p1e
'Tis .the season for pumpkin pie
and 23 Meigs Countlans competed
for ribbons and prizes at Vaughan's
Cardinal in Middleport Saturday
evening.. and all for the benefit of the
Meigs County Unit of the American
Cancer Society.
The 23 pies baked by the
contestants were auctioned to the
[ill bile following the judging and the
local cancer unit received $1,. from
the pte selling 'done by Auctioneer
Dan Smith.
Winner of first place honors was
Sarah Gibbs of Pomeroy who
, 'recetved a $!ll gift certificate and a
.blue ribbon. A red ribbon and a $25
'gift certificate went to Peggy
· Schmoll of Middleport, and third
place, a $10 gift certificate and a
white ribbon went to Cheryl Folmor
of Route 3, Pomeroy. D. J.'s
Trading Post of Middleport bid the
highest to purchase the ltrst place

.. .Weather

Committee
(Continued !roril page 1)
cmunlsskmers .are doing t!very·
thing In their power to downgrade 11
needed and wanted service."
,
"We need to approach the
cmunlsston," said Crisp, "and
make them aware of the Intense
publlc lnterest...to work with them
to solve the problem."
"Foothllls Is absolutely not In
violation of the contract," he added,
"I can't keep !rom believing that
theY (the commissioners) are
getting bad advice .. .! wonder If theY
aren't UsteJ:Ung to Someone with a
pet peeve."
It was suggested by one of those
present that the county was pursu·
lng a "personal vendetta" against
Hitchcock.
"That may be," responded Crisp,
"but tbere Is no provision In the
contract that says the lessor must
like the lessee...and, the fact Is, the
airport Is being operated better now
than ever."

were moving when Mr. Withers
became ill. He died in' a hospital
about~ miles !rom Boise.
Mr. Withers was born Oct. 18,
19al. He was a 1938 graduate of
Pomeroy High School.
SulV!vlng are his mother, Mrs.
Eleanor Withers of Pomeroy; hts
wfie, Genevieve Duchnich·Wtthers;
a son, Lawrence M. (Bud ) Withers
D of Portland, Dra.; a daughter,
Carol Wardwell, Bristol, R. !., and
three grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his father,
L.awrence M. Withers.
Services were held today in
Bristol, R. I.

Della Curtis
Mrs. Della Curtis, 92. Route 3,
Pomeroy, died early Sunday at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Ahousewife, Mrs. Curtis was born
In Meigs County, a daughter of the
late Hiram and Martha Inman
French. She was also preceded In
death by her husband. Clarence; a ,
son, two daughters. two sisters, a
grandson and a great .
granddaughter.
Mrs. Curtis was a member of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church ,
the Laurel Cliff Better Health Oub
and the Me)gs County Senior
Citizens organization.
SulV!vlng are a daughter, Ruby
Frick, Pomeroy, and a son, Homer
'Curtis of Sheelsburg, Ia.
· Services will be held at 1 p.m .·
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert Miller
offlciattng: Burtal will be In Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
atthefuneralhomefrom2to4 and7
to 9 p.m. today.

Meigs County happenings
Election highlights
Jaycee function

pte and Central Trust Co. of
Middleport purchased the second
and third place entries.
The pte baking contest is annually
sponsored by Vaughan's Cardinal
with the cancer -unit receiving
proceeds.

Parents, counselors
to discuss problems
Parents of students of Meigs High
School will have the opportunity to
meet with teachers at the high
school Tuesday night to discuss any
problems which they are
encountering.
Teachers will be at the school '
from 6: :Jl to 8 p.m. and are
encouraging participation .
Teachers want to discuss positive as
well as negative aspects. Carl
Hysell. county juvenile officer, will
also be on hand to meet with parents.
Parents who wish to meet•with
teachers should contact John Redovian or Mrs. Martha Vennarl.
guidance counselors, at 992-2158 or
992·2158 so that some system of
scheduling might be completed.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Dennis
Hart, Middleport; Elvira Barr,
Syracuse; · Eunice Nutter,
Reedsville.
Saturday Discharge--Eva
Lawson.
Sunday Admissions--Richard
Swanson, Pomeroy; Homer Cra·
ham, Racine; Mary Cropper,
Pomeroy;
Oarence
Hayman,
Ra,
cine;
Chester
Mundry,
Reedsville;
Sharon Wyatt, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges--none.

'

~·

FAMILY ESCORT- KarenSosnickiofClalrton,
Pa., is escorted from mllltary ceremonies by Marine
Capt. Thomas McGee of Washington, D.C., as the
mllltary honored thefr dead from Beirut and

around 10 mph. Partly cloudy
Tuesday. High around 70.
Exte11ded Ohio ForecMI

Wediwdllll' throup Frida¥:
Filii' llawP tile perlod.lfilhsln
the
m the mid-'lUll. I.Dwllln
Jbe .._

mkl•

His brother, Rick, was wounded in
Vietnam. and his great-grandfather
was killed in combat, his father said.
West had been living In Jacksonville, N.C., with his second wife,
Kathy, whom he manied only ·a
month before he left for Beirut, his
father said. She wlll meet his
parents for the first time when she
travels to New Richmond for the
funeral.
The Pentagon ep.rlier had confirmed the deaths of Cpl. John
Buckmaster, 21, of Vandalia; Pfc.
Marc OJie, 19, of Ludlow Falls;
Navy Hospltalrnan Bryan L. Earle
of Painesville, and Lance Cpl. Virgil
Hamilton, 20, of Middletown.
Lance Cpl. Bruce Hollingshead,
19, Fairborn, appears on the
Pentagon list as missing, but his
family said last week the Marines
told them he had been k!Ued.
·
The family ol Cpl. Scott Luckosavlch, 21!, of Cuyahoga Falls, was told
late last week that he was safe. He
had been listEd as missing.
Still listed as missing were Cpl.
Paul Callahan of Lorain, Cpl.
Edward Johnston of Struthers and
Lance Cpl. Michael Spaulding ol
Akron.

Gangur volunteered .lor a second
By Associated Press
trip
to Lebanon so it would fulfill his
Four more Marines from Ohio
requirements and he
overseas
died in the Oct. 23 bombing of a
would
behomebyDec.15,
the family
Marilles barracks ln Beirut, Le·
banon, according to the latest list said.
Lewis, of Garfield Heights, near
released by the Pentagon.
In all, ten Ohioans now are . &lt;;:ieveland, also had signed for a
reported killed in the terrorist ' second tour with the Marines,
artackThreeothers still are listed as family members said. He worked as
a storekeeper in Beirut, issuing
missing.
Reported Sunday as killed were supplies.
The 1979 graduate of Lutheran
Cpl. Terry Abbott of New RichEast
High School had written one
mond, near Cincinnati; and Cpl.
letter
saying, "If I were not here,
George Gangur of Cleveland, Cpl.
things
would be worse," said his
David Lewis of Gartield Heights and
Lance Cpl. Stanley Sliwinski of mother, Betty Jean Lewis. But she
said other letters expressed his
Niles, all in northeastern Ohio.
Gangur, 20, enlisted In the frustration with sniper attacks
Marines in 1981, after he . was . against Marines In Lebanon.
Abbott, 25, enlisted in 1980 and had
graduated from Cleveland's MaxS.
Hayes Vocational High School, taken to Marine life, according to
family members said last week, Ricky Willis, a close friend who had
when he was llsted as missing. They been corresponding with him.
declined comment Sunday, saying
In fact, Abbott hail .decided to
they stood by their earlier re-enlist, although he missed his
friends in New Richmond, Willis
comments.
"The first time he was In Beirut said.
Also reported kliled was Gunnery
was when theyl were sent to
evacuate the embassy (inApril)," Sgt. LloydDennlsWest,28, formerly
said Dimitri Gangur,li!S father. "He of New Richmond. West was a
was there, came home and went career · Murine and the fourth
generation ol his family In the
back again. It was his second lime.
He was supposed to be home by Marines. said his lather, Charles
Cbrlstmas."
West.

Granted divorce
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Elaine Mitchell was granted a
divorcefromBobbyRayMitchellon
charges of gross neglect of duty.

Emergency squads kept busy
Nine calls were answered by local to Veterans Memorial; Racine, l: 35
units over the weekend, the Meigs a.m. toBowman'sRunforatruckon
County Emergency Medical SelVI· · fire, owner Henry Lyons; Racine,
8:04a.m. to Antiquity for Clarence
ces reporls.
Sunday calls Included: 1:04 a .m., Hayman, to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy Unit to Crew Road for Tuppers Plains at 5: 22 a.m. lor
Whitney Ashley, treated; · Pomeroy Mabel Bearhs, treat€d but not
at 8:22 p.m. to State Route 143 for 'transported. On ·Saturday at ll: 41
Charlotte, Patterson, to Pleasant a.m., Pomeroy went to Dark Hollow
Valley Hospital; Middleport at 8: 27 Road for Ray Landers, taken to
Veterans Memorial and Racine
p.m . to Stonewoods Apartments for
Iva SteWart, to Veterans Memorial went to County Road 35 at 4: :Jl p.m.
for Beverly Wilson, taken to
Hospital; Racine, 1: ll a.m. to
Pleasant Valley.
Antiquity for Homer Graham, taken

school ratings

Austin has surrendered. Tite resist·
ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada (AP)
ance Is over.''
- U.S. helicopters buzzed a sniper
Gen. Hudson Austin, who led the
on one side of Grenada while
Mlirxlst mllltary junta which seized
searchers45 miles away cleared the
control and killed Prime Minister
rubble of a mental hospital whereas
Maurice Bishop, was taken by U.S.
many as 2D patients were killed
parairOOpers after they were tipped
when U.S. jets bombed the facility.
that the general was hiding In a
The helicopters swooped In low
house on the southeast coast, Willey
over the treetops after sniper fire
said.
Mo.nday !lent U.S. soldlers scrambling for cover.
Without firing a shot, the para·
Despite the snlplng,l,200Marlnes
were · leaving for Lebanon, their troopers seized Austin, along with
original asslgrunent before being two militia officers and two young
diverted to Grenada. U.S. Army men, Willey said. Whether the
soldiers were taking their place young men Were hostages,"! cannot
today, a week after the u.s..Jed say," Willey said.
White House spokesman Lariy
Invasion of the 133-square-mlle
Speakes said Austin was being held
Caribbean Island.
Oepuly Secretary of State Ken- "for his personal protection" on the
neth Dam said Monday night there USS Guam, the flagship of the U.S.
was no timetable yet for U.S. troop fleet off Grenada.
:. withdrawal because tt. was not
The Pentagon said 18 U.S.
· known when all the resistance would servicemen have been kllled, 86
wounded and one is missing slr.ce
end.
Capt. Barry Willey, an Army the Invasion.
publlc affairs officer In Grenada,
In the capital, the stench of dead
bodies
pervaded the ruins of the
said he knew of no bands of resisters
still fighting on Monday, but added mental hospital, but otherwise life
that soldiers combing the Island began to have some nonnalcy.
Students went to school Monday
were finding more caches of
for the first time slnce leaders ol a
weapons and arrununltlon.
"I don't want to mislead you that mllltary coup imposed a shoot-on·
the whole island is now secure," sight curfew. Tite pupils iraded
stories of life during the Invasion.
Willey said.
• • V!!hlcle!l ·with loudspeakers Stores reopened.
The Pentagon said that during the
fanned out over the roads, blasting
first hours of the Invasion, U.S.
this message over and over:
"Members of the People's Revolu· troops encountered heavy fire from
tionary ArmY. Cuban defenders. --Fort Frederick, 500 yards !rom the
Lay down your arms and surrender. hospltlil on a neighboring hlll
You will be allowed togo home. Gen. _overlooking St. George's harbor.

·Teenager injured
in Meigs accident
A Rutland teenager suffered
minor visible Injury after her
vehicle went Into a creek off County
Road 5 Monday.
Mary E. Jacobs, 16, was south·
bound at 6 p.m. when she reportedly
went right In a curve, through a
fence and Into the creek, two-tenths
of a mile south of Ohio 124.
, Jacobs was not treated at the
scene and her. vehicle was moder·
ately damaged, the Gallia-Melgs
post of the state highway patrol
reported.
Earlier In theday;the patrol cited
a 68-year-old Chester man for
failure to yield In a two-vehicle
accident at the Intersection of state
routes 7 and 248.
The patrol said Gudrun E .
Schaekal pulled from 248 onto 7 Into
the path of a northbound vehicle
driven by Ronald G. Davis, 40,
Rutland, at 8: 10 a.m. and struck the
left rear of Davis' vehlcle,.causlng

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. By DALE LEACH
Aeeoc'e!etll'res8 Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
chairman of the Public UtllltteS
Commission ofOhiofav&lt;irscomplet·•
lng the Zimmer power plant as a
nuclear-generating facility despite
estimates that the plant could cost
more than $3 billion to finish. '.
But. Michael Del Bane aid
Monday that his prtmary interest Is
nidshlng the Plant - with the
empbasts on flnlshlnl!·
· "Our job is to see that the serviCes
are.provlded," Del Bane saki.
Tite owners of the plant
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co.,
- ~- ~- ---~ ~
Dayton Power &amp;: Ught w., ....
Co!umbus&amp;SoutbemOhloElectrtc.
Co. - ilppeal'ed before the PUCO
here to dl8cuaa their oPtions lor

AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT
GREGG AND PAm GIBBS ·
.
litldleport
N. 2nd Ave.
·

·ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
MECHANIC

$}4999

"-

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PH. (Ohio) 992·2178
(W. .Ya.) 773-9577

Mon., T•.; Wed., Fri.
. 9:30 to .5:00
HOURS Thtn. t.lo to 12:GO
Sit 9:30 Ill 2:GI

'

.
'

..

ZJmmer.

' ,
' While CGaE end ca:SOE said

~

they arestm.,......, Inc a~

r1 opllona lor CCIJijAelbiC ~.

.. wen ... ahenclnnlng the plant,

OPAL PresltleDI Peter Fenter said
Ids cornpaity faVOJ:S coovertlng

.•

,

•

slight damage to both vehicles.
Tite patrol ticketed Ronald H.
Graham, 46, Marietta, for assured
clear distance follo)vlng another
accident on 7 near the Pomeroy
corporation llmlts that morning.
Graham was southbound at 9: 10
a.m. and reportedly failed to stop for
a vehicle driven by Carl E. Qualls,
74, Pomeroy, that was stopped in
traffic, and struck Qualls' autotnthe
rear.
There was slight damage to
Graham's vehicle and moderate to
the Qualls auto.
The patrol also Investigated a
two-vehicle accident on 248 at the
Intersection with County Road 36.
A vehicle driven by Linda G.
Giillian, 29, Pcrneroy, pulled Into the
path of a 'westbound auto driven by
Juanita G. Lodwick, 51, Chester.
The resulting collision caused
m~rate damage to Lodwick's
vellicle and slight to Gillilan's. No
citation was Issued.

WILKESVILLE- VlntonCoun~
National Bank officials closed their
Wilkesville branch bank Monday lri
response to an attempted bank
robbery last week.
'

Robert Will Jr., the bank's
president, said "lVe cannot risk th~ ·
personal safety ofvaiued employees
further."
Will added that the decision to
close the bank, which handles
payroll for nearly2,00lemployeesof
Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs
Mine No. .2. was " painful" and
"made with great reluctance."
The branch closed at the end of
business hours Monday. Three
full ·tlme employees .at the branch
have been transferred to the home
bank in McArthur.

SEl'l'ING- Members ollhe memorial oommlttee
ol Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, were
hard at It Monday aftemoon . seUing this historical ·
marker near Middleport VDiage HaiL The marker is
In tribute to lhe late James Stewart and the late
Edward Bennett, Middleport residents, who won tbe
Congressional Medal of Hooor for bravery In the
anned forces. The marker will be wweiled at a

l)el"emony later this month. Members ol the
conunlttee are Robert GDmore, James Clatworihy,
Charles Edw~, John Metzger, Albert Roush, Bill
GUmore, Bobby Hooten and James Hudson.
Residents who ~h to niake contribution&lt;~ to ·the
marker hmd may sent them tAl Henry Clatworlhy, S.
Third Ave., Middleport, Ohio, 45700.

Deadly fires, other vicious
acts mar Halloweef.1 holiday
By Associated Press
Benign vampires capered
through New York City streets amid
Groucho-masked nuns and human·
sized bread sllces, but Halloween .
took a gruesome tum elsewhere,
with deadly fires set by Detroit
pranksters and shootings In two
states that k!Ued one girl and injured
another.
Reports of tainted candy and
goodies laden with pins and needles
marred Monday night's holiday In
Arizona, just over a year after the
Tylenol poisonings In the 'Chicago
area worried parents of trick-br·
treaters.
But · officials in other ' states
reported a calm Halloween, made
safer by curfews, organized eve.nts
for children and X·ray stations
where parents could bring treats to
spot tampering.
"We just dldn 't see many trlck -ortreaters out tonight," said police Lt.
Jim Webb In Muskogee, Okla. "The
city had little programs for the kids
to go to- carnivals- and that kept
a lot of them of1 the street."
However, In Macon, Ga., a
9-year-old girl died in a Georgia
hospital today after she was
wounded when an unknown gunmanflredlntoagroupofchildrenas
theY were trick-or-treating Monday

Night, the 24-hour period that ended
night, pollee said.
at
noon Monday, fire officials said.
And in upstate New York, police ·
Officials said the fires were set by
said a man who answered his door
teen-age pranksters, not profesexpecting trick-or-treaters was shot
sional arsonists.
with a rifle by one of two meil in
army fatigues and blackened faces .
His 3-year-old daughter was also
An l&amp;year-old Phoenix woman
·
wounded.
who ate poisoned candy, contaml·
nated with an unknown substance,
The streets of New York City's
was
sickened and felt d~. and her
Greenwich Village were thronged
16-year-old
sister reportedly swal·
Monday night, but most of thE!,
lowed
a
needle
that was embedded
250,00l revelers were grown-ups
Halloween
treat,
police said.
in
a
playing at being children for one
In
New
Jersey,
curfews
for those
night for the loth annual Halloween
under
age
18
were
enforced
in the
parade through the Bohemian heart
towns of Marlboro and Westwood.
of the cily.
Costumes ranged from the sedate Westwood police Sgt. John Dexter
- a red, white and black painted said the curfew has "greaily
face over a business suit - to the reduced Incidents of vandalism."
But Freehold police Lt. Don
outrageous: a carton of milk, a
seven-slice loaf of white bread, and Burlew said Monday night's haunt'
Ing was the quietest in his 12 years on
an entire family
of ancient
the force, and he had a theory about
Egyptians.
the drop In vandalism:
Seven witches on stilts swept
through the crowd Wtth long brooms
"I think the old crowd Is finally
and 10 nuns wearing Groucho Marx
moving on and doing bigger an
masks marehed In single file.
In Detroit; one man died and two better things In life and their little
firefighters were slightly injured in brothers and sisters have better
as many as 600 !ires set on Devil' s sense."

Two Licking County men attempted to rob the branch Friday. The
attempt was foiled when one of the
men; Carl E. Knorr of Pataskala,
was shot and wounded by Wilkesville Marshal J ack Sorrell as he and
John Lambert, 28, Hebron, were
exiting the bank with an undisclosed
amount of money.
Knorr was shot in the leg by
Sorrell after Knorr allegedly shot at
the marshal. Lambert escaped in a
car and was arrested later in the day
by Licking County sheriff's
deputies.
Lambert was returned to VInton
County Monday and appeared
before County Court Judge Michael
Brame, who placed himonbondand
remanded Lambert to the custody of
Sheriff Delno McClure. A preliminary hearing wili be scheduled later.
Knorr was still belng treated for
his injury in St. Arlthony"s Hospital
in Columbus and was reported ln
good condition.
McClure said Knnorr a nd Lambert allegedly entered the bank
.wearing stock ings over their faces.
Knorr fired a gun into the a)r to
surprise one customer and on-duty
tellers. Sorrell was alerted to the
robbery by a village resident.
MCClure said that after the pair
demanded money, they received a
" modest" amount that was recovered after the shootout "1th the
marshal.
It was the second time the bank
had been robbed this year. Au thorities are still investigating an AprilS
robbery at the branch In which two
armed males fled •with an undisclosed amount of cash.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 1, 1983

'

19,700

"Miss Lillian' dies

ent1ne

20 killed in

"We need to make the comrnls·
ston aware of our feelings," trlsp
added, "Most people- unless they
are Involved In aviation or operate a
business served by it -areunawa.N!
of the Importance of an airport." ·
"Even th!&gt;se not concerned Wlth
the airport itself," he added, "should
be concerned over the Issue of their
county government and the Integ·
rity of the contracts it enters lnto." •
The recent dispute arose In
September, when Foothllls sought
to renegotiate the term of the
contract - dated Nov. 2, 1982. A
clause In that agreement allows for
renegotia!ion of the amount of
county contribution ~ to the
Gallia·Meigs Regional Airport Au·
thority - on Sept. 30 of each year.
Those funds- used to payutUity,
maintenance and related costs ·are channeled through the county to
the airport authority. Foothllls has
no control over expenditure of those
funds.
Foothills does, however, asswne
financial responsibility for _utility
costs over and above the amount of
county contrtbution if the eounty
money is depleted during the year.
Foothllls had proposed a new
arrangement by which the amount
of county allocation to the aiipGrt
would Increase !rom $5,00Jto$15,00l
per year.
On Sept. 30, the commission
issued a letter toFoothlllscalllngthe
proposal "totally unacceptable."
On Oct. 11, the commission acting to cancel Its contract informed llitchcock of Its Intention
" ... to bid the operation" of the
facility.
Last Wednesday, the firm was
directed to vacate the faclllty by
Nov.1,orfacethepossibilltyoflegal
action.
While most of Sunday's meeting
centered on the airport · dispute,
other Issues - including a suit
CUJTently pending over the lease of
the bulldlng housing the Gallta
County Volunteer Emergency
Squad- were aired.

IN STOCK-READY TO PICK UP

erate damage.

a1 y
! -

' Voi.32,No.t•2
Copyrightod 1983

KEROSENE
HEATER.

a

•

•

e

ON THIS

Lambert'svehiclesu~inedmod­

Halloween activities
See photo, story Page 6

SAVE S50° 0

The Gallia-Meigs post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol investigated a
single-vehicle accident on S.R.l24 in
Rutland Township Sunday at 9:35
a.m.
Dennis G. Lambert, 29, 1890 Big
Run Road, Seaman, waswestonthe
l)lghway when he lost control of his
vehicle on a curve. The vehicle ran
oft the right side of the road, came
back on and then off the left side
striking ditch.

wife, Rosa!ynn, were at Mrs.
Carter's bedside when she died,
along with her other son, Billy, and
her daughter, Gtorta Carter Spann,
said hospital administrator James
Griffith.
. c
Dr. Paul Broun said Mfs. Carter,
who unde!went a radical mastecumy In 1981, died of cancer after a
period of declining health.

See stories Page 4

'jr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

OSP checks accident

Area business news

te issue stand

I

Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

lormer

Variable cloudiness tonight. Low

Granada. She is the sister of Corp. Richard Morrow
from Clairton, Pa., wllo was k!Ued In Lebanon. ( AP
Laserpholo ).

Ohio's Lebanon casualty list grows

AMERICUS, Ga. (AP) ·- LUUan
Carter, the spry and forthright
mother of former Pres!dentJinlmy
Carter whose lull life spanned
politics, the Peace Corps and the
limelight of her son's White House
years, is dead at the age of 85.
Mrs. Carter, affectionately
known as "Miss Lillian," died of
cancer at 5:05 p.m. Sunday at
forecast
Americus-Sumter County Hno~pltal.
- - - - ·-- ~ ·-.. - Tile
presidenl' affil Ills

in the mld-405. Winds southwesterly

.Monday, Oct. 31, 1983

I

l

0&gt;

Dickhonerblamedpartofthecost .
LJmmer to a natural gas-fired
Increase
on runaway Inflation and
facility.
nearly
300
changes In Nuclear
Ali three bwners are reconsider·
Regulatory
Commission
guidelines
tng their stake in Zimmer In the
the
1970s.
He
said
alterna·
during
wake of estimatEs that place the cost
Zimmer
as
lives
Include
completing
lor the completed plant at $3.1
a
nuclear
plant,
convertlngthep!arit
billion. When Zlnuner was begun in
1969, Its cost was estimated at $240 to anotherfueisourceorabandonlng
it.
MOlton.
"What we really get down to is
Del Bane said· he called the
meeting, which lasted less than an there's no easy solution. to the
hour, to help the three Zimmer Z!mml!!" problem," Dlckltoilersald.
Forster said DP&amp;L now Is
owners reach a COI1Il'IIIUI oo the
plant's future. The PUCO Is ·spending about~ mOlJon a month
conducting Its own audit r1 Zlnuner In direct costs lor Zimmer, located
to determine whether the plant's on the Ohio River 'II miles from
Cincinnati. He has estimated It
~ has . Ia!!!. -~bt_ - would cost about 13!10-rn!Won and
Del Bane. asked who should pay take ajlout 28 IJQ!ths to convert
lor any Zimmer mlsmana&amp;ernent, Zimmer to a ga.s·llred plant - tjte
said: "I expect the stockholders to bption currently lawred by DP&amp;L.
"But we'll adopt anything that
pe.ylorlt."
looks
as . ~ It'D ~ the job
· CGaE PPJJ.,.addeniltlo&gt;nt WIWam Dlckeconomkaliy,
Forstersaid.
hoaerrnadethe lenlthleBt lftlll!!lta·
C&amp;SOE
has
hired
an bldependent
tim! blliretlle PUCO,IWIUIIarlzlni
conaultaDIIDdetermlllewbethel'the
Zimmer's problema IUid ~ to
·expiUi bow the plallt'a COlla bid · .lateltcostllllmallestOrZimmeran!
bal~s~thelSelteatlrnate.

aCcurate.

MOVJNG 00~ PAST ZIMMER - A barae loaded
rib _ . .. pl...., )IIIII lbe .-npleted Zluaner

dtanpover of Zhnmer !rom nuclear to coal.
CIDdnDaU Gas aad Electric and Colmnbus aad
• .._. pill&amp; aJoac lbe Olllo River at M08COW • Southern Ohio nectric Companies are !11111 "'M11Iccer~ Power aad ~ Cootpany bu [IIGjiOiii!Cl the lng c¥lcuilor the plant. (AP Laaerpholo).

•

�...
Tuesday, November 1, 1983

Comment
Th.e Daily Sentinel.
Ill Court Street ~ •
Pomeroy, Ohio
·DEVIITED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON !\RE."

ROBERT ·L. WINGET1
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Associa·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are weh:omed . They !!hould bt' less than 300 wor~
lonr. 1\Jiletters are nbJect to editing and must~ signed with n11me, addrest and
tell!phone number. No unsigned letter!! wUI he published. Leiters should be In

good lute, addressing lssues, no&amp; personalities.

Our opinion:
For the past several weeks, opponents of Issue 3 have have treated Ohio
voters to liberal doses of doomsaying from Gov. Celeste down. Plague will
spread across the land, they say, if taxpayers tell their elected
representatives to reexamine what they did earlier this year and come up
with a more responsible tax plan.
·
Depending on who is saying it. passage of Issue 3 would close Ohio's
prisons, double local school taxes and abort thestate'seconomicrecovery.
One would never know from the hysteria being generated that the
state'ss legislators and governor could. lf necessary, sit down In a calm
reasonable atmosphere and provide the revenues to fund desirable state
seiT~es.
·
Issue 3 Is not a choice between solvency .and ruin. What Issue 3 does Is
force the governor and legislature to sit down and take a second look.
\\'hich' is not a bad idea in any situation.
·
We'd like to see Issue 3 pass. It would roll back all Ohio taxes enacted this
year, chiefly the 90 percent income tax boost which got by without debate
on a strictly party-line vote in the Senate.
The sky wouldn't fall. Ohio's public schools and colleges wouldn't close.
The state's elderly citizens wouldn't suffer. State agencies wouldn't shut
down for lack of funds.
•
With passage of Issue 3. the rollback would not go into effect unW June 30
of next year. That would give lawmakers eight full months between the
Nov. 8 election and the tax expiration date to go back and do the job right.
With taxes rolled back to the Jan. 1 level, you can bet they'll waste no
time before rolling up their sleeves in Columbus to pass a tax bill and
budget that will be adequate and fair .
Gov. Celeste won passage of his tax package with a partisan vote In both
Democratic-controlled houses of the state legislature. He argued that the
Rhodes administration had left Ohio facing a deficit in the hundreds of
millions.
'
He argUed that only a combination of additional taxes and government
cutbacks would solve Ohio's irrunediate budget problems.
The Celeste administration took the 50 percent temporary earnings tax
increase passed under Gov. Rhodes and made It permanent. The
administration added another 40 percent on top of that, for a total tax hike
of 90 percent.
Then the governor and the Genera~Assembly set out to spend the money
tl)at would be flowing into state coffers. They had a license to spend, and
they did just that. Within days of passage of the additional tax, spending
projections for proposed departmental budgets rose by an average of 28
percent.
Celeste said lf any surpluses happened to develop, the funds would be
returned to the taxpayers. In light of government's long-standing tradition
to spend every .dollar it can get its hands on, it is a pipe dream to think
surplus funds will ever be returned.
The tax itself, and the manner in which it was passed did not represent
good government.
First. the legislation was approved in haste, in a crisis atmosphere, with
no bipartisan support.
Second, it was a permanent solution imposed on a temporary problem.
What voters should be asking themselves is whether the administration
and the General Assembly acted responsibly and in the taxpayers best
interest when they enacted a permanent 90 percent income tax surcharge.
Issue 3 gives voters thechal)ce to tell their legislators to reexamine what
they did earlier this year. It also gives them eight.months to complete their
task without disturbing current funding.
Ohioans today are hearing all kinds of threats about the consequences of
repeal. These are the tactics of fear-mongering. They are also false.
They' assume the governor and the legislature would sit on their hands
for the months following passage of Issue 3 and allow state seiTlces to go
down the tubes.
The fact is that they would reassess revenues . and expenditures and
come forward with a reawnable tax.
What elected official would chance having to go to the voters with an
explanation of why he sat around and watched essential seNices go down
the drain? None we can think of.
Politicians get votes by promising the people to take care of their
legitimate needs and then doing it. Every elected official knows tllat.
Passage of Issue 3 would provide the ppportunity for the governor and
General Assembly to reconsider not only the levels and duration of tax
rates, but also the allocation of revenues flowing from those taxes.
If, after careful review of all the facts, the governor and the legislature
concluded that new taxes are warranted. they could enact them. But,
whatever action they did take would be carefully considered in light of
economic needs.
This is what should have been done In the first place. It wasn't
We'd like to see Issue 3 pass.
We oppose Issue 2.
Issue 2 - which would require a three-fifths majority vote by the
legislature on all taxes- would Impede the state's tax and budget process.
Reguir!ng more than a one-vote majority would put too much power into
the hands of minority caucuses and discourage genuine negotiation.
The "anti-everything" forces would be given the edge, with gove~nt
by crisis being the rule rather than the exception.
Issue 2 assumes you could get three-fifths of the legislature to agree when
a tax Increase Is truly necesary to the state. We don't think you could get
that percentage to ever agree to anything.
Requiring more' than a simple majority would tie the hands of the
legislature and allow ·a minority to prevent responsible action when
needed.
On ~sue 2, a NO vote is the 'Vise vote.

Letters to editor
Concerned child

'While fishing Oct. 26 at approxt, mately 2:30 p.m. my son (Mony)
and I came upon a car that had been
sti1Pped and burnt. My son said we
~h011!!Lgo to the shedtf's _dep,art··
men! right away. He 'said SheriU
Jim would know whatto do. We felt
the car had been · stolen or
something was wrong.
Slrtce my son was so concerned
about this I felt the department
could have used his name. He Is 12
old and thinks very wghly or
Sheriff Prottltt and his department
(he knows some of them). But, In
the paper's report, It only stated a
1981 Datsun was found on Old Town

years

Creek. Instead o( gotng to the
sheriU' s of!lce I phoned them !rom
Bradford's Store (Sycamore
Grove). They thanked me for
calling, but It was Mony_!\'.hQ was
most wonied,and concerned. I am
very proud of him for wanting to
help Shel1ff Proffitt In thJs,
It's good that our young kids are
so proud of a sherlff and want to be
Involved in something most adults
wouldn't think Important. Youngsters should know how to call law
otllcers and get Involved. - Robert
Wood, Eagle Ridge, Long Bottom,
Ohio.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Moseley's' kick defeats Chargers, 27-24
Another

casualtr~------J_a.,--m_es_J_.K_il..;_pa_tr_ic_k

WASHINGTON- It won't make
the official casualty lists. bul
among the wounded in last week's
explosion of' news was the pending
bill for refqrm of. our immigration
laws. Until the news lrom Lebanon
and Grenada sWept everything out
of sight . an rffm1 had bt'en planned
to revive the ailing legislation.
"Who wants to talk immigration
now?" That waS the forlorn QUE'S-

tlon raised by a Senate aide who has
.worked hard for the bill.
"Nothing now is likely for this
year," said a top committee staff
member in the House. "It 's off until
February." ·
AU this is a pity, because the
long-suffering Slmpson-Mazzoll bill
represents the best possible legisla·
tion that can be achieved in this
field. It Is not a perfect bill - we
rarefy see perfect bills on Capitol
Hill _.:. but It Is the product of years
of patient Ia hor by devoted

members In both houses. Because
of the opposlt1on of Spei\)&lt;er Tho·
mas P. O'NeUI, the btll now lies In a
coma. O'Neill ~as vowed not to let
the measure reach the floor of the
House In this first session of the 98th
Congress, and In the House the
speaker'S WOrd is ci9se tO law.
Unless O'Nelil somehow can be
mollified. (which was the White
}louse hope),lt will be the spring of
next year pefore any realistic bope
can be raised for agreement
between the Senate and the House.
That prospect evokes the appllca·
tlon of Pickle's Law, named for the
Texas congressman whose wisdom
teaches us that "If anything
politically dangerous Is to be done,
It must be done in an odd-numbered
year."
.
The bill doc::s carry political rtsks.
The Hispanic vote in 1981 will be
critical In Texas, Cailfornla and
Florida, where nearly 100 electoral

votes will be at stake. q;j"eill leaned
- or professed to fear - that If
Congress passed an Immigration
blll, the president would veto the
measure and thus carry favor from
Hispanics who oppose IL Because
significant differences remain between the House and Senate
versions, the White HoUse under·
standably has been unwUJlng to
pledge the president's signature In
advance. There the matler stands
- or rather, slumps.
The whole business is · keenly
regrettable. Hundreds of thousands
of Immigrants slip Into the U.S.
Illegally every year. Five Y.ars ago
a select commission on lrnmlgra·
tlon estimated the number or
"illegals" already In residence at
3.5 million to six million persons;
the number surely is much larger
now. Immigration totally - the
legals plus the Ulegals - now
accounts for 30 percent to 50 percent

'SAN DIEGO (AP) - For a few
anxious minutes, Mark Moseley
knew what it felt like to be In Nell
O'Donoghue'sshoes.

•'

record.
ButMondaynlghthewasnearthe
breaking point.
• "I wouldn't be human HI didn't
say I was thinking about the four
misses," said Moseley, who had
failed from 43, 52,47 and39yards , He
aiso had made a 4J.yarder.
The winning kick ' 'felt like I had a
1,000 pounds taken off my
· shoulders," a relieved Moseley told
. reporters. "It's been a mental
struggle all year. Tonight was the
turning point of my career.''

After missing four field goats tn
Monday night's game against San
Diego, Moseley was fighting a case
of neNes when be llned up for what
he called "the hardest field goal I
everhadtoldck!nmycareer.
"I was aver there on the sidelines
praylngtogetanotherchance,"sald
Moseley, a veteran of 12 National
Football League seaspns.
His J7.yard field gOa) with four
It was the third consecutive week
seconds left produceda27-24vtctory.
that
a field goal kicker determined
over the Chargers and helped
of the Monday night '
thP
outcome
Moseley, 35, conquer a confidence
NFLgame.
·
crisis that traced back to a key miss
In last week's2().20tle between St.
two weeks ago.
A year ago, he was near-perfect Louis and the New York Giants, the
for the Super Bowl champion Cardinals' · O'Donoghue missed
Redsldns, hitting 20 of 21 field goais three. field .goal attempts in the
foranall-tlmeNFLaccuracymark. overtime period.
Two weeks ago Moseley missed a
Over two seasons, he had made 23
consecutive kicks. another NFL . 39-yarder as time ran 'i:mt, allowing

or our annual population growth.
Under the Senate bill, the lllegals
already In residence would be
divided4nto two categortes. Those
who have resided !n 1 the United
States corttlnuously since 1977
would qualify at once for perman~
ent resident status. Those who have
been here since 19110 would quall!y
for a three-year temporary status,
after which permanent status could
be sought. Under the House bill, all
those who had taken up residence .,
prior to Jan. 1, 1982, would become
immune to prosecution.
One of the many problems has to •,
do with cost. Testimony In the •
House has suggested that the
granting of amnesty as of 1982
would make two million to .three
million persons Immediately eligi·
ble for federal assistance In health,
education, housing and other entl- · ·
tlements. The cost could run from
$4 billion to $11 billion over the '
ensuing five years. ·
In a time of prodigious federal
deficits such an expense has small
appeal, but It Is the Hispanics' fear
of dlscrtminatlon that forms the
most serious obstacle. The bill
would punish employers who knowIngly hire undocumented aliens.
Rather than run the risk of possible
trouble with the law, s0 the theory
goes, many employers would refUse to hire any Hispanics at aU. No
one can say Whether · such ·an
apprehension is justified, but the
feeling Is real. It has to be dealt
with.
The prospects are discouraging.
In a presidential election year,
neither party may be lncllned to
risk poll tical retaliation. Llke other .,
hot potatoes - the omnibus rewrlt ·
lng of the criminal code comes to
mind - the immigration bill may
be left to cool on the back of the •
stove. It deseNes a better fate. It
deseNes enactment before a bad
situation becomes unbearably '·

the Green Bay Packers to preserve
a 4847 victory on Jan Stenerud's
20-yard Jield goal with 54 seconds
·
left.
With the victory, Washington
improved Its record to7·2in theNFC
East, a game behind the 8-1 Dallas
Cowboys. San Diego slipped to 3-6
and has a !~·game losing streak,
its longest in five years under Coach
Don Coryell.
Moseley's kick erased a dramatic
comeback by the Chargers, who
~ralled 24-7 early in the fourth
quarter and tiedit at 24-24 with 1:52
remaining on a 43-yard field goal by
Rolf Benirschke.
San Diego quarterback Ed Luther
overcame six Interceptions, a
fumble and a sack to ignite the

Scoreboard ...

.

Moeller battles
Princeton for top
final state ranking

NallofW &amp;sketbaD A.•t~oduU~
By The 1\H!iocillted PreM
E.-\STERN CONFERF..NCE

WASIDNGTON - Eight years
after the United States pulled out of
Vietnam, that unhappy nation Is In
dire economic straits. But Its
leaders are not likely to discontinue
the occupation of Cambodia, des·
plte the financial drain of maintain·
!ng 200.00l troops there.
This Is the crux of a recent
classlfled report prepared by the
State Department's Intelligence
and Research Bureau. My associate Dale Van Atta was shown a
copy of the report.
Furthermore, the report notes
that VIetnam's aging leaders are
stlll in firm control of the country
"despite their lnflrmltles." The
report . adds: "Whlle they do not
face any significant opposition over
foreign pol'icy," the VIetnam~
leaders are having a tough time
with their foundering domestic
policies.
"In the past year, particularly
since December, the leadership h1\S
modified the 'liberal' economic
policies which had brought in·
creased production but weakened

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PITI"SBURGH PIRA~Piac'ed Bob
OwrlllnkO . pitcher. m wal\'t&gt;rs.

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GOLDEN
STATE
WARRIORS ·
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Ron 81"1"'A'f"r, )(Uard. a11d plact'd hlm on
tlx' Injured lisl ,
NEW JERSEY NETS-S]JfnOO Mark

Jones. guard.

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PIDLADELPHIA (AP) - The
Philadelphia Phillles dropped
another of their so-called "wheeze
kids" Monday when they released
second baseman Joe Morgan.
Morgan, 40, asked for and
received his unconditional release
so he could play with a team close to
his Oakland, Callf., home if he
decides to play again in 1981.
Several weeks ago the Phillles
gave 42-year-otd Pete Rose his
release after he decllned to remain
with the team as a part-tlmeplayer.
Morgan reportedly is negotla ting
with the San Diego Padres for next
~on.

IW!IOO'BALL

\1('5(',

~1

ANGEL~

'111E ONE THAT COUNTS - Washington Redsldns kicker Mark
MoseleY kicks the winning field goal with four seconds left In the game
as holder Joe Thelsmann watches tile baD. The kick, which gave the
Redoldns a 2'7·24 victory over San Diego Munday was the second of six
aJtempts made by Mosley during the conte;t. (AP Laserphoto).

Phillies release ex-Red, Morgan

Transactions

1ldruw , pltctK&gt;r·, on waiver!l

EM!
W L TPt.t. Pt' PA
6 3 0 .007 173
6 .1 0 Jii7 m
4 0 .a?ll 1€6
4
0 .41-i 1!B

·l .

.

rldc:k•r. lo ltu"l'l."-yMr rnntraet~. and Ellis
Valentine. oulllel&amp;r, to a mulll·)'('ar
pael.
Oil CAl..O -WHITE SOX-Piac«l Dick

Nallonal Foothalll.eai;Ue
American C'.mden-ntll!

' '
Cenlnol
'
' •6

'!D :al3
.444 196 179

Cl£1'V('land vs. Greer! Bay at Mllw11u~
Los A11~\~ R.aldfrs at Kan.sa5 City
~n Otego al P1ttsbu!Wl
Buffalo iit, N&lt;'W England
Miami at San Fr~Li&lt;:icO
Omveor at ~attlf'

CALIFORNIA

Football

Erigland
N.Y. JNs

0

Boone, cau:tll,'f, 3!\CI Bnan Downln~. out-

Phlenlx, IDI

"""'

.4

IIASEIIALL

Dallas at DenvPr, tn1

Baltimore

4
4
5

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

WMhlrlf(lon at Atlantil. tnl
Por!land at Sa11 A11toolo. tn\
Golden Slate at Ktmsas City, tn l

BuffalO
Mlaml

w..

NASCAH - Arlnoul'K'('(j that Rld!ard Pt&gt;t ~
t}' Is lcavll1f1: Pt&gt;tty Entprprilil.&gt;s foc a Klln11a\XlUs. N.C. ha..nl racing tf'am. 1'1Xiklg a
~)l('ar afflllalion w\lh lbt famlly.a.vned
ro&lt;'ln~t business.

Otlcaso at Pblladf:otphla. 1111
Milwaukee al Delroll. tnl
Houslon at lntllana. 1111

matte discussions (undertaken) In
the hope of galnlng acquiescence In
Hanoi's position."
As fo\ VIetnam's relations with ·
the Soviets. the report foresees no '·
change: "Concern about excessive
dependence on the U.S.S.R. Is ·
outweighed by the necessity of
Soviet support for Vietnam's .
survival."
Some of this may change with the
death of Le .Duan and his elderly
cohorts, because, unlike Ho Chi"
Minh, he has apparently made no
preparations for the succession.
And his successors might decide to
jettison the costly Cambodian
effort.
•
The report assesses this as
"possible but not likely."
HEADLINES AND FOOTNCYI'ES - In a blatant publlclty
stunt, Hustler publisher Larry
Flynt sent copies of his porno
magazine to every member of
Congress. Not to be outdone In the ~
p.r. department, several congressmen mailed their p&gt;ples back to
Flynt, along with pious denuncla·
tlons of smut

6

AUTO RACING

~·sGamo;

~I

~

.

Monday's Game
Washlngcoo 27. Sari Dl~ 2a
Sunday. NCJV. 6
AtJ8flta at New Orleans
Cincinnati at Hwston
Tampa Bay al MlnriPsota
Dall as of Philadelphia

No games scheduled

Si!alllt-

J

5

Atlanta

IOUOO-

Athmta

Dire economic straits_·----'-____J_ac_k_And_er_so_n
adopting doctrinaire Marxist
policies.
"Conuptlon and persistent !tic·
ttons between northern and aouth·
ern cadres compound· the leader·
ship's problems," the analysts
wrote. At Its June meeting, the
Central Committee warned that
harsh measures would be taken
against party cadres who fail to
carry out Hanoi's new line. "How
widely the threats can or will be
carried out remains to be seen," the
report adds.
In contrast to their domestic
problems. the party leadership is
having no trouble over foreign
policy. "Leading cadres apparently
have not questioned Hanoi's determination to occupy Kampuchea
(formerly Cambodia) for as long as
needed to ensure a subservient
regime, despite some misgivings at
lower levels," the report states.
The State Department lntelli·
gence analysts dismiss Hanoi's
talks with other Southeast Asian
nations as nothing more than
propaganda - "superficial dlplo-

o .m rro

0

.5001

Uloh

.1157 ru 225
.444 9
lffl
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Ce:lltnal DtvL&lt;ilon

High S"chool ratings

0
0

6

1

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1

Denver
Sa11 Anlonlo
Kansas City

1

0\\c~o

1

Hoostoo

6

Gm&gt;n Bay

Botllon

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.389 1!m 2m
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0 1.100 -

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Washing1on

i

3

0
1

6
4
4

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2

MUwauke('
Chicago

worse.

state control ," the report states.
"Hanoi Is now trying to reassert
control over commerce and pfO\Iuctlon, constrict the burgeoning pri·
vate sector and plan renewed
collectivization of southern agrlcul·
ture. These moves appear to have
been triggered by conseiTatlve
attacks bPfore last year's party
congress and by growinginstablllty
in the marketplace."
It's not clear, the analysts wrote,
whether 76-year-old Vietnamese
leader Le Duan "resisted changes
In .policies closely associated with
them, but it Is evident that the
military was a leading advocate of
the get-tough policy" on non:·
Marxist economic entrepreneurs.
Ho Chi Minh City (formerly
Saigon), with Its freewheeling
market. has been the prtme
target;" the report adds, "and there
are indications that the party center
Is unhappy with local party efforts." The analysts speculate that
party leaders at lower leveLs', where
discipline Is often lax, are reluctant
to jeopardize productive gains by

2

York
Phllillll'lphla

o·

(;mtral •

Allandc Dk'lston
)\;('W

2
5
5

1
4

Washington
Philadelphia
St . Lo.lls
N.Y. Giants

Basketball

fourth, Newark Catholic was filth,
McDonald sixth, Berlin Center ·
Western ReseNe seventh, Archbold
eighth and newcomer Columbus
· Ready ninth.

17-po!nt fourthquarte{withapairof
touchdown passes 4~ mlnutet
apart.
.
But, after Benirschke tied It, the
Redskins drove 72 yards in the final
two minutes to grab the victory.
Washington bull! its lead by
converting three of Luther's toter·
ceptions Into '17 points. Redsklns'
safety Mark Murphy had three
Interceptions. San Diego also lost
two funibles, !noludlng one that
rolled' through the Washington end
zone lor a touchback.
Joe'Theismanncompleted25of46
passes for 324 yards while Luther
finished with 19 completions In 36
tries for 314 yards.
"It's tough to take," said Luther.
"We stopped ourselves."

}{JliSS('n ,

'

18 RBL In one four-game stretch
during the long winning streak, he
had 13hits tn 18 at-bats.

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
All SE"ATS $2.00
ADMISSION EllERY TUESDAY S 2.00

~T 28 thru NOV~
FRIDAY thru

He hit only .7.ll during the regular
season, but the figure Isn't indica·
tive of his contribution to the
Phlllles' September drive to the
National League East title.
In September, when the Phillies
posted a 22· 7 record, including an
11-gamewlnnlng streak, Morgan hit
.337w!h five of his 16 home runs and

FRUTH PHARMACY
OF OHIO, INC.

No foreign policY-_·__._. _____A...,......r_tB_uc_h_wa_ld
Every time something serious
happens, my relatives from around
the country call me to find out what
Is going on. They do this on the false
assumption that someone who lives
In Washington must know more
than they do.
Last week was a busy one.
Cousin Zlggy, who Is a neNous
Nelly when It comes to the
Caribbean said, "Why are we
landing jn Grenada?"
"Because of leftist Marxist thugs
who overthrew the other leftist
Marxist thugs running the
goyernment."
"But why would we care lf one
MarXIst government overthrew
another one?''
"Because tne guys who took over
made the .Marxist thugs who were
In power look like altar boys."
"Can I ask you a serious
question?"

"Shoot.''

''Does the Reagan administration have a foreign pollc~"
"Of course It has a foreign policy.
You can't be a super power without
having a foreign poUcy."
"What Is It, then?" Cousin Zlggy
asked.
"Our foreign-policy IS not to have

one."
"What does that mean?''
"If the other side knows that we
have no foreign policy, then the
Kremlin thugs have no Idea what
we'll do next. Up until recently
when a president spelled out a
foreign policy, the Soviets Immediately worked out a policy to
counteract It But now they're as
contused as the American people as

to what our objectives are, and
t hey're climbing the Kremlin
walls."
"Under the 'no-foreign policyforeign policy' of the U.S. are we
getting closer to going to war with
the USSR?" Zlggy asked.
"No, but they are getllng much
closer to going to war With us."
"What's the difference?"
"The Soviets will not sit down
with us unless they know we are
willing to fight."
"Are the Soviets willing to fight If
they know we are?"
"That's the $64,iro megaton
question. Until that moment comes
we must do everything to make·
them understand that we will use
every weapon In our arsenal, up to
and Including the big '}j,' before
we'll bow to blaclunall."
"And that's oi.r foreign policy?"
Zlggy asked.
"That's our broad policy. We are
also In the business of destabilizing
governments favorable to Mos·
cow's thugs, and supporting go.
vernments that Moscow Is trying to
destabilize."
"We'll give the job to a third party
which will be financed and trained
by' tM CIA. Tl!eSovletnisetlie
KGB to find and train tlleir third
parties. If destabillzatlon doesn't
work tbrough third partieS then we
are 1XW3red to use Arne~an brute
force, ·just as the Soviets do when
one of their covert operat!om tan. ••
"What ever happeaed to dlpJo.
rnacy where nations talked thing&amp;
out first, before flexing their

"Our foreign policy Is to use
diplomacy only as a ll)st resort,
when all else falls. The president
can't endanger the lives of 220
million Americans, not to mention
everyone eise on the globe by using
diplomacy, when the only thing the
other side understands Is armed
might"
•
"It doesn't sound like a foreign
policy· that can last for a very long
time. At some moment onesldewill
test the other to see If it's bluffing or

not.
• •
"Reagan doesn't bluff," I said.
"That was the true message of
Grenada."
;.
"And Andropov?"
"He doesn't bluff either. That was ' '
the true message of Afghanistan." ::
"So what do we have to look • ·

...

forward to?"

College's Top 20
IIJ'DeA..ucl... rn.

..

.

n.,. Top Twenty ll'aiTIJ In thf' AIIOCI·
•tll!d P'rMJ oolleae foOtball poU, Wllh ftnt.

•,

"More of the same, with clearing
skies and light parachuting on
Thursday."

~vote~~·~

•

p»nts. Points blwd on
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NEW YORK (APJ - Commls·
sloner Larry O'Brten, WhO played a

dJrecit

POMEROY
HOME &amp;AUTO

600 E1st M1in
614-992·2.094

York, but not In the 1eape offtces .

I

~

•'

Relattoos Committee today Ia New

'.•
4

Stlhl builds this powerful
homeowner saw the same way
they build their heavy·duty
professional models. Tough.
Then they put features on It
that you'd expect to find only
on bigger saws. So, If you're
looking for a chain saw that
cuts like a pro, we've got your ·
number. The Stlhl 010.
. _- ....

Mcnlay nlllht 11ewuwllllng1Dmeet
wltll O'Brien and theowllers' Labor

~

muscles?"

role In helping avert a

NalfllMI- Basketball AIIIOCiatl(ln
playerS' strike last spring, wu
prepared to IJike part In talks witll
locked-cJUI referees tmW a dllplte
CNf!'l the site stymied a meeting
between the two sides.
Riehle PI11D,tps, ge11eral ccuneel
tor die NBA referees' 11111011, said

·''

It's one tough
little number.

406

~·~
~·~
' &amp;-2.0

' .
Ref dispute eontmues

••

. SPECIAL $209 90

"
•

•I

-· -

.

______

'

\

THURSDAY~

�..

'
4 The Daily Sentinel
Pameroy-Midclleport, Ohio

Business

Page

By The Bend

Tuesday, November 1, 1983

'

No panic predicted
in coal firms' ·future

H

Coal Co.
Six days later, Appalachian
Power Co., the largest eleclrlc
utility in the state, said It was selling
part of Its subsidiary Southern
Appalachian Coal Co·, and was
·negotiating to sell the rest plus Its
two other West Vlrglnla mining
su bs!diar!es, Cedar Coal Co. and
Central Appalachian Coal Co.
Ne!thercompanyhasanyplansto
get out of the businesses they're !n
that require coal; Armco says lt Is
restructuring Its steel operations
and has contracted with Peabody to .
buy the metalli.irglcal coal It
previously produced for !tseH.
Similarly, Apco contracted with
Ashland Coal Co., which plans to buy
part of · the utU!ty's Southern
Appalachian subsidiary, to buy 15
mU!!on tons of coal over the next 10
up."
years and 3. 75 mill!on tons over the
Armco Inc. - which !n 1981 was subsequent five years.
West VIrginia's filth largest coal
The sales are not yet flnai; Apco's
producer- made Its announcement mu$t be approved by regulatocy
at the end of September. The agencies, whUe the boards of
company said !t had signed a letter dtrectprs of Armco and Peabody
·of Intent to sell Its 14 West V!rgtn!a will have to approve that sale.
coal mines and interest in a nearly
BothSearsandMannsuggestthat
finished Newport News coal term!· the general economy have somenal to Peabody Holding Co. Inc., . thing to do with the divestitures.
parent company of the nation's
': Maybe they need cash, to
largest coal producer, Peabody modem!ze steel plants, or make

.....;.

'

I: J

GRAND OPENING IN NEW LOCATION - The
grand opening of the Top of the Stairs Beauty and
Fitness Center In Its new locllllon on Second Street in
Pomeroy, will be held, Oct. 31-Nov. 5. Residents may
register for door prizes robe awarded at5 p.m. on Nov.

5. Pictured here are Trudy Roush, left, wWt Mary
PoweU, center, owner and operator, and Roberta
Smith, aU stylists, in the hair drying and manlcJ!ring
section of the renovated facillty.

take place from Oct. 31 to Nov. 9.
The business, owned and operated
by Mary Powell, is now Joea ted in
the building formerly occupied by

recenttransactlons:VVestrnore~d

Coal Co. recently sold a portion of Its
equity to a vvest German utility for
$32.5 million and some guaranteed
sales.
Pittston Coal, the nation's largest
Independent coal company, has had
to cut Its dividends tostockbolders !n
the meantime. On June 3, 1982,
Pittston pald a dividend of :JJ cents a
share, and by March 29, 1983, that
dividend had dropped to 5 cen!5 a
share.
"There have been substantial
price reductions for coal contracts
overseas, and that has an effect/'
Sears said.
In Apco's case, Mann suggested .
that regulation of the utlllty by the
Publ!c Service Comm!sslon may
have something to do with the sale.

Business Briefs:

I

FirrrJ.S file for incorporation
GALLIPOLIS - Three Gallia County.firms have filed articles of
incorporation with Secretacy of State Sherrod Brown' s office.
Ralph Martin Co. of Gallipolis recorded 750 shares with the state.
with Richard H. Oman as Incorporator . Ralph R. Martin, 913Second
Ave .. Is the agent.
J.P. Holley is listed as the Incorporator of Hot Rock Stone Inc.,
Rodney. Filed with the state were 500 shares, and David T. Evans,
456 Second Ave .. is the ~gent .
C &amp; L Mining, Rt. 1, Bidwell, filed 500 shares: with Lyne Baxter
J ohnson identified as one of the incoporators and the agent.

Realtors Institute exam Thursday
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Realtors Association's Graduate,
Realtors Institute exam will be offered Thursday at University
HUton Inn. Olentae1gy River Road .
The exam tests realtors' knowledge in required courses and the
realtors' ability to apply that knowledge to SOI\Ie current real estate
problems.
An optional review session, open to all licensees, will be held the
morning of the exam . The review counts as four hours of continuing
education credit.
All participants !n the review session or the exam should
pre-register. The exam fee !s $25, the review session an additional
$35. For more information. contact OAR's education division at
228.6675.

AEP appoints fuel

~upply

CHARLESTON, W.Va . - Kaiser
Aluminum &amp; Chemica! Corp.,
expects to report a modest profit in
·the current quarter and to be
profitable In 1984, said Edward M.
Qulnnan, chief financial officer.
Quinnan said continuing favora ·
Hair stylists are Mrs. Powell,
ble economic trends are Increasing
Trudy Roush, and Roberta Smith. In
demand for a broad range of
addition to cuts, shampoos, styles
aluminum products and improving
and permanent waves, the salon
the company's realized prices.
offers hair colorilig, hair removal,
"For these and other reasons,"
hair and scalp massage treatments,
he said, " we believe the operating
and complete nall care with
losses experienced in recent quar·
pedicures. They also offer a
ters by our aluminum d.ivlsion will
complete line of skin care and
be sharply reduced In the current
makeup products along with free
reporting pertod, and that overall
c&lt;insultat!ons and demonstrations.
earnings of our diversified activi·
The fltn\'SS center offers profes· ties wlll allow the company to move
slonal tanning, body wraps, exer- Into the black."
cise equipment and classes, plus.
Chairman Cornell C. Maler,
belly dancing and yoga tra!n!ng.
President A. S. Hutchcraft Jr ..
For the grand opening there.wW Qu!nnan, and managers represent·
be special prices on all services.
ing four of Kaiser Aluminum's
major diversified businesses have

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Chamber of C9mmerce
will meet Tuesday. November 1,
at noon at the Meigs Inn. ·
Scheduled guest speaker will
be a representative of General
Telephone Company wbo will '
discuss .the upcom!ng change!!
with AT&amp;T. All members are
urged to attend.

"I'm jus! conjecturing, but it Is my
suspicion that It's to Apco's advan·
tage !n the regulatory environ·
ment, " Mann said, adding !halt!]€
· sale of of all coal holdings by the
utU!ty "certainly (would) IIlake the
Publ!c Service Comm!ssion's job

. -.

LANCASTE R - John E . Katllc has been appointed senior vice
president of American Power Service Corp.'s fuel supply depart·
men I.

Station names sales

manage~

HUNTINGtON, W.Va. - WOVVK·TV, a diVIsion of Gateway
Communications, Chercy Hill, N.J., has named John Fusco as local
sales manager !n the station's Huntington·Charleston coverage

area.

Fusco comes to the job after working 12 years in sales at
WTAJ-TV, Altoona, Pa., another Gateway station.
He attended the University of Delaware in Newark, Del., and
Penn State University, where he majored in edu~atlon.

Kaiser Refractories for sale
OAKLAND, Call!. - Kaiser Refractories, a division of Kaiser
Aluminum &amp; ChemiCal Corp., Is looking lor potential buyers for its
baSic refractory p~ts !n Plymouth Meeting, Pa., and Gary, Ind.
Sale of the two plants, acquired !n 1974, has .been ordered by the
Feiler.ITTi'a&amp;rC~Ion. 1!1"1981; tne'ortler·wanet as!CIE!"~!IH!- ~
Seventh U.S. Dlslrlct Court of Appeals and referred back to FI'C for

further proceedings.

·

Katser has also offered for sale Its clay-alumlnum refractory plant
1n Frostburg, Md. That plant has been closed since August 1!81 due to
poor market cond!tldns. Kaiser has no plans to resume operations
there.
,
The Plymouth Meeting facility Is on a lim!ted production schedule,
. whlleKatser plans to phase\""t theGaryp~t attlleendofthlsyear.

aluminuiTI.
Hutchcraft told the audiences at
financial meetings that Kaiser's

Sam Blaekbum

Julia Corp.
announces
new president

ATHENS - An - Athens·based
electronics firm that produces
hearing testing equipment has
become the first small business to
move Into Ohio University's new
Innovation Center.
Chelco Electronics Inc. relocated
!n the small business Incubator ·
facUlty !n late August and began
manufacturing products from Its
new headquarters in early Sep·
tember, according to Chelco Pres!·
dent Richard Chubb.
'·
In operation !n Athens since 1m.
·chelco speclallzes !n Infant and
child hearing testing equ!pmeni
sold to schools and clinics through. out the United States and overseas.
A trademarked device manufac·
tured by Checlo, the lnfantometer,
is designed especially for use with

babies and retarded persons.
The Innovation Center . offers
low-overhead space and access ro
Ohio University research laboratories and faculty expertise. Shared
secretarial and accounting services
are also provided.
The center was created by Ohio
University trustees !n late 1982 to
promote economic growth 1n SOU·
tneastern Ohio and to strengthen
the bridge between the university
and business.
Chubb said his company needs
continued research and development to upgrade its products and
marketing assistance to promote
them.
•
"This Is a tremendous opportunIty for a small business," he sa!d. "I
hoPe ltwlll also be a big boost to the

POMEROY - Meeting ot
Pomeroy Lodge 164 will be held
Wednesday at 7: JJ p.m. at the
Masonic temple. Annual due.
are to be paid aod there will be
election of oCflcers. Re!resllments wlll be served. All master
masoos are invited.

easier."

POMEROY - Eastern Local
Board of Education will meet ·Ill
speical session Wednesday at
7: JJ p.m. to discuss personnel
and finances.

•

GALLIPOLIS - Sam Blackburn.
has been appointed president of
Julia Corp., the parent flrrri of
GaUlpolls Business College, 529
Jackson Pike.
A graduate of the University of •
Kentucky !llld a veteran, Blackburn
has been associated with proprietary education for several years.
Blackburn lived !n Portsmouth
and actively played professional
tennis there and !n IIllnols and
Pennsylvania. He and bls wile,
Linda - who serves as !he
corporation's vice president- and
two children now live !n Oillllco!he.
Asked aboutGBC'sfuture, Blackburn said there ls "no doubt we are
- growing- with -a -eani:Bned -enrol· - lment !n excess 1,001."
The.college Is presently enrolllng
,.tor thew!nterquarter, scheduled to
, begin Jan. 2. For more Information,
~HONORED- Serville
conmct the local admiSsions office
aWIII'dil
were
pven In six Ohio VaDey Banli
at 4464367.
ernplgyes
at
the
bulk's rooelll family plmlc held ·at
The corporation operates busl·
Buckeye
IIIII
c
- Center. llollrd Clllllmu
ness colleges tn Wellston. Ports·
Morrll
PrJ
h•,
far
left,
pves aWIII'dil to, from left,
mouth, Lorain, sandusky · and
Madce ..... !! yean; Jeff SMtb, 18 re-; ~ ·
Oillllcolhe, where corporate offices
Barlow, Z3 years; BIJBe do ~ !! JUri; IIIII
are located.

Wash )'Our hands thoroughly and
e' amine 1hr injury. If il is not
severe, wash the wound lhoroughly
w!lh squp ilnd w ater and, if
nrrf'SsiJr~·. scrub gf'n tl .\' to remove
a!J of the dirl an(i ol her contaminat·
!ng parliciPs.
lt may be necessat1' lo remove
foreign particles with twe&lt;?vers that
have been sterilized over an open
fla me or boiled in. waler. Foreign

The Ohio Univers ity Office of
Publ!r Occasions presents "The
1940's Radio Hour" Wednesday,
· Nov. 2 at il p.m. in Memoria!
Auditorium. Tllis smashing Broadway musical-comedy invites you to
become part of the l!ve studio
audience as the actors ring !n "The
Golden Era of Radio."
The 'p erformance is a re-creation
of the Dec. 21, 1942 WOV live radio
show thai was broadcast from the
Hotel Astor !n New York City. The
original show was produced live
and broadcast nationwide and by·
shortwave to the soldiers overseas.
It Is a fast·paced show where
evecy second of air-time !s packed
with comedy, drama. music, and
commercials which feature such
products as Eskimo Pies. Nash
Automobiles, and Peps! Cola. You
will hear those good old tunes that
del!ghted many a jltierbug fans
Including such great numbers as
"That ' Old Black Magic ," "The
Chattanooga Choo Choo," "Ain't
She Sweet," and ."Hey Daddy."
The 12 member cast includes the
master of ceremonies C!l!ton Fedd!ngton portrayed by David Coffee
and the upcoq&gt;!ng · New Jersey
sidekick Johnny Cantone played by
David Bean. Other great stars of
the time Include the Blues Queen
Geneva Lee Brown and sex kitten
Ginger Brooks.
If this performance is anything
!Ike the good old days , there must
have been some clever and witty
entertainment for those at home as
well as in the studio. You don't have
to belong to the 1940's crown to
appreciate this exc!t!ng "Golden
Era of Radio" in the dramat!c

Wednesday through Nov. 13 at
7: JJ p.m. nightly . Guest speaker
· will be the Rev. Ernest P!ertl·
mmons, Decatur, Ill. There will
be special s!ngtng each evening.
The Rev. Earl Fields, pastor
InviteS the publlc to attend.
CHESTER- Bruce Stone will
pl'e51!11t a g05pel concert at the
Chester United Methodist
Church Wednesday Wednesday,
7: JJ p .m . The public Is Invited to
attend.
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Literary Club will meet at 2 p.m. ·
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Richard Owen.
Thunday

be held at the Pomeroy Wes·
leyan Holiness Church, SR 143

9!12·216L

A revival will

A donation was made to Big
Brotbers-B!g Sisters by the Middleport ChUd Conservation League
followlngatalkonlheagencybyDr.
J .E . Levernler at a recent meeting
held at the home of Mrs. Thebna

IN OONCERT- Bntee Stone
of Florida, lonneal.) of Pomeroy, w8J present a I"'IP"I mncert
II&amp; the ~United Methodist
Church Wednellday, Nov. 2, at
7:30 p.m. Stone ilaDinst~
tall8t and sololt!t. The public Is
Invited In alten!L

materials that are deeply em·
bedded !n tissue should ot'tly be
removed by a physician.
After washing the wound, rinse !t
thoroughly under cool running
water and pat dey with a clean
cloth. Do not apply medication
unless directed by a physician.
Cover the wound with a sterile
dressing and bandage in place. If

Levernler talked on the role of the
Osborne.
organization and Its work !n Meigs,
. Gallla,JacksonandMasonCountles
and noted that a director has been
appointed.
A taarprlse shower was held for
Debbie Tbomas and her Infant
daughter, Ashley. Janet Duffy won
the traveling prlze, Susie Soulsby,
the hostess prlze. Clarice Kennedy
and Susie Abbott were hostesses.
Others attending were Nancy
Monis, Eloise White, Peggy Harris
and Ann Colburn, and a illest from
B!g Brothers· Big Sisters, Barbara

re-creation of the ''1940's - Radio
Hour" Wednesday, Nov. 2, ·atSp.m.
!n the Ohio University Memorial
Auditorium.
Tickets are on sale for $6 and $9
" and are available at the Memorial
Auditorium Box Office between the

FFZWL

A Divlsloa ot Multimedia, Inc.

CLERK-Salisbury Township

Published every. afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court StrP£&gt;t, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company · Multimedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,992-

RELIABlE &amp; CAPABlE

NOV. s. 1983

2156. St&gt;co nd class postage paid at Po.
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Ohio

Get a
Glass When
You Enjoy a
Medium Serving
of Coca-Cola at
Pomeroy
Burger Chef

·13 We('kS .. , ................... ........ .. . $14.04
'26 We('kS ............. ................... , $27 .30
52 Weeks ................................. $51.48

OutRide Ohio
13 Weeks ...... .............. ............ .. $15.21
'26 Weeks ................. ................ $29.64
52 Weeks ......... ............ .... ..... ... $56.21

Only

49t
With the purchase of a. Combo Dinrler
You Get the Glass for only 19'

A MEDICAL PROBLEM ...
'

A~d shou

be examined by a qualified physician.
Medical or surgical intervention may be indicated.

Collect aset.

If your doctor suggests th!ll you try a hearing aid,
call the one who has been reliable since 1949.,.

OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 6TH
Offer good at participating Burger Chef
locations while su_pplles last.
.-•• ' "' • "' " ' .. ~ •P&lt;J•"'''"'·" ...

• •... .. .

TOPS meets
A bridal shower honoring Joyce
Grover Hall was held at a recent
meeting of TOPS OH 570 held at the
Rock Springs fairgrounds.
Games W!lre played with prizes
gotng to Pearl Knapp, Kelly
Thompson and Ann Mattox. Refreshments of punch and num,
clleese and crackers were served.
At last week's meeting, a halJo.
ween party was held with costumed
being judged. Awarded·prizes were
Unnle Aleshire, prettiest; Al\fl
Mattox, ugliest; Joyce Grover Hall,
!he most original and Teni Grover,
the funniest; The club members
showed a net lossof26poundsat the
· meeting.

Hospitalized
B!Ole Jo Halley ls a patient at the
Shrlners ·Hospital for Children,
Lexqton, Ky.
She Is the daughter of Bill and
Debbie Halley, Second St., Syra·
cuse, and expects to be confined
there for a few weeks for IIW'gery on
both feet.
Cards may be sent to her at th«:
Shrlners Hospital for ChUdren,
Lexington Unit, l!m Richmond
Rood, Lexington, Ky., 40000·1298.

CRYSTAL &amp; SILVER
3 PC. SALAD SET

ONLY

ALL
WATCHES

*Select moathly, quarteriJ, seml·IUlllual or aanual
optlou.

!NOW

ww .....,t Dller coatnl and

proYitle roa eemprelleun. frllllllllllll, 10_. adYkle, and
prot_..lll MJVIce. CaD • .... br ..,ume.

a1 .. , _

14K GOLD 81 RTHSTONE

. AND DIAMoNDS .

- NOW~-129"9 5

.,

REG. 1169.95

SA~E 140.00

$7

,................__..
, While Supply Lasts

' '

'

200/o

OFF

•BULOVA
!~~IKO -~-- ·-•PULSAR
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MEN'S OR lADIES'

DIGITAL WATCH
95 EA.
ONLY

I I'

$}3 95

Malces A Great Gilt
For Any Occasion//

*Piaee au your pezaaal aadlor commercial
tiiiUI'aace protect• on oDe convl!llleat budget
paymeat piau.

MeNta, wilD IIMta ,_...New OVB lliWfldeiiiiJaw
were IIIII t w Ill the piiJde - BIIIMir Ba•n •,
Gd ..._, '11m M 'mw, a.- Newbaa),
-......r.lc)-.PII&amp;TN+ea,.._,W.._.I'I!m
m

tlon contact toe Office of Pub!!c
Occasions al t614 ) 594-G2:n.

Candidate For

' •.

Lei ua pi roar Mltlre I

Not II' I

concerning the treatment for an .
open wound, please contact the
Veterans Memorial Hospita l emergency department at 992-210l .

WANDA L. EBLIN

(USPS ....... )

IS FIRST

*Choose the day ol tile mentb ,you want your
payment due.
·
· - · ~

!! ,_..,

about tetanus immunization.
If there are a ny questions

rr=~~~=R~E-~EL=EC=T~~~~ ~

The Daily Sentinel

Meeting postponed

I •

the !nj~ry was ca used by a dirty
object, foreign material is embedded in the wound, signs of
Infection or !f the re is any doubt

University

hours of noon and 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday. For inore !nforma·

HEARl NG LOSS

*Pay no naance, lnstalblleat, or service chaqea.

•••1

O~io

r~::::::::::::::::~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::~

Do Your Jmurance Premiums
strain y 0111' Budget?

...,• . W

the cut Is s!!ghtly gaping, apply a
butterfly bandage or tape the
wound to get the edges as close
together as possible,
There are some cases !n which
medical attention should always be
sought. A visit to the Veterans
Memorial Hospital emergen~y
room Is necessary if the wound is
severe, the bleeding will not stop,

Musical-comedy set for

CCL meets

or

YE'l'ERAN

Veterans .Memorial Hospital emer ·
gency department, at times st~ps
must . be performed f!rst by nonmedical. personnel in orde r to
preserve the health of Ow vicl im.
II the bleeding of the wound !s
severe, use direct pressor~ to stop
the Dow of blood . Do not clea n a
large seyere wound or apply any
medication . Seek medical attention
Immediately.

POMEROY - Kenneth Ma·
han\ assistant director of the
OhiO Commission on Aging will
be at the Senior Citizens Center,
Thursday at 11 a .m . ro speak on
the effects of Issues 2 and 3 for
senior citizens. Those staying for
lunch that day should register at

POMEROY -

aluminum division "is In the
process of returning to prof!tabtuty
- returning at a rate slower than
we might l!ke becau of measures
being taken to ensure superior
efficiency !n the future - but
returning nonetheless.
"VVe are making changes !n our
aluminum business which make us
better equipped and better struc·
tured to perforq~ at,vecy high levels
in good years and to avoid
substantial losses in the lean years
... changes which will have an
Immediate and direct effect on our
bottom line !n 1984 and beyond,"
said Hutchcraft.
"The company must have, and
expects, excellent' performance
from Its major rolling mllls at
Ravenswood, w.v.a .• and Trent·
wood, Wash., !n order ro realize Its
earnings potential," Hutchcraft
said .

uniVersity and to the community by
Increasing the number of jobs and
tax revenues."
Chubb said , he expects to hire
students and technicians from the
Southeastern Ohio workforce as his
company grows.
Innovation Center officials are
continuing discussions with several
other entrepreneurs from Athens
and outside the region wbo are
Interested !n the Incubator, accord·
!ng to Dinah Adkins, assistant to the
director.
Additional small companies are
expected to move Into the center
later this fall, she sa!d. The facWty
could accommodate up to six smaU ·
operations by January1984, accord·
!ng to Adkins.

.

WEDNESDAY'

Small firm enters center·

official

Katlic will manage mining subSidiaries .. of AEP's operating
utll!tie!l and handle overall fuel procurement activities.
Prior to joining AEP, Katllc was executive vice president ,
engineering and government relations, at Island Creek Coal Cc., a
subsidiary of Occidental Petroleum Corp.
A recipient of bachelor's and master's degrees in mining
engineering from West Virginia University, Katllc has worked in the
mining industry for more than 30 years.

attended financial sessions, which
provided a status report ori !mple·
m entation of the CO!'J)Orat!on's
strategic plan.
Maler said the long·term objec·
tive of the plan !s to make Kaiser
Aluminum a much stronger company, no matter what the business
environment. This goal will -be
achieved, !n part, by emphas!zlng
the firm's aluminum capabuttles !n
areas where !t has a ccmpetltlve
edge, such as lower production
costs, superior technology , or
strong market acceptance, he said.
In the diversified activities area,
the strategic plan ealls (or achlev·
!ng s!gnl!!cant growth !n lnduslrlal
chemicals, International trading,
oll and gas, and real estate. These
businesses are expected to provide
a return larger than that earned !n

Page-S

Calend4r

the Kiddy Shop.

The lower floor has been com·
pletely renovated and refurbished
for the beauty salon .and fitness
center. The telephone number
remains the same, 992-67ll. The
business was forrnerly located over
the Dollar General Store on Main
Street.

.- ·

An open wound Is any !njucy In
which the skin Is broken. The
objectlv~ In treating an open wound
consist of stopping_the bleeding,
preventing contamination, prevent·
lng or treating shOck, and seeking
medical attention if ·the wound !s
severe or the victim has not had a
tetanus shot within five years.
Though professional medical at·
ten~!on may be sought at the

other Investments," silld Mann. And
Sears says Apco and Armco are not
the only · companies Involved !n .

Pomeroy beauty salon
moves to new lOcation Kaiser expects modest
profit n,targin in 1984

. POMEROY - Grand. opening of
. the Top of the Stairs Beauty and
Fitness Salon in their new location
on Second Street in Pomeroy, will

Tuesday, November 1, 1983

OPen wound treatment ·requires several objectives

•

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Assoclated Press Writer ·
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Announcements by two major coal
producers that they pian to get out of
the business probably are no more
s!gnl!lcant than any other b!!p !n the
business cycle, several energy
analysts say.
"It may just be a good time to get
r!d of that Investment," suggested
Dr. Patrick Mann, act!ngdlrectorof
West VIrginia University's f!.e.
glonal Research Institute.
And Steve Sears, a broker With the
firm of Sm!th, Barney, Harris &amp;
Upham, had s!mll!ar Ideas:
"Why should they want to hold on
to !t !f they can buy !t back cheaper !n
a year or two?" Sears aske(L"Coal
prices aren't going anyWhere. They
haven't changed, but costs are going

. -···

..
The Daily Sentinel

COMING SOON

SEIKO
TELEVISION
WATCHES

ALL.

DIAMONDS
·20o/&amp;-To-309AlOFF REGULAR PRICE ·
OUR DIAMONDS ARE PRICED
LESS THM OTHER JEWEL£RS

AND OUR QUALITY IS THE ·
SAllE.

Why Pay More!

7 DIAMOND CLUSTERS
YELLOW OR WHITE GOLD

1~ 4.CARAI.lOlAL
NOW $29500
REG. 1395.00

SAVE '100.00

FOSTORIA . LA~~
NOW

20°/o

OFF

4 PC. SET

'\

�Pomeroy- Middleport,

'

Tuetda.y, Nt.-tG&amp;r 1, 1983

Ohio

lllemay, November 1, 1983

Middleport event draws over 500

TREATS -

Mrs. Yvonne Scally, Middleport

Chamber of Onnmerce president, Is surrounded by
just a part of the some 600 treat bags which were
distriboted at Middleport's Community Halloween
party Monday night. The large bags of treats were
reserved lor those appearing in co:stwne at the party

held at the junior high school field. Member-S of the
chamber of conunerce, parent-teacher groups,
village officials and others prepared the bags of treats
lor distribution. Residents contributed money and
candy lor the bags.

Over 400 turn out in Pomeroy
It was trick or treat night f01·sure

at the ronununity Halloween party
held on Pomeroy's upper parking lot •
Monday night.
More than 400 person tu med out
lor the celebration sponsored by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Tlie event featured costume
judging, pumpkin carving, bobbing
for apples, a Halloween scream
con)est and a ghouls dance contes t.
Tom Reed, who served as
chairman of the event on behalf of
the chamber, expressed his thanks
.to everyone who turned out fo r the

. festivities.
Reed repo11ed ·that eve1ything

came oft as planned, although the
crowd was somewhat larger lhan
anticipated.
The event was made possible
through the cooperative eftons of
chamber members, village officials. various organizations and
individuals. Reed declared the

event

a success and said tha t next

year's would be better than ever.
Winners in the costume judging,
pre-school through kindergarten,

Middleport chalked up Its second location to help with the formation of
successful community party in two parade.
.
months time Monday night.
"Big Red" of WMPO radloseiVed
On Sept. 24, the rommunity's as master of ceremonies for
Chamber of Corrunerce staged an aetlvltles at the field as judges trled
unusual block party In the business to sort out the best costumes from
section. Last night, again sparked the many entries. Judges were
by the MlddlE!P,Ort Chamber, with Boster,LarryGrlmes,represenllng
several others groups cooperating, the Meigs Jaycees, and J ames
the second event was a community Hudson, representing Feeney·
Halloween party which replaced Bennett Post. The public address
ttick or treat night In the town.
system was provided by Middleport
A parade from the Fruth-Sears businessman John Werner who was
area on North Second Avenue assisted bv L.W. Mr('nmas.
through town to the junior high
Youngpeoplewlnnlngprizeswere
football field opened the evening's presented Halloween theme gifts
activities. Adding to the life of tbe while adults received cash awards.
partywere the MelgsHighBandand E ach person In costume received
the Southern High Band, both also large bags of treats prepared by the
perfornning at the football field.
chamber, parent-teach..- group
Over 500 youngsters and adults In representatl\11!5 and others.
costume tumedouttobeapartottbe
Donuts and elder, some being
parade andyoungsterswereaccom- donated by Vaughan's Cartllnal,
panled by their teachers, many of were to be distributed to everyone
whom were In costume.
.--attending. However, 90 dozen doChamberofCommeroemembers nuts later, the supply became
taking active roles in seeing that aU exhausted.
.
went well were mostly In costume
Financing of the party was
also. The Color Guanl of Feeney· apparently haadled without much
Bennett Post 1.28, Ame~lcan Legion, dl1flculty. Feeney-Benne!t Post
the Middleport Pollee Department, contrlbuted $300,Middleport Village
the Middleport Emergency Squad, - the Idea of tbe party. ortglnated
a Halloweendecoratedvehlclefrpm with vUiage officials - gave $400,
Pat Hill Ford and a vehlcleprovlded residents sent In contributions rJt
by Tom Rue Motor Co., In which about$250andothersgavecandy to
Rep. Jolynn Boster rode, rounded belpwlthtbetreatbags. PauiDalley
out the parade to the stadium.
and Arnold Priddy distributed the
Village Councilman J ack Satter- bags to treats to the costumed.
field, Dewey Horton and Bob
Heading up the entire operation
Gilmore were at the starting wasYvonneScally,presldentofthe

·first, second and . third place
· respectively were, Mike Klein,
Jenny Clifford, Bobby RoUsh; grade
• school, Travis Drenner, Ronnie
Casto,.Myrtie Klein; junior high and
high schQOl, Louis Chapman, Tabi·
lha Watson, Gail Scarbrough; adult,
Dwaine Qualls, Susie Jones and
Vickie Dent.
Over 200 adults and children were
in rostume. Popcorn and cider were
provided by the Pomeroy Fire
Department and candy and ptizes
were distributed by the Pomeroy
Chamber.

Hallo'U!een contest . judging announced
Halloween art prepared by stu·
dents from kiindergarien through
grades six and displayed in Middleport business houses over Monday
were judged Monday afternoon.
The work w,p.s done as class
pro)ectscarryifigout the Ha lloween
theme and prizes for the classes will
Include t.aJ for first place, $15 and
second and $10 for third and
cotn(&gt;etltlon was divided into two
categories -' one kindergarten
through grade three and gradesfour

through six.

Winners In the younger group
were
first place, Mrs. Dewey
Winners in the upper grade level
Horton's
third grade, Boll, Boll Toil
were Group II , sixth grade at
and
Trouble
displayed at the
Bradbury, for Dracula's Castle
LaSalle
Restaurant,
second to Mrs.
displayed in the welfare building on
Twtla
Childs
second
grade, Tbe
Nmth SecondAve.; thefifthgradeof
Great
Pumpkin,
displayed
at Ingels
Mr. Birch, second place, displayed
Furniture,
and
third,
Hand-some
at King Builders and titled , Fran· ·
kensteln's Lab, with third going to Ghosts by the ftrst graders of Mrs.
the fourilh grade of Mrs. Grinun, Davis, displayed at the Masonic
displayed at Wemers Radio and 1V, Temple building.
Representatives of the media
titled, Haunted House Party.
judged the art entries.

~~-

I

.
I

P

For
c!~;so;~~eet
Type Aluminum
Del iverod to Plant
111 M. East of Pareville
On Township Rd. 141
we Specialize
in Aluminum Only
PH. 992-3466

1'/1

BOGGS

•
Washers, Dryers
· Ranges, Refrigerators

742 -2 3 52 .

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Needlework

Route 4, Pomeroy

Tf ~.

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61 Ho,.,,..,..,. Gooclo
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~~~~

Grades three through six, first
through thlrd, ,respectively, prettl·
est, Sherry Jo Johnson, Lisa Potilln,
Wendy Clark; twmlest, Nlkl Meier
and Hetl!loer Davenport, a team,
and Chris George, third; uplest,
Steven Mariin, Cl!arla Colper,
Robby Wyatt; most original, Ryan
Hollman, Sbeily Pullins, Love
Batey;
Junior and senior high, first
through third, respectively, prettl·
est, Kim Chadwell, Tammy Hof·
fman, Penny Pridemore; funniest,
Lyon Chase, Gene nnlt:, Mlcllelle
Stevens; ugliest, Eddie Baer, Shane
Ingels, Steve Foulkrod; mOtit orlgi·
nal, Jeny Van Kirk, Tracy Casto,
Tim Knotts.

~ .
~·

Trophy
ftllanufacturers

.:' u.
·_'1"

~·

PlAQUES
~NGRAVING .

I

We can re.pair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boi I and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

PAT HILL FORD

Vinyl 8t Aluminum
SIDING

T

_:;

41 H&lt;N Mohl oll..,l
Ol·MutoiloM-I• IileM

43-r ...... r..,,..,,

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4 ~ fo m ioheodll - •

4 I ·SIWicot !..,. lkfl,

11·11"'•- TV I Cl " -"

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Public Notice

6 1 F•!OI I 'I"- '
61 ¥j . . . . . 8 .....

nu-lDtlt

.::· ::..•,o;s~~···

•.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or

'

_LDI

cr,ro•'""~

U 7 ...,._.

u........,..-.....

•• -~
c .... ..

'

••

patt1m .

Print nalfll. addfm,

li~

The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box. 1GO
Radio City St.lllon
New York, N.Y. 10019
TIM! New AllUM with Free Pl"trn
Slction - $3.00 postplid.

2

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..

In Memoriam

·

-

over present rates w1ll vary
depend1ng·on wh1ch rate sche·
dule a customer 15 receiVIng
gas serv1ce The rate 1ncreases
proposOO by th1s flltng range
from 11 .6 percent to 1 6 ~ 1
percen t for consumptiOn of 11
Mel per month.
COST 01;= PURCHASED
GAS IleAl ATION
Both the present and the
proposed r a te!J~ are ·sub1ect to
decrease or 1ncrease 1n accqrdance With the· "Gas Cost
RAcovery" pr oviSionS of Columb1a·s Rules and Aegulattons on
f1!e w1th the PubiJC Ut1f111es
CommiSSIOn of Ohto. as reQUI red bv' CommiSSIOn Orders
datP.d October 11 . 19-18. and
October 18. 1979. 1n Case No..
76-5 15-GA-O AO. The pro_.
posed rates are also sub1ec1 to
an "Oh1o Exc1se Tax" clause as
set lonh below
OHIO EXCISE TAX
All b1ds rendered shall be
adJUSted to 1nclude the effect !~
of. Oh1o Exc1se Tax on gross

"AUTO
PARTS

GRAVEL
HAULED

AND

AL TROMM

.REPAIR

amoun t e~ ual to the "custo mer
charge" for eac h month of the
1ntervenmg penod, but not to
eKcP.ed ·slx (6) months.
ANY PERSON, FIRM. COA PORATION. OR ASSOCIATI ON
MAY FILE. · PURSUANT TO
. SECTION 4909 19 OF THE
·.REVISED CODE AN OS,.JECTION TO SUCH PFIOPOSEO
INCREAS ED RATES BY A l l.E G ~
lNG TH AT SUCH PROPOSALS
ARE UNJUST AND DISC AIMI·
NATORY OR UNREASONABLE.
AecommR nd ati ons w h 1ch
d1ffer from th~ ap p.llcat1on may ·
be made by th e StaH' of the •
Pubhc Util1t1AS ComrmS 510 n of
Oh1o or by •nterven 1n{:l pan 1es
and may be adapted by ,the
Comm1SS10n
Further 1nformat•on reg ard1ng the Appltcahon mav be
obtatnf!d from Columbta Gas of
Oh10. Inc . 99 North Front
_Street. Columbus OhiO 432 15
(6 14) 460-2485. or from the
Pubhc Util1t1es Comm 1ss 1on of
, Oh1o. 375 SO..Ylb....tiJgh ..Sw~ei __:_

Rev1sed Codf' Sec t 10ns
~727 .38and5727 JI1 .except ·
1ng tt")ose accounts exempted
from such ta11..
A EC 0 N N I C T I 0 N
CHAR.
If servtce under thiS rate
,scheduletSdlsconnec:tedat the
request of any customer. Co·
tlu"'!bta shall not be ~nder
Jobhgat1on to resu me SMV1ce to
that customer on the same'prem1se.S until that customer
has made pavment of an

- --·""'

--

~

1

NO'/. 1. 8. 15

.......____

Residence: 985-3837
Warehouse : 985·3509

J&amp;F

10 ·2~ - 1

, ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

15 Ye•ra ·Experience

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
or 992,.2282
ll·l·tfc

PH.

992

•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, REClAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK

All types o roof"work,
newt' repatr, gutters
and ow~spouf$ , gutter c eamng and
painlipg~ storm doors
and WlnuOWS .
All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"
Call 949-2263
or 949-3091
3-10-tlc

·~ortc

Pomeroy, Ohio
PH . 992·~;~~ mo .

dishea, mlac. 270 Jackson
Pika .

Garage Sale. Harry Baby's,
11 26 E. M ain S1 .• Pomeroy.

McClure• 3 In 1. Pomeroy.
Call in Oi'den 814· 992-

4 Family Porch Sale Fri. &amp;

canning .Jars.

Garge Sale Friday Only 9 · 6.

Large Sale. 2 miht on flat ·
w oods Rd . from Five Pointe .
Wed ., Thurs. 8t Fri . Clothes,
dishes. collectibles. wood
cabin et st ereo.
·

Dairy tole. Middleport •

Sat. Nov . 4 • 6. 94 Loculi
St .. Goltipotlo.

6292.

Vacancy : Julia's Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mer c er Canvaleaence
Home. 18 years experience.

275 LeGrande (oH 1411.

utility trailer. m isc.
Garge Sale June. Rts. 7 &amp;
218 . Thurs. • Fri. Nov . 3rd

Sister wants to hear from 8t 4 th, 9 til 3 .
Sitter. Frances Waugh Law- 1-1-.,- T-im-o-th-ls- y-eo- r-.-F-ri-da- y
renee wantt Dorothy Waugh . Nov . 4 t h. S:00- 4. :OO . child·
Robinson to contact her at
P.0 . Box 641 , Mt. Vernon, renaW"clothing,
tt D baby items.

10 1::-o~w_ _r_.- - - Go. 30446. 912 ·583-2155. ~ ~--

Yard Sale Nov. 1 .2 ,3 &amp;. 4 . 1
mile east of Porte'J on Rt .

4

554, t0 -5. .•

Giveaway

Moving Sale Cars, furnitu re.
Wed. -Sat. Noon-dark . Lin coln Pike, 8 miles outside

Beautiful, ~layful kittens to a

good home. Can 446 ·2686.

Northup. 614-256-1603.

2 freezers. Call ahar 4 p.m .

Yard Sale 308 Sanders
Drive off neighborhood Rd .
Wednesday and Thursday .
Good misc. item s.

ALL

STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'

GOOD SEL,ECTION

SHOTGUNS &amp;
. HANDGUNS

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36 '
Insulated Dog Houses

We buy, sell or trade .
Good prices.

Frank's

317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Cross Stitch and ·
Candlewick Supplies
Giving lessons
Take Crafts on Consirnments, also have craft
rifts.
HOURS: 9·3 Mon . thru Sat.
9·6 Friday

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614·843·5191
10-6-tfc

~o3s'!md.
~.~i?og
446-0840

lir.26·1 mo

M.L

SPORTSMEN

CONTRACT! NG RECAMATION

Have Your
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by

'

TAXIDERMY
SHOP

New Lima Road
Rutland, Ohio
PH. 742-2225

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

Addons and rsmod.tl~g
Roofing and guttef waft
Concrete work
Plumbing and
eltctrlcl work

•9·29. J mo .

Pomeroy

1

GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tranamiuion

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

PH. 1-304-773-5634
MASON, W. VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

3·24'tfc
10·3·1 mo.

GLASS • GLASS .• GLASS

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
8ashan Building ··-

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

•

,~
"AU'I'OGLASS
OUR SPECIAL TYI"

Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns

I

...... . 7 '

-

When You Need Gl~s/vou Need Us ... We Can Hendto
Your Every Glass Ntedl
"Wo Want And Approclote Yo~r Business"

Only .
IO·tO·t mo.

, .. fltiltlllll

tra.s: .....fri. toll to 7:GO ~ 1:01 II

11:10 !."!!.

Dispoldlod

POINT·MASoN AUTg." GLASS
Rt. 33
I

;·

--r_r':'l~~~·:::n-~
L----

&amp;1 614-992-2181
Landmart

111

Public Sala
8t Auction

12

•
Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant. WVa .
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg., Camden St .
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate , Farm , An tique &amp; liquidation sales .
Licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandiSe every week.
Consigmenta of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276·3069.

13tWI 773·5710 . 773-5111
•

"'o

Christmas seson .
more
consignmenta will be taken
until after Christmas . Emma
Bell Auctioneer . 428 -8177.

9

~

Cord of Thanks

Please accept our sincere
thenka for the kindneu
.
shown us •n t~ loss of our

pay c•sh· ior- late model
clean used can .
Jim Mink Chev.·Oids Inc·.
'Bill Gene Johnson

446·3672

Wanted to buy used coa l &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furniture. 446·3159, 3rd . &amp;
Olive St .• Gallipolis . Oh.

614-3e7-0560.

Rider needed t o c ommute

with to ou. can 446-3737 .
Tree trimming and removal.
Free estima1e1 . 614 · 992·

6040 or 6'14·949·2129 .

Babysitting in my home.
Ages 1-5 years. 8 a.m .- 6

Sherri . Will pick up at $6.00
at your holfte, radius of 16
miles .
"'
Typing and oHice work by
para legal secretary at reaidance. pick up and deliver.
Phone 304·875-6367.
Dump truck f or hire. Will
haul coal, gravel, sand , etc.

Oh. Or 992· 7760.

Wanted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete house ~
holds. Also complete Aucti oneering service. Call Osby

Middleport. oh. 6,4· 992·
3476.

ling , concrele work, basement water proofing , f oundation work , free estimates .

13

Insurance

SANDY AfiiO BEAVER In·
surance Co. haa offered
services for fire lnsuranoe
coverage in Gallia County
for almoat a century . Farm.
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs. Con ·
tact Kail Burleson , agent .

Phone 446-2921 .

11

Help wanted

·1
- - - - - - -'

&amp; Vicinity

' •

YARD SALE several fami ·
lies . He nd erson Town Hall.
Wed. 2 nd.. Thurs. 3rd .
10 :00 t ill ?. Rain cancels.

your

marketplace
Professional

PIANO TUNING Lower
p ri ces· regular tuning• · ··
discounts to Senior Citizen•.
Churches &amp; schools. Ward ' •

Keyb oard , 304-676-3824.

PIANO TUNtNG AND RE·
PAIR . Service wi1h skill and
in1egrity . Lane Oaniels· 614742 - 2951 . !Retiree.
Teacher Discounts) .

. ~allliiEI

31

..
•.

Homes for Sale

- - - - -- -- - - . ~
4 bdr. ran ch home. large LA ;~~­
full basement, with garage; ::
wood burner included, city
schools, 2 miles from town. ·

a.-

Or will t rade for anything
value . 3 bedroom houae
with fireplace. central air. 2
full bath s, in city limit s.
Immediate posseasion. Cell

P,r iced reduced . 3 bdr. In '
Henderson , new ..carpe11.
city water &amp; sewer . Natural
gas furnence. last house on
Henderson St. Toward Red·
mond Ridge . $18. 500. P.O.
Box 533 Gallipolis, Oh

45631 ..

8'.4% Loan Assumption. 4
bdr ., 1 % baths , dining room.
LR room , utility room, large
1 car garage, C -A gas heat.
large laval lot. Yz mile from
Hol zer Hospital. 89,000
down , assume loan . Serious
inquires only . Call 676·

House, recently remodeled
32 acres In ; Eureka .
General Hauling and Trastt
removal Service . Reliable
and dependlble. Call 4483169 between 9 and 6 .

537.600 . Can 446·2206.

Good 6 rooms &amp;. bath.
garage. good tobacco barn,
&amp; other outbuilding, 1.1 oo·
lbs . plu s tobacco base. Call

ing. Open six days a week. 845.000 . 614·992·5858 .
7:30-6:00 PM .. 304-882·
3224.
10 Pet. interest, owner
Now open . New home for
elderly people. Nurse on
duty at all time . Phone

DoUy Tribune. 826 Third
Ave .. Gotlipotio. Oh 46631 .

Outline experience,
references.

give

The Gallipolis Parks and
Recreatio·n Dept. needs
p•rt· time instructors for the
following activitiea: cooking, quilting, che11, and

weight tilting. Pick up appli·

cation forma before Nov. 4
It the Recreetion Dept .• 518
Second Ave.
Insurance Inspector, Part
Time. No selllnfl,
wll
·
d 2 1 t d
trem, nee
u
ay. per
week In Gotilo • Melgo
County. Repty to: Commer -·

w•

cl 11.,_ 1
1 · D 0. B
...... ot ceo •. n• ... ~- · ox

elderly people, OflO portiolty

Invalid . Cooking &amp; houae·

.hold dutloo. frH room •

Some

week ondo ott. 614·986·
in

hla

home .

sere . $50.000. I ·896307t .

21

Phone 304-675-1529, after
5:00PM ..

Business
Opportunity

Three bedroom . two c::ar
garage. assume 10 per cent
lo1n . At. 2, Point Pleasant:

t NOTICE I
THE OHtO VALLEY PUB·

614 -446-8603 or 304·6751248 .

LISHING CO. recommend•
New~·
that you do business with . Hou se for Hie people you know, and NOT A-frame . 10 percent inter- :
to send money through 1he est, owner finance, 1 'l.t
mail until rou have investi- baths, JA. acre; $60,000.
304-895-3071.
gated the offering.
For informatiOn about Synthetic lubricents an ex cel·
lent busineas opportunity.
Contact Rodney Stapleton,

----------- .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

446-7414 ..

THECORNiR CUPBDARD.
Shop to o,en soon. Now
seeking hattdmade country
crefta to Mil by consign •
ment. If inteNited call 446 ~

TRI · S TATE M080LE
HOMES . USED · CARS,
TRUCKS . GALUPOLtS.
CHECK OU.R PRICES . CAll
446-7572.

1_!'~-~t~qu...

1\f~W.l\_ND USED..MllBtL~

1806 oft..- 11:00. Atoo buy·

HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
Loulng firm looking lor tTY MOBILE HOME SALEB.
ea~ciatH . Mu1t be hlah
4 Mt. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
1chool graduate and 25 RT 36 . PHONE 446·7274.
yooro otoge. Colt 614 -949·
2892 o r - P.O. Box 81, 1972 14x70 Kirkwood 3
Racine, Oh. 46771 .
~R. 1 "'h bath, new carPet,
22 Money to Loan

35118.

gentleman

flnancing. new 21h story,
mod ·A ·frame, 1 'h: bath, 3,4

Tri -level, excellent condition. $66 ,000. 8 Yz assumable loan. $11.000. down_

•

dun 1hoot Racine Oun Club. t.dy to Uvo in or otoy with

Malon. WV only.

.......Pt.Pieasa·r.t..... .

Housecleaning for those 1 -::-~-------­
that work or jult need extra 3 b,droom ranch style
help . Call 4-46 -2006 .
home, carpeted, full tile
basement, 1 car garage. in
McDaniel Custom Butcher· ground pool 16x32 _

F•rm Worker with Dairy
experience. Write to Box
1010 in care of Gallipolis

bo•d with ••lery.

Every 8und8y ltarting 1
p.m . Fectory choked guns

5344.

7547. 7PM-IOPM .

1 B Wanted to Do

304-676-7810.

Needed in the Chelt•r area.
someone to live-In with two

Announcements

Garage Sale. Thurs. Fri.
Clothes , t o'ys, cameras,
tires. antiques. car. Rain or
shine: Five Points. 614 -992-

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small . Reliable and de pen .. 446-1006.
A. Martin 6,4·992·6370.
dable. For estimate calll - - - -- , - - - -446-31'69. 9 to 5.
Located in Syracuse-Near .'
Buying daily gold, silver
school &amp;. swimming pool. 3
coins, rings , jewelry. sterling Will do babysitting in mv bedroom situated on on•· ·
ware, old coins , large cur· 'home. Located 3 mi. frottn third acre lot. 824.500 . or
rencv. Top prices. Ed. Bur- HTHS . CaU 614-266-6216. will rent for $276 . mo.
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave .
304-855-3934.

tChurch. Veteranl Memorial
Ho•plllll and itaff and Dr.

3

623% Russell St .• Middle·
port. Nov. 2, 3 , 4 . Behind
t-feiners Bakery.

Colt 446-0276.
•
1- - - -- -- -- - - - - - - - -.·
House raising, leveling, rasil·

BEDS·tRON, BRASS, otd
1urniture. gold. silver dollars. wood ice boxes, stone
jars. antiqul!s, etc.. Com ·
plate househol ds . Write :
M .D . Miller, Rt . 4. Pomeroy,

12187, Columbuo, OH .
_43_2_1_2_·_ _ _ _ __ _

Femlly of Edgar Wolfe.

9-5.

614-245-5281

We

tovod ono. Spectot thonko to
IU our fntll~o and- nlligh· boro, Rov. Mort&lt; McCtung,
Middleport Ftnt Boptlot
Rldgwoy.
Ood Blooo You All

Ska te -A -Way, Rt . 7, Chester. Fri .. Nov. 4- Clot hes.
t oys . h ou sehold items . m isc .

~.ervices

304·675-3908 .

Wanted To Buy

Nov. 3 &amp; 4. Clothing,

23

Situations
Wanted

...------,1~
~~~

·'PERSONALIZED POOLS"

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Serviceman On Duty
Monday· Friday
8 :~0 to ·12-and 1· to 5 •
Saturday
8:30 a.m. to. l2 Noon
Also complete service on I ·
all Hotpolnt fnd General
Electric Appliances. ·
Other makes ·also ser·
viced and we also service
Kerosene Heaters.

•

B

8-H tc

Kl'tCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

GUN SHOOT

11

LOST:900ib. Hereford cow

on Rayburn Aa ad. Fletrock
community. Call 304-27.3 3447 collect.

2420.

Racine, OH.

1

•

Yard Sale Centenary Town house. 9 -6 . Wednesday
Nov. 2. Many things, some
new. Decorations. bedspreads. what nota. clothing ,
shoes. 1urnips. pumpkins,
greens. baked goods, muc h
more.

6 Lost and Found

Small horse drawa cart for
hauling firewood. 614-992-

949-2293

~--~----i-1·_26~-tf~
c 1'-----~------~~------------~ ~

&gt;J

614-843·

614·664-4781 . 1·9 DaUv

Roger Hysell

•

,
·•

firewood .

Raw Fur Buyer . Beef&amp;. Deer
Hides· Ginseng, · Trappii1g
Supplies . George Bt'ckley.
At . 2, Athena, Oh . Phone

*Excavating
*Ponds
·septic Tanks
*Hauling

THE

' - - - - - - 10-31 -1 mo.-c

lfroe Eotlmoteo)

~

6263 .

Wanted to buy washers &amp;
dryers in· any condition . Call

GUNS

i~1?.~ mo. od.

Guaranteed''

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201 l·7·tf

COUNTRY CRAFT
COTIAGE

ROOfiNG

.. Free Estimltes"

"12 Veers Experience ..

BON0£0 &amp; WORK GUAAANI££0

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

H. L. Writesel

SAVE 30% OH MORE
On Siding and Roofinf,
Gutter and Downspou s

•DOZER

mo .

- Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo·Boy
-Trencher
-Water
- Sewer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
lARGE or SMALL JOBS

Rooli~

•BACKHOE

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

New Homos- Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cuslo.m Pole Bldas.
&amp; Garaaes
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

Vinyl Siding &amp;

CONTRACTING

Have 1 Carpet
In Your Home
Shampooed "FREE"
And See A
Kirby Demonstration
Completely "FREE"
limited Offer
Call 986-4226
Ask lor Guy Shea
Independent Kirby Dealer

2-23-tlc

HOMELITE
CHAIN SAW
SERVICE AT
.Pomeroy Landmark

~,

· CommuM y. Cu rr entBI/1 Pro. POSPd. and Percent Inc' am
listP.d 1n ordf'!r:
·
Hami:JP.n. Qh1a $ 7 7 7 9
186 86. "11.6.
'
·
PomAroy. ·Ohro. $75_9 1
S86 85. 14.4
·
. . R1o Grande, Qh1o. S7591
. $86.8 5, 14.4. .
· ·
Weltston. O.h 1o. s 7 4 7 8
S86.86. t 6 l
·

Thu rs. 9·6 , Ff'l . 9-12. X·tree.
w int er clothes. TV game,

l[l. Jn mo. pd .

CALL NOW

PH. 992-2280

3 Announcements

!

5 . ··

10 pet . discount o n all
products eJC.cept apeclal for
each church bulletin brought
in. Sunday only . Mc Clure'•

Mt .Aito auction every Sat .

$3000

Dh. so happy and so bright.
Jhere is perfoct jo_y and
• beauty
,In this everlasling light.
-All the pain and grief is
over
Every restless tossing
passed .
·
I am now at peace .forever
Safely home in Heaven at
, last.
Sadly missed by wife Hazel
&amp; Children, also by dauah·
ter Madolene &amp; grand·
daughter Brenda Kay Chal·
tin.

- --1

10/20/ U.n:

Middleport

&amp; Vicin ity

wva . 304·773·6786 or
304· 773·91 86.
p.m. 614-985-4392 ask lor

"Water Pipe
"Gas Pipe
"Regulators
"Fittings
"Drips
PHONE,

10-13·1 mo.

COAL

'
'

' "IJO
1 "1(10

.. G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

742-2328

CHESTER, OH.

STRIP

..

1l OG

· rn~l~as~1ll\iilli!ll inDiliOTofumbus.()h, 0 4 32 t

12-20-tfc

10/1212 mo. pd .

CHESTER

MINE RUN

Sadly missed by Wife
&amp; Family

Public Notice

PVIolic NGIIIce

&amp; Vicinity

Call

night, 8 p.m. Starting 304-675-3190.

Who Passed Away ·
Nov. 1, 1979
I see not a step before
me
As I tread on another
year:
But I've left the Past in
God's Keeping
The future His mercy
shall clear;
And what looks dark in
the distance
!\lay brighten as I draw
near.

l ,. ...
..,,.,.,

' .- - - -- --'"-u .u.,--111-'....,_ '--I
' ~-

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
Long Bottom, OH . 4$743
985-4193 or 992-3067

ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks
"Your Place or M;ne"

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-llc •

3-7-tfc

IN MEMORY OF
. EARL DEAN

~ G,.,_

h·u., h !lo

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

PH. 742-2456

•Refrigerators

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3196

COOt and atyte number.
NEECLEWIJRK
,._

l. -

Ul

Salem Twp. Rd. 180
~-~~ter, Oh .. 45726
· ' Bill Eskew

•Dryers •Freezers

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

To ora.. send $2 .00 IIIUI 50&amp; lor
PClllaQI and IIIJMIMrtg 11)1 each

6"'
"'""-·
t;,.

U6 Qvy.,D:ol

Rd.

614-367-7101 .

simple stilches from
4-ply worsted ¥&amp;m.
Great for carrying hoi
or cold dishes loa polluck supper. No. 5030
' has full directions,

' ones

2"' ll ie 0 • -

Kitchen Cabinets - . Roof·
ing - Siding - Concrete
Palios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

General Welding

All Makes

3-11 -tfc

I am home in 1\eawen, dear

4!11

Tri-County

•Washer• •Dishwashers
•Ranges

No Sunday Calls

· j n memoiY of George
./ttcHaffie Sr. who passed

U J ......., ..,...

10·3·1 mo. pd.

Crochet a handy

lA"'"'-" !"""··- ~ ~

COLUMBlA GAS
ant to order s of the PubliC
OF OHIO, INC.
Util111eS CommiSSIOn of Oh10.
83-926·0A·A.IR
PRESENT RATES-x
(CHIWCOTHE DIV.
The pmsent ra tesvervbvrate
COMMUNmES(
schedule. depend1n~ on loc•
NOnCE •
liOn w.th1n the area afl ecled by
Not1ce 15 hereby g1ven that
thP. apphca110n. as shown m the
Cotumb1a Gas 'Of Oh10. Inc .
companson bel ow
200 C1v1c Center Dnve. Colum x - Includes 50 559 cen ts
bus. Oh1o. has hied an Apphca per 100 cub1c feet Gas Cos t
lion w1th the Publ1c Utd1tleS
Recovery AdJuStmen t flffect~Ye
Comm1SS10n of Oh1o 1n wh1Ch·1t
Sep t 9. 1983. and ad1usted to
ret~uests that the Comm1ss1on
reflect Oh10 Exc1se TaK on
f1nd and determtnP. that the . Gross Receipts of Publ1c
Ax1st1 ng rates for gas SArv1ceto
Utilities.
PROPOSED RA'TES·x
customers m the ComrnuM tes
A "'Customer Charge"' of
of Hamden . Pomeroy. R1o
Grande. and Wellston are
S6 24 per mi'rtAf per month.
unJUSt and ~re unfa1r and are
regardless of the amoun t of gas
1nsutftCHmt to y1eld rP.asonable
consumed. an d 73 278 cents
compensaiiOn for th1s seMce.
per 100 cub1c feel per mete r
The rates presently be1ng calper month . for all gas
consume d
lected from the apprOximately
3.47 4 customers affected by
The percentage 1ncrease
th1s apphcat1on are those presaver prese nt ra tes IS shown·
cnbed m 4 different PUCO Rate
below for an average-b1ll of 11 Schedules . pursuant tovanous
Mcf per month:
O.rd1nances passed by The
(The apphcable compar1son
MuniCIP311MS on ·August 1.
tor each com munl!v w1ll be

- ~----~ --

··--

•*-, . v ..-

773-5040

10- 3·1 mo. pd.

casserole canier in

,,,,.,.,, J!'"' ..

t!Z ............

SM ALL

Minersville, OH.

985-3561

949-28tr0

5030

1 11"'"' ......

71 &amp;_ £ _ ...

OR

992-6030

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
· SERVICE

SIDING CO.

7 4-. ... .,.,.._.

17- ~

Public Notice

'"'"~ea . r

75---··-·

7, . ._..__ .. _, __ _

JOB - BIG

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

BISSELL

•·r 1/w

f :lfl.•-• ifi•••l l"'lf'"" '""'

•Reasonable

•Work Guaranteed

~,:~g~S4~r",""

Free

Wri'• Dlllly S.ntinll CllssifiH Dilpt.

j , IIHN"ill /{ l ••l ••t•hu ll &lt;'

•E,.;perlenced

Cleaner, one h•lf mile up

614-992-2679 .

PHONE 992-2156

71 A--s-

SAVEMORE-MARK
Coal &amp; Kerosene
Heaters
sgg TO '189
Also Army Supplies,
Radios, watches &amp;
General Variety
2nd St. Across From
Post Office
Mason, w. Va.

PLUMBING and
HEATING

......Giiiiiiioiiil ........ .. .....P.iimiirov .........

dotivory , Dovi o Vac uum

Clifton, W.V. 304-773 ·
5873.

D&amp;J

JEWELL'S

992- 2196
Middleport, Ohio
1· 13-tfc

520 JERICHO RD.
PT. ~~~SA~!· W._'!~ ·¥.
1-:&lt;liA-675 -1353 ~

Costume prizes were awarded at
the anmlBI hallowl!en party · of
Salisbury Junior Troop 1100 !rid at
the school.
Donna Hatfield was the judge and
awarded prizes to Tara Humph·
reys, Rae Lynn Basham, Kristen
King, Kristen Stanley, and Rebecca
Bowers.
Games played included scream
In the dark, bobbing for apples and ·
fortune telling. Cupcakes, candled
apples, potato chips, pop, and
cookies were served. Bags of candy
were given to the scouts.
Othen a !tending were Marcia
King, Misty Butcher, Lort Hayes,
Pam Whaley , Stephanie Banks,
Mrs. Basham, Mrs. Linda Blowers
and Justin, and J . T. Humphreys.
Plans were made for the trOOp to
visit Fenton Glass on Oct. 16. Gll'ls
were reminded to turn In thell'
registration forms.

71 1r""U'""S.
7l v...... wo

742 _2328 •·li -Uc

RADIATOR
SERVICE

1982.
)

Resident ial - New and rewirinr; Commercial and In·
dustria l.
•
BONDED
AII .Work Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214
After 5 PM
' ·
11·1-t mo. pd. •

"lowest Rates
Around
"Dump Tru.ck
Servt·ce
SEPTIC TANK$
A SPECIALTY

J -3-tf c

THE
TROPHY
KING

away I year ago, Nov. I,
l&amp;lo _ _ _

MIlls ' .'
ELECTRIC

p~l&gt;-,,

lll.COart Sl.', POIMrDJ, Oltio 45761

•

;ard saleS 1

chine
p•rt•. -and
SWEEPER and sewi.ng
m aPick up •nd

Al TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT . 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE , OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Holland . Bush Hog
Farm Equ ipmen t
Uealer
Farm Equipment '
Parts &amp; Service

Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

1011.9/2 mo · pd

Junior Troop
1100 party

NO\Iember 2. 1982, and De·
x - Includes 50 .559 cen ts
cember ~0 . 1979.
·
per 100 c ub1c feet Gas Cost
Columb• a Gas of Oh to. Inc .." Recovery Ad Justment effective
fUrt her requests that the Com- • Sept1 9, 1 983, and adjusted to
re flect Oh1o Exc1se Tax on
m1SS1on fix and determine
un1form. 1ust and reasonable "Gross Rece1pts at pubhc
rates to be charged and
util1t1 es.
PERCENTAGE INCREASE
collected by Cofu mb1 a Gas of
Oh1o. Inc. for the serv1ce
OVER PRESENT RATE
rendered to the general sefVIBecau se thi S application ptaces cus1omers 1n the affected
poses to esrabl1sh umform rates
comrnun.r1es and subst1tute
lor gas serv1ce wh1ch Is cur·
such rates for those rates
rently prov1ded under 4 d1ffer·
currently being charged pursuent rate schedules. the mcrease

-----·.. --

T

Only tlrst place awards were
given In the adujt category and
ptizes went to Jamie Scally,
prettiest; Millie Price, ugliest; Jean
Ann Bradbury and Scotty Hayes, a
team , funniest, and AnltaMIIJI!rand
Karen Holden, also a team, most
original.

1979. Dlll:emtrer I&gt;T9ff2: -

, WINNERS -These are aorne of the winners of tile
pre-tiCbool through grade two category coetume

USED
APPLIANCES

SCIPIO RECYCLING

kuma Tyree;

Chamber of Commerce, was a pwnpkln cutting
contest. Ron Ash, president oltbe charnbertenned the
Hallowen party as " very successful." ·

3 Anf'louncements

Business Services

T

Winners In the p~scbool through
grade · category, · first
lhroogh thlrd, respectively, ~:
prettiest, Lisa llonaker, JesBlca
Mulford, Jessica Mitchell; funniest,
Ryan Rowe, Jeramy Rowe, Be- .
thany Boyles; · ~est, Jason
Nelgler, Brad Davenport, Ryan
Bareswlll; most original, Chastity
McKinney, Autumn Conde, Na- •

Or

The Dally Sentinel-Page ...7

Ohio

r========~rr==~:=::::::===;;rr========::;~r::::::::::::::::::;Tr========::;~ auppliea.repa ir.

second

The Daily Sentinel
PUMPKIN CUTfiNG
Featured at the
conununity Halloween party held in Pomeroy
Monday night, sponsored by the Pomeroy Area

.,

Middleport Chamber. Parents and
teachers d. schools worked cooperatively with the obseiVance. , .
Costuming worn by the hundreds
ot partlctpants sMwed creativity
and origiDallty creatlllg a challenge
for the judges. Pri7J!S were awarded
to the first three placei In four ·
categories.

APPLE BOBBING - Approximately 110 younpt8lll ~ In
the "bobbing for apples" contest at the COIIIIDunlty llaloween PB1V held
on Pomeroy's upper parking lot M"''day nJsllt,The - 1 was ~red
by the Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce. Approdl'nately 480111lulls
and children attended with 000 persons In 001tunaes. Boo Ash, pmildent
of the chamber stated that It wDIIn all probabiUty be an annual event.
(Photo by Paul Gerard)

Pomeroy- Middleport,

HOME LOANS Low
ra.te . LaadefMongage,

fix-

ne .

hnoleum, 30 ft . awning,
back deck .. aXe. • con d. Call

446·8382.

1979 Duke 14x70 2 bdr ..
famMy .r oom, AC. micro·
wave. underpinning, total

Roferonceo. Cot! 304-878· :stoto. Atll.,o. Ohio. 1·114· llioctric, Rio Grande. Colt·
3748 after 11:30.
'692-30111 .
114· 246-9226 .

· ---~~-:I

I
'

.

'

�Nr..ember 1 1983
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

51

They'll Do It Every Time

Household Goods

TV &amp; Applloncn, 127 Third

2 bdr. 1 2x&amp;O. t3.600. 3
bdr .. 12x70, total electric. 2
betho 17,1100. Call 1114448-0176.

shower . Owner moving
mutt tell immediately, Call

Spin wathera, gas &amp; elecl:ric
dryers, auto waahers. gas &amp;.
electric ranges, refrigerators. TV sets.
Large wood burning add· on
furnace -brand new -heats
hot water -automatic
cont-rols-firebrick lined .

Queen oizo hlda-o-bed. llfnyt

$590. Call614-256-1216 .

446-7171 or 448-8288 after 5PM .

Ml1c. Merch1ndl"

2-P211ix14 onowtlroo. n-.
f80 pelr . 2-P205x1 4 tlroo,
VG. f40 poir. 4-Ford 6 lug
IIWheelo whh hob Clpl, .40.
5-Blezor 6 lug WhHl. UO.
Cell · 614-379-2307 otter
6PM .

Ave .. Gelllpolio. 446-1699.

For tale by owner, 12x65
trailer, with water: bed.
bllautiful coordinat&amp;ct llvingroom, large handmade tile

154

KIT

'N' CARLYLE"'

.....

1983 Necchi sawing machines . tree arm $1 29, Antique•. oak furniture re·
Dial-o-01atic. monograms, production, misc. items. UN
makes but1,on holes, sews on our Christmas llyaway plan.
buttons . over caat &amp; much Conkels, Tupper&amp; Plains.
more . Regular priced
$349.95 now $130 . 26 yr. 15ft. Hotpoint refrigerator.
factory warran1y. free deliv- Very clean, 3 years old;
ery . Call 614-385-4535 .
Asking 1250 . 614-992-

Windsor. 14x70. with &amp;Jt ·
pando . 3 bdr .. 2 baths.
priced at appr.o x. payoff.
Rodney , Oh . 304 -676 1728 for information.
4 mobile homes. 1 o· and 1 2'
ft . wide . 2 bedroom fu ·rniahed . Low priced .
Brown's Trailer Park . 614 -

3517 .

Used sofa &amp; chair, love seat.
cedar wardrobe, 4 drawer
chest &amp; bed. Call446 -1 1 71 .

992-3324 .

81

Apu. for rent. 614-992 5908 .

1981

3 bedroom

Dey 304-675-2318 o'r after
6:00PM 675-1361 .

14x70

Shulb: Mobile Home. 1 '12

baths

with

front

porch

12x66 . 614-247-2664 .
1976 1 4x70' trailer. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, large kitchen,
SlO,OOO . 304-773-5023.

•

2 bedr. cabin on Raccoon
Creek . Lease required. Call
446-0093 before 6, 4460796 alter 6.
2 bdr. house available N~v :

2 bedroom apt. in Middle-

port. Utili1iea included .
$210 . plus deposi1. After 6

1.:.__________
1 bedroom apt. in Middleport . Uti.titles included .
$200. plus depoal1. Aher 6
p.m. 614-992-7177 :

1. one mile out of town on
At . 588. Call 614-2459170 .
l_:__ _ __ __ __,_ _
-------------------- 2 bedroom ..._.rnished aptt .

304-675-6049 alter 6 p.m.

nished, Stove and refrig .

614-992-2815 from 9 to 5

Mobile Home Moving, Li -

canted and Insured, Free
Estimates S100. per hookup minimum . Phone 304576 -2711 or 576-2868 .
USEO MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-576-2711 .

For ,.le by owner in Hillview
sub dlv Greer Rd. 'A mi. off
Rt . 2. MObile home wi1h
add . rooms, 3 br. living room
12K24, kitchen 12lll12, dr
12x1 1. utility r. 12x1 2.
-- 24x 12 outbuilding , 124x10 outbuilding , fruit
house 10x10 on three large
lots. Good water. Elec .
stove, frig ., air cond, dryer.
304-773-5282 .

1- - - - - - - - -

2 bedroom houn in Langsville area . Deposit II references required. Country ho·ma,
large yard . 614-742-2641 .

House and two acres, lo cated on 1OOac. farm near
Cornstalk . Built-in Country
kitchen, fireplace, air, etc .
Available In November .
$260 .00 per month pfua
security . Call 216-327 7548 af1rer five .

gas, 3 bedrooms. 2 bath.
$12.900 . 1970 ELCONA ,

65 x 12, gas, 2 bedrooms,
furnished,$6,495 . 1969
CHAMPION, 60 x 12,J111, 2

firniSlled ,

$6,996 . 1974 CAMERON,

1973 DOUGLAS, 65 x 14.

gas, 3 bedrooms. furnished.
$ 7 , 2 9 5 . 1 9 7 9

42 Mobile Homes

1984 14 · wide. 3 bedrooms.
1 1!2 baths. 6 inch outside
walls. all-electric, com p 1 e t e l'y f urn ish e d ,
S 1 3,995 .00; 14'x50' 2 bed-

rooms, all electric Fleetwood mobile home, delivered ·and set up on your lot
$9,995, 10 percent down.
low bank financing
cavailable.
All-State Modular
Homes
located halfway between
Huntington and Point
Plaatan1 on St. Rt . 2.
304-676·271 1.
home,

3

bedroom, 1111 baths. Parked
KS. K Mobile Homes. ready
to move in . 304-675-3000.
Lots

&amp; Acreage

35 ecres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd . Owner financing available. Call446-8221
after 6 weekdays.
3 1/4 acre lot, flat, some trees.
restricted . 5 acre lot, flat,
between 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park
&amp; Cinema, rural water city
schools . Call 614-3792196.

1 lots in West Columbia.
Rt.82 . Gas and utility hookup. f2600 . 614-742 -2369 .

Five acres of land with
electric and water. Down·
payment and pay balance on
land contract . 304 -8752449.

Farm- Pliny 70 acres. good
well, refiniahed house.
priced in 40's. 304-9372031. Plantation Real1y,
Broker.

36

Apartments. 304-675 ·
6648.

APARTMENTS . · mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis. 614-446B221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .

Apartments now available to
elderly &amp;. disabled with an
income of less 1han
percent of adjusted incOme. Phone 304-675-8679.
Ferry. 304-675-264B.

675-4072 .

2 bdr . mobile home. CAll

·-

,
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 .Oliva St .. Gallipolis. 6

~

For Sale or Trade

54 Misc. Merchandise

___;__ _ _ _ _ _ __

Oak firewood. large pickup
loed 136. Avarogeloed 130.
304-676-4216.

- -·

.···.... -- ·"
. . ....
'"'.

9760 . •

61

Farm Equipment

9ftx401n. 304-6711-4671 .

4807 day_. 446-2602 ave .

2 bdr. 1r{lliler partially fur-

lot, 6 mi. from town, water
furnished. no pats. one small
child . Call 446-01514.
2 bdr. parti.ally furnished.
Kerr-Harrisburg Rd. $176
mo. Call 446-9384.
2 bdr. mobile home reasonable. prefer retired couple,
ref . &amp; dep required . Call
614 -256- 1291 .

or cool. t690. Call 614256-1216.

Vacancies for ladies or men
'in privata partial care home.
Room &amp; board, handicap,
24 hr . nursing care. RallO·
nabla in Crown City. Call

46

Space for Rent

Furnished office for rent.
Close to city building and
court house . Call 446-0856
days. t126. mo.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

Very nice 2 bdr. mobile .992-7479 ,
home in good loca1ion near
Green School. ~ Unfurnished
49
For Lease
excep1 carpe1 , C-A. 8200
mo. includes water. sewage
&amp; garbage. Call eve. 448For lease Modern office
,_0_2 _5_4_
. ------suite especially good for
•Two bedroom furnished
insurance. real estate or
trailer, $160.00. Plus dap·
accounting. 1300 sq.ft .
osit . Crab Creek Road . Four room a plus lge. clerical
Phone 304-676-1206.
office. klr:chenette and storage room. Nat. gas. central
air, carpet, Rent very retso·
44 Apartment
nable for this quality office.
for Rent
Corner Third &amp; Olive. Gallipolit,

2bdr .. 2 bath, 11 Court St .
Ref. &amp; dep. $325 mo. Call
446-4926.-,

Small turn . house 1 or 2
adults only, no pets. Call
446-033B.

Oh.

Ph.

614c446-

3994. Evens Enterprises,
9-6, Mon . thru Frl.
Wanted to Lease; 1983
Tobacco Poundage. Call
446-7380.
0
-. .

51

0 J.O
~

Must Sell new demonstrator
Sewing Machines wil:h treearm, 12 designs etc. were
over 1400 now 898. Call
446-9301.

Firewood- cut up, slabs. $16
pickup load. Call 614 -2465804.
.

Wood splil:1ar hyraulic A
horae power. gas motor.
axe. cond. Call446·3171.
Firewood fo.: ,_ sale $36 1
pickup load delivered, 10
loada for 8300 . Call 614266-1427.
19' portable color TV &amp; 2

gaa warm moring stoves.
Call 614-367-0409. ·

Guns: good Selection shotguns, rifles 1 &amp; handguns. We
buy. sell or trade. Good
prices. Franks Pawn Shop,
430.Second Ave .. Gallipolis.
Ctl 446-0840.

·

1 VW Super B~le. 1971. 1
VW lug, 1974. 814-9923517 oftor II or 814-441 73B9 onytlme.

e.

tlvo Coro
Trucko. Longollflle,ll14-742-2734.
1881 · Dlooel Flobblt LS.
10,000 mlleo. Exc. cond.
13,960. 614-949-2273 . •
1878 Pinto, 4 -ed. 1900.
114-882-7403.
11n Pontiac Orond LoMana. Good runrilng cond.
N-bodyworlc. 114-9923717 otter 3.

Service . Call448-77.95.

-·Oft.
j:;~=~===;===
304-175-50311.
Livestock

mere, 8 yro. old. Cell 8142411-611, 5.

Kennels. AKC Chow pup-

pie&amp;, CFA Himalayan, Per·
sian end SiemeM kittens.
Cell 448-3844 alter 4 . .
AKC Reg. gold Cocker Spa-

niel. female, 6 mo. old. Call

4x4. Excellent condition.
304-1711-1859 oftw 4:00

0

0 '

' ' ..

OOo

0

• ••

Household Goods

ferred . Call 448-2215.

Furnished upstaiu ap1.. 3
rooms &amp; bath. clean. adults
only, no pets, ref. req.

FOR A PEAC~­
FUL WAY TO
DEAL WITH
THE ALIEN!&gt;.

Houto rololng,lovollng, reollllng\ concrete work. bliMESTIMATES.
3808.

304-871-

c.~lfhood

Nov. 304-273-2848.
Plgo. 304-1711-3224 .

"'.· .

News hour

18n Oldo Cutlooo Supromo. One ownor. looded,
111.000 mlleo, U,DOO.IIrm.
304-8711-3771.

Saturday Night
at the Fights from San

([) Good News
ril 0 (I) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortune

OJ

ANNIE

ln1ured. free estirft''"•Phone 11 4-3117-0113•. ooll
after 6.

SEAMLEsSOUTTER~~

•

-

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND .HEATING

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 448-3888 or 4484477
JIM'S PLUMBINO &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Fomorly Dewltt'o
Plumbing. Coli 614-31706' 6.

Carter
Trenaportetton.

•·

.,..'
'

GASOLINE ALLEY

But Phyllis,
the won;t part
is
'

'

Lonnie Bogga Excaveting.
Dozer, beckhoe, dumptruck .

-

1 ·Triple registered Blue Tick
male 31JJ years old. 2·atarted

-·

71

"

Work by hour or job. Coli
441-7903.

. . . .... ....

dogs &amp; 1 pup, UKC &amp; PCA

regiS1ered. Trial on older dog"

Evans

o I

992-6883.

only. 614-742-2364.

a.

•• ••

&amp;

•

•

•

.,
.

Ca1 216 hoe. dozers, cr~ne, , ,
k»aders, dump truck. Call

..

114-446-1142 bltwun
7:dOAM &amp; II:OOPM.

Auto• tor Sale

AKC Registered Doberman

'

.~ .

Good· 1 Excavating, IMise· ments. footera, driveways.
Mptic tanka, landacaping.

puppieo. Cell 875-1822.

AKC Bassette puppies, 7
weeks old. Shots, wormed.

C~ll

AKC aolid block lemolo
German Shepard, $200.00.
304-676-7771.

· .10' •

anytime 441-41137, . . ,

James
. owner.

ready to go. 304-876-5214.

L.

Davison.

Jr.

-~~~

-···.

..

J.A .R. Construction Co.
Weur Lin••· Footer•.
Drains. All klndt ofD;tchlng.
Rutlond,
· 2803.

AKC Registered Doberman
puppiea. One black and one
fawn. e 60. to $85. Phone

WINNIE

Oh. 614-742'

WHY, THIS PlACE
15 50 GLOOMY IT

WOUlD DEPRESS

Meigs Excavating. Bulldo••
• backhoe HNice. 811• .~:
menta. foolera,landecaptng. ''"IJ •
drivewaya, . term pond a. ·• .

304-676-1B22.

Woodburner fireplace insert.
Can be converted to free
standing stove. like new.

A8AT/

814-742-2407orl14-742- .;
2018.
~ ·
' ' ·-

1350. Cell 446-2813 .

84
&amp;

•
•

Electrical
Refrigeration

448-2206.

• '•

Blue beige striped couch·. ••·
cond .. 8190. Cell 446·

Pe-ele Electric Co. oil
phuao of olo;ctrlc work, 111

...,.
,,.-

work guerantaad. Aerial
truck rental. Call 814-441- "' •

Singer sewing machin'e
makes designs, etc., coa1
$600 new, axe. cond. t89
cash or t&amp; per week. 446-

2718.

BARNEY

SEWING Mochlne repolro,

1ervice. Authorized ftlng..-

9301 .

Soloo •

Sclaaon.

F1bric Shop, ·

1

• '

I

86

Real Estate
Wanted

'

General 1-!aullng

'

'• .

JONES BOVSWATEA SEA-

...~

vtCit. Coli 814,317-7471
or 1114-317-01181.

'

'iPU
HAVE
TO HOLLER!!

J"U6HRID!!

lervlco Shorpon

Romeroy. 992-2284.

Cell 441-

GtT IN HERE
AN' CLEAN
OFF 'fOUR
BED!!

-.'

have a buyer for a
tobacco farm . Must have 50
ac. of cropland . Please contact David Wiseman, 4463844. Wiseman Real Estate
Agency.

'
PEANUTS

41
JIM8 WATER SERVICE. •
Cell Jim Lonlef, 304-117117317.
•
I

olr. UIIO mo .. ooc. dep. &amp;
ref. Call446 -31711 .

87
House b8autiful 3 bdt·· 2
beth, LA. FA, wall to wall
carpet, diahwasher, g11

;

l-IE WAS STANPIN6

I T~HNK HE

WITH I-llS

WASWAVIN6

ARMS

IN TI-lE AIR
LiKE THIS ...

IT WAS A

HIS ARMS
AT ME!

•'

Donn•

•
I .

1 2:30

••

TRISTATE
• ';
UPHIKAT!RY IHOI'
:
111:1 leo. A .... Golllpollo.
•

hoot, olr cond .. In Golllpollo.
Rot. req. Cell 441-1408
ottor I.

'

Upholttary

441-711:1 Df 441-111:1.

' ..

•

I Answer:

EPOCH

OBTUSE

MISHAP

What the new fathe r of quintuplets just
couldn'l believe -HIS " CENSUS "

Jumblt Book No. 14 , conlll!lnlng110 puzzltl, II avalllblt for $1 .!15 PIUI 55C pal It~
and handling from Jumble, clo thla newaptper, Bo• M, Nor-wood, N.J . 07841 .
lncluct. rotJf name, eddrna, zip cocM and maka cheeks ptytbltto Ntwlptperboaka .

.

1:00

-: .

I

Thloko of the Night
I]) 1D Lo10 Night yllfth
O.vld Lottennen
.(1) Jeok lenny Show

. dtI! 1 Morrlad Joon
(i) En10rtlllnmont Tonlgh1

IIIIIJ CNN'HNdllne Nowa

•

.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

-

The double rebounded
.a sm of youth and lt kes to ge t

Tea111 In order

.ern

WB

4 bdr. houM 6 ICfH of l1nd
·on Rt. 160 in Vinton. Central

Entertainment

head-on , f60 min)
(2) MOVIE: 'An Officer and
a Gentleman'
(2) MOVIE: 'Kentucky Fried
Movie'
·
I]) I Spy
Cil
NBA
Basketball:
Waahina_!on at Atlanta
ril Ill ll2l Just Our Luck
Shabu and Keith join
forces when Professor Bob
threatens blackmail.
Ill (I) ® Mississippi A
former peace activist hires
Ben to prove her innocence
of murder charges that
happened 16 years ago .
f60 -min.)
IIll!ll Nova 'Anthropology
on Trial. ' TonighfS program examines what people being studied think of
the anthropologists who
study them. f60 min.)
[qosed Captioned]
Ell MOVIE: 'The Candidate'
8:30 (1)11) illl Happy Days Richie and Fonzie come to
blows over Richie's decision to remain in Milwaukee. [(:losed Captioned]
9:00 UC2)ffi Remington Steele
Remington
'Steeles' a
scene on a TV commercial
when he swings across the
set to save Laura from a
would-be killer. (60 min.)
liD 700 Club Today·s
'guests are to be announ ced.
(I) lllll21 Three' a Company
Ill (I)® MOVIE: 'This Girl
For Hire'
(I)
l!ll VIetnam: A
Television History 'America's Enemy (1954- 1967) .'
The Vietnam War is looked
at by Vietcong guerillas,
North Vietnamese leaders
and by American prisoners
of war. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
9:30 C2)
MOVIE:
'Southern
Comfort'
(I) Ill illl Oh Madeline
1 0:00 U (]) ffi Bey City Blues
Ozzie Peoples is honored
with a. dey of appr\ciation
and catcher Lee Jacoby
breaks up with his girlfriend . (60 min.)
@
Billiards: Women's
World InVitational Coverage of the Women's World
Invitatio nal 7-Ball Championship is presented trom
the Playboy Club, Atla~tic
City, NJ. (SO min .)
Clllllll21 Hart to Hart
IIl Firing Line
l!ll News
@)INN News
10:16 (]) HBO Rock: Donna - A
Hot Summer Night
Cil TBS Evening News
10:30 liD Ozzle end Harriet
l!ll This Old House
ell Comed'i_ Time
1 1:00 D (2) @ ri! U CIJ ID Ill
illl News
liD Another Life
@ SportsCenter
IIl Or. Who
To Be Announced
Ell Benny Hill Show
11:16@ NCAA Football: Navy at
,
Notte Dame
11:30 0 (]) fiJ Tonight Show
(]) MOVIE: 'Honkytonk
tylan'
(]) Album Flash
liD Doble Gillis
Cil CotUna
())Soap
G (I) Magnum P.l. Magnum is hired bye nominee
for the U.S. Supreme Court
to find the woman he left in
Pearl Harbor. (R) (80 min.)
()) Lo1enlght America
ID M•A•s·H
IIIID Nlghtllno
Ill Twilight Zone
12:00 (]) MOVIE: 'Richerd Prv_or
·-- tlvo on tho lunHt- 8tr1p--·
liD lumo &amp; Allon
III MOVIE: 'Tho Vplechl
Pspero'
()) Nlghtflne
(j) MOVIE: 'The Dirty

... IN YOUll NE'I:T liFE- Y'
WANT T' BE MORE
CIJREFUL IN TH' CHOICE
0' YOUR ENEMIES!

E &amp; R T~ Servlcl1 '1\olly

•so7.

Yesterday's

to help five cabbies who
lost their jobs due to their
boss,. members of the A
Team set up a competing
business to banle the inan

' •

bloemenu. otc. Clll 4411-

AKC Cocker Spaniel puppies. Champion blood linea,
Pedigrees available. Shots&amp;
wormed. $200. &amp; e2t50.
Serious inquiries only. 614·

U (]) ffi A

8:00

304-886-3802.

ponds. dll:che1,

crll

Tonight

pleco cuotom Itt your

[I]CIXIXJ
(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles : SKUNK

Ell One Day at a Time ·

Weter Welle. Commercial
and Oomeatlc. Teat holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

Hanna,

gested'by the above canoon.

Print answer here:

bout featuring Nino Larocca vs . Harold Volbrecht
from San Ramo, Italy .

304-876-2088 or 8714&amp;60.

WORK By Ted

Now arra nge the circled letters to
form the. surp~ answer, as sug -

Ramo, Italy Saturday Night

rienced roofing, including
hot tar applicetion, carpenter, electrician, mason. Call

DOZER

1

at the Fights presents at
10-round
Welterweight

'

8360. Cell 448-2107 or
614-246-6027.

U (]) Tic Tac Dough

'CD ESPN's

446-7781.

daughter of PJ Wildfire. 1·

tJ

IFEEDAC

rJ

THE C~OOI&lt;EPAR!CHI·
TeCT PI5COVER"Ec;&gt; THAT
P~ISON WALL'S WEREN 'T
I!UILT THI5WAY.

Ell Jelferoons

7:30

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe-

Bird dog tor oola. 1 yr. old, 1 _e_4__H_•_v_•_G_r•_i_n_ _

I

IELLBOWt.

®News

F • K'Tree Trimming. atump
removol.
Col1875-1331.
.
.

82

Y'Tfj

I

--

Ill illl People's Court

houMi coils. Coli 576-2399
or 441-24114.

rnem Wlitlrproofing. fOundation work . ..:FREE

711 lbo. f11. to UO. 614- 1973 Chevy Capric d111ic.
9811-4104.
•4 doer. good tlreo. excellent
concltlon. f476.00. Call
FlftNn 1,200 lb. A.l. bred, 304-1711-11818.

vaccineted. Holatein heltert. will treahen In

'.

Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola. Quaur, and

.

Wood &amp; coal stove, auto.
thermoatal:, brick lined. Call

.. • H

TO SHOW ~UPPOI':r

GET your carpet SHIP

PM.

Aegiatered · QUarter horae

AT 10 ~M.SHARP

@This Week In the NBA
(1)11) illl ABC News
Ill (I)® CBS News
(!) Buslneu Report
fill Over Eooy
7:00 - D (]) PM Magazine
(]) Alias Smith and Jones
@ SportsCen1ar
(I) Carol Burnett
ril Entertainment Tonight
(IJ Charlie's Angels
Ill (I) Wheel of Fortune
(!) l!ll MacNeil/lehrer

RON'S Telellfolon Sorvlce .

SHAPE WITI1 CAPTlAN
STEAMER. Wotor romovol.
fumlture clea.--ing, frM utimotes. 814-4411-2107.

1870 Monte Carlo, dual

2205.

Furnished 3 rooms. with
private bath. Reference ·pre-

Utllltlet paid.
1619.

614-448-0475.

614-256-8509.

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

Furnished apt . $185 . Water
paid, 2 bdr .. 131Yz 4th.
Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 7
p .m.

Troybilt Tillers Sales S. Service. Swlsherl Implement.
St. Rt. 7, North. Gallipolis.

2851.

1979 Ford Truck F-160,

Sperry Now Hol.. nd 6811

Dragonwynd Catl:ery -

Cell 446-0766.

·,en Orond Prix loJll».d,
t3,000,117,000. Coll44e-

HILLCREST KENNELS

Tobacco atrip.per. uMd dne

OFF
LI5HT?

I

6 14· 446·4088 .

I

Doberman puppies: Stud

EA?Y A F EW
QUE•TION?.

VE.lYONE

microw1vea. Heating 6 ;.,.,Cooling. Sheet Metal Work.
G•llla Refrlgerel:ion Co. Call

.

Food.

HERe.AND A,; K

ASK itJ6

compoctoro. diohweohen.

Guaranl:eed. Advancec:l

prompt delivery. 614-2566246.
.

Fireplace insert-still in factory carton-automatic
For rent Sleeping Rooms controla-2 blowers-glass
and light house keeping door-ash pan-fits 30 in. to
room1. Park Central Hot•l. 48 in. fireplace-burns wood

utoa for Sale

tor, fOoy 114-592·40
(night 1114-888-82011.)

Dog

LET'S 5 EE IF
WE CA.O 5 ET lf..l

THEIR ?PACECJ'&lt;AFT-

·

••hauat, body perfect, runs
·~-- 304-8711· 7981 eltor

Delivered. 12''-22''atocked
in yard . HEAP vender,

Furnished Rooms

A

I;;.;:::"=:::;=·=;·::~~;~·=
Jock

~Riflemen

(;REAT! ""'"''' ~ 0'T''" rA ?Y HA?
A,;KED EVERYONE TO
MORE
COPPEI:t!
BRING COPPEJ't &gt;rEM?
HEI'tc JN AN EFFORr TO
?UPPLY THE ALIEN!&gt; WIT H
A METAL THAT CAN POWER

-

11n Chevy Monzo. 4 cyllndor. excellont condhlon.
814-448-8803 or 304-87&amp;1248.

Vortf: Land. race croas pigs.
Pifferenr: av•• • al••· 31 to

45

71

Foreman'• for teA Expen-

Hoapital bed. manra... rails.
New four cap wood bUrning
laundry atove. Metal awning

63
judy Taylor Grooming. Call
KnauH Firewood Pk:kup or 614-367-7220.

3 bdr. 1 V2 bath. mobile
home, on At . 36 . Close to
hospi1al . Call 614-388-

PLASTERING

6 model• refrigerators.
was hera. dryers, reng 11 ,

FOr Sale or trede VW A•bblt,

wood, open only Frldoy, . 1983. 114-992-3617 otter
Saturday, Sundoy 1:00- II or 114-441-7389
. 7 :00 p.m., 304-8711-3334 anytime.

Bording all breeds. Selling

_ (!) l!ll 3-2-1, Contact
Ill Buck Rogers
8:30 D (]) ffi NBC News

Home
Improvements

Appl ..nce 8ervlco AN mokn

69

coverello

$27.60. heavy jeans t10..
rental surplus. · Sam Somerville's, 7 miles East Renna·

Happy

Prairie

~::========;:========~ _c_•_I1_6_1_4_·3_B_8_-9_&amp;_5_7_._ _

piece wood living room sUite
. a... buotor, 3j&gt;t. hhch wood
with 6 inch flat arms 8399, 30 inch General Electric opllttero. 1345.00. Troller
bunk beds complete with range. 195. 304-676-1390 mounl:ed Bhp. hydreuUc
bunkies $199, 2 piece an- after 6 p.m.
wood oplln..-, 14 ton opllttron livingroom suites 8199,
tlng Ioree, f975.00. We
antron , recliners 899. other
hove 19 good uoed choln
recliners $80. maple dine1ta 55 Building Supplies
AWl, f80. to 1200. A
seu 8179, love seats $70,
complete line of Homefite
hide -a - bed 8260, box
uwa and w. are a Homeltte
springs &amp; mattreu twin or
Building materials
full Hrvlce dHI•. New
full $100 set regular-firm block, brick. sewer pipes, Hollond Modol681 Tobocco
$120, maple dinette chairs windows, lin.t ela, etc. ,.,.._, opec ..ll2,6110. Wo
$36. wash stands 134. Claude Winter&amp;. Rio Grande. hllve 1ome fantaadc dnta on
maple rockers 859, 7 piece 0 C 11 814 24
new Alllo Cholmoro tnlctoro
6 11 1
In the 4th quortor. - S.. uo
chrome
dinet1e
8149,
6
Piece dinette
s81set889.
Used
before you deal. Keefer's
bedroom tuitet. rolirgere- 56
Pats for Sale
Service Center, Fit. 17.
tors. ranges, cheat, dressers,
Point Ploooont ond Ripley
wringer washers, TV's,
Rood, 304-8811-3874.
dryeres, &amp;. shoes. Call 4483159.

@ ESPN's SportsForum
Cil Little House on tho

Marcum Roofln'g &amp; Spou1·
ing. 30 yeara ex·perlenca,
apeclatl.t;ngin built up roof.

witch

before 9:00a.m.

CIJ New Treasure Hunt

ntlmoteo. Cell 61 4-2&amp;81 182.

446-0508,

nishad. Buftvilla Rd. Ctll
14, electric, 3 bedrooms, 2 1 4_4_6_·_3_4_3_7_.- - - - - baths, $1 1 ,900. D and W &gt;3 bdr. mobile home, private
Homes. 304-675-4424.

35

614-992-6262 eveninga·or

mornings.

for Rent

SHERWOOD -HILTON. 70 x

Mobile

Small furnished apt. for 1
person. All utilitifs paid.

$12,300. Renting for 30

70 x 14. electric. 2 bed. all elect .. 2V2 mi., Rt.
room. furnished , S10.900 .
1973 CAMERON, 65 ;~12.
new carpel:, ready now.
elec1ric, 3 bedroom, 11/2 $176 mo. Security dep . II
bathl. furnished $7,496. ref. Call Mr . Dobson 446-

14x70

614-992-5434, 614-9926914 or 304-B82-2566 .

2 bedroom apt. a1 Gall.

1972 ELCONA. 44 x 24.

bedrooms,

or 614-992 -2362 frori16 to
7 p.m.

Maple table with chaira
8100. Tapen gas range 840,
coffee table f7. mattress &amp;
box springs $30. Call 304-

p.m. 614-992-7177.

1981 14ic70. 'Shultz limited
mobile home, microwaVe,
dishwasher, central air, underpenning , three bed - ·
rooms. 1% baths, ~xcellent
condition, $15,600. Call

$236 . month. 3 bedroom.
Fully carpeted. gardenarfur;

Used refrigerator for sale.

inoulated

••

textured ceilings commercial · and reaidantial, frM

trencher. 1-614-194-7B42. 1

$21.,

6:00 . . (2) ()) riJ • ()) liD Ill
ll2l Newo .
(2) MOVIE: 'Super Fun'

~

CAPTAIN EASY

614-992-3001.

Camouflaged new Armyclo1hing size 2 children'&amp;- 62
men's, heavy denim jecke1a

·-· ·
..•

STUCCO

...

Sentinei-Page-9

I.,........,._
I r_ ....... l
,_.._

EVEN INO

..",_

.. .

R65 dlteh

11/1/83

~-

Cleveland Dornback coal &amp;
wood furnace. Thermosta1
control.. Like new. t460.
Used

+

•••
•

8 ft. olldo In comper wtth
jocko, UOO. Coll441-20711

Cell 448 -80811 or 4414482 .

~

••

Motor• Home•
S. Camper•

The

Television
Viewing

-..... . .

1171 Dodge Von cempor
lnoor-2 . 304-1171111164.

ca.
79

Ohio

DICK TRACY

...

by Lany Wright

recliner. 2 end tablea, platform rocker. all 1 Y, yr. old.

November 1 1983

•.

NORTH

11-1-!!

+K97 5 43

• A95
t K 10 2

+4

WEST

+A 82
.106 3
• Q 9 51
+ K 10 9

er, when 28-year -old Oswald
Ja coby invented the bid
ba ck in I 931. we must admit
that he bid th em with the
same reckle ss abandon that
28-year-old Howard Parker
does in 1983.

.,2
t

A 763

+AQ80.2
SOUTH
+10 6

..

Anyway , his bid put considerable pressure on West,
who finally bid thr ee clubs.

North raised to three hear ts

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

West

Nortb

East

Dbi .

3.
Pass

Pass
Pass

• •

and after East and South had

South

1+

Openi.ng lead:

tw o-heart jump ove rCall
With a mere five-ca rd suit.
We use pre'-em ptivc jump

overcalls, but want some
di stribution values. Howev-

EAST
+QJ

.KQJ87
• J8
+J 7 6 3

s•

into the biddin g wi t h both
feet.
W'e don't approve of hiS

2.

Pass
· Pass

•3

passed, West decided to tr y a
light , boundin g double and

led his three of tru mps .
Howard Jet it ride to his

•.

seven and promptly led a
spade. If Wes t had ducked,

Howard would have risen
with his king , struggl ed
along and probably made his

...

contract , but West rose with
the ace. East dropped t he
jack . West led a low spade

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

and after a me ntal revie w of

Howard Parker o( Baton
Rouge has started a career
as a bridge professional. He
has only 2,000 master points
right now, but is moving up
rapidly. He has the enthusi-

the bidding . Howard decided
that We st wdn'l hold four
spades to the A-Q. He rose
with dummy's king, dropped

'

the queen an d made an ove rtrick and a top score.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~w~td
THOMAS JOSEPH
' ACROSS
4 Conjunction
I Restore
5 Irish city
by

inaway,
&amp;Between(Fr.
for short
7 And not
6 Door sign
8 Ensnare
11 Without
9 "Madame
help
Bovary"
12 Bellini .
10 Engrossed
opera
14 Ireland
13 Down-and-&lt;mt 17 One kind
cowpoke
of school
15 Tree
18 Make over 28 Put back
. 16 Caress
19 Satanical 30 Honored
17 Ready-to-eat 20 Ornamental
guestS'
22 Correct;
loop
seating
improve
21 Play
32 Correct
23·Gambol
24 Redolence
a text
27 Proclama25 Marshal
33 Enumerate
tion
DiUon
34 Opposed
28 Flying
28 Victim
35 Detail
safety
device
29Gameof
horseplay
30 Downgrade
31 Affair
for Alice

38 Hasten
39 Refonner,
Dorothea

40 Bug killer
(abbr.)

41 Celtic deity

42 Geol. time
period

6-+-+-l-+--f!l!

33 ChouEn-3&amp;Wire
measw-e

37 Riding
43 Tokias'
friend

44 Beverage

45 Clocked
46 Movie
player

DOWN

I

Ethiopian
prince
2 Highest

· note
3 Coal
scutUe

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

11

It:

One letter simply stands for another. In thio sample A Ia
. used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lett ers, :
apostrophes, the length and formation ot the words are all hints. E1d\ aay the code letten are different.
.
:. :

-- -

Cll'YPTOQUOTES-"-·__.....,---------:-

L

TJVRY

L.

Y L Y S' V

AJU

QIKWESES

QRKEICR •

EZELSCV

YLY

XSJ M

XSJ M

WL P

E SY

QRKEICR

AURPJSV

WL P.

TJVRY:
'
' .. ..

IBNCCRC

ZUESV

L.

c ..

_, -

.. ;

~

YePslllly'a Crypfaqaole: A GREAT MAN IS HE WHO HAS:.NOTI.alT'I11EHEARTOFACIULD.-MENCIUS

'

., •• ,

�Tuesday, November 1 1983

Ohio.

Dea~line

ignored, credit cut

WASHlNGTON (AP) - The
federal goverrunent' s Une of credit
has been cut off because the Senate
igpored a deadline for final action
and refused to pass leglsliltlon
raising the national debt llrnlt,
which already has hit

$1,389,o:x&gt;,o:x&gt;,OOJ:

VARIETY - Variety reigned In the wide range of
costumlngwhich was worn by over500youngstersand

adults attmdlng lllc ~ddleport Conununlty llalloween Party Monday night .

Happenings around Meigs County...
Candidates invited Fire destroys truck
to public meeting
A 1982 pickup truck owned by '
E. A. Wingett , former Raclne
mayor, todayextendedanlnvitation
to all Racine Village officials and
candidates for public office this fall
to attend a public meeting he hils
called to 7: D this evenlng at the
village hall.
PurpoSe of the meeting is · to
discuss misdemeanors taking place
in the community, Wingett says,
and he Is urglng the public to a ttend
and offer suggestions towards
curbing these lncidents. He has also
invited residents of communities
near Racine.
Wingett stresses that the meetlng
will be controlled and will be
"constructive and not destructive".
He says he is relying on the public
meeting system to work out the
-·problems. The community earlier
worked out such problems as fly ash
from a nearby plant, the establishment of the water system and other
matters through such meetlngs,
Wingett concluded.

Meets this evening
Middleport Lodge 363 will meet
this evening at 7: 30 p.m. There will
be election of officers and annual
dues are to be paid. Refreshments
. will be served. All master masons
are Invited.

Henry Lyons, Racine was destroyed
by fire Sunday at 1 a.m. the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
reported.
Lyons was traveling on county
road 34 when the vehicle caught on
fire. Lyons suffered minor bums.
The Raclne Fire Department was
called to the scene.
.
A deer was killed Sunday at 7:40
a.m. when it ran Into the path of a
vehicle traveling on SR 124 near SR
338 driven by Roger Toney, Pomeroy. Therewasmoderatedarnageto
the Toney vehicle.
The department investigated a
minor accident Saturday that
occurred on private property.
Elza Bartirnus, Rl. 1. Reedsville,
was parkedatReedsStoreandwhen
he was leaving he backed lnto the
left front fender of a vehicle owned
by Barbara Reeds, Reedsville.
There was moderate damage to
the Reeds vheicle and none to the
Bart inn us truck.

Soil clarification
A soil survey involvlng 279,040
acres in Meigs County will get
underway the ftrst of the year not
\\1thin the next five to six years as
was reported.
The survey will take from five to
six years to complete according to
Bob First, district conservationist of
the Soil Conservation Service.

Election day dinner
An ·eJection day dinner wlll be
served at the Racine United
Methodist Church· sponsored by the
women of the church.
Dinner will be served beginning at
11 a.m. and food will also be served
In the evening.
The menu will Include vegetable
.and bean soup, sandwiches, pie and
beverage.
·

Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township Trustees will
meet this evening at 8 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

Christmas bazaar set
A Christmas Bazaar will be held
at the Kroger Store Nov. 3 and 4
sponsor'ed by The Syracuse First
Church of God.
·

Meets Friday
Salisbury Township Trustees will
meet Friday, Nov. 4, at ?.p.m. at the
home of Wanda Eblin, clerk, Lau~l
Cliff Road. All meetings are open to
the public.

Special session set
The Eastern Local Board of
Education will IT)eet In special
session Wednesday,. Nov. 2, at 7:30
p.m. to discuss personnel and
finances.

-A suspension, a5 of today, of
sales of U.S. Savings Bonds.
-A required Treasury Depart.
ment deposit of $13 billion to the
Social Securlty trust funds is being
limited to only $4 billion. However,

Social Securtiy checks will not ~
affected.
..:.canceuation of scheduled secwitles auctiOns by the Treasury,
Department and reduction In some
other otler!ngs.

,---------------------

Led by conServatives who said
they were fed up with the government's deficit spending, the Senate
voted ' 56-39 Monday to reject a
measure that would have 11lcreased
the government's borrowing authority by $61billlon to $1.45 billion.
Senate Majortty Leader Howard
H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., chided his
colleagues for action that he said
lllflounted to "lightlpg a match near
a gas tank." The Senate has never
before rejected such legislation
outright and congressional leaders
were uncertain how they would
proceed today_
So far, the fallure to raise the debt
limit from Its current $1.389 trinlon
ceiling has meant:

Your Vote and Influence Appreciated · ·

ROY ARMES·
CANDIDATE FOR

TRUSTEE

•

SUTTON TOWNSHIP
General Election November 8, 1983
Pd. Pol. Adv. by Cand.

Weather forecast
Mostly clear tonight. Low near 50.
Winds southerly less than 10 mph.
Partly cloudy Wednesday. lfigh
near 75.

~~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~~;~;;;;;;~i
-M-EN'S -QUILT LIN

~~~~,
Chance ol showers each day.

FLANNEL SHIRTS

mghs ., tbe ml&lt;HlOs to the mld-70'!.
Lows In the upper 40s and 50s.

I ·Area death I
Hazel E. Wickline

Hazel E. Wickline,' 77, Rt. 2,
Racine, died Monday afternoon In
the emergency room at Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Mrs. Wickline was born Aug. 25,
1906 · In Letart Township, Meigs
County, the .daughter of• the late
Watd and Laura Jackson'Sayre.
Mrs. Wickline was a homemaker
and a member. of the United
Methodist Church, Dorcas.
She is survived by her husband,
Clarence Wickline, Racine; two
daughters, Elleen M. Hamlin,
Binghamton, N. Y ., and Dolores
Wickline, Racine; one grandshon,
Duncan G. Mahoney, Pasadena,
Calif.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at EWing
Funeral Home. Burial will be in
· Letart FallS Cemetery. Friends

31ST

•Button Front
or Snap Front
•long ·Tail .
•Banded Collar

•Two Pockets
•Colorful Plaids
Small, medium,

large, X-large.

MEN'S DEPT.
1st FLOOR

Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
~m~a~y~cau~~at~the~~hme~r~a~l~h~oCm:eJL~~~~~~~~~~~;::;;;~~~~~~~~
~

UNBREAKABLE

3"X6" SCENTED

'PLASTIC

PILLAR
CANDLES

r--~HANGE

RED, WHITE OR GREEN

With Non-Slip Bar

Can We Beat Our
Own Low Sale Prices?

Hollyberry

CHOICE OF COLORS

.:Pine;::~y

BASIC
-TELEPHONE

FRUTH COUPON

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE

FOR DESK OR TABLE

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IF YOU CAN'T FIND, DON'T GET OR HAPPEN TO RECEIVE A PAPER THAT IS JUST UNREADABLE, DON'T
GIVE UP. CALL THE DAILY SENTINEL .

,.

•••

SERVICE DESK
Missile Command"' Cartridge

We~ve Got It Good.
---.-. ~·--~oifYou've Got 11 Better!

. ....

.

Saving Plact~•

185 UPPER RIVER

RO.~D.

,

992-6111

•

WE'LL BE SURE YOU RECEIVE A NEW
------cRISP DAILY S_ENTINEI:TRAT EVENlNG --·-'
.. ---~-" -·~
•

•

SERVICE DE.SK. IS OPEN MONDAY·FRIDAY FROM 5 TO 6 P.M.
ON SALE THRU SAT1

GALLIPOLIS

THE DAILY SENTINEL
'
"HERE TO SERVE
YOU lfTTIR" .

•

..

'

•

3 LB. CAN

$999 .

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Defender,. Game Cartridge

EA.

White Gllrdtnla

Due to recent price changes, we are able to offer
· these 3 games at 14 .97 ea.; an even lower price than
that featured in todoy's "99' sale" color circular.

SpaCe Invaders.. Cartridge

$199

11:¢11

,

Save Your
Phone Rental Costs

$

5 99

With !!~s Coupon
15.00 Purchase

While Quontitia Last

·

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