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                  <text>Brewers bombard
Cardinals, 10-0

Hoople picks Meigs
for upset victory

Page4

Page6

•

Page 12

The Daily
Vol.31 ,No. 113
Copyrighted 1982

A78x13

29

I

P155/80R13

• "78" Series Tread
• Multisiped Ribs
Mfr 's Treadwear Rat1ng 80 • Est1mated 24,000 Miles

..._
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..--

)

•th • 36HI Month
ProrOICI Adju••menl
Won111nti'

.........,.._ .......... .....
Our Reg. 48.88

Sale Price

39.88

15.88

36·Month laHery
Many U.S.. foreign
cars and light trucks.

Alignment Special
Work done on many
U.S. c ars. Save!

Forest Run to Smith Associates, Minersville.
It was indicated that Pullins is traveling out Forest
Run to SR 7, but coming back empty over Minersville
Hill.
Commissioners feel they haven't lived up to the
understanding they had with the residents of Miners·
vllle. However, the original understanding was that no
coal would be hauled. Pullins is hauling rock.
Bill Pullins told the Daily Sentinel he was asked to
remove the rock by Coal Power and was told by Coal
Power that no coal trucks were to travel over Minersville Hili.
Pullins said he does not have a contract with Coal
Power, but does have a contract with Smith Associates
of Minersville.
Pullins stated that he has been hauling rock from
Coal Power to Minersville approximately a day and a
half a month and Is traveling empty down Minersville
Hill.
" I was totally unaware that hauling empty over
Minersville Hill would cause a problem," PuUins
stated. He also added "takingthetrlpbackemptyover
Minersville Hili cost me less money, approximately
$10 a truck load, than If I run a truck to SR 7 to Forest
Run" Pullins stated.
"This is strictly a temporary situation and should be

.

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·.·

···Pilclifork used i~ store robbery
WICHITA FALlS, Texas -Two men veiled with red bandanas
used a knife and a pitchfork to rob a convenience store of $33, pollee ·
said.
The two men entered the Jiffy Food Store early Tuesday, thrust a _
farming tool at the clerk and demanded all the money in the cash
register, said a police spokeswoman, who asked not to be Identified .

Kahn's moves distribution center
I

CINCINNATI - Kahn's &amp; Company, one of the largest meat
. packing firms in Cincinnati, reported Tuesday It will move Its distribution division 15 miles south to Claryville, Ky.
Mariano Feldmann, processs product manager, said the operation
will move into a $22 million faclllty to be built by Kahn's parent firm,
Consolldateq Foods Corp., Chicago. She said Cincinnati workers will
be transferred to the newer plant expected to be completed Jan. 1,
1983.
The status of the meat processing plant was not decided, however.

I
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completed within a week. I think the situation is unfair
to me," Pullins commented. PuUins cited several instances where trucks n·om other companies are traveling the hill loaded.
Meeting with the commissioners Tuesda y regarding the problem at Minersville were county engineer
Roberts, and Ted Warner. superintendent of thecounty highway department .
It was decided to set up a meeting with Coal Power.
Pullins, Robert s and the commissioners to discuss the
situation.
Richard Jones, commissioner. reported he talked
with Don Day of the Ohio EPA and he was told that by
11 a.m. today they (the commissioners! would be
informed whether the new landfill site is approved or
disapproved.
Last week the commissioners were prl'Sented a
petition from Chester Wells to vacate township road
4361ocated in Olive Township. Wells contended that he
owned property on both sides of the road .
At Tuesday's meeting a lener was read from Ada
Bissell stating that the commissioner deny the petition
of Wells and the road not be closed as she is an adjoining property owner.
Commissioners referred the matter to the prosecuting attorney.
iConlinued on poge 121

Shipyard workers
•
get stern warntng

Plus F.E.T. 1.51 Each •
• Tread Design May Vary ·
• Radial Tire Traction
Estimated 36.000 Miles
Mfr 's Treadwear Rat1ng 120 •

Plus F.E.T. 1.59 Each

Moflotb f•••
. .placomant : u.;ifi d ~

3 9

care; Walter Lawson III, commissioner of the depart·
ment' s Division of Business Administration a nd Dr.
Grayce Sill, professor andasslsiant director for gradu·
ate studies in the Ohio State University's Department
of Nursing.
The first meeting of the group Is expected to be
called next week.
In recent weeks, the mental health program in the
three counties has been torn by a dlspu te between the
administrative "648 board" and the operative Mental
Health Center Board.
Meanwhile, Gallla County Commissioners have
sought approval from the state and the other two
counties to withdraw from the 648 board management
and set up their own program.
Hauling restrictions
Last Feb. 8, a public meeting was held with approx\ma tely 30 resldenls of Minersville attending concerning coal trucks traveling Minersville Hill.
At that time, county engineer Phil Roberts and the
commissioners were in agreement that there would be
no coal hauling over the hill by Coal Power.
The route established was from For.est Run toRt. 7
with trucks to return the same route.
Since that time, an independent contractor, Bill
Pullins , has been hauling rock from the mine site at

:::::~.:- Hed &amp;.VWhHew~ .

::·:.:~:erCord ~h.ltegwalls~
1

.

2 Sections, 16 Pag es
I 5 Cents
A Multim edia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Oct. 13,1982

By KATIE CROW
Paul Case!, Middleport, was appointed by the jVIeigs
County Commissioners Tuesday to serve on the Community Services Review Group.
The Review Group, established by the Ohio Director
of MIIJltal Health, Is charged with reviewing in detail
the·operatlon of the G-J-M Mental Health 648 Baord
and the Community Mental Health Center Board.
Case! Is a fonner Pomeroy businessman and a
retired Middleport Postmaster.
In announcing the appointment Henry Wells, pres!·
dent of the board of commissioners, said, "It has been
our objective to seek out the be't person we could find
in this county to perfonn this task. We believe that in
Paul Case! we have chosen such an indlvid~al.
Cascl's background in business and management
qualifies him for this Important appointment," Wells
concjuded.
John Brunton has been appointed torepresentJackson County while Gallla County Commissioners have
chosen fellow commissioner, Paul Dean Niday torepresent them. Others named earlier by State Mental·
Health Director Myers Kurtz were William H. Davis,
commissioner of the department's Division of Gen·
era! Aadminlstratlon, who will serve as chainnan;
Grace Lewis, chief of the department'sOfflceof After·

The Saving Place ®

• Mlr. lfeodWeor toling based on U.S. Dept. ol Tronsport o liotl's Unilorm Tire Quolilv grading system

entinel

Casci named to review committee

---.

We Honor

Suspect sought in
acid laced incident

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Sale Price

98.88

Man faces murder charge

Front Disc Brakes
Many U.S.. foreign cars.
Light trucks higher.

MARIETTA, Ohio- A man who had been charged with felonious
assault in the beating of a 2-year-old boy was indicted on a murder
charge after the child's death.
Brian D. Hunter, 25, ofMarletta,lscharged in thedeathofJonathan
R. Becker, 2-year-old son of Judi N. Becker and Robert J. Becker Jr.
The child, who lived with his mother in Marietta, was taken to a
hospital Friday afternoon suffering from severe head Injuries, officials said. He died Monday night after a life support system was
removed.

· Sizes
U.S .. imr&gt;nrt

Dispute leads to resignations

Thank You For Shopping At K marf

WILLIAMSI'OWN. W.Va. -AthlrdoftheWilllamstownVolunteer
Fire Department has resigned In a dispute over the membership of
women firefighters, MayorHennan Fischer said.
Fischer said nine ot' the :IJ members have resigned since Saturday
after fellow firefighters voted to include only one of four women who
wanted to join the force.
The men who quit couldn't under~tand why the other three women
weren't voted Into the department as well, Fischer said.

•

Winning Ohio lottery number
,.

· CLEVELAND - 'I')Ie winning number drawn Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Numller" was 344.
In the "Pick 4" game, played three times a week, the winning
number was 9474.
.
The lottery reported earnings of $582,1T/.50 on Its daily game. The
earnings came on sales of$875, 745.50, while holders ofwlnnlngtlcJ&lt;ets
are entitled to share $293,568, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast
Cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain tonight. Low 42-46. Wlrids

. bi!cunlng westerly leSs than 10 mph. Thursday, variable cloudiness:
Hlgh55-00.
••
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•

Extende!t Ohio Forecaat

~llnupSunday:

..

Celeste campaign
given money boost
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -[)e.
mocratlc gubernatorial candidate
Richard Celeste's campaign has received a big cash boost at a fund·
raiser staged by House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr. and attended by
some traditionally Republican
contributors.
The speaker's aides said 250
tickels were sold, many of them to
Republicans, for $1,00! each for the
Tuesday night event at the Ohio
Theater.
The event resembled some GOP
fund· raisers, with plenty offood and
drink, and each ticket buyer got a
basket of Ohio-made f&lt;XX!_ producls
Valued at about $70 wholesale. The
Columbus · Symphony Orchestra
provided chamber music at the
event.
"I think they (Republcans) know
which way the political winds are
blowing," said Riffe, D-New Boston, noting the presence of bankers
and race track owners - such as
Robert Dienst, w11o has Beulah
Park, and Charles Hill, owner of
Scioto Downs. Both are noted as f!e.
!RJbllcan campaign contributors.
Also present were many lobbyists
for organizations that traditlollally
l«laD towlll'd the Republican Party.
. Celeste, woo Is leading' Republl·

fari ·opponent Clarence Brown, a

'

Faltlinaablbeperlllcl. iDplla lbelowtomld.Fltda_v apdthe
mid iolWII'. . IIIIIurllq lllldSunday. M~lowll .latheupperlnl

to . . . .

EASTERN QUEEN CANDIDATES- These three Senior girls at
Eastern High School were recently chosen as queen candidates for the
1982 homecoming ceremonieS to be beld this Friday evening during
halftbne of the Easlern-Kyger Creek .football game. The 1982 Queen
candidates are, l·r, Miss Becky Eichinger, Miss Pam Murphy, and
Miss Synthia White. Friday's football contest will begin at 7:30 p.m.

-·v· .

.I

~frml Urbima,lnniost
polls, thanlci!d !he crowd for Its help.
But he said in a brief s~h, "I
still will need your help, not only

•

•

•

•

now, but in the next three weeks
before the election."
In other political ac tivity, the Republican candidate for state auditor, Vincent Campanella, was
presented a can of dog food Tuesday
by a campaign aide of his incum·
bent Democratic opponent.
Campanella, a Cuyahoga County
commissioner, had just finished a
news conference in Columbus outlining his program to Improve state
audlls when Denny Gilbert, campaign coordinator for incumbent
Auditor Thomas Ferguson, strode
up and gave him a can of dog food.
ThemovewasajabatCampanella's television ads that feature a
Dobennan pinscher and K.C., a
basset hound.
The ads bnply that K.C. Is Dem&lt;&gt;cratic incumbent Ferguson and the
Doberman Is Campanella. In one of
the ilds, K.C.lssleepingatopa pileof
money when hands reach In and
grab wads of the cash. A volc.e refers
to the disappearance of more than
$1 mllllon from the state treasury.
"The state auditor fell asleep on
the job," Campanella· said. "While
hewasasleep,acrookstoleamllllon
bucks."
In the -o~r commercial, K.C.
SI1IXll.eS while the Doberman snarls
ll!ld barks 'at the camera. Theil an
off-camera voice asks, "As a tax·
payer, whatklndofwatchdogdoyou
want for state !ludltor - the one we
haveotthe ..ne we need?"

WARSAW. Poland !API -Riot
police ringed the newly militarized
Gdansk shipyard today after two
days of strikes and bloody protests,
and officials warned workers they
face five-year prison terms if they
stage more demonstrations over
the outlawing of Solidarity.
Workers claimed some of their
colleagues planned to ignore the
warnings, but it was not imme·
dlately known if the yard was struck
again. Unconfirmed reports said
two people were killed and many
injured battling riot police in
Gdansk during the night .
Reporters in Gdansk said that
workers leaving the yard said they
had been "technically" drafted into
the army and made subject to mil·
ltary discipline after the yard was
declared "militarized" by the government Tuesday in an effort to
break the spirit of some 10,00!
workers who staged eight-hour
strikes In Gdansk and nearby Gdy·
nla Monday and Tuesday.
Pollee firing tear gas, water cannon and smoke and stun bombs
routed protesters at the shipyard
monuments Tuesda y evening,
chasing them through city streets.
Witnesses said many rioters were
beaten, and the streets were littered
with rocks and debris. Authorities
reported 148 arrests.
Martial-law spokesman Jerzy
Urban told reporters in Warsaw the
uprising will not affect plans to re·
lease 308 more Interned unionists,
but he declared that Solidarity chief

Lech Walesa and about 7lll others
will not be freed.
Militants who organized strikes
Monday and Tuesday demanded
Walesa's release and the reinstatement of Solldarity, banned Friday
by Parliament under a tough new
labor law that erases reforms won
by the independent union before
mart iallaw was decreed 10 months
ago.
The militarization of the shipya rds w here Solidarity was born in
August 1980 came after riot squads
bat tled wit h an estimated 10.1XXl
shipyard workers and suppot1ers In
two cities.
Police fired tear gas, sprayed water cannon and lobbed smoke
bombs at an angry mob of atiout
l ,IXXl protesters who surged toward
Communist Party headquarters after authorities dispersed their mass
rally Tuesday outside the Gdansk
plant, witnesses said.
An "underground committee"
called for a general strike through·
out the Baltic coast region, said
some workers leaving Lenin Shipya rds. The report could not be inde·
pendently confirmed.
Eight-thousand Lenin workers
struck for the second day Tuesday,
joined by 2,00! in the nearby port of
Gdynla. Few details on the Gydnia
strike were ava ilable n·om reports
reaching Warsaw.
Authorities reported 148arrests In
Poland's worst violence since
worker revolts swept the country on
Solidarity's second anniversary
Aug. 31.

RESUMING - Dr. J-..nes P. Conde has resumed his medical
practice In Meigs County at IIIli N. Second Ave., Middleport. The Ioca·
tloo was fonnerly lhe Downlng.Chllds Insurance Agency buDding and It
has been completely remodeled and redecorated to meet the needs or
Dr. Conde. The new phone number of Dr. Conde's office which will nol
_be ll8led untn the next publication of the telephone directory Is mf800.

.'

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·

�VVednesday,Ckt. 13,1982

Commentary

Page-2....:.The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednetday, Oct. 13,1982

Eagles host Bobcats,
Southern goes to HT

Meet the Meigs Marauders
..

The Daily Sentinel

Distortio~s,

Ill t llllrl .... II nl
l '••l!lt'r"\ . I lhno

Mario Cuomo. the New York De·

lil i-'1!1:!-! ll6
I ll In II 0 I U 1"111· I \ II- II F"l HI· I ltl· \11· It, _
..,. \I \ -.n'\ \ 1(1 I

mocr a t who is running for governor

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I' IT" IIIT FIIF!ID

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Bull, bear, or...
unidentified critter
As puzzled as a nyone else. some of Wa ll Street' s seers a re suspending
judgment about the stock market a nd ass uring their customers that if it
looks like a bu ll a nd acts like a bull the n it probably is a bull.
But others remi nd us that thcscaredaysofdeepdeceit.and that now is the
very time that judgments should be based on more than a ppeara nces lest.
for exa mple. a lx'ar stalks the market dressed as a bull.
Tha t is the dilemma in which in vestors -amateur a nd professional alike
- now find themselves. Whic h is worse, tobelieve it'sa bear whe n it's rea lly
a bull. or a bull when it 's rea lly a bear? Neithe r choicesatis ifies, of course.
You 'll get little hrl p from the professional forecasters, beca use they have
demonstrated themselves as being unable to de termine the na ture of the
beast. Their records. as compiled by.Mark Hulber1. aren' t impressive.
Looking back two months a nd better tha n 200 points in the Dow Jones
industrial average. few of the pros foresaw the tum that shot the Dow to its
present e minence- 1.012.79 at the close of business Monday.
Buried in a mudslide of gloom. their forecas ts we re awful. in jus t about
anywav you want to a pply the description.
.Joe Gra nville. who once convinced some people tha t he was the thing,
whatever it is. that propels or buries the marke t, sa id at the time tha t the
market was e ntering its " free-fall zone." the third phase of a bear ma rke t.
Richard Russell of Dow Theory Letters a~ with Gra nv ille. " I would
say that we arc now in the early stages ol&gt;the third phase of the bear
market." he told readers. Lawrence Heim of he Heim In vestment Letter
·announced a " modern·da y Depression" had /a rri ved a nd that " it is defi ·
nitelv rime to sell short." Harrv Schul tz. w~o c harges more for a brief
cons~ lta tion that mos t people c~m in a week i said that " no light ·brigade
charge to 900 is anywhere in sig ht. "
··
Hul ber1. whose newslette r is based on thed&lt;tsrardly prac tice of c hec king
up on the forecasters. found very few who alerted their rm de rs to the rally
that lx'ganabout then.
. J a mes Dines of The Dines Letter. a nd Market Logic. a publica tion of the
Institut e for Econome tric Resea rch. probably came closest. the la tt e r with
a forecast tha t " the risk of a buy ing panic continues to fa r outweigh therisk
of renewed heavy selling," a nd tha t 100 million-share days we re a head .
But all in a ll. rigidi ty seems to dominateforecastcrs: Those tha t a re bears
continue to be bears. a nd the bulls tend to remain bulls. no ma tt er wha t the
market docs. They become prisoners of their forecasts. They miss turns.
Anybod y in a ny aspec t of the forecast ing business will tell you that the
ga me is easy when events just remain the same, month afte r month. The
fri ck is to forecast ma jor turns in the ou tlook, a nd not ma ny do it well .

Berry's World

havin g beaten Ed Koc h in the prim·
a ry. telephones In to complain. He
begi ns by saying nice things about
one's record for intellectual integ·
rity li hank you very muc h) a nd
then comes home to the point.
whic h is tha t said record for intel·
lectua l in tegril)' is gravely com·
promised by so me thing writte n
a bout Marion Cuomo. Wha t?
" Well." he says, "you wrot e that I
was agains t the death pena lty. a nd
therefore was soft on c rim e. That's
baloney. It's oft e n the othe r wa y
around - co me out lor the death
penalty so people wi ll think you're
tough on crime . a nd the n vote
aga inst fund s for policemen, appoint soft judges. the whole bit. The
Re publica ns could have had the
dea th penalt y a ny time they
wa nt ed it. All they had to do was go
for a state ple biscite. A governor
ca n't veto that. But no, they'd
rather just have the issue, so they
ca n hit the De mocrat s with it."
What I had written was: " Mario
Cuomo's obdurate opposition to the
dea th penalty serves as a sy mbol
of. well. more of the sa me. It Is not
necessary to develop the aya tol·
la h's a ppetite for the dea th pena lty
in order to strik e out convincingly
aga inst crime. But vote rs tend, almost necessa rily. to accept signals.
And Cuomo 's refusa l to side with
the overw helming ma jority of New
Yorkers who believe in the deat h
sent e nce for cert a in kinds of crime
di stances him from wha t those va.
ters desire. namely a tough a nti·
crime progra m ." On refl ec ting,
these words accura tely convey pol·
itica l realit y in New York . But le t us
ack nowledge a few distinctions .
a nd record one or two point s:
11 Cuomo is a bsolutely correct
tha t opposition to the dea th penalty
does not necessa rily mean opposl·
lion to tougher a nti-crime policies.
If every murde rer. rapist a nd
mugger in New York we reperman·
e ntiv removed from the streets a nd

William F. Buckley Jr.

distortions

given to drink from the founta in of
ete rnal youth, New Yorke rs could
easily do without the death penalty.
The problem. of course, Is to con·
trive the former. a nd one needs
he re to exa mine the record of Ma·
rio Cuomo, whic h, a lthough he
serves as lie utena nt governor, Is
not ex te nsive on the ma tt e r of his
views on crime.

2) What does one find ?
Cuomo does not believe In what
genera lly goes by the na me of the
Hinckley Reform, na mely theellm·
!na tion of current practices tha t
permit mental Illness to exclude
a ny considera tion of guilt or inna.
cence. He is opposed to the idea of a
finding of "guilt y but me nta lly Ill. "
On the ot her ha nd, he believes tha t
the burden of esta blishing the de·
fendant's mental illness should fall
on the defe nse. Cuomo is against
ma nd a tory sent ences for c rimes

committed with guns. Here he is in
direct conflict with oppone nt Lewis
Lehrman, who takes the toughe r
position.
Cuomo believes that the Su·
preme Court's general position on
the Inadmissa bility of evide nce Illegall y obtained should no t be
meddled with. Lehrman believes
the sa.called exclusionary rule
needs to be rethought and, in effect.
scuttled. It Is fair to say ·that this
may be a constitutional argument
between Cuomo and Lehrman,
rather tha n a test of a ttitudes to.
ward crime.
Cuomo Is opposed to "double
bunking" In penitentiaries already
full to capacity. Lehrman's position
is: Put convicted men In jail wha·
tever the crowding, pending the
construction of new jails.
Cuomo has opposed the propos!·
lion that judges should be ap-

Today in history
TodaY ts Wednesday. Oct. 13, th~286thda yof1982. Thereare79daysleftln
the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On Oct. 13, 1775, the Contine nta l Congress ordered the construction of a
naval Oeet, the reby la unc hin g the U.S. Navy.
On this date:
-In 1792, George Washington laid th~ cornerstone of the executive
mansion 1n Washington, D.C.
-In 1845, Texas ratified the U.S. Constitution: .
-In 1943, Italy declared war on Germany, its former Axis partner.
-In 1900, presidential candudates John Kennedy a nd Richard Nixon
appeared 1n a televised debate.
·
.
Ten years ago: Congress completed action on President Richard Nixon's
revenue-sharing plan, a new system for providing federal aid to state and
local governments.
·
Five years ago: President Jimmy Carter accused the oil Industry of
seeking "the biggest rip-off In history" and of not being Interested In solving
the nation's energy problems.
One year ago: Egyptians voted for a successor to slain president Anwar
SalJat, with vice president Hosnl Mubarak running unopposed.
· 'J'Oday's birthday: British pFirne minister Margaret Thatcher Is 57.
110ngwrtter Paul Simon ts 40 and singer Marie Osmond Is 23.
~t
for Today: ''What men value In this world Is not rights but ·•
prtvUegeS ... _ H.L. Mencken, American Journalist (l.Bffi.l956).

'·

MIKE JACKSON

Private mediator orders news blackout
COCKEYSVll..LE,Md. (AP)-A
private mediator who says he hopes
to outlast the adversaries In the National Football League strike was
listening to both ~es spell out their
posltlons amid a news blackout he
ordered sbortly after taking a seat
at the negotiating table.
"My tactics are to tire them out
before they tire me out," San Fran-

Expos
choose
Virdon

School aid will total $1.8 billion in 1983
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The amount, with $105.3 million. The
OhioPublicExpendltureCouncil es·
largest increase was for Toledo
t ima tcs that state foundation a id for
schools, getting 61.8 percent more in
school districts will tot a l $1.8 billion
the c urrent fiscal year tha n three
for fiscal year 1983.
years ago.
The private, non·partisan tax reIn aU, the report says the 10 largsearch group a lso report s tha t the
est districts are getting 34.8 percent
aid represents a n increase of 30.2
moreforthecurrentflscal yearthan
percent or $418.5 million over state
in 1980. For the remaining 605 dis·
aid for fiscal year 1980.
tricts the increasewas.27.9percent.
The report notes tha t $361 million
The council used Department of
of the $418.5 million -,.or 86 percent
Education figures to m ake Its
of the increase- is scheduled to be
computations.
received by school districts in the
current fisca l year. The fL•cal year
The council cautions that It isdlffi·
ends June 30, 1983.
cult to compare state aid a mong
Of the $1.8 billion in estimated aid various school districts. It cites dif·
for fiscal year 1983, the council says ferences in average dally m ember$425.8 million- 23.6 percent - was ' ships, taxable wealth, numbers of
allocated for the 10 largest school . . disadvantaged children, m e thods of
districts. Cleveland is being a Uo· providing vocational education a nd
cated the largest part of that other factors.

Some districts , however, got less
tha n they did three years ago, the
report says. Aid to the Brecksville
district In Cuyahoga County
dropped 1 percent, and the South
E uclid·Lyndhurst distric t got 1.1
percent less. OtltPr Cuyahoga
County districts to get less are Independence dropping 1.2 percent, and
Richmond Heights, getting 2.6 per·
cent less.
Aid to the Lockland district in Hamilton County dropped 11.2 percent,
aid to the Reading district in that
county dropped 3.8 percent, a nd a id
to the Oak Hills district dropped 2.3
percent.
11he la r gestpercentage increases
were registered for the following
districts: Warren, (Washington
County), 128.5 percent; Bettsville
'(Seneca), 190.4; Jackson Center

"They aren't, but you can't just
" Did you hear the good news?"
stop selling ammunition beca use it
Colt. a ha ndgun -loving friend of
ca n pene trate soft body armor."
mine asked.
"Why not ?"
" What's that?"
Colt said a ngrily, "Because when
"They now have am munition
you start talking about armortha t can penetrate a ny lig htweight
piercing a mmunition you're get·
bulle tprqof vest. It 's called the
ling yourself into a very complex
K1W and it's coated with Teflon ."
a nd subjective area. There Is no
"Fantastic," I said. "That's the
simple dividing line be twee n
same stuff the vests are made of."
bullets that will go through Teflon
"That's right. An ammunition
vests and those that will go through
compa ny figures out if a Teflon vest
a deer. an antelope or a n elk. If you
was strong enough to stop a n ordi·
ban something like the K1W you
nary bulle t. the n a Teflon-coated
have to also ban other ammunition
bullet could penetrate one."
"You have to ha nd itto the person · tha t Is used for hunting and target
practice.' '
who thought that one up. He must
" Who would try to ba n a bullet
be a genius. Wait a minute. Don't
that could go through a policeman's
law e nforcement officers a nd put&gt;
yest?" I asked.
lie officials wear Teflon vests to
"Congressman Mario Blagg! of
protect themselves? Won't they be
New York, for one. He has pro.
enda ngered by the KTW ?"
posed a bill that would ban all soft
"Of course not. The KTW costs
armor·pltchlng ammunition."
$1:50 a round, and the price Is much
"What does he hope to gain by
too high for your run-of·the- mlll
that?"
trigger man. Besides It's only sold
"WhQ knows? But It's bottled up
by better gun deale rs."
In committee, and I doubt if the
"The police can't be too happy
about the K1W."

(Shelby), 189.5: Franklin (Muskln·
gum), 156.8; a nd Campbell (Mahanlog), 157.4.
The Ohio School Boards Assocla·
lion notes In Its booklet on school
financing that lack of growih In local
property taxes and failure of a large
number of local levies left many
districts unable to keep up with In·
flatlon and other costs.
The association lists other factors
in determining state aid, such as the
guarantee In fiscal1983 of 103 per·
cent of the 1982calculatedamountof
aid; deduction for districts failing to
meet teacher and other personnel
requirements; additions for
teachers with above average train·
lng and experience; and additions
for districts that qualify for disadvantaged pupil impact aid.

abiding people who use armor·
piercing bullets for sport and target
shooting."
"That's why we're making such
a big issue of lt. Let me read you
this letter from Wayne Lapierre,
the NRA lobbyist, which was sent to
all congressmen. 'The most clear
and present danger· to Jaw enforcement and public officials. Is not the
presence of one type 'or bullet.
Rather It Is from the unwarranted
and Irresponsible publicity sur·
rounding this or other means of defeating soft body armor.' "
"That says It all,"Itold Colt. "It's
the media and not the K1W which
is threate ning the lives of our policemen. Blagg! would be doing a
much better service to the country
If he proposed a bill forbidding the
press from talking about ammunl·
tlon that can blast through Teflon.
By the way, why would somebody
want to buy a KTW bulletin the first ·
place?"
"Because ," Colt said. " It's
there."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Late-arriving skydivers cost host Toledo
Start.; delay-of·game penalty and launched unbeate n Toledo Central
CathoUc on the way to a 54-0 j)rep football rout.
The skydivers were supposed to deliver the game ball before th~ Friday
night klckotf. Instead, they arrived 3';-S minutes late, drifting down on the
field as Central Catholic prepared to punt on Start's42-yard line.
"I thought !was hallucinating," said NickToth, Centra!Cathollc'scoach.
"AU of a sudden, my playersarerunnlnglneverydlrectlon. lt'sthecrazlest
thing I've ever seen In a footbaU game.
"It wasn't very funny until theotficials called a delay-of·game penalty on
Start. If It were my homecoming and I was the other coach,! would have
been smoking.''
ThepenaltygaveCentralCathollcaflrstdownattheStart37. 0nthenext
play, Ron Wesolowski ran the distance for a touchdown.
Around Ohio: rn·greater Cincinnati, there are22quarterbacks who have
thrown for 500yards this season. The leaders are DougRamseyofReadlng,
8Hor·171 and 888 yards, and Loveland's Guy Harris, 71-for·l39 and 887

manager."

yards.

' ITATI OF o.. o, OI,ARTMINT 0, I~
IUftANCI. C:IRTI,.CATI OF.COMI'LIANCI.
The •IIHnl.........,...._..., ot IMir•
ene.
lla.. 01 Ollllo, IMNIIJ' •rtlll..
that PlltWI' COLONY Lin INSURANCE
CO., ot Lyndll...._, ...... ol Vll'flela hu
e-plled wl&amp;h tiM liiwe ol&amp;lllula.. e.,tke·
blektlta... l•l.•.......... ~ri•ldall~••
,..arWtt~le.._IUta .........,....

ot,..

.......... .,,....,..... ... f'lllud.l --~~

..-t

doit l••how!liJ le.u•ulaa..
&amp;a han
Ntn u followl 011 o.o..ittr II, IIIII All·
•lu.d AaNta ,...,IOI,IIO.OOJ UabllldH
........ 71.00; ........ -~·001

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

·•

............. --.lli.OO,Ca,.
,Hai ...,Gil,III.OO.INWITN . . . WHUIOF,
1 haw ...,._.. • ' , ......, . . . . and
~. . . 1111 . . . ID ... alft ... at Col-lilu,
ot.lo tht1_M7aMI ..... .I•IJ 1, 1. . . Aoltrtrt
.1• .....,.,.., Jr., . . .rt.te::tk-M ollanr• - el Oltlo. (SIAL)
'

..

By George Strode

MONTREAL (AP) -The basebail cap Bill Virdon donned was too
tight, but Montreal Expos President
John McHale expects him to be a
perfectfitasthenewmanagerofthe
National League team.
The Expos Tuesday named Virdon as the sixth manager In their
14-year history, signing him to a
twa. year contract. Theclubalsohas
an option on a third year.
" We think Bill ts the right man for
the job," said McHale. "I've admired his work for a long time.
"I've watched him develop as a
manager. He's a winner, and as a
player he was a hustler, a great
defensive player, who unlike many
others, chose togo pretty deep In the
minor leagues to become a

RIO GRANDE -The 1982·83 Rio
Grande College Boosters Club
membership drive has started, a~­
cordlng to athletic director John ·
Lawhorn.
"It Is essential that we continue to
receive scholarship ·support from
our friends so that all can benefit
from lntercoilegiate athleilcs," La·
whorn said. "We will be maklngev·
ery attempt to contact as many
people as pt&gt;SSible about joining thts
worthy organization. If for some
reason you are overiqoked, please
contact us so that a representative
can lalk wtth you.''
If Interested In joining the Rio
- _ Grande College Boosters Club, contact Lawhorn at (6~4) 245-53\3.

I

I

nounced an immedia te news
blackout.
"I have ordered all parties, players and owners throughout the
league. to make no public comment
while the mediation effort ts ongoIng," Kagel said following the meetIng at a site in a suburb of Baltimore.
Three weeks of games already
have been bypassed, and earlier
Tuesday the NFL announced the
games of Oct. 17·18 would not be
played as scheduled.

Ohio
Sportlight

Rio boosters plan
membership campaign

/AJIAT PIU &gt;W 8t
1/AV!IIJ fal. /!I?CAKI'AST7115 /&gt;OINING,
~«. s?

ctsco attorney Sam Kagel said Tuesday night after holding an
introductory session with representatives of the club owners and strlk·
lng players whose walkout 23 days
ago has resulted In four weeks of no
pro football.
Kagel, named earlier Tuesday to
mediate the NFL Playe rs Association's contract dispute with the NfL
Management Council, said he asked
both sides to be ready to start Intensive negotiations today. He also an-

Virdon, 51, began his managerial
Urbana's Jeff Rogan has two straight JOO.yard rushing performances
career In 1966 at Wlll1amsport, Pa., with 345 against Bellefontaine last week. Greg Baker of Springboro col·
In the Class AA Eastern League. He lected a school-record 333 yards In 20 rushes against Little Miami.
eventually managed the Pittsburgh
Frank Mertalsmann, an exchange student from West Germany, kicked
Pirates, New York Yankees and :J3. and J5.yard field goals for Delphos St.John, a 1.3-6 victor over Rockford
Houston Astros In the majors, comParkway. Mertalsmann started kicking just two weeks ago.
piling a career won·lost record of ·
Jeff Melton, Cedarville's highly recruited 6-3, 215-pound senior, has 1,027
849-781.
yards rushing In six games and needs abouUOOyards to reach the3,&lt;XX).yard
The Astros firedVirdonAug. lO, In ·plateau for his career. Springfield North. loser ofl6 straight games, broke
the middle of 1+1e second year of a . anelght·game5coringdroughtwlthsixfourth.quarterpolntslna27-6defeat
three-year contract. When McHal!i ' by Dayton Wayne.
.
requested and received the reslgna- · Berlin Center Western ReseiVe's &amp;-0 record is the hest starf In school
tlonofExposManagerJimFannlng history. Vanlue's home game with Pandora-Gilboa Friday night was deon the last day ofthe 1982season, he layed about two hours when a transformer blew out.
.
turned to Virdon.
Defensive tackles Jeff Ogg and Roger Klump scored touchdowns In
"We had several calls for the job, Logan's 44-6 rout of Athens. Klump ran a fumble 25 yards. Ogg fell on a
but when we put it all together, the
fumble In the end zone. Logan's defenders also scored two other touchanswer came out Virdon," said
downs. Cincinnati Taft broke a 45-game losing streak, 20-14 over Cincinnati
McHale. "This isn?taneasyclubto .CAPE.
manage.
Marysville has a 11(}.6 scoring margin In Its six victories. Wellston's first
"We have·a clubwherethemajor- points of the season led to a 2(J.{)blanklngofAibany Alexander. Wellston had
lty of players need to look at the
beenoutscored116-0untlllastweek.RichmondDaleSoutheasternhasthree
manager with respect and know
points, yet Is unbeaten In the Scioto Valley Conference with a pair of
he's been through the wars. That's
scoreless ties and a .~decislon over Piketon.
PomeroyMelgsdldnotrunaplayfromscrimmagelnthe thirdquarterof
why I thought experience and getling the right guy were the m~lor
a loss to Gallipolis.
'
quall!lcatlons."
Golf- John Moillca of Upper Arlington lost a leading 731n the Central
The Expos assumed the final year District Tournament last week to rain. A day later, John'syoungerbrother,
of Virdon's Houston 'contract and
Tony Mollica, shot a 69 to lead the district. Tony settled for a 77 the second
~ddedoneyear. Theron tract should
time.
pay Virdon in excess of $:ro,(XX) per
season.

Art Buchwald
NRA will let it get out. Even the
Justice Department thinks It's a
lousy bill."
" Wha t's their objection?"
"There are a lot of other kinds.of
handgun bullets that can go
through a Teflon vest, and they feel
the Blagg! bill Is so broad it would
hurt the sale of the m as well."
"Maybe Instead of worrying
about ammunition, Congress
should concentrate on developing a
safe r garment for policemen to
wear," I suggested.
"That's the way we feel about it .
It's the responslblllty of the bulletproof vest people to keep up with
the times. The K1W is alive and
well and you don't solve the prot&gt;
lem by banning It, just because It ·
can splat through Teflon."
"I Imagine the handgun ~;ontrol
nuts are supportlrrg Blagg!."
. "Of course they are. They figure
If they can ban bullets that kill policemen, they'll eventually be able
to ban all ammunition used In
bandguns."
"But that would hurt the Jaw·

BRILL KING
135 pound
Senior end

NICK RIGGS
(140 pound
Junior quarterback)

172 pound
Junior wingback

"

Splat!

" I would like to see Jane Fonda 's exercise
book. I'm a voyeur! "

pointed with some reference to the
severity of their disposition toward
cri minals (Lehrman's position) .
They shoulil, says Cuomo, be appointed with exclusive reference to
their legal record.
Cuomo Is against "preventive
dete ntion." Lehrman believes that
men a ppre hended In crime, who'll}
ready have criminal recoJI!s
should be kept behind bars pendllllr
trial on the new crime.
3) Conclusion? The generality
survives that conservatives are
less disposed to be guided by a gen.
era tion's decisions (by the Warren
court) on which criminals professionally rely.
And finally, 4) Marta Cuomo,
during the campaign, said of his opponent who favored the death penalty that he was "coming out for
death." That !J?n't the kind of Jan·
guage one should expect from those
w:.o are keen on Intellectual

.

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, OHio

THURSDAY, OCT. 14, 1982
AT 7:30 P.M.
MASON, W.VA.

JOHN A. WADE,. M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAt HOSPITAL
·'

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GEN.ERAl ALLERGIST

,,

'\

.'

; 0 72 136
; 0 34 137

SVAC ONLY

I 0 0 43
I 0 0 36
I 0 0 14
0 I 0 6
0 I 0 8
0 I 0 0

North Gallla
SouthPrn
Kyger Creek
Hannan Tract'
Southwestern

Ea&lt;&gt;IPrn

64

14
36
43

SVACST.\NDINGS

o\U.
TEAM
Nort h Gat! Ia
::.Outh£'fn

Eastern

GAME.~

w t. T POP
' I O 125 37
:l :l 0 129 109
1 , o :t8 182

89

f~H;an~na~n~T;r•;c;c;;;;;;~' ~·;l~2~&gt;0~d;;~~~~~~~~~~~

ATTENTION
SYRACUSE-RACINE RESIDENTS

WE NOW HAVE IN STOCK, THE SPECIFIED
PLASTIC SEWER PIPE FOR YOUR HOUSE
CONNECTIONS.

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555 Park St ., Middleport, Oh .
Hours : Mon .- Fri. 7: 00 to 5: 00
Saturday 7: 00 toJ:OO

Ph . 992-6611

THE 1983 FORDS ARE HERE WITH A GRAND SHOWING AT:

PAT HILL FORD

COME ON IN TO FORD COUNTRY AND LET
BILL WALTERS OR PAT HILL SHOW YOU
THE FORDS OF 1983.
.
OUR REGULAR HOURS ARE MON-WED. 8:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
TIL 5:00 P.M. THURS., 6:00 P.M. FRI., 3:00 P.M. SAT.

461 S. THIRD AVE.
•

0
8

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PAT HILL FOR.D, Inc.

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

C.A.LL (614) M2-2104
or (304) 675-1244

I
I

Soul hwestern
Kyger Creek

REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED, PLUS REGISTER FOR SOME SUPER DOOR PRIZES.
A GRAND DOOR PRIZE WILL BE A KERO-SUN HEATER. OTHER DOOR PRIZES WILL BE
SONY WALK-MAN RADIO. FIFTY DOLLAR SAVIN1JS BOND, AND TWO GIFT CERTIFICATES
FOR GROCERIES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY AND NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN .
ALL DOOR PRIZES WILL BE DRAWN FOR AT 5:00 P.M. SAT.

MASON VOL Fl RE DEPT.

.

one
run.a nother six·pointer on a
Heyard
added
Eric Penick, NG's speedy tail·
back, who has rushed for more than
700 yards this season, got into the
scoring act In the third period with a
four yard run. Senior Paul Holling·
shead added the final PlrateTDon a
nine yard run.
Scoring extra points for the PI·
rates were Penick, Pickens, Mays
a nd Hollingshead on a kick.
Penick finished the contest with
135 yards in 21 a ttempts , Pickens
passed for 172 yards a nd Hollinshead rushed for 100 yards.
Eastern's Troy Guthrie recorded
40 yards rushing.
Kyger Creek, the Eagles' oppone nt this week, snapped a five game
losing streak with a determined effort led by sophomores Chuck Vogel
and Steve Waugh.
Vogel connected on four of 10
passes for 72 yards while Waugh led
the Bobcat rushing attack which
ne tted the team's first points in
three games.
Kyger Creek scored In the first
period after Vogel connected with
Waugh on a 34 yard gain. Vogeltook

the ball over from two yards out.
Waugh added the two point conver·
s lon on a run.
Hannan Trace got back Into the
game midway through the third period when junior running back Jeff
Barnes capped a 43 yard march
with a 19 yard run. A run for the
conversion fe Ushort.
Kyger Creek wrapped up the contest after recovering a Wildcat fumbleat the 12. Wa ugh went over from
the five pushing the score to 14-6.
Meanwhile, Southe rn ended a
long dry winless string in the SV AC
with a 36-8 drubbing of
Southwestern.
Southern's Wade Connolly, junior
tailback, scored two touchdowns, a
PAT run and had two key interceptions. Connolly had 85 yards rushing
in 11 carries,and caught four passes
for 57 yards. Quarterback Tony Rif.
fie passed for 105 yards.
Riffle scored oneTD while hitting
Connolly and Jason Hill for two
other scores.
Greg Nease led Southern with 101
yards in 13 carries while Keith Cook
had 30 yards in seven carries.
Sophomore quarterback Steve
Pelffey scored SW'sonlyTDona36
yard run. He hit Roy McCarty for
the EP's. A second Highlander
score, a 60 yard run by fullback
David Nida was called back by a
cUp.

IT'S A VERY SPECIAL PREVIEW OF THE NEW RESHAPED
TOTALLY REDESIGNED LTD AND FORD'S MOST LUXURIOUS CROWN VICTORIA,
PLUS THE NEW SPORTY MUSTANG GT. WE WILL BE OPEN EXTENDED HOURS:
8:00 A.M to 8:00 P.M. THURS. &amp; FRI.. OCT. 14TH &amp; 15TH AND SAT .. OCT. 16TH
UNTIL 5:00 P.M. SO EVERYBODY CAN JOIN US FOR THIS SPECIAL GRAND SHOWING.

AUCTION

~

League action continues Friday
night In the SVAC with three Important contests.
North Gallla takes Its 5-1 record to
Southwestern; Kyger Creek goes to
Eastern and Southern visits Ha n·
nan Trace.
Last Friday night, North Gallla
clearly established Itself as the
team to beat In the SVAC fall with a
43-0 convincing victory over the 1981
defending champion Eastern Ea·
gles. In other results, SoOthem
moved Into the Pirates' most challenging team position with a solid,
36-8 trjl'mph over Southwestern
while Kyger Creek captured Its first
victory this season, 14-6 over Ha n·
nan Trace.
Going Into Friday's game a t
Southwestern, Coach John Blake's
· Pirates will beouttocontlnuea long
winning streak against the Highlander s. Since Blake took over 11
seasons ago, a Southwestern foot ·
ball team has never beaten the
Pirates.
North Gallla had quite a n easy
time of It last week In what was
billed as a crucial first league game
for both teams.
The Pirates scored early, often
and never let up. NG got Its first TD
with 3: 22 left In the first period on a
29 yard pass play from Scott
Pickens to Ken Neal. In the final
minutes of that period, senior end
Mike Mays grabbed a 65 yard TD
pass.
In the second quarter, NG got its
third TD on a three yard run by
Pickens.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

PH. 992-2196

�Pag~- The Daily Sentinel

VVednetday,~.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

VVednetday, Oct. 13,1982

13,1982

Powerful Brewers bomb Cardinals, 10-0
ST. LOUIS I API -Surprise, sur prise. The M ilwaukee Bl'!'wers can
play Whitey Ball, too.
The American League champion
Bl'!'wers charged lnto the World Series with an image of sluggers who
thrive on the long ball, as evidenced
by 216 home runs In the regular

season.

GREG TAYLOR

CHRIS BURDETI'E

CO-PIA YERS OF THE WEEK- Gr eg Taylor , senior guard and
linebacker wbo recovered a fumble. intercepted a pass. and was one of
the l eading tacklers and Chris Burdett e, junior fuUback-linebacker ,
who gained :Jl yards in five carries, aver aged ~ 1.6 yard.• in three punts
and have been chosen '" co-players of the week by the Meigs County
•Jaycees.

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grlmlley
AP Correspondent
ST. LOUIS 1AP 1 -Ralph Michael Ca ldwell had no reason to believe he
would pitch well in the first gam eoft hel 982WoridSeries. B ut hebelieved he
would.
He certalniy had no reason to believe that he would shut ou t the St. Louis
Cardinals, but he believed he would.
Caldwell's last twooutlngs were portra its of disaster. He lost both games,
and both came in pressul'l' situations when plucky pitchers such as Mike
Caldwell are supposed to pull through.
In Baltimore. on the last weekend of the season, Caldwell went to the
mound as Milwaukee's starter in the second game of a doubleheader. The
Bl'!'wers had already lost the first game, and they needed a victory to clinch
the pennant.
Caldwell . a left -handcr with a modest fastba ll. an exceedlngly flne slnker
and slider- when they work- and a complementary palm bail . must keep
the bail low if he is to get opponents out.
Ca ldwell could not keep the ba ll low and his pitches became music to
Oriole bat s. In seven innings, he gave up 13 hits, seven earned runs and four
home ru ns. The sinker obv iously wasn't sinking.
The next time out.ln the first game of the Amer ica n League Championship Serif'S when the matter was even more critical. he lasted j ust three
innings. and gave up six runs and seven hits.
"I pitched so badly the last two times out I figured it was m y turn to pitch
II'Pll ... Caldwell sa id after giv ing up just three hits as the Bl'!'wers battered
the Cards 10-0 Tu csda,· nightln Game 1 of the Series.
" I alway s expect to shut 'em out." he added. "And if they scoreoneru n I
expect to keep 'em ther e. If they scol'!' more. I expect to hold them .
" I consider this one of m, · best performances of this year and of my
career." sa id Ca ldwell. unshaven and sport ing a half-ounce of gold on a
chain around his neck .
Caldwell was in charge from the first pitch. " When the first three baiters
grou nded out. it built up my confidence," he sa id.
"Ani' time vou arc not a big strikeout pitcher, you have to depend on what
you do best . i was gcttlng ahead of the hitters and m y sinker bail and slider
were working wcU. ·'
One thin g Ca ldwPii has done frequently over his 10-year major league
car eer ls move from team to team . He' s been with four major league clubs.
The Brewers acqu ired him from Cincinnati ln 1978, and it was no colncidencP that George Bamberger was the M ilwaukee manager and t hat
Caldwell had his best year. wlnning 22 ga(Tles while loslng nlne.
"Bambi was the l:e;t confidence builder I've ever seen," said Caldwell,
holding Cal McLish, the current BI'!'Wer pitching coach in similar esteem .
" I 've always seem ed to pitch be Iter for managers who have confidence ln
me.
Milwaukee Manager Harvey K uenn didn't show much confidence last
week after Caldwell had lost the two important gam es. He bypassed him in
the fifth game of the championship ser ies.
But Caldwell wasn't complaining now- if he did then.
"When you don't pitch any belter than I pitched, you can't expect to pitch.
Anyway, I' ll face the Angels next year," he sa id, referrlng to the California
Ange ls. Milwaukee's opponent ln the AL playoff.
"This ls a team effort . I just want to help the ball club. And tonight we
proved we can scrap and scrape just like the Cardlnals can."
Ca ldwell says w hen he is on the m ound he becom es a different per son:
"When I'm pitching, I'll do anything to get the batter out, even if it m eans
throwing the ki tchen sink," said Caldwell, who has been accused dur ing his
career of throwlng an occasional spitball.
" I don ' t hate batters. I just hate everybody on the other team."

St. Louis, on the other hand, got
here on speed and defense, a bunch
of singles hitters assem bled by Manager Whitey Herzog and conditioned to zip around the bases at
breakneck speed.
So ln Tuesday night 'sopener, the
Bl'!'wers put together 13 singles,
three short of the World Series record, ln a 17-hit attack and rode the
three-hit pitchlng of M ike Caldwell
to a lopsided J().O v ictory .
Herzog called it an old-fashioned.
back of the shack, rump-klcklng.
''I'm glad it only counted as one
gam e." he said. "I'm glad we didn't
have a doubleheader."
The j ackrabbits at the top of the
Bl'!'wer ba tting order drove the Cardina is to distraction.
Leadoff m an Paul Molitor set a
World Series record wit h five hits.
all singles. Three were lnfield hits
and one, drivlng in a key run, came
when he shattered his bat and
looped the ball beyond the lnf leld.
" It 's the flrst time I've had three
lnfield hits." M olitor said. " They
weren't very pi'!' tty."
No. 2 m an Robin Yount had four
hits, three of them singles. Molitor
and Yount drove in two runs apiece
as M ilwaukee punished four St.
Louis pitchers'.
" I just hit the ball w here the
fielders weren' t," explained Yount.
How's that for Whitey Ball?
Just to make sui'!' their long-baU
image wasn't forgotten, the Bl'!'wers also had a towerlng home ru n by
ex-Cardinal Ted Simmons and a
two- run tr iple by Jim Gantner.
" It 's nice to score 10 runs." sa id
M olitor, "but we still didn't swing
the bat as well as we'!'!' capable of.
The Cardinals know we can hit the
long ball."
What St. Louis m ight not have
known, though, was the kind of performance Caldwell had ln his 33year-old left arm . Shelled in his las t

two starts, he was passed over by
Manager Harvey Kuenn ln the decisive fifth game of the American
League playoffs . B ut he came back
wWJ an airtight, worlananllke
game against the Cardinals.
" I was gettlnj: ahead of the hitters, throwlng m ostly sinkers and a
back-door slider," Caldwell said. "I
felt strong and when I got three
ground balls in the flrst Inning, I got
a lot of per sonal confidence."
Simmons, the B rewers' ca tcher,
knew early that the veter an left bander was on his game.
"I could tell right away," he said.
"There w as no question in the flrst
lnnlng. He was throwing the sinker
at three-quarter speed and we were
getting the ground balls. I said to ·
m yself, 'This could be nice for a
while. " '
It turned ou t to be nice all night
long. Caldwell surrendered a double
to Darr ell Porter in the second Inning, a walk to Tommy Herr ln the
sixth, singles to Porter and K en
Oberkfell in the eighth, and nothing
else. He retired 17 of the flrst 18
batters he faced and threw flrst ·
pitch strikes to 22 of the 31 Cardlnal
batters, including 10 in a row at one
polnt. He retired 14 hitter s on ground
balls.
" That' s as good as he can pitch, "
said Simmons. " You'!'!' not going to
see him any beIter. "
Before Caldwell ever took the
mound, he had a two-run lead
thanks to an error by usually surehanded Cardinal flrst basem an
Keith Hernandez.
St .' Louis star ter Bob Forsch had
opened by getting Molitor to ground
ou t to second baseman Herr, the
only time all night the Cards would
retire the Bl'!'wer leadoff m an.

Herwg knew F orsch was not
himself.
" He threw 39 pitches In the flrst
Inning, " the manager said. " I don't
know If It was World Series jitters or
what. He didn't get theballwhere he
wanledto."
In the fourth, the Brewers were
back for more. Charlie M oore
opened with a double, moved to
thfrd on a perfect Whitey Ball sacrifice by Gantner and scored on Molltor 's broken-bat single.
A n inning l ater , Simmons
sm ashed Forsch' s first pitch deep
into the r ight field seats, but foul.
Then he got into a little guessing
game with the Cardinal pitcher and
cam e up a winner.
''They are golng tothrow m e slow ,
stuff, " he said. "That' s what the
scouting reports say and I was seeing screwballs and slow changes
prior to that. The ball I hit foul was a
slider up. I was geared to take t he

Gloves for his defensive abili ty.
"The ba ll was hit very hard. I just
booted i t. I 'm not going to offer any

scored 25 touchdowns in 1912 for
Carlisle (Pa.) I nstitute and later
played professional football for Can' the New
ton (Ohio) , Cleveland and
York Giants. He m ade his last gridiron appearance ln 1929 with the
old Chicago Cardinals.
Thorpe, who died in 1953. was

elected to both the college and professional football halls of fam e.
King Gustav of Sweden said at the
1912 Olympic games that Thorpe
was " the greatest athlete In the
world" and an Associ ated Press poll
In 1950ranked him the best athleteof
the century's first half.

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F'ridlty, lll Court Stret!t, by the Ohio Vt~lll'Y

CINCINNATI (AP ) - The FritoLay snac~ foods com pany says It
will donate $l ,&lt;XXJ a week to the
Ricky King Fund at the University
of Clnclnnati Children's Medical
Center.
The Dallas-based firm had
pledged to contrtbule $100 for each
point the Cincinnati Bengals scored
thls year. However, the Bengalsand
the other National F ootball League
teams have been struck by the players association.

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WINNING FORM - MUwaukee Brewers' calcher Ted Swnmom
folloWs through on a swin g In Tuesday night's World Series game in St.
Loufi. Simmons, who played with the Cards before helng traded to the
Brewers in 1980, caUed t he horner one of the biggest thrills of his Die.
(AP Laserphoto).

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APPLY EARLY! Applicalion filing deadline is January ) !, 1983.
For mo re informalion call the Ohio H EAP office between 1he hours 8 a.m. -.5 p.m. Monday lhrough
Frid ay toll-free.
•
.

1-800-282-0880

,
'

Thorpe, who was born ln 1888 In
Oklahom a, played six seasons of
professional baseball after the
Olympic Gam es, ending his career
ln 1919 with the old Boston Braves.
Thorpe's exploits in American
football are legendary. A powerful
ru nner and excellent passer, he

The Daily Se ntinel

(Add $2.3) 0 for each addilional member In families greater l han si x.)

113 SECOND AVE •.
POMEROY
CALL· 992-3381
992-2342

er a, won the deca thion and pentathlon at the 1912 Gam es at Stockholm.
It was later found that Thorpe, a
strapplng6-footer, had playedsemiprofesslonal baseball ln 1911. His
m edals were taken away and the
Olympic records he established
were st ricken.

bch Of ft.e idverbled tUWT'II II
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12-oz.

CINCI NNAT I !API -A Hamil- NCAA is at the association's next
ton County Comm on Pleas judge - convention in January , and he said
says he'U decide Thursday w hether
Players of week
that would be too late to undo the
to temporarily block the Na tional
damage from the reclasslfica tion.
Collegiate Athletic Association
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP)- RunIn closlng arguments Tuesday,
from downgradlng the Univerity of
ningback
Ricky Calhoun of Eastern
Weil den'ied NCAA charges that t he
Clncinnati's footba ll program.
Michigan
and defensive back Chauniversity is merely trylng to sidesJudge Fred Cartolano listened to
r
les
B
rountle
of Central Michigan
tep a proper associat ion rule that it
clos ing arguments from both sides
share the Player of the Week honors
doesn't Uke.
Tuesday afternoo n on the universiin Mid-Am erican Conference
"We are not assaultlng those
ty's request for a pl'l'lim inary
football .
rules," Well said. " The university.
• injunction.
Calhoun, a 6-foot, 192-pound junexpects to abide by those rules, B ut
The university is trylng to stop the
ior
from Toledo, ran 37 times for 209
it also expects the NCAA to abide by
: NCAA frvm rec lassifying its footyards
and two touchowns, but the
those rules."
. ball progra m to division 1-M, one
Hurons stU!
UC and the NCAA disagree on
step below the big-school ca tegory.
lost Sa turday to Toledo 20-19.
how to lnterpret rules for separating
.The university contends the rec lasBrountie, a 6-foot, 175-pound sedivision 1-A and 1-M schools. The
sification would hurt its recru itlng, NCAA claims the univesrity falls to
nlor from Highland Park, Mich.,
scheduling, and radio and television
had two lnter ceptions, broke up two
m eet requlrem erits for attendance
passes and for ced a fumble ln the
revenues.
and stadium size to m ake the 1-A
The univer sity wants the pl'l'limiChippewas' 18-18 tie w ith Western
category. 'The univer sity thinks it
nary injunction In force until the
Michigan.
m eets the standards.
case can be tried. University attorney Sidney Well said the school's . -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - only other avenue of appeal ln the

MULLEN INSURANCE

m aranch will present the medals to
Thorpe's daughter In January.
' 'The name of Jam es Thorpe will be
added to the llst of athletes whowere
crowned Olympic champions at the
1912 games," the IOC said.
Thorpe, who was l'!'garded one
the finest all-round athietes of his

LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP)
- The International Olympic Com mittee today restored Jim Thorpe's
amateur slatus and will return to
the family of the late American athlete the lJledals he won at the 1912
Olympic Games.
I OC's President Juan Antonio Sa-

WE SELL HUNTING LICENSE

· Hamilton County judge
:will pnnounce decision

AND

Olympic ·Committee restores Thorpe's amateur status,

gamble that they would throw mea
fast ball down and It was right
there.''
Simmons hit It over the right field
waU, making It «l. 'Then In the sixth,
the BI'!'Wers pushed across two
more runs with two ou't. Gantner
and Molitor singled and Yount
dropped a double just Inside the
r ight field foul line, making It IHJ.
Meanwhile, Caldwell was breezing through the St. Louis batting
order. He occasionally has been accused of doctoring baseballs, but
there were no complalnts from the
Cardinals.
"I didn't think he had to the way
we were swinging, " Herzog said
dryly.
------------

To donate funds

•

DOWNING-CHILDS .

-

A Dlvl"lon of Multimtedill, lnr.

Yount slngled and Cecil Cooper
walked. After Simmons struck out,
Ben Ogliv le hit a bouncer a!Hernandez' feet. Theball gotby foran error,
scorlng one run , and Gorman Thom as followed with an infield slngle
fora nother
" I didn 't have tirne tomove,"sald
Hernandez, who has won four Gold

The Daily Sentinei- Pagr.t-5

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

YVednesday,~.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Oct. 13,1982

13,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs County and area organization members hold meetings

Major favors Kyger Creek, North Gallia and Southern

Middleport
Literary Club

CAN'T GET A HANDLE - Milwaukee Brewers; third baseman
Paul Molitar hobbles a h•~l from St. Louis Cardinals' batter Lonnie
Smith in the first inning of Tuesday night's World Series game in St.
Louis. Molitar was a ble to recover and throw Smlth out at first. (AP
La.•erphoto). ·

Losing new thing
for runningbacks ·
CO I ~UMBUS.

Ohio !API - Ohio
Stair's star ting runningbac ks. Tim
S(J&lt;•n('('r a nd Jimm y Gay le, say los·
ing is" newcxperienceforthe mand
!hal !hey arc flllstrated over the
Ruckevcs' football tailspin.
The palr has helped Ohio State
11·in :!'lgames and lose7. win or share
11m fli g Ten Confe rence titles. and
go to the RoS&lt;:'. Fiesta and Liberty
13oll'b in the las t three seasons.
Bul noll' I he pre-season Big Ten
lil lr fav·oriles arc on a three-game
losing s l rcak .
TI1C'ir2 -:~s t art Lo; theschool 'sworst
stn('(' 1~11i7 . And. if hos t Illinois whips
lhr Buckeyes Sa turday, it wou ld
mark I he first lime Ohio State has

lost fou r ronsccut ive games in a single season si nce Coach Paul
Brown 's 19-!3squad.
" I m·vw lost in junior high school
or hig h school. .. said Gayle. a fifthv·ccu s&lt;'nior from Hampton. Va. " I
fCPI Iikl' lhrow ing up some times."
Cav·lc has mov·ed into Spencer's
spot a 1 !ail back a ft er 252- pou nd fu llback \'aughn Broadn ax suffered
an inflammation of his lower leg.
Spencer moved to fullba ck, a spot he
played two Sf'asons ago.

Gayle says he is mystified by the
Buckeyes' ineffectiveness on of·
fense. Ohio Sta te, a team tha t averaged 33 poin ts a game last season,
has gone six quarters without a single point.
" We go over the sam e thing," said
the 5·foot-l0, 192·pou nd Gay le. "I
j;~st can 't explain it. We execute
well, the n we fa lter. We have one
little mis take. tha t's what has hurt
us."

Spencer, the No. 2 rusher in the
Big Te n in 1981, says he cannot pin·
point the proble m either.
" I have been winning a ll of m y
life," said the 6-1, 210.pound
Spencer, a senior from St.Clairs·
vi lle, Ohio. "Losses hurt me. I take
them personally. "
In a (K} loss to Wisconsin Saturday, Spencer carried the ball only
seven tlroes for 31 yards. Gayle.
mea nwhile. ru shed 25 times for 100
yards.
" 1wasn't disappointed I had to go
to fullback," said Spencer. ''I' ll do
a nything to win."
Spencer a nd Gay le combined for
1,!M9 yards and 21 touchdowns rus h·
ing in 1981. At thlsstageof1982, those
figures are 654 and three scores.

Penguins snap streak
By A.- .;odated Pres.'
The Pitlsburgh Penguins were
de pr,--,;Sf'd . 'llH ·v· ca rried an (). 2-1 record int o lh•·11 ga me wit h the Vancouvc·r Canu• ks ;md only 6,:l66 fans
s howed up
WarS&lt; ' s1ill. lhl' Penguins trailed
the Canu ck.s ·t-:1 head ing into the final minu 11·s of their Na tional
Hockey L r·c~ ~ue cont es t Tuesday
nlg ht.
" You know what you can do but
you s till ha ve to prove it, ' said
goalie Michel Dia n, whose team certain ly wasn ·I proving a nyth ing up to
that point.
Then Doug Shedden lied the game
with 1:41 re ma ining a nd Pat
Boute ttescored the winner. his thi rd
goal of the night , with 1: 1M left.
Boutelle ska ted in front of the ne t
a nd tipped defensem a n Greg Hotham 's shot pas t goa lie Richa rd
Brodeur.
E lsewhe re . it was Calgary 9. Edmonton 4; Ne w .Jersey 2, Boston 2,
a nd Los Ange les 5, Winnlpeg 3.
Flames 9, OUers 4
Kent Nilsson had a goal a nd four

assists. while Phil Russell and
Lanny McDona ld each scored twice
as the Flames registered their first
victory of the season for rookle
Coach Bob .Johnson . Calgary was
the fin a l NHL team to register a
point in the standings.
Edmonton grabbed a 3-1 margin
before Russell's two goals lied it.
After McDona ld a nd the Oilers'
Mark Messier traded power·play
goals in the second period, Ric hie
Dunn put the F lames ahead to stay
with a s hot from just ins ide the blue
line.

Brums 2, Devils 2
New J ersey stayed undefeated (1 0.3) despite being outshot 32-13, in·
cluding13-2 in the third period, when
the Bruins scored their goals. Goalie
Lindsay Middlebrook, making his
flrst a ppearance of the season, kept
the Bruins off the scoreboard untU
12: 29 of the final perlod.Middlebrook helped New Jersey kill a 1:03
span when the B ru ins had a twoman advantage in the second
period.

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Original Man-In-Motion
It was a nother good week for
your peerless prophet In high
school footba ll circles. We co nnected on 13 of 16 guesses for an .810
percent age.
Our three misses las t week were
Greenup-Waverly; Hannan TraceKyger Cr eek a nd We ll s to n Alexa nder.
After six weeks of action. we own
a 66-25-.1 mark. That's batting .725.
We have 16 more area high
school games on tap this week. In
our seco nd "Upset Special" of the
year, we're picki ng Meigs over Logan, 16·15. Har-lllmph!
Egad, fri ends, the confe rence ra·
ces a re in full bloom this week in
college football- with some of the
biggest showdowns taking place in
the Pac- 10, the Big E ight a nd the
Big 10.
Jove! 'Tis a schedu le to del ig ht
a ny football fil bert. Um-kumph!
The Southern Cal-Sta nford meeting in the Pac-10 is their61st contest
in this rivalry. USC holds a 3g.18-3
margin. But John E lway, the cinch
All-A merica QB, a nd his Stanford
Cardina ls wUI be a t home.
Nevert heless. our Wes t Coast
scou ts give the edge to USC. The
Trojans will take a 33·31 hear tstopper. Kaff·kaff.
In other Pac-10 games. look for
highly rated Was hington to co nquer Oregon State, 29·14; UCLA to
swa mp Was hington State, 45-12;
and California to down Oregon. 3517.
Looking a t the Big E ight, the
hi g h -scoring Nebraska Cor n huskers. who average better tha n
40 points per ou ting, will keep it rol·
ling with a 42·21 conquest of the
Ka nsas Sta te Wildcats.
The Okla homa Soone rs, who
ha ve been Jllnn ing from the !formation as well as their trad i·
tiona! Wishbone. will co nfuse -the
Ka nsas J ayhawks as they tak e a
:l0.18 decisio n. MissoUii' s Tigers
will claw their way to a 24-12 win
over Iowa State. And up-a nd-dow n
Okl a homa State will nip Colorado,
17-10. Har -lllmph!
In the Big 10, whe re conference
victories are the biggest wins of al l.
the Fight in' Illini of !llinois wUI add
to Ohio State's woes as they edge
the Buckeyes. 28-21. The tough Minnesota Gophe rs will level Indiana
27-16: Mic higa n wUI ta ke the mea:
sure of Iowa . 24·10; Wisconsin will
outscore Michiga n Sta te, 35-21; a nd
Purdue will s hut the door on
Northwes tern, 38-12. Hak ·ka ff!
Top conference matchups elsewhere include such dilli es - he hhe h - as Nort h Ca rolina vs. Nort h
Carolina State a nd Duke vs. Cle m son, in the ACC; Georgia vs. Vanderbilt a nd Alabama vs.
Tennessee, in the SEC; Sout he rn
Methodist vs. Houston, in the SWC;
and Ha wa ii vs. Brigham Young, in
the WAC.
The North Ca rolina Tar Heels
are a t home to neighbori ng North
Ca rolin a Stat e in the 72nd renewal
of this classic. The Wallpack wilt

Two books, "Jon!" by Joni Eareck$0n and 'Whe n Bad Thlngs
Happen to Good People" by Harold
S. Kushner were reviewed at the
opening fa ll m eeting of the Middl~
port Literary Club held at the home
of Mrs. Roy Holter.
Mrs. Rlchard Owen, president,
welcomed those attending with
Mrs. Forrest Bachtel Introducing
the _reviewers.
The story of a young woman· s
struggle aglnst quadraplegla and
de pression In the a utoblography,
" Jon!", was reviewed by Mrs.
Dwight Wallace. In he r review,
Mrs. Wallace gave each step of Jonl's struggle and adjustment to her
handica p In her bitter stuggle and
:desperate·search for the meaning of
life. At the conclusion of her review
_she presented each m ember with a
:Christmas card designed by the
quadra plegic who paints by using a
'brush in her mouth.
Rev. Wanda Johnson reviewed
Kushner's book which ts currently
·on the best seller ltst. Authored by a
Rabbi Prlest, the book Is a comme n·
'tary on views of life, the world and
God and talks about when sorrow
visits our hearts and makes us per·
' plexed about these things . The r~
v ie wer described It as a
•compassionate and moving book
which brings renewed fa ith, com·
fort, a nd inspiration but most of a ll
the promise that we are not a lone in
our pain.
For toll call members na med a
courageous woman. The hostess
served cake a nd coffee.

Purdue :.i Nonhwestern 2
San Jose St 35 Lon~ Beach St 12

Southern Cal 3.1 Stanford 31
S Carolina 42 Furman 1R
SMU 32 Houston 28
S Mississippi 40 Tulane 26
Texas TE'Ch .16 RIC'(' 21
Toledo 36 Central Michigan 7
Tulsa 34 S llllncAs t6
UCLA 45 Washington St 12.
Utah 39 Nevada·Las Ve~as 19
Utah St 33 Pacific 11
Washington 29 Oregon St 14
Weber St J6 Port land St 28
West Vlr~ln1a 26 Virginia Tech 21
Wichita StZJ New Mexico St 21
Wisconsin 35 Michigan St 21
Wyoming :W F\iUertrn St 20
Yale 14 Columbi a 7

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JAMES L. SCHMOLL, O.D.
DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY

VISION EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT LENSES

HeathUMW
New officers were elected a nd a
program on "Growing in the Christian F a ith" was presented at the
Monday nig ht meeting of the United
Methodist Women atHeathChurch,
Middleport.
E lected were Euvetta Bechtle,
preside nt; Emma K. Clatworthy,
vice preside nt; Clara Criswell, secretary; Beulah McComas, treasurer. Chairman elected were
Juanlta Bachtel, Christian socia l in·
volvement; Maxine P hilson, Chris·
!ian global concerns; Elizabeth
Mourning, Christian personhood;
Nan Moore, _progra m resource;
Mary Rinehart, me mbershipchat•man; Doi)Jla Byer, supportative;
Lettie Young, public relations and
~torlap; Be!IY Fultz, mission
c;oordlnator; Mrs. Mourning, Ka·
!bryn Swanson and Mary Wise,
nominating committee.
World Community Day of Church
Women UnltedofMelgsCountywas
announced for Nov. 5 at Heath
Church. Dues are payable at tha t

HOURS: MON . THRU FRI . 9:00-12:00, 1:00-5:00
OPEN WED. EVENING 6:00-9:00
CLOSED THURS. AFTERNOON
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previously assigned a t Fort Knox,
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Multipurpose Health Facility
Mulberry Hei,hts
Pomeroy, 'OH. 45769
992·2192

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5b0 UNCOLN HILL
POMEROY, OHIO

..-..

Support of at~ mill operating
levy tobe votedonlntheNovember
General Election was pledged durlng the Oct. 11 meeting of Southern
Athle tic Boosters.
Danny Brown presided at the
meeting held a t the high school durlog which Ume the levy was dis·
c ussed. It was noted that the funds
derived from the levy will go toward the purchase of new textbooks, educational ma te rials and
equipment and for much·needed
building repairs. Passing the levy
will not increase taxes, officials
adv ise.
Plans were made for parents
night to be observed on Oct. 29, and
for the annual banquet to be held on
Nov. 13. The ba nquet w!U be potluc k with the boosters to furnish
the meet.
Donations were made to the
Pomeroy Fire Department a nd to
the Racine Emergency Squad for
assista nce during the footba ll
season.

A picnic was recen tly held at the
home of Mr. a nd Mrs. David Cum·
mlngs . Guests were husbands of

members of Middleport Amateur
Garden Club a nd Mrs. Pa ul Haptonstall, Mr. a nd Mrs. Rex Cum·
mlngs a nd children, a nd Mrs. Nina
Hicks of Morgantown . W. Va.
Members toured the gardens at the
Cummings home.

EVEN THOUGH WE'RE REMODELING
WATCH FOR SATURDAY NIGHT

SPECIALS

EVERY SA

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· OPENING OCT. 22, 1982 10 A.M .
COME IN AND REGISTE~ FOR ~RI~ES

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THIS SATURDAY ENJOY
A CHOICE OF PAN FRIED
CHICKEN OR HAM STEAK

weight classes
Shirley Johnson was the top loser
a t Sl!nderella Flv~Polnts Class
meetings over the past two weeks,
with Marla Mario as the runner· up
both weeks. At the Tuesday Mason
class Louise Hoffman lost the mos't
weight a nd Betty James was
runner-up on week, while Angie
Roush and Betty James tied for the
most weight lost and Jean Fisher
was runner ·up the second week. At
the Thursday morning Five-Points
class Joan Vaughan lost the most
weight . lnformatbn on meeting
m ay be obtained from JoAnn Newsome, director.

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MASHED POTATOES
VEGETABLE, SALAD BAR,
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ARMAND AT THE ORGAN 8:00-11:00

MEIGS INN
Pomeroy

126 Main St.

992-3629

Army Pvt. Douglas H. Rollins,
son of Bernard E. a nd Clara F . Rol·
llns of Route 2, Point Pleasant, W.
Va ., Is one of more than lOO,!XXlU.S.
soldiers a nd a irmen particip ating
In the U.S. Army Reforger, or return of forces to Germany, and the
U.S. Air Force Crested Cap exercises In E urope.
U.S. service me mbers in Europe,
as well as those from the United
States, join their NATO partners In
ground exercises centering on central West Germany east of the
Rhine Rlver.
The joint exercises are designed
to demonstrate U.S. capabilities to
relriforme Europe with NATO.
committed ground a nd air unlts in a
crisis situation.
Rollins is a vehicle driver with
the 1st Supply and Transportation
Battalion· a t Fort P.lley, Kan.

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COUPON EXPIRES. JAN. 5, 1983
ONL Y ONE COUPON PER REQUIRED
PURCH ASE. NOTE TO DEALER For
each coupon you accep t as our au lh·
or!z&amp;d agent , we wit! pay you the lace
value ol thi s coupon, plu s 7' handling
charges. provided you and your cus·
tamers have complied with the terms
ol this olfer. Any other appl!catton
constitutes fraud. Invoices showmg
your purchase ol sulllcient stock to
cover all coupons must be shown
upon request . Void wher e prOhibited.
tax ed or restricted. Your customer
must pay any required sales ta•
Cash value 1/20 of t•. Thi s coupon
will be red eemed by mail ing to The
Coca·Cola Company, P.O Bo• 1504.
Clinton, Iowa 52734. Otter good only
In area served by:

SAVE

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with purchase of any adult meal
at the regular price!
Enjoy Long John Silver's delicious taste
today ... featuring crispy fish, tender
chicken, savory seafood, &amp; much more!
Offer expires: 'Oct. 31, 1982
Good only at: State Rt. 7
Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
Gallipolis, OH.
'
~valid with

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Gardeners

Offer good uptol mnl1 for children 12£ under.

'

HOURS:
·
' WED. &amp; THURS. 6 f.l.-9 P:M.
'FRI. I SAT. 10 A.l.-=4 P.M.
• Ollw Tillllly AppolttiiMnt .
.
.
. -

TOILET TISS
(

da ughter, Terri Lynn, to Max
Wayne Wilson, son of Emma Jean
Wilson, and the late Geoq:e Wilson,
Route 1, Shade.
An open wedding wUI take place
a t 2 p.m . on Oct. 16 at the home of
the brkl~elect with the Rev. Eu·
gene Anspach officiating.
Matron of honor will be Teresa
Walker, sister orthe bride, and the
best man w!U be Earl C. "Butch"
Wilson, Pottstown, Pa. Sara Le An
Randolph Lee will be the flower
glrl, and the r!ngbearerwUI be Max
Wayne Wilson Jr.
The bride-elect Is a graduate of
Meigs High School, class of 1982
and Is employed part-time at the
Pomeroy Elementary School. Her
fiance also attended Meigs High
School.
Following their wedding the ample will reside In Middleport.

COUNTED CROSS STITCH
SUPPLES

~·

4 ROLL CHARIIII

!I

Marine Lance Cpl. Mlchael R.
Smith, son of Roy 0 . and Lucreta
M. Smith of 35961 Rock Springs
Road, Pomeroy, has been promoted to his present rank while
serving with Marine Corps Air
Ground Combat Center, Twenty·
nine Palms, Calif.

THE WATERMELON PATCH.

.,'•,,
...
'if.

~....

Chester Garden Club

Roush, Wilson wed Saturday
Reta Rou sh of Route 2, Pomeroy,
announces the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of her

SOUthern
Athletic Boosters

Retarded Citizens

Meigs County and area servtce notes

LB.

lB. RUDY VALnY FARMS

meeting.
rangingclass eachmonth. Theclub
Betty Fultz presided at the meet· members voted to buy a book e n·
ing with Mrs. Moore asking for sub- titled "Complete Gulde to Flower
scriptions for Response. It was a nd Foliage Arranging." Mrs.
decided to take food for the food Dean, chairman of the program
bank to the November meeting. The comm!tlee,announeedthattheclub
Afternoon Circle was announced for will have an old fashioned QuistThursday with the Eleanor Circle to mas party at the Methodist Church
be held Thursday evening featuring in Chester, Dec. 15.
Pat Holter gave a report on Gara craft speaker. It was reported that
about $400 was m ade on the recent deners Day Out held at the Clnc!nrummage sale. Five members at- na tl Zoo recently. She also gave a
te nded the district meeting at Ches- report on the Chnrlstmas flowe r
terhill. Pauline Horton gave the show which will be held a t the Ru·
lland Civic Center on Dec. 4 and 5.
nominating committee report.
Mrs. Horton presented the pro- The theme will be "Christmas In the
gram noting that In the gospels Country."
DevotionswereglvenbyRuth Erthere are serveral accounts of Jesus
going away to quiet places to pray win using "Laughter" as her subafter which he returned to the com· ject. A book report "Speak to the
munlty to a ttend to the needs of the Earth" by William A. Breyfogle
people. An example she cited Is the was reviewed by Maye Mora. Iicon·
story of the feeding of th~5.&lt;XXl.
sis ted of a collection of essays on the
The areas of spiritual growth relationship of man with his
were dicussed by the program universe."
leader, these being solitude, com·
A program, "Hi a nd Dry" was
munlty, a nd journa l. She had two given by Janet Koblentz who dis·
speakers, Donna Byer, who talked cussed when a nd what to pick for
on the life of Florence Allenshorn dried arra ngements with copies IJe.
who told of her llfe and offered her· ing given to a ll the members. Mrs.
self to mission service abroad, going Koblentz listed three methods for
to Africa where she had charge of a drying flowers- pressing, a ir dry·
glrls' school.
ing, and using a drying agent such
Second speaker was TwUa Childs as slllcagel. She said tha t flowers
who talked on He nry Nouwen, a
should be picked in midmorning af·
comtemporary priest and teacher,
ter the dew has evaporated and IJe.
whose books brought him wide ac- fore the sun is high. Foliage should
cla im. Mrs. Horton gave "10 rea- be removed a nd dried separately,
sons for Journl!llng" by George she said. Whe nhangingshesuggesting tying the stems of large blooms
Simmons, discussing how to begin a
journal. She then gave eight topics in bunches of four or five, and small
on the signs of growth a nd passed
blooms in bunches of 10 or 12. She
out cards for comments from the
said each bunch should be hung semembers on them . She closed her parately not touc hing one another.
program with prayer.
Whe n thoroughly dry, they should
Mrs. Clatworthy had the piano then be sprayed with clear, matte,
plastic spray.
prelude and her pevolional topic
was "This Is My task." Scripture
Guests were Nola Will and Ma·
rilyn Sue Burke. J ennie Machirwas
was taken from ~rinthlans and
Matthew a nd she read a n article
the contributing hostess.
entitled "Falth, Hope and Love."
Members sang "Love Divine" with
Twila Childs at the plano.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Moore, Terri Byer, Elizabeth
Darlene Curry was elected pres!·
Mourning, with Lorena Davis and
dent of Meigs Associa tion for ReJane Gil key as contributing
tarded Citizens at a meeting held
hostesses.
_Oct. 7 at Carleton School.
other officers elected for the 1~
year were Jessie Might, vice pres!·
dent; Donna Simms, secretary;
and Rhonda Stockwell, treasurer.
New officers ·c;p;e installed In a n
Plans were m ade to rent Disney
Impressive ceremony at a recent
films
to be shown at the school durmeeting of Chester Garden Club
ing
the
holidays. A rummage sale
held at the homeo!'Mrs. Betty Dean.
was held with $184.&amp;1 being raised.
New officers for the coming year
The money will go toward pure has·
are Crystal Rayburn, preside nt;
ing small tools for the workshop. A
Betty Dean, vice president; PatHolcomforter
made by Ruth Karr was
ter, second vice president; Clartce
on
display
and
will be used In a fund
Krautter, secretary; Maidie Mora,
raising project. Next month a proassistant secretary; Pat Barnett,
treasurer; and Dorothy Karr, as- ducts party will be held at the m eet·
ing. Membership dues are $1 a year.
sistant treasurer.
A
kitchen showe r was he ld for the
During the meeting a report was
living
skills room. Thirty-three atgiven on programs for the new year.
tended the meeting.
There will be a different flower a r·

•

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The Daily Sentinei-Page--7

any ot':ter offe r.

One covpol' per
perton, per visit .

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Wednelday, Oct. 13,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Poge-8-The Daily Sentinel

Helen help us

Meigs County and area correspondence

Condemning of church members may open a can of worms
By HELEN BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN :
Regarding "Church Members,"
who wrote a bout a supposed affair
between a widow and a married
man, both very active a nd useful In
the church. They evidently wanted
the woma n ousted so tha t "sanctity
of God's house" would be maintained . No mention of the man's
guilt.
Good for you - maintaining that
both or neither should be censored,
a nd adding ··perhaps the wife
would prefer the latter." It could be
platoni c.
Since whe n can't a man be kind
and considera te to a female friend?
l"m in this same problem : !lost my

husband two years ago, and our
staunch friends, Mr. and Mrs. S.
stood by me where other marrted
people dropped away . Mr. S. and I
work together on committees. Mrs.
S. Is more of a homebody. You
guessed It: Several church biddies
are gossiping about a "triangle," no
matter that the three of us are perfectly secure In our relationships.
There's no romantic Involvement
between Mr. S. and me, but try to
convince the IIppy sisters of that.
Thanks for pleading my case
even though (I'm sure) the writers
weren't aiming a t me. - AGAINST
GOSSIPS
DEARA.G.:
Thanks for coming to my de-

tense. A number of good church
members, howeTer, didn't see
things our way. Read on:
DEAR HELEN:
I was shocked by your answer to
"Church Members."
You wrote, "Either censor both
persons and strip them of their offices or agree the church shouldn't
try to regulate private Uves ... "
The church must watch over Its
own. The Bible sets standards for
those who worship God. No one has
the right to say these rules should
be set aside,
"Church members" must pray
for God's guidance. Then they, as a
group, should go to the husband.

another of the flock In his bed.
wl!e, and woman friend and con·
front them with this adultery, as It Turned out he was conducting pri·
vale "prayer" (blue) meetings for
surely Is.
some half-dozen susceptible feU they refuse to stop unbecoming
males, each of whom thought she
conduct, then they must be removed from their respective · was the only one. ReaJiy, he was a
great preacher, exuding loving
offices.
klnclness and good will. NevertheHes, this will cause more gossip
less .. .
and an open scandal but better that
than a mockery of God's House.
The members and their pastor
have already brought shame and
disgrace to their church by not act- ·
lng at once to stop the affair. -

EVE
DEAR HELEN:
We had a sinlilar problem at our
church, only It Involved the minister. One of his married ladles found

Family medicine

Who should receive influenza vaccines?

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Michael entertained with a picnic at their ho'Tle
recently. . Guests Included Miss
Louise Michael, Kimberly. Todd,
Mathew Michael, Susie Wolf, Clifford Smith, Charles Weddle, Mrs.
Mabel Bigley and Margaret McKinley, Ravenswood; Mr. and Mrs.
Wilber Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Hamm, Charles Rogers, Coolville;
." Pauline McLean, Little Hocking;
Helen Myers, Cincinnati, and Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Pool and son,
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter recently
hosted a hayride and weiner roost
tor the Trinity Sunday school joined
by youth of Pomeroy United Methodist Church at their farm.
Attending were George Francis,
'.Elizabeth Downie, Allen Downie,
: Bob Buck, the Rev. Robert McGee,
: Dan Thomas, Fonda Rapp, Nathan
- Baloy, Joshua Clark, Michael
· Mayer, Marie Hauck, Ada Holter,
· Don Thomas, Carolyn Thomas,
Linda Mayer, Don Mayer, Rev. Wllllam Newman, Betsy Newman. Btu
Spaun, Ruth Ann Spaun, Julle
: Spaun, -Jessica Chapman, Paul
: Chapman, Mary Thompson, Fred
· Thompson, Gay and Beth Perrin,
:. Donna Carr, Pautlne Mayer, Pat
: Holter, Brenda Newman, Debbie
: Downie, Julle Miller, Sherrie South. worth, Lynn Slater.
· Jenny Mlller, Diana Wllllamson,
; Beth Mayer, Diane Hawley, Alan
: Hayes, Denise Hayes, Karen
• Thompson, Anna Chapman, ShannonSpaun, Chase Cleland, Kim EwIng, Lisa Newman, Beth Ewing,
. Lesley Carr, Hank Cleland, Benny
. Edwlng, TRENTON Cleland,
: Heather Woods, Mickey Seyler,
·· Debbl Buck.
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Wallace and
children, Keith and Alison, Canal

We now have a new clergyman
and a number of repentallt wives.
ANOTHER CHURCH
MEMBER (Not one of the half·
dozen)
DEARACM:
Now there's a minister who truly
practiced the "love one another"
theme he preached. - H.

ATTENTION
Kmart SHOPPERS

IN THIS WEEK'S WHITE GOODS SALE THE
MEN'S BOOTS ARE NOT SALE PRICED AS PICTURED. THE VIBRAM SOLE REG., S44.97 ARE
SJ2 AND THE 8" GENUINE LEATHER WORK
BOOTS, REG. SJI.97 ARE S21.90.

breathing problems when he eats excess frequency of this disease at
one to two days. In addition, perBy Edward Schreck, D.O.
We regret any inconvenience this may have caused our customeggs,
he should not receive the In- the rate of about 10 cases per milsons who have serious reactions
Assistant Professor of
ers.
lion
reported
among
unvaccinated
fluenza vaccine. You might rewhen brought In contact with eggs
Family Medicine
member that In 1975 a disease adults. Since 1976, however, there
or
egg
by-products
should
be
careOhio University College
caJJed Gulllain-Barre syndrome has been no slgnl!lcant risk from
ful In using the influenza vaccine.
of Osteopathic Medicine
Guillaln-Barre syndrome with the
was associated with the swine flu
QUESTION : I know flu season Is Specl!lcaJiy, 1! a person develops
Influenza vaccine.
vaccine.
Vaccinated
adults
had
an
swelling of the Ups or tongue or
approaching, so I" ve been thinking
of having my fa mily get flu shots. is
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __L___::~~~~~~~~~~====~==~~=~11
t his a good idea?
ANS WER:
Certain groups of
people arc more
s usce ptibl e for
' '
the flu and. there'~
fore, should be il"
vacci n ate d . SCHRECK
These include persons older than
65. children and victims of heart,
kidney or lung disease. Those with
impairment of the circul atory system, severe asthma or cystic fibros is. for exa mple, are most
vulnerable to the· flu . The vacclna·
lion is also recommepded for people who have conditions like cancer
that alter the body's immune
syste m .
QUESTION: Wha t causes the1
I

ANSWER: Influenza is caused .
by a virus . Influenza virus A and
virus B ca use th e widespread outbreaks of respiratory Illness whic h
we simpl y ca ll '"t he flu ." These two
types of viruses can cause more
tha n just a mild cold. runny nose
and cough. It is es timated tha t from ·
1968 to 1981 more than 200,!XXl
deaths were the result of influenza
epidemics. a nd that is just in the
Unit ed States . Stalistlcs from

Winchester, spent the Oct. 9-10weekend here with his parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, Middleport.
The family took In the Bob Evans
festival while here.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Tuckerman of
Springfield were Wednesday visItors of Mrs. Gladys Tuckerman, ·
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning, Rona ld, Dorothy Reeves. Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Darnell and family and
Don Reeves.

tended the UMW district annual
meeting at Chesterhill.
The community was saddened
by the death of Howard Flanders,
member of the Alfred Church,
Young Adult class teacher, church
song leader. Church and communIty members attending his funeral
at Athens Oct. 2 were Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Swartz, Mr. and Mrs. Art
Atherton, Nina Robinson, Clara
and Osle Mae Folirod, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Henderson, Nellie
Parker, Janet Moore, Eleanor
Boyles. Sandra Massar, Mr. · and
Mrs. · Richard Spencer and Tim,
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Spencer and
Kirk, Icy Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd DU!inger, Rickey Dillinger,
and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brooks.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz vis it ed Katie Swartz. Athens,
recently.
Genevieve Guthrie received
word of the death of her niece, Eva
Babcock. Mrs. Babcock was also a
sister-in-law of Ruby Burke.

Alfred
Social Notes

Alfred Sunday School a ttendance
Sept. 26 was 23; Oct. 3, attendance
was 36.
Recent weekend visitors of Genevieve Guthrie were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Yost, local, and Mr. and
Mrs. Russel Yost and Ann ,
Lancaster.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker. Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Poole and Will enjoyed a picnic dinner at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Michael, Stlversvllle. Other family members
present were Louise, Matthew,
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Grimm
Kim and Todd Michael. Friends spent a weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
from senior citizens also attended. Sam Curtis at Lorain.
Mrs. Hattie Taylor of Upper SanMrs. Parker received a birthday
gift. In the afternoon, she, Mr. Mi- dusky Is a guest of Mr. and Mrs .
chael and Mr. Poole went to the Ra- Oris Smith.
venswood Cemetery where the
Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford of
'parents of Mrs. Parker and Mr. Ml- Worthington, Ohio were here Saturchael are buriecl.
day, Oct. 3, for Racine United MethMr. and Mrs. Hobarl Swartz odlst Church Consignment Auction.
spent a Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. . It was a closing out - going out of
Harold Swartz at Williamstown, W. business of the A. C. Bradford store
va.
with proceeds for the new church.
Clara Follrod and Nina Robinson
Mrs. Raymond Butcher of Calspent a Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. vtn, W.Va .. spent several days with
Gerald Swartz at Reno.
Mr. and Mrs. James Authurson,
Sept. 29 Ruth Brooks, Nina Ro- who accompanied her to visit Terry
blnson, and Nellie, Alfred UMW, at- Nichols of Scioto Crest Center.

Racine

County
happenings

IF

flu ?

The Daily Sentinei-Page--9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Christmas ornaments

I

Christmas ornaments are being
sold by Eastern High School flag
corps beginning today and continuing through next Thursday. Proceeds from the sale will be added to
the unl!orm fund. Prices are from
$150 to $5. The ornaments may be
ordered by calling Lori Hudson,
992-7184 or Ann Wilhelm, 593-5908.
The flag corps at Eastern has •. :2
exclusive sale of the ornaments In
Meigs County· tbls year, tbe band
director rep(iriS,

many other countries are much

Food Co-op orders

higher. In addition. these epidemics ha ve tx&gt;cn assoc iated \\l ith an

increase of Reye·s sy ndrome
a mong U.S. children and teenagers. Reye"s sy ndrome ca n follow a
vir a l Infec ti on, pa rticularly
chicken pox a nd virus B Influenza.
destroying nerve fibers in the liver
a nd bra in . Other organs which can
be affected include the hea rt, kidneys a nd lungs.
QUESTION: How can doctors
tell which stra in of the influenza virus is going to cause a n epidemic In
the United States?
· ANSWF.F\: Determini ng which
stra ins of a virus shou ld go into the
vaccine is complicated . The process actu a lly begins severa l years
before a particular flu season. This
can bE&gt; done because an Influenza
epidemic oft en appears In Asia
about one yea r before we see It In
this coun try. Based on Asian reports. the vaccine for the 1982-&amp;:l flu
season contains A Brazil . A Bangkok, and B Singapore viruses.
QUESTION : Don' t some peopie
ha ve adver se react ions to

Orders for the Meigs County
Food CO-op must be placed by
Thursday for the Oct. 21plckup. Volunteers to handle the orders will be
at the Senior Citizens Center Thursday afternoon until 3: :.J p.m.
Orders must be paid for at the time
they are placed.
The food Is brought from Cincinnati by truck directly to Pomeroy
where volunteers package It for
each family . The truck arrives
around 1 p.m. and the orders must
be picked up not later than 4 p.m. at
the Center closes at that time.
All work In the food co-op Is done
by volunteers and assistance Is always needed.

TALL - Mrs. Frailk Clark Is a top contender lor the laDesI castor oU
plant grown in Meigs County this year. She Is pictured with the plant which
measures ten and one-hall feet. The Clark Home Is bt Hemlock Grove.

on

nu shots?

ANSWER: About one- third of
those vaccinated have an area of
redness a nd trnrk•rm·ss at the injec-

THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

tion site for one or two dJ ys. Infrequent reactions to the influenza

We Have Moved Next Door To Our Old
Building At 83 Mill St.

vaco.tne" are fever, genrra lized wea -

kness a nd muscle ac hes. These usually begin approximately 12 hours
after a vaccination and may last for

SPECIAL SALES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

Accepted in honorary
Kevin H. King, senior at Ohio University, has been accepted Into Beta
Alpha Psi. Alpha Kappa Chapter,
national accounting honorary.
King Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
William King, Bradbury Road, Middleport. and is majoring In accounting working toward a BBA degree.
He wUI graduate in June, 1983. King
Is a 1979 graduate of Meigs High
SchooL

Water exercise
ATLANTA (AP) -Exercising In
water may help relleve arthritis
pain, reports the Arthritis
Foundation.
"Proper exercising dorie In a pool
allows people with arthritis to move
paJntuJ joints with Jess stress," said
Dr. Frederic C. McDutfle ot ·the
foundat ion. "Because water alds In
support ing body weight even stl!f
joints arc ca,sier to move."
The foundation says people with
arthritis should participate ooly !n '
supervised water exerc11e pr'0- 1
grams approved by their phyllelan
or therapist. ·

•Imperial Reference Bible, Reg. s31.95 ........... Now S24.95
*Children's Rainbow Bible ........................... Sale Priced
*Ideal Cookbooks ;........................................ s1.oo Off ·
10% Off All Records, Cassettes, and 8-Tracks In Stock
•Children's Cr~ek ~~k Record &amp;Book, Reg. S3.95 Now $1.00
•All Bibles Sold on Friday &amp; SaturdayWill Receive A.
FREE IMPRINT
..,

*

BANK ONE would like to help you buy your new car now.
There are plenty of 1982 models available and the 1983's
are on the way. All you have to do is shop for the best deal
and finance your new car thro~gh BANK ONE. We'll give Y04
an interest rate that's fair and $150 t6 boot! Stop by any
BAf\.IK ONE office for details. Don't miss this limtted time offer.

(

.,

'··....

BANKONEN

BANK ONE OF POMEAO't'
1

~PI.AINI

......,FDIC

.·~·.

·-

-~

,._

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~·

L

9:30. 5:00

'

-~ MIDDLEPORT~
BOOK STORE
.
.
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-2691

... ,f
'

Open Saturday

.'

83 MILL sr.
'I

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9:30.8:00
.
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Open Friday

...
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DRAWINGS EACH HOUR FOR BIBLES, BOOKS
MUSICAL ITEMS, RECORDINGS AND
GIFT ITEMS
.

,•.
',,

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-

•• •
-~-

Take a bite out of thicker, richer Armour®Star Chili
and enjoy a soq: savings on the chili people prefer
2 to 1. The leading national brand can't hold a spoon
to Armour, because Armour has a delicious
combination of real beef, plump beans in a rich sauce.
No wonder twice as many people prefer Armour to
the leading national brand.

-----------------

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- - -- - - - Page-l 0-- The Daily Sentinel

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Regu lar meeting, Pomeroy Cha pte r 00. Roya l
Arch Masons. 7:30 p.m .; regula r
m eetin g Bosworth Council 46.
Roya l a nd Select Mas te rs . 8: 30
p.m .; All compa nions as ked to
a tt end.
MIDDL E P ORT - The Middleport Ama teur Ga rdeners ll'ill
m eet Wednesday a t 8 p.m . a t the
home of Mrs. Lillia n Moore. Lincoln Hill. Mrs . .Jmn Moo re a nd
Miss Ka thryn Hvsclt will be cohostesses. The progr a m will co nsist of a workshop in rf'ramic
flower s.

POME ROY - Meigs Cou nt\·
Women's Republican Club. ca n-

Calendar
di cta tes night , Meigs Inn. 6 p.m .
covered dis h dinner ; 7:30 p.m .
meetin g for a ll Re publica n
wom en.

TI-IURSDAY
POMEROY Wesleya n Holiness Churc h loca ted on Sta te
Rout e 143, Ha rrisonville Road
w ill start reviva l services Thurs·
day night to continue through
Oct. 2~ . Rev. Law re nce J ewell of
Dayton witt be the evangelist.
There will be special singing
ni ghtt:.-· with serv ices to begin a t
7:30p. m . Rev. Earl Fields, pastor . im·ites the public.
I.AURF.L CLIF F &amp; tt e r
Health Club. a nni versa ry ob-

Area residents record birthdays
serva nce Thursday, 6 p.m . potluck dinne r with meat
furnished at the La urel CUff
Free Me thodist Churc h. Sunshine siste rs to be revealed.

October U , 1982
You could tx&gt; C'xt rC'mely fortun ate' this coming year in imaginative
ventures or enterprise's \\"hich ~' OU conceive. Don't let your valuable

ideas ga ther dust.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23) Self-doubts a re likely to be your great est
e ne mies today. Instead of dwelling on wha t mi ght go wrong, think a bout
· all the good th ings tha t can ha ppen.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. U- Nov. 22 ) Whe n ha ndling fin a ncia l tra nsacuons
tod ay, don't be hasty. Take time to sca n the receipts a nd carefully count
a ll of your cha nge.
SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) The re is a possibili ty you could
have a misundersta nding tod ay with someone of whom you a re ve ry
fond . Resolve it promptly so that it doesn't fes ter.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22--Jan. 19 ) You will have to pa)' a price tod ay if
: you don 't do thin gs In acco rd a nce with your high ideals a nd sta nd a rd s.
· Let your noble qu a lities prevail.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Even though othe rs may knock a
mutua l friend today, be the one who bu ilds him or he r up instead . Your
loya lty will not go unnot iced.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You rna)' be tempted today to try to
dodge difficult decisions. Keep in mind th a t progress ca n only be made
when you set a course.

ARIES -March 21-Aprll 19 ) Your attenti on spa n may not be up to
pa r today. Extra discipline will be req uired when periorming tedious

tasks. Concentrate, concentrate, concentrate.

TAURUS - April 20-May 20) You could be a tt racted today to situati ons or involvem ents in unfamiliar realm s. When skirting the un-

known. take cautious steps.
.
GEMINI (May 2hlune 201 Don't make ha lfhea rted commnme nt s
todav. It 's bette r to say " no" tha n to prete nd you're going to do some. th ing which you may not in tend doi ng.
.
CANCER (,June 2I.July2'l) You wi ll be well awa re of your res ponsibilities today, but you may try to find reasons to ra tionalize the m awa y.
Unfortunately. it wo n't wo rk .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) Be both gua rded a nd prudent in ma naging
. your resou rces tod ay . The re's a possibili ty you could suffer a loss.
: e ither through ca relessness or ex travaga nce.
.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Even th ough you may be a ble to a d) US! a
tricky situat ion to your adva nt age today. give the edge to the othe r guy
ra the r tha n to yo urself. You'll feet bett er for it .

their parents. Mike and Debt
Gilmore.
Also observing a birthday was
the twins' great-grandfather, Burdell Black, 81. A Smurt theme was
carried out In the cake and decorations. Attending and presenting
~Its to Brandee a nd Brlanna were
their grandparents , Mr. and Mrs.
warren D. Black and Mr. and Mrs.
Et za Gilmore , their gr e at ·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Black and Mrs. Nora Gilmore,
and J e rry Blac k, Mrs. Margie Kappte, Louise Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Stewart and Heldt, and their
parents.

Gilmore, Black

POMEROY - The Meigs
Hig h School Class of 1978 will
meet Oct. 14 a t 7: 30p.m. at the
Meigs Inn in Pome roy. Plans
a re being m ade for a five year
reunion to be he ld in June.
110CK SP R INGS Gra nge,
7:30 Thu rsday evening a t the
hall .
SOUTHE R N Band Boosters
Thu rsday a t 7:30 p.m . in the
music roo m at .t he high school.
All parent s are inv ited to att end.

FRJDAY

Astrograph

VVednelday,~t. 13,1982

VVednesday,Ckt. 13,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11J PPE RS PLAINS- A com
bread a nd bean supper wlll be
held Friday night a t the Tuppers
Pla ins fire house by the Tuppers
Pla ins Ba ll Field Improvement
League. Serving will be from
4:30 to 6: 30p.m .

Holter
A birthday party was give n for
Arvll Holter by his wife , Mary Kathryn, and children on Oct. 6 at the
Holter home.
The group sang "Happy Birth·
day" to the honored guest. Games
were played with prizes going to the

Brandee and Brianna Glbnore
with their great-grandfather BurdeUBiack
Bra ndee a nd Brianna Gilmore
cele bra ted their third birthday recently with a party at the home of

DWI cases
lead list
'

winners.
Attending were Mrs. Jeanette Davis Rutland; Fred and Bertha
Srnlth, Warden and Murl Ours,
Chester; Worley and Glada Davis,
VIrginia Nelson, Dexter; Bob and
Martha Lee, Route 1, Racine; Curtis and Sharon Holter Riffle an&lt;!_
daughter, Greta, Pomeroy; Paul
Moore, Route 1, Racine; Harry and
Genevieve Richard, Bald Knob;
John and Mary Kathryn Rose, Julie
Rose, Glenn and Margaret Tuttle,
Gordon, Jill, Wesley and Martie
Holter, Gary, Judy, Little Gary, and
Brenda Holter, Carl and Pearlene

Lee, Basham.
Martha Lee won the door prize. A
decorated cake made by Margaret
Tuttle had the Inscription "Happy
Birthday, ArvU, 68, husband, dad,
grandpa." The cake was served
with Ice cream, sandwiches, mints
and nuts, punch and coffee. Gifts
and cards were received by the honored guest.
·
:
:
:
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·

RUTLAND Churc h of God
Junior Boys Sunday School Class
will ha ve a yard sale Friday at 9
a .m . The sale will be held the
third house above the Nazarene
Chu rch, with a bookcase bed,
ma tt ress. c lothing, a nd mL•cella neous item s to be included .

'

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The Daily Sentinei-Pag&amp;--11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ELL

Ten of the 47 .a rrests made by the
Middleport Pollee Department during September Involved charges of
driving while Intoxicated, accordIng to the monthly report of Pollee
Chief J . J. Cremeans.
Second highest offenses were no
baffle plates and disorderly conduct with five persons being
charged on each. Three persons
were charged with not having a
driver's license and two each were
charged with destruction of property, assault, criminal trespassing,
Improper backing, possession of
marijuana and leaving the scene of
the accident.
There was one arrest each for left
of cente r, driving under suspension, passing another car In lane of
traffic causing an accident, operatIng a vehicle without regard to
safety, squealing tires, failure to
yield the right of way, allowing
dogs to run loose, right of way at
Intersection, running a stop sign
and failure to maintain conlrol of a
motor vehicle.
The department Investigated 10
accidents, wrote 201 parking meter
tickets and drove vehicles 1,685 .
miles during the rmnth.

SlORE HOUKli:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-1 0 pm

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.

OR

•J,ooo
CASH!
IN OUBCRAND PRIZE DRAWINGS!
HERE'S HOW TO PLAY

THE ODDS ...

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH OCT.

;Middleport
:funds total

ll4

~~

'- -

:$456,116.09

SATIJRDAY
POME ROY - Employes of
the Pome roy Hea lth Car e Center will s tage a yard sale beginnin g at 9 a .m . Saturday a t the
parking lo t alon g the Ohio River
in Pome roy. All proceeds from
1he sale will go towards purchasing Christmas g ift s for residents
of the cent er. Anyone ha ving
ite ms they would like to contribute to the sate is as ked to contact
·Jua nita Spencer a t 992-6606 or
916-4192.

All Middleport vUlage funds to. taled $456,116.09 as of Sept. 30,
· Clerk-Treasurer Joh Buck reports.
· Receipts, disbursements of each
fund during the month, respectively, and the balance of each at
the end of the month Include: gen·
eral, $22 ,851.90, $14,356 . 16,
$34,401.22; street maintenance,
$3,012.78, $5.~1.40, $3,797.65 deficit;
HUD, $106,500, $108,294.15, $117,16
· deficit; federal revenue sharing, no
' receipts, $1,871.80, $3,019.62; street
' light, $3,600.54; $1,388.88, $10,738.71;
· street levy, $3,600.54, $97.05,
· $9,976.97; fire equipment, $1,622.96,
$:.;6·.10, $1,198.05 deficit; fire truck,
. $2,622.82, $71.10, $37,437.69; general
' bond retirement, $1,738.43, $48.09,
$18,500.70; planning commission,
; no receipts, $26.92, $87.47; sanitary
sewer escrow, no receipts, no dis: bursements, $142,807.29; water
tank, $1,000, no disbursements,
.$166,640.34; water, $9,526 .18,
:$12,159.43, $30, 766.58; sanitary
;sewer, $6,683.21, $8,400.50, $1,373.98;
: swimming pool, $53.25, $819.89,
-$2,572 . 93 deficit ; cemetery,
'-$1,442.75, $1,069.41, $795.45 deficit;
:water meter trusts, $210, $120,
•$8,817.45.
: Receipts for the month totaled
;$164,465.36 while disbursements
;amounted to $155,070.88.

MIDDLEPORT - The Peaceful Valley Gospel Singers witt
sing Saturday evening a t 7:30
p.m . a t Ash Street Freewill Baptist Churc h in Middle port. The
public is invited .

To be Informed in an objective
and unbiased way is a privilege that Americans
enjoy every time we read the newspaper. II means
that we have a right to know what is happening in
the world, to speak out on the Issues, to form opinons and to bring about change through our voting
system. That's what democracy Is all about, and it
begins with our basic right to freedom of the press.

$}29
Chuck Roast .... ~~ ..
USDA CHOICE
$}99
Round Steak ....~~ ..
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
$}59
Chuck R
USDA CHOICE

.

LB.

•••••••

COUNTRY

SPARE RIBS .•••••••••••.••...•...•••••.•• ~~~ $1.19
MIXED FRYER PARTS •••.••••••.•••••••. ~~-.49¢
GROUND BEEF••..•••••••••••••••••

[Farm Bureau
~annual fete

iset Oct. 21

""'

~ The annual dinner meeting of the
;Meigs County Farm Bureau will be
:held at the Chester Elementary
·School on Thursday, Oct. 21, and
'not Oct. 16 as reported earlier.
·. A steak dinner wUI be served at
-7:16 p.m . and this wUI be followed
by the annual business meeting.
Entertainment this year will be by
~close harmony group, "The Sweet
Adelines." .
: Reservations may be made at
the office In Pomeroy, P .O. Box 426,
calling 992-2181.

or'

Will support levy
' The Meigs County Ministerial As·
r;octation pledged Its full support of
the Meigs County Health Depart·
iytent levy Monday. The one mill
levy will be voted upon on Tuesday,
Nov.2.
' • The endorsement came after
:John Jacobs, deputy health comriussloner, and Norma Torres, desiartn,lent nursing supervisor,
appeared before the association to
present an outline of seiVIces and .
expenses of the department.

Newspaper
Week

Answers 53 calls
The Middleport Fire Deparqnent
answered a totai of 53 calls during
l!eP.tember, Fire Chief Jeff Darst
reports. Of the t9ta1 45 were emergency runs and eight were fire
calls. All vehicles of the ,department were driven a total of 1, 732.5 ·
m.Ues during the rmnth.

key to freedom
'

October 10-16.

: ··3LB.

A free p~:

Your key

"'
to freedom •.

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GOLD MIDAJ.

COFFEE

FLOUR

CA~$659

'

&amp;LB. BAG .

·89¢

Umit One Per Cuatomer
Good Only At Powell'a
Ott.
Oct. 18. 1982

'

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t

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t.

. MaRTON'S FROZEN

THANK

••

I

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MAXWBI: HOUSE'

•

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WHITE POTATOES •• ~ •••••••••••••• ~?.~~-.~!?.89¢
BROUGHTON'S BUTTERMILK •••••i~~~~. 79¢
MEDIUM EGGS .........................~~~~~.59¢
tESTA CRACKERS .......................~~-.69¢
GRADE A

A free press: Your

..

U. S. NO. I

:Cherry Pie '"filling
210Z.

89

TV Dinners
110Z.

Umit One Per Cuatomer
· Good Only At Powell's
()ffef
Oct.
1982

.•.
II

2/$1

.LIMIT 2 Per Customer.
Good Only At Powell's

()ffef

Oct. 16, 1982

'&lt;1

�•

•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Wednesday,Oct.13,1982

.

10
ntineiw!~~~Od~-~~~3.~19~B~2------------~-----------------1~~~~~~2h~·~----~------------~--------~~¥ySe

Search continues for eye _drop spiking su-s pect

ISiiiH
A.C:

SEARCH CONTINUES - The search continues In Grand Junction, Colo., for a " copycat" suspect who put hydrocWoric acid in bottles
of Visine A.C. eye drops. (AP Laserphoto).

pies at Brooklyn, N.Y., plant where
the contaminated bottles were produCfd, and ."we found no adultera·
lion , contamination or mistakes In
production," FDA Commissioner
Arthur Hull Hayes Jr. said.
There Is no Indica tion this Is anything but a local problem," Hayes
told reporters In Washington.
In New York, State Health Commissioner Dr. David Axelrod recommended that no one use· that
type of eyedrops until It could be
determined they were safe.
Pfizer Inc., which manufactures
the medica tion for relief of minor
eye irritation, had no plans to recall
the drops, spokesman Tony Blesada said by telephone Tuesday
from the company's New York
of!lces.
Larry Michael Tingley, 39, a
Veterans Administration Hospital
patient being treated for depression, had suffered eye damage
Monday when he used two drops of
Vlsine A.C. in hls right eye.
His bottle was contaminated with
hydrochloric acid, as was a second
bottle of Vlsine A. C. found Monday
at the same Target store where the
first bottle had been purchased, of-

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (API
-The search for a "copyca t" who
put hydrochloric acid In bottles of
Vlsine A. C. eye drops concentrated
here Tuesday after investigators
ruled out contamination at the manufacturing plant.
A hospital patient whose eye was
burned by acid-spiked drops Monday was released shortl y before
noon Tuesday wit h doctors saying
he should be "all right in three to
four days."
Thousands of impounded bottles
of eye drops from stores In Mesa
Coun ty were inspected as police
caught the " nut" who they think
reacted to publicity about the Chi·
cago Tylenol murders.
"It's the same as thi s morning,"
Police Lt. Robert Kibler said late
Tuesday aft ernoon. "We have no
leads. no suspects and no new bottles. We're just doing the groundwork - a Jot of groundwork."
State and federal drug officials
were gathering bottles of Vlsine In
the Grand Junction area for testing
at laboratories in Denver. according to local health officials.
The federal Food and Drug Ad·
ministration inspected Visine sa m-

flclals said.
Authorities In the western Colorado county banned the sale of all
liquid eye products.
The seals on the two bottled had
been broken and they contained a
yellow, pungent liquid. Uncontaml·
nated Vlslne Is clear and odorless.
In Washington, the FDA suggested that consumers who find
drug products from which seals or
other barriers have been removed
show the products to a pharmacist
or a retailer.
Dr. Kenneth Lampert, director of
the Mesa County Health Depart·
ment , said he believed the bottle of
Vlslne used by Tingley had been
"emptied out and completely replaced with hydrochloric acid. "

_

Business Senices

"There was a pretty crude attempt to reseal" the second bottle,
Lampert said. "It had been cut vertically and then resealed wtth
Scotch tape. It should be obvious,
along with the yellow color and the
odor, that these bottles are not
right."
Colorado health officials Issued a
statewide alert asking retail stores
and consumers to check eye drop
bottles for signs of tampering.
Grand Junction Police Chief
Gary Leonard said the crudely resealed bottle of acid-laced Vislne
A.C. Indica tes the poisoning was
the work of a "copycat whodld this
as a result of the publicity from
Chicago."

COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!

binet as a minister respon~lble for
disarmament and church affairs in
1967-73. She was awarded the 19!ll
Einstein Peace Prize.
Garcia Robles was Mexican am bassador to the United Nations in
1971-75. after which he was ap-

COLUMBUS, Ohio !APt- The
mayors ofOhio'seight largest cities
have given their endorsement to
Ballot Issue I. a proposal to assist in
the building of single-family and
multi-unit housing.
Their support came Tuesday at a
meeting on various common problems faced by the cities.
The session was arranged by the
Ohio 1\l'wiclpal League as a followup to a similar session the big-city
mayors held last April.
The mayors supported the Nov. 2
proposal, they said, because it not
only would help the economy by giving a boost to the construction industry. but also because it would make

housing loans available to young
couples and others who currently
cannot afford to pay prevailing Interest rates.
Under the proposal, the state
would issue bonds and turn the proceeds over to private financial instltu t ions which would make the loans
at a discounted interest rate.
The mayors aiso heard a report on
state school fundin g problems from
a spokesman for the State School
Boards Association, but deferred
taking a position until a later meeting, probably aft er the November
election.
They also agreed to support reenactment of general revenueshar-

1Cant inued from page II

Prior to the commissioner's reguJar meeting a public hearing was
held at 10 a.m. to receive public in·
put concemingthefiscalyearofl~.
work plan for the Community Services Block Grant program to be administered by the Gallla-Meigs
Coummunity Action Agency.
CAA acting executive director,
Hazel McKelvey and Robert Haner.
act ing assistant director presented ,
commissioners with an application
for CSBG funds totalling $ll9,219
which. if approved by the Ohio Department of Development . will provide funds for the programs
operated in conjunctin with Head
Start. home weatherization, assistance prog'rarns. department of
energy, home energy assistance
program . Title XX Transportation,

and CETA programs.
The COI1lqlissioners approved the
application as prepared. No concerned citizen appeared for the
hearing.
.
Attending Tuesday's meeting of
the commissioners were Wells,
Jones and DavidKoblentz. commisstoner s, Mary Hobstetter , clerk,
and Martha Chambers.

ing by the federal government and
to make their support known to their
respective members of the state's
congressional delegation.
Mayor Tom Moody of Columbus
challenged the seven other mayors
as to which of them can produce the
highest voter turnout in his city on
Nov. 2. promis ing a trophy to the
winner.
Other mayors attending the session were Roy Ray of Akron, Doug
DeGood of Toledo, Stanley Cmichof
Canton, Paul Leonard of Dayton,
George Voinovich of Cleveland,
David Mann of Cincinnati imd
George Vukovich, Youngstown.

KANSAS CITY . Mo. iAP I-Af·
ter a woman named Nancy Johnson
invented the hand-cranked lee
cream freezer in 1846, ice cream
quickly became as American asapple pie.
Today, Americans consume
nearly a billion gallons of ice cream
each year. According toSealrlght, a
maker of ice crea.-,.. and dairy packaging, the trend is to richer, creamIer ice creams made with natural
ingredients.

c.

I

..

.

WINNING -This Southern IDgh School soli judging team placed
first In the county competition held recently at the Jim Lucas farm In
Rutland Township. Pictured are the high scoring lndlv lduals In the
competition from the left, Dave Salmons, Southern IDgh, first; Greg
Bolen, Meigs IDgh, second; Ted Smith, Southern, third, and Richard
Hill, Southern, fourth. The coraest was sponsored by the Meigs SoU and
Water Conservation District.

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Patrick A. Hill, Nancy J. Hill to Jay
Hall , Jr., Parcels, Middleport.
Dana V. Canter, deceased, Ruth
H. Ca nter . Cert. of trans .,
Syracuse.
.
Rolland C. Searles, Avery S. Searles to Murphy 011 Company, Right
of Way, Rutland.
VIrgil · Parsons, Geraldine Parsons tQ Herald Oil and 'Gas Co.,
Right of Way Salisbury.
VIrginia E. Hartley formerly Virginia E. Vltatoe to Paul M. Kauff,
Debbie S. Kauff, 1.088 acres,
Rutland.
Harvey R. Learnond, Anna Mae
Leamond to Carroll Teaford, Eric
Teaford, Right of Way, Sutton.

'

John C. Young, Leora M. Young
to John C. Young, Leora M. young,
Parcel , Sutton.
Jean Hawk, Calvin Hawk to
Roger L . Hawk, Shirley A. Hawk,
Tracts 1 and 2, Orange.
Robert V. Haggerty, Lucllle M .
Haggerty, Richard L . Haggerty to
Robert V. l{aggerty, Lucllle Haggerty, Lotl8, Middleport.
The Racine Home National Bank
to Robert B. Qeek, Neva J. Cleek,
Parcel, Sutton.

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PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF EVA ARCHER
DECEASED
'
Case No. 23881
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

from their grandparents and Eva was 88 years old when
she passed on: From Racine, Ohio take Co. Rd. 28. Watch
for sale signs.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Cupboard with glass door, high back bed, spool bed, pump
organ, oil lights, lanterns, dressers, se wing rocker, kilchen
coal stove, stand s, wash bowl &amp; pitcher, baskets, copper
wash boiler, chest of drawers, misc. hair combs, old dishes,
churn, misc. chairs, couch, wagon seat, lreadle sewing
machine, and lots more.
'
"MISC."
Step ladder, misc. garden &amp; yard tools, push lawn mower,
plow, single tree, and extension ladder.

On Oc1ober 7. 1 982 m thP.
Mf'tq&lt;; County Proha!P Courl.
Cil '&gt;" No
23881
Ht~ ssell
Archm. Roure 2. Box 7 Gtrys ·
villi"' Ohro 45735 W:J S
POintP.d El(P.Cutor o l !hP. I"' Si o111"'
o l Eva Ar chm r1r&gt;CP.nsed . IJtP. n l
Rott!P I RacrnP 0hi045771

ar-

Rn hf'rl E Buck
Prohm" Jt1d'1r&gt;·
Clerk

' 101 IJ 20 27 . 3rc

ESTATE OF EVA ARCCHER-Case No. 23881
RUSSEL ARCHER - EXECUTOR
Dan Smith
Jim Carnahan
949-2033
949-2708
Eats - Cash - Positive 1.0.
"Not reponsible for accidents or loss of property."

I w ill offP. r for sn lf' ar thf' lr on t
dno r o f lh P Cou nhousP 1n
Pomf'rOy. Ohto on l hf' 19th day I :__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __!~=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~
o fOciOhP.r. 1982atl0000c· 1fod AM the lolfowmfl ner'lonal pr op"rtv o f Jilm''"- S
ConkfP.. dece::l'&gt;P.(!
A 1978 Forrl LTD 4 ·rloo r
REG. '15"
har(Hon au \ornobllr.. au tomattc
rran sm tSSton i'ltr co nrlrt• ontnq
pnwr:r '&gt; 1eerrn(J. po wP.r hr ilkos
and CB rarl• o. 46 .5 72 mtfP.s

CARPET SALE

Bern;11rl V Fult z
A1t orn py tor the
Es1a1e o f
Jilmes S Conkle

PWS t•STAWTIOII

'4'9

ESTIMATES
PH.

10-6-llc

J

CARPET

• Ranges • Refrigerat·

ors
• Dryers • Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4·5-lfc

NOW'16•s sa. vo. ••sr•LLe,o

992-6011

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG
eexcav8ting
-septic systems
tdump truck service
-seeding and reclaiming
•Racine and Syracuse
sewer hookup
Work Insured and
Guaranteed

PH. JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201
1017/Hc

GARAGE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

m

I
,----------------------~

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savel ·I _I
Write your own ad and order by mail with this

coupon . Cancel your ad by _phone when you get
results. Money not refundable .

.
1 Nam•---------1

I Address---------

1. P h o n e - - - - - - - - -

st. ARUI.Tt204 P&amp;omTRerUoCy,KOH

New Holland, Bush Hog

REPAIR

Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-3-lfc

Also Transmission
PH. 992·5682
or 992· 7121
3·24-llc

\

:

/)111"'
11 1111

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

nlfllf
\IRII
Anevwnsvmvnu

And Home Maintenance

• Roofing of alllypes
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs . experience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2834 or 949-2160
4·20· tic

Yard Sale

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 614-992-2681
or 614-992-3752
ANYTIME

'Roofing Work
'Aluminum &amp; Vinyl

Eber and Bill

Sidin~

15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

10/7/ l mo.

Backhoe Service
PH. 992-1181
or949-2182
9·20-1mo pd .

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing ma chine repair , parts . and
supplies . Pick up and delivery, Davis Vacuum Cleaner .
one half mile up Georges

9·5·1 mo

~::::::======~==========+=========~
CANDLELIGHT INN
Between Cheshire &amp;

ROOFING

Middleport. Ohio ·
PRESENTS
Marshall Tennant Band
Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
in October
Wed.·Draft Nile
(all draft beer price)
Thurs.-Pool Tourn. Nile
Daily Specials
Not Mentioned
Open 7 days a week
Carryout Beer &amp;
Wine Available
Extra Special
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10 to 2
Drink any drink
for I low price
Phone 992-9913

H. L. WRITESEl
• Gt1tter !&gt;
• 1: owns pOl ti S
e New or RP pair
• Painting

v,

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
7 14 TIC '

YOUNG'S
SERVICE

Superior Siding Co.

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work,
Complete Remodeling,
Roofing of all types.
Worked in home area 20
years.

'Addons and remodelin&amp;
-Roofin,and eutter work
-Contre ework
-Piumbineand
eledrital work
(FrnEstimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or992·7314

Gallipolis

Ph. 446-0687

Route 1

Long Bottom, Oh. 45743
985·4193
9-15-1mo.

EUGENE LONG

CARPENTER

orga'liRUNICARDI
MUSIC CO .
61 Court St.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

D.M.C.

Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES
CALL 843-3322

9-JO·Ifc

1

9-17-2 mo

clothing , fUrniture &amp; house -

hold items.
Two Family Garage Sale
Charolais lake. OJ Whit e
Rd . Friday Oc t 15 and Satur-

day Oct 16, 9:00-5:00 .

urday Oct. 15 S. Oct. 16.
Good winter clothing , coa ts ,
ja c kets . pants suits ,
sweater, hou se hold items .
Down At . 7 . Clipper Mill s
tum right 3rdhou seon right .
Baird 's 4 Family Gig antic
miles out George s Creek &amp;
Mill Creek . 1st hou se on
Bunce Rd . X- large t o sm all
clothes. knick kna ck s, c hild ren clothes , etc .
Yard Sale Friday, 9 -4 . Satur -

day 9-1. 426 Hedgewood
Dr, Gallipolis . Misc ellan eous it ems, coats, shirts , bed
springs . Cheap .
Yard Sale Just belo w 76
Station toward Ri o Grande
in Rodney . Thursday 14th.

Dance Class, Ballet. Tap ,

Jan. Jazzercise. Aegistera - Garage Sale Sat . Oct . 16th.
tion Oak Hill Teen Center,

Harrisburg -

ing in Racine Sat., O ct . 16,

4 family Garage Sale . Thurs.
&amp; Fri.. Oct. 14 &amp; 15 . 10a.m.
to 6 p.m . Wilma H. Ca sto,
S.R . 124, Portland.

Moving Sale start s O ct . 14,
Racine Fire Dept . is sponsor - Thurs ., Fri. , Sat ., Sun .
ing a gun shoot every Sat. Glassware , pot s. pans ,
night st'lrting Oct . 9 at 6 :30 clothes, tables, c h air s,
p .m . In Bashan·. Factory lamps, beds . Ladi es bring
choke 12 gauge shotguns your men . Hemlock Grove.
only .
Oh . 33 west turn right onto
- - - - - - - - -lc - 19 then left on old 33 , at the
Julies Attic Book E~tchange . Y turn right on 39 co me past
Open Oct. 11 from 12-5 . Hemlock Grove po!t offi ce.
Monday - Friday . Rt . 124, tum right on gravel rd . one
outside of Racine .
mile. Watch for signs .

Professional Electrolysis
Center. A.M .A . approved .
Doctor referals, by appoint -

123 Park Llr . 3 -family , child rens clothes large adult
clothes. lots of what not s..
8 -3 . Tues . Wed . Thurs .

3 -family garage sale . Rain or
shine . Oct. 14 &amp;: 16 . 8 :30 to
4 :30. Fairview Rd . Camp
Giveaway
4
Conley . Pt. Pl. Elec. stove ,
GE dishwasher. swag tights.
curtains. glassware, old mir ANY PERSON who has any· rors, pressure canner , brand
thing to give away and does name toys , Sears toy riding
not offer or attempt to offer tractor and wagon , picnic ta any other thing for sale may ble, patio table. lounger,
place an ad in this colunln . porch swing , chitdrens
There w~l · be no charge to books . tricycl e. bi c ycle, little
girls and wom ens clothing,
the advertiser.
misc .
Kittens to give to a good
home. Call after 5 or on wee-

kends, 446 -4173 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Pd

~1~6-~~m~o~-i~========j~~~~~~~~~~ genlle. Call 367 -78722 .
~~====~9Estate COMPLETE
MILLER
2
Call
RADIATOR
ELECTRIC
614·256-1932
SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
Part
4
mos. old . Call alter 9AM.
Core to the
Radiator.
614-245-5665.
SERVICE
Radiator Specialist
VIRGIL B. SR.
very. old
playful
and
3 female9. wks
Puppies
, male.
puppies ready to go.

la~&amp;est

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(614)·992· 3325

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NEW LISTING ...:. 4 yr. old 3
bedroom brick horne in the
woods. Family room wrth fireplace, 2 baths, large front
porch and large rear sundeck.
One acre level lot. $62,900.

Pomeroy, Ott.
Ph. 992-2174
2-26-Hc

3 ACRES -of trees, water tap,
electric and gas available. Will
sacrifice at $4,500.

Need home for loving pets.
Puppies &amp;: kittens . For info.
call Meigs Co . Humane So-

ciety . 614-992-6605 .

6 lost and Found

VINYL 8t ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation •Stonn Doors
•Storm Windows •Reptacelll8nt Windows
•New Roofing

POMEROY _; 6 room home
with 3 bedrooms, bath, basement. nat gas heat, on level lot
near stores for $17,500.

Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

9-22- 1

mo

ducts, At. 217 S. 218 , Scot-

town , Oh . Sawmill
equipment. conveyors . mo tors. steel building for remo val. JD 3508 dozer. Cat 910
lifts . Chipvan. flatbed
trailer, Int. &amp; Transtar tan 7 wk old pups, mixed breed. dems, Ford dump, Chev .
Call 446-2952 .
flatbed. other misc . (land
for sale thru owners) . Star
Datsun frame &amp; cab for juck . Ind. Auctions, V . Trageser
Call 614-379-2469.
Auctioneer. 716 - 457 -

weeks old. 985-3567 .

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

' Auction . Sat . Oct . 16 ,
10 :AM , Buckeye Wood Pro -

female,

4 part Beegle puppys . 6

DOUBLE - Both rented, 6
rooms and bath in each. Good
for write-off. All utilities in Mid·
dleport for just $27,1XXJ.

3005 .
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 276 -3069.

LOST all black female cat at
corner of Bob McCormick
Ad S. 5BB . If found pleaae

9

call446·1765.

WANTED TO BUY Old furni -

LOST: In Hemlock Grove

ture and Antiques of all
kir?ds, call Kenneth Swain ,

area on Sat.,' Oct. 9. Female
Walker Hound, black &amp;
white. Collar with name.

614-992-7548 .
lost - long haired female ca lico cat in vtclnlty of v. mile
out

Sandhill

Rd. Anyone

1----------t-----------j finding
this cat please return
to Robert Watton or call

Wanted To Buy

446-3159 or 256-1967 in

the evenings .
Buying Gold, Silver, Plati num. old coins. scrap rings
&amp;. silverware . Daily quotes
available. Also coins &amp;: coin

ouppliel for oale. Spring Val·

ley Trading Co ., Spring Val·

ley Plaza, 446-8025 or
304-675-6146 or 676- 446-8026.
6604.

7

Yard Sate

We pay cash for tate model
clean used cars,
F1enchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson

446-0069

$31.500.

Need 5 lo ca l perso n s to help
teac h &amp; se ll craft classes . N o
expe rience necessa ry , good
ea rn ings for those who qu al if y . Int er viewi n g n ex t 3
weeks . Writ e Tri Cham , P.O.
Box 2255 , Co lumbu s, Oh

43216 .

N eed immediately - 2 li ce nsed insurance agents.
Min . 2 yrs . ex perience .
Rumley In su rance Agen cy ,
446 -3320 for appointment .
Real Estates Salesperson for
loca l realtor . Experience perso n preferred . Send resume
to box 20 01 in ca re of Galli polis D ai ly Tribun e. 825 3rd .
Av e .. Gallipolis , Ohio

456 31.

Qualified teacher to come t o
my ho me to teac h 9 yr: old
girl full tim e. Wages dis cussed at time of interview,
good 2n d i nco m e. Contact
Steven J ac kso n, At . 1 Box
15, Ewington . Oh 45627
Ea rn ex tra mon ey for Christ mas . Sell Avon . Earn good
SSS , se t your ow n hours .

JUST graduated &amp; un sure
about your future? The West
Virginia Army National
Guard ca n help you decide.
We are loo king f or high
school se niors &amp; graduates
to tr ain in com muni ca tio n s,
ad ministration , supply , me ch ani cs. &amp; many o th er
fields . If you qualify you may
be eligibl e for an enli stment
bonu s and co ll ege or Vo Tech assista nce. Be one of
West Virginia s best. For
more info rmation , ca ll 304 675 -3950 or toll free 1 -

800-642-3619 .

WANTED : femal e vocalist ,
bass guitarist, for pop rock
band . Call weekends , 304 -

273-2130 .

Hav e a Ba sket Party . Earn
free baskets for gifts . 304-

675 -2069 .

12

Situations
Wanted

Tree trimming &amp; removal.

614 -949 -2129 or 614 992 -6040 .
CLEANING SERVICE Homes, offices. small busi nes s, and rental properties .
Reso nabl e, reliable . Have
references. 614 -992 -6208 .

- - - - - - - - -lcHav e vacancy for elderly
man or woman in my private
home at Tuppers Plains .
Good ex peri ence . 667 -

6329 or 667 -3402 .
Want ed t o Do . Exp. m o ther
will baby sit in h er ho me . Ma -

son. 304-773-5758 .

Vaca ncy in boarding home
for elderly . Room &amp; board
reaso nabl e. 614 -992 · 6022

or 614-992 -5748 .

Woman nee ds work , will do
all kind s of cl ea ning, small
paint j obs also . 304 -675 -

9100.

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insuran ce Co . ha s offered ser vices for fir e insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century . Farm ,
home an d persona l property
coverages are available to
meet individual n ee ds . Con tact Fost er l ewis . agent .

Phon e 379-2204.

Ar e y ou paying to much for
your hospital -hea lth insu ran ce . Call Carroll
Snowden, 446 -4290 .

15

Schools
Instruction

Karate the ultimate in self
defen ce all private lessons,
Men, women . &amp; children . In struction thru black belt .
Also available Karate uni forms puching and kicking
bags , and protective equip·
ment. Jerry lowery &amp; Associates Karate Studio, 143
Burlington Ad ,, Jackson ,

Oh. Call 614·2B6-3074.

POMEROY - 4 llrge room~
bath, suntledt, blseinellt and
kJt for only $17,000.

Finishing cherm, Pin care.~
modeling Clasaea . Al10 LollI-pop ages 7 thru 14. For
more info. call Gail McHugh

Housing
Headqilarters

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces ·
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742·3195
3-7-llc

Help Wanted

AVON . Give you rse lf a
C hri stmos Bonus . Sell
Avon . Earn good mon ey, set
your ow n hours. Call 614 698 -711 1 coll ect .

Chester. Ohio .

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL

11

signs .

Adamsville Rd.
10:00to 4 S. Sun .. Oct. 17 2
- -- -- - -!c - to 5 . Proceeds toward foot Golf Lessons. John Teaford . ball building .
Gun shoot , Racine Gun
Club . Every Sunday starting
1 p.m . Factory choked guns
only .

l!rnuhn meAt
lvr.IGttti

Coli 446 -3358 or 446 2156.

Shooting Match every Fri day. 7:30PM . Rob art Burns In Southern Football build -

Redbone

3145 .

Household items and an -

Oct. 16. 11AM . Call 614- tiques . 3 mil e South of Cad 245-5558.
mus. At . 141 . Watch for

General

Want ed : 1 6 ' fibre glass in sulated truck topper for 82
Dodge pickup . 304-882 -

cothe Rd . Gallipolis. Tools.

Yard Sal e Upp er At . 7 at Fl owerland . 9 :30 Thur s. &amp; Fri.

on

Want ed -Used coal &amp; wood
stove. 614 -742 -3 186.

Yard Sale Oct . 15 &amp; 16.
10Am -4PM . 101 Chilli ·

ment only. 304-675-6234 .

IO·l l mo.

we will MEE
or
BEAT any leg!timate
price you rece1ve on
any new piano or

Kitchen
Cabin ets
Roofing - Siding - Concret e Patios - Side walk s - New Construeton - Remodeling
Custom Pole Barn s.

Winter hour s: Monday thru
Friday 10 to 5, Saturday 1 0
to 4 . All cross stich supplies ,

home.

992 -6370.

160 at Evergreen .across

Yard Sale. Oct . 14. 15. 16. 3

Creek Rd . Call 446-0294 ..

SYRACUSE-RACINE
RESIDENTS
NEW SEWER
HOOKUPS
INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

8 room residence on 2 level
Ice. Balh. gas lumace and
equipped kitchen. Asking

\..

7

ca rds . pocket watches. gold
&amp; silver . Osby M artin . 614 -

from D eWhitts Plumbing .

u
.s. Rt. so Ohio
East
Guysville,
AuthorizedJohnDeere,

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
flew Homes - extensive
remodelin£
'Electric work
'C;:t:r~~e Bldgs.

TUPPERS PlAINS - Modem

'17"

1

1----------+----------+----------1 Di's
Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza. 446-2134 .

reasonable.

Rea-'19"
_,6 Rolls of SOl Nylon

----------l

1-

l~:::::::::9:/=2=4=/=l=m=o~~::::~~==========4!::::::::::::::::::~==~~::::::::::::~ Garage Sale Friday and Sat -

SYRACUSE - 2 level lots and .
okter 7 room home. Needs ·
some repairs but will seN .

6 Rolls ol AnsoiV Extra Good Nylon
s Year PresiC:Iefttlal Wear Warranty .

• Dish -

~

2.8 ACRES - 6 room home
near stores. out of all llood~
Basemerit with earage, bath
and all utilities. $25,1XXJ.

2 Rolls of Brown 1nd

54 Misc. Merchandise

. .. . .. . . . 992-2259

REALTOR

SAT., OCT. 16, 1982
10:00 A.M.
This is the last of a large family who has kept everything

Public Notice

Trustees of Rutland Township to
Frank Herald Jr. dba Herald Oil
and Gas Co., Easement, Rutland.
(55674) .

·'

Jean Trussell .......................... 949-2660
Dottie S. Turner .............••. . ...... 992-5692

ESTATE AUCTION

1101 13 lie

CALL AL
742-2328

Syracuse - Racine
Area

OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE - Is part of the charrn of this 75 acre
farm and owner desperately needs to sell. This is a deal you can't
resist Home has three bedrooms, new bath and septic system.
Nice big barn, and approximately five pnmitive campsites. Near
the new bridge. $52,1XXJ.

t-• ..... ,
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{nlluwi11~ lelt!pleotU! uclt.~~~tf!._

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..

PUBLIC NOTICE
NEW YORK (API -Since the
1973 oil embargo, New York State
res ident s hav.e shown a 14 percent
per capita increase in home energy
use - the third highest increase in
the nation.
Despite the increase, New

.....-.... ...
If&lt;

Empire state energr.______________
Yorkers still use less residential
energy per person than most of the
nation, says Honeywell's Energy
Management Information Center .
In fact, New York City residents use
about half as much energy per per- ,
son as the rest ofthecountry,ltadds.

FREE ·

MIDDLEPORT- Athree or lour bedroomhomewith afireplace in
the dining room, ~rge master bedroom, almost new furnace, new
water tank, new carpet throughout Asking $31 ,900.

PRICE REDUCED - On thts two story home with almost new
~ding and roof, four bedrooms, 2\\ baths, nice front porch. back
patio, and in good l)tlighborhood. Now $29,900.

(;t.uifw.d fM~et rooer dte

""""""-"''
to Avln P•'"'

t\ I o" A "'"'·'"'

"'''~"-"""'""

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 5-4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591

All Makes

Farm Equipment

H&amp;G SEWER
HOOK-UPS

REALTORS!
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI ............. . 992-6191

II''"'"'"'
'w••
lh' •"'''"'[)

" -'""'

........... ,...
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'"'''" ,,,
n"""''"
ll'•'''"
'"' ' "'
"h••"''" ~ "''"'"~'

'' '"'pfuno""

BUILT AND
REWORKED

NEW LISTING- Racine- Approximately one acre of nice laying
land which is set up for atrailer wrth septic tank, drilled well, public
water, and electric. Also, a new two car block garage with storage
room and a concrete patio. $8,000.

PRICE REDUCED -On th~ beautilul brick and frame ranch wrth
a full basement. three bedrooms, 1\\ baths, larnily room, and a
large nice laying lot in Fairview. Blended rate loan available. Now
$47,500.

PHONE 992-2156

~

l l l l l • v l.ll ••"' l ""P"'"~'

I "•OP• Alii

...~.. .

or :

Custom kitchens and
bathrooms. Remodeling,
add-ons, new homes,
plumbing, electric, siding.

10·3·1 mo pd

. NEW LISTING - Racine - Building ~te or !railer lot Approxi·
mately 2 1/ 3 acres, of which most is wooded, with a septic tank.
Water and electric are available. $5,1XXJ.

"AOI.OUO'\

" .~

&amp;
CHIMNEYS

-Water
. -Sewer
-Gas Lines
- Seplic Systems
1Jr1• or Small Jobs
PH. 992;2478

PH.992-2259

Ndd'itUHIIIM

&amp; ""' ' '""

-

• washers
washers

CONSTRUCTION

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo-Boy

608 E. MAIN

Or Wttle OiltiJ Sen hnt l (l• n •l•tcl De pl .
Ill Cour l Sl . Porneorr . Oh •o4 SIU

. ........, . o......
, ....,,,,.
·--~··"
, ,., ···-~

949-2801

3·11 -lfc

- Trencher

The Daily Sentinel

,...,_0
.. .......... '
P• ·I·' odoO"'P

siding

9-20-1 mo Pd

- Dozers

Real Estate - General

Public Notice

Meigs County property transfers ..
LlOrothy H. Boot h. George E.
Booth to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
Right of Way, Scipio.
Edmond Grueser, aka John Edmond G!lleser, Lela Irene de La• val, by power of atty., aka Lela •
'Irene-De Laval to John T. Grueser,
Juanita P. G!lleser, 1.2 acres,
Sutton.
Qyde Slone, Wanda Lee Slone to
. Clyde Slone, Wanda Lee Sloan, 8'!.
acres, Columbia.
Wanda Louise Eads, Jerry Eads
to Larry V. Parsons, Sonla E. Parsons, Parcels, Columbia.
Mona L. Snowden to William N.
Snowden, Parcels, Rutland.
L. Wbartqll, Nell'(~. Wharton,

PH . 843-2075

r-----------------------------------------

' ..................."

estimates,

PULLINS
E!!CAVATING

Nancy Jaspers - Associate

wood, W.Va., was westbound on
Ohio 338, about a mile west of Ohio
Ii4, at 7 p.m. Tuesday when a deer
ran into the path of his vehicle and
was struck and killed, causing moderate damage to his vehicle.
At 10:40 p.m., Glenwood E. Malone, 32, Scarborough, N.C., was
northbound on U.S. 33 when another
deer ran into the road and was-killed
in a collision with Malone's auto.
The car was severely damaged.

Creamy Treat

Casci chosen

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL

Teenager cited after accident

'&lt; •·~"' ·· ~.- ·
I ( .. r&lt;&gt;' 1· · ~ --

949·2860.
No Sunday Calls

free

and Ra~ene.

pointed foreign minister by Mexi·
can President Luis Echeverria.
Last year's prize was awarded to
the office of the United Na tlonsHlgh
Commissioner for Refugees for its
work with the world's mlUlons of
homeless.

Ohio mayors support ballot issue I

Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
service available

for

Old fumiture. glass&amp;: china .
Clocks , phon es, fan s, quitt a,
paintings, baskets . bank s,
--4.&gt;¢.-'&gt;_ _ _ ,&lt;..J( coin mac hin es. oil &amp; electric
lamps. rai lroad items, war
items. w ea ther vanes , tools ,
knives &amp; swords, marbles.
base -ball card s, indian artifacts. com ic books , post

McCormick
to 4 ..
Ir~=~======~f::=:;::~~~:;=~f.=========J~========~ Bob
Garage
Sale WedRd
. S.., 9
Thurs
C. R. MASH
Roger Hyse II
Yard Sale Thursday Oct.
FIREPLACES .
BOGGS_
14th s. Friday 15th at Pete
cox residence on Old Route

Real Estate - General

POMEROY, OHIO

The Gallia-Meigs post of the state
highway patrol cited a Pomeroy teenager for no operator's license in a
one-car accident Tuesday.
Terry A. Derenberger, 16, Pomeroy, was nort hbound on County Rd.
38at 5:45p.m. when hedroveoff the
right side of the road, came back on,
went left and overturned.
The car was moderately damaged and Derenberger was not
injured.
The patrol said Clem U. Norman.
25, Geneva. drove his vehicle into a
ditch near the intersection of Ohio 7
and Salisbury Twp. Rd. 189 at l: 33
a.m . Tuesday while attempting to
enter a priva te driveway from the
berm.
Deren berger's car suffered slight
damage.
Thomas J . Mulhern, 47, Ravens-

Call

Shop. Middleport . 992 3476 .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.
lnsulalod Do1 Houses

Buill Garages"

S. Scottie Smith
AI mokao and models

ALL STEEL &amp;
UTILITY BUILDINGS

"Beautiful, Custom

Oeweyne Williams

Gold, silver, sterling, je welry , rings , old coins &amp; cw ren cy. Ed Burkett Barber

FOR FUTURE USE"

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes stort from 12'116'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382

The Daily Sentinel

SYRACUSE - W~l kept home on e._
lla large ~l. 5 bedrooms. d~nmg
mom and kitchen are spaCKJO&gt; Klchen • fully equrpped rrrctuding dishwasher. Asking $32.!1Xl.
OWNER MOVIN_G - 2 weeks and you could bern th• 3 bedroom,
large IMng_room, ulilrty room. and add-oo mobile home wnh corner kll
Owner anxoos to work term• Let's ~~~ Asking $16.500.
.
HOME ON APPROX. 2ACRES - Bashan &amp; Ea~e Ridge. Needs
handyman. 14% mterest available. Asking $25,!1Xl.
VACANT 3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME - Lrvrng room has
woodburning fireplace, 1~ bath, hard\\00&lt;1 l'oors well corrstrucled and
insulated. Asking $35,!1Xl.
'
NICE FLAT LOT IN RACINE - Good c~an area. One 3 bedroom
mobile home rented and secorrd lrar~r spot Aslung $17,!1Xl.
RENTALS: $220 1D $250 or&lt;e range ~us deposrtrn Po.-.roy, Letart

~

Garcia Robles is currently Mexican representative tot heUnited Nations in Geneva and heads his
country's delegation tothedisarma·
ment talks. He was chief Mexican
delegate to the United Nations in
New York in 1971-75, after which he
was appointed foreign minister by
Mexican President Luis Echeverria, leaving with the expiration of
Echeverria's term in 1976.
The committee cited him for his
prominent role in disarmament at
the United Nations, both in Geneva
and in special sessions.
ln 'disarmament negotiations at
Geneva, Switzerland, where Mrs.
Myrdal formerly headed Sweden's
delegation. and in other international bodies and in her writings, she
has helped arouse a general sense of
responsibility for the world problems that the arms race causes. the
Nobel committee said.
When she was not chosen last
year. 19 Norwegian political and
pacifist organizations took up a nationwide collection and presented a
"People's Peace Prize" of 375,001
Norwegian kroner to her- equivalent to about $50,1XXJ by today's exchange rate.
A former member of the Swedish
Parliament, she served in theCa-

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE

By ahopplnc In your home arN you aave on
pa, the WMr and tear on your Clr and avoid
the hiZirdl of hl1hway and freeway
tr1Velln1. It paya to ahop where you llvel

Myrdal, Robles joint Peace Prize receipients
OSLO, Norway !API - Alva
Myrdai of Sweden and Alfonso Gar cia P.obies of Mexico. two veteran
fighters for world disarmament,
were jointly awarded the 1982 Nobel
Peace Prize today.
The ffi.year-oid Mrs. Myrdal, a
sociologist and former diplomat,
and Garcia Robles, 71-year-old
former Mexican foreign minister,
"for many years had played a central role in the United Nations' disarmament nego t lati ons." the
chairman of the Norwegian Nobel
Committee. Egil Aarvik, said in announcing today' s award.
Mrs. Myrdal' s husband , Swedish
sociologist Gunnar Myrdal. won the
1974 Economics Prize. Another
husband-wife team, Frederic
Joliet-Curie and I rene Joliet-Curie,
jointly won the 1935chemisttyprize.
Mrs. Myrdal and Garcia Robles
were among a record 79 candidates
- 60 individuals and 19 groups nominated for the prize. which carries a stipend of 1.15 million Swedish
kronor. equivalent to $1'\7.001.
Others had included detained Polish labor leader Lech Walesa, U.S.
Mideast mediator Phil ip C. Habib.
black South Alrican bishop Desmond Tutu and jailed Soviet human
rights act ivl5t Yuri Orlov.

S&amp;WTV

Wanted To Buy

LAFF·A· DAY

..

Page-13

.

.

at 61 '!1-992-7440.
r.

�. "'

....-

- ...

... .'

,

"'

Wednesday, Oct. 13,1982
D.

n

The Daily Sentinel

14

1 8 Want e d to Do

They'll Do It Every Time

44

r-----

General Hau ling and Trash
remove\ Service . Reliable
and dep endable. Ca ll 446 -

Apartment
for Rent

....~ew Haven. 3 bedroom un -

3159 after 6PM 256 -1967.

\

Phtanshll
21

u: ........

apt s. Adult s.

ONE bedroo m apartment in
Hender so n , partly fur ·

nished. 304 -675 · 1972
TWO bedroom apartm ent.
Newly painted . Quiet neigh ·
borhood . Refe r en ce re -

quired. 304 -675-1962.

HOME LOANS 14% fi xe d
1a te. leader M o rt gage. Ohio

only 1 - 800 · 34 1 - 6554.
WVa. 614 -592 -305 1
Professiona l

Services

5804.

446 -0475.

_2_5_6_·_
6_
24
_ 5_._ _ _ _ _ _
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1981 14 ft x 6 5 Ventura , 2
bdr .. exc .co nd .. set · up. Call

41

Houses for Rent

Furnished Rooms

holds five guns. Double
glass doors, 6 shelves. big

Furnished room . $115 . u tili Sale or rent , Pomeroy . 6
ties pd. single male. share
large room house, 1 bath ..
bath . 919 2nd . Ave .. Galli bas ement. Call for more
polis . Call 446-4416 after 7

drawer in bottom. Complete

PM .

1980 Happy Hou se 14K70 .
3 bdr . . total elec tri c .

46

S11 . 995

1978 Nashu a

House for rent -all new paint .
Some ca rpeting , no inside

pets. 614 -992 -3090 .
Hou se for r ent S100 . in

42

PIANO TUNIN G &amp; REPAIR

1973 Darian 60 x 12, 2 bdr.,

Nice 14x70 M o bile Home.

Ca ll Bill Ward fo r appoi nt ·
ment. W ard ' s Key board ,

$6,495 . 1970 New Moon

446 -2192.

1979

lib e rty

60x14 ,

Ca11446 -1546 .
Fo r sa l e by ow ner . 3 bed·
room home. large family
roo m . S5.000 down ass ume
9 h% . 44. 000 mortgage .
M on thly paym ent s on l y
5424 Send lett er exp ress·
mg ~nterest to Mr Gemm ell .
7231 North Ridg e Road.
Mad1son . Ohio 440 57 or ca ll

216 -428 · 5320 aft er 5PM .
Offered by Board o f Trustees . Ri o Grande Co ll ege,
Rio Grande. Ohi o , removal
of two (2) houses loca ted on
the forme r Bem an property,
5 18 East Co ll ege Ave .. Rio
Grand e. Ohi o Sealed bids
wi ll be acce pt ed in the offi ce
of Bu siness M anager , All en
Hall . Ri o Grande Co ll ege,
un til 2 :00 PM . October 22 .
1982. at w hich ti me bids
w ill · be opened. rea d and
evaluated for remova l of
both hou ses . Rem oval of
houses mu st be made on or
befo re November 15 , 1982.
Direc t bid s to Rio Grande
College , Ri o Grand e. Ohio
45674 . ATTN : Bu sin ess
Manager . Hou ses m ay be
viewed by appo intm ent
on ly - co nt ac t 614 - 245 5353. eKt . 217 . Th e co ll ege
rese rves th e right to rej ect
any and all bids .

3 bedroom house for sa le.
1 1/~ ac r e levf! l lot. has barn .
and 2 out buildings. Call

614 -379 -25 50 .
House for sa le or rental pur c ha se . F ai r vie w Sub division. 614 · 992 · 53 48 or

614 -992 -2064 .
Middl ep ort : Sa l e. lease option. 3 bedroom. dining.
basement . ga rag e . Ni ce
neighborhood . Own er fi nancing S40's. 614 -992 -

60x12 , with 12ft. eK pando .
setup in park. 55 , 995. 1966
New M oo n 50x12 , 2 bdr ..
S4.495 . Call J ohnson ' s Mo bile Hom es. Cal\446 -3547.
1970 El co na 12K 65. 2 bdr. .
wood burner . Call 379 79 Bayv iew trail er 1 2 x 65 .
Tak e over payments. Phone

614 -949 -2446 . Cell even·
ings after 8 . Charles Ritchi e.
1973 - 12x60 Baron Trail er.
with wood burner. 8 x 16
porch. Must sell . M ov ing.

614 -742 -2897 .
1974 New M oo n trailer .
Range &amp; refrig erat or. Tot al
elec tri c. 2 bedrooms. utility
roo m . 614 -992 -7406.
1 97 1 liberty 12 x 52 . 2
bd.room, gas . partiall y fur nished , und e rpinnin g .

S4.000 61 4-992 · 7324.

197 3 14x70 m ob il e hom e.

3 bedroom . 30 4-882 ·2820 .
2 bedro om trailer 12x50, 1
acre o f ground . Rt . 2 below
Henders on S10.000 . 304 -

675 -3662 .

1st St . Meson, WV . 304·
773 -6392 .
For rent or sa le. 3 b8droom
hou se with ba se ment. For

1979 22 ft . Holid a y
Rambl er. Free Spirit travel
tr ailer, self contained . slee ps
6. S5800 . 304 -895 -3636
aft er 5 p .m .

35 lots &amp; Acreage
For sa le one and half acres
m ore or less. approximately
600 ft road frontag e on
Cora -Centerpoint Ad . ne ar
Centerpoint S3 . 000 . 00

Phone 682 -6944.
House or trailer lot in Brad bury. Water . gas, electric.
septic tank . Call 614 -992 -

2602 .
Two ac re lot s- 150 ft . road
fr ontage, city water , behind
84 Lumber . Call 304 -675 -

6873 or 675 -3618 .
THREE ac r es, fen ce d .
12x6 0 trail er. well . septic
system. letart , 9.000.00.

Call 304 -895 -3605 or 614 367 -0612 .

woodburner, atove ·~ d re·

frig,rotor included. Ce.M of.
tor 5PM, 1114· 245-9221.

Cell 446 · 1052 after 5.
3 bdr trailer on Kerr-Bethel
Rd . no pet s. Cal\446 · 3371 .
2 bedroom trailer . Real ni ce,
aduhs only . Brown 's Trailer
Park , Miner svill e. 614 - 992 2 b edro om furnished .
Adults pre ferred . No pets.
D epo sit required . 614 -992 Furnished 2 bedroom on 1
ac re. Couple with 1 c hild
only . 5200 . month plus dep -

Rental&amp;

41

Ashland -Upland Ad . Galli -

polis Ferry. 304-675 -4088 .
14x70 Mobile Home. Apple
Grove. 2 bedroom. partially
fum . $230 . month plus utili ti es. S100 Sec . deposit. Call

Houses for Rent

•

% acre. thr ee bedr. hom e,
ba se ment . c ity school,
county water . Call 216 734 -3734. evenings.

Very ni ce 2 bdr. duplex
house. Furnished, Main St ..
Cheshire. $185 per mo .. wa ·

tor paid. Call 61 4 -246 ·
5818 .
Three bed., Spring Valley
area. two baths, family room
with fireplace . double garage , nice neighborhood .
8325 per mo . Deposit and
reference required . Call

with locks, $75 or trade for
pop gun or rifle or trade for
freezer or refrigerator freezer. Can be seen at Rt . 4
Te xas Ad ., Box 26, toward
end of Road , house on hill.
20 gallon aquarium. Full
hooded light. All accessori es. Fish heater. loader all
$45 or trade for gun. Can be
seen at At . 4 Texas Rd ., Box
25. toward end of Road ,
house on. hill.

Pt. Pleasant area , trailer
$175 .00 month plus utili ties and deposit . Greer Rd .
Pt . Ple asa nt . 304 - 675 -

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr . downtown , all carpet ,
co mplete kit c hen, all elect·
ri c heat -air cond ., Washer -

dryer. Call 446 -4383 days.
446 -0139 eve.
Furnished 3 r . private bath.
845 2nd . Ave ., Gallipolis.
Ref. preferred . Call 446 Small furnished effiency, 1
prof essional type male only .
Center air &amp; heat. Call 446 ·
2nd floor furnished effi ci ency apt . Apt . 4 , 729 2nd
Ave . Adutts only . 446 -

0957 .

tor. Call 304 -675· 6104 or
676 -5386 .
Nice ly furnished mobile
home, central air. 1 mile
below city overlooking river,
edu~s

only . Cell446 ·0338 .

First floor unfurnished apart·
ment . Inquire at 631 4th
Av e.. Gallipolis .
3 bedroom unfurnished apt .
1 03 Court St. Gallipolis.
8216mo .. 8100deposit,no
pets, ref required . Call 446;

2572.

./

Furnished &amp; part furnished

apt ., adults. Call 446 -3733
or 446·0171 .

16ft. gooseneck trailer . Call

614 -256-6230.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olive St .. Galli ·

Like new . Cell446·8143 .
Homelite string trimmer
$75 . King Trumpet 8225 .
Honda Trail 90 motorcycle.
$350 . All like new . 614·

S40 . Call 446· 31 59 .

304 -675 -1293.

992 -7539.
Firewood. Cut &amp; delivered.

$30 .

614 - 992 - ~218 .

FIREWOOD, cut, split &amp; del·

- wash ers. dryers, refrigerators. ran ges . Skaggs Ap plian ces. Upper River Ad .,
bes id e Stone Crest M otel.

ivered, 525 . a load. 1972
Chevy Impala. 2 door. hard·

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa , chai r. rocke r. otto·
man , 3 tabl es. (ex tra heavy
by Fronti er). S685 . Sofa.
chair and loveseat , S2 75 .
Sofas and chairs priced from

S285 . to S895 . Tabl es. $38
and up t o S125 . Hid e-a beds . $440 . and up to
S525 .. qu een size. S380.
Recliners . S175. to S325 .,
lamps from S18 . to S65 . 5
pc . dinett es from S79., to

$385 . 7 pc.. S189 . and up .
S395 . to S650 . Desk $110 .
Hutches. $300. and S650 ..
maple or pine finish . Bed ·
room s uites
Ba sse tt
Cherry , $795. Bunk bed
complete with manresses,
S250 . and up to $395. Baby
beds. 599. Mattresses or
box spring s, full or twin ,
$58 ., firm . S68 . and $78.
Queen sets , S195 . 4 dr .
chests , $42 . 5 dr. chest s,
S54. Bed frames, S20 .and
$25 ., 10 gun · Gun ca binets ,
$350 ., dinette chair s $20 .
and $25 .· Gas or electric
ranges , $325 . Baby me tresses , S25 &amp; S36, bed
frames $20. $25. &amp; $30 .
Used Furniture .. bookcase ,
ranges. chairs, end tables,
recliners and TV's . 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 7pm. Mon . thru Fri. , 9.am
to 5pm. Sat.

446 ·0322

etc . Cell 446·3937 .
Whirlpool washer , $110 . extra ni ce . Whirlpool dryer
$90. 9Ktra nice. Guaranteed

30 days. Call
1207.

top. 304-675 -1478.

614 -2 56 ·

GE dryer like new, $80.
Whirpoo l portable washer ,
24 in . wide, real nice. $80.

Call446 -8181 .
Bed and dresser, ex. condi tion , complete w arm morn·
ing heating stove . Call

446 -4497.
54 Misc. Merchandise

BUYING and selling ul8d
heavy equipment (agricultu ral. co nstruction. mining,
c he mical industry , etc .)
through consignment for a
national company . Starting
at s 15.000 . vai'Ue. Call Ro-

bert L Harper. 304 -675·
1293.
UTILE John add on furnace .
S200 . Sears 12' fibreglass
boat. 4 % HP motor, $360.

304 -675 -2693.
Harvest special whole
shelled corn 85.00 per 100
lb. your sacks. 85 .75 one
sack . Morgan Woodlawn
Farm, Rt . 35, Pliny, WV .

pickup truck. Call614 -286 ·
5930. Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

614 -367-0646 .
Pomeroy -2 bd. room unfurnished houM . $195 . mo.
Security deposit. $100. plus
utilities. After 6 -call 614·

992 ·2288.
Large house in country . Free

u••·
61 '·992 -6443or614992·5672.'
Middleport: Rent, leaoe op·
tlon. 3 bedroom, dining, fire·
.,..00. b01ement, goroge,
nice Mighborhood. f360.
114·192-2617.

oo

79

HILLCREST

KENNEL

Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Dobermens pups and
Doberman Stud Service .

_

r--

Autos for Sale

74 Datoun 260Z, good
cond. Call 614 -256-1768,
81 ,800.

Call 446-7795.

77 Dodge Charger SE. PS,
AT. AC, cruoie, AM·FM

POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Taylor at 614· 3677220.

stero, rally wheels. new ra dials, one owner, must sell .
will sacrifice . Call 446-

1325.

6 weeks old male Beegles-

full blooded, 825. Coll4464658 .
AKC registered Schnauzer
puppies. Poodle puppies,
$160 . each. wormed &amp;

1975 Ford Grande 2 door. 6
cyl., auto, gray with red inte-

rior, good cond., $900. Call
446 -3759 .
1981 Cutla11 Supreme Diesel with everything. Will
consider older car as trade

in. 614· 742-2416.

57

Musical
Instruments

1974 Pontiac Catalina. 4 dr.
sedan, good cond . 8760.

61 4-949· 2B34.
We will MEET or BEAT any
legitimate price your receive
on any new piano or organ .
BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO.,
61 Court St .• Gallipolis. Call
446-06B7.

HARTS Uold Cars, New
Haven West Virgi nia. Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock.
JEEPS. cars, trucks under
$100. available at local
gov't sales in your area . Call

lrefundeblel 1 · 71 4 - 669·

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

0241 ext. 1866 for directory on how to purchase. 24
hrs.

I
I

Golcjen • Delicious. Rome
Beauty end Wine Sap, $7.00

bushel. 84 .00 y, bushel.
Cornf!'r of LeGrande Blvd .
and Portsmouth Rd . Cell

446• 859B.
APPLES - Fitzpatricks Or chards has plenty of picked
apples for appte butter or for
winter stortng. Visit our orchard qn St. At. 689 or call

669-37B5.
- - - - - - - - ·lcPotatoes. Humphrey Farms
have a good supply of Ken nebec potatoes on hand .

1976 FORD 4 door aeden,
power steering, power
brakes. air conditioning.
cheep . good condition , 304·

458 -1864.
1975 LINCOLN Mark IV.
48,000 miles, loaded. 304·
468 -1854.
74 Chevelle .
4824.

304 -676 ·

1977 Chevy 360 engine
complete $176. Low mi -

leage, 304· 773 -5889 .
1976 Corvet T-top, a-c.

89.00 per 100 lba. Your
containers . Reedsville, Oh .

304· 675 -3016 .

614· 37B-6295 . No Sun .

REMINGTON 700 BDL.
30.06. New Redfield scope.
304 -675' 5214.

Mango ' s. Hot end banana
pepf)era . You pick· $4 .00

bu . Call 843-2183 after 9
p .m .

CAMOUFLAGE new U.S.

196B Camero 2 83. 3·
speed, $1000 . 304-675·
7436 after 5 p.m.
1974 Plymouth Valiant. 6
cyl. $700. 304·B82· 2638 .

72

Pwr91 luppllae
aLl wcvuh
61

Trucks for Sale

1972

Farm Equipment

Chevrolet

%

Ton

Pickup. 8295.00. Ph. 245·
9570.

7 :30p.m. Friday, Saturday,

- --------Backhoe will fit just about
any tractor. $3,000. Sandera Auto Sales, ht &amp; Syce-

auto., 3A ton . Call614· 388·

more St., Gallipolis. Call
446 -8640.

1975 FO&lt;d. F 150. Loaded

895· 3821 .
Sears electric range $26 . an tique rocker $15 . 304-675·

55 Building Supplies

Soler stainless steel bulk
tank holds 240 gals. 2 surge
units &amp; pumps, 3 point 4
bottom Massey - Harris
mouf'ted set of plo~s.
Priced on inspection. 388-

B338.
Building materials block ,
brick , sewer pipes, win ·
dows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. 0 . Call

614-245-6121 .
Build your own garage
24x24 all lumber furnished,
$696 . Can deliver. Bern
pattern also. Call 614-886·

7311 .

1963 Minneapolis Moline
tractor, $700 or best offer.

Call 675· 7726.

12. Prices, 87.00 to 89.60.
614· 667-3085.
Pets for Sale

DRAGONWYND CAT"{ERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pup·
pies. CFA Himalayan. Persian and Siamese kittens .

Call 446 -3844 after 4 p.m.

1974 GMC PU 350 engine.
8543 .
with

extras .

614 - 949-

2544.
1976 Ford - 1 ton

truck .

Good cond. 614 -247-3895 .
1976 Ford Bronco. lock in
lock out hubs, 4-whael

1976 Ford % ton pickup

sale. Call 614-388 -9930,

73

Vans

8o 4

W.O.

evenings only.

1977 Chevy Blazer, good
cond. Coli 446-2647 .
livestock

21 otaer, 600·7001b. &amp; 93
International combine . Cell

1979 Dodge Powerwagon
150, 4 wheel drive, 36.000
mileo, 304-675·4168.

614·3B8-84B3 or 614·
471-1472.
- - -- -- --·ICH(JLSTEIN HEIFER
CALVES. 614·992·6198.

NEED to sell or trode Dodge
van, cultomized paint &amp; in terior, with captlen swivel
chairs, ice box, link, cebi nent apace, couch to bed. air
conditioned, cruise control.

Regiatered Nubian male
goat. 5 years old . Papers in-

trade

cluded. 890. 2 year old fee
mele goat.

rebred,

53000 milao. Willing to
for

4-.. wheel

truck . 304-773-9192 .

now

milking. 860. Shade-614696· 1234.

71

76

Auto Parts
Accessories

after 4 p.m . 992 -7515 .
Efficiency Apt . . Suitable for
1 or 2 people. Roush Lena,

Cheshire, Oh . 304-773 5882 .

Autos for Sale

Good u oed meteI tool box
for wide bod pickup. Call
446-01149 after 6PM.

1110 Chevy for nle fair
cond.. pertly r11torad. Cell
114·4411-1817.
-·

77..

and · Gallipollo. 614·446·
B221 or 1114· 246·9484.

74 Chevy Mollbu Cloallc. re·
built engine, new tlrn,
II!Uffler, ohooko, br~keo,
Crolg Mereo, Pion- ljloak·
era. t1600 or beat offoor.
Call 441·8382.

SPECIAL Complete enomol
point jobo from ,uoo. Sun·
roofo inotallecl Trom t?~6 .
Auto Trim Center,
•·
1818.

Three room furnlohed epert·
ment. ldulto, no• pall, Point
Ple01ont. Call 804-171·
2463.

1171 Ford Pinto. exc. oond.,
4 oyi., 4 opd .. low•mlleo, re·
dlalo, AM·FMI ruotproof,
OIHI - -· Col 441-1171.

Apartments . 304 - 67 5·
5648.

-t"'

APARTMeNTS, mobile
homee, houaee. Pt. Pleeeent

1()-IJ

y

PLASTERING

estimates. Call 614· 25611B2.
PAINTING · interior and exterior. plumbing. roofing.
some remodeling . 20 yrs .

exp. Call 614· 38B·9652 .

ANNIE

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. 30 years experience.
specializing in built up roof .

l '

r.. r ootn

UP
AT FA111EK'S STOKE SINCE

1- HI,nlc HASN'T TURNED

Caii614·3BB·96!2 or 614·
388-9857.

UHOERST4HQ

11-IAT SUSIHE55 WITH THE

Ml55 HAN-

GOVE~HMEHT

WHERE ARE

A6EHT.1•.• .J
HOPE $HE HASN'T•• ~~

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet
Cleaning featured by Haffelt
Brosthers Custom Carpets.
Free estimates. Call 446 -

QUIET!

YOlllt "tliO\lY'
WAITIM6

l'i\~B!x:KS 15

FOit '100 DO\'jH AT

THE 00Cit5.

'100 T/1/t/H'
ME?-

2107.
Masonary work. Logue Con tracting, Rt . 1, Ewington .

Call614·388·9939 .
CHRISTIAN'S CON ·
STRUCTION . Conotr., roof·
ing, siding. spouting ,
fencing , painting, repairs &amp;
fore 8 and after 5 :30.

Gene Smith, 992 -6309 .

house calla. Call 576· 2398
or 446· 2464.
removal. Cell 676· 1 331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rience.d mason, roofing, carpenter. electrician, general
repairs and remodeling . Call

304· 675·2088 or 675 4560.

GASOLINE ALLEY

fm afraid rve Qone
off half-cocked

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

ADVANCED Seamless
Gutter-Doors. Offering con ·
tinuse guttering, seamless
siding. roofing. garage
doors, free estimates, 614·

698-B206.
PAINTING inte.rior &amp; exterior, free estimates, 304·

676-112B.
CARPENTRY &amp; remodel ·
576· 2989.

WINNIE
I'M MRS. WRIGHT... COME IN, MA'AM.
THE DOCTOR'S
ORVILLE'S 515TERUPSTAIRS WITH
IN·LAW.
MR. WRIGHT NOW.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

IT'S HIS HEART.
HE'S GOT A VERY
WEAK AND
IRREGULAR &amp;EAT.

IT MUST llE PRETIY
SERIOU5, ltiA 'AM •••
THE DOCTOR SENT
FORA NURSE.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446-3888 or 4464477

- - - - -Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING Machine repairs,
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

BARNEY

Pomeroy. 992-2284.

MY

General Hauling

DAD BURN
TOAST?!

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Cell 614-367·7471
or 614 -367·0591 .
Need

aomethi~g

hauled

away or something moved7 •.

Auto Repair

'

8Y*fy end Folio Autometlc
Tranomllllon. Rebuilt or ex·
oh.,ged. AH work guliran·
IMd; reuonbll prloeo. Call
l·4_4_1_·1_1_3_8_
. -----

Now .Hauling houae coal.
lump or ltoker up' to 8 ton .

Umeotono. top ooll, fill dirt.
Coll614-367·7101.
JIMS Woter Service. Coif
Jim Lenloor, 304-676· 7397.
PEANUTS

87

Upholstery

HE CEMENTED 1HE AAHPS
OF Hl5 WATCII T06EniER!

l-IE woRKED ON IT FOR
"fl.IREE MYS, BUT
THEN l-IE GAVE UP•••

.'

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Hll3 Sec. Ave., Galllpollo. 1
441•7833 or 441·1833.

MOWIIEYS . Upholotery Rt.
1 Bo• 124, Pt. Pleooont, '
304-17!1·41114.
;

Now arrange the ctrded letters to
form the surpnse answer. as suo·
gestld by the above certoon.

1

XI I I I I I)

A(

Print answer here:

"NFL

(Anowero tomorrow}

Yesterday·sj Jumbles: ROUSE

(!) International Racquet·
ball
(I) Gomer Pyle
(]) Entertainment Tonight
(I) Chortle's Angels
Ill (I) Tic Tac Dough
(]) (fi) MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
(JJ News
Ill (!21 People's Court
7:30 U Cil ® You Asked For
It
(!) ESPN Sporto Center
(I) Andy Griffith
(I) D (I) Family Feud
(I) Business Report
(fi) VIctory Garden
Ill (!21 Entertainment
Tonight
B:OO U Cil (I) Wortd Series
Game #2
Cil MOVIE: ' Body Heat'
Cil MOVIE: 'Any Number
Can Play'
(})I Spy
(!) Auto Racing '82:
World of Outlaws from
Odesae, MO
(I) MOVIE: 'Magnificent
Obsession'
(I) Ill (!21 Tales of the
Gold Monkey Jake poses

FURNIT'URE replllred, aritiquu Nltored, cuttpm ca· :_.
lllneta. 304-1176-3171 efter• 1,.
II p.m.
I•

(I) Inside Story Special
'Nuclear War : Incurable Disease.' Tonight's program
discusses the medical consequences of nuclear war.
160 min.l
(jj) Newowatch
10:15 (I) TBS Evening News
10:30 (}) Star Time
(jj) Guitar
11 :00 U Cil Newscenter
(!) ESPN Sports Center
(I) Ill (I) ® Ul (!21 News
(I) News/Sports/Weather
(]) Dave Allen at Large
11 :16 (I) All In the Family
11 :30 U Cil (I) Tonight Show
Cil MOVIE: 'Tattoo'
Cil MOVIE: 'La Strada'
(}) Another Ufe
(I) Benny Hill Show
D (I) Archie's Place Archie becomes sick over the
energy crisis. lA}
(I) PBS Late Night
® All In the Fam~y
Ill (!21 Nightline
11:45 (I) MOVIE: 'I Am a
Fugitive From a Chain
Gang'
12:00 (}) Bums &amp; Allen
(!) Profe11ional Rodeo·
from Mesquite. TX
(]) Nlghtllne
CJ (I) MOVIE: 'Fugitive
Familv'
® MOVIE: 'Airport'
• (lJ love Boat An IRS
auditor falls for the Capt\in , a television actress is
hounded by a reporter end
a honeymoon
couple
meets the · bride·s exboyfriend. (AI 11 hr., 10

min.}
12:30 • Cil (I) Late Night with
Devld. Letterman
(]) Jlock Benny Show
(I) Love 11otot An· IRS auditor falls for the Captain, a
television
actress
is
nounded by a reporter end
y

honeymoon

couple

meets the bride's exboyfriend .(R} . (1 hr., 10
min.}
(]) To Bo Announced
t :00 (I) I Marrtod .._,
· • ()INewo

'

).,

I

•

'

YEARN

POLICY

DRAGON

Answer: Expected to get In touch with a receiver-

YOUR EAR
Jumble Booll No. 11, containing 110 puzztn,il IYIIIIble tor $1.15 poetplld
from Jumbll, do this niWip&amp;per, 8oJ. 34, Norwood, N.J. 07Ma.lncludll your
name, IMtdi'MI, zip codl ind rn.1kl checb p~yablt to Nawspt~perbooks.

Uule The great impressionist performs hi s solo
nightclub act .

a

-.~i

. .I

WHAi iHE 60SSIP
iURNcDAN
EAII:FUL INTO.

~EHRA~
J r I I

(I) MOVIE: 'My Brilliant
Career'
(jj)
Pursuit
of
the
Marvelous Tonight's pro·
gram looks at the intellectual, historical and creative
factors which resulted in
the surrealist movement .
190 min.l
9:00 (})700 Club
(I) Ill (!21 MOVIE: 'Having
It All'
D (I) ®I Alice One of
Mel's Brooklyn buddie s
comes to visit .
9:30 Ill (I) ® Filthy Rich
(jj) Placido Domingo "The
Tenor , the Teacher .' Famous tenor works with
some promising singers
from the Philadelphia College of the Performing
Arts. IRI
10:00 Cil MOVIE: 'La Cage Au•
Folies'
Cil MOVIE: 'Uttle Dar·
llrigs'
(!) Unlimited Hydroplane
Racing 'Budweiser Thunderboat World . Championship from Houston, TX .
D (I) ® Tucker's Witch
The Tuckers try to find out
who is trying to kill a TV
gossip reporter . (60 min .)

RON'S Television Service.
Specielizhig in Zenith and
Motorola, Ouaz•r . and

86

I KI

nearby stream and Ford is
signed by a talent scout to
be a back -up singer. (60
min.)

CAPTAIN RUDOLPH, YOU AND THE EAGLE
WIL.I. RIDE TO THE FORT AND DEMIWD
THAT IT BE SURRENDERED!

Gene's Steam Carpet Clean Scotch Geurd - Free
estimates- spring specials·

84

end

)

INONITEj

g (I) ® Seven Brides
for Seven Brothers Guth·
rie discovers gold in a

cleaning. 446-2000. call be-

82

II

as a American defector to
infiltrate a German island
encampment. (60 min .)

We'll do it. Coii446-31S9 or
6t4-256-1967 lifter 6.

1980 Pontiac Firebird. AM· 300 11-cyl. engine USO.
FM CIIHitl, air, •1.000 transmission, •150. Rear
end t100. Utility bumper
firm. Coli 114-2116-1698.
UO. • odd on iolr tiiO.
Frome for F1 00 Ford, V. ton
1978 Felrmont Ford, extra
ciMn, good cond., •1.996. pickup 19111 Ford Galexle
600 t260. 304·176- ~6116.
Cell 441·4782. Gelllpolls.

Upstairs, 1 bedroom fur,ilhed apertment with utilities paid, no children . Call

I

drive

Trw naps rcwclpn
614 -992 -7206 or 304 ·
BB2·2566 .

.,

textured ceilings comro ~
clel and residential, free

drive, 3,900 miles. 82700.
304-675 -1036.

8o
2 bedroom furnished apt.

l

Home
Improvements

STUCCO

1m! ~'/ -n,w::s
AA~~ I lDLD '/OJ,
ll-tAT1SIIOf FV~~'{ ~?

!

ing, siding, painting, some
electrical &amp; plumbing. 304-

$1200. 304-676-3384.

Weened pig, 7 wks. old , for
11le •36 each and hay for

63

Metal sheets for all building
purposes . Flat porcellan
enamel coated: _4x8 thru 4 x

lui• .

304-895-3B02.

Monday, (Monday evening) .
Coal and wood stove . 3o4 -

3009.

81

Cil Strange Creatures of

(I) Bob Newhert Show
(I) G (!21 ABC News
Ill (]) !lD CBS )llewo
(])Dr. Who
(fi) Over Easy
7:00 U Cil P.M . Magazine
Cil On Location: Rich

----------

lvr,

....... -

Films' will be aired.

kend camping trips. Price
negotiable. Call 446-2666 .

il

·:a..~

D Cil NIIWIICenter

pre-empted

1974 VWcampmobile . ldeal
for hunting, fishing or wee-

b
I

{)

NFL nPii1f.'rs strike contin·
ues, this program will be

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump

auto. trans . ps. pb, maroon
with silver interior 87,000.

Sales .

Army clothing . boots,
packs , (suqJius rental) Sam
Somerville's Warehouse , 7
miles east Ravenswood, old
route 21 (New Era), open
this week only evenings 5
p .m . regularly open 1 :00· .

Motor Home
&amp; Campers

WHAT'5&lt; THe
MATURf DON'T
'IOU Lll&lt;! TO IJE
COMPLIMeNTeD;

BORN LOSER

614 -3 88 -9680.

2 bdr. house. fuel oil furnance, has chimney for
wood stove, in Vinton . Call

~

71

Pets for Sale

304 -675· 2275.

56
Plastic Septic Tank s. State
andcountyapproved. 1.000
gal. tank . price 8340. Other
sizes in stock , haul in your

66

Cid .... $2 .00 gel. , German
Rid g. apples. Red and

7436 .

Furnitur e for sa le. Selling
cheap . Couches. end table,

-}

THii McKee HEAD- 0000:::~~ ll.II&lt;E THE
WAY YOUR MOUTH
MOVE~ WHEIII
CAl.l. THI'M~El Ve~ THE'
YOU TALK,
"&amp;ElleVER5&lt;." THAT!; WHY
THe " INFIOEL!J~ WHO l.IVE
IN THE OPPO~IT!! 5-ECTOR.
CONSIDE!t WA4PH TilE
ENEMY.

QUARTER~ I~ IN THE'
5-eCTOR OF THO~E WllO

83,500 . 00 . 304 - 675 ·
1370.

71 Motor Home, good con ·
dition $4800. 304 - 676 -

58

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

ceJ

&lt;()

rl .,.
.....,

1 boys cub scout unrtorm .

Call Robert Harper for Gin ·
seng and Yellowroot prices.

446· 7398 .

Ctt~~.,.t«A.•

~

c;

CAPfAN EASY

IIJHooiiiAnoc*l ... llalo 1M

I SCOUF

adapting to lila in the dark .
(}) Bull' 1 Eye
(!)Ski School
(I) Corol Burnett
(I) II (]) !lD 8 (!21 News
(I) Newo/Sports/Weather
(]) &lt;ID 3·2· 1, Contact
6:30 D Cil (I) NBC News
Cil MOVIE: 'The Great
Bonk HOIIlt'
(}) MOVIE: 'Journey to
the Center of Time'
(!) Pick The Pros If the

$650. 304· 8B2·

•

~Ill

where animals survive by

CORSAIR camping trailer ,
23 '12 foot self contained
sleeps 8 , refrigerator ·
freezer. excellent condition ,

II~ ~l
&lt;()==~()j· •
l-:::====:::;

shots, 304-675 · 7877.

polis . Couch. lovesea t and
chair, S199.; wallhuggers
$125 .; bunk bed s with bun ki es. $170.; box sprin g and
mattr ess. $ 100.
Firm .
$120 .; rec lin ers, S8Q.; 9 X
121inoleum rug s, S22 .; ma ple rockers . S49 ., wringer
wash ers, r efrig e rat o r s ·
. din e tt e se ts . c h est.
dressers. bunkie mattress.

Wood tabl e with si x chairs

Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr . apart ments for rent . HUD pro gram available. A -One Real
Estates . Carol Yeager, Real -

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

front deck off kitchen;

Trailer on Mill Creek Rd and
trailer spac e on bulaville Rd .

0338 .

446 -7322.

For sale or rent 81 Naehue
mobile home, 3 bedroome,

rent . Kanauga ,

Oh. Call 675 -3475.

2215 .

Home for rent Hwy 160. 4
mi . from hospt., 8260 per
mo., prefer aduhs. ref. Call

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
AT 35. PHONE 4411"- 7274 .

Trail er for

1724.

infor. call 304 -896 · 3516 .

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS ,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446· 7572&gt;.

446 -0958.

after 4, 304 -676 -2009 .

0338 .

3 bedroom all el ec tric , 105

For rent two bdr. house in
city . full ba se ment. car pet ed, adult s, no pets . Call

camper.
31BO.

•

four crtlnlry ......

tho Night Explore a world

9 'h ft . self contained truck

t-1':==========;:=========~

275 gallon tonk. $150. Cell
614 -245-5329 .

51 Household Goods

USED MOBILE HOME .
576 -2711 .
TWO bedroom house trailer -

HOUSE M eadowbrook Ad -'
dition , 3 bedrooms. f amily
roo m with firepalce. cent ral
ai r. base ment. phone 304 -

cheap. $15000 . 304· 773 9192 .

-IO
·It .=j

Good Siegler fuel oil stove &amp;

os it. 614 -742 -2753 .

Small furnished hou se. 1 or
2 adults only . Call 446 -

NEED t o se ll 6 room house
with air co nditio nin g, gas
he at . st ove with refrigera tor, 2 1arge lots. large garden
space. 200 yard s off of main
road in Clifton . Will sell

992 -7 479 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2749.

$49.000 . 614-992 -7414 .

675 -1542.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pom eroy . large lot s. Call

3324 .

2517
9 yr . old bi -leve l. 4 bd .room.
2 bath. Approx . 1 &amp; v, ac re. 1ft
.is woods . Fully eq uip . kit chen w1th dish -washer. Air co nd .. ca rpet, full patio
M ov ing · pri ce d l ow .

Space for Rent

S8, 795 1973 Champion
60x12 . 2 bdr .. $7.495 .

2124.
In ground conc ret e pool on 2
acre lot . Al so has a 3 bdr . ai r
co ndition ed h ouse with full
base men t, 2 we fireplaces .
new ca rpet . Would co nsid er
lower va lued property in
trade or will finance with
low dow n pa ym ent and 10%
1nterest, reduced 55,000
Loca ted 1 23 Gar field A ve .

45

614 -256 - 178 5 o r 614 · info . 61 4 -992 · 7284.
256 -6265 .

S11 . 495 1979 Skyline
56x14 , 2 bdr .. S9,495 .

31 H omes f or Sal e

.

I

6:00

9V. FOOT, self contained

\!1

Ulw•••
,_ tu Juntill.
OMillar IIIIlCh
farm

EVENING

truck camper, 8550. 304·
882 -3180.

~ ~C!.
I·&lt;&gt;
&lt;() J

Blue Ridge Mountain fireplace inserts now in stock at
Swisher Implement Co .• St.
At . 7 North, Gallipolis, Oh,

Delivered in dump truck

C&amp; l Boo kk ee ping
Bookk eep in g &amp; tax serv ice
for all type s of bu sinesse s.
Ca rol Nea l 446 -3862

~ state

WF ~ Rt.me$, Nil&gt;~
~ AU.- flleiR lli!AWiW:;-1~
FoR A C!l~e.

Firewood . Slabs $10
pickup , cut up slabs $16.
round wood $20 . Rio
Grande area . Ca\1614 -246·

loads or may be picked up in
yard . Crown City. Oh Junetion 563 &amp; 218 . Call 614 -

l

~

10/13/82

*2495. Located Main end
Second. Middleport, Ohio .
614 -992-2828.

DeCiDt 1b lO!i!N ~ A Her/

nfJ9~111ATICP'=mWDIIDu.

Television
Viewing

Camping
Equipment

Stercraft fold · out, uaed
twice . excellent cond .

fllet't&gt; ~~KiND
rR Nf.loONCeMeftT Wllert 1llef

Oh . Call 614-256· 6245 .

78

DICK TRACY

·lc-

iF

Firewood. Cut to length.

Hertford. 304-B82-2371

Real

•

House coal for sale $24 tOn .

14x70. 3 bdr.. fir epla ce
S11 , 595 . 1981 V enture
60 x 14 , 2 bdr . , gas ,

446·4372 .

WOOirl&gt; 6t( Alal(;r
Bel''(eJt WitH Tllti~CAT5

1· 614 -256 ·

One wooden gun cabinet,

22 M oney t o loan

,-.... .....,.
.W~S

Cell614-256 -6816 or 614·
256-6747.

446 -1988.

byLan:yWrlght

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

Wood burning add on furnance. Still in factory crete,

Firewood $26.00 pick up.
95% hard wood . Jet . Rt .
218 &amp; At . 563, Crown City,

Ea rn 5700 -51 . 200 monthly
opera tin g you r own part time . in - home busin ess .
Qua lif y for com pany car.
travel, retirement program .
Repeat prof its on co n suma ble products . Does n't inter f e r e with p r ese nt
employ m ent N ot door to
door . We train you . Ca ll

23

54 Misc . Merchandise KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

Unfurnished apartments for
re nt . Call Automotive

304 -675 -2257.

1293.

Oct. 13,198)

s4so . Call
1216
.

Furni sh ed

LOOKING for peop le w ho
want to ea rn be t ween 5500
a nd 550 . 000 monthly
throug h t his " newest and
fastest growing co mpany in
th e nat ion " . Cal l 304 -675·

Ohio

fum opt . 304 -882· 3356 .

Supply, 8 till 6. 304 -676·
221B , 304 -675 -6763.

Busin ess
Opportunity

:..

The Daily Sentinei-Page-15

iddleport, Ohio

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Lair leaves his mark
NORTH
• 9842

10·13·82

• AK5
t763
+K 5 4
EAST
WEST
• ;3
+K6
.QJ10 !71
t9 8;
• Q J 10 4
+QJ9 762
+to 3

.9

SOUTH
+AQJ107

• 632

tAK2
+AB

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
We1t

Nortb

East

Pass
Pass

2+

Pass
Pass

Pass

Soutb

I+
4+

Opening lead: •Q

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Son lag
Here is an apparently simple hand that manages to
show how really successful
match point players lind
ways to get top scores.
Here we see Mark Lair of
Canyon, Texas, getting one.
He won the heart lead in

dummy and noted the fall of
the nine from East. Mark
had also noted that West had
thought lor a moment over
his one -spade opening .
Hence, Mark decided that
West was very likel y to hold
six hearts and the king of
spad es. So Mark led
dummy's nine of spades and
went right up with his ace
when East followed low. A
second spade went to West's
king.
West continued with the
jack of hearts. Dummy won
and East discarded a club.
Now Mark was sure of a
good score, but he still hoped
lor a top.
Was there any play that
might produce one more
trick than other declaren ?
Mark found one! It wasn't
complicated, but it risked
nothong and worked. He
promptly led a club to his
ace and continued by play·
ing his ace of diamonds.
East dropped the lour spot
and Mark was home ,
although he didn't know it.
He cashed the king of
diamonds, led a club to
dummy's king, ruffed a club
and played his last diamond.
East was forced in and
had to give Mark a ruff and
discard lor that important

extra trick.

~~"'"at
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1 Fragment
6 Type size
10 Breathing
11 Boston's
airport
12 Permit
14 Mime
15 To excess
16 Black (Fr. )
17 Glorified
21 He was
"Colombo"
25 Husbanded
26 Marie
or Pierre
27 Eastern
European
28 Jamestown

5 Apple of

one's eye
6 Influential
7 Sikorsky
8 Astronomer
.Sagan
9 Singer
Williams
11 Leah's son
13 Cowl
16 Actor
Beatty

17 Dolt
18 Swedish
river
19 Eggs
20 Changed
gears

Yesterday's Answer

22 Nigerian
23 - Yutang
24 Pitch
26 Cape 28 French city
30 Small insect
31 Slide around
32 Prong

33 To be (Lat.)
34 Greek
portico

35 Church

season
36 Dismounted
37 Act
39 QUick swim

was one
29 Gadzooks!
31 English
novelist

34 Insult
38 No
genUeman
would
40Map
portion
41 Old Greek
colony
42 Geste
43 Hamburger
shape

DOWN
1 Chronicle
2 -joint
3 Tear apart
4 Contend

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
II

how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELL' OW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo1trophes, the length and formation of the wordo are oil
biDII. Eoch day the code !etten are doll'erent.

CllY1'TOQUOTES
ASFCMCHIL
PZCSW

CGN

V M Z

MWOMRL
WMLC

WHHY

CNZ

THHA

USZPCNL.

UMLM!RY

Yesterday's Cryploquole: I ASSURE YOU IT REQillRES Ntl
SMALLTALENTSTOBEADECIDEDBORE.-SCOTI

�Wednesday, Oct. 13,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, Page-16--The Daily Sentinel

Recovery outlook still cloudy
i

By The Assocla!t_&gt;d Press
Inte res t ra tes have fa llen to their

owes t level s ince Septe mber 1900
with some bankers saying they'U go
still lower, but a preside ntia l adviser ca utioned there are no signs
t he eco nom y will improve
immedia tely.
Preside nt Reagan, mea ntime,
sc hed uled a " non-partisa n" speech
on thecconomy tonight a t 7: 30 E DT,
to be broadcast by two television
ne tworks. Democrats cha rged the
ne tworks were giv ing Reagan o·ee
time for a poli tical speech only two
the Novembet'
"'-"
Weeks ~rare
e lections.
Four m a jor ba nks c ut their prime
le ndin g ra te to 12 percent on Tuesday, a nd the government said it was
lowering the inte rest-rateceiling on
certa in feder ally-backed home
loans to 12.5 percent.
Mea nwhile, the average ra te pa id
on new six-month Treasury bills
a uctioned to the public plunged
near ly J r;, percent age point s, to
7. 734 percent.
Tha t means people _buy ing six-

I

month savings certificates sold by
banks a nd savings in t!tuti
in
. .
s
ons
mmunum de nominations of$10,00J
will earn 9.15 percent interest start,ing today, down from last weeks
9.643 per cent.
The falling rates a lso could signal
eas ier credit for retail sales.
But Ala n Greenspan, a m ember
of the Preside nt's Economic Polley
Advisory Board , told reaes
d
1 t a teevelopers in Boston that despite the
drop in rates, there is no indication
of improve me nt in the over II
econom y.
a
"The economy 1tse if shows no
s igns of change," he said.
A growing number of investors
apparently think such a turnaround
will come sooner rather than late r.
Activity in the stock and bond
mar kets has been extreme ly heavy
in recent days, although stock prices turned mixed Tuesday after severa l days of spectacular increases.
Bond prices were mode ra tely
hi gher.
The Dow Jones aver age of 30 in-

Area deaths

Harold E. Cowderv

Harold E ugene Cowdery, 67, died
Tuesday at his home in Reedsville
following an extended illness.
He was a son of the la te Cecil a nd
Sarah Kibble Cowdery. He was retired from the F.M.C. Corp., a t Par kersburg a nd had been a far m er in
the Reedsv ille ar ea. He was a
mem ber of the F irst Luthe ran
Chu rch in Parkersbu rg.
Su rviving a re his w ife, Ida M.
Cowdery: two sons, Richard ,
Palms, Ca lif., a nd Lee of Reeds·
v ille; a da ug ht er , Betty Ann Myers ,
Phoenix, Ariz.; three brothers,
John a nd Riley, Marie t1 a ; Dale of
Colum bus, a nd a sis ter , Sarah Ann
MmTison.
Besides his pa rents . he was preceded in death by a brother a nd two
sisters.
Serv ices will be held a t 2 p.m .
Fr·iday at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville with the Rev. David L.
Scharf officia ting. Buria l will be in
Eden Ceme tery. F r iends ma y call
at the fu neral home any1 ime after 2
p.m . Thursday.

Benjamin E. Boggess

I

Benjamin E . Boggess, 57, 49419
SR 338, Racine, died Tuesday
evening.
Mr. Boggess. was the son of the
la te Charlie and Osa Anderson Boggess. He was also preceded in death
by two brothe rs, Gle nver a nd Denzel Boggess.

Mr. Boggess was e mployed on a
river boat on the Ohio. He was a
member of the Dorcas Pe ntecostal
Assembly.
He is survived by his wife , Zelpha
Boggess; one step-son, Wa yne Roseberry, Racine; two brothe rs,
Charlie and Razel Boggess, Racine; one sister, Alberta Marie
Spa un, Racine, and seve ral nieces
a nd ne phews.
Funer al services will be held Friday a t 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with
William Hoback officia ting. Burial
will be in Letart Fa lls Ce metery.
Friends m ay call a t the funeral
home after 7 p.m . this evening.

Mayors finish cases
Six defenda nt s forfeited bonds in
the cou rt of Pom eroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
They are Her bert Re ibel, Pomerov. $43, improper backing; Michael Smi th, Huntington, $48, Vicki
Gilmore, Pome roy, $48, Richard
Gilmore, Pomeroy, $.'i0, John Davis, Syracuse, $45, Lea nna Beegle,
Rac ine, $45, a il posted on speeding
charges.
Seven persons were fined in the

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Ad mi t te d -- Sus ie Va na bl es,
Pomeroy; Anthony Shamblin, Ra cine: Shirley Smith, Rutla nd: J e nnifer Bar rett, Rutland: Dennis
Palmer, Racine: Victoria Morrison, Pome roy:
Linda Eblin,
Pom eroy .
Discharged -- Ama nda Hawk, Bill
Kennedy,Gle n Hudson, Victor Braley, Ke nneth Keiser, Clarence
Longst reth, Rhonda Barnhart.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

DISCHARGES OCT. 11
Ric ha rd Bla in, Shawn Cox, Anna
Craft, J a net Crea me r , Mrs. Dona ld
Curtis a nd daught er, David Da iley,
Mrs. Daniel Davies a nd da ughte r,
Leona rd Davis, Mason DeWiss,
Sharon Drum mond, Cha rles Este p,
Elijah Es te p Sr., J oel Fa rrar, Wa lter Morris. Christin Murphy, Mrs.
Pa ul Sexton a nd son, J essica Shoo k,
Patricia Spotloe, Helen Stumbo,
June Turner, Marga ret Werry,
Ramona Yonke r.
BIRTIIS
Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert McClure,
son, J ackson; Mr. a nd Mrs. Len
P reston, da ughte r , J ackson; Mr.
a nd Mrs . Rona ld R ~ssell, da ughte r,
Oa k Hill; Mr. a nd Mrs. Ha rry Va nme te r , son, Clifton, W. Va.

court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Halfman Tuesday night.
They are Wllliam D . Whit1ington,
Pome roy, $100 a nd costs, driving
under suspension; Jane t Oiler, Middleport, $10 and costs, assured clear
dist a nce; Ben H. Philson, Racine,
$10 and costs, failure to m a intain
control; Roy Brown, Langsville,
$10, no costs, improper starting and
backing; Rick McClella n, Middleport, $100 and costs , criminal teep ass ing;
Robe rt Stewart,
Langsv ille, $100 and costs , criminal
!repassing: Timothy He rdman,
Middleport, $100 and costs , pet1y
theft.

Court actions filed
A suit in the amount of $6,098 plus
inter est was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by the Racine
Home National Bank against
J a mes Hubbard, Potneroy.
In other court action two suits for
dissolution of marriage we re filed
a nd one divorce.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
we re Jan B. Clark, Pomeroy, and
J oe N. Clark, Pomeroy; Mary Beth
Clark, Pomeroy a nd James Oliver
Clark, Pomeroy.
J a net Romine, Dexter, filed suit
for divorce against Kenne th H.
Romine, Rutland.

.
dustna l stocks, measuring the performance of ma jor corporations
feli 9 . llpointsto 1 , 003 _ 68,0ntheN~
York Stock Exchange, 932 stocks
d
ced 318 t ks
a van
,
s oc
we r e unchanged and 776stocks declined.
After the four major banks cut
their prime lending rates Tuesday,
the government a nnounced that
home
brak buyersalsowouldbege tting a
e ·
'7~inte~est·;:,;;:, c~Uing on Fede ra
ous g
in1Stratlon and
Veterans Administration loans for
single-family homes was cut 1 percent from 13.5 percent, the lowest
ra te since August 19~.
Meanwhile, the Comme r ce Departme ntsaldretailsales rose 1percent in September from August, led
by a 4 percent ga in in a utomobile
sales.

Cards even serie~

The Daily
Vol.31 ,No.114
Copyrighted 1982

lost a $28.5 million patent suit in fed·
eral court in Rock Island, Ill. In a

lawsuit filed in 1976, Deere &amp; Co. had
charged Harvester infringed on its
patent for a device tha t c uts cornstalks and feeds the m into
combines.
- Chrysler Coil&gt;- a nd the United
Auto Workers announced they wlll
return to bargaining Friday in the
face of overwhelming rejection by
the rank-and-file to a tentative contract settlement.

POSTER WINNERS - A large group of students and adults as weU have been lending their tal·
ents to the Eastern Local School district campaign to
support Its upcombtg levy in November. Winners of a
recent poster contest were announced Wednesday at

North Perry, about 35 miles east of
CLEVELAND (API - Some
cam e dressed as ghosts and mu- Cleveland.
Another part of the rate hike is to
tants, but no mat1erwhat the attire,
most people at a public hearing on a . guarantee a fair rate of return to
investors. If the full increase is
~ percent rate increase for Clevegranted by the Public Utilities Comland Electric Illuminating Co. were
mission of Ohio, the ave rage consuagainst the proposed rate hike.
mer's bill wouldrisefrom$45 to $54 a
"Suc h a request a t this time is
month, company spokesman J . Lee
unconscionable and obscene .. .. The
Bailey said.
number of soup kitchens spr!ilging
CEI is Ohio's third-largest electup at the present time gives eviric utility and serves 711,(XXl custodence, " said Hortense Da vis, who
mers in five northeast Ohio
represented the Weste rn Reserve
Alliance at Tuesday's hearing.
counties.
The staff of the PUCO recomCEI seeks a rate hike ofabout$235
million, the largest part of which is
mended rejection of all but between
for construction costs of its$4 billion
$70 million and $90 million of the CEI
nuclear power plant being built in
proposal. That money, the staff
said, should be allowed as construction costs for Perry.
Members of the audience of about
100 people, many of them elderly,
Local em ergency units we re kept
waved small flags with the term,
on the move Tuesday and Wednesday morning.
At 1:10 a.m. Wednesday, the Rutland Unit took Allee Chapman of
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - LongCounty Road 12 to Holzer MediCal
Center and the Pomeroy Unit at8: 54 range weather forecasters at Ohio
a.m. took Roy Smith from County University and Cornell Unive rsity
Road ~ to Ve te rans Memorial agree this winter will be colder than
normal in Ohio, but they diffe r on
Hospital.
Tuesday's runs Included Racine how much colder.
Cornell meteorologists predict
at 6:53p.m. took Helen Hayes from
Great Bend to Veterans Memorial temperatures in Ohio will be 6 to 11
Hospital; Rutland at 9:25p.m. took degrees below normal this winter,
Robert DlVltro from Meigs Mine 2 but Ohio University forecasters say
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pome- they will be 3 to 4 degrees below
roy at 11: 26 a.m. took Susie Venable average.
Cornell used sunspot activity for
from Kerr St., to Vetera ns MemorIts
conclusion and Ohio U. studied
ial; Pomeroy at 9: 55 a.m. took
Helen Augustine frpm E . Main St. to the jet stream.
"Ohioans can expect a consideraVe terans MemorW; Middleport at
12:44 p.m. took Mildred Mllburn bly colder than normal winter, but
from Coal St., to Veterans Memor- we foresee temperatures running
Ial; Pomeroy at 4:37 p.m. treated about 3 to4degrees below average,"
Velma Siders on E . Second St., but said Ronald Isaac, who directs Ohio
did no transportation; Pomeroy at U.'s Scalia Laboratory for Aimos·
7: 32 p.m. took Linda Eblin from pheric Analysis.
Last winter, from December to
Route 143 to Veterans Memorial.
February, Ohio temperatures aver - '
aged 1.2 degrees below normal, said

Squads kept busy

'

I

'
Pomeroy, OH.
"Located at the End of the
PomtiOI·Mason Bridre."

less sentinels dressed as gbosts proclaimed what they said were the
past. present and future of electric
rates.
Along another wall, two women
stood clad in ill-fitting garb, designed to show potential deftlrmlties
they contend nuclear radiation
could cause. They carrledsflnssaying "Mutants For Nuclear Power."
"It Is a cruel joke, but it'Sllboutthe
only way we can make our point,"
said Dee Dee Garslene ot North
Shore Alert, a group fighting construcllon of the Pertjl plant

Open forum set

!Cas tern Local School District wlll
hold an open forum meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. at Tuppers Plains Elementary School. The ~bile Is
invited to attend.

PAC MAN AND
"DUKES OF HAZARD
PARTY SUPPliES

Jon Skindlov, the lab's assistant
director.
The Ohio forecaster s predict an
early-season freezing rain followed
by s now befor:e Thanksgiving.

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
PH. 992-6342

SWEEPER SALE
EUREKA ESP UPRIGHT
This Eureka Upright has the. power.to
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Page 7

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to obtain results on
OHIO DAILY
LOTIERY GAME

Meigs County Probate Court to Daniel Greg Wooten, 26, Vinton, and
Brenda Kay George, 24, Vinton;
Verne Alvin Ord, 26, Syracuse, and
Crystal Elizabeth Simpson, 30,
Pomeroy; Wllliam Oscar Carney,
85, Ripley, and Mabel Clare Landfried, 73, Rt. 1, Ripley.

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Or 992-6798

•Triple filter system for dust
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brush roll loosens deep"grlt
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carpets from low naps to
high shags.
•Bright headlight to see in dark
·
dark areas.

ALL LADIES
ON

Bpitool HI.
tnchrded

SPECIAL THIS
THURSDAY,
FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY

20o/o OFF
CHAPMAN SHOES .

NEP TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY ·.

his recovery program must be
changed.
"I was disappointed that thepresident failed to propose a single new
measure to create jobs and put
America back to work," said House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Nelll, DMass.

"If he thinks we should stay the
course, he should ask those mllllons
of American famllles who have already reached the end of the line,"
O'Neill said in a statement. "If he
thinks Reaganomics Is working, he
should ask the fellow who isn't.''
Speaking from the Oval Office

Wednesday night, Reagan said,
"Nowidonotpretendforamoment
that in 21 months, we have been able
to undo aU the damage to our economy that has built up over more
.than~ years.''
He said the current recession "Is
part of a long series- a series that
hasn't stopped because, in the past,
when the crunch came, too many in
government resorted to quick fixes
instead of getting to the root cause.' '
Sen. Donald M. Riegle of Michlgan, giving the Democrats' formal
response to P.eagan, said the economy "is on a downhill slide ."
"Morepeople areoutofworknow

than at any · time since the Grea t
Depression," said Riegle. " And it's
get1ing worse."
"What kind of course is it that
creates more business failures tha n
at any time since the Depression? "
Riegle asked.
The senator called for cuts in Reagan's ma5slve Pentagon buildup,
and said Democra ts would seek legIslation to protect American industries from unf a ir forei g n
competition, changes in the credit
system to reduce interest ra tes and
restoration of cuts in Social Security
benefits .

Council says petition statements untrue
By KATIE CROW
Statements contained ina petition
presented to Syracuse Council Wed·
nesday night have been branded
UNTRUE. Council upon receipt of
the Kenneth Cundiff circulated petition bearing 253 names was disturbed by the fact that residents
were mtsled by untrue statements.
The first paragraph read: "We
the undersigned residents of the VIllage of Syracuse, do not favor the
borrowing of money for the water
system and lncre'll'lng rates to repay the loan.'" ·
Council explalned that It was necessary to borrow a line of credit
between $14,00J and $22,00J to pay
for a new well and pump.
What was not explained was the
fact that rates will not be increased
to pay off the loan. If and when rates
are increased, revenue from collections will be used only for the operation of the water company.
The second paragraph read, "We
feel that the money for payment of
the new well, pump and other bnmedlate necessities should be taken
from present sull&gt;lus funds.''
This too is misleading-- council
has invested$:ll,OOJincertlficatesof
deposit (CO"s) . Thatmoneylsdraw-

By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVPnewsstaff
The seven-member committee
formed to investigate the !delivery
and funding of mental health services in GaWa, Jackson and Metgs
-countieS wlll meet for the first time
:Friday, but at least three members
are unhappy with the state's role 111

NOW,$14995
()NLY . . . ::'.
.ELB5RfiELDS
IN.·POMEROY
'

·

the ctmmlttee.
The Ohio I&gt;epartrnent of Mental
Health has too much power and Is
making undue restrictions_oo the
ctmmlttee, accorillng ID commlt·
tee representatives trom the three

coontJes.

'

.

.

The cornmi~· known as a Com·

t

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!dent Reagan, Insisting he Is forging
a lasting economic recovery, cautloned voters not to be tempted by
those advocating a retun\ to "big
spending and blg taxing.''
In a speech broadcast over Democrats' protests ~ days before the
election. Reagan said the country's
problems were years in the making
and were the fault of blg spenders
and people playing politics with the
economy.
Democrats, however, pointed out
that unemployment has soared to
lts h!ghestlevel infourdecadesduring Reagan's presidency and said

ing inte r est for the village and Is
used in the best interest of the
village.
The interest received from the
CD"s is greater than the interest due
on the loan. Council note that when
you look at it very closely council Is
not really paying any inte rest at aU
on the borrowed money since the
interest from · the invested money
exceeds the loan interest.
The last paragraph in the petition
read, "In addition, any revenue
realized from the investment of water funds, now and in the future, be
returned to the water system.
This too is incorrect. The law
states that any interest derived
from investments can be placed in
the general fund. The larger portion
of expenses for the village Is paid
from the general lund.
Janice Lawson, clerk, informed
council that Glen Blevins, a state
auditor, had advised her that interest from the CO's may be placed in
the general fund .
The money was invested in order
to pay off the indebtedness due on
the water system which at the present time totals $55,00J.
George Holman, ~asurer, presented council with a breakdown of

receipts and expenses of the Board
of Public Affairs which showed a
tremendous loss of money since 1979
According to Hoiman the Board of
Public Affairs in 1979lost $10,918.01.
Council in 1979 cashed a $5,00J CD
and in addition loaned the water
board $2,00J to continue its operation. In addition, the board lost
$3,918.01 making a totalof$10,918.01.
In 19ffi the Board of Public Affairs
lost $9,272.03. Again council cashed
a$2,00JCDanda $5,00JCDandpaid
the water board $1,200. Coupled )"lth
the board's loss of $1,072.03 this
made a totalloss of $9,272.03.
In 1981, the Board of Pulbic Affairs showed a slight galn of$972.81.
As of August of this year the Board
of Public Affairs has lost $5,171.32.
Jack Wllliams, councilman, said,
"The water board should be making
12'h percent profit. No business can
stay alive if they spend more than
they take in."
Council noted tha t if it cashed in
the $ll,OOJ in CO's and water rates
were not raised to meet the cost of
operation the vlllage would be in
deep financial trouble.
Council felt that it has not been
taken into consideration the amount
of money the village pays out of the

The environmental review for the
county landfill determined a finding
of no significant environmental impact. The waterline extension in Rutland passes through a 100year flood
plaln.
Anyone who wishes to express
their concern about the environmental impacts of this project
should send written comments to
the commissioner's office prior to
Oct. 30.
Anyone wishing to comment on
any of these projects or any part of
the application are invited to submit
written comments to the commissioners prior to Oct.
Meigs County is certifying to
OLGS that the Meigs County Commissioners and Richard E. Jones as
the board's certifying officer, in his
official capacity as commissioner
consent to accept the jurisdiction of
the Federal courts if any action is
brought to enforce responsibilities
In relation to environmental reviews, deciSion making and action,

and that these responsibilities have
been satisfied.
The legal effectofthecertificatlon
is that upon Its approval, Meigs
County may use the Block Grant
Funds andOLGSw!ll have satisfied
its responslbllltles under the National Environmental Polley Act of

1969.
OLGS wlll accept an objection to .
Its approval only if it Is on one of the
following bases: (a) that the officer
of applicant approved by OLGS; or
(b) that applicant's environmental
review record for the project indicates omission of a required decision finding or step applicable to the
project In theevnironmentalreview
process. Objection must be prepared and submitted in accordance
with the required piocedures (24
CFR part 58) .
Objections to the release of fundS
on bases other than those stated
above will not be considered by
OLGS: No objection received after
Nov. 15, 1982 wlll be considered by
OLGS.

general fund for the wa ter board
such as paying audit fees, a nd repairing of streets torn up by the water board to name a few .
Council stressed that TH E MONEY INVESTED DID NOT COME
FROM WATER COLLECTIONS.
TilE MONEY INVESTED CAME
FROM PROPERTY T AX
ASSESSMENT.
Loan payments will be made
from the genera l fund a nd revenue
sharing.
Council hasas kedmembers ofthe
Board of Public Affa irs meet with it
to discuss the conditions ofthe water
company. Howeve r, the members
of the water board have not as yet
attended ·any council meetings.
The water board must recommend raising of rates for council's
approval. However, council will investigate the situation to see what
other procedures it ca n ta ke.
It was noted that the only control
council has over the Board of Public
Affairs is in the allocation of funds
which is done the first of each year.
(Continued on page 81

ECONOMIC TALK - President Reagan poses for photographers
just after his speech on the economy Wednesday evening In the Wltite
House Oval Office, in which he said the nation is "recovery-hound a nd
the world knows it." The president said his economic progra m will
bring a resurgence "buHt to last" because it will create m•w .inh'
without rekindling ioDation. ( AP Lase.,hoto)

Youth charged in B&amp;E incident
A 17-year old juvenile has been
arr ested in connection with the
breaking and e nt ering o!the Candlelight Inn tha t occurred a week ago
today the Meigs County Sheriff' s
Departme nt re ported.
The juvenile had previously
broke and entered the Candlelight
Inn in July and was out on a stayed
committment to the Ohio Youth
Commission. Juvenile Court authorities advied that the juve nile

will be tra nsport ed to a Youth Co1· '
m ission fac ilitY.
Bill WinebrennPr , Svracusc'. rl'ported that a boys bicycle was taken
from his property somct ime Tuesd ay night. The 26 inch bike was
green with gold trim wit h a I.Janana
seat.
Anyone having any informat ion is
as ked to contact theshcritf' sdepartm e nt or Winebrenner a t 992-3277.

Old Ohio Hotel being razed
The nearly 100 year old Ohio Hotel in Middleport is coming down due to it s deplorable conditi on
Worke rs have begun razing the structure, owned by Chad Humphreys, whic h overlooks the Ohi o
River on First St.
First foundation for the Ohio Hotel wa s laid in 188.1. but was washed aw ay by the nooct of tha t yea r.
The following year the structure was constructed. In the early 1920s it was known as the Seyfried
Hotel and in 1925 was purchased by Billy Bowen of Pittsburgh. He had elec tricity added to the hotel as
well as a steam hea ting system. He also maintained a restaurant in the hot e l.
Two years later the hotel was purchased by ~n Andrews of Columbus and he leased it to the Owen
family who operated it for a year a nd the n to the Sayre famil y which operated it for another year.
In September, 1929, before the stock market crash. the hotel was purchased by the late Lee Pra ll
who operated the business until his dea th in 1944.
Mrs. Pratt opera ted the hotel until 1947, at which time she sold it to a son , Ra lph Pra tt. i ~a l p h
operated the business until 1974 whe n he sold it to a corporation.

Members unhappy with state's role

'

,,

1 Sec! ion , 12 Pag es
15 Cents
A Mvhimedio Inc . New , po per

Reagan insists economic
recovery lasting thing

Meigs County Commissioners announced today approval of their application to the Department of
Development of the State of Ohio for
$89,500 in Community Development
Block Grant money.
Projects funded under this year's
allocation include a new county
landfill, $59,551; a waterline extension in the village of Racine, $4,!XXI;
a waterline extension in the vlllage
of Rutland, $1,995, and road im·
provements on TR 235 in Bedford
Township, $5,00J.
Work on a firehouse in Chester
Township in the amount of $2.600
and one in Orange Township, in the
amount of $7,404 were funded
respectively.
Commissioners intend to request
the release of funds for these pro. jects on or about Oct. 30~fthisyear.
An environmental review record
for each project excluding the village of Rutland has been completed
and Is on tile at the commissioner's
office.

r.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;­

entinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Oct. 14,1982

$89,500 grant approval given

Marriage licenses

Adolph's Dairy Valley
570 W. Main

"Whip CW!P," which stands for
"construc tion work in progress." .
Jay Westbrook, a Cleveland city
councilman, said, "ThisCWIP-offis
just the most recent example of CEI
burying its mistakes under piles of
money.' ' He said the Perry.plant is
unnecessary because of a continually de clining de mand for
electricity.
The Ohio Consumers' Counsel
promised to fight the construction
costs whe n PUCO's hearings begin.
"We will have nuclear witnesses
who will testify that the plant is not
75 percent complete," said Susan
Butle r , a spokeswoman for the state
group.
Bailey said the plant is about 80
percent complete and thus eligible
to recove r construction costs.
In one corner of the State Office
Towe r a uditorium, three motion-

Colder than normal winter predicted

Fish-n-Chips
$}14
r
I

the high school. Shown are first place winner, Arlene
Ritchie, Traci Schu~ second; and Susan Swain third.
Ritchie and Swain, both eighth p-aders, and Schul a
sophomore at Eastern participated. in the contest
held in conjunction with the classes of Mrs. Nancy
Larkins.

Majority opposes 20 percent rate hike

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!

PH; 992-2556

BHCC
nursing grads

Page B

Annual smorgasbord
The annual smorgasbord of the
Pythian Siste rs at Wilkesville will
be held from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday at
the Pythlan Hall in Wilkesville.
Chicken. ham, meat loaf, assorted
vegetables, home made noods, rolls,
pies and salads will be available.
Admission is $3.;ii for adults and
$1.;ii for children under 12. There
wlll be music provided during the
a nnual event.

Pages 8-12

Page3

In other economic developments:
- International Ha rveste r Co.

Marriage licenses were issued in

Area deaths...

Meigs telephone
·,
rates gomg up...

i

\j.

munlty Services Review Group,
was formed by former mental
health director -Myers Kurtz last
week.
The group Is ID investigate
charges of mismanagement and
waste brought aglllnst the Callia·
Jackson-Meigs )'&lt;fentl!l Health Cen·
ter artd the tri-county 648 board.
The organizational meeting of the
group will be held in Athens at 10
a.m. Friday.
Members were asked by the state
ID sign an agreement which in·
cludedactausestatlngtheycouldbe
removed from the commlttee
"without cause" artd "without'
notice.''

The Gallla and Jackson county
members struck that clause from
thecontractbeforesigningltandthe
Metgs representative has report·
edly said he wm do the same.
Jackson County representative
John Brunton said he "will not go .
into a investigative piocedure with
those restrictions."
Brunton sald·Ufe state ts trying to
tell members that If they "get too
close to something we don't want
you tp know, we'll get rid of you."
Paul Niday, Gallla County commissioner and group member,
agreed.
"If we should stumble onto some(Cootlnued ori page 8)

DOWN - 'lbe 98 year old Ohio HOtel oo First St. In Mlddlepori Is coming down. Work~rs are In
the process of 1\Jttlng the Interior of the hotel which overlooks the Ohio River. After that the walls
wlll come down.

·

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