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                  <text>Victprious ·Buckeyes

I;Alrge~t gristmill

Story on Pap 3

Photo, story on P-age 10

Umps go io n_strike ·

Area deaths •••

Story Oll ...age 4

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Vol.34, No.119
Copyr!yhtecl 1984

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at y

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-SUiry on Page 10

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e.n ttne

1 Section, 10 P-aeo 211 C....
A Muhimedia Inc. N_...,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi_o, Monday. Qctober 1, 1984
I

Mondale
labels
•
ltleettng
'failure'

Independent·
Coal eompany
hit ~y strike

WASHINGTON (AP) -

ciJARLEsTON, W.Va. (AP)- . today whether National miners
. · Hundreds of miners struck one were staying home.
As of early today, UMW headIndependent coal company
and walkouts were ordered against quarters In Washington, D.C., had
another In the first test of the United released no other statement on the
Mine Workers' selective strike status of contract talks. Chief union
spokesman Joe Corcoran could not
strategy.
Scme 225 miners at five A.T. be reached.
Walkout averted
Massey Coal Group mines In
. A walkout was averted · at
eastern Kentucky did not appear for
their 11 p.m. Sunday shifts, said Pittsburg &amp; Midway Coal Mining
Co. mines when tentative contract
Charles Dixon, president of UMW
agreement was reached shortly
Locall440 In Pike County, Ky.
Telephone calls made early today before the old pact expired at
to several A.T. Massey mines In midnight Sunday, ~ld Norvell
soothem West VIrginia Indicated Moore, superintendent of P&amp;M's
Pleasant Hill, Ky., Mine.
that many miners there also stayed
In addition to the three companaway from their jobs.
, However, ·union and company - les, the Union negotiated Sunday In
otflclals mntacted early tOday were Washington with the Association of
unable to comment on the extent of Bituminous Contractors, composed
of companies employlngS,IXXltJMW
the strikes.
A second company targeted for members handling coal mine conthe strikes, National Mines Corp., struction. ButRDmeyNelson,afleld
did not reach agreement with the representative for southern West
UMW· and talks were not planned, Virginia UMW construction
said Norman Willard Jr., company workers, said his local was told to
vice president for human resources. report for work today as usual.
Massey, National and P&amp;M were
National employs 550 miners,
officials said, but Willard said he did not party to the contract signed
not know If they were on st:rll!e. Friday by the UMW and the
UMW offictals had no word early Bituminous Coal Operators

Beef Day
held at
fairgrounds ·

Sheets .- sa~s Boster.
is just 'rubber stamp'
-Rhodes told the gathering the
country has grown dUring the
administration of ?'resident
Reagan.
"Inflation'i .Sdownfroml5percent
to 5 perCent and the Interest rates
are doWn from 22 percent. Reagan
has put twice as much money In our
pocketbooks than Jimmy Carter
and Walter Mondale."
Rhodes a~ complained about
environmental laws passed during
the Carter administration. "We
should not have a federal law that
creates unemployment." he said.
"We cleaned up the Mahonlng
River," Rhodes added, "but unemployed steel workers cannot afford
to buy poles to fish In the rtver."
According to Rhodes, Moildale
blamed the closing of the Portsmouth Steel Mill and subsequent
loss of 1,400 jobs on Reagan. "But
when It snowed," he said, "we had to
walt until the sun came out and
melted the snow before we got any
help. And we got vecy little help
during the last coal strike."
Speakllig In behalf of Sheets,
Rhodes said senior citizens w~re
fighting loneliness "which kills
more senior citizens than any
disease."·
"I guarantee you," he said, "that
she will vote for -evecy piece of
legislation that will help senior
citizens."
Sheets and Rhodes spoke , to
approximately 100 Republicans,
who paid $10each to hear them.·

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
OVP staff Writer
GAlLIPOLIS Saying the
Celeste administration "Is stlll
Ignoring southeastern Ohio," . Rep.~bllcan State Representative candidate Jennifer Sheets told a
fundralslng reception Saturday the
lncumbept, Rep. Jolynn Boster, "Is
just a rubber stamp" for the
Democrats.
'\
Sheets said Boster promised In
her campaign two years ago more
jobs and better highways, "and I
can't see any Improvement."
"There hasn't been an Increase In
jobs," the Pomeroy attorney said,
"and with the recent closing of
Anchor Hocking, we've been losing
jobs. Ohio now ranks 46th In · the
nation In business climate."
According to Sheets, many state
funds and programs are going to the
northern half of the state. "Six of the
44 poorest counties In Ohio, ~elud­
Ing Athens, Gallla and Meigs, are
located In southeastern Ohio," she
added.
She also accused the administration pf Gov. Richard Celeste of
unnecessal)' taxation.
"Celeste said he would put money
back In our pockets," Sheets said. "I
· have trouble with that because he
doubled the state Income tax rate.
They are over ~g and over
spending."
Campaigning for Sheets was
former Republican Gov. James
Rhodes.

,

DEMONSTRATION:m::·J.&gt;ern.
' "t·''' '

onstratlons, recyclbii, . and
anbnal dJsplays blgliBglited a
Beef Day COilducted SaWrday

at the Meigs

~ty

Fair-

grounds. ,In top photo, Cindy
Oliveri, Meigs County Home
Demonstralon Agent, was kept
busy throughout the day giving
microwave demonstrations tAl
visitAirs at Meigs County Beef
Day. Beef Day, held on the Rock
Springs Fairgrowtds, was spon.sored by the Meigs County Beef

Patrol
•

cites
.
mQtortst

CaWe Assoclatloo and the ·
Meigs County Cooperative Extensloo Service. In middle '
photo, a Tom Turkey, owned by
Jbn Lucas, Rutland, strutted
his stuff during Beef Day

-

A Pomeroy woman was cited by
the Gallla-Meigs post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol following a One-i:ar
accldent.on Meigs Co. ~ Saturday.
The patrol said Yvonne S. Young,
37, was southbound on ~when sbe
apparently lost control of her car.
The vehicle ran off the left side of the
road, came back across the hlgbway, then went off the ,rtght side
strtklng an embankment and 0\lel'tumed, according to the patrol. The Incident resulted In heavy
damage to Young's car and she was
cited by the patrol for failure to
control her car.
In GaUia County, a Vinton W&lt;man
escaped injucy when she lost control
of her car on Ohio 325 SundBy
morning according to the GalliaMelgs post of the State Highway
Patrol. The patrol said Mildred F
Donahue, 53, was southboundonaZ •
when she apparently lost control of
her car In a curve, went off the left
stae of the road and struck a fence.
The 11: 10 a .m acci.dent resulted.ln
light damage to Donahue's vehicle, t ·
according to the patrol.
AnaccldentonU.S. 35causedlil!lt ·. • l'
damage to a car drtven by a
Fayettevlll~. W.Va., man.
•
The patrol said Everett D. J01115,
26, told them he was eastbound Wilen
an unlndentlfled westbound veNcJe
was !eft of center, causing him 11010
off the right sldeoftheroad, strlldllt
a guardraU atlO: 45 p.m .
•
·
A Sunday aCcident on Ohio 2J8
resulted In light damage to a
drtv~ by Jetfecy H, Campbell, 17,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. Accordtna.to
the patrol, Campbell was nor111bound when he had a blowout,
causing him togootftherlghtsldeof
the road, striking a mailbox.

acdvites. Slx-ye8Mds, KeDy
Spencer, Bashan, and Jeanine
Mae NeweR, Long Bottom,
apparently tbooght Tom to be
an lnteresdng feDow. At bottom

right, al~mn cans and newspapers are being recycled td
. raise money for the special
olymplcs. Kila Young, ' Utter
Educalion Program Assistant,
was on band at the senior fair·
building to accept materialS for
recycling. Up undl Saturday,
$180 has been raised for speclill
olymplcs through the recycling
effort.

Foley gets suspended
sentence, probation
· William Lester Foley, 22, di-e\¥ a
aboutAugust3. Thecharge,afelony
suspended senl!!Jlce on a _ B&amp;E In the fourth degree, canied a
charge this morning In Meigs _ possible maximum sentence of 18
. County Canmon Pleas Court.
months ln~pison with a $2500 fine.
Judge Charles Knight suspended
At that time, Foley was remanded
Foley's six months sentence and. to the custody of Meigs County
placed him on twoye~· probafton. Sher1tf James J. Protfltt until an
Hewasalsoc.'deredtonotassoclate Interview by an adult probation
With a C~Hiefendant In · the case, otflcer could be lllTanged. FollowGary Martin, who was previously lng the . Interview, Foley was
given allx months term In the Ohio released bn a $11XXJ recognizance
State Reformatory. FoleY was also bond.
ordeled to refrain tromenterjl,g any "' The court has ruled that Marshall
establishment whlctl serves alco- Adams, Racine, Is ent4,tled to a
hollc tJeveraies- He Is to appear In judgement In the amount of $700)
court again In 90 days to access his pi~? -Interest of $2,000.'/0 with
projiiellilncesentenclng.
lnterestaccumulatlngdallythereafFoleypledauJlt:YonAugust16toa ter In the amount of $3.07. from
1ireaicq aad mt.erllli at the Michael O'Brien, Columbus, and
SyracU.e MUIIIclpalBulldlng on or Linda O'Brien, Racine.

'

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•

Walter

F . Mondale, well behind In thE: polls
midway through the general election campaign , Is describing PresldentR.eagan 'smeetlngwithaSovlet
official as an "apparent failure" and
depleting It, along with the latest
bombing Iii Lebanon, as evidence of
lnadquate leadership.
The two events " have really In a
profound way. exposed to the natiOn
what I've lleen ttylng to say In the
past," Mondale said Sunday.
"We have a president who's not
really In charge. He's not mastering ·
the details. He's not leading on the
central questions," the Democratic
presidential candidate said of the
president's meeting with Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko
and the fa tal terrorist bombing of
the U.S. Embassy annex In ~trut.
Mondale's only public campalgningSundaycamelnhisweeklyradio
broadcast, although he took questions from reporters afterward.
He was making a quick trtp to
New Jersey today and one to
Arkansas on Tuesday, the beginning of a week that aides have
structured to give him plenty of time
to prepare for next Sunday's
televised debate with Reagan In
Louisvlll!!, Ky.
Reagan was returning to the
campaign trail today, starting a
three-day trtp to Michigan, Mississippi and Texas.
Hew as stopping first In Detroitfor
a swearliig-in ceremony for new
Citizens and a luncheon of the
Economic Club. From there he was
flying on to Biloxi, Miss. , and from
there to a three-city tour of Texas,
ending In Houston with Vice
President George Bush on Tuesday
'
night.
Bush, back from a ·trtp Sunday to
Parma, Ohio, near Clevetand, was
campaigning-today In Athens, Ga.

today,

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car .

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Monday, October 1, 1984

Commentary
·
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE IIIEIGS·MASON AREA

~~

- ~v

Pomeroy, Ohio

-.-.~o::;:j,.,..

r"T"&gt;.o.... .....

.,.,.. ROBERT L, WINGETf
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Puhllsher/Controlier

I Meet the Eagles

Allen Strikes back ________.,..._W_il__:.lia__..m_A_._Rus-..h---er

Ill Court Street ·
·

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assoclallon and the Amerklan Newspaper Publlohen Association. ·
·
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They' 'should be less than 300 ~ords
long. All letters are subject toed lUng and must be 1111cned with name, address and

telephone nwnber. No umlgaed letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good taste.• addressing issues, ~ot persorialltle!i.

Hearings on coal
amendment set
to get underway

'~.

same·general type. Even earlier, in
NEW YORK (NEA) -Possibly
And of course the full name of subsequently turned up in a White
Apr111983,
USA Today had casually
the most vicious single practice Salvadoran conservative leader House otflce safe.)
thatAllen "resigned as
asserted
engaged In by our tmperlal media is
Allen and his . wife had also
Roberto d' Aubt$son, who has not
National
Security
Adviser for Presitheir habit of publicizing some · only never been convicted but has accepted three $135 wristwatches
dent
Reagan
followwg
allegations
totally unwarranted charge against
not even been specifically accused • -f rom personal Japimese frlends.
he
accepted
bribes
from
that
an honorable public otflclal, ' then of a deniable crime, Is "d' Aubuis· Investtgattns or these $1nslter acJapan~ jpuntallsts."
(after it is duly discredited) dusting son Whose Name Has Been uriked tions, by the Justice Department
it off and bringing It up, year after With Right-Wing Death Squads."
and the Office of White House
So, the wan Sfreet. Jdurnal's •
year, In · some condensed and
Another favorite punching bag of Counsel, respectively, resulfed In
liberal news staff had plenty of
misleading form as . a part of the this type Is Richard Allen, who lost pubilshed 'findings that no crime
victim ' s s upposed curriculum . his job as President Reagan's was Involved In either case, and the , precedent tor coming up wtth this ·
beiiuty: "Mr. Allen, then President
vitae.
matler was dropped.
national security adviserinl9821n a
R!!.a gan's national security adviser, ·
Thus Btirt Lance, who was duly . White House power play. About the
Except, ·that is, by the .mectla.
teceived $1,000 from Japanese
tried by a jury of his peers and same time, somebody discovered · Last spring, when the usual. mudjournalists for helping arrange an
never convicted ol · anything, is that he had told an aide to turn over gunners were warming up on. Ed
interview
with Nancy Reagan."
Meese, whom -President Reagan
often casualll( described as "Lance, $1,000, paid by a Japanese magaJoseph
Kraft,
in his column,
who resigned as Caner's budget zine for an Interview with Nancy had nomlnaied to be attorney
that
President
Reagan
recalled
director In the wake of ..charges Reagan, to the proper authortties
general, several of them fondly
once
','had
a
national
security
involving improper bank~ loans." and had then for~tten lt. (II
recalled previous uproars of the
adviser who took watched from
Japanese buslnessmert." Anthony
Lewis of The New York Times was
more detailed: "Allen," .he said,
"had resigned when found to have
accepted $l,IXX&gt;' and th&lt;ee watches
from representatives of a Japanese
magazine· for whom h€ had arranged an interview with Nancy
Reagan."

Appalled, Allen took his problem
to Arnold &amp; Porter, one of ·
Washington's most formidable taw
firms. I a m glad to say that, as a
result of letters from them, every
one of the above-mentioned authors
has retracted and apologized for his
·
misstatements.

•

I Love

Peace.

I

NOT

ILL

I Have

CHaRi~Ma,

Too.

§uBSTaNce.

Today i.n history
Today is Monday, Oct. 1, the 275th day of 1984. There are 91 days left in
the year.
·
:I'oday's highlight in history:
On Oct. 1, 1949, Communist Party Chahman ~1ao Tse-Tung raised the
first flag of the People's Republic of China in a proclamation ceremony in
Peking.
:on this date:
:In urn, Spain ceded Louisiana to France in a secret treaty.
·In 1908, Henry Ford introduced the much-anticipated Modei-T to the
market. The basic' cost of a car: $850.
In 1936, Gen. Francisco Franco was proclaimed the head of an insurgent
Spanish state.
·In 1943, AJIIed forces led by Gen. Mark Clark captured Naples during
World War II.
1958, Congress established the National Aeronautics and Space
Adminlstra tion.
:In 1961, Roger Maris of the New York Y81)kees became the 'flrst major
league player ever to hit more than 60 harpers in one season when he
si)lmmed No. 61 off Boston's Tracy Stallard at Yankee Stadium.
In 1976, President Gerald Ford reprimanded Agriculture Secretary Earl
L; Butz tor making an off:COior racial joke. •
:Ten years ago: The Watergate cover-up trial began in Washington. Five
fqrmer Nixon administration officials - including ij.R. Haldeman, John
Ehrllchmah and John Mitchell - faced charges or conspiracy.
. ; Five yea:rs ago: Pope John Paul arrived in Boston to begin a seven-day
visit of the United States.
•
·'
. One year ago: Democratic presidential candldater&gt;Walter F. Moildale
won a straw poll in Maine, the same day he reoetved the endorsement of the
AFL-CIO's general board.
•
: Totlay's birthdays: Pianist Vladimir Horowitz Is IK). Actor Walter
Matthau .Is 64. Actor James Whitmore is 63. Fonner President Jimmy
Ql11.er and
Justice Wi111am Rehnqulst areOO. Actor·Tom Bosley Is 57.
Actor George Peppard is 56. Actor Richard IHrris Is 51.. Actress-singer
JW!e Andrews is 49. Ballet -dancer Edward Vlliella Is 48. All-star first

:rn

u.s.

baseman Rod carew 1s 39. .._
: ~t for today:· "It's tlle trade of lawyers to question everything, ·
~PJd nothing and talk by the hour." - Thomas Jefferson (1743-lll'.!li).

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speed ahead after its share of the
wants the skies over 5.600 square to a few people what you can't do to
Nevada desert. The admirals have
miles of central Nevada closed to a lot of people."
asked for 21,576 acres of public land
civilian air traffic for a "supersonic.
From a physician's point of view,
near the Fallon Naval Air Station,
operations area." This patch of sky he said, the sonic booms "amount to
to go with the 183,000 acres tliey_ · will be reserved for F -18 fighter an uncontrolled experiment on
soug ht there two years ago. The
human beings."
·
planes based at Fallon.
Navy is still drafting an environ· · Although much of the area the
There have already_been instanmental impact statement on the Navy w.ants the exclusive right to ces of mtlltary planes bombing the
earlier request.
fly over is public . land, It also wrong ta rgets - including an
The · Navy has also gained a
includes privately owned ranches accidenta l attack in 1'¥13 on a Fish
toehold in public lands that are and towns, whose desert solitude and Wildlife Service headquarters
theoretically under wilderness-law
will be shattered by as many as 100 near the NelUs base. And the
protection. It .has put radar stations sonic booms a day.
Navy's own documents concede
in "wilderness study areas" public
Dr. f,Uchard Bargen of Fallon , that a ny person straying into the
land that is s upposed to remain who runs a flying. health service,
restricted area - or any wildlife
untouched until Congress deci des
has gone to court to block the living there - would be in peril.
what fo do with it. . ·
NavY's pian , which he s uspects is a
"Any structure, person or animal in
Tl!e radar, ~tailed by helicopter reincarnation of the 1974 Air the area - could be exposed to
to minimize disruption to the wild
Force-Navy 'pro)Xlsal to restrict JXlSSible destruction from aira rea, helps Navy pilots keep score airspace in a triangle formed by launched ordnance," one report
in practice dogfights. A Bureau of Fallon and the Air Force's Nellis noted.
Land Management official told my and Hlil bases.
The Nevada State Parks Division
associate John Dillon the Navy was
"A major project with major described the expected sonic-boom
given permission to put In a radar health implications for the entire impact with understatement, saybecause the environmental Impact state Is being implemented in a
ing: "The Oying. of s upersonic
was considered slight.
piecemeal fashion," Bargen said, aircraft, in substintial increasing
Perhaps the Navy's most ambi- "without really addressing the need numbers, to within 100 teet above
tious expansion proposal is not a for it or what im pact It will have on ground level will surely ·impact
la nd grab but an "air grab." It people. It's really a matter of dOi1Jg
wilderness values."

The bird .won't fly_-"--_ ) ____;_____Ar_tB_uc_h_u:a_ld
I was eating at my favorite parts."
Washington restaurant the other _ "I can't go back to the Pentagon
day when I overheard an Army and tell them we're going to have to
general and what I preswned to be pay nlne for a bird you promised to
sonieone from the defense industry deliver for five. The heat's on·there
In discussion.
now, and they're starting to ask
"Harry, the bird doesn't work," questions about price. As a matter
the general said.
of fact, after they found out about
"What do you mean the bird the tests they sent in their accoundoesn't work? I saw It fly. with my tants, and they said you overown eyes at our testing grounds.' charged us by a half-billion
You were with me. The guy 'dollars."
knocked down four drone planes
"59?''
with the bird."
.
" They want half the money back,
"I saw it. But we took It out and Harry."
tested it ourselves in battlefield
"Come on, you have to be
conditions. Every time one of our kidding. They want us to give them
guys fired one, instead of heading back $250 million just because one
for a plane it hit a n outhouse. Are of our bookkeepers made a
you sure you didn't , have those mistake?"
drones fixed to blow upjustforus?"
"Tll!!y really wanted an of It
"Chuck, you're not talking to back, but the Defense Department
some civilian. This is Harry is going to.eat half because we ltke
Minnefie, West Point Class · of '64, doing business with your
the guy Who returned a kick 90 company."
.
.
yards against Notre OOme. Just
"Chuck,' let's be reasonable.
because I left the service doesn't Maybe the bird isn't what It's
mea n I left \he honor code behlpd cracked up to be, but what Is today?
me. You're 'not going to release the You buy a car, It doesn't work; you
buy a refiigerator, It breaks down.
results of the tests are you?"
"We weren't. But somehow a Whyshouldadefensecontractorbe
congressman got wtnd that · we held to higher sland{lrds? When we
withheld them and gave the report designed the ground-to-air mlsslle,
to the press, and that brought tile we knew It had a few flaws in it, but
inspector general in, and now the you .guys were dying to get It into
sec':_E'tary Is chewing out my butt.. production, because if you didn't
We ordered 1,000 of the birds at $5 ·the Air Force would get the money
million e~cn, and they can't shoot ' for their bird. Now you're making
down an ostrich."
us the fall guys because the thing
"Look, we know the bird has a . can't get off the ground."
few mh!or bugs In It, and we're . "Harry, if It were my decision I
working on it now. We're going to couldn't care less. I've only got one
rep!~ the laser, the microchips,
year to go before I retire. But
the guidance system and tlle Congress Is on our backs about all
payload. You're going to get Ute · the weapons we've orctered that
best bird the Army ever ordered." don't pan out, and they're demand"When?''
·
ing guarantees they work before we
"Two, threeyearsatthemost.or buy them." .
course, we can't let you have It for
" What the hell kind tJf national
$5rnlllion. Weftgurewecanbrlnglt security policy Is that? Look,
in at nine, ,not including spare Chuck, 'w e're not just talking about

...

f
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Brian Beeler

5-11, l'JG pound
Fftllhrnall luDback

~

1,!XXI birds. We're talking about
50,000 jobs. If you cancel the
. contract on us now, we're going to
have to close down s~p. "
"We're not going to cancel the ·
order. If we did we'd be admitting
we made a mlslake. Ali we're
asking Is that you pay us back $250
million to s how we mean business
when it comes to demf!nding
quality control. As a West Point
classmate, is that asking too

"I'll make a deal with ,you,
Chuck. We'll give you your lousy
quarter of a billion dollars -back if
you order 2,000 ' new birds at $7
million each. I swear to you thls one
will knock a fruit fly out of the sky."
"What do we do with the ones that
are now knocking out outhouses?"
"Keep them . Did it over occur to
you that you can kill more Commies
in an outhouse than you can In a
Backfire bomber?"

Berry's World

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PITI'SBURGH (AP) -They are tllat relies solely-on t he run tor ball - most effective and explosive passFranco-less and Bradshaw-less, but control."
lllg attack.
there are more than memories
Woodley, the former Miami
"Bemg healthy . makes all thp
remaining from tile Super Bowl Dolphin, has completed 54 of '¥/ difference, " Stallwonh said. " I've
days of old for the :pjttsburgh passes tor!ll9 yards, six touchdowns never thought I'd lost anything just
and three lntercep ions._ with Stal- because I'm getting older. PeopiP
Steelers.
Good things haven't always come lworth catching W passes for 365 expect you to lose it once yoil gel
to pass thi~ season for the 2-2 yards and Lipps 18 for :Hl yards.
older, but I don't feel like I've lost
The Steeiers haven't been as anything.''
Steelers, who play winless AFC
Central Division rival Cincinnati, explosive as they were when
[ljeither the Steelers nor the
0-4, in tonight's National Football Bradshaw was at the controls, but Bengals can say that.
League Monday night gatne.
Woodley has stabilized an offense
The Steelers struggled defen .
. But the Steelers; whose passing that was erratic a y.ear ago when the sively In a JS.-28 lass to the Kansas
attack was the next-to-worst in the now-dej)arted CUff Stoudt replaced · City Chiefs, .t hen couldn 't move the
2S-team league last season, have the injured Bradshaw.
ball in losing to the Cleveland
two of the. NFL'S top receivers in
One r eason has been the return to Browns W-10 a week ago. The
veteran John Stallworth and rookie form of the 32-year-&lt;Jid Stallworth, ,Bengals haven't won, period, in new
Louis Lipps. And that makes who caught just eight passes in an Coach Sam Wyche's first month on
quarterback David Woodley a injury-fUied ,J.OO:l season. He has the job.
happy guy.
"We can 't say we're a greatieam
again become the kind of game''Being able to throw the ball takes breaking receiver he was when he, but I don' t tlunk we're an · 0-4
a lot of the pressure off," Woodley Bradshaw and Lynn Swann teamed ballciub ," said Wyche, the former
said. "We don't have to be a team to give the Steelers' 'the league's Indiana University coach. ·"We're
.

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
It was safety first, second and
third tor the Los Ange les Rams.

Kirk Reed
5-8, 200 pound
Sophomore tackle

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Plan A
in ·the offensive scheme of. third·
ranked Ohio State is named Keith
Byars.
.
· A, as in An Automatic AllAmerican, Awesome and a 35-22
victory over Minnesota Saturday
night . Byars, a junior tailback, tore
through Minnesoia's defenseJor 164
yards and two touchdowns.
But to use a current football
buzzword, Ohio State . uses a
"multiple offense," meaning
there's a Plan B.
Quarterback Mike Tomczak, in
his second.start since fracturing Ws
right leg in two places, completed 11
of19passes, includingtwQTDfiips to
Crls Carter and no interceptions.
"I think we mixed it upprettyweli
offensively," said Buckeye Coach
Earle Bruce, whose team is now 4-0
overailand2-0 in the Big Ten. "Mike
played exceptionally tonight and
we've got a good passing game,
especially when they have eight
guys up front trying to stop the pitch
outs to Byars."
.
In other words, the effectiveness
of Plan A has a direct effect on Plan"

B.

'

"The philosophy of every team we
play from here on out will be to stop
Keith Byars," said Tomczak, with a
grin.
Bruce said with Minnesota focusIng on Byars, "Wefiguredwe'dhave
the curls and could get in behind
'em.''
He was right. Tomczak hit Mike
Lanese seven ttmes (or 113 yards.
"Tomczak is .the guy who hurt
us," said Minnesota Coach Lou
Holtz, whose team dropped its 19th
Big Ten game in a row. "He threw
the ball well, we could never stop
their passes. They just whipped us.' '
Before the game, Tomczak figured his unbeaten Buckeyes were
due for a letdown playing a t lowly
'

a bitter battle. Gerald Willhite's
4-yard scoring run and three Rich
Kariis field goals did the damage for
the Broncos ln:!!fight-marredgame,
lifting 4·1 Denver into a tie with the
Raiders and Seahawks for first
place in the AFC We5t.
· The Broncos rushed for a season·
high 233 yards.
Chiefs 10, Browns 6
Kansas City produced an awesome pass rush, sacking Cleveland
QB Paul McDonald 11 times for 78
yards. Todd Blackledge connected
• with Billy Jackson on a decisive
9-yard scoring toss.
Dolphins 36, Cardinals 28
Miami used a familiar formula:
Dan Marino throwing to his talented
corps of receivers for big yardage
and lots of points. Marino, who leads
the NFL with 15 touchdown throws ,
hit for a team-record 429 y ards and
three touchdowns on 24 completions
in 36 passes.
Tight end Joe Rose caught a
26-yarder, Mark Clayton hauled in a
29-yard strike · and Tony Nathan
scored from 22 yards on Marufo .
passes. ·
49ers 14, Falrons a
san Franciscp kept its record
spotless as Joe Montana hitonapair
of touchdown tosses and the defense
stoppep AUartta - which was
averaging ll.5points a game- four
tim€!0 inside the' 49er 10. !ylontana,
weartng a Oak jacket to protect
bruised ribs which forced him out of
last week's game, threw to Russ
Francis for a 5-yard score and to.
Mike Wilson for a 21-yard TO.
Tlie Falcons roiled up 418 yards on
offense as Steve Bartl&lt;owski passed
for 267 yards a nd Gerald Riggs,
leading rusher in the NFL, ran for

The Rams manhandled the New
York Giants 33-12 Sunday, registering a National Football League
record three safeties and generally
embarrassing the Giants' offensive
line, which was called for holding
nlne ttmes. Punter Dave Jennings
had two of his kicks blocked and
quarterback Phil Simms was
sacked in the end zone while trying
to pass,
Elsewhere, It was Denver 16, the
Los Ange les Raiders 13; Miami 36,
St. Louis 28; San Francisco 14,
Atlanta 5; Tampa Bay ll, Green
Jolm W. Rice
Bay 27 in overtime; New England
6-0, 180 pound
28, the New York Jets 21; Dallas 23,
Junior back
Chic!ago 14; Seattle 20, Minnesota
12; Indianapolis 31, Buffalo 17;
Kansas City 10, Cleveland 6; New
Orleans 27, Houston 10; San Diego
27, Detroit 24 , and Washington 20,
Philadelphia 0.
Cincinnati visits Pittsburgh
tonight. ·
Henry Ellard sparked the Rams'
scoring with an 83-yard punt return,
but it was the defense which
controlled the game. New York had
Minnesota just o11 week after a
only eight yards rushing.
The Giants, who were given a gift
stunning victOry over highly-touted
touchdown nine seconds into the
Iowa.
game when LA's A.J. Jones failed to
"There was just so much emotion
last week andsomuchexcltement,"
cover a kickoff in lhe end zone and
Tomczak said. "I've been playing
rookie Phil McConkey fell on it,
college football for four years now,
trailed 7-6 when E llard scooted
and you knew there was going to be
down the sid elines with a Jennings
kick.
an emotional letdown."
But while the team was sitting
The safeties a ll came in the 'third
quarter. At 1:00, Ivory Sully blocked
around the television at its Minnea·
a Jennings punt in and through the
po)ls hotel before Saturday night's
e nd zone. Just 2: ~ laier, Youngbgame, they heard something that
IOQd and fellow DE Reggie Doss 136.
quickly erased last week from their
Buccaneers 30, Packers Z7
trapped Simms . At 12:24, Norwood
minds.
Green Bay pulled off some
Vann burst into the end zone to stop
But Tomczak's fear of a letdown
last -second heroics to force the
another Jennings punt.
was justified.
oventme,
but the spontaneous
. Broncos 16, Raiders 13
After methodically opening a 21-0 .
trickery
by
James LoftOil was
Denver knocked the defending
lead in the second quarter, a
Super Bowl champions from the wasted when Tampa's Obed Ariri
Buckeye letdown, a lbeit short-lived,
· undefeated ranks- only Miami and kicked a 48-yard field goal witlflO: 38
didoccur.
·
Minnesota, sparked by first-time
san Francisco are pertect at 5-0- in gone In overtime.
freshman starter Rickey Foggie at
quarterback, pulled within 21-14 in
the third quarter.
. Foggie ntpped a 4-yard TD pass to
Kevin Starks with 13 seconds to go in
the half and hit Melvin Anderso.n on
a 40-yard scoring bomb on third·
and-20 in the third quarter.
· FOggte finished 9-of-17 with two
touchdowns, . but threw two costly ·
interceptions.
The Buckeyes gave Foggie and
Minnesota no more tifne.
POR'TSMOUTII - Following a
put the Bobcats a head , 15-0.
Byars added his second short
scoreless first half. Coach Mel
The Irish fought back quickly as
touchdown to ntake it 28-14 and
Coen's Kyger Creek Bobcats scored qua irterback Dee Bende neili conscampered 33 yards to set up
a touchdown in each of the final two nected with Leo Gillen on a 62 yard
Tomczak's second TO pass to Crts
quarters then held on for a 15-8 scoring homb. A pass for the
Carter.
Tomczak completed 11 o( 19 victory over Portsmouth Notre ~onveri;ion fell short .
Dame here saturday night.
In the final seconds, Kyger Creek,
passes, including two touchdown
The win gives the Bobcats a 3-2 . deep in Its territory, elected to take a
throws and no Interceptions.
record going into Friday's SVAC safe ty rather than rtsk a punt being
Byars' 164 yards marked the
opener against Southern.
blocked in the end zone for a
fourth time this season and the ninth
Portsmouth Notre Dame took the touchdown.
time In his last 11 games that he's
opening kickoff, controlled the ball
Offensively, Vogel had 120 o!KC's
topped 100yards.
for m ore than eight minutes but 140 yards rushing.
The Buckeyes are now 4-0 and 2-0
Defensively , Kitchen a nd Brian
fumbled it back toKC inSide the five
in the BigTen, while the Gophers are
yard line.
Wamsley interecpted passes to
1-3and0-2.
prevent any further scoring for
Kyger Creek reached the score·
board with 3: 59 lett in the third
Portsmouth Notre Dame.
period following a 62 drive capped
The loss left Portsmouth Notre
by senior fullback's Chuck Vogel's
Dame with a 1-4 record.
three
run. Quarterback Garry
S&lt;aoL&lt;II&lt;~
in saturday's game, seven of which
Kt · l'oo1.&lt;. ND ·
Western Michigan converted into Pennington hit Vogel for the extra Dt.'Pou1mcnt
points and an 8-0 lead. A big play ~~~s~s~~;g ·
i~ ~
sco~.
.
. &lt;2
111
. "We were bad almost from the during the march was a third down, v ..·ds passlnA.............
l,yardage .............. : ...... ..... l~l
'.m
start," said first-year Marshall ' 38 jrard pass from Pennington to his Tola
Passes a l1f&gt;mplpd ...
. .. .... ....... ~
15
5
Coach Stan Parrish, whose Herd Is favorite target, small but sure- Passes compiNro ....................... &lt;
handed, Barry Matthews.
Had lnte rN'pl&lt;'d ... .. .................... o
2
row 3-2 after beginning the season at
Midway in the fourth quarter, f,:;~~:~ i;;&lt;i . :. :.......:.. :.: :
~
3-0 and then losing to Furman :t!-28
on Sept. 21. "l was · afr;i.id of Vogel broke loose for a 55 yard . PE&gt;nalt lt"S ................................. 2·Zl :J-15
gallop giving the Gallialis"a 14-0 · K~~ -~-~~'.. .. . ..
something like tWs.
0 0 " 7_ ,
advantage. Anthony Kichen's kick P orts. N.D.......................... o o o i1- R

Byars, Tomczak
pace Buckeyes'
35-22 Big 10 win

KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) .,...
Marshall Coach Stan Parrish says
his Thunderiog Herd pertormed
badly through most . of a 42-7
trouncing by Western Michigan,
a nd he blames the previous week's
loss·to Southern Conference powerhouse Furman.
Marshall was the victim of its own
inability to hold onto the football.
The Herd commi.tted nine turnover,; '

Kyger Creek in
15-8 victory over
Portsmouth N.D.

y-ard

•

SJ.25

"Now that he talks In nothing but football
'sportspeak,' we don't communicate at all/"'

,.

all sharlng in it and I'm taking tlle
biggest part or the responslblllty."
But vete ran Kenny Andf,!noll,
who has .long been oneoftheNn's
best quarterbacks, has been taldDg
his share of the .heat, too. SIDle
Benga,ls' fans have chanted tor
rille-armed rookie BoomerEslaaOil
to play, but Wyche Isn't ready to
make a move ... yet.
"Boome r has ari11e," Wychesal!I" Boomer has one of the pUI'eSI
throwing arms In the !~ague. ~~
Boomer doesn 't have any NEL
experience .
"To m e the re's a big dlffe1ence
between a passer andaq\llll"t.ertlaCI
- a quarterback who operates 1be
e ntire offense. Kenny Is smart IIDd
he's got as good asarmashe'sever
had. The quarterback Is standtDg
there with the ball so I guess tlle
c riticism gets directed at hlm."

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
PH .

• Saints Z7, Ollers18
Hapless HoustOn, 0-5, was held to
e igt\t first downs and 133 yards by
New Orle ans. FrankWatteletran35
yards with an interception tor a
score andHokieGajanhadal&gt;yard
TD jaunt. OUers quarterback
Warren Moon , the high-priced
refugee from the Canadian League,
was benched infavorofOiiver Luck
in the second half. Moon had theftu.
Chargers Z7, Uons 24
Da n F outs engineered 24 first-half
points , the n san Diego held otf a
furiou s Detroit rally. The Chargers
drove 1l!, 49and87yardsforscoreslil ·
the first ha lf and led 24-7 at
intermission. Then Gary Danielson
and Billy Sims -whohadan81-yard
tun- sparked the Lions. Danielson
even hit James Jones on an ~yard,
go-ahead scoring toss in the Hna1
minutes , but it was negated by an
offensive intelierence penalty.

Lofton caught a 22-yard pass from
Lynn Dickey and Jateraled to Gerry
Ellis, who ran 14 yards to complete a
36-yard scoring play with e ight
seconds left in regulation. The
razzle-dazzle between Lofton and
Ellis was unplanned, according to
' Gregg .
Packe rs Coach Forrest
Patriots 28, Jets 21
New England controlled the ball
with long drives and Tony Eason
connected on 28 of 42 passes for 3!l4
yards and three touchdowns. He
also scored on a 4-yard rut:J.
Cowboys 23, Bears 14
Despite 155 yards rushing by
Waiter payton - moving him
within 66 yatds of Jim Brown's
all-time NFL record- Chicago was
victimized by a fill-yard TD screen
pass from Gary Hogeboom to Tony
Dorsett.
Colts 31, Bills 17
Indianapolis' running a ttack .
ranked second in the NFL en tering
the game.
wasitstoppej:l
cold in the
first
half. But
came alive
second half behind Randy McMillan, who wound up with 114 yards
and two touchdowns . Joe Dufek ,
making his first stan as Bills
quarterback, ran for a touchdown
and threw for another.
Seahawks 28, Vikings 12
Seattle didn't match KC but still
gol five sacks, forced three fumbles
and led from its first possession, on
which Dave Krieg hit Steve Largent
for a W-yard score. Eric Lane, who
along with Franco Harris has led
Seattle's running ga me in the
absence of injured Curt ·warner.
rushed tor 113 yards and a 40-yard

-~·~li~i~i~~~~·

53 I JACKSON PIKE · RT. Je WEST
Phone 446 - 4~
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT a $t1¥
.IIU SEATS $2.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY Sl.OO.

TD.

.-----'----------1

~\"\~~~~l'o.f
STATION
----·-- ---·

RENT MOVIES AT
THE MOVIE PlACES
ALL FRUTH PHARMACIES
IHU~OYE·G!l!IPOLIS
UP THE CRE EK
ICE PIRI\TES
AGA INST ALi. ODDS
MAKINC: THE C: RAD E
"Annlmmg Sp•~ief "

MOVIE R!NTAIS ....$2.SO A Day

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Tender steak, lightly breaded ,.and smothered
in o ur own special-recipe brown gravy.
Rice pilaf or French Fries (or bJlked potato
after 5 PM).
Toasted Grecian Bread .
Ali the soup, saiad ·a nd fresh fruit you care to eat.

Don E. Mullen

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~Commissioner

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328 Vielnd Street
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

MEIGS COUNTY

·Progressive - Experienced
Paid Politic al Ad by Cond 1date
Don E. Mullen, 5ll3 North 2nd Ave .. Middleport

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•

'I Winless Bengals face Steelers tonight

Marshall ripped, 42~ 7

1

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

Broncos stun Raiders; KC Chiefs-stop Browns

According to an &lt;\Be network
'news · report, Alien "Set up an
·interview with Mr.;. Re8gan for a
Japanese magazine, but rl!lllgned
when It turned out he'\1 i~CrePted
$1,!XXI payment for his f:rot!ble."

Hearings on a proposed constitutional amendment which could give
tangible assistance to the ailing coal Industry are getting under way this
week in a n area most famillar with the problem.
.
House Energy and Environment Committee Chairman Thomas P .
Gilmartin , D·Youngstowri, says a subcommittee of hls panel, headed by
Rep. Joseph Secrest, D-Senecaville. will launch the hearings Tliesday
night in St. Clairsville, in the heart of the state's coal-producing region. ·
The proposed resolution, sponsored by Sen. Richard Pfeiffer Jr.,
D-Colwnbus, Is an outgrowth of studies early this year by the Senate Task
Force on Ohio Coal.' Some of the other recommendations of that group will
be addressed in legislation in early 1!115, but Pfeiffer's proposal, which
passed the Senate in May, requires a vote of both houses of the Legislature
and the people.
Specifically, the proposal would make an exception to a iong-slandlng
constitutional ban against the state subsidizing prtvate industry. It
provides that the state may give financial assistance to corporations which
are formed to engage in research and d evelopment of coal technology.
Primarily, these efforts would be directed to technology which would
W1\.SIDNGTON - Land grabs by
peimlt the burning of Ohio's high-sulfur coal without damage to the
powertul, well-armed interests with
environment, such as that caused by acid rain.
scant regard for the law were fairly
Gilmartin says Ohio's coal "must be able to be burned in an
common in the Old West. Unfortue nVironmentally acceptable manner. This resolution Is a key component to
nately, the practice still exists. Just
the strategy of getting Ohio's miners back to work, to allow utilities to burn
ask the people of Nevada.
ffi\)re Ohio coal ... and to lower utility costs to consumers• •
This time the land grabbers
He said Tuesday night' s hearing at the St. Clairsville branch campus or
aren't railroad tycoons or cattle
Ohio University is important.
barons, but the milltary services of
" I am calling on industry, the miners, the general public, and others wl\o
the United States. They're armed,
share our conunon concern to work together, and to attend this hearing,"
not. with six-guns, but with helicopthe veteran Mahonlng County lawmaker said.
·
ters and supersonic fighters and
Besides Secrest, the other members of the subcommittee are Reps. Jack
bombers. Their arrogance and
Ce ra\, D-Bellalre, a nd Thomas W. Johnson, R-New Concord.
. might are more than any latter-day
"Shane" could overcome.
I've a lready reported how the Air
Force Illegally appropriated 139
square miles of the governmentowned Groom Mountains insouthw·
estern Nevada and set up ·"No
Trespassing" signs, armed guards
and he licopter patrols. The Air
Force finally admitted to Congress
HaTe
that it had never obtained legal
WaR.
right to the property from the
Bureau of Land Management but no one has been so much as
reprimanded for this violation of
the law.
Now the Navy has steamed full

J WaNT PRo§PeR;TY.
6llT I'M

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

The Daily Sentinel
·

'

I Try our new hot vegetables 4 o30· 9 o00 PM . 1

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Pomeroy-Middleport,' Ohio

Page-:-4-:-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. October 1, 1984

Monday, October 1, 1984

~

Major league umpires strike as playoffs·start
.

.

NEW YORK (AP) -NatlonalLeagueumpirePaul
Runge contlnned late Sunday that major league
umpireswUlgooutonstrikeandwUlrefusetoworkthe
two championship series which begin Tuesday.
" It's definite," said Runge. "We've instructed the
umpires of the American and National leagues to go
home."
Runge, vice president of the Major League Baseball
Umpires Association, was contacted at his El Cajon,
Calif., home. Earlier Sunday, he had worked a
se;~son-ending doul;lle-header at PhUadelphia.
·Runge, a National Lea8'Je umpire for 11 years, said
Richie PhiUips, attorney for the umpire's union , l~ued

the "go-home" order on Saturday to umpire crews
·
The strike decision remal:netl In force Sunday,
Runge adde!l, after PhUllps met with Ameiican
League President a&lt;Jbby Brown and Charles Feeney,
president of the National League.
Runge said he was told l;ly PhUUps that the two
baseball executives indicated that "a solution to our
problem was not lmmlnent." ·
Bob Wlrz, a spokesman for the Conunlssloner's
Office, !laid. Sunday that "contingency plans" were
being made to cope with a strike,,
scheduled to officiate the playolls.

"Our position remains the same, In that there are
ongoing negotiations," said Wlq.
.
''I'm not prepared to talk In detail, but we'll have
umpires" for Tuesday's opening playoff games. The
Chicago CUbs host the San Diego Padres Tuesday
afternoon in the first National League game, and the
Detroit Tigers visit the Kansas City Royals for
Tuesday nli::ht's American League opener.
Repeated efforts Sunday to reach Phillips at his
home and office Were uru;ucce5sful.
The two sides hitve talked since last DeCember but
· ·
haven't met since Sept.l!6.

ShOuld a walkout occur, It would lxitlli&amp;eCOIIdtntlve'
years 1;1y !he umpires, who had a sevep-week strike
during the 1979 season.
PhUllpshadsaldearUerthelssuesatlhebeartotthe
negotiations - aU of which were covered for~ two
yearslnthefour-yearcontractreachedonAprll5, 1982
-Include: "a fairer and moreequllablediAtrlbutionof
the enonnous re*"ues generated by maJor league
baseball.''
.
. Other Issues include job secul'lty . and "the
dlscrlmlnat0ry selection process .ot umpires . for
postseason events," f'hUUps said.

-

.

.

· By The Associated Press
Winfield for the Amertcan ~ague
The l!Sl season ended on a perfect
batting title. Mattingly needed a hit
note for Mike Witt.
in his final at·bat to pass Wlnfleld,
The California right-hande r
who had entered the game at
·. tl1re'lll the 13th perfect game of nine Yankee Stadium with a .341-.339
innings or better in major-league
advantage.
history as he retired every Texas
The deciding hit for the secondRanger that came his way Sunday year first baseman was a "goodand the Angels ended the season
hop" single that bounced over the
with a 1-0 victory.
.\
glove of Detroit second baseman
The 15th victory of 1984 for the Scott Earl and gl,lve Mattingly a .343
6-foct-7, 24-year-old Witt was some- average, three points better than
thing special.
Winfield, who went 1-for-4 Sunday.
Perfect games are hard to come
The Yankees, who finished third
by as are no-hitters. Witt 's was the in the AL East, put the game away
third no-hitter of1984 and the second early with a three-run first inning on
pe1iect game.
a two-run double by Don Baylor and
Detroit's Jack Morris no hit the a wlld pitch by loser Randy O'Neal,
Chicago White Sox on April 7 a nd 2-1. Dennis Rasmussen, ~6, scateight days later David. Palmer of tered eight hits over seven innings.
Montreal retired aU 15 batters he
The Tigers head for Kansas City,
faced in the Expos' rain-shortened where they Will face the Royals in
victory over St. Louis.
the opener of the best-of-five
- • In other American Ll?ague games American .League Championship
Sunday, New York bombed Texas . Series Tuesday night.
9-2, Baltimore heat Boston 5-3,
Indians 7, Twins 4
Milwaukee downed Toronto 4-0,
Bert Blyleven won his 19th game
Cleveland' defeated Minnesota 7-4, of the season and Ernie Camacho
Oakland blasted KansasCity8-2and extended his club record with his
Sel!ttle edged Chicago 5-3.
23rd save as they combined on a
Witt went to three balls Oh just one nlne"hitter. The victory was the
batter - Wayne Tolleson in the sixth straight for the Indians and the
seventh inning- and threw just 94 sixth consecutive loss for the Twins,
pitches as the California outfielders who fWshed tied for second in the
recorded only four putouts.
AL West. Minnesota had taken a 2-0
Witt ·s truck out 10 and the only lead on a bases-loaded walk l;ly Kent
well-hit ball came off the bat of Hrbek and a sacrifice fly by Randy
Larry Parrish to start the eighth Bush. The Indians took the lead In
inning. Parrish's drive sent right the bottom of the fourth when loser
fielder Mike Brown to the warning Ken Schrom, 5-10, threw an appar·
track in front of the 380-foot sign.
ent double-play grounder Into center
The last nine-i1\ning perfect game field .
was thrown by Cleveland's Len
.... Orioles 5, Red Sox 3
Barker on May 15, 1981 against the
Wayne Gross' two-run single In
Toronto Blue Jays.
the top of the seventh gave the
Orioles the victory and spolled
Yankees 9, Tlgel&gt;i 2
Don Mattingly supplied a story- Ralph Hook's farewell as Red Sox
book finish to his season when he manager. Mark Brown earned his
went 4-for-5 to edge teammate Dave first major-league victory lnreUefof

•

.

starter John Pacella. Boston's big
offensive blow was a two-run trlple
in the second Inning by Marty
Barrett, who scored on a passed
ball.
Brewers 4, Blue Jays 0
Bob Gibson and Ray Searage ·
combined on a four-hitter as · the
Brewers avoided llnlshing with the
worst record In the major leagues.
The victory was the 67th for
MUwaukee, one more than San
Francisco In the National League.
Robin YountsupJ&gt;Ued the offense for
the home team with a two-run
double In the fifth.
Athletics 8, Royal'i 2
BATDNG CHAMPION - New York Yiulkees' plteher, WIDle Hern1111dez In the ·eighth Inning
Tony PhUUps and Mike Davis
Don Mattingly connects on Ids fourth hit of the day cUnched first place In the American League Bllltln~t
each hit a three-run homer as the
against the·Detroit Tigers at Yankee stadium In New Championship with a final average ol .343. The
Royals lost their second straight
York Sunday. Matllngly, batllng against Detroit Yankees beat the Tigers &amp;-2. (AP Laserphoto).
game since winning the AL West
tllle Frtday night. Davis' ninth
homer of the year capped a four-ruJ:J
.
.
first inning that featured the final
at-bat of Joe Morgan - a double.
By BOB GREENE
striking out eight.
90-72 mark, had the second-best
Morgan, whoflnlshedastheaU-tlme
AP Sports Writer
Cubs 2, Canltnals 1
season in their 23-year ldstocy.
home run king among ·s econd
For Pete Rose, the playerChicago also got a helping hand in
Darryl Strawberry hit two solo
baseman, capped his 17-year career manager of the Cincinnati Reds, his
its victory over St. Louis as the.Cubs home runs for the Mets; whUe
with a standing ovation from the latest National League record was a
scored the winning run on a George Foster had one, ·
home crowd after his extra-base hit. deeply appreciated gift.
throwing error by Cardinal catcper
Braves4, Padres3
Mike Knlger, 10-10, struck out sjx
Rose hit the 726tll double ·of his Glenn Brummer.
Paul Zuvella knocked in the first
and allow~ three hits in six lnnlings. career- a two-run soft fly ball that
"Xeah, I guess yol.l do get some run of his major league career and
·
Mariners 5, White Sox 3
fell 'in when Houston left fielder Jose breaks when yoo're winning," Cub Dale Murphy his 100th of the!ieason
It was rookie's day In Seattle. Cruz and center fielder Jerry
Manager Jim Frey said.
to lead Atlanta over San Diego.
Danny Tartabull and Jim Presley Mumphrey collided as Cincinnati
St. Louis reliever Bruce Sutter Pascual Perez, 14-8, the central
hit consecutive first-Inning homers downed Houston 7-6 Sunday.
haq Hllead and was In pursuit of a figure when the two teams. were
and left-bander Mark Langston,
The two-base hit gave him the NL major league-record 46th save. Involved In a sertes of bench17-lO,struckoutnlinefora 1Dtalof204 recoi'Jl, one mo~ than Stan Musial.
After retlrlngtheGubs in order in the clearing brawls on Aug. 12 in
to become the first rookie to lead the He trails .only Tris Speaker's
eighth, he gave up a single to Henry Atlanta, went 8 2-31nnlngs to get the
AL In strikeouts since Cleveland's all-time mark of 793.
Cotto to begin the Chicago· ninth. victory.
Herb Score in 1955. Seattle scored aU
Elsewhere Iii the NL Sunday, Two more hits tied the. game and
Dodgers 7, Giants%
the runs in the first as Tartabull Pittsburgh swept a double-header
Bob
Ballor
had a double and two
Sutter then walked pinch-hitter
launched
three-run homer and from Philadelphia, defeating t_he
In three runs to
singles,
drtving
Gary Woods to load the bases.
Presley followed with his lOth of the PhiUies 2-0 in th~ opener and 7-2 in
support
the
nine-hit
pitching ·of
KelthMorelandgroundedsharply
year. The final run came on an the nightcap; Montreal nipped the
to Terry Pendleton at third, who rookie Ore! Hershlser as Los
lnfleld single by BaiTY. Bonnell. New York. Mets 5-4, Atlanta edged
threw home to force the runner. But Angeles whipped San FranCisco.
carlton Fisk hit h)s21sthomerofthe . San Diego 4·3, Chicago squeezed by
Brummer, going to first for a Dodger rookle Tony Brewer, who
year for Chicago and Ron Kittle St. Louis 2-1, and Los Angeles
possible double play, threw wildly, had only two hits In 34 at-bats this
added his 32nd.
downed San Francisco 7-2.
allowing the winning run to cross the season, singled and hit his first
One of Rose's singles chased plate.
major league home run.
home a run to give Cincinnati starter
Los Angeles finished the season In
Pirates 2-7, Phlllles D-2
Mario SolD a 6-5lead In the sixth. But
fourth
place In the NL West, their
Jim Morrison had three hits and
Alan Ashby slammed a solo homer three RBI, and Lee Lacy went first second-division finish In 15
In the eighth, his fourth oft he season, '4-for-5 with two doubles as Pitts- years. The Giants, 66-96, ended the
to knot the score again.
burgh defeated PhUadelphia In the season with · the worst record in
The Reds then loaded
bases second game to complete a double· baseball .
before Eddie Milner won the game
headersweep.
r~::::::::::::::::::::~
with a sacrifice fly.
In the first game, Jason ThompSoto earnetl his career-high 18th son and Jim Morrtson had RBI
The Dally Sentinel
losses, giving singles as John Tudor and four
victory against
up seven hits, walking five and relievers shut out the Phlllles 2.0 In
.
!USPS 1411-1110)

·Cubs-Padres meet
in NL ~playoffs
ODCAGO (AP) - 'I'Ite Ollcago
Cubs bring a bettl!r season record
and a handtuJ of candidates for
pitcher, player and manager of the
year Into '1\lesday's opener of the
National League Championship
Series against the San Diego
Padres.
But the league' s two biggest
surprise teams mlghtliave tQ share
the spotlijht wlfh the Major League
Baseball Umpires Association. Union vtce president Paul Runge, a
National. LeagUe umpire, continned laie Sunday that the assocla·
lion has ordered Its ~bers to
strike the playoffs because of a
dispute wer ' a contract. The
umpires are seeking better pay and
job seCurity, amoog&lt;ithei'thlngs.
Cubs shortstop Larry Bowa, who
•
played on fool: of the PhUadelphia
PhUiles'NLplayoffteams,saysthat
regular-season statistics don't
mean a thing.
"You · can erase aU the ::nl
averages, all the records, the big
nwnbers - !!Verything," says
Bowa. "It starts aU over, and at a
different level.
6"
ButwhiletheCUbshaven'tbeeriln
a post-season game since World
War
many at the players and
coaches on the 1984 squad have
playoff and World Series
experience.
CUbs Manager Jim Frey, who

Witt no..hits Rangers;
' Blylev~n has .19th.win

n.

_.__

Otllu IO,dl School FudhiiD
By 11M' 1\!twi!IU-d PreiH
Saturday'll Retult.oi
Akron BuchiN 13, Akroo Kmmol'&lt;'" 1J,

lit•
Ausllnlw.·n·Fitch !11. NiiC'!! McKinley 6
Ek.lck&lt;')"t' C'ffilral ~- Plrasanl (}

•

BudtPyP ~- 14, WM!1on 1W.Va I . .Ma-

•
SCORING THE GAME WINNER - Cincinnati
' Reds' outfielder Cesar Cedeno rahes his anns In
triumph as he sUdes past Houston Astros' catcher
Alan Ashhy Into home plate safely with the ~tame
winning run In the ninth Inning ol their National

League game Sunday afternoon In Cincinnati. Cedeno .
scored from third base on a sacrifice fly by teammate
Eddie MUner. The Reds beat the Astros 7-41. '(AP
Laserphoto).

Rose can't wait for season to open

donna 7
Canton Ca lh. lJ, Clc&gt;. COllinwOOd 12
ranlon McKinle-y 28. 7..an('S\•1Ut• 21
Cln. Country Day 22, Hlllcrrsl 0
Cln. McNichOlas iri. Clfl . 1'afl12
Cl&lt;'. H a ~·kcn -ll. Wnrrm ChampiOn 8
Cll'. Holy Name&gt; 18. Bt'dford ChanN 11
Ol'. Lutht-ran W. 36, J(cyl;lonc 16
Q('. Oran~ 7. Chagrin Falls li
0 1•. Sl.IRJiallus 'II. Clc&gt;. Kennedy 12
Comnon Val. 12. 7.anC'!i. RosKTans 0
~y .

Palleraon 21, Day. \-\'hill' 6

Fa irport Ha rdin~ H . l..cdgt'mont 1

F'rrmont St.Joseph 2l , Sandusky P..r·
kin!! 7
Ga1fiC'Id His. 18. Parma Vallry Fa~
12

Hamilton

Badin 26, Cln.

Pur-Mar

14

Hudson W. Rc&gt;sl&gt;n'(' .11. Soorhington 2;!
Kentucky [)(&gt;af 50. O n. Sl.lllto 32
K.)'Rl'f Cr«'k t'l, Pa-ts. NO!rr Dame 8
l.ak~«XX SI.Edwanl 42, Eri&lt;' tPa.l
Tf.'Ch 0
.
Lorain Soo1hVICW 14. Lorain Calh. 12
, LLKJIOW, Ky. ~ 1 Cln. Landmark 0
Margaret1n 26, Sqndusky SI.Mary _13 ·
Ma$Uion Washin gton '!1, Cl('. St.Joscph
7
Mlnl"I'Vil 1(1, Tuscarawas VaL 0
Newark Cal h. 21, CosllOC'tcn 0
On.&gt;f(on Strltch lti, T~ . f1wi~ het 6
Paln&lt;&gt;!NIUc- Rlv&lt;'rskk' :n. Ashtabula

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commis·
slon of Ohio has s·et for public
heaiing Case No. 84-12·EL·
· EFC . l o rev1ew the fuel pro·
cu remen t
practices
and
polic ies of Columbus and
Souther n Ohio Electric Company. the opera lion of its Electric Fuel Component . and
related matter s. This hearing
is schedu led to begin at 10:00
a·m. on Wednespay, October
3. 1984 al lhe offices of the
Public Utilities Conlmission.
t80 Ea st Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
All interested pames" will be
given an oppp~tu~ity to be
heard. Further informaHon
may be obtained by contacting the Commission.

New York
llosloo

"""""""

GENERAL ALLERGIST

._,

•

wnrr IJI\ItiiON
81 78
8181

MlnJK&gt;sota

81 81

11 115,

Chicago

7\t

""
""·
.415

II!
7-t 88
Ql 92

Texas

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPI·NG
SERVICE
818 E. Moln St.

Pomeroy, OH.
' H&amp;R Block Office Location .

PH. 992-3795

.

0 1eU fii .J . M't'NOlOI Tc:.ACCO CO .

.519 -

Oaklllf1(!

SeaU)e

Prtwice
Bef~re the
Internal
Revenue
Service

Also sure to grab attmtlon Is a·.
planned strike by major league
umpires. National Ll?ague urnpJ.re
Paul Runge, vice president of the
Major ~ague . Baseball Umpires
Association, confirmed late Sunday
that umptres would strike. the
playoffs and World Series. Money
and job security, among other
things, weremattersofcontentlonin
the union's contract negotiations
with Major League Baseball.
Royals centerflelder WUlie Wilson said the Tigers will "be hyper
and up. But If they 're too up, they'll
comedown hard."
The. Tigers 111ere easily the best

.463 29
416 361h

7'i Jf1

x-Kansas City
Cdfomla

3
37

.ti7 10
.~7

10

.429 lf'h

x:·won dMsJon title
s.&amp;.rday'a GamM
.Ba.Jtirmn.&gt; 6, Eostm 3
DMrolr ll, New Ycrk 3
Tmlnto 5. Mllwaulwi- 4
Cleveland 6, MlMesota f
Oakland 6, Kansas City 4

--

Ca.utomia a. Texas o
ChicSRO 6, Sloame 2
CJeyelai1d

7, -

•

New York 9, Detroit 2
Mitwaukl_.e 4, TOIUIIo 0
Ba.Jtlrnln!' 5. B:stoo 3
CaUfDm.la 1; Texas 0
Ool&lt;land ~ Kansas City 2
.,..,.:,..,._., .._..._ Seattle!),~~ AD.,,., .........,

END III!G·~ ~·•
N.\'DONAL LFAGUE

£.\8'1' JJIVMION
W L Pd. Gil
!ll .. !ll&lt; x-CIIIc,..
00 12 .$6'~ 6'h
New York
.. 78 .519 l21h
Sl. L&lt;ili

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78

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92 i'O
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Chicago 9, Sl. l..c:ldS 5
Las Angeles 4, San Francisco J. 11 In·
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ptltDlrgh 4. Phl1adelphlil 0
New York 8, Montreal 4
San

Die80 ti, AtliRia

Pltt~WrJh

~

2, Ptillacletphla 0, lsi game

P I - 7,

2.

M&gt;ntreal 5, Nl'W Yock f
ADanUI f , San DIERO l
Chica((O 2, St. LOJis 1

__
_

2nd...,... .

cmdnnatl 7. Hwston 6
Las Angries 7, San Franctsco 2
END III!GlllAIISEASON .

NFL results

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VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE ~THROAT

Peace of Mind

WINNING MATCHES The managers for the teams which will
meet In lhe American and National League playoffs are shown In
undaled photos. The Chicago Cubs will meet the San Diego Padres and,
the Kansas City Royals will meet the Detroit Tljers Tuesday. (AP
Laserphoto) .
.
.
.

Wasl*tgtcn at lndiMapolls, 1 p.m.
AllaDill at Los Angeles Rams. 4 p.m.
Hoos"lon al Ctnctnnad, 4 p.m.
San Otego at Green Bay , 4 p.m. .
Seat1ie- at Los Angeles Raiders, 4 p.m .

Pd. GB.
.612 .51!9 15
517 17

W L
101 58
f9 73
fr1 15
a:; 7ti

X·Dl&gt;tt'OII
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Publl shC'd cvPry aftt:'rnoon. Monday
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FINAL
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' ons by mall P.('rmUI~ In
No subscripti
CINCINNATI lAP) - Cincinna- sixth .- moved Rose closer tD the at .500 for the season when Eddie
towns WhC'r£' hom(' &lt;'arrlcr servlcl' Is
record he most wants. He's 94 hits MUner hit a sacrlllce fly with the
ti's Pete Rose isn't satisfied by the
avallablt'.
away from Ty Cobb's aD-time hit ~ loaded In the bottom of. the .
usual "~ail until next year" theme.
Malt ~uhoicrlptlon'l
For Rose, next year isn't · soon mark of 4,191:
ninth to make a loser of Jeff
lnKkle Ohio.
IJ' W..ks ........ " .... , ............... .... $14.56
"I'd Uke to have au the National Calhoun, 0-1.
enough.
.. .
·
26 Weeks ............ .. ... ................ .'$2!1.12
"It's a shame spring training League records," Rose said. "I've
Houston fought back from an
52 Weeks ..... ,....... ...... ............... , 'i\.24
doesn't start tonight," Rose said been In the National League all my early 4-0 deficit against starter
Outidd~ Ohio
... _0
13 Weeks ............ ...................... $15.60
Sunday, after collecting three hits career. I have a lotofrespecttorthe Marlo Soto, who wound up with a
Pt't~rg Spring. 14. S. Range 14:. \If' .
26 Wceks .................................. $.11.2fl
Rlchnnv:t His. :17 , Nl"Wbury 7
and setting a National ~ague National League." .
52 Weeks .................................. $59.1!0
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COM·
career-high 18th victory against.
Rreky RIV('f l5, Fairview Park 6
doubles record in the Reds' sea,son·
MISSION OF OHIO
. f:lowever, Rose said the thought of seven losses. Alan Ashby's solo
Sleubenvllk&gt; Ca lh. :D, Mar11ns Fmy 0
It you hav(' S&lt;' t'VIC'&lt;' problrms call our
Tol . Macomber 19, Thl. Scoll 1t
closing 7-6 victory over the HouMon waltlngslxmonths Qe!orehecanget homer, his fourth of the season, tied
By : MAR ~ \ ANN OALINSKI ,
service desk a t 992-21$6 bPfore 6: 00 P.
W. C'arrolltoo 12, Middl&lt;'fown Fmwtck
M. Monday thru Friday.
Secre1ary
Astros. "I guess it's too cold to 'start another hit dldn 't make him It in the eighth. ·
10
anxious.
tonight, though."
The 43-year-old player-manager
"If I have a bat in my hands and r-------------~~:---------+-----------..,.JL
wasn't ·in a quitting mood. after his there's an umpire back there and
seventh three-hitgameslncereturn- another team on the field, I'.Ugetmy
lng to Cincinnati Aug. 16. His hits," he said.
second-inning double drove In two
On Sunday, Rose was content to
runs and put him one ahead of Stan savor the doubles mark and enjoy a
Muslal-With 726 career doubles, season-ending victory that pushed
most in the league. He trails justTris · the Reds' final record to 70-92;
Speaker's aU-time mark of 793.
lnlll\lding 19·22 under Rose.
.The double .resulted when Hous"'I'he guys are having fun," Rose ·
ton left fi elder Jose Cruz collided said. "Thatcangoalongway.lthlnk
with cente'r fielder Jerry It we had straightened a couple of
, Mumphrey . . ·
.
areas out, we could have been well
The three hits -including an RBI over .500 (under Rose)."
·
single lhat put the Reds
ahead In the
The Aslroi lost a_ chance to finish
I .• ~

KANSAS CTIY, Mo. (AP) team In the game the first two
Sparky Andersoo was merely months of the season and the Royljis
statlng the obvious, but the Detroit were certainlY among, the wont.
manager may rutne a few feathers They were beset l;ly 'lnluey and
on the eve of the Ame11ca.n League controversy. Wilson, aa ,..all-star
playOffs.
outfielder who won the AL batting
- The Western Division champions title in 1982, sat wt thetlrst32pmes
from Kansas City would be also- because of a drug-related $11p"l·
ranslnthetoughALEast,Anderson · slon. All-star third basemanGeol'lle
noted.
Brett missed the first ~~h~
Mathematically speaking, he's much of the last month with u .. - , .
rlght. The Royals wU1 represent
The Royals. who said themselves
what many heUeve Is the worst they were In a "translliott year,"
division 1n the major leagues. They didn't reach .500 unW September.
won the West an 84-76 record, ~
Jack Morris, a hard-throwing
games short of the l()l..58 mark rlght-hander whose 19 victories
Detroit posted 1n the East.
Include a no-hitter against the White
"Kansas City has played well . Sox, will start for the Tigers
They've got a goOd ballclub," r;;:::::;;;;;:::::::::::::~
Anderson said. "I think we have to
remember one thing. They couldn't
have done that in any other
division."
..
The Royals, however, are weary
of heating about·what a 'pushover
their division Is. Any hint of Tiger
bravado Is certain tnstlrresentment
when the action starts at 7: :Jl p.m .
CST Tuesday night In Royals
Stadium.

KANSAS CITY

St. lolta at DaUas, 1 p.m.

a,. n.e 'eecldtd PftM

seven

High school
grid scores

guided the Kansas City Royals . into .
,t hel!8JWorldSerles,satdhedoesn't •
plan any changes for the playoff
series.
The Royals made It !Jlto the
American ,League playoffs again
thlsyear,butFreysaldhewon'Ueel
tunny facing his fanner players If
the CUbs and Kansas·City meet in
!lie World~Frey has been mentioned as
Manager at the Year timber whUe
Rynesanctberg, withahotgtoveand
.:n4 bat, ls a candidate for Most
Valuable Player and Rick SutcUffe,
Frey's pick as Tuesday's starting
pitcher, Is in the running for the Cy
Young Award. SutcHffe was 16-1
with 14 wins ina row as a Cuband4-5
at Cleveland.
San Diego Manager Dick WUUams, Who spent theflnal weekend of
the regular season In Chicago
personally scouting the Cubs, wU1
send his pitching ace, E;rtc Show,
15-9, in the battleofrlght-handers.
.. WUUams can brag of having the
runaway league batting champ, •
Tony Gwynn, in his Unellp. Therlghflelder had a .351 batting
average.
On Sunday, theCubsbeatSt.Louls
2-1 to llnlsh with a 96-65, record, 6 ~
games ahead of the runner-up New
York Mets, whUe San Diego lost in
Atianta 4-3 to end up92·70,12games
ahead.otsecond-placeAtlanta.

Majors

me

Paul Owens' final game as Philadelphia manager.
E7QlnS 5, Mets 4
, Ban Drlessen drove In three runs
withatwo-runhomerandadoubleto
power Montreal past New York. The
Expos finished with a 78-83 record in
the East - their worst since 1978 'whUe the second-place Mels,_with a

Anderson ruffles
on eve of playoff

Scoreboard ...

Pete closes in on Speaker's record

a

The Doily Sentinel Page 6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

.

--Gome

C'nctrlrlad at Pltllblqh. 9 pro.
.....,,Oet..7
llellv« at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Ms.nl •• Pttllbqh, 1 p.m.

Warning, Th~ Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

f6weuli at Tln'1ll Bl:t', 1 p.m.

New~lt~lp.~
Nfw C»r--. II Chlcllo. ] p.m

NeW Yortc Jell It K.-. Clly, I p.m.
I'

J

'

.

.
.

.

14 _mg. "tat", 0.9mg. nicqtrne 11'1. per crgarette by FTC meti&gt;Jd.

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

�I
Paga

.

6-The

Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 1, 1984

I

Monday, October

•

1, 1984

f£ncounter Fall} ·sess'ion set at Burr Oak
COLUMBUS - Beautiful Burr Into the robust and majestic Cy making and butter churning from 2" qulred for this tree statewide public
Oak State Park located In Athens Gatton whose reputation as a story to 4 p.m. A special treat will be a workshop. Overnight accommoda. and Meigs COUI\tles will be the site teller extended through the Ameli- tasting session of traditional fall' tions offered at Burr Oak are lodge
rooms, cabins and a campgroUnd.
of an "Encounter Fall" Workshop can Heartlands In the 1930s. wild edibles.
Oct. _5 to i. The ,activity Wul Gatton's tales and_folklore were
A bonfire will be held "at the Facilities In the !l().sltecampground
celebrate the arrival of faD and retold In UJe state parks this past park's public beach at 8 p.m. on lnclud\fi,ush toilets and showers.
feature seasonal aCtivities, a craft summer as part of the Traditional Saturday. Participants may brtng Sites wtth electricity cost $4 and
fair, Uving history and formal Arts In the Parks program. This snacks to cook over the flre 1and sites without electrtclty are $3.
will be one of Sowash's last Items such as homemade jam, toys Rese"'ayons fqr the lodge and
evening programs.
and trtnkets to swap at a bartertng cabins can be made by calling
The tree workshop, sponsored by performance$ of the year.
A
full
day
of
activities
begins
afill
-·sesslon.
Indian dancers .wUJ make 1-!ID-AT·A-PARK.
the Ohio Department of Natural
Burr Oak Is located on States
Resources' Division of Parks and a.m. Saturday morning with a fall an appearance at the !Ire and other
Routes
13 and 78 northeast of
Recreation, begins at 7 p.m. on Oct. hike and field trips leaving from the surprlses will be enjoyed. A special
Glouster.
More Information on the
5 In t1Je Burr Oak lodge lobby. A lodge lobby. A vartety of dlspla~ In surprise farewell Will conclude the
event
may
be obtained by calling·
brtef Introduction wiD be followed and around the lodge wDI feature weekend at 10 a.m. Sunday In the
the Division of ParkS and Recreaby a special performance entitled fall pleasantries such as cornhusk lodge lobby.
tion at (614) 2G5-7001.
Cy Gatton TaU Tales. Dulcimer and doll m aking, decoy carving, bread
Advance registration Is not reAppalachian Music will also be
featured Friday evening.
,--;===:::;;:::=;:::~;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::=z================::;Rick SOwash, executive director
of the Renaissance Theater In
Mansfield , will transform himself

FIELD miP - Several students of the Guiding Hand Schooll'OOillltly
visited the Cheshlri! Post ' Office where Kate Shoemaker, •selsta..t

postmaster, explained malldl.'!triiJUtion. As partofthelrstndeonmallfng
sldlls, the class prepared 319newsletters for a local church ustnglcamed
sldlls In folding, stapling and collating according to zip codes.

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE 992-2156
Ctusifiti,Dtpt.
Or Writ• Oallly S.fllintl

~MAT workshop,
Thinking about getting your MBA
degree?
If _you are, did you know your
Graduate Management Admission
Test (GMAT) score will be weighed
the same as your GPA!
If not, then Communlverslty's
GMAT Preparation Wor kshop is
for you.
Tlie GMAT Preparation workshop will be a two-day workshop on
Friday, Oct. 12, 6: 30-10 p.m .. and
Saturday, Oct. 13, 9 a.m~m
The workshop will cover all
sections of the GMAT in dNail to
help diagnose your weak areas and
to strengthen them.

testing,-set
hAM

You will be provided witn
ex tensive material based on 1983-84
exams - over 350 pages of
exerc ises. questions. problems and
full -length verl-simllar sections wlll
prepare you for the final exam .
In addition, the class wUI be kept
small so the Instructor can give you
an in-depth analysis of each exam
section for your understanding.
This course is offered by Fairfax
Lectern , a company with highly
educated professlona from the
Umversity of California. Stanford
University. Michigan State, Yale
University and more!

The fee for the GMAT Preparation Workshop will be $125. However, If you register by Oct. 5, you
will receive a 10 percent discount!
You can register by phone with
Master Charge or VIsa.
TheGMATexam will be administered at Ohio University on Oct. aJ,
Jan. 26, Mardi 16, and June 15.
For more Information or to
register, contact the O.U. Office of
Continuing Education, Conferences
and Workshops, Memorial Audltorlum, Athens. Ohio 45701, (614)
594~6. Collect 'calls will be
accepted.

Alfred UMW has recent ·meeting
Alfred UMW met at the church
Sept,. 18 with nine mem bers present
and 50 sick calls reported.
Annie Thompson. nominations
• chairman, presented the slate of
officers to the society, a nd they
were elected. Members paid pledge
dues and made a donation to Za ire
which will be presented a t UMW
annual meeting . Flore nce Ann
Spencer was a ppoint ed leader for
services at Arcadia Oct. 9. Other
topics discussed were assisting with
birthday cakes a t Arcadia a nd with

a Thanksgiving meal at the church .
Mrs. Spencer h'ad the prayer
calendar and chose Lyman Hale,
medi ca l missionary at Seoul ,.
Korea.
Mrs. Spencer led the pledge
program "Bread &lt;From F"alth to
F"lour) with all members taking
part in reading a nd discussion.
Points especia lly appreciated were
that ,_all members must work In
misston " trusting that God can
forgi ~e the efforts whic h are
imperfect or misdirected" "a nd ··we

can't Improve · the product (the
Gospel) but we can Improve the
package." Nina Robinson was
·
pianist.
Ka te Rodehaver and Anna
Thompson served sandwiches,
chips a nd soft drinks during the
social hour.
Others present were Clara Follrod, Nellie Parker, Osie 'Mae
Follrod. and Martha Poole. Next
meeting will be Oct. 16 at the home
of Icy Taylor.

Cheerleader clinic is set
ATHENS - The Seventeenth
Annual Ohio Universit y Cheerleaders' Clime will be held on Sunday,
Oct. 7. at the Ohio l!nlverslty
Convocat ion Center from 10 a.m. to
4: :«l p.m Registration for the clinic
is at 9 a. m . Cost Is $11 per person at
the door.
The clime is conducted by the
Ohio University Cheerleaders, several of which Instructed at National
Cheerleading Camps during the
summer. The clinic will include a ll
new, original cheers and sideline
chants, latest Ideas for mounts,
tumbling and stunts. and pom-pom

In the cheering competitions,
first and second place trophies wUI
be awarded to the top two squads In
each category: ·varsity, junior
varsity, junior high, and ~th
and eighth grade. Partlclpan.. are
reminded to brlng unlfor- -, for
competition.
For information, write or caD:
Greg Ianni, Assistant Clrector of
Athletics, Convocation Center, Ohio
University, Athens, ' Ohio &lt;15101,
614-594-5206.
For registration Information, call
Ohio University Workshops Office,

1·CM Gllllaftkl ! D.IIftHV ~I
"'o~w

Fetty

~irth

............
.,__

I LM 1""'4 , .......

Mike and J a nice Fetty. Village
Green Apartme nt s. Pomeroy, announce the birth of a daughter,
Amand a Nicole
Born on Aug. 9. she weighed
seven pounds, 12 ou nces a nd was aJ
Inches long. Mr. and Mrs. Fetty
have a son. Davtd Michael. seven.
Pa ternal grandparents a re Mr.
. and Mrs Hank Fe tty. Point
Pleasant. W . Va. and the paternal
great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Fetty. Poi nt Pleasant.
W. Va .. and Mrs. Estyl Cla rk. New
Haven .
Maternal grandparents are Mr
and Mrs. Raben Couch, Pomeroy.
and th e mat e rnal gre at grandpare nt s a re Mrs . Ell en
Couch. Pomeroy. and Ben Stobart.
Racine.

.MONDAY

Calendar

LONG BCYITOM - Pythian
Sisters wUI meet Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the Long Bottom Community Building.
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
Fair Board meeting, 8 p.m.
Monday at secretary's office on
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of Eastern
Star meeting, 7:45p.m . Monday
at temple; election of officers. ·
POMEROY - Sister Janet
Rectenwald will speak on "Child
Abuse" when the Big Bend ·
Clvltan Club meets at 7: 30p.m.
Monday at the Meigs Inn; public
.Invited.
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134 O.E.S. wnt meet Monday
evening, 7: ll p.m. , at the
MasoniC Temple. Dues will be

payable a t the meeting. The
reports 'of committees will be
read a nd election of 1005offlcers
will take place.
. POMEROY - Pomeroy Elementary PTO meeting, 7: ll ·
p,m. Monday with plans for the
fall carnival to be discussed.

Happenings
Revival continues
REEDSVILLE - Revival
services begin Monday and .
continue through Oct. 6, at Joppa
Unite&lt;! Ml!thodlst Churcl) near
Reedsville. Services begin at
7: ll p.m . nightly with spec!aJ '
singing by Eric Starr on Mon·
day, Charles Leeson on TUesday, Lloyd Mlddletop on Wednesday, John McGmy on
Thursday and George Luster on
Friday.

i~---------L--~,------------~~--~

j Poet's corner

n.o...,~q

Come softly. Lord Jesus.
Tiptoe gently ln
Corne sottty, Lord Jesus,
And cleanse us from sin

Come softly, Lord Jesus,

We need You today
Come sottty. Lord Jesus,
Comll soflty. I pray.

Come softly, Lord Jesus,

come unto our heart

Come soflty. Lord Jesus.
And 110\ie!" deport .

· Jesus ta oweet and loW1c with ..,..-cy and
ldndneos. Pralle Hlm. - BartJara Jameo.

Reports for duty
Marine Cpl. Michael R. Smith,'
son of Roy 0. and Lucretia M.
SMith of 35961 Rock Springs Road,
Pomeroy, has fEI!Orted for duty
with Third Marine Division on
Okinawa.

....

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Public Notice

..

NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS
Olllce of Commta1onen at
Jurors. Meigs County; Ohio
Oct. 1, 1984
To Atl Whom It May Concern:

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6 Publisher Robert l Win -

Public Notice

ran ee Co

A!lanta GA Estate

OF E W Op•e Staunton VA.
Mutual of New York New York ,
NY Bank er&lt;; Trust of N Y New

York NY. C111Zens &amp; Sou thern
Natl Bonk Greenv1lle SC C•tv
of W•cll1/a, W 1c h1ta. KS

St P 0 Box 1688 Greenv1lle
s c 29602
CommiSSIOners oi Jurors of ' 7 Stockholders own111g 1

Aver- No. Copies Each
l11ue Dunng Preceding 12

percent or mo re ol total •; t'1arns
outstandtng Frances P Bun
nel le. c/ o SCN M ail l elle r P 0
Box 750 Columb•a SC
29202 Frances P Bunnelle
M arv P S!er l1 nq and Alfred F
Burge ss Tru stees U/W Char ·
he Pe{lce c/o SCN Mailteller
P 0 Box 7 50 Columb1a. SC
1101 1 lie
29202. Cede and Co cl o
Oepos110ry Trust Co . P 0 Bm&lt;
863 Bowllno Gr'"en S1a New
Public Notice
York. NY 10274 M ar1an l
Hants
0 Bo)( 140 5. Green
woo
SC 296 46, James E
STATEMENT OF
Jol .y
161 lngleoak lane.
OWNERSHIP,
eenv rlle SC 29615 Robert
MANAGEMENT
A. Joll ey Jr
161 l ngleoak
AND
L.1ne Gt ePnvill e, SC 296 15
CIRCULATION
Kr ay and Co PO Box 10645
1 Tt tl e of Pubi10Bt1on
Newe~rlo: NJ 0710 1. Dorothy P
DJ1iy Sentmel Publica tiOn a
Rarnsaur &amp; A F Burfjess
I 4.5-960
L Daw of F•l1nq Octo be r . Trustees. U / W Roger C PCace.
!984
.
. c/O Bankers Trust ol S C , P 0
Bo)( 7968 Col urnbrn SC
3 Fr equenc y of Iss ue Oarl
29202. Genev1eve Sak.as 20 1
M ond &lt;1y, thr ouqh Fnrtay A No
of Issues PLJbli sherl Annually
Chapman Ad Gree nville SC
29605. Southern Bank and
255
B Ann••al Suhscnptto n Pnce
Trust Tr U'A Mamre J Bn•ce
P 0 Box 1329. Greenv1!1c. S C
S5 7 20 Hornr. Del ivered
29602
4 l oca uo n of Known Off1ce
ol Publica!10n • 111 Col 1rt St .
8 P&lt;uh~ hold1no n ol e~" 1n
Pxcess of 1 percent or total
Pomeroy, Oh•o. M ei(!S Cou nty
1ndebterlness F1r st Un10n Natl
45769
5 LociJ tlon ol t he Hea dquar - Bank. Ashev1lle NC, W&lt;Jc hovto
te• s or Gen era i -Busmess Olf1ces Bank &lt;~nd Trust Asheville NC
of t he Publishers 111 Court S C Na!l Bank Gre.envtlle SC.
St . Pomer oy
Oh1o M etgs Ma ss M utua! ln ~ura n ce
Spnnq Mnss Prurlent 1fll lnsu Co •• ntv 4 5769

10 E&gt;C tent anrl Na!ure o f
C•rcui;JII on ·
A Total No Cop•es Pn nt ed

Me1ps County Oh10 Add1t 1onal
Juro rs w1ll be publicly d rawn for
the September 1984 Term o f
the Common Pleas Court of
sa1d Coun ty
Lauren Hoflmiln
Wallace Bradford
CommiSSIOners
of Jurors

,----------~-----------~

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and

Monthl : ·

-

5 817
B Pawl Ctu.;ulurton

1 Sa les thro ugh Dea lers nnd
Ca rnr&gt;rs Str ne t Ven dors and
Counter Sales 4 H54
B Mwl Subs cnpt1 ons 648
C Total Pa•d C~rc.ula110n

5 502
•
0 Frf!fl DIStrlbu ltOin By M a11

Cnrrlf~r or Oth er ~P.ans Sar n

pies. CompllmP.ntary, nnd
Othc1 Free Cop•es 85
E Total D•stnbutron 5 587
F Cop1es Not D• stnbu ted
A Ollice Use lflft Over
Undcco umed Spoilo(l Al ter
Pr1n t1ng 65
,•
2 · RAt urn s f rom NP.ws
Aoents 165
G Towl 58 17

54 Misc. Merchandise
INniNATIONAL
SnEL IIIILDING
MANUFACTUIII
AWARDING DEALERSHIP
IN AYAILAILE AREAS
SOON.
GliAl PillAr P011NIIAL
IN AN EXPANDING
INDUSTRY.
For Application Call :

Actuot No. Copies of Single
tuua Publilllod Naerast to
Filing Dote:
10

b te.n l Mrl Nat ure of

Crr culatton·
A Tutal No Cop1~s Pnnted

5.800
B Paid c.rr.t.I\IOn
1 Sail% Thr ouoh 0P.i11ers mi d
C.:~r n ers
C n r n1tt~ ,

S!1 M ! V~'ndo r s and
Sales 4 898
2 Marl Subs cr1pt•ons 590
C Total P!l1cl C~rcu la110n

0 F!P.P. 01 f; l11h c~ ti O n By Mail
C &lt;~Ht '-' r 0 1 OthPt M(!ans Sam .
f)le " Compltmrnt.nv nnd

Oth ror Freo Copu~s 82
E f o tul Ot::;tr thut lon 5570
F Coptes No! D•Siftllli !Cd
1 Ofttr:~ UsP tell Over.
Un:~ r· r:o1m t NI

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S noil1~ d

Pt111 ltnrJ 90

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Aq em s lllO

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"

I )Announcement
C

)For-Rent

17. _ _ _ _ __

1.

20.

21.

3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

22.
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_______

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19,

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_______

:15.' - - - - - ~II This c_aupon with Remittence

The Dally Slllflnal

m court st.

'

PamlfiiY, 011.45769

~--~------------------·

(1) HOUSE IN CHESTER:
Three acres with a nice ly constructed concrete
block home 26x30, 3 bed rooms, one bath, 12x15
family room. Partially
carpeted, fuel oi furnace
with facilities for woodburner. 12xl5 block storage building,-20x30 block
garage. Right off Rt. 248,
country setting, Y, mile
east of Chester, Ohio.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN · RACINE: Downstairs
equipped with kitchen,
livin1 room, dinin1 room·
and den; upstairs has two
bedrooms and one bath;
house also has basement.
Lot size approx. 48'x308'.
Needs work.
If interested contact. The
Home National Bank in
949-2210. ~

New Homes-Extensive
lemodelinl
Insurlllct Work
CUIIQJit Pole Bides.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~
:z:

• 6111115

licensed Clinical Audiolo&amp;ist

-z

Roofint Work
.
·Aiu11inum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Vaaro Exporience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992· 7683
or 992-.2282 .

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio ~5631
8/ 13/ Un

.

9 13-tfn

ll· l·tlc

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
CLINIC

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Guttor Work
Complete Rampdellng
Rooltng of all Typea
Worked in home area

20 years
" Free Eatimateo"

SMALL ANI MAL HOURS
Monday 3 p.m.- 5 p.m.
Tuesday 6 30 p.m-8 p m.
Wednesday 3 p,. -5 p m.
Thursday 3 p.m-5 p.m.
friday I p.m-2 -p.m
Saturday 10 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
lARGE ANIMAL ANO
SU RGERY BY APPOINTMENT

304-675-2441

LANGSVIL~E

GROCERY
&amp; GARAGE
Open

7:00-7:00

E
EXCAVATING
•TRENCHING
•BACK HOi •DOZER
•END. LOAD£ A
•DUMP TRUCK SERVIQE
•WATER, GAS, S£WER'
R4tN UNES .

Ph. (614) 843-5425

ComptiOio Gutter Work
CompiiOie Remodeling
Roofing of oil Typea
Worked in home area

FREE ESTIMAYES

EUGENE LONG

CHESHIRE, OH!u

9/13/2mo. d.

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING
'DOZER · BACKHOE
' RECLAMATION WORM

•LAND CLEARED
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS .
•GRA~EL HAULED

"OIL FIELD SERVICES
'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

"CONCRETE WORK
'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
"WATER, GAS &amp; •
OIL LINES

Bonded &amp; Insured.

JIM CLIFFORD

PH. 742-2328

PH. -992-7201

3-5-tlc

Mechunical Work

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

F•ll Tm-/Jp Sp•~lel'
Check Anti-Freeze,
Belts, Hoses, Plugs
Prices
5
Start At

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cotes. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tal)ks.

. BISSELL

$}49

PH. 742-9070

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196 - Middleport, Ohio

SIDING CO.

"Beautiful. Custom
Built G•rages"
Cell forJree sidinc es,
tilllte~~9-2801 or

949-2

"

No Su"""y C•ilo
II lilt

1 13 tfc

YOUNG'S

ACCENT·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FENa &amp; SUI'JILY
220 I. Main, Pom...,

PH. 992-6931

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing •nd gutter wor•
- ConcraltJ work
- Plumbing and el-ectrical
work

KEN'S
' APPLIANCE
SERVICE

2

985-3561
All Makes

V. C. YOUNG II I
992-6215

•Waihara •Dilhwaahera
•Ranges
•Aefrigaratora
•Dryers •freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
~ lie

DITCH WITCH

Of

992·7314

608

Installation Available
8/1 /I m .

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - Tuppers
Plains - Country setting on
approx 21h acres wrth 3
bedroom ranch h~me, fireplace, carport Good'tondttion
$36.00100

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES

SWEEPER and aewing ma chine repair, parta, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mile up
Georgea Creek Rd.
Call

FREE ESTI.M ATES

773-5839 or
773-5788

614-448-0294

8/ 13/ 1 mo

NEW LISTING - How about
almosl 5 acres wtlh country
setttng1 N~ely remodeled 2
story 3 bedroom home,
basemen!, patio &amp; carport.
spec1a1linanc1ng terms avatlable Call lor ·your showing.
$26.300 00
NEAR POMEROY - 3 bedroom home, range, refngerator,
and woodbummg ~ove Needs
some repair Small lot and
butldrng near house
$9,80000
POMEROY - ~ce 3 bedroom
ranch w1th range &amp; hood. FuHy
carpeted, ' new plumbing.
JOO 'x1 08 " lot. Only
$25,000 00
FIVE POINTS - C10w Subdtvtsion - Newer ranch style
home with 2 car garage, air
cond1tionrn&amp; pool, all on 1acre
lot 3 bedrooms and large
krtchen Asteal lor $54.900 00

'fl:

l~tr:rr!'"'

Ill

121-'1...
Boolis and Catakic - adll 50! each tor POState. and handline. I

C1nning pear'i. Call 304·

MIDDLEPORT - Fantastic
home wtth a giganttc famHy
room wtth a beaulilul fireplace.
large llilng room, 3 bedrooms, ·
2Vz baths, full basemenl on
approximately I acre ol
ground Want $69,000.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland.
Jr ........... ,.992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottle Turner ..... 992-5692
Jo Httl .... ........... 985-4466

A

~

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

4

Call 614-992-6737

Fenders Available

choice

Giveaway

Alto Some Car

For Faster Servtce

....
J 21

irn

. Kindling wood muat tlke all.

Colt 446-1149

4 puppies 2 months old 3

motoa. Call 614-388-8883.

- SEWER
- GAS LINES
-SEPTIC SYSTEMS
lARIE " !N~ll

Puppies Mother Doberman,
father 4nknown. Call 614-

367-7763.

JOB$
PH. 992·2478

Two short haired ble~ll fe·
male kittena, 7wkaold.litter

912ZII mo pd

trained. 614-986-3640.

P,uppius, couple all white,

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRtGERATOR

mate puppies. 304-882 ·
3380.

6

We Have A Full Time
Shop Technicfan
on Duty

Lost and Found

2 black cats lost in Foraat
Run, Route 7 area. Call

992-2332.

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985-3307

Solid black preacription
glaa1ea found on Rouah
Drive, New Haven. 304·

882-3681 .

I I

Loat, black and tan beagle,
Hickory Chapel Road area.

Reword . 304-676-66.89.

.Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Also Transmission

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
l

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Or 992-5875

u lit

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.
NEW-REPAIR
G11tters
Downspouts
Guttars Cleaned
Painting
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

(B

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191 .

1

Parts &amp; Service
I

J tit

or
•

board . catl 1-3 04-8822711

COMPLETE HOUSEHOlDS
FURNITURE. Beda, iron ,
wood. cupboards, chairs,
chaeta, basketa , dishaa ,
stone jara, antiquea, gold
1nd silver . Writa -M . O .
Millar, Rt 2. Pomeroy, Ohio

auction. Cott 814 -692 4310.

For vour Re.ct Hla call Emma
Ball, auction,eer, licena,d
and bonded Wast Virginia

843-5424
LIM_
ESJONE
GRAVEL , SAND
TOP SOIL-FilL DIRT

9-4-1110.

end Ohio, 4288177.
9

,011-.y
"
PH. 949-3046 !"'
From ••oo " soeo
,
9-12-tln

Wanted old pianos, Paying
UO .OO end 140.00 eoch.
Firah floor only. Write giving
.directions. Witten Piano•
box 188 Sardis. Ohio

RENT A CAR

439411. Phone 614-4831605 . .

CALL
446-4522
"We Rent

Ca1h for reaaon1bly priced
u••d c1rpet laying toola, call

'Of less"

before "7:30 AM or after
8:00PM, Athena Oh. 614·
693-6870.

. U-SAVE
AUTO

RENTAL

Wanted To Buy

GINSENG ROOT. Top quality 1nd aiae gr1ded. 1electad

e200 .00 tb . Ordinary

I

St. Rt. t6D North
Galll~llo, Ohia
'
7/ 11 /tfn

amaller root - laaal All
other kinde of root 1110
purch~aed .
C•ll Robart

Horpor, 304-1175,7977.

. •.• ·" .

"- .1"7

1.. • - ~

... ~

,., ,.
:. ;

"VJI/)\'J'A

, ..

·-·---GiiiiiP"oiiii ____ -- ·· ····-· P"o-.n&amp;.:c;;,; ---·-·---. ::~

Middleport
~ ::. . ...
- ...
&amp; V ICintty - · r~;·•

8i Vicinity
------------ -·------------ ····

..,.

Ohio Valley Fle1 Market, Fri. -· ···········-··· ····---·····S•t 1nd Sun . Acro11 from
1
Zinn 'a Landing, Kanauga . S~tvaral family 's, 3 h mllee ·: ~
east
of
Cheater
on
248, :. :
Dealarl welcome.
Herald Osborne ,residence. ... ,
;,
Wed. 3 Centenary Town- Oct . 1 thru 4 at 9 ·00.
house 3 Family Singer - - - - - - - - - - r
MWing machine. flowers , Four family yard aale Mon.! ·••
veg.tables. long dreases , day ond Tuudoy. Oct. 1 end
2 Beginner drrums . atero;: ,. ~
dilhes. mite.
miac household, toys, good
Big Red Barn Sal8 3 Family clothing •II s izes. At. 33 •
30 6 40 yra. of aocuml1ti~na North , 1st. house on right off
Jr'a jaana S-7&amp;9- Oct 2nd . Co. Rd . 19.

-.
..

3-4-6-&amp; 6th, 1OAM until 6

or 6PM . Down Rt . 7turn on Five family yard aale Oct 1
218 firllt bid red barn on the thru 4 one mila from Harri· "'
.anv1lle County Rd. 3 .
right, rain rr thine .

.

Yord Sate Thuro. Oct. 4th Huge yard sale : toola.
9AM Orchord Hit! Rd. off At . clothes, boys jacketa , miac.
~18 . Drapea, bed clothing , 693 High St . Middleport"
f1ah tank &amp;. stand, Iota of Oct. 2,.3, 4.6 ,6.
misc. Fisher &amp; Sheets

Mens , ladies , ch•ldrena
clothing-aummar &amp; winter
t1ousehold itema. Toys, Lots
of aurpriaes.1 Mon ., Tue Oct
1. 2 , 1 O:OOAM . Ratn -ahine

October, 1 thru 6 at 810
South Second Middleport.
Clothmg, hnena,• bedding,
drappas, curta ins, am1tl ap~
pliances. jew•lry. silveratone diShes, avon, pots and
pans, tools , kn ives, toys and
mise

GigantiC Moving Sale Oct .
1, 2 &amp; 3 2 miles from Porter

Five family yard aale: Car- .

mention .

toys , clot hes. books ' and
more

lijabelievable Garage Sale

Rt

141 -269 Dobby Dr

donas. Sixth St., Racma. ··
46769 or call 614-992 - off SR 654 on White Ook Oh 1o Oct 1 at 1nd 2nd .
Rd. 2nd house on right.
7760.
ltema to numer o ut t o 9 ·00·3 00 Antique dithea .

Buying daily gold, sliver
coina , rings, jewel.,, sterling
ware, old coina . lerge cur·
rency. Top pricaa . Ed . Burkett Barber Shop , 2nd Ave

Middleport. Oh. 614 -992·
3476.

Wanted to buy : investment

Garage Sale 356 LeGrande
Blvd Gruen Acres Subdlvl a•on October' 1.2 9 00 ~
6 ·00 ·Nice clothmg, soma
baby cfothing , curtains.
aheeta, and other household
items

property. Call 614-992 - 3
6868.

Family Yard Sale at
Bulaville Townhouse Mon .
Tuea, Wed .

Eilii!IOy 1111:11t
St:rvlt:t:s

Michigan Sale Cabbage
Patch look alike dolla, toys,
clothes , knick knacks. 50
Neil Ava . Oct. 1-7

~~~~~~--· 10 Family Yard Sala at Mary
1 1 Help Wanted
Layne 's re sidences Che shire Oh1o Oct . 3 . 4,6 .
Merri - Mac Homemakers 9AM-dark
..
earn .c -tra income. We need 1-::-:-.: -----"----.,.._--...
sav·aral repra,antativas •n Garge Sale 2 mi. from H~
this areal Party plan exp 81 Rt. 160 Oct 4,6,6 Apple ·
plua . Gifta , toya , home de- butter. Clothing Yz price
cor No investment Car &amp;
phone nee. Call free 1· 800·

663-9077. Also booking
parties. 614-446 -3043

···---Pt"Pieiisilrlc·-&amp; Vicinity

Wed . Oct 3 rd at Roderick ·
Grimms Ra in or shine On
Broadway m Racine. Nu- '
m~trou s items and clothtng .

Phone 949-2834.

Oct 2 . 3. and 4 , indoor sale .

9:00 to 3:00 aach day. St. ·

Joseph 's Church, 3rd 1nd
Pomeroy St., Maaon. W.Va.
Clothes, all11zea. high ch1ir, ·
at roller. glass . books. tapea. ·,
Carport sale at Bob Eada,
Salem St , Rutland Oct . 6 ..
9 00 am to 4 OOpm Sponsored by Rutland Church of

-

God

Firat t1me yard aale . 6th St .·.
Syracuse, 8 30-4 00. Mon· '
day and Tuesday only. Rain
ca ncels
Oct first thru fourth at 836
E Main St.. Pomeroy Nice
clothmg , househo ld, and
m ts c

Sat! AVON make 46 % Cat!
446-3358.
Yard Sale. October 2.3.4,

Salsa not
experience
but
necaauryhelpful,
Call

614 - 448 - 4367 , lor

+

2219 Oak Sheet Tools,
' ., , f 1gunnes. d"11 h es .
miSc
odds and end s. Cancel if
rain

12

Need wood cunera for fire wood on our land Call

614-266-6689 after 6:00.
Work available needed AN's.
LPN's, GN 'a, companions.
ianitoral &amp; maintenance pur·
aonnal. Send reauma &amp;
police report to P 0 BoJC

965. Gallipolis. Oh 45631 .
Reputable internettonal
company &amp;Kpandmg in th1s
area. Hard working individual nee$ied for sales and
management . Full or part
time. 830,000 yearly possi·
ble full time. S8nd resume:

Acorn. P.O Box 146. Roo
Grande. Oh 46874.

Wanted: Lady to live 1n a nice
home and care for an elderly
lady. Salary plus room and
board . Reply to Box 242 ,
Pomeroy.
Christmas E•rnings begin
now for Avon Representa tives. Sell full or part time.
over 18 colt 614 -69B-7111
collect .

Situations

1\'anted

FIXED

RATES Below marllet ratea
F1xad co n~Jentlonal FHA ·
VA' leader Mortgage .

3051

Openmg for elderly rn home

-

Will care for the elderly m our
home L.P N care QIYBn 15
years experian cu call 614 -

23

Cat! 773 5423.

--------

'

992-7314

SECRETARY ·
RECEPTIONIST : General
secretary work. bookkeeping , accounting, f•hng and
telephone skills needed Ex parlance 11 not necessary.
l)ut reliability , pleasing per ·
sonallty, good shorthand,
and abtlity to work With
others 11 necessary Reply to
Box 426, Pomeroy, Ohio
giving full details , with
resume

Schools
Instruction

18 Wanted to Do

Professional
Services

Piano Tunmg and Repair .
Brun1card1 Mus1c Co .. 446 0687 Twentieth year of
qualitY. aef'\lica Lane Da ·

-.·:

niets. 6t4-742-2951

Real Est ate
31

15

992-6683

rl

Homes for Sale

3 bdr house, pool; AC ,
fireplaces , Pt Pleasant. sale
or runt Call 675-5104.
loan assumption , 4 yr. old
ran ch, 3 bdr , 2 baths, DR,
car peted , 2 car garage . Call

446 -1282

600 block of 2nd Ave 2
bd t, e•c cond . big blck

yard , 537,500. Cat! 446 2169
into a Unbelievable
home Saving Th o usand s of
Dollarst f ireplace . Middle·

Fall

port Col\6t4 -992 -6941
Would like JO pa1nt tra1ler

Bab-y aittar needed •mme - roofs . Cat! 614-256. 1528
diallly, prefer in my home
Call after 7 PM . 304· 773 - Will do house cleamng at
6212.
reasonabl e rates. Call 4467243.
~ecratary,
Receptionist ,
part dme with flexible hours
tutor math 3 evenings a
Computer e.cperience help- Will
ful but not ne~aaurv . Reply week Call 446-7432
care · of Box 0 - 29 , Point
Plea1ant Register, 200 Main Gener1l Repairs. Raasona ·
ble rites. carpentry. plumb ·
St, Point Pleesant ,..,W Va
ing, electrical, no tab too
E.ccell1nt Income for plrt small. Call 614-266 -6495
time home assembly work . --:---- - -- - - tc walls , drilled &amp;. serFor tnto . cotl31 2-741 -8400 Water
VICed.
Free eatlmatea Call
ext 313
614-992 -5006 or61 4-742,

lf you are a high school
Junior or Senior. you can
enl11t in the Weat Virginia
Army National Guard . at·

HOME LOANS

Athens. collect ·61 4-592-

Karate -Private Lessons .
Learn the ultimate in self·
defense . Amar~can Karate
SUBSITUTE TEACHERS - Studio since 1971 . 143
must have valid Ohio 'reach · Burlington Rd . Jackson .
ing certificate Applaclt•onl Ohiq 614 -286 -3074. In
availlble at Carlaton atructor , Jerry low,ry Schooi.P.O. BOX 307,Syra· 1984 inductee into Weigh·
CUSO, Qhoo 46779 ,814 · tlifting Hall of Fame
AVON II Earn ing opportunity

22 Money to Loan

t:;;,::=~=;:::::::~

Auction-. Coli 304-276- Are you in' High School and 3147
looidnq for • port -time job 1 1- - -- - -- - -3089 .

John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Ho&amp;
Farm Equipment
,
Dealet
fdrm Equipment
"'

Shamrock Auction Service .
Pat Sheridan Auctioneer
EM.,P&amp;rianca in Farm &amp; home

Auction avery Friday night at
the Hartford Community
Center Truckloads of new
merchlt)diae every, week .
Conaigmenta of new Ia uaed
. merchandise alwaya welcomed. Richlrd Reynolds.

CHIMNIY SWHP

992-34-10

In Meigl Co .

Center Bldg .. Camden St.
Coli 614-367-7101 . •

~uthorized

IULTOI

1

Stzes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Do1 Houses

CHIMNEY KING

DENNY .CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CA,LL!
M. L." 'Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
Cheryl Lemlay,
Meigs County Assoctate
Phpne 742-3171

Auction Every Tuesday
n1ght, · Pt. Pleasant. WVa
Auct. Lonnie N,al, Youth

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
· ~GUYSVILLE, OHIO

8-10-1 mo,

Caah paid for fancy iron or
heavy iron bada . $160 and
up for certain Meiga Co .
stone jars Old ttma cup-

Meson County. 304-676 1429.
-

UTILITY BUILDINGS

SALES &amp; SER~ICE

'

8o Auction

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

10 5 11t

BOGGS

949·2969-949-2263

·a ...... Public Sale

ALL STEEL &amp; -·
POLE BUILDINGS

For all your wiring
nee4s ; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residentia I
&amp; Commercial
Ca-ll 742-3195

448-1325 .

interv~ .

1 mote 304-676-1069.

,No Down Payment
Lo"wir"Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box , 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

We'd like to mtroduce you to
EnJI&amp;e·A·Car, the modern way
ta:..4rivt th• vehicle of ~our

Wlnted to buy good u1ed
King coal a. wood atove.
Mu1t be '" good condition .

Gun. shoot at .Racine Gun
Club avery Sunday, 1 -00 Adm1aaiona representative
.
C
p.m . Factory chocked guns t or Ga til Pol 1a
8 ua 1ness olonly.
0
lege. Salary plus bonus .

6 Beagle pup1. 6 female and

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992-7013
New Chevy True~ ...
FENDER .. . '76 95
DOORS ....... '149 95
HOODS ... , ... '174 .95
BUMPERS .... '69.95
GRILL ... .
.. '42 .50
R. SUPPORT ..... 184 .95
TAIL GATE ....... '85 .00
FORD FENDER ... '69 .95
BUMPER ........ S69 .95

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

In Memoriam

3 Announcements

\

E . Mcun

243 Ills! 17 Sl1.!1tw Y-*, IIY
111011. Print NAME, ~
ZIP, SIZE, Md STTlliiUIIIfl.
NEW FALL-WINTER PATTERN
CATALOG for clever women who
enjo, sa"nl money as much as
wearina beautiful ckithes. Over
100 success sl)les. free Pattern -~-­
Coupon. Send $2 for Catal\11.
JILL CIIAFJ lOIIlS . .$2.50 11Cb
131-M! I lllacir

condition . Colt 614-2511·
6251 .

Walnut: deep aaa fishing rod
1nd reel-4 0 or 6 .0. Call

SERVICE

- WATER

"Fret Estimetet"

Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

W1nted to buy 1 uaed King
COli • wood atove. in a,ood

BACKHOE
DUMP TRUCK
CONCRETE WORK
TRENCHER
\SEPTIC TANK
CO~L &amp; Ll MESTON E
Cotl For Frae Estimate

We wiah to eKtend our
1incara thanks to the many
friends , relatives: and neigh·
bora for their klndne11 and
sympathy during the illneaa
and death of our mother.
Mra . Eva Hartley. Special
thank• to Rev. Mark
McClung and membera of
the Firat Baptiat Church and
all thole who Hht food and
flowers . Your thoughtful·
neaa will be long remem·
bared. The Family of Mra
Eva Hartley.

- BACKHOES
- DUIIP TRUCKS
-LD-BOYS
-TRENCHER

I

ffrea Estimates)

How would you like to feel
smart and fresh and comlortable
all day' Just sew this somple
sktmmer wtth a pretty square
neckline (note side ztpper m
back) and the briefest sleeves.'
Punted Pattern 4595 Half
SilOS 10\7. 11 \7, 14 11, 16\1,
181!. 1011. 121!. 241!.
$2.75 lor udl (lllltm. Add 504
for uch (lltltm for (M\1111'
111d handlln~ Send to:
,
Annt.Adltlll Plttlms 1 n l
Ruder Mlil
· c•

condition. Coli 814-3889303.

c,u 266-8261 .

Ann ounce ments

Major &amp; Minor

Printed Pattern

'

W•nted· Junk 1utoa any

.,.

I M
--

'

CONSTRUCTION

9/ 17/ 1 mo' pd.

"CUT OUT
FOR· FUTURE USE"

4

AM

742-2167 or
742, 2225

Ph. (614) 843·5425

3 1

TROMM
EXCAVATING

Daily

Vi"yl &amp; Aluminum
20 yoaro
"'Frae Eatimotoa"

367-7560-367c767

7/ 9/2 mo . pd.

.

.SUPERIOR,
SIDING CO.

Counry Certif••d

SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED"

EUGENE LONG

Take It Easy!

-'

"'· ..
~-~~~If---~

W1nted to buy uaed co•l •
wood he1Ur1 . Swain Furni ·

turo. 446-3168. 3rd. &amp;
Olivo St., Gottipotto. Oh.

,,

'

BUI G..,. Johnoon
. 446-3172

466-1818 .

1101 I

Real Estate General

FOR SALE

WHA~EY'S AUTO PARIS

ROUSH·
CONSTRUCTION

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Computerized Hearin&amp; Aid Selection
Dependable Hearinc Aid Service

"i!z

81i:~!:,·r~o~:~.~~·-· ..... ,.. 49

Aohnn W1ng ott
Publishe r

1D.......24.,..

)Wanted

C.r fondors ............. ... 60
79-80 IUII1n1
.
Cor Fondors ............ :..... 60

ford Ran•er
······ 110
•
Chevy &amp; ford
18 frin:ersT ·· ···· ··· .... 98
PU 8\lmptrs ....... ..... 69.95
71 0 0
Fe
&amp;e r
79-82 C~ovttte Grills ........ ll
ndeos ...... ............ 115 ford Rlnltr Gnlls .......... 75
·ford and Chevy Ttil Gatti

9-4-1 mo.

Phone-------------------

C

7/;~~h!;liil .... .. ·- 62

Omni ·Horizon 2 dr. or
4 dr. fenders .............• 75

and complete

~

.

..... 59

Fnders . ....

G Total 5 800

.

Addra·~----------------

s/i4~·;~d- T·,·.·· .. ..

I Ccrhfy that thP. statements
rTl.idP by mr&gt; Jl!ove tJre co rrect

54 Misc. Mercllandiss

I

•

D-50 Do....
lr.
.....

5 488

Ext. 2403.

Nama _____________________

,/);~;~d-·r·; ····· · ········ . ao

Public Notice

WEDGCOR
(303) 759·3200

Write your
ac1 and
bY mail wim mls
Cancel your ad by phone when you get
, results. Money not refundable.

r/ ... ·····

B/20f l mo

Savell
I
own ·
order·

&lt;oupon.

Ch"v Tr
enders
5
81 -84 Che,Y
70
s [Jnsdt's"
· ···· ··········· 110
. Chevy Tu.
r-I!{J

.... ,..-,-.

Wanted To Buy
c.r~

3305 JACKSON AVE.

:~.~~"::'~"1Rol•-"'"'" 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
••·o..,
.... ,,,"...,.
ucuo ts
o..
•.,,,o.,
uoo
uoo

U 1o--

......... ,...."..

gett. Syracuse Oh1 0 45779
M anag1ng Eduor Robe rt Hoefit ch. Po,neroy, Oh10 45769
Oh10 Valley Publt sh tng Co
11 1 Court Sl Pome roy Oh1d
M ult1med1a Inc , 305 S Mam

OA Tuesday the 9th day at
October 1984 at 10 00 o'clock AM at the off 1ce ol the

l&lt;&gt;ll•r I Ill'
/&lt;&gt; ll•l ll lllfll• •l••llhmll' o•n 11 1111 11'•'&lt;
( /(! &lt;Jij/1' 1/JJfl/lf'"

' j~ :.::.~:.'::.

9

clean ullad
:::---------------r-------------------,r-------------------~------------------~------------------.1
Wopaycuhlor~tomo~
Jim Mit* Chlv.- Otda Inc.
73

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

MiiiMIM!pyF

lt1 ~ c

Public Notice

C )For-Sale

Come Scillly, Lord J .....
Come softly, Lord Jesus,
Come softly right now
Come softl¥, Lord Jesus,'
Corne In, stay awhile

If_,. ....

l).flf-tatltlo

IW-edool"'

614-594-6851.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Walter McDade of Troy, Ohio
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Young
at Middleport Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ables, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Congo, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Roush attended a hymn
sing at Salem Church back of West
Columbia, W.Va. Sunday evening.
Dan Hayman Hymn Timers were
there .
Edith Manuel Is a patient at
Veteran s Memorial Hospital,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Lorna Hart and son Jonathan of Columbus were here to visit
her mother, Mrs. Lois Bell, while
she was hospitalized at Holzer
Medical Center.
Jonathan Hart spent a night with
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
,, RDbert Hart at Racine.

81 " ..........~C1!'&lt;&gt;4•
U Cl TV .I'IH io fqulpm l ft l

J:J.I'rotH.ol_l ....... .

l1

7T.nllalt!~lnllllooncol

Apple Grove happenings
By Mrs. Herbert RousH
Mr. and Mrs. Da llas Hill were In
Belle Vista. Ark . a few days to
attend a reunion of the 58th Signal
Corps of United States Army of
which Dallas was a member during
World War II. Of the ortglnal group
there were 24 men and 20 women
attendi ng the reunion. The Hills left
Wednesday afternoon returning
Tuesday night
•
Bessie Parsons, Mary Roush and
Georgia Durst of Niles, Ohio were
gues ts of Bernice Roush Monday.
Others visi tin g were Herbert
Roush. Chester Durst, Dorsa Parsons. Nancy Russell and daughter
Mandy of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush and
Gladys Shields spent a weekend
with Wa lter McDade of Troy.

......,

J1·--•0""""".u'
u ....... v.... ...

I H -V AOI

routmes.

Amanda Nlchole F etty

1..-1- lnMin••l

lin,.._.,

l •AII!I ... IIc:-MI

Business,Senrices

IN Ml DOLE PORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.VM.
OPE.N EACH
THURS . EVE. 6-8

Ill Court Sl., POIMfOJ, Oltto U76!

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7 -·-

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

F1nanctal

tond drill- one weekend a -;2;-:;--;:;----;-----1
month tor pay. andcomptete
Business
required 1ctive duty training
Opportunity
during 1umrl1er months . Call

3 bdr., basement. 2 car
garage, large garden. fruit
trees. on 11J• flat acres. cloM
to town Cali 446 -4217 .
--::----~----- t c -

8 yr~ old, 3 bedrm, 2 baths,
fam1ly room with Wood
burner. Stngla car garage, on
8 flat acres with stocked
pond C1ty water in Aa c1ne

'

\

Ca11614 -949-2641 .

\

Nice 3 bedroom , garage,
buament e•callant loca tion near schoo l. owner
finance Middleport . Call

•' .

992-25H.

'
Three bedroom. bath , living
\
room. Den, Din1ngroom , k•t·
\'
chen. Full basement fuel oil
\
furnace and wood burning
furnace Approximately 2
acres in Da•ter price ,

$27,000, phone 614 ·742 2832

4 '12 acres, houae w1th 8
rooms and bath Aeaaon1bty
'\
priced Located at 36860
~
Kingsbury Road Phone 992- • \.

304-1175-3960 or 1-800642-3619 .

I NOTICE t
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBWom1n to care fbr middle LISHING CO. rocommonde 6031
age lady. daya only, 6 days a that you do buaineaa with
WMk, 304-896-3900
people you know, and NOT Arbuckle , 3 bedroom home,
to send money through the
m1il until you h1va inveati·

12

Situations
Wanted

Would love to care for 2

etdotly lodioa In my home by
the month o• •• dea~rad . Lou
of refarencaa and TLC .

Phone 949-3014 at ony

time . .

gotod tho offering.

large utility room, 1 ¥: b1th1
dining room, half acre j:llua:

304-468·1800.

By owner 3 badroo~a . 1 Va
batha, living room , dining
room. recreation room in
b..ement, new ~24x24 gar".
buainou only 116.600. 1- age Close downtown .
800-327-8466. Cott now! • Shown by •ppointment ,
Moat profitable' buaineaall
60 outlet• producing high
profit, multi-flavor popcorn .
Only $310 uch, enti;a

Store butldint for rent at

220 E. Main, Pomeroy.

304-675 -41104.

3 br homo. 1'I&gt; botha.
homo . Front 1nd r.. r antranc,. ~Call bataement with temily room .
Harrl1onvilla area. Clll742· 1114-992 -6232 or 992- double pr1ge, pool. M11on .
2142.
6767. '
773-~96 aftor 4:00:
----------~--~-

!lob~ Sitting in

my

}

..
·

lo

&gt;

&gt;

''

•'
~

'•

.- .

�'

'.

.

"'

•
Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

32 Mobile Homas·
for Sala

. 51
I.ET TUEoSii STAY-INS

NEW j\ND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S .QUALlTV MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI . WEST, GAL'LIPOLIS ,
RT 35. PHONE 614 -4467274.

liCT WISC ~ CiOIN6

our NU7 '1111:'1 WANT

'ltH-IlOCAPVY'FOfl

1JIE!I4 ;---

,;__:.--"""iilt

CJI!J~FO-­

IF

YIN~E

G()IN{i~OUT

1972 Freedom trailer, par·
tially furnisl]ed . 86 ,000 .

WIL.L.'IA PIC4(
UPM'(

call 446-7603.

435 . 7 pc. $1B9 ond up.

IIERE:'S lHE

Wood table with six chairs

TICKET····

$286 to $746. Desk e1 10
up to $225 . Hutches. 8550.

One acre ground, all conven·

Bunk bad comp$ete with
mattresaea, $275. end up to

iences. $·1 7.500. By owner.
e)(tra

good

bi,JVI

Shown

$395,

a ppt. orly . Call 446-4286 .
1973

Schultz

12x65

Mattressee o.r t»ox spririgs,
and $78. Queen sets, 8195 .
4 dr. , c.hests, $42 . 6 dr.
chests, 854. Bed frames,

ai r. Call 446-7440.

•2o.and $25 ., 10 gun - Gun

l eaving State. owner must
sell beautiful 3 bedroom
home. .Family room haa

cabinets, $360. Gas or
elet:tric ranges $376. Bsby
mattresses, $26 &amp;. $36, bed
frames 820. 825. &amp; $30.
king 'frame $60. Good selec1ion of. bedroom suites.

20ft . of windows lor pastoral view, finished double
garage , fireplace .

headboards
$38 cabinets
&amp;. YP to,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;=~~~::~ rockers.
metal
$65 .

privacy,50ft.
neardeck,
floyal -aw...~
porch,
Park, reduced to S59,900 .
Y2 percent assumability . Call

614-992-5420.

41

14 X 70 Fairmont Trailer, all
electric with 8 x 12 add on;
patio, 2 porches, 2 acres.
and city water. call 614-

985' 4141 .

- - - ----d
1981 Kirkwood 14x70. 3
bedroonl . 1 Y2 bath , electric
heat. wood stove, $11 ,900
call 614 -843-5244.

1980 14)(70 three bedroom
mobile home, fire place.
ceiling fan, ·unfurni'shed'.

make and offer: Call 614992-5163 . .
W~l

sell lor payoff. 1983
S c hultz limited edition .

14x70, with 7x11 expando.
;3 bedrooms. 1 'h baths, all
alec, central air cond , fireP.Iace, extra installations.
builr in stereQ . 304 ·468-

1594 or 304-773-5417 .
1960 New Moon mobile
home for sale. phone 304676 _2569 .

1

'

--- --·· --· ---- -··

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. brickwi1h basement&amp;
garage in Rio qJ:ande. Security deposit. no pe1s.

8235 mo . Call 614-2455439.

garage . Call 614 - 643 ·
2171.

10 yr. old 8 unit apart..ment
complex, Wellston, Ohio . All
1 bdr. apts ., 4 furnished , off
street patking . Resident
manager over $1 ,400 mo .
income. Constant waiting
li~t less than $15,000 per
unit . Possible 2nd . mort·

gage . Call 592-1189 Mo~ .­
Fri . 9 -5 , 594-2B74 eve. l!o
wk. ends.

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Usad Furniture -- head

for Rent.

boards, and 2 bedroom
suites. 3 "'i'es out Bulavilla
Rd . Open 9am to 5pm, Mon .
thru Sat.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal

days 614· 992-6461 or evenings· 61 4 -992-3301 .

witn $200 deposit located

2 houses for rent and bar for
sale or lease with option to

ant. Call 4'2116-2745 or leave
message.

buy. 304-675-5720.
House. modern 3 bedrooms,
out in coyntry, furnished
kitchen. Muit have referen -

ces. $250 . 304-675-1900.
House on 21st Street, lOw
rent, quiet, adults. no pets.
Inquire 2100 Mt. Vernon
Ave., Point Pleasant.

near Foodland and Spring

Valley Plaza. pool and TV

Furnished efficiency $145 '
utilties paid, single, share
bath. 607 2nd. Ave ., Galli·

polis. Call 446 -441 6 after
. BP M.
For lease overlooking, city

park.

2

bdr..

LR .

fully

equipped kitchen, dining
area. unfurnished. Call PJ 'a,

S625 month, 304-675 - ·
6276 .
3 rooms and bath. range end

2 bdr. apts . utilties part paid,
newly decorated . Call 675-

5104.

0338.

ref, gas heat. $200 .00 per

- - - - - - - - - -·.1

month. Homestead Realty.

Furnished Efficienty; $150.
Utilities paid, shine bath.
7· 1 4th. Gallipolis . 446-

4416 alter 8 p.m.
2 bdr. apt. stove refrig .
Water furnished .. new carpet

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

LR. 80R , hall. $225 mo .,

Two bdr. mobile home.
comple1ely fur'hished on Bob

McCormick Rd . Coli 4469669.
.
-

Furnished 2 bdra. TV cable.
clean. quiet. beautiful riverview in Ka'nauga . Fosteri
Trailer Park, 446· 1602.
2 bdr .• AC , gas heat, wall to
wall carpet in Gallipolis. Call
Very nice, 2 bdr., unfur-

nished, located Rt. 588.
$8 .000 . Call 614-256 - adults only, no pets. S185
mo. plus deposit. Call 4466618 .
2300.

Building lot Neighborhood

Rd . 65x1 50 . $6.000 . Call
446- 3B44 alter 7PM .
Clearview Estates. buildirlg
lot, restricted , all UtilitieS
under ground.. centralize
sewer system . 6 mi. below
Gallipolis on Raccoon . Call

446-3485.
For Sale : Once acre lot with
large in-ground pool, torn
liner. and partially finished
basement . For . information

call B13 -665 -1 232.
1.14 ac . level lot with
basement . alec. &amp; water.
Located in Greet Twp. Call

446-3044.
Singing Trees Subdivision
1.9 acres. 1 mi. last on Rt.
490 . Homoassa. FL. Call

614-379-2712 or 614-3792243.
Price reduced. 7 acres more
or less. '.4 mi. off Rt. 218.
New barn. "tobacco base,
city schools. Call 446-256·

Fully furnished ,

2 bdr.,

2 bdr. ·mobile home in city.
ref. &amp; dep required . Call

614- 256-1922 .
2 bdr. unfurnished, 12x60 12
1

mi . post HM c. Call 4464369 or 675-9760 .
14x70 3 bdr. 1.2x60 2 bdr.
On Bulaville Rd. 3 mi. from

Rt. 160. Accept HUD . Call
446-9204 .
4 bdr. home, tri-level, full
basmen1, fireplace, heat
pump, wood Bvailable. 12
mi . from city, Hannan Trace
School District. Ref. &amp; dep .

req. Call 614-256-1929 or
446-:!252.
Mobile

homes

for

rent.

Upper River Rd. Call 4461609 or 446-0508 . "
Libeny

Mobile home for

4 acres off Kei'r Harrisburg
on Viney Road near Gallipo-

furnished

Hill Road . 304-675-3834.

house.

3999 or alter'S, 675 -2498 ;
44

. adults only, Call 446-0338 .
Unfurnished house. 3 bdr .,
stove. tef. Rodnev Village II ,

$275 mo. Call 446 -4416
after 9 PM .
3 bdr. house deluxe Pt.
Pleasant. 3 bdr . house 50
acres Eureka, Oh. Call 676-

5104 .

•

.

Cltizano . $130. Equol1tous-

srze16. Both $25 .00. Ladies

304-675-2991 or 304-675·
6762.

Old W. Va . Malleable Iron
Plant. 9:30AM to 3:30PM.

One 6 ft Kold·Draft cooler.
One 6 ft Perlick cooler, One
3 key 2 tap draft cooler. Two
ice bins. One 3 bay bar sink .

Me;tal post and beam buildIngs COflStructed. For farm,
storage, garacjes, commercial, etc. As low as $3.00 sq .

·

COUNTRY MOBILE Homa
Park, Route 33, North . of
PomeroY . • Large l-o ts . Call

614-992-7479 .
Trailer lots, sewer and water
furnished , small children

accepted . 304-675-1 076

ft. 304-675-39B1 .
Produce scale $50.00. 6 ft
cooler for store $450.00.
cash register $40.00, 6 wall
unit shel\leS, 2 floor shelves

51

Household Goods

SWAIN .
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp; ~sed wood-coal stovea, a
pc Wood LR suite $399,
bunk beds $199, antron
recliners $99, used bedroom
suites, ranQes , wringer
washers# &amp; shoes . Call 614-

446-3169.

..

614-256; 1427.
.
1971 Camaro $600. 19, .9
XR 1B5 Honda , 16 o . Hogwater
$76.e&amp;OO.
Portable
milking new
machine
Po-

well tobocco settlf $100.
Call 614-245-9G98.

81,

to

i

Weight loss breakthroughll
The Grapefruit Diet Plan
with DiadaJC . Medically
pro\len results available at
Hockenberry Pharmacy.

56

PU load. Larger loads delivered. Call for prices. 614-

included, $160. Callevelngs
614-367-7744&gt;.
7 piece living room suite
good cond $200, wicker
peacocR chair like new·$60,
brown sling back chair new
$25. doak &amp; chair good
~ond.

835. brass head board

&amp; bed frame like new *60.

Call 614·379-2314 after
3PM .
Smith

lJ!

Wesson modal 28

357 cal .. 6 in barrell. tuned
action pacmayar grip. Smith
&amp; Weaoon model 1000 12
gauge shotgun with vented
rib b8rrel also deer barrel.
Ross 26 in. tan speed bike,

$275. Call 614-388-9711 .
Crossbow Barnett-Wildcat,
150 lb., new cond . Call

614-367-7434 alter 5:00.

8225 . Deposl! requlrad. Call
614-992-5319 or 9922B15.
.
-lcFumishod 2 bedroom opartmontoln Middleport. Adultl.

rant 1280.00 par .'J10nth.
Utilities included. CoN 7735423 .

Cslll14-992-3874.
2 · bedroom apar1ment for

APARTM.E NTS, .mobile
homos houns~t. Pleeunt
ond dalllpolls. 814-448·
8221.

71

Autos for Sale

Doberman pups for sal1. 6
·old with Champion

wee~•

57

Musical
Instruments

Rock bond oquipmenl, kayboard • ICCI11drle1. 8ar1
amp, spaakera, etc. Call

446-B161.

Pontiac LaManna. 4

PS. PB. AT. AC. -yery
cond. Tako over PoYmonll of e1&amp;5.24 a monlh.
Call614-379-2314.
t969 Buick Wildcat. ou1o.
air. Ulpe. U99. Johna Auto
Soloa. Bulavlllo Rd .. Gallipolis, Oh, 441-4782 .
1982 Mercury Lyn; 3 dr.
holchback. plr. ounrool, 4
cyl., 4 apd .• roor defrost. Call
614-38B-9811 .
1980 Buick 'tationwagon.
loaded. FL can, no rust, low
miles. price below book. Cal!

and

dryer

bn1

offer. Will consider

ethan ;&amp; Super Gold atul11
room. Sr. Rl. ~S . E. of

lrodo. Coli 949-21B1.

Albany. Call 61'4·6986298. Weekdeya 1 PM-7PM
&amp; Week endo 1 0AM-6PM.

Oak furniture, tables,chairs,
cupboards. pie safe, tela·
phones, desk, also antiques
and glassware . Open Sundays . Conkel's Tuppersplains, Rt. 7.

king holrticulture baane for

1972 Ford LTD,
P.S.,P.B.,A.C. Good condition. 1950.00. Call 99256B1. '

•10.00 a bu. Call
botweon 9AM- 1 2Noon. Call
614-266-1906.

'75 Datoon, $1,000.00 .
304-675-6848.

Winter potatoes, apples,
pumpkins. cide.r, and produce. Harris Farms, Rt. 124.

1978 Dodge Monaco 3602BL. axe. cond. $1500 .
304-675-3087 afler 5.

Comb honey for sale. Call

614-949-2175.
--------lc-

181&amp;,

Portland, Ohio. Coli B435193.
.

19BO Dido Cutlaaa · Supreme. Approx . 51
mile1.

FMITI Siipplii'S
&amp; LI'JI~ol · ll : k

55 .Building Supplia.s
Building Materials
Block. brick, sewer pipes
windows, lintels, etc:

Claude Win~ars. Rio Grande. . 61
0 . Call 614-245-5121. .
~uild

your own 4 bdr. home.

&amp;6,995 del. to your iita.
New display model open .

See it now! 1 -614-8B67311 .
Now open fo~ 'buainess,
Mountain State Block, Rt .
33, New Haven·, Complete
masonry supplies. ~ 4", 8",
· 1 2" block, Delivery service.

Phone day 304-8B2-2222.
even1ng 8B2-3239.

F

arm

E

.

qUipmant

2 Ford corn pickers 802 2
row mounted and one for
parts. 3 Gleaner combine

with 1 0 loot groin hood ond
2 row corn head good cond.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

good

cond .

1978 Chryaler Now Yorker,
Brougham fully loaded. Extro .nico. 304-675-6644.
'79 Ford lTD. 4 door blua.
48.000 miloa. tilt wheel.
AC, AM-FM 8 track, buill in
CB J

crui1a

hitch 4 row corn planter,

Callll14-898-6262 or 6148J18.-6896.

Badger Forage Wagon for

eele. With orwithoul now 10
Holcomb. Rt. · 3. Albany.
1-698-5025.
10ft. grain table, uc. cond,

Plckono uHd furniture. 304-'
81,11-8483 ofl75-1480 .

..

oxp. Caii614-38B-9652 .

DO bi HAV6 AllY

&amp;tone. Call 614-367-0409
or 614-367-7244 :

~~suse;o•?

Call collect 1-614-23704BB. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .

after 6.

Wood burner $75.00. 304675-4684.

10 American Pit Bull pup----'----- - - -·1pies. Call614-388-9881 . .
AKC Reg. Poodle dogs iJ,
puppleo. Coli 446·0867.

Block

Muslong

.

1 949 Plymouth good con d.,
ovory1hing orglnal. Coll614388-8543.

Vans

&amp;

W.O.

Motorcycles

1980 Horley Super gltde.
4000 mllo1, llko now. Coli
448-7383.
Hondo CR121 Elslno·ro.
Nev., raced.

like new.

• •e11o.oo. 01..e11 Moped 4
month• old, Ulo.oo. c:·.11
TOP CASH . pold for '110 982-7384 ovenlngo . .

•

FOR US, MR .STROBRIDGEJ

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex -

TH' WAGONS ARE HERE !
~il!:.'-lt1

perienced carpenter, electri ·
cian, mason, painter, roof ing (including hot ta &amp;.

·opplicationl 304-675-2088"
or 675-4560.
Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Moat wafls .completed same
day. Pump sales and servi-

750 Ford truck, 20 ft. bod.
cab ovor -por. Hobert
gaaoUne weld~, and ,power,
2 tyl. onglno. Col1614-3188288.

ill

·

76

Boeu end ·

Plumbing

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

B:30

l

Answer here: ON HIS
Satllday'a

"K I 1 rt I XI J

(~nswers 1omo1Tow )
.Nmbleo CRIME MOGUL QUORUM BANISH
Answer: In wh ich il 's di f fic ult to row- when yo u
" man ipu late" huge oars- A " ROUGH SEA "

I

Wonderworks

BRIDGE

James Jacoby

It's coming in'

NORTij
+A K 6 3
• J 82
t KJ 92
+ ·10 6

loud _and clear
By James Jacoby
East-West were certainly going to
make their vulnerable lour hearts.
From that point of view, it was right
lor South to save at lour spades. With
nonnal distribution and a little luck,
lour spades might even make. But the
price of sacrificing came too high
when an unusual suit-preference play
by expert Fred Hamilton sitting
East, created a precise and devastating defense.
The bid of three heartS over North's
takeout double was pre-emptive, a
method favored by most good players. West knew his partner might con·tribute little to ·beat four spades, but
still felt that four and a half quick
• tricks were enough to warrant a
double. He led the king of hearts, on
which East played the queen. That
could mean only one thing - ·lead
diamonds, partner! The ace of diamonds was played, followed by. the
three, which called for a club return .
Hamilton trumped and returned a
club, and back and forth they went.
The defense took four tricks in high
cards and three ruffs to beat lour
_spades doubled 1100. Without the

WEST ·
.• 4

9AK7 63
t A6 S3
+AQ 7

.,

16-1-8t

EAST
+J92
'Q 10 9 4

t a

+ J9 4 3 2

SOUTH
+Q l08 7 5

• Q 10 7 4
+K85

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West
West

Nortb

Ea1t

1'9
49
Obi.

Dbl.
Pass
Pass

~

Soatb
3+

Pass
Pass

4+
Pass

Opening lead: •K

L------------.J
switch to ace and a diamond, declarer
;.vould have been down only one.
It looks easy from here, but how
many of us would have played the
heart queen to tell our ·p artner to lead
diamonds'

!lzed. LeVar Burton , Sneiley
Duvall , Shavar Ross . (60
min.) [Closed Captioned!
@II MOVIE: 'Blue Hawaii'
(I) Album Fla•h : Barry

C!l NFL's Superstars The
or

9 :00

Smith and Powell furnace .
electrical, plumbing repair ·
24 hr. a day service . Phone

614-882 -3722 or 514-8822052.
SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Healing. 211 Sixth St ..

Point Pleasant, w. Va. 304675·6420. · Licensed and
insured .

Basements, Foote.rs, Con crete work. Backhoe's .
Dozer &amp; Oitcher, Dump '
trucks. &amp;: water-gas-sewerelectrical lines.

e.

1 Need
5 Precipice
(1975 J
11 Porter
12 Benefit
13 Showy
u Palestinian

Australia - Semifinals from

Portland , OR - Daciding
Match
I]) Gl @I NFL Foolball:

.

Cincinnati at Pittsburgh

0

(I)

®

18 Cheat
17 Lounge

JUGHAID'S

1 DON'T HAVE A
CLOSE-KNIT FAMILV

UNDERFOOT--

Th~s documentary concerns
1he siting of the nation's first
..... hi9h level waste reposit ory
edjacent to Canyonlands
National Park in southeast

the _

Murphy.
1 0 :30 (I) Shirley &amp; Pal Boone
(]) ® Greatosll.akas This
program looks at how Increasing pressure from a
growing population and int enstve use of Great Lak eS
water
':las
signifiaantly
..,changed and harmed them .

Alan

ZZUnruffted
Deceives
UCUtwith

a

. anax
Z5Frayed
I

!IJ)estiny

great

b-+-+-

3%Antelope

38Steps
U Old lane!!
:It Bring

to light
3'1 To be
(Fr. )

·
10 I

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES.,.. Here' s how·lo work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
ls .L ONGFELLOW

11:000
James 8oys Weter SerVice .

Alao pools filled. Call 614·
256-1141 or 614-446 1175 ol 61"+'6,_791 1 .

-

.. , ..

Ken'• Water Service. WellS,
ciat•na, paoli filled . Phone

367-0623 or 367-7741
night or day.
JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lanier, 304-6757397.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc. Ave.. Galllpolia.
814-4.4 8-7833 or614-448- ·
1833.
,

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apa~trophes, the length and fonnallon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code le~rs are different.

CRYPTOQUO'I'FS

con' s Run'

Cil MOVIE : ' Bleck Eman-

PEANUTS

nus IS THE

MONTH

1,1114EN Ali TI4E CLIFF
SWALLOWS 14EAI7 FOR
60VA, ARGENTINA ...

Upholstery

'(]) Ded'o Army
a! Benny Hill Show
11 :30 0 (I) (l) Lata Night with
DaviCI Letterman
Cil MOVIE : ' Eddie. Ma·

.

.

fJI Soap

CIJ (l) 0 (I)® News
,. &lt;Il Another Ule

exte'nsive
34·Frost
Billy
24 Storeroom 35 Six (it.)

ZlActor

31 One (Ger.)

Frank Sinatra , Joan ' Rivers
and Jerry lewis are impersonated by this comedian
whose special quest is Eddie

25 Midriff
27 Deserve
Z8 Entrap
%9 More

zz Chuckle

Paladin"

fJI Independent News
10:15 (I) Joe Piscopo Special

by

McKuen .
Newswatch

Pomeroy: 61 4·992-22B4.

23 Ex-boxer,

27Unwon\an
ly
:It Hockey

Narrated

®

...

9 Budding
doctor '
11 TV's

Rod

Utah .

SNAKE!!

15- the bill
18 Circuit
Z1 Forsaken

20Acein

1

ALWAVS

zade's
• tales
8 Impedes

19 Anger

Captione d!
•
10:00 ffi MOVIE : 'Torn Curtain'
(]) Nuclear Nalional Park

NOBODV CAN SAY

2 In unison
3 Child's toy
4 Pwview
5 Suitfabric
8 Prison (sl. )
7 Schehera-

plain
1li Vapor

MOVIE:

'Passions'
(j) (ffi Heritage: Civilization and the Jews ' A People Is Born .' (13th Century
B.C.E. to 6th Century B.C.E.I ·
First of 9 part s. Judaism is
born amid the ancient civilizations of Egypt and Mesopotamia _ (60 min) !Closed.

BARNEY .

38 Eur. river

10 Wimbledon DOWN
winner
1 Toil

Cup
Te'nnis: United States vs.

TH!515 MY

Elactrica 1

service. Authorized Siriger
Sales
Service Sharpen
Scias·o n. FabriC Shop ,

by THOMAS JOSEI'H
ACROSS
38 Precept

(I) 700 Club
(!). 19B4 Davis

WINNIE

0 . A . Boston excavating ,
Complete dozer and dump
truck services. Call 66 7 -

SEWING Machine repairs,

61 er.u.." t ,(

CIJ MOVIE: 'A Star Is BOrn'

Excavating

dand, Qh,614-742-2903;

Men Who Played The Game .
(I) (!) Tho Tonight
Show Starring Johnny

·o

Carson: 22nd Anniversay
Early clips of Carson shows
including those with Buddy
Hackett, Jimmy Stewart .
Red Skelton and Shelley
Winters highlight the celebration of The Ton ight
Show' s 22nd AnniVersary.
(2 hrs .)
•

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT:
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 355, Galli ·
polio. Ciill 614-367-0576.

87

abOve canoon.

ge~

Manilow

,Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio

Motor• for Sale,
17 ft. Cra111Mnar, In board
Out board 1111 hp, Ill COftVII
ood, .. xtru. ,304-671286.

®

'Booker .' . F~rst of 4 parts.
The story of young Booker
T . Washington is .drama·

&amp; Heating

model and new• ulld C81'11.

Smith Bulck-Pontloc. 1911
Eeotorn Avo .• OoiHpoll1. Coli
814· 441·2282.
•

nor Sarnac finds himself under political pressure and in
danger of jeopardizing his
military career . (60 min .)
0 (I) ® Scarecrow and
Mrs.' ·King Season Premiere. Amanda and Lee· s
assign,ment is to catch an
elusive hit-man and diamond
'Monthief
nic.knamed
goose.' (60 min .)

LOOKS LIKE HA.WKINS

&amp; Refrigeration

1981 Harley Dovldoon wide
glide, low mHMgo. 1981
' Cor" for oele oholl ond eor 4110 Elanor, 1979 Z-28 . Coli
both. Coll614·281·1144. · 814'317-7269 . .

Alitoe for Sale

ill MOVIE: 'War Wagon'
CIJ Ill (HI Call to Glory Ray-

ALI:EY OOP .
HAS SOME MORE RECRUITS

84

call 814-992-2834.

71

The laughs continue w ith
specially-edited.
encores
featuring the best sketches
of the satirical series.
(I) Cisco Kid
(!) Monday Night MatchUp Cincinnati Bengals vs.
.J Pinsburgh Stealers .

• 662B or 378-82B8.

Two regis't ered hereford
, cows with Semttol Cll\les,

r I .I !IS IIIII !.1!11111

Caption~]

Cil SCTV: Second Coming

HIS DIH/'ER .'

4537, James L. Davison . Jr.
owner.

.

73

HIIO T'5E.'
HE GUAE lOVED

Call anytime 61 4-446 ·

614-367-7744. .
Block Anguo buU weighing
opprox. 700 lbs. Coli 446·
4063.

130/TO~q:_::~'}l!)p!ll'~

by Ed McMahon and Dick
Clark. !60 min .l
(I) MOVIE: 'Never Say
Never Again' [Closed

house cells. Call 304 -576 2398 or 614-446-2454.

J.A .R.Construction Co.Ru -

kittens. Call614-446-3844

Oak Ridge Boys and Richard
Simmons are practical joke
victims in this show host ed

~ITCHEN I'Ll llET M~. RUNN
EQUIPMENT 15 'IIAG THAT
FIPST PRIZE 015TINGUIGHED
FOil HAUTE FElLO'II YOU SERVED
CU16!NE!
THt: OTHER ClAY ...

.• THE

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola. Ouazar. and

Brokers, 446-6592 .

!
Top Quality Reglatered
Quarter horN mere. 6 yr. old
buckskin color, Call eveings

THE Lt:TIEAHEAD MY (;jOODNt:G5!
SAYS "N.Y. DAI LY HE'S THE NUMBER I
HERALD':.. AND IT'S 1 RESTAURANT
SIGNED EATON
CA ITIG IN THe
fliJIV/V, "011111/fi
COUNTRY!

8 :00 0 Cil CD TV's Bloopers
and Practical Jokes The

Good-1 Excavating, base ments, footers , driveways, . •
septic tanks, landscaping , ~

motor and
new
I
FM.ca11tte,

(}Q CBS News

fl) WK RP in Cincinnati

dows call 304-773-5131.

Interior, front end damoged.
Boll offer. Call 446-8398.

Livestock

ANNIE

0 . and M . Contractors.
Remodeling, vinyl siding,
painting (indoors and outdoors) replacement win-

mags, red crushed velvet

63

•

Gene Smith. 992-6309 .

ces. 304-B95-3802.

ABC News

Now arrange the drcled letters 10
form the at.rprile answer, as sug-

tJ

J KJ

@II Jeffarsons
7 :30 . 0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
Cil Fraggle Rock
(!) Inside Baseball
([I Andy Griffith
(I) 0 (I) Family Feud
rn Jeopardy
00 Wheel of Fortune
Gl (HI New Name Thai
Tune

·unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local referenc~s
furnished . Free estimates .

Phone 61 4-446-3B88
614-446 -4477

tNATTIC ,.

Nawshour

BASEMENT
WATER PROOFING

Rogers Basement
Wa1erproofing .

~

(J

®I News

~~

-------0

sional All -breed grooming.
1r:t~~or-outdoor boarding fa·
cJflt•ea:. English Cocker Spa·

nlel puppieo. Coli 614-3889790.
•

CHIL~f.l

woo AAJ:;

'""- -

1968
95,000 mllea.
red, black

1972

..___,-r-----.

H • S Horne Improvements
vinyl siding. rOofing, room
additipn, storm windows.

" Now only $2,800. Sldoro Orende engine overhauled.
Briarpatch Kennels· Profes· Equipment. 304-876-7421. Remington tiree in alotted

614-367-7220.

betweon 9 :3,0 and 5:00
614-992-2064.

For Sale, King Wood and
Coal H..tlng Stove with
blower. Hell Foiel Oil Furnaco. Call 614-742-2674.

BORN LOSER

Dozer Work by Ted Hanna .
Ditches. ponds. roads, land
clearing, etc. Call Motor Car

Interested parties call

Broken Slllr; Trip Around the
World, and Fan , $225.00
eech . Ceil 992-7886 or ·
992-2318.

PAINTING- interior and exterior. plury·lbing, roofing ,
aome remodeling. 20 yrs .

B3

a.m.

Model E Glaonor combine,

good

3 tlend quilted quilt• for ule:

veers

roofs.
30 in built
experience,
specializing·
up roof.

·82

IJ?AfL[j

(])
Nightly
Busi"?es
• Report
® Colorsoun s ·
I'll One Day at a Time
7:00 0 Cil PM Magazine
I]) Here Come the Brides
® SportsCenter
ffi Gomer Pyle
(I) Ql (HI Entertainment
Tonight
.
CD Wheel of Fortune
0 (I) Wheal of Fortune
ill ® MacNeil/Lehrer

control.

13,600.00 or boot offar. call
alter 8. 304-678-2010.

1 set of Ford IS- HI oemi
mounled plow._ 8000- Ford
tractor mint condition wil~
96% rubber. Ford 3 point

ton running gur. Everett

Pats for Sale

Very

Asking $6600. 304-8953860 after 6:00.

&lt;IJ Rifleman

(!) Mazda Sportslook

_c_a_II_6_1_4_-_3_8_B_-9_a_s_7_._ __

1976 Pontiac Grond Solari

12,000 . miles. AM. FM
casoett, AC, PS, PB. Call
Dunrovln Fruit Farm Grape 98&amp;-4290 alter 5:00.
Spacial I All grope varlotlaa.
Pick your own . 20 lb. All 1984 Monte Corio SS. blue.
Apples Red &amp; yellow doll- · fully equipped. new condicious, Melrose, grimes, Jon· tion. Asking $11,800.00 or

Grado An ex-high school

ing. Now installing rubber

scotchguard-water extrac ·
tion, deodorizers. FREE estimates. ·Reasonable rates .

Berry Patch. Coll448-8892.

Cil Best Legs in lhe Blh
loser encounters thO girl of
his adolescent fantasies .

Marcum Roofing 8t Spout- ·

1984 Grand Prix, leas than

Taylors

·

(I) (!) NBC News

(1).111

removal . Call 304-675 1331.

raspberries.

'

... I 1\I(;HT NOT,--- ---,
HAVE A PLOT,
&amp;UT I'LL HAVE!
i:I.EVENG&amp;!

D

6:30

0 Cll

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump

running cordllion. $200.00.
~irm

® Voyage ollhe Mimi

CAPTAIN EASY

II I

·i'~--

1· PLONY

PoUito

uicv Show

·Iii Dill' rent S1rokea

Home
Improvements

Dna· clarinet &amp; one Bundy Coli 446, 8283 .
trumpet . Call448-3231 .
1977 Monto C..-lo one
Fender bas.. ·quitar with owner. $1,800. Call 446herdohell caoe, good con d .• 7567.
$31!0. Call 614-2511-6248.
'
83 Sapporo $7,100. 82
Bach Stradlvariua .Trumpet, Cavalalr Cadet $4,400.
$400.00. 304-676-4034.
Both ex. cond . Call 4462148.
58
FNit . .
1977 Cordoba for sale.
&amp; Vegetables
1965 Ford GaiOKie porto for
1110. Coll304-773-5851.
Red

I ECSEA
. I I I _)

ill Carol Burnett

446-7019.
statlonwagon,. many options. runs good. best offer.

·

·

(I) Dr. Who

•

GENE ' S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN,

Remington 11 00; 20 ga.
V.R. youth 21 in. N.I.B.,
Ruger 77·22 cal. N.I.B. Call
446-7019 .
,.
- - -- - - - - - l c -

ings only. 304-8.9 5-3581 .

cloth $50 .00. 304-6755398:

Pe's for Sale

blood-line. •5o.oo. Call
straton .i'ribtor. Perfect con- 9_9_2_-_7_6_1_7_._ _ _ _ __

Dragonwynd Cattery Ken"!Is. AKC Chow puppies,
S1amese kittens, new litters
CFA Himalayan end Persian

crochet table

I.L\'&lt;'llfl"l

~~~=;~~~;~=:r~::::::::~e~·~"':':''":':':~~

appraisal certificate $3,000. HILLCREST KENNELS
Will ,l.fll for- $1,600. Wur- Boarding all brMdl. Healed
llber plano good cond. indoor· outdoo·r facilities.
$300. Call 446-0009.
AKC Doberman pupploo:
Stud Service. Call614-448Firewood cut up slabs. $16 7796.

Put Your Order In Now!
"Soft Sculpture" wide-eyed
Blo11om Babies. 23" fuily
clothad. plus birth certificate. Rasberry, Chinaberry,
Blackberry. $23. Call even-

size

.JJS3L.

Brond now 1984 Yamaha
1 2&amp; 3 whattl1r, never ridden
1111 . for 1800. Cell 448:
4042. .
-

Washer

partially furr:-lstled.

&lt;IJ HOt

•

74

King Woodburner, only used
2 montt._l!l · EJCcellant condi-

1972" Volunteer camper 21

Se rv1ces

Ladies diamond cluSter ring

245-5904.

.r

ft. New Roll out- awning .

([I

~.

to-

&lt;IJ Cll crJ Ill m Cll •

to Gol'

._.fOul

lour ordlnory -

(I) MOVIe 'What a WilY

For eele fill dirt. and top'a(!ll.
Call Call814-258-1427.

56

large

8 :00 D

8 Ft. TrUck campe~ sleeps
four, 1325.00 call 614742-2460.

Fall Yard Care Mulching,
fertilizing. liming, rneeding
8. transplanting. Also for
sale: cow manure &amp; top soli.
Con_1act Bruce Davison,

Ur40iantlkt

. EVENING

11900.00. 992; 3936 ffter
•4:30 or wnkanda.

verts, RON EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jackson, Oh 1142B6 -6930.

--to--.t .

10/1/84

24 ft .

CI2N-•

Plastic cistern• state •pproved, plastic sep1ic bnks,
plastic culvert, metal cul-

$50 .00 each . 304-6752265.

Warm Morning stove, Shop
Vac. sweeper, lathe. 304-

Merchandise

C~ieftan

Call. 446-7019.

Lim,atont, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered In Mason, Meig1.
Gallia or pick up at Richtrde
&amp; Son. Call 446-7785.

Call 614-3BB-9811.

Furnished room, $145 . Utilities, range. ref·. Share bath .
Men only. 919 Sec. , Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 8 p.m.

46 Space for Rent

deliver. HEAP vender. 814266 -6246.

Record player with 8 track
and AM &amp; FM radio, 2 . l:l'anklin stove, burns wood,
speakers, works good. coal or charcoal. Used one
Needs needle . $25.00 . season. $200 .. Call 446·
Sm~ller record player with 2
2958 .
speakers, like new. Needs
needle. $15.00.
16 ft . .Lowes wide bottom
canoe with square stern
2. student nurse uniforms, same as neW~ With eXtl'a'i

Call614 -446·0756.

Newlv redecorated, 1 bed-

Corter 448-1370aftar 6 :00.

387-3780.

King wood and coal stove. 2
speed fan complete with
triple wallpipe outfit. Excellant condition. $350.00.

304-675-1578 after 6 PM
or 675-7896 .

992·7721.

no pets. security iteposit.

Stanley Shaver or call 814·

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house -keeping
rooms. Park Central Ho\el.

tion. $300.00. Call 8873378.

Newly painted 6 rm. 2 bdr.
home. Quiet ltrtet excellent
neighborhood. R•!· .&amp; deposit required. Call Richard

Rd. Budget g1i U6 mo . SM

'

Riverside Apts . Middleport.
Sp•cial. rates for Senior

roan:-.

lArge houaa on Little K yg4tr

.

Furnished Rooms

,T elevision
Viewing

loeded, eir , generator, low
miles, new tirea, exc . cond .

poll. Colt 446-3748 or
614· 256· i903. .

Love.ly, large 4 bedroom 2
bath 'HOme. fully carpeted, .
LR. DR. Kit, stove , dis·
hwasher, AC. gar .. and blmt
near downtown Pomeroy.

Call 614-3BB-9909 .

1970 Chevelle SS.
51000 .00 . 1971 Honda
350. $200.00 . Call 9492952.

Mon thru Fri. Minimum
purchase $25.00.

45

green. You pick up or we

Unfu{.nished apt. 2 bdr. with
stove, refrigerators. 322
Third Ave ., Adults only, no

ing :opportunities. 614-

Large houll good shape!

.

Apartment
for Rent

House for rent references
·required . Inquire .at 631
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, "'h.

S360 mo. Ca11446-0116.

54 Misc. Mer.chandise

Steel I beams, angle irOns,
sheet steel. grating. 18
cents _to 25 cents per lb.
Conduit and galv drain pipe,
gas ceiling furnaces,
150~ 000 btu; electric ceiling
heaters, 15,000 &amp; 3g.ooo
btu. Parts bins. steel work
table, electric motors "3
phase" 3'1o hp &amp; 125 hp .
Firebrick, electric hoist. gear
boas, electrical fiXtures ,
panels, breakers. starters .

Middleport. Call 992-585B .

Trailer partially furnished on
1 acre ground . 304-675-

Small

OH .

6'75.-3666 .

2 bedroom, 1A mile out Sand

Houses for Rent

627 3rd . Ave. Gallipolis,

67646104 or 675-5'386 .

Call for appointment. 985 A\lailable October I, a 3
bedroom I'"('IObile home for
rent. Near Pomeroy and

41

TV sets. Open BAM to 6PM.
Mon thru Sat. 446-1699,

Firewood $20.00 pickup
load; $30 .00 delivered .

Oct. 4 . Call-949 -3082.

Winnebago

ditio.n, runs good. Helmet 1

Apt. -2 bdr., nice . Apt. -1
bdr., utilities furnished .
House 3 bdr. , deluxe . House
2 bdr,, central location .
A-One Re8! Eata.J.e Broker

Furnished 2 bedroom apart·
ment in Racine for
rem,$150 .00 per month
plus $50 .00 .deposit. You
pay own utilities. No more
than 2 children . Available

Knouff Flrowood Split- 91"
hardwoods . Sori~Mtl or

CoYnty · Appliance. Inc.
G.ood used appliances and

949-2719.

dep. &amp; ref . Call446-4607or
446-2602.

DICK TRACY

79 Motors Homes ·
&amp; Campers

..

Go· Kar.t.3V1, horse Briggs &amp;

Plaza. Call 446-01 1 6 .

Furnished efficiency apt. fo~
single or couples only. See

. ltiT 'N' CARL YU &lt;!llr urrr Wright ·

614-446-739\

wool dress coat, fall coat,
winter jackets, size 12. Call

sale, 10X50 . 82700 .00 .
4260.

Rental s

Washers, dryers, refrigera tors. range,. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd.
beside Storie Crest Motel.

quiet area near Silver Bridge

adults only. Call446-4110.

9330:

lis, &amp;7 ,000.00. Call 304·
895-3398 alter 7 PM .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Call 614-949-2479 .

1 small furn . efficiency for 1
gentleman only: Call 446 -

alter SPM, 446-1409 .
Lot for sale in Mercerville, 3
trailer hookups. electric. ru·
ral water. sep1ic tank ,

614-446·0322

446·1819 or446-4425.

304-882 -2405 or 304-6755540.

Business
Buildings

Apartment

Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, ren1
Four bedrooms, two baths.
garage, Y2 mile from Neigs . starting at '8163 for one
bedroom end S198 per
High School $250 .00 per
month for two bedroom,
month pills deposit. Phone

5 room brick home. close to
- - -- - - - - --- 1 Point Pleasant, heat and air,
33
Farms for Sale
city water, 14 acres, pond.
small barn. 1 year lease
96 acres Waterloo. 6 rooms,
bath, J,&lt;. basement, tobacco
base . 24 acres tillable, barn,

44

5, Misc .

Ohio

Baby beds, 8110 .

full or twin, $58 .. firm, $6B .

2

bedroom, livingroom, tilt
ou t , Woodburner 8t ceJ11ral

34

LAYNE'S FURNITURE ·
Sofa. chair, rocker, otloman, ~ _lablea, (extra heavvl.
$8B51!;ofa. chair and love·
aoat. $275. Sofaaandchairo
priced from $286. to $B95:
Tables, $r;;O ond up to $125 .
Hide-a-beda,$390. a~d up
to 8550 .. aola beds 1145,
Recliners. S286 . to e·3 75·.•
Lamps from 828 . to S125.
pc. dinettes from e109 .• to

L.AUN~?

Wsnted to buy used mobile
home. Call 614-446-4782 .

,

Goode

f1.1onday, October 1, 1984

Mondliy, October.1, 1984

.
SIX THOUSAND MILES
LATER, IN MARC~. THE'r' •
RETURN TO CAPt STRANO

uella'

NPTI

[!) SportsConter
(I) Simon &amp; Simon A.J .
and Rick pose as zoo work ers to investigate the death

HZBF

&lt;Il Best of Groucho

0

of an animal tender killed by
a lion . (R) (60 1111n .1
(]) l.atenight America
110 Berney Miller
Ill fwlllgltt Zone
12:00 I]) Bums &amp; Allan
(!) Mazda SportsLook
Cll.ID (l2J News · .

ATU

Z

MZQ

S. J ?

Z

ATU

QZLF

CF .TUZUQV

JIPFEV . QZLF

HZBF

CFTUZUQV.- PJETAF

HZIIHF
IETKMFH

· Ywlmlay'a Cryploquote: PEOPLE WHO LACK A
COARSE STREAK, I HAVE DISCOVERED, .t\LMOST
ALWAYS POSSESS A CRUEL ONE.
LOUIS

KRONENBERGER.

.,

I'

•

'

\

�. I .

-~

Area deaths
Winojean_M. Maue

•

Wbtojean l'tfurlel Maue, f!l, Route
2, Albany, died Saturday at her
residence followbtg an extended
Illness.
She was born at Lodl, Ohio,
Medlria County, a daughter of the
late Bert and Olive Swier Archer.
A retired registered nurse, l'(frs.
' Maue worked with the AmeriCan
Red Cross and served as a first
lieutenant In the U. S.l\rmydurbtg
World War El, 1941-1946. ·
Survivtngareasooanddaughter·
In-law, Joel and Pearl Maue,
Albany; a daughter, Janell Maue,
Albany; a grandson, Jonathan B.
Maue, Albany; a sister, MaryEllen
Shuster, Wellington, Ohio, and two
aunts.
Besides her parents, Mrs. JYiaue
was preceded bt death by her
husband, Harold; her stepmother,
Ora Archer, and a brother, Lowell
Archer.
Services will he held at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home In Albany with the
Rev. Leonard McVay officiatlilg.
Burial will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday
in Germantown CemetEry at Germantown, Ohio. Friends may call at
the funeral homefrom2to4and7to9
p.m . today. Military memorial
services will be held at7thlsevenlng
at the fduneral home by the Albany
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post9893.

,,

Athens; two step-children, Mrs.
James (Mary) Myers and ·Alva
Amos, both of Gallipolis; a sister,
VIolet Reeves, I&lt;Ubuck, Ohio; -a
brother, Wesley Scott, St Cloud,
Fla.; 26grandchlldren; and37great
·grand children.
· 1n addition to her parents, Mrs. ·•
Amos was preceededbtdeathbyher ·
husband, Pearl; an infant daugher,
Delores; a son, Bruce Roger's; two
brothel'!! and one sistEr.
Services will be held Wednesday
afternoon, 1 p.m .. at the ..BigonyJordan FuneraiHome,Aibany, with
the Rev. Lawrence Haskell official·
lng: Burlal will be In Gravel Hlll
Cemetery, Cheshire:
F)iends may call at the funeral .
bomefrom3to5p.m. and7to9pm.
on Tuesday. ·

•

SALE-STARTS TODAY
Good thr.ough October 7, 1984
While quantltlea laat. Quantity rlghta reaerved
We are not reeponalbl• for typographical er·
rora. Sorry no dealerl.

Willanl N. Price

Willard N. Prtce, 66, of 68 Myrtle
Avenue, Newark, died . Saturday
morning at University Hospital,
Columbus.
Mr. Price was born September10,
1918 in Portland, the son of William
and Clara Icenhour Prtce.
He had been living In Licking
County since i943andwasemployed
with Martin Heating Company.
Mr. Price Is survived by his wife,
Freda Fitch Price; two daughters,
Mrs. Joe (Janet) Hanes, Granville, .
and Mrs. George (Martlyn) Gou·
mas, Heath; four grandchildren;
two brothers, Edwin Price, Heath,
Marie Amos
andOscarPrtce,Pon.eroy; aslster,
·Marie Amos, 85, Albany, formerly Lucy Larkins, East Liverpool; and
of Cheshire, died Saturday evening several nieces and nephews.
A son, two sisters and a brother
at the . Russell Nursing , Home,
preceeded Mr. Price In death.
Albany.
Funeral services will be held
Mrs. Amos was born In Cheshire,
the daughter of the late Niday a nd Tuesday morning, 10 a .m., at the
· Henderson, Van Alta and Johnston
Jennie Swisher Scott.
She as a homemaker, a member ' Funeral Home Chapel In Newark.
of Old KygerChurch,andlivedin the Rev. Joseph Harrwill officiate.
Burial will be at3 p.m . Tuesday In
Little Kyger community most of her
Bald Knob Cemetery, Portland.
life.
Friends m ay call at the funeral
Mrs. Amos is s~rvived by two
sons; Galen, Columllus,andLuther, home from 2 to4 p.m. and7to9p.m .
Cheshire; seven daughters, Mrs. on Monday.
Forrest {Jennie) McNeal, Spring·
field, Mrs. Josiah (Lavada ) Barcus,
Cheshire. Mrs. Joseph (Lydia) Meets Tuesday ·
Chestnut. London, Mrs. George
(Tracy) Del.ozier, Columbus, Mrs.
A stated meeting of Middleport
Alfred (Lyvonnia ) Ypung, Pome· Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will be held
roy, Oretha Miller, Bidwell, and Tuesday at 7: ~ p.m. All members
Mrs. David (Maxine) Horner, are asked to attend. Refreshments
will be served following the meeting:

Ohio lotto winners

'·

CLEVELAND (AP ) - Holders of.
three winning tickets will share an
"Ohio Lotto" jackpot of $2.165,973,
Ohio Lottery officials say.
The winners listed all six numbers
chosen In Saturday night's Lotto
drawing- 2, 12, 16, 18, 20 and 2G.
Each winning jackpot ticket will
•· pay $721,991, in annual installments
of $36,009.55, officials s;Ud.
Ohio Lotto begins twice-weekly
drawings this week. Wednesday's
estimated jackpot Is $1 million.

.

CHECKS GRAIN- Stanley Evans, left, checks 1!1'111n miDed from tile
new grislmiiJ operation at the Evans Family lWII SuDcJa.v afternoon. 'lbe
grain, trucked In from Montana and 'lbe Dakotas, Is ground through the
old French bohr- mlllstones at the Evans family 0peradoo In GaOia
County. Appro!&lt;lmalely 1,200 people attended au open house there
SlD!day. Kevin KeDy photo.

·Meigs County happer:tings
Emergency squads
make nirie runs
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reports making
nine runs over the weekend, three on
Saturday and six on Sunday.
On Saturday, ttt 12:26 p.m .,
RuUandwent toMeigsMbteno.2for
Randall Cross to Holzer ·Medical

Veterans Memorial ·
Saturday Admissions -~- Brian
Bowers, Pomeroy; Ruth Lutheran,
Racine; Donald Riffle, Racine;
Della Roseberry, Pomeroy.
Saturday Dlscharges-.. Connie
Manley, Lois Hager, Catherine.
Roach,EdithSpencer.
Sunday Admlssions ... Citarles
Salley, Pomeroy; Woodrow En-

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HOURS: llon.-Tues.-Wed.-Fri .
9:30 to 5:00
Thurs. 9:30 to 12:00
Sit. 9:30 to 2:

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Break-ins probed

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BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
_Stl~AFIS

~~~J~:~u~~~·~;~~ee;~: ge~~~~~~~~;.,.~--LonnleDal-

to Veterans Memorial. Middleport ley, Brian Bowers.
went to 1175 Vine St. at 3:04p.m . for
Ryan Cowan to Veterans Memorial.
Sunday runs included Pomeroy to
thePomeroyHealthCareCenterat
Pomeroy Pollee Monday morn1:44 a.m. for Mae Ellis to Holzer ingwerelnvestlgatlngbreaklngand
Medical Center. At 12:12 p.m., enterlngoffensesattwobuslnesses.
Pomeroy went to Rock Springs Rd.
Police were called to Midwest .
for Mildred Arnold 10 Pleasant Steelat8:03wherearearofficedoor
Valley Hospital. Middleport tra- · had been broken open. A ,&lt;;mall
veled to 161 Pearl St. at 3: 22 p.m. on ampunt of ch3I1ge In the office was
Sunday for Woodrow Engels to taken. At 9:09, pollcewere called to
Veterans Memorial. At 7:26 p .m., the Smith-Nelson Motor Co. An ·
Rutland went to Depot St. for Merle office door Inside the building had
Young to Holzer Medical Center. been broken open and a small

·

•

.

l:C,~o:un:t~o~fc~h:an~ge~tak~en~fro~m~th~:e·re:J~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Pomeroy was called at 9: 'l7 p.m . to
State Rcute GSI West (or Juanita ~
Hoscher to Holzer Medical Center.
At 10: 28 p.m., Mlddleportwasca lled
to Shady Cove R(l. for Woodrow
Engels to Veterans Memorial.

Weather forecast
Clearing
, tonight. Low in the low
40s. Northerly winds less than 10
mph. Sunny .Tuesday. High in the
mid-60s. Chance of rain 20 percent
tonight and near zero percent
Tuesday.
Extended Fo~
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair through the period. Highs
from the mld.fiOs to low 7fi&lt;;. Lows In
the 40s.

FALL
APPLIANCE SALE

i'

Parade eniries sought
Southern's annual homecoming
parade takes place on October 12 a t2
p.m . Ar)Y group or persons wishi ng
to make entries should contact Julie
Houdashell al 949-'l/00 or 992-7451
after3p.m .

.'

,,..

'•
'•
'

-

ELBERFEL[~:·S

ST

CUSTOM-MAl. ,_:
SAVINGS

0

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.

ON QUALITY DECORAMA

DRAPES and BEDSPREADS
•Hundreds of colors and patterns
duy any width, any length, ·

GIVE ·
'

YOUR HOME
A NEW
LOOK

any fullness . ·
•4-inch double headinas and
bottom hems .
r
•Hand set .permanent pleats ·
•Lined .or unlined

.

'2··

HURRY ·
IN ·
AND
SAVE!

Now Wednesdays are for winners too .. . because OhioLolto has·added ·
ajackpot drawing to the middle of the week! So now you have two
chances to win!
You can play Lotto as usual for Saturday's jackpot drawi~g . . . then
play it again for Wednesday! If no .one has matched the six winning
numbers, the jackpot builds for the next drawing. And you don't have
to wait awhole week to see if you've hit that big Lotto jackpot!
The wagers you place from 7:25PM Saturday until 7:25PM Wednesday ·
are for Wednesday's drawing. Wagers placed from 7:25PM Wednesday
until 7:25PM,Saturday are for the Saturday drawing. ·
. .
Try your luck at Ohio- ·
L9tto twice aweek! And
look for the jackpot draw·
ings every Saturday and
Wednesday evening
at 7:29. ·. ,_
You could be an
Ohiolotto Wednesday
winner, too! .

.

**********.*******************t**************************
I

.

..'

.

'

OCI!olco of two hoatlevelo: 1500 Wo!to (5i20 ITU),
750 Watto (2560 ITU). 100% en•'fY off1.clonl,
Dvroblo HeoTubo" hooting e l - l tor rolialoto

. operation and 1ont l,lfo. Ilion! operation. "'-•·
mootot controlled. rortable dnign with conve. •' nient carrying handle, and
bronze ~ontrol
i&gt;onol. Tip·.,..,· oafety-owttcll, woodgrain
cobin~t with cocoa brown on&lt;1 panolo. ·

"""'*"

"No matter how you ·
pick your numbers, now
pick 'em twice aweeki"

Free
Parking
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JILIP laiS,

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DRAPERY SALE

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Up to 5118 BTU's ...
When You Willi It,

When You Nlld ltl
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~~~

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