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                  <text>A «hance at history

The second season.
See SVAC roundup on Page 6

See Jetter on Page 2

.'
'

Cubs, Tige..s growl

Steam epgme show

~ff resullson Page 3

Story on Page 8

•

e . a1 y
Aviation officials.
approve heliport

••

e~nttne
2 Sections. 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, October 3. 1984

.

SIXTEEN

SOFTENS YOUR
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THAN THE OTIJ.IEI~I
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Laundry ·
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'

A proposed site for the location of a
hellport just off the Mulbeny
Heights access road for use by
Llfetllght has been approved by the
Ohio Department of Transportation, DlvlslonofAvlatlon, according
to an announcement at Tuesday's
weekly Meigs Olmmlssloners'
meellng.
Commission . President David
Koblent:z reported representatives
of tile Dlvlsim of Avlatlon met Sept
'Zl with board rrumtbers and Meigs
Coonty Emergency Medical Service Dlrel;tor Robert Byer to discuss
a proposed bellport location which
has been approved by aviation
of11clals.
Funding for construction of the
proposed bellport project, spearheaded by Koblent:z, Is stlll uncertain. No grants are available at this

'

.

time, II was reported. However,
because the need for such fo.cWty
has been determined, the state and
Byer are to begin putting figures
together to decide the cost
Koblentz said the proposed project would measure 60 by 60 teet and
that otr!c!als had recommended a
concrete surface.
He also reported that radio
transmission towers and overhead
power Unes In that v!cln!tywould not
be a problem, according to the
•
officials.
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
and Ted Warner, county highway
department crew supervisor, will
also check the proposed site to make
sure there would be no problems
with water or gas Unes In the area.
Tl!e highway department will begin
bulldozing the site as soon as

a

possible.
The Llfefllght helicopter has
made 17 trips to Meigs County since
the sex:vlce was started on Oct. 'Zl
last year.
Corrunissloner Richard Jones
also pointed out that lf the heliport
does become a reality, it would not
lntelfere With future expansion or
the parking area at the ·multipurpose buDding.
LandDlJ S~Jeidng projects
Meigs Olurity SoU and Water
Ollll¥'rvation District reptt:senta·
lives, Bob First and .Gordon
Gilmore, met wlth ,commlssloners
to discuss the upcoming road bank
and landfillseedlngprojects that are
being co-sponsored by the commls·
stoners, son and water and the
Resource, Conservation and Devel·
(Continued on page 16)
'

PROEST LEAP - .Greenpeace member Robin
Held leapsTuesdaylromthesmokestowkoftheGavin
Power Plant near Gallipolis. Held and John Myers, at

DIAL
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SOAP

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The victim has been

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•

amount to be used in Athens, Meigs
and Peny Counties where Bank One
Me!gsCounty's$150,00lallocation has offices.
Midkiff believes people might
for special low Interest home
have
misinterpreted the low Interest
mortgages has been delenntned,
loan
program. "Many people
but appUcatlons for this money are
thought
the loans were for low·St111 being accepted at Bank. One, ·
Income
Individuals.'
• ·
Pomeroy.
The
loan
progi'am
guarantees an
· Bill Nease;- manager of the
Interest
rate
of
11.875
percent to
Pomeroy branch of Bank One,
explained, "we are stlll iaktng would-be first lime home buyers.
applications In case another,appll· This Is about three percent below the
cation should tall through. This way CUITent commercial rate. The
we would have someone else to natlonalaverageonmortgagesls14
percent, .
.
call."
Midkiff
explained
that
although
Nease said each Individual loan
has a different closing day which there are no Income limitations for
aUows for substitution If a loan Is not applicants, therearecertalnincorne
requirements. Applicants must also
accepted.
have
a signed purchase contractfor
Olnslderatlon for the low Interest
the
home
they want to buy.
mortgages are given to applicants
"A
certalnamountofcashon
h!ylQ.
on a first cOme, fltst setved basis.
Is
also
needed,"
continued
Midkiff.
According toMU!le Midkiff, Who Is
admlnlstertng the Baillt One. pro- 0ut'()!-pocket fees Include _a $1'75gram; Athens County has not used application fee and four percent of
.all of Its.allocation. Midkiff Is not the· loan amount which Is due at
·
sure whether this will have a helpful closing.
Bank One had estimated It would
effect on Meigs County's allbtment.
be
maklng four loans In , Meigs
Bank One applled to the Ohio
Housing Finance Agency for a total

By NANCY YOACIIAM
SeiJtlud stall Writer

A ~t

~nt Plea~&gt;~an l .

CHESHffiE -TWo members
of the Greenpeace environmental group were aqested and
charged w!ih&lt;trespassing Tuesday after climbing the stack at
the Gavin Power Plant to protest
adb rain emmisslons.
Robin Held, 30, Denver , Colo.,
was arrested .after parachuting
from the 1,143 foot sll)ck at 1: 10
p.m .
The second climber, John
Myers, 33, Hatboro, Pa., ""'
CarJ!e ill after breathing sulfur
fumes and was brought down by
elevator.
The two started their climb
around 6: ll a.m., according to
Brian Fitzgerald, Greenpeace
Issues coordinator. Each· man
carried between 40 and 50
jJounds of equipment up a
staircase inside the tower, including a "Stop Acid Rain Now "
banner, parachutes and life
vests for a possible parachute
jwnp Into the O.hio River.
After a 1~ hour climb, the two
attempted to unfurl the banner
on the east side of the stack
Wind condltions prevented them
from securing the bottom part of
the banner, Fitzgerald said. As
an alternative, Reid and Myers
suspended the banner from a
100-foot ladder on the west side of
the stack.
Because tbe banner was not
visible to passersby, Fitzgerald
said the two took the banner
down and after the wind died ·
down , hung it on the east side of
the stack.
According to Fitzgerald, the
climbers were equipped with
particulate gas masks covering
their mouths and noses, He said
In order to ~ to hang the sign,
Myers removed his mask and
Inhaled sulfur dioxide rwnes,
making him ill.
Officials of the plant originally
said they had no inunediate
knowledge of the incident, but at
11 a .m ., Gavin officials reqaested· assistance from the
Gallla County Sh er if f's
Department.
Fitzgerald said the effort was
In tl)e planning !or three months,
studying the layout of the plant
and the best time of day 'for the
jump. "We· were surprised at
how easy It -.ras," he said. "We
were planning on driving a van
up io ~fence and hopping ov~r,
but lrtstead they walked right
through the front gate."
The arreSts presented an

A nursing supervisor at Pleasant

Valley Hospital said Robln.Richard·
. son, 12, Tina McDade, 12, and Buffy
Stranahan, 13, suffered hea&lt;l'lnjurtes and w«etn stable conllltlon. Tile
supervisor said she did. not lmow
wtiere the three lived.
Another dozen of the 53 students
were treated at ihe hospital and
released, the supervisor said.
Henry said the tractor-tralier
driver did not stop after the accident
and inlght not have seen the bus veer
off the road becauseofthe heavy fog.
''I was out there and you couldn't
see 10feet in front of you," he said.
The accident . happened on a
stretch of road known as "Dead
Man's Curve" while the bus was on
the way to Point Pleasant Junior
and Point Pleasant High schools,
Henry said.

.Meigs County's $150,000 low
interest mortgages allocated_

•••· '4"
••

as

daugllter of Mason Olunty Clerk
Josephine "Tommy" Hanes and
Eugene'IJanes,
·
Details of the accident, which
occurred at 5: 47 p.m., are sketchy,
but a sheriff's spokesperson saldear
Hanes was driving south on Route 2
apparently collided with an oncoming van driven by Rebecca Rayburn, 21, GalllpollsFeny.
. Hanes was transported to Plea-.
sant Valley Hospital later transferred to Cabell-Huntlngton Hospi·
tal where she died shortly after9: ll

Bottle of

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Of 12 Different Spices

Values To 'I tl

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Annette L. Hanes, Route 2. Letart,

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Bath
Size
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am

p.m., tl)e spokesperson said.
Also lnjured.in the accident were
Rayburn and two passengers In the
Hanes' car, Mary Fluharty , ~. and
Walter Fluharty, 28, both or Folnt
Pleasant. Rayburn was treated at
PVH and released, whlle both the
Fluhartys are listed In stable
condition there today, a nursling
super:vlsor at the hospital said.
.. · Meanwhile, three children were
hospitaliZed Tuesday tor treatment of minor Injuries they suffered when
the school bus . ihey were riding
swerved off a road to amid hitting a
tractor-traDer, authorities said.
Sheriff's Deputy Steve Henry said
53 students were on the bus , which
rolled over twice after the driver
swerved to avoid the · truck and
landed on its side. Henry sald the
accident occurred at8a.m. Tuesday
on w.v,a . 6'2 in heavy fog.

,·

·"

Ada~s .County
~L~::d~!AP) -~County 1'I10Ved ..
~tile

, lll=wlth t~tnAuaust.
s t a t e . to figures~ rafe of
1
. Olllo~•~of
..,._.....,_, ~.~vallable by
tile
.,....,..u
..........,,....,."...,. vJU:ZO,
·
Adams hlch had the blghest
• w . ihs hadd!.,._, to~oyment rate
for many mon ,u;;pw ""'vuu In Jlllywith '
a ·rate of 16 paa!!lt, ccmpered with Lawrence
Cronty's lU periient. Lawrence County was second
.,atn bl AIJIUII with an 18.6 petcent jobless rate.
' '!be ~ said Hancock County apln had the

l8.8

right, had both planned to parachute from the sta&lt;:k
but Hayes became ill. .Both were arrested and
charged with trespassing. (AP Laserpholo).

Jumpers
arrested

Mason County woman
dies fOllowing crash
POINT PLEASANT- A :IS-yearold Mason Coonty woman has died
or Injuries suffered In a two-vehicle
IJead'()ll coUlslon on Roufe 2 In
a
early Tuesday evening,
according to the Mason County

26 Centa

A Multimecli• Inc. Newspaper

County and to date, the bank has
accepted four loan appUcatlons.
This Is the second year for low
Interest mortgage loans in Ohio. In
1!m, Bank One was allocated$40,lro
fromOHFA, all of which was used.
Central Trus~ Company, Middleport, also participated In last year's
program. However, Central Trust
chose not to participate In the 1984
program.
,
"Only two serious Inquiries came
into Central Trust last -year," saki
Harold Hubbard, president, "and
only one was financed."
Hubbard said the remainder of
funds alloted to Central Trust had to
be sent back to the state. Because
that money was absorbed by other
counties in the state, Central Trust
did not suffer a loss.
"In order to participate In this year's
'p rogram, Bankdilehadtopaythree
percent of the total money allo.tted.
t:tall 'tllemoneywerenotuSed,Bank
One would lose money, unless
another. county woUld pay us ,for
what we have In the. allotment,"
Midkiff said. .
,.

P ARAC~ PROTEST -R!&gt;bln Hel~ Doats beside the l,l()O:'foot
smokestack at the Gavin Power Plant on the Ohio River near Gallipolis
Tuesday after he and another Greenpeace protester climbed the tower
and displayed a banner agai!L'lt acid rain. &lt;AP Laserpholo ), .

interes ting legal question, ac·
cording to Fitzgerald . ''The area
was not posted a s 'no trespass·
lng' , a nd they were not asked to
lea ve, which must be done."
Fitzgerald said the action was
taken to protest the policies of
American Electric Power Co.
and ·the Gavin plant in emitting
sulfur dioxide.
"We targeted Gavin because
in 1900, it was nwnber one on the
Environme nt a l Protec t ion
Agency list of p lants, dlscharg·
ing 367 million.t ons of sulfur per
·year into the · atmosphere," he

said. "AEP has been in transient
on the Issue. At least the
TeM essee Va lley Authority has
. agreed to reduce their emissions
by one million tons."
"The only reason the stack Is
so tall is to prevent sulfur from
fa lling in the Ohio \'alley," he
_continued. " It wa~ their idea of
ac id ra in control in the 50s.''
" We are not advocating the
plant closing," Fi tzge rald
added. "There is available
technology to clean up the s tacks
1vitljout costing jobs."

'leads Ohio's unemployment rolls again
lowest · jobless rate ll:l AugUst ...: 5.6 percent.
Uriemployrnentstatewldewas9.2pe!'Centduringthe
month, according to the tlgures.
Here Is how the figures broke down on a
county-by-county basis:
Adams, 18.8 Pl!f.:~!; Allen, 8.8; Ashland, 9.5;
Ashtabula, 12.8; AUleiiS, 9.4; Auglal2ie, 9.4; Belmont,
13.6; . Brown, 13.8; Butter, 9.6; Carroll, 9.6;
.Champaign, 7.0; Clark, 8.5; Clenmnt, 11.0; Clinton,
9.3; Colwnblana,12.2; Coslklcton, 8.8; Crawford,12.0;
Cuyahoga, 8,9; Darke, 8.4;

ner!ariee, 9.1; Delaware, 6.91 E rie, 7.4; Fairfield,
6.8; Fayette, 12.9; Franklin, 7.1; Fulton, 7.4; GallJl!,
9.9; Gfiauga, 7.0; Greene, 6.2; Guernsey, p..4:
Hamllton, 8.1; Hancock, 5.6; Hardin, 9.6; Hanison ,
12 9 H
7 6 Hlghi d 12 0 H kin 13 5
· ;
enry, · ;
an • · ; oc g,
·;
Holmes, 7.2; Huron, 11.7; Jackson, 10.6;
, Jefferson, 9.6; Knox, 11.7; Lake, 9.9; Lawrenee,
, · 18.6; Licking, 8.8; Logan, 7.7; Lorain, 11.0; Lucas, 9.9;
Madison, 8.3; Mahonlng, 11.2; Marton, 14.9; Medina,
9.1; Meigs, 9.8; Mercer, 11.8; Miami , 9.0; M~nroe,

. l

17.8; MontgOmery, 7.8;
Musklngum, 9.6;
.
·

Morga'h, 10- .5-: ~M-orrow
-:-.
\

.

114' ·
· '
·

Noble', 13.6; Ottawa, 8.4; Paulding, 6.?; Pei'!'Y,12.7~
P!ckaway, 9.3; Pike , 11.7; Portage, 10.0; Preble, 5.9;
Putnam , 9.6; R!chland,10.7; Ross, 9.0; Sandusky,8.7;
Scioto, 14.2; Seneca, 10.8;' Shelby, 8.2; Stark, 9.9;
Summit, 9.4; TrumbuU, 13.5; Tuscarawas, 9.7; Union,
9.3; Van Wert, 6.5; . Vinton, 14.2; Wan-en, 8.1;
Washington, 11.8; .Wayne, 7.8; Williams, 9.4; Wood,
7,6, and Wyandot, 6.5.

.

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...

"

o

T &gt;.

... •

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• "

Wednesday, October 3, Hi84

Cubs, Tigers capture -p layoff ·victories

Cotnmentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Coprt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
~EVOTED TO THE INTER~TS OF THE MEIGS-MASON !\REI\
.

A~

~m~
~v

.

,......,_,._....,..,I"T"'EOd'"""

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asalatant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
· A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
llori and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclallon.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be let~s ttuv'l 300 wonb
lone. All letters are subject to edltln1 and must be s lrned with name, IUidre!is and
telephone number. No unslgaed letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
cood taste, addressln, issues, not persoaalltles.

More lottery pro(its.
would go to schools
Ohio's schools, which recently got from .the state lottery a $45.9 million
Windfall plus a $40 million "ratny day" fund for future school oontingencies,
may get a Similar boost agatn next year.
.
It depends on thecontinuingpopularityofthe lottery and the passage of a
bill by the Legislature to give to the schools all the money which exceeds
the $170 rnllilon in profits anticipated in the state budget.
The Legislature already has earmarked lottery profits for the schools,
but there is no statutory mechanism allowing them to receive the profits
which exceed the estimates in the two-year budget.
Last week, two lawmakers- Sen. Steven Maurer. O.Botldns, and Rep.
Palil Mechling, !Jfhornvllie - introduced In their respective chambers
Identical bills which would assure the schools of au the lottery profits.
Their legislation is similar to this year's bill which passed along t,he .. .
excess profits but restricted their use to programs seeldng educational
excellence through the purchase of computers, textbooks, . other
Instructional aids and, In some cases, for capital construction and
emergency repairs.
Mechj.log.sald the new legislation has been endorsed by Democratic Gov.
Rlcllard Celeste along with top leaders of both the House and Senate.
"There Is no guarantee that lottery revenues will exceed estimates in
1985, but If they do, my bill will assure that lottery profits will go where they
should: to Ohio schools and school chtldren," Mechling said.
· 1be Legislature created the so-called "rainy day" fund to Insure fiscal.
stahllity for the schools in the event of shortfalls In other school funding
silurces, Including those in lcical propertY tax collections.
. Lawmakers could consider the Maurer-Mechling bills when·they return
tor an expected brief session after the Nov. 6electlon, but more likely It will
be on the ir 1\R'i agenda. 1be state's 1985 fiscal year doesn't end untll next
June 30.

--'

Letters to editor
A moment of history

Dalai Lama's lit town_·____w_ill_w_m_F_.B_uc_k_Ley_J_r.
the palm!ot .o.11e. ll!lnd· .1bese they monks red.uced to a few hundred,
found, and the two-year-old .was · perhaps a thouSand.
"Since 1959.'' Avedon haswrl~,
thereupon proclaflne4 the 14th
Dalal Lama , supreme spiritual and "there have been at least 50 major
uprisings (In Tibet). There are
temporal leader of Tibet.
What then happened Is bi1111antly more than. 100,0ll· political prison·
recalled by John AVj!don, author of ers. Amdo, Tibet's nOrtheastern
"In Exile , From the · Land of province, Is home to the largKt
Snows." After the Dalal Lama fled gtllag in China -or anywhere In the
In 1959, the ~ communists world. It houses some 10 miUIOii
persevered In ,their genocidal fury prfsoners - 1J1PSt of them
against tbe gentle Buddhists of Chinese."
Now It Is very lmportallt to
Tibet. 1bere followed a holocaust
remember
that the only thing ()81! Ia
that ranks with Hitler's and Pol
not
.permitted
thetle days to say,
Pot's: 1.2 million Tibetans kUied. or
about
such
regimes,
Is that they are
one-seventh of the total population.
evU,
or'
the flora a1ld
the
focus
of
Slx hundred thousand Tibetan
fauna of an evU empire. And It is', of
course, official U.S. policy that we .
are to understres5, Indeed pmeraI
bly to forget, the activities of 'Uie .
Chinese communlsta durlllg the
past 35 years.
. ·
·
This Is not easy for the Dalal
Lama to do. Interv!PNed IM!Yft'81
years ago, he aalcl . tlllt Ule
communists clalmfd tllat they lllld
· come to Tibet 10 •tljbenlt'' the
people. "In fact, they llave broulbl.
the greatest suff1!11111 to our lllb
In Its 2,100 yean of hlslory."
N&lt;iw this gentle man face a
problem, not one be can wltJI
·nuency formulate, because hll
•
English Is insEcllr@. But It boUI
down to this: 1be Chinese conunu' ·
nists have Invited him to revisit
Tibet. But negotla:tlons, which have
been going on for over six years and
are conducted under great secri!CY.
obviously have to do with the
question: How much is the Dalal
Lama willing to surrender In order
to bring a measure of rellef to hb
people?
On the one hand, Peking Is not
about to give Tibet anything like
Independence. On ·the other lland,
there Is vague talk of Hong
Kong-type S!jl!;soverelgnty. Right
now. what 1the Dalal Lama • Is
experimenting with Is a vague
search for common Idealisms, such
a search as might give the Chlcoms
a Utile face.
"My opponent is Just a rubber stamp for the Celeste adrnlnl8tratlon.. .uh, Iii there uythlng
else I sbould S1Q' -Gov. IUtodes?"
_ .., _

While Gromyko, spealdng to the
United States, was cataloging the
Iniquities of the West during .the
past 40years, the Dalal Lama made
an appearance at Middlebury
College, where a week-Icing symposium Is exploring "The Chrlst and
the Bodhisattva," an Inquiry Into
what Buddhism can learn from
Christianity and vice versa.
A Uttle personal background. In
1937, a delegation of Buddhist
monks, as though guided by a st;lr
of Bethlehem, arrived at a jleasant's.t;0ttage In Tibet. There, alone
with a two-year-old boy, they
placed a collection of articles before

him which had belonged tQ the 13th
Dalal Lama: a black rosary, a
yeUow rosary, a walking stick and a
small Ivory hand drum. Alongside
''lese, the monks placed exact
duplicates. They . signaled to the ,
baby to choose one of each of the
articles. and without hesltatl!ln he
put his han!! on the genuine relics.
He was then examined for the
physical stigmata of the Buddha of
Compassion, whose reincarnation
was being sought. They looked for:
large ears, long eyes, eyebrows
curllng up at their ends, streaks Uke
those of a tiger skin on the legs and a .
print resembling a couch shell .on

- · ----·.

.. .

·E xorbitant profit.s_-...,--______
...
Ja~ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASffiNGTON _:The public Is
rightfully outraged by · revelations
that the Pentagon routinely pays •
exorbitant prices for spare parts,
hand tools and coffee-makers.
Despite the shocking extravagance laid bare by such stortes,
Defense Secretary Caspar Weln·
berger and his subordinate spend·
thrifts Insist that these hoiTOr
stories are the exceptions, not the
rule. The system, they say, Is
basically sound.
But Is I)?
As part of our continuing series
on waste in government. m y
associate Donald Goldberg has
studied an Internal analysis of
certain Navy contracts by invest!-_
gators for the House Appropria·
-tions Committee. The analysts was
not Intended to be made public, but

I think Its conclusions deserve to be
. At a time of sky-high IntereSt cost-of-money giveaway In the
profit colunin; "they I!ITived at the ,
shouted !rom the roOftops.
rates, Loophole No. 414 was in·
.
shipbuilders'
"real" profits &lt;in the
In a nutshell, the committee
tended to encourage contractors to
contracts.
Here
they are:
investigators found that two major
bulld modern defense plants. The
For
one
Los
Angeles-class
shipbuilders are maldng profits of
government would ·help pay the
nuclear
sub
with
a
target
price of
more than 20 percent -In one case, - finance charges.
$240
milllon,
Eleclrlc
Boat
nearly
nearly . 30 percent - ,on nuclear
Critics ·point out that 414, while
will make a profit of more than $(l
submarines and aircraft carriers • flawed from the start, has become
million, or 21.7 percent.
orde~ed by the Navy. The true
~Imp!~ a gift to the contractors now
- For · a similar sub with "an
extent of their profits Is covered up
that Interest rates have oome down
by a bookkeeping procedure.
and the government makes "pro· estimated cost of $292 million,
Eleclrlc Boat will make a profit of
Here's the story:
gress payments" as often as twice a
Back in the mld-1970s, the
month. Yet this "cost of tnoney" is $43 million, or 17.3 percent.
- A Los Angeles-class sub built
now-d efunct Cost Accounting
not classified as profit, as even
by Newport News has a targetprtce
Standards Board created a loophole
Na~ contract officers think It
of $236 million, on which the
known as Cost Accounting Stand-"
should be.
company
stands to make a protlt of.
ard No. 414. Simply stated, It allows
The House committee investigators looked at just five contracts $48 mUllan. or 25.6 percent. '
defense contractors to pass on to the
- Trident·735 submarine being
government any finance costs
awarded to General Dynamics'
lncurred in the construction of new
Electric Boat Division In Groton, built by Electric Boat will Cllit an
facilities needed for a particular
Conn.. and Tenneco's Newport estimated $532.6 mUUon. The profit
contract.
News , Va., shipyard. By putting the will be nearly $96 million, or 22
percent.

On NovemberS, every registered consider women to be Inferior. In
voter In the United States will have fact there was one woman who
the opportunity to touch a moment recently wrote a letter to the editor
of magic. When we step ·Into the suggesting that we should not vote
votil)g booth on this historic day, we for Mondale/ Ferraro because Manwill · each be participating In a dale might die and we would have
moment in history that can never Ferraro as president and we all
repeat itself. We will be partlclpat· know that women can't take
lng In an event that marks a turning pressure and then run away wl)en
point for America and the future of trouble strikes. However, If this is
valid how come there are so many
all citizens In our countiy.
For the first time, a woman is on single households where mothers
. the ballot for the office of vice- are caring for children . when
president of the United States fathers have died or disappeared
representing a major political after divorce•
party. Sure there will be many
How many women In Meigs
women in the future who will run County have kept together their
and who will win and who will lose. homes over this past recession
Butneveragalnwilltherebeafirst. when work was scarce and help
And ,never again will we have the even scarcer under Reaganomics?
opportunity to be a part In ' How m any women are taking care
participating in creating hlstbry in of hus band , children, household ,
BIRMINGHAM, Ala . (NEA)
job, and not running away from the
such ~ strong way.
Reubln Askew and Ohio Sen. John party's presidential nominee has
To paraphrase an old saying, it pressure?
. Democratic presidential nominee
decllned markedly In recent years .
H. Glenn Jr.
matters not who wins the race but
While there may still be a few
Indeed, a majortty of those states
Walter F . Mondale's serious polltl·
After they were defeated by
cal problems elsewhere in the
who ran the race and how the race backward Individuals who will seek
has
given Its votes to the Demo·
Manda te, he sought to assuage the
nation pale In comparison with the
was run.
to subjugate more than 50 'p ercent
cratic
nominee In only two of the
South by including on his Ust of
Ferraro is just one of many of the world's population, I believe
potential disaster he faces on
five
presidential
elections durtng
[Xltenttal running mates a number
women running for office this year. that anyone who has been a chtld of
electln day here in the South.
of prominenrr-&gt;lltlclans from the the past two decades. On both of
In o~t county, many qualified and a woman in today's society will
Even If Mondale Is victorious in region. ·
those occasions, the Democratic
talented women are stepping for· never believe the lies and stereo- major battleground states In other
Included In that category were dndldllte was a Southerner ward · to share their special skills types that women are born weak
regionS, he must also capture about
Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, Texas Texan Lyndon B. Johnson In 1964
30 tc;&gt; 40 Electoral College votes In · Gov. Mark White and Arkansas
and expertise with the citizens of and helpess. The intelligence and
and Georgian Jimmy Carter in
this iiommunlty. Each ,;ctory by a managem ent s kills required to
the South If he Is to score an upset Sen. Dale Bumpers. But they were
1976.
woman candidate insures the ex- survive with an Income below the
victory against President Reagan.
rej eCted in favor of New York Rep.
pam\lng of opportunities for all poverty line demonstrates that
But Reagan's appeals to conser- Geraldine A. FeiTaro.
vatism and patriotism have given
women.
·
today's women are tough and able
At the Demilcratlc National
Thl$ elections means that our to contribute to the future of this
him a commanding lead every·
COnvention, Mondale made a finai
where In a region where Mondale Is
mothers, sisters, daughters and country.
but clumsy effort to placate the
Viewed by many voters as too South by tentatively selecting Gear·
granddaughters are no longer
In today's world It is no longer
second class citizens but fair and necessary· to label one's self . to
liberal.
gla Democratic Party Chairman
equal before the electorate. This I!( femini st or "women'~ iibber" to
."Almost without exception, jour·. Bert. Lance to be chairman of the
the year when individuals will be believe In . a world of equal
nallsts and political Insiders from
Democratic National Committeeable to cast a vote which says more oppoi:tunlry. As women beCome
both parties throughout the South an unsuccessful ploy that humll·
than · I approve o: disapprove of a more visible In the political posl(say) that Rea2an has a strong lead fated both Mandate and the South.
candl~ate. But to cast a vote which
lions In our county, state a"rtd. in their states," notes the Southern
Notwithstanding that recent his·
says llr\lly believe that all pmple country, the opportunities for all ' Politic;ll Report, a highly regarded tory of missed . oppo~tunitles for
are equal regardless of sex, .age, women Improve. When a famUy' s ' newsletter.
.
lmproYect.,relations, Mond3Je. has
race · or religion. This is the year survival depends u[Xlri the salaries
Darden Research, an Atlanta· an outside chance of defeating
when we can put on the line our of both members of the parent ieam based survey research organiza- Reagan In the most populous state
persOnal morals and ethical stand· to pay the bUls, equality.in pay and
tion that specializes In Southern - In the South - Texas, witlt 29
polllng, found throughout this year electoral votes; But It wtll happen
ards by voting.
In opportunity Is Important. When a
ThiS does not mean · that an family must depend upon the
that the region's voters prefer only If the Democrats mohtllze vast
IJ!dlvldual should vote for a woman . Income of one person, a mother, to
Reagan over Mon!iale by an nwnbers of · black voters In the .
overwhelming margin of almost Houston area and elsewhere,' and
just becau~ shels a woman. But It · surVIve then equity In pay al)d in
also means that a person should not opportunity become CfliCial.
two-t&lt;HJne.
. Hispanic voters in the ruo Grande
vote for a man just becaUse he is a
On November 6, we will each
.
Southern Democrats, many of VJ!lley.
that..-We should have an opportunity.: tO--&gt;TQte on
them lileologlcaliy mOderate to
The South's second mo&lt;st-JiOOil\1-'~­
coll$ervatlve, .have been repeatedly lous state ~ Florida, .with 21
consider who will 'provide the 'best many tlrsts In this county, state and
serviCe to our county, our state, and federal election and to become a
rebuffed·this year in their quest·for electoral votes -:- has consistently
repfe$elltatlon at the highest levelS voted for Republican presidential
our. country . . It means that we part of creating history by vot)ng.
of the national party's structure: · candidates In recent · decadl!ll. It
shOuld conslder"l)le person ·and his Experience a very spi!clal and
·Eitmtnated early In the prlmar- . almost certainly wm support Reaor her abilities and qu~lltlcations magical moment by helping to
regardless of age, sex or ·any other create the future by participating In · les . were three contenders for the gan this year.
Democratic presidential nomina·
label· that one chOOSeS to ' use. It this turning point In America.
· The states that lie in ,a ct"eSCE\"t
lion - two of them from the South . stretching from Louisiana · and
means that we should coilslder the Participate In the history you will
- who framed their campaigns to Arkansas through Virginia were an
person and not the party. It means be telling your grandchildren about
appeal to center-to-right voters: Integral cOmponent of the Demo!hat We should think and then vote, · and In creating the future In which
1 realize that there are still some they will live. - Myriam Ruthchlld. · South Caronna Sen. Ernest F . cratic political base formed during
Individuals In our country who
Hollings, former F1orlda Gov. the 1930s. But th~ ~UP.port for the

Shaky South quits Fritz__---"--_R_ob_er_tw;_a_lte_rs
Mondale's best hope of attaining
even limited access In the South lies
in campaign that appeals to the
region's populist strain by crltlclz.lng wealthy, power1ul Individuals
and Institutions.
Even that approach may no1 be
adequate," however, to keep the
once-Democratic "Solid South"
from lining up solldty behllld
Reagan this year.

a

...

I

CHICAGO (AP). ~ Bob Demler
set the tone and Gary Matthews set
the pace In a record-shattering
display of power, but It wa5 Keith
Moreland's defensive gemthatputa
lock t11 the outcome.
"
The Chicago Cubs smashed five
. Mine runs, two by Matthews who
drtve In four runs, on thelr.way to a
l:WrompTuesdayoverSanDieiotn
the opening game of their best-of·

He also hOmered In the first inning to

scorea

a+so

two

•

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.

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ROUND TRIPPER- Detroit's Alan Trammell.gets congratulated · ~
by teammate Kirk Gibson (left) after hi• fifth Inning home run during
Tuesday night's ~eric1111 playoff game with Kansas City. Trammell's
three RBI's helped lead the Tigers to an S.l victory. (AP Laserphoto).

Questions surrQJind
purchase of Giants

SAN FRANCISCO (AP l - Ed· and primary objective is to promote
ward DeBartolo Jr., who has tasted and aovance the San Francisco
sports success asowneroffqgtt?all's 49ers,."·
San Francisco 49ers, said Tuesctay
But he added that he expects to be
that he will ask a lot of q,uestions
involved ·· in the next few weeks" In before considering the possibllty of. diSoussions concerning the Giants.
buying the baseball G_ianis.
Lurie announced on Monday that he
"1be door is not lodked, but at the wants to sell , but only to a buyerwho
present time it must remain will keep the team in San Franctsco.
c losed,'' he sald, meaning he should
DeBartolo said, "Bob LW"ie Is a.
e
, T
not yet be considered .a logical tine man and his organization is an
candidate to buy the National important part of the great San
League team which Giants owner Francisco sports scene. I feel that It
is very important that this baseball
Bob LW"ie says he wants to sell. ,
Chicago were Dick Cavanaugh, a
"!\here was only one close play In
DeBartolo has owned the 49ers franchise remain in the Bay Area."
51-year-old retired pilot, who the AL contest, a sixth inning s ince 1977. They won the National
But he added , "Ihave no ideawhat
worked behind the plate; Dave grounder by ·• Frank White to Football League championship it! Bob Lurie's situation is, what his
Sllckeruneyer. a steak and seafood shortstop Alan Trammell, whose the 1981 season, came within one losses have been, what he"s asking
salesman, and Joe Pompom and )hroW seemed to pull first baseman game of reaching the Super Bowl for the club. There are so many
Maher, both physical education Darrell Evans off the bag. White
last season. and are off to a 5.0 start questions that have to be
teachers. All four hil:ve worked was call"ll out by Bible.
' this season.
answered.''
together inthe "BtgTen Conference
Asked about that. play, Rpyals
"Manj;Jp,qulrl,es have been made
DeBartolo also noted that an NFL·
and had also worked during the Manager Dick Howser said ··Jose by the nil'dla and other ooncerned rule prohibits team owners from
seven-week major league umpires Martinez (KC's flrst ·base coach) organizations as to m y interest in owning fran chises in other major
thought he stayed on the bag and
strike In 1979.
purchasing the Giants." DeBartolo league sports , saying that, "I don't
said from his business office in Ohio. know what my scenario would be
The usual six-man contingent was that he was out.': ....,.
reduced to four in the NL playoff
I::leeian !lreW praise from Howser "At the present time. my first love with the NFL. "
with the ellmlnatton of the tout-line ,- and 'lleers wtnner'J ack Morris.
umpires. The league 's· explanatio~ · "I thought Deegan did a good job
was that the replacements "are - he was a good umpire tor 10
used to working that way (In years," Howser said.
to break even .
· "I thought he did an outstanding
CINCINNA11 (AP) - TheCincln·
tour-man crews).' '
1be AL game had six umpires. job," added Morris. "Every umpire nat! Reds lost about $4.5million this · r - - - - - - - - - - - Bill Deegan, who umpired for 10 is human and wtll mistakes and I season, the third consecutive year
the team struggled on the field .
years In the majors, was behind the think he made some.''
Club officials said Tuesday it's the
Deegan said he has been umpiring
plate, with John Bible at first base.,.
DOWNING~C HILDS
Randy Christal at second, Larry
Uttle league and softball the last few fourth straight year the haUclub has
' AND
suffered a financial loss. The first
Zirbel at third, Harold Jordan in left years.
•
field and Mike O'Dell in l'igh.t,
·
"l volunteered for it last night year of losses was 1981, when the
·•.-..;,!
when I saw It (the umpires strike) In players' strike cut the season short .
.,
the paper,'" said Deegan, who also
1be Reds have finished last twice
worked a 1970 game when the and fifth in the National LeagUe
113 SECOND AVE.
National League playoffs were West over the past three years.
POMEROY
1be Reds drew 1.2 million fans to
struck. " I don't believe in unions."
'
.
Phillips claimed his union Riverfront Stadium this season, an
CALL 992-3-381
members
would "hold out through increaseof85.0ll fans over last year.
Turner did not give any specific
However, the total is fanhort ofthe
the World Series if we have to."
reason for firing Torre, saying only
1.7 million the ballclub said it needs
that "I, and thefrontofficethoughtlt
wastlmetomakeachange. ''
. - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - . , - - - " - - - - - - - - - - - Asked why he had soured on
Torre, Turner responded:
"I wouldn't say soured Is the right
word. I like Joe tremendously. He's
a terrific guy and a great manager.
We discussed another job in the
organization but Joe expressed a
desire to manage on the field next
year," he sald.

Substitute umps gtven break In blowouts
By ibe Associated Press
The Chicago Cubs and Detroit
, Tigers Were rough on their opponents and easy on the suhstitute
umpires In the opening games of the
basebBil playotfs.
The Cuhs belted the San Diego
Padres J3.0 and the Tigers routed
the Kansas City RoyalsS.l Tuesday.
Both winners jumped to early leads
and made things simple for the
umpires who were working In place
of the strlklng regular arbiters.
The American League game
otfered virtually no close calls and
the replaCement . umpires were
generally praised for their work.
The National League contest did
have one embarrassing moment,
though.
In the bottom of the third inning,
Ryne Sandberg raced from first to
third on a single by Leon Durham
and sUd In just as the tJu;ow tram the
outf1eld an1ved at the base. Joe
Maher, the tlllrd base umpire, was

well up the left field lliie and out of
position, prompting former Balli·
more Ortoles' Manager Earl
Weaver - a television commentator - to say, "'ntey got their hands
caught In the cookie jar already."
Otherwise, everything went
Sl"I)oothlyon the fields. Off the fields,
however, therewerenonegotlations
and Uttle hope that thedisputewould
soon be resolved.
IUchie Phillips, head of the
umpires' union, and American
League President Bobby Brown (a
management negotiator) were at
Thesday night's AI..CS opener in
Kansas City and were. to meet
following the game.
."The big isSue Is money," Brown
said. "Right now, there lsn'ta bright
ray of hope."
·
Earlier in the day, Phillips said
from his offJce In Phtladelphla:
' 'There'snothlnggoingonrlghtnow.
There have been no negotiations."
The umpires for the NL game In

Reds lose $4.5 million

MUllEN INSURANCE

Haas named Braves'
leader
.

ATLANTA (AP) -Eddie Haas,
who languished as a minor league
11181ll1!1er, instructor and coach for
a&gt; years, will get his chance at the
big ttnne In· 1985 as manager of the
Atlanta Brav~ .
Club owner Ted Turner made the
announcement Thesday at a news
conference at Atlanta-Fulton
County Stadium. Haas, 49, replaced
Joe Torre, who was fired Monday.
Haas was signed to a one-year
contract. Terms were ncit
announced.
Haas, who served as theorganiza·

Sports
· FOOI'BAIL
OAKLAND, Calli. (AP) _:.Dis·
agreement over control of a United
StatesFootbaiiLeagueteamresult·
lng from a proposed ~
between the Oakland Invaders arid
the Oklahoma Outlaws has resulted

inacolla~ofrnergertalks,owners

·of both teams said.
OUtlaws General Manager Bill
Tatham Jr,, who along with his
father owns a franchise without a
home, said he Will seek another
team with which to merge.
Tathain said the Outlaws would
neither fold nor return to Tulsa,
Okla., where the Outlaws played
their first season earner this year.

TENNti
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) Hans Schwaler or West Germany.
upset CZechoSlovakia's Tomas
Smld, the No.4seed, 4-6,6-1, 641n the
first round of the $225,!00 Count of
Godo tenniS tournament. ·
Jbnmy Atlas of the United Slates,
seeded second, defeated Andreas
Maurer of Wl!llt GertnllllY. 6-3, 7-5,
and Henrlk Sundstrml of Sweden,
the No. 3seed, beatJtmmyBrown!t
the United States,
6-2, 6-4.

3-ti:

•

five National League Championship
Series.
·
'
Demler homered on · losing
pitcher Eric Show's second pitch
whlcn Matthews said "set the
precedent for our club. Bobby hit a •
fastball, we're a fastball·hlttingclub
and Show Is a fastball pitcher. The
quick run takes the pressure off and
·everyone tends to relax."
Matthews didn't relax too much.

. The fact the Tigers whipped them
hand RlckSutcllffea2.01ead,and his 8-1 wa.Snotasgallingtothe Royals as
three-run homer tr:lggerec:j a slx·run ' how It happened. The Tigers, the
!11th to put the Issue beyond doubt.
Eastern Division champ$ who won
Matthews put a leg up on the 101 games ln . the regulllr season;
sertes' Most Valuable Plajrer award jwnped on their rosts with a
which he won last year witlt.J:he , ~combination of pitching, power,
Philadelphia Phlllies. But he told his and, insist the Royals, plainoldluck.
teammates "Don't be afraid to
·Tiger starter Jack Manis left the
dethrone me."
game aftertheseventhtnnlngwitha
It might not be easy,- but others bUster qn his pitching hand. Even
gave It a IIy, Sutcliffe allowed only though he dlo;l not have his ~t stuff,
two hits, struckoutetghtlntheseven Morris allowed only two third·
Innings hepttchlid an!J.h~cracked a Inning singles and retired 10 in a row
homer and a single.
before JorgeOrta Uipled leading off
Demler also had a double and two· the seventh,
· walks and
three times and . By then, Alan Tranunell's single,
.Ron cey also homered giving the Uiple and home run had led the
Cuhs an LCS record of five round Tigers toa5-0ieadoffKansasCity's
trippers.
Bud Black and the Issue was all but
Other series records included settled.
Matthews homering In four straight
games dating back to last season;
La!:ry Herndon and Lance Par·
theCuhs' 16hlts; the biggest shutout rish
bit solo home runs for the
score and the biggest margm of Tigers, whohavewoneightstraight
victory.
games in Royals Stadium da ling
With one out In \he fourth, Steve back to their final meeting In 1!fl3.
Garvey beat out a buntsingle.~tg
Tonight the Royals, ~ware that no
Nettles fllfd out, but Terry Kennedy team ever recovered from an 0.2
and l}evln McReynolds both walked deficit to win a league series, stake
to ·flll the bases. Caimelo Martinez their Immediate future on the
.rtpped a drive to right and Moreland W.year-old right arm of Bret
speared the ball withadlvtngcatch. Saberbagen. He was 3-1 against the
San. Diego Manager Dick Wllll· TigerS In the regular season and will
ams kept a low tone, but said, "That oppose Dllll Petry as the Tigers seek
was one loss. Wedldn'tplaytoowell. to take a commanding two-game
We were blown out, the long ball got lead back to Detroit.
us. I thought it would be . a
Black pointed to the first Inning,
low-scoring game. It was, for us."
when Lou Whitaker singled and
Game No. 2 was scheduled today Trammell Uipled and both wound
with Steve Trout , 13-7, facing Mark up scoring .
1burmond, 14-8, In a battle of
"I've got to keep those guys off
left·handers.
base to keep their RBI guys from
DOUBLE-EDGE SWORD - ChiCBIO Cubs' pitcher Rick Sutcllffe
Sparky's Tigers win
driving them in ," he said. "I didn't
Ia congratulated by third base coach Don Zimmer as Sutcllffe rounds
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
do that. Imadesomemlstakes.Igot
third !ID bla homer In the third Inning of Tuesday'~ National League
Amateur umpires are no problem the ball out over the ,plf!t~ and they
Champiolllhlp opener against the San Diego Padres in Chicago. ·
when the Detroit Tigers make. the took advantage, I t'elt't.\jte. J· just
bft8"in lleVen Innings In the Cubs' J3.0 victory
SotcH«e aDowed only
Kansas .. City Royals look l{ke threw bad pitch~s. iand dhey took
(AP Laserphoto).
amateur players.
advantage."
·

c,::·,- briefseee

Berry's World

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

tlon's manager at IUchmond of the
International League for nearly four
seasons before belr)g called up in
July as a coach with the Braves,
began his minor league managing
career with the Braves In 1965 at
West Palm Beach of the Florida
State League.
.
Haas said he's "seen a lot of little
towns," but he said he's had fun all
along the way from "Yaklma
(Wash.) to Kingsport (Tenn.)."
"This Is an honor to be a major
league manager," Haas told reporters. "But It's a special honor to
manage one of the top organizations
In baseball.''
Torre, 44, won the National
League West title In 1982 during his
first season with Atlanta and wound
up as the most successful manager
In Braves' history since the club
moved to Atlabta from Milwaukee
In 1966. He had been signed to a
two-year extension at a reported
$425,!1XlonJylastJuly.
Turner said Haas was the
unanlniouscholceofhlmselfandthe
Braves'frontoftlce.

GET SET FOR·WINTER!
KING·

Playoff weather
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
Mosllyclearsklesandllghtwesterly
winds were forecast Wednesday
night in the ~sas City area when
the Detroit Tigers meet the Kansas
City Royals· In Game 2 of the
American League Championship
Series.
The low Wednesday night should
beintheupper50s,accordlngtothe
National Weather ServlceAhs
from 75 to 8J ~der mostly sunny
sklesw~expecteddurlngheday.

•

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Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. Octobar3. 1984

Wedneat.lly, October 3, 1984

•

·ur r1ces Are allin Durin

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._.

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
/

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The fall Harvest

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

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Coffee

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110.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
EXCLUDING CIGARETTES, TOBACCO,
BEER &amp; WINE •COUPON GOOD THRU
SATURDAY, OCT. 6, 1984

7 g•
BEEF
119
FRANKIES 12 oz. PKG.
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FRESH LEAN BUTT

SUPERIOR

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299 _BOSTON PORK' 129 YOUNGe ~~.rfv~~
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•
Daily Sentinel

Kafl-kaff!

Pr...,...ueac., ef Pull.
Y-. frleads, here we b.ave some
uceptioml college football on tap clauic coofrantatiOil!ll within several

lop COD!ereDOeS. Um-kumph'
, Golng into this week's key Big
Elllllt game, the home lorceo of
Nebraska's Tom Osboroe will be the
favorites against Oklahoma State.
But - kaff· kaff - don1 tbink lor
0110 minute tbey will take the Oklahoma state Cowboys lightly. Lut year
tba 'Husken had to' come from behind
In the closlng minu~es to beat the
Cowhoyo. 14-10.
Nebraska bas been averaaing better than to points per came this year.
WI~ n~nning back Jeff Smith maintaining a better than 100-yarda per
p~ averag~. Nebraska figures ,to
pound the dogged Cowboys.
In a brulsinJ battle, we look lor

Nebruka to prevail. 28-U. Har-

rumpb!

Alao in the Big Eighl. the Hoople
System· sees MJJsouri dumping Colorado, 33-ll; and Kansas toppling Iowa
State, 3&gt;10.

The Hoople Upset Spedal of the
Day, tflough, 11 a key Pae-10 gameStanlolcd will nip favored UCLA, 21·
19. Coach Jack Elway, in his fint

year ~ head coach of the Cardinals,
bas seen his team improve each week.
1be Hoople Hunch l!. they will hold on
to whip the Brulna. Kall-kalfl
In oUter Pac-10 meetinp, Arizona
will take Oregon. 31·21; Arimna State
will level California, 38-11; and Washington will have an easy time with
Oregon Sta~e. 28-7.
Tbe Big Ten feature matches pow·
erful OhiO State and dangerous Purdue in the Boilermakers' RoSs-Ade
Stadium. Purdue h.as passer Jim
Everett and a solid running attack
lead by Ray Wallace. Leading the
Buckeyes are running . back Keith
Byars, a legitimate Heisman candidate, and QB Mike Tomczak . In a
fairly high-scoring a'ffair, we give it
to Ohio State. 38-21 . Har-rumph!
Elsewllere in th e Big Ten. Illinois

The·:sec&lt;ind season begins Frtday
night for all SVAC teams after five
~ of combat with non·
confermceopponents. Theschedule
finds the defending and unbeaten
North Ga1lla Pirates hosting Han· ·
nan Trace; Soutbern at Kyger
Creek and Eastern vjsits
Southwestern.
Going Into league play, the
Pirates are 5-0 after last weekend's
1~ victory aver Hamlin. Coach
·Dave Angles~ Pirates have been
paced offensively by the running of

Will sUp put Wilconlln. :14-28: Mlehlcan wUHtop riYal Michlaan State, U·

11; Iowa will turn back NOrtllwstem,
40-14, ond -~~will alp IDdioDI,
24-Zt.
Ia tba SEC. Villce Dootey'o "oever·
say-die" Georsta and Alabama will
1•t it oo ror the ~lth lilllf!. The Bulldog lam are still taJ.kins about Georg·
ia's lalt-mlnute upoet. ZI-ZS. of Clemson.· Now theJ''II he taltlq about
another victory u the Georgia lado

-·lowa!ltaielt
· Kmt !ltaie 11 MJam (Ohlol n
KalluolJ • Rulpn Ill
Mlddpo Stl Mlclllpa 18

stop Alabama, 44·17. Hat-bff! Look
lor Auburn to but Milllallppi Zl-15
In the a~r SEC coatest.

The SWC haa Tens flnlahlnil llbead

Mar~

- 2 4-ladloaiZI
Sl ColoradO 11
Nebo h Stl OldUoma !ltaie II
MWnl ( - ) 21
Ololo lillie 311 .......... Z1 '
.......ylv.... Stl Col'lmbla 18
Pem Slalo II Maryland It
l'rlnoel4n 1 4 - 18
Sotttwari Cal _.. Wutastoa !ble %1

of Rice, 42-7; Arkansu over TCU, 21·
%1: Houaton ahead of Baylor. SO-ZO.
and Teus UM, U-10, over Teus

-Dame.

.Tecb.
The ACC has resurcOJ!I Geor1la

Tech i&gt;lumphlna, 21-21, over North

Carolina Stole: Clemson knocklnl oil
North Carolina, 21-21, and Dulle flo-

S.."h ·~~~--lillie·

San .Jole 8tMe a !IC I '1... !bte14
ScMthem ftfl
pl111 ftC
~.~ 8We 14
Slanford21UCLAIII
Mary 7

lshinl oil Vlrclala, Sl-Z4.
Ia the WCC, Brtllllam Young Uni• veralty Will drop Colorado State, 58-

Temple.-.
I

14.
Among iadepeodenta, Notre Dame
will but Miami of Florida, 28-ZI,la a

':

v-

I

TeuaCIUce7
Teuo AAM 13 Teuot'e&lt;h IO
Teuo-EI P - Sl New Mexico lillie 18

hard-fought cotl!eot. And Joe Patet·
no't Pena .State Nlttaay IJons will

1\Jiedo II -

defeat West Virginia, 21-14. Rarrumph!

'Nolle 111
'l'ulla :n

... Groen II

111

w... Teua 8tato I

Virlbda Ted! 311 VMI-7 .

.Now go on with my forecast:

Wake Fonalt 311 Rldlmond 17
Waeldqton S Orepn Slalo 7
Wyomlq II Son D1ea&lt;&gt; !!lite 2l

Salurday.Ocl.6
Air Force 1!8 Na'l' 2J
Arlmoa:IIOrepnZI
Arlzooa !llo&amp;e 311 California 14
Arkan8aa :ll TCU Zl
Anl)y %1 Hal'vll!'ll4
Auburn %1 Mlo8loolPi&gt;l u
BYU 311 Colonlao Stale 14
UelrfJOII :a! North Carolina Z1
CorneD lC llu&lt;lmell 10
Duke 31 Vlr&amp;lnla 24
Florida 311 Syrac,.. 18
Florida sta&amp;e U Memphis ~ .21
Ge&lt;qla U Alabama 17
GeorPa Te&lt;h 211 North CanJIIDa Slate Z1
Holy Cross 17 - u l h II
·H....ton :II
\!D
IWnols 34 Wl&amp;oonoln Ill
Iowa to Northwestern 14

Yole14M...... SU&amp;ell
FrldQ""a Area GIU'neS
lronlon311G~R

P-..-hii.Jac-.6
211 Lopn I
Marlelta tS 6
Nooth Gallllllllanaao Trac:e 8
EoolerniDSoul.......... lt
Ky..,- Creek 211 Soulhem 18
14 Boyd County 8 ·
Che9pea!re II Synunet! Valley 6
Falrlaad 311 Ook BJD 12
-.rg78A&gt;dtBJDI
Neloon\tlle-York II WellRion ill
Ml!lp !I! VInton Coant).l" ~
P - l l v s - Z1 Ripley 1%
Mlltoo Ill Pt. Plelllllllll IZ

-huoll

-D

Do,._.

Wyche also announced a number
of changes in the lineup, some

chances.
"It's tlme to give Boomer a
chance. He's been around for
one-thirdofaseasonandhe'splayed
well when he's been in," said Wyche.
"He'lldo a good job."
Receiver Gary WUllams and
running back Stanford Jennings will
start with Esiason, Wyche said.
W}'che said thedefensewasootto
blame for the loss ID Pittsburgh. ·
"The offense gave up 14 points on
pass Interceptions and gave up the
ball continually giving the defense
poor field position," he said.

because of injuties. Rookiequatierback Boomer Esiason will start
against the Houston Oilers here
Sunday.
"It's sweeping only because-of the
numbers involved,'' Wyche said.
The injury list includes quarterbacks Ken Anderson and Turk
Schonert, offensive tackle Anthony
Munoz, defensive end Eddie Ed·
wards, defensive backs Robert
Jackson, Ray Horton and Louis
Breeden, linebackers Rick RJ!z.
zano, Glenn Cameron and Ron
Simpkins; rreeivers Steve Kreider
and David Verser, and guard Gary
Smith.
Wyche said it was too early to tell
how setious the injuties were but
said there were an unusual number
of hamstring and groin injuries. He
guessed that they may have been
caused by the partially wet field in
Pittsbitrgh.
"Kenny (Anderson) says he feels
better than he expectro," despite
the back injury that caused his
departure from the game. "Turk
(Schonert) playedagutsygame.He
didn't make any mistakes," said
Wyche.
But Wyche said the Bengals' four
interceptions were costly. He said
Schonert was trying to get the
Bengals back in the game and took

Meet the Eagles

screammu,
· • e··

·.
1

Ruttg
• t•Iano's

old tactJ•c

NFL leaders

-

Woodley, Pin.

127

AVG W

A1T YDS

McNeil, Jets
Winder, [)(on.
Dkkey, lrd.
Jack.tOn, S.D.

3
0

6
5

2
6

13 liE 7

6

'ID
44J t2
i16 t 7
fli 391 4.6
78 383 4.9

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II

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Collins, N.E. ·

15
6

:ri6 4.3

lllo.,..-, Mia.
Wln.llow, S.D.
Chr!Rilll!n,

Rib

Franltlln, Butt'.
Stallw&lt;rt~

5-6, 145 pouotl
Fresmtaa back

- Several Browns' receivers appear to be at simUar crossroads In
their careers, most ootably Dwight
·walker and rookie Bruce Davis.

'II)

:tl 619 21.6 Ill 6
~ 318 13.0 33 1
2t m u.s :rr J

-

Pin.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) .:.... Whlle·
screaming at a wlderecelvermlght
notseemllkethebestwaytogethim
to catch a football, Clevef1nd
Browns' Coach sam Rutigliano says
he's used the tactic before ....: and it
worked.

1J! 4
:n 1

NO YD8 A.YG W

29 343 ll .B

~

~

51 1

481 18.6

0

N.4.'1'10N.U. POIJI'IlU.l. OONJ'ERDI(E

NIT COM V1l8 'I'D INT
Danlelim, Del.
Bartllif:M'IICI. Au.

147

Moalana, S.F.

107

SIJru1w, Glan1s

L..ornax. St.L

m

97 1llKl 9

lmpi-ovtng Eastern Eagles. Last
Frtday night, Southwestern
bomtled Hannan, 50-0 while
Eastern woo a thrilling, :D-28
contest from Huntington Vinson.
Will Halslop, Jim and Tim
.- Burnette led the Hannan onslaught
with long touchdown runs. Southw·
estern scored on five of its first half
possessions. ·
·
.Defensively, Bellny Boyd, Chris
Hampton, Justy Burleson and the
Burnette brothers each eni&lt;Jyed a
hard-hitting affair.
Eastern's offense was again led
by the brothercombinationofRoyce
Bissell and Brent Bissell. Brent
Bissell, a freshman, tallied three
touchdawn and grabbed two other
passesfor212yards, added two, two
point conversions and 40plus yards

rushlll8~ Brotber Royce cm~pleted

11 of 25 passes for 260 yards, rushed

for In ylll'ds and scored a
touchdown .
Ron Hensley led the Eagle
defense with. nine tackles and a
tilmble recovery. Tim Dorst contriblltro 10 tackles and Ron Maxson

had nine.

Concerning !hegame, Highlander
Coach Jack James said, "I'm lm•
pressed with Eastern. The Eagles
certainly are not the same club as
they were- a year ago. For that
matter, neither are we. Ifeel Coach
Watson has done a great job and
t~Q;eBissell boysarereallytoogii. U
shOuld be a big game,".

Wedna1dey,

.'
.

•

:;

9ctober 3, 1984

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mike
IJ'ootczak says his career at Ohio
State has been disappointing so far.
He has one more CJ!lllOI'tUnlty to
correct that this season. :
~'When you come to Ohio St' te,
I. I.
you feel you'll go to the Rose Bowl •
twooutoffouryears.It'snotllkethat
now, notwith!becompetitlonlntbe
BigTen. Thls·ts my last stab at the
Rose Bowl,'' said the senior
quarterback
""!"'_ _ _ _ _ _. . , . _ _ _ _
"Every senior is thinking Rose
Bowl-butthey'~thinkingofitone

T OmCzak Can
'
CO eel hl•S
•
• .·
d188ppolnlmenl

game a1 a time, " he said.
Ohio ' State, the nation's seco~- ranked team, plays at · Purdue
Saturday In a battle of two of the
three Btg Ten leaders. Michigan

alsocarrtesa2~1eaguerecord.

Tomczak says he's 95 percent
recoveredfromadoublefracture of
hisleg,!jUfferedintheteam's sprtng ·
game May 5. He spent 12 weeks on
cruli;hes and missed the l9lW
opener.
"I'm not able to run full spl.ed
yet,' '· Tomczak said. However, he

The Daily

has overcome a limp that confounded t.eem physlclans.in preseason practice as well as the first
couple of weeks. " It was just a
.process of learning 11ow to walk and
then run again," he explained .
Tomczak says he's now as sharp
as€'\'er,andmaybemoreconsistent
becauseofall ofthethrowinghedid frorT)achairwithhisleginacastthls
summer. He flashed his old-time
form Saturday night, connecting on
1Jof19passesfor1B1yardslna35-22
triumphat Minnesota.

Two of his passes were dropped
and anolber two were caught
out-of-bountis. Otherwise, he would
have been 17-&lt;&gt;f-19 for nearly :nJ
yards. Tomczak also stretcQed his
streak to &amp;l passes without throwi(lg
an Interception.
Eventhoughhehasstartedonly 24
games, " Tomczak ranks second
behlndArtSchilchteron theall-time
school )&gt;8S$lng list. He has thrown
for4,018 yards.Schilchterpassed for
7,547 yards, but needed fot.ir starting
seasons to accompUs h 1\.

0

115 m'l 9 5 ·
63 816 6 1
171 96 ltlt 11 · 3
113 l!Yr 1.112 8 4

Walker and Davis both dropped
somecriticalpassesinSunday's11Hi
National Football League loss to the
Kansas City Chiefs, which dropped
the Browns' record to 1-4.
Veteran Durie! Harris, though,
bad pertuips the worst blunder,
mishandling an easy p6ss In the end
zone that would have put Cleveland
up 10-31n the third quarter.
"We're Inside the 10-yard ·line,''
Rut1gllano sald. ''The score is l-3,
Durtei Harris - people are paid to
make thotie catches."

(USPS lfii-M8)

A Division or Mul&amp;lmedla, lac.

SVAC lfi'ANDINGS
AIGameo

Team
WLTTOP
North Gatua .. .............. ...... 5 o o 105 22
KygerCreek .. ........ ...... ... .. . 3
Hannan Trace ....... ............ 2
Eastern .. ............ .............. 2
SouthW.Sterr ......... .. .......... 2
Southern ........................... 1
F'rldqspmeo:

2
1
3
3

0
1
0
0
• 0

84 6!1
91 ~
UO 144
110 81
.. 76

Hannan Trace at Nonh Gfi,Uia ; Southern at
·Kyger Cref!k and Eastern at Southwestern.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Ulilities Commission ol Ohio has set for public
hearing Case No. 84-12·EL·
EFC, to review the fuel procurement
practices
and
policies of Columbus and
Soulhern Ohio Electric Company. the operation of its Electrir: Fuel COmponent , and
related matters. This hearing
is scheduled to begin at 10:00
a .m . on Wednesday, October
3, 1984 al I he oil ices of lhe
Public Utilities Commission ,
180 East Broad Streel, Colum·
bus, Ohio 43215
All interested parties will be
given an oppor1unily1 to· be
hea rd. Further information
may be obtained by conlacting the Commission

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COM·
MISSION OF OHIO
By: MARY ANN . ORLINSKI,
Secretary

Published every aUernoc:m, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., y the
Ohio Vallfiy Publishing Compal'l:y/ Mul·
tlmedla , Inc ., Pomeroy, O.hlo 45769, h.
992-2156. Second class postage _paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Kroger And
WJEH-am
WYPC-fm
' Suckeve
Sweepstake~

Member: The Associated Press, In·
land Dally Press Association and the
Amutcan Newspaper Publishers As·
sodaHon. National Advertising Repre•
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York 101ll7.
•
POSTMASTER: send address chan~

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me roy. Ohio 45769.

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with ttt. ume brand or a .comparable
bn~hd or refuM vout purcheae price.
COPYRIGHT 1184 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOC SUNDAY, SEPT. JO, THROUGH
SATUADA.Y, OCT. 6, 1984 , IN~:Wipollund -I!(J"*I)J· . .

~~,~:~w:::1:&lt;.'""~\"\iG\

siER TO

•

If you have service problems call our
service desk al 992· 21~ before 6:00 P.
M . Monday thru Friday.

s MORE\

RUTLAND

DEPARTMENT STOR E
Phone 742-21 00
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAl . OCT. lJ. I UH 1

BOLOGNA •••••••••••••••~b•••••••• 89(
SMITHFIELD

BOILED HAM •••••••••••~b•··· Sl. 99

HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••~•••• S1.2 9

- 54&lt;

MARGARINE ..........!'!!!!. S1.39
12 OJ. Kraft Singf11
16 Sll&lt;t Pimento

PROCESSED
Pk
•
CHEESE .................... !:.. S1.89

I 0 II. IDAHO

BAKING
.
POTATOES ........... ~~!... Sl.89

14 COUNT

HEAD

LEOUCE ...............~~:........ 79c

STRAWBERRIES •••••••••••~:·••••••••• 77(
8 OZ. IIRDS-EYE

16 OZ. DEL MONTE SliCED

SLOPPY JOE •••••••••••••••~~••••• S_1.19

1 Brand New 1985 Ford Escort could be
yours. Just fill out the entry blank and drop
it in the Drawing . Box of yol!lr nearest
participating Kroger store or mail it to:
SUPER BUCKEYE SWEEPSTAKES
THE KROGER C0 . -2007 E. 7th . ST .
PARKERSBURG , W . VA . 26101

$100 IN CASH!

30 OZ. JOAN OF ARC.

KRAFT DINNERS •••••••• !::!'. 2/S1.19
29 OZ. UBBY'S
PUMPKIN ••••••~~ •••• ~ •••••!=. 2/S1.8 5

1985 FORD .ESCORT

1

I

71f• OZ. MACAROPI &amp; CHEESE

Register To Win A

0r

WHIP···············~~':~ ..•.....99c

RED KIDNEY BEANS •• !::......•••.99&lt;

... ....}-----

Also ,Register To Win A
CABBAGE PATCH KID

10 OZ. GOLDEN ISLE

COOL

'

1 Winner Will Receive A
1985 FORD ~SCORT
Register At Your Pomeroy,
Belpre, Marietta, Gallipolis
And Ironton Kroger Stores
Deadline To Enter Is
Saturday Night, Nov. lrd.

16 OJ. ShooW'o W11ippo4 lowl

1Slf1 OZ. AbiOUR BEEF

.

•car Similar To One Being

....

TRASH .BAGS •••••••••••••••~~·••••• S2.79

CORN DOG

' .

SUPERIOR BIG RED

I 5 Ct. HEm SUPER WEIGHT

WEEK

r•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,

:

Cbntest valid of,ly-at your Pomeroy, Belpre,
Marietta, Gallipolis &amp; Ironto!) Kroger
stores. Register at any of the above stores.
Tgree dolls per · store will be given away
each week, plus one winner in each store
each week of $100 in cash. Nq purchase
necessary, ente.r as often as you like. New
drawing every week through October 27,
1984. Just drop entry blank in the drawing
box at any participating store or mail to ad. qress above the entry blank.

ENTRY BLANK

TOWELS ••••••••••••••·•••••• ~.~~~.~••••••• 89&lt;
8 OZ. REGULAR

ADOLPH'S

..DAIRY VALLEY

.
"At Tlw lnd of the PuooN""Y M""n lridp'"

,

...i~~
- ···AII~~O~~~·ioHII.IIIIIIII....~~~PH~~.19r.lj2.-2.SjS6il. .ll~
J

PRINGLES ••••••••••.••••••••.••~c:••••• S1.19
46 OZ. HUNT'S •
.·.

·TOMATO JUICE •••••••••••~~......... 99C

AMERICAN SINGLES

-Kraft

Kraft .

Mayonnaise..

Cheese
Food
. . 12-o.z. .

*Ia•

$148

32-GZ.

'

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t)l

:

I
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I

NAME

I
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ADDRESS

I

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PHONE NO :

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••

1
1

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4

CITY

,.

e I.

I

"
NO PURC HA SE N EC ESSA RY

WI~

•

NEED NOT BE PRE SENT TO
KROGE R EM PL OY EE: $ &amp; THE IR
IMMEDI A T E F AMI LII; S NO T ELI G IB LE

1 1 ·

I
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~---------------------·--·-·--·--·~

30 CT. )UMBO BOUNn

WITH FIIIES........51.04

..

.
• Earle Bruce, Ohio State's coach,
credited Tomczak with an excellent
Jo,b of changing plays a t the line of
scrtrnmage at Minnesota. And the
senior says that may be Jbe big
difference between his early collegiate days and his last season. '
" My checks (audibles ) are better.
I 've been through.a lot of pressure
situations. It's become routine for
me now. I'm reading defenses
better and I'm zipping the ball
better," he said .

The DaUy Sentinel

PEACHES •••••••••••••••••••••~'!"••••••••• 79&lt;

SPECIAL OF

Sentinel-Page~ 7

r-:==========::;

Odillyen~,theToma~and~~::::::::::::::::~_l~::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;~

KygerCreekaretheoruytwoteams
which have given the White Falcons
any problems. Wahama edged KC,
20-18.
KygerCreekmoveditsrecordlast
Saturday night ID 3-2 ·with a 15-8
victory over Portsmouth Notre
Dame. Chuck Vogel, senior running
back, switched to taUback since the
fractured ankle sutfered by senior
Steve Waugh, led the way with W
yards rushing and two touchdowns,
one a 55 yard gallop.
Defensively, Anthony Kitchen
and Btian Wamsley each contributed an lnterecption.

Kyger Creek's Lady Bobcats
defeated Southern's Tornadoettes
ln a three-game match, 15-7, 14-16
and 15-10 Tuesday night at
Southern.
The victory left KC with a 4-3 Eastern&amp;utllwestem 0;
Another good contest is expected
record in the SVAC and 7-5 overall '
at
Southwestern where Coach Jack
mark.
J~es'
Highlanders meet the .
KC plays Southwestern at home ·
Thursday. Leading the wa)l Tuesday night were Loti Graham,
Carolyn Vansickle and Michelle
Reese. Leanna Nibert led the
spiking attack with six down spikes.
Inthereservecontest, KCwonln .
a two-game affair, 15-11, 15-10. Loti
Thomas and Paula Brown had nine
points apiece.
1

YIWi 'lD INI'
Martno. Mia.
1~ lffi 1527
Eu:ln, N E .
95 61 '734
FerguJOR, Ekdf.
us m tcu
Fouts, SD.
176 W l'*'i

Kyle Davis

Foreman led last Friday's victory
with 119 yards In 14 carries.
Pacing the Pirate defense were
co-a~ptalns Joe Moore ~ Hawks
each with 11 tackles.
···
.
Coach Brett Wilson's WUdcatsare
2-1·1. HT was idle last week
followbig a 14-8 loss to Ironton St.
Joe. The Wlldcats opened with
_victaties aver Synurtl!$ Valley and
Hannan, but were tied . 24-24 by
Green before losing to the Flyers,
Hannan Trace's offensive attack
has been led by quarterback Gary
Kirk, and i-unning backs, Ertc Darst
and Derek Barnes.
KCSoulhem
At Kyger Creek, Coach Mel
Coen's Bobcats will face the
rebuilding Southern Tornadoes who
all but upset the highly toured
Wahama · White Falcons last
weekend.
Southern, according to Coen, is a
big, physical team which played an
outstanding game agatnst
Wahama.
Mark Jarrell set up Southern's
first · 'ID against on a 23 yard
Interception return to the five yard
line. Three plays later, quarterback
Sean Grueser hit David Ebersbach
with a five yardstrike!Ebersbach's
two point conversion put Southern
ahead, 8-7. Thatleadwasshort-llved
- as Wahama march 65 yards In 12
plays. The winning score came on a
fourth down pass play from Jetf
B;lrnltz to Matt Thompson.
Southern's Greg Nease led his
team's offense with n yards In 17
carries. Defensive standouts were
Jimmyu Wolfe, Kelly Grueser and ·
Scott Wickline.

Lady Bobcats
stun Southern

.\n OOM

Brian Dun;t
$-9, 145 pound
Fresllman quarterback

Foreman; ~tt WWiamson

and Brtan Hawks.

Wyche names Esiason quarterback
CINCINNATI (AP) - Being a
nice guy has nothing to do with not
winning, says Cincinnati Bengals ·
Coach Sam Wyche. Besides, there
are stili 11 more games to play, not
counting the team 's five losses.
"My nice guy image is beginning
to be a problem ,'' Wyche told a news
conference Tuesday following Monday night's 38-17 drubbing by the
Steelers a t Pittsburgh.
"People think I'm too nice to
make the team work hard and win.
That's not the case," he said, adding
· that he runs tough practices and
doesn't hesitate toberatepiaye rs for
poor play. '
'
"When 1 was coaching for a world
champions ttip te am (San F rancisco
49ers') and calling the same types of
plays and we were winning,
everybody said we were brilliant
coaches.
"When l dothesamethlngs here,
and not winning. well, they think
you're not a good coach," Wyche
said.
"We are not giving up on this
season. I am not conceding this
season. I've told the players this and
I said if any of them concedes I'm
going to get tid of them."

1984

·Second season starts Friday

.

Hoople picks ·osu again;
'Huskers to top 0-State

By Major Amoo B. Hoople

Wednesday. OctOber 3,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio -

U.S. NO . 1

Round White
Potatoes
.

PLAIN OR SELF-RAISING

Gold Medal
Flour

$, ••, sec
ZO.Ib. Beg

60-LB . BAG ... $4 .79

!i-lb.

S~ringdale

%Milk
Gallon

.$ ,57

U .S . GOV' T lNSPE CTED
" THE MORE BE EF
GROUND BEEF"

Extra Lean
Ground Beef
Pound

$118

...
'
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·..
....
.'
.

.'-•.

-- ~

''

...
.·

'

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'

•
The

e~gn;te

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

show set

Family Medicine ..
B

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

Y

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
P.RICES IN EFFECT
THRU SAl.,
OCT. 6, 1984
..
.

J

MIXED

Fryer Parts

CHESTER- Dr. Ray Swick,
chairman of the Blennerhassett
island Coountssk&gt;n, will be
speaker at anopenmeetlngofthe
Chester Garden Club and the
Shade Valley Council of Floral
Arts to be held Wednesday night
at 7::xl at the Chester · United
Methcidist Chureh.

LB.

•• • ••••
.

'
$}
'
.7·9
Rump Roast • • • • •

BONELESS

LB.

·/
/

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

Wieners • • • • • • • • • • • • 99

¢

12 OZ. PKG.

.
$}09
Ground Beef ... ~~ . ·

MIDDLEPORT -'Sue Tlll1s of
Rutland will be speaker at a
special youtlt missionary meet·
lng to be held at 7::xl p.m.
-..Wednesday at the Middleport
Independent Holiness Ch~.
Pearl St. The Rev. o·~u
Manley, pastor, Invites the
public.
CHESTER- A garden club
open meeting wUI be held
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., At..the
Chester United Methodist
Church. Or. Ray Swick, hlstortan of the Blennerhasset Hlstor·
· leal Park, will be the ~peaker.

•

1HURSDAY
POMEROY- The Hysell Run
Hn!Jnes• Church will have · a
misslonalymeetlngThursdayat
7:30 p.m. at the church. Susie
TUIIs of Rutland will talk on her
time IJi Honduras. The publlc is
Invited to attend.

SUPERIOR

Lunch Meats ••••
LB.

The first sale will be Tuesday,
Oct. 9, and the second on Tuesday,
Oct. 23.

'

Club sets
rummage sale
POMEROY - The Happy
Harvesters Class of Trtnlty
Church, Pomeroy,' Will hold a
rummage sale Thursday and
Friday 1n the church basement, 8
a.mto4p.m. ·
·

Cattle can be brought In, weighed
and graded the day before the
sale is), Monday, from 8 a .m . to 6
p.m. , and 8 a .m. to 12 noon,
Tuesday, the day of the sale(s).
Al l ctnsignors and buyers are
welcome. F or more information, to
consign cattle, or to arrange for the
trucking contact Rodney Howery at
(614) 698-7231 or call the stockyard
on Saturdays at (614) 592-2322.

Bake sale
FOREST RUN - The Forest
Run United Methodist Churcli
will be holding a bake sale
Friday,~ a.m. to 3 p.m ., In front
'

YELLOW .

Onions. • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Plans made
for annual
fair election

.B.ROUGHTON

2% Milk • • • • • ••• • • • •
GAL

c c0 Ia

·DIET RITE, RC 100, NEHI .FLAV. ORS

'R•
.

·

•
STOKELY'S
•

•

•

$

8 Pak,Depostt
16 Qz. Btls.
Plus
·

• •••••••

·

Tomato Juice .:~~:·69.¢
MAXWELL HOUSE

JIFFY

COFFEE

CORN MUFFIN MIX

·Limit ()ne Ptr Coupon
Good Onl'y At Powell's
Offtr Explrn Oct. 6, 1914

8.5 oz.

-S /Sl

Five per C01pon
Only AI Powell's
OHw
Explrn
Oct. 6, 1914
.
Limit
GjiCIII

.

~

I

$}69
¢

SANDWICH MATE IND. SLICES
~2 •0~·

99
...
·rv Dinners .....noz.69¢

149 Amer. Ch·eese.

·

u:·S649

MIDDLEPORT
Evangeline Cha pter 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7: JO ·
p.m . Thursday at the Masonic
Temple. Officers are to wear
street length dresses. ·
RUTI.AND- Rutland VU!age
Councll will meetat 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the Rutland Civic
Center. Meetings, open to the
,public, are regularly held on the
first Thlir'sday of each month .

FRIDAY

1

POMEROY The Rev.
Ermal L. Wilson of Marlon, Ind.,
is evangelist for revival services
at White's Chapel Wesleyan
Church through Sunday with
services at 7 each evening and at
10: JO a.m. and 7 p.m . on Sunday;
public invited .
Saturday
CHESTER Annual fall
carnival and jitney supper at
Chester Elementary School Saturday. The jitney supper Is 5 to
8:30p.m. and thecainlvalisfrom
6: JO to 8: 30; open to the public.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va . Firemen's AuxJIIary of New
Haven 'Fite Pepartment will
hold a cWcken barbecue Satur·
day at NeW Haven fire building
with S!:'rYlng starting at 11 a.m .;
hat dogs wUI also be available.

.

.BANQUET-+-·

'

DEL MONTE CATSUP
32

oz.

89C

Umit Ont Per Coupon •
Good On'y At Powlll's.
Off• Explrn Oct. 6, 1914

•

of New York Clothing House In
Pomeroy. • An effori is being
made to ra ise Junds ·ror new
siding for the church . Donations
will also be accepted .

Runimage sale
POMEROY - A rurrunage
sale will be held today through
Friday at the Senior Citizens
Center , 9a.m . to4p.m. Proceeds
irom the sale will go into
oper!ltional expenses of , the
Center.
·

Women's Vote '84
speaker in Meigs

5 LB. BAG

DIAL SOAP

~~~H4PK~$149
BARS
I
.

Limit four Per (~upon
Good Only At Powell's
Offtr bpirn Od. 6, j 914 .

Lanle Onley, Athens County
coordlnatorofWomen's Vote '84and
asslstant director of the Honors
Tutorial College of Ohio Unlv.e rsity,
was·the spec till guest at the Sunday
rne¢ting of the Meigs . ' County
CommltteeofWomen'sVote '84held
at the LaSalle Restaurant ,
Middleport.
Mrs. Onley reported on the
activities of the Athens area effort to
register voters for the ml4 election
. illld a special meeting held In
Colum!Ns concerning the registration of Ohio voters. She commended
the local groop for their efforts In
registering voters and their plans
for getting out the vote on Nov. 6.
ThecommltteereportllthatMeigs
County has reached Nil!of Its goal of
JOO newly registered voters 1n 1984.
SueMaoon,MeigsCountycoordlnator for W!Xtlen's Vote '84, credited
the work of the committee and the
work of dedicated volunteers In the

disease processes mimic athlete's
definite diagnosis of athlete's foot,
foot. ' Including_psor.lasls, and con- ,he or s~. willlristruct you on proper
tact derma,titls caused by allergies
loot care, especially In keeping your
to chemicals In shoes and socks.
feet as dry as possible. This m eans
These conditions will not respond to
drying your toes and the spaces
athlete's foot medications and It will . between the toes carefully after
take your physician 's knowledge
bathing, perhaps bY even blowing
and examining skills to determine
your feet dry with a hair dryer.
what treatment ls needed.
Your doctor will ask you to use
QUESTION: How lsathiete's loot
absorbent cotton socks and all tre~ted?
leather shoes, because these
ANSWER: Athlete's . foot is
"breathe" better than synthetic
caused by several difterent types of
materials.
fungi which cannot' cause Infection
It your infection is mild, your
unless the skin has been Injured .
physician may prescribe a mediAthlete's foot gets Its name because
cated powder that will help to check
it usually starts after hot, swe1,1ty
the fungi's growth and soak up
feet remain lor long periOds of time
excess moisture. For a fungal
In poorly ventllated sh.oes:, ~
Infection that has spread over the
situation brings moisture In contact
sole, sides and top of the foot, more
with the skin, which eventually
vigorous therapy is Indicated. In
breaks down th'e skin layers.
addition to all the above measures,
When your physician has made a

Revival set

Happentngs

Both \\111 be nightly auctions with
sale time beginning at 8 p.m ..
All breeds of calves and yea·
r Ungs, including dairy cross, as well
as Ieeder bulls will be accepted.

.

Pa9e-~-

.

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WEDNESDAY

Chuck Roast ••••

Five members wlll be elected to
the Meigs County Fair Board when
the group' s annual election Is held
this fall.
. Plans lor election were made
Monday night when the board met at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Each year five persons are named to
threeyeartermson theboardwhlch
is · composed of fifteen members .
Members whose terms expire this
year are Danny Zirkle, Wallace
Bradford, C. W. Henderson, Fred
· Goeglein and Virgil Windon.
Candidates · must have their
petitions In the hands of Fair Board
Secretary Mrs. Muriel Bradford,
985-3974, no later than 5 p,m . on
Monday, Oct. 29. Residents seeking .
election to the board must be
quallfled voters and must have a
1984 membership ticket.
The election has bel\n setforNov.
5, 5 p.m. to9p.m.ln the secretary's
office at the falrgroonds and only
persons holding membership
tickets at the close of the 1984 COUilty
fair or at letit :1.5 calendar days
before the (late of election are
qualified' to vote,'
One resident has already fUed for
one of the five seats. He 1s Elson
Spencer of Racine.
·
Petitloos . of candidacy can be
secured by ·contacting Mrs.
Bradford.

E
.
dw

Calendar .·

LB.

The Athens Livestock Sal!!s is
announcing plans for its 1984 ·Fall
Feeder Calf Round-up.
'

Wednesday, October 3, 1984 .

Athletes' foot actually an infection, usually sup~ificial

ani Schreck, D.O.
· For the vast majority of people,
A•1st11111 Prof~'
athlete's foot is only a superficial
ol Family Medicine
and annoying problem.' For people
Ohio University Cdlege
who have phlebitis ofthe deep veins
ol Osteopathic Medicine
of the leg, however, athlete's foot
QUESTION: I think ·I have can be more serious.
athlete's foot, but the foot poWder I
Chronic athlete's foot infections
bought isn ' t helping . Any can injure the skin, alloy.rtngforelgil
suggestions?
organisms to invade the body arid
ANSWER: The ·
. consequently "causing ·l nflamlna·
scaly rash on the
, tion of' tile veins (phlebitis). For a
foot or between
significant number of pallents,
the toes com - "
phlebitis in the deep veins of the legs
manly called athor pelvis progresses to a pulmonary
lete's foot Is a
emboltsm or blood clot In the lungs,
ringworm Infeca life-threatening condition. But
tion technically
even 1f you're among the majority
known as tinea REdia. Athlete's foot for whom athlete's foot 1s a minor
ls an extremely common skin problem, you may need to see your
,._
problem, particularly In males, and doctor.
approximately $150 mUllan are
Not a ll Itching a nd r!lshes on the
spent annua)ly on over-the-counter feet are athlete's foot. Several other
preparations for thls rash. '

"

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

Fall feeder
calf sale set

B~nd

The Daily Sentinel
...

•

The West Virginia State Farm
Museum, Inc. (formerly the Mason
County Regional State Farm Museum) will hold Its sixth Annual
Country Festival and Antique
Steam and Gas Engine Show on
Saturday and Sunday.
The two-day festival Is being
co-sponsored by the West VIrginia
Steam and Gas Engine Association.
Several Antique Steam . Engines
and a large number of old gas
engines will be on display during
the two-day show. Some antique
tractors wUI be on display and
operated. Various pieces of old
farm equipment will be displayed
and will be operated periOdically.
The two-day festival wiU feature
a number of activities and crafts
that were quite common durlng the
late 1800s and seldom observed .
today.
o ·n Saturday visitors can see
wheat threshing using an antique
steam engine which will furnish
power for one of the early threshing .
machines. There \\\ill also be corn
grinding, apple butter making and
molasses making.
Saturday evening, Floyd Rayburn will call lor a square dance.
The music will be furnished by
Everett Wedge, John Smith, Burl
Tennant and Frank Thomas.
On Sunday, Oct. 7, the Rev. Louis
Hussell will hold church service In
the Old Log Church at 9 a.m .
Sunday afternoon beginning at 2
p.m . several gospel groups will
present a program of old-tlrtle
gospel songs .
The Country Kitchen will be open
both' days.
•
In addition to its specialty of
cornbread and beans, the kitchen
will serve cornmeal pie, hot dogs,
ice cream and pop. Admission is
free . The Farm Museum is located
four miles north of Point Pleasant
just off State Route 62.

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By,The

•

.

Sentinel

·country _
festival,

,,

.

1

The Rev. Herman L. Jones, a
retired pastor and former superintendent In theOhloConferenceofthe
Free Methodist Church, will COD·
duct revival services at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodlsi Church Man·
day through Oct. 14.
The Rev. Mr. Jones, a riatlve of
Cambridge, Ohio, studied In the
areas of applied science, law, Bible
and preaching at Moody Bible
Ilistltute and Fort Wayne Bible
Ilistltute.
He has served the Ohio Conference for 43 years, 26 as a pastor,
eight as a district superintendent,
a nd nine as a conference
superilntendent.
· Services will be held at 7: 30 each
evening and· the public Is Invited.
Anyone needing more Information
or transportation should call the

oral medica tion may be needed. A
common drug now used Is grlsefulvin. A new oral medication that
soon may be prepared for use on
athlete's foot is called ketoconazole,
which shows promise of working
more quickly and with fewer side
effects in atta cking the fungus .
Whatever the extent of the
athlete's foot infection you may
have, It's probably going to take a
number of weeks, or even months,
for It to clear up. YoU should also
know that it's very likely you.'ll
develop athlete's foot again. That's

why many physicians suggest yoo
use powders against fungi every
day, even when you don't have
SYmptoms.
Before ~ou embark on any
longtertn self-therapy for the rash
on your feet, you should let your
doctor make sure you truly have an
athlete's loot infection.
"Family Medicine" .is a weekly
colu mn. To submit questions, write
to Edward Schreck, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.

In the service
Nichols
Terry W. Nichols, son of Mrs.
Raymond (Kathryn ) Butcher of
Calvin, W.Va. and grandson of the
late Pat and Augusta Will, has been
moved from Scioto Crest Center ,
Hilliard, to Scenic Hills Nursing
Center In Gallia County.
His uncle and aunt, Pauline and
·-' Jim Autherson, were there to greet
'him when he arrived ·on Sept. 21. His
room number is 118A. Cards maybe
sent to lilrn at the Scenic Hills
Nursing Center, Route 2, Box 262,
Bidwell 45614.

Well

Denver E. and Florence D. Well of
37341 Wickman Road, P om eroy,
has been decorated with the u,s.
Air Force Commendation Medal at
lraklion Air Station, Greece.
the Alr Force Commendation ·
Medal is awarded to those Individuals who derr?nstrate outstanding
achievement or meritorious ser·
vice in the pertormance of their
duties on behalf of the Air Force.
Well is a Morse systems supervisor with the 6931st Electronic
Security Squ ~dron .

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

Tech. Sgt. Wayne Well, . son of

Rev. Herman L ]ones

. '

Rev. Robert W. Miller, pastor at

992-5326.

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53 i JACKSON PiKE - RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446 · 4524
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS $2.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAr Sl 00

Schultheiss reunion held
Children, grandchildren, a nd
great-grandchildren of the late
Edwin and Georgia Schultheiss
gathered recently a !the fairgrounds
In Marietta for a reunion.
Attending were Lyle, Rita, Allan
Beebe, Dale and Madeline Muntz,
Marietta; Robert and Romana
... Hawk, Hemlock Grove; Shlela
' Regan, Bidwell; Kelly, Lynn, and

Derek Hawk, Mason, W.Va.; John,
Joyce, and Patsy Sc hultheiss, Jyl
and Wendy Woodgard, Logan;
Pa.ttY. Homer Lauer, Garland,
Travis, Dena Smithy, Judy, Scott,
Christy Bugaof Newpori; Joy, Jan ,
Andy and Tina Schultheiss, Reno;
Ted, Jackie, Laura Lauer of
Whipple; Betsy Blankledge and
Jason Ludy, Canton.

Trip to coast experienced
by residents at facility
ra ise the m.oney for their trip by
Thanks for contributions by area
conducting weekly car washes
businesses and Individuals - and
some elbow grease -eight teenag- during the summer. Additional
funds were raised by a benefit
ers from Woodland Center's Childsoftball
game between "The Woodren's Residential ·Treatment Proland
Wonders"
(made up of Center
gram had a memorial summer
staff
members)
and the WKEE
educa tiona! tour.
"Jock
Sox,"
and
by
donationS from
According to Bill Kiser, Coordiarea
businesses
and
Individu als.
nator of CRTP, the residents and
The trip was the first visit to the
staff members went on an educaocean for all the residents, Kiser
tional camping trip in August,
\1siting Colonial W1lliamsburg and ·said. When asked what they
enjoyed most about the trip, the
Busch Gardens in Williamsburg,
residents - ages 12 through 16 Va., as well as the Wright Brothers
commented
· on ''seeing how they
Museum, the beach and sand dunes
made t~e first airpla ne," diggi ng
at Kitty Hawk and Nags Head, N.C.
The Children's Residential Treat- holes In the sand, visiting Busch
Gardens, swimming, and the free'i'nent Program provides long term
mental health treatment for emo- dom and responsibilities they ha d
during the educational trip.
•
tionally troubled adolescents from
"The
experiences
really
s
howed
Ga llia, Jackson and Meigs County,
Kiser said. The teenagers reside at the kids that when everybody works
the Gallla County facUlty for an together somet hi ng good ca n
average of six months, attendl,ng happen," Kiser said.
The Children's Resldent)al Treatlocal schools and receiving tutorment
Program a nd the staff of
ing. counseling, family therapy,
Woodland
Centers, thanked the
recreational therapy and other
. various individuals and businesses
services as needed .
.Kiser said the residents helped for their donations .

county, She said that there Is stU! a
need 'for volunteers to.help register
another 150 voters before Oct. 9 and
to help with asslstlng those voters
whO need help 1n getting to the polls .
Individuals who would like to
volunteer
urged to call Malson,
ThesecondmeetlngoftheChester will be games .a~d door prizes. A
992-:iml or 66'7-6455, or Myriam. PI'Owas held Monday at the school. sweet shop and a cake walk Will also
·
Final plans for the fall camJval · be featured.
Rulhchlid, '992·52ffi.
The public is Invited to attend the
It was pointed out that lf a person
and jitney supper, to be held on
carnival
and supper.
Is unsure as to whether he or she 1s
Saturday, were discussed.
The movie "Better Safe Than
register('(~ to vote, this Information
The supper- will begin a 5p.m, and
may be obtained by calling the . end at 8: 30 p.m . A chicken noodle Sorry" was shown and it was voted
Board of Elections, Monday
dinner with green beans, ~law and to show the film again to the
elementary chllclren.
through Frtday, 8 a.!l'l. to 4: :xJ p.m.u roll will !Je on the menu . Hot dogs,
The ·siXth grade won the room
Th~ of Elections will also be · pizza, sloppy joes, chips, pie, pop,
count
·
~n Friday evening untll 9 and on
coffee and tea will also be offered.
All
PrO
m!)!'tlngs wlll now be held
Saturday from9a.m. to !p.m.
Thecarnlvalw!Ubeheid!rorn6:30
oil
the
first
Monday of the m onth .
At Sunday's meeting were Ms.
to8::xlp.m. Featuredatthecamlvai
Malson, ~uanlta Naiman, Phyllis
Ciay, Peggy Brickles, Katie Biron,
Jane Frymyer, Evelyn B. Thomas, 1&gt;
Fral)ces Thomas, Helen WeDs, Ms.
CHESTER - The annual fall
Ruthchl)d, Yvonne Scally and Ms.
camJval
and jitney suPJ?E'I' or the
Onley.
Chester Elementary School will be
held Saturday. The supper will be
from 5 to 8: 30 and the camlval hours
.
.
are6: 30 to 8:30. ThepubUclsj.nvlted.
At 6 p.m, there will be a church
Sunday will be a busY day for
supperandatthattlmearevlewwUI
per!IOI1S attending the Heath United
be held on how Heath United
Metlxxllst Church In Middleport,
Methodist
has been In mlnl.stry this
Pastor Robert E:. Robinson reports.
RACINE - A gun shoot will be
year:
Church school at 9:30a.m. will be .
·
heidbylheRactneFireDepartment
Joan Robinson will present a slide
fQllowed by a worki "communton
program
depleting the people of the at the Bashan Building at 6::xl!l.!l1.
expeileuce at 10; 00. a .m. With the
church
In
mlnlSttY, Those attmdlng. Saturday. FactoJY choke 12-gauge
II!J1l'IOII topic, "If Only I Could Find
are
to
take
their own table service shoti!Uils are the only approved guns
Clod.''
for the shoot.
ll!1d a food basltet.

RSAB

Rated at 8:200 B1Us per ho"r. 1he
most corupact. most econom•cal rad&lt; ant model. Great for small er heat;ng
. Operates lrom 28 to 39 hours on
7 gals kerosen e U l. listed .

OTHER SIZE .
StOVES &amp; PARTS
AVAILABLE

r------------..L----.,--------

·Chester .PTO meets

are

Fall Carnival

r----------'---L--------,----------------.-

~hurch . plans act~vities.

.

Gun shoot

53100 1031.20

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1 0-The Daily Sentinel

.Page

.. ,;;iiil............i&lt;....;;...._..;....__ ~·---

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Wednuday, October 3, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

J

,
.
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.

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The Daily .Sentinel- Page-:.:11

.' FOOD STAMPS WELCOME ··.
.

. LOCUST and PEARL STREET ·

-.•

...
.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.;

•

. TRUCKLOAD· HOURS
9;00 A.M~ ·TO 6:00 P.M.

Ina

.

DON'T. MISS~JHIS SALE.J!
'

'

'

'

.

'

...
' I

THURSDAY, .FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY!!!
.

Sale· Ends Oct. ·6 th

3 BIG o·AYS LEFT!
Stock Up Now For Those
C·old Winter Months Ahead!!
NO LIMITS!! .
ITEM

13'1• oz.
cans
13'1· oz.

BEEF BROTH

SAN GIORGIO

SPAGHETTINI
nDY

CAT UTTER

S1 0.68 SS.34

39'

$9.36 S4.68

49&lt;

24

COllEGE INN •

SPAGHETTI

89&lt;

24

CHICKEN BROTH

SAN GIOIGIO

CASE '

cans

COllEGE INN ,

TUNA

CASE

' 24•
16 oz.

SAUERKRAUT

C111D1EN OF THE SEA Ill ,.
WA18 PAOim OIN liGHT

rice
jars

SILVER FUECE

CORN

HALF

25 oz.

APPLESAUCE

WHOLE KERNEL

FULl

12

Mon·s

THOROFARE

· Individual

cans

I

24
16 oz.
cans

49'

PUIINA

DOG CHOW
SWANSOH CHUNI WHnl

CHICKEN
SWANSON

MIXED CHICKEN
DECOIAIED

TOWElS

$33.12 $16.5

12
32oz.

S1' 9

S14.28 S7.14

$1 19

$14.28 S7.14

521

2bagsb.

S299

48

-

103/4 oz. vt
......
cans ·

1
30 lb.
bag

24
5 oz.
cans

24

5 oz.
cans

30 ct.
jumbo

rolls

'1111'

$699

TOWElS

jumbo

59c ~17.7

sa.as·

CREAM STYLE

16 oz.

39' $9~36

S4.68

Pric1

99

10 LB.

BOX

YEllOW CORN
THOIOFAIE MIXED

VEGETABlES

SS.98 S2.99

TAVERN HAMS
·

49

By

...

18 oz.

KIA" AI'PlE

PEACH HALVES .

, WHOlE!

AMERICAN

Dl

lAG

CRIISIIED, SUCED, TIDIITS

ONLY ·

PINEAPPLE

99&lt;

S23.76 11.8

79&lt;

518.96 S9.48

59' .

s11.1o sa.as

12 LB.

· BOX

99

16-12 Oz.

"'
SS.94
ss.94

99&lt;

SS·.94

29 oz.

89c

S21•.36 S1 0.6

24

..

18 oz.
jars
24

canr

PAGHETTIOS ' cans

SLICED BAC"ON.

00

99&lt;

14 oz.

;

.....

FRANCO·

N

S6.99

S9.36 S4.68

12

12
18oz.
jars
12

STIAWitRRY

OSAGE FREESTONE

O·LI.

39C

jars

GRAPE JEllY

~

$9.36 S4.68

16.oz.

APPlE llACKIERRY

JEllY..

39'

48
.cans

IRAn

Per Lb.

Demand!

0
0

$

cans

BEANS

JELlY

Held
Over

24
. 16oz. •
16 oz.
cans

PEAS

BONELESS

cans

24 •

THOROFARE

-

30 ct.

rolls
. 24

PORK &amp;

cans

boxes

CASE

HALF ·
· CASE

(AMP BEll'S

69'

12

ndividuo · FUll

ITEM
GALA WHITf DECOIATED

(11)

48

3loz.

POLISH SAUSAGE

S11.76 SS.88

6'(, oz.

boxes

'

..o-

CAMPBELL'S

TOMATO
SOUP

$11.7 SS.88

.

Stock ·Up Now ·For Those
. cold Winter Months Ahead!! ·
NO LIMITS!!

THAIICYOU DAD

swm

12

16 oz.
cans

12

~

~

69&lt;

8.29

CHERRIES

99&lt;

THANI YOU CIIEIIY

12
21 oz.

Slit

CMIPHU'S

TOMAT!) SOUA.

cans •

12
46 OZ.

cans

-•"'

'lit'

16 oz.
cans

PIE FIWNG

....

-

.'

S7.14

99C

Pkgs.
DEl MONTE

·cATSUP

12
.32 oz.

-......

o- ·•
v-

bottles 0'

tit

THOROFARE CUT
'

Held Over By Demand!

GREEN .

. BEANS ·.·

24

16 oz.
cans

STORE HOURS

..

....,

842 SECOND AV ENUE

GALLIPOL,I S
446-1405

MONDAY
TUES.-FR I.
SAT. 10
_. SUN. I

NOON -8 P.M.
10 A.M.-8 P.M.
A.M:·5 P.M.
P.M.-6 P.M.

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.Exhibit planned

'

Mel&amp;!! Coonty Artist Jon! Carringart exhibit at the

The

present

a

concert at the Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene at 9; ll a .m . Sunday
with a communion service to follow.
'The concert Is In conjunction with
the "People Reaching People"
Sunday school emphasis.

Whe!'e

smg.

! know Plll'8dlse Is

on

But It's not dten

chonll oo

We priiC'tice what we preach.
I have always had one smau wt8h
To see lot&gt; ol people practice what IIley

to be

preach.

I k:nOW me man, Jesus Christ by name
,:Yesterday, tomorTO'N, today He's lhe same
At the age ol l2 He waa teachtnc God's Word

In
In God's Parade ~ wlU be oo more sin .
It's a beauttruJ place
With arti&lt;Is nearby
God's Paradise which He
Built upon high.
Paradise has a wan

All pralst&gt;s and glory, to Almighty God ,

8/ 13/ tl n

Deher U•
Deliver US, 0 Lord,
From our tnlqulfy
Hear our cry!

By clily and at night

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

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Deliver us, 0 LJrd ,

From our rebellious ways
Before lbe morning comes nigh.
Deliver us, 0 Lord
From our Iniquity
Today we need you more
oeuver us. oh Lord,

From our Iniquity
Thou art the way, the OOor
Delivt'l" US , 0 l.J:n"d,

Paradise, beautUul Paradise,
Has oo need at sun rr moonlight t1 nigh t

From our Iniquity
How wretched Is the ma n
Deliver us. 0 Lord,

~

magnificent S&amp;Yiour
Provided au the light.

From our tnlqulty
I know Thou wW and can.
' Deliver us, 0 Lord,
Deliver us today

,
Pralstrtg Alpha and Omega, The lleglrmlng
' aDd the end, the lnrd Jesus Christ . - Mrs

Barbara James.

l'ncdce lftWl'oo Preach
lnl"' d folks are apt to teach "'"

SOnya Wise.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second llvenu•, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
•

Christ our Lord. - Mrs. Barbara James.

!know Paradise Is a beautllul sight
The walls ......, bejeweled
In excnldattrtg splendor
The streets are pure gold
Like dear glas.s r1 window
Glory and honor are there
From kings of the earth
, 'lbei"e Is no one place
1bat can value.Its worth.

Mldlele y OWJ&amp;, lllld Joel Grate, the dlurchmlce; lllld
third row, ~ )!lad[, Amber Hek!a, aDd 'l'rllcy
MCKIDney, with the s1ng1ng DJSbook, canoa,
cmtpledl!g the callt. Other!llln the caal not pr.-.t tor
the pldure were Jason Black, Tammy Black and

Licensed Clinical Audiologis t

preached.

God's Jove lights It up

Complete Gutter Work
Compl11e Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked In home 'area
20 yearo
··Free E1timate1 ..

EUGENE LONG

EUGENE LONG

. Ph. (614) 843-5425

.Ph. (614) 343-542'5

7/9/2 mo. pd.

9/13/2mo. pd.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

•t RENCHING
•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVtdE
•WATER, GAS. SEWER.
RAIN UN ES.

P'HONE 992-2156

County Cerlif1ed

SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLEIJ
FREE ESTIMATES '
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367-7560- 367-0767
.
CHiSHIRE. OHI
3 1 .t

WRITESEL

5000 PSI

2 Tre compressor shall be of
th€ fo ur stage smnle Actr nq
destq n Sha ll be arr cooled and
Pqur pped wr lh both rn te r
coo Prs and an aft er cooler II
shall be capable of contrn uous
npPr cl!ro n at mnxmHrrn rated
~HC SS U I 8

3 The com pressor dflv8r
il ll re lated compOnen ts
shc1ll be housed rn a floor
mcu nt
cabrnet li ned wrth
'lOu'l d dead enrnq ma tenal
Roth P.nrls nnd hack of the
ca brnet ar e to be removable lor
seNrc rng Cab rne t shall be
lrnrs hed wr th pr 1mer and
enamel and all control s for
reg11la r operat•on shall be
mou nt ed on the front of the
r abrnet
4 Co mp resso r lubrtcalron
syste m shJII be press ure type
and capable ot orovrdmq adequate lu bnatron at all operatrn g
prPS"U' l"' A vrsual mean s of
checktnq the ori pressur e one
IP.'JPI shall be nrovtder:l and a
ro•A or I press ure shut down
sa f ~ t v swrtch shall be provrded
5' Ttw co mpressor arr rntake
sha ll be provrdecl wtth a
repldc:e&lt;l ble drv tvoe cart rrdge
fr ltcr to rern ove partr Clrlate
ma tt er
6 The co mpressor rs to be
drrv('n Nr th a 7 5 HP 230 volt
srn iJtP phase elecnr c motor of a
bran d reudrly avarl &lt;1 ble locally
• t:.. rn cliJ rl Ptr c start er wrth heat
rrse protectr on rs to be pro
vr rl erl and all rntegral wnrng
crr rur ts are to conform to
'lJ tronat wr rrng codes
7 The sate o peratron of thrs
.mrt wr ll be rnsured bv th e
oruvrsron of sil1Rty valves at
each sta\ie of compressron and
on tl'i'e purrfrcatrOn system An
au!O matr c pressur e swrtch shall
be pravrd ed whr ch wrll shut th e
unrt down at a pre set adjuSta l)ln pr css1rre and resta rt the unrt
at 300 PSI below the pressure
setlrng
8 lnter stage arr d ryr ng
cnambers are to be provrded to
rn::; ur e that the arr produced wrll
meet all regulatory agency s
dewp orn t stJndar ds Each
r ham ber rs to be eourpped wrth
a manual drarn valve and all
co ndensate chaniBe rs are to be
dr a rn e d au tomatr c ally by
Jnd

LAFF·A·DAY

Public Notice

Public Notice

means of a trr"n ~d solenord valve
NOTICE OF
Sav1ngs Company 125 East
19 The etectr1cat tnsta ilaH on
whrch Wtll ernpty the chambers at th rs unrt wrll be provrded lor
Ma1n Street Pomeroy Ohra
PUBUC SALE
"
of accumula!ed morsture every by the buyer
The follow1ng descrr bed 1tem
Terms of Sale Cash
15 mrnutes
wr ll be off ered for pubhc sale to
Seller reserves the nght to brd
20 t he prrce quote shall
the hr ghest brdder on the 13lh and the rrg ht to reject any and
9 A three chamber pur rfrca- tnclude al l shtpprng costs
of October 1984. at 10 00 all brds Pno r to the date of sale
tron systern rs to be provrded
j adayclock
FILL STATION
am
'Nhrch IS capable of processrng
arrangemen ts may bt&gt; made to
SPECIFICATIONS
1980 Pont rae 2 door Bonne- 1nspect th1s rnerchand1se by
at leas! 57 000 cubrc fe et of arr
lrem 21 A fr agme nta l~
betwee n cartr•dge cha nges to a deflectrng frll statr on tnclud1ng
VI ll e serra l number calling 992-2 171 between the
.. ' !
2N37AAX112572
pur rty eQuill to o r bell er than th e lollow rng .shall be provrded
hours of 9 00 o clock a m and
CGA standard for med rcal
Sa le of the securrty l•sted 500 a clock p m,
(a) chest level water b'ath
above wrll . be held on 1he
grade 0 One cham ber wrll cool 1na pot wrth dra1n
premrses of The Crty Loan &amp; (10) 3 1tc
serve as a separator the a ther
(b) fragmentat ron deflector
two wrll acceot droo tn car- rns rde coolrng pot
trrdqes whrch shall be iead rly
(c) steel fragmenta tr on Shreld
J VJ !able !rom the supp lrcr at all
Public Notice
lor operator
t1mP.s lm ludP.r:l tn the pur rfrca (d) dual frl ler hoses to frll all
tron system shall be a back standard SC BA bottles to 22 50
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
oressu re ma rntar n1ng check
4 500 PSI
valve 2 rn anual samplr ng chem- PSI(e9'
RE.t1-L ESTATE
) contra• panc 1 moun ted on
The
Stata
of Ohio.
ICal color change hrgh mars
th e operat o rs srde of the
tur e rnd rcator aml ane lectrorw fra g mentatiOn Shield Thrs
The leader ' M ortgage
Company
cartr rdge mo'lrtOr w1th gau ge panel wrll rncl ude a.) 1/? gauge
Pla1ntrfi
and/o r warnrng lrght
rnd rc ate supply p r e s ~ure a
vs
10 A gau ge ppnet shall
reg ulator to a dtust the fillrng
prav rded whrc h rncludes a press ure from 400 PSI io 5000 Mrchael D Smrth , et al
Defend ant
pressure gauge for eac h !:itage PS I a 3 1!1 ga ~ ge t o rnd r ca t e th e
of cornpressr on and f1nal pres adJUSted fdlrnq oress ure and a
No 83 CV 23 1
In pursuan ce of an Alias
&lt;&gt;urR .1 n orl press ure ga~rge an separate fdlrng valve lor each of
Order of Sale rn the above
accumulat1ve recordrng hour
frller hoses
ent
1t!ed actron I wrll offer for
rneter ready lrg hts shut down th e(f ltwo
the entrre stn1ron rs to be
rndr catrn q lrg hts and an an / off modu lar se parate lrom the sale a1 publrc auct ron at the
fron t steps of th e Court House
swrt ch .1
co m~re sso r and desrgned for
1 1 An au tornatrc hrgh
1n
Pomeroy rn the above
floo r rno(rntrn g o n an elevated
temperatur e lrmrt rng s hu t st anrl
named Co unty o n SatUrday
rl owr swttC: h shall he provrrlP.d
th e I Oth dav of November.
(g) the sta\l o n sha lt be of th e
wr th rnd rcatar lrghts on the same
t 984 at 10 00 o clock AM .
brand
as !he compressor
gauge panel
the tollow1nQ descrrbed real
and oarnted the same :olor
1 2 The compressor shall be
srtu.3 te rn the County of
v1llage reserves the rrg hl estate
capable of s tart rn q und er lull 10 The
Mergs
and
Stale of Oh10 and rn
t anv o r all b1ds and to the Townshrp
load wrth no manual unl oadrng VJilrreJeC
of .Salisbury
v~
anv 1nfo rrn alr tres rn 10 WI!
requr(Ad
brdd 1 n~
13 Any component requrred
Srtuated 1n the State of Ohro
Fred HolfrnJn Mayor County
for th e norm&lt;1l tnlended operaof Me1gs and 1n the
Vrlla
ge
of
Mtddleport
Real Estate General
Ir on Jl th ts system whrch has 191 26 1101 3 3tc
V1llage of Middleport . and
not bet&gt;n s pecrlrc ally herern
descnbed as fo llows
men tro ned Wtll be undersiOod
Lot One Hund red Erghty S1x
M. l. "Bud" McGHEE
to hP. [lrnvrdP.ct
Public Notice
( 1861 rn Bosworth s Addrt1on to
Lower Pomeroy as desrgnated
14 Al l necessa ry hose and
Broker-Auctton SeN1ce
on the Plat of sard Add rtron
at tach ments shall he prmrded
PUBUC NOnCE
Cheryl Lemley,
to enable !he compressor to
Natrce rs here by grven that on beanng dale of October 24
Meigs County Associate
19 73 f1led rn th e off1ce of the
pump rn to a fragmentat1on Saturday Oc10ber 6th 1984
Phone 742-3171
deflectrn g fr ll stauon as des at 10 00 am a publ1c sale wrll Recorder of Mergs County
crrbcd m par t 2 1 of these specs be held to sell fer cash the Oh1o and recorded 1n Plat Book
Now
No 2 oa ge 10 of the Record of
in
Co.
15 Atle.Jst one of eac h of the follow collateral
lollowrng shall be orovrded (At
To be sold at 105 Union Plats of Me1gs County Ohm
and now rncorparated 1nto ~nd
operators manual (b) parts Irs! Awtnue, Pomeroy, Ohio:
Public Sale
8
a part ot the Vrllage of
lcl marntenance sc hedule
11) 1976 Ford Truck Mf r s
16 Factory auth orrzed ser
serral no F26 YEB 2833 1 4 Mrdd leport Mergs County
8t Auction
v ce parts and normal ope rat wheel drrve
4 speed - wr th Oh !O
Known as 640 Pl um Street
rng rnatP.rrals are to be read.rly snow plow
Moddleport· Oh'o 45760
avar lable from the supplrer of
12 ) 1975 Ford Granada 4 Dr
Property App ra1 se d a t
thr~ unrt on order
S - Mfr s ser1al no
S18 500 00 and cannot be
17 Warr &lt;l nty poltcres arc to 5E8L 197785 - 6 Cyl - AT
be clearly stated wrth the brd
To be sold at Ktnglbury sold for less tha n two-th rrds of
OF
and are to be hr lly honored by Mobile Home Sale&amp;, Pom.-oy, that amoun t
Ter ms of sale Cash rn hand
the suppl rcr wrth no undue Ohio:
66 ACRES, BEDFORD TWP. MEIGS CO., 01110 delay
197 1 Skylrne Mobrle Home - on day of sale
JAMES J PROFFITI
AND PERSONAL PROPERTY
18 Included rn the prrce Mfr s serral no 2322
1
Sherr H
Quote' shall be the serv1ces of a
The Farmers Bank and SavMe1gs County
fac tory tra tned Delivery Technr
rngs Company Porneroy Ohro
cr.1n to perform an on srte stan reserves the rrght tb b1d at th1s (10) 3 10 17 3 tc;
up and perf ormance check of sale and to wrthdraw any of the
the entr re system a nd a above collateral prror to sale
thoro ugh trarnrng sessron for Further Th e Farmers Bank and
REAL ESTATE TO SELL AT 12:00 NOON
the personnel who are to be Savrngs Company reserves the
located 12 miles north of Pomeroy; 3'h miles •st of U.S.
tnvo lved wrth rls operatron At rrght to reject any or all brds
Rt. 33; I mile south of St. Rt. 681 on fownsbip IOICI #247.
thrs nme the output l iiow~a,r-1 subrnrned
St1ns
will be posted REAL ESTATE ,
punty CO content anti
Furth er the above are sold rrt
rP.l ref devrcP.s are to be tested thecondl tron theyare tnwllhno
Real estate conststs of approx;mately 66 acres with frontage
calrbrated and documented 1n expressed or rrnplred warran
on both sides of County Road 247. Improvements constst of
v-.rr trng by the tec hnrcran
tres g1ven
(10) 3 4 5 3tc
3 room concrete block and frame structure·with 2 enclosed
porches and bath: small barn, also 2 story frame dwelling,
Some acreage cleared Mmeral'nghts have not been leased
and shall transfer with rea l estate.
TERMS &amp; CONDITIONS: Property appraised at $30,950.00
and cannot be sold for less than $24,760.00. Rea l estate
A TIIP FROM ANYWHERE
taxes pro· rated to date of clos;ng. Ten percent (10%)depostt
day of sale; balance of purchase pnce due upon delivery of
Admtmstrator's deed on or before November 6, 1984. Possession gtven upon deltvery of Admtntslrator's deed· Any sta·
tement made day of sale shall take precedence over pnnted
•TWO BLOWERS
matter.
•GLASS DOOR
NOTE: Thts acreage ~ a good tnvestment opportumty as
there are se~eral producmgoll wells tn the tmmedtate area or
•LA~GE ASHPAN
it could be made into a huntinll_lodge or retreat.

Use Inserted In F'

54 Misc. Merchandiae

Public Notice

JOBS ,

CARS

I

I APARrMENTS I
I REAL ESTATE

PLU6 INTO.

CLR551 FIEOS

992-2156

EXECUTOR'S PUBLIC AUClJON
Saturday, October 6, 1984
Beginning at 11 :00 A.M.

INO MONEY DOWNI

lace or Free-Standing

SAVE

•AUTOMATIC DRAFT
•BURNS WOOD
or COAL

B.V.P.U .

40°/o

."· PERSON~l' PROPERTY

Ktng wood and coal heater, Holpoinl refrigerator; propane
gas heater: BN Ford lractor, needs repair; 2 bottom plow·
shallow well pump; 'cement m;xer 1968 Chevrolet pickup:
1950 Ford pickup, 53 Ford, 53 chevrolet
'
None of the above vehicles are in running cor\dilion at this

90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH

-

b~

ESTATE OF RICHARD 0. SMITH
Ftan~lln D.

Executor
Fr~n~ County Probate C011rt Case 11349594
Joel Campbell, Attorney
'
4!10 City Par~ Ave.
Columbus, Ohio
SAlE CONDUCTED BY
Phone: 614· 224-8339
ROGER E. WILSON
REAL ESTATE BROKER &amp; AUCTIONEER
107 S. llain St. - lotldon, Ohio
Phone: 614·U2· 1181

KI"DLEWOOD
OIRECTIONS: Rt. 7, 6 Miles Below
Gallipolis-Cross Raccoon Creek
Bridge a~d follow signs.

OPEN
·'

Smltll,

DliiC

•

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
·Downspouts
Gutters Cleaned
Painting
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

GOOD USED
GAS S. ELEC. DRYERS
Washets to 111tch Upri&amp;ht
FreeztiS, S_l!in Woihers, &amp;E.
Whtrlpool . Mayto&amp;. ·
TV S. APPLIANCES
627 ltd A... llallipoits, 011:
(~pan Da1r &amp; Saturdar t1l6 P . l . ~
PH . 446 -1899

I

ONE WOOD STOVE THAT CAN HEAT YOUR EN11RE HOUSE
WORTH

ROOFING CO:.-

-~----~--··

949-2969- 949-2263
B·IO·i mo

Real Estate General

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

FOR SALE
(I) HOUSE IN CHESTER:
Three acres. witha nicely constructed concrete
block home 26x30, 3 bed·
rooms. one bath; 12115
family room. Partially
carpeted, fuel 01 furnace
with facilities for wood·
burner. 12Kl5 block storage buildinl. 20x30 block
garflle. Right off Rt. 248,
country setting, % ' mile
east of Chester. Ohio .

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

1

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121 ·

TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE: Oownstaits
equipped with kitchen,
living room, dining room
and den; upstairs has two
bedrooms and one bath:
house also has basement.
lot size approx. 48'x308'.
Needs work.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• DOZER · BACKHOE
• RECLAMATION WORK
•Qtl FIELD SERVICES

•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•CONCRETE WORK

'CUSTOM BUilT HOM ES
•WATER. GAS &amp;

If

tnterested contact The
Home N,tional Bank in
Racine , 949-2210.

WH~~EY'S AUTO PARTS

Vinyl 8t Aluminum

CHIMNEY SWEEP

SIDING

Call for free siding estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860
No Sun~ay Calls

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314

..-

' ,,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

or

843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Authorizeit John Deere,
New Holland , Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Equipment

Parts &amp; Service

OIL LINES

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your winng
needs: furnaces repair
service and installatio n.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

AUTO
RENTAL

E.

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

Real Estate
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

1·(614)-992-3325
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
mobile home w~h washer &amp;
dryer Garage. one acre, near
Pomeroy for $15,000
NEW LISTING - AI Reedsvtlle
6 rooms, bath, T P waler,
carport and one acre, m. or I at
$18,500.
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
tratler, 2, ,added frame rms.,
about one , acre near Tuppers
Plans lot'\$14,000
NEW LISTING - Rac; ne - 8
rms., bath, 2 enclosed porches
and one level acre UMden
Estate) As~ $27.500
POMEROY Nice home
where you can w~k to the
sillies. Bath, basement furnace, carpeting and aH uttltties.
NEW HOME - You wtll be ·
surprised when YQU see thiS
one. Space for large fam;ly
10011] and the 2nd bath for only
$1'8,000 .00 Owner wtll
finance

'

83 ACRES - Some nice
tractor bllable. Good 3 bedroom
home, balli and flue lor a
woodburner.

SYRACUSE :.._ 2 level mts, 6
rms., nice bath, carpeting &amp;
automatic helL
NfAR ATMENS .:._ 3.95 acr.es,
2 bedroom mobile horre, 2nd
water .lap and 2 bldgs. Just
$10,500.

Wt AilwrtiM Yow
Tl• A llanth.

~

Ht lfl\'lfllf
Ht •, I( It II I./I ft 'I_\

3

NEW LISTING - luppetS
Plams - Country setting m
approx 2\ol acres wtth 3
OOdroom ranch home. fireplace, carport Good oondmon.
$36,000.00.
NEW LISTING - How abOut
almost 5 acres wilh country
setting? Nteely retrOOeled 2
story 3 bedroom home,
basement patio &amp; carport,
spectal financing terms availa~e. Call for your :;!towing.

$21i,300 00
NfAR POMEROY - 3 bedroom home, range, reftl!eralllf,
and woodbummg smve Needs
some repatr. Small lot and
butld ;ng near house .

$9,80000.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd like to tntroduce you to
Eniaae-A-Car. the modern way
to dme the weh1cle of your

ch01ce

. No Down Pa(ni( nt
l ower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For F1ster Serv1ce
Call 614-992-6737

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd.
Chester, Ohio

Ph. 9B6-4269

POMEROY - Ntce 3 bedroom
ranch wrth range &amp; hood. Fully
carpeted, new plumbing
IOO ' xl08' lot. On l y
$25,000.00.

FIVE POIIITS ~ Crow Sulxlivi-

If No Answer, 1:111 m -4382
We Service All
Mokoi &amp; Modolo
Anlenno lnsllllllton
House Cells ond Shop
Servtce Avollable
"Serv1ce that Towers Above
The Res!"

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1 1 3 tf e

TROMM
'
EXCAVATING
•LAND CLEARED
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS '
•GRAVEL HAULED
Bonded &amp; Insured

PH. 742-2328
3· 5·tfc

7/1 1/tln

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Buying daily gold, silver
coins . ring a. jewelry. sterling
ware. old coins, large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed Bur ~
kett Barber Shop, 2nd Ave .
Middleport. Oh. 614-992 3476.

GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583

Wanted to buy . investment
property Call 61 4-992·
5868 .

or

CHESTER-985-3307

·

conditionin&amp; pOol, Ill on I acre

LANGSVILLE
GROCERY
&amp; GARAGE

lot 3 bedrooms and large
kilchen. Asteal tor $54,900.00.
MIODLEPDRr Faittastic
home With a gtpnltc famtly
room with a bea~ul firepllee,
large liVing room, 3 bedrooms,

approximatEly I acre of
ground. Want $69:1XXl.OO.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cltllnd,
Jr ... .. ............ 992-6191
Jean Trussell .... . 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692
Jo Hill ......... .... . 985·4466

A

7:00,7:00 'Daily'
Major &amp; Minor
Mechanical Woi'k

Open

llllllltATIOIIAL
miLIIILIIIIG
IIAIIUfACTIIIIII
AWAIDIIIG DIALRSHIP
IN AVAILAIU AliAS
SOON.·
GliAl l'llOfR POIIIIIW
Ill AN IXPAIIDIIIG
lOUSilY.
For Applicltion Call :

.03 1

992-2282
11 I tic

Announ ce menls

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing ma·
chine repair, part&amp;, and
supplies
Pick up end
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
614· 446·0291

DITCH WITCH
SERVICE
GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE L1 NES
FREE ESTIMATES

773-5839 or
773-5788
8113 / 1 mo

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Gun shoot at Racine Gun
Club every Sunday, 1:00
p.m. Factory chocked guns
only

Emp loyment

4 puppies 2 months old 3
males. Call 61 4-3B8-8883
Puppies Mother Doberman.
father unknown C ~ll 614·
367·7753.
Puppiea part AU'1 tralian Blue
Heeler 8t Ph Bull, 3 weeks.
Call 614-3B8 · BB76 evos
ofter 4 :00.
Fuel oil thet has some water.
Caii448 -391B .

2 bags of yard 1ale goods
Call 814-J8B·B449.
Female puppy mother white
German Shepherd Call
446-7943.
Female cat. good with child·
ren, 4 female kitten e. 8 wks.
old. Call 814· 949· 2666 elter 6 p. m.

.

•Washers •Dishwashe rs
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
I S lie

Free lire kindling . 304-6756648.

6

Lost and Found

WEDGCOI
(3031 759·3200
Ext. 2403.

F•tt r.....u, $,.,,,t
Check Anti-Freeze.
Belts. Hoses, Plugs
Prices

Start At

$149 5

PH. 742.·9070
9-4·1

•

mo.

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
.CLINIC
IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.

OPEN EACH
THURS . EVE . 6-8
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
Jl05 JACKSON AVE.
SMALL ANIMAL HOURS
Monday 3 p.m -5 p.m.
Tuesday 6:30 p. m.· B p.m.
Wednesday 3 p.m.-5 p.m.
Thursday l p.m.-5 p.m.
Friday I p.m.-2 · p.m.
Satwdly 10 a.m.-11:30 &amp;m.
LARGE ANIIAL AND
SURGERY BY APP!11NTIIENT

304-675-2441
8120/1 mo

Loot In Middleport aroo
brindle colored Pit Bull with
white feet. • month&amp; old,
reward. Call'614-992· 3289
or 814· 992·6648 .
loet. red Doberman .
an1wars to n•me of Ailey
Lalt •en on Second St. in
Middleport wearing tilver
ohocker chain. Call 614·
982-3288"
loot 2 doge in TNT arM, one
Beagle and one Boxer, Ae·
ward. 304-176·5646.

B

Public Sela
8t Auction

Auction Every Tueoday
night, Pt. Pla01ant, WVa
Auct. Lonnie NHI, Youth
Center Bldg., Camden 51.
Calll1 4-367· 7101 .

General Repairs Reason&amp; ·
ble rate&amp;. carpentry, plumb·
ing. electrical, no JOb too
omall . Call 614·256· 6496
---~---,--- lc ­

Water wells, drilled &amp; ser·
viced . Fre&amp;" est1mataa. Call
614-992· 5006 or 61 4-742·
3147

Financial

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE
OHIO
PUB ·
Wanted old ptanos, Paying LISHING CO.VALLEY
recommends
S20 00 and $40 .00 each .
you do business with
Firsh floor only. Write giving that
know. and NOT
people
directions. Witten Pianos to sandyou
money through the
box 188 Sardis. Ohio mail until you have inveatl ·
43946. Phone 614 -4B3 - gated the offering.
1605.
Moat profitable bus~nessll
Cash for reasonably prtced 50 outlets pro d~dng high
used carpet laying tools. call prof1t, multi·flavor popcorn
before 7 30 AM or after Only $31 0 each, ent ire
6 ·00 PM, Athens Oh . 614 · businen only $15 .500 1·
593-6870
800· 327·B466. Colt now l
GINSENG ROOT, Top qual · Store building for rent at
ity and size graded, selected ~20 E Main ; Pomeroy .
$ 200 . 00 lb Ordinary Front and rea r entrance C all
smaller root - Lessl All 614· 992 · 8232 or 992 other kinds o f root also
purchased Call Robert 6757
Harper . 304 · 67 ~· 79?7 .

Giveaway

Puppiea. couple all white,
male puppiaa . J04· 882·
33B.:l

985-3561
All Mokes

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Bods. iron,
wood, cupboards , chairs,
cheats, baskets. dishes ,
stone iars. antiques, gold
and s1lver . Wrlte·M . D.
Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 o r call 614 ·9927760.\o

New Homes-Extensive
Remode ltng
Insurance Wotk
CustQ.m Polo Bldgs .
&amp; Garages
Roofing Wotk
Alumtnum &amp; Vinyl Stdtngs
15 Years Experience

m

StOn Newer ranch sl)'le
home with 2 car garage, a;r

2\1 balhs, !WI basement, on

Will do house cleaning at
reaaonab1e rates Call 446 ·
7243
'

Gallipolis, Ohio

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

9/27/ 1 mo pd

Karate· Pr1vate Leasona .
Learn the ultimate 1n self·
defense. American Karate
Studio since 1~71. 143
Bu rlington Rd , Jackson,
Ohio. 61 4-2B6· 3074. lnatructor. Jerry Lowe r y ~
1984 inductee 1nto We1gh ~
tliftin"g Hall of Fame.

U-S~VE

J O6 l! c

JOBS
PH. 992·2478

Catl 742-3195
Or 992-5875

Wanted: deep sea fiahing rod
and reel · 4 .0 or 6 0 . Call
446-1325.

Schools
Instruction

1 8 Wanted to Do

St . Rt. 160 North

- BACKHOES
- DUMP TRUCKS
- LO-BOYS
- TRENCHER
- WATER
- SEWER
-GAS'tlfiES
- SEPTIC SYSTEMS
lARQE Gl SMAU

Baby Sitting in my home
Harriaonville area. Call 742·
2142 .

15

"We Rent For less 11

Ractne. Oh.
Ph 614-843-5191

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- DOZERS

yeara experianc e call 614992-7314

446-4522

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Have A Full Time
Shop Technician
on Duty

Will care for the elderly in our
home l.P N care given 16

Junk auto• any
conditio n Call 61 4 -3BB·
9303 .
Wanted ~

Ser vi ces

11

Help Wanted

Merr i- Mac Homemaker s
earn x·tra income We need
several representa tives m
thia areal Party plan exp. a
plut Gifts, toys . home de·
cor. No inveatment. Car &amp;
phone nee . Coli free 1 -BOO·
663-9077 . Aleo booking
parties.&amp; 14-446-3043
Soli AVON make 46%. Call
448 · 3368
Admi ..ions repreaentattva
for Gallipolis lusineiS Col·
lege . Salary plus boniA.
Sales experience helpful.
but not necessary . Call
614 - 446 - 4367 . lor
intervjew.
Automotive Clng . &amp; Recon·
ditioning matertala . Sell to
Car Dealers, etc . Commis·
sion basis. full or part time .
Write Sales Mgr . P.O. Box
2106, Dayton, Oh 46429
Wanted . Lady to live •na nice
home and care for an elderlo;
lady. Sa la ry plus room and
boord . Reply to Box 242,
Pomerov-

.. ·-- ·Pom&amp;rov ·.. ·.... ·

.. .... Gaiifiioifs.........
&amp; Vicin ity

Middlepo rt

&amp; Vicinity
.. ..... ··· '··---··-......... X'

Firtt Time Garage Sale 9 · 4
Oct . 5 &amp; 6. Furn iture,
clothes, 1omething for f' \18 ·
ryone . Rt . 141 to Pleaaent
Hill S chool Rd. to · Fairfield
Church Rd . Follow signa.

Oct 2, 3, and 4 , indoor sale
9 .00 to 3.00 each day St
Joseph' s Church. 3rd and
Pomero v St . Mason. W \Ia •
Clot he s, all sizes . high cha1r,
stroller, glass. books. tapes ·

'

Wom.n to care for middle Yard Sale Thura . Oct. 4th Carport sale at Bob Eads.
ag' lady, ... yo only, 6 dayo a 9AM Orchord Hill Rd . off Rt S alem St ., Ru tland Oc1. 5.,
woek, 304-896-3900
' 218 . Drapes, bed clotbing, • 9 .00 am to 4 :0 0 pm S ponf1 sh t ank &amp; stand, lots of sored by Ru tland Church of
Eern tNttra money for Chriat· mi•c . Fi•her &amp;: Sheatl.
God
m11 w11h Rawlelgh Pro·
ducu. phone 304 - 675· Garga Sale 2 mi. from HM C Oct . frnt thru fourth at 8 36
1090.
Rt. 180 Oct 4 ,6, 6 Apple E. Main St . Pome roy Nioe
butter. Clothing % price
c lothing. hou sehold. and

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;. Will baby a•t in my home.
wood heaters. Swain Furni· ~ave references Call 992 ·
turo, 446· 3159, 3rd a. _7_o_3_B_. -----~­
1
Olive St .• Gallipolia. Oh.

Wanted t o buy hou se or
trailer bo property wtth land
contract $600 down . Call
446-2244 .

CALL

Sizes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsulaled Dog Houses

9-4·1 mo.

3 II IIC

. RENT A CAR

4

TEAFORD

Jim Mink Chev · Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnaon
446-3672

SIDING CO.

work
{Free Estimates) ·

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

Are you In High S chool and
looking for a part-time Job 7
II you ore a high ochool
Junior or Senior, you can
onllot In the Woot Vlrglntl
Army Natlon1l Guard. at·
tend drill one weekend a
month for pey, and 'complete
required ~ctive duty tra ining
during aummer month&amp; . Call
304-175· 3960 or 1 · BOO·
842-3619. .

Auction, Sal, Oct 8th, 8:JO
PM Hugo trucklood, new
morchondloo, Dtck Bowman, Dealer. Chombilr of
Commerce Building, Belpre, 12
Situations
Ohio in Howallo Grove Pork .
Wanted
Juot c "!"e to Belpre otlk
anyone, oaoy to find Emma 1- - - - - - - - - - Ball "Mrs." Auctioneer li ·
cenoad and bondad W. Ve . Will do babysitt ing in Merand Ohio 429B5. For inlor· cerville area. Call 446 motion call 304-428•8177 . 4717

9

BISSELL

- Aoofmg •nd gutter work

Farm

Bell, bonded.
auctioneer,
and
Weat licensed
Virginia
and Ohio . 42BB177 .

9_13_1fn

CHIMNEY KING

- Concrete wprk
- Piumt:J1ng and electrical

Pomeroy, Ohio

For your next 111e 00111 Emmo

r J ,,,

I

(2)

73-80 Chevv lr.
D-50 Dod1olr.
fenders .................... 170
fenders... ..... .. ....... 62
81 -84 Chevy Tr~
76·82 Chevette
Fenders ............... ... 110
Car Fenders ............ .. ... 60
S· IO·S15 Chevy lri.
79·80 lttuslana
Fenders ... ................... 80
Cor Fenders ........ ... ..... 60
73·79 Ford Tr
81 ·84 Escort-Cynx
Fenders .... ................... 59
Fenders ...... .. .. ........... 49
80·1Hord Tr.
Omni-Horizon 2 dr. or
Fenders ..... ......... ...... 110
4 dr. Fenders ........ ........ 75
Ford R1naer
Chevy &amp; Ford
Tr. Fenders ................. 98
PU Bumpers ........... 69 95
72·80 Dotlp Tr.
79-82 Chevette Gnlls .. .... 38
Fenders ............ 115
Ford Ranaer Grills ...... 75
ford and Chevy Tatl r.ates

- Addona a nd remocteling

•BACK HOE •DOZER

'

"

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
" Froe Estimates"

James

..

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Come, Almighty Jesus ,
And bring a brand flEW day.
Praises to the Lord Jesus, - Mrs. Barbara

But 1t takes a lot to practice what you preach
Sometimes we strive our goals to reactJ

Auction every Friday night It
tho Hertford Community
Center Truc kload• of "ew
merchandile avery week.
Conaigment1 of new 8t uted
merchandi•• always wei·
comed. Richard Revnotdt,
Auctioneer. Coli 304· 276·
J069

USA M. KOCH , M.S. .

Many were amazed by what they htard
Many Jost souls through Christ were reached
He was man who practiced what He

Great and mighty a nt
Inside of this wall
111e etrrnat city does sit.

KIDS PRAJSE- The muslcai"KidsPralse4" will
be pfU!elded lit the Rutland Churcll of the Nazarene
Saturday night lit 7 under the dlredlon of Jell Carson.
Mike Gilmore has charge of the music. In roles,
plclured left to rtg!J.t, front, are Cadna Wolfe, Shelley
Black, Angle Black, and Renee YO!IJIIr, tbe kids,
second row, Beverl.v Baylor, Jenillfer Chasteen,

E•perlenced ..... peroon for
lumber 1nd h1 rdw1re etore ,
00111114-~92- 181 1,

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PU8UC NOTICE
Brds will be rece rved until
2 3Q PM Octobe' 15 1984 at
th e M ayor s olf rce 237 R ae~
St MioJleport Oh ro fo.r an arr
&lt;;r rprJiy systern to meet the
IQIIowrng specrfrc at rons
AIR COMPRESSOR
SPECIFICATIONIS
Compressor shal l be of th e
rn.mu fa cturer s latest model
pwpe rly rd entAfrcd and shall be
ctesrg nP.d spP.c rf rca lly lor the
produc tr on o f breathrng arr It
sha ll orodu ce a delrverv of no
less tha n 9 2 CFM at 3200 PSI
anrl no less tha n 8 3 CFM at

..... -

We keep our emotions light a ieosh
And many o01ers we do lrtlpi!IICh

With golden streets and a crystal sea
With pel!l'ly gates to eoter.there!n
It's ~ giOI)' o1 God. you•re·welrome, oome

Public Notice

,_

But It'&amp;not often we pracdce what we preach.

,_Y w1D
.
beautiful, It's got

his HeaVOIIty

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notice

~~

I

Poet's corner

Pu . ..
Paradise 11 beautUul l 1a1ow
And that's where I want to go
OVer in Paradise with Je&amp;u!, our King,

Meigs Inn, Oct. 11 and 12, open for
publlcvte.vlngtrom lla.mto8p.m.
eachday.
·
The approxlmately 00 paintings
will be displayed In the l?anquet
room and there will be no charge for
viewing. Most of the pieces will be
for sale.
An art Instructor, Mrs. Carrington CUITe!ltly has approxlmately 60
students ranging In age from 7 to 72
from Jac kson, Hocldng, Athens and
Meigs Counties In Ohio, and Mason
and Wood Counties In West VIrginia
In tbe Gingerbread Studio, which Is
located near Pagetown.
She has exhibited extensively
·over Ohio, and her paintings hang In
homes and businesses across the
cOuntry. Twice sbe has been
commissioned to do full wall murals
In motels.

·Service
set
Harvest Trto will

~

OctOber 3, 1984

• Pilge-12- The Daily Sentinel

ton will' haw an

-··- '

'

mise

Don' t m1 as th11 sa le f rL one
day S everal fam ilies. So me·
th1ng tor everyone. 5 8.6 Jay
Dr.

GARA GE SALE : 315 Con·
dor St in Pomeroy . Sat Oct
6 at 10:00 Chau . rugs,
draperie s, beddmg . coats.
clot hmg , mise

Yard Sale Centenary To w nhouse , Thurs. Oct. 4 G la ss
&amp;. wheat dishes. utensils.
da c roma . drapes. lamp. pic·
tu res. coau, clot hing

Ya r d sale at - Florence
S idd ers, Darwin . Wed ,
Tl1 u rs, and Fr. 10 till 1 lots
of m1sc

4 Family Yard Sale S 4 th
St ., Cheahtre. Oh Thrus ,
Oct . 4 . 9· 5 New Englo sh
Sa dd le , JUte box wtth 8 track
stereo, c loht1ng. &amp; t oys.

Fr~ d ~y

an d Saturday, 133
Bitternut Ave W arm Mo rn·
mg heater. dresser, chest.
new Circular saw, btke ,
antique pu m p parlor o rgi n
Baby furn1ture, hobby hores,
depression . JOWel tea. }eana.
coll ectible, much more

Rummage Sale a t Gra ce
United Methodist in Grace
Gutld room, 8-4 30 , Fnd ay
Oct . 5.

Five fami ly garage sa le at
Dale Hart's, Yellowbush
Rd Recrne Furniture. fuel
011 fur nace. 8 &amp; W TV ,
Stereo. d1shes, m1sc 1toms
October 6, from 9 to 4

Vard S ale Thu rs . &amp; Fn . 5 m1.
out Rt 218, 9AM to 5 PM
M•sc . 1tems
Garaga Sale Oct . 4t h &amp; 5th
Thu rs . &amp; Fr1 634 Hilda Dr .
Fa•rv1ew Subdivision 9 to 6
Rai n o r shme .

2 famt lv garage sale across
from Naza rene Church m
R utla nd Sale at NelsOn 's

Yard Sale Wed. &amp; T hurs 4t h
traile r on lincoln Pike. Just

off R t 141 at C ente nary
Chea p sale Fallcl othmg ,
di s he!, pan s. too ls. lmens
Jew elry Lots more.

restde n ce on M am St
10 00 -3 00, Oct 4th and

5th

1- - -- - -- - - - Huge sale . Th urs and Fri

Baby bed . drapes, curtains ,
boys c loth mg 4 -14, girls
G1gantic Ya rd Sale 1 st Time 0 -2(excell a n t ).a dults al l
th1s yea r oct . 3.4.&amp;5 1 mile stzes. doub le mattress ,
east of Porter o n Rt 544 spnngs. ceiling light. walnut
9 · 5 . Clothtng all stzes, baby lum ber, m1sc
Flatwoods
item s, chest of d raw ers. Rd .. Ftve Pomts . Co. Ad 26
tupparware, dis hes Co18- a t Ba1leys
man &amp; Mc Gu1re res1den ce
Oct 4th an d 5t n at 9 00v. -mi off Rt 7 on Georges 4 , 00 Seco nd St , Syracus e
Creek Ad Oct 4 th &amp; 5th
Housenold 1te ms, clothrng. Two fam1!y yard sale at 444
curtain s
Beech St 1n Middleport
Cu rtuins . p•llows baby
Ga rage Sele Oct 5 &amp; 6. clothes, clothes for all s1zes,
Debby Dr McGu ire Subdivl· bed spre ds 9 to 4 Thur.
sion . Encyclopedia Brittan · Frt ,Sat
1ca. mtrror stereo . a rtlftc la ll - - - -- - - - -- &amp; hve flowers , nature encyc
Clea rance. lar ge ya rd sale
lopedia. Call 446-3 9 18
Col lectors rtems antiques.
School desk Law n mowers·
End of Season Gara ge Sele , b1cycle, tools. t oys. d1shs,
Rts 7 &amp; 218, Fri &amp;r Sat Oct applian ces. s tereo . record
5th ,&amp; 5th 9 -7
player, Christma s decora -,
tiOns , r"&amp;d1os . clocks. tue:s
G1gant1c Movmg Sale 505 andmisc At5,2E MarnSt
Pecan St Oct 4 &amp; 5 , 8 0 0 til P omeroy , OhiO , O ct
5 3 0 Furnnure. an tiques, 4, S,and 6. Thursday. Fnday
guns, weed ea ter c h1lds and Sa1Urday Be srde Oh10
captarns bed , t oys. b1cycles. Va ll ey Bulk Food Store
plants . clothm g, soft scul p·
'
ture dolls. meta l dec tector. Yard Sa le Oct 4 5.and 6
b1cycfes, un1to rm s, etc
10 00 to 5 0 0 At John
Suttles on 24 8 En d of
Yard Sale Fnday 8r Sat urda y S uccess Ad (cou ntv rd 46)
9o00 to 7 Bethe l-Churc h Rd Furntture. d ishes. clothf!ls
2 m1les fr om Holzer Me d1cal and M1sc wat c h ior signs
Center Clothe s, glassware,
furniture, m1sc

F&gt;tF&gt;Ieasa·ri·i - ...

Carport Sale Oct 5 &amp; 6 Fr1
&amp; V icinity
a. S at 9 00-6 00 4 52
Lanat Or, near Ho lzer Me dical Ce nter Clothes. draper- Yard Sale . October 2 3, 4
Ies, d ishes, 2 Slu e Devil 2219 Oak S t ree t Tools
jackets, a quar~ u m . bicycles m1 sc . ftgu rines . d1shes
m ise
"'
o dds and ends Cancel 1f
ram
Yard Sale Oct 5 &amp; 6, 9 -5
Househ old furms hrngs . c lo · Yard Sale. 16 Burdette
thmg, t ires. antique s, V1cto r· Add n Point P leasan t , Wed .
ola &amp; sewm g mac h1 ne· Thurs. and Fn
Som e furniture Old Rt 35
22 Money to Loan
belo w Canoe l 1very
1 0 famr ly yard sale. Oct
4 5, 6 , Powel l' s Barber
Garage S ale Fri &amp; Sat 0 ct Shop , Ga llipoli s Fer ry ,
HOME LOANS FI XED 6 S. 7 B.OOAM to dark W Va Flowe r asso rtment s ,
RATES Below market rates Avecodo ref &amp; 30" gas Show &amp; Tell reco rd playe r. 2
Fixed conventional FHA · range. baby furn iture , heavy H1 ll Motor Cycles, chaas ,
VA . Leader Mortgage , duty ca rgo tra1le r, red wood tabl e , al l s1ze cloth1ng ,
Athens, collect 614-592 · lawn furni ture. mr sc , mrle dishes elec sweeper and
3061
out At 141 , Safio rd Sc hool attac hment s, some tools ,
Rd . 3 rd . ho use o n nght
4 24 In ternat io nal Tractor .
a ddmg machine , 2 radios ,
23 Professional
Oct . 6 -7. 9 · 5. Cou ntry A1r ple nty m1sc. come early
Services
Estates % mile off At 7. don 't mrss lot s o f tJllrga rns
Geo rges Creek Ad Low
pnces
5 fa mily yard sale. 131
P1a no Tuning and Repair
Lew1s St , N ew Haven , Oct 3
Brunicardi Music Co . 446 · 6 Family S ale Clay Com - and 4 . M ise items a nd good
0687 Twentieth year of m u ntty Bldg V2 m1 below c loth1ng
quality service ' -Lane De· Rt 2 1B. off r1 2 1 8 &amp; At 7
Oct . 4th, 5t h. 6th . 9 -l
Oct 4 S. 5 , 10 AM -4 PM .
noelo, 614 · 742-2951
169 Roush Or, New Haven.
Piano les sons by ex pe - 3 Family Yard Sa le Frr &amp; chrldren clothing, Husky 12 ·
rittnced teachel"; call 614· Sat. Bes1de Po rt er c hurc h m 16, pool. Cabbage Patch
992· 3039. Joan Robin son . Porter
Dolls car seat

.

1 st . rd on nght after Swan
Creak Bndge Thurs, &amp; Fn
Men w o m an c tnldre n
clot hes . muc h more

Real Estate
31

Yard Sale 3 56 Third Ave
Baby 1tems . .~ di shes , toys,
and more Fnday, Saturday,
9 00· 5·00

Homes for. Sale

3 bdr . house, pool, AC,
fireplac ... Pt. Pleasant. sale
or rent. Coli 676-6104
600 block of 2nd Ave .. 2
bdr . ~ exc. Cond . big back
yird , $37,500 Call 446·
2168

Fall · into a Unbelievable
home Savmg Thousands of
Oollaral Fireplace Middle·
Christmas Eern1ngs begin , port . Call 814-992· 6941 .
now for Avon Represent• ·
tivea . Soli full o r pan time. 3 bdr home for 1118 by
over 18 call 81 4·69B · 7111 owner, located on Rt. 160,
near N G .H.S 836 ,000.
collect.'
·
Caii614-3BB-8711 .
S E CRETARY ·
RECEPTIONIST: Genarol Arbuck ... 3 bedroom home,
iecretl~ work, bookkeeplarge utility room. 1 '.7 baths.
ing. accounting. filing and dining room, h.J if acre plus.
telephone aklllo needed . Ex· 304·468- , BOO.
perlence ia not nece1sery,
but reliability. pleulng per- By owner 3 bedroom1, 1 Vt
oonolity, good ohorthand bath&amp;. living room . dining
and ablllly to work wilh room, ' recreation room in
othert la necaaaery . Reply to batement. new 24x24 gar·
8o1&lt; 428, Pomeroy, Ohio a ge . Clos e downtown
giving f ull de1ailo. w ith Shown by ap poi ntment,
resume.
3 04-675·4604 .
.:.:;~:.:_~_ _:__ _ ·ICG't&gt;V E RNMENT JOBS . 3 br homo, 1'h botho,
11 6,559 -$110.56J per year. baoement wtth l&lt;mlly room ,
Now hiring. Your area. Cell double gareQe, pool. Meson
1-806 · 8B7-6000 Ext . R· 7 73· 5496 alter 4 :00.
9806.
1- - - - -- - -,;_

Oct 6th fo r Church Yout h A
m11e before JUnCtiOn Rt 2
and 87 Kenneth Durst
Furn1ture clothes . m1sc.
10 00 t'll4 00
Yard Sate, 1 m1le from Yon
At 62 . chr ldrensc lothe!'ii and
mise rtems Wed thur Sat

1:::::::::;::;:::;:;::;::::,t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;::;;,
~

31

Homes f or Sale

3 2 Mobile Homes
f or Sale

8 yra. old, 3 bed rm . 2 bat hs,
family room w ith woo d
bu rner. Stngle car ga rage. o n
8 fl at ac res wi th s to cke d
po nd . C1ty wa ter In Raci ne
Coll 81 4·949·:i64 1.

NE W AND USED MOBILE
HO MES KESSEL' S QU AL·
ITY MOBILE HO ME S ALES,
:4 Ml WEST , GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 35 PHONE 61 4-4 411•
7274

Nice 3 bedro om, gara ge.
basement. ex.cella nt loca·
t1on nea r achool, owner
finan ce . Middlep ort Call
992· 2617 .

1972 frEtedom tra1ler. par•
to aliy tu rn .. hed ss.ooo ·
'
Call 4 46 ·7603

Three bedroom, bath. living
room, Den, Oinmgroom. kit ·
chen . Full basement fuel oil
fu rnace and wood burning
furnace . Approx im ately 2
a c res in De xt er pr1ce
827 .000. pho n e 614·742·
2 8 32 .
4 Y, acres, house with 8
rooma and beth. Reatonably
priced. Locoted at 36860
Klngobury Roed. Phone 992'1031 .
•

Wanted to buy used mobile
home . Coii61 4 · 446 ·4 7B2 ;
One acr9 ground, all convelP
1ences. $17,500 . By ownet~
extra good buy I Shcwh
appt only Call 44 6 - 4~88 , ·

'

Schu ltz 12x85 2:
bed room, livingroom , tllt
out, woodburner &amp; centr4{
air . Call44 6 ·7 440
.
1973

1973 14x6 6 unfurnloh.c(
Kirkwood AC , underpfn._l}ing , por c h . mutt s e'tl ,'
87. 300 Call 4 4 6 -769J . •

�·.

-··

-

•
Wedntclay, October 3, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport,

TRACY
GOOD USED ,r.ppu,r.NCE8
Woallero. dry.,., mrtuer•·
tore, rengeo. 8kegga Ap·
pllonceo, Upper Rlvar Rd.
bealdl Stone Creot Motol.
614·4411·73118.

1974 Acedemy 12x&amp;O 2
bdr .• extra clean. total elect .•
control elr, 7x12 porch. Coli
814·379· 2341 '
.
Will ooll hOmo ooperoto. Call
446· 0083.
1974 Pork Avo. 14x70 3
bdr .,, total electric : 1 'h
liotho, $7,900. Coli 614·
448· 0176 . •
.

79 Motors Home•
&amp; Camper1

garage , fifaplace . laragQ
·porch, ~Oft . declc.. woods,
privacy, near Royal Oak

'12: percent a11umability. Call

'

WA€. MY Gl~l.!

Record pleyar with 8 treck
'
.lJWil
ond AM a FM radio, 2
UJII~
•P••kara, worka good.
" ,*~&gt;r'*'"'· II"IC
Noada needle . ez&amp;.oo . ~-~=========:;:=======::==~
Smollor record player with 2 ~
-•kero. like now. Neodo
nlldlo. f115.00. Coli 992· 66
Pets for Sale
71
·Autos for Sale
7453.

1

hond quilted quilt a for oola:
Broken Star. Trip Around the
World. and Fan. 822&amp;.00
each. Call 992·7868 or
992·2318.

5 room brick home. close to

1975' Sava.,nah
home,

pa rtly

304· 676·1809
33

mobile

furnished .
anyt ~me .

Farms for Sale

96 acres Waterloo, 6 rooms ,
bath, ,_.. basement, tobaCco

base , 24 acres tillable, barn.
garage . Call 61 4 -643 ·
2171 .
34

. Bu.s iness
Buildings

10 yr. old 8 unit apartme nt
comple,.;, Wellston, Ohio. All
1 bdr. apts .. 4 furnished , off
street parking . Residant
manager over $1 ,400 mo.
income. Constant waiting
list less than $15.000 par
unit . Possible 2nd. mort·
gaga . Call 592-1189 Mon.·
Fri . 9 · 6, 594· 2874 eve. &amp;
wk . ends.

Point Pleasant. heet and air,
city water, 14 acres, pond.
small barn, 1 year lease
8526 month . 304·676·
6276.
3 rooms and bath, range and

ref. gas heat, $175 .00 per
month . Homestead Realty,

304·882· 2406 or 304·876·
5640 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished 2 bdrs. TV cable,
clean, quiet, beautiful riverview in Kanauga . Fosters
Trailor Park, 446· 1602.
2 bdr .. AC. gas hoot, wall to
wall carpet in Gallipolis. Cell
after 6PM. 446· 1409. ·
Mobile homes for rent.
Upper River Rd . Call 446·
1609 or 446·0608.
2 bdr. all electric 2% mi. out

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
lot for sale in Mercerville, 3
trailer hookups, electric, ru·
ral water . septic' tank.
SB.OOO . Call 614- 256 661B .

Rt. 588, private lot $176
mo. Call 448-4807 or 448·
2602 .
2 tidr. 2 mi . from hospital jn
country. Single man no pets,
8175 mo .. 8100 dap. Call
44B·1722 .

Building lot Neighborho;d
Rd . 65•1 50 . $6.000. Call
446· 3844 after 7PM .
Clearviaw Estates building
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 pooi. torn
lin.e r, and panially finished
b8samant . For information
call 813·665· 1232 .
1.14 ac . laval lot with
basement, alec . · &amp; water,
Locat'ed in Great Twp. Call
446·3044.
Singing Trees Subdivision
1.9 acres, 1 mi . last on Rt .
490, Homoassa. Fl. Call
614· 379-2712or614-379·
2243 .
4 acres off Kerr Harrisburg
on Viney Road near Gallipolis. $7,000.00. Call 304·
B95· 3398 after 7 PM ,

Rental s
41

Houses for Rant

Small furnished house.
adults only. Call 446·0338 .
Unfurnished house . 3 bdr .•
stove. ref . Rodney Village II .
$275 mo. Call 446-4416
after 9 PM .
House for rent references
required . Inquire at 631
Founh Ave .. Gallipolis. Oh.

THE· WOMAIJ Hf,
.'/fA€. IN ~OVE WITH

B1

Furnished adults only no
inside peta. private lot. fuel
oil , also trailer space on V2
acre lot. Call 446-3918.

1-----------

2 bdr . mobile home on At.
554, v. mi . off · Rt. 160.
8176 plus dep. Call 614·
388·9661 ' .

Available October I. a 3
bedroom mobile home for
rant. Near Pomeroy and
Middlepon. Call 9.9 2· 5868.
2 bedroom, JA mile out Sand
Hill Rood. 304·876·3834.

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Speclol roteo · for Senior
Citizeno. t130. ·Equa1Houo·
lng Opportunltlea . 814·
992· 7721.
1- - -- - - - - swAIN
Newly redocoretad. 1 bed· AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
room, partially furnlahed. 82 Olive St.. Golllpollo. Now
t225. Dopooit required . Call • Ulld WOod·COIIItovH. 8
61 4 · 992· &amp;319 or 992· pc wood LR ouite f399.
bunk bed a 81 99', ontron
2816 .
reclinera•99. uled bedroom
- - - - - - · l c - auitll.
rangea, wringer
Furniohed 2 bedroom apart·
map11 i!'Middloport. Adultl, weohers. &amp; ohoeo. Cell 814·
no pets, aecurity depoait. 448·3159.
Call 81 4·992· 3874.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Furnished 2 bedroom apart· Sofa. cheir. rocker, ottoment in Racine for men. ·3 tablea, (edre heavy),
rent.$1 50.00 per month 8885. Sofa, chair and love·
pluo 850.00 dlpoolt. You - t . t27&amp;. Sofu andcholro
pay own utilities. No more priced from US&amp;. to 1896.
thon 2 chllaron. Available Table•. 850and up to 8126.
Hldo·a·bodo,f390. end up
Oct. 4. Coli 949·3082.
to t&amp;&amp;O .. oofa bedo $145,
APARTMENTS . mobile Reclinoro, 8286. to 1376 ..
homes, houaea. Pt. Pleaeant Lampo from 828. to $126 .
and Gallipolio. 614·448· pc. dinette• from f109 .. to
435. 7 pc. f189 and up.
B221 .
Wood tabla with oiK chllra
Efficiency apt for one per· 8286 to t745. Delk e1 10
oon, prlvoto, 1186.00 per up to 1226. Hutcheo. f&amp;60 .
month, utilities paid , 304· Bunk bed complete with
mattreuea, $2715. •nd up to
675· 2083.
8396. Baby bedo. e110 .
Apt, 3 roomo and bath, ref &amp; Mattresses or box· sprlng1.
' stov$ furniahad. All utilities full or twin, f68., firm, f88 .
peid . 8226.00 month. 304· and t78. Queen lOti, $19&amp; .
4 dr. chesto, e42. 5 dr.
875· 1090. "
chests, • 64. Bed framee.
2 bedroom hou11 Point 1'20.and 126.. 10 gun· Gun
Pleeeant, extra nica, no pete. cabinets, ·• 360. Ga• or
electric range• $376. Baby
304·876·1388.
mottreoses. f26 &amp; t36, bed
1 bedroom apt. furnished or fremao 820, $26, • no.
unfurnlohed, all utllltleo king froma t&amp;O. Good oalec·
tion of !:Jidroom aultH,
paid, 304·875·7112.
rockers. metal cabinets .
2606 Jackoon·2 bedroom headboards UB &amp; up to
apt 12211.00 pluo olectrlc; 3 866.
bedroom ept f250.00 pluo
olectricondgeo. 14100hlo· Uaad Fu~niture -· head
1 bedroom ap1120&amp;.00 pluo boarda. and 2 bedroom
water and elect.-lc. Rt. 2 auitea. 3 mllea out Bulaville
North· 2 mobile hom eo Rd. Open 9am to 6pm.. Mon .
t226.00 each pluo electric, thru Sat. .
gerege apt UOO.OO pluo 81 4· 446-0322
electric. 2215 Jafforoon-4
bedroom homo 1300.00
pluo utllltieo. All of theu 64 Misc. Merchandise
rentals are neet end clean.
Ready ·tll rant. Muot heve
referancaa and depoeit . Knouff Firewood Split· 95%.
Town and Country Reol hsrdwooda. Sea1oned or
Eoteto. Broker. 304·676· green. You pick up or we
6648.
deliver. HEAP vandar . 814·
266·8246. '
45

44

Apartment
for Ront

Furnished Rooms

Umaatone. Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Maeon. Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richard•
&amp; Son . Call 448· 7785.

For rant ·sleeping Rooma
and light hOUH kHplng
rooma. Park Central Hotel .
Call 614·446·01116 .

Plaatic cistern• .t•te ap·
proved, plastic 1eptic tanka,
plaatic culvert, metal cuivane. RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISES. Jackson. Oh 614·
286· 6930.

Furnished room, e145. Utili·
ties, range, ref. Share bath .
J A C K SoQ N E STATES Men only. 919 Soc .. Gallipo·
APARTMENTS (Equal lis. 446·441 8 ofter B p.m .
Houaing Opportunity) haa
one and two bedrooma. rent
stoning ot 8.163 for ona 46 Space for Rent
bedroom and 8198 per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 dapoait located COUNTRY ' MOBILE Homo near Foodland and Spring
Route 33. Noith of
Volley Plaza. pool and TV Park,
Pomeroy. large lots. Cell
ant. Call 446·2746 or leave 61 4· 992·7479.
meaaage.

Fall Yard Core Mulching,
fertilizing. liming, re11odlng
8t trenaplantlng. Aieo for
sale : cow manure a. top 1011.
Contact Bruce Davison.
614·266· 1427.

l----------

Flr-ood cut up olabo . e1 6
PU load. Larger loada dali·
verad. Call for pricaa. 814·
245· 6804.

Trailer lots, ~ewer and water
Furniahed apt. $186 water furniahed. small children
paid, 2 bdr. 11381'&gt; 2nd. accepted. 304·676·1078
Ave.. Gollipolio. Call 448·
4416 after 8P M.

Go·Kart 3.'/a horae Briggs It
ltraton motor. Perfect condition. runl good. Helmet
included, f160 . c,llavelngo
81 4·367· 7744.

For leaae overlooking, city
Me rGtld lliiiSr.
pork, 2 b~r . . LR, tully
equipped kitchen, dining
area. unfurnished . Call PJ's, 1:::-::-:--:-~-:--:----­
448 ·1819 or 446·4426.
51 Household Goods

Lovely. large 4 bedroom 2 1 amell turn. effiCiency for 1
bath home. fully carpeted. gentlomon only. Call 446·
LR. DR , Kit. stove, dis· _o_3_3_8_.- - - - - - - hwashai', AC. gar., and bemt 1
near downtown Pomeroy. large Furnlohod opt. 919
2nd. 8176 utilltieo paid.
$350 mo. Call 446· 0116 .
Man only. Share bath. 446·
Newly painted 5 rm . 2 bdr. 4416 after 8 p.m.
home. Quiet street excellent 1 --------~-­
naighborhood . -Ref. e. dep· 2 bdr. apt. atove refrig.
osit required . Call Richard water furnished. new carpet
caner 446· 1370 after 5:00. LR, BDR, holl . U26 mo ..
quiet area near Silver Bridge
Large house good•. ahapel Plou. Coll'446·0116.
.
Call 614·38B·9909 .
Apt .·2 bdr .. nice. Apt. · 1
Large house on Litt181 Kyger bdr.. utlljtieo f~rnlohed .
Rd. BudQttgas U6mo. Sea House 3 bdr .• deluJte. HouH
Stanley Shaver or call 614 - 2 bdr.. central location·.
A-One Real Eetate Broker
446· 3760.
676·6104 or 876· 6386:
4 bdr. home. tri-level. full
baement, fireplace , heat Clean downtown apt •• pripump. w~od available. 12 vate, apacioua. reaaonable.
mi . from city, Hannan Trace no peta, lingle or couple.
School District. Raf. «. dop.' _c _a_ll_4_4_8_·4_8_7_2_•_ft_•_
·r_4_.__
req. Call 61.4·266-1929 or 1
Furniahed efficiency apt. for
446· 3262.
lingle or coupiN only. SH
5 room houae in Crown City. dap . a ref. Call4411·41107or
446·2602.
Ohio. Call 81 4· 266· 17'44.
For rent 8 room houM, Untumlahed ,opt. 2 bdr. with
clean. city ochoolo, t160 etove. refrlgenitofl. 322
.Third Ave .. Adu!U only, no
mo. Call 446·0974.
peto. Col 4411·3'n8 or
Uriturnished bOUH for rent. 614· 2118· 1 803.
2 bedroom. hompletely re·
decoreted, tully lnoulated. For rent furnlallld efflcl.,cy
atorm window• and doora, apt. Downtown location
new ildlng . Will accept 1 or 8 17&amp; mo. pluo utlltln. Call
2 children. Depoaltroqulred . _4_4_6·_9_2_8_3_.~----1
Coli 992·3090.
·
Modern 1 belt. ept .. otove •
2 houHt tor rent and bar for mrtg. lumlohad. aintle plf·
11le or lo111 with option to aon or oouple p...terrecl. no
peto. Coli 446·201111.
buy. 304· 675-6720.

For Sale, King Wood and
Coal Heating S1ove with
blower.Heil Fuel Oil Furnace . Coli 614·742-2674.

7 piece living room auite
good cond t200. wicker
peacock chair like now f50.
brown ollng back chelr new
f26. dook a chair good
cond. 836, bra11 hold board
&amp; ' bed lromo like new •so.
Coli 814· 379· 2314 efter
3PM.

Snoopy talophono,lika new.
.
·
$76 . 0 0 . Call 614· 949·
2866 1 ft 8
er p.m.
Picken• ulld turn~uro. 304·
676·6 48 3 or 875 •1450.
RCA 13 In color TV

Smith &amp; Wo11on model 28
367 eel .. 6 In borroll, tuned
action pecmaver grip. Smith
&amp; Weooon model 1000 12
gouge ohotgun with vented
rib borrol aioo d - borrol.
Ron 26 in. ten - d bike.
Coll814·388·981 1.

$100.00. Recliner ·choir
Ruot $75.00. Eooy cholro
$1 o .oo . 304·8711· 1768.
7 :00PM. '
fineat qulllty mettr••• and
box eprlnge, price new
8340.00. U11d one week.
With oolld maple twin bad
n 95.00. For motchlng bed
without bedding odd
n5:oo. 304·67&amp;·22112.
Set bunk bedo. Meplo Eorty
American, comllete
e1110.00. Phone 30 ·875·
1988.
14•12. 12•10. 1h3,
Carpet. Jungle Green. vary
cleon. good cond. 304-8711·
4887.
Metchlng couch. 2 chelra.
coffH tobla. 2 end tobleo, oil
liken-. 304·87&amp;·4221.
Weahw. dryer, couch. ohelr.
antique dry oink, Dor Oof·
tney, 202 7th . It, NHown, Sot. Oct 6th.

1968 Volkowagon . Neodo
starter and bet·
tery,f1i;O.OO. 22 plotol; 2
Inch barrel. $26.00. Stavllno
20 guege, 3 ohot ohotgun.
N- 12 . guogo, 3 1h1&gt;t
oht&gt;tgun. N- Rugar ~2
11ml·autometlc rifle. Call
742·2487.
Weight loll broakthroughll
The Grapefruit Diet Plan
with Dlodax . Modlcolly
proven reeuha available et
Hockenbeny Pharmicy.

Rag . German Shephard
PUPI· 7 will. old, 3 fomaleo,
4 maleJ. Wormed and 1st.
ohots,cell 614·985 · 38 4 9.

1979 Pontiac LoMonno. 4
door, PS, PB, AT, AC. very
good cond. T•ka over paymenta of 8156.241 month . .
Coli 614·379·2314.
AKC rogloterod Mino.turo 1-- - - -u_ic_k_W_II_dc_a_t_.-.-ut-a.
198 9 8
Schnaur:ar puppl••· 1 male,
1 femila; '126.00. 304· olr, tope, $&amp;99. Johno Auto
895·3961 .
Salol, B.ulavillo Rd .. Gollipo·
llo, Oh, 448·4782.
67

Musical
Instruments

Put Your Order In Nowl One clarinet 8a one Bundy
"SoftSculpturo"wlde·eyed trumpet. Call448· 3231.
Blo11om Babioo. 23" fully
clothed. pluo birth certifi· Fonder bue · quitar with
cato. Raoberry, Chinaberoy. hardoholl
Blackberry. 123. Callevan-~~·~3~5~0~.~c:a~ll~~~~~~
lngo only. 304· 896·3&amp;81 .
Cable grand piano a~ec .
Whlio'o Dlocount Metal Do· cond. f3,000 . Call after
tectoro, free literature 304- 8:00 448·8049.
676·2908.
Conn Silver Trombone with
Flower Gorden quilt, 304· .trigger for Sixth pooition
8186 .00. 304·882-3376.
67&amp;·21157.
King Wood burner with 2
epaed fan, good cond.
$226.00. 304·676·8174.
Ueed double dr8in aink
8100.00. Call 304·882·
2864.

Bundy Clerlnot. hao bean
repadded, t100.00 (no loll)
304· 676·694~.

Drummer nelda band, C &amp;
W. C ·&amp; R. 0 &amp; R, Fred
304·876·2784.

1 ga2 Mercury Lyn• 3 dr.
hatchback. air, aunroof, 4
oyl.. 4apd., rear defrost. Call
614· 3B8·9811 .
1 9n Monte Ctrlo one
owner. · $1,800. Call 446·
7667.
83 Sapporo 87,100. 82
Caveloir Cadet •4. 400 .
Both ox . cond . Call 448·
2146.

1---'---------

77 LTD hardtop AC. PS, PB.
361 angina, 83,000 mlloo,
needa engine work. Call
614·256·1350.

1 - - - - - - - - -'1977 Monte Carlo PS, PB,
AC. awivel aeate. cruiae.
AM·FM Clllltte, new
carpet, brakeo. &amp; ohocko.
t2.500. Coli 448•34811.

1982 Ford' 'Eocon 4 opd ..
AM · FM $3,499 . 1981
Chevy Chevette auto. radio,
f3,199.1978DodgoAopen
New King Wood and Coal
Fruit
auto PS, P8. radio, U. 1 99.
Stove. Ueed 2 or 3 timet. 68
1978 Plymouth Salon iuto
304-676· 1 422.
lit Vegetables
air 81.999 . Johri'o Auto
Surplua regular army i11ue .
Salas, Bulovllla Rd, 4464_7_8_2_·_G_•_II.:.ip_o_li_o,_O_h_._ _
cemoulloge clothing-leather King holnicultur~ boons for _
combat boots. denim heavy llle, 810.00 a bu. Call 1
jockatl·plntl choop, Sam between9AM·12Noon. Call 2 complete Vega atatlon·
Somorvlllo'o (our 20th ytiarl 614· 266· 1905.
wagon ' 160 for both. Call
Eut·Ravenowood. (Now
446·2244.
Erol Fri. Set. Sun, 1 :00· 7:00 Winter potatoae, applali,
PM . Call in orders before pumpkin•. cider. and pro· Good uaed claan car, only
1 0 :00AM . 304·876·3334. duce. Harrlo Fermo. Rt. 124, 60,000 rniloo. 1 979 Cougar
Ponland. Ohio. Call 843· XR7. loaded. Call814·256·
6239 ofter 6.
6193.
66 Building Supplies
For ule or trade 1979
Corvette good condition.
69 For Sale or
Will trade for 81·82 Jeep
Bujlding Materials
CJ. Call 61 4·246·~219.
Block, brick, aewar pipea,
windows. lintels, etc . 400 CC Street Bike, will
Claude Wintero, R.lo Grande, trade for wood or coal stove. 1979 Datoun 2BOZl(grand
luxury package, ·6 spd .• e•.
0 . Coll614·245·6121 .
304·89&amp;·3834.
cond.. low · mlleogo. Call
B1 4·367· 7871 or614· 367·
Build vourown 4 bdr. home.
I ,II III Slllll iiii:S
0167.
88,995 dol. to your site.
&amp; LIVI:sluck
Naw dloplay model open.
1g94 Monte Carlo SS, blue,
Sea It now I 1 ·814·886·
fully equipped. new condi·
7311 .
tion. Aoking $11 ,600.00 or
Rough Cut Lumbar, oak, 61 Farm Equipment best ..offer. Will conaider
trade. Call949-2181 .
poplar, and pine. 2x4'1,
2x8'o. h8'1, 1x8's. AI· Ideal corn·plcker. Nll 7 .
1 9 7 2 F o r d LT D ,
oonod longtho. Cell Hogg Phone 667-6636.
P.S .. P.B .. A.C. Good condi·
and Zuapan Materiall
Co ., lnc. 773 · 6554, Model E Gleaner combine, tion . $960.00. Call 992·
daytime.
10ft. grain tabla, oxc. con d. , _6 _88_1·-------Now only U,BOO. Siders, .
Now open for bUiina11. Equipment. 304·876· 7421 . 1989 Camero. 360. A.T.
410 goors-hoodero .
Mountain State Block. Rt.
$600.00 Call 992·6974 .
33, N- Haven. Complete
masonry suppliea, 4". 8", 63
Livestock
1981 Pontiac Phoenix.
12" block. Delivery service.
38.000 original miloo . e•.
Phone day 304·882-2222,
conant condition. AM·FM
evening 882· 3239.
Top Quality Regilterad atallJQ,Iir conditioning, IU·
Ouarter horse niare. 6 yr. old tomatic. t&amp;.ooo.oo. Call
bucklkin color. Call evaings 992·6609
.
66
Pets for Sale
814·367· 7744.
1978 Dodge Monaco 380·
2 heifer calve•. 1 Bleck 28L, exc. cond. • 1 600.
HILLCREST · KENNELS Jor11y and 1 Chartols. Hay 304·876·3087 after 5 .
Boarding all breada. Heated for ule. Call 949 -2237.
indoor-outdoor facilitia1.
1 977 Cldllloc Sedan De
AKC Doberman puppiaa: Chickono for ule. 304· 773. Villa. good ohape, runo
Stud S.ervice. Coll814· 448· 6082 ofter 6 PM ,
good, good tlroo, •4000.
7796.
'
Call304·876·2760after 10
Three aowa, good aiza,
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call *200.00 for all . 304·576· a.m.
614·367·7220.
2737.
1966 Muotong, orlglnol.
96,000
miloo. Candy opple
Brierpatch Kennela Profes·
red.
black
vinyl top, rebuilt
alonol All·breed grooming. 64 Hay &amp; Grein
motor and tranamiaaion.
lndoor·outdoor boarding fa ~
new radiale. GT rima, AMcllltloo. Englloh Cocker Spe·
nlol pupploo. Call 814· 388.' Corn for aale shell and ear FM casstta. 304· 676· 2178.
9790.
both . Caii614· 26B-1144.
'71 Chevy Impala, runo
Dregonwynd Cattery Ken· large round baleo of hay. good, body tolr, AM· FM
caooetta pleyor. t250.DO.
nell. AKC Chow puppleo,
$20
h.
Ca11446·
1062.
304·67&amp;·71 1 e.
Siame• kittens, new littera
CFA Hlmel•yan and Peraian
1982 AMC Sprlt DL. axe
klttono. Coli 614· 446· 3844
66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
cond. loaded. 304·675·
aftor 8 .
3364 or 6711-4437.
AKC Rag. Poodle dogo &amp;
'78 Century Sulek Wogan,
puppleo. Call 446·0867.
Certified leedwheet. ~oy. good cond, phone 304·176·
rye, opolto, triticale. · eloo 1090.
AKC Aeg. Doberman 860. cover drop wheet . Altlzor
Cell446·7796.
farm Supply. Call 814· 24&amp;· 1970 Chovell SS, PS. PB,
11 18
auto, roel good cond, 304:
_ _ 3_._ _ _ _ _ __
6711·2099.
Trdn s porl..lllllll
1979 . Co~gor XR7, 302
englna, olr, PS, PB, AM·FM
8 track. 46.000 mllea. 19
71
Autos for Sale
MPG. 304·875· 2226.

1----------

I:========:.Jt========Jt

TOP CASH pold for '80
model end newer uaed can.
Smith Bulck·Pontlec, 1911
Eootem Ava .. Oolllpollo. Call
~1 4-448·2282.

'78 Dauon, e1.000.00.
304·87&amp;·6848.
1982 Chevrolet Chevetta.
AC. fully aqulpped. oKC
cond. euume loen. Phone
304.· 773·&amp;908.

1172 Block Muohng I-~----~~~­
Grencla engine overheuled. 72 Trucks for Sale
Remington tlreo In olottod
mago, red cruohed velvet
1 980 Dodge D 110. low
Interior, front and dlmeled
llolt offer, Coli 4411·B3 a. · milage 1111 et reeoonoble
price, coll614-992·7208.
48 Pontiac lilvet ltreok 4
dr.. rootoroble '400. 76
Ford Explorer, ~ ton PU 73 ~ Van1 &amp; 4 W.O.
e1 .1100. Rt. 141 to · 233 1
mile on right.
1876 Chev. 4x4 pickup now
wheolo ond tlra. good oon·
1848 Plymouth good con d.. dltlon ..Tiki o - peymorrto
everything orglnll. Call14· of •110.71 • month. Cell
311·8143.
.
614-378~ 2314 .

Home
Improvements

ru- ,

Mercum Roofing &amp; Spout·
lng. Now lrlltolllng
roofo. 30 yeero experience, '
opeclollzlngln built up roof. ;
Caii814· 388·9B67.

(]) Here Come the Brides
Cil SportsCenter
ill Gomer Pyle
(I) Gl @ Entenainment
Tonight
·
ill Wheel of FQitune
0 Cil Wh eel of Fortune
l1il MacNeil/ lehrer
• Cil
Newshour
® News
fiJ Jeffersons
7:30 IJ (1) Tic Tac Dough
CV SCTV : Second Coming
Th e laugh s cont1nue w1t h

fhiDiM f:A.Vf. Ill&gt; A
QU~A!VIM
IT UIUR M'( PILLCW

J

FOR ~I&lt;$PitJbl

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gU•·
rantee .~ local referencee
furnlahed. Free est:imatn.
Call collect 1·814·237·
0488, 9 a.m . to 15 p.m.
Rogers Baaement
Waterproofing.
~HAT A DELIGHTFUL
STILL ... IT'S
CHILD ANNIE IS! I
LIKE THEY
00 6ELioVE GHE AND 60TH HAVE

GENE'S DEEP STEAM

AB~Efl

C L E A N •. .,

PLUM/'ll HAVE

LET'S HOPE
TH ERE'S

GOMETHI!Ki

GaME GORT

6POU(jHT~M;E_:;:;;~O;F~~
eC-;e
l~!

scotchguerd·water ••tr•c·
tion. doodorlzoro. FREEOIII·
mates. Reaaonable ratei.
Gone Smith, 992 ·8309.

TO WOMEN'S

!!P~:_':::IHTIIITION...

and M . Contractora.
Remodeling. vinyl aiding.
painting (indoor• and out·
doora) replllce1111ent win·
dOWI COli 304·7?3·6131 ,

D.

RON'S TelevisiOn Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
houoe cello. Coli 304-'616·
2398 or 614·448·24Ji4.

we 'TI,IINJC; Y'OUGHTI'.
AI'Ot.O&amp;IZE T'MISTER
CQ:K&amp;R, FRIEND/

Fatty Tree Trimming, otump
removal. Call 304· 876 ·
1331 .

Wagon'

Playoffs : Game 2 At press
time . the teams h ad not
beefl'determined . (3 h rs., 30
mi n.)
O ®GQl Charles in Charge
(PREMIERE! Charles ftnall y
gets a date with the g1rl of
his dreams but ha s to babySit instead .
00 (ill Great Perform·
ances: Live from lincoln
Center Violinis t P1n chas Zukerman 10ins Zubin Mehta
and the New York Philharmonic in a program fea tunng
Teleman n's 'Viola Conce·n o ' and orches tral excerpt s from Wagne r 's 'Der
Ring des. N1belungen · 12
hrs .. 30 m 1n.)
I'B MOVIE : 'That's Enter·
~· tainment'
8 :3 0 0
Cil (jQ) Dreams
(PREMIERE! F&gt;ve Philadel ·
pllia k·id s work blue colla r
JObs during the day and pur sue the rr dream of bc1ng
rock s tar s at night .
9 :00 0 (2) CD Facts of life Jo
seeks to make some extra

RINGLES'S SERVICE, u ."
perlenced carpenter, electrl·
cian, maaon, peinter, roofing (including hot ter
applicotionl 304· 876·2088
or 876·4580.

Rotary or cobletool drilling.
Moat well1 comple1ed ume
day. Pump aalea and Hrvi·
• ••. 304-896-3802 . .

GASOLINE ALLEY .

1:;8;2=::;P;Iu:m::::;b~in:g:::==
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
GolllpOIIo, Ohio
Phone 614· 446·3888 or
61 4·446-4477

.

•

In case
If you didn't open my
som'body
drawer,
'/..---Jl....£i:l.
need
why are
I likes
som'thin'
tliese
'em
pi~ks·
handy! · unloch'!

ll'lr1nC11o;;

1n
lfOUr

lunch

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 3&amp;&amp;, Gelli·
polio. Call 614-367-0678 .

box?

SHULAW'S Plumbing ond
Heating, 211 Sixth St ..
Point Pleount. W. Vo. 304·
676-6420. Ucenlld and
insured.

money by seil1ng pizza
based o n her mothe r's orrgrnal recipe.

.·

(]] 700 Club
@ (jQJ MOVIE : ' He's
Not Your Son'
9 :30 0 (1) CD It's Your Move
When
Matt' s
English
teacher ta kes off on marern·
1\ y lcnve. Norm :ln 1S the sub·
strtutc teac her who trieS to
fori Man's exam sa le
ffi Coming Attractio ns
(!) PKA Full Contact
Karate
10:00 IJ (1) CD St. El sewhere
The nurses mak &gt;J good on
therr pledge to stnke and Ca·
vanero IS attacked by a man
weanng a sk1 mask (60

0

Excavating

Good·1 Excavating. bell·
manti, footers. driv.ways.
IIPtic tonka. landtc~~plng.
Call anytime 614 · 446· ..
4637. Jameo L. Dovloon. Jr.
owner. '
Dozer Work by Ted Honno. ' '
D~cheo. pondo. rC&gt;edo. lend
cloorlng. ate. Ceft Motor Cer
8rokero. 448·8692.
J .A.R .Conltructlon Co.RU:·
tlond, Oh,814·742·2903;
Baaementa. Footera. Con·
crete work, Backhoa'a,
Dozer &amp; Dltchor. Dump
trucks, 8t water·gii·HWIF·
electrical linea.

m1 n )

(1)
MOVIE :
' Private
School'
(1) MOVIE: ' Dracula '

BARNEY

D.A .Booton ucevatlng. 1
complete dozer and dump 't
truck 11rvlcoo. Call 1187· !
8628 or 378·6288.
,•

I'LLFIX HIS

"LL JUGHAID
DOES AU DAY LONG
IS. STARE OUT TH'
WINOER

LITTLE
RED

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

TURN TO PAGE 23 .
IN 'lOUR SPELLER

'

~

,.

'

'

Jam•• Boya Water Service. \
Aloo poolo ftllad. Coli 614· ~
256·1141 or 814·446·
11711 or 814·448-7811.

~

I'B Soap
11 :00 0 CV CD 0 CIJ

SNAKE!!
I

HAVE A

BEAT5

FEELJNG
. 1HATI'M

ME,
COMRADE'!

..JUST OFF
THE U.S.

COAS1\JNE.

Ken'o Wetor Service . Wallo,
clotarno, poolo Ill~ . Phone 1
367·0123 or 3117· 7741 . •
night or dly.
•
JIMS WATER .SERVICE . . .
Coli Jim Lanier, 304·671· -,
7397.
.,

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 1 U 8ec. Ave., ·OoUipollo.
114· 448·7133orll14·4481833.

G~

News

(1) Another life
(!) NFL Films Super Bowl

:'

Upholltary

00 My Linle Margie

CIJ Tai Mahal Th os docu-

·xvr Hrgh lights - San Fra nCisco 49er's vs. Ctf1Crnnati

f

87

10:30

architectural ma st erp 1ece.
(11'' New swatch

"

SEWING Mechlrur rePIIIro.
oervtce. Authorl'ld Singer •
Salol &amp; Service Sherpen .
Sci11on . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 114·892· 22B4. •,.
General Hauling

I'B Independent News
mentary traces the historica l
and ro mantic mottvatio ns
leadtng tO the burld 1ng thi s

WAGON ,

'

86

1..111 Newswatch

ALL RIGHT. CLASS· ·

=========::;::.;
84

NASCAR Holly Farms 400
from Nonh Wilkesboro
NC
'
® An\lv Griffith
(I) 0 ® Family Feud
CD Jeopardy
,
@ Wheel of Fortune
Gl @ New Name That
.Tune ·
@) WKRP in Cincinnati
B:OO IJ C2) CD Highway to
Heaven Jonathan and Mark
help a young boxer and a
gro up of elderly residents
protect the mselves from a
youth gang in an urban
ghetto. (60 mm. )
(1) MOVJE : 'Space Raid ·
ers '
(2) MOVIE: 'Wuthering
Heights'
ill Flipper
[l) MOVIE : '.Paint Your

([) GJ GZI Americ.an league

1-----------

83

KI [), .

I

WHAI THAT c;~z.'(
AI'I:TIST MADE. OF
HI~

MODEL.. .

Now arrange the drded letters to

form the aurpriM anawer. u IUQ·
gested by 1t1t abo\le cartoon.

Print answer here:

0 KXI I I J )
.

Yes terday's.! Jumble!· GRAVE

I" " - ,...,.,_I '

FETID

BOILED

MANIAC

Answet". He th~ugtn his new com puler was going to
· give hi m th!s kind ol

A " TERMINAL" ONE

an

Illness -

Join ttl• Jumllre Lo.,.,. Fen Club lnclrKitlwe et• eloltt·wOfG iM,per Jumblts ,....,..,
n~onth. ofOf ,,.. 11mpt. . wrttelo: JIJmbM Lo.,.,, F1 n Club c1o tttle .,..,, ,..,.,

P."O. SoA 601 , P1lmyr11. N.J . 08005.

'

'

specially-ed ited
en cores
featuring the best sketches
of the satirical series .
14) Auto
Racing ' 84:

Plaetering 8t Platter repair,
freo astimetea. Cell 814·
266·1 182.
CA R P ET

IJ C2JCIJCD O CIJ® Gl
(121 News
(1) 'Hot Potato
ill Lucy Show
Cil Dr. Who
(!j) Vofage of the Mimi
@I Diff' rent Strokt!S
6 :30 IJ (2) ill NBC News
(l) Riflemal!
ill Mazda SportsLook
ill Carol B'trnen
® Gl @ A!IC News
0 CIJ ®I CBS News
CIJ, Nightly Business
Repon
(!j) Body Electric
fit One Dav at a Time
7:00 IJ (2) PM Magazine
(2) Coystal Gayle in
Concen Backed by a 22 ·
piece orchestra, Crystal per·
forms some of her bigges t
hits .

PAINTING· interior and ex·
terior, plumbing. rOQflng,
some remodeling. 20 yra.
oxp. Call 614-388·96112.
H a. S Home lmprovemMtl
vinyl siding.. roofing ~ room
addition, . storm ·. wlndowa,
stone. Coli 614·367·0409
or 614·367·7244.

foul-.

600

------~·lc-

P' rk. reduced to $69.900 . 8

linlcrlmblo-

one letter 10 each ..,_, 10 form
four Ordinary wordl.

EVENING

•i

1974 Storcroft pop-up tent
camper. oiiiPI alx excellent .
condition f1 , 350. CaM 4411·
4863.

1970 Chevel l e SS ,
f1 000.00. 1971 Honda
350, '1 200.00. Call 949·
2862.

~.l'}j}~fi}~ JihHATIC-.o-QAIII!
~ ~ ~~ ·
byHorwiArrddondBobLM

10/3/84

-::::;:;:=:::::;:;:=:::::=
,
=

------·lc-

leaving State. owner must
loll beautiful 3 bedroom
home. Family room ha•
20ft. of windows for pis·
toral view, finished double

WEDNESDAY

Never raced, -like new. ·
eeeo.oo. Olralll Mopecl. 4
monthl old, UIO.OO. Cell -.
992· 73114 -lngo.

County Appllanca, Inc . 8eof reedy for frHzar 411
Good u•d ioppllenceo ond canto per pound on hoof.
TV 1011. Open BAM to 8PM. C•ll 448· 10112.
Mon thru Sot. 448· 1699: I---~~~---­
&amp;02H7. 3rd. A.va. Oolllpollo, Klngftllo Creftmetic. bed,
LowNy orgen with glnny.
of bunk bedo. Coli
Kincaid bedroon:t suite.. pol· 448·3101 .
·tor bed, bochelor cheat, a
night otond. Aloo Sooro Ook lumlture. tebles,chelro.
walght -bench. Cell 614- cupboordl, pia 10fo, tole·
pho-. daok. 1110 entlq2611·1267.
and glollworo. Open Bun·
deyo. Conkol'a Tuppera·
plelno, Rt.7.

72 mobile home 1 Va acree;

81 4 · 992· 6420 .

-----~---------·,
Hond.- CR125 Elolnore.

Crooobow Bernett·WIIdcet,
1110 lb.. new cond. Coli
814·317·7434 efter ·ll :oo;

5

Television
Viewing

1810 Herlov lupe1 glide,
4000. !ftllel. Nke .(IIW. Coli
446-7383.
'

'or Mit fill din, end tO'p 1011.
Cell Clll!l14· 2111·1427.

Ohio

•'t

•'
;
'
'
,'

•'

·'··'

Bengals .
® Oad's Army
(It) Hutterites: To Care or
No1 to Care
@)Be nny Hill Show
11 :30 1J (2) CD Tonight Show
· T onigh t's guest rs Don Rickles . (60 n'11n)
(V MOVIE : ' llionh Oallas
Forty' ·
ffi Best of Groucho
r!l SponsCenter
r1J MOVIE: 'Pepe·
® Gl (@ News
0 Cil Magnum P .l. When
Robin Mas ter's latest book
1s made into a mot ton pic-

ture . Magnum

becomes en·

tangl ed in the tempe ra ments
• of the film industry . (R) (60

PEANUTS

As she climbed intc

tM carriage, he
waved . goodbye.
'

11

HE WAVED
600DSVE" ?

He also said,
"Have a nice day!"

End played
in spades

NORTH

. 75

By James Jacoby

WEST

with dummy's long sui t. Even if you
can't get there yourself. you may be
able to force an opponent to help you
out. South 's three no·trump bid was way
out. He should ha ve bid ' three hearts
to encourage North to bid no· trump ,
with a stopper or pa rtial stopper in
that suit. In any event, declarer was
lucky to find the heart ace in dummy.
Let's see now how he combined good
play with m ore good luck to make his
contract.
East overtook the 10 of hearts and
continued the suit , dummy 's ace
winning. A diamond ta the ace told
declarer that West had started with
live diamonds to the king. South now
played the nine of spades (o- llie king
and a spade back to the ace. When the
queen of spades was next played ,
East showed out. ·T hat completed the
count of the hand for declarer. West
had started with five spades, one
heart and five diamonds. Only two
clubs .could remain in the West hand.
Accordingly, declarer p layed the ace

.J...

EAST

.1 08643
.10
tK 975l

·So you'd like to make some tricks

5

.KQJ95 2

. Q9

• J8P2

SOUTH
. AQ92
• 8763

.A

'tAK '106

Vulnera ble: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

East

Pas.o;
Pass

lt
3t

1•
Pass

Pass

Pass

PasS

,.

Soutb
1•
3 NT

Opening lead: 'I I 0

and king of clubs and placed West on
lead with the deuce of spadeS. Hap-less West could cash two spades and
t he diamond king, but then bad to
give up the remaining tricks to
dummy's diamond suit:

~u•"~
by JHOMAS JOS PH

ACROSS
1 Colorless

2 Regretting

5 Confronted 3 German
river
10 Brain part
4 French
11 Mental
dance
attitude
5 Converg-·
1% Tidbits
ing
wlth
6 Noachian
sand·
craft
wlches
7 "tempest"
14 "My role
andOnly"
15 Miscellany 8 EMOble
14 '~- Gatta 9Dry
regions
Be Me"
17 Driveway 11 Under·
grotmd
substance
worker
19 Exclude
13 Old dance
20 Spoil
%1 Elec. unit 18 Lady
friend
%%Silk
(Fr.r
fabric

Yesterday's Answer

21 Air
22 Hails

29 Devout·

23 Nail
polish

30 French
city
31 Expunge
35German
river
37 Caesar

remover

241talian

seaport
Z5 Mining

finds
27 Light·

haired

ness

38 Loser
to ODE

Z5 Boundaries

Z6 Israeli
port
21-ofagun
!II Garland

b-+ + ·-

!9 Spank
32 Colorado

Indian
33 Suffix
34 Choler
31 Popular
dish
39Being

co Different
USit&amp;bby

4% Prophet

DOWN
1 Pedastal

part '
DAILV CR VPTOQUOTES -

Here's bow to work It :

AXVOLBAAXR
lsLONpFELLOW
~

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two ()Is, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

..

all

CRYPI'OQUOTE

mrn .)

(] ) latenight America
®l Barney Miller
@) Twilight Zone
12 :00 (2) MOVIE: ' My Body.
guard'
(I) Burns &amp; Allen
cJJ Mazda Spons Look
(f) WKRP in Cincinnati
®l MOVIE : 'April Fools '
Gl @ Nightline
@I Gunsmoke

111-J.It

. K7
• Al
t QJI08S32

SKU SWVSK
EAY

AUMUW

QG

WEWURI

GQ~CRU .

CVWU,
HGXEW '

FQRYU ,

Yestel'llly:s Cryploquote : ORGANIZED, · CARING
CITIZENS AcnJAILY REPRESENT 11IE BEST HOPE
OUR NATION HAS FOR AN ENVIRONMENT FREE OF
POISON. - CA111ERINE M. CAMERON

'

..

�Page 1 6-The Dai Sentinel

Area deaths
Zenno J, Turner

'
ZennoJoseph (Joe) Turner,82,of
Route 1, Albany, died unel&lt;Jl€Ciedly
at hls home Tuesday morning,
Born in Dyesvllle, he was the son
• of the late Delbert and Cora Hull
Turner. He was a retired Penn
Central foreman , bridge and bulldlng crew, and a member of the
Brotherhood of Maintenance Em'ployes. Turner was a member of the
Albany BaptiSt Church.
,
He Is SUrvived by hlswife, Ernlly
L. Foster Turner, five sons and
daughters-In-laws; Danny and Pat
Turner and Tonyaoo PeggyTurner,
Albany; LavernandConnieTurner,
Wapakoneta; Jerry and Barb
Turner, Netsonvllle; Kenny and Lea
~r, Jasper, Mich.; six grandclllldren, and two step grandchildren.
Also surviving are six brothers,
Frank and Glenn Turner, Albany;
Tom of Pomeroy; Henry of Middleport; Warren G. of Columbus, and
Kenneth of Somerset; and two
sisters, Alice Phillips, Columbus;
Hazel Slater, Millersport.
Preceding hlm in death besides
his parents are three brothers,
Robert, Ralph and Wayne; three
sisters, Villa Swearingen, Mable
Gibson, and Annie KindeU, and one
• granddaughter, Angela Turner.
Funeral services will be held at 1

p.m . Friday at the Blgony-Jonlan
Funeral Home in Albany with the
Rev. · Gerald Phipps officiating.
Burial wUl be in the A~ns County
Memqry Ganlens. Friends may call
at the funeral home Thursday, 6 to 9
p.m . .

A letler will be sent this week to
trustees of nine of Meigs County's 12
townships. Another letter will be
· drafted to the three remaining
townships, Sutlon, Salem and Columbia, to Inform those trustees that
no road bank sites have been
identified In their areas. If those
to~hipsdo have sites, trustees are
to contact the commiSsioners in
onler to get the sites inventoried and
Included in the project ~&gt;BCkage. A
reply date of October 19 has been set
for the townships,
Although. a separate project, the
landfill seeding w1ll alSo be included
in the package. The commiSsioners
are now trying to obtain the right of
way for · that reseeding project
which would also begin In the spring.
The county's estlmated cost for
the reseeding projects is between
$8,COO and $10,COO. About 16 acres
have been designated for reseeding
at this time.
Road patched
Crew supervlSorWarnerreported
that County Road 2!&gt; has been
patched and sealed from the county
fairgrounds to the Pomeroy Health
Care Center. Warner alSo mentioned that a new mix used in the road
repair has proven to be exceUent
and will be used in future repair
work.
Sealing work is finished for the

To meet with sheriH
Commissioners decided tosetupa
ineeting with Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reganllng a deciSion on
what action should be taken In
developing the longterm plan for jail
corrections that has been requested
by the stall'.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services has requested the return of
funds totaling $14,:m.06. This money was left over from the CETA
program which closed In September
1981. ~t the tlme of termination of
the CETA grant, a financial closeout
report was submitted by Meigs
County, but no word on what was to
be done with the money came at that
time. Commissioners agree with the
total except for $492.74 which was
deducted for workman's compensation leaving an amount of$13,710.32.
That amount will be forwarded to
the state.
A motion passed authorizing
Probate Judge Robert Buck to enter
into' an agreement with the South
Central Ohio Juvenile Detention
Center In ChiUicothe. This contract
would allow the placement of Meigs
County juveniles in the center as
needed, throughout the balance of
1984. Money for the fulfillment of the
contract would come from the
existing budget of the judge.
Inter-department transfers were
also okayed for the coroner, the
. landfill and the board of elections.

'

C&amp;SOE seeks reduced rateSchuler ·
·returns to· see
Lou.·Sl.ana
CanrntSslon
,

gency Medical Service Tuesday.
At 4:47 a.m. the Syracuse squad
went to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Mabel Hetzer who was
trans[Xlrted to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 2:07 PPJ· the Middleport unit
went to the Holzer Clinic in
Middleport for Joshua Snider who
was taken to the Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis; and at 2: 32 p:m.
the Pomeory unitr~ponded to a call
from Crows Steak House for Helen
Long who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

share $428,:Jll.50.

Weather fol'eeast
Oear tonight. Low45-50. Variable
winds 10 mph or less. SI!IUlY
Thursday. High 70-75. Chance of
rain near zero percent tonight and
Thursday.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
Fair on Friday and saturday and
a chance of showers Sunday. JUghs
from the mlcJ-als to low ... IA!ws In
the ills.

The fiery opal ... in
fascinating designs.
Fashioned in 14Kt.
Gold 9verlay by
K.rementz .
Also choose a Beautiful
Opal Ring from our wide
selection.
Layaway Now For
· Chri8tmas
Your Dependable Jeweler
For 25 Year•

~0&lt;9'

'QJnelers
.
212 E. Main, Pomeroy

J(/tP/JJWiiti

YOU!l WJgHOUR. COMMAND

Meers Th'"'i'day
Racine American Legion Post 602
will hold a special meeting Thursday night, 7:30 p.m., at the post
home. Refreshments will be served.
Those attending are to take a
covered dish.

White-Ethridge
· Funeral Home
Coolville, Ohio 45723
16141 667-3110

.
lelpro, Ohio 45714
. ,(6141 423-6300

LEE ETHRIDGE

FlY IT WITH PRIDE OH:

N

BE SURE TO VOTE

SAVE SOC

I

on COIM 'N Get It• dry
dog food, any siie beg.

I

'cONSL.W.ER: L1m1t one coupon ~,',tern PJf·
cha~d Th1s coupon good only on produCt

I
I
I

RETAILER: GYMtto n wtll retmburse you fece
value plus 8C if !iUbm1tted 1n compli(Jl(e with •
Ci!rnation Company Store Coupon Rede([IP·
lton Pol1cy dated Ap11 12, 19S4j· a copy of
wtuch is iJIIailable on request Send coupons

I
I

I
I

:
I

1
1

1

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s•zes and fliJv'OI'S •nd•cated

CCO&gt;ONS, llo&gt;&lt; 171.P&lt;o Rr.&lt;la
CA 90665. Cosh -..lue 1/1'04

II&gt; CMWlON

,

NOV. 6TH.

PARI1CIPI&gt;JING
SlORES.

---------,

--- -- -----------T----------------------- T-----~-------STORE COUPON
,EXPIRES 1/31 /85
I
STORE COUPON
EXPIRES 4130185
STORE COUPON
EXPIRES •13018&gt;

I
I

I

G£T \01111 FRfE
Fl.AG ORD£R
FORM AND OFFER
DEWLSI&gt;J

D.rr. Sept 17 · Columbus~ 2nd Men . O&lt;:t • Nd"'f D,r.,: Oct 27 • Veter.Jns
Oily, Nov 11 • lh(lnksgrvmg bay, 4th l~urs, Nqv • Chnstmas D.ly Dec ~~~

1

""-' ........ Jon.ll,ttu.

.

1

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• 1

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·. SAVE JSC
CONSUMER: Llm1t one cpupoo per .~m pur·
chased Thts coopon good only on product
sizes and fbwors rndicoted.
RETAILER: Cc'lrndt ion will re1mburse you face
'IICIIue I
submitted in compliance With
Coupon Re:d~mp ·
11 1984, a copy of
Send cou pons

171. PK:o-._

I

' '

I

I

I

SAVE JSC .

on any beg or 11 bol&lt;es of
Fri!ldes' dry cat food .

1

"''·

on any ~ or li bous of
Chef's lllcnd' dry cat food.

CONSUMER: llm•t one coupon per item pu~
chescd .Thls coupon good only on product

sizes I'Jnd fl~ indicated.
RETAILU : Cttrnation will re1mburse you face
wlue plus 81 if wbmitted •n CO'Tipli&amp;f'lee with

Carnation Corwt~nv Store Coupon Redemptton Policy dated APfil 2, 1984, e copy of
~ich 1SMi~ble on rtQuest. ~nd COUgc&gt;'!S

10 c.o.AIW10NCOJ'ONS, Ilo&gt;&lt;171,PK:o-._
CA 90665. c..t&gt; ""'"" 1/1101

_...,....,..10,1tN.
socoo 12!"105

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soc
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soc
3SC
3SC
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L-----------------------~----~-----~------------~-----------------------J

I

50000 12&amp;&amp;9?

.,

I

50000 130042

· See photo on Page 9

•

enttne

e

2 Secdona, 1 4 Pogeo

Pomttroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 4, 1984

26 Centto

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

'

-

Restored Gavin taxes
swell Gallia coffers

We'll send you a FREE
Flag Kit conta1ning your
b ig, 3' x 5' all cotton flag
with sewn stripes plus
pole, eagle ornament
and mounting bracket
when you send
us spwfied proofs·
of-purchase of
Carnation products

I

Student testing hegins

0&lt;·--'- ' '.;,' ...

PRESERVATION FUNI) FOR EVERY FLAG ORDERED I

I

Cubs, Tigers \rin again

Force. The 75 people attending from
governor.
all over the state, dWided-into
Karr also serves on the 16smaUer groups then spent much of
membllr Ohio River Task Force
the remainder of the day either
which was formed In July to acMse
fishing from shore at the RaCine
ODNRanditsDivlsionofWildlifeon
Darn or fishing from a boat In the
the development of a comprehenGailipolls pool which stretches from
sive plan to lmprove the fisheries of
the· Racine dam to the next dam
the Ohio and its trtbutarles.
located at Eureka .
Members to thiS board were
River cruiSes from Pomeroy and
appointed by Max E. Duckworth,
demonstrations of fish manage- __chlefoftheDiVISlonofWUdllfe,anda
men! techniques were also on the
na!ive of SyraCuse. · ·
day's agenda.
The problem of limited river
The group gathered again In late
access Is the main concern of the
afternoon for a butfet dinner at
task force at thiS time. In his
Royal Oak Park. Horace Ka!T,
capacity on the force, Karr .,WU be
Pomeroy,ownerofRoyalOakPark,
working towanl lmproved entrances to the river In the lrrunedlate
serves on the eight-member board
of the WUdUfe Council. Members to
area as weU as tn other parts of the
this boanl are appointed by the
dlsllict he represents.
· Bill Napier, assistant director of
the DIVISion of WUdllfe, explained
that improved liver access w1ll have
a state-wide effect regardng
tourtsm.
Napier alSo announced a publlc
meeting scheduled In Portsmouth
on Tuesday with Governor Rlchanl
Celeste, and Verne Riffe, speaker of
the Ohio House, on hand. Potential
Meigs County rtver access projects
are to bemmtloned at that meeting.
Tom Wasson, executive admlnlS·
ttator of fish management for the
diVISion, discussed an· Ohio River ..
Access Study that IS being carried
out by the Office of Outdoor
Recreation, alSo a part of ODNR.
This study, to . be completed In
January, wUl become a planning '
document
to be used in making
\\'Ji,, ....~-~ '•
deciSions as to where access sites
sbould be constructed and how those
sites might be funded.
Wasson also explained that the
Division of Wildlife owns the Apple
Grove an Portland lock properties.
Both of these were taken over from
the Corps of Engineers and are
(Xltentlal development sites in the
near future, according to Wasson.
At this time, the division is
negotiating with the corps over two
other Meigs County sites, one on
Shade River, the other on Old ToW!)
Creek. There was no mention of the
proposed marina at SY!Jicuse.
According to Wasson; a large
AWARD-Wllll.sHertlg, West Vlrglnlaclrectorofnaillralresoitrces,
facility of this type comes under the .
was. presented an award of apprecladon from BW Napier, assistant
jurlSdlction of ODNR's Division of
director of ODNR's Division of WUdHfe, at yestenlay's field day outing
Watercraf! and not the Division of
!lpiiiiiiOI'tld by ODNR. Hertig spoke briefly at the dinner held In
WUdllfe .
cOnjundlon with the outing and said, "West Vlrglnlalslooldngforwanl to
Natural resource representatives
working w1th Ohio In doing more toenhancetheOhloiUver. 'lbe resource
from Kentucky ·and West Virglna
Is of mutual Interest to our puhllcs and allll!lers of the rtverwlll benefit,"
were In attendance during the day.

THE MOUNT RUSHMORE NAnONAL MEMoRIAl

I

Story on Page 7

ByNANCYYOACHAM
' Smllne!Siaff Writer
Plans are underway for Improved
entrances to the Ohio River In Meigs
County, acconllng to announcements made Wednesday at the
conclusion of a FiSh Ohio Day held In
Meigs County by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
Dw1ng the observance, guests of
the department had the opportunity
to enjoy Meigs County scenery and
fish In the Ohio River as they
participated In the Ohio River Field
Day, sponsored by the FiSh Ohio
Committee and ODNR'sDlvtslon of
Wildlife.
Events of the day began at Royal
Oak Park with the Introduction of
the newly formed Ohio River Task

PLUS CARNATION WILL CONTRIBUTE $1.o0 TO

,----

See Marauders' story on Page 3

story 011 Page 4

'

Admitted: Coy N)tz, Middleport;
Mable Hetzer. Pomeroy; Rita
Stobart, Pomeroy; Preston. Parsons and Edna Deem, Racine;
Martha Faso, Pomeroy; Johnnie
Belinda Meadows, Mason.
Discharged: DeUa Roseberry,
Grace Glaze, and Andy Cross.

.Jdn 20 , Ll"&lt;Oirfs Brnnctay: fe b Ill • Wd&lt;l1• nstoo\ B f1110tl'l, 3rd Moo feo •
Edst~r Sunddy I ~~~Jri&lt;!blt! ) • MoH1er &gt;D~ 2nd Sun , t.\ay • Arrneo for cr ~ Dd-..:·
Jfd Silt . Mtry • Me morral ~ ( Hoi I $I CI~ to noon ) -l ~st /W;Jn . /olldy • f111g OJy
Ju~ \-4 • lr'lde~Xr.c:koc~ DJy; July 4 • WOOl D.Jy, lSI~ , SE:pt • (onstPIUTIQn

'

ODNR plans improved
ingress to Ohio River

Veterans Memorial ·

•lnaugu•di •Or'l Day,

.

.

FROM

I~

-'·

Vol.34. No.122
Copyrlg~ted 1984

•

NewY(llr 's Day, J~n l· o Martin Lutt1er k •f&gt;9, Jr , Jan

'

·OPALS

Judgment
sought
,,,
· The Jackson Production Credit
Association, Jackson, has fUed suit
against Charles D. and Rose D .
Carr, Coolville. The' petition' seekS
$48,814.96andstemsfromdefaulton
the payment of three promissory
notes made over a period of tlme
beginning Oct. 19, 1979. The mortgage for property toea ted In Orange
Township was give as secwity on
the notes. The plaintiff IS asking the
court for foreclosure on the mortgage and sale of the property.

Flower arranging

Sectional
champs
.

ATHENS- C&amp;!DE customers use rate, using 500 ~attbours
wUl
a five pen.-ent, or more, (kwh) or etectrtclty, the monthly
redt~ction In electt1c bills durlng the electric bill woold drop $2.16, or 5.55
first six months of l!Hi It the F'ubllc percent, trorn $.1!.89 to $36.73. . .
A customer with electric heat, on
UW!tles
Of Ohio adopts
·
the
standanl residential rate, using
thecompany'sproposedfuelcharge
change; says j .R. Weeks, Athens 3,500 kwl), would see a$15.00, or9.02
percent, reduction in the monthly
Division Manager:
c&amp;SOE IS making thiS request at bill, from $167.37 to $152.28.
Its semiannual fuel hearlng which ,-----.;._------1
begins today. This fuel rate change
wUl reflect the company's costs for
the fuel used to generate electricity
.
durtng the laSt half of 1!ll4.

Authorities from LouiSiana were
In Meigs County Tuesday afternoon
to pick up auegect armed robber
Dennis R. Schuler, woo was .
apprehended last week by 'Meigs
County
Sherlff James 3. Prot!itt and
Martina VanMatre
several deputies.
Gary Wolfe, special Investigator
Martina VanMatre, 59,- Clifton,
died Tuesday evening in Holzer for the sheriff's department, met
Medical Center.
two Louisiana officials at the Mason
Fuel ~dltures are revieWed
Born Sept. 8, 1925, In Mason, she Counry airport and brought them by by the PUCO every six months and
cruiser to Meigs County. He then thefuelrateto,thenextslxmonths
was the daughter of the late Martin
trans(Xlrted the out-o!-stateotflclals Is adjusted accordingly. The pro- .
T. and Lula Gray Stanley.
and Schuler' back to the Mason posed reduced fuel rate WOUld be In
Surviving are her husband, An·
County airport at which time the effect Jan. 1 through June 00, 1985,
drew H : VanMatre; four daughters,
Mrs. Dennis (Marlene) Hutchinson, men left to return to Layfayette subject to PUCO approval.
Parish, LouiSiana.
·
For the average non-heating
Dublin, Ohio, Mrs. Leo (Judy)
Bond for Schuler had been set at residential customer on the smallKennedy and Mr.s. Grant (Linda)
Newland, both of Tuppers Plains, , $75,tm In LouiSiana.
.
.......
Ohio, and Helen Manhirter, Colum. HeisatsoaUegedlychargedwitha
Ohio lottery numbers
bus, Ohio; two siSters, Leta McDa- simple robbery without a weapon.
niel, Cleveland, Ohio, and Helen·
Martin Schuler, who was alSo
Gibbs, Mason; two brothers, Ken- living In the Salem Center area
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
-neth and Martin Stanley, both of where hls brother Dennis was found,
winning number drawn Tuesday
Mason; and six grandchildren.
is also aUegedly charged with the
night In the Ohio Lottery's dauy
Funeral services wlll be at 1:'30 same ot!enses In LouiSiana. Meigs
game, "The Number," was 233.
p.m. F'rtday at the Foglesong County authorities w1ll operate
In the "Pick 4" game, played
Funeral Home, Mason, with the under' the premise that Martin
Monday through Fiiday, the winSchuler Is still In Meigs County, untU
Rev. Rlchanl Carpenter officiating.
ning number was 7464.
he Is located elsewhere. ·
Burtal will follow In Graham
The lottery reported earnings of
Cemetery.
$661,174.50 from wagering on Its
Friends may caU at the funeral Three emergency runs
daily game. Earnings cameonsales
home from 2-4 !"'m and 7-9 p.m.
Three callS were answered by of $1,00,476, whUe . holders of
Thursday.
units of the Meigs County Emerwinning tickets were entitled to

time being. Seventy-five miles of
county roads have been patched and
sealed this year as compared to 35
miles last year, according to
Warner.
It was also reported during
Tuesday's meeting that the railroad
crossing at Middleport should be
paved within the next week.

.

Wednesday, October 3. 1984
'

I

Aviation officials

(Continued from page 1)
opment Disllict.
Road bank seeding is scheduled to
begin in April and will include
township banks as weU as county
road banks.
The cost of the project Is
estlmated to be $1600 an acre with
RCD paying 75 percent of the cost.
The other 25 percent wlll be covered
locaUy.

•

Pomero -Middleport, Ohio

I

CHESHIRE -The figures are In, and as expected,
Gailia County tax revenues from the restored
assessed valuation of the James M. Gavin power
plant have received a hefty boost.
County Auditor Ronald K. Canaday, who received
the 1!1&gt;4 certificate of public utility taxable property
from the state tax commissioner earlier thiS week,
rePOrted the total valuation of all utility property for
the county IS now $271,635,(0).
1n 1983, thetotalwas$:ID,001,lm. The.newvaluiJ,tion
certificate allowed for a $64,543.~ Increase this year,
he said .
Gavin's total assessed worth jumped from
$154,552,240 In 1983 to $218,5'l0,8i0 on the new
. certificate.
The assessed value of the Ohio Power Co.-owned
plant and other utilities with property In the county
Increases the money that wUl be taken In by (X)Utical
subdivisions with taxation~. Canaday said.
The auditor said it means 1the county's general fund,
at 3.4 nUlls, w1ll get an additional $219,447.62 for 1985.
The Gallla·County Local SchOOl District will stand an
lilcrease In revenue of $1,290,868.40, based on Its ~
mllls.
•
- Othet units receiving extra money next year are
Rio Grantle Conun4nlty College, at 1 mlll, $64,M3;
0.0. :Mcintyre Park District and Dr. Samuel L.
Bossard District Library, both at flve-!Enths of a miil,
w1l! each get $32,m: &lt;111d the Gtildlng Hand School, at
three-tenths of a mill, $19,363.02. The Ga!Ua.JacksonVlnton Joint Vocational SchOOl District, which gets
two mills, will receive an additiOnal $129,1116.
''This Is the first implementation of the &lt;PJD.!e _vs".

-

'

Lindley deciSion for 1!&amp; valuation to be applied to
calendar year 1985," explained County Pro;ecutor
Joseph L. ·- cain, who with Canaday and County
Treasurer Myron L. "Bud" McGhee are the three
members of the county's budget commission.
Cain referred to the suit tued In 1981 by then· Auditor
Dorothy Condee against a state taxation department
deciSion to diStribute :Jl percent of Gavin's property
valuation out of the county.
Gailia County Local SchoolS, which stood to lose
signtflcantly from the decision, latt!r joined In ihe suit.
The decision was negated by the Ohio Board of Tax
AppealS In Nov~ber 1983. A subsequent appeal by
Tax Commissioner Joanne Umbach was turned
down by the state supreme court In June .
1n the first year of the decision, CanadaY. said
Gavin's valuation went down :167,072,400.
"We can't attribute an of·the decrease to the state
taking the property away, but a high percentage of It
Is," he said.
catn said a re-determination of the 1981-83 Gavin
valuations, au under appeal, iS yet to be made by the
tax commissioner. The state has since onlered back
valuations for ihose years.
"Qur legal counsel tells us that once the tax
depa;ll11ellt sent....us our certification for ~.
sanetlme In November they w1ll &lt;;ampule the 1981
valua tton and we wU1 receive It," Canaday said. "Our
· counsel, naturally, Is In contact with the tax
department."
'
"Legally, fr!lm our standpoint, we wUl review It
with our counsel to make sure they are in cm~pllance
with the decision of the Condee case," Cain said. ·

·,

....
~

... ..~ ··....
.

.. '"

.

BRICKING - 'lbe Racine fire station is getting a being paid for with · money raised by the fire
faceBft. Workers David Stollings and Chuck Bonice department and through revenue sharing fund&lt;!
from the Gallipolis area have begun the job of, appropriated by Racine Village Council .
bricking the cement blocl&lt; building. 'The project Is

Stackbusters fined for climb
CHESHffiE, Ohio (AP) - Two
men pleaded guilty Wednesday to
charges of crtmlnal ttespasslng
af!er their arrests for clbnbing the
stack of the Gavin Power Plaant.
Robin Held, 30, of Denver, and
John Myers, 33, of Hatboro. Pa.,
entered the guilty pleas this
morning in Gallipolis Municipal
Court before Judge James A.
Bennet!, whoflnedeachofthem$250
and placed each on 18 months'
proba lion. Bennet! suspended l:J.
day jail terms for each.At the sentencing, Reid apologIzed for any incovenience he might
have caused and complimented
pubHc officialS for their handling of
the case.
· Held and Myers are members of
Greenpeace, a Washington-based

environmental group. They
climbed the stack Tuesday moming
to protest sulfur-dioxide emissions
from from the Gallia County plant.
which they say Is one of the worst
poUuters In the co(mtry.
The pair entered !he plant, along
the Ohio River aoout halfway
between Pomeroy and GaUipolls, at
6 a .m . Tuesday and climbed the
stack.
They remained there until shortly
before 1: 30 p.m., when Reid
parachuted off the top of the
1,100-foot tower. Myers alSo had
planned to parachute down , but

became ill from the fumes and
instead took the stairs back down .
Greenpeace spokesman Peter
Dykstra said the two climbed the
stack "to caU atlention to and
protest acid-rain emissions from
Ill at plant."
He said the plan t - owned by Ohio
Power, a subsidiary of American
Electric Power - IS considered by
the U.S. Envtronmental.Protection
Agency as the eighth-worst emitter
of sulfur.dioxide In the nation. Sulfur
dioxide is the contaminant that
some environmentalists say causes
acid rain ..

Meigs woman'
cited byOSP

A Pomeroy woman was cited by
the Gallia·Meigs· post of the State
lfighway Patrol foUowing a two-car
accident on Meigs Co. 20
Wednesday.
•
The patrol said Grace I. Abbott.
51, was southbound on 20, when she
reprtedly lost control of her car in
loose gravel and slid across the road
Into the path of a northbound car
driven by Earl E. Henry Jr., 53,
Point Pleasant, W.Va . The two cars
met head-on acconllng to officers. ·
No Injuries were reported and
Abbott was cited for failure to yield
one-half of the roadway following
the4 : ~p.m. accident.
Two Gallia County m en escaped
Injury when their cars coUlded on .
Ohio 218 Wednesday according to
the GaUla-Meigs post of the State
lfighway Patrol.
The patrol said Donald R. Blake,
••: 48, PSR. was southbound and
reportedly met a northbound vehi ·
cle driven by Mason J . MuUlns, 22.
Rio Grande, In a curve. Both
vehicles were left of center, acconl· ·
lng to the patrol , and MuUins struck
Blake's vehicle in the left side at6: 45
p .m . Officers said no citations were
Issued foUowlng the Incident.
A Portland man was cited
following an accident on U.S. 35.
The patrol said Edwin E . NelSon,
18, Jackson and James E. Ward, 51.
were eastbound on 35. Nelson
stopped In traffic and Wanl report·
edly could not stop In tlme, officers
said, and struck NelSon from behind
at 4:40 p.m. Wanl was cited for
assured clear distance by the patrol.

. P~T JUMP - Ro!D Held, with the Greenpeace movemeat,
leaps off an 1,100 foot smolrestack at the Gavin Power Pia ·
Gallipolis, Ohio 'l'ue8day, as part ol an anti-pollution proteee, Held w!i.e
parachute worked properly, landed uninjured. (AP Laserpboto).

.

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4-. ... . . . .

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