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                  <text>Page 1 0~The Daily ~el

Monday, October 8, 1984

.Democrats well-off
.in Ohi~, _says Ruvolo
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Demo- . tlons," Colley · said. "That wasn't
era tic Party In Ohio Is going IntO the done ln. the previous
November election with plenty of administration.n
spending money, which state party .
CoUey and olher Republicans are
Chalrtnaq James RuvOlo attributes objecting to the way Democrats are
to the . advantages of :havmg a
collecting money from deputy
Democratic governor.
registrars.
"Right now, our county parties
The Enquirer reported Sunday
probably have more money In their that deputy registrars, who genertreasuries than they've ever had,"
ally are recommended by party
Ruvolosald. "Thelrfund-ralsersare officials, are expected to contribute
better attended than they've ever tO the party out of the $1.50 they
been. When you !lave a governor receive from each transaction. The
from your party, It generates the $1.50 Is set aside to pay employees,
kind of ability to raise money at an
rent, operating expenses and the
levels.' '
registrar's salary.
Having Gov. Richard Celeste In
The newspaper said deputy
office has" helped Democrats In registrars are expected to contribvarlnus fund-raising practl~, Ruute 10centsfromeach tr;;wsactlonvolo ~ld. For example, one recent
drlver's licenses, auto registration
dinner In Colwnbus brought In tags and the like - in their branch
$400,!XXJ, he said.
offices to the county Democractic
"1llat's almost double what the parties. Another 5 cents goes to the
party's budget was when I took state party In the form of "assessments," the newspaper said.
over," he said. "We might raise a
Democratic Party officials Insist
mllllon dollars this year. The
the registrarS' contributions are
Democratic Party In this state Is
alive and Well!"
strictly voluntary.
"We have an Implied mandate
By contrast, the Ohio Republican from the governor to raise money
party was left $1.4 million In debt for the party In this way," said Art
after the 1982 gubernatorial cam- Church, finance ·chairman of the
paign and still owes more than Hamilton County Democratic
$400,!XXJ, according to the Cincinnati . Party. "It has helped make our
EnQuirer.
P1ll'1Y financially healthy.''
.
State GOP Chairman Mike CoUey
A former Republican deputY
said the party is on target to pay off registrar told ·the Enquirer that
Its debt by the start of the 1986 Republicans used the deputy regisgubernatortal campaign and has trar system for political fundpaid back all the money it owed its raising under former Gov. James
county parties.
Rhodes. However, the Republican
"The incumbent party has a great said registrars wer!! supposed to
advantage, especially 1f they resort contribute only 6 cents of every
to -arm-twisting contractors and tr,ansactlon to the county Republideputy registrars for contribu- can Party.

Emergency squads kept busy
The Meigs County Emergency
Mec:llcal Service responded to a total

9:19p.m. for Charlie Rlein. No one
was transported. Rutland went to
of 10 calls over the weekend; six on . the civic center at 9: 46 p.m . fro
Saturday and four on Sunday.
Vanessa Fife who was taken to
On Saturday, the Tuppers Plains Veterans Memorial.
unit answered a call from the scout
Sunday calls included at trip to the
camp at Chester at5: 03a.m. Ronald Pomeroy Health Care Center all: 52
Clay was taken to Holzer Medical p.m . by the Pomeroy unit. Evelyn
Center. At 7: rn a.m., Middleport Lewis was taken to Veterans
was called to McElhinny Hill for Memorial and later ·returned to
Walton Tern pleton who was trans- PHCC. At4: 12 p.m., Tuppers Plains
ported to Veterans Memorial. responded to a call in Long Bottom.
Pomeroy went to Young's Nursing Leona Hensley was transported to
Homeatl: fJip.m.forEdnaFindllng . Veterans Memortal. Middleport
who was taken to Veterans Memor- Station 10 responded to an auto fire
Ial. At 2:09p.m., Rutland responded
in Hobson at 4: 14 p.m. The Racine
to a motorcycle accident on New unit responded to a call on Hill Rd . at
Lima Rd . No one was transported. 9: 22 p.m. and transported Deanna
Pomeroy went to East Main St. at White to Veterans MemoriaL

Rutland man escapes injury

Mrs. Edna M.-Ftndllng, 72, Route
2, Cooivpte. Alfred area, _ died
Sunday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
She was bornatHeborn, W.Va. , a
daughter of the late Grover and
Molly Rice Higgins. Mrs. Findling
had. worked for lJ years at t11e
American Viscose Co. in Parkersburg,W. Va.
She Is swvived by her husband,
Shirley ~- Findling, and several
· nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by two brothers
and two sisters.
·
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Tuesday at the White Funeral Home
lnCoolvlliewiththeReV.AmosTillis
officiating. Burtill wlli be in Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime after 2
p.m. today.

Usa Faye Rose, two months, died
Sunday at her home, Route 2,
Racine.
She was born July 30, 1!&amp; tn
Gallipolis, a daughter of Harold and
Mary Christina Watson Rose.
Swvlvtng besides the parent$ are
four brothers, Harold, Jr., David,
Jock and Roy, an at home; 10
sisters, Sheny Miller and Barbara
Rpse, both of Galllpolls; Deborah
Rose, Antiquity; Tina, Sarah, Rita,
ChriSta, Faith; Chrystal and Mary
Joy, all at home; maternal grand·
parents, Nelson and Mary Watson;
Pomeroy, and paternal grandmother, Mabel Rose, Antiquity.
Gra~lde lites wlli be held at 2
p.m. 'Tuesday ;It the GUmore
Cemetery. The Ewing Fl!neral
Homelsinchargeofarrangements.
There are no calling hours.

MEETS FERRARO - state Represental!ve Jolynn Boster
(l&gt;-Gallipoll&lt;i) met VIce-Presidential candidate Geraidlne FeJTai'O at a
recent breakfast In Columbus.

Meigs County agent's corner
· ! .~

The brand that fits.

Extension notes•••

JEANS
SALE

By JOHN C. RICE
application of nitrogen on the soU
Exten•iion Agent
surface for two-three years deAgriculture, Meigs County
pletes the surface pH and hinders
POMEROY ~ Where Are Your weed control by herbicides. Lime ls
Quality Lee jeans in straight leg
Legs a nd Arms? We are entering one of the most important fertility
the corn picking se.ason. Please ... practices. Lime neutralizes acid
styles, baggies, capri styles,
s hut off the power takeoff before soil, Increases microbial activity,
stripes and London Riders. ·
dismounting from the tractor. increases the tllth; and increases
Junior Sizes I to 15
Don't wear loose-fitting clothing, be the availablllty of plant nutr.lents.
Misses Sizes 6 to 20 and 30 to 44
sure shields are in place, take The bottom line ls Increased Ylll'ds.
REG. '22.00 TO '31.00
breaks to reduce fatigue, a nd make
Need To Buy REstricted CIJ!!ml·
sure your machine is in good cals? No License???· You can·WJ&lt;e
working order.
the test to obtain ' a lice~. f. on
REAL - REsearch Extension Monday, Oct. 15, at 1 P-11)1.. in
Analytical Laboratory. One of the Jackson, Ohio. Call tls for details at
'
\'·,
best in the country. REAL does soil 992-6696.
tests, synthetic mix, plant tissue,
Clean Up, Fix Up,:Store ... !'iave
and feed testing. Animal manures you prepared your hay·equipment
can be tested and water can be for next year? U it has to sit out,
tested relating to horticulture and remove all chaff and debris, tie
animal production. Now, or as soon oil-soaked rags around tying
as corn is harvested, is an excellent mechanisms, remove or cover
time to ta ke soil samples. It is twine with plastic bags, and cover
important that good soil tests are moving parts with one-half kerotaken . Soil samplers are available sene and one-half used .motor all.
free on loan at our office to assist Apply this coating with a hand
you in taking good samples ..
sprayer.
For no tillage corn, two soil
samples should be taken. One r - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - -.- - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - sample is taken one inch deep for
i
surface pH and one eight inch·
sam ple for plow layer depth. The

Sale Pticed
$17 59 ro$2479

FREE

-

PARKING

A Rutland man escaped injury In · apparently lost control of his car ina
a one-car accident on Ohio 124
curve, went off the right side of the
Saturday night, according to the
road, came back across the highGallia-Meigs post of the State
way, went off the left side, struck a
CLEVELAND (AP)- Hoiders of
Highway Patrol.
fencepost and barbed wlrefenceat8
eight winning tickets will share a
Officers said Chad T. Willlams, 18,
p .m. The patrol said Wllllams was $1,816,736 jackpot from the latest
not cited.
was westbound on 124 when he
"Ohio Lotto" drawing, Ohio Lottery ·
officials say.
Each ticket, which listed all six
numbers chQsen In the semiweekly
Lotto drawing Saturda;r·iiight, will
Veterans Memorial
Meets tonight
pay $227,092.
Saturday Admissions---Luther
Southern Junior High Athletic
The game reported sales of
Imboden, Middleport; Lawton Boosters will meet tonight, 7:30 $4,304,007.
Templeton, Middleport.
p.m., at the junior high schooL
The wlnnbig numbers from the
Saturday Discharges-- Rodney Parents parents of children who drawing Saturday were 2, 6, 8, 14,24
Spires, Charles Bailey, Terry participate in any sport are urged to
and 29.
Brewer.
attend the meeting.
~
Sunday Admissions---Eva Law- ;------------------------~
son , Rilctne; Arvll Holter, Long
Bottom; Leona Hensley, Long
Bottom; Linda Dains, Pomeroy;
Deanna White, Racine.
Sunday Discharges---Coy Nltz,
Beth Eills, Faye Kirkhart, WaUace
Hatfie ld.

Ohio lotto winners

Meets Tuesday
The Eastern Band Boosters will
meet on Tuesday, 7: lJ p.m., In the
band room.
The BendArea Merchants Association wlli meet at the Meigs Inn on
Tuesday at 5:llp.m. All merchants
are asked to attend the one-hour
meeting.

Friday homecoming set
Southern High School's annual
homecoming parade will take place
on Friday at 2 p.m. Any group or
persons wishing" to m'!lke entries
should contact Julie Houdashelt at
949-Z700or, after 3 p.m., at992-7451.

Meets Tuesday
Harrisonville Eastern Star Chapter 255 wlli meet Tuesday evening,
7: lJ p .m., at the temple. Election of
officers will be held. All members
urged tq attend.

KENMORE
1.1 CU. FT.

MICROWAVE
OVEN

E88651

Now

.CUT S140 . Only

$28031

BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

are

Tonight, ralnordrlzzlellkety, Low
00. Tuesday, cloudy with a
chance of showers. High around 70.
The chance of rain Is 70 percent
tonight and 50 percent Tuesday.

.

£xtaNiedF-.t

W__.t¥Unucb~

w

a.aoe ol llllllwl!l'l hed!Q'.
FalrGD'ltlunlllw lllldFrlday. 11111!1

...78. Low14HII.

Thllrs. 1:30 to
Ill 1:30 to

Country music awards

Workl Series preview on PageS

Story, photo on Page 12

Vol.34, No.1 25
Copyriphtod 1984

•

•

enttne

a1 y

e

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, October 9. 1984

about the ordlnalice.
Several residents appeared again at last night's
Sentinel S&amp;alf Writer
Middleport's proposed ·ordlnance to prohibit all · meeting when the third reading was scheduled burnlng!nthetown·"wentup!nsmoke"Mondaynlgbt · again voiCing opposition to the legislation. James
when Middleport Village Council voted unanlinouS!y
Brewer presented results of a survey he and his wtte
against giving the -legislation the third and final
hild conducted In the town since the last cowicil
reading.
meeting. They had surveyed 131 residents In all
• sections of the town with ill people lndicatli!g they they
At two earlier meetings, council had unanimously
approved readings of the ordinance which would have
were In -favor of residents being permitted to burn
prohibited all burnlng; bUt did allow for the Issuance of
papers; five were, In favor of burning everything
possible; two were \ffilleclded, and 11 were against all
permits by the fire department for special burning.
Two weeks ago, theordlnancewasscheduledforthe
burning.
.
thlrd _arid final reading, but the legislation was .tabled
The discussion brought out that there are village
ordinances already on the books pertaining to burning
when a group of ,resl.d ents appeared before councll to
and Brewer·commented that he saw no need for any
lodge complaints.
more. Present ordinances provide that burning must.
In .the following two weeks, council members had
asked their constltuents to advise council how they felt
take place In a container; that there be no burning of
ByBOBHOEFUCH

leaves, and that there shall be no obnoxious odors
created.
Council President Carl Horky said that the no
burning ordinance would reduce burning in the
community even though there might be some
violators. Councllinan Roberi Gilmore said he
appreciated the survey work done by the Brewers, but
added !hal he would hate to say that no action against
burning had been taken in the village, particularly
after the recent Greenpeace demons,tratlon on
pollution at the Gavin Plant.
Horky said that since the list of names submitted in
the Brewer survey indicated that most people are
against the no burning ordinance, he would go a long
with it until another list was submitted or the burning
legislation was put on the ballot.
The five members of councll present - Horky,

Gilmore, Jack Satterfield, Dewey Horton and Wllllam
Walters - voted against giving the no burning
ordinance its third reading. Any new legislation
dealing with the matter wlli not have to start back at
the first reading status.
Brewer questioned the provision of obtaining a
special penni! to bum brush and was told that the six
officers of the fire department are authorlz,ed to Issue
such permits.
Approve report
Councilapprovedtherepon ofMay0rFredHoffnnan
showing receipts of $7943 in fines and fees during
September, In other rna tiers, council authorized
Hoffman to proceed w·ith plans for theestabtistunent of
a bike path In the town. Under village sponsorship, the
path Is subject to extensive regulations by the Ohio
Department of Transportation.
·
(Cont inued on.pal!.e 12)

~Qndale

visiting
Queen City today
CINCINNATI (AP) -Buoyed by .
"He was very upbeat and positive
upbeat appearances In New York about his debate with President
1and P€!111SY1Vania, DerbocratlcpreREagan. I've .n ever seen him cjulte
sldentlal candidate Walter Mondale so enthusiastic and happy," .said
visited Cincinnati for a question- Donald Mooney, Hamilton County
and-answer session with the general coordinator for the Mondale·
public tOday.
Ferraro campaign.
The community forum appearMondale verbally dueled with
ance was scheduled at the Cincin- Reagan on Sunday night in a
nati Gonventlon and Exposition nationally televised debate In LouisCenter. He was scheduled to leave ville, Ky., the first of two such
for Detroit Immediately afterward. meetings between the candidates.
Mondale; who wlli return to Ohio Geraldine Ferraro, Mondale's runon Thursday for a noontime rally at ning mate, Is to debate Vice
the Stlltehouse In Columbus, has President George Bush on Thurs·
conducted·other such forums during day In Philadelphia.
his presidential campaign as a
Thousands lined the streets of
or ·getting direct give-and-talte NewYorkCityonMonday, ruidthey
exchanges with voters.
shouted and waved nags and signs
Mondale made no public com· as Mondale and running mate
ment when he arrived Monday night Geriudlne Ferraro marched side by
at Greater Cincinnati International · slcte,eachwithanarmbutstretched.
Airport. He was met by local
'!'he scene was In sharp contrast to
Democratic leaders and about lJ the ne.il:ly empty streets of New
weD-wishers.
(Continued on page 12)

Permit
sought
at locks

way

.

Earlier today, the American Red
Cross recalled 1,931 bottles of a
blood·clottlng substance used by
hemophiliacs because &lt;! donor
whose blood was used In the
preparation has AIDS, the disease
that destroys the body's lmmune
system.
. ,
It Is not known If ' the recalled
material is cl)pable of transmitting

I

STEPPING OUT IN FIFI'H AVENUE Politicians re~t to an awkward sltuatlo11 on New
York's Fifth Ave. Monday as they follow a mounted
unit In the annual Columbus Day parade. From left

are Democratic l'resldential Walter Mondale, a
security agent, Democratic Vice Presidential
candidate Geraldii.e Ferraro and New York Gov.
Marlo Cuomo. (AP Laserphoto ).

Now Wednesdays are lor winners too ... because Ohio Lotto has added
ajackpot drawing to the middle of the week! So now you have two
chances to win!
·
You can play Lotto as usual for Saturday's jackpot drawing . .. then
play it again for Wednesday! If no one has matched the six winning ·
numbers. the jackpot builds for the next drawing. And you don't have
to wait awhole week to see if you've hit that big Lotto jackpot!
The wagers you place from 7:25PM Saturday until 7:25PM Wednesday
are for Wednesdays drawing. Wagers placed from 7:25PM Wednesday
until 7:25PM Saturday are for the Saturday drawing.
Try your luck at OhioLotto twice aweek! And
look for the jackpot draw·
iligs every Saturday and
Wednesday evening
at 729.
You could be an
Ohiolotto Wednesday
winner, too!

AIDS, but the The Red Cross silld on person who died of AIDS six months
Monday lt was withdrawing two lots after donating blood were received
of Antihemophilic Factor (AHE) as In this area. We are stopping
a precautionary measure.
distribution and reCalling all (AHF)
The 1,931 bottles, distributed In 12
the lot numbers. We are
of the Red Cross' 59 blood regions in telephoning key persons in the areas
the U.S. and Puerto Rico, Including where this: material has been
the' Huntington · area, have lot . distributed. We wlli recaU iml'nenumbers 0577A004AA and diately, any material previous
05'T7A004BA on the labels.
distributed,".
According to a release from Dr.
Dr. Stevenson pointed out that
Mabel M. Stevomson, Director of this, does not In any way, affect the
Blood Services for the Trl State safety of people receiving blood in
Regional Blood Center In Hunting- the area.
The blood of :!l,!XXJ donors was
ton, "We have received Information
that two lots of anti-hemophlllac
used to make the batch of AHF,
factor containing plasma frilm a sometimes called Factor vm, that

from

went into these lots . One of these
Foundation issued a statement
encouraging aU with the disease to
donors later was diagnosed as
having the symptoms of AIDS.
continue their medication with
Researchers believe AIDS is ·non-suspect AHF. The 1isks of not
continuing treatment exceed those
caused by an tnfe&lt;&gt;tious agent,
probably a vtrus, that is transmitted
of using AHF, the foundation said .
through intimate contact with
Bottles from the recalled lots were
bodily Dulds, such as blood, saliva or
shipped to Red Cross regions
semen.
. headquartered in the following
cities:
According to government figutes,
more than 100 of the 6,00l AIDS
Los Angeles and San Jose, Calif.;
cases reported in the United States
Fannington , Conn.; Galesburg and
.since 1981 have been lltnked to
Peorta, Ill.; Baltimore, Md .; St.
transfusions of blood or blood
Paul, Minn .; Syracuse, N.Y.;
products.
·-- Philadelphia, Pa.; Huntington. w.
Following the recall announce- Va.; Green Bay, Wis.; and San
ment, the Amei-ican Hemophilia Juan , Puerto Rico .

Two drivers
escape mJury

"

•

·()

2 ~~tions. 12 Pages 26 Centa
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Middleport's.burning ordinance out

ADDS.

"No matter how you
pick your numbers, now
pick 'em twice a weeki"

HOURS: lon.·Tuts.·Wtd.·Fri.
t:JO to 5;00

Contrasting-teams

WASHINGTON (AP) - - The
·Tri-State Regional Blood -Center in
HuntingtOn Is taking action to stop
· dJsti'1lllltlon of two lots of Antihemophilic Factor (AHF) frOm a supply
bellev!!d affected by a patient' with

Weather forecast
around

Beat ol Bend col~ oo Page 8

BloQd center takes action to ·recall had suhstanc~s

Meigs County happenings....

FALL
APPLIANCE SALE

See 1eUers oo Page 2

·usa Faye Roee

Edna M. Findling

Alumni band deadline

Election 'hegts up'

•

0

0

Two Meigs county residents
escaped Injury when their carS
collided head-on on Meigs Co. Road
5Monday.
The Gallla-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol said vehicles
driven by Margaret P . Tanner, 51,
Langsville, wassouthboundon5anl;l
Joesph Dldlsse ill, 31, Rutland, was
northbound. Tanner's car apparently went left of center while trying
to stop for traffic an~struckDidlsse'
vehicle head-on, causing heavy
damage to his car. Tanner's vehicle
suffered light damage In the n:10
a.m. accident. Tanner was cited by
the patrol for drlvtng left of center.
A Westerville man _was cited by
. the patrol for Improper passing
following a 9: 05 a.m. accident on_
Ohiol24.
According to the patrol, vehicles
driven by Russell A. Hepll', :!l, and
Barbara Dugan, 43, Racine, were
eastbound on ·124, When Heppe
·apparently attempted to pass Du·
while she was makiJig a left
tum. The accident resulted . In
moderateclamage to Heppe' vehicle
and Uibt damaae to Dugan's.
A Shade man escaped Injury .
When hlscarwentotrtherlghtsldeof
Ohlo143andatn1Ckanembankment
Monday.
The patrol laid WUilam E. Green,
43, wu llll'thbllund on143when the
steerlngofhll car appan!lltly failed
as he l'llllllded a curve at ll: 12 p.m.

can

'

.

FDU&gt; TRIP - KIDclerpriaa1lfrom the Southem Local School
Dllbtct, I tor, ML+eel AM, Kerl Caldwell, Jeaslea Sayre, Mllty llylleD
-.l 'l'Gmlll)' l.aali, 1r aed lblt-ML"'' up the md of afire lillie can be a
heavy job. v .......... periOIIIMll wllh the

s~

momJng and afternoon ldnderprten clrre~~ a guided tour of the~
oo Monday. Thill Is the fowth year for tbe field trip wldclt coincides wllh
National Fire Prevention Week.

F1re Dept gave

.

GALLIPOLIS - Use of the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam as the site
of hydroelectric power genera tlng
station Is again under study .
Noah Corp. of Aiken, S.C. , has
applied f~ a prellmtnary permit
from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to "prepare studies of the hydraulic, construction,
· economic, environmental, historic
and recrea tiona! aspects of the
project,"
A firm created in 1980 to develop
and construct hydroelectric stations, Noah in tends to se!J the power
genera ted by the proposed sta lion to
Virginia Electric Power Co. of
Richmond , Va., a utility serving
Virginia and North Carolina that is
interconnected with Columbusbased American Electric Power
Corp.
James B. Price, Noah's president, said his firm has not
contracted with VEPCO and has no
commitmen t to sell thepower tothe
firm if the sU!tion gets underway.' ···
"We think the project Is feas ible, if
power ca n he sold outside of the
area ," he said . "ll we thought the
power had to be sold to AEP, or to •
municipalities, then the project
couldn 't be built, simply because
their (AEP'sl power is cheap ."
Price said power sold to VEPCO
would be sent through AEP's
transmission lines.
"
"ln our opinion, that's the· only
plan that would be practical." he
added.
Earlier this year. Ohio P ower Co.
withdrew a FERC application to
build its own hydro sta lion at
Gallipolis. A company spokesman
said Ohio Power won't need
additional generating ca pabilities
for the next 20 years.
The preliminary permit Is mainly
a ''bus iness venture.'' Price said, to
see what can be gained from
building a station a t Gallipolis .
The FERC application noted that
Noah 's plans are to build a
powerhouse with a generating
capacity of 70,00) kilowatts, construct a 1.7-mile transmission line
running south from the dam and a
generate :nJ million kilowatt hours
annually .
"That's enough electricity to take
care of 30,00l homes ," Price said.
The project's estima ted cost Is $9
mlllion .
U the permit is approved, Noah
will apply for a license. which Price
said is a more difficult task because
tile firm has to conduct env ironmental Impact SJudics.
Price said that its pfans would bi!
compatible with the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers' proposed
construction of a new locking
system, or any rehabilitation at
Gallipolis.
• Should the license be granted by
1987, construction could begin by the
.latter part of the year and the station
could be opera tiona! by 1989, Price
said.
Gallipolis is one of 10 projects In
the Appalachian region Noah Ia
developing, Price said. FERC ~
given Noah a permit for one~
station on the Allegheny River
while three others may be
granted later this year or In~
1985.
'

may
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The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commen
.

Tuesday, October 9, 1984
•

'

The Daily Sentinel
1lJ Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON /\REA

~lb

~ij' ~ .......,...~T'""'
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

Free

pr~ss,

The nation's ·c ommunity newspapers are- and always have been
- "lighting freedom's way" during
National Newspaper Week, October 7 through 13. The nation's
plinted press has always pictured
itself as shedding light In one way or
another - many of us carry in our
front page "flags"' a picture of a
torch, or a lighthouse - because It
is our contention that the truth is
there for the public io see If we shine

(:;uest editorial
R_ob_er_tJ_.~~

free ·society___

that light on it
In other words, we don't have to
crea(e .the news, or liype 'it - it's
there, and our job is to present it
factually so that citizens of an
informed democracy can make
their choices based on knowledge.
One of the newspaper Industry's
continual problems is convincing
our readers that we don't "make
up" or. "hype" the stories we report
in order to lurther our own alms or

make some political or social
statement.
Our primary task, as we see it, is
to be "llg!Jters," not "fighters" ~
that Is, to tell the story of even(!j in
the best way we know how rather
than to try in our news pages to
shape our readers' opinions· about
the · world a~und them and what
they ought to do as citizens.
We express ~ our opinions - no
doubt about it We do it on our

i\ MEJ\!BER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press 1\ssociatlon and the A_m erlcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shOuld be Jess than 300 words
long. Allletler!!i are subject to editing and must be Sl&amp;'fled with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be puhllshed: Letters should be In
good tusle , addressiDg Issues, not persooalllles.

While Mondale won
on points he missed
the knockout p~nch .
There he went -again, The Great Communicator at his Graft. But this
time, President Reagan was matched against a tough and polished lival
For Walter F. Mondale, never regarded as a master orator, dlspiayed
hls own Skill as a communicator, incampaigndebatethatran overtime. He
. came on strong, punching and counter-punching. Then, Invited to offer a
• summary denunciation of Reagan 's debate performance, adroitly
pralslng the president for ralslngg national morale.
For all that, In politics as in sports, favored champions are not dethroned
on points. It takes a knockout punch, and there were norie, from either
corner, in the LouiSville debate . .
Some of the Republicans who called Reagan the debate victor
acknowledged it wasn't his best night. "I think he seemed uncertain at
times, but so did Mr. Mondale," said Sen. Paul Laxalt of Nevada.
Predictably, he said Reagan did best. Just as predictably, Democrats said
Mondaie had won. "We've got a new great communicator," said Rep.
Michael Barnes, D-Md.
The debate fare was generally a s predictable as a Mondale or a Reagan
campaign speech. Mondale said Reagan wants to cut Social Seculity and
like programs; Reagan called that outrageous and said it isn't so. Reagan
said Mondale seeks tax increases by habit; the Democratic nominee said
the president thinks he can curb federal deficits by magic. Each said he
wants to keep religion out of politics; each accused the other side of trying
to put it there.
But the glorified panel programs that pass for presidential campaign
:debate never have been forums for groundbreaking on the issues. They
are, instead, occasions for summation and repetition of well-rehearsed
campaign themes. That's valuable, as is the opportunity to see rival
candidates handle themselves away from their sclipts.
Mondale elitics- and some of hls l'rtends -long ago marked him down
as a dull and listless orator. He proved otherwlse Sunday night in
LoutSvllle. He will get a second, and final opportunity in a foreign policy
-debate with Reagan in Kansas City on Oct 21.
· The best-remembered Une of Reagan's debateagalnstCarter in 1980had
nothing to do with issues. It was the Reagan refrain to what he said were
Carter mlsstatements: "There you go again."
Reagan knows a good line when he's said one.
So after Mondale talked about his tax Increase-deficit reduction plan, the
,president looked over at his challenger.
.
"You know I wa~n't going to say this at a ll ," Reagan said, "but I can't
help it. There you go again."
· Mondale was waiting for that one. He said the last time Reagan made the
comment was in response to Carter's charge that he wanted to cut
, Medicare funds . "What did you do right after the election? You went out
and tried to cut Medicare," Mondale said. :
·

Letters to editor
Your help still needed

Common thteads bind World Series opponents

Pa9e-2-The Daily ~tl....a
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.

Newspapers: Lighting Freedom's Way
-

U.S.

editorial pages, whiCh we clearly
mark as such . But we do our best to
report the news straight, correct
and to the point, without slanting
the story or making It bigger (or
smaller) thar\Jt deserves.
That - printing the objective
truth, and confining our own.
opinions to our opinion page - is
our creed. And there's a wonderful
debate, which never ends, within
the newspaper community .about
how to do this best. No reader can
be as· hard on an editor who has
strayed from the pa'th as hls or her
colleagues. are. ArguJpents about
our duty to our readers - · about
how best to cover tile news, and
whether we are "lighters" or
"fighters" - are good medicine for
our industry, and bring the reader a
better newspaper with every issue.
It's a matter ol quiet plide within
our news community that reporting
the news has become more professional every year.
Most of us agree that we are also
"fighters" - that we will put
ourselves, through our edltolial
pages, in the forefront on issues that
are important to the community.
But we know, in our best moments,
that taking our advocacy stance is
no substitute for the Informed
action of the -community, and we
take care not to confuse the two.
Best of all, we know that
:'lighting" comes'llrst -If we don't
get the facts light, our opinions and
the actions that we, urge In those
opinions wlll have diminished value
to the community.
In this week when we stress the
'role of newspapers in the health of
our democracy, we proudly say we
are "llghtihg freedom's way"
because, If we can show our readers
the truth, that truth wtll make them
free.

ID~ial laW_~~------Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n
.

!

WASHINGTON - The nation's civlllibertles without the hindrance
civll defense chief, Louis Giuffrida, of the courts or leglslatu. res.
Now my associates Donald Goldseems determined to carve out a
powerful empir(' for his Federal berg anti Indy Badhwar have
E mergency Man&lt;~gement Agency, obtained a Pentagon documentthat
even If he has to call in the An'ny.
discloses how the military would
The scary thing is that there are work in cooperation with FEMA
like-minded elements in the Pen- civlllans durtng a national einertagon Willing to scrap the Constitu- gency. Its proposed assault on the
lion and turn the United States into . courts, the executive branch and
a ffillitary dictatorship.
the Constitution is truly
I've already repOrted how Gulf- breathtaking.
frida ran afoul of Attorney General
The Internal document shows
William French Smith with a draft how the Pentagon, in league with
executlve order that would insesrt FEMA1 plaris to drape a cloak of
FEMA between the White House questionable iegaUty over their
and the Cabinet In the event of a activities whenever they decide the
national emergency.
country Is in the throes of a national
I also reported that Giuffrida had emergency. The report, Issued by
prepared sweeping legislation, to the. Joint Chiefs of Stall last
be presented to Congress when December, is titled, "Military
disaster strikeS, that would give the Support of Civil Defense: System
president (and FEMA) authority to · Descliption."
abolish private-property lights and
The Posse Comitatus Act prohib.

its the armed forces from engaging
in domestic law enforcement except under strictly delineated restlictions designed to safeguard
constitutinal rights. The Joint
Chiefs' guideline sets forth its own
exemptions to the law "based upon
the Inherent legal right of the
United States government to ensure the preservation of public
order ... by force 11 necessary."
It's wise to be suspicious when ·
someone starts talking about the
'
governr:nent's "inherent"
right to
do this or that It's a signal that the
Constitution is about to be blindsided. In fact, when President
Truman ordered the Koreanwartime seizure of the steel mills in
1952, the Supreme Court ruled that
he had no such inherent right, even
for " national defense.''
Here are some of the ways the
Joint Chiefs plan to bring in the
troops- In close coordination with

FEMA:
- "Normally a state of martial
law will be proclaimed by the
president," the document states.
But it adds, "In the absence of such
action by the president, a senior
· mUitary commander may impose
martial law in an area of his
com mand where there has been a
complete breakdown In the exerelse of government functions by
local civUian autholit(es.'
- "Military assumption of judiciai, law enforcement and admlnlstrative functions of local gnvemment will be based on necessity that
is actual and present" - presumably as decided by the general on the
scene.
-"In the absence ofmartlaliaw,
the performance of law enforcement functions by the military wtli
be limited to those actions that are
necessary to prevent loss of life and
wanton destruction of property.''

Why people don't like lawyers James J. Kilpatrick

WASHINGTON - In the current pitfalls that go with divorce and
Journal of the American Bar child custody. We are leery of
Association , a gentleman who is insurance forms and nrooertv
Many C&amp;SOE consumers are decision -making process. Winter is
both a lawyer and a public relations . leases. We are afraid offoreclosure,
aware of the rural line extension approaching and there are stm
counselor
grapples with an ancient afraid of eviction, afraid of the
case pending before the Public t hose who can express the severe
Why
is it, he asks, that housing inspector and the bill
question
.
Utilities Commission of Ohio. There inconveniences caused by the
people
·
d
on't
like
lawyers? The collector. In all these areas, and in a
was a two-day public hearing in company' s neglect.
author,
Dennis
E.
Hensley,
comes hundred more . besides, It is the
Athens on April 3-4, at which time
It would help if customers
up
with
some
familiar
reasons
and lawyer who lies at the root of our
the PUCO presided and the Office of suffering from these problems
offers
some
familiar
advice.
One
apprehension. Lawyers write the
Consumers Counsel represented would write to Chairman Michael
complaint is that trtallawyef$ tend laws: lawyers enforce and interthe rural customers. Those families
DelBane, PUCO, 130 E. Broad
to be rude. He suggests that ttiey try pret the laws; statutes and opinions
named in the formal complaint,
Street, Columbus, Ohio 43214, to
not to be rude. That' a nice pile up like mountains of grain, and
along with quite a feW others
request a fair and immediate
beginning.
the mill never stops ..
directly affected by the company's decision. When writing, you may
Let
me
turn
around
for
a
minute
·
It is a culious thing. It is a
Illegal charging practices, gave refer to Case No. 83-1279£L-CSS.
or
two
on
Hensley's
theme.It
has
to
of love and hate. For a
bonding
spirited testimony.
Your help is needed and informabe
said,
first
off,
that
his
threshold
country
that
prides Itself on freeWe believe the company's practi- tion about your own problem with
is
·undeniably
sound:
Indipremise
dom,
we
are
in thrall to the law.
ces ·regarding rural line extensions
the company's practices can be
vidual
lawyers
may
be
dearly
TWo-thirds
of
ali
the lawyers in the
are unjust, unreasonable, discrimiheard and will possibly influence
loved,
but
as
a
breed
th€
profession
are
practicing
in the United
world
natory, unjustly preferential and in the PUCO to make the decision that
historically
has
been
held
in
low
States. Japan has about 10,000
violation of Ohio law and PUCO will help you , the rural customer.esteem. It is almost impossible to lawyers for the whole country; we
Ms. Phyllis Casto, 220 Hill St., Apt.
regulations.
' Six months have passed since the D., Belpre, Ohio 45714, 614-423-49ffi. find a passage in literature in praise .. have upward of 001,000. Our m law
of the legal practitioner. Keats schools turn out another 00,000
hearing the PUCO is still in the
thought lawyers should be classed lawyers every sprtng. There Is no
"in the natural history of mons- way thls.army of lawyers can exist
ters," and Keats -was among the without creating new laws, new
milder clitics.
rules, new regulations that must be
As a layman in love with the law, Interpreted and applied. Lawyers
I am concerned aoout recent P.lint. l,.et's keep the editor's
I have spent a lifetime coveling the feed on litigation as whales feed on
articles in your .newspaper which opinions on the editorial page and . bar and the bench. From these
plankton. At any given moment,
appear to. reflect a biased political give both candidates fair and equal
years .of observation, I venture this eight million lawsui(!j are pending .
View of the race for state represen- coverage. Let us make our own
oversimplified explanation: People in our state . and federal courts.
tative (Sheets Vs. Boster) . We read choice, don't make it for us. do not like lawyers because people Many of these cases have been
· . about Jennifer Sheets on the frol\t Bernadette Anderson, 242 Muldo not like laws.
pending for years, waiting upon
berry Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
~ge and Jolynn Boster in fine
You will understand that I am not trial dates or out-of-court
speaking of the body of law that settlemenls.
deals with "malum in se," with evt1
Law Is not like medicine. Given a
in itself. Society plainly likes laws pain in the belly, we willingly
that punish murder, rape, robbery aoknowledge our ignorance of
has a mind of her own and as those and fraud. I am thinking rather of anatomy and trust the surgeon's
I thought Jan Haddox's cartoon
who have heard her speak know,
depleting the tug-of-war between
that mile-wide web of rules, judgment It's your appendix, he
she spea)&lt;s straightforward and regulations and statutes that deal says to the patient, and out the little
Jennifer Sheets and Jolynn Boster
was amw;lng and on balance ' articulately. ·
with "malum prohibitum." We do critier comes on Tuesday. 'I1Ie
You could have balanced .the not obey these out of fear of doing problem is over and done with. But
between tbe candidates.
It wa~ inaccurate, however, since cartoon and been more accurate if wrong; we obey them out of fear of the client hasn't been born who
Rep. Boster has not exerted enough
you had published a .companion getting caught. This ts why we flle doesn't believe tl)at he knows as
cartoon showing a rubber stamp our tax forms, observe the no- much about the law -or almost as
effort to obtain highway improve(Rep. Boster) bwnclng to the tune smoking signs and drive at 55 mph. much - as his lawyer. A patient
mentS to 11ft the rope, much less tug
ot a deUghled, well-fed (with OUR
on it!
Fear. That is the operative word. wouldn't dream of suggesting that '
Your latest cartoon implying that taxes) Governor Celeste!
We are afraid of being arrested; we his surgeon cut to the left or the
Ruth B. Arnold, are afraid of suing andmore afraid light of the navel, but clients are full
Jennifer Sheets is a puppet was
25 Chestnut St.. Middleport of ~ng sued. We are a!rald of the of advice on how to handle a
again inaccurate. Jennifer Sheets
. '

lawsuit. If the lawsuit is lost, after
months or years qf suspense, it's all
the lawyers' fault .
People do not like criminal law
any better than they like civil law.
The people are fed up with a system
that admits manifestly dangerous
climinais to balL The people do not
understand the exclusionary rulejudges and cops do not understand
it either - but the peopie see that
the rule can be twisted so as .to
make a travesty of justice. Only a
tiny fraction of our people ever
serve on juries; but jurors talk, and

too often they talk of ill-prepared
l'awyers and Indifferent judges.
Too many laws, too many
lawyers, too many lawsuits! The
people feel helpless in a mire of
invisible ooze, and they do hot see
the typical attorney as a l'rtend who
wtll pull them out. They figure it
was attorneys who threw them into
the muck in the first place. And the
melancholy truth- a truth that no
public relations campaign · wtll
overcome· is that In this
conviction the people are generally
right.

Berry's World

SERlE! MANAGERS - Detroit Tigers' manager
Sparkey Anderson (left) and San D1e110 Padres' manager Dlek
Williams chat alter a preu conferen\)e at San Diego Jack Murphy
StadiiDD Monday, On Tuesday the Plibes wiD host the 'llgers in the
opening game or the World 8erles. (AJt Laserphoto ).
·

Moeller risks. No. 1
ranking in state poll--·
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP) - Cir.clnnati Moeller will havl!' an
out-of-state opponent Saturday
night for the second time thls season,
rtsking its No. 1 rimklng In The
Associated Press' Class AAA state
high school football poll.
The Crusaders eniertain Cathedral Prep from Erie, Pa.. at
Galbreath Field, looking for their
seventh straight victory in lOOt The
Crusaders whipped Miami, Flit,
Christopher Columbus earlier this
fall. .
.
Moeller's other victories have
been over Ohio te3ll'Vl - Akron
Central-Hower, Lancaster, Lima
Senior, Cincinnati LaSalle and
Cinclnna ti Rnger Bacon, the Crusaders' latest victim 41-0.
Moeller leads !he Class AAA
ratings with 'M!l points. 76 ahead of
second-ranked Centervllie (~)
and 104 more than No. 3-rated
Lakewood St. Edward (6-~).
Elyrta Catholic (6-0-0). a 47-7
victor over Cleveland Holy Name
47-7, kept the top spot fn Class·AA
with 252 points. Orrville (~)
moved !rom third to second place,
swapping positions with Steubenville(~).

Class A froni-runner Newark
Catholic defeated Heath 41-12 and
retained the .Class A lead with 248
points from a slllte board of sports
wrtters and broadcasters. Cincin-

Southern junior
high rolls over KC
RACINE - The Southern Junior
High Tornadoes claimed a 46-28
trtumph ov~r the previously undefeated Kyger Creek Bobcats Thurs.' ' day evP.ning.
Sot1thern is now 3-2 and KC 4-1.
1
' TQdd Lisle led Southern with 9
carries on 88 yards,Brian Thorla
and Danny Gheen each had 29 on 7
and · 4 carries respectively ,and
David McMillen hl!d 15 yards on 2
carries.
Kyger Creek had 211 yards
rushing,four yards passing and no
turnovers . Sobby Gorden had 187
yards on 22 carrtes, scoring four
touchdowns. His TD runs included a
43 yard,67 yard, · 40 yard,· and 15
yarder.
Chris Stout had one
and extra
point run for Southern. The big story
of the day was thatMcMillencaught
6 passes for 131 yards and four
touchdowns while running for
another. He also scored six extra
points for a total production of 36
points.
Stout was 9 of 12 passing for 196
yards and five touchdowns. the
other being a 15 yarder to Mike
Amos.Danny Gheen had one catch
and Sean Diddle another for 34
yards.

m

natl Academy of Physical Education (6-0-0) remained in second with
216 .points, whlle New Phlladelphia
Tuscarawas Catholic (~) advanced from fourth to third with :m
points.
Youngstown Mooney ranked
fourth IIi Class AAA with Dayton
Wayne fifth, Lorain King sixth,
Youngstown Ursuline seventh,
Toledo Central Ca\holic eighth,
North Canton Hoover ninth and
Findlay lOth. Hoover and Findlay
were tied for 11th last week.
In Class AA, Akron St. Vincent -St.
Mary was fourth, Loudonville fifth,
Cincinnati McNicholas sixth, l..oWsville Aquinas -seventh, St. Marys
Memolial eighth, Portsmouth ninth
and Oak Harbor lOth. Oak Harbor
was 12th a week ago.

Prep ratings
COLUMBUS, Ohlo !AP I - How .a panel
of sports wrltet'!l and broadcaslcrs rat('!!
Ollkl hiatt sctxxll football tearm for TlX'
A..•;..c;ocl :nro Pr3s twlth playotf divisions
In p&lt;af(-'111~ )
C!ASSo\AA
Sdtool - ..L...'I'Pt&amp;

1, Cln. Moeller Ill
2. Ct'lllcrvllk&gt; I II

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7, Uli ts. Aqutns I[ VI
8, Sl. Mal)'s 1m 1
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10. Oak Harbor ( nl 1

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tlll' l, Calf'S Mills Hawk&lt;'fl and Por1s ·

2, Cln . CAPE I rYI
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HUCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
volleyball team rebounded from an
earlier loss to Alexander with a
16-14, 15-3 win ove r the TVC rival.
In upping their record to 11-4
overall and 8-4 in the TVC , the
Marauderettes hold on solidly to
third place behind Belpre and .
Nelsonville-York .
Greta Kennedy led Meigs in
scoring with seven points, all of
which came as the final seven
points of the s~ond game. Julie
Miller and Jenni Couch had six
each, Jodi Harrison five, Carol
Smith three, and Shannon Hindy
and Ruth Fry two each.
Coach Ron Logan considered this
win one of Meigs' best efforts of the
year, praising the hustle or his
squad which played before a big
and vocal crowd .
In the reserve tilt, Meigs suffered
a: 1-15, 9-15 loss to drop their record ·
"to 10-4. Coach Rick Ash's Little
Marauderettes are now in second
place in the TVC.

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·ltJ I~D~NEA. 1nc &lt;i'l~

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ITIO\.It h WE'!;! .16. 18, BL•Urionlalnf' 15. 1!1
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21 Hlf' l. Coal Gl'O\'P, WJ&gt;SI Jf'ffi'I'Sffl and

100° L'.N.A.

Feels description inaccurate

World Selies for De!roit againSt
Mark Thurmond. For the Padres
during the season, Thurmond was

·-

COMPLETE. lO' SYSTEM.__r

Vpset with coverage

SAN DIEGO (AP) - It is a Monaghan, who bought the Tigers 1983.
atter the 1983 season.
matchup bot)l of contrasts -Centerflelder Chet Lemon, actradition . vs. ex~ion - and
Kroc, who In his early years as the quired from the Chicago White Sox.
ccmmon threads binding the San team's owner was perhaps best
Jack Monis (19-11) will open the
Dteso Padres and Detroit Tigers.
known for grabbing a stadium
And it wasn't even supposed to mlcrophone, apologizing to the fans
stan here. Chicago was all charged for the club's per1ormance ar\d
up lor its first World Series in 25 beratllighisplayers,wentaboutthe
years, perhaps the Cubs' first world business the past few years of
SAL! PIICU COOD TIIIU 111-1444
finding the r ight parts to the (XlZZle.
championship in 76. ·
01 Wlllll QUMTlTI£S WT
~ut in a most Improbable of
The pivotal one was Dick Wllll. comebacks, the Padres, only 15 ams, a manager with winning
111(years old, won !hi! final three games credentials in Boston, Oakland and
1lJ liiMT
in the National League's best-of-five Montreal.
QtiMill1D
playoffs ·a nd now find themselves
And Jac)&lt; McKeon, vice president
hosting tonight's opening game of for baseball operations, went about
their first World Series.
spending Kroe's money for the rest
In Chicago, where waiting, for of the pieces, among them:
next year. has become a family
-First baseman Steve Garvey,
tradition, handed down .from gener-. for years the All-American boy up
atlon to generation, a psychiatrist the coast with the Los Angeles
and Cubs fan, Helene Starr, was , Dodgers who led the team with 86
quoted as saying of the Padres: "I runs batted in. He was the Padres'
don't want you to think I'm bitter, ·Most Valuable Player in the NL
bui let me say thls .. . I hope. the Championship Series against the
Tigers squash them, eat them up Cubs, who nearly outbid San Diego •
andspltthemout .IhatethePadres! for hls services In the free-agent
I hate the name Padres! Their market before the 1!1l3 season.
-Third baseman Graig Nettles,
colors stink, too!"
Their colors are those of autumn , the stUI-slick fielder with the
brown and gold, but in Southern occasional lightning In his bat
Ca)lfornia, autumn ls only a word,
(seven home runs in Six consecutive
not a season. It is forever sunny, games In August) was acquired in
warm. and green. Not a bit like trade from the New York Yankees .
DetrQit, the very essence of fall -Relief pitcher' Rich "Goose"
cool, crtsp and lich in World Series Gossage, the stopper out of the
tradition.
bullpen (25saves) the Padres had so
Eight times previously, the Tige~s sorely mlssed, was signed out of free
have participated in this fail classic , agency when he tired of Yankee
winning three of them, most owner George Steinbrenne r' s
recently In 1968. The names, too, meddling.
Less traveled than WUliam s but
rtngof tradition- TyCobb, Charlie
Gehrtnger, Mickey Cochrane, Hank equally successful is ~troit's
Greenberg, AI !&lt;aline. . .
manager, Sparky Anderson. He
. And in San Diego, major league directed the Cincinnati Reds, the
baseball tradition is, well, nonextst- Big Red Machine, to world chament. In fact, for a while adecadeago, pionships in 1975 and 1976, then was
·major league baseball here alinost
stunned by his dismissal after the
was nonexistent C. ArtJholt Smith, 1978 season. He was hired by the ·
thentheownerofthePadres,wason Tigers midway in 1979.
the verge of selling the tran~hise,
Like Wllllams, Anderson a lso
whiCh was to be moved to Washing- shopped around to pick up the few
ton, D.C. .
·
missing cogs for his new machine,
Instead, he sold it to the late Ray among them:
Kroc, the hamburger king, founder
...-Relief pitcher Willie Heman - .
ofMcDonald's,apioneerlnfast:food dez, obtained from Philadelphia,
franchising.
last year's NL champs.
This, incidentally, is being called
-Third baseman Darrell Evans.
thefast-foodseriesmatchingMcDo- the San Francisco Giants' MVP in
nald's against Domino's P(Zza, a ..---------------i
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·'"

CHICKEN. LEG
HERE HE GOES AGAIN - San Francisco
49ers' quarterback Joe Montana ( 16) leeds the jall to
fullback Roher Craig (33) as49ersmeettbe Ne.w York
Giants at East Rutbet1ord, N.V., Monday night.

QUARTERS

Montana, who wore a D-" jacket to protect rib
Injuries, completed 15 out of 24 passes before leaving
the game · euriy. 81111 Francisco won 31-10. (AP
Laserphoto).

Grode "A"

Montana's touchdow.n passes
give 49ers 31-10 victory
EAST

RUTIIERFORD, N.J .
(AP) - The San Francisco 49ers
learned a good lesson a bout the
va lue of keeping a big lead earlier
this seasonandthey showed the New
York Giants they hadn'tforgottenil.
Quarterback Joe Montan a threw
two touchdown passes and Da na
McLemore returned a punt 79 yards
fo r a nother score as the 49ers ripped
the Giants 31-10 Monday night to
remain one of two undefea tea teams
in the National Football League this
season.
"Even though we jumped to a 21 -0
lead , the game was by no means

over," said safety Dwight ·Hicks,
who had an interception In the
nationally televlsed game. "It's a
comfortable lead but you still have
to play hard."
That's the !""son the49ers learned
earUer this season against the
Washington Redsklns. San Fran cisco grabbed a 27-0 lead In that
game, but had to sweat out a 37-31
victory.
" It wasn't that long ago and it
popped into everybody 's mind once
we got the big lead :'' said linebacke r
Keena 1\tr ner. "We knew wha t
happened in the Washington g-

Texas still No. 1;
osu ~rops to 8.th .r·

and we knew itcouldhappen again if
we did not keep playing.' '
The 49ers never did as they ralst;d
their record to 6-0, the best start in
the team 's history.
"The 6-0 means consistency
throughout the ballclub, .. •· sa id
Montana , who completed 15 of 24
passes for 2r:fl yards and three
touchdowns. "We are playingwell·. "
That was especially true In the
first quarter as the 49ers scored on
their first three possessions In a span
of seven minutes, 33 sewnds.
Montana, wearing a flack vest to
protect sore libs, . connected with
speedster Renaldo Nehemlah on a
59-yard scoring play just 2:32 Into
the game. Less than four minutes
later, he tossed a 1-yard TO.pass to
tight end John Frank.
McLemore's long punt return, the
second against New York In as
many weeks, turned the game into a
rout.

ninth with 646polnts after a 17·17 tie
By HERSCHEL NJSSENSON
. AP Sports Writer
with Me mphis State . Miami r~=========:j
Te xas held onto its No. 1 ranking rounded out .the Top Ten,- vaulting
The Daily Sentinel
today in Ttle Associ;l.ted Press from 14th to lOth with 605 points by
college football poll , while Okla· defeating Notre Dame 31-13 a nd
'
.(US P S H5·96!1)
A Division' nf Multlmedi n, In c.
homa, the Longhorns' opponent knocking the Irish out of the
next Saturday, climbed from fifth rankings .
Pu bli sh('(! evf'ry aft ern oon . Monday
The Second Ten consists of Pe nn
place to third.
th rough F r iday, 111 CoUrt St.. y th~
Ohio Va ll ey Publi shin g Comp a ny t MU I·
Washinglon took advantage of State, LSU, Oklahoma State,
lim Pd la. Inc ., P ome roy, Ohio ~ 57 69. h.
Purdue,
Gecrgia
,
Auburn,
South
Ohio State's 28-Z11oss to Purdue and
992·2156. SI?Cond c lass pos tage pa id at
Pomrroy, Ohio.
,.
replaced the Buckeyes as No. 2, Carolina, Florida, Kentucky a nd
Georgia
Tech.
while Purdue, South Carolina a nd
Mf'm ber: The AssO&lt;' Iaw d Press. In·
Last week, it was Penn Sta te,
l;.~ nd Da i ly P sess Assoc ia t ion and th&lt;'
Kentucky m ade the Top Twenty
1\mf' ri ra n Newspape r Publi shers As·
Georgia
Tech,
Michigan
,
Miami
,.
after absences of several years.
socla lion, Nat iona l Advl'r li sing R&lt;' pre:
~ f'n la t iV(' , B r &lt;:~n h am NewspapPr Sales,
Texas, a 38-13 winner over Rice, LSU, Nou·e Dame, UCLA, Auburn ,
733 Th ir d Avenu e, New York. New
received 55of59 first-placevotesand vanderbilt and Georgia.
Yor k HXJ1 7.
4-1,
last
appea
red
In
the
Purdue,
1.170 of a possible l.l!'IJ points from a
POSTMASTER: St•nd address cha ng:es
nationwide panel of sports writers Top Twenty in 19&amp;1, finisljing the
to Th&lt;' Da ll y S&lt;-nt lnel. Ill Cou rt St.. Po·
season as the No. 17 team.
and s portscasters.
m(lroy. Ohio 457b'9.
South Carolina, which trounced
\Vh.lle Ohio State dropped from
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
second to eighth, Washington, No. 3 · Kansas State 49-17 to go 4-0, a lso
By Carrier or Motor Route
made the ranklngs for the first time
One Wcek ............ ............ .. .... ... ..$1.10
a week ago, moved up one spot with
One Month ........................ ......... $4.80
since thel980season. That year, the
one first-place ballot a nd l ,()l9points
One Year .............. ....... ........... $57.20
SINGLE COPY
following a 19-7 tri umph over Gamecocks were In the Top Twenty
.. PRICES
12
times,
!ising
as
high
as
No.
14.
OregOn State.
Dall y ....... ::·::., ............ ..... :, ... 25 Crnts
Oklahoma was idle las t weeke nd They were 18th in the last regularSubscri be rs not desi r i ng ro pay t hE&gt;Car season poll, but· did not make the
but jumped from fifth to third with
r ler may re mit in a d vanc&lt;' direct to
Twenty.
final
Top
The Da lly Se ntinel on a 3, 6 or 12 mo nth
one first-place vote and 1,038 points.
basis. Credit will be ~lve n ca rrier eac h
Kentucky, also 4-0 followin g a
The other two first-place ballots
month .
27-14
victory
over
Rutgers,
had
not
went to Boston College , which was
No ~ ub s c ripti on s by m ail pe rmi tted In
idle for the second week in a row and been In the Top Twenty since the
towns wh£&gt;re hom e ca r rier serv k l' Is
first
regular·season
polloflinswhen
received 1,026 points to remain No.4.
ava il abl e .
the Wildcats were No. 17. And
The Eagles return to action this
Mail Subs crlpllons
Florida , No. 17in the 1984 preseason
weekend against Temple.
Inside Ohio
13 Week.s .................... .. ......... $14 .56
Brigham Yolillg moved up from poll, returned for the first time since
26 WE&gt;eks ..... ............ .............. $29.12
seventh to fifth with 932 points tor a then by blanking Syracuse 16-0.
52 Weeks ..................... . ... ........ $58.24
Michigan dropped out by losing to
Outside Ohio
52-6 rout of Colora do State a nd
13 W(.'{'kS.... .. .. .. .. ... .... .. . .. . . S15.60
Michigan
State 19-7, UCLA disapNebraska, a 17-3 winner over
26 Wl'eks ... .... ................ .......... $31.20
52 We~? k S ............. ... .................. $59.80
Oklahoma State, rose from eighth to peared after a 23-211oss to Stanford
sixth with 869 points while the and Vanderbilt, which made the
If you have S('rvlce prnhl£• ms cal l our
ranklngs last week for the first time
Cowboys fell from ninth to 13th.
se rvlct' desk at 992-2156 IX&gt;tor(&gt; 6: 00 P .
M . Mond ay lhru Friday .
Sou them MP.thodist also was off since 1958, fell out after bowing to
Tulane 27-23.
,
last weekend and the Mustangs
received
going from
lOth
place'i'JJ/pointswhile
to seventh.f;ighth-place
Ohio State received 6~ points, while
Florida State dropped from sixth to

College's top 20
BJ 1be Awtoda&amp;al Pl'l'!WI
Tht.• Tcp TWcrHy teams in the&gt; A.'lSOCI·
ati'd Press roll(.'!:!:l' rootball poll , w1 th firs t·
vows In Jl3!"611tees. l !IW m.urds,

Pia('('
!o!al

p:&gt;lnt~ baSed

on :.»19-l&amp;J7.1t&gt;-J!). tt-13-

12·U-10-9-S7-G--S43-2·1 and ranklngs tn t he
pr£'\.ious poll
RK-ord Pts Pvs
3-().()
1.17{) l
L Tl"Xa~ 1!i.'1
!i-0-0
UW9 3
2. Washingtcn ( 1J

lOklahoma m

4-M

l .n:l!

S.

4.Bostoo Coll(f: {2.1

3{1-0

l.Wti

"

~. Br1gh am

&gt;M

7.So. Me!bod!SI

4-HI . . 800 8
J.(}{)
lll7 10

8.0ttlo Sta te

:&amp;.J.{I

!B)

2

4.().1

644i

6

a-2.0
4-1.0
:J-0. I

4115 14

Young
6.NPbl'llSk.a

1O.Miaml, Fla.

, ~. fklr1da

StatE'

l l .Pmn State ·
l2.LSU
l,'J.Ok.lahOma Statt&gt;
. H .PurdLK'

15.Ccorda
16.Auburn
17.Soolh Carol ina

18.f'lor1da

19.l&lt;al-

:n.Georol•,.,.,

f.Hl

4-1.{1

3- 1.{1
. 3-2.{1

3-1-1
4-0.0
J. ].()

932

7

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5fAj

557 15
4m 9
lfil Jl1

20

278 1B

.,.

--

167 -

l!i6 - 101 12

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Hunley talks end;
negotiations begin
for ·Collinsworth
. CINCINNATI (AP)-TheCincin·. contact by Brown about three weeks
natl Bengals ,have broken off ago.
contract talks with first-round draft
"He said he wanted to talk about
choice Ricky Hunley. but would like it," Bassett sa id. "!told him I had no
to sign wide receiver Clis Collins· Intention of voiding the deal and that
worth to another contract, Assistant
I'd call him back if I changed m y
General Manager Mike Brown said. mind. But I ha ven't.calledhimbac k.
Brown said Monday the negotia"Only two things could keep Cris
tions with Hunley, a linebacker who Collinsworth from coming to
was thetean\'sNo. ldraftpickoutof Tampa Bay. The first would beifwe
. Alizona, have ended.
decided we didn'twant him based on
· "We made Rlckywhatwe thought his ability and the second would be.if
was an exceptional offer," Brown
he decided he didn't want to come. "
Said. ' 1Hedidn'tthinK it was enough.
Collinsworth, who grciv up in
Wecouldn'tmake a deal. Now we're Titusville, Fla., and played at the
$&lt; games into the season and it' s University of Florida , has signed a
just too late to get it done."
five-year contract with the Bandits
The Bengals reportedly offered for a reported $3 million beginning
Hunley $17 mllllon over four years. after the 1984 season .
Hunley said he wouldn 't sign with
Collinsworth said he 's planning to
the Bengals now even if they'd meet go to Tampa when the season ends.
l\15 salary demands.
"As long a s John Bassett things·I
"They would have to compensa te
can contribute to the .team and
me for all the agony they've put J11e
wants me, I want to go there,"
through during these .negotiations,' · . Collinsworth said. "I'm not going to
do anything to try and w easel out of a
Hunley said. "It would be something
contract I've signed.
similar to a lawsuit."
"I'm happy with what' s going on.
On another matter, Brown said
a very Joyal dog, I guess you
the Bengals want to reacquire the
could
call m e. When we first started
lights to Collinsworth, who is under
negotiating (with Cincinnati for a
contract with the United States
new contract), I wanted to stay here
FootbatJ League when this season
In Cincinna ti . Whe n it became
ends.
However, John Bassett, owner of appatl?nt we wouldn 't get wha t I
ltle Tampa Bay Bandits, said the thought I was worth, then J ohn
USFL team isn't Interested In giving Bassett made the effort when I
upColllnsworth, Bassett saidhe was
needl!dit."

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3
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Bruce sees ito unbeaten teams
in Big 10. race
this campaign
.
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Grode "A"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Coach
'Earle Bruce of Ohio State sees no
team going through the Big Ten
Conference football schedule un·
beaten the way Illinois did a year

ago,
·. Theonlyschoolwhlchhasashotat
an undefeated league season is
Purdue. The Boilermakers handed
the Buckeyes their first Big Ten
defeat 28-23 to assume sole posses·
sian of the conft!rence lead
Saturday.
"The Big Ten Is exceptionally
·strong this year," Bruce said
Monday. "Ilook at the films and am
, amazed at the offensive punch most
teams · have and some of the
defenses have really come on
·sp-ang.
.
"I think Purdue is an exception·
ally strong team. They are playing
·weU together on offense and
defense.n:teyaregettlngthebreaks
and capitalizing on them. And
making the plays tbey have to to
wtn. That's what happened oil
-~turday," he .sald . •
'
: Bruce says the Buckey"" stU!
·must face several strong Big Ten
teams, starting with Dllnols In
'ColumbUs Saturday before an Ohio
Stadium sellout of more than 88,00!
and a CBS-TV audlenctj (3:40p.m.
EIJI') .

"It's going to be very difficult togo
through the Big Ten season un·
beaten. lllinois did it last year, but
they can't do it this year," the
Buckeyes' coach sa id.
Bruce believes the next few weeks
will decide if Purdue is to go
unbeaten in the league . The BoUer·
makers must play at Iowa Saturday
and then at Illinois and at Michigan
in 'two of the following three weeks.
"That's a pretty rough grind," the
Ohio State coach sa.id.
Illlnois haS won three of Its four
Big Ten games this fall for second
place. Purdue is 4-0. Ohio State,
Iowa and Michigan share third at

2-1.
"This lllinols team Is coming of
age now,'' Bruce sa id of the Big
Ten's defending champions.
"They've got their defense squared
away. They are very similar to last
year. They control the football with
the pass and run."
Bruce anoounced his star fresh·
man linebacker, Chlis Spielman,
has !Jeen cleared for duty after
spraining an ankle ·against ~owa
three weeks ago. However, Ed
Taggali, a starting tight end, will be
outanotberWeekwlthabacklnjury.
Bruce announced his team would
conduct clqsed practices for the
Dlinl,. \_17-13 winners over the
Buckeyes in 1!183 in Champaign. .

For The Month
of October
You Can Get A
15 Word Ad
For 3 Days For $3.00
GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
(Galli a County)

THE DAILY SENTINEL
(Meigs County)

POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
(M~son County)

ALL ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE
OFFER ENDS OCT. 31, 1984

CLASSIF·IEDS

�Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

October

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1984

Ohio

Presentation ·
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Twenty-seven different slide programs, with sound, 'have been
'·
\
/I
obtained by Meigs County Juvenile
1 ·r.;
Court and the Meigs County
.
I
Sheriff's Dept. and are avaUable
I
I
upon request for use by community,
civic, church ·and school
I'
organizations.
The slide programS have been
made possible by various local
businesses and orgaillzatlons who ·
acted as sponscrs.
The . juvenUe court programs
provide lnformatlnnal and educational material on such subjectS as
I
child abuse, crime prevention, drug
SLIDE PROGRAMS AVAIIAIII.E _:Terry Gardner, 88!1lstant to the
and alcohol abuse, famUy violence, ·
Melp Coonty juvenDe probation olllCer, and Carolyn 'lbomas, chief
shopltftlng an~ teen smoking. Han·
deputy ~tk ill Meigs Coonty Probate Court, will be happy to assist the
dcut booklets on various social
public
bt scheduling the showing of ·btfonnatlonal slide programs
problems are also avaUable.
recently
obtained by the juvenUe court oftlce and the sheriff's
'The sherlft's department's crimi- . department.
nal justice programs Include the
subjects of vandallsm, burglary,
through thesherlff's.dept.
.
lille court office In the Meigs County
self-protection and other topics.
Anyone wishing to schedule the Courthouse at 992-3096 or 992-6625 or
F11ms on bicycle rules and
regulations and alcohol and ru-ug . showing of any of these slide the Meigs County sheriff's dept. .at
useamongyouthsarealsoavaUable programs should cpntact the juve- 992-3371.

•..

i''

,J

~

CalendarROCK SPRINGS- The Rock Nease birthday·

TUESDAY

POMEROY - The Meigs
Vocal Musls Boosters will meet
at 7 p.m. Ibis evenbtg In the vocal
room at Meigs High School.
·:·

WEDNESDAY ·
. MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
meet Wednesday a I the home of
Mrs. Edgar Reynolds. A "show
and tell" program will be
featured along with the lnstaUatlon of o!flcers for the new year.
Mrs. Em&gt;ll Conroy will be
co-hostess.

1HURSDAY •

POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Pbl Sorority, meeting thursday,
7: .30 p.m. at Riverboat Room of
Diamond Savbtgs and Loan.

Springs Grange will meet at7: ao
p.m .. Thursday evenbtg, at the
grange hall.

Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson,
Brian and Jamie, entertained
Sunday with a birthday celebration
for her grandfather, VernonNease,
on his 86th birthday.
Two cakes and ice cream were
served In the afternoon and gifts
were presented to the honored
guest. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Nease, Westerville; Paul and
Jolm Nease, Columbus; Mrs. Ruth
Powers, Richard Powers, Grove
City; Michael Powers and his
fiance, Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs.
WUliam Nease, Jill and Travis, Pine
Grove Road; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Nease, Mrs. Vernon Nease, a nd
Stanley Nease, Pomeroy.
For the occasion, ll-year-old
Jamie composed a poem for his
grandfather: "Fall Is the leaves and
trees everywhere; fall Is the breeze
that goes through the air; It's also
.the ti!ne when Halloween Is near;
It's one of the great tlmeofthe year.
Fall Is the time when your birthday
Is here; Sohaveahappyonefromall
of us here."

RUILAND - Rutland Lions
Club will meet Thursday, 7 p.m.,
at the clvtc center. VIsitors are
welcome to attend.

RACINE - RaCine Annerlcan
Legion Auxiliary meeting,
Thursday, 7: ao p .m. at post
home.
Rui-LAND - Rutland Lions
Clubwillmeet'rhursday, 7p.m.,
at the clvtc center. Visitors are
wel~me to attend.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange wUl meet at 7: ao
p.m., Thursday evening, at the
grange hall . .

.Happenings

'

Homecoming

VIce and the afternoon service.
The public Is InVIted.

R • ·1

LANGSVILLE - The annual
homecoming will be held SuneVtVa
day at the Langsville Christian
flOMEROY - Revival servl·
Church with Sunday school at cesatthe.OldDexterChurchon
9: ao a.m. followed by morning
County Rd. 6 will begin Thursworship at 10: ao. A basket day and continue through Sun- .
dinner will bed held at !2:30p.m. cay. Nightly preaching will
In the fellowship room with the begin at 7 p.m~ with Pastor
Charles Hatfield and Rev. fullph
af,ternoon service at 2 p.m.
Featured will be the "Harvest Smith. Special singing wUI also
Trlo" which will be sbtglng at · be featured nlghtly.1bepubllcls
.hoth the mornbtg worship ser· welcome to attend.

..

Confined
Raymond Krider is confined to the
Echo Manor Extended Care Center
In Pickerington. Cards may be sent
to Krider at Echo Manor. 10270
Blacklick Eastern Road, N.W.,
Pickerington, 43147 .

Middleport Garden Club meets
A memorial service for Ceclle
Kincaid and MUdred Ziegler, longtime members. of the Middleport
Garden Club, . was held at the
Monday night meeting of the club at
the homeofMrs. Louise Thompson.
Nelle Zerkle conducted the
serviceuslnganarrangementofred
sUk roses and · small wblte mums
with white tapers pi'epared by
Hallie Zirkle. Nancy Hill, cohostess, was 'Introduced as 'new
president by Jeanne Bowen, retirIng president; along with the other
officers for the J.984.,&lt;l5 year.
Program books for the hew year
were given to the members.
1be regional meeting to be held
Oct."l7 atMcArthurwasai11101111Ced
with Ijetty Dean of the Chester

•

Garden Club tohavetheprogramon and by-Jaws of the club were
holiday arrangements. Reserva· discussed. The 50th anniversary of
tlons are'to be made this week and the club to be observed at the May
further Information may be ob- meeting W&lt;!S dlscused.
Arrangements at the meeting
tained from Mr$. Dean, !RS-3855.
Discussed at the meeting was the Included one of golden rod, white
open meeting of Chester Garden · wUd flowers and red and yellow
Club and Shade Valley CouncU of peppers In a pumpkin Oanked by
Floral Arts held last week with Dr. orange t,apers In silver holders by
Ray Swick, Blennerruissett Island Mrs. Bowen and a mantel arrangeCommission chalnnan, as !he ment centered With a pumpkin
speaker, and the Japanese flower combined with gourds, lvy,frultand
arrangement class held Saturday at ltrethom, prepared by LouiSe
Chester. Also noted was the county Thompson.
A dessert course was· served by
association meeting held Monday
the hostesses with favors of hallonight at Trlnlty Church at which
time the county-wide Cluistmas ween cimdy being given to the
members. For roll call members
flower show was planned.
.
Judy Schaekel waswelcomedbtto paid their dues.
the club membership. Constitution ·

..
•.

•

•

'.

·Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
17 mg "tar:' 1.1 mg nicoiine av. per cigar~tte, FTC Report Mar: B4

.,

'1•

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llliJy c.._, -

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of Pea,v and
BID en., PometOJ, rOUDd wi!M appean to~j=with two heads
In ID pili 1 u ' prdea 'l'llurlda1· A IDeal ,
111P lhat lbe
lultle ceuld have two helldl but lhatCIBir IDX·I'IIJ. . . . provel&amp;. A local
lllolop ...... uya the lurde baa oalr- held, tile other pvwlll . .
btJ a tarrior. A&amp; any rate, lbe 1u1t1e II maltmalhe
to be shown at
local~
TWO

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~-

lenny

at local church
'

PDA

Mike 'Pangio, pastor of The
Chrlstlan FeUowsblp, 371 N. Second
Ave., Middleport, InVItes the public
to hear Lenny Anderson Friday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. each
evenbtg and also at 10 a.m. on
Sunday.
Anderson is senior pastor and
founder of the Rejoicing Life Baptist
Church, a ~pldly growlngchurdh In
Raleigh, N.C. He Is the founder of
Rejoicing Life Baptist Churches In
America. A former entertainer,
Anderson was well known as a
recording artist imd performer, who
was miraculously healed following
a glider crash. He has spoken at
crusa~ not only across the United
Slates but bt Canada, Europe,
Africa, the South Pacific and In the
far north o! Alaska among the
Eskimos. He has been a guest
numerous tlnnes on the 700 Club, the
PTL Club and at 100 Huntley St.

'

J Personal note
lLva Hohnson, Mrs. Jerry Holley,
Kalvbt Lee, were recent dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. ·Harley
Johnosn, Tammy and Terry. Afternoon VIsitors were J erry Holley and

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Peggy Murplly.

.•

�'

Beat of the Bend
"'

Johri Van Reeth, South=e::..:rn.:...:.:=
School Band Director, has extended until Friday the deadUne
for Racine and
Southern former
band members to
enroll to play in
an alumni band he is pulling
together for the final home g&lt;ID')e on
Oct. 1~John will need to know if you
would llke to take part and if so, if
you have an instrument. Do contact
him at your earliest convenience.
Eastern is dotng the same thtng for
homecomlng on Oct 12 and hopefully, the bands will materialize.
To help raise money for the
construction of the new Christian
education wing at Grace Episcopal
Church; women of the church will
hold a soup supper beginning at 4 .
p.m. Fiiday preceding the Melgs
game. The Meigs stadium is close
to the parish house so It might be
. convenient to drop in for the supper
and ti)en go on to the game.
Sandwiches and beverages will also
he available.
Meantime, the PrO at the
Tuppers Plains Sct10ol Is finalizing
plans for the annual fall carnival at
that school from 4: 30 to 9 p.m.
Saturday. There will be a soup
sUpper - with a wide variety of
Items to be served - beginning at
4:30 and the carnival with games,
door prizes, a cake walk-and other
'activities to begin at 6 and wrap up
at 9·.
the Melgs County Farm Bureau
has set Its annual dinner meeting
for Tuesday, Oct. 23, at the Chester
Elementary School and providing
entertainment this year will be the
SUnrise Gospel Stngei'S. Reservations can be made at the office in
Pomeroy, P.O. Box 426, ·or by
calling the office at 992-2181. Board
members als9 have tickets.
The Rev. Elden Blake will be
observing a birthday this week. It
was earlier reported as being on

Annual Inspection of Chester
Council 323. Daughters of America,
by Faye Hoselton, ~!pre, deputy
national councilor, was held recently at the hall.
National and state officers received officially besides Mrs. Hoselton wereDorothyRitchie,vicestate
co~ncilor; Esther Smith, District 13
deputy; Marcia Keller, n;ember of
the state publicity comm1ttee; and
Betty Roush, deputystatecouncilor.
Eima Cleland. chairfnan of the good
of the order corrunlttee presented
each one with a gift.
Alta Ballard, councilor, presided
at the meeting, with reports being
given that Leona Hensley and Mrs.
Ritchie have been recently hospital·
!zed and that Elizabeth Hayes
remains ill at home. It was also
noted that Thelma White has a new
granddaugher.
.
.
The past councilor s club meeting
\\111 be held at the hall Wednesday

The folks of the Letart Elementary PrOclaim theyhaveoneofthe
last true jitney suppers, popular in
the fifties and s!A'!Ies when fOOd was
cheaper. going·for Oct ~- ·
They say _that a lot of jitney
suppers are so called, but they
really aren 'I because prices are not
a nickel a serving ·as the name
Indicates. At the Oct. ~. the Letart
Falls group will be having food at a
nickel a scoop. However, some
dishes will be two nickels. Still. it
sounds reasonable, depending, I
suppose, on how many scoops it
takes to solve a particular hunger
problem. The supper will, of course, .
be at the school
Mary Easterday, Emma Easterday Adams and John Easterday
were at Fredrickstown to attend the
67th annual wEasterday reunion.
ActuaUy, Mary and John were the
only two In attendance still having
the Easterday name, all of the
others having lost it through
marriage.
If you made the mistake of
associa ling Lesley Daun Carr with
a recent hearing in the Pomeroy
Mayor's CoUrt in which a Leslie
Carr was fined $63 over the
issuance of a parkng meter ticket,
you're not thinking. Lesley oaun is
only 13 and a student at Meigs
·Junior High SchooL That makes her
a juvenile and juvenile cases are
definitely not handled In the
mayor's court. Now, you knew that
all the time, didn't you?

Billy Young D

Young birthday
Billy Young II celebrated his fifth
birthday with a par!Y Saturday at
the Tiny Tech school !acUities. A
Masters of the Universe theme was
carried out with the guests enjoying
a magic show. A HE&gt;-Man cake, lee
cream and soft drinks were served
to the guests followed by drawings
for prizes.
,
Attending were Eric and Andy
Dllard, Denise and Allen Hayes,
Ketih Mattox, Angle Seales, Palma
Wiles, Megan and Jerry Clark,
Heather Knight, Ronnie Casto, Mrs.
Elmore Boice, Linda Lambert, Mr.
and Mrs. Wllllam Young, and Billy's
sister, Rayan.
Sending gifts were Joshua and
Jeremy Casto, Mrs. Norma Parker,
Myrtis Parker , Mrs. Norma Good·
win and Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
'
Young, Sidney.

Wolf Pen personals
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank and
Sarah Beth, Texas Road, were
Wednesday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hanning, Ronald and
Gladys Tuckerman.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith were
Sunday afternoon visitors ofMr. and
Mrs. Harley Smith, Kanauga.
Mrs. J.R. Murphy· was a recent
visitor of Mrs. Joseph Evans and
family, Racine.
Peggy Murphy recently visited
Tammy JohnSon.

night at 7:30 with Betty Roush and
Cora Beegle to be hostesses. At the
Oct. 16 meeting of the council, there
will be a potluck.
District friendship meeting was
announced for Nov. 7 at the Logan
Council ~- Potluck supper will be
at 6:30p.m. and members are asked
to ·wear white since initiation will be
held .
Helen Wolf was pianist for the
evening. Mrs. Hoselton complimented the Council on Its work, and
in her remarks noted that she was
initiated at Chester Council in 1952.
Refreshments were served. Others
a !lending were Margaret Tuttle,
Sandra White, Mary K. Holter, Ada
Morrts, Thelma White, Jo Ann
Baum, Ethel Orr, Mary Hayes, Ada
Bissell, Lora DamewOOd, Opal
Hollon, Mary Showalter, Charlotte
Grant, Virginia Newlun, Doris
Grueser, Laura Mae Nice, Goldie
Frederick, Pauline. Ridenour, Cora
Beegle, Virginia Lee. Fern Morris,
Sadie Trussell, Faye Kirkhart.

Zelda Weber, and Iva Shutts, a
guest.

Young Adult class
Preparing meals for the elderly
was scheduled for the second
Sunday of every month when the
Bradford Church of Christ Young
Adult Class met recently with Steve
Pickens having the Opening prayer.
The class members will contribute the food to be prepared for the
special project It was suggested
that the basement fund he used for
the purchase of a copier or a
typewriter lor the church. Danny
Harrison gave the secretary's
report, and the tre3.'lurer's rE'port
was given by Dreama Pickens.
A pizza party was planned for the
Nov. 5 meeting at the church.
Attending besides those named
were Mark and Cheri Seever§,
Larry Pickens, Cherie and Matthew
Williamson, Tammy Milliron, and
Paula Luckett.

Mill i.!i!IIIU!NIIIM
I ·Cood Dl l~onl"l'to~ If\ od•o nc:o!
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Beneltctal Mortgage of OhiO,
Inc., 300 West 2nd Street.
Poll1'lo6y. Ohoo 4576 9.

L£GAL NOTICE
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION OF JOSHUA
IVAN KUHN
TO: JERRY STONE, wheddreu II unknown
You are hereby not1fted that
on I he 12th day of Sep;emt;:Jer
·1 98 4 Henry Jun,or Doerfor and
Mary Ann Kuhn Doerfer. restd·
1ng a; :v1dlf1eld. Oh10. w1th the
consent of Tresa Faye Kuhn .
res1dmg a1 Langsv1lle. Oh10.
mother of Joshua Ivan Kuhn.
f1ied 111 ihts Court ·a Pet1t1on for
leave to adop t Joshua Ivan
Kuhn. a ch1ld. age 21 months,

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Onodoy •nn01ion
T!wooNo"'"'""""

Public. Notice

the Inventory and Appratse·
of the estat e of the
afore men tiOned. deceased. late
of sa1d County. we n~ filed 111 th1s
Cou rt
Sa1d Inventory .and
Appra1sement wilt be for hea r·
mg before th1s Court on the
19th day ol Ociober. 1964. at
men t

1

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK tEASING

eGRAVEL HAULED

PH. 742-2328

• For Faster Service

IH - l tll"

Call 614-992-6737

Ul - IM!olo

· 10-5-1

.. oo

ACCENT
220 I . Main, Pomeroy

I

PH. 992-6931

• t1

•

lh.em at le&lt;lst !tva da'vs pn0r to
the date set for heanng.
Gtven under my hand and
seiJI of sa1d Court. th1s 27th day
.of Sep!cmher. 1984
Raben E. Buck
·
Judge
By Lena

~ny person deslfl ng _
to f1le
excep t1ons thP.reto .must f1 le

..

ROUSH .
CONSTRUCTION

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

Public Notice

30 o'clock PM

mo.

... IJ QQ

llo!l""'-""' ···• . noc

Public Notice ,

and lor a change of the namP. of
sa1d child to Joshua Ivan
Doerfe1 . and th at heEmng of
sa1d pet1t1on ard the examma·
'tton. unde1 oa th . of all parhes 1n
mteres t who may be present
and to whom lawf ul not1ce has
been 'liven. will be had before
sa1d Court at M e1gs County
Prov a!e Cowl. Courth ouse.
Pomeroy. Oh10 on the 26th day
of Novembor. 1984 at 1 30

I Dll.
WDfklng
Fot You.

Box. 326
Pomeroy. OH. 45769

•M - ~"""

1U - Po"~"d

1....... , •• -~., .. ,;;.01

New Homes-htensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu1to.m Pole Bldgs.
Garages
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidincs

I

"Fr• Estimates"

K Nesselroad

Installation Available

Deputy Cl~:~rk

·

These casn rates

Yeara E•perience.
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-22B2

15

include discount
)Wanted

)For Sale
)Announcement

8/ 1 / 1 m .

)Far Rent

11012. 9. 21c

pm

Wttness my 51gnatwe and the
seat of sa1d Caul\ th1s 12th day
ol September. 1984
Robert E Buck...Judge
Me1gs Countv
Common Pleas Court.
Pr"oba te. OtvtSIOn
Metgs County, Oh10
191 18. 25. 11012. 9. 26. 23. 61C

SERVICE

2

W~can repair and re-

In

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

tn

lMIIIOIY ·of ,.. bo!Md Husblnd. Flit.. &amp; Son (TrOJ Ohlill-

,., Jr.) wllo possad Zl 1984.

Public Notice · .

$opt.

,

Wt Nt to taprtn our sinetrt

NOTICE ON FlUNG
OF INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Maigo
County, Court of Common

Pleat. Probate Divioion

992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1-13·tfc

praptre food .lfttf ttll

&amp;·

sent flowtrs &amp; ctnls. To ltv. 11-t
~Ito Ewill
IIA'ICts I"

funtrll Ho111 tor t!ltir
lflllftJIIIIIfttl of . .
lost ont. Aptn wt 11-. our slnewt
·IPPI'Kiation - God iiMI.

Gill, Jtff .
Rosa lo Conr1~

•

1
I
I

~-

5.
6.

-----:-

8.

'1:1.
28.

12. - - - - - - ' ' - - 13. - - - - - 14. - - - - - -

15• .....__ _ _ __

Now Acceptin

22.
23.
24.

25.

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

I
1.

21.

• 26.

'------

·,

17.
18.
19.
20.

1.

10.
-_
--_
.11. _-_
_
_-

Phone 742-3171

Ponalo llltll Proodloot.

·

·I

V. C. YOUNG Ill

M. l. "Bud" M.cGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley,
Meigs County Associate

btl,.,

st~icu

Addona and remodeling .
Rooting and gutter wo1k
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical
work
(free Estlmatesl

1,, - " - - - - - -

bon for all thtl; ti11dnn1 &amp; ec,,..

cern. To tho11 who.1111t I

2. - - - , - - , - - 3. _ _ _ __

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Real Estate General

(IMfltiiCY tor oxntn: to hllllur·
ort: Bus Danltlo. .llcl Sllottoy,
Ftrr•U Forest, Johil S.idlllflft,
Dow lie~ l Gono Kltln l ...,,_ ·

To the E~~:ecutor or Ad m1n ts·
tr ator of the estate. to sucn ol
the fotlowtng as are re s1dents of
the State of Oh •o. v1z -:""t. the
sl!rvlvtng spou se. the ne"Xt of
km. 1he-benelic1anes under the
will: and to the auorney or
attorneys reo•es~nMg any of
thf! aforementiOned perso ns ~
Name of Decedent - Dana
H. Bailey. Deceased
Res1dence - A. 0 . 3, Albanv.
Oh oo 457 10
You are hereby not1l1ed that

-

PAT HILL FORD

thank you &amp;appttciatlon to 111 his
111ny frilldl lfKI co-worttrs It
Southorn Ol&gt;lo Cool Co. wloo ~oipool
IS durlftl tM timt of his illness
WUh llll'lj' doAitiDIIS &amp;II'IUCh COitCml: Dr. lttt ..lltr &amp; staff It
Halrtr Hospital, ·Dt Witlltrtll &amp;
staff. 1l1o Or, ltntz &amp; aurltl. Tilt

1. ------

YOUNG'S

RADIATOR

54 Misc. Merchandike

( 10 ) 9. ft c

Public Notice

t l..,lonv

17-U"hol""''

41-Eq...,_mtor fl.ont

PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC AUCTION
OF AUTOMOBILE
A 1978 Ford Fa1rmont Fut·
ura. SN 8E93TI647 69. w•ll be
so ld at publ1c auct1on on
Monday. October 22. 1984 at
10 00 am at 300 We st 2nd
Street. Pomeroy, Oh10. starttng
at a m1n1mu m b1d pr1ce of
S 2 5 00. terms c&lt;:Jsh. to the
h1ghest t:i1dder. Sa1d 1tem IS
ava1lable to the publ1c lor
mspechon at sa1d address upon
request.
The above collateral 1tem 1s
be1ng sold under the terms of a
cert&lt;:J1n Secur~ty Agr eement be tween Raymond and E1 leen
Just1s. 305 112 North 3rd. M1d·
dleport. Oh1o 457 60 and the

..... c-Jo•
Ill! - ,

~UJ.(oo
.. ohnq
~-----~--------;
·f .. ~\llr;ollill•lu~or o&lt;.,n ~­

ll·l•"'"'"""

IO•tiOJI Groin

11·WII'IIt010fltftt

Public Notice

lil - A&lt;I D• IO!I •
Jn Woln•U

Hool ,ng

•

lrrluonCo_, WV

Phone
446-2062

TROMM
EXCAVATING

No Down Payment
.. Lower Monthly Payment

o·urr•r l"#!o•

ho•o-"'

U forloiiOt ''•"'

lf· ~ool hltiOWonle~

41 - ~

/111111'~

j .,//mdn i/ 11'11'/IIUII/!' o•t"dlllnpo•.l ..

29.------

30. --'---..,..--

31. ·32.
______
33. _ _ _ __
]4 __ _ _ _ __

35'------

Mail This Coupon with Remlnanca
The Dally sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy,Oh.45769 ,

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

.

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair, parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery . Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call

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

Giveaway

Part Doberman puppies, 2
male 2 female, 8 weeks old .
Cal614 -367-7763.

Roy Bickle

9/Il/2mo. pd.

Wt1d like to introduce you to
Engaa:e·I.·Ca r, tile modern way
to drin tfle vehicle of yo~r
choice.
-

3 Announcements

3 loveable kit1ens. Call446·
4668 .

•complete Chimney Cleaning
•certified Chimney Relining &amp; Repair
•Experienced and Insured

Dept.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Lowen . Also Rev. McClung.
neighbors and friendS for
flowers and food. your kindness and thoughtfulness is
appreciated. William Lowen .

2 black kit1ens. Call 614256-1579.

446-2062

Ph. (614) 843-5425

10 6 tlr

doctors and nurses of Veta·
rans Memorial Hospital end

Kiuens 1o good hpm8 call
614-986-4'3 70 .
Black female kitten 6" mo.
old, ca ll614-992-7655 .
Mother Border Collie and
pups to give away. Call
. 992-7180.
One Collie puppy 1o give
away. 6 months old. Call
949-3009 .

Three year old Doberman
Pinscher. Saal·point male
Siamese cat·declawed . Call
614-843-523 1 .

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean uaed cars.
Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
446-3672
Wonted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furni·
ture. 446-3169, Jrd. &amp;
Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh.

•

&amp; Vicinity·
-····· ·--··--·····-··-······· ·

deal. Toys, coats, sleepers. 682 Beech St. Middt.port.
work basket. books. mise: Oct. 10 thru 13th. Cfothing.
60 Neil Ave. ~
drapes , bed spreads.
blankets.

quilts.

sheets.

Yard Sale 24 Cruzet Ave. rugs, dishes, pots and~"'·
Wed. &amp; Thurs. lots of s i lverware, depretsron
everything!
glass, washer and d!"far.
elec1ric appliance. furniture
Yerd Sale Log house on and much more .
Mitchell Rd. Thuro . 9 -6 .
1 -~----:---:-:-:-::---:--:::
Oct . 12th.13th,14th on

Garage Sale 2 miles from 143 Racine at tt,e old Fieher
HMC Rt .·160. Oct . 11,12, plac~ . Blond resid8nta. : lf
13 . ct;)ated glass canning 1aining cancel to later d•tf!· _2

jars.,. iron skillets, crocks,
electric oven. apple butter,
tools. ciQthing % price,

11

miles above Southern H1gh
SchooL

Sell AVON make 45% Call
446-3358

12

Situations
Wanted

Young·woman needs female
roommate- tQ help mee t
expanses of nice 3 bdr ., 2
bath house on Rt. 35 , Y:l m i.
from 'HMC . Ph. 446 -9472 .

Have vacancy in my home
for elderly or disabled per ·
sons, reasonab le 614 -992 ·
6022 .

Automotive Clng , &amp; Recon ditioning materials. Sell to
Car Dealers, e1c . Commis·
eion basis, full or pan time .
Write Sales Mgr., P.O. Bolt
2106, Dayton , Oh 45429 .
Someone to stay with me
night &amp; day. light house ·
work, will pay good; Call
'446 -1414 .
Telephone girt, part time,
epprox . 20 hrs . per week .
Meigs Memory Garden .
Neat appearance . Call
afternoons - Pomeroy area .
992-7440 .
RN -LPN -EMT
We need a mature person to
complete mobile life insu·
ranee exam in Gallipolis- Pt .
Pleasant area . On a part time
basis. You need to be
enthusastic &amp; enjoy a chal ·
lange . Car &amp; phone neces·
sary. Reply in writing to
Examiner, Rt . 2 Box 85 ,
Riplay, WV 26271 .
Planner I
Rural . multi -county, re ·
gional planning commission
seeks entry· level planner :
Bachelor's degree required ;
Urban . and Regional Plan·
ning. Public Adminsitration .
Political Science , Geo·
graphy and related coUrse
work preferred ; exce llent
fringe benefits . salary
810,000-$12 ,000 . Send resumes by October 15. 1984
to Ohio Vtttley Regional
Development Commission,
740 Second Street, PorU·
mouth Ohio 45662. Equal
Opportunity Employe'.

Now accepting application
for employment. Du~e
Cleaners, 2419 Jackson
Ave, Poin1 Pleasant.
Baby sitter in my home, 5
days a week, 2 school age,
one infant. Meil ~- baby
sitting references, salary and
phone number to Bo• P8 ,
care of the Point Pleasant
Regiater, 200 Main St .,
Point Plees~nt. W . Va .

S. Vicinity

Help Wanted

Merri - Mac Homemakers
earn x-tra income . We need
several representatives in
this areal Party plan exp . a
plus. Gifts, toys, home de ·
cor . No investment . Car &amp;
phone nee . Call hee 1 -800·
563 -9077 . Also booking
partieo .61 4 -446 -3043 .

.•

•

Michigan Sale Lets make a

Baby Sit1ing in my home .
Harrisonville area . Call742 ·
2142 .

Tractor trailer drivel. expe·
rie nce not necessary , for
more informe1ion call 91 9 2 yellow and white kittens, 1 229-1125 9AM to 7PM .
C.lico colored to give away. . Mon. thru Wed .
304-675-7430 .
The Meig s Local School
5 kittens 6 weeks old . District is currently seeking
304-882-2976 .
applice1ions from certified
applicants for a Freshman
Shepard Collie pups 5 weeks
Basketball Coach. a Junior
old. 304-675-2254 .
High Girls ' Basketball
Coach, and a Yearbook
Blond. female Poodle, year Advisor at Meigs High
old . to good home. very
School for the 1984-1985
good with children. house school vear . Applicants
pot. 304 -676-7226 after must hold a valid Ohio
4PM .
teaching certificate and for
coaching , positions must
meet certification require ·
6 Lost and Found
ments of Ohio for sports
medicine and CPR . Persons
interested should contact
Cow was found in the Dan E. Morris. Superintend ·
langsville area . Call 61 4 · ant of Meigs Local Schools.
742-2681.
at 621 South Third Avenue
in Middleport, Ohio .
Young male red and white
Beegle dog lost on Boy Are _you in High School and
Scout Rd . in Chester. WearLooking fof'lf'part· time job7
Ing black flea collar . Call If. you are ti high school
985-366' .
Junior or Senior, you can
enlist in the West Virginia
Army National Guard." at·
tend
drill one weekend a
8
Public Sale
month for pav . and complete
&amp; Auction
required active duty training
during eummer months. Cell
304- 675, 3~50 or 1- 800Auction Every Tuesday 642 · 36!9 .
night , Pt Pleasant, WV.a
Auc1. lonnie Neal, Youth Baby sitter needed m my
Center Bldg ., Camden St. home , must be able to work
Col1614-367-7101 .
week ends . Call after 7 PM
304 -773-5212 .
Auction every Friday nigh1 at
the Hartford Community Ofllce positions available .
Center. Truckloads of new Excellent opportunity for
marchandln · every week. advancement. Good benefit
Consigments of new&amp;: us~d
package. An eq·ual oppor·
merchandise always wei·
tunity emptover. Send Re·
comed. Richard Reynolds,
sumo to Box. C- 6.
Auctioneer . Cell 304-2753069 .
CATV Installers and Technicians. Excellent opportunity
For your next sale call Emma
for advancement. Good beBell, auctioneer, licensed
nefit packJge. An equal
and bonded w..t Virginia
opportunity employer. Send
and Ohio, 4288177.
Resume to Bo• C·51 .

9

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

Help Wanted

In Memoriam

1 would like to thank the

4

EUGENE LONG

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

PU Bumpers ............ 69.95

You Were Going To Call Us?

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

Car"Fenders .................. 60

Why Wait Till· Winter To Remember

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

POLE BUILDINGS

Fenders ....... .. ............... 62

l1

10-8-lln

ALL STEEL &amp;

2

1;====~~~~·!i:~~~~~=9=·1:3:·tf:n~-;~614-446-0294.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL-FilL DIRT

I J '''

·

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

992-3410
Or
843-5424

Farm Equipment
Ports &amp; Se..Vice

D-50 Dodge Tr.

Ford and Chevy ·Tail Gates

DENNY ·CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
• · Farm Equipment '
,
Dealer

ana Loan Compant. a Ben&amp;I IC I ~I allihated
ume ot. purchase &lt;Jre gua1anteed lor the en11re 6·month periOd

Fenders ............ ........... 110

Tr. Fenders ....... ... ......... 98

742-2167 Or
742-2225

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Services

I'!'

Cell For Free Estimate

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Employment

~:;_:;;::;;::;;;:=:;::====:c::;;:;;:;;:;:::;:=:B:I:IJ:/:tl:n~~ staff
during the illness and
death of my wife, lara
79-80 Must.ang
Car Fonders .................. 60
81-84 Escort-Cynx
Fenders .... :...... ............. 49
Omni-Horizon 2 dr. or
4 dr. Fenders ........ ........ 75
CNovy &amp; Ford

BOGGS

sa~1ngs

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, BoK 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

S-IO-Sl5 Chevy Tri.
Fonders ...,.................... BO
73-79 Ford Tr.
Fenders ........................ 59
80-84 Ford Tr.
Fendors ,.. ................... liO
Ford Ranaor

.__ ____:9::./..:.17;.;./.:;l.;.m..:o.;.
. '-pd_..

. (614)4 46-2765
. (61 4)992-21 11
. (614)286-4 187

~

BACKHOE
DUMP TRUCK
CONCRETE .WORK
TRENCHER
SEPTIC TANK
COAL &amp; LIMESTONE

3 !I tlr

Wanted to buy, gas tank for
1978 CJ6 Jeep . 304-882 3734 .

11

76-82 Chevetle

No Sunday Calls

GfNSENG ROOT , Top quality and size graded, selected
$200 . 00 lb . Ordinary
smaller root lass! A-ll
other kinds of root also
purchased . Call Rober1
Harper. 304-6 75-7977.

Announcements

73-BO Chevy Tr.
fend,rs .......~ ..... .........'70
81 -84 Chevy Tr.

949-2860

'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER , GAS &amp;
. Oil liNES

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

------Giiiffiioilii ___ ____ _ ------r,-iimero;;-----·---

1---------··-·· - ···-·-·
Need furnace
fire brick
for 24Smith
inch·,~m::'.•:c.:i:te:m~•~;~~~~ .. ---p·f Pieasant
gas
, call
Nelsons 614-992-2174 .

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

PH. 949-3046
From 9:00 to .5:00
9-12-tln

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

AM
CONSTRUCTION

Call for free siding ~s ­
tiinates. 949C2801 or

Capual Sav;ngs &amp; Loan, a Beneficial aff1liate. has been accepting
depos!IS in Oh1o since 1892. Come •n now and pic;k up your
postage-free deposil envelope at any Benef1 cial olfice in Oh i~ and
start earning high rates of 1nterest on Six- Month T1me Deposits or
one of Capital 's other high rale p l an~ . Ca tl loll ·free 1-I;KJ0-282·1706.

~t

160 North

luilding

10/ 4/tfc

SIDING

ANNUAL YIELO
(Based on assump110n ol addtlional six month renewal al same rate)

company Rates

Dultlon
Chl-yCieanloog

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings. jewelry. sterling
ware. old coins. large cur·
rency . Top p~ices . Ed . j:lur·
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ava .
Middleport. Oh . 614-992·
3476 .

" DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCRETE 'WORK ,

FREE HEARING lESTS WEDNESDAYS
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Dependable Hearing Aid Service

6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns
Only

SIDING CO.

are made to Cap11a1

c....,..,.

Gpllipolis, Ohio

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Chester. Ohio

• Minimum deposit $1,000
• Interest paid quarterly, or
.. let. it compound .

u nders1gned.

Easy to Expand as Your
Skills and Needs Grow!

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd,

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

~

, . . . ....... , ... ..... 8

........ - . .

GUN SHOOT

Ph. 986-4269

•

-

~- ...... -

S&amp;W TV

BISSELL~

··Dei)9SIIS

Sl. AI.

111 Court St .. Po1111roy. Oltio 45769

w...... .

·--..........

•Refrigerator~

•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

.Ben•flclal Ohio Inc.
GALLIPOLIS- 416 2nd Avenue .
POMEROY- 300 W. 2nd Slreel .
JACKSON - 396 EaSl Ma,n Slreel .

CONTRACTING
'DOZER · BACKHOE
* RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL fiELD SERVICES

711 1/ tln

INTEREST RATE
· Through Monday t0/15

Or Writ• D•ill)l

1 1-llolp
1 l •lilua!H

:::::-.::...~-

'Rangel

Service Available

The Daily Sentinel

....
I·Won•••G'"'

... -. ""'
.;:._:-::::;-......... .. ._........ ..
.......... ..

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER--985-3307

CHIMNEY SWEEP

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

•Washers •Dishwashers

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

··"~"'
IAwe~lon

:::-.:=-..-:::::.:::::

on ·Duty

J&amp;F

"We Rent For Less"

985-3561
All Makes

Shop Techniciatl

CHIMNEY KING

CALL
446-4522

kEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

"Serv1ce that Towers Above
The Rest"

Attendance at all services at the
Free Methodist Church Sept.16was
142. There was a song by Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Martin.
· Mr: and Mrs. James Gilmore,
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Eblin and
daughter Becky spent several days
In Kentucky and attended the
Grand Ole Opry In Tennessee.
Mrs. Eva Wells, Hayes, and Mr.
and Mrs. Don Wolfe, Logan,
recently called on Mrs. Bertha
Parker and Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer.
Mrs. Margie Fetty was hostess
recently to the Laur~l Cliff Health
Club. Refreshments were served.
The October meeting wtll mark the
49th year for the club. It will be
potluck .at the local church at 6:30
p.m.

J.

SAVE S400 TODAY ON A
TRS·Bir MOJ)EL 4 COMPUTER

FOR FUTURE USE''

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Have A Full Time

StC[Irt earning
-·
higher rates on ·
&amp;-month time deposits

.,

RENT A CAR

"CUT OUT

AND

Laurel Cliff
happenings

~- H ... py Ado
• ·t• •• nd r~~""

.. • 4

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND, SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

.

•.a........

was $999 In Our 1984 Catalog

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Beda. iron,
wood. cupboards, chair1.
chests. baskets, dishel,
stone jars. antiques, gold
end silver . Write·M . O .
Miller; Rt .2. Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or call 614-9927760 .

r:a i

Moore, . Art . Bauman, Rosalind
Newman, Numbus and others. Ms.
Geller has choreographed and will
perform "Mysterious Universe by
Slr James J eans," which Is partially based on chance structure. It
Is left to the mE'mbers of the
audience to Infer what they will
from the danc.e. "Titled Calypso
No. 1," also choreographed and
pertormed by Ms. Geller, uses the
music of Peter Weinstock with
lyrics by· EHzabeth Henry. It Is a
very rhythmic piece jam-packed
with movement
Madeline Scott ·has pertormed
extensively throughout the U.S. as a
soloist in ihe companies of Manuel
Alum and DANCE /LA. She trained
principally with Jack Cole and Mia
Slavenska while under a Rockefeller Scholarship at UCLA's Grad·
uate Dance Center.

Wanted To Buy

~lfW/-'fl.'/j

1

:he

East Main St. merchants had
better tighten up their doors. In the
past week. five of their stores have
been broken into with resulting
thefts ranging from a small amount
of change to the latest- $1500 at the
Stnunorjs Motor Co. All entrances
have been gained by prying doors
open. It isn't always opportunity at
the door is tt?! So - keep your
powder dry, your doors double
bolted - and do keep smiling.

~

9

,!;;

Nov. 11. However, the correct date
Is Oct 11. He'll be 88.

The Daily Serrtinei-Page-9

Caeh paid for fancy iron or
heovy Iron beda. $160 and
up for cenaln Meigs Co .
stone jan . Old time cup ~
board . call I · 304-8 8 2 •
2711
•

"Last Waltz," choreographed
A'l'HENS- The Ohio Unlver~lty
She has self-produced severa
Ms. Tcheng and performed by her
SchoolotDancefacultywlllpresent . concerts In ~ew 6:::-k ~ltys:;:;: and Noel ParentioftheO.U.Schoi:&gt;l
0
'
a concert dt their most recent work moving to A~ ens,
s.
t of Theater, Is the third sectiqn of a
In "Faculty In Performance," Oct newest work, as yet untitled, 15
foUr-part work, "Waltz Suite,"
1
11, 12and13at8p.m.atthePutnam to ambient souru:- ~~j ~tt Mo- which 1s scheduled for completl~n
Studio/Theatre. The faculty comes also ~ perform ng
us aBet · In 1985. costuming for this piece is
from a variety of' backgrounds and · ment, choreogr~p~ed tb~t ~ by Richard Fox of the O.U. School
techniques and their dances In this Walberg, current Y ues
lber
of Theater.
concert promise to be exciting and the School of Dance. Ms. wa
g
Fred Kraps Lighting DesJiner
diverse.
has a distinguished career as
for "Faculty I~ Performance," has
Gladys BaUin, Professor and m\Jslcal director and :nance a'::'ci designed lor many well-krtown
Director of the School of Dance, ranger f~r theater, . ';;;uch of dancers a'nd dance _companies,
performed extensively . with. the television, and has devoted
. Including the Jazz Tap Ensemble,
Alwin Nlkolals Dance Company, the last 10 years tf teachi~gm~ Ruth Currier, Daniel Nagrln,•Kal
the Murray Louis Dance COmpany vlslttng artist pas 11ons a
Take! and Paul Taylor.
and the Don Redlich Dance Com- tha~;~1S universities.
~ from this concert will
pany prior to relocating to Ohio
Margaret Tch:n~ wa~ ~~ :~ support
Shirley Wimmer
from New York City In 19'12. For Hong Kong an
as a n .
A
d
this concert, Ms. Ballin bas ch~~eo- Engla~~~a~,r ~nadstt~u!~j;'~
";;k~ts for "Faculty ln Perfor- _
graphed "Stan Free Blues, a She to K
t
~
All
and
In
mal)ce"
are $4 and are available at
1
languid portrait which will be · ~g otryqg witheArt ~~terface and the Kantner Hall Box Office, or at
t hcohun T dy Be 1 D
Com
the .door the evening of the
performed by Madeleine Scott.
rt
ed
wit te an
a ance
·
_
lkl
Gell
h
Mc e
er as pe OJVI •
.. 1
, 15 a ure movE'- pertormance. No phone reservachoreographed, and taught in New pany. Ra nso:f M PTchengby lions will be accepted. Tickets
1
York City since 1971. In addition to ~e~t PWec~m~ theo~a~~n Contem- should be purchased early, For
0
performing and producing her own
e
a 0 Th t
ticket Information, call 594-5010.
works,
Ms. Geller
has been
In r_!po~r;ary~D;;;a;
nce=;;e;a;;er;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;===;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;=:!'';;;;~
the companies
of Tina
Croll,seen
Jack
·

Area groups conduct meetings
Chester D of A

Business Services

Faculty dance program set at_ .

Deadline extended·
By BOB HOEFUCH
D aiJ,v Sentinel st aff

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio

T~. October 9, 1

Pomeroy_- Middleport, Ohio

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, October 9, 1984

Will baby sit one chlld in my
home lots of TLC . Call
614 -949-2514
Need sitter in home, part
time, shift worker. Hemlock
Grove area . Call 614 · 99~ 6553 .
Will do house end car
cleaning . · Excellent work .
Call 992-6234 .

Small Yard Sale--. No junk,
Oct . 9 . 10. 11 . 403 Firat St.
New Haven .

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS . Ft)(ED
RATES Below marke1 rates .
Filted conventional FHAVA . leader Mortgage ,
Athens . co llect 614- 6923051.
Quick casl"l Frank ' s Pawn
Shop, 430 Second Ave .,
Gallipolis . Instant loans ,
merchandise of value, 'guns,
jewelry, stereos, TV' s, etc .
and also buy the above.

23

Piano Tuning and R'ep.air."
Brunicardi Music Co .• 446 ·
0687 . Twentieth year of
quality service. Lane DB ·
niels . 614-742 -2951 .

Will do baby-sitting in my
horile . Call 992·5886 .

15

Schools
lnstructio11

1- - - - - - - - - -

Professional
Services

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

v

Karate·Private Lessons .
Learn the ultimate in self·
defense . American Karate
Studio since 1971 . 143
Burlington Rd.. Jeckson .
Ohio . 614· 286-3074 . In ·
structor : Jerry lowery ·
1984 inductee into Weigh ·
tlifting Hall of Fame .
Will do tutoring . major
areas . Call 614- 245 -5812 .

18 Wanted to Do
General Repairs . Reasona ·
ble rates , carpentry , plumb ·
ing, electrical. no job too
small . Call 614 -256 -6495 .
Car,ton ' s ~epajr" Service .
audio equipment, stereo &amp;
publi c address systems .
Kerr, oh . Call446 · 7141 or
446-4410 .
Will do babvsitting in my
home. Sprjfig Valley area .
Call 446- 8396 .
- - - - - - - --- lc Water wells, drilled &amp; ser·
viced . Free estimates. Call
614-992 -5006 or614-7423147 .
Winterize your cars body .
Hand wax job . Call 304·
675· 2175 after 4 :00 for
.estimate and appointment .
Furniture refinishing. call for
estimate 304·675 -4444.

Financia I
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE 1
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends
that you d o business with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investi·
gated the offeri ng:
Mos1 profitable businesslt
50 outlets producing high
profit, multi-flavor popcorn .
Only $31 0 each, entire
business only S 15,500 . 1 ·
800 -327 -8456. Call now!

3 bdr house . pool. AC,
fireplaces. Pt. Pleasant, sale
or rent . Call 675· 5104 .
600 bloc k of 2nd Ave ., 2
bdr ., exc. cond .. big back
yard. $37 .500 . Call 446·
2158 .

3 bdr home for sale by
owner . located on Rt . 160,
near N .G .H.S . $36 ,000 .
Call 6 I 4 -388 -871 1
Owner Must Sell Now/
Small house. fireplace. gas
furnance , storm windows.
Middleport . Call 614-992'·
6941 .
- - - - - - - - - lc 8 vrs. old, 3 bei::trm, 2 baths,
family room with wood
burner. Single car garage.·on
8 flat acres with stocked
pond. City water in R8ci'ne.
Call 614-949-264 f
Nice 3 bedroom, garaga,
basement , excellent loca·
lion near sch ool. oWner
finance. .Middleport. Call
992 -2517 .
Three bedroom spaciou•
house, New Lima Rd . Rutland Pool. low utilities .
special financing.call 614~
742 -3080 .
Three bedroom haute. hot
water hea1 , excellent loca~
tion, good condition, car~
peted , some furniture . Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio . $25,000.00. O 'Brie n
&amp; Crow Realty Company.
Phono 614-992-2720 or
614 -992-3589.
By owner 3 badroom1: '1 'h
baths. living room, dining
room . 1ecraatiQn room.. ·in
basement, new 24x24 ;8rage . Close down~P.'f$m .
Shown by appointm•nt,
304-675-4804.

1---------4

bedroom. both and halt. ·
living room , dining .. roOm
equipped kitchen, large t :ca;
garage, large level lot. ckJM
to Ho,zer Hosp, o.wner arinxious to sell, . $41 .900 .0o ,
Cell after 5:00 PM. 30'4875 -7547 .
.

;tancher house. 3 be:d.
rooms, 2 baths, fireplace ; 7
acres, half basemant
$65 . 000 .00 . Glenwood'
W.Va. 304-576 -2933.
: '

Cost Free Christmasl l La· 1-::----:-------dies!! earn 81 ,000.00 or House for sate, 4th St. ,
more by Christmas . Show· Mason, W . Va. t28,000 .0o .
ing toys, gifts, weekly pay l-::3-0'4::-·:-7-7::-3-·-::5-53_8_._ _ _ _.::;_
checks plus bonus. Choose
your hours . Part time now till Gallipolis ferry, 3 br briCk
December . Car . phone large rooms, 4 car gaf8ge
needed . Hiring this week and storuge bldg .• atove,f;f .
only! Fo1 more de1ails calls washer - dryer. Make·· an
today co ll ect 304- 744 - olfer . 304-675-6851_. •
0924 .
House for sale or rent
Internationa l steel building $325 .00; 9 rooms and boiee:
manufacturer • awarding mont. Call 304-676-2885
dealership in available areas after 6 :00, Pat and Butch
soon . Great profit potential Greenlee.
in an expanding industry.
For application c. II Wedgcor
32 Mobile Homes ·
303-769-3200 ext 2406.
Own your own Jean ·
Sportswear, ladies Apparel.
Combination. Acceaaorlea,
large Size 11ore. National
brands: Jordache , Chic, lee.
Levi, Vanderbilt, lzod, E•·
prit, Brittania. Calvin Klein,
Sargio Valente, Evan Pi ~
cone, Claiborne. Members
Only, Organically Grown,
Haalthtex , 700 othera .
17,900 to $24.900, inventory, airfare, tr•ining, fix·
tures, grand _opening, etc.
· Can open 16 daya. Mr.
Kannan (305)878-3639 .

for Sale

·

I\IEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUlr.LITY MO!{llE HOME SALES
4 MI . WE~T. GALLIPOLIS'
RT 35 . •PHONE 114-f4
7274 ,
•.
.
:

e:

Want~d

to buy u-.ct rnoWJ.
home. Colt 814-441-4712

.. .
00:.,;,
....a...·

One acre ground, •H
iincea, 117,1100. By
••tro good buyt BhoWri
oppt. only. Colt 44e-42lll.

......
'

�P&amp;Clte-1 0

The Daily Sentinel

.

_32 Mobile Homes

They'll Do It Every Time

for Sale

51

,.,_ PON'r ASI&lt; HIM
~'- ..--.Nr-

1 974 ·Park Avo. 1 4x70 3

,;;::,';;:",;'!Jl&lt;i'
..,__.._...

bdr .. total electric , 1 'h

'~

baths. $7,900. Coli 614446-0175.

Pti771N6A i.GAF
IN 7NE TABl-E ····

'llml!!ll!!lll

"h acre lot w ith 1978 Mobile
Home, tota l elect., unatt·
ached two car garage, rural
water. Call after 5Pm. 2566460 .
.

Coppertone gu range 30 ;n.
S110. Avacodo gu range
30 in, f110. 80,000 BTU
gu heater *125 . Moytog
automatic waohar ovocodo
like new *160. Other makeo
of washers t90 and up.
Hupp"o Appliance &amp; Gluewire, Cotner Rt. 141 8t Rt.
7 . Call 446-8033.

1974 Academy 12x50 2

''~~~~~

54

Misc. Merchandise

some furn it ure, all electric.
$7, 000. 2 swings 4ft. one
S30, one .&amp;20 . Call 4462572.

Knouff Firewood Split· 96%
Seasoned. or
green. You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614·
256-6245 .

.har~woods.

Firewood . 304-773-9179
or 304- 773-61187.

1971 Broa'dmore trailer, 2
bedroom , excellant condi -

tion . Set up , underpinning,
partly furn ished . Rental lot
avai lable . $5300.00. Call
992-7479 .

1980, 50x1 4 Patriot, total
elec. 2 bedrooms. 1972 ~
60)(12 Baro n, total alec, 2

bedrooms. Can be seen at ·K
&amp; K Mobil e Homes, Inc.
Now o pe n under new
owners. Preston and Arlene
Love, across from Point
Pleasa nt Jr . High School.
30 4 - 6 7 5 - 3 000 . Winter
hou rs 9-5 .

33

· Farms for Sale

200 ac re farm for sale. Will
·subdivide . Rutland Townsh;p . Call 6 14-373-0456.

34

Business
Buildings

10 yr. old B ' unit apartrt~ent
co mplex. Wellston, Ohio. All
1 bdr. apts .• 4 furnished . off
stre~t parking . Resident
manager over S 1 ,400 mo.
inco me. Constant waiting
list less than $15 ,000 per
unit. . Possible 2nd . mort·
gage . Ca ll 592 -1189 Mon.Fri. 9-5. 594 -2874 eve. &amp;
wk . lods.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

l ot for sale in Mercerville, 3
trailer hookups, electric, ru r a l w at er . septic tank ,
S8 ,000 . Call 614 - 266 6618 .
Building lot Neighborhood
Rd . 65 x1 50 . $5,000 . Call
446-3844 altar 7PM .
Cleervi ew Estates building
l ot, reStricted, ell utilities
under ground, centralize
sewer system . 6 mi . below
Gallipolis on Raccoon . Call
446-3485 .
For Sale: Once acre lot with
larg e in -g round pool. torn
lin er, and partially fini shed
basement. For information
ca ll813 -665 - 1232 .

2 bdr., AC, gas heat, wall to
wall carpet in Gallipolis. Call
after 5PM . 446-1409 .
Mobile homes for rent,
Upper River ~d . Call 446 1609 or 446-0508 .

2 bdr,. 2 m i. from hospital in
country. No peu, $175mo .,
$100 dap . Call after 6PM.
'!46-1722.
2 bdr. mobile home on Rt.
654, lf• mi . off At. 160.
$175 plus dep . Call 614388- 9651 '
2 bdr. mobile home, ref . &amp;
dep . required . Call
256 -1922 .

614-

2

bedroom , 1 2x65- furnished . washer, dryer .
S 175.00 plus utilities and
deposit. No pets . call 992 ·
7479
- - - - - - - - - lcThree bedroom mobile
home, new carpet. 1 child
accepted. no drunks Or dope.
Rt. 7, Middleport. Call 614367-0611 .
2 bedroom mobile horl-.e for
rent, Racine area. Call 992 ~
5858 .

2 mobile homes. Both 2
bedrooms, located in Gallipolis. 304-675-3000 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS ( Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent
starting at 8163 for one
bedroom and $198 per
month for two bedroom,
with S 200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool end TV
ant . Call 446 -2745 or leave
message.
Furnished apt . $185 water
paid, 2 bdr. 1136% 2nd .
Ave.. Gallipolis . Call 446 4416 aft or BP M.

For lease Overlooking, city
park. 2 bdr., lR. fully
equipped kitchen, dining
'area. unfurnished. Call PJ's,
11 .75 acres. half wooded . 446 -1819 or 446-4425 .
24x40 wood building, drivew ay. and electric. Chester 1 small furn . efficiency for 1
erea . S1 5, 750.00 . Call985 - gentleman only. Call 4464405 .
0338 .
10 acres. in the country.
N ice quiet spot . Call 9492906 .

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

Unfurnished ho.us8. 3 bdr.,
stove. ref .. R odney Village II .
S275 mo . Call 446 -4416
after 9 PM .
Unfurnished 2 bQr. house .
Ra nge, garage, storage
bui lding. One mile out Rt.
218. Call 446 -9686 .

Large Furnished apt . 919
2nd . $175 utilities paid .
Men only. Shere bath . 4464416 alto• 8 p.m.
Clean downtown apt., private. spacious. reasonable.
no pets: single or couple .
Call 446 · 4672 after 4 .
Modern 1 bdr. apt .. stove._
refrig . furnished. single person or couple preferred. no
pen . Call 448 -2056 .
Modern 2 bdr. duple.IC apt.,
furnished, water paid, Main
St.. Chaohlro, Ohio. Call
614 -246-5818 .

Small furni1hed apt. utilities
paid. 6 min. from Holzer' a or
2 bdr . house in Kanauga toWn. Nice for one nonmos tly furnished. $200 mo .
~ drinking peraon. Refra. Call
plus dep . &amp; utilities. can
· 446-4063 .
446-7406 .
3 rm . &amp; bath furnished apt.,
Hou se for rent large, 3 bdr ..
suitable for one o"r two . Call
1 'h bath . fireplace. fenced in 446 -3733 dayo, 446-0171
yard . in town. $300 per mo.
eve.
Cell .61 4 -388 -8248 .

Firewood for sale, uatontd
or graen . 304-773-5738 .
Firewood •. $20.00 pick up
lood. $30.00 dellvorod.
304 - 675- 2991 or 676·
6782 .

Large house good shape!
Call 614-388- 9909 .

4 bdrs. in Tare with range,
refrig . &amp; dishwasher. Fireplace &amp; family room , 2 full
baths. Call 614-367 ' 7464
after 5PM .
4 bedroom colonial b\ick
house for rent or sftle in
Pomoroy. Call 1-373-0466 .
- - - - - - - - - lcfour ro om and bath, unfurnished house . Pt. Lane Lin·
coin Heights, Pomeroy,
Ohio. 614-992-3874.
2 houses for rent and bar for
Sale or lease with option to
buy. 304 ·675 -6720 .
2 bedroom hou10 Point
Pleasant, extra nice. no pets,
304 -675- 13B6.

613 ThirdAve. 1 bdr .. water
furnished, adults only . $136
mo ., dep . required . Call
446-4222 between 9 &amp; 5.
Riverside Apto. Middleport.
Special rate1 · for .Senior
Citizens. *130. Equal Hous;ng Opportunitiao . 614992-7721 .
Laurel lanit Apt. in NeW
Haven, W . Va . now accepting applications for 2 bed·
room apt1 . Bile rent,
$168 .00 per month . Market
rent, $228 .00 per month.
Equal hou•ing opportunity.
Call 304-882-3386 .
Apt. for rent in Syrac;:uae.
Phone 992-7689 .
One bedroom apt. Carpeted.
total electric. dtpoait required . coli 614-992- 2094.

3 bedroom dupleJC, full basement, Mt. Vernon Ave ..
304 - 876 · 3030 or 675 343~ after 4 :00 .

Two bedroom furnished
apartment. coli &amp;14 -9925434 . 614 - 992 · 6914 or

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleeaant
and Gollipolio . 614-4488221 .

Fumlshad 2 bclrs. TV cable.
cleon. q~tlet. -utllul rlwr·
\liew in KeneutJ8. Fo.t.-1
Trailer Pork. 441-1102.

Efficiency opt lor on1 pereon. prlvoto. U81 .00 per
month. utllltleo pold. 304178-2083.

DICK TRACY

Remingtqn 1100, 30 in fuli
VR. 304·676-3004 .

RE"TOUCHING BUGGY'S
MLG SHOT 'TO MA'TC.H
THE SUSPECT St&lt;E;TCH-

Malt of frG~ah beef ready in 3
weeks, 304-Ba2 -2470.

81

l'-----------

G:oo

~ News

T1

&amp;

K~~2:~:;

r

6 :30

Marcum Roofing 8t Spouting. Now installing rubber
roofa. 30 years experience, ·
opecializlng In built up roof.
Call 814-381!-'9867 .

7 :00

PAINTING- interior and exterior, . plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yra.
axp. Coll614-388-9652 .

.

H Ia S Homa lmprove,.,ents
vinyl 1idlng. roofing, room
addition, storm windoWs.
stone. Call 614-367-0409 ·
or 614-367-7244.
BASEMENT
Unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local references .
furnished. Frae estimates. ·
Call collect 1·614-2370488. 9 o.m . to 6 p.m .
Rogeri Basement
Waterproofing.

~\

Plastering &amp; Plalter repair.
!reo estimates. Call 614256- 1182.

ANNIE

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET ClEAN.
scotchguard-water extraction, deoctori~era . FREE esti·
mites. ReaSonable rates.
G.ane Smith. 992-6309.

8 :00

been de termined . (3 hrs.)

ffi

Willie Nelson and
Family Willie Nelson JOins
family and friends to pe r·
form h1s greatest hits
Cii MOVIE: ' Sophie's
Choice'
C1J Gentle Ben
ffi MOVIE: 'Girls! Girls!
Girls !'
® &amp;I © Foulups/ !lloep s
&amp; Blunders
0 Cil i1QJ AfterMASH Klinger IS arre sted and must
face tnal. wh1ch 1s attended
by h1s nemes1s, Colonel
FlamJ.

D. and M . Contractors.
Remodeling, vinyl siding.
painting (indoors and outdoors) replacement windows call304-773-5131 .
RON'S Television Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house coils . Call 304-6762398 or 614-446-2454.
Fetty Tree Trimming,_stump
romoval . Call 304 - 6761331 .
RINGLES'S SERVICE, experienced carpenter. electri· .
cian, mason, painter, roof- 1
ing (including hot tar
application} 304-675-2088
or 875- 4&amp;80.
::

([) 2 -Hr Season Pre miere
• FRONTLINE look s At A
Presidential Campaign
WPI3V

m frontline

Rotary
Most walla completed sam,t; •
day. Pump ulea and servi-• ·
.... 304-1!96-3802 .
-- - ~:

===::;:====='
Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PlUMBING ,.
AND HEATING
''
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolio. Ohio
.Phone 814-446-38BB or
614-446-4477

Ifs qoin' t' be po' if th'
school ketch fire an' nobody's qot a key t' th' do'!

'

'

'"

Excavating
I

Good- 1 Excav~ting. basements, footers, \ drivewa_v s.
septic tanka. la'fdscaping .
Cell anytime 6ti.4-'J46- _.
4637. Jameo L. Dav'lt.orl, JI"; " '
owner.

1- - - - - - - - -

Dozer Work by Ted Hanna.
Oitcheio. pondo. roado. land
cloorlng. llc. Coli Motor cor ·
Brokero. 448·81592.

J.A .R.Conotructlon Co.Rutlond. Oh,81 4- 742 - 2903;
Basementt. Footers, Concrate work, Backhoe'•·
Dozar &amp; Dltchor. Dump .
truck•. It water-gaa-sewer- ·
electrical tine•.
:

BARNEY
50 DID ZEB POTTER'

PAW !!

I TOLD vou
TO STAV OUT OF
ZEB POTTER"S
HENHOUSE

O.A . Bolton excavating. 1
cbmpl•t• dozer and dump ;
truck servlceo. Call 6876628 or '378-6288.

I::;::;::=::::;;:::::======
a.

AN'

Electrical
Refrigeration

'

SEWING Mochine repairo, •'
sarvic,. Authorized Sing~ :
Solaa &amp; Service Sharpen ·
Sclsaon . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 814-992-2284.

SNAKE!!

•

85

,

1
1' - - - - - - - - ' - - - ,•

Jameo Boyo Water Service. : .
Aloo poole flllad , Colt 814- •
268-1141 or 814-446 - ~
__,_17_5_o_r_8_1_4_·_4_4_tl_
-7_9_1_1_.-'- ~ ..
1
Ken'o Water Service. Wallo. •
,
·
1 filled Ph
1
~:'::~:!r
o'r
7. ;;~ :

36 7

(VE.~N
6AILJNG FOR

WE!EK6!!DO

YOU1"HINK

n. .l- eveR
GET IN1"0

MAL-16U? -.

night or dey.
JIMS WATER SERVICE.~
Col Jim Lon lor. 304-876- .
7397

1----------- l--·-------e

ISif-VPh~rnwv:---

fO - 'i

1
1- - - - - - - - - - _ ;
TRISTATE
. UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 &amp;3 Boo. ,\ve .. Oollipollo.
814-441-7833 or 8'14-4481833.

..

•

•

I I K
Wt-&lt;.A'T l'O PO
WHE'N YOU GE'T 'THE
FEEL.tN6 iHAT YOV

WAt.ii 'TO SPLU RGE .

)
a :t I l
.I

I)

I

Now arrange the circlttd 1e11ars to
form the surprise anSwsr as suggested by the above canoon

]~~~"t

XXj - [ I I)"

(Answers tomorrow)
NOTC'H BE LI EF DEFACE
Answer· The sailor's many romances ·~o~ere just
this- " FLEET-tNG "

Jumbtes · PAGAN

vester&lt;Ja s

y

I'VE ADDED WI-IlTE
RICE TO YOU!&lt;: DIE T
•

HI S

YOUNG -UN

{ 1~ E/ R
I]) 700 Club
® El lt2l Paper Dolls Bl a ~r
info rms Grant to expect h1 s
f1r st grandch tld and Taryn
lands a model1ng assign ment m a mu stc vtdeo . (60
min .I ICiosed Captionedj
O ® l1QJ MOVIE : ' Scorned
and Swindled '
Cii And If I'm Elected ...
The Smothers Brothers play
hos t to th1s prog ram about
the sell1ng of can d1dat cs and
ca uses .
1 0 :00 CII MDVI E: ' Hooper'
ffi 3rd Annual legendary
Pocket Billiard s Stars U.J .
Pucke tt ~s . Cowboy J1mmy
Moore. (60 mt n.)
® &amp;I @ J essie
liD Statew;de
(11) Newswatch
tEl Independent News
1 0 :1 5 ® MOVIE: 'The Long Gray
Line'
10:30 Cii Album Flash: Barry
M anilow
CI1 Celebrity Chefs
(]) Adam Smith 's Money
World
(!1) Congress : W e the
People
fll Soap

, 1 :oo o

rn ®

CD

o rn c1m01

[121 New s
CIJ MOVIE : ' Educating
Rita'
C1J Oobie Gillis
@ NFL's Superstars Th e
M en Who Played The Game .
® Two Ronnie s
@ Congress : We the
People
fll Bennv Hill Show
11 :30 0 C2) CD Tonight Show
Tonight 's gue..st IS Bob Newhart. (60 m1n )
(I) Bes t of Groucho
(!) SportsCenter
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
0 Ill Campaign '84 Dan
Rather hosts this look a1 1h e
latesl news on the presidential ca mpatgn traH .
(j) Latenight Ameri ca
(1(]) Barney Miller
OJ (j} Nightl jne
fll Twilight Zone
1 1 :45 C2) Not NecessariiV the
News
12:00 liJ Burns &amp; Allen
C!l Mazda Sportslook
lJ) Nightline
0 CIJ fall Guv An embezzler and his fence try to
mak.e their business deal
and take off before Colt can
find them . (RI (60 min.l
llOl MOVIE: 'Some like It
Hot'
OJ © Eye on Hollvwood
fll Gunsmoke
12:15 C2) Joe Piscopo Special
This fortner 'Saturday Night
Uve ' comedian performs his
repe toiro of famous imper·

12:30

\I

·so

-·IDGE
James Jacoby
·Keeping the wolf
from the door

NORTH

10~9 · 84

8 Q4
. 6 53
+K Q 3 2

a A 105!

By James Jacoby
There are lots of rules lor winning
tricks at bridge. How about a rule for
losing a trick ? The Jacoby rule ts:
When you may have to lose a trick. let
it be to that opponent who won 't be
able to do anything to set your
contract.
In today 's deal South won the ace of

+ K 10 8 7

. Ai

. J !0984
• 76 5

• J 10 9 8
a Q6 2

8 3
SOUTH

a A63

• K Q2
t A4

a KJ 987

"Eight ever, nine never,"
he said to himself as he pla yed the
ace and king of clubs. When West won
the third round ol clubs with the
queen , he shilled to the deuce ~f
spades. Declarer .played dummy s
queen, covered by East's king. It was
curtains lor three no-trump! Before
the ninth trick could be developed in
hearts, the defender s had their spade
tricks ready to go and took three
spades, a club, and the heart ace lO
set the contract.
II declarer had 1hought about lhe ·
Jacoby rule he would have taken a
slightly inferior percentage play . 1n
the club suit. Playing the club kmg
and then finessing the I 0 brings home
five club tricks lor a total of ten
tricks, but note t he effect even il East

E AST

WEST
• J 9 52

Vulnerabl e: Neither
Dealer: South
West

North

East

Pass

3 NT

Pa ss

So uth
I ~T
Pc.... ~

Pass
Opening l ead . aJ

could win the club queen . Dummy"s
spade queen cannot be aaacked . and
playing the heart ja ck w ould establish
a game- goi ng hea rt tr ick for declarer .

Jack and V1 c k.y fe•gn happi ness during a brrthd ay pany
aft er the•r f1r s t f1 ght. [Closed
Ca pt1 oned]

JIM'S PlUMBING &amp; HEATING . Rt . 1. Box 365. Galli'
polls. Call 614-36.7 -0676 .
SHULAW'S Plumbing end .
Hooting. 211 Sixth St ..
Point PleaJBnt, W . Va. 304676-54~0 .
licensed and
insured .

Arl ...

(11] Frontline
You Want
to Be Pres1dent . · Gary Hart 1s
one of the subJec ts o f th1s
exam1nati on of the process
of nom1nattng a party candlda~e . (2 hrs.l !Closed Cap·
t10n ed]
fll MOVIE : 'The Tarni shed
Angels'
® lEI It~ Three's A Crowd

'
or cable to~i drilling."':

84

Pota1o
(]) lucy Show
CIJ Dr. Who
® Voyage of the Mimi
tJ) Diff' rent Strokes .
0 C2J CII NBC News
C2) MOVIE : 'I' d Climb the
Highest Mountain'
liJ Rifleman
(Jl Mazda Sportslook
(]) Carol Burnett
@ El © ABC News
Q CIJ ®l CBS News
CIJ Nightly Business
Report
® America Works
fll One Day a1 a Time
0 (V PM Magazine
(I) Here Com·e the Brides
® SportsCenter
® Gomer Pyle
(§) &amp;I ~ Entertainment
Tonight
C1J Wheel of Fortune
Q CIJ Wheel of fortune
® (jj) M acNeil/ lehrer
Newshour
®I News
Jetfer"Sons
0 C2) Tic Tac Dough
ffi Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City . NJ Doug Dewi tt vs . Jimmy Sykes ih a
12 -round bout for the ESPN
Middleweight
Championship and Lonnie Smith vs .
Frank Montgomery in a 12 roun d bout for the ESPN Jr
l:.ightwe•gh t Championship
(2 hrs ., 30 min .)
(]) Andy Griffi1h
(§) 0 ® Family Feud
CD Jeopardy
·
[1Q) Wheel of Fortune
&amp;I © N ew Name That
Tune
f» W .KRP in Cincinnati
0 C2) CD 1984 World
Series : Game 1 At press
time , the teams had not·

m

7 :30

WATERP~OOFING

83

o m (]) m o rn ®J 01
lil Hot

Homjl
Improvements

82

lour ordinary wot'da.

EVEIIUNG ·

1973 Open Rood motor- :
home. 40.000 mi . .26 ft .. ,
aalfcontoinad. •8.200. Can· ·
814- 261-1332 or814-266 1307.

Cabbage Patch Doll. new in
box with adoption papers,
880 .00. Call 304-6766011 .

l}fjii)N'} fi)'i} ~THATSCAAM.LED WOIID GAME
~ ~ ~~ s
byHon/;Amoldand·BobLeo
Unscramble theM lour Jumbles,
one letter to eiCh square. to form

10/9/84 '

1973 Midoo 19 · ft . self
contained Clmper. Cail614379-2086.

Merchandise

I

Television
Viewing

THO: D. A . APFRovED

'''
'I

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1983 20 tt. told out Palomino climper, . exc. cond.,
used one time, quJck sale.
Call 114-367-0334 .

Building Materials
61 Farm Equipment 71
Autos for Sale
Block. brick. liwer pipes.
windowt , lintela , etc .
For sale or trade 1979
Plastic cisterns state ap- Claude Winters. Rio Grande, Long tactot, VermHr round
baiera. rikes. teddero &amp; Uncoln Continenttl Town
proved, Plastic septic tanka, 0 . Call614-246- 5121 .
mowers 1nd • complete line Car. Call 614·388-8244.
plastic culvert, metal cul BUild
your
own
4
bdr.
home.
of bale hondllng end leading
Novo Concord. outo2606 Jackson -2 bedroom verts. RON EVANS ENTER acces,orlea. grinder mixers.
apt $225 .00 plus alactric: 3 PRISES . Jackson. Oh 614· $6,995 del. to your site.
t
till'
otarv
AC. PS. P8 • very
.
New display model open. wagono. ro ory oro. r
good cond . Call 614,266bedroom apt $250 .00 plus 2118-5930.
cutters, ba.dea; cuttlvatort.
See
it
nowl
1-614-886electric end gas . 1 410 Ot'!io diaco. plowo. . pootdrlverl. 1 1 _3_
32_&lt;&gt;&lt;_&amp;_14_·_2_~&gt;;:-6-·_13,..-0_7_.--:
1 bedroom apt $205 .00 plus Fall Yar.d Care Mulching, 7311 .
woodaplittera •. sweden~ 1983 Chevy CheYette 4
water and electric. Rt. 2 fertilizing, liming, reseeding
ga "t el, POWIHWalhert,
·
North-2 mobile homes &amp; transplanting. Also for Rough Cut Lumber, oek, Wheel Hor•e Lawn &amp; gll!rd•n cylinder. 4 speed, tinted
poplar,
and
pine.
ax4's,
sale:
cow
manure
&amp;
top
soil.
s 226.00 each plua electric.
2x8's. 1x6's. 1 xB's. As· tractora w~tendom axles. windows. AM FM cessett.
garage apt $200.00 plus Contact Bruc·e Davison.
·61.4-256-1427.
sorted length!. Cell Hogg ~nd aee us for 8 complete 18,000 milea.·excellantconelectric . 2216 Jefferson-4
and Zuspan Materials line of partl and service. ditlon. good gas milege. Call
bedroom home $300.00
Usod:
992-7672 or 992-3187
plus utilitin.: All of these firewood cut up slabs. $16 Co .. lnc . 773 - 6564, MF 160. MF 166. MF 6 0 . 1 - - - - - - - -daytime.
rentals are neat end clean . PU load. larger loads deliMF 150 w-loodar. 801 Ford. 1979 Chevy Impale Wagon .
Ready to rent. Must have vered . Call for prices, 6142 Vermeer round 'Demo' Excellent condition, new
245
-5804
.
Now
open
for
business.
references and deposit.
baiera, 2 uoed baiera. 120 Goodvear radials. PS, PB.
Mountain
State
Block,
At.
Town and Coun1ry Real
MF balar gravity wagono. AC. AM-FM. cruise contol.
Estate. Broker. 304-676- Go-Kart 3Yz horse Briggs &amp; 33, New Haven. Complete 990 IH haybine. plows tilt steering. Book price
m8Sonry
supplies.
4
".
8"
straton
motor.
Perfect
con5548 .
dition, runs good. Helmet 12" block. Delivery service. bladoo. And chock our toll f3800 .00. sale S3600.00 .
Call 742-2328 .
included,
$150 . Call eveings Phone day 304-882-2222. Ala pricesl
3 room unfurnished apt,
J IV I D E N S F A R M I - - - - - - -- 614
-367-7744.
evening
882-3239
.
bath. $200.00 month. utili·
EQUIPMENT
1973 Olds Cutlass. t400 or
ties paid . Phone 304-675·
614-446-l676
'best offer. Call 6'14-992Crossbow
Barnett-Wildcet,
3030 or after 4 :00. 3046031 .
150 lb., new cond . Call
Pet$ for Sale
675-3431 .
Tox-Wik
260
circulating
1
- - - - ----::-:-_- lc614 -367-7434 after 5 :00 .
botch grain dryer. call Gary · 1984 Monte Carlo SS. blue.
fully equipped. new condi Michoal 614-985-3966.
45 Furnished Rooms Beef ready for freezer 45 HILLCREST KENNELS
tion. Asking 811.600.00 or
cents per pound on ·hoof:.. Boarding all breeds. Heated
best offer. Will consider
Call446-1 062.
indoor- outdoor faciliti.es. 86 Ferguson TFactor; law"' trode. Call 949-2181 .
For rent Sleeping Rooms
Genie
Flail
Mower:
3
point
and light houae keeping King size Craftmatic bad, AKC Doberman puppiet: hitch 6ft. bush hog; 6ft. pull
rooms. Park Central Hotel . Lowrey organ with ginny, Stud Service. Call614·446 ~ type bush hog; Call 949- 1976 Mercury Comet
7796.
f360 .00 firm, call 614Call 61'4-446-0756 .
2008 .
set of bunk beds. ·Call
949-2606.
446-3101 .
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
Furnished room, $146. Utili63
Livestock
ties, range, ref. Share bath . 2 air conditioners on 12.500 614-367-7220 .
1981 Ford Escort GUt 4
door hatch back. (Oood
Men only. 919 Sec .. Gallipo- BTU. ona 7.500 BTU used 3
Brierpatch
Kennels
Profeslis. 446-4416 alter B p.m .
condition. Call 992-3974 .
mos. Patio set 4 chairs &amp; sional All-breed grooming.
table with umbrella. bed- Indoor-outdoor boilrding fa· Top Quality · Registered
room set, white Frenclit ~ilities. "English Cocker Spa- Quarter horse mare. 6 yr. old 1982 Chevrolet Chavette.
46 Space for Rent
Provihial . Honda motorcycle niel puppies. Call 61.4-388- buckskin color. Call eveings AC, fullv equipped. e•c
61 4-367-7744.
cond. 111urile loan. Phone
XL 100 1 980 model. call 9790.
304-773-6908.
614-245-5219 .
15 Holsten heifers, pasture
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Dragonwynd Cattery KenPark. Route 33. North of For sale fill dirt. and top soil. nels. AKC Chow puppies. bred, · 46 cents a lb. Call '72 Volkswagen, over ~
614-388-9676.
hauled engine with .30.000
Pomeroy, Large lots. Call Call Cell614-266 -1427.
Siamese kittena. new litters
milet. 8760.00. Call 304614-992-7479 .
CFA Himalayan and Persian Santa Gre1rudis Rag. herd 675-5004.
Cabbage Patch Preemies kittens·. Call 814 -446-3844
bull, proven producer .
2nd. floor office space for new in boxes with adoptiofl after 6 .
rent. Coun St., Pomeroy . papers. $7&amp; each. Call 446 - 1- - - - - : - - - -- - - 1.600 lb.. 1800 or best 1979 Camero 350 auto.
offer. Call 814-256-1959.
light blue metallc.
Call 614-373 -0456 .
4349 or 446-2087 .
Registered Poodle . Call
$2,600.00 . 304-675 448-9865 .
Remodeling Sale G.E. dis· 1-----~--~-­ AQHA Registered mare for 3994.
sale, very gentle, 6 yr. old .
hwasher, G .E. drop in stove, Puppies $26 each. Mother color:
Bay. Call 446-2446. · 1979 Monte Carlo 305
Hotpoint refrigerator. all 8 Registered Westia, Fether
auto, PS. PB, Air. till wheel.
yrs. old or less . Reasonable Peke-a-poo. Puppies have
2
heifer
calves,
1
Black
nice car. Mle or~ trade.
prices. Will consider offers. no papers. Call 61 4-446·
Jersey and 1 Charlois. Hay 84.200.00 . 304-675 Wood TV stand for sale also . 2393.
lor sola. Call 949-2237.
4181.
51 Household Goods Call 446-7307,
- - - -- - - - - l c AKC Golden Retriever. 13
Oak furniture, tables, chairs. weeks old. 1 ahots. Call Hogs. 200 lbs and over. '79 lTO $3,20D.OO or best
good for butchering. phone offer. 304-578-2010.
cupboards, pie safe, tele- 614-593-5243 .
SWAIN
304-576-2743.
phones,
desk,
also
antiques
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
end
glassware.
Open
SunGerman
Shephard
Reg
.
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
Pigs lor sale. 304 -676 - 72 ·Truck-s for Sale
&amp; used wood -coal stoves. 6 days. Conkel's Tuppers· pups-7 wks. old, 3 females. 4139.
plains.
Rt.7
.
4 males. Wormed and 1·st.
pc wood LR suite .$399 •
TRUCK TOPPERS Moot
shots.call 614-986- 3849.
bunk beds $199, antron .:..._---- - - - lc 54 Hay &amp; Grain
ailea, different colors, mas·
recliners $99, used bedroom 1 954 Massey-Ferguson 30,
good
condition.
$1700
.00.
tar card accepted. John's
Registered
UKC
Night
suites, ranges, wringer
Auto SAle, BulaVille Rd. , Cell
washers. &amp; shoes. Call614- 8 f1 .x 1 6 ft . tandem axle flat Champion, Treeing Walker.
bod trailer . S2000.00. 2 Priced right, Call843-5426. Large round bales of hey. 446-4782. Gallipollo. Oh .
446-3159 .
· $20 each. CaM 446-1062 .
banjos, excellent condition.
Call
992-6990.
·
1 960 Willyo Jeep wagon
Beautiful A .K.C . Collie pup·
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
pies, champion pedigree. Hay for lal,. ,111'11446-0373 . would make a great fir~­
Sofa, chair. rocker, otto·
wood vohiclo . Coli 388man, 3 tables, {exoa heavy}, Chrome and Walnut Dining shots and wormed. Call
8710.
$685 . Sofa. chair and love- Table with padded. chairs, 61 4~ 698 - 4 179 weekday ev65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer.
seat, S275 . Sofas and chairs extra nice. Call 614 ~ 992 - enings. all day Saturdy and
1980 chevy Luv auto. AM ·
Sunday .
priced from $285 . to $896 . 5742 or 614-992-2094.
FM tape. $3,199. John"a
Tables, S50andupto5126.
Hide-a-beds.$390 . and up Jesse French spinet piano AKC reg boxer pups, call Certified seed wheat, barley. Auto Salas. Bulavilla ~d ..
rye, IJ)alta, triticale. alio 448-4782. Galllpolio.
to S550 .. sofa beds 5146. $450.00. large butterfly 614 -742-3080.
cover Crop wheat. Ahlzar
Recliners. S285 . to $375 .• quilt $125 .00. Chair and
Lamps from $28 . to $126. ottoman, $15 .00 . .20 book AKC registered Minature Form Supply. Call614·246- 1972 Chavrolet CaiKornio
truck! aft orginal. very good
pc . dinettes from $109 .. to set of Do it yourself Encyc - Schnauzer puppies, 1 male, 5193.
running cond. Call 614·
1 female. $126 .00 . 304435 . 7 pc. $1 89 and up. lopedia $20.00 .
367-7111.
895-39~1 .
Wood tabla with six chairs
illlS JHll l ollo n
·$285 to $745. Deok 8110 Surplus regular army Issue,
camouflage
clothing
-leather
1982 S-10 long bad PU. 4
up to S226. Hutches. 8550.
opd. Call 446-4447 or 441Musical
Bunk bed complete with combat bopts, denim heavy 57
9752.
mattreaees, 8276 . and up to jackets-pants cheap, Sam
Instruments
71
Autos for Sale
$395 . Babv bods, 8110. Somerville'S (our 20th year}
1980 Dodge D 60. low
Mattresses or box springs. East-Ravenswood , (New
milage sale at re~sonable
full or twin, 458., firm , $68 . Eral Fri. Sat. Sun. I :00-7:00 Piano. Wurlltzer Spinet. like
TOP CASH paid for ' '80 prica. coll614-992 -7206 .
and 878 . Queen oets. 8195 . PM . Call in orders before f10W, 304· 773-6324.
model and newer used car~ .
4 dr. chests. S42 . 5 dr. 10:00 AM. 304-676-3334 .
Smi1h Bulck-Pontlec. 1911
1977 Chavy pickup. VB. PS.
cheats, $64 . Bed frames.
Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis. Call Stondard. Rune good. body
· $20.and $26 ., 10 gun· Gun W . Va. Custon:aers save 30
59 For Sale or Trade 814-441-22B2.
rough. •1000.00. Coll992 ·
cabinets , $360 . Gas or per cent of your long distance
telephone
bill
for
7841 .
electric ranges $376 . Baby
1948 Plymouth good cond.:
mattresses, $26 &amp; $36, bed detail1 call Richard Wilson,
frames 820. 825. &amp; 830. 1-800-344-5118 Monday For sale Browning Sweat 16 ovarything orglnal. Call814shot gun made in Belgium, 388-8643.
73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O .
king frame 860. Good selec- thru Friday.
614-949-2716.
tion .. of bedroom suites.
1877 Monta Carlo PS. PB. 77 Ford F-1150 4x4. V-Ii.
rockers. met~l cabinets, Maple full aize bad with
AC; swivel ...ts, crul11, auto.. 64.000 ·nineo. Coli
headboards $38 &amp; up to mattrase end boJC 1prings
840 .; Sturdy bunk badowith
AM-FM canet1t. new 448-1095.
$66 .
Fd l lll S uppll l!:&gt;
mattresa $1 00.; Exercise
carpet, brakes, • 1hocks,
Used Furniture •• head bench with leg lift, arm pull,
•2.600. Coli 441-348&amp;.
LIVI!~Iuek
bar bello and dumb b•ll•
boards, and 2 bedroqm 466.. Everything in good
Good Uled clean car. oniV 1972 Chevy van whh rabullt
suites . 3 mile• out Bulaville cond . 304-895-3903 .
60.000 miles. 1979 Cougar motor end trah'ami11I01;1~
8900 00 304
Rd. op,n 9am to 6pm, Mon.
51 Farm Equipment XR7. loaded. Call614-218:
· ·
thru
Sat.
2
Ml
h'
b'l
6239
after
II.
614- 446-0322
1
ton
c lgon mo I e
crane. 88,600; 4 wood
burning 1tove $260 . each . Modal E Gleaner combine, 1967 Plymouth Valvedere.
GOOO USED APPLIANCES 304 • 675 .1 678 altar 8 ; 10ft. grain tabla. axe. cond. PS.PB.AC. 4dr Soden. one- 74 Motorcyclea
Washers. dryers. rafrigera- 3 04- 876 _789!1',
Now only 82;800 . Sldoro owner. Coli 614-379-2310.
tors, ranges. Skaggs ApEquipmant,304-676-7421 . 1.- '' --------pliances. Upper River Ad. l _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.l,::::::::::::::::::;:::~ · 1977 Chryaler Cordoba,
For ule or trade 1981
bealde Stone Crest Motel.
&amp;l.&amp;OO. 73 •000 mllao. good Hondoln1orotate wl1h loto of
614-446-7398 .
cond. Call 814 • 367 _7131
extrao. Ca11614·388-8244.
County Appliance , Inc .
after 4PM w•kdoyo.
1979 Harley Dovidoon
Good used appliances and
Sportoter;
many . oxtrao.
1976 C d 0 ba 2 d
TV aets. Open BAM to 8PM .
or
r .. cond..
outo..
11 ,900. Cell 448-8239.
•
AM-FM
otoreo.
Good
Mon thru Sat. 446-1699.
627 3rd. Ave . Gallipolis.
runo good. 8700. C'oll 4 4 1.8331
OH .
·
75 Boats and
1982 Chevy Chevett• 4
Motors for Sale
Side by aide refrigerator
opd.. rodlo. new tlroa, - - - - - - - . . . . , - - - harveot gold like now $275,
aide by aide avacodo green
t3.3911. 11179 Plymouth
Vololro, 2 dr.. 8 cyl .• outo..
John Boote. 3 trolling mollnla older •126. !root free
refrigerator white lg. freezer
AM-FM 82.3911 . 1878 Plytore. 2 owivet . . .to. chotn
mouth Vololro outo.. olr.
tightener. 304-11711-1719.
on top 8176. copportona
AM-FM. •1 .999. John"o
refrigerator froat free 8128,
auto wether G E harveat gold
Auto . Sileo Bullville Rd..
like new t175. Kenmore
446-4782. Oolllpollo.
76 Auto Partl
waohen • 95 eoch 3 to
l!o Acce•sorie•
chooae from. 2 gas range•
197!1 Pontloc Orond Sofori
ltatlonW8gon.
·
Rune
very
896 each, electric ranges30
in e 1 26, all appliance&amp; sold
good, rneny optlona. Beat
ofler. Coli 448-8213.
2 nowly built ell oteol utility
with 30 day werrenty .
trollers.
One 4Y.. '2711.
Skaggl Applianceo, Upper
1984 Buick Riviere. fully
Dne·3~x6 1200. Coi1448·
River Rd.. Golllpolll, Oh
olec1ric. full power. dorli rod
74(&gt;11.
446-7398.
metoHic w. white lAndau
top. wire wh..lo. conoert
3'AI In Uft kit tor Jeep ond
Sooro Mlcrowove •1 00.00.
atorioo oyotem. loaded.
Buokohoi Mudcle,. O"o with
3Q4-il76-31 83.
1 1.000 mi. Coli 441-93114.
while Bpolte ,Rima.

.

October 9, 1984

18ft. RV com...,. . .II contained. furnance. AC. range;
rtfrlg,. full bath. Roeaa hitch
I ecces10rle1. H11 received
TlC 83,300 . Coli 446.
2297.
.
.

.

limestone, Sand; Gravel.
Delivered in Mason , Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446-7785 .

.

Motore Homes
l!o Campers

KIT'N'CARLY~J!lbr&amp;MryWrlfld

Now $840 .00 TOMOS
Silver Bullet Moped, Smiles,
Velvet love seat makes bed. · Chrome exhauJt, Mig
Recliner. $260.00 both. .wheels. Priced. •650.00.
1-614-247-3684.
Phone 304-675-6022 .

bdr .. extra clean. total elect614-379-23 41 .
•
1 975 1 4x60 mobil a home
good co ndition , 2 bdr., one
owner, bought new with

54 Misc. Merchandil8

Household

King wood -burner . Aaking
$100.00. Coli 992· 7841 .

1 972 Freedom 1 2x55 ft .
fully furnished &amp; ' axtraa,
ss.ooo. Call4 46-7603.

ric. CA. 7x 12 porch . C.all

October 9. 1984

Ohio

(?~~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
U English
1 Faction
novelist
5 Heap
42 Sandy hill
9 Perfect
43 Watched
11 Slanting
DOWN
13 Spread joy 1 Italian
14 Pinch bar,
city
e.g.
2 Stalis
15 Crisscross 3 Mann work
16 Famous
4 Conswne
Yesterday 's Answer
5 Blanched
" Stooge"
20
Mining
28 Snuggery
lll Midiani(e 6 Resident
find
30
Champtonking
of (suff.)
23
Civil
ship
19 Kentucky 7 Dearly
wrong
31 Opera
city
await
c onductor
21 Rich
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23 Oz canine
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24 Musical
17 United

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27 Split

28 Gossip
29 Before
30 Developed
cariines

33 Alder

tree

:14 Neighbor
of Ill.

:15 Epoch
38 Halo
wearer

38 Presbyter
40 Thai
monetary

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•

One letter stands for a nother. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the tw o O's, etc. Si ngle lelters,
apos~hes, the l ength and foffi'l!ltion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
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28 " Two
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'

'

~v.Ocrober9. 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Alabama .takes record music award :
'

Tigers edge Pa~~s

The award presented at the Grand
TheonlydoublewinnerwasAnne_
Tenn. (APl Ole Opry house IS based on Murray, whO won single of the year ·
Alabama's boqncy fiddle music and
sort love songs won 1he group a excellence In all phases at country and albwn of the year for ''A Little: ·
music.
Good News." They were her first ;
record third entertainer of the year
award, and guitarist Chet. AtkinS
Alabama was bolStered by the CMA awards after 14 years of·
won top Instrumentalist for the
album "Roll On," which contains
trying.
·
seventh time at the 18th Countcy
the hit stogies "Roll On,'" 'When We
WWie Nelson and Julio Iglesias
Music Ass6clation ceremonies.
Make Love" and "IfYou'reGonna werevotedvocalduooflheyear.
The award pushed Alabama past Play In Texas (You Gatta Have a
The Statlers won vocal group of·
· the year for the ninth time, ending:
Barbara Mandrell for most awards Fiddle In the Band) ."
as top entertainer. Miss Mandrell,
Monday night's wtnilers Were · Alabama's three-year hold on !he:
who missed Monday night's cerem- · chosen by ihe S:Oll slngeis, must- award.
onies because of Injuries sustained
in a car accident but was shown at try music professionalS wbo belong
songwriters
and other counhome vta remote camera, won clans,
to the CMA
- the lndustty's
trade
entertainer of the year In 198) and a!SOciatlon.
1981. •
.
Greenwood, a fanner casino
."We don't take entertainer of the dealer who scored this year with the
year lightly," said Alabama lead hit "God Bless the USA,'' was voted
singer Randy Owen. "We are going top male vocalist for the second
/ ·
to make plans tomorrow to make straight year.
you proud you voted for us.' '
A tearful Reba McEntire, wbo
M1ss Mandrell, Lee Greenwood, sings hard-core country· mUsic,
Ronnie Milsap and the Oak Ridge received a standing ovation when
STARTS FRIDAY
she was chosen top female vocalist
Boyswereflnalistsforlhl!tophonor.
'
~ASHVn.LE,

Emergency runs

'

Childhood earaches

Additional jurors

Famib' Medicine Colunui on Page 7 .

Story Oil Pagel4

ENTERTAINERS OF YEAR - The country
group Alabama accepts the entertainer of the year
award during the 18th annual Country Music

Association Awards Monday night In NashvWe, Tenn.
( AP Laserphoto).

Unemployment now declining issue
CINCINNATI (AP) - Unemployment remains a strong but
declining issue for Ohioans, and
most of those who feel strongest
about it intend to vote for . Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale, a new poll indicates.
Threats to world peace; taxes and
govenunent spending tend to be the
biggest concerns of those intending
to vote for President Reagan, saldAITuchfarber, director of the University of Cincinnati's Institute for
Polley Research, which produces
the Ohio Po)! each month.
Unemployment was the top issue.
among 51 percent ofOhioans in April
1983 and remained the No.1 priority
in the most recent poll, a lthough it
was cited by 28 percent.
The latest poll was taken randomly between Sept. 4-18 among 805

Ohioans who were asked their
assessments of the nation's top
problems.
"Threats to world peace, especially in the Middle East, Central
America, and U.S.-Soviet relations,
are the second-most frequently
mentioned problem facing the
co untry ," Tuchfarber said.
"TWenty-two percent cite It as the
U.S.'s'most important problem."
Other Issues frequently mentioned by Ohioans were government
spending and lligh taxes, 8 percent;
nuclear proliferation, 7 percent;
Inflation, 6 percent; other economic
issues, 6 percent; and poverty, 4
percent.
"It Is interesting to note how
Ollioans who mention these issues
intend to vote in the upcoming
presidential election," Tuchfarber
'

said. "A majority of Ollioans who
cite unemployment or poverty as
the most important problem facing
the country intend to vote for
Mondale and Ferraro.
"However, Ohioans who mention
threats to peace, high government
spending and taxes, nuclear prolifHarold Luther Little, Middleport,
Board meeting set
eration, Inflation or other economic has filed suit for a divorce from
The Southern Local School Board
problert~.$ support the Reagan-Bush
Janice Faye Little, Gallipolis, in , will hold a special meeting on
ticket."
Wednesday at 5: 30 p.m. lo discuss
Meigs County Common Pleas
Danocrats and blaaks were most Court.
negotiations.
llkelytonameunemploymentas the
Free clothing day
major problem facing the country,
Tuchfarber said. Republicans and
The Gallla-Meigs Community
those with higher incomes and more
Action
Agency will hold its free
education were least likely to have
clothlngdayforlow-incomepersons
unemployment as theirtopconcem,
· on 'Thursday from 9 a.m. until 12
he said.
"Threats to world peace are most noon. THe agency's clothing bank is ·
Served with
commonly cited by no particular now located in the old lligh school
Mashed Potatoes,
bullding in Cheshire.
group," Tuchfarber said.

ARt. 2, Pattiot man was listed in _and Gallla Co. 3 Monday.
good condition at Holzer Medical
Aecordlng to the patrol, vehicles
, Center following a twa&lt;ar accident
driven byC&lt;innleJ.Saunders,30, Rt.
on Gallla Co. 6 Monday evening.
3, Gallipolis, and Hansen B. .
Hospital officials said Garry E.
Buckley, 20, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, were
Lamm. 33, was being treated for a
westbound on 35. Saunders apparpossible concussion.
ently stopped tomake aleftturnonto
The Gallia-Melgs post of the State 3 and Buckley reportedly ci:&gt;uld not
Highway Patrol said Lamm was stop In time and struck Saunders
southbound on 6 when he apparently from behind at 6:25 p.m.
struck a parked car owned by Blaine
A Gallipolis man escaped injury
A. Taylor, Rt. 2, BidwelL The when his car went into a ditch along
collision caused heavy damage to Gallia Co. 25 Monday afternoon.
Lamm' s car and light damage to
VIrgil E. Bean, 19, Rt. 2,Galllpolis,
Taylor's.
·
was northbound, according to
Officers cited Lamm for DWI officers, when he apparently lost
following the 7:30 p.in. accident.
control of his car · as he was
A Pomeroy man was cited for attempting to slow down. He was
assured clear distance following a cited for no registration and failure
collision at the Intersection ofU.S.35 to control.

A Rt. 3, GaWpolls, man was cited
following a two-car acCident at the
intersection of Ohio · 588 and
Garfield-Centenary Road.
David L. Massie, 18, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was northbound ·and
Jason P. Hogan, 19, Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, was eastbound, according to the patrol, when Hogan
reportdly struck Massie as Hogan
was attempting to make a left turn
at 9:25a.m. Massie was cited by the
patrol for failure to yield following
the accident.
The patrol said Richard Ciders,
:Jl, Rt. 2, Crown City, escaped Injury
when he apparently lost control of
his car in a curve, went off the left
side of the road and struck a mailbox
at 7: &amp;1 a.m. Mo~day.

4

Middleport's burning ·issue out...
(Continued from page 1)
According to plans made last
night, the planned path would run
!rom the marina to the shopping
area near the corporation limits on
N. Second Ave. A sketch will be
prepared and ODOT personnel will
visit the community to view the site
and advise the town whethe.r or not
to proceed. The village would be
required to provide the engineering
planning costs for the path but
ODOT would provide construction
costs If the plan is approved.
Mayor Hoffman distributed copies of a new state law wllich
outlines procedures to be followed,
when buildings In a town are burned.
A local ordinance will be required
before the new law can be effective
in the town, Mayor Hoffman
reported.
Mayor, Hoffman reported a traf·
fie safety control program funded
by the Ohio Department of Hlgh·w ay Safety, has been underway
. over the past 11 months In the town
and stated that in the past 11
months, the number of alcohol
~elated accidents was five comperiod.
pared toThat
17ln the
is aprevious
reduction
11 month
of 340
percent. He said that all accidents
had reduced 26 percent with 97 accidents occurtng during the past 11
months compared to 122 in the pre-

Weather forecast
Tonight and Wednesday, m06tly
cloudy, continued mild. Low tonight
arwnd 60. Hlg!l Wednesday In the
mid·m.. The chan~ of rain Is 20
percent tonJght and Wednesday.

,.........Forecast

~llraUihSaturda.v:

vious 11 months. There were 127 arrests for driving ·under the Influence during the past 11 months
of the program while the 11 month
period before the program haS reduced accidents, the mayor concluded.
Lighting dlscw!sed
Council discussed street lighting
in the new Hartinger subdivision
where five houses are under
construction and granted a five foot
wide easement to Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. for
Installation of underground lines.
Mayor Hoffman will ask the
company to plot the lighting and
provide costs on various types of
attractive street lighting that might
beused.
.
Councilman Gilmore said he had
been advised that the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce has been
unable to further plans for staging a
comm~ty Halloween party. Council Indicated they had expected the
community event to be annual since
council last year had approved that
activity in lieu of the traditional trick ·

Dining Room Qnly

or treat night. Councilman Horky
said if there is to be no community
party, then he Is In favor of
reestablishing trick or treat night. It
was . agreed that Gilmore wlll
contact the Middleport American
Legion Post and the Meigs County
Jaycees to see if either group would
take on the staging of the community party. Gllrnbre also reported on a
community July 4th celebration. He
said that everyone has been In favor
ofsuchanoOO&lt;&gt;rvance buttherelsno
money to finance that endeavor. He
will continue to pursue the matter,
however.

ADCmoney

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

POMEROY - State Auditor
ThomasE.Fergusonannouncedthe
October distribution of$57,629,584in
Ald to Dependent Children funds to
638,411 recipients in Ohio. Meigs
County necelved $:u.!,637 for 2,414
recipients.
•

PH. 992-5432

ELB

DEDICATION SPEAKER
SOUGHf - Ohio Govemor
IUchllrd Celeste who de'k'!l!ed a
new science and maUt bldlcllng
n-la)' at IUo GJ'BHe ~
has been requeJted to meet with
several chamhers of conunerce
concemlng highway projects In
tile Melp, Athens, LancastB
area.

DS

SALE!

Mondale..
(Continued from page 1)
York that Mondale walked through
as he kicked off his campaign on
Labor Day. On that occasion, he
paraded before the .official start of
the Labor Day march and there
were few people around to see llim.
"Today we have a . brand new
race," Mondalesaid. ''Today everything is different Millions of
Americans now know what's at
slake in this election."
Mondale seemed relaxed and
having fun as he walked at the tall
endoftheColumbusDayparade.He
stopped once in a while to shake
hands with people behind pollee
lines on the sidewalks.

Pomeroy, OH.

MEN'S

~
DENIM JEANS
Sl.711

RlO GRANDE - The new
science and math building ai Rio
Grande College and Community
Collegewasdedlcated'I'uesdaywlth
a pledge from Gov. Richard Celeste
to continue state support for the
cooununlty college.
"ltlsamatterformeasgovernor,
for the executive branch,"and for the
Board of Regents to ensure the
resources that helped make this
building complete," he said.
Celeste noted the efforts of State
Rep. Jolynri Boster, D-Galllpolls, In
early 1983 to appropriate funds lor
construction of the $3 million
structure In spite of a state
budgetary freeze.
.
· "As much as any college, Rio
Grande Community College IS the
most vital Institution In this region,"
Celeste said. "Withoutlt, thousands
of Ohioans would not have access 1o
educational facWtles."
Celeste made his brief corrunents
atacerentonyheldin !he lobby of the
building attended by the boards of
trustees of both colleges, admtnlstrators, legislators and other

?rewashed 1414 ounce No-Fault blue denim.
Won't shrink, stretch or pucker. Straijht leg or
boot .cut styles. Waist sizes 27 to 42 inches,
lengths 30 to 36.

GENERAL
TIRE
SALES

"WHERE THE RUBBER
MEETSJHE ROAD.
II

PH. 992·7161

BJat.-111 the '1111. lAMB 45-115.
'I

An audit report of the Eastern
Local School System by the State of
Ohio Is one of the best ever Issued to
the district.
This Is the statement of the
Eastern Local Board of Education

today.

.

The audit was concluded July 11,
1984. and covered the period of Jan.

1, 1982 through Dec.

ffttnuat .ftme
(614) IV2-5141

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

'

Your question and comments on this and othllt JUbjtcts 111
welcome - In privltt or publicly throulh thil column.

JAMES SIMPSON

'

JAMES BLOWER

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, October 1 o. 1984

support for the construction of the""
Ravenswood access road from the
Ravenswood Bridge to Rock
Springs and the completion of all
unfinished four-lane portions of
Route 33 from Rock Springs to
Columi:KJs.
No CQJiflrmatioil concerning an
appointment has been received on
the Sept. 28 request.
Plans were made to formulate the
session In Columi:KJs with the
delivery of signatures.' gathered
through the citizens' petition drive
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber. Atty. Jennifer Sheets Is
chairperson for the drive.
Chamber President Ron Ash, In
giving an update on the drive, said,
"at last count, 3,:m signatures have
been gathered In Meigs County,
1,710 In Athens and 2,00! In Logan.
There has been no count on the
number of signatures gathered in
the Lancaster area. Petitions are
now being circulated at the FAirfleld
l -County fair,"
Petlticils are to be delivered in
Columi:KJs via an antique car
caravan. This was decided by the'
petition drive committee. Several
local antique car owners have
offered to make the drive to the Ohio
Statehouse. Additional cars and
drivers will join the local group
along the Route 33 conidor.
Glf!lllllelt.er read
Lowell· Wingett read a letter he
had received tram Senator John
Glenn regarding the proposed
access road. GleM, who received a
letter from Ohio Department of
'l'ranspllrtatlon Director WaJTell
Smith, Informed Wingett that the
1!&amp;! cost estimate of the project was
anywhere from $67 mWion and $131
million. "That's a big difference,"
stated Wingett.
·

officials.
~building, designed by Schooley Caldwell Associates of ColumI:KJs, provides the community college with laboratory facllltles,
classrooms, a computer center and
a greenhouse. Approximately
$375,00! of the funds appropriated
for the building have been spent on
new equipment •
Thebuilding'sbeglnnlngscameln
1975 when officials detemllned that
Haning Hall, whiCh had beell
. housing math and science classes,
was considered no longer useful.
Following the release of funds,
bldswereletandcoustructlonbegan
In spring al3.
Prior to the dedication, Celeste
received an honorary degree of
doctor of public service
both
colJeges. The degree was presented
at a ceremony In the Fine and
Perfonnlng Arts Center.
·
"I am really honored to ·be
honored with this degree," Celeste
said, noting that "agreatdealofmy
adult life has been committed to
public service."

Wingett wrote back to Glenn
inviting him, or a member of his
staff, to he present when the
petitions are given to the governol'l
"For muscle," Wingett
cmunented.
Supports levy
Also speaking to chamber
members was Dan Morris, superintendent of the Meigs Local School
Dlstrtct Manis explained the
purpose of the proposed .75 of one
inlll bond Issue which will be on the
Nov. 6 ballot for the Meigs School
Dlstrtct and asked fOr a resolution
from the chamber In support of the
measure.
The six-year Issue Is based upon
valuation of the school district, $94
million, and will generate approxlmatley $.1Xl,OOJ over that six year .
period. However, according to
Morris, the Issue, called a "stay at
home" measure, will not raise
taxes.
Morris told the chamber the 4
mllis, which are presently h\'lng
colleeted In the district, will still
have to be collected, regardless of
whether the Issue passes or not.Said
Moms, "If voters· say ye5, the
$.Dl,OOJ generated by the issue, wlll
stay withtn the school district. If
they vote no, the money will go back
to the state.''
Morris compared this measure to
one that ·passed in the district
several years ago.
A motion to endorse the issue was
made by Jennifer Sheets, seconded
byJoeCtark.Itwasapprovedbythl! ·
membership.
CoostrudloD (llooeech

Ash also reported that construction on the Pomeroy Pizza Hut was
moving according to schedule. He
had been In contact with the director
(Continued on page 14)

:n.

lll!3,

althougb some Items were checked
through May, 191M. This was the
regular two year audit required of
the district by the State ot Ohio.
There were no findings for
recovery in lhereport~only three
cltatlona whlcll Include: monies
derived . frml .the lunchrOOm re.clelpts at Cliester Elelnentary were

Citing personal experience, the
governor urged his audience,to do Its
best to improve.
"If we are challenged to be our
best, then we are building a
foundation for our future that Is as
strongasltcanbe,"hesald. "Wecan
do better. Rio Grande is doing
better.''
In remarks to reporters upon his
arrival at the colleges, Celeste said
he favored the private-public concept of education offered at RGCCC.
"I think we can learn tram the
experience and possibly marry
these two functions so they can exist
side-by-side," hesald.

Jrom

No recovery findings
made in school audit

f!l~&amp;-rt'oa16-f!J~;.

•

at y

Governor dedicates ~uilding;
pledges continued state help

r•·············-~-----;iii;;i

Gem~¥ lair llroalb llleperiOO.

'

1

ByNANCYYOACIIAM
Sentinel stall Writer
A letter has been sent to Ohio
Governor Richard Celeste from the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
n&gt;questlng a personal meeting
sometime between Oct. 15 and Oct.
26, !ICCOrdlng to Information presented at Tuesday's regular
chamber luncheon meeting.
The request has ~ made on
behalfoftheChambersOfPomeroy,
Middleport, Athens, Nelsonville,
Logan, Lancaster-Falrf!eld County
and Ravenswood, W.Va. Purpose
of the proposed meeting·ts to show
state officials ' the
unified

Choice ·of Salad,. Roll &amp; Drink

Gallia :inan hurt in traffic accident

•

Chambers want
·Celeste meeting

SONGWRITER
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY:·
~-·thru~

Admlsslons.:...J'ohn Moore, PomeFour calls were answered Mon- · roy; Dena Manley, Pomeroy; Nora
day by units of the Meigs County
Nltz, Middleport; Erwin J'hllllps,
Emergency Medical Service.
Racine.
At 4: 59 a .m., the Tuppers Plains
Discharges---Mabel Helzer.
unit responded to a call on State
Route 681 for Luther Boothe who To make apple butter
was not transported. At 8:48a.m.,
Applebutter will be made at the
Syracuse responded to a call !rom Racine United Methodist Church
the Syracuse Ball Pru:k. Again, no Wednesday. !twill beforsaleat$3.00
transport. Tuppers Plains traveled
a quart and $2 a pint after 5 p.rn.
to Long Bottom at 9: 19 a.m. for Wednesday or all day Thursday at
Miller Ball who was taken to the church.
Pleasant Valley ·Hospital. Racine
responded to a call on Fourth St. at
Meets Thursday
8: 24 p.m. and transported Erwin
· The Southern Band Boosters wlll
Phillips to Veterans Memorial.
- meet Thursday evening, 7:30p.m.,
in the band room.
Seeks divorce

e

No.126

.NINJA· Ill

Veterans Memorial

Sloey on Page 10

ISle•')', pbolo 011 Page 3

r~r~~~!~!!r~i

Meigs County happenings...

Gas customer refund

not deposited dally with the treasurer; the treasurer's contract did
not extend to the January 15 date or
orpnlzatiooal meeting, and requl1'l!ml!llt for the district to obtain a
reduced 'ameJtded certificate of
estlmate11!110Um!11wbenltlsknown
that actualJea!lpls will be less than
estimated 1ec;eJpts was not done.
All of thele minor citations are
being c&lt;»:Ia:ted to meet the State
Auditor's requirEment.
"The Eastern Local SchOols.
admlnlstratlon~BoardofEduca- .

t1on are prood to fbld that the State
Audit«'&amp; aalce fl!ell they are di:Uig
a (IOOd Job wltb •a:ords ar the·
district," the board ooncluded.

,,

'

ARRIVE FOR CEREMONIES - Ohio Govemor

dedication ceremonies Tuesday of a new science and

Richard Cele!ite, left, and State RA!presentatlve
Jolynn Boster, (D Gallipolis), arrive at Rio Grande
College . bt the Governor's hellco~r prior to

beEn in Portsmouth prior to the 4 p.m. dedication.

;~

.

'

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP ~~ Writer
RIO GRANDEJ- Aller receiving
a rtnglrig endorsement from Gov.
Richard Celeste, State Rep. Jolynn
Boster told more than lm people
attending a local fund-raiser Tuesday that a "spirit of cooperation"
between the governor and legislature is Improving life for Ohioans.
Boster, a Gallipolis Democrat
seeking a second term to represent
the Mth House district of Gallia,
Meigs and Athens counties, urged
the audience to work together and
echo Celeste's 1982 campaign slogan, "Stand up for Ohio."
"It Is a positive spirit of cooperation I'm proud to be a part of," she
said. "lt's coopera lion that is get~g
projects started in this district.' '
Achievements made during her
first tenn - sometimes through
constant nagging at Celeste, she
said ·- include release of funds for
the construction of the science a nd
math ,building at Rio Grande
College and Community College.
In additiO!l, Boster mentioned
efforts to get a state study done on
traffic problems on Ohio 7 in a
section of Gallipolis reaching !rom
Eastern Avenue to the Silver
Memorial Bridge.
Boster said the county was in
dru)ger of losing new business and
Industry because of safety problems
and traffic congestion on the
two-~e strip. She said she brought

'

'

;~~~~~~~==~~~~:~~·~:
.'(

U,

~

state transportation director
Warren Smith here to see the
problem first -hand and announce a
$1 million hazard elimina lion
project.
The study is not complete, Boster
continued, because now that Smith
has seen tbe problem , there may be
an additional $1 million in the works
to make a three-lane out oftheenttre
strip.
River development
She detailed a visit to Portsmouth
made earlier in the day by Celeste
and herself to announce a study for a
river development project there.
"There are projects that will bring
national attention upon the Ohio
River and attract tourists to the
area," she said. "The OOhlo River
has been long neglected, but out of
the spirit of cooperation. and out of
an intense desire to bring new
industry to the area, we've put
together a package that is probably
one of the most exciting things to
happen to river counties."
During her term, Boster said she
has stressed a "positive, forward
theory" to defeat the "element of
negativism ... that Columbus doesn't
care about us down here."
Prior to her re marlp;, Celeste
praised Boster's efforts for her
aggressiveness and effectiveness in
achieving things for the district.
"The fact is, I'm not saying this
because this Is a speech I give for
every legislative candidate, but

because .there is no member of the
legislature who's more tenacious on
behalf of her district than Jolynn
Boster. That's a fact, and I think you
should know it .
NOI a puppet
"She is no I a puppet whose strings
are being pulled by the governor of
Ohio." added Celeste, paraphrasing
an accusation made by Boster's
opponent, Pomeroy attorney Jen- ·
niter Sheets.
" You need teamwork, because
after what was left to us in January
1983, we had to act.' ' the governor
continued, citing Boster's role in
sponsoring or co-sponsoring legislation for lott~ry profits going to
schools, pay equity for state
employees, CrimE&gt; victims' rights,
crippled children's services and
creation of the Ohio Coal Development Authority.
Celeste aiso took the opportunity
to defend his administration, noting
that the budget has been balanced
and plans to combat unemployment
have been created.
On recent income tax refunds,
Celeste said "I believe it's important
for citizens to know we'U use the
m oney wisely.
"'When we asked people to oppose
lssues 2 and 3, I said at the time that
if we had an excess, it would be
returned to the ta:xpayers." he
continued. "We sent out real checks,
the other guys sent out phony
cheeks.' '

Eastern schools
get new materials

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Larry Ewtng photo.

,.Spirit of cooperation"
improves life Boster

follows
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l1lath buDding at Rio Grande CoDege. The pair had

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to Paul Gerard.
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All schools of the Eastern Local
School District will have new
encyclopedias a long with new.
library and reference materials
through the courtesy of' the Ohio
Lottery.
Meeting in regular session Monday night, the district's board of
education agreed to use lottery
monies for the encyclopedias and
reference materials as well as
classroom materials as recommended by the teachers and a new
fire alarm system for the high
school.
The board accpted the rates
detemllned by the county budget
commission and approved a field
trip to Ohio University lor college
day and a trip for art classes.

Margaret Amberger. Addt'd to the
substitute custodian and maintenance list were Mike Whitlatch, Pat
Buchanan, James Osborne, Rebecca Runion, Dixie Baetr. and
Sandra Koenig. Linda Edwards and
Jeanette Radford were named to the
substitute secreta1y Us! and Lucille
Kimes to the substitute aide list.
George Gagai was given a
supplemental con't ract as junior
high football coach and Patricia
Shrlvers, a supplemental contract,
as junior high cheerleader advisor.
The board approved the secondary principals and elementary
principals state meetings and voted
to permit Rick Martin, Spencer
Wiersma and Mrs. Carolyn Tripp to
attend a reading conference on Oct.
The resignation of Pam Doutllitt 26. Mrs. Tripp was also given
as junior varsity basketball coach permission to attend a Rio Grande
was accepted and added to the . writing conference and Mrs. Fran substitute teachers Ust were ces Thomas was approved to attend
the State Science Teachers ConferYonlece Mlller, Jeannie Slawter
ence.
Supt. Richard Roberts will
John Bailey, Nancy Wachter, Car:
attend
the Capitol Conference.
man Manuel, Valerie Hanstlne,
David Weber, Borinle Kibble and
(Continued on page 10)

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