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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

,r,~~~O!t~~~ ap~, flfelp eou:nty sberll.r$ dilputtes di.ScO\!ered
bti
IJOIDD,}' ~.'II. ar ~ 1n a tJ'aller on Forest Run

)

Larry Ewtng photo.

,.Spirit of cooperation"
improves life Boster

follows
'lttlirder· case
.
..

l1lath buDding at Rio Grande CoDege. The pair had

In Wood

,'

to Paul Gerard.
crow,m. "JtlW

1hJw&amp;b. IlL'
lo liaYe him

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)

�·.---

Wednesday, OctOber 10. 1984

.-.-Comn1entary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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As:b

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&amp;!mlil .,..,_.._................ c:~.­
~v
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.·'·. .'

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

..

:·. · J'AT WHITEH.EAD
Assistant Publlsherj ControUer

•

•

BOB HOEFLICIJ
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

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.• . .
A MEMBER of The Associated P ress. Inland Daily Press Assocla·
.• tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

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LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
1""1. AU letters are subjed to edltlarand must be strned wtt• name, address and
telepltODe number. No UMlcned letten wUI be published. Letters 8hould be In
· jood lute( addresslnllo.,.., ne&amp; .......,..lilies.

:~oday in history
·.::. TOday is Wednesday, Oct. 10, the 284th day of 1984. There are 82 days left
•-111 the year.
·
·.. · TOday's highlight In history:
:: ·. 9n Oct. 10, 1973, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew resigned his office as part
~ -Qf· a plea bargain with the Justice Department. To avoid Imprisonment,
: -~. who had been accused of accepting bribes, pleaded no contest to .
count of evading federal Income taxes.
:. :: On this date:
..
•
;. : 1n 1911, revolutionaries under Sun Yat·Sen overlhrew the Manchu
'.dynasty In China.
;· . .ln 1913, the waters of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans flowed together
. through the Panama Ganal after U.S. engineers blew up the Gamboa Dam.
: , • .In 19Z1, on fields which had been the focal point of the Teapot Pome
· Sfilndal were returned to federal control under a U.S. Supreme Court
' 'llillng..
; ': 1n 1935, the opera "Porgy and Bess," with music by George Gershwin
• and Ubretto by DuBose Hayward and Ira .Gershwin, opE;ned on Broadway.
: · in 1943, Chiang Kai-Shek took the oath of office as president of China.
. ' •..rn 1970, two masked men kidnapped Quebec Labor Minister Pierre
1:.aPorte In Montreal. He was found dead a week later. A separatist group
· calling Itself the "Front de Uberatlon du Quebec" claimed responslblllty.
Ten years ·ago: Britain's governing Labor Party, led by Prime Minister
Harold Wilson, won the country's second general election of the year:
'Five years ago: PaJiil: selling swamped the New York Stock Exchange
following two days of sharp drops In stock prices and big jumps in Interest
rates. Volume soared to 81,6'bJ,OOJ shares.

'More statistics ________w_ill-:-ia_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley_Jr.
Not long ago, facing the news that Reaga11 asks, or are you worse
more and more Americans denoml· ott?"
nate themselves as "conserva· ' And then the basic data: "The
tlves," Arthur Schlesinger Jr., most recent and complete statistics
disinclined to believe that any such collected by the federal govern·
atavism Is really bellevable, made ment show that tbe typical Ameli·
· the point that lots of people Uke to can famtly's Income In 1l&amp; was
call themselves conservatives but three percent lower than It was In
live under Uberal policies. la fact, 198&gt;, the year before !U!agan took
he has a pretty good point here, and office. Famllles In the poorer half of
the latest income figures as· the population lost seven percent of
sembled by the Census Bureau to their real Income, after adjustment
some extent bear him out.
for Inflation, during the Reagan
The headline writer In The years. The richer half stayed about
Denver Post elected to lead off as even."
follows: ..-.U.S. FamUy Income
Now If you chop thestoryoffrlght
Below ·~ Levels." That was the there, you can get a deep draft of
headline. The lead might have been learning about the !nsufflctency of
written by Walter Mondale him· the statistical game.
For Instance:·-· We know !hat
self: "Are you better off than you
were four years ago, as President Income, where It US!!d to tell just

about ~g about hOw non·
farm famUies Uved, tends to teD less
and less. The reason fOr this Is, of
course, that much of what the
American famtly receives Is other
than In the form of Income. 1n the
case ·or poverty-level Americans,
benefits can rise to as much as 70
percent ol what they .consume.
Let us take an obvious example.
If between 1!8l and 1983thevalueof .
an Individual's stake In Social
SeCurity rose, that would not be
reOected In the figure just given.
And of course If that val11e rose
because of an Increase In the Social
SeCurity tax ($150 between 1!81 and
1983 for persons earning $25,(JX] per
annum), then the figures would
show a Joss or Income, whereas
what they s hould re~y shOw Is a

•

~

Ill

deferral of Income.
There are, on top 9f Social
SeCurity, tax stratagems available ·
to most employees that permit a
percentageoftheweeklywagetooo
withheld and Invested without
paying a tax on it. Tax Is levied only
when the employee's equity In the
trust Is liquidated, and that may be
25 years dOWl1 the line ..
And then suppose (to take a
marginal situation) that between
1!m and 1983 teachers In pubUc
schools were better paid, maldng It
possible to raise the level of
teaching. Well, since.public schools
are free, then the average family
benefits to the extent of the better
schools. A datum that would not
rise to the surface of such statistics.
Or consider something of rilajor
consequence, namely the rtse In
medical beneflls, both Medicare for
the elderly and Medicaid for the
poorer American. The figures show
that the per-capita medical expense
In 1983 paid for by the federal
government alone came to over
$300 per capita, $100 ...... 33 percent. more than In 198&gt;. These figures do
not, once again, float In such a
study.
And then of course the Interesting
question about the "richest half,"
· here defined as those who make
$38,045 or more. Well, they are
making 1.1 percent less than they
were three years ago, which would
seem to pull a very thick carpet 01,1t
from under Mr. Mondale's encephalophonlc charge that under
Reagan the rich got richer.
But here Is the most Interesting .
figure of them all. '~Real lamUy
lncollJe reached a peak of$ZI,0171n
1973 (adjusted for Inflation). There .
have been ups and downs," the
Knlght·Rldder News Service· reports, "but the typical American
famlly has not been as well off since
then.''

Senators shouldn't throw

stones~__________Ja_ck_A_nd~e_rso_n

well as adults.
The founder of the orgone
movement ws Dr. WUhelm Reich.
an Austrtan-born psychoanalyst
and one-time colleague of Sigmund
Freud. Reich. ~ In 1957 at the
federal prison in L!!wJsburg, Pa. He
had been sent there for persisting In,
selling "orgone accumulators" large boxes In which the patient
would sit and supposedly absorb
orgone energy. The Food and Drug
Administration had ordered him to
stop se111ng the boxes.
Relch taught that children should
be encouraged to })ave sex at an
early age. In his book, "Children of
the Future: On the Prevention of
Sexual Pathology," Reich wrote.
"The central question is that of
sexual Intercourse in adolescence
and theattltude of society toward it .
Young people have more than
merely a right to he 'enlightened';
they are fuUy entitled to their
emotional health and their sexual

joy In life ... The sexual needs ·of
young people cannot be solved ...
wlt·hout gratifying sexual
intercourse."
Humphrey has espoused pro·
famlly conservatism in strong
moral terms. In 1979, for example,
he led an effort to block the
appointment of Patrtcla Wald to a
federal judgeship on charges that
she would use the position to
"abolish parental authority." Ms.
Wald's views on children's rights,
he argued, would lead to "bizarre
changes In the famUy structure" If
she were on the bench.
When my associate John DU!on
asked the senator If he could
reconcUe his conservative social
views with his wife's association
with orgonomy, he said:
"What my wife's views may or
may not be are her business. I don't
know anything about orgonomy. It
doesn't Interest me and I .can't
comment on lt."

The senator said he does Mt payers $91 credit for a three-cent
believe In promoting sex, among screw.
adolescents. He said he didn't know
How does the government justify
that a 'central tenet of orgonomy
paying $436 for a $7 hammer? I'll
was based on orgasms.
"I've talked to her very Utile tell you how the Navy justifies It:
about It," he said. "I don't $41 to order the hammer and figure
understand and it doesn't Interest out how to use it; $93 tor
"mechanical subassembly" to
me."
Mrs. Humphrey did not respond make sure the hammer worked;
$102 for '!manufacturing over·
to a request for an Interview.
S'IRICI'LY PERSONAL: I have head"; $37 to lineup spare parts tor
heard from thousands of taxpayers the hammer: $3 for packing the
who are boiling at the Pentagon's hammer tor shipment; $00 for the
spending practices. They wonder contractor's "general administrawhy the Pentagon would pay $91 for tive cost"; $56 for the finder's fee;
a three-cent screw, $114 for a $7 for the "capital cost of money";
nine-cent battery. $511 for a 60-cent and $7 for "other expenses."
lamp and $436 for a $7 hammer.
I have a suggestion. Since the
.You can register your protest
government places sUch high value with Citizens Against Waste, P.O.
on these Items, maybe taxpayers Box 1!Xk), Ben Franklin Station,
should pay tbelr taxes with three- Washington, D. C. :m44~ The names
cent screws and nine-cent batteries. will he presented next January to
Of course. I doubt the Internal
the new leaders In the White House
Revenue Service would give tax· and on Capitol HID.

Ohio independents
bec~ming force to
be reckoned.with Election refonn._________L.;.._ow_e_ll_W_in..:;;_ge_tt
'

•

Ohio's independent voters, just like Independent voters across the
country, are becoming a greater force to be reckoned with, an Ohio State
University political scientist says.
Particularly among younger voters, political parties have lost much of
• their relevance, according to Professor Herbert Weisberg, who specializes
In American government and voting behavior.
"The change really occurred in the 60s and 7Us," Weisberg said. "The
Vietnam War got people disenchanted. Southerners got upset with the
Democratic Party because of civil rights. Watergate turned off a lot of
voters."
Consequently, politicians can ~no longer rely on the saUd base of
organized support they once enjoyed. And not even those voters who call
themselves Democrats or Republicans can be counted on to consistently
· support their party's nominees, he said.
The most recent figures show 39 percent of voters consider themselves
Democrats, down from 47 percent 30 years ago. Only 21 percent call
themselves RepubUcans, down 6 percent in the last three decades. Yet
independents now account for Tl percent of voters, up from the 22 percent
of the 195Gs.
,.
Far from being Indecisive or poUtically unaware, these Independents
tend to outvote their partisan counterparts, Weisberg said. 1n the last
presidential election, 71 percent of Independents cast ballots, oompared to
just 69 percent of voters allgned with one of the major parties.
"People who say they're Independent often are better educated, and
. education Is often a strong predictor of turnout," Welsbe\-g said. "People
with a college education often tend to ll!llndependent, and they do vote In
large numbers."
·
He says what this all means for the upcoming election Is this: The
Republicans shouldn't start sending out Inaugural invitations yet.
"The electorate is quite volatile," Weisberg said. "It's changeable,
sensitive to news occurrences."
Weisberg concedes chances of a victory look slim for Democratic
challenger Walter Mondale, but said that since fewer voters have solid ttes
to either party, many of them can still be swayed. ·
Weisberg- said SUnday's debate In Loulsvllie and one upcoming In
, · KanSas City are crucial.
·
"What the candidates are saying on the campaign tt:aU matters
relatively Uttle, except for the debate part,'' he said. "Mondale must
generate some excitement, sane charisma. He:s not really projec~ a
good television ttnage yet. He must come anve. become personable.
Stme RepubUcans are predicting not only a JandsUde vllctory for their
candidate. but a major reaUgnment of party-loyalties, such as OCCIUTed In
the 1930s. when Franldln Roosevelt put together a coalition ot!bithemers,
itberals, labor and minorities to control the White House for :ll years,
Weisberg ciDUbts that wW happen.
.
''What It takes Is people not just voting for Reagan, but voting
Republlcall all the way dawn the ticket,' he said. "AU the Jl?lls certalnly .
augpst CWii 1 wW stay DetiiOCiat. It loOks like II were getting a
ReaiJllll Jandsllde, It wW be largely a personallandsllde against Mondale."

In less than a month we will hold very few of our past 39 presidents
another presidential election. It wUI would q!Iallfy for election today. If
defi~ely prove the need for
President Abraham Uncoln was
eiectfbn law reforms which are long alive, he would never even make It
overdue, reforms which our law· to the Illinois legislature. He was
makers and politicians never seem homely, ung;dnly and awkward. He
to get around to making. In this had a squeaky voice. He was
computertzed and televised age, we everything !hat modern-day pres!·
are stU! electing our national dential timber Is not. The Madison
lawmakers by horse and buggy Av~nue ad boys would have taken
rules.
· one look and turned thumbs down.
For the last several presidential Yet, Lincoln Is universally acknowl·
elections, the television. industry edged as one of our greatest
has had a stranglehold on our presidents. I can remember In 19:al
electoral process. For 24· hours a when the United States elected
day we are bOmbarded with Warren G. Harding of Marion,
election propaganda with a steady Ohio, as president. . He filled the
flow of polls, opinions and prophes· romantic Ideal of what a president
les cunningly contrived to make a should look Uke. He was strikingly
weak candidate appear strong or a handsome and made a favorable
strong candidate weak. We no public appearance and wa5 elected
longer elect our . presidents or by a landslide over his opponent,
leglslatoFS as tbe framers of our James Cox, Dayton, OHio, a former
constitution Intended. Television Ohio governor. Under his urbane
does! The legal machinery that facade, he served two years of the
directs the course our country most corrupt · administration ln.
follows has become so complex and history before he died In office in
confusing the average voter can no 1923 whUe returning from a trip· to
longer ,uxterstand lt. Instead of Alaska. Harding was our first
print media which we can study at "pretty boy" president, elected on
our leisure, the average voter Is appearance rather tllan character.
cbntent to follow the Impressions It was not untU his death that the
formed by the carefuUy staged Teapot Dome scandal and other
performances on the evenjng news corrupt practices became known.
or television advertising. By the Since his wife refused to permit an
time election day roDs around; the autopsy, It was widely tumored
voters are so tired of the constant that he had been poisoned.
battle for their "X" on the ballot
After the Harding debacle In
.!hat they no longer give a damn. All which the seeds of the Great
they want Is to get back to their
Deptesslon were sown, Americans
favorite soap opera or sports eyent. for 60 years were leery of acceptln&amp;
A candldate.'s stand on the ISsues
shadow for subltance until 1960
which has blstorlcaUy bieen a part of when Ronald Reagan came along.
presidential eJectlons 'is no longer By that Ume television was caillng
Important. What Is Important Is a the"polltloal shots 811d the photopleasing pei'IIOnallty, a plausible gerilc actor wu.elected by an even
way of speaking and good lookl. If Jaraer landslide than Harclln&amp;.
you wJU thumb through your According to the poUs, he may
history books, you wW find that repeat the perfonnance this year

,

but not by a landslide. The public Is
again becoming leery of "pretty
boys" but they are stiU susceptible
to the siren voices of the Madison
Avenue ad men. Truth In advertls·
lng should be made to apply to
political advertising just as lt does
In advertising commodities.
I doubt If there Is ever an
administration In Washington with
guts enough to propose and pass
election reforms or to curb the
power of television. Three sunbelt

states, Florida, Texas and Callfor·
nla, have one-third of the electoral
votes In the United States. No doubt,
the Electoral College seiVed Its
purpose when it took weeks to get
election results to Washington but It
became superfluous when Samuel
Morse Invented the telegraph over
a hundred years ago. The entire
antiquated election system needs
reforming.
The sooner the better!

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Sparky's Tigers post ..
·3-2 World Series win

.

::one

WASHINGTON - Sen. Gordon the college's fund-raising effort.
Humphrey, R·N.H., is a strict According to a 1983 journal article,
conservative with strong "pro- she "took on a superhuman task,
famlly" views. He once assailed the starting from scratch, organizing
wife of Atlanta Mayor Andrew the campaign, appointing regional
Young because of what he called chairmen, Instructing them, and
her "campaign todlstrtbutecontra· arranging for workers under these
ceptlves to minors."
chairmen."
.
A politician who attacks other
What makes this fascinating is
men's wives runs the risk of having that "orgonomy" Is a school of
to defend his own; thlsls thestoryof psychology that would curl the hair
Patrtcia Humphrey.
of·your average pro-family conser·
She is a member of the American vatlve. It makes providing contra·
College of Orgonomy, has attended ceptives to teenagers look !Ike
at least one International ogonomy Victorian repression at Its most
conference and has written articles bluenosed.
for the American Journal of
The basic tenet of orgonomy Is
Orgonomy.
that orgasms are essential to a
1n 1982, she was chairwoman of healthy psyche - In chUdren as

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel ·
~=- Middleport. Ohio
Wednuliay, October 10, 1984

..... '

SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Detroit
Diego.
Morris, wbopltchedano-hltteron
Tigers won a battleofbasebaU'sold
and new Tuesday night, using 11.. Aprll 7 and ended the season with a
two-tun homer from Larry Herndon 19-llrecord, waslessthanspectacuand clutch pitching from Jack lar IN! struck out ·three straight
MorrtstobeattheSanDiegoPadres batters after giving up consecutive
3·21n thefli'stgameofthe1984World singles to start the sixth Inning.
Series.
The tense game that went beyond
He escaped trouble In the seventh
three hours was marked by ques- Inning with the help of Padre
tionable base running and manage- base-running blunders. KurtBevac·
rial decisions by the Padres, who · qua led off with a drive Into the
were playing In the World Series tor rtght"field comer, but was thrown
the first time In thelr1S.yearhlstory. out on a rela"y from outfielder Klrk
The Tigers, Who appeared In t!leir Gibson and seci&gt;nd baseman Lou·
first World Sertes In 1007, trailed 2·1
9Whltaker as he trtect to stretch a
when Herndon hit a two-run homer double into a trtple. With two out,
In the fifth inning off Mark Tony Gwynn singled, but was
Thurmond. The Padres'left·hander thrown out trying to steal second by
had struggled all night, while catcher Lance Parrish on a
relievers Dave Dravecky and Andy pltchout.
Hawkins looked on, ready to work.
Thurmond threw 117 pitches in
flvelnnlngsbefore belngrellevedby
Hawkins, who pitched 2 2-31nnlngs
of one-hit, shutout relief, and
Dravecky who went the rest of the
way without giVing up a hit.
STATION
The heavily favored Tigers had
put the Padres ili'a very famUiar
position. Sari Diego trailed In every
game and lost the first two before
winning three in a row at hOme
ALL FRUTH PHARMACIES
against Chica'go to capture the
THE ALCOVE-GALLIPOLIS
National League pennant, while the
Tigers had swept Kansas City In
FIRE STARTER
three to win the American League
VIVALDI
. pennant.
THE FOUR SEASONS
Game Two of the Series was
"Annlr~mrg Spre/1/"
scheduled for San Diego on Wednes·
MOVIE
RENTALS....$2.50 A Day
day night with Detroit's Dan Petry
going against Ed Whitson of San

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

NO TRIPLE TIUS TIME - San Diego Padres'
Kurt Bavacqua reaclles In vain for third base after

being tagged O\lt by Detroit Tigers' third baseman
Marty Cast!Uo (right) as umpire RlchG.....,Iaeyesthe
action In the seventh inning of Tuesday night's World

Series ojlener In San Diego. Bavacqua tried to strelch
a double Into a triple ~ut was caught on a throw from
Detroit right fielder Kirk Gibstln to second baseman
Lou Whitaker to Cast!Uo. Detroit won the game, 3-2• .
( AP Laserphoto).

Morris in trouble most of the way

BAOOAIN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS $2.00
EVERY TUESDAY $2.00

STARTS FRIDAY

NINJA Ill
SONGWRITER

0

1\KK~OllT.·JO B lTHWJLU AM S

[!!l.

j l DDH IRSLH ·RALPH IAAU•.JliU

lH WE EK~ 7, 11 &amp; 9, 15 P.M.
SAT &amp; SUN MAT! NEE 1'
&amp; 3,

~\~\~~~~~o.t

RENT MOVIES AT
THE MOVIE PLACES

overswlng a tittle bit. I reaUywasn't
DIEGO (AP) -Like a man bunting. I got him with a fastbaU."
myself.''
Strike
three.
·
walking ever so gingerly through a
Strtke three.
Rookie Carmelo Martinez was
minefield, Detroit pitcher Jack
Then CaJ'!le Garry Templeton.
Morris tip-toed his way out of one next.
·;;I think I was a little too anxious," "After I got the first twostrjkeouts,"
crtsis a!ter another.
theyoungPadre said. "After Bobby Morris said, "Ijustboredownfor the
And, when he was done with this
difficult stroll, he had survived the came out, I went up there tryiitg to third.''
Strtke three.
San Diego Padres and, more
mnportantly, wontheopenlnggruhe r---------------------------------------------------------------------L---------------------~---------------------­
of the 1984 World Sertes.
It was not pretty, but neatness
C 1984 R _.l _ RE.YNOLOS TOBACCO CO
doesn' t count. Winning does. And.
Morris wins.
Sparky Anderson knows that,
wl)ich may explain why Captain
Hook was a dash more patient with
his ace right-hander than he mlght
ordinarUy have ~n. The Detroit
bullpen stayed warm all night as
Morris did his death-defying act,
and Anderson admitted that there
were moments when he came
perUously close to llftlng Morris.
The Tiger starter had been
strafed for three hits and two runs In
the first inning. He had escaped a
two-on, none-out jam In the third
only through the grace of ·a double
play turned by second baseman Lou
Whitaker, who had the good fortune
to be moving in thertghtdlrectlonon
a hit-and-run play.
Then there was the San Diego
sixth Inning when Graig Nettles and
Terry Kennedyopene(l withsingles.
1n the Detroit dugout, Anderson was
marching from one end to the other
.like. weu. a restless Tiger.
"I move quick,' ' Anderson said of
his weU-known affinity for reaching
Into the talented Tiger bullpen. "I
was getting i:eady to do it."
The stadium was rocking, and on
themoundMorrlswashavlngalittle
problem with the notse.
"It got so lout!, it was llkesUence."
: .'
he said. "You couldn't hear a thing.
' :;
It was so loud. you could block
:. ' ! .'
everything out."
The pitcher, unable to hear the
' ..
.'
defensive plan, had to walk over to
.. ' ' .
':
third baseman Marty Castillo to
i' ...
.
work out the strategy. That turned
\ ' ·, ,'! ·. · '.
out to be the pause that refreshed
SAN

New.

. i

Filter.

• '

New

him.

''I knew Bobby Brown would be

•

0

Rich Taste.
FILTER LIGHTs

Also available in ·

Berry's World

'

,I

I

Filter 1005 &amp; MenthoiiOOS.

BOSToN BoUND ?? - John .
· McNamara, who told the Cllllfomla Angels he wBI not return
as Jlltlllll&amp;tll' next season, Is a
candidate, perhapS tbe leadln&amp;
candidate, to lll8llllge the Bollton
Red Sox. Haywood SuDlvan,
CCHJWJit!l' ol the Red Sox,
·confirmed Tuesday that
McNiliiUII'&amp;o SZ, Is being lllll&amp;dered to I!I1CCeed Ralph Houk as
manager or the American
Leape club, 'l1le Bollton Herald
aDd 'l1le Bollton Globe reponed
~. Both Bollton neWspaper&amp;
pl"ilddded that barring a Jaat.
mlnut.e I!IJI1H'IIe or unknown .
·complication, McNamara
would

become .Bollm's next
Jll8DIIIll'· Rauk l't\dn!d lrcm the
Red 8oK II&amp; lite ead of the
~regular-

Try it for the price You11 smoke it for thefla\lor•.
\

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
\

14 mg "lar ", 09 mg niCOIIne av pe1 c1gare1re by FTCmelhOO
I

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'
i=p~ir=a~t~e:.::s.:.:...:,~B:;o=-b;-c-a7ts-,--:Ww,.I;j.l~d1c-a-=-ts. :.:.:..:.:.:.:.~r,K~at~iJ.T.:kat~iJ!F=::::;=====:==;M•;=;Jor~Hoop~le;=·s==i :
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'
S
Texas picked 'over Sooners;
;
am.p bell
on ~oad against . vAC foes
Bucks wlll outlast Illinois
'.
HunIey
....,...

. Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Meet the Tornadoes
• ..__! ....... ...._

f!:cld,

lrloolla, . _ _ 1111~ ll'a
otata lair Ume opili Ill Ttua. ADd
lloat- t i l e - .............

1M

of_....

Add 1o Ilia! tho ·brlllluoo
Fnd Akin of Teut and Barry

Switzer of Otlahoma.

fJET
SET
FOR
WINTER/
MOBILE HOME ALUM-INUM FIBERED

$2295
COATING ·

ROOF SGALLON
Black FU.encl

ROOf COATING •••••••••
S. GlllON

GALVANIZED MOBILE lOME 28"x60"

UNDERPINNING ••••••····
.

.

S980

3

$ 60
PIISMn
.

.HOGG &amp; ZUSP.AN

TERIALS
CO.,
I'
N
C.
PG. J7J.JJS•
. ·
MASON, W.VA.

·

lbiclaoaay better pmM
1loan llill - · Teut lada the aoriea
17·21--J, aDd baa woa fc.r of the 1ut
live ..,.... Alter ehorOIII( the Hoople Compiiler, we predict IIDIIIber
TeiW lrlampb, 28-14. Rarorumpb!
After • two-weeto layoff the potent
llcooton Collep !tapa return 1o
acuca aplaat the aurprillnlly IIIJOiil
Temple O..la . .DC'a Douc Fluile, a
Hellman-lypo - · IIi bolped by
runner Troy Stradford, IJid receivers
Gerard Phelan and Scott ·GI-lman. ,
Make it BC over Temple, 311·11. Hak.kall!
.
After pttiq off 1o a faltering 0-1
start and loolni Do Jackaon by IDJurlea lor the ....... tloe Auburn Tip
are now back at their "bbbone belt.
In a mild upaet we look 101' Auburn lo
mprlloe
Florida Stale
In a wlld IJid wooly lffolr,ll-14.
II the Comhakon are lo win tbe
Bl&amp; E!pl C~WD aJI(n. t1oey bove 1o
beatMislourl. But the 'f'l&amp;erlwoo'l be
puolooven. II Nolorub'a !·bock Jeff
Smllh cao operate at lop speed, we
look for Nebrub to win a wild one,
3f&gt;.28. II Srnitli can:~ look &lt;Mil ·BIB
YCN .WODt

,,__linl

Red!

Tlie Geor(!la Bullilop keep drlvlnB

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llpn ot WI liMa to tl!dJd 1111 11111-

_ , "'lloiiM. v~
Bolli of it.e '14 leaml INIOidfd
wit.b put taleat - lor Okht 11'111.
QB ~ Bradley, RB 8Ioft! 11n11
and WR......,. ) b , _ lor Telu, •
QB Toc!d Dadae, OW»i- Bill Boy .·
Bryaat and Wllllun Rarrll, · iuocr
delelillve alandout TCIIIJ Jlecrata.
eot~oa

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Ooorpo ratea tile
Ho;tlt,~~·J!. lor RB lteltll

ltJr!p -

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clualc: foiotlllll rlnlr7 ill the OMrby

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willo
1M1 tJ..Il.
put
tnl'blll .,. ttu.oll.
will
lllaJ ..,...,. Ia Ita clrl"' 1D 1M WAC
tiiNM Willi a Ji-lT Will over
WJOIIIIDI, ADd NOinllual, altar two

atralaltt "-'to ... Air ,._, wiD
elp U.. rate.., 11·11. Allo: WUII·
laaiCIII 2..21. tllul~ !Iouth

CarollDa 14-11-llnlaoi,
1111U wW w1a tile IWC ' lleadJIDef

, wltlla . .uc:o '
1 aiBaylor.'
' ADd Ill • ...,., ...,. 10011 "'
the Elal. for Ratcen 10 out1ut
anlmJIIOYiq Army 10om, 17·14. Rar·
rumn~

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Now110 on wltb mrloreout:
~.oet.ll

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-..i Colop II Tornillo If

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BYU II

-lllpa .l l

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Ji1odcla 15 Te1
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L8V·V· 1 :lrllt1'7
.
MuJillld r1 NOitll ~.- n
Me~ stiR 11 ScM II e c:af Lcw+f•u lG
Miami (florida, ~ ............ 14
MlclllpaiiN--11
Navy llLeblch 7
N..,.._S-.rlll
N, Maloo S Ceki: ... 8lMe %1
Norill Carolina Ill Wake FCil'l!llltl

Sale disagreeme~t
will be resolved ·

CLEVELAND (AP) -Disagree- whether the consent of the remainment over the proposed sale of the
Ing three partners Is needed. Quick
Cleveland Indians to New York said .
attorney David LeFevre should be
"We're confident that the court Is
resolved by mld·November, an going to rule that ~imous
attorney says.
consent is not required under Ohio
Ali but three . of the American law," said Qulck. "Ohio law Is not
League team's 54 llrnlted partners sufficiently clear .on whether all
have agreed to LeFevre's proposal llmlted partners must consent."
to buy the Indians' assets for $31.5
Quick said another trial date of
mllllon and assume $8 mlllion In Nov: 13 has been set, but he expects
llabUities, said attorney Harry the matter of the sale to be resolved
Quick , who Is representing byJhen. '
LeFevre.
The suit med In Cuyahoga County
1be purchase by LeFevre would Common PleaS Court In .June
· settle a lawsuit flied by Walter Latch blocked LeFevre's purchase . of
and three other minority stock- · controlllng Interest In the team from
holders over the sale, said Lalch's the estate of F.J. "Steve" O'Neill,
attorney, Armond Amson. The suit who died In August 19&amp;1 .
had been set for tt1al Tuesday, but
attorneys asked for a delay. ·
"We're hoping there is (a settlement)," said Arnson.
Lalch and the three other stockholders Involved In the suit have
agreed to the revised proposal but
tlu'ee otbers'have not.
"All the parties are anxioUs to go
forward with the deal we have
made," said Quick. "Unfortunately,
the three llrnlted partners who have
not given consent have caused us all
CALL 99~-3381
to look at the transaction.''
992-2342
The parties plan to ask Judge
Stephanie Tubbs Jones to rule

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Cleveland
Browns· Coach Sam Rutigliano has
been slow to admit that his National
Football League team's running
game has disappeared.
The calf lnjucy that kept fullback
Mike PruittoutofSunday's17·16loss
to the New England Patriots,
however, has forced Rutigliano to
face the issue.
Heath Hill
Sean Grueser
" A guy like Mike Pruitt could
[).8, 147 pound
5-9,
193
JIOtliKI
have.madetherunnlnggame, which
Junior tackle
Junior
quarterback
was inept after the first quarter, a
little better," Rutigliano said.
But even includi{lg Pruitt's statis·
tics this year, the Browns have
compiled an average of only 2.7
yards per rushing play.
.
"It's obvious there's something
wrong, because we're not vecy
productive," the coach said.
The Browns have been a pass·
oriented team ever since Rutigliano
arrived in 1978. Pruitt, though, has
maintained the running attack,
putting together four l,OO).yard
seasons since 1979.
Play selection has probably hurt
the running game at times. In the
first half Sunday, for instance, the
Browns had 13 plays on first down,
and Boyce Green, Pruitt 's replace· ·
ment, ran the ball12 of those times.
Green finished with 33 yards on 19
carries.
Jeff Como~
Rutigliano, however, points to the
ScoUKJser
5-10. 153 pound
[).7, 125 pound
Injuries that have hit his offensive
Junior back
line as the most important factor.
Sophomore end
The critical injury, he says, was
the knee problem that has kept young tackle on the right side (Paul
"Last year, wnen we had a vecy
veteran right tackle Cody Rlsien out
Farren, a 12th-round draft choice in good running game and Mike Pruitt
of actl.on since the last week of the 1983) playlnghlsthirdgame,andwe was a 1,00yard rusher, we had
pre-season. Rutlgilano has often
don't have healthy Doug Dleken, basically an ·all·pro tackle on one ·
said Rlslen was good enough to play
and we've changed three people in side and we had a guy like Dleken
In the Pro Bowl, although Risien was
six weeks atones pot (left tackle)- · who was a lot healthier and played a
never .chosen for that game.
Doug Dleken, Bill Contz, and J'ed lot more, who was a Pfo.Bowler1on
. the other side.
"Whatyou'reseelngright now is a Petersen," Rutigliano said.

a

IoWaN VI.ilaalo,'a -llllC IItle Ia II JOill • 1MJ
- 1 M W I \114 ReMia. 1111

BylllaJor-8. .......

I

-

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,,,,.._

NorthGallla, thedefendlngSVAC contest, theTornadoes' Greg Nease our chances to win but didn't get the
champ, will attempt to keep Its was injured and another running
job done," James lamented.
winning streak going Friday night back, CharUe Boso was ejected.'
Chris Hampton is a doubtful
against the Southern Tornadoes
Kyger Creek goes into Friday's ~t a rter for the Highlanders this
whlle Kyger Creek and Eastern, the contest against Southwestern was
Friday nlght.
other two loop winners last Friday much respect for the 2·4
lfi'-Easlem
try to keep pace.
Highlanders.
Hannan Trac;e. a 33-0 loser, will
North Gallla, 6-0 overall, was
Mel Coen, first year coach a t Icy to get back on the winning track
ranked 18th In this week's Asso- Kyge r Creek, expects a good ball against the 3-3 Eagles. Coach Brett
ciated Press Poll and· second In game. "They are basically a Wllson'sWUdcatsstartedtheseasori
Region 19 In last week's computer running team, but . capable of with two straight wins, but have a tie
ratings.
passing. SoUthwestern has played and two losses and their last three
Kyger Creek, 4·2 overall. dumped well e nough to win most of Its game. outings.
.
Southern, ~ last Ftiday while I have a lot of respect for the
North Gallla and Hannan Trace
Eastern stopped Southwestern, 12.0. Highlanders and their coach Jack battled to a 0.0 tie going into the
ThePiratesranoverHannanTrace, James," .
second period last week but the
33-0.
Concerning his own Bobcats, Pirates broke the scoring ice with
Pirate mentor Dave Angles ·said Coen said KC has to cut down on its two.touchdowns for a 13.() lead at the
his team played good football last
pena lties. "We are coming along half.
week and put It all together for the offensively," he said. Scott Con·
Hannan Traee' s offense was held
first time since the opening games nelly, a sophomore · lineman, is to just 54 total yards.
againstBatavlaandSoutheasternof expected to return to action followQuarterback Royce Bissell threw
Ross County.
ing an injucy suffered two weeks ago ·for one touchdown and rushed for
. Mark Foreman led the offense against Portsmouth Notre Dame.
another In pacing the Eagles to their
with 212 yards rushing. Defensively,
In last Friday's contest against 12.0 win over Southwestern. 13i.ssel
the Pirates' 5-2 alignment, was led Southern, Barry Matthews, 5-7, 140 hit Kevin Morris on a 23 yard TD
by linebackers Joe Morre and Bill pouhd senior, caught tlu'ee touch- pass in the first quarter then teed the
Hawks. In addition, Bill Harden had down passes and grabbed three victory with a seven yard run in the
another fine game as did the eritire . interceptions. Other Bobcats enjoy· fourth stanza.
NG defense. Angles feels the team·s ing a fine outing were Frank
SVAC STANDINGS
1\LLG-'MES
second ranking In the computer Swanson, Larcy Edge and Tom TeiUll
W L T P OP
ratings may be helping, not hinder· Waugh.
North Gallla ...................... 6 0 0 138 22
. .. . .4 2 0 113 68
ing the Pirates.
Concerning KC, Highlander Kyger Creek ....
Eastern .... .. , ..... ...... .......... 3 3 o 122 144
Coach Angles says the team's coach Jack James said, "They Hanna.11'race ................... 2 2 1 91 83
Southwestern ..... .... ...... ..... 2 4 0 110 93
opponent this Friday, Southern is a scare me to death. KC uses a
.. ...... .......... } 5 0 flJ 105
big club that has suffered from balanced attack and CoachCoen has Southern ... .... ..SVAC
ONLY
injucy problems.
done a fantastic job considering the Team
WLTPOP
KC.SW
loss of all·league performer Steve NorthGallla ..... ....... : ......... l o 0 31 0
Creek ...................... ! 0 0 29 6
Last week against Kyger Creek, Waugh,". In last Friday's loss to Kyger
Eastern .... ......... ............ ... l o· 0 12 0
the Tornadoes were held to a second Eastern. the Highlanders were Southwestern .................. ... 0 1 0 0 12
quarter touchdown which came just forced to adjust to the Eagles' Southern .. ·........ . .......... ...... 0 1 0 6 29
Hannan Trace ..... .............. () 1 0 0 33
as the half ended. Thepassreceptlon defensive chan~. ''Those changes
Frtday's lames:
Kyger Creek at Southwestern; NorthGallla
by Dan Wolfe was deflected by two were hard to adjust too, but, we had
at Southern and HaiUlan Trace at Eastern.
BObcat defenders. During the

Browns'
•
runnmg
attack
• •
missing

Wednesday, October 10. 1984._..

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

..------------1

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

!N-~Pame!!l!ln2.~~..,11!111"".- ·

The Daily Sentinei-Pegill

By The Alisocbded P.-New Orleans Saints Coach Bum
PhiUips hasbeenreunitedwithEarl
Campbell, the ruhning back he
·
unlea~hed on the National Football
League
In 1978, and linebacker Brad
'
Van P elt has fulfUled his wish to
move to the West Coast.
In the most notable transactions
on a busy closing day in the league's
trading period Tuesday, the Hous·
ton OUers $ent Campbell to the
Saints In exchange for a first ·round ·
' - - - - - - - - - - - - d r a f t choice in 1985, while the

traded

"We wantedtosomehowaccomodate a guuy who 'wasn 't totally
excited about being here," said
Minnesota Coach Les Sieckel. "I'm
happy for Brad Van Pelt. He's given
a lot to the NFL, be's playedllyears
and felt they really dumped on
him."
"That's what I was looking for,"
said VanPelt, " ... andtogotoateam
of the Raiders' callber Is just, well,
the op1y thing that could have been
better Is It it happened 12 weeks

¥!Meseta Vikings, unable to sign gals traded the rights to unsigned
Van Pelt after a 12·w~ lmpaS8j!, first-round drafi pick Ricky Hunley
~t I1Jm to ' the Super Bowl
to the Denver BroncOs for a
champion Los Angeles Raiders.The first·rounddrafi choice in 1986.
Vikings will get a sixth·round choice
As far as Van Pelt was concerned,
In 1985 and a second· round selection what was good for him was any
in1986.
team inF1oridaorCallfornla so that
Campbell, who gained 8,296 in his he could pursue busines s
first six years, managed only 2781n • opportunities.
six games- all losses- this year.
Van Pelt, who played 11 years
Under Phlllips, Campbell led the with the New York Giants and was a
NFL In rushing in 1!JI8.!lland topped fl~tlme Pro Bowl choice, held out
the AFC again in 1981.
for l2 weeks rather than sign with ·
Meanwhile, the Cincinnati !'len· the VIkings.

ago."

6

VanPelt's holdout was expensive,

costing I1Jm about SlOO,!ro .In fines
and missed paydays from his
$240,!XXI annual salary.
· Among other transactions
Tuesday:
-The Pittsburgh Steelers acqulred ·offensive tackle Steve Au·
gust from the Seattle Seahawks In
exchange for an undisclosed draft
choice.
-The Raiders sent reserve center.
Jim Romano to the Oilers for
undisclosed draft choiceS.

Nuaillam- I l l - MlciiiP!' I
()lllo-fl-11
.
~- 17 Col1lonU 14
Pe-,ivoala 1 7 - 10
Pa.8lalo111Aiabunal7
Pabt:czt• M Ollam'* 1
Roqenl7 Am11 H
Sulllop !llalel7 Vlah 15
se rtt mCal tl 0rqoD 13
SoolloC--111'*11
8MV IIIIIQ!or Ill

Teua1101dohot\lal4
Teua A4M ~~-If
Tt'V 41 Bloe 17
, . . _ II Miami (Ill*&gt;, It
Tulue. lllltherD ......ppl 31
UClA M Writ! :P- 8&amp;ale '7
V1rJ1n1a Todl If Puke 7

••

W..._...lllllanlonlll

w....... ~. a~tl4
w... VirJinla 14 8 - 18

WilcoDIIn t1' Mbl.-ot• • .
· FrtdQ'o Ano llllb sC(!oOI
Gall,... II IUpley 14

........ ,_.ill
._,IIJoW!eniiB

!Ina' Creek 111_....., 6
Norill Glllla II Soulhoo'n 0
-TnceUEMienll%
Ill H......... HIP 21
Me1p a w..... l.DColl4
PcwtaaeiiOIIIb tl ~!
l'wloio...Uo Weal %1 Waverly 6
F....,....llocld"' o
Wheelenbu&amp; %8 Mlalord 12
o,_ IS s,nome. Valley 8
Polnllll&amp;ck Rll ·l%
RoekJDIIIFIII'IIIidl%
Coal Grwe 7 Cher'P"'ke 8
...,. tl Gn!enop ll

Pt..,_.,.
w.a.... •

FL G113' II WoiWna 12

•
The Dally Sentinel
(VSPS 14:1-960)
A Division of MulttmetUa, Inc.
Published every af1Prnoon . Monda y
through Friday, Ill Court St. , y rheo
Ohio Valley Publi shing Company / Mul limE'd la . Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, h.
992-2156. SPcond clas..o; postage paid at
Pomeroy. Ohio.

Member: Th(' Assoclat€'d Press . In land Da lly Pn•ss Association a nd thP
American Newspa)X'r Publishers Association, ·National Advertising Rf'prc sentatlve . Branham Newspaper Sal~ .
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eactpi•IPIC"Icdv noted in thill ad. -tf we do run
out of _,. ICIYtrtilld item, we win offer you your
choice of 1 compar_.. hem, when availeble,
•an...""'•
aavinga or • raincheck which wil
entll.. you to purch8M the edveniNd item ., the
adloter1111 d price wh:hin :1) diVI- Only one vendor
coupon wiH be accepted per iterfl purcheMd.

I»

the..,.

lVTIU. U'lllfACTID• GUAIIA.Tll
Everything you buy It Kroger is
guar~~ntMd for vour total 111isfection
rtg~rd.... of

manufiCturer . It you er11 not

ullfild, Kroger will replace your item
with the NrM brand or 1 comPJrable
brtnd or refund your purchete price .
COPYRIGHT1984· THE KROGER CO . ITEMS ANO
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, OCT . 7, THROUGH
SATUROAY, OCT. 13. 1984 . WE RESERVE THE

:~cOl~

CNC ' " " " ' " '

ftEG\SlER 10

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POSTMASTER: Send addrfSs changes
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s tAORE\

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No subscriptions by mall PE'rmitted In
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available-.
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If you havP S('1'VJCl' problPms call our
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•car

For All Motorists•••••FREE

&lt;8··Car
Maintenance
;(heck
·
An "under the hood" inspection - takes about
15 minutes - includes:
.
•batteries &amp; cables
*fluid levels
•belts &amp; hoses
•lights
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Engine
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. Given Awav
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S

,m•

Register To Win

.

NO APPOINTMENT N!CESSARY .
THE SERVICE WILL BE AT:

THE SILVER BRIDGE 'PLAZA SHOPPING MALL
OCTOBER 15-19, 1'914
9:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

$100 IN CASH!
Contest valid only at your Pomeroy, Belpre,
Marietta, Gallipolis &amp; Ironton Kroger
stores Register at any of the above stores.
Four dolls per store will be given away each
week plus one winner in each store each
week' of $100 . in cash. No purchase
necessary enter as often as you .hke. New
drawing ~very week throug~ October ~7,
1984. Just drop entry blank 1n the ~rawang
box at any participating store or mall to ad-:
dress above the entry blank .

.!'-

1985 FORD ESCORT

Kroger And
WJEH·am
WYPC-fm
Buckeye
Sweepstakes

1 Brand New 1985 Ford Escort could be
yours, Just fill out the entry blank and drop
it in the Drawing Box of your nearest
participating Kroger store or mail it to:

....-

'

SUPER BUCKEYE SWEEPSTAKES
THE KROGER C0.-2007 E. 7th . ST.
PARKERSBURG, W . VA . 26101

Or

8

INCLUDES CHECK OF

1 Winner' Will Receive A
1985 FORD ESCORT
Register At' Your Pomeroy,
Belpre, Marietta, Gallipolis
And Ironton Kroger Stores
Deadline To Enter Is
Saturday Night, Nov. 3rd.

Also Register To Win. A
CABBAGE PATCH KID

AND

,·

Wednesday, October 10, 1984

r•••••••••••••••••••••············~

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ENTRY BLANK

I

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NAME

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ADDRESS

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CITY

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PHONE NO:

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..

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
NEEO NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN KROGER EMPLO YEES &amp; THE IR
IMMEOIA TE FAMILIES NOT El iGIBLE
MUST BE 18 YEARS OR CLOER TO REGISTER

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�~·

Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 10, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport. OhiO

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 10, 1984

HOMEMAKERS: COM

Big Bend .$1 00 Winners
Gift Cfrtificate Drawing
MAliC nLUS '
TEIESA CAMP
MOSES NORMAN
RUIEN (OWNS
TillY COPPICIC
CHANDA MOON

••• HERE

16 oz.

aonLEs

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Family Medicine
'

Causes and exploration of earache problems
By Edward Schreclk, D.O.
millimeters In diameter.
that can cause pain. An Infection In
· Assistant Pro!eMOr
Congestion from a cold, swollen the canal leading to the outsi!Je of
F8llilly Medicine
adenoids or Infected tonsils . can the ear, a condition commonly
Ohio University College
easily obstruct the drainage from known as sWimmer's ear, shows up
of Osteopalhlc Medicine
the tube, causing swelling In the as red and swollen canal walls.
QUESTION: Our preschooler " middle ear and resulting In pain. As
Most middle ear Infections are
seems to get an earache with every the chlld grows, the eustachian the treated with antibiotics. Variations
cold. What causes earaches In
tube gets larger and slants downw- of penlclllln are effective In the
children?
ard, making Infections less likely.
majority of cases, but for resistant
ANSWER: The ·
QUESTION: What does our Infections, drugs containing sulfa
ear Is made of
doctor see when he looks at the ear? • may be needed.
three main secANSWER: An Instrument called
QUESTION: Why daes the doctions: the outer,
an otoscope aitows your doctor to .tor want io see my child every few ·
middle and Inner
easily view the walls of the canal months after she has had an
ear. In the rruddle lleading back to the eardrum and Infection?
ea r , tiny ear
the eardrum Itself. With a middle · ANSWER : Frequently after
bones convert
ear Infection, the eardrum may be treatment for an ear Infection, fluid
sound wav(!S to mechanical movebulging, red and possibly draining may continue to accumulate In the
ments that are translated to the
some yellowish pus. With recurring middle ear cavity for a few weeks .
liiQer ear, where the nerve for
ear Infections, the eardrum draws In about 10 percent of . cases ,
hearing originates. The middle ear
back and looks puckered. The however, fluid may remain In the
I~ conne~:ted to the back of the
eardrum will not move when air Is ear even ilfter,hree or four months .
thi'oat by the eustaclilan tube.
gently puffed against lt.
This Impedes the child's healing
During the first few years of life, the
The otoscope also helps your ~nd sometimes delays speech
epstachlan tube lles relatively tlat
doctor detect other ear problems development. The physician can do
and Is very narrow, just a couple

of

some simple nearing tests to
evaluate the extent of the hearing
loss.
1 In addition to examining your
child's ears, your physician also
will check her throat. Often adenoid
tissue which surrounds the opening
of the eustachlim tube In the back of
the throat becomes enlarged and
blocks the drainage of the tub6.
Sometimes this swelling Is caused
by allergies and can be resolved by
allergy therapy . Other times the
adenoids may need to be removed
surgically.
QUESTION: Why are tubes
sometimes put In a chlld's ears?
ANSWER: If fluid remains In the
middle ear for several monthS,
your physician may decide to Insert
tubes In the child's eardrums.
These little plastic tubes allow fluid
to drain to the outside, clearing the
middle ear cavity. Small tubes ·
usually are expelled from the
eardrum within a year. When they

drop out, the opening In the
ea rdrum simply heals over .
U your child's ea rache doesn'tgo
away In a day , you should seek
medical help. Delay In treatment
not only causes unnecessary pain
lor the child but can result In

permanent hearing loss.
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to Edward Schreck, D.O., Ohio,
University College of OsteoPathic:
Medicine. Grosvenor Hall , Athens,.
Ohio 45701 .

r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;··

..,..
'

•.

...·,

Meigs garden clubs conduct recent meetings
COOK1'4G

ONifJNS

49(

MEDIUM

SWEET
ONIONS
FOR
.
4 LBS.$1

PORK

NECK
BONES

59(

FOODLAND GlADE A .

Idaho
Potatoes
'

lEAN

PORI

ORANGE

STEAKS

JUICE

GAL.

ll. .

$15

$1 .29 .

The artnual Christmas flower
show of the Meigs County Garden
Clubs Association was scheduled for
Dec. 1 and 2 at the Senior Citizens
Center at Mondaynlght'srneettngof
club representatives held at Trinity
Church.
Mrs , Wilson Carpenter, county
contact chalmian, presided at the ·
meeting which was also hlghllghted
by a vote to continue the civic
beautification project at the Carleton School, Syracuse.
Shelia Curtis Is chairman of the
show which will have as Its theme,
"A Christmas Storybook", using
titles of the various classes In the
artistic deslgli division.
Besides arllstlc designs In 15
classes for garden club members,
the general public, and junlors,
there are horticUlture classes for
junior exhibitors, potted plants,
such as Christmas cactus, African
. violets, tollage houseplants and
cacti, as well as berried branch and
evergreen specimens.
The show, according to the
· schedule distributed by Mrs. Curtis,
wU also include classes for door
decorations, wreaths and swags,
and wall hangings. There will also
be a class tor Christmas package
decorations using one or more
recycled Items either as a container

or decorations, using some plant
material, and contrlvl!!i tlowers.
Also Included wtU be a special
exhibits division by Cindy Ollveri,
Meigs COunty Agrtculture Service
agent, and a display . of home
decorations using natural materials. All of the garden club
members were Invited to take Items
for the display.
F1o1Yer show committees were
appointed at the meeting and
Include the Rutland Friendly
Garden Qub and the Mlddlepori
Garden Qub, staging; Chester
Garden Qub, entry, classification
and placement; Middleport Amateur Gardeners, class name cards;
Rutland Garden Club, entryway
theme decorations ; Fernwood
Garden Club, judges committee and
clerks; Star Garden Club, ribbons;
Wildwood GardenQubandWindlng
Trail Garden Qub, hostesses and
food sales; Bend 0' the River,
publicity; Shade Valley CouncU of
Floral Arts, photography; and
special exhibits, Melanie Stethem.
The show, always a highlight of
the oollday season, wU1 feature open
judging for the education of arrangers, on Dec. 1 at 1 p.m. and will
be open for viewing by the publlc on
the afternoons of both days.'Speclal

awards In artistic arrangements
will be best of show, reserve best of
show, and creativity; and In the
horllcuture diVIsion, a sweepstakes
awarddetermlnedbypolntsaccurn·
ulated on exhibits.

Carleton Beautification
Pat .Holter, chalnnan of the
county's civic beautification project
at the Carleton School In Syracuse,
reported that shrubbery has been
placed around the building and that
a variety of trees have been planted
In keeping with the architect's
original deSign. Total cost of . the
project was $600 with half of that
amount being provided by Meigs
County Garden Club members. It
wasnotedthatboththeRoseGarden
Club and the Reedsville Garden
Club who do not belong to the county
association, contributed to the
project.
Plans now call for the clubs to
continue the plantings. Spring
tlowerlng bulbs will be planted Iii
beds tliere yet ihls fall, It was
decided. The project will be rntered
In the state clvlc beautlflcatlon
program of the Ohio Association of
Gardrn Clubs.

.•.

llowerarrangtngcl~

beld at the D.
of A. hall in ~r. Allee
Thompson, Jane Thompson, and
Shella Curtis displayed the arrange.
ments which they had made In the
class taught by Mrs. Ralph A. Smitz,
Parkersburg, a master judge In the
National Council and a graduate of
the Ikebana School of Japanese
Flower Arranging.
It was decided that the county
association will offer another class
Oct. 22, 10 a.m to 3 p.m . at the same
location. Those Interested In reglsterlngfortheclasswhlchwlll cost$8
are to contact either Betty Dean,
985-3855, or Mrs. CaJllellter.

Japanese ArTanglng Classes
A report was given on Saturday's

Envlronmmtal Program
Ron Ash of the Ohio Power Co.
presented a program on electricity
from coal and the environmental
Impact for the garden club
members. Introduced by Paullne
Atkins, Ash reported that Gavin Is

~ulrements

l·t·s Coming To

MASON FURNITURE
Friday!

MASON
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2nd Street

Mason, W . Va.

304} 773·5592·

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WIENERS •••••••••••••••••• r~~•...... S1.79
SUPERIOR
AST HAM
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LUNCH MEAT ••••••••••• i!••.•.... 51.9 3
BREAK~

30' OfF LAIU
Smooth-Crun&lt;hy JIF

BONElESS

CHICKEN

Peanut Butter

BREASTS

2801$219
FOOD LAND

$299

SMITHFIELD

BOILED HAM •••••••••••• i!•.•..... 51.99
HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••• i!o ••••••• 51.2 9

ofrom. left, Doris Mulll, Sheila
:Arnold, Lois Ebenbach with
WUiard Ebersbach, sealed
.S ince organizing four years ago
•the group has sung In several
states · and has made two
recordings. Much.of tbelr music
18' written by Mrs. Arnold. 'lbe,
group sfllgs three part hannony
and their accompaniment Is
plano, bass, guitar and 1'1\vtlm
guitar.

DAIR'f

PhODUCE '

I OZ. GOLDEN MAID ROll

MARGARINE .••••.'.~m . 2I S9&lt;
OHIO COllY

LONGHORN
CHEESE ............. ~.•; ..... s I. 93

3 18. RED

DELICIOUS
APPLES ................. ~~.q sI, 19

HtlUNDAIE

5 18. BAG flORIDA

MEDIUM

WHitE
GRAPEFRUIT ......... !~q 51.89

EGGS .................~~1........ 69 &lt;
2 LB. ORE-IDA &lt;KINKLE CUT

1&amp;..pz. LOAF

Meigs property transfers
Gale E. Osborne, Deborah K.
Osborne to Q,lurnbus and Southern
o nto Elect. Co., Right of Way,
Olive.
Hugh C. Rousey, deceased, to
Roland H. Rousey, Bonnie J .
Wilson, Barbara Sims, Rita (Dol·
l!ei Mees, Cert. of trans., Lebanon.
Donald L. Dailey to Jan Roach,
. 1.016 acres, Rutland.
Ralph Calvert, Pamela Calvert to
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co., Easement, Chester.
VIllage of Middleport to Columbus and Southern Ohio Elec. Co.,

Easement, Sallsbury.
John C. Bacon, Louise M. Bacon
to Harold Brinker, coal, oU, gas and
other minerals, Meigs.
Roger K. Stewart, Linda ·L.
Stewart to Harold D. Dmerson
Heighton IT, Ollta F. Heighton, Lots
304, Jlfi, Silllsbury.
Frank Krautter, Judy Krautter to
Keith M. Krautter, Ruth A. Kraut·
ter, Parcels, Pomeroy Village.
Anna M. ·Grue§er, deceased,
Herman A,. Grueser, Affidavit of
Death, Bedford.

FRENCH FRIES •••••••••• f~!i••••••. 51.3 9
I-LB. BOOTH OCEAN

PERCH FILLETS ••••••••• !~~•...... 51.9 7

For our Number 1
customers.
America's
Number I
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Shoe.

13 OZ. CANNED CARNATION

EVAPORATED MILK •••••••~~~~. 2/S1.19
6112 OZ. STARKIST

LIGHT TUNA •••••••••••• m-~••....•.••• 99 &lt;

16 OZ. BETTY CROCKER R.T.S.

Season after season, Nurse
Mates0 lead the fashi on
parade with fabul ous styling. And these shoes with
che little blue hearts also stand
for superb comfort;
quality and value . Only
problem is, which style
to choose. Since
they're all #I!

fROSTINGS •••••••••••••• ~~!-~••••••• 51.3 9
181/, OZ. DUNCAN HINES REGUlAR

CAKE MIXES ••••••••••••• !P.x••••••• S1.1 S
31 OZ. SHOWBOAT

PORK &amp; BEANS ••••••• mt .......... 69&lt;
19 OZ. CAMPBELl'S CHUNKY

VEG./BEEF SOUP ••••• ~~!-~••••••• S1 J S

BONNIE

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16 OZ. PEAK LARGE DRY

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.MateS·
HARTLEY SHOES, INC.
992 -5272

LIMA BEANS'•••••••••••• !~~•.......... 89&lt;
175 COUNT PUFFS

FACIAL TISSUE •••••••••!P.x••••• ~ ••••• 89c
:: OZ. TASTER'S CHOICE

Pomeroy

210 East Main St.

·-•.

~.

l·lB. KAHN'S PACKAGED ·

SUNRISE TO APPEAR

-.•.
•,
.,

mretlng EPA
and 1
explained
~procesSofwashlngthe
coal and theuseoffans to bring down
r&lt;;malnlng pollutants before the
smoke leaves the stack.
An autumn theme was used by
Ruby Diehl of the Star Garden Club
for devotions. Reireshments were
served by the Rutland Garden Club.

: "Sunrise," a Meigs Cowty
.,gospel group, wiD be singing at
. revival sen1ces at lbe Laurel
CUff Freewill Methodist Clalrch
Friday, Saturday and Sunday,
:Z: :II each evening. 'lbe group Is

.

'

INSTANT COFFEE ••••• !~~....... 56.3 9
29 OZ. GENERIC IRREGULAR PIECES

CLING PEACHES ••••••• S~!-1}•• 2/S .89

=
·'·
•••'

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Wedntadlly, Ootubtr 1

'

Page-S--The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 10, 1984 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Looking around
WEDNESDAY

Differing views on the teacher's classroom role
By Richard Roberts
Superintendent

and thiilk back :II yeats ago when
are different, therefore, she works we were In school.
Easte.m Local .Sch&lt;~~Jis
on with the child as a dedicated
. Are t here any changes that you
"Whenever two people meet, Individual · to see progress or can see over these years and do you
there are really six people present. success. that comes many years think the same amount of changes
There is each !llan as he sees later ..
will take place In the next 30?.
himself, each man as the other
We, as members of the communA child today faces a challenge of
person sees him, and each man as ity, must understand that our view entering a world where a high
he really Is," so said Wllllam James
of a teacher or educational system . school diploma wm not get him ·or
on the topic of "personality."
her a job, and the jobs they take wUI
may be different from those around
The same Is true of a teacher in us. We need to work toge(her to change five or siX times In a
the classroom and community. The . understand what objectives are lifetime. We need gOod basic
teacher views what she Is to do and most Important In .that teacher's
programs in our school systems
how she should do it; her Sl.Udents . rpind and work with her to
that will give thelll a strong
view her as a person to turn to for accomplish these objectives for the
background for these changes In
help; The students' parents view improvement to the knowledge of
their !tfe.
her as a person who controls the our children:
Many people are working toward
child's learning; the principal
We all have heard the expres· · these goals from a teacher In the
views her as the link between the sion: "Let's get back to the basics." · clas~room, the administration , tlie
materials and knowledge In order Gra nted, we need the basic educa- state superintendent of schools, and
to educate the child; the superin· tion in Math, English, Writing,
the state board of education. Much
tendent views her as the person who Spelllng and Science. But let's also study has gone Into these g'oals and
establishes the primary .educa- IOQk around us at our world today what chapges need to be made
tional obio"&lt;&gt;tivo&gt;s.
All of these views of the teacher

through the implementation of the
new state standards.
Ohio's new state standards put
our educational programs ahead of
many either state's In meeting the
future needs of the children In our
communities. rhese standards as
they are completed wUl give the
parents the knowledge that their
children are . bejng given a well·
rounded education for the future.
Inc!uded.ln the new standards are
some of the changes that have
taken place In Eastern dtstrlct this
year. The Inclusion of new e!emen·
tary principals will.he!p to lin prove
our elementary schools with more
time being spent on. curriculum
development, evaluation of programs, and testing to see what .ts
needed and how to improve on what
we have.
Also, Eastern High School now
requires .19 units of credit for

II

••

graduation Instead of 16 units
required a few years ago. The new
state standards require each school
to have 19 by 1987. State requires
three units of English - Eastern
requires four; state requires one
half unit of American History and
one half unit of American Govern~
ment - Eastern .requires one full •
untt of each. All other requirements
are the same as the new state
standards.
All of these add to the students'
basic knowiedge before graduation.
We bope In the future we will he able
to stay ahead ·of the state standards
and give our students ail even
better education than we had.
With the school year well under
way In the Eastern district we find

MIDDLEPOR'l' -

Middle-

port Amateur Gardener~ will
meet Wl!dnelclay at the heme ot
Mrs., Edgar Reynok,ls. ;.. "lltow
and tell" Program Will . be
featured along with the 11\st.alla·
lion of otricers for the new year.
Mrs. Erroll Conroy wlli be

this year's student population as
follows : Chester 165 students With
39 In kindergarten (two classes of
kindergarten); Riverview has 122
students; Tuppers .Plains had 149
with 40 students in kindergarten
(two klnqergarten classes); and .
Eastern High School has 438
students fora totalof953studentsas
compared to the 1983-84 School year
of 959 students.
· .
This Is -the first In ~ series of
articles that your newspaper has
granted us the privUege o!Wrtl!ng.
We want to express our thanks to
them for their help In establlshi!1g • ,.
this .series. We would hope that It
you have any questions about your
school system you wUl contact your
schools to seek out the answer.

POMEROY Pomero~'
Chapter trl, RAM, and Bosworth
Councu !16, R. and S.M. wW meet
at 7:.l l Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple,

TiiURSDAY

POMEROY - Preceptor ·.
Beta Beta Chapter; Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority, meeting thursday,
7: :Jl p.m. at Riverboat Room of
Diamond Savings and Loan.

ROCK SPRINGS - .The Rock

Team reunion held

grange hall.

The annual reurilon of the 1933 Mrs. Charles Hayman, Dick Beegle,
basketball team · ot ..Racine High Barberton; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck, .
School was ·held Sunday In the · Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Orion Roush,
k!J)dergarlen rooms of Southern Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sarient, Mr. and
High School. Amusing birthday gifts Mrs. Clarence Prlce, Mr. a,nd Mrs.
were presented to the coach of the Clifford Hlll, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
team, Charles W.liayman, Wester- Carpenter and Herschel Roush, all
·
ville, by Allen Salser, Nyack, N.Y. local.
Unable to attend this year's
Salser had driven 600 mlles to join
his former team maies .
reunion were Mr. and MrS. Clyde
Mrs . .Blanche Biggs, ·Custodian, Cross, Mr. and Mrs: Horner
gave the group a tour of the former Meredith, Mr. and Mrs. Selva
high school bulldlng whlch was the Spencer; Mr. and Mrs. William .
scene of many of the team's sports McKelvey, Mr. and MrS. John
achievement. They noted the condi- Hayman, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph .
tion and changes which had been Kerst.
Next year's meeting was schemade In the past fifty years.
A covered dish dinner was
duled for the first Sunday in October
enjoyed by . those mentioned and In the Racine area.

.RUTLAND - Rutland Lions
Club wiD meet Thursday, 7pin.,
at the civic center.· VIsitors are
welcome to attend.
·
RACINE -Racine American
Legion Aux'illary meeting,
Thursday, 7:00 p.m. at post

WITH
THIS AD '
PLUS up to $36 worth of custom features FREE!

Ask Meg

i~~IJ[I(;

Exercise compromise over cat ownership
having them spayed and giving the
rest (lots of luck ) away. It's the only
way to prevent a total cat~astrophe.
DEAR MEG - Whe n we mar·
ried, Ray and were both virgins .
While neither of us ever fooled
around on the other, we both agree
that I have become much more
adept sexually.
My problem is that now Ray
continually accuses me of Increasing my sexual prowess with other
"teachers." This is simply not true.
My proficiency is merely a result of

my loving my husband and enjoy~
ing the sexual act. I'm religious and
would never try to gain sexual
experience at his expense.
How do I convince Ray I'm just a
quick learner- not. an adulteress?
- NO HESTER PRYNNE, Lawrence, Mass.
DEAR NO - Ray may be
Influenced by an upbringing that
left him with the subconscious
message, "nice girls don't. " He's
Wrong, of course, but meanwhile
your healthy erotic appetite is

making him feel inadequate, therefore undesirable and jealous.
If you can't talk this out frankly,
an outside counselor should be able
to reassure Ray that you two can
learn better lovemaking together,
and help him overcome his
inhibitions.
Write to Meg care of this
newspaper. She will personally
answer only letters that contain
self-addressed, stamped envelopes.
Questions of general interest wU! be
discusSed In future cOlumns.

Enc!USitn(l

f1reburst

Sunlight
Des1gn
Pcisona t
·
UndP. r StonP. N~me

Full Name
Engravmg

..r
I

1.

·RtiTLAND "'"' Rutland l.ioils
7pm.,
at the civic center. VIsitors are
welcome·to attend.
~Grangewlllmeetat7:00

p.m., Thui'sday evening, at the

grange hall.

James Wagonseller, Lancaster,
past national commander, was
speaker at the recent Eighth
District American · Legion fail
coilference hosted bY FeeneyBennett Pclst 128, American Legion,
In Mlddleport;
· Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
welcomed legionnaires of the dis·
trlct and their gl!ests to the
cmununlty and Frank Vaughan,
Pmlemy, distrlct cllaplaln, pre. sided over the .Invocation and
. benediction. Jack Miller, eighth
· district first vice commander,
- presented awards. At noon a
. · luncheon was seiVed by the Ladies
. Auxll!ary of Feeney·Bennett Post.

PRESERVAnOH FUND FOR EVERY FLAG.ORDEREDI

Hospitalized
Becky Tyree remains a patient at
UniversitY Hospital, Columbus,
Rooin 990, for treatment of kidney
problems. Het · husband, Lanny
Tyree. ts staying at Orient with his
brother~in~Iaw and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Roush, while Velsia .
Roush, MrS. Tyree's · mother, Is
staying In Columbus with relatives.
·Mrs. Roush's stster,. r.rudred ·
· Meade, wW enter the hQspltal
:wedneSday tor diagnostic treat·
rpent on a heart all!nent.
·I

Fryers ... • • • • • • • • • • • 49¢
LB.

$109
••••
LB. ,

KAHN'S CRISPY SERVE

Bacon ........... :~·. 99¢

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO RUSSEl

59
Potatoes ..... ;o.~~. $}

GRADE A

Larg.e Eggs •••••• .69¢
DOZEN

KRAFT P.ARKAY

Margarine

JIOIIIICing the.birth of a son, SEpt. 9.
The Infant 1)8Jlled Bradley Michael
weighed 10poundsandll01111Ce!i.He
has a brother, Joey, and a sister,

Shannon.

.

Grandparelrt are Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Jaclls,l.angsvllle, and Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Kretz, Toledo.
Great·grandparents are MirJ Ra·
tlltf, Cheshire, and Katie Gordon,

FIMORD£R
FORM AND OfFER
DETAJI.S /IJ

PARTICIPATING
SlOR£5.

Columbus.

·

ot

Chester High
· School graduatJne class of l9.1i was
· held at the Chester Fire Station
A reunion

the

' f!!Celltly.
Attelldlng

were HaiTy Balley,
!build Olbcme, Walter ~
. Mildred Caldwell, Marie Hauck,

.\'lrll!lle Elbr!rteld, EvelynSeawldt,

,owen Damewood, Sa~Jtue~Mtchael,
Roy Christy, Gordon RldenOOJ', and
.' Wllm!ll. Plclu!fts.
. .

••••••••

Cake Mixes
STORCK SUNBEAM

59¢

18

oz.

•••

BANQUET

,Bread .• • • • • • • • 3/$}19 Pot Pies
20 OZ. KING SIZE ·.

• • • JL~

•

:Reunion held
,

(

LB.

BETTY CROCKER

Mr. and Mr5. Bruce Beach, 3613
Homewood St., Toldeo, are an-

GET 'lOUR FREE

BE SURE TO VOTE
NOV. 6TH.

$}19

GRADE A WHOLE
'

Beach birth

s·

New Yt:an. Day Jan I • J\Mrtu'l lulhe• I(•Dg, Jr , J.,n 1~ • lrlitug w ilno n Oily,
Jan 20 • L u•co ln'~ 811thdil",,. Fe:b 12 • W~stllngiOfl's Bml'lddy, 3rd Moil . Feb •
Ed~tt: r Sund"Y (vdnob't: ) · Mol her'~ Ddy, 2nd Sun . /tl'(ly • N med Fore t~ Q.,y;
Jrd Sat , Mitt •.Memonl)l Day ( Half &gt;talf to r.oon ) -last Moo , /lit.cry • ~I&lt;J9 DiJY,
June 14 • lndepe ndenct DifY. July 4 • Llbor (»,: 151 M:ln , Sept • (()1si:M 0'1
Day, 5e0f 17 • CaymbuS Day, 2nd ~Jon , Oct • Na\.y Day, Oct 27 • vet0"ans
Day, Nov 11 • T hdn~SSIVIng D&lt;ly. 41tl Ttlurs , No.- • Chrrstmas Day, Du 2)

Chuck 'Roast ••••
LB.

· Cathy Scarberry was ~ored
recently by her fam!ly and fftends
with a party In celebration of her
graduation fl:om Buckeye Hills
Nursing School.
Gifts were presented and.refresh·
ments served.
Attending were Ms. Scarberry's
son, Corlney, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Dill, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Folmer,
Michele and Danny, Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Foster, Bobby Lee, Missy
and Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Dill, Tanya, Riehle, Angle and
Christy, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
. Eblin and Tabl!Y, Mr. and Mrs.
CllffordJacobs,AnnMash,Suianne
RichmOnd, Kaley Stone, and Diane
and Kandl Bachtel.

We'll send you a FREE
Flag Kit containing your
big, 3' x all cotton flag
with. sewn stripes pi us
pole, eagle ornament
and mo4nting bracket
when you send
us specified proofs~
of~ purchase of
Carnation products.

FlY IT WITH PRIDE OH:

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Scarberry
honored

PLUS CARNAnON WILL CONTRIBUTE $1.00 TO
11fE MOUNT RUSHMORE NAnONAL MEMORIAL

A meeting of the Meigs Fellowship of Christian Athletes. was held
Sunday afternoon at Meigs High
School.
Pastor William Middleswarth,
guest speaker, talked about "The
cBest Days of Our Lives." The riext
.meeting wm be on October 21, at 2
· p.m .. at the high school.

29
8
Ground Chuck ~ ;. $}

ROCK SPRINGS- The Rock

'

FROM
Meigs FAC meets

19
Steaks/Roast ,L~. $1

Clubwllim~Thutsday,

POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter, Women's Aglow Fellowship, will meet ·at 6: 45 p.m.
ThursdayatDuftsSmorgasbord, Ga!lljlO)ls. Eloise McGraw
wW be the speaker. Dinner w!U
beat6p.m.

I'
I
I
I
I
I·
I
I,
I'

FRESH PORK BUTT

home.

Past commander
addresses
•
meet1ng
I
I
I

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH:
.PRICES ·1N EFFECT THRU SAl, OCT. 13, . 1984

Springs Grange wiD meet at 7:00
p.m., Thursday evening, at the

I
I

&amp; .we, first; Adam WYatt, second, second graders; back: Amity Dixon,
first; Sherry Michael, second, third grade; Kyla Sellers, fi1'st; Michael
Cremeans, second, fourth graders. On the left are Dewey Horton, Bob
GUmore, councUmen, and Mayor Fred Hoffman who served as judges
along with CouncUman Allen Lee King and on the right Is Middleport
Ftre Chief Jeff Darst who presented prizes.

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

co-~~ostess.

I.~------------------

·
WINNERS NAMED - These are the Middleport Elementary
School students who won a poster contest held ai the school In
observance of Fire Prevention Week, now underway. First place
winners received $10 and second place wirmers, $51n the contest staged
by the Middleport Fire Department. P&lt;isters are helng displayed In
windows of Middleport businesses. The Winners are, front, from left,
Jeremy Hartson, first; Mark Mills, second, abSent; first graders; Ryan

We Reserve
~)ght To
limit Quantities

DOMINO

SUG~R

:A~·$159
Limit Ont Ptr Coupon
Good Only At PowtH's
OHw Eaplrts Oct. 13, ,1914

.HYLAND DOG FOOD . ·

::Glb. $319
limit OM Ptr Coupon
Good Only At Powell's
OHtr Expires Oct. 13, 1984

CRISCO
REG . OR BUTTER FLAVOR

THANK YOU

CHERRY PIE FILLING.

3 Lb.

Can
limit One .Per Coupon
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 13, 1984

21 Oz.

89 (

limit One Per Coupon
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
Oct. 13, 1984

�Page

.·

1 0--:The Daily Sentinel

Preliminary hearing
held for Meigs man
James Russell Peck, 23, of
Pine Grove Rd., Route 1.
Racine, appearEd .... In Meigs
County Court Tuesday afternoOn
for a prellmlnary hearing on
charges of receiving stolen
property In a CO!llplalnt prepared by the office of Meigs
County · Prosecuting Attorney
Fred
Crow m.
Peck is accused of "receiving,
retaining or disposing" of an LP
gas tank belonging to Larry
Rapp, a)So or Pine Grove Rd.
The charge is a felony,
according to prosecutor's Investigator Paul Gerard, because
Peck was previously convicted
of a theft offense. "We had Peck
In Common Pleas Court In
August of 1982, on two receiving
charges, one breaking and entering and one charge of trafficking

w.

In drugs,' 1 Gerarlt saki.
Peck was sentenced to prison
on those charges, but was
granted shock probation. He
was on probation at the time of
the new offenses, and wW be
cited for viOlating the tenns of
that probaUon, explained
Gerard.
It his probation In the old cases
is violated, Peck could . be
sentenced to a term of not less
than two nor more than five ·
years. In addition, be could face
a determinate sentence of up to
two years on the new charge.
County Court Judge Patrtck
H. O'Biien, at Tuesday's hear·
lng, ruled that Peck should be
bound over to the grand jury and
remanded him to the custody of
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt.

Three defendants forfeited bonds
and two others were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor ~
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were James R. Banks,
Gallipolis, $50, faUure to maintain
control of a motor vehicle; John R.
Jeffers, Mlddleport, $40, speeding,
and Harley McDaniel, Middleport.
$50, no eye protection while riding a
motorcycle.
Fined were David Persons, West
Columbia, W. Va., $100 and costs,
possession of marijuana, and $100
and costs, open container; Todd

Weather forecast
Tonight, mostly clear with patchy
dense fog again. Low in the mld-51\s.
Thursday, 'mostly sunny an(j con·
tlnued mUd. High In themld·70s.The
chance of ram is 10 percent tonight
and Thursday.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
Fair and unseasonably wann
weather during the periOd. JDghs In

Seventeen cases were processed
In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night,
Three were fined or forfeited
bonds as the result of a disturbance

The fourth bi-monthly meeting of
the Southeastern Ohio Board of
Realtors was held at the Holiday
Inn, Gallipolis, with President G.
Bruce Teaford presiding.
Those In attendance In addition to
Teaford, were Secretary Helen
Teaford, Treasurer Sue P. Murphy,
Virgil Teaford, MOton Roush, Ken
Morgan , Jean Trussell, ·Dottie
Turner, Phyijis Loveday, Marte
Leadingham, WUlls Leadingham,
Michael Gillum, Don Shaffer.
Eunice Nlehm, Audrey Canaday,
Becky Lane, "Winniw Blair, Mau·

hi August, more than 3.2 million

Ohioans received state tax refunds
averaging $15.
Meanwhile, the Public Utilities
Commission llf Ohio has made it
easier for gas and electricity
customers to maintain service this
winter.

The commission ruled Tuesday
that utility service can be reconnected lor customers if they pay the
amount of default on their
percentage-of-Income plan payments , the total back bill or a
lump-sum payment.
Service can be restored for
customers who were not on a
payment plan when a utlllty was

PIP plan reminder issued
Customers of Columbia Gas of Ohio who have
been participating In the percentage-of-Income
payment (PIP) plan are being mailed reminders to
renew their ellgibllity for the new winter season. the
company's Galllpolis manager. Jake M. Koebel , said
today.
Under PUCO rules, PIP customers must reversify
their household income to remain on the plan.
The PIP plan, mandated by the PUCO last
December, allows income-eligible gas-heating customers to retain service by paying 10 percent of tlieir
total household Income for gas service. The plan as
set up by the PUCO requires participants to submit

household income Information to utilities tWice a .
year .
Columbls of Ohio customers on the plan are being
malled an application and instructions for returning.
it, along with other necessary information, to the
company. All information must be returned by Nov .
30. Koebel urged Columbia customers to return the
required Information as soon as possible so that no
one will lose service through misunderstanding of
PUCO regulations. The documents may be returned
by mall or taken to any gas company office.
Customers who do not follow the income verification
requirement will be removed from the plan, Koebel
said _

Happenings around Meigs County...
Meigs district plans
parent conferences
The Meigs Local School District

will be holding parent-teacher
"CCnferences on Thursday, Oct. 18,
from6p.m. to9p.m., and on Friday,
Oct. 19, from 9 a.m. to 12 noon .
School will not be held on either of
those days.
Parents wm receive a ·letter
describing the conferences' scheduling proceedure along with lnfor·
rna lion on the conferences. Students
Will be bringing this Information
home on Thursday of this week.
Purpose of these conferences is to
allow the parent and teacher to
discuss pupil progress and to keep
the parents and schools informed
about student actMties as they
relate to school behavior and
performance.
Parents are encouraged to take
advantage of this opportunity to
communicate with their children's
Instructors. Hopefully a more
effective educational program can
result from this exchange of
Information and ideas.
Further questions regarding
these conferences should be di·
reeled to the chlldren's schools of
attendance.

Wanda Johnson, Middleport.
Discharges---Della Roseberry,
John Moore, Lawton Templeton.

38 fire calls
The Middleport Fire Department
answered a total of 38 calls during
September, four fire calls and 34
emergency runs, Fire Chief Jeff
Darst reports. All vehicles of the
department were driven ro9.5mlles
during the month.

lob Service Office
sets new hours for
new appliCations

Emergency squads
answer six calls
Six call were answered on
Tuesday by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical
Service.
At 2: 06 p.m., the Middleport unlt
went to city hall and tranSported
Dennis Hart to Veterans Memolial
Hospital. At 2: 11 p.m., the Rutland
unit responded to a call on Beech .
Grove Rd. and transported James
Adams to Veterans Memorial.
Pomeroy traveled to the Pomeroy
Health Care Center at 2:40p.m. and
took Alva Will to Veterans Memorial. Racine went to Oak Grove for .
Sarah Rose Taylor at 6:50p.m. She
was taken to Veterans Memorial.
At 9:53 p.m. , the Tuppers Plains
unit went toStateRoute681 Westfor
Carl Matlack who was transported
to St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkers·
burg. The Middleport Fire Dept.
responded to an oU storage tank fire
on Leading Creek Rd. at 2 p.m. and·
the rescue squad was on the scene
for two hours and 45 minutes.
Middleport was assisted by the
Pomeroy Fire Dept.

Beginning Monday, Oct. 15, the
Employment Department of the
Job Service In Pomeroy will start
observing limited hours In which
new applications will be taken.
The Employment Department
(the department which assists
people In locating jobs) wW accept
new applications on Monday, Tues·
day, Thursday and Fliday from 9 to
11 a .m. and from 2 to 4 p.m.
Wednesday is reserved for JTPA
applications.
The office will continue to beopeo
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday Ohio lottery wiruters
through Friday, for anyone apply·
CLEVELAND (AP) The
Veterans Memorial
lng for unempl()yment compensawinning
number
drawn
Tuesday
tion and those people wishing to
AdmlSslons- ·Marjorle Stewart, contact the Employment Depart- night In t1)e Ohio Lottery's dally
West Columbia: Dorothy Jenkins, .ment about any concerns other than game, •"fhe Number," was 791. In
· the "Plck 4" game, the winning
Middleport; Alva Will, Pomeroy; placing a new application.
number was 6848.
Lottery officials reported earn·
(Continued frol]l page 1) tngs Tuesday of $676,364.50 from
wagering on "The Number." The
A change was made In the school and was told that this is one of the
earnings came on sales ol
·calendar to Include parent-teacher areas discUssed by the board when
$1,1(1!;001.50, whlle holders of win·
conferences on Nov. 2 and Jan. 21 the new elementary pJinclpals were
ning tickets are entitled to share
and classes will.be held on Feb. 18. , hired. Tbese prlnclpals having been
$!13l,ID7.
The board tabled action on the working on that program and Mrs.
In lhe parimutuel "Pick 4" game,
buDding program untU the October Milnlcke was referred to them. The
sales totaled $155,1ll9. Holders of
meeting which was set for' Oct. 22 at board granted a request of Mrs.
winning tickets are entitled to 4.'5
pe~cent of the take, or $70,125. A
7::llp.m. .
Sandra Gillian that her daughter be
Mrs. Kathy Manlcke approached transfen'ed from Riverview EJe. winning $1 straight ticket earns
the board In regard to a parent mentarytoTuppersPlalnsEiemen- · $5,ffi2. A winning $1 bQxed tlckel
voluntary program In the schools tary School.
earns$421.

Eastern schools

.

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

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~dtrs .................... ..

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

Cl

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11-looto I "'"' ""

Vogot ..,.U

o.u .. coon..

78 Auto P"u • Ae&lt; o"'"''"'

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lt.o oo Aopo ..

7 ~ · C• mo io~ [Quoom•nt

F&lt;&gt;o $ oiO ~· Ito ...

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RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

AIU tcdoJO&lt;II
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P...... ,

4M - ~..,n

1 71 - ~lo Goo ..

173 - Mnon

Gallipolis, Ohio ~
7I 11/tfn

111! - ..... 11.~··

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Up to

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AND

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE

APARTMENTS

vs
M •c hae l 0 Srntt~l e1 at
O el endan t

,08

I REAL ESTATE I

No 83 CV-23 1
In pursuan ce o f an Alras
Order at Sa le rn t he abovf'
entrt led ac tro n I will o1fc r for
sale ill nubltc auc1ron at the
l ro nt stem:, ot the Court House
.n Po mmov tn th e ab ove

th e lOt h d ny at Novern bP.r
1 9 84 Jt 10 00 o'r. tock A M
thf' to!low tng rlesc r•bed reai
esta te. srtu.:J le rn th e Countv oL
M erq ~ and StrJ te of 0 1\rO. and tn
the Town :;h tr:J of SCIIis hr rry

of Ohto.

Coun tv a t M c rgs and on the
Vrll aqe of Mtddl eport Jnd
descr rherl ns l o llow s
Lo t One H un d rrd Etqh ty SJ&gt;:
( 186r tn Bo&lt;&gt;wonh ·&lt;; Ad dtii On II{)

Public Notice

l ower Pomerov. as rl PSt fJn&lt;~ted
o n the Pta t ol sard Add r! IOr'l
l)earr nq dat e of Oc tober 24 .
l 9 73. hled rn the o ll• ce nl the
Rec orde r ot M ern s Cor Jntv.
Oh1o. and reco rded rn Pla t Bo ok
No 2. page 10 o l the Re cord o l
Plats of Me•gs County. Oh10
rmd now rn co rpo rated 1ntQ and
il
PJfl ot the Vrllnoe a t

1

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF EVA D. HAR TLEY, DECEASED
Case No. 24680 Docket 12
Page440
NQTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

JAMES J PRO FFIIT

On October 5. 1984 1n the

Sher1ff
Mergs Co unty

CARD OF THANKS
We sincerely thank our
friends and neighbors for
kindnesses extended during the recent death of oor
husband, father and
grandfather, Norman R.
Smith. Special thanks to
the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, The Ladies of F.O.
E. Au~. 2171 of Naylor's
Run and Tupfle!S Plains
who gave food, flowers
or money. Also special
thanlt$ to Ewing Funeral
Home and Rev. David
Mann. Your kindness
and tltoUihtfulness was
greatly appreciated.
Mae Smith, Children
and Grandchildren

Public Notice

M1 d d lep on
MP. rrr; Colm tv
Oh•o
Known as 640 Plurn Street
Midrllcpon. Oh •o 4 5 760
Prop e rly Appr a rs ed at
S 18.500 00 and cann ot be
sold fo r less tha n two -th •rd s of
that amoun t
Term s o f sa l ~ Cash m hanrt
on day o f sal e

Card of Thanks

110i3. 10,17. 31c -

54 Misc. Merchandise
GOOD USED
GAS t!o ELEC . DRYERS
Washers to match Upright
freezers. Spin Washers . GE,
Whirlpool . Maytag.
TV t!o APPLIANCES
627 3rd A'o'e ., Gallipol is. Oh.
(Open Daiy &amp; Saturday ti l 6 P.M.)

Me•gs County Proba te Co urt

Case No 24 580. Sa ra· H
Owen. 4 1 82 3 Pome roy Prke
Ror~r! . Pomeroy, Ohro 4 57 69

was aopomted becutnx or th e
estate of Eva 0
Hardey.
dec easP.rl. late ol 378 Ha111nqcr
Blvd . M tddlepori . Ohto 45 760
Robert E Bu ck.
Pro ba1e Judge
Bv L ena K Ness el road
C le rk

!101 10. I 7. 24. 31c

PH . 446-1699

Real Estate General
M. l. "Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley, ·
Meigs County Associate
Phone 742· 3171

Now

in

Use Inserted In Fi

lace or Free-Standing

BISSELL

742-2167 or
742-2225

SIDING CO.

9/1711 mo . pd.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding es·
timates. 949-2801 or
949·2860
No Sunday Calls

BOGGS
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Co.

GUN SHOOT
loshan luPdlng

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

EVERY

Parts &amp; Service

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GI BSON REFRIGERATOR
We Hove A Full Time

NEW LISTING - Eastern
District "- Aneat 3 bedroom
ranch home w~h full basement. rec. room and den.
Excellent condition. Assumable
loan al 10% v.itll approx.
$7.000.00 down, 25 years.
paymenl of $407.06 per
month. Total price $45,000.00.

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland.
Jr ..... ............ 992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692
Jo Hilt ..... ......... 985·4466

-lO·BOYS
-TRENCHER
-WATER
.-SEWER
-GAS LINES -SEPTIC SYSTEMS

lARf. , IMAU lOB$
. p • 992-2478

912711 mo. pd.

I

CARPENTER
SERVICE

pet. 304·675· 7226 after
4PM.

Addona and remodeling
Roofing and goner work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical
work

(Free Estimate!!)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·1&gt;215 or 992-7314
Pomeray , Ohio
17 ~ l! r

CHIMNEY SWEEP

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Raofing of all Types
Worked in home area

20 veers
"Free Estimates"

EUGENE LONG

I

I

Ph. (614) 843-5425
·

NEW LISTING - Business
bldg. at less than $11.00 per'

We'd like to introduce you to
En1a1e·A-Car. the modern way

RACINE - Good old 6 rm.
home near Sou. High. Bath,fur·
nace, tg. kit, full basement and
217 acres. $35,000.

to drive lhe vehicle of your
choice.

No Down Payment
Lower lonthty Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster Service
Call 614·992·6737

SYRACUSE- Lot 245d 15. 1!
eat-in Itt, bath. 10 rms. All uti I~
ties. $25,000.
POMEROY - Excellent 6 rm.
modern brick. 21! baths, !g.
family rm.. dbl. garage. patio
and landscaped lot. $125,000.

(1) HOUSE IN CHESTER:
1"

Three acres with a nice,:ly c~nslructed concrete
block home 26x30. 3 bed·
rooms, one blth, 12xl5
Jlmily room. Partially
carpeted. fuel oi furnace
"ith fKilities lor wood·
burner. 12x15 block stor·
qe bulldinc. 20•30 block
PrJie. Ai1ht oft Rt. 2~8.
country settinc. 'h mile
eest of Chester, Ohio.
(2)

TWO STORY HOUSE

Ill RACINE: Downstairs
equipped with kitchen,
livln&amp; room, diniRI room
and den: upstairs has two
btdroo11s and one bath:
house also his butment.
Lot silt appr01. 48'x301'. •
Needs work.
If Interested contiCt The
Hutt llatlonal Blnk In
Rlcllll, 949·2210.

NEXrTOGOLFCOURSE-1.7
acres, water &amp; ele. available.
$6,500.

I Dig
Wotklng
Fot You.

SYRACUSE - 2 level lots bet·
ween jX)Oi and schools. 7 rm.
home only $21,500.
·

-GRAVEL HAULED

RACINE RURAL - 4 bed·
rooms. fuH basement, garage,
family rm., woodburner on·the
furnace and nice kit. wit11 din·
ing area. Just $42,500.

PH. 742-2328
.

10-5·1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homn-Extensin
Rtlll0tltli11
lnsun!ICI Work
cur~Jol: Bldas.

.
1515 · Nye

POMEROY Awnue. 4 rms., bllh, lwnlc:e.
blsem«&lt;lalll some fwnitln.

Young male red and white
Beegle dog lost on Boy
Scout Rd . in Chester. Wearing . black flee collar . Call

SIItlllble • •

H ou\ 11 111
:

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•BACK HOE •DOZER

•END LOADER
•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER. GAS. SEWER'·
RAIN LINES.

County Certified

·

SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllEp
. FREE ESTIMATES

367-7560-367,767
CHESHIRE. OHIO
3·1 - I

Roger Hysell

GARAGE'
Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Traosmission
PH. 992-.5682
or 992-7121

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late modil
clean used cars.

Jim Mink Chov.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

"46-3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni·
ture, 446-3169, 3rd. &amp;
Olive St .• Gallipolis. Oh .
Wanted- ·Junk autos any
condition. Call 814·388·

.9303.

The Mei9s Local School
District Is currently seeking
applications from certified
applicants for a Freshmen
Batk8tball Coach . a Junior

High Girts' Basketball

Coach, and a Yearbook
Advisor at Meigs Higl'l

Ca1h paid for fancy iron or
heavy iron beds. $180 and
up for certain Meigs Co .
stone jars. Old time cupboa~d. call 1 -304-882·

2711

Up to $1,800 monthly to
start . If aelected you will be
trained by experienced instructors at ·our expense .
You have the backing ot
extenalva national and local
adwertising . Rapid advance ment in sales management if
qualified . Opportunity available in Meigs County and
surrounding area . Retirement benefits and perman ent position with an internationally known company
that is a Ieeder in its field.
Call or ·send resume to Mr.
Hale, Box .918 , Ch illicothe.

Ohio. 46601 . Cell61 4-7733387. Equot Opportunity
·

Lady to do full time secretarial work in gener.al insurance
agency . Previous experience
not a necessity but preferred. Must do typing . Send
resume to; Office Manager,
100 Union Ave., Pomeroy.

• DOZER . BACKHOE
•RECLAMATION WORK
"OIL FIELD SERVICES
•o· 'UP TRUCK SERVICE
"CONCRETE WORK
' CUSTOM BUllT HOMES
"WATER. GAS II&gt;
OIL LINES

PH.

992· 7201

Buying dally gold, silver
coins, rings. jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins, large cur·
reney. Top prices. Ed. Bur·
kett Barber Shop. 2nd. Ave.

Ave. Point Pleannt.

Netoons e14·992-2174.

0 'llllllllll 1'1111 llh

3 An"ouncementl

CATV Installers and Techni·

Now accepting application

Smith

Baby sit1er In my home , 6
1 ~eek. 2 school age,

dey•

one infont. Moll 3 baby
aitting references, salary and

GINSENG ROOT. Top quo!· phone number to Box PB.

ity and eize greded, nl1cted

""=·

1----------

structor : Jerry lowery ·
1984 inductee into Weightlifting Hall of Fame.
Will do tutoring, major

areas . Cell614-246-6812 .

18 Wan1ed to Do
Carlton' s Repair Service ,
audio equipment , stereo &amp;
public address systems .
Kerr. oh. Call 446· 7141 or

446·4410.
Will do babysitting in my
home . Spring Valley area.

Call 446·8396 .

Winterize your cars body.
Hand wax job. Call 304 -

675·2t75 after 4,00 for
Furniture refinishing . call for

Finan cial
- - - --

advancement . Good benefit 1; ·
package. An equal oppor·
21
tunitv employer. Send Re sume to Box C-6 . of the
Point Pleasant Register.

box 188 Sltrdis. Ohio for employment. Duke
439411. Phone 814-483· Clooners. 2419 Jackton
call

303· 759·3200 ext 2405 .

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES Below market rates .
Fixed con\lentional FHA VA . Leader Mortgage ,
Athens. collect 614-592 ·

3051 .

Quick cash Frank 's Pawn
Shop. 430 ·second Ave .,
Gellipolis . I ristant loans ,
merchandise of value. guns .
jewelry, stereos, TV 's, e1c .
and also buy the above .

23

Professional
Services

Piano Tun ing .and Repair .
Brunicardi Music Co .. 446 0687 . Twentieth year of
quality service. Lane Da -

niels , 614-742·2951 .

care of the Point Pleaunt

Register. 200 Main St.,
Point Pluoant. w. Ve.
I- - -- -- - - - Eorn •1 .000.00 by Chrlat·
·
mae plue awlirdl, no Invest·
ment. Flo
houri . 304·
f17fl·fl1
82.. blo
between
9:00
and 5:00 for oppointmont
for Interview.

-

-

-

Real

31

Ohio. 614 -286 -3074. In·

Office poSition• available.

e20 .00 and e40.00 .. ch. R•ouma to Boo C-51 .

furnace .

Schools
Instruction

Karate -Private lessons .
Learn the ultimate In satf.
defense . American Karate
Studio since 1971 . 143
Burlington Rd .. Jackson .

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

Firah floor only. Write giving
dlrectlone. Witten Pianos

Nftd fire brick for 24 inch

15

estimate 304 -676 -4444.

Wanted old plano1, Peying

gaa

lnternat•onat steel building
manufacturer awarding
dealership in available areas
soon . Great profit potential
in an expanding industry .
For application call Wedgcor

my home. Call 773-6423 .

required active duty training
duririg summer months. Call

tor advancement. Good be·
nefit package . An equal
opportunity employer . Send

1106.

Baby Sitting in my home.
Harrisonville aree . Call 742 -

estimate and appoi ntment .

Middleport, Oh. 814-992- clono. E•collent opportunity
3478.

from HMC. Ph . 446-9472.

Are you in High School and
Looking tor a pert-time job7
If you era a high school
Junior or Senior, you can
enlist in the Wett Virginia
Army National Guard, attend drill one Weekend 1

46769 or call 814-992· e.cellcint opportunity for

7780.

Business
Opportunity

Have opening for elderly in

chotito. baakoll. dishes, 304-1175-3960 or 1-800·
otono joro, antiques. gold 642·3619.
silver . Wrlte - M . D .
Miller. Rt.2. Pomeroy. Ohio

Young woman needs female
roommate to help meet
expanses of nice 3 bdr .• 2
bath house on Rt . 35. Y2 mi .

s'c hoot year. Applicants
Have vacancy in my home
must hold a valid Ol'lio for elderly or disabled per teaching certificate and for sons, reasonable 614-992 coaching positions must 6022 .
meet certification requirements of Ohio for tports Will do house and car
medicine end CPR . Persons cleaning. E.11cellant work .
interested should contact Cell 992 -6234.
Dan E. Morris, Superintend- j - - - - - - - -- ant of Meigs Local Schools.
Will do baby -sitting in my
at 621 South Third Avenue
hom, . Call 992 -5886.
in Middleport. Ohio .

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLOS month for poy. and complete
FURNITURE. Beds, iron,
wood, cupboards, chairs,

21

22 Money to Loan

Situations
Wanted

School for the 1984· 1986 2142.

Ohio 46769

and

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Governmentjobs. $16 ,559·
950.663 year . Now hiring .
Your area . Call 805·687·

6000 eKt R-10253.

Company M-F .

e200 .00 lb . Ordinary
omatler •oot - Leos! All
kinds of root oleo
Alultllnultl &amp; Vinyl Sidinp . SWEEPER and -ng mo· other
purch ..od. Coli Robert
1 t5 Yurt Experience
chino ....,.lr, pons, end Horper. 304·875·7877.
Plcll. up and
GREO ROUSH
d 0 IVery, DIV I0 VIOUUm Wanted to buy, goo tank for
PH. 992·715B3
r Ct.o-. ono ho" mile up 1878 CJfl JMp. 304·882"
or 992·22B2
0 .., .. C• Rd . Coli 3734.
·IHik
814· 41·0284.

Roofl.. lf:rk

181-

HI'.Uif/11,/l(t ' f',

lost and Found

E
EXCAVATING

JIM CLIFFORD

ROCK SPRINGS- Halt lillie 4
rm. frame. mod. baltl, ps fur·
nace. and lg. yard. Only
$14,1m.

Blratin Ill $5.500.00 Of

•

Babysitter wanted 12 · 4:40
daily in my home. Ref .
required
Call
446-7405
.
_;_
_ ._
__
__ ·lc-

6

Auction every Friday night at
the Hartford Community
jlfliljlflillla-.lfll~"'~~~~~~-~ Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week.
Conaigments of newS. used
merchandise always welcomed. Richard Reynolds,
Auctioneer. Call 304 -276·
•TRENCHING
'
3069.

TROMM
EXCAVATING

RUSTED HILLS- Real nice
modem 3 .BR home, 2 full
baths, d~J)osal, !lshwasher ·
and hobby bldg. On~ $57,1XXl.

P.O . BoK 293. Nelsonville .

Ohio 46764.

Ce~tor Bldg., Camden St.
MANAGEMENT TRAINEE:
Cotl8i 4-367· 7101 .

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

sq. fool

FOR SALE

9/1312mo. d.

Wanted. Lady to live in with
elderly Christian woman in
Athens. light housework ,
wages, weekends off. Write

Now hiring. Your area . Call

Auction Every Tuesday
night. · Pt . Pleatant, WV.a
Auct. Lonnie Neal , Youth

10·6·1!1

Catl 742-3195
Or 992-5875

mornings • week , light 11 Help Wanted
~g~~ekeeping . Call 446 - - - - - - - - --

t -805-687·6000 Ext. A· 1- - - - -- - -9806 .

B

Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

I:m~o~r~e=.===========t3~0~4:-6:7:5~·~3:5:1:3:a:ft:or:5::;o;o;.
t

GOVERNMENT JOBS .
818,559-850.663 per yeer. 12

Free kittont, 304-675·6644

apota.Coll 247-2575 .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

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

P-erson to care for 1 yr. old, 3

after 6 PM .

Roy Bailey hat lost two bird
dogs in letart area . A.
German Shorthair, brown
with white spota and a
Brittany. white with rust

CHIMNEY KING

~g~a:

7 6
8 · 000 ext · R-

6 free kittens. 6 weeks old .

Blond. female Poodle, year
old, to good t:!ome, verv
good with children, house

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

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
.1·1614)·992-3326

SAVE

Rt. 7-6 Milos below Gallpalis
Crass lace- Crlc. lrldlf
Turn right 011 lear luw It
fohw Siat&amp;--OPDI Til DAII

YOUNG'S

UTILITY BUILDINGS

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

TEAFORD

II

INO MONEY DOWNI

111tnnONS:

5-Hc

rJl
Real Estate Wrl'

·I

Collie, Father is Pit Bull . Call

992-3187.

•R•nu••

Real Estate General

.A W

•TWO BLOWERS
•GLASS DOOR
•LARGE ASHPAN
•AUTOMATIC DRAFT .4001
•BURNS WOOD .
/40
or COAL
·B.Y.P.U.
90 DAYS
(Brine Your Pick-Up)
SAME AS CASH

992-2196
Mjddleport, Ohio

6 puppie• to give away. 3
months old. ·Mother is white

985-3661 .

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

··.. ··F1omiiri:iv .. ·.. ·.. ·

..... ·Fit'Pieiisitif ....

PAT HILL FORD

843-5424

PARTS and SERVICE

Pike Ata ri · 2600 with certridges, bean bag chair, two
single beds. dishes. something fo r everyone .

Pert Doberman puppies, 2
male 2 female. 8 week• old .

repair Gas Tanks .

10·8-tln

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freeurs

-OUIP TRUCIIS

S•ll AVON. moke 45%. Call 1..:....:.:.
mioc.______
itemo.
448-3368
_
Big Yard Sale 445 Hedge·
RN -LPN·EMT
wood Or. Oct. 12th· 13th.

Giveaway

SERVICE

-

Or

985-3561
All Makes

Neat 1ppearance. Call 13. Dated gla81 canning
afternoons -Pomeroy area. jara. ir~n skillets, crocks,
992-7440 .
electric oven, apple butter.
.tools, clothing "h price.

I

TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

-BACKHOES

4

Moigo Memory Garden. HMC At. 160. Oct. 11 . 12,

l-1-ot_a_o_f_o_th_e_r_t_hl_n.:.
g_s._ _ _
Bao~ment Sate Oct .. 13,
9,00· to 6'00. 212 Jackoon

"FrH Estimates"

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND

•Washers •Dithweshers

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

304-876-3334.

Telephone girt, part time, Mitchott Rd . Thurs. 9-6.
approx. 20 hra. per week. Garage Sahli 2 miles from

drapea , gotf thoeJ, Iampi,
loti more .
·
Esta t e Sal&amp; 4 Yi'ill ilea out At.
141 . Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat .
Bedroom auite, kitchen ap·
pliancea. livingroom suite,

SUPPLY

Sizes Start From 12'd6'

PRICE REDUCED - A
Brealhlak1ng view - comes
w1th th~ lovelybnck ranch v.ith
3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, full
basement. 2 fireplaces, patio, 2
car garage and approx. 3.98
acres. Now $75,000.00.
MINERSVILLE - A 2 story
frame home with 4 bedrooms
and a dining room. Walls are
panaed and a big lol. Also an
extra house that could be a
rental, wil . separate houses.
Both for just $18,900.00.

JUST CALLI
992-3410'

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

&amp; Vicinity

e•rn lll· tra income . We need - -· ·-·- ----····-'·--- -- .. · ····Mveral repreHntativel in
this ar.. l Party plan exp. • Michigan Sale leta rnake a
plus. Gift a, toya. home de- deal. Toys. coats, aleep!rl,
cor. No investment. Car • work balket , booka. m1ac .
phone nee. Call free 1 -800- 60 Neil Ave.
863- 9077. AIIO bookingl - - - - - -- - -panlee. 814-44~-3043
Yard Sale log house on

3 Family Yard Solo 4V. mile•
out Rt. 141 . Thurs., Fri . t!o
Sat. Kit. utonolleo, chairs.

ACCENT

WILL HAUL

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

·------G--8--. 1·1·1•p-- 0··1·f8--· ·· ... ..

We need • 1fl&amp;ture person to 9AM . Rain or shine. 1-10
Middleport
complete mobile life insu· speed biket. rock,r.
&amp;
Vicinity
ranee eKa~ In GaUipolia· Pt. :::...:.:.:....:.:....:.:.:___.;....._ _ _
Cat &amp;.1 4-387· 7763.
Plea.. nterea . .On apart time Yard S. Garage Sale Thurs .,
t Border Colll.. nd 1 Beagle baaia. You need to be Fri ., Sat. Oct. 11th, 12th,
enthut~attic &amp; enjoy a chal - 13th. 9 till s. Refrigerator. 582 Beech St. Middleport.
pup to a good home . Call
lenge . Car &amp;. phone n8Ces- dryer. wooden kitchen .ce - Oct. 10 thru 13th. Clothing,
446·2171.
FENCE &amp;
aary. Reply in writing to · binet with · flour bin, older drapes , bad spr~ads,
220 !. Main, Pemor'IY
Kitten• vary good. mouaers . Examiner, Rt. 2 Bmt 85. chairs, c offee tables. c ut blankets . quilta . sheets.
Cal614·266·1661. ·
Ripley. WV 25271 .
iron ware, trunks. granite, rugs, dishes, pots and pans,
PH. 992-693 I
_:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ lalumlnum pots 8t pans. silverware . depression
4 pups, 10 wks. old. Mother
glaasware, thread cabinet. glass . washer and dryer.
Elkhojlnd. · Call 61 4·256· Planner 1
old. toys, sewing machine in electric appliance, furniture
1581.
Rural. multi-county , re - cabinet. pictures and and muct~ mora .
gional planning commission frames. older toola, compo· 1- - - - - -- - - 2 kittens 1 male black. 1 Hiks entry -level planner: sition dolls, lamps. books , Oc t 12th. 13th . 14th on
female Siameae. Both good Bachelor's degree required; antiques and collecti~les to 143. Racine at the old Fisher
• with ktds. Call 6 t 4·256· Urban and Regional Plan- numerous· to mention . Paul place . Blond residents . If
1841.
ning. Public Adminsitretion, Denney's. St . At. 664 and raining cancel to later data. 2
Political Science. Gao - Bidwell-Rodney Rd . in Bid · miles above Southern High
Installation Available
Black female kitten 8 mo . graphy end related course welt. Ohio.
Sch oo l.
8/ 15/1 · l old.
L---~..2!-!.:!.!..!....!!m!!!o.l'
catt 614·992·7556 .
work preferred; excellenl 1- - - - - - - - -fringe benefits , salary Garage Sale 1069 SecOnd First time 4 family yard sale .
Mother Border Collie ·and
f10 ,000 ' S12.000.Sendre- Ave. Thurs. t!o Fri .. 9'00AM Oct . 1 1 and 12 on Taus Rd .
!'IJPI to give away. Call sumee by October 15, 1984 to 5 :00PM . Furniture . Frank Krautter .
992-7180.
to Ohio Valley Regional carpet , la!;Jratory with ca ·
08\lelopment Commission, binet. commode , stereo
One Collie puppy to give 740 Second Street. Ports· with cabinet and speaken . 2
We can repair and re- away. 5 months old . Call mouth Ohio 46662 . Equal winter tread tires 8t rims siu
&amp; Vicinity
Opponunity Employer.
1 5'' . Jewelry. clothing of
core , radiators and 949-3009.
different sizes.
heater cores. We can Three year old Doberman Government Jobs .
.
also acid boil and. rod Pinscher. Seal-point male . $16 , 659-$50,553-yftar . Rummage Sale 55 Garfield Moving sa~e . 2212 Jaffer·
Siamese cat-declawed. Call
Ave. oct. 11 -12- 13. From son Ave ., table and chairs,
II , 9-4
out radiators. We also 61 4-843·6231 .
Now hiring. Your aree . Ca
. Couch, chair. beds, dolls. TV ' s. one feather tick .

DENHY CONGO

10/4/tfc

~

camouflage. Cell in orders

Assorted colors. Call 992-

on Ovly

CHESTER-985-3307

Sam Somerville's Army Sur·
plua he a It all in regular ermy

7472.

Only

Shop~Technicion

only.

1 -13 -lfc

12 Gauge shotguns

Help Wanted

RADIATOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

l II nr

992·2259

ONE WOOD STOVE THAT CAN HEAT YOUR ENTIRE HOUSE
WORTH A TRIP FROM ANYWHERE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

"Service that Towers "0011e
The Rest"

POMEROY, 0.

NEW LISTING - Eastern
District - Sptrt entry home
that is fantast!~ Huge family
room, 4 bedrooms. 2\7 baths, 2
car garage, in-ground pool,
patio, deck, and lots ol storage
space. $54,500.00.

992-2156

10- Wt l

S ta t~

E. Main

NEW LISTING - 1\7 stO&lt;y
frame wrth a big rec. room, 3
bedrooms. dining room. 1\7
baths. rear and front sitting
porch Financing available witl)
small down paymenl.
$24.700.00.

nam ed Cou nty, on Sa tur dav

S rtuat ed rn the

Chester. Ohio
: Ph. 986-4269
il No Ansnr, Colt Jl5·ll82
We Servtco All
M.okeo &amp; Modelo
Antenna Instillation
Ho~st Calls.ond ShOji
service Awlilablo

CARS

M o rt gn ge

BACKHOE
DUMP TRUCK
CONCRETE WQRK
TRENCHER
SEPTIC TANK
COAL &amp; LIMESTONE
C•ll For Free Estimate.

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

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd.

The State of Ohio.

AM
CONSTRUCTION

(614)446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
8113/ifn

U-SAVE
AUTO

Public Notice

The Le a de r
Co rn p any
Pla tn trll

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

CALL
446-4522

Mooo~c,. ,

44 &amp;- Goll111ntoo ·
lti? Chooh•••
J lla - v .. to•
~M

ooo l o• A.,,

4 l ·MODI1oltom n '"' ~""

'() ., .,,.. , !oo AOPI

"""'''c •••••

lt.rHCon l •o

Gun ahoot It Racine Gun

Club every Sundoy, 1:00

•completll Chimney Cleaning
•certified Chimney Relining &amp; Repair
"EKperienced and Insured
Phone
Roy Bickle
Certified Chtmnoy SwHp
446-2062
10-8·1 mo.

FREE 'HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
CC~mputerized Hearing Aid Selection
Dependable Hearing Aid Service

RENT ACAR

),.,,lf,w · · t· duw ~.· ...

A t uC mloii O

205 · RooG•••••

o l ·Ht lpWo•ud
l 2-SttuoiOd Won roo
1 l ·lnootU&lt;t
l I Buol no .. '" ''""~
l ~ · 5o~o&lt;&gt;lo
l 6 -llo tllo . lv I. Clllo 0o;,
17 1\(!Koftonoout

t ..

tton coM 1814)812·3284 or
wrlto P.O. box 1&amp;&amp;. Ste·
won, Ohto 45778.

446-2062

iE LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

:i::c

~~~~~~~.·~.;: .::: 1 k."t!r~~:

p.m. Factory chocked guns

9·1Jtfn

11

ltleo, church, privllegu, Merri-Moc Homemokon

Ch"I mne
· 'y
care

Fenders ........., .............. 49
Omni-Horizon z dr . or
4 dr. Fenders .. .............. 75

Ford R111aer Grills ............ 75
Ford and Chevy Tail Gates

·

f:l n,.i (u••ll'"l!''' ~,., . , , r llw

, , . . .. otfo• S.Jt
to o 5ol o
l:J . Vono i. O WO
10 Mooo•cyc loo

Sentinei-Page- 11

sl!f vI I:I!~.

-eel. Senlorcltlton octlv-

115

"We lent for leu"

7J · Tt"" ~'

••• ~........

,,.,h,.,.•t&lt;

u~~ ~:~:~~cynx.... .. &amp;o

-F~t~:.~n.. .. ..... .. . 98 , 79-IZ
Ch~lf :.~0:,,
. . . . . . 6995
C~evette Gritls ........ ll

·- 1HQ Dodao Tr.

PHONE
992-2156
Of Write Dailly Stntintt Clu&amp;ifitd Otpt.

§Sit.MIQUU

U Hu~dong s~ NII •.,
IU ' ' " 10! So'-

You Were Going To Call Us?

Car Fenders .................. 60
79-80 lustana

-~

Goudo

Cd , TY I. Aodio

10

:.._ ftndtrs ........... ............. 59
80-84 'Focd Tr.
·.· ..ftncltrs ...................... llO

Miii!Miliifiii!!h+

2 1 • Buoltwoo 0~1&gt;111'1Ui&gt;OI I
2 2 · Mo .. ~te Le ""
Z)•, &lt;O .. I IIO .... I II Ni&lt;:l l

l·•· - ~JII~I~tcl•l•&lt;el
l ................u ..

1

.Ftncli.. ...................-.. 110
S.l a:si5 Chevy Tri.

Ill Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45751

• •!,jiji!i! ...., •• •

Daily

I lti iJI IJ iltll ' lil

3 Announcements

-=~;;;.;:;:::::::::!::;;~;;;;==~=:::;-r.:::================::;i ALTERNATIVE
TO A
NURS·
IlliG HOME Adult
Peraonel
~::.~
~~
70
D·r.n~~r Tr . . ............. 6Z
:~~.-:::::. ~:n:1eL;~h~~
76. 8zchmtte
,'VM
Chevy Tr:
Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
• day. Spoclal .dieto 11

r---------------------------------The Daily Sentinel

The

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

r

Realtors meet at Holiday Inn

I

disconnected if they pay the
delinquent bills or $200.
All customers with restored
service must register for an
extended payment plan or the
percentage-of-Income plan. The
percentage arrangement allows
low-Income people to keep utility
service by paying 15 percent of their
monthly household Income.
The PUCO also simplified ellgibil·
ity for the percentage plan. Appli·
cants no longer are required to apply
for weathertzation programs. Customers also now have eight weeks to
prove they have applied for the
Home Energy Assistance Program.
They previously had toshowproofat
the time of application for the
percentage-of-Income plan.
The PUCO ruled that companies
cannot send a disconnection notice
to percentage-of-Income customers
unless there is default on Payment.

10. 1984

at Veterans Memonal Hospital. and $113 public Intoxication. Forfeit.
Fined were Dwlght Haley, Route 1, ing a $213 bond posted on charges of
Middleport, $213, assault on an assault upon an officer as a result of
officer; $63, disorderly manner, and the Incident was Leonard F!tzpa.
$113, public Intoxication; Mark trtck, Route 1, Mlddk!port. The two
Haley. Route 1, MiddlepOrt. $63, Haley defendants have requested a
dlsturbtng the peace: $313, resisting transfer of their cases to county
arrest; $213, assault on an officer. court.
Forfeiting bonds Tuesday night
were Kenneth Benson, New Haven,
w. Va., $63, traffic llght violation;
T!rn()thy Bish()p, Syracuse, $43,
squealing tires; Richard Sayre,
reen Kreider, Connie Walker, Pete Racine, $53; James Hoffman,
Nibert, Fred Hill, Allee Hili, Ike Pomeroy, $43; Cynthia Nau, PomeWiseman, Clyde Walker, Betty roy, $47; Phyllis Spangler, Rutland, ·
Hairston. David Wiseman, Fred $43; Martin Seelig, Texas, $52;
. Goegleln and Charles Leonard of Dottle Morris, Pomeroy, $44; Nora
Leader Mortgage Company, Jeri Hartman. Long Bottom, $17; MarAllie of N.R. Stevens and Asso- garet Tanner, LangsvUle, $46;
ciates, and Larry A. Moore of the Perry Carpenter, LongBottom,$46;
U.&amp; Dept. ofH.U.D.
Glen Lang, Waterford, $44, all
The continuing education classes posted on speeding charges. Donnie ·
at Buckeye Hllls were discussed. Stone of Middleport was fined $113
The next class has been set for Oct. ' and costs on charges of Intoxication
17. To register for the class, contact and disorderly manner, and Robert
J ean JTussell or Dottle Turner of Wllllams, Middleport, was fined $63
Cleland Realty .
and costs, no operator's license.

Garnes. Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
excesstve speed.

Columbia customers will get
refund checks from court
ministered those refunds , saying
tha t consumers shoUld not have
been charged for construction costs
at the Zinuner Nuclear Power
Plant.

w-......-v. October
Business Senrices

Village mayors end several court ·cases

~~dtoupper'li};.Uiwsgenerally

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Some
Ohioans can expect to receive their
third refund check in as many
months when the state Supreme
Court malls out checks from
· Columbia Gas of Ohio at the end of
the month.
The FUbllc Utilities Commission
of Ohio decided the utlllty should
have bought gas when prices was
lower, and because it did not, must
refund the overcharges.
The average residential customer
wW receive a refund check of about
$4.W, a Columbia spokesman said.
The refund will cost the company
about r.DJ,IXXlln postage. Refunds
for less than $1 wiD be credited to
future bills.
Earlier, customers of Colurn bus
and Southern Ohio Electrtc Company reCeived average refunds of
$3), totaling $1J mUlion. The
Surpreme Court ordered and ad·

Wednesday, October 10, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--

Business

0 pportunity

I NOTICE !
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB LISHING CO . recommends
that you do bui!nell with
people you know, and NOT
to und money through the
mail until you have invetti gated the ~ffering .
Moat profitable busineaall
60 outlet• producinO high
profit, multi-flavor popcorn .
Only S310 each, entire

businoso only f 15.500 . 1.
800·327-8466. Cell nowt
Cott Free Chriatmaell la diesll earn e1 ,000.00 or
more by Christmas . Show-

ing toyo, glfto. weekly poy

checka plua bonua. Choose
your hours. Parttimenowtill
December . Car. phone
needed . Hlr;ng thlt week
"onlyl For mora details calla

today collect 304· 7440924.

Estat e

Homes for Sale

3 bdr . house. pool , A.,
fireplaces. Pt . Pleasant. 11
or rent . Call 67S -5104 .

!;,

4;·

600 b lock of 2nd Ave., }
bdr .. exc. cond ., big b~

vard , S37 ,500. Colt
2t58 .
________
......
44&amp; ~

3 bdr home f o r sei•~Y
owner. located on Rt .
,

near III .G.H.S. $36,1'
Call 614-388-871 t ,

.

Owner Must Sell NOw!
Small house, firepl~c~ Qfl
furnan ce. storm wmdoWil..

Middleport. Cell 614 - 992 ~ '
6941 .
- - - -- - - -·lc8 yrs . old , 3 bedrm , 2 bathl.
fa"lily room with ,wood
burner . Singltl!cargarage, on
B flat acres w rth stocked'
pond . City water in "•cine.

Call 614-949-2641 . :

Nice 3 bedroom. garage,
basement , excellant loca·
tion near school, owner
fin11nce . Middleport . Call

992 -2517.

Three bedroom t»acioua
l'louse , New Lime ~d . Ru tland Po ol. low utilities,
specia l financing .call 614 -

742·3080 .

Three bedroom house , hot
water heal, excellen1 location , good condition. car·
petad , some furniture . Mulberry .Avenue , Pomeroy,
Ohio . $25 ,000 .00. O ' Brien
&amp; Crow Realty Company,

Phone 61 4·992 -2720 or
614-992-3589.

4 bedroom. bath and half.
living room , dining room ,
equipped kitchen , large1 car
garage, large le~ellot . cloH
to Holzer Hosp , owner an•- ~
ious to Sell . $41 ,900.00 .

Cell after 5:00 PM , 304·
676-7547.

Rancher house, 3 bed rooms. 2 baths. fireplace, 7
acres . hllf ha•ement,

t66 ,000.00 . Glenwood.
W.Vo . 304-676 -2933.

Galttpollt Forry, 3 br brick
lerge rooms , 4 Clr liJirate
and atorage bldg., stove, ret.
washer - dryer . Make ari

oHer. 304-875-6851 ,

Threo bedroomo, nice nolgh·
borh~od .

churcha .

near 1choo11.
uor•• · Under

U7,000.00. Shown by opo .
polntment 304-871-8783.

�;
'1 2 The
31

Sentinel

Home• for Sale

They'll Do It Every Time

County Appliance,

l,..c .

Good uHd appliance• and

TV uts. Open BAM to &amp;PM .
Mon thru Sat. 446- 1699,

New home 1or sale with 3
acres of land. $35 ,000 .00.
304· 773·5474 .

Wednesday, October 10, 1984
KIT 'N' CAIILYLI ®ttr Larrv Wrltlht

61 Hou1ehold Good•
0000 USED APPLIANCEI
W11hero, dryer•. refrlgere·
toll, n~ng•• · Skagg1 Ap·
pllenoeo, Upper Rl•er Rd.
beoldo Stone Creel Motel.
114·441-7398.

32

October 1

Ohio

DICK TRACY

t 1100 boord hot of mlxod
rough lumber. Coli 114·
317-0131 .
J1111 Fran 0 h spinet plono
1410.00. Large butterfly
quilt t128.00. CJ!.alr ond
ottomon, t11.00. 2 0 eel of Do It yourself Enoyclopadlo uo.oo. c.n 9492834 .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Coppartone gas range 30 ln .

•110 . Avacodo gas range

1 883 Scotty Spor1omlll
compor. 13 ft., 2 ·wheelo,
$500. Coll1114-2511-1561 ,

ware. Corner Rt. 141 &amp; Rt.

1. Call 446-8033.
Wanted to 'buy used mobile

home. Call 614·446 ·4782 .

1972 .. freedom 12x55 ft .
fully furnished 8t extras,
S5,000 . Call 446 · 7603 .

2751 or Ralph Barcus 614-

245-9175 .

1974 Academy 12x50 2 4 bedroom colonial brick
bdr .. extra clean. to't al elect- house for rent o r sale in
ric , CA. 7x12 porch . C.all Pomeroy. Call 1 -;J73-0456 .
1- - - " " " " - - - - - -lc614· 379 · 2341 .
----------

Four room and bath, unfur-

1975 14x60 mobile home

nished house . Pt. Lana Lin-

good conditiop, 2 bdr ., one

coln Heights, Pomaroy,
Ohio, 614·992 · 3874.

owner. bo ught new with
some 1urniture. all electric.
$7.000 . 2 swings 4ft . one
$30. one S20 . Call 4462572.
1965 A oy Craft hoUse trailer

12x60, $1 ,800. Call 614256 · 1561 ..
14x65

1973 Holly

Park

mobile home with 2 bed -

rooms. Call 992-7819 .
1971 Broadmore t railer, 2
bedroom. excellant condi·
tion. Set up, underpinning,
pa rt ly furnished Rental lot

available . $5300.00. Call
992-7479.
1980. 50x14 Potriot, total
alec, 2 bedrooms. 1972.
· 60x 12 Baron, total elec, 2
:· bedrooms .. Can he seen at K
&amp; K Mobile Homes, In&lt;: .
Now .open under n ew
owners. Preston and Arlene
Lov~. across trom Point
Pleasa nt .J r. High School.
30 4 · 675·3000 . Wint er
hours 9 · 5.
In Mason mobile home with
or w ith out lot. garage. BJC ·
tras. ca ll 304·882-3774 or
304· 773· 5563 .

33

Farms for Sale

200 acre farm for sale. Will
subdivide. Rutland Town ship . Call614 ·373-0456 .

34

Business
Buildings

10 yr. old 8 unit apa rtment
complex. Wellston, Ohio . All
1 bdr. apts., 4 furnished . off
street parki ng . Resident
manager over S 1 .400 mo.
inco me . Constant waiting
list tess t han $15 .000 per
unit . Possible 2nd. mor1·
gage . Call 592 -1 189 Mon .·
Fri . 9 -5 , 594-2R74 eve . &amp;
wk . ends .

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

l ot fo r sa l e in M ercerville, 3
trailer hookups. electric. ru·
ra l water, ~opt ic tank',
$8 ,000 . Call 614- 256·
661 B.
Building lot Neig hborhood
Rd . 65x150 . $5,000 . Call
446 -3844 after 7PM .
For Sale: Once acre lot with
large in· ground pool. torn
liner. and part ially finished
basement . For information
call813 -665· 1232.
262x110 At. 775 appro'x.
23 mi . fro m Gallipolis. Level
lot , septic tank. access to
water. Ba sement hole dug .
$3,200. Call 643·0168 .
11 .75 acres. half wooded .
24x40 wood building, driveway. and electric . Chester
area . s15,760 .00. Call985·
4405 .
10 acres. in the country.
Nice quiet spot . Call 949·
2906 .

Renlals
41

Houses f or Rent

Unfurni shed house. 3 bdr .•
stoVe. ref . Rodney Village II ,
6275 mo. Call 446-4416
otter 9 PM .
Unfurnished 2 bdr. house.
Range , garage . storage
building . One mila ou t Rt.
218 . Call446·9686 .
House for r~nt large. 3 bdr.,
1 1/J bath, fireplace, fenced in
yard. in town. $300 per mo.
Call 614-388·8248.
Lerge' house good shape!
Call 614-38B-9909.
4 bdrs. in Tara with range,
refrlg. &amp; dithwaaher. Flreploce &amp; fomily room, 2 full
baths. Call 614-367-7464
attar &amp;PM ,

3 bdr.. 2 both, double
gerage, all oloctrlc, with
woodburner. Out Rt. 218.
UIIO mo. Coli 446-7044.

2 houses tOr rent and bar for
sale or lease wi t h option to
buy . 304·675-6720 .
2 bedroom house Point
Pleasant. extra nice, no pets.
304 -675-1386.

3 J&gt;edroom duplex, full basement. Mt . Vernon Ave ..
304-676 -3030 or 6753431 after 4 :00.
3 bedroom house. $150.00
plus deposit, utilities, all
elec, with wood burner.
304-676·6544 after 5 PM .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished 2 bdrs. TV cable,
clean, quiet, beautiful riverview in Kanauga . Fosters
Trailer Park. 446-1602.
2 bdr .. AC . gas heat, wall to

wall carpet In Gallipolis. Call
alt•r 5PM. 446· 1409.

Riuarsida Apts. Middleport. Hoover washer, $100.00.
Special rates for Senior Call 742·2362.

CitiZEtns. $130 . EquaiHous- 1- - - - - - - - - - ing Opportunities . 614 - Pickens used furniture. 304992-7721 .
675-6493 or 675 -1460.
Laurel land Apt. in New Velvet love s8at makes bed.
Haven, W. Va. now accept· Recliner. $250.00 both.
ing applications for 2 bed - Phone 304-676-6022 .
room apts . Bue rent , 1 - - - - - - - - - - $158 .00 per month . Market Sears Microwave 8100.00.
rent, $228 .00 per month. 304-676-3183 .
Equal hOusing opportunity. I - - - - - - - - - - Call304-882-3386 .
New refrigerator, new
couch, antique dresser, wardrobe . Phone 304·675 6727.
.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. houses . Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614-4468221 .
3 room unfurnished apt.
bath, $200 .00 month, utilities paid. Phone 304-6763030 or after 4:00, 304675·3431 .
One b.,.edroom apt, 614 -4460682 or 304· 675·3000.

45

Furnished Rooms

Mobile homes for rent.
Upper River Rd . Call 4461609 or 446·0508 .

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park. Central Hotel .
Call 614·446-0.756 .

2 bdr. 2 mi. from hospital in
country . No pets. $175 mo ..
$100 dep . Call after 6PM,
446 · 1722 .

Furnished room. e145. Utilities, range, ref . Share bath .
Men only. 919 Sec. , Gallipolis. 446·4.4 16 after 8 p.m .

2 bdr. mobile home on Rt.
554, 11.. mi. off At. 160.
$175 plus dep . Call 614388-9651 .

46

2 bdr. mobile hom&amp;,' ref. &amp;
dep . required . Call 614 ~
2 56 -1922 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
614·992-7479 .

2 bdr. unfurnished very nice.
adults only, $17~ mo . plus
deposit . Located 3 mi . Rt.
588 . Call 446-2300.

2nd . floor office space tor
rent. Court St., Pomeroy .
Call614·373·0456 .

2 badroom. 12x65 fur·
nished , washer. dryer .
$175 .00 plus utilities and
deposit. No pets. call 9927479
- - - - -- - - - l cThr ee bedroom mobile
home, new carpet, 1 child
accepted,no drunks or dOpe.
At . 7 . Middleport . Call614·
367·0611 .
2 bedroom mobile home for
reilt, Racine area . Call 9925868 .
2 mobile homes . Both 2
bedrooms. located in Galli·
polis. 304· 675 · 3000.

44

G. E. refrigerator, green.
$1 60 .00. Hoover portable
washer and dryer, $260.00.

Space for Rent

Merchand ise
51 Housl!hold Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood·coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR suite S399 .
bunk beds $199, ant ron
recliners $99, used bedroom
suites. ranges . wringer
washers, &amp; shoes. Call61 4·
446·3159 .

Regency pocket scanner, 6
channel. with charger, antenna , e'tc. Exc cond,
$125.00. 304-675·5884.

54

Misc. Merchandise

Knauff Firewood Split- 95%
hardwoods . SeaSoned or
green. You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614256-6245 .
limestone. Sand , Gravel.
Delivered in Mason , Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son. Call 446-7786.
Plastic cisterns state approved. plastic septic tanks,
plastic culvert.. metal culverts, RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISES, Jackson, Oh 614286-5930 .

81

~..::::::=====:;:======="':"::"":'":··:'"~

Firewood, *20.00 pick up
load, e30 .00 delivered.
304-676-2991 or 6756712 .
Cabbage Patch Doll, new in
boJI with adoption paper~.
180.00. Coli 304-6766011.
Half of fresh baaf ready in 3
weeks, 304·882·2470.
Boyo 16 In bicycle, good
cond, $20.00. 304-6766884 .
Camouflage regular army
clothing, denim surplus.
Sam Somerville's, 7 miles
Eaot Ra•enswood I new erel,
open normally 1:00-1:00
pm, Fri, Sat, Sun, (open
ofter 6 :00 evenings until
Oct. 22) .
Get your order in earty for
Christmas hard rock ~andy.
Phone 304·676-2607.

66

&amp;
61

LIVI~ S IIILK
1984 Buick Rl•lera, fully
electric. full poWer, dark red
white Landau
metallic
top. wire wheels, concert
atereo eystem. loaded.
1 1,000 mi. Cell 446·93114.

w:

Farm Equipment

long tecto1, Vermeer round
balers, rakes. teddan &amp;
mowert and a complete line 1983 Chevy Chevetta 4
of bole handNng end feeding cylinder, 4 opeed, tinted
accanoriea, grinder mixers, window•. AM FM casutt.
wagons, rotary tillers. rotary 18,000 mlleo, axcellont concutters, blades. cultivetora. dition. good gao milage, Call
di1e1, plows. poatdrivers. 992-7672 or 992-3187
woodsplittare, aeadars,
guea, powerWashers. 1979 Chevy lmpelo Wogan.
Wheol Horss Lown &amp; garden Excal.l ant condition, new
tractors w·tendom axles. Gopdyaer rodlali. PS, PB,
And see u1 for 1 complete AC, AM-FM. crulu contol.
line of parts end Hrvice. tilt oteorlng. Book prlco
$3800.00, sele $3600.00.
Used: ·
MF 160, MF 165, MF 60, Coli 742-2328.
MF 160 w-loodor. 801 ~ord,
2 Vermeer round 'Demo' 1973 Olda Cutlaoo, $400 or
bolero, 2 used bolers, 120 boot offer. Call 614-992MF baler gra•lty wagons, 6031.
990 IH hayblne, plows - - - - - - - - · l c bladel. And check our tall 1984 Monte C•rlo SS. blue.
sale prices!
fully equipped. new condiJ 1V 1 D E N
F A R M lion. Aoillng $11.600.00 or
EQUIPMENT
boot . offer. Will consider
614-446-1675
trade. Call949-2181.

s

1----------- 1---------1 no. 30 JD combine pull
typs, Call 614-256·8618.
Jay Criunbery.

1981 Ford Eocort GLX. 4
door hatch becl&lt;. Good
condition. Call 992-3974 .

20 HP Wisconsin motor.
alai:t. start, 3 in . hydraulic
cyNndor 8ft. Coli 614-38,B230.

'72 Volkawegon. overheuled engine with 30,000
mlleo, $760.00. Coli 3048711"-5004.

Building Supplies

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

1979 Monte Carlo 306
auto, PS, P8, Air, tilt wheel.
nice car, sale or trade~
e4,200 . 00. 304 - 6764181 .

66 Ferguson Tractor; Lawn
Genie Flail Mower; 3 point
Building Materials
Block, br!ck, sewer pipes,
windows . lintels. etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Granda;
0. Call614-246-6121 .
Build your own 4 bdr. home.
$8,995 del. to your she.
New display model open.
Sea it nowl 1·814-8867311 .

hitch 6ft. buoh hog; 8ft. pull
typs bush hog; Call 9492008 .
.

MF·275 Dleeel, opin out '79 LTD e3,200.00 or boot
wheels, bumper, duel Hyd, otter. 304·578-2010.
87 hp, diff lock, 396 hrsllke 1--~------­
new. $10,000 .00 firm . 1978 Mercury Cougor XR7.
304·676-2902 mar 6:00. PS, P8. AC, AM-FM. 814446·2666.

63

'78 Century Bulcl&lt; wegen,
good cond, phone 304-6761090.

Livestock

2 air conditioners-on 12,600
BTU, one 7,500 BTU used 3
mos. Patio set 4 chairs &amp;
table with umbrella, be.do
room set, whit&amp; French
Provinial . Honda motorcycle
XL 100 1980 modal . call
614· 246-6219.
For sale fill dirt, and top soil.
Call Call 614-256 · 1427.
Remodeling Sale · G.E . dillhwasher, G. E. drop in stove,
Hotpoint refrigerator, all 8
yrs. old or less . Reasonable
prices. Will consider offers.
Wood TV stand for sale also.
Cell 446-7307 .

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCA EST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor· outdoor facilitlae.
AKC Doberman pupj:Jiea:
Stud Service. Coll614·4467795.

2 heifer calves. 1 Black 1980 chevy Luv IUIO, AMJar11y and 1 Charlois. Hay FM taps, e3. 199. John'o
Auto Solu, Bulovlllo Rd ..
for ssle. Call 949-2237.
446·4782. Gallipolis.
Hogo, 200 lbs and o•er,
good for butchering, phone 1972 Chevrolet California
truck! all orginel. very good
304-676·2743 .
running cond . Call 614367-7111 .

a. Grain

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
614·367-7220.

64

Brlarpatch Kennels Profaaaional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilitill. English Cocker Spaniol puppleo. Coli 814-388 9790.

large round bales of hay .
820 each . Coll448·1062 .

Dragonwvnd Cattery Kennels. AKC Chow puppies.
Siamese kittens. new littlt'l
CFA Hlmalayen and Persien
kittens. Call614-446-3844
ahar 6 .

65

Hay

Seed

a. Fertilizer

Certified ooad wheat. barley,
rye, spelts. tritic.la. also
cover crop wiTeat. Altizer
Farm Supply. Call614-24115193.

ru-

PAINTING· Interior and exterior, plumbing. roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yro.
exp. Coli 614-388-9652.

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN.
scotchguard·wate1 ••traction, deodorizers. FREE aatl ..
mates. Reuonabla rates.
Gena Smith, 992-6309.

Ill (j}) Entertainment
Tonight
Cl) Wheel of Fortune
0 Cl) Wheel of Fortune
(I) liD MacNeii/Lohrer
Newshour
®News
&amp;I Jeffersons
7:30 D [})Tic Tac Dough
(!) Auto Racing '84: Spa
1000 Coverage of this
world endurance auto race
is presented from Spa, Belgium. (60 min.)
(I) Andy Griffith
Cl) 0 ([] Family Feud
(I) Jeopardy
® Wheel of Fortune
Iii (j}) New Name Tha1
Tune
fil WKRP in Cincinnati
8:00 u rn
1984 wortd
Series: Game 2 At pre ss
time, · the teams had not
been determined. (3 hrs.)
CIJ MOVIE: 'Table for Fi•e'
[}) MOVIE: 'Funny Lady'
Ill Flipper
Cil MOVIE : 'The Molly
Maguires'
(I) Ill (j}) Fall Guy Colt and
Howie set out to rescue
.Jody from a prison where
female inmates are forced
into prostitution . (60 min .)
0 Cl) ®I Charles in Charge
Charles urges the kids to
take up challenging new ac tivities which land everyone
in hot water .

ANNIE
~ 15

rn

MV JACIIET

lO~N OA
SOME THIN:

TAFFY'? •.

D. and

M . Contractors;
Remodeling, vinyl siding;
painting (indoors and out·
doora) replacement windows cell304·773-6131 .
RON'S Television Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar. and
house calls. Call 304·6782398 or 814·446·2464.

ALLEY OOP
OKAY, STROBRIDGE,

Fatty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Coli .3 04-6761331 .

57

Musical
Instruments

Transporla l1 11n

71

Aotory or ceble tool drilling.
Molt wello completed oame
dey. Pump uln and •rvl ~
.... 304-89&amp;·3802.

8 :30

Plumbing

find as I qet older
it's hard to tel one
day from ~nc•thl!r'
9 :00

JIM'S PLtiM81NG &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1, Box 356. Golllpolio. Call 814; 367-0676.

Oood-1 Excovoting. beoe·
mante. footera, • drivewaya,
oeptlc tanks, londsceplng.
Coil anytime 614 -446•
4537. Jomas L. Dovloon, Jr.

WINNIE

9 :30
10:00

Excavating

owner .

Dozer Work by Ted Henna.
DRcheo. ponds. roado, lend
claarlng. etC. Call Motor Car
Broken, 446-8692.
J.A.R .Construction Co.Rutlond, Oh.l14-742-2903;
Bosemento, Footero, Conwork, lec~~oe'o •.
Dltchar. Dump
water-ps-nwer·
oleootrl·cellines.

10:30

BARNEY
'

JUGHAID!!

PUT TH' LID

ON TH' POPCORN POPPER!!

0

G

o'V
0

a.

. 1972 Chevy van with rebuilt
motor and tranami11ion.
llood tlroa, e9oo.oo. 304882-2936.
.
.
'79 Ford Fairmont
$2,000.00. '711 throe quart or ton, 4x4, Chevy
11 ,800.00. Call ••onlngo
304-675-7890 .
1917 Plymouth Velvodsre,
PS,PB,AC, 4dr 8-n. oneowner. Coll814-378-23110.

Side by lido refrigerator
harvest gold like new t275,
side by aide IVICodo green
Uttle oldsr 1126, froot free
refrigerator white lg. frHIIr
on top *176, coppertone
refrigerator froot free 11211,
auto washer G E herveet gold
like new 1176, Kenmore
walhara *96 each 3 to
chO:oH from.. 2 g11 rangei
t96 eoch, electric ronu•• 30
In t126, oil oppllonceo oold
with 30 day warranty.
Skoggo Applloncoo, Upper
River Rd.. GoiHpollo, Oh
446-7398.

74 Motorcycle•
1------'---

0

fi)Soap
MOVIE: 'High Risk'

Cil

o rn CI&gt; rn o

CI&gt; ®! Iii

(j2) News
(])
lnvestigator;s
Crusading Reporters of
the Air This parody features
In-depth investigations and
sa tirical exposes .
[I) MOVIE: 'Never Say
Never Again '
W Dobie Gillis
(1) NFL's Greatest Mo·
mentsi982NFL Yeann Re·

ci) Two Ronnies

General Hauling

fi) Benny Hill Show
Cl) Tonight Show
Tonight's gueSt is Bette
Davis. (60 min.)
[}) MOVIE: · 'The Final
Option'
Ill Best of Groucho
C1J SportsCenter
(I) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 Cl) Magnum P .I. A •e·
teran hires Magnum to loca te his girlfrie nd in hopes of
also finding the man responsible for a friend 's death . (AI
(60 min.)
([] Latenight America
(jij) Barney Miller
• (jJ Nlghtllne
18 Twilight Zone
12:oo Ill Burna &amp; Atten
(1) Mazda Sportslook
Cl) Nightline
® MOVIE: 'The Se"'n
Year Itch'
• ClZ Eye on Hollywood
&amp;I Gunsmol&lt;e

11 :30
Jamea Boya Water Service. .
Also poole filled. Coli 114- ·
2111-1141 or 614·441 : ·
11711 or 114-446-7911,

1979 Huley Dl¥1doon
Sportlter, many e,.;trae.
., ,900. Cell 446-8238.

1876 Cordobe, 2 dr.. outo ..
AM·FM -eo. Good cond ..
rune good, 1700. Call 4488331.

19n. 28 ft cemper, self
contained, elr, pa furn804P,
uc cond, 11,200.00. 3046711-4085,

JIMB WATER SERVICE::
Con Jim Lenior, 304-6711· ·
7397.

'

10:45
11 :oo

VIBW .

86

Kon'o Wetor Service. Welle, ·
cloterno, poole flllacl. Phono '
317 -01123 or 367-7741
night or dey,

-

(ff) Brain ' The Enl1ghter;Jed
Machine.· Models . m1cro·
graphs and computer ani·
mation help demonstrate
the mystery of the workings
of the brain . (60 min .)
f1l MOVIE : 'Sa•e the
Tiger'
(!) Auto Racing '84: Fall
1 00 Coverage of this NA5·
CAR Darlington bash Series
is presented from North Wilkesboro, NC . (60 min .)
0 (I) (jij) Dreams A little
fame may cost Phil his
friendship with Gino after he
is quoted out of context in a
magazine article.
CIJ 700 Club
Cl) Iii (j}) Oynas ty
0 Cl) (jij) MOVIE: 'Attack
on Fear'
[lJ @ Smithsonian World
' Filling in the Blank s.' To·
night's program visits the
Freer Gallery of Art in Wash·
ington. D.C . and talk s with
Mel Blanc. cre'a tor of car·
toon chara cter voices. (60
min.)
(!) PKA Full Contact
Karate
[I) Pat Benatar in Concert
Thi s four-time Grammy win·
ner was v•deo taped a t th e
New Haven Veteran s M emorial Coliseum.
(I) Iii (j}) Arthur Hailey' s
Hotel Peter and Billy inter·
vene in a young girl's venture into prostitut ion and
Mrs. Cabot's magazine in·
terview goes awry. (60
min.I I Closed Captioned!
{]) To 8e Announced
® Newswatch
@DindependentNews
CIJ SCTV : Second Coming
The laughs continue with
specially-edited
encores
featuring the best sketches
of the satirica l seri es
(l) My Little Margie
liD New Capitalists 'Econ·
omics in Indian Country.· (60
min.)

SEWING Mochlne rapoln,
Hrvlce . Authorized Singer
Batao · &amp; Service Sharpen
Scleson . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 6.1 4-992·2284.

1977 Chryoler Cordoba,
•1.600. 73,000 mlleo,good
cond. Coli 1114-317-7131
after 4PM w-doys.

1882 Chevy Chevetta 4
apd.. radio, new tlrea.
U,319. 1979 Plymouth
Vallln. 2 dr.. .8 oyt., auto.,
AM·FM t2,381. 1171 Ptymoulh Vololra euto., air,
AM ·FM, 11,189. John'o
Auto Bells lulevlllo Rd.,
446·4712, Oenlpollo.

Adv

(I) Brain

lng (Including hot tor
oppllcetlonl 304-676-20B8
or 875-4560.

77 Ford f·150 4x4, V-B.
auto.. 64,000 mlloo. Cell' O.A . Boaton excavating,
446-1096.
complete dozer and dump:
truck eerviceo. Call 617-·
1977 Ford 4 wheel drive. 6128 or 378-6288 .
361 modified 400, auto
tran1, tlnlted windows, Q78 mud tlrao with chrome
spoke rims. e.:c. cond .,
Refrigeration
e3,000. Call 446-4462.

Autos for Sale

W PB'f'

cian, maaon. painter. roof·

1878 Ford Courier bucket
nato, 5 spd .. AM-FM cau.,
chrome slot a, good cond ...
e1,300. Call 614· 2668276.

73 , Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

Cl) 'The Brain' -Nature's
"' Awesome Creation!

THEY'RE ALL YOURS !
TAKE 'EM UP TO, 'TH ~
RAILHEA.D AN' PUT
'EM lOWORK!

RINGLES'S SERVICE. ex·
perienced carpenter, electri-

SHULAW' S Plumbing end
Heating, 211 Sixth St., ,
Point Pleou"t, W. Ve. 304-·
876-11420. liceneed and
lneured .

-··--.

10·10

87

Upliolaterv

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11S3 SIIC. A~~a .. GaUipoiio
814-448-7833 CH"6t 4"448:
1833.
.

WHAT 'THE I&amp;OVE~t-.1-

MENT

EXP'ECT~"It:l .

· 6ET F~OM INCOMe ·

TAXE5.

IJ r I I
~ .. t I I I X Jt I I I I I J"
(Anlwerw 10m01 row )

Ynterday's

I Jumb6es. BILGE

TEPID HUNTER FABLED
Anlwet' : What to do when you get tM feeling that you
want to splurge - NIP IT IN THE " BUD-GET"

tiJ Gomer Pyt•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditionellifatime guarantee. Locel references
fumiehed . Free aatimataa.
Coli collec11-114-2370488, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
Plastering &amp;. Plaster repair.
free elllmotes. Call 1114266·1 1 li2.

·=--=--=-":"

Cl)

H &amp; S Home Improvement•
vinyl oldlng, roofing, room
lddltion. lltorm windowe. ..
stone. Call 614-367·0409
or 614-367-7244.

83

19BO Dodge Truck, low
milage. Reasonable price.
Coli 992-7206.

AKC Golden Retriever, 13
waoko old, 1 shoto. Call
614-593-6243.

Registered UKC Night
Champion, Treeing Walker.
Priced right, Coll843-6426.

Modern 2 bdr. duplex apt ..
furnithed, water paid, Main
St., Cheshire, Ohio. Call
614-246·6818 .

3 bdr .. 1 both, flraploca, uoe
of born, Uoo mo. ptuo
utilities, also efficiency opt.
with flreploce &amp; gerage,
e1111 mo. pluo utlitloo. Call
Lolo Richsrdo 448-2761 or
F.o lph 8orcu1 614-2469176.

ING THEM·

Marcum Roofing &amp;. Spouting. Now Installing
roofs. 30 yaara experience.
spaclallzln!lln bUilt up roof.
Co111114-3B8-9867.

1982 9·10 long . bod PU. 4
spd. Call 448-4447 or 4469762.

1977 Chavy pickup . VB, PS,
Standard, Runo good, body
rough. $1000.00. Call992·
7841.

1 small furn . efficiency for 1
g~ntleman only. Call , 44603/JB .

613ThlrdAve.1 bdr':,woter
furnished. aduhaonly. 8136
mo., dep. required. Coli
448-4222 between 9 &amp; 6.

WITH TERRifY-

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614·448-3888 or
614·446-4477

For lease 1 bdr. apt. over
looking th' park, 1160 mo.
Call 446-1819 or 4462325.

eve.

WHEN THEY

GeT LONHY.

&amp; Heating

1--------Crossbow flarnett-Wildcat,
1!10 lb.. new cond. Call
614·367-7434 after 5:00 .

~(lRKER~ KA,
1!-EiiN I&lt;ME'D. THE
~ON~TER ?!'EM,

Home
Improvements

82

Furnishad apt . $185 water
P.aid, 2 bdr. 1136'11 2nd.
Ava.. Gallipolis. Call 4464416 after BP M .

3 rm. &amp;. bath fumiehed
suitable for one or two.
446-3733 doyo, 446-0171

Autos for Sale

Firewood cut up slabs. $15
PU load . Larger loads delivered. Call for prices, 614245· 5804.

For sale roll bar $45 . Cell
614· 266-6208.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at S163 for one
bedroom and $198 ' per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 deposi1 located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza, pool and TV
ant . Call 446· 2746 or laava
message.

Firewood for Hie; seasoned
or green . 304· 773-6738.

71

!.trill Sup ; JIIi~'

Fell Yard Care Mulching,
fertiliz.ing. liming ~ reseeding
8a transplanting. Also for
sale : cow manure 81 top soil. .
Contact Bruce Davison ,
614·266- 1427 .

Firewood for sale $26
pickup load, $36 delivered.
Call614·256-6208.

Apartment
for Rent

Firewood. 304· 773-9179
or 304-773-6667.

YOU K"OW
HOW I\'IEN AAE

TO liE ?ATI!!oFIED

12 ton Michigan mobile
crane, $8,60Q; 4 wood
burning stove t260 . each .
304-676- 1678 after 6;
304·675; 7896.
Large Furnished apt . 919
2n~ .
$176 utilities paid .
Men only. Share bath . 4464416 after 8 p.m.

NONE. OF 1HE.

D CIJCI)ClJ O ([J(lt •

(jJ Newa ·
CIJ MOVIE: 'A long Woy
Home'
.
CIJ Hot Potato
(I) Lucy Show
([]Dr. Who
liD Voyage of the Mimi
Sl Diff' rent Stroku
6 :30 D CIJ Cll NBC Newo
[}) MOVIE: · 'Still of the
Night'
CIJ Riflemen
C1J Mazda SportsLook
(I) Carol Burnett
([] Ill !D ABC News
0 Cl) ® CBS News
Cl)
Nightly
Business
Report
liD Body Electric
Ill One Dey at a Time
7:00 1J CIJ PM Magazine
CIJ Here Come the 8rides
C1J SportoCenter

CAPTAIN EASY

thru Friday.

186..bells
Everything
In ·good
bar
and dumb
bells
cond. 304-895-3903.

3 bdr .. 2 bath, garage, lg.
rec·. room , 2 FP. barn, $425
mo. Call Lola Richards 446-

6:00

S t ~rv 11 :1:~

Mopl' full sire bad with
mattreaa and box aprlnga
UO.; Sturdy bunk bedowith
mettreaa *100.; Exerciae
bench with teg lift, orm pull,

EUJIC

EVENING

11i73 Mldos 111 ft. Mlf;
contllned camper. C.tll14379-2886.

Cemetery lot for ula in
Memory C:lardena . Lot
number li9C. Call 3177478. Virgil Wamoley,
Cheshlro.

13

6
I I r ·

10/1Q/84

' campe;, exc.
~ud one time, quick
Coli 81•· 3117-0334 .

30 in. 1110. 60,000 BTU
hooter 1125. Maytag
automatic washer avacodo
like new $1 60 . Other makes
of washers 890 and up.
Hupp' s Appliance &amp; Glass-

The Daily Sentinel- Page

WEDNESDAY

~as

..r\~11

Ohio

Television
Viewing

HERE'S THE FI!'IISHED
F'«&lt;DUcT- WI-I"" 1:0
YOU TI-IINI&lt;,?

627 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis.

OH .

Pomen~y-Middleport,

I'LL .COME RUNNING BY
'I'OU, AND 't'OU TRI{ TO
GRAll ME BEFa1E I 6ET
TO 11-tE
LINE ...

I HATE PLAVIN6
WITH 'I'OU, MARCIE!

East feels
the pinch

NORTH
I~ I H4
t AQ3 2
• J 10 3
• J 10'
tAQJ
WEST
EAST
t9 7 6
tJ 10 85
.92
.AK8 76 4
t 532
tA6
t98 732
SOUTH
tK4

By Jomet Jacoby

So· you have only eight tricks in
three no-trump. If you knock out the
defender's diamond ace, he'll take
enough tricks to set you. Go ahead
and take your eight tricks, but don't
throw in your hand!
When your partner makes an over·
call and you cue-bid the opponent 's
suit, you may be asking for a stopper
in the enemy suit. If, on your next
tum to bid, you repeat the cue-bid ,
you are asking for a partial stopper.
And that's what happened on the cur- j
rent deal.
East happily cleared the hearts .
after the opening lead and, like a ·
panther waitlllg to pounce, eagerly ·
walled for the first play In diamonds.
That waa one play option for declarer
- to lead the jack of diamonds from
dummy as though he were missing
the queen, and hope that East would
carelessly duck.
There was another legitimate play
for the contract and declarer took it.
He played four rounds of clubs, discarding a diamond ·from the table.
East bad two easy discards - a diamond and a heart. But the fourth club
gave him fits . If he gave up a spade,

.,

.Q5
tKQ98 7
t 'K 10 6 5

Vulnerable: East- West
Dealer: East
West
Pass
Pass
Pass

Norlb

2•
~

Pass

I.

East

Dbl.
Pass
Pass

Soul~

2+
34o
3NT

Opening lead : '19

the spade suit would run. If he gav e
up one more heart, declarer would
simply force out the diamond ace.
There would be only one more heart
for East to cash , and the contract
would be assured.

6£c,."rrr'
lty THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

1 Visit

1 French

5 Engerxlered . painter
1t Moldillg
%Plato's
style

11 Greek moon

marltetplace

goddess

3 Become

12 Concourse
13 Blab
14 Hockey

4 Directed
5 Manly

skilled in

Yesterday's Answer '' "'
great
symbol IS Klinger
27 "China
15 In favor
6 Porker
in " MASH" Seas"
.11 Vietnamese 7 Become 18 Incisive
star
holiday
adept in 21 Regretted Z8 "17 Drinking
8 Away
%%Chan is one Parisienne"
vessel
from
%3 Vocation !9 Gatecrash
1t Exclamcamp
%4 !Jrinking 34 Prepare
ation
t Develop
toast
ensilage
21 Designate
bicuspids 25 House
35 As written
U Dream(Fr. ) U Fury
ci (Mus. )
%%"Silkwood" .,....,.......,.......,.....,
co-star
%3 Paul's

, companion

6-+-+-+.......j

USnowgoose
genus
~;,---+-+-

%5 Claim
21 Trilby, e.g .
t7 Servitude
31Gowrong
31 Prior to

32 Container
33 Euphoric
35 Theatrical
bit

:II Horsemen
3'7Lug
31Shabby
39 Southwest
wind
DAIL\' \.'1\YPTOQUOTES-Here's bow to work It :

D [})

r
'

AXYD.LBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter sLands for another. In this sample A is used
ror the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophes, the length and rormation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
1~10

CRYP'I'OQUOTE
SPC

ZCCUTEGG

BM

VDNGAEP LEPZEPA . UYAPA
VC

LBVVAPM, CVGI

ZPEVR

GBRA

EPA

M DPOBOCPM .

WBZZCPX

Ystenlly'1Crypteqallle: PROORESSISANICEWORD.
BUT cHANGE IS ITS MOTIVA1UR. AND CHANGE HAS

ITS ENEMIES. - ROBERT F. KENNEDY

�'

Page-14-The Oaily Sentinel

·Additional names
.put on jury· list
The names of 30 residents
were drawn ln the office of Larry
Spencer, Meigs County Clerk of
Courts, Tuesday for pc&amp;ible
duty on the September term of
the pettlt jury,
The new names are to supplement names drawn «:arlier ln
, case of nwnerous jury dismissals from the first draWlllg.
The group lncludes Clarence
Arland King, Pomeroy; David
Edward Ball, Racine; Wlima
Marie Rizer, Syracuse; Ernest
E . Imboden, Syracuse;. Marvin
Richard Stafford, Route 2,
Pomeroy; Michael Alan Mattea, Middleport; Leigh A. Canter, Route 2, Coolville; Julie A.
Napper, Rutland; Charles Leon
·Collins, Reedsville; Leo L.
Lentz. Route 1, Dexter; Terry

M. Barrett, Route 1, Dexter;
Mamie D. Harmon, ROute 1,
Dexter; Llllian Louise Burt.
Pomeroy; Sarah C. Ebersbach,
Syracuse; John Edward Moore,
Route 1, Rutland; Unda S.
Montgomery, Langsville; Mary
Olive Weber, Long Bottom;
Charles E. Blakeslee, Pomeroy;
Doris A. Buchanan, Reedsville;
Mary E. Rlclunond, Route 1;
Middleport;
WilUaJT1 Todd
Snowden. Rutland; Gladys J .
Cross, Langsville; James M.
Werry, Sr., Raclne; Shirley Ann
Tyree, Middleport; Kenneth R.
Cook, Syracuse; John Wilson,
Jr., Pomeroy; Mitchell H. Meadows, Middleport; Paul A. English, Reedsville, and Richard W.
Danner, Route 2, Albany.

Village funds total $530,776
All Middleport VIllage money as
of Sept. 30 totaled $530,776.63,
accordlng to the monthly report of
Village Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.

Receipts, expenditures and the
end of the month balance of each
fund lliclude: general, $14,651.&amp;1,
$14,435.41, $32,362.85; street malntenance, $2910.35, $4624.53, $1007.31,
deficit; HUD, $65,000, · $66,698.61 ,
$6,934.6l; federal revenue sharlng,
no receipts, $1,620. 72, $933.75; street
Ught, no receipts, $1,486.48,
$3,903.15; street Jeyy, no receipts, no
disbursements, $20,486.13; fire
equipment, $75, $619.60, $4,0C&lt;i.77
deficit; fire truck , no receipts, no
disbursements, $59,518.03; general
bond retirement, no receipts , no
disbursements, $18,694.79; sanitary
sewer escrow ~ no receipts, no
disbursements, $136, 717.29; fire
house improvement, $101.17, no
disbursements, $13,737.44; water
tank, no receipts, nodisbursements,
$180,977.58; water , $11,219.31,
$10,901.85, $26,621.89; sanitary
sewer, $7 ,623.36, $6,572.72,
$32,673.55; swimming pool, $184.80,
$1,788.65, $5,!112.97 deficit; cemetery, $306.50, $1,327.36, $4,631.76
deficit; water meter trusts, $.'l15,
$260, $10,900.35; economic development, no receipts , no disbursements, $2,(0).

Wedneidav. October 10, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Receipts for the month totaled
$102,687.33 while disbursements
amounted to $110,335.93.

Chamber wants ....

CE WD®IMD1TW
@[f
.
.

'

(Continued from page 1)
moneywtthwhlchtobuycandy, are
of development for that establish· still needed and can be made by
ment but had obtained no lnforma· calling the chamber otr1ce at
tlon on the status of the sewer Jlne 992-!XUi.
•
connection to the building.
Approximately 25 chamber
The chamber commended the members attended Tuesday's
efforts of the Pomeroy-Middleport meeting.
Lion's Club for placing benches MIIITia@e'lice118e8
throughout the area. .
Marriage licenses have been
In further business, the date Cor Issued In Meigs ~ty Probate
this year's Chrlstma!; parade to be Court to Wesley Marshall Smith, 2:,!,
held jointly with MiddlepOrt, has · Middleport, and Megan Usa Long,
beenscheduledforNov.24.Plansfor 18, Pomeroy; Troy Allen Willis, aJ,
this event have not been completed. and Kathy
Gibbs, 26, both of
Plans !ll'e also. llicomplete for a Middleport; John H. Ord, 32, and
fall dlnner-dance which Is to be held Martha L. Michael, 38;. also both of
prior to the holiday season.
Middleport.
Atthepresent,alleffortsarebelng Seeks divorce
channeled toward the upcoming
Sharen M . Herald, 1n care of
Halloween party scheduled for Oct. David Givens Cheshire has filed
30, 7to8::llp.m ., on the parking lot for a divorce 'trom Fr~ Henlld,
Area youngsters and ,adults are MiddlepOrt IIi. Meigs County canlnvited to attend the party ln rnon Pleas' CoUrt. The lalntlff Is
costume and be treated to games,
P
contests prizes and candy Pwn"- charging gross neglect of duty and
•
·
" extreme cruelty
klns for carving and appleS for
JudgeCharles.Knlghthaslssueda
dunking have been donated for the rest:raJnlng order against the clefestivltles. Donations of candy, or fendantpendlngthedlvorce.

Jean

WH ITE-ETH Rl DGE
667-3110

Middleport police make 64 arrests
Sixty-four arrests were. made by meter violatloos and $56 In mer·
the Middleport Police Department
durlng the month of September,
Chief of Police J . J .. Cremeans

reporu.
The department Investigated six

chantpolicecollectlons.Ailvehlcles
of the department were driven 3, 743
mllesdurlngthemonth.

SINCE 1858

125 LEE STREET

COOLVILLE, OHIO 45723

BELPRE. OHIO 45714
'

(Behind Post Office)

LEE ETHRIDGE

.Only

accidents and collected $517 In park

SPORTSWEAR
E

conn1e:s

got 1t!

SO LIVAIII.f. SO LOVAII.I. SO LOW.
Low. sncpety neers make tNs

J:~ump

423-6300

5th STREET

r....................~

Ir;========::::::;::::::=::=::::::::::j

. !F~~

one ot tne most livable in your

_ ___________ _

..... .....

II PONDEROSA.
SUNRISE SPECIAL

·

1 FREE COFfEE

wardrobe And you'll love the new wrln~le It gives 'tQIJr wardrobe without

outtlng a dent In your ouoget In Brown , Wme, Bl11ck.

WITH THE PURCHASE OF
I BEST
THE WORLD'S BIGGEST,
BREAKFAST BUFFET'"
I MONDAY
THRU FRIDAY

STERLING

Bathroom~
Faucet.

~·

1n

combmatron

able lor cash . AI partrc tpatrng

steak houses Ctloppecl ste;tk t'&gt;
U 5 0 A. rn spected 100%
chopped beet s \~ak . Beverage ol
ler eAcludes tur ce, beer 21nd wrne

·

CHAPMAN
SHOES
NEXT TO ELIEIRLDS IN POMIIOY

'

IIAM-4PM Moo S, l. '"''
Otter
111 !0184 .

PDNDE!\cs.a;

FREE

LUNCH SPECIAL
I THE
WORLD'S BIGGEST,

PARKING

BEST SALAD
I sou
p• AND BEVERAGE
_ $2.99
I SANDWICH,
FRIES AND
BUFFET'~'~~~

99

Protectant
IT'Sse&amp;a.
lliT v.aKS lJ(f MIC£

'

4JWiiWW!'
Renews, revitalizes &amp; protects
vinyl , rubber, leather &amp; plastic.
4-ounce bottle. (5t2-54t /A2B·
13040)

I
MEALS
I 2 FOR $VALUE
7 49
I T-BONE
STEAK DINNERS
2 FOR $8.99
I

99
Drain
Cleaner

'nit

PCNDERC

I

A powerful cleaner for sink &amp; tub . Also for cleaning
septic tanks . Will remove tree roots. 1-quart. (513·
62?/P72·LFQ) ·

~
~

Step

Floodlight .
PAR-38 outdoor reflector flood lamp. 150-watts.
. (085·936.E4-BG150PAR/Fl-120V-12)

99
lfsrERLING

Sink
Faucet

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
Pomeroy, OH. 992·2811
PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
Mason, W.VA 773·5583

Rivetool
Kit
Kit contains : 2 interchangeable nose pieces, one
· pkg. of rivets, back-up plates &amp; rivetool. Comes in a
·
plastic storage pouch. (412-1971V24-K110)

RIDENOUR'S SUPPLY
Chester,OH
(614) 985·3308

STAR SUPPLY CO.
322 Third Street Racine, OH
949-2525

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
4th &amp; Main St. Reedsville; OH
378-6125
'

u s.o A.'""''''"' 100%

chopped beet steak Be~er a gco f !er e-elude s )urce . beer and wrne.

1

I\AM -4PM Mon . Sat only.

wrth d r ~ou n t s. Applicable taJ:es
nol rncluded Not red~mabl e l or
C~~ h

AI pdrt iCIIJil l lnl! Steakh OU5

~:s~~~~ge~~~%;~~~;d~l

--1
I
I
I
I
II

TBONE
STEAK DINNERS
2FOR$8.99

1

INCLUDE SWOR LD'S
BIGGEST. BE ST SALA D
BUFFET'" . BAKED
POTATO , ROLL AND
BUTTER.
C ~nn o l

be

u~ed tn

I
I
I
I
I

comb111al1 0n

·w1 lh diSCO unts Applicable taxes
not InClud ed . Not red eemable f or

cash At pantc1patmg st eak llou ~ ·
e~ Chopped stea~I S U S.D.A
1r•spec ted 100% chopped beet

·

;te~~ Olfer bpnes lll Jl ,84 .

COUPON GOOD FOR ANY PAITY SIZE .

r.p_ONIJE_--R-OSA-.:- ::c7u~
;0-;D-:;-...,
BIGGEST. BEST SALAD I

OIIAIN OPINER

[!.;Jn

Appll c abl~

U •es not mcluded Not redeem&lt;lhte tor cash At part •crp.,trng
'5\~dk~muse ~ . Chopped steak is

r. ---------------1
,SA'
I

I
I BIG CHOPPED STEAK
2 FOR $6.99
I DINNERS
RIBEYE VALUE MEALS
I 2 FOR $7 49
I

3"

1
I1

"""
' "" clr"""
'" comb'" ''""
y,·•th other
scounts.

steak Oller [xptres ll ll l /84
COUPON GOOD FOR ANY PARTY SIZE.

•

Liquid Fire

SING LE STEAKBURGER OR

1--I PONDEROSA.
.
I
~IBEYE

Wall
Brush

'Solod O.H•• iodod" 1

·
otter E•pues t l!l0/84
~~0~22,0.!2,R~'t~T~ll,_-INCLUDES WORLD'S
.
BIGGEST, BEST SALAD
BUFFET'" , BAKED
BIG CHOPPED STEAK
POTATO . ROLL AND
DINNERS 2 FOR S6.99
~a~~;;e~~ed rn combr~tron
•

n:

. ABS chrome plated housing, 8-inch exposed deck
faucet. Brass
Y,-inch male Celcon shanks
coopllngs nuts.
'

HARDWARE

Offer Expires 11/ 9/ 84.

wrth other drscounts. /lpplrcabl e
taxes nolm cluded . Not redee m

•

3
..

I
I

partic tpa ting steakhou ses

Cannot be used

General purpose exterior or in·
terior, non-flammable with a
specially selected latex base
Paintable, White. 11 -ounce .
(267·781 /M57·
tube.
18250WH)

Allows JOints to be moved into
precise position before clamp- ·
ing. Formulated for use on all
hard &amp; softwoods . 8-oz. bottle.
(457·9111M2-E701 I

I

SANDWICH IN CLUDES
SINGLE STEAK BURGER

Latex
Caulk

Glue

Cannot be used in combinaI ton with other discounts. Apolicable t"es not tncluded
Not redeemable for cas h. At

I
·~alcd Buff•l include' 2 'oup~l I
OR
I
FISHSA NDWICH.
I
I THE WORLD'S BIGGEST,
I
T SALAD BUFFETTM,
I BES.
Soup • AND BEVERAGE
I
I.SANDWICH
$2 .99
FR. IES AND
I
I BEVERAGE $2.49
E~p·res
L-- ~D!!.0!2~,!2R!!Y ~T!,!!ZL_-- ...J
'""P'' I
I
SANDWICH INCLUDES
I
FI SH SANDWIC H.
I

49

8
Wood

II

L __ ~o!:,o~~~R!_Y,:!T~z:,,_. _ _ J.

1 BEVERAGE $2.49

69

~B/

S'A LE ENbS
OCTOBER 17th

Ladder

I
.
I ;oBI;;;G::-;C;;,HC;:oo:;;P:;;:PE;;:Dc;S~TE;::A;:;:K~::._._
DINNERS 2 FOR $6.99
I RIBEYE VALUE MEALS
I 2 fOR $7 49
•

STEAK DINNERS
I T-BONE
2 FOR S8.99

BUFFET '" . BAKED
PoTATO . ROLL AN o
BUTTER.

I
I
I

Ccll1not t&gt;e used tn combmat100

w1t h d1 scou nt ~. Applicabl e ~~~es
not Included Not redeemable 101

cash At part iCi pati ng st eakl1ous·

~s~~i~r~~~~a~~~~~d ~'
st eak . Otter E~ p1re s llill /84

L-- _i0~0!!2~!2!~~T~~--

j

1
'

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