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                  <text>l;..ocal grid previews

Top farm family

Stories on Pages 4, 9

Story on Page 20

Homecoming activities

Levy motion rescinded

l'hotAls oli Page 12

StOry on Page 15

.'

e.
Vol .l4, No .127 '

•

•

at y " " "' en t 1n e

. Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Thursday. October 11. 1984

Copy.ighted 1984

2 Sections, 20 Pages

26 Cents

Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

ks project ~delayed another year
WAsHlNGTON (AP) - Ohio water projects,
including proposed construction and renovation of the
locks and dam near Galllpolls, appear dead for the
year after they were stripped from an emergency
spending bill.
Faced with a threatened veto bY President Reagan,
.a House-Senate conference committee late Wednes·
day ditched consideration of 300 water projects
nationwide thl!t illtlmately would have cost up to $1.8
billlon.
•
Rep. Clarence. Miller, R-Ohio, said today he Is
disappointed with the "setback" but has been given
every trdlcation frmri - committee chairmen with
jurisdiction that the water projects will be one of the

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O'Neill for delaying action ·on the legislation.
In add ition to the Gallipolis project, the House
water bill had authorized navigational improvements
to the Ctev~tand and Lorain harbors and for a beach
erosion project a,t Ma umee Bay Sta te Par k.
It had also author ized loa ns for a water flood control
projects for the Miami Ri ver at Fairfield, the Scioto
River north of Chillicothe, the Hocking River at
Nelsonville and at Logan. the Muskingum River at
Kjl!buck a nd at Mansfield , and the Li tUe Miami River
south of Dayton. It also wou ld have authorized loans
for a water supply project at William H. ~arsha Lake
and a distribution project at Caesar Creek Lake.

water proJects
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bllllon water omnibus ~ uthorization bill, which the
administration had opposed as too e&gt;~pensive and not
requiring local governments to share enough of the
cost. The House also tried to spend nearly $100 million
to begin construction of nearly 53 projects that
ultimately would have cost $6.8 billion .
Rep. Bob McEwen said the Gallipolis proposal,
which was probably the "single most urgen t" water
development project in the na tion, .will have to wa it
until ne&gt;~t year.
The Ohio Republican, a member of the House
Publlc Works and Transportation Committee. called
Wednesday's development a "fiasco" and blamed the
budget system and House Speaker Thomas "Tip"

Veto threat

Can not b' ""'d m comb;na.
~~
l•on w;th otherd•sco unts. Ap · I ~

~~~~~~~ee~~:b~ol~rn~!~~~~·t

first items of business .in the new Congress.
"Gallipolis locks and dain remain my priority
concern for the commerce and developmeni of the
Ohio Valley," said Miller.
The Gallipolis provision had called for construction
of two new locks in a canal that would bypass the
existing Ohio River structure. In addition, it provided
for rehabilitation of the e&gt;~istlng dam.
The location of the current structure makes locking
conditions difficult and dangerous, officials have said.
And the small size of the lock chambers results In
delays and higher barge transportation costs.
The project had been attached to the emergency
spending measure bY the . House as part of an $18

~
~

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•

He said the approprtation for
WASHINGTON (AP) ...;. Law·
makers ,w ere ready to adjourn the water projects waS "not even the
!lith Congress today, confident petty cash fund at the Pentagon."
Presldent Reagan · would sign a Referring to defense Items, he
catch-aU money bill that was added, "The White House seems to ·
drained qf every single water have no ltmttatlon on Its lust to
project, including the new locking Increase those projects."
House Speaker ThomasP.O'Neill
systerq at Galltpolls Locks and
Jr.,
defending the water projects,
Dam, to prevent a veto.
said
he· gave up because "the
Following House approval by a
president
wants to veto It and will
252-60 vote Wednesday night, only
blllme
the
. Democrats as big
today's scheduled Senate vote was
spenders."
needed to send the bill to the White
House. But before Congress could · . The House had written Some $139
• . l~ators ·also had to vote to mllllon In water projectS Into tt.
elltend the government's borrOwing omnibus bll, whlle the Senate's
~was $EI2 mllllon.
authority.
Thespendlngmeasure,whichwlll
Negotiators saved the toughest
keep
most government agencies
part for last, giving up cherished
cwratlng
In the 1985 tlscal year,
programs for , pons, • municipal
containS
a
provision that llkely will
water supplies·, barge locks and
cut
off
aid
to
Nicaraguan rebels next
darns.
"They really bit the bullet, " said year. The administration owe ses
Rep. SUvioO. Conte, RMass., senior the language.
House and Senate conferees
R.epubllcan on the HouseApproprlafinally reached agreement on the
tions Committee.
But In fact they had little choice, omnibus spending blll WedneSday
with President Reagan Insisting he alter a week of gridlock that kept
would veto a blll containing the Congress In .session an erua week
water projects. When the projects and forced postponement of numer·
evaporated, the threat apparently ous re-election campaigns.
Before the agniement on water
dried up too.
projects,
the negotiators reached
White House Budget Director
compromises
on the aid to NicaraDavidA.Stockmansentlawrnakers
guan
rebels
and
key Items In the
a teller saying the administration
defense budget.
backs the compromise.
Up to $14 mllllon could be spent to
The administration's refusal to
even negotiate on water projects assist to so-called "contras," but the
money ~annot be released unless
angered Sen. Mark Hatfield, R
ore., chairman of the Senate both houses of Congress approve it
AppropriationS Committee - who next March.
The money bill will permit three
lost the Bonneville Lock and Dam
(Continued on page 16)
project In his state.

SUFFERS ANOTHER SETBACK - Supporters of the proposed
constrilctlon and renovation of the locks and dam near Galllpolls
received disappointing news today when funding was stripped from an

emergency spending blll. Faced with a threatended veto by President
Reagan, a House-Senare conference committee tare Wednesday
ditched 300 water project• that would have cost $18 billion.

Vice-presidential debate slated tonight
WASHINGTON (AP)- With the
label of underdog in dispute, Vice
President George Bush and Geral ·
dine Ferraro square off tonight In a
90-mlnute debate that will be
watched closely not only for what

they say but how they say it in the
first man-versus-woman nationa l
political forum.
Both camps deemed their candi·
dates ready for the 9 p.m . EDT
meeting In the Philadelphia Ci\ic
Center.
Unlike Sunday's m atch between
President Reagan and Wa lter
Mondale, which was limited to
domestic policy, there . were no
limits on tonight's topics.
"She's very feisty . She's very
. good on the stump and she's very
quick ," spokeswoman Barbara
Dl.xon said of the Democratic vice
presidential candidate, Ms. Fer·
raro . "She's a natural for debate
style. She's a very fast study and
people are very pleased.··
At the vice president' s office ,
spokesman Peter Teeley said , " He
feelsgrei!-t. I ,think he'll do just fine."
Both candidates staged mock
debates with stand-in partners
Wednesday as they wrapped up
their preparations. Working at a

private television studio in Manhal·
tan, Ms. Ferraro a !so reviewed
\ideo ta pes of herself and Bush. The
vice president studied papers , met
with his staff and went jogging.
"The fact that thi s Is the first ever
debate between a woman and a man
means It is much more difficult to
predict (the .outcome )." said Dr.
James J. Unger , director of lbe
National Forensics Institute in
Washing1on.
"If he was debating Gerald
Ferraro Instead of Geraldine Fer·
raro. I think he would ha.ve an
imme nse advantage." Cnger
added .
Beca use of Bush's long political
background and natio na l expe·
r ience, Unger said Ms. Ferraro
"enters as a n underdog."
Not so. said Bush's press secretary. "We are t he underdog by the
measurement of all the mournful
pundits," Tee ley said.
Political polls show ,·oters hea\'ily
favor Bush over Ms. Ferraro.

Mondalewasasked at a New York
city news c~erence whether he'd
given Ms. F erraro any ad\i ce and
how he thought she would do . "l
talked to herthis mor nin g.l sa id. 'Be
yourself.' I think she'll do verv
well."
Unger, a professional dcbat&lt;'
scorer, said the thing to watch i&gt; not
only wha t they say but how they
perform .·
"The totaUty of that impression
has the potenti al to cost either
candidate very. very greatly ,"
Unger said.
Th0 sponsoring League of Wom en
\'oters announced Wednesday night
t.he final two panellsts w ho will
question the candi dates: Norma
Quarles of NBC News a nd Jack E .
White. correSpondent for Time
magazine. They will join two others
previously c hosen. Robel1 Boyd of
Knight-Rldde r newspapers and
John Mashek, national correspondent dfU.S. News &amp; Wor ld Report .

Meigs has 13,560 registered voters

'l'IUFll NEW BENCH- llml...... - lilliebenchel placed a IIIIID8I'OIII localhw b)' tile
PomeroY-Middlepori IJoas Club are IMied, I to r,
Rullll WIJUam8 and Bob Netben, gtton to 1be area,

IIIII+ .,,, I to r, the Rev. W!lllnl Ml~,
IAn7 llnpn IIDd IInce Teaford, memhen of the
locai ..... Ciub;

From AP and staH reports
Approximately 675 new voters
have registered to vote in the Nov . 6
election as the result of a voter
registration program which began
on Sept. 10. Many of the new
registrants are young people, the
Meigs County Board of Elections
reports.
1n an, an estimated 13,500 Meigs
CounUans are now ellglble'to vote In
the Presidential election.
ln the meantime, volunteer voter
registrars helped drive up what
Ohio's jargest cotJntles already
were reporting to be record
numbers of people signed up to vote
Nov. 6..
Facjng a 9p.m . deadline Tuesday,
many Ohioans were tined up at
county election boah! off!~ or

satellite registration sites.
In Olyahoga County, which
hicludes Cleveland, Elections
Bolird Chairman Robert E . Hughes
said 923,722 people already were on
th!! registration rolls . The previous
high was 912,241 set in 198J.
Hughes said elections board
inspectors were planning to make
pickup stops at more than 235
satellite registration centers
throughout the county beginning
today. He said the satellite locations
in area shopping malls had signed
up more than 8,(XX) voters.
Secretary of State· Sherrod
Brown's office says a record 5.9
mllllon Ohioans were registered to
vote In the state's May 8 plirnaJY,
and he ellp!!Cts more than 6 mlll1on
will be signed up to vote In the

general e lection. Brown's office
estimates 7.8 million Ohioans are of
voting age.
A total of 525,(XX) people In
Franklin County had registered
through Friday. eclipsing the county's previous high of 510,tm.
He said voters also were being
registered at publlc libraries In
Franklin County and at Ohio State
U niversity, where student govern.
ment leaders signed up 3,8JJ new
voters.
Elvera Radford, director of thl!
Hamilton County BoardofEiectioM
In Cincinnati, said that as of last
Friday, Hamilton Coun!:y had a total
of 512,tXKl registered voters, up tram
the tttal or 488,(XX) for the primacy
election last May 8.
·

�•

Thursday, October 11, 1984

Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
. 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERFSTS OF THE ~IEIGS-MASON AREA
~~~
S!m~
~v

,..,..,__.._..... ,I'"'T"'E! c:::l•=
.

ROBERT L . WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

_Page--2-The Oaily Sentinel
PQmeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thund8y. O~ber11,1984

Cornerstone of freedom
The press in Amei1ca occupies a
place unique among the organized
societies of the world, even in those ·
democratic societies we regard as
the most enlightened. The First
Amendment, perhilps more so that
any other · tights our Constitution
gives us, Is the cornerstone of the
m;my freedoms we as a people
enjoy today. Its language, which
guarantees . 115 the freedom . ot
speech and the press, among other

Gues.t editorial
-~by_R.:..:.....ic_ha_rd__.:J:_.V_.'_Jo_hns_on

· The tight to know, to inform, and
to be informed. is a fundamental
human rtght. The !unction of a free
press is to serve the people's tight to
know. Any restrictions placed on a
free press are restrictions on the
people's rights and on their
.freedoms.
Newspapers serve as a conduit of
information, ideas, thoughts and
opinions. Through their columns
they transfer, without intentional

freedoms. Is simple and
unequivocal.
During the course of our history
those
there bave been, and still
who attempt to find ways to tear
these freedoms apart. Yet, our
freedoms have endured and a free
press Is very much a part of a ~
United States of Ametica today,
because a strong, free press and a
strong, free society are
Inseparable.

are,

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. A.lllettersare subject to editing and must be s igned with Mme , addr~sand
te1L1)hone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In

good taste, addressing lssues, not per!iooalltles.

·

After presidential
face-off, Veep debate
grow~ in importance
A vice presidential debate might be expected to draw about as much
attention as a game with second-string players, but tonight's night
confrontation between George Bush and Geraldine A. Ferraro has taken
on pivotal Importance in the 1984 presidential race.
The Democrats are looking for a good shoWing by Ms. Ferraro to boost
the momentwn that presidential candidate Walter F . Mandate started
with his wort&lt; in the Sunday night debate against President Reagan.
"I think the pressure is on Mr. Bush. They lost one. He'strylngtoseehow
to overcome that loss," said Ferraro campaign manager John Sasso.
. "The calendar's with us," sald Democratic consultant Robert Squier,
lalking of the debate schedule wrapping up with a second presidential
!::Onfrontatlon debate on Oct. 21. "The prospect is that Reagan will !ace his
last debate with his team behind 0-2."
The Republicans, still a bit stunned by Reagan's lackluster performance
Sunday, would like a quick move from Bush In the debate to stall any
Democratic momentum before it eats into the GOP's big lead.
:Jbe Republicans held a big lead over the Democratic ticket before the
"Sunday debate and the instant post-debate polls said there was no quick
movement to Mandate after the event.
But the polis a)so said the foundation was laid for big changes if the
Democrats can continue to capitalize on Mandate's debate shOwing.
And the next big event is when the vice president and the womap whO
would be vice president face each other in a ~minute debate in
Philadelphia with millions of Americans watching from their llvingrooms.
Of course, a lackluster debate with no major goofs or high points might
leave no impression on the voters at all.
But even before Sunday, the vice presidential confrontation p(Omised to
be an interesting one - the first woman ever to run for the office lacing a
longtime politician and officehoWer from an old-line New England family.
With the new pressure on both candidates to perform, it might be even
more revealing.
With a month to go, no one would have predicted In advance that Reagan
- called the "Great Communicator" - would need any help from Bush
during a debate series.
But the VP debate is the second time Mondale has looked to Ms. Ferraro
for a boost. The first came when Mandate choose Ms. Ferraro as the first
woman to serve on a national party's ticket, setting off a surge of
enthusiasm among many women for her and - by reference - for the
Democratic ticket.

Berry's World

T't1e Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

LET'$ TR\' SOM~
. 6EMAVIOR MOOifiCAliO~
ANO S~E· HOW QOICKLV
W~lAN FORGET THE
P~ATFORM.

.....

"Uil.l't111:; ~19&amp;,

fOI'TW01!n'

PIECE OF 'AKE •
WE'VE ALRE.Al&gt;Y
MANAGE!' TO FORGET

THE VEfiCIT.

!V'I'-~

bias, prejudice, distortion or favoritism, the news to their readers, and
they attempt to analyze and to
Interpret what it ;ill means.· In a
highly complex, extremely eompllcated and changing society newspapers provide their readers with
an enormous amount of informa- ·
tlon in a wide "ariety of interesting
areas. Not only must they provide
objective and factual news, they
also must provide essential explanation and interpretation.
One of the newspaper's greatest,
unwavering strengths Is the element of fi1endshp, the intimate
one-on-one reiatlo~hip that exists
between the newspaper and its·
reader- a relationship that doesn't
exist between any other medium
and its audience. The newspaper is
the one medium that literally wrap!l
Its arm around the reader - a!l(l
the community. Newspapers today
are still the best source lor all kinds
of Information that people need to
carry on their dally living.
Freedom of the press means the
citizen's rtght to be informed, to
know what's happening and to be
able to act on that knowledge. True
press !reedom as we know it exists
nowhere else, .. certainly not In
totalitarian states, nor even in inost
dempcracies. It Is essential to our
free way of life. It we do not have
access to true and accurate information upon which to make
judginents and decisions we lose
our abUity to govern oUrselves and
pave the way for someone else.todo
·
our thinking for us.

Investment finD 'swindle ____J_ac_k_A_nde_r_so_n
BBRD&amp;W operation- as well as of
_WASHINGTON - At least one agency officials.
The CIA declined to comment on several other CIA activities In the
CIA agent was fired and several
grounds that the mater Is now In Otient.
others disciplined when it was
Here are some of the charges he
revealed that they were part of -a · iltigation. I'll reveal· the bizarre
twists and turns in.future ColllffiRS. made in the affidavit:
Honolulu-based Investment
- Rewald, who had worked as a
Here's the bare-bones outline,
scheme that bilked private invesdrawn from Interviews and confi- CIA informer on anti-war demontors of millions".
dential documents:
strators during his school days in
The agency at first denied
At center stage' is Ronald Ray Wisconsin, said he was introduced
Involvement, but has now admitted
Rewald, currently facing federal by CIA operatives In 1978 to
at least some connection to the
and state criminal charges stem- Honolulu station chief Eugene
swindle In confidential affidavits
mlng
from his operation of a Welch. Rewald said it was Weich
flied in federal court.
Honolulu
. Investment firm called who suggested setting up
Intelligence sources told my
Bishop,
Baldwin, Rewald, . Oil- BBRD&amp;W as a CIA front; and It
associates Indy Badhwar and Dale
!Ingham and Wong. Rewald claims was Welch who ·arranged a· phony·
Van Alta that the CIA's inspector
he was a covert agent for five years, pedigree and $150 million net worth
general investigated the investrunning
the firm for the CIA.
for the company and lake crroenment operation and · found . the
More
than
a
month
agn,
a
federal
tials lor Rewald.
agents guilty of "poor trade
Rewald stated that Welch OK'd
grand jury handed up a 120-count
practices," but concluded that ihey
indictment charging that Rewald the hiring of a former National
did not act Uiegaliy.
·
But the sources suggested that diverted to his own use Some of the Security Agency employee to work
the internal investigation, which $22 million In Investors' money "by full time for BBRD&amp;W, and that at
means of false and fraudulent least 10 ciA agents worked for the
left a handful of agents hanging out
pretenses ... and omissions of company, including Welch's sueto dry, may be\ just the tip of the
. cessor as station chief, John C.
iceberg. StU! submerged, they say, material facts."
A year earlier, In response to Klndschi.
is a massive scandal - a story of
.:.. From 19!Kl to 1982, the CIA used
deception and betrayal that has the complaints from Investors and the
Securities
and
Exchange
CommisBBRD&amp;W
to gather Intelligence on
intelligence community watching
as
a
bankruptcy
Japan,
Indonesia
and Philippines;
sian,
as
well
nervously to see where the trail
petition
lodged
;~gains!
BBRD&amp;W,
as
a
conduit
for
funds
used in covert
leads.
Congressional Investigators and a federal judge froze the firm's operations; and as a shelter for
assets and placed it in trusteeship. well-connected foreign diplomats
attorneys on the case have already
RewaW was arrested and jailed and businessmen who wanted to
heard testimony that Vice Presiby Hawaiian pollee. When the export cash to the United States,
dent Bush had some lalowiedge of,
and some contact with, the Invest- agency disowned him he fUed a Rewald stated.
The crucial questlon,.of course, is
confidential, 40-page affidavit with
ment house, which was a CIA front
operating with the full knowledge of 95 exhibits giving details of the whether Rewald is telling the truth

in his affidavit. Confidential documents and tranScripts of secret
taped conversations appear to bear
out parts of Rewald's story.
For example, the CIA fired
Richard B. Cavanaugh, who also
used the alias, James D. Bishopthe first name in the Investment
firm. In a recent confidential
affidavit, the agency also admitted
It Invested about $2,000 in
&lt;BBRD&amp;W, that some CIA agents
had Invested In the firm, and that
Klndschl's successor as -station
chief, Jack Rardin, sent reports on
his meetings with Rewaid back to
CIA headquarters.
With his affidavit, Rewaid submitted checks that show Klndschl
reimbursed the investment company for telephone bills.
Interestingly, the Justice Depariment's chief prosecutor in the
Rewaid case is John F. Peyton,
former CIA chief of litigation .

$250,000
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Today in -history

"

on their car. They're afraid that a
· Mondale supporter might smash .
into them just for spite."
"But you said there aren't that
many Mondale supporters on the
road."
.
"There aren't many, but they are
pretty mad about how badly Fritz is .
doing, and they figure they have
nothing to lose by totaiing a Reagan
voter's brand-new Cadillac."
."You mean they would total a car
just because their boy Is behind in
the polls?" "What other choice do they have
if they want to make a political
statement?"
..
~ 'Why don't they just put
Mondale-Ferraro stickers on their
bumpers?"
"They're afraWotherdtiverswlll
laugh at them and make obscene
gestureswhentheyhavechildrenlrl
the car."
"There · is something sad about
people refusing to declare themselves publicly on the road," 1 said.
"Bumper stickers don't make
you vote for somebody: tbey ·make
you vote against him. If someone
steals a-parkiDg spot from you and
he or she has a bumPer sticker on
the car, It could make you mad
enough to vote for the other guy.
· Durtng Nixon's dirty trtcks campaign, his campaign people drove
around with McGovern-Shriver
bumper stickers and · kept cutting ·
off other cars. Some people stlil
believe that this cost MacGovern
the eiec;tlon."
"Who thinks that?"
"McGovern for one."
"So it is your theory buinper
stickers are passe?"

"They are for presidential elections. But they still are very helpful
for local ones. For example, if you
put one on your car for the
Incumbent sheriff, you have much
less of a chance of getting a traffic
ticket than if you plastered one on
for his opponent. And it never hurts

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Footnote: The federal indictment
against Rewald acknowledges that
Weich was lhe CIA's Honolulu
station chief, but accuses Rewaldof
having perjured himself when he
claimed that Welch helped establish BSRD&amp;W and its phony
history.

to have one on your car for a judj:e
that Is running for n!!!lection, just in
case one of your kids gets lrlto
trouble. Everyone has only two
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wasting the space on who you think~
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States should be."

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Where are bumper stickers ?__A_r_tB_uc_hwa_ld
There is · sOmething wrong with .
this presidential election year, and
up until recently I couldn't put my
finger on it. Then It occurred to me
that I hadn't seen a b~mper sticker
for either candidate since the race
got under way.
People are no longer declaring
themselves on their cars as they did
in other presidential campaigns.
I asked an astute · political
" This poll shows your popularity right up there
observer what he made of the
with Oreo cookie ice ((ream! "
phenomenon.
He said, " Why would you want to
mess up the bumper of your car
with the choice of candidates we
have this year?"
"It just seems the election would
Today is Thursday, Oct.ll, the285thday of 1984. Thereare81days left In
be more exciting if you knew who .
the· year.
the guy you were driving behind
Today's highlight in history:
was voting for," I said.
One hundred years ago, on Oct. 11 , lffi4, first lady Eleanor Roosevelt was
"Well, if the person is dtiving a
born.
Mercedes-Benz or a Jaguar, you
On this date:
can assume he's voting for
In 1T79, the Polish nobleman Casimir Pulaski was killed while fighting
Reagan."
for American independence dwing the Revolutionary War Battle of
"And if he's dtivtng an old jalopy
he's
voting for Mondale?"
Savannah, Ga.
"Not
necessarily. The guy dtivIn 1716, the first naval battle of Lake Champlain was fought during the
!ng
the
old
jalopy may think tbat if
Revolutionary War. American forces led by Gen . Benedict Arnold suffered
he
votes
for
Reagan he'll be able to
heavy losses in the series of battles that followed but managed to stall the
car
with all the tax cuts
buy
a
new
Btitish.
the president has promised him."
"What kind of car would you have
In 1863, Thomas Edison filed papers for his first invention, an electrtcal
to own to be a Mondale supporter?"
vote recorder that would quickly tabulate votes In Congress. Congi:ess
"One that the bank just repossubsEquently rejected the Invention, with one laW!Ylaker telling Edison the
sessed because you couldn't keep
device would prevent fillbusteting.
·
up the payments on it. You don't see
In 1962, Pope John xxm convened the first session of the Roman
too many ot those cars on the road
Catholic Church's 21st Ecumenical Council, also lalown as Vatican 2.
because the banks have turned
In 1968, Apollo 7, the first manned Apollo mission, was launcl)ed.
them over to used car salesDII!Il."
In 1976, reports from China said the widow ot Mao Tse-Tung and three
"Yoi! would thlilk that Reagan
others had been arrested. They were later denounced as the "Gang of • supporters would love to advertise
Four."
the fact they're supporting the
Ten years ago: Final returns from Brttaln's second general election In
Reagan-Bush ticket." ·
eight months showed Labor with a three-seat majority over the combined ·
"Peopte are very nervous about
strength of the other partieS.
putting a polltlcal bumper sticker

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�0

Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Meet the Tornadoes .Meigs· .aniors t~gle in top

Jay Proffitt
il-9, 173 pound
Junior tackle

1lmSmlth
5- II, 168 pound
Sophomore tackle
'A;t~•

Tom Greathouse
il-9, 144 pound
Senior back

.,.

Tony Connolly

5-3, 112 pound
Sophomore back

Charley Chancey:
Melp offense liey
By KEITH WISECJ)P
Both teach and stress fundamenmain
reasQn
for
the
MaThe
A legitimate shot at the Trl·
tals
to the utmost and each have
rauder
resurgence
has
heen
the
Valley Conference championship
characteristics on the
gentleman
performances
by
splendid
rushing
watts In the balance as Meigs hosts
field.
undefeated Warren Local Friday In taUback Brad Robinson and the
Coach Hill seemed almost apolopinpoint passing combination of
what promises to be a whaie of a
abOut his recent one-sided
getic
Mike Chancey to ends Scot Gheen
game.
wins
over
Miller (47-0) and FederalEvidence that the crucial TVC tilt and Dan Thomas.
Hocking
(45-14)
.
Robinson, coming off a remarka·
wt11 be as close as everyone
opponents
have made very_
"Our
expects, Is last year's 14-13 Meigs ble 231 · yard rushing performance
loss. The Marauders fell behind at VInton County last week, Is many critical mlsta,kes deep In
their territory and that Is mostly the
early, came roaring back In the bordering perfection.
The stocky runner Robinson Is a reason for the big scores. And when
second half, and missed upsetting
the Warrtors when a field goal In the home-run threat every time he · you score quick against a team that
touches the ball, whether It be Is used to getting beat, they seem to
final ·seconds was Inches wide.
This year, the Warr)ors have rushing, punt or kickoff returns, or · quit," said HUL
Hill. like Chancey, has long been .
cruised past six straight opponenll&gt;, a Chancey aerial.
Robinson Is neartng the aU-time kltown for not running up scores.
but as their six-year head coach
Robert "Red" Hill put It, "We have · single season rushing markheid by HUI will play nearly every kid on his
not played a team nearly as tough Lennie Van Meter. van Meter, who roster, no matter what the score ..
Chancey could see a mirror-like
had his 220 yard single garne mark
as Meigs yet."
Image
In the Warriors. as they, like
fall
last
week,
had
1,017
yards
In
Meigs, on the other hand, lost Its
Meigs,
make very few costly
TVC opener to Trtmble 8!)d has had 1967, the first ever for a Meigs
squad.
football
mistakes.
to battle with its hacks against the
"They don't run very many
Robinson Is 234 yards away with
wall since. Consecutive victories
lrtcky plays, just e~ecute real well
over Mlller ('!1·12), Wellston (33-8), 7&amp;'1 , probably too far to reach In the
and make very few mistakes. They
Nelsonville-York ('ll-0), and VInton Warren game but easUy In sight
have an exceptionally quick quar·
County (33-8) 1iave · lifted the sometime In the next four games.
Overshadowed by the record- terback (Greg Huffman) and aJsc a
Marauders right back Into the title
quick fullback (John Fryman) ,"
setting Robi!ISO!I has heen the
picture.
commented Chancey on the
Since Warren has Trtmble (also strong throwing arm of Chancey.
Warrtors.
4-1 in the TVC). Nelsonville-York, The tall signal-caller has passed for
Hill still Isn't sure just how tough
and Belpre yet to play after 712 yards and most Importantly,
his ball club Is since they haven't
Friday's game, the Warrtors could has been Intercepted only three
really been tested.
times In ff7 attempts this year.
be spoilers If not the champ.
"We know we're In for a tougher
Chancey has fired six touchdown
With the Trimble loss, Meigs
game
than· we've had all year.
must have ou.tslde help for an passes ... two each to Gheen and
Meigs has played some very good
outright title crown. Many feel the Thomas along with one each to
teams and we have not. We do not
Marauders have developed to Jackie Welker and J. R. Kitchen.
· have very good pass coverage.
Coaching duo
championship caliber and can take
One of the game's outstanding
both Warren and Belpre (Oct. 28 at
features will be the coaching duel
Melgs) .
"I guess we'll find out Frtday just
how good we are," downplayed
between a pair of veteran coaches,
Warren's Hill and the Marauders' · Hill, who also Is an expert at
Probable swan1 Uaoupo
•
1 camouflaging very good football
Melp
teams In that he refuses to run up
(Oft..... )
Player (Vr. and Wt.)
Poo.
scores.
SCot Gheen 112-1101 ...... ... ...................... E
The Marauders, 4-2 overall, has
SCoH Powell 110-2101 ......... .. ..... ............ .. :r lost to Warren In bOth previous
Tony Welch 112·2'12l .. .... ......... .. ............. G
meetings . .With Meigs the visitors
Jay Whittington 112-170) ......................... G

Ohio
Sportlight

ButchLongstreth
Stu., 112·1701
...............................
John
(12-215'
..... ...... .. ............G
T
Dan Thomas (12-ltilil ............................. E

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

The Daily .sentinel- Page-$
"C PhlltpMqrr•lnc: 1il84

.

'

J

Thursday, October 11, 1984

In 1982 and 14-13 a year ago. The two
teams )lave .scrimmaged several
times over the years untO they were
urilted In the TVC. Warren Is the
TVC's largest school and only class
AAA member. The Warriors will
transfer to the SEOAL beginning
the 1986 grtd year.

The Dally Sentinel
.
(USPS 14~~)
A Dlvlslo• of Multimedia, Inc.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.. y . the
Ohio Va lley Publishing Company/ Mul·.
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r~o:n~bo:t~h~oc_::::c:a:sl~on:s~,~W~a~rr~e=n~w:o:n~29=-0~.~============

Mlke Chnncey i1H901 ......................... QB
Brad Robinson i1Hti61 ....................... . TB
Mark Hammonds {12-170) ......... ........... FB
Jackie Welker 112·1651 ...... :.... .... ....... ... WB

DEFENSE - Robinson - MG; Welch and .

Acree

Longstreth or Stiles - T's; James
112 · 1~1 and Whittington - E's: Hammonds

By George Strode

and Nick Bush (12·180 ) - LB's; Welker and

Huey Eason 00-HiO ) - CB's, and Gheen and
Thomas - S' s.
WARREN LOCAL

Trent announces resignation

JAYCEE PLAYER oF TilE -

~~e~.~~~~~+!i".llOe,

TE

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - AJ McKinney of Elyria Catholic has
. lmEK - Brad Robinson, 5-ll,
~~nw~~~i~t21if~i :: :: :: ::: :: ::·:: :::::);
averaged more than four touchdowns per game this season and, even If he
I65 pound Junior tailback, has
Mtke Smith 112·1751 ..............................c
manta Ins that pace the Test of the year, would not break the single-season
heen named the Meigs Jaycee
~~- ~~r;!;;\T1.iiiii'
Ohio prep football scortng record.
Player of the Week. Robinson
Ken Short 112-1451 ...... ..................... .... SE
112 ·Ll5) ...................... ... QB
The 6-foot, 1!!6-pound senior tailback has scored 2'i touchdoWns for 150
set a schoolftllihing record with
Grog
Chris Hurtman
Neptune (11-160)
....................... .. WB
23 I yards In 17 carries and
points In six games for Ohio's top-ranked Class AA power.
Craig Lochano 112-1601 ....... ...... ..... ...... TB
However, he Is far short of Hilbert Bobo's state record. The fullback for
-red
two touchdowns while
John
Fryman tl2·11!!!! .......................... FB
1
DEFENSE - Fryman and Jay Johnson
Ohio State's 1954 national champions scored 323 points for Chauncey-Dover
eadlog ·the defense with eight
1U·:nli - E's: Ken Hager IIH7th and Don
in 1952. The national one-season high school mark of 395 points belongs to
tackles as the Marauders won
Stalnaker 111 •161ii-Ts: Anderson and Mark
th 1 f
h
Dye (12-155) - LB's; Stamer and Todd
Ken Hall of Sugarland. Texas. in 1953.
e r ourt straight game 33-8
sarver (II -lli))- CB's: Jim Lee 112-1:111and
Around Ollio: Bill Trent, former head coach at Gallia Academy In
la..t Friday night at Vinton
Darren Roddy 111-1651 - HB's. and Matt
12 1 35
Gallipolis,
announced his year-end resignation as Chillicothe's head _ _:C:::o:::un::ty::_._ _~--~---.....:J::'a_mes-=.::on::=l=:·=='=·::=::=::=::==:.::=::=::...
football coach. Trent, 43, is 3-3 this season and 65-56 in 14 years In his career ,at six schools.
Ironton had gone 42 Southeastern Ohio League games Without a defeat
before losing to Gallipolis 19-21ast week. Centerville's strtngoffive straight
shutouts ended when Kettering Fairmont kicker Rod Lovelace's field -goal
r.
hit the crossbar and bounced over for t&gt;rree points last week. Centerville
has yielded 281 rushing yards this season. Cedarville's Jim Villlnger has
PRESENTS
100 carl;'er coaching victories,
There Is another Logan at North Canton Hoover. Andy Logan, the
brother of former Ohio State star Jeff Logan, threw a 25-yard halfback
This Friday At
scoring pass to help beat Massillon Perry W-16.
7:45 P.M,'
Tom Bolyard, Orrville's do-everything star, hit nine of 18 passes for 122
yards' and one touchdown, ran three times for 125 yards and one
touchdown, kicked a 47-yard field goal and Intercepted a pass to stop
Manchester's fourth-quarter drive. Orrvill~ won 15-6.
The scoring parade last week - Six touchdowns, Kurt Darden of
Hanoverton United; four touchdowns , Judd Garrett, Cleveland
University; Scott Qay. Vienna Matthews; Brad Beck, Middletown
Fenwick; and McKinney; and four touchdowns passing, Findlay's Brian

::::::: :::::::::::::::: J

. . _,-.. ~~~ .t~4~
- ~~-

THE SPORTS LEADER

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•

MEIGS vs.

.

M~

Runningbacks R.J. Brydon and Dan Scott each have six straightlOO-plus
yards rushing in Duncan Falls Philo's six victories. Dresden Trt·Valley's
three touchdowns In the last eight minutes beat Crooksville 28-21.
Scott Rindfuss of Warren ~nnedy, who hi!d 1&amp;3 yards against Struthers
last week, Is a son of former Michigan runnlngback Dick Rlnd!uss,
Girls cross country .- Freshmen twins Lort and Unda Melendez of Lodl
aoverleaf tied for first place In the Pioneer C!&gt;nference meet. Both were
clocked In 20 minutes, 10 seconds. ,
Erik Young already has broken the one-season placement record for
New Philadelphia Tuscarawas Catholic. Young has made 2'i of 'll
extra-point attempts. 11m Teynor, the sqn of Coach Art Teynor, had the old
mark of 21 extra points In a single season.
Chrts Rosser of Cincinnati Summlt Country Day ran for one tou&lt;:hdown,
threw for one, returned a punt for a third score and caught a two-point
conversion pass In a 39-6 victory over Hamilton Ross.
Mentor Lake Catholic had given up only 13 points this season until
Cleveland St. Ignatius pinned a 31-7 defeat on the state playoff semifinalist
·
for llie last two seasons.

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.::uctrd T,pt&gt; b P ·~!lllle r td trod.mork oi Omori.. lnd., 1,,.,,,
0- 0o~ l lmotrd Worron!y •IUMIJ commtmo!lv

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Regular and Menthol.

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Mill St.

Middleport ·
•I

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PH. 378-6125

Offer good until .October 30, 1984, or while supply lasts.
"'

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

...

�Page_ 6-The Dally Sentinel

Thu~y.October11,

Thursday. October 11, 1984

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1984

c·OMt:-JOIN OUR

Pirates still second in Region 19; Moeller drops a notch
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The
surprtseo!the19840hioHighSchool
Athletic Association's computerized football ratingscamethlsweek.
Cincinnati Moeller, six-time bigschool playoff champion, no longer
was No. lin Its own region.
That honor In Region4ofDivlslon
I belongs to Cincinnati Colerain,
which has 70.50 points to secondplace Moeller's 66.51-polnt totaL
Moeller, a playoff qualifier 10 Urnes
in 12 years, had led Region 4 forth&lt;'
first two weeks.
The OHSAA uses the ratings to
determine
Itsin
playoff
top
two schools
each teams.
of 20 The
regions
m ake up t he post -seaso n
eliminations.
Colerain never has qualified for

this fall .
There were two other new
regional leaders In Division I this
week.·
In Reglon2, North Canton Hoover
moved ahead of&lt;last week's front runner Akron Springfield, &amp;1.00 to

Dlvisloniii,ClncirmatiAcademyof
Physical Education In Division IV
and Monroeville In Division V.
Orrville took over tiW sole lead In
Region 9 1n Division III . from
defendlngstatechamplonAkronSt.
Vincent-St. Mary. Orrville and St. ·
63.50.
VIncent-St. Mary )lads)lared the top
Toledo St. Francis Is the new · spot a week ago. Orrville has 50.25
leader In Region 3 with 56.00 points.
points while the Akron school has
Upper Arlington, No.llast week,fell 47.00.
to second place with 53.50.
Keeping their top spots this week
Also taking over regional leads were Lakewood St. Edward . In
this week were Columbus WalterDivision I, Westlake, Shelby and
son In Division n, Portsmouth In
Youngstown Mooney In Division IT,

s IN

r-;;;;;;;;;;;=;:~~;;;;;;;;::;;· ;;;:~;;~;;~~;;;;;;;;;;~

CHRIS~MA

oc

_ _~OBER .

School but
Athletic
the Ohio High
Association
playoffs,
has
matched the Crusaders' fUl-0 start

Prep ratings
COLUMBUS. otOO 11\P 1 - llk' Ohio
Hbih ScOOol Athll?tlc ~ l atlo n 's comJ:a.nerlied footba ll !'('gk&gt;nal leack&gt;rs this
wN'Ic 1nrst .two 111 each regioll quality lor
thr- post -SC!ason plaYOtfst:
DI\IIUON I
Rtgkm 1 1. Laki:'WOOd St . Edward
£B.25 JXllnts. 2. Clevt&gt;laJtd St. Ignatius
~ .00. 3, Mayfield 56.00. 4, Mentor LakE&gt;
Ca tt-ollc tl$. 5. Bedford 41 .00. 6. C1P\'£'Iand Heights 41.00.
RPglon 2 - I , Nonh C8ntoo Hoovc&gt;r
6Hll. 1, Akron Springfield &amp;3.50. 3. Lorain
Klrl~ Sol .'m. 4, Austintown-Fitch ~9.7!i . 5.

SAVE 50°/o
ON SELECTED

FIGURINES and Gin ITEMS

Pt•ny 46.50.
Reg10n 3 - 1, Toledo St. Francis 56.00.
2, Uppc!r Arlington 53.50. 3, Wcstt&gt;rVIUe
Non h 52. ~ . 4, Findlay 50.50. 5, Worthin2ton t.lOO. 6. ToleW Ct_111ral C.a liilllc

-

1, Cincinnati Colt&gt;raln

dJ..

· ·

.J;~

'j4jf~

~.50.

~l~@t

.

COME IN TODAY
AND GET YOUR
KEY
IF IT
·OPENS THE CHEST
YOU WIN Sl ooo

(fJ\41992-&amp;491

YOU SAY£

OFF RETAIL

DIAMONDS~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~~: •••••••••••••••••••••. 25°/o

KREMENTZ JEWELRY •••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••• 20°/o
14K.GOLD JEWELRY ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 30°/o
SEIKO WATCHES •••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••.•••.! •• 20°/o
BULOVA WATCHES·············································~ 20°/o
. 20°A· o
'PULSAR WATCHES...............................................
EARRINGS, All Styles ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~ ••• 20%
STONE RINGS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 20°/o
L1g1tr1g Now Fo1 Ch,l1tmt~

f£2§~~~1 TOILET TISSUE
4 Roll Pa'k
Asst. Colors

QUAKER

STATE

WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY

~l~
.

DIVISION D
RegiOn 5 - l , Westlake 7tl.50. 2, Bay
VIUI.Ifie 411.50. 3, Cleveland BenOO!ctlne
40.2i t Akron Non h 37_:15. 5. . Wickliffe
:W.!l fi, Akron F irestone 11.44.
Rc¢on 6 I, SIK'Iby 55.50. 2, Pcrrsyburg 46.75. 3, Dayton Chamtnadf-.Julicnne 45.'15. 4, Kettering Altt•r "45.50. S.
Ga lion .fi.OO. 6. ToiK:Io Srort C .!Jl
RegiOn 7 - I, Youngstown Mooney
67.00. 2, 'l'ou n~ tow n Ursuline 56.50. 3,
Wlntcrsvlll c 49.40. 4. Steubt'n\'\lle %.50. 5,
YOOI!Jl:Siown East -lJ.:'il. 6. LoulsvWl' 4:1.75.
Rc.i!:lon 8 - .1. Columbu." Warterwn
Norwood

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GALLIPOLIS/POMEROY

"Cb1i1tms1 In Oetohe,"

992·2054

~ .m.

2.

TREASURE HUNT .TODAY.

ham,N~~~~~~~~~o~ne.Middle-

town Fe

Vl1lf Ou1 $fD'81 Tod1g Duling

Pomeroy, Ohio

:l. Cincinnati MO('ilcr fii.51. 3, Middletown
GlOO. -l , Cincinnati St. Xav1er 62.50. S. ·
Cin cinnati Princt'1oo 55.00. 6, CPntPrvlliP

~- 00

.

d

113 Court St.

47.'l!i.
~

.

Central Catholic and LoUisville
Aquinas In Division IV and Wind·

QUAKER
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lUX

342 2nd Ave.

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Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2691

2 LOUnONS TO SERVE YOU
&lt;

12

JO CT.
91NCH

oz.

2:99(

~

Reg, 69&lt; ea.

PAPER
1PLATES

• Reg.'&lt;1lJ9

89(

S7.00. 3 , Columbus

Whlt{'l\all -1$.!!'1. 4, Hamilton Badin t1 .50.
5, Columbus Eastrroor 39.50. 6. Washingtoo C.H. Miami TraCt&gt; 37.25.
DIVL_~TON

m

B~OWN

1. OnvUlt&gt; ~ . :ti . 2, Akron

IWglon 9 Vln~nt ,St .

Mmy 47.00. 3. Ou~~:rtn
Palls Krnston 42 .00. 4, Warren Kennedy
37.50. 5. Cort land Lak.tn,riew :16.50. 6,
Bmoldletd :n .~
Rl'giOn 10 - I. Lima Bath 51.00. 2. E lyria Cath:ilic '1.1.00. 3 nier, Oak Harbor
St.

I, Pon5rrouth H .fil. 2,

REG.

Po1,srrouth Wl':it 40.00. , 3. Duncan F'alls

Philo 42.00. 4. lrorrtcm 4l.:li. 5. As!rvllll'
Tl'a}-s Vt~IILoy ~ - ~ - fi. Swuhf"rlvUic CathOlic O'ntra l .'11.00.
l~ lon 1:.1 l. Cincinnati McNicholas
44 .00. :Z, Cinc innati Wyomlrllii: li.OO. 3~
W hen 33.50. 4, Greoenflckl McClain 2'1 .00.

Reg. 12.49

89(

$1 59

· 40 COUNT -

Reg. '2.49

rv

EN ·

, Mon.-Fri• .10 a.m.-8 p.m.

Sf'RO 2fi ~ . 6. Swanton 26.00
Rrgion 15 - l. Lou isvUI&lt;' Aquirlas ~9.6:2 .
:!, Coal Crov(' 4.1.2l. .1, &amp;&gt;lprp 31 .00. 4,
Chi'Sa J)('ak(' 29.(Jl 5. Ballll'SVIJ!t• 28 .2}. 6.

•

$l 59

Cadlz 26.00.
Rcf:1on Hi -

1. Cincinnati CAPE .fi.OO.
2. Columbus Hanlc.v 37.75 . .1, Jamestown

2"x1 0 YDS

27. !11.
r DIVISION \1

lumbiiUla 23.00. 5, Mldvall' lndiiUl Val l ~}'
Nonh 2 1 .~ ti , Mingo Ju!K'UOn 20.00.
Rl'f{lon 18 - I, Monr(J(&gt;\'illf' 25.00. 2,

Now through October 22.

Hol~atl' 2:! .50. 3, l\rlin¢on t9.7:l. -1. 11ffln
Calv('rt 18.rJO. 5, Bascom H qX:•wt'II·LDUdo n
U!.-10. fi. Lura.s 17.75.
Rff!lon 19 - I. NC'wark CatlnliC' &lt;12.00.
:!, Vinton Nor1 h C:J U!a 22. ~. 1, Su ~'lor
Crow• 8m1P U nion 22.00. -1. Centerburg
l~l.75 . 5, Cana l Wlnd'H&gt;stf'r \!'.~ . 6, Colum-

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bu~

Wt&gt;h rle 19.2!1.
20 - 1. MiddJMoo•n Fll1~1Ck
.'R ill. 2. Cincin nati Summit Cwnll)' Day
~. 00. 3. Sidney LA-hman :!i.'JI. -1 , &lt;:roar\'IUC &lt;Y}.OO. 5. Mech&lt;11i~bur!:!: 1 9 . ~. ti. [)(&gt;1phf:tl;; J elf('r.;on 19.1!'i.
R~

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FLEX STEEL
RECLINER

LANE
CEDAR CHEST

Reg. s699.95 ·

Reg. S359.95

Now$34444

NOW

Reg. s920.00

Reg. S699.95

R

REG. 6S•

PEPSI
DIET PEPSI,
7.-UP. DIET 7-UP
ORANGE CRUSH
NiouNTAIN DEW

BOUNTY
PAPER TOWELS

79&lt;

892(LITER

REG. 99 '

BOX
OF 6

by Jameson

CLING FREE

$996

FABRIC SOFTENER SHEETS

BES-PAK
FOLD-LOCK TOP
6 FOOT

'BENTWOOD
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HALL TREE

BoiS mAIL

SOFA
AND .CHAIR

2 88(
F
0

Tee

$17777

FLEX STEEL
SOFA

Qt.8 9 (,

Pump

"

.
t\.merkall Le~
NEW YORK YANKEES-Rrnc•wl"d the&gt;
rontrart of Phil Nl€'kro. pltctlf'r.
TORONTO BLUE JA YS-Addrd Mlkr
Sharpcl"iiO and Alexis l niantC', irlflrldl'n;,
and Kash fk&gt;auchamp , wtfl eldrr. to thl'
&lt;l().man 1~:tnrrr ros tC'r . Assllimf'll O.•nnls
Howard and Oa\(' Shtpanotr. pltcht•n.

1

With

8·9(

'NtJA&gt; if' 11ibU~

Rt&gt;J: Ion ll - I. Windham :1.1.00. 2,
McDOnald 27.3J. 3. SmithvUl£' 26.75. -&amp;, Cc.-

FOOTBALL

DUCT TAPE

.VALUES UKE THESE THROUGHOUT THE STORE.

G1"€'t'nf''k' 36.00. 4, Cinci nnati Marlcrn:mt 32.10. r•. Wrst .lt'fferson 2R-r.'J. 6.

IOW40

· SMOKE ALARM

SILVER

Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sun. 1 p.m.-6 p.m.

.....

~

DIAMOND
FOIL

52 QUART

1. Otx&gt;rlln 36.15. :!, Lw&lt;km·

viii&lt;' 35.50.•1. Ga l(.'l; Mills Hawkffi lUll. ~ .
Bw1oo &amp; rkshir'l' :ri.OO. 5. Wl'lllngton
~.rn. 61 ~'tTY 2100
. f«&gt;Won 1~ - I, Lima Central Catholic
29.!17. 2, ~ort h Robinson Crmo~1ord ~.00.
3, Castalia Margaretta 27.00. 4 (!!(').
Mf'tamora E\!' O:..'l't, •n aml Tomagany Ot-

MOTOR OIL

ALL KITCHEN BAGS

DrSales :al.:'{J . . 6. Carllsll'

DIVtiiON

Rll!lon 1J -

sus

33 GALlON

LAWN BAGS

GLOVES

Va ll ~· 2ROO.

5, Colu mbu.o;
2"i.2'1.

15 COUNT -

JERSEY

and Wlllrttd .1';,75. 5, St. Ma"rys M1•mor1a1
32.:!•. !l nll' l. Fostoria and Mar1on RIVer

H£1glon IJ -

12x2 5 SQ. FT.

DELUXE

We are your Full Servl~e Jewelry Store; wilh a professional
jeweler, watchmaker, and well trained sales staff we can offer yQu FREE
ring sizing, estimates, appraisals, and engraving ~one right in our 810re8.
Moot of all we offer you the loweot price&amp; on quality name brand products.

North Canton G lcnoaJt 49.00. 6. MiiS!iiUon

Refmn

LlmaBathandClncinnatiMcNicholas In Division III, Oberlin, Lima

The Daily Sentinel-Page. 7

No. 777 ·

SANDWICH BAGS

WHISTUNG TEA KEm.E

69&lt;

Harvest Gold

Almont
Choc. Brown

Lysol

anc! Toby Hcma11ck'z. catch••r. to Syra&lt;"USC of the' lntcnmtlonaJ Lcagu('.

Nudonw.l ...._aru~·
PITI'SBURGII PrRATES-Namro El·
mf'r "Dutd1 "" C&lt;1ry scouting dlfl'('tor.
ft,\SKEJBALL
N adonal BM.,.ball "-&gt;cladon
ATIANTA HAWKS-Cut Dk"kl&lt;' Eral,~ard .

PHIU\D ~ LPHIA

NOW

76ERS-Rrteasro Earl

'"Butc-h'" Gt'ltvt'S. guard. a nd Earl Harri·

MJn. lmwan l
f''O OTIIALJ.
Na..oul Football LP&amp;«Ue
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS-Signed Doflald

Ba llr-v, CO'Itrr, and Vau,~thn Williams. lk-fm s.tVf' back . Pla.-n:l Grant f"l'asel. em·
t&lt;'r. on &gt;A:a tv&lt;&gt;~ - Placf:'d Larry A ~ .
d(&gt;f&lt;'n!;l\'l' back , on ltv&gt; Injun '(!

r(!S('fV~

1\sr.

SEATILE

SEAHAWKS- PiacOO

lloo
Duft'k, !lafC'ty, on th£&gt; ill jured rrservc ll~&gt;t .
Addro Adam Sc'hrt'llx&gt;r, otfl'nslvl' lineman. itnd Bonnlt:' Ray Wllml'r, saf('ty, to
tht· rustt'r.
HOCKE\'
NUional Hodlf')' Le&amp;I'JE!:
NHL-S~pt'flded

PhD Housley of

ttl(&gt;

BuJTalo Sabres for lhr"ffo llanlPS for his
mil' In on Hltl'rt.'llllon In a prf'SC'a.'&gt;on
RamP il$1'alnSt Dl.&gt;ti'Oit.

r

HARTFORD WHALERS- Sent P11ul Frl·
cker, pltmdr.r, to Suit Lak(' CJty ol the
International Hockey L.e~.

MI NNESO TA

NOR TH

STARS-An·
nourn'd thl&gt; rMirmll'flt of Grorf.:'(' FeJ"RU·
!DI,

t'ftltl'f". Sl:&gt;nt Jlr1 Ponrr, center, to
cl tlw&gt; Americar1 Hodr:ey

Sprtngf!E&gt;Id

..........
NEW

YORK

RANGERS-Aulgned

Blaine Stooahton. fiihl wtn(L Robbie Ftordl:, C'('fltf'r, and Rlll1 Scott. goaltender. lo
New Hawn ol thtl Amei1Can Hockf'Y

Lee.il'Ue. ReMSlpC'd Cal}' DE:Cr10, r1gt'lt
WlnJt, to 5a lt Lake City d IlK' lntcrrtaUOnal Hockey ~-

PHILAD ELPH IA
FLYERS-'Il--

Diilrryl Slftlt&gt;r. center, to the Dttrolt Red
WingS

t:Jr MUITily Crawn Md Jor Pater-

son, lefl wlnp.

Wlna2week
vacation for two.
Anywhere in the world.
Every year for the next 5
yeatS. Plus $10,000 In gold.

$58888

SOFA,. LOVESEAT
&amp; CHAIR ·
Reg. S999.95

2 SECOND PRIZES 2-'r ncallon tor two •trM

, _ , . F#Uplltrlclr Catle In Dublin, hllltld. lncludel cNCII
•lrl•,..llent.l c.r prorldfld foralgh,_,ng, PLUS Nell Winner gela

$5,000"' -''"' bllw.

3 THIRD PRIZES an._... ~K4tt1on tortwo.,rM

Comt•••

Del""

In~.

NOW

$48888

Reg. $799.95

Now$4:4444

.
"

4 FOR$)
,#-'IORTHERN ®
QUEEN OR lUNG

ELECTRIC
BLANKETS

'

listed

Queen
Size

..

1,000 FIFTH PRIZES 3-dlty, 2-nlfht ~-tiona tor

.
. '
.Mon.-Fri. - 10 A.M. • 8 P.M.

King

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Sat. 10 A.M. • 5 P.M. - Sun. 1 P.M. - 6 P.M.
"

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lNER 6000 TV TRIVIA QUESTIONS
·Dnuna•Sports·Co~y·News

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• Talk Shows· Qu~ Shows and More!
Nothing mirrors our life an_d times like the
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. I

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bevac~a's three-run blast beats Tigers
·
.
·
· apotentlalraUybystumbllngwhUe
· less Innings. In Game One, glvlngup
SAN ·DIEGo (API -- Kurt
·
·
ff
b! In
hit 1n relief of starter Mark
Bevacqua atoned for a rally·kllllng
trying to stretch a leado dou e
one
d tn.iggted
. blunder In . Game One with a
the seventh 'lnnlng Into a triple. But Thurmond, who ha s . with the
three-run homer, vaulting San Wllllams kept his faith In · the evening he~hln°'; ~a~ was
Diego to a 5-3 victory over the
37-year-old designated .hitter and Padres
·
Detrolt'I'IgeT$Wednesdaynlghtand
movedhln\upthreenotchestoslxth nearly naw~~ ~::=
00
a split of the first two gam~ of the
In the batting order.
night. He golJt In
before Kirk
1984 World Series.
His horne run came after a walk to
and retired
a row
The American League champion Nettles and a bad hop single by
Tigers scored three n:ms In the first
TeJTY Kennedy on a shot that
Inning off Ed Whitson, butthls time,
bounced oft second baseman Lou
Padres Manager Dick Williams
Whitaker's chest.
made his move before !twas too late.
As he watched the ball salllntothe
WIIUams removed Whitson with one
left field seats, Bevacqua jumped In
out left In the tnbing, and relief
thealrands~aroundatftrstbase.
pitcher Andy Hawkins ll.u'ned
He pumped the No. 1 sign with a
giant-kllier.
·
fl1lger as he rounded second, and as
Hawkins a parttlme starter who
he trotted around third, Bevacqua
had two'cdnplete games during the
pressed both hands against his lips
season, pltched51-3innlngs, gave up
and blew a kiss tothecrowdot57,911
just one hit before he gave way to
at Jack Murphy Stadium. Even tn ·
his moment of Infamy on Tuesday
left·hander Craig Lefferts, who
started the seventh.
nlght, they had not booed him. Now,
The Padres, meanwhile,
they cheered him.
scratchedbackwitharunlnthefirst
Hewoundupwiththreehltslnthe
on Gralg Nettles' sacrif!ce ny and game, as did teammates Alan
another In the fourth on a ftelder's
Wiggins and Gany Templeton . .
The victory kept the Padres alive
choice grounder bY Bobby Brown
thatscoredBevacquatomakelt3-2.
as the Series moves to Detroft-..for
Then, In the fifth, the Padres garnesNo.3,4and5onFrldaynlght,
finally chased Tigers starter Dan Saturday and Swulay. No team had
Petry, J8.8 during the season, with ever lost thefirsttwogamesathome ·
Bevacqua's three-run homer. l1j · and come back to win a best-of.?
San Diego's 3-2 loss tn Game One, Series.
Bevacqua had run the Padres out of
Hawkins also pitched two scorn-

Gibson led off the sixth with a bloop
single to left.
.
Over two nights Hawkinsfaced23
tralght batters ~thout yielding a
~t. A single bY Gibson broke that
_
perfect string. San
~: tn=ers have pitched 21
scoreless Innings tn postseason play.

an

SLIDING IN BELOW - San Diego Padres' Alan Wiggins slides
safely Into home plate he neath Detroit 'ngers' catcher Lance Parrlsh In
the first Inning of Wednesday night's World Series game In San Diego.
Wiggins beat the throw from Detroit left fielder Cannelo Martinez on a
sacrifice Dy by Padres' Gralg Nettles. (AP Laserphoto).

Punishment lasts
several·days·for
· Buckeyes' Byars
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
physical pounding Keith Byars of
Ohio State, the nation's leading
rusher and all-purpose runner,
absorbs iakes it toll for several days .
The 6-foot-2, 235-pound junior
tailback was asked if he were very
sore on Sundays. He averages 28
rushes a nd 32 offensive plays for
Ohio State, . accounting for 160
rushing yards and 226.8 aU-purpose
yards per game.
Byars grinned and weighed every
word. "On a scale of one to 10, I'm
about an eight on Sunday," he
replied slowly. "It starts to wear off
by Tuesday."
· The man who runs the ball on 73
percent ofOhio State's rushing plays
and on 45 perce nt of the eighth·
ranked Buckeyes' offense plays
.tloes not mind being the No. 1 target
of college defenses this year.
. "If ever~ybody is leaning toward
me,lt helps the team.llikeplaying a
decoy. It opens up our passing game
and (fullback) Roman Bates. And
then the defen ses have to play
honest," he said Wednesday.
Byars, at his current pace, would
break the single-season school
rushing recorctof1,695yards. Archie
Griffin established the mark as a
junior, the first of two seasons he
won the Heisman Trophy.
In 1984, Byars l)as 802 yards
rushing, 222 yards receiving, 35

yards passing and 66 points In five
games. He has 11 consecutive
games of two or more touchdowns
and 100-yard rushing performances
in 10 of his last 12 contests.
Byars was asked to analyze
himself.
"Everytime I touch the football,!
thlnkTD," he said. "Ijustrunforthe
daylight. People look at me and
don't think I'm that fast. I have
deceptive speed and blend it with
power. I !Ike to run possessed."
Byars couldn't be blamed for a
28-23 defeat at Purdue last week. He
gathered a career-high 191 yards
rushing and piled up 354 yards In
all-purose yardage, the second
highest single-game total In Big Ten
history.
· Eric AUen of Michigan State
accounted for the conference record
in 1971. AUen gained 374 yards
against Purdue.
Byars is the principal reason Ohio
State stlll Is· a Big Ten contender.
The Buckeyes are 2-1 with IoWa and
Michigan, tied for third place behind
3-1 Illinois and 4-0 Purdue.
llllnois, the league's defending
champion, visits Ohio Siate Saturday for a regionally televised
contest (CBS-TV, 3:40p.m. EDT).
Fullback Roman Bates has
worked as Byars' backfield buddy
all se1150n. "I've never seen a
tailback punish linebackers on

Patriots~ but the Cleveland running

game faltered, managing just 44
yardson24canies. Veteranrunning
back Mike Pruitt sat out the game
because of an injured calf muscle.
" We would have been helped
immensely last week if Mike had
played," Rutigliano said Wednesday. "In spite of the fact that we're
not running the ball as effectively as
we need to, we've just got to keep
pouJ\dlng away and hopefully get it
together, just as we'redoinginother
offensive areas."
Pruitt was working out Wednes·
day and expected to be back In
action Sunday, Rutigliano said.
The coach also labeled as "abSolutely unbelievable" and "totally
Inaccurate" reports that the Seattle
Seahawks had talkea to the Browns
about acquiring Pruitt In exchange

A solid 134 correct prediction rate a week ago might have
gained ground, but It just wasn't quite good enough as yours l:n.i!y fell
slightly further behind the ole' master prognostlcaior, Major Hoople.
Hoople, you see, carne home with a little better 12·3 week. Season
stl!ndlngs have the Major the Major at 77-33 (.700) whUe "wonder
bird" loses ground to 80-35 (.696).
A football predictor's dream-come-true selection slipped around
the crystal ball of both yours truly and the Major last week. Ironton's
loss to "tip your hat" Gallipolis was the upset of the year, maybe the
decade.
Our pl&lt;;ks last week were 34-6 (mine) and 38-8 (his'n), both for
Ironton. Oh, well. Who'd a !hunk It!
Trl- Valley Conference action heats up as fast-scoring Meigs and
mistake-proof Warren headline the loop's five-game schedule.
The Marauders make It five In a row as tliey knock the Waniors
from the unbeaten ranks with a nail-biting 21J.14 win.
Belpre remains unbeaten In seven games with a 46-6 romp over
Muter, Nelsonville-York makes it two straight with a l:J.Owhltewash
over Alexander.
Wellston gains Its long-awaited first victory by smashing
halpless Federal-Hocking 30-6, and Trimble stays In the tight TVC
race by thumping Vlnion County 18-6.
The SEOAL title Is In Gallipolis' own hands as the Blue Devils
(who else) could win the crown •with future wtns over Jackson and
Logan. But this week, the French !owners take on Ripley In
non-league play. Galllpolis shows•the Ironton upset was not a major
Duke as It humbles Ripley, 22-16.
Ironton goes against poor Jackson. The Ironmen· catch the
Tigers at their best and get creamed, 52-14. Logan edges Athens 12-7,
bouncing back from last week's shellacking against Columbus
Beechcroft.
In the SVAC, North Gallia continues Its search for a playoff berth
as it remains unbeaten and whips Southern 28-6.
Kyger Creek stays In the race as it clobbers Southwestern, 34-0
and Eastern wins Its seCond straight SVAC game in a 14-8 squeaker
over Hannan Trace .
· In other area action, Wahama keeps a big zero In the loss column
as It upsets strong Fort Gay 22-20, Pt. Pleasant has a rare easy one as
it rolls over Huntington's Pony Express 28-0, Coal Grove edges
Chesapeake 21J.12, powerful Portsmouth W~t cracks Waverly 34-7,
and Fairland nips Rock HUI 14-6.

Sllnrblrd Satlllte Syst•

,,

Phono·ln Orders Wokarno

FALL' SPECTACULAR
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Authorized
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IN MIDDLEPORT MASONIC IUILDING

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2.3

Charlie Barret1 ......................... I 3 3.0
Tony~ker ................. ....... l
1 1.0
Nick Bush .............................. .... ! ·I ·1.0
J. R. KJtchen .... .......................... 3 -1 -o.3
• Man Rll!le .............................. ! -3 -3.0
Dan Thomas ........................ .. ..... I ~9 -9.0
• Phil Klng ....... ~........ .. ................. 5 -13 -2.6
Mike Chancey .. ...... .................... 39 -79 -2.0 ·
Tolalo
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Brad Robinson ............................. 6 35 0

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Scot Gheell ................................. 2 0 12
Jackie Welker .............................. I 2 8
.1. R. Kltohen ...........

.. ....... ! 0 6
2014134

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SOlo Toe- (10 or more)
•
No.
Brad Robl.nsoh ................................ .... .. 33
Mark HamrnQnds ......................... ......... .'l)
Jackie Wf'lker .....• ........................ ....... .. 25

79(

Player

~~~E:.:::::::::::::::: :::::: :::::::::·::: ::::::
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Jay Whittington ................................ ..

Butch StUf!l ...... .. ...................... ...... ...... ~

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Paul Dalley ...... .. .... .,.... ....................... . l4

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Mike Chancey .................. ............ 3 8 26
Dan Tilomas ......................... ....... 2 0 12

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J . R. Kitchen .... .......... ............ ..... 2 7iJ 1
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39 nz s

Player

CLEAR 64161
AMBER 64163

99(

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D&lt;:~n lllornas ................................ 8 185 2

WET-N-WILD

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$)799

Limit 4

Jackie Welker .............................. 5 101 I

Erch.

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· 1!11ft Ind . ....... _Charlie VanMeier in~;

R00ert H0111loy 51!· Ru1us JeweU 510.
, l!llft Inti. pme .:_ Qwile VanMeter 256;

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SWISHER LOHSE

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Bowuna

P h o r n HI 1 y

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Cllod" "tftt, I.Ph.

lOIIIId H•nifll. Utt

Mon. thru Stt. I~ t.m. to 9 p.m.
Sun&lt;Uy 10:30 '·'"· to 1!:30 p,01. ind 4 to I p.m.
RESCRIPTION!
PH. 191-2955
ot Mtin St.
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Po.,.oy, 011.

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Rulua JeweU 213; Cbar11e VanM- 211.
HJa1t !Nm - Fraternal Onter ';'
Eagles Zllt; Roach's Gun S00p :1483; BIU 5
Body Sltop :m1.
· l!llft !Nm pme - Fraternal Onter ol
: Eagleo lilt, Roocb'a Gun ShOp $74, 1166.

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Scot Gheen.... .... ......................... 18 318 2

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;======;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w~

Systems from s1695
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Mark Hammonds .... ... ............... 31
James Acn!O ............................ . 9
Jackie Welker ............. ............... 8
Paul Dalley .................. ...... ...... 8
Huey Eason ........ ............ ........... 7
DonnJe Becker .. .......... .. .............!

T«a1o

Carton

"Never Is a pretty big word, isn 't
it... '

All YdB A•l

Player·
.
No. Vdl Td
Dan 1bomas ............ ..... .. :............ 3 38 0
Scot Gheen .................................. 2 25 0
Huey Eason ................................ I 12 0

Choice

will be affected bY Ibis game. We
urge anyone who wants to Join
our effort to give the team a
helping hand ·to come and sit .In
our area. We will be the 12th
man on the field. We wiD be
heard," Bachner ooncluded.

Bra_d Robinson .. .........................!!; '183 8.2

.

Your

Steve Bachner, a spokesman for the'Meigs Jaycees said
his group is spear-heading an
eHort to create a "more vocal"
group of people for the critical
Meigs-Warren game. Bachner
said, "This Is a crucial game and
the TVC championship certainly

RUSIDN,G
Player

Huey Eason ............ .................. 20 714 :fi.7
···rea m (Blocker Punts ) ... .......... ... 2 17 , 8.5

CIGARETTES

.saoo

Jaycees head drive for vocal support

"It wasn'tan easycholcetornake.
But we have an obliga tlon to do what
Is best for our club.
"We got a bird in the hand . H we
had waited until after the season,
who knows what we mig!lt have
gotten . if anything."
·
Hunley and the Bengals ended
contract talks Monday, one day
before the National FootbaU Leagt~e
trading deadline. Brown said th~
Bengals went against their no-trade
policy because they could get a
future No. 1 draft c hoice.
"It indicates that a player who
holds out may always get what he
wants," Brown said of the trade.
"We are not a big-market team, and
we don 't have all the guns that some
people have. !nthe future, that has to
be a worry to a team in Cincinnati."
The Bengals and H unleywerf't1't
able to agree on money. Hunley
reportedly had demanded about
$500,tXXI a year, a nd the Bengals
were unwilling to pay that much.
"1 don't want to whine. We can
compete with the other teams In the
league under these rules. We have a
handicap . The bigger market teams
have m ore ancillary ·revenue and
this concerns us. It 's a threat to the
competitive balance in the NFL. But
we can compete," Brown sal d.

MEIGS GRID STATS

RECEIVING

for Seattle's reserve quarterback, . early In Sunday's game and was not
Jim Zorn.
able to play. He feels a lot better
"We've talked to people all year, physically, so hopefully he'll be able
but we've never ... talked about to play, also, which wlll be a big help
Mike Pruitt,'' Rutigliano said.
towards our effort," Rutigliano
Bill Davis, the Browns' vice said.
president of personnel, previously
The only. other injured Cleveland
said the Browns had "casual player Is reserve tight end Tim
conversation" with the Seahawks, Stracka, who hurthlstoeSundaybut
is expected to be avanable for this
who offered Zorn "because they felt
we needed a quarterback."
week's game.
Pruitt, though, was never offered
The Jets listed five players
to Seattle, Davis said.
Wednesday as injured. Running
Cleveland's running game should back Cedric Minter and receiver
also benefit this week from the Wesley Walker were listed as
return to health of the oft-Injured
questionable for the game, whUe
running backs McNeil and Marion
offensive lineman Doug Dleken,
Rutigliano said.
Barber and linebacker Lance Mehl
"I talked to Dleken. He got hurt were listed as probable.

THAT'S RIGHT! 50% REDUCTION
In The Price of Athletic Shoes .

I

THIRD TIME- Joe Flelds, W. ~st., Pomeroy, Monday evening
bagged this six point btlck de€1' In Meigs County. Tlds Is the ~tud
consecutive year In which F1elds has bagged a deer on the second day of
the bow and an'OW humtng season.

CINCINNATI CAP )- The Cincin nati Bengals want to make it clear to
future players selected in the college
draft that the team won't give them
JJP eully If a wage agreement Is not
made.
Assistant General Manager Mike
Brown says the .BengaJs reluctantly ~
lraded holdout Ricky Hunley to the
Denver Broncos for future draft
choices.
During months of fruitless contract talks, Brown had maintained
the Ben gals wou!dn 't trade the
rights to Hunley, a linebacker from
Artzona who was Cincinnati's top
draft pick this spring. Brown said
the Bengals didn't want to let a
player force a trade bY holding out
for more !)'laney.
•
"Hwedraft a player, wewant him
to know he has toplayforus,'' Brown
said last-August.
"We made our point," he said
Wednesday. "The negotiations weren't quick and easy. They extended
welllntotheseason.Anyonewedeal
with tn the future willlmow we'll go
further than other teams have, and
that should be to our advantage,"
said Brown.

Meigs slats ·

Player

25°/o OFF

State. Washington Statesawhlmgo
for 145 yards on the ground and score
twice. At Minnesota, !twasl64y;~rds
rushing and three more
touchdowns.

BJ 800ft WOLFE
Hannan Trace feU to a 33.0 ·defQ-at
Friday evening kicks otf the
at the hands of North GaUJa last
second week Of SVAC league action
weekend. Hannan Trace couldn't
as teague-leading North Gallla
untrack Its offense against the
travels to Southern, Hannan Trace
Pirates, rushing and i&gt;asslng for
visits Eastern, and Kyger Creek
just 27 yards aptece.
travels to Southwestern.
One of the area's leading scorers,
Currenily, North Gallla Is riding
D\!ke Barnes Is always a threat;
atop the SVAC standings with a
however, as Is junior fullbacl!- Eric
perfect 6-{) mark, HJ- rnstde the
Darst.
·
league.
Hosts SVAC Chlill!ps
Inside league play both Eastern
Last week Southern Was defeated
and Kyger Creek are tied with
29-6 by a tough Kyger Creek squad.
perfect 1.0 Tl'C()rds, owning 3-3 and
'!'his week the Tornadoes again
4-2 records respectively.
have their hands full against North
Eastern, which seems to he the
GaUia's Pirates In Racine.
biggest surprise of tbe year, Is
Southern netted 197 Yllrds, hut
young but talented and hopes to be
couldn 't come up with the big play
among the league leadel'$ as the
last Friday. Aggressive play such
season winds to a close. If for some
as that exhibited by Southern in
reason Eastern falls to contend, It
recent weeks has kept It tn
M.s shown tllat It can be winner and
contention, but It still needs a itttte
that It Is vasily Improved over last
offensive boost to get it over the
season.
bump 11nd back In the · winning
Although the Bissell boys have
,
circle.
been the talk of tbe town, talented
A 53-yard Sean Grueser to Danny
running backs · John Rice and
Wolfe pass led to Southern's only
Ronnie Hensley compiled lmpres·
score last week.
slve yardage gains last week at
·The powerful Pirates were again
Southwestern. Rice had 92 yards on
led by senlor back Mark Foreman,
12 canies and Hensley 46 yards on
who tallied two touchdowns and an
12 carries.
extra point conversion. Foreman
Qwlrterback Royce BlsseU, hav·
rushed for 212 yards on 24 carries,
lng l!Jl 0\ltslandb)g season, hit five
while Brian Hawks had 64 yards on
of 12 passes iast week, Including a 23
11 canies and one touchdown.
yard TD pass to Kevin Moms.
Scott Wllllamson added' the other
Bissell scored the other TD on a · Pirate score on a 14 yard run.
selien yard run to lee the 12.0 EHS
Sophomore back Mike Kemper Is
win.
· also an offensive threat.
Eastern's defense, which has
struggled through the fln;t part of
the season, finally stiffened and
"won the game" Friday nlght,
according to Coach Ray Watson.
An Improving defense and explosive offense such as Eastem'scoukl
put them In position to challenge for
the league crown. But first there's
Hannan Trace.

"Brown explams
Bengals' position
on Hunley trade

PAS'!ING
, Play..
Cemp AU 'I' do lal Td Pet
, Mike Chancey ................ 39 1!1 712 3 &amp; 45
· Phil Klng .................... 0 2 0 I 0 0
NlckBush ...................... o 1 0 0 64.1
Totals
39 !II 712 I &amp; 13
. Opposition
11 83 449 6 3 45
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about every play like he does. I can
tell people are almost afraid to
tackle him," hi! said.
Byars ran, passed for and caught
touchdowns against Iowa. He
scored three •touchdowns and had

I
·I

I JEFF'S CARRY OUT
I
Pomeroy, OH.
I

I

Featuring The

INSTAlLED

r:----COUPON.;.. ___ _

SPARKY NOT FULL OF
SPARK Detroit Manager
Sparlcy Anderson watches &amp;he
San Diego Padres take a 5-3 lead
over his 'ngers In the ftfth Inning
of Wetlnesday night's World
Series game In San Diego. (AP
Laserphoto).

ALL ATHLETIC SHOES
-.

J

,

CapL Crow predi~ts

Browns could learn from Jets says Rutigliano.
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns' offense, which
• s howed some s igns of life in last
· Sunday's 17-16 loss to the New
E~gland Patriots, COUl\1-·affOrd to
take some pointers from this
weekend· s opponent, the New York
J ets, says Browns' Coach Sam
:· Rutigliano.
"Theonething that'shelped (Jets'
quart erback) Pat Ryan Is the fact
~ tha t they're able to run the ball,"
' Rutigliano said. "Freeman McNeil
is a great threat. That takes a lot of
. pressure off the quarterback. It
: gives him the play-action game, his
' ~ bootleg game, and subsequently it
~ puts a · lot · of pressure on the
• defense."
' Browns' quarterback Paul McDonald passed for 320 yards against the

October 1 1. 1

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�Thund8~~r11,1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

'

The Daily Sentinel

·By The ·Bend

Thu~y! October11,

1984

Page 11

&amp;.::~~:·' ~.?!.. ~!.?.Dt~~~...plant growth, upsetting timetable
MeipCGw!tyGardeoCiu._~

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llaldO'IheiUVerGardenClub .· flowerlngwhetherdaysare!ongor
As ~ nplse, air and w ter pollution short. In this category are African
weren t enoug!J, we11 are · nciw violets, . ~. ·snapdragons and
discovering light pollution!
tomatoeS.
Safety lights, Installed by many
The growth pattern is altered
people In their backyards, upset the when plants are near the night llghts
timetables ofplantsandcausethem because the plants grow when they
to contuse night and day.
sl100kl be "sleeping." This .Is
The amount of sunlight which a detrlmentaltotrees,partlcularly!n
· pl~t needs each day Is called Its northern regions, because they
"photoperiod." Plants that flower continue to grow In the fall when
w,hen days are short
called daylight Is shorter and they should
"slxlrt-day plants" and Include be ceasing growth to prepare for
clirysanthemums, Chrtstmas cac- winter. New growth Is moist and
Ius, gardenlfiS, asters and potnset- tender.' When a tree contlnues to
lias. Plants that flower when days grow well Into the frost season, It

are

•

"·~
ndudtoct:luNt ....... .....

easny InJured
more
Ughtln ~makes the
1

function bf the greeq leaves or
plants,isactlvatedbyredandblue.
morese~tlvetoairpollutlon~aves The blue region also attracts
High press
sodlun)lam
nlght-flylnglnsects.
~ce as ,;:lent for
ResearchbytheU.S. Department
purposes as ~ mercury va r of Agrlcultw-e Indicates the red part
lamp and emltsmoreredandyeJ!. of the spectrum Is the ~Ugbt. Mercury vapor lamps gener- · triggering Ugbt. During the hour
ally used on highways and city pertod or the day, the light-dark
streets give off a bluish green light ~cles trtgger the flowering,
which contains few red rays and
ranching, dormancy, bulblng, and
many Ultra-violet rays. Natural other plant growth responses:
sunUghtgivesoffllghtlnthev!s!ble
In the Beltsville, Md., nursery
region from blue ~ 0 green to ellow . where tests were conducted, It was
to red. The red reglonn ~f the ~that plants near the sodium
spectrum regulates tbe fall ps grew more rapidly Into the
photopetiod
. seasonandalsogrewmuchlater
ChloropllYil ~
hot
th Is
than plants of a Uke age that bad
thefood-maklng~n!ss=~ been screened from night lighting.
only In nature anp whicb Is the chief
Treesli""'
~~chredhad-~n
the
·
,.., t suue
..,.ereexposed
wintertodie-

u:::

back the follOWing season.
Thesellghtsalsohave anadverse
effect o~, g~ because plants
need to sleep. Generally speaklng, plants are affected within a
radius of about 25 feet oltbe lights.
As the lights become more widely

used, It is well to become aware ot
the effect they have on · growing
plants. With t)lls knowledge, you
maybeabletoplaceyourgardenln
a more favorable location or plant
trees of varieties on which the effects may be so disastrous.

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MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT
STORE

/0 OFF
20 01
,r'Wrangter Jeans
tHROUGH
OCT. 17th

.ar.llpll.............. .;hQI

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· . Modern Woodmen meet,
learn CPR technique

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CPR DEMONSTRATION - Duane Moon of Sout"easten1 Ohio
Medical Services clernoml'lltftl cardlopulmoaary I'SI8Citatlon for the
ModemWoodmenoiAmerlcaattherecentlndlanSummerpimlcheldat
Carr's Oak Grove, AJfred,
·.
,

Rt

Installation of new officers highlighted the recent meeting or the

to Mrs. RK W!!llams, and gifts
were given to the publicity chair-

IUvervtewGarden
of
Mrs. FrankBise.'Club at the home
Mrs. Walter 11~ ~ tor
·,thenomlilatlngrommlttee. Elect£d
were Mrs. Harllss Frank, presldent; Mrs. Okey Cotmolly, . vice
president; Mrs. Roy . Hannwn.
secretary, and Mrs. Curt CaiJthom,
treasurer. Mrs. Denver Weber,
retiring president, Installed Mrs.
C9nnoUy and Mrs .. Cauthorn with

man,
Lyle Balde'rson,
the , on
cluysanthemums
that
flower Mr!;.
fund c~alnnan,
Mrs. Blse',
plants
should be placed noting
two to three
aqd t)le scrapbook chahman, Mrs. . feet apart, need a great deal of

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Dr. and Mrs. Doll Gibson,
Maryland, spent thepastweekhere
v!sltlngMrs. MargaretDouglasand
Mrs. Lana Gibson.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight S!eple,
Dayton, were Thursday and Frtday
guests of Mrs. Frances Young.
Mrs. Juanita Richards of Dayton
and Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gibson and

.sons,
wereGibson.
weekend
visitorsColumbus,
or Mrs. VIrginia
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Alkire, visited
Sun&lt;laywiththeRev.andMrs.Lou!s
Carnpb!!ll. Belpre.
Mrs. WIU!e ·ColUns of Ridgeway
and Mrs. Sally Welch of Marysville
have been here to visit with their
mother, Mrs. Dena Welch, who
underwent surgery last week at
O'B!eness Memorial Hospital,
Athens.
Mrs. WaldoNealspenttwoweeks
In Titusville, Fla. with her brother,
Arthur Cline.

Homecomings set
Flatwoods Melhod!st Church w1ll

mid a homecoming on Sunday. The

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prayer by Mrs. Balderson:
Mrs. Youngpresentedaprogram

M Ro aid Co de " - Do ld
Mrs. n
w IY·'"""' na

.

1

:

~·~:.""'
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1

!~&lt;10'111' llt~~OI P~«h;.~ It (&gt;"' I - P •"' Ol ""'•n'i-C• tU~\

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' ....MIDDLEPORT
- ,.
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1::.~S~:Z..E::~~.:..~."C:.

[_?,~

I

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DEPARTMENT
STORE

I
I

5

water, but not much fertll!Jzer, ancl
for winter protection should have
Tho~Spencer\verealsoremem.
their: tops cut off after the f!srt
bered. Mrs. Weber extended thanks freeze. She also suggested covering
to the members rorthelr help during with two lnches of coarse material,
her term as president
· and perhaps removing some of the
· The program colnmlttee report rooted suckers and placing them In
was given by Mrs, Ray Young. A small pots to carry over for the
get-well .card was slgnf!!l for Mrs.
winter.
. Ronald Osborne. Plans were made
Mrs. B!se, Mrs. Cauthorn and
for an odtlng at the Ohio University Mrs. Balderson were hostesses and
Inn on Oct ~. For roll caJJ, sexved refreshments. Games were
members gave a rememherarice of enjoyed and the door prize went ID
a grandparent. Devotions were Mrs. Herman Grossnickle. Besides
entitled "IArnSoBusy,Lord"w!tha
those named others attending were

day w1ll Include Sunday Sc)lool atlO
a.m.,preachlngatlla.m.,d!nnerat
12: 30 p.m., and atterooon services
beginning at 1:45p.m. Rev. James
Mathias w1ll be preaching. Special
singing by The Soldiers of ljght,
. Bobby Barker and others w1U he
featured .
The St. PaUl United Methodist
Clluteh w1U have Its annualllolnecomlng on Sunday. A carry-ln
d!nner;w!U begin at 12: :J) p.m. with
. the attemoon program getting
wxlelway at 2 p.m. A gospel group
from Marietta, God's Children, w1ll
appear. Everyone Is welcome. ·

also viSited with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Martin and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wb!tehead
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Walt Hensch and Lisa at Canal
Fulton, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Hensch, Canton.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wallrer and
daughter, Jennifer, Rac;!ne, visited
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. Ed

Humphrey.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Long of Belpre
were recent visitorS of Mrs. R.E.
Williams and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
Balderson.
Dinner guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Denver Weber and Mark
onSurulay,wereMr.andMrs.Oscar
Weber,ChloeWeber, Keno,andMr.
and Mrs. David Weber.

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MIDDLEPORT

OPEN TILL .
7 P.M. FRIDAY
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riMrs~ye~rs~,e?Mrs;~
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,~·~u"~""'~""~-----------------·--·-·•••••J
""~"~'·'~'";;;l~-~~·'-~·;.;~~~~~~~1
·
·

Meigs County personal happenings

ReedsviDe Penonals
Charles Hall has returned home
following surgery at the Veterans
Hospltlll In Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. George Elwart of
West Germany are here visiting
with her brother and his wtre, Mr.
and Mrs. Grant Bor!rig. They have

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Ranis.. The call!ng canmlttee,
Mrs. Connolly, Mrs. B!se and Mrs.

theotherofficersto~lnstaDedata

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SIZES 1-20, 1-1S

=~.':' ~:..."'.!:;:::.":"".;.'!~.:.

later date. Gtrt.s were presented to
the officers.
'
Mrs. Weber presented potted .
mums to the honoracy members,
Mrs. Gene WHsort and Mrs. Ciermont Harris. A mum was also sent'

SAVE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

greetings were sung to Charles
Carr, Alfred. Cheer plates will be
prepared for shu tins.
Duane Moon of Southeastern Ohio
Medical SeJVices demonstrated
cardiopulmonary resus!catlon, and
plans were made by the group for
CPR training. The classes will he
held0ct.24;6to10p.m.and0ct28,1
.to 5 p.m. at Coo!vHie. Each
participant must successfully com·
plete both clasSes and purchase a
training manual to be certified for
CPR Those Interested are to enroll
at 667-lm piior to Oct. 22:
A Halloween masquerade and
weiner roast was planned for Oct 'l7
at6:30atCarr'sOakGrove. As!lver
collectlonw!UbetakenforUNICEF
to benefit underprivileged children
around the world .

Ganden . Club t"ns't.alZs otCfi.t"cer.r .

·v.ervt~e·w

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Os!e Elizabeth Henderson,
Alfred, was welcomed Into the Half
Century Club at the annual Indian
Summer picnic of Camp 1091ll,
Modem Woodmen ofAmertca, held
reCently at Carr's Oak Grove,
Alfred.
The Woodmen's Creed Service
was led by Nina Robinson Lee
'
I
. Henderson, Hobart Swartz, Al!red;
and Bob Pullins, Coolville. Group
slnglng was led by Marjorte Malone
andThelmaHenderson,Alfred,and
new camp members welcomed
were Bobby McBreyer, Coolville,
and Dana and Ryan Cunningham,
Belpre
A fl~ral arrangement was presented to Art and Ollie Atherton,
Alfred, In obsexvance or their 50th
wedding anniversary and birthday

WOMEN a.nd JUNIOR BASIC JEANS

I

12 9 Mill Str11t
(On, the T in Middleport}

43 Court Street
(Across from Municipal Par~ing lot)

Daily 9:30·6:00
Friday 'til 8:00
(lostd

Daily 9:30·6:00
Mon. &amp; Fri. 'til 8:1'"
Closed s~ndavs

· Quality Apparel

�Thursday, October 1 1, 1984
Ohio

October 11 1984

Sanborn~Missionary
Plans for Sponsoring a chlld In a
forelgnlandwlthlndlvldualmlsslon
donationsweremadewhentheB.H.
Sanborn
Mlsslonaey Society of the
MlddJeport First Baptl,st Church
met Mooday night at the church.
The white cross report was given
byiU!odaHall. Forthel!J84.85year,
the society wW be giving to the

ov~ -white

cross, Latlil Am~-

lea, overland white cross, and the
Trumble - Baptist Neighborhood
Ministries, among others In the
mission mlnlstry.
It was noted that June !Ooes wm
have charge of the World Fellow,
ship offering, to betaken on Oct. :n
EUzabeth Searles presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer.
Sllewelromedthe2lmembersanda
guest, Edna Wilson.
BeulahWhlteofthei:lorcasCircle
had deVotions using John 21; 1
through 6, and a meditation entitled

Society makes plans

"You Are Loved. " stressing how son, Helen Bodlmer • Ka~ Anthoey;
Jrnportant It Is to have the right , Gwllinle White, Kat.Juyn Me~.

· Indian
awtudeotmlnd.
Sheclosedwithanf~E~II~m~be~th!Slaivenian~disariah~F~
. -ijJer.,
prayer.otncers'
report were
given by Texanna Well, secretazY, ·
and Dorothy Anthony, treasurer.
The Electa Circle had prayer
using a poster which had been
illustrated by Margaret Ella Lewis.
Freda Hood read Psalms 24 and
"l'ouch God's Earth," Mary
Hughes, "bid Conceptions of Earth
and Heaven"; Lillian Demosky,
"The Indians, the Natural Amerl,
cans"; and Mary Brewer, "Modem
DayCareoftheLand." .
AlwUda Werner, Sanborn Society
president, and others of the church
and community who are Ill were
remembered with prayer. Cookies
and sandwiches were served by the
Electa Circle. Others attending
werePearlHoftman,EthelHughes,
Freda Edwards, F1ora Marte Gil&gt;-

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' "Open the Door to Learning" was
the progr&lt;1111 topic presented by
BormieFrielldattherecentmeeting
of the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
WMFI held at the church.
Included as a part of the program
was a skit by Brenda Haggy ad
Donna Gilmore entitled "Doorkeepers In a South African Mine
Meeting." Iva Powell, Eva Robson,
and Genevieve Ward were hostesses for the meeting with Wanda
Eblin. giving devotions on 'World
MiSsions" using scripture from
Psims 141. Karen Stanley had the
prayer and Shirley Frtend gave a
reading on prayer.
Brenda Haggy won a decorated
Jar of candy In a game, and the
friendship basket was won by
Belinda Soulsby. Flowers were
presented to Shirley Frtend, Jean
. Wright, and .Kay Clark for having
been on a weight loss program ..MJ:s.
Stanley talked on the execlse class
which will start next week. the door
prize was won by Janice Haggy aild
to close the meeting Shirley Friend
sang the theme song, "Open th
Door." Darla Hawley was at the

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1be family of Inez Hill enjoyed an · Marcy, and Courtney Hill. Missy
outing at Coonskin Park In Charles· Rainey. pwieu, Shirley, Kim.
ton, W.Va. The six sons and two Richard, Kevin, and Ertca pugan,
daughters and ~lr fainilles en- Tammy Adklr\s, Angle Grueser.
joyed a picnic, games, hiking, and Tim Imboden, Valerie Jeffers,
paddleboatlng dining the day. Door Tommy, Sally, Angle, Julie Hill,
prizes were awarded.
KrtstenPape,Henry,Kay,MeUnda,
Attending were Inez Hill, eecn, and Monica Hill, Deily Hill, RaMarlene, Ten and Robin Hill, Jae chelle Davis, Roger, Jane Ann,
Brunetti, Larry and Grace Griffin, Scott, and Heather Hill, Clarence,
Greg Huffman, Debbie Bryant, SusL and Krtstln Hill, David, Linda
Brady and Deb! Huffman and and Jason Hill, Perry and Bobbl
Dustin, Don, Mary, Heath, Carissa Hill, Bob and Nadine Euler, Ethel
and Corey Hill, Mandy Hill, Jill Euler, Harold and Margery Roush,
Nease, l'racl Norris, Denle, Janet, Norman, Janet and Garin Roush.

Students and faculty get Into
bomecomlng spirit Wednesd!IY
when punk !laY was observed at .·. .
Easte.m IDgh School. ·Above, the
group Includes, front from left,
~I Shepard, TonyaSavoy, Angle
Spencer; back, Miss
VanReeth, choir teacher; Mark Shrlv81'!1 and Barblll'a Wesel, EMR
teacher. At right, Jennifer Grover,
field commander of the Eastern
IDgh School Band, won third place ·
trophy for her work at Grove City
competition held over the weekend
Wider the sponsorship of the Ohio
Music Education Association.
Below, Eastern IDgh School majorette corps, lnstmcted by Debbie
Duvall, won second place in Class(:
tompetition at .Grove City In
competition sponsored by the Ohio
Music Education Association. Pictured with their trophy are Kristl
Shepard, &amp;byn Barnett, Erica
Kessinger and Amy Louks.

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Others attending were Rose
Butcher, Emma Fox, Mary Miller,
Arnie_ Frtend, Danny and Jason
Butcher.

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Historical Society to meet
Members, life members and
friends of the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society and Meigs
County MuseUIJ) are Invited to
attend the annual meeting of the
societytobeheldSundayatlp.m.at
the museum, 144 Butternut Ave..
Pomeroy.
Those attending are asked to
bring a covered dish and table
service.
Immediately following the
dinner. devotional and memorial
services Will be given, after whlcl),
officers
wUI be read. An
election of officers will also be held
and life members in attendance will
receive special recognition.
Jeanne Ontko Suchanek, scheduled speaker, will talk about
"Getting Together - The lmpor-

rePorts

.

Fox Chasers plan
Trade, Trial events

lance of a Local History Society."

history archivist and local.govern,
ment records specialist for the Ohio
Historical Society ans has a
bachelorofartsandmastersdegree
In American History from Young,
stown State University,
Youngstown.

Mrs. Ontko Suchanek is consultant
for the local office of the Ohio
Historical Society, and will answer
questions about inanaglng a local
hlstoricalsociety.
· She has also worked as a labor

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"BLACK MESH ANTENNA
AVAIWLE"

•The Meigs County Fox Chasers·
Association will have a Trade Night,
oCt. l9, and a onedayfle!d trialOct.
20. Cast will be made at daybreak,
and there will be cash awards lor the
three HGA dogS In the field.
TIM! events WillbeattheclUbhouse
· on Eagle Ridge Road, County Road

32.

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

614 SllVER BRIDGE PI.AZA
446-1051
MON.-FRI. 10·9; SAT 10-7
SUNDAY CLOSED

PINE&amp; THIRD
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THRU FIIDAY
9 A.M. Til 5 P.M.

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�14-The

Sentinel

.'

Ask Meg

Calendar
1HURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority, meeting thursday,
7: 30p.m. at Riverboat Room of
Diamond Savings and Loan.
ROCK SPRINGS- The Rock
Sprtngs Grange will meet at 7: 30
p.m ., Thursday evening, at the
grange hall.
RliTLAND - Rutland Lions
Club will meet Thursday, 7 p.m.,
at the civic center. VIsitors are
welcome to attend.

RACINE - Racine Amertcan
Le gion Auxiliary ' m eeting,
Thursday, 7: ll p.m. at post
home.
RliTLAND - Rutland Lions
Club will meet Thursday, 7 p.m .,
at the civic center. Visitors are
welcome to a !tend.
ROCK SPRINGS- The Rock
SprtngsGrangewillmeet at7: 30
p.m ., Thursday evening, at the
grange hall.
POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter, Women's Aglow Fellowship, will meet at 6:45 p.m.
Thursday at Duff's Smorgasbord, GaUipolls. Eloise McGraw
.will be the speaker. Dinner will
beat6p.m.

FRIDAY
POMERY - Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
. Revolutlonwillmeetatl:llp.m.
· • · · Frtday at the home of Mrs.
Vernon Weber. Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds - will present the pro..
gram on the seven first ladies of
· Ohio.
'

POMEROY . - Soup supper
beginning at 4 p.m . Friday at
Grace Episcopal Parish House,
E. Main .St., Pomeroy, by
women of church preceding
Meigs football game; proceeds
go to new Chrlstlan education

wlrtg.

SATIJRDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Fall
carnival Satw'day at Tuppers
Plains Elementary School with
srup supper starting at 4: ll and
ending at 9; carnival beginning
at 6 ending at 9 with games, door
pi1zes, sweet shop, l)azaar,
country store, cake walk and
other events.

MONDAY
MIDDU:PORT - The Meigs
County Churches of Cluist
Men's Fellowship will meet at
the Middleport Church of Cluist
on Monday at 7: ll p.m . Slides of
the holy land will .be shown.

Happenings
Praisemen to _sing
RACINE -The Pralsemen of
Vienna, W.Va., will be singing at
the Fellowship Church In Racine
at 1:30 p.m . Sunday . . Pastor
Charles Bush Invites the publlc.

Rutland Bowhunrer
schedule meeting
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Bowhunters Club. will meet
Saturday at 7: 30 p.m., at the
clubhouse. Nomination of officers for the upcoming year will be
held. All club members are
urged to attend.

·.,

.

: Meigs property transfers
'

Scottie H. Smith, E sthe!'R. Smith
to Harold A. Rainer, Blondena M.
Rainer, Lot. Racine Village.
Donna R. Stobart to Velma

:: Stobart,.Mtnerals, Sutton.
:Woodrow Fortney, Virginia Fort:~ -~ey, Clinton R. Pitzer. Ester L.
' : Pitzer to James E . Diddle, Right of
: ·- Way, Chester.
:: - Woodrow Fortney. Virginia Fort.: ney to James E . Diddle, Right of
:: Way, Chester.
:: - -clarence T . Wolle, Rosalie Wolfe
'• to James E. Diddle, Rlght of Way,
Chester.
Clinton R. Pitzer, Ester L. Pitzer
... to James E. Diddle, Right of Way ,
Chester.
Joseph Bailey, Mildred Bailey to
- James E. Diddle, 'Right of Way,
- Rutland .
Joseph Ba iley, Mildred Bailey to
James E. Diddle. Rig ht of Way,
Rutland .
- . Robert L. Kautz, L. Rose Kautz,
• George F. Kautz, Herbert a E .
Kllutz to James E. Diddle. Right of
Way, Chester.
· Larry R. Bailey, Sara L. Bailey to

October 11, 1

Ohio

J ames E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Chester.
Larry Rex Bailey, Sara L. Bailey
to James E. Diddle, Hight of Way,
Chester.
J . Frederick Stanley, June A.
Stanley to James E. Diddle, Right
of Way, Scipio/ Bedford.
Myrtle H. Stanley, J . Frederick
Stanley, June A. Stanley to James
E . Diddle , Right of Way, Scipio.
Marlon · F. Reynolds, Elnora
Reynolds to J ames E . Diddle, Right
of Way, Chester.
Dan R Smith, Dona J. Smith to
J ames E . Diddle. Right of Way,
Sutton.
•
George A. Wolfe, Faye Wolfe to
J ames E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Chester.
Richard L. Bearhs J r., J une
Bearhs to J ames E. Diddle, Right of
Way, Chester.
Carolyn Price to James E.
Diddle, Right of Way, Lebanon.
Kenneth L. Cozart, Patricia W.
CoZart to John J . Stark, Eleanor J .
Stark, Parcel. Lebanon .

Exercise compromise over cat ownership
By Meg Whitcomb
believe. The wife arid kids said the
DEAR MEG - I live with my
only fair thing to do Is take a vote, so
wife, six daughters and 11 cats. I'm
we voted. Needless to say. I was
an even-tempered soul who rarely
oulnumbered. Is this talr? -CAT
gets mad, but these · cats are
CRAZED, DULUTH, MINN.
making me crazy. They are ·
DEAR CRAZED- Your famlly
everywhere - in the living room,
has forgOtten the elementary math
on the kitchen table, In my bed, on
ol call!: "The_problem with a kitten
'the c_ar, (always right after I wast)
Is that eventually It becomes a
cat! "
.
it). even In the closets ..Two weeks
ago Mimi had a utter In tbe utility
I'm aU for m~jority rule, but If
closet and I'm not allowed to get at
you're the sole breadwinner you
my tool box for fear of "frightenshould have the power to exercise a
Ing" her and her seven lousy
veto over your hou5€! becoming a
kittens. Meg, li'othing &lt;;auld seare
~oo . Compromise by keeping a pair;
Mimi. She spends her days running
having them spayed and giving the
up and down the curtains, tipping
_rest (lots of luck-) away. It's the only
over the trash basket and sharpen- way to prevent a total cat-astrophe.
Ing her claws on the fun'!lture.
DEAR MEG - When we marWhen I threaten ·to get rid of the
ried, Ray and were both virgins.
cats, there's an uproar you wouldn't
While neither of us ever fooled

About 125 persons attended an
Tim Massie and sons, Jason and
open house at the home of Mr. and
Jeffrey, Gallipolis, and Bill Kautz.
Mrs. Dale Kautz recently honoring Pomeroy. Also attending were
his mother, Mrs. Ina Kautz. on her
Ruby Kautz, ColumbUs; Rose
90th birthday anniversary.
Marte Shaw and Woodrow Dorst,
A decorated tiered cake In pink Olathe,Kansas,nlecesandnephew;
and white topped with the numerals and other out of town guests, Mrs.
"90" was served with punch, mints, Kathryn Massie, Mrs. Annie Masand nuts. Kathryn Windon assisted sle,Mr. and Mrs. Waltf'rElliott,Mr.
with the serving. Here for the and Mrs. RobMassle,andErtcaSue
observance were Mrs. Kautz's and Kathy Newell, Gaillpolls; Mr.
daughter,GraceSwiderski,Monroe and Mrs. Bill BattreU and Mr. and
Mich.; grandchildren and their Mrs. Wayne BattreU, Iva imd
families, Sandr&lt;j_ Swiderski, Lip- Jimmy Wayne, Albany; Mr. and
sarill, Mich. ; Mrs. Sharon Smyth Mrs. ClarenceArcherofAkron,and
and Callie and A.J ., Denver, Colo.; · Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sams,
Suxanne Gruhl, Marblehead, Guysville, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Mass.; Mr . and Mrs. Jim Guzi and Stanley, Shade.
Tyler, Monroe, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs.

Van Meter birthday
Sandy and Sue Starr hostlid a
party recently at their Rutland
home honoring their grandson,

Joey VanMeter

Joey, on his first birthday.
Smurfs and balloons were used In
the decorations. A cookout began
the celebration followed by a
Smurtday party. Cake, Ice cream
and fruit drink were served. AU of
the chlldren received Smurf loot· bags with gifts In tbem.
Attending the party were Mr. and
Mrs. Gilbert Maynard, Langsville;
BU12, Debbie, Candy and Sissy
Moore, Dexter; Walter, Mary, Jeff,
and Glen Tomblin, LangSville;
Mltchie Conley, Beaver; Tracy,
Tamara and Mindy O'Dell, Pomeroy; Mike and Theresa Van Meter,
Rutland, and the hosts.
SendingglftsandcardswereMrs.
Frances Starr, Dunbar, W,Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Schuler, Middleport; Harley and Jane Eblin and
children, BidweU; Kip Grueser,
Rutland; Jackie; Bonnie, Jeff and
Racheal jones, Langsville.

message, "nice girls don't."
wrong, of course, but me;anw•hiiE
your healthy erotic appetite
making him feel inadequate,
fore undes·lrable 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,
a nd help him overcome his
Inhibitions.
Wrtte to Meg care of this
newspaper. . She will · personally
answer only letters that contain
self-addressed, stamped envelopes.
Questions of general Interest will be
discussed In future columns.

Sp-tart buildings

fight fires

90th birthday celebrated

":

.

&lt;: ,'".

.·; . - .
...
...- ..::::··
. .. . ..:··:---:
.
. .

. :;

'

'

.

-~· : ; .; _f : ·; .: : :

'

' '

...
• r

Malt'- Steven Yonker

Yonker birth
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Yonker,
Burleson, Texas,annomicetheblrth
ofason,MatthewSteven,June26,at
Harris Hospital, Fort Worth, Texas.
The Infant weighed seven pounds ,
11 ounces and was a:J inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Yonker have tw&lt;
other chlldren, Stephannie, age
eight, and Amy, four. Grandparents
are Sharon Ashley and Bob Ashley,
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
George Yonker, Racine. GreatgrandparentsareMr. and Mrs.Tom
Riley and Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Ashley, Middleport, and Mrs. Olga
Yonker, Racine.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - "Intelligent" buildings can now tell
firefighters how to battle a blaze.
An alarm system which features
electronic voice synthesis combining a wide range of detection, alann
and control functions with audible
communlca tion has been developed
here by Emhart. ''
The firm says the system can be
Installed In new high lise bulldlngs
that are given " Intelligence" by
electronlcaUy linking ail of · the
structure's beating, ventilation, air
conditioning and other systems.
When an alarm condition Is
detected, the system alerts the fire
department. It also- broadcasts
evacuation Instructions, shuts down
elevators, fans, etc., and provides
arriving firemen with audible and
visual references about the fire.

interest payments, for as much as
25 percent of a loan, up to $100,001,
for FmHA borrowers who are
experiencing severe fi nancia l
stress and who · show promise of
success with atemporary economic
boost.
Under the new guarantee plan,
FmHA will be a ble to guarantee a_
loan In·severe difficulty if the leader
is willing to wl1te· off at least 10
percent, up to the amount necessary to give '!lie borrower a positive
cash flow. To be considered for this
assistance, the borrower must
meet general eligibility criteria lor
FmHA farm operating and ownership loans.

A resolution was passed to rescind
Syracuse village's one-mill fire tax
levy when village council met in
regular session this past week.
The decision to begin the necessary process to rescind the levy was
made l)ecause Sutton Township has
passed aone-mill flretaxlevywhich
m eans that Syracuse (in Sutton
Township) residents . would be
paying double taxes.
It was also brought out at council
tba t no open burning without a fire
permit is tobeallowedwithln viliage
limits. Anyone caught doing so , thus
endangering the property of others,
will be subject to a fine .
Fire Chief Gene Imboden announced that Oct. 7- 13 is Fire
Prevention Week.

Sheets fund-raiser announced
State Representative Ben Rose of
Lima will be In Athens on Oct. 13 to
attend art Octoberfest Cookout for
State Representative candidate
Jennifer Sheets.
.
Rose Is seJV!ng his sixth term In
the Ohlo General Assembly where
he Is tile Assistant Minority Leader.
He Is a member of the House Rules
and Ethics Committee, the Legisla:
ti:ve Service Commission and the
House Republican Polley
Committee.
The cookout wlll be at 6: 30 p.m . at

the American Legion Shelter on W.
Union St. In Athens. Tickets a re$15
per person.

Mortgage bur...ing
· ceremony planned
A mortgage burning ceremony on
the parsonage, located on Pomeroy
Pike and purchased one year ago,
will be held at the Chester United
Methodist Church Sunday morning
at 9. The Rev. Benjamin Edwards,
district superintendent, will be
speal5er.

URN PI _f

"

OF .GALLIPOLIS, 0.

Florist Since 1957

~~
FLORIST
PH. 992-2644

Union endorses Rep. Boster

I

BEST IN MIDWEliT - Tammy Veltman o! South HoUand, m.,
poses recently with her mixed-breed pet, Geena, after they were
selected as finalist In the 1984 Purina Dog Chow Search for the Great
American Dog. They represent the North Central region of the United
States In the contest for a 525,000 cash award and otherprizes. (AP
Lascrphoto).
,
·

The United Transporta tion Union
has endorsed the cand idacy of
Jolynn Boster for re-electio n to the
Oh io House of Representatives
from the 94th District.
In a letter, Rowland D. Deal,

chairman and state legislative
director of the union, stated · ~we
know that you will understa nd the
needs of our members and that tau
~&lt;1ll provide good judgment and
leadership."

.· 1084%

BANK FINANCING
To Qualified Applic~~ts On All ~ew
11
.,
84" &amp; 1185" Cars &amp; Trucks.

FORD

MERCURY
LINCOLN

&amp;h.
~

. _ LARGE SELECTION • LOW PRICES!
~~-·

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

41414 .

~~~
- ~~~

VOLKSWAGEN
19M VOLKSWAGEN Gtl
STOCK NO.4 t 22.
2 dr, front wh -drive, 4 cyl eng , s
sp- trans, body side mldg, tint .

glas s,

remote cont .

bucket

seats,

rear

mirrors,'

wind

def .,

me tallic paint. stereo ·prep w-2

speakers, slid. sun roof, floOr
m.Hs, rust proofing.
WAS
•

$14.797

00

·ooubly

practice of stopping vehicles in the
middle of streets "to vtslt."
Council Is also asking property
owners to remove blockages from
village ailwways immediatf'ly.
An ordinance regarding uttllty
companies digging up village
streets wUI be reviewed at the next
meeting.
Trick or Treat has been set' for
Wednesday, Oct. 31, from 6 p .m . to 7
p.m. A siren will sound the
beginning and the end of the hour.
Residents wishing to pass out treats
are asked tO turn on their porch
lights as a signal to youngsters.
Present for the meeting was
Mayor Eber Pickens , coupcil
members Kenneth Cundiff, 0ris
Hubbard , Glen Cundiff, Jack Williams, and William t:. Guinther. and
Janice Lawson, clerk-treasurer.
Herb Gibson, owner of the ·
Syracuse Home Utility Company,
was unable to attend the meeting .

"HURRY" OFFER GOOD THRU SATURDAY; OCTOBER 13th. "HURRY"

446-9800

-# ·

It was also noted that village
sidewalks are still being parked on
and pointed out that this practice
must be stopped as well as the

WAS

NOW

$945000 $8512 00

1914 FORD THUNDERBIRD ELAN
PORTAPOWER"M
VACUUM CLEANER!

Delici~

.All Steel Handle
1i' Cord W/Wrap
• Convenient Bull-In
Conylng Handle
8 Qf. Dllpoeable Bag
No Shock Hood
~JitOn.CO" ducft¥1

• Compact - Portable· Light·
weightl11 YJ " long,5' ' wide,
10'1. .. high
• Fits on a stair t,..d
• Full size canister power
• 3-way filtered ~r ayatem
· • Easy to empty duat bag
· • Complete with tools and
extra long c:ord

Steel

STOCK NO. 4tilv

VI eng., fact. air,

heate~.

auto. trans., p. st., p. disc brakes , p .

wind., p. seal, p. door locks, body side mtdg., tint. glass, till st.

wheel., cr. coot., am·fm stereo tape, wsw radials, wire wh. covers,
remote cont. mirrors, console, rear wind. def.
NOW
0

WAS

10

$15,425
1914 FORD THUNDERBIRD
STOCK NO. 4840

$13,146°

·

6 cyl . engine., fact . air cond., heater, auto. trans., p. st., p, disc
brakes, body side mldg., tint. gtass.
NOW

WAS

$11,453
l914 FORD THUNDERBIRD
10

SUrtace

POWERRJL
4.8 AMP MOTOR

$9810°0

STOCK NO. 4784

6 cy 1. engine, tact . air, heater, auto. trans. , p. disc brakes, p. wind . ,
p. seal, body side mtdg., I inl. gtass, till st. wheel, cr . cont., am -t m,
stereo tape, wswradials, wirewh. covers, remote cont. mirrors.

REG.

$J099S

WAS

NOW

$12.116..
$10,983
1984 FORD THUNDERBIRD ELAN

00

STOCK NO. 4SS6

$13,255

mirrors ..

HOOVER.

SPIRITn•

Pow.-nozzle.Cenlatar

HOOVER~

$12,726 00

$14,94910

Self-Propelled
Upright

ll!liUnlon

edge auction
•1% qt.

dlopooabte

beg
• Check beg

£51
~ PG·

Only in a

WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY
OCT. 10-14

$19995

v.w.

d isc brakes,

eng., te~ct . air, auto. trans ., ps ., p.
locks ,

body

p. wind ., p. door
side

mldg .,

$14,820

* Prices Quoted Are Manufactur ers Base P rice E:x c luding Fre ight ,

Options, State and Local Taxes and Fees .

00

tint .

glass , cr . cont ., stereo tape.
remote cont. mirrors , metallic
paint , electric 2 way sun roof,
luggage rack, rust proofing.
.
WAS

NOW

$13,105 75

D
VICTORIA

STOCK NO. 55051

STOCK NO. S4260

4 dr, VI eng, fact. air cond,
half vinyl roof, h~ater, ~uto.
trans- ps, p-disc brakes,
boclyside mtdg, linl. glass, lilt

2 dr, ve eng, fact -air cn nd .,heat t! r , a uto -tran s, ps , pb, pwind , p-seat, p-door locks ,

WAS

body side mldg , tint. gl .
WAS

' NOW

SJ3,995.
1

1~u~r~ IIEG. '29995

OMNI 4 Dr.

•Big 16 Qt.

Otopoublo

Boo

•Soli Ad·

2 dr ., 4 cyt. eng., heater, ••••·1

juot~bte

trans,

ps, a m-tm,

bucket

' seats.
WAS

•Ouodroftex

'6695.

Agitotion

RUTLAND FURNITURE
RUTLAND, OH.

"Stt tht Grate loys Far Seme .Great luys"

STOCK NO . 49411

STOCK NO. 5532t
4 dr, 4 cyt. eng, heater, 4 sp -

STOCK NO. 55172

carpet H ·
lector

742-2211

. 41SB
4 d r . Sedan , front wh . drive, 4( yl.

Jee~

U3109

otgnet
•24000RPM
o...tiSt.oge
motor-t•n
ovotem

1984
QUANTUM _

trip length, weather. Actual highway ligiJres lower.

CROWN VIC

SS69t
4·w11eetdr, toe king hubs, mud ·
snow tires, VI eng, stand.
trans. ps, pb, tint. g·lass, am
radio.

• 'Ouedraflex'
ptuad~el

@4

Concept OnaTM
STOCK NO.

• Edge bNahttr

EST

HWY

"Use tor comparison. Your mileage may vary wilh speed,

NOW

WAS

32

No Other American-Built 4X4 Sportwagon
Even Offers a 4-Door.
Nobody else gives you a choice of two shift-on-thefly 2WD/4WD systems. Or offers Quadra-Link front
suspension for high ground clearance. And no other
4X4 has been acclaimed as Cherokee has: 1984
"4X4 Of The Year " Triple Award Winner.

6 cy 1. engine, tact. air, heater, auto. trans., p . s~ ., p . disc brakes , p .
winCI. , p . seat, body side rnldg., tint. glass, tilt st. wheel, cr. cont. ,
am-fm, stereo ..
tape, wsw radials, wire wh. covers, remote cont.

Sv•tem

PIC*~~gt
plul$t.OO
'*'
be pun:hMMI.

to a five-year deferral. with no

Fact. air, heater, Ssp trans, p·s t.,
p-disc brakes, p-wind ., p-door
Jocks, body side mtdg ., tint.
glass, tilt sf-wheel, am·fm stereo.
rear wind. del.

Total Package

-==

President Reagan's farm, credit
initiatives to reschedule portions of
loans for some financially stressed
Fannel'S Horne Administration
(FmHA) botTOwers and-to guarantee loans of some other borrowers
may help many llnanclally stressed
fanners In Athens, Meigs, and
VInton Counties, FmHa Supervisor
Archie Stegall said today.
Annual review of FmHA farm
loans will soon begin, Archie Stegall
said. A major prtortty of the
revtews will be to detennlne which
fanners in Athens, Meigs, and
Vinton Counties will quallfy for a
rescheduling of part of' their loans
• up to live years.
The President's plan permits up

FORD THUNDE~BIRD TURBO

2-MoToR

ill=~~=··
AII5C diPOIII
rwQiftd
IDt'
~
llldlllanlll
UJject.
Addlllanll

.

5 TOCK NO. 46G8 ·

$12.95

HOURS: ,
Wednesday &amp; Saturday 10-1; 2·6
Thursday &amp; Friday 10~1; 2-5:30; 6-8.
Sunday 1-4 - Lunch 1·2

_r,

1984 Thunderbirds

95(

•·

Syracuse village
votes to rescind
one-mill fire levy _

may help fanriers ·

Your ··extra Touch"

2(8xl0s), 3(5x7s),

Deposit

New credit plan

Shade River Lodge will hold Its
regular meeting Thursday at 7: :JI
p.m . .Dave FOK, district education
officer, will give a presentation on
r-ed_u_c_a_
tlo_n_a_ls_u_b_Jec_ts_.- - - -

Portraits make
wonderful Christmas
gifts for those you love.

15 wallets only . . .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-16

l.LJdge io meet

r---------======-----------1

PontferoSa RWeye

-Thereis
still time to get
those pt:ecious
porttatts.. -

around on the other, we both agree
that I have become m)lch more
adept sexually.
My problem is that now Ray
continually accuses me of IncreasIng my sexual prowess with other
."teacllers." This is simply not true.
My proficiency Is merely a resul~ of
my loving my husband and enjoyIng the sexual act. I'm rellglous 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 upbr1nglng that
lett · him with the subconscious

-

Oc1ober 1 1, 1984

Thursday,

NOW

•5995.

trans, body side mtdg, ftnt .
gaass, am-fm, W9N radials,
rear wind. del.
WAS

'3995.

NOW

'3295.

STOCK NO . 49162
STOC~

va eng,

N0. 4t011

4 dr, heater, 4 sp . trans, am

radio. wheel covers .
WAS

'4995.

NOW

S]995.

fact . air, auto. trans,

p-steering, p-disc brakes, tint.
glass , am-fm, console, bucket
seats.
WAS

'6995.

Gallipolis, Ohio

'5995.

root, heat er, auto . trans, p.
steering, tint. gt., tiltst-wheel,
c-cont rol, am-1m, stereo tape,
wsw radials . wh·co11ers, bumper guard s, bucket seats .

WAS

WAS

5295.

1

NOW

4495.

1

'3995.

SHOWROOM HOURS:

446-9800 '

195-Upper .River Road

NOW

6 cv I. eng, fact . c1 ir cond, vin v ;-

4 dr. V8 eng, fac t. air cond .,
heat er , auto. trans , p·st , p·d isc
brak es. body si de mldg, tint .
gl ,, am r.-.dio, wsw radiais,
wh -covers, tow mileage 45894.

PI

YRIVERSIDE MOTORS

MONDAY THRU. FRIDAY
.
8:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M.

SATURDAY
8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.

NOW

$3495.

�Page- -16- 1ne Oaily Sentinel

Thuraday, October 11. 1984 -

Thursday, October 11, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs SWCD selling fmgerlings
Fingerlings for use In restocking
ponds are now for sale by the Meigs
SoU and Water Conservation Dis·
tlict (SWCD).'lbedlstrlctwlllhave
large mOuth bass, channel catfish
and a combination of bluegill, red
ear slmttsh and green hybrid
sunfish.
FlngerUngscan besoldlnlotsof25
only or any combination thereof.

D~ily

The

r-=====jij=~::::ilj::::::===~rr:::::::::======~r;:===:::=====~
AM.
ACCENT
PULUNS
CONSTRUCTION
·
Roger .Hysell
FENCE &amp;

·I

BACkHOE
DUIIP TRUCK
CONCRETE WORK

PH. 992-6931

TRENCHER
SEPTIC TANK
COAL &amp; LIMESTONE
Call For Free Eotimate

9/17/1 mo . pd.

PHONE
992. . 2156
Writ• Dailly Sentinel Classified Otpt.

GARAGE

EXCAVATING
-DOlERS

SUPPLY

220 I . ·Main, '•meroy

742-2167 Or
742 . 2225 .

Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio
6

Orders will be taken until Oct 19
and fish will be de livered on Oct 25.
Pick -up will be at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds between 12 noon and 1·
p.m . on that d ay.
For more lnforrna tlon concerning
the sale, or to order fish, contact the
"Meigs SWCD at 992-6647 or stop by
the ortlce at 221 West Second St. ,
Pomeroy.

Prices are 40 cents each for large
mouth bass -1-4 Inches and channel
ca tflsh 3-5 Inches. Bluegill and
sunfish are 3-4 Inches and ll cents
each.
Anyone picking up · fish must
provide a container tilled with pond
water. Approximately 10 gallons
per 100 fish should he adequate.

Pomeroy

- BACKHOES
-DUMP TRUCKS
- lO-BOYS
-TRENCHER

=~t~!:

-GAS liNES
-SEPTIC SYSTUIS

"frH Estim1t1s"
Installation Available

Also Transmission
PH. 992-_
s 6 a2
or 992 •7121

lARtlE 01 $MAli JOBS
PH. 992-2478

L\1 C&lt;IUJI St.. PQIMroy. Ohi?.~5"7Gt

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
HOMEffiMING - Three Eastern lligh School
seniors have been nominated for homeeomlng queen.
Homecoming wiD be observed Friday night when
Eastern meets Hannan ~ and the queen will be
crowned at halftime. The candidatfs,Jrom the left, are

I ·C ..d Dl 1NMo j... d I~ od" o•ol
1-ln - - ,
lp.;d l"lodniiC I I
l •AA,.,M-1111

Tonya Fortney, daughter of Mr. and )Irs. RA!bert
Fortney; JennHer Grover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Grover, and Kri$1 Gaddis, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. BW Gaddis.

•-a...... ..,

...............
.,. ....
I ·HIIIIGWIIIII
~

Thirty-two cases were concluded
Wednesday In Meigs County Court
by Judge Patlick O'Brien.
Fined $250 and costs, three days In
jail and &amp;rday license suspension for
OWl were Rodney Spurlock ,
Tuppers Plains, a nd ruchard T.
Dugan , Racine.
Judy Neece, Albany, was sente nced to 30 days in jail, four years
probation, . and ordered to pay
r e stitution and · costs for
falsification.
Fined for passing bad checks
were Donna Miller, Middleport, five
days In jaU for each of two charges
with jaU sentence suspended, one
year probation and restitution and
costs; Mary Moreland, restitution
a nd costs (or three charges of
passing bad checks; and Brenda
Wrtght, Vinton, and Shirley Wilson,
Rutland , both fined restitution and

costs only.
Also fined were James Cantrell,
Hamden, $61 and costs for overload;
Brenda Morris, Shade, $25 and
costs, expired Ohio license; Jeanne
Dubois, Dexter, $25 and costs,
failure to yield; Thomas Myers,
Langsville, $10 and costs, failure to
yield; Judy . Hendrix, Tuppers
Plains, $10 and costs, failure to
yield; Keith Harris, Reedsville, $10
and costs, operating a vehicle
without license plates; Grace Air
bolt, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, ]eft of
center; Robert Pickett, Jr., Pomeroy, $10 and costs, left of center;
Paul Martin, Albany, $10and costs,
left of center; and John J . Ginther,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, Ugh ted lights

required.
Jack ·Rankin and John Rankin,
both of Coolville, were fined costs

.

.

-

competes
•
mevents
The E a stern High School Band
has had a good s eason to da(e with
personnel winning awards In two
rece nt c ompetitions . James Wilhelm. director, said today.
Friday night at homecomi,ng, an
a lumni band of some40 former band
members over the years, will be
making an appearance during
pre-game activities.
At c ompetition held in Wellst.on
recently . the band received fourth
place in Class C competition and the
majorettes a nd flags received third
place. Last weekend at GroveCity In
competition sponsored by the Ohio
Mus ic Education Association, ,the
majorettes won second place and
J ennifer Grover, field commander,
won third.
On Oct. 20, the band wW be taking
part in the Ohio University home·
coming parade In the morning and
in the a fternoon wm be competitlng
a t Fort Frye High SchooL
Barbara Wesel Is instructor for
the nag corps and D.ebbie Duvall Is
in cha rge of majorette training for
the East ern Band.

(Continued from page 1)
tests of a proposed anti-satellite
we apons system, provided that the
Congress approves It next year and
certa in conditions are met. Reagan 's proposed "star wars" mUitary program would be financed
thls year at a compromises pending
level of $1.4 billion- Reagan asked
for$1.8billlon . Thefuturtstlcsystem .
· contemplates use of laser and
particle beams to defend against
mlssile attacks.
.
Also left in was President Reagan's a nti -crime package, plus a
number of Democrat-Initiated
crime-fighting measures.

Five bus drivers
given certificates
School bus driver certifiCates
were Issued to Steven D. Morris,
Don P . Smith, Fredertck D.
Thomas, Phyllis M . Wells and Carol
Kimes when the Meigs County
Board of Education met In regular
session Tuesday night.
The board contracted Mrs. Mary
Miller to type the new course study
for mathematics, reading and
language arts and approved a
contract with the Educational
Media Resource Center In Nelsonville to provide weekly f1lrrt reviews
forMelgsCountySchools.Costotthe
service will be paid for with fUnds
received from the . lottery profits
program:
The November meeting was
changed from the 13th to Tuesday,
Nov.6, due to a confiictwlththeOhlo
States Schools Boards annual conference In Columbus.

11-H.,..oeh.W'a..ft
U •C II. N IIIIMio hwl,....,..

n ..... ..._

~3- '"'""''u•IIM&gt;t

I ~ - lwol,.uoT••tli~t
1 1-14:110011
1 l · lhdl&lt;&gt;. TY • Cl 11o~o ;.
1 , ...........

u- •~,.,~~~

•t·IIIIIH

.... .

l~till ... l

11-r.ttiO&lt;I...
li1•MY .. CIIIIII ... IM~11

-

ll&gt;l'•..ot. lv.,.. .... ,
li•· •~»IIII.,T••*

.l ,.,
..... 1!""""'""''
l •'lti.. IUIOIW
13·1.1• ..'""'
1 4- Ht,IG! IIfl

••·'!&lt;'""' ,.,,j;,.,

•l-Wenu~tolh~•

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

••. t .........,.,,,;, "·~·

Oual tftcatta ns for d1rectors
PUBUC NOTICE
The annual electiOn o f the are th at they must be a qualtfled
Me•gs County Agncult ure So- vote r of M et g s Co u nty and must
c•etv D1rectors wil l be held have E! membe rShtp !tCket 1n
M on day, November 5. 1984 m sa•d soc•etv of 198 4.
C.and tdates' petn•ons must
the Sec retary's off .ce at the Fcllr
Grounds at Aoclt;"Spn ng s. Oh10 be filed w1 th the Secretary no
later than 5 p m Monday.
from 5- 9 p m.

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell!
your own
and
mail

lI ·

Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughte rs of the Ametitan Revolution, will meet ;~t 1:30 Friday
afternoon at the home of Mrs .
Vernon Weber, Rutland. Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds will give a
program on the seven firs t ladies of
Ohio. Members a re reminded to
take things for hos pit alized
veterans.
Hostesses for the meeting will be
Mrs. Weber, Mrs. VIrgil Atkins,
Mrs. CecU Blackwood, Mrs. Steve n
Jenkins, and Mrs. Dayton Parsons.

Wri11!
"ild
order by
willt 11115
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
,resul15. Money not refundable.

.

1
· Name·----------

Addnt·~---------------­

Phone·------------------

To end marriage
Hillard Conley, Chester, and
Margaret June Conley, Shade, have
petitioned Meigs County Common
Pleas Court for a dissolution of their
marriage.

I

Wealthy Will. 86, died Wedne sday
evening at the Arcadia Nursing
Home In Coolville. Arrangements
are being made by the Ewing
Funeral Home.

Daisy · Franz, a teacher in the
Southern Local School District, was
among 36 Southeastern Ohio lan·
guage teachers who participated In
a day long professional developm e nt held at Ohio University.
Themeetingwaspartofanational
endowmen for the humanities
project a t the university designed to
strengthen the humanities through
foreign language and lite rature
studies.

cows $UJ.50 hlgherj.

Feeder Steers: Good and Choice 250-n:l lbs.

52-58; JJ0.400 51-Ql.50; 400-500 53-60: 500Ql)
51-Ql; liD700 51-57.50; 700-000 50·55.50; fill lbs.
over 48-55.
Feeder H.eu~s Good and Choice 250-JXllbs.

44-51; ID4W 42.50-50; 400-500 «J-411.50; 500Ql)
42-49; 000.100 40-50; 100-000 :JI\.45.!&gt;1; fill lbs.
over .tl-46.50.
Feeder Bulls: Cood and Choice 250-300 lbs.
49-!16; 48-57.50; 400-500 50-58: 500Ql)
48-57; liD700 48-:14.50; 71XJ.lll0 47-52.50; 000 lbs.

over ts-52.

Holstein Steers and Bulls maD lbs.
31-41.50.
Butcher Bulls I,OOJ lbs. attd up, utiiiUes
~.50; canners and cutters :E-50 down .
Slaughter Cows: utilities 35.50-40 .50;
canners and ·cutters 35 down ; Low grade
21-:!fl.
Veal CSJves: ChOice and Prime 61-68,~:
Medium grade 51.00• •
Baby Calves by the head 15-45.
Cowl and Calves zro.JMl.
Sprtnaer Cows :!15-331.
Top hop 210-2«1 43-43.50.
Boars «&lt;llbt! and up 71-31.50.
Sowi400111Xilbt!. :1141; ~ 42-43.25.
Pip by the heed 14·:11.
Feeder Call Sale Tueoday, October 16, 1984.

include discount

1. ------

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

Funds received

I

State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson reported the Octol!er dlstlibu·
tion of $15,242,857.95 in local government money in Ohio. Meigs
County's part was $25,1XXl.

4. _ _ _ _ __

20.
21.

22.
21.
2~ .

6.
7.

25.
26.

IT. ----....,

28.
29.

10.
11 .
12.
13.

30.
31.

., • •, . ... ~. loo- . .. .

1~ .

33.

16. - - - - - -

. ....... .............
'"'" .
.,.11·,..•.".c._
71·1101tl. M t,10U

.

Canners and Cutters 29-35.10.

Veals: iChok:e and PtimeJ 35&lt;11.
Head! 1e-38.

Baby Calves: (By the

HOG PRICES:
Hogs: !No. 1. Barrows arx::l Gilts) mm
lbs. 4444.35..
Butcher Sows 39.7540.
Butcher Boars 32.50-33.
Feeder Pigs: (By the Head} 12.50-31.
SHEEP PRICES:
Slaughter Lambs 55.50-57.25.

.

~O .... I

, .. o...,. ... o...

13- f•••~Oii"ti
14• t....,tnnllillorf• lo.,.,io~

IIV

, . , _ . .. , .. h ili

IU - l OC o&lt;l
Ul - lul!•l&lt;!

tU - IIo &lt;:i .,.
1 ·1 - ll ~ t .... d

U7- c...,,,,,,

I

I I;Q., .... H·..,ll11g

u ~ ' " ' ~"'ood o

o~t~n ·no tfll on

IJp iG I !'t W OI~I

• 100
U OO

l" d ll!ft UII'IIOn

01 0 0

Up•o •&amp;..oo 4o

II ·MH llopooio
17·\lllhoiiiiiY

T~·••d•·••"''''' " "

l"••••a•• ... ..,, P'"""''

October 2 9. 198 4. Only persons hold 1ng member sf11 p
ttckets at t he close o f the 1 98 4
County Fa tr or at least ( 15)
c;alendar days b efore the date
of elect1on are Quahfted to vote.
Petl! tons can be obtamed fro m
the Fa•r Secretary .
The M e1gs Agncul!ural So ·
c1ety. By Mrs. Wall ace Brad ford.
Secretary
110i411 . 18. 3tc

Public Notice
IN TH£
COMMON PlEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
EFFiE M. BUSKIRK.
Plaintiff,
-VI-

Public Notice

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

You are reQu 1red to answe1
t he Compl a• nt w1 thtn twenty ·
e•ght 1281 d ays aft er the last
publica t•on ol th1s notice vvhtc h
will be pu bliShed once each
week for S• x (6 ) success1ve
w eeks The last publ•c&lt;lllon w •l
be m ade on Novem ber 1st.
198 4. and the rwenty-81ght
(281 rlavs for a_ns wer wtll
comm ence on that dpte
In ca se of yo ur failure to
answer or o'therw•se respon d
as reQUired bv Ihe Oh1o Rules of
(lVII Procedure . Judgment by
de fault will be render ed agamst
vou lor the relief deman ded 1r1
the Compl atnt

lashan luilding

LARRY E SPE NCE R.

'Cle rk. M e1g s Co un ty
Comrnon Pl eas Court
(9 2 7 (101 4. 11 . 18. 25

15A41C WRIGHT, ET AL,
Delendanto.

CASE NO. B4·CV-267
. NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION
TO: 1118C Wright. ij living.
whose add.r eu Is unknown,
tho unknown IPQUie. lteirw,
deliioeea, legat-. admlnlotrators, executon. suoceuon,
and/or 111igns of Isaac

Wright. if -oad.
You ar e hereby notl fted that a
Compla tnt to Qu•e t 1ttle h as
been fded 1n the Common Pleas
Court of Me•gs County, Oh1o.
Case No 84·CV-25 7 demand•ng Qu•et t•tl e o f the follow tng
descnbed real estate. tO·W ll'
Be1 nq 1n the Vlll aQe of
Rut land . County of Me1gs and
State o f Oh1o and be1ng Lots 10
and 1 I 1n Falloon·s Add1 ho n to
th e V1 llage o f.Rutland. Oh10
, Betng the same property
conveyed to D olph Hysell by
Shenff s Deed dated Augu st
1Oth: 194 9. and reco rded •n
1 64. at Page 128. M e1as
County Deed Records and f ro m
Do lp h Hysell t o Elizabet h B
Hysell. .Carl S. Hysell and M abel
H Hysell by Cert1f 1cate ol
Tr ilnsfer d ated D~ce mber 14.
19 4 9. recorded 1n Volu m e
164. Page 308 . ol the Me,gs
County Deed Records, and
tram Carl S Hysell and W1fe

LAFF-A-DAY

EVERY

remodeling
- Roofing and gutt er work
- Concrafe wmk

'SAT. NIGHT

- PiumtJ.ing Md elecuical
work

New Homes-Extensive
RemodelinB
Insurance Work
Custo.m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gar,ges

Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7583
or 992-2282

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG-III
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

992-3410

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

Or

UTILITY BUILDINGS

843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SQIL-FILL DIRT

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

~vll!ll ot\C!e -

Hazzard .' '.

446-4522
" We Renf. For Less"

on ' The Duk• ot

54 Misc. Merchandise

-U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North I
Gallipolis, Ohio ·
7/ 11 / lln

I

, TROMM
EXCAVATING

- I Dig
Wo,klng
Fo, You.

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;-APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985-3307
I

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BISSELL SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

985-3561

Call for free siding estimates, 949-2801 or

949-2860
No Sunday Calls

4 5-Ut

J I J tlr

I

Phone 742-3171

1

~
::t
z

-

'

ONE WOOD STOVE THAT CAN HEAT YOUR ENTIRE HOUSl

INO MONEY DOWNl

•TWO BLOWERS
•GLASS DOOR
•LARGE ASHPAN
•AUTOMATIC DRAFT
•BURNS WOOD
or COAL

SAVE

40°/o

90 DAYS

SAME AS CASH

\

Three year old Doberman
Pinscher . Seal-point male
Siamese cat-declawed . Call
614-B43-6231.

5 puppies to give away. 3
months old. Mother is white
Collie. Father is Pit Bull. Call
992-3187.

EUGENE LONG

73-80 Chevy Tr.
D-50 Dodge· Tr.
Fendsrs ... .................... '70
· Fenders ....... ................. 62
11·84 Chevy Tr:
76-82 Chevette
Fenders ......... .... .. ...... 110
Car Fenders .... ......... .. ... 60
S-10-515 Chevy Tri.
79·80 llus1ane
Fenders .... ............ ........ 80
Car Fendors ............ ...... 60
73-79 Ford Tr.
81-84 Escort-Cynx
Fenders .. ............. .... ..... 59
Fenders .... ......... ......... .. 49
80-84 Ford Tr.
Omni-Horizon 2 dr. or
Fenders ..... ................. IIO
4 dr. Fenders .. ......... ..... 75
Ford Rtn&amp;er
Chevy &amp; Ford
Tr. Fonders ... .. ...... ........ 98
PU Bumpers ............ 69.95
12-80 Dodto Tr
79-82 Chevette Grills .. ...... 3o
Fsndors ..... .. :............ .. ll5
Ford Raneer Grills ............ 75
Ford and Chevy Tail Gates

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

6 free kittens. 6 weeks old.
Assorted colors. Call 9927472,

Ph. (614) 843-5425
9/13/2mo. pd.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
'DOZER · BACKHOE

"RECLAMATION WORK
•oiL FIELD SERVICES

'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCRETE WORK

9_13 _11 "

'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER. OAS &amp;
OIL LINES

JIM CLIFFORD

Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
Yo~ Were Going To Call Us?

PH.

992-7201

-.l

_ ~--~..
•

11

Chimney

c·are

•TRENCHING

•BACK HOE •DOZE A

446-2062

"

•EN, LOADER

•DUMP T'IIUCK SERVIQE

~

WATER. GAS, SEWER!

R.o\IN liNES.
County

.

~rtlfied

$EPTIC fAIItiS iNSTAllED
Fllll ESTIMATIS

Phone
446-2062

367-7560-367-b76

. . CHUHtll, 'OHI . ·

10-8·1 mo.

3 1

"

.·-,

L

Mln'aiMIIfold.·lost in Pomeroy. Coii892-788B or 8928408 or r.turn to Police
Dept. Flndor moy keep
money.

for

edv•ncement. Good benefit
packogo. · An equol oppor·
tunity employer . Send AI·
o~mo to Box C-5. of the
Point PINnnt Aegleter .

...... Gaiiiiloiiii ... .....

3 Family , Fri- Sat ., 5 1 7 Hilda

CATV lnatallera and Techni-

&amp; Vicinity

new w ei ght bench , caat iron

ciana. E~ecellent opportuntty
for advancement . Good be·
neflt pockoge. An equol
opportunity employer. Send

Reoumo to Box C-61 200
Main St. Pt . Pleasant .
WVo . 26~60 .

Now accepting application
for

employment, Duke

Ave. Point Pleasant.

c ·on•igmente of new • uaed Baby litter In my home, S
-merchandiH alwlya wel- dayS a week. ~ school age,
comed . Richard Reyno!dt. one infant. Mail 3 baby
Auctioneer. Call 304-275attting referencaa. salary and
3089 .
phone number to Bolli P8 ,
care of the Point Plea sant
Reglotor, 200 Main St ..
9
Wanted To Buy
Point pteeaent. W. Va.

We pay cash for late model
cleen used cars.
Jim Mink Chev .. Qids Inc.
Bill Gena Johnson
446-3872

Earn tt.ooo .oo by Christmas plus awards, no invest·
ment . flexable houra. 304·
676-5162 betwoeri 9 :00
and 6 :00 for appointment
for interview.
·

Wanted to buy u~sed coal S.
wood halters . Swain Furni- Government jobs. &amp;16.559ture. 446 -3159, 3rd. &amp; $60,563 year . Now hiring .
Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh.
Your area . Call 806 -68760()0 eKt A-1 0263 .
Wanted- Junk autos any
condition. Call 614 -3BB' Secretary Bookkeeper, Ma9303 .
son COunty Public Library,
40 hrt per week. with one
Cash paid for fancy iron or evening and rotating Satur·
heavy iron beds. $160 and days . Salary open . Call
up for certain Meigs Co. Sharon Stone for appoint·
stone jars. Old time cup- men~. lnterviewa starting
boord . call 1-304-BB2- Tuesday Oct. 16. 19B4 .
2711
304-675-2913 or 6752943 .
COMPLETE
FURNITURE HOUSEHOLDS
. Beds. iron. 1-:
wood, cupboards, chairs, 1 2
Situations
chests, b•skets, dishes .
W
d
stone jars,· antiques , gold
ante
and ailver. Write · M.o . I- - - - - - - - - -Miller ..Rt.2, Pom'Broy, Ohio Young woman needs female
45769 or cell 614-992· roommate to help meet
expenses of nice 3 bdr., 2
7760 .
bath house on Rt. 36 , 'h mi .
Buying dally gold. silver from HMC . Ph . 446 -9472 .
coins, rings, jewelry. sterling
ware, old coins, large cur ~ Baby Sitting in my home .
rency . Top prices . Ed. Bur·. Harrisonville area . Call 742 ·
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave. 2142 .
Middleport, Oh. 614-992Have vacancy in my home
3476.
I or e ld arly or disabled per ·
Need tire brick for 24 inch sons, reasonable 614· 992·
ges furnace, call Smith 6022 .
Nelsons614-992 -2174 .
Will do hous e and car
GINSENG ROOT. Top qual- cleaning. Excellent work .
ity and size graded, selected Call992 -6234 .
$200 . 00 lb . Ordinary
smaller roo1 - Lessl All Wilt do baby-sitting in my
•
k' d
·
•
C II 992 6886
otner Jn a of root also .. ome. 8
·
·
purch.sed . Call Robert - - - - - -- - - Harper, 304-675· 7977.
Have
opening
elderly .in
my home
. Call for
773-5423
Wanted to buy, gas tank for
197B CJ5 Jeep . 304-BB2- Will care for lady in my
3734.
home . Call 985 -4416 after
6 :00p.m .

1--;=;: :=:;::======

E111p lo ynwnt
Se rv1ces
11

Help Wanted

RN-lPN·EMT
complete mobile life insurance exam in Gallipolis-Pt.
Pleasant area . On apart time
basis. You need to be
enthusastic &amp; enjoy a chal·
lenge. Car &amp; phone neces ·
sary. Reply in writing to
E•emlner, Rt. 2 Box 86 ,
Ripley, WV 25271.
Person to care for 1 yr. old, 3
mornings a week, light
housekeeping. Call 446 2066 .
Wanted, Lady to live in with
elderly Christian woman in
Athans, light housework.
wages. weekends off. Write
P.O. Bolli 293. Nelsonville,
Ohio 45764 .
Babysitter wanted 12-4 :40
daily in my home . Ref.
required. Cell 446 -7405 .

Scenic Hills Nursing Center
now accepting applications
SiK Labardor puppies 5 for nursing aids. Apply in
weeks old. · call 614-667- person·from B-12, Mon.-Fri.
at Scenic Hills Nursing Cen 3826.
ter, in Gallipolis, Oh.
Blond. female Poodle. year
old. to good home, very The Meigi Local School
good with children , house District is currentlv seeking
pet. 304-676 -7226 af1er applications from certified
applicants for a Frelhman
4PM .
Baske1ball Coach, a Junior
Free kittens, 304-675-6544 High Girls ' Basketball
Coach. and a Yearbook
after 6 PM .
Advisor at Meigs High
School for the 19B4-1985
school year . Applicants
6 lost and Found
must hold a valid Ohio
teaching cenificate and for
coaching positions must
·Found: Pure Bred hunting meet cenification requiredog, Call to identify ef1er ments of Ohio for sports
6pm, Owner pays . for ad. medicine and CPR . Persons
Call 448 -1364.
interaated 1hould contact
Den E. Morris, SuperintendYoung male red and white ent of Meigs Local Schools,
Beegle dog lost on Boy at 621 South Th'ird Avenue
Scout Rd. in Cheater . Wear- in Middleport, Ohio.
ing black flea collar. Call
Lady to do full time secretar·
986-3561 .
ial work in general insurance
Roy Bailey h11los1 two bird agency . Previous experience
dog• in Letart area . A not a necessity but preGerman Shorthair, brOwn ferred . Muet do typing . Send
with white spots and 1 resume to: Office Manager.
Brittany, whhe With rust 100 Union Ave., Pomeroy,
opoto.Coll 247-2575 .
Ohio 45789
·
Found: BHgle femolo dog ot
Burllnghom . Hao bleck fleo
collor end a block loothar
collar. lovable dog. Some·
bodv• pet. Coli 814-99277114.

Office posRione eveileble.

Community Cleahen. 2419 Jackson

We need a mature person to

One Collie puppy to give
away . 5 months old. Call
949-3009 .

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

Now Accep1ing Listings in Meigs Co.

Hartford

Electric range to give away.
Can be seen at 631 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis.

Mother Border Collie and
pups to give away. Call
992-71BO .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

or

(614) 446-7619
(614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue , Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8/ 13/ tln

Auction every FridtV night at

Sol) AVON make 45 %. Cell
446 l336B .

245-9129 af1er 4pm ., _

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Coli 814-387 -7101 .

Border Collie pup, good pet,
good w1th kids. 1 yr. old. Call
614-367-71_34..

7 puppies, part Beagle . Cell

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

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Auction Everv Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleal8nt, WVa
Auct . Lonn ie Neal, Youth
Center Bldg .. Camden St.

Merri-Mac Homemakers
earn lll-tra income, We need
Elkhound . Call 614 -266·, 'several representatives in
this' ereal Party plan exp. a
1661 .
plus . Gifts. toys. home de·
2 kittens 1 male black, 1 cor . No investment. Car &amp;.
female Siamese. Both good phone nee. Cell free 1-800with kids. Cell 614-258- 663 -9077. Also booking
parties .614-446-3043
1641 .

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd like to introduce you to
Eniaie·A-Car, the modern way
to drive the vehicle of your
choice.
No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH . 45769
For Faster Service
Call 614-992· 6737

All Makes
•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

a. A~o~ction

4 pups, 10 wks. old . Mother

PH. 742 . . 2328

Halp Wanted

Public Sale

Kittens very good mousers.
Cal614-256-1661.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

SIDING

Giveaway

1 Border Collie and 1 Beagle
pup to a good home. Call
446-2171 .

eGRAVEL HAULED

to

B

Part Doberman puppies, 2
male 2 female, 8 weeks old.
Cal614-387-7763 .

10-5-1 mo.
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Certlflod Chimney SwHP •

Feeder Steen: (Good and Coolce 1 :ro500
lbt!. :17-113; mii-1,00J lbs. $-55.25.

NO. Hunting. No 1reapess' lng. Howard Hickel property, Hartford. W. Va.

4

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

Roy Bickle

CATn.E PRICES:

Sam Somerville's Army Surplus has it all in regular army
camouflage. Call in orders
304-675-3334.

Racine, Oh .
Ph. 614-843-5191

•complete Chimney Cl?a.ning
.
•certified Chimney Reltnrng II&lt; Repetr
*Ellperiencad •nd Insured

-- - ,Llveolock, Od. .. 1111

Gun shoo1 at Racine Gun
Club every Sunday, 1 :00
p.m. Factory chocked guns
only .

· P&amp;S BUILDINGS

10-8-tln

CALL

M. L. "Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
,
Cheryl Lemley,
Meigs County Associate _

or Free-Standing

ALTERNATIVE TO A NURSING HOME h.dult Personal
Assistance Home. Lots of
TLC. Nurse available 24 hrs.
a day. ~pecial diets as
needed. Senior citizen activ·
ities. church. privileges.
beautician services included. For more informa·
tion cell (6141662-32B4 or
write P.O . box 155. Ste·
wart, Ohio 4577B .

II · l · lf ~

11 a ur

. WILL HAUl
JUST CALl!

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

"iz

WOITH A liiP FIOM ANYWHERE

Bllloons for Get Well, Anniversarys. Birthdays. parties.
Singing Gorrilla . Call Balloons &amp; Co . 446-4313.

DENNY CONGO

AND

RENT A CAR
·-·------- .. ~
"Here's a ear that wu onl)'

SWEEPER and sewing marepair. pans. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Cavia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
George~ Creak Rd.
Call
614-44.6-0294.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION .

JO~li e

and M abel H Oltver and
husband to Eliza beth S Hysell
by Oull Clatm Deed dated
December 17th . 19 49. and
recorded 1n Vo lume 164 . at
Page 3 10 or th e M e1gs County,
Oh•o . Records of Deeds .
RE F DE ED Volume 26 5.
Page 102 1. M etgs Co urltv
Deed Records ,
The dem and Of th e Com plaint IS tha t the t1tl e 10 the
abov e d esc:n bed rea l esw te be
qu1eted m th e name of the
Pla•nt.tf. Effie M Bu sk.rk.

35.' - - - - - -

3 Announcements

r--------~---rl chine

- Addons and

46353 Scout Camp Rd.
Chester. Ohio
Ph. 9B5-4269
If No Answer. tall 985-4382
We Sorvlce All
Mokeo &amp; Modele
Antenno Installation
House C1Us and Shop
Servics AYiilable
"Service that Towers Above
The Rest"

(11 \ 1 6tc

Anno uncements

Catl 742-3195
Or 992-5875

CARPENTER
SERVICE

. S&amp;W TV

Am}

Residential
&amp; Commercial

.

YOUNG'S

10/4/tf~

IN THE

1-13 -tfc

J ' ''

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

Uii:Q

For all your wiring
needs: furnaces repair
service and installation.

Middleport, Ohio

GUN SHOOT
Public Notice

DIIEmONSI
It, 7-6 ~iles below Gallpolis
Cross • - - Crlt. lrftlle
Turn right 111 laar Ru" ld.
folloo{tr Sips..-OPEN nu DAII
'
.

AU breecll, oole uzne 7: :JJ p.m. Receiving
cattle 7;:.1 p.m.-3 p.m. on the day of sale.

992-2196

&amp; ' Service

Parts

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

PAT HILL FORD

Farm Equipment

7 Pl - ,.u un
112- No .. " ' '"'"

l l l - ' D&lt;I IOnd

Ul - • ••~"0 "'
) l 1f- Wol•ut

lC I

' '~ • !il - l .,n

t n - t""'"

..,,. ~

t•l - ~ •o G • .. u

:::~':'..:::-::.:::t~·

.. ,........
''' - "'"''' a....
-'••t Co h

U 2 - lol •ddl._.,.

, .__ Qelipol"
U7- Chu h·•t

, _...

M~t a nC::o , W\'

"'" c~u•• •

IUU Codoft •

,, ,...~pm. .,.

I.Y.P.U.
(Brin1 Your Pick· Up)

Feeder Lambs 5~25-:14 . 25 .

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

34.

Use Inserted In

Slaughter Co.ws: Utilities 35.25-41.75l

M-. . c.~,,.

oow .. c..~"

lllop...-

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally sennnel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy; Oh. 45769

I

U~

j .. / lmd ll /l tPI•·rr,,,.,,. ''·"''""'ll''·' ..

71 -MOI ..&lt;vdn

~--~~---~--------------·

Feeder Hel!ers: fGood and Choice) :m-500
lbs. :JJ.25-46; :ID100 lbs. :11-42.75.
Feoder Bulls: iGoOO and Choice lD-51111bs.
3:&gt;~1: !ill100 lbs. 32-50.
Slaughter Bulls: (Over 1,00) lbs. 1 38.50-

1' 1/ l'f' r t l lf'

32.

IS.------

Admissions---William Hamm,
Middleport ; Martin Molloham,
Pomeroy; Lucille Smith, Chester;
Melissa Collins, Middleport.
Discharges-- -Denc&lt;t Manley,
Luther Imboden, Edna Deem,
Diana White, Lucille Garten,
Wanda Johnson.

17.
18.
19,

s,
B.
9.

Veterans Memorial

Market reports..••.
Ohio VaDey Uv""""k 'C.,
Mlll'llet Report
Saturclay, Oct ~ 1981
Trends: Veal calves sleady; feeder ca ttle $1

These cash rates

)Wanted
)For Sale
)Announcement
JForRent

.,,.....- . .......
n-.....,•••wo

Public Notice

Public Notice

Attends workshop

DAR meets Fricroy

hl~er;

~J. MoWNI4-IIIOfi1HI

... ,. ...............)11101

1 ~ ·WMW.d1oDft

I
I
I

A reciprocal action for child
support has been . filed in Meigs'
County Common Pleas Court by the
State of Georgia and Roherta Ann
Hawk, Centerville, Georgia, against
Steven Paul Hawk, Meigs County.

I

.

~t ..H..,•oiDol'l•l

r-u••

Fifty dollar bonds were posted by
Arden Linn, Pittsburgh, Pa. , and
Mary A. Brown, Norfolk, Va., both
for speeding.

Only one call was received
yesterday by the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service.
At 6:37 a .m. , the Rutland unit
responded to a call on State Route
124. John MCGuire was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

Wealthy Will

~

l l •IMWIIIIQt

$:15.

Support sought

Area death

...... ..
,);t.,.,_
..................

21-te~oaA.uMt•

I J •l lt ... IH ll'l'eMDd

One emergency run

Veto threat

)1 ·N-•IIIII'IJII

12-IIMI!o H-N '"' I Ol e

2.11.. 111M11Wonl•d

1 t.ltolfWiftiH

Happenings around Meigs County•.
EHS band

...... ..,••

11-luNI"' IIu .....
~""

loAuctio "
• •w.... M t• l "''

only for criminal mischief
(property) .
Fined for speeding were Phil
Baldwin, Gallipolis, $20 and costs;
Linda Butcher, GalllpoUs. $20 and
costs; George Adams, Parkersburg, $27 and costs; Kimberly
Hannon, Charleston, $22 and costs;
Floyd Mason, ·Williamstown,
W .Va., $24 and costs; Gregg
Harrlson, Cheshire, $22 and costs;
Robert Green, Columbus, $22 and
eosts; andllichardGullett,Mornlng
VIew, Ky., $22and costs.
Bonds were posted for overload by
Kenneth Wallbrown, Portland,
$157; Elbert WUson, Stewart, $86;
and TimmyOldeker, Letart, W .Va.,

!)....-

I"'Mho M.. chonol;oo

1'· Yif.lltlt !..... on ldl&lt;once l

O'Brien ends 32 court cases

2t·I....,_O....,.,..,v
U ·lh-lo'--'

C/o•(i/ it•tl flnJI I 'S

U. S. Rl 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

RADIATOR
SERVICE

ell
· white
pointed
.. ,.,femole
CUrlld updog.
till
loot on Long Hollow in
304 896 3936
l•t•rt.
•
·
•

Center. Truckloads of new
merchandiM every week .

Gr

11

.Excellent · opportunity

the

9/27/ 1 mo. pd.

8/ IS/ 1 mo.

lOST II •1 00.00 reword lor

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; T
RUCK
REPAIR

lost and Found

The Daily Sentinel- Page 17

Are you in High School ·and
Looking for a pen-time job?
If you are a high achool
Junior or Senior, you can
enlist hi the W11t Virginia
Army Nltlonal Guard, It•
tend drill one weekend a
month for ply. and complet•
required aCtive duty training
during summer months. Call
304-1175-3950 or 1-800642-3619 .

Dr .. car top c arrier. piano.
free

weighta.

kids-adult s

qu al ity clot t1es, t ov s. m isc.

Michigan Sale Let a rnake a
deal. Toys, .coats, sleepe r~ .
work basket, booke, m isc.
50 Neil Ave.

Garage Sale 2 miles from
HMC Rt . 160, Oct. 11 . t2.
13 . Dated glass canning
jl!ln , iron skillets , crocks,
electric oven. apple butter.
tools. clothing % price,

N ice

To ys

Gara ge

Sale,

Friday 9 to 6 , on At . 1 60 . 3
m i. fro m HM C . on rig ht.

...... F,omiirov ·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

misc. items.

...... .... ... ·.•....... ... .... . .

Big Yard Sale 44S Hedge woo~ Or. Oct . 12rh-13th .
582 Beech S t. 'Middlepon.
9AM . Ra in or shine . 1 -10 Oct . 1 0 thru 1 3th. Clothing,
speed bikes. rocker .
dra pes , Dad spre a ds .
blank ets, q uilts, sh eets.
Yard &amp; Gange Sale Thurs., rugs, di shes. po t s and pa ns.
Fri ., Sat. Oct . 11th, 12th, silv..er w a re . d e pr ess io n
13th. 9 till 5. Refrigerato r, glass . washer and dryer,
dryer , wooden kitchen ca · electr ic appliance, furniture
binet with flour bin . older and mu ch more .
chairs , coffee tables. cast
iron ware. trunks. granite, Oct. 12th. 1 3th. 1 4 t h on
aluminum pots &amp; pan s. 143 . R acine B1 t he old Fisher
glassware, thread cabinet . pte·c e. Blo nd res ide nts. If
old toys , sewing machine in raining cancel to later date. 2
cabinet . pictures and mile s a bovo South ern High
frames . older tools, compo · Sc hool.
sition dolls , lamps , books .
an.tiques and collectibles to Garage sale . Morn ing Sta r
numerous to mention . Peul Sub -div ision -c o unt y Rd .
Denney's. Sl Rt . 554 and 30.0 ct . 13 and 14 hours
Bidwell-Rodney Ad. in Bid · 10AM to 6 PM . Tenl,
well. Ohio.
bicycle. toys . boys c lothe s.
tires, misc. cal l 949 ·2537 .
GaraQe Sale 1069 Second
Ave. Thurs. &amp; Fri., 9 :00AM Lo ts of childrens c lothing.
to 5 :00PM . Furniture , House near Ra dio Station in
carpet, labratory with ca - Br a d bu ry Th u rs day an d
binet. commode . stereo Friday.
with cabinet and speaker s. 2
winter tread tires &amp; rims size
15 " . Jewelry , clothing o1
different sizes .

... ··- i&gt;t Pieiisin-i .. ·

3 Family Yard Sale 4 Vz m iles
&amp; Vicinity
out R1 . 141 . Thurs .. Fri. &amp;
Sat . Kit . utensiles, chairs .
drapes. golf shoes , lamps ,
lots more .
Moving sal e. 2212 Jef1er ·
·son Ave., table and chairs ,
Ru-mmage Sale 55 Garfield do ll s. TV 's. one fea t her tick
Ave. oct . 11 · 12-13. From 304 -6 7 5-351 3 after 5 :0 0 .
9 -4 . Couch, chair, beds,
more .
Garage Sa le, 1 mile out
Sa nd Hill Roa d. lois of
Estate Sale 4% miles out Rt . you ng child rens clothing
141 . T"nurs.. Fri. &amp; Sat . and t oys .
Bedroom suite . kitchen ap · 1- - - -- - - - - -pliances, livingroom sui1e . Garage sale. 120 3 Mea dow ·
lots of other things.
brook Dr. Fri Oct 1 2th and
Sat Oct 13t h. Ftve family
Basement Sale Oc t . 13 _ nice winter clot hmg. 1u rni 9 :00 to 5 :00 . 212 Jackson ture. dishes. etc
Pike Atari 2600 with ca r·
tridg.e s . been bag ·•a,· r. two B
.. n
ack porch sa le . Fri a nd Sat.
single beds. dishes, some- Oct 1 2 and 1 3. 13 1 s Pa rk
thing for eve ..... one .
o · 9 oo AM

~======·=
·====i=r=tv~e~.~:~~==t~o~2~:~0~0~P~M~
23

Professional
Services

31

Homes f o r S a le

4 bedroom . ba th an&amp; halt.
living room , dining toom .
Piano Tuning and Repair. equipped kitchen . large 1 ca r
15
Schools
Brunicardi Music Co., 446- garage, large level lot , c lo se
Instruction
06B7 . Twentie1h veer of 10 Holref' Hos p , owner an•·
quality service. Lane Da - ious to sell. $41 . 900 .0 0 .
niels. 614 -742-2961 .
Call aher 5 :00 PM . 304Karate -Private lessons . 1- - - - -- - - - - - 675 -75 47.
Leern the ultima te in self·
defense. American Karate
Ra n c he' h ouse . 3 be d ·
Studio since 1971. 143
roo ms. 2 baths. fue pl ace 7
Real
Eslate
Burlington Rd .. Jackson ,
a c re s , h alf baseme nt ,
Ohio. 6T4-2B6-J074 . In$65 . 000 0 0 . G le nw o o d .
structor: Jerry lowery- 1- - - ----.:__ __ W.Va. 304-576 -29 33
1 984 inductee into Weigh- 31 Hames for Sale
tlifting Hall of Fame.
Hou se fot sa le. 4th S t .,
Mason. W. Va. S2B.OOO .OO
Thre
e
bedrooms
.
ce
ntral
air
,
Will do tutoring, major vinyl wall paper, carpet 304-7 73 -55 38 .
ereas . Call614 -246-5812 . throughout. well insulated,
new paint . aHeched garage. Gallipolis Ferry. 3 bt bri ck
gas ou1door grill , awn ings, larg e rooms , 4 car garage
1 B Wanted to Do
many extras. Ca11446 · 2583 a nd sto ra ge bldg .. stove, ref.
til 5 :00PM . after 6 :00PM wa s he r-dry e r . Ma k e a n
offe r 304 -675 -6851
cell 6t4 -245-5B59 .
Carlton 's Repair Service,
audio equipment . stereo &amp; 3 bdr . house. pool ~ AC . Three bedrooms. ni ce neig hpublic address sfstems , fireplaces, Pt. Pleasant. sale b o rh oo d. ne a r schools .
c hur c hs. s t or 6s Un d er
Kerr, oh. Call 446·7141 or or rent. Cell 675-5104.
$ 37.00 0 .00. Shown by ap446-4410 .
600 bloc~ of 2nd Ave .. 2 p oint men t 304 -675 -5793
Will do babysitting in my bdr .. exc . cond .. big back
home. Spring Valley erea , yard. $37.500 . Call 446 - Hou se for sa le or rent.
S 32 5 .00 ; 9 room s and b a s e ~
215B .
Call 446 -8396 .
mo nt . Call 304-675 -28 85
Will cut and deliver fire · 3 bdr home for sale by after 5 :00, Pat and Butch
owner, located on Rt . 160. Greenl ee .
wood. Call 256 -152B .
near N.G .H.S. $36.000 .
Hou se 1 72 N Par k Drive. 7
Winterize your ctfrs body. Call 614-3B8-B711 .
Hand wu job . Call 304- 1- - - - - -- - - - roo ms, 2 baths, comp letely
675 - 2175 af1er 4:00 tor Owner Must Sell Nowl re dec o r at e d . 3 04 - 675 ·
estimate and appointment. Small house, fir eplac e. gas 25 98 . Dorothy Mitche ll,
furnance, storm win dows. Parrish Avenue .
Furniture refinishing , call for Middleport . Coli 614-992 ·
New ho me fo r sale w it h 3
6941 .
estimate 304; 676 -4444 .
res of land . $35 .000 .00
1- - - - - -- -- lc- ac
8 yrs . old, 3 bedrm, 2 baths, 3 04 -773·54 7 4 .
family room with wood
Financial
burner . Single ca r garage , on A frame hous e, 15 a cre
S60.000 .0 0 o r t rade t or
B flat acres wit h stocked
pond. City water in Raci ne. equal va lue. 30 4-8 95
3 935 .
Call 614-949 -2641 .
21
Business
Opportunity
Nice 3 bedroom. garage,
basement, excellent loca- 32 M o bile Homes
fo r Sale .
tion near school , owner
i NOTICE!
finance . Middlepon.. Call
THE OHIO VAllEY PUB - 992-2517.
NEW ANO USE O MOBILE
LISHING CO . recommends
th.a1 you do business with Three bedro om spa cious HOM ES KESS El 'S QUAl people you know, and NOT house. New lim a Rd . Ru- ITY MOB ILE HOME SA LES
to send money through the tland Pool, Low utiliti es. 4 MI. WEST. GAl liP OliS :
PHON E 6 14 -446 mail un1il you have inves1i· special finan cing,call 614- 7RT27435.
.
gated the offering .
742-30BO.

Cost Free Christmasll La · Three bedroom house. hot Wanted to buy used mob ile
diesll earn $1 ,000 .00 or water heat, excellent loe B· home Cal! 6 14-446 -478 2
more by Christmas. Show· tion , good condition, c arlng toys, gifts. we.ekiV pay peted . some furnitur e. Mul- V, ac re lo1 with 1978 Mobile
checks plus bonua.' Choose berry Avenue, Pomeroy, Home. total elect ., unatt ·
your hours . Pan time now till Ohio S25.0.0 0 .00 . O ' Br:en ac he d two car garage, rural
December . Car , phone &amp; Crow Realty Compan y, w ate r. Call a fter 5p m. 256 needed. Hiring this week Phone 614 -992 -2720 or 645 0 .
onlyl For more details calls 614-992-3589 .
197 3 Buccaneer 12x50 2
. today collect 304 - 744 ·
b
dr. mo bile home. S3 .800 .
0924 .
By owner - mod ified A - Call 446-411 3.
1------ - - - -- frame. fully carpeted ,fire·
International steel building place. on 5 acres with 1 972 Fr eedo m 1 2x55 tt
manufacturer awarding timber , fruit trees, garden full y furnished &amp; ext ras
dealership in available areas space in Portland area . Im- $5.0 00 . C•ll 44 6-7603
.
soon. Great profit potential mediate occupancv. te rms
in an expanding industry . available . 542 .500. C all 1974 Acade my 12x50 2
For application call Wedgcor B43-5384.
bdr., ex ira c lean , I aie l elect ·
303· 769· 3200 ext 2405 .
ric. C A. 7x12 porch . Call
leaving state, owner must 614-379-2341 .
sell beautiful 3 bedroom 1- - - -- -- - - -22 Money to Loan
home. Family room has 20 1975 14x60 mobile ho me
ft . of windows for pa storal good co ndit ion. 2 bdr., one
view. finished double gar- owne r. bough t new w ith
HOME lOANS FIXED age. fireplace. large porch. some furnit ure. all e lectric .
RATES Below morf&lt;et ratos. 50 ft . deck, woods , privacy, $7,000. 2 swings 4 ft . o ne
Fixed conventional FHA · near Royal Oak Park , re ~ $30. one $ 20 . Ca ll 446 ·
VA . laadar· Mortgage . duced . to $69 ,900 . B'h 2572 .
Athens. collect 614-592 · percent auumability. Call 1 ~:-:-:-::-------3061 .
992 -5420 .
1965 Roy Cref1 hou se t railer
Quick Cllh Frank 's Pawn
Shop. 430 Socond Ave ..
Gallipolis . Instant loans,
merchandise of value, guns,
jewelry, S1ereos, TV ~ s . etc,
end also buy the above .

Must sell 10 room house on
47 foot fron1age lot by Nov .
20 . The price will never be
lower $3760.00. loan value
is higher . Coli 216-394 6741

~~ ~~~5 6$t 1 · 80 °

Call 6 14 -

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

1969 Now Moon 12x60. 2
bdr., best offer! Call 446 4282 or 304· 625-4073 •f·
tor 4 :00 .

,,

�Merchandlae

1 Household Goods
County Appliance. Inc .
Good u10d oppllon~o ond
TV Hto. Open BAM to 8PM.
Mon thru Sot. 448-169'1;127 3rd. Avo. Galllpollo,
OH.

1971 Broadmore treihn. 2
panly furnished . Rental lot
available. $5300.00. Call
992-7479 .
1980. 60x14

elec. 2 bedrooms.
80•1 2 Baron, total oloc,

bedroom•. Cen be aeon at K
Ito K . Mobile Hom01. Inc.
owners, preston and Arlene
Pain~

Pleasant Jr. High Sct,ool.
l'loura 9 -6 .

•as ..bells
E
h'
·
d
bar
and 1ng
dumb
balls
•
veryt
'" goo
cond. 304·896·3903.

Selling for payoff. 1983
Schultz limited aditi.o n,
14x70 with 7x 11 expando,
3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths with

garden tub. Extra insulation.
all alec, central air, fireplace,

built in stereo and many
other extras . 304 -773 5417 or 304-458· 1694.

33

Farms for Sale

Furnishod 2 bdrs. TV cable.
claan. quiet. beautiful riverview in Kanauga. Fosters
Trailer Park, 448· 1602 ·

2 bdr., AC, gas 'heat, wall to
wall carpet in Gallipolio. Call
after 5PM , 446 ·1409.
Mobile homos lor rent.
Upper River Rd. Call 446·
1609 or 446-0608 .

200 acre farm for sale. Will

2 bdr. 2 mi . from hospital in

subdivide. Rutland Township . Call614-373 -0456 .

country. No pets, S175 mo .•
$100 dop. Call after 8PM .
446-1722.

Busines·s
Buildings

2 bdr. mobile home on Rt.
554, v.. mi. off Rt. 160.
$175 plus dop. Call 81 4 ·
388-9851 .

-34

10 yr. old 8 unit apartment
complex. Wellston. Ohio. All
1 bdr. apts., 4 furnished , off
.st re et parking . Resident
·manager over S 1,400 mo.
'income. Constant waiting
'list lass than $16.000 per
unit. Possible 2nd. mortgage. Call 692 -1189 Mon.Fri. 9 -5. 594-2874 evo. &amp;
wk. ends .
·commarical building and lot
:tor lease.plenty of parking
can 614-992-7251 ·1] after
5pm.
35 lots

&amp;

Acreage

Lot for sale in Mercerville, 3
trailer hookups, electric, ru ral wa te r. septic ·tahk .
$8 ,000 . Call '61 4 - 256·
6618 .
Building lot Neighborhood
Rd . 65x150. 85,000. Call
446-3844 after 7PM .
For Sale: Once acre lot with
large in-ground pool. torn
liner. and partially finished
basement . For information
call813 · 665· 1 232 .
2&amp;2x1 10 Rt'. 775 approx.
23 mi. from Gallipolis. level
lot, septic tank . access to
Water: Basement hole dug.
$3 ,200 . Call643·0168 .
}1 0 acres. in the country.
Wice quiet spot . Call 9492906 .

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

Unfurnished house. 3 bdr.,
st0\.18, rei. Rodney Village II.
$276 mo . Call 446-441 6
after 9 PM .
Unfurnished 2 bdr . house.
Range , garage. storage
building . One mile out Rt.
218 . Cali 446-9686 .
House for rent large, 3 bdr.,
1% bath. fireplace . fenced in
yard , in town, $300 per mo.
Call 814-388 ·8248 .
large house good shape!
Call614· 386-9909 .
4 bdrs. in Tara with range.
refrig . &amp;. · dishwasher. Fire·
place &amp; family room. 2 full
baths. Call 614-367-7464
after 5PM .

3

bdr.. 2 bath , double
garage, all electric, with
woodburner. Out Rt. 218 .
$350 mo. Call 448· 7044 .
3 bdr .• 2 both, garaga, lg.
rae . room, 2 FP, barn, $425
mo. Call Lola Richards446 2751 or Rolph Barcus 614·
246-9176 .
Remodeled farm house,
newly decorated. low
budget gas, rant $260 . Ref.
&amp; Oep . Call 448· 3780 .

6 rm, 2bdr home. ex. cond.
deposit required. Call 446·
1370 after 5pm . .

3 bdr house in country,
water turr'!ilhed. fullv carpeted. dep. &amp;: ref .• no pats.
Call 268 -8813 .
4 bedroom colonial brick
house for rent or sale in
Pomeroy. Coll1 -373-0468.

- - - - - - - --tc-

Four room and bath. unfur·
rii1hecf houH. Pt. Lane Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy ,
Ohio. 614-992-3874.
2 houMa for rent and bar for
1111 or leaH with option to
buy. 304-876 -8720 .

2 bdr. mobile home. ref. &amp;
dop. required . Cell 814·
258- 1922.
2 bdr. unfurnished very nice,
adults only. $175 mo. plui
deposit . Located 3 mi. Rt.
588 . Call 446·2300.

a.

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

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light hoiJae keepir,tg
rooms. Par~ Control Hotel.
Call 614"446 -0768 .
Furnished room, f1 46. Utilities. range, ref. Shl)!e bath.
Man only. 919 Soc .. Gallipo·
lis . 446-4416 after 8 p.m.

46 Space for Rent

1 4X70 Jbdr, total elect.,
furnished. plus washer It COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
dryer. on private lot. 10 min. Park, Route 33, North o1
from town. $200 mo. plus Pqmaroy. Large lots. Call
utilities. Deposit 8t Ref. Call 614-992-7479 .
256-1393.
2nd. floor office space •tor
14X70 mobile home, adults reni. Court St .• Pomeroy.
preferred. 1 child accopte· , _c_a_
II_6_1_4_·3_7_3_·_0_4_&amp;_8_._ __
blo, no poto. Call446· 1339. 1
2 bedroom, 12x65 furMerr.h~nrlise
ni shed , washer. dryer .
$175 .00 plus utilities and
deposit. No pats. call 992· · -::-::-::-:---::-:-:--:::---:7479
· 51 Household Goods
- - - - - - - - · ICThrea bedroom mobile
home. new carpet. 1 child
SWAIN
accepted,no drunks or dope.
Rt. 7 . Middlaport. Call614· AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
367-06t1 .
&amp; used wood-coal atovea, 6
2 bedroom mobile home for pc wood LR suite 8399.
rent, Racine area. Gall 992- bunk bods $199. ontron
recliners 899, used bedroom
5868 .
suites , ranges. · wringer
2 mobile homes. BotH 2 washers,&amp;. shoes. Call614bedrooms. located in Galli- 446-31 59 .
polis . 304·875·3000 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE .
Sofa. chair. rocker. otto·
man, 3 tables, (extra heavy,,
-:--::---::-------- 1$685 . Sofa. chair and love44
Apartment
seat. $276 . Sofao andcheiro
for Rent
priced lrqm 8286 . to 8895 .
Tables. 860andupto•126.
- - - - -- - - - - - 1Hide-a·beda,$390. and up
to 8660 .. sofa beds f145 .
JACKSON ESTATES Recliners. 8285 . to &amp;375 .•
APARTMENTS (Equal Lampo from S28. to $126.
Housing Opportunity) hal pc . dinettes from $109 ., to
one and two bedroome, rent .435 . 7 pc . t189 and up.
starting at S163 for one Wood tabla with six chairs
bedroom and $198 par $286 to $745, Desk $110
month for two bedroom, up to $225 . Hutchoa, 8560.
with $200 deposit located Bunk bed complete with
near Foodland and Spring mattresses·. &amp;275 . and up to
Valley Plaza, pool and TV $396. Baby bedo, 8110.
ant. Call 446· 2745 or leave Mattresses or box springs.
full or twin, $68., firm, $68.
message.
and $78. Quean oeto. 8195.
Furnished apt . $185 water 4 dr. chaoto. $42. 6 dr.
paid, 2 bdr. 11 36'1. 2nd . chests. $54. Bed fromoo.
Ave .• Gallipolis. Call 446 - 820.and $26 .,10gun-Gun
cabinets, $360. .011 or
4416 after 8P M .
electric ranges $3"1 . Baby
For lease 1 bdr. apt. over matlreoooa. 826 &amp; 836. bod
looking the park, $150 mo . frameo 820. 826. Ito 830.
Call 446· 1819 or 448 · king frame •so . Good oolaction of bedroom suites.
2325 .
rockers, metal cabineu.
1 small turn . efficiency for 1 headboards 838 &amp;. up to
gentleman only. Call 446- 866 .
0338 .
Used Furniture - - heed
large Furnish'ad apt. 919 boards, and 2 bedroom
·
2nd . $176 utilitias paid. suites. 3 miles out
Men only. Share·bath. 446 - Rd. Open 9am to 5pm, Mon .
thr._. Sat.
441 6 attar 8 p.m .
614-446-0322
Modern 2 bdr. duplex apt.,
furnished. water paid, Main
St.. Choohire. Ohio. Call
614-245-5818 .
513ThirdAvo. 1 bdr .• water
furnished. odulto only. 8135
mo.. dep. , required . Call
446-4222 between 9
6.

a.

3 bdr .. 1 bath. fireplace. uoa
of born. t300 mo. pluo
utilities, also efficiency apt.
with flraploco &amp; garage.
8175 mo . pluo utllltloo. Call
Lolo Richordo 446· 2751 or
Ralph Borcuo 81 4 · 246·
9175 .

Regency pocket scanner, 8
channel, with charger. an·
tenna, etc. Exc cond,
$125.00. 304-876-6884.

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

5" Misc. Merchandise

Knauff Firewood Split· 96%
hardwoods. Seasoned or
green. You pick \IP or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614·
268-6246.
Limeatone. Sand. Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
Ito Son. Call 448· 7785.
Plastic cisterna state approved, plastic septic tanks,
plastic culvert, metal cui·
vans. RON EVANS ENTER ·
PRISES. Jackson. Oh 81.4·
286-6930.
Fall Yard Care Mulching.
fertilizing. liming. reseeding
It tranaplantlng. Also tor
ule: cow manure &amp; top soil .
Contact Bruce Davison ,
814-258-1427.

. 6 :00 U Cil CIJCZJ O Ciltlt 81
C!Z Newo
Cil MOVIE : ' Hooper' •
Cil MOVIE: 'No Other
Love'
CIJ Hot Potato
(]) Lucy Show
Cll Dr. Who
{j]l Voyage of tho Mimi
Ill Oiff' rent Strokes
6:30 II Cil CZl NBC News
ill Rifleman
® Mazda SportsLDok
(]) Carol Burnen
lil
(!Z ABC News
0 (I) ®I CBS News
Cll Nightly Business
Report ·
® Body Electric
fiJ One Day at a Time
7 :00 U Cil PM Magazine
(}) Hero Come the Brid.es
® SportsCentor
Gomer Pyla
(I)
(j}) Entertainment
Tonight
CZl Wheel of Fortune
0 (I) Wheel of Fortuna
Cll ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
®J News
m Joffersons
7:30 iJ Cil Tic Tac Dough
(!) PKA Full Contact
\
Karate · from Montreal,
Canada World Middlew ·
eight Championship. (90
m1n.)
ffi Andy Griffith
IIl 0 IIl Family Feud
CD Jeopardy
l~ Wheel of Fortune
@l New Name That
Tune
fj) WKRP in Cincinnati .
8 :00 0 (1) CD Cosby Show ChH
is proud that Theodore
makes the school foot ball
team, until he sees him play .
(1) Inside the NFL Len
Dawson and Nick Buonicont i
review thrs week 's ~FL action .
(1) MOVIE : ' The Bi g Chill'
(]] Circus
ffi MOVIE : 'Von Ryan's
Express '
(IJ
(121 People/ Do
Craziest Things Bert Convev and Lou Ferrigno try to
determine rf a blindfolded
woman can Identify parts of
her husband 's body by
touch alone.
0 Cil ®l Magnum P .l .

Firewood cut up alabs. $15
PU load. Larger loads dell·
vared. Call tor prices, 614246-6804 .
2 air conditioners on 12.500
BTU. one 7 ,600 BTU used 3
mos. Patio set 4 chairs 8t
tabla with umbrella, bedroom set. white French
Provlnial . Hon~ motorcycle
XL 100 1980 modo! . call
814-246-6219.
For sale fill dirt, ar-d top soil.
Call Call814·256-1427.
Romodoling Sale G.E . dis·
hwasher. G.E. drop in stove,
Hotpoint refrigerator. all 8
yrs. old or less. Reasonable
prices. Will consider offers.
Wood TV 11and tor sale also.
Call 446-7307.
Firewood tor 1ale 825
pickup load, &amp;36 delivered.
Caii814-266·620B.
For sale roll bar 846 . Call
814-268-8208.
Firewood for sale. Call 256 6574.
Antique hanging light. an·
tique waffle Iron, quean size
bedspread and shams. lmpe·
rial crystal. Coli 245-5274
after 7pm.
2 extra Boston Ferns in tubs
with metal trays. Call 446 3373 .

King-size Craftmatic bed &amp;
Lowery organ. split level
with magic Jennie &amp; rhythm
chorda. Coli 448-3101 .
-:--:-:-:-:::-----For Sale: Electric baseboard
heatera, 220 v.. ueed Carpet
with padding dark green.
F' h
db
·
II ar woo urnong stove.
Coll448· 7339 .
- - - - - - - - ·lcGOOD USEO APPLIANCES Ook furnituro. tobleo.chairo.
Waahers, dryers, refrigere - cupboards, pie safe. telators. ranges. Skagga Ap·
h
pliancas, Upper River Rd. P ones, desk, also antiques
beside Stone Creat Motel. and glellware. Open Sun·
days. Conkel' s Tuppers814-446-7398.
·
Rt .7 .
p 1atne,
p

Heavy Pine BR suit, Poster
Bed. Bocholor cheat night
stand. like now. Call 2681267.

a.

-:-::-:=-:--::-::----:--- ·lc-

1964 Mooooy-Ferguoon 30,
good condition. 81700.00 .
8 ft.• 16 ft. tandem axle flat
bod troilor. 82000.00 . 2
benjoa. excellent c;ondition .
'
Coli 992·8990.

Building Materials
Block, bri·ck. sewer pipes,
windows. lintels , etc.
Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
0 . Call814-246-5121 .
Build your own ' bdr. home.
86.995 del. to your site.
New display model open.
See it nowl 1 ·614·888·
7311 .
Build your own 3 or 4 bdr
0
hom. •5995 ko't dol
••
v.. ur
new
i1 open, sea
todaymodel
. Call 1·B86-7311
. it
Rough Cut Lumber. oak.
poplar. and pine. 2x4's,
2x8 's, 1 K6 's, h8'a . As·
sorted length1. Call Hogg
and Zuspan Materials
Co .. lnc . '773-6564.
daytime.

1-:-- - - - - - - -

Now open for business,
Mountain State Block, Rt.
33, New Haven. Complete
masonry supplies, ' 4". 8".
12" block. Delivery service.
Phone day 304-882-2222,
evaning 882-3239 .
66

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breedi. Heated
indoor - outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Coli 814-446·
7795.
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
614-387-7220.
Briarpatch Kennels Professional All-bread grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding facili1ias. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 814·388 9790.

1978 Mercury Cougar XR7,
PS, PB, AC. AM · FM . 814·
446-2688 .

20 HP. Wisconsin motor,
elect. start, 3 in. hydraulic
cylinder 8 ft . Call 61 4-388·
8230.

' 78 Century Buick wagen,
good cond, phona 304 · 676·
1090.

For Sale: 101 0 John Deer
Dorer $3500 . Call 256·
1477.

AKC Golden ' Retriever. 13
weeko . old. 1 shots. Call
614-593-5243.

72

I:;;==:;===;::==
63

Trucks for Sale

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

MF-275 Diesel. spin out
wheels. bumper. dual Hyd.
87 hp. diff lock, 396 hrollke
new . $10.000 .00 firm .
304-675-2902 after 6:00.

Livestock

15 Holsten heifers. pasture
bred. 46 cents a lb. Call
614-388-9678 .
Santa Gretrudis Reg . herd
bull, proven producer .
1.600 lb.. 8800 or boot
offer. Coll614-258-1969 .

3 tall growthy. exc. ant
Hereford Club calves . Butler
Hereford Farm. lower River
Rd. Call614-258· 6618.
Black Angus Bull, weighing
approx. 750 lbs. Coil 446·
4063 .

1980 chevy Luv auto, AM·
FM tape. $3,199 . John's
Auto Sales, Bulaville Rd ..
446· 47B2, Gallipolis.

1972 Chevrolet California
truck! all orginal. very goOd
running corid. Call 614367· 71 11 .
1982 S-10 long bod PU . 4
opd. Call 446-4447 or 4469752.

Now 2 bdr. Apt.. unfur·
niohed, 8260 mo. Coli 448·
0208.
Now 1 bdr. opt., unfur·
nlohed. 11150 mo. Coli 448·
0208.

Two bedroom furnlohod
apartment. coli 114-182·
11434, 814·112·8114 or
304·112-2181.

Pickono UHdfurnitu,. . 3046'16-8483 or 875-1460.

Velvet love - t mokoo bod.
Recliner. 82&amp;0 .00 both.
Phono 304-875-6022.
SNrl Microwave *100.00.
304·8715·3183.
New refrigerator, new
couch, antique dreuer, wardrobe. Phone 304- 8768727.
Romoldollng, kitchen Cl·
bineta, atove end refrigerator, call 304-882-27115 of·
tor 5:00PM.
Gold vinyl couch ~onverto to
bod, boot offw. 304·171-

3447.

m

Hogs, 200 lbs and over,
good for butchering, phone
304- 576-2743 .

1 970 Dodson truck. call
247-3125 .

Hay

&amp;

Grain

large round bales o1 hay.
$20 ooch . Call 446-1062.

&amp;

Fertilizer

Certified seed wheat. barley.
rye, spelts. triticale, also
cover crop wheet. Altizer
Farm Supply. Coll814· 2465193.

Tr ~ ns~ o r l ~I ion

10 American Pit Bull pupplea. Cell 388· 9861 .
71

Autos for Sale

Vans 8o 4 W.O.

73

1 971 Ford 4 wheel drive,
361 modified 400. auto
trans, tinited windows, 0 78 mud tires with chrome
spoke rims, exc . cond .,
$3,000. Call 446-4482 .
1972 Chevy van with rebuilt
motor and transmission ,
good tirea, $900 .00. 304882·2935 .
'79 Ford Fairmont
82,000.00. '76 throe quer·
ter ton. 4x4 . Chevy
$1,800.00. Call eveningo
304· 675· 7690.
74

Motorcycles

1977 Monte Carlo PS. PB.
A"C. awlvel seats, cruise.
AM · FM CIIIOtle, now
carpet, breke1. &amp; shocks.
12,600. Coli 448 -3486.
1977 Chryoler Cordoba.
11,500. 73,000mlln,good
cond. Coli 814·317-7131
· oftor 4PM w•lulayo.
19715 Cordoba. 2 dr .. outo ..
AM-FM otoroo. Good cond ..
runo good. t700. Coil 448·
8331.
1982 Chevy Chovotto 4
tpd.. radio. now tlreo. ·
'3.319 . . 1979 Plymouth
Volllro, 2 dr.. 8 cyl .. auto ..
AM·FM U,381. 1978 Ply·
mouth Valllre auto., elr,
AM·FM. 11 ,811. John'o
Auto S.loo Bulovlllo Rd.,
441-4782, OaHipollo.

.

1977, 28 It camper, aolf
conteined, air, gal fur.nace,
••c cond. 88.200 .00 . 304·
875-4086.

76

Auto Parts
8o. Accessories

3'h In lift kit for J - and
Buckohot Mudde,. Q' a with
white Spoke Rlmo.

79

M otora Homes
&amp; Campara
---------18ft RV compor, Hll con·
tllned, furnance, AC, 111nge,
refrlg .. full bath, R•H hltoh
• ICO. .OriH. Hal NOII\Id

TLC U. 300.
2217.

Call

441·

BORN LOSER

H &amp;. S Home Improvements
vinyl siding, roofing. room
addition. atorm windows,
stone. Call 614-387-0409
or 614-387-7244.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime _guarantee . Local references
fur nished. Free estimates.
Coil collect 1 -81 4-237·
0488, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Rogera Basement
Waterproofing.

ANNIE

'

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN.
scotchguar~-water extraction, daodonzers. FREE eatimates . Reasonable rates.
Gene Smith. 992·8309.
D. and M. Contractors.
Remodeling, vinyl 1iding,
painting (indoors and outdoors) replacement win·
dows call 304· 773-5131 .

ALLEY OOP

Fatty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Coil 304-875·
1331 .

I]) Rockefeller &amp; Roesel
Senatorial Debate

(1:'7._,~c CHAR~J;S

WPBV

CROCKI'R TALKS

TO HIS NEWI.Y
AP1'01NTED CREW
CHIEF, ACE CHUNG,
AND AI.I.EY OOP,
teN RESPONsiBLE
FOR SUPPLIES,
St"'G TU MAKES
. CONTACT Willi
TliE TONG'S
REPRESENTA.TIVE
AT THE RAILHEAD.

RINGLES ' S SERVICE, OX·
peri anced carpentw. electrician, maaon, painter, rOoting (including hOt tar
epplicationl 304·676-2088
or 876-4680.
Rotary o.r cabja tool drilling.
Most welle completed same
day. Pump sales and sarvi·
COl . 304·895 -3802.
Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

Yes~

,---.:---,r

WINNIE
OH, MY GOSH.
HA5 8/L'I.. BEEN

TRYING TO REAC~

ME?

Good-1 Excavating. base·
ments, footers, driveways,
septic tanks, lend•caping.
Call anytime 614 - 448 ·
4537, James L. Davi1on, Jr.
owner.

rn m

Oorer Work bV Ted Hanna.
Ditchea, pond1. roade. land
clearing, etc. Cell Motor Car
Brokers, 446-8692.
J .A .R.Conatructlon Co.Ru·
tland. Oh,814 · 742 - 2903;
Basements. Footer~. Concrete work, Backhoe's,
Dozer 8t Ditcher, Dump
trucks, &amp; water-gaa- uwerelectrlcel linn.

BARNEY
YOU SHOULD

D.A.Boston e•cavating,
complate darer ond dump
truck serviCes. Call 687· _,. "
6828 or :t78-6288.

&amp;

A· BEEN AT
TH'CHURCH
PICNIC, PAW

Electrical
Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repain,
aervica. Authori1ed Singer .:
Sales &amp; Sarvk:e Sharpen
Scluora . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 814·992· 2284 . ·
86

SNAKE!!

General Hauling

HERE I
AM IN 1HE.

MIDDL.SOF
THE PACIFIC
OCeAN
fSN1RU51'tNG

Jomoo Boyo Water Service .
Aloo pool• filled. Coli 814266-1141 or 614- 448 ·
1176 or 814-448·7911 .

ASIRD!!

10•1/

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim Lllnlor. 304·8715·
7387.

--'------ ,
B7

Upholstery

----'--- -

·'

~

••

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY IHOP
1 183. lee. Ave., Golipollo. •.
114-441· 7133 orl14·441· •.
1133.
:·

,,'

b'yHeMArnoldandBobLet

J-.

I I I

(]

r

I I

II

IZOAMANI

()

II I

IGEEREMj
I

10 , ,

Y. 6 1VE5 YOU
'THE GoO-AHEAD.

I

Now arrange tile cirCled teners to
form tne IUIPfiH answer. as sug·

KX

gested by the above cartoon

l X XX]

Print answer here: (

(Mawera tomorrow )
Vesterday·s

I

JumtJM;s JUICE MAJOR EX PEN D STYMIE
-.n1wer What the governmen t e~t pec t s t o ~e t lr6m
i ncome taxes- '" EXACT MONIES'

IIIDGI
James Jacoby

Which finesse
has priority? .

,._ll-84

NORTH

+ J2
. AQ 7 6 5
• 10 5 J
+ Q5 J
EAST
WEST
+ Q9 5
• !0 8 7 0
. KJ 9 8
. 1013
• A J6
• Q97
+ a1 6
+12
SOUTH

By James Jacoby
Don't take the first finesse you see
just because you happen to be in the
right hand to do it. There may be
something else to think about.
South rolled into the quite reasonable contract of three no-trump. On
tbe openinc lead he put up dummy's
jack of spades, covered by the queen
and ace. Now he played a heart to the
queen. East grabbed the king and
returned the nine of spades. South
ducked. West overtook with the 10
and played back - you guessed it the 10 of hearts. So the adroit defenders took one spade. three hearts, and
the diamond ace to put declarer one
down. I call the defense adroit, but a
more accurate assessment is that the
declarer was clumsy.
He can easily make his contract if
the ace of diamonds is with East or if
the king of hearts is with West.
However, to take full advantage or
both chances, South must take the
diamond play first. Alld ao, painful
though it may be, declarer sloould
cross to dummy's queen of clubs and
)ead a diamond to the king. When that
winsl school is out. Should the dia·

.2

+ AK6

• K 812
+AKJ 10 9

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West

Nort b

East

Pass

1•

Pa.s

2•

Pass
Pass

3+
Pass

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Soutb
t+

Opening lead : +4
'

mond

king lose to the ace, South wins

the spade return, cash"" out his clubs,
and then decides whether to take the

heart fi nesse for hos contract. Chances are he 'll grit his teeth and go for
the gol&lt;f .

~Mt.ttntl'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Diplomacy

41 A Ford
42 Sicilian

5 Ciphered
1t Noisily
1% Do penance
13 Wind

DOWN
1-

instrument
14 Hils from
Berlin

15 Indian
cymbals
16 Cat
or chance
18 PrefiX
wtth cycle

:~ =~

=f
.

fiSh

22 S~ount

~

city

Hartley

2 ~~~ndo
_ Turca,
3 Wasdisin· Yesterday's Answer
terested 8 Artisan
27 Gained
(colloq.) 9 Requested 29 Essential

4 Eqyptian 11 CoiTUpt
king
17 Cato's
5 Hindu
greeting
social
20 Level
group
22 Scooped up
6 Sioux
23 Hold out
7 See 3
24 Atmosphere
Down
25 Exclusive

33 Jacket
or collar.
34 Greek
" B"
3li Colorado
Indian
l8 Scottish
explorer

25 Rescued
28 Knowledge

27German
river

28 - llad it!
29 Italian
physicist
30 "Alice"
cllaracter
31 Angl~

Saxon
king
32 Society

lass
35 Alaskan
3'7 :Jalopy

39 Seed coat
40 Fortune-

teller

card

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how to work it :
AXYDLB-AAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

mtn .)

Cil SCT\1: Second Coming

MY 1-IFE!'ID

Ken ' s W1ter Service. Wells.
cloterno. poolo filled. Phone
3117·0123 or 317-7741
night or day.

-::::::--:~:-:-----

I]) WV Election '84
lliJ Sneak Previews
fll MOVIE: ' Hud '
8 :30 0 Cil Ci) Family Ties
1IJ ® Who's the Boss
Angela steams when her soronty sis ter invites T onv to
attend the1r sorority reunion.
!Closed Capoionedf
® On the Money
9 :00 0 Cil Ci) Vice· Presidential
Debate Coverage of the debate
between
v,cePresident Bush and Repre·
sentative Ferro IS pre sented from Philadelphia,
PA . 190 min .)
(1) MOVIE : ' ichard Pryor
Here and No '
ill 700 Club
IJ) Top Rank Boxing from
Las Vegas. NV
CID
© Gtiner Kal e and
Sam unco\oler a long forgot ten movie star' s secret. (60
mrn.) /C losed Capltonedl
0 ® UQJ Vice· Presidential
Debate Coverage of the debat e
. between
· VicePres ident Bush and Re presentatrve Ferraro 1s presented from Philadelphia,
PA . 190 m1n.l
Cll Gable Touch
(11) Myste ry! ' Rumpo le of
the Ba1lcv: Rumpole' s Ac ·
turn.· Finding th at he 's not
suit ed to re trrement . Horace
Rump ole return s to London
and pur sues the case of a relrgrous cult murder. (60 m m.)
ICio sed Captioned I
9:30 Cll Bach Castle Concerts
10:00 (1) MOVIE : ' Triumph s of a
Man Called Horse'
Gz. 20120
(I) Constitution:
That
Delicate Balance ·cnmina l
Justrce: A Defe nda nt 's Right
to a Fa1r Trral. · The rrght of .
the accused to a fair trial IS
w eighed aga1nst the right of
society to take measures
as surr ng public safety. (60
mon.) jCiosed Cap tioned I
fl) Independent News
10:30 0 (1) Ci) Deba1o Analysis
(}) My Unle Margie
([) MOVIE: 'The Villain'
0 IIl ®l CBS News
Debate Summary - Dan
Rather hosts this summary
and ana lv ~ i s of the Vice·
Pres1denua1debate.
msoap
11 :00 0 Cil (I) CZl 0 (IJ (jQ) Q)
@l News
CIJ , Joe Piscopo Special
Th1s fmmer ·sa turday Night
lrve' comedian performs his
repetor re of famous impersonations .
(}) Dobie Gillis
(IJ Two Ronnies
® Nawswatch
f11 Benny Hill Show
1 1 :30 0 Cil CZl Tonight Show
Tonight 's guesl 15 mayoral
candidate Bud Clark . (60

m

Excavating

B4

Ad v

m

He dQes seem to
But at least this
be getting more
time he didn't run off
forgetful! ~.....,. and forget his hat!

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Galllpollo. Ohio
Phono 814-448-3888 or
614 -446-4477

B3

m

m

RON'S Telovioion Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola . Quazar, and
housa calla. Coli 304-5782398 or 814-446-2464 .

82

'lour

m

Plastering &amp;. Plaster repair,
frea ooti(Tlttes. Call 814·
266-11112 .

SHULAW' S Plumbing ond
Hooting. 211 Si•th St ..
Point Ploaunt, W. Va. 304·
875-6420 . Liconaod and
insured.

1977 Chevy pickup. VB. PS.
Standard, Runs good, body
rough. $1 000.00. Call 992·
7841 .
.

rn

PAINTING · Interior and e•terior. plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs.
oxp. Call 6, 4-388 -9662.

1978 Ford F150. V-B. auto.
P.S . PB . 53.000 actual
miles, one-owner, no rust .
Call 448-4053 .

Heavy hens for sale. Call
448-4821 .

64

roofs. 30 years experience;
Specializing in built up roof.
Call 614-388-9867 .

JIM'S PLUMBING Ito HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1 , Bo• 356. Galli·
polio. Call 814-367-0676.

1979 Harley Davidson
Sportater. mlny ax tras,
81.900. Call 446· 8239 .

I-::-:-:--- : - - - - - - -

MAN'-liNG THAT VALVEA"'D ,;oo ... .

WE LL- ! HA\it= THE PERFECT , - - - , ·
TROUBLE? HOOTER -;, FOR
r.1-1 e J O e~

Homa
Improvements

1 978 Ford Courier bucket
seats, 5 spd., AM -FM cass .•
chroma slots. good cond ..
$1 }300 . Call 614- 2686276 .

1980 Oodgo Truck, low
milage. Reasonable price .
Call 992· 7206.

66 S.eed
Dragonwynd Cattery Ken·
nels. AKC Chow puppiao.
Siamese kittens, new litters
CFA Himalayan and Persian
klttano. Coli 614-448- 3844
altar 6 .

HAVE TO MAK!O
S.URE WE HAVE S.OMI!&gt;ODY

Rooting 8t pout·
~~&lt;&gt;:•"'~"~"'~·=··~:·======:;:=========~ 1Marcum
ing. Now installing srubber

1 no . 30 JD combine pull
type. Call 614· 256·6518 .
Jay Crisenbery.

--nary-.

1963 Scotty Sportomon
camper, 13 ft., 2 whMII,
$500. Call 814· 268·1 5111 .

s.o WE

~ THATICRAMBLEDWOROGAIIIE

~~ ~

Uno&lt;r~ -

EVENING

CAPTAIN EASY

\,9

one letter to·~ ,quar., to totm

THURSDAY

Utfel _IJ
o.RJ(jff 111

1---:-:-----:---;-

ftlf\JNliD'iJ
_

~

1973 M ldao 19 ft . oalf
contained camper. Coll614379 · 2886 .

B1

1----:-----------

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 19.•

Television
Viewing

Serv1ces

12 ton Michigan mobile
crone. 88 , 600 ; 4 wood 57
Musical
71
Autos for Sale
burning atovo $250. oach.
Instruments
304-875-1678 after 8;
R'egisterad Blue LeOpa'rd Cur ' 1984 Buick Riviera. fully
304·675· 7896 .
mala dog. 14 mos. old. Coli
electric, full power. da·rk red
Firewood . 304· 773-9179 614-268· 1661 .
metallic w. white Landau
or 304-773· 6667.
wire wheels, concert
1 -:::---:-:~-:---- Conn TrPmbone, good cond. top,
stereo system . loaded.
Firewood for oalo. oo01oned 81 50. Call 266. 6808.
11,000 mi . Call 446-9364.
or green . 304·773· 6738. 1-::-:-:::--::--:::-:-::-'-:::~
Piano. Wurlitzer Spinet. like
1981 ComaroZ-28. 23 ,000
Firewood. 820.00 pick up new. 304· 773· 6324.
original mila,. would conload . $30 .00 delivered .
sider trade. Cai1446-4063 .
304 -875, 2991 or 875 ·
6762 .
F~rm Supp ltes
1973 Olds Cutloss. $400 or
beat offer. -call 614 -992·
&amp; Live stock
Cabbage Patch Doll, new in
8031.
box with adoption papers,
- - - - - - - : - : - · IC880 .00 . Call 304 - 875 1984 Monte Carlo SS, blue.
61 Farm Equipment
6011.
fully equipped, new condit ion . Asking S1 1,801).00 or
Half ot fresh beef ready in 3 Long tactos, Vermeer round best offer. Will consider
balers, rakes. tedders &amp;.
woako. 304-882-2470 .
mowers and a complete Una trade. Call949 -2181 .
Boys 18 in bicycle. good of bale handling and feeding 1981 Ford Escort .QLX. 4
cond. $20 .00. 304-876· accessories. grinder mixers, door hatch back, Goof;J
wagons, rotary tilleri, rotary
6B84 .
cutters, blades. c~ultivators. condition . Call 992-3974 .
Camouflage regular - army diacs. plows, poetdrivers,
1977 Mercury Marquis se·
clothing, denim surplue, woodsplitters. seeders, dan, good condition. 1973
Sam Somerville's, 7 miles gates, powarwashers,
Ford Grand Foreno.good
East Ravenswood (new era}. Wheel Horse Lawn &amp; garden condition,call 614 · 992 w-tandom
axles.
tractors
open normally 1 :00· 7:00
6974 .
pm. Fri. S•t. Sun. (qpen And see Uti for 1 complete
after 5 :00 evenings until Una of pans and service. 1973 Dodge Coronet. tour
Uood:
Oct. 22) .
MF 150, MF 185, MF 50. door.Auto .. P.S.,P.B .. Axc .
Get your order in early for MF 150 w -loader. 801 Ford. Phone 61 4 ·985-4276 .
Christmas hard rock candy . 2 Vermeer round 'Demo'
balers. 2 uiOd balers. 120 1979 Monte Carlo 306
Phone 304- 676-~ 607.
MF baler gravity wagons. auto, PS. PB. Air, tilt wheel.
Roto tiller. fireplace screen, 990 IH haybl ne. plow·s nice c8r. sale or trade,
10 speed bik'e, 28 country bladao. And chock our fall $4,200 . 00 . 304-875 41 B 1.
and western records . Phone salo pricaol
J
IV
IDE
N
S
FARM
1
---------~
304-876-3048 otter 6:30
EQUIPMENT
'79 LTD 83,200.00 or boat
PM .
614-448-1875
offer . 304-578 -2010 .
5p Building Supplies

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DICK TRACY

1980 Yellowstone camper,
28 ft. carpetad. oir cond,
awning , e)(c cond.
$8,500 . 00 . 304-5762006.

.

Complatoly furnlohod all
oloct. 4&amp;8 Second Ave .. One
1BR Apt. 8196 mo .. One
2BR Apt. 1220 mo., odulto
only, oecurttv depooit, Rof·
erencoo. Coil 448·2238 or
4415-2681 .

Rivorolde Apto. Mlddlopon.
3 bedroom duple•. fu!l baoo- .Special rateo for Senior
morn, Mt. Varnon Ava.. Cltlreno. 1130. Equal Houo304·876 - 3030 or 876· ' i ng Opportunltloo . 814·
3431 otter 4:00.
992-7721 .
·
3 bedroom houM. 1160.00
pluo depoolt, utlltlee. oil
- · with wood bu.....,.
304-878·11144 otter I PM.

Ray's U10d Furniture. 614·
367·0837 . Coal cook stove
$85. gao ra~ge t66, deep
APARTMENTS . mobile frooro $185. coal heater
homes. houses. Pt. Pleannt e6 o. aoveral gao heater a16
and Gallipolis . 814 ·446·
up. chest of drawers $20.
82.21 .
wardrobe 836 . bookshelf ·
$22. vanity dreoHr w-mirror
3 room unfurnished apt. $30,1orga booocabinet $45,
bath. $200.00 month. utili- night stand $ 5 , coffee table
tieo paid . Phone 304-876· S6. end tobloo $4 each.
3030 or after 4 :00. 304·l;;;::;;;;;::::::;;:::::::==
676-3431 .
52 CB,TV, Radio
One bedroom apt, 814-446·
Equipment
0882 or 304· 675-3000.

1984

1983 20 tt. fold out Polo·
mlno camper, axe, cQnd .•
uoed one time, quick 10le.
Coil 814·387·0334 .

JesH French aplnet piano
1460.00. Largo buttarfly
quilt •126 .00. Chair ond
otlomon, • 16.00. 20 book
eet of Do It youroolf Encyc ~
lopedia t20 .00 . Call 949·
2834.

,Maple full size bed with
mattress and box spring•
840.; Sturdy b~nk badl with
mattreaa *100.; Exercisa
bench with lag lift, arm pull:

304 · 876 · 3000 . Winter

Th~y.Oc~r11 ,

Motora Homes
&amp; Campara

f

under new

love, across from

1 600 board foot of ml•od
rough lumber. Coli 114,
317·0136.

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

t ion. Set up, underpinning.

open

79

KIT 'N' CARLYLI! ®by L1rry Wright

Side by lido rofrlgorotor
hornet gold like now t276,
aide by oldo ovocodo groan
little older I 1 26, froot !roo
refrigerator whh"elg •.freezar
on top *176. copl:tertone Cemetery lot for sale in
f ·
t t at f
•125
Memory Gardens . Lot
ra "'are or ro
roo
' number 69C . Call 387auto waaher OE harvest gold
llko now •176, Kenmore 7479 . Virgil Wamoloy .
washen *95 each 3 to· Cheshire.
chooee from. 2 goo ,.ngeo ~ ~~::--:-----~:-::
196 oach, olectrlc rangoo 30 W. Vo . Cuotomoro nvo 30
In 1125, all appHancoo oold per cent of your long dlo·
with 30 day .warranty. tence telephone bill tor
~~i~~fil Skaggo Appliances, Upper ·detail• call Richard Wilton.
·River Rd .. Gollipolio. Oh 1 -800-344·51 18 Monday
446· 7398.
thru Friday.
'

bedroom . eKcellant condi-

Now

Thursday. October 11. 1984

Ohio -

Sentinel

PEANUTS
OKAV, TR'( IT AGAIN

f.IERE I COME !

The laugh's continue wirh
specially-edi ted
encores
featuring the best sketches
of the sa11rical serres.
ffi Best of Groucho
(]) SportsConter
(f) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 IIl Newhart Tiie Loudons help Kirk bring his cafe
up to code to escape condemna tion. (R)
Cll Latenight America
® Barney Miller
® World Chess Championships
(121 Nightline
Ill Twilight Zone
12:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Carny'
Cil MOVIE: ' Melvin and
Howard'

m

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

1~11

VMQU ZU RSU ABPBLMUO.. CX AMXU
DEW

M

NMRS C BR

NMAA

.,

RSU

NMAAMEVAK

WC

El!TUOOMRMUO .-

XLDEF AACKW NLMVSR
Yeatenlly'• Cryptoqu&lt;ite : PRO FOOJ'BALL IS LIKE
NUClEAR WARFARE. THERE ARE NO WINNERS,
ONLY SURVIVORS. - FRANK GIFFORD.

,.

�'zg •2o-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 11. 1984

Jop farm family

Onlookers ·watch
teenager's rape

.~'-.~hosen by SWCD
' Meigs SoU and Water Conserva·

. ~District's (SWCD) Outstanding
F.:ann Family for 1984 is the Richard
. Manzey family.
•
' Tile OUtstanding family was
el)oeen at a I'E'Cellt meeting of the
dlltrlct board of supervisors.
·;FbtaJ plans were made for the
Meigs SWCD annual meeting and
l!allquet to~ held on Nov. Sat 7p.m.
at Sallsbury Elementary Scllool.
~kets are $5 each and may be
p;lrChased from any SWCDsupervi·
. sor, candidate for supervisor elec·
Uon or office personnel by Nov. 1.
Tlcke1s may also be purchased from
tlie:SWCD office.
. • Candidates for supervisor elec·
tiQD are Tom Theiss, Rex Sbene·
~. Roger Nease and Rodney
CJ!evaller. Ellglble voters are those
~ 18 years o(ageorolderwho
re&amp;lde tn f.!eigs County or own
'prOperty bt Meigs County. Voting
' c~bedoneattheNov.Smeettngor
!he SWCD office between 7: 30

II\

a.m . and 4 p.~. or by requesting an
absentee ballot.
The 1985 annual work plan was
also approved at the meeting.
Winners of the soU judging contest
were announced. They were the
Southern f'FA agriculture judging
team and Meigs FFA urban judging
team.
High sc0rtng individuals tn the
agriculture contest from Southern
FFA were Andy Rose, Curtis Jones,
and Todd Hubbard, 1st, 2nd and 3rd
place winners respectiyely, all from
Sout hern FFA.

CLEVElAND (AP ) The
W)n!Jing number drawn Wednesday
nteht in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 774. In
the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto" draw·
ing, the six winning numbers were
~4~ 17, 18, 21,26 and 40.
The lottery reported earnings
Wednesday of $862,253 from wager·lngon "The Number. " Theeamlngs
·came on sales of $1,129,019.50, while

dlSclosed, was dragged from the
Police say a J5.year-Qld freshman parking lot to a boys' bathroom,
was taken trom a high school pl8cedlnastall,strtppedandrlij)l!d
· parking lot to school rest room and by amanwbohad made overtures to
raped twice before at least 10 her earlier, said Pollee spokesman
oolookers, someofthemhoottngand Warren Carmichael. She was then
jeering.
.
raped by one other person and
Fairfax County pollee said Wed· possibly a third, carmichael said.
nesday the incident occurred the
HesaldatleastlOpeoplewhohad
night of Oct 3 while students were . seen t)le girl dragged from the
gathered for two junior varsi~klng lot watc~ the Incidents,
football games at Fort Hunt High some of them hooting and jeering.
School, about 10 miles south of Some of tliose Involved were
Washlngton.
students, pollee said.
A Pax:ent·Teacher Association
"lfthefaetsarewhatlunderstand
meeting also was tn progress at the them to be now, I'm appalled," said
time of the rape, pollee s~d.
Fairfax School Superintendent WU·
J. Burkholder.
llam
The girl, whose name was not

a

holders of winning tlckets are
entitled to share$~. 766.50.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
game, sales totaled $2,100,379. The
share for winners is to be announced
today. Theestlmatedjackpotwas$1
million.
The Number: seven-seven-four
Ohio Lotto: fourteen; seventeen;
eighteen; twenty-one; twenty·six;
forty
·
( ··~ .,

·sunny wea~her' in Ohio forecast ·

mld-l!Os.

Members of Greenpeau, 4res8ed as penguins, de111011!!&amp;rlde In
front of the French state secretary building for overseas territory
Wednesday aftemoon. The group was protesting the conslructloJ! of an
airport tn AdeHe Earth, Antarctica, which Greenpeau claims wW
result In the death of many penguins and other wildlife. The bags by
demonstrators' feet contain several thOusand l~rs of protest against
the. airport. (AP Laserphoto).

;

TWO DAYS ONLY/I
BUCK STOVE SPECIAL

~;!

$1 QQOO OFF

~

~

SALE/ - OPEN STOCI&lt;

ANY BUCK STOVE PURCHASED
FRIDAY, OCT. 12th or
SATURDAY, OCT. 13th

SLACKS

TUBE SOCKS

REG. $18.00 SLACKS .. Sl4.39
REG. s20.00 SLACKS ...... S15.99
REG. 124.00 SLACKS ...... 119.19

MEN'S and BOYS

'

Boys' sizes 7 to 11; Men's sizes
9 to 15.

\

LITTLE BOYS'

FALL SHIRTS
&amp; TOPS

•

~~~
.._~
~

'lil

FLANNEL
SHIRTS
111.95 Flannel Western ........ 19.50
114.95 Flannel Western ...... 111.90
118.95 Flannel Western ...... 115.00
122.95 Flannel Western ...... 118.30

Knit tops include velours, long sleeved
turtle necks and long sleeved placket
front tops. Sweaters include cardig'ans
an.d pullovers. Sportshirts are plaids,
solids and stripes.

D.E,NIM JEANS

Lee and Wrangler- All are pre·washed. Boys' sizes Slims, Re· .
gular, Huskies and Students. Men's Sizes 27 to 42. Extra Sizes
44 to 60. Entire Stock Included.

WRANGLER
JOGGING
.OUTFITS

SWEATER
SALE '

Two day sale prices on our en·
tire stock of women's fall
sweaters. Cardigans, vests
and pullovers in solids and
·stripes.
Misses and Extra Sizes
REG. '11.00 to '41.00

SIZ£S 6 to 24 Mos .. 2T to 4T and 4 to 7

CUSTOM MADE

14.99

Reg. 16.25 ............. Sale
Reg. 17.75 ............. Sale 16.19
Reg. 19.00 ............. Sale 17.19
Reg. 112.50 ........... Sale 19.99

DRAPERY
SALE
'
T

Stop in the home furnishings department on the 1st
floor. Select your new drapes from our large selection
of patterns, colors, sizes.

TWO DAY SALE/I

MEN'S
SWEATERS
Our new fall and winter

Custom-made Bedspreads lnciuded

SAVE

50°/o

$879 roS3279

.~,

'

•.'}'··
111.•
~ ~

MEN'S DRESS
Waist sizes 29 to 42, plus extra
sizes 44 thru 50. E~cellent Se·
lection of new falj shades_ Now
is a good time to buy what you
need. We'll gladly help you find
the color and size that's right for
you.

BROWN DUCK

WORK
CLOTHES·
f Cornplete selection

incl•udin1~

Men's 119.95

coveralls, jackets, coats,
vests, bib overalls, dungarees.
matehi ng hoods. Regular and
eKtra large sizes .to 50. Shorts,
Regulars and Talis.

Men's 129.95

SALE PRICES

Men's '15.95
. Trousers ................. 'll.99
Trousers ................. 114.99
Trousers ................. '22.49
Men's 134.95
Trousers ................. '26,19

116.95 SWEATERS ... 113.30
119.95 SWEAfERS ... 115.50
124.95 SWEATERS ... 119.40
129.95 SWEATERS.:. 123.30

SALE/

WALLPAPER SALE
Save now on 1he wallpaper you'll be
needing. Many patterns and colors in
our selection. 'Quick delivery.

GIRLS'
TERS
Cardigans and pullovers in solids
and prints. Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to
4, 4 to .6X, 7 to 14.
Reg, SJO to 117

$799

FREE
PARKING

TO $1359

foreign policy issues.
But Rep. Bill Alexander, DArk.,
echotng some other Democrats,
poked fun at the exuberance Bush
dlsplayedearly In the debate , declartngthathe''remtndedmealotof
a fraternity hoy, kind ofwhoopingit
up among the boys."
Sen. Paul Laxalt, R·Nev.. Pres!·
dent Reagan's campaign manager
and GOP general chairman, how·
ever, pronounced Bush's perfor·
mance: "Superb. Ten plus. I've
never seen him better."
In San Antonio, Texas , Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, O.Mass .. told
a wildly cheering rally that MsFerraro "not only demonstrated
tonight she Is qualified to be a vice
presidential candidate, she also
demonstrated she Is qualified to be
president."
At the White House, spokesman

Marlin Fitzwater said Reagan was
"delighted with the vice president's
performance" and telephoned Bush
after the meeting. He said he did not
know what was said.
Sen. Ernest Hollings, D·S.C., Who
ran for the Democratic presidential
nomination in the primaries, and
Sen. Frank Lautenherg, D·N .J .,
sa id they saw no edge for either
candidate. and Sen. J ennings Randolph, DW.Va. , decU'ned to pick a
winner .
Senate Democratic Leader .Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia said,
however, that Ms. Ferraro won
because she w~s "completely tn
control and demonstrated sincerity ,
class, presence and a clear grasp of
the Issues."
Sen. John Tower."R·Texas, said
Ms. Ferraro was "cool" and "a little
hesitant about some of the

answers." He said Bush "carried
the day."
Feminist . Gloria Stelnem called
Ms. f'erraro "calm and in com ·
mand of the facts ," adding that her
"Victory was absolutely definitive."
But Pennsylvania Gov. Dick
Thornburgh said Ms . Ferraro's
"glibness contrasted very sharply
with the thoughtful and careful
assessment of Bush_"
.
Meanwhile, the question arises,
did he patronlze her? That's the
debate about the debate that
America m ay be chewing on for as
long . as women- ·candida tes for
national office remain a rarity .
Geraldine Ferraro said George
Bush, her opponent in Thursday
night' s vice presidential debate. did
indeed put her down and she made
clear tn word and tone that shedidn't
like iL

FERRARO DEBATES -Democratic vice-presidential candlda&amp;e Geraldine Ferraro ges.
tures during her debate against
VIce-President George Bush In
Philadelphia Thursday night.
(AP Laserphoto).

.Stitt enters guilty plea;
air compressor found

A Portland woman was treated
and released from Veterans Memorial Hospital for injuries suffered in
a one-car accident Thursday.
. The Ohio State Highway Patrol
said Donna R. Rose, 31, was taken to
the hospital by private vehicle
following the accident.
Rose was reportedly southbound
on County Road 35, one and
four-tenths of a mile north of Ohio
124, at 9:25a.m. whensheswerv¢to
avotd collision with a deer, and
struck a brldge abutmen(, causing
severe damage to her vehicle.
A hOSpital spokeSperson. said
Rose was treated for head bruises.
A two-vehicle collision at the
Intersection of Ohio 7 and County
·Road 46 remained under lnvestiga·
lion today by the patrol.
BEAN COOKER- CecDEDiottlltlnalarge keltleof Farm Festival at Rio Grande. Arts and crafts of
The patrol said Dwight E.
various fonns wW be displayed during the three day
be'l'lnll'llday aftemooa tn preparation for a huge
Spencer, 82, Pomeroy, was travel·
event.
Kevin Kelly photo.
crowdexpectedlhlsweekeitdattheanaualBobEvans
ling at 3: 30p.m. Thursday when he
saw a vehicle ahead driven by
Ronald G. Lambert, 47, Rt. 4, Oak
Hill, stopped for a school bus.
Spencer reportedly applied his
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The
Ransbottom. The testimony ca me a
brakes but WI!S unable to stop In
from the bank.
day
after Altier held a news
time, strtktngtherearofLambert's chairman of the board and a
Board chairman John Altier Sr.
conference
in which he sa id a
vehicle. Both autos were moder· "director of !he Bank of Coming have
and djrector James Graham went
testified
before
a
federal
grand
jury
former
employee
has adml tted
ateiy damaged, the patrol said.
before the grand jury here Thursabout the disappearance of $950,000
partial
respons
ibility
for the missday, said bank attorney James

WICHITA, Kan . i AP) - James
Stitt. 35, of Pomeroy. has pleaded
guilty in federal court here to the
Aug. 22 armed robbery of an Athens.
Ohio. bank.
Stitt has been in federal custody in
Wichita since he was arrested In
Kansas on Aug.30inconnectionWith
a Colorado bank robbeJ'Y. He
pleaded guilty to robbing a Bank
One branch of about $2,8ll
Stitt also pleaded guilty toste,aling
a car in Nevada, said assistant U .S..
Attorney Jack Williams.
Sentencing has been delayed
pending a presentence report . Stitt
faces a maximum 25 years !mprl·
sonment on the bank robbery
charge.
Complaint Investigated
Meanwhile, in Meigs County, an
air compressor reported stolen by
Norman Weyersrnlller of Long

Hollow Rd . last Saturday morning,
has been recovered .
According to Meigs County Sheriff James J _ Proffitt , the air
compressor was recovered Thurs.
day evening in weeds along Long
Hollow Rd ., not far from the •
WeyersmiUer ~idence .
Apparently, when a thin pipe
handle broke. the thieves were
unable to carry the compressor,
therefore, it was dumped over the
road embankment.
JnvesiJgation Is continuing in the
matter.
An act of vandalism was reported
by V!rgihla Hendricks, of Racine,
Thursday. Hendricks said on Wed·
nesday evening. she was traveling
north on State Route 338 near
Antiquity when the wtndshleld ofher
vehicle was cracked when It was
struck by corn or rocks.

ing money.
In a prepared statement at the
· conference. Altier said that Beatrice
Dean, a former bank cashier and
board member, admitted on June27

"numerous forge ries. the taking of
monies from various savings ac·
counts In various amounts and the
Improper stealing of monies fro.n
the bank from time to time. "

Wholesale prices
dip in September

Rae. 18.00 ........ Sale '6.39
Reg. s10.00 ...... Sale '7.99
Reg. s12.00 ...... Sale S9.59
Reg. '15.00 .... :Sale '11.99

Ask about Corhortt's frt1
glo" offer . with moil-in

mtiflcatt.

selection.\.---"---·-·-·-·-~-·---·-,.._, __

Entire stock included. Slipovers,
coat styles, sweater vests. EKcel·
lent selection. Regular and extra
large sizes. Also tails. Buy for
or lay·a-way for Christmas.

By MIKE ROBINSON
A!!l!ll'dqtec! Press Writer
Republicans praised VIce Pres!·
dent George Bush for a "superb"
performance tn hlsdehatewithRep.
Geraldine Ferraro, while Democrats agreed only that their vice
presidential candidate held her own
against a seasoned opponent.
Democratic nominee Walter F.
Mondaie said Thursday nlght after
the nationally televised confronta·
lion in Phlladelphia that Ms.
Ferraro won by showing voters the
dlt!erence between "a cheerleader
and a leader."
HouseSpeakerThomasP.O'Nelll
Jr., 0-Mass., and other party
leaders also called their candidate
. the victor, but some Democrats,
Including San Francisco Mayor
Dianne Feinstein, called It a draw.
Most thought Bush excelled on

JUNIORS SIZES; S, M. L

Sal• Pricad

SALE/

2 Sections , 12 Pages 26 Cent1
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 12. 1984

Bank officials' testimony concerns missing funds

Crewneck- sweatshirts,. hooded.
sweatshirts, layered sweat- \
shirts, polo sweatshirts, vests '
and pants.
Purple, Blue and Gray
•
·

TROUSERS ·

Reg. $5.50 ............ Sale 14.39

JU,.IOR

LADIES'.

MEN'S WESTERN STYLE

\

$866-

&amp;

Sale Prices

Tapered body, pearl snaps, front and
back western vokes. western flap
pockets. Sizes S, M, Land XL. plus Big
Sizes 18, 19 and 20 and Talis. Colorful
plaid patterns.

SALE·

*

f)

20.

$foek up now tnd $t~e.
11.59 White with
Color Tops ............ S1.19
11.39 Grey With
Color Tops ............ Sl,S9

Fo, Thl1 Sele
MEN'S and BOYS'

SALE/

Our popular Springfoot socks in
a b1g selection of colors.

!Lee!

JUNIOR
Twills, Flannels, Gabardines and Denims.
Beautiful fall colors. Junior s1zes 5/ 6 to

I

M. Land XL. Long tails, two but- •
ton through pockets, colorful
plaid patterns. Made in U. S. A.

FRIDAY

...

Meigs woman
hurt in wreck

FLANNEL
SHIRTS
For work or sports wear. Sizes S,

.6. '

itt

Vol.34, No.128
Copyrighted 1984

MAKING A POINT - VleePretldenl George Bush makes a
pobtt diii'IDI .'l11UI'IIday nllbt's
debale In Phlladelpbla with
democratic vice·presidentlal
candlda&amp;e Geraldine Fen-aro.
( AP Laserphoto ).

MEN'S SJ0.9S

•

story on Page6 .

.
e
at y enttne
•
Dems, GOP dispute debate's winner

j

'

Trick or treat night

·

•

.

Monday. Next week's commission·
ers meeting will be held at the
normal time of 1:30 p.m., Tuesday
afternoon, IJi the commissioners
office, located In the courthouse.

.

Stories oo Page 3

No business transacted Wednesday
There was no business cOnducted
at Wednesday's regular session of
the Meigs County Commissioners.
The meeting was changed to
Wednesday In view of the fact that
the courthouse was closed on

story, photo on Page 6

Bobcats-OSU wrapups
.

Extended Forecast
saturday through Monday:
Fair 1111d unseasonably wann
weather during the period. Dally
highs mosiJ.y 711 to 80. Lows bt tile

Tonlght, mostly Clear. Low 5().55.
Friday, mostly suMy and continued
warm. High again 75-lll. The chance
of ratn is near zero percent tonight
and Friday.

New business opens

LeU.en oo Page 2 '

ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP)

In the urban judging contest,
Robby Cundiff came In 1st, Jim
Parker, 12nd and John Carl and
Randy Birchfield tied for 3rd place.
All hoys .. are members of Meigs
f'FA.
The winning teams will receive
trophies and high individuals will
receive cash awards at the Meigs
SWCD annual m eeting.

\Yinning Ohio lottery numbers

Republican view

. LUGGAGE SPECIAl .•
Quality ~irways Shoulder Tote, 26" Pullman, 21 Carry-on and Boardin&amp; Bags.
tance. Zipper closure. Color; Golden Tan.

!59.50 SHOULDER TOTE... .......... 144.00
'69.50 21" CARRY-ON .•:............ '52.00

BOARDING BAG .............. '54.00 ~1107.50 26" PUL~MAN ............... 'BO.OO ~
172.50

e!;.~~'
.. CHUGlCAID
··- .. :

\ .

"Higher tnfl~tlon is still nowhere
WASHINGTON (AP) - Wholesale · prices, down two months on the horizon, ' private economist
running, feU 0.2 percent tn Sep- Michael Evans said in advance of
today's report. "It is justthe wrong
tember, the government said today.
The drop was the sharpest since time to raise prices. Firms would be
January 1983 and marked the first wiped out by Imports."
Pork prices faD
time In eightyears thatprtcesfellfor
In
its
new
report on the Producer
two straight months.
Price
Index
for finished goods. the
Today'sgoodnewsmeantthat,for
Labor
.Oepartment
gave these
the first nine months of the year,
prices at the wholesale level rose a details:
....:. Pork prices fell 5. 9 percent
minuscule 1.9 percent, surprising
economists who had forecast an while the cost of eggs dropped 5. 7
Inflation rate approaching5)lercent percent. Fresh vegetable prices
were of! ·9.3 iJercent following two
for all of 1984.
Much of the credit for last month's sharp monthly IncreaseS. Flsh
performance went to lower food and prices declined 4.8 percent. Smaller
declines were posted for beef and
gasolbte prices.
Food prices fell 0.4 percent, the veal.
Fresh fruit prices rose 17.8
fifth time tn the last six months that
those prices have dropjled. Prices l)!'lrcent while dairy products rose
for pork and eggs continued their sllghty.
-Prices fell for natural gas, off 2
sharp declines while the costs of
fresh vegetables and fish were also percent, and fuel oil, down 1.9
percent.
of!.
-New car prices dropped 0.4
Gasoline prices declined for the
fourth month running. although the percent; light truck prices were up
0.5 percent decline was off sharply 0.5 pe~cent.
from the previous month's 4.2 · -Capital equipment costs were
unchanged.
percent drop.
Today's energy price calculations
Today's report took many analysts by surprise. While most are were actually tor August. That
forecasting only moderate price component of the wholesale price
increasesforthebalanceoftheyear, measure .}ags a month because
nonehadforeseenthedecllne.which energy companies report their
dotlbledAugust'sO.lpercentdroptn prices too late for Inclusion tn the
most recent ln&lt;lex.
the wholesale tnfiatlon rate.
Indeed, since Labor Day, there
The persistently docile inflation ts
much the product of the overall have-been Indications that gasoline
economtc slowdown. Also 'aiding in prices are on the way up following
the fight Is the strength of the dollar, apparently successful efforts by
which keeps pressure on domestic Arab oil producers to cut back on
producers to hold down prices in the production.
face of cheaper foreign goods.

GOP OPENS HEADQUARTERS - Meigs County's Republican
Headquariers, on West Main In Pomeroy, was omdally opened
'l1runday mornbig. Present for the opening were aD of Melp County's
Republican cancldates for the Nov. 6
and other aetlve
Republcail party mtmbers. Seated, I to r, Evelyn Clark, central
COIIIIIINee cllllnnan; JennHer Sheet8, candlda&amp;e tor state repl"eeM!!Ita·
IIW; Incumbent Cclunty Recorder tmmogene Holstein Congo; Probate
Judie Robert Buck, naming unopposed; and Clerk of Courts Larry

election

. r

'

Spencer, also nanning unopposed. Standing, I lor, Prosecutbtg Attomey
Fred Crow, ill, nanning unopposed; Counly Engineer Phil Roberts,
runnbtg unopposed; Dr. James Conde, candidate for county coroner;
lncwnbent Cornmlllllloner David Koblenlz; btewnbent Trealurer
Georae CoDtns; Incmnbent Commls!lloner Richard Jones; and Howard
Frank, candlda&amp;e for sheriff. Headquarters wtD be open from 10 a.m. to 11
p.m., Monday through Saturday. A telephone nwnber wW he anmunced·
at a laaer date.

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