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                  <text>·Wood chopping party

Outstanding volunteers

by .· Dick c;avall

WINTHROP®
HEY, WINTHROP.' ~LlE5S

WHAT MY DAD BROO~HT

rrt; A WHI5it..E ~
eQLJND 15 Prn::;Heo
'SOHICS"H .••

A~

··NEf=I&lt;QV. TH5 CllY:'

WHISTLE:/

See letter oo Page 2

Story on Page 6

Bengals top Browns

18 highway deaths

Story on Page 3

Story on Page 10

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enttne

Vot.34, No.134
p
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b 22 1 984
1 Section. 10 Pages 25 Cents
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Plans underway for new locks bill

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wateiWays projects were "disappointed' 'when a joint
House-Senate ' conference committee dumped all
water projects, including GaUipolis, from a continuing
funding resolution for. government operations on Oct.
10.
A new locking system, estimated at nearly $300
mlllion, has been recommended at Gallipolis by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to end navigational
accidents and bottlenecks in the antiquated locks.
Less than an hour alter the conference committee

GALLIPOLIS - Strategy to get authorization and
funding of a new locking system at Gallipolis Locks
and Dam early next year is undeiWay.
Rep. Clarence E. Miller said chances of including
the project in a supplemental appropriations bilhvhen
Congress reconvenes are good.
" It ls going to happen, and we're going to see that It
happens," the Lancaster RepUblican said following an
address at a local GOP rally Saturday.
Miller said he and other supporters of inland

WOW/
G-!Vf: IT
ATRY/

struck Gallipolis and other water projects from the
resolution, Miller said hewasincontactwithRep. Tom
Beville, D-Aia., chairman of the energy and water
subcommittee of the House Appropriations Commit .
tee, which toured GallipoUs in March 1!m.
Miller said he and Beville then starting laying the
groundwork for getting Gallipolis authorized and
funded . .
Had the project been kept In 'the continuing
resolution, Miller said both congressiona l authoriza·

tion and money would have been approved. Both can
still be achieved in a supplemental bill. the
congressman added .
"The problem is, we cannot appropriate unt il we
have the authorization, " Miller noted . " In a
supplemental bill , the idea·is to get both authorization
and appropriation."
If the project Is funded. C0!1&gt;S offi cials have
projected actual constru ction to begin in 1~ a nd be
substantially complete by 1990.

Mondale still chasing;
Reaganites confident
... reaves and Sellen

' MR. MENTM AND LITTLE MISS'M
IT1S STRANGE TO THINK THAT
THE MOON IS 2~8,857 MILES
FROM WHERE WE'RE STANDING.'

SOME SILLY PEOPLE
THINK THAT IT'S·, ,· &lt;
MADE OF CHEESE!
,.

KANSAS OTY, Mo. tAP) President Reagan and Democratic
challenger Waiter F . Mondale,
anackin"g each other's judgment
and competence in a shOwdown
debate, were heading into the
't:ampalgn's closing two weeks with
Mondale still playing catch-up and
Reagan's supporters confident his
victory was secure.
Mondale stopped short of claim·
ing victory, but at a post-debate rally
l)e repeated the leadership them e he
stressed during their 9().minute
televised confrontation Sunday
night on defense and foreign policy.
"Tonight, despite
the tragedy
in Lebanon, I think I heard the
president, the commander in chief,
blame it on somebody else,"
Mondale told about1,500 people in
downtown hotel.
"Tonight , despite all the embar·
rassment of that covert action in
Nicaragua. which has strengthened
our enemies , I think I heard the
president. the commander in chief.
blarn e somebody else," he added.
But Vice President George Bush
was jubilant. "! think we just
wrapped up fou r more yea rs." he
declared alter the debate.
A. p~nel &lt;if seven scholastic and

all

DEBATE EXPRESSIONS - l'l'esldent Ronald
Reagan, at left, and Walter Mondale, right, show
varylilg e&gt;&lt;pressions during the debate Sunday In
Kansas City. This was the final debate for the 1984

tT LOOKS SMALL UP THERE,
BUT ACTUALLY. tT'S 2 1 160
MILES IN DIAMETER!

_,

THATS qq

AND IT WE\GHS
MORE THAN
II MILLION TONS!

BILLION

Ci1EESEBURGER9!!
-~

by Sols

SNAKES TALES'M
WHY

AMI

HERt:?

... AND 1Ht:~bNa DAY,

WHU.£ SI1"'11Ne~ AT MARINE
L-1"'\1~~ 1-r
CAME 10 ME!

election campaign, which featured two debates
between Mondale and Reagan and a single tot with
vtce-pfestdent candidates, Geraldine Ferraro and
Vice President George Bush. (AP Laserphoto).

a

Meigs board, principal·sued
by two former instructors
'IWo Sl.(XXl,OOO suits were filed
Monday mo['Jling in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
former Meigs Local School District
teachers against the Meigs Local
Board of Education and HighSchool
Principal James E. Miller .
The two teachers are l\'larilyn K.
Goodnite, Hartford, W. Va., who had
been band director at the highschool
for two years , and Verna Evans:
GaUipolls, who had been an English
teacher at Meigs High School for
seven years. The board did not
renew the contracts of either last
spring.
Miss Goodnit e charges that the
board terminated her contract in
April, 1984, upon the recommenda·
lion and advice of defendant Mlller.
She charges that she was not given
an opportunity for a healing
comporting with due process . She
says the action of the defendants
have prevented her from obtaining
other ~mployment as a teacher In
the State of Ohio and that the
defendants have damaged her good
name, reputation. honor and Integ-

rity a nd her standing and assocla·
tion in the community. She further
charges that the defendants' accu·
sa lions were maliciously and inten·
tionaliy designed to deprive her of
her employment, to expose her to
public ridicule and scorn and to
injure her reputation and character
as a professional educator.
Goodnite says the defendants'
failure to provide her with an
opportunity and a hearing compor·
Uon with due process guaranteed by
the state and federal constititlons is
a breach of her civil rights.
Goodnite charges the defendants
consplred and agreed not to renew
her contract in retaliation for her
opposition to the defendants' policy,
for exercising. her rights of free
speech in advising parents and
students and requesting and insistIng upon adequate teaching materials for use of herself and her
students and constitutes an unlawful
invasion of her academic freedom.
She alleges that rhe failure to renew
her contract on such grounds is a
violation of her freedom of speech

and association as guaranteed by
the First and 14th Amendments to
the United States Constitution.
She asks for $250,000 In com pen sa·
tory damages and $~,!XX) in
punitive damages fj)Om Miller and
the same amounts from the board of
education.
Evans' suit
Mrs. Evans, whose contract was
not renewed by the board in April,
this year; charges that the board
acted upon the recommendation
and advice of Miller. She says that
she also was not given a hearing
comporting with due process and
that the defendants' actions have
prevented her from obtaining other
employment as a teacher in the
StateofOhio. She says that her good
name, reputation, honor and integ·
rity and her standing and.associa·
tJon ln the community have been
damaged and that defendants'
accusa lions were maliciously and
intentionally designed to deprive
her of her employment as a teacher,
to expose her to public ridicule and
(Continued on page 101

collegiate debate judges ca lied
44 percent saying Reagan won, 27
Mondale the winner by an even
percent saying Mondaie won and 21
wider margin than in the first debate percent saying they tied . The poll by
in Louisville, Ky. They gave the Gordon S. Black Co11&gt; . had a margin
Democrat 187 points to 168 for the of error of plus or mius 3.5 percent.
president. The same panehleciarect
With 14 days left before Election
Mondaie the winner by a m argin of Day, national polls are saying
174 to 157 after the Louisville debate. Reagan's lead isanyv:here from 9to
" It was a decisive victory for
25 points or more.·
Mondaie," said James M. Cope·
land, president of the National
Mondale. who got a boost in the
Forensic League and debate coach
polis from his st rong showing in the
at Marquette University High domestic policy debaw rwo weeks
School in Milwaukee.
ago, was hoping far a similar result
But voters often have far different
from their second and final debate to
standards for evaluating political help him close that gap.
Sen. P a ul Laxalt. R-l'ev .. the
debaters than the technical point s
Reagan cam paign chairman who
used by debate coaches .
An ABC News poll of 695 people was clearly upset tulo weeks ago
who watched the debate said that a
after Reagan's subpar pertor·
narrow margin thought Reagan
mance In the first deba tt&gt; In
Louisville, Ky.. was obviously
was the winner . The network
relieved alter this one,
reported that 39 percent called
" in the worst case scenatio, I
Reagan the winner , 36 percent said
it was Mondale and 25 percent said
think il was a draw and in that case
... it was a Ronald Reagan v ictory."
there was no clear victor . The
said Laxalt , "Mondale needed a
m argin of error was 4.5 percent,
knockout tonight a nd ir was far fmm
which meant that statistically it was
that "
.a virtual tie .
Even some Mondale supporters
Another poll taken for USA Today
gave the president credit for a fa r
had a larger percentage calling
stronger pertormance than two
Reagan the winner. The newspapweeks ago.
er's poll of 850 registered voters had

DEMOCRATIC FUND RAISER- Appro!dmately corrunlssloner posts; Peggy Bowers Brickles, for
200 people attended a Democrat Party hand-raiser reco[der; back, I to r, Dr. John ~dgway, county
held Saturday night at the Meigs Senior Citizens coroner candidate; James J . ProHitt, for sheriff·
•
Center In Pomeroy with Michael C. Shoemaker, 88th Henry Hunter, local Democrati c chairman; James
district Oblo House representative, as speaker. Buchanan.• for the district repl"eSlllltative to Congress
Shoemaker used "How to Spread the Word- posl, and Shoemaker, the speaker. The other
Democratic" liS his tapir. Pictured at the event are ·Democratic candidate In the Nov. 6 election, Mary
front, I tor, Jolynn Bosler, for district representative; Swain, nmnlng for treasurer, was not present.
Don Mullen and \' vonne Scally, candidates for counly

11 W~ 1"HEN, FOR.
-(HE VERY FIRS-r 1lMe.
I SAWA

B&amp;E, o•her complaints investigated

6Ui
I DON'i
SEE II
'NOW!!

. !!

--

-

•

PRESENTED PlAQUE ~ Outl&amp;tuldlng coach,
teacber, friend, and pntteman, lim Veanarl wu
honored SMurdaY night at Rutland Fade echool wUh
a banquet and tribute. He was ~ IIIII line

t.l

,

A breaking and entering over the
weekend at the Hal Harmon
·property near Dexter is being
Investigated by the Meigs County
sheriff's department A 100 foot
piece of rope was taken from the
hOuse. An old grindstone , eight
sheets of galvanized roofing and
other tools were taken from a shed.
plaque by 881 Brown, caplaiD of the 1M9
The Chester Fire Dept. reported
champiol18hlp team. the plaque and banquet were
to Sheriff James Proffitt's Derwt·
II(IOIIIOred by the Hutland Fire Department. See story ..• '"• ment that sometime Sunday night,
5omecneattemptedtostealgasoline
on Pap 5.
j

from the equipment truck and also
from the state forestry truck parked
at the fire station .
David Scott Souders, 20, Dayton,
has been cited to Meigs County
Court on a charge of hitskip,
resulting from an accident on the
WMPO parking lot Saturday
evening,
According to the report, Souders
backed Into the side of a vehicle
~ by Amos Tillis, Route 1.
\l

Rutland . There was light damage to
the Tillis vehicle .
The shertff's .dept . a lso reports a
single car accident that occured at 6
a .m . Sunday morning in Syracuse.
According to the repon, Pamela
Humphreys, Syracuse, was traveling north on Btidgem an St in the
rain and went off t~.e left side of the
street over the embankment. There
were no injuries but heavy damage
was done to Humphreys' 1979
. Chevette.

�Monday. October 22, 1984
Page-2..:...The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 22. 1984

Conttnentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
PolJleroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTtJ'RESTS OF THE MEIGS-~IASON AREA

Ajb

&amp;!m~ ~._-.,-,~c::loo=o
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Assoclaled Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE"M'ERS OF OPIN'ION are welcome. They should be l es~; than 300 words
long. All letters a re subject to editing and must he signed with namt&gt;, address and
telephorie number. No unsigned Idlers wUI be published. LeUers should be in

good taste,

addressln~

will cite you, dlstrtct by
district, state by state, who Is
running against whom, what are
the strengths and the weaknesses of
each candidate; and, most Importa nt of all, which one is likelier to
win.
Consider the fascinating race
precisely In the Ninth Dlstrtct. It is
nationally known as the home of
Archie Bunker. All the crotchets
Archie Bunker betrays are a part of
the composite scene. By one of
those masterstrokes of Irony, the
congressional representative of
Archie Bunker's district -bas been,
for six years, Geraldine Ferraro.

whO

issues, nol personalities.

Letters to editor·
Uutstanding volunteers
During my terms as Sheriff of
Meigs County my department has
had numerous , opporiuntiies to
work with the fire departments and
emergency squads in this county.
Last week was no exception to those
expertences. First, my chief Investigator. Gary Wolfe. mother's
house was destroyed by fire . This is
-one of the most devastating events
which can strike anyone. Not only
do you lose one of your most valued
assets, but you lose memories and
articles that can never be replaced
no matter how much insurance.
This· particular fire was fought by
the Racine Fire Department and
one of the things that was brought to
my attention by Gary and Sgt.
Randy Forbes was the personal
attention and sympathy expressed
by the members of the fire
department and Its auxiliary.
Anyone who has had to experience
such a tragic loss as their home
being destroyed knows how at a loss
someone is, and how helpful it is at
that time to know Y0\1 have friends.
Another incident which happerea
was equally as impressive to me as
sheriff. While on patrol (Tuesday,
Oct. 161 I received a call that a man
was pinned under a tractor. My
office advised me that two squads
were being dispatched to the scene.
Upon my arrival I saw rescue
trucks from Racine and Syracuse
busy with their task . I can honestly
say it was a very moving sight The
two squads had numerous volunteers working side by side and ali
dedicated to one goal ... remove the
victim a nd do everything possible
to keep him alive! ... The ladles and
men were as professional as I have
had the honor to work with. The

cooperation between the two departments made them one, united
in their goal. The complete cooperation shown in this Incident. as well
as other fire and emergency cases I
have w i tnessed , has been
overwhelming.
The night that the Baker Furniture building burned in Middleport
is another example of the cooperation arid ultimate sacrtflce by a
volunteer. Fire departments and
emergency squads from all over
Meigs County as well as Mason, and
Gallia Counties banded together to
form one united group. The miles of
fire hose that snaked its way
through the streets was certainly
som ething to see. The firemen
quickly worked at their duties and
their efforts paid off. Through their
efforts the town of Middleport was
saved and property damage was
kept relatively low. The women of
the various departments' auxiliaries were also on the scene to furnish
drinks and food for the volunteers.
The highest cost of this fire was not
in dollars, but the loss of one of
Middl e port's mo.st beloved
members, Jim Daniels. I saw many
of the firemen from time to time
leave their duties for a break and go
off into a dark corner to privately
cry over their lost friend, only to
return to the thankless job as he
would have wanted them to do.
We the people of Meigs County
have an asset that goes to often
unpraised ... Our outstanding volunteers!! ... I too often deal with the
few bad we have in Meigs County,
it 's so nice to see the majodty of the
James J. Proffitt,
good!!! Sheriff, Meigs County.

Sounds like shopping trip
1 read your paper every night.
Mr. Cleland Is always suggesting
what we need In M~igs County.
Once he said we need a park at
Paget own. Then he said we needed
a place In Rutland for the children's
amusement. Then he wanted the
road built to Ravenswood Brtdge.
Now he wants amusement for boys ·

and girls In Pomeroy or Middleport. He puts me in the mind of
taking a child Christian shoppinghe wants everything he sees.
Always remember what John F .
Kennedy said. "It Isn't what your
country can do for you, but what
you can do for your country." Ben Batey.

Special thanks
On behalf of the st udents and staff

of Tuppers Plains Elementary, I
would like to thank Chairperson,
Joann Calaway, and the many
individuals and businesses that
were instrumental in the successful
presentation of our 1984 school

carnival.
Because of their efforts and
donations, additional funds will be
available to further enhance the
quality of education for our children. Spencer J. Wiersma,
Prtnclpal.

Sentinel offers free space
for 7hank You' letters
As a community service project, the DaUy Sentinel is ollering ·
residents free space for special '"lbank You" leUers next month.
It's the time ofyearwesiJou!_\lreftect on the things for which we are
thankful. We sometimes forget the people to whom we owe thanks.
We aD have :;omeone we would like to thank, but never have the
chance. Now you do,
The Dally Sentinel, In Its combined Thanksglvlng-Chri!;tmas
edition on Wednesday, Nov. 21, wiD publish, free of charge, "thank
you" leiters from area residents. The letters should he brief I around 100 words or less) and contain
the person's fuJI name, the reason for the thank you aild the writer's
name and address and phone number. Leiters need that btfonnatlon
he pubHshed.
.
DeadUne lor receipt of the leiters Is 4 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7.
'lbey may be sent "Thank You," The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45631, or hand delivered to the editorial office.

to

to

Today in history
Today Ls Monday, Oct 22, the 296th daY of II&amp;. There are 70 days left In
tbe year.
Today's hlghllght In history:
On Oct. 22, 1962, President John F . Kennedy went on radio and television
to announce that he had ordered U.S. atr and naval forces to blockade
cuba, following the discovery that Soviet mlssUe bases were being buUt
there.
On this date:
In 1746, Princeton University In New Jersey receleved Its charter.
·• In 1836, Sam Hooston was Inaugurated as !lrst president of tbe Republic

at Texas.

'

-Meet .Southern's Tornadoes

F. Buckley ]r.
A pro looks at I•t• • • - - - - - -William
-------Arthur Finkelstein is one of those
new-breed professionals who make
their living, and other .people's
political careers, at one and the
same tin1e. It is true that many of
their proficiencies are acquired one did not grow up knowing how
many Jrtsh, how many Italians,
bow many J ews, how many blacks,
how many Hispanics; occupy the
Ninth Congreiislonal Dlstrtct, situated In Queens, N.Y . Butt! is what
then flows from the brew that
distinguishes the true ·political
analyst from the amateur.
Unquestionably the leader of the
entire profession is Richard Nixon,

-~1\iA, ID·C

CounciL
And it is both fascinating and
Arthur Finkelstein, surveying .
amusing that the Republican who Is,
that race among the many he ls .
trying to get the seat she vacated in
order to run lo~ vice presid~nt is, . managing, talks about what It Is , .:
that Is distinctive about tbe national
like Ms. Ferraro, a lawyer; and,
political scene In 1984.
like her, a former assistant distrtct
"They compare It to 1972, be·
attorney. There all resemblances
cause
McGovern got c(()bbered In ·
end. Serphln Maltese is a stalwart
1972
and
It's expected that Mondale
conservative - Indeed, he served
as executive director of the New will get clobbered In 1984. Well, •
maybe the figures wUI come out the •.
York Conservative Party for a
dozen years. He Is a man of same, but it isn't like 1972. Wha,t It's ·
brainpower, energy and grega- !Ike is 1964. The Goldwater year."
Finkelstein goes on to explain.
riousness who just might overcome
the natural lead of his Democratic Nixon, he reminds us, was not, In
1972, the unanimous choice of
opponent, Thomas Malon, who is a
New York City American Republicans . '"Rem ember
member, he had primary opponents even though he was president On the right, there was John
Ashbrook. On his left was Pete ·
McCloskey." The result was a
grumpy acquiescence In the matter
of voting for Nixon, kindled primar- lly by the lefi-mllitancy of George
' McGovern.
"But this time around," Finkelstein reminds us, "you find 94, 95
percent of all Republicans united
behind Reagan. They like him,
There aren't many leftRepublicans around, and they
never had their own candidate. On
th!" other hand, you find only about
6.1 percent of the Democrats liking
their candidate. So what's likely to
happen?"
It is to break the rules, In
conversing with political experts, to
draw your own conclusions - as
though you walked Into a barber
shop and started to cut your own
hair. "What is likely to happen is
that a lot of Democrats simply will
stay home, the way a lot of
Republicans, in 1964 torn between
Rockefeller and Goldwater, stayed
home.

I&gt;aruzy WoHe
i&gt;-11, Jwdor End

'A.::.~ri~;~l choice

CHARLESTbN, f.C. (AP) Although Citadel qljllrterback Robert HUI set a couple of school
records in a picture-perfect ·performance to lead the Bulldogs toa:!S-17
win over Marsha II, he was only half
thestory.
·
The Bulldog defense put on quite a
showasweUSaturday.
The swarming Bulldog defensive
unit held the opposition to only 244
total offense and limited MarshaU
quarterback Carl Fodor to only 10
completions In 28 attempts for 171
yards and no to~chdowns.
The defense also sacked Fodor
five times and picked off three

\

Cbx drilled a60-yarder just before
the half. the second-longest field
goal In National Football League
history. Only former New Orleans
Saln'-'!, kicker Tom Dempsey has
booted one from farther away, a
63-yarder In l310.
It was only Cox's second career
field goal, topping his team-record
58-yarder against Denver ~~
season.
"My main concern was just to get
it far enough and to try to keep some
control and accuracy," .Cox said.
"Just tbe least little bit you're off is
going to be a whole Jot over60yards,
soyoujusttrytodothebestyoucan

to be a good team and obviously we
didn't do thaqoday," said Marshall
Coach Stan Parrtsh, "We weren't
sharp and Carl Fodor wasn't sharp
and when you have thaLcomblnatlon we aregolngto have problems."
Citadel linebacker Richard

and kick it as hard as you can."
After a fi rst half featuring a
combined six turnovers, things
remained slow in the third qllarter.
The Bengals were using a U three
quarterbacks

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

Sacred Heart Church
of Pomeroy

AN NO UNCE

Annua I Bazaar
Has Been Reschedule~

for Thursday,

Nov. 8 1984
~=:..==~:..=-=~~=-==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

SERVICE, DEPENDABILITY, AND'
PEACE OF MIND

MARY C. KEBLER, E. A.
'Lnrollc·d to Pr.u 1"' Ihfr,rl· Tlu
l ni e nu / l~ u

nwc

\(J/l1"f.' ·

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING SERVICE
~ ..,

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, 10H,
H&amp;R Block Office Location
1
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ PH.
__
_ _ _ _ _ _.,..
'1'12-37'15
1 ..

r-------------------------------------------------------------------------L--------------------------------------------+--

Toledo Coach Dan SlmreU says
mistakes don't bother him as long as
they're part of a victorious effort.
The Rockets defeated Eastern
Michigan 17-7 Saturday to remain
tied for the Mid-Amertcan Conference lead at 4-0-1, and SimreU said
his team's errors were mainly
responsible for keeping the winless
Hurons in the game.
Central Michigan edged Miami of
Ohio 10-9 to stay In a deadlock for the
top spot. In ol her conference games,
it was Bowling Green 28, Northern
lilinois 6; Kent State 19, Ohio
University 7; and Ball State 23,
Western Michigan 20.
Bowling Green is just behind the
two leaders at 4-1, followed by
Northern Illinois and Ohio at 2-2-1,
Kent State and Ball State at 2-3,
Western Michigan and Miami at 14,
and Eastern Michigan at 0-3-2.
Sophomore Ron Conlin's 47-yard
field goal with two seconds left kept
Central Michigan from being upset.
Cul;lis Adams pickedup100yardson
24 carries and scored the Chippewas' only touchdown. AU of Miami's
scoring came from the toe of Gary
Gusman, who had fleldgoaisof24,22
and 45 yards.
Bowling Green quarterback
Brian McClure threw for 3&amp;5 yards
and three touchdowns against
Northern Illinois and set a conference record for career completions
with 583.
Northern Illinois Coach Lee Corso
underscored McClure's importance: "The difference In the game
was a good quarterback In Brtan
McClure." Bowling Green's Denny
Stolz agreed, saying: "Brian was
just excellent, anq our young
offensive line protected BrlanweU."
Kent 1· State used a balanced
running attack to defeat Ohio, with
Derrick Nix picking up 63 yards,
Tim Starks 55 with one touchdown,
and Robert Golden 43. Ohio suffered
two Interceptions and last two
fumbles, whUe Kent State did not
give up the ball.
"We were a little concerned that
we weren't converting turnovers
Into touchdowns, but as tong &amp;s
points were going on the board, we
weren' t disSaStisfied," Kent State's
Dick Scesnlak said.
"Turnovers obviously were the
biggest difference in the game. They
capitalized on the breaks," said
Ohio's Brtan Burke. .
Bali State edged Western Michigan with six seconds to play as Jay
Neal scored from 2 yards out
Leading the Cardinals' comeback
was quarterback Nell Britt, who ·
completed fiveofsevenpassesln the
Ill-yard drive that led to Neal's
score. For the day, he was 20 for 30
for 237 yards.

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

make further inroads are those the
Democratic Party fondly thinks It
has bought and paid for.
·
Seldom has the choice been
clearer, or the.stakes higher. Only
one question remains: In reelecting Reagan, will Amertcans at
last give him a Congress willing to
work with him, or doom him to sill!
more crippling battles with Tip
O'Neill?

Berry's World

"SUBVERSION or TREAT/"

II

-J

·I

.

S

OUR

Toledo
still tied
for lead·

ble national crimes.
- · Tsakos was suspected of
running an antique-smuggling operation based in France. The
anliques were smuggled from
border posts and even from the
Athens airport with t)le aid of a :
Greek Civil Av'1tion Service em- ·
ployee. The network was also
suspected of smuggling Illegal
immigr;mts from Italy and Bulgaria to the United States.
- The Greek army investigated
Tsakos when he tried to sell tank
parts to Greece in 1973. More
recently, the Greek defense ministry launched a major Investigation
of a Tsakos-related tank deal,
which I wrote about.
- Greek governmental reports
confirm Tsakos' earlier crlmlnai
record and describe him as someone who "would do an'ythlng for
money. "
- The Greek files state thai
Tsakos was denied a passport In
1949 because he had been an army
deserter. he later obtained a special
diplomatic passport .

I

I•

punter Steve Cox, who handles
kickoffs and long-distance field-goal
attempts .

When added to Hill's 29 completions In 49 attempts for 328yards ahd
three touchdowns it was more than
enough tor The Citadel to Improve
Its record to 4-3 overaU and 2-11n tbe
Southern Conference.
Marshall, also 4-3 overall,
dropped to 1-2 in conference play.
"We need to play flawless football

William A. Rusher
Paradoxically, I he analysis,probably even explains why Mr.
Reagan, in the first debate in
Louisville, elected to distress his
own core constituency by defending
his record on such welfare programs as food stamps and AFDC.
Everybody In Amertca who is or
hopes to be a productive, prosperous, taxpaying citizen is already on
his side: The only· constituencies
where he can reasonably hope to

CINCINNATl (AP) - With the
Intrastate rival Cincinnati Bengals
and Cleveland Browns doing their
worst to a void crossing the goal line,
kicker Jim Breech figured hiS 10e
would make the difference.
"It seemed things were going
back-and-forth, and both defenses
were playing well," Breech said.
"Whensomehodywouldgetcloseto
the goal line, things got really
tough."
·
Breech rescued the Bengalsfrom
a tough spot Sunday wllh four field
_goals, th~ last one a 33-yarder as
time expired for a 12-9 victory over
the AFC Central Division rival
Browns. The victory was only
Ci!ICinnati's second, while Cleveland fell to 1-7.
A crowd of 50,667 braved heavy
rain lor the game. Some unfurled a
banner that read, "Welcome to the
MaUCombs
Hall of Shame Game," a reference
5-7, lin pound
to the teams' 1-6 records at the
Sophomore End
opening kickoff.
It wasn'ta dayforoffensivegems,
with both teams tossing away
touchdown opportunities through
· mistakes a nd halting play. But the
Brock, who Intercepted a Fodor cool, rainy autumn afternoon
pass ·and returned it 22 yards for a
proved just perfect fo r kickers.
touchdown said "we threw him
The first half ended 1n a 6-6 tie,
(Fodor) off balance a couple, of with Breech making good from 24·
and23yardswhileCieveland's Matt
times. The up linemen applied
Bahr connected from 50 yards. The
pressure and we were able to get to
tying kick came from Browns
him.''

passes.

/

NEW YORK (NEA) - The it) .
World Series is over, and Election
Not ali of the check recipients
Day Is two weeks away. It's time for vote Democratic, but the vast
Americans to decide how they are majority of lhe 20 percent In the
going to vote.
means-tested programs do, and the
The polls, with Impressive un- desperate effort of the Democrats
animity, suggest that President to scare every Social Securtty
Reagan Is far ahead of Walter pensioner Into their creel reveals
Mondale, and this "is unlikely to their basic strategy in all its cynical
change · dramatically no matter splendor.
how the "debates" are scored. Nor
Add to these millions of voters
are the reasons for Mr. Reagan's their Immediate families, plus the
lead all that mysterious: He has vast welfare bureaucracy that
strengt.hened the nation's defenses, administers the vartous handout
kept the peace, lost not a yard of programs 1and prospers In the
territory to communism anywhere, process), the OWJ\ers and embroken the ·back of Inflation, cut ployees of the myriad businesses
Interest rates in half, slashed our that have sprung up to feast
Income taxes, and stimulated the parasitically on big government,
economy so vigorously that the and those stubborn Democratic
unemployment rate is lower today sentimentalists still reliving the
than It was when ' he took office, Civil War or the Great Depression,
even though 5.5 miUion additional and It isn't hard to reach the 40
people have entered the work force. percent of voters that will probably
If the Democrats are sertous In be in Mondale's corner on Electlon
·
complaining about the federal Day.
budget deficit, the answer Is that
The same analysis explains
Ronald Reagan and his fellow various other mysteries - the
Republicans are a lot likelier to try famous "gender gap" for one, since
to do SO\Ilething about It durtng the women are disproportionately
next four years than Walter over-represented in the categories
Mondale and Tip O'Neill, whose receiving government aid.
party Invented deficit spending.
On the other side of the equation,
The real shocker Is that, accord- It explains what liberals regard as
Ing to the polls, somewhere around the unklndest and most tmrOing cut
40 percent of the electorate Is going of all: the evidence, in eve,.Y poll,
to vote for Mondale anyway. In that young voters are overwhelm!leaven's name, why?
Ingly for Reagan. Butwhatonearth
One must begin by remembertng would you expect?
one simple statistic: thanks to 50
Better educated than most of
years of liberalism, nearly three their elc!ers concerning the connecAmericans out of every 10 are tion between politics and econore&lt;:elvlng government checks . .A mies, they realize who iS going to be
good many of the checks are for
stuck with the bill for the party the
Social Security, but nearty two out . Democrats have been throwing for
of every 10 people are receiving their greedy constituencies. Undermoney under "mearis-tested" pro- standably, young Amertcans will
~ams (I.e.. just because they need
vote to close the bar.

Jim Wolfe
6-0,U pound
Junior Center

Page- 3

Field goals reign in 12-9 win

Citadel stops Marshall, 28-17

Uncomfortable embrace _______;,_J_a_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - CIA Director scheme to build a trans-Africa oil
- In the mld-1960s, Tsakos
William Casey has been caught in · pipeline. Casey has denied enders- represented the British governthe uncomfortable embrace of lng the project, though a CIA ment In Its effort to · sell nuclear
Bas il Tsakos, a Green arms spokesman said the agency .was power plants to Greece. Sources
promoter whose international deal- interested In the data because of its descrtbed Tsakos as a "bag man"
ings have attracted the interest of potentially strategic importance,
;o who was paid thousands of dollars
The pipeline would carry Saudi to Influence Greek officials to buy
intelligence services around the
world.
Arabian all across Africa, bypass- the Brttlsh reactors. Though TsaJ've seen a thick report on Tsakos ing the unstable Persian Gulf and lios was apparently Influencing the
from the files of Greek intelligence tra nsiting three central African
light people, the dea l fell thro)lgh
alleging that he had a criminal states - a route of questionable abruptly when a military junta
record in Greece and was suspected stability.
seized poer in A!hens in 1967.
of dubious International arms
Whether the plan was endorsed
- Tsakos is suspected of being
or not, the meetings with Casey
more than just a nuclear-plant
deals.
Sources say Greek intelligence gave Tsakos and his American
middleman for London. Greek
cooporates closely with the CIA, partner - an old Casey sidekick
intelligence, the KYP, suspects that
and at least some of the Information named Joe Rosenbaum - ' an
he was a part-time British spy.
is in CIA flies.
important name to drop as they "Tsakos is very closely associated
At the snap of a finger, Casey sought support for the pipeline at
with an agent of the British
could have obtained a report on the Penta go n and State Intelligence Service," a KYP reTsa kos . Either·he failed to check his Department
port states, adding: "Our reports
own flies or ignored what they
Casey. also put Rosenbaum in indicate he Is a collaborator of the
contained . . Casey also ignored touch with some former inteili- Brttlsh services."
warnings about Tsakos' criminal gence agents who might have been
- The Greek files show that
record. This says a lot about the interested in the project.
Tsakos represented several British
compelence and coherence of the
Here, meanwhile, is what my
firms, but he moved his military-.
nation's spy master.
associate Corky Johnson found out
sales operation to Switzerland
Tsakos came to Casey during the about Tsakos from Greek intelll- shortly after the Greek government
early days of the Reagan adminisl gence reports a nd other sources:
began investigating him for possi-

the Daily Sentinei-

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•

�Monday, October 22. 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Cardinals defeat Redskins
By Associated Press'
The St. Louts Cardinals, who have
had more faUure than .success In
recent years, deftnltely
to be
rever:sing ihe trend.
However, the jury ts still out on
their 6-foot ·6 kicker, Nell
O'Donoghue.
Before the season, the Cardinals
had lo6t ~ of 23 games to division
rivals Dallas and Washtngton since
1978, but they haw beaten both
teams In the last three weeks to pull
into a tie with the Cowboys and
Redsklns for the NFi. Ea8t lead,
each wlth .a 5-3 record.
Sunday's 26-24 victory over the
Redsldns saw theCardinalsoutgain
Washington 456 yards to 296, but In
part because of O'Donoghue's
missed extra point and missed field
goals of 34 and 40 yards, victory or
defeat rested on the accuracy of one
last kick In the final seconds.
In other NFL games, It was
Miami 44, New England 24;
Indianapolis F. Pittsburgh 16;
Chlcago44, TampaBay9; PhUadel·
ph!a24,NewYorkGlants10; Detroit
16, Minnesota 14; Denver 37, Buffalo
7; Clnclnnati12,Cleveland9; Seattle
30,GreenBay24; SanFranclsco34,
Houston 21; New York Jets 28,
Kansas City 7; Los Angeles Raiders
44, San Diego Chargers 37. and
Dallas 30, New Orleans 27 in
overtime.
Tonight, the Los Angeles Rams
are at Atlanta.
Dolphins 44, Patriots 24
Dan Marino threw four touchdown passes, giving him 24 for the
season and lea vtng him just 12 short
of the NFL record with eight games
left, to engineer a 552-yard offensive
by Miami at New England.
The Dolphins, the NFL' s only
unbeaten team at the season's
midway point, scored touchdowns
on seven of nine possessions. but
didn't cllnch thl' victory untll thl'
fourth quarter as Tony Eason kept
the ·Patriots In the game with three
TDpasses. ·
Bears 44, Buccaneers 9·
Jim McMahon pasSEd for 219
yards and three touchdowns and
Walter Payton rushed for a pair of
TDs to lead thl' Bears' routofTampa
Bay, giving them a two-game l!'ad in
the NFC Central.
Payton, who faUed in his attempt
to become the third runnl'r in NFL
history to top the century mark in a
record seven straight games, was
Umlted to 72 yardS on 20 carries, but
he scored touchdowns on runs of 3
and8yards . .
Colts 17, Steelers 16
The Steelers, who lead the AFC
Central by two games despite a
lackluster4-4 r'ecord, lost to Indianapolls on a play reminiscent of
Franco Harris' Immaculate Reception in the playoffs 12 years ago.
Ray Butler grabbed a deflected
pass on the run and completed a
54-yard touchdown on a third-and-24
play with 34 seconds remaining.
Quarterback Mike Pagel hurled a
pass that was almost picked off by
Pittsburgh's Sam Washington, who
bobbled the ball Into the air and Into
the hands of Butler at the Steelers'

seem

SENIOR LEADERS - Tonight the Eas&amp;em Hocking and Trimble to advance to the District meet.
Eagleltes varsity ·voDeybaU team travels . to • Shown are senior leaders of that championship team,
ChlUicothe to play the winner of the Lucasvtlle front, 1-r, Susan Bailey, Tara Guthrie, Lea Ann Gaul.
sectional, beginning at 6 p.m. at the Ohio KneeDng In baek are Beth Berldllmer, Lori Hudson,
and Krlstl Gaddis. The Ealletles are coached by ·
Unlverslty-Chllllcothe Branch. Eastem won the
sectional. title Saturday with wins over .Federal Coach Pam Douthitt.

Eaglettes eliminate Tomkittens
NELSONVILLE - Riding a
huge wave of momentum that
resulted from a fine second half of
the season, the Eastern Eaglettes
girls' volleyball team rolled over
the Trimble Tomkittl'ns h!'re at
Nelsonville-York High School Saturday a fternoon to claim the"Class
A" uppe r brac ket sectional
championship.
The win boosts Eastern to a 9-14
record and aliows them to advance
to the District Tournament tonight
at the Chlllicoth~OU bra nch at 6
p. m .
An excited Coach Pam Douthitt
praised her ·club for the a bility to
improve and com e back after slow
start early in the season, saying,
"The girls played the way t hey are
capable of playing. Everyone
played a great game today. "
In the first round Eastern rolled
over Federal Hocking in three sets,
losing the fi rst 10-15, then rebounding to claim the exciting fin ales 15-9
a nd 16-H.
Eastern showed its true championship form a nd ability to bounce
back from defeat as it lost both

opening games played Saturday.
In the second game, howevl'r,
EHS was out to prove its sincere
effort , brea]&lt;lng away late in the
game to score a handy 15-9 triumph.
The third bout, which probably
pushed Eastern over the bump on to
success, was ,a real barnburnl'r
highlighted by many long volleys
a nd great defensive plays by both
club. In this tilt Krist! Gaddis and
Margaret Horner provided great
front line play, securing ' a close
.
16-14 tie.
Gaddis led the winners with 14
serving points, Lesa Rucker had
nine, Lea Ann Gaul six, Krist! Hawk
tour, Horner three, and Tonya
Savoy two.
J ill Russ!'!I led FHwlth 14, Denise
Blrchwell had slx, Holly DeLeval
four. Kim Chapman six, and Lori
Sinnet! four.
Coach Douthitt praised her l'ntlre
team for great team play and
mo ve m e nt and commended
Horner and Gaddis for their
outstanding front line play.
KC Gals Lose
In the second match of the day

Trimble defeated Kyger Creek IS-5
and 15-13 to earn the right to play
Eastern In the championship game.
· Eastern won in three sets 10-15,
15-12, and 5-12.
With the stage set for the
championship set, the third game
was the rubber match In more than
one aspect. Trimble took an early
5-0 lead, but Eastern "bounced
back" to overtakE' the Tomkittens
and surge on to a clm;e vlctory 15-12.
"Everyone played well again ... It
wsa an entire team effort. (Krist! l
Gaddis played her best gam!' of the
year, "spiking." Lea Ann (Gaul )
had some great sets and Krist!
Hawk played real well on the front
line."
Lesa Rucker, the sleeper of the
day,' played consistently and Intensely In serving up nine points as did
teammate Lea Ann Gaul to lead
EHS scorers. Hornl'r added eight,
Hawk six, Gaddis four and Savoy
three.
·
Jan Downs had 11 for Trimble.
Julie Kuhn had nine, a'nd Michelle
Trainer had seven,

Pirate gals oust Tornadoettes
NELSONVILLE - The topseeded Southe rn Tornadoettes took
to the hardwood for the last time
this season Sa turday afternoon as
the North Ga llia Lady Pira tes
swl'pt away Southe rn' s chances to
regain the sectional title, claiming
the w in in three sets f\.15, 15-8, and
15-5.
Twice. during the regular season
North Gallia ha unted Southern with
two league defeats, knocking South·
ern out of sole possession for the

Haddix won't
acceptjo~

•
•
tn
mtnors

SOUTH VIENNA, Ohio tAP) Harvey Haddix says he's telling
Pittsburgh Pirates Gene ral Manager Harding "Pete" Peterson that
he will not accept the National
League club's offer to become a
minor league coach.
Haddix a nd two other Pirates'
·coaches have been demoted. The
59-year-old farmer from South
VIenna, Ohio, had served as
Pittsburgh's pitching coach for the
last five major league seasons.
"I'm too old to be tramping
around to different places and I
didn 't know exactly where it would
be. Plus, the money is not good,"
Haddix said.
However, he says he will consider
offers with another baseball franchise, provided the position will be
on the major league level.
Haddix also has served as a coach
for the Cleveland Indians, Cincinnati Reds, New York Mets and
· Boston Red Sox.

league championship,
Kyger Creek, however; spooked
the Pirates for a couple losses,
allowing Southern and North Gallla
to share league championship
honors.

·

·

Saturday there was no second
c hance for Southe rn. The Tornadoettes jumped out to an easy 7-1
lead in the first game behind the
serving of senior netter Karen
Hemsley and sophomore Rachel
Reiber.
Southern incr!'ased its lpad to 13-5
on serves by Tracie Hubbard and
Tammy Adkins. Hemsley, who
ended an outstanding volleyball
career at Southern, served the last
two points for the win.
Southern's victory laurels en.ded
with the final points of the first
game as North Gallla led from thl'

iWP? li

beginning In the second. Southe rn
could get no closer than two points
throughout the game. dropping the
tilt 15-8.
The pressure was now on as both
teams faced the fact that It could be
their last game of the S!'ason, but
utlllzlng thl' old adagl' "History
repeats Itself" to Its best advantage
North Gall Ia buckled . down for a
12-5 lead, that put the Tornadoettes
away 15-5.
Karen Hemsley led the SHS gals
with 10. Reiber and T. Adkins each
had five, Mandy Hill three, and
Tracie Hubbard and Lori Adams
fwo each.
Leading the winners were Angle
Aleksic, who had a great floor game
and front lien play with 14 points,
and Diane White who had an
outstanding day with nine.

.·.. ,~,,:4;;:Jabr

40.
Raiders 44, Chargers 37
Marc Wilson threw for 332 yards
and flvetouchdownsforLosAngeles
to outduel San • Diego's sharpshooting Dan Fou~.
.
The Raiders, 7-1 and tied with
Denver In the AFC West, had two

Chargers.
'
.
San Diego tight end Kellen
Winslow sutfered tom knee ligaments and will be lostfortheseason.

Broncos 37, Bills 7
John Elway fired two touchdown

passes for Denv!'r before being
sldeltned with a bruised sooulder In
the second quarter at Buffalo.
Gary Kubiak came In for Elway to
run 3 yards for one touchdown and
pass to Sammy Winder for another,
whUe the winless Eill)s didn't score
until halfway through the fourth
quarter on a 70-yard pass play from
Matt Kofler to Mitchell Brookins.
Seahawks 30, Packers 24
Dave Krieg riddled Green Bay for
310passlngyards, Including a pair of
touchdowns, but Seattle had to hold
off a late rally to hand the Packers
their seventh straight loss.
Cornerback Terry Jackson intercepted a Lynn Dickey paSs In the end
zone with 24 seconds left In the game
after the Packers moved to the
Seahawks 10 In the final seconds.
Jets 28, Chiefs 7
Pat Ryan hurled three touchdown
passes and Mark Gastineau recovered a fumble for a touchdown and
recorded two sacks as New York
mauled Kansas City.
Gastlnl'au's sacks represented
half the total by the Jets against Bill
Kenney, who was making his return
as a starter for the Chiefs after he
suffered a broken thumb.
Ryan completed 21 of31 passes for
the Jets, whO Improved their record
to 6-2, still two games behind Miami ·
In the AFC East
41lers 34, OUers 21
Joe Montana completed three
touchdown passes to lead San
E'ranclsco over winless Houston.
The 49ers, 7-1, led only 27-21 when
Ollers quarterback Warren Moon
hit Jamie Williams with a 29-yard
touchdown pass, but Montana ·c ame
back with a n 80-yard bomb to
Dwight Clark with five minutes left .
Eagles 24, Giants 10
Ron Jaworski threw three .touchdown !&gt;asses for Philadelphia.
including two in the decisive fourth
quarter to brea k up a tough
defensive battle with New York.
With the game tied 10-10, Glams
quarterback Phil Simms fumbled
while being sacked by Eagles
defensive end Greg Brown. Jerry
Robinson recovered on the 8 and on
third down, Jaworski hit Mel
Hoover for an 11-ya rd TO.
Jaworski clinched the gam e with
a 37-ya rd scoring pass to Tony
•Woodruff with a minute to go.
Uons 16, Vikings 14
Eddie Murray's three second-half
field goals, including a 41 -yard
game-winner with 49 seconds left,
and th~ running of BlUy Sims gave
Detroit a narrow triumph at
Minnesota. which lost for the fourth
straight week.
Cowboys 30, Saints 27
New Orll'ans rolled to a 27-6 lead
after three periods when Dallas
quarterback Gary Hogeboom went
to the sidelines with an injury. His
replacement, Danny White, guided
the Cowboys to a pair of fourthperiod touchdowns on a 3-yard run
by Tony Dorsett and 12-yard pass
from White to Mike Renfro. The
Cowboys tied to 27-27 when Jim
J effcoat flopped on a New Orleans

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He admits his demotion by the
Pirates could signal an end to his
41,year baseball career.
.f it might be," he said. "It'sklndof
sad in one way. I'd like to be in It in
the right sltua lion."
Haddix pitched for14seasonswlth
SI'Veral organizations, Including the
Pirates. Hlsbtgmomentcamewhen
he threw 12 perfect Innings against
MUwaukee only to lose in the 13th
Inning.
"I have no hard feelings (toward
the Pirates)," Haddix said of his
demotion, which came after Pitts·
burgh pitchers led the National
League in earned run averagE' In
1984. "I enjoyed ever blt of it. I just
thank them tor whatthey gave me."

CINCINNATliAPI-Thef'incln
nat! Reds said Friday they haVI'
hired New York Yankees eXt'l:utiVI'
Bill Bergesch a s their · gC&gt;n&lt;•ral
manager, .1o l'nabl&lt;' Reds prC&gt;sid&lt;'nt
BobHowsam to devot e mOI'e timPto
rebuilding the ballclub.
Bergesch. 57, has be&lt;'n thl'
Yankees' v!Cf' preside nt of bas&lt;:ball
operations the past five yC&gt;ars,
helping to direct IhE' team 'sscout ing
and minor-league d epartments and
sometimes handling the duties of
general mal)ager.
Howsam, who rcvlaced forme r
Reds prC&gt;sident Dir k Wagn&lt;'r m id·
way through the 1!!8:2 season , has
functioned as president and grnr ral.
m anager. But he told a nPws
conference Friday that the job was
too big for one person.
"Don't think I'm going to give up
m v. work," Howsam told neportr 1·s.
"This just gives m£' th.e cha nc&lt;' to
concentratP on certain areas. Thf'
workload is so heavy anyroorf', tha t

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DENISON PRAISES VENNARI - Serving as Master of
Ceremonies In the tribute to Coaeh Jim Vennarl at Rutland Elementary
School Saturday night was lonner Vennarl scout and lormer Helld
Foot~all coaehCarl Denison. Denison gave a: history of Rutland football
and paid tribute to ~ennarl as " friend Wld coaeh . .

·. lim Vennari honored

Veteran coach
re~ognized for
accomplishments
By SCOTI' WOLFE
The war bad be~n tough on
RUTLAND - "It's nol just ihe Rutland, however . by t'he time i946
wins and losses that you ml'asure a
rolled around, C.O . Cha pm an, who
· · coach by, but som ething far more · had b&lt;'&lt;'omr su perint endent by now
Important ... years down the road,
sa id, " Here Is a m an who Is looking
the fellowship and lhe lnfluenCf' on ' for a job and 'hp Is a wlnn£&gt;r.' His
the minds of men that he has name Is Jim Vennari." F'rom tha t
. coached," said Meigs coach CharliP timP on the rest bee amP hi slory, an
Chancey of wteran coac h and exhibit tha t p rod uced ope of thP
gentleman , Jim Ven·n arl.
most illustr ious football coaching
Based on thoSP words a lone, the carCPrs anywhere.
Me mbers of Vennari's first team
large turnout- of man• than 200
friends, stude nts, and for m er play- were . recognized, including Hal
. , ers spoke for its!'ll as all paid a
Dewhurst, Joe Bolin. Lowell Vance.
' sincere trlbutP to the former ~')ill Brown, Jim Snowden , Dave
Rutland High School grid coach and Grueser, Stubby Wells, Paul Pathis many accomplishme nt s here terson, Leon McKnight. Mickey
Saturday I'VPnlng at RuUand ele- Williams, Carl Moms , Gen!' Rupe,
Ca roll Snowden, J ack Ha rrison,
. mf'ntary school.
Vennarl, on!' of Ohio's most Bob Nelson, Bill Wilford, Bob
successful and respected grid Denison and Bruce Davis.
In closi ng Denison noted, "In 1950
coaches , achiPved what le w
Jim
was the Ohio academic Coach
coaches could Pver drraam about .
th&lt;'
Yl'ar. Then• is no question
of
His many accomplishments In ·
tha t J im was Rutland's most
clud&lt;' claiming th£' Southeastern
Ohio Buckeye League I SEOBL 1 outstanding coach. He was a
championship in 1948, 1949, 1950, motivator, fundamentalisl , perfec·
tlonlst,'and was dedica ted ."
1956, 1957, 1956, and 1961. Rutland
Vlnaliy VPnnarl was glwn his
was runners-up In 195.1 and 1960 and
c hanc·e to speak after receiving a
was MOVC champion in 196.1.
Vennari SPf'nt one season a l livP·minutf' tong standing ovation .
" Th&lt;lllk you!" said Co~c h V&lt;&gt;n ·
Ch&lt;'sapeake, hl'tween c hampion ·
· nari, :·1 don't know how anyonPcan
ship se~ns at Rutland . I
In 1950 Coach Vennali was Pxpr!'ss the feeling of being in this
position . I rea lly a ppreciate this . It
named "Coach of the Year" and in
will
bP a day I'll never forge I!
1957 was named as a coa&lt;· h of thr
"Ma
ny memories come 1o mlnd
South All-Star tea m which won 26-0.
...
all
thr work that made th is
Coach VPnnari has also lwn a
wondrrtul
thing possible tonight. I
b&lt;lsf'ball scout with lh&lt;' Cincinnati
think
maybe
this whoiP thing shou ld
RPdS .
bP
I'PV&lt;'I'Sed
...
this sho uld bP put on
After a fine mr al provided a nd
sponsored by the Rutland Fin• for you, you the ball players mad&lt;'
Df'partment, Charlie Barrett mad&lt;' thi s possible. This is on£' of the
.p he ' inlmduc ttons. Among thoS&lt;• h'-lppiPst daYs [ haVPf"VPr had in my
pr!'s&lt;&gt;nt wer&lt;' coaches .John Dud· Pntln.l lifr .
·T vf' had many ~ r ea t timPs,
ding, CharllP Cha ncf'y. Darrell
many
great ballclubs, ma ny gl'l'at
Dugan and Alston Wright.
pl
ay&lt;'rs;
l&gt;ul tn he gr m t you must
In rPferf'nce to Coac h Chancey's
pay
a
great
price .. . nol only in
opt&gt;nlng s tate ments, hP conlinu.ed .
athlPtics
bu·
t
also
in life . After a ll
"Things Ilk&lt;' this lthosP in attend·
wr•'rfl
ull
coachC's
in lifP and w e
anw. thl' fellowship! are a testlm·
must
ha
vr
som•~
kind of gamP
ony to him . HI' had disc iplinf' out of
rPS!X'&lt;'I· That respec t speaks lot for plan."
As a li liste ned attPntivrly , VP·
a type of man tha t hP is. Ther!' has
IK'V&lt;'r beet\ a mst&gt;, whPn he wasn't a narri continued , "Et~rh m an has a
gn•atN potenlialthan he rea lizes. It
true gf'ntl!'man ."
Nf'xt. Carl J:l&lt;onlson, a scout for Is up to us to teach him om• way or
Vrnnarl for 1:1 smsons and a form&lt;'r a nothPr. You g!'l out of a young man
teachPr and hPad coach at Rutland, what you f'XpPC t fmm him. NPver
do for a yo ung man what he can d n
was Introduced as emcee.
Denison gaw an lnt!'restlng for himself ... that can destroy
history of Rutland football slnCP Its him .''
In his closing statements Coach
~:JE&gt;glnnlng baf'k In Ill22 und&lt;'r Coach
Vennarl
said, "Before a young man
C.O. Chapm a n. Rutland football got
of.f to a good start as it won three of ra n rPspect anyone, h&lt;' must
ttve games Its firs t season of play. a rPspecl hlmS('lf. That res)l('('t s tarts
tl·adition that coaf'h Vennarl would In his home surroundings. With tha t
hP m n b&lt;• SUCCPssful. ThP boys who
build upon and &lt;'ontlnuP.
In its second season Rut liiDd had played ball a t Rulland ... well , a lot
trouble with Gallipolis, which had ol thr m have had good jobs. T hey
the likes of two grPat running backs know it's hard to llv£&gt; a nd b&lt;.•
In Art Phillips and .I. E. "Red" succ&lt;•ssfut without payin g thP pricP
Halliday , both of whic h w&lt;'nt to Ohio to d o th!' job. That 's one thing1 I' ve
Wesl!'yan and hc•Ip&lt;•d dPfPat Michi - a lways tried to get across .. .'
In final activities Charlie Barn'lt
g&lt;ln in the dedkatlon of its new
11Xl,101 capacity stadit~m. thf' score pra ls&lt;&gt;d the Rolland Fit'!' dE'part 7-0, Df'nlson WPnt on to tell of m a ny m e nt and a ll associated personnel
great athl!'t&lt;'S who played for for the suca&gt;ss of the banquet.
Rutland and many opponents who . ThHaptaln of the l!l49champlonat so went on to achieve fame at t h!' s hlp tm m, Bill Brown presented
collt'ge levC'I, a !ImP that was Coach VPnnarl with a plaquP to
setting the stage for eoac h Venna- commC&gt;morate his success as a
('Qach and gentlem a n at Rutland
, rl's r&lt;'lgn .
High SchOOL··

Yet1USnational 200 cigarette canon count name

'Based on suggested rotai price

br~ .

-!
FilTER:15 mg. 'tar", 1.1 mg. nicotine ... pel c~81otto by FTC molhod.

St · l .oulsCard!nalsorganlLa tion and
with the Kansas City Athletics a nd
thP New. York MPIS.
Bergesch said he e njoyed his work
wit h the Yankees, but was looking
for thl• . type of challenge that
Howsam offPred .
" I want todosom&lt;'t hinglnvolving
all fa('Pis of basebaU ," Ekorg&lt;'sch

Si:l id . .. 1 lov4' lht• YJ nkfot '.'\, C f'fwgP
StPin br&lt;·nnt •J' tt'Pal ud nw vt•J y wt•ll ,
but whm Flub Howsa m ult&lt; ·r"'l m r·
lhP ehanct• to join thP or ga niza tion

and to h&lt;•ip g&lt;•l if startf'd again, I
jum p&lt;&lt;! a t it. T his joh b tlu · oni1
thing I lookf'd at sPrlo usly a nd had
an intf'l'l 'SI in."
in 1'*"1 , th&lt;' R&lt;&lt;l' lini sill&lt;l lifth in
thP National Lt•ag:ut • W('~t &lt;-t tl r• 1
fini shln ~

.last

thP

1-JI't 'Viou ~

twu

sPa5ons.

LAKEBUENAVISTA,F'Ia.IAPI
- Larry Nelson, baltllng a pro
tracted and deppenlng slump,
admitt ed that he had thought h&lt;'
may never win again .
" You never know when it's thP
last one. Yes, I guPSs you could say
I'd thought I might not win again,"
Nelson said.
Those thought s were erased and
the slump ended whPn h!' held off a
challenging Hub&lt;.' rl Green ov&lt;'r thP
wildly~JTatlc finishing holPs a nd
scored a one-stroke vtctory Sunday
in the Wa lt Disn&lt;'y World ·Golf
Classic.
"When you win the last tourna ·
ment you'r!' going to play for the
season, thatmakes it a much he ti Pr

h a ll l'iuh should lx· built · primarily
th rough its larm syStPm . Bergesch
said F'riday hf' is not yl't familiar
with thP Reds ' piayr&gt;r ta lent . and his
ti rstt ask will txoto i&lt;'a rn morPabout
t h&lt;:il UJ'('U .

Howsam said h&lt;· rt•ali:wd dur ing
thf' l-&gt;f 'tt ~un thtJ t ht· had tfXJ many

du ti&lt;'&gt;o and that hr wanll&lt;l to spend
l&lt;·&gt;S t im r dolng pap&lt;••wm ·kandmore
tinw " ·orking wit h thP piayPrs and
J Jla yt&gt;r-M an&lt;J gf•r Pf'IP RoSfl.

Although thl• y a nk('('S in l'!'t'Pnl
yPars have built their tf'a m largrly
through. tht.• fn'&lt;· - a~wnr mu rkH ,
Rl: ·r gPsd l, lik1• ll ow ~-o am , hdl l'\'!'"&gt;

Tit&lt; · llitil.v St•ntln••l

&lt;I

~~i'li~~~jij~~iii~·

1 I s t•."i IH·Htift I
\ llid:.i m t uf .\ 1ultlnwdb. , hu·,
!'uilli ~ tit · rl t '\ 1' 1 \
tt ~ • •• u~JI V r ul ,• l

,,

l

&lt;lllt ' ln"uil . Mron o1 o.~ \
Ill f 'lt Utt S 1 , 1 I ttl '

llh lt• \'., lin l' tJ itlt l&gt; htn g f ,.mp.tm Mu l
t lll lt'Ci t,, Inc
l'" llll'lto\ Ohil.l 1,7ti!t, h .
~ ) lh "' t ;ll tllll r loJ!'&gt;!'&gt; pu')lol ~t · pitld ~1

1tft!

r ..\

l'&lt;~rt lt

Mo

1

n, t.,
lht ·

111 h n

t,rnt l j,,,, l\

,\:,;,!11 loJII·rl

l 't • ·l&gt;.~ i\:');o,l)t

l't t ·:. ~.

Ill

tuttl!ll .. nri tlw

\ n, t•tll ,, 11 '\ t · \.1 • pdpt· t l 'ullli!-. ht- 1 .~ A!&lt;. ..,, ,, ' ·' tt .,ll '\ .1 11, t nt~ I Arl\ ,., 11 11 lflf.! I&lt;I' IH P
"'' ' 111 , 11 1\ o• lll o.lll~l ,J 01 1\ J •V. /) p,;p(•l S . dl •l&gt; ,

711 'lt111d ,\ \ o·lllJ• ·
Y I d f.. j1 ~ 1} ";

" '" "

\'o1k .

~ ' '"'

l ' ( ,..,. I~~ \"&gt;' l' l I(
...,1·11d ,_,rid I, -:. .., 1 l l&gt;~lli-!t '!&gt;
(,, J'ho ll,,l h 'wtlll!ld 111 I ••l111 '-11 f' o

yPar, '1 said Nelson, whose last
previous victory had comf:l in thP
1983 U.S. Open.
"I 'm very excited about HR'l. " he

lllt 'l 01\

ll!ll &lt;o l'l?tl: t
~l U~4

~aid .

IUI''I' IOI\ IL \TES

( IIJo ·

U.\ ( ..I ITit- r i1r Mutu1' ltuult'
\\ t'l' h

~~

t lilt

1\l , llll l

:~A N l

HJ

~"1 7 :.!11

( 1111 ' o•,t l
S l~ ( .l.l·:

( OP\'

I'IOC t:s
Nelson acqui red hi s sPvPnlh
carl'er till&lt;' with a S!X'&lt;'ta cul ar 166
"l ulo-,1 I IIIo ·1 ... Il l ol l1 o·11 11 Ill!.! lo , j h l\ I I H· I dl
tota l. 2'2 shots undPr par. That' s the
t li 'l lllol\ 10'/lll l ltl &lt;1 fl\&lt;1 111 t ' dill'' I 111
grm tPst subpa r total ot thf' season
rtJt •i l, ll l\ "" ' llllndon . t l tll oJ l ~ tll11nl ll
h . i ~h I I o•1 111 \0, IJ1 1W • ~ I I +' I I d l I 1! •1 I ' d I' ll
and hrokco .l ack Nicklaus ' tourna·
ll1 1oil I l l
m r nt sco1'ing f'('('Ord ol 267 "'t in
... 11 ~11 11 ~1 llpll l lll ' II \ 11 1. 11 1 lll ' lllll ll+'rl In
1!!72.
1•• 1111.., \l !l +•il • h 'l llw o , , l lhl M'llli l ' li'J
Thl' vld ory was worth $72,101
, , I c~ll ,dllo ·
lrom the total purSP of $11Xl,10l and
M.lil :•,uli~~ l'i ltlhm :-o
Pnabled Nelson to compll'l&lt;' the
llll'&gt;ill+• llhlu
I I \\ l • o · ~:to ll "lh
season with $lf&gt;4,1iR9.
211 \\ t 'l ~ ..
$'.!!t 1:.!
Green said he a lso has his sigh ts
'i'! \\t'!'h '
.b;-.i'l :!-l
set on the 198.1 campaign .
.~l'i tll l
l I \\ ' ' ~ '
" I expect to play heller nPx t yPar
!h \\l · t · ~ ~
.b.! I :!II
".'!. \\1'1'1- ~
1ha n I have in a long lime- but I' m
J; ;-.•1 HH
not through ye t. I' V&lt;' got nPxt wpek
I I \I• U 11.1\ t " ' I II • J ll•&lt; l l lo •ll l., ,11 1 UUI
tl he Pensacola Open 1 to go,' •C r('('n
» &lt;'I\ I I,. d, .., j.. ,tl '11•! Jl'\h I ~ 1•&lt; 1 , . II IIU !J
:\1 ~ l · ·n d ,,, 11111 o l 11&lt;1,11
said .
He added a runn&lt;·r up finish to his
victory in the South!'1·n Op&lt;·n with a
1--------------'-- - - - -- -- - - - closing 68 a nd il 267 total.
Although he onet• tit&lt;! th•· hpnl ·
running Nelson with a two-shot
swin g on the 14th hoi&lt;·. Green satd
Nc•lson "was in coni rnl all thPway ."
Nrlson was not so surf'.
" Hui:l!'rt madt• it Pxciling," hl'
,aid . The r(• wf' n• twn·strokP swings
on three of four hol&lt;·s tx•ginning on
MJIGS COUNTY
thf' 14th, but Cn't•n 's thre&lt;• ·pUII
bOgey on 1he 1tit h prow'&lt;! 1o bP th&lt;'
decisivP factor.
Progressive-Ex perienced
It was thr&lt;'&lt;' strokPs ha ck to .Jay
Pa1rl Poll lit dl M D)· C dnl!!ildl~
Haas, Chip BPck a nd Brad Faxon,
OLII t Mu llr-n S8J Null n }fl(l A\lt- MICJOit:IJllrl
lied lor third a t 270. Haas had a
closing 68, Faxon ti9 and Br&lt;'k 7'2.
t

&lt;

Expetience 8. Ability

Don E. Mullen
Commissioner

VENNARI HONORED as he
addr&lt;,'!O;Cd llu· &lt;-rowd In attendance Satunlay t•venlng.

EleebieThe•·mal
so you can
cdlday
Electric Thermal Storage, ETS, stores
enough heat at night to heat your home for the
rest of the day. And because ETS stores heat,
it saves on your hearing bills all winter long.
Heating coils inside the ETS furnace heat
the special bricks throughout the night. The
bricks then store heat which the furnace draws
from at night, and the rest of the day.
You save because you heat with electricity at night, when the cost of electricity is less, under
special rates available to ETS customers. So you pay lower electric rates for heating. Aml for
all other electricity you use at night.
What's more, the same lower electric rates apply all weekend - for ETS heating and all
other electric uses .
ETS heats your water, too. And indiv;dual room heaters are available,- which let you l tlll l fort conrrol any room.
For complete information .about the energy-saving and money-saving advantages of Elt·,1nc
Thennal Storage, send us this coupon. It could be one of the best invesonents you ever tmkt.

.

'

r
I
I
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I
I

------ •

0

'

CLIPANDMAlL•------

Pleas&lt; send me funher information about the ETS program .

Please check your principal besting fuel:

0 Oil

0 LPGas

0 N arural Gas

0

EleLH 1u 1v

Name
Ad~~s ------------------------------------------------------

City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ slllte _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ ZiP·- - - - - - -- -

_________________
L

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

you n&lt;'f'd more p&lt;'llpll' to do it. "
Huwsa m sa id he will shan· dutil's
with Bl&gt;rgPsch, although thPy ha ·
Vf'n't pinnf'd down oow the work will
hP divided. Bl&gt;rgPsch said hi' will b&lt;.•
involved with pla yPr dPVPlopment ,
but that How sam will m ake the fina l
d('(·islon on movps,
Howsam said he d&lt;'&lt;'lded to add
fl&lt;&gt;rgpsch, a longtime friend , aft er
talking wi th hlm at the World Series.
Howsam and Bergesch were minor ·
IPague rtva ls in the 1950s when
Howsam opera too the Denver team
and Bprg!'Sch thPOmaha club in thP
Al111'1'll ·an Association .
.
13crgesch a lso has worked in th&lt;·

general manager

Nelson wins Disney classic

JOHN A. ·WADE, M.D., Inc.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Red~'

Bergesch named

fumbll' In the Saint end zone with but
touchdowns and two field goals In a
=1ef::.t::.;ln:::.:.;r~=u::Ia:.:tto::;n:.;;._ _...:..__
seven-minute span of the third ,...:2·.::53

~~~~ ~:rth~~art~~hs~ th:

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Telephon&lt;--------------Account Number - - - - - - - - - -Mail coupon to: Marketing/Customer Serviqs Dep:. • Ohio Power Company
30i-305 Cleveland Avenue, S.W. • P.O. Box 400 • Canton, Ohio 44701

· We gheitour 'best.

0810 POWER COMPANY

,

I
I
I
I
_.1
•J

�'

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

DAR chapter conductj meeting
A program on the lives of the
seven First' Ladies from Ohio was
given ,; by M rs. Seven Ronald
Reynolds a! a i ecent meeting of
Return Jonathan M eigs Chapter of
.the Daughters of the American
Revolution held at the home of Mrs.
,Vernon Weber, Rutland
Mrs. ~olds displayed a photograph of rach as she related
Interesting facts about their Jives.
Mrs. Robert Ashley, regent , presided atthemeettngwhichopenedin

ritualistic form. The national defense report was given by Mrs. G-.ne
Yost who talkect on hearings on
education begging being held across
the country. It was reported that
there are nine elementary schools
participating in the American
Hlst6ry Essay contest. A newspaper
drive is being continued by the
chapter. ·
seven ·members attended the
gra"e m arking for Mrs. Marton
Hayman at Long Bottom on a recent

The Daily Sentinel

I.C..,.oll......,ol,.W I~--• t

1 .... _ _
INII III ... ¥1111:1 1
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a Olv•w-v

.......

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Group 2 elects officers
New officers were el ected at the
Tuesday night meetlngofGroup2of
the Women' s Association, MWdleport Presbyterian Church, held at
the home of Mrs. Myron Miller.
Elected follomg the nominating
comnuttee report by Mrs. Morris,
chatrman. were Mrs. David Cwnlngs. chairman, M rs. Harley
Brow n. co chairman; Mrs. Miller,
treasurer; and Mrs. Dwight Wallace. secretary. Mrs. Paul Haptenstall had the prayer to open !he
m eeting and also conducted the
least com offeringusmganarticleon
peace and Lebonan.

Tentative plans were made for a
Thanksgiving dinner party at the
LaSalle Restaurant. Devotions
were given by Mrs. Miller who used
comments from " These Days"
devotional booklet. Mrs. Wallace
gave the lesson from the study book,
"Concerns." A report on the fall
Presbyterial was given by Mrs.
Haptpnstall.
Guests at the meeting were Mrs.
James Johnson, Mrs. Putman
Bragg, and Mrs. KariGrueser. Mrs.
Miller and Mrs. Morris, co-hostess.
served refreshments.

Meigs County bookmobile
Wolfe Birthday
announces weekly route
POMEROY - Bookmobile service m Meigs County is brought to
you by the M eigs County Public
Ltbrary under contract with the
Oh10 V alley Area Libraries.
Bookmobile sched ule for Monday, Oct 22 -Carpenter (Laura's
Store), 3: 10-3:40 p.m.; Dexter
(Chur ch ), 4: 10-4·40 p m ; Danville
(Churc h !, 5:20-5:50 p.m.; Rutland
(Civtc Center). 6-:J0-8 p.m
Tuesday, Oct. 23 - Portland
(Post Of!tcel. 2· 10-2:40 p.m.; Letart Falls (Effie's Restaurant) .
3:05-3:50 p.m.; Racine (Bank),

4:35-6:05 p.m.; Syracuse (Pool),
6: 20:,7: 50 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 24 - Chester
(Fire Station), 2: 15-2:45p.m .; K eno
(North side of Keno Bridge), 3-3:30
p.m ; Success Road (near 39060),
3:45-4:15 p .m.; Long Bottom (Post
Office), 4: 25-5: 10 p m .; Reedsville
(Reed's Store), 5:20-6: 20 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's), 7:207: 50p.m.; BaumAddltlon,S: l0-8:40
p.m.

-

J ......,.""'
I Oiu-oTtol,.,..

I

Returned home

Joshua Dwight, Jeremy Emerson IAlgan

Logans announce twin birth
Dwight E (Skip 1 and Barbara
Logan. Middletown, R.I. are an
nouncing t he birth of twin sons on
Sept. 22 at the Newport Hospital in
Newport. R.I.
Joshua Dwight weighed five
pounds, 11 ounces. a nd Jeremy
Emerson weighted fi ve pounds, SIX

ounces.
Matet nal grandmother is Mrs.
Milicent Balanger, Middletown,
R I , and the paternal grandparents
are Dwight and Kay Logan, Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy. Logan Is a
graduate of Pomeroy High School,
class of1969, and has two of her sons,
Shawn and Robert F .

Calendar
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT R egular
meeting Bethel 62, International
Order of Job's D aughters, 7 p m
Monday at the M asonic Temple.
l!litlatory work.
POMEROY - Oh Kan Com
club wW meet Monday, 8 p .m . at
the Diamond Saving and Loa n
Riverboa t Room. Socta l hour
with dealers will precede, and a
coin auction will follow.

•

TIJESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion AUJ(Ji !ary, both junior and senior
members, will meet a I 7 30 p m.
Tuesday at the post hom e. W.
Main St.. Pomeroy.
POMEROY - The ' Ladtes
Auxiliary of Veterans M em orial

H ospital will m eet at 7 pnn.
Tuesday at the hospital.
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 American Legion AuxilIary, junior and senior m embers
will meet Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.

Happenings
GJstume party
POMEROY - A community
costume party has been planned
by the Bashan Auxiliary of the
Bashan • Fire Department for
Oct. 30 from 7 to 8: 30 p.m.
Children of the commuillty, ages
one through 12, are Invited.
Those who would like to donate
candy, gum, or money for the
party are asked to contact Becky
Pullins, 949-2578; Stella Smith,
949-2452; or Mary Holter, 949-

2960

LONG BO'ITOM - Millard Ball
has been returned to his home from
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Cards
m ay be sent to him at Box 36, Long
Bottom, Ohio.

Attend meeting
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall, president
of the Middleport Women'sAssociation, Mrs. Jack Sorden, vice
president, and Mrs. Dwight Wallace
were in Wllkesvllle recently for an
ali-day meeting of the Presbyterial.

Hospitalized
POMEROY- Carol McLaughlin
or Pomeroy will undergo surgery
Tuesday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Omitted
Rodd Harrison, son of Mr. and
Mrs. PhliHarrl.son, has been named
to the 1984 Tri-Valley Conference all
league golf squad and was unintentionally omitted from an earlier
listing. A junior at Meigs High
School, Rodd has been named to the
all league squad for the past two
years.

Attends workshop
Frances Hewetson, Pomeroy, of
Fran's Ceramics, 113 Union Ave.,
attended an advanced workshop on
new designer coats for ceramics, a
new product of Duncan, held at
Athens Tuesday.

Eastern wins
A headline In Thursday's edition
of The DaDy Sentinel indicated that
the Southern Reserves had defeated
the Eastern Reserve football team

.... ,....

.. '~"'""'" h-·
··•-to•l
lffl•

On Sep tember 12 1984 rn
the Merqs Coun ty Pro'bate
Court Case No 2 4482 Gladys
Shreld s Box 30 I Rac rne Ohro
4577 1 was appornted Execulru~; o lthe estate of Ottre Anhur
Bos ton d eceased
late of
Founh Street
Racrne Ol;f
4577 1
Robert F Buck
Probate Clerk
BY Lena K Nesselroad
Clerk
110122 291111 5 3Jc

Public Notice
NOnCE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL UMITAnON
NOTICE rs hereby grven that
rn pursu ance of a Res olutron of
th e Board of Trustees of the
Townshrp of Orang e Oh •o
pa ssed on the 6 th day of
August 1984 there will be
submrtt ed to a vo te of the
people o f sard Ora nge Town
shrp at a General ELE CTION to
be held 1n th e Towns hrp of
Orange Ohro at the regular
pl aces of votrng t herern on
Tuesdav the S1xt h day ol

., .._.lmp..... -nl.

......"""'*""'""'nt
_...............
..
......

II
11-hgo·-·

I ..O.O..oi Ht - f

"
17 u, .........

'
Public Notice

Announcements

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL UMITAnON

MEIGS CO.
FARM BUREAU
ANNUAL MEEnNG
Tuesday Night
Oct. 23, 1984
7:11 P.M.
Adults-$3.00

Children-$1.00
Chester Grade School
Steak Dinner
Far Reservations

Call 992-2181

6CII
E . Maini.WAtU..I
POMEROY,O.

NOTI CE 1S h er ~; hy grven that
rn pursuance of a Reso lutron ol
the Coun crl of the Vrllage of
Pomeroy Ohro passed on the
16nd day of Ju ly 1984 there
w ill be subm•tted to a vo te of the
peopl e of sa •d Pomeroy Village
at a General ELEC TI ON to be
helrl rn the V tllaae of Porne•oy
Ohro at the regul ar places of
votmg t he rern on Tuesd ay the
srxth day of Novemhe r 1984
th e Qu es tr an of levytng tn
€)(Ce ss of the ten mrtll•mtt atron
for th e hen ef1t of Pomeroy
Vdl aqe f or the purpose ot
curr en t expe nses
Sard tax bern g an fld dr tro nal
tax of 4 0 mills to ru n for frve
years r~ t a rate not exceedrng
4 0 mrll 'i lor eac h on e dollar at
va lu;mon whr ch amounts to
$0 40 for .ear:h on fl hur:.dr ed
doll ars of val ualron lor frve
years
The Poll s fo r sa •d Elec tr on will
op en at 6 30 o cloc k AM and
rem arn open un111 7 30 o'cloc k
PM o f sard day
By orde r ol th e Board of
EIP.C t t OI~S
ol Me•ns Cu unty
Ohi O
Evelyn Cla rk
Cha rrman

992-2259
NEW LISTING - Hysell Run
- A 2 story home, 3
bedrooms, bath, famtly room,
1nsulated, Ia f o heat, part
basement, on approx acre lot
$1,300 down, 13\\% Interest.
30 years $271 46 per month
Total pnce $25,000 00
OWNER WILL FINANCE! Th1s 2
bedroom home 1n country w1th
full basement can be yoursat a
real bargatn 1Only $3,000 down
&amp; owner wil finance lor 15
years at 11 \\% With monthly
payments of $245 32 Total
pnce $24,000.00.
ARE YOU A DEER HUNTER?
Th1s vacant land con~sl!ng of
approx 77 acres ~ ideal for
hunters' 5-10 acres cleared,
balance wooded wtth walnut
oak beech, hickory. Mmeral
nghtsl Buy belore season ts
over.

Jan e M Frvmver
01rec tor
Da1ed October l

19 8 4

11018 15 22 2 9 4tc

Public Notice
NOnCE OF
ELECTION
Notu-:e •S herehy Q•ven that
pu rsuant !0 a rf!5Q IIIt ton
ndop ted by the Bo,Jrd of
EdrJcniiOn at the Me rr~ s l oca l
School Dr st rr ct
County of
M ergs Oh10 on the 31 c:t dny ol
July
19 84
there wrll be
submrn ed lo the. qualdred
electors ol silrd schoo l d •slrr cl
at the elect ron to b e hPid on 1he
6t h day of Novemb er 19 84 at
thP. renular places o l vo trn(l

54

Merchandise

HOME IN COUNTRY! A 3
bedroom 2 story house on
approx 2 acres, with lull
basemen~ other outbutldtng:;.
Plus 2 bedroom mobile rome!
15 mtnutes from Pomeroy.
Aslmg $27,000.00.
EASTERN DISIRICT - Th5 3
bedroom house wrth \! basemen~ has mce patio and large
2 acre lot Partially furn1shed at
the low pnce of $24,!XJO 00

J7t~ Wol""1

Upto11_,_
UPIO I I - ·

I

BY ORDER OF THE BOARD
OF ELECTIONS OF THE
COUNTY OF MEIGS OHIO
Jane M Frymyer
Orrec tor of Elect rons
Evelyn Cla rk
Charrman
11018 15 22 29 4Jc

m

MnonCo WY
Aou Cot!l o J04

IU - IIIIIi.........

1 11 - Po , . , . _,

..... c""~~~'~

-··

tii- CM11"
UJ - ~rtll""
U 1 - I.Ol.,tfol~

141 - "oclno
U2 - llui iO""

I M - Uon
IH -~Gt o ..

771 - Mo..,.,

,.,_..,.,,.
IH- l01on

IIJ - C-'"""
o ... t!l.. -..,...,
111... ,....,..,_

l*J

.....
"""
"""

Jane M Frvmyer
01 rec tor
Datnd Oqobcr 1 1 984

1101 8 15 22 29 41c

NOnCE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL UMITATION

C hC~r rma n

111. the- ancltllr on JIM car•nd no1c1
the hlzardl of hllhwlf ll1d """"
triYallnl. h 111J1 10 lhop wl1n JOU lh.l
\'

~ lit

TROMM
EXCAVATING

I Dig
Wotking
Fot You.

-GRAVEL HAULED

PH. 742-2328

10-5-1 mo.

Renr For Less"

Chester, Ohio

AUTO
RENTAL

II
I

St. Rt . 160 North I
Gallipolis, Ohio
7/1 1/ttn

I

All Makes

Call For Free Estimate

•Ranges

742-2167 or
742-2225

•Refrigerators
•Dryars •Freezers

PH.
or

PARTS and SERVICE
4

Announcements

Any aile or condition. Call

supplies. ·
Pick up and
delivery , Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creolt Rd
Call
614-446-0294 .
Reduce safe &amp; fest with
GoBooe Tablets &amp; E-Vop
'water pills' at Gillingham

Drug.

Gun shoot at Rac~ne Gun
Club OVB'Y Sunday. 1:00
p m Factory chocked guna
only

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
SALE: Hidden Antiquoi,
Monkey Run Rd., Pomeroy.
Ohio. Hours· Sun. 10·00-

992-.5682
992-7121

3:00. Mon. thru Thurs 8:0011 00
ATIENTION : New Stanley
Home Product dealer for this
area. Have a Stanley Party

3 u l!t

Stlc

Old Orlontol Rugo Wanted .

SWEEPER and awing mechine repa1r. part1, and

Also Traf!smission

•Washers •Dishwashers

and earn wonderful Christmas gifts Information call

CJ

z

a:

~
:z::

z

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Dependable Heanng Aid SerYtce

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

4

~1TIPI'It

SA VI ON rua IIU.
lNIULATI YOW ArriC 01 WHOLI;
HOUSI

-==.I
&amp;onoline Home ln1ulation Inc.

licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohto 45631

illllt -

lH I "' pd

1

...

- · Gille · llf-41J-7H4

rr.

446-2062

Adult male
388-8738

Roy Bickle

Phone

446-2062

Certified Chimney Sweep

10·8·1 mo

GUN -SHOOT

For all your wmng
need s; furnaces repair
servtce and Installation.

lashan luildint

Residential
&amp; Commercial

6:30 P.M.

Catl 742-3195
Or 992-5875

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'

Factory Choke

12 Gauge shotguns
Only

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd hke to Introduce you to

Free Estimates

Box, 326
Pomeroy. OH 45769
For faster Servtce
Call 614-992-6737

CHIMNEY KING
CHIMNEY SWEEP

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rac1De. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

chotce

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAI,IL
JUST CALU
992-3410

Authorized Jolm Deere,
New Holland. Bush Ho1
Farm Equipment
Dealer

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Guner Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of ell Types
Worked in home area
20 years

"Free Enimates"

EUGENE LONG

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

PH 949-3046
From 9 00 to 6:00

10 19 ~n

'Ia Beegle 8t '12 Rat Terrier
pupa. Calt 446-3252 or
256-1929.

Strawberry plants . dig your
own Call 614-742-2460.
-.:v

614 -446 -

6 puppies . 2 white, 3 brown,
8 weeks old , 304-6753532 .

Giveaway

Parts

&amp;

Service
I

J

tl r

d.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

•lENITH·
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Have A Full Time
Shop Technician
on Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985-3307
4 I

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes- Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu~t11.m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gara1es
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidtngs
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
or 992-2282

londey 3Jl.ll.-5p.m.
Tutdsoy &amp;:30 p.m-1 p.m.

PAT 'HILL FORD
992-2198

Middleport, Ohio

poodle

WED.,

lARIE " IMAU lOBI
PH. 991·1478 ·

Phone 915-9966
ar 915-3929

Wldnts!IIJ 3 p.Jll.-5 p.m.
TlluriNY 3 p.m.-5 p.m.

Fridoy I p. m.-~ p.m.
Slturday 10 e.m.-11:30 LJII.
lARGE ANIMAL AID
SUIIG£RY IY APPOINTMENT
10·18·1 1110

Fll. &amp; SAT.
7:30-10:00

-SEPTIC SYSTEIIS ,

9127/1 mo pd

1H£

KOUNTRY~ -

JLfl.
Golllmn

'KWB

.

..... 6JI40-S4odlrttt 61'

Jr . tour. pUttfng grHn.
hlnlng area. Chrt1tm11
glfto, traphill, ptaqu•.

JOHN TEAFORD
Eelt Melae
10112/1 mo

10.1,. I•t

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

SIDING CO.
"Beautiful. Custom
&amp;_uilt Garagas"
Call for free siding es' tlmates, !149-2801 or

949-2860
No Sundoy Coils
3 11 tic

Help Wanted

ble for p1ckup, hauled to
your drive, hauled, etacked
and covered~ Dependable

adult poroonet. Celt 992-

family room with wood
burner S1ngle car garage. on
8 flat acres with 1tocked
pond City water 1n Rac1ne.

7606 Tuesday thru Satur-

Call 614-949-2641 .

day.

992-7039

rs hrgher
6741

21

Four bedrooms. 1 end 'h
Baths In good condition.
- - - - - - ' - - - - --1 Water St . Racine C.. !
614-949-2196
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- House for sale in Dexter.
LISHING CO rec ommends
that you do busmess with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
ma1l until you have invest1·
gated the offermg

Close to Metgs Mrne No 1
School bus route , close to
store
In fair condition,
needs some decorating .

Auto Parts Dealership avarlable FUll or part ttme. Soltd
monthly rncome
92,996

6 rooms and bath , garage
Really n1ce Second Ave,M1ddleport Shown by apporntment Call 992 -5569

reqirod 1-800-336 -6014
Carry Out prime location ,
corner State At 7 and US
35, Kanauga, Ohto If tnterested. stop by 12-9 p m
any day I and J Carry Out.

tnc
Money to Loan
LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below market rates.
Fixed con v entio n al FHA VA Leader M ortgage .
Athens, collect 614 -592-

3051
LOANS: Borrow from the
privacy of your home or
off1ce, cred1t no problem .
For Information call 919-

227-6525

HELP
Local corporation now
accepting applicatrons for
several postttons tn Management , marketing and
delivery No experrence
WtU tratn Companv benef·
its

23

P1ano Tunmg and Repa rr
Btumcardt Mus1c Co . 446 ·
0687 Twenueth year of
quahty service Lane Da ·

mels, 614-742 -2951
HAIR No parnl No needle'
Approved depalator me
thod Remove s unwanted
ha1r pe r manently . Call

today-614-992 -6720

Mother cat a. 8 weeks old
kitten. good mouse catcher
1 Colt 446-7739 .
"h Beegle &amp; % Rat Terrier

pupa Celt 445-3252 or
256-1929
Strawberry plants, d1g your

own Calt614 -742-2460

8 weeks old, 304-6763532
Lost and Found

Found· Black female mi•ed
breed puppy white under

neck, paws. 2 mos
Vicinity of State St

old .
Call

446-1870

Financial

NEED EXTRA CASH? Tho
Wast Vtrginia Army National
Guard currently has vacan ctet for high school JUniOrs
and seniors who want a part
time job. Jotn the GYard.
anend drill one weekend a
month for pay. and complete
required Act1ve Duty Train ing during summer monti"'S.

Cell 304 -676 -3950 or 1800-642-3519
Wanted exper~enced single
needle factory sew1ng machine operatort Apply Riply
Sportswear. Rt . 56 E Ra-

venowood, W Va 26164.
Wanted piano player for
Elmwood Methodist

ChuiCh. 304-468 -1575

AucttonHr. Call 304-27630419.

Wanted To Buy

Wanted old pionoo, Povtng
UO.OO end $40.00 ooch .
Flrsh floor only. Write giving
direction•. Witten Plano•

toll f1'oo1 -800-653-8021

Galhpol1s Ferry.
farge rooms , 4
and sto rage bldg
washer - dryer

Auto Parts D ealersh1p avail able - Full or part t1me.Sohd
monthly rncome
$2,995

reqsrod 1-800 -336 -6014
Carry Out. prime location.
comer State Rt 7 and US
35 . Kanauga , Oh10 If mt er ested, stop by 12-9 p m
eny day . I and J Carry Out ,

Inc

22

Money to loan

HOME

LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below mark et rates
Ftxed conventtonal FHA VA Leader Mortgage .
Athens, collect 614 -592 -

3051
LOANS, Borrow from the
privacy of your home or
office , cred1t no problem
For mformat1on call 919 ·

227-6525

23

Four bedrooms , krtchen·
family room w1th f~reptace .
fm1shed basement , Po rnt
Pleasant
Shown by ap pomtment , 304-675 -3079

32

Mob tte Homes
for Sale
'

1977 Mobile Home 14X70,
3bdr. walk -1n closet m ce
carpet, CA. range &amp; refrr_ger
ator. redwood porch . under·
p1nn1ng, e" cond . price
reduced t o $9500
Call

388 -9767
1972 12x50 Freedom tra1ler
fully furn
exc co nd

$3,900 Call446 -7503
1972 12X50 Indo mob1le
home , total elec , atr. stove,

refrrg . washer. dryer, good
cond
Must be moved
$5000 or best offer Call

388 -9736
1978 Duke Crown Royal
mob1le 14X70 3bdr , on 82
X 166 corner lot m V1Uage of
Porter Call C &amp; S Bank
446 -0662 ext 23

1981 Kukwood mobile
home 1 4x 70. 3 bedrooms.
1 1h bath, electrrc heat and
wo od stove Call 614-843-

5244
L1berty. 2 bedroom remodeled bed and bath rooms.
Lrtton m1crowave and oven ,
ref. C.A. vmyl underpen-

nsng. 304 -575 -6280

Double w ide. Eckard Chapel
Road, Mason County. 5
acres 304 -675-4197
1972 l&lt;tngswood 12x65. 2
br lal'ge ltvmg roo m w1th bay
wmdows. gas heat Aaktng ·

Professional
Services

$5,500 304-895 -3655

Piano Tunmg and Repa1r
Brunicardi Mus1c Co , 4460687 Twentreth year of
quality servrce lane Do

nil! Ia. 614· 742-295 I
REMOvE UNWANTED

Tra1ler and Land for sole . ' 73
mobtle home 12x60, 3
bedroom 1 1h bath s. carpon
and porch w1th 2 rooms built
on. S16 .000 00 Broad Run
Road . 882-3266 anytime

Situations
Wanted

today-614-992 -6720
Have opening for elderly 1n

of the Stairs Beauty Salon,
Pomeroy.

522 .000
6522

12

Top

Rea I Eslate

Vacancy m my home for
elderly parson . Personal
care Call 992-6022 or

985-4416
Will do baby sitting 1n my
home, day or night, referen ces. behind school. 304-

675 -2784 .

16

Schools
Instruction

Karate - Private Lessons.
learn the ultrmate in sel f detente. American Karate

structor : Jerry Lowery 1984 inductee into Weigh -

tUfting Hall of Feme.

31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr

3 br brick
car garage
. stove, ref
Make an

oller 304 -675 -6851

!33

box 188 So•dio. Ohio
43946 . Phone 614-483- Studio oinco 1971 . 143
Burlington Rd , Jackson,
1606.
Ohio. 814-288 -3074. InOld Oriental rugt wanted .
Any 11ze or condition . Celt

Ran ch 5 rooms , beth, full :
basement, breeze way, double garage w1th atuo parta
store, rural water. pnced on
mspect1on , 9 miles below
Kaiser 304 -895 -3849

HAIR No peinl N o neadle l
Approved depalator m e·
thod. Removes unwanted
h81r perm.l!lnently
Call

my home. Call 773-5423 .
Auction every Friday night It
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week.
Conligmentt of new &amp; u•d
merchandiH alwaya welcomed. Richerd Reynold1,

Business
Opportunity

992-2441 after 5 00 p.m

tal vicinity Contains health
cards for seriously ill husband . Laeva in medbo" at

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

21

LISHING CO recommends
that you do busmess w1th
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mlul unt1l you have mvestr·
gated the offer~ng

372-2731 '

6365

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 Ml WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35 PHONE 614 -446 7274

Willing to Work

Director of Pharmacy, Jack ·
-son General Hospital. RI pley, W. Va has an opening
for a director of Pharmacy
The director IS retponllble
for both 1n patient and out
patient pahrmacy Oualifred
person should have hosptlal
experience Compat1ve sa lary and axcallent benefits
Call Personnel dtrector 304 -

By owner 3 bedroom, ~
bath, sewmg room , sunroom , l1vrng room with
frreplace . famdy room with
buck stove. cellar, k1tchen
w1th range and mtcrowave ...
large two car garage. Muat
see to apprec1ate Shown by
apporntment 304 - 676... ..

of the Sta1rs Beauty Sal on.
Pomeroy

I NOTI CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·

in Veterans MemOhel Hoapi-

378 Second St .. Pomoroy or
colt 992-2431 or 9922049.

Top

Enthus1asttc

Wanted . Someone to tear
down 2 story house m
Pomeroy for the lumber Call

3935

mont 304-6 75-7746 .

Professional
Services

Dependable

5pm 446 · 7441

A frame house, 1 5 acre ....
s 60 ,000 00 or trade for
equal value 304 · 895

3 bedroom house, 7 miles

You must be
Honest

810,000 00 Call614-7422423 after 4 00

from Holzer. no down pay -

sonnel Adminstrator . Wood ·

5500 . Woodland Centers 11
an equal opportunity ·
Aff.rmat1ve Act1on
employer

Call 216-394-

BuGiness
Opportunity

lend Centers, Inc.. 41 2
Vinton Pike. Gallipolis. Ohio

Application s accepted by
appointment only 1 Oam to

Part German ShephOfd 6
weeks old . Colt 614-3888869

8

Must sell 10 room houN on
47 foot frontage lot by Nov
20 The price will never be
~ lower $3760 00. Loan value

F;nancial

HOME

p1cked up at Betz Honda.

6

Mondays

and even1ngs till 7 :00.

Immediate openings for soctal workers to provide general outpatient therapy and
contultative aerv1ces as ne ~
cessary Master's degree in
clinical - psych iat ric social
work with at least one year
of a"perience in clinical
evaluation and pscythother·
apy preferred . Pan lime
clintcal assistant for relief
work 1n the lnpattent un1t
Mostly n ight th1fts with
some possible evening
work . For more tnformat1on
contact Juanita Atha. Per-

45631 o• phonel6141 446

3 bdr .~ basement, 2 cer
garage, large garden . fruit
treat, on 1 1.4 acres, cloae to

town Call 446-4217 .
FIREWOOD FOR SALE All - - - - - - - -tcseasoned herdwood availa - 8 vrs old, 3 bedrm . 2 baths,

22

Metal Honda crates. Can be

9

BISSELL

trimmed and removed,
eaves and gutters cleaned.
ttorm windows and heat
tape s installed, general
maintenance and hauling

Sell AVON make 45% Call
446-3368.

Call

1 -13· tfc

-SEW£1
-GAS liNES

Sat. &amp; Sun.

11

Outdoor mala kittens. str1pe
&amp; black, will deliver Call
388-9001 '

6 puppies, 2 white, 3 brown,

&amp; Private Parties
Skat• &amp; A« lSI Ill its
Public Skating

-WATER

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
3305 JACKSON AVE.
SMALL ANIMAL HOURS

Employment

6 rabbits Call 446-2310

SERVICE

SKATE-A-WAY
CHESTER. OHIO
Available far Iii n•ys

tO 8 tfn

THURS . EVE. 6-8

5260.

Baby Hamsters. Call after

Puppiee half Sheep Dog,
phone 304-675-3 136

II l ·tlt

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

OPEN EACH

Wanted to buy- beef hides
Call after 5 00 p m 843-

5pm. 446-4173.

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

traneplantlng, aeeding. aod-

ding. fertilizing, atone. bark. 1974 Por14 Avo 14X70.
sterilizing. FALL MAINTEM - total elec., 3 bdr. 11f2 btrth,
ANCE Shrubs and treea good cond Call 448-0176.

TO QUALIFY

26" color TV. 614-4467480

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

Middleport, Oh 614 -9923476.

Homes for Sale

Will cut end deliver fire- N1ce 2 bdr .. large lot, cloM
wood . Colt 256 -1528
to College Compuo. 608
Ridge Ave .. Rio Grondo, Oh
HOME OWNERS MAINTE- Priced to ..u. mid twenty&amp;.
NANCE All typos of lown Shown by appointment
work, mowing, trimming. only . Coil 614-682 -7424 .

REMO,VE UNWANTED

. Burgandy clutch billfold lost

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
CLINIC

Buying daily go14, s1lver
co1ns, r1ngs, Jewelry, 1tert1ng
ware, old coma, large currency. Top prices. Ed Bur·
katt Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave

Farm Equipment

843-5424
Ch1mney Cleaning

Call 446-7739

Adult male
388-8738 .

Or
Complete Dustless

Mother cat 8t B weeks old
kitten, good mouse catcher

4

SAT. NIGHT

Engage-A-Car. the modern way
to drtve the vehtcle ol your

10-19·1 mo

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

!Cl 6 rt c

New - Repair
Guttes • Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
Storm Doors '
Windows

949-2969--949-2263

weeks old. Cat! 614-3888889 .

Pupp1es half Sheep Dog,
phone 304-6,5-3136

EVERY

10/ 4/ tfc

Howard L Writesel
Roofing Co.

Part German Shephard 6

II...,;-,--....-W....RsH~~:Aili~i.tiEY...II'Sw't.;A:UT:..HO:lP:2A:Il.:RTSL___::9.:.:_·1:;3t~ln_J I 7480
25" color
g·

UTILITY BUILDINGS

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

poodle. Colt

' Metal Honda crates. Can be
prcked up at Bet:z Honda

1'

•co'm plete Chimney Cleaning
•certified Chimney Relining &amp; Repair
*Experienced and Insured

Call after

Outdoor male kittens , stnpe
&amp; black, will dehvo•. Colt
388-9001

l.llttG

73-80 Chevy Tr
D-50 Dodae Tr
Fenders.. ................. 170
Fenders .. .. .
62
81-84 Chevy
76-82 Chevene
fenders . .. .
110
Car Fenders .
60
S-10-S15 Chevy Tn
79-80 llustena
Fenders .......... ....... 80
Cor Fenders . .............. 60
73-79 Ford Tr
81-84 Escort-Cyn•
Fenders ................ .. 59
Fenders .................... 49
80-84 Ford Tr.
Omm-Honzon ~ dr. or
Fenders .. .
110
4 dr. Fenders .,..
. . 75
ford Aanaer
Chevy &amp;ford
Tr Fonder. . .
. ... 98
PU Bumpers ..... .. 69 95
72 -80 Dodce Tr
79-12 Chovelte Grtlls ... 38
Fenders.. ............... . 115
Ford Ranaor Gntls ........ . 75
Ford and Chevy Tail Gates

Chimney
Care

46789 a. ca ll 614-9927760.

31

Wanted to Do

wood. cupboards, cha1r1,
cheau , baskets, d1shes,
stone jars. antiques. gold
and silver . Write- M . D .
Miller, Rt 2. Pomeroy. Ohto

Ser v1cc s

6 rabbits. Call 446-2310.

r--;;-:::;,....,--;-----....!-::,-::,.....,--;-------rl

Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
'
You Were Going To Call .Us?

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE Bodo. iron.

Giveaway

Baby Hamsters

)f.;._..._'h..-~-;::·
fOil _ . IITIMATil •
/ ~ PIIONI POINT PLIAIANT. au4714K2.

8/ t 3/~n

2711

5pm 446-4173

·- ,.. . __

u. •m11

Cath paid for fancy iron or
heayy iron beds. *160 and
up for cena1n Me1g1 Co.
1tone jars
Old time cupboa•d catt 1- 304-882 -

Oebb1e Nrbert et 304-6756930

~=:~~!~~G~~! lSi

FREE HEARl NG TESTS WEDNESDAYS

•

toll 11'• 1-800-553-8021

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

985-3561

9/ 17/1 mo pd

3

GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

tu••·
448-3159, 3•d
Olivo St., Gollipolio. Oh.

Annuu 111. f:ntt: 111 s

Roger Hysell

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

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

Wanted to buy uaed coal Ill
wood Matera. Swain Furni-

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992·7201

The !los!'

AM
CONSTRUCTION

448-3872

'CONCRETE WORk
'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
"WATER . GAS II&gt;
OIL LINES

' Serv1ce that Towers Above

~

Bill Gentt Johnson

'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

Ph . 986-4289
II No AMwor, C.lt fi5-431Z
Wo Service Alt
Moltoo • Modoto
Anttnnl Installation
House Colts end Shop
S..Vict A.. ttobto

'

18

Wanted To Buy

We pay caeh for late model
clean uted cert .

"DOZER • IACKHOE
•RECLAMATION WORK
"OIL FIELD SERVICES

46353 Scout j:emp Rd.

U-SAVE

9

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

J,mf! M Frymyer
•
Drmctor
D;~t n(t Octot1n r 1 198 4

a, •liappl111ln , _ llame.,. JOU ._on

inarecentgame.EasternReserves
Now Accepting Listings tn Meigs Co.
won 20-12.
' L;.._...;.;;;.;;~:;;:::;,::.:.::.,;-~..;;.;.:::.;;.:;;.,;.;:..,.....a

'~We

Public Notice

COMMUNITY SHOPPIN&lt;r PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAVS THAN ONEI

Phone 742-3171

992-73 I 4

Public Notice

Real Estate General

Broker-Auctton Service
Cheryl Lemley.
Metgs County Associate

01

ll

SHOP LOCALLY
M. L. " Bud" McGHEE

V. C. YOUNG In
PomE&gt;roy, Ohia

NOTICE 1S hereby g 1ven that
•n pu rsuance of a Resolutr on of
---------~- 1' the ' Counr.rf of t h e V.tlage o f
Syrac use Ohro passed on the
NOTICE OF
2nd d ay of Aug ust 1 984 there
ELECTION ON
w11t be submrlted toavoteofthe
TAX LEVY IN
people of sard Syracuse V1 llaqe
EXCESS OF THE
at a Gene1 al ELEC TI ON to b e
TEN MILL
UMITAnON
held rn the V1llage of Syracuse
NOTI CE rs h ereby grven thot Oh ro at ttle regular p laces o f
1n pursuance o f a Reso lu!l on. of votrng thP.rem o n Tuesday 1he
the Board 'of Trllst ee~ of the SD&lt;l h day of November 1984
Township o f Chester Oh1 0
the questron of lewrng rn
pass ed on lhe 14th day of excess of the ten m rll lrmtatron
Augus t 198 4 there writ be lor th e benefrt of Syracuse
submmed ro a vote of the Vrllage lor th e pur pose o l
people of sa•d Chester Town - Cu rr ent h penses
shrp ot a General ELECTION to
Sa1 d tax berng a renewal of a
be held rn the Townshrp of l ax of 2 3 mrlls and an rncrease
Chester Oh•o at the regular ol 1 7 mtlls to const1tut e a lax o f
places of vo trng therern on 4 0 m rl ls to run f or hve vears at
Tuesday the srxt h day of a rate not e1&lt;ceedrng 4 0 m•lt s
Novembe r 1984 the questron for each one dol lar of valuatio n
ol levyrnq rn e)(cess of th e ten wh1Ch amoun ts t o SO 40 tony
mrl llrmr tatron for the benefrt o f cent s lor ea ch one hund red
d o ll ars at va lu alro n l or ft ve
Chester Townshrp for lhe pur
yeafs
p ose of provrd mg and marn tarn
mg lrre apparatu s appliances
The Poll s tor sa1d EIPC tton wrll
burl d rngs or srt es lheref or or open a1 6 30 o c lock AM anrf
sou rces of wat er supply and remarn open until 7 30 o clock
mater•als ther efor or the estab - PM oJ sard ct ay
By order of th e Boarct o f
frs hmen t and marntenance o f
frnes of frre alarm telegraph or Elec tr ons of M e1gs COt.mry
Ohro
th e paymen t of pe rm anent
part ·trm e or volunteer frremen
or frr e frghtrng companr es 10
Evelyn C l rt r~
opP.rate the same or to put ·
ChJ11rnar
c hase ambulance eQurpment
JanP. M Frymyer
o r to pr ovrde ambulance or
emerQency med•cal serv•ces Orrector
operated by a frr e departmenl Dated Octobe r 1 1984
or l rr e lrghtrng compa ny
Sard tax berng a renewa l o t 11 0!8 15 22 29 4tc
an ex1s trng tax o f 0 4 mrlls to
run for ftve yeats at a ra te not
'Public Notice
exceedrng 0 4 m rlls lo r each
one dollar of val uatrqn wh1ch
Nonce OF
amounts to SO 0 4 (lour ce nts)
ELECTION ON
fo r each one hundred dollars of
TAX LEVY IN
valuatron to r lrve yea rs
EXCESS OF THE
The Polls for sard J;lect• on wrl l
TEN MILL
open at 6 30 o clock AM and
. UMtTATION
rematn open untrl 7 30 a clock
NOTICE IS h erebv Qrvr.n that
PM o f sard day
1n pursuonce o f a Resolulron of
By order o f t he Board of
the Counc •l of th e Vr llage of
Electr ons of Mergs Coumy
Mrd dlepon. Ohro pnssed o n
Ohr o
the 13th day o f Au~u st 1984
Ev elyn Clark
the re will be submrned to a vo te
Chan man
of the peo ple o t sa rd Middlep ort
Jane M Frymyer
Vtll age at a Genernl t LECTI ON
Orrec10r to be hr.ld 1n the Vrltage of
Da ted Oct ober 1 1984
Mrd d leport Oh10 at thr. reg ular
places of vo trng thP.rt&gt;tn· o n
11018 t 5 22 29 4t c
Tu esday the s•xt h da y of
Novembr.r 1984 the ques t• on
o f IP.vyrng 1n nxcess of the te n
Public Notice
mr tl hmrtill ron lo r th e benef1t of
Mtddleport Vrllrtg e lor th e
Dllrnosf! of l'u rrP.nt ,expr.nsP.S
NOTICE OF
Sarrl t1111. hA• nn i1n ilddr tr o n al
ELECTION ON
ta)( of 50 mills 10 r11n for 5
TAX LEVY IN
vP.a r ~ il l il rat£&gt; not n ~~. r.f!crlrnq
EXCESS OF THE
50 rnlfls lor ~ar.h onr• dollar of
TEN MILL
val• tilt ton ~\ohr c:h dniOrrnts to
UMITADDN
lrftv CF.!nts lor P.flc h onn hundre d
NOTICE rs hereby grven that
doll;ns Dl vnluat•on tor f1ve
1n pursuance of a Resolut ion of yP.a rs
the Board o f Trustees of thf!
ThA Po\wnr sa trl Elrr tron w1ll
Councrf of t he Vrllage o f Rac1ne
op en ill 6 30 o c lock A M t~nd
Ohr o passed on the 24th d ay of
rP.manl npl'n un trl 7 30 oc lock
July
1984 there wrll be
P M of sa•rl ctav
su bm•tted to a vote o f the
.. By rJrrlnr rrf thP. 13nrurf o f
people of Sard Aacrne V1llage at
Eler: trnns ol M erqs Co 1m tv
a 6eneral ELECTION lobe held Oh• o
1n th e V•llage o f Aacr ne Ohro at
EvPiyn Cla rk
1he reg ular places o f vo trng

IUllOI

Addons and remode ling
- Rooft ng and g utter work
- Concrete work
- Pium bmg and etect uca l
work
!Free Est1ma1es)

992-621 S

permanent part -trm e or vo lun teer f rremen or fife frghtrng
compan1es to operate th e sa me
or to -. J)urchase ambulance
aqu rpm ent or to prov tde ambulance or emer gency medrcal
servrces operate d bv a frre
depart men t or frre lrghtmg
company
Sard tax bemg a renewal of a
part of a 1 7 mrll exrs trng levy
be •ng il reduct ron o f 1 0 mrU to
co nstrtute a'tax o f 07 mrll to ru n
tor frve years al a rat e not
exc eedma 0 7 mrlls for eac h
on e dollar ol val ualro n wh rch
amoun ts 10 SO 07 m1lls lor
each on e hundred d ollars o f
val u at 1on lor trve y ears
The Poll s tor sard Electron wr ll
open at 6 30 o'cloc;k AM and
remarn open untrl 7 30 o clock
PM of sard day
By o rder of the Board of
Etec1rons of M er g s County
Ohro
Evelyn Cla rk
Charrman

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Jrm Mink Chev -Oido Inc

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CALL
446-4522

. .1 - N_Ho,..,

Public Notice

therern on Tuesday the Sl)dh
day of November 1 984 the
Question of levy 1ng rn e)(cess ot
the ten mrll lrmnatron tor the
benef1t of Racrn e V1ll age for the
purpose of provrdmg and
marntarn1ng f1 re apparatus ap
phances bUIIdrngs or srtes
therefor or sources at water
supply and materrals therelor.
or the establr shment and marn lenance of lmes o f hre alarm
telegraph or the payment of

REALTORS
Henry E. Clelend, Jr
GAl 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

• ... c......

Up to II Wordo llo ••v _ . ,.
lolo•triJI4 WOIOI
nt)

there• n the ques tron ol ISSurng
bonds of sard board of educa
t1on rn lhe sum of S300 000
for the pu rpose o t rmprov e
ment s renovatt ons and addr·
t•ons to school facrlttres and
prov1d1nq equ rpmen t furn tshrngs and srt e rmpr ove ments
an d o f levy•ng a tax to pay the
pnncrpa l and 1nteres t of sa •d
bonds outs1de ol the ten mtll
co nst rllJtronal tax l•mll al ron rm
posed by Sec t1 0n 2 of Art1 c le
XII Ohro Cons trtut1 on
The maxrmum number of
ye ar s durmg vvhtch lhe bon ds
wrll ru n tS srx (6 ) vea rs .; nd t he
es lrmated averag e ad d1 1ronal
tax roule out s• d e of th e ten·m1ll
lrmrtatron to p ay the rnte rest
thereon and to ret1 re the sa me
as cert tfted hy !he co unty
audr tor wrll 11e seve nty frve
hundrerltns ( 75) rnrl ts pe r
dollnr ($2 QQ) o f tax valua tron
whrch amount s to seven and
one half (SO 07 5) cents f01
each onP. h u ndred dollars
IS 100 00) of taK vatuatron
The pol ls vvtlf be open fr om
6 30 a m to 7 30 p m on sard
dme

Evelyn Clark
Cha rrman

! 10! 8 15 22 29 4tc

"' "

211- 0-Di«
IIJ - An"• Dirt

Public Notice

Public Notice

Jane M Frvmyer
Drrector
Dated October 1 1984

-~.

z•- ll ~oOt"'d'

''"•••O•olo
n lo ..t&amp;fortiliuo

November 1984 th e Quest ron
of levytng rr excess of the ten
mrll hm•tatr on for the benefrt of
Orang e Townsh rp for the pur
pose of Provrdrng and mamtalll·
rng frre appa ratus appliances
bu rldings or srtes therefor or
so urces of water supply anrl
m"atenal s therefor or th e establr shment and marntena nce of
lrn es of f•r e alarm telegraph ~r
t he payment of pe rmanent
pan -trrn e or vo lun teer hreman
or ftre frghtrn g co mpantes to
operate the sa me o r to pur·
c hase ambu lance eq utpment or
to provr de am bulance or emergency medrcat serv•ces operated by a trre departm ent or lrr e
fr gh tr ng company
Sard tax berng a rene wal of
an ex•st•ng tax of 0 8 mills to
run lor lrve years at a rate not
exceedrnQ 0 8 mills fo r eac h
one dol lar of valuatron whrc h
amoun ts to ergh t ce nt ~ for each
one hundred dollars o f valua
Iro n for ft ve year s
The Polls lor sard Elect ro n wrll
open at 6 30 o clock AM and
rem arn open untrl 7 30 oclock
P M of sar d doy
By ord er of the Bo ard of
Elec tr on s of Mergs County
Ohro

...

c..... ..,

311- 11•"'"

I'PW- dlo llt.•t
41 h~ll&gt;..,.ftl fOr "- ~•

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF OTnE ARTHUR
BOSTON. DECEASED
C- No. 24482 Docket 12
Page438
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

o-Il~

ll tHc,HI1 4

317-c....... .

.. .... u ...

,

Public Notice

A
~

nc......,,l,....,_...

n~•­

U "'-""""'''" lloon

17 111 1.,..11noo..,

"""••oo•••

11
' ""''
u ..,
..... ,...••_...,
,..,.

~,

ft~l /t&gt;U lrllf 11•l••plu111 t t•.r• hrut lif'" ·

71
•""' '"''"'
77 .....
~

-

~~

u.--,..

•tll •...... w...•M

Edward Mcintosh has returned to
his.hom e in Floral City, Fla. after
spending three weeks here with his
sister, Harrlen Spencer, during her
recent hospitalization.

The birthday of Carl Jennings was
celebrated with a dinner at the home
of Harriett Spencer recently. Present for the observance were Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Jennings, Mrs. Hazel
Clark, and Mrs Spencer

?zt..oc~,...,lolo

11 11....... 0

, ..,,,...v_,_,

.,41M...........Homnl,.
... """'

Back home

Birthday observed

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

",.,.

..

Ul.olo&amp;""'-.•

Brandon Scott Wolfe

The lhtrd bJrthday of Brandon
Scott Wolfe, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Denms Wolfe. was observed With a
party at the Burger Chef.
Games were played With priZes
goiqg toBobby Writesel, Todd Mttch
and the honored guest. A H e Ma n
cake was served with ice cream and
frwtdrmk
OtHers attendmgwe" ' Pa t, Dmsy
and Mike P anerson, Sandy, Amiee,
Scott and Shawn Mitch, Darlene and
Jenme Newell, Rick , Camelle and
Mitchel Walker , Betty and Jason
Writesel, Dorot hy Greathouse, Debbie Pickens. and H allie Cross.

lt.llllll&lt; M• I~PCIIU

lt.llellloNI ...
17 Nwolc .. ,.,. .,._..u

l l l l. . l tloltWo•lt&lt;t

11 liolpW"!!Iool

3

• • ~.... ~GMi·

UC:III TYIII ..•f:clul_ft,
' lllilnll'!•n

Sl fl-nloot.ro
l i M " * - • I•Iole
, .. , ...... k&gt;r .....
u._,, ...,.~

IW-Mt• l ...,

I IW.,,. t!llo Do

11·-·-...~""·
u-.,.,,.~GM
IS ,.....tloMI .... Iou

RENT' A CAR

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Clnmfu•tl pnJirtrl Nltl'r t ho•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Buslness Services

PI:IOWE
992·2156
0r
Dllnr
Clfslihtd DeJt

11A111Htolleltl

u a..UI..,a..,;u..

l' l".•,"
...ll&gt;lk
.- ..........

Old-fashioned wood choppin-'
Point Pleasant; Dale, Joy, Sherrie
and David Roush, St. Albans,
W.Va.; Garnet and Eph Herdman,
Rachel and Jared Matheny, Leon,
W .Va.
They were joined by VIrgil and
Gerry Parsons, David and Jeannie
Lipscomb and sons, Shawn and
Travis, Kim Eblin and VIcki, Lois
and D.J. Jenkins and J.D., Christl
Smith, Ken and Lisa Roush and
sons, Jason and Justin, Lanny and
Becky Tyree, Lanny Jr. and
Spanky, Mr. and Mr s. Henry Cade
and Pam, and Char les Cade, all
local.

22. 1984

YOlJNG'S

lllloclio TVICI-... o ~

prepare for the cold weather ahead
wer e M r. and M rs. BIU Hudson,
Jacksonville, N.C.; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenny Six, Plnebank, Pa.; Mary
Rose Roush, B1acksv llle, W .Va.;
Mrs. Dor a Batley, Portland, Mich.;
Mrs Mildr ed Mead, Mrs. Roy
Miller. and M rs. Penny Eubanks,
Columbus
Larry and Judy Flowers, Pickerington; Dave and Reathe Kwiachow ski and Paula, Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Johnson, Kelly and Stacy
Parsons, Grand Rapids; Roger
Roush, Dodger and Susie, Grove
Ctty; Ralph a nd Barbata Miller,

Monday, October

Writ•
Stnllft~
111 eoun St.. ,.,....,,Otlio 457&amp;9

Sunday. Several applications for
membership were read, and it was
decided-to make a memorial book of
Items trvm the late Mrs. Clara
Lochary. Mrs. Clyde Ingels gave a
report on her work with the Docent
program. A card was signed for
Miss LucWe Smith who Is Ul.
Reireshments were served by
Mrs. Weber, and co-hostesses , Mrs.
VIrgil Atkins, Mrs. Cecil Blackwood, Mrs. Stephen Jenkins, and
Mrs. Dayton Parsons.

llklo-11

They came at daybreak with
chain saws, spllners. a nd axes to the
Roush farm on Bailey Run Fann
and before the evening su nset had
enough wood cut and stack ed lo fuel
A lbert and Valesla Roush's fireplace for the winter.
fhe m en cut and split, the wom en
anb children loaded and unloaded
the pickup truck and helped m the
kitchen to prepa re the cornbread
and bea_ns, vegetable soup, and
desserts to feed the 58 relatives and
friends there for the old-fa shioned
wood-choppin'.
Coming in to help the Roushes

Monday. October 22. 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

house, pool, AC ,

fireplacet . Pt Pleaant. ule

Farms fot Sale

By owner 4 11: acres with 32
X 88 Horsebarn 2yrs old .

Call 614 -286 -

200 acre farm for sale W1ll
subdiVIde Rutland Town·

sh1p Call 614 -373-0456
212 acre farm on Parker Run
Rd Must sell, mov1ng to
Arizona . Terms negotiable,
will carry on land contract.
mineral rights included . Call

742-2852

or rent. Cell 675 -6104 .
600 block of 2nd Ave . 2
bdr . e"c. cond ., b1g "back

yard. 837,600
2158 .

34

Business
Buildings

Colt 448 ·

3 bdr home for sale by
owner , located on At 160,

neor N.G.H S. U6,000 .
Call 614-388-8711 .
Root Cu.. Home! Tho toovoo
have fallen and to haa the

p•icol Mrddloport .. Call614992 -6941.

Have apartment houM for
tala tn Pomeroy . Good location. needs minor repeiri .

Call614-992-6022 or 114985-441t\ .
Commercial building and

tot

for lila in Gollipotio. Coli
614·446-7389. After 11:00
colt 614-992-3617.

�Monday, -October 22. 1984

Ohio
35

LoJs

8o

54

Acreage

Mise: Merchandise

water,

septic

$8 ,000 . Call
6618 .

KIT

'N' CARLYLI ®tl, LMTy Wright

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boording Ill breedo. Huted
Indoor-outdoor facilltlea .
AKC .Doberman pupplu:
Stud Service. Call814-448·
1'795.

lot fo r sale In Mercerville.
tra iler hookuPs. electric,
ra l

Pete for Sale

58

79

614-256
~lme1tone,

Building lot Neighborhood
Rd . 65x150. 85,000. Coli
446 -3844 after 7PM.

Sand, Gravel.

Delivered in MalOn, Meigs,
Galllo or pick up ot RIchor do
&amp; Son. Coli 446' 7785·.

0

0

p8r-

cent hardwood; aplit JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (~qual
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rant
starting at $163 for one
41 Houses for Rent bedroom
and $198 par
month for two bedroom.
with $200 deposit located
House for rent large, 3 bdr .• near Food land and Spring '
1 V:z bath. fireplace. fenced in Valley Plaza. pool and TV
yard. in -town, $ 300 per mo . ant . Call 446-2745 or leave
Call 614-388-8248.
message .

Rentals

5 rm, 2bdr home, ex. cond,

large Furnished apt . 919
deposit required . Call 446- 2nd. $175 utilities paid .
1370 after 5pm.

· Modern 4 bdr, 2 baths. FP,
. DR, basement &amp; garage.
: Mulberry Hts. $325 mo..
· dop . &amp;· ref. Call446-01 16.

Men only. Share bath. 4464416 alter 8 p.m.
1- - - - - - - - - -513 Thitd Ave. 1 bdr .. water
furnished. adults only. $135
. mo.. dep. required . Call
446-4222 between 9 &amp; 6.

2 bdr hou se 4 2 Chilicothe

Rd .. S2 10 mo ., $75 dap.
Call 446 -1340 or 446 ·
3870.

Completely furnished all
elect. 458 Second Ave ..
One 2BR Apt. $220 mo.,
adults only, security deposit,
References. Call 446-2236
or 446-25B1 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gollipolio . New
· &amp;. used wood -coalstovaa. 8
pc wood lR suite 8399,
bunk beds $199. antron
recliners $99. used bedroom
suites. ranges . wringer
Washers.&amp;: shoes. Call6144~6-3159 .

dalivared- stacked. 6 loads
for 8140. Call 446·0373.
30 gallon fish aquarium
complere, 1 97B 750 Kawasaki. 1973 Gremlin. 19 in .
Pan01onk: TV. Call 446·
3501 .
Great Christmas gift! Girls
10 speed bike, $80. Call
446-7911 .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE ·
Sofa. chair. rocker. ottoman, 3 tables. (extra heavy!.
8685. Sofa, chair and love- Moving Sale Gravely 40B
seat, $276 . Sofas and chairs lawn tractor with 34 in. rot.
priced from $2B5 . to $895. motor, 22 ft. Sears freezer,
Tables, $50ondupto8125 . Maytag washer, Maytag
Hido-a-bedo,$390. and up dryer. roll -a-way bed &amp;
to $550 .. solo beds $145, mattreoo. Call 448-71 82 .
Recliners, e2B5. to 8375 ., - - - - - - - -· lcLampo from 828 - to _8 125. Oak furniture. tables,chairs,
pc. dinettes from $1 09 .• to cupboards, pie safe, tele~
435. 7 pc. $189 ond up. phones. desk, also antiques
Wood tabla with six chairs and gla11ware. Open Sun ~
t2BS to $745. Delk f1 10 days. Conkel's Tuppers·
up to $225. Hutches, 8550. plains, Rt.7.
Bunk bed complete with
mattreues. $276. and up to Fresh brown eggs, Willow
$395 . Baby bods, 8110. Crook Rd. Cell 992-5416.
Mattresses or box springs.
full or twin, 868 ., firm, 888 . Nice Christmas gilt: Odysey
and 678 . Queen oeto, $195. game with 4 cartridges.
4 dr. · cheots, 842. 5 dr. 1125.00. Call between 8 :00
chests, $54._'(! Bad · .frames, and 11 :00. 992-3955 .
S20.and $26 ., 10 gun- Gun
cabinets, $360 . · Gas or 21 ft. X 16 .ft . insulated steel
electric ranges $375. Baby building. Call 742· 2225 .
mattresses. $26 8e $35. bad
frames 820, $25, &amp; 830, 30x30 rifle with ocope . . 1 2
king frame $60. Good selec- guage pump jun. 2 bar·
tion of bedroom suites, rels .22 pistol with b.olster.
rockers, metal cabinets. Iron bad . Call 514-!92·
·headboards S38 &amp; up to 6BB1 .
$65 .
Couch that makes into a
uSed Furniture •. head bod, $40 .00. Sot of lamps
boards. and 2 bedroom with c.i garette stand to
suites. 3 miles out Bulaville match, 850.00. Call 614Rd. Open 9am to 5pm, Mon . 992-588B . .
thru Sat.
614-446-0322
Firewood, $20.00 pick up
load . $30 .00 delivered .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 304 -675 - 2991 or 675 Washers. dryers. refrigera· 6762 .
tors. ranges. Skaggs Appliances , Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel .
55 Building Supplies
614-446 -7398 .

House for rant , Call · 446Downstairs. 2 rooms &amp;.
337 1.
bath. furnished. clean. no
6 rm . house location, Kyger pets, adults only. Oep&amp; Ref.
Creek Dist.. For rent large required . Call 446, 1519.
trailer lot. all utilities availa Unfurnished 2bdr., in Crown
ble . Ca11614 -367-7350 .
City. Call 256-6520 .
3 bdr. clea n house. city
school dist .• nice yard. reas· Clean downtown apt . w -d
e nable rent. Call446·0974. hookup, 3 very larga ·rooms .
Call after 4 , 446 -4672 .
Home on river lot in Che·
sh ire. 3 bdr. 2 baths, family Furnished efficiency, 7 %
room. stove. refrig.. dis· Neil. GallipoliS $150., utili·
hwasher. CH &amp; A . sec. dep. ties pd .. Call446-44 16 alter
&amp; refe~ences req uired. Call 8pm .
367-7567.
1 bdr . apt . between Gallipolis
&amp; Holzer. stove &amp; refrig.
Modern 1 •_bdr. downtown.
. complete kitchen , air, Call 446-2065.
car pet . Dep. required. Call - - - - - - - - - - '
· 446-4 383 days or 446- Furnished efficiency, 701 .
Fourth, Gallipolis. Share
0139 eve.
bath, 8150'. utilities pd. Call
446-4416
after 8pm .
4 bedroom colonial brick
house for rent or sale in
Pomeroy. Call1 -373 -0466 . Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
2 bedroom house in the Citilens . $130 . Equal Hous·
County Appliance, Inc .
country. Approx . 10 miles ing Opportunities . 614·
Good L,ased appliances and ·Building Materials
from Pomeroy. Call 992· 992-7721 .
TV sets . Open BAM to 6PM . Block, brick, sewer pipes.
7201 .
Apt . for rent in Syracuse .
Mon thru Sat . 446· 1699, windows , lintels , etc .
627 3rd . Ava. Gallipolis, Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
2 houses for rant end bar for Call 992· 76B6 .
OH .
· 0 . Call614· 245-5121.
sale or lease with option to
Laurel
land
apartments
in
buy. 304· 675 ·6720.
Now Haven ,now accepting
New Microwave convec - Build your own 4 bdr. home.
tion . colt $650- now $360. , 96,9,96 del. to your site.
Mobile home , S175 .00 , applacations for two bed·
$ 100.00 deposit. Now, fu r- room apartments. Base rent plush area rug 8X12· cost New display model open .
S300· now $80. Call 446· Soe it nowl 1-614 -8B6·
nished , porch and out build- rat&amp; starting at $158.00 per
7311 .
3040 .
ing . 4 mile back Glenwood, month. Market rent
8228.00
per
month
.
An
·
304-576-22BB .
equal housing opportunity . Close-Out Sale Necchi sew· Build your own 3 or 4 bdr
Caii614-304-882· 33B5 .
ing machines 1984's. Dial· homo, 86995 kit dolv .. Our
a-matico, regularly $399.95 new model is open, see it
One and two bedroom fur - your cost 879.95 While they today. Call1 · 886-7311 .
nished apartments, call614 - lost. Call collect 614 -654·
42 Mobile .Homes
992 -5434 or 61 4 -992 · 4000 Mon.·Sat. between Rough Cut lumber, ·oak,
lOAM &amp; 5PM .
5914 and 304-882 -2566.
poplar, and pine. 2x4's,
for Rent
2x8's, 1 x6's, 1 x8's. AsAPARTMENTS. mobile Ho~ver portable sorted lengths. Call Hogg
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
washer, $150. Automatic and Zuspan M&amp;te~ials
2 bdr .• AC. gas heat, wall to
and Gallipolis . 614-446washer and dryer,$200 . Gas Co ., lnc . 773-5554 ,
wall carpet in Gallipolis. Call
8221.
clothes dryer, 850. Self· davtiiTI&amp;.
after 5PM, 446 -1409.
defrost refrig.,$85. 30 Inch
gat range,$45 . 40 inch gaa Now open for busine11,
1
bedroom
unfurnished
.
14X70 3bdr, total elect .•
Gallipolis Forry, S175 .00 range,.$86 . 24 inch gas Mountain State B'ock, Rt.
furnished, plus washer 8.
rango,$100. Call 614 -742- 33, New Haven . Complete
dryer, on private lot, 10 min . per month, all utilities paid
e•cept
electric.
304-675
2352.
masonry supplies. 4", 8".
from town. $200 mo. plus
1371.
12" block. Delivery service.
ut ilities . D·eposit 8. Ref. Call
2 piece living room suite for· Phone day 304-B82·2222,
256 -1 393
3 rooms and beith with sale. Like new. Early Ameri· evening 882-3239 .
refrigerator and stove fur- can style. Must see to
2bdr mobil e home with
natural gas heat. Adults nished. Refrencei and dep- appreciate . Call 992·3517., 58
Pets for Sale
osit required , $226 .00
only, no pa1s. Call 367·
month,
304-675·
1090.
Propane.
Warm
Morning
gas
7438 .
heater. 66,000 hourly input,
vented.
8299.00. Phone Beautiful Pomeramium pet.
Raccoon Rd . unfurnished.
babied by old folks, needs
Rooms1-614-742-2602.
45
s 2 20 mo .. water included.
care for two weeks. or sell.
ref. dep. adults. Call after
c111 44&amp;-2376.
•
For
rent
Sleeping
Rooms
·
6:00. 446-9346.
and lirntt house keeping
AKC German Shephard
1 bdr, furnished, 2 mi . out rooms.- lark Central Hotel.
pups-8 wtcs old wormed and
54
Misc.
Merchandise
Call
614-448
-0756
.
Vinton. 9 mi. from Rio
first shots. Excellent size for
Grande. $140 mo. plus
age. First class pupa. Call
Furnished room, $146. Utiliut ilities. deposit . Call 388·
614-985-3849 .
ties, range, ref. Share bath . Used 2300 Ditch Witch
9717 .
trencher,
1·614-694-7842
.
Men only . 919 Soc .. GallipoMale Cocker Spaniol, AKC
lis. 446-4416 alter 8 p.m.
Nice 3 bdr mo bile home.
ragi•tare~. Blond, 2 years
Camouflage
Army
Denim
unfurnished. Upper Rt. 7,
old. Coli 949·2196 after
surplus,
Sam
Somerville's
•
water paid. no pets . Call
5:00p.m.
East - Ravenswood. Fri •.Sat.
46 Space for Rent
24 5-5818 .
Su~. 1:00-7:00 PM, 304675 -3334 before 10 :00
3 bdr. 1 % bath. in Ever·
AM
.
green, Co . Rd . 42 , 3 mi.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
from HMC. Coli 245-9171l
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots . Call
3 bdr ., 14X70 trailer, ule or 61 4 -992· 7.479.
rent. will rent with opt . to
buy . Cheshire area. Call
2nd." floor office space for
388-9776 .
rent. c ·o un St., Pomeroy.
Call 614-373-0458.
2 bdr trailer, very private, 2
m iles from hospital in coun·
try, no pets . $175 mo .• plus
$100 dep. Call onytime
Merchan di se
446 -1722'.
Captain Steamer will clean 1
chair free when you get 2
rooms of carpet cleaned.
12X60 Jbdr,
totalmoalec
.• . 61
Addison,
Oh ., 8175
. Call
Goods 304-875-2295 .
446-0175 .

ltillia.n Provincial Sable
Cherry Wurlitzer piano
e1600., like new. Coll446·
4428 .
Cable grand piano, axe.
cond.. 13.000. Coli alter
Bpm, 448-8049.
Wurlitzer Organ. Funmaker
special with solid st1te
CIIBette recorder. Like new.
$1200.00 Call1-814-742·
2602:
Tuna up for the Holidays,
speical ditcount for limited
time, 304-676-5500,
Alto Sax, Buescher, Horn
and case like new cond, less
than wholeoolo at $250.00.
304-675·3824 .

58

8o

Fruit
Vegetables

Peas. you pick, $5.00 bu·
shel; delivered, 2 bushel for
$15 .00 . Macil Gondoo,
304· 675-210B .

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

Autos for Sale

rent, Racine area . Call 992·
5B58.
Furnished mobile home. 3
bedroom, wash er and dryer.
No petl . Coli 949-2263.

14 ft . X 70 ft .mobil home.
s tove and refrigerator furnished . 3 bedroom mobil
home, gal, water paid. 1 kid
accepted. No petl, drunkoor
dope. John Shoots. 3!h
mlleo oouth Middleport. Rt.
7 . Coll387-0111 .

Cenopy bed ond draooer. 2
pleco living room oulio. Both
In excellent condition. Cell
992· 3391 .
•
Picken• uoed furniture. 304·
815-84B3 or 675 · 1450.
New Gibson refrigerator, 8
months old, $500.00 . 304 ·
675-671B .
Solid' maple twin lizo bodo
complote, 1100. aech; cheot
and full oln bed, 150.
304-875-5425.

Trucl!s for Sale

1988 Chevy C-80 dump
truck, newly painted cab l!t
bed, no reasonable offer
rofuood . Coll1 · 286-6522 .

1970 Chryoler Cordobo
good cond., 73,000 mileo.
Coll614·387-7131, oftor4
weekdoyo.

79 GMC pickup !h ton. Coli
446-2B83 .

1982 Chevotte 4 opd,
$3399 . 1981 Chovotte
outo., 83199.. 1979 Plymouth Volore, outo. •2399,
1 978 Dodge Aopen 12099,
1978 Plymouth Solon
t1799. John' • Auto Soloa,
B~laville Rd ., Gallipolis,
Ohio 448-47B2.
1988 C-80 Chevrolet 1Y,
ton, 2 opd. roar end, A-1
ohope t1000. Coli 3877496.
19B1 Z·2B Camoro, 43,000
miles, exc. cond., Mutt
Sollll Call 245 -9656.
77 Pontloc Grond Prix 301 '
good condition. Call after
5PM, 446-0137.
1 9B1 VW Rabbit Diooel, 4
dr., om·fm rodlo, ohorp. Coli
C &amp;. S Bonk 446-0882 ext.
23 .
'1 977 Chevrolet lmpolo,
4dr., no ruot, f1000. Call
448-2429 .

1950 Willyo 4 wd, 1700 or
B.O. Call 38B ·8710.
1968 Modal 2B3 Chevrolet
motor. Completely rebuilt,
with all new par1s. Call
367-7498.
Jeep, 1973 Dodge Monaco,
both good cond., your cho·
ice e750. Call 367-7300
alter ~pm.
1979 Ford Ranger F-150.
4X4, auto trans., ps., pb.,
good cond. Call 446-4292.
1978 Ford F-150 Ranger, \1•
ton, heavy duty bed, good
cond.. $2 ,500. Call 614·
388-B128 .
1977 Podge Kory van 12ft.
box. runs good. Call 446·
4627 after 5.
19B1 Dotson Pick-up
four wheal drive.
condition. 84,opo:oo .
614-742-3063 .anytime .

------

c

4 F7814 biu ply tiro•. Very
good condition. 185.00.
Coli 949· 2893 .

79

I PON'T I&lt;NOW,
8UT 1 HOPE tit;
ooe;N'T w~~T TQ
COME IN FOf(

\.1-r-r"r--..

COP~EE ~

Motors Homes
&amp; ,Campers

Wlnntbogo Chiotton 24 ft ..
loaded, air, gen ., new tirel,
e•c. cond., Coli 448· 7019.
Bell thio weelc--·Bergainl
1977 Plomoro RV, totolly
oelf-contalnod, lingle a•le,
A.C., rongo, rafrlg, full beth.
olaepa II•. w-w carpet, ruoe
hitch, Muot oeo to oppre·
cleto.U400 . Coli 441·
2287.

1 0 opeed, boyo bike, brand
new. racing bike, phone
304-8711·6240 .

1984 Apoche fold down
comper with edd on room for
llle U211. Call 448·86110.
1873 Ford hlllf ton pick up,
85,000 mllao. 4 _.ttronomiulon, 302 motor.
t711 .00. 304·871--4183.

I toot utlltv - .- l'lymal
Rood, 3rd la!'la on !'1Vh1.
ora- truok.

17 ft. calmpar exc. cond. ,
Coii441· 183B.

•sao.

1877; 28 It comper, oelf
conteiMd, al! ,_ II!• furnace.
..a aond, •1.200.00. 3041711-4085.

11 m (I)

7:30

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN ,
acotchguard·water extraction, deodorizers. FREE esti ·
mates. Reasonable rates .
Gone Smith, 992·6309.
0 . and M . Contractors .
Remodeling, vinyl siding,
painting (indoors and outdoors! repla oament win dows ca!l 304-773-5131 .

B:OO

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 304-6751331.

RINGLES ' S SER\IICE, e••
perienCed carpenter. electrh .·
cian, mason, painter. roofing (including hot tar ·
. application) 304·675-20B8
or 675· 7368.

Atlanta Falcons·.

of 5 parts. Join tho Audubon
society for a look at nature's
interwoven tapestry--from
Alaska's Chill Cat River lo
the shores of th e Carribean .
(60 min .)
ill Ill (ft] Call to Glo,Y Raynor helps a friend overcome.
h1s fear of flying . (60 min.)
0 Cll ® Scarecrow and
Mrs. King Amanda and l ee
are summoned to Salzburg
to track down a top-level
British agent who has mysteriously disappeared. (60

IEJuilding-Remodeling. Concrete. drywall, electrical,
kitchen -bathroom installa · .
tion , door-window framing .
304-675-2440 .

B &amp; D HOME IMPROVE· :
MENTS. vinvlaiding. alumn '
soffit , window, gable, face '
board caps and guttering,
also painting, roofing, room
additon, no job to small or '
largo. 304· 576 -2644 .

min .)

Wait, Joel! Here's one
more pester!

Plumbing
Heating

8t

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, OhiO
Phone 614-446-3888 or
614-446-4477

8 :30

"SHE'S A GEM, WINNIE,
WE'RE 50 GLAD l'DU
INTRODUCED HER TO

Excavating

Good -1 Excavating, basements, footers . driveways.
septic tanks, landscaping.
Coil a~ytime 614 -446 4537. James L. Davison, Jr.
owiter.
Dozer Worl( by Ted Hanna.
Ditches. ponds, roads. land
clearing. etc. Call Motor Cli'r
Brokers, 446-6692 .
•

BARNEY
HOW DO 'IOU

NEW

LIKE MY
ELVINEV?

D .A . Boston Excavating 1
Dozer and Dump Truck
Services. Call 61 4 -667· •
662B or 614-378-62B8.

E l~ctrical
Refrigeration

SEWING M_achine repairs.
service . A~thorlzed Singer
Sales &amp; 'Service Sharpefl
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 614-992 -2284 . .

General Hauling:

James Boys Water Service:.
Aloo poolo filled . Call 614258 -1141 or 814 -448·'
1175 or 614-448'- 791 1,

Upholstery

TRISTATE
..
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 S.C. Avo., Golllpollo ·
114--448-7833or814·448:; ·
1833.
.

·.\c ·

\;'

NFL's Superstars The
Men Who Played the Game.
9:00 II Cil I\!IOVIE: ' Aurora'
Cil MOVIE: ' louisiana'
Part 1
()J 700 Club
00 World Endurance
Series: Fuji 1 000 Cover·
age of this auto race is pre·
sented from Fuji, Japan . (60
tnin.J
CD MOVIE: ' Duel in the
Sun'
I]) 01 G:2l NFL Football :
L.A . Rams at Atlanta
0 ill ® Kate &amp; -Allie The
decision about whether or
not to sell the house in Con necticut makes Allie stop
and think about her past and
her future.
(I) (fi) Heritage 'Civilization
and the Jews: The Search
for Deliverance.· The flourishing Jewish communities
of Eastern and Western Europe and the interactton with
the surroundijlQ culture are
discussed. (68 min.I!Ciosed
Caotionedl
9:30 0 Cll ®l Newhart Despite
Dick 's disapproval, Joanna
wants to keep a date made
20 years ago w1th her col- ·
lege boyfriend.
10:00 G) Auto Racing '84: SCCA
Rabbit Bilstein Cup Cover·
age of this auto race is presented fri:lm Phoenix, AZ.
(60 min .)
0 (I) I]) Cagney and
Lacey When Cagney and
Lacey make a routine check
about some juvenile mi s~
chief, Lacey is taken captive
by a desperate young punk
who has just committed a
robbery. (60 min .)
I]) Tho Paterson Project
'One City in the Reagan Era .·
The impact of the Reagan
administration·s economic
policies are e~eamined as
they affect ~our New Jersey
iamilies . (60 min.)
® Newowatch
Sllndepondent News
10:30 ()J Shirley &amp; Pat Boone
@ Forceo of Order

:I DIDN'T
THINK IT LOOKED
ALL THAT TACKY

. , Soap
11 :00

Ken'• Water Servtce. Well••
clotln)o. poolo filled. Phone
387 · 0623 or 367 · 7741
night or dey .

Wough'o Wator Sorvlco. Coli
268·1240 , If no onow~r ·
21111· 1130.
'·

1

I I

r

I

HOW YOU HAVE i'O
LEAR'N TO TAKE

C:AI\'E OF A E!IABY.
Now 11rongo tho circled lettors to
lorm the aurpriM answer. u sug·
geotod 1&gt;y tho 11&gt;0v1 conoon.

I KI

0

kfft FRO~

TH E

t I I I XXKTI

(Answers tomorrow)
Salurday·s l Jumbles: ADULT TIGER B$FOUL GOVERN
Anawer: What some secretarieS ha'ie to take A

LOT FOR "GRUNTED"

D C2J CD D Cll ®
CIJ Dobie on~.

EYER SEE ANVONE
CATCI-1 AN ERASER
IN 1-lER TEETH ?

.2

• A 10 74 3

.Q96

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.H

••

1•
s•

dl~·'•"*"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Tokyo bar
specialty
5 School
course
9 Legal

39 Layer of
paint
tO Feat

tJ She (Fr. )
DOWN

1 Malmo
document
citizen
·to Fatty acid 2 ~
12 Sicilian
Rubinstein
spewer
3 Roger
13 Complicate Miller
15 Excavated

18 Wag
17 Child of
Ulki

song

11 Split

t Greek

18 Caustive

20 RoUof
SI!Wbucks

Penalty
2% Suffer
from
23 Arbuckle
Z5 " Algiers"
21

Z5 "Strike Up

U Presbyter
the - "
1&amp; Vinous
27 Saluted

letter

5 Whodwtit lt Location !9 Make the
factor
%% One having
i Winged
guests
3t Ultimate
7 Denary
23 He sold
31 Chew the
8 Old TV
his souli
scenery
police
:U Members 3a Bad news
of Equity 37 Expert
show
r,""""Tr""'TT"'..,.-

star

26Yearn
27 Fastening
device

Zll American

Indian
!9 Flynn film
32 Spanish
composer

33 ''EI-"
U Literary
tyke

35 Mason's

need
37 Italian
river
38Ewwean
river
DAILY CRYPJUQUm'DI - Here'&amp; bow to work 11:
AXYDLBAAXR
IIILONGFELLOW

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,
apc&gt;!ltrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
.CRYPTOQVOTES

rn

PEANUTS

10.22_..

WEST
EAST
By James Jacoby
.QJI0
8
s
.96
There is a lesson in the bidding of
.KQ86 2
today's hand. South had 6-4 distribu • Q 10 8 4
tior. with solid values: A-K in his pri ·
., 3
• 8s42
mary suit, .diamonds; A·K-J -10 in the
SOUTH
secondary club suil. Anyone holding
., 2
such a hand can best describe it by
bidding t.wo clubs on the second round
tAK9 763
and then returning to the first-bid
.AK J 10
suit, diamonds, to confirm a six-card
Vulnerable: Both
holding. With one king less in his high·
Dealer : South
card values, South would have first
rebid two diamonds, and then later
West
Nortb East
introduced three clubs. Armed with
the knowledge that partner had not
Pass
Pass
only 6-4 shape but also a good hand,
Pass
2•
Pass
North showed club support. Soutli
Pass
44o
Pass
asked for aces and bid the small slam
Pass
Pass
in clubs.
Pass
Pass
Pa~
Bidding the slam is only half the
Open ing lead: ~
battle. Once there, you, as declarer. L--...:--=~--;______.
need to bring in 12 tricks. '~; here is
never any trouble in the play of such
hands when all or some of the key approach that is successful when
suits divide 3·3. Unfortunately, bridge either minor suit divides unfavorably.
probabilities don't work that way. II The answer might sound a little
you play A· K of diamonds and ruff a unnatural. At trick two, play a low
diainond with the nine of clubs, even· diamond from both hands. Win the
tually you will come up short of 12 return, come to the South band with a
tricks. Your· band lacks outside high trump, .aod ruff a diamond. Now
entries and you cannot come to your draw trumps and, unless one of the
hand by ruffing without losing control I defenders bas five cards in one of the
of trumps. What is needed here is an :minors, you will make y our slam. ·

News

lnaido Baaebell 1984
Season Wrap-Up.
(I) Two Ronnleo
Ill Benny Hill Show
11 :30 U Cil CD Tonight Show
Tonight's guests are Martina Arroyo, Jennifer W et·
son and Buddy Rich. (RI (60
min .)
(I) And If I'm Elected ...
The Smothers Brothers play
host to this program about
the s~ling of candidates and
causes.
(I) MOVIE: 'Manhattan'
CII Beot of Groucho
(!) SportaCenter

NORTH
.AK43

Uneven splits
and feW entries

m

J .A.R .Constructlon Co .Ru·
tlond ._ Oh,614-742-2903 ;
Basements, Footers. Concre1e work, Backhoe 's,
Dozer 81 Oitcher, Dump
trucks, &amp; water-gas-sewerelectrical lines .

r1

ICUSTOC

00

SHULAW'.S Plumbing and
Heating, 21 1 Sixth St.,
Point Pleasant, W. Va. 304 ·
675· 5420. Licensed a.nd
insured.

87

I]) ®Wonderworks 'Who
Has Seen the Wind?' Pan 2 .
The conClusion of the story
o f a boy's COfT!ing of age in
rura l . Saskatchewan is followed by a shan drama1ic
film. 'Boys and Girls.' (60
min.)]Ciosed Captioned]
fJI MOVIE: 'True Grit'
Cil Album Flash : Elto~
Joh~

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1 , Box 355 , Gallipolis. Call 614-367-0576 .

8o

f11 WKRP in Cincinnati
II (I) CD TV 's Bloopers

Ill World of Audubon First

Rotary or cable tool drilling-. .
Most wells completed same .
day. Pump sales and servi ~ ·
•••. 304-B95 -3802 .

84

® News
m Jefferson•
II (I) Tic lac Dough
(I) Fregglo Rock A lost·
Jalking salesman 1ries to bilk
Junior out of the Gorg fam ily
mansion.
G) Inside Baseball 1984
Season Wrap-Up
(]) Andy Griffith
ill 0 Cll Family Feud
CD Jeopardy
® Wheel of Fortune
Ill (ft] New Nome That
Tune

and Pra&lt;1ical Jokes To·
night 's practical joke victims
are.Ed Marinaro and Alfonso
Ribeiro. (60 min .)
(I) MOVIE: 'Fanny and
Ale•ander' (Dubbed)
Cil SCTV: Second Corning
The laughs continue with
specially-edited
encores
featuring the best sketches
of the satirical series.
()J Cisco Kid
(JJ Monday Night MatchUp Los Angeles Rams vs.

RON ' S Television Service.
Special_izing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quuar. and
houoe calls. Call 304-576 2398 or 614-446-2454 .

' 83

Cll ClD a

Newshour

Plastering &amp; Plaster .repair,
free estimates. Call 614 256-11B2.

82

ma

(iZ Ne(1) MOVIE: 'I Go Pogo'
()J Hot Potato
([) Lucy Show
(I) Dr. Who
CiD 3 -2 -1, Contact
Ill Diff' rent Strokes
6:30 8 (I) ID NBC News
(I) MOVIE: 'The Return of
Frank James'
()J Rifleman
00 Mazda SportaLook
([) Carol Burnett
Cll 8 CiZ Aile News
0 (I) ® CBS News
(I)
Nightly
Businoso
Repon
@ Colorsoun.ds
fl) One Day at a Time
7:00 II (I) PM Magazine
()J Here Come the Brides
00 SportsCenter
Gomer Pyle
ill Ill (ft] Entenainment
Tonight
iD Wheel of Fortune
0 CU Wheel of For1uno
(I) @
MocNeii/Lehrer

rn

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local references ·
furnished . Free estimates . .
Call collect 1-614-23704B8. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

85

Mlnolto 1 1 14 Zero• copier
1300.00. Trl County Sport
Shop, 304-876-2988 .

Firewood, UO.OO load ,
130.00 delivered anytime
during doy. Coli aftor II,
304-4158· 1728.
I·V-an_lt_y__-d-ro-.-..
- r-.-a-lm_o_ot_n_aw
•••rcloo blko. -304.8711·
·
1388 ,

72

1 979 Camero Berlin otto
ex c. conci.. madeel. for ule
by owner. Caii446-7B14.

I:~~~~~~@:~~~

2 bedroom mobile home for

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 yearS e~eperience.
apeciilizing in built up root . ·
Cal! 614-3BB-9B57.

H·&amp; S Home Improvement&amp; "
vinyl sidi~g. roofin~ . room
addition, storm w1ndow1, stone . Call 614-367-0409 ·.
or 614-367-7244 .

19B2 -'!.! ton Chevrolet
Farm Equipment
pickup truck, automatic
- - - - -- - - - transmiasion. 29,0QO miles.
1984 2 horse trailer. 8 mo.• B2 ColerltyAT. PS, AC, V-8, 3015 engine, black with red
old, never been used. Coli cruloe. tilt. AM. 27 MPG . ·vinyl in1orlor . 86, 700.00 .
Coli 448-2684.
1-286-6522.
Call 992-5502 .
Heavy duty 5 ft . buoh hog 1977 Mercury Marquis se- 74CJ5. hoadors, 1200X15
dan, good condition. 1973
$476. Call 448-3824.
Ford Grand Foreno.good tires. white spoke wheels.
now top. $1700 .00. Coli
New 14 ft. Tandom axle condltlon,call 614-992- 992-7891 .
8974.
trailer. Call 446· 7383 or
446-3358.
197B Dodge pickup, olont 6,
1976 Codilloc Coupe Do 72,000 milao, $2,000. 304·
Farmall Cub tractor with Ville. two door. In ucollont 875-15084.
cultivators and other equip- condition. Phone 614-9B6·
mont. Coli 614-256·6846 3987.
73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O .
alter 4PM .
1973. Pontillc Le Mans.
REPOSSESSED : Must sell •400 .00. 1976 Mercury 1977 Dodge Van, 31B eng.,
two quonset style ltHI Comet, $700.00. Coli 992- auto . • call .• a.c ., c .b .•
$1800 firm. Call 446· 2707
buildings. brand new. never 8031.
eve.
erected. One is 40ft. X 60ft.
1983 Z-28 Camero, 4,300
Coli Tom, 419·669-2494.
miles. white with red stripes.
1957 - Ford 641 troctor, T -top, crui1etilt, a-c, am~fm, 1977 Dodge window Van,
cassette. stereo, lots more. all power. Coli alter 5PM
e~ecellant condition,
$2400.00. Wagner Loader Same 11 new. e11.000. 949 -2195.
304-875· 7591 .
with manure forks and 2
--------·lc1978 Ford F250, 4 X 4.
buckets, $250.00 . Coll614·
1977 Olds Cutillo S, good wagon wheels, running
742-2877.
cond, $1 ,500 .00. 304-675- boordo, otc. UOOO.OO. Call
6474.
742· 2B77 .
63
Livestock
1979 Renault, La Cor, oun 1976 Ford Ranger XLT. 4
roof, good cond, axe gas wheel drive, loaded .
miiMge. call after 3 :00 e3,860.00 nogotioblo. 304·
Purebred Polled Hereford 304·8B2-2252.
895· 3472 or B95 · 3967.
cattle feeder calvea.ataers &amp;
heifers, yearling also steers 79 Ford Feirmont $1900.;
1979 Chevy von loaded .
&amp; heifers A bred haifera. ·76 Chevy '.4 ton 4x4 304-875-7746.
Registered Australian Blue $1 BOO. Evenings 304-675Hoeler pups. Coll448·2109 7890.
plter BPM . Mon.-Fri. Any·
74 Motorcycles
time Sat. &amp; Sun.
'7B Ford Fairmont, 6 cyl, PS.
good tlreo, good cond, 304·
For Sale-60 hood of young 875-6809 onytime.
, 1983 Interstate brown,
baef cows and heifers. Call
61 4 · 38B·8592 .
1978 Plymouth Fury, 318 B.500 miles, $4,000. Call
engine. vinyl tQp, PS, PB. 446-2240.
sound. Phone 304-675 ·
84 Hay 8o Grain
Honda 125S. 1806.5 actual
1296.
mileo. t550.00 . Call 1-61 4 ·
1 977 Mercury Monorch, 4 742·2802.
large round bales of hay. door. good cond, 1 owner.
. , ,300.00 . 304-882 ·
$20 each. Call 448-1052 .
75
Boats and
2213.
Motors for Sale
1980 Scirocco VolksW.gen,
65 Seed 8o Fertilizer
t4, 700. Phone 304-675 5289 after 5:30.
12 aluminum bolt, 9 % H P
Certified saeCJ wtleat, barley,
Evinrude motor with remote
rye, spelts, triticale, alao
tonk, heavy-duty tilt trailer
cover crop wheet. Altizer
with bearing buddy axles,
Trucks for Sale
Farm Supply. Call814· 245· 72
H50. Call 448·2588.
5193.
- - - - - - - -·lc1983 Chevrolet S· 10 Truck, Wordo Stoking, 1 2 foot, 5
V8 eng.. 15-o-d monuol h.p . m~or, electric motor.
trono., AM FM otereo rodio, pediltal nau. trailer and
Transporlat;on
••tended cob with jump more. t650.00. Call 742·
1e111. power steering. 2B77.
power braku. Coli 982·
6814. or 887·1878 .
71
Autos for Sale
76 Auto Parts
- - - - - . , . . - - - - f7295.00 .
&amp; Accessories

61

Home
Improvements

PAINTING· interiQr and o~&lt;
terlor, plumbing. roofins.
some remodeling. 20 yra. ~·
exp. Call 614, 388-9852 . :-

71

ETIRP

EVENING

0

Musical
Instruments

Firewood for sale: 1 00

10/22/84 ·

e:oo

81

The

Television
Viewing

Serv1ces

Judy Taylor Grooming. Coli
614· 367·7220.

BrilrP8tCh Kennel• Prof••
oionol AU·bl'lld grooming.
Indoor· outdoor boentlng fa·
plaadc culven. metal cul- cllitieo. E"gl.ilh Cocker Spa•
vlrto, RON EVANS ENTER· nlel puppiu. Call 814·388·
PRISES, Jockoon, Oh 614- .9790.
2B8·5930.
Dragonwynd Cattery Ken'
Fll owood cut up olobo. t1 5 nell. AKt; Chow puppleo.
PV . lood . Larger loodo deli- Siamese khtene, new lltter1.
vered. Call for ,pricea. 614- CFA Himoloyan and Porolon
kittono. Coil 81 4-446-3844
245·5B04.
after 6 .

CHECKlHE

PometOy-Middleport, Ohio

Moton Homes
8o Car:npers

1973 M ldu 19ft. oolf·
contained camper, ex.
cond.. $2350. Coli 379·
2686.

Plaatic cietarna atate ap proved, plaltic 1ept:lc tanka,

Trail er tot for rent. Call
367 -743B .

Monday. October 22, 1984

K

IKV

NLKN

XBUGN
TGKM

RUTT

GVOHF

JHVCJUGVJG
K

XBUGN

K

I BCN

TUSG.- THEM

JLGCNGESUGTM

Yeaterdly'a Cryploqaote : Bl FSSEO IS HE :RHO EX·
PECTS NO'I1UNG, FOR HE SHAU. NEVER BE DISAP. ,
POINTEp. - AlEXANDER POPE,

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-1 0-Tlte Daily Sentinel

Monday. October 22, 1984

18 killed on 10hio highways
By The Ali80CI•ted PreM
SATURDAY
MANSFIELD- David R. Mlller,
Three multiple-fatality accidents
boosted Ohio's weekend traffic 26, of Crestline, In aone-car accident
death toll to 18, the Highway Patrol on Ohio 1811n Richland County.
KENTON -Lela M. Acton, 00, of
reports. Three motorcyclists were
among the weekend victims.
Dunkirk, In a one-car crash on U.S.
Thepatrolcountedfatalltlesfrom 68 in Hardin County.
MONTPELIER - Leroy D.
6 p .m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
The dead :
Sheets, 19, and Timothy L. Grace,
17, both of Angola, Tnd., ina one-car
SUNDAY
COLUMBUS - Samrand Thong, crash on Ohio 151n WUllamsCounty.
72, of Columbus, a Cambodian
MEDINA-LouAnnZieUnskl,24,
Immigrant, when the car he was of North RDyalton; In a one-car
rtdlng In went out of control on crash on a Brunswick Hills city
raln·sllckened I-7lln Columbus and street.
sm11511ed Into all exit slgii post.
GEORGETOWN - Willie CheaGEORGETOWN -Steven Gast, nault, 9), and ·Drimus Morris, 70,
18, or Georgetown, In a one-car both of Cincinnati, In 11 .two-car.
accident on U.S. 621nBrownCounty. accldent on u.s. 6BinBrownCounty.
WOOSTER-RobertaL.Rogers, .
NEW PmLADELPHIA- Danlel D. Shetler, 7, of Sugarcreek, a 28, Orrville, in a one-car accident on
MEMORIAL IS QUIET REMINDER -A somber
ceremony was held Sunday at the Mason County
Courthouse In Point Pleasant where a granite
monument was dedicated In memory of three county
officials ldUed in an explosion at the Mason CoWJty
Jail eight ye'!fS ago. Frances Wedge, left, and Leisa
Wedge, right, wife and daughter of the late Mason

County Sheriff Elvin E . "Pete" Wedge are shown In
front of the monument. Also 011 hands were relatives
and friends of two other officers ldUed In tbe Bne of
duty, Kenneth W. Love and Ernest E. Hesson. Also
killed was Bruce Sisk and his wife who had been
charged In the ldlll!tg of her Infant daughter. Ten
others were injured.

pedestrian struck on Ohio 93 In
Tuscawaras County.
WOOSTER -Henry A. Whittier,
28, of Wooster, In a one-car accident
on Ohio 831n Wayne County.

CHARLESTON. W.Va. tAP) Keith Parsons stands in a Iarmer's
market stall, surrounded by pumpkins great and small , and says
there ·s no secret to raising these
symbols of fa ll .
"There's nothing to growing
pumpkins - you just plant the
seeds,;. said Parsons. 20. of Kentuck. ""The only thing is they take a
Jot of space. One vine will cover4or5 ,
feet."
Parsons and his relatives are
professional farmers; they sell
everything from com to beans to
peppers grown on their Jackson
County farm .
This summer , they planted a
pound of pumpkin seeds worth $8 to
$9 in a three-acre bottom. The end
result was about 1,200 punipkins
selling for up to $5.50 each.
Pumpkin is a fruit rather than a
vegetable. with four to five pumpkins on the average vine.
Prime pumpkin planting season
is June 20 to July 15. Parsons said,
which allows most of the crop to ripen by October.

11 size and not quantity is the goal,
Parsons says, there are two rules to
follow.
One is to remove all the new
pumpkins but one, letting all the
plant's nutrients and energy go
toward one plump product.
The other , somewhat more bl-

Meigs board '

za rre method, is to feed the pumpkin
cow's mille
"Some of these big prize. winners
are milk-fed, " Parsons said. "They
use these hospital things- what do
youcallthem,IVs'-and insertthem
right in the vine. They'll consume a
pintaday."

A Meigs County man escaped
Injury when he lost control of his car
on Ohlo689 Sunday night.
The Gallla-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol said Dewayne DIU,
21, Racine, was southbound on 689
when he apparently lost control of
hls car In a cwve, went off the left
side of the road ·and struck a tree.
The 8 p.m . accident resulted in
moderate damage to Dill's car
according to the patrol.
A Gallla County woman escaped
Injury when her carwentintoa ditch
off Ohio 325 Saturday afternoon.
Krishna L. Kool, 43, Bidwell, was
southbound on 325, according to the
Gallla-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol, when she appare ntly lost control of her car In a
cwve. The patrol said she went off
the left side of the road into a ditch.
The 5: 25 p.m. accident resulted in
light damage to Kool's car, accord- •
ing to the patrol.

(Continued from page 1)

scorn. a nd to injure her reputation studentsandconstltutes~nunlawful
and character as a professional Invasion of her academ1c freedom.
Failure to renew her contract on
educator. ·
Evans alleged that her constitu· such grounds Is In violation of her
tiona! rtghts were violated and that freedom of speech and association
she has been deprtved of her as guara nteed by the U. S.
livelihood , medical benefits. retire- Constitution, Evans claims.
ment and other benefits. She
Evans asks also $500,tXXJ from
charges that the defendants con- Miller in compensatory and punispired and agreed not to renew her tive damages and $500,001 from the
contract in retaliations for her board in the same denominations.
Both teachers asked that the
opposition to defendants' policy, use
of sick leave as permitted by state defend?nts be ordered to reinstate
law, for exercising her rights of free them to their positions in the Meigs
speech in advising parents a nd Local School District and that the
students and requesting and insi st- actlon ofthe defendantstenninating
ing upon adequate teaching mate- thl"ir employment be declared null
rials for use of herself a nd her a nd void. They also ask for court
costs.

Candidates nights' set

The Big Bend Civitan Club will
hold two meet the candidates nights
The Meigs County E mergency with the first set foro 7:30 p.m.
Medica l Service reports that six . tomorrow night at the Racine
ca lls were answered by various Masonic Temple.
The second
units over the weekend:
session has been set for 7:30p.m. on
At 9:04 a.m. Saturday, the Oct. 30 a I the Middleport Masonic
Tuppers Plains unit tQOk Wynn Temple.
Blake from his residl"ncein Tuppers
Plains to Camden Clark Hospital in
Makes all-conference
Parkersburg. At 3 p.m. Saturday.
Rutland wen t to Township Rd . 175
Rodd Harrison, son of Mr. and
for Delbert Romine who was taken
Mrs. Phil Harrison. Pomeroy, has
to Veterans Memorial. Also on
been named to the 1984 Tri-Va lley
Saturday, Pomeroy was called to
Conferen~e a ll-league golf squad. A
the scene of an a uto accident on
junior at Meigs High School,
Dark Hollow Road . William and
Harrison has been selected as a
Charlie Collins were taken to
member of the all-league team for
Veterans Memorial.
the past two years.
On Sunday, at 12:14 a .m .. Middieport responded to a call from the
Friendly Tavern and transported
Christine Pullins to Veterans Memorial. Middleport answered a call on
Wright St. at 8:02 p.m. and
transported Gladys Moore to Vete- Mae M. First
rans Memorial. Middleport was
Mrs. Mae M. First, 89, Rutland .
then called to 1086 Vine St. lor
died
Saturday at Veterans MemorEdward Evans who was taken to
ial
Hospital.
Veterans Memorial.
A homemaker , Mrs. First was
born Nov. 3. J89.,l in Gallia County, a
Veterans Memorial
daughter of the~ late Ballard and
Sa turday Admissions---George E lecta Lemley ~usk. She was a
Daylong. Middleport ; Virgil member of th9 Poplar R idge
Walke1·, Racine: Cora Webb, Ra· Freewill Baptist O~urch .
Surviving are 1:1 granddaughter,
cine; William Collins, Pomeroy.
five
great-grandchildren and Mr.
Sa tur(lay . Discharges---Donald
and Mrs. William Smith, Rutland,
Buffington. Anthony DiVincenzo.
Sunday Adm iss ions---James with whom she made her home.
Spa ngler, Rutland; ElSie Stanley, Preceding her In death were her
husband, Robert Ross First: a
Pomeroy.
Su nday Discharges··'Wiliiam daughter , Marjorie Wyatt, a nd a
son. Donald First.
Collins. Gera ldine Sexton.
Services will be held. at 11 a.m .
at the Poplar Ridge
Tuesday
Meeting changed
Freewill Baptist Church with the
The Eastern Board of Education Rev. Amos Tillis officiating. Buria l
meeting that was scheduled for7: 30 will be in Gravel Hill Ceml)tery,
p.m. Monday evening has been Cheshire. Frtends may call at the
changed to Wednesday evening at Ewing Funeral Home a nytime this
evening.
7:30 p.m.

I Area Death I

The Church of Christ in Christian
Union, Hartford, W.Va., will hold a
revival beginning Wednesday and
continuing thrOugh Sunday. Nighily
services, with Rev. Rick Weaver.
will begin at 7:30p.m. with special
singing featured.

Meets this evening

Vol.34. No.1 36
C?hted 1984

By NANCYYOACHAM
Senltnel Staff Wliter
"We have hollered for genera1ions about the rest of the state
forgetting us ' Really who has
ic;&gt;rgotten us?We,ourselves, are our
own worst enemy. Are you willing to
move ahead?"
This was the challenge Issued by
C.E. Blakeslee, executive director
of Meigs County's Regional Planning Commission which met Monday In quarterly session at the
Farmers · Bank Building In
Pomeroy.
In hls report to the commission,
Blakeslee saki In part, "We (the
meiJlbers of the planning commls·
slon) have With limited funds and a
few grants, been able to keep MeigS
County fully qualified for federal
and state assistance. Beyond that
we have been able to do only token
work because or lack of funding and
personnel.
"We may as well face the realities
of the political situation. It lS not
politically feasible to really get Into
economic development because
manyofourcitlzensdonotwantany
change. However they areunwWing
to go back to a more simple time.
Only when a son or daughter cannot
find a job locally are they upset
about our economlc 's ltuatlon.

ALL THIS WEEK!

WALl-TO-WAll
CARPET
SPECIAl
Buy Any

Quality Kroehler rocker/recliners and wall-away recliners.
Long wearing, durable fabrics in
a variety of colors.

REG. $399.00

$24900

PARKING

ByBOBHOEJILICII

s r 18alftWrMer
• Meeting hrlttlil&amp;rS6ston Monday night, Middleport Village Council took Initial action towards
providing a Christmas bonus for
employes.
Council gave a first reading to an
ordinance which will provide a
Christmas bonus of $150 for each
full-time employe and $75 for
part-time employes.
Three readings wlll be required.
There are 19 full-time and two
part-time employes. Cost of the
bonus will be $2,850, Mayor Fred
Hoffman said.
·
Hoffman also asked council to
think about- what members would
like to do In providing pay Increases
for village workers for 1985. He
suggested an across-the-board raise
of 30 cents an hour for emplbytes.
Cost to the village wUI be betw n
$13,001 and $14,tXXJ, he said. e
pointed out that workers also get a
sman Increase automatically each
year as they add years of service tq
the town . Hoffman will ·present a
firm pian for the 1985 Increases at
the next meeting.
llaloween party
Councilman Bob Gilmore reported that plans are being com-

terrific

The Salisbury P .T.O. will meet
Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m. The
program will feature Dr. James
Witherell . speaking on the subj ect of
ch ild abuse.

now!

Ask lowed

JOIN-NOW
5
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CLEVELAND (AP) The
holder of one winning ticket
correctly naming all six numbers
chosen in Saturday night's "Ohio
Lotto"' drawing is entitled to an
estimated $1 million jackpot and
may get the ticket validated
beginning today at any Ohio Lottery
regional office.
Lottery officials reported Lotto
sa les of $4,038,926, while holders of
winning tickets will s hare $2,817,250.
The winning numbers from the
drawing Sa turday were 1,4,11,14,29
and 31.

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First Meeting Fee 6.00
Total 517.00

SAVE 57.00

enttn·e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, October 23, 1984

2 Sections. 1 2 Pages

25 Cento

A Multimedia Inc. Newsp•per

No coordinated effort
"It shouldbepolntedootthilt there
does not seem to· be. a coordinated
effort between IndiVIduals, officialS .
(regional, county, toWnship or ·
village), consultants and state
developn:~ent departments to move
Meigs County ahead. For years we
of the planning commission have
recommended the hiring of a full
time executive director. So far
nothing has happened although·we
currently have a request In for
$25,00) for 1985. This would be a bare
mlnlmull")."
makeslee continued hls statem ent by repeating recommendations for a long-range comprehens ive Industrial plan which was
developed for the county In recent
years. Coordinated efforts to support Scipio Industrial Park and the
hiring of a full time executive
director were among the recom- ·
mendatlons mentioned by
Blakeslee.
In closing Blakeslee stated, "The
first thing we need Is a commitment
to economic development. We need
a full tlmeo!IIce. Let's make a joint
project of this. Government JX~tlnas
much as they can. The prtvate
sector Is willing If properly
motivated.
"Wehavetohavecontlnulty.lam

recommending to the planning
commission today that we pay a
small retainer to keep a consultant
active from Jan. 1, 1985 on. We need
this continuous Input. The finances
can be worked out -If we have the
commitment. It Is up to us."
Consultant continues
Discussion followed the Blakeslee
report and Itt was agreed upon in the
meeting to pay a retainer to James
M. Jennings, Columbus. who will
continue to represent Meigs County
as an economic consultant for
several more months to come.
Sid Edwards, executive director
of Gallla -Meigs Community Action
Agency, made m ention in the
meeting of some recrea tiona Idevelopment projects that are being
planned by the park commission for
proposal in the future.
Although Edwards dl&lt;) not specify •
those planned projects, he did say
there was "no reason Pomeroy and
Middleport could not be showplaces
on the Ohio River. "
Kevin Costello, a representative
of Buckeye Hills, exi&gt;!ained to the
commission the final form of an
eight-county regional tourism employment expansion program of
whlchMe[gsCountywouldbeapart.
The majority of funding for this
project has been received by

Buckeye HUis, however. · some
monies wll! have to come from the
local counties.
The a nticipated accomplishments of such a program would be
the establlshmen t of an ·on-going
organized effort toward tourism.
short-run expansion of permanent
and seasonal opportunities and
Increased employment in the eight
countl~&gt;s through prtvate Investment related to travel and tourism .
Tourjsm 'only hope'
Pete Shields. longtime commis·
sian m ember, pointed out that 40
years ago. tourism was considered
the only hope for the county. "We've
come full circle. We talked about It
then and we're talking about It
now.''
It was also pointed out that
Middleport and Syracuse are the
only areas In the county tha i· are
actually trying to develop recreational facillties at this time, referring to the Syracuse and Middleport
park and pool areas.
Another Buckeye Hills project
which was explained to the commission by Costello was a plan for
industrial development In the re·
gton. However, this program is still
in draft form .
Documents returned
Clearinghouse review documents

havf&gt; been returned to the commission for endorsement or protest.
Those dOcu!T\ent~ include applica tions for a Racine water treatment
system. $50l.tXXJ to be borrowed
from Fariners Home Admlnistra·
lion; $6,tXXJ for lighting the tennis
and basketball courts in Middleport: $345.00l for the state lor an
underground injection construction
program, $32,900 for the Meigs
County Council on Aging to fund the
Relined Senior Volunteer Program ;
$160,001 for the Ohio Hills Health
Agency, a subs idiary of Buckeye
Hills; $18 million for the state for 60
reclamation projects: and $14,tXXJ
for a bus for the Meigs County
Council on Aging.
Petition update
The commission wa s apprised on
the chamber of commerce petition
drive fo r the Ravenswood Bridge
access road a nd the complet ion of
Route 33 to Athens. by Ron Ash.
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
president.
Ash said that a meeting was held
In Logan last Thursday with
chamber representatives from
Meigs. At hens. Logan and Fairtield
counties. An attempt is now being
made through this group to secure a
meeting with the governor, some·
time after the election. at which time

the petitions Ifill be presented.
Bob First, from theMelgsSotland
Water Conservation District, said
reseeding projects will soon be
uildeiWay in the county. Oneprojett
involves the county IandfUI, the
at her county and township road
banks.
Although efforts have been made
to include all townships. response
from township trustees has been
minimal. according to First and
County Commissioner Manning
Roush. First said that time Is
running out. and iftownshipswantto
be included in the project, the
trustees must make their requests
soon.
Gordon Gilmore. soil survey
leader in 1he cou nty. brought. the
commission up to date on soli
surveys that have aiready been
completed in certain Meigs areas .
Gilmore told the commission that he
would be willing to survey priority
areas if that would help wit h long
range plan s for c ou n ty
development.
Before th.P close of the meeting.
Blakeslee noted that the county
commissioners have completed the
upgrading of the county property
tax m aps and that provisions, have
been m a de to keep these maps
updated .

pleted for a community Halloween
party on Oct 30.
He and Pollee Chief J .J. Cremeans have been working on the
project: Gilmore was named by
council to see what he couldcorneup
with for a community party at the
last council session when U was
reported that the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce could not
secure leadership to handle the
party.
Gilmore said that a parade will be
held on Oct. 30, assembling at 5:30
p.m . at thevlllageparkinglotonMUl
Street. The Meigs High School
Band, Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of
the Amertcan Legion, and fire
vehicles will lead the costumed
youngsters in a parade to Hartinger
Park.
At the park, judging of costumes
will be held and refreshments will be
served to the young people. Plans
are being made for members of the
Meigs Jaycees to 'a ppear In their
costumes normally worn for their
Halloween season haunted house.
Trick or treat night
A break dance group will entert.aln along with the band. Gilmore
said that with council's permission,
trick or treat nlghtwillbeheldtrom6
to 7 p.m . on the following evening,

Oct. 31. I
Councilman Allen Lee King
emphatically stated - that he is
disappointed that the Middleport
Chamber of.Commerce did not pick
up staging the party as village
officials had counted on and that he
Is against trick or treat night
because It exposes children to
hazards.
He termed It "Russian roulette."
Trick or treat night was cancelled in
the town last year and the Chamber
of Commerce had held a party in lieu
of that activity.
Gilmore said he also feels the
same about trick or treat night this
year as he did last year, but there
was Uttle choice in going ahead with
It this· year since the chamber of

King made a motion that the
commerce party · had fall en . are problems on · North Second
~!efl' .&lt;;.o mmit!ee meet and discuss
through. King said that he was not Avenue, during early morning
the problems immediately . How criticizing Gilmore and did com - hours when there are boisterous
ever , the mf&gt;tion failed forthelackof
mend Gilmore for pulling the party gatherings. much noise and profane
.
a
seco_nd with several council
language.
together at a late hour. Hoffman and
m
embers
sticking to their opinion
He
asked
council
to
place
an
other council members also commatter
should be discussed
that
the
officer
on
fOOl
a
t
that
location
to
get
a
mended Gilmore.
the
regularly
scheduled meeting
at
control
on
the
mattl"r.
Council
said
'IJ).!'re l'.'as a motion to approve
of
the
committee
wit hpoliceofficers
It
had
already
made
plans
for
that
Gilmore's plan for the Halloween
in
November.
observance - 'the party on Oct. 30 the safety committee to meet "1th
King then asked Hoffman 'how
the police department before regu and trick or treat night on Oct. 31.
many
days Chief Cremeans had
lar council meetings on the second
King attempted to amend the
worked
this year. Hoffman said that
Monday of each month and the
motion to exclude·provisions for the
he
does
not ha ve this type of
matter shou ld be brough l up at that
trick or treat part. However. his
information
but . that Clerktime.
motion died for the lack of a si&gt;cond
Treasurer
Jon
Buck
can supply the
Gilmore said that he is aware that
and five council members voted in
figures
.
there are problems on North Second
favor of Gilmore's plan. King
Counc ilman Dewey Honan stated
and he suggested securing outside
abstained.
that a m a n on foot on North Second
help. perhaps. using deputy sheriffs
Noise problem
tContinued on Page 12&gt;
to help curb the situation.
King then told council tl)at there
/

I

Sheets 'maps out'
highway concem
JennUer Sheets has mapped out a
strategy In her campaign to
spOtlight highway conditions In
southeastern Ohio.
.The Republican candidate for the
~th House district of Gallla, Meigs
and Athens coontles has drafted a
, letter protesting the lack of placement of 1Jl8in highways leading Into
the region In a recent lssueof"Ohlo:
The Heart of It AU."
The magazine Is a travel and
tOOr!sm publlcatioo ror the state.
Sheets addressed her letter to Gov.
Richard F. Celeste; Alfted s.
Dietzel, director of the Ohio Department of Development; and Marilyn
J . Tomasi of the state's office of
travel and tourism.
Her complaint was leveled at a
map appearing In the magazine's
Aug. 4 Issue wtlllling highways
whlcb are "used to represent major
pteways off major routes Into
Ohio."
,

Tonight and Tuesday, occasional
rain or drizzle. Low tonight around
50. High Tuesday near 60. The
chance of rain Is !10 percent tonight
and Tuesday.
Extended Foreca.&lt;ot
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair on Wednesday and a chance
of showers Thursday and Friday.
Highs In the mid-50s to the mld-111!!.
Lows In the mld-305 to the mld-40s.

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MEETING SCHEDULE:

POMEROY.

ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH

.

231 E. Second
Wed: 5:30p.m.

THURSDAY, OCT. 25TH, 6:30 P.M.

ROYAL OAK PARK

Neither U.S. 35 and the Silver
Memol1al Brttlge or the WW!am S.

Rltrhle

FREE MEAL - - - ENTERTAINMENT
BRING THE FAMILY

Brtdge at Ravenswood.

w.va:, are on the map. Sheets saki.
U.S.lll in Athens Count)' II noted on

Pd. Pol. Ad
(

at y

e

•

/

Weather forecast

RALLY

•

:Employe Christmas bQnuses .initially approved by council

FREE

Tuesday meeting set

A marriage license has been
issued in Me igs County Probate
Court to Richard Raymond Gabb,
26, Bethel Park, Pa., a nd Lori Ann
Wood, 23, Pomeroy .

Weather 011 Page 12

Full-time planning consultant recommended

120th Anniversary Sale

Sole

Rainy.days

Eastern eliminated

Sports 011 Pap 3

.--'------------+--------:---'--:----------------

Middleport Elementary P .T.O.
will meet this evening at 7:30p.m.,
fo r an open house observance at the
school.

REPUBLICAN
.

VOLLEYBALL .

ELBERFELD$

Carpet From
Our Stock or
Special
Order and
Get the
Paddding at
NO CHARGE!

'

1'

Revival planned

Happenings around Meigs County...
Emergency squads
answer six calLs

..

Beat of the Bend

Bob Hoeflich Oil Page 5

Art Bucltwl!ld oa Page 2

m,

I~~;:;;~;:;;;;;:;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Two drivers
escape injury

Pumpkin production, no big secret

Almighty dollar

a Wayne County road. ·
TOLEDO - Kenneth I. Tenney
29, Harding, in a one-car
accident on a city street. ·
BUCYRUS- Kevin R. Durnmlt~.
20, Bucyrus, a motorcyclist, and
Kay E. Swartz, 26, Bucyrus, a
passellger In a car, in a carmotorcycle accident on a Crawford
County road. .
HUBER HEIGIITS - Raymond
J. Oberer, 21, of Xenia, In a
motorcycle accident on a Huber
Heights city street.
FRIDAY NIGifl'
AKRON - Ronald B. Cookro, 42,
of Wadsworth, when hls motorcycle
crashed on an Akron ctty street.
XENlA-DavldM.Kodlier,Z7,of
Jamestown, In a one-car crash O'l
Ohio 721n Greene County:

©Sior18. AUQUSI &amp;Co. 1984
I'

,

'

.

the map, flirt not the Appalaclililn
HJpway, she added.
· "How can a twrlsm brochure
'~ .

Ignore U.S. 35 as a major thorough·
fare when the Bob Evans Farms
Festival just a week ago attracted
an estimated 100,001 visitors . to
Gallla County?" Sheets wrote.
")must express my view that the
omission of these three significant
features Is symbolic of the n«;Jllect
which the highways here In the 94th
Ohio House District have received
d\jrlng the first two years of your
administration," Sheets added.
Sheets Is chairman of a petition
drive Inaugurated last summer to
get an access road built from the
Ravenswood Bridge to U.S. 33 at
Rock Sprtnp, above Pomeroy.
"It Is sad that a throughway as
Important to Ohio and Gallla County
as Route 35; that a developmental
highway asslgnlflcantto Southeast·.
em Ohio as the Appalachian
Hlgllway; and . that a brtdge as

symbolic .to the hopes tor ccminer·
clal and lndustrtal development of
the Route 33 corridor are Ignored In
this way - not to mention the
significance or all three oJ these
omlllions to tourtsm In 1011theastem Ohlo," Sheets wrote.
,
Sheets urged the olicta!s to
complete aU three projects 10 the..
state ''will be proud to Include them
In fUture Issues d. Ohio Magazine."

•

SCHOIARSJIIP-TwDaClatworll\yChllds,asecondgradeteacherat
the Middleport Elementary Sehool,ls presented the teacher schola!"shlp
of the Meigs LoeaiTeachenoAMoclation by Assocladon Treasurer Mlk~
WOfoag at Monday night's n:ietb~g. 'l1tls Is the serond year that Mrs.
Childs has received the scholarsltlp. She Is working on her master's
degree from the University of Dayton throug!l Rio Grande CoUege.
Looking on Is Rita Slavin, a1180Ciall011 prestdent. Mrs. Childs Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Clatworthy, Middleport. She and her
hwlband, Mlck, also a teacher In the Meigs Local District, restde In
Middleport.

M~igs

.d.;..
CHATS - Rep. Jolynn Bosler chats with teacher.; of the Meigs Local
Teachers Assocladon preceding a regular meeting of the group at Meigs
High Sehool Monday evening. FoUowlng a talk by Rep. Bosler, the
association voted to endorse her for,reelection.

Local teachers endorse Boster

The Meigs Local School Dlstrtct
Teachers Association endorsed
Rep. Jolynn Boster for reelection at
a regular meeting held Monday
evening at Meigs High School.
Speaking to the association,
Boster was enthusiastic about this
year's campaign, she said, because
· ot the Improvement In the financial
condition of local schools sinct' she
took oftlct'.
She said thateducatlonwas one of
her prlorltles In the last election and
that she stands on her record of
progress for schools.
·

In the years of the prior
administration between 1979 and
1982, approxlma tely iOO Ohio school
districts were forced to apply for
emergency state loan funds needed
to ciffset repeated cuts In state funds
for schools, Boster reported.
However, she said, because of the
funding efforts of thf;! current
admlnlstratlorl and legislature, only
one dlstrtct has applied for the loan
funds In i983 and 19114.
Boster slated that claims of a 90
percent. tax Increase do not tell the
whole story . A large part of that

Increase was voted during the last
adminlstatlon, and tax measures
which give relief to small businesses, farmers and married tax·payers mean an Increase of only
ahout 13 percent In actual dollars,
she commented. She stated she
believes that she had the ear of the
goyernor, the director of transportaUon and the speaker of the House In
seeking cohtinued Improvement In
state efforts for schools and roads In
southeastern Ohio.
She cited several projects under-

way on roads In the three county
area and pledged continued persistence in effons toextend U.S. 33 to the
Ritchie Bridge In Meigs County.
After she left the meeting,
members of the association voted to
endorse Bost er's reelectiori as
representative from the 94th House
Dlstrtct In Ohio.
·
·
Duling Monday night's meeting
the association's teacher scholar:
ship was awarded to TwiJa Clatworthy Childs, Middleport. RJta
Slavin Is President of the Meigs
Local Teachers ASSOCiation.
•.

�'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.CoJ!lmentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ ~ .....--.- ........... c:::l.o=o
~v

.

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

liOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ol The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Associa·
lion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are weh..oo me. Th"Y should he less than 300 words
long. AJIIettenare subjed toedltlng and must ht' signed with name, addrt&gt;Ss a.nd
l&lt;'lt&gt;phone number . No unsigned letten will tle publi!ihed . lt&gt;Uers should ht' in
Jtnod l.IL.'\~, :u:JdressinK l!'isues, not penooalltltli.

Sentinel offers free space
for •Thank You" letters
As a community service project, the Dally Sentinel Is offering
residents free space for special "Thank You" letters next month.
It's the tlmeofyearwe should reftect on the things lor which we
thankful. We sometimes forget the fM.lople to whom we owe thanks.
We all have someone we would like to thank, but never have the
chance. Now you do.
The Dally Sentinel, in its · comhined Thanksgiving-Christmas
edition on Wednesday, Nov. 21, will publish, free ol charge, "thank
you" letters from area residents.
The letters should be brier (around 100 words or less) and contain
the person's full name, the reason for the thank you and the writer's
name and address and phone number. Letters need that infonnatlon
to he published.
Deadline for receipt of the letters is 4 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7.
They may be sent to "Thank You," The Daily Sentinel, IJI Court st.. .
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45631, or hand deUvered to the editorial office.

are

Mondale attacks aura;
Reagan played Reagan

"

Start to finish. Walter F. Mondale pounded Ronald Reagan with the
argument he hopes will pierce the president's aura of political
Invincibility: That he is a commander-in-chief without command of the
facts, a leader who leads'by committee.
The Democratic challenger pursued tha t lin(' with single-issue fervor
Sunday night in K_ansa ~ City and it will be a maj or theme of his campaign in
the fin al 15 days as he fights for a n upset Election Day victory. ,
While Mondale played his chosen hand to the last card, Reagan played
Reagan.
"I know it will come as a surprise to Mr. Monda le, but !'am in charge,"
the preside nt said.
. The Grea t Debate. second and las t In the series. was In large measure a
- repl ay of thP a rguments ¥ andale and Reagan a re using every day. In city
after city.
Mandate sought to sow voter doubt that Reagan is in command of his own
White House . Reagan said Mandate stands on a record of weakriess and
naivete a bout the Soviet Union .
Each said the other was wrong. The voters will decide which to believe.
The Kansa s City debate was no runaway, In either direction. And If
voters view it' as anything like the standoff some politicians said they saw,
that would would work to Reagan's advantage. For Mondale is the
challenger battling to overrule· thE' oddsmakers, with time running short.
Reagan faltered now and again, but ne ither so often nor so clea rly as In
the first debate in Louisville . He lent no comfort to the Democrats who
want to make his age an issue; when the question came up, he dismissed it
with a typical quip.
"I am not going to exploit ... my opponent' s youth and Inexperience," the
73-yea r-old president said. closing the subject as a debate topic.
Monda le taunted Reagan on grounds tha t the president had said nuclear
missUcs loosed from a submarine could be recalled if launched in error.
Mandate sa id tha t to assert command - a word heused eighttimes during
the debate - a president must know bett er than that.
Reagan denied having said such missiles could be recalled . Mondale
Insisted he had , and said hP could prove it. Reagan said thai was a
repe\ition of falsehood.
Actua lly, both debaters could argue thai point, to no clear decision. The
Reagan statem ent Mandate was citing is ambigious as to whether the
president was talking of recalling missiles or of recalling the submarines
that carry them .
While RPagan was adamant on that. he corrected himself on one debate
statement. Early on, the president said that a CIA agent in Nicaragua
edited the controversial manual advising Nicaraguan rebels on actions
against the government including assassinations. He disavowed the tactic
and the handbook and said that whoever was responsible would be fired .
The president was immedlatPly asked about this CIA person in
, Nicaragua and said he had erred . The CIA employee was not in Nicaragua
itself but elsewhere in the area , he said. The CIA says it does not have
American agPnts Inside Nicaragua.
Reagan had some difficulty with his debate closing, too. He asked the
voters "do you want to see America return to the policies of weakness of the
pas! four years or do we want togo forward .. . ?" That was a near reprise or
. a campa ign line in which he speaks of theweaknessoflhefour Democratic
. years during which Mondale was vice president to Jimmy Carter.
Then the president talked so long about a time capsule to be opened 100
· years In the future that he ran out of time. Under debate rules agreed to by
both sides, Reagan's summation was cut off as he sppke of the young
people he's seen In his campaign travels.
It wa s not Reag an at his televised best. But in political terms, it may
havP been good enough.

Today in history
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 23, the 297th day of 1~. There are 69 days left 1n
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
One year ago, on Oct. 23, 1983, 239 U.S. Marines and sailors stationed 1n
Lebanon were killed when a suicide terrorist crashed a truck-bomb Into the
U.S. compound at Beirut International AiiWrt. Almost simultaneously, a
simllar attack on French peacekeepers claimed the lives of 58
paratroopers.
On this date:
In llli4, forces led by Union Gen. Samuel R. Curtis defeated Confederate
Gen. Stirling Price's army In Missouri. ·
1n 1910, Blanche S. Scott IJecame the first woman to make a solo airplane
flight In public, reaching an altitude of 12 teet as she sailed across a park 1n
Fort Wayne, Ind.
.
'
In 1915, 25;00&gt; women marched In New York City to demand the right to

\ vote.
In 1917, Amertcart soldiers In France fired their flrst.shots In World War
L
..
1n 1942, durtng World War n, the British launched a major offensive
against AxiS forces at El Alameln In Egypt.
1n 1950, entertalner AI Jolson died.
. 1n 1956, the Hungarian revolt against Stalinist ppllcy began. (It was
subsequently crushed by Soviet troops.)
I

•

Page-2-The Daily Senti,aa

Eastern eliminated in tourney

P.:;-roy-Middleport. Ohio .

..

T~y.O~ber23.
198~
.
. '

.

CHILLICOTHE - Undefeated
Portsmouth Clay maintained Its
perfectrecordlntheCiassADistrtct
volleyball tournament Monday by
defeating the Eastern Eaglettes,
15-12 and 15-12.
The match was played In the Ohio
University Branch-Chllllcotbe Shoemaker Center. Clay advanced to
the distriCt finals with a 20-0 season
mark. The Meigs County squad fell
bythewaysldewltha9-15record.
Eastern led 12-10 In !Jtellrstgame
on two Lesa Brucker serves, plus a

Perfect children _______J_am_e_s_J._K_ilp_a_trac_·k
'SCRABBLE, Va. - Let us truck with the notion that children ents cultivate the kind of glare that No parent worthy of the name will
tolerate a tantrum or an outburst.
suppose, to be supposing, that you
are born good, and need only to can be turned Uke a laser beam on
"Swift
punishment or the technique
the
bratty
child.
It
Is
the
glare
that
have a cat named Tinkerbell and an
have their natural goodness rein·
·
of
treating
the offender as a
says,
"If
you
don:t
cut
that
out,
you
forced. In her clear-eyed view, "We
old acquaintance named Susan.
non-person
for
the duration of the fit
One ·day Susan comes tq call, are all bOrn Ignorant and oafish. will catch It when we get home."
are
the
standard
ways of dealing
The glare gelid has its complebringing her six-year-old daughter What Infant ever considers, when It
with
this
behavior,
which fortifies
along, and young Natasha, an can 't sleep, that someone else ment In the smile frozen. This Is the
parent
In maintaining '
the
steadfast
absolute bra t, undertakes to put might want to?" The parents' job I~ , weappn of choice for the nosy
brought
It on."
whatever
dictum
acquaintance who Inquires of a
Tinkerbell in the frE;ezer: What is to civilize savages.
Lest
she
be
thought
authoritar"There Is· no quick and easy way pregnant jwoman, "Was 1t planned
the protocol for such occasions?
This Is the kind of question that to rear a chUd," she writes. "It or was ttj a ·surprise?" The smile Ian, Miss Manners recommends
Judith Martin, otherwise known a s takes 18 years of constant work to frozen may also be turned upon · that parents occasionally should
Miss Manners, deals with In her get one Into presentable enough · permissive parents who rattle on confess error to their children:
newly published "Guide to Rearing shape so that a college will take him about "not wanting to Inhibit the "Yes, you're right, I shouldn't have
Perfect Children.:· Her book Is or her off your hands for the winter naturalness of their children." Why done It" The advantage of this ploy,
not Inhibit thein, Miss.. Manners besides shocking a child Into
more fun than a Gene Wilder season."
asks?
"Repressing the dear things speechlessness. Is tha:t It leaves
The chief tools for chlld·rearing,
comedy; it can be read In bits and
pieces: and as a way to spend a she suggests, are example and can only Improve the state of the unsaid but well understood that "I
am perfect most of the time, a
nagging. If parents will regularly world."
profitable e vening in October it
Whamming a kid, she contends, demonstration of which Is my
beats pres ide ntial debates all say "thank you" to each other, it
may require no more than 6,412 Is not the answer to misbehavior. U graciousness In admitting fault."
hollow.
Miss Manners' admirable work
Miss Manners begins with the . reminders before a "thank you" a child has been given enough love,
would
be worth dc:iutile Its price If
pops out of a child's mouth. There a withering "I was very dlsap·
plausible premise that children all children - are born with the are other ·tools also. Miss Manners pplnted In you" m&lt;~y produce •the only for the profound truth that she
packs !nto a single sentence: "Life
instincts of con-artists. She has no especially recommends that par- trembling lip and the tearful eye.
Is full of situations that cryoui joot to
be commented uppn." The maxim
should be put Into needlework and
framed for every home. "I thought
you were on a diet." "You certainly
did crumple the fender." "You
didn't touch your dessert." Of such
comments are lasting hostilities
born.
A final pearl beyond price Is Miss
Manners' glossary of useful paren tal expressions. The first ofthese, of
course, Is. "Becau·se I say so." As a
mild reprimand she suggests, "Do
that once more and I'll kill you ...
There Is also "Go put on your
sweater," which she defines as an
order given to a child Whose parent
is cold.
Getting back to the brat and the
cat. Upon reflection, Miss Manners
concludes that nothing much could
be 15ained by a feeble "Kitty doesn't
like that." The proper resppnse lsto
say tu the child's mother. "I'm
afraid that Tlnkerbell is vicious you'd bett er discourage Natasha
from teasing her. because we
wouldn 't want that pretty face to
get all torn up."

'Rti.l&gt;Y!'

October surprise
WASHINGTON- Has the Ayatolla h Khomelnl given Ronald
Reagan the e vil eye? According t-o
intelligence sources, the aged
leader ol Iran's Moslem fanatics
believes he was responsible for
Jimmy Carter's defeat four years
ago. Now he wa nts to put lhe 'same
spell on President Reagan.
His madness is not without its
methods. Iran has trained, bank·
rolled and directed Shiite terrorists
who are repprtedly planning onP or
more bombing attacks on U.S.
facilities in the Middle East before
Election Day.
U.S. intelligence received what
one State Department insider
described a s a "specific" warning
of a pre-election strike just a few
days ago.
As a result, several embassies In
the region have been placed on full
alert . They include those in Kuwait,
Oman, Bahrain, Jordan, and, of
course, Beirut.

The flood of intelligence tips has
created a probl~m . though. There
have been so many threats of
violen ce against U.S. embassies In
recent weeks that some analysts
suspect a deliberate dislnfonnatln
campaign. The aim would be to cry
"wolf! " so often that, when nothing
happened, the America embassies
would relax security and make a
real attack easier.
"There is deliberate misinformation being given out to water down
our analysts," one source told my
'
associate Lucette Lagnado:
The Shiite terrorists' long-range
goal is nothing less than driving the ·
United States out of the Middle
East. Some administration critics
charge that President Reagan has
encouraged this dangerous dream
by his failure to retaliate against the
terrorists - or their sponsors who were resppnslble for the two
embassy attacks and the Marine

Jack Anderson
massacre In Beirut. The critics say
the terrorists have Interpreted this

as a sign that they can operate
against Americans with impunity.
The latest intelllgen&lt;'e warnings
have been passed along to the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which will soon Issue ·us
long·awalted report on the September embassy bombing. Partl·
sans on the committee staff have
been quarreling over the final
wording of the repprt, but at this
writing Its main pplpts Include
these:
Contrary to some press
repprts, the decision to move the
embassy from West Beirut to East
Beirut was a sound one. Morale was
poor at the old location because of
. constant tension; East Beirut
seemed less vulnerable to terrorist
attack.
- Replacement of the extra
Marine security detail with L~i!ba·

nese guards was a ppsitive step.
The Lebanese performed well. and
a visible Marine presence outside
. the embassy building was considered an Invitation to attack.
- The tot.i'ghest criticism the
repprt
make Is that some oi the
most fundamental security mea. sures had not been taken at th~
embassy. For examplE&gt;. while
officials· waited for concrete to set
so steel gates could be put In
position, a single truck parked
across the entry ro11d at the right
place would have been enough to
block the bomber's truck.
The Syrians, who have been
drawing praise In recent months In
admln!sfratlon circles, were less
than helpful : They allowed terrorist
grou~ to operate freely In Syrtancontrolled areas of Lebanon. It's
also ppsslble that the Syrians let the
tru~kload of explosives pass
through their checkpplnts.
·

will

Every time I read the dollar Is
getting stronger I am tuled with
patriotic fervor and I'm proud to be
an American.
Therefore I was very annoyed
when my French friend Alain came
to Washington lor a banking
conference. I ws prepared to "be
kind to him and not brag. Instead I
found him patronizing ME.
. "I am sorry your dollar is doing
so well agairist the French franc,"
he said.
"What do you mean you're sorry
It's doing_ so well • Do you realize I
can now buy 10 francs for the
dollar?"
"I know you can , and It's all right
with us, because now we can export
ali our snails to the United ·states
and Amertcans can afford to buy
them. But we can't afford tol buy
any American snails becaus11
they're t90 expensive. You people
should have a S5 million trde deflcll
In snails along by t-he end of the
year. That's why I feel sorry for
you."
"The reason the dollar is strong,
Alain, Is because the rest of the
world has faith In It Our tourists
can go anywhere and just by
flashing greenbacks foreign merchants will grovel on the floor."
"Yes, but whlle they're groveling, they're buying United States
Treasury notes with dollars. The
reason is that you people are paying
higher Interest rates for money
than anyone else."
"What's wrong with that?" ··
"Nothing, except your budget is
so out of whack you have to
continually borrow money from all
over the world to meet your $WO
biiUon deficit. As long as you have
~

large budget deficits people will
stay In dollars. Your dollar may be
strong but your economy is In a

mess."
"How can we have a strong dollar
and an economic mess at the same

time?"
"It's good to have a solid
currency, but not one that makes II
lmppsslble to compeie In the world
marketplace. Let us go back to our
snaUs. Bec11use the franc Is so
weak, the French can undercut the
price of American snails. So while
you people are buying French
snails, American snaU producers
have to lay off their workers
because they have they have no
market for them. Every country
with a weak currency Is flooding the
Unlled States with their expprts,
and all you people can do with the
dollar Is borrow more ot them to
pay your debt." ·
"You're just saying that because
you want us to go back to having a
weak dollar against a strong
French franc. " .
"Up to a point. But we dOn't want
you people to go Into a recession, or
you won't be able to buy any French
snails. Also, with a weak dollar we
would start buying American snails
again, and that would hurt the
expprt of French snails.''
"How would you suggest we
· weaken our dollar?"
"You can't weaken It now unless
you start printing more dollars, and
that would only lead
ln11atlon. If .
the dollar became Inflated everyone would get Into something
more comfortable, like gold or the
Japanese yen. Then you wouldn't
be able to sell-any more loans to
meet the Interest on your debt, and

you'd be worse off than Brazil and
Argentina."
"Again, here I was willing to
commiserate with you about your
weak franc, and all you're doing Is
gloating about our strong dollar.
Well, let me tell you something. I
don't like French snails, and neither

do most Americans."
"Okay, forget snails. How would
you like to buy this French alligator
tennis shirt for half the price you
would have to pay for an Ameiican

one?"
"I'll take all you've got."
"That's why I feel sorry for you ."

,B ig 10 title, Rose Bowl trip
should be incentive Earle
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Earle
Bruce, Ohio State's football coach ,
says he doesn't have to remind his
players of the impprtance of the
Buckeyes ' last four regular-season
games.
If Ohio State wins those four
contests, the Buckeyes will · make
their first Rose -Bowl trip since
.Bruce's first teamln1979, which was
undefeated in 11 games before
losing 17-16 to Southern California on
New Year's Day In the Rose Bowl.
Ohlo State and Iowa share the Big
Ten lead with 4-1 records. If they
remain tied, the Buckeyes would
gain the league's sppt In the Rose
Bowl because Iowa last played In the
·
postseason 'ciassic.
'If they (the players) don't know
that , there's· no sense In me

communicating with 'them," Bruce
said Monday as Ohio StatE' prepared
for a road assignment Saturday
against Wisconsin.
"I think they keep up on every
facet of what's happening in the Big
Ten. I don't have to tell them one
thing. They do know that if we
continue to win, that's daggone
important. We've got four tough
games and we havetoplaythem one
at a time. They know that ," the Ohio
State coach said. ·
Bruce thoughtOhioStatewould be
undefeated 1!1 this stage of the
season , but the Buckeyes fell at
Purdue 28-23 two weeks ago.
"Obviously, If you rest on your
laurels and take all your press
clippings, you lose In this league, " he
said. "It's very difficult to come
away from a game you won on an
emotional high and then prepare for

Scoreboard ...
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Sallomd Hod!.ry lA·~
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By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
Washington , Oklahoma and
Texas had close calls over the
weekend but held on to the top three
spots In The Associated Press ·
college football ppU while South
Carolina cracked the Top Ten fotthe
first time In Its history .
Boston College, Southern Metho·
dist and KPntucky aU suffPred their
first setbacks of the season and
dropped In today's ran kings. BC and
SMU, Nos. 4and6last week , slipped
to 11th and 14th, respectivPiy , whiiP
Kentucky's36-10loss toLSUcost the
Wildcats a Top1\venty ranking .
Was hington, which became the
No. 1 team last week, was
hard-pressed to bt&gt;at Oregon 17-10.
The Huskies, who managed only 109
ya rds in offense, received 45 of 60
first -place votes and 1,161 of a
possible 1,200 points from a nation wide panel of sports writers and
sportscasters. Nebraska Is the only_
team to be ranked No. 1 for more

Chillicothe. Clay defender Is Angie Horsly (.00).
Sentinel Photo and story by Scott Wolle.

EASTERNGmLSELIMINATED-Eas&amp;em'sLea
Ann Gaul (14) slalm ball back onCiay'ssldeofthenet
In Monday's Class A District Tournament at

I

Berry's World

splke by Margaret Homer, but Jodi
BurgessandAngleCra!tcame back
to score five straight pplnts for
Portsmouth for the first match
victory.
In the second match, Eastern was
all but beaten, falling behind 5-0 by
the flneplay ofMykal Rlddlebarger.
However,led byKrlstiGaddls,EHS
came back to take a 6-5 lead.
Additional fine plays by Tonya
Savoy and Lea Ann Gaul and
Rucker gave the Meigs Countlans a
7-5 advantage . ·
·

However, It proved · to be the
E aglettes' final lead of the evening.
Clay rallied to win the match and
meet , 15-12.
Coach P~ Douthitt's crew was
led by Ru er with nine points .
Krlstl Gadd added seven, Horner
five, Kristl awk, Gaul and Beverly
Wigal one point each.
Rlddlebarger led the winners ·
a ttack with seven ppints . Burgess
added s ix.
Clay will meet Bishop Flaget lor
the 1~ district c rown.

Top three hold on des.p ite
close calls over weekend

Monday';; Gamt'!'i

Almighty dollar _ ____.;.____A_rr_B.:.:..::..:uch~wa==ld

The

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10. Lima Bath IIIII

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Ulcl. CoNmtw Har11eY, Onctnnal\
McNidlolu. Masm. Wam.n Kmnffiy and
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1,
2,
3,
4,
5.
6

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Th.'K'a ~ · ~ Clh. lV I
Mid. Fenwick !VI
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OUter .5CtloOIJ l"'t'('t&gt;IVInJ( 10 or ITIOrt'
points: u. Holgalt&gt; 28. 12 llle l, COllin!!
Weslt'm ftt&gt;atl'\'c, Ll:.tc-toni a and Cadiz :M.
1 ~. Columbiana Ul. II (de),
JIINI VWan Narth G.aa 17. 18. Wellav~
15. 19 !lie&gt;) , Sidney Lehnwl. Mc Dmald,
Arlln~crt and East Canton 141. 2J, Ctncln·
nail Mariemont 1.1. :If (tiel, Mt'd'taft1c·
5burJt. Stnsbw"J Frankllr!, Llacu and
Wbldham 12. 28. Mm.tpeUer 10.

Smllr¥•

the next game . That's · what's
happening In this league all the time .
"You go from one extreme to the
other. You've got to be prepared
m entally and physically."
The Buckeyes a re an illustration
of Bruce's theory in their last two
games .

than two weeks this season. The
Cornhus kers held the top spot lor
three weeks.
Oklahoma. which trailed Wa·
sh!ngi.on 1.135-J.cm a week ago,
closed the gap, although the Sooners
needed a field goal and touchdown In
ihe final period to t1lfn back Iowa
State 12-10. They received 7 ~
first -place votes compared to 10 ~
la st week but totaled 1.121 ~ point s.
Texas blew most of a 21-point lead
and held on to defeat Arkansa s 24-18
when limP ran out wi th the losers on
the 3-yard linf'. The Longhorns
received 3Y, first -place ba llot s and
l .-096Y, points.
Ne braska, a 24-7 winne r over
Colorado, moved up from lift h place
to fourth with 980 ppints while
Brig ham Young jumped from
seventh tofUth with three firsi -place
votes and 926 points after downing
Air F orce 30-25. OhioSta te rose from
eighth to sixth with 812 point s by
dpfeating Michigan State 23-20.

Winslow's grid career may be over
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Kellen the fourth quarter of the Chargers'
·
Winslow. the San Diego Charge rs' 44-37loss to the Raiders.
All -Pro tight end, may have played
The ligaments in Winslow's right
knee looked like ' 's()aghetti ... like a
his last football game.
"The chances are difficult to couple of mop ends'"before surgery,
predict. but it's a very, very severe the physician said. "The ligaments
.Injury ," Dr. Gary Losse said had almost an explosion-like
Monday of Winslow's tom up right appearance."
Winslow was hit by Raiders
knee," the -result of a hard hit he took
after a pass reception against the linebacke r J eff Barnes afte r he
Los Angeles Raiders. "We won't made a twisting catch of a pass by
Dan Fouts.
know for six months. My job ended
As he exited on a golf cart ,
last.night .. . the rest is up to Kellen's
rehabilitation."
Winslow waved tocheerlngfans and
Winslow, the NFL 's leading acknowledged members of the
receiver over the past six seasons , Raiders who stepped forward to
will be In bed for several days, in · speak to him. Losse said that was a
fairly typical reaction to such an
casts for several weeks and In
rehabilitation for half a year before Injury, which initially sparks a
su~ge of adrenaline through the
he tests his mobility on the knee.
body.
Losseoperated on Winslow for2~
Winslow declined to talk to
hours Sunday night after the tight
report ~rs after the game, and a
end went down following a ca tch in
spokeswoman at Sharp Memorial

Portsmouth 7th in
AA, North Gallia is
16th in Class A poll
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cinelnna ti Moeller. Elyria Catholic and
Newark Catholic are two victories
away from undefeated regular
seasons and apparent accompanying championship trophies in The .
Associated Pre5s' Ohio high school
football polls.
Moeller. ranked No. 1 in Class
AAA. goes after victory No. 9
Saturday night against Cincinnati
Elder. Class AA Elyria Catholic
awaits Mansfield Malabar and
Newark Catholic, the Class A
pace-setter, travels to Utica In
Friday night games.
The three AP poU leaders c arry
8-0-0 records this season.
Moeller, a 38-28 winner last week
over previously unbeaten Cincln:J
natl St. Xavier, collected 266 ppints
to 201 for new runnerup Centerville

and 187 for third-rated Youngstown
Mooney.
,Lakewood St. Edward, Ohio' s
second-ra ted Class AAA power last
week, suffered its first loss , 14-13 to
Mentor Lake Catholic, and fell to
eighth place this week.
ElyiiaCatholic,a49·7w!nnerover
Panna Padua. was No. 1 again in
ClassAA with 221 polntsfromastate
panel of spprts writers and broad·
casters . Steubenville, a ~ victor
over Bellaire, moved from third to
second, swapping sppts with OrrvUi e, a 48-6 winner over Navarre
Fairless. Steubenville collected 200
points, 12 more tllan Onville .
Newark Catholic defeated Granville 48-0 to stay In the top spot In
Class A. The Green Wave piled up
247 points to 182 for second-ranked
ew Philadelphia Tuscarawas Cathollc and 163 for No. 3 Middletown
Fenwick.

Hospital forwa rded his calls Man·
da y night to the Chargers · publicity
office. whe re they were not
answered .
Losse said his patient 's response
wa s "very appropriate. If he haqn't
been upset after .being informed of
this nature of injury, I'd have .been
worried."
Winslow was not wea ring a knee
bra ce . He broke his light i&lt;'g during
the 1979 season. but Losse, whb
designs braces for use by football
pl ayers, said that did got affect the
severity or the ligament damage.
Losse said Winslow will never
r&lt;'gain 100 percent use of the knee"we would hope for It to return to 95
percent " - and will be sidelined for
nine months to a year eve n if his
recovery is perlect.
The doctor said In six months; the
6-5. 240-pound Winslow m ay be
allowed to try running and pivoting
on the knee to determine if he can
ever rejoin the Chargers.
Winslow, who leads the NFL this
sea son with 55 receptions lor 663
yards, has 399 Cjl tches for 5.176
yards since 1979. more than a ny
pla yer In the leag'UI' .

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The other first -place ba llot went to
LSU, which c lobbered Kentucky
and vaulted from lOth to seventh
with 829 point s. M iam l climbed from
ninth to eighth with 752 point s by
downing Pitt 27.7.
South Carolina m ade the Top Ten
for the fi rst time by rallying to beat
Notre Dame 36-32. The Gamecocks,
whose 6.() start is thei r best ever and
the fi rst time thcy have ever won six
consecutive ga mes in one season ,
received 719 points. Oklahom a
Sta te, 12th last week, rounded out
the Top Tcn with 613 ppints after
routing Kansas47· 10.
Boston Coll&lt;'ge dropped out of the
Top Ten by losing to West Virginia
21-20 and SMU fell followi ng a 29-20
upset at the ha nds of Houston.
Th is week' s Second Ten consists
of Boston College, Aubu rn, Georgia.
SM U. Florid a Sta te, Florid a. Iowa.
West Vit'ginia ; Penn Sta tP and
Southe rn Cali fornia .
La st week , it was South Ca rolina .
Oklahoma Sta,e, Aubur n. Georgia ,
F'lorlda Sta te. Kentucky, F'lorida .
Iowa. Penn Sta te and West Virgin ia .

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�Rams stop Falcons, 24-10;
1 Dickerson charges foul play
ATLANTA (AP) _;_Eric Dicker·
son was turning.
"They really hacked meotr. They
have no class," the Los Angeles
running back said of" the Atlanta
Falcons' defenders afterlielplngthe
Rams to a 24-10 National Football
League victory Monday night In a
nationally televised contest.
Dickerson, who ran for 142 yaids
on 25 can:les, Including a 10-yard
touchdown run,. charged · the Fal·
coris with hitting late on numerous
occasions and was partlculilrly
Incensed at Atlanta defensive back
Tom Pridemore, for an alleged
tardy hit on only his second carry of
the night.
" It was No. 27, I don't know his
name. I think he wanted to do a head
stand or a hand stand on my back
after I had been down wha~ seemed
like five minutes," he said. "It was
right tbere on the sideline and a
referee was right there and said he
didn't see it. I think somebody needs
glasses."
He said that wasn't the only cheap

RAMS TRIUMPH -AUantaFalcons'KenJolutson,
left, holds baD, but Is stopped by Los Angeles Rams'

Vince Newsome (22) in Monday night's NFL game in
Atlanta. The Rams won, 24-10. (AP Laserphoto).

Anderson will start rest of
season. for Cincinnati team
CINCINNATI (AP) - Veteran
Ken Anderson will be the Cincinnati
Bengals' starting quarterback for
the remainder of the season because
the team now has a chance at the
playoffs, says Coach sam Wy~he.
Despite Cincinnati's 2-6 record ,
the Pittsburgh Steelers lead the
Central Division of the American
Football Conference of the National
FCX?tball League with only a 4-4
record. Cincinnati plays the Ollers,
0·8, at Houston on Sunday.
Anderson, who has not started In
three games, said he never felt he
had lost his job. He also said he has
recovered since being knocked cold
by the Cleveland Browns' Carl
Hairston on Sunday. Cincinnati won
the game 12-9 behind the work of
relief quarterback Turk Schonert.
Anderson came in when rookie
starter Boomer Esiason was unable

to complete passes. Esiason has
relieving. To me - I've said this
completed only four of his last 20 before- there's nostatusdlfference
in their positions. I don't like the
attempts.
"We're going to start Kenny, "
term 'starting quarteraback. ·
said Wyche. " It's a decision I expect
"In Turk, We've got the NFI.'s
togo with the rest oftheyear.lt'sthe answer to Goose Gossage. He's
proper thing to do.
great at what he does. HC' comes in
"We're looking at a second half of without warmups and does a great
job.
a season where we have to have a
good record to have a chance at the
"It comes down to 'Who's your
playoffs. I think Kenny is the guy to
best starter?' and 'Who's got the
take us there. He went in Sunday and
best chance of beating Houston?' I
played like he was never out. He
think it's Kenny, because of his
came in and dld a great job," Wyche . experience, his mobility, his poise,"
said.
said Wyche.
Anderson had high prai'£' for
Anderson completed 8of12passes
for 168 yards plus one interception.
Schonert.
Schonert led the Bengals on their
"!think we've got a guy here who
longest two drives that culminated
isn't always appreciated by a lot of
in two field goals. He completed 9 of people," said Anderson. "I think
15 passes for 130 yards.
he's demonstrated to people that
"You play players at their best
he's a quality quarterback and can
positions.': said Wyche. "Kenny's play for a lot of teams."
better at starting. Turk's better at

Meet the Tornadoes

Kevin Spaun
5-8, 150 pound
Freshman Guard .

Wendell Clark
6-1, 143 pound
Junior end

~Bowler

recalls heart
·attack six years ago
start bowling again.
By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
"They said three frames would be
The pain started in his chest, a all right. I did three games. They
sharp insistent pain thatcouldnotbe said If I wanted to exercise, I could
dismissed as simple indigestion, the walk a little. I ran a quarter-mile a
kind of pain that demanded Imme- day."
diate a Mention.
The, problem was the Waukegan
Earl Anthony, professional bo- Open. Anthony had won the tournaw!ing's$1mlllionman, was having a ment three years in a row. His'wife
heart attack.
comes from the town. There was a
"It was' just like you read about, a little pride involved and the event
classic one," he said, recalling the was just two weeks away. Anthony
1978 attack. "I was staying In the was determined to bowl in It.
home of a friend In Callfornla. I got
"I was concerned, sure," he said.
dressed, woke him up and went to ·
the hospital. I got lucky. A heart
specialist was on duty. The lastthlng
I remember was hearing him say,
'He's having a heart attack.'"
A blockage had formed In
Trf.CouniJ
- ·.. ·Leque
Od.t,JIIW
Anthony's heart and the bowler's
S&amp;andlnP
strenuous running program - " I'd Team
Pia.
Fraternal
Order
of
Eagles .. ................... . 38
do 5-7 miles a day preparing for the
Roach's Gun Shop .... ......... ....... .. ........... 32
tour," - had caused his blood Bttl's Body Sllop ...... ........ ...................... :rl
vessels to develop their own bypass Hysell's Used Cars ............................... :111
OU &amp; Gas ............................16
as the heart muscle strained for Shoemaker
High individual series - Jerry Vanlnwa·
extra oxygen .
gen 571: CharUe VanMeter 570; Rufus J~ll
For two days, Anthony remained 557.
High Individual game- Rufus Jeweii21B;
sedated as doctors worked over Charlie
VanMeter 213; Jerry Vanlnwagen
him. For two weeks, he was In ~ Klgh team series -Roach'sGun Shop2495;
Intensive care. For two months, he Bttl's
Body ShOp 218f; Fralernal Onler ct
was supposed to take It easy. The Eagles 2433.
.
High team game- Roach's Gun Shopll!lll;
first thing he asked the doctors when
Fraternal Onler of Eagles 8'10: Btll's Body
he·was released was when he could Shop 861 . '

Local bowling

Woodward named
toYankee post
CINCINNATI (AP) - Woody
Woodward, Cincinnati Reds' assistant general manager since 1980, has
taken the job with the New York
Yankees vacated last week by Bill
Bergesch who is now the Reds'
general manager.
Woodward has been named vi(:e
president for baseball operations.
"When Woody said he was going
to New York tolookatthesituation, I
told him I was going to have to make
a decision, so I did," .said Bob
Howsam, Reds President. He said
this all happened during the general
managers meetings in Austin,
Texas.
·
1
•Til be working directly for Clyde
King, the general manager, which
would make it very similar to what I
was doing with the Reds," Woodward said Monday.
Woodward, whO . played for the
Reds from 1968-71., was promoted to
assistant general manager in November 19130.
He resigned just three days after
Reds President Bob Howsam hired
BUI Bergesch from the YanJ&lt;ees'
front office to become the Reds'
general manager. Bergesch was
vice president of baseball operations for the Yankees the last five
years.
Woodward was a National
League Infielder for eight years. He
coached the Florida State baseball
team for five years before reiolning
the Reds as inlnor-league field
coordlna tor In 1978.

Falcons, who had beaten Los
shot, b\lt "that'stbewaytheyplay. I
guess that's what the coacbes down
Angeles two weeks ago 30-28, could
In Atlanta· teach them.
manage only a 39-yard field goal
"I'm not saying It's dirty, but I
from Mlck Luckhurst In the second
don't think It's real good football. If
quarter and scored In the closing
minute on an 18-yard pass from
they want to play that way, they
ougl)t to go to Russia," said
SteveBartkowskltoStaceyBailey.
Dickerson.
Ellard, a second-yearplayerfrom
'The 6-foot-3, :!'»pound speedster, Fresno State, who suffered a
l)rulsed th)gh and sat out the second
however, didn't let It bother him In
his performance, scoring the Rams'
hail!, said hlspuntreturniD"wasn't
first touchdownonhls10-yardsweep
the end of the game'' for the Falcons
after only 1: 03 of the second quarter
"but, It probably was a big letdown."
before letting Henry Ellard do the
The Falcons, whose offense has
rest.
been missing the last two games,
Ellard, the NFL's leading punt losing a 1!1-7 decision to the New
returner, who helped set up Dicker- York Gl311ts a week ago, managed
son's score with a 29-yard punt only 217 yards against the Rams, 73
return, caught a 9-yard TD pass In the second half, and dropped to
from quarterback Jeff Kemp only 3-5.
1: Ill later, then closed out the
"We've gotto start thinking about
21-polnt second period with an stringing some wins together," said
explosive 69-yard score on a punt Atlanta quarterback Steve Bartreturn with 39 seconds left before kowskl, whohiton20of31passesfor
Intermission.
only 144 yards. ''We're not going to
Mike Lansford closect out. the · have many friends until we do.''
Rams' scorjngwlth an 18-yard field ·
Most or the crowd of 52,861 left
goal In the fourth period. The earlylntheflnalperlod.Martybcoed
the home team.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) -In12years
In the Na tiona I Football League,
Cleveland Browns' offensive line·
man Joe DeLamlelleure has seen
coaches come and go. Coaches are
fired , he says, because "you can't
fire the whole team."
DeLamlelleure, though, was In
the minority among Browns' players Monday in complimenting
owner Art Modell for firing seventhyear Coach Sam Rutigliano.
"You're never glad when something like that happens, but! feel it's
·a positive move," DeLamielleure
said. "I can't say I'm surprised.
When you keep losing, you expect
something like this."
Rutigliano, with a career record
or 47-50anda record thisseasonofl-7
following Sunday's 12-9 loss in
Cincimiatl, was replaced by defensive coordinator Marty
Schottenheimer.
The move had many of the
Browns' re-examining their own
performances so far this season.
"I guess 'shocked' Is a good
word,'' said tight end Ozzle Newsome. "Sam and I came here
together and I hoped we'd leave here
together. There's no way it's all
Sam's fa ~It. If we go 8-0 now, I guess
then you could say It was sam's
fault.
"Was sam to blame for me me
dropping that pass In Los Angeles?
Was Sam to blame for all those
passes that were dropped Sunday?"
Quarterback Paul McDonald,
who credits Rutigliano for helping
him develop Into the Browns'
starting quarterback, said he, too,
was surprised.
"I didn't see ll coming," McDonald said. "I think ordlnartly, this
would cause some chaos and
confusion . There's some of that, but
there's less of It because It's Marty

Schottenhelmer, who's an outstandingcoach.
"If I would have played better,

just enjoy playing the game, and I'll
play for anybody." .

r;==========~

obviously the chance is we could
have a better record now and he
would still be here," McDonald said.
"I tried as hard as I could, and the
last three weeks I felt I was playing
well.''
Defensive linemen O;lve Puzzuoll
and Bob Galle were both angered by
the news.
"AU I know is, he's not theonewho
was dropping passes and missing
tackles," PuzzuoU said. "He's the
best motivator I've ever worked for.
I'm shocked."
"I'm angry not with all the fans,
but with the small select group that
chose to take out their frustrations
o'\. the head coach," Colic said. "I
resent that. They have no idea of
what he's !Ike as a man. And I'm
angry with the media. Somewhere
along the line, people In the industry
decided to stop writing the facts and
decided to write editorials every

APSportsWrlter
The St. Louis Cardinals are trying
to avoid a situation that now races
the Cleveland Indians vis-a-vis free
agents.
The Cardinals understand that
reliever Bruce Sutter will file for
free agency later this week, but they
continue to negotiate with the highly
prized pitcher. Andre Thol'l)ton of
Cleveland, who already has filed for
free agency, says the Indians

tlmedla , In c ., PomerOy. Ohio 45769, h.
992·2156. St&gt;cond class posta~e pa id at
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11-IURSDAY
BRADBURY Bradbury
P.T.O. wUI hold Its regular
monthly meeting Thursday, 7: :lJ
p.m., at Bradbury Elementary.

If you ha\1!' SC'rvi cc problems ca ll o ur
serviC(' desk at 992 · 21~6 berore 6: oo p .
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RUTLAND - The Rutland
Lions Club wDI meet at 7 p.m .
Thursday evening at the civic
center. Visitors are welcome.

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POMEORY - Fenney Bennett Post 128 auxiliary wlll have
a dinner Wednesday, 6:30p.m.,
at the hall. Meetings for the post
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No subscriptions by mail pt_•r mlned In
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SYRACUSE - The Third
· Wednesday Homemakers Club
of Syracuse will meet at 10 a.m.
Wednesday morning at the
Presbyterian Church annex.
Cindy Oliveri. home extension
agent , wlll demonstrate wok
cooking. A potluck will beheld at
noon.

POSTMASTER: Send addrPSs changes
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Harrtsonvllle Senior Citizens
will meet tonight at 7 p.m. at the
town house. Those attending are
asked to take snacks .. VIsitors
are welcome.

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TIJESDAY

Published eve ry a fternoon, Monda y
through Friday, 111 Court St ., y th&lt;'

The selection of Schottenheimer
seemed to please most or the
players.
"That's cool there, butlhatetosee
this happen to Sam," PU22uoll said.
"He's certainly done a great job
with the defense," said linehacker
Clay Matthews, "so I think they
picked a good man tor the job. But I

..................
OFFII EXPIRES

• 110; 1111, 1:11 Of Dlla 111m llzH

NOV, 2, 1914

Volunteer Fire Department will be
serving an election da&gt;: dinner light stuff !Ike sloppy joeS, hot dogs,
soup and pie- and that's on Nov. 6
at the station.
And -last, butcertalnly not least
- the Ladles AuxUlary of the
Orange Fire De~ent, head·
quartered In Tuppers Plains, wlll
hold Its annual turkey supper on
Saturday night, Nov. 17.
I know so little about the Ohio
State Board of Education and the
selection of members to that bOard.
However, Mary Goodrich, a
candidate for the state board,
visited our office the other day ani:!
points out that there are 21
members on the state board, one
elected from each Congressional
District, for a six-year term.
Peti!lons of candidacy are flied In
Fairfield Co!lnty - same as the
Congressional candidate requirement and the counties are the same
as those making up the Congres·
slonal District. Mrs. Goodrich Is a
resident o! Zanesville.
A couple of people have said that
they understand there will be no
yearbook at Meigs Hlgh School this
year.
While there Is dlfflculty In
locating a faculty advisor for the •
book, beth Principal James Miller
and Supt. Dan Morris report that
efforts are being made to 5ecure a
person to head the project and they ·
anticipate that a yearbook wDI
materialize.
Boys Interested In joining Syracuse Boy Scout Troop 242 and their
parents are cordially Invited to
attend a troop meeting' to be held at
7 p.m. tonight at the Syracuse
Elementary School.

PORTLAND - Halloween
costume party at Portland Elementary School, 12 noon to 3
p.m . Frtday; costume judging
for students as well as pre-school
children; treats.
·
'
MIDDLEPbRT- A planning
session for the. World Commun·
lty Day observance of Chllfch
Women United of Meigs County
will be held Frtday at 1: 30 p.m.
at the Middleport Presbyterian
Church. Representatives of the
member chUrches are asked to
attend. 'The World Community
Day program will be held on
Nov. 2 at the MiddlePort Church.

SATIJRDAY
MIDDLEPORT - 'The Middleport Elementary P.T.O. Is
sponsoring a fall carnival saturday from 2 p.m. until 6 p.m. at
the school. Food, pop, a sweet
shop, general store, games,
prizes and entertainment will be
featured.
CHESTER - An arts and
crafts show, sponsored by the

nus

GURADIAN ANGEL 8x10 loot painting acryUcs. A retired postal worker, McElroy's interest
titled "The Guanllan Angel," was iumg In the rooms in arl Is long standing and he paints mostly for the
of Trinity Church last Friday and was dedicated expenses of his work. He has completed baptistry
Sunday In tribute to four deceased Sunday School paintings lor Churches of Christ In Pomeroy,
superlnlf!ndellts- Lena Huber, Fred Blaettnar, Carl . Rolland, Zion and GaDlpolls. Pictured with McElroy
~and Roy Mayer. The artist, J'aul McElroy, left,
Is Qob Buck, Trinity Church member who accepted
painted the scene on fiberboard usln~~: oils and · ' the p8inttng on behalf of the church.
·

Cub Pack 245 conducts meeting
Cub Scout Pack 245 of Middleport
held a halloween party recently at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Prlzes were won by Bobby E!Us
and Jason Stewart. The boys played
games · and refreshments were
served.
Attending were .Bob Smith, cubmaster, Bob Johnson, assistant
cubmaster, and webelos leader,
Jason Stewart, Bobby Johnson,
Ryan Cowan, Robby Wyatt, Jay C.
Cremeans, Kyle Simpson, Matt
Craddock, Frank Blake, and John

Bechtle; Paula Carmichael, Den 2,
David Carmichael, Cory Seymore,
Crockett Roush, Bobby Ellis, Kevein Whobrey; Den 3, Sherry and
Gene Goodwin, Nicky Goodwin and
Mark Mills; Sarah Johnson, Den 4.
tigers and cubs, sam Cowan, Jon
Mattea, Willie Johnson, Adam
Wyatt, Cllfford Thomas, Keith
Darst, Walt Williams, Kevin Logan.
and Ryan Rowe. Others of the
committee assisting with the party
were Judy Cowan, Brenda Wyatt,
and Shirley Smith.

SEE US ABOUT
THE

3~R's

Cookes observe child's birthday

The fourth bi'ihday of Bethany
Cooke was observed with a party at
"The Debates" just don't seem to the home pf her grandparents, Mr.
be very earthshaking even though and Mrs. Kenneth McLaughlin,
both sides declare victory. Per- ' Pomeroy. Attending were her
haps, my attitude is one of "don't parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cooke
confuse me with the facts, my
mind's made up" ....do keep
smiling ...

RE-TIRING
RE-TREADING &amp;
RE-PAIRING

-

and son, John, and Kevin, Terry and
Nick McLaughlin . The youngster
also.recelved congratulations and a
gift from her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. PhUip Cooke or Sumpter, S.C.

GENERAL TIRE SALES

Gray Panthers plan meeting

Calendar

(USPS 14li-9QI J
A Dlvlsloa of Multimedia, Inc.

day."

-

October is moving right along.
See how time rues when you're
having fun!
Meigs County groups often bank
on public dinners to btcrease their
treasuries and already several
have announced - dinners for
November.
The Racine Volunteer Emergency Squad will .stage its annual
ham and turkey dinner at Southern
High School from 11 a.m. to 2 p.rn.
on Nov. 4. The &amp;!!em Township

The Dally Sentinel

.Cardinals trying .to
avoid agent problems
By JOHN NELSON

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Mrs. Agnes HUI,
Involved In col·
lecting historical
Items 1,1bout
Meigs County \ es•
pecially the
Tuppers
area, has been
given an extension
secure the needed orders for the
publication of her book on the
history of Tuppers Plains and the
sun-rnmdil)g area.
There are 200 orders needed for
publica lion and there are over 100
on hand at the present time. The 200
page book Is the early history or
Tuppers Plains and starts back
about 1B02. It has pictures or the
community from yesteryear and
well as family history.
Copies are $25 each and you are to
order by send[ng you nnoney and
address to Mrs. Hill at Box 172
Tuppers Pl1,1lns, Ohio 45783.
'
Do hurry ·~ would be a shame for
•• the book which will have Informa- .
tion for generations to come
Included not to be printed due to
lack of orders.

-1

[lJI~i~illllll:i

Historical publication
must be within month

It's this Friday and Saturday that
the Big Bend Merchants Association Is urging employes In town and
their employees to wear costumes
for their work day: Also, It has been
suggested that, perhaps, the costume idea can be carried out also In
Ponneroy on Tuesday, Oct. 30, when
a public Halloween party will be
staged.

MARTY SCHOITENHEIMER

The Daily Sentinei-Pa

Beat of the bend

•

Browns
fire Sam,
hire new
mentor

SIU'BIUIIRD
SATILLITI

Tuesday. October 23, 1984

October 23, 1984

Ohio

Community Wives Club, wDI be
held at the Chester Elementary
School, saturdl,ly, from 9 a.m.
until 4 p.m . Breakfast and
dinner wDI be . available. To
reserv~ table space for crafts,
contact Jane Coates, 985-4327, or
Lila Van Meter, 985-3951.
BURLINGHAM - A community Halloween party is
planned for Saturday, 6 p.m.
unt118 p.m., at Woodmen Hallin
Burlingham. A fish pond,
games, country store and refreshments will be provided. AU
are welcome. The party Is
sponsored by the Modern Woodmen adults and juniors and the
community.
MIDDLEPORT ~ Revival
servll:es with Leslie Hayman
wUI be held at . the Ash St.
Freewill Baptist Church, Middleport, beginning Saturday and
continuing through November 3.
Services, with special singing,
will begin at 7: ill p.m. each
evening. Dan Hayman and the
Country · Hymntlmers will sing
this Saturday.

Happenings
Free doth~ng day
POMEROY - Free clothing
day will be held at the &amp;!Iva tion
Anny, Pomeroy, on Thursday,
from 10 a .m. until noon. All area
. residents In need of clothing are
welcome.

Trick or treat
set for wednesday
SYRACUSE -Syracuse trick
or treat night will be heldfronn6
p.m untU 7 p.m. on Wednesday
Oct. 31. A siren will signal the
beginning and end of the hour.

"Where the Rubber Meets the Road"

The Gray Panthers of Southeast- some new project Ideas.
For more information contact
ern Ohio are having a meeting and
potluck meeting on Tuesday, Oct. Pam Garretson. Chairperson. at
23, beginning at 6: 30 p.m . at lhe 594-7490.
Athens County Senior Center, 20
Kern Street, Athens.
During the dinner, there will be a
colorful arid fast paced slide .
presentation, "Never Get Sick In
Amertca," complete with musical
score, which wDI highlight the basic
problems confronting us In health
care today.
Among topics to be discussed
during the meeting will be the Have
a Heart Ohio campaign, recruit·
ment • of new members. the new
Medicare Assignment law, and

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Oh.

PH. 992-71 b 1

Adelines
install
new
members
Betty Longstreth, Langsville,
was one of four women Installed as
new members or the Hocking
Valley Chapter of Sweet Adellnes
Tuesday evening. Others were Ann
Buck, Guysville; Grace Feeck and
Holly MUier, Athens.
Preparations are being made for
the third annual show, "The Hands
or Time" to be presented Nov. 17 at
8 p .m. at the Middle School
Auditorium In Athens. Tickets are
available from any Sweet Adeline
for $3 In advance, or $3.50 at the
door.
Guest quartets appearing on
stage with the local chapter are
"The Harmony Highlights," Louisville, Ky. and "The Bowery Boys"
from Columbus, Ohio. For more
Information, phone 593- 8620 or
949-3022.

...AERODYNAMICALLY RE·DESIONED. OUR 2.2 LITER ENGINE
HAS BEEN REFINED mliVE YOU IMPROVED PERFORMANCE.

$7039*

Donations sought
Donations of prizes and money
are being sought by the Rutland
commUnity halloween party committee for the party to be staged Oct.
30, 6 to 8 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center.
Tit~ party will be held In lleu of
trick or treat In the village and
co-chairman of the event are
Marcia Elliott and Jane Wise.
Games and contests will be held
with prizes to be (!Warded. Donations for the party are to be sent to
Reva Snowden, treasurer. '
·

Revival in progress

Wednesday potluck

MIDDLEPORT - A revival
Is In pro~s at the Middleport
Independent Holiness Chureh on
Pearl Street. The revival began
Sunday and will continue
througli . this coming Sunday.
Services begin at 7: ll p.m. each
night with evangelist, Rev.
Roria!d Baughey from Adrian,
Michigan. Odell Manley, pastor,
extends a welcome to all.

Mrs. Margie Cartwright, Worthy
Matron of Mason Chapter 157, Order
of the Eastern star, Pomeroy St., ·
Mason, W. Va., wishes to Invite all
Eastern Starmembersln the area to
attend the regular October meeting
and potluck dinner to be held
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m . A social
hour will follow the meeting with a ·
door prize to be awarded. All
members are Invited to attend, as
well as members from other
chapters.

•

I

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Family slm Iuxuty to challenge Buick

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Centuty and Olds Ciera lor hundreds
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The Mavlc Wagon ... seats zand a big
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Every RIW ~mlfieln IJuln Cllrysler lnd PlymOUth Carntl Wlltt
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lor 5 yellS or 50,1100 miles whichever comes li~t. Deduclible
applies. hcludesie..u Dealer has delails.

. SEE ALL THE •mNS
15 CHinSI.Eim AND PLYMOUTH$, lODAY!
.

• M.S.A.P. of base whlcle eKcludes title , ta)(es and destination charges. Other higher priced ·model s available. Deale• pnces w1U vary.
Bas~ on ~ sticker pnce companson pf comparably eqLiippe&lt;:l vehicles 1tBased on slicker pr1ce of opt1ons 11 purctlase&lt;l separately

.

t

'

TO

399 S. THIRD

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RUE MOTORS
PH. 992-2594

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

�PauB

.'
Pomeroy-Middleport, 1Ohio

6-The Daily Se,ltinel

Tuesday, October 23, 19_8 4

October

1984

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomaroy-Middleoort. 01::0

Ame'fi:can.Legion Auxiliary:s
function is promqting service .

"

The role of the Afflerlcan Legion
Auxlllary In promoting America·
nlsm, cornrilunity service, youtb·
oriented programs, and help to '
veterans was reviewed In a school of
InStruction on project work held at
the Eighth District meeting of the
American Leg!Qn Auxlllary held at
Wllkesvllle recently.
Topics discussed Included the
responslblijty to promote America·
lllsm through appreciation of the
nag and the essay contest conducted
In the schools, led by Denise
Shannon; children and youth, the
l)roblems of missing children,
suiCide, alcohol and drugs, by
10haron Squires; community ser·
Vice emphasizing "giVing of yourl;!!lf' In community and church

SHlMI'OO

FREE .
7 oz. (onditioner

work, as well as beautification . various programs of the Auxiliary.
projects and health drives by Her theme this year Is "Show We
Margaret Bowles; junior partlclpa· Care." Joanne McHaffie handled
lion todevelopleader5hlp by Loretta registration, Patiicla Shaefer, pres·
Tiemeyer; assisting 'veterans !dent of the host unit, Joseph
whether In their homes, hospitalized Freeman 476, as well as Helen
or In nursing homes by Sharon Hannpson, Eighth District pres!·
Dixon; preparation of matetlals for dent, gave greetings, Lucille
McComber, the wel~;Qme, and
Publication by EUzabeth Young.
Mary Martin and Mlllle Cotterill, Linda Neff, the response.
John SimmOns, principal of the
hospital representatives, com·
mented on the things needed to Wllkesvnte Elementary School, and
carry out the parties as well as Frank Helm, chaplain of the host
personal Items for the veterans. unit gave welcomes. James Bald·
win, dlstrrlct commander, comThey said cigarettes are furnished
on the good work of the
mented
from Gifts for the Yanks funds.
Auxlllary.
Lorene Snyder, past president,
Iva Powell and Lula Hampton,
spoke briefly as did Eileen Howes,
Pomeroy,
reported for the resoluwho reported on the national
tion
committee.
A tea was held atthe
convention. Norma Frazer, depart·
conclusion
of
the
meeting.
ment president, t'l)ked on the

with purchase of

s 01.

1

Shompoo

FRUTH PHARMACY - MIDDLEPORT
364 JACKSON PIKE

G.IIJ.!ro.~. ()j!Q 45631

next meeting as a fund-raising
project. A birthday card was signed
chUrch siding project was made at
by the group for Lillian Napper who
tile recent meeting of the Forest
ts· Ill at home. Other birthdays
Run United Methodist Women held
observed
were those of Leah Nease,
'O.t the home of Leah Nease with
Kathleen
Scott, Erma Roush, and
Mary Nease and ROse Ann Jenkins
Mrs. Hollon.
il!; co-hostesses.
It was decided that Instead of the
· A report was given on the recent
district meeting held In Athens . usual ThanksgiVing carry-In dinner
for November, the group will have a
attended by Mary Nease, Hllda
:Yeauger, Faye Wiggins, Kathleen Kentucky-type dinner, typical of
Central Appalachia.
~~~ and Evelyn Hollon. Mrs.
Kathleen Scott had the evening
Hollon presided 11t the meeting
which opened with a poem, "Ten program using missions as her
Little Christians." Officers' reports topic. She read an article from the
were given with 35 sick calls being Interpreter on missions. It was
reported. .
noted that some of the World
A bake sale was planned for the Service gifts and the Women's
$50 toward the

.

Officers elected
The candystripeers of Veterans
Memorial Hospital elected the
following officers on Thursday
October 4. Tracy McKinney, pres!·
dent; Becky Vance, vice president;
Missy Longstreth; secretary;
Cindy Fetty, treasurer; Krista
Roush. news reporter. The candystrlpers will have a Halloween party
"' 7 p.m., a t the hosp!tal.
on Oct. ""·

fen:

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use ia optional - heater '

woodgrain fini1tl control

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Uns~;nted

WED., OCT. 24

7:30 P.M.·
(hester Fire House
No Weekly Meetinas
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DISTRIBUTOR-JEAN TRUSSELL

Ph.

$119
7.5

7:30 P.M.

THURS., OCT. 25

2.25

oz.

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r-------------1

Tim and Linda Coats cetebra ted
their first wedding anniversary on
Sunday at their residence, 1533 Nye
Ave.. Pomeroy. The couple received gifts from Mrs. Barbara
James, Mrs. Llllle Aleshire, Rl·
chard Qualls, Pomeroy; and Sherry
Coatss, andShannonandLoriCoals,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
An anniversary cake and Ice
cream were served to Mr. and Mrs .
Coats who were married on Oct. 21,
1983 In Huntington by the Rev.
Henry BraceY,.

POWDER

t~e Model 3602 PLUS e bu ilt·in

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patients were served at the party.
Members of the units visited each
patient before leaving the home.

Coates note
•
anntversary

·aABY

HEATER with FAN

cen be used witJ:t or without it.
•Beautiful almond cabinet with

3

JOHNSON'S

Thill heeter tl•s ell the feelurH of

Pledge to Mission offerings go as
block grants of money ·to the
conferences for training leaders
and carrying on evangelistic
efforts.
The United Methodist Women
support three missions with Red
Bird Mission of Beverly, Ky. being
one of them. Several told of a recent
trip there by Erma Roush, Edith
Sisson, Mary K Roush and Kat·
hleen Scott.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Betty Blackwood,
May Holter, Sandy Hawley, Naomi
Wyatt, and guests, Jean and Dan
Nease.

Rovnak birthday is celebrated
· The 70th birthday of Bill Rovnak,
a veteran residing at the Ar!;adla
Nursing Home at Coolville, was
observed with a party staged by the
American Legion Junior and Senior
Auxlllarles of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion.
Other- patients lit the nursing
home were Invited to join In the
observance wit!) cake and punch
'being served. The Halloween theme
was carried out for the party
decorations.
Going for the party were Veda
Dal(ls, junior actiVities chalnnan,
Drew Webster Post, Janice Hankla,
Lannle and Amber, Erica McCllntock, Mary Martin, IvaPoweU, Lori
•Black, and Ann Will. Seventy

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lotOOlEI'OIIl OH. 45760
~~~ 992-6491

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39

After
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EMMOGENE
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CONGO
I Pol. Adv. Pd. lor by

Emmbgene Holste1n Congo
College Rd .. Sy1acuse. Ohm 45779

DEODORANT

TAMPONS
Regular .

REPUBLICAN
RALLY

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$189 EA.

THURSDAY, OCT. 25TH, 6:30 P.M.

PEPTOBISMOL
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CHERRY
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HOW DOES ONE AQJUST TO WIDOWHOOD?
Bag of

Theft 111 meny tscollent tolls. reference books. tnd Yidto ttpes re·
lllift&amp; tot.. odjutlltnts wttich survi•ioawidowsand widowers must
flllb. lost "' oot o"~' tochnictl ond moy help you undenttnd
· bttltr till tronsltionll stillS of widowhood . Those books holp ex·
pllin how to ftellltltt htllthy ment1l1nd physictlodiustments titer
1t1t loss of 1 love one.

~088

DEWITT
ASPIRIN
5 Gr.
Bottle of 100

HtrtiN jut• ftw of tl!em wt hiiYt millblo in our library ot tile Fu·

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GENAPAP
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itiiOiE'i:S:",;rob&gt;ltiiiS ond Ajustments
It Is l11port1ot to point oot thllt 111 tho texts. rtforenctllllltriols. Yi·
doo llflllllllll ptOftssleMI counnlina ctnnot repltct • lov1n11nd
Clriq frltod. Ooll't sltilt yoerlrioods out, tl!ty ctn be 1 vtlutbltiS·
nt in pttlnc on wit~ yoor IWt.

.__

f!l~6- ct:~r?l!-ic

Warning :
Surgeon General Has D~terminad
That Ciua'ren• Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heahh.

.... ,...
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17mg "tar:· 1.1 mg nicotine av. par cigarette. FTC Report Mar.'84

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~
.

(1141 tfil.ll~l

Wt wtlc- your question• 1nd co11mtnts . privltely or publiely
tl!rOIIIII this colullft.

JAMES SIMPSON

JAMES BLOWER

l_:_____· --~u~~~~~~·~:='o~~--~-------------------------------'

'·

"

.'

99

If you would lilt ••ditlontl infonnttion or discussion. stop by,
phone, or drop us 1 note.
.

\-

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Compare to Tylenol
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I L----,.:;;;;;;;.;;;;:::._________________.J

c.

~

�Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday.~ber23,

1984

Lewis Manley Auxili~ry
conducts meeting recently ·
Report on a contribution made to
the Statue of Liberty Rejuvenation
Fund was given at the recent
meeting of Lewis Manley Unit 263,

American Legion, beld at the home
of Mrs. NeUie Winston.
Mrs. Margaret Bowles, presl·
dent, opened the meeting In rt tualls·
tic form With Mrs. Winston serving
·as chaplain In the absence of
Annette Johnson. Mrs,. Bowles
distributed report forms which she
obtained at the Eight District fall
conference held at Wilkesville
earlier this month. It was noted that
the unit had attained goal In
membership. She also distributed
bulk maUing which had been sent to
her.
Mrs. Florence Richards ex·
plaiDed the work of the family

1

1

NURSING 'CLASS- FII'St row (from left)- DebbleMyets, Mary
Keating, Leann Howard, Julie Hall, Bess Gammon, Kim Lambert,
. Karen Werry, Ll!tsa Wedge, Kathy Ball, Bobbl Stover, Uly Clay apd
JeweD Ragland. Second row - Melissa McDade, Sonya Harold,
Channalne WUson, Mlllld Rickard, Debbie Mountjoy, Wendy Ball,
Debbie Fannin, Nannette Church, Regina Beck, Ronda Smittle, Sharon
Conger, Roblit Stinson and Usa Conn. Third row- Cheri BaDey, Cheryl

Eight and Ff!rty Salon
holiday rememberances
planned during meeting

Lewis, Lori PaweD, JuDe Strait, Rebecca stump, Barbara Rider, JuUa
Sheppard, Karen AlderiKJ, Edwina Nelson, SWWJ Gl'l!ell, JuUa
Pasquale and Brent Hoover. Fourth row- Cindy Davenport, Lisa Kirk,
Gale Keith Layne, Steven Coulson, Tim Stewart, Kathy Richardson,
Danny Watson, Robert Naugle, Rhonda Potter, Loretta Meadows,
Barbara Earl, and Stepha!tfe Williams. Absent from photo were
Melissa Hall and Anna Riordan.

Nursing class at RGC-Holzer begins term
The Rio Grande College and
Community College-Holzer School
of Nursing will begin its fifth year
with85students, according to Janet
Byers, Dean of the School of
Nursing.
The majority of students are
from the four-county Communlty
College district. Students from
Meigs County include: Loretta

Powell. Racine, and Karen Werry,
Middleport.
Students are admitted to the
Nursing Program sequence only in
the Fall Quarter a( each year.
There will he 49 freshmen entering
this year.
Nursing candidates follow a
two·year (seven quarter) under-

graduate·curriculum that includes
clinical learning experiences In
health care settings with the
eldelry, adults. new mothers and
newborn infants, at a variety of
hospitals. nursing homes, and
community health agencies and
clinics within a 60 mile radius of the
college.
Upon graduation from the Nurs-

ing Program, students are eligible
to take the National Council
Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses In the State of Ohio.
A ~ew full-time faculty member
has JOined the staff of nursing
Instructors. She Is Louisa Ellingson,
RN. Nursing SkUis Lab Supervisor
from Gallipolis.

Chil4hood fevers may .signal a problem
Perhaps one of the most difficult
and stress-producing times for
parents of young children occurs
when their chlld has a fever: The
child is hot, uncomfortable, often
crying or lethargic, looks sick. and
may or may not be vomiting.
Fever, In itself, ho'wever. is not
usually a real medical problem,
and, often. the child with a fever
does not need immediate medical
attention. However, when the child
with a fever suddenly experiences a
seizure. immediate medical a !tenlion must be sought.
To physicians, fever is not a
diagnosis, but rather is a symptom.
That is. a fever is a signal -that
something else is wrong - usually
an infection. A temperature rise Is a
normal response of the body to an
illness and thought to be a stimulus
to it s infection·fighting defenses.
Fever Is defined as a rise in the
body's basal temperature above an
average normal value. This normal
value will vary, depending upon
-just where the temperature of the
body is measured. Anora! tempera·

ture is normal at approximately 99
degrees Fahrenheit: a rectal
temperature is normal at 100
degrees Fahr~nhe it ; and an axil·
li ary temperature is normal at 98
degrees Fahrenheit. Fever, then. is
any temperature above these normal values.
The height of the fever does not
directly Indicate the seriousness of
the Ulness. In the determination of
how severe the associated illness
actually is, the severtty of the
accompanying symptoms. such as
pain, difficulty breathing, severe
nausea, vomiting or diarrhea. are
much more reliable tttan the degree
of temperature rise.
There are two major reasons for
treating a fever. One is simply to
al.low the chUd to feel better. The
second Is to prevent a febrile

seizure.
The body, including the brain, is
not damaged by temperatures in
the range usually found associated
with illness. However. a rapid rise
in the temperature may cause a
sei zure, and this can and should be
prevented.

About one child in 50 below the
age of five years will have a seizure
associated with a fever. The
younger the child, the greater the
chance of this occurring. Children
who seize simply from a fever
rarely suffer brain damage and do
not develop lifelong seizure problems. This type of seizure Is a
self·llmlting condition and rarely
lasts longer than several minutes.
The febrile seizure has no direct
relationship to the final level of the
lemperature or to the severity of
the associated illness, and Is
thought to be related to the'rapidjty
with which the temperature actu·
ally rises. That Is, a rapid rise to 103
degrees Is more often associ a ted
wtth a febrile seizure than a slow
rise to 100 degrees.
During a seizure. a child should
be turned on his or her side to ailqw
any saliva to drain freely from the
mouth and should be gently restrained and protected from Injury
in a lying position at a safe level.
Nothing should be placed into the
mouth or between the teeth.
Your physician can answer any

Meigs County land transfers
- .Allen F . Mlddleswart, Joan M.
M!ddleswart to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way. Lebanon.
. Robert R. Yonker, deceased,
Olga A. Yonker, Ray L. Yonker.
Mable B. Brumfield, George W.
•Yonker, J ay E. Roush , Mabie R.
He nd er son. Cert. of Trans .,
Chester.
Bobby Arnold. Bonnie Arnold to
Herald Oil 11nd Gas Co .. Right of
Way. Re-Record, Scipio.
.John M. Causey, Sylvia Causey to
Monongahela Power Co. , Right of

Way, Olive.
Raymond Cunningham, Lois Ann
Cunningham to Garnette Marte
Hail, Pt. Lot. Middleport Village .
Paul Simon, Allie Simon to
William L. Klein, Pt. Lot, Pomeroy
Village .
Howard Norrts. Marie Norris to
Marshall R. Roush, Deborah V.
Roush. Parcel, Letart.
Albert G. Barber. Margaret V.
Barber to William Ray Barber,
Rebecca Irene Barber, Lot 123,
Olive.

Stiversville area news .
By Freda Carpenter
into a mobile home near the
Those visiting Mrs. Audrey residence of her daughter, Mr. and
Brewer and David during the past Mrs. Mike Evans.
.week Include Mrs. Myrna Close,
Howard Alien, Ripley, W. Va.,
Waterford: Mrs. Rita Garrett. called on Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Columbus: Mrs. Rhonda De Gerrio Carpenter on Thursday afternoon .
and Nicholas, Huntington Beach,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Allen' and
Calif.; Mrs. Marilyn Beall. Coium· Carl Autherson Visited Mr. and
bus: Mr. and Mrs. Kerry Dobbins, Mrs. Jim Pape, Kristen and Cheryl,
Bidwell: Mrs, Ruby Frederick and Syracu~ . on Tuesday.
Mrs. Zelma Stewart, Middleport,
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, BUffalo,
and Harold Brewer, Long Bottom. W.Va. spent a few days last week
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Conrad and wtth Mr. and Mrs. Jim Davis· and
daughters, Columbus ; Mr. and children. ·
Mrs. Randy Congo and daughters.
Mrs. Alan Mlddieswart, Mel·
Belpre: Mr. and Mrs. Joe Congo, bourne, Fla. spent the past month
Sabrina imd Rebecca, Racine: and with Mrs. Nell Middleswart.
Mrs. Charles Congo, local, enjoyed
Mrs. Nancy Hunt and daughter
called
on Mrs. Marilyn Cooper and
a family gathering and picnic at
family on Thursday.
Portland Park a recent Sunday.
Dale Boyd, Tampa, Fla. spent a
Mrs. Fannie Durst spent the
weekend with her daughter, Mr. week recently with Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Tim Wilkinson, Shawn Harry Willford, Racine, and called
on Mr. and Mrs. · Hobart Cozart,
and Kevin, at Columbus.
Bonnie Lawson was an overnight Hayes McMurray and hls cousin,
guest of Ginny Pickens on Freda Carpenter.
Tom Durst, Columbus, spent the
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Corns, weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Huntington, W.Va. were weekend Durst.
guests recently of her parents, Mr.
Leota Birch called on Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Roush, Racine, on
and Mrs. Robert Cooper.
Mrs. Ada Van Meter has moved Friday.

Delia M. Norton, Owen Ralph
Norton, deceased , aka Ralph Norton. deceased , Pomeroy VIllage.

CB Club plans
Halloween party
The Big Bend CB Club will have a
haloween party on. Oct. 26 at 6:30
p.m .at the Rock Springs Grange
hall. The Auxiliary wUI furnish the
cider, apples and candy, and each
nlfmber Is to take donuts, a cake or
pie for the cake walks, and gifts for
the fish pond, and are asked to come
masked for the party.
Plans are also being made by the
group for a Thanksgiving dinner to
be held Nov. 18 at the grange haD, 1
p.rri. The meat and beverages wUI
be furnished and each member is to
take a covered dish and their own
table service. Guests are welcome.
The plaque for the most outstanding
CB'erwill be awarded at the dinner.

Laurel Cliff
happenings
Attendance at all services at the
Free MethOdist Church Sunday,
Oct. 7,. ;.vas 129. There were eight
choir members present.
Mrs. Emma Fox and Mrs. Roy
Howeu spent a day recently with
Mr. and Mrs. John Douglas,
GuysvUie.
Mrs. Lena Hellman is a patient at
Health Care Center of Meigs
County.
Mrs. Joan McKee and her
daughter of Akron visited recently
with Mrs. DeUa Stahl.
The revival at the local church
was well attended.

support network board of which she
Is a meml;ler. Emphasts· of the
program, she said, wlll be to teach
family members how to provide
quality care for theUIIn their home,
hopefully postponlng the time when
nursing home care Is I'l.'qUired.
Lula Hampton, legislative chair·
man, reported that the newly
elected national commander of the
Legion has asked that the Veterans
Affairs Committee put veterans
rights and funding second only to
national defense. She also reported
on th~ extended education bill (or '
veterans along with job training
program improvements.
A prayer for peace closed the
meeting with Mrs. Winston serving
refreshments . Mrs. Bowles will host
the November meeting.

questions on how and when to treat
a fever In your child; however, any
child who has a seizure associated
with a fever can receive medical
attention Immediately at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Plans for holiday remembrances
for three families having chUdren
with respiratory IUnesses were
made at the Monday night meeting
of the Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, heldatthehomeofRuby
Marshall.
The Salon will prepare food
baskets for each of the families at
ThanksJllvingaildatChristmaswlll
provide some clothing and toys for
all seven children 1n the three
families. One family has two
children with cystic fibrosis,
another family a child with asthma,
and the tlilrd family has two
children suffering from yet another
respiratory ailment.
Loretta Tiemeyer opened the
meeting In ritualistic form with Iva
Powell giving the prayer, andEunle
Brinker leading In the pledge.
Members were reminded that dues
are payable.
A bulletin was read from the
departemental chapeau, Linda Edmondson, noting the school of
Instruction held at the Ramada Inn,
Worthington, over the weekend. A
reception for Ms. Edmondson wlll

1-Coocl 51

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You are hereby not dred that
o n the 12 th day of September
198 4 Henry Ju n tor D oer! or and
M ary Ann Ku hn Doer1 er. resrd·
rng d! Mlllheld. Ohro. w rth the
co nsem of Tresn Faye Kuhn.
restdrng at Langsvrlle. Oh 1o.
moth er of Jos hua Ivan Kuhn,
hied 1n thrs Cou rt a Petrtlon for
leave 10 adopt Joshua Iva n
Kuhn , a chrld . age 21 months,
and fo r a change olt he nameol
sa rr.l child lo Jos hua Ivan
Ooerler. and that hea nnq of
sard pet•tro n and the exanlrna·
t1o n. u nder oa th. of ail partie s rr,
rnterest who mav be prese nt
and to wh om la 'lv'ful not•c e has
been q•ven. will be had befOfe
sa•d Court at M e1gs Co unry
Provate Cou rt . Counhouse
Pomeroy, Oh ro on thP. 26th day
of Novem ber. 1984 at 1 30

pm

Wrt ness mv srgnature and the
seal of sa rd Cou rt thrs 12th day
of Sept ember 198 4
Robert E Buck. Judge
M ergs County
Common Pl ea s Court.
Probate Orvrsron
M e rgs County. Ohro
.

foll ow1ng lands and tenements.

Srtuated rn the Township of
Rutl and . V_rHage of Ru tland.
County of M ergs and State of
Ohro · and bounded an d des cnbed as follows·
Be tn~ l ot No. 20. srtuated on
Salem Street rn satd Vr ll age of
Ru tland. Mer gs County, Oh to
It •s the mtentron o f the

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&lt;lolho Co~n oy •
AtH COt;!JI1 .

.

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ll ·~ltl..nnv

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tol oolwo Countr

Muon Co . WV

~ftoCIId o l 1 1

.lltoo COd• J OI

II VZ - ~ rtl&lt;ll .

•n- 1'1

...

~.

IH - G .. ron Oooo
US- .IIrolliOOIO I
3 ,. - Wol nu l

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•N - bon

111"""''''¥
- CPit llff
J l l - Po.,lond
ZIJ - Lnttt FOI "
?IZ - II uoiO nd

..

Delendonta

C.. No. 84CV217
In pursuance or a·n Order of

294 .2 7 fee t to the wes terly lrne
of a 1. 1 acre lot as desc rrbed m
Mergs . County Deed Records
Volume 24 5, Page 75. cros srng
rron rod s at 19.5 teet a nd
15 5.5 feet· for re fere n c e.
the nce North 22 deg. 42 ' West
32.73 feet along the Southwe s·
terl y line of sar d 1 1 acre lOt to
the Northwesterly corn er a t
sa•d. 1. 1 acre lot thence No rth

67 deg. 55· East 139 22 feet
alo ng the North erly lrne o f sa •d
1. 1 acre lot to a· post. the nce

Non h 2

de~ .

00. 33. West

44.5 feet along a westerly line
o f a 1. 1 acr e lot surueyed Ap r rl,

t975 by H. Hysell. R. S. No

227 4 to an rro n rod: thence

no nh

88 dea 29· 06 .. WeSI

exceptmg all legal rrg hts of way
The bearin'l S tn the ab ove
descriptton are based on a
survey by H. Hysell. Regrstered

o'c lock A.M .. the lallow•ng
d escri bed real es tate. srt tla te rn
th e Cou n!y of Mer gs and Stat e
of Ohio, and rn the Townsh rp of
Rutland, IO·Wtt:
Srtuate m Ru tland Townshtp,
Meigs County, State of Ohto.
an d berng rn Sect1on 12. Town

o North. Range 14 West of the

Ohio Company's Purchase and

b e tng ·descnbed as follow s:
Beg•nn.ng at a point west about

1.830 teet and Nonh about
2.360 teet and North I deg . 30'
54 .. East4 73.78 feet from the

S o u theast corner of• said Sec·
tion 12, said Po1nt of beginning
being in the center of Town sh1 P

Road T· 176(Nichols Road! and
being N0&lt;1h t deg. 30' 54.. East

4 73 .78 feet fro m the Junctron
o f · the centerline of sa1d

Township Road 1-176 (Nichols
Road ) and Co unty· Road C-3
(Leading Creek Road!: thence

BACKHOE
DUMP TRUCK
CONCRETE WORK
TRENCHER
SEPTIC TANK
COAL &amp; liMESTONE
Call For Free Estimate

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
seiYice and installation.

Residential
&amp; Commercial

742·3195
Or 992-5875

Catl

TROMM
EXCAVATING

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
loshan Building

I Dig
WD'.Ing
Fot You.

eGRAVEL HAULED

PH. 742-2328

Only

10·5-l .mo.

CONTRACTING
' DOZER · BACKHOE
•RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL F!Eto SERVICES

Rt. !24.Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

"DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
· cONCRETE WORK.
" CUSTOM BUILT HOMES

Also Transmission
PH. 992-.5.6 82
or 992-7121

"WATER . GAS &amp;

' OIL LINES

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992·7201

RENT A CAR

S&amp;W TV

CALL

APPLIANCE

For

tember 16. 1974, as per Me1gs

1 Card of Thanks

.CARD OF THANKS
We wish io · tJtllld our

siiiCift llid hllrtftlt lhris

to lllltivls llld frilllds for
their syntpltilr llld Mtdnns
slt01111 Ul duri Ill the H'lnd deltlt of 0111 husblnd.
father, lnd broth~!, lllltlr
R. lllnntdy, J1. We ..,..
cillly •nt to t111111t lin. hll
P10udfaot,' the doctors 1nd
nurses of V11111ns MtiiiOrill
1nd Holzer Hospltll, Ewinl
Funtrsl Home and the pill·
belnB. Also, lltlnks for the
btlutlful floWIII, load, 1nd
WOlds of klndntss. All hlvt
our ..tlsti111 l!ltitudl.
Psuline Sp1ncer Kennedy
Barbara Kennedy Loftis
Batty Kennedy Nelson

'

OPEN EACH

..

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
3305 JACKSON AVE.
SMALL ANIMAL HOURS
Mo"doy 3 p.m.·5p.m.
Tuedsay 6:30 p. lil .·~ p.m.
Wednesday 3 p.m.·S p.m.
Thursday 3 p.m.·5 p.m.
Fridoy I p.m.·Zp.m.
Saturday 10 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
LARGE .ANIMAL AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT
·fO·IB·l mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custo.m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
·
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
16 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992· 7583
or 992-2282

.. ,.

.~. ,•

.

AND

"service l~at Towers Above
The Rest"

s:

M erg s Cou ntY

tl01 23. 301 1116. 3ic

? R !I•

Real Estate General
M. l. "Bud" McGHEE
BIOker·Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley.
Meigs County Associate

Phone 742·3171
Now Accep1ing listings in Meigs Co.
11

Help Wanted

Executive Sales Career
If You Are Interested In A Succtssful
Automotive Sales CarHr We Would like To Talk To You!
•Excellent Income Opportunity
•Opportunity For Advancement
•Automobile
•Paid 1nsurance
•Paid Vacation
•Pleasant Working Conditions
•Professional Training Program
Experienced Automotivt Sales People
Need Not Apply!
If lnternttd Apply in Penon

THURSDAYr OCT. 2S
10 A.M.

'TIL

lanauga. Ohit
No Phone Calls Pl.e aae

10-8·1 mo.

W~::N~!~NG~~:lAS Si

.:=..,

HOUSI

Econoline Home Insulation Inc.

k

J.L 1111

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist
X:
z (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601

843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEl • SAND
TOP SOIL-Fill DIRT

PH . 949·3046
From 9:00 to 5:00
10·19·tln

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
+ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
+SPEE'D QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

-

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
U l3 /tln

Fenders ..... .. ~_.. ....... .. .... 170

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

949-2860
No Sunday Calls
l I 1 llr

41 f '"

SKATE~A-WAY
CHESTER, OHIO

Avcilable.for Birthdays

Authorized Jotm Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Oealer
Farm Equipment

Publit Skating

Parts &amp; Service

. &amp; Private Parties
Skates &amp; Accessories

614 -446-0294 .
Gun shoot at Racine Gun
Club every Sunday, 1 :00
p.m. Factory chocked guns
only.

WED., FRI. &amp; SAT.

7:30-10:00
Phone 9&amp;5-9966
or 985-3929

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
SALE : Hidden Antiques,
Monkey Run Rd ., Pomeroy.
Ohio. Hours ~ Sun, 10:003:00, Mon. thru ThursB:00-

10-1&amp; . liM.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes. from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
P~. 614·843·5191
106

rtc

SUPERIOR
StDrNG CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete Gu11er Work
Comple1e Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area

20 yeon
"Free Eltimatea"

EUGENE LONG

Ph. (614) 843·5425
9/13/2mo. d.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd like to introduce you to
En&amp;•&amp;e·A·Cor. the modorn way
to driYI tht vehicle of your
choice.

.

No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Peyment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326
Pom11oy. OH. 45769
For Fnter Service
Call 614-992·67~7

9

Wanted To Buy

THE
KOUNTRY -~
. '.f '. ,..
KLUB

. ~-~
1

GaH Lessons

.

11 :00.

ATIENTION: New Stanley
Home Product deller for this
area . Have • Sta~ley Party
and earn wonderful Christmas gifts. Information call

Debbie Niben ot 304·675·
6930.

Sat. &amp; Sun. .
Adults 6/140-Siudtnh 61'
Jr. tour, putting green,
hitting area. Christmas
gifts, trophies, plaques.

4

JOHN TEAFORD
East Meigs
1011211 mo .

Metal Honda c::rates. Can be
picked up at Betz Honda.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

-BACKHOES
-DUMP TRUCKS
- LO·BOYS
-TRENCHER
- WATER
-SEWER
~GAS LINES
- SEPTIC SYSTEMS

Giveaway

Mother cat • 8 weeks old
kitten. good mouse catcher.

Cott446-7739.

112 Beegle &amp;. % Rat Terrier

pupo. ·Coli 446-3252 or
256-1929.

1984 inductee into Weigh·
tlifting Hall of Fame .

31

We poy

lor tote modal 1 8 Wanted to Do
Jim Mink Chev.·Oido Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

W ill cut and deliver fi re·

446-3672

wood. Call266·1628 .

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;:
wood heaters. Swain Furni-

ture, 446·3169. 3rd.
Olive St .. Gollipolio, 0~ .

HOME OWNERS MAINTE ·
NANCE : All cypes ol lawn

&amp;

board . call 1-304-882· FIREWOOD FOR SALE: All
seasoned hardwood availa2711

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Beds, iron.
wood, cupbpards, chairs.
chests. baskets, dishes.
stone jara, antiquea, gold
and silver. Write - M . D .
Miller. Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio

Fin ancial
Business

Opportunity

i - - - - - - -- - -

lARSE " SNAU JOBS
PH. 992-2478

9/27 / 1 mo. pd.

RADIATOR

SERVICE

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out .radiators. We also
repair Gas Tallks.

PAT HILL FORD
992· 21 96

Middleport, Ohio
1-13· tfc

1
Coli after 5:00 p.m. 843· Wentod lady to work in
6260 .
general insurance agenc~ .
Must have previous expe -·
rience end license to sell
general insurance . Send re ~
sume to Office Manager ,
100 Union Ave., Pomeroy ,

Ohio 46769.

Help Wanted

Sell AVON make 45%. Call
446-3358.

an equal opportunity·
Affirm 1 t i v e A c:: t ion
employer.

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
FOR SOCIAL WORKERS to
provide general outpatient
the~apy
and consultative
seFvices as necessary ="' Master's degree in clinicalpsychiatric social work with
at least one year of eNperience in clinical evaluation
and pscyhotherapy pre -

ferred . PART TIME CLINI·
CAL ASSISTANT for relief
work in the Inpatient• Unit .
Mostly night · shifts with
some possible evening

Auto Parts Dealership avail able. Full or part time .Sofid
monthly income . $2 ,996

1 - - - - ------:- reqired . .1·800· 336 ·6014.
lmmedlate opening for
Physical Therapist with Ohio
License. Will consider new
graduates. Selary according
to state scale. Excellent
fringe benefits. Contact
Personnel-Gallipolis Devel ·
opmental Center, Gallipolis,

Carry Out. prime location .
corner State Rt. 7 and US
35 . Kanau'ga , Ohio. If inter·
ested, stop by . 12-9 p .m ,
any day. 1 and J Carry Out.

-'::"c~.::;:;::::==::::;===

45631 . Tolep~one c
!614)446-1642. Equal Op· 22 Money to Loan
0~

portunity Employer ·
Affirmative Action.

Wanted : So;neone to tear
down 2 story house in
Pomeroy forthelumber. Call

992-2441 altar 5:00p.m.
Occasional evening babysit·
tar needed near Alfred
(Tuppera Plains) for two
small boys , ages 4 and 2 .
Prefer our home , will pro·
vida transponatlon if re ·

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES Balow market rates .
Fixed conventional FHA ·
VA . Laader Mortgage .
At~ens.

3051 .

collect 614 ·592·

1 - - - - -- - - --

LOANS; Borrow from the
privacy of your home or
office ~ credit rio problem .··
For information call : 9 1 9 -

quired. Cell614-696 -1395. _2_2_7_·_6_5_2_5_.- - - - - 1
NEED EXTRA CASH? The 1- ---::-----.,..-Witt VIrginia Army Notional 23 Professional
Guard curren11y has vacan Services
cies for high school juniors
and seniors who want a part
time job. Join the Guard.
attend drill one weekend a
month for pay , and complete
required Acti\le Duty Train ·
ing during summer months .

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

Piano Tuning and Repair .
Brunicardi Music Co .. 4460687. Twentieth year of
quality service . lane Da ·
niels, 614 ~742~ 2961 .

Call 304·676-3960 or 1· 1- - -- -- -- 800-642-3619.
REMOVE UNWANTED

Puppieo ~oil Sheep Oog .
phone 304·675-3136.

Wanted experienced single
needle factory 11wing machine operators. Apply Riply

HAIR: No pain! No needlel
Approved depafator method . Removes unwanted
hair permanently . Calf

6 puppies, 2 white. 3 brown,

Sponoweor. Rt 56 E. Ro · today-614·992 ·6720. Top
venowood. W. Vo . 26164. of the Steirs Beauty Salon ,

8 weoko old, 304· 676·
31i32.
AKC rogiotered Docho~und .
female. 3 yro old. ~ouoe
broken. noedo good ~ome
with lots of love and

tlon. 304·176-2713.

enen·

Wanted piano player for
Elmwood Methodist

Farm cat, catches rata and

Situations
Wanted

onokeo, '304·882,3590.

Have opening for elderly In

6 Lost and Found
lost or 1tolen in vicinity of
Grant, Pearl ehd Seventh.

Pomeroy.

my

~ome .

Call773-5423.

Vacancy in my home for
elderly parson . Personal

core. · Call 992 ·6022 or
Yeltow ond white otrippod 985-4416.
mela kitten. Answers to
neme of Skeeter. Childo pet. Will do beby ol«lng in my
Reword . Colt 992-2788 or home. d•y or night. raferenreturn to 332 Grant St. ceo. behind oc~ool, 304·
675·2784.
Mlddlepon. Ohio.

1974 Park Ave. 14X70.

total efec ., 3 bdr, 1 Vz bath,

good cond. Colt 446·0175 .

3 bdr .. basement. 2 car
garage. large garden , fruit
trees. on 1V• acres. close to
town . Call446-4217 .

8 yrs . old, 3 bedrm, 2 baths.
family room with wood
burrJEn'. Single car garage, on
9 flat acres with stocked
pond . City water in Racine.
Four bedrooms, 1 and Vz
Baths . In good condition .
Water St., Racine. Call

614 ·949-2t95.
House for sale _in Dexter.
Close to Meigs Mine No. 1 .
School bus route. close to
store. In fair condition;
needs some decorating .

$10.000.00 Call 614 -742·2423 after 4:00 .
6 rooms and bath , garage .
Really nice . Second Ave .,Middleport. Shown by ap pointment. Call 992 -5569 .
Middleport house for &amp;ale on
Gravel Hill. 2 bedrooms,
large living _
r oom . bath,
central air, carpeted, new I~
painted inside. basament
with 2 car garage. Shown by
appointment only. Call992-

5310.

4 rooms and bath . lot is
50K1 60 . Extra lot for house
trailer. $6000.00, Call 1 -

304-773 ·5449 .

A frame house, 15 acre ,
$60,000 .00 or trad e for
equal value. 304 -895

3935 .

By owner 3 bedroom. 2
bath. sewing room , sun room , living room with
fireplace. family room with
buck stove, cellar. kitchen
with range and m icroweve,
large two car garage . Must
see to appreciate. Shown by
appointment . 304 - 675 ·

6365 .

3 bedroom house. 7 mites
from Holzer, no down pay ~

mont. 304-675 -7746.

Gallipolis Ferry, 3 br brick
farge rooms , 4 car garage
and storage bldg ., stove, ref.
washer ~ dryer . Make an

offer. 304-675,6851 .

Four bedrooms. kitchen ~
family room with fireplace ,
fin ished basement . Point
Plenant. Shown by ap-

pointmenl. 304·675 ·3079.

6 acres , barn, outbuildings,

5 room house. bath , double

garage. 540.000.00. 304·
882 -3271 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USE'D MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS ,
RT ,35 . PHONE 614·446·
7274.
1972 12X60 lnda mobile
home, total elec., air, stove.
refr ig ., washer. dryer. good
cond . Must be moved .
$5000 or best offer. Call

38B·9.JJ6.

1978 Duke Crown Royal

mobile14X70 . 3bdr .. on 82

X 166 corner lot in Village of

Poner. Call C &amp; S Bonk
446 -0662 ext. 23 .

85 Springbrook 14x70. 3
bedrooms for $12 .950.00.
85 Rockford 1 4x70, 3 bed·
rooms 512 .950.00 . 69
Stanford 12x60 , 2 bedrooms. e"tra clean. used.

&amp;6250 .00. 70 Titon 12x60

,2 bedrooms. extra clean .

usod .$6500 .00 . 74 Ca -

Church. 304·458·1676.

12

only . Caii614·6B2· 7424.

Call 614·949-2641 .

Old Oriental rugs wanted. that you do business w ith
Any size or condition . Cell people vou know. and NOT
toll free 1·800-663·8021 . to send money through the
mail until you have investi·
Wanted to buy• beef hides. _g_a_ta_d_th_a_0_11_8_"_
·n_g_._ __

Emp lo yment
Scrv1ces

Nice 2 bdr., large lot. close
to Collage Campus. 508
Ridge Ave., Rio Grande, Oh.
Priced tD sell . mid twentys.
Shown by appointment

and evenings till 7 :00 .

day. 992·7039 Mondays

1

992 -6941 .

- - - - -- - - · l c -

Buying doily gold. silver 21
coins, rings, jewelry. sterling
ware, old coins, large cur-

Real Cute Home I The leaves
- have fallen, and so has the
price! Middlapon .. Call61 ~ -

ble for pickup. hauled to
your drive, hauled, stacked
and covered . Dependable
adult personal. Call 9927606 Tuesday thru Satur-

45769 or call 614·992.
7760.

11

Homes for Sale

coo~

Daschund 2 yr. old . Call

446-B239.

·- - -- · · · · ····· ··-·-- - ~---··· -~

Karate-Private Lessons .
Learn ' the .,.Ultimate in aelf·
defenM. American Karate

clean uaed cars.

In Memoriam

delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call

Middleport
&amp;.Vicinity
In garage T ue1d1y thru
Thursday at Robert Grueser
res idence, 1 mila nonh of
Five Points on At. 7 . Clo·
th ing and misc.

work. FOR MORE INFOR ·
MATION CONTACT JUAN ITA ATHA . PERSONNEL
ADMINSTRATOR; WOOD ·
LANDCENTERS, INC ., 412
VINTON PIKE. GALLIPO·
LIS. OH1045~31 or PHONE
(614) 446-5500. WOOD LAND CENTERS IS AN
EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY ·
SWEEPER ond sewing ma· Vinton Pike. Gallipolis. Ohio
ACTION
chino repair, pono. ond 46631 or phono(6141446· AFFIRMATIVE
EMPLOYER
.
supplies.
Pic::k up and 5500 . Woodland Centers is

. Call for free siding es·
timates. 949·2801 or

.. ....P.omerov.........

comed. Ric~ord Roynoldo, Studio oince 1971 . 143 ~==========
Burlington Rd.. Jackson.
AuctlonHr. Colt 304-276· Ohio.
614-286-3074 . In·
3069.
structor: Jerry lowery ·

Immediate openings for social workers to provide genlrll outpatient therapy and
In memory of Joseph A. consuhative teNices as neBiooell. who God coiled to cellary. Master's degree in
rest three years ago, O'ct., clinical - psychiatric social
23. 1981 . You wore gone wOrk with at least one year
before we knew it. only: God of experienca in clinical
knows why. You bade no evaluation and pscyt~other ­
one a lut farewell or even apy preferred . Part time
••id goodbye. Sadly miaaed clinical aasistant for relief
by · wife. Rachel. children work in the Inpatient unit .
Mostly night shifts with
and grandchildren .
some possible evening
work. For more information
contact Juanita Atha , Per 3 Announcements
sonnel Adminstrator. Wood·
land Centers, Inc ., 412

2

SIDING CO.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

. n
913 11

Announcements

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Fenders ... .. ...... ........... ,.62

81 -84 Che~ Tr.
76-BZ CheYette
Fenders ...................... 110'
Cor Fenders ............. ... .. 60
79-10 llustan&amp;
S-IO·Sl5 Chevy Tri.
Fenders .......... .............. 80
Car Fenders ........... ....... 60
73-79 Ford Tr.
81-U Escort-Cynx
Fenders ........;................ 59
Fendm ........................ 49
10·84 Ford Tr.
Omni·Horizon 2 dr. or
Fenders ...................... 110
4 dr. Fenders ....... ......... 75
Ford Range•
· Chevy &amp;Fo1d
Tr. Fenders ..... .............. 98
PU Bumpers ............ 69.95
72-80 Dodge Tr
·
79-82 Chevette.Grills ........ 38
Fenders .. ............. ........ 11~
Ford R1n1er Gulls ......... ... 75
Ford and Chevy Tail Gales

BISSELL

BOGGS

Schools
Instruction ·

roncy. Top prlcat. Ed. Bur· 1
l...-------:---;;---------'-1( ke« Barber S~op. 2nd. Ave.
! NOTICE I
Middlepon. Oh. 614-992· THE OHIO
VALLEY PUB ·
,.....=-=,...,,.--;------'-.:===::-----r
1 3476.
73-80 Che~ Tr.
· D - ~0 Dod&amp;e Tr.
- - - - - - - - - LISHING CO . recommend s

Vinyl &amp; Alllminum
SIDING

CHESTER-985·3307

G.irog~ S~le Oct. 25 &amp; 26. 4:00.
Thuro. 8o Fri., Bto 3. 608Joy 1- - - -- - - - - -

work. mowing. trimming,
transplanting. seeding, sod Old Oriental Ruga Wonted. ding. fertiliring , 1tone, bark.
- - ..... Olllolilts
... ''"'
'
..
- 114-UJ.Any alza or condition . Call sterilizing. FALL MAINTEM s ·
fOit fHI IUIMA Til •
toll free 1·800·553·8021 . ANCE : Shrubs and trees
trimmed and removed ,
.PHONI .OINT PLIAIANT, a....714tU.
Cash paid for fanc::y iron or eaves and guners cleaned.
heavy iron beds . 8160 and storm windows and heat
up for certain Meigs Co. tape• installed. general
r-:"~-:------.....1'----------r(stone jars. Old time cup- maintenance and hauling.

c.L.m..

Garage Sate, rein or shine,·
Out Sand Hill Rd to Lewis
Lane, Thurs. and Fri. 8 :30 ·

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

Auction every Friday night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchendiM every week.
Conaigmentl of new &amp; u ..d
merchandiM IIWIYI wel-

Dot
I 1
1
;I
It .

SA VI ON rUIL IIU.
INSULAR YOUI Amc 0. WHOU

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

4 P.M.

HOLIDAY INN

Cenified Chimney Swoop

ii:

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Phone
446-2062

Or

on Duty

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Roy Bickle

z

CHIMNEY SWEEP

nityre • eppliecas .

15

•complete Chimney Cleaning
:r;
•certified Chimney Relining&amp;. Rtijlair
.
• Experienced and Insured

CJ

Chimney Cleaning

SERVICE

8

992-3410

CHIMNEY KING

on

pr, Jackson Pike .

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Computerized Hearing Aid Select.ion
Dependable Hearing Aid SeiYice

I0-8·tln

&amp; Vicinity

Mitchell Rd Wednooday. lur·

9

446-2062

'

Yard Sale log house

rdo for Mriouoty 111 ~u•·
bond, ....,.,. In mailbox ot
37BSecond&amp;t..Pomeroyor
2~! ~92- 2431 or 992·

•

DENNY CONGO
WILL trAUL
JUST CALL!

Complete Dustless

46353 Scout C1mp Rd.
Chester, Ohio
Ph. 986·4269
II No Answer. Call 985·4382
W• B•rvice All
Makea i&amp; Models
Antenna lnstolltltion
House'Catts and Shop
Service Avolloble

Leu"

..

0

~·

THURS. EVE. 6-8

&amp; Vicinity

in V11ter1n1 Memorial Hoapi1111 vtcinf1v. conulno heott~

h1mney
(are

(

~~""'
~~
~
;,y"";'·
s
,~
..
m~:
~~i
···.. ·Gii iiiiioils····..... ...... Pt'Pieiisa·rit
·441· 1B7 o·
Burg•ndy clute~ bitllotd loot

You Were Going To Call Us?

•

3·24 -l lc

The a'bove desc rrptro n w as
turrshed by Ra ben H. Easo n
Reg rsterP.d Surveyor. Ohro A

•

10/4/tfc

Roger Hysel·l
GARAGE

J&amp;F

'

ll · l ·llc

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns

245. Paoe 75

.

8 Lost and Found

Why Wait Till Winter To Remember

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E SHOCKEY DVM

- Peumbing and electrical
work
,
(free Estimates)

Survevor. No. S-02274. Sep· 64 Misc. Merchandise

Sa fe

Saturday. the 24th day of
November. t9 8'4. at IO:t5

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

- Addons and remodeling
- Roof ing and gutter work
- Concrete work

deg. 30· 54.. WeSI t 30 teet
The Stole of Ohio. Moiga alo ng the cen ter of Township LAS ROAD. AT 1. MIDOLE·
County. Com..- Plooo Court Road T·176 tN•chols Road ! to PORT. OHIO 4 57 60
THE KISSELL COMPANY
the po 1n t of begtnn rn g. con tarn JAMES j PRO FFITI
PWndff
tng 1.0 53 acres. more Or less.
SHERIFF
vo.
Capehart

AM
CONSTRUCTION

noo

Prope rty loca ted at NICHO-

Woltlom R. ond Helen M.

.10,1,.1 mo.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

202 .89 feet and 387 .99 feet

tiOI 23. 30 (I ll 6. 3tc

4·5- l! c

1 17 - l ltl loi&lt;r

for reference the nce Sou th 1

Terms of Sale Cash
Real estate ca nnot be sold for
less than tw o· thrrrls of t he
a pprarsed value.
· James J Proff •tt
Sherrff of
M ergs Co unty. Oh•o

949·2969-949.2263

IJ -Iu:-11"'11
i------~-----~
••· • ••• .C ol&amp; llet ng., otioo I
II· G..,ffoiH ...Iona
Up 10 11 _ ,,
OnUoy •no""'""
. , 00
l l ·ltl H ~01&gt;00•
Up 10 1 1 -~ I hr. . My rnltri iOft
uoo
17·!.11,..111 trr
Up "' 15 W&lt;&gt;!&lt;ft lo odo y "''"'" on

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE

at 4.766 00

PARTS and SERVICE

YOUNG'S

405 .6 9 fee t to the center o f
Townshrp Ro ad T-176•1Nrchof s
. Road) cross rng •ron ro ds set at

Sa rd property was appra1 sed

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezera

lll - ~ o .. M••..

Public Notice

•

•Ranges

111 - Mo ..,n

No S-0 654 5. per su rvey o f
Septem ber 1. 1979
Exce pt rng and reserv1 ng unto
the granto•. Vlfgtnra E Hart ley.
forme rly V1rqrn ra E Vrtatoe. he r
he1rs and assrgns. all matenals
underlyrnq sard p ro perty wrth
the rrg ht to mme and remove
th e sam e w rt ho ut encumbrance
tb the surface. and th 1s co nveyance 15 further sub1ec1' to a
ptpelrnf! r1gh t of way wh1 ch rs
her eby e)(ce pted and reserved
a lan ~ wrth the rrght to use.
qperate. marn ta1n. reparr and
replace the same
Pr op erty a ppr a 1s ed at
$40.8 0 0 il nd cannot be sold
for less than two thrrd::; of that
amo unt

Ven dor

All Makes
•Washers •Diahwashers

....,,

County Deed Reco rds Volume

the Hue bo unda ry l•n e b etween
the lot conveyed and the
remarn rng lot ow ned by the

985-3561

... _,..,..,

111- t -•••11•

Down~pouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
Storll! Doors
Windows .
Free Estimates

11'1t - .,llllloGro ...

I U - IIIo t •""

•

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
CLINIC

We Have A Full Time
Shop Technician

South 88 deg. 29' oe· Ea s1

Public Notice

10 ·\NII:

71 -AuloPa."&amp;. Ace ....,.,.,

partr es to convey hereby. a lot.
1 00 tee t tronHng on Salem
Street an d 100 feet •n depth
Furt her, the part!CS agree to
ma rk the weste rly' hne oi !h e lot
w rth an •ron prn, wh•ch shall be

th e Cou rt House rn Pome roy. rn
th e above named County, on

24 th day of November. 1984,
at 10,00 O'clock. A.M.. the

71-IHIII Moooro

,,.,,..,0 .......

New • Repair

GUtttl

St. Rt . 160 Norlh
Gallipolis, Ohio ,
. 7/1 1/tfn

o•.n•h au !l''' ...

Public Notice

19118. 25. (1012. 9. 26. 23. 6ic

By w tue of an Order of Sale
rssued out of the C o mmon
Pl eas Co urt of M e1gs Countv.
Oh1o. m the case of Neva
Nr c holson. PlamtrH agarnst l eland C. Wad e. et aL D efendants. upon a judg ment therern
rendered. ber n g Case No
84 -C V-1 11 rn sat d Cou rt. I Will
offer for sal e. at the fron t door of
th e Court H ouse rn Pomeroy,
M ergs County. Oh10. o n the

JI{IJll' ,\ r 111 ·r•r l h• •
f! •lo •jllllllll'

Public Notice

rn th e above entrtled
ac t1 on . I w ill offe r for sale at
publ•c auction, at the door of

NOTICE OF SALE

7UIII01orc,c l..

Cl n•.d f it•fl
.f"ll"n iriiJ

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

U-SAVE
AUTO ·
RENTAL

Public Notice

Public Notice

addraa is unknown

n -v... •••wa

... ...., _. ......... .,

u .w... ••o a ll~t~o

....1!.... _ ....... ,.. " '
. ..Fatl--

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE MATIER OF THE
ADOPTION OF J6SHUA
IVAN KUHN
TO: JERRY STONE. wllote

11 ·1111101'10fhlt
12-trvcktiOfhlo

ttoward·L Writesel
Roofing Co.

446-4522

IM

*.!!iii!&amp;

" CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

"We Rent

01pt
111 Court St .. PO!Mroy, Otlio 45769

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9 · .

Found:puppy,
Block lomote
r::::::::::::===il~::===~~~~::;r,:::::::::::::::::::::;-r;:=========c========:;1 brood
White mixed
under

9/17/1 mo . d.

PHONE
992-2156
Or •rite Dtilly Sentinel Classified

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

Busmess Services

742-2167 or
742-2225 .

be held Nov. 10 at the Bexley
American Legion hall. The next
pouvlor was announced for Dec. 1
and 2, with the spring pouvlor to be
held April 13 and 14 at the Ramada
Inn. Theme this year is ."Don't
. Crawl Like Caterpillars, Flutter
Like Butterflies."
Mts . Marshall report.ed on the
cystic fibrosis drive and thanked the
workers as well as those who have
contributed.
Several full4_ralsing projects are
underway by the salon to finance the
project work, and items being sold
are pecans, knJves, thennometers,
Christmas wrap, cards, stuffed
animals. It was reported that sales
were good at the recent Middleport
block party.
Mrs. Marshall and Mary Martin
served refreshments carrying out .
the ha lloween theme. The door prize
was won by Mary Martin, with
proceEds going Into the scholarship
fund. Lula Hampton gave a report
on children and youth and the next
meeting was announced for Nov. 5
with Rhoda Hackett and Florence
Richards as hosts,

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 23, 1984

31

Rea l Eslale

meron 12M60. 2 bedroom's.
extra clean , used ,

Homes for Sale

set· up. located 2 miles form
Raven1wood bridge. Junction ot 1-77 and Rt. 2 ..

86250.00. Free delivery ond

GENE'S MOBILE HOMES
3 bdr. houoe, pool. AC. Coli 304-273·5135.

fireplaces, Pt . Pleasant, sale

or rent . Cail 675-5104.

600 block of 2nd Ave.. 2

1972 Kingtwood 12x66, 2
br large living room with bay
wind~ws. g11 he•t . Asking

bdr ., axe. cond .• big b1ck 85,500. 304·895·3655.
yord, *37,600.- Coli 446· I -:------~--215B.
Trailer and Land for oola. '73
mobile
3 bdr home for Nle by
owner, located on Rt. 180.

home

12•10,

3

bedroom, 1'h batha, corport

and porch with 2 rooma built

neor N.G.H.S. 136,000 . on. *16,000 .00. Brood Run
Rood. 882-3268 onytimo.
Coli 614-38B·8711 .

�Page~ 10-The

32

Sentinel

Mobile Homes
for Sale

64

Mise, Merchandise

P1111atlc ~ist,rna atate approved, plastic septic tanka.
pleatic culvert, metal ct.il·
verts, RON EVANS ENTER PRISES. Jackson, Oh 614286-6930.

1980 Fairpoint all electric

14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 full,,___
baths, $12.200.00 . 614446-8064 a; 446-1387 .

33

Firewood cut up slaba. $16
PU load . Larger loada delivered. ~Call for pric~s. 614246-5804 .
.

. Farms for Sale

8v owner 4 V:r acres with 32
X 88 Horeebarn 2yrs. old,
922 .000 . Call 61'4-2866522 .

For sale fill dirt, and top soli .
Call Call 614-266-1427.

. 200 acre farm for sale. Will
subdivide. Rutland Town ship . Call614-373-0466.

Arizona . Terms negotiable.
will carry on land contract,
mineral rights included. Call
742-2852 .
Business
Buildings

Have apartment house 1or
sale in Pomeroy. Good loca- 1-----------r---~------~
lion, needs minor repairs. i
Coll614-992-6022 or 6. 14 - I4~~M:,~ii;"H-;;;;;-;;-9B5-4416 .
Homes
46 Space for Rent

42

Rent

Commercial building and lot

for sale in Gallipolis . . Call
614-446-7389 . After 5 :00
call614-992- 3517 .

35

lots S. Acreage

2 bedroom mobile home for
rent. Racine area. Call 9925868 .

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

Furnished mobile home, 3
bedroom, washer and dryer.
No pets . Call 949-2253 .

Merchandise

-Lot for sale in Mercerville, 3

trailer hookups, electric, rural water. septic tank ,

14ft. X 70 ft .mobil home.
S,t ove and refrig8rator 1ur$8,000. Call 614.- 266 - nlshed. 3 bedroom mobil
6618 .
.
home, gas . water paid. 1 kid
accepted . No pets, drunks or
Building lot Neighborhood dope. John S~eets. 3%
Rd. 65x150 . .95,000. Call miles south Middleport, Rt.
7 . Call 367-0611 .
446-3844 after 7PM.
For Sale: Once acre lot with
large in-ground pool. torn
liner, and partially finished
basement . For information
call813-665-1232.

Trailer lot for
367 -7438.

rent.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ
Build your own 3 or 4 bdr
home, &amp;8!1115 kit delv.. Our
new modal is "o pen, HI it
todoy. Call 1-B88-7311 .

56

Pets

44

Apart'ment
for Rent

Call

61

Household Goods

SWAIN .
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood -c·oal stoves, ~
pc wood LR suite $399,
bunk beds $199, antron
reCliners $99, uSed bedroom
suites. ranges. wringer
washers, &amp; shoes. Call614·
446-3159 .

21 ft . X 16ft. insulated steel
building. Call 742-2225.
Couch that makes into a
bed. $40.00. Sat of lamps
with cigarette stand to
match, S50 .00 . Call 614992-6868 .

()
0

. 1.1
t-;;:=:;:;=~=;:::::::-r~;;:::;;;:=;=:;:=;;:;=~
Livestock

For Sala-50 head of young
beef cows and heifQrs. Call
61 4

I;;;::·3~8~B::·::8::5;9::2;.==~=

first shou. Excellant size for
age. First class pups. Call
614-985-3849.

64

HayS. Grain

Pit Bull dog fOf selo . 7 ( - ' ' - - , - - - - - - - - months otd . Male. No papers. Good wat c h do·g. Large round b•leS of hay.
.$125.00 or best offer. Call $20 each. Call448- 1062.
992-6967.

66

Seed

&amp;

Certi1ied seed wheat, barley,
rye. spelts. triticale, also
cover crpp wheat. Altizer
Farm Supply. Call614-245 5193.

Musical
lns1ruments

Italian PrOvincial · Sable
Cherry Wurl itzer piano
$1600., like now. Call4464426 .

~eAM, 1\\1'1'1!11" IT WA7.

Home
Improvements

A~~ A DREAM,

PAINTING- interior and ex·
t8rioi, plumbing. rOofing.
some remodeling : ~0 . Vrs.
exp. Call"614-388-9.6 52 .

(01 98-I~~NE.t.. l..e

63

81

Transporlat1on

72

Trucks 'for Sale

1978 Ford F-150 Ranger, Y•
ton, heavy dutv ·bad, good
cond .. $2,500. Call 614388-8126 .
1977 Dodge Kary van 12ft.
box, runs good. Call 44646.27 after 5.

t-t &amp; S HOme hTiprovements
vinyl siping. roofing. rpor:n
addition, storm window s,
Slone. Call 614-367-0409
or 614 -367-7244.

-------5

1---------

I .JUST COlT
U~'ftio
~Cf'L~~

· BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references
furnished. Free estimates.
Call collect 1-614 -2370488, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

1977 Ford 150 4 spd, 4
wheel drive pickup, low
mileage. Call 614-367- Plastering 8a PIBster rep8ir.
7540.
· free . estimates. Call 614256-1182.
1982 % ton Chevrolet
pickuJ) truck. automatic G~NE ' S DEEP STEAM
transmission. 29.000 miles, C AH P E T C L E A N ,
305 engine, 'black with red scotchguard-water eJictracvinyl ioterior. " $6, 700.00. tion, deodorizers. FREE estiCall 992-5502 .
mates. -Reasonable rates.
Gone Smith, 992-~30![1.
74CJ5. headers, 1200X15
tires. white spoke wheels, D . and M : Contractor!.
now top. $1700.00 . Call Remodeling, . vinyl siding,
992-7891 .
painting {indoors and out·
doorsl replfcement win1983 Chevrolet S-1 0 Truck, dows call 304-773-5 131 .
V6 eng .. 5 -sp"d manuel
trans., AM FM stereo radio, RON•s T81eviaion Service .
extended cab with jumP Specializing in Zenith and
~~;eats,
powttr steering , Motorola. Quazar. and
power brakes. Call 992· house calls . Call 304-6766614 or 667'- 6976 . 2398 or 614-446-2464 .
87296 .00.
Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
1976 Jeep Pick-up truck . removal . Call 304 -675Excellent condition. good 1331 .
tires. Coli 614-985,4209.
RINGLES'S SERVICE. ex1972 Chevrolet pick up half perienced carpenter, electriton, 3 sp, 8(),000 miles, axe cian, mason. paint8r, roof·
running cond. two new front ing !including hot tar
tires, d8pe,dable work applicationl 304-675-2088
truck. $996.00 . Call 304- or 676-7368.
675-2592 after 5 o'clock .
Rotary o~ cable tool drilling. :
1972 Chevy Stop-Van. good Most wells completed same
shape. state sticker, regular dily . Pur:np sales and servi·
$2,200, now $1.800. be- cas. 304-896-3802 .
tore Nov 1, 304-675-3824.
8uilding -R8modelirig. Con~
1978 Chevy C - 1 0 , crate. drvwall, electrical;·
$3,400.00 . Phone 304- kitchen·bllthrOom installa882-2985.
tion. door-window framing .
304-675-2440.
1973 Ford half ton pick up,
86,000 miles, 4 spaed trans- 8 &amp; D HOME IMPROVEmission. 302 motor . MENTS, vinyl siding, alumn
$796.00. 304-676-4893.
soffit. window. gable, face
board caps and gunering,
6 foot utility bed, Plymal also painting, roofing, room
Road, 3rd lane on right, additon. no job to small or
orange truck.
largo. 304-57:6_- 2644 .

ISS~

w

~R&amp;:TCRI{1;

LIST!~

!;V~~IIJ0

FRCMSCW

ro wrs..

ANNIE

GASOLINE ALLEY

Melba,dii1n't Bicker

used to
work ,
here

~ewu:

th' City -

Manaqer'

at

City

Ha11r

WINNIE

OLLIE SAVS
MARV-LOU GIVES
HIM HEARTBURN

e.

-:-----'----- ~========:l==·=·=·:0:18:1:.===~

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S.

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®I li)

'Space Raiders' ,
·
·
IIl MOVIE: 'The Mudlark'
CIJ Hot Potato
Cil Fly Fishing Journal
Cil Lucy Show
Cil Dr; Who
. ® ~-2-1, Contllct
fit Di.t i'ritnt Strokes
6 :30 0 ffi (!) NBC News
Cil Rifleman
I]) Mazda Sportslook
IJ) Carol Burnett
Cl) Iii (j}) ABC News
0 (j) 00 CBS News
Cl)
Nightly
Business
Report
® Body. EleC1ric
fit One Day .at a Time
7 :00 0 ffi PM Magazine
Cil Here Come the Brides
I]) SportsC!Inter
Cil Gomer Pyle
Cil El (j]) · Entertainment
Tonight
Cil Wheel of FQrtune
0 (I) Wheel of Fortune
CIJ ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
®I News
fit Jefforsons
7:30 U IIl Tic Tac Dough
CIJ HBO Coming Attrac tions
C!J Auto Racing ' 84 : CART
Laguna Seca 300 from
laguna Seca, CA
00 Andy Griffith
III 0 ® Fomilv Feud
(!) Jeopardy
@ Wheel of Fortune
li) [J}) New Name That
Tune
fj)WKRP in Cincinnati
8:00 0 (I) (I) A- Teall) Hannibal,
B.A . and the t eam rnust f ight
the syndicate to rescue th e
kidnapped daughter of a
protected government Witness. (60 min .l
CIJ MOVIE : 'Educating
Rita' [Closed Captioned]
Cii Album Flash
Cil Gentle Ben
00 NBA Basketball : Utah
Jazz at Boston Cettics
® Q) [J}) Throe's A Crowd
Vicky's got the measles. but
it's Jack an.d her father
whos e t emperatures ri se
when It comes to deciding
who will take care of her.
[Closed CaptiOned 1
0 III ®I AfterMASH Coldnel and Mrs. Potter begin to
feel the strai·n of taking care
of the Klinger's baby while
Max is in the hospital.
(]) ffi) Nova 'The Fountains
of Paradise : Th e impact of
an enormous hydroelectric
project in Sri Lanka is examined , (60 min .)!Ciosed Captioned!
fit MOVIE : 'The Breaking
Point'
8 :30 Cii Scrn Legends: James
Cagney
® Ql (j}) Who's the Boss
Tony and An9ela chase thei r
runaway
children ~ 1nto
Tony's · tough neighbor·
hood. !Closed Captioned!
®! E/R
9:00 U Cii (1) Riptide Cody,
NiCk and Boz attempt to
salve a possible murder . at
sea which is based on the
word of. a local fi sherman
who swears a mermaid in·
formed him of the murder
(60 min.)
ffi MOVIE : 'Louisiana'
Part 2
(I) 700 Club
00 Ql ll2l Paper Dolls T empus sportswear .makes a
dramatic move to save Oav·
id's company from financial
ruin . (60 min .)jCiosed Captioned!
0 (]) ®I MOVIE : 'The
Cowboy and the Ballerina'
(]] ® Frontline 'Not One of
t.he Boys. ' Profiles of Geral*
dine Ferraro , J ei;~ nne Kirkpa·
trick and Joan Growe
provide an in-depth look at
women in t qday· s political
arena . (60 min.) [Closed
CaplionedJ
9:30 (!) NFL' s Greatest Moments
1 0 :00 0
Cii (1) Remington
Steele Remington and laura
go undercover at an exc lusive adult baseball c·amp to
investigate a. possible murder. (60 min.)
Cii Even More . All -New
Unexpurgated Benny Hill
Britain's mulfiNtal ented co·
median is back for his six th
HBO special .
C!J 3rd Annual legendary
Pocket Billiards Star~. Minnesota Fats vs . U .J . Puckett . (60 min .)
Cl) 1D (W Je~sie Jessie tries
to bring a fire-injured pohce
officer out of his depression
and back to a full life . 160
min.) [Closed Captioned!
(j) Stlltewide
® Newswatch
fit Independent News'
10:15 (I) MOVIE: 'Cabo Blanco·
10:30 Cil Celebrity Chefs
CIJ Adam Smith's Money
World
® Congress: We the
People

Marcum RoofiRg &amp; Spout·
· irlg. Now . installjng rubbe~
roofs ~ 30 years; eKperienca,
specializing ill built Up rool
Call 614-388-9861.

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

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Serv1ce s

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Soia. chair, rocker, ottoAutos for Sale
Vito alto sax, e.xcellent con - 71
man, 3 tables, (extra heavy).
262K1 10 partial basement
dition.
$350
.
Cell
446$685 . Sofa, chair and loveseptic tank level $3,000.
seat, $276. Sofas and chairs Firewood, $2Q.OO pick up 2875 .
Call 6.14-643-0168.
TOP CASH paid for '80
pric;ed from $285. to $895 . lo·ad. $30 .00 delivered .
CONN trumpet ·- l.ike . new model and newer used cars.
Tables, 950 and up to S125 . 304-675 - 2991 or 675$150. Call after 5 :30, 446- Sm·ith Buick-POntiac, 1911
Hide-a-beds,$390 . and up 6762 .
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis . Call
3199.
to S550,, sofa bods $145,
614-446-2282.
Recliners, 8285 . to $376 ., Used 2300 Ditch Witch
Renlals
lamps hom 828 . to S1 25 . trencher, 1-614-694-7842 . Wurlitzer Organ. Funmaker 119'19--c:;.;;;;&amp;;;ii;,~
special with st;Jiid state 1979 Camero
pc. dinettes 1rom $109., to
435. 7 pc. $189 end up. Camouflage Army - ·oenim cassette recorder. Like new. eJtc. cond .• loaded, tor sale
$1200.00 Call 1-614-742- bv owner. Call446-7814 ,
41 Ho~ses for Rent
large Furnished apt. 919 Wood table with six chairs surplus, Sam Somerville' s .
2602.
2nd . $175 utiliti·es paid . S285 to $745 . Desk S110 East · Ravenswood. Fri. Sat.
1970 Chrysler Cordoba
Sun
.
1
:00-7:00
up
to
S225
.
Hutches,
$550.
PM.
304Men only. Share bath. 448·
good cond., 73,000 miles.
676
-3334
before
10:00
Tune
Up
for
the
Holidays,
Bunk
bed
complete
.with
4416 a~ter 8 p.m .
5 ·rm. 2bdr home. ex . con d.
Speical discOunt for limited Call614-367-7131 , aftar4
mattresses, $275 . and up to AM.
deposit required. Call 446·
weekdays.
time, 304-675-5500.
$396. Baby beds, $110 .
513
Third
Ave.
1
bdr.,
water
1 370 after 5pm.
3
way
bumper
pool
table
MattresSes
or
box
springs.
furnished , adults only. $135
1.982 Chevette 4 spd,
mo.. dep. required. Call full or twin, $58., firm , $68 . with ~ining surface, 2 cap- Alto S.ax. Buescher. Horn $3399 .· 1981 Chevetto
Modern 4 bdr, 2 baths, FP,
and $7B. Queen sets. $196 . tain chairs for van, need and case like new cond, less
446-4222
between
9
&amp;
5.
DR , basement &amp; Qarage.
4 dr. chests, $42 . 5 dr. upholstered . · 304-675- than '·wholesa,le 8t $250.00. auto., $3199 .. 1979 PlyMulberry Hts. $325 mo.,
mouth Volere, auto, S2399,
304 ' 675-3824 .
$64 . .Bed frames , 2112 .
chests,
Completely furnished all .
dep . &amp; ref. Call 446-0116 .
1978 Oodge Aspen $2099,
$20
.and
$25
..
10gun'
-Gun
elect. 458 Second Ava ..
1978 Plymouth Salon
Cabinets.
S350
.
Gas
or
C~ptain Steamer will clean 1
2 bdr house 42 Ckilicothe · One 2BR Apt . s220 mo .. electric ranges $375. Baby chair free when you gat 2 58
9l799. John'o Auto Sales,
Fruit
adults only, securiiydeposit.
Rd ., $210 mo .. S75 dop.
Bulaville Rd.. Gallipolis.
mattresses.
$~6
&amp;,
$35,
bed
rooms
of
carpet
cleaned.
S.
Vegetables.
References. Call 446-2236
Cell 446 -1340 or 446Ohio 446-4782.
lrames $20, 925, &amp; $30. 304-675 -2295 .
or 446 -2681 .
3870 .
king frame S50. Good sBiecPeas, you pick, $5.06 bu- 1966 C-60 Chevrolet 1'h
Downstairs, 2 rooms &amp; tion of bedroom suites. Minott a 1 114 Zerox copier
sl1el; delivered, 2 bushel for ton, 2 spd. rear ei1d, A-1
House for rent . Call -446·
bllth. furnished. clean. nQ rockers. metal cabinets. ~300 . 00 . Tri. _Co1,1nty Sport · S15 .00 . Macil Gandee, ahopa $1000. Call 3673371 .
headboards
S38
&amp;
up
to
304-.
6
75-:.!988.
1
Shop,
pets, adults only. Dep&amp; Ref.
304-676-2108 .
749.6.
.
S65.
.
required. can 446 -1519.
3 bdr. clean house. city
10 speed, boys bike. brand
school dist .. nice yard, reas·
1981 Z-28 Comoro, 43;000
Used Furnitlh'e · N head new, racing bike, phone
Unfurnished
2bdr.,in
Crown
Farm Supplies
onable rent . Call446 -0974 .
miles, · axe. cond., Must
boards.
.
and
2
bedroom
304-675-6240
.
Citv. Call 256-6520.
Sellll Call 245-9656.
suites. 3 miles out Buiaville
&amp; Live stock
Home on river lot in Che·
Ad . Open 9am to 5pm. Mon. _ Fir~wood. $20.00 load ,
FurniShed
effici~ncy,
7
112
shire. 3 bdr, 2 ~aths. 1amily
77 Pontiac Grand Prix 301' 1978 Dodge pickup, slant 6. 1- - - - -- - - - - $30.00 delivered anytime 61 Farm Equipment
Neil. Gallipolis S150 ., utili· thru Sat.
miles, •2.000 . 304- 82
room.N stove, refrig ., dis·
Pl~mbing
good con.d ltion. Call after 72,000
'614
-446-0322
during
day.
Call
after
5
,
676 -6084.
.
hwasher. CH &amp; A, sec. dep . tie~ pd .. Call446-4416 after
6PM, 446-0137..
S. Heating30'\-458-1728
.
Bpm .
&amp; re1erences required . Call
1984 2 horse ~railer, 6 mo.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
367-7567 .
old, never been used . Call 1981 VW Rabbit Diasol, 4 ' 77 Ford F- 1 00 pickup, exc
Washers.
dryers,
refrigeradresser.
almost
new
Vanity
1 bdr. apt. between Gallipo1-286-6522.
. dr., am-fm radio. sharp. Call cond, body good, low mi·
tors, ranges . Skaggs Ap- exercise bike. 304 - 675 ~
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
Modern 1 bdr, do.wntown, lis &amp; Holzer, stove &amp; refrig. pliances, Upper River Rd . 1386.
C &amp; S Bonk 446-06112 ext. leaga. 304-576-2377 . ·
ANO HEATING
comple·te kitchen , ai 'r , Coli 446-2055 .
vv
duty
H,
ea
5
ft.
bush
hog
23.
beside Stone Crest Mot81.
Cor.- Fourth and Pine
4 7 5. . Call446-3824 .
carpet. Oep. required . Call
· 1-:-::-::---:------~
614-446-7398.
Off white, neutral. Rowe
Gallipolis ..Ohio
446 -4383 davs or 446 - Furnished efficiency, 701
82 Celerity AT, PS, AC, V-6, 73 .Vans S. 4 W.O .
couch,
good
co
.nd,
Ph.one 614 -446 -3 8B8 or
Fourth , Gallipolis . Share
0139 eve.
New
14;
ft.
TandOm
axle
.
c
ruise.
tilt.
A,M.
27
MPG
.
614-446-4477
bath, $150. utilities pd . Call County Appliance , Inc . $160 .00, 304 -675-6030.
1977 Dodge Von, 318 on g..
trailer. Call 446-7383 or Call446-2684.
Good used appliances and
446
-4416
after
8pm.
4 bedroom colonial· brick
auto., cess., a.c .• c .b.,
TV sets. Open BAM to &amp;PM . 9 in Sears Craftsman table 446-3358 .
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAThouse 1or rent or sale in
1981 Comaro Z-28, 24,000 $1800 firm. Call446-2707 ING. Rt . 1, Box 355, GalllMon
thru
Sat.
446-1699.
saw
with
2
extensions.
Furnished efficiency apt .•
Pomorov. Calll-373~ 0456 .
Farmall Cub tractor with actual miles. Must selll No eve.
poiis. Call614-367"0576.
lR , BR. combination kit· 627 3rd . Ave . . Gallipolis, brand new, 9200 .00 . 304- cultivators and other equip· reaso"nable offer refused.
675-3538
.
.
OH
.
2 bedroom house in the chen 8a bath. Private. sec.
mont. Call 614-256-6846 Ca!l 446-4063 .
SHULAW'S Plumbing and
country. Approx. 10 miles dap. &amp; ref. Call446-4607 or Close-Out Sale Necchi sew··
1 977 Dodge window Van,
Quilts, 609 First .St. Point (~a~ft~
•~r~4~P~M~----'----­
Heating, 211 Sixth St .,
from Pomeroy . Call 992· 446-2602
power.
Calt
after
6PM
all
1976 Cadillac Coupe De
ing machines 1984's. Dial· Pioasant, W. Va . 3.04 -675Point Pleasant. w. Va. 3047201 .
5998
.
REPOSSESSED:
Must
sell
949'
2196.
Ville, two door ..ln excellant
Riverside Apts. Middlepon. a-matics, regularly $399.96
two quonset style steal condition. Phone 614-986- - - - - - - - - - l c - 675-6420. Licensed and
vour cost $79.95 While thev
rates
for
Senior
Special
2 houses for r8nt and bar for
buildings. brand n8w. never 3967.
1978 Ford F260, 4 X 4, insured .
lost. Call collect 614-654sale or lease with option to Citizens. $130 . Equal Hous- · 4000 Mon. -Sat. between
One
is
40ft
.
X
60ft.
aractted.
wagon
wheels. rurining
55 Building S~pplies
ing Opportunities. 614 buv. 304-675-6720 .
Tom,
419-659-2494
.
Call
1973
Pontiac
Le
Mans,
boards.
etc
. 93000.00. Coli 83
10AM &amp; 5PM .
Excavating
992-7721 .
$400.00.
1976 Mercury 742-2877.
Mobile hon\o, $175.00,
1957
Ford
641
'
tractor,
Comet, e700.00 . Call992- 1 - : - - - - - - - - Apt. for rent in Syracuse. Heavy duty Whirlpool Building Materials
st oo'. oo deposit. New, fur·
6031 .
"1 978 Ford Ranger XLT, 4
I
washer 8t dryer. Used only 6 Bl!&gt;ck. brick, _sewer pipes, excellent condition
Call
992-7689
.
nished. porch and out build·
wheel driVe ; loaded . Good-1 Excavating, basetimes, with guarantee . Windows, lintels , ate . $2400.00. Wagner Loada;
ing. 4 mile back Glenwood.
with manure forks and 2 1977 Thunderbird . Air $3,660.00 negotiable. 304- ments. footers. driveways.
$500.
Call
446-9384.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande. buckets, $250.00 . Call614laurel land apartm&amp;nts in
septic tanks, landscaping ~
304-576-2288 .
cond.. p.b., p.s .. AM-FM 895-3472 or 896-3967 .
0. Call 614-246-6121.
New · Haven, now accepting
Call
anytime 614 - 446742-2877.
stereo, ET wheels. Good
Hotpoint under-the;counter
45.37, James l. Davison, Jr .
4 bedroom house, 1716 applacations for two bed- dis~washer, good cond. ,
Call992-7042.
condition.
Build your own 4 bdr. home.
owner .
Jefferson Blvd .. Point Plea- room apartments. Base rent $60. Call 446-7262.
$6,996 del. to your site.
'
63
sant, W . Va . 304-675-1860 rate starting at $158.00 par
livestock
1983
-Z-28
Camero,
4
,300
New display model open .
month . Market rent
Dozer Work by Ted Hanna .
or 304-675-3262 .
miles.
white
with
red
stripes,
Hoover
portable
See it nowl 1-614-886$228 .00 par month. An
T ·top, cruise tih, a-c. am·fm. 1983 Interstate brown, Ditches, ponds, roads, land
equal housing opportunity . washer. S150 . Automatic 7311 .
Purebred Polled Hereford casaetta, aterao, lots mora. 8,600 miles, 84,000. Call clearing, etc. Call Motor Car
washer
and
dryer,
S200.
Gea
Call 614-304-882-3386 .
42 Mobile Homes
Brokers. 446-6592.
cattle feeder cal~es. steers&amp; Same 11 now. $11 ,000. 448-2240.
clothes dryer." $50. Soli.
Rough
Cut
Lumber.
oak,
heifers,
yearlin"'also
·SteerS
for Flent
Orie and two bedroom fur- defrost refrig.,$ 86. 30 inch poplar. and pine. 2x4's, &amp; ~eifers &amp; br8d heifers. 304·676-7691.
J .A .R.Construction Co.RuHondo125S. 1606.6 actual
nished apartments. call61 4- gas range. $45 . 40 inch gils
2x8'sd 1 x6 ' ~, 1CB's. As- Registered Australian Blue · '78 Ford fairmont, 6 cyl", PS, miloa. $660.00. Call 1-614- tland, Oh,614- 742-2903 ;
ranga,$86
.
24
inch
ges
992-6434 or 614-992 Basements, Footers, ConN·
all Hogg Haolor pupa. Call446-2109 gOOd tlreo, good cond, 304- · 742-2602.
range,$100. Call 614-742- sorte 1ongt s.
2 bdr .. AC, gu heat. waU to 5914 and 304-8B2-2666 .
crete work.. Backhoe's,
and Zuspan Materials after BPM, Mon.- Fri. Anv· 876-8609 anytime.
2362.
wall carpet in Gallipolis. Call
Dozer &amp; D.itCher. Dump .
Co .. Inc. 77 3 - 5 6·5 4
time Sat. 8o Sun .
'-:-::----.:___ _ __
after 5PM, 446-1409.
APARTMENTS , mobile
trucks.
&amp;. water-gas-sewer- ·
·
I'
·
daytime
.
'
1·
1978 Plymouth Fury, 318
, Boats and
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant 2 p1ece 1vmg room sUite for
electrical lines.
·
Nice young Black Angus bull engine, vinyl tQp, PS, PB,
14X70 3bdr, total elect .. and Gallipolis . 614-446- sale. like ne:-v. Early Ameri- N
Motors for Sale
can
Style.
M.
u
st
see
to
ow
o_
pen
for
business,
weighing
approJ!C.
760
lb.
sound.
PhOne
304·8761umished, plus washer &amp;
8221 .
D ~ A . ~oston Excavating
appraciato. Call 992-3617. Mountain State Block, Rt. Call 446-4053.
1296.
dryer, on privata lot, 10 min.
Do,zer and D"'mp Truck :
33,
New
Ha"en.
Complete
fi-om town, $200 mo. plus 1 bedroom unfurnished.
asonry supplies, 4", 8 "; 660 lb. Hereford bull
1977 Mercury Monarch, 4 1 2 atuminum bo.a t, 9Yz. HP Services . Call 614-667- ·
utilities. Deposit Ref. Call Gallipolis Farry, $176 .00 Propane, Wa"rmMorni~ggas m
1 2" block. Delivery service. s 11 b 11 1
hoatar · 65 •000 hourymput,
1 ·
· door, · good cond. 1 owner. Evinrude motor with remote 6828 or 614-378 -6288 . ·
p
.
~a
er
us.
sow2001ba.
256-1393.
per month, all utilities paid vented. 8,:Z99 .00 . Phone
tartk, heavy-c;luty tilt trailer
hone doy 304-882-2222, for sale Call ft
d k
81 300 00
eacept electric. 304-675avanlng 882-3239 .
614 367.
a or ar ,
'
.·
. 304-8B2- with bearing buddy axles.
1 -614-742-2602·.
2bdr mobile home with 1371.
84 · Electrical
$7&amp;0. Call 448-2588. •
natural gas heat. Adults
2213. -1------Canopy bed and dresser. 2
I-,~~~B~O~S
-lc
&amp; Refrigeration
only, no pets. Call 367,
3 rooms ..and ·bath with pieceliving room suite. Both
c rocco Volkswagen, Warda Seeking, 12 foot. 6
7438 .
refrigerator and stove fur - in oxcellant condition. Call
$4,700. Phone 304-676- h.p. motor. electric; motor,
11289 after 6:30.
niahed. Refrences _and dep- 992.3391 .
. pediatal ae•ta, trailer ·and SEWING Machine repairs.
1 · bdr, . furnished, 2 mi. out osit required, $226 .00
'77 Malibu Cle11ic St•tion. more.
Vinton, 9 mi . frOm Rio monih, 304,676-1090.
2877, •660.00. Call 742- ,1 , !'""''ca . Authorized Singer
WagOn, exc cond,
Pickens used furniture. 304&amp; Service Sharpen
Grande, $140 mo. plus
$1,650 . 00. 304-876676-64B3 or 875-1460 .
Se;issors . Fabric Shop ,
utilities, depoolt. Coli 3888951 .
Pomeroy: 614-992-2284 .
9717.
45 Furnished Rooms New Gibson refrigerator, 8
76 A~to Parts
1978 Corvette, good cond,
l!o Accessories
months old, $800.00. 304Nice 3 bdr mobile home, ·
· For rent Sleeping Rooms
85 .
Fol Solo Or Trade for JHp
Ha~ling
unfurnished. Upper Rt. 7, and light hou.-r kHplng 1!76-8718. '
CJ-7
~r
4
whHI
drive
truck.
water paid. no pets. Call
rooms. Park Central Hotel. Solid maple twin lin bedo
1114-441-80211.
4 F781-4 bioo ply tlreo.\lery
2411-5818.
Call 614-446-0758.
complete, •1 00. each; cheat
good condition . •as.oo. James Boy&amp; Water Service ,
'79 Dodge 4 wheel drive CaM 949-2893.
and full oize bed, $60.
3 bdr, 1 "'AI bath; in EverAloo pools filled . Coli 614Furnished room, et46 . Utili· 304-1175-1542&amp;.
thrH quartero ton, '81 Toy258 -1141' or 614- 446 green; Co. Rd. 42, 3 mi.
tiis, rar'lge. ref. Share bath ~
Storllte. 304- 5761175 or 814-446-7911 ,
from HMC. Call 24&amp;-91 70.
Man only. 919 Sac., Gallipo79 Motors Homes
lis. 446-4418 after p.m.
54 Misc. Merchandise
C~mpera
2 bdi trailer, very privote, 2
Service . CaU
if no answer.
miles from ho1pital in coun 72 Trucks for
try, no peto. •176 mo., pluo
46 Space for Rent
t _1 00 dep. Call onytime
Knouff Firewood Split- 96%
195B Chevy C-1!10 dump
448-1722 .
hardwoodo. Seeooned or
truck. n.Wiy pointed cab &amp;
green.
You
pick
up
or
we
2i1d. floor office space for
bed. no ruaonable offer
12X60 3bdr, total alec., rent. Court St .• Po'"eroy. deliver. HEAP vender. 814refuood. Call 1 -288-81122.
Addloon, Oh.: $175 mo. Call Call814-373-0468.
2115-52411.
,
. 448-0.1 76.
TRISTATE
. UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Store building for rent. 220 Llmootona, Sand, Grovel.
Fuily fumlohod, 2 bdr. elr E. 'Main, Pomeroy, front and Dlllvered In Meoon, Meigo,
11 53 Sec. Ave.: Gallipollo
17 ft. ui'l'lper •xo. colid., 614-448-7833 or &amp;1 4 -448:
cond.. odulto only. can rear entrance. Call 9g2. GoUla or pick up 11 Richardt
1833.
.
UIIO. Call 448-1138.
ol4e-4110.
• Son, Call 441-77811.
8232 or 9g2,117&amp;7.
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at $1 6~ for o·no
bedroom _and $198 per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza, pool and TV
ant . Call 446-2745 or leave
message.

6 00 . . IIl

1964 Apache fold Clown
camper with add oil room for
sale $325. Call 446-9650.

0

~!t~Nl

~ ~ ~~ --

EVENING

ll2l News

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Hooted
indoor· o~tdoor facilitiu .
A.KC Doberman puppies:
Stud Sorvico, Coll814 -4467796.
.

57

10/23/84 .

for Sale

Pomera~ium

Warm glow wood burning
stove. radiant heat . . Takes
logs up to 22" . Call 4463426 .
.
-------'---lcOak furniture, tab.les,chairs.
cupboards, pie safe, tale phones, desk, also antiques
and glassware . Open Sun·
days. Conkel's Tuppers·
plains, Rt .7 .

Television
Viewing

Motors Homes
S. Campers

1973 Midao 19ft. iolfcontainad carnper, ex .
cond.. 82360 . Call· 3792686 .

Firewood for sale: 100 per- BriarpaJCh Kennell Profescent hardwood; spli·t - · sional All-breed grooming.
delivered· stackedd. 5 loads ~~~C?or-_ o~td~Or boarding fafor 9140. Call 446-0373.
Cilities. Enghah Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 614 -38830' gallon fish aquarium 9790 .•
complere, 1978 750 Kawa saki, 1973 Gremlin, 19 in. Dragonwynd Cattery Ko~­
Panasonic TV . Cell 446 - nels . AKC Chow puppieo,
3501 .
.
Siamese kit~ens, new litters
CFA. Hil'flelayan end Persian
Great christmas gift! Girls kittens. Coli 614-446-3844
10 speed bika, ··$60 . Call after 6 .
446-7911 . ·
---'--~----Beautiful
pet,
Moving Sole Gravely 408 bobiod by old folks. noadi
lawn traC1or with 34 in. rot. care for two woeko, or .-ril.
motor. 22ft. Sears freezer, Call 446-2376 .
May.tag washer. Maytag
dryer. roll-a-Way bed &amp;. AKC German Shephard
pups-8 wks old wormed and
mattress. Call 446-7162.
Captains bed. gr8at for a
child " $75. 3 drawers, 4
.shelves under . Call 446 ·
2876 .

79

Larry Wright

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220 .

212 acre farm on Parker Run
Rd. Must sail, ·m·oving to

34

Tuesday, October

Ohio

11

Ohio

·--

I KI

I

IFEAMEDt .

I I I IJ

HEl-D UP IN
EMD WeA'THER.

tJ I I tJ
BYSUIL

NoW arrange the circled teners 10
lorrn the surprise answer, as sug·
gestecl by !he above cartoon.

J I XI I I J )

Printanswerhere : AN [
vesteraays

I JumtHes
Answer

· (An!!lwers tomOrrow)
TRIPE HOBBY STUCCO MEMORY
How you have .to learn to take c are of a
baby-FROM THE SOTIOM UP

Jurnblllooll No.25,ContllntnQ 110purdlt,II IJIIIeblt lOr$ 1.i5 pion. 5~cefltl postage
.and hlndllng tram JumtJM , clo ttt11 newtpeJ* . P.O. llo.11 531 , Ptlnlyra, N.J . 01065.
lnckKII JOUffl_,., addrna. $coOl end makt c~- PIYiblt to NewlpapefboDks.

BRIDGE

James Jacoby

Declarer makes
a key play

NORTH

10-U-84

. H2
. AK7
tAK 8642

By James Jacoby
The bidding by North was superaggressive. After South had responded to the one-diamond overc&lt;1ll with
one no-trump, North might have contented himself with ·three diamonds
or a raise to two no-trump. South

WEST
• K 10 4
• J963

•a

EAST
+ Q97

•s

4

tJ

• 10 75 3
.AQ J64
• to 9 52
SOUTH
• A86 3

would have accepted any game invi-

.Q 1052

tation happily , but the jump to three
no-trump r emoved all doubt.
Now that he was in game , South
had to m ake it. Certainly t he l e'ad of a
low heart was not frightening to
declarer. The obJective in the play on
such deals is to establish t he l ong suit
(diamonds in this case) without allowing the dangerous opponent to come

t Q9

. K7 3
Vulnerable: North -South
Dea ler : West

West
1•
Pass
Pass

Nortb
1t
3 NT

East
Pass
Pass

on lead. Of course, more often th an
not (68 percent of the time) t he opposing diamonds divi de 3-2 . In other
words, about two-t hirds of the time
declarer will be smiling. But it does
pay to provide for that ·unfortunate

Open ing lead:

South
1 NT
Pass

•3

remainder of the ti me when East
may have four to the jack or I 0.
So what needed to be done here' · run the diamond suit

for enough

The answer was for declarer to win tricks to make three no-trump.
the heart king in dummy· and l ead a
low diamond lo the ni ne in the closed
hand. Now a ny return can be won. the
queen of diamonds ·pfayed. and dummy re-entered with a high heart to

The lerm for th·i s
" avotdance." By playing in
South has avoi ded givi ng
oppor,t unity to com e on

pl ay 1s
th is way.
East lhe
lead and

attack declarer 's precious club king.

~'6td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Chilling
I Enfant's
glance
mother
39 Presbyter
5 Ceiling
fO Eyot
supports
10 Cupid
I Pulverize
11 Shrewd
I3 Complacent 2 Wheat
variety
14 Victory
3 Casino
symbol
cynosure
I5 Child of
4 Work unit
Loki
16 Future ham 5 Blanching
6 Indian
17 Western
tribe
state
7
Man's
(a bbr .)
nickname
18 Clarify
8
Reverse
20 Three,
a trend
in Napoli
9 Guided
21 Chinese
society
22 Sultry
songtress
23 Hind
24 Campus
queen
25 Abound
26 Joust
27 - deal
26 - hygiene
30 AngloSaxon
letter
31 Caddoan
Indian
32 Faulty
34 Interpose
, 36 Napoleonic
setting
37 Gannent

DOwN

Yesterday 's Answer

12 Young eel

26
16 " Turandot "
character 28
I9 Froth
29
22 Gun name 33
23 Seahawks' 35
home
24 Movie !Sp. ) 38
25 Lock of hair

Young
one
Impel
Epithet
Cha llen ge
Foot
(prefix )
Hebrew
for Lord

part
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work it :

~!~Soap

u m III m o oo ®I m

(j}) News
Cii
Not
Necessarily
Television Tho NNTN team
takes a satirical look at tele ·
vision ·s new fall TV season ,
inclu~ing the sJars. the
shows and the networks .
ffi MOVIE: . ' National
Lampoon's Vacation'
Cil Doble G!llls
(!) NFL's Superstars The
Men Who Played the Game.
CIJ Two Rqnnies
® Congress: We the
People
·
1!11 Benny Hill Show
11 :30 0 ill CZl Tonight Show
Tonight's guest are Paul
McC artney and Mary Gross .
(60 min.l .
_
ill MOiiiE' ' Yor: The
Hunter From the Future'
Cil Boat of GrO&lt;Icho
C!l SportsCenter

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A i s used
fot the three L 's_, X for the two O's. etc. Single l etter s.
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words ar e a ll
hints. Each day the code letters a r e differen t.

W-23

CRYPTOQUOTEs

FSR

XDQUMI!

SLO

WBGC

FBAR
-

FL

FSR

HLLUK

WBAR

GMILUBK

DX

XDQUMI !

l&gt;fF

TLR K
B

XDQUMP

ISBWHLNF

Yesterday's Cryploquote: A MAN TiiAT WILL ENJOY A
QUIET CONSCIENCE MUST
LORD CHESTERFIELD

LEAD

A QUlET UFE. -

.I

'

�Page 12-The

errorist ·attack
·a nniversary noted
by grief, hopes By DRUSIE MENAKER
Assocated Press Writer,
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - One
father fights his grief with )lope for
peace while another expresses
bitterness at talk of responsibility a
year after a suicide bomber crashed
Into tl)e Ma rine compound in Beirut,
kllllng 241 U.s. servicem en.
Meanwhile, a Lebanese war bride
widowed by the terror attack is
fighting to stay in this country,
fearing for her fa te if she istorced to
return to her homeland.
" We just kind of hope some good
will come out oCthis, hope that it was
not in vain, hope that somehow
Lebanon will settle down and live in
peace and harmony,'' said the Rev.
David A. Stowe, whose son was
killed In the Oct. 23, llm, bombing.
A dogwood tree was planted
Sunday at a senior citizens' housing
complex that Stowe has been
Involved with to mark the anniversary of the death of Cpl. James D.
Stowe.
Cpl. Stowe was 20 when he died.
He never saw his daughter, whowas
4 months old a year ago.
"He Is constantly in our mind ,
especially this week," sa id Stowe, of
Somervllle.
"Som etimes the grief and sorrow
can almost take control of your life,"
he said. "It's not a goixl way to live."

James Langan Ill of Lakehurst
lost his son, Lance Cpl. James IV,ln
the bombing and planned to spend
today remembering his child.
"Last year everything was so
public and I. understand the reasons
for this," said Langan. "I want to
just be with myself in a very private
way."
But he said not enough public
attention has been paid to the
aftermath of the bombing.
"Pres!dent Reagan took responsiblity ... but I don't know what It
m eans," said Langon.Asked what
he would like done, he said, "I'd like
to see Walter Mondale elected."
The fates of many of the
servicemen were not known tor
days after the bombing. Throughout
the nation families waited, hoping
they would not see the miUtary
captain a nd cha plain at their door,
bringing tragic news.
They scanned news reports from
Beirut, watched television and stood
by for overseas telephone calls.
Cpl. Joseph Martucci Jr., 21,
called his mother, Connie, several
days after the bombingtosayhehad
been rescued from the rubble.
He came pome to the family' s
Forked River home in March , his
brother Gerard said. Now, "he tries
not to talk about it."

-

.

Judgment rendered by court
A judgment for $16,848.10 plus
interest has been awarded in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to
Central Trust Co, Middleport ,
against Mary E. Hager, Middleport,
eta!. Foreclosureactiononproperty
in Middleport has been ordered in
this matter.
Another judgement in the amount
of $12,00!.58 plus interest has been
awared to Capital Financial Servi·
ces, Inc. of Ohio, from Raymond
Justis, Middleport, et al. The court
further ordered the foreclosure and
sale of the property In question,
located in Middleport .
An order for discovery a nd a bill of
particulars has been ordered by
Meigs CountyConirnon Pleas Judge
Charles Knight In a case filed by the
state against Eli Ebersbach. The
docume nts are to be s ubmitted to
the court on or before Thursday.
Ebersbach has been charged with
felonious assault, a second degree
felony . The alleged assault occured
about Aug. 20ofthis year.
A case filed by Eva Ma r ie Dailey
Enterprises, Inc. Racine, against

Property Protection Co., Inc.,
Charleston ; has been dismissed.
Also dismissed Is a case filed by
Ray R. Pickens, Middleport,
against St. Paul Fire and Marine
Insurance Co., Youngstown, et a !.
A jury trial has been requested by
Ronald G. and Lady Davis, Rutland,
in a case against Patric k Mitchell,
Langsville. The Davis' claim states
that becauseofthenegllgenceofthe
builder, their home which was
purchased in June 1!8!, is in need of
substantial repairs. They are asking
for a judgme nt of $10,000.
A request for a $10,823 judgement
and foreclosure has been requested
by Za lly B. Medors and Pearl G.
Medors, Clearwater, Fla., against
James and Phyills Pierce, Rutland.
The terms of the mortgage on said
property, located in Rutland, are
alleged to have been broken.
A reciprocal support action has
been filed by the State of Indiana In
the matter of Anna F. Dodson ,
Richland, Ind., against Daniel M.
Dodson, Pome roy.

~llrl)J}()y~ ••• __~(C_o_n_tl_nu_ed
__f_r_
o m~p_ag~e--11____________
council turned down the third
would not be helpfuliftheofficerwas
reading.
burdened with a lot of restrictions.
Council m embers explained to
Horton also said that It should be
King
that James Brewer hap
kept In mind that Cremeans has
conducted
a survey among a
been off wor k from time to lime due
number
of
residents
on the proposed
to Injuries received in the line of
ordinance and a high percentage
duty.
Both Horton and Council Presi- had said they were against it.
Council members stated they had
dent Carl Horky again stressed that
dropped
the oredlnanee because the
the North Second issue should be a
of
the
poeople had been heard
voice
topic for discussion at the safety
through
that
survey. King com·
committee and police department
m
ented
that
surveys
sometimes can
meeting next month a nd It was
be
m
isleading
in
what
they show.
decided that this is how. It will be
Hottman pointed out that there
handled .
are ordinances in existence to the
Corps visit
effect
that leaves cannot be burned.
Councll accepted the bid of Dils
containers
for burning must m eet
Mountaineer Equipment Co. for an
certain
standards,
residents are not
alr supply system. There was only
permitted
tocauseunpleasant
odors
the one bid and !hal was for $10,930. ·
through
burning
and
are
not
The county commissioners have
permitted
to
leave
rubbish
lying
agreed to pick up the tab on that
about their properties. He said that
purchase since the system Is used
police can be and are called In
for fire departments of the entire
offensive cases.
county .
Horky said that if another survey
Hoffman announced that reprewere held and disclosed different
sentatives of the U S. Corps of
results then he, again. would be In
Engineers will be in Middleport at
favor of a burning ordinance. It was
2: 30 p.m. on Nov. 1 to meet with
pointed
out that such an ordinance
village officials on the expansion of
again
would
have to introduced as
the marina as a recreational area.
new
legislation
and be approved at
Athens architect David Reiser,
three
readings
before going Into
who prepared plans for the improvements which have been studied by effect.
Attending the m eeting were
the Corps of Engineers, will be on
Hoffman, Buck, Horton, Horky.
band for that meeting.
King, Gllmore, William Walters,
Bumln~tordlnaDOO
Jack Satterfield, C(luncllmen. •
Hoffman discussed Ohio Environmental Protection Agency burning
staildards and indicated that he will
have copies of the standards made
forcouncllmembers .
CLEVELAND (AP) The
KJng questioned the status of the winning number drawn Monday
blii'Ding ordinance which had been nig ht In the Ohio Lottery's dally
·, been given two ·af three required game, "The Number," was 322.
/. readings untll the last meetlngwhen
In the "Pick 4" game, the winning

Reagan camp
is overjoyed

Commodities
pickup slated

pet cent Wedi-'AJ·

Winter
Jackets
.
'
Sizes 8 to 20. Many, 111ny
styles end colors lor your

setecltons. This' sato includes our entire stock.

$16.15
129,95 Jackets

$21.85
139.95 Jackets

$29.25

S61.00

S49.95 Jackets

S118.00

$36.45

BONUS BUY CERTIFIC

It's Easy To Use This Bonus Buy Certificate

1. GET A FREE BONUS BUY CERTIFICATE FROM OUR CASHIER.

2. FOR EACH $1.00 YOU SPEND, YOUR CARD Wl1 BE STAttftD.
3. PRESENT ONE FILLED BONUS BUY CERTIFICATE TO THE CASHIER.
4. SEE OUR ADS FOR NEW BONUS BUY SPECIALS EACH WEEK.
BREAD

ICE MILK

·6(

6( :::i:e

·R.C. COLA &amp;
Emergency runs
Six calls were answered by local
units Monday, the 1'!1eigs CountY
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
Rutland at 2:12 a .m . went to
Township Road 36 for Clara
Shenefield , to Veterans Mem orial
Hospital; Syracuse at 5:52 a .m.
went to Maplewood Lake for Denver
Parsons, to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy at 7:09 a .m. took Jo Ellen
Wolfe from 206 E . Main St. to Holzer
Medical Center; Syracuse at 12:39
p.m. tookAvazoSissonfromCollege
Street to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland a t 3: 00 p.m . took Ishmeal
Smith tram Meigs Mine 1 to Holzer
Medical Center and Middleport at
5: 24 p.m. took Mabel Smith from
Route 7 to Veterans Memorial.

.---------------4

8 PACK
.16 oz.

4

0

MEET THE
CANDIDATES

RACINE

ocr. 23-7:30 P.M.
Masonic Tample

MIDDLEPORT

ocr. 30-7:30 P.M.

TOBACCO
~:~. $666 CTN.

$6 66CTN.

811ur Bug

S.n11 B•g

56(

GAL

loous

tk, COFFEE
Sl 06 OFF
&amp;111 B•r

Whole

SUPERIOR

PICKLES
QT.

36( ;.:.
81.,, Bar

79(

LB.

·SLICED 89&lt;

LB.

HOMEMADE

DART BACON.~.~~~-. 99&lt; HAM SALAD ••••••L!;.. 99C
1~

SUPERIOR

(

ALL MEAT BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••• 99 ta.

GROUND BEEF ••••••••••• 99(

LARGE

Plus Dtp.

EGGS

69(

DOZ.

,..,. ~ Ftl. 01112

R.C. COLA
8/16 OZ.

$14 9 Plus Dtp.

'
'
PRICE~ EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 27, 1984

. "FRE£ PARKING"
OPEN DAILY &amp; SUNDAY - 9 A.l. to 9 P.M.
"No S1les To Dealers" Wt Reserve tilt Rl&amp;ht to Li11it Qu1ntities 1nd Correct Prlntina Errors
Not
for TYPOIJ'Iphlcll Errors - We Accept Food Stlmps 1nd "WIC" Coupons

group by Srriith. One rtght of e ntry would allow for
exploration of property. The other would allow for
construction or the actual reclamation.
Landowners voiced some concern by landowners
regarding no-Interest liens that might be placed
against their property when a construction right of
entry Is signed. Liens are based upon certified state
appralsals, .made before and after the reclamation, of
the acreagl! Involved In the project. Smith and Farley
pointed out, that to date, the increase in fair market
value for land that has been reclaimed has averaged
$50 to $75. Tilere!ore, unless a vast acre3@ owned by
one property owner Is being reclaimed, the final
appraisal of the land. after reclamation, usually Is
less tbat what It costs the state to file a lien. That cost
Is $21m. When this is the case, a lien is waived .
According to Smith, there have been no liens filed
against landowners In any reclamation projects to
date.
Farley told the group tha t he realized that talk of
liens made ·property owners uncomiortable, but
because the Division operates under federal law, such
guidelines have to be followed. He also advised
landowners that they could walt until the first
appraisal Is finished and then estimate the rise In
va lue before signing the right of entry for
construction.
It was also pointed out by F arley thai the division Is
"good_for any problems" that might occur because of
rec lamation work, for example, land slips. Property
owners must agree not to use the reclaimed land for
two years following reclamation, to allow the ground
to settle and vegetation to grow .
(Continui:!d on page 10)

PLEASED WITH ANNOUNCEMENT - Many
Meigs CoUnty people are pleased that two large
reclamation projecls have been announced for the .
Rutlwtd area, including Phil. Roberts, eow1ty
engineer; Rich Jones, county commissioner, and Ted

Consumer prices
increase slightly
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices rose a moderate 0.4
percent 1n September as gasoline
prices rose at their steepest cllpln 16
months but food prices dipped
slightly, the government said today.
The new report showed a stark
reversal In the summer-long trend
of cheaper gasoline but rising food
prices.
With only thl'ee months left in the
year, consumer prices were rising
at an annual rate of just 4.2 percent,
close to the 3.8 percent posted lor all
of last year.
Today's Labor Department announcement of September price
activity wlll trltter a cost-of-living
increasefoFihe nation's36.1 mllllon
Social Security recipients and a
refiguring of income tax brackets to
account for Inflation. Both changes
will come in January.
Based 9n Jnfla tlon over the last
year, Social Security recipients wlll
see their monthly checks rise 3.5
percent, which translates into an

2 Sections. 14 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

average of $15 for a typical single
retiree and $26 for an average
retired couple.
The Social Security Increases will
match last year's 3.5 percent
cost-of-living adjustment, which
was the smallest gain since benefits
were first tied to the Consumer
Price Index In 1975.
The government also will use
today's price report to rejlgger
Incom e tax brackets to ensure that
taxpayers aren 't pushed Into 11
higher bracket merely because
their wages kept pace with inflation.
Tha t "indexing" adjustment wlll
be the first since Congress adopted
Its across-the-board ·tax cut program in 1981.
The adjustment, also based on the
pace of Inflation over the last year.
will translate into an extra Sla week
In take-home pay for a typical
$25,001-a-year, one-earner couple
with two children and $15 a week for
a $250,00l family, according to
calculations hy the AP.

Warner, crew supervisor for the county highway
department. The m en discussed the upcoming
projects with Rutland area landowners at a pubU c
meeting at the Rutland lire statidn on Tuesday
evening.

Prosecutor awaits
state police report

UJNGEST MEMBERSIUPS- AdaL. Holter, 5!1 years membership,
and Vernon Nease, a 66 year member, held the record of being the
longest-tbne members In the Meigs County Fann Bureau at the annual
meeting Tuesday night. They were presented gifts In recognition of their
long-time membership ,

CHARLESTON, W.Va. !API The adoptive parents of a 2· year-old
Mason County girl told a pediatrician nine days before herdea thfrom
child abuse that her injuries were
accident al, state Medical Examiner
Irvin Sopher says.
Sopher said Tuesday that Dr.
Georgiana Burns, a Point Pleasant
pediatrician, exarhtned the child .
Tasha Kotsu . on Sept. 4. Tasha died
Sept. 13 in Pleasant Valley Hospital
from head Injuries that·Sopher said
were " the result of child abuse."
Sopher said the child 's major
inju ries. including those that caused
he r death, occurred after Dr. Burns
examined her.
State Human Services Commis sioner Jotm E . Burdette said, "I
think the in juries were identifi('()
and they were explained as a wagon
wreck or a tr icycle wreck. They
seemed to be explainable injuries ."
The a ut opsy showed that in
addition to the head injury the child

suffered multiple bru ises on her
face . extremit ies. back and but toc·ks. Sopher said.
Ma son Co un ty Prosecutor
Damon Morgan Jr. said Tuesday he
is awaiiing a sla te police report on
the case before d&lt;&gt;Ciding whpt her to
file a ny charges against Tasha's
adoptive parents. EmU and Debi
Hoffm an of Point Pleasa nt.

Reagan plans
Parkersburg visit
Ronald Reaga n wiU visit West
Virginia for the first time s ince
becoming pres ident when he makes
a campaign stop in Parkersburg,
W.Va., next week, a spokesman for
U.S. Senate candidate Jotm Haese
said Tuesday.
Reagan i~ tent a hvely schrouled
to visil Pa rkersburg on Mond3y
said Raese sJ)okesm an Branda~
Scholz.

'

•'••

1Oth District race a rematCh of '82

Ll.

$149-PiusDtp.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. October 24, 1984

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff writer
Two upcoming strip mine reclamation projects In
the Rutland area were announced Tuesday night at a
pUblic meeting held at the Rutland fire station.
Approximately 52 citizens, most of whOm own land
in the affected areas, attended the meeting to discuss
reclamation proceedures with Mitch Farley and Mike
Smith, tram the Division of Reclamation, a part of the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
Prior to the meeting, landowners were advised hy
mall that the Division had plans to reclalm certain
sites.
·
Those' at the meeting were shown maps outlining
the specltic strip mine areas to.be reclaimed , much of
which Is loc;1 ted northwest of Rutland village. The two
separate projects have been designated Rutland I and
Rutland IJ,
The Rutiand I project involves approximately 150
acres for which money for both design and
construction have been earmarked.
Plans are expected to be completed In March. Bids ·
for construction will then be let and work should
commence soon after. The project could be finished
and seeded by late fall of 1!£5 according to Farley.
The Ruti? nd U project will Include an area of about
170 to nl acres. At thiS time however, money has been
earmar ked only for the designing a nd engineering
part of this project.
No cost estimates were given for either project
because estimates are not dependable until designs
are complete, Farley explained.
The two rights of entry that will have to be signed
before reclamation can begin were explained to the

PEPSI COLA
8/16 OZ.

Story on Page 14

'

HOMEGROWN TURNIPS .................................~!•.. 10&lt;
NO. 1 RUSSETT POTATOES •• ~•••••••••••••• JP.!!~••••• S1.4 9
AU WEEK
AU. WEfll.

99(

See photo, story on Page 8

e
at y enttne
set
Rutland reclamation

'·

DOUBLE COLA

Traveling trophy

•

FRESH-LEAN

c.
Pomeroy, OH.

66(

2% MILK

Bonus luy

HAMS .

8/16 OZ. ·_

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

5 18.

PICNIC

McJSonic Temple

Served with
Mashed Patatoes;
Choice.of Salad, Roll &amp; Drink

BROUGHTON'S

SUPERIOR

OFFERS
TO

46(

CHEWING

.... Bag

SUGAR .

lonus

CIGARETTES

BIG BEND
CIYITAN CLUB
TWO CHANCES

tOll.

S.m

Choice

6
(
c'!.:.
811111 B•g

Keebler Cookies

um

POTATOES ·

NEHI FLAVORS

SOn BATCH

COKE

IDAHO

Hall of Fame honoree

Vot .34, No .1 36
Copyrighted 1984

FREE
PARKING

~oo=m~ber~w;a;s~~~-~~;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;:;:~

PH. 992-5432

OH.

Divorce sought

Eldellded F~

For 'OIIInday lllr8u&amp;b !lalurday
- 0 Mtolnllleadlday.Hiflhalll
1o • '1'11unt11Q- and F'lida.Y, near 'lll
~·Lon Ill the 40s eacll~-

Locatt4 In

122.95 Jackets

Approximately 25 to 30 pounds of
Sale S~u.u'
cheese, butter, flour and dry milk
REG.
S72,00
will be distributed to eligible low
income families by theGallia ·Meigs
Sale
Comm unit y Action Agency
REG. S139.00
Thursday.
CAA representative Bob Haner
Sale
said those receiving goods need to
bring their own grocery bags, tote
bags or boxes to carry the items. He
said it will .be necessary for som e
A divorce action has been filed in
people to bring someone to help
Meigs County Col'll/l)on Pleas Court
them carry the items.
Distribution of the _·goods will · by Debbie Marie t;'eck, Pomeroy,
begin a t noon at the American against James Russell Peck, also of
Legion Ha ll in Racine, Meigs Pom eroy, charging gross neglect of
County Fairgrounds a nd Tuppers duty and mental cruelty.
Plains Fire Department.
Proof of e ligibility must be s hown
to receive the items, Haner said.
Acceptable proof Includes food
stamp cards, SSI award letters,
general relief cards, IRS tax
information, a current unemployment book. welfare ID cards,
general welfare cards.- welfare
medical cards or foster grandparent cards.
Food items lor .seniorcitizens only
m ay be picked up by a not her person,
Haner sa id . The person picking up
the items must bring with them the
senior citizen's identification for
qualiflca tion and a signed permisHEINER'S KING SIZE
BROUGHTON'S
sion slip.
Haner said anyone needing
furlher information should contact
2
limit2
the Community Action Agency at
1ft GAl.
367-7341 or 992-6620 and not the
B~nur Bog
/JIIIUI
partlcipa ling fire departments.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

Today, rain lkety' Hllh around
•. 'fGnllhl, oocaalonal rain. Low 411
to 58. Wedneedq, cloucJy wMh a
dlanee of 1'11111. HlP again around
111. Tile rJuy!re of rain Ill fMl percenl
loclay, 110 percent lonlflhl and 110

".'iJ•n 1ing With A S milt•..

LAY·AWAY FOR CHRISTfttASI
BOYS ·
JUNIOR
Jac kets and 'A
length coats. Wool
blends, corduroy
and poplins.

Story on Page 10

$179

1-20th Anniversary Sale

COATS
.

Story on Page 3
.
'

I PACK -U OZ.

ELBERFELD$

No injuries were reported by the
Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol following acolllsion
between a bookmobile and a pick-up
truck on Ohio 143Monday afternoon.
Officers said the . bookmobile,
owned by Ohio Valley Area Ubraries, driven by Lewis R . Farley, 5!1,
Jackson, was parked in a Stone lot
when a norihbound pick-up driven
by Kay W&lt;JOIIyard, 41, Albany,
apparently started to pull off the left
sid e of 143 and struck the bookmobile in the left side.
The collisOn resulted In light
damage to both vehicles, according
to the patrol. Woodyard was cited by
the patrol for defeetive brakes
following the 3: 30 R.m. accident.

Veterans' benefits

.

PEPSI

~,.,~,,

Discharged . Richard Lee.
James Spangler, Paul Michael.

Accident reported

SVAC roundup

PENNZOIL

Admitted - Bernice Fry. Pomeroy; Margaret Spencer, Pomeroy;
Glenna Rummel, Syracuse; Ernest
Triplett, Syracuse; Mabel Smith,
Cheshire.

f"'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

Fresh !!'Om his final face-to-face
confrontation with Democratic
challenger Walter Mandate, Reagan said, "We're entering the home
stretch of the campaign, and we've
set oW- sights on victory."

DIES - Ac~r Oskar Werner,
who starred in silch films as
"Jules and Jlin" and "Ship of
Fools," was fowtd dead in his
Marburg, West Gennany, hotel
room today, ·JMluce said. He was
Gl. Werner Is seen above in a 1!164
me photo. (AP Laserphoto).

SUN FUN

.Veterans Memorial

PORTLAND, Ore. (Ai&gt;) -An air
of barely restrained jubUancebueys
President Reagan's campaign as
the front-running incumbent moves
Into the final phase of his carefully
paced r~lection drive.

Lottery

,VVealher

October 23. 1984

Ohio

John Buchanan (D)

LANCASTER, Ohio (API Voters In the sprawling lOth Ohio
District may think they're experiencing deja vu when they see
who's running for the U.S. House in
the Nov. 6election.
But it's no Ulusion. The race is a
rematch of the contest staged two
yearsago.
..
Veteran Rep. aarence Mlller,
R-Lancaster,lsbelngchallenged by
Jolm Buchanan, a Democrat from
Newark. The two clashed before In a
1982 contest which Miller handily
won, rolling up 100,044 votes to
Buchanan's 57,983.
, Campalgn\Jlg is difficult in the
11-county district qf sou the astern
Ohio, wliich stretches from Newark
south to the Ohio River. MIUer's

personal campaign was delayed by
a U.S. House session thatlasted until
mid-October. Buchanan 's problem
Is more basic - Jack of money.
. "We've got everything but a
bunch· of money like the oppone nt.
We were outspent six-to-one in 1982,
and I think that would probably be
par for the course this time, very
definitely," Buchanan said. "We're
running essentially a grassroots
type campaign. The response Is
very good."
The district includes Fairfield,
Gallla, Lawrence, Meigs, Morgan,
Muskingum and P erry counties a nd
parts of Athens, Guernsey, Licking
and Washington counties. MIUer has
represented the district since 1966.
The candidates agree the econ-

om y is the paramount issue, but
their disagreement about how to
solve fiscal problems mirrors the
national debate ))ptween the prest·
dentia l candidates.
,
"That's the key thing people are
concerned wi th, the declinin geconomies in all the district and the lack of
opportuni ty and jobs for the young
talks," Buchanan said . " ! am a
conservative Democrat, particu larly when it comes to fisca l matters
of the government, and progressive
when it comes to social issues. but
not liberal. That's a bad word in the
lOth District.
"Our Incumbent congressman
lays claim to being a fiscal
conservative," Buchana n said. " If
he can suppor1 the Reagan ad minis-

'
tration deficit
policies, 1 don't think
he wo~Jd be."
M iliE~I'\~a m embPr of the House
Appropriations Commi ttee who
regularly in troduces measures to
cut government spending, sa id
constituents he's talked with want to
avoid a fed~ral tax increase.
He acknowledges unemployment
remains a problem. but says"We're
doing better all the time."
"U nfortuna tely, we have a lot of
smokestack industries, and they
come back just a little later than
others." he said .
Miller traces the problem to state
tax policies .
" 1 have talked to some people ...
who have businesses (and ) they
(Continued on page 10)

•

Clarence Miller (R )

•

·C hild abuse reports presented to Meigs commissioners
"We continue our concern for
children of our county. Our appearance today was a part of regular
reports we wlll be giving in
monitoring the local situation. The
·county commissioners are respondIng well and we look forward to this
continued response."
This was the comm~nt of a
member of the Meigs County
Alliance for Children . Tuesday
afternoon after a delegation from
the Alliance met with the Meigs
County Commissioners and Meigs
County Human Services personnel.
During the short meeting with the

commissioners, members of the
Alliance presented a typed report
giving detalls of specJflc cases of
child abuse which they have found to
exist in Meigs County. .
Their statement to the commissioners and others says:
" In !ICCOrdanre wltth the guals of
the Meigs County AU!ance for
Children, this report presents Information on the delivery of Child
Welfare Services to the abused,
neglected, and dependent children
of our county. Much of the .
information in this report has been
gathered tram a variety of persons,

agencies, a nd institutions and to the
extent possible efforts have been
made to protect both the confldentiallty of the sources and the
chllctren-famili es involved.
"In the past year , the Meigs
County Welfare Department has
made progress In their efforts to
upgrade services to children. Additiona! staff has been hired. a c hild
abuse botllne is operational, and the
reportlng of abuse-neglect sltualions is up substantially. We
recognlze these improvements and
beUeve they are first steps toward
providing a structure from which

the professional delivery of serv ices

to children In need can be achieved .
"Providing services to children In
need is a. dif,IJsult task requiring
trained, motivated people working
in coordina tion with persons outside
the Child Welfare Agency. The Child
Welfare Agency itself must be
highly organized with systematic
procedures to deal with a complex
array of legal and ethical obll galions. As m onitors of this process,
the Alliance must focus on pel'formance . We ask outselfes, 'How well
are they doing what needs to be
done?' and 'What is the Impact on

the lives of the children and families
they SCI'\'e?'
"Our research indicates that we
continue to be in need of much
progress. We have gathered Information on many cases , several of
which are presented_ here. Our
int ent is to reveal systematic
problems in the delivery of services
and the Impact these shortcomings
have on the lives of children.
Following the review of cases, the
report says,
"We believe these cases and
others we have reviewed Illustrate
continuing deficiences in the Wei-

fare Depar tmPnt' s deliven • of
setvices to children . The respo~se t o
abuse-negi&lt;&gt;Ct cal ls is frequently
tardy and sometimes non-existent.
lnten•ention strategies are often
inadequate))' plann('() or are
handled by outside human service
workets who have neither the
resources of authority to dellver
needed serv icPs appropriately.
Follow-up on individual cases Is
often insufficien t a nd follow -up with
ot her human sen ices professionals
is infrequent.
"We believe these deficiences
(Continued on page 10)

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