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WINTHROP®

Bengals dump Oilers

Community meetings

~ryon- PageS

Stories on Page 6

Dick Cavalli
WE

THEY'VI:~

PROBLEA-\5 AND
RESF'ON516/I...ITIE:5.

WE D0~5
·DON'T
HAVe AN

, Avoiding colds

CAT6/ NON •.•

HAV~MANY

.~

A RACKE-T.

See FamDy Medic~ on Page 5

WAGN 1TTHAT

CAT
YOUR DO~~

6/TAR.a.JND

t:piNq'~EOW."

Story on Page 10

•

•

at y enttne
Nation's worst jobless
state greets ·President

e

EA5YI...IFe.

, ALl- THE:Y C::O 15

Major endorsements

VJSD'S WEST VIRGINIA than ~.000 tickets were

More

~~w~v~woo

plan to _, President Ronald
Reagan during his visit to Parkersburg today.

•

'
_Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday, October 29, 1984 .

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
-In bringing his campaign to West
VIrginia, President Reagan · ls
addressing the nation's worst
pocket of unemployment and one of
slx states he lost to Jimmy Carter
four years ago.
In his weekly political radio
address on Saturday, ·Reagan
appealed for votes from thenation's
youth, declarlng that Democratic
opponent Walter Mondale would
"send many of you from the
graduation line to the unemployment line."
That unemployment line already
Is well-known In West VIrginia,
however, where the jobless rate has

sign-waving throng. City olflclals
say they will cordon off three blocks
of the motorcade route so those who
could not obtain tickets can try for a
glimpse of the president, who is
schE1(1uled to fly back to Washington
following a 15-to 20-min ute campaign pep talk .
"Why West Virginia? President
Reagan cares about Wesl Virginia, "
said Priscilla Haden, state chairwoman of the Reagan-Bush ca mpaign .
"He wants to cany thestateofWest
Virginia . ...
"Some people have asked, 'Why
Wood County ?' President Reagan
seems to represent the values here

been the nation's highest for nearly
two Years and stlllls lndoubledlglts.
Still, hundreds of people lined up
Saturday for tickets to Monday:s
spe!!eh. M~tofthe4,00ltlckets have
been reselVed for Wood County high
school seniors and GOP party
officials and candidates.
Reagan's vlslt to Parkersburg
High School continues a recent focus
on young voters. The president has
made a series of appearances the
past few weeks at high schools
across the country, culmlnated with
Saturday's radio address.
Reagan wiU be greeted by high
·school marching bands and what
organizers hope wUl be a cheering,

in Wood Count y. Al so. It's .
accessible. "
It was four years ago this week
tha t · Reagan last visited West
Virginl"il. In a Nov. 3, l!m ,campaign
rally at the P arkersburg a irport.
Reagan made a pitch · for GOP
guberna tort al candidate Arch A.
Moore Jr. and the resl of the
Republica n licke l. ·
Moore lost to incwnbenl Jay
Rockefeller , bul the former twoterm governor once aga In is running
lor the office. Reagan fa iled to carry
West Virgini a, but had much t.?t1e r
success nationwide that yea r.

•

MR. MEN'M AND LITTLE
~ME

PEOPLE.

CAN BE VERY
CRUEL!

MISS'~

by Hargreaves and Sellers

M1~5 (3095'(! '(t&gt;U

WON'T
BeLIEVE WHAT HAPPENED
TO MR.?JL.L.Y !

HEMET
A MAN IN
IHE PARK

(~~

© 1984 Hargreaves and Sellers

to-ze

Distributed by NEA.Inc .

TALKING TO HIM
FOR FIVE MINUTES, THE
CAL.LED MR.91LLY
.-.--. A POPE!
AFTE~

WHAT TOOK

.

HINTED IN CANADA

by Sols

SNAKES TALES'M
I CAN'T
-rAKE IT

GOOD&amp;YE,

CRUEL. WO~L-D,

ANYMORE~!

MY WIL-L-16
6ROKEN~!

MY

HEAR-r
IS

e.ROKEN~

25 Cents

DOWN IN POW - Democ rat Walter Mondale, above,
continues to trail President
Reagan as he enters the final
wee!&lt; of the 1984 Presidential
campaign . A New York TimesCBS News poll released over the
weekend showed Reagan with
an 18-point edge over the
Democrat .

Crime declines in six of Ohio's biggt:st cities
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Slx ofOhio's seven largest
cities got safer during the first slx months of1984, but
Columbus became a more dangerous place to live,
according to preliminary crime figures released by
·
the FBI.
While there were decreases In the number of
robberieS ' and cases of arson In the capital city
compared with the first half of 1983, total number of
crimes reported was up nearly 5 percent - from
~.594 In 1983 to 21,467 In 1984.
This Is In contrast to a nationwide decrease In
serious ,crtme. Fm Director William Webster said
Sunday that crime nationwide dropped 5 percent 1n
.
the first half of 1984.
In Ohio, Akron reported an Increase In the number
of rapes, aggravated assaults, burglaries, motor
vehicle thefts and cases of arson, but showed a
decrease li\ the total Qumber of serious crimes.
Cincinnati reported an Increase In the number of
_aggravated assaults and slight rises In murders and
rapes.

from 112.
Cincinnati - 13,669 reported crimes In the fi rst half
of 1984, down from 14.@63. '!'here were 16 murders. up
from 15: 159 ra pes, up from 155; 623 robbertes. down
from 666; 804 aggravated assaults. up from 782; 3,114
burglaries, down from 3,461; 7,'if.J7 larceny lhefts,
down from 8,645; 477 m otor vehicle thefts. down from
541; and 239 cases of a rson, dOWJl from 298.
Cleveland - 22,500 reported climes, down from
23,733 1n 1983. There we re 8.1 mu rde rs, up from 76; 342
rapes, up from 338; 1,838 robberies, down from 1.939:
1,219 aggravated assa ults, down from 1,473; 6,312
botgtmes. clown trom 7,017; 6,:!52 larceny tiJQLts,
down from 6,615; 6,018 motor vehicle thefts, up from
5,819: a nd 434 ca ses.of arson, up from 426.
Columbus- 21 ,467 reported crimes. up from 20.59'1 .
There were 35 murders, up from 26; 167 ra pes. up
from 161; 1,042 robberies, down from 1,168; 730
aggra vated assaults, up from663; 6:t0 burglartes, up
from 6,038; 12,010 larceny thefts , up ~m 11,133: 1,253
m otor vehicle thefts, up from 1,213; a nd 159 ca ses of

In Cleveland, there were rises In the number of
murders and motor vehicle thefts and slight Increases
In the number of rapes and cases of arson.
· Dayton showed Increases only In th!! number of
rapes and motor vehicle thefts. Toledo reported a
substantial drop Iii total crimes, with a rise only in the
number of arson cases and a slight Increase 1n rapes.
Youngstown had an Increase In aggravated assaults
and a small jump In murders.
The FBI cautions against making direct comparisons between cities because of factors that affec t the
amount and type of crime from place t!J place.
Here are the FBI's preliminary figures for Ohio
cities:
Akron - 7,541 reported crimes in the first half of
1984, down from 7.722 for 1983's first six months. There
were 11 murders, down from 15; 72 rapes, up from 64;
232 robberies, ·down from 3117; 366 aggravated
assaults, up !rom 201; 1,738 burglaries, up from 1,468;
4,5m larceny thefts, down from 5,161; 474 motor
vehicle thefts, up from 387; and 143 cases of arson, up

10 people die
on Ohio highways

HIM t;;o LONG?
.

1 Section, 1() Poges

A Multim edia Inc . NewJpaper

arson. down from 192 . •
Dayton- 9,033 reponed crimes. down from 10.06.1
There were 14 murders. down from 18; 79 rapes , up
from 69; 773 robberies. down fro m 873: 354
aggra vated assa ults, down from459: 2.207burglaries.
down from 2.995: 5.1()1 larceny thefts , down from
5,665; 402 motor vehicle thef ts. up from~: and 100
ca ses of a rson, down from 135.
Toledo - 13,421 reported crimes, down from 15,851.
There were 14 mu rders. down from 19: lr.J rapes. up
from 105; 594 robberies, doom from 675: 326
aggravated assaults, down from 368; 3,152 burgla.r ies,
down 3,993; 7,803 larceny thefts, down from 9,313:
1,003 motor vehicle thefls, down from I,Otl ; a nd 39.1
cases of arson. up from 337.
Youngstown- 3,516 reported crimes. down from
4,007. There were 10 murde1·s . up "from nine: 25 rapes ,
down from 28; 189 robb!'ries , down from 220; 282
aggra vat ed assaults. up from 200: 1.229 burglaries.
down from 1,593: 1,305 la rceny theft s , down from
1,341; and 506 m otor vehicle thetis, down from 676.

Agreement should end strike
TORONTO tAP I - United Auto
Workers union officia ls pred icted
36,000 worke rs would e nd their
strike by accepting a proposed labor
contra ct with Gene ral Motor s Corp ..
and an official said the 40,CXXJ U.S.
worker s the strike has idled m ight
return to work by Frtday.
Acceptance In voling today ai13
Canadian GM plants could send
Canadian workers . who walked off
their jobs Oc t. 17, ba ck lo the ir jobs
as early as Tuesda y. sa id company
and union offic ial•.
In Jhe Uniied Sta les. where l h~
layoffs were forced by parts
shortages engendered by the Slrike ,
company officials began scheduling
a resumption of opera tions . The

In a single-car crash on Interstate71.
By 11te AssOclaled Press
SATURDAY
Ohio traffic accidents claimed 10
HEATHDale R. Houck, 25, of
lives over the weekend, the HighNewark,
when
his motorcycle
way Patrol says.
car
on a Heath city
collided
with
a
The patrol counted fatalities from
· street
6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
DAYTON- Johnny Stewart, 37,
The dead:
Dayton, In a two-ear accident on a
SUNDAY
Montgomery County road.
WbOSTER - James H. AnderNEW LONDON - Dennis A.
son, 40, of Shaker Heights, when his
Sands,
26, New London, 1n a .
car ran off a WayneCountyroadand
crash on Ohio 00.
single-car
plunged Into a creek.
SANDUSKY
- Richard A. BenMEDINA- Amy S. Harris, 16, of
tley,
22,
Sandusky,
In a single-car
Seville, when the car In which she
crash
on
an
Erie
County
road.
was riding was struck by a
FRIDAY
NIGHT
tractor-trailer Jig on U.S. 224 1n
EATON -Raleigh E. Shelton Jr ..
Medina County.
18," Eaton, In a three-truck accident
CINCINNATI - Robert Cox, 35,
on a Preble County road.
Batavia, In a single-car crash on a
COLUMBUS Gregory R.
city street.
MIDDLEBURG HE!GfiTS - . Wlndau, 23, Columbus, In a twCH:ar
accident on a city street.
Brian l. Schoening, 21. Strongsville,

company a sked laid -off workers at
four plants 10 report for work today.
Some 115.001 Ford Motor Co.
workers in the t.: .S., who concluded
voting Sunda;' on their tentati ve
pact. loda y were wa iting for LiAW
officials to announce the offic ial
ta l.ly .
Ratification. whi ch was expected ,
would not Pnd Ford"s labor pro blem s. As in th~ U.S.. ncogotiaiJcms for
Ford's Ca nadiBn worke~ wcrf' put

on hold while the lJA \\" held lalks
wil h a nd s truck GM.
Robc•rt Whilr.lhd.:A\\" "sdirc-'('fOr
for Canada. said the agr('('mf'nt
reac h'«! Satut·da .v with GM would
"sel thP Ca nadian pall~rn ·· for talks
wit h F ord.

,'¥:buths face B&amp;E
in Me.

STATE BOARD CANDIDATE - Congressman Clarence MUier
(right) discusses national education legislation with Larry Kandel, can·
dldate for State Board of Education from the lOth Congressional District. Kandel Is president of the Fairfield Union Board of Education and
lives In Falt11eld County. Other candidates are Hugh Coffman of Ma·
rleUa and Mary Goodrich of Zanesvtne.
·

.·

School, gas tax funds
distributed in Meigs

/0·28·84 ·

MY

.'

&amp;ACK
..

15

•..

'

Meigs Coonty's three school
In other tax distrtbutlons, Meigs
districts received $499,377. 64 under County's five villages received
the State School Foundation pro-· $5,981 as thelrshareofthe$10,174.773
gram accordlng to figures released October distribution of the state's
today by State Auditor Thomas E . seven cents per gallon ga sllne ta x.
Ferguson.
Amounts received Include: Mid; Following deductions lor retire- dleport, $2,245; Pomeroy, $1.846:
ment, Meigs County's three local Racine, $618; Rutland, $513, and
school districts received the follow- Syracuse, $759.
Ing amounts: $ID,550.36for Eastern
Meigs County received S35.00l
and each township In the county
Local; $271,747.43 for Meigs Local,
and $116,079.85 tor Southern Local. · received s~. according to the
In addition, uie county board of report of State Auditor Thomas E.
education received a direct allot·
Ferguson.
ment ol $25,742.~.

.'

.

~KEN!!

I

•

•

I!&amp; JUNIOR MISS- Karen Hemsley, right, became Meigs County's
1!185 Junior Miss during Saturday evening ceremonies at Southem High
School In Racine. Miss Hemsley, a senior at Southern High, Is the
daughter of t\nn Hemsley, SyracW~e, and Jimmy Joe Hemsley. First
rumer-up was SheiTY Sayre, a senior at Meigs High and daughter of
Larry Wld Delores Sayre from the RutiWtd area. Mls.~ Heltlsley was also
the preUmlnary event winner In the creative and performing arts, poise
Wld appetiJ'ance, and scholastic achievement categories. MiSs Sayre was
the preUmlnarty event winner In the youth fitness category. Both girl~
shllred the Spirit of Junior Miss award, which Is voted on by the Junior .
Miss contestants. Miss Hemsley wlii now compete for the title of Ohio
Junior Miss when she travels to Mt. Vernon In FebnuU'y. David Harris
served as emcee for the I!&amp; JuniOr Miss Scholarship Program which Is
staged by Southea.• Ohio Junior Miss Inc. of which Ralph WelTY Is the
president.
·
·

�·-- . .,. . .- - t--·------- ------------ -- --··-----. "
Mohday,

....
•-

'

Commenta
•
•

'Michigan
C leader

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
~onda . O~ber 29 1984 · ~

•

By

The Daily Sentinel

.·
ROBERT L . WINGE'IT
Publisher

..
.•.
'

PAT WHITEHEAD .
'lUslstanl Publisher/ Controller

.
•

:•:

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

.
.•.
..

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland DaOy Press Assocla-

:Jioa and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoolatlon.

,..

LETrERS OF OPINION IU"e welt:ame. They should he less than 300 words
~1•1· A.lllettersaresubj('(!'t toedltlng and must be slrned with name, address and

~ &amp;elf1lhone ·namber. No unsl1ned letters wUI be publlllhed. Letters should be In
rpod taMe, addressing Issues, not personaUtles.

Wrong answers
You should know the answer to this question, if only In the Interest of your
own economic suzvtval, but you probably don't:
What percent of the national budget do you think the United States spent
'In 1983 on social programs, Including Social Security?
Pick th~ category closest to the answer. Less than 10 percent? Perhaps
21 percent to 30 percent? Or 41 percent to 50 percent?
Asked that question this summer, only8 percent of a random sampling of
Americans -1,0061n all- supplied the correct answer, which 1541 percent
to 50 percent. Seventy-three percent underestimated the amount.
H you failed to answer correctly, here's a chance to redeem yourself.
~ch of the following individuals could be eligible for Social Security
be6eflts:
A 58-year-old disabled worker; a 62-year-old retiree; a 12-year-old child
of deceased worker; a 17-year-old child of a deceased serviceman; a
30-~ear-old widow of a deceased worker?
4-Jl of them, you say? You are correct.
Most people had no trouble with the second question; more than
!~-quarters of those intezviewed identified the first four people as
eUgJbie, and more than one-half knew the widow also was entitled to
be(leflts.
Draw your own conclusions from these answers and percentages, but
one observation seems fair: Americans are better at .understanding who is
entitled to social program benefits than how much is paid to support them.
The results of the survey, conducted by a national polling company for
th; Hearst Coil'·· were summarized thusly In the final report by frank A.
Bannack Jr., Hearst president and chief executive officer:
"First -A large segment of the American public is sadly deficient In its
knowledge of basic business and economic facts of life, and:
"Second- The media , which people say are the primary sources of their
business and economic information, do not appear to be making any
significant impact on this ignorance."
Reports of popular economic ignorance a re not new. It is well known, for
example, that almost acy ~urvey will show most people overestimate the
percentage of sales a company keeps as profit, which is under 10 percent '
But questions asked in the Hearst survey involved issues regularly
reported in the media, which prompted Bennack to obsezve that while the
media does indeed inform, it apparently doesn't always explain and
educate.

Are you there, America?___

W_ill_w_m_F._.B..,....uc_
' k..,....le:r....:.....::..Jr;..:..
•.

The news began routinely. Reagan accused Mondale of historic
complicity in a thOughtless record
of American disarmament, such as
to make us relatively weaker than
we should be, given our global
responslbllltles. (True.) Mondale
was on to a precocious letter
Reagan wrote 25 years ago to
Richard Nixon in which Reagan,
only recently born again from the
inertial state welfarism of the
Democratic Party, announced with
the bright ey~ of the young convert
that the kind of commitment
Candidate Kennedy was claiming
for the state over the individual was
akin to that of such socialists as
Stalin and Hitler. (True, though
native in its forl'l)uiation.) Hecklers
had exhibited themselves on that
campaign day everywhere, both
against Reagan and against Mandale. Etc., etc. One !'lore election
\\1nd-up.
·
The attention of CBS then turned
to Ethiopia. There we came face to
face with scenes of massive, and of

1 KNOW IT
WI\.L COME AS A

particular, stazvation. In one scene
a crowd of several thousand people
were filmed running, using up
emergency reserves of energy,
toward a location where - the
rumor had reached tbem - a
supply of food was due to arrive.
The announcer told lis that the food
was not In fact coming. In fact, even
If it had, In the quantities advertised, it would not have taken care
of one half of those who were
starving. Starving to death.
The camera turned then to show
an IJlfant girl. Her emaciation was
so advanced that, the announcer
told us, she died even while the
pictures of her were being taken .
It is progressively difficult to
shock via television . The technology gives us- seated In comfortable quarters, surrounded by reserves of food and drink about
which one worries not about their
potential scarcity, but about the
Impact of their abundance on the
waistline - an isolated sense of
security. Like the child's dream:

... ~ur x
AM IN CHARGE!

5URI'"Rl$E TO

MR. MONPALE;

a

.-::Sentinel offers free space
t~or "Thank You' letters
,,.. .,.
.
.. ; • : As a community senlce projcet, the DaUy Sentinel is oftering
~;

29.1984

'

: • jesldents free space for special "Thank You" letters next month.
::; : : It's the tbneofyear we should reDect onthethlngslorwhich we are
~-: ;thankful. We sometbnes forget the people to whom we owe thanks. ·
•. •. · We all have someone we would like to thank, but never have the
:; • ;manre. Now yoo do.
::; ; : The Dally Sent~el, in its combined Thanksgiving-Christmas
:.;.ecJtllon on Wednesday, Nov. 21, will publish, free of charge, "thiutk
::,: :you" letters from az:ea residents.
::;: The letters should be brief_(around 100 words or less) and contain
; •. "the person's full name, the reason for the thank you and the writer's
and address and phone number. Letters need that infonnatlon
:;; : ~ be published.
~:-: - Deadline for receipt of the letters is t p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7.
•·:"''bey may be sent to "Thank You," The Dally Sentinel, lll Court St.,
:_:• ' Pomeroy, Ohio, t5631, or hand deUvered to the edltorlal office.

...

:=;;woe

School standards
~nspections
begin
..

.
•, State Education Department officials are about to start a new round of
~lions to det.e imine whether Ohio's more than 4,oo:J public schools are
¢eeting minimum standards.
•' But this time, the Inspections involve more than just such things as the
iiz.e of the building and the number of books In the library.
;: As State Instruction Superintendent Franklin B. Walter put It, the
~pections "center around curriculum and improving the educational
~am. "
.
' •New standards adopted by the State Board of Education require
~mpetency testing in reading, writing, and mathematics at least three
ll)nes during tbe students' public school years- at least once In grades one
ilp-ough four, again In grades five through eight, and once during grades
rune through 11.
.
:; Competency tests, which are being developed locally, are to be in place
llt all of the state's 615 districts by 1!m but departments officials say the
~ts already are being phased in.
•:watter said "one of the major goals of the tests is to determine problem
$as for Individual students and to allow help to be provided."
•
:. He said the standards reflect the intention of the state board to provide
~irectton to the schools, but that they also are flexible enough toaUow local
~hoot boards to di!\lelop programs to meet local needs.
.
:• For example, the standards require districts to develop coutses of study
grades one throu~h 12 In each subject taught, but these courses are to be
~sed on the educa tiona! philosopy and the goals set by local districts.
•' Tile evaluations are to be made pubUc by the education department,
$ng with deficiencies which have not been corrected within a fixed period

c!

.;, time.

·

;• Assistant Instruction Superintendent Robert W. Evans said that the
Yl,spections are getting started this month in a program which involves
~ding teams of department representatives to Individual schools.
&lt; Plans call for the inspections to be ca!Tied out In cycles In which each
~hoot wlll be visited once every five years. About 850 schools are expected
~be inspected during the 1984-1985 school year.
.

.,,'·, Letter advisory
:~
::
The Sentinel's deadline for all letters to theeditorpertalnlng to the
:: Nov. 6 general election Is 4 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 31. No letters wUl
;: be published after Friday, Nov. 2. Letters should address isslles and
:·- 110t personalities. On the local level, letters should not contain
blatantly partisan endorsements of candidates.

I,

surrounded by an Impenetrable at a time when peopleweredylngol '
cylinder of glass, the little boy sees starvation in otber ' parts of ~ ·
the wild animals go by, bUt he is world. This ecnomlc paradox Is not •
totally safe from their deprada- one that human ingenuity has come
tlons; a special quality of coziness up with a solution for. There is no
way In which farmers can be made ·.
comes with security of that kind ..
That complacency was strikingly to farm, or seamstresses to sew, In ·
evident when the sequence of the absence of what the economists
1
Ethiopia ended, ended without the call a "felt demand' for their
pi'Qducts.
announcer's bothering to mention'
But what is it, if not the ::
what it was that American viewers
socialization
of mercy, that causes' '
of that terrible scene could - well,
the
largest
television
network In the ·
do about it. The television direction
country
to
portray
so
graphically
was In this sense no different from
of
Ethiopian
rnen
the
plight
the depiction . of a natural catas1 women
to
death
and
children
starving
tropbe. When we see a flood on
without
at
tbe
same
time
Indicating
television, we know, quite simply,
how, and In what way, Individual.
that there Is nothing we can do to
Americans can help? Something
still the waters. Wben Mount St.
happened, somewhere along the
Helens belches out her fulminations
over great sections of tbe American line, that seems to have persuaded .
Northwest, we - watch; properly us that if a human being is sick or ·
hungry and needs succ6rtng, !ben it .
horrified but comfortably Impotent.
is
state-time, and please let us ger
Why Is it taken for granted that we
back
to the political campaign, or to :
are Impotent In tbe face of children any
other
distracting subject. Many
dying in Ethiopia?
years
ago,
when the Vatican first
A few weeks ago tbe pope was in
got into· \tbe business of issuing
Canada, deploring Idle fishermen
encyclicals aimed at broad soctat :
action, till?\doctrine of subsidiarill' •
was enunciated. What it said was:: ·.
No government can undertake that_ :
which can privately be undertaken;· :·
and no higher unit of government ·,
can undertak~ what a lower unit of
government should undertake. . • .
Those strictures might have been :banded out at Mount Sinai, so
sensible are thoiy. But what has
happened to the jplpulse to private
charity? What aren't the churches
and other phllantl)ropic organlza- .
lions galvanized to help Ethiopi•
ans? H. Ross Perot, tbe Texas '
blillonalre of large Imagination·, is
needed to be the modern Herbert
Hoover, to say: "Look, America:·
There are people out there dying of
misery. Stop! Give them a band. I
am organizing an effort to deliver
10, 20, 50, 100,00:&gt;, a mllllon, tons of
grain. Are you with me? Or are you
dead, Americans? Prove you're ·

AP
Central
assist from Kent ~talte, ~tasllSSIJml!d
the sole lead in
Conferenee
race, just where
ex!ierts predlcied the Chippewas
wouldbe.
'/
_
SUD, the rat'!! for the league.tltle
.and the accompanying California
Bowl berth Is far from Settled.
Central MIChigan (5-0-1), which
has games ~malnlng with North·
em Illinois, j:lall Sta)e and Toledo,
has a one-game lead over the
Rockets (4-1-1). BOwling Green is
stlllln contention at 4-2-0.
The Chippewas, the media's
preseason title favorite, moved into
sole ownership of the top spot by
crushing Bowling Green 42:21.
Central Michigan scored on Its ttnlt
tWo drives and taUback Curtis
Adams scored three Urnes, pus.!lling
his career touchdown tOtal to ' a
league record.
Dave Preston of Bowling ~"'"
ail!) Jerome Persell

of~~=;

Michigan shared . ·the
Mtd-Amencan mark with

touchdowns apiece.
Meanwhile, Toledo lost at Kent
Stale for the 12th time in 15 vlslls.
This time It was 16-7, marking a
third straight triumph for Kent
COIICh Dick Scesnlak's rebulldlng
project.
In other Mld·Amerlcan games
Saturday, Joe ~·s two touch·
downs and Mike Prindle's four field
goals led Wesleln Michigan past
Ol)lo UniVI!fSlty 33-14, George
Swam's 10i yards helped Miami
defeat Northern IllinOis~1BndB11il
Stale kept ·E astern Michigan win·
less 17-10.
AtterToledolosta~first-quarter

lead at Kent, Toledo Coach Dan
Simrell said, ''There's no jinx here.

Kent just played better than we
did."
SimreU probably was thinking of
six Toledo turnoVers from ll teal'!1
that led the nation In turnm'er
margin earlier this season. He
watched Kent State rally with
quarterback Stu Rayburn running
16 yards for a !QI!Chdown and Mike
Virgin 1 yard and Tony DeLeO~'s
booting a 47-yard field goal.

I

Pll:RF'ECT RECORD - Meigs' eighth grade. finished the season
with a 7-11 record last week. Team members were, lelllo right, row 1,
Mike Schuler, Joe Hall, Scott Mellon, Luke Burdette, Bm GOkey, Chris
. Becker, Dennis Harris; row 2, Keith lUcks, Matt Baker, &amp;nnie
Bachtel, Jeff Stone, Henry Buchanan, Jeff McElroy, Kelly Ogdln; row

·Anderson, Kinnebrew lead Bengals' 31-13 win
HOJ,JSTON (AP) - Cincinnati's
Ken Anderson relived an old thrill
and running back Larry Kinnebrew
discovered for the first time the joys
of running against the Houston
Oilers.
And~rson has beaten the Oilers In
his last six starts, completed 73
percent of his passes over that
stretch and set a National League
recor;d 20 straight completions In a
1982 game against the Oiler
secondary.
1
Kinnebrew had not plagu~ the
Ollers until Sunday when hescot'ed
all four Bengal touchdoWns on runs

The lonely whistle-blower_ _-~-·-Ja_ck_An_de_rso_n
lonesome whistle blower is John
"O'Brien requested that I check
Hnatio, a security specialist for the with personnnel to see if we could
Energy Department. He dared to fire (Hnatlo)," the memo states. It
'disagree with his superior, Robert then goes on to tell what the
O'Brien, who allegedly had in- employee learned from the pel:sooformed the president that safe- nel people, who apparently are
guards at the nation's nuclear skilled at such matters .
weapons plants were adequate.
According to the memo, there
"I wish I could share your views . were two options. The first was to
on the adequancy of protection ... " "reassign !tim as requested." The
wrote Hnatlo, "but my experience other was more sinister. "If you
and knowledge of the program want to fire him- start documentdictates otherwise."
lng records," the memo advised.
Never mind thatHnatiowasright
If then explained how to.dQ this:
and O' Brt~n was wrong. This "Establish good perf,ormance
offended O'Brien, who Is now the standards- If he Is rated unaccepdirector of the Office of Safeguards table, then he can be reassigned,
and Security. He evidently asked a downgraded, etc. If he continues to
subordinate to find out how he could fall to follow instructions, (this) can
get rtd of the meddlesome Hnatio. lead to dismissal- after warnings,
The employee who was asked put it reprimands, etc.'' The memo
all down In an Internal memo, closed with the estimate that the
which has been obtained by my "process could take six to eight
associates John Dlllon and Indy months ." Hnatlo's superiors
Badhwar.
wasted no time getting started.
He had been summoned to

Capitol Hill to brief an Investigator
for Rep. John Dlngell, D-Mich., on
security lapses. For disclosing tbe
poor security at nuclear plants,
Hnatlo dtew a reprimand.
Then a "warning letter" similar tb one given to slcohol or
drug abusers- was put In Hnatlo's
file. (His addiction, apparently, was
to telling the truth.) ·
Hnatlo went to the department's
Inspector general who cmiductedan investigation, cleared him of any
wrongdoing, ordered the reprimand and warning letter removed
from his file, and saw to it that
Hnatlo got a formal apology. When O'Brieli! learned tbat Hna-.
tlo had found out a bout the
Incriminating memo, he wrote to
the whistle blower to assure him ·
that it "reflected only a oortlon of
my request for general information
and, by Itself, is toally out of
context.".

Reagan's ·performance_____
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -President . there's no preventing, no stopping
Reagan's per1ormance in his se- them." But air- and sea-launched
cond debate with Democratic missiles "can be recalled If tbere's
presidential nominee Walter F. a miscalculation," he incorrectly
Mondale was all of the _following:
claimed.
a) far superior to his disastrous
Reagan's misstatements and facshowing in the first confrontation tual lapses almost certainly wUl be
between the two men.
. seized upon by Mandate to provide
b) marginally better than Man- fresh material to atta_ck the presidale in terms of style but markedly dent and to place Reagan on the
Inferior In terms of substance.
defensive in the crucial closing
3) abysmallyweakforamanwho
stage of the campaign.
for many years has been widely
During the debate here there
.acclaimed as the best public were, however, brief flashes of tbe
speaker in politics.
dazzling rhetorical style for which
The president's closing speech in Reagan has become famous - ·
the debate here - a rambling, most notably when he deflected a
disjointed and unfocused perora- , question about his advancing age.
tion - was strikingly reminiscent
"I am not going to make age an
of the almost incoherent statement Issue in this campaign," be exbe offered at tbe end of tbe first plained. "I am not going to exploit,
debate in Louisville, Ky.
for political purposes, my oppoIt included, for example, an nent's youth and inexperience."
embarrassing slip of the tongue
At another point, the president
when he asked voters, "Do you undercut suggestions that his adwant to see America return to the ministration was insensitive to
policies of weakness of tbe past four human rights by ndtlng, "The
years?''
invasion of Afghanistan didn't
Earlier In the debate, the presi- happen on our watch."
dent acknowl,'f!ged that the Central
As In the first debate, Moildale
Intelligence Agency had a station was impressive In his command of
chief In Nicaragua, then Inexplica- factual material but the verve he
bly reversed himself and offered a displayed durtng the Louisville
correction which lacked credlblllty. confrontation was replaced here by
He also dented that he had once the tedious, monotone presentation
claimed that missUes carrying for which he has become notorious.
nuclear warheads can he recalled
In addition, his physical appear·
after they have been launched from ance was marred by noticeable
aircraft or ships. But the official bags under his eyes - an unappealtranscrtpt of a presidential press tna reminder of the toll the tong
conference in mid-May Indicates campaign has taken on the Demothat he embraced preclBely that cratic challenger.
erroneous belief.
Although Reagan's performance
"Once launched, that's It," Rea- was hardly overwhelming, It was
gan said at the press conference In clearly adequate to prevent Manreference to ground-launched mls- dale from scoring the "lmockout"
slles. ''They're on their way and ~he needed to significantly close the

gap between the two men in the
public opinion polls.
But the first reliable nationwide
survey of voter reaction to the
debate lllustrates the public's apparent disappointment with the
president's inabllity In both debates
to meet expectations as "the great
communicator." An ABC News poll
of almost 700 people _found that
Reagan was judged to be the
winner by a slim five percent

00~ TOWARD GOAL IJNE - Melp' Dau 'lbOmas (IMI) g~

low~ the end zone following a pusJ•ecepUoa In l!leeOIId quarter action

of the Mel~!~~-Belpre III!M Fltday nlpt. Providing coverage Is Belpre's
Shane Slnunons. Belpre remained atop the TVC lllandlnp with-a 25-14
victory. Raudy Houdashell photo.

Kickoff
retum
killsHrrd
I

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.
(AP) .
I

For o'le glorious/ moment, it
appeared Marshall,would post Its
first-ever football, victory over
UT-Chattanooga $1d win its fifth
game of tbe sea so~- something the
Thundering Herdfasn't done since
1965.

.:....:.;Ro=b:..::::..:er-=-t. :.:. .w,. :::=al:.::..:::te:!..!!.rs

margin - a surprisingly weak .
showing for a man who, according.
to most voter suzveys, is 10 to 20 :
percentage points ahead in tbe
race.
The president remains the favorite to win the election, but tbe
contest ·may be tightening up .
significantly as many people who-.
have traditionally voted Democratic return to that party after a
brief stint as Reagan supporters.

caught
of one, anthree
11-yard
andtouchdown
one yard pass
and
from Anderson en route to a 31-13
victory .
'
Kinnebrew, a last minute replace-ment for Charles Alexander, didn't
even know he would start until
shortly before kickoff.
But it was enough time for the
second year per1ormer from Tennessee State to prepare for the
OUers.
. "The coaches told me before the
game to be ready and when we came
out to start the game, they told me,"
Kinnebrew said. "It was definitely
my best game as a pro although I
had a four-touchdown game at
Tennessee State."
Anderson completed 18 of 24
passes for 154 yards in Hhls first start

in four weeks, but he proved the
same nemesis for the Oilers.
"We talked before the game and
we felt he could have a great day,"
Cincinnati Coach Sam Wyche said.
"We thought he could complete a
high percentage of his passes."
Wyche said Kinnebrew reminded
hlni of a sUmmed down Pete
Johnson, a former Bengal runner.
"He's a Pete Johnson typ!' player
but he's faster and quicker than
Johnson was when he left us,' 1
Wyche said .
.
Kinnebrew gained fll yards on 19

carries and caught two passes for 24

yards .

r---------------------'-----

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RE-LOCATiON OF HIS OFFICE
400 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS MEDICAL"CENTER
PHONE: 6'1 4-694-4224
EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 29. 1984

I

Marshall's fall,l got their hopeS up
when, with jus! 3:29 left to play
Saturday,' qua~rback Carl Fodor
· drove the Her'il 95 yards for the
go-ahead touc~down and a 13-10
lead. The crowd at Fairfield
' Stadium was ttlrlous with joy.
But the chrers turned to groans .
seconds later1
The reason,{or the sudden dismay
among the ~rd faithful was a fieet
'running back named Jonathan
Parker, wh runsthe40-yarddashln
4.4 seconds·
Parkertllmedjoytogriefwhenhe
returned lbe ensuing kickoff 93
yards for 1 touchdoWn, giving the
Moccasl~Jl a 17-13 victory and its
eighth straight decision over the
Herd.
"You fiOUid literally have driven a
truck thiough the hole I had. Nobody
touched,me," said Parker. wboran
up .the middle and then broke free
dOWn the right sideline, breaking the
Herd'ssptiit in the process.
Coach · Stan Parrish · acknOWl·
edged he would have a hard time
reviving his team's splrtt this
weekend, when Marshall plays at
Western CaroiiDB, the first of three
straight SouthE:rn Conferenee road

I*
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wASHINGTON -Now and then,
a lonely hero appears deep in the
compounds of government. He
becomes convinced that pollution
must be seen and smelled to be
combated, that corruption hidden is
corruption heightened. He convinced himself that good wlli
overcome evil if the facts are
known. So he becomes a whisDe
blower.
He knows, of course, that exposure could cost him his livelihood
and lay him open to harassment.
Yet he comes forward and condemns the wrongdoing.
Thereafter. the scenario seldom
vartes. The villain In the drama is
quickly surrounded by paid obfuscaters and Is given the full
protection of the U.S. government.
But the hero Is isolated and
Intimidated, harried and hassled.
It's almost always the same old
story; only the cast of characters Is
different. In this acco4nt. the

3, (;oach Jesse Vau, Mike Soul hem, Scott Banon, Jerry F1elds, Matt
Peterson, Decker Cullums, Kevin Oiler, Donnie Putnam, Jerry JacU,
Ronnie Powell; row 4, Mark COrsi, Wes Young, West Howa.-d, Todd .
fowell, Robin Qualls, Scott Neigler, Jared Sheets, James.Sauvqe.

to the 200 you get with other brar:-tds.
..,

gam~.

Marshall, row 44 on the season,
needs to win two of these games to

!'ec9rd its fll# wlnnlngseasonstnce
1964. The Hl111d W&lt;lll fhre arid lost fl11e
the
year and haS been a
since.
Fodor, who completed
str;BIIrht passes during the
quarter touchdown
t1W llo6Swas heartbreaking.
believe It," Bald the
wbo completed 25 of
for 304 yards and one
an ll-yarder to Rober:t

'.
"What would YOU Hke to d/SCUN - 'AH My
ChHdren, ' 'As the World Turns, ' 'Genera/ Hosp/.
tal, • one Life to Live, ' 'Another World, ' 'Days of
Our Lives,' or 'The Edge of Night'?"

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'·

'

�•

Page

4

\

n.

Monday, October 29. 1984

.

By Aalloclated l're!8
The last two ~ the Denver

Broncos vlslted the West Coast, they
• ''il'eren't happy e"l!ertences.
- · Last yeal', rookie quarterback
: john Elway had a hard time getting
: .started against San Diego -In fact,
. he llru!d up once behind the guard
.and cost his team a penalty - and
·the Broncos went on .to lose to the
. ·~hargers, 31-7. Against the Seattle
: · ~ahawks In the National Football
· League playoffs, It was another
: blowout, also by a 31-7 score.
· ,S unday, however, was different,
as the surprising Broncos beat the
An!!!!~ Raiders 22-19 In a
. sudden-death overtime thriller on a
-last-second 35-yard field goal by
· Rich KarUs.
• : ·" It was a great win,'' Denver
: Coach Dan Reeves said. after the
struggle llefore91,000roartngtans In
the Los ' Angeles. Collseurn, the
·largest regular·se&lt;tson crowd In the
NFL since Oct. 3, 1954, when 93,621
sawtheSanFranciSco49ersandU&gt;s
Angt&gt;les Rams play to a 24-24 tie.
· The game Sunday dropped the
Raiders one game behind the 8-1
Broncos In the. American Conference West race with third-place
Seat!le, 6-2, In action tonight at San
Diego.
The Broncos-Raiders game highlighted a day of significant action In
the NFL that Included Miami's 38-7
vlctory over Buffalo to Improve the
; Dolphins' record to !Hl and a 37-13
· shocker by the New York Giants
-over the Washington Redsklns.
In other action; It was San
Francisco 33, Los Angeles Rams 0;
NewEngland30, NewYorkJets20;
New Orleans 16, Cleveland 14;
Dallas 22, Indianapolis 3; Chicago
· 16, Minnesota 7: St. Louts 34,
· Philadelphia 14; Pittsburgh 35,
Atlanta 10; Cincinnati 31, Houston
13; Kansas City 24, Tampa Bay 20
and Green Bay 41, Detroit 9.
Dolphins 38, Bills 7
Dan Marino continued his assault
. on Miami's team reeord book by
passing for ~ yards and three
: touchdowns to lead the Dolphins

:Los

Marauderettes
finish season
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
volley hall teams ended their season
on a losing note to Belpre as the
: varsity lost a heartbreaker, 15-10,
: 4-15, 14-16 and the reserves 10-15,
. "13-15.
Coach Ron Logan's varsity fln·lshed at 13-10 despite playing with
:only one senior. Coach Rick Ash'-s
. ·reserves·completed its year with a
: 15-7 mark.
. In the varsity tilt, Greta Kennedy
·_ and Jennl Couch paced Meigs with
·'five points each in the first game,
:one the Marauderettes won 15-10.
: In the second game, Meigs had
·trouble keeping their serves In play
: and wound up losing 4-15.
. Shannon Hlndy served up eight
; straight winners as Meigs seemed
-;to have the match won in the third
·· and deciding game with a 13-71ead.
: Trailing 14-8, Belpre reeled off
: eight straight of their own to take
the exciting match. With the win,
. Belpre won a share of the TVC
: championship along with Vinton
· County.
· Tot a I scoring for Meigs Inc! uded
:couch with 13. Hindy eight ,
. Kennedy seven, Jenny Miller two,
Jodi Harrison two, and Rhonda
. Neece one. Other members of the
: team Include Julie Miller, Ruth
Fry. and Carol Smith.
..,,·
In the reserve game, Terry
· Roush paced Meigs with10, Cindy
. Rime had five, Shelly Stobart four,
Tina Harris two, and Donna
Lambert and Lisa Pullins oneearh.

Scoreboard ...
NFL results
N~

fi

.1

0

N.Y . JNs

6

:\

u .667 2l1 1R7

:m

1 'h

[);&gt;nv('r

I

0 I.Oll -

Hoo!&gt;OtCfl

I · 0 l.Oll I 0 um -

6

0

.ll3"1')4 228

Sa n Antmlo

!)

0

.!Dl 143 271

Dallas
Kan.&lt;;;u; CitY

Pllt s bur~h

a

o

.'1

0

.i"'fi :m 180
.1'!.1 163 197

Utah,

. Cinr-lnnatl
CIC'Vf'land

4
li

1
II

!I

.. 0
0

.111 116 ~~
,(IX) 116 265

Ol•n\·r-r
L A. Rai!ll•r.;

~

~nk&gt;

.......

0

.!WI Mi llR

;

1
2

o .m

tl

'l

O

.OO:Wl~

2M

Poo:'"tx

fi

"'"'
:\

0

3

0

J!tJ

1'\. Y. Giants

5

4

I)

~.

4

0

Phlladrlphla

4 5 0
ft'Hlrul
fi ~ n
:1 tl I)
.1 6 0

Chk:li~O

Dl•lrOIT

Tampa Bay
Gl'«'n Bc!y
MlnnP!IJia

2
:!

1~

):1.1

.1'!.1

1~

22\

7

....

0

·.ll.1 16.'1 224
.:m 17R :n-1

7

0

.:m

170 219

.IRI 317 lt1
.Wi tS4 170

Sa n Ft•;md!l('(]

R

1

0

I.A Rams
NN ' Orlrans

5

4

0

~

~

Atlanta

o

3

6

0

.+Hlfli

n

.11.1 lll4

212

! ndlanapoll~

O rk•an.~

o uro o um

1

%

o uro %
1
l J ID 1
n 2 .WI 2
0 2 .IDJ 2
1

Washingtoo UM, Indiana 100

LA . Q~rs llll UTah !M
Sundl)'ll G.metl
Dallas lU7, l..A. Lakm 00

POOrolx 1112, Sf'aHJdr7

._y'11Game
Mllwaukt'E' at Ch.lfaJilo
~IIGV'I'Ieti
Allanta a1 WastugtOn

Ck&gt;vl&gt;land at [}(&gt;frdl
Phlbdrlphla a l Nev.· JC'f'S('V
Dalla.~

at Hoostm

·

Drflv&lt;'f at San Antmkl
Otic~o at Kansas Clly
NN• York al UtaJI
LA . Cllpp-rs at PhomUi
· Gokrn SlafC' at L A. LakPrs
SC'at11P at Porlland

.1

16. Ck•\l('land H

.n.

San F'nmel!&lt;ilu
L~ An~IPs Ram s n
Ml :~ ml ~ - Buaruo 7
r"N· York Giants :r.. Washingroo J,1
Dc&gt;nvrr :r.l, ~ An~l~ 1!1, 01'

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VOTE
CRAIG WRIGHT FOR JUDGE
OF THE OHIO SUPREME COURT
Paid for by the Committee to Elect Judge Craig Wright
to the Supreme Court; Fred Crow, Attorney-at-Law.
Pomeroy, Oh., Southeastern Ohio Chairman.

COMING SOON1 "'BOOY ROCK"'
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1------------------'---------.!....----'--...:...----WANT ANSWERS INSTEAD
OF QUESTIONS?

Honor
rolls

SCALLY

The first slx weeks grading period honor
roil at the Bradbury School has been
·announced. Making a grade of 8 or above In
all their subject s to be riamed to the roll were:·
Fif1h grade - Trlcla Baer, Frank Blake,

FOR COMMISSIONER

Dodle Cleland. Sharla Cooper, Ryan Cowan,
Heather Davenpor1 , Stacy Duncan. Tara
Gerlach. Klm Hanning, Darin Logan. Lisa
Poulin, Christina Weaver, Robby Wya n .

Paid for by Scal ly for Commissioner.
Myriam Ruthchild . chair./treas ..
125 Lincoln Hill , Pomeroy

Sixth grade - Erica Elias. Pam Haggy
Susan Houchins, Missy Nelson. JaS9n Smith:
Joseph Smith. Ken Van Matre, Dare! Wolle.

112

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2°/o MILK...................~~~L~~.~149

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Hiram 24, Thiel 1
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oumo um ~

MIDDLEPORT
TOPS
Chapter· OH570 will hold Its
weigh• in from 3: 30 to 4: 30 p.m.
on Tuesday at the Word of Faith
Church In Middleport. Time
change Is due to the parade to be
held later that evening.

SUG·AR

:n, capUal 0

W LPct. GB
2
1

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce Halloween party will be Tuesday
from 6: 30 to 8 p.m. at the stage
area on the parking lot. Activities wni Include a pumpkin
carving contest at 6: :.!, costume
judging at 7, and apple bobbing
and break dancing at 7:45.

lf5~~--;D:OM::I:::NO~~ U.S. NO.

EASIUN OONFI!RENCE
AIIMIIc Dtvb1u11

Pbll~~hla

This event will feature Chab
Guthrie, Children's Librarian of the
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library, telling ghost stories designed for school-age children.
Many are typical of ghostly ~les
told In the early ums.
The Our House Museum Is known
for Its friendly resident ghosts, and
anecdotes about the General, the
· Lady In Taffeta and the BaUroom
People will also be related.
Th)s Halloween celebration Will
take place In the ballroom of this
1819 Ohio River Inn. After the
stbrles, guests will be treated to
refreshments In the common dlnillg
room.
Parents may drop t~lr children

off at the museum, or sh3re In the chased at the time of the event .
For fu rther information contact
festivities at their discretiOn.
Admission price Is 50 cents per Mic helle Corbin at 614-446-1818. The
person and no reservations are Our House Museum 1s located at 432
reQuired. Tickets may he pur- First Ave .. Gallipolis.

Ground
ef .......'~~~·~. ~ ~.~~~~~:~ ...

r------------.L.-----4--...,....---

North O»&gt;fft Coni.
Case Rc!nvt&gt; :b, Allf'Jlhrri Y 0
Obrrlln 15, W~lrr U
·

N-.. . . . . ._. _

~
26 thru NOV_!j
FRI OM thru THURSDAY:

at POWELL'S SUPER VAL

52 Weeks ................... ............... $!l8.24
OUIRldc Ohio
l.l W&lt;'£'k s ......... ....... ... ....... ........ $15.60
26 W('f'k s ........................... .. ..... $31.20

"""·

NBA results

r~iii~~~~iii~Ci·

2S Wf'eks ............ ...................... $29.12

MuriC'IIa .1, Ohio Northl'm .1 llir l
Mwn1 Union 51, Hctdl'llx'r2 21

lhP A.lnA1nln Hockey Lfq:I.K'.

effective
re being
developed,against
but theycolds
are aalong
way
from being used on a lar@! scale .
Because of the sheer number of
vlruses that ca n ca use the common
cold, a vaccine that works against a
single virus Is Ineffective.
A vaccine a gainst just one type Is
also Impractical because viruses
cha nge their genetic make up
quickly and frequently, making
today' s vaccine Ineffective against
that same virus next year.

"Family Medlclne" ts a weekly
column . To submit questions, write
to Edward Schreck, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall , Athens,
OhiO45701.

ALL TREATS,
0 TRIC S••••

One&gt; Yf.&gt;ar ................................. $57. 20

Baldwtn-Wallaa' 42, O!IM"brln 14

Wlnmtrrg

recruits also have more colds than
normal because they're exposed to
new cold vlruses when they leave
their usual envlronments.
QUESTION: If ~hots against
viral flu work, why can't we
develop shots for colds?
ANSWER: Immunization shots

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Cnrrler or Motor Route
OnC' Week .. .... ...... ... ................ .... $1 .10
Onf' Month ......... : ....................... $4.80

-

from Rochc&gt;s·

Pocllubly. forward. kl rtr Sr . CathartnPS

Atlanta al Washlnglon

sociation. Nat l o n ~ l Adve.rlislng Repre-sentative. Branham Newspaper Sales,

.....u..d ford.
Ashlan:l :l:l , E\'&lt;11\S.VUI£1 7

TORONTO MAPLE LEAF"S-Smt Wall

Mmday,Nov.!5

Mf.&gt;mber: The' Associated Press. Inland Daily Press Association and the
Amf'rl can Newspaper Publishers As-

Youngslown St. 2.1, Mlddlf' Trnn . S1. 1.1

YORK ISlANDERS-Rl'tuml'd
~r Kor1kD. cenl('r, kl SpR\p;fk&gt;ld of
1hi' Anrrimn Hot.'k&gt;y Lc&gt;~.

Nl'llo.• Enj;!'land at Drnv('!"

Pomeroy. Ohio.

OhMt v..a._.,YC:.ont.
Aki'On 17. Tmn(".''S('(' Tfeh ~

'"·NEW

Cinr lnnall al Son F'rand.&lt;.CO
Los Al'ijJ'k&gt;s Rams al St. lrut!i
Miami at N~· York J«s

. Chills and thrills are In store
when the Our House Museum
p,r esents "Stories of Ghostles and
Goblins" Monday, Oct. 29, from 7to
Bp,m..

Holiday activities were discussed group singing accmpanled by Mary
and officers and project reports Stewart. Devotions were based on
made when Friendly Circle met Psalm 19 - "Thy word Is a lamp unto
Tuesday evening at Trinity Church. my feet." E.velyn Srauss receiv\!(1
Reports on calls to the Ill and the offering.
shutlns were made. Mrs . Pauline
A dessert course was served to 13
Mayer reminded members to take meinbers by Marie Hauck and
Christmas stocking savings to the Pauline Mayer. Favors were flower
next meeting. "Falth"was tbetoplc· pot recipe holders, each. with a
:. of the program by Maye Mora with favorite recipe brought by
each member quoting a favorite members.
Bible verse on faith. ·There was

W, Mldllli:an l l Oh!o U. 1-t
Km1 St . 17, Toledo 6

IJnf't)8('kA', m thr tnJurro n:&gt;sPrw' lis!
HO!UV
Nlltlollal lieder tape
BUFFALO SABRES-Sent Tom Bar·
rasso. ROUITmdl'r, to Rochcst&lt;'rO r th&lt;'
AmMcan Hockey lal(ll('. Rr-&lt;-allrd Jac·

Hw ~ton

Publfstled every afternoon. Monda y
through Friday. 111 Cou11 Sr... Y. the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Mulllmedla, Inc., PomProy, Ohio 45769, h.
992 -~156 . Seco nd class postag{' paid at

MIWl11 2fl, N. lll!llols 7

JNnll'l".

LONG BOTI'OM - In lieu of
trick or treat, a Halloween party
will be held at the Long Bottom
Community Building Tuesday
tram 6 until 7: 30 p.m. Anyone
wishing to donate may leave
donations at Phyllis' Beauty
Shop or with Sue Hayman. ·

Friendly circle has

(USPs lt5-HOl
A Dl\'lslon of Multimedia, Inc.

contact with a cold sufferer, you
should wash your .hands as quickly
as possible afler the encounter.
QUESTION: Why do children
.have so many colds?
ANSWER: 'Children have a high
Incidence of colds because they've
not been exposed to as many
different viruses as adults. When
they come In contact with a new
virus, they are more likely to
become Infected because they have
not developed antibodies. Once
they've . had the Infection, they'll
rapidly develop an a,ntibody to that
specific virus. ·
Adults In fanillles that Include
children also have more colds than
the norm, because they catch the
cold from their youngsters. Travel·
ers, college students and milita ry

Ghost stories set at Our House

The Daily Sentinel

Sllturday'!IO ResuiiM
81~ Ten
WIS('OIISIO Hi, OhiO St. 14
MI(I-Anwrkan r(lflf.
C. M lc hl,::on 42. Dowllnl.! G twn '!1

COWBOVS-R&lt;' · ~I~n&lt;'d

DALLAS
John .

POMEROY- XIGamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority. will meet at 7: ro
Tuesday night I the home of Mrs.
Evelyn Knight for a pizza and
card party.

Ohkl Colh."Jel" Fnothal

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

S..lllly,Ntw ...
CIM'Pianrl al Buflalo

MONDAY
POMEROY Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will meet at 7
p.m. Monday night at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Past
masters night will be observed.
AU master masons and past
masters of Pomeroy and surrounding · lodges are Invited to
attend. Refreshments will be
served.

11JESDAY

Cbaches Bill Hensler and Ron
Clark praised the offensive· and
defensive units for doing a good job.

near people with colds, for we knowthat the cold virus ts spread by
water droplets which linger In the
alr after someone has slii!E'Zed or
coughed. Research shows that
paper tissues effectively cut down
the survlval time of the virus to just
minutes, and new tissues are being
developed which will kill the virus
almost immediately on contact
with the paper. Use of these
prnducts certainly can help stop the
spread of a cold virus . •
But rnany of us are not aware.that
cold viruses are also spread tram
· person to person by hand contact.
Simply touching someone with a
cold (by shaking hands, for example) and then putting your hand to
· your face may Infect you with the
virus. H you come Into physical

viral Infection of the respiratory
tract - · we call It "cornmbri"
bel: ause almost au of us have two or
three colds a year. Children may
gt&gt;l as many as 10 or 12 colds In a
year's dme.
·
A cold Is not so much a specific
disease as a set of sympto!T!S, and
It's Important to understand that
the,se symptoms can be caused by
nearly :nl different varieties of
viruses. You may have ileard of
rhinovirus, parainfluenza virus and
ecbovlrus. These are just a few of
the viruses that can bring on
congestion, cough, body aches and
the other miseries we call ·a cold.
Because there are so many
viruses that can cause a cold, It's
hard not to cross paths with some of
them. Most of us try to avoid being

Calendar

Ohio college
grid scores

Na&amp;tonMI Footbal l.eqw

Sl'itltiC' al San Dlt"Jro

~

reserves end season

BEVERLY - The Southern
Tornadoes' reserve football team
ended Its season at Waterford
recently, dropping a very hardfought 20-12 decision to the
Wildcats.
.
Playing under a steady rain, both
teams managed to limit their
turnovers, however, Waterford
took advantage of Its Initial posses·
slons to take a quick 14-0 lead, which
·
stood until the half.
In the second half, Southern got
an on-side kick and picked away at
the Wildcat lead aS freshman Pete
Roush cracked theendzoneon a two
yard run, the score 6-0.
After forcing Waterford to punt,
the Tornadoes swarmed the WHS
punter and blocked the ensuing
punt. This set the stage for another
quick score by Pete Roush, who
rambled in from four yards out, the
score 14-12 at the end of the third
quarter.
Neither team mustered much of
an offensive threat In the fourth
frame, but Waterford did score on a
broken play to push the final to
20-12.
.
Southern had one touchdown
called back , a nd another was
nullified as a Tornado was called
out of the enclzone late In the game
as the Tornadoes failed to
capitalize.
Southern was led In rushing by
Brian Freeman who bad 72 yards
on 12 crrles and Pete Roush with 58
yards on 20 carries. Bo Willis, Eric
Mllllson, and Tony Connolly had a
total between them of 25 yards for a
total of 155 yards for the Tornadoes.
Southern had 10 yards passing.
Southern's defense was led by
Tim Smith with another great
game and eight tackles, Mickey
Tucker had six, Eric Thoren five,
John Riffle three, and Pete Roush
five and a blocked punt.

Medicine

GALLIPOLIS -' Every winter
my famUy comes down with
several COlds. · Do you have any
suggestions on how we can. goov~
colds this year?
: ·ANSWER: As I
wrtte this article,
I'm suffering a
nasty ~ad cold of
my own, sp obviously, I'm not
· expert at avoiding colds . ·
But
there are soine precautions everyone can take to lower the chances
· of getting a cold.
· The cold Is the most freQuent

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Elementary PTO wil hold Its
annual fall carnival on Saturday ·
from 6 to 9 p.m at the school. The
public Is lnvlted to attend the
party where games, food and fun
for au ages Will be featured.

SHt)Ul.DEit. TO LEAN ON - MlnneiJol8 Vtktnp' John Swain
appHes prel!Sure to Chicago Bears' ball carrier Dennis McKinnon (85)
as McKinnon scores a touchdown during second quarter action Sunday
In Chicago. The Bears won, 16-7. (AP LaserpiJOto).

Transactions

~y'KGIUllc

.

1 !IJ

Milwaukee&gt; UB, Chlelij!O 100
0ronv£'J" 12"1, GJI&lt;bl Stale 121

Pl nsoorgta .l 'l. Allanta lfl
NC'\4' EnA:Iand :1.1. NN.· York .k&gt;ts :!1
Sf . Lruls :w. Phllack&gt;lphla J.-1
(; f'(('JI Bav .[] , 01:-troll 9 ·
Ka n~s City 2-1 , Tampa Ba:v 20

Tampa Bay

I

.{Ill

N£w .Jt&gt;rsto.v L'tl , C'k&gt;l.dand. lOii
Portland 140. Kansas Cltv 119
San An!OOIO 11.1, L.A. Laicl'n; 112

Ch lcaJ:O 16. Mini1NI01a i

Nt-.w

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2

NEw York 1.17, DE&gt;tro!tl1R
, Philadrtphla 111. Atlanta 1(11

Sunctaf• GUII16i
Clnelnnatl :n , Houston 13
Dallas 22.

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Saturda)"11 GamCft
HW!&lt;IM 121, Dallas 111

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LA. l.alwrs

.667 179 173
.6b"7 2r.i 213

Washington

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Portland
St&gt;att l&lt;'
Gokrn ~all·

Kansas Cll\·
5 4 I) .5516 172 176
011~0 ·
4 ~ 0 .500 221 21 !!
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Dallas
St. Louts

.

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........ DtvWon

Grwn Bay at NP-1• Ori(':Jns

: NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP)
: - Donna Burnham rode Thomas
Carroll's Advance to win the$15,(XX)
Private Account Purse at Thistledown, bea tlng Pete Oover at the
wire.
. The winner on Sunday turned the
· mile and a sixteenth In 1: 451·5topay
:$11.40, $6and$3.40. Pete Clover paid
:S5.20 and $3, while Killarney Road
· returned $2.60 to show.
' Th~dally doubleoflOO pald$13.40.
· The last-race trHecta of 6-2-4 paid
$233.10.
A crowd of 5,265 wagered $754,219.

}I"'

_ffil
wnrrERN OONFEilF:NCE
• Mktwell DhtiiDn

:1

~

~

1

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Houston

'h

2

lndlanapoll ~

(:U,ln!J

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Buffalo

•

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0 Ulll 1 1 . .500

1 l
0 1

Ck'\'l"'and·

W L T Pd. PF PA
9 0 0 UIXI :m 124

Nf"A• Enj;!'lanrl

l

Atlanta
Indiana

By 'DIP AMrlodated f"''MM
Amt&gt;rkul fadeft'lllr
. Miami

........ ..._

MllwaukA'
Chk'B$1:0

Foothllll ~

By ~af'd Sc~k, ·D.O.
At
1\v't or

'

pass defense In the NFL, hit Tony
over the Bills.
The second-year quarterback HID with a 38-yard scoring pass and
broke Bob Griese's single-season di1l1ed a 5-yarder to tlgllt end Qoug
passing yardage markof2,473yards
Cosble.
Bean 18, Vlldnp '7
Ia te In the first quarter and finished
Jim
McMahon
passed for 00
the day with 2,672 yards with seven
regular-season games left In the 1!114
yards and one touchdown and the
Chicago defense, ranked No.1 In the
campaign.
NFL, registered· a club-record 11
Giants 37, Redsldns IS
sacks while beating Minnesota.
Joe Morris scored on three short
Archie Manning, filling In for
runs ·and Phil Simms lofted two
Injured quarterback Tommy KratOuchdown passes as the Giants
mer, was ch'\ll)edfor losses totaHng
ove!Wbelemed the Redsklns, who
10lyards.
.
have played In the Super Bowl the
Clll'dlnalll34,
Eace
14
last two seasons.
Nell Lomax completed 20 of 26
The victory was the Giants' first
P.sses
for 28i yards and two
over the Redsklns In seven games
touchdowns
and Sl\lmp Mitchell
dating back to l!lll.
ended
long
drives
with a pair of
49ers33, RamsO
scores
as
St.
Louis
rallied to
1-yard
Joe Montana threw for 365 yards
and three touchdowns as San· defeat Phlladelphia.Lomax' gamewlnnlngtouchdownl,lf8yards to Pat
Francisco blanked · the Rams.
Tilley capp(.&gt;d a 27-yard secondMontana completed 21 of his 31
period drive.
attempts, Including a stretch beginsteelers 35, FalconillO
ning In the second quarter whim he
Mark Malone threw three touchhit 13 straight, accounting for 263
down passes, two to John Stalyards.
lworth, and · Dwayne Woodrull
Patriots 30, Jets 20
returned a fumble 65 yards to score
Craig James Ignited New Engon
Atlanta's first playastbeSteelers
land with a 25-yard third-quarter
routed
the Falcons.
touchdown burst and quarterback
Malone
fired passes of 20 and 31
Tony Eason threw five yards to
yards
to
Stallworth
and 7 yards to
Stephen Starring for the go-aheac!
Rich
Erenberg
wh.lle
]!'rank Pollard
score In the fourth period as the
ran for l11 yards and scored the
Patriots raiUed from a 17-polnt
Steelers' other touchdown.
deficit to beat the Jets and give
Chiefs 24, Biles 20
Raymond Berry a vlctory In his
Bill Kenney completed 26 of 46
NFL coaching debut
passes for 332 yards and two
Saints 16, Browns 14
touchdowns, uftlng Kansas City
Morten Andersen kicked a 53over Tampa Bay In a game which
yard field goal despite a driving rain
featured an NFL-record 100passes.
as time expired to boost New
Steve DeBerg tried 54 passes for
Orleans over Cleveland and spoil the
the
Bucs andcoupledwlthKenney to
NFL debut of BroWns' Coach Marty
break
the record of ~ Set In 1969 by
Schottenheimer, the Browns' defenVIkings and Balli·
the
Minnesota
sive coordinator who replaced Sam
moreColts.
·
Rutigliano last Monday.
'
Packers t1, Lions 9
Cowboys 22, Colts 3
Lynn Dickey !Ired four touchdown
Danny White celebrated his
return as DaUas' starting quarter- · passes, Eddie Lee Ivery rushed for
116 Yards and safety Tom Flynn
back by riddling Indianapolis'
Intercepted two passes as Green
porous secondary with two touchBay broke a seven-game losing
down passes and 362 yards. White,
streak with a victory over the Lions.
operating against the second-worst

Avoiding winter time colds. the easy way

Family medicine ·

Br()ncos nip Raiders;
49ers
bombard Rams
..

The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$119_

FREE TREATS
FOR THE KlbS
•COFFEE •CIDER
•DONUT HOLES

79&lt;
We Reserve The Ri&amp;ht To
limit Quantities

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH .

STORE -HOURS
9:30·5:00

Closed Thurs.
. __

----•

------ --- - - --------·---J
'

•

�. ·- ... -- - ----. .....--- ·-------·.:!
Monday. October 29, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Delta Kappa ·Gariuna has meeting

Returns home
Mr. and Mrs. TIIomasRoushhave
returned to their home In Lake
Park. Fla. alter visiting here With
his mother, Mrs. Erma Roush al)d
his son, 'Thoolas K. Roush, Mliters·
vllle Road, as wen as other relatives
and friends. They also visited In
•
Columbus.

showed twofllrns which emphasized "Au the Way" and "Take Time to
menu planning, list making, and Dream."
Next meeting will be at Robbins
checking of unit prtces and IngreRl'lltaurant, Jackson, on Nov. 19
dients lists.
JoAnn H11ys, hostess committee with &lt;1 silent auction to be held.
chatnnan, gave the Invocation to Members who cannot bring supplies
open the meeting attended by 31 for the auction are asked to donate
members. Jean Ward conducted the money.
Meigs County members attend·
meeting and a thank you note was
Charlotte Grant was the top loser
!ng
were Rosalie Story, Lee Lee, and Margaret Tuttle, the runner-up
read from Merry Dawn Simmons.
Members signed get-well cards for QUve Page, Wykle Whitley, Carolyn at a recent meeting of TOPS
Lucille Smith and Chrtstlne Rouse. Snowden, Martha Greenawy, Anna Chapter 9H 570 held at Middleport.
\ Mrs. Hayes and Dorothy Scott Turner, Rebecca Zurcher, DorothY
Kathy.McDanlel presided at the
reported on leg!slatlon and the Woodard, Jo Ann Hays, Margaret meeting when a new ~ntest was
Parsons, Donna Jenkins, Mary explained. Therapy class was held
president gave the rules forweartng
A $2,(XX) contrtbut!on toward of the key. Dobna Jenkins led In V!i-glnta Riebel, Nellie Parker, by Delores Long. Wetgh,Jn lor club
Carolyn Smith, and Nan Moore.
hospital equipment was approved at singing the Delta Kappa Gamma
members Is from 3: 00 to 4:00p.m.
a recent meeting of the Ladles
Auxiliary of Veterans Memortal
Hospltal.
The group also made a gift of
money to the nurses scholarship
1:
fund In memoty of Eva Hartley, and
Or Writt Dilly Sttatlnll Clllsiltld DIJII
111 Court St. Po•mr Ollto 457&amp;9
Carrie KeMedy, corresponding
secretary, will send a card to the her
family advising them of the gift.
Arrangements were made to
purchase a table cloth for the
Auxiliary's refreshmens table. A
report on the dlstrtct meeting held at
Mt. Vernon was given by Mrs.
Juanita Norman and Mrs. Mary
Folmer who attended. Katheryn
Metzger was presented her past
president's pin by the volunteer
41 !iooo••lor!llo"t
'' ,_ .-.
....,........
U Mol&gt;h M-•lor liNt
chairman.
12Wift-..ratvo,:
I Z lit-H Woi'IIH
4S h•motodlont
uu
.....
It was noted that Brenda Roush,
14
,.......,
44 """'""""'"""""'
41
''lt-lc"'"""""'
• . . . . . . . , ..oil....
IJp IO 1t - · · 0 ..1..._ ..........
nOOII
4t-IINotiOtNoll
gilt shop chairman, will have a
Th..,doyonHt lt""
""
I I llolllio, TY.
n w...... ,olll""'
Up to I I w.,..n I I• Qy ln-lo•
""
U I•Wi!IIMOI larl.. nl
11 M
•te•••nto,.
tAooro .. 4 woo6tpetlnol
""
pre-Chrtstmas sale of merchandise
t tw..,•• To Oo
U ~o•Lh•
on Nov. 9. Pecans and walnuts have
been ordered to sell forthe holidays.
Public Notice
Public Notice
Clara Burrts opened the meeting
with the Aux!lary prayer. Reports
PROBATE COURT OF
were given by Phyllis Qay, secre·
SArvt ces opera1ed by a ftr e
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
tary, and Mary Folmer, treasurer.
P.nt or f1re ftghung
ESTATE OF JANES. GILKEY. departm
company
Next meeting wll he held on Nov.
DECEASED
heme;:) a re n ~a l of a
27 at 1 p.m. at the Ha;plt:l!.
COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS CU. No 24.1187 Docket 12 partS.;Hdof tmc
a 1 7 m1ll extstmg levy

Dian Partlow presented the
research committee program on
grocery shopping at the recent
meellng of the Alpha Omicron
Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma
held at the Meigs Inn.
Ms. Partlow used a member
participation project and then

Business Senices
CHIMNEY ICING
CHIMNEY SWEEP

TOPS meers

VMH auxiliary
holds meeting

•SPEED OUEEN lAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Have A Full Time
Shop Technician
on Duty
Complete "'Dultleaa
Chrmney Cleaning

PH. 949·3046
From 9:00 to 6:00
10 19 rtn

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

-'
,,;,;.PLAqUE PRESENTED- A surprise going away pariy was held to
'''llaaor the Rev. and Mrs. James B. Kittle of the S)?"BCI.L'II! Nll2llftllle
; jJwrch by the looaJ NYI youth group. Charles Lee, president of the host
.. CJQUP. presented a plaque to the couple to show appreciation for their
'' -work at the Syracuse Church. The Kittles wiD be moving to Zanesville,
• where the mlnloter has accepted a pastocate.
' t• ...
~

......

~~usy Bee meeting held
'• Contributions to the Lung Associ·
itdon and the Statue of Liberty
reJuvenation fund were made at the
Busy Bee Class of the Middleport
'First Bapltlst Church held at the
church.
' · The meeting was preceded by a
solip!Jbmer hosted by Beulah White,
;Gwlrinte White, and Pearl Hoffman.
.lt .. was voted to retain the same
of11cer5 for another year with the
,!!JC?!Iltlon of vice president, a
.P,OSitlon filled by Elizabeth Slavin.

Mary Brewer had the prayer, and
reports of officers wen~ given.
Freda Edwards read a thank .you
note from the Hartley famlly, and a
card from Mildred Fowler with a
monetary gift in Mrs. Hartley's
memory was ackowledged.
Others attending the meellng
were Carolyn Miller, NeUe Werner,
Nora Jordan\ Rosemary Lyons,
Lillian Demoskey, Roma Hawkins,
Dorothy Evans, KatherynMetzger,
and Elizabeth searles.

~orres birthday noted in Meigs
·=The sev~'h birthday of Kristin
Marte To
was observed recently with party at the Senior
Cltlze~ Cent r hosted by her
rttother. Norma Ann Torres.
~eroy.

· Theme of the party was Critter
Sitters with homemade pizza, pop,
candy and a Critter Sitter cake being
"setved.
. Each chlld received a bag of
party favors.
-Games were played with prizes
•ll!ling to each of the chlldren.
Attending the party were Krtstln's
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs Joseph
Delgado, MMdleport; Mrs. Ruth
Simpson, Racine; Marion and
'f.racey Michael, Pomeroy; Enelda
ahd Jon Jacobs, Rutland, and Becky
Ackerman. Elly Asbeck, Jenca

The Daily Sentinel

-

...........

SHOP LOCALLY

OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!
By allopplna In your home It'll you -on
111. tht -rand tur on JOUr car anciiYOid
the haurds of hlpay and fr-ay
travellna. It PIYI to ahop where you live!

JOBS
CARS

.

By NELLIE PARKER

- Sunday School attendance Oct. 7
"was 34; church attendance, 26. On
;Det. 14 Sunday School attendance
was :rl; church attendance, 26.
.' Alfred UMW members con·
· d'ucted worship services at Arcadia
oflurslng Center Oct. 9. Florence
Ann Spencer was leader, Nina
Jiclblnson, organist. Others attend·
In« were Clara Follrod and Nellie
'Parker. Mrs. Spencer opened the
'program with Psalm 100, read by
Mrs. Parker.
· Mrs. Robinson read Trust In the
:).,ord; Mrs. Parker, God's Infinite
.J&gt;Qwer; Mrs. Spencer, One Set of
:Footprtnts; Sammie Ralrden, No
Pocket In a Shroud. All joined In
g,i.up singing and the Lord's

~~Racine

led by Mary Brewer and a program
by Mrs. Hood, assisted by Miss Hall
on Thialand tAken from the Na tiona I
Geographic.
Refreshments were served by the
hostessestothosenamedandLUIIan
Demoskey, Maty Hughes, Gwinnie
White, Kather:Yn Metzger, Ethel
Hughes, and guests, Maty Sigman
and Mildred Westfall.

-o"•

'

Belle Reeves Is recovering after
surgery at Veterans Mem~'}~l
Hosptta!.
Mrs. Delbert Yost, Lancaster
Rt., visited Genevieve Guthrie at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Yost. Mrs. Guthrie Is recovertng
slowly. Delbert Yost Is receiving a
sertes of tests at a Lancaster
hospital.
-'
Mrs Ruth Brooks visited her
mother, Hazel Carsey, in Colum·
bus. Mrs. Carsey remains In
serious condition at Riverside
Hospital.
Jo Lamp, Toledo, and Connie
Ballard, Chesterville, visited thetr
parents, Mr and Mrs. Arthur
Spencer recently.

community happenings

By Mrs. Francis Morris
- Jean Burnside and frtends, Jen·
1llfer Shrouder and Bob Stevens of
. Lehigh Acres, Florida visited Mr.
·and Mrs. Ward Sayre and .daugh·
~ter. Aprtl Roach and babY accom·
•I•
panled them to Flortda for a visit.
Mrs. Velma Taylor and Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Rainer visited Dorts
:,:wnson at Brooksville, F!ortda.
· Mrs. Gretta Simpson spent a
week with her brother and sister-In·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Howell
·,iit FII!Shlng.
i' . Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Wingett of
· Cleveland were recent visitors of
.Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wingett.
- Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bradford of
.;Lancaster spent a recent Sunday
: attemoon with Mr. and Mrs. Crttt
Bradford.
.. Mrs. Lavinia Simpson and Mar·
..I.Jh Knightstep,of Columbus visited
'.ln.Raclne recently.
~ Jeanne Bradford and Esther
RitbJe tt W0111dngton spent a day
_;rjiCeatJy with . Mr. and Mrs. Crttt
• Brtildfol d.

..

prayer at closing.
Church nominating committee
met with Rev. Archer at the church
Oct. 12. Present were Florence
Spencer, Nellie Parker, Osle Mae
Follrod, Qertrude Robinson, Nina
Follrod and Doris Dillinger.
The community was saddened by
the peaths of Mrs. Russell (Edna)
Findling on Oct. 6 and Minnis El!!ot
on Oc,t. 13.
Mr and Mrs Philip Powers,
Grand Junction, Colo., visited the
Poole-Parker home Oct. 11 and 12.
The Powers were returning home
after an extended genealogy trip to
Missouri and Vermont. They and
Mrs. Parker visited the Michael
family , Samuel, Gary, Sharon,
Matthew, and Todd.

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Krantz of
Mears, Mich. spent several .days
wltl) Mrs. Garnet Ervine.
The &amp;3rd birthday of Mrs. Garnet
Ervine was celebrated with open
house at her home by her family.
Mrs. Edison Johnson and Mrs.
Pearl Adams attended funeral
services for their aunt, Mrs. Grace
Shaw at Beaver Falls, Pa.
Donald Bradford of Davisvllle,
Mich., who came to bring Edna
Deem horne from Veterans Mem·
ortal Hospital visited Mr. and Mrs.
Crttt Bradford. Mrs. Deem wUI be
at the horne of her :daughter at
Belleville.
Brtce Hart of Rockville, Md.
spent a recent weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart
attended the wedding of their
step-niece, Melanie Perry and
Duane Wise at Hilliard, Ohio and
also visited Ted and Sallie Hayman,
Bruce and Lorna Hart and Greg
and Beth O'Brien at Columbus.
Mr. anc;! Mrs. Edison Brace

NOTICE OF
APPONTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On October 25 1984 •n the

Metns CO\Jnty Probate Court
Cas!'! No 24 587 Guy F Gtlkey
110 7 Hardesty Place East
Coh rmbus Ohto 43204 was
appo tnted Executo r o f th e
P.S ialfl of JanP. S Gilkey
c1eceased ta tr. of 368 1 ".&gt; N
Th1rd StrePt M1ddlepor1 Oh10

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge
By Lena K Nesselroad
Clerk

992-21.56 '
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Btds arP. now betng accep ted
hy th e Sout hern LQcal School
D1str1ct for two 7 1 passenger
school buses Spec 1hcattons
may be obta1nP.d 1n the otftce of
the Treasurer of Sou thern H1qh
School 01 by wrtttng or catltng
Treasurer Dennts H1ll at 614

949-2213

PO

Box 176

Aactne Ohto 4 ~7 71 Btds will
be acce pted 1n the Treasu rers
oHtce un!tl noon on Now.mhP.r

28 1,984

110) 2911115 1219 4tc

Public Notice

By Mn. Herbert Rou8h
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
Mrs. Cindy Sands and son Joey
eaUed on Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp
and famUy Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson of
Pt. Pleasant, Tom and Janet
Warner of Racine spent Sunday
with Mrs. Etha Warner.
Mrs. lAicllle Lawaon returned
home Sunday from Veterans Mern·
ortal Hospital.

to prO\nde ambulance or emer·
gency medtcat servtces oper
ated by a f1r e departmen t or ftre
ftghllng company
Sa1d ta&gt;&lt; be1ng a re newal of
an e:~~ts1 1 ng tax of 0 8 mtlls to
run for hve years at a rate no,
exceed tng 0 8 mtlls for each
one dollar of valuatton whtc h
amounts to etght cents for each
one hundred dollars of valua·
liOn lor ftve years
Tfle Polls for satd Elect1on wt ll
open at 6 30 o clock AM and
rematn open unt1l 7 30 oclock
P M of sa1d day
By order of the Boa rr:f of
Electtons of Me1gs County
OhiO
Evelyn Clark
Chatrman
Jane M Frymyf!r
Otrector
Dated October 1 1984

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF OrnE ARTHUR
110)8 15 22 29 4tc
BOSTON. DECEASED
c- No. 24482 Docket 12
Page 438
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF RDUCIARY
NOTICE OF
On September 1 2 1984 tn
ELECTION
the Met{1S Co unty Pr obate
Court Case No 24482 Gladys
Sh1elrls Box 301 Aacme Oh10
45 77 1 wa s appotnted Execu
trtx of the estate at Ot11e Arthur
Bos ton decease d lale o f
Fourth Sueet
Aacme OH

45771

Roberl F Buck
Pr oba te Clerk
BY Lena K Nessel road
Clerk

110122 291 11 15 3tc

visited Mr. and Mrs. George Farra
Public Notice
and famUy at S;jndyvllle Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley
spent a recent weekend with Mi-.
NOTICE OF ELEcnON
ON TAX LEVY IN
and Mrs. Brian Simpson at
EXCESS
OF THE TEN
Baltimore.
MIU. UMtTAliON
Mr. and Mrs. AI Crow and Mrs.
NOTICE IS hereby g t ~en th at
Swart of VIrginia Beach, Va. spent 1n pursuance of a Reso!Utton of
the Board of Trustees ot the
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Townshtp
of Orange Ohto
David Crow
passed on th e 6th day of
Mr. and Mrs. Rodertck Grimm Augu st, 1984 there w1ll be
to a vote at the
and Mrs. Gretta Simpson spent submttted
people of sa td Orange Town·
Sunday with Rev. and Mrs. Don ShiP at a General ELECTION to
be held tn the Township at
Walker at Newport.

Fairview notes

Public Notice

Orange .. Ohto at th e regu lar
places of vottng th eretn. on
Tuesday, the s1xt h day of
NCNember 1984, the questton
of levy1ng tn excess of the ten
mtll hm1tatton. for the benefit of
Orange Townsh tp for the p.urpose of Provt dtng and matntalnmg ftre apparatus, applian ces.
bUIIdtngs or s1tes therefor or
sources of water su pply and
matenals therefor or the estab·
hshment and matntena nce of
ltnes of ftre a!arm telegraph or
the paymem of permanent.
part-t1me or volunteer hreman
or ftre f1ghttng compantes to
operate the same or to pur·
chase ambulance eQ,UI~ment or

Nottr.e tS hereby gtven tha t
pur su an t to a re so lutto n
adopted by th e 8oa rd of
Educalton at thP. Me•gs LocAl
School Otstn ct Coun ty of
MP.1{1 S Oh10 on the 31St day of
1984 there w1ll be
July
subm1 t1 ed to the qual1f1ed
electors o! sa td school d1str 1CI
at !he elect1on to be held on the
6th drlY of November 1984 at
the rP.gular places of vot1nn
theretn the questton oltssut ng
bon ds of satd board' of educa
!ton tn the Sttm of S300 000
fo r the PLtrpose of tmprovements renovat1ons and ad dlttons to schoo l factltlles and
prov td1nr1 equ1pment furn1sh1ngs nnfl st te tmprovements
and of IP.Vy1ng a tax to pay the
prmctpal and 1nterest of satd
bands outstde of the ten m111
conslttuttonal tax ltm11a110n 1m·
posed by Sec tton 2 of Arttcle
XII Ohto Constttut1on
The max1mum number of
yea rs dunng whtch the bonds
wtll run tS stx l6l years and the
esttmated average addt!IOnal
ta x route outs1de of the ten mill
hmttatton to pay the Interest
thereon and to rettr e the sa me
as certlft ed by the county
audt tar wtll be seventy·ftve
hu ndredths ( 75) mtll s per
dollar (S2 00) of tax val uatton
whtch amounts: tO seven and
one·half ($0075) cents for
each one hundred dolla rs
( S100 00) of tax valuation
The Polls wtll be open lrom
6 30 am to 7 30 p m on sa1d
date

bP.tng a reductton of 1 0 mtH to
constitute a ta)( of 07 m1!1 to run
for ftve years at a rate not
exceedtng 0 7 mtlls tor eac h
one dollar of val uatton wh tch
amoun ts to SO 07 m1Us for
each one hundred dollars of
valuat1o n for f1ve years
The Poltc; tor sat d Electtonw tll
open at 6 30 o clock A M and
rematn open tJnltl 7 30 o clock
PM of satd day
s.., o rder of the Board of
Elect 1ons of Metgs County
Ohto
Evelyn Clark
Chatrm an

4

110129 lie
Public Notice

PLU61NTO,
CLR551FIED5 ·

·!llfred area news notes_,____
j

Poge443

45760

I AMRI'MENTS I
I REAL ESTATE I

Electa Circle conducts meeting

'·.

1Jato1&amp;-do ~

Cllllt~il

Clark, Leeann Cundiff, Heidi and
Jolmny Gorby, David Fetty, Steven
and Dusty Andrews. Chrtstopher
Triplett, Emily JolmsonandChristy
Hawkins
Others presenting gifts were Mr.
and Mr. Danny Cordero, Pete
Simpson, Cynthia and Nicholas
Mills. Mary Jacobs. Jolm and Al!cta
Jacobs, Debbie Lavalley, Carol
Tannehill, Ginny Killin, Darcy and
Amy Rubenking, Corrissa, Shanda
and Alicia Hart, Kelly Smith, and
Diane Carrera, Puerto Rico, Mary
Dorta of New York City, Barbara
Delgardo of Florida; the McKenna
family of New Jersey, the Lopez
family of VIrginia, and Krtstln's
paternal grandparents, the Torres
of Puerto Rico.

· ·Arrangements to send gilts of thank you note was read from Lar!Ji
money to Dr. Phillip L. McDaniel Kerr, home missionary, and It was
and his family, foreign mlssionar· noted that two shut!ns had been
fe:;, for birthdays and Chrtstmas, \1S!ted on their birthdays. lya
weremadewhen the EJecta Circle of Turner will be added to theshutln list
the B.H. Sanborn Missionary So· to be remembered durtng the year.
Rhoda Hall read a prayer poem,
eiely of the Middleport First Baptist
Oturcb: met Tuesday night at the "More Blessed to Give" a nd
devotions by Mrs. Searles were on
tiomeof Elizabeth Searles.
.A pen sketch on the McDaniel frtendship using scrtpture from
Camlly ws given by Freda Hood. A Jolm 15. There was a prayer circle

m,•aut~

~.m~llloamo

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MIU.
UMtTATION

NOTICE IS hereby g1ven that
In pursuance of Resolution of
the Board of Trustees of the
Towns htp of Ches ter Ohto
passed on the 14th day of
AUgust 1984 there wtll be
subm ttted to a vote of the
people of sa td Chester Town
shtp at a General ELECTION to
be helr1 tn the Town!'i htp of
Chester Ohto at the regu lar
places of vottng theretn on
Tuesday the stxth day of
November 1984 the questton
of levymg tn e)(cess of the ten
mill hm1ta11on lor the benefn of
Chester Towns h1p for the pur·
p as ~ of pr ov1d1ng and matntatn
tng ftre apparatus apphances
bu 1ld1ngs or s1 tes therefor or
sou rces of vvatP.r supply and
ma tcrtals therefor o r the estilb
hsh ment and matntenance of
lines of ftre alarm telegraph or
the paymen t of permanent
part ltme or volunteer ltremen
or ftre ftghttng compames to
operate the same or to pur·
chase ambulance equt pment
or to provtde ambulance br
emergency medtca l servtces
operated by a ftre depanment
or lire ltg httng com pany.
Sa1d tax betnc; a renewal of
an e1usttng ta)( of 0 4 mills to
run lor f1ve years at a rate not
e)(ccedtng 0 4 m1IIS lo r each
one dollar of valuati on whtch
amounts to $0 04 (fo ur cents)
for each one hundred dollars of
valuatiOn for ftve years
The Polls for satd Elect ton w111
open at 6 30 o'clock AM and
rematn open until 7 30 o clock
PM of sa 1d day
By order of the Board of
Electt ons of Metgs County
Ohto
Evelyn Clark
Chatrman

a

Jane M Frymyer
Otrector
Dated Oc tober 1 1984

11018 15 22 29 41c
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MIU.
UMITATION
NOTICE 1s hereby g1ve n that
1n pursuance of a Resoluf1on of
the Board of Trustees of tt(e
Counc tl of the V1llage of Aactne
Ohto, passed on the 24thdayot
July 1984 there 11'1111 be
submmQd to a vote of the
people of S'\ld Ractne V1llage at
a.General ELECTION to be held
tn the V1llage of Rac1ne Oh1q at
1he regular places of vot1ng
therem on Tuesday the stxt h
day of November 1984 the
queshon of levytng tn excess of
the ten mtll hmttatton, for the
benefit of Rac.ne Vtffage for the
purpose of provtdtng and
matntatmng ftre apparatus apphances. butldtngs or sties
therefor. or sources ' of water
supply and matenals therefor
or the estabhshment and matn·
tenance of lmes of fire alarm
telegraph or the payment of
permanent part-time. or volunteer ftremen , or ftre ftghttng
compan1es to operate the same
or to purchase ambulance
equ1pment. or to prov1de ambulance or emergency med1ca!

BV ORDER OF THE BOARD
OF ELEC TIONS OF THE
COUN'TY OF MEIGS. OHIO
Jane M Frvmver
Dtrector of Elec11ons

Evelyn Clark
Cha1rman

11018. 15 22. 29. 4tc

(

R
CALL
446-4522

PHONE 992-2156

....

.~

Jan e M Frymyer
01rect or
Datfl d Oc to ber 1 1984

WE AR£ YOUR SALlS
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
.ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

"We Rent for Less"

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

St. Rt. 160 Norlh

Gallipolis, Ohio
7/11/lfn

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

-BACKHOES
-DUIIP TRUCKS
-LO.BOYS
-TRENCHER
-WATER
-SEWER
-GAS LINES
-SEPTIC SYSTEMS

lARIE " $MAU IOU
PH. 992·2478

912711 mo. pd

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

Authorized John Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hoe
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipmenl
Parts &amp; Service

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

UTILITY BUILDINGS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614'-843·5191
10 6 tf(

I J '''

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

RADIATOR

Engage·A·Car , lhe modern way

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

to drtve the wehtcle of your
chOICe

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

BlACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

Box. 326
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
For Faster Serv1ce

Call 614·992·6737

Puppie1,

Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tra{llmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
J.24·1ft

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALU
992-3410

Colt 814·742·246B

Catl 742-3195
Or 992-5875

Key ring. full of keys. w1th a
anap on the ring. M1y heve

10·8·tln

Howard L Writesel
Roofing Co.
Ntw - Repair
Guttes • Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Pointing
Storm Doors
Windows
Free Estimates
949-7969-949-7763
10·19·1 mo

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

"Beautiful. Custom
.. Built Garages"

AMI6~~6fl

East Meigs
10!1211 mo

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
RUTlAND - New Lima Road
- In the country 3 bedroom
ranch with full basement
Approx 2acres ground tn good
condtbon $34,900 ()()

New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu:;t11m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garaps
Roolin1 Work
Aluminum &amp; Vtnyl Stdtngs
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

DANVILLE - Country hvtng rn
a great location tor mrners'
located on approx 2 acres, 2
story home With new v1nyl
stdtng &amp;storms 4-5 bedrooms.
2 baths. lots of remodeling
completed
Garage
$37 50000
RUTlAND - Over 3 acres of
ground with a pond &amp;a mobile
home with 2 large rooms added
011 Cellar With storage butkltn&amp;
Serene setting. $20,000 00

I I J lit

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

POMEROY - Rrver v~ew
Centrally located tn lte Twtn
Ctbes I ~ story. 3 IM!drooms.
full basement large ~l large
dtmng room &amp; hvrng room.
vmyl ~dtn&amp; mce lront ~tting
porch $31,90000

- Addon• and remodeling
- Roofing end gutter work
- Concrete work
- Ptumbmg and alectncal

work

Middleport. Ohio

992-6215 or 992-7314

(free Estimates)

GOOD FARM IN MEIGS
COUNTY - Owner wants an
alter - 105 acres with bam.
sheds and house Also has gas
well producmg and m1nerals
Call lor showmg

Ohio

110)8 15 22· 29 41c
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY tN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MIU. UMtTATION

NOTICE tS hereby gtven that
1n pursu ance of a Resotutton of
the Counc1 l of the V1l1age of
Syracuse Oh10 passed on the
2nd day of August. 1984 there
wtl l be submt tted to a vote of the
people of satd Syracuse Vtllage

al a General ELECTION to be
held tn the Vtllage of Syra~use
Ohto at .the regular places of
vot1ng th eretn on Tuesday, the
s1xth day of November 19 84
the questton of levymg 1n
e)(cess of the ten rndl hmttat10n,
tor the beneft t of Syracuse
Vtllage ' for the purpose of
Curren t Expenses
Satd ta&gt;&lt; be tng a renevval of a
ta)( at 2 3 m1lls and an tncrease
ot 1 7 mtiiS to cons!llute a tax of
4 0 mtlls to run for f1ve years at
a rate not exceedtng 4 0 mtlls
for each one dotlar of va luatton
wh 1ch amounts to SO 40 forty
cents for each one hundred
dollars of valuat iOn for ftve
years
The PoliS for sa1d Electton wtll

open

a1

6 30 o clock AM anp

rema1n open un11l 7 30 o'clock
PM of sa1d day
By o rder of the Board of
Electtons of Me1gs County,
Oh10
Evelyn C la r~
ChDtrmar
Jane M Frymyer

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vin~t

&amp;·Aluminum

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Type•
Worked in home area

20 years
"free

Estimates"

EUGENE LONG

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

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
CUNIC
IN M! DDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
3305 JACKSON AVE.

SMALL ANIMAL HOURS

Monday 3 p.m ·5p.m.
luodsay 6 30 p m.-8 p m.
Wednesday 3 p.m.·5 p m
Thursday 3 p.m·5 p.m.
Fnday I p.m ·2 p.m
Saturday 10 a m.·ll:30 a.m
LARGE ANIMAL AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT

10 18 I mo

1101 8 15 22 29 4tc

&amp; Privott Parties
Skates &amp; Acurno ies

Public Skating
WED., FRI. &amp; SAT.
7:30-10:po
Phone 985-9966
or 985-3929
10.15, IIIlO

Clark

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MIU. UMITATION
NOrtCE IS hereby gtven that
1n pursuance of a Resolut ton of
the Council of the V1llage of
Pomeroy Ohto passed on th e

16nd day ol July 1984 there
w111 be submmed to a vo te of 1he
people of sa1ct Pomeroy Vtlfage
at a General ELECTION to be
held 1n the Vtllage of Pomeroy
OhtO at the regular places of
vo ttng theretn on Tuesday the
s1xt h day of November 1984
the quesuon of levytng 1n
e)(cess of the ten mtllltm1tat10n
for the benef1t of Pomeroy
Village for the purpose of
current e)(penses
Sa1d tax betng an addtttonal
tax of 4 0 mtlls to run for five
years at a rate not e:~~ceedtng
4 0 mills lor each one dollar ot
valuatton whtch amounls to
SO 40 for each one hundred
dollars of valua110n for f1ve
years
Th e Pol ls for satd Electton w111

open at 6 30 o'clock AM and

rematn open until 7 30 o clock
PM of sa1d day
• By order of the Baird of
Elecllans of Me1gs County
Oh10

Jane M Frymyer

Evelyn Clark
Cha1rman

Otrector

Dated October I t 984

Jane M ~rymye r

1\01 B. t 5. 22 29 4tc

Director

Daled October 1 1984

li

.. 80

60

73·79 Ford Tr.
81-84 Escort·Cynx
Fenders .......... 59
Fenders .' . . .. ..
49
80·84 Ford Tr.
Omno-Honzon 2 dr. or
Fenders .
110
4 dr. Fenders.. .... .. ... 75
Ford Ranaer
Chevy &amp; Ford
lr. fenders .. .... ........ 98
PU Bumpers .......... 69 95
72-80 Oodae Tr.
79-82 Chevette Grills . ..... 38
Fenders ........... ... .... 115
Ford bnaer Grills .......... 75
Ford and Chevy Tail Gates

WHALEY'S

PARIS

446·3672

Old Oriental Ruga Wanted
Any size or condition. Call

toll lroe 1·800·553·802t

Cash paid for fancy tron or

hoovv iron beds. $160 end
up for certain Meigs Co .
atone jars. Old time cup-

board
2711

call 1· 304·862·

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Beds. 1ron,
wood. cupboards, chetrs,
chests, baskets, dishes ,
stone jars, antiques. gold
and atlver Wute · M . D .
Miller, Rt.2 , Pomeroy. Ohio
45769 or call 614·992 ·

7760

Buying da1ly gold , 11lver
coins. rings . jewelry. sterltng
ware, old coins, large cur rency Top prices Ed Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Jj;ve

Moddleport. Oh 614-992·
3476.

Wanted Old pianoa, Pay1ng

S20 00 end S40 00 each

Firth floor only. Write giving
directions. Wlt1an P1anos

bo• 188 Sardis . Ohio
43946. Phone 614-483·
1605.

FIRE DEPT.

CJ

...... lulltllng

iiC

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

z

Licensed Clinical Audiolocist
m
:z:

P PJ 8 1!i. 22 ,29 41c

-

z

12 Gauge shotguns
Only

46353 Scout C1mp Rd.
Chester, Ohio
Ph. 986·4289
II No Answer, Call fl5·4312
We Service All
Mak11 • Modell
Anllnna Installation
Houst Calls and Stlop
Sarvtct Availlbla
"Servtce lhll Towtt'3 Above
The R..t"

8/ 13 /tln

r

Ch·imney
Care

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Scally - Meigs

Coupty Commlssioner.Pa1d
for by Scally for Commis·
aionar, Myriam Ruthchild,
Ch . and Treaa .. Lincoln Hill.

Giveaway

8 weeka old. 4 male kittens

&amp; mother, good mouaer.

Call 448-4426

Puppies: elf black, 8 wka.

old, Colt 448· 7353.

,Two. seven year old apayed
female cate. lndoora or
outdoora. Moving must ..c -

•W11htr1 •DIIhwll......
•RengH
•Refrigerator•

•Dryert •FrMatll

PARTS 1nd SERVICE
4&gt;1k

M~GHEE
'R,eal~

SALES AND MARKETING ..

t21,000· f47,500 Cell lor

an appointment in
confidence - Doug Aber-

crombie 614 · 776· 7000.
Monday &amp; Tuesday 10 Am
to 7 PM. Equal Employment
Opportunity M·F.
Secretary &amp;. Office Manager
wanted for local company.
Experience needed in work·
ing with saleapeople. Salary
plua commission 10-4
Mon-Sat. Mutt be dependa ·
bla. Please aand reaume to

P.O.Bo• 729 Athens. Oh
46701 or Coli CoMoct 614·
592·8151

Occaaionel evening babylit ter needed near Alfred

4 yHr old mote Boogie, call
Ptaina) lor two
after 6 PM, 304·8B2·33B9 . (Tuppero
om ott boya. age• 4 and 2.
Free kitten• to good homes.

985-3561
All Makes

appointment· 614 -890·
0222 .

velopment if vou quolily 121
REOPENING SOON The or older bonda~lo with do·

refice. Celt 814·992·6719.

A!!l E1t1te General

Music Programmers. Mala
or Female FYII &amp; Part-time.
No e•perience , equipment
or records neceasory. For
parttes, hotels , radio Interviews · Week of Nov 6 For

pendable transportation)
you Will be guaran1eed en
income to start baud on
your current earnmga. Potential fir1t year earnings of

1,

Tired of questions instead of
anawera? Tired of excu1e1
instead of results? Vote Dr.

Yvonne

304·675-6544.

· M. l. "Bud"
Broker·Audion
Cheryl Lemley.
Mttp County Associ1te

Three kitten•. 2 Tiger and 1

Phone 742-3171

To Give away 3 klttena to

Block, coli 304·875·3864.

homo. 304 · 675·
L.~--~~~~~~~~~l~n~~~c:o~-~--~~--5-7_1_.------------~ood

Call 614-949·2641

Prefer our home. will pro Y1de tran1port1tlon if re·

qulrod. Colt 614·696·1396.
Meigs Inn hoate11 and wei·

trell needed. Apply In per·
son

from

9 OOam

to

5:00pm. No phone cotto.

Neat and
penonable.

clean

3 bedroom houae on Wehe
Terrace 1n Pomero'y .

992·3704.

$200.00 a month Call
992·5815 after 6·00 p.m:

WANTED . Sleeping room
wtth light k1tchen prtvlleges
or small trailer for semor

Galltpohs Ferry, 3 br brtck
large rooms. 4 car gar•g•
and storage bldg., arove, ref.
washer -dryer . M ..:e ~ an

citizen. Call 992·2639 .

offer 304-675·6851 .

17 Miscellaneous
Lose We1ght. feel greatt
Natural Herbal diet 8t NutritiOn plan D11tnbutors

Four bedrooms, kitchenfamily room with fireplace
finished basement, Poi'nl
Pleaunt Shown by ap;.

pomtmont, 304·675·3079

Needed Cal1367-7695

6 acres, barn, outbutldin,ga,
5 room house, bath. double

18 Wanted to Do

garage. $40.000.00. 304·
882·3271

Will cut and dehver f1re

wood Call 266·1528

Will baby sit in my home,

304·895·3021 .

underground

houH

1.200 sq ft. 3 acres len-d.
S36,000 00 304 · 7734_
74_ _ _ _ _ _ __
_5 _

Will haul limestone or gravel
1
Hayman the Hoeman Call

992 -2707

New

3 bedroom, large kitchen,
famtly room . lot li0x1 .19.
Farmers Home Ftnlnci"V·

304-675 -3030 or 675 ·
3431

Remodeled 6 room hOUH ,
New Haven area, coal-wood
furnaca Good ne•ghbor-

Financial

ood. $17 , 500 00

21

Business
Opportunity

3 bedroom ranch , full blaament, closed breezeway,
garage , rural watr, 1 . ~
acres Phone 304-8 9&amp; .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· 3B49
LISHING CO. recommondal -;:;=:::::=::=:::::====
that you do bu11neaa w1th I·
people you know. and NOT 32 Mobile Homes
to nnd money through the
for Sale

interview 606-474-7454.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 Ml WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35 PHONE 614-448·
7274
1972 12X60. 2 bdr .. ·hOI

22 Money to Loan

apphance1, washer, dryer ,
bay Window, total electr1C,
nice cond., S4800 Call

HOME LOANS FIXED 3B8·9736
RATES Below market rates
Fi~~:ed conventional FHA ·
1972 12X65 Vontogo. good
VA . Leader Mortgage
cond 2 bdr, 1 v, bath, new
Atheno, collect 614·592 · furnace . fireplace with
3061
blower. good carpet, stove,
1,

Wood Shed Cuatom wood·
working and cabineta. Will
be glad to 1ee my friend I and
customers. Watch for date
and locatton . H.R LQmond.

before January

old dogo. Call 446·1570

•complete Chimney Cleaning
*Certified Chimney Relining &amp;. Repair
*Experienced and Insured
Phone
Roy Bickle
Certified Chimney Sw•p
448-2062

Dllk Jockoy/ DJ

fam1lv room with wood
burner Smglacargarage, on
8 flat acres with 1tockea
pond Cttv water 1n Rac1ne.

Lady to live tn Room and
board and amaH salary Call

Mill Creak,

Henkle. Chatham Avo .. Kinoon . Catt 446·2166.

Pomeroy, Oh1o

1986

4 small puppies Ia two 1 yr.

446-2062

Downtown,

excellent opportunitY for an
aggrea1ive and ambitious
person, looking for a high
Immediate earnings and
raptd advancement tn the
area. Specialized division of
an eatabliahed international
organ1zat1on. offer• a poll ·
tion in sales leading to
management promotion 1n 1
matter of months Previous
management expenence
helpful. A complete tr1ining
program empha1ize 11lea.
marketing end personal de-

4

10·8·1 mo

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

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

paid

AND

SERVICE

Reduce safe &amp; fast with
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap
'water pifls' at Gillingtlam
Drug
.:,.

Racine Gun Club 1985 dues

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

APPLIANCE

Help Wanted

- - - - - - - - - - - ·lcB yra old. 3 bedrm, 2 botho.

9472.

Overweight people wanted
to lose weigh- and ahara
company profits. Call for

Sell AVON moka 45% Colt
446·3368.

are dua. $25.00. Must be

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

10/4/tfc

S&amp;W TV

11

614·446·0294.

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Dependable Hearing Aid Service

RACINE

houM.n

weekdays )

mail until you have invest•·
gated the offering .

AVON -Need 5 girls to sett

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

;,.a.

b11yor 849,900 Call 258·
6494taltor 7pm on

Young woman wants female
boarder to help wrth BJI: ·
pensea of nice 3bdr , 2 bath
house on Rt 36, V:l mtle
from Hospital Call 446·

toll ftoe 1-800-553·8021

OUILTS. OUILTS. OUtlTS
(mode before 1940) . Call
614-245-9448.

SWEEPER and sew1ng machine repair, par1s, and
auppltes.
Ptck up and
delivery, Dav11 Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

992-7201

firt,placea. Pt Pleaunt,

or rent. Coli 875·5104. •

Weat Virgen11 Army NatiOnal acreageavatlable). nice lawn
Guard currently ha• vacan· &amp; garden area with aome
c••• for high school JUntora frun 8 mt. So . Rt. 7,
and aeniora who want a part conviantly loCIIted nHr Clay
time job. Join the Guard, grade school, grocery 11:ore1
attend drill one weekend a &amp; gaa atation1. 300 yAb.
month for pay, and complete away from highway . ~200
requtred Active Duty Train- &amp;q . h of living apM:a$ 2
ing dunng summer montha. bath•. modern k•tchen, dinCall 304·875-3950 or 1· ing room, spacious living
800-642·3619
room with ftreplace, TVgame room. mud · rooffl,
Help Wanted· Part · ttme waahor dryer room, 4! 5
won., open territories, Ma- bdrs. full attic partially tfnson, Po1nt Pleaaant, Letart iahed, hardwoood floor1,
areos Call304·675·1429 attached garage. wood
burner Sc fuel od furn.ce.
county water Owner •'nx'·
12
Situations
tous to sellet bargain for the

Old Oriental ruga wanted.
Any 11ze or cond1t1on. Call

Coli oHor 5:00 p m B43 ·
5250

3 Announcements

GUN SHOOT

-..

Help Wanted

Wanted to 'buy- beef hides

REALTORS
Henry E Cleland. Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Oolite Turner 992-5692
Jo Holt 985·4466 ,.

Announcemenls

JIM CLIFFORD
PH.

Baldwin fun Machine, fully
equipped aquarium, k1ng
dark
head board

Wanted

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni ture, 446·3 169. 3rd. &amp;
Oliva St , Gall1polis, Oh

9·13-tln

'DOZER · BACKHOE
'RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL FIELD SERVICES
•DUMP TRUCk Sf AVICE
'CONCRETE WORK
·cUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER. GAS &amp;
OIL LINES

Factory Choke

Ch111rman

60

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Public Notice

Eve~n

110

Availollle for Birthdays

_, EVERY

NOTICE IS hereby gtvP.n that
1n pu r~un n ce of a Resolutton o1
the CounCil of the Vtllage of
Mtdflleport Ohto passed on
the 13th day of August 1984
1hemw1ll be submitted 10 a vo te
ot tho poople of sa1d M1dd!PpOrl
V1llnof' at a General ELECTION
to bl"! Mid tn the Vtllage of
Mtddleport Oh to at the regular
plar.e5 of vo11ng theretn on
Tu esd&lt;~v
the s1xt h day of
Novemhor 1984 the ques11on
of IP.vy tng tn excess of the ten
mtllltmttatton for the benef1t of
M•drlleport V1llage for the
purposn of current e)(pc rtses
Satd lax be1ng an add1110nal
til)( of 50 m111s. to run for 5
years ill &lt;1 rate not e)(ceedmg
50 m111s for each one dollar of
vaiLJCllton whtch amounts to
ftfty cents lor each one hundred
dol tors of valuation, for ftve
vears
The Polls for satd Elecuon w1ll
open at 6 30 o'clock AM and
rematn open unt1l 7 30 oclock
PM of satd day
By order of the Board ot
Electtons of Metgs County,
Oht o

62

CHESTER, OHIO

We pay cash for leta model
clean used cara .
Jim Mink Chev -Ofds Inc
Brll Gene Johnson

Sl:rv1c1:"

Da1ed Octobe1 1 1984

NOTICE OF
ElEcTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MIU.
UMtTATION

·Fenllt;s~:. ::.; .. ......... 170

POMEROY - Recently remodeled home with 3 bedrooms
dtnrng room. mce SIZe h~ng
room and part basement Land
contract - $500 00 down.
15% rnterest for 10 years.
$1 37 13 per month
$9.000 ()()

Wanted To Buy

EIll PI tl y1111' Ill

Otrector

.

SKATE-A-WAY

9

E . Main......

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

No Sunday Calls

' , 3 de:

3069

JOHN TEAFORD

Pomeroy,

mirrorM

c.biMts.

brand now, $200 00. 304· cabinet. ti9~t fi•turel. 11010
676·363B or 676·21 83
appliances. eurtarns. Mo.
304·882·3332.
• ••

Urge 2 story frame

Auction every Friday night at
the Hartford Commun~ty
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Conaigments of new &amp; uud
merchandiae always wel comed. Richard Reynolds,
Aucttoneer. Call 304 -276 -

Jr. tour. putting green,
hitttng area. Chriatm11
gifts. trophle1. ptaquea

V. C. YOUNG Ill

!II

Porch Sale. aofe • cfla!l',
vanity

NEED EXTRA CASH? The 3Y, acrH jwith additional

Golf Lean
Sat. &amp; Sun.

PAT HILL FORD

3 II

9 In Seare Craftsman table
uw with 2 extenaions,

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~

Call for free siding estimates, 949·2801 or
949-2860

992-2196

-

lost 992·3256.
in Fourth St vicinity 1
31 Homel for SeleCott
po!::!::::~~!aft~o=r~4~:~0~0J ___________
,.;.....
3 bdr houH, pool, AC,

::mva

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

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

&amp; Vicinity

Doberman.

lott Beagle about 6 montha
old on S"ide Hill Rd area
Antwers to Mindy Rew1rd.

Residential
&amp; Commercial

lHE

pan

Kltteno. voriety Coli 614·
992·7458.

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repatr
service and installation.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

SERVICE

Lost end Found

...... .,.. ................... ..
··.....P'i' Pieiil&amp;'i1f :-·:
uallipolis

Or

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

We'd hke to Introduce you to

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

CHESTER-985-3307

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

8

and

23

refrtg . washer. dryer, win dow, au cond , drapes, aome
furnrture , outs1d111 building,
lot 97 Oua1t Creek Cell

Professional
Services

446 -6592 or 245·9592

Piano Tuntng and Repair
Brunicardi Music Co • 446 0887. Twentieth year of
quality aervtee. lane Da·

niolo. 614 -742-2961

t 2X60 mobile home. 2 bdJ,
all new appl with waaher·
dryer, new carpet Out~tcle
deck &amp; storage garage. Must
sea to appreciate Call 448-

1805 alter 5

REMOVE UNWANTED

·

HAIR. No pain! No needle!
Approved depalator method Removes unwanted
hatr permanently
Call

85 Spnngbrook 14x70, 3
bedrooms for S12.960.00 .

HAVE YOUR LIFE INSU·
RANCE POLICIES RE ·
VIEWEO ANO UPDATED

used ,$6500 00 74 Co ·

86 Rockford 1 4x70. 3 bed·
rooms S12.950 00 89
todoy-614·992-6720 Top Stanfo•d 12•60. 2 11-&lt;1·
of the Stairs Beauty Salon, rooms, extra clean, uHd,
S6250 00 70 Titon 12•80
Pomeroy
. 2 bedrooms. e•tra c..an.

Some life insurance policies
allow the insurance com pantas to keep your aaving1.
upon death . We offer a w1de
variety of insurance. IRA's
and tax ahelterad annu1ty
products Contact Osby

Mort1n·6 14·992· 7022 .
PIANO TUNING •

meron 12J~:50 . 2 bedrooflla,
e•ua clean , used,
$5250 00 Freedefiveryend
set· up located 2 miles form
Ravenswood bridge June·
tion of I 77 1nd Rt.. 2 .

GENE'S MOBILE HOMES
Coli 304 273·5136

Ma1est1c

Mob•le

Hom•.

14I65, underpinning llld

RE ·

PAIRS - Tune up for the
holidays. Special di1count
for limited time 304· 675-

5500.

block, porch . Priced to sell .

Call 304-882-2683 or 304·
773·5096

1 980 Fa~rpoint all electric

14x70. 3 beclrooma. 2 lull
baths. St2.200 00 814·
446·8064 or 446 · 138~ .

14•65 Ma)elloc mobile

31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr home for ule by
owner, loceted on Rt. 160.

home . underpenning, porch,

btoci&lt;s all goeo. firm mult
oell 304· 773·6098 or 304·
BB2·2863 .
Middleport. Pomoroy, Ru·
tland ar01, 1 ecrelond, 1179

noor N.G.H S $38.000.
Cell 614·388·8711

Hillcrest

Reel Cute Homer Tha leaves
have fallen and 10 h11 the

60•12 D &amp; W Mobile
Homos. 304-875-4424.

pricol Middleport .. CatUI14·
992·6941 .

Middleport house for sate on

Grovel Hilt. 2 bedroom•.
large living room. bath.
central air. carpeted. newty
paiJ1tld lnaide. baMmenl
with 2 car goroga. ShoWft by

appointment ontv CeH 9925310 .

Mobile

Home,

3 extra nice UMd mobile

homos. 10 per cent down,
tow monthly paymentl, 10
yr

financing

D

•

HOMES 304·671·442 • .

W

1979 W1ndoor mobile holna
14•70. 3 bedroomo, · 2
blths. contret cooling. 304·
876·3030 or 871·3431 .

�.,

~2 Mobile

. 51

for Sale

home, Mason, WV with 2

acrea. low price. 304-676 ·
2928 or 304-676-2139 .

33

Farms for Sale

U-Build it or we Willi Beauti·
ful, spaciQus 5 BR home·
$6996 / up. See new model!
Call 614-886 -7311 .

200 acre farm to·r sale. Will
subdivid~. Rutland Township. call 614- 373-0456 .

35

tots

8t

Acreage

Lo~ for sale in Mercerville, 3

tra1ler hookups, electric, rural water, septic tank ,
SB,OOO .
661B .

Call

KIT 'N' CARL'YU ®b, L8rrr Wrltflt

Household Good•

74

Couritv Appliance . Inc .- Slate roofing -pieces for ule.
Good used oppllanco~ and ,_c~a:-1-13-:6_7_-_7_6_6_:3_._,__ _;~
TV 14!11, Open BAM to 6PM . , Mon thru Sat. 446-1699, Live flower hanging baaketa
627 3rd . Ave. Gallipolis, 304-675·41.41.
.
OH.
Place orders. ctii'JI81ary van
arn~ngementa and grave
Pickens used furniture . 304blankets . Four Seaso·ns Flor675-6483 or 676-1450.
i at, 304- 876.5033.
RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURI\!ITURE . Usad .stoves Birthday, Novolty, Allocca and ,efrigerators , Compare sion and Wedding cakes
decorated reasonJ~ble.
our prices, save today.
Phone 304· 876-6627.
Phona 304-773- 5430.

'73 two bedroom mobile

Steamer will clean
free when you get
Qf carpet
. 304-676-2296.

Alumn truck topper, sacrifice $80.00. Conn trom ·
bono $160 .00. 304-B82 3376 .

Mattress and box springS
$40.00. · Refrigerator
$2 00 .00 . Green recliner
$16.00 . Call 304- 676 ,4174.

'64 Chevy · pickup, good
cond. 16 ft grain bod dump.
One '72 International school
bvs. goodcond. One1B,600
lb truck, 2 speed axle. '83
Chevy Impala for' parts. Mise
household items. 304-6767716. ·

614 - 266 -

Motorcvcles

26~x110 partial basement
septic .tank level $3,000.
Caii614-643-016B .

Trailer lot with natural gas,
Rd . near Chester. $100 .00
including gas. Call
9B5-3979 .

614-

Middleport. Pomero.y . .Ru tlandarea.l acre land, 1979
Hillcrest Mobile Home.
50x12, D &amp; W Mobile
Homos, 304-676-4424.

Rentals
41

5 rm . r-"~~ 2bdr. home, t;tx.
location.' Dep . required . Call
446-1370 after 5pm.
•

Mobile Home for rent, 2 bdr,
furn.. $200 mo ., water
includec;l Ref . &amp; Dep ..
aduk&amp;. Call 446-3100 or
446-9346 .
·. ~
Furnished, on private lot,
near Centenary, adults only,
no inside pets, available
Nov. 2. Call 446-3918 .

One 2 bdr furnished &amp; One 3
bdr unfurnished. with stove
5 rm, 2bdr home, ex . cond, . &amp;. refrig . on Rt . 7. Call
stove. refrig. included . Dep- 245·5818
osit required . Call446· 1 370
2 bdr mobile home. Ref. &amp;
after 5pm.
Dep. required . Call 256.
2 bdr house wi.th full base- 1922 .
ment, 42 Chilicothe ·
Rd .. $210 mo .. $75 dop. 2 bedroom mobile home for
Call 446-1340 or 446- rent in Racine . Call 614367-7148 .
3870 .

2 bdr. house. basement,
garage. Chillicothe Rd . Call
246 -9170 .
3bdrhomeon141-$275 . 4
bdr home in Tnra -$400. 3
bdr home in Addison-$250 .
5 bdr home in town -$32 5 . 4
bdr home if'! town-$350. 3
bdr home in Spring Valley$450.
3 bdr home in
country- $250. 4 bdr home
in Charlais Hills- $500.
~ References and security
deposit 'required. Wiseman
Real Estate AgenCy. 4463643 .
Nice modern 2 bdr house in
Centenary community, full
basement, gas heat, CA.
garage. lg . yard, Oep . Req.
Must have references . Call
446-4159 .
Modern 3 bdr. house on
588, fireplace &amp; family rm .,
dishwasher, range in kitchen, 2 baths . Call 3677454 after 5 .
Modern 4 bdr house in Tara.
. range, refrig ., dishwasher in
kitchen·. firplace i.n family
room. 2 ba t hs. Call 3677454 after 5 .

4 bedroom colonial brick
house for rent or sale in
Pomeroy . Call1-373-0466 .
Newly remodeled house, 2
bedroom , 1 full bath, largo
furnished kitchen. located in
Middleport . Send resume to:
Daily Sentinel, P.O .Box
729-V . Pomeroy . Ohio
45769 .
Newly remodeled house. 2
bdr, 1 full bath. lg. turn .
kitchen. located in Middleport. Send resume to Daily
Sentinel, P.O . Box 729-V,
Pomeroy, Oh 46769 .
Six rooms and bath, to
responsible parties.adults
preferred. Located in Portland . for more information
call 304-273-2273.
4 ~oom house in country for
elderly only . 304 - 5762 133.
House for rent. 4 bedrooms,
3 bedrooms. 2 bedrooms.
304 -675 - 5104 or 675 6386 .
Five room brick home. close
to -Point Pleasant, heat ind
air. city water. 14 acres.
pond , small barn, 1 year
lease $475 .00 month,.304675-6276 .

3 bedroom , basement, nice
yard. Close to school and
markets. Will accept Hud.
304 -675- 3030 or 676 3431 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr .. AC. gas heat, wall to
wall carpet In Gallipolis . Call
after 6PM, 446-1409.
2bdr mobile home with
natural gas heat. Adults
only, no pets. Call 3877438 .
Fully furnished, 2 bdr. air
cond.. adultl only. Call
446-4110 .

Furnished room, $125 . Utilities. rartge. ref. Share bath.
Men only. 919 Sec ., Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 8 p.m .

46

Space for Rent

Knauff Firewood Split - 95%
hardwoods. SeasOne~ Or
green . You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614256-6245 .
Sand, Gravel .
Deli~ered ~n Mason, Meigs,
Galha or p1ck up at Richards
11o Son. Call446-7786 .

Limestone,

Plastic cisterns state &amp;pprov.~d. plastjc septic tanks.
P.lastlc culvert, metal culverts, RON EVANS ENTER PRISES. Jac~son. Oh 614286-5930 .

Furnished 2. bdrs, T.V cable, Trailer lot for rent . Call
clean, Quiet, beautiful river . 367-7438 .
view in Kanauga. Fosters
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Firewood cut up slabs. s 15
Trailer Park, 446-1602.
Park, Route 33 . North of PU load. larger loads delivered. Call fOr. prices, 614For rent: 1 bdr. trailer on Rt. Pomeroy. Large lots. Call 245-5804.
614-992-7479.
141 . Call379 -2469.

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. 2 beth, double stall
garage. woodburner, 218
area. $35.0 mo. Dep. &amp;. Ref.
required . Rent with option
to buy. Call 446-7044 or
446 -8080 after 5pm .

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 614-446-0756 .

Misc. Merchandise

44

2nd. floOr office space for
rent . Court St ., Pomeroy.
Call 614-373-0456 .

Merchandise
51

For sale fill dirt, and top soil.
Call Call614-266-1427.
Warm glow wood burning
stove. radiant heat. Takes
logs up to 22"'. Call 4463426.
,,
Nice box springs &amp; mattress.
couch_&amp; chair, dinette set,
metal wardrobe. Call 446·
3224 .

Household Goods I -:F:-o_re_w_o_o_d___1_0_0_%_H_ar_d_w_o_o_d
split , delivered. stacked
$36 . Pickup after 5pm. Cell
446-7524.
.
1--:::-- -- -- - Firewood for sale: 100%
Hardwood , seasoned or
green, split &amp; delivered.
Face cord. Call 379 -2552 .

Apartment
for Rent

Wanted to buy, Cabbage
Patch Preemie Doll. Phone
304-675-6066.
Grapevine and Della
Wreaths: One new
Ceramic Christmas
304 -676- 5416 or
1316.

55

Robia
20 in
Tree.
676-

Building Supplies

Building Materials
Bl?ck. bri~k. sewer pipes.
Windows , lintels, etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Call 614-245-6121.

2lx161nsulatod steel buildong, must sell. CaH614-7422226.
Now

open

for

busi~ess

Mo~ntain State Block, · At:

33. New Haven. Complete
SWAIN '
ma.~onry supplies. 4'', 8",
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
12 block . Delivery service.
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
Phone day 304-BB2-2222
&amp; used wood -c·oal stoves. 6
evening 8B2-3239 .
'
JACKSON ESTATES pc wood LA suite $399
APARTMENTS !Equal bunk beds $199: antro~
Housing Opportunity) has recliners $99. used bedroom
56
Pets for Sale
one ~nd two bedrooms, rent su ites, ranges, wringer Teen girls coats-sweaters
a riety of clothing, thr~
startmg at $163 for one washers. &amp; shoes. Call614- v_
446-3159.
cushion maple couch. Call
be(:lroom and S198 per
HILLCREST KENNELS
446-2996.
m~nth for two bedroom,
~oar.ding all breeds. Heated
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring Sofa, chair, rocker, otto- Oueen-siztt Meditteranean mdoor - outdoar facilities .
Valley Plaza. pool and TV men. 3 tables. (extra heavy), styl~ bdr suite 8175, 'boby AKC Doberman puppies:
ant. Call 446-2745 or leave $685 . Sofa, chair and lovtt- sw1ng $5.00 , blender Stud Service. Call614-446seat. $~75 . Sofas 8nd chairS S5.00, used clothing $2.00 1795.
1 -:m-:e~s-:s-ag:_•_·----------­ priced from -$286 . to $895 . box. Call 446-0065 .
1--:-:--::--- - -- - 513ThirdAve. 1 bdr., water T~blos, $50 and up to $125 . l pr. boys new leather shoes Judy Taylor Groon:ting. Call
furnished. adults only. $135 Htde·a-beds, $390 . and up ~kates , size · 4, will ' sell 61:4- 367-72~0.
mo ., dep . reqUired. Call to S550 .. sofa bods $145
Recliners, $285 . to $375.: ~t::::.P· Call 446 -341 0 any Briarpatch Kennels Profes446-4222- between 9 &amp; 5.
sional All-breed grooming.
Lamps from , $28. to $126.
Indoor-outdoor boarding faCompletely furnished all pc. dinettes from $109 .. to
elect . 458 Second Ave.,
435 . 7 pc . . $1B9 and up. M_oving sale-furniture. ap- cilities. Engliah Cocker SpaOne 2BR Apt. S220 mo., Wood table with six ch8irs pliances, household items, niel puppies. Call 614-3B8.
adults only. security deposit, $2B5 to $,7 45 . Desk $110 tools, etc. All price d ~ II 9790.
References. Call 446-2236 up to S225. Hutches, $650. Now I Call 367-0201. """~
Dragonwynd Cattery Kenor 446-2581 .
Bunk bed complete with
nel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
mattresses, $276. and up to Warm Morning gas stove
Downstairs. 2 rooms &amp; $395. Baby beds. $110. 1 6 " snow tires, metal steps' and Siamese kittens. New
1 2' bench, 5X4 Storag9 litter AKC Ch.o w pUppies.
ba1h. furnished, clean, no Mattresses or box springs
pets. adults only. Dep &amp; Ref . full or twin, $58., firm . $68: building . Call 614- 256 - Call614-448-3844. after 7.
1529 .
required. Call446-1519.
and $78 . Queen sets. $195 .
ltalia.n Provincial Sable
4 dr. chests, $42 . 5 dr. - - - - - - --- lcOak furniture, tables.chairs, Cherry Wurlitzer piano, like
Unfurnished 2bdr.,in Crown chests. $54. Bed frames
City. Call 256-6520 .
S20 .and $25 .. 10 gun . Gu~ cupboards, pie 'safe, tele - now. $1600 firm . Call446cabinets, $350. Gas or phones, desk. also antiques 4426 after 4pm .
Furnished efficiency. 7% electric ranges $375. Baby and glassware. Open SunNei!. Gallipolis $150., utili- mattresses, $26 8l $35, bed days. Conkel's Tuppers- Halloween. Spook-tackular
, Spec!al . Oct . 30 only, Fane~
plains, At. 7 .
ties pd .. Call446-4416 after frames $20. $25, &amp; $30,
Guppios,$1 .00: Black MolBpm .
kmg frame $50. Good selec ~
6 Y2 foot of 6 inch flue liner lies . 2 for 81.00;
tion of bedroom suites
Furnished efficiency apt .. rockers, metal cabinets : with brackets and Swords,$ . 75; Goura lR, BR, combination kit - headboards $38 &amp; up to flango,$46.00. Cell 614- mis,$1 .00 ; Black Moons. 2
985-3979.
for $1'.00; Silver. Molchen &amp; bath. Private, sec. $65 .
lies,$1.25; Hamsters,$.89;
dap. &amp; ref. Call446-4607 or
Used Furniture -- head Myers water pump one Free flow filters, $8.95;
4 4 6 26 2
:-_ _·_ _0__·_ _ _ _ __
boards. and 2 bedroom third H.P.. plus tank. Cell Gravel. 6 lbs .. $1 .-89: All
992-6137.
tanks 10 percent off and
Gallipolis: 2 bdr, lg.· clean suites. 3 miles out Bulaville
K'
. much more. ·Near Bradford
rooms, central heat - air, Rd . Open 9am to 5pm, Mon.
,_ng wood burning stove Tree Farm. Call 992· 6· 644.
water -trash pd ., $236 plus thru Sat.·
With blower. Good condi614-446-0322
dep. Cal1446 -01 .1 6.
tion. Call 614-742 -3186.
Doberman · Pitbull, mixed
Modern 1 bdr. downtown. GOOD USED APPLIANCES Firewood, $20 .00 pick up pups for sale. $10 .00 each.
complete kitchen , air . Washers. dryers, refrigeracarpet, Dep. required . Call · to_rs. ranges. Skaggs Ap- load , $ 3 0. 0 0 doli vered . !-;:C:al::l_9_9--:2-:-3_2_6_6:-.:--:--~­
446-4383 days or 446- pha_
nces, Upper River Rd. ~~:2675 - 2991 or 675 - AKC rogioterod Pit Bull pups
for solo, call614-949-3076.
0139.ove .
beSide Stone Crest- Motel
614-446-7398.
.
Firewood, $20.00 load
Rat Terrier Puppies, 304New efficiency apt., with
$30.00 delivered anytim~ 675-1606.
garage, $210 mo .. Dep . &amp;
lease. Northup area . Call Close-Out Sale Necchi sew- during day. Call after 6
• Beautiful Sable and White
ing machines 1984's. Dial· 304-458-1728.
446-7209 after 5pm .
e-metics, regularly $399.96
Collie, shota, 2 grown fa~
Nicely furnished mod&amp;rn you.r cost 679 .96 While they Bal~win fun Machine, fully males for breeding or pets.
mobile home in city. , 1 or 2 last. Call collect Ohio resi· e~u1pped aquarium , king Call 304-676-3638.
adults only. Call 446-0338 . dents only 614-654-4000 SIZe dark pine head · board .
Mon. -Sat. between 10AM&amp; 304-675-6999 after 4 :00.
Riverside Apts. Middleport. 5PM .
57
· Musical
Special rates for Senior Dark oak dini.ng table 8. 8 SURPLUS DENIM
JACKETS , HEAVY LINED
Instruments
CitiZens. $130 . Equal Housing Opportunities . 614 - chairs . Ex . cortd., $400firm . $21.00, ormy f ield jackets,
Call after 5pm : 446-20B6 . camouflaged regular issue,
992-7721.
.
gov~rnmant clothing, boots.
CONN trumpet like new
Apt. for rent in Syracuse. Gas Dryer 895, elec. dryer I don om 14 oz pants $10.00).
$1 60. Call after 5: 30 446$95, Port. dryer S75. Kon- SAM SOMERVIllE'S, Eaat, 3199
.
•
Call992-7689 .
mora washer 666 , GE Ravenswood. Open·Fri. Sat,
washer
896
,
9
other
Sun,
1:00-7:00
PM
.
Call
in
One and two bedroom fur- w_ashars · to choose from . Orders before
O:OO AM Music P A cabinets. Peavey
nished apartments. callS 1 4 - Soda by side rofrig. Harvest 304-675-3334 . 1
horns. J B L Bottom . Cell
992 - 5434 or 614' 992 Gold s 275, Side by side
6914 and 304-882-2666.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===
·
refrig . Coppertone $260.
gas range 30" S95 Maytog
APARTPiENTS, mobile
sq. tub wringer wa~her •ss.
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant Skaggs Appliances Upper
and Gallipolis . 614-446- River Rd. Gallipolis, 446B221 .
7398 .

~::::~:::::;;::;::;::;:::.,.~9~$2~-~6~1~3~7~.

i bedroom unfurnished. 1- : - - - - - - - - - Gallipolis Ferry; $t76 .00 Trade Canter Kanauga
per month. all utilltllts paid Ohio. Furniture outlet, WhY
except electric. 304-875- I ::P-::ay-:-:M_o_r_e_l--~--1371 .
Whirlpool stackable washer
8a dryer with stand, washer
In Middlepon 2 bedroom ex. cond. . dryer needs refurnished apt, also 2 room. pair. $150. Call448-1324.
furnished apt. No children.
1 -304-882-2686.
30 inch Sunray electric
double oven,coppertonelike
Apt for rent, 2 bedroom. 1 now $260.00 . Hoover
bedroom. 304-876-6104 or
$100.00 . ·Auto875-5386 . .
w ..her and dryer
•166.00. 30 Inch goa range
1 bedroom apartment in $60.00. 241nch and 401nch
Henderson, 304-876- 1972 gas range $B6.00 each .
after 5 p.m.
Norge electric dryer
$125 .00. Self defrosting
3 room unfurnished apt, relrlgerotor
U6 .00. 18
utllit1.8s paid, will accept cubic feet freezer ·choattypa
Hud. 304-875- 3030 or •1oo.oo. call 814-742875-3431.
2362 .

~

EVEN INO
6 :00

Auto Parts
8t Accessories

6:30

CAPTAIN EASY
LOOK OIJT, I!IIGFOOT,
COM!;~ CAP.TIVITY'

Wanted to buy, top to fit '79
CJ6 Jeep, 304 -468-1834.

79

1976 Cutloas Supreme. now
tires. good . cond .• $1600
Trombone, Bundy, used two oleo 1971 Cemaro, 8 c_yl ..
yeora, call 304-675-4504 auto.• runs good t&amp;96. Call
after 6:00.
446-8113 or 448-820(

· 59

For Sale or Trade

19.82 Monte Carlo, PS, PB,
AC, tilt. T-top, ex. cond ..
Call 446-7218.

1980 Pinto, 4 speed .
81800.00. Cell 992-3917
,.;! GA Browning outofield
after 6:00p.m .
grade barrell. S.rnett huntIng bolts, left handed receive
1.980 Buick part Avenue,
hunting-target bow. New excellent condition .
PSE Compound bow with
Loadod,s7,050. Call 614hunting sight. 2 fireplace 992- 6271 . .
screens. Coil 246-6093 .

hr111 SupJJiies
&amp; L i ve&gt;lock
61

Farm Equipment'

Motors Homes
8t Campars

1978 Chevy big 10 with
PB.PS and air conditi ·
n . V .ery ·goo'd condi tlon,t3,000. Cell614-992-8271 . .
1972 Nova. 8 cylinder,automatlc. $1250.00. Call 614992- 6266.

=---------

81

7:00

.-'·...

Home
Improvements
7 :30

8.

Marcum Roofing
Spouting. Now installing rubber
roofs . 30 yean experience.
specializing in built up roof. ·..
Call 614-3BB-9867.
·
·•
PAINTING- Interior and exterior. plumbing, roofing.
some remodeling. 20 yra . ·•
oxp. Caii614-38B -9662 .
H &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl Siding, roofing, · room
addition, atorm· windowa,
stone: . Call 614-367-0409
or 614-367-7244.

8:00

ANNIE

5ANDY Htl5
l-ICENSE,

~L

IT'5 AeotJT

BUT YOU'I7 'BE TTER
iT Rl6T~ Mll6. I.ENCE
AWFUl LY P~ECi OUS

THANK6 FOfl
. MAG. LENCE

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua ~
rantee. Local references
furnished. Free estimates.
Call collect 1 -614-2370488, 9 a.m . to 6 p .m .
R o g e r s B. as em en t
Waterproofing.

~~~-~~~~

TINE

.

DETECTIVE

A80UT THAT

UP

AFCiHAH OF

2

1----------

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump-·'
removal. C·all 304- 676 - .:~

13;11.

;·

RINGLES'S SERVICE, expenenced carpenter; electrician, rriason , painter, roof·
ing (including hot tar
application) 304- 676-20B8
or 676-7368.

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

Rotary or cable tQol drilling.
Most wells.completed same
day. Pump sales and ·services. 304-896-3802 .

-·

B &amp; D HOME IMPROVEMENTS, vinyl siding, alumn
soffit, window, gable, face
board caps and guttering. ·
also,painting, roofing. room
additon, no job to small or

GASOLINE ALLEY

Tran sporla tllln

19B1 Com.o ro Z-28, 24,000
actual miles. Must sell! No
reasonable offer refused.
Call 446-4053.

1976 International Loadstar
1600-2 ton truck . Flat metal
bed, 12 ft. Excellent condi lion • 2600 or will trode for
good car. Call 614-3792260 otter 7 PM .
1-::---.-----'----1972 Dodge truck, needs
repair. 1974 Ford LTD Stalion Wagon, good cond ..
new battery. 5 new tires,
body good, 19B1 Plymouth
Champ, 4apd. Call 2466 144
'--:-_ ,.._ · - - - - - - - , - - ,- ·
19B1 Ford Courier, 4 spd.,
om -1m-tope, $3199, 1980
Chevy Luv, auto .. om-fm
$3199. John'• Auto Solos,Bulaville Rd . Gallipolis. Oh
448-4782.

1978 Dotsun 1110 Wagon,
good cand .. cleen. e1 BOO.
Coll446 7209 8 ft 6
•
er pm.

1976 Ford pickup, 302,
'660; 1978 4 wheei Jeep
V-B, ohort wheel ' base,
$2600.00. 304-876-2266 .

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid lor 'BO
model and newer uaed cara.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eastern Ava .. Gollipolia. Call
614-446_2282.
1979 Camero Berlinetto
exc. cond .• loaded, for sale
by owner. Call446-7814.
77 Pontioc Grand ·Prlx 301 '
good condition. Coli after
6PM, 446-0137. ·

1973

Ford Gran Torino
ltltiOn wagon, 361 r runs
good. $600. Call448-8071 .
19B2 Chovotte
41pd . , 8 '3199.
Chevotto, auto., *3199
1979 Plymouth Volore:
IUtO., $2399, 1978 Plymouth Valera, auto
*1999. John's Auto Sa~·
Buloville Rd.. Gallipolis'
Ohio 446-4782.
'

uai

Notice of Public Sole The
following tleaorlbad · item
will bo oflerad lor public Hll
to tho hlgheet blddlr an tho
3rd day of Novembot,19B4,
II 11 :00AM. 1876 Chevrolat Vago 2 dr. Ser No .
1V7788U1628155. Solo of
tho aocurlty llatad obovo will
bo held It the Commercl•l•
Sovlngo Bonll, Silver Bridge
Plaza, Oolllpolla. Ohio .
Torma of Hie cam. Soller
reeerv6a the.rlghtto bod ond
tho right to rlject ony ond Ill
bids. Prior to the tlato of eelo.
arrange11111nta m.y be meH
to lnapocn this morcllondlee
by coiling 441·0184 bto·
tween ihe houra of 8:00AM
and4 :0~ PM.

73

Vans

8t 4 W.O.

==

am leadinq

l;lo~r;g::e.:3::0:;4::-5::7::6::·::2::6::4::4::.

one!

Hunter's Spacial. '715 OMC
Jimmy Bluer ih4, Auto,
PS, PB, AC. olmaat new
tirea, runa good . Wll take
ye&gt;u anywhere. •eso.oo.
Phone 304-8715·435? . .

WINNIE

SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating, 211 Sixth St.,
Point Pleuant. W. Va. 304676-5420. Licansed and
insured .

83

"

Excavating

Good-1

Exclvating. base-

men~•· footers, driveways, ·

aept1c tanks, landscaping.
Call anytime 614-446 - '
4537 , James L. Davison, Jr. :
owner.

84

Electrical
Refrigeration

SNAKE!!

----------------~-- ·•
SEW,NG Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric · Shop.
Pomeroy. 614-992-2284.

.

:
~
\
,

.

86

General' Hailling

brown,
8,600 miles. ••.ooo. Cell
441-2240.

'

Yomahe YZ UIIJ motorcyalo, oxo oond. f1 .000. Conn
trum..- oncl OIM e85. Girls
10-apeod
Coli 3177197.

en.

1 -:::=--~-'------

87

U pholsterv

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
;
1163 Sec. Ave.. GoiUPGiia. 1
814• 446-7,~3 or 814-4481833 .
,.

'!

TH'RABBITS
OOTOFHER
GARDEN
PATCH

min.)

i

Waugh's Water Santlce. Call ,
268-1240, If no answer. •
266-1130 .

SHORE KEEPS

Cisco Kid
@ Monday Night M atchUp Seattle Seahawks vs .
San Diego Chargers.
CID MOVIE:.'Hauseboaf
(J) Cll (ill Call to Glory
liJ (I) ® Scarecrow and
Mrs. King Amanda and Lee
must figure out . a way to
break up an illegal deal in volving millions . of dollars.
(60 min.)
il) ill) Wonderworks
fJl MOVIE: 'The Wind and
tho Lion'
B:30 C!l NFL's Superstars The
Men Who Played the
Game.
9:00 0
{]) C1l
MOVIE:
'Shattered Vows'
CI) 700 Club
C!J SCCA Supar Yeas from
laguna Saca. CA
(J) II) (Hi NFL Football:
' Saanla at San Diego
liJ (I)@ Kate &amp; Allie Kate
inherits a stra_n ge lucky
charm from an eccentric ·
aunt and her luck b egins to
Ch8_!!9e.
(f) (lj) Heritage ·~ivi lization
and the Jews: Roads from
the Ghetto.' The confrontation between European
Jewish society and modernity, covering the period
of the
Industrial
and
French Revolutions, is discussed. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
9:30 Cl)
Nat
Necessarily
Television The NNTN team
takes a satirical look at televiSion 's new fall TV season. including the stars,
the shows and the networks.
llJ (J) liDl Newhart When
Dick's first-ever hunting
trip is taped for television.
his stage-struck companio.ns rush to get on camera .
10:00 (}) MOVIE: 'Daniel'
Cil SCTV: Second Coming
The laugh s contmue with
specially-edited
encores
featuring the best sketches
of the satirical series.
C!J Polo: U.S. Open
Championship from San
Antonio. TX
1iJ il) ® Cagney and ·
Lacey Cagney and Lacey
are assigned to temporary
duty as part of a special
n~rcotics task force. (60
min.)
® To Be Announced
ill) Nowswatch
f)) Independent News
10:16 (5) MOVIE: 'Tho Owl and
tha Pussycat'
10:30 Cil MOVIE : 'Love and
Death'
CIJ Shirley &amp; Pat Boone
Ill) The Peterson Project
·one City in the Reagan
Era.' Tho impact of,t~e Reagan administration's
economic policies are eKamined as they affect four
New Jersey families . (60
min .)
fJl Soap
1 1 :00 D {]) CD D (I) liDl News
Cil Bill Cosby Show
® Two Rannles
.
fJl Benn.Y_ Hill Show
11:30 D (}) (lJ Tonight Show
Host Joan Rivers· guests
are Twiggy, Drew Barry·
more and Joe Piscopo. (60

Cil Beat of Graucho
C!J ~ortsContor
D CIJ Simon • Simon Rick

!

74

l~teratote

IT TO
MAW--THAT"I&lt;EEP OUT"
· SIGN
MADE "·-

D . A. Boston Excavating .
Dozer and Dump Truck '
Services. Call 814-667662B or 614-378-82BB .

James Boy1 Water Service . :
Also poola .llllod. Call 614- '
256-1141 or 814-446-~
1176 or 814-446-7911 .

1983

I GOT TO HAND

J .A .R .Constructlon Co.Ru- r
tland , Oh,614-742 -2903; '
Basements, Footers, Con- ·
crate work, Backhoe's. 1
Dozer &amp; Oitcher. Dump •
trucks. &amp; water-gas-sewerelectrical linea.

Must eell t879 Ford Bronco,
4 WD. boll offer In next 7
cloY.. 304-11711-7362 leovo
measqe.
Motorcycle•

BARNf:Y

Dozer Work by Ted Hanna.
Ditches. ponds, roads, land .
clearing. etc. Call Motor Car ·
Brokers, 446-6692.

8t
1979 CJ7 Jeep, 8 cylinder.
4 wheal drive, 268 engine.
A -1 condition. •4ooo.oo.
Call992-3449.

It cost
thousands
of dollars

poll shows

Riding horses, mare and truck. 304-468-1926 or
filly, plus seddlea. Child 468-1793.
sale. very gentle. call 304-1------- - - - - 82
PI
876-4504 after.6 :00.
'76 Oldo Storfire, 83,000
umbing
miles. V6. 4 opeed .
8t Heating
$500 .00. Phone 304-676- 1-~------2799.
64 Hay 8t Grain
CARTER'S PLUMBING
1976 Camero 360 engine,
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
run• good, 8800.00. 304Largo round bolas of hay. B96-3929.
Gallipolis, Ohio
$20 each. Call 4~ '·1 062
Phone 614-446-38B8 or
after 5pm.
'79 Muotang, block, 88,000 614-446-4477
milea, g~od cond,
round b. 83,600.00. Call otter 6 :00, JIM'S PLUMBING llo HEAT·
Call 388 - 304-882-291 o.
lNG . Rt . 1, Box 356, Gallipolis. Call614-367-0678.

1977 Ford 150 4 spd, 4
wheel drive pickup. low
mileage. Call 614-3677640 .

{]) (J) (I) • (J) (JJ Ill
crJ NIWI .
Cil Hot Potato
(]J Luay Shaw
Cil Dr. Who
I]]) 3-2-1. COntact
Gl Dlffrent Strokes
• {]) (I) NBC Nowa
Cil Rifleman
C!J Mazda Sportalook
(]J Carol B·u rnen
(J) Ill (ill ABC Nowo
II (I) ilD cils Newo
Cil Nightly Buoineas
RepOrt
I]]) COioraoundo
fJl One Day at e Time
8 {]) PM Magazine
{]) Go-Oo'a et the Greek
Cil Her4! Como the Brides
C!J SportaCenter
·
(]J Domer Pyle
(I) Ill (ill Entortainment
Tonight
CD Wheel of Fortune
liJ (I) Wheel of Fortune
il) (j]) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
liDl Newa
fJl Jefferson&amp;
IJ {]) Tic Tac Dough
{]) Fraggle Rack
C!J NFL's Graatest Moments Highlights of the
1983 AFC Playoff - Miami
Dolphins vs. Seanle Seahawks.
(5) Anc!l_ Griffith
(I) Ill IJ.J Family Feud
(I) Jeopardy
® Wheal of Forturie
Cll (ill New Name That
Tuna
fJl WKRP in Cincinnati
0 Cil CLl TV's Bloopers
and Practical Jokes Tonight's practical joke victims are Jason Batemari .
and Deacon Jones . (SO
min.}
·
(1) MOVIE: ' Yor: -The
Hunter From tho Futuro'
{]) MOVIE: 'Louisiana' Part

•

Cil

· -~-

1975 Chevy Monzo. 4 cyIinder, good condition, 304.650 lb. Hereford bull, 876-6809.
smeller bulla, 1.aow 200 lbs.
for sale. Cell allOt' dark 1 - - - . - - - - - - - - 614-367-0181.
' 1976 Chevrolet Caprice,
PS. PB. 360, ~gino auto,
10 Holstein Heifers, brad to sharp, $1,175.00. Phone
Holotaln bull, Duo: Starting 304-876-7192.
December. Call 38B-8524.
1976 AMC Gremlin, PS, 6
Mixad hay, appro• 60 bales cvl. standard 8976.00.30481.26 each. Phone 304- '-:-:6::7:-6-·7_1_9_2_._ _ _ _ __
676-2728 .
I
'77 Monza; 4 new radials.
Pln~o ~ony .mare, axe with needa minor ~ody work,
Children. Western saddle 81. •. 500.00 . 304-8B2bridle, pad. All for $86 .oo: 2528.
304-882-2762.
1-------~1984 Chevy Nova. 2 door,
hard top, auto. rebuilt 250
Pigo for sale, 304-675- sb: cy~. good shape.
4139 . .
t1,600.00 or trade lor

THAT

PRIVATE

1976-135- Massie Fargu-1-=aondleeelfarmtractor,extra 1 9 73 Oldlmobile Cutlass.
good shape, now ~ilk. buah $200 .00. 1975 Ford Granhog, &amp; plow.-P!i&amp;d $6, 250 _ oda. Call614-986-3839.
Cell 246-91 q_s:
'77 Malitiu Claasic Station Plas,ering &amp;. Plaster repair.
.
Allis Chalmare 190 XT farm Wagon • ex c con d. free estimate&amp;. Call 6142 56 1
tractorwithceb*6.500.00. $1 8!50 . 00. 304-675 - I-:-:-:::
-'1::·_B::2_._ _ _
Exc cond. Siders E'q ulp- I-::::----'------- - ' RON'S Television Service.
ment, call 304-676-7421.. •711 Dodge 4 wheel drive Specializing in Zenilh and
three quarters ton, '81 Toy· Motorola. Quaiar . and
oto Storlito. 304-675- house calls. Call 304-676607.8 .
2398 or 614-446 · 2464.
63
Livestock

l-::

.

10/29/84

Boats and
· Motors for Sale

Build 'your own 3 or 4 bdr
·hofTio, 86996 kit delv .. .Our
new model is open, see it
today. Caii1-8B6·7311.
Rough Cut Lumber. oak,
poplar, and pine. 2x4's
2x8's, 1 x6's, 1 xB's. As:
sorted lengths. Call Hogg
and Zuspan Materials
Co. , lnc . 773 - 6564
daytime .
'

Television
Viewing

76

· 76

!

PEANUT~
•

I
I

TI-lE BOOK OF JONAH
IS MORE Tl-IAN A STORV
ABOUT A BIG F!Sl-1 ... . .

The Daily

Ohio

WHY DID BUG!.Y
GO lWCMV WHEN'
W8 SHO'NEO UPt

1977 Suzuki AM BO: runs •
good.- UOO.OO. 304-676-. •
11072.

Ser vice s
54

Monday, OctOber 29. 1984

Monday, Octpber 29. 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Sentinel

and A.J . end u~ taking on
the IRS when they go to
work for their arch r ival.
Myron Fowlor. (R).(60 min.)
il) Lat&lt;Onight America
ilD Barney Miller
till Twilight Zone
12:00,{]) MOVIE: 'Spring Brook'
(I) Burna &amp; Allen
C!J Mazda Sportslook
(I) Portrait of America:
Meine
(J) GilD NIWI
ilD MOVIE: 'Truo Grit'
II) Ounamoko
12:15 {]) MOVIE: 'The Guardian"
[Cibsed Ceptlaneci)

.·rJJ

THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
Henri Amold and Bob

Uooleroonlllo-

tour""-· .

one letllf to each squaii, to form

lour~wordl .

I

PYLAP

I·::-..;::-..::::KJ - l j

HARCI

I KJ

..
'"

OF
DOE'&amp;
6A5KETE'IALL..
U5UALLY ATT~A CT~
WHAT K INI7

I I C) tJ

'1'0-'NGSTE~

rUHRGYj

Now arrange the e~ rcl ea letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sugge ~ led by the above cartoon .

J I K

Answer here:

X X X )( X X X ]

A vERY (

(Answers tomorrow )

Saiurday 's

I Jumbles· FLOOD

SWOON W ALLOP FINISH
What that Peepi ng Tom wasA WINDOW FAN

. Answer

IIIDGE
James Jacoby
NO RTH

Eliminating
a guess

10-29-8~

• A6
• 5 4 :l
t A 7 64

+ AJ9 a

By James Jacoby
When North finally gol around to
bidding four clubs, South realized that
slam .was -a virtual certainty if part·
ner had a few aces. South bid Black- .
wood and when he discovered that his
side had all the aces, he even checked
to see if North had a king. When that
reply was negalive , he stopped in the
small slam.
·
Six clubs was a very good contracl.
It would make if diamonds divided 33, or if lhe heart finesse worked, or if
the opening lead were a hearl into
declarer's A-Q. Although none of
those things happened . slam was sti ll
a certainty as the cards Jay.
Declarer simply had to remember
what all good pla yers know about
finesses: If there is a finesse to take .
do what you can to avoid it.
South won the opening lead with
dummy's spade ace and trumped a
.spade in his hand. Then he played 1wo
rounds of clubs. Next he played the
three high diamonds , end ing in lhe
dummy. When East showed oul on the
third diamond, declarer was readv to
fall back on the heart finesse until he
saw something better. He played th e

EAST
+ KQ9&gt;4

WEST
. J 1 08i ~

!I' K 7 6
• j 9 82
5-

!I' J!098
• 10 3

+j

+

4

SOUTH
+ 3
!I' A Q 2

t K Q5
+ KQ1 0632

Vulnerab le: Neither
Dealer: Sout h
Wes1

Nort h

East

Sotnh

P ass
Pass
P ass
Pass
Pass
P ass

1•
3•
4+
s•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pas::.
Pass

J+

6+

Opening lead

t+

3 NT
4. NT
5 f\;T
Pas:-

•J

fourth dia mond and dtscarded the
deuce of hearts West had to wm that
tri ck and h.ad a choice of lea dmg into ·
declarer's A-Q of hearts or of g1ving
declarer a spade ruff 1n dummy and a

discard of the heart queen

aD......,tit'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Detail
I ShadowDOWN
box
I StrikeS Meander
breaker

9 Chen's
z Trim
coffee
3 When
10 Lake or city
things
11 Dilettantish quiet
12 Monopoly
down
15 ApiS
4 King (Sp.l

16 Fonn
5 Deny
for Dracula 6 Make a
17 English
speech
river
7 Make
18 European
public
river
8 WeatherZO W.W.II
wise one
agency
13 Breathe
(abbr.)
Zl Hidden

out

Yesterda y's Answer
14 Vaulted

27 Sterne

16 German city character
19 Pay atten- 29 Obv1ous
tion to
33 Gaelic
21 E . Indian 34 Abound
sailor
36 Shad e
22 Off the ship
of green
23 AtteniJllted 37 Capudun
25 Forenamed
monkey

Z3 Journey

1!4 Pallid
25 Famous

songstress
2&amp; Let go
27 Plowed
the waves
28 Lettuce
29 Work-pants

b:-+--t-+ +-

fabric
30 Skill

31 Youth
32 Obtain
35 Reswne
37 Engender
38 Interpret
39 Afr. fox
tO She had
a lamb

1().29

CRYPTOQUOTES
RFCW

W DYJCDO

NPDX G
XFGTJXR
0 F

V PST.

GFPST

M JGT

YID-

GT D I D'O
GTD

THXW

UFXHGTH X

O M JYG

YFP C O

Yetilenlay's Cryptoquote : THE AIM OF STUDYING
PlllLOSOPHY IS TO KNOW ONE'S MIND, NOT OTHER
PEOPLE 'S. - W.R. INGE

DAILY CRYPl'OQUOTES- Here'.s how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrdphes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters a.r e different.

�SUPPLEMENT TO: THE POMEROY SENTINEL

Monday, October 29, 1984 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reagan has 3-1 edge in
Ja11nes L. Denison
James L. Denison, 57, died early
Sun(lay morning at his home In
Rutland.
Mr. DenstonwasbornJan. 16,1927
in Rutland , thesonofthelateJames
Ell Denison and Beatrice Effie
Williamson Denison.
He was a retired member of the
Rutland Fire Department.
Survivors Include an uncle, Carl
Denison, Rutland: two aunts. Winnie Sowers, Ne Isonville, and Gertrude Jones, Columbus; and1&gt;everal
cousins.
In addition to his parents, Mr.
Denlson was preceeded in death by a
brother, Harry Joe Denison.
Funeral services will be Tuesday,
2 p.m ., at the Hunter Funeral Home
in Rutland with Rev. Lloyd Grimm
officiating. Burial wiil be at the
Miles Cemetery.
Friends may ca ll at the funera l
home between the hours of 7 p.m.
and 9 p.m . on Monday.

Fred D. Stone
Fred D. Stone, 83, Route I,
Coolville, died Saturday evening at

By'l11eAMoclated
Pref18 has. , The
The
(Cleveland)
Plain
and
President
Ronald Reagan
Cincinnati
Post
alsoDealer
said that,
JackSOn General Hospital, Ripley, won three more big newspaper on balance, Reagan's accomplish·
following an extended Illness.
endorsements, whlle Democrat mentsoutwelgh theproblemsofhls
Born in JackSOn County, W.Va., challenger Walter Mondale got the administration.
Mr. Stone was the son of the late nod from another.
"With a notable exception · Charlie and Bertha Stewart Stone.
The Akron Beacon Journal picked Inability to lower enormous federal
He was a retired farmer and had Mondale, although the newspaper deficits -Reagan has by and large
been employed at the Coolville Mill. · said Its first choice would have been delivered what be pledged, which Is
Mr. Stone attended Oak Hill Ohio Sen. John Glenn, who dropped a major reason why he deserves a
Church in JackSOn County, W.Va.
second term," The Post said.
out of the Democratic primary.
Survivors Include his wife. Erma
The Cincinnati Enquirer said It
The Plain Dealer said: "if
Stone, at home; twosons,JamesM., endorsed Reagan tor another four Ohioans think 'about the speCial
CoolvUI¢, and Charles F., Little years 1n office "with the strong troubles of their state, they will not
Hocking; three daughters. Isabelle acknowledgement that Mr. Rea· give Reagan the mandate so many
Sargent, Ripley, Bonnie Cremeans, gan's record during his first term Is observers now expect. He needs to
Little Hocking, and Ruth Ann far from perfect and with an be sent a message that Americans
Nutter, Coolville; twelve grand- unsettling concern that his style at want more sensitivity to major
children ; and eleven great times outdistances hls substance."
problems, fewer television Images
grandchildren.
·
But the newspaper said it be- and more results.
Besides his parents, Mr. Stone lleves: "Mr. Reagan's accomplish"At the same tiple, Democrats
was preceeded · in death by a ments whlle In the White House are have not fielded a candidate able to
brother, Lloyd N. Stone.
sufficient to merit another four coalesce the American public Into
Funeral services will be con- years as president."
supporting his Initiatives."
ducted at 1 p.m . Tuesday at the
The Beacon Journal said the real
The Enquirer listed among .those
White Funeral Home in Coolville. accomplishments the rebuilding of question is "Why not Ronald
Rev. James Hodge will be officiat- the economy, strengthening of Reagan?" a ndllstedthepresldent's
Ing. Burial will be In the Torch defense and the Improving mood of economic policy and foreign policy,
Baptist Chur:ch Cemetery.
Americans.
along with his ability to govern, as
Friends may call at the funeral
But the newspaper noted that the reasons for voting him out of office.
home after 2 p.m. on Monday a n Reagan administration has proThe newspaper, noting record
untU the time of services on duced record budget deficits that deficits, said Reagan pledged to cut
Tuesday.
"lmpertl. .. oureconomicvltalltyfor government spending but became
generations to come."
"the biggest spender of aUtime."

wee~end endorsements

rr:::::·::::::::::;::::;

FINAL TWO DAY$
Wallpaper S~le

SALE
STARTS TODAY

QUALITY WALL COVERINGS IN PRINTS,
STRIPES, MINIATURES, PLAIDS,
SPORTING EVENTS AND MANY OTHER
PATTERNS.
MOST ARE PREPASTED AND WASHABLE

looll throuch lonmller 4, 1184.
WhU• ~·•ntlllea !•at. Qu1ntHr richta reaernll. W• •re not
reap•nalltle fer tJPocraphloal errora. Sorrr, lo lellera.

·Emergency squads kept busy
Eleven ·ca lls were answered by
local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County E mergency Medical
Services reports.
Sunday runs Included: 4:47a.m ..
Pomeroy to Pa trlcia Shields to
P leasant Valley Hospital; Syracuse
at 12:35 p.m. took Margaret
Eichinger to Veterans Memorial;
Rutland at 7:14 p. m . went to Route
689 for an auto accident and took
tanya Tracey and Darren Cox to
Holzer Medical Center. At 10: 11
p.m .. Pomeroy went to !lJ6 E. Main
forJoEiienWolfe, toHoizerMedical
Center.
On Saturday, ¥iddieport at 2:42
a. m. took Ronnie Frye to Veterans
Memorial and Pomerov at 10:31

For 1gt1 5 and 0111r.

-

a.m. took Wllma Terrell from
Mulberry heights to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 5: 32 p.m. took
Herman Grueserfrom the Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse at 9:04 p.m .
took Hlldy Weaver from the
Syracuse Elementary School to
Veterans Memorial; Raclneat9.:07
p.m. went to State Route 338 for
c tydeTucker.toveterans Memor-

$3 25

DIN
Served wit~ whipped potatoes . c~icken
gravy. cole slaw, hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
Sorry. no substitutes e&gt;c.ept beverage with
additional price.

·

•

'

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

~tM~I~at~~ ~m.~k~~~~~-§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Mildred Milburn from Brownell
Ave. to Veterans Memorial and at
10:53 p.m. , Tuppers Plains went to
Reedsville for Arizona Wigal, to
Camden-Clark Hospital In P arkersburg, w. Va.

At The

Meigs County happenings
Water shutoff set

Tuesday luncheon

Water service on several-Middleport streets will be off for about two
hours tonight beginning at 10,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
announced.
The areas affected include Beech
St., from General Hartinger Parkway, south; Plum, Pearl and
SycamoreSts., toAshSt.; Pearl St.,
to General Hartinger Parkway
south.
A new wa ter line valve w111 be
installed during the two hour period.

The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce will meet at 12 noon on
Tuesday at the LaSalle Resta urant
in Middleport. All chamber
membe rs a nd prospective
members are-urged to attend. The
Christmas promotion is to be
discussed .

To end marriages
A divorce action a nd a dissolution
action have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court .
Peggy Platt. Albany, has filed tor
a divorce from Larry P latt, a lso of
Albany. charging the · defendant
with gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty.
Robin Douglas, Reedsville, and
Glenn Douglas, Parkersburg, have
pet.itioned the court for a dissolution
of their marriage.

Weather forecast
Tonight , mostly cloudy. Lew near
50. Light and valiable winds.
Tuesday. mostly cloudy. High in the
low 70s. The chance of rain Is 10
percent tonight a nd Tuesday.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair on Wednesday with lows In
the mid to upper 4$ and highs In lhe
mid-60s to mid-70s. Chance of
showers Thw-sday and Friday with
lows In the upper 30s and 40s and
hlghs In the upper 50s and 6k

Side-winding
"C" batttrlel, not
molt Mattera of the

FARMERS BANK

Plan Ahead....
JOIN OUR

&amp; SAVINGS CO.

CHRISTMAS

CLUB NOW!!!f

Meets-Tuesday

SPECIAL t:t:n:

c~Cw

-For the month of November only,
Alcoholics Anonymous. or AA. will
meet on Tuesday instead of Thursday, at 7: 30 p.m .. at the multipurpose building , Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. The Ai-Anon
meeting will be held at the same
time in the same building.

II~E

S BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.
THt FARMER POMEROY. OHIO

Only

'3•• .,,,

'

10C..t

\
October 22nd,

\

1984

Needy will gel food

lEFTY

Leftover food commodities which
were not given to eligible families in
severa l locations in Meigs County
last week will be distributed to
eligible families beginning at 9 a.m.
Tuesday at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.

·i.ia~

,__

\
\

____----

\

This year we mailed $210,725.00 to our 1984
Farmers Bank Christmas Club members. Be sure
to get your share next year. Stop by now and...
'

-

JOIN OUR 1985 CHRISTMAS CLUB

The Undersigned Physicians
Arc 1lwNUa

Y•rFGr

Clwlltl•••

ARE SUPPORTING
oiOc

Dr. John H. Ridgway
CANDIDATE FOR

MEIGS COUNTY CORONER
JAMES E. WITHERELL, M.D.
WILMA A. MANSFIELD, M.D.
ROGELIO A. AVERION, M.D.
E. S. VILLANEUV A~ M.D.
Z. B. DAYO, M.D.
RANKIN RAY PICKENS, D.O.
M. W. LENTZ,M.D.
Pd. Pol. Ad by the Committee
To Elect Dr. John H. Ridgway

............
,.. ..........
·a:.w=-::
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.........,.,......-··

'

oOo 0 00000 0000 000 oO I 0 oo 0 o oOOO 000 0 0000

121.()(1

11.00 ...............................•.. tiO.OO

t2.00 ·· ·· ·············~·~······ ·· ······1CJC).()C)

eJ.oo .................................e110.00
ti.C)() .•....". ...................... ..... 210.00

110.CJC) ....................................()C)
120.CJC) ••.
0.1 ,CIK).()()

\
\

You Pay49 Payments

We Will
Pay the 50th ·

0 . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Bank
Memhet

FDIC

The Community _Owned Bank
•
•

0 0 I

0

o 0 o 0 0 0 o 0 o o . . ."

·········-. 4 • •

OilY

(PRACTICING IN MEIGS COUNTY)

uas ·

·~ •••••• , ·••• '0 ·•'·"

__
L - - --

TILL IITCIEI

,. I I '

1984 CHRISTMAS CLUB MEMBERS

Ohio lotto winners

••••m

........
.
'''"'"''"'··
........ .,,.......

-...a'E oRDRft 01'

PAY 'TO on

CASH W l TH IN 80 DAYS

CLEVELAND (AP) - Three
tickets correctly named ali six
winning numbers selected in Sa turday's "Ohio Lotto" drawing conducted by the Ohio Lottery.
The Lotto game reported sales of
$4,135,349, lottery officials said.
The winning nwnbers from the
drawing Sa turday were 5, 11, 13, 21,
28and30.
The J;Jext estimated jackpot Is $1
million.

UP Ul

···~

'

'
'

�</text>
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