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                  <text>Pag-12-The Daily Sentinel

r----Local briefs:--..

.
·

·
·

·

Local emergency units were on the moveover the holiday weekend,
the Meigs County Emergency Medical SeiVlces reports.
Thesday morning at 3:40 a .m ., the Pomeroy Unit took Florence
Musser, Route 143 to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Monday calls Included:. 2: (11 a .m., Middleport, to S. F1fth Ave., tor
Electa Souders, taken to Ve terans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
B: 25 !J..m . to Grant St. for Leona KolU, treated only; 9: 30 p.m. the
Middleport Fire Department to Poplar Ridge tor a brush fire; 7:38
p.m ., '!Uppers Plains to the post ottice for Elvira Hughes, taken to
Veterans Memorial; 4:41 p.m. Racine to Antiquity for Preston
Parsons, taken to Veterans Memolial.
Sunday calls included Pomeroy at 7: 43 a .m . to Locust St. for Dewey
Lyons, taken to Veterans Memolial Hospital; 9:11a.m., Pomeroy to
Locust St. for Tina Brown, .to Veterans Memorial; 3: 19 p.m.,
Middleport, to Pearl St. for Bertha Blickles, treatetd; 6:38 p.m.
Syracuse to Third St. for Elvira BaiT to Veterans Memorial.
On Saturday, Racine at 9:39 a.m. took Roger Birch to Veterans
Memorial; at 7: 4B p.m., Racine took Donnie Dye, Sutton TownShlp, to
Veterans Memorial; '!Uppers Plainsat1: 2Bp.m., took Helen Archer,
Reedsville, to Pleasant Valley Hospital; '!Uppers Plains at 8:27p.m.
for Gay F1elds, Route.7, taken to Veterans Memolial; Syracuse at
tO: 13 a.m. for Edna Deem, Racine, to Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy
at 4: 35 p.m. to Pomeroy Cllff Apartments tor Debbie Pridemore, to
Veterans Memoliai; Middleport at 10:21 a.m. asdfto Bradbury for
Oleva Cotterill, to Veterans Memorial; Middleport at 1: 4B p.m. to
North Second for John Caynar, treated.

Clarence Stewart

Qarence M. Stewart, 65 ~­
ville, died Monday afternoon at
Camden Oark Memorial Hospital,
Parkersburg, following an extended
illness.
Mr. Stewart was hom at Centra·
lla, W.Va. thesonofthelateCharles
and Gussie Knight Stewart.
. He was a c~l miner In .Cra!gs,
ville, W. Va., area and had retired
from American Vlscoe Corp.,
Parkersburg In 1973.
He Is suJVlved hy five sons,
Kenneth, Little Hocklng; Clarence
J., Belpre; Arden Leon, Chester;
Randall Wayne, VIenna; Jerry
Dwaln, Coolville; two daughters,
Carol Sue Rockhold, Reedsville,
and Rnbln Guthlie, Rt. 2, Coolville.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Kupper·
neck United Methodist Church at
Cralgsvllle, W. Va. Burial will be In
Buckle Cemetery. Friends may call
at the White Funeral Home In
Coolville after 3 p.m. Wednsday.

Jack White
Jack E. White, 58, owner and
operator of White Funeral Home,
Coolville died Sunday at Marietta
Hospital following an extended
illness.
Mr. White was hom at Coolville
the son of the late Qyde L. and
Pauleta Harpold White, Sr. He was
also preceded In death by his first
wife, Auldlne Ethridge In i957 and
one brother, Clyde White, Jr.ln1972 .
He seiVed on the Soldiers Relief
Commission, Athens, was a director
at the Ti-l County Bank, Coolville, a
member of VFW Post 3478, Cool·
ville, memberofOhlo VaDeyHealth
Services, Athens and American
Legion, Athens. He was a charter
member of Coolvllle F1re Depart·
men! and Lions Club. Past Masteof
Coolville Masonic Lodge337F&amp;AM,
Ancient Accepted Scottish Rlte of
Columbus, Alladln Shrine Temple,
Columbus, Athens and Belpre
Shrine Clubs, member 'Of Coolville
United Methodist Church, a veteran
of World War II, former Athens
County Commissioners and former
mayor and councilman at Coolville.
He Is survived hy his wife,
Dorothy Day White; two step-sons,
Lee Ethridge, Coolville, and RusseD
L. Day, Coolvllle; two st"P"
daughters, Ann Glllfan and Nancy
Ethridge, Coolville; six grandchtld·
ren; one aunt, Kathleen Justice,
Cambridge, Md.; one nephew Larry
White, Coolville.
Funeral seJVIces will be held
WednesdiiY at 1 p.m. at White
Funeral Home In Coolvllle with the
Rev. Roy Deeter and the Rev. Eric
Starr officiating. Burial will be In
Coolville Cemetery where Masonlc
rites will be conducted.
Friends may call at the funeral
home at anytime. In lieu of flowers
donations may be made to the
American Lung Association, Cline
Butldlng, Athens, Oh. 45701.

Mrs. Harry Davis
Mrs. Harry Davis, 75, of Canton,
the former Brittla Weeks of Pomeroy, died Saturday at the Tlmpkln
Mercy Medical Center, Canton. ·
Daughter of GUbert and Maude
Mcintosh Weeks, sbe was horn at
Enterplise and was a 1925 graduate
of Pomeroy High School. She was a
teacher In the Meigs County Schools
untO her marriage. and has substi,

secure the coastal highway to
southern Lebanon and the Beirut·
Damascus highway. wlUch trans·
verses the embattled high country.
The ftgbtlng was touched off hy
the Israeli army's withdrawal from
the centralmountatnreglons&lt;1Aley
and Chouf to pull back to a more
defensible line along'the Awall rtver
In southern Lebanon.

Reds blast Giants

Fair school winners

story Oil p. s

storyonP.8

Hoople's weekly picks·

New cancer treatment

Area briefs:
Vot.32,No.l 03
c.,,
........ 1913

Elbert Tanozzo
Mrs. Beatrice Smith of Bradbury
has received word of the Sunday
night death of ber brother·ln·law,
Elbert Tanozzo o!Paw Paw, Mich.
Funeral services were held Thes·
day morning In Paw Paw. Tanozzo
retired from Welch Food. Inc. and
has since been raising draft horses.
He and his wife recently observed
their 50th wedding anniversary.

Nellie Nelson
Nellie Ernestine Nelson, 86, died
Sunday at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center.
She was preceded In death by ber
husband, Pearley Nelson; her
parents, Charles Murray and Jen·
nle Love Murray; one son, Hobart
Nelson; two brothers, Wtlllam and
Paul Murray; and a sister, Lucille

Roese.
Survivors Include a son and
daughter·ln·law, Olion and VIrginia
Nelson, Dexter; a daughter and
son-In-law, Max and Arline Davis,
Middleport; four grandchUdren,
and four great-grandchildren.
She was a member of the Dexter
Church of Christ and a charter
member of the Star Garden Qub.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Wednesday at the RawUngsCoats·Biower Funeral Home with
Mr. R,obert PurteU otflciatlng.
Burial will be In the Von Sch111tz
Cemetery.
·
Fliends may call at the ~.meral
home from 1 to 9 p.m. ~y.

James Lowe
James Wllllam (Bill) Lowe, 81, of
Middleport, died Monday at the
PlneCrestCareCenterlnGalllpolls.
He was preceded ln. death hy his
wife, Mlldred Carney Lowe, and his
parents, Andrew J. Lowe and M1na
OtyLowe.
Surviving are a sister, Do!Ul8 E.
Busboom, Columbus, several nJe.
ces and nephews, and a close lrtend,
MUdred Meadows.
Funeral services will be beld
Thursday at 10 a.m. at the
Rarllngs-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home. '!be Rev. Robert Robinson
will otflclateand burial will be In the
Gravel HID Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends may caD at the IUneral
home Wednesday from 4 to 9 p.m.
On Wednesday evening at 7; 00 the
Mlddleporrt Fire Department will
COII®ct spectal IH!IVIces for Lowe
who was a member for severai

By 'lbe •4 eeooletei' Pl"e88 ·
ThunderstoiTDS rumbled along
the lower Mississippi ani! Ohio
valleys Monday, whUe the East had
a warm and muggy Lahar Day.
Showers fell from Wisconsin
across Iowa and northeastMlssow1
to nortbeast Oklahoma.
ForTuesday, the weather service
forecast thunderstorms scattered

Ohio
...
(Continued from page

1)

Deats.
Therewerewithhundredsofslgns
with such sayings as: "C'mon, Ron.
stop tbe Bonzo economic~."
M1ke West, president of the
Amerlcan Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees
Local 1632 In Columbus, 9ald union
memberslUp Increased 25 peJLelt
following a 1().month wage freeze,
recent talk or layoffs In the capital
city and passage or a new public
employees collective bargaining
bill.
"People want to stick together.
They see a union as a way!ikeeping
things fair," West said.
Ahout 1,500 people attended a
Labor Day rally at the Cincinnati
Zoo, where an AFl..-CIOof!lclal said
the Reagan administration Is ''un·
fair at the core."
Howard D. Samuel, president of
the AFL-CJO Jndustlial Union
Department, accused Reagan of
marching backwards In the area of
fuD employment.
"Jobs and justlce are not a
privilege. They are arlght,"Samuel
said. "And we have the right to
demand that our government take
the leadership In assuring jobs and
justice for ,all Americans."
Numerous local politicians
shared thestage,lncludlng Republican Cincinnati CouncUman John
Mlrllsena.

from the Great Lakes to the Ohio.
Valley, along the Gulf and Atlantic
Coasts and over the Tennessee
Valley and the AppalaclUans.

Soowers were expected over the
PacUlc Northwest and along the
Southern Plateau and Rlo Grande
Valley.
Hlgbs were expected to range

from about 100 In the desert
Southwest, liE In the deep South,
most of the Atlantic Coast and from
the lower Mlsstsslppl Valley
through the Southern Plains and
Southern Plateau, In; In the eastern
third or the nation and from
Southern California across the
Great Basin to the Central Plains,

GraJI8'l to meet

To meet Thursday

Rock Springs Grange will meet
Thursday, Sept. 8, at 8 p.m. There
will be electkm of officers.

will meet Thursday, Sept. 8, at7:30
p.m. In the hand room.

1

By KATIE CROW
Seotklellltalf
In an attempt to Improve the quality or water In the
v1llage of Pomeroy, v!Uage council Thesday night
entered Into a contract with Engineering Associates
for a study on how to better the system.
Aller councD members Larry Wehrung,
Reed and Harold Brown met with Chuck Mann of
. Engineering Associates and the Bnard of Publl~
Attali:s; !bey. agreed they COUld ·either treat river
water or well water:
It was noted there Is an abundance of water coming
from the Syracuse well, but It Is ex~mely hard
water.
It was also noted that water from the tests wells
drllled In Syracuse was of no better quality. It Is not
feasible to drill additional wells.
· The$ '1,500 study will tell cilu,neU what jt will cost to ·
treat the water, whether It be weD water or river ·
water. CouncU will also have to come up with a rate to
charge Its customers. In lhe rate will be the cost or
.treatment·.
The engineering study Is to be completed hy Oct. 1.

Bruce

..

70s In the North, and from the
Central Rockies to. the Central
Plains.
Temperatures around the Mt!on
at 3 p.m. EDT Monday ranged from
52 degrees ln Kalispell, Mont., to 100
In Blythe and imperial, Callt

Saturday Admissions - Oleva
Cotterffi, Middleport; Edna Deem,
Racine; Roger Birch, Racine
Saturday Discharge - William

Andersoo.
Sunday AdmlsslonS -

Elvira

Barr, Syracuse; Carroll . Smith,

Belpre.
Sunday Discharges -

Southern . Local Band Boosters

Phllllps, Roger Birch, J. J. Crer..eans, Elvira Barr. .
Mondaay Admissions - Denver
Hysell, Pomeroy; Elec'ta Souders,
Middleport; Eliza Hughes, RuUand; Kathleen Smith, Pomeroy;
Preston Parsons, Racine.
Monday Discharges - Carroll
Smith, Harold Jeffers.

Maxine

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

MEN'S WORK
DUNGAREES

' GAlLIPOLIS - The firm whlcb
Gperates the Gallla·Melgs Regloaal
Allp)rt hu 1o1t more than f,II,IXXJ
~It took OYl'!" the facility In 19111,
_r!pmlmtatlves say, and they are
aaldDg the Gallla County cornmlsIIQI)ers for more financial support.
Kenneth Wblted and Gearled
Hltcbcock Jr., C(}()perators of
Foothills Avlatlon, told the coounls·
lionerS Tuesday the airport has not
been Profitable, despite their best

Work long and hard in these 100%
cotton work dunguees backed by a
on .. year warranty. Authentically
styled wrth rule POCket and
hammer loop. Sizes 32·52.
Avlilable in a choice of colors.

ertorts.
'We have tried to get It on a
break-even basts, but thai's Qb.
vlously mt going to baWen."
Hltcllcock Bald He asked that the
eounty's annual allotment to Foot·
ldlls, CUJTently set at $5,000, be
int'l"eased to about $15,000.

Hospitalized

Chester Townahlp Trultees will
meet In reauJar leUion at 7:30p.m.
at Chester Town Hall.

Eastem Band Booeter8
to meet tonisht
The Eastem Band Bocwt.en will

2 S.Ctionl, 14 Pog..
20 c.ntt
A Multimedia ln(. N.wepaper

abreast by Improving tbe cable system. He alsO
that specifications for Nye Ave. water Improvement
added that cable service will be given to residents or
had been received. CouncU voted to advertise for bidS
IWse Hill as Rnse Hillis In the corporation.
for the project.
Newell was asked If residents could pay cable bllls
Borrow money
at the water ortlce at the city hall. Newell had no
Council also passed a resolution to harrow $50,000 at
objection adding that he Is Interested In the most
10 percent Interest for seven years to pay lor !hi!
convenient point lor residents.
paying of various streets In the vll1age and !hi
Newell also pointed out that councU receives three
parking lot, The loan .w111 be paid hack qut ot
· permissive ll()ei!Se tax· monies: ·
· ·
percent of the groSs Income from cable. ije rE!POI'ied
that Cablentertalnment Is. ready to place Cable News
· Harold Brown presented the amuserrienfordtnanee
Network on channel 13. Subscribers would be
tor review. '!be piesent ordinance calls for a tax on
receiving CNN as of now but due to the action of
juke boxes and game machines. The ordinance states
councU tt was delayed.
that a tax or $50 be paid for the tlrst three machines
Newell Is to meet with councU on the 19th since
and $25 for every machine thereafter.
councll Indicated It would start proceedings all over
FoDowing a discussion, councll agreed to ch~ a
and possibly pass an ordinance to tncre~ the rates.
Oat rate or $50 per, machine.
Councn wants to chi!ck with Racine concemtng
The minl' park was discussed once _a gain .
their proposal fqr cable ServiCe: NeweU said it would · ·. Councll has uniU · !lie· end of the'Year to decide
be difficult to compare a company that Is 1n exlstance
whether tn proceed with the park and use the
with one that is not yet In operation and just making
matching grant or $19,000. Anderson stated that
proposals.
councU would be extemety hard pressed If they
Bruce Reed, president of councll, who presided In ·
pursued tbe park project. Presently, councll has
the absence of Mayor Clarence Andrews told council
$2,900 In the park fund.
(Continued on page 14)

I 00,000 attend
senrice for
l!f~ne
victims
,

Foothills Aviation
.
•
wants assistance

A Jury trial scheduled ror Thursday, Sept. 8, has been cancelled.
Jurors need not report

Tnutees meet toni@ht

I

Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 7, 1983

Cable TV dlscn....,..
Meeting with councU were Dick Newell and Marty
Crawford of Cablentertalnment. Councll at Its last
meeting dld not pass the second reading of an
ordinance to Increase cable TV rates from$7 a month
to $8.50.
NeweD said he dld not feel he was being treated
right as he tried to bargain In good faith. He added
that the company could not continue to&lt;lpera(eon1979 ..
rail!$. NeweD felt an explanation was due hlrri: :
' ·
Wehrung said the service he was receiving In his
home had been terrible and could not justify a raise
with those conditions.
Newell explained that the company was averaging
90 calls per month In Pomeroy and that 50 percent of
the calls were system problems. He did say that the
crnnpany did not have SJ!Y major problems. Newell
added that they .are serving 6,900 customers and-he
deflnlteJY dld not want anyone to think that they, the
company, werenotgoingtotakecareoftheproblems.
Newell also added that the company appreciates
hearing from customers who have problems so they
can be corrected. Newell also added he was keeping

.
' By The 4_.tp';ed Pre8e
attack hy Soviet planes using
More than 100,000 mourriers sophistiCated We8Jl!lliTY .. .An attack
lammed a Seoul stadium today to durlngatlmeofpeaceandnotwar."
denounce the Soviet Union for
In MOIICOW, one day after the
downing a South Korean jumho
Soviets acknowledged shooting
jetliner, and the Kremlin tried to down the alrUner with 269 people
deflectworldoutragehylaunchlnga
aboard, the government-run press
press campaign comparing Presi- \ unleashed a savage attack on the
dent Reagan to a Nazi. ·
United States, comparing U.S.
Australian pUots, meanwhile,
otflclals to Nazis and accusing
agreed to heed a call hy an
Reagan of stirring up anti-Soviet
ll!tematlonal organization of comhysteria.
met'Clal pUots to ban flights to
One cartoon In . P.ravda, the
Moocow, but there was Utile Communist Party newspaper,
lrnrnedlate response from pUots' shoWed Rea&amp;an swallowing a
e•W'?Ciatlons in other nations.
banner displaying a swastika, and a
''God will not forgive this deed," weekly paper acccused U.S. offt·
South Korean Prime Minister Kim clals of using the "recipe" Qf Nazi
Sang-byup tOld mourners, many propaganda chief Josef Goebbel.s:
screamlllg with grk!f, during the
''Telllleo, tell lies - some!bing will
mass rally 1n Seoul. "Retribution stick.''
and Clll'lli! will fall upon them for the
Korean Air ,Lines Flight 001 was
crime they have committed. ••
downed Thursday over the Sea ol
A statement read to the crowd Japan after crossing Soviet terrtsaid: "It Is dlfflcult to conirol our toryonafllghttrornNewYorktothe
lieartl and keep from gnashing our
South Korean capital. '!be 269
Ieeth when we think of the last peq&gt;le aboard, lncludlni 61 Amerilierrlf)l1na' moments of .t he paa· cans, arepmrumed dead.
sengers and crew .. .An Inhuman
(Continued on page 14)

Cancelled

Jay Rees ol Racine ls confined to
the Holzer Medical Center. He will
be a sophomore at Olllo Unlvenlty
this fall.

enttne

Mortgage
rates up
By 'lbe Awde'ed Pi'ftl8
The average heine mortgage rate

....... ~-

Hospital news

VeCeraii&amp;MemorlaiB'MIII"PI

•

at y
Pomeroy

'

Pomeroy seeks better water quality ·

Fix-it shop open for business
f&lt;&gt;J;NT

Holiday weather warm and muggy over weekend

•

e

COLUMBUS, OlUo (AP) In the Cincinnati suburb of
Ohioans who knew . three people MontgomerY, a neighbor or Mlngamong those aboard a Korean Air · Tsan Weng, one of the Korean
Heavy damages-were Incurred to two velUctes tnanaccldentonE.
Lines jeillner downed hy a Soviet jelllner passengers, said he felt
Main St. at 6 p.m. Suilday, Pomeroy Police report.
·
fighter plane generaUy agree with Reagan was doing what be could In
Pollee state that an eastbound vehicle driven by Kenny Koehler,
President R.eagan'sactloas toward response to the Incident.
Spring Ave .. had sloPDed to make a left tum from Main ootoSprtna:
theSovletsandonesaldReaganwas
"It's theonlytblngwecoulddo. Do
when he struck In the rear hy a car dliven by Douglas Priddy,
tougher than he had expected.
you want to go to war?" said Ray
Pomeroy. Pliddy was cited on an unsafe vehicle charge. There were
"The president's statement Is a
Martin, one of Weng's nelgl)bors.
no Injuries.
little bit stronger than I expected. I
Warren Kilo, president of tbe
Pollee said also that on Saturday, the residence of Jan 'llemeyer,E.
think theconservatlveslntheUnlted
Taiwanese Association or ClnctnMain St., was broken Into and a stereoandother itemsweredarnages.
States persuaded him lo make that
D!Iti, said be thought the president
Entrance was gained by breaking glass out of the front door. Also
statement,"saldSangSooLee,Ohio
should have imposed economic
police said the resldenceofDara Warth, Peoples Terrace, was broken
University senior and fanner pres!·
sanctions on the Soviet Union.
Into Saturday. There was vandalism and $216 In cash was stolen.
dent of the university's Korean
"We should not have cultural or
Entrance was gained there also hy breaking out a front door glass.
Assoclatkm.
technology exchanges, or Import
Lee said In a telephone Interview anything from Russia or export
from Athens, where OU ls located,
an.vthln.ll to Russia a tall," Kuosald.
that he was close to Kyoung Hun
Kuo said his association plans to
Min, 26, a sophomore physics major
wlite a letter of protest to the Soviet
'
.
whowas!lymghacklohis~land
ambassador 1n Washington.
Eleanor Circle of the Heath'United Methodist Church will hold a
to visit his family and was aboard
In the Cleveland suburb of Solon, a
·
haylide
and Wiener . roast fqr members .and t11e1r famllles on
the Boeing 747. when It _w~ shot
frlend of an0tbei' vtctliri of the ·
down.
· ···
·
·
Tiiuooay,
Sept. 8, atthe home ot Margaret Weber, Rutlaild; at 7p.m. ·•
.· · tragedy said Reagan · reacted .
Each
famlly
Is asked to bring a package of Wieners and buns.
Reagan on Monday night decorrectly.
manded a complete explanation
Armond Waxman, president of
from the Soviets, · who have not
Waxman lndustl'les Inc.• said sales ·
admitted they shot down the plane.
trainee Mason Chang, 24, had
He also called· on the Soviets to
worked at Solon offices of Waxman
compensate the victims.
for six months before getting on the
'
. Reagan said the UnltedStateswlll
PLEASANTA Point Pleasant couple has opened a new
plane to go back home to.:ratwap.
.. business, The Flx·It Shop, at 2101 Jefferson Ave. .. ·.
.
~e a · claln) against .the !)o\llet
Waxmini said ' Mon~y night 'Qy
· · Owned hyHugh"alidEihel Burris, the Shop Is open fi.otn 9 a.m. t09
Union within ..the next• Week for telepoone that ·he watched Reagan
compensation. "Sucb rompensa· ·on television and that: "I feel that
p.m. Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday.
tion Is an absolute moral duty which
The shop specializes In glass repair and etching. Other ser ices
he's doing the best he can under the
Include
repair of all types of screens, handmade leather goods, small
the Soviets must asSUII\I!." he said.
ctrcumstances, and I feel he's
appliance repair and sale or new and used merchandise. The store
Lee said that Reagan's call for
reacting aswellasheC31l&lt;Iilon't feel
also has a video game room.
restitution was an adequate
be's oveiTeactlng and I don't feel
response.
he's under-reacting."

,

l

.

'

P.9

Hayride and wiener roast slated

luted In the Canton Schools.
She was a member of the
Westhroo~ Me~t ChurCh· or
Canton. ·.Piior to . .leavlhg , M~
County she was a· member of the
Enterprise United Brethern
Church.
Survivors Include a daughter and
son-In-law, Jean and HubertHamU·
ton, Canton; a son and daughter-In·
taw, Don and Sally Davis, Lewis·
ville; four granddaughers, two
grandsons, a sister and brother-In·
law, Phyllis and John Fliel.,
•
Lewisburg. '
· She was preceded In death hy her
parents, her husband, Harry, and a
brother, Paul.
Funeral Services were held Tues·
day at 11 a.m. at the Westbrook
Methodist Church with bul1al In a
Canton cemetery.

years.

raining down.
Several rounds struck the runway
~ar the ternnlnal buUdlng of the
closed airport. A few landed within
the Marine zone and others exploded nearby, Mell said.
Druse and Christian forces are
battling for Israeli-vacated areas In
the Chouf andAley mountains whUe
the Lebanese army ts trying to

Two vehicles damaged in wreck

Due to the large crowd expected, a dance to benefit Marvin Teaford,
swimming accident victim, has been moved from the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy to the Racine Amerlcan Legion
HaD. The dance will be held In the new location beginning at B p.m.
Saturday with Blitzkrieg providing music for dancing.
Teaford Is confined to a Columbus hospital but at this time it Is
expected that he will be present for tbe danCe. Speelal equipment Is
being secured for his appearance. Teaford was Injured In a diving
accident near the Boy Scout Cabin In the Chester area and has been
hospit~lzed since th!lt time. .
·

Area deaths

helicopter that evacuated them to
the Navy's carrter lwo Jbna off the
Beirut coast, Jordan said.
Associated Press pOO!ographer
Don MeD, who spent the night at the
Marine base, said the Amerlcan
peacekeepers dived Into bunken;;
and foxholes on their hlgheststateof
Wert, known as "Condition One,"
when sheDs and rockets started

Korean surprised ·
by tone of Reagan

Dance site relocated

I

Two more Marines killed in Lebanon
(Continued from page 1)
request.
The 1,:m Marines are part of a
multinational peacekeeping force
sent last tall after the Israel's June
1982 Invasion to rout Palesttnlan
guerrillas from Lebanon.
Jordan said the latest victims
were posted within the airport
perimeter. Two annored cars
brought the lour casualties to a

Squads have busy weekend

..

Tuesday, Seprember 6, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MEET ME AT 'THE MEIGS INN

•.

Luncheon Special Every Day 11 A.M. to 2 P.M . .·
New Dinner Special Every Evening 5 P.M. to 9
P.M.
Lounge Open Daily 11 A.M. to 1A.M. (Closed Sundays)
Live Entertainment Nightly 8-12
.Jamie Shooter At The Piano

Foolhllls Avlatkm entered Into a
ftYI!-year lease with the county In
1981. whereby the firm operates the
ablJort,located In Gallipolis oo Ohio

7.
IJDder temll of the agreement,
ForOQ!e J1Nit pay all expen8I!S
abiM! the $5,000 yearly grant from
lbeOOUJity. Oneperteltofanyprollt
aaaall!ll will go to the county:
. But, IIWJiding to Hltcbcock, ''We
hawD't any prollt ID tbree

meet this I!YI!IIIn&amp; at 7:30p.m. In the
band room.

~

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Wblted Bald Footh!Da haS tried
II!Wnl meesures, Including In'·

creasing hanpr rent fees and
negotlatlnlloll'l!rpsollne prices, to
make the alJ1lOl't prolltable.
"'lbere's mt a wllole lot more we
can do to get more Income or cut
expetSeS, II be said.
Although Meigs County lias
members on the airport 11uthorlty
and Is served hy the facility ,It has no
flnanclal responslblllty under the
agr&amp;..&gt;ment whlcb buUt the airport.
MetgsCountytumedoverHsstate
airport grant toGallla County so the
facllity COUld be buUt. In exchange,
Meigs Crunty does not have to pay
for Its coollnuiDg operation.
Hltcbcock said the airport is "a
real asset to the conununlty" and
has helped rnalle GaUia County
more attractive to busineSS. With
lmprovements, the airport COUld do
more for the cormnunlty.
"I wish peq&gt;le 1D the community
would reail2le this, too." be said.
'!be c:ommlSIIOilers agreed the
alrplrt belpl the area, but did not

promllemore mooey.
''We'D lle tUIIII more of an
IDtelest ID the llrport," cornmlssloner Paul Niday aiel.
'Jbe Foothills IEjA
ltatlves
aslled tor a i1!ply to tbelr request by
Sept. l&gt;. 'lbe canmllllooerl Bald
they will clllcuD the jMUjWI ~
lllftlll'l! 8lllltber mea n,c with the
finn In the next aeYel'8l weella.

TAPES IN HAND -United States AmhllllllPdor
JeBIIDe Klrlrpa&amp;rlcll holds lhe lape8 of I he coaversalion of lhe Sovlel pilot wbnhol down lhe Korean
commercial jelllDer as lbe Soulb Korean represents·

Uve 1o the United Netloml KyuaJ Wo.Kim epealallo
her bel ore lbelr p.t eseiii•Una al tile Securlly CGuDcll
or lbe Unlled NailoDB Tuesday. ( AP r • rpbolo).

Commissioners seek drought funds
Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday agreed to wlite a letter to
Gov. Richard Celeste asking that
Meigs County be Included In the
Emergency Assistance Program
due to the drought.
'!be decision was based on facts
and figures subniltted by the Soll
and Water Conaervatlon office
showing crop dannage.
Commissioners, In other busl·
ness, approved the purchase of a
new dwnp truck In the amount of

$Zl,653

from Simmons Olds·
Cadillac and Chevrolet to replace
the truck that was wrecked recentty. The commissioners are
allowed to purchase a velUcle
without advertising when It Is an

emergency.
Ike Jackson, '!Uppers Plains,
Arbaugh addition, met with the
commissioners In regard to a
drainage problem that Is causing
water to run onto his property. The
commissioners referred him to

-

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... ,. •...

~-

athand."

1

Dmtestlc carmakers reported
their sales In late August rose 15.9
percent from the same weeks o1

1982.

...

AIIII'ORT WOIIII - ......... A'VIIIIIII. llle pri\WI linn wlildJ
w 111e 'k"n M 'p RIJp...a Alrpalt 1liiller a ~ wll.b Gaiiia

uper

Olive Township Trustees.
Ted Warner, superintendent or
the county hlgbway department,
was asked tn check on a drain on
Dark Hollow Road (township road)
which has created a larage hole
aroond a culvert.
•
Attending were David Koblentz,
president, Manning Rousb, and
Richard Jones, commissioners,
Mary Hobstetter, clerk and Martha
Chambers.

rose In At.gust !or the second
straight month, butprlvateanalysts
are divided on whether that means
the housing Industry's recovery lias
peaked.
The Federal Home Loan Bank
Board reported Tuesday that the
average rate on new, fixed-rate
mortgages was 13.63 percent In
August, up from 13.25 percent In
July.
While the report may be dJscou.
raging lor home buDders and
buyers, a~burstof\)ptimlsm that
Interest rates have peaked was
evident In a surge on the stock
market Thesday. U.S. automakers
meanwhUe reported sharply Increased sales for late August.
The Dow Jones average of 30
Industrial stocks, the most widely
watched market Indicator, soared
23.27 points Tuesday, to 1,238.72.
More than tbree stocks rose in price
lor every one that fell on the New
York Stock Exchange.
Economists have agreed that
rising Interest rates are responsible
for a slowdown lnhomeconstructlon
and sales, but they differ at whether
the Industry can keep from sllpplrc
further without a drop 1n the rates.
At Cltlbank In New York, economists said Tuesday the higher
mortgage rates "should not put the
housing recovery In jeopardy,'' and •
predicted fJult home buying would
stay "reuooably strong'' as long as
the rates are below 14 percent.
But at the Federal Reseive Bank
of ClUcago, economists said In a new
report that the upward trend of
mortgage rates "has taken many
potential buyers out of the market.
Unless rates retum to lower levels, a
peaklnthehouslngrecoverymaybe

c._, IIIJSitllapal ~n~• r'"Mco•"'· Bepre•mtMII!aGf
lbellnnrooehed • - e r n 'vwlleillhey llllr.ed lheGelllaeea.ty
MilD' '
••moremoney.

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•

Weclnetday, September 7, 1983

3

.

-.:

'Rookie hurls Bucs' 5-0 win over Cards·

-."'

The shock I ________w_u_limn_F_.B_uc_k-r-ley;,__J_r.
The Daily Sentinel

Tile shock has been Instructive
bnth to Amertcans and !D Russians .
On the scales on which crimes are
abstractedly measured, the figure
of ~ people killed 1s negligible. If
that were the total number of
violent deatbs caused by the Sovtet
empire In a single day , Sept. 1, 1983,
would go down as evidence of the

Ill Cowt Stree t
PMnerey , OJI.kl

DEVOTED TO TilE INTE REST OF T HE !llEIGS· MASON AJIEA .

ROBERT L. WINGETT
P•MI!'I'ber

.

PAT WIDTEHEAD

greening of oommwtlsm. We do not

have Ute !igllreB 81111 probably
wm. But betaan mtdntgbt
the last day In Auguat .00 midnight
the first day In Septembe!', there
were Violent deatha etlected In
many parts of Russia 8lld In
territory contniUed by mmmu·
nists. In Afghanlstiut. In Cuba. In El

IJf."'Ve'r

BOB IIOEI'LJCH
Goioonl~ ...

' AMfsCit.nt P•t.Usher/ (GRtroUer

DALE ROTHGEB, .rR..
New!J lUiNr

A MEMBER of The A!Metated Pn!!fi. lnlull DoDy Pretti A!iMC'
~ ~"pMper

Publ:iftllltn .\MectaliecL

*" 111111 dlr

lEI1'E1lS OF OPINION are welcomed. 'They IIMuld be te. .,._ D wwD .....
.U lll"'letn are s uh)ect 10 ~ _. mR be MpH wtdl aame, adltreM ..S *tkp'
•IIUlJllller. No gnslgned letten~ "ill be pu~ l.eUel'fl 8hould be
Malle, 8ll*eto

... -. ...

~

Salvador, Nicar"'lla, &lt;lllna, VIet· EXI*l lenced air l'llgbt. And maily ·
nam, Laos, Cambodia. How many Amer1catts haw experleliced air
foreign tenltllly. Tbe
times 269? Ten ttmes? One bundred flilbt
Joneline!ll
of
llilbt Is JIOI Elltlrely .
times?
·
overwbetitool
by calmt movies, !tie
But, and not without ...,...,, this
dr111111.
the
tood
and tbe 'JII!IIilltllcl" .
was the act of violence tllat
Inflamed the public Imagination. It 'lrelt ot sbouldeNo-aiiJitlder life. .
is worth asking why.
Outside there II cold and blod • ·
1. Most. Americans haw nOIII' And below there Ia, at 25,11001eet; • ·
dlstailce equal approximately "' •
times the beilht of the Errtpll9
State BuDdin&amp;-To ao ~ trodl
the safely of a serene flllht tllrOulh
the air to. w!tat happen«&lt; to 111011!
269 passet~gers Is to feel, empllat1·
cally, w!tat It would be Ute to be
dropped Into the sea from a ~t
25 times that ot the Empire State

over

Building.

in..,..

..... .

2. The psyciiOIQIIIcalimaglnatlon
continues to agitate. ·The actor·
dancer Gene KeDy once ~ me
about his experleoce. It hid been
the malden flight d. ooir proud
Boeing 'IIJI, westbotmd, (.clllkln to
New Y.,..k: Aml!rlca's big mtry
. into the jet age, England havlllg
failed when its Comet Jas to&lt;ploded
mysterloosly In the early 'i!Os. Both
the captain and the ~pilot m that
blstorlc fan American flllht had
ambled aft to cbat with the
paSsengers when It happen«&lt;. Tbe
plane ))egan a OOSedive toward tile
eltrth,
·

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~epublicans .look

for
women to run
.
for
Senate seats .
.
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Sen. Rlcllard ,Lugru:, R·Ind., says he is talking to .a lot of RepubUcan
CIA~
women .who want 10 tun fo~ seats Iii tile Senate, and thlnl!s some of thorn_ .
have a gooi!' charice, despite the celebrated gender gap.
.
"One of the ways we think we may make the most headway In this
particular year ·against Democratic Incumbents Is by Identification and
l't!CI'Uitment of superior Wll!Tlel candidates," Lugar said In an lntervt.w.
WASHINGTON- How a repor- freedoms and adopted the same the Rio San Juan, the liver
Tbe seconc}term senator Is chalnnan of the National Republican
ter
gets the news can be more oppressive practices Pastora had separating Costa Rica from
. Senatorlal Canmlttee, which has the job of seeing that the Republicans
.
. . , ."·
drama.ilc
than the new.s Itself. It fought against,. be returned to ihe . Nicaragua.
retain control ol the Senate, which they won In 19!1181111 kept In 1.9112. ·
·
bush.
·
·
·.
·
·
·
·.
·.
·•
,
Alider;;on:
fou!Jd
PBstora
out pi.
!IOmetlrnes
takes
raw
guts
and
With more GOI' ·seats than Democratlc seats at stake next ·year, the
darilig
enterprise.
·
Today,
Pas!Dra
leads
·a
Small
money
and
snort
of
sitpplles.
There ·
Detnocrats think they have a mooh sltol!gercllancethan theydld lastSoear
For
example,
I
asked
my
roving
band
of
independent
rebels
against
were
barely
enough
munitions
left
tD regain the dominance they held for 25 years.
reporter,
Jon
Lee
Anderson,
to
the
Sandlnlstas
be
once
served.
His
for
one
last
battle.
"Get
ready,"
Lugar says be doesn't share this vtew, llut he isn't taklni any cbancei.
.In an article published twoweek.ugoln The WasiUngtonPostandother . Investigate the covert rnllitary ls .a lonely fight, lor lie refUses to Pastora told my reporter. "You're
manipulations In Central America.
ally himself with the CIA-hacked coming along on a big o!fenslve."
lii!WSJlllpers, he said .be is prepared to commit the committee to the
He
went
deep
into
the
Nicaraguan
Nicaraguan Democr aile Force Commander Zero Intended to i.'J out
nuudmum legal financial support for any Republican woman who Is
bush
to
observe
the
guerrllla
war
which,
he. says, bears the taint of In style. "We'll be at the target In 'lO
)lornlnatro next year, "regardless how Den~ratlc the state Or how
Somoza.
He stlll goes by his hours walking time," be said.
where It Is happening. ,
:apParently formidable the Democratic candldate."
He
travelffi
by
Jeep,
by
foot,
by
revolutionary name, Commander
. But he re-evaluated the prospects
·: ·In addition, he said, "I am prepared to consider direct assilllancf! to
dugout
canoe.
He
is
the
only
Zero.
and
decided It would be !Utile to
:~ candidates even prior to their nomination, a sharp dEpertw'e fran
correspondent
who
visited
all
the
Anderson
sought
out
Pastora
In
throw
his reported 2,&lt;XXl guerrillas
,1lllr usual policy."
·
·
waning
factions.
He
marched
and
Costa
Rica,
south
of
the
Nlcara·
against
a Sandlnista military
: Since the artiCle appeared, said Lugar, "I have got !etten fran wcmen
ltlvouaCited
with
thecombattroops.
guan
border.
After
an
eight-day
camp.
Instead,
he radioed his
-:aiJ over the country."
.
At
camp
sites
In
the
rugged
emissaries
picked
combat
units
that
he
was giving up
·
walt,
the
·
r
ebel's
: : Among the prospectlvl! candidates who Lupr thlaDare prom1s1nc ~
northern
mountains
and
marshy
Andersonupanddellveredhimbya
the
fight.
.
:Rep. Claudine Sclmeldl!r In Rhode Islalld and Lore! Rlii!PI!. dlrec1pr of the
couta1 plains- sometbnes against
circuitous route to a subwtlan
Anderson was at his side as be
: ~ Coi1B. In Mlclllpn. He ll&amp;ys the oxnmittlle Is e!ICilUI'IIIJII both of
villages
full
a
backdrop
of
thatched
hnme
where
exiles
were
making
broadcast
the message. Then Pas)llem, llut. neither has made a decision.
.
of
the
rural
noises
of squeallog pigs,
nags
and
writing
propaganda
tora
rigged
up a telephOne patch
·· Ms. Schneider wwld run for the seat of veteran Democratic Sen.
bawling babies, squawking hensm-es.
Not
long
afterward,
two
through
his
rnllitary field. radio so
OalbomeP
:· Ms. Ruppe would be seeking to capture the seat of Democrlltlc Sen. Carl Anderson wrote stories that later · Jeeps pulled up, and Pastora's top Anderson could alert me In Wamade worldwide headlines.
aide jumped out He wa_s called · shlngton. The news made front·Levtn, who won his first term In 19'78 with !12 percent of the vote.
The
most
colorful
of
the
rebel
"The Dwat1."
page headlines .. The result: Supp; Lupr lillY! the committee Is IIClt trytag "to dicta~ tile ......... tile
commanders
Is
Eden
Pastora,
a
He
took
Anderson
on
a
~!-hour · ues were rushed ID ComrnaDder
~nnous i 1a1e11" llui does have "an afftmlatlye obllp.tlon to klell~
Nlcar&amp;IW'Il folk hero, who stormed Journey that began In a jeep and Zero so he could stay In the war.
::pp~entlal iiOI11Inf!al and to recnut them."
clictator Anastasio Somoza's palace ended In a dugout canoe, powered
Later, Anderson joined !be Mls.".
and captured It ior the Sandlnlstas by an outboard motor. Pastora's kilo Indian guerrilla force, MISIn 15'19. But when the Sandlnista
camp was located In the Jufll!ie near URA, upon the Ri? Coco delta retlme fa1led to grant the promised

Risky

·· Berry's World

.

~.
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....
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·'

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•'

"Yes, lir! From

~w

on 1011 would like him to be

.tt your side .tt .t/1 tim!M, so you will appiMr
.'
.'
.'

more .ens/live. "

.'

:T oday in history
:· 'Today~ Wednesday, Sept 7, the250thday&lt;tl983. Thertln!115dayslfft

In tht )'Mr. .
:: Today' a Hilblilht In HlstlxY: On Sept 7, JlNO, Getman aircraft began
t1t1!1r World War II bombardment of Londoa, wlllclt ClllDt to be DaWIIM
ille Blitz.
0!1 thl:tt date:
: In 1822, Brazil declared Its bidepeudetlce from Plrtugal.
In 1825, the French hero of the American Rewlutlon - the Manjuls de
Latay-- said his last farewell to President J&lt;lhn Qu1ncy Adamll at the
White Hoole while on his famous tour c:A the United States.
.• In 19:11, work began on Boulder Dam, now knOWn as HooveT Dam, on the

toloraoo River.

: In 1Hi, President Harry Truman receiVed the SIIJTftlder papers si&amp;Md
by the Ja~ ending World War IT.
• Tal yean
Fcrnw Willie Holate ~ JoiiD J:llrllclmu . . 111111
11oc lllltY 111 r.o. Alf&amp;l!lelt to c~~arp~ of ti&amp;ijlll..cy &amp;1111 I*'JUrY 111111e
fnlk·ill at tile omc:.. &lt;t ICIMat Dulel
pl)'dllati1al.
-: lM )fti'IIIIID= Ia-.11 Pr*ne MllllaterMn'•1ii!ln 8J1!eb1 Mil~
PI 11'-': lt6nr :!llldat held tlltlr lint fllre-lil&gt;-lacle na "C of !he • ilk
at c.n., navld, Md.
One )1'1!81' ago: The threatened furlough of 19,000 emplo)
of tltl
lltiatwl Revenue Se!vlce was averll!d wb!ll tltl HINit's TitiiUIY
lllllleDimlitle app!Vo'f!d a transfer of money within the 'l'reuwY

aao:

E!"""'' •

Dlplnmellt.

country~

by

oppressive humidity and pelting

.r ains.
On a IWI!ltering journey .delllyt!d .by a tropical storm, be traveled ina
leaky dugOut canoe, Joadfd above
the gunwales with supplies and
ammunition, and navigated by a
22-year-old rebel known as '"!be
Zebra."
After two days r1 paddling
through endless channels &amp;lid
bayous and sleeping In the mil! of
destitute Mlskltos, Anderson
reached the base camp of '"lbit
Eagle," a 21-year-old rebel .com·
panycommander.Itturlloidooitthat
"The Eagle" was In lllght because
his guerrillas had run out r1
ammumtioiL 1bey bid In tllf rain
forest while a Sandinlsta recomtals·
sance plane ovelilew .the camp
twice.

My ·reporter Intended to proceed
down the coast another 100 miles,
llut the rebel commander at !be
destination radioed that his fonll!li
were surrounded and under hea-.y
!Ire. It would be !Utile, ~
suicidal, to try to reach them, be
reported tenely.

Flight 007 furor___--,--___Low--:--eu_w_~-=---,eu

"
•

business~--------.J~ac~k~A~nd~e~__.so~n
nat, marsby

rm

For the last several days the
dictionaries have been depleted of
derQeatory adjectives as politicians
6M · .-smen have sought to
graplllcall}' Inform the public about
the death of 269 people In the
paclftc_, By this time there is little
doubt lite Korean plane wtth 61
American citizens among lis passeneers was shot down by a Soviet
lnlsslle. There Is little I can add to
this linguistic carnival except to say
I think It was a heinous and
barbaric act about which Utile will
be done. 11 wars could be fought
with words, Russia would soon lose
IJut that Is unhappily not the case In
the reel world as 269 people mw at
the bottom of the Pacific bear mute ·
testimony.
This is the second Korean
pasaenger plane the Soviets have
shot down In the last few years. The
firSt was only disabled and managed to land wtth only two lives lost
· Because the plane was astray deep
In Soviet air-!tpllce, the Incident
caused no International furor.
There was never ol!lclal criticism
af the Soviet action In shooting down
an obviously unarmed and defenseless passenger plane. Perhaps If the
first Incident had been taken more
seriously, the second would never
have happened. When a Russian
airliner strayed off course and flew
over Connecticut while a nuclear
submarine was being launched, It
was not shot down but allowed to
[Hoceed to the New y.,..k allplrt.
Oollalde of a mere mention In the
pn!88, I have never beard of the
~~ laking any ot!lctal
action. There was not even a slap on
the wrist!
President Ronald Reagan was
vacationing at his California rancb
when the Incident OCCUlTed last
week, I will not go oo far as !D say
his carnpaten people can1ed him
ldcklng and screaming back to the
Oval Olllce but be ,.... extremely
loath to liD- He hid !Pie to hisraadl
lor a v.catlon to 1ut over Labclr
O.y IJid tile day after the plane ....
downed waa plcturea oo tell!'vlslon
as All aging, sedate president t1dlng
a very sedate oone.ll was scarcely
a spine tingling picture Uke Teddy
Roool!!veh's cb&amp;r&amp;e up San Juan
Hill llut be was obviously preferring

the horse over his desk at tbe Wlllte counterpart to · sign a ~
House. But his advisers prevailed arranged agreement. In a speech to
and on Friday, be returned to the Amertcan people Laboi- Day
Washington to lead the .
&lt;t . evening, tbe president was his usual
words with tbe Kremlin. hrhapa bombastic self and casttaated the
the tlloulltt c.' tlte .1.981 p!tlideutlal Communists stoutly with words .
campalan .v:t the threatt!lled loss wbOe delivering a we8k tap on the
wrist. The cancellation of aeroflot
of their jolla had put new 1r011 In the
landing prtvUeges In the I,Jnited
backbone of the president's men.
Remember when theY were afraid States were continued, a move that
to waken him when two Libyan will cost the Russian peq&gt;le the
planes were shot down by the U.S. least Inconvenience possible. Is litis
Air Force? At least, this time theY a punishment.tD fit the crtme?
Of course there will be polltlcal
managed to get him awake!
consequences
for ' the RussiaAs'
President Reagan bad promised
11
Ul-roncelved
act
but I C!IJfa)t see
a tne8BUred" responSe to the
them
as
long-term
problems for the
Soviets While polls In the United
For
the
short ll!rm, I
I;Jemocrats.
State. llhDwo!d an OW!i'Wbelmlng
believe
the
Reagan
administration
demand for slrofll action In
wUI be the big gainer for the nuclear
punishing the Russians. Slrofli
'8ction calls for some financial freeze movement the big loser. 'nle
sacrifice on the p8rt c:A the American people are rlght!UDy
American people llut wtth this Indignant and when people are
administration the Almighty Dollar Indignant they write their
comes first. They had already ruled Congressman.
I believe tbe president wUl get more
out embargoes of grain and high
out
of Congress this fall than he
technolotiY equipmellt. A rnoeting
expected
In tbeway ofwaporutand
In Geaeva COIJVI!IIell as sclteduled
money
while
the freeze forcelllaw
and Secretary af state Geol'XI!
'been
struck
a massive blow just
Sltultz will meet with his Soviet

war

Pon-y-Middleport, Ohio

whtn they are [lCf!PU'Ina to pro"ll
the new missile lnstaDatkttls ·a
~- If the lneldent had bappeDBI a year later, I would have
expected It to !lave an .rlt!ct on !be
presidential election llut public
memory is too sllol't to expect It to
last until d&amp;tloii time next year.
01 - ; there are political
opportunists who wiD try mcajtltallze on anything. '!be Pactnc waters
had scarcely closed &lt;Ner Flicltt 007
before a RepubUcan Political Action Committee had a commercial
running on New York televlalon.
They clalmed f'V!!IIII hid (II'OYft
the -president rllbt In his llanll
conderrulation r1 the Conmtuilllla
and hinted by oort of
cock-eyed reasoning that thep!apR
supporting the nuclear frel!ze wwe
In some way t espouslble tor the
tragEdy. Con\lng when It did, I
considered the commercial not cmly
distasteful llut downrilhl Insulting
to the mWions of pecple woo don't
want to be bloWn to bits by nuclear
bombl.
11 the Ruaslarut want to focus tbelr
nuclear sights on that particular
F AC, It wlll be all right with me!

By BEN WALKER
AP Sports Writer
Wbenltgetstopennant racetlme,
the Pittsburgh Pirates usually rely
on their veterans.
For now, though, rookies and
reserves continue !D keep the
Pirates near the top of the National
League East
Rookie Lee Tunnell threw a
three-hitter, extending his string of
shutout innings to 28, and reserve
Jim Morrison homered as Pittsllurgh beat the St. Louis Cardinals
!HJ Tuesday night
The Pirates are one percentage
. point behind '!irst-place Montreal in
the Jumbled division scramble.
Phlladelphls is In third, one-bal1
game behind, anll the fourth-place
Cardlnais are just 1\!, games back.
"We needed a good ballgame,"
said Tunnell, wlw:lse team had lost
three In a row, lneludlng a
doubleheader sweep by the Card!·
nals the previous night "I'm J~t ·
·happy I did what I was supposed to
do "
~
Oberkfell was the only St.
'. Louis batter who figured out
.Tunnell, 8-5. Oberkfell singled three
times lor the only hits off the
: right-hander.

Ken

"It was toomuchTunnellandnot second Inning, and Andre Dawson 1-31nnings In taklngtheloss. He gave
up just one run - a bizarre one enough Obies, right? " commented followed with his 29th home run.
Dawson's blast, of! Dick Ruthven, and five hits before leaving with a
CardlnalsManagerWhlteyHerzog.
In other NL games, Montreal 11-11, gave him 100 runs batted In pulled left hamstring.
· The Phillles scored ln the fourth
bounced Chicago 8-2, Philadelphia this season.
Charlie Lea, 14-8, won his seventh when Joe Morgan walked, took
beat New York 2-ll, San Diego
downed Los Angeles 8-3, Cincinnati straight game, tying a team record second on a ~dout and came
routed Sari Francisco 11-1 and forconsecutiVevtctorles by a starter hOme as Darlil;3 lll''ked twice while
set by David Palmer. Lea allowed Mike Schmidt was .,atting.
Houston at Atlanta was rained out
Two errors by third baseman
Tunnell' s 110-pltch effort resulted four hits In siX Innings . Scott
Sanderson
finished
up
lor
his
first
Huble
Brooks In the eighth inning led
lnhlssecondshutoutoftheseason.It
save,
·
w
hich
was
the
second
of
his
to Philadelphia's other run.
was his third complete game.
Padres 8; DcJd&amp;erS 3
The 22-year-old pitcher, who career.
Chicago's Leon Durham tore
San Diego won for the seventh
pitched seven shutout Innings In his
last start, admltied that his toncen- · ligaments In his- thumb trying to straight time In Los Angeles,
tratlonoccaslonallydrlttedfromthe field TrUio'sdouble In !befirSt Inning trlmmlng the Dodgers' lead In the
and is expected to beoutofactlonfor NL West toone game over Atlanta .
mound arid the St. Louis batters.
Terry Kennedy drove In !our runs
Morrlson got a rare start In place three weeks.
l'ldllee2,Mtll80
with a homerun and two singles and
of Pittsburgh's regular third baseThegamelnNewYork!eatureda Luis Salazar also homered to lead
man, BJll Madlock, who suffered a
torn tendon In his left calf Mooday matcbup of rookie pitchers- Tony San Diego. Tony Gwynn of the
night Morrison resporided with his Gbelfl of Philadelphia, making the Padres singled to extend his hitting
flllhhomerunlnthefourthlnnlngoff second start of his career, an&lt;l Ron streak to 16 games.
Winner Ed WilliSOn, 4-7, gave up
John Stuper, 9-10, and an RBI Darling of New York, making his
seven hits In pitching his second
major-league dellut
. groundout In the sixth.
Ghelfl gave up five hits In 4 1-3 complete game of the season. He
Expos8,Cub&amp;%
Manny TrUio went 4-!or-4, lnclud· Innings and did not get a decision. yielded only two hits In the first five
'
lngahomerunandtwodoubles,and Reliever Tug McGraw went 2 2-3 Innings.
R.J
.
Reynolds'
first major-league
Innings
to
get
the
win
and
AI
Holland
drove In four runs to pace host
three-run
homer
in the sixth,
hit,
a
gOt
his
18th
save
!IS
the
three
Montreal.
for
the
Dodger
runs.
accounted
Philadelphia
pitchers
combined
on
Trlllo's RBI double trlggered a
Rick
Honeycutt,
2-2,
took
the loss ,
a
seven-hitter.
three-run firSt Inning. He drlll€d his
third
consecutive
defeat
for Los
the
Darling
struck
out
five
of
the
first
second homer of the season in the
seven batters be faced , and went 6 Angeles.

KitJle
slatps 32nd _in 7-.6.victory over A's
..
,·

By A8!!11"ia'ed Preo8
Comiskey Park In Chicago is not
necessarily known as a home run
paradise. It just seems that way
'when Greg Lozinski and Ron Kittle
bat
· Luzlnskl has already hit three
-roof-top jobs In Ie!tneldatComlskey
· this. Season. And Tuesday- ·night,
·Klttli&gt; hit the roof to help the
-American League West leaders
beat the Oakland A's 7-6.

Kittle hoffiered In his !Uth
successive game. The blast was the
32nd of the year for the White Sox
rookie and he became only the :!Otb
player In the 73-year history of
Comiskey to hit a ball on or over the
roof. Only Luzlnskl, Ted WUllams
. aitd JJmmy F~ have done It more
~OJICI!.

.

.

• In · other AL · action, It was
Baltimore8, Boston 1; Mllwaukee6,
NewYork3; Toronto6,Callfornla4;

Today's

Sports World
By wm Grlal*y
APCwaa;nnla'

' Can a disorganized, demoralized and disinterested ball club survive the
tightest divisional race In the major leagues and claw Its way into the World
~?
.
''Who knows?" · says Mike Schmidt, All-Star third baseman of the
PhJladelphlaPhiDJes. ''Thlsgarneplaystrlcksonyou.Don'ttrytoanalyzeit
MaybethisyearwUibeamlrrorot199lwhenwewon19o!thelast27gamesto
_pull it &lt;iut.I hope so, but! wouldn't bet on It
,
''This Is nothing like the club we had three years ago. .
· Schmidt needs tD look only at his own statistics without exploring other
negative aspects of the PhiDJes' current season- the mid-season firing of
Manager Pat Corrales and replacement by 59-year-old General Manager
Paul Owens- the ensuing confusion, consternation andlethargythatswept
the clubhouse.
'
"We have no sense of dlrectlon, " Schmidt said. "We have developed no
stability. Nobody Is sure who the manager Is- who is calling the shots.
From day to day, we don't know what the lineup Is going to be: You don't
knowwho'sgolngtohit In front of or behind you.
,
·"Only two places are fixed In the lineup. I'll hit fourth or fifth, DeJesus
(Ivan, shortstop), eighth. The rest is a grab bag.
.
. "The pressure on everybody Is ttemendous. We're always relieved when
we start a road trlp w¥re we can meet ~ people. The fans boo us
'Urunerci!Ully and don't play !avorttes. We have guys on the club who are
potential Hall of Famers (Pete Rose, Steve Carlton, Joe Morgan, Schmidt
himself for starters) and they get booed as much as anybody."
· Schmidt has a light to beo!fended. All-tlmeclubleaderlnbomeruns, eight
times an All•Star, perennta1 Golden Glove third baseman, be bas been a
major factor In the Ph!Wes' winning of four division crowns ln seven years
and the World Series In 19111.
In 1911lbe won both the National League and World Series MVP awards.
Heledthemajorslnhomerunswith48,batied.286andknockedin12l'runs.
In the World Series, he balled .381, hit two homers and drove In the decisive
run that clinched the series over Kansas City In the siXth game. He repealed
as National League MVP In 1981.
,
This year, Schmidt's power figures are good, 33 borne
through
Monday'sgamewiththeNewYorkMets, with94runsbatledin.Hisbatting
'a verage has dipped to an anemic .249.
. "TIIeremustbe10dlfferentreasonsmyaveragei~solow,"besaldprlorto
a game In New York. "I don't want to go into all of them. They Involve
Injuries, personnel and !allure of the team genera By to hit
"With a toi of dose 2-1 or 1-1games, I feel when I come to the plate I am
expected to hit the ball out o!thepark. I am trying toforcethegame.
"When r pu!Jl05eiY try to hit home runs, IhitundertheballtDgetsomeloft.
'Ibis isn't natUral. Sometimes I feel it would be nice to go up there totally
relaxed and just wheel away. I know my average would be better·"
The31-year-oldsluggersaidbealsowasunnervedllyconstantjugglingol
the lineup.
•'When r hit before or after a guy whO is batting .240 or .250, pitchers can
pitch around me," he said. ''Take Andre Dawson of the (Montreal) Expos.
I'll wager his place In the lineup with good hitters like Gary Carter and AI
Oliverhasn'tcllangedacoupleo!timesaUyear."
Gary MatiheWs, who last year hit In front of Schmidt, is batting .268with
only 44 RBI. Bo Dlaz, who hit behind him, has stumped to ·222· The
42-year-okl Rose, his consecutive game playing streak broken after 745
games, Is balling only .245 and is being platooned Von Hayes, the young
outfielder picked up In a llllljor olf-seasondeal with Cleveland, is hitting .26~.
"Only two guys are lllttlng above .300 -Joe Lefebvre and Greg Gross,
Scllmldtsald. "Wehavetheoldestguyslntheleagueandtheyoungest. Some
are disenchanted with the management and want to get out Alm&lt;lst
everybody Is confused.
''Baseball can be a humbling game.''

runs

notched his 12th save.
Orioles 8, Red Sox 1
In Baltimore, Jim Palmer gave
game.
up eight hits In 7 1-3 Innings and
Klttle'shomer,hisslxthlnthelast Eddie Murray and Rick Dempsey
seven games, came In a two-run hit two-run homers as the Orioles
third o!f loser Cllrb Codlroll, .12-10, defeated Boston. The victory was
that ~ up .the contest for .the . .the 12th In 14 games for the Orioles,
Wblte.Sox&lt;lri!I.Wucedtbelr"maglc theALEa5tleader!i. · · ' . ·:.• ·
niunber" for wiltniDg the West to 11 · Palmer, !1-4, allowed the only Red
games.
Sox run In the fourth on a single by
LaMarr Hoyt, 19-10, won his Carl Yastrzemskt The RBI by
eighth consecutive game and Yastrzemskl was his 1,840th, snapmatched Jtls career high of 19 ping a ninth-place lie with former
Minnesota 5, Texas 3 In 10 Innings

and Sel\ttle 3, Kansas City 1.' Rain
washed out the Detroit-Cleveland

victories
which
led the
AL hits,
last
season. He
allowed
eight
Including a pair of solo homers by
Wayne Gross, but departed In the
eighth. Four pitchers finished up,
InCluding Dennis Lamp, who

CAN'T TURN FOR TWO - Seattle Mariners' second baseman ·
Tony Bernozard (14) hangs on to the ball as he leaps over a sUdlng .
Don Slaugh! (7) of the Kansas City Royals In the llflh Inning of '
TueSday night's game In Kansas City. Bernazard furred Slaught out
at second· but coul.dn't .· throw to · first to catch Royals' On~
C6neepclon. Seattle won the game,- 3-1: ( AP Laserpbo~) · ·

r-·-·-···_ _;__. _·_·_____·_:·- ----------::-

Boston
great WUllams on the
all-time list
MliiTlly lined his 27th liomer off
Dennis Eckersley, 7-12, In the first ,
following a two-out single by Cal
Rlpken, Jr.

~:::::;:===~=====::;T--:=========j'
I
The Daily Sentinel .
!USPS 115-960)
A. Dlvl!don of Multim edia, Inc.
Publlshed- every afll'rnoon, M onda y

Navratilova advances
in U.S. Open Tourney
NEW YORK (AP) - They are

best friends, doubles partners and
two of the top players In women's
tennis. It's just that Pam Sllrtver
keepS getting In Martina NavraWova'sway.
One year ago, when Navratuova
was supposed to win the United
States Open Tennis Championship,
her pal Pam destroyed the dream In
the quarter-finals.
Now Martina is supposed to win
theOpenagalnandshe'sadvanceda
step closer this time, reaching
Friday's semifinal round .
And there, waiting for her again,
Is Shrlvl!r.

lhrough Frlday.lll Court Stree t, by the
Ohio Val ley P ublishing Co mp any- Mul-

tlmedla. Jnc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 992·

2 1 ~16 .

Second class postage pa id a t Po·
meroy, Ohio.

Membf'r : Thr Assod atl..'d P ress, ln·

Navratllova continued her
straight sets ·march through the
tournament with a 6-0, &amp;-3 destruction of No. 7 Sylvia Hanlka of West
Germany Tuesday. MeanwbOe,
Shriver, seeded fifth, upset No. 3
Andrea Jaeger 7-6, 6-3.
On the men's sldeofthedraw, No.
2 Ivan Lendl of C211!Chosiovakia, No.
4 Yannlck Noah of France, No. 5
Mats Wllander of Sweden and No.9
Jimmy Arias completed the
quarter-final lineup.
Lendl defeated No.l2Johan Krlek
&amp;-2, &amp;-4, &amp;-1; Noah eliminated
1&amp;-year-old Aaron Krlckstein 6-3,
7-6, &amp;-3·

Hammaker,. the Na tional League
earned-run-avera!!" leader at 2.24,
was chased when the Reds scored a
pairofrunsinthes1Xthfora6-0iead.
Evans' second error helped the
Reds add three runs In the seventh,
and catcher Dan BUardello capped
a three-RBI performance with a
solo homer in the ninth:
Right-hander Bruce Berenyl, 7·
14, blanked the Giants 51-3 lnninlij
before departing with shoulder
stiffness and seven walks: Rich Gale
completed the combined six-hiller
and registered his second career

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~PTEMBER 2 thru~

POSTMASTER : &amp;.&gt;nd a dd ress to ThE'
Da llv Se n11 nPI, 11 1 Court St., P omeroy.
OhiO 45769.

the smallest crowd at Candlestick
Park In three 'years, and the San
FrancisCO Giants played with
appropriate enthusiasm.
I
While some of the 3,562 spectators
yelled derisively, the Giants were
clobbered by the Cincinnati Reds,
11.1• Tuesday night wtth shortstop
Darrell Evans' twoerrorscontrlllut·
lng to siX unearned runs.
" If you don't hit, pitch, throw or
field, you're not going to win ,"
Giants' Manager Frank Robinson
said. "'Ibis was a poor excuse for
baseball."
Indeed. A total o!17 bases on balls sa~rdon't want tornake any excuses
were issued and Reds' first base- for the walks," said Berenyt, "llutl
man Skeeter Barnes, making his threwsomanypltchesandmyarm
major league debut, was plunked by was pretty sore the last three
two pitchers.
Innings.••
Evw:s, seldom used at shortstop,
Hammaker, who entered the
made his first error In the second game with · a !HJ record against
Inning and the Reds bolted ahead Cincinnati, also has been having
with four unearned runs off Allee shoulder trouble, but be didn't
Hammaker, 10-9, whO lost his fifth blame It for his performance.
straight.
"I'm a little stiff," he said. "But
Gary Redus' bases-loaded walk the main problem Is.that I'm not In .
and Paul Householder's three-run · rhythm. I'm overthrowing and my
double accounted for the scoring.
control isn't what It used to be."

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

ALl SEArS S2.00

la nd Dally Pr ess Assoclaton and the
Ame rtra n Newspaper P ubli shers As ·
soc ta t ion . Nat iona l A dver t l~ ln g Reprc.
st&gt; nt a tl vl'. Bra nham Newspape r Sa lt'S,
7:ll Thi rd Avl'nu e, New York, Ne w
York lOOli.

Small crowd watches
Reds rip Giants, 11-1
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _It was

BARGAIN MATINEES
ADMISSION EVER'f TUESDAY $ 2 .00

·-

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."

'

/';

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Store Hou/S: Mon.-Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.-Sunday Closed '·

�.
Page

The Daily Sentinel

4

Pon~roy · Middleport, Ohio

Har-rumph!

Oklahoma Sooner rise traps Cardinals

...

"

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Trojans . In an auspicious start for
kumph~
Ohio Statp's Buckeyes, despite
Peerless Prognosticator
new coach Ted Tollner. USC Is Ut!'
Egad, friends, have we got some Hoople choice, 28-22. But it won't be
thE' long jaunt :o the Wesl Coast,
should- heh-he!. - coast past the
-beauties for you! Most of the major easy!
college football powers- kaff·kaff
Nebraska's powerful ' HuskersOr~gon aggn a ·;,..,., 35-10. Nort h
-are swinging into action.
who destroyed Penn State In the
Carolina will cloubko the score on
Memphis State, 36-18. The Mary.
Independent clashes dominate Klckoff Classic - have won both of
this week's schedule with such their previous meetings with the
land Terps, who wm make a good
run at the 'ACC crown, will sink the
excellent matchups on tap as Wyoming Cowboys of the WAC.
Oklahoma at Stanford; Florida This week they ~&lt;ill make It No.3 by
Vanderbilt Commodores, 38-24.
State visi ting LSU; Southern Cali· a 42·14 margin. Um-kumph!
In two Big 10-Pac 10 meetings: ·
fomia enterta ining Florida; and
Auburn, our pre-season choice We look for Michigan 's Wolverines
Nebraska hosting. Wyoming. And for No. 4, will get off to a good stan to claw their way past the
don't forget Auburn at home to by routing the Southern Mississippi W,as h'mgt on St ate Cougars. 3512
· ·
Southern Mississippi and Penn Golden Eagles, 31-15.
But It will be a different story in
Sta te vs. Cincinnati.
Penn Slate, bouncing back from ·Evanston. 111.. where the host
In a pair of intra-state classics, the Nebraska debacle, will get a Northwestern Wildcats will suc·
Iowa meets Iowa State and Notre good look at Its own depth In cumb to the attack of Washington.
Dame visits neighbor Purdue.
vanquishing Cincinnati, 42-14.
It's the Huskies, 26-14. Jove!
And there is more' Alabama, in
Well-regarded Iowa of the Big 10 Perhaps we should have wild
Its first game under new coach Ray will be out to avenge its 19-7 loss to a nimal trainers referee those
Perkins, takes on formidable Geor- the Iowa State Cyclones in 1982. gam es. Ho-ho!
'
.
gta Tech.
Hayden Fry's
Hawkeyes
get the
Elsewhere, it will be Jeff Hos·
Jove! What a weei&lt;end!
Hooplenodtowlnasqueaker.Make teller and his West Virginian
How'U they do? From the top, this It Iowa, 17-14. Hak·kaff!
Mountaineers winging their way
Is how the Hoople System calls
The Notre Dame-Purdue clash Is past Pacific, 42-10; Arkansas topthem:
No. 55 In this hostly contested piing Tulsa, 24·12, In their 61st
-,... The Oklahoma Sooners, with series. The Irish lead In victories engagement; Mississippi beating
•-- Marcus Dupree rambling at will, 33-19-2. But thesegamesarealways Tulane. 'll· 1·, and Air Force winning
are too much for the Stanford hard-fought. Notre Dame has the a close one from Texas Tech, 33·28.
Cardinals, who are without the edge this year with experienced
Clemson and Boson College
services of Incomparable John Blair Klel at QB and runners galore battled to a 17-17 standoff last year
Elway, now an NFL rookie. We - headed by Greg Bell and Allen as BC's Doug Flu tie had a good
gtve It to Oklahoma, 35-14. Urn· Pinkett. The Boilermakers will passing game. Flulie Is still throw·
kumph!
keep It Interesting with premlerQB il\g with authority. This time
florida
·
State's
Seminoles
we~
:.
Scott
C~mphell
!llllng the
air )ll!th
··. Cl~mson will' be
_ · walt_ing for _
h lni.· ..
.
I
: :.
. .
,.
.
.
.
•
chilslng along ln -IUgh.gear last year· footballs. Give tlie Irish of Notre The Tigers \Vlll take it, '!1-24: when the l.SU Tlg'ers wiped 'em Dame a thrilling 35-21 win. Har·
In the Southwest, SMU will down
out, 55-21. This time the Seminoles rumph!
Grambllna 22·10, and BYU will top
•
will get the Tiger by the taU. With
Alabama, using a multiple of· Baylor, J6.W. The Arizona Wildcats
Bobby Bowden's hlgh-powered of· tense Instead of the wishbone will defeat Utah, 28-7, and the
!ense In gear, FSU will topple LUS, favored by the late Bear Bryant, Arizona State Sun DevOs wUI
38-3I In a wild fray. Watch for a will sip It to Georgia Tech, 35-21, prevail over the Utah State Aggles,
spectacular offensive duel between· making It a memorable del/ul for 38-8.
'
· · I..Su·s Dalton Hilliard and Seminole . Ray Perk\115 lis the new TldeCo!tch.
In another aerial circus Duke's
ritnner Greg Allen.
'
· The Mlariu Hurricanes, In a
"Bullet" Eien Bennett will bomb
Last year the Hoople System rebuUd!ng year, stUI have enough to
Indiana's Fighting Hoosiers, D-21.
stunned the collegiate footbaU beat Houston In a close one. In 14 Har·rurnph!
world by correctly predicting the . previous meetings these clubs have
Now go on with my forecast:
Florida Gators' 17.0 triumph over won seven each. Would you believe
Solurday. SepL 10
Air Force D Teua Tech !8
the Southern California Trojans. the total points scored by each team
Akron 2 1 - Mlchlpn 8
Har-rumph!
.
Is 272 by Miami to 270 by Houston?
Alabomo 15 Geoflla Teeh %1
This year we are calling It just the That's the same margin the Hoople
-J8VIall7
St 28 Ulall 81 8
opposite when the Gators travel to System gives to the Hurricanes on
Artuulia 114 Thloa 12
Southern California to mset the Saturday. It's Miami, 23-21. Urn·
1\nny 17 Colple 14

Scoreboard ...
Majors

roaches. to tontracls thrOIJgh the 1984
WII:IOO .

Natlo...l Le ...e
CHICAGO CUBS-Call~ up Dave

Owen

EAST DIVISION

and Tom Grant,outnelli!rs, Don Sthulu,
Pi.t1E"rson and
Alan

1\E'IR'Rif'

"' ""' ·"" •
"' ·""'"' '·~
11 "'
"' 16:Ill\\
....
"'"' ·...
".. ..m.. "141\
.."' "" .45"1...
.. ""., .421.... ",.
"

BaJIImOI"('

18
11

Mllwaulu&gt;f:o
o.tro!l
NI"W York

ffar~sheln -

.569

mer, pitchers, from Iowa oft he 1\mt'r lcan

Anoctallon.

.

~land
Chic~

INDIANA PACER S-Sig ned Jim
Thomas, guard, and Granville Waltcn;, center ,
t&lt;l multl·)'l" ar rontract.s .

.5'/'l

SEATTLE SUPERSONICS - Si rnf'CI
JoM
Cref.R and Ray Smith, forwarcb. and
Stf&gt;VP. Burks. Rlliln:l. to one.year ro n.
tracts.

15

T""'
Cllllt&gt;mlu
MlnnescJta
SPanK&gt;

Johnson .

IIASIIE'niiU.L
NatkJ..J BuU.b.U AMoclllloa

7J

Kansas City
Qlkland

Btl!

from Midland ol the Teu§ Ll!'lij{Ue.

7

64
72
16
M.'EST DIVIIION

and

pitcher,

16

Toronto
Boston

·

and Fritz Co Mally , lnflf'ldfora, .JoeCartt&gt;r

W ..L. Pd.GB

&amp;l

21

FO&lt;I'I'B.W.

Natloul Football Lupe
CINCINNAT I BENGAl.S-Cut

n-iq'• G..nBI
Toronto 6, California 4
BaltlmOn? 8, BOston 1
Drtrol l a t CJeo.•('land. ppd ., rain
MIJwaukre 6, Nl'W York 3
Mlnncsc:c.a fi, Tcxa.~ 3, lD lnnl~

Ack·
t•r,
d('h.•nslve end.
Lind·
strom, def~ns lvefo nd .

scattll' J. Kansas City 1
Chlcma-o 7. Oakland 6

Shf"lby Jordan, offf'flsfvP tackle, lo 11

IF'l'II"Sdl

lhret&gt;·)'('ar contract.
TAMPA
BAY

at Toronto

ll·91

-Placrd

tl .~!al 11 · 101 .

tn\
E!Mton (Boyd HI at BaiiLITIOrt' tFlana·
~~:an ~11. tnl
Dl'trdt tWUrox S!l and Pttry ~~ at
ONE"Iand r~ren!J('tl !J-9 and Behrnna 0.

"I.

~21

Sl&gt;atHe IYOUJll: ID-131 a! KWWII!i City
10.71, tnl

Mlnnesoca !Williams »12t at Thxas
tHOURh 12-121. tnl
n.and.8 GMM~~

NATIONU LFAGUE
BATI'ING 1340 at ba!JJ: Madlodt. Phi&amp;·
' bUI'Jlt\, .3'/l: C'n.lz. Hou5tm, ..m; Dawson.
Montrea.l, .318; Hll'fldrlck, St. louis, ,1HI:
Murphy. Atlanta • .3L'I.

Nrw York at MUwaukee, rnl

California at Chk:a~. tn l
OnlY games Sl'hecluled

NATIONAL LFAGVE

RUNS: Murphy, Atlanta , 114: Ra'lnes,
Montreal, 10'1: Do\\'3011, Mootreal, !W:
Evans, San Fr~~ncls('o. 87; Schmidt,

EAST DIVISION

W ..L. Pet.OB

66

Montm&lt;~l

'1U

Plll.&lt;;bt.H"'I:h

n
67
?U67
1B ill
62 'ni
511 Ill

Phlladclpl"'la

...

S! . louis

"'"
"""Yoo1&lt;
Lo5 An~
,· , Atlanta

"'EST DIVISION
1'!1 59

PhlllklclphJa. 82.

:515
. ~H

fll

.~

Tl

65

.!1.26 6'h
.493 11
.475 13Y.r
.4S7 16

Houston

_,_ ...

Hrt'S:: Dawaoo, Monlr'tal. 170: cnaz.
Houston , 162; Ollvcr, Montreal. 19): Than,
HW!IOII,J!i9; Ramlrel, Atlanta, 157.

.572

'IB

San Dle!ilo
tD 71
San fl'anct!!i('O
a; 13
C'lrll'lnnatl
64 76
'IWMQ'a GIIDHII
Montreal 8. ChiC~ 2

RBI: Dawson. Montreal , 100; Murphy ,
Atlanta, 99: Scbmldt, Phlladt'~hla, !K;
Guemoro,l.os A~. !II; TKmnedy, San

.m %
!D4
lY.t
.tf'J 9
.m JJ

OOIJBL~: ~kner. QUcqo, 36; Daw·

1

son. Momreat. 32: Knigtlt, HOU51011, l'l;
OUVl'r, Montreal. 32: Ray. Plttlbw'Jtl. 31.
TRlPI..ES: Butlrr, Atlar!IA. 12; Thon.
Houston, 9: Cruz, Hcwton, 8; Gree~. St.
Lools, 8: Washington, Allan~. 8.
HOME RUNS; Schmid: , PhUadelphla,
JJ: Dawson, Montreal. 29; Evans, S.n
~ ~; MurphJI , Atlanlll, 28: GuPr·

Phuadf'lpllla 2. New York 0
Hooston at Allan~. ppd., min
Pllt!AirRf! r;, Sl . l.wls 0

l"f''"'.I..ll'IAn~.27

S'TOl.EN BASES: Raines, Montreal, Ell;
Wlatns. San ~. 53; S. Sax, Los A.nafoles. +I; Wllsoo, NE.'W' Ytl'k. 43: LeMaster,

Clndnnatl 11. san Francisco 1
San Dlf'RO 8. Lori AJ!grles J
\\'e &amp;..-1&amp;)''1 GIRH!II

ChlC"BJ:O
~n

ll'i~ ~~

San Francisco, 3!1.

at Montreal lftO.

PrraDNG (13 det-lsklnsJ : Orok'O. New

16-91, cnl

Y.;"~k,

IJ.S. .722, 1.]): Dmi\Y, Pt111alU, .68t, 2.50: McWlUiam.s,
PtttsbJT"Rh. 13-6, .&amp;H., :us: Perez:. Af.
lanla, J3..6, .6&amp;1, 3.78: Ryan, Houstoo. 13-6,

Phlladt&gt;lphla f[~"'~ lJ.fi) at New York
(1\om.&gt;ll Ul, (n)
P\Uib.lrgh cRhoden 10.11) at St. Lwl!

!COX 1·3\ ,

delpbla,

.aw, :us.

(Df

HooiJICI'I 1Scot1 8-41 at San Dlejto !Lol·

Ctnctnnall !Pastore H21 at l.ol 1\nRf'h't

rR.euss ltl-101, !nl
Atlanl3 tDa)'ley 4.$1 111 Siin Fnmcboo

~;

,.,..,..• a.,.

Hwl;l on at san Dleto
CinC"'rmatl at Los AngeleS, (n l
Atlanta at 5an Franctsro, {D)
On!)' ~1111K'fi 5C.'hl'dUlcd

""""""" lEAGUE
BATI'ING (3411 If ball): Bogs,

.m

IIASEIIALL

RBI: Qqler', Milwaukee, 108: IUce.
P,_on, 109: Wlnaeid. New York. 99: Par·

Amtrtcu Ltarut

Paael,

JNDIANS-i'all.-d

Jack

Perconte

,,tjl:

&amp;llton,
Tn.mmeu,

DPtrolt, .377; MOII'by, Toronto, .320; Slm·
rn::~n~ . Mllwaukfto, .316.
R~ : ~lien. Bal!lmon&gt;, 98; MUlTI)',
Blttlrnlre, 57; Moteby, Ttwmo. t.1:
BJaa, Bolton, Ia; O:qler, Milwaukee, 81

Transactions

"'

cuew. catiJonda,

and

.

rtsll, O..nit, 98; AnnU. Jb10n,

Charlt'Si on of the International League.

l&amp;L

es and Ernie CamiK'ho, pltchent, from
KANSAS

ROY Al..S-A~tlvated

C ITY

Willi(' Wilson, oulflelder. and Do!! Hood,
, pitcher.
TORONTO BLUE JAY~S I&amp;ned
Bobby
Co•, lniD&amp;JI!'r, lnd Jo hn SUIIIVal'i.
Cito

IXXJBL~ :

Boaa.

lbtm, 43; ~~.

Konlu
"" .11'
- ; Brett,
· ...........
""
Pantsl\, Q!y,
D!mllt,
Kanlas City,
:It: HI'Wk, Mlnni'I!IIOta, 36.
TRIPLiS: Grtlln, 'I'oroato. 9; Frw1co,

.,.....,.,
~ Gootnor,
-· MD·
~
Wlnl"eed. New
York, I;Yaunl,
wauAI!f!.8.

Melp28MW...O

Wa.rren Loca120 Wotlsoo 6
SI!IIAL

Pt. Pleasant 14 Athens 0
Coal GI'IM! 21 GaWpolls 0
anctnnatl McNtchDlas 28 Jl'Ofltm 27
WheOI..-.t&gt;oq 14 Jaci!SOOJJ
Columbus Wehrle 13 Logan 7
SVAC

.

=~~~ n

CARMEL, Ind. (AP) - Jim
Mcintyre, a fanner radio broadcaster tor the Cincinnati Reds, died at
his home In Carine! after a long

Mldllpa35 W-811%
MldllpnSI.teC&lt;IIo&lt;!l&lt;lo8
Miami (Fia) Z!l HGII!Ilon 21
-ppll!'l'l'lllane 1
Mloooort5-34
MlnneoulateRiceiO
Navy tt VlrCID18 11
Nebraaka Ill W)'ORIIn&amp; 14
N Carolina 31M.,...,.. St U1
N Carolina Site E Corollna II
Ohio Sill Oo-.p&gt;IO

OhloUalv!!-8
~a S&lt;Mionllt
~ Sl • N TnM St s

TVCSTANDING8

Oft&amp;oo St. 11 Portland 81. If
l'&lt;oa StIll~ 14
a....,. n ~ n
San J ... St. Ill N""·LM Vepo 14
ScMtliiti n Cal !B F1ortda !2
s c....... zs Miami IOtdol 11

tNon-Leope 611111&lt;11 Daly)
Team

news

The Rev. Joseph Lowecy, pres!·
dent or the Soutllern Chrl&lt;!tlan . "wallaSUpthat~athou!ht"

Cosell said rn hls broadcast: " I
respect "!'d admire Alvin Garrett. I
was bragging on him with affection
and I used a word I use when playing
with my own grandson ."
Coseil enurnera ted a long Us! ·of
black athletes who had been hiS
friendS, including the .late J ackle ·
Robinson, Muhanunad All, Curl
Flood, WUlle Stargell, Joe Greene
and Silgar Ray Leonard.

C.ldweUll Eastern o
Hannan Trace 36 Hannan, W. Va. 0
Wa.._.a lol Kyger Creek 12

Fon FTYO Jl Southern 7
Ross Southeastern 12 Southwestern 6

-· ...'. ---

.

Belpre .......... ..................... ,. ]
Nel.·'iork ...... .... .. ................. 1
Warren Local ...... .................o
Melgs ......................... .........
. Mlller .................... ............ ..O

0
0
o
1
I

0

0 16 6
0 l2 8
1 7 7
3 9
0 0 6

o o

t8

Welbloo

'1'.......,. 30 New Mexico 28
Te....EJ P ... 14 , _ St. 13'

0 I 0 6 26

Trimble .............................. ,0 1 0 () 21

.. F.... !!ocktng .... :._......... :........ O· 1.- 0 . 0 28

.- 'l'ol&lt;do Ill' MMM.- If
VMI a
A Mary n ·

wm

·Alexander .... . ;.... ; ..",...... ......... 0 l
Sept. I

Vlrlltl!a'l'edl14 Wake F . - 11
w-n,.... 111 ,.....,._, 14

0 · 0 l2

AJexander at Vinton Co.

Belpre at Trimble
NeLsonville-York at Federal-Hocking
Meigs at Miller

W VJrpnla 42 Padllc 10
Wldllla 81 114 Boll Si u

- - • N. _ ,

Wellston at Wa rren Local

Frt&lt;~at•area

hiP ochool ..,....

M~I!S ~MW..-8

Scioto results

.Warren LDca1 8 Wellston 0

Oak HOI 22 Minford 6
Caldwt'U 7 Eastern 0
Hannan Trace 28 Hannan 6
Wahama 22 Kyger Creek 12
F'l. Frye 20 SouthErn 0
Southeastern 6 Southwestern 0

Pt. Pleasant '11 Athens 12
Coal Grov@ 28 GalllpoUs 0

Ironton 22 McNkhololS 8
Jackson 14 Wheek!rstJJ.rg 7
Logan 12 Wehrle a
Boyd County 41 BreathHf County al
Slsoonville 16 Ripley 8
Rook HUJ 22 Wayne :.Jl

"

Illness.
Mcintyre, 58, along·~tlme Indiana·
polls radio and TV perfonner,
broadcast the Reds games from

1966-70.

LEGAL NOTICE

.

W. LT. Pta. Opp.

Vinton Co . ..................... .... , .. I 0 0 21

SMU a Grombllllc 10
11
1

.

attention."

He fonnerty was with WISH·N
and WFBM·radlo In IndlanapoUs;
Mcintyre, Who died Tuesday, had
operated his awn business recently .

Tri Valley
standings..

Noire Dame 1 1 1 - n

= p=

grandson,

Matter of fact, I am pleased that he
sb)gled me out for such favorable

Former Reds' voice Mcintyre dies

1.oa1 ...., S&amp;.Jl ~ Sll&lt;
Lo±'·= Tech 48 New MeJdco sa s

COLUMBUS, Ohio !AP) Smouldering Pride, driven by Jim
Dalley; went the mUe in 2: 011·5
1\tesday night to win the featured
elghthraceatSclotoDownsandpay
$8.60, $4 and $3.20.
Second was Brink's Donut for
$3.40 and $3.40, followed by Lassie
Hook for $3.60.
The second race lrlfecta, t&gt;-8-9,
paid $5,323.W.
· . A crowd of 2,063 bet $207,704.

•• •

Th• Public Utllllleo Com·
mission of Ohio h11 set
tor public hearing Case
No. 83·32·EL·EFC, · to
review the fuel procure·

menl

pracllces

and

ADV.ITISID ITIM I'OUCY

potlclos of tho Columbus
and Southam Ohlo' Eiec·
trlc Company"," the .optro·
lion of Its Electric Fuel

lech et . ~ elhedlti-:ttl · ~-· II ,.._..ir.,4. ....... ,........, .
owoiiiii!Q : .. , .... I• ..ch .,....., St.,., ••C.,t · - ·
tpMIII.to~~J ...-4 '" this • . tf , we ·; . ""'· .U4 ef el'l
. •41wortlsM Item ' •• will ...., rev JltUt cheke .. .
, • .., ..., ... ,. 11- whew •••1..... . refledl ..... ....
•••~t•t•
rol•~:••• ••kfl will ....... ,,._, to pvrclrl ...
tlrte •4•onlae4 no,.. ot th. •••ortlle4 price wlttrllll Jl
o,.tr .,.. wet~tler , • .,.,. will 1M ecc.,.... Jet ....,_ .

Component, and related
malltro. This hearing lo
scheduled to begin 11
8:30 p.m. on Thuroday,
September 8, 1983 11 tho
offices of tho Public
Utllltleo Commloolon of
()hlo, 375 South High
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215. The ae111on wilt
end et 7:30 p.m." or ouch
tater time eo It required
In order to accommodlle
those waiting ·to testily.

., •

4•,•·

t~Urchea.l .

.

.. tNSPEC1E0

fOTAl SA JISFACfiON GUAIANTII
.•

' \J,S,O•"'

lworJihi,.. JOV ltvy .. I(,..Of II tVefOftt.-4 fer,...., ....,
totltlectlor~ , • .,., ..... of ·moftwfoch•ror. N ;.., ore,..,
••titlloi l{ro,., will reJieco .,..,, lte"' wltfol the ...,.:.
ltror~d or o comporofltlo ltro,"t or ,.ty,.; your Jltltchole
pric•

AU Interested parties witt
be given an opportunity
to bo hoard. Further In·
formation may be oliCjltn.
od by contacting tho
Commission.

I

Kroger Welcom11
YourFederel
Food StaiiiPI

(CMI'Y.tGHT 1tU · THI KIOOI. CO. ITEMS AND PIICES
GOOD SUNCAY. 111'1'. 4. THIOUGH SATUIDA1' , SEPT .

t~. lfU. tN GALLJPnliS AND POMEROY STORES.

WI IIISIIVI THI liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIIS . NONI

IOLC TO DIAI.IIS.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: MARY ANN ORLIN·
SKI, Secretary

'•.
•

U.S, GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Cln·
cinnati's Gary Redus Isn't counting
himself as a candidate for National
League Rookie of the Year~
"I'd vote for BUly Doran," the
Houston Astros second baseman,
Redus said 1\tesday. "I've been
InJured too much this year.
"The two things that have been
disappointing to ~ are my stri'
keouts and my average. If I didn't
have as many strikeouts and my
average was hlgher, I'd be satls·
field, even with the Injuries," said
the Reds outfielder.
Redus, who was hitting .253 going
Into 1\tesday night's game with the
Giants, hadstruckout97tlmes ln384
hats.
"You can't scoff · at what he's
done," said Reds Manager Russ
Nixon. "He'sgot15homersandhe's
going to steal over 40 bases. But I
think he reallzes he's got to work on
better contact. BY a lot of standards
he's had a pretty good year. But he
probably feels he should have a
better year."

BREAKFAST HAM .... J~. S2.09

SLICED Fltll INTO ONE CONVENIENT
TAKE HOME FACKAGE
IA·I7·LI. AVG •.

SMITHFIELD OR AGAR

BOILED HAM ........... ~~~Sl.98
1-LB. CRISP-N-SERVE VACUUM PACKED
SLICED BACON ........ .L.~t.Sl.39

Whole Fresh SJ28
Pork Loin .......· "'·

HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD .......••...L~.: Sl. 59
l·LB. TEEN QUEEN QUARTERS

MARGARINE.. .. 2/'1.19

24 COUNT

HEAD LETTUCE.~~~.69 4

Embassy Tea Bags

SEEDLESS
OHIO COLBY LONGHORN

CHEESE ......... ~; .. '1.19

WHITE GRAPES ..

~P,.89 4

c

30 COUNT MICHIGAN

CHERY ..........,~~f~.69'

1-00·Ct.

12 oz.

AND

MULLEN INSURANCE

NOODLES••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !.~~-97'
33

CANS

CORN DOG

54~

~

32 OZ. PEAK

~

NAVY BEANS ... ~ ...... !:~~~:. 89¢

~
~

ADOLPH'S

~

.DAIRY VAUEY

til

"At The End allhe PlooiM&amp;f Maat

lridfe"

''

-

~...~
....Y._OH...............~•.•~.-.25.~....'

16·01.

LOC!f

PINT IIETUIINAILE 101'TLES,,..~~
DIET COKE,

••

,.,,.....
Any 3.

*7

:.~ ~ ~! .
..,..._ 2$7

30 OZ. JOAN OF ARC RED

KIDNEY BEANS .........~~~.. 89'

I

lO OZ. INSTANT

.. ~~.t '4.89

Cost Cutter
White ~ Bread

Toppings

APPLE SAUCE ... ~~~t 2/Sl.09

E

Any 2

4

16 OZ. LUCKY LEAF

WITH FRIES ...... 99~

,

PINEAPPLE JUICE .. ~.~~- Sl.39
NAPKINS ..•......... ~~~.K.~. 2/89

Peaches

Grade A
Large·Eggs .... oo•.

2/S2.29

~

Eastern
.

Gal.
Jug

KROGER

CORNED BEEF HASH 2/S2.29

60 COUNT NORTHERN

Can

Milk .......... ......

12Yz OZ. MORTON HOUSE ASSORTED SLICED

~

as
·
•
•
•••

Homogenized

FABRIC SOFTENER .•.... Sl.39
15 OZ. ARMOUR

88

KROGER

oz.

MEATS.~.~~~

l·lb.
Pkg.

Vac Pak
Kroger Coffee

lox

GRAPE JUICE•••••••••• ~ •••••••• ::\~. SI.09

CANNED

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

1
.
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
~

tl!!'

•••

lb.

lox

46 OZ. DOLE

fl

I

.-------------1 12 OZ. WELCH'S

DOWNING-CHILDS

Beef
Round Steak
Ole Carolina
Sliced Bacon

Kraft
Velveeta -Cheese

POTATOES .......~~~- '1.95

"I lind myself getting In bad
habits,' ' Redus said of hls transition
from the minor leagues. "In the
minor leagues, It was kind of easy to
get out of lt. Up here, the pitchers
find out what you're doing wrong
and you can goO-for-a-week."
"I figured he was going to strike
out some," Nb&lt;on said. "But I
thought this late In the season he
would have adjusted a UtUe better at
going the other way (hitting to right
field).

FULL CUT

lONE IN

s

~

-·
1111: "-"'·
MU·
WIUift, 172;
Wbit~Ur,
DetrUt,
l'IU: fUpkiEII, Baltlmcft, 116; Mcn.e, Kanlu ctl)',

.

KaBul st. :!IIi Kentucky!!
Lehlp.
21 Nortl&gt;w......,,.

. Reds' Redus likes Doran chances

97.

Hbombl'rg, lnflt'lck'rs, and Rica ant Barn-

1&lt;{'\lln

Belpre 22 Trtmblel4
Nelsonvtlle-York :Jl Federal-Hocking 6

and said CoseU "ought 1o be man said Lowery, who said CoseU
enough to ~.enough loiay 'I said It promised to send him a tape of the
and rm!IOl'IY.'" Hewasalsocrltlcal . radio program. "If he said what he
of the "absence of blacks" on 1V said tome, I'msatlsfled."
~L
.
Cosell was supported both by
'1\Jelday ntght, Lowery said Redsk!ns owner Jack Kent Cooke
Coeell had called him and "told me said the team's managemenl"was
over the pmne that he regretted "Oabbergasted at the fUror raised".
using the word and assured me and over the comment and GatTett. The
millions of people that he did not use receiver saki In a statement Issued
the word In a deroptory lashlon. · by the Redsklns:
"I was satisfied by what he said to
.,I dl&lt;2 not, and do not, lake
mem the telephone, bull do want to exception to anything he said about
know wllat he said to the· public," me ID the broadcast last night.

"

Ryan, Houston, 14S.

SA~ Le. Smith. aucaao. &lt;;M ; Reu·
don, Monti"HJ, Zl: 1Jfodro8ian, AtlUIW, 19;
Minton. San f'rudlco, 19; ' Holland,
PI\UadelpNa, 18.

!Gant'lts ().(h , I DI

Karl

lowa17 Iowa s..e 14
n Texas Cllrlaelan 20

S1RIKEOllfS: CarHm. Phlladf'lphiA,
234: Solo. Ctnd/11\all, Zl6; t&amp;W!Ulams,
Plltsburgtl, 164; Valmt~La . l...o!i Angt&gt;IK,

lar 7·101. \ DI

CLEVELAND

It

TVC

Vlntoo Co. 14 Alexander 0

Kaasu

HOCKEY

l...t-.aders

t~llnortl'

Hawali11~81.13
n.oy """" 311 - .. VniY
Idaho ~ S C'..olorado II

Chris Burdette ................. ........................................... ... ....... 9
Mark Hammond ....................................... :.... .................... , .. ~
Andyiannarei11 .... ... .. .... ......... ,......... .. .. ........ ..... ...~ ............... 4
Tony Welch ............. ........ .. ...... ......... .......... ................. .... :.... 4
Dave Barr .... ........... .. ....................... ......... .................... ...... 3

BUCCANEERS ·

tlol\5.

at MllwaukR&gt;

Freono
c...., n
Flrman 48 Canon-Newman te
F1Goida !ll 38 U!U 31

No.

Chris
,

ST.
Goy
CtiOu lnard, centl'r, lrom ltw&gt; CaiJary
f1aml'!l In eltch&amp;Jt!l'(' for fu ture-mnsldera ·

tKOON1"'aff 10.7), tn l

New York tFmleMI
tPortPr
tnl

Btl!

NaU•nal Hockey Lupe
LOU IS BLUES- Acqulrfil

Ot. ~ O·n l
.
Oa:k.Jand tHf'imiW&gt;DI"r J..11 at Chk:'aao

Sill_..,

Dnlllell S Ookala !ll 7
Dull&lt;lOincUMall

Alt. Yd&lt;!. Avs. TD
Dave Follrod ....................................................... 5 30 6.0 0
Jon 'Perrln ...................... ....... .. .......................... 18 22 '1.2 0
ShawnEads ........................................................ 7 w 2.9 o
Chris Burdette ............... .. ................ . _............... .... 6 7 2.9 0
Nick Rlggs .......................................................... .'.6 ·7 ·1.4 0
n 72 u o
Totals
·
Passing
Alt. Comp. Ydo!. lat. TD
Nick Riggs ..................................................... 9 4 39 1 0
MlkeChancey ............................................... 1 I 39 0 0
Totals
10 5 78 1 0
Scoring
TDPatFgTp
Dave Barr ... ...... ................................................ 0 0 H
3
Solo Tackles: (three or more)

Mar k Cotnl:'y, Afeiy, on tht&gt; InJured rt&gt;·
servt" 1.151. RI"·.&lt;~IRnedDwa yneO'Ste€&gt;n,d t&gt;­

h:&gt;ni lve back.

Delaware 48 Weot ctoeoter 12

t,op next week.

Rushing

LOS
ANGELES
RAIDERS--Signed

w~·.o~m~~~

CalifOrnia

SlgnPd

a ....... n-...c.u.,eM

Son of a gun! The Ole' Major
put It to yours truly In the !lrst
week of local hlgh school action.
Hoop picked 11 of 16 whUe I
crawled home with a 13-8-1
bombing.
This week finds the Tri· Valley
Conference opening league play
whUe the .Southeastern Ohio
AthletiC uiague and Southern
Valley Conference continue nonleague play.
Look out, Hoop! Take a
gander at these and see who's on

Leadei'Shlp .Conterence, said Tues·
day ntght that CoaeU had Cl!lled him
to aPDkl!Jze for using · the term
during ABC's telecastMonday night
of the game between the Redsklns
and the Dallas Cowboys.
Diutng a replay of a G&amp;m!tt pass
receptlollln the second quarler, he
said Washington Coach Joe "Gibbs
wanted to get this kid and that little
monkey gets loole, doesn't he?"
Lowery, wbo.said at a 1\te9day
co~ Colell'scmunent

· The Daily Sentinel-Page-S· ..

Meigs grid statistics

· Gaston, A I Wtdmllr.andJJmmy WIJ tlams ,

AMERICAN IEAGUK

A.ubum 11 s Mh::t..W 15
!ll !t E W.......,lt
llrfatwn
vowoc
• 111
11uc1&lt;no0 s:J
Howor&lt;llt
c-sss.. Dler.&gt;SI. it
Ctladet It Praobyterlaa 10

-

Monkey
remark
draws
apology

Capt. Crow predicts

NEW YORK (AP) - Sportscaster Howard CoseU, acknowledging
· that he referred on the air to
Washinglon Redsklnswlderecetver
Alvin Garrett as "that little mon·
key," has apologized for It and says
the remark was "not remotely
connected to racism."
Moreover, Cosell said Thesday on
his New York Radio show, "a little
monkey" is what he calls his own

,·

•
'•
~~
'

.......

tJ....

Fresh

Sprite,.Tab or
Coea

Broccoli

....

Pilat .'1•.•. _L

~

...~... --·- -

�Wednesday, September 7, 1983

. The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

' WEDNESDAY
a meeting and potluck dinner.

Ribbon winners announced from Meigs Co. Fair
The WOrk was judged with 386

blue rlbbons; 351, red; 187 white
and 18 green ribbons awarded along
with cash premiums. Entrles by

f

.

.

Todd Jackson. Todd Michael, Ora Nelson.
Susan Francis, Tracy Murphy, Ruby Burke,
Tony Masters. Jenny Maslers, Michael
Smtth, Amy Hager, Tanny Kennedy, David
Rice, Shane Simpson, Ted Slnclalr.
Rro ribbons: Ryan Buckley, John Collins,
Jessica Crttes, Heather Goff, Darlene Good,
Susan Hawk. Jeromy Jackson, Janet Mel»
natd, Hedl Ne~on, Crystal Smith, Angela
Young. Scott Burke. Jenny Deem, JeU Durs!.
Michelle Lawehery, Jtmmy Smith, Jay

hools ln 1 ded So th
HI h 1
SC
C U
;
U ern
g • ;
Southern Junior High, 46; Syracuse
: Elementary, 75; Racine ElemenSwain, Heath Gerlach.
• tary, 133; PortlandElementary,35;
BradburyEI...........,
Meigs,Junior High, 10; Middleport
Blu(&gt; ribbon" Henry Buchannan. Brenda
Elementary, 79; Pomeroy Elemen- Hawley, Jackie Large, Dee Shane, Debbie
West, Jennifer McKinley, Matt Ba.k~. Luke
. tary, 123; Salisbury Elementary, Burdette, K,bn Chadwell, Sheila Edmonds.
• 59; Rutland Elementary, 69; BradMary Goodnlte. Tammy Hawley, David
: oury Element·~·.
56·,
Harrlsonvtlle
Jacks, Lorrena Laudemlltt, Bre~ Utile,
...... J
Mindy Spencer, Jeff Stone.
: Elementary, 61; Salem Center
Red .rlblx&gt;ns: Barb Coleman, RaMie
.
Ch t El
· Johnson, Pr1cUla King, Robin Qualls, Shawn
El
ta
59
•
emen ry,
;
es er emen- Bradley, Pat Gibbs, Joe Hysell, Darrick
tary, 15; Riverview Elementary, McCloud, ScottOgdln, Marr~a Baker, Randy
74, and Tuppers Plains ElemenBunce, Joe Hall, Karla KauU, Tannmy KauU.
Ada King, Man Lyons. Elise Meter, Klm
. tary, 47.
Peck, Danette Sef., Kathy Thomas, AMon
• Winning blue and red ribbons In Stone. Heather Thomas.
: thelr respective schools were:
Blue =~'J;!~, Brian
Chesler Elementary

•

•

Phi!Ups, Calvin Donohue, Tayna Hudnell,

Blue ribbons: Adria Frecker, Sarah Harris,

Lessle Osbom, Matt Parsons, Karen Smith,

Tony Grate, Julie Ritfle, Suzanne Clay,
. Red ribbons: Matthew Michael, Kellle

Tiffany Bennett, Missy Marken, Jason TUIIS,

Ridenour.

IUvervtew Elementary
Blue ribbons; Chad Barber, Colin Cbeva".
Uer. Matthew. M/P'tln. Gus. MoMon, Wendy
ROch, Amanda RIChards, WUIY Adams, BUiy
Ba.k er, •. ,Patrick Baninger, Jim Buckley,,.
JeremY Cline, Mandy Drake, LetiUa Holslnger~ Cheryl JOhnson, Nicole Kanawalsky,
Misty Newell, VIncent Reiber, Wayne
Ritchie, Jason Ryan, Amanda Wells, Jean
Wilson, Jim Wood, Honey Flelds, Wesley
Holter, Danny Lawrence, Keith Spencer.

Ronald Vance, Amanda Molden, Lisa Mor·
· gan, Aaron Sheets, Cindy King, Amee Rupe,
Debbie Six, Jason Dodson, Dena Hall, Candy
Parson, Teddy · Parsons. RonnJe Pettry,
. Shane H;tell.
·
. · · ·· . · .. . .
Red ribbons : · Crystal Donohue, Meron
Orueser 1 .Brooke Howard. Tim Vance, Bobby
. X, Shane Hatfield, Becky Snowden: Larry
Hall, Shawn Hamon, Julie King, Bobby
Vance, Jennie Barrett, Jeny GUkey, Rodney
Butcher. Sheri Call, Kimberly Chapman,
Brad Cornwell, ROOnda Mark~~, Klm Parsons.
KeMy Harden, Wesley Howard, Kevin

BWy Wells, Chris Adams, Jarrod Barber,
Tina Newland, . Jared Spencer, Stanley
Bennett, Jenpy ~ry. Lisa Ortggs, Lori

Rullantl Elemet~~~~ey

Mich.\tel Cremeans, Brtao Hortman, Paul
Anspach, Frank Blake, Stacy Duncan, Darin
Logan, Nikki Meier, Jactnda Mullen, Tabitha
Phillips, Usa Poulin, Mike Reynolds, Ttna
Smith, Lee Cradle. Mary Crerrteans, ~uMn
Houchins, Dare! Wolfe, Jeri Hawley. Ken
VanMatre; Dodle Cleland, Jerry Stone,
Rachel Ekllck, Jason Smith, Beth Buskirk,
James Large.
Red rtbb&gt;ns: Chad Duncan, Erin harper,
Bridget Jacks, Todd McDade, Elisha Mea-

Bluertbbons: Alanna Cleland, Chris Gilkey,
Bob Moonlspaugh, Gary Adams, David
Dalley, Kevtn 'Prtdem&lt;re, Angie Black, BWy
Haggy, Tracie Richmond. TOJTa SChoonover.

Jim Cleland, Bob Lambert, Beth ~artng,

Tammy MWer, Meranda NicOOlsoo, Shelly
Black.

Red rl-.s: Peay Estep, Jtllllel Harmoo. Darlene Stanley, Tammy SW&lt;her,
Richard White, Mary Whee&amp;er, Lorl Bumem,
BW Jone&amp;, Jay O'Brien, Scott Peterson, Matt
Wood, Riehle C&amp;rsan. Kim Cottn Melllsa
Jeffers, Kandt H)'lell, HoUy Wllllams, Juan
Reynolds, Eric l'etersCII, Kevin Taylor, John
Wll~ Angie Elliott, John · Evans, Julia

OOws, Kathy Michaels, Angie Seldenabeck,

Christine Taylor. Brooke CUts, Mindy
Harris, Scott Hudson, Lori KeUy, Kyle
Simpson, P. J. Chadwell, Heather Davenpon,
Chrissy Weaver, Teresa Deem, Ertca EUas,
Tracy Ellis, Kurtis EngliSh, D. J . Herdman,
MISsy NelsCI'J, Tara Ge-rlach. Robb W.¥att,
Matt .Gattrell, Dan McOoud, Frank Musser,
Abbey Blake, Matt Falls. TOdd Napra. '
Pomeroy Elementacy
Blue rlblxlns:

Hatfl.ekl. Tony MWer, carl WUllams, Kelly
Wood, Jeff Jeffers, Jerry Cleland, Mike

Walls.
Salem C..l!lomallory
Blue ribbons: Matt Clark, lJllJe Lambert,
Denise Shenefield, Larry Athbum, Jessica

Terry Lyons, Mary Martin,

Silvers, Kurt. Adkins, Kerl ~k, Matt
Haynes, Candy Helllley, Terry McGuire,
Jenny Peyton, Dennis Edmuston, Richard

Trenton Cleland, Lee Husk, Brett Laudermill,
Eric Qualls, Sandy Will, Dav:ld Darst, Lynette
Neece, Stephanie Prtce, Mlcha Bunch, Mindy
Faulkrod, Susan Goode, Scott IcenOOwer,
Penny Klein. Reva Laudermllt. Joe McElroy,
John Sargent, Sandy Monis, Jason Carpeoter. Dantelle a-ow, · JOhn Davis, Andrea
Dillard, Kelly Smith, Jeff Tracy, Debbie
Alkire, Dennis Boyd, Nathan Brown, Katrina
Turner, Keith Smith, Terti White, Eric Heck,

Workrnarr,' Brady Ashburn, Mary Hale,
Pennie Hensler, Mike Sct.Jier, Tara Oark,

Scott Gilkey, Jody Uvlnltston, Cludy May-

nard. Todd Price. RellflO YOWI8.
Red r1blxms: Jason Dellavallo, Dllve
McDonald, M1lce Pl!llllpo, Shayne Aapln,
Jamie Barrett, Jenny Erlewtne, Andrei
Hale, Danny Lewis, Bobble llaiTett. Lelllh
Estrltl&amp;e, Cryslal Brown, Carrie SCIII'Ilerry,
Dale Johnson, NataHe L\K'U, TherHa

Angle Spaun, John Anderson, Jennifer Buck,
Kenda Kloes, Richard Rathburn, Tara Wolle,

Lesley Carr, Leah Doidge, Steve Foulkrod,
Lee Ann Goode. Dennis Han1s, Keith Manox,
Jeff McElroy, Beth Pierce, Sonja Steele.
Valarle Lynn, Don Wauah, Missy Wood,
Brent Zirkle, Anna Chapman.
·
Red rtbOOns: Chris l.all@, Kandt Bachtel,

PIIWlps, Jeremy Stone, M1lce Fe«y.

s.Bat.y Demm·-y
Blue rlblx&gt;"': Heath Hudson, Tony King,
Eric Wagner, Matt Cook, Elizabeth [)(Mrney',
Trever Han1soo, GirY King, Mandl Sheets,
. Elsie Bufltngton, Jenny BamllaJ1, Mickey
Yvette Young, Tamml Jones, Conrile 8auters,
}~e.. ~asm Stewart, ·• Da\1d' SWillll30n,
Jell Wellbl'ovm,: -· Terry. Reurer. Krtsti!n .
vlrg!ru. - ~her, K1lil . EWing. Bob"'• · Slawfer, Motite Swindel, Melill}je Beegle, ·
Huffman, Angela Klein, Usa Pierce, Lori
Kristen King, Andrea \YIIaley, KellY Herd- .
, P&amp;im;e, Sean Walton, Nancy Baker, Randy
man. Kelly Douglas\ Pab1da Davis, MlcheDe
Hawley, Brad Anderson, DeAnna Boothe.
Taylor, Vanessa Jay, Michelle Klein, Jennifer
Ron Casto, Rotui.ld DOes, Jamie Hubbard,
Taylor.
Christy Waugh, Jamie Btgg, Chrl.sten Buz.
Red rlblx&gt;ns: David Herdman, Charley
zard, Candy Harmon, Denise HyseU, Donnie
Martin. Travis Shockey, Angie Teaford,
May, VIcky Warner, Tommy Wllson, Mona
Brian Wal.ke!', Carrie Bartles, John Martin,
Fairrow, John Haggy, Lula Nease, Raymond
Richie Blankenshlp. Steve Crauthen:, J. J.
Landers, Dennis Boothe, David Buchanan,
Moore, Chris Sloan. M1ssy Leach, Chuck ,
Rro&lt;an Cundll!, Greta Rlllle, Shelly Triplett.
~th, Kelly Dpualas, James Sauvage, Jody ·
Nicole Bu.och, Carolyn Eiam, John Ellkltt,
Taylor, Mary Butcher, Sherrt Teaford.

1HURSDAY

Pridemore, Enc Smith, Bob Hall.
Red ribbons: AllsM Jones, Ptl1l Morgan.
Cathy Neutzllng, Barry Yeaugor.

Wllllams, Tr1da Woijo, Shal'1ln IJeort1.
JessJca Evans. Bllly Joe Janes, Mellsia
Ralno)', Elizabeth SmJth,

Blue ribbons: Kljsty Rizer, Barbie Rouall.
Junte Beegle, Nancy Hunt, Tommy Ja&amp;pers,
Jeremy Lawrence, ZeUa Lawsoo, Rebecca
Malone, Rebe&lt;:&lt;&gt;a Roush, Sheri Roush, Susie
Sp.,..,., Greg Weddle, Diana WUlblrgEr,
Nett Barber, Michal!! l!ooo, Becky Evans,
Ryan Evans, Debbie Greatoo.ae.- Deaana
I!Teber, Sabrina Mahlman. David McM1llan,
AJUt Sellers, Junior Smllh, Timmy Teaford.
Red riblx&gt;ns: Terri Hill, Rae Lynn Dalley,
Kevin Heaton, Tanya Meadows, Jason
QuWen. Tommy Stoban. Sabrlna Bush, Greg
Greber, Dawn JOhnson, I...arry Sellers, Travis

81110 rlbllons: Slwmon C&lt;&gt;der, Heather
Han1S, Joe Smltb. Stephanie Sayre, CJv1l.
I~ Weaver, Jason Arnott. Chris Ebenbodl, Marcy HID. Herrle Mullen, Reoee
Ruaoell. Tonya latlla, Travh Neue, Clwyl
Papo, IIHIIa' Rolooll. Mlcliael - ·
Andne , _ , Chr1s Wolle, ChrtsU Snlmlleltl, Mlc:helle Harris, Donlae Rlchnrds, Dooll
Stewon. Mloty Swllhel', Bectd L a - .
Todd Lllle, andy Nelltzllni. Sarah ~
Candl Smith, Chris Strut.
Red ! 1 - : bennts Foley, Chris Gulntller,
Jodi Hobts, Amy Morft; Michael Mcteelwy,
Jared Stewart, 1'\JClo!r WWlaml, NICOle
Beewle, VaWrle CoonoUy, Deble HaUoy; ·
Tamara Hayman, Kimberly Jenkins, Ja1011
Powell, MJchH Bentt, Amber CUmrnlnp,
MJ.chelleFrlend,UtaJonet,Micheik'McCo:Y)
Bufft Menifteld, Nancy Hud&amp;on, Anthon)' '
Moore, Ray Sayro, Kev1n Burgess, Racblllo
Davis, Challty Jade, Doua Lavender, Cball
Taylor, Barbara U.le, Brian Wee~. Becky
Wlnetreoner.

P-El..........

wan..

Rodael!lomeotary
Blue r1bboM:. Cllrts Brown, Jamie CoUnts.
Kelly Hensler, Brandi Mallory, Atmee

Manuel, Jessie Older, Robert Reiber, Shan-

non Tucker, Mike VanMeter, JrFJ Hel151er,
Rhonda Spaun. Timmy Baker. Michelle
Brown, KeMy Clark, Jeremy Oeek, Todd

Harr15oo, Jerry Hayman, Jamey ·Holter,
Val"'sa Hunnell, Trevor Petrel, Eric Shoults,
Heldt Snider, Donald Stephenson, Jenny
Vamey,JarrodQrcle,JuonClrcle,Rhannon
Counts, Jbnmy Deem, Chad Diddle, Colin

8

a

VanMeter.

Johnson, KelUe Mullen, Rachel Retber, Ten1

Red rtbbons: Steven Arnot1, Peggy Caruth·
Rowsh, Eric Stover, Tamll'\Y Theiss, KJm
ers, Jenny Clark, Jimmy Counts, Jessica
WUlf«d, Wendy Wolfe.
Coven, Jennl Hlll, Ryan Holter, Wendy
Red ribbons: ~ Baer, Bridget Bin&amp;.
Jone!l, Bryan Justis, Marcy Mat~s.
Dolly HW, Tammy J{olter, Barry McCoy,
FreOdle M!otson. Michelle McDanlOI, J.....,y . -Rick Sollers. Jtullle Wol(e, Una CUr!ls, t::hr1a
Nor:thup, Jtmmy Rand:llptv Angel Robert!, ·. Deemer, Anette Fitch, Joyce.; 'Fomnan,,
Rase~! ~· .Do~d S~er. Heather
Legina Hart, Angle llayes, M~hael Holter,
Sl1\lth, John Spencer, Rebecca Stobart·, Kevin • Jeff Holtz, Bill Protltt.
.
Turley, Jodi Cummins, Shane Circle, Lenny
. 81 • t n J11ib SCbool
Dowell, Kellle Ervin, Heather Gibeaut, Kevin
Blue rlbbln: L.a.tttn WoUe.
Grady, Davtd IhJe, Robin Imtx&gt;den, Jason
Lawson, Robtn Manuel, Rebecca Parsons,
Emily Shain, MelJssa Tea!crd, Mark Thel.s.!l.
Rebecca Wiles, Michael Beaver, Jenny
Dllnll'1ll'l, Arnie Dugan, John Hoback, MeU&amp;sa
Justis, Jennller Smith, Angel Snider, Jarielle
Wllllams, Harold Bird, Todd GrlndsiJ&gt;ll. SCott
HW. Jennifer Jotmson, Melanie Lyons, Joey

Stanley, Jared Sheet5.
Middleport EleRlflllar)'
Blue ribbons: Mandy Slavin, Kevin wpaKeith ~tlJU!n, Bret_ Rod, Mykal , ley, Jamie Harris, Patrick . Jacks, Sherry , Terry_F1elds, ~ Wll)'\and, Mlke-~orrls.
Mt!IPI-IIIIb
YMun~y.
oung.
·
Michael, · Kyla Sellers. JaY Cremeans.
Rice, Ammy Roush, Sarah Wiles, Shannoo
Blue rtbbons: Trena Buchanan, Permy
Red ribOOns: Amanda Barringer, HaM'}'
BartJmus, Deana Good, Shelly Pooler,I - - : - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Jesslca Reiber, Tony Rood, Jessica Schmitt,
Chastldy Mlllhone, Karen Morris, Brett
Prtce, Susan Richards, Brent SaUcy, Patrick
Gibbs, David Gumph, Jay Holsinger, John

!folslnger,. Greg Ryan, Missy Stewart, Usa

Health
meeting
at Jackson
The topic of the 1983 District
Health Conference to be held on
. Sept. 8 at the Jackson Area
Extension Center Is "How to Avoid
Dying of Cancer." Sponsor of the
· meeting Is The Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service. The Ohio State
: University.
The keynote speaker will be Dr.
. John P. Minton who Is a nationally
: latown cancer speclallst and sur• geon at The Ohio State University
: College of Medicine.
He wUl talk about family history,
what you put In your body and
expose your body to as predictors of
cancer. Minton has done research
: relating to the foods and chemicals
• we eat and breathe.
· Chris Goodall, the Southeast
District Health Department nutritionist, wlll discuss the relationship
of diet and food and wUl help us
understand such things as cholesterol, fiber, lipids, vltamlns, caffeine and sweeteners as they relate
tD cancer.
Sue Basta. with a University of
C!na!nnatl Health Project, wlll
provide Instructions on testicular
, : and breast self-examinations for

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TIJESDAY
MIDDl.tPORT - The Middleport Garden Club will meet
Tuesday evening at the home of
Mrs. Carl Horky. Rita Hamm
wUl be co-hostess. New officers
wUI be Installed.

Happenings
Warner reunion

DAR meeting
postponed

·

POMEROY - A meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the American Revolution 'announced for ·
has been postponed to
• Saturday
Sept. 24.
The meeting will be held at
Blennerhasset Island and the
1&gt;rogram to commemorate the
mil annlversacy of the Signing
of the Treaty of Paris w!ll be
given by Mrs. Pearl Mora.
Hostesses for the meeting will
be Mrs. Joseph Cook, Mrs.
; Patrick Loohary, Mrs_ A, R.
Knight, Mrs.. Jean Craig, i!nd ·.~
·M rs. Macy Rose. Those needing
a ride are asked to call 992-2433,
992-7669, 992-2600, or 247-2344.
The group will leave Pomeroy at
noon.

LAKE HOPE - The B!rda
warner famUy reunion wtl be
held at Lake Hope Sunday with
· dinner at noon.

Wood reunion
FOREST ACRES The
annual WOOd reunion wtll be
held Sunday at the Forest Acres
Park. There wW be a picnic
dinner at 12: ll p.m.

Moore reunion
POMEROY - The annual
Moore family reunion
.wUl ,b e held Sept. 18'a t the Me~
County Senior Citizens buDding
on Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
The potluck dinner will be held
at 1 p.m. and all friends and
relatives are Invited to attend.
J~

c.

Spagl:!etti dinner

Camera Club
seeks members

LONG OOITOM - As a
special tund raising project for
the Long Bottom Conununlty
Association, a spaghetti dinner
wUl be served at the bulldlng on
Saturday from 4 to 7 p.m. The
menu will Include sP.,.ghettl,
homemade rolls, tossEd salad,
beverages and pies. Charge Is
$2.50 for adults, and $1.50 tor
children, 12 and under.'

POMEROY - A meeting of
the Image Seekers Camera Club
will be held Monday night at 7: ll
p.m. at the Meigs County
Museum.
Anyone !nteresled bt photography Is Invited .to attend. At
Monday's meeting basic camera handling and tundamentals of camera use wlll be
discussed In a question and
answer type format.
Those attending are asked to
take their cameras. David Bowers of Albany won the Nlkon
camera ·and Lee Miller, the
lnatted print, awarded trom the
eamera Club booth at the Meigs
Coutity Fair.

FOREST ACRES The
descendants James and Bertha Cremeans wUI have a famUy
reunion Saturday at Forest·
Acres Park, New Uma Road. A
basket dinner wt1 be served at
-12:00 p.m. All relatives and
frlend'i are Invited.

Benefit dance

Townsend reunion

RACINE - A benefit dance
for Marvin Teaford who was
Injured earlier this summer ln a
swimming•accident, wtll be held
at the Racine AmeriCan Legion
hall from 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday
night.
Blltzkrelg will provide the
music.
To.reach the hall, travel Route
124 to Route 338, and turn right.
The dance had orlglnally been
scheduled tD be held at tbe
Senior Citizens Center but was
changed to the Racine hall due to
the expected large crowd.

PARKERSBURG -The 30th
annual Townsend reunion wtl be
held Sunday at the City Park ln
ParkersiR!rg. The plcDlc lunch
will be held at 1 p.m. All relatives
and trlends are Invited to attend.

Jehovah's Witnesses belleve Chesapeake High School.
there are more Important things
The 2,900 square foot structure
than buOdlng a church. That's why wUl be all "Witness built." Five
they seldom spend more than 48 hundred volunteer workers from
hours constructing one.
four states arrive to begllt at 7 a.m.
"Time Is the most Important Saturday. The architect for the
commodity we have. If we can do ln project Is Donald McCartney of
two days what we would normally C&lt;:&gt;lumbus. The job supervisor wlll
do In two years, we can have more be Hubert Gammill from Indians;
tlme for our family, our cngrega- structural inspector, Wllllam Dea·
tion and our neighbors,'' said David con, Waverly, Ohio; electrical
Nemetl}, BuDding Committee Co- Inspector, Warren Connelly,
ordinator.
. Reedsvllle.
This two-day project Is scheduled
tor Sept. 10 and 11 In Chesapeake,
All trades will be represented,
Ohio_ The buuatng site Is located Including cabinet maker and Inte· about one mile west of theOjdRoad rior decorator. The bulldlng crew
52 and New 52 lntersectlon, on Old will work ln shifts, around the clock
Road 52. It Is two blocks above untll the buDding 'Is completed,

~arpenter

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SEPTEMBER 11 1983
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Eblin reunion
ROCK SPRINGS - The 16th
annual reunion of the Samuel
Allen Eblln famlly wW be held
Sunday at the Meigs County ·
tatrgrounds. 1ltose attending
are to take food, beverage and
table service. The dinner wtll be
at 1 p.m.

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•

FAMILY AND FRIENDS OF RESIDENTS AT
POMEROY HEALTii CARE CENTER, COME I"
AND JOIN IN THE FUN ON .• :...

Mr_ and Mrs. Wllber Parker, Mr.
and Mrs . .J.o e Poole, andSibyl poist
went tD die J!;wlng Funeral Home ·
for Mr. Parker's
brother;' Herbert,..

COMPARE

FREE
DELIVERY
. ..

GRANDPARENTS' DAY

Pearl Randolph welcomed visItors, Beatrice Bentz, Lancaster,
June and Samuel R!zley, Britton;
Dorothy Hess, Dalton; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Bentz, Sugar Grove; Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Balns, Iowa;
Bernice Meeks, Shade. With other
members of the fat:nlly Pearl
visited V!nls Randolph, Huntington,
and attended the Randolph family
reunloti at Athens Fairgrounds,
June 26.

Mr. and Mrs . John Dwelley and
family from Florida visited his
brothers-In-law and sisters, Mr_ and
Mrs. Clay Jordan and Mr. and Mrs.
Granvllle Stout and family
members.
Recent guests or Mr. and Mrs. G.
R. Cline Included ~r. and Mrs_
Lawrence Carpenter, Langsvtlle;
Mr. and Mrs. Qale Caster, Apple
Creek; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Caster.
and Joe Turner, Albany; Myrtle
Queen, Venice, Florida; Mrs. Phyllis folden. Nelsonville, and Mr. and
Mrs. Granville Lyons, Golden
Stal\Sbtlcy, . Wanda Oxley, Mrs.
· Dennis Fraley · and Mrs. · Allee
· Walsh, all local.

A pre-construction organization
meeting will be held at 7: ll p.m. at
the Riverside Country Club, Friday. A fUm will be shown of the
step-by-step procedure for those
workers who are not famlllar with
lt.
All construction work, from
landscaping, bricklaying, electrical
wlrlng, plumbing, painting, alr
conditioning, roofing, finishing and
feeding of the workers Is done in this
two-day period•
Recent two-day completions Include Craig, Colorado; Elk City,
Oklahoma; Lake Charles, LouiS!- _
ana; Memphis, Tennessee; Sequin, '
Texas; Elkhart, Indiana and otherS
In Kansas, Missouri and lllinol!i;· · ·

Sunday afternoon_
Some of the tradesmen from the
Gallipolis- Point Pleasant - Middleport area will be Tom Fowler and
Ray Fowler, carpenters; Marty
Shinn, brtckwork: Tony Platzer,
drywall; Robert Abercrombie,
carpet btstallatlon; Amiand Hoafat, wallpaper hanging, Many
others will also be going tD offer
help and observe.
"This quick-building system,
used by the Witnesses, has spread
across the nation ln recent years
and Is now being used ln Canada,
England and· South Africa, " aceordlng to Jon Lebsack, secretary
of construction group that wlll be
doing tile Chesapeake project.

area news notes

Several women of the First . Lefebre, .{anet Needs, and Sadie
Southern Baptist Church of Pome- Carr. Titemewas "I Love the Word
roy attended the recent Baptist Impossible." Guest speaker was
Women's Retreat held at Seneca Ruth Ward, author, ccunselor, and
Lake. Approximately 500 women pastor's wife. Her topic or study was
attended the retreat, the largest on concentrated on developing a Otrlstlan personality and building self·
record.
Going from the local church were esteem.
Linda Hunt, Donna Wllson, Rachael

PRO-liN

PRO-LINE

MIDDLEPORT -

Salban of Haiti wlll be the
speaker at a missionary meetIng to be held at the Middleport
Independent Holiness Church
Sunday at 7: ll p.m. The pubUc Is
Invited.

Women attend BaptiSt retreat

cancer.
What do you have20bllHonofthat
constantly travel through your
body hunting for "bad" cells to klll
and destroy? The answer: lymphocytes. They are part of your body's
lnimune system. The "bad" cells
they hunt and kill are cancer cells.
And, ln . most people, they are
cOnstantly at work. "That's bec(luse all of us have cancer cells In
OUJ bodies," says Pat Glass,
• Jackson Area Extension Agent,
• Horne Economics.
•
But why do some people suffer
from the dreaded disease and
others escape? According to MlntQn, cancer specialist and surgeon
at the Ohio State University College
oi Medicine, your faamlly history Is
one predictor. How many people on
bolh sides of your family had
cancer• That wtil give you some
Indication of your risk for developIng the disease.
During ·the day-long meeting,
cancer will be explained In simple,
Understandable words.
Registration begins at 9 a.m. with
• the program starting at 9: 3() a.m.
and finishing at 2: 30 p.m.
Bring a sack lunch for the noon
· meal. Refrigerator and beverages
. · wUl be furnished .
. Call 286-2177 or any County
: Cooperative Extension Office for
: more details on the program.
All educational programs and
." aCtivities conducted by the Ohio
. Coopera tlve Extension Service are
available to all potential clientele on
· a IIOIMI!scrlmlnatory basis without
; regard to race, color, national
: origin, sex, handicap or religious
: aftlllatlon.

SUNDAY

a l..._. lOP

Sawyers, Almme WoUe, Charlle Wood.
Brenda .?Jrkle. AUce Plll'SOII.!I, Melanie

Maidens, Shelly Wlnetreuner, Kristine Ash,
Jamie Oummlns, Amy Harrison, Kath Jllle,
Jamie Jones, Angie Manuel, 0\rls Murphy,
John McClintock, Mary ~. Shelly

POMEROY Precep!Dr
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorortty will meet
Thursday at 7:45 p.m. In the
Riverboat Room of !he Diamond
Savings and Loan Co.

"--

Blue rt1:1tl1Q.: ~ Arnold, RoiiDf
Burkharner, Annette Canlooe, Le....,Clork;
Chr1s Diddle. Jarrod 11111. Bill Hupp, Scott
McPhall, Trtsh Mulherin, Billy Joe Parscoa,
Dina Shuler, Klm Stobart, Jon TUttle, Kim
Manna, Kenny - . _ Carol Burnem. David
Deem, M1ke Deem, nm GUbrttle, Lor1
Grueser, Matt Harrll, Trac~ Hubbard, Pete

Kingdom Hall beirzg built zn Chesapeake

Calendar

Wednesday, September 7, 1983

meet all: 00 p.m. Wednesday for

Watson. Amy Well, Jam.. McDaniel, sherri
B~sell, Joe Bame, Ann Buckley, HoWle
Lawtence, Jason Wells.
Tllpp&lt;n Plains EtemealaJ'y
Blue ribbons: Lori Braden, Lee Connelly,

~ntinei-Page-7

•

POMEROY -Happy Harves. ters Class, Trlnlty Church, will

Students of Meigs County schools
exhibited 942 Items showing their
work, an Increase of 56 percent over
last year's nuinber of entrtes, at the
annual Meigs County Fair,

The Daily

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992-2635

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
't'

"

�Ohio

The

Sentinel

Ohio

Treatment
•
nnproves
cure rate

.:Beat of the Bend

~Benefit

dance scheduled

'

t,

"

By BOB HOEFlJCH
Dally Sentbtel Staff

&lt; I do want to point out t hat the
· benefit dance for Marvin Teaford,
· Injured in a divbtg accident on July
: j , will be held
.
1-American
Legion
' Hall Saturday.

'

Dear Disgusted in Rutland: I'm
sorry but we cannot print your
letter because we are required to
have your signature. However, if
things are as bad as you say in your
comr:nunlty, I don't bla m e you for
being disgusted - I don 't blame you
for not signing your name either.

· :: The event was

Wallace Bradford has one oi
"those" books that most historians
would kill for. It's an 1891 edition of
the Historical and Business Review
for Meigs and Gall1a Counties
prlntPd by the Union Publishing Co.
at Coshocton.
The books Is loaded with "good
stuff" which historians mop up.
There's an interestbtg notation
about the Meigs County Children's
Home which now houses the ofltces
of the Meigs County Board of
Education. It states:
,. ~
___
"A!the spring election ofl882, the
: ~~ayle Price points out that there citizens of the county, by a large
;wm; a surge of Interest in the 1870s majority. voted to erect a Chlld.&lt;{nd 1800s in the Meigs County ren's Home at a cost of $10,000 for
~!oneer and Historical Society.
grounds and buildings. A site was
;. At the l877meetlngofthe society. selected on original section 20 and
:f3. B. Smith, president, remarked, 25 acres of land costing $2,610 and
•''the number of members now buildings were erected, anr(lt was
lOelonglng to the society Is very ready for occupancy in the spring or
jarge, 150." Of course, you aU know 1983. The Rev. J . M. Nourse was its
!tow the society has thrived in the first superintendent.
~st few years establishing a
"The farm is in good condition,
~useum and archives.
and Is favorably located In a good
•
· .:__.;._
neighborhood; is sul!i~ieiltly ·.. re; :. Pomeroy lost a good friehd. and · ·ilred, yet easy. of access," and..from
.h:.ister with the death of the Rev. the buildings and grounds Is
;fonn A. Turel on Aug ..27. .
. ... · ~resented a bea~tllul and .· p!ctl!·
..: Many wlll remember when he resque view."
:was pastor of Sacred Heart Church
Nowhere does ft say tbat the
:lind the lavish decorations which budget was overspent In providing
.Were featured every year at the· the facUlty which Is stUI one of the
. cpurch. People came from every- most . attractive structures In the~\: here to 5€!' them and Tt,ll'l'l county.
~!'"led to work from one year 'to
. The Halloween goodies Including
$other in comingupwithoutstand·
jrlg presentations - always some- cards, masks and accessories are
jlling different and always so out for sale; Stiffler's previewed Its
altractlve. Services were held at St. toyland on Tuesday, which means
Peter's Church in Steubenville on that time Is still marchirtg a(ong
hug. 31. He had been in failing - -. And you're stlll smiling.
Right?
~altl) for a number or years.
originally sche·
&lt;luled for
.
':M~igs County Sei.lUor Citizens cen.
~~. Dancing wUI start
!B!l\zkrieg providing the music.
;Thtre w111 be refreshments availa·
;!Jie; a nd all proceeds w1!1 go to help
.Marvin.
;:' lhctdentally, arrangements at'l'
~beiJlg made to have Marvin present
;tpr the benefit, If all goes well.
;Marvin is a son of Mr. and Mrs.
~bert Teaford Jr. of Syracuse.

.

..

..

i(;hapman reunion held

• •
~ 'the annual Chapman reurdon and Mrs. Dennie Coulter and Amy.

was held recently at thehameofMr.
and Mrs. Gordon West~
•: A basket dinner was held at noon:
:.; Those attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Chapman , Eddy and
2\hdrea of Plckerbtgton; Mr. and
Mr-6. Floyd Chapman, Kim and
flab: Pickerington; Mr. and Mrs.
:t'lddie VanMatre, E. T. and Anesa,
~ason, W. Va .; Mrs. Nancy
Cha pman, Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
&amp;n Chapman, Windber, Pa .; Mr.
,,

Windber, Pa.; Tom Chapman and a
friend, Barbara, New Haven, W.
Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Chapman,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. John West,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Cottr!U and Sharon, Syracuse; Deb
West, Jackson; Rhonda West,
Pomeroy; Mr. and M,.,.. Gordon
West and Melody, Racine.
Afternoon visitors were Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Quick, Columbus.

,...
~

Jn
the countcy' s service
•

'-

FUU.- M~mbers of the 1983 Stylettes TWirling Corps troin Meigs,
Gallla anjl Mason Counltes have completed a filii agen!la o! sununer
• pei1onruuices and '. paradeS Including the Meigs County Fair, Mason
County Fair, Big Bend Regatta Parade, G8mpoUs Fotirih of July
Parade and Mason County Fair Parade. Fall classes for the IP'OUP wUJ

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital of
Meigs County has a physician In Its
emergency room 24 hours a day to
provide treatment for emergency
llbtesses and Injuries. There are.
however, some Injuries which
require some treatment even faster
than 1t can be obtained at ihe
Veterans l\:lemorlal Hospital of
Meigs County emergency depart·
mentOne such Injury Is a chemical
bum. ~

traces of the chemical.
Speed and plenty of water are
hath important In minimizing the
extent of the Injury . Use a garden
hose, buckets of water. a tub or a

clothing from the burned area as it
may hold some dangerous
chemicals.
If lhe chemical causing the bum
has a label, check It for instructions
shower.
for ireatlng a burn. Cover the burn
A steady stream of water should ' with a clean bandage. A cool, wet
be used but not a strong stream ll it
dressing may be applied, if needed,
can be avoided. Continue to flush
!or pain.
the area with water while removing
A chemical bum always requires

; :Airman Jay A. Dewhurst, son of
H).rold E. and Carol J. Dewhurst of
~!land, has been assigned to
chanute Air Force Base, Ill .. after
'&gt;011fPletlng Air Force basic
(~lnlng.

: •During the six weeks atl..ackland
Alr Force Base. Texas, the airman
9{).died the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
(Qceived special training In human
•" .

relations.
In addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn credits toward
an associate degree In appUed
science through the Community
College of the Air Force.
The airman will now receive
specialized Instruction In the fire
protection field.
He Is a 1982 graduate of Metgs
High-School, Rock Springs.

Scholarship awarded

Meigs ·property

Harold R. Billups, Judith F .
BUlups to James L. Chadwell,
Fhonda Sue Chadwell, Lot 117.
Olive.
J. B. O'Brien, Roberta C. O' Brien
to James L. Chadwell, F~onda Sue
Chadwell, Olive.
Paul K Boring to Larry Harris. 3
acres, Olive.
Gall P. Buck, deceased, Addle R.
Buck, Tracts, Cert. of Trans.,
Meigs.
Delbert Ours to Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp., Right of Way,
basic training earn credits toward
Lebanon.
an associate degree in appUed
Robert R. Durst , Maxine Durst to
science through the Community
Columbia
Gas Trans. Corp .. Right
College of the Air Force.
of
Way,
Lebanon.
The airman will now begin
David G. Wolfe, VlrgtnlaH. Wolle
on-the-job training in the transporto Columbia Gas Trans. Corp..
tation field at Dyess Air Force
Right of Way. Lebanon.
Base, Texas.
Dennis ROush, Ruth Roush to
· He Is a 1981 graduate of Meigs
Columbia Gas Trans. Corp., Right
High School, Rock Springs. ·
of Way, Lebanon.
Charles R. Lawrence. Mary J .
Lawrence to Columbia Gas Trans.
Corp., Right or Way, Lebanon.
Trustees of East Letart Sunday
supervising and training small
School to Columbia Gas Trans .
groups of soldierS In combat
Corp., Right of Way, Letart .
specialties.
Robert L. Casper, Dolores J . ·
Black is a personnel speciallsi In
Casper to Columbia Gas Trans.
Charlotte. N.C.
Corp., Right of Way, Letart.
She is a 1968 graduate of West1all
Paul E. Wolle, Leota Wolfe to
High School, Willlamsport, Ohio.
. Columbia Gas Trans. Corp .. Right
of Way, Sutton.
Lawrence E. Bush, VIolet L.
Bus.h · to Columbia Gas Trans.
Corp., Right of Way, Letart.
and bridge building, camouflage
Frederick J. Stobarl, Earlene
and demolition. They also received
Stobart to Columbia Gas Trans.
Corp., Right of Way, Sutton.
instruction In combat squad tactics
Joel Kevin Kitchen. Sallie Eliza·
as well as In the use of Infantry
weapons.
He Is a 1981 graduate of Southern
Giant squid
High Sch&lt;iol, Racine.

~aker completes Lackland basic training
: , Airman Richard L. Baker, son of
t:arry D. and Norma J. Baker of 17
~- , Locust St., Pomeroy, has
~~rT)pleted Air Force baste training
~~ Lackland Air Force Base, Texas .
· ~ During the six weeks at Lackkind ; the airman studied the Air
t~rce mission, organization and
eustoms"and received special train·
(rtg'tn human relations.
•' In addition, airm~n who complete

!~ .

.illack
.. completes non-commissioned course
; : Army Reserve Spec. 4 Barbara J.
~l ack ; daughter of Mary E. Brown
~~Pomeroy, has completed a U .S.
i\'rmy basic non-commissioned of·
f!(,er course at Fort Gordon, Ga .
: Soldiers develped mid-level management skills to be used In

.; Pvf.

Eric J . Hlll, son of Reta J .
Racine, has
completed a combat engineer
C(lwrse a t the u.s. Army Tralnlng
Center at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
:: l:lurbtg the course, students were
~ed In the techniques of road

....
.•

•

S.(hultz basic training completed
'•

.

,-: Pvi .

Gary L. Schultz, 5on of ceremonies, weapons, map readMarcelllng J . Schultz of 500 Second ing, tactiCS, mllltary COUrtesy,
si.~ Point Pleasant, W. Va., has .mUitary justice, first aid, and Army'
elllflpleted basic tralnlng at Fort history and traditions.
~N.J.
He Is a 1982 graduate of Point
During the training, students Pleasant High SchooL
received Instruction In drtll and

•

•

BERGEN, Nmway (AP) - The
giant squid - vUlain of many a
movie- has ftnally been seen alive.
One was captured recently, alive
but czylng, bt a small bay near here.
Hooked by a tlsherman, the squid
had tentacles 24 feet long and
weighed 485 pounds. The creatUre
has never been seen In its native
habitat. lis emtence Is known
through dead specimens.

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

for Girls In Action (GA's).
Girls In Action Is a missions
organtza tion for gtrls, grades one
through six. GA"s wlll learn about
missions In Ohio, the United States,
and around the world. Theywlll take
an active part In missions. by
participating in prayer and gtvbtg,
and by mlnlsterbtg to people with
special needs.

Vllla~.

VIcky Koste El -Dabaja, Sala All
EI-Dabaha, Gene Chaney, Grace
Chaney, David S. Hysell, VIctor
Hysell, J'4ary May Hysell , Janet L.
Hysell, John W. Hysell, Judith A.
Hysell to James E 1Diddle, Right of
Way, Sutton.
James L. Spencer to James
Diddle, Linda Diddle, 35 acres,
Sutton.
Noel A. Herrmann, Dora Edith
Herrmann to Charles Kitchen,
Sharon K)tchen, Lots 12 and 13,
Middleport.
Pauline Hysell vs. Olan L. Hysell,
Judgment, Chester.
Joseph B. Moore !Il, Donna
Moore, Alvin Moon, Linda Moon,
' Bill Frazier, Gall Frazier to

t.

Richard
LeeParcel,
Moore,Rutland.
Bruce McGregor
Moore,
Richard L. Moore, Jane Moore,
Bruce M. Moore, Lynn Moore to
Richard Lee Moore, Parcel,
Rutland.
·
Olan Lee Hysell IX His Mark) to
Giles Lee Hysell, Hermetta Kay
Hysell, 1 acre, Chester.
James Wells to Larry R. Welts,
Anita G. Wells, 6.06 acres, Salem.

Fink birthday
Mrs. Wllllam Fink held a birthday
party lor her son, John Paul, on his
14th birthday recently.
Since John Paul Is a first class
scout in'froop245, Middleport, a boy
scout theme was carried out. Cake,
Ice cream and fruit drbtk were
served to W. T. English, Curlls
English, Jerry Armstrong, BUly
Fink, Gene Fink, Rabble Clonch,
and Carl Moodlspaugh. Others
unable to attend ~ Buddy
Thompsoo, Barbara Smith, and

Steven L . Sayre to Leading Creek
Conservancy District ' Right of
Way, Salisbury.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
Hilton Wolfe, Ruth Wolfe, 1 acre,
Sutton.
Administrator of Veteran,s Af.
fairs to Tennis J . Edmiston,
Genleva J., Edmiston, 79.61 acres,
Salem.
Paul E. Green to Larry E. Porter,
Joyce Sharon Porter, 97.6 acres,
Rutland.
Edward Anthony Russell, Sharon
R. Russell to Clarence .J. Williams,
Catherine Jlll Williams, Parcel,
Salisbury.
James Wells to Glen H. Litman,
Kathryn L. Litman, 3.061 acres,
Salem.
Columbia Gas Trans. Corp. to
Melvin Lawrence, Release of'Right
of W&amp;y, Pomeroy.
Joe Moore, deceased to Linda
Moore Mon, Gall Moore Frazier,
Joseph B. Moore ill, Bruce M.
Moore, Richard L. Moore, Cert. of
Trans .. Rutland.

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

Umit Quantities.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. ·
WE WIU BE OPEN LABOR DAY-1 0 A.M.-1 0 P.M.

PRICES

THRU

• SEPT. 10, 1983

U.S: .A. CHOICE

$ 99.
8

. .

R1b Stea k..........~ ~
U;S.D.A. CHOICE . · ...··

••

·

$ ··89

T-Bone Steak... :~·..
'

FRESH PORI( BUTT .

Ste ks or
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS $
3
9
Chuck Roast .. ~~ ..
BUCKET
99
Cube Steak..... ~~

·

·

$

·

Roasts~.

'

Marijuana
QUALITY PLUS
searchtums
• ~n,wn
mountain
into war zone

Wi-eners ..

BothBaptlstWomenandGA'sare
p;n1 of the Women's Missionary
Union (WMU) of the church. Mrs.
Linda Hunt may be contacted for
information ahaut either group,
992-2454.

transf~rs _ _ _ __

beth Kitchen to Ohio Power Company, Right of Way, Rutland.
Warren Herald, Barbara J.
Herald to Ohlo Power Company,
Right of Way, Rutland.
Ronnie K. Hubbard, Linda Hubbard to Diamond Savings and Loan
Co. , Sherlfrs deed, Middleport

¥ill finishes combat engineer class
Hlll of Rural Route 2,

professional medical attention but
only after first flushing the area. Do
not apply ointments, sprays, .antiseptics or home remedies.
Veterans Memorial Hospital of
Meigs emergency department may
be contacted at 992·2104.
·

Baptist mission study beginninf!.

With a chemical bum, It is ·
extremely Important to ImmeThe First Southern Baptist
diately flush the burned area with a
Church of Pomeroy" Is organizing a
large quantity of water for at least Baptist Women's . group whose
five minutes In order to remove all pr!marypurposewillbetostudyand
participate In mission outreach.
SouthernBaptlstsaregroundedln
the tradition of a Biblical basis of
Steve Bunce, son of Larry and
missions within the framework of a
Reva Bunce, Middleport, was sending agency for hath home and
awarded one of the scholarships foreign missions.
given by Feeney-Bennett Post 128
The first meeting wlll be held at
and the Ladles Auxillary of the the church on Pomeroy Pike,
American Legion.
Sept.15 at 7 p.m. Meetbtgs will be
Bunce, a 1983 graduate of Meigs held thereafter on the third ThursHigh School, will be attending day of each month,
Washington Technical College at
Eeglnnlng Oct. 5, at 7: 30 p.m. at
Marietta this fall.
the church, will be weekly meetings

We Retl8tVo The Right To

LEXINGTON,Ky. (AP) -Anew
radiation therapy that has slgnlfl·
cantly improved cure rates for
certain severe cancers has been
reported by University of Kentucky
· researchers. ,
Tumorsdlsappearectln80percent
ofthecaseswhen!hetreatmentwas
used for more than 300 women who
had advanced cervical cancer, said
Dr. Larry J . Beach, a medical
physlclst Involved In the research
Pl"Piect. ·
If more traditional trealment had
been used, the recovery rate would
have been4045percent, Beach saki .
The new treatment also has been
Used against brain, breast and oral
tumors, he said, but Is !netfectlve
against widely spread cancers.
The new procedure Is slmUar to
some tradltlonal treatments In that
the radiation source Is positioned
Inside the body, as close as possible
to the cancer, Beach said .
But, Beach added, "large, bulky
tumors" were resistant to the
phatonradlat!on errdtted by the
traditional Isotope, Cesium 137.
The new method Involves the use
of Californium 252, a powerful
source of neutron radiation.
In the past, Californium was used
"against the wrong types of tumors,
where it W;tS nomoreeffectlye (than
-o~ IsOtopes);'' he satd. '.We-Rind
of came Into It
everybody else
had_glven up."
In treating cervlcal cancer,
stainless steel tubes are Inserted In
the vagina and moved close to the
tumor mass. Tiny slugs of Callfornlum then are placed In the tubeS,
sending neutron radiation ·Into the
tumor Itself.
.
X-rays are used to pinpoint the
tumor and a computer calculates
the amount of radiation' being
absorbed by the patient.
A single treatment typically lasts
live to seven hours, after whlcll the
patient can retum home, Beach
said. The entire regimen of treatmenls would last five to six weeks
and would Include exterruil radiation, he said.
"You get rapid shrinkage of the
tumor," Beach said. "It's really
startling and exciting forthedoctors
and nurses, as well as the patients.
These things go away."

after

10 at the Rutland Civic ~r for ~ three through 18.
Peggy Gillespie, a teacher lor ,elgbt _years, Is director of the groUp.
Those wishing additlonallnfonnatlon may contact DoiOn!s WUhebn at
1·30&gt;Hi'l5-ltl99.

begin Sept.

Chemical
burns
treated
.With·
plenty
of
water
.
.

•

,.Dewhurst assigned to Chanute AFB

STOCK YOUR FREEZ

SAN

FRANCISCO

(AP)

¢

12 oz.

-

Marijuana-hunting lawmen have
turned a tbty mountain town Into a
"war :rone" where mothers looking
for their chlldren are sropped at
gunpoint by suspicious officers, say
residents complaining about the
agents' tactics.
.
But state and federal agents
tiying to halt northern Callfornla's
multi-billion dollar pot trade say
their methods are both legal and
professional. They say marijuana
growers are using - sophisticated
defenses, sometimes boobytrapping their plantations with
grenades, bear traps, dyn!ll'nlteand
laser alarms.
"We are going to win and they are
going to stop growing It," said Bill
Ruzzamenti, a chief planner for

Our new
Bouquet - and adnrahle
ceramic honeyja_r bursting
with fresh flowerr. One
quick call 01' visit to our
'!hop sends it to your
grandparents, anywhere
in the country.

Send the
Honey Jar Bouquet.
Grandparents' Day
~Septll.

POMEROY
ROWER

Operation CAMP -

RED OR WHITE SEEDLESS

Grapes................~.
FLAVORITE
$ 59·
2% MiIk...~~~~c.~A;~o.N•••

Campaign

Against Mat'!juana Planting which authorities say will be carried
on In other states If It succeeds In

SHOP

Callfornla,

u.s. District Judge Robert Agul·
lar,ln San FranciSco, was expected

r------------L-===::::::::::::::::::::===-

*DON1 GO WITHOUT*

to rule today on a request for a
preliminary Injunction against the
operatio!l by the National Organization tor Reform of Marijuana Laws,
which works to legalize marijuana.
The group sued the federal Drug
Enforcement Administration, the
U.S. Defense and Justice depart·
ments and the state attorney
g-eneral Frjday - contending the
agents have vlOiall!d constttutlonal
protections against Illegal search
and seizure.
Since the campaign began two
weeks
the strike force has
stapd 122 raids In 14 northern
California cwntles, destroying
l!I,!XXJ marijuana plants with an
eatml&amp;ted street value of $100
mllllon, agents said.
' In Denny, a community of 1!iO
aloni the New River In Trlntty
eoonty, at) m11es north or here, the
strike force swept through In two
days, chcppiJia IIIII of marijuana
IJid and hauJina it olf In hel1oopters
.00 dtmlp trudla. Aaents said the
baulwillltedofl,900plant1, mostly
oa jJubuc land, With an estimated
va1ur ct$5.8 mlllloa.
.
"It felt like belnlln tbemlddlecta
Wll' 210111!," Jlebecca Sue Massett,
31, uJd In a declaratloa auwort111a
NORML'I case.

aao. ·

CAU OUR SERVICE DESK

We'll Deliver A Sentinel
To You
Open Monday-Friday

Call 992-6111
The Daily Sentinel
..WE DELIVER"

•

SANDWICH-MATE

MUELLER'S

ow

IND. sLl cEs

$ Amer. Cheese ...

'LB. BOX

Mac. or-Spaghetti ••.
TENDERLEAF

· •

$

1~~~...

Tea bags
.........
•••••.••
PON ••••••••

GOLD MEDAL

•

•

89¢

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell'•
Offw l;xplrea Sept. 10, 1983

79 P·lzza •••••••••••••••••••••
oz.
·.

MAXWELL HOUSE

3 LB. CAN
•

•

·······~····· · ·········

•

¢

9.5

COFFEE

FLOUR
• 5 LB. BAG

MR. P's

'

••••
• ••••••
•·····cou~&gt;m·······

:

12 oz. PKG.

$6 29

Limit One Per CUitOmer
Good Only At Powell'a
Offer Exphes Sept. 10, 1983

:

GERBER STRAINED

:

BABY FOOD

4.soz.
. •

••••••••••••••••••••••

5/$}

Limit Five Per Customer
Gaod Only At Powell'•

1983

PUREX

DETERGENT
147 oz.

$379

Limit One Per Customer ·
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 1 0, 1983

•••••

Floyd McClelland.
t

r

I

...

J

'I

I

'

�wednnday, September

7, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

7, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport,

, ...

--.

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~~~.....,

lt ·lu-oo,.po.. ~"'''

u•- ·· ~-

11'0011 •• -..... ,

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...

Public Notice
PURCHASE OF
SCHOOl BUSES
hMtotiontollid
Sealed proposals will be
recerved by the following
Boards of Education for school
buses. according to speciftcations of said Boards of
Education:
Alexander local School. Box

337. Alb•ny Ohio 45710
Wellston City Schools. 416

N. Pen'nsylvania Ave .• Wellston.
Oh10 45692
Zane Trace local Schools.

946 St Rt 180. Chillicothe.
Ohio 45601
Fa tr land Local Schools.
Route 4. BDK 201 . Proctol\lllle,
Ohro 45669
Southern local Schools. Mtller
Htgh School. Hemlock. Ohio.

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

n .u.....,.u-.y

(A-- I - -ioool

Public Notice

45693.

THO~ON.OECEASED

c.. No. 24130 .•

9- 65 pas-

5-59 passenger.

45601 .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On August 17, 1983. •n the
Meigs County Probate Court.
Case No. 24130. Frank W
Porter, Jr., Route 3, BOK 36A.
Raci ne. Ohio 457 71 Was ap·
pointed Administrator ol the
estate of Edda J. Thompson.
deceased. late of l angsville,

2-71

Passenger.
Vmton Count y Schools.
Memonal Build1ng. McArthur.

OhiO

.........

c:. ,....,

..........
...
llllo....

......-

111 ""',..._,

IJII- """"'0.-

SERVICE CALLS

"-

~

Ohio 45741 .

45651 . 4-65

Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
(8) 24. 31 {9) 7, 3tc

passenger.
New leKmgton City Schools,
310 First Street. NEr-N l exing·

noo

·

. Paiht..Va11ey -lOcal· So t"!oois.
7454 1 USA 50. Bainbndge.

Ohio 45612 .

FAMILY OF LATE SENATOR -Members of
the famDy of tbe lare Sen. Henry Jackson lilt In the
front row of a pubUc memorial service beld In the
Everett (Washington) Civic Auditorium Tuesday

night. From left, Ills daughter Anna Marie, II, Ills 80D
Peter, 17, his wife Helen, and Mr. and Mrs. M. H.
Hardin. Mr. Hanlin Is Mrs. Jacluion'sfatherandMrs.
Hardin Is Mrs. Jackson's stepmolber. The Bardlnll
are from Palm Desert, Cllllf. (AP Laserphoto).

1,000 mourners attend
•
Sen. Jackson service
WASHINGTON (AP)- The late reported.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson was
Even though he voted for approremembered at a memorial seiVIce priations for a strong national
as a "defender of freedom" In a defense Jackson "never belleved
dangerous era whose portrait that we should pay for our mlssiles
should be placed In the Senate's by taking foo:l from a hungry chUd
·'Hall of Fame."
or hope from a jobless worker," said
Jackson was "a defender of Kennedy, who often disagreed with
freedom In a generation of national the Washington senator on defense
danger," Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Issues.
D -Mass., told about 1,000 mourners
"He wanted his nation to bestrong
at Tuesday'sseiVlceatthe National because he kneW theten1bledanger
Presbyterian Church· for the Wa- of the age In which we Uve," said
shington Democrat.
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
A member of Congress for 42 D-N.Y., who joined Senate colyears, Jackson died last Thursday leagues, Supreme Court justices
at his home In Everett, Wash., and representatives of past and
where funeral seiVIces were sche- present administrations In paying·
duled to be held today. An autopsy tribute to Jackson.
perfonned Tuesday revealed JackColumnist George Will said
son died of a burst blood vessel Jackson's portrait should placed Ina
Instead of a heart attack as had been reception room set up in the 1950s to

honor five former senators- Heruy
Clay of Kentucky, John Calhoun of
South Carolina, Daniel Webster of
New Hampshire, RDbert LaFollette
of Wisconsin and RDbert Taft of
Ohio.
"A Senate Hall of Fame without
Jackson Is as silly as a baseball Hall
of Fame without George Herman
Ruth," Will said.
Mourners at the memortal ser·
vice Included Joan Mondale, wife of
!ormer Vice President Walter F.
Mondale, Senate Majority Leader
Robert C. Byrd of West VIrginia,
Supreme Court Justice Lewis F .
PoweU, former Secretary of State
Edmund S. Muskle and WUUam
Ruckelshaus, head of the Environ·
mental ProteCtion Agency, whlcb
Jackson was Instrumental In
creating.

Free rides offered following strike
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Public
transit officials, concerned about
the potential loss of regular customers who were forced to find new
methods of transportation during a
36-day bus strtke that ended
Thesday night, offered free rides In
an effort to get them back on the bus.
Service was resuming today, with
tlie first buses scheduled to begin
their runs about 4 a.m .. said Dale
Culbertson, director of marketing
for the Metro Regional Transit
Authority.
CUlbertson said the system's 22
mechanics, members of Loca11363
of the International Association of
Machinists, ratified a new contract
late Tuesday afternoon, clearing the
way for the resumption of seiVIce
today.
The buses had been Idle since Aug.
1, and the strtke continued Tuesday
although the 170-member union
representing bus drivers and ser vice workers had ratified their new

contract on Monday.
The drivers, members of Local1
of the United Transport Workers
union, had . refused to cross the
mechanics' picket lines.
But after bargainers for the
mechanics reached agreement on a
contract Tuesday, it was quickly
ratified and the first mechanics
were back at work late Tuesday
night to begin getting the buses
ready for today's runs.
The system serves riders in
Akron, Batberton, Cuyahoga Falls
and Stow.
Culbertson said they'll be riding
free for the balance of this week and
all of next week, saving a basic fare
of 60 cents per ride.
"We would like to think and hOpe
that offering free rides Will get our
passengers back on the bus," he
said. "That'swherewewantthern."
The bus drivers and seiVIce
workers represented by the Trans-

port Union had rejected a
contract during the weekend, but
then met again Monday and voted
93-51 to ratify a two-year pact that
will raise theirpayfrom$9.31 to$9.n
an hour and improve hospltallzatiOn
coverage.
The contract Included a provision
to reopen negotiations on wages In
one year.
The mechanics accepted a pact
that Increases their pay by 51 cents
to $10.55 an hour, said Thomas
Stanek, business representative for
the union.
The Transit Authority's contract
seiVIce to transport some of Akron's
high school students will not resume
today, but Culbertson said he hoped
that rnlght be operating agaJn by
Thursday.
The school system bas been using
Its own buses to provide the
transportation by adding extra
routes since classes began last
week.

Prosecution rests in Jackson trial
AKRON, Ohl~ (AP) - Now that
the prosecution bas rested its casein
the trtal of a physician charged with
a s tring of rapes, the defense has a
chanc. to call witnesses In an
attempt to justify an Insanity plea.
The prosecution rested its case
against Dr. Edward F . Jackson Jr.
after testimony Tuesday from five
more victims, one of whom said she
was left Ued upside down In the
basement of her townhouse.
The defense said It plans to call a
psychiatrist, three psychologists
and 15 acquaintances of Jackson, a
Columbus iliternist.
Jackson's lawyers, who have said
In court that he corrunltted the acts
with which he is charged, describe
him as a person with a Jekyll·andHyde personality, a compassionate
physician by day and a rapist at
nlgl!t.

I

Oh iO

asgallant.

An a !rUne employee said she was
showering on Aug. 31, 1982, when a
man wearing an orange-red ski
mask slipped through a kitchen
window, ordered her out of the
bathtub and told her: "If you try to
look at me, lwlllkillyou."
The woman, who did not give her
age, said she was raped In ber
bedroom then taken to the basement, where she was Ued upside
down, with her legs Ued to a sewer
pipe arid her head touching the floor.
She said the man put a pillow over
ber face and threatened to kill her,
but wished her luck before leaving.
She quoted him as saying: "You
see how easy Ills to kill someone? It

45692 . 2 - 65

passenger
Zane. Trace Lo ca l Schools.
946 St At 180. Chilltcothe.

Ohoo

45601 . 4- 71 · pas-

senger. 1-36 passenger.
· Farrland Local Schools.
Route 4, Bo)( 201. Proctorv•ll e.

Ohoo

45669.

1-65

passenger.
Southern Local Schools.
M iller Htgh Schools. Hemlock

Ohoo

45743.

2-65

oassenger.
Washrngton local Schools.
13th Street. W. POrtsmouth,

Oh1o 45662. I- van. 2-66

passenger
Pa1n1 Valley Local Schools.
74 54 USR 50. Ba1nbndge.

Oh1o

45612. 2-65 pas-

senger. 1-2 4 passenger.
Federal Hocking local
Schools. P.O. Box 1 17. Ste·
wart. Ohto 45778, 2- 65
passenger. 1- 48 passenger
Belpre Ctty Schools. 2014
Washington Blvd .. Belpre, Ohro
45 714, 1-65 passenger
Meigs local Schools. 621
South Third St.. MiddiBoort.

45760.

2-65

passenger.
Morgan Local Schools, Bo"
509. McConnelsville. Oh1o
45756. 2.._- 71 oassenqer,

Vlillr

OR

GROUND INJECTION CONTROL SECTION. DIVISION OF

OIL

\

FOUNTAIN

!91 7. 1tc

ltaspital. A special

11

H•lp Wanted

CQordinator,
o.g,... Prtferred.
CONTACT
SAM NEALl

Pl..-v.ney

111mb to Dr• .llmll P. 111YIIlci 1si1y and .U. IIIII
for the ldnd lllwllb jwn

Holpll•l

V1lley Drive,
Plllnl PIHun1, WV
25550

willie beq I Pllilnt
tlln. Also 111Mb to laoa
. £-.w.y Squad for 111tlr
lffldent IIIVkl.
I •nt to lhlnt lilY flmily
for tilt 111111r. l1llllr llqs
liMy tid for 1M while in tilt
hospltll and sincl Clllllin&amp;
' - . I caa't forJit lilY
ntW1bcn'
lllout
1111. 1'lllllb to Cart and ...
lcDMIII for tile wort lhtr
did in IIIJ ...... - lilY poll106 and aiiMr Cart tid.
Sl*ill INnb to PaluB
Rankin llolc:h, Bennie Stlvens and WiRi-.1 (Bill)
lllnks for
visits.
I fill V11Y rid! Indeed for
frinls 11111 you ~~~ lay God
bltls you an. Your~
will be lujltlln.
1M

(304) &amp;7S4340
"An Equal Opportunity
Employer"

JOB - BIG OR SMALL

On Au·gust 17. 1983, tn the '

Meigs County Probate· Courr.
Case No. 24197. Helel') Gulley,

992·6030
Minersville, OH.
8/19/1 mo. pd.

1001 BIShop H1l1 Rd .. Chillicothe. Ohio 45601 was appornted ExecutriK of the estate
of Clarence J.' McNeal. de·
ceased. late of 558 Mill Street.
Mtddleport. OhtO 45760
Robert E. Buck
Probat&amp; Judge/
Clerk
IB· 24. 31 191 7. 3tc

3 i4 ltc

FURNITURE
*Tables &amp; Chairs
*Comer Cupboards
*Buffet, etc.

MINE RUN

M.L

STRIP

CONTRACTING-

8·3 I mo PI!

$3()0°

"Excavating
*Ponds
"Septic Tanks
*Hauling

A TON

PH. 992-2280

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING
or

repair, pliers and
do1111spouts, autter cleaning and painting, ~onn
doors·and .'lliiidows.
. •' .
.
~

·Ail Wor~ Guaranteed
·"free Eslimates';
I

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

Call: 949·22~
or 949-3091;_10 _1"

PLAQUES
ENGRAVI.NG

Racine, OH .

-Dozera
- Backhooo
- Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher .
--Wat«
-Sewer
-Gas Unes
~Sept!c Syllems
LARGE OR SMAU JOBS

N!W USTING - Grand farm
house and 5 acres of level land
deScribe tlis mini farm wi1!1
several buildings, more land
avai~bfe &amp; special financing
avai~bfe. Cali about this. one.

'"'...

.,., .

$42,500.00.

~.

PH. 992-3047
8-1-1 mo

"We got along nne until we
learned lo talk."

N!W USTING- Lee Subdivision - Nice 3 bedroom ranch,
hardwood floors, car(XII'I. many
ot~ features in great n~gh­
borhood. Immediate pa;ses.
sim. $32.900.00.

*Planing
•Shop Work
•New Construction

Around
•Dump. Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

*Remodeling
15

Years Experience

992-3987

J J·1Hie

1 mo. ~ ./8 / 12

NEWUSTING -Remodeied8
rm. home in Racine on Rll24.
Fumac~ bat~. equipped kn·
chen, carpeting llasement and
large lot $39,900.

BACK TO NATURE! Wildi"e is
abundant on 111is 23 acre tract
of beautiful wooded acreage.
Perfect site for arustic cabin or
log home. Water and efectric
available. Only $15,000.00.

3 ACRES - Septic, water and
electric. Only $6,000.
IIIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms,
1II baths, front porch near
sttres. Offer wanted.

I.OOtt liE OVER - !lose to
town. Nayiors Run Rd., nice II!
st«Y trame home, &amp;05 acres.
7 room house. 3 bedrooms.
equiped kitchen witt! nice
cabinels, cellar &amp; 2 outbuildings. $29,500.00.

RANCH - Nice home in the
country. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
full basement and 2 acres.
N£AR POMEROY - 7 rm.,
remodeloo home. Carpeting
1\l baths, lg eaHn kitchen,
furnace, RB111ROS for 6 cm.

FANTASTIC PORCH to sit on
and watch the world IJl by, has
a super neat 11! story house
W1 Excellent location wilh
fenced in lol Come md loo~
you111ike. $26,1100.00.

Asking

$40,000.

MIDDLEPORT - Nice older
home w~h swim pool, New dbl.
garag~ 7 rms.. I \l baths,
carpeting modern krtchen and
full basement. $45,900.
.

9.9% 110110 IIONEY STill
AVAilABLE IF YOU HURm
REALTORS

a

Henry E. Cfellnd, Jf.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Donie Turner 992·5692
Jo Hill 98s.44&amp;6
Office !t92·2259

A·FRAIIE acres of level
land. T.P. water or &gt;lift divide.
UK£ NEW - 7 yr. old 8 rm.
home. 4 bedrooms, lamily rm.
in the fuH baserlleni equipped
kitchen, nice carpeting ard
almost 3 acres for $69,000.

IB

' - 2 houses
OFFER WANTED
on fast Main with all utilities for
on~ $21,000:

!£AllOR

BUSINESS - We have 5
chant21 for a fami~ who want
sen employment wi1!1 no
iaydls,

YARD SALE

Housing
Headquarters

HARTFORD, W.VA.

r-------·
J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
·UIIESTONE •WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES .
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK
BONDED &amp;WORK GUARANTEED
PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
.992·7201
,.,.,,

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
'Roofing

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply ·

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and r&amp;core radiators and hea·
Ia' cores. We can also
acid boll and rod out ra·
diator1. We alto repair

'Water Pipe
'Gas Pipe
'Regulators
*Fittings

G•Tanka.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2-196
1-13-tft

I

Roofing

SALE
. DEAL DIRECT &amp;
• SAVE m OR MORE

'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodelin&amp;
20 Years Experience

In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 843-5425

On Sidinc and Roofing,

7-5·2

Gutter and Downspouts.
&lt;#Free Eatimatea"
"1 2 Yoorw Exporlence"
"Work Guonntood"

Phone:
Residence: 985·3837
Warehouse: 985-3509

Middloport, Ohio

I

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

8-4-1 mo. pd.

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-8792

mo. INL

Kilehen Cabinets- Roofina - Sidinc - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
modeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

PERSONAUZED

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Route I
Lone Bottom. OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

POOLS

985-3561
Makes
•W1ahera .•Diahwasher1
Rangea
•Refrigerator•
•Dryera •Freezers
PARTS and

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

PH: 1-304-773-5634

Mason, W. Va.
C. L. Kitchen

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

8·29·1 mo.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

Call for free sidinc es·
timates, 949-2801 or

YOUNG'S

ULTRA CLEAN
DRY FOAM EXTRACTION METHOO

CARPENTER
. SERVICE

No S~nday Calls
3- JHic

CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
DE~P CLEANED- SHORT DRYING TIME
USE SAME DAY- ANTI·RES01l DETERGENTS
COMMERCIAL e. RESIDENTIAL

-Addona and ......Wing

Arbaugh's Archei}'
&amp; Hunting Supply

*Professional Spot Romoval Service
*Wall &amp; Cellini Cltanlnc
•
"insur~nce Work Welcome"

-c. ..... ...
-P!umblng and

-W&lt;Ifk

James Knicht-273-5388

(Free htimatea)

in RIVtnswood
Rick Hovatter-992-2606
In lllddleport
"Free Estimates On Ali Services"

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

949-2860.

1

11-26-Ht

TUPPERS PlAINS. OH.

'Bows &amp; Accessories
'Guns &amp; Ammo.
'live Bait, Fishinc

Tackle

'Huntin&amp; &amp; Fishinc
license
'Do1 Supplies
Hrs.: Weekdays 10·6

Sat. &amp; Sun. 10·8
Closed Tues. &amp; Wed.

8·1·1- mt~.

3 Illes Up Riwlr from l'omeroy, OH • .&amp; Mason, W. Va.

ANTIQUE PIECES: Roman Chair, Old rockers, 2-6ft.
oak mantels, 3 cider presses, 3 oak round tables 3
slep-back cupboards, 3 old lime clocks, 8 Hi-back
beds, oak; fancy iron beds, many serpentine dressers,
corner cupboard 1840-1860, set chairs 4 &amp; 6 count 6
drawer O.N.T. spool cabinets, prim~ive lables, glaSsware, . old churn, old blue crock, 4 oak secretaries
beautiful ":drawer oak file cabinet 3 wood ice boxes:
waterfall dresser, old 3 ct. deposit milk bottles glass
baskets, corn grinder, Sid irons, dolls, water pump, 2
mce WICker lables, choice wash stands pols &amp; pans
oak sideboards, old horse collars, mowe;s, gate leg
ble, organ, guns, set pressback chairs.

SHERIAN R. FORD

1a:

STONE JARS: Donahue, long Bottom, Oh., Pomeroy,'
Oh., letart, W. Va., Palestine, WVa. Pennsylvania
.Hamilton &amp; Jones, Point Pleasant W.' Va., large De:
corated Ones &amp; Othe11.
· ·
luch lise. Items Not liSted.

CARPET. STARTING AT

"FREE ESTIMATES"

$1295 :~A~~~

*CHAIN LINK
FENCING

$13.95
'

''

l

•

Sq. Yd. lnotalled

Good s.t.dion Of
GOLD SEAL

ANSO IV NYLON

CONGOIIUM

Yd. lnslallod

Installed And
Warranted by Sears

- $15.95

For

$399

CASH

SWEEPER ond oew!ng mo·
chine rep1ir, partt, · and
aupplloo.
P!ck up end
delivery, Davia Vacuum
C'-ner. one hatt mHe up
Goorgoa Crook Ad. . Coli
448-0284.

4

Giveaway

Klttan1, cala, dogs, puppte1.
Con 814·21!1·1431 .

•

&amp; CARRY
1 ROLL ONLY IN IROWN

Isears I CATALOG

ALL lUST GO- COlE GET ATRUCKLOAD

•

5 Years.

RUBBER-BACK TWEEI;)

TIME 9-6
WATCH POl

11

Gn~~~~~

1

MERCHANT

• P.tty Glbba·Dwnera

PH. 992-2178

SIGNS

1 Family Yard Sale 'I• mile
out Rt. 21.8, Odetay game.
couch • chair. Infanta to
grown up cloth11. many
other ltema, too many to
montion . Sept. 7,8,9. 9:30
to 6:00 .
Garage Sele E. College. Rio
Grande . Sept. 8 &amp; 9. Davit
r81ldence. Variety of clean
misc. itema.

Yard Solo Sot. 10th, 10,00.
Jaycee Building. 601 . Burnett Rd . Proceeds to Muacular Oyatrop_hY.
·
Garage Sale2 mi. from HMC
Rt. 180. Sept. 8. 9 10. Goo
hot water tank, heat-o· later.
Yard It Creh Sale Sept. 9 ,
333 Third Ave. in back,
beaide of Municipal parking
lot. 9 to 7.
2 Family Yard Sale Fri. 9,
Sot. 10. 1 926 Chol1nut St ..
Gallipolis.

840 Grant StrMt. S..,t .
7 . Olahea. clothing. booke. ~ .
pots and pena, coata, 011 :
heater. miac .

Garage Sale Firat Time 6
Family Sale. 46~ lariat Dr ..
first St. W of Holzer hoap.
Sept . 8·9·10. 8:00·7 Lota
needle point. macrame.
crochet, beada. 10me gla11.
Great fQr glfta, aever«&lt; alze
clothing, rummage. Iota of
miac .

412 Spring Avenue. Sept. 8 ~
&amp; 9 from 9 AM t!11 8 PM . •

Yard Sale 27 Henkle Ave.
Thura. e. Fri. Sept. 8-9 .
Winter coats, chlldrenamena -womena clothing,
miac.

Che11er next to fire houN.
Sept. 9 e. 10. Children e.
maternity clothet, boys
bike, china closet, dl1h ~
washer.
·
..

•

... .. . FICiiiTiEirCiif ········ ·

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Garage tale: 1 mile north of
Cheater on Route 7. Turn on
Co. Rd. 82 (Texaa Road) .
Clothes, carpet , bedapreada. misc. Sept. B. 9 .
Porch aale. Sept. 7 6. 8. At
Maxine Michael residence.
Laurel Cliff Rd ., Pomeroy.
Children• clothing sin 1 6
3. Misc .

Yard Sale Adldns residence,
Rqdn'oy VIllage "ll friday l!o
·set. 9 to 6 . Good girla
clothing.• infant thru aile 6,
Winnie the Pooh bedrool'fl
cordlnatea. P. camera, typewriter, car radio, miac.

4

Giveeway

Kinena to giveaway. Lo·
cated on Rt. 7 in Cheahire.
Coli !114-387-0401 .
2 rebblts 1 male and 1
female. Call 61 4 · 367·
0331 .

CATSI1! 982-6276 .

3 Cute kitten 1 grey • 2
yollow. Coli !114-378·2186.
2 doga port CoDio. Co11
114·2411·5813.
4 cuto klttono. CoN, e14·
2411-1188B.

'

e. ·: :•

Garage Sale Sept. 9, 10.
188 Woodland Dr .. Oallipolla.

..

Gla11ware. clothea, stereo. • 1
clerinet with muaic 1t1nd. • ,
Many more ltema.
: •
Letar1 Falla, Oh. Pearl Willie.
Bucktown Rd.. Sept. 8 -9.
Thurs. &amp; Fri.

Yard aale-flrat one ever .
:rhuraday, Friday 6. Sartur·
dey. 10 tl1! 5. lro Jblln,
Hubbard St. SyreCUN, 011
lights, iron butcherin~ kettie, school house cloc\t end
other antique Olahea .

.. ,
: ~
,
•
:
.,

~~:!~:·&amp; ::=~~ 0~~~~· the:::: .: :
····· ·Pt ·Pi iiiisaiit ····· '
&amp; Vicinity
- .......

--·----··-- -- -· .. -· ·- . .

YARD sale~ September 7 It ~
B. 9-6. B mihlf out Jerry'a •
Run Road • .Cotton Holley
residen'ot•, B~~~Clothaa~ :
misc. f(.. , ~L
·
.

9

Wanted To Buy

Buying dally· gold, tilver
coins, ringa.jawelrv, aterllng
ware, old coins. large cur·
rency. Top pricea. Ed. Surken Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, oh. 814-9923478 . .
WANTED to buy. gansing &amp;
!yellow root. dry topa It
roots), Local buyer, 304782·2681 .

.

•
Business
Opportunity

.

to
sendyou
money
through
the ·
peopla
know,
and ·NOT
mail until you have invattl·
-lod
the offoring.
~

Lost and Found

LOST In vicinity of Popular
Ridge or Turkey Run. Walker
Coon hound. with alot, of
white on body. with brown
hoed. •&amp;o reword . Coil
814-387-7733.

FOUND: Bleck dog on Union
Ave., Sunday night. Phone
814-992-2863.
Would the lady from Syracuse that called about my
lost r11ccoon please call
ogoln. 304· 773·6452 or
814-992-7846.

8

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

11

Halp W.nted

AVON now, AVON wowl
Sell AVON for Chriatmaa,
buy yours at a discount. Cell
448-3368 or 44e·2158.
Someone to cut timber &amp;
firewood. Call 814-2668689.

TEXAS OIL COMPANY
need• mature per10n M-F to
Nil full line of high quality
lubricantlto manufacturing,
trucking, conatruction and
farm customers. Protected
tarrito,Y. thorough tr•inlng
program. For peraon1l interview, send work history to
G. C. Llna. Southwestern
Petroleum, Box 789, fort
Worth, TX 7e101 .
12

Situations
Wanted

For leaH, Auto SBn~ica
Canter, Meaon, WV. 3 baya,
2 holats. excellent location,
luccealful buain•• tor over ·
30 YHFI, available . attar
Aug . 9, 1983. Coli oftor 8
p.m., 1-304-8711· 2982.

22 Money to Loen
HOME LOANS Low llxod
r1te. Loder Mortgage, 77 E.
State. Athena, Ohio. 1·!114512-3061.
'
23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUN!NG Bock to · '
School Special •26 normal
tuninga. September only.
Ward'o Keyboard. 304-8753824.
PIANO '!'UNING·LANE DANIELS. Reliable service
alnc:a 1985. Aaaoclate of
Brunlcardl Mualc Co. Phone
814-742-2961.
SUBKEN SERVICE CO.
Lock1mlth service, toolaherpenlng. acreen &amp;. gle11 lnotolod. Coli 034-!175-3!184.

:;:=:::;::======

9

Wanted To Buy

SANOY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. haa offered
ltiNicea tor fire lneur.,ce
coverage In Qallla County
for almost a century. Farm,
home and penonal property
coveragea a're available to
meet lndlvidull needa. Contact Kall Burleson. agent.
Phone 448-2821.

~!.~aJ_:•~.~.r lote model ~1~7;-=~M~I~s:ce~lla:n:eo~u:a:.==
Jim Mink Chov.·Oida Inc.
em Gene Johnaon
I 448·3872

.

I ~~~~~~~~~~ I

Will do blbylittlng in my
Auction every Tueadey home. Live in Middleport
night, Pt : Pleaaant. WVa. areo. Coil 614-992-8349.
Auct. Lonnie Neal . Farm,
household. estate. ate. Call RETIRED ahoot motel
614-387-7101.
worker • plumber seeks ptlrt
tlmo job. W!1! do anything.
Rick Pearaon Auctioneer Write: lox C· 1 Pt. Pleaaant
Service. Estate, Farm, An- Reg later. Pt. Plea ant, WV
tique • liquidation Ales. 26650.
Ucanud
&amp; bonded6786
in Ohio or
&amp;
WYa
. 304-773304· 773-8186.
13
Insurance
Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchendl• every week.
Conaigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auction"'· 27&amp;-3089.

t

. mother of 2 will
'
Experienced
do babysitting in my home.
Col! 44!1-0082.

YOUNG mala fox hound,
eher 6. 304-896·3841.

6

.r

18 Wented to Do

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommend•
that you do buaineill with

Kittant. 304·676-2611.

.

Sept. il, 8 , 10." (11cwlng; · ;
things old &amp; new. ~lldlen ~ ~
smell library, turn. _odd• 8t .-..:
endt, Gibbs. 1 006 SimpiOn_~~ ~
Ploco, Pt." Pl.
· :,.

Pupa. Half German She· 1---~-----­
phard. 11 wooka old . 81 4·
992-2038.

TWO white klttona, litter
trained, 8 weeks. 304-8762902.

~

6 fa~T~ily; turn. toya and 1 .. ~
linle of everything ~ Thura. ;
F.-i. Sat. 9 to 7. 6 miles North • ·
Rt. 2. Pt. Pl. Wotch lor ligno. •

12-20-tfc-

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stain1ess Steel

All

Garage Sale Sept . 6. 7 .8 .
112 VInton Ct., Gallpolia .
9:00.

Two cata, one calico end ona
brown . 992-3960 .

4·21 -tfc

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 9-1 0

**'

1-3-lfc

'Sidinc

REILTOR

Phone
1-( 614 )·992·3325

Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

742-2328

EAFORr}[H

PRICE REDUCED- Commercii! lot in lliddltport lOO'dOO' on Hartinger Pky,
Sewer &amp; water. Smal building
with \l bath. Now $16,C.OO.

·

CUSTOM WORK - AIR BRUSH
CAPS
JACKETS
UNIFORMS
T·SHIRTS
TROPHIES
QUANTnY SPECIALS
TRANSFERS- LETTERING
8·22·1 100. pd.

AL TROMM'S
. BACKHOE
SERVICE
.•Lowest F!etes

Custom
Sawmill Work

15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583 ·
or 992·2282

Hoc

949-2358

:.l ic.ensid &amp; Inspected"

New Homes - Extensive
Remodeling.
•I nsurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
•Aluminwn &amp; Vinyl Sidings

Authorized John Deer,
New Holland. Bush
Farm E.quipment

CUSTOM PRINT

and
All Occasion Cakes

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

OnAL~inc

W~ing Cal:~

8·18·1

..

$12.000.00.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Print .AI.I!2n Anythinc

TERESA'S
CAKE
DECORATING

PH. 992-2478

)

BOGGS

Hue

LAFF·A·DAY

N!W UsnNG - FrMI Free
~ and water· goes 'lith lhil
1971 - !2x60 mobile home.
Approx. I aCIII lot in country.
Owner needs quick sa~

320 JERICHO RD.
PT. PLEASANT, W.
-304-675-1

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re· ·
pair eervice and in·
atallation.
Residential
8o Commercial
Call 742-3196

949-2293

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

·~ ·

Trophy
Maoofatturers

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

&amp; Vicinity

Golllf.dis

. THE
TROPHY
KING

Vienna. W. Va.

RECLAMATION

······Gaiiii&gt;oifii········

"We_ Hll quility used cars.

1~14-446-4782

WOOD
WORLD
2506 Grand Central Ave.

10·6-tk

2-23-llc

Alllypes of roof WOIIt. new

A
~

R4cine, 011.

Ph ..61H43-51~i

- -.. and ....... W&lt;lfk

.The Daily Sentinel

down thestalrsagaln," sbesald.

AND GAS.

SQUARE. COLUMBUS , OHIO
43224. Such commems or
objections shall be filed wrth the
dtvision no later than fifteen
calendar days from the pubhcation date in a newspaper of
general circulation in the area
of rev181N.

Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

COAL

o...

o.

Ohio Department of Natural
Resources. Division of Oil &amp;
Ga~. Founta1n Square, Columbus, Ohio 43224. 614 · 26569 17
Ally person des1ring to comment or to make an obJeCtiOn
with reference to an application
for a permtt to construct.
con11ert to. or operate a salt
water tnJectton proJect sh all f1le
such comments or obJ8C!tons
in wrtting . with the UNOEA-

SUCCESSFUL
BUSINESS
IS A CINCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH'!

always amazes me.''
"I was hanging there and trembling like a leaf and praying I wwld
not hear those footsteps com1ng

J

lnsui,td

or 992-7121

•ExperianCBd
•Reasonable
•Work
r.ueed

NOTIF!I;ATION
James E. Diddle dba

lrom·&amp;'l&amp;' Up
to 24'x36'

•

Also Transmission

PLUMBING and
HEATING

!----==---LEGAL

Drilling Company
P.O. Bo" 537
location of Propo sed Salt
Water InJection Well:
- Section 3, Rutland Townsh ip, Meigs Coumy. Oh1o.
leland and Fleth'a Clonch.
.
Geolog1c Name and Depth of
.lnject•on Zone Clinton .
Approx . 4,400'.
Maximum Proposed lnjection Pressure - 300 lbs.
Ma~~;imum Proposed A11erage
Daily lnjeq,on Volume -More
than 200 Bbls.
Further information May Be
O~lainecf By Contact!ng the
Following: ,
James E. Diddle dba J. D.
Drilling Company, P. 0 . Box
587. Racine. Oh1o 45771
614-949·2512

Siz~s

PH. 992.· 5682

JEWELL'S

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF CLARENCE J.
McNEAL. DECEASED
C.. No. 24187
NOTICE OF
APPOiNTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

lyn c hb u rg'· Ciay ·Loca1
· Nam-e .and Address · Of
Schools, 8250 SA 134. LYnCh· . Appl!cant:

Federal Hocki ng local ' burg, Ohoo 45142. 1-65
Schools. P.O. Box 117. Ste- passenger.
Greenfield Ex. V. Schools.
wart. Oh10 45778
,
Belpre City Schools, 2014 · 200 N. 5th Street. Greenf1eld.
Washtngton Bl11d., Belpre, Oh•o 0 h i o 4 5 1 2 3 , 3 - 6 5
passenger
45714
Northern local Schools.
Me•gs .l ocal Schools. 62 1
South Third St. Middleport. 8700 Shertdan Road. Thorn'
v1l le. Ohio 43076. 1-65
Ohio 45760
·
"Morgan l cical. Schools. Box. passeng~r.
Southern local SchoolS. Box
509 . McConnelsvtl le. Ohio
176. Racine, Ohio 45 7 71 .
43756
Ohio Valley local Schools. 1-65 passenger. .
Hunt1ngton l ocal Schools.
123 W. Marn St.. Wesr Union.
18S Hur;ttsman Road. ChilliOhio 45693
Union-Sc1oto local Schools, cot he. Ohto 45601 . 1-65
1432 Egyp_t P1ke. Chillicothe. passenger.
Athens C1ty Schools. 141
Ohio 45601
Vinton County Schols, Mer!}· Columbus Road, Athens. Ohio
erial Building, McAnhur. Ohro 45 701. 1- 65 passenger,
1-7B passenger.
45651
Manena City Schools. 701
New lexington City Schools.
3rd Street. Marietta. Ohio
310 First Street NE!IN lexing- 45750.
3- 65 passenger. ~
ton, Ohto 43764
Separate
and tndependent
Eastern Local Schools. At 1.
btds Will be recerved wtth
Reedsville. Oh1o 45772 ,
lynchburg -Clay lo cal respect to the chassis, body
tvpe and options and will state
Schools. 8250 SR 134. Lynch - that
buses. when assembled
burg . Ohto 45142
Greenfield Ex. V. Schools. and pnor to del1very. comply
200 N. 5th Street. Greenf!eld. with all school dtstnct specifica !ions. all current federal safety
Oh10 45 123
Norrhern Local Schools. regulattons and current Ohio
8700 Shendan Road, Thorn- mintmum standards for school
bus construction of the Oh to
ville. Ohio 43076
Southern local Schools. Box Depanment of Education
adopted by and with ·· the
176. Racine_ Ohio 45771 ·
Hunt1ngtqn local Schools. Dilector or H1ghway Safety
188 Humsmen Road. Ch•lh- purs uant to Section 4511 .76
bl the ReviSod Code and all
cothe. Oh!O 45601
Athens C1ty Schools. 14 1 other pertinent pr0111S10ns Of
Columbus Road. Athens. Ohio the law. Purchase of buses
advertised is conttngent upon
45701
Manetta City Schools. 701 state ,approval for purchase.
Bid proposal forms and
3rd Street, Manetta. Ohto
Jnstructions to bidders are on
45750
Adena Local Schools 1 19 file and may be obtetned from
West H1gh Street P.O. BoK SEO VEC . 507 Rich l and
Athens. Oh•o 45701 .
266 -D. Franklord. Ohio 45628 Avenue.
A 10% bid bond IS required
Sealed b1ds will be received
With subm1ssion of b•ds to
at the address of each of the school dts1ucts. The Board of
above named Boards of EducaEducat1on reserves the nght to
tion on October 7. 1983 . . at .re1ect any or all b•ds.
12 :00 noon and at that t• me
opened and publicly read by 191 7. 14. 21. 26. 4tc
each respecti11e ·treasurer of
said Board of Educations as
provided by Sectton 3313 .46
of the Re11ised Code oft he Stale
of Oh10 accordtiig to speciftca·
!tons of said Bbard of Education
CARD OF THANKS
as follows:
1would llulo lib tllil opAlexander local Schools.
portUnity ID tlllllk all lilY
Box 337. Albany. Oh•o 45710,
frltndl for IIMir PIIJIIS,
3-65 passenger. -1- 23
passenger.
canis, llowll1 and visits
Wellston City Schools. 416
ibq
lilY illy in PI 11
N. Pennsyhtan1a Ave .. Wellston.

OhiO

He has pleaded Innocent by
reason of Insanity.
Jackson, 39, is on trial for sexual
attacks on 30 women In their
Columbus residences between Nov .
26, 1978, and Aug. 31, 1982, five days
before his arrest.
Hehasbeenchargedwith38rapes
that occulTed· over seven years.
Charges In this trial Include 22 rapes
and 38 related crimes. A second trial
is scheduled for charges of crimes
occurring before Nov.1, 1!178.
The Dve women who testified
Tuesday In Summit County Common Pleas Court were tbe last of 30
to take the stand against Jackson.
All ha ve described similar earlymorning attacks by an Intruder who
blindfolded them and left them
bound and gagged. Only two have
identified Jackson as their

Eastern Local Schools. Rt. 1,

Reedsville. Ohio 45772. 1-65
P•ssenger.

UTILITY BUILDINGS

ARROW FLASHING
SIGNS
FOR SALE OR RENT
6" &amp; a··
Repa.cement Lett••
JOHN'S AUTO SALES

OAK

1700

ton. Ohio 43 7 64. 2 -6 5 1---;;:--;-;;--;;-:::-;-:::--Public Notice
Wash1ngton local Schools. passenger.

13th Street W. Portsmouth.

Sizes sllrt flom 12'xl6' ·

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

I· HI'·I ma.

14.00

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

St. At. !24, Pomeroy, OH.

Route 4, Pomerov

43743

Ohio 45662 ·

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

742-2352

,,., _ ~

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF EDDA J.

2-54 passenger.
Adena local' Schools. 119
West High Street. P.O. B_
ox
266 -D. Frankfort. Oh•o 45628.
2-65 passenger. 2 - 54
passenger
Uruon-Sctoto local Schools.
1432 Egypt Pike. Lhilllcothe,

Oh10

o-..,--.,
T_ _ . _ . _

u.····-· .._...,_

\lllloJI-•

U•wll_..

11-MM ,__.,

3-65 passeng8r. 3 -.:: 53
passenger.
Ohio Valley local Schools.
123 W . Mam St, West Union.
s.;~nger.

JIU - •.,...,;,
111 - Coohillf'

11-o-.tM.....,.,.

Public Notice

O~io

Washers. Dlyers
Ranges. Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO

n•-•-•
ll·
hC.OVM"'t
I
- - - - - - - - - - - --j
. .. Eiecoricellllo! ... •lio" r

,._...Y.. Gr*n

_... ._....

... , .. t....

=

•-c••t• ....,.C...,,•
Jn - o.••
_..,
,._
.,_o.... ••-c-·
a•-••
1&amp;3- .........,.

''"
"_..,...._..
u.,...._....,
*".,.

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

11.w.,
.."''"'"'
U -l-lock

lllhlfl_lll_o

14 lu .....oo ''"'"'"'

=

c-...,

o.lloC_.,_

J7 . .............

fl.r,..u .. v.tii.W.o
ll·foo . . •l•a•

USED
APPLIANCES

f :l••'lifio•oll,.ll'"' r ·ou· ~·r

,.,,_
.........•••wo
,.._
,

~-

Jl.-..hof . . .

1 '••" ..... ,..... ,., ......... ,

•

_..... .
.............
........
.....-. ......

.,, ...

11 ·11... - G M d .

Daily Sentinei-'-Page

Business Services

PHONE
992-2156
o. w.n, Doily
JootiooiCiaaillod-..
lll eoon st., -..,. l*la 4~15!

I C0&lt;4oii... Mo j ,OO&lt;I .,. ... _ _ ol

The

Ohio

Newly remodeled 2 atory
frame. 1 "12 bath, 31,-i ec:rea,
city ac:hooiJ, riverview ,
u2.ooo. Cell 448-4222
between 9 e. 5.
4 bdr. ranch home,lergeLR,

tun basement. with garage,
wood burner included, city
achoola, 2 mil .. from town.
Cell 448-0278.
In Mlddlepon. newty remo·
deled home with fireplace,
possible woodburner, close
to achool1 and ahopplng.
Cell 814-992-8941 .

Custom Butchering. 304·
882-3224. Open !I daya
Wanted to buy used coal &amp; wookly.
wood haetera. Swain Furnl·
By owner HouM with 2
ture. 448-3169. 3rd. e.
ecre1 more or Ins, been
Olivo St .. GoU!po!la, Oh.
18 W!lnted to Do
remodeled, orchard, 87 f1 .
well, t22,000 . Call 814Will pay good price for used
388-9053.
mobile homea, travel trailers
·~
&amp; comporo. Coli 814-448· General Hauling end Tr1ah
0176.
r1movel Service. Reliable 2 BR home for ule on land
and dapendablo. Cell 448· contract. t2000 down, balance like rent. C.. l 441·
Standing timber wanted, 31&amp;8 betWHn 8 ond 5.
0924 .
Top prices paid. C1ll after 6
P.M. Lorry Strlck1end, !114- LAwn Mowing no yard to big
!182-7832 .
or email. Reliable and depen- 6 room house It bath.
doble. For olllmoto col! county 8a wall water on 1IJ
acre lot. real nice on Floyd
Solf-delrolling relrlgerotor, _4_4_8_·3_1_6_8_,_8_to_6_._ __
Clork Rd, off St. Rt. 180. 8
muat be In good working
co ndltlon, four kitchen Uke to do blbyllttlng In my miles ffom Holzer hosp. Call
814-388-8282.
cholra, aot of ond toblea. Coli home. Clll1 44!1-33!18.
814-268-171!1 oltor - - - - - - - - 1:30PM.
HouM cle1ning or taka care 3 bedroom house whh fireof elderly person . I day1 a piece, central air, 2 full
12 ft. or 14 ft. Hmi-V WHk, wl1! cook tho mao1o. bethl, In cl1y limits. lmmediett POIMSiion. Call 61 4lllumlnum boot. Col! !114· Coli 448-2842.
241·!1582.
1 ..:..:----~-:-:---:-- 248-6281
BABYSITTINGin my home,
BED8·1RON, BRASS, aid lul!orparttlmo,tancadyerd, Houae It lot in Vinton.
lurnl4ure, gold, 111- dol· bah!nd ochoat. 304-!176- •&amp;.1500 will conakler lend
controct . Col! 814-245lar~. wood lee lloaee. etone 278•.
joro, ontlqueo, etc., Com-1--------:--:-- "6818.
pleta houeeholdo. Wr!to: WELDING, gu, electric,
M.O. Mlllor, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, pqrteblo, o•porloncod. do· 1 . 14 acres level land with
Oh. Dr ea2-7780.
-dabla, low rotoa, amoll or partillly conatructed blsa.
ment. Price nego11able. Call
lorgo Joba, 304-87!1-3877.
448·3044.
Wented to buy. New, uoad e.
ontlque fUrniture. Will buy 1 Boout!clon looking for o
p._ or oolltfll- houoa- oo1o~ opon!ng In tho Po!nt Brk:lc &amp; trama houN. 3 bdr ..
ho1do. Alao complete Auc11· Pluoont eroo. Coli onyt!mo 1 ~ beth. little over YJ acre.
n!co oroo. Col! !11 4 -245qneering - · Coli Ooby ottor II p.m. Aak lor Gwen . 5233.
A. Mort!n 814·192-8370. 1_3:..:0_4_-2_7_3-_2_8!1_5_.- - -

�12 The

Sentinel

31 Homos for Sale

THIN~

8275

for

mo.

304-855-3934.
For sate in Syracuse on 100
x 200 lot. 2 outbuildings,
room for large garden, 3 or 4
bedroom o lder home, needs
repair. $10,000 . 614-992 -

5056 .
Sale by owner-- Rustic Hills,
SyraCL!IB. 3 · bedrooms, 2
baths, bi -level with patio &amp;

cover. 30x30 two-car garage .

16x12

barn.

(6141

992-2967 alter 5 p.m.
Immediate possession in
Middleport . 7 rooms, new
kitchen , carpeting down-

stairs,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

woodburner. 614-

FIVE room hou:se behind
Hanford Grade School . FOr

Rosch . 304 -773 -58 17.

~~~~~~=~~=~~~~=g=~§==~

Great buy. Newly remodeled
house, nice, quiet &amp; beauti·
fullocation . Immediate pos -

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

seuion. Turn off Rt. 36 in

Beautiful lots 2 and one third
acres. Trees . flat, rural water. Green Elementary, between Mcintyre Park District &amp; Spring Valley
Cinema . Call 614 - 379-

Henderson, WV. on Henderson St . Go away from the
river, the last house on
Henderson St. 6 rooms with
new wall· to wall carpeting .
Priced in S20's. 8ob Kie·
sling, 446-2601. ,.

44

CLEAIII USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 36. PH OlliE 446-7274.
14x70 Kirkwood, 2 BA ,
unfurniahed mobile home.
Central air, carpet, stove,
refrigerator, ceiling fan. un derpinning. 811,000 · firm .
Call 614-256-6035 or after

41

Houses for Rent

1972 Castle mobile home
14x86 with 82 Vemco
12•20 room attached, central air, fireplace, located Rio

equiped kitchen, dining
area, family room. woodburner, city schools, fenced
beck yard . Call446-2003 or
446 -4469. Must rent or sell
immediately.

pets. Call 446-3748
614-256-1903.

For ule by owner. 1981
Kingsly all electric mobile
home. 14JC70 with 7x24
expando, 2 bdr., 11f.z bath,
utility room , centra l air,
firuplace, awning &amp; underpinning . Reason for selling
must relocate . Price

$19,000. Call 614-2466572 or 614-246-6500.
Mobile home In Rodney ,
12x&amp;O on rented lot. Call
446-1167 , 8-6 MondayFriday.

'
Apartment

1 bdr., furn .
Trailers 2 bdrs., furn .. beau ~
tituf Riverview, Kanauge,
Fosters Trailer Park. 446-

1602.

rent. 2 bdr ., all electric. Call

4 r. furn . apt .. ground floor .
private entrance, no 'pets.
Please apply at 1058 FirS1
Ave. , Gallipolis.

614 -388-8711 '
2bdr .. fum .. t75 dep .. $150
Call 614 -388-

3 bdr. house near Rio
Grande. $236 mo .. adults
only . Cal 614-246-543tJ.

dayo. Call614-256-1207.
G.E. electric refrig. &amp; Sears
Kenmore continuous cJean
electric range . Both gold
tone, good cond., e400 for

Three bedroom unfurnished
upstairs apartment in Mid-

dleport. $150 mo. 16141
992-5692.

6:30

aotlmotoo. Clll 614-28&amp;-1 182.

IN

COUNTRY

ON

set. Coli 614-246-6058 af-

Furnished one &amp; two bed·
room apt . Middleport .
Adults, no pets. Month rant
plus $100. security. 614-

Used vinyl sofa &amp; chair.
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furn . Co .,
966 Second Ave., Gallipolis.

Call44&amp;-1171.

992-3874.

1-----,..-----6 room l.pt. Fully carpeted .

rv ·&amp; Appliances, 627 Third

In country near parks on Rt.
33 north. Adults, no pats.
References. Call 614-9923 201 .

Ave., Gallipolis, 448-1699.
Spin washers, gas&amp;. electric
dryers, auto washers, gas &amp;
electric . ranges. refrigara·

Apt. in Pomeroy. 3. rooms &amp; 1'

BUD

CHATTIN ROAD ONLY
8250 .00 PER MOIIITH .

bath . 614' 992-6621.

LESS IF LEASED BY YEAR .

Furnished .- apt.

304-576-2711 .

Utilities included. 614-992-

NEW HAVEN. all brick. 3
bedroom home , garage ,
basemen•. $260 . per

3

rooms .

6949 .

G.E. waoher A-1 cond ..
guaranteed,S125 . Caii6143 67 · 0S60.

1- - -- - - -- - -

For sale -- Liberty dining
1- - - - - - - - - - room suit, consists of hutch
2 bedroon furnished Apts. table and 6 chairs, like new
614-992-6434. 614-992 - condition, $460 . Middle0
9 2
or 304-882-2566.
1P__n_._ _9__·_2_8_22_._ _ __

month, 304-882 -2405 llo
304-676-5540. .
I.a.- - - - - - - - - ,.

after 6 for more info.

5751 or 773 · 9520 .

Apartments . 304 - 676 5548.

New living room S1Jite,
couch. chair. end table,
coffee table. 247-3208 .

1- - - - - - - - - APARTMENTS, mobilel~::;:::;:;==::::====­

TWIIII RIVERS TOWER .

Apartment• now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income of less than
$12,300. Ranting for 30
percent of adjusted income.Phone 304-675-6679.

1- - - - - -- - - 2 bdr. trailer located on
Upper River Rd. all utilities
paid except electric . Dep .
req. Call 446-8558 .

Atari 6200 Super System
with super breakout cartridge, played very little.

304-676-6182.
Sears ref . . 860. gas stove
$20 .• dishwasher &amp;100 .
euy chair 826 . 304-882-

3108.

Sylvania

color

TV,

portable. 304 -676-2815 .

56 Building Supplias
Building materials
block, brick, aewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

0 . Call614-245: 5121.
Building material for a
12X1 6 utility building. Call

Call 446-3044 .

66

FURNISHED apartment,
adults, no pets. phone 304-

675-1453.

limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallla or pick up at Richards

llo Son . Call446-7786 .

Pots for Sa I.e

"September Sale"
Jividens Farm Equipment

Bording all breeds . Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman I puppies: Stud
Service. Call 448 ~ 7796.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

614-367-7220.
Siamese kittens. One male
Seal Point, four female
chocolate Points, one male
chocolate Polnla, $60 ea.

look for our display at the
Farm-City Field Day. Sept.

10. 1:00 to 8 :00.

10FT J D grain drill. 8760.
Allis .Chalmers E combine.
corn It grain head, $2500.

Call 614-388-9790 .

Female Chawawa. House·
broken $60. To good home .
Beagles for sale. Days till 6.

614-843-51 ,5 4.

II
1971 Pontiac Cat.'llna·.
Good wor~ car.' 614-949-

2849 .
1980 Monte Carlo, ps .• p.b.,
air, tilt wheel, am-fm
cassette. 85000. 61 4-949·

mantal bull. 6 years old.
Huck Wagner . 61 4~ 949 -

2059 .

THREE male Poodle pups.
for ula. 886.00, 304-882-

3672.
AKC registered Beagle pup-

pies. 304-676 -5886.

Firewood cut up slabs $16
pickup load . Call 814-245·

Musical
Instruments

5804.
Released for Public Sal&amp;
several Singer sawing machines unclaimed by a
school· new free arm only

$89 . Coli 446-9301.

Uprigth piano t660. Call

altar 6PM, 446-3873 .

1 Bundy clarinet, 1 Caravello
tenor S&amp;kaphone, 1 Bundy
'alto sax . Call 814- 387-

0331 .

TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars.
Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern Ave.. Gallipoli:!l, 446-

2282 ..

1916 Dodge Aspen stationwagon . Cali 614-388-

97!5 .

'

1980 Ford Pinto, auto.
1979 Plymouth Arrow auto.
1 979 Ford Fairmont Stati·
on wagon auto. 1979 vw

675-3819.
82 Mustang l(red) am-fm.
ps, pb, 4 ap., axe. condition.

Dewitt'&amp; ~

304-676-4039 .

. •'
DOZER IIXORK By T~d ;

Vans &amp;

4 W.O .

1976 Jeep CJ-6. molal tOJJ,

_,

1972 Suzuki GT 760, low
mileage. good cond .. $890.
will consider trade for wood
working equip . Cell 614-

3B8-B71 0.
Black w1th slny bar, luggage
rack. road pegs. crui• control and ca .. guards. E~c .
cond ., 8,800 mllea. $1,800.

Roger Abbott 992-6114 or
mouth Duster auto . All good _9_9_2_-2_3_7_7_._ _ _ _ __
buys. John ' s Auto Sales. 1
446-

1981 Yamaha 760 Virago.

;

cond .. UOO. Coll446-3820
·

,!:t~~:~t:r~::.~ ~

menta,
:·
aeptic tanka, landscaping .....

. ~1

ll1

Inspection . Call after

PM. 992· &amp;95&amp;.

Jeff and Fallon. IR1160 min.)

Call anytime 446-4!37, .
L.

Davison,

[Closed Captionedl

Jr. ·

(DSt. ElaewharaDr . Morri-

•
-----L~------ · ·1

son is perplexed with a patient who has had many
operations and Nurse Daniels is attacked by a ·street
woman .' IRI (60 min .)

Do1er Work. 9round clean·
ing • exceVMirig. $26 hour. ':
Call448·96~ . 1

•,

,, I

..... '

....;

J .A.R. Con•t uction Co. ,: 1

10:30 •
(f) Major Loogue
Bueboll; Cincinnati at l.oo

Rutlond,

[II Star Time
(() Mejor Loogue Besoboll:
Atlanta at Plttoburvh
Cll Jazz In Woat Vlrvinia
(Jj) Pallise,..
1 1 :00 (f) Lourenco Olivier and
Jocklo GINOOO Two stran-

Water linea , Foot en, ,. 1
Df'llins. All kinds of Ditching . •. :

Angeles

Oh, 614-742 · '·:
- ~

2903.

114-742-2407or614 -742- I

.j

gers discover that they
loved the same woman.

'1

BACKHOE.

dozer.

lTJCIJD(I)®GllJ

dump '
~

truck . licenMd septic •Y•·
tern Installment &amp; repair.

Nawa

BARNEY

Cll Dr. Who
11 :30 Cll MOVIE:

304-675· 7666.

========'

Electrical
•• ~
&amp; Rofriaaratiofl . •

84 ·

------~"'-

__

GOOD WOMAN
LIKE LOWEEZV.

_: ;:

' ' ''

SEWING Machine r....., . ..
aentice. Authorized Singer
&amp;aiel • Service Sharpen
SeluQrs. Febric Shop,

Pomeroy. 992·2284.

'Tllen~ God,
lt'o Friday'
IJ) Another Uta
(!) SportsContor
Cl)s...p
(II T'"'lght Show
•
())
U.S.
Open
Highlights Tonight's pro·
gram presems highlights of

VOU DON'T
DESERVE A

;

Farms for Sale

l~t lot In Syracuse. Priced

IRI

miliates Krystle ln front of
Alexis and Kirbv catches an
Intimate moment between

1980 Honda CR -2&amp;0R 1 axe.

1977 Suzuki GS750, .,50.
992-7447.
.

' 1!1232. _ __
,.:;:,:_.:,=::.:__

nifer disappears ahet Alelil
takes her to ~ poker game .

.'

&amp; backhoe seNiee. Baa•· ;
menta, footers ...nd1capJng, :
drivawaya, farm ponda. 1

Call 614-949-2737.

lie acre lot with platform
hoUse and In-ground
cU. for information, 813-

9:30 8 Cll (IJ Family Ti•o Jen-

814-44&amp;-1142 between '.
7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM.
. .~

James
owner.

SNUFF,Y '

;
t

the day's tennis action from
the USTA National Tennis
Center. Flushing Mead.ow-

t

. :;

Corona Part&lt; , IIIY .
79 ' 860 Suzuki 1heft drive,
6.000 mlle1, 1howroom

2 bedroom furnished, a.c.
New Haven. (304) 882·

cond. Aoking .,750. 304·
576-6713.

2466.

44

Mobile Home Lots for rent·
water and sewer fu,.niahed,
1 small child accepted,

Apartment
for Rent

304-676-1076.

47 Wanted to Rent
2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart·
menta Utiltiea partly furn .,
apartment• available now.
$200 per mo. A-One Real
Ettattl, C1rol Vuger, Real-

75

Motors for Sale
1980 Codllloc Coupe Do- 1-- - - - - - - - VIIIo. CruiH, tilt, air, AM -FM
C8 8 trocik, good tlreo, 14 ft. Sol lllymph flohing
eaaellent

condition.

Call

448-2100.
A nice home, can be en older
one. mult have at least 6
roans, etc. located in city of
Gallipolis. preferablv downtown. Excellent care will be
given ·by reaponaible lady

tor. Call 304-676-6104 or
304-876-7386.
Furniahed apt .. *186. Water

and 13 .,..,. old oon. Coli
446-9546 or 441-2648 or

paid, 2 bdr .. 13HI 4th.
Gallipolis. 448·4416 after 7

contact Evelyn at Oacar' 1
Restaurant.

p.m.

'

Boata and

boet. big w1ter. •ml V had,

5 peroon copoclty, 1.8 HP

Morcurt trollor, 1900. Coli
446· 8693.

'-============

1177 Rolley &amp;porto Comoro
PS.
PB, olr.good
AM-FM
rodio,
one owner.
cond.,
Call I
77
oltor 5, 81,· 246-6697.
72 Buick 4 0, HT, Umltod,
one owner. low mANge.

good condition, 1895. Cho·
~•• M. Nool, 21! 2nd. Ave ..
Golllpollo.

Auto Repair

-rk.

Attention Auto Pointing
1150 ond up. lody
oxtro . I*' otr(plna, .DVotom
otrlpo.Coll 441·0fll&amp;.

86

([I Letenlghl America
® All In the F11tnily

.

General Hauling • ,

ee Twilight
(]II Nlghlline
Zone

1

JONES 80YSWA1ER SER- ;
VICE. Col) 814'-367-7471 •
or 814-31'1'-0!9; .
~

11 :411 (!) NFL'o Grell- Moments
NFL's Greatest
Moments
presents
the
1981 AFC Playoff • San

Need' something hauled _
away or 1omethlng moved'1' -

Diego vs. Miami and the

198 1 NFC Championship ·

Wo'll do II . Coli 441-3159
between 9 and&amp;.

"

.

\.1'

I\IORTH

FR16~TEN

-·

ME ...

I

BurM&amp;Aion
Nlghtllne
(I)~ Stort 'Year of
the Orogot&gt;.' Oo1octivea Weber ond Darrin try to protiiCI
the wrtne11 of a murder
when two gango fight for
control of Chinatown. 12
hra.l
~ MOVIE: 'Tile Leman
Dr11P Kid'

TRISTATE
I
UPHOLSTERY BHO'
'
1 183 lloe. •Ave., Gom.,O,.a. :

l

'

'

North Is showing something
like six-six in the minors.
Note tliat three clubs would
have shown a very good
hand with clubs, though not
necessarily any unbalanced

t-7-SS

+AK82
•• 3
tAKJ764
+2
EAST

\VEST,

+toss

monster.
South doesn't have much
of a hand, but he now. knows ·
that his four little clubs rep;resent just one loser. He
should be willing to show his
ace of hearts by bidding four
hearts. The queen of diamonds Is also a valuable
card. He assumes that Harth
probably has a five-card diamond suit.
North has only 15 high·
card points, but if South can
alford to make some sort of
slam try, North should check
on aces land he does),
Here we come to another
point of liidding interest.
Some players feel that South
bas already shown his heart
ace and hence should
respond five clubs. We don't
agree \lith this, We think .
Blackwood asks for aces,
and South should show the
one , he actually holds. So
South bids five diamonds
and North bids the spade
slam.
There is nothing to · the
play as long as nothing is
ruffed and the diamonds
don't break 5-0. The defense
takes the first trick and
South the rest.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

+4

'fKI064" ;

t 5

'fQJ9S2

· tlO 9 8 2·

+KQI073

+AJ6

SOUTH
+QJ973
'fA7
tQ3
+98&amp;4

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Opening lead: +K
By Oswald Jacoby

ODd James Jacoby.

1b" splinter bid can be
used after a one-over-one
start. It works beautifully
provided that partners don't
get confused.
North's four-club call Is a
good example. Unless South
is wide awake, he is likely to
be confused and think thai

dl"''*"'•"

by YHQMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Forbidden
5 Ump'scry
9 Seaweed ·
derivative

I Philippine
language

2 Openmoulhed
3 Unfair selling

!OWly

practice

4 Vessel

1Z Pickup
points
13 Sonora

5Garment
6 Imitate
7 Do something!

snooze

8 Covenant

14 Likely
15 Drop

•• Pronoun
17 Hired
I! Gennancity
zo Designate
Zl Commedia
dell'22 Official

Yesterday's Answer

IOOutoltheway 23NearEast

30 Expire

11 Deserved
15 Greek

32 Bold

expert

24 Harness

township
18 Wise ones
19 Dundee baby

35Corile point
(converge)

strap
26 Packing

36 Dutch

zz Turned into

commune

shield

24 Pureed
25 Gaelic

zs S.A. COWllry
%7 Crow cries
28 Door part
31 Mother of

b:-+--l-

Hezekiah
3% "The Great
Gcxl-"
33 Bikini part
34 Tot's
handwanner
36 Western
gtmlighter

37 Ball beau

38 !iOd (Sp.)

39 "All-

Jazz"

40 To be,
in Nancy

))AlLY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

to

work

It :

One Jetter simply stands [or another. In thi s sample A is

used for the three L's X for the two O's, etc . Sing le iellcrs.
apostrophes the lenat'h and formalinn of the wo rds are all

hints. Each day the code letlers are diflerenl.
CRYPTOQUOTI!S

160 min .)
12:00 Cll MOVIE: 'Uttle Min

NO, MA'AM,TllEV
•

Upholstery

441-71$3"' 441·1833.

.- ·' '

Dallas va . San Francisco.

JIMS WATER SERVIc'E, . :.
Coli Jim Lonlot, 304-175- • j
7317.
f '
87

An extended splinter

r

10:00 8 Cll {fi) Nowa
Cll MOVIE: 'Tha Jackpot'
(() TB&amp; Evenlr19 News
([lg Gil Dynasty Blake hu-

.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Pass

.

'

BRIDGE

Cll MOVIE: 'Woltz Acrooo

onight' s program
looks at th8 anniversary of
the death of Vl&amp;dimir Vyso1·
sky, the Russian poetballadeer and satirist . t60
min.)

i

A TALL STORY

8 CD (IJ Facto of Ulo

To Be Announced
ePitltburgh
Major Leotuo Boaeboll:
II St. Louio

pie.'

him out, I will!

C•t 2115 hoe, dozen, crane, ~
loaders, dump truck. Can ~ ,

-----------------·1
Meigs hcavating. Bulldozer ~

1974 Honda Chopper 30 ln.
over front end. CB 760 F.

~

If LJOU won'~ draq

She even qave
us a clue!
"Five hoqs':1

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

$1 , 600 . Coli 614- 3670214.

paint job, A-1 ohope. Coli
614-388-8284.

acres at Rodney on W.T.
ataon Rd . Owner financ available. Call446-8221
r er 6 weekdays.

Theqirl is in trouble!
Sh¢'s BskinQ for hel

Hanna, panda, dltchu. '
basementa. etc. Call 4,a~
4907. Carter &amp; Evens ..
Trensport•tkJn,
... :

. .,

9766.

· A.nswar: What "Jack and the Beanstalk" Is-

•

ClooedDoon
(Jj) Inside Story Special
Edition ·A Bard for the Pao·

can ~ 1

actual miles. Cell814-388·

I

Ye. sterday's

tx r

I I I

IAnowerolomOm&gt;W)
Jumbl,s:
BARON LOFTY SUBMIT GR ISLY
·

1+
4'f
st
Pass

Cll WaahlngtOn Behind

83

73

Print answer here:"(

Pass
Pass
Pass

Belinda'

Excavating

1

South

Q (()®MOVIE: 'Johnny

1978 Dotoun truck, nowly

Now arrange the c:lrded letttfs to
form the surpril&amp; answer, as &amp;ug·
gesled by lhe above cartooo . .

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Nancy gets into a bad argument with her mother and
Ann tries to decide on
whether to take a vicepresident post over her hus·
band's wishes. (60 min.)

Plumbin(l. CoH 614-3&amp;7- ·
•
1 977 otep oldo Chovy truck. 0676.

painted, one local owner. 1----~----...:...

IQUOPEAI
rJ

East

TeXM'
700 Club Speciol;
Seven Day. Ablaze .
(!)Top Rank Boxing from

\
\

cout..c:&gt; &amp;E A 5POFO'
" CONNECTED• WITH
THE Ct..E:~6Y.

It
44
4 NT
6•

IJ)

Pine
or 446-

lNG. Fomerly

II I

Nortll

' Hammond. 1111
Cll Portrait of America:
VIrginia
Cll 8 Gil Two Marriogoo

2068.

Lots &amp; Acreage

...YEAH.._~ HEARD
IT! lHI:T FLY OVER
ll-IIS PLACE EVERY
DAY!

72 Honde 760-Four, custom

35

9 :00

JIM'S PL\.I~ING llo HEAT· ":
Trucks for Sale

after 6.

742-2211 '

8:30

CARTER 'S'-~LUMBIIIIG
AI\ID H~ATING
Cor.

PLESIV

West

(HJ Ramblin'

Sr. Rloatina
1 - - - - - - - - --

$5200. 304-882-3402 of- Phone
4477
tar 8 p.m.

Robbil 4 spd. 1971 Ply-

tl.OOO. Call 446-8239 ..

36 acre farm . Has smell
barn. water, electricity. Iota
of pasture. Some farming .
timber . Good place to build .
Min&amp;ral rights go. Call Arnold Grate. 742-2 246 or

shipo. IRI 160 min.)
8 ()) ® Billy Graham
Crusade
Cll N81ional Goographic
S_poclal

(IJ

304- 1:l~i==i~~~;=== ··

73 Volkswagon Super Bee·
tie. good cOndition . 304-

I K)

searches fOf a woman
whose crime specialty is
robbing mf;tn on cruise

tor. (Doy 114-692-40141.1 . '
(night 814-69B-8205 .) • &gt;~

Get Your Cerpet IN
'"
1978 Monzo , block, 4 SHAPE ~ITH CAPTAI,III :
speed, V· 6, air, Cragars. STEAMER~ water ramov11 ; i·
82700. Call304-876 -861 4 furniture cleaning. Free Eati· r '
alter 4:00..
mateo. 614-446-2107.

19BO Ka-..yaoold 760 LTD.

1966 Mustang convertible,

33

CULTIVATED AGAIN••

plea. cultom fit your ho~ ....;
Guaranteed . Advanced Gdtr .. ,

458·1817.

,

8ulaville Rd . Cell
4782, open 9 to 7 .

BEFORE ITCME

SEAMLESS GUTTERS•.Ono

good tires. low mileage, 3
speed, good cond. 304-

....................
... ... .... ...... ..
~

CD MOVIE: 'MJorcloo:&gt;&lt;&gt;'
[l)ISpy
.
.
Cll Portrait of America:
Nevada
(I) 8 G21 Fall Guy Colt

.' ~y IT'lL 8E A OEC/I{)e

I

"

alec. cond. Call 446-0492.

-------·
Registered full blooded Sim-

..,.omen !;erving time for
murder ate interviewed.

$14,900. 304-676-6622.

1972 Camero, &amp;700.
773-91 33':

I YORFT

Real People Film Award. IRI
160 min .)
Cll When Women Kill Six

Roofing end Cerpentfy : ·
wor~.
general repairs, cal.t ·:
1981 CHEVROLET Anthony
WIJJiemson. 614- .
Corvette, 18000 miles. 367-0194.
. ;·

63

Mi~ed calves. Hereford, Holstein . 843-5185 atter7 p.m.

'•,

2059 .

72

Livestock

614-3&amp;7-0836, coli

()) Utile Houoe on ll&gt;e
Prairie
(I) (Jj) High Foother
• Wild, Wild Wool
II Cll CD NBC News
IJ) Love Thai Bob
(!) ESPN's Horse Rocinv
Wldy ,
Cll 8 GJI ABC News
II ([I ® CBS lllows
([I Buolneo• Roport
(Jj) Over Eaoy
II (f) PM Motazlne
IJ) Burna &amp; Alton
(!) SpotUConlor
(I) Carol Bumott
Cll Entertainment Tonight
(IJ Charlie' a Angels
0 (I) Tic TIC Dough
([I (Jj) MecNoil· Lehrer
Nowshour
®News
8 Gil People'• Court
• &amp;tar Trek
8 CD Ue Detector
IJ) Dobie Gillis
(!) PKA Full Contact
K..-eto
Cll Good Nowo
([I 0 ()) Family ~oud
Ill Wheel of Fortune
g
Gil Entertainment
Toni9ht
II CD Real People Today's
prog{am features &amp;QI'T\8 pool
players who use ttM,ir n.oses
as cue sttcks, a man who
makes food out of garbage
and the w inner of the first

CAN' T REALLY TELL 'TILTH'
SOIL 15 ANALYZE'D, BUT I'D

insured , free 81timate~,

304 -675 -5180 or 6753383.

Call 614·388-B253.
Briarpatch Kennell Professional All-breed grooming.
lndoor · O:~tdoor boarding facilities. All geta given TLC.

E &amp; A Trn Service, fuHv

446-1675
Check out September Special prices ..,.on aU Long
tractors and equipment!
Long t~actora. Vermeer
round ba,lers, rakes, tedders
&amp;. mowert. And a complete
line of tobacco &amp; corn
sprayers, wagons. rotary
tillers &amp; rotary cuttera,
blades , cultivators. plowsdisc. post divers. wood
splitters, power washers,
plastic tanks &amp;
wood burners!
Used Equipment
IH hydro 70, 246 Meuey
Ferg., 35 Massey, 65 Massey with loader, Ford Jubi·
lee. Farman C. gravity wag ons, N .H. grinder mixer,
cornpickers, 2 &amp; 3 bottom
plows, culipackers, &amp; post
auger I
We buy used equipment.

446-1676 .
HILLCREST KENNELS

57

8:00

ANNIE

Knauff Coal &amp; Firewood Buy
now for seatoned wood this
winter. Call614-266·6246 .

1----------

for Rent

~'(!

ONE . bedroom apartmemt.
8226 month, all utilities

paid. 304-676-2695 .

42 Mobile Homes

~It-!

'""''m

1438 alter 4:3!).

17"

7 :30

PAIIIT 11-IAT

1 complete bed, 3 gas
heaters, 1 gas dryer, 1 9x1 2
indoor-outdoor rug, aterao
with 2 speakers, . 7
G7B.x:14, one ice
1
makerln8W) . · 304 '

and Gallipolio. 614 -4468221 '
j
1

1- - - - - - - - - -

1-

,-..:...&lt;... to&lt;: WJ.\Pl.E, IF IT T,I&gt;,K£7 A
~ 4 ~Y-710 Pf&gt;..INT A
-y-4-., fPU5I:: 1 4
MEI-I CAt-!

7 4 M otorcyclos
Siamese kittens. Approxi- 71
Autos for Sale
Ml
'
sc
.
Morchando'se
metely
8
weeks
old.
Choco-54
late lip. 614-992-3229.
1974 Hondo 360. 7,400

homes, houses. Pt. Pleeunt

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

7:00

ter 5.

THREE BEDROOM HOUSE 1- - - - - - - - - - ,_to._r_o._T_V_ aa_•_•·- - - --

pets and 1 child . 304-773-

304-675-6375 .

3 matched GE washer &amp;
dryer pairs, 2 white pair. 1
avacado pair. 12-16 other
good washers 8a dryers to
choote from Guaranteed 30

614-992-7787.

Three bedroom brick home
with large extra lot, located
ju1t outside· New Haven.
City water. central air and
he•t pluS fireplace. $300.
per month . Comp . fur·
nished. For more information call after 6 :00; 304-

lock Grove . 614-949-3059

1981 Shultz, 2 bedroom,
excellent eondition .Phone

STUCCO PLA&amp;TERIIIIG
textured ceUingt commei'·
cial and rHidantilll. free

992-7690.

446-0322

1 bed room Apt . $196. mo.
including utilities. Equal
housing opportunity. Contact Village Manor Apts.

871.1.

Full basement, 1Yz story,
with city water, double
gar~ge, garden, 1amell child
accepted, 304-675- 1076.

Good sele~:,tion of bedroom
suites. cedar chesu .
rockers. metal cabinets,
swivel roCkers.
Used Furniture -- bookcase,
ranges, chairs, dinnett set,
wood table and chairs, dryers, refrigerators and TV's . 3
mllet out Bulaville Rd . Open
9am to 8pm, Mon. thru Fri ..
9am to 5pm , Sat.

243 Jackson Pike, Gallipolia. 446-4416 after 7 p.m.

Lake. 1100 dep .. $175 mo .

mo. rent .

S2&amp; llo $35, bed frames $20,
S26, &amp; $30, king frame $50.

tfMC, t236 utilities pold :

Partially furn ., near Tycoon

12x68 Vindale mobile NEW HAVEN , spacious, 3
home. 6' expando living b8droom home. new kitchen
room, all electric with wood with JennAir, family room,
burning stove, large con - fireplace, 2 baths. patio,
crete patio including 1 room nice vard, 304-882-2405 &amp;
remodeled school building 304-675 -5640.
with wood burning stove, 1 --~------carport &amp;. wood storage 2 bedroom home in Mason.
building on 2 acres. Hem- Washer, dryer, ac, carpet, no

24x40 double-wide building, insulated, paneled. alec tricity. Would make nice
holne. on one acre lot with
septic tank. All for $7,600 .
992-3460.

8oby beds,

Gas or electric ranges, $326
up to 1375. Baby matreases,

or

Furnished apt. 2 bdr., near

In town, 3 bedrOom house:
no pets. Inquire at Sheppard
Sales &amp; Service, First 8t
Olive St., Gallipolis. Oh .

675-3996 .
Grande School Oist. Call 1- - - - - - - - - 614-245-5308 after 8PM .

up to $395.

_._

II~
...
·-·-e--.
.

Your Best Game.'

S99 ., to S436 . 7 pc., t189 .

81 10. Mattresses or box
Unfurnished. downstairs. 3
4 bdr. house 5 acres of l~nd. , roo.m ~pt .. 1 bdr. , no pets. spring1, full or twin, $68 ..
.o.n Rt. 1:60 i~ Vinton. C~n.tral Inquire .. at 87 Vine . St., . firm, 868 . .and 878 . Queen
.sets. $f96. 4 dr. cheit$.
a~r, •350, mo., .see. dep . .$1:
Gallipolis.
$42. 6 dr. che'ati, $64: Bed
ref. Co11446-3175.
framaa, 820.and $26 ., 10
Unfurnished garage apt .• 4
House tor sale or rent 3 bdr .• rooms &amp; bath. 322 Third gun • Gun cabinets. $360 .•
1 'Y:i bath, living room. FP, Ave .. Gallipolis. Adult&amp;, no dinene chairs·$20. and $26 .

Call 304-675-1726.
furn .. .&amp;1.600. Cal 6766724.

Improvements

and up. Wood table with six
chairs &amp;426. to t746 . Desk
t1 10 up to 1226. Hutches,
$660. end up. maple or pine
finish . Bunk bad complete
with manre11as, $260. and

446-4222 between 9 &amp; 6.

Close to North Gallia HS,

1 Ox 56 mobile home, partly

B1

and up to $126 . Hide-abeds, t 440 . and up to
t626 .. Recliners. $176. to
t360., Lamps from 128. to
176. 6 pc. dlnenes from

bdr. apt., 2nd Ave .~
Gallipolis. $190 mo. Call

I BAXO~

8:00 . . (f) ()) (IJ • (() ® •
Gil News
CD MOVIE; 'Tile Seo
Wolveo'
IJ) Tic Toe Dough
(!) Play Your But Tennio
This show features 'Building

:i

byHenriAmoldandBobloo

Unser- lh- lour Jumblol,
one len.er to eaCh square, to form
tour ordinary words.

EVENING

:i

j'jiTIIATSCRAMBLEDWOAOqAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

9!7/83

$285 . to $896 . Tebles, •45

3

7 PM 614·256-1572.
For sale or lease. late 1980
Windsor 1 4x70 with 7x22
eJCpando. Three bedroom,
two full baths, central air,
stero, microwave, and more .
Top of the line home.
Located Rodney-Cora Rd .

...

Priced reducH . Mull s~q
nice 28 ft. self contained .•
camper, air con d.. lots of . j
extras. 98&amp;-3988 .

chair and loveseat. $276 .
Sofas and chairs priced from

Call 446 -3437 or 4461637.

304-676-1922

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446-7672 .

68 l\lomod csmper. 111o\ 1t.
Coll614-379·2665.

by Frontier), t685. Sofa,

for Rent

Unfurnished ·4 rooms 81
bath, no children, no pets.

2196 .

after 4 p.m .

". for Sale

Apartment

fi'llllNl ID,.

TeleVision
Viewing

Sola, chair, rocker, ottoman. 3 tablet, (extra heavy

446-1519.

central air, city water, 13
ecre:!l on lievlng Road, West

32 Mobile Homos

New Oak Fumlture, teblea.
chairs, cupboards, pie safe,
dry slnka. Paul Conkels
Antiques, Tuppers Pleins.

p !CKTRA,CY

13

The

Ohio

LAVIllE 'S FURNITURE

Furnished upstairs apt. 2
rooms &amp; bath, clean, adults
only, no pets. ref. req . Call

6 room house with bath,

Columbia .

64 Misc.

79 Motors
&amp; Campers

· washers, dryers. refrigera tors. ranges . Skagg1 Appliances. Upper Riv~r Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446· 7398. .
'

992·6028 .

information
call Mike
more-6007
773
.

.'

1983
by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

Oliva St., Gallipolis . 6
wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat arms $399,
bunk beds complete w ith
bunkies $199. 2 piece an - FIFE ' S - Guns , ammo,
tron livingroom suites S199. archery . BIG WHOLESALE
antron recliners $99: other CLOSEOUT. Stock 8o con recliners $80. maple dinette signment sale. New, used &amp;
sets $179, love seats $70, collectibles. You name it. we
hide - a-bed S260 , bo• probably have it. Resonable
springs &amp; mattress twin or offers will be accepted. We
full $100 set regu la r-firm are quitting. FIFE'S . 3rd. St.
$120, maple dinette chairs . Middleport . 614 - 992 $36 . wash stands $34. 7494.
maple rockers $69, 7 piece
chrome dinette set 8149, 6 Will -Burt stoker tUrnanca
piece dinette set $89, used 24', good cond. Call 446bedroom suites. retirgera· 1572.
tora. ranges . chest. dressers.
wringer washers . TV 's, Coal ' &amp; woodburning
dryeres, &amp;. shoes. CaiJ 446- furnac8 -$560. Gaa heating
stove-$260. Boys 20 in .
3.159 .
bike. Trombone- •100 . Call

7H.47

rot:SN'7
,HAKE SliNSE ...

third acre lot . $24,600. or
rent

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE

.4N071ftif?

school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onewill

51 Household Goods

They'll Do It Every Time

located in Syracuse-Near

1983

Ohio

F

XP

XV

WXQN

WYQNWJ

TXVM

WNFQXCO

FC

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AYHKFON

FCZ

NQNKWFPVXCO

VY
ZXN

EWFLN .

FWNIFCZNK
VMN
OKNFV
Yetlerday'l Cryptoqaole: I SHALL NOT WASTE MY DAYS IN
TRYING TO . PROLONG THEM. I SHALL USE MY

TIME. -JACK LONDON

'

�·--- ---·
Fage

- --

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

14--The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Chamber ·in~tiates
plans for Halloween Party
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel slaff
The P omeroy Chamber of Corn·
m erce Tuesday Initiated plans .for a
community Halloween party on the
P omeroy parking lot. No exact date
was set, however, the ""ent will be
s imil.a r to last year with prizes being
awarded In various categories and
treats distributed , It will not
interfere with trick or treat night
detennln"'l by town council.
Chamber members also decided
to coordinate the annual Christmas
parade
with the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce. It was
indicated that · this year's parade
would begin In Pomeroy and end In
l&gt;fiddleport. Deflnite plans will be
announced later.
Gregg Gibbs reported there was
some Indication by the Middleport
.Chamber that possibly trick or treat
night would not be held there.
Middleport was commended for
its up-coming block party tllat will
be held on Sept. 24.
Ron Ash, president, announced
that Sid Edwards, executive dlrec·
.tor of Community Action Agency,
would be at the next meeting of the
rhamher to discuss the CETA
program and tlle n£W Jobs Tra ining
Partnership Act.
,
.
.:: Ash
read . a .letter from the
.

.

Columbus Area Chamber of Corn·
merce concerning the possibility of
locating a Small Business Resource
Center In Pomeroy.
Ash also mentloned·the fact that
several new businesses were local·
tng In P omeroy and Middleport, and
suggested tllat Information be
rea d ily a v a ila ble for new
businesses.
A letter was read by Ash from the
state board of directors of the
Chamber of Commerce concerning
SET (stop excessive taxation). The
letter Indicated the Ohio Chamber
would neltller support or oppose the

issue.
Ash said tlle local chamber's
policy was not to endorse candidates

or issues.
Also discussed was tlle light at tlle
Pomeroy·Mason Bridge. Ash men·
tioned that traffic approaching tlle
bridge from Middleport has a long
wait at tlle traffic signal. It was
noted tllat if tlle road under tlle
bridge was paved, traffic could use
tlle road tllus ending some of tlle
congestion.
It was also noted the same
situation also exists at Kerrs Run.
Ash suggested a letter be directed to
tlleOhioDepartmentofHlghwaysto
see if tlle situations could be
improved.
John Anderi;on, a member of

Pomeroy Council said tlle decision
was not up to council since the
village has the autllotity to change
the timing on tlle lights.
Gibbs announced that Fruth '
Pharmacy will open for business
next Monday. On TUesday, Sept.lJ
ribbon cutting ceremonies are
planned tor tlle new Sears Store as ·
wellasFrutllPharmacy. Gibbsals(J
added tllat Fruth Pharmacy wants .
to be Involved in both chambers of
commerce and is willing to help in
the community. He added tllat
Frutll Pharmacy is retaining all
those employed at Dutton Drug
which was purchased by Frutll
Pharmacy.
·
Gibbs also explained tllat over a
long range plan he hopes to see~ to
100 jobs available as he plans to
expand, by adding new businesses,
from his property to Diamond
Street. He said Sears In Middleport
would stock Items as do company
stores even though It is a locally
owned store. " Local people will see
an increase In tllelr business, a lot
· more money will be kept In tlle
county" Gibbs noted.
Attending were Ash, Sherr! Hart,
secretary, Gibbs, Anderson, Paul
Barnett Joe Clark, Tom Reed,
Bruce Reed, Rev. Lee Miller, Dave
Harris, J ohn Koebel, Tim Halstead,
Jeff McDaniel and Pat O'Brien.
·

·P rotesters demand sanctions
ByDEBO~~O

A.......ated Press Writer

.

Longshoremen refused to unload
heavily guarded Soviet freighter,
states banned Soviet vodka sales,
11·year-old Samantlla Smith
called the destruction of a Korean
passenger jet " really honible," as
thousands mourned tlle flight's 269
victims.
.
The freighter, thetargetoftllreats
since Korean Air Lines Flight 00/
was gunned down over Sakhalin
Island on Thursday, docked Tiles·
day at San Pedro, Calif.
"Local13's position Is tllat we will
not work tlle Russian vessel at bertll
178," said a dispatcher wltll the
International Longshoreman's and
Warehouseman's Union who declined 10 give her name.

a

and

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy tonight. Low 55-ro.
Winds westerly 10 mph or less.
Moslly sunny Thursday. High near

85.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
Fair oo Friday and Saturday and
a chance of thunderstonns Sunday.
Jllgbs 81).95. Lows tn the OOs.

'100,000
(Continued from page 1)
Today's mass rally In Seool came
after South Korean President Chun
[Joo.hwan accused the Soviet Union
of committing tlle ''double crime" of
lhteatening peace and t:rytng t~
eoverup.
The plane carried people of 15
' countries, including Ameri~ans.
and Korean Air Lines arranged for
97 relatives o! foreign passengers to
attend tiJi, memorial. Many wept in
the wailing group of bereaved
Korean family memhers and
friends .
· Qlarlotte0ldham,18,astudentat
WesleYan University in Connect!·
cut, told a reporter tllat "although
they have not found the body of my
' · brOt)ler,John, lnowfeelsomepeace
·In my mind."

'.,.

Meets Sept. 12
' Racine· Vllage cpuncu '¥Ill meet
M:OIIday, Sept. 12 at 7 p.m . due to
Labor Day falling on their regular
meeting night.

Meet this evenirlg

·'

· ' Olive ToWnship Trustees will
'meet uuseventng at 7:30p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire Station.

Brown said this is tlle only year
council is going to have the money.
He suggested tllat tlle money be
borrowed to . go ahead witll the
project and pay it back out of the
amusement fund tax.
ltwasdecidedtohaveBemadette
Anderson, clerk·treasurer, check
past expenditures on the park
project before making a decision.
Traffic problems
John Anderson told councU tllat
chamber members TUesday ex·
pressed a deslne to have the timing
on the trafHc llghtat tlle brldgealid
tlle light at Kerrs Run changed to
help the flow of traffic. Council
agreed to contact tlle Ohio Depart·
. ment of transportation.
Anderson also suggested tllat If
tlley have any tonnage left from tlle
paving to place It on the road under
the bridge. He also asked that tlle
· street crews be directed to remove

parking
meters from
anests Stitt
in August
and drove
4,839
In
preparation
for tlleparkinglot
tlle paving. mlles.
was ask"~!
by Brown
Council did Indicate that the lots about theonecrutser being Wrecked
would be striped.
twice on the same night within a two
Bill YOU:ng presented an ,ordJ. hour petlod. Brown stated he
nance, that must be passed each wanted a wrjtten report by the next
year, to join uniform rate gas meeting.
coalltlon. The ordinance was'given
·Brown also stated tha.t residents
tlle tllree necessary readings under are calling him In regard tQ the
emergency measures.
· . · cruiser ·· being parked alongside
Young also asked for pet'l'lJtaslon other cars and the officer sitting In
to pvrcbase dry waU and fire doors . the cruiser talking to the person ih
for use on tllesecondnoorotthedty ~other car: Stlttstatedthathewas
bullding which councll is remodel· golngtoholdapolicemeetlngoncea
ing for rental space. Council month.

'ROAST COVERED WITH MUSHROOM SAUCE. SMOTHERED WITH
CARROl'S, ONIONS, AND POTATOES.
Try Our Daily

LUNCHEON &amp; DINNER SPECIALS ........... '2.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS .........................'1.99
DINING ROOM ClOSES AT 7 MONDAY-SATURDAY
DINING IIOOM ClOSES AT 4 ON SUNDAY

NEW FAU HOURS

5:30 a.m.·7:00 p.m. Weekdays
8:00 a.m.·3:00 p.m. Sunday

.

&gt;

{

approved tlle request.
Young also reported that he had
sent arentalspaceleaseagreement
to the commissioners for the second
!loor. Theleaseca1Is!or1,100square
feet witll seven offices for $400 per
moth, 1,600 square feet with Ililie
oftlces and a conference room for
$000 per month.
The Lions Club was given ·
permission to store nags in a room
near tlle stage In tlle new city
buldlng.
Betty ·B aronlck stated tllat guar.
dralls in tlle village will he painted.
The village will purchase the paint
andlaborwillbedonatedshesald;
Council set Monday, Oct. 31, as
trick or treat night. Activities will be
held from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. with the
siren to sound to begin and end the
event.
PollceQ!Ie!GeorgeStlttreported
that the pollee department made 44

Pftles 3,4

Story Page 6

Buckeyes top TVC pick

Middleport block

Page4

Story on Page 7

Voi.32,No.1 04

•

at y

•

enttne
'2 Sedi oftl , 12 Paget
20 C.ntt.
A Multi media Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 8, 1983

·Copyrightod 1913

U.S. seeks truth;
boycott spreading
ORTEGA FUNERAL - Robin Lee Qrteaa of N.Y., oulalde St. Richard's BollWI Catholic Church In
Hometown, Pa. follows a caske&amp; carried by a Marble Baraesviiie,, Pa. Tuesday. Ortega, 29, was ldlled In
.honor gwu:d conlabdng the remains Ill her ~d, · Belnat last month. The widow. Is six months pregnant; ·
( AP La&amp;eiaJhoto).
.
•
Marine S&amp;aff Sgt' l\lexander M.· Ortega of Roojlester,

Happenings around Meigs County..• ~

(Contiqued from page 1)

Renew Vietnam grant

e

About, 250 protesters picketed as. ..churchlnDanbury, Conn., tomoutn
the freighter · Novokulbysh~Sk.
anotller'passenger, 33-year-old bust·
anchored tllree miles offshore since
ness traveler Mark McGetrick.
Friday because of anonymous
telephone threats, entered Los
New Hampshire's Liquor Control
Angeles Harbor with a Coast Guard
Department voted ~ Tuesday (9
stop selling Russian vodka at state
escort.
In Dunellen, N.J ., thousands liquor stores. In Iowa, Roland
Emercency calls
Gallagher, director o! the-Beer and
attended a memorial service for
Ray Petroski, a 36-year-old postal
Liquor Control Departmeni, he has
Fourcallswereansweredbylocal
clerk who was one of 61 American
decided to delay further onders o!
units
Tuesday and on Wednesday ·
citizens killed in tlle attack. Soviet
Russian Stollchnaya vodka for the
the Meigs County Emer·
morning,
officials admitted TUesday destroy·
state's 2141lquor stores.
gency
Medical
Service reports.
lng tlle plane, butsaid they thoughtit
Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste last
Wednesday
morning
at7: 06a.m ..
was a spy plane.
week ondered his state's Uquor
tlle
Pomeroy
UnlttookHarry
Davts,
One molli'IH!r, Rep. Mattllew J . Control Department to stop selling .
Spring
Ave.,
to
Holzer
Medical
.
Rinaldo, R·N.J. , urged tllat U.S.
Russian vodka and brandy.
ports be closed to Soviet vessels and
During an bour·long demonstra- Center.
TUesday at 10: 24 a.m., the
tllat other nations join In an
tion outside tlle South Korean
Middleport
Unit took Katie Gilmore
embargo on Soviet landing rights consulaie In Seattle, about 400South
from
theLazyDayCafeto
Veterans
until the Soviets apologize and pay Kore&gt;~~~S bearing signs and nags
Memorial
Hospital;
at
11:11
a.m.,
reparations to tlle famtlles of tlle raised clenched fists in anger agaist
Middleport
took
Linda
Imboden
victims.
the Soviets and bowed tllelr heads in
from Pat Hill Ford to Veterans
"Let the Soviets keep tllelr ballet prayer for tllose aboard the jet.
Memorial
and ~t 12:23 p.m.,
dancers and cultural delegations,"
Members of the Korean Veterans
Pomeroy
took
George Freeland
Rinaldo said. "We don't want tllem Association tllen led about 511 penple
from
the
Pomeroy
Flower Shop to
in tlle United States."
on a slx·block march marked by
Veterans
Memor!al.
About 500 people crowded a shouts of "Murder Russia."

Pomeroy council seeks

Football returns Friday

Three forfeit bonds
, Forfeiting bonds In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
TUesday night were Mathew
Weaver, Middleport, $43, posted on
a speeding charge; Randy Ebers)).
ach, Middleport, $100, disorderly
manner charge, and Linda Im·
boden, .Racine, $00, assured ctear
distance. Fined $25 and costs on an
open container charge was Joyce
Double, Point Pleasant, W.V.

Passport applications
must be made pro~ptly
~le who wish to obtain a
passport are asked .not to wait untll
the last minute, Lany Spencer,
clerk of courts, advises. Spencer
says It takes six to eight weeks Ill
Qbtaln a passport. As soon as a trip is
planned go Immediately to the office
of tlle. clerk of courts and make
application Spencer advised.

Special meeting set

Veterans Memorial

The Meigs County Budget Com·
mission will hold a special meeting
Friday, Sept. 9, at 10 a .m . In the
office of tlle Meigs County Auditor,
WUllam Wickline.

Admltted..Walter Barrett, Sr. ,
Dexter; Mary Rulli Barnett, Langs·
ville; Edna Parsons, RaFine; Linda
Stewart, Syracuse.
·
Discharged:·Sabrtna Drake.

I Area death
Rhea Ann LWer

Dinner, rlance planned

'

Mrs. Rhea Ann Lozier, R.N., 51,
formerly of Pomeroy, died TUesday
as !be result of a fall at her borne in
Richmond, Va.
Mrs. Lozier had moved to
Richmond on Mooday !rom Prln·
ceton,N.J. Shefelldownafllghtof
steps In her new living quarters
suffering tlle fatal lnlurles.
Mrs. Lcrller was a graduate of
Pomeroy High School and the
Holzer Hospital School'of Nursing.
She was supervisor of the geriatric
ward at thePr!Dceton, N.J., hospital
until her move to Richmond.
Preceding her in death were her
husband, Dr. Gerald LOzier, and a
brother, Jay Kelton.

are two
children,
Joan
of SurviVIng
San Francisco,
Calif.,
and Jay
of
At.lanta , Ga., wherehelstngraduate
school at Georgia Tech.; her
parents, Aaron and Iris Kelton,
Richmond, formerly of the Poltle'
roy area; her mother-in·law, Mrs.
· Hugo Lozier o! Loudonvllte, Oh.; a
sister and brother·tn-law, Kaaron
andJohnAustin,Rlchmond,anaunt
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. George
. Shlveler of Cincinnati, three nieces,
a nephe\11 and a
ri!ece.
Services are being arrang!!d at
tlle Byerly Funeral Horne In
Loudonville.

A public dinner and square dance
is planned for Friday, Sept. 9, at tlle
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
This Is one o!
money
making projects planned to help
witlllocal share of money needed to
continue. services of 'senior
programs.
The .menu Includes homemade
cabbage rolls, macaroni and
cheese, homemade light rolls and
beverage for Sl.iiO per person.
Serving will be from 4 p.m . to 7 p.m .
Ice cream and desserts will also he
sold at an additional cost.
I. square dance, round dancing
and cakewalks will be featured.
Francis Andrews and The Ohio
River Drifters will provide tlle
music. Admission to tlle dance is $1
per person with children under 12
admitted free.

severru

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

sreat

r;:========~============:j

MEET ME AT THE MEIGS INN
Luncheon Special Every Day 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.
New Dinner Special Every Evening 5 P.M. to 9
P.M.
Lounge Open Daily 11 A.M. to 1A.M. (Closed Sundays)
· Live Entertainment Nightly 8-1~
Jamie Shooter At The Piano

By The A.sooclated Press
French ptlots today joined a rapidly spreading
boycottofMoscow·boundfllghtstoprotestthedownlng
of a South.Korean jetliner, and u.s. SectetaryofState
George P. Shultz says he will press his Soviet
counterpart tor a fl'ank explanation of the attack.
The French national pilot's unltm said !lyers for Air
France will boycott all Paris·Moscow flights for 60
days beginning next TUesday. Air France has seven
flights a week to Moscow.
Shultz, scheduled to meet today In Spain witll Soviet ·
Foreign Minister Andrei A. Groinyko, said U.S.·$ovlei
· relatlons COUld worsen unless tlle Soviets provided a
more candid account o! the attack.
But Grornyko on Wednesday maintained tlleSouth
Korean Boeing 747 "tried to escape" Soviet air-space
and Ignored orders to land. He called Soviet borders
''sacred," and reiterated Moscow' scontentlon tllat the
alrllnerwas on a spymlsslonforthe United States- a
claim denied by U.S. and Soutll Korean officials,
Shultz and Gromyko are attending the 35-nation
Madrid Conference on European Security and
Cooperation.
The Soviets reportedly stepped up their search for
tlle plane's wreckage today. A Japanese Marttlme
Safety Agency patrol boat repqrted sighting 55 Soviet
vessels in SovletwatersoffSakhalln,includlngaSoviet
Intelligence ship that tossed two cables from Its stern
Into the sea, agency ot!lcials said.
It was unclear· whether the Intelligence ship, the
'TID-ton Okean, had discoVered the CI'ash site or
rl\a~ .trom tlle misSile-downed aircraft, l\Bid
o!!lcials at the northern Japanese port of Hokkaldo.
They said 43 Soviet !ishlng boats were spotted
drlttlng near the Okean about lB miles northwest of
Moneran, a smaiiSovletlsiandoffSakhalin. Anotherll
Soviet guardshlps and fishing vessels were situated
about a mile closer to Moneron, the oftlclals said.
Japanese, U.S. and Soutll Korean vessels barred
from en~ Soviet waters are pressing tllelr search

In International waters, but so far have found no trace
of tlle plane.
.
In Ottawa, hundreds of .angry Korean Canadians
chanted "Soviet mlll'derers" outside the barricaded
Soviet Embassy, pelting It wit)! eggs and trying to
storm It Wednesday. In New York, nearly 1,tnl
protesters clashed witll rlot·helmeted pollee near a
Soviet diplomatic mission.
By Wednesday night, alrline pllots in· Britain,
Canada, Denmark and Sweden ,had announced they
will1oiha6lklayboycottoiflightstoMoscow,calledior
IJy tlleJnternatlonal Federatl~n of Airline Pil9ts.
Spokesmen lor pilots' groups In France, West
Germany, the Netllerlands, Norway, Italy, Belgium ·
and Luxembourg indicated they probably would join
tlle boycott. In Switzerland, pilots of the national
airline Swissalr are seeking government permission
for a boycott. And Australian pUnts have refused to fly
Soviet diplomats within Australia for 60 days. Qantas,
Australia's International carrier, does not ny to
Moscow.
.
F11ghts by tlleSovletalrlineAero!lothavesuspended
for 60 days In Canada, and NATO countries are
considering similar sanctions. The United States has
barred Aeronot landings since 1981, when martial law
was imposed In Poland.
Japan's top Cabinet ministers, headed by Prime
Minister Yasuhlro Nakasone, decided at an emer·
gency meeting Wednesday that Japan would continue
.to apply "maximum pressure" on Moscow to provide a
true accounting of tlle alr tragedy, but stopped short of
announclngsanctlons. .. ..
The Foreign Ministry also reacted strongly late
Wednesday to Sovtet charges of "criminal carelessness" by Japan l!or not warning tllealrliner that It had
entered Soviet space.
Soviet Ambassador to Japan Vladimir Pavlov was
called into· tlle ministry Wednesday night and told
Japanese officials were unaware of the plane' s
location until alter it was shot down.

$10 million sought in lawsuit
A $10,004,544.40 suit was filed In
Meigs County Conunon Pleas Court
. by Mary Jane Talbott, admlnlstra·
tr1x of the estate of Terry D. Talbott,
deceased, TUppers Plains against
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elect·
ric Co., Columbus, Ohio Power Co.,
Canton and American Electric
Power Co., Inc., Columbus.
According to tlle entry, an
accident occurred Sept. 13, 1981 on
SR 7 when a truck lett tlle highway
and ran Into and broke off a utility
pole owned by the defendant
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elect·
ric Co. causing the electrical
transmission line supported by said
pole to sag within about five feet ot
.. !he ground.
· The entry further read tllat Ohio
Power Co. was promptly notified
· : pursuant to a request by Ohio State

Highway Patrol , but took no action
in response. ·
The defendant, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric CQmpany
knew or should have reasonably
known of saki collisslon and the
dangerous condition created ther·
eby according to the entry.
It further stated that the defend·
ant's transmission line of the
defendant, Columbus and Sbutllern
Ohio Electric transmtttes normally
about 7,200 volts of electricty and
S~~ld line while conducting said
electricity was a highly dangerous
agency conducting dangerous and
deadly energy all of which was well
known to all three of the defendants
according to tlle entry.
The defendant at tlle time alleged
in this complaint had no repair and
maintenance facilities within Metgs

County to correct . and repair
emergency situation.
Decedent Terry D. Talbott at
about 11 hours after the time tlle
transmission Une was brought into
close proximity to the ground came
upon the scene of the accident and
was electrocuted. When he came
Into close contact with said trans·
mission tine his death being instan·
taneous the entry read.
Accordlngtotheentrytlledeatllof
the said Terry D. Talbott was solely
and proximately caused by tlle
negligence of tlle defendants.
(Edltor'sNole: Asuitrontainsibe
charp8 of one party Ina legal action
agalnll anodler. As a l't!lllllt, the suit
spedftes onl,y the plalatllf's allegaltonsagalnsUhedelendani. Thesult
does not detail the defmdaat's
answer to the charges alleged).

;: 13th annual farm festival set
RIO GRANDE - Longing for a
time when It was slOwer paced and
things were a llttle simpler? You
can still get a .gllmpse o! the "good
old days" Oct. 14·16, when tlle 13th
Annual Bob Evans Farm Festival
brings Early America to life amidst
golden corn husks and radiating fall
leaves.
Artisans, such as the blacksmith,
tlle cooper, the candlemaker, the
soapmaker. and the weaver whose
skills were once an Integral part o!
· the American way of 111e, are just a
. few o! the hundreds o! exhibitors
· who will demonstrate their skills In
: big, colmiul tents tllat will dot tlle
;': pastures of tlle 1,100-acre Bob
Evans Farm near the village of Rio

MEN'S DELUXE
COVERALLS

Comfort, quality and convenience
come together in these rugged
coveralls of 100%cotton. The
Action Back provides freedom of
movement and gives you the right
fit. Backed by a one·year warranty.
Saes 34 to 50 . Available in a .
choice of colors. Shorts, Regulars,

Lon115.

.

'

Grande.
, VIsitors can wander in and out of
: various displays, exhibits and
barnS from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. dally,
see one o! several educational
demonstrations or entertaining
shows throui!l10ut the day, or sip on
some Joe cold sarsaparilla or
freshly preued cider willie sam·
· · piing the variety of tempting
homemade baked goods available.
: In the Craft Barn where women
rbytbmtcally dip candles in wax,
_._

---

churn butter, make cheese. and
piece together colorful qullts, the
peaceful atmosphere o! y~steryear
soothes the senses.
Not far away, the hammering of
the colonial cooper and the blacks·
mlth can be heard; a skilled
Instructor details how to restore a
log cabin; while a tinsmith and his
famlkly are busy molding lanterns
under heat. Dressed In knickers,
long sktris, aprons, boMets, over·
all, hats and other clOthing depict·
lng Early America, all exhibits are
anxious to share their love for their
crafts with festlval·goers.
Bill Preston. tlle blacksmith. Is
quick to point out tlle rarity o!
blacksmiths today and tell bow his
trade held Early American com·
munltles toeetller because he made
the tools for all the townspeople to
us:sfor tllelr own crafts.
A gristmill powered by an
old·!ashioned, single piston, gllfiOline engine turning corn Into
cornmeal is just one of the early
machines that can be observed In
action at the festival. By watching
the arJstmtll, the borsepoWI!I'ed
sorghum mill, or the tum-of·the-:
century sawmill, visitors can see

what It used to take to get farm
chores done.
Young people especially enjoy
seeing a cow milked for the first
time, watching sheep sheering and
horseshoeing durtng tlle barnyard
demonstration, or taking wagon
and ho!'Seback rides.
There are plenty of entertaining
shows including Bradford's Border
Collies of Walt Disney film fame ,
the Hank Peters Lumberjack
Sl\oW, world championship horseshoe pitching and tun, old· fashioned
country contests such as tobacco
spitting and com shelling.
The down·home beat o! country
and bluegrass music Is never far
away during tlle r..stival which is
packed with many returning and
!;eVeral new attractions Including
Elmer Bird, "the Banjo Man from
TUrkey Creek," Bo's mue Grass
Boys and Helen and Billy Scott,
with their com"'!y and music show.
Kicking oft this year's festival Is
" Bus Day," with free admission for
groups aniving In buses or vans. A
$2 per-car admission Is charged
each day of the festival. Primitive
camping for the entire weekend Is
$10 which includes festival
admission.

WANTS TRUTH - U. S. Secretary of State
George Shultz, left, and Soviet .Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko, right, weJ;e in session today In
Spain. Major topic for. discussion was last week's

shooting down of KoreW! Flight 007. Shultz says
U.S.-Sovtet relations could sour further unless
Gromyko "tells the truth" about the plane's downing.
(AP Laserphoto).

Debris f~und from jetliner
TOKYO (AP)- TheSovtetUnion
has found debris from the Soutll
U.S.S.R.
Korean jumbo jetliner It shot down
near Sakhalin Island, the Soviet
ambassador told Japanese o!fl~tals
today.
The envoy, Vladimir PavloV, said
the debris was found In tlle high seas
northeast of Moneron Island, which
is about 30 miles west of Sakhalin.
He pinpointed tlle sites as 46.15
degrees north and 140.15 east, 47.10
north and 140.15 east, 47.10northand
141.35 east and 46.35 north and 141.25
.• ,_... .
-Planned Route of
east.
Korean Jetliner
~~I &gt;· ':\:-:~&gt;~'- ,,,. 1~_To k yo
Pavlov said his government wlll
... JAPAN
- -- Repo'r ted Rout e of
....
· Korean Jetliner
,
deliver debris and documents to
Japan " In the near future, " Foreign .
~~Flight Path o f RC· 13S i'
Ap
Ministry officials said.
·-·······-- ·······-··-····-··············-.,,,...... ~ .. .
They said Pavlov declined to
AID TRAFFC - This graphic indicates the planned and the
identify tlle documents and mate·
reported fllghl path ol the downed Korean jetUner enroute from
rials and also did not say when tlley
Anchorage, Alaska to Seoul, South Korea, and the fllght path of the
wlll be delivered or when the report
RC 133 reconnaissance plane. ( AP Laserphoto),
would be made.
As of TUesday, tlle Soviets had
found nosurvlvorsorbodies , Pavlov TUesday, had accused American were norma l for more lban a n hour
was quoted as saying.
and Japanese ground controlle rs of until the Boelng747'ssignal beca me
Meanwhile, Japan says its air ''criminal casualness'' ln not warn- garbled and we~k at 3: 27 a .m.
traffic controllers were unable to ing the Korean pilot he was off Thursday (2: 37 p.m . E DT Wednes·
day), Kuroda said . That was the
warn a Soutll Korean jetliner tllat It course.
had strayedlntoSovtetalrspaceand
Radio communications between time that monitored Soviet mt'S·
charges that Moscow Is trying tlle airliner and tlle grroulid control sages said a jet fighter shot down the
escape blame for shooting down the station at Narlta airport near Tokyo alrllne with a missile.
plane.
Ambassador Muzuo Kuroda,
speaking at a Security Council
meeting Wednesday, said Japan's
The squirrel season opened In after sunset. Hunter s, of course,
radar coverage was limited to tlle Meigs County today and Game must have a valid hunting license.
alrspaceoverandaroundJapanese Protector Keith Woods warned tllat The dally bag limit is four squirrels.
tenitory so . it was Impossible to hunters should get written permis·
Woods resides at Rou te 1, Long
warn tlle jetllner it had strayed off sion from landowners on whose Botto: .1, telephone 985-4400 and
course before Soviet warplanes shot
properties tlley hunt. The season requests tllai any hunter or lao·
it down.
will run through Dec. 17.
downer having questions concern·
Soviet Ambassador Oleg A.
Hunting hours are one half hour lng upcoming hunting seasons, call
Troyanovsky, In tlle councll debate before sunrise and one half hour him.

. .. .

Squirrel hunters must get permission

. FARM f1!3 ftV AL - .upellalllaohorahwn IU'e
mOiecl tile olcl-fMhloaed way durioa the Bob Ev1111
Fann Fellllval Od. 14-18 at tile 1,11JG.IIIft Bob Evana
Fann near Rio Gl'llllde. Live COIIIItey enlelialnmeni,

oJd.ltme country conlellts and more than 125 heritage
Cl'1l!t demollltrallonslll'e a part of the festival - one
o! the region's first and hU'gest festivals.

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