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Fage

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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.

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'

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.

�'

.

Thunday, September 8, 1983

Comment~
Ill Court Stn ·~ ·t
Ponwro,\', Ohi o

rn: \'OTE:O TO THE ISTEHEST OF THE

)IEIG~- )1 . \SOS

.\Ht: \

lllb.

~~ ,...,...,__.L...-.,...t~d·~

q:jv
ROBERT L. 1\'1:-IGI;:Tr

'

l'uhli..,ht·r

P \T 1\'IUTEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

.\... .. i .. LIIIt Pu h li ... tu:•r ( unlrolh•r

c:t •nt-ral )lamu,:t·r

DALE ROTHGEB , ,JR.
~

••.,..01 Editor

.&gt;\ llt: :\11\EH ill Tilt' ,\s...o(·jah'(i l'n ...... , Inland
;\nwri can S· ·~· ,;papo~·r l'uhli....tk•n; J\"''itK'i:.Ltioo.

Dail~· l'r•~~

·\s...,..wialkln omd tht•

l.ETTER.~ OF OPISIO' an• "''f'korrwd . 11w)' should hP tes.o; Uuln :QJ "'ord .. lon.a:.
.W k&gt;tll•"" art&gt; suh...,.ti h1 t'dilin~ and mlN ht&gt; !liiKfkod "ith nanw, ad~ and lt·lt'phorw
numht•r. So un.,iwwd Witt• no~ M-ill ht• puhll.,hed. Lfn.ers shoukl twIn I{OOd ta."iie, addt't'!'i·
sin.: io.sLM~. noc pt.'l"'!()nalltle..
'
.~-

'

..

-

WASHINGTON - A notably
insignificant anniversary slipped
by the otber day, and I mean to
apologize for overlooking it. Aug. 22
marked tbe fifth anniversary of tbe
approval by · Congress of tbe
proposed District of Columbia
amendment to the Constitution. All
my brotber pundits Sl'em also tD
have let the occasion pass without
comment, but tbe matter is not
without interest
Five years ago, by the margin of
a single vote In the Senate,
Congress proposed this amend-·
ment: "For purposes of representation In the Congress, election of the
pt'esldent and vice president, and
Article V of this Constitution, the
District constituting the seat of
government shall be treated as
though it were a state."

A second section of tbe resolution
provides: "The exercise of the
rights anp powers conferred under
this article shall be by the people of
the District constituting tbe seat of
government, and as shall be
provided by the Congress."
The first section Is clear enough:
It would gtve the city of Washington, D.C., two members ol tbe U.S.
Senate and one member of the
House of Representatfves. The
second section has all tbe clarity of
a hot fudge sundae; the sentence
reads · as sensibly backward as
forward, but this is ol no particular
consequence because the amendment is a dying duck anyhow.
Ths Is the record of ratification:
Three states ratl!leclln 1978- New
Jersey, Michigan and Ohio. Four
more rati!led In 1979- Connecticut,

La town of leaks
. The House· probe Into how Carter Whlte House documents reached
:_: President Reagan'sl98l campaign is a tight ship In a town of leaks.
"I find It very refreshing," says Joe Grimes, the public reia lions
: . specialist serving as the spokesman for the investigation by the human
· relations subcommlttee of the Post Office and Civil Sernce Comnllttee.
.; •• Had Grimes and other subcommlttee aides been so Inclined, the probe
: , : could have commanded media attention In the August JI€WS drought; when
• • Congress recesses and much of Washington's of!lcialdom vacations.
: ·: · Documents slipped to an anxious newspaper, tidbits whispered to a TV
: : rietwork...., traditional Washington gambits lor making headlines- would
: : : have been like a soaking rain In an Iowa cornfield.
'
Instead, the lid has remained tightly tn place, largely the result.of an
•
• edict issue&lt;) by the panel's chairman, Rep. Donald Albosta, D-Mich.,
shortly after the Investigation began In l'nld· June: ieakers will be fired,
: ·: "I much, prefer it with the lid on," said Albosta's special counsel, James
• :. Hamilton, a Washington lawyer who saw a sieve-like Investigation close up
: . : a decade ago when be was assistant chief counsel lor the Senate's
Watergate commlttee.
••
Albosta has hardly been silent. At one point, the chairman described
:; : hearsay In which Investigators were led to believe t~ might be a sex
; : twist to the mystery. But Albosta went on the record; there was no leak
~ ::: involved.
• .- . Micah Green, the subcommittee's staff director, said that Albosta's own
··· experience with leaks Is one reason for his edict. During the 198l campaign
published allegations about Albosia'sflnances forced him to open his bank
book to newspapers In his rural district.
Green and Hamilton say the no-leak posture helps the Investigation In
several ways.
"It makes It easier for us to negotiate with tbe White House and Justice
' Department for access to materials," Hamliton said, relening to
documents uncovered by the FBI in Its separate probe of tbe l!m case.
Green says that by keeping its findings secret, the panel avoids criticism
that could focus dehate on the panel's methods and lead to charges the
probe was being used as a poUtlcal publicity vehicle.
Secrecy also keeps people guessing about what thepanel'selghtfuli-time
Investigators may be discovering and adds "spontaneity" to lnteiViews, .
according to Green.
The panel's probe has centered on 1"eviewing documents collected from
Reagan campaign files and lnteiViews- between 50 and 60 to date- with
Carter White House and Reagan campaign personnel, Green said.
·'
Green said the probe lacks the type of koow-ali, tell-all witness that the
Watergate commlttee had In White House counsel John Dean.
He said Albosta has not decided whetber to release the results of the
Investigation before the subcommittee holds public hearings, now set
tentatively for mid-October.

&gt;·
&lt;

;&lt;

&gt;.

Reagan had a problem
: on diplomatic hands

-·

.·

It was a classic RI:mald Reagan per1ormance - or was it?
There was the president of the United States, offering his typically tougb
talk directed at the Soviet Union.
Shunning the graphics that he often uses to illustrate a teievlsecl speech to
the nation from the Oval Office, Reagan opted instead for a dramatic tape
· · recording as be reported the radio transmissions of Soviet pilots shadowing
:· and then atiacklng a Korean Air Lines 747 jetliner.
But how often does a presidential speech draw praise from liberal
Democrats and sharp criticism from his longtime support In the ranks of
the conseiVatives•
That is what happened In the wake of the president's speech Monday
: night outlining the limited sanctions he has decided to pursue in response to
the Soviet role In the catastrophe. The Soviets on Tuesday admitted that
one of their pUots fired the shots that destroyed the airplane carrying 269
people, ali missing and presumed dead. ·
With few options avaUable, Reagan administration officials labored au
weekend to find concrete measures they could pursue to respond to the
atiack and give body to their frequent words of outrage.
But Reagan had a dilemma on his hands. In 198l, he said the U.S.
response was inadequate when President Carter imposed a grain embargo
and tried to organize a boycott oi the 198l Olympic games In Moscow after
the Soviet mWtary moves Into Afghanistan In December 1979.
The United States has just completed a renewed grain sale agreement
with tbe Soviet Union, and any disruption of that contract was ruled out this
past weekend. The president had just backed off the restrictions oo the
shipment of U.S. equipment for a Soviet natural gas pipeline, and that, too,
could not be an element In his response.
In fact, It was felt the best response would be an International one, and
not one clearly engineered by the United Siates.
Citing the problems Reagal! encountered with France and other allies
wben he trial to Impose the restrictions on the pipeline shipments, one
admlnistratlon official said ••his whole point is the United States tried to act
unilaterally and it dldn't work."
·
"We don't have an American pian we're trying to ram down people's
throats," said this official, who spoke on condltion be not be Identified.
The initial reaction from Congress was favorable. Sen. Gary Hart of
Colorado, a candldate for the Democratic presidential nomination, said
Reagan offered " the right response."
But from Reagan's conseiVatlve allies came tbe outcry.
"It was the president's moment of truth, and as far as I'm concerned he
Ounkecl tbe test. The president is sending them a signal of weakness. He is
saylng even If we do build up our weapons ... we simply lack the polltlcal
courage to take effective action,'' said Howard Phillips, chalnnan of the
Conservatlve Caucus.

:Today in history·
;: Today is Thursday, Sept. 8, the 251st day of1983. There are 114days left In
·:the year.
·
· Today's HJghilght In History: On Sept. 8, 15ffi, a Spanish expecll~
landed at what Is now St. Augustine, Fla., and established the Drs!
permanent European settlement In North America.

•

'

By BEN WALKER
AP Sports Wrller
The Los 'Angeles Dodgers expected big things from Mike
Marshall and Greg Brock this
season, and hoped Sid Bream would
help out sometime In the future.
On Wednesday night, the trio
spelled triple trouble . for the
Cincinnati Reds - along with the
Atlanta Braves.
Bream's first major-league hit. a
run-scoring pinch-single with two
outs lntheninthlnnlng, tied the score
and Marshall then belted a grand
siam homer In the bottom ofthe lOth
toglvetheDodgersa7-3victoryover ·
the Reds.
Los Angeles, which "'as aided by
Brock's 4-!or-4 per1onnance, broke
a three-game losing streak and now
leads Atlanta by two games In the
NLWest.
In otber NL games, Montreal heat
Chicago 6-1, Philadelphia topped
New York 6-1, St. Louis downed
Pittsburgh 5-2, San Diego edged
Houston 8-7 and San Francisco
nipped Atlanta 2-1.
Bill Russell began tbe 10th-Inning
rally with a one-out single and went
to third on Dusty Baker's single.
PedrO Guerrero was Intentionally
walked, filling the bases for

ments for mWtary seiVice; they
are affected by every act of
Congress as we au are affected but Washingtonlans have no representation In thewrlttngoftheselaws.
They are citizens, but they are
second-class citizens. It isn't right.
But tbe solution, I submit, Is mt to
be found In adopting this clumsy
amendment to tile Constitution.
Washlnginn, D.C., is not a "state."
It cannot be transformed into a
state by declaring that for certain
purposes It "shall be treated as
though It were a state." Washlni!On
is a city of some 637 ,!nHnhabltants.
To many of us, It Is ludlcrous to
propose that any city should have
two members of the Senate. No
way. Tbe answer Ues In conveying
most of the city, apart from a
non-residential federal enclave,
back to the state of Maryland
whence it came. That Idea 1s
regarded with horror by Maryland
politlcoes, and there the matter
rests.
The D.C. amendment wlU go to Its
grave as the seventh proposed
amendment to be approved by the
Congress but tD be rejected by the
states. Two of the rejects, dealing
with congressional apportionment
and tbe compensation of members,
go back to 1789. In 1810 •Congress
approved an amendment to strip
• -.-..u.s. eliizensh!p from any person
who accepted any present or
emolument of any kind "from any
emperor, king, prince or foreign
power." In March 1861, In an effort
to forestall civil war, an amendment was proposed to prohibit
Congress from abolishing slavery
by statute. In the lS'.nl, an
amendment on child labor went out
lor ratification, but only 28 states
approved it.

Wisconsin, Massachusetts and Minnesota. Two came along In 1981,
Maryland and Hawaii. In 1981,
Oregon ratified. In 1982, Maine and
West Virginia joined the Inglorious
parade, and In May 1983, Rhode
Island brought up the rear. That
makes 3. Unless 25 additional
ratifications are secured by August
1982, the amendment wlil be
certl!lecl dead. The chances of
achieving those additional 25 states
are roughly to be equated with
Seattle's prospects lor winning tbe
World Series.
I cannot quarrel with the predl·
cate on which tbe resolution rests.
The present situation 'Is Indeed
unfair and unjust. Residents of tbe
District of Columbia pay the same
federal taxes that others pay; they
are subject to the same require-

:_:: A tight ship in

available to NATO." But the report

warns that they "are generally
regarded as 'strategic' systems
whose use prior to General Nuclear
Response might convey an overly
escalatory signal to the Soviet
Union."
There are also problems with
"yields and accuracy" which make
the submarine missiles "unsuitable
for many of the desired (Soviet)
targets." In otherwdrds, NATO has
a choice between Inadequate weaposn that would be an Ineffective
deterrent and apocalyptic weapons
that could turn a "limited nuclear
war" In Europe Into a global
holocaust.
That's the reason the military
brass decided to deploy 464 groundlaunched cruise missiles and
another 1f»! mobile Pershing II
missiles In five European countries
this year.
Footnote: A worried Yurt An·
dropov suddenly offered to scrap
enough Soviet medium-ranee missiles In Europe, Including SS-20s, to
bring tbe total down to tbe number
of British and French missiles - If
the United States wlil change Its

plan to deploy the Pershing II and
cruise missiles.
Har ARGUMENT: Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker's
management of the nation's money
supply has sparked many a hi!atecl
dlscusslon ~ but few hotter than
!his:
Once he got Into a tiff with
Murray Wetdenbaum, President
Reagan's then chief economic
adviser. It happened on the last of
many trips that Weldenbaum made
across town to soothe relations
between the White House and the
Fed.
Between puffs on a fat cigar, a
testy Volcker mckee! asbes into a
trash container while he complained that the administration was
doing nothing about de!lctts but was
blaming him for high interest rates.
Suddenly Volcker was engulfed in a
cloud of smoke considerably larger
than his cigar had produced.
Weidenbaum leaped to his teet,
knocked over the blazing trash
container and stamped out the
flames.
Oblivious to it ali, Volcker
rumbled on.

Marshall.
,
made it 5-1 In the sixth and Gary
Hayes got two quick strikes and Carter tilngleclln anotber run In the
Marshall figured he "was in a hole."
seventh.
Bream, playing in only his fourth
game, ~In glee! home pinch runner
C~5.P~2
Cecil Espy from third base to tie it In
Danny Cox threw eight strong
tbe ninth.
Brock, who earlier hit his 20th Innings and then got help In the ninth
homer and a double, started the to beat visiting Pittsburgh.
The rpokie right-hander took a
ninth-Inning comeback with a
one-out slngleapd took second on left tbree-hitter and a 5-llead Into the
. ninth, but left after MaiVeU Wynne
fielder Gary Reclus' error.
Tom Nleclenfuer, 8-2, got the led off with a dbuble and Dave
victory.
Parker delivered an RBI single with
one out..
Expos 6, Cubs I
. Reliever Dave Rucker came In
Steve Rogers, leading the NL In
victories. upped his record to 17-9 and walked pinch hitter Gene
with a five-hitter. He struck out four Tenace before B":'ce Sutter was
and walked two during his 13th summoned and retired the Pirates
complete game of the season.
!orhisl7thsave.
Coxisnow2-3whileRickRhoden
The victory gave Montreal a
one-half game lead over Philadel- fell to 10-12.
phia in the NL East. The Expos have .
now won 10 of 13 games during a
Phlllies 6, Mels 1
16-game homestand.
John Denny scattered nine hits
Chicago took a 1-0 lead with an and Joe Lefebvre singled in two runs
unearned run In the first Inning during a four-run seventh Inning
before host Montreal scored four that snapped a 1-1 tie.
times In the second.
Denny, 14-6, struck out five and
Doug Flynn singled home the walked none.
tying run and Rogers followed with
Len Matuszek's sacrifice fly gave
an RBI single. Tim Raines .then Philadelphia a 1-0 lead In the first
· Inning before George Foster's 24th
doubled In two more runs.
Terry Francona' s first homer home run tied Itin the fourth. ·
The Phlllies scored four times In
the seventh to pin the loss on Walt
Terrell, 6-7.
· '
Mike Sctunidt belted his 34th
homer in the nlitth for visiting ·
Philadelphia.

Blu~ . Angel~

•

wins.

Southern's varsity Is now 1-0,
while Gallipolis is 1-2 on the year.
Southern's reseiVes are 1-0.
In the opening varsity tilt Southern blitzed GAHS 15-0 as Becky
Michael seiVed tbe last eight points
for the win. Southern zipped to 'a 9-0
lead In the second set, before
stalling to a 94 score. The

I

·'

!amllles Into announcing a tough
austerity program, which they
were more than happy to do, since
most of them live In Florida. Tben I
went to the banks with the austerity
program, and asked them to
renegotiate the loan by not demandIng principal lor seven years. The
banks accepted this providing
Santa Busta pay interest on the

loan."
:·Where could Santa Busta get the
money to pay the interest?"
"I persuaded the consortium to
loan Santa Busta tbe funds to meet
the Interest payments."
"Why would they do that If tjte
country was bankrupt?"
"The consortium had to do it so
they could keep the Santa Busta
debt on tbelr books as a viable loan.
If ,Santa Busta couldn't pay the

Interest, the banks would have to
tell their stockholders that a major
loan client .was In default, and then
everyone would be In the soup. As
far as tbe banks were concetned It
was just an accounting transaction.
They put tile Interest money they
loaned to Santa Busta in one
computer and transferred it to
another computer In the same
office. Now everyone can be
relaxed until tbe loan comes up for
renegotiation next year."

MEIGS GOLF TEAM - ~lembers of the Meigs
Golf team are, left to right, Rod Harrison, Shawn

Host Meigs defeated visiting
Trimble and Gallipolis In a triangu lar match Wednesday evening.
Final scores were Meigs 164,
Trimble 179 and Gallipolis 180.
Parker Long's two-over-par 37
paced the Marauders. Rod Harrison
had a 42, Jay Carpenter 41, Shawn
Baker 44 and Lee Powell a 51 for the
home club.
J. R. Stanley's 43 .Paced the .
Trimble TomcaIs. .
Steve Bradbury's 42 led the Blue
Devils. Other GAHS scores were:
TomMeadows,44; BoAllen47; Tim
Spurlock 47 and l}ev \;arty 50. , ~
Gallipolis, 2-8 overall, will play
Meigs and Pt. Pleasant at Wahama
this afternoon.

Eastern, Torri~does
seek first victories

Tornadoett&lt;:S then went pn to. claim
the win 15-4.
Leading scorers for the winners
were Becky Michael with 14, ·J enny
Bentley with six, Laren Wolfe five,
and Amy Littlefield four. Four
Gallipolis gals had one point each.
Southern's .reserves claimed a
come-from-behind victory behind
the fine serving of Tammy Adkins.
Adkins seiVedl2 consecutive points
In the third game to give SHS a 15-1
edge. Leading tbe l:"lnners were
Tammy Adkins with 21 points,
Wendy Wolfe seven, Rachel Reiber
five, and Jill Nease five.
Southern hosts Kyger Creek
tonight in · the SVAC opener at
Soutbern High SchooL

RACINE -The Soutbem Tornadoettes ripped the Gallipolis Blue
Angels 15-0, 15"4, In tbe opening
game of the 1983 volleyball season
Wednesday. Southern's reseiVes
won the preliminary match In three
sets after Galltolis claimed the
· opening set 15-11. Soutbern rebounded for exciting 15-13 and 15-1

By SCOTI' WOLFE
Eastern and Southern hope to
catch their opponents on the
rebound after disappointing losses
suffered last week In season
opening games. Southern dropped a
13-12 heactbreaker t0 RossSoutheastern while Eastern
dropped a 7-0 defensive struggle to
Waterford.
This week Eastern hosls perennial power Caldwell, while Southem hosts another tough contender
In Fort Frye.
In the loss, Eastern did have
some bright spots, Including the
fine rushmg of senior tailback Troy
Guthrie who scampered 118 y~rds
on 27 carries. The total EHS rushing
output managed just 167 totaL
Eastern's offense looked as though
it could awaken this week, but
faltered In key situations. Defen-

,_,

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Dave
Lincoln drove Heartfull to victory
Wednesday night In the featured
eighth race at Scioto Downs.
Heartfull covered the mlle in
2:062-5 ln .the featured race, which
was tbe Ohio Sire Stakes Champion-

Baker, Parker Long, and Mike Kennedy. Head coach
is Bob Ashley.

531 JACKSON PIKE·Rt35 WEST
Phone 44e - 4524

LEGAL NOTICE

8AROA/N MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
AlL SEATS $2.00
EVERY rUESD.4Y $2.00

~OMISSION

The Public Ulili1ies Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 83·32·EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procure.

ment

practices

~PTEMBER 2 thruJ!j
fR/OAT lfltu fHURSDAY I

and

policies of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Elec·
tric Company, the operation of its Electric Fuel
Component, and related
matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
~-

6:3..0 pAll. on Thursday.

September 8, 1983 at theotfices of the Public

l,.!tililies Commission of
Ohio,
Street,
43215.
end at

375 South High
Columbus, Ohio
The session will
7::30 p.m. or such

l~t ~trme

as Is required
in order to accommodate

those waiting to testily.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity

sively, Eastern looked strong and
held Its own except for a surprising
15 yard touchdown pass in the final
seconds of the first period.
Eastern's opponent this week,
Caldwell, dropped a 16-6 decision to
Belpre last weekend, although
losing Caldwell played well against
a team that is favored to win the
TVC this yeaL
Last week, costly mistakes hampered the Southern Tornadoes, but
this week with a game of experience behind them Southern hopes
to get . untracked for ils home
opener with Fort Frye.
Like many teams in the area
Southern was sharp defensively
last week, but offensiVely was
Inconsistent. The Tornadoes have
been working vigorously this week
to overcome its offensive woes and
are looking forward to blowing up a
storm Friday evening.
Both non-league tilts begjp, at 8
p.m.
SVM: STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
w. L. P. OP.
Kyger Creek ... ........ .... .. ........... 1 o .28 o
North Gallla ....... .... ...... . ....... 1 0 28 0
Hannan Trac. .......... .. ....... .... ... 1 o 28 o
Eastern ..... : .............. .
.... ... o 1 0 7
Southern
....
·
......
..
·
..
..
·
·
·
...... · 0 1 12 13
Southwestern ......... .... ....... ...... .. O 1 0 lJ

Fri...,..•

ships for2-year-old trotting fillies.
gameo•
Kyger Creek at Wahama; Caldwell at
The wlnne r pal'd $8 ·80 • $3 and $3·
Eastern; Fort f'rye al Southern: Hannan
Second-place Seedy Smoke Puff · Traco at Hannan and Southea.tern at

to be heard. Further in·
formation may be obtain·
ed by contacting the
Commission.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: MARY ANN aRLINSKI, Secretary

t------------..L_____________;

R. CRAIG MATHEWS, DDS
IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT

*LARRY b. KENNEDY DDS*
WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH .HIM IN THE PRACTICE OF

GENERAL DENTISTRY
Beginning July 20
OFFICE HOURS WILL BE EXPANDED TO MONDAY THRU •
SATURDAY BY APPOINTMENT.
Both Doctors Are Now Welcoming New Patients.

PHONE 992-6658
205 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, OH.

returned $7.60 and $4.20 whUe ~So:u:th:wes:t•:rn~.~No:rt:h~G:•t:uo~l~s:ld:lc.~--r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
third-place VAnna Speedy paid $5. ,_
In the fifth-race trtfecta, the
combination of 34-6 paid $2,673.90

Loan negotiator _________A_rt_B_uc_h_wa_ld
I met a man the otber day who
"What dld Santa Busta do with
has a vecy Interesting job. He tbe billion dollars?"
renegotiates loans tlr Third World
"Some of It went lor roads, some
countries. A loan renegotiatDr Is not of It went for Mercedes Benzes,
to be confused with someone who some of It for scotch whiskey, some
gets a nation a loan or collects one. of it went to pay for tear gas, and
He goes to Work after a country has quite a bit . of It wound up In
the loan and can't pay It back.
numbered Swi'i5 bank accounts
We shall call the man Jean belonging to Santa Busta politicians
Valjean, and he works for the in power."
Credit Bearnaise. He told me, "A
"Okay, so the money was well
loan renegotiator Is the most spent. Why can't they pay 11 back?"
Important figure 1n the banking
"Last year the price of raw
world today. Witbout him the Velcro tUmbled to 10 cents a pound
monetary system would go under." and the country went bankrupt."
"How do you renegotiate a
"So that's when you were called
loan?" I Inquired.
in to renegotiate. the loan•"
"You renegotiate a loan by not
"Right. Both Santa Busta and the
paying it. The seiVice you per1orm consortium of banks asked me to
is to come up with a legitimate come up with a plan that could
reason why a country cannot repay justify them not paying the loan
a loan to a foreign bank."
. back. !talked Santa Busta's leading
"Does it have to be a good
reason?"
"ot course It bas to be a good
reason. Everyone knows long
before the payment date that tlie
Third World country can't pay its
debt. But you stili have to go
through the ceremony of pretending It's a surprise to aU parties."
"Could you give me an example
of how you renegotiate a loan?"
"At the moment I just renegotiated a loan lor the Sooth American country of Santa Busta. Santa
Busta is a Third World country that
owes Sl bllllon ID a consortium of
Western banks."
"Why did the banks loan ber that
kind of money?"
"Because she was wllllng to pay
two percent more lor tbe loans than
other countries. Besides, at tbe
llme, Santa Busta was getting U a
pound ror m1Dll1g raw Velcro, lis
only natura1 resource."

The Daily Sentinel Page-3

Me···gs golfers win triangular
• . ble, GaJJ"tpo·••IS
mateh over T rnn

Tornadoettes-·~rip .

NATO deficiencies _______J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
WASHINGTON -There Is more
configured. The accuracy and
to the great mtssUe controversy,
yields of available warheads make
now under discussion In Geneva,
them unsuitable lor some limited
than the press has reported.
attacks. Tbe missUe · range is
The decision ID deploy Pershing
tnsu!!iclent to place targets In the
II and cruise missiles In western
Soviet Union at risk."
Europe not only · shook up the
NATO wants to deploy 572
Kremlin (which launched a masPershing II and cruise missiles In
sive propaganda campaign against
western Europe to offset what Is
It), but alarmed many Europeans · perceived to be a Soviet advantage.
who see the deployment as a
Of urgent concern to the West are
dangerous escalation In the terrifyapproximately 250 SS-20 mobile
ing game of showdown.
missiles that the Soviets have
Why did NATO decide It had to trained on Europe; each of these
modernize Its nuclear forces des- . awesoine missiles can lire three
pite tbe high risk of political
warheads.
backlash? The explanations are
The United States also has more
found In classified documents,
than 600 bombers In Europe. But
which my associate Dale Van Alta
they lace more than 900 Soviet
has reviewed.
Badgers, Blinders and Backfires.
A top-secret State Department Cautions the top-secret report:
report, for example, describes the
"Whlle dual-capable aircraft are
deficiencies of the NATO forces
a valuable and versatlie element of
now In place. Of the 72 Pershing 1A NATO's forces, all the land-based
missile launchers In Germany, the aircraft, except !Ill' F-111, lack the
report complains:
range to threaten credibly strategic
"The Pershing missile system targets In the Soviet Union."
has been In tbe Inventory for a long
The report described the
lime and Is becoming increasingly submarine-launched Poseidon and
dl!ficult to maintain. The system is Polaris missiles assigned to NATO
manpower-Intensive as presently as "the most survivable systems

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dodgers take two game lead
he~ind .hitting of 3 rookies

Overlooked .anniversary____Ja_n;r.e_s_J_.K...;_i_lpa_tr_ic_k
The Daily Se.ntinel

.

-

Professional Counseling
and
Family Services

Woodlond Centers
~t

;{!

HITS BALL - Southern def~ated GaWpolls in girls' volleyball
action Wednesday evening. In the action pho&amp;o above taken by Scott
· Wolfe, Karen Hemsley (5) gels ready to hlllhe ball. Tomadoeiie Amy
Uttlefleld (15) Is also shown on the front One.

! WILL CLOSE AT 12:00 NOON f
ON SAT., SEPT. lOTH
t

~

"I can now see the value of what
you do. What do yoo get paid for this
sort of thing? "
"A nice percentage of tbe loan,
which tbe banks are only .too happy
to pay anyone for getting them off
the financial hook."

113 COURT ST.

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GREGG AND PATIY GIBBS

! U8 W. MAIN ST.

PHONE: (Ohio) 99?-2178

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POMEROY . OH .
Mon., Tues ., Wed .

9:30-5:00
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.,

Thurs .

9:30-12:00

~·

�1983

The

Arguello seeks championship
against Aaron Pryor Friday

Scoreboard ...
Majors
By KEITH WISECUP
Thirty-eight yea rs of coaching
•vill test each other Friday night
when the Meigs Marauders travel
to Miller to open Tri-Valley Conference play.
Both schools are new members in
the now ten-team TVC. The Falcons ' head mentor. Jim Cook, has
spent the last 18 year s at Miller
while Meigs' Coach Cha rles Chan- ·
cey is in his 20th a s a head coach.
The Fal cons, much like Meigs.
come off a hea rt-breaking 6-0 loss to
No rthridge. 1\orthridge scored with
12 seconds left on a Miller fumble at
their own 20.
The Mara uders were nipped 9-3
at Mariclta in a well-played
hard -hitting tilL
Miller. i-6 last year; returns 12
lett ermen but only two starters ·
ft'otn E'ach the offense a n&lt;! defense.
"They have a tough backfield and
a pretty good coach. They show a lot
of co-ord inat ion on both offense and
defense," commented the West
Virginia University graduate Cook.
)3ased on scouting reports. Coach
Chancey thinks the F alcons have a
good defense. "They are very
aggressive and hit well," said the

taking Route 13 off Route 33 just
north of Athens. Continue on Route
13 through Corning, then travel
Route 155 for three miles. The
school Is on the left side of the
highway.

Nelsonville-York, the power- .
house which has gpne to the state ;
playoffs in recent ye~rs. is the top
choice among league coaches to
finish atop the Tr1-Valley Confer- .
ence this fall.
·
'
Belpre was given the second :
place nod while Meigs , a first year :
member of the loop, \"as picked "
fourth .

Mel.:s-MWcr Probahlt• start.&gt;J"!!ii
MIUer
(Offense)

StevP Owens tl50 t
Greg Wilson 1l8.il

.. .. RE
... RT .

Dave Jones 11721. .

....... RC

Todd PIPrr{' {178~ .......... ...

.. ........ C

Ron BraAA 1t ftj l

....... LG

Sehool
Potnt&amp;-x •
1. NelsonvUle-York !41......................... 89 ~

Paul Mere!(' ll95t .. ................. ._. ...... ,LT
KE:&gt;I!h Roberts tl1H 1 .
... .... ... LF.
Ray .Jt&gt;nk.s lll:ll1 ...... .................... ..... .. QB
Georg(' We;t tliOI ............................ LHB

Pierct"-. .. .... .... .. .... ...... ......

....... . E

Ciiscy Taylor 1180r..

Jenks .... ........ .. ... ...........

.. .. .. .......... . E
... .. ... ...... LB

Bragg. .. .. ...... .. ... .......

Owens ..

_,

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

Jones .. .. ..... ,... ...... .... ...,
Lar~

LB

ca·

... CB

Rushing (1351 ..... ...............

Rolx&gt;rts ..-...... ..... .... ........... .... _...

.. , F'S
. .... SS

MARAUDER VOlLEYBALL TEAM - Above
are memhers · of the 1983 Meigs Varslty VoUeyball
ieam. They include, first row, leH I&lt;&gt; right, Marla
Averlon, Peggy Cremeans, Cathy Dean, Jody

Harrison, and Betty LoHis. Se&lt;lond row, Karen
Walker, coach, Brenda Cuonlngh!llll, Ruth Fry,
Jenny Meadows, Trina Reeves, Paula SwindeU, and
Gary Walker, 118Sistanl .coach. ·

~IEIGS

and Mike Chanet&gt;:,.· !173) ...
Butch S!Ue; 11761 ..... .........

.. .... LE
.. ..... . ...LT

.lay Whittington (l$4) ...... ... .. ... .. ... ....... LG
J a y Evans (156) .. ..... .. ........... .... .. .......... C
Dave Barr !1781 .... .. ....... ............ ...... RG
Tony Welch (240) .................... .......... RT

49ers-Vikings battle tonight

•• •

...

CM.IFORNIA ANGEI...S-Calk'd up
Cortlctt. curt Brown and Bob L.a-.
c-ey, plldters . Car; Pt-tlls and Mil«'

Brawn,

ootflf'l~.

5~

78
77
67

·6:1

.561 51f.!
!W2 8
.419 17

-

65
73
63 T7
Wf.BT 01\'tiiON
Cblc...
!I)
59
KanJ.iq City
6li 73
66 7!1
Ooklano
fiG 76
C&amp;llt&gt;n&gt;la
f.4 75

"""'"""

HITS:

}iruston,lfi(). Ramlr'P'L, Atlant; , ~-

.576 -

SOI\.

OOUBL~ :
~~

.468

15h
.460 16

rnr:Pu::s : ButJrr, At1a111a , 12: Grt'E'n.
Lwls, 9: Tbon , Houston , 9: Crw..
Hwslon, 8; Wash!n,i!on. Atlan ta , 8.

_46/j

$

~

.4111 22

53

86

'r1

~1

S~.

RUNS: Sctunldt. Ph1tatlrlphlll.
34: · Dawson, Monlreal, 29: Evans. San
Frand:sro, :!!; Mu/'lXl)', Allan ta, 28; G\K'r·
rero. Los Angeles, '17.
H OME

S'IOLEN BA..&lt;&gt;ei: Ralnrs . Montnoal. ~:;
Wlll'J':(ns, SruJ Diego, 31: ~ - Sax. Los Ana:e-ies, 4-1: Wilson. N~· York. 4:1: LeM85ter.
San Francisco. 3!!.

"""''"""

New York

66

.518

71

~'7

.51f

.Mit
.fill 1~

62
58

.m 14

T7
Bt

WI!ST~ION
Ani,N&gt;s
II)
59

Los
Atlanta ,
18 Gl
Hwltal
72 G6
San IMego
70 11
San Frandsro
\ G'7 73
Clndnoatl :
iW Tr
.··-,,.·. W~'aGuna

:::: : ::: :::::

-

AU.Ia !Dayley
lKn.Lmw 9-81. tnl

.561

2

.522

7\o,l

~

Wtn·

1-fiTS: &amp;ggs, Bostoo •. 1&amp;1: Cooper, Mtl·

wa,ukee, 174; Whitaker, netrolt. l T.l: Ripken , Battlmore, 167; Slmmotl.S, M11·

.496 11

waukee,

.479 131,1,
.454 11

162:.

,J-~~:- ~..1 )3os1Qn. &lt;l'l: Mcftat&gt;.

'

at Los AngriH

at San Francisco

rsmes scheduled

F'rtU.Y• GMnel!l

St .l.aJIII at Otlcago

Philad!lphla at PlttsWrgh, tn)
New York at Montreal, (n)
Cincinnati at San OJeso, in)
ft.tlanra at Cai Angl'&amp;es. (n)
Hcustoo at San Francl!co, 1~1

'

Kansas Efij,:..~·RIR,~f Bi.tlt~, ~

Parrlsh, [RtnJtt, 37: &amp;ett. kansas Ctty. r
36: Hrbek, MlrmesOta, J6

1RIPU:S: Grtmn, Toronto. 9; Franro;
Clevelilrul. B: GantrK'r, 1-.UIWilUkee, 8;
Winfield. New York, 8; Youm. Mil·
waukee, 8.
HOME

RUNS: Rice, Boston, 34; Klnle,

Oltcago, 32;: Annas, Boston, 31: Murra y,
BaJ.ttmore, Zl;Luzinskl, Chicll£0, 27.
STOLEN BASES: R. H()ldcrson, Oak·
land, 96;. R. Law , . C~~o. 67; , J . C~.
ChiCago. -19; Wilson, KaJtsas C1ty, 47: .
Satnpie, Texas. 39.

PlTCHJNG (13 declslOnsl t Haas. Mil-

.Ill!. 3.37: McGregor. Baltt2.95: F1a~~agan. Baltimore. ID-3. .769, 3.W: Heaton. Clevtland.

waukee,

12~

more. 17-5.

.m.

10--1. .714. 142: Dav1s, Balthmre, 12·5,
:1.44: Slaton, Milwaukee, 12·5, .700,

:106.

3.'rl
STRIKEOtJTS:

Morrts, Detroit, 200:

Slleb. Toronto. ]£6; Rlghettt, New York,

~ders
NATIONAL lEAGUE

BA'M"'NG r340 at batsJ: Madk:dt, Plttg..
burgh. .322; Cruz. Houston, .319: Dawson,

1S2;

Bannister,

Chicago, 159: Sutcllffc.

C'k&gt;veland. UO.
SAVES: Quisenberry, K!Ul sas City, ~:
Stanley, Boston, X7; R. Davis. Mlnnesour.,
26; Caur:lUl, Seattle, ll: Ladd, Milwaukee,

19.

Britt, Sanders top MAC players

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

HEAR IT
EVERY
FRIDAY

·-

• •

• • , _..

I

MORNING
=:--fROM
9. A.M.-12
NOON
YON 92 FM
• .•

The
whippedit."
the Bengais
w.as
theRaiders
bestwaytodo
:1&gt;-lOintheseasonopenerbyscorlng
a pair of early touchdowns and

WAYSIDE FURNITURE

resortingtoapassdelensewlthfive
def-lvtl backs. They also used a
four-man line to rush the Cincinnati
quarterback.
Although Anderson completed a
high percentage of his passes,
hitting on 26 of 35 tosses, the offense
managed Jvst 226 yards passing.
Anderson's longest completion was
for just 14yards. Hewas also sacked
4 times for 23 yards, threw an
Interception deep in Raider terrt·
tory, and fwnbled the ball away.
Stephenson wouldn't tip his hand
about how the Bills plan to defense
Anderson, but he did say it won't lle

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Phone (8141 gg2-6333

"Idon'tunderestimaieArguello,"
said
the champion. "He's coming
for his pride, for his country."
~ Arguello is a native of Nicaragua,
where his possessions have been
confiscated by theruUngSandinista
government, which accused him of
being a supporter of the late
FORT MITCHELL, Ky. (AP) President Anastasio Somoza. Ar·
Winners at Latonia Race Course's guello now lives in King's Bay, Fla.
spring meeting who have been
"lwlllputthelastdropo!myblood
holding onto $62,719 worth of intothisflght,'' said Arguello. "lean
wlnntng tickets .all summer can ,loseaga1J!, butr'as~re~.!'~itJV~ll~e
begin cashing those tickets and a IJetler light Than; the first one.'
. sho\11nT\he inoiiey . through the
Win or loll!, Arguello's 84th fight
turnstyles again tonlght at the will he the finale.
northern Kentucky track.
"I swear it to God and to everbody
Officials of the Cincinnati-area that this will be my last fight," said
track say about4,200winningtickets the man who has held the WBA
from 'the spring thoroughbred
featherwei~d Worl~)!&amp;;
have not been cashed, or may have _,.. Coi!Ddr Upel" featherweight and
been lost or destroyed .. Winners llghtwelght. titles since tumrng pru
have two years to caslitheir tickets in 1968. He has a 78-5 record, with 63
before the unclaimed money reverts to the Commonwealth of
Kentucky.
For Its 25-&lt;late fall meet, Latonia
has joined a trend among race
\racks trying to attract patrons by
staging a big-mohey giveaway.
Latonia's "Run for the Silver"
promotion ends Oct.6 with a
drawing for SlO,IXXl in silver, and
-'
patrons may register each time they
visit the track.

mee!

Racine, Ohio 45771
Phone (614) 949-2210

..

"We feel we're just going to have
our hands fuU no matter what
(defensive aUgment) we're in,"
Stephenson said in a telephone
conference with CinCinnati sports
writers Wednesday.
There's another element that
coriCems Stephenson - t.he Bengals' bad luck so far.
The Bengais went winless in four
preseason games, then opened the
'regular National Football League
seU(III with the :1&gt;-10 thrashing from
the Raiders.
StephensOn Indicated he's concerned the Bengals will take out
their fnlstratlonS on the Bills when
the two teams meet in Riverfront
Stadium on Sunday.
"I tblnk It' sgolng to be one heck ol
a ballgame," Stephenson said. "We
know wbat we're coming into clown
there.
"My goodness, a Super Bowlcont.endlng team IIUCbaa Clndnnatl
has, wlthalltbeweapD"stbeyhave.
And Cl!l1alnly, wltll !bern not havlna
won a pmeyetthlsyear-we know
wbat we're up apiDst from a
ps)'Choqlcal standpoint.
\

andshoutsof"What tlmeisit?"-to
which aU respond, "It's Hawk
time."
''I can do what I want to do with
Alexis," said The Hawk. "He has
one style, ami! have seven."
Pryor, who will be 28 on Oct. 20,
also is talking about retiring after
this fight.

rr:====:::======:;
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Jet. Rt. 1 and 554
CHESHIRE. OHIO

367-9671
•PIZZAS
•HOT SANDWICHES
"We Deliver"
Eat In or Carry Out
MON .· THURS. 4-10
FRI. &amp; SAT. 4 TIL12 P.M.
WE'RE NEW, TRY us

GRANDPARENTS' DAY
FAMILY AND FRIENDS OF RESIDENTS AT
POMEROY HEALTH CARE CENTER, COME IN
AND JOIN IN THE FUN ON ......

GRANDPARENTS' DAY
SEPTEMBER l.l ,- 19:8 l :,:;,-~.~
ACTIVITIES BEGIN AT 2:00P.M. WITH REFRESHMENTS,
MUSIC AND THE CROWNING OF KING AND QUEEN FOR THE
DAY.

~o=-ARr C'OI~OJALLY' llHT TE ·

Ttl. AnEND AU THE
ACTIVITIES ON THIS SPECIAL DAY.

'

ANNOUNCING
THE MERGER
OF

Anderson
still key
for Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) - Buffalo
Head Coach Kay Stephenson says
there's no secret to defusing the
Ctnctnnati Bengals' offense.
Just as the Los Angeles Raiders
stopped Clnclnnati last Sunday by
blunting the Bengals' passing,
Stephenson said the Bllis will be
looking to trip up the pivotal man in
the Bengal air attack when the two
teams meet Sunday.
"We do know that what you have
to do against Cincinnati is what
you've had tn do over the past three
years - you have to 'contain Kenny
Anderson in some way." Stephenson aid Wednesday. "And I'm sure
that was the Raiders' philosophy.
........,, put such a priority on
.;.;;WningKennythatlheyfeltthat

retained the World Boxing Assocla· I've concentrated."
lion welterweight championship on
Arguello, indeed, has been a study
a smashing 14th-round knockout of concentration. He has s hunned
last Nov. 12 tn Miami.
the media after some workouts,
·"That fight will always be a something he never did in the past.
history in my mind," said the Buthedldmeetwithreportersinhis
31-year-ol&lt;!ArgueUo. "Nomancan · room Tuesday night, and he
change that."
attended a Wednesday news confer"I respect him for getting back encecalledbypromoterDanDuva.
into the ring with me after the
Pryor has been a study in
beating he took," said Pryor, who is confidence. He was about an hour
a 2'h-l favorite to win the scheduled late for his workout Tuesday
15-round rematch in a 13,&lt;ID-ll!at because he went shopping. When he
outdoor arena at Caesars Palace.
does train, his sessions are filled

Winners may
cash tickets

fteld, New York. 99: Annlls. Boston, gj' ,

•
~~

~:

knockouts.
Arguello blames his losg'ln the
first fight to lack of mental
preparations.
" I was thlnk!ng about other
things," he said. "The first time I
just did thebodywork.Nowl've put
the mind to work. I've spent six
weeks of my life in Las Vegas, and

r~wl~th~th~e~roc~klng~~sou~n~ds~o~f~m~us~ic~~;;;;~~~~~~~~;;;~

. RUNS: Murray, Balttmorc. fll: Rlpkera .
Bo.Jtlrmre, !II; MosctJy, Tormto, M: Cooper. Mllwaukee, B!!t: Boggs, Bailon, 83: R,
Henderson. Oakland. 88.
RBI: Cooper, Milwaukee. 110: Rlre,

lbton. 100: Parrtsh. Detroit.
.~

Phlla·

Delroll, .:m; Moseby, Toronto, .318: S!m·
moi'IS, Milwaukee, .318.

San [*'llo IHaWidnl U l
!Welch 11-lll. (n)

Dmr~v.\

.364; Carew, eanromia, .J;t; Trammell ,

fMiddl!rl 64 or RUhle 8--31 at
15-11)

1.:11:

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATI'ING 1l«l a1 bats) : Boggs, Boslon,

~a Glmilll

Clnclnnad !Solo

.7:!2.

JH&gt;. _j'OO, 2.44: McW1111ams.
Pittsburgh. 13-6. .ffi-1 , .1.15:_ Ryan, 1\oo.~ ­
ton, 13-ti, .ffi-1, 2.1Il; ~~- Montrt'al. 17·
9. -~-2-~.
.
STRIKEOUl'S: Car lton . Ph1ladt&gt;lph1a,
234.; Solo. Cincinnati. :!16: McWill iams .
Plll!lburgh, lG4; Valenzl.l.'la. Los Angeles.
156; R)•an, Jlou.&lt;itOn, 151
SAVES: Smtlb, Chk-a.go, 2-1: Reard:ln.
Monll"f.'aa, I); Bedro!;lan, Allanta, 19: Hot·
land, Philadelphia, 19; Minton, San Fran·
clscu, 19.

.446 10

Mootre-.1.1 6, Olicagu 1
Ptl.lladelphla 6, New York 1
St. Louis 5, Plttsburgh 2
Sar1 Dle(lo 8, Hwston 7
l..ol AligNs 7, C1nclnnatl 3, 10 Innings
Sari Frandlco 2, Atlanta 1
' ~~auRa~

13-~.

~lptua.

Yo!

n&amp;e
10 Ql

PLAYER OF WEEK Meigs' Andy JannareW, a 155
pound senior middle guard, has
bein ll$Bied the recipient of the
Meigs County Jaycee Player of
the Week. Jannarelll was credited with four solo tackles,
several as!ilSted stops, and
caused a Marletia fumble on a
punt retum.

PITCHING i 13 dedslons l: OI'OIIro. ~('W

York,

,

11

Buckrrer, Otk'ap;o, 36: Daw-

Montreill, 12; Kn1¢u, Houslon. 32;
Ollvt.'f, Mont~a.l. l2: GCartl'r , Montreal.
ll : Ray. Pil'tStlW'Rh, 31.

Oakland at Toronto, (nl
Bosconat Cleveland, I n )

St. Lw1s
Chicago

Oliver'. Moznwal , 100; Thon,

.450 21

..._,,•Games 1

..................
..,..,

Jeny Narron, catcher

Scholk&gt;ld. Infielder rn:m Ed·

.

Dlwsoo. Montn•al. JW; Crw.,

Hey~. 16-l:

.47'S 14

""""'

!1ChOOU1ed

OaiiOIOfl,

""""· "'· -

TE&gt;X&amp;S .at Se&amp;ttlt-, In)
NATIONAL L.EAGUE
EAST Dn'BION .
WLPct.GB

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The San him.
stnce I became coach here, and I'd
mo ntoo of rhf' Pacific Glast LHg\lf'.
Na&amp;nal Leilpe
Francisco
49ers
and
Mlnnesota
The
Vildngs
made
use
of
Leguess we'll have the same kind of
Dan Thomas (156) .............................. RE
P ITT SBURGH
Nlc!&lt;. Riggs 1140\ ................... . ........... QB
veteran mentor.
Vikings are two teams that still · Count's many talents and he game Thursday night," Vikings
PIRATI:S-Purchased
Chris Burdette !1751 ..... , .... ....... .......... FB
Miller will have a small weight Dave Follrocl (155)
believe in throwing the football- a warmed up tn the role of a backup Coach Bud Grant said. "They're as
w ·contract of HE'd! Vargas, first base...... WB
man-outfielder, from thei r Hawaii ol the
advantage on the Marauders as Jon Perrtn 1174)
lot.
and special teams player.
fonn!dable as they ever were."
Paclf1c Coast League . Traded RandY ~lc­
and Shawn Eads /1611
..... .. .... .... .TB
they have an average of 178 on the
"I still believe you win with the
His opportunity to start carne
TheViklngshavewonthelasttwo
mann. pltciM'r. to the ·ChJcago While SoX
(Delerne)
for Miguel Dilonc, oollk&gt;J~r. and Mike
ilr!e and 170 in their backfield . Andy IannarelU (155) ,...
. .. .. .. ... .. . MC
forward pass," said 49ers Head through the retirement of Ahmad meetings, and quarterback Tommy
MalUarid. pitcher.
•
Barr
...
......
..................
...
,
..
..
..
......
...
..
..
..
T
Meigs is .17.3 and 161 in respective
BASKEmALL .
Coach Bill W~I.sh, whose has Rash;ld last season. He had to fight Kramer has been largely responsiWelch . .. ............. . ........ .. ..
.. .......... ....T
categories.
overseen th.e most ellicient passers wlthSamMcCuUumforthestarting ble. As a roOkie in 1977; he threw
N"""""'""-~"~rno
NA'nnNAL
nASKE'TJIAU;.
~::: :~:.::.: :
~ in 'th N~:~tiQJ!ll! Football ~a~e -;fsaJI"Jil 'tf!'Jnjllj{ &lt;:'.~· &lt;but wjle t~J&lt;ee fourth-Q~W~er touchdown
Meigs ,came through the Marietia ~~~!~\: :-~ ::::~:;;:::
ATiON-N.,Nl'l('d H~ 'Rubin assistant
Burdette ............... .. ... .... ..... ... ...... ...... LB
co ntroller.
game with fio-seililus' lilJuries and Mark
overthepastthreeseasonsandwho MCttillum broke a thumb the passes- to give Minnesota a 2&amp;-27
Hammonds 1162 1 .. ....... ........... .. .. LB
PORTLAND TRAJL BLAZERS-Traded
will probably start the same FollrOd and Mike- Wlillord (161) ... ... . , ,, .. CB
will lead the 49ers against the matter was settled. ·
victory. He threw four tn 1979 for a
Llllton Towr.&gt;!i, forward, lo thE&gt; Cleveland
JackJe Welker (150) .. .. ........ .. .. ......... .... CB
CilvBiiton; for a 1!1!7 Sl'l'Ofld.rwnd draft
players as last week.
Minnesota Vikings tonight in the
He has a talent for making the 2&amp;-22 victory.
pick.
Gheen ......... . ..... .......... .. ........ .... .. ..... FB
:Miller High School is located by Eack .......... ...... ..
Metrodome.
spectacular catch. He occasionally
Walsh knows "that you can't let
.. .. ... ... SS
"We still thrtve on that. But we're runsoutofthebackfielddnarever§e him loosi&gt;." ·
·
~ 51Ui going for yardage in chunks. ·ami, stnre- he was a high sc.!Jool -. ~49ers-opened the ~;eason ast
Th~ Daily Sentinel
When you run-tne-OOll solltten,you ~rterb~k.heknowshowtopass. Saturday with a 22-17 loss -. to
runtheriskoftrylitgtoivinthegame Ail those talents mlght be called Phlladelphia. M!nnesotabeatCleve(USPS 145-9&amp;0)
A Dhilslon of Multimedia., Inc:.
by a field goaL Then you have the upon against the 49ers.
land Sunday 27-21.
By MIKE EMBRY
winning pitcher, allowing seven hits
" It would he good to throw a pass
For San Francisco, quarterback
possibllity that an official can throw
AP Sports Writer
tn seven inntngs, waiktng three and
Pub lishC'd Eiv&lt;'ry artrrnoon, Monday
lhrough Frlday.lll Court SlrrPI, by th e
a
flag
and
lose
it
for
you."
against
San
Francisco.'
'
LeCount
Joe
Montarta is ready to start after
strtklng out one.
l)hJo.Vnlle.v P ub li ~ hing Company . Mul.The New York Yankees, MUwauThe Vikings ~lso are a passing said. "Butonlyfora touchdown. But suffertng a concussion against
11mf'dl 11 . Inc- . . Po m&lt;'roy, Ohio45769, 992:! l~!i . SPC'ond class .post a~{' pai d at Poteam and wide receiver Terry I'djustllketoplaywellandmakethe Philadelphia.
kee Brewers, Detroit Tigers and
Chuck Porter, 6-7, took the loss
•
''
Toronto Blue Jays are trying to after giving up four runs in the first
LeCount is becoming an Integral bigpiay."
,------------1 m&lt;'ro.v. Ohio.
part of that offense this season. He
Big plays are not unusual in 107 Slate cl OhiO. Oe ~ ~rlmtnl oflnluriiH:e . C~llr!oult. ot Com
make . things interesting in the two innings.
M('mb&lt;'r: Thr A~sor ialf' cl Press , In ·
land D'a lly Prf'ss AssOclaton and the
pha~ u Tlie undersr:.nrd. St!ptunien(lent ot lniiM arM:e Dll~f S!Jit ol
lx&gt;gan his NFL career with the 49ers-Viklngsgames.
American League East.
Angels 9, Blue Jays 6
Onr~ llerebv cethhes tNt ATINITA ~SUAL TY COIIIPANY ol
Amf'r lca n Newspa per Publishers As49ers. 1n 1979, the 49ers put him on
"No more than 10 points has NorCIDS'!.. Slate ol Gln'£1ll. lll5 tom~lrfd .~~ lht 11•5 ol lh rs Sr11r
The only problem ls that front:
The Blue Jays lost valuable
soc-I a l ion. National A d vPr ti sl n~ Re preapplrcable tort and it au!llonz~duunarhr cuntnl Je.1r tDIIIn~tl111
s('n tat ivc.'. Bra nha m N(&gt;wspapr r Sa les,
waivers and the Vikings grabbed separated the Vikings and 49ers lhrs state rts aooroorrate buu'lessolli15Urana l!s rr n1nt r1l c.JndrtiOil
running Baltimore isn't cooperat- ground in tbe AL East division race
I! shown tr, ~~annual stalrflll!ntlll hlvebftn ts lot lows on Decemlltr
7:t1 Third AvPnuf'. Ne w Yor k . N(&gt;w
in_g. The Orioles posted their 13th as California rallied for five runs in
31. 1931 Adnlrt1fll usfts. Sl 7.!1115.98?00:llfbllfhes. S9.9l!~!UIO,
York 10017.
Nft mtb. S1.966.9B( 00. ~¢•1. Sl .tmOOO.OO. S4!rpkls. 16.966.
victory in the last 15 games the top of the ninth.
984 00: tnaune. 1l l580.204 00. hl)fflll'11ures. 11 3.31l .OO!iJXII~
WITNESS 'MiEREOI. I ha-..e htrf~n t~ SlhY:rtll&gt;d m¥ ~! 1nd
POSTMAS'TF.R : Send address to The
Wednesday night by downing BasPinch-hitter Daryl Sconiers proCIUS«&lt; m, ~tillo be tllued .11Cclum lw ~. Otno !hr ~ 11.1r •IJII ~I!
Dally S0 nlinf'l, 111 CourtS ~ . , Pomrmy,
IIebeit H katz, Sllpl. tlllnsuunu ol Ollo
Ohio 4576!L
.
tQn 5-2.
vided the key hit in the ninth, a
611 St.llf ol 0110, llepir!menl o l l ~ur•nce. Cl!r1rlrnle ol Cc.n.
· Meanwhile. New York whipped bases-loadeddoublethatciearedthe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Quar- Rhode Island. He leads the conferpi1111Ce Tht uml!!r1r;:nred . Sup!'rrn le~dent ollnsu!lnte ~1/lleSitlt o1
SUB."iCRIPI'ION KATES
Ohl(), hmby c~rrtres th~t NATtONAL OLD UNE INS CO ollrtlle
Milwaukee 11-5, Toronto lost 9·6 to bases.
terback Nell Britt, a Ball State ence in total offense and has a o,yide
Ry C'u.rrler or Motor Rout e
Roc,, Slille ol Aikin! H. hu COillpiJed Wlih !hi! IIWS 0 11 ~ Stile IIIDII·
ubteto •l 1ndrs1111M-rlled aurrnglhtcurrent ,ur !o lransut rn lhtt.
Onr Wcf'k
.......... ........ ...... $1.00
California and Detroit split a
Luis Sanchez, the third California sophomore, and cornerback Jeff lead in passing efficiency with a
SUit rts I~Pf1l!llllle bli~MSS d !n511!111Cl! Its F 1111~Crll COIIdi!II,J!I tt.
On(' Month .................. .............. $4.40
5/lclwn bJ ~1"1110UIIII.II-nl !o hiW been U lallowSC111 Dtctnlbef
doubleheader with Cleveland, win- pitcller,hlkedhlsrecordto9-7.Dave . Sanders, a Northern lllinols senior, rating of 189.81\.
OnC' Year .......... .... ...... ....... ... :. $.1)2.Bo
31. 19111: Mmrtll!d me«. S282.ll6.J9UJD: Lrlbtlrhts. S2 33.039,, ·
33900: Surptus. "4,866.401.00. lncoN. SJoa.l1U81 00, bpenSINGLE COPY
..;!ng the nightcap 7-3 after losing the Geisel, 0-2, was the loser.
are the Mid-American Conference
Sanders played a major role in drturn.
S293.461l,1SO.OO. Ne! mets, S.U.167,0SI.OO. CIPIIII. J4 .
PRI&lt;CES
400.649.00 IN ~ITNESS WHERECJ.I hnt hereunlo suMcrlbed mt
&lt;&gt;Pener 7-1.
California's Ellis Valentlnehithls ·offensive and defensive players of Northern Illinois' 37-14 victory over
Dall.v ..... .............. ..... ... , .. ... 20 CC' nt.s
nameand custd ~t~y stilllo be .!filled 11 Co!ulllbn,Oh111.lhr1day anG
d1te Rotl!lrt H. htz. Supl. ollnSIMIMf ol O~rc.
The Orioles now lead the secon&lt;!- lOth homer in the first and Toronto's the week.
Kansas. Returning to home terri- 905
S!Jie at Cl!ro, Dtll•rtmenl ol IMur1ncr. Ctr1tlicatf ol Com
Subscr-Iber.-. not d£&gt;slring to pa y thr carPhiMCt Thunclrr' 'i"ed. Su~nllftnrilnt ollnwr111ce ~I the Stalf ot
place Brewers by five games, with Jorge Orta homered in the sixth, his
Britt, making his second colle- tory, the Kansas City native
rlrr may remit in advance direc t to
Ohro. hrrrby cttUits that UNITED ITANDAIID USUR CO I)!
lnllranlooli!. Stitt olllld11na, hn cornplred w•l~ !he IIIII'S ot thrs Sil l~
New York and Detroit both 5'h out seventh of the season.
giate start , completed 21of28passes disrupted the Jayhawks' aerial
'l' hf' Dally Sf. ntln E'l on :J. 6 or 12 month
IPfll•ub" 111~1 nd rs autllo!lled durrn1 thetuHM!t weer kllr1nucl rn
ha!iil:o;. Crf'dlt will br ~iven carr ier each
for 265 yards and three touchdOwns attack and helped hold them to 270
tftrs llille rts IIIOI'QPrrale bu~n ess ol tfiSIJr~~~~;e Its Frn•~clll (OIIthlron
and Toronto a iongshot at elght.
Indians 7-3, Tigers 1-7
monlh ,
I'! ~hown b~ ~urm~~tlsl.lltr!lfntkl bawebren as IDIID'IIsOIIOecember
in
his
team's
42-26
victory
over
· Elsewhere in the American
John Wockenfuss' bases-loaded
total offense yards.
Jl. 1981· ~!llllled assets. 119.725.656.00; lrabrlrl•es. 51 5.399.·
177 00: Surlllu~. SJ.2?5.719.00. I!ICOmt, 19.756.93900: E~peMr
:-.: n subscrip1inns by ma ll per mi11C'd In
League, Chicago trirruned Oakland single in the ninth broke a 3-3 tie and
fur~ . $9.158.207.00. M
el 15511~. 1025.119.00: C.Dttll. 11.100.·
lowns when&gt; homC' car rier srrv ict' Is
000 00 INWifNESSWHEREOf.1hm bmu nto~bKnbrdmy111'"t
S:7 tn 10 innings, Texas defeated helped the Tigers salvage a spilt of
avo il ab lf'.
1116 uused ~~II to be tllued 11 Columbu5, O h iCl, lllr~ dly 1m! dtlt
Roller! H tbti , Sl4lt oiiMurtnce Gl oruo
Minnesota . 3-0 and Kansas City the doubleheader in Cleveland.
9&amp;2 SUte of Oh111. 1~pilftmMll ol lrnurur-ce. Certilrcll! at ~m ­
MAIL SUBSCRIPTI ONS
JIItii!Ct T ~tllf1dersrped S.UprnnterHientM lnsurlnctollhe Staleol
stopped Seattle 3-2.
1n the first game, right-hander
O~ro, hfrfllt cerld~eS lhal WISCONSIN NATfONAL UFE INS
lmddf' Ohio
~at
Otllkash,
Shtr
ol
W
&amp;oosm.
n.
tomf)ltfd wllh !lie IIW~ ~ lftrs
13 Wr(' ks .... ........... ................. $U.04
Baltimore's Mike Flanagan, 10-3, Lary Sorenson, 10-9, fired a sevenSllte 1pplre~blr to ~ ilnll rs llll!torrud du11n1 tile un~l ,e1r to
2tiWrf' ks . ............ ....... ,..... .. .. $:.!7.30
lrlllSIC I rn thiS Ililt rls lppropr~~rte brrsrntss ol' lmUrlnct ltsfrnan
gave up 10 hits before being lifted in hltter for the lndians. He lost his
clll condriOQII rs ~htiWn ~ rtslnnu.alstattmentlo ~nebftn 1slollows
52 WC'f'ks .. .... .............. .
.. .. $.11.48
on Dfcember 11. 1!1112 Admitted useb.-11,1.21 0.217 OO.lllbdrtrts,
the seventh after Reid Nichols shutout when La!)ce Parrish hoOutside Ohio
SHM.!I19.69HIO: Surplols, $25,330.555.00: IIICOR'II! $36.666.·
U Week" .. .. ............. ........ ..... $15.21
668.00, f.•~dr lli'e-t, 133. ~3 .829.00 Nfl m els. 128.330.555 00
smacked a leadoff homer. Tippy mered with one out in the ninth, his
C1111111. 110011.000 DO IN WITNESS WHEREOf, t ~M nereu"tG s~b :
26 Wc{'k~· .
.. ..... ... ......... . $29.64
scrrbed m~ ~!I!IIU11d CIU5MI m~ Sflllll bealh•l!d II Columlllrs.Ohro.
Martinez then came on to notch his 25th of the season.
~:.! WN•k s
..... ......... $56.21
thr• ~ ~ v ~ M "Itt Rolle:r1 H llatz. Su~l olln!.urJrl(t ul Ohrc.
15th save of the season.
The lnilians' Gorman Thomas hit
· John Lowenstein added an !nsu• a two· run homer in the first game
ranee run for the Orioles With a whUe George Vukovich added a
tKJmer in theelghth, his llth ofthe two-runshottnthesecond.
; Dan Petry, 16-8, won the second
season, off reliever Mark Clear.
- Dennis Boyd, 4-5, was the losing game while Ernie Camacho, 0-1,
WITH BOB KINGSLE
Pitcher, leaving in the fifth.
took the loss.
::
l'ankeesli,Brewers5
WhlteSox8,A's7
: Reliever Goose Gossage put out a
Julio Cruz . singled in Harold
Milwaukee rally in the last two Baines in the bottom of the lOth
innings to earn his 18th save.
Inning to lift the White Sox.
Chicago sent the game into extra
After the homestanding Brewers
hlld cut the lead to 8-5 on Ted Innings when Greg Luz!nsld -lilt a
.
'
Simmons' three- run homer in the two-out homer, his 27th, in the
241 THIRD' AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
eighth of George Frazier, Mark bottom of the ninth. Carlton Fisk
Brouhard and Marshall Edwards also homered for the White Sox, his
followed with singles. Gossage 24th of the season.
came on tn strike out Ben Ogilvie
Juan Agosto, 2-2, picked up the
and get Jim Ganter to hit into a victory, giving up one hlt while
dpuble play.
fanning three after corning in with
New York added three insurance one out in the eighth. Keith Atherton,
. '
runs in the ninth when Graig Nettles 2-2, was the loser.
cracked a three-run homer, his 18th
Rangers 3, Twins 0
"
of . the year. J uan Espino also
Charlle Hough ran his scorelessconnected on his first major-league inning streak to a club-tying 29 in
homer in the eighth for theY ankees. stopping the Twins on three mts in
: Ray Fontenot, 6-2, was the Arlington Stadium.

::::::

.562

Baltimore at New York, tni
California at Chicago, j nl
Detroit al Mllwau~. (Iii
Kansas City at Minnesota, (n)

Dou~

an~ Dirk

'

son 1~7) , (n)
Only gam~

f.

BASEBALL

Scott Chl"en 11481

5

00

~•Guns
New York· (ShJr)Ey 4~) 81 Mllwaulcel&gt;
ICaldwP.llll·9J, (DI
C&amp;llforn!a (Witt 7·11) at Chicago iDol ·

~

__

(Offense)

.5&amp;5

T7

Nfw Yc.-k

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Alexis
Arguello, his loss to Aaron Pryor
etchE!d forever in his mind, will try
again to make . boxing history
Friday night in what he says will be
the end of his lliustx1ous career.
Pryor fon.id Arguello's bid to
berometheflrstmantowint!tlesin
four weight classes when he

Mon!n&gt;al. 100; Murph~· .
Allanta, !ll: Schmidt. Philadelphia, ~;
Gum'ero,l_.oi!. Ans--lerr;, 1!9: Kenoody. San
RBI:

Chlcaco 8. Oakland 7, 10 1nn.1ngs ·
New York ll, Mtlwauka&gt; ~

in :

Transactions

.wa -

Kaftsu O ty 3, Seattlt&gt; 2
Cleveland 7-3, Detroit 1-7

10. Federa1-Hoeki ng...... .. ... ....... .......... 18 ~
x- Points \'{ere tabulated by 10 points for r.
first, nine for second, etc. First place votes
parenthesls.
No1e - All 10 coaches vo1ed.

78

M
00

s:z

BalUrrue 5, Boston 2
C-alli&gt;nu 9, Thi'Qflto 6
Texas a. Mlnneloca o

7. VInton County .. ...... ... ...... ............... .4() :
8. Alexander ............ .. .... ..................... 27 .
9: Miller . . . ...... .... .... .... .. .......... ...... .. 2.3 ,

'Yitllson ... ..... ........... ....... .. ....... ............. T
IA'o rkman ..... ......... ...... ............ .. .. .... .. r-..·c
DavP Har'dy 1l 901 ... ....
.. .. .. ..... ........ .T

I!AIITDIVIIMJN
W L Pc:t. GB

"""""""' w-.....,.•,o.,._

3. Warren Loca1 (3) .
.. ..... :~ .. ............ 82 ~
· 4. Meigs 111 ............... ....................... 11 •
5. Trimble .. ......... ... .. ........ ..... ...... ........ 56
6. Wellston ........ ... . ... . ........... .. ............ Sl ~

(Deferl!le)

llaJUmono

Hm~ . ~ - ~. ~~

Lo. Smtth. St. Lwls, Jl.'L
RUNS: Murp~. Atlan!a. 114; Ral~.
Monti'Ml. 107: Oaw01, Montreal. !Wi
Evans, San Franctsco, 87: Schmidt ,
Philadelphia, !W.

11 ,,.._

S...nle

2. Belpre- (2) ............ ...... .. .. .. .............. 87 ~

Daryle Workman !180 1 ..
. .. F'B
JOE' King tl49 t ... ..... ... .. .................. RHB

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

3W:

MOm~.

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

.,....

'

VALUES FROM $20.00 TO $50.00

NOW ONlY

FRUTH

$799

,

P~HARMACY

lltZO

AND

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

STORE HOURS:

9 30 A M TO 6 00 P M
FRI. 9 :JO.A.M. ~0 B:OO. P.M.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;;;~~~~~

p'

---,

•

DUTTON
DRUGS

MEIGS COUNTY'S NEWEST

SALAD BAR

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

(WITH 32 ITEMS)
WITH THIS COUPON

SAVE 50¢
REGULAR $2.09

ALL YOU
. CAN EAT
.
NOW ONLY

$1 59

(COUPON EXPIRES SEPTEMBER 30TH)

NOWHERE
.
ELSE BUT...
NOW IS THE TIME TO TRY OUR

~:; UPER SA LA D BAR

YOUR DRUG STORE AND PRESCRIPTION NEEDS WILL CONTINUE
TO RECEIVE THE SAME FAST AND COURTEOUS SERVICE AT
DUTTON DRUGS THRU SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER
lOTH.
.

'•

.

"

EFFECTIVE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12TH, ALL DUTION DRUG
PRESCRIPTION FILES, STORE PERSONNEL AND PHARMACIST,
HE~B CARSON, WILL MOVE TO THE NEW FRUTH PHARMACY
LOCATION AT 786 N. 2ND STREET, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.
FRUTH PHARMACY WILL BE OPEN ON MONDAY, SEPTEMBER
12TH AND WILL PROVIDE YOU WITH THE SAME ACCURATE AND
DEPENDABLE SERVICE YOU HAVE RECEIVED FOR 37 YEARS
FROM DALE DUTTON OF DUTTON DRUG CO.
•

..

•.

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Meigs property transfers

Thunclay, September 8, 1913
Page 6

Woodland retains Vietnam Vets porgram
A Veterans ' Admlnistratlon contract awa rded to Woodland Centers
(formerly t he Gallia-JacksonMetgs Community Menta l Health
Center) in 1982 has been renewed
through the summer of 1984. for
provision of readjustment counselIng and services to Vietnam
veterans, announced David Houch,
ACSW, Outpatient therapist for
Woodland Centers.
The Veterans' Administration
grant helps to pay tor Individual,
marital, family and group counsel-

ing to veterans of the Vietnam war.
who may still be struggling with
flashbacks, nightmares, withdrawal from their familieS and fr1el!dS,
depression, survivor guut, or other
problems related to their war and
Jl(lst-war experiences, Hough said.
One of the services offered at
Woodlalld Centers Is a weekly
Vietnam veterans "rap group,"
which Hough said provides the '
"first support many o! the men
have had In dealing with . the

Vietnam veterans In our comml,lnity who may still be struggling with
problems, and who still need

emotional effects of t)le war since
their return home.''
Hough said approximately 3J
Vietnam-era veterans have received services through the center
and that the program has been very
successful.
"The services we've offered to
the men contacting the center have
been helpful to them In putting
VIetnam behind them and moving
on with their Uves In the 1!ms," he
said. " However, !.h ere are other

atteii'Uon."

.

Any Vietnam veterans who are
lntereested In joining therapgroup,
or who experience any of the above
mentioned problems, are encouraged to contact David Hough at
Woodland Centers by calling 4465500 for Gallla and Mason Counties,
286-5075 in Jackson County or
992-2192 In Meigs Cou!lty.

Plans madefor Middleport block party
The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce Is striving for an
outstanding display of exhibits in
arts and crafts to point up the talent
of Meigs Countians at its first block
be h
party to
eld from noon to 9 p.m.,
Saturday, Sept. 24.
Mrs. Yvonne Scally Is handUng
MODEL_ Crystal Renee llamett, Racine, has been selecCed out of
the planning lor the arts and crafts
200 trants 1
displays and Invites all Individuals,
cas:g Agen:;
groups and businesses to take part
Parkersburg. &amp;be was Interviewed and had a PhotographY session done
in the block party.
In sportswear and dress-up gannents. She.will he kept on.fUe lor tu·t ure. .
MembeJ;S of the chamber met
··
Tuesday
night at the LaSalle Hotel '
f
re eren.ces. 0 n Friday she will he Interviewed lor phntograpby
·
•••!
ts d b
in Middleport to further plans for
- gnmen an rochure calalog work and will he doing numerous
assignments 1n both areas In the lall. Crystal Is lour years old and
their block party with Dr. Craig
resides with her grandparents Mr andMrs Ro
Mathews presiding.
Crystal is the dau liter ol Mrs '
·
· bert Waldnlg, Racine.
It was announced that the
Bamett, Pomero:.
.MelanleHolman, Colurnbus,andWesley
Middleport Fire Department will

~~:ur":, ~=· :."::::.:::::~U:.,~=::: :::;,~

. stage a

~~- _.c_Hors~ sl_!a.~
~

- ./

qas .· severat -area

:::;;.:_

_

.

.

..c,..~

-

will

POMEROY - A hayride and
weiner roast wm be held by the
Eleanor Circle of Heath United
Methodist Church, Thursday, 7
p.m., for members and thelr
famllles at the home ot Margaret Weber, Rutland . Each
family is asked to bring a
package of welners and buns.

Bahr family
reunion held
The annual Bahrreunlonwas held
recently at ihe Forked Run State
Park.
At the reunion were Tammy,
Jessica and Betlhany Barber, Bertie
and Bessie Bahr, B!ll Gould, Pat
Bahr, Jackie Wallace, Anita and
Scott Zietlnsld, all of Athens; Ms.
Flora Betzlng, AI and Eloise Hansel,
Nancy Tipton, Karen and Kevin,
Richard and Jean Tipton and Holly,
Chandlersville.
Evelyn alld Kenneth Well, Jean!lle Baker, Andrew, Matthew and
Jeremy, Norman and Dayleen
Bahr. Victor A. Bahr, Arvllle
Frecker, Lila Van Meter, Alvina
and V. J .. Ada Van Meter, Jane
Coates, Joey and Amanda. Kathy
Stone, Kay and Kirk F!ck, Chick,
J)onna, Lynn and Susan Conley,
Lorna M:ontgomeroy, GalllpoUs.
Henry, Eileen and Randy Bahr,
Lila Bahr Winters, Cheryl, Teresa,
an&lt;l, Casandra Sparks, Parkersburg; Vicki GlllUan, Russ, Linda,
Heather and Leah Well, Linda Bentz
and Brenda, Jim Gibbs, Bnan Well,
!l"d Zandra Vaughan, all local.

p~ans ~r the party.

The oral judging by the standard
OAGC system wlll hegln at 1 p.m. on
Saturday and is open to the publlc.
One blue. red, yellow and white
ribbon will be placed In each class.
The show Is open tothepubllc, not
only to view from 1 to 6 p.m. on
Saturday and 1 to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
but Is also open for exhibits In all but
five classes of the artistic design
division.
There are also several classes,
both In horticulture and artistic
design, for junior exhibitors.
They are cacti or succulent and
wayside flowers, five wlth one to a
container, and artistic, "Pomeroy
Regatta Frog Jump," design to
include a trog figur1ne. and "Roseville Pottery Festival," an arrange-

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday, 8 p.m., for election of
officers.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Benjamin
Salban ot Halt! will be the
speaker at a missionary meetIng to be held at the Mlddlepori
Independent Holiness Church
Sunday at 7: 3J p.m. The pubUc Is
Invited.
·

ARTS AND CRAFTS REGISTRATION
I (We) wish to register for participation In the Arts and Crafts
Division of the Middleport Chamber of Commerce Block Party on
Sept. 24.
. . .
.
Name .. .......... :,............ : .................... Phone .. ............... .

va'.

ment In a pottery container.
Special displays will Include
books and magazines on gardeni~~g
and arranging, and a display of
materials for flower arranging.

dl~por.t.

American ~gion has meeting

J)lembers'i.vtio ·
helped Wltli' the· county· lair car
parking project was planned for
Sunday, Sept. 18, when Drew
Webster 39, Amencan LAlg!on, met .
Tuesday night with Commander
Don Hunnell presiding.
The party will begin at non, with
dinner to be served at 1 p.m. Post
members held a discussion on the

car i&gt;arkllig project af th;;county .·
fair ami voted to pay the Meigs
Local Athletic Boosters $(,00 for Its
help with the project and SOO to the
Boy Scouts.
It was announced tl!"t . the
membership quota Is . over 50
percent of the goal and that dues
are now payable. The next meeting
will be held at the regular time on
Sept. 20.
,-----------

Per.:rona/. no·tes

Labor Day weekend guests of Mlr.
and Mrs. George Anderson were
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Dodson ol
Columbus.
Mrs. Wel!ha Bryson has been
discharged from Veterans MemorIal Hospital, and has returned to the ·
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Asa Hoskins, former Pomeroy
High School teacher, bas returned to
his Route 2, Pomeroy, home troin
O'Bieness HospltallnAthens, where
he underwent inajor surgery.
Hoskins, 84,is permitted visitors .

Get About Fast
in Comfort!

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-i
F;~ mou s lur lrt aoo
comfo rt. thQSO

WE ARE YOUR WESTERN
WEAR AND BOOTS

M llc r t; ~ SUOI S h il"Je

. ,.ltvv

....
MARGUERITE
SHOES

~

"

" The Miclffle Sho• ~"lore In
The Middle Block"

1-----------------------...l-___________:

$1 ooo

COORDINATING BLAZER

/,(

12 Oz.

lO's

Box of 50
Legal

$184

HEAVENLY BODY

HEATING

By Ogilvie
Susanna Wise

Susanna Wise, a student at the
Marshall University School ol
Nursing, has been awarded a $300
scholarship from the Grand GuardIan QftheStateo!Ohlo, International
Order of Job' s Daughters.
Daughter of Mr.'llnd MrS cflffsroe
Wise, Middleport, Susanna is a past
honored queen, 19lll, and while In
that station received the Excellent
In Youth Award In the 12th Masonic
Distr1ct from the Grand Master ol ·
all Masons in the State of Ohio,
Charles A. Br1gham. Jr.
She was active at Meigs High
SchoolwhefeshegraduatedinMay,
and Is a memberoftheHeath United
Methodist Church, Middleport.

Shampoo &amp;
Conditioner

PADS

16 Oz.
ONLY
.
'

$1..79
)

'

REG. '3.00

Coty Wild Musk

SPRAY
COLOGNE
"' 1 Oz.

REG. '3.95

77
ONLY $2

Famous
Northern
Quality

696

3 NOTEBOOKS
10lf2''x8", 120 Sheets Total

Alfred community news notes_______
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yost Mrs. David 'weber and children, · 15-18. Enroute here they toured
visited Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost, local; Charles Woode, Dayton;
Kentucky Horse F~rm. Lexington,
Lancaster Rt., and attended the . Juanita Robinson and Ralph GUll- Ky. They called at the Parkerbirthday party of Aldo Barnhill at tan, Blacklick.
Poole home.
ColumbuS.
·
Barbara Mantel, Athens. visited
Nina Robinson. Clara Follrod,
Mr. and Mrs. Oarence Hender- Martha Poole and family August 11. Mr. and Mrs. Clalr Follrod and
Wilson Henderson, Royal Oak. Kathy, DaVid Watson, Mr. and Mrs.
son visited Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wood,
Michigan, visited Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz, Mr. and Mrs. Avery
Zanesville.
Soliday School attendance AuClarence Henderson and other Goeglln attended . the wedding at
gust 14 was 38; church attendance,
VIcki Swartz, daughter of Gerald
relatives.
31. On August 21 Sunday School
T-Sgt. Terry Fetty, Wright- and Norma Jean Swartz, and
attendance was 44; church attendPatterson AFB, and Harold Fetty, Dennis Gibson at the Christ United
ance, 36.
·Langsville, were guests of Mr. and Methodist Church at Marietta Aug.
Church visitors were Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Poole and family August 20.
13.
The committee on nominations
Mrs. Josephine Lamb, Erica and and personnel met at the church
Lisa, Toledo, visited Mr. and Mrs. August 22. with Rev. Archer in
.
Arthur Spencer, Loretla Brown and charge. Members present were
corps representative. and Jamie
Brenda
Weber and families, August Florence Spencer, Nina Robinson,
Chapman, majorette
Nellie Parker, Gertrude Robinson
representative.
j
and Osle Follrod. The committee
The band recently held a successprepared the slate of officers for the
ful band camp at the high school In
1983-1984
year.
'
preparation for this year's appearBetsy Stivers and ·Renee' Riances. Seniors In this year's band
chards tied lor the most weight loss
are Jamie Chapman, Connie Clark,
Dee Dalley, Ann Diddle, Cheryl at the Monday night Five-Points r----.,.---------1
exercise class. Runner-up was
Folmer, Ann Jones, Sheila Koenig,
Your "Ektra Youth"
Rhonda Roush.
Robyn Pitzer, Pam Riebel, Alice
Florist Since 1957
At the Tuesday morning Mason
Ritchie, Melissa Scarbrough, Scott
Trussell, Scott Upton, Jeff Myers SllndereUa claSs, Mildred Hudson
and Helen Gnm lost the most
and Larry Cowdery.
weight, while Winifred Clarke was
FLORIST
the runner-up.
PH. 992-2644
The lall schedule lor the Wednesday morning Five-Points class was
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
started last week and new
Your FTD Florist
members are being accepted.

-

TV-CAPS

ACETAMINOPHEN 500 M. G.
(Compare to Tylenol Extra-Strength)

IOO's ONLY

$2 47

BAYER lOO's Reg. 53.28

ASPIRIN .......... ONLY $1 99

.

Five-poi'nts meets

TIMEX

WATCHES
"Special Group Of 24"

~~

NEW PADDED
CHEST
. By Lane

SAVE

$72

1/2

Price

~~:~~~~:~~.~~~ ~~-~~LY $1 19
..

(Compare to Cortaid)

Reg. '240

'

EFfERDENT

MERONA PANTS

Elastic waist, pull-on, poly-cotton, •
Available in assorted colors.
Sizes Small, Med., Large, Extra large an~ XXL.

SALE PRICE
$ OO

7

"OYER 48 YEARS IN THE-SAME
PLAa UNDER THE SAME MANAGIMINT"

~the kids to Ponderosa for free

"Kid's burgers and fries."
You can pick ~ any meal on the
menu. Your kids 12 and under v;iD eat
"Kid's bunlm and &amp;ies" absolutely
free. And iion't bget ID briiw alortl

couppns. heraJSe )IOU CCI1 still
take advantaQe of our spedal 5il\lire
on any iddt meaL
But huny. Our free meal deal is
)001'

only tJOd "'--.....

1933.

uu.,..., Seplenber

22

'

Stort tolcing advantage of this money-saving offer today
at any of these arwloa~tions:

"ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT"

60 Tablets

GRANDPARENTS
DAY IS
SEPT. 11TH

ONE GROUP OF LADIES

516.99 AND
117.99

RIOPAN
or
RIOPAN PLUS

DENTURE CLEANSER

$2QOO

REGULAR

BOXED
ENVELOPES ./

sgc sgc

SALE PRICE

'2995

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MONDAY, SEPT. 12

Box of 100
Standard

Eastern Band Council chosen
Eastern High School Marching
Band members have elected this
' year's band council.
The group Includes Sheila Koenig, president; Jennifer Grover,
vice president; Ann Diddle, secretary; Pam Riebel, treasurer; Scott
Upton, senior representative; Lea
Ann Gaul, junior representative;
Dawn Grueser, · sophomore representative; Todd Clay, freshman
representative; Maralyn Barion,
eighth grade representative;
Heather Ftnlaw, seventh grade
representative; Dee Dalley, flag

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IIEDU];J)

CONTACT 992-21 56

IN BROWNS &amp; BEIGE

REGULAR

: Chuck and Allee WU!lams, Racine, are announcing the birth o!
their fourth child, a daughter,
Tiffany Nicole.
The infant was hom Sept. I and
weighed seven pounds, nine ounces.
She was 211nches long. The couple
~ three sons, Shannon, 11, Corey,
three, and Adam, two.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Cisco Williams, Albany,
and the maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Qeland,
Racine. Mrs. Mabel Roush, Racine,
Is a great-grandmother.

Hillery Harris

SllVI~·-IIJJ~N'IT

CONTAC

Scholarship
awarded

Hill~ Harrl.!ii .d;!qghter o~ :Mrand Mrs. Jeff Harris, Portland; ·
recently celebrated her fourth
birthday with a weiner roast at her
home.
Attelldlngwere her brother, C. J.,
her maternal grandj)arents, Mr.
andMR}.EarlP. CrQss, Racine; her
paternal grandparel)__ts, Mr. and
• Mrs. ~!!SR. Harris, Po'itiand; '
her maternal great-grandmother,
Lena l:lolter, Racine; Mlr. and Mrs.
Gary Norris, Kendra and Kyle,
Racine; Diana Cross, Gahanna;
DelLi Cross, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs, Jack Turner, Ravenswood.
Sending gifts were her paternal
great-grandmother, Helen Harr1s,
Portland, and·Mlr. alld Mlrs. Frank
Mamone, Lor!, John and Chr1stlne,
Worthington.

PART· TIME HELP IN MIDDLEPORT
NEEDED AT ONCE.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY
GOOD PAY

BROWN

SALE PRICE

$}899

Williams birth

Columbus 'a nd Southern Ohio
Electric Co. to Milo B. Hutchison,
Betty Ann Hutchison, Release of
Right of Way, Chester.
Gary L. Riddle, Joyce C. Riddle
to D. C. Bauman, Parcels, Olive.
Karen J . Bullington to Phillip L.
Bullington. Parcel , Rutland.
Cha rles W. Cornell Jr. , Beula h
Cornell to James E . Diddle, Right
of Way, Sutton.
Charles W. Cornell Jr., Beulah
Cornell to James E. Diddle, Right
o! Way, Sutton.

HELP WANTED

PANTS

REGULAR

:Tiffany Nicole Williams

plc r·rty nt too ro om

WRANGLER MISSES .
EASY-STRIDER DRESS
BEIGt

Harris birthday

Type of Display ..•................ . ..................... :..... : .. :...... ..
(Complete and mail to Mrs. Yvonne Scally, LaSalle Hate, Mld-

-NA~Y. BLACK~

clsrs.,

~

.

ters ol Mr, and-'Mrs , lfarry Roush, New Haven, w. va.; Scott Meeks,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Shorty Meeks
Athens; Stacy Bumgardner:
daughter --of. Mr. and · Mrs Bumgardner New Haven w
Scott
Fisher, ~n of Mr. and Mrs. Fisher.
Middlepor t; Jocelyn L!ncott
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Llncott:
Shade, and Marshall Arrington son
of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Arr1n~on
Galllpolis Ferry, w. va.
'

88TH BIRTIIDAY OBSERVED - Ne\la SeYfried. left, iu.d Edith
LanDing were hanored at TrlnUy Church Wem-day wllh a blrihday
luncheon hooted by tbe Busy Bee Class and Happy Harvesters. The
decorated cake was made lortbe honorees by BWIIIY Kuhl, a member ol
llelh Mrs. Seyfried and Mrs. LannJDs are longtime
• the
· .members ollhe church. llelh observe their 89th blribdays thl8 month.
~

-p~rttctpauts· ...- ~4J)ar1Y ~. -JlCl$1'

Janet Bolin, an accredited judge
of the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, will judge the Rutland
Garden Oub flower show to be held
Saturday and Sunday atthe Rutland
United Methodist Church.

POMEROY- Southern Local
Band Boosters will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m., In the band room.

Middleport Council has given the display of arts and crafts,
permission for the ctianiber to close residents are to complete the
N. Second Street, from Mills to accompanying registration lorm
Rutland Street, for the designated which Is to be sent to Mrs. Scally, at
the LaSalle Hotel, N. Second Ave.,
hours of the party.
In order tQ plan· sufficiently for Middleport, as soon as possible.

w!ll

Flower show scheduled
by Rutland Garden Club

Calendar
POMEROY Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phl Sorority
meet
Thursday at 7:45 p.m. In the
Riverboat Room of the Diamond
Savings and Loan Co.

; '·

barbecue 1n

Grande;" Matt -Justus, son -ol Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Justus, Bidwell;
Laura Swick, daughter of Sherlywn
Tripp, Vinton; Tiffany Franklin,
daughter of Richard Franklin and
Vickie Franklin· Chris Bates son of
Pam Bates, Oak Hill; Mica Jones,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Jones, New Haven, w. va.; M. K.
Ohlinger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Ohlinger. New Haven, w. va.;
Dee-Dee and Kr1stln Roush, daugh-

Kanauga Stables awarded a
of Nelson and Linda Newell of
youth saddle and a championship Galllpolls, took a fourth place high
trophy to Mike Oouglas, age 16,
point trophy on "Sandman," with a
Sept. 2. He is thesonofMr. and Mrs. total of 20 point~.
Al!on Douglas, Shade, Ohio. He won
In 20 preilmmary events, five
on the horse, "Roscoe P. Coltrain,"
different types of competition proowned by. Kelly Meeks, with a total · vlded points for the riders In the
ol 36 points.
youth barrel races, pole bends, cone
Also winning with a total of 36 races, straight line barrel races,
points was Rodney Byus, age 12,
and dash for cash; Points were
son of Paul and Judy Byus,
accumulated from the four shows
Galllpolls, on "Brasso," which he
held July 8, 29, Aug. 12 and Sept. 2.
First place winners took four
owns. The two competed lor the
points, second place three points,
final championship In a cone race to
determine championship and
third place two points, and fourth
1reserve.
place one point per event.
Reserve championship went to
The competitors were 16 years
Byus with a high point trophy and
old and under, from the tri-state
area. Riders from this area were:
belt buckle. Douglas also won a
third place high point trophy with 26
Randy and Paul Sanders, sons of
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Sanders, Rio
points. Samuel Newell. age 11. son

1HURSDAY

chicken

conjunction with the party, and that
60 prizes have been secured lor
awarding throughout the party
hours.
There will be the selection of
Little Miss and. Mr. Middleport
Block Party ullder the concession
activities which are being headed
by Mrs. Joyce Blake and David
Mann Is heading the listing of
musical entertainment to be tealured throughout the hours of the
party. · A number of games for
· young people are.. being. p·lanned.
with Jean Whobrey heading that
activity.
Next Tuesday at 8 a.m.,
members
met for a continental
breakfast at the LaSalle to further

Michael Lowell Bing, Dlana L.
Bing to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co .. Right ol Way,
-Sutton. _
Charles _E .' Yost, Margaret Mae
Yost to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., Right of Way.
• Sutton.
Milo B. Hutchison. Betty Ann
Hutchison to Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. , R!ghtofWay,
Chester.
Fred W. Crow Jr., George S.
Hobstetter, Maxine Hobstetter to
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co., Right o! Way, Chester.
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. to George S. Hobstetter, Fred W. Crow Jr., Release
Right of Way, Chester.
Jewell L Mathews. Catherine J.
Mathews to Edwin S. Cozart,
Shertff' s Deed. Sutton.
Edwin S. Cozart, Laura H. Cozart
to Margaret Esther Metcalf, .234
acre, Sutton.
James W. Bland, Carolyn A.
Bland, Virginia Margaret Bland to
VIctor C. Young Jr., Mary K.
Young, Lot 286, Pomeroy Village.
Roger L. Hawk, Shirley A. Hawk
to Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., Right of Way, Orange.
Richard L. Haggerty, Lucllle
Haggerty, Robert V. Haggerty to
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electnc Co .. Right of Way, Middleport
VU!age.

Upper liver R01d
(Across from tht Airport)

ONLY

SHOP MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE FOR
GIFTS AND CARDS FOR
THAT SPECIAL GRANDPARENT

RUSSBl STOYER, Reg.

$224

35~

CANDY BARS ......... oNLY

--·- -----------·--1

Top

IIIII Winp.,

100% Expensive

Nyton/Anlron
SAVE eo-.
1200

tR1
-·CE'S·l:ifi.:8s.
fU~"~RE
~~~urs.
t
OR:

!
I

446-9523

- -· - '

24(

CRAYOLA

SWISHER LOHSE

CRAYONS

Pharmacy

24's

I

Ko''""'"c"''""'"·•·••·
•·••. \1
llltnald Hanlnt. R"'"""""'·
. Ph.
Mon . ltlru Sat. • :oo a ,m. to• p.m .
Jundawo 10 : JO to 11 : :tG •nd Stc9 .m .

PAE~CRIPTIONS

E. Maln

Friendly Servin

L-----~~~:'.:.:

PH . "N'U
Pomtn~v.o .

______J

�l'tlge-8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8, 198.3

Patrol checks five accidents
The Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Patrol reponed a one-vehicle acci dent involving a car driven by
Steven D. Morris. 22, Rt.1, Rutland .
occurred Wednesday a t 5: 05p.m .on
Rutland Townshi p Road 48.
Morns · ve hicle was traveling
nonhbound on 48 when a goat
jumped from the east side of the
roadway and s truck his vehicle . The
car had ilght damage.
The state pa trol reponed a
one-vehicle accident involving a
pick-up truck driven by Jonathan
TilliS, 60, Rt 1, Reedsville. occurred
Wednesday at 5: 55 on Ohio 7 in
Orange Township.
Tillis' vehicle was t raveling
nonhbound on 7 when he struck a
deer that ran onto the roadway. The
vehicle had moderate damage a nd
Tillis had minor visible injuries.
A one-vehicle accident Involving
a pick-updriven by J ohn E . Clonch.
17, Pomeroy, occurred Wednesday
at 9:13p.m . in5alisburyTownshipof

Business Services

Clonch's vehic le wa s traveling
southbound on H 3 w hen a deer ran
into the pick-up's path. Clonch·s
vehicle, which struck the deer, had
moderate damage.
The state patrol reponed a
two-car accident involving vehicles
driven by Jeffery L. Davis, 'n,
Pome roy, and Glenna A. Rummel ,
70, Syracuse, occurred Wednesday
at 4: 34 p.m. on Ohio 124 in Lebanon
Township of Meigs County.
Davis" vehicle was traveling
eastbound on 124 and stopped totum
left . Rummel's vehicle - also
traveling eastbound on 124- didn 't
stop and struck Davis' vehicle in the

rear.
Both cars had light damage and
Rummel was cited for driving
without an a ssurm clear distance.
A two-vehicieaccldentinvolvinga
car driven by Charlie R. Geary, 19,
Middleport, and a parked wrecker

owned by Joe Bobbins, Rt 1,
Bidwell. occurred at 8:05 p.m .
Wednesday on County Road 32 in
Cheshire Township.
Bobbins· wrecker was parked
soutbound on 32 and attempting to
pick up another vehicle when
Geary' &amp; vehicle - unable to stop
because the bra kes failed -snuck
the wrecker head on .
Both vehicles had light damage
and Geary was cited for driving
"1thout an operator's license, showing a fictitious registration and
driving an unsafe vehicle.
The state patrol also reported. a
one-vehicle accident Involving a
trailer driven by Ralph T Dillon, 46,
Mansfield, Ohio, occurred at 4:35
p.m . Wednesday on Turkey Run
Road in Cheshire Township.
Dillon's traUer was traveling
westbound on Turkey Run RQad
when he struck a utility wire. The
car was not damaged In the
accident

Custom
Sawmill Work
•Planing
*Shop Work
•New Construction
•Remodeling

YOUNG'S

-Addono and romodoling
-Roofing c:nl gutt.r work
----C.OIK•et• work

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.

.

.

'.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

priZe. The pooup Includes front, I 1o r, Doetle "*.
Debbie l'llelps, Helen Phelpi, Debbie HeDSiey, Sam
Pickens; back, llo r, Janet SIJ1111811, Sue Rice, JieUy
Smllh, c"JJ'•In; Daana Rice, Shamn Smith and Mary
McAn&amp;u, auxiliary presJdent. Member Kbn Batey
was not present for the picture.

GOLD -The inembel"8 of tbe tug-ol-war team of

the Auxiliary of Melp Aerie zm, Fraternal 0tt1er of
Eagles, may not be worth their weight Ia gold, but
they're good for big money. 'nieieam rooentlyplaeed
llrst In tbe tug-of· war contest held atJaclaoonviDe aacl,
In addition lo lbe trophies IIley hold, won a SMO cash

!I ?fl·UC

.New Homes - Extensive
Remodeling.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
•Aitrnintllt &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience

ment
namedMike
to be
McDaniel
In charge
wasoftbe
recrultguest

ot~,:~::·wasopenedwiththe

PULLINS
._:,_:DOzers
EXCAVATING
·
·
-Boct&lt;ho""

- Dump Trucks

-Lo-Boy
- TrMcher

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

- Sewer

-Gu Unas
-Septic Systems

LARGE OR SMALL JOBS

PH. 992-2478
8-18-l

wi~~gJ~:=~

the ages of
18-35 are invited to join or attend any
of the meetings which are held on the
second and fourth Monday of each

.J;tS - -

-...·--

1 C,,.,, "' I Mn .. OP""' 'n '"'" "n~ ~l
~"' """""""

ip.,,o, n ... t • .onu o

., """""""""'•"'•

.- Happenings around Meigs County...
Admitted --Helen Icenhowe r,
Pomeroy; Betty Wilson, Pomeroy;
Pauline Taylor, Middleport; Elizabeth Beaumont, Reedsville: Carl
· Rairden, Hartford: Robin BuHington, Pomeroy; William Ebersbach •.
Pomeroy.
Discharged--Martha Searls,
Denver HyseU, Carl Gilmore.

_ Plan .))AV meeting
A meeting of Meigs Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans has
been set for6: :xlp.m. Monday at the
.chpaterhomeonButternut Ave., M.
. · L. KeUy, adjutant, announces.

.· Free clothing day
Free clothing day will be held
trom2to4p.m. Frldayand5aturday
. at the former Warner Insurance
· ' buUdlng, W. Main St., Pomeroy.
Anyone needing clothing is
welcome.

·. . Harry L. Wallis, 61. Gallipolis
' Ferry, wasdeadonarrlvalWednesday at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
Born Feb. 12, 1922 In Mason
County, be was the son of Mrs. Etta
Nora Wallis of GaUlpolls Ferry and
the late B.C. Wallis Who Preceded
him in death Dec. 25, 19m.
A fol1llE!" merchant and farmer,
he spent hiS entire life In Mason
County. He was a member of the
Loyal Order of the Moose 731 of
Point Pleasant.
Surviving in addition to his
mother are his wife, Mrs. Frances
.Yester· Wallis, Gallipolis Ferry;
. · three daughters, Gale WalliS, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Darlene Hayes,
· Pomeroy, and Mrs. Marlyn Blain,
GallipoliS Ferry; two sons, Benny
and T&lt;:&gt;rry WaUis. Gallipolis Ferry;
three brothers, Jake Wallis, Point
Pleasant: Alden Wallis, Southside;
· Hillard Wallis, Gallipolis Ferry and
eight grandchildren.
Funeral services will be Friday at
1: :xJ p .m. at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with the Rev. Odel Bush and
.Charles R. ' 'Tommy" Kinnlard
"Otflclatlng. Burtal will follow atZlon
Cemelely In Galllpo&amp; Ferry.

Authoriz6d John Deer.
~ Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1·3-lk

J&amp;F

•DOZER ·· ·
•BACKHOE ' ··
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE .
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATJ()fj
WORK
•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK

100. pd.

•Washera •Diahwuhers
Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Free:~ers

BONDED &amp; WOIIK GUARANTEED

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD

PARTS ond SERVICE

1 ~ ... ~ S'"" I U• ~ '" d•io,IM ~ I

9

Emergency runs

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

~
1°h~1,..j i D 8 o..,

-

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11
~
12 S.t ... o.d W ont o&lt;l

·..... _

1 I H"' l"" .. OW~ " "~.'I O

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lJ P, oiU O•Gft.ol $ . .... .- . ,

,,..,s •••

l l .........
J2 flll obol • H""'OI I"' hi•
J3 ~

.......

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l~ ' "'"'"U II """' ft !IO
l~ l ou • " •• ••• •
l l ~ • •I f llo to i\'on1~~

-

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~~· ll• n•
ut&gt;ol• " ""'nlar
4 ]

f.o• mo

1ft' ~Oft f

-

~I " "''""'"''~Goo d '
~1

Cll

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53 Anl&lt;lu~l

5 4 M"&lt;

'"'"' '~"'""''•

b ~ R u •~•"'I'Sb pplo,..

5 6 . ...... ~-51 M, ooc:ol '" '"~ """""
58 lu• h A \l~q~ool&gt;1o:•
!&gt;! l o• !iole o • T•• ....

81 '""""f~ u --•n•
~ 2 w ..,~ll o o a ..,.

. . ........... _ ,,,,. ,.. ft,

6 J ' ' '"""Dd

as

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f.,,,..,..,., Aoooou

t ~ !;c: h -

lV&amp; C IIIl ~""'~

lol• ..c .t~oon

l~ w

~h""

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write
Cllssified Dtt&gt;t.
Dailly Senti1el
Ill Court St .. Pomeroy. Otlio 45769

We Print ALMOST Anything
On AlMOST Anything

CUSTOM PRINT

949-2358
CUSTOM WORK - AIR BRUSH
CAPS
JACKETS
UNIFORMS
T-SHIRTS
TROPHIES
QUANTITY SPECIAlS
TRANSFERS-LETTERING
B-22-1 mo. pd.

Al TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Loweat Rates

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
'Siding
'Roofine
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodeling
20 Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

Around
•Dump Truck
Service

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

Call 843·5425

742-2328

7·S-Z mo. J)d .

Hl·ltc

c .....

•

~~M

, ~ ~to ll -

11"'~-nt

f lfl (~ i/i•· •lllfJJ!•·•

11 "•1 DolorS olo
12 lo uc:• o ' "'S olo
1l \lon o ll. 4 WO
10 M ot ato , olu

I ,IJ.,,.-;,.!! t.·l ,.,, '"'" •· •·,.,.,,"''II''' ..

7 § Bull I. III!OIOfO

n.. ,.. c...... .,

71 Aw lo Fono &amp; A« OUQ•••

n

Aw ou ~n•"

18 Como01q

f...,,_..,

-

••u C..,oll l &amp;
44&amp;

c.......

-~
c.....

Jill 'I'Oiton

a• l~o&lt;: ~&lt; c;.ol &amp;II • " """ " ,.._~•· n ~

l lt!l

M,..Go.,d&lt;O

~a
] rl)-

H ill

G,.yOftDIIt

1&amp;7 let ... Fott.

'""

643 ......... 0 •••
179 - .... .

,......,Do.............,
G«o tt•

.912 ....,........,

......... .

J67

81 .. _.. '""''""·- ··
82
ll [Hh a h~~

!87es1,

MILLER
ElECTRIC
SERVICE

' ''" •·r llw

.......

141 ...........
1161 Cooho...

11'5
"~-·
4M ~~7'6

.....

o.-

.,.,J
--la:l! ....._"_
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l .....
•n
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...... .....,

Up to 1 1 - n

upoa

M H R ""O"
U p-01 ••~

s-""'"',..,_

··--·--""-""•'

Upto i $ Wootk

· ~ ·to-•

u

00

••oo
1100

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofing - Sidin1 - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeline - Custom .Pole
Barns.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re- · ,
pair service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

We can repair and ntcore radiators and heater cores. We can al10
acid boil and rod out radietorw. We 11110 repair
Ges Tanka.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2l96
Middleport, Ohio
1·13·tfc

l ·Hfc

Public Notice

Corn er ot Mulberrv A venue and
Second Streer 1n Poroorny.
Ohto. at 10·0 0 A.M on Fnd ay,
Seotem ber 16th. 19 8 3
The r• g ht 1S reserved to re1ect
any b1d Arrangemen ts to see
th e property may be made by

12·20-tlc

ca lhng 992-5 132

th e Last W1ll
and Testam ent of
Grace L. JiVIden.

married on Oct. 25, 1961; two sons,
ShonC!IftonandJohnHeruyLucas,
both of South Lyon, Mich.; three
daughters, Molly, Natalle and
Laura Letgh Lucas, au at home: a
brother, WU!Iam-J. Lucas, Auburndale, Fla.
Services will be held atlO: :lla.m.
Saturday at the Old Dexter Church
with the Rev. David Hobbs otflclatlng. Burial willbelnlheMountOllve
Cemetery at Hun1cane, W. Va.
Friends may call at the Hunlel'
FuneraiHomelnRutlandtrom6to9
p.m. Friday.

Sunday homecoming

Plan car wash

B•ds w tll be rece tved un t1l

2 00 P M Sep1 23 . 1983 at

Sept 8 . 15

A car wash will be held at the
Syracuse. Fire Station 5aturday,
Sept 10, sponsored by the Pomeroy
Health Care Center. Proceeds will
be used to purchase Christmas gifts
tor the residents of the center.
Price IS $3 for outside only and $5
tor inside and out Donations will be
greatly appreciated.

fir:=====::::::::::::::::;1
''DANCE FOR JOY"
JOY COMPTON-INSTRUCTOR

AEROBICS DANCE CLASS
12 WEEK SESSION OR
24 CLASSES *45.00
Mon-Wed. 4:15 to 5:15
6:30 to 7:30
TUES.-THURS. 5:30 to 6:30
CLASSES START SEPT. 12
SENIOR CITIZEN BUILDING

Mulberry Hits .• Pomeroy
For Reaistration Call 992-n73

2

ln Memoriam

Ra~.

Refripqtors

Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS
742-2362

PUBLIC NOTICE
t he mayor's off1ce. 237 Race
St . M id dleport. OhiO for re ·
hab wo rk at the Midd leport
Pu bl•c l tbrary for th e pur ,pose of mak1ng th e li br ary
mo r e access ible to t he han dicapped . Plan s and s p ee d ,.
c att o n s may be rev•Bwe d at
th e mayor' s o ff 1ce
Fred H o ff m a n . M ayo r
V1 llage o f Mtdd leport

Washers, n.."'1"'~

Route

ALL STEEL &amp;

4, Po•:.?¥.1•••

POLE BULDINGS

JEWELL'S

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PLUMBING and
HEAnNG

Sizes st1rt from i2'xl6'

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
· to 24'x36'
I nsulatd Doe Houses

•Experienced
•RMIOnable
•Wotk Gueron1eed

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, 011.
I'll." 614-143-519f
. ,.

·

~

JOB - BIG OR SMALL
992-6030
Minersville, DH.

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel
Mason, W. Va.
C. L. Kitchen

WOOD
WORLD
2506 Grind talntl All.
Vi111111, W. Va.

1·3·1.fllll. pd.

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

$3000

No Sunday Calls

8·29-1 mo.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

446-2540.

Clean newspapers . Call

446-0772.

4 -6 weeka old klnena. Call

446-9628.

longhair black kitten famale. 8 weeks old. Give to

992-2038.

P~ppio~. 614-.742 -~606.

kitt8ns-paf1:

614-992-2219.

bobCat.

AKC Garman Shepherd .. Famale. Approx . 4 years old.
To good home or farm . Good

watch dog. 614-992-.5071.
Kitten• to give away. 2
males, 2 female&amp;, tiger
•tripped. Call 614-986-

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy; OH.

Arbaugh's Archery

CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
OEEP CLEANED - SHORT DRYING TIME
USE SAME OAV- ANn-RESOIL DETERGENTS
COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIOENTIAL

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•Professional Spot Removal Service
•Wall &amp; Cellini Cleanin&amp;
r!''
"Insurance Work Welcome··
' 1 James Kni&amp;ht-273-5388
I -~
In Ravenswood
il Rick Hovatter-992-2606
In Middleport
"free Estimates On All Services"

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

M".L
CONTRACTING-

8·1·1 mo.

&amp; Hunting Supply
TUPPERS PlAINS. OH .
'Bows &amp; Accessories

'Guns &amp; Ammo.
'live Bait, fishin&amp;
Tackle
'Huntin&amp; &amp; Fishin&amp;
license
"Do&amp; Supplies
llrs.: Weekdays 10-6
Sot. &amp; Sun. 10-•
Closed Tues. &amp; Wed.

8·Hmo.

"Excavating
•ponds
•septic Tanks
•Hauling

SALE
DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% OR MORE

"FREE ESTIMATES"

PH. 992-2280
2·23·!1(

FULL blooded Alaskian
Spitz. female, no papers,
and pup . 1 Female black cat.

ATTENTION LADIES!

THREE kinena. nine waeka
1)1(1. Two are white with
blue-gray markings and one

Call614 -992- 7~24 .

Insurance career! Up to
8300. per week while training flheen weeks. Unlimited
aarnings. including expense
allowance after training. Exceptional fringe benefits and
good future management
potential for mature person
selling and servicing life
insurance. Call 614-992·
2480 between 1-3 p.m .
F~iday .

E.Q .E.

needs mature person M·F to
sell full line of high quality
lubricant&amp; to manufacturing,
trucking. construction and
farm customers. Protected
territory, thorough training
program. For personal inter·
view, send work history to
G. C . Lins, Southwestern
Petroleum, Box 789 , Fort

304-882-2964.

Situations
Wanted .

12

6869. ,Will make nice pets.

Will do babysitting in my

SHEPHERO-Cotlle pups. 6

home. Live In Middleport
area. Call 614-992-6349 .

weeka old, 304·676-2264.

6

Lost and Found

LOST in vicinity of Popular
Ridge or Turkey Run . Walker
Coon hound. with alot of
white on body. with brown
head. $60 reward. Catl

Male Student would like to
ahara ride to Hocking Tech.

614-992 -3753 .

.

RETIRED stieet metal
worker &amp; plumber seeks part
time job. Will do anything .
Write: Box C-1 Pt. Pleasant
Register, Pt . Pleasant. WV

.

25650.

. FOUND: Black dog on Union
Ava., Sunday night . Phone

1!14-992-2863.
Would the lady from Svracusa that called about my
lost r1ccoon please call

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallla County
1or almost a .century. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet Individual needs, Con tact Kail Burleson, agent .

Phona 446-2921 .
Auction every Tuesday
night. Pt. Plaannt, WVa .
Auct. lonnie Neal. Farm,
household, estate, etc. Call
Rick Peerson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm. An tique &amp; liquidation aale1.
licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

17 Miscellaneous
Custom Butch&amp;ring . 304882-3224. Open 8 deya
weekly .

wva. 304-773-6786 or
304-773-9186.

1 8 Wanted to Do

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckload&amp; of new
merchandiaa every week.
Conaigments of new and
uaed merchandiae always
welcome. Richard Reynolds

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable

Auctlonaer. 276-3069.
AUCTION avery Saturday

Mt. Alto

Ball Auctioneer, 304-428-

8177.

9

Buy

Wa pay cash for late model
clean used CIIJI.
Jim Mink Chev .-Oids Inc .
Bill Gena Johnson

446-3672
Wanted ~o buy uaed coal 81
wood heatera. Swain Furniture, 446-3169. 3rd. &amp;

Olive St., Galtipollo. Oh .

All ~ypes o1 roa1
or rtPiir. &amp;UtiJrs ·111d
downspouts, lllllr eltMiaw 11111 ~ stonn
doors lf1d llintkMs.
All Wort aurin~

In Memarlem

CATALOG

·

MERCHANT
Gregg • Patty Olbbe-Ownere

PH. 992.-2178

In memory of J-ph E.
Bluall who p a - awoy
Soptombof a. 1112. lldly
mt-d by wife and chi-.

9 to 6 .

Jaycl!e Buildi ng . 601 Burnett Rd . Proceeds to Muscu·
lar Dystrophy.

P.M. Lorry Strickland, 814·
61!2-7832.

..n. antlqu11, etc.. Com·
plete household&amp;. Write:

M.D. Mlllor. Rt. 4, Pomoroy.
Oh. Or 992-7.780 .
Wanted to buy . New. us4Mt &amp;

antiquo furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete house·
holds. Aloa OOI)'Piato Auctl-

Buying dally gold, ollvor
oolno, rings, jewelry, otltlllng
ware. old ooln1. lerge aurkett I a - Shop, 2nd . Avo.
Middleport, oh. 814-8923478.

WANTED to buy, ganalng •
root, dry tapo &amp;

evenI'VCIIa). Local
.712· 2111.

.....,.,. 304-

t------

.

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING-LANE DANIElS . Reliable service
since 1966 . Associate of
Brunicardi MusH: Co. Phone
614-742- 29~1.

pening. screen &amp; glass Installed . Call 034-615-3694.

31
~ewly
.
frame, 1 V2 bpth.
city schools,

Coli 446-0276.
In Middleport, newly ramo~
deled home with fireplace,
possible woodburMer, close
te schools and shopping.
Call 614-992 · 6941 .
By owner House with 2
acres more or less, been
remodeled . orchard . 87 ft.

Y·ard &amp; Craft Sale Sept. 9.
333 Third Ave. in back.
beside of Municipal parking
lot . 9 to 7 .
..-.......,.,
·

1647 Lincoll1 Heights . Sept.
9-10 . Dishes, shl!etl, some
hand tooli , clothes, misc. ·

I

Yard Sale Adkins residence.
Rodney Village II. Friday 8t
Sat. 9 to 6 . Good girls
clothing, infant thru size 5,
·winnie the Pooh bedroom
cordln,.teJ, P.. ~arTier a. tv · ·
pewrit8r. car radio. misc . · ·

Sept. 12. 13 . Langsville, 1h
mile off S.R. 124 on Dexter
Rd. Bobo residence. Exc.
men , woman, children
clothes. uniforms. tovs.
misc_.. -.1~ 8 :11"! .-4 p , nk ~aln
c'ancel~ . ·
·
·
· '

Garage Sale Firat Time 5
Family Sale . 453lariat Dr .,
fir~t St. W of Holzer hoap.
Sept. 8-9 -10 . 9:00·1 Lots
needle point, macrame,
crochet, beads. some glass.
Great for gifts, several size
clothing, rummage, lots of
misc.

·· ··-·-fl..- Piiiiisa·ri·f ····

4 Family Yard Sale on At.
•
218 across from' Kriner Rd.
Sept. 8 . 9 . &amp; 10 . From 9 ~
to 7PM .
-. &lt;ie ;.;.

Extra nice hounon Rt. 664,
approx. 3 mi. East of Porter.
price reduced. Shown by
appointment only. Call 446 -

9340 , 446-7901 or 614266-6413.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

WELDING. gas, electric,
portable, experienced dependable. low rates, small or

14x66 with 82 Vemco
12K20 room attached , central air, fireplace. located Rio
Grande School Dist. Call

·

_ _' _·_m_,._c_. - - - - - 1

10K56 Z bdr., all electric
mobile home. good cond.,

82.600. Call 446-0974.
1 2x68 Vindale mobile
home. 6' expando living
room. all electric with wood
burning atove, large concrete patio including 1 room
remodeled school building
with wood burning stove,
carpor1 &amp; wood atorege
building on 2 acres. Hem-

lock Grove . 614 -949 -3069
after 5 for more info.

24x40 double-wide build·
ing, insulated, paneled. alectricity. Would make nice
home, on one acre lot with
septic tank. All for S7,600 .

992-3460 .

LABOR DAY SPECIAl.
NOW THRU SATURDAY,
SEPTEMBER 10th. INTROOUCING OUR NEW
scorr·s HOME. •soo.oo
ABOVE INVOICE . ALL
STATE MODULAR
HOMES. HALF WAY BETWEEN POINT PLEASANT
ANO HUNTINGTON ON ST.
RT . 2. 304-676-2711 .
USED M081LE HOME, IN
GOOD SHAPE. 304-6762711 .
18 Holiday, full selfcontained. very clean, roll up
awning, many extr11. 3Q4·

676-3445.

5066.

814-245-6308 af1er 8PM.

33

Sale by owner--Ruatic Hilla.
Syracuae. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. bi -level with patio &amp;
cover. 30x30 two-car gar·

For nle . by owner. 1981
King1ly ell electric mobile
home, 14x70 with 7x24
expando. 2 bdr .. 111, bath ,
utility room, central air ,
fireplace. awning &amp; under·
pinning. Reason for 1elllng
muu relocate. Price

36 acre farm . Has small
barn. wa~ii:-" electricity , lots
of pasture . Some farming,
timber. Good place to build .
Mineral rights go. Call' Arnold Grate. 742-2246 or

ogo. 16x12 born. 16141
992-2967 after 6 p.m.
Immediate

Opportunity

A tori, diahwasher. refrigera -

t0

Call Ben Slawter at 614-

Call304-67f;i-1726.
1972 Cattle/ _m_o_b-ile_h_o_m_e
For sale in Syracuse on 100

Business

&amp;.

CLEAN USED MOBILE 742 -3069.
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL ITY MOBILE HOME SALES. 1981 Shultz, 2 bedroom,
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS. excellent condition.Phone
RT 36. PHONE 446 -7274. 304-676-5376 .

For aale or lease. late 1980
Windsor 1 4x70 with 7x22
expando. Three bedroom,
two full baths, cl!ntral air.
stero, microwave, and more.
Top of the tina home.
Located Rodney-Cora Rd.

304-273-2856.

friday

1976 Horizon 12x66. 3
TRI - STATE MOBILE bedroom. 1 Yz bath, natural
HOMES . USED - CARS, ges cookstove, furnace and
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS . hot water ha~tor . Maytag
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL washer and dryer, central
air, underpinning . $9000,
446-7572 .

House cteaning or take c:are
of elderly person. 6 days a 1-:---~:--:----::­
week, will cook the meala. located In Syracuse-Near
achool &amp; swimming pool. 3
Call 446-2942.
bedroom situated on one·
Babysitting in my home on third acre lot. 824.600 . or
lincoln Pike. Daytime only. will rent for 8276 mo.
Experienced. Call 446· 304-866-3934.
Jil 200 lot . 2 outbuildings,
room for large garden . 3 or4
bedroom older home. needs
repair. 810,000. 814-992-

sale,

GARAGE

Sat ur d B!Y. 10 • 4 : 30 . ram
·
h.
510 Mc Ne1·1 Aveor.
s 1ne.

for Sale

5818.

5233 .

VAR 0 sale, 1int tim8 items,
clothing all sizes. ' misc. 5
Maple St. Meson, WV, 9 -1
Tt'1ura., Fri .• Sat.

~;~==~=~==1~~;;~;===~==
31 Homes for Sale
32 Mobile Homes

Great buy. Newly remodeled
room house &amp; bath.· house. nice, quiet &amp; beauticounty &amp; well w~ter on Ya ful location . Immediate posacre lot. reel nice on Floyd session. Turn off At. 35 in
Clork Rd. off St. Rt. 160. 8 Henderson , WV. on Hendermiles from Holzer hosp. Call son St . Go &amp;way from the
614-388-8282.
river, the last house on
Hehdersoh St. 6 rooms with
3 bedroom house with fire- neW wall to wall carpeting.
place. central air, 2 full Priced in $20's. Bob Kie·
bathe, in city limits. Imme- sling, 446-2601 .
diate po•session. Call 6142!1$-5281
6 room house with bath,
central air, city water. 13
House &amp; lot in Vinton . acres on Lieving Road, Wast
$6,600 will considelr land Columbia. 304·676-1 922
contract . Call 814- 245- after 4 p.m.

Brick &amp; frame house, 3 bdf.,
1112 bath, little over Y2 acre,
nice area . Call 61 4-246 -

Sept. 8, 9 , 10 . moving,
things old &amp; new. teachers
~mall library, furn . odds. &amp;
ends, Gibbs. 1006.Simpaon
Place; Pt. Pl.
--~~~-,----­
-"YA~O : sate: 2306 lincoln
Ave. Pt. Pleasant. WV,
Friday .
~:-::--:-:----,.,-­

Yard Sale 27 Henkle Ave.
Thurs . &amp; Fri. Sept . 8-9 .
Winter coats , childrensmens- womens clothing .
misc.

6

446-3D44.

&amp; Vicinity

Fbur''Fanlily Ya.rd Sale ~·ri .
Sept. 9 . 9 to 8. at Ceru~"ary~ ·
juat off 141 on Lincoln Pike.
Dishes. record player &amp;
good clean clothes .

well. 822.000. Call 614·
388 -9D63 .

1 .14 acres level land with
partially constructed basement. Price negotiable . Cell

Letart Falls, Oh . Pearl Willi a,
Bucktown Rd ., Sept . 8 -9,
Thurs. &amp; Fri.

Corner of Broadway and
Garage Sale Sept . 9 , 10. Main. Racine. S.,pt . 10. 9-5 .
166 Woodland Or ., Gallipo - Glassware, toyl, clothes,
TV's , chrome wheels, misc .
lis.

3824.

4 bdr. ranch home, large LR.
full basement, with garage.
wood burner included . city
school a, 2 miles from town.

····· ········· ············ ····

2 Family Yard Sale Fri . 9,
Sat. 10. 1926ChestnutSt .,
Gallipolis.

PIANO TUNING ' Back to
School Special 826 normal
tunlnga . September only.
Ward's Keyboard, 304-676-

4 '\'"'l:~~l~

hot water tank . heat-a· later.

7 PM 614-266-1672.

Beautician looking for a
salon opening in the Point
Pteasant area. Call anytime
after 6 p.m. A1k for Gwen.

Middleport .
&amp; Vicinity

Rt. 160. Sept . B. 9 10 . Gas

HOME LOANS Low fixed
rate. leader Mortgage, 77 E.
State, Athens. Ohio. 1 -614·

of land, $6.600 . Coli 614·
367-0619.

largo Jobs. 304-676-3677.

- - - - -- -- -

----- ·'fii:ji-ii&amp;rav·········

Garage Sale 2 mi. from HMC

6 room house about 1 acre

9306.

5 Family Yard Sale Cent .. •
nary Townhou se Fri. &amp; Sat .

Yard Solo Sat. 10th. 10:00 . 1-

14•70 Kirkwood . 2 BR.

446-3169, 9 to 6.

clothing.

residence. Variety of clean
mise , Items.

unfurniahad mobile home.
Central '·air. carpet. stove.
refrigerator, ceiling fan, underpinning. $11 ,000 1irm .
Call 614-266-6036 or after

Stllndlng timber wanted.
Top pric11 paid. Call after 8

rency. Top prlcea. Ed. Bur-

2

Garage Sale E. College, Ri o

Grande . Sept . 8 &amp; 9 . Davis ~ ~--------­

modular Home . qualified for
W.VA. housing money. See
at French City Mobile
Homea. Inc .• 446-9340 .

lawn Mowing no yard to big
or •mall . Reliable and dependable. For estimate call

Large Yard Sale Fri. $qpt. 9 ,

9 -1 Second ttouse . bdiOVt~
Raccqon Bridge off Rt ~ 7 .
Complete bedroom Itt .
glusw1re , loti of nice

mention. S8pt. 7 ,8 ,9 . 9 :30
to 6 :00 .

and depondablo. Coli 446- Schultz-The ell new Schultz

21

onMrfng Mrvice. Call Osby

. .... .. .....
-. ...............

grown up clothes , many
other It ems , t oo many to

For lease , Auto Service
Center, Muon, WV, 3 bays.
2 hoists. excellent location.
succaSiful business for over
30 years, availabl8 after
Aug . 9 , 1983. Call after 6

$32.000 . Call

misc . cheap price1 .

couch &amp; ct'lalr. infalltS t o 1 ----~----­

Mr. Kootocky (6011 327 8031.

betwa:en 9 &amp; 6 .

OKt. Glaaaware. jugs. stone
jars, other antiques. Iota of

mile

out Rt. 218 , Odetf y game,

tory, ah:fare. training. flxturea, grand opening etc.

23

v.

3169 between 9 and 6 .

WiH pey good price for uaed

"Free Eattm.tea:••

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 982-11792

7 Familv Yard Sale

"·sERVICE CO .
TEXAS OIL COMPANY SUBkEN
Locksmith service, tool shar-

Is block . Call 304-773-

len, wood Ice boxea, ..one

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

Klein, Eaprit, Zena. Ocean
Pacific, Brlttania, Evan Picone, Healthte~~: , 300 others.
t7 ,900 to 824,500, inven -

692-3061 .

Thurs .• Fri. 9 to 4 . Turn right
off Rt . 664 at Rodney Rd

22 Maney 10 Loan

Woi'lda largest toy party
comp&amp;flY now hiring demon·
suatora. No collecting! No
delivery! No investment!

Ga r•ge Sale Bidwell , Ohio.

&amp; Vicinity

p.m., 1-304-675 -2982 .

304-676-1 894.

A. Mortln 114-182-8370.

•'
'

Ladys apparel shop needs
mature lady for part time
employment . Applv to Box
105 in nra of The Gallipolis
Dallv Tribuna. 826 Third

LINGERIE Party Plan, earn
t50. to 876. per week or
more. Car &amp; phone neces·
aary. Booking parties now ,

BEDS-IRON, BRASS. old
fumhuro, gold, oil- dol-

"'12 v ... Expartence"
''Work OuantntMd"

Installed And
Warl'lnted by Sears
For 5 Years.

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING

Cal: 949-226:1
or M9-3091~ 10 "'

446-3368 or 446-2166.

Ktttono. 304-676-2611 .

On Siding IIIII Roofina.
Gutt. and Downspouts.

*CHAIN LINK
FENCING

R1eine, DH.

'"fi'H Ellilllltea''

AVON now, AVON wowl
Sell AVON for Christmas,
buy yours at a discount. Call

Worth. TX76101 .

0176.

oofina

·---··aiiiiif)oifil········

Chic. Lee, Levi. Vanderbilt,
lzod, Gunne Su, Calvin

&amp; comporo. Coli 814-446-

Isears I

RECLAMATION
'

Jean-

tlon , acceaaoriea or Quality

mobile homes. travel trailers

10

o;our own

Chlldrana Furniture Store.

3669.

1 :00 till oale time. Emma

ULTRA CLEAN
DRY FOAM EXTRACTION METHOD

Own

2 reb.bits 1 mala and 1

female . Call 614 -3670331.

night. 6 p.m.

m. -

A TOll

1=:===::

AVo .. Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .

Auction Barn . Consign·
menta taken avery Saturday

IQ..&amp;tlc

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

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding es·
timates, 949·2801 or
949-2860.

PH: 1-304-773-5634

949-2293

8/ 19/ 1 mo lld.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Deceased.

191 B. 15. 21c

~;:~;;,:;;;:;;;,~;:~rr==~~~~===;r~========:::;

USED.
APPLIANCES

&amp; Aluminum
SIDING

VInyl

·PERSONALIZED
POOLS .

Ju ne Sherod.
Execut nx of

Business

Sport•wear, Infant-Preteen,
ltldlea Apparel, Combine·

614-387-7101.

Business senices

Clifton H. Lucas, 41, died Wednesday at his home in Dexter following
a lingering illness.
Mr. Lucas was born Dec. 28, 1941
at Grand Rapids, Mich. , a son ot the
late Clifton H. Lucas, Sr., and Mrs.
Natalie Pierce Austin who resides at
Auburndale, Fla.
Lucas served in the United States
Army and was a pollution technlclan for the W. R. Grayson Co. at
Bartow, Fla. He served as pastor of
the Old Dexter Church.
Surviving besides his mother are
his wife, Darla N. Lucas, whom he

Giveaway

8

Public Natice

r----------..1.----------.L..---------

Clifton H. Lucas

4

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

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

Friends may call at WUcoxen
Funeral Home alter 6 p.m. today.

Phone 814-992-7324 .

again. 304-773-6452 or
614-992-7646.

They

The Orange Church ltomecomlng
will be held Sunday with Sunday
school at 9::xl a.m.; morning
worshlpat10: 45and dinner atl2: :ll.
Tile afternoon service will start at
1: :xJ p.m. with George Pickens as
speaker and music by The Seekers.
The public is Invited.

Now booking parties! 640.
free merchandise for hosting
• toy party! Plus morel

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON /
Route I
long Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

! '

.

Balloons for Birthdays, Got
Well, Anniversarya , Swee ·
thearts, parties. Call Bel·
locno &amp; Co .. 446 -4313.

Pups. Half German Shephard . 11 weeks old. 614-

CONTRACTING

· KEN~S ..
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

21

Nation•l brands: Jordacha,

4 kinens to giveaway. Call

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE':

246-8882 .

446- 294 .

614-367-7733.

1 • !lu .,_u ''•"'""
Twocallswereanswerm by local
Five defendents forfeited bonds,
4 3 Spo"" !oo
6~ s.. .... , ' "'"""'
, . .,......
• 1 w..
17
...., ..
all posted on speeding charges, in units Wednesday, the Meigs County
41 t
l n r l!•nl
......
.,
..
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Emergency Medical Service reClarence Andrews Wednesday ports. At 1: 48 p.m., the Middleport
night
are Patty Hannon, unit took Pauline Taylor, 795 S.
Public Notice
Public Notice
Rutland, $46; Herman • FerreU, Third Ave., to Veterans Memorial
Dexter, $47; David Gainer, Point Hospital and at 2:13p.m., MiddlePleasant, $48; Daniel Hof1man and port took Cheryl Clark from the
P\J8UC NOTICE
PUBUC NOnCE
Gene L. Berkhouse, addresses not Holzer Clinlc to the Holzer Medical
The real estate form erly
Th e real estate · formerly
ow
ned
by
Edna
.Kennedy,
now
recorded, $48 and $53, respectively. Center.
owned by Grac e L. J1v1den. now
deceased. Situate m the Vil lag e d eceased . s•tua te •n the VIllag e
William A. Thoma, Jr., Pomeroy,
of M tddleporr . Oh 1o. be1ng 525 of Rac1ne. Oh1o. 1s now be 1ng
was fined S63 and costs on charges of Saturday service
South Broadway. tS now be1ng offe red lor sale Oil ers will be
o ffered l or sale Oiler s w 111 be rec e1ved at the law oH1ces of
dlstmbing the peace, and $1l3 and
rec etved at rhe law off •ces of Crow. Crow &amp; Porter at the
costs, on a public Intoxication
Funeral services for Mrs. Rhea Crow. Crow &amp; Por ter at the
charge.
Ann Lozier, R.N., who died Tuesday Corner ot Mulberry AvenUe and
as a result of an accident at her Se cond Street m Po meroy.
Ladies golf results
Oh1o. at 10 15 AM on Friday.
residence in Roanoke, Va., will be Sep tembe r 16 th. 1983
Nanna Custer had low gross and held at 10: :xJ a.m. Saturday at the
The ng"'h1IS res erved to re1ect
Tee Teaford had low net at ladies Byerly Funeral Home in Loudon- any bid Arrangem ents !0 see
day Tuesday at Jay Mar Golf ville, Ohio. Mrs. Lazier was a
cal
992 -5may
1 3 2 be ma d e by
1heli ng
prooerrv
Course.
fonner Pomeroy resident and was a
Ro bert A W•nn.
ARROW FLASHING
Chipping In were Jane Brown and daughter of Mr: and Mrs. Aaron
Exe cuto r of the
SIGNS
Clarice Krautter. Ladles Interested Kelton, fQrmer Meigs residents,
ES!ate ot
FOR. SALE OR RENT
Ed na Kenn edy.
e·· 6. 8"
are invited to attend ladles day held also now living In Roanoke. Friends
Deceased
Rapioc:ement
Lenero
every Tuesday morning.
may call at the funeral home at !9! 8 15. 2tc
JOHN'S AUTO SALES
.:!,.11ytime.
We sell Qllllity used
"""·
Hl~782
. Gollioolis
Public Notice
Hu

Area deaths
Harry L. Wldlis

Middleport deparlmenl; George Cwnmln&amp;, Bout
Bees, Racine deparimeal; Smith; DOn Thomas,
Pomeroy depanment; Paul Jobn8on, George Canon
and Richard Carson, Mason depaftment.

i
\f~.~;{;Jai!IM.......·:Ach

pledge of allegiance and was closed

~ &gt;&lt; ~~'Ad &gt;
5l"" '"~ F uor n •1

Forfeit bonds

to four depanment&amp; From the left are Jell Dan&amp;,

The Daily Sentinel

4 r:; .. .... ... .

Ve.t erans Memorial

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

8-4·1 mo lld

12 ft. or 14 ft. sam I-V
aluminum boat. C1ll 614-

Caii814-367-0401 .

SALES &amp;SERVICE

·water Pipe
·Gas Pipe
•Regulators
•fittings

Wanted To Buy

Kittens to giveaway . located on At. 7 in Cheshire .

BOGGS

985-3561
All Makes

-Water

r~====================================

month.

Cl11ner, one half mile up
George• Creek Rd . Call

good homo. Catl446-2494 .

GIFI'S- The tug-ol-war learn of the Auxiliary of
Aerie 2171, Fratemal Order of Eagles, won a SMO
priZe recently for taking first place In an event at
Jacksonvi!Je. They decided lo donate the money to
several Ore departments and In the photo, team
copt•in Betty Smith makes tbepresentatlonof$13'7.50

programs are now In progress.
David Harris was appointed
publicity director, Bruce Reed was
appointed visitation chalnnan, and
Tim Faulk and Ray Willford were

chine ;epalr,Pickpartt,
aupplies.
up end
and
delivery , Davia Vacuum

246·5688.

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

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992 -7SB3
or 992·2282

SWEEPER end 18wlng ma·

4 cute kittens . Call 614-

.

· Jaycees announce future programs
charge. Anyone wishing to rent the
dunking machine IS asked to contact
the Jaycees.
The annual haunted house was
discussed with efforts to be made to
secure a location.
A report was given by Faulk on the
radar gun project which proved to
be very succt'SSful a1 the Meigs
County Fair.
Following a discussion it was
decided to begin all meetings al 7
p.m. and to hold the annual chapter
picnic on Sunday, Sept 18. Jay Hill
was named chalnnan of the event
Brian Conde, president, announced all individual development

320 JERICHO RD.
PT . PLEASANT . W. VA.
1 - 304-

992-6215 or 992-731•
Pomeroy , Ohio

~------"-"-'-"'

on his 1981 Datsun as weU as tn a
station wagon owned by his sister.
Over Labor Day weekend, approximately :xJ plastic safety !raffle
construction barrelS were reported
stolen from SR 7 Bypass construe. tlon site, WQtk is being done on
bridges on IU 1tn the Laurel Cliff
area.
Deputies and the State Game
Protector are investigating the
dumping of a load of trash on
Vinegar St., just off Eagle Ridge
Road. Severalenvelopeswerefound
but deputies were unable to locate
the indivldual._An arrest Is expected ··

toiie made.

· PlAQUES
ENGRAVING

(Free Estimate• )

11 1lllc

Meigs County sheriffs deputies
station wagon.
investigated a trashcomplaint!rom
The driver of the truck drove
away even though the driver saw
Rutland Township Wednesday evening and ISsued a citation to Freda
Mrs. Blevins coming towards the
Swan, Rutland to appear in Meigs
vehicle.
County Court on chargesotuttering.
Bill Pooler, Jr. Chester, reported
· .. On Wednesday depqtles tnvestJ-.. : Wedn€Sdayt)!at some.timeTuesday
gated a · hit-skip accident that · eveningaZOOAMPbteakerboxand
occurred on private property Wedelectric meter was stolen tromaslte
nesday evening.
off SR 338. The incklent is under·Accordlng to the sherlffs.departinvestigation.
·
ment Tina Blevins, SR143, Pomeroy
The department Is also tnvestlgatreported that she was parked on
ing a weekend repoprt of WU!is
private property at Rt. 2, Cheshire
Dillon, Rt. 2, Albany. Dillon repowhen a white truck with blue racks
roted that Sunday morning he
and bumper pulled. into the drive- • discovered , that sorneorie had
way_and back_ed into the rear d{ her . smeaied a stlc;cy. smelly substance

Manufacturers

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

992-3987
tx~ I S / 1 2

Trophy

- Plumbing and

15 Years Experience
1 mo

THE
TROPHY
KING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

9

Opportunity

---------~----------,..----------l

_Deputies check several complaints

The Meigs County Karate Club
will give demonstrations at the
Jaycee meeting during the month of
October · It was announced at the
regular meeting of the Meigs
County Jaycees held recently.
The Jaycees will also participate
In the Meigs High School "player of
the week" program which honors
the outstanding player each week
throughout tl\e season.
At the end of the season; the club
will honor an outstanding player of .
the year on offense and defense.
•
11 was decided to make Improve.. ments on the dilly-dunker with Tim
:Faulk and Rusty Bookman in

3 Announcement•

.

Meigs County.

The

Ohio

pouesaion in
Middleport. 7 rooms, new
kitchen. carpeting downstairs. wood burner. 614-

$19.000 . Call 614-24661172 or 614-246-6600 .

Farms for Saltt

742·2211 .

.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

992-8028.

'

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends
that you do business wtth
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mall until you have inveltj·

g'tod tho offering.
Ambulance tranaport aervice for sale Immediately.
Bualneas already eltabllshad
medicare and medicaid IP·
proved. Excellent for anyone
lntereated In thlt type of
bualneu. 300 trenspons,
1 5 montht. Only lnter..ted
peraona nud call, 448 ·

0788 .
Great bualneas opportunity.

For nlo ootabllohod busl neee, grocery etore, carry

2 atory house on nice lot.
Sixth Street in Syracuse
clo18 to all conveniences.
Priced raaonablt . Call after 6

p.m. 614-986-3878.

6 room houee on 1 acre In
Pomerov . . City water It gas.

make offer. 692-6778 .

1974 Champion 14Jt66 furniehed. with many extras. on
large lot at Quail Creek MH
Park. French City Brokerlng
Services, 446-9340.
Free central air, 1983 Red·

Middleport, 2nd Avo., 4 mon 14x70, 3 bdr., 2 full

baths, cathedral ceiling, delivered In set. Frtnch City
gorogo. 614-992-6709 af- Mobile Hom••· Inc ., 448·

bedroomt, 2 bath•. large

deluxe

interior,

1ireplace.

ter 5:30.

9340.

Rench typo !Brick}. 3 bod· Cash discounts. 24x40
rooms. fireplace, attached Clayton sectional, 3 bdr .,
garage, full basement. 1 VI batha. flreplaca, patio
newly shingled roof. walking door, Cathedral ceiling. Deldistance to Pomeroy Ele- ivered In aet. French City
mentary School. t4Q, 000. Mobile Homee, Inc ., 446Colt 614-912-8143.

9340.

35 acraa at Rodney on W .T.
Watson Rd. Owner financing available. Call446-8~21
after 6 weekdays.
•
Ontt acre lot with platfOrm
for house and In-ground
pool. for Information. 813·

885-1232.

BNUIIfullolt 2 en done third
acrea. Tre11, flat. rural wetar, Green Elementary. betw.en Mcintyre Park Diatrlct &amp; Spring VaHey

Cinema. Colt 614 -3792198 ,
Nice lot on Raccoon Creak
with 1 9 ft . travel trailer
awning &amp; deck . priced to

selL Coli 446 -9340. 4467901 ·or 614 -266-6413 :

out. •elf serw gae. e•r•e•
wtth cer lift for mechanical

work, 3
.....-head
Addloon.
74811 .

bdr. apan-nt
on St. Rl. 7 In
Call 814-3117.

•

�10-The

8, 1983

Ohio

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

114 Misc . Merchandise

66

Pets for Sale

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

by Larry Wrlghl

~~----------------·

1971 Caravan Trailer 12.-:65 Border Collie Pupa. Hav•
fully furn ., new furniture, hod oil ahot1. 614-288 t4,600. 1980 Hondo CB 2498 .
660 motorcycle 11 , 100.
Coli 81 4-388-9027.
THREE male Poodle pupa,
4 l:tdr. house 5 acre! of l~nd
for ••lo, e&amp;5 .00. 304-882·
on Rt. 160 in Vinton. Central
Firewood 1 load $35. 4 3872.
air, $350 mo .. sac . dap. &amp;
load• t1 00, 10 food• $200.
ref. Call 446-3175.
70% hardwood . heap AKC regiatered Beagle pup ~
vouchers
acceptad. Call pies. 304-676 -6886 .
In town, 3 bedroom house.
614 -256-1471 or 446 - 1 ~-----------------no pet&amp;. Inquire at Sheppard
7077.
REGISTERED Blua Hoofer,
Salet &amp;. Service. First &amp;
female,
8 month• old, 304 Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh.
New Oak Furniture, tables. 676-2798 .
chairs. cupboards, pia safe,
Paf1ielly furn ., near Tvcoon
dry sinks. Paul Conkels
Lake. $100 dep ., 8176 mo .
Antiques, Tuppers Plains.
67
Musical
rent 2 bdr, all electric . Call
Instruments
614 -388-8711 .
FIFE'S-Guns. ammo ,
archery. BIG WHOLESALE
Close to North Gellia HS ,
CLOSEOUT. Stock &amp; con2bdr .. fum .. $76 dep .. $150
signment sale. New, used &amp; 1 Bundy clarinet. 1 Caravella
mo . ren t Call 6,4· 388·
collectibles . You nama it, we tenor saxaphone, 1 Bundy
8711 .
probably have it. Resonable alto sex . Call 614-367offer• will be accepted . We 0331 .
3 bdr. housa near Rio
are quitting . FIFE'S . 3rd. St.
Grande, $235 mG ., adults
Mlddlaport . 614 - 992 - Clarinets, flutn, saxe·
onlv. Cal 614-246-6439 .
phones . • trombones.
7494.
trumpets . Franks Pawn
3 bc:ir. all eiectric 6 mi. from
Wiii~Burt stokei- furnence Shop. 446-0840.
24' , good cond. Call 4•6to wn, $160 mo . plus utilia Tloi iJit
Martin Acouttic Guitar .
Heavy
duty
case,
superior
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_...,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
tios. Call 446-0974.
-:-----:--Three bedroom brick home~
Coal &amp; woodburn i ng cond. After 7 p.m. call r
with large extra lot, located
furnac,-8660.
heating 814-441!-7221 .
63 · Livestock
just outsi~e Naw Haven.
· ·
,61 Household Gpo.d s stove-8260. Boys 20· in.
71
Autos for Sale
City water, central air and 44
Apartment
bike. Trombone -$100. Call Reynolds Professional silver
trumpet. $360 . 814-742·
heat plua fireplace . 8300.
for Rent
992-7690.
3063.
par month . Comp . fur· 1- - - - - - - - - - Mua1ang L(red) em-fm,
Holstein Springing Heifers. 82
nished . For more inform•·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
ps, pb, 4 tp. , axe. candltlon.
Miller
gun
type
fuel
oil
Cleveland
S-axophone
.
Exc
.
Also
open
Heifers.
814lion call after 6:00; 304i
Sofa, chair, rocker, otto- furnace, B&amp;OO BTU. tank
t5200. 304·882-3402 of·
876-3996 .
Furniat',ad one &amp; two bed- man. 3 tabl&amp;s, (extra heavy included. Child rettraining cond. Call evenings. 614- 288-2486.
ter
8 p.m.
986-4466.
room apt. Middleport . by Frontier), t686. Sofa.
·~at.
utety
approved.
8141
PIGS.
826.
eaCh.
10
Mile
Full basement, 1 "h ttory,
Adultt, no peta. Month rent chair end loveseat, 1276. 742-2416 .
c
R
with city water. double
plua t100. 1ecurtty. 614· Sofas and chaira priced from
rook d. 2 mlleo from Rt. 72 Trucks for Sale
Steinway studio grand pigarage, garden. 1· small child
992-3874.
8286 . to 8896. Tablaa, t45 Oak firewood delivered $30. ano. Exc. cond. 614-986· 62, before Leon , Alee.
accepted. 304-676-1076.
1-:--,--------and up to $1 26. Hide-a- pickup load. 1980 Suzuki ~942.
0UARTER horool, t500. 1977 ...p lido Chevy truck,
6 room apt. Fully carpeted. beds, $440. and up to GS 11 OOL $2.000. 304·
oxc. cond. Coll448-0492.
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE In country near parks on Rt. 8626 ., Reclin•a. 8176. to 875·2073 .
Kimball piano 8800. Precti• Phona 304-882·2078.
1!'1 COUN"I'RY ON BUD 33 north. Adults. no pets. $360 .. Lomp1 from $28. to
cally new. 304-773-5373.
67 Ford ohort bod pickup
CHATTIN ROAD . ONLY Roforoncel. Cell 814-992· 876 . 6 pc. dinettes from
runs good. ~all 446·
$260.00 PER. MONTH . 3201.
. _,.···
$.99 .. to $436 . 7 pc .. f1~9 ..
81')d
-.up.
·Woot:J
t•bl&amp;.with
six
~~~w8~~;~.r.o IIY YEAR
·Pomeroy . ·3 roomt &amp; ch81re t426. to 8746. Deek
1980 4 whool drive Chevy
814-992-6821 .
81 10 up to $22&amp;. Hutches.
Blazer. Tilt Rftring. am -fm
NEW HAVEN. all brick. 3
&amp;660. and up, maple or pine
8 track atereo, 4 new all
bedroom home. garage,
Furnished apt. 3 rooms. finish . Bunll bed complete
weather radiale V'JIIh new
basement, $260 . par
Utilitietlncluded. 614· 992· with mattresses, $2&amp;0. and
epare, 3&amp;0 4 barrell auto·
month, 304-882-2406 &amp; 6949.
up to •396. Baby beds, Atari 6200 Super System
matic, 30,000 mllea. Exc.
304-676·6640.
81 10. Mattr&amp;t188 or box with super breakout carcond. t8,&amp;00. 814-9922 bedroon furnished Apts. spring•. full or twin. 868 .. tridge, played very little. Delicious red raapberrie•.
3982.
NEW HAVEN, spacious, 3
614-992·5434. 814-992- firm, 188. end t78. Oueon 304-876-6182.
Taylor's Dairy. Coli 446- 71
Autos for Sale
bedroom home, new kitchen
6914, or 304-882·2566.
sets, t196. 4 dr. cheat•.
8692.
with JennAir, family room,
WOOD HAULERS
$42. 6 dr. chaeta. t64. Sed Sears ref. t80. gas stove - - - - - - - - - . , . . . - fireplace. 2 bJths, ·patio,
FDI'd F-2~0.
frames, . ~2.0.end • -26r 10 t20., dishwathe.r e.,-oo·. NOTICf; ~ :Con~ord Gr8pel: TOP CASH paid for late SPECIAL·1P73
Dual
gas
tllt*t. a.c .. heavy
. nice yard. 304•8.82-240&amp; lo
gun ~ ·Gun cabinets. ~360 .. · easy cii1111ir 826. 3014 : ~82- while they last .. You pick or
model Ul8d ·cera. Smith duty suepeneion. •aoo. or
304-875-5640 . dinette cheira $20. tllnd 826. 3108.
buy pi"ckad. Apples &amp;. craft Buick-Pontloc,
1911 Eolt· boot offer. 814-949-2603
Gas or electric ranges, $325 - - - - - - - - - - items at aalesroom. Medena err:a Ave .. Gallipolis.
446-. after 6 p.m.
2 bedroom home In Meeon.
up to $376. Baby matresses. 17'' Sylvallla color TV. Dun Rovin Fruit Farm, State 2282.
I-----------------Washer, dryer, ac, carpet, nc Apartments. 304-676· $26 &amp; $35, bod frames •20. portable. 304-675 -2815.
Rt . 681 S. of Albany. Call
197B Datsun truck, newly
pots end 1 child. 304-773· 6648.
•25, &amp; $30, kingfromo •eo.
614-698-6298, houra1to 7 1976 Dodge Aspen ltatlon- painted,
one local owner.
5751 or 773-9520 .
Good selection of bedroom REMINGTON 700 AOL
PM .
wagon. Coli 614-388· 304-875·4039,
APARTMENTS, mobile aultea. cedar chests , mmm. with scope, 8200.
homes, houiet. Pt. Pleasant rockers, metal cabinets, Craig car aterao, R· 3 AM- YELLOW freestone canning 9766.
1;;:::::::;:~::;::
42 Mobile Homes
and Gallipolit . 61 4 - 446~ swivel rockers.
FM Ca11aHe, 1100. 12'' peaches now available, rees73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O..'
8221.
for Rent
Used Furniture ·· bookcase, beginners bicycle with train- onabl~ prices. Please bring
rengea, ch .. irs, dinnen aet, ing wheelt, $40. 304 -773- your own bushel containers.
ONE bedroom apartment, wood table and chairs, dry- 6026 .
14th year of serving the
S226 month, all utilities ert, refrigerators and TV's. 3 - - - - - - : - : : - - - - - - area . Bob's Market, Mason,
2 bdr. trailer located on paid,
304-676-2595.
milet out Bulaville Rd . Open CAMOUFLAGED new army 304-773 -6721 , Open 7
Upper River Rd. all utilities
9am to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri.. clothing . denim pants14 oz. days, till dark .
paid except electric. Dep.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER. 9am to 6pm, Sat.
8.10., surplus r~mtal clo-1 - - - - - - -- - .roq. Coil 448-8668.
Apartmenta now available to 448-0322
thing. Sam Somervlle'a, 7
&amp; diaabled wltb en
miles eut Ravenswood.
2 bdr mobile home. Call elderly
income of Ieee than G.E. electric refrig . 6 Sears
446-0608.
S 12,300. Renting for 30 Kenmore contlnuoua cfean day.
open 1:00-7
Friday,:30
Saturday,
Sun · ~!~!~!~~;~~
p.m. Phone
3 bdr. trailer 1 1h: batha in percent of adjusted income- electric range. Both gold 304-876-3334.
Evergreen. 1175 mo., plus I-·P_h_o_n_o_3_0_4_·8_7_5_·_8_6_79_.__ tone, good cond., *400 for
1979 Hondo Accord air 1974 Hondo 360. 7,400
1at. Call 614-246·6068 Of·
61 Farm Equipment cond
dep .. wotar paid. Call 81 4 · FURNISHED apartmant, ter
., AM -FM 84,000. actual miles. Cai1614 -388&amp;.
66 Building Supplies
~ 246-9170.
adults, no pata, phone 304~
Doy•
call 448-2933, avo. 1_9_76_6_._ _:-:-=-:---''September Sale''
448-2414.
,.
Uted vinyl sofa &amp; chair.
Trailer for rent $160 mo. 676-1463 .
Jlvidens Farm Equipment
1972 Suauki GT 7&amp;0. low
•
Snyder
Furn.
Co
..
Corbin
8100 deposit. Located on
Building materials
446-1676
miiM,ge,
good cond .• •890.
81
Olde
Cutl11a
Supreme
TWO bedroom apartment,
986 Second Ava., Gallipolis. bloCk, brick, aewer pipes, Check our September SpeKerr Bethel Church Rd. Call ·
wll
consider
trade for wood
Breuhm
excellent
cond.,
t160.
convenient
to
town.
Coli 446-1171 .
614·388-9360 or 446windows. lintels . etc. cial prices on all Long 19&lt;000 mlloo, t7,99&amp;. Coil working equip . Call 814per
month,
304·
882·2406
6639.
Claude Winten, Rio Grande, tractors end equipment!
388-8710.
614-388-8648.
&amp; 304-876-6540.
TV • Appliances, 627 Third 0. Call 814-245-6121.
Long tractors, Vermeer
Ave., Gallipolis, 446-1699.
(Nice) 3 bedroom trailer for
round balers, rakes, teddert 1972 Chryaler Newport. out 1980 Kowoukl 750 LTO.
rent 12x60. 8176 mo. plua 1ft Middleport, 2 bedroom Spin washers, gaa&amp; electric Building material for ·a &amp; mowen . And a complete of
South, no ruet. •eoo, no Block with 1fuy bor. luggogo
turnithed
apartment,
1
dryers,
auto
weshera,
gas
6.
utilitiea, 314 3rd. St., Ka1 2x 16 utility building . Call line of tobacco &amp; corn chocks. Col814 -388-8133. reck, road page, cruiH conchild,
1-304·882-2688.
elecnlc ranges. refrigera- Coli 446-3044.
naugo. Coll448-7441 .
sprayers, wagons, rotary
tors, TV eeta.
and
casemileo.
guarda.
tillers Ia rotary cuttere, Collectors items. 1969 trol
cond.,
8,800
•1.800.
bladas,
cultivators,
plows·
12x50, $160 par month 46 Furnished Rooms O.E . waaher A-1 cond.,
Chevy 3 dr.. SW, V-8. Roger Abbott 992-6114 or
disc, post divers, wood original. needs body work. 992-2377.
Pets for Sale
plua utilities, 8100 dep. N o ' - - - - - - - - - - guaranteed, 8126. Call614- 66
pets. In Syracuse . 992 - •·
splitters. power washera, Drive away. Make offer. C a l l l - : - - - - - - - - - 367-0580.
6284 or 992-5732.
For rent Sleeping Aooms
p I a s t i c 1 t a n k s S. 446-3898.
1981 Yomaho 760 Virogo,
and light house keeping
t1.800. Call 614-387KENNELS woodburnersl
1 2x60, $166 per mo. plus rooms. Perk Central Hotel. REBUILT APPLIANCES HILLCREST
Barding all breads. Selling Used Equipment
1980
Cadillac
Coupe
Do·
0214.
Washere,
dryers,
ranges,
utilities. $100 deposit. No ,_c_or_r_4_4_6_-o_7_6_6_._ _ __
IH hydro 70, 246 Massey
refrigeratora . Shop repair. Happy Jack Oog Food. Ferg., 35 Maaaey, 66 Mas- Ville. Cruite, tilt, air, AM·FM 1 - - - - - - - - - pets. In Syracuse . 992 - •.
Doberman
puppies;
Stud
CB 8 track. good tires. 72 Honda 760-Four, custom
8294 or 992-5732.
Sleeping room $116, utili· bring it in Ia Save. Call Service. Call 446-7795.
sey with loader, Ford Jubi· e•callent condition. Celt paint_job. A-1 shape. Call
ties paid, range &amp; refrig , 448· 8181.
lee, Farman c. gravity wag- 448-2100.
814-388·8284.
2 bedroom furnished, e.c.
Share bath. Man only. 446ons, N.H . grinder mix.ar.
Judy
Taylor
Grooming.
Call
Krohler blue ttrip couch. like
New Haven. (304) 882- 4416 after 7 p.m.
cornpickers, 2 &amp; 3 bottom 1977 Railey Spon1 Camero 1980 Kowuokl 440 LTD.
814-367-7220.
plows, culipackars. &amp;. post PS. PB. air. AM~FM radio, 3,600 mllee. Uke new,
2466.
1:::::;:::::::~:::::: new, $200. Coli 446-2206.
auger!
Sia.,ese
kittens.
One
male
one owner, good cond., Coli t850. Coil814-992-8317.
46 Space for Rent
Kenmore washer *7&amp;. Ken·
We buy used equipment, after 5. 614-246-5697.
more dryer t66, elec. range Seal Point, four female 446-1675.
1980 850 Hond1 . Coli 446·
$86, gas range t85. Hoover chocolate Points, one male Look for our displav at the
chocolate Points, $50 ea.
7B
Bonneville,
exc.
cond..
9416.
44 Apartment
portable
wether
$76,
Mar·
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Farm~City Field Day. Sapt.
Call 614-38B·8263.
4&amp;,000 mlla1. Call 446- l-----:-----:---:-::-:for Rent
Park. Route 33. North of tag wringer waeher $96, GE;
10, 1:00 to 8 :00.
4094.
1974
Chopper 30 ln.
Pomeroy. large Iota. Call coppertone weaher like naw Brlarpatch Kenmda Profesover front end. CB 760 F.
t176.
side
by
tide
rehig
.
992-7479 .
sional All-breed grooming. Massey Ferguson 203 Die·
Buick 4 o, HT, Umkod. ,_c_ar_r_6_1_4_-9_4_9_·_27_3_7_._ __
$176 , Coldspot ralrig . lndoor:outdoor boarding fa - sel back hoe and loader. As 72
one owner, low mileage, a·
2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart~
$160. 1iving room suite $46,
manto Utiltias per1ly turn ., Mobile Home Lou for renlis, $2,500. Registered Suf·
· he d . swival
rocker $36, Sigler oil cilities. All gets givan TLC . folk rom. 8100. 614·949· good condition, t996. Cho- 1977 Suauki .G S750, t750.
h
• p.rtm.n.. .v.'.labla now. water an d sewer f urn11
Call 614-388-9790 .
6
rles M. Neal, 21 6 2nd. Avo .. _s_9_2_·7_4_4_7_.- - - eater
87
.
ch11t
of
drawers
2008 .
8200 per mo. A~One Real 1 small child accepted, t66, 11.000 BTU air cond.
Galllpoll•.
1
3
04
6
7
5
1
0
7
6
1981 KIIWOIOki 440 LTD
Estatas. Carol Yeager, Real- _ _ _-__ _ _- _ _ _ _·_ _ _ _ 896, Skaggs Applianeas, AKC Toy Poodle puppy
tor . Call 304-676-5104 or 1
U
R"
Ad G 111 r·
female. will be very small , 1OFT J 0 grain drill, $760. 77 Pontiac Ventura 4B,OOO motorcycle in excellent con·
304-676-7386 .
EXCELLENT location for
pper tver
• a po II, black, $100 . Blua Point Allis Chalmers E combine. milet. blk . on blk. V-8, auto dltion. 814-949-2046 .
office, retail or wholeaale I::O:;h:=,:=4:;4:=6=·7=3=:9::;8:=. =:==:::= Siameee cat, S26 . Small corn &amp; grain head, 82600. trono, V.G.C .. $1,860. Coli I - - - - - - - - - Furni1hed apt . $186. Water business. 1400 sq . ft . Call
female Pomerainian. Also 304 -875· 6180 or 675 - afier 6:30PM, 448 -7020.
1981 Suaukl. 450 Lowridor.
Only 900 milee. Perfect
paid, 2 bdr.. 131 'II 4th. l-=:30:4:·:6:7:6-: 3:7:8:8.:::::::: 54 Misc. Merchandise wanted Great Danes. Call 3383.
Gallipolis. 446-4416after7 I·
1 - - - - - - - - - - 446-2310.
1976 Nove 6 cyl., auto, PS, condition. For more info. cell
PB.
AM-FM etero cae..tte, 114·742·3013 end eak for
p.m.
47 Wanted to
Livestock
air cond .. exc. cond. Mull be Danna.
Knauff Coal8a Firewood Buy Female Chawawa . House - 63
Unfurni1hed 4 rooms &amp;
Men to appreciate, 81,195. 1 - - - - - - - - - now for seasoned wood this broken $60. To good home.
blith~ no children. no pats.
Colloftor 4PM. 4411-7231 . 79' 850 Suauki ohoft drive,
winter. Coll814-2&amp;6-6245. Beagtes for sale . Days till 5.
C•fl • 446 -3 437 or 446 - A nice home, can be an older
614-843-6164.
8 yr. old rhara17 hands high,
11.000 miles. showroom
1837.
one. must have at taut 8 Limestone. Sand, Gravel.
good rider, S600. Call614- 1981 Monte Carlo exc. cond. Asking •1760. 304·
Located in city of Delivered in Maaon, Meigs, Siamese kittens. Approxi- 388-9969 .
cond .. 16,000 mi. Loodod 1_&amp;_76-_6_7_1_3_.- - - - - 3 bdr. apt ., 2nd Ave .,
Ii
, preferably down- Gallla or pick up at Richards mately 8 week• old. Chocof7.000. Call 448· 7399 .
,.
Gallipolit. $1 90 mo . Call town . E;~~.cellent care will be &amp; Son . Coli 448 · 7786.
Tobacco steaks for Hie. Call
lote tip. 614-992·3229.
1973 HONDA 750, 4 cyl ..
446-4222 between 9 &amp; 6.
614-379-2145 or 614-379 - 1978 Chevy Nova 4 dr., Y-8, oxcollent condition, 1700.
given by retponaible lady 1- - -- - - - - - and 13 yaara old son . Call Firewood cut up slabs 816 Collie. 1 1 months old, neu- 2370 .
Unfurni1hed , down•talrs, 3 446-9546 or 448-2548 or pickup load. Coli 614-246· tered. ell shots, house broke,
auto.
PB. air
ono~:~3~o~4-:4:5~8~·1;6;6~5~.;;;;i===
owner,PS,good
car,cond.,
for only
roOm apt ., 1 bdr., no pets. contact Evelyn at Oscar's 6804.
e;~~.cellent with children. $26 . Gravley for nle . Purchased
f1,600. Call 614·379·
lnC.uira at 87 Vine St., Restaurant .
614-992-7811 .
for Carol Snowden State 2871 .
G+llipolil.
Farm Agent, Gallipolit, Oh .
Released for Public Sale
Motors for Sale
several Singer sewing ma- Cocker Spaniel, Poodle and Coli 614-256· 1551 .
1980 2 dr. Dodga A1pon, 1 - - - - - - - - - chines uncl1imed by a Siamese kinens. Dogs are
auto, PS, PB, low miiHge.
Furnished
apt.utilities
2 bdr., paid.
near
HMC
. 1236
school- new free arm only registered, Poodle in he•t. Registered full blooded Sim- real nice, t2,796. John's 14 ft. See Nymph fishing
243 Jackaon Pike, Gallipo Call 614-992·2607.
mental bull. 6 veers old . Auto Sale1, Bulaville Rd. boat, big water, semi V haul,
es9 . Coli 446-9301.
lit. 446·4416 after 7 p.m .
Huck Wagner . 614-949- Coli 446·4782, open 9 to 7, 8 penon copoclty. 9.8 HP
Mercury troller, 8900. Call
Apartment 1 bdr., turn .
Sto..,es.ln~&amp;rts.
tree a- l----------1.:2:0:5:9:.
Woodburning
tanding,
fireplace
1973
Monte
Corio,
now
448-8593
.
Trailers 2 bdra ., turn., beauSWAIN
mobile home approved, &amp;
tirea,
end
wire
rima.
Run•
I:;:====;:====
tiful Riverview. Kanauga, AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE furnance ad-ont. Jivldens
good. tiOO . 614 -742Fo:Sters Trailer Park. 446- 62 Olivo St .. Gallipolis. 6 Farm Equipment, 446- OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople 2513.
76 Auto Parts
1602.
piece wood living room suite 1875.
with 6 inch flat erma 8399,
1979 Ford Thunderbird .
&amp; Accetaories
4 r. turn . apt., ground floor. bunk beds complete with Slightly irregular carpets,
t3,700. 814·949-2890.
1 - - - - - - - - -private entrance. no pets. bunkies $199. 2 piece an- remants and whole house
Please apply at 1068 First tron livlngroomaultes8199. aize . Ideal for rental income,
1980 Voik1wogon Robblt 1977 FOR 0 LTO II, whole
Ave ., Gallipolis.
antron recliners t99, other etc . Price• starting at 12.99,
dioiOI. 83,800. 992-7380 cororportl, 304·875-4437.
rec,inen 880, maple dinette $3.99 oq.yd. Coli 814-992after I p.m.
·Efficiency apt., private en- aeta *179. love teats t70. 8173. .
'
trance and bath . Suitable for hide·a·bed 1260, box
1971 Pontiac Catalina . 77 Auto Repair
one person . Call 446· 1232. eprings 8a mattreu twin or MenreiS &amp;: box aprings t36.
Good work cor. 814-949·
full • 1 00 aet regular-firm 1978 Hoovervaccuum t30.
2849.
2bdr .. 2 both, 11 Court St. s 1 20, maple dinette chairs Cell 448· 0911.
Attention Auto Painting
Ref. 1!. dop . $325 mo. Cell $36, wuh lfando $34,
1980 Monte Corio, p1., p.b., t150 ond up. Body work,
446 ·4926.
maple ·rockers 169, 7 piece Hoov• portable washer &amp;
air, tilt wheel. am-tm extra pen ltriplng, cuetom
chrome dinette set t149. 6 dryer like new. 4·16' 7.60
cuootto. nooo. 814-948- 1trlp1. Coli 441-0388 .
3 room apartment, turn .• piece dinette tel es9, und tlrea, Zenith portable TV axe .
20119.
adults only, no pets. Call bedroom suites. retirgera- cond. 1978 LTO 54,000
446 -0962.
tora. rangea, cheat, dreaaera. actual miles. Cell 44&amp;~ 7273
1978 Monao, block, 4 79 Motora Home•
wringer washers. TV's, after &amp; and Saturday end
opeed, V·l. olr. Crogor1,
8t Campers
Small turn . house 1 or 2 dryeres, &amp; shoes. Call 446 - Sunday anytime.
t2700. C411304-875-8514
adults only, no pets. Call 3169.
oftor 4:00.
446·0339.
18 cu.ft . refrigerator frMnr
88 Nomad camper. 19"11 ft.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES on bottom tiO. 15x17 blue
1872 Comoro, t700. 304- eon 814-371-21111,
1 beet room Apt. t196. mo. . waahere, dryers, refrlgera~ corpot • podding f1 45. Coli
773-1133.
including utUitiea . Equal tors, rangea. Skagga Ap- 448-0028.
1171 Co......., oomper, 13
ho~slng opportunity. Conpllonceo, Upper Rivllt' Rd .. l - - - - - - - - - 73 Volko-on &amp;u.- .... ft ~
4 IIIIo
-ve
tact Village Manor Apte.
bealde Stone CNet Motel. 3•4mlrror,mitaltruck,pole
••v ,
tlo. good condltlo n, 3 04- leo., box, turnonce, 11,100
814-992· 7787.
448-7398.
lamp1." Coll814-2118-1768.
875-3819.
firm.
Coi1441·4ZI2.
'

•

I~~==~~~~~~~~~~~:§~===~ ~1_6_7-:2_.

~,.

a.,

Thunda,

79 Motore Homes
8t Campers

Pomeroy--Middleport,

DICK TRACY

.•

Priced reduced . Must sell

8, 1983

IILLCJN ME 10 TAlCO 'IOU ON A LITTl-E
"lOUR OF CUR FACILIT'I',"DR.FREEZDR&amp;:I

nice 28 ft . self COI!'It•lned '
camper, elr cond .. Iota of '
extras. 98115-3988 .

SAYS.

~Newa

.
~

CAPTAIN EASY
THE ONLY

~I!A!'OioJ

VOU WANTED ME IN
VOUR MOVI&amp; WA7 &amp;E·
C:AU7&amp; YQU TKOU6HT
'IOU COU~D GE-T II ~OT
OF PU~LI CIT'I FROM

.

________

MY

~0

IF YOU PON'T

WAIOT ''TI~~oL TOWIO"
TO KNOW WHAT A
"NICE"GUY YOU
A~&amp;-

~&amp;PUTATION ~

7:00

--------- ~

RON'S Television Serva. !
Specializing in Zenith, and ~
Motorola, Quuar, and 111
hOUM celll . Cell 678~2398 ,
01' 448-2464.

7 :30

F • K Troa Trimming, otump
removal . Cell 676-1331.
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rienced roofing, Including
hot tar application, carpenter~ electrician, mason. Cell
304-676 -2088 or 876·
4&amp;80.

--------. .,
W.ater Wellt. Commerciill

8 :()0

aOd Oom8atic .· Teat holeS ·1' .•
Pump• Sales and Service.
304-896-380~ .

Get your carpet in ahip '
thape . Waterremoval, FREE !
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614-446-2107.
E 6. R Tree Service. fully

Insured , fr.ea ·estlrr).atel .
Phono e 14·3117-0638, coli
after ·&amp;.
·

·'

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
piece cuatom fit your home.
Guaranteed . Advencatt Guttor. (Day 814-692-4066,)
lnight 614-898-8205.)
Roofing end Carpentry
work, general repairs. call
Anthony Williamson. 81 4387·0194.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

=======~

ALLEY OOP
AFTER WHAT WE DID 10
THOSE GERMANS, MICHELLE

AND .JACQUES CAN'T SlAY
HERE EITHER, ALLEY!

..

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . Fomerlr Dewitt's
Plumbing. Call 614 -3670578.

1----------

M- , -·

------1

' .. ,

~

DOZER WORK By Tad
Hanna, ponds. ditches.
basements. etc. Call 4464907. Carter &amp;. Evans
Transportation.
Lonnie Bogg1 Excavating.
Dozer. backhoe. dumptruck.
Work by hoUr or job. Call
448-7903.
Cat 215 hoe. dozars. cran•. j
loaders. dump truck'~ ~All
814-448 -1142 botwdan
7 :00AM &amp; 5:00PM.
Good· 1 Excavating, baa aments. footers, driveways,
aeptic tanks. landtcaplng.
Call anytime 448-4637.
Jamaa L. Davison , Jr.
owner.

E&gt;UT OUR LITTLE HOUSE
MEANS 50 lf//(JC/-1 TO ME.
IT HOLDS SUCH PLEASANT
,lr\EMORIES!

Oozar Work. ground clean·
ing 8a e)I.Cavating, $26 hour.
Coli 446-9638 .
J .A.R . Construction Co.
Water Linea, Footers, .
Orain1. All kind• of Ditching. '""~
Rutland , Oh . 114-742 ·
2903.
Melga Excavating. Bulldozer
• backhoe aervice. Basements, footera,landtcaping,
driveway•. farm ponda.
614· 742·2407 or814· 742·
2068 .
BACKHOE. do1er, dump
truck. licannd septic •v•·
tam installment &amp; repair.
304-675-7666.

BARNEY

-..,
''
'

84 Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

...

(R)

••

SEW! NO Machine repairs,
aervice. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sciuors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

;c

I]) Dr. Who

' '

'·

'

'

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SEA· VICE, Call 814 -387 -7471 "'1
or 814·367· 0691 .
Need something hauled
away or eomething moved?
w,·11 do 11. Coli 446 - 316~
between 9 and &amp;.

PEANUTS

VOU CANT STAY JN

HOOSE FOREVEit.¥011

..'

HAVE TO 60 TO

Upholstery

"
•;

I KNEW YOU'D 5AV
TJ.lAT, SIR, 50 I 8ROII6HT
ALON6 SOMET~IN6 FOR
¥0U TO W~AR ...

ntAT'5 NOT
FUNI~V MARCIE!

• Benny Hill Show
11:15(!) Auto Racing '83 :
NASCAR Worner Hodg·
don 200 from Rlvoroldo,
CA
11 :30 D (2) l1.l Tonight Show
(l) MOVIE: 'Star Wars'
Ill Another Ufe
I]) 81 (IZ Newo
g
I])
U.S .
Open
Hlghilghta Tonight's program presents highlights of
the day 's tennis action from
the USTA National Tennis
Center. Flushing Meadow·
Corona Park, NY.
I]) l..otonlght America
1JD Allin the Family
• Twilight Zone
12:00 ()) Bumo &amp; Allen
I]) Soop
g I]) MOVIE: 'Detour to
Terror'
()I MOVIE: 'My Favorite
Brunette'
(jJ Nlghtllne
• Thlclto of tho N_ight

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
"
1 183 Sec. Av8.. Gallipolis. ·~
448-7833 or 448-1833.
.,,

---------- ',.,

(}) Mama's Family
B:30 0
Mama gets a job at a travel
agency. lA)
(2) MOVIE : 'Silence of the
North'
Ill Top Rank Boxing
Spring Highlights
I]) Ill® NFL Football: San
Francisco at Minnesota
Cll Up Pompeii
(ffi Hitch-hiker's Guide
9 :00 0 (l) l1.l We Got It Made
Concerned that their apart·
menr is becoming messy .
David and Jay hire a live -in
maid much to the chagrin of
their girlfriends.
Ill 700 Club Specie! :
Seven Days Ablaze
CIJ Portrait of America :
Puerto Rico
D I]) Billy Graham
Crusade
Cil Flickers from Masterpiece Theatre
,
®I Simon &amp; Simon A.J .
can't get anyone to believe
he witnessed a murder whtle
he was on vacation. (A) (60
min.)
G]) Jazz in America 'Dizzy
Gillespie 's Dream Band .'
Jazz great Dizzy Gillesp1e is
joined by an array of jazz
musicians in one big band
concert at Lincoln Center ,
New York , NY . (90 min.)
Iii MOVIE: 'Vegas'
9:30 0 (l) I1.J Cheers Diane" s
mother pays a visit and announces that Diane should
marry Sam. (R)
1 O:oO IJ (l) I1.J Hill Street Blues
A notorious narcotics officer
is transferred and Gold·
blume deals with a murder
suspect with multiple per·
sonalites . (R) 160 min.)
(l) MOVIE : 'The Mission·
ory'
CD TBS Evening News
G I]) ®I Knots Landing
Gary feats responsible for
Ciji's death after new evidence indicates that she did
not drown. (R) (60 min.)
I]) Avengers
10:30 (2)
MOVIE:
'Deadly
Games'
Ill Star Time
())Major League Baseball:
Atlanta ot Plttoburgh
(jJ) Tony Brown'• Journal
'Herpes : Is There Hope?'
Conclusion. Host Tony
Brown investtgates current
methods of herpes control.

Ill INN Nawo
11 :00 II (2) IIl Ill ()) GJ News
Ill SportoCentor

'

87

MOVIE: ' If Things
Wale Different'
Ill Tic Toe Dough
([) Uttle House on the
Prairie
I]) (j]) High Feather
Ill Wild, Wild Woot
II (l) 11.J NBC News
Ill Love That Bob
Ill Bill Dance Outdoors
I]) Ill CIZ ABC News
Ill I]) iJD CBS News
(() Buaineaa Report
(j]) Over Eaoy.
IJ (2) PM Magazine
Ill Bumo • Allen
Ill SportoConter
I]) Carol Burnett
(() Entertainment Tonight
l1.l Charlie' o Angela
Ill I]) Tic Toe Dough
I]) (j]) MacNeil · Lehrer
Newahour
®Nowa
Ill CIZ P-Ie ' a Court
Ill Star Trek
II (2) Ue Detector
(2) lnolde The NFL
Ill Doble Gillis
Ill ESPN Sportoweok
I]) Good News
I]) Cl I]) Family Feud
llD Wheel of Fortune
Ill CIZ Entertainment
Tonight
.
II (2) Gill)mt a Break Noll
·and Grarldpa Me mistak&amp;n
for bank robbers . (A)
(2) MOYIE : 'Tampeot'
IJ)I Spy
Ill NFL'o Greatest Mo ' menta NFL 's Greatest Moments presents thn 1982
Year in Review . (90 min .)
(() Portrait of America:
Georjla
I]) Ul ~ Too Clooo for
Comfon. Hen~y g ~ ts an invi·
tat ion to be th~f best ,-naf1·at
-his _friend's wedding: .!Rl
I1.J Billy Graham Crusade
Cl ()) ® Magnum , Pl.
Higg in's illegitimate half·
brother. who is an impover·
ished Irish priest, pays a
vtsit. (A) (60 mtn .)
(f) Sneak Previews Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Ly ons take e look at
'Moon in the Gutter' and
'Smokey and the Bandit Part
(fiJ Sneak Previews

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coil Jim Lenior, 304 -8757387.

ilHil

Iii Hungry Eyes

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
'
Cor . Fo"u rth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446- ..,
4477

86

-~.,._

(I)

Ill. "

Got Your Corpot IN SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
STEAMER. water removal.
furniture cleaning. Free Estimates, 614~446·2107 .

Exc.l :~i=~~~~~~=::

1----------

6:30

Mercum Roofing • Spout- 10
lng. 30 years experience.
speciellzing in built up roof.
Cell 614-388·9857.
•

82

Unscramble lhese four Jumbles,

YASTI ' [j
I KJ

(2)

..
----------------- '
PAINTING · interior end
exterior. plumbing. roofing,
aome P.ornodeling. 20 yra.
oxp. Coil 814-388·9852.
_:

l1.l a

D

...

fly Honrf Amol&lt;lond Boll Leo

one lener to each squate, to torm
four ordlnery wordt.

EVENING

•"

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceiling&amp; commercial and residential, free
utlmatea . Call 614-2561182.

1tfl~f.\.{t fi}1t ~THAT SCRAIIIIUDWOI'IO GAME

9/8/83 " .
8 :00 0 IJl I])

Daily Sentinel-Page-- 11

~ \!!JI.NU'!J~ 11

THURSDAY

•••
••'

Home
· Improvements

The

Television
Viewing

1978 Coruir camper . 21'.
Sleeps 8 adults, full bath. ~:
Hlf- containe~ with furnace.
b .c. Cond. t6.000. 114- 1
992-3982.

81

Ohio

12:15 (2) MOVIE: •Ablence of
Moll co'

......

I DROAR
I I I
REYYAL

I I I

Wf1AT THEY PAl P
1f1E K ING Wf-10
W~OTE

IHOGBUT!

(]

I Answer
Jumbles:
:

Now IITange the drcled leCtert to
fOITT1 the 1Urpr1!14f lntWW, II SUO ·

geslod fly lho abOve conoon.

A[IXIIII:J

Print answer here :
Yeslerday''s

A BOOK.

(AAIIWO'lfomorrow)

PELVIS OPAQUE
"connec ted " wit h the
clergy-'" PASTOR'"
BORAX FORTY
Could oe a sport

Jum.,.. laa6l No. 13, containing 110 puul•• . Ia nallablaiOf 11-.H pkla 5k poat-.
and handllnt from Jum~•. clo thlt nwtpll)tr. 8011 34, NorwDOd; N..l, 07141.

lncluct. OUJMIM,addraaa,llpcod•anclmakectitcklplylbleJoHew•Pt,..ttooll.t.

BRIDGE
· OswaldJ~coby
Jacoby
. arid James'
.

Exploring for slam
have passed at a low level. It
also can't be a stop bid
NORTH

D·B-83

..A K ~2
.KI

.AK~7 6'
• ·

•to3·
WEST
...
.J8"653

EAST
..J73
¥Q 9
tQJfl 2
.. K652

+104
.. QJ974

SOUTH
.. QI0654
¥A 10 7 2
• 53
.. A8

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Wesl
West North East
Pass
1•
Pass
Pass
4•
Pass
Pass
5.
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Suuth
1•
4 NT
s•

because North has no idea as
to whal South holds.
In modern bidding it also
tells South something else . It
~ tell&amp;- South that North does·not ·hold a singleton .
South has only 10 highcard points, but they include
two aces. South is also looking at a doubleton of North's
fir st-bid suit. South likes his
hand and uses Blackwood to
check for aces. Norlh shows
two, but South wisely
decides not 10 try for seven
and to bid merely six. It is a
good decision. Not that we
h_;~ven't seen many worse
grand slams, but all in all
six is a ni ce conservative

contract.
South wins the club lead
and sees that the slam is not

guaranteed. There are lots
of ways 10 play the contract,
but South follows up his simple bidding with simple play .

Opening lead: +Q

He draws trumps With three
By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
North's jump to four
spades is a normal, old-fa shioned bid to show 19 or 20
points in support of spades .
It is not a preempt. There is
no need to shut out opponents when both of 1hem

lead s and goes afler
diamonds. They break 4·2 so
South ruffs a diamond, leads
a heart to dummy 's king;
ruffs anolher diamond with
his lasl trump, cashes the

ace of hearts , ruffs a heart
with dummy's last trump

and scores the slam trick
with
dummy 's
diamond.

fiflh

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~
· by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
I Untouchable I One of
5 Underthe bases
standable
2 Video
10 Toss
complement
11 Place
3 Contend
for plants
against
13 Same (Lat. ) 4 German ci ty
14 Considerably 5 Masticated
15 Inlet
6 Rodgers and
16 Sheep
Hart song
17 Mililary
7 French
address
season
IS File
B Abode
20 Concealed
of bliss
21 Conduce
9 Pause
22 Facts
12 Unnamable
23 Dull,
item (sl. )
as paper
· surlace
25 Having
a cupola
26 Yearn
27 Twoina pod
26 Break the 29 Twaddle
32 Tolerate
33 Made haste
34 Danish ·
money
35 Menlo Park

~~~:.:Answer ·
16 Fraulein's
one
19 French port
22 Strip of land
23 Nonnan 24 Gave one's
consent

25 "Giant" star

27 Sows
29 Offspring ,
30 Rub out .
31 Man-made ·
fabric
36 Pronoun ...
for a ship"
37 Adherent

name

37 Britisher's
conunent
38 Burning ;
fiery
39 Middling
40 Gary Cooper
film role
UFederal
agenl'l

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE II

Here's how to work It: ' :
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A It .
used for the three L's , X for the lwo O's, etc . Single letlerg
apostrophes , the length and formation o( the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
JIW
FJP

USQPATGEF
C PQ ,E

SWGIR

QPSCGE

UTCGEEWT

E J

1

UXl(

EYUE
HJXXJK . - AJCUI
QUFGIR
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: IT IS A LOVELY THING TO UVE
WITH COURAGE AND DIE LEAVING AN EVERLASTING
FLAME.-ALEXANDER THE GREAT
I'

�Page-12

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-!.Middleport, Ohio .

Thunday, September 8, 1983

Heat wave continues in East, Midwest gets cooler air
By DAVID L. LANGFORD
"MOcl•ted Press Writer

Tne heat wave that has destroyed
.$7 bU!Ion worth of crops oet records
again Wednesday In the cities along
the Eastern Seaboard, but a dose of
cool Canadian air brought relief to
.the sweating Midwest.
Schools let out early In places such
as Baltimore and the suburbs of
.Washington as temperatures shot
back Into the 90s In the Northeast,
where Labor Day normally signals
!he end of summer even !hough !he
calendar says there are still two
weeks togu.

chickens.
In Georgia, agriculture officials
reported !hat rains over the weekend may have come too late to
prevent up to 25 percent losses to the
$340 million peanutcrop,lhestate's
largest: cash crop.
But !here was good news Wednesday for parts of !he heartland.

A cold front pushed thunder·
stonns through !he Midwest while
cool weather settled Into !he
northern Plains and lheupperGreat
Lakes nigton. Morning lows In the
40s were reported from the northern
Rockies to Michigan, with a 43 at
Oakland; Iowa, !he coolest tempera·
lure In Iowa since last spring.

I

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT 'TIL 8:00

TO

Save·

i3199

20%
GIRLS'

·. FaU··Tops

•. lADIES'

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

New Fall blouses in misses and extra
sizes. Brilliant fall colors in casual. or
dressy styles.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

18.00 ........... SALE 16.39
112.00 ........ SALE 19.59
116.00 ...... SALE 112.79
123.00 ...... SALE 118.39

'35.00 ........ SALE 127.99

MEN'S

Corduroy
Jeans .

Red Heart

CaniiSoles, haff slips and full sli~ in nylon
and poly/cotton blends. Whrte, Black and
Be1ge. Sizes 32 to 50 and Sthru XXL

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

Waist sizes 29to 38, 1englhs 30 to 36.
Good selection of solid colors.
Wrangler brand. Stock up now.

The quality yarn

Men's 119.95
CORDUROY JEANS ......... '15.99
Men's '22.95
CORDUROY JEANS ........ '18.39

Regular SI.69 Skein

Wintuk Yarn
3\1 oz. skeins. Non-allergenic and
mothproof. Big selection of solid and
variegated colors.

MEN'S FLANNEL

$}39

Ask About WRANGLER BC).
NUS...Up Ia $30 on Carduooys and
Denim Jeans.

SALE! BOYS'

Work Shirts

Fall Color
Photos

. 1.~
':1~~
------LJ\HA."&gt;URAA .. • .. •

~
... """""'' TDI:&lt;S
53 ' 991~ ·
~
UU'V"""'- . .....

JjtJ EXI'()SLIRES . .. $5.4~

J
I
VIllAGE
I
PHARMACY I
~~ MIDDLEPORT, OHIO · 1•
Vdlid: Sept. 5-9, 1983
From your C 4 1 ne ga1 1ves o nly

[o clud1ng lorergn l ltn'l dnd ~ I roes
0.1l f' r.Junon D P' P. rl vf' lo pe
. . , HJ ntl: r~v a ·r a b t e h om dr&lt;. c

--------·

Boys' 115.95
Corduroys ...................: '12.59
Boys' 117.95
Corduroys .................... '14.29
Boys' 118.95
Corduroys .................... '14.99
Ask About WRANGlER
.
BONUS....Up ·to S30 on

Men's 119.95

FLANNEL SHIRTS .................. 'l5.96
Men's '21.95
FLANNEL SHIRTS .................. 'l7.56

Page3

SIAiry on P. 8

Jeans &amp;
Cords
Quality brands include Lee, Wrangler,
and Buster Brown. Regular and slim
cuts. Sizes 1 to 7.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

15.75

............ SALE 14.59
'7.00 ............ SALE 15.59
113.00 ......... SALE 110.39
117.00 ......... SALE 113.59

SALE!
$2 79 Table

Place Mats
100% Polyester. Sizes 12 x 18 inches.
Big selection of solid colors. Home
Furnishings. 1st floor.

$219

enttne
'l S.Ctiona, 14 Pages

20

~It

A Multimedia In,. N:wspo,_r

.-

By RICK GlADSTONE
flee when Interceptors scrambled .to meet It and
They said searchers· recovered several pieces of
possibilities were exhausted and only !hen was the
A....,.eled Prel!ls Wrler
defied lai warning shots before a Soviet warplane
metal
debris, apparently wreckage from !he
order given.'' He did not say why the plane couldn't be
A top Kremlin general said today a U.S. spy plane
blasted It with an alr-ID-alr missile.
shattered jetliner.
Identified.
l'mdezvoosed with a South Kore!lll airliner that
This was the first Soviet acknowledgment lhat one
Tass, !he state-run Soviet news agency, said a
The elaborate Sovtet response to world outrage
entered Soviet airspace on Washington's orders and
of Its planes downed the South Korean jetliner kith a
U.S.-backed Security Council resolution In the United
over !he destruction of !he aircraft carne as !he Soviet
Ignored at least m warning shots before a Soviet
mlssile, one of two Ogarkov said were fired.
Nations, sanctions against !he Soviet airline Aeroflot
Union faced a possible rebuke In !he United Nations
warplane destroyed It with a missile.
·
Previously, the Soviets bad said only that the ntght
and a spreading boycott by foreign pilots were part of
and Increased retaliation elsewhere for the Incident.
"The plane obviously must have been flying toward
was "stopped."
what It called President Reagan's attempts to Incite
All people aboard the jetllner are presumed dead.
Sovl(!t airspace fulfilling a spy mission ... Why did It .
On the warning shots, Ogarkov said Soviet pilots
.."unil_-~vletpsychosls."
·
Standing In front of a detalled map, Ogar!&lt;ov said
·proceed In no other place than !he ope with Soviet
fired two sets of warrtjng shots, Including .a series Of ,
!he Sovle\ radal- trackers detemilned !hat the RC-135
Gecrge P~
. Earller In Ma&amp;.id, Secretary of
.illstallattons?" aSked Marshal Nikolai Y. Ogarkov,
' "four bursts" totprung m roundS of traeer shells:
. peeled off and new back toward Alaska shortly before
Shultz
called
the
Soviet
act
"shocking
to !he
the Soviet mllltary chief of staff.
the jumbo jet entered Soviet airspace, leaving the
conscience
of
mankind.
''
The United States has admitted that an RC-135 spy
In a rare news conference at !he Soviet Foreign ·
commercial liner to proceed alone.
Shultz, speakihg at !he 35-nation Madrid Securtty
Ministry televised overseas, Ogarkov told foreign
plane was In the area the day of the shooting, but
"Obviously they felt that plane was being
said !he destrvctlon of !he J~tllner was
Conference,
reporters that Soviet defense forces detected Korean
claims it was never closer than 300 miles to !he
controlled,. precisely controlled, I would say, and the
part
of
what
he
called systematic Soviet human rights
Air Lines flight 007 flytng side by side with an
Jetliner and was on the ground In Alaska one hour
entry was deliberate," Ogarkov said.
violations.
AmerlcanRC·135survelllancealrcraftfor10mlnutes
before the jetUner was shot down Sept 1.
Japanese pollee said a child's body, with glass and
The secretary of state's remarks came one day
IIE'ar a sensitive Soviet mllltary zone In !he Sea of
Asked by an American reporter why the Soviets
metal fragments \fnbedded In It, had been found. by . . after he said Soviet Fqrei!l" Minister Altdrei A.
Japan, 310 miles off the Jetliner's Intended course.
couldn't ldentlly a jumbo jet, and why In any event !he
"Their flights were certainly !'QOrdlrujted sd as to · ·, ·__pmne catrylng 2!i9 people, l,ncludmg ~ An!er!(:ans, · · :fishermen off !he northern coa.St or Japan. Officers :-:- Gnimy~o·s exPlanation of !he Incident was "prepos.
have
terous" following a twO:h\Jllj' meetfug Wllh· him In
.said lhetra!iments bldlcated' theyo~ter
make a,~r task more difficult and d&gt;nfuse our air
was shot down, Ogarkov replied:
•
·
been a passenger aboard !he downed letllner and said
Madrid. Gromyko new to Paris today ·tar talks with
"The Soviet air forceS made attempts to milke It
defens!! forces," !he marshal said.
an autopsy was helng conducted.
French officials, skipping Shultz's speech.
He said the South Korean Boeing 747later trled to
land but the plane evaded, altered course ... All

S..;te

WASHINGTON (AP) - Whole- Producer Price Index for finished
sale prices, driven up by the first goods:
fond price Increase In four months,
-Vegetable prices skyrocketed
1'0111! 0.4 percent In August, !he 16.5 percent, a dramatic turnaround
government said today.
from July's 11.9 percent decline.
Food price hikes, largely !he
-Poultry prices soared 5.1 perproduct of the swnmer' s drought cent after falling 2 percent In the
I!Jid heat wave, W!!n! posted for preceding month.
\'llii!IAbles, poultry. egg.g and pork.
-Egg prices, ori 1.4 percent In
Food prices rose 0.4 percent, July, were up 4.4 P1!J cent.
matching the overall gain.
-Pork prices rose 0.6 percent
Experts had been predicting that after five months ot sharp declines.
ttieclevaatatlngweatherwouldsend
On the plus side, prices continued
fond prices up next year, but !he falling for beef and veal, down 1.3
speed with which the Increases are percent, a sharp cutback, however,
being felt shows just how severe lhe from July's 4.8 percent drop.
drought and heat have been.
As for beef and veal prices, which
Even with the food price In· · have been madera ling as breeders
creases, however, many econo- liquidate !heir herdsratherlhan pay
mists say lhat the Labor Depart· hlgh feed prices, many analysts
ment's wholesale prire calculation expect higher prices In the corning
for all of 1983 may rise at Its slowest months as the liquidation ends and
pace since the mld·1960s.
!he supply of cattle going to market
Indeed. prices for the flrl;t eight shrinks.
monthsoftheyearwereflat. For !he · Fresh fruit prtces fell5.6 percent.
year ending In August, prtces rose
As for other areas ofthewbolesale
Just l4 percent, their best 12-month price report, the department said
showing since 1967. They had risen energy prices rose a modest 0.3
. 3.7percent In 1982.
percent, slightly higher than the 0.2
This summer's weather was felt
percent galn of the previous month.
In a number of statistics In today's
Gasoline prices rose 0.4 percent, .
less
than half the 0.9 percent gain of
Wholesale Prices--,
!he
month .before. Natural gas
Producer Price
prices
edged downward 0.2 percent
· Index For
after
tumbling
1.2 percent. Heating ·
Finished Goods
on prices rose 0.5 percent after
290·
1967:100
falling 0.7 percent.
'Ole energy price calculations
reported todaY were actually for
July. That component of the
wholesale price measure lags a
month because energy companies
report their prtces too late for
Inclusion In the most recent Index.
The department also reported
that:

..: ,
.• :

WHOLESALE PRICJ!S Wholelale prices, driven up by

Sport S_hirts

llle llnl food pJtce blcrea8e In
foar ......_ ...., O.t pemeol Ia
AUIIIIII, 1118 pvenunet~l said
ll'lida.r. In Ill, the Producer
:Prtee IDdex .... flalahed &amp;oods
.lllood at alia AIJIIIII, meanin~ &amp;11111 &amp;oods ...... Ill In 198'7
would !lave llGII&amp; 1111.112 Jail&amp;
IIIOIItb. (AP J;urpiiO&amp;o).

flannels, Westerns, Button Down
color. Oxford Cloths in solid and
stripes. Good style and color selection
in sizes 8 to 20.

19.95 Shirts.. ......... '7.90
110.95 Shirts ......... '8.70
'11.95 Shirts ..........19.50
'14.95 Shirts ........ 111.90

sharpL3percentafterboldlngtlatln
July. UghI truck prices were up0.3
percent, reversing a 0.3 percent
.
decline.
--Capital equipment costsrose0.7
percent, their sharpest rise since
' November 1981. Much of the
Increase was due to higher motor
vehicle prices. Those costs are for
machinery and transportation
equipmellt U9ed by business.

Minor brush fire
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called to the Children's Home
lllllRoadnearPcmeroyat7:14p.m.
'Ibul'llday to extinguish a brushfire.
Firemen were on the scene until

7:49.

Teachers, hoard reach accord .
A tentative contract 11g1 eemeut
hal beenreecbed between the Melp
Local TNcberl Alloclatlall and the
Melp Lcx:al School Dlltrlct Board
f#. Education, according to Supt.

OPEN SATURDAY 'TIL 5:00

Dill E. Man1L

USE OUR FREE
PARKING LOTS

at y

Counter charges brought by Soviets

V

SALE! BOYS'

Boys'
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 9, 1983

-Passenger car prices rose a

'

lllTLE BOYS'

•

e

,'Ji .

corduroy and denim jeans.

·· .

I112 ~v•w~ITDL'IS $1.791I
115 EXroiURf.S .....s2.49J

Boys regular and slim sizes B to 16.
Husky sizes 8 to 18 and Student Sizes
26 to 30 waist. Choose your correct
length. New lash ion colors.

Men's '15.95
FLANNEL SHIRTS .................. 'l2.76
Men's '17.95
FLANNEL SHIRTS .................. 'l4.36

~

..

·Corduroy
Jeans

Our new fall selection including the popular Alaskan
flannels, plaid patterns in sizeS, M, Land XL Talis in
Medium, Large, Extra Large. Big and Talis in 2X, 3X
and 4X. Two flap pockets, extra long tails.

WEEKEND SALE!
~ .

Girl scout winners

prices
up during August

lADIES'

Weather foreusl

Deveopyour

Baseball roundups

~olesale

16.00 ....... SALE '4.79
18.50 ....... SALE '6.79
114.00 ... SALE 111.19
118.00 ... SALE '14.39

Slip Sale

,.

may

Girls' Knit Tops, Blouses, Flannel
Shirts, Sweaters and Vests. Famous
name brands like Wrangler, Buster
Brown and Russi e. Girls' sizes 12 to
24 mos. 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7 to

Blouse
Sale

. The Veterans Memorial Hospital
Speech and Hearing Clinic will be
held on Thunsday, Sept.15, from 5 to
9 p.m: at the Pomeroy Elementary
SchooL
Speech, language and healing
therapy Is provided by the clinic
and there are complete diagnostic
evaluations and complete healing
testlngs available through the
clinic. The services of the clinic are
available free of charge regardless
of !he individual's level of Income.
There Is a considerable amount of
time open for hearing testing for
persons from Infancy through
senior citizens and all residents
even suspecting a hearing problem
are urged tovtslt thecllnlc an&lt;j have
the situation checked out. Persons
feeling they have a need for cllnlc
services may contact Susie Heines
at 985-4163 who will arrange an
appointment time.

I

Weekend sale prices on our quality Airway
Luggage. Carry-On~ 24" Pullman, 26"
Pullman, 2~' Pullman, Two-Surte~
Cosmetic bags and Attaches:

.SALE PRICED

Speech clinic
:set Sept. 15

I
I
I
I

. Sale

Rer. '17.00 to '40.00.

In Arkansas, officials said !he
thunderstorms which swooped
across the northern part of the state
on WedneSday would do uttle to
. relfeve the drought. · ·
.
LeOn McGoogan, dir!!Ctor ot the
state Office of Emergency Services,
said the damage to crops - mainly
Soybeans,cottonandgralnsorghum
-could exceed $00lmilllon and !hat
doesn't Include the hlgh COSis of
purchasing feed for cows, pigs and

~·

Luggage

Fine quality knrt tops, sweaters, slacks,
cords and skirts. All new fall colors: gray,
blue, red, royal, khaki and turquoise.

Sl359

Stories, photos p . 5

C.,.,r!fr.d 1983

·Junior
Sportswear

.National dance titles

Pages3,4

. VIII.32,No. I05

--~
HANG TEN

Several slates -including Iowa,
Indiana and Missouri - have
declared agricultural disasters and
asked for federal.asslstance In what
the weather serVIce calls ihe'\vo..St
drought In !he Midwest and Ohio
Valley since the Dust Bowl days of
· the 1900s.

SUnday and~ Monday.

College grid roundups

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SPECIALS.

The New England Power Co.
urged Its customers to cut back on
consumption.
The mercury had topped 90
degrees by noon in Philadelphia for
a record 37th time this summer. It
was 93 by afternoon at !he airport In
Atlantic City, N .J ., a record for !he
date.

Clear tonight. L.:&gt;w near 60. Winds
light and variable. Sunny on Friday.
High85-90.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Satunla_rlhroUgh Monday:
Fair through lbe period. Highs
85-9!1SaturdaY and Stmdll)' and 71&gt;85
Monday. Ww8 65-15 Satunlay and

!rom the oppressive'heat with a few
daytime highs In the 70s and
nlghtlme lows dipping Into the 50s...
The hottest day of the sununer In
Iowa came on Aug. 17 when the
temperature inDesMollles reached
1~. It was senior cltl7,ens dll)' at the
state fair and more than 50 were
treated for heat exhaustion.

National Weather Service In Des
Mol!les. "But !he most bizarre lhlng
about this summer, especially July
and August, was the persistent heat.
"Granted, there have been two
hotter summers - 1934 and 1!1ll.with several days of trtpl~lglt
temperatures. But even In !hose
summers !here were brief breaks

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Record consumption qf electrtclty
was reported by a pool of utilities ·
serving more than 21 rnllllon people
In Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
Maryland, Vlrgirila, Delaware, and
!he Dlstlict of Columbia.

.

In Des Moines, Iowa,- meteorologists said !he cool snap broke a
record strtng of 81 consecutive days
In which temperl!tures never
dropped Into the 50s. That's compared with 58 straight days In 19.'fi.
"We recorded our hottest August
ever, and third hottest summer In
!he books," said a statement !rom

Eh,t•l~r
'"-.aun.-•
IMIIHMoPI

.~lllCAIO

.
'l'Mcbera wW meet Monday
aflaiWI tiD c111cua ratlllcatlml of
!he._ ooatract IIIII, lfratllltd. the
board f1 education wW probably he
called lll1o lpeCiall!!lelm 1D put Its

approval oo the new ag1 eenll!llt.
Meantime, 011 Monday Lee Sltll·
!man of the Federal Mediation
Service wt1l !ln1ve ID cl1scusa an
Impasse slluatioll betwi!Etl the
board 8Dd liOIHlel'tlfled employes of
thedlltrtct. Sltlllmln wtllaerve ua
medlatxlr ID Ileal lag~ sldelf#.the
lmpasle lltuatlall and wDI ~
recornmeildatlons but t1le I'III.UII·
rneudatlclll are not mandatory•

·Plane Comparison

-

-::-·

I
------·~--- -·

Boeing 747-200
length of
Fuselage:
225fl .·2in .
Wing Span:
195 ft.-8 in
Height Ov~rall: 63 ft. ·61n

RC-135 ..
145 11·6 in .
145 11 .·9111

42ft

· "&gt; Ill

~----~--------------~Ap
PlANE COMPARISON- U.S. Officials~ that a Soviet pilot may
have mlaldentllled the Korean passenger jelllne, a Boeing 717·200, left,
as an RC-135 U.S. Air Force recoon•IM'8'K"e aircraft, right, as 11 strayed
over Sw1e&amp; sides Thunday, Sept. I. Tbe lwo sllhoueUes are
appi'OXbnelely similar In scille. CAP Laserphoto) .

Local cable
nowhasCNN

Deputies continue
hu~t for escapee
John A. Park. 34, who was being
held In !he Meigs County Jail on
charges of child stealing and on
Franklin County charges of break·
ing and entering and grand !heft
escaped at 9:15p.m. Thursday after
confe!Ting with hls attorney.
Whlletalklngwilh his counsel, the
attorney asked If Park could make a
phone call, Which was granted.
Before !he attorney left he asked If
Park could use the phone for a few
more minutes. When Parkcameout
he asked to talk with Deputy Beegle.
Beegle was on the phone and Park
had a seat In lhedlspatcher'soffice.
Afti,r telling Beegle he needed a
paper !rom his personal belongings
for his attorney, Park moved to the
door and sUpped out. A trusty seeing
him gu by a window, yelled at Beegle
who pursued on foot down Cgurt
Street and East on Main Street.
Park ran Into the Pizza Shack and
then entered the Meigs Inn. He ran
towards the Second Streetsldeoflhe
Meigs Inn. No one reported seeing
him on Second St.
Pomeroy, Middleport, and Ru·
· tland Police, State Highway Patrol,
Gallla County Deputy und off duty
and special deputies searched the

....;

Clear tonlght. Low 63-68. Winds
scuihwl!ltl!rly less !han 10 mph.
Sunny and more humid Saturday.

.,~

lit ')MilT

'q.'-aiDibe

..niDibeiOI•Tt,

IIQ',

MILLER, Ohio (AP) A
35-year-old Kenova, W.Va., man
was killed Thursday morning when
a construction crane he was
dismantling fell on him, authorities
said.
Pollee Identified the victim as
Harold Perdue.

...

'

.\.
', !'

/

~

fr

Hlgh8&amp;93. .
Ea I ' I Olllo Jl'oreca8t
SuP'Iq ....... 'l'ueDy:
.,_
ln&amp;e

• • • r ... n J,IHIMc-?q

Accident kills man

\

Weather forecast

. . . -? ,.,,_..,lo'INO

Park was seen wearing a two
tone blue jersey, blue jeans. white
tennts shoes with laces. Hels5foot8
Inches tall and weighs Hill pounds.
He has light brown hair and Is
partially bald on top.
When officers were searching !he
Meigs Inn they discovered that a
door to one of the rooms had been
kicked In at the rear of !he buJidlng.
The occupant of the room Informed
!he officers !hat he had locked !he
door when he left . Nolhlng was
·
missing from the room.

area.

Dick Newell, manager of !he
Cablentertalnment Cable 1V System. today announced the addition
of Cable News Network to Its
channel line-up.
CNN, the award winning 24 hour
news service, has replaced the old
AP NewsPrtntout on Cable Channel
13. say~ Newell.
NewellpolntsoutthatCableNews
Network Is the leade4r In cable
televiskm news services. CNN
features up to the minute world and
national news, sports, financial
lnfonnatlon and In-depth reports.
Newell reports that CNN was
added to partofthe system In Mason
County last month and now covers
all of the Mason and Meigs County
System. '"'bbs has been a much
requested service," says Newell.
"Cablentertalnmmt Is proud to
make CNN a part of your cable 1V
service.''
If any further lnfonnatton Is
needed, subscribers ai'e to call
Cableotertalnment at:ll4-675-3398or
614-992-6444.

a._._
... •• F• ......_.
,__fair•
~;~~~--., .. VUWiWW

Park was returned from California on July 15 to answer the child
stealing Indictment. He was · also
being held as a parole violator as
well as being held for Columbus
Pollee.

BtJSY, BUSY, BUSY - Emplo)'ea of Fnllh
l'blrmacy, wlllcla wiD opetl . . doorl ar.cia,y In lbe
fonner J.G.A. balldllla ou Mlddlepor&amp;'s North s-d
Ave., were buly'l'llunda)'tjooldgr&amp;be -ltare,lbe

)'

lil&lt;th Fnllh Pbannacy. The lllore, In addltloa to Its
pharmaceo&amp;lcal opera&amp;loa8, wW ofter CUIIomers a
wllle ru19 ol meroh"""'e 'lbe bulldiDr ha8 ~n
CCHU&amp;I!iteb' I&amp;!,P 4eW lllld redecorated lo ACCommodate lhe buolo-.

,,

,,

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