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Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel
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~y,SephKnber26,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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•

•

-~- Block party said suc~essful

' ....
"l -· ----

(:nalk up an ~t rating lor

the Middleport Olamber of Com-

merce lor Its efforts In stagln&amp;' lts
first

block

party

Saturday

afternoon.
The party was a wholesome,
tamUy entertainment endeavor,
well supported by the public. WhUe
more exhibitors and partlcl(lllllts
would have been helpful In fUUng up
the vacant spaces throughout the
business section where the party
was held, ~~Jeri, was still a wide
variety of attractions which offered
••something for everyone.''
There were · games, excellent
displays of crafts and merchandl.se
offered for sale, a wide variety ot
food Items sold from stands, and
sidewalk bargains otlered by merchants ot the town.
·
A stage on Coal St. offered
entertainment throughout the party
hours and the crowd on hand loved
the presentations by the various

TUG - These representatives of the welding
class of Meigs High School receive their trophy as tug
of war winners a1 Middleport's Block Party Saturday
from Brian Conde, left, presldmt of the Meigs

Jaycees, sponsors. Team memhers from the left are
Joey Barton, Eddie MIJJer, Hobert Cundiff, Jeff
Cundlfl and Tim Compson.

Nine calls wereahswered by local
units Saturday and Sunday, the
Meigs County Eme!-gency Medical
Services reports.
Sunday calls Included 2; 53 a .m. ,
Rutland, to 34350 SUo Road for
Grace Caidweu, taken to Holzer
Medical·Center; ll: 34 a.m .. Pomeroy,atll:34a.m. to Pleasant Ridge
for Dwight Parker, dead updn

.

"'
(Continued from page 1)

arrangement proposed for rental of
the hangar SDIICP- •
Under tenns of the current
contract, thecountyisdeslgnatedto
receive 1 percent of the protlts
generated by operation of the

-,.._

DOLlS- Gwen Ferguson displayed some of the
exceUmt pieces of her Carriage House of Dolls

creallons at Satunlay's Block Party In Middleport.

Meigs County
happenings..

chamber o( commerce members ·
~ gold and blue t·shlrts tor
Identity as they moved throogh the
area making sure that aU went well
and providing any assistance where
needed. Dr. Craig Matbews was
general chairman for the party and
Yvonne Scally, president of the
chamber, was also acttve In
planning and staging the event
Pollee officers_ were on dUty
throughout the day to reroute traffic
around the party area which
extendecl fran MW St. to Rutland
St., having been blocked ott through
the cooperation of Mlddleport
Vtuage o!ficlals. During the party
son)e 60 prizes contributed by
merchants were given away.
Only complimentary · remarks
could .be heard from the crowd
attenillng the first e!fort by the
chamber. By the same token,
chamber members were complimentary towards the crowd. There
was no disorderly conduct and no
• Incidents OCCUlTed. It was just a
situation that gave people a chance
to get out ot the house and enjoy
arrtval; Rutland at 4:14 p.m. . some special activities on a beautlextlnguished a brush fire near the fulfaU day.
Extending theopenlngremarks to
Haggy residence on White's HW
welcome visitors to the first block
Road .
Saturday calls Included: Pome- party was Middleport Councilman
roy Unit at Shammy' s at 2: 45p.m. . Dewey Horton.
groups, mostly musical, and the
Grande Squares from Gallla County
moved through 900le smooth
square dances In the street. much to
the delight of the crowd. Attractive
costuming enhanced the appearance ot the dancers.
And--there were contests.
Walter Haggy, 14, Rutland, and
Mark Imboden.14, Middleport, tied
for first place honors In a hamburger eating contest staged by
Burger-Chef and won dinners at the
restaurant. Nellie Brogano!Middle-port won first place honors In a pie
baking contest with second going to
Thelma Hayes, Middleport, and
third to Phyllis Blake, also of
Middleport. Amber Blackwell and
Jeremy Northup emerged as
winners ol the UtUe Miss and Utile
Mister Block Party titles.
Jay HW served as master of
ceremonies for the stage entertainment and the "good guys" were the

airport.
That
percent
clause does
not exist
In 1 the
proposed
new
,
contract.
The airport was buUt ln1967wltha
combination of stat~~. grant montes
given to Gallla and Meigs cowltles.
Agreement between the two counties allowed the airport to be
constucted In GaWa County, with
Gallla accepting financial responslbUlty for the operation and maintenance of the facUlty.

for
Jo Bolinger,
'at the
lOcation;
Paneroytreated
Fire Department, 2: 41p.m .•for a structural fire
at~ Butternut Ave. ; Pomeroy at
2:53a.m . to165Mu1berryAve.,for
Shirley Jones, taken to Holzer
Medical Center; Mlddleportatll: 14
a.m. to Vtuage Manor Apartments
for Shawn Roush, treated on the
scene; Middleport at 4:31p.m. to222
N. Third lor Dee Dee See, taken to
Veterans Memorial; Raclneat2: 47
p.m. to Bucktown Road for WUma
Anderson. taken to Veterans
Memorlal.

Page3

·.weather forecast

Arafat.
Belnlt newspapers said a lourLebanese army today accused
man
committee - composed of
antt-goveriunent forces ot using the
representatives
of the army a nd
newly proclaimed cease-tire to
warring Christian, Druse and ShUte
reinforce positions around army
Moslem mUitlas- planned to ~t
strongholds on ~ hills overlooking
privately today to work on arrangeBeirut.
ments for consolidating thf truce.
But an army statement carrying
Newspaper reports sald U.N.
thechargestoppedshortofaccuslng
Secretary-C;eneral Javier Peftl'l de
Syrtan-backed Druse militiamen of
Cuellar was In contact with the
violating the cease:flre, which
presidents of Syrta and Lebanon
Mol$iy halted. a three-week ciVIl
regarding formation at a obsel'l(a·
war In Lebanon' scentral mountains
tlon force'to monitor the cease-fire,
and the outskirts ot Beirut.
No fighting amOili the prtnclpals
The reports said between 500 and
In the clvUwar was reported today,
600 observers would be needed to
but newsmen In the northern ·port ' supervise the truce, .mediated by
city ot'l'ripoll said seven Palestinian Saudi Arabia and the United States
goerrWas were kWed this mornlng to end ftghtlng'thateruptedatter\h~
In a bazooka and machine · gwi fsraell army withdrew from Lehan·
exchange between factions support- on's central mountains Sept. 4.
Ing and opposing Palestine Libera·
Gen. Franco Anglonl, comtlon Organization chalrman Yasger mander ot Italy's contingent In the

..

November 8 Election
Pd. Pol. Adv.

r~::;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

ELBERFELD$

MEN'S INSULATED
&gt;

' G~ AT THE PORVM - Deinocra&amp;lc mrnlnee llopelu1 U.S.
Sen. John Glen ·Of Ohio..,.... ai aN~ Yolil pitcaldenlllll forum In
S)TIICWie Moadllif ....... Gleim IIII8Wl!l'ell qu UIMi8 from tile public u
well u fronl New Yolil GoV. Mu1o Cuomo and U.S. Sen. Daniel
Mpylllhan of New York. Tbe forum wllldl wu held a1 the HcKI!I
Syrecuae wu altended by approxlmailey . - lhouaand people. CAP

r a· erphoto)

~

Mostly cloudy tonight, clearing
overnight. Low near 50. Winds light
and southwesterly. Mostly sunny
Tuesday. High In the mid-70s.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Wedne8day throup Friday:
Fair and wann. IIJpa In the
upper ~. Ill mld-110!1. Low&amp;ahout80.

Wednesday meeting

..,

USE OUR FREE
IPAAIING LOTS

The WUdwood Garden Club wlll
meet at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Ada Holter.

Will view film
A tum on the Nelsonville-YorkMeigs game will be shown when the
Meigs Local Athletic Boosters meet
at 7: 30 p.m. 1\tesday at the high
schooL

Veteran!! Memorial.
Saturday Admissions--Barbara
Fry, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--Walter
Barrett, Sr., Pamela Clark, Floyd
Reynolds.
Sunday Admlsslons--Wllma Anderson, Racine; Robert Manley,
Middleport; Sandra Luckeydoo,
Middleport;
Bernice Molden .
Pom eroy.
Sunday Discharges--Macle
Prtddy.

Marriage licenses
Jimmie Lee Putman. Jr .. 23,
Route 2, Coolv ille. and Robin Lee
WUfong, 23. Route 2, Coolvlllle.
Norman E. Hawley, 36, Middleport. and Linda S, Hawley, 36,
Mlddlepon.

To end marriage
ThemarriageofKathleenNapper
and Christine Napper has been
dissolved by decree filed ' In the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.

ROYALTY - Amber Blackwell, 6, and Jeremy Northup, 7, after
tough pompetltlon were selected the Utile Miss and Uttle Miller
Middleport Block Party Satunlay afternoon. They were presented
Dowers, gilt certmcates and banners. Amber Is the daughter of Mr. And
Mrs. Steve BlackweU of near Shade and Jeremy Is the son of John and
VIcki Northup, Racine. Contestants had to be six or seven years old.
Extensive Interviewing was done by Tonya Ruchti, a therapist a1 the
Guiding Hand School In Gallla County and judges were !rom out of the
county.

Area deaths
. Dwight Parker

Wilma L. Roush

Dwight Parker, 84, ofl()(( Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, dled late Sunday
night at his residence,
He was employed at the Parkers·.
burg Rig and Reel Co. In Pomeroy
for 46 years, and was a m ember of
the Pomeroy Fire Department.
Born In MlnersvUie, he was the son
of tbe late Ellsworth and Men ls
Wilbarger Parker.
He Is survived by his wife, Norma
Young Parker, Pomeroy, and a
daughter. Myrtis Kay Parker,
Pomeroy, a long with several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services wlll be held at
tbe Ewl~g Funeral Home at 1 p.m.
Wednesday with the Rev, James
Corbitt officiating. Burial wlll be In
theWeUsCemetery . Friendsmay
call at the funeral home after7 p.m.
tonight (Monday).

Wilma L. Roush, 74, 1655 W. Farr
St., 1\tcson, Ariz., formerly of Meigs
County, died Friday at the Tucson
Medical Center after an extended
Illness.

•

She was born May 3, 1909 In
Minersville, Meigs County. She was
a member of the Logan, Ohio,
CouncU120 Daughters of America.

Hit the road.
An Auto Loan
will put you· on wheels.
We give fast action.
Low rates.
Friendly service.
Come in today.
Get us started.
I

•

Services wUI be held at 10 a.m.
Wednesday at the Roberts Funeral
Home In Logan with the Rev.
Conrad 0. Diehl officiating. Burtal
wtll be If\ Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral home fran 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.1\tesday and from 9 a.m. untO
tlmeof services o,n Wednesday.

SALE EXTENDED
UNTIL

SATURDAY, QCTOBER 1
12:00 NOON

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
POMEROY, OH.

--

&amp;11 .. (!!4•
-::.:... .

labor support
WASHINGrON (AP) - Sen.
John Glenn's presidential campalgnishoplngtheAFL-CIO'srank
and ftle Is heard when the national
labor union votes on endorsing a
P~lden\lalcandldateSaturday. ·
I think we have said from the
very beginning that'we thought that
wehadagoodbltofsupportwlththe
rank and tOe - (and) that that
might not necessarUy be reflected
when It comes down to voting,"
Louise Swartzwalder, deputy press
secretary for the Glenn campaign,
said Monday.
.
Ms. Swartzwalder said various
polls of labor memberships "lndlcate that there is .a depth ot support
among membership."
"Whether that Is retlected when
the ftnaJ vote is !liken - we don't
know; It remaJns to be
Accordlngtoreports,tormerVIce
President Walter Mondale Is fa· .
vored to receive organized labor's
endonenent. 1be Glenn campaign
has , challenged the endoroement
procedure, fearing that Glenn
support among the rank and ftle
won't be reflected In the vote by the
general board.

slnglecandldaterecelvestwo-thlrds
of ·the vote on the first ballot, a
second role call wtll be taken
between the top two candidates.
"There Is a posslbWty that that
could happen," Ms. Swartzwalder
said ot a second ballot. "It Indeed
· the senttrDents ot some' of ~
rank·and-flle people end up belrig
expressed · on the' first ballot,
according to some ot the tnfonnatlon we have, there are suttlclent
numbers within some of , those
unions to give us a percentage that
would block the two-thirds."
Ms. Swartzwalder said the Ohio
Democratlsonrecordasfavorlnga
procedure In which !be wishes of the
membership is reflected by the
leaders who cast the votes.
"There's a little bit ot fear that If
thatdoesnotoccur, It's not exactly a
democratic process," sbe said.
"The membership In the end does
makeuptheunlon,andthosearethe
people wfuse wishes should be
heard."
Ittheboard'ssecondrole:callvote
falls to produce a two-thlrils
majortty, theAFL-CIOwlllmakeno
pre-primary endorsement.
· Ms. Swartzwalder sald campaten
1be AFL-CIO, with lts95afflllated Information has been maUed out In
unions, represent 14.5 mUIIon
antjclpatlon ot the event and that a
workers. According to some estiGlenn contingent plans to be In
mates, the endorsement lsworthUJ
Florida. ·
· mlWon to the chosen candidate.
"EssenttanY, we're just keeping
The 500 members of tlie AFL-CIO
the lines. (lf communication open
board convene Satunlay In Hollywlthpeople_a ndmaklngcertatnthey
wood, Fla., lor two OOurs ot open ·are aware ot where .John Glenn
discussion on theeildorsement. It no
starids," she said.

seen.:·

Johs·bill program
outlined by mayor
By BOB HOEFUCII
SetltMelltaft
Arepresentatlvefrom!heDepartment of Developmenl wW be
visiting Middleport soon to discuss
detalls of a SZI9,1m community
,, development block grant under the
1983emergency jobs bill p1'0(11'&amp;1n.
This was disclosed by Mayor Fred
Hotrman Monday night when Mid·
dleport VWage · CouncU met In
regular session. Mayor Hottman
read a letter fran Gov. Richard F.
Celeste announcing the grant.
Accordlngtotheletter, therewere
139 applications for such grants In
Ohio requesting l'nore than $37
mDIIon. The letter pointed out that
$ll. 7 mUllon of federal assistance
granted the'state In the program will
provide more than ~ jolis. 1be
letter emphasized Ohio money was
targeted to ·areas havbig the
greatest employment needs and
Middleport was one ot !18 projects
funded out ot the 139 applications.

Install downspoutlng at a price of
$645. CouncUman Allen Lee King
said that there were other people
who could do the work at vUlage
and felt that It should be a bid ·
situation. Mayor Hollman said that
the work n££ds to be done at once.
Coullcllmen King 11110 Robert Gll·
more voted against hiring Haley•
whlle Counclimen Horton, Jack
Sa tterlleld and Carl Horky gave
Haley the green light to proceed with
the repair work.
Mayor Hoffman announced a
public hearing on the rate hike
"iQUested by Columbus and Southern Ohio Electrtc Co. for0ct..24, 9: 30
a .m . at the offices of the Public,
UtOitles Commission· of Ohio In
Colutmbus.

nan

Party ooordlnator
Mrs. Yvorme Scally, president of
the Middleport Chamber ot Commerce, met with councU and
extll!nded thanks for the VIllage
ottlclals help and coopemtlon In
Seek Improvements
stqtng Saturday's block party
Several residents met wlth coun- which was termed quite successtul.
cn and requested that Improve- A discussion was later held with
ments be made to an alley between Scally on a Halloween party to be
First and Second Sts., running from staged In Ueu of trick or treat night
Walnut to Rutland Sts. Councilman by the chamber, Middleport Council
Dewey Horton pointed out that the and the Middleport Pro. Mrs.
alley had not lti!en Included In this Scally was named to serve as
fall's resurfacing because money coordinator of the party and she wtll
wasspentonmajorroads.However, work out details with chamber
It was agreed that some Improve- l'l)embers and the Pro as to
ment can be made to the aOey now location, activities, prizes ani! other
and tbe group was asked to remind matters. ·Hope was eXpressed that
council neict year on the resurfacing townspeople wW contribute to the
request sometime In June so that It party since they will not have to
can be Included In plans.
contend with trtck or treat night and
A letll!r was read from Mr. and a plan will be worked out as to how
Mrs. James Brewer, VIne St., residents can go about this.
commending Mayor Hoffman and
Curbing on Middleport HW was
council members for seeing that discussed and Mayor Hoffman said
damages to their property were It wW be done this week. At King's
eliminated In theconstructlonofthe suggestion, the mayor will Investinew water tower and Jines. They gate the posslbW\Ies or planting
al8o commended otllclais for pro- evergreen trees out Broadway St.,
gress ~lng made In the town. towards Logan St. to camouflage an
Council accepted the 1984 tax and area when dirt has been dumped.
Income ll(lures approved recently Mayor Hot!rrian wW determine If
by the Meigs County Budget tl1j! property owner has any objecCommission.
tions to the plantlltgs. A discussion
Splltwte
was held on therepavingotW. Main
Council voted 3-2 to hire' Dwight St. In Pomeroy and'the fact that the
Haley to repair the second. noor new surface does not go clear to the
porch and steps atvtuagehallandto .
·tcoRtlnued on pqe 10)

multinational peacekeeping force,
told The Associated Press that Italy
has 'been asked to send up to 250
troops to the central mountains as
part of the obse_rvatlon force. And
the leftist newspaper· As--Saflr
quoted uMamed Lebanese govern·
ment sources as saying France has
promised to contribute 250
observers.
As-Saflr said the four-man ceasefire committee Is scheduled to
debate a plan to establlsh Lebanese
army control over the coastal
highway that links Beirut with
Israeli army lines In southern
Lebanon and over the central
highway linking Beirut with Syrian
army lines In eastern Lebanon.
1n accordance with "tbe agreement, President Amln Gemayel
said he was caUlng for leaders of the
various Christian and Moslem

factions to begin "a national
reconcUI'atlon dialogue at onc;e" to
restructure Lebanon' s political system . A conunlttee of representatlves from the various groups was
expected to m eet soon ro arrange the
conference, posslb~y In Saudi
Arabia.
In the strat('l:lc hill town of Souk
e i-Gharb. which overlooks the U.S.
Marine base at Beirut's alrpon,
Lebanese soldle1~ milled about the
ruined streets, eating grapes, talkIng with each other and raising fists
In the victory SW\.
Streets In Beirut wt•re jammed
with eat'S and pedestrians as
residents took advantage ol the
truce to shop or stroll .
A s[Xlkesman for Middle E a st
Allways, the Lebanese a lrllne, said
the company hoped to reopen the
Belrul alrpot1 "within a few days."

Localgovernnnent
funds distributed
The Meigs County Budget Commission has completed Its
apportionment of local government monies totaling $250,00 for 1~ .
Local goventment funds are received from the State of Ohio, Tl)c
apport-Ionments to the subdivisions of the county aremadeon the basis
· of figures which the commission has on hand at the present tlme.
Meigs county receives 40 percent or $100,032; the townships receive
~ percentor$75,024and that Is divided among the 12 townships on the
basiS o!mlleagewlthlneach township; thevlllages recelve~percent,
$75,024 and that Is divided on the basis of population .
Amounts allotted to the townships Include: Bedford. 8.18 percent,
$6,136.96; Chester, 12.17 percent, $9,130.42; Columbia, 7.18 percent.
$5,386.72: Lebanon, 9.98 percent, $7,487.40; Letart. 4.79 percent,
$3,593.65; Olive, 9.78 percent, $7,337.35; Orange, 7.78 percent,
$5,836,87; Rutland, 9.18 percent, $6,887.20: Salem, 10.19 percent ,
$7,644.95; Salisbury, 5.99 percent, $4.493,94: Scipio, 7.99 percent,
$5,994.42; Sutton, 6,79 percent, $5,094.12.
Amounts vWages wlll receive Include: Middleport, 38.~ percent, •
$29,266.86; Pomeroy, 39.01 percent, $29,109,31; Racine, 5.79 percent,
$4,343.89; Rutland, 7.9..1 percent, $5,949.40; Symcusc, 8.47 percent,

$6,354.54.

Officials deny
recorder findings
TOKYO (AP ) - Japanese go- gone down after being hit by a Soviet
vernment officials reportedly said mlsslle . Sept. 1 with 269 people
today that U.S. Navy search vessels aboard,
haw located the Oight data arid
Gotoda said the officia ls were to
voice recorders !rom the downed be present when the Americans
South Korean airliner, but a Navy recovered the two reconlers.
spokesman denied the reports.
Later today, 10o!flclals, Including
Reports by the Japan Broadcast- two, Japanese and onl! from the
Ing Corp. and the Kyodo News International Civil Aviation OrganiServleo!, quoting unnamed govern- zation, Jeft Wakkanal, Japan's
ment sources, follOwed a statement northernmost city, aboard a U.S.
by the chief government spokesman Navy helicopter for an unidentified
that' setoff a waveofspeculatlon the u.s. Search vessel.
Americans would soon recover the
Japan Broadcasting Corp. said
recorders.
the recorders had been located In
But Lt. Gary Shrout, spokesman International waters at a depth of
for the U.S. Navy In Japan, denied 2,nt feet west of Moneron, a snlall
the reports. "Asotthlsatternoonwe Island off Sakhalin. The recohlen;
have not found the black hox," he continued to give off an e lech-onlc
said. "I'm not wattling on that one." "pinging" sound which can be
The recorders - the so-called plcke&lt;;l up by sonarequlpmenton the
"black box"- tuive tapes of the last U.S. vessels, It said.
30mlnutes ofthetlfght andmlght tell
It said the main wreckage of the
why the Korean ~lrcratt veered off Boeing 747 also appeared to tx-ln the
course Into Soviet airspace.
same spot, and that the Americans
This morning, Chlet Cabinet are preparing salvage opera lions
Secretary Masaharu Gotoda, Ja- , l:iut face the technical problem ot
(lllll's top government spokesman, overcoming the high water pressure '
said the United States Invited at that depth.
Japanese otrlclals to join U.S,
U.S. mU!tary and embassy oltlsearch operations off western clals In Tokyo, Hawaii and WashingSakhalin where the Korean Air ton earlier denied that recovery ot
Lines jumbo jet Is thOught to have the recorders was lr!Unlnent

Meigs Countia~ .
Grand jury receiving evidence
injured in Lebanon
Teacher·strike ends

Photo correction
A photograph of Eastern High
School' sHomecomlng In the Sunday
edition of The Times-Sentinel was of
the queen, SheUa Koenig, daughter
of Mr. and Mr$. Leonard Koenig,
Route 3, Pomeroy. With her rather
than her escort were the senior
attendants, Mary Beth Hibbs,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Larry
Cleland on the left, and Paula
Frecker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
Ke nneth Frecker.

GieDD watches

.Zips fro_
mlop and buttom oconcealed me!lll snaps
ofiberfillrtsulation lor warmth oconcealftj kn~ cuffs
oadjustable leg snaps oregu~r and extra large sizes
~avv. brown duck and dark olive.
•

enttne

BEIRUT. Lebanon tAP ) - The

meetat7:~p.m.

Thl' Mason Chapter 157, Order of
the Eastern Star, wtll meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m . In the Chapter
Room at Mason. Star Points wU he
h&lt;?nored ,during the meeting. Area
members are Invited to attend.
Potluck wlll follow the meeting.
Members of the Mason Chapter are
requested to take an Item for the
kitchen such as dish clothes or
towels.

at y

•

Civil war cease-fire ·continues

IN THE

Eastern Athletic Boosters wW
tonfghtatthehlgh
school.

•

e

SCHOOL BOARD

COVERALLS

Property transfers
6

WILL BE A
FOR EASTERN ILi·OCAL

Beat of Bend p. 5

Forsch no-hits Exp6s

KEITH WEBER

Write-In Candidate

Lots of Litter...•

.

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

Meets tonight

Meets Wednesday

America's Cup lost

Squads have busy weekend

Re'iecls

,, ,...

1983

Farmers
Bank
Your Community Owned Bank
,

POMEROY,~Ob!O (AP) - The
"It's something he wanted to do
mother ot a 19-year-old Marine .tor bls country,'' said Mrl. Boyd.
prtVate tnjur:ed tn Lebanon says her , "He had tallred about joining the
.- son's military service was some- Martnes!oralongtimeandheeven
: thing he ''wanted to do tor bls enll8ted a year before graduatlni
· country."
trcm hl&amp;luchool."
She said abe W81 told ~ Boyd'l
P!c. Mark Boyd,l9, of Pomeroy,
, was ln1ured In fighting In Lebanon
lnjurtel when two .Maline~ ahowal
. just before a cease-tire was an- upatherdoor.
.
, IIOIIDOed at mldnl&amp;llt Sunday. H1J
Mark Boyd W11 8lll&amp;ned to the
: rnodler, .Anlll!tll! Boyd, alia ot Me Battalion of the Marine
: Pt:iiW!IO)I, said h e - woundeclln
peace-keeplnl Ioree In Beirut, 1111
• the arm. but tbat !be exteat olldl mOcher said.
.
· lnjul)' was unkllown.
'·
~

LOGAN, Ohio (AP) -A Hocking
County judge Nled the third tloor
con1dor ot the county courthou91'
otl-llml~ to aU but 1f0Urt otrlcers,
law entorimlent otrlcers, if8IIC)
jurors. wttneraes and people with
olflclal bullnesa when the county
pnd jill)' Ia meetJna.
The grand jill)' IJetllnnlng today
may be lnvestlpttna the decaplta·
tlollllltllden llltOctoberotAnDette
Johnstm; l8, and her llance, Todd

Schultz, 19. HockiDICounty Proeec·
utor Clu1l Veldt woold not oon11nn
that report

However. Judie Edwin Johnston
had ordetal Veldt to preaent the
cue to a grand jwy by Friday. Or
.l j

else, be said, 91'alal Information
from the Investigation would be
madepubUc.
. Veldt flied a motion Monday
cltjng space llmltatlolll as the
reason lor wanttna the third floor
con1dor Umited to o!llclal visitors
and court personnel. Judge James
StWweU slined that Order Monday.
Veldt said the grand j\fry session
probably wUl last more than one
day.
Schultz aild Ma. JC&gt;hnSton disappeared last Oct. 4.1belr tor-. were
found tn the river Jut Oct. 14. 1belr
UmiB Mre later bmtl burled In a
nearby comfteld.

LORDSTOWN, Oblo (AP) - A
teacher strike that closed the
Lonlstown public schools for nine
days ended today after members ot
the Lonlstown Education Assocla·
tlon ratified a new contract, one
which leaves salary differences stm
unsettled.
'The 9().member teachers' union
walked out Sept 14 alter the board
rejected an arbitrator's proposal !or
a 7 percent Increase this year and
next.
Neaotlators agreed on a new

!I

two-year pact at a meeting Monday
night. It was ratltled by the school
board a short time later, a nd after
teachers ratified lt this morning,
classes resumed for the district's
1,300 students:
Days missed during the strlkewUl
have to be m ade up, sa id William
Blascak, assistant superintendent
of administrative services for the
Trumbull County Board of Educa·
tlon. He said two days wiD be made
up between now and December, the
rest alter Jan. 1.

�..
•
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Tuesday, September 27, 1983

Comment
11l Coun Strce1
Porn(' roy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE I~"TEREST OF THE ~IEIGS- .,J,\SO~ U!EA
-

Bm~ m......JL,--..~c:::~~~

~v

ROBERT L. \\T'I;GETT
Puhlisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Aulstant Publisher/ Controller

General

~fanap;pr

because, after all, It Is our front line.
The whole NATO alllance, whlch Is
about the defense o! Europe,
accepts the proposition that unless
West Germany can he d~ended,
the jig Is up.
American liberals used to
trumpet the crltlcal role of European Social Democrats as the
backbqne of anti-communism, on

the grounds that they above all
knew the dangers of totalitarian·
Ism. Well, tell It to WWy Brand(. He
has become the Neville Chamber·
lain of West Germany, leading the
drtve to postpone - which means
lndetlnltely to cancel -the deploy·
ment of our Pershing and cruise
mlsslleo scheduled for DeCember ct
this year. Notwithstanding that It

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The r\ssodated Press, Inland Daily Press As~ocla­
tlon and the American Nt&gt;wspapi"r PublishPr Association.
LETTERS OF OPINIOS arf' wekomt'd . Thtol' s hould hl' le!is than 300 word..;;
looK. Allletlers are s uhjefllo t&gt;dltlng and mu sl bt' si gned wllh name, addr~s and
telephone number. No unsigned lt-Uc r!O wUI be publis he-d . Leiter" 9hould be In
cood taste, addressin~ luuf!!t, not persomt.lllie!l.
·

. . .. . .•·•...·

Odd principles
govern money
Anyone who has ever applied for a personal loan hegins to undersumd
some of 'the odd principles that seem to apply in the seemingly proper
world of high and low finance.
The oddities begin at a rudirnentai)Ilevel- with that upright person: for
example, who pays bills on time and ln cash. He has no record, so he will he
denled credit because he hasn't used credit.
Only slightly higher ln respectablllty and acceptability ls the person who
applies for a S3,!XXJ loan. Hls credit record Will be examined ln great detail,
the loan will he granted waJily, and repayments will he monltored closely.
The blg borrower ls treated dWerently, ljis request for seven or
eight·figuresums suggesting a borrower of means ratherthanonelnneed.
The bigger the debt, the more formidable the borrower becomes.
The ultimate in formidability and Irony ls when the big borrower finds
~lf '!llable to repay on time and Insists that the lender give him more
money and soften the terms of repayment if he ever wishes to get hls
money back. ·
Such will he evident this week as the International Monetai)I Fund meets
ln Washington with a proposal that $42 blllion- one-fifth from the Unlted
Slates - he added to Its resources.
The money is needed to lend to, underdeveloped nations, among them
ones that have been unable to repay earlier loans to commercial banks ln
the Unlted States and elsewhere.
A lot of the arguments are bound to annoy· ordinary Americans who
couldn't get personal loans or even a home mortgages in recent years,
although their credit ratings are better than, say, Mexlro's.
Their sense of Injustice might be raised higher by the realfzatlon that
some of the domestJc shortage of lendable funds stems from banks
bundling up consumer savings and shipping 'them to foreign borrowers.
Now, they argue, the request of the IMF is an attempt to ball out those
banks, to save them from their own folly and greed, and once again lt is the
ordinary American who will pay- through inflatJon ..
The argument has tremendous appeal, and probably as much merit, but
reason and logic aren't the sole criteria, as even some bankers Will admlt.
In the odd world of finance, they say, it nqw can be argqed that It is ln the ,
ordinary American's self-Interest to come up with more money to be lent
abroad.
' Nevermlnd the addltl~nallrony that while tM loans aren't beingrepald
a lot of the money ls still coming home as investments ln choice real estate.
Remember, logic offers little guidance.
Better Instead to remember that those loans mean jobs.
It the ·tess developed economies are dehled an addiilonal Injection of
funds from the industrial world they may be unable to buy the Industrial
world's gOods. It they cannot buy goods, those who produce gOods cannot
emplny workers.
: It you seek justlce ln such events It may elude you, because ln the odd
world of finance that quality often isn't respected highly. Perhaps.lnstead
the explanation or the solace can he found ln.a study of philosophy.

Letters to editor
Help appreciated
We want to thank the people who
assisted us the day our car caught
tire at the corner of Brown'sDentlst
place, especially the lady, name
unknown, who called the flre
departrilent and assisted ·ln getting

Mrs. Stewart to her home. Thanks
·for so much kindness when we
really needed lt.
Pauline and Mack W. Ste"'art
Fourth St.
Mason, W. Va.

It's

The 132-year wlnnlng streak, the
longest ln sports, is over. The
seven-race struggle, the first ln
history, is over. The secrecy of the
winged keel ls over. Australia's
2i-year walt Is over.
And a new America •s Cup era theAustrallanera ~has just begun.
"This ls the greatest day of my
life," said Australia II skipper John
~trand, thewlnnerofthegreatest
Cup series.
}{e captured Monday's final race
the way he captured the best -of·
seven competition, by turning the
tlde that was flowing ln favor of
Liberty, the 25th U.S.defenderofthe
C!IP and the first loser.
Bertrand rallied from a 3-1 deficit
to· tie the series with two decisive
wins after trailing at the starts, then
surged from hehlnd on the fifth leg to
wln the unprecl!dented seventh race
by 4l seconds, the fourth smallest
margin ln Cup history.
The gun that signalled the end of
the race was the cue for the start of
far-flung celebrations. From this
seacoast resort to a newly important

was Helmut Schmidt who 1n 19'19
first called on the United States to'
supply· rountervalllng missiles to
face the Soviet SS.20s, the Social
Democratic 'party slowly came
around, and although It lost the
critical e[e(;tlon 1n March, an
electorate that backed Helmut Kohl
ln endorsing deployn\ent unless a
disarmament deal was meanwhlle
struck ln Geneva, the SPD COD·
tinued to move toward aJllli!IISI!'
ment. And now. as the, drive to
capitulate strengthens, Willy
Brandt has released a pollln which
he asserts that 66 percent r1 the
German people oppose deployment
even It the Soviet Unlon and the
Unlted States tall to make a deal.

no

place 12,500 mlles away called this series tl!st he was uncertain if he
Perth, Western Australla, horns would return for another Cup bait !e.
-blared, crowds cheered and tears of
And, while the· New York Yacht
Joyandsorrowwereshed.
C!ubwon'thonorthe legendthatthe
Uberty skipper Dennis Conn&lt;'r, a · head of· the first losing skipper he
master seaman who met his match placed in the shOwcase now displayln Bertrand, fought back rears at a ing the Cup, that notoriety won't
nE'Ws conference where he made a enhance his credentia ls.
Something else is over. now that
statem ent but took no questions.
"Today, Ausu-alla II was the the Australians have succeeded for
better boat. We had no excuses," he the first time since launching their
sald. "1 don't think thet·e Is any pursuit of the Cup ln 1962. It's the
reason for Americans to feel they mystery of the radical winged keel
are anything other than No . J."
that made Australia II more
Outside the Rhode Island Ar- maneuverable and carried her to
mory, where the news conference victory.
As the new champion of thesalllng
was held, a predominantly Amerlcan crowd of about 2,(0) roared for world maneuvered through dozens
both skippers. Th&lt;' throng was of welcoming boats and setUed Into
jammed tOgether so tightly that her berth, the chant went up from
Bertrand rode Into the armory on a some of the thousands ln the crowd:
pollcemotorcycleandshookhlsflst "Let'.s see the keel. Let's see the
ln victory,
keel."
Wlnl!lng sall!pg's most prest!The jubilant Aussles obl!,gect.
glous prize "is the fulfillment of a
Their conqlle&lt;Jt completed, they
dream come true," he sald.
no longer felt the need to hlde the
It was a nightmare for Conner, once-secret breakthrough beneath
whose career as an America's Cup her familiar green and blue plastic
skipper appeared to be over.
Conner, who won the Cup aboard . .
Freedom m 199J. had sald before

Meet the Meigs
Marauders.....

are

Now this does not entirely
surprise, because the Soviet Unlon
is always counseling other coun·
tries on what to do (give up) . But
the structure of Comrade Androp- · •
ov's appeal has got to capture, tor
all time, the International Chutzpah
Award.

MEJ6b

'

Drug hack on market __~___Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - A blg drug
company is quietly moving to put
back on the market a controversial
palnklller lt pulled off pharmacy
shelves ln March after the government compiled reports that linked
the medication to serious allergic
reactions, Including at least five '
deaths.
The drug is Zomax, a powerful
antl-lnOammatlon palnldller that
had been prescribed for some 15
mlllion Americans. Its maker Is
McNeil Pharmaceutical, a subsl·
diary of Johnson &amp; Johnson.
The drug Is unchanged. It wlll
simply have a new label, stressing
the risks and .advising Its use _only
by persons suffering chronlc, ln·
tractable pain.
Incredibly. a government advt·
sory panel has approved the
reintroduction of Zomax with its
new label, on the understanding
that further tests of the drug te
made after it Is back on the market.
McNell voluntarlly stopped sel- ·
llng the drug after studying reports
that !Inked Intermittent use of
Zomax to hundreds of reverse
reactions, Including shock, swollen

body parts, Irregular heartbeat,
labored breathing, unconscious·
ness and heart attack. A Food and
()rug AdminlstraUon computer
printout of last June listed 5,282
cases of adverse reaction toZomax.
Although raw data suggested that
Zomax mlgbt have been a factor ln
40 deaths, the company and the
FDA agree there were possible
links ln only five.
The drug has also caused cancer·
ous ·tumors ln laboratory animals,
according to Dr. Arthur H. Hayes
Jr., then FDA commissioner.
Under questioning last Aprll by
Rep. Ted Weiss, D-N.Y.,Hayessa!d
that before the FDA would allow
Zomax back on the market "we
would have to conclude that there ls
a population of patients lnwhomthe
risks of lis use would he outweighed
by its benetlts."
Another FDA cttlcial, Dr. Robert
Temple, echoes Hayes' point and
added: "There would have to be
substantial new Information, InformatiOn not now available, before
one would reach a conclusion that
making the drug avallable for
chronic use Is the right thing to do."

All McNeil has come up with ~ a
new label; there is no new data that
would satisfy the FDA's
requirement.
.
Yet last month, an FDA advisory
committee approved the drug
maker's plan to Introduce a new
Zomax label provided fUrther tests
are then conducted. Temple and •
other FDA offlcJals werr present
but made no· obJection to the
advisory pimel's decision. They
never brought up the conditiOns
they had assured Weiss would have .
to be met.
The company sticks by Its
product. A spokesman told my
associate Tony Capacclo that per·
haps the adverse reactions to
Zomax were the result of lntennlt·
tent use, and suggested that It
should be used only In cases of
"Intractable" chronlc paln where
other drugs don't work. The
company admitted that there is no
current clinical data that proves the
effectiveness ct Zomax for such
use.
Footnote: An FDA spokesman
stressed that the committee's
decision was purely advisory.

WATCH ON WASTE: Given· the
bWions !hilt are squandered by
federal agencies, Utee,xpendi!Ureof
$58,883 on a questionable project .
may seem like small potatoes. But
Small extravagances can quickly
add up to horrendous waste.
This It the story of one of these
small expenditures, UI\COVen!d by
my associate Lucette Lagnado.lt Is
a proposed grant to the International Youth Year Commission
from the U.S. Intormatlon Agency.
But thanks to the vigilance of Sen.
Edward Zorlnsky, D-Neb., the
request has been red-flagged.'
Here's what aroused bls
suspicions:
- The money ls supposed to be
spent on legitimate educational
expenses. But It was allocated to
pay for a series of Junkets to the
Caribbean, Western Europe and
Africa ln connection with the 1985
International Youth Year.
- · The amount of the proposed
grant was shrewdly kept ,a few
hundred dollars below the $8l,tnl
Umlt that would have ' brought It · ;
under congtesslonaJ scrutiny.
'

BRAD ROBINSON
IHI. lf6 poond
Soph. lallback

"Why don't · \\fe just publicly
censure the guy?"
.
~
"We can't do that. We'll only
offend the people who thought hls
remark was very funny."
"I have an idea. You know those
things they have at carnivals where
a guy slts on a !llatform and P11&lt;Jple
throw balls at him, and every time
they hit him he gets dumped 1n a tub
of water? We could set one of those
up on the White House lawn and
Invite the public to throw things at
Watt: The president could throw out
the first ball."
"That would be sort of tun, but
don't you think It's slightly undlgnltled for one of the president 's
Cabinet officers?"

DAVE SHULER

J-9, 146 pound
Soplt. Guard

,.

~e get

one?"' .

· "We'll go through the mall that

By WILLIAM R. BARNARD

AP Sports Writer
For five years, Bob Forsch lived
with the knowledge that some
people thoughthe dldn 't deserve his
'
firstno-hltgame.
On Monday nlght,heleftnodoubts
as he pitched the second no-hlt gem
of hls career and the first ln the
National League ln exactly two
yem as the St. Louts Cardinals heat
the Montreal Expos 3-{l,
Only a hlt batsman and an e!TOr
by second baseman Ken Oberktell,
both ln the second inning, kept the
no-hltterfromhelngaperfectgame.
Forseh. 33, retire!~ the last 22Expos.
. Meanwhile, division leaders Phl·
. !adelphia and Los Angeles both won
their games to pull Closer to
clinching spots ln the playoffs. The
J)odgers rallied to beat Clnclnnatl
12-9 ln lO Innings and the Phlllles
beat Chicago 5-2, while Atlanta
defeated San Francisco G-2 and
Houston tripped San Diego 5-3.
Forsch, the 20th player to pitch
twono-hltterslnthiscentury ,gothls
first on Aprll l6. l978 against
Philadelphia.
lnthatone,adrlvethatwentunder
the glove of Ken Reitz was called an
error ln the eighth lnnlng. On
Monday night, Oberk!ell let a

,,

l .Nt'braska t9JJ

2.Tcxas

•

l.Artza\a
4.1owa
S.Norlh Carolina
6.Aiabama
7.West Vlrgln19

I

ROhJo State

!Wklahoma

I

lO.Aubum

U.Groll!ia
12.f1or1rla
lJ.So. MetOOdiSt

JOHN WNGSTBETH
6-%, l7l pounds
JWIIor laclde

MJKE CHANCEY
&amp;-3, l'l3 pound

behalf of the NYYC. Now the Cup
will be lodgeq ln the Royal Perth
Yacht Club untO 1987 or 1988 when,
Bond said. the Aussles will stage

their first defense ln the Indian.

Ocean off Perth.
Now the Americans Will be the
challengers.

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2-141
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19.Maryland

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~-Arll.ooa Sratf'

'

grounderbyChrlsSpeiergothrough
hls legs.
The Cardinals scored all of their
runs ln the fifth Inning on run·
scoring singles by Ozzle Smith and
McGee and an RBI-double by
Lonnie Smith.
PhUlles 5, Culls 2
Philadelphia won at Chicago for
Its 11th straight trtumph, built Its
lead over second-place Pittsburgh
to 4 ~ games and lowered Its magic
l!flu.mber to two with nye games left..
John Denny picked up his 1llth
victory, high ln the league, with an
elght-lnnlng seven·hltter and the
Phlllies got all their runs on two-run
homers by Ivan DeJesus and Joe
Lefebvre and a solo shot from Len
Matuszek.
Dodgers 12, Reds 9
Los Angeles maintained lis 3~game lead over Atlanta by rallying
forthreerunslnthetopof!J:Ienlnthto
tie the score and then wlnnlng the
game wlth four runs ln the lOth.
Pedro Guerrero slammed a
two-run double ln the lOth and
contributed an RBI-slngle ln the
nlnth.
Greg Brock and Dusty Baker
collected their fourth hlts of the .
game to start the lOth Inning, and
Guerrero drove ln pinch-runners
Derrel Thomas and Candy Maldonado for a 1~ advantage. Cecil
Espy then singled to score Guerrero
and Steve Sax walked with the bases
lnatled for the final run.

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

.,..
,_,. ,,

3-IHJ
2+0
3-Hl

14.M!chl~

Soph. QB-End
"Not for Watt He has a great
sense of twmor. "
"I have a crazy Idea. Instead of
treating It like a joke, why don't we
get the president to tire the
secretary?"
.
"What tor? We have to give Watt
a reason," a White House aide said.
"We'll say we need the post to
appoint a member of one of the
groups he offended."
"He offended a lot of people."
"Suppose we found a black
Jewish woman with one leg that
was shorter than the other?"
"I'm not against It, but where do

.

Tht&gt; Top Twenty turns In t!Yo A.&lt;l.'iOd·
ated Press college footbaU poll . with fln tpllK't' votl'S In parultht.'Sl'!l, 1l('ll'IOII
reoon1s and toCal points . Pulnts oosro on
1).1~ tS.'llt6-1).14-lJ.l2-ll ·lO.t-8-7-6-5-4-3 -~ ­

{MEIGS

skin. Spectators felt the keel, clung
to it and leU ln the water from it.
Its appearance was no surprise. It
had a blue bulbous front that
extended toward the bow, rather
than angling as traditional keels do
toward the stern. The wings
extended sideways from the bottom
edge and were painted the same
blue color that was dl1flcult to see
under the water.
o.
AusslesyndlcatechiefA!anBond,
successful at last ln hls fourth Cup
campaign, ordered the unveiling of
the keel that ended his decade of
frustration.
"They say something good comes
along once In your llfetJme. Well
something came to Australia today," saki the outspoken mllllonalre, who planned to send a
messengertoplckuptheCupatthe
New York Yacht Club. "I'd llke to
thank. the New York Yacht Cluo
because they have not had an easy
Job when It comes to deaUng wlth a
chalienger as hard as us."
American boats have saUed on

..

h
h•
·
E
Forse no Its xpos .
Dodgers outslug Reds

Top Twenty

Damage control ___-..,.-____A_r_tB_uc_h_wa_ld

Fair youth support

The
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number .

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features on it that you'd expect to find only on bigger
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we have been receiving since he
made his remlll'k. -I'm sure we'D
find a candidate there."
"The president will have to make
the final decision. In the meantime
we have to put the tire out right
away. Schedule the president to
speak to a black group, a women's
group, a Jewish group and a
handicapped group 1n the next
week."
.
"It Will he too obvious 11 he
all of them at this time."
"We'll declare Octobei Black
Jewish Women's Handicapped :
Month. It's about time the president
recognized them for wbat thtoy've- ·
done tor the country."
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' 1.

l

Today in history

.

NEWPORT, R.I. lAP) -

over.

And thls drive against deploy•
ment ln West Germany has become ·
by
means a purely Gennan
question. This is not hard to
understand from the point of view
of Gennany' s allles. It Is obYtously
of vital interest. to America, let ·
. alone torrance, whether If we bave
pledged to defend West Germany,
we
to have the resources to do .
so. But for Russia to get mto the act Is on the order of rats lobbying ·
against rat polSon. And. I kid you
not, last week the Gennan people
heard from Yurt Andropov himself.

No one seems to be able to take a
joke any more. When Secretary of
the Interior J11mes Watt said, ln
desci1blng a panel appointed to
study the coal-leasing situation,
"We have every kind of mix yilu can
have. I have a black, I· have a
woman, two Jews and a cripple.
Recently, I was Involved ln the
having it sent on to market where lt
And we haye talent," he started
Mason County Fair Livestock Sale,
brought market price .of $1_00. The · another political ~torm.
wlllch is the sale of 4· H and FFA
hog cost~s ln actual money put out,
Mr. Watt managed, ln one
projects. These are projects that
$70, a small price to pay for
sentence, to offend a race, a sex, a
our young people work on for
advertising, and most importantly,
rellglous group and almost every
several months, sometimes all
support of our youth.
afflicted person ln the United
year. Out of the 113 hogs, Iambs,
Some Bend Area merchants have States.
and beef sold, only 12 were
The last time he blew It was when
been heard to say that people do not
purchased by the Bend Area. Of
support them, and go elsewhere to
he banned the Beach Boys from the
these12, 7wereW. Va. Sausageand
shop and buy other services, etc.
Mallon theFourthofJuly. Then the
Mason County Bank. It you read
But where were you, Bend Area
White House decided to laugh it ott
down the sale results, you could tell
merchants and residents, when It
by giving Watt a big foot with a hole
quite plainly which youth were
came to supporting our youth?
ln lt where he shot himself. It made
from the Bend Area. They were the · Their parents, and eventually the
a great photo.
ones whose anlals brought the least
youth themselves, are consumers.
The damage control people met
money. In most Instances, Bend
right after Watt's new boo-boo to
A lot of their money IS spent ln your
Aiea youth blue ribbon animals
stores. So next year, Bend Area
see what to give him thl~ time.
brought less than red and whlte
merchants and residents, Will we
One polltlcal expert said, "Why
ribbon animals from other parts of
see YOU at the Youth Uvestock
don't we give him a large water·
the county. Why? Because the Bend
Sale?
melon to stick ln hls mouth? "
Area didn't support them.
"How about letting him come out
Ellzabeth Ohlinger
We, .at our shop, purchased a hog
of the White House ln drag and
New Haven, W. Va.
tor $l70. The fair office took care of
blackface, wearing a skullcap whlle
slttlng ln a wheelch4ir?"
A White House chlef sald, "I'm
not sure the people he offended will
see the humor In lt. "
•
Today Is Tuesday. Sept. 'n, the 270th day otl983. There are 95days left ln
"Oh, come on," sald another
the year.
White House aide. "It we can't
Today's highlight ln history'
laugh at ourselves In this country,
On Sept. 'n. 1964, the Warren Commission issued a report concluding that
we're ln a lot' of trouble."
Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone ln assassinating President John F .
"We are ln a lot of trouble," the
Kennedy.
political aide said. ·.'The Chlet
On ihls date:
spends all hls Ume saying hls
In 18&lt;5, the first locomotive to haul a passengl!r train w_as operated by
administration has done more for
George Stephenson ln England.
blacks, women, minorities and the
In 1894, Presklent Grover Cleveland proclaimed amnesty tor people
handicapped than any other prest·
convicted of polygamy.
·
dent, and then that born-again nerd,
In 19CM, a woman was arrested for smoking a cigarette on Fifth Avenue
ln one stupid statement, blows lt."
1n New York City.
"We bave to rome up fast with
And ln 1972, the Nobel Committee ln Stockholm, Sweden. announced It
something that can get us· on tne
would not award a Peace Prize that year.
'
hook.'"
.
'(

.

Midd.....,,

brother's keeper_·___w_iu_u._m_F_.B_uc_k_ley_J_r.

It is charted more exactly than
the neXt e&lt;;lipse of the sun ·that ln
Europe, mast eopeclally ln West
Germany, a great hailstorm of
pacl!lsm will hit the country,
seeking to -shatter the scaffolding of
Western resistance to the communist juggernaut. The special \'Ulner·
ability of West Germany Is the
proper object of our attention

The Daily S.ntinei-Poge-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Australia captures America's Cup from U.S .

2-The Dally Sentinel
Pon•oy
Ohio
TUI by, Sept.!ltber 27, 1983

l'ag1

O~e's

The Daily Sentinel
~~

•

PRICES APPI.Y AT PAR.TtCIPATING STORES AND DEAI.ERS

"

'

.·'

�Page

4 The D!:lily Sentinel

·.

Pomeroy Middlepert, Ohio

New York Giants overwhelm Packers

Scoreboard ...

EAST

AM.HUCAN IEr\GlfE
EAST DIVBION

WLPd.GI

By ~ Aaaoc:lllled Pl'ellll
NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST DIVISION
W
L
Pet.
GB
P.Niadf.lpllla
rn '111 .564 PittsbU rgh
82 74
.5216 4~

Toronto

8&gt;

Mllwa u~f't'

Montreal
S1. l.DJ15

Boston

82
15

aev.. land

Ill

if
81
87

Ill

·?ti
"'

ChJc""'

63

New Yor k

9J

WEST DIVISION
Los AnaeJeos
ED 67
Atlanta
~
70

Houston

81

74

San otego

77
75

7'9
81

72

&amp;I

San Franc~M'o
Cincinnati

.510

7

.41W 11
.446 17
.404 2JY.!

.571 .'&gt;411 .1~
.12.1 1~
.494 12
.4131 14
- ~ 17

Monday', Ga.o~
PhiJ.ade.IJi!ia 5, OUcago 2
Atlanta 6, San Francisco 2
St Louis 3, Montnoal 0
Houstoo 5, San Dk'gO 3
Las An~les U, Cincinnati 9, 10 Innin gs
Only games !l:'twodulf&gt;d
TUesda,)''!l Games

P'hlladelphla tCarltoo

l~l'H

at ChiCago

(Reu&amp;chel.l-11

5B
G7

.619 .571 7~

G8
71
?ol

.561

.526

~~ ~

81 .

.tB:J
.436

21~

88

Oakland

11

85

Mlllni&gt;so4a

67

89

California
SeatUt&gt;

67

90

!18

911

PI~ .

(n}

San Francisco at Clndnnatt, tn)
Mon!n&gt;al a! St. Louis, (n )
A.tlanla at Hrustun. 2, O-n)
Onzy games sttMlduk!d

.487 19
,481 ' ))

.... 28

·"' 37
28\1
.312

ClevPland 7, \'~Jew York 0
Toronto 3, CaUfom1a 2, 10 lnn1n&amp;s
Kansas C:lty 6. Seattle 2
Orl.l)• games schedWecl

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

Detro!t IMorru a121 at
!McGregor 1.8-6), rnl
Boston {Hurst 12-ll) at
/Keough ,._7). In\
O f'\leland

(SorensAI

Baltimore
N~

York

at

11-10)

(WOllams 1(1..13). (n)
Toronto ILeal 13-11 )

New York at

·"" ... ,.

~aGamm

New York (Lyncy, 10- 101 at PlttsbuJifl
!DeLeon 7-2}. l nl
San F'ranct.sco /CalvErt l ·3l at Atlanta

Phlladi&gt;lphla at Chicago

28~

x..cllncht'd r:l:l\1s.lon title

waukeE' ICaldwfoU 11-ll l. (n)

IHeathoxk 1-1), tn)
Wednel;day'• GIUlM!II

9
11

-~

WI!NT DIVIiiON
x-Ollc.ago
!r'i 61
K.&amp;nsa~ ·Ciry
76 110
Texas
'75 81

Los Angctes {Honeycutt 2.JJ at Clnctn·
nati tRusscll 4-Jl

!Barker 1·31 . inl
Mortre.al ILea I&gt; IO) at St. Lool~ ((:rot
3-~l. lnl
San Diego (Lollar 7-11 ) at Houstoo

.-

96
!D
lr7

Mil·

Texas (Sml1hscl1 !Hf ) at Mlnnewta

at

Tuetday, Septeu' u 27, 1913

CalUomla

(McLaughlin 1-4), 111)
0\ICa,go !Bannister Jl.lOI at Qakllll'ld
(CodiroU lJ..U), (n )
.
J&lt;&amp;nsas· Cl!y (Gura 11-m at Seattle
(Beattle9-lt), {n )
W~•GM~ee

Chkaao at Oakl1111d
DelroJt at Balttmore, In)
B:lston at, New York, lnl
01!'11C"Iand al Milwaukee, In)
Texas at MJniV'!IOta. lnl
Toronto at CalUornla. In)
Kansa.s City at SH.ttlf'. (n)

RU'IHERFORD,

N.J.

good, buttheyarenotsupennen.We

(AP)- NewYorkGiantsCoachBW

made them look Uke supermen.
"I don't Uketoadmltlt, bu!lcan't
remember us playing any worse
than this, I 0
'The Giants chose tn look at It
another way.
"This was just our night. There
wasnowaytheycouldbeatus,"sald
linebacker Lawrence Taylor. "We
got very stingy. 'lbey got close toour
goal line and we'd bend. But we
didn 't break."
Taylor referred to a ffN&lt; Instances
when the defense refused to break,
Including a fourth-down play by
cornerback Mark Haynes In the
second quarter. Haynes rode Green
Bay tight end Gacy Lewis tn the twi
Inches soort of the end zone after
quarterback Lynn Dickey executed
a seemingly perfect fake handotr up
the middle and shoveled the ball tn
Lewis on an end-around.
"1bat was my man," Haynes
sald. "If 1don't go with him It's s!x
points.''
'The Giants got three points a few
minutes later when rookie All
Haji-Shelkh kicked a team record
$.yard field goal with three seconds

Parcells had a can of soda In his
hand,astlckofgumlnhismouthand
a notion In his head.
Hehadsomethlngtosayabouthls
team, andhesaldltmorethanonce.
His words weren't poetic nor
nearly as overwhelming as the
Giants' 27·3 National Football
League victory over the normaUy
explosive Green Bay Packers
Monday night But he .m ade his
point
"Although our won-loss record
doesn't show It, I think we're an
Improving football team," said
Parcells, whose team evened Its
record at 2-2 while notching Its
largest margin of victory-In eight
years at Giants Stadium.
Presumably, Parcells and Green
Bay Coach Bart Starr watched the
same game. But It didn't sound that.
way as Starr lndleated his team
made 1t easier for the Giants to look
Improved.
"We embarraSsed CM.ll'Selves,"
Starr said. "We llld just about
everything we could to cost ourselves a baD game. The Giants are

By The Bend

to play 1n the 11.rst half to give the Giants a 1o.31ead.

·~
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,.

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Beat of the bend

•'

.............
J, Urbana Ulll. HI. 264 polniA

Lots of litter everywhere
By BOB HOEFUCH

Focn..ty
Angle's Pizza

Dally.smtmet

:!, Elyria Cat!Dllc IDI) , 4-{), 233

ALL NEW RECIPE FOR SAUCE
AND DOUGH
New Hours
12 ln. Personal
U-11
Size Pizza
'l.t5
PHONE 992-6851
F'REE DEUVERY ON FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS
(7:00 to II :00 Only)

4. F'011trrla (lll ), 4-{), 162
~. Ironton (ID ), 341. 111
li Stt'Ubenvlllt&gt; (ll J, 4.(1, l29

Ohio Valley Publlstdng Company - Mul·
tlmedla, Inc., Pomeroy , Ohio 45769, 9922156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

..-· ""'

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•'
•'

,•

.·
,·

7. Cadil: IM , 4-0, 122
1!, Mlllersburtl! wm Holmel i llll . 4.(1,
9, Cohto¥atl'r (lV}, 4-0, i1i

10, Canal FUitoo NOI'thwest (ffi) , «.1, oiS
Other SC"hools I'I"C'PPvlni 10 or rwrY
plirlt!l: 11, HamUton &amp;din 36. 12, l...eavlttsbJrg LaBrae :W. 13, Belpre 71. 14,
Btooldleld 26. lS, Cantoo Cmt:ral Calhlllc
25. 16, Fredl!rick.tawn 22. 17, Ravmna
Southeast M. 18 Hk&gt;), OreRon Stt11Ch.
St ClalrsvtUE&gt; and ColumiiWi Whlletlal.l l8.
2J, Sanll!S)Gt PerkinS 15. 22, Wan'l'n Ken·
nect,• 1•. 23, OrdevUle 1.3. 24 ltlcl. Pauldlng and LouOOnv1lle U. 26 ltlel, Washing·
tori Court HOWJ(", St . Marys and Akron
Manchester 10.

CIA.'i8.

1. Newark ~tmllc (V), 4..0, 279 points
2, Mogadon' (V) , 4.(1, 233
3, Fc..taia St. WmdPUn [\') , 4-0, 187

-·

4, 'Nttln Calvert {V) , .a, Ul6
5, New Philadelphia Tuscarawas Catro.
lk lVI, ~ 138

«1. 125
7, Arctlbold tV), 4--0, U8
8, McComb lVI , W , &amp;'I
9, Souttl Charlestm Southeaslt'l'n tVI. 46, McDonald (VI,

o.,.

. . ..

10. BerUn Center Weslern Rl!eetv'P (V),

~

sitools wtth 10 or mort' polnts :
11. CAnal Wlndles.ter 3l 12 ltk-1, Ashland
Crestvlt&gt;w and Shadysidl' 31. 14, North
LUria Sour.h Rane't' JJ. 15, WayneMlle 24.
16, Ondnnad Sununlt CountJy Day 21. 17
ttiE'J ,Stra&amp;blii'R and MlnaO Junction M. 19,
Sarahsvtlle ShdiMctlah JJ. :11, Gatt'S
Mllls Hawken 17. 21, Mineral RJ~ l4. 22
Itiel. Plymouth and Arcanum 11. 24 (tiel I.
OM Hlll, Lafayette A11m Ea!l, Mlltord
Cfntn Fairbanks Md ~rtnn. United
10

Set . SyraaiSe

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Da lly ................... ............... 20 Cents
SubS&lt;'r lbers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit ln advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credll wlll be given carrier each
month .
No subscriptions by mall permUted In
towns where home carrier service Is
available.

•'

POMEROY - 1be Bend 0'
the River Garden Club wUI meet
at 7:.tl Tuesday evening at the
home of Mrs. WUson Carpenter.

Wildwood
POMEROY Garden Club will meet at 7:30
WednesdaY at the home of Mrs.
Ada Holter.

HARRISONVILLE - Senior
Citizens Club of Harrisonville
wUI have a picnic Tuesday, 6
P m at the Route 33 Roadside
Park, tn honor members with
birthdays In July. August and

POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Cornmandery 24, Knights Tern·
plar, WedneSday, 7: 30 p.m.,
officers to take swords and belts
for full form practice.

CENTEI

FRUTH PHARMACY

IINCI1M9

OF OHIO, INC.
786 N. 2ND AVE.

...,..

RENT A NEW 18 LB.

WASHER
FOR ONLY

$1 QOO WEEK

CARPET SPEClA LS

"1

KITCHEN
CARPET

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BROWN STRIPE
NYLON

$4 99

$6 95

CARPET

WITH WHITE BACK
SQ. YD.

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PH. 992-6491
•••

ENJOY THE GREAT FOOD AND
FINE ATMOSPHERE .

NEW EVENING HOURS TUES.-SAT. 5 A.M.-10 P.M.

Valuable Coupon
When you buy one meal at theregular price. receive another meal
of the same value or less. at
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When you present this coupon.
Note:.II you chose 1 111111 oll•w Yliue Hwill be It \I
not thlexpena!ve 111111.

price,

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12xl3 Hi/Low Blue Nylon
12xl3'6'" 52 oz. Brown Nylon
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GREEN 50 OZ.

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OR 992-3106

BROWN 40 OZ.

REG.
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INGELS APPLIANCE RENTAL

AND

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

uOURS
MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
n
:SUNDAY 11:00 TO 8:00
•

POMEROY - Mack Matson
will · be speaker when the MI.
Herman Christian Endeaver
Service Is held . at 7:30 p.m .
-sunday at ·the Mt. Herman
United Brethren In Christ
Church, County Road 82, Texas
Conununlty. There l'{ill be speak
muslc by "Harmony''. The
public Is Invited.

served by I
Ethel Orr, Cora Beegle, and : . ._ _.;;.;...;,;;.;;.;..;;.;;,_ _ _ _""1_______
Margaret Amberger.

WEDNESDAY

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Ohio

I . , ....

Mr. Herman service

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PRICI'll

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Be:,~":,':~r~~;,

lreslunents were served by Mary
Hysell and W!llard and Nettle Boyer
to Mrs. Van Meter, Thelma Boyer,
Dorothy Roach, Flo Grueser, Raymond and Dorothy Baker, Bud and
Hazel WUson, Clarice Etwln, and
Far!eCole.

WE WELCOME YOU TO TRY
OUR NEW SPECIALTIES FROM
OUR NEW NIGHT MENU

By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week ..... .... .... .......... .... .... .. .$1.00
One Month ............ ............ ... ... .. s.t.fO
One Year .... ... ....... .... ... ..... .... .. $52.80

MI

Invited Chester Council to its annual
Inspection, Oct. 10. A silent auction
was held by the good of the order
committee netting $44.12.
Quarterly birthdays were observed with the honored members
being seated at a table centered with
a decorated cake made by Jo Ann
Baum, and a gift. In the honored
group were Faye Kirkhart, Dorothy
Ritchie, Lilllan Demosky, Cora
Beegle, Leona Hensley, Betty
Roush, Elizabeth Hayes, Doris
Grueser, Jean Frederick, Lora
Damewood, and Mrs. Holter.
Others present were Ada Bissell,
Esther Smith, Mae McPeek, Opal
Hollon, · Sadie Trussell, Nelle
Werner, Sandra White, Zelda
Weber, Alta Ballard, Eileen Martin,
Jo Ann Baum, Charlotte Grant,
Everett Grant, Betty Denny,
Thelma White, Erma Cleland,
Marcia Keller, Goldie Frederick,
Virginia Newlun, Nettle Hayes, and

Calendar

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1be annual banquet was set lor
Oct. 18 at 6:30 p.m. at the church
when the Homebuilders Class met
at the Middleport Church of Christ
· '
recently.
Colleen Van Meter presided at the
meeting. The dinner will be prepared and served by·the Phllathea
Women of the church and past
presidents will he honored.
Members discussed the purchase of
some new baptismal clothing. An
expression of appreciation was
extendced to Raymond Baker for
mowing the church lawn over the
past several months whUe the
regular janitor, WWard Boyer,
underwent heart surgery.
Bud Wilson had the prayer and
officers' reports were ,given. Re-

Chester D of A meets

POSTMASTER : Send address to The
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

DILES
HUIINGAID

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Homebuilders Class sets banquet

ybu

Member: The Associated Press, In·
land Dally Press Assoclaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·
soclatlon. National Advertising Representative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
7.1.1 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.

13 Weeks .................... ......... .... $14.041
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13 Weeks ... ....................... ..... .. $15.21
26 Weeks ................................. 129.64
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little more handy where one can

dispose of lt. I'm not sure that

Tracy, Eileen Buck, Early Roush,
Mary Wolfe, Eulah Wolfe; Aaron
Wolfe, ·M r. and Mrs. Tom Norris,
Mildred Norris Gathers, Will Gath·
ers, Sandra, Jolm and Glorta
Gathers, Larry Gathers. Maxine
and Tom Norris, Columbus.
1be 1984 reunlon will be held on the
third Sunday In September at the
Portland Park.

· 1
N azarene feVlVa

DELIVERY UMiTED TO THI MIDIJLIPORT ..JIOMiiOY AIEA

(USPS 14..1110)
A DIYialoa of Multimedia, Inc .
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the

swr

Descendants of the late Artemlsa
Russell and Bernice Roush,
Wolfe Roush and Gideon Roush held · Michael and Beverly Roush, Cindy
their annual reunion at the Portland
and Joey Sand, Ronald and Nancy
Park Sunday.
RusseU, Michael and Mandy, RoA basket potluck dinner was
berta and Dana Lewis, Randall and
served after grace by Henry Roush
Judy Roberts and daughter, Leslie,
of Racine. Oldest person present
Keith Hayman, Greg and Vicki
was Henry Roush of Racine, the
Cundiff and children, Valar!e and
youngest, Jason Cundiff, son of Mr.
Jason, Gary and Terri Roush and
and Mrs. Greg Cundiff, Morning
children, Jeremy, Brandy, Adam
Star. Henry and Early Roush, the
two surviving sons of Gideon Roush
and children,
BrianKaron
~nd Shelly,
Dick
Fallon, Mrs.
Connolly
were present
and JoAnn Smith and sons, Travis,
Others attending were Mr. and
and Edward Roush.
Mrs. Harold Sargent, Middleport;
Harold and Margery Roush, Orton
Mr. and Mrs, Herschel Roush,
and Kate Roush, Pat and Mary
Josephine Mallary, Mrs. Pearl
Roush, Chad Grover, Amy Roush,
NoiTis, Jolm J. Shane, Mr.andMrs.
Robert and Mary Jean RoUsh,
John Young, Jolm and Pat Pa~Je.
Columbus; Oris and Dorothy
Usa Pape, Mr. and Mrs. Ralpb
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Nelgler, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Linley
Roush, Gladys Shields, Mr. and
Hart, Henry Roush, son, Dale,
Mrs. Howard Roush, Lester and
Leglna Hart, Amy and Angle
Carrie Roush, son, John.
Manuel, Don and Sue Beegle and

Congratulations
· people would use them, but without
members of
any, nothing wUI get better.
Mlddlepor
It seems that In past years I've
Chamber ol Comheard of people stuffing public
merce for pulling
containers with . their personal
ott a successful
garbage trom home. No doubt that
block party
has been a discouraging !actor
Saturday.
towards placing containers about.
I've heard notlllng
conunent about the event It was
Middleport artist Bob Haggerty
wholesome people meeting ran Into some problems after
people and having a great time at!t spending five hours Sunday In
The crowd was well behaved and creating a great Halloween sign f9r
'The Rev. Jay Budd
utter - · In spite of the many Middleport merchants at the
opportunities to do so - was at a !onner Shamrock Inn.
minimum. Durini: several hours of
The sign had everything the party, I didn't even hear one spiders, black cats, goblins, wha·
lfi
word of profanity - now that's a tever. Before Monday morning the- ·
·
.
sign was vandalized to the tune of
switch for our vlllage sidewalks Revival services wUI begin toand you thoughtltCOUldn'tbedone. about $150. Middleport pollee are , night at 7 p.m. and continue through
I was Impressed wlth the quality looking lrito the situation. Really too Sunday, ·act 2; ·at the Syracuse
of the musical entertalnment - at bad that there are some who are Nazarene Church. the Rev. Jay
least the parts I heard. There was a bent on nothing but destruction.
Budd wlll be the evangelist.
group called Lone Wolf- and those
Born near Parsons, Kan., Budd
of you who latow me can underWord has been traveling about has pastored Nazarene churches In
standd when I saw I am not a that the Ohio State Unlverslty Band Cheney, Washlng!on and Lebanon,
"today" music enthusiast. How- · drum major Is Bruce Hart, son of Celina, WUHamsburg and Jolmever, I llked Lone Wolf and thought Mr. and Mrs. Robert ·Hart of near stown, Ohlo:
the vocal deliveries of Van Johnson Racine.
He graduated In 1944 with a
with the group were fantastic.
Well - the name Is the same but major In rel!glon from the NorthwAnd weren't the Grande Squares It's not our Bruce. Our Bruce has est Nazarene College and furtbered
of Gallla County something with completed his work at Ohio State his study for the ministry at Central
their dancing In the street? There ·and Is with the research center and Baptist Seminary. When the Nazacostuming was most attractive and Is a pilot Instructor at the un!ver- rene Theological Seminary opened
they danced so well that I'm sure ~lty. He's man1ed tQ the former
In 1945, he" transferred there and
many of
wanted to join it. I'm Lorna BeD, daughter of Mr. and
received the bachelor of dlvlnlty
sure It's not that easy although they Mrs. Donald Bell, Letart Township.
degree In 1948.
made 1t look that way. You LOrna Is devotf!Jg full time these
The minister and his wife,
probably noted that Mary and Art days In taking care of their small
Lorene, reside In Reynoldsburg.
Skinner of Middleport were dane- son.
1bey have four children, all serving
lng In one of the sets- and I bel!eve
In some type of ministry.
I spotted Mr. and Mrs. B!ll Knight
The Pomeroy Area Chamber of .
The Rev. James Kltile Invites the
In the same set They're former Commerce In conjunction with the
public to attend.
residents.
Meigs Athletic Boosters, the Meigs
Marching Band and Meigs CheerThere's entirely too much Utter leaders wUI host a pre-game pep
around and I'm beginning to rally for the Meigs Marauders
Inspection was set for Oct. 18 at a
understand why.
·
Friday evening at 7 on the parking
recent
meeting of Chester Council
A couple of days ago I picked up lot In downtown Pomeroy.
323,
Daughters
of America, held at
an empty plastic soft drink conFoUowlng the bonfire rally, the
the
hall.
tainer from the sldfN&lt;alk on Court Meigs Band, followed by supporA practlcewUI be held at the Oct. 4
Street. I looked around for a !rash ters wUI march to the Meigs
meeting
at 7:30p.m. and all off!cers
container. No luck, so I moved onto Stadium where the tearo, hopefully,
and
members
are urged to attend .
Second Street tn dispose of the !tern. wUI come up with another victory .
Mary
K.
Holter,
colmcilor, presided
No luck there either, so I was struck
at
the
meeting
with Margaret
with frustrations.
Janet Ewing Reuter Gatlde,
Tuttle,
recordlngsecrelary,readlng
What to do? It was a temptation formerly of Pomeroy, wUI he
to discreetly drop the container traveling here on Oct. 1 with her son a conununlcatlon from the National
back onto the sidewalk. I was and daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Leglsla t!ve · Committee asking
tempted to deposit It In one of the Larry Reuter and their daughter, members to join In a letter wrttlng
large flower containers on the Pam, from Rochester, Mich. They campaign designed to deter efforts
which would keep religious prosidewalk at the side of Bank One.
are traveling In a motor home and grams
and prayerofftelev!slon. The
However, my angelic skle (you on Sunday afternoon the motor
letter
emphasized
the need for such
didn't latow about that dld yoo?)
homewUibeontheMechanlcStreet
programs
particularly
for shu tins.
took hold and I put thesof!drlnkcup parking lot and Janet Is Inviting all
F1aghearers,
Darts
Grueser
and
In my car, tooklthomeandaddedlt
of her friends to come and visit for a
Everett
Grant,
escorted
Betty
to my !rash there.
while. Janet has had some health
Roush, deputy state councilor, to the
What I'm saying Is that Utter, It - problems recently and It looking
altar whre Carolyn Holley, chair·
seems to me, Is going to be at peak forward to the reunlon so ao drop
man of the good of the order
untll some containers are made a
by.
cornmlttee, presented herwltha gtft
on behalf of the Council, and
congratulated her for accepting her
commission to he Counclldeputyfor
another vear.
September. The club wUI fum!sh
TIJESDAY
Belle Pra!r!e Council, Belpre,
hamburgers and hot dogs. Those
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi attending are to take a covered
Chapter, ~ta Sigma Phi Soror- dish. Both members and guests
lty will meet Tuesday, 7:.:1! p.m.
are Invited tn attend.
. at the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center.
POMEROY - Past matrons,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
PoMEROY - The American the Eastern Star, will meet
Legion Aux!llary (junlor and Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the home
senior groups) of Drew We!Eter of Mrs. Lucille Swackhammer
Post 39 wUI meet Tuesday, Sept.
In Mason, W.Va.
27, at 7:30 p.m. at the Legion
hall. Dorothy Jenkins, music
MIDDLEPORT -' Amer!can
chairman, will be In charge of Association of University
the program.
Women, Middleport-Pomeroy
branch. wUI meet Tuesday, 7: .tl
LAURAL CLIFF - Meigs p.m., at the Meigs Inn.
Area Holiness Association wUI
hold a ldck- oil rally Tuesday,
POMEROY - Special meet·
Sept. 27, at 7: .tJ p.m. at the lng, Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
Laurel CUff FreewUI Methodist Tuesday, 7:.tlp.m., wlthworkln
Church. Each church will· tea- the IIUillter mason degree.
ture singers. The public Is
Invited to attend.

The Daily Sentinel

3. AkrOn St . Vlncent..St Mary, (Dl J, 3-1,

Roush reunion held in Portland Park

'

BELPRE :_ In girls' high school , slve threat
Meigs claimed the reserve watch
volleyball action Belpre claimed a
In
two games, 15-10 8J)d 15-7. Carol
hard fought conference victory
Smith
served 12&gt; points, while
over the local Meigs Marauderettes, 15-12 and 15-12. The Shannon Hlndy cashed In on several
Marauderettes, despite the loss, are good spikes.
Meigs plays WeUston tonight at
enjoying an excellent 6-2 league
slate and 74 overall ledger. Is only home.
In other volleyball action, East·
lOsses thus far have been to
powerlul Wf!ITE'n and Belpre In the em played well throughout the
Trl-Valley conference and two contest, but when the final chips
were cashed Fort Frye's reserves
losses to undefeated Southern.
claimed
the JV volleyball contest
It was evident that the two clubs
1!&gt;-7
and
15-7.
Poor serving dropped
were very evenly matched. A
otherwise
talented Eastern gals
the
matter of who claimed the f1naJ
Into
the
loss
column.
serve was going to determine either
J. Erb led the winners with 13
match as both were comeptltlve
pintS
and A. Brlnegar had 8. For
see-saw battles. Rowan served 9
Eastern
Aleshla Holsinger had 3,
points to lead the winners, while
Michelle
WUson 4, Susan BaUey 1,
Brenda Cunningham sparked
Arlene
Ritchie
1, Susan Swain 3,
Meigs with 8. Although several
DeLeah Sanders 1, and Beverly
good volleys hlghllghted the match,
Meigs defensive play proved to be W1gal1.
Eastern dropped a three-game
exceptional against Belpre's oftenheartbreaker to Southern after a
tr1gld start spotted the Tornadoes
with a 1JI.O shut out 1be other two
Ohio ratings
sets revealed a 15-10 Eastern
COLUMBtJS, OhJo lAP) -How a Sl.atevlctnry and a 1~ Southern trtumph
wkifo panel of sports wr11ers and broad·
that clinched the match.
casters rates Clhkl high ldlool football
tearru; ihis ,.w~o; In the Assoclall..'CI Press
Tammy Adklns led SHS with 16
poll, with names of schools, ~YOD: dtvt·
points, Alana Lyons 8, Rachel
slons b1 P~UWtheses. won-lost reconls and
total points:
Reiber 6, JW Nease 2, Lort Adams
&lt;lASS AM
4,
Mandy HW 1, Wendy Wolfe 1, and
l, Ctnclnnatl Moeller (II, f.-0, JJ2 polntA
2, Akron Gar11eld ii L 3-0, 2lll
Tracl
Hubbard 1. For Eastern
3, Ml~own m. 1-0. llfl
Holsinger
netted 6, Swain 12. Hawk
4, u~ Arilngtoo (1) , :n 1&amp;9
~. Ctnd.nnatl ~ (1) , 3-l,. 14-t
2,
and
Wigal,
RUehle and Kim Dent
6, Austintcwm F'ttdt. (1), 4-0, W
one
each.
7. San&amp;tslcy II ), 4-0, 1'11
8, Berea Hl. «1, tOO
The EHS reserves are now 2-6
9, Ynungstown Ursullrle /U) , 4.&amp;, 83
overall and 2-2 In loop play.
10, Centerville (1) , t-O, 76
Otb:&gt;r sdlOOls with 10 or more polnls:
11 , Warren Western Reserve 34, 12. To.
ledo St . Fn.nct:s 33. 1J. AUJan~ 31. "14,
Ma$.illlon Washlngtcwa JJ. 15. Fremont
FWu :a 16, TOledo Macombl&gt;r Zl. 17
(tiel, Mentel' Lake CathOUc and G ahanna
15. 19, Nortfl cantoo HOCI\Ier lJ. ~ Lima
seniOr 12.

Tuesday, September 27, 1983
Pa~5

: . Belpre gals top Marauderettes

.'

The Daily Sentinel

KUT RITE CARPET
NORTH 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT
TELEPHONE 992-7028

'

�•

- . ,,

.
Pomeroy

Sentinel

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

They'll Do It Every Time

54 Misc. Merchandise 54 Misc. Merchandise

983

27, 1983

Middleport, Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

by Larry Wright

Television
Viewing

79 Motore Homaa
• C1mpers

~---------------.

I • •'I

Millar Mobile home fumlce.
Knauff Coal &amp; FireWood Buy Bottle or natu11l gaa with
nOw for 1eaaoned wood thi1 tharfl)oatat, ate . e100. Lo·
condltklning &amp; underpen·
Buy Factory Dlr·oct. Ugh·
winter
. Call614-266-6246 . well Wingetl, Syracu ...
nlng, partially furniahed ,
wwlght. flborvlooo lcomp
814-992-3827.
•e.soo . 304-875-11484.
13' ond 18'trevoltrollors•
Lime1tone, Sand, Gravel .
now
111' 8th whool. Cllhow
Sofa
and
chair.
excellent
Delivered in Mason, Melgt,
1981 . 14&gt;70, Shu~z imltod
toll " • 1 ·100-348·4181 '
condition. rutt and gold,
or
pick
up
at
Richards
Gallla
mobile home, microwave,
for froo brochUN ond lAVE I
S20U . Coli 304-676-1642
lo Son. Coli 446-7786 .
dlahwasher, central air, unafter&amp; .
derpanning. three bed ·
Slightly i"oegular carpalt,
.... '
r'ooma, 1 Ya bathl. excellent
remarh 1nd whole house Chest type freezer, ' 18 cu.
condition. $16.600. Call
ft.
,
•
1
60.
304-876-8073.
size -,( I 'or rental income,
304-1176-8049 oftor 5 p.m.
etc. f ricJs 'staning at 12 .99.
81
Home
e3.9, sq.yd. Cell 614 -992· Ore..er, cheat gf drawera,
,
1879 Baron mobile home,
Improvements
___:"•
wardrobe. Phone 304-876·
6.173.
14x70, 3 bedrooina. 1Va
2194. See ot 903 Moumon
baths, panially furniahed .
Used gu heater with fan, Circle.
central elr, good condition.
STUCCO PLASTERING ·- •
50.000
BTU heats 4 rooma.
price, 09,000 .00. Coli 304·
teJCtured celllnga commer·
Old
clocks.
electric
and
off
control.
See
Automatic
1178-3288.
ciel and reaidentlal, tree
wound up, oil floor furnace,
It 87 Vine St. Gallipolit .
ootlmotoo. Coil 814·258·
automatic, 375 gallon ciNm
1182.
Firewood- cut up, . slabs, ond stond, e300. 304-882·
$15 pickup load . Call 6-14- 3590.
PAINTING - lntorlor ond •
34
Business
245·6804.
eJitarior. plumbing, roofing.:
Air conditioner, can aee at
Buildings
toma remodeling. 20 yra. ~
1 atmo1t new chein nw. 18 Regency Apertmenta, no. 4,
304-876-3648.
I~
.
..p.
Coli 814-388 -9862.
in . cut. Call 448-7273 aher
6 PM or enytime weekenda.
Buain11a building down·
Table with 6 chaira. •e&amp; .. 2
~~J·L7
Marcum Roofing • Spoui:-· .
'""'" Golllpollo. f 160 · por
end tablet, Raggedy Ann
lng. 30 yeera axparien.,·.
mo. Coli 448·3888.
doll. Nlke track or b11ab1ll
tpecielizlng n built up roofr
shoot, ol1e 7, A tori
Coli 814-388-9867.
..
1 _ _ _ ___;
CIIHttet. Phone 304-675·
__;_ _ _ _
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
7436 .
63
Livestock
71
Autos for Sllla
RON'S Tolovlolon Sorvico.' ~
Apartment
Spoclollzlng In Zenith ond ,
Breekfatt aet with 6 chairs,
for Rent
Motorola, Quezar, and ·
good COfld. Black &amp; White Gr"n couch and chair. 12 yr. old PaltminohorMfor
35 acrn It Rodney on W. T. 1- - - - - -- - - - Sleeping room e116, ~utili ­ TV, 19 ln. acreen. like new. Phone 304-675-3446.
houoe colla . Coli 878-2391 ~
Wataon Rd . Owner financ..1•• 113'12 lnchoo toll. *428. 1977 Comoro, rune good.
or 448-2454 .
paid. range &amp; r8trig. coil 446-3548.
Ing ovolloblo . Coll448-8221 2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart· Ilea
Bridle Sa uddle included. needa eome body wort..,
Share
bath
.
Man
only.
448menta HUD Available Utilafter 8 WHkdaya.
Coli
onytlmo
441·2149.
U,300.
Phone
304-876F • K TrH Trimming. tt:ump
Walnut lumber 8 and 1 0 h . 55 Building Supplies
ti&amp;l partly fum., epertments 4418 after 7 p.m.
t818 oftor 4.
removol.
Coli 876-1'331.
long.
Coil
304-468-1997.
One acre lot with platform available now. e200 permo.
Club celvet · Exotic tteer
4 room apt. utifitlea partially
for house and in·ground
crooooo-Sirod by Double
Sale
RINGLE'S SERVICE expe46 Space for Rent
Kenmore waaher &amp; dryer,
Building material•
pool. for Information, 813- paid e150 . A·One Rul
Time.
Tornodo . 61 4·379rienced roofing, Including
Sean
portable
dlthwaaher.
brick,
sewer
pipet,
block,
Ettata1, Carol Yeager, Real865-1232 .
280&amp;
.
hot
tar application, carpen-lawn
mower.
exc.
cond
.
wlndowe . lintels . etc .
tor. Coli 304-675-5104 or
78 Ford Courier 36;000 ter, elect{iclan , m..on. CaH
Cosh
lo
corry.
446-3294
.
..claude
VVintert,
Rio
Grenda,
Mobile
home
lot
v.
acre,
1
304-675-7386.
1 ,2 's ere a . land with two
'For ule-Roglstlrod Poliild mllea on:o_,.,..euled.lopper, 304.-1178-2088 or 876 ·o. Coli 614-245-6121 .
mile paSt Centenary on Rt.
renUI trailer . For sale
Hereford Bull. 18 monthl Cl. AM oouotto. good tl'". 4680 .
Fireplace
lnaert-ttlll
In
fac·
Furnlahed apt. e186. Water 141 . Water 8t electric hoo02&amp; .000 . Coli 448-8683.
old.
Juatamere Amclety. Ex· f 1,800. Coli 4411· 1028.
pold. 2 bdr.. 131 Y, 4th. kup, dep. &amp; ref. req. Call tory carton-lutomatlc
cellent proapect . •eao.
Wetar Wellt. Commercial
oontrolt-2
blowen-glan
814
-246-6841.
56
Pets
for
S
ala
Galli~olia . 446·441 6 after 7
Lllnd 111J aeras on Rt . 141, 1
814-992-8&amp;66. •
1880 Chevy Y, T.. 4•4. 360 end Domettlc. Tett holetr ·
door· ath pan-fits 30 in. to
p.m.
mile from Green School.
outo., 44.000 mi .. wldo
Pump• Salea end Service:·
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo 48 in. fireplace-burn• wood
Coll448-8197.
tlroo, tl.700. Cill 4411- 304-895-3802.
.
8690.
Call
614or
coal.
Pori&lt;.
Route
33.
Nonh
of
3 bdr. apt., 2nd Ave.,
HILLCREST KENNELS
.
..
.
. .......
0231
.
...
...
' . ..... . ..
268-1216.
Golllpollo. •190 mo. Coli Pomeroy. Large lott. Call
8ordlng oil broods. . Selling
Levet lots 6 mi. tout.h of
Get your carpet In ahip•
Happy Jock Dog Food .
Golllpollo. All underground 448-4222 between 9 lo 5. 992-7479.
1 978 Ford F· 1 60 PU outo thape. Weter removal, FREE
10
palr1
of
girla
blue
jean
a
Autos for Sale trona, P8, PB, Y, ton, good ESTIMATES, FURNITUR~
Ooberman puppiea: Stud 71
utilltiea, central aewage.
tize 3. Diahwaaher, 2adding Service. Coil 4411-7795.
Coli 448 -1241 , 8 - 5, Unfurnithed, downetaira,
cond .. t3.700. Coli 441- CLEANING. CAPTAI~ ·
mtchlnet, and 1 quilt. Cell
room apt .• 1 bdr., no peta.
Monday· Friday .
2403.
448-3204.
Inquire at 87 Vine St ..
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call TOP CASH pold lor l o t o l - - - - - - - - - - STEAMER 814-4411-2107.
61 Household Goods
614·387-7220.
BHutiful lot on Lower Rac- Gallipolie.
model uted cera. Smith 1 ton dump truck. Cell E a. R Troo Service, fullr .
Ben Franklin woodburne.r.
coon Creek. Lend contract
Bulck-Pontloc. 1 81 1 Eut- 448-9428.
free eatlme1e1.1.
e175.
Coli
614-388-9802.
Briarpatch Kennell Profea- ern Avo .. Golllpollo, 4411- 1 - - - - - - - - - - lnaured.
available. Call Tom letlie Furnlahed apt. 2 bdr .• neer
SWAIN
Phone 614-387 -0838, coli
HMC, '235 utilltloo pold. AUCTION 6 FURNITURE
sional All·breed grooming . 2282.
448-7901.
1971 Ford truck, ohort bod, efter li .
243 Jockoon Pike. Golllpo- 82 Olive St .. GollipoUo. 8 Atari • 6 cartridg11, •100. Indoor-outdoor boarding ft·
8 oyl. Coli 4411-2182.
Coli
446·2~97_.
220 ft. road frontage over llo. 446-4418 oftor 7-p.m. piece wood living room aulte
ciliti•• · English Cocker Spa- 1973 Vplkowogon. Con bo
SEAMLESS GUTTERS; Ono
looking R•ccoon treek w-h:h
with e inch flat arm• e399. Fuel oil etove forced air. niel puppies: Call 814·388· ooon on Mill Crook Rd. or 19118 Ford T880 tondom piece cuatom fit your home. · ;
9790.
.
2bdr.,
2
both,
1
1
Court
St.
1 970 mobile homo. Coli
bunk beds complete with
dump truck. 814·1112- Gu1renteed . Advanced Out"'
Coli 448-983B.
Rot. lo dep . *326 mo. Coli bunkie• e199 , 2 piece an· Siegler Brantwood, 21h yr.
814-2&amp;8- 1&amp;77.
6641 .
tor, (Ooy 814-692-40811.1'
old.
Tonk
Included,
*400.
448-4928 .
Minalure Schnauzer pup- 70 Chryolor Now Yorl&lt;or.
tron livlngroom IUitea e199, Coli 446-23&amp;B.
(night 814-1198-8201 .1 ·
piet,
AKC
Reglatered
••
,..
Co.Ad.18, 8 acrealand with
antron reclinera e99, other
e460. Coli 448-4399.
1877 Ford Rong• Y, ton,
ceptlonal quality, 6 weekt .
..,riJ'\g water and aeptic tank Small furn. houM 1 or 2 recllnera •ao. maple dinette
bod, otoorlng, Roofing Bnd Carpentry·
adult a only, no pet a. Call ..... 179, love teats e?o, New Oek Furnlt\lre. leblea. old. $176. Coli 814· 384- 1973 Plymouth Road long
te.eoo. 1114-992-2803.
powarbrekea,autometlc:.alr work, general repelra, • cell
chairt, cupboardt, pie safe, 4609.
448-0338.
hlde-o-bod o250, bo• dry 1ink1. Paul Conkela
Runner, gray &amp;. red ltrlpet, condition. V8.1otl of eKtna. Anthony Wllllomoon. 61 4,16 ACRES lend, Groor Rood
apringa 8&amp; mattre11 twin or . Antiquet,
cragera, tharp. •1 ,3150. Call · Good ahlpe. ••king •3.000. 387-0184.
Tuppera
Pleina.
area. priced reaaonable . For leaae modern, unfurn., 2 full e1 00 set regular-firm
Slomooo klttono. Avolloble 448-1300.
304·8711-21183 oftor 4 .
bdr. apt. Overlooking clty e1 20. maple dinette Chalra
814-448-3703.
Sept.
24.
1
fomolo
UO
..
3
1
1
:
=
;
:
: = = = = = : ; : : : = Get Your Carpet IN SHIP
park. lncludea range &amp;. re- •as, waah atenda e34, Will-Burt aloker furnance malaa eao. ••ch. 614-992- 1978 Honda Accord .. Ex. 1SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
24',
good
cond.
Coil
4483 .80 ACRES In Leon, dril,_d lrlg. f 175 mo. Coli 448- maple rockera esa. 7 piece
7201 .
MPF (35 -hwy . l. Good 73 Vena &amp; 4 W.
STEAMER . water removal,
1572.
1819
or
eveninga
448well, 304-46B- 1 &amp;88.
chrome dinette aet e149, 5
cond., tingle owner, price 1 - - - - - - - - - - furniture cleenlng. Free Eati4425.
piece d_lnene Ht *19, uted Guna-600 guns. new and AKC registered Doberman bolow Blue Book. Call 448- 1 9118 Gillie School buo 30 !lllt.oo. 814·448·2107.
Nice %- acre lot, drilled well,
2011 eveninga. ·
bedroom
1ultet, refirgere- uted. · Hand guns. riflll, pupploo, 304-878 -3093.
pouongor, 282 .-lno, 4
aeptlc tank. Southakle area. Furniahed efficiency aplt. tara, renget, cheat. dressers, thotgunt. extra barrel a,
epd.,
new brtkn, good tlrea, Stove and furnace ciMnlng
f10,&amp;00. 304-937-2886 or Good locetion In town. no wringer WDihJI.JI, TV'a, priced tar below current AKC Registered Doberman, 1971 Dodge Co~ In good U,200.
CoR 4411-2838 of. ond ropolr, 304-875-8013. !
pett, dep. • reference• req. dryerea. 1!1 thoea. Call 448- mertlet. 25 percent will lay f76 . 304-882-2230.
876-3676.
cond. Phone 448·7148.
ter I.
Coli Mr. Doboon 448-3045
31&amp;9.
awey. Will trade for boata or Floh Tonk lo Pete, 2413
doyo, 441-2802 evoo.
1974 Muotong II. 4 cyl .. 4
82
Plumbl11g
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
moot anything. Shot ohelio· Jaokton Avenue, Point Plet- opood 0880. 1971 Dotoun
Heating
chair,
rocker.
ottohigh
power
$6.00,
aluga
Sofa.
oont,
304-8711-2083,
Jeckaon Eltata Apartment•
74 · Motorcycles
e2.26, other ammo below Mondoy -Soturdoy, 11 -11 . Pickup ••eo. 3117-0108 .
838 Jockoon Plko IEquol man, 3 tablet, leJCtre heavy coat.
9-S except Sunday.
Houaing Opportunity) haa by Frontier), t886. Sofo, 614-992-7494 lor evonlng Tame goffln cock·l·loo and 1961 Rambler Cle11ic.
one bedroom epertmenta cheir end loveaeet. *276. appointment. FIFE'S. 3rd. cogo, f425, BB ponot, ee&amp;. 48.000 octuol mlloo. hcolCARTER'S PLUMBING
Love birds, •4o each. lont mechonlcolly,_ good 1982 Vomoho 128 CC 800
AND HEATING .
rent .tartlng at e157 and Sofas and chalre priced from s M
4 bdr. hou11 &amp; acrea of land two bedroom rent ttartlng at f285. to f888. Tobleo. 046
t. lddleport, Oh .
orange wing, *17&amp;,
.;:or; Fourth and Pine
body. Phono 4411-8106.
octuol miloo, ••• · cond .. In
on Rt. 160 in Vinton. Central f183. UOO dopoolt. Col
t 1 .99 ond t2.98,
otorogo. Coli 114-248- Phono 4411-3888 or 4411up to e12&amp;. Hide·•· Empire haltln! atove for tero,
olr. *'360 mo .. ooc. dop. lo 448· 2746 or IHYe mMHge and
89 centa.
4477
1980 Dodge Aopon, outo.. 82U.
bed
a.
e440.
and
up
to
1
614
949
5
ref. Coll448-3176.
on 1nawerlng UNice.
o625 .. Roclln•!•. *175. to _•_•_e_._ _-__-_ _5_8_.--!::;::;:::======== P.S .. P.B .. II cyl .. ounrool. 1-_:..________
1
real nice. John'a Auto Selea. 1174 Honda Chopper 30 ln. JIM'S PLUMBING • HEAT·
.. Lompo from 028 . to
Mu•o"cel
3 bdr. houae neer Rio FurniaMd upatalra apt .• 2 f350
67
4411-4782. Bulovlllo Rd.
ovor front ond. CB 780 F. lNG . Fomorly Dowltt'o
e7s. 5 pc. dinette• from
•
Grondio. No pou, -*236 mo. rooma 8t bath. clean. adulta o99 .. to o436. 1 pc .. o189.
Coll814-849-2737.
Plumbing. Coli 814-387·
Instruments
Coli 814-2411-5439.
0578. .
only1 no petl, ref . .req. Call and up. Wood table with tiJI firewood for tale. Herd- 1- - -- - - - - - - 1980 Ronou~ LoCor, 4 opd ..
448-1619.
am·fm, full eunroof. rnl 1182 Honda Aapencede GL
choirs f425 . to f74&amp;. Dook wood. 814-843-6186.
White frame, 3 bedroom 1 - - - - - - - - - - f110 up to U26 . Hutchoo,
Clarlnett , flutes , 11 ,. 1 • sharp. John'a Auto Salea. 1100. lncludea all avlil•ble
.houaa with carpon. Garfield Furn: 1 bdr .. btth, ldtchan, . •&amp;so. and up. maple or pine linch RCA TV. am-fm radio ph n
EXCIVItlng
optiona. Two tone lllver, 83
0 1 1 , t r 0 m b 0 n 1 1 • 441-4782, Bulevllle Ad.
Ava. locetlon. Phone 246- large llvingroom. large en- flniah . Bunk bed complete combination . Battery or ec- trumpet
.
Franke
Pewn
le11
then
3,000
mllu.
Uke
1
5268 cr 448-8879.
doaed porch. edultt. refer· with mettreaMa, e260. end dc current. 614·992·2080 . Shop. 448-0840 .
1979 Plymouth Arrow, now condition. U.BOO.
ancea, • 200 par month. plua up to f395 . Boby bodo. .76.
outo .. p.o.. p.b .. om-fmtopo. Phonoll14-982-8816.
DOZER WORK By Ted
~N;early new 2 bdr. hou•. 3 depoelt. 458 Second Ave., •110. Manreatea or boJI
AKC
Reg·.
Schih-Tzu
male
eunroof.
John"•
Auto
Selee,
Hann•.
ponda, dltchea.
, mi. from HMC. no peta, Golllpollo. Coil 446-2238 or oprilng''c !lull or twtn. •sa .. EXTRA good top ooil, doli- puppy. 7 woolro old. Coil 441 -4782, Bulovlllo Rd.
19711 Horloy Dovldoon porto booomonto, etc. Coli 448· f196 mo., f100 dop. Coli 448-2881 .
for oolo. Trone. 280, phooo 4807 . Cortor • Evono
".".''::,·_·· .. ~ e78. Queen vorod, phone 304-1178- 448-4&amp;78 .
. 441-3817.
uta,
dr. chetts, 7771 .
1- - - - - - - - - - 1979 VW Robblt, 4 opd.. 3-3 ln. bolt drive, SU corb.. Tronoportotlon.
1 bdr. apl. with atove • '42 . &amp; dr. chooto. •&amp;4. Sod
Kimba11 Aquarius, 2 kay- em·fm. air cond., aunroof. front end, rear wheel, etc.
bdr. houoo In Euroko. Coli refrigerator, near HMC, no framea, e20.and e2&amp;.. , 0 For Sale: Lumber 1'' and 2" board
orgen with ben'd John'• Auto Salaa, 446- lee 324 Palmer St., Lonnie Bogp Exctvatlng.
448-863&amp;.
poto, o 189 mo .. e60 dop. gun - Gun Cablneta, •3&amp;0 .. dlmonoion, , poplar, ook or ohordo. 81;4-742-2187 .
4782. Bulovlllo Rd.
Middleport.
Dozor, bockhoo, dumptruck.
Coli 448-3817.
dinette chalra e2o. end •26. pine. For pricea end avellaWork by hour or job. Call
: TWO bedroom unfurniahed.
G11 or electric renget, 8325 blllty . Contoct Millwood Uoodtrombonoondctorlnot. 1979 Oldomobile Storflro 11711 11114 Hondo. Good 441-7803.
· Camp Conley, •126 . per 2 bedroom apt.. furnished, up to e 37&amp;. Baby matreana, Inc
304-273, 2522, Rt. 2 In good oondltlon. Coli 8 14 _ Flrenro v -1, outo .. p.a., p.b.. con-n. 247· 3844.
: month, 304-876-1371 or utllltloo pold, U76, f100 f25 a. 036, bodlromeoo20, at ..EvergrMn
Hills Road, 992·1824.
am·fm tape. aporty. John '•
Cat 215 hoe, do1era, cr1n1, •175-3812.
dep .• ed"-'h' only. no peta. US. lo UO. king !rome 050. Mondoy-Frldoy, 8-4 :30; 1 - - - - -- - - - - Auto Soloo, 448-4782. Bu· 1113 Suzuki GS 1100 GK, loodoro. dump truck. Coli
Coli 4411-0882.
Good aalectlon of bedroom Saturday. 8-3:00.
NEW Bundy olto ux w~h lovlllo Rd.
lull-d........ 1,300 mlloo. 814-4411·1142 botwoon
fHAEE bedroom houae,
auitea. cedar chettl ,
muolc otond, 034- 117&amp;- ·l----,,...-------- Phono304-878-7878 .171- 7:00AM lo 6:00PM. ·
Rouah Rd., Chethlre, OH. 1 bed room Apt . •196. mo. rocken. metal ceblneta, Firewood, *30. truck lood, 1718.
1972 Chevrolet lmpolo. 74111.
f:ull beaement, large lot, including utllitiet. Equel twivel rockera.
or
will
split
wood
at
your
1------~--good, body·fllr, good
Good·1 Excavating. H11·
gorogo . Coli 814-387- houalng opportunlty. Con- Used Furniture -- bookcaae, home . 304-67&amp;-4216 EIICiro oloctrlc guitar with Rune
worl&lt; cor. *4&amp;0. Coli 448· 1881 IKIO Cuotom Hondo. monte. footoro. drlvowoyo,
7176.
teat ~VIllage Manor Aptl. rengea, chelrt, dinnett aet, eveninga.
HS caM, crete emp. 80 rma, 0345.
fully druaed. Including at• !Mptlc tanka, lendsclping.
6·14-992-7787.
wood ttble and chaira, dry·
WAH,
photo
1197i""R,;.;;;d'~;;jj-;;;;:
rwo,onddrivoohaft,$3,700. Coli onytlmo 448-4837,
Morley
vol.
2 bedroom cottage, new
art. refrigeretora and TV' e, 3
oak firewood. ahifter, electric tuner, corda, 119715
All auto- 30'·773·1944.
Jamea L. Davlaon, Jr:
cerpet, good locadon, In Furniahed efficiency and 2 mllea out Bulaville Rd . Open Seeeoned
304-676-2767
after
4
p.m.
stend,
mlacallanaoua
ltem
owner.
• matlc. Sport whHis. •eaa.
1
~own. 304-87&amp;-7834 oftor
bedroom Apt . in Middleport, Sam to 8pm, Mon. thru Fri.,
f1800 voluo, tBOO. 304· 814-742·3083.
6.
Oh. No pete. Monlha . rent 9em to 6pm, 511.
Boat• end
Dour Work, ground olearlng
106.000
BTU
fuel
-oil
fur876-5843.
~~;&amp;~~~;;;;;iii;;:-N.~ 711
pluo e100 oocurity. 614· 448-0322
noce Ponwoy, 1,000: 2 7 1 1 - - - - -- - - - - 1978
Noodo
Motors for S1la
•
••cavatlDn, e2&amp; hour. Cell
992-3874.
gallon tank , e226; player
tender.
•soo.
448-8838.
42 Mobile Homes
..
...
'
...
.
TV 6 Appllonceo. 627 Third piono, •&amp;o. 304-176-1423.
..
814-742-2708 .
1 • 2 bedroom furnished Avo .. Golllpollo, 448-1899.
for Rant
14 ft. v bottom llboralooo lo J.A.R . Conotruotlon Co.
...... 814-892-6434. 814- Spin waahera, gaa &amp; electric Woodburner. double door
1 972 Moverick. Good work Ill troller, t300. Coli 1114- Water Linea, Footen.
992·5914 or 304-882- dryara. auto wnhera, g11 •
model, Flaher atove, bought
car, body a little rough. 248·1875.
Drolno. All kinde of Ditching, - :
electric rangea. refrlgera- In 1982, UMd one winter, 61 Farm Equipment 814-378-8369.
3 bdr. doublewlde in John· 2688 .
llutlond, Oh . 114-742- ' ,
tora. TV aett.
Phone 304-676-2635.
toni Mobile Home Park.
Croft 1157 oonotoll• 2803.
40 ft . hay conveyor. U11d 1 1980 Toyota Corallo. 6 Chrio
Private yard. eaoo per mo., 2 bedroom tumithed Apt. 1 - - - -- - - - - orul-. 31 ft..
lion
cobln
opwd. Good con d. Prlcod to with troHor. • 1 2,800. Coli Molgo bc0¥8tlng. Bulldozor
. includet water, tewege, gar- *150. month. pluo utll~leo. REBUILT APPLIANCES Two wheel utility trailer, 4x8 IOIIOn . 814-843-6188.
Availtble
Oct.
1.
Depotlt
Weshere,
dryera.
rangea,
foot bod, e1&amp;0. 304-773ooll. 03800·. 814-992· 11 4·387-0378 botwoon 6 bockhoo oorvlco. In•
'· age pickup • v••· Haa gai required. Roclho. 814-949refrigeratOJa. Shop repelr, 6518
11737.
~ rilnge, water heater. Electric
10-3. 81 4·448-1 343 ott• monte. footoro , ion-ping,
63
Livestock
bring It in • Seve. Cell
not. Included, no peta. LI- 2875.
drlveweya, term panda;
4411-8181
.
mited to 2 children, city
814-742-2407 Of 1114;742achool, cloH to K-Mert &amp;
.
1i' Glou M•- ao.t Wolk 2081.
Sliver Bridgey Shopping
Thru Wlndtohlold. eo h.p.
Center. Cell 446·3647 or
Mercury "long treller'',
448-4028 otter 8PM.
84
Electrical
f1 .210.00. 441-21177.
&amp;
Refrigeration
· 1 2JCI0 2 bedroom trailer
· fumlohod. f280 mo. Goo lo
711 Auto Parte
: water paid, e100 depoait.
&amp; Accae80rt . .
SEWING Mochlno ropolro, ., .
Coli 448-8&amp;83.
MrVk:e. Authorized Slngar '
Soloo a. 8orvlco Shor- .
- 2 bdr. lrollor. furnlollod. Coil
4-11" w.nern 1lumlnum Scf11on . Fabric Shop • .,.
. Al411-07611.
meg whoolo *126. be. Po-oy . 812·2~84.
i.
cond. Coli 4411-0848.
Furnlahed 14JC70 3 bdr.
'.
trailer on private lot. 10
Oanarel Hauling · : :
Th'" opwd tronoml-n, BIS
· mlnutet from town. • 200
clutcll,ltyw-r 302 Ford : ino. pluo Utllltloo. f200 dep ..
"' .
Phone 304-1178-7241
• reterenc11. Call 814-266·
betuw•" 4·1 PM.
.. 1393.
JONES IOYSWATER IER- : '
viCE . Coil 814-317-7471 , .
· 12xl0 2 bdr. unturn.. moOf 814-387-08111 .
~
78
Camping
bile home. water • ~··
l
fumlohed. he8tod by goo.
Nood oomothlnl houlod •
Equipment
-Y or oomothinl movodl '
Coli 448-4389 .
Wo'l do h. Coli 441-3181
MoiMie home lott for rent,
blt\:ueen 8 and I .
biro nlao Stor Crtft
water NWir furnllhed. 1 Furnlahed 1 bedroom apartcamper.
All
equipment.
Wotor hauling. Foot lorvloo,
child oc:coplod. 304· ment In Point Plea11nt, very
rMoonoblo prlco. Coli 441· 1cl11n ·a nd nice, no pett.
rotoo. Coli 814·218· •
1715-1078.
4172.
Phono 304-117&amp;-1388.
1743.
•
TWO bedroom, unfurnlahed.
_J
...
IM
...
I.:__W_A_T_E_R_I_E_R_V_I_C_E
.
:
Uka new ....,par, 11 ft.,
Comp Conloy, 0150. por
Tonclom - · Col Tom Coli Jim Lenior, :104-178- •
month. 304-1178-1371 or
Lallo 441-7801.
7317.
:·
11711-3812.
74 FREEDOM, 12x8&amp;, olr

TUESDAY

''

~
Proltio

l
.

.. .. .

31==========

WHOHNOW6? I
JUST AE'IICHED OUT
T' TOUCH Ati6ELA
IH MY EiEHTLE,
TENDER WAY, AW
ZllP!!

1.:..:..:.::...::..:::...:..:..:..::.::.:.:....:.._

1----------

ALLEY OOP
Ill-liNK ONI!'S GONNA
BE ENOI.MOHeiACQIJES!
COMI! OIIIJ.t:.T'S GIEr ·
OUT":- Ho:RE!

z

1----------

1----------

WINNIE

DON'T L.OOK SO GLUM,
1 KNOW.
DEAR. WE'RE STARTING A DARLING,
!!~RIGHT NEW CHAPTER

IN OUR LIFE.

-

-.-,._-·
....... .

79

Apartment
for Rant

lumloltod 3 roomo, with
Jltlv.,. both. Ref-nae pro- ,
,foiN&lt;I. Coll448-2218.

•

1874 Oldo Cutlau, 4 - ·
-"
oon-n. tiOO or.,_
oflor, ao4-1711-4437
Of

171-3:1114.

PIFI'I'/U'Nr

&lt;

l)liotors Homaa
• Campers

o.lrey oolf OOtltlln -

In

- · ~Ju!. - · PrleodtO
ootl. N- •1.100. Clllll14·
742·1111.

~~~---------··

BARNEY

I AIN'T TAKIN'

NO MORE

HE CAN'T NEVER GIT
. HISSELF IN FOCUS

PITCHERS OF
TATER!!

-·

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Pessimism rewarded
NORTH

.QJ7
• K Q 10 9
+J 8 6 3
WEST
EAST
+Q101711
+A9
.K85
•au
t3
ta 6 52
+7 52
Q 10 9 4
SOUTH

.....

8J4 2 •

• A 10 9 3

.AJH
+AK
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weot Norlb Eool
Pass
Pass

Pessimistic Pete made the
automatic play of the spade
six from dummy to make
sure of a spade trick . East
'rose with his ace and

ACROSS
43 Muscular
I Jeweler's
.types
weight
DOWN
&amp;Ready
I Aida 's
"0 Palria - "
to fight
11 Expectant 2 Expectant 12 "Age of
3 Craze
Reason''
4 Imitate
5 Earthly
author
13 Maris of
6 Tell's target
baseball
7 Scottish
14 Nuisances
explorer
15 Mature
8 51st Psalm
11 Elec. lll!it
(Latin
version)
18 "'-Tu,11
Verdi aria 9 Certain
19 Yield
operatic
20 Ethiopian
music
pfince
10 Refrained
21ItaHan
17 Tokyo's
cheese
old name
24 Religious.

1 2:30

I

:00
t:11

:

~

I

•

back
Z2 Sunnount
23 A Bergen
dummy
U Miffed
28 Provide
28 For
)

Nicolai .
33 Hurt ·
34 Advantage
35 Hammer
feature
37 DancerMiller
39 Caddoan
Indian

a text

u Suilfabrlc
U Ubyanport

DAILY CRYP.TOQUOTE- Here's

how to work It:
AXYDLBAA.XR
lo LONGFELLOW

'
Feuoo

i'i

One letter simply •tends for another. In thio sample A
uaed for the thr.ee L'o, X for the two O's, etc . Slncle lettere,
oposlropheo , the lencth and lormallon of lhe words ore all
hlnu . Eoch day the code letters are dltrercnl.
~YPTOQUOTES

LV

',

.

PGB

TBHXBV

SN

HD

PDCSRUBDP

EBUBUOEHDIB

JG LIG

LP

OBGLDW . - C . ELIGPBE

Yeolelt~(:~ruote: MAN BECAME FREE WHEN HE

N.,._
' ..

~

PBVP

PGB

Not N-..rlly Tho
N_. Thlo ohow prornluo
10 ._ awrythlnA tho curiont

(!) NIMIISign

30 Tenor

19 Encrust
21 Won

decree

I~
Tonight
1]1 CNN Helldllne N_.

(])My

.

tO Correct

.....,.Show

-·"not. .

YtSterday's Answer·

aa tomatoes

(]) (J;) L* Night with

1:30 y _ N.IC.

.,"
·'

!&amp;Knack
for doing
!II Novelist
Vidal
Here (Fr. )
3Z Sea eagle
3J In the know
!II Wanderer
38Sultan's

i;~- - ·

1

..

' Richard-

David~

'{()U'RE BACK! HOW WERE
THINGS AT TilE ''SLEEP
DISOIWERS CENTER"?

' ·

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRJSI ASSN.)

Z&amp;Sieved,

1110 Heloy'
'T1tlcQ ol the Night

I .....

scored game and rubber.

·,

!&amp;Strong suit
%1 Actor,

MOVIE: 'VkHnt Rolld'

• llld
PEANUTS

wrong. He cashed his ace
and king of clubo. threw
West In with the spade and

body
21 EUcit

12:00 (I) MOVTE: ·~·
lluml • Allen

'Uttte

to assume everything is

lor THOMAS JOSEPH

e
e Twllltht Zone
M'OVJE:

.,

He rapidly ran off the dia- · :
mond suit. West, who had to ·
make three discards, tossed . ·
the deuce of dubs, eight of
hearts and 10 of opades. ·~
West had r.layed his three of
spades at rick two.
Pete had already decided
that West held the heart
king. Where was the five of •
spades?
If East held it, West was " "
down to two spades and It
would be perfectly safe to ,.
take the heart finesse and
give West two spades and a
heart. If We•t held It, Pete
could· cash bls A-K of clubs
and throw West in with a
spade. West would take
three spade tricks but would
then have to lead a heart.
We aren't sure if Pete
made the best percentage
play , but It is Pete's nature .,

~~-~..a'

()II M"A"II*H
()I Nlghtllno

Nltlhlllno

Pass

By Oawald Jo~oby
and Jame• Jo~oby

N-• .

l

Soot
I NT
Pass

Opening lead: +7

~
=~~~~~..;, P.l.
(I) Lotenlght Amerlco

'

3 NT

returned the nine. knocking
out dummy's king.
Pete thought of taking the ..
heart finesse and making a
lot of tricks. but Pete never
let possible overtricks keep
him from his main purpose
in life, which was to make

his contract.

+

e

..

•·17·83

8K6

(I) Another Ufe
(I) c.ttlnl.

TRISTATE
I
UPHOLIT!IIY I HOP · j
1 tU Soc. Avo .. GoUipollt. ' 1
448-7813 or "'"·1833.
••

.

gollod by lholbove cortoon.

Vesiordoy's l Jumbloo: BASIN DUSKV LARYNX PONDER
Answer · What the gardener said when the Uowerl
woul~n'l grow-"UPSY-DAISY"

(jJ) Nowo
•
(]] 8portaConter
(I) Dr. Who
Benny Hill Show
11 :16(]] NCAA F.....ll: N~o
Domo ot M18ml
· 1 1 :30 D (]) CD Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE:
'lletwMn
Frilllldo'

.I

~

Now •~ongo lho circled ltttoro to
form the ll,lrpriN 1n1wer, as IUQ·

(An-rotornom&gt;w)

11:00. (])(I)(!) . . (I) Ill.

l

ACCOMP'ANY A
TUI'I::KEY C'INNE~.

I I]''( I I I XI I)

AnMr: A"(

nurse who is charged wlth
murder . 160 min.)
Cll ® Novo 'LKe, Patent
Pending .' The promise end
perils of new breakthroughs
in gene engineering are e»tplored . (AI (60 min .) !Closed
Captioned I
Ill . MOviE:
'Pockot
Money'
8 :30 CllG (j}l Hoppy Doyo Fonzie decides to prove he is a
men by tak ing on 'Suicide
HIU.' !Closed Ceptionedl
9 :00 D (]) CD Romlngton
Steele laura has tO move in
with Remingicin after her
apartment is blown up dur·
ing an investigation. (60
min.)
CD 700 Club Todoy's program features high fa shion
beauty Cristina Delore,n.
(I)
G
(jJ)
Threo' 1
Company Jack is shocked
when a woman tllllls him that
she wants to be tho father of
his child. !Ciosad Captioned!
II (I) ® MOviE: ·'Ona
Cooko. tho Other Dolsn't'
(I) Ufellne 'Or, Oaniel
Smith.' Or . Smith cares .for
an 18-year-old awaiting her
first childbinh and a motherto-be who faces complications . (60 min.) !Closed
Captioned/
ilD Non-F ctlon Telovlolon
9:30 Cll G (JJ Oh Modolino
IPIIEMIEREI
' 10:00 D Cll 11) Uvo a .• d In
Peraon Sandy Gallin hosts
this first of three nights of
special Sntenainment featuring superstars from the
world of show business. (60
min.)
(I) MOviE: ' The Rood
Warrior'
(I) Album Fluh
(]] Bllllordo: Womon'o
World lnvltltlonol Coverage of-the' Women's World
Invitational 7-Ball Cham·
pionship is presented from
tho Playboy Club. Allontic
City, NJ. 160 min .)
Clle IJ}I Hlrt to Hort ~on athan and Jennifer reveal
how they first met and fell in
love . (60 min.)ICiosod CeptionOIII
(I) Firing Uno

ilD

-=:--------.'
87 Upholatery

MU51C THAT M15HT

ICY1'JMI· (J

10:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Thenk God.
II' o Frld8y'
•
CD Stor n.,.o
ell,TBS Ev.tlng News
t11l1Mide W.ohlngton

.

44

euT THINGS
WILL flE 50

FOR. US. ·

--up

..,..u

(]] ESPN'o SportoForum
(I) G (Jt ABC Nowo
Ill (I) ® CBS Nowo
(I) Buolno11 Ropon
())) Over Eooy
7:00 •. D (I) PM Mogozlno
. CD Burne lo Allen
(]] SportoCen1or·
ill Good Nowo
. Cll Entertllnmont Tonight
CD Charlie' 1 Angelo
Ill Cll Wheel of FDI1u1M
Cll ())) · MocNtii/Lehrer
Newahour
()II News
G (jJ Pooplo'o Court
Jofferoono
7 :30 D (I) Tic Tor: Dough
(I) Coming Attraction•
CD Doble Gillie
(]] Saturday Night 8t the
Flghto Saturday Night at tho
Fight• presents 1 1O ~ Round
Lightweight bout featuring
ken Bogner and Livingstone
Bramble from Totowa, N:J .
ill Major League Boooboll:
Son Francioco at Atlanta
Cll Ill Cll Fomlly Feud
® Whool of Fortune
01 IJ}I Entertllnment
. Tonight
81 Ono Ooy ot o nmo
8:00 D (I) C!J A Toom Tho A
T earn tries to ~alp an old
friend bv baking tome wea·
pons into a truckload of hijacked broad . (60 min.)
· (I) MOVIE : 'Blood Relodveo'
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Strotton
Story'
CD I Spy
(I) 01 (j}l Juot Our Luck
Ill Cll ® Mlnlnlppl Bon
Walker defends a private

a.

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CD Love Thot Bob

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:0 'llL\T HE WAS SUBJECT TO LAW.-WIU.
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.
Carter's ~i8ter

victim of cancer

Area deaths
Funeral services for Roxie Janet
Shockey, ali, of Huntington, were
held Saturday at the Ravenswood
CHurch of Christ with burtal In a
cemetery there.
Mrs. Shockey died Sept. 22 In
Huntington where she has been
residing for the past four years. She
and her husband, . the late J . B.
Shoekey, form e rly Uved in
Portland.
She is survived by five daughters.
Mrs. Lucllle Laughlin. VIenna, W.
Va.; Mrs. Leola (Lee) Enoch,
Syracuse; Mary Dale Oldhan,
Camp HUI, Pa.; Joan Wright,
Huntington, W. Va.; and. Laura
Rebecca Circle, Racine; and a
brother, Blaine B. Shockey, Nedderlands, Texas. Also surviving- are a
sister, Charity Johnson. Mesa,
Ariz., 24 grandchildren, and 21
great-grartdchlldren.

Members of. the Pomeroy Fire
Department are to meet at the fire
station at 7 this evening prior to
going to the Ewing Funeral Home to
pay respects to a member of the
depMtment, the late Dwight
Parker.
',

HI'Jlds parade again

A marriage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Ronald William Masters, 22, Reedsvtlle, and Catherine Lorraine Everitt, 18, Reedsvllle.

Laren (cq) Wolfe, Southern Local
High School senlor, is again heading
the parade ID be staged by Southern
High SchoOl as a part of homecomIng activities on Friday. Any group,
business or Individual wishing to
participate Is asked to contact Wolfe
at949-3836.

Court actions filed
A suit totaUng$5,463.56was!Uedln
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by the Home National Bank,
Racine,. against Danny M. GrUflth
and Nancy Griffith, Pomeroy.
· According to another entry Tract
Denise Casto, Racine. flted suit for
divorce against Donald Eugene
Casto, Minersville.

Free clothing day
Free clothing day wlll be held at
theSal\iatlonAfmy,ButternutAve.,
Pomeroy on Thursday from 10 a.m.
to12noon. Allarearesldentslnneed
of clothing' are welcome.

Revival planned

Emergency runs

Eastern yearbooks are In and
may be picked up beginning
Wednesday at the high school.

Five calls were answ~red by
emergency units the Meigs 'County
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
At 1: 11 p .m., Pomeroy took Ette
Ellis from the Infirmary to Holzer
Medical Center; 12.52 p.m. Pomeroy treated Albert Keeton at Liberty
Ave.; at 12:23 p.m.\ Racine took
Jarod Staats, Racine, to Veterans
Memorial; 10:07 p.m., Middleport,
took Annand Caughey from VIneS!.
to Veterans Memorial and Rutland
at4:53 a .m . Tuesday took Gary P.
MltchfromMineltoHolzerMedlcal ·
Center.

Hole in one

DI'Jldline nears

There wlll be a fellowship revival
at the Racine First Church of the
Nazarene begtnntng Wednesday,
Sept. 28, through Oct. 9 at 7:30p.m.
nightly. .
· There wW be different speakers
each even!~ and services on
Sunday will be atlO: 30 a.m. and7: 30
p .m. There wlll be special singing.
The public is Invited to attend.

Yearbooks arrive

The dream of a lifetime for golfers
occurred last Thursday for Tom
Wolfe, Racine, who made a hole·ln·
one. Wolfe made the hole-In-one at
hole 9 using a numher 5 wood. His
· accompUslunenl was witnessed by
his golfing partner, Elson Spencer,
also of Racine, at the Riverside Golf
Course.
'

Host Jackson tonight
The Meigs seventh grade team
wUl host Jackson at Middleport
beginning at5: :Jl p.m. today.

Property
transfers

~

10

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...

OF

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.

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OUR 60th YEAR

.

CARTER GATHERING - Rutb Carter ll&amp;aplelon was paid a surprise vlllll by bNthen Billy and
former pl'ellkleot JJminy Carter. u her Jabfraat

cabla. Alllo oa haml lor lhe family pHoplher her IIMMber, LllllaD, &amp;1111 otbermembenoflhelamQy. ·
Mn. 8!1ph*- dleol ol cancer . MCIIIC!aJ. (AP
J=erpbo&amp;o)

Loans.will create 200 jobs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The ·
Controlling Board has approved
three loans IDOhio businesses which
say the money will help them create
a total of 200 new jobs. ·
·
The biggest of Monday's low
Interest loans, recommended by the
Development Department, was
$175,1m to MancheSter Man!actur·
lng Inc. of Manchester.
It is reopening the fonner
Hercules Trouser Co. The Adams
County !Inn, which got an Interest
rate of 7 percent, will employ 121
workers In a renovation project
which will cost $2i2,W&gt;. .
Two other companies received
smaller loans at a 2 percent interest
rate. Interest rates vary due to a
number of factors, Including the
financial standing of companies and
repayment schedules. among

Program

was tUied with zeal and love."
•·
A spokeswoman for Carter aald ~'
the fonner president was In Plalns, •: •
Ga., but be would not say whetber :
Carter.plarmeii!DgolDFayettevllle. &gt;
However. a spokeswomt!ll for the :;,
Rogers &amp; Breece Funeral Hoine :.
said Carter would attend Wednes· •
day's graveside funeral at La· :;
fayette Memorial Park In :
Fayetteville.
::
Carter visited · Mrs. Staple!Dn •~
during a May family reunion and :
vlSHed her again about 10 day.s ago. ::;
Mrs. Stapleton was diagnosed ln .;: ·
AprU by doctors at Duke University "
Medical Ceoter as having termlnal :E"
cancer. Her son, Scott Carpenter .. .
Stapleton, an opthalmologlst at ~
Duke, urged her ID have orthodox ~
treatment, but she refused.
;;:
"My whole Ute has been geared tp -::
this kind Of thing," Mrs. Stapleton ~
saki In May. "I worked 20 years In ~
healing, and I have seen so many •
miracles.
~ll

.

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At an executive session, Drew
Webster Post 39, Aml!l'lcan Legion,
voted ID continue the sponsorship of
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249 as It
has in the P{!St.
After a question and answer
session, the group voted unanlmously to conttnue sponsoring the
troop and agreed to buy materialS
for a bulletlll board upon which
scouts will diSplay thelrartandcraft

work.
Representing the troop at the

meeting were Bob Arms, Bob
Workman, Danny Will and Paul
Reed, leaders, and representing the
post during the session, presided
over by Don Hunilel, were George
Nesselroad, George Horak, Raymond Jewell, · Leonard Jewell,
RichardRussell, JoeZwUltng,Elza
Gllmore, Mickey W!Wams, 'Paul
Case!, Russell .Moore and Gerald
RoUght. Rought was named scout
coordinator. The post made a $50
donatton!Dthetroop.

WE HAVE MANY UNADVERTISED SPECIALS IN THE
STORE .AND IN THE TENT. SOME ITEMS AT WHOLESALE

OR BELOW.
LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

88

_. . . . . -.®~

~
IBOY'S AND GIRL'S
WINTER COATS AND

EACH

JACHfTS

...

Llmlttd
Quantltlts
.MEN'S CREWNECK

SWEATSHIRT
COTTON/POLYESTE'R
IN ASSORTED COLORS
. SIZES S, M, L &amp; XL

s

' CLEVELAND (AP) The
wtnnlng number drawn Monday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," wa$ 435.
· In the "Pick 4" game, played five
times a week, the winning nwnher
was4289.
The Ohio Lottery reported earntngsof$537,951fromthewagerlngon
· Its dally game. The earnings came
on sales of$896,317, whlle holders of.
wtnnlngttcketsareentltled!Dshare
Ui8,366, offlctals said.

20% Refund*Set
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BIG' SAVINGS ON
BOY'S WINTER

ASSORTED COLORS IN
SIZES 7/8 TO 17/18

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ASSORTED COLORS

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(EXCEPT DENIMS)
ASSORTED STYLES

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BLAZ~RS
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MISSES
-CORDUROY

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on a Beige Bra and Panty

IT'S OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER
AND RUNS

THIS IS THE KICKOFF SALE . FOR
NATIONAL FURNITURE SALE
SEPTEMBER 30 - OCTOBER 9

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can be

SEPT. 28 THRU OCT. 1

(REGULAR '10"1

roop sponsorship to COntinue Ohiolotte.:rwinner .

Supp_ort
AND STOREWIDE SALE

ASSORTED COLORS
IN SIZES S, M, L &amp; XL

.11uraday.

(Continued from page 1)
curbing creating a dangerous
gutter. However, Mayor Hoffman
pointed out that the Mkldleport
resurfacing has some stmllar sltua·
tions. Plans were made for a new
street Ught In an alley behind the
scoreboard and for repositions a
HghionMalnSt.,neartheCashBahr
residence
CouncU came to another split vote

All Meigs County resldents65and of the Meigs County Welfare
older and those persons who have Department, be left "as Is". There
100 percent dtsab!Uty have only untu' are two parking places in front of the
Sept. 30 to sign up for Ohio Energy If buDding on Race St., with no meters.
they are eligible.
CouncU had talked about meters or
Oct. 3 is the starting date for yellow Unlng the two spots for no .
signing up for the Home Energy · parking.
·
AsslstanceProgramforlowlncome
However, Councllman King obfamtues If they qualify. For more jected to the recommendation and
lnfonnatlon call 992-7225 between 3 said that under the . two parldng
and 5 p.m.
spaces were good ones and If they
did not need meters there then all of
the meters should be taken out.
Valuations on reeord
Mayor Hoffman commented that
Following section 5715.16 of the
areparking
not for control..
Income Council
but'for
metersand
Ohio Revised Code, changes In
traffic
property evalua!Ions have been
voted 4·1 for purchasing meters for
completed for 1983, Meigs County
the location with Councllman GU·
Auditor William R. Wickline anmore c~llng the dissenting vote.
nounced today.
Councllman Hork}' reported that he
Changes In valuation wUI reflect
has had no word from a surveyor In
only the new construction for 1983.
reference ID Hndson St., and It was
Valuessetmaybevlewednowatthe
agreed ·to grade the tum area
county audltor'sotflce.
and repair a hole on that street.

·MEN'S AMERICAN MADE PLAID
FLANN~L
TS

others.
.
partment ID buy36 School buses at a
The National Biological Corp. cost of $ei5,943.
received a loan of $101,W&gt; for an
~Released $257,W&gt; from the
expansion of Its Summit County emergency school loan fund for a
faciUty where~ among other things, loan to the Ucklng Heights Local.
an ultraviolet device for the School District Iii Ucklng Cbunty.
treatment of psoriasis is manufac- · -Allowed the Natural Resources
tured. Department. offflclals said Department ID spend $72,666 for a
the $410,W&gt; project will boost the prellmlnary design study on WUd·
company's payroll from 12 to 40.
wood Park breakwater at the
Cleveland
Lakefront State Park.
Ohio J&gt;ure Foods Inc., Akron,
-Permitted
the Natural Resourreceived a loan of $84,600 for an
ces
Department
ID hire a consultant,
addition to Its plant where fruit juice
at
a
cost
of
$49,575,
to review
:'}
and fruit drinks are processed. The
operations
of
the
reclamations
..
Weather
fortlCilllf
·
::;:
expansiOn will cost m,&lt;m and the
!llvlsion and submit a report. The
I ·.
plant will Increase Its empleyment
contract
wW
be
with
the
MCI
Clear
tonight.
Low
near
50.
WindS
~
from Ill ID 113 workers, the loan
Consulting
Engineers
Inc.,
North
light
and
variable.
Sunny
on
~application said.
.
Wednell(lay. High In themld·'10s.
In other business, the seven- Canton.
-Released
$175,10)
for
planning
Exlended Ohio Fo~
';
lfleiJlber board authorized transfer
'11nn'lllay illrllqll ~:
:'
of capital Improvement funds so funds tor renovattng the greenhOUse
Fair 11suraday aa11 f'rlclay. :1
that the Medical College of Ohio at at · the Ohio Agricultural Research
Center In Wooster.
Chance of showers or &amp;Jw••'er
Toledo can spend $2.1 million for a
-Approved
spending
of
$175,500
.
olon1111 ~- A slOw ClOIO!Ins
new pedlatrtcs facWty.
by
Youngstown
State
University
for
.
treac1. Wp In lhe low to ll1lcWOII
The Office of t'le Consumers
pavement
repairs
and
rehabillta'111unday,
_ . 80 l"rtddQ' aa11 tile ;
Counsel was permitted by the board
!Ion
projects.
mid
to
upper
'10s Saiunla)&lt;.IAwllln :
to enter Into a $99,835 consultant
11M!
mld-8111.to
low
tile .
contract for assistance In two
mld
to~
lillll
Frtday
....
low
to .
upcoming uiWty load forecasting
Extinguish fire .
mid 110!1 Satunlaj.
hearings.
load forecasting, In which uwt·
The Pomeroy Fire Department
.ttes must estimate their long-term
was called \0 Bunker Hill at 1:50
capabilities, is new In Ghlo regula·
p.m. Monday ID extinguish a brush Veterans Memorial
tionandtheotrlceoftheConSwners'
fire which burned over a two 1\Cre
Counselsaldltlackedexpertlse.'
areanearthemobllehomeofFred
Admltted.. FJorence RiYOOlds, .
• The board otherwise:
'Ibompson. Flreinen were on the Mlddllplrt; Gloria ll'eUure, Crown
-Authorized the· Education [)e. .
tUJ 24
·
· Clty,DixltKnotts, Reedsville.
scene un
: p.m.
·
. Discharged--Freda Henderson.

Jobs hi•JJ

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
SEPT. 29th &amp; 30th AND OCT. 1st
DOORS OPEN AT 9:30 A.M.

'

but she was a devoted and loyal · :;

follower and servant of the Lord ·:
Jesus Christ," Grahaql said. "She- ;:

MISSES ASSORTED

\.

HN~E

j J

Harry Holter, George Holter,
Margaret Holter to James E .
Diddle, Right of Way , Sutton.
Delbert Heasley, Marie Heasley
to James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Chester.
Delbert Heasley, Marte Heasley
to James' E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Chester.
.
Edison Hobstetter to James E.
Diddle, Right of Way, Sutton.
Bruce Morris to Columbia Gas of
Ohio Inc., Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., Easement, Rutland.
Joel K. Kitchen to Columbia Gas
of Ohio Inc .. Columbia Gas Trans.,
Corp., Easement, Middleport.
James A. Thomas ID Columbia
Gas of Ohio Inc .. Columbia Gas
Trans. Corp., Easement, Rutland.

~

was uagoodfrlend."
..:
''She was often misunderstood, ;.

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

Parcel,
Scipio.
Herbert
H. Matheny, Clatestine 1
Matheny aka Charestlne to Herbert
H. Matheny, Clarestlne Matheny,
Parcel, Olive.
Pearl Hysell, dec'd ., to Birdie
Hysell, Affidavit, Rutland.
Juette Earl Hassler, Ethel Belle
Hassler to John A. Hawley, Bertha
M. Hawley, Parcel, Salisbury.
Olan Hysell to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way, Chester.
Albert R. Dangelo, WUma L.
Dangelo to James E . Diddle, Right
of Way, Olive.
Larry Hallon, Joyce Hallon to
James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
·
Chester.
Edison Hollon, Evelyn Hollon to
James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Sutton.

DAILY SENTINEL

!lister ot tonner Prelldent

Carter, died Monday of pancreatic
canceraftera!Jve.monthatfl!lnptto
treat heraelf through diet, exercl8e
and fBlth In God.
•
Mrs. Stapleton. sa, died at home
aro.tnd 11: :Jl a.m.. said ,her busband, Dr. Robert Staple!Dn. He
refused ID romment fUrther when
reached by telephone.
The Rev. BUJy Graham said In a
stalmlenl Issued from his Montreal. N.c .. home that Mrs.Staple!Dn

Pay last respects

Marriage license

Raymond Cotter!U, Letha CotterUI to Lonnie Bolin, Jetta M. BoUn,

llst

Memorial serVIces for Rllea
Lozier, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron Kelton, former Pomeroy
r~ ldents, were held recently at the
All Saints Episcopal Church. Princeton, N. J . whereshewasanactive
·
member.
A service of remembrance and a
serviCe of thanksgiving for Mrs .
Lozier' s life was also held by the
Medical Center of PrinCeton Merwick Unlt , Princeton, N. J . along
with chapel prayers by the Cardiac
Rebat Department In her memory.
A memorial was given to the Jay
Kelton Library at Grace Eplcopai
C)lurch of Pomeroy In memory of
Mrs. Lozier, his sister, by Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Reed.

Meigs County happenings

•''

SUPPLEMENT TO:

FAYETJ'EVILLE, N.C. (AP)Ruth Carter Stapleton, the evanae-

Rhi'A Lozier

RQxie Jane Shockey

6
JACKSON-WELLSTON-McARTHUR
WAVERLY-POMEROY-NEW LEXINGTON

, Now's your chance for special savings with this limited time only ·
~r from Playtex• - choose a Support Can Be Beautiful
beige bra and a Super Look beige panty, and you'll get a
20% refund check from Playtex good toward the purchase
of any additional product at this store or for cash. We know you'JI
be able to choose a
set just perfect for you. ·

SOCKS

ARGYLES, RIBS,
PLAIDS AND MORE...
IN A BIG ASSORTMENT
OF COLORS.

•tHOMASTON'
NO-IRON MATCHING

SH~~T S~TS
IN ASSORTED PRINTS

s 99

(REGULAR '2")

'

As llustrattel

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