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                  <text>Praises Meigs coach

Budget beef ideas

See letter on Page 2

What's Cooking? Page 5

Hoople's weekly picks
Story on

Page 4

Queen candidates

·

e
Voi.32,No .118
Copyrifhr.O 1983

Page9

•

at y

en tine

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 28, 1983

2 Sect ions, •• Page•
20 C:.nt1
A Multim.dia Inc. NewtpOp.,

'

648 issue delays
rate certification
. By KATIE CJWW.
Sentinel staff .·.
Meigs County commssioners Tuesday tabled a
resolution accepting the amounts and rates as
determined by the Budget Commission and
authorl21ng the necessary tax levies and certifying
them to the county auditor untU 1 p.m. Friday.
Commissioners d&lt;l!'lded last week to table the
matter untO the coUection of .20 mW for the 648
Tri-County Mental Health could be studied.
At Tuesday's meeting, It was reportedcommlsslonershadaskedprosecutlngattomey,Fn!derlckCrowto
determine what action the commissioners should

...

..

.. . .

.. .

Employment Services, aske&lt;;J commissioners to
encourage the use or Its services, io which the
commissioners agreed.
Richard Jones noted· that the employment office,
located at the Intersection of SR 7and Union Ave. has
been In the same location for the past seven years.
SCarberry reported the office, at Its peak -served
1,500 cl~ per week. Last week , 650 people were
served.

SCarberry said on slow days there are perhaps 20
people a day served, on the first threedaysoftheweek

there are 00 people each day .
SCarberry noted additional space could be utlllzed.
take. ·
She also added that OBES Is testing clerical job
Commissioners, earlier addressed a letter request·
applicants !'Jid If enough space was available, testing
lng the Budget Commission submit In writing Its
.could be- done there rather than sending people to
opinion on the following: "Melg County Is p~tly · GaUta County.
coUectlng .20 mlll or approxlniately $2411XXl for the
The commissioners agrool to help In any way they
Tri-County Mental Health 648 Board. This Is being · could.
collected on a levy voted by Meigs County citizens In
Local Govenunent funds
1976 for a 10 year period.
Cornmlssloners diScussed local government funds
"Presently, Meigs County Is the only county In the
·and noted that a formula has been devised to revise the
Trl-County Mental Health Dlstrtct that has such a levy.
funds. Jones feels Meigs County could come out ahead
GaUia and Jackson County's renewals were defeated
under the new fonnula.
and Gallla County did not collect the final year of Its
C. E. Blakeslee, executtve director or the Regional
_levy.
Planning Commission met with ·the commissioners
"It appears an Inequity now exl!;ts since Meigs
concemtng the updating of industrial sites before the
County Is the only contributing county. We, as
arrival of Al Dietzel, director of the Ohio Department
commissioners would like to know If It would be
of Development, who Is scheduled to be In Meigs
possible for the Meigs County Budget Commission to
County Nov. l4 or 16.
cease collection ofthis levy and If so what action needs
Blakeslee said over the past IOOyearsMeigs County
to be taken to do so.
has been exporting young people and money out of the
"lf It Is not possible tocea.Se collection could a sult·be
county. Jones said he was going to request that theCIC
filed to enjoin the4&gt;48 Board from spending the money
act Blakeslee added tll!lt1!1he commissioners assure
anywhere, but In Meigs County?"
leadership thing wUl hilppen In Meigs County.
Requests more !lei'VIce usage
Emelyn SCarberry. director or the Ohio Bureau of
i Continued on page 14)

RESURFACING - R&lt;!sur1aclng of aeveral
sections ol Pomeroy streelo Is underway by the Shelly
Co., pictured working on Lincoln HW. Cool of the
resur1aclng, about 110,000, wiD he paid from
permissive auto Ucense recelpls recelplll In the town.
Besides a part of Lincoln HW, other sections helng

Form reclamation committee
A reclamation committee was
fanned when the Rutland Township
Trustees met Tuesday night .to

Celeste prepares
spending c~t list
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
Celeste Administration "edltect and
refined" Tuesday a list or $1.55
billion In spending cuts It says ltwUI
order If a tax repeal measure on the,
Nov. 8 ballot Is approved.
Speclllc reductions by agency and
Items that wW be excluded from
cuts are to bt outlined by Crtstlna
Sale, dlrectoroftheOfflceofBudget
and Management, later this week.
Issue31sa proposedconstltutlonal
amendment that would repeal aU
tax Increases enacted by the
General Assembly this year, chiefly
the 90 percent boost In the lncome
tax.
A companion measure, Issue 2,
wculd require a three-fifths leglsla·
Uve vote Instead of a slmpl~
majority to enact fu(JJre tax
Increases.
WOllam Shkurtl, OBM deputy
director, said the list of anticipated
cuts does not account for the
posslblllty that legislators would
enact a substitute tax package If
repeal passes.
"We're assuming these cuts
would be done by executive order,"
Shkurti said. "We are putting It

together. It's stUI being edited and
refined.''

'

TheOhioDepartmentofTaxatlon
has projected that repeal would cost
the state $1.55 bUllon In revenues for
Fiscal Year 1985, which begins July
1, 1984.
In separate news conferences last
week, otflclals said elementary and
secondary education would lose$637
mtlllon whUe higher education
spending would be cut by $260
mtlllon. That leaves $6.'i3 million io
be spread over the rest of state
government.
As fiscal analystscompleted work
on the list of potential cuts, a trade
association and a coalition of
parents wtth school chUdren voiced
opposition to Issues 2 and 3.
The Ohio Hotel and Motel
Association said passage of the
measures would have "clearly
devastating effects" on the state.
It would place In jeopardy the $10
mtlllon which thestatehas budgeted
over the next two years for travel
and tow1srn promotion.
"We don't have any olflclal word
from the administration on that
particular point."

"""'rfaced are on the parking lot, along the river;
Spring Avenue, under the Pomeroy-Muon Brldre,
Union Ave., from Osbome St. to the village llmlta.
Moet heavUy traveled streets and their condition were
conaidered In oeledlng what work Is to be done with
the llmlted funds .

further their program on reclama·
tlon of strip mine areas or Impacted
areas.
Named to the committee were
R2x Shenefield, Phil Roberts and
Robert First. Letters were sent to
residents of the area seeking
priority Information.
The committee will Inventory
suggestions submitted by residents
and Inspect the areas before It
prepares prepare a priority list.
In addition to preparing a list of
priorities, the committee will deiermlne the cost and work envolved.
Robert First or the Meigs County
· Soil and Water Conservation and
Mike Farley of the Department of
Reclamation wUl work hand In hand
wtth the trustees on the project .
First and Farley showed s Udes of
unclamled land as well as land that
has been claimed.
It was also reported that they wUI

attempt to have mine sriarts closed
and abandonded pits. These sltua·
tiorts are considered emergency
projects as they endanger the safety
of the publlc. The unclaimed mine
areas and abandoned pits and cause
flooding and landslides.
First stated that the project will be
lengthy In that It wtll take tlve to
seven years from start to completion. He also said that thereare6,1XXl
acres In Meigs County that have
unclaimed mining a reas. Approxl·
ma!ely 40people attended .

Winning lottery number
CLEVELAND' (AP) - The
wtnnlng numller drawn Tuesday In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game, "'The
Number," was674.
·
In the "Pick 4' ' game. played five
times a week, the winning number
was2869.

OAPSE, hoard reach accord

RECEIVING WORD - Foo&amp;hlll8 Aviation co-owners Geareld
IDicbcock Jr., left, and Kenneth Whited review a """JIIlnse by GaUla
County COil1ltllsslone and GaJUa.Melp ReJIIonal Airport Authority to
Foothlllll' lease agreement pi'CIJICI8Il]. Both boards rejected the pro]l081ll.

A contract agreement was
reached Tuesday night between the
Eastern Local SChool District
Chapter of the OWo Association or
Public School Employes and the
Eastern Local Board of Education.
The contract wtll be considered
for ratification now by members of
the non-certllled employes union
and, If approved, will then be
considered for ratification at a
special meeting ol the district's
board of education.
On Monday night, the Eastern
Local Board ratified
two year
contract wtth teachers of the

a

district. The new contract Is
retroacllveto Aug.l, 1983andruns
toAug. 1, 1985. Under the contract a
beginning teacher wtth a bachelor's
degree and no experience wlll
receive $12,500 untO Aug. ], 1984 and
$13,1XXl on Aug. I, 1985. The present
base Is $12,100. Teachers holding
supplemental cont racts will receive
an additional S.'ll and srck leave can
now be accumulaled to 190 days
rather than 1&amp;5. There were
language changes and the school
day length was set at seven hours
and 10 minutes .. Basic fringe
benefits did not change.

Meigs-Gallia Airport situation ~till unresolved
By KEVIN KElLY

OVPitaft
FoothUis Aviation and Gallla
County commissioners are goq
back to the drawing board to ccme
up wtth a lease agreement proposal
foriheoperattonoftheGaWa·Melgs .
Regional Alrpol1.
FoUowlng an occasionally ~tormy
session Tuesday, both aldel agreed
tentatively to meet at6p.m. Monday
to discuss a new llJ:OPOS8l.
FoothUis still operates at the
al!llOrt unt1er ~mm~ or • live-year
lease signed In lB.
ComrnlssiOne1'l lnfonned Foot·
hills ~ Geareld Hltdlcock
Jr. and Kennetb Wblted of their
lntenllm to reject • leue propcul
submlttl!dtocorrmlllloneriSept.6.
' 'lbe propoul calledfor.-hanpn

1,.,

and anaddltlonalSlO,JXX)approprta·
tlon from the county to help operate ...
the airport.
No action was taken on a request
by aewra1 pecple who attended the
meet1na to remove Larry Beebe as
presldem and member or the
seven-member airport authority
board.
.
Hltcllcock and Whiled were to
have rece1vetJ a copy of the letter
drafted to them by COIIlllllsslone
and the aulbarlty that rejected
FcWbllh' prqlONI.
'l'lle)l ~ that as ot. Tuesday
IIIOI'IIIDI they had not received the
letll!r, but bad 18e11 the &amp;IDly in
M'olldly'&amp;JIIPI!I'detaliJnalbereJec·
lion, wlllch Hlllchcock said he
"didn't appreciate."
Whiled told CIJIMil.ltdoner that

statements claiming Foothills
mademoneytrom thealrportaren 't
true, and that commissioners are
welcome to examine the company's
books at any time.
Whited, a Stauffer Chemical Co.
executive, added he would pay for
an audit If It wouldquashrumorsthe
airport Is poorly managed .
"A statement hal been made that
money we've lost Is paper money,"
Whited added. "We've made an
Investment In that airport that's
gone, burned up In operational
expenRS. That's hard cash, not
paper money."
WIUieCI 11110 felt commissioners
aren't receiving adequate lnfonna.
don on the airport operation, which
hal created problems.
Hitchcock asked commissioners

what they planJodoaboutaddltlonal
hangars after rejecting FootWlls'
P!,UPOSBI.
.
.•
Whentoldthejobwouldhavetobe
specllled I!Jid bid and that a Foothills
bid would be considered, Hitchcock ·
said·he wouldrl't Invest any further .
Into the airport and blasted commls·
sloners for lack ot Interest In the
15-year-old facUlty.
"When you talk about lack of
Interest, we worked our butts oft to
get a new runway," Commissioner
Verlln Swain retorted. "W\Ien you
make statements about us not being
toterested In theal!llOrt, you'reolfln
left field."
"We're both on the same side,"
Hitchcock repUed. "I'll do what I
havetodotomakeltsucceed.Ihope
you'll do the same. Gentlemen, the

airport Isn't going anywhere unless
there's some Interest In lt."
Commissioners agreed to aUow
Hitchcock to consult with Prosecu·
tor Joseph Cain to examine legal
Issues slllTOundlng specifications
and bids.
"I want you folks to know we're
trying to do what's rtght, and we're
not taking sides," Swain noted. "We
want to do everything right and
legally."
"AU we want Is a fair shake,"
llltchcock said.
Other attending the meeting, who
ldentlfled themselves as Dying
enthusiasts or airport users, complained or a lack of communication
wtth the airport authortty and wtth
Beebe In particular, whom they
claim Is unresponsive to their

suggestions for Improvement.
Vinton resident Roben McCa1ley
said his enthusiasm for the facility
has been "dulled" by Beebe's
attitude.
Some of the group asked commissioners to consider removing Beebe
from the authority boanl. He was
re-appointed by commissioners last
Friday.
Swain declined. to comment
turth~r on the situation, but agreed
!'something was Wrong" wtth the
authority and changes woulr' be
made.
Contacted Tuesday afternoon,
Beebe had no comment.
"I wasn't at the meeting, so
anything I say would be T-totally
wrong," be said.

�Wedrw1tlay, Seplem'*- 28, 1983

Comment

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, September 28, 1983

The gender gap ________J_am-:-e_s_J.-,-K-ilpa~trrc-=·k

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF TilE M"IG,HI,\SOS AHE.\

~~~

~m~ ~~..,...~c::~.~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

1\sslstant Publisher/ Controller

Gent-ral Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Prf.'S!oi Assochl·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION arf&gt; welcomed . Thf'J should be les!ll han 300

WASHINGTON - Ronald Reagan is nothing if not persistent. For
the past year or so, as controversy
has grown over the so-called
"gender gap," the president has
persisted in· his conviction that his
problem is essentially a problem in
public relations: "nobody knows
' what we have been doing."
A fair response to the president
on that score is, yes and no. On the
Issue dearest to their hearts,
feminist leaders know exactly what
the president has been doing: He
. has been91Jposingratlficationofthe
Equal Rights Amendment. On that

issue, in their view, there can be no
middle ground, no compromise, no
ambiguous support for t~ "prtncl·
pie" or the "purpose" of the ERA.
The amendment has become a
totem; not to revere is to
blaspheme.
. The feminist leaders know some
favorable things : They know that
Reagan nominal~ Sandra Day
O'Connor to the Supreme Court;
they know t))at he now has three
women (Kllpatrtck, Heckler ;mil
Dole) in his Cabinet: they know
generally that he has appointed
several hundred other women to

full-time, policy-making positions.
But the knowledge gives them no
pleasure. They are likeOIIverTwist
in the musical, they want more.
M111tant women know also that
the president has named only a
handful of women ro the federal
bench: that he has kept the repeal
of discriminatory laws on the back
burner; and that he has evidenced
some of the old-fashioned chauvinistic attitudes they lind so desta·
ble: Me cafeman; you civilizing
influence.
Very well. My guess, for whatever it may be worth, is that these

\IIOtd!ii

long. All letters are Muhject toedltln1 and must be s igned wUh namiE.', a ddrf!'!lisa nd
IM. ephon e number. No unsl1ned Jetter!ii wUI be published . LeUt&gt;t!li should he In
good taste, addtf:§!lln&amp; ls~uet~, not penooaiUiet~ .

Making economic
democracy less so
One of the charms of the American economic system is that everyone
· can be a capitalist ;mil, so the theory runs, help run the company.
·
All it takes is the prtceof a singieshareofstock. For your money, you get
: a share of profits and a voice in the company's affair.;. Until Jan. 1, 191!4.
On that date, the government, egged on by the corporate world, wm
• make economic democracy less democratic.
The Securities and Exchange Commission changed the rules and made
It harder for the·srnilll stockholder to challenge company policies.
After Jan. 1, you'll need a fairly substantial investment in the company
- and hold It for a year- before you can get a vote on your Ideas by your
fellow shareholders.
Before companies were required to lay any stockholder's proposals
before all shareholders. Votes were cast either at the firm's annual
meeting or by a proxy ballot through the mall. One vote per share.
The proponent got 500 words to lay out his idea and his arguments. If the
· company's directors didn't like the proposal, they had 500 words to explain
· why. Stockholders w~o wan\ companies to apply social values to their
businesses began using that mechanism for advocating change. They got
under the skin of management by raising all sorts of issues in proxy
statementS.
Last year, holders of stock in American corporations voted on 111 such
propoSals. They almost never win. If the board of directors is opposed, it
usually controls or Influences enough votes to win. Institutions and many
shareholders vote the management line.
But tbe proponents believe the process causes management to rethink its
policies and to justify them in public.
And often, to keep an issue off the ballot, managements negotiate a
settlement with the stockholder proposing change. Compromises emerge.
But most people in business feel that a corporation's purpose is to make
money, not waves. The SEC action obliged such management thinking. On
· Aug. 15, it adopted the new rules by a 3-1 vote.
SEC Chairman John Shad, appointed by President Reagan, said that
· "for $25 or $fil an individual can become a shareholder" and force a vote on
· "his pet concern." He didn't like it.
Under the new rules, a shareholder must own $1,(XX) worth·of stock, or 1
. percent of the company's total, to advance a proposal. And )le must )lave
owned the stock lor a year.
: If a proposal doesn't get 6 percent of the votes the first time around, it
~ can't be resubmitted. It neeeds 10 percent in the third and succeedlngyears
• to get on the ballot. The old requirement was a 3 percent vote for a proposal
• to be resubmitted.
Alice Tepper-Marlln of the Council on Economic Prtortties, which
encourages stockholder activism, says the higher threshhold wm cut in
half the number of proposals submitted to stockholders.

=Letters to editor
Three cheers for Charley
. I would like to publicly praise
· Coach Cancey for his professional
: manner and being able to keep his
: cool in a situation that the Maraud. ers faced Friday night at
· Nelsonville.
: From the stands It ~ms as
. though the Marauders came out on
the short end of the stick, so to
: speak, on some of the calls the
: officials made: especially the un·
: sportsmanlike conduct penalty on
· the play preceding the touchdown
• to win the game.
. If Coach Chancey had reacted by
· "losing his cool" as many of us tans
· did, the players would probably
: have followed suit and would not
: have been able to concentrate on

the pass play that won the tial!
game.
Coach Chancey gave the boys
credit in the wrtte-up in Sunday's
paper and now I think we should
give Charley his praise! The boys
had to execute to pull ott the
touchdown play, but it was Charley
who kept them in the rtght frame of
mind to do it!
I think that maybe we have one of
the best coaches around and
probably don't realize It! So, I think
we should give "Three Cheers" for
Coach Chancey!
Rodney Wright
Salem Street
Rutland, Ohio 45115

Likes a pretty town
• Middleport is a pretty town. I like
· to drive along lower Second Street
: where old trees line the walks, and I
· was happy to see new trees being
· planted In the business section. I
was reminded of a poem I learned
many years ago:
I Uke a Reverent Town
·I like a town that sees
· The sacredness of trees,
Acknowledlng their light
To whisper half the night
And all the day to talk
Above a shaded walk.

I like a reverent town
That hews no tree trunk down:
But lets it stand to know
Sidewalks around can go.
As If to say "I comprehend
You were here first, my friend ."
- Charles Divine
My thanks to the Middleport town
council and those persons resonsible for making their town more
beautiful lor all of us to enjoy.
Evelyn Proflltt
Mason, W. Va.

:Today in history
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 28, the 271st day of19f!3. Thereare94daysleft
in the year.
· Today's highlight in history:
.
On Sept. 28, 1978, ~ Joho Paul I died in his sleep at the age 65 after
·
serving just 33 days on the Throne of St. Peter.
On this date:
In 1850, the U.S. Navy abolished flogging as a form of puniShment.
In 1924, two U.S. Anny planes landed in Seattle aftercompletlngtheftrst
round-the-world flight. The elapsed time was 175 days.
1n 1971, CardJnal Joszet Mindazenty of Hungary new to Rome, ending 15
years of asylum in the U.S. mission compound in Budapest.
.
And, In 1974, !lrst lady Betty Ford, suffering from breast cancer,
underwent a mastectomy.

I

'

political actlvlsts actually speak for
only a very small fraction of the 88
mDI!on American women over the
age of 18. My guess Is that a large
majority of the 88 million support
the idea ol''equal lights," but that a
large majority of that maJority
understand only vaguely what a
constitutional amendment Is all
about. I doubt that one in :Ill cares a
fig about women on the bench or in
the Cabinet, and I am certain that
not one In a thousand gives a damn
it Section 1413 or Title 48 of the U.S.
Code is or is not repealed. The law
:•provides lor the protection or
rights of the widows of discoverers
of quanos islands."
Let me summarlze the president's case as he outlined it In me
last week. What we need, he said, Is
more understanding. Among . his
first actions as president was to ask
each of the states to set up a
program aimed at repeal of their
discriminatory laws. All 50 states
complied, but some have moved
faster than others. "After all, they
are sovereign states. We can't
order them." But ''we're continuing

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SVAC ~earns in final week of non-league action

Meet the Meigs
Marauders.....

The final week of the non-league
action involving SVAC schools is
slated Friday before league competition begins.
Non-league encounters find Huntington VInson at Eastern: Ironton
St. Joe goes to Hannan Trace, North
Gallia visits Hamlin, Wahama

1

DI.EY CASSEU.

IHO, 1111 JIGUDd
Jlllllor Guard

Meigs junior high grid results
In recent Meigs Junior High
football action, the seventh graders
opened their season with a strong
~ win over Jaci!SQn while the
elgbth graders have loot to Ravenswood 32-6 and defeated Wahama
14-6.
In the seventh grape win, Jeff
McElroy scored three touchdowns
whUe Wesley Howard added two.
Matt Baker· and Howard added
extra points.
. In the Meigs eighth grade win
over Wahama, Don Nichols scored
both Meigs touchdowns. Blll Broth·
ers scored Meigs' lone six points In
their loss to Ravenswood.
The Junior !Ugh .. teams are
coached by Jon Arnott, Robbie
Eason and Carson Crow.

At the federal level, more has
been done than the feminist leaders
will acknowledge. Twenty-four sexist statutes already have been
corrected. Another 64 statutes W)ll
be cured by Sen. Bob Dole's bill
(S.5011), which should clear the
Senate this month. lt.is likely that47
other statutes, Identified by compu. ter search, wm be added to the Dole
b!ii by amendment.

WASHINGTON - President
Reagan's most controversial appointee is also the most secretive.
He is Willtam J. Casey, who
abandoned his roost amid the glass
canyqns of finance to head the CIA.
With an Obsessive If sometimes ·
fumbling dedication, he promotes
the kind of secret government the
CIA flavors. Hehasputupadogged
fight in the backrooms for the
expansion of our countertntelllgence and counterinsurgency oper·
allons - tho;! better to battle the
communists at their own game.
Usually, information about the
70-year·old. Casey · sw1aces only
when he's involved in some controversy he can't keep the lid on. So I
assigned my associate Dale Van
Alta to dig into Casey's background
and character. Over a period of
several months, he interviewed
Casey's friends and enemies in and
out of the CIA.
The composite picture they
etched is of a loner who operates out
of his hat: who lives in a continuous
state of crisis: whose mind Is
encased in a Republican hard shell:
who talks of American-Soviet relations, for example, in terms of

"showdown": but who has surprising tolerance for the views of
others. Here are closed-door
glimpses of the CIA director.
-Casey doesn't run the CIA. He's
a lone wolfe who prefers to leave the
detaU work and public relations
chores to his deputy director.
-His style in clothes can best be
described as "contemporary disheveled." He sometimes falls asleep
in briefings. His typical speech
pattern - mumbling in a rtch .Ne
York accent - has led to an
in-house joke that he's the only CIA
boss who doesn't need a voice
sct:ambler on his telephone.
-Since he dislikes minding the
store at CIA headquarters in
Langley, Va., he is frequently on the
road. In a speech to CIA employees,
Casey boasted that in his first six
months on the job he had "traveled
to Europe, Asia, Central Amertca
and the Middle East and met with
over 20 station chiefs in those

areas."
-Many sources 'agreed that
Casey has Improved the quality of
CIA Intelligence analysis by allowing competing views to appear
prominently in agency appraisals.

Under his predecessors, dissenting
viewpoints were relegated to brtef
footnotes.
-A bedrock political conserva·
tlve, Casey is not inflexible. He's
Intellectually honest enough to
change his hardllne Reubiican
outlook if there's solid evidence to
refute it.
-He has a habit of sending his
subordinates clippings from old
publications that his rtght·wing
friends thrust on him along with
notes asldng wby the CIA didn't
know about this 91 that.
-Casey loves the covert·action
side of his job. "The cowboys down
in the ranks wtll send up a
harebrained proposal, and the next
thing you know they're In his ottice
·plotting with hlm," complained one
source. Other sources expressed
concern that 'this sidesteps the
checks and balances designed to
prevent preposterous clandestine
operations.
,
-Some who served under Casey
in the espionage business during
World War II remain unimpressed.
"He sat there ,safe in London
drinking his coffee and issuing
some stupid orders that nearly cost

me m y lite for nothing," said a
decorated Office of Strategic Servt·
ces veteran. " And thenhegotall the
credit for the big stuff."
-Casey Is an unabashed political
animal. It was only because he
realized the political damage tt
might do President Reagan that he
agreed to put his financial holdings
in a blind trust.
-He dumped his spymasterfriend, Max Hugel, not because o!
the damaging admissions in taped
conversations of Hugel's financial
dealings - but because of Hugel's
salty language. Casey was afraid
the tapes would be heard by the
president, who would have been
offended by Hugel's language.
-Casey can be childishly petty in
dealing with people he doesn't get
along with. One source insists It was
at Casey's personal order that the
admiral's flag was flown upside
down at a farewell ceremony for
Adm . Bobby Inman - as a
calculated snub.
But probably no one knows the
real Casey behind the blinking,
owlish face. Thereisawartnessand
tenseness in him - a sense of
beleaguerment as though he were
at war with Ubiquitous forces .

An inflation prediction._____L_awe_u_w_in...;;_ge-..-u
My reputation as a potent
political prognosticator Is in shreds.
I may never be able to hold up my
head again. All because I underestimated the president's desire to
gather the Hispanic population to
his bosom to get their vote.
Remember a few weeks ago
when I predicted the next astronaut
to get the media political fireworks
would be a Hispanic woman? I was
wrtting about NASA's first black
astronauts was getting more than
his share of media attention
because he was black. Instead of
naming a Hispanic woman, Catherine Ortego, to rtde our next space
shuttle, the president has named
her to rtde the Washington merrygo-round as Treasurer of the United
States. I am always glad to see a
member al a minority group
receive recognition, even it it is
done with such blatant political
expediency. Of course, the pres!·
dent denied the appointment was
politically motivated so it must
have been mere coincidence that
400 Hispanic leaders were present
at the White House. when It was
announced. I am relieved that the
failure of my powers of prophecy
was in degree and not in substance.
I was at least halt light when I
predicted a Hispanic woman would
be picked for something as · the
admini!tration SOUKht the Latin
and women vute but doubt If the
members of either segment are so
easDy fooled.
Although I am continually underestimating the administration's
capacity for raw politics when I
.lllve been a'CIIB!omed to more

=·" ' alllave ....

batting
aver
the prediction
field
Wblch me.~~ I have been light
more often titan I have been wrong.
Now I'm l'l!lldy to make another
prediction! 'Ibis II a long range
affair and you will have to walt a
whUe to see If I am right. I believe
that by the time the 198t electlcn

rolls around you wlll see inflation
approaching double digit levels. I
make this fearless forecast in spite
ot the administration's smug Confidence that the dread 1nliation
monster has been safely locked in
his cage. In August, prtces rose
alnmost one-half percent which
makes inflation now about 3.5
percent. 'Ibis seems insignificant
now when we are accustomed to
higher figures but remember the
rate was forced down byunemploy·
ment ;mil the scarcity of money. As
unemployment dinninishes and the
money supply increases, Inflation
wtlincrease with it. You don't need
a degree in economics to figore that
out!
If jou care to remember back to
1971, you will know that President
Richard Nixon ordered wage and
prtce controls when the 1nliation
rate reached four pereent that year.
He didn't have the intestinal .
fortitude to withstand the pressure
when the going got tough. If he had
stuck to his guns Instead of bowing
to political forces which he feared
would affect the outcome of he 1972
electiOn, the history of the United
States for the last twelve years
might have been different.
Wouldn't it be nice If we could some
how roU back to that time and start
over? We can't but that shouldn't
stop us from tty1ng something.
Unless we do, the same old spiral
will start again an dhte devil take
the hindmost. The hindmost is
always the poor, the sick and the
old, the population segment dial
concerns the present administration the least!
H you have visited your supermarket recently you will ootlcethat
prtces ot most •gtocetles, with the
exception of meat, have taken a big
Jump. Plrt of his rille Ia due to the
prolonged droulht. wblch the ad·
mtnJstrallon didn't cause, and the
Payment in Kind p1 CJ81 am, which
!heY did Com prices have Jumped

71 percent in the last year and
soybean prtces have shot up 50
percent since July. The reason
meat prtces have not followed suit
is that farmers are now selling their
livestock !or slaughter rather than
feed them expensive grain. The.
drought has caused farmers to
begin feeding their winter supply of
hay Just to keep their cattle alive
untU they can get them to market.
You don't have to be a farm boy to
know that we are in for some
mighty expensive meat next year.
When the American farmer is
hurting, everyone eventually hurts.
With the possible exception of the
corporate. farms, everyone who
depends on the land for a living is in
trouble. What high interest rates
didn't do to them, the prolonged
drought &amp;~d heat wave did. The

plight of the farmer is what has
started the inflation spiral on its
way. Manufacturers have also been
hurting the last two' years and C!'JI
be expected to raise prtce in order
to hasten their own recovery. The
accelerating demand is already
pushing up prtces. Aluminum
prices have soared 90 percent in the
last year, a fact vertfled by renewed
activity at the Kaiser plant at
Ravenswood. With recovery barely
underway, inflation is rearing its
ugly head virtually ignored by the
administration.
Unimpeded, Inflatino will stm be
upward bound on the economic
roller coaster by winter when food
prices are usually highest. The
suave· assurances of government
economists won't pay your grocery
bills!

Donnie VanMeter opened the
WhiteFalconchargewithaslxyard
run . A second TDcameona23yard
pass to Mike Pethtel. Later came a
14 yard pass to Anthony DIVin·
venzo. Other touchdowns were
scOred by Plitl Stewart.
Eastern got on the scoreboard
when Mike Lance went over from
the three .
Meanwhile, at Southern, the
Tornadoes of coaches Bill Porter
and Darrell Duganrolledup&lt;l81 total
yards in the 49-0 r&lt;mp of Hannan.
Southern began with a safety then
scame a :Ill yard run by quarterback
Tony Riffle. Riffle then connected
for a 24 yard scoring pass before
Brtan Allen added a six pointer.
Riffle, enJoying his best night this
season, scored one m, passed lor
three others.lmd 156 yards. Allen led
ail rushers with 142 · yards in 19
carries.

travels to Hannan, W.Va. Kyger
Creek is idle this weekend.
Going into this week's games,
Southern and Kyger Creek have 3-1
records while North Gallia is 2-1.
Hannan Trace has broken even with
a 2-2 slate while Southwestern and
Eastern are stm seeking their first
victories.
· Kyger Creek was knocked from
the unbeaten ranks last Friday night
by the Minford Falcons, 18-13.
Coach John Blake's North Gallia
· Pirates behind the numlng of Ertc
Penick recorded their second victory in three starts. 22-6 Saturday
evening at Parkersburg Catholic.
Penick scored on runs of one,ll and
three yards.
.
Wahama,whlch blasted Eastern,

tO press on this.*'

A .secretive . loner.,.....,...~---.---:-·...,....:._......;_,____,...~Ja_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n

42-6 last Friday, wUiseeksltssecond
straight victory against the Improving Southern Tornadoes. Southern
romped Hannan, 49-0.

piaysatSou~nandSouthwestern

BRIAN ZIRKLE
IHI, ltl JIGUDd
Senior Guard

The Daily Sentinei-Poge-3

CIIIIIS BlJRDETIE

RANDY JBWELL
u. 11\l (ICIUIId .

5-11, I'll JIGUDd
Senior Fullbaclc

Junior W1Dfback

·Dodgers move closer
to NL West pennant
RBI

CINCINNATI ·( AP) - Los An- runs in the fliurth on an infield
geles Dodger Manager Tom La· single by Sax and Greg Brock's
sorda is glad he's not in the Atlanta sacrifice fly. With two out, GueiTel'O
Braves' shoes.
came to bat and took a pitch from
The Dodgers completed a two- Russell hlgb and tight. Russell later
game sweep of the Cincinnati Reds said he wasn't trying tn hit
behindPedroGuerrero'shomerand Guerrero.
three runs batted In Tuesday night,
Guerrero ~ out to end the
shoving the Atlanta Braves closer to inning, but threatened Russell as he
elimination in the National League left the field. Both benches emptied,
West.
but no punches were thrown.
The Braves lost 6-2 to the San
"I just told him, 'Don't hit me. It
Francisco Giants Tuesday, reduc- you hit me, you're going to get hit,
·ing the Dodgers' number for too.'Ican'tsayhethrewltatme,but
clillching the division title to two it was too close," Guerrero said.
games. The Braves trail the
The Reds chased Dodger starter
Dodgers by 4~ games.
Rick Honeycutt in the fifth, and
"Let's put It this way," Lasorda mounted one last threat against
· said. "I'd rather be in our position · reliever Joe Beckwith 3-3 In the
than theirs, wouldn't you? I think elghth.DaveConcepcto'n~Cesar
they would, too."
Cedeno led off with singles, and
. The Dodgers have two games left Niedenfuer was summoned.
at San Diego and three with San
Nledenfuer got Dan Dries8en and ·
Francisco at home, while the Paul Householder to foul out to .
Braves play three in Houston and catcl1erJackFimple, and he retired
threeatSanDiegobeloreclosingthe pinch-hitter Duane Walker on a
.season.
ground out to finish the Reds' eight.
''I like our ch~ces a lot ~r He gave up a walk in the ninth, but
than I like Atlanta s chances, said held on for his 11th save.
·
The two-game sweep gave the
reliever Tom Niedenfuer.
Los Angeles scored in each of the Dodgers a good feeling about !heir
first four innings, then snuffed out a standing, p&amp;rtlcularly the 12·9 win
late Cincinnati lhreatto improve its on Monday night in which the
chlllla'S Tuesday.
Dodgers scored three times in the
Guerrero, hitting .3531nhlslast32 ninth tosendlttoanextrainnlngand
games, rapped a first-inning sacrt- four times in the tenth to win it.
Glanla 8, Bra- 2
lice fly. Steve Sax hit another in the
second for a 2-0 lead.
San Francisco, which successCatcher Dann Bllarclello's two- fully played spoiler a year ago
run homer in lhe second, his ninth, against the Dodgers, tothebenetltof
tied it, but Guerrero responded with the Braves, all but killed Atlanta's
his 32nd homer of the season Iii the hopes.
top 0t tl!e third off Jeff Russell, 4-4;
Mark Davis, 5-4, who has won five
!ora4-2lead.ItmatchedGuerrero's of his last six starts, yielded three
career hlgb for homers, set last hits over six innlngsandpinch·hitter
season.
Tom O'Malleybrokea2-2 tie with a
"It was a good pitch," Bllardello two-run single in the top al the
said. "Sometimes you Just have to seventh.
give the hitter credit. He really
TheGiantsgottheirflnaltworuns
smoked it."
in the ninth on a two-run homer by
One inning later, Guerrero was Greg Minton. his first in the major
smoking.
leagues. Minton pitched the last
The Dodgers added two more three Innings for his 21st save.

snc Standlap
WLPOP

Team

Southern ... ..... ......... .............. 3 I 86 25

Huntlngtm VInson at Eastern; Ironton St.
Joe at Hannan Trace; North GaUia at
Hamlin; Wahama at Southern MdSouthwestern at Hannan.

llli(NhGnde

&amp;,lt 28, at Nelsoo.vWe-York.
Oct. 6, at Aleunder
Oct. 13. Galllpoll!.
Ocl. ro, VInton COunty.
Oct 'IT, at Belpre.
All the above games wtU be ~~ ~= :l&gt; p.m.

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
FISH SQUARE

Undergoes treatment

79(
With Fries ..... s1.24

A.DOLPH'S
.DAIRY VALLEY
"At The End of the Pomeroy-Ma10n S.idge"
POMEROY OH.

PH. 992 -2556 ·

,

'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

nltely also
by be
thelostteam
last Frtday, ~
would
foranypostseason
action.

------------l

Classic College Women's Basketball Tournament In December.
,.
Georgia, the Southeastern Con·
!erence champion, will play Miami
of Ohio from the Mid-American
Confel'EI!Ce, wh!le Ohio State, the
· winner bf the.Big Ten Conference
the last two ·seasons, will face
Clemson of the Atlantic Coast
Conference In first-round games
Thursday, Dec. 29.
The consolation and champion·
ship games will be played Frtday,
Dec.JO.Gametimesbothnightswm
be 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. EST in St.John
Arena on the Ohio State campus.

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

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STEA
TOMATO JUICE ........ ~:'.~ .• 97¢

24 OZ. ARMOUR

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POTATOES .............S~~~2/97 4
19 OZ. CAMPBELL'S CHUNKY

·laot1sc-

DeF;ciTC)

:131 JACKSON PIKE - RT. 3~ WEST
Phone 44e· 4524

....._,.•&amp;ama

at Jackson

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Relief
pijcher Steve Howe, who has
undergone treatment for cocaine
abuse twice in the past year, will be
unavaUable to the Los Angeles
Dodgers for the rest of the season,
the National League West leaders
were told by his pbysician Tuesday
night.
The Dodgers issued a statement
sayingthattheywereinformedthat
Howe, who was suspended indetl-

fjf~~~~~~~~~~,,

Southwestern .... ...... ..... .......... 0 4 18 ua
Eutern ............. .... .. ..... .. ... ... o. • 6121

Sevetllhllndo

Oct. 3. at Oak Hill.
Oct. 10, Bel .....
Oct. 17, Oak Hill

OSU will host
.
women 's.sesswn
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Geor·
gla, a member of the NCAA
Tournament's final four last season,
and host Ohio State will lead a
lour·team field in the !lrst Buckeye

the Bisonsfor
erupt
22 second
perldd
scoreless
onetor
quarter
then
saw
points enroute to a 34-6 victory. Jim
Burnette got the Highlanders'
toUchdown on a six yard run ,
Coach Brett Wilson's Hannan
Trace Wildcats battled Lucasvme
Valley ~fore dropping a 28-12
decision. Jeff Barnes, gaining 116
yards for the night, scored the first
WUdcat six pointer. Hannan Trace
got ltsotherscoreafterDeke Barnes
connected with Phil Bailey on a
passing play, Bailey then ran the
llna1 eight yards.
At Minford, the Falcons went to
the air to break Kyger Creek's
defense which had not yielded a
touchdown in three previous victories. Minford's David Pinson hit
Steve Martin for a 44 yard play then
connected with Martin for 14 yards.
The winning m came after a bad
snap on a punt attempt.
Kyger's two touchdown resulted
from an 85 yard klckott return by
Chuck Vogel and a one yard run by

Shane Stover which capped a 67
yard march.

Kyger Creek ............. .. ......... .. 3 1 62 ~
NorthGa.Wa ............... ... .. ...... 2 1 !'&gt;4 43
Hannan Trace ...... .... .... .. .. .... . 2 2 86 78

The remainder of their schedules
are as follows:

~.25,

At Southwestern, the Highlanders
of Coach Jack James held Buffalo

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�~-

Page 4 The Daily sentinel

· Kaff·kaff!

·

:'
..,

'
·~

·,

·

..

.

Wedrwc ~

• . Pomertly- Middleport, Ohio

I

.i
I

..

Down South a trio of peoplepleasers - heh-heh - Is on tap.
Surprising Tulane meets Vanderbilt; the Duke Blue DevUs tangle
with Miami of Florida, and F1orida
State goes against rugged Auburn.
Okey Bayou, our SoUthern representative - who makes his home
near the New Orleans campus of
the Tulane Green Wave- says the
home forces wUl sink the Vander·
bilt CommOdores, 35-16. The Duke
Blue Devils wtll pull a mild surprise
by taking some of the wind out of the
Miami Hurricanes as Duke's QB
Ben Bennett outduels freshman QB
Bernie Kosar, 35-24, In a real
thrUier.
The hlgh·scorlng F1orida State
Seminoles know their way into the
end zone. But their prohlem Is
keeping their opponents. The Semi·
noles have had very little luck
against the Auburn Tigers, standIng 1-9-1 In the series. The Hoople
Hun-ch Is thefr luck Is going to be hak-kaf!- all bad again thls week.
Make It Auburn, 31-28, in a
cutthanger!
A pair of Interesting first-ever

meetings pit Brigham Young ofthe
WAC against UCLA of the Pac 10
(in the fabled Rose Bowl) and Notre
Dame against the Colorado Buffaloes In Boulder, Colo.
BYU, with QB Steve Young
exhibiting All-American capablllties week after week, gets our nOd to
win a wild-and-wooly affair, 38-35.
. Notre Dame appears to have too
many guns for the Buffaloes; the
Irish should win 35-14.
A glance at conierenees slates
finds Ohio State the Hoople Favor·.
ite to whip Minnesota, 42-17, In the
Big 10. Elsewhere In the league,
Iowa 24-17 over Illinois; Michigan
36-21 over Indiana; Wisconsin 24-14
over NorthWestern; and resurgent
Michigan State 40-20 over Purdue.
The ACC has three good ones on
tap. We· a~e calling 'em: North
Carolina 38-12 over Georg1a .Tech;
Maryland. 22-10 over Virginia; and
North Carolina State 28-21 over
Wake Forest.
In more SWC games: the bruisIng Baylor Bears wiU defeat
Houston, 27-19; Arkansas wiU prevail over TCU, 17-14; and Texas
A&amp;M wUl double the score on Texas
Tech, 26-13.
Arizona State of the Pac 10 wUl
down league foe Stanford, 28-W,
while Arizona beatS Calltornla,
36-21.
Elsewhere, Washington will dunk
Navy, 31-7; Southern Calltornla wtll
edge South Carolina by a 31-27
count; Alabama wUl thump Memphis State, 35-14; SMU wUl whack
Tex.as Arlington, 38-14; and WyomIng wtll rise In the WAC with a 31-10
victory over Texas-EI Paso.
Now go on with my forecast:
Frtclor. Sepl . •
Pen. !'J Columi:JlWI

eon.... Temtlle 110

1

x·Balttmore

Brlparn YOIUI&amp;3ti UCLA !II

WLPcLGB

Cent Mlchlp~~ U .Keol Sl 7
Ctndnoall48 Cond 17·
Delawue 30 LeldJb E
Duke 311 Mbunl (F1a) U
E Car.llna 38 MIIW1118
Freloo SUI Utah-St lt

· -31VMI8
Georafa Zl - l p p l Sill
Grunblla1 r1 Pnlrle VIew 1
Hawaii • San Illep Sl zs
Holy CrGM 28 Dartmouth lQ

PhUaddphla
Pl.ttsbUrgh

87
82

Mont rea l
S1 . Louis

81
'ni

Chicago

n

NeW York

64

n

'ro
Tl
B2

.551 .522 4~
.513
.tBl

6
11

~

.M!I · 16

93

.«&lt;I 221t.l

WEST DIVE ION
l..oll

Iowa U llllnc* 17
Iowa 8&amp; II New Mexioo 8t 14

Ange~

~

&amp;7

.573 -

AdaiH.a

85

71

.M5

4~

Houston
San Diego

7~

-~

~~

San F'r&lt;Uiclsw

82
77
76

81

Clnclnnad

72

811

Ill

_. · 1\leMa,y's Gam•

Lolli Beach Sl .II Tfoxal AAI14

Chicago 3, P hiladelphia 0
I..o&amp; An~es 7, Cncinru:lt! 4
New York 4, Pittsburgh 3
San Fro.nctsco 6, Atlanta 2
Montreal Hl. St. Loots 4
HOUSIOO B. san otego S

ISUSZF1orida!2
l.eulo. .e 13 VJrpnla l'e&lt;ll U
Marylaad Zll vqtala 10
Mlchlpa as bwlma 21
Mlcldpll St 40 ......... •
.
~Wppl • 8 Mht-lpp' 11
Mo-.... Sl N Artzona II

.&lt;&amp;!II 13
.4lW u.

.... 18

'

WLPd.GB

S&amp;9J
.,

"""'"
New York

.m .rn s~

f3

88 68
.564
-116 1'l
Milwaukee ·
83 7&lt;1
.52!1
1.5 82
.418
Boston
tJI !I
.Ul
Cleveland
WEST DIVIIION
x..ctUcago
!!i . 62 · .e
Kansas ary
75 81
.484
Texas
76 81
.48t

·*

Ton&gt;!IIO

Oakland
12 M
Calltornla
~
00
Minnesota
~
oo
Seattle
~
98
x-ciiDched division title
TlleiiiiiJ'• G.na
Del:roll ' · BaltlrnCJn&gt; 2
New York 7, Boston 2
MUwaWr.ee 8. Ck'Veland 4
Texas 6. MJnnesota 1
CallfDmla 7. ToroniO 1
Ot.kland 5, CNcaeo a
Sea~ 4, KaMas City 0

8
11

13~
21~

'

28Y.z

1~

19

.459 23
27~

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28

.:m

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Netruka, 4Z SJI'aCUie 14
New Medoo If NT.... Sll2
N Canllaa 38 G-..,. TecliiJ

N~St18WIIIoeFo-ZI

Notre Dame 9S Colorado 14

BREAKFAST SERVED AT OUR

Oblo 84 G Min"

da 17
Oldaboma
13
Orepn st If Nev·Lu Vegu %1
...... Sl*l Rutamt 18 .
San ..... Sl 'n llfta&lt;no 25
Soulhenl Cal 31 8 Carollno Zl
8MU ll8 Texao-AriiD&amp;Ioa 14

a-

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wVlralala 27 1'111 21
WI-ll Northw....... 14
Wichita st 2S Drake 11
W,.cmlnl: 31 l'eou-1!1 Puo 10
Yole%1 Wm a. M~ry 14

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~~

Stretch your food budget with hamburger ideas
By Dale M. StoD
Meigs Counly Extension
Home Economist
Be creative with penny-wise
meals! Learn to stretch your food
budget with delicious and economical hamburger and other low cost
cuts of beef.
A budget meal can be satisfying,
nutritious and interesting. Think
beyond the plain hamburger and
French fries! Next time you're
planning a money·stretchlngmenu,
try a new recipe llke meat and
potato burgers. This recipe uses
hamburger but extends it with
grated potato. If you have never
tried a dish like this, plan to have It
soon. It's delicious! Use garden
tomatoes In place of canned
tomatoes, 1f desired.
Meld 111111 Potato Burgers
1 pound hamburger
1 large white potato, ~led and
chopped
1 small onion, chopped
·
- · 1 teas piioon salt
·"
· F1our
2 cups canned or fresh peeled
'tomatoes and juice.
: Mix meat, potato, onion and salt

tightly. Make six or eight patt ies .
Place patttes in a frying pan and
brown on both sides. Drain. Add
tomatoes and juice. Cover and CO()k
slowly untU done, about 25 minu1es.
Remove patties from the frying
pan and keep hot. Combine one
tablespoon flour and one tablespoon
water. Stir untu smooth. Add a little
hot tomato juice. Stir. Add nour and
water to the frying pan. Cook until
thick, stlrr!ng occasionally. Serve
the gravy with the patties. This
economical meal could also Include
green beans, cabbage slaw and a
baked apple. Pep up the cabbage
slaw with bits of red and green
pepper. Top the baked apple with
raisins and a marshmallow.
Beef Is a good that has a lot going
tor it nutritionally and Is also
versatile and easy to fix. If you're
worried about fat In foods, then
there are ways to fix beef that can
lower the fat content, too.
Many Ideas for preparing beef
wtll be included In my two
presentations at Meigs County Beef
Day, Saturday, Oct.1, at¥ Meigs
County Fairgrounds.
1

.-

·

.

'
shutout of Madison Plains. Officials
have thrown 21 -fiags for 263 penalty
yards on Miami Trace's last two
visitors. It hasn't helped the hosts.
They won one and tied the other
game.
Tony Stephens, Leavittsburg La·
Brae's star fullback-defensive
tackle, Is the brother of top
Crulserwelght contender Randy
Stephens,' University of Toledo
tallback Jerome Stephens and Lee
Stephens, the starting basketball
center at Geneva College.
Top-ranked Newark Catholic has
beaten four opponents by a combined 1~ m~. East Clinton,
3·1, has topped Its total victories for
the last two seasons. MU!ersburg
West Holmes' regular-season win·
nlng streak is up to W games.
Youngstown Ursuline had lost to
Mooney seven straight times before
a 14-6 triumph before 14,CXXJ at
Youngstown State University last
week.
Lorain quarterback M~e Repko
played more than half of the game
with a deep thlgh bruise and still hit
11 of 19 passes for 239 yards and two
touchdowns In a 21-12 decision at
Lorain Southview. Repko has eight

The public is encouraged to
attend these sessions and learn lots
of new ideas for beef cookery.
Included wUI be choosing hamburger, making your own convenIence freezer mixes, and more.
There Is no cost and there's lots of
parking. For more Information
about Beef Day, contact Dale Stoll
at 992-6696.
Choosing meat for a meal Is a real
art. The process heg1ns with the
grocery ads. · Check out the -meat
cuts and choose recipes that utUize
these
cost cuts. That's why I
plan meals next to my cookbooks
and recipe rue.
When you're plal~nlr!

law

POMEROY. OHIO

l'ortsmouth 12 o...... up, Ky. s

'

HUSH PUPPIES·
WORK ALL DAY~

'

MARION SNIDER and DONALD GRAHAM

J;~.AIJI ,I II~IA! '&gt;

Snider, Graham birthdays noted

Ovr working shoes really worlt. They take you
through the entire day with all iloe com/on, support
and style you need. Treat yoor.,.lf to Hoe fit and
fashir1n of Hush Puppie•" 9 to 5 .hoes. You
deserve it!

·Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Snider Angel Snider, Heidi Snider, Kelley
entertained with a party recently in Snider, Michelle Snider, Crlssy
observance of the birthdays of their Snider, Heather Gibeau!, Pat
son, Marlon, and friend, Donald Snider, and Chuck Snider.
Graham, son of Jtrnmy and Brenda
A Pac Man cake was served with
homemade
ice cream. Games were
.
Graham.
· , Attending were Becky Graham,
played.

200/0 OFF _

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a

ALL WOMEN'S
DRESS HUSHPUPPIES

the dish.
Will special spices or Ingredients
raise th~ cost per serving' Are the
Ingredient&amp;ones that you have on
hand? Are the ingredients ones that
you're fairly sure that your family
wtll like? Does the recipe come
from a rellable source? Be wary of
recipes
of
packagesthat
or come
bottleson
of the
foodsides
. Often
these recipes are excellent but
sometimes they1 may call for a
product, like frozen green beans In
butter sauce. Using one-half cup of
a can of pineapple juice may be
economic~! as.Iong as your family
can drink the rest of the Juice as a
part of their meal pattern. Just
gobbling It up In Jlddltion to au the
foods that are normally eaten just
adds to the food costs. You might
consider using the rest of the juice
or other food as a part of another
recipe, too.

The first birthday of Trlcla Lynn
KJttle, daughter of Buddy Kittle,.
Syracuse, was obServed recently at

Smith birth
Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Smith,
Peach Fork Road, Pomeroy, an·
nounce the birth of a son, Marc
Donald, Aug. 31, at the Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
.
He weighed eight pounds and one
ounce and was 21inches long. 'The
couple has a daughter, Sabrina,

-~&amp;!'-~~~;.!!®
CHAPMAN SHOES

Next to Elberfelds In Pomeroy

three-

'

Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Roy 0 . Smith, Pomeroy, ,and Mr.
and Mrs. Carrol F . Nelgler,
Syracuse.

SJII5*
• Price includes special options

Salisbury PT(! meets
Fall activities were planned and
teachers were introduced at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
held t the hooi
Salisbury PI'O
a
sc
·
The annual fall f~tlvai was
announced !or Nov.19. It was noted
that the PI'() has purchased and
received the new benches for the
auditorium and the old benches wiU
betaken tothehlghschool!oruseat

and custom features (Full name option extra)

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'79.95 Applko~blt• llfl Vallldium '" H.i n ~~. 10 &amp; !4K Guld /\\•,ul&lt;'iblt.•
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the home of her grandparents, the
Rev. and Mrs. James B. Kittle.
The party was hosted by her
grandmother, with a Smur! cake
being served with Ice cream and
soft drinks.
Attending besides her grandparents and father, were Regina Lee,
Debbie, Jason and Tommy Powell,
Rol)le Cunningham, Ora Bass,
Debbie, Wendy and Adam Triplett,
Janie and Jerrod Woods, Michelle
and Benjl Cundlt!, Keith and Sarah
Bochard, Harry and Phyllis
Woodyard.
Sending gifts were Tara and Amy
Rizer, Christian Kittle, Kendi Barr,
Nonie Currey, Hazel Hayes, and
her great-grandmother,' Anna
McCauley.

Humphreys,
leader of the
theJudy
athletic
field.
junior girl scout troop 1100, presented the troop's trophy to John
Lisle, principal, for the school
trophy case.
'rroop 1100 was selected as the
outstanding troop in the county and
awarded the trophy at the Meigs
County Fair.
·
It was decided thatagalnthisyear
PTO wut once again fumlsh
·paper and have menus sent home
for the students. Again this year
there ·will be an award for room
count at each meeting: A separate
award will be given In November to
the room with the highest percen·

.tage of..parents as members of the
PTO. Theslxthgradewontheroom
count at this meeting.
L1sie introduced the teachers,
"~ de Marge
Sabra Morrlson.'""'gra :
Barr, second; Rosalie Story, third;
Karen Walker, . fourth; Dorothy
Chanliy,!Uth,andEdBartels,slxth.
The school has a total enrollment of
168.

Staff Sgt. Oliver E. Sayre Jr., son

ot Doris M. and Charles P · Bailey ft
31269 Lovett Road, PortlaDd. has

1.

72600 105661

--~--------------~
(

y

reenlisted In the u.S. Air Force at
Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas,
after elght years mUitary service.
· Sayre, a student tralnlng advisor,
is a 1971 graduate of Southern Hlih
sChool, Racine.
.

correctly. An · overc()()_ked tough
roast is another waste of money
unless you can cook it In a pressure
cooker or grind It up and use It In
some other way. Low , slow cookery
Is Importa nt to keep meat tender
and moist.
For more ideas on meat cookery,
attend Bee!DaySaturday. Oct.l. at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds.

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

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL -HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST .
Office Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614} 992-2104
or (304} 675-1244

Participation in the collection of
clothing and supplies fortheGrundy
Mission at Grundy, Va. was
discussed at ·the recent meetlllg of
the Men and Women's Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
It was noted that the materials
wiU be taken to the Grundy, Va .
m!sslon.where there are around 250
children on Oct. 23.
Making sunshine baskets for the
shutins was discussed and the ttme
of meetings was changed to' 2 p.m.
for the winter.
Reported hospitalized were l.ro
Searles and Bob Hunnel. Lena
·McKinley remains In a nursing
home, Lester Balley, Gerald Rupe,
Jessie Bowers and Helen Reynolds
were reported Improving.
Mlldred Riley presided at the
meeting with members responding
to roll call by naming a musical
instrument of the Bible.
Re!reshmentswereseriled
the
hostesses,
Freda Welling, by
Nina
Bland and Dee Hartinger. ·

DAVID ALAN CARSON

Carson birth
Alnnan 1st Class Roger Carson,
103-1 Del Mar Ct., Minot Air 'Force
Base, North Dakota, 58704, are
announcing the birth of a son, David
Alan, horn on Aug. 6. The Infant ,
first for the couple, weighed six
pounds, eight ounces.
.
Grandparents are Russell and
Pat Carson and Randall and
Carolyn Davis, all of Middleport.

Exercise class
meeting held
Janet · Sigman lost the . most
weight and Betsy Stivers was
runner-up at the Monday night
meeting of the F1ve Points exercise
class. At the Tuesday morning
Mason class of Sllnderella, Janet
Morris lost the most weight with
Lois Ann Reitmire- being the
runner-up.
1n the Wednesday morning Five
Points class of Slinderella, Joan
Vaughan lost the most weight, and
there was a tie tor runner,up
between Vicky Abbott and Cathy
Workman. JoAnn Newsome Is the
dlrectol'of the classes.

Girl Scout
meeting set
Fall meeting of the Area 3, Black
Diamond Girl Scout CouncU wiU be
held In Pomeroy~ on Oct. 27, with
Mary Ash of near Pomeroy, the
Area 3 chairman to preside.
The meeting wiU be held at the
East-West Dining Room at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Registration wiU beheld from 9:30
to 10 a .m . with the opening to be by
Big Bend WeSt. CouncUgoals wiU be
defined by Lois Whealey of Athens.
field vice president, delegates to the
national convention wiU be elected,
and the lOth birthday of the Black
Diamond Councll wUl be observed.
There wUl also be reports on the
annual meeting and eJections to the
councll's nominating oonunlttee.
The program wiU feature Pamela
Ash, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Ash, Pomeroy, who attended the
National Center West, In August.
Awards and recognitions wUl
Include the super service unlt
awards, the super troop awards, the
membership awards, and the gold
award presentation. There wiU be a
luncheon at noon.

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we

Sayre reenlists

Another important consideration
would be to make sure that the
foods are stored properly. Hamin
burger and stew meat part1cu 1ar
need special attention. Because
t
d th
they are cu or groun · ere 1s
more surface exposed to become
contaminated . Th rowing out
Is
te'
spelled food a sure was .
Be sure to cook the foods

Be sure to take Inventory of all
your supplle5, too. It would be very
frustrating to heg1n to make a
recipe only to discover that you are
out of an essential ingredient.

Kittle birthday noted in Syracuse

Three Grea.t R. JOHNS
Ring Styles to choose from!

.

&lt;.

'

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

.

'

'
' --: ft·:\;''
...
, ,::

TRICIA LYNN KJrl1..E

·Bengals reactivate Browner, Johnson still out

I

dish, think about the Ingredients In

Class meeting
in Middleport

Nell!lonvme-York 20

TD passes In four games.
a city passing mark of 352 yards in a
Greenan's first-year head coach 32-!or-39 performance against PrlnBut Gaines resigned because of cetonandcamebackwith24of36for
what he called tan abuse after a 50-{) 342 yards and three touchdowns last
loss to Sprtngtleld Shawnee Friday: week against Western Hllls.
.
Two of his assistants, Mike F1ora
At Chllllcolhe;-l!nebacker Joe
and Jack Allison, wiU share the head Webb Is back in the lineup after
undergoing an emergency appenasslgrunent the rest of the season.
Cleveland Benedictine has scored dectomy on the eve of the opener,
Its 300th career victory, edging less than one month ago. He was In
Mansfield Senior ~- Two sons of on 17 tackles upon his return. The
Cleveland Browns' official Jtm
Cavaliers are 0-7 without Webb and
Garrett, Jason and Judd Garrett, 5-1-1 with htm In the lineup.
are stars for unbeaten Cleveland
Chllllcothe Unioto, the Scioto
University. Their oldest brother, Valley Conference champion the
last three seasons, has been
Jim Garrett, serves as an assistant
at University. Another brother, ' outscored 94-13 In four sira!ght
John Garrett, 1s a Jreslunan on
losses. Cincinnati Taft broke a
Columbia University's football
33-game losing streak with Its first
team.
victory In 17 years over Cincinnati
In the opening :rr seconds, Marlon Woodward 32-15. Greg Baker of
Harding trailed Elyria 12.{). An
Springboro needs 33 yards to reach
the 4,CXXJ career rushing plateau.
Interception and a fumble return led
to the Elyria touchdowns. Burt
Chris Kenne of Sandusky Perkins
Hagler, Xenia's quarterback, was
has 863 yards rushing, Alliance
fitted with a flak jacket to protect
quarterback Dan Boring 727 yards
cracked ribs and then sprained his
passing, Andy Peterson of Archbold
ankle the next week against Xenia
94 points and Jerry Mapes of
Beavercreek.
.r
McComb75polntsinfourgamesthis
A.J. Nieman, Cincinnati La- season.
Salle's quarterback, has completed
Ottawa Glandorf's Jeff Compton
93 of 145 passes tor 1,191 yardsand11
needs one more field goal to match
touchdowns this fall. He established
his single-season school record ot
seven field_ goals. Joe Boes of
Arcadia ran 40 times for 242 yards
and four touchdowns in a 26-7
decision over Rawson Corylntercepted a pass and ran 34 yards
Rawson.

for
touchdown
against
Tampa
Bay,a and
linebacker
Ron Simpkins
have Injured hamstring muscles.
Both are considered questionable
tor the Baltimore game. Offensive
tackle Anthony Munoz also was
knocked out of the Buccaneers
game earty when he suffered a
bruised thigh. Hls status for
Saturday Is in doubt.

oven.

.

~- Ironton's 57 game winning streak on line
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -IDs
- backers are calling Toledo Scott
: football coach Johnny Hutton an
- opportunist.
~
Because of a busing snafu,
DeVUbiss arrived at Scott five
• minutes late for lts Saturday
afternoon kickoff. The DeVUblss
· players took no warmups on the
Scott field. The coin was tossed
before they had filed off the team
bus.
Scott won the toss. Hutton decided
DeVilbiss was not ready to play. So
he ordered his players to run eight
straight plays without a huddle.
Scott used the strategy for a
touchdown en route to a 21).15
triumph. ·
Post-game comments by Jim
August, DeVUbiss' coach, were
unprintable.
Around Ohio: Ironton's 57-game
unbeaten regular-season winning
:Streak wiU be in jeopardy Friday
night at Ashland, one of Kentucky's
-ciassAAAApowers. TheTigerslast
lost to Logan in 19TI.
Washington Court House set six
_school records last week In a 66-0

At 11 a .m. that day, ! am giving a
program ca lled "101 Delicious
Ways 10 Prepare Beef."
Inr luded in thi s program, which
will feat ure samples, are quick
ways to lix meals, new ideas for
thai old standby- hamburger, and
lots more!
At I p.m. I will be working with
mlcrowa ve ovens from Landmark
and Sears to present a program on
cooking beef in the microwave

BURGE-R
CHEF
•.
.

I

!looltoern 7 .,........ 0

•

BREAKFAST SERVED
6-10:30 Monday-Saturday Sunday 7-11

_....._,.-...S&lt;Joee
North Galllall llamlln 0

""'"- 28 -

Page-S

What's Cookin'?

EAST DIVFIION .

&amp;\ST DIVIUON

Alobama lllllllompllll Silt
8118 Sloolonllll
Arkanou 17 TCU 14
Ann.!&gt; ,l lllarvard 110

.....acANLIWJUE

8)' 1be ~ '""-'
NATIONAL lEAGUE

llowUn1 Green *I I! Mldq• 8
Bl'owa 2"1 Prlncllton 8

8oulbw rt

Soholliif, 0&lt;1. I

Majors ·

......... ' n - ..

-

Wednesday, September 28 , 1983

.,

Aubum Sl Florida Sl 21'1
Ball Sf: 33 N llholl If

-7

T-he Daily Sentinel

6y The Bend

Scoreboard ...

Nebraska-~nslaught _ · will continue
hotly conti,sted s~ries. Um-kumph!
· '!'he -Georgla Bu)lddgs, meanwi\Ue, wUl stay on track in-\he SEC
race with a 21-12 decision over ·
Mississippi State. ·
. There is Important action In the
East. plttsourgli and West Virginia
will have a t It for the 76th time; . and
high-scoring Boston College will
meet old foe Temple.
Pitt leads In their long series with
West Virg1nia, 52-22-1. But this year
the Hoople System sees the Mountaineers closing the gap slightly.
The West Virg1nla combination of
Jeff Hostetler throwing and Piml
Woodside booting field goals will be
just enough for West Virginia o take
a 27-21 victory .
Boston College, with or without
the services of injury-plagued Doug
Flu tie, wUl roll over Temple, 30-2().

1983

I

, ··

•

By ~or Amos B. Hoople
PlpJdn Geolus
Egad, friends, undefeated and
untied major elevens are as scarce
as those proverbial hen's teeth.
Um-kumph!
'Tw1II be a season to remember.
And tor some ~ heh-heh - to
forget!
· One team· that wUl have much to
·remember is our pre-season No. 1
choice, Nebraska, whose awesome
offense Is clicking at a better than 50
points per ·g ame average. This
week Syracuse has the unenviable
task of tcylng to stop the Nebraska
· onslaught - and do it on the
.Cornbuskers' Memorial Stadium
tUrf!
'
The last ttme these teams met
was way back In 1961, with
. Syracuse taking home a 28-6
; VIctory. Buc Bored, our Nebraska
' field rep, confidently predicts what
' the Orangemen wlll take home this
: Year Is a big headache. And a 42-14
· 1oss. Har-rumph!
:: The highly regarded Texas
; Longhorns, looking ahead to their
: big one with Oklahoma next week,
wtll have little trouble downing
· Rlce, 42-8. Oklahoma wUl warm up
. tor Texas with a 42-13 triumph over
Big Eight toe KanS&lt;ts Slate.
· And now, the Hoople Upset
:_Special of the Week: East Carolina
30, Missouri 28. Yas, dear readers,
the Southern Independent Pirates
. wm surprise the Big Eight foe with
their amazing offensive acrobatics
- which racked up 122 points
against Florida State, North CarolIna State and Murray State.
Har-rumph!
:' • In a shocker In the Southeastern
- loop, the LSU Tigers wUl prove to be
:: rude hosts as they beat the F1or!da
_ _ Gators, 32-22, In their :llth renewal.
• It wtll be the air attack of Florida's
- Wayne Peace against the Infantry
:; maneuvers of the Tigers' Dalton
·- HUIIard. The Tigers will improve to
' a 17-11-2 record In this short, but

r, ~J!I!mber 28,

•

.
I

�Paga 6' The Daily Sentinel

Racine news notes
By Mrs. ~cls..Morrls
American Baptist Women of. Rio
Grande Association held a picnic
dinner and planning session July 14
at oak Hill. Those attending from
Racine Church Included Mildred
Hart, Margie Grimm, Mary K.
Yost, Emma Adams, Barbara
Gheen, Martha Lou Beegle.
The Booster Sunday School Class

held the July meeting at Portland
Park with picnic dinner. Mrs.
Margaret Wolfe, president, pres·
ented a devotional program and
brief business session. Mrs. lJo.
rothy Badgley brought a reading,
"Our Class" which was enjoyed.
The meeting closed with prayer by
Mrs. Garnet Ervine.
Fred Sayre is convalescing at

Pen ..,.r•

Wednesday, September 28, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
home after undergong surgery at the wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Merle
· Schroeder and Mae Fern spent 10
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Francis Morris spent a days In Columbus visiting and
week In Columbus with Mr. and enroute to their home In Fayetteville, Ark., spent several days In
Mrs. Robert Swift to attend tbe
Racine with her mother, Mrs.
wedding of her grandson, Ronald
Schroeder and Naomi Mabeus at Morris. They were dinner and
Brookwood Presbyterian Church afternoon guests Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Morris. On Tuesday they
on July 2. She was joined at the
Swift home by Mr. and Mrs. Merle \'islted Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre
and family and Mr. and Mrs. Crttt
Schroeder, daughter, Mae Fern
Bradford.
Schroeder and son, Capt. Steven
Mrs. Peggy Nlxono!Loganwasa
Schroeder, who came from Florida
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
where they were vacailoning, lor

Thursday and Friday o! last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Webb and son
of Columbus were Sunday guests or.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Beegle of
Barberton spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Beegle and BW
Beegle and children of Gallipolis
spent a day.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bradford of
Lancaster and mother, Mrs. Erma
Bradford of Marysville spent Mon·
day with Mr. and Mrs. Critt
Bradford.

Fourth of July weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley~
Larry Badgley of ManaSsas, Va.,
Karen and Thomas Eckersley of
Hano!bal, N. Y., Bonnie and Brtan
Simpson of Baltimore, Ohio; Steve
and Linda Badgley of Columbus;
Ruth and BW Hill, Racine. Also
others visiting were Christy Badg·
ley, Manassas, Va., Lisa PhlWps,
Darin Simpson and Lisa Upp of
Baltimore, Ohlo; Kelll and Amy.Jo
Badgley o1 Columbus; Jenntler and
Joshua Young of Mason, W. Va~

COI'VIIiGHT 1913 · THE telOGU CO . ITEMS AND PIICU

...

GOOD SUNDAY , SEPT . 25 , THitOUGH SA.TUitOAY , OCT . I ,

nu IN GALLIPOLIS AND PDME~OV STORES.'
Wf ltfSfiiVI THE ltiGHf TO liMIT QUA.NTITIU . NONE
SOlD 10 DIAlERS .

ADVEITtSED ITEM ,OLICV
loch of the•• tHh•ertltod Items It r-.ulred to 1M r.-411y

e.c.,·t

o .. ollo"'lo lor , ... In -ch tcrotor . Storo .
01
1podlhollr not..t In th la oct If •• clo ,., .. out Of Ofl

adYortlaed hom

co...,poroblo

••••ne•

wo w il l aHor rou rour choko ef o

who" nolloltlo . ro.floctl"l tho 101110
oro ro lruh.c• W~~hkh "'Ill ORfltlo .,.v t'o -vrchote
110M

iOrthe~of

· · ~ COST cu~lI ER priCe!

'"'• oct.ortlaod Ito.., ol tho od•orllte4 ''leo •lttlln JO
doy1 Onlr ono ••ndor cov pon '"'Ill Ito occoptetl p a r ltom
puuhoaod

TOTAl SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

'

00

Pak

;.

10·01.

Pkgs.

•

.

PLUS
DEPOSIT

ore

•

Pak
•

38

8

Kroger
Dinner Rolls

Cottone lie
Bath Tissue
• ·Roll ·

Diet Coke
or Coca Cola

FULLY BAKED

400 SHEETS PER ROLL

4

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES.
SPRITE, TAB,

Kroger GladlY
welcomes ·
Your
Federal Food
Stamps

f.,or r'"''"l tau bur ot tcr.• v•• ia tuoro,t~ lor yovr tOta l
tolltlo ctio, ••t••dlon af monulocturor If rov tiro not
1DI,.f •od l(ro gor ... 111 roploco rout 11om w itt! tho tomo
b•an d o• o cCJmporolt lo bro,d or rohmd yovr pur choeo
pt1(0

- . ~ ··-....;.;.

KROGER CHILLED

Orange
Juice ..

Kroger 0~5%
Lowfat Milk

.,. .,$1 00

. Ctn .

Gal.
Jug

WHERE NEW IDEAS
COME TO UFE

l~-'0

. .- .
~

... .
'

48

..

. .'
' ..

0 LAKES"

~~RG~RINE

BUY ONE

QUARTERS

Land 0 Lakes
Margarine

IN THE DELl

Sugar River
Polska Kielbassa
/

,?

70' LB.

Serve 'N' Save Sliced
Luncheon Meats

AT THE REGUlAR PRICE OF $1 .69

1-lb.
Pkgs.

I I,.

j:- SAVE

l·LI . PKG . ANY VARIETY OF

GET ONE

••

FREE!

•'

our

.

14·17·LB. AVG. WHOLE

Spotlight

Semi-Boneless
Smoked " ·

.$578

Bean Coffee . ~!~·

'

I

Fresh
Broccoli

.. .... .

'

.

;

' ~·

.

rien

. . . . . . • . . . . . . . lb.

•. '

.

U.S. GOV'T INSIPECTEn
COST CUnER

.

.....

,.

ro er

ese

Fresh Ground
Beef

Sale
Ends

••

SOlD ONI. Y IN loll. lOLLS EACH •••

•

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'

l, 1983-

$4.95

I

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�Pon~e~oy

Middleport, Ohio

28, 1913 .

Ohio

·Brown reunion ~t Royal Oak

Calendar

Th&lt;&gt; third annual reunion of the
Wllllam and ~mma Brown family
was held Sl'pt. 18 at thl' RoyaJ'Oak
• Rl'creatlon building.
Recogntied and presented gifts
were Mrs. ElsiE&gt; Brown, the oldest,
Mrs. Ruth Thaler, thl' one traveling
thE&gt; farthest, and Steyhanle Pullins,
th&lt;&gt; youngest.
Gifts from Emma Burkhard wert'
presE&gt;~~ted tQ three families during
the entertainment session in the
evt&gt;ning. At 4 p.m. a dinner was
served and officers for the 1984
reunion w&lt;&gt;re elected, and at 7 p.n,r.
John Weeks introduced the Tex

WFDNESDAY
LAURAL CLIFF - A revival
be held at Laura) Cllff Free
Methodist Cburch beginning
Wednesday, continuing through
Oct. 2, 7::llp.m. nlght)y. Sunday
services will be at 10: 30 a.m. and
7: :ll p.m. EvangeUst is tile Rev.
·
· Rickard Stickland.

LONG -BO'ITOM -

We Reserve The Right To
Umit Quantities.

..•

STORE HOURS

•

Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-"10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Long

•

•

Bott~m Community AS~;~JCiatlon

will meet Wednesday. 6 p.m .. in
till! rommunlty building . There
·will be a potluck dinner, and
anendlng are to bring a
COvered dish.
RACINE A fellowship
revival will be held at the Racine
First Church of the Nazarene
beginning Wednesday contlnuiltg through Oct. 9. SeiVices are
at 7: :ll p.m. nightly. Services
sunday are 10:30 a.m. Special
singing nightly. The public Is
Invited ot attend.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH_
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., OCT. 1, 1983

..

,.

-

1HURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Child ConseiVatlon League wU
meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the
horne of Mrs. Susie Abbott, with
Susie Soulsby to have the
traveling plize, and Mrs. Abbott,
the devotions.

Chicken •••••••

Fairgrounds.

II
, I

.

The asooclatlon promises
something for everyone from
the producer to the consumer in
the live feeder calf demonstrations, numerous commercial
exhibits and the presentation of
161 ways to prepare beef. Roast
beef sandwiches and soft drinks
will be available throughout the
day and door plizes will be
awarded at inteiVals. The public
is Invited.

19
$
Pork Steak ••
lB.

KAHN'S CRISPY SERVE

Bacon
.........
l!.
29

Southem-Waluuna pme

li'rlda.v nl&amp;hl.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

Mrs. Katherine Pullins, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brown,
Avon; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Volle,
Laki'Wood; Mr. and Mrs. Tom ·

Chuck Roast •••••
lB. $

K mart's New Low Prices!

'

·FRUTH PHARMACY

•
.'r

01' OHIO, INC .
786 N. 2ND AVE. .

-~

--..

MIDDLEPORT, OH .

9:00 TO 9:00
HOURS .·MON.-SAT.
• SUNDAY .U:OO TO 8:00 .

Frog 1100~" SwamP

AdVentUre. IS. 97 ·

¢

LB .

And Action. 23.97

Boxing.'" Action
Cartrldge,l9.97

Stor Strike1M
Cartridge. t6.97

Space Hawk,.;

Moze-A.Jron'"

Deadly Diles'"

Utopia~" For Fun

4~769 .

Bomb Sq uad.,.

Eggs .......... :~z.
VALLEY BELL

SUBSCRIPTION KATES
By Cary-ler or Motor Routt&gt;
One Week .................... ..... ......... $1.00
On~ Month ................ .. ..... ......... $4.40
One Year ..... ... ................. ....... $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally .. ........... ................ .. ... 20 Cents

2o/o
Milk
•
•
•
•
•
• •• •
29
Gallon

BANQUET fROZEN

Ca midge. 25,88

·Super Dryness for Baby!
( ...Super\alue for Mom!

'

[;]

·c~:~:r 11.97 .

S0 UP • • • • • • • • •

No subscrlpt..lons by mall permli!Pd In
towns wherP home car rlt-r service Is

available.
• -

32 Oz. Btls.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnaktt Ohio

·J:! Weeks ........................ ... ...... $14.04
'$ Wffi&lt;s ................................. $77.30
~~Weeks

... .. ............................ Sl!l.l8

o...

_
Outakle
o
13 Weeks ............................. . .. . 115.21
26 Wtaek~ ..................... .. ... .. ..... $29.i4
S2 W.-.b ......................... ........ $56.21

'.

HEINZ CATSUP

·,

99¢

Umit One Pw Cuatomer
Good _Only At Powell'a
Off8r Expi- Oct. 1. 1983

.,

HYLAND CHUNK

BETTY CROCKER

DOG FOOD

CAKE MIXES

25 Lb. Bag

3

$ 29

Limit One Pw Cull:omer
Ooad Only At l'oMII'a
Off8r
Oct. , • , 983

t

18.5 Oz.

3f$ 2

Cj~' 22.97

Special Manufactur r's Offer!

$ 59

-.

:.:;r!--.J~--.
;

\_~

JINlEW\bict

'

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I

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(Except Beef)$

-----25c1

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·Save25&lt;:

t:nr Jl!"Umpl P,.l\lflll.' nl
th lt roupun TO
Cl lU[l&lt;•n ~,~~._, r •ct~·pt "~ouro~~nl.

69¢

Umlt One Pw eu.tomer
Oood Only At Pc•'Jel'a
Off8r
~- ~. 1883

!

I
on any size Kleenex® SUPER DRY™ diapen. 1
ntAI.EH
~·nr!
Klmbl:r!y CI.!!J. Co~"J&gt;Qtilllllll.
"1·Cf,ntor;.
I
t("lj.'&lt;'l!l27:io'l F••rv.teh
..,.._,..,,n
foc,•vlllu.-plus 7C
I
,,MiiL'li vo1u tmd 1o01.1r
hi'M.· C(lmplt\'tl v.1th
h'fm!l of
coopon A"'othl!'l" uw ronstil\.111!'5
bud l nvut&lt;.·•~ ~h•AA111Y purch/l'lo'sof !!UHI("il.lr!l stnd•
;,II (oupt)n~_,uhmlnlo!d muit Ill'~ upon
I
~Ill'! V.•11l "-h"'''l"' oh~~''"'. I m n.'5tncwd Your rustomo.'t mus!_~ afl!,"!oilks IU Involved Offer
,.,.., 1n tlw r1n
St-. It'S ,,,wJ lr\r
....,thAPO
Cash\•all•l 20th ot tc
I
"ll! ~k'~·d lfl'lllo'mark ul K1ml&gt;.!r~ Cl&lt;'lrk Curp C 1 -'KI HCC /lA!YJ:I
OPFER EXPmES. APRa. 30. liM.
I
UMITONii't.:OUPON PI:.H PACKAGE
I

PUREX BLEACH
Gal.

Cartr=:r31.97

' '

rler may rt'mlt In advance dlr(&gt;('f to
basis . Credit will be- g1ve-n carrier each
month.

:~:r

A 74.84 VALUE!

Subscribe-rs not desiring 10 pay thl"c-ar·

Thf' Dally Sentinel on 3. 6 or 12 month

Cortrldgel

B-17 Bomber"'

Customers purchasing a Mattei"' lntelllvlslon"' video game will receive a compllmentary lntelllvolce'".module.

19.
Buffet Suppers •.

10.75 OZ. CANS

Advanced Dungeons
81 Dragons'". 27.97

Space Sportani'"
Cortrldge, 31.97

GRADE A MEDIUM

Published evf!ry afternoon, Monday

Ohio

I

PH. 992-6491' OR 992-3106

Grapes ..... .•••

• •••••••
CAMPBELL'S TOMATO

•

'

A ~vl81ea of Multimedia, In c.

POSTMASTER : Send addrPss to Th e
Dally Sentinel, 111 Coun St., Pomt&gt;roy,

l

• I
l

l·,_........................................~

RED or WHITE SEEDLESS

3 LB. CAN

I
. '•
'.

.I

COMPATIBLE INTELLIVISION· GAME CAJlTRIDGE SALE!

,. . ··.,.------------------------~-----------------1

'
'

SHORTENING

•

!

I

ICS·

MATTEL

Recent guests of Mrs. Lillllin
Napper of Racine were her son anc:l
daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Napper of West Union,
and her grandson, CUnton Napper,
Dallas, Texas.

.••

Crisco

Also, if you move you must notify the county
office. If you are in doubt as to whether you are
properly registered, phone the board.

The Saving Place®

(USPS 145-NI)

York 10017.

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VISIT .THE
BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON - DR PHONE THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS - OR MAIL THE BOARD A CARD.

'"

49

The Duily Sentinel

st&gt;ntative, Branham Newspapeor Sales.
733 Thifd Avenue. New York. Nl"w

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCTOBER 11TH

MEIGS COUNTY .BOARD
OF ELECTIONS

89
Round Steak.~~ ..

POMEROY - Free Qothlng
Dey at the Salvation Army on
Butternut Aven~~e, Thursday, 10
a.m. to noon.·Ail perrons'in need
of clothing are welcome.

Memlx'r : The As soolarf."d Pr~s. Jn.
land Dally PN&gt;ss ASSOC'laton and thf'
American N.-wspaper Publishers As ·
soclatlon, National Advert is InK Rt&gt;prE'·

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE
NOVEMBER 8 GENERAL ELECTION

$

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Free clothing day

rhrouRh Friday. 111 Co un StrN&gt;L by thf'
Ohio Valley Publishing Company · Mul ·
tlmedla, Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohto 45769, 992·
2156. Second C'lass postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

~

POMEROY - The annua!
homecoming of the Unlled Faith
Chureh, Route 7 by-pass, Pomeroy, will be held Sunday with a
basket dinner at 12 noon on the
grounds.
There will be a
songfest at 2 p.m. featuring the
United Faith Quartt&gt;t, Harmony,
VIctory Voices Choir, Primmer
Dul't and others. The public
lftvlted.

I

smlorsatSouthem. 8 e'ecUonwllbe~attlle

..

Teresa Pullins. Stephani!' Pulling,
Rodney Pullins, Mr. and Mrs. Cart
Hall, Danny Hall, Jason Halt
Dorothy Clark, Shelly Clark, Davi9
!ylltchell, Laura Clark, Leslie Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. John Musser, Stev~
Musser, Scott Powell, Mr. and Mr(
Emle Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Pa\{1
Frtck, Corrine Hager, Martllf
Greenaway, Mrs. Franres SchoU,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Brown, Mr. anb
Mrs. Tom w. Bowen. Speclalgues!f
wl're Mr. and Mrs. Bemest Bruclt
Mt. Vernon, and Mr. and Mrs. HI!P
Bearhs, Pomeroy.

.

Homecoming set

i

mil- School. AD are

•
•

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

:
An offl'rlng for the Henderson
: Settlement in Ken"l,ck;y was taken
·- at th&lt;&gt; recent meeting of the Alfred
.: , United Ml'thodlst Wom&lt;&gt;n at the
., church.
;
The .olfl'ring wlll be presented at
~ the annual meeting to be held on
~ Sept. 29.
Th&lt;&gt; society voted to
• lncreasl' Its annual pledge and
. &lt;&gt;lected officers for 1984 to be
: Installed at the December meeting.
Flfteen shutln and sick calls were
. repq~. . .
' ..
· ~ F1orence Ann Spencer, vice
.·; president, led the pledge program
:.. on missions at the ml'etlng.
: Gertrude Robinson had the opening
prayer followed by group Singing of
• "Give
of Your Bestto the Master." .
'
'
Mrs. Spt&gt;ncer led the socl&lt;&gt;ty In the
• pledges to the Aml'flcan and the

FRESH PORK BUTT

LB.$
Ground Chuck •••••

homecomln&amp; queen at Southern

Brown. KJm Brown, Mike Brown,
Port Clinton; Mrs. Nancy StrauSI'r,
Matthi'W StrauSI'r, Mark Strauser,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Brown,
Reynoldsburg; Hoben Brown, Jr.,
M&lt;&gt;redlth Brown, Melissa Brown.
Avon; Mr. and Mrs . Ct&gt;ne Harmon,
~lpre; Beck I Branham. Mindy and
Aaron Branham. Hebron; Mr. and
Mrs. John Weeks, Mary Beth
Weeks, The Plains; Mr. and Mrs .
Keith Cockran , Langsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Roush, Cindy Roush ,
Rutland; Chuck Clark, Debbie
Sanders, Rl'edsvlll'; Linda Pullins,

~- ~lfred· UMW has meeting IJTuif.~~~~r~

LB.

Happenings ·

ROCK SPRINGS The
Meigs County Beef Cattle Association in cooperation with the
Meigs County Extension Service, is sponsoring a beef day
Saturday from 10 a.m. to J p.m.
at the Rock Springs

"

:
HOMEroMING QUEEN CANDIDATI'l&gt; - Anne
• Adams, Tina IDD, Larm Wolfe, and Debbie Mlcllael,
'
•'r pictured left lo rl&amp;hl. are tile candidates for

GRADE A WHOLE

POMEROY - Annual meetIng, Meigs County Unit of th
American Cancer Society will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m .. In the
east-west dining room of Vete. rans Memoria) Hospital. ~
ports of committees will be
given, board members will be
elected and officers will be
Installed.

BeefDay set
at fairgrounds

Harrison Band from GaillpoUs.
A.!lendingwere Mrs. Elsie Brown,
Mr. andMrs.EariBrown. Prospect.
Ky .; Mr. and Mrs. Warren Rl'as,
Louisville, Ky.; Mrs. Emma Burk·
hard, Clarksville, Ind.; Miss Leslie
Livingston. Miss Lelanne Llvlng'ston, NI'W Albany, Ind.; Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Thall'r, Miami, Fla.; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Brown, Hartsville, S.
C.; Mr. andMi-s.AlbertBrown,Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Brown, KeUy
· Brown, Mt. Vernon.

).

\'

n

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-~;:'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

n.~.,romo'l"ll

·

Un~o·tl

~·
tOCIIWf

ml~tal\' p~!r!.&lt;Jnn..ol

thl~

1-l'Oaddr~

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good

1

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\:=::.T....
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STORECOUPON

I
II .

Boll
hlll"ldhng ch~ .

1)4\/)0U

lntel!lviiiOn•tt VIdeo Game System
The new lntelllvlslon'" 11 master component
features detachable hand controllers and
single on/olf reset buiiC?O- Also Included Is
Burgertlme,. cortrldge.

''
'''

'

36000 lr!S741

I;

.

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I a~) Upper River RrL

G~ llipol is
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- _j

�1~The Daily

• l)a,ea

Sentinel

Pameray-Middleport,

.

1983

Bud and Ully Adams are greatLongbottom of Hamilton, Ohio.
Special meeting of the Long grandparents. Their granddaughter Tracl gave birth to a baby glrl
Bottom Community Association
Monday.
will he held Wednesdljy, Sept. 14, a t
8 p .m . in the Community Bldg. All
Tom and Sue Hayman gave their
members are urged to attend: , daughter, · Beth, an outdoor wedding. Beth married Ron Murphy,
Matters of lmportan~ will he
Torch.
discussed.
Don't forget to register to vote
CaUlng on Millard and Rosa Ball
have heen Mr. and Mrs. Dougle
hefore Oct. 3 deadline.

Long
Bottom news notes
.
By MELODY ROBERl'S
CaUing on the Hensley-McPeek
hOtne have been Jlm Packard, Ann
Arbor, Mlch. Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Packard, Belpre, stopped to look at
~dhlll Cemetery helm.,; visiting

Ohio

the Leona Hensley-Mae McPeek
home.
Long Bottom had some very
"original': people visit our s pecial
little town, just for the name. Their
names were Mr. and Mrs. Bob

BaU, Montgomery, W. Va.
Mr. IUid Mrs. Done! Larkins had .
two famllies visit them &lt;Ner a
recent weekend. They were Mr.
and Mrs. Dean Smith and Michael,
Chllllcotlle; Nola Beardsworth and
AU!son, Wyoming, Ohio (they Uved
here 20 years aaol.
Calilng on Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hauber have been Mrs. Mae

MaxweU and ClareDCe, PlttaburJIIt,
Pa.: Mrs. DeiOrea Hawk and

Business Services

Robbje, Pomeroy; Betty Dlckl!nl,
IJttle Hockin&amp; Ohio; Tom Kibble,
Danlelle; Baahan; Betty Oabome
Jackson. Jim. Reedsville: Ora
Sinclair, Pomeroy.
'

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

AD,yone wishing to contribute
Item~

please caU 981-4Z74 or write
Box 7, Long Bottom.
~

The Daily Sentinel

- Sewer

PHONE 992-2156

.,.
,,

1-Card of Thanks (paid in advance)
2 -ln Memory
(paid in advance I
3 -Announc.e ments
4-Giveaway

2 1· Business Opponunity
22-Monevto Loan
23- Professional Services

5 - Hap~;~yAds

6-Lostand Found
7- Yard Sale (paid in advance)
8-Pubic Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wanted to Buy

·.

31 - HomesforSale
32- Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Farms for Sale
34- Business Buildings
35 -Lots &amp; Acreage
26- Raal Estate Wanted

51-Household Goods
52-CB. TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53-Antiques
54-Misc . Merchandise
·ss-Building Supplios
56-Pets for Sale
57-Musical Instruments
58-Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

41 - Houses for Rent
42-Mobile Homes for Rent
43-Farms for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished ROoms
46-Space for Rent
47-Wantedto Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49- For Lease

1 3-lnsurance
14-Buainess Training
15-Schools
16-Radio. TV &amp; CB Repair

17-Miscellaneous
1 B-WantedTo Oo

'•·'

Public Notice

Public Not(ce

Public Notice

,_,
• ·•

South'"' Th1rd St . M1ddlepon.

PURCHASE Of
SCHOOL BUSES

.... • Invitation to Bid
-Sealed pfoposals Will

be
rece1vP.d bV thP. lotlowmg
Bt~aJ.ds of Educ at1on fm school
ba ses. accord1na to soec1 f1Ci'l·
t iCI/lS o f sa 1i;J Boards a t

Edt,cat1on ·

i'.lexander Local School. Bo)(
38l : Aibany Oh10 4 5710
Wells ton City Schools. 4 16
N Pennsylvania Ave . Wellston.

Oh10 45692
Zane Trace Local SchOols.
946 St

Rt

180. Chil li COthe.

OhiO 456 01
,.f.an land Local Schools
Route 4. Box 201 . Proctorville.

Ohto 45669
Sel1J tl"]ern Local Schools. M1ller
H1Qh School. HemloCk. Oh1o,

4o&lt;l/43

,,vyash,ngton Local Schools.
ltlth Street. W Portsmou th ,
Ohro 45662 Pamt Valley Local Schools.
74 54 USR 50. Bambndge.

01'11 0 456 12
Jedera l

Hock 1ng

Lo cal

Sphools. P 0 Bo)( 11 7. Ste·
wan. Oh1o 45 778
Belpre C1ty Schools. 20 14
Washmgton Blvd. Belp1e. Oh10

45714
Me1qs Local Schools. 621

Gallia County '
Area,Code 614

•

446-Gallipotis
367- Cheshiro
388-Vinton
246-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Oist.
643-ArabiaOiot.
379-Walnut

Northern Local Sc hools.
8700 Shendan Road. ThornVIlle. Oh•o 43076
Sou \hern Loca l Schools. Box
176. Rac,ne. Oh1o 45771

Huntington Local Schools.
188 Hunlsmen Road. Ch•ll•-

coJhe. Oh10 .45601
Athens C11v Schools. 14 1
Colu mbus Road. Athen s. Oh10
4570 1
Manetta C11v Schools. 701

--------------------

•

:)
·Curb Inflation I
I :: .
I ..
:7 Pay Cash for . l
I
lI ·-· · Classifieds and II
I ·:·
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1 ~~upon . Cance l your ad by phone when you 9et
I 'results , Money not refundable.

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.You ' ll get better res ults ----1---1---1--t--i
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giVe price . The Sentinel 'To 15
r'eserves the r ight to -;-;;-;-;"t-Ts7.0i;t~;;J-""'!
c lass ify , edit or re ject To 15

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JWanled
JForSate
&gt;A nnouncement
'For Renl

Jo .

Mail This Coupon with Remillance
The Daily sentinel -

111 courtst.

·'·

Public Notice .

Meigs County
Area Code 614

Mason Co. , WV
Area Code 304

992-Middleport
Pomeroy
985-Chester
343 - Portland
247-Letart Falls
949 - Racine
742-Rutland
6 (;7- Coolville

675- Pt . Pleasant : ·
458-Leon
576 - Apple Grove
773-Mason
882 - -New Haven ·
895-Letart
9 37 - Buffalo

,•

Notice

--...... _

-·

USED
APPLIANCES

I

I
I
I
I•

I

1
1

I

Call 614-742-2214

~water Pipe · ·
•Gas Pipe ·
•Regulators
•fittings

"Drips

..,.,is! -

..

.lrilns

..........

•d-

.... ""' (IMdl) .........
.... lllny (fllomi)'Wyott,

Sis1lrs
11

INSTAUED
WITH PAD

New linsa Roed

or ttree bedrooms with

1

··fntulation'· ·
• •Storm Doort
1
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windowa
· •Now !looting , ·
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

9·9·1 mo

everythng

carpaoo. A ful

basement to tinker ina quarter

,.

erea of land to cal ywr OWil

$21,500.

Rutland, Ohio
PH. 742·2225

SO CLOSE ro shopping thlt
your car wilt rarely be used.
Plenty of room forlle kids, pets
snd pleyrrates. four bedrooms, 2\! baths and Ilia bmai
dining r00111. $27,500.
lEAl.TORS
HtiiiY E. alllnd, Jr.
Gil 992-6191
.

$13.95

Help Wantad

Good Selection Of
. GOLD SEAL

Sq. Yd. fnstollod

·~Retaa

Service

ANSO IV -NYLON
$15.95 .

CARRIER WANTED

CONGOu!UM

PART-TIME HELP 1'4;MIDDLEPORT
NEEDED AT ONCE.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY
' GOOD PAY . .

RUBBER-BACK twEED 'I
$399

Yd. tnslallod

CASH .
&amp; CARRY

949-2660 '
Dottie Till* 992-5692
Jo HHI 985 1466
Jean TMIIII

1 ROLL.ONLY IN IIIO•WN

OffiCI 992-2251

n&amp; etc. Can Rllke 2 more.
Want just $85.GOO.

I.

I

OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
"CI,If

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561
All Makes

Na Sunday Call•

Auction every Tueadey
night, Pt. Pleuant, WVe.
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
Ce'nter Bldg., Csmden St.
6t4-387-7101 .
Rick Pearson AuctionHr
Service. Ettste. Fsrm, An·
tlque &amp; liquidation ulea.
Ucen1ed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;
WVo. 304-773-&amp;785 or
304-773-9185.

l ·ll ·tlt

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

C8rtalnteed

Vinyl Replacement
Windows

- Dor.-.
-Backhoeo

&amp; Labor

-Dump TruCks

As low As $250 Each
"free Estimo,.s"

- Wet•

-Sewer

-GasUn•

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

- Septic Sylhml

LAROE OR SMAU JOBS

PH. 992-2478

PH . 992-2772

8-18-1 mo. pd.

9·9·1 mo

Roger Hysell
· GARAGE .

RADIATOR
SERVICE

St. Rt.

We cen ....,_.nd,.
"""' nodllltons and hire'.
ter consa. We can 8110
add boll end l1ld out redilltora. We 8110 repair

124.

Pomeroy, OH.

AUTO. &amp; TRUCK
~EPAIR
Also Tronominion

G11Tanks.

PH.

Auction every Fri . night at
th• Hartford Community
Center. Trucklot~da of new
merchendlu every week.
Conaigmenta of new end
uud I'J'erchendiae elwaya
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auction-. 275-3089 .
AUCTION every Siaturday
night, 6 p.m. M1 . Alto

- Lo-Boy
-Trenchor

. Also Blown Insulation

S&amp;W TV

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

AND · .

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
• Scottie Smith
All Mikos and Models ·
Antenn1 Instillation
Houso C. lis 1nd 'Shop ·
Service Av1illlbls

9·15·1 mo. pd.

. CHESTER

AUTO

PLUMBING and
HEATING

PARTS.

•Experienced

~ -R~

AND

•Worli G-."'-&lt;!
.JOB -

REPAIR
.
.

BIG OR SMALL

992-6030

'Minersville, OH.
8/19/1 mo. pd.

ROUSH

f2~o~!~U~!!~i~ l

R1110dtlin1,
•Insurance Woti
.Custom Pole Bld1s .
&amp; Garaaos
'
•Roolinl Wort

CHESTER, OH.
9-U·t 111(1.

H. l. Writesel
ROOFING
All types ol roof MR. new
or rtiJiir, plleq and

downspotrts; Jlltlr c'-',ina lnd Plinlllw. storm
doots and willlows.

oAUnitun &amp; V'lll)l Sidinp
15 Yeort E•perience
OIIG ,ROUSH
PH. 992-7513
or 992·2282 11 _11 _, ,

I·

MINE

3HOUSES - On Grant One or
al IBvel kis 10511190. New
garage and in good oonditiln.

RU~

STRIP
COAL

Only $60,000.

AllRACfNE - 7 rms. Central
. air and hal _ . ...._ 3 nice
bedttMits, 2 .. bllhs and

S3(PJ

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Esti11alos"
I

Call: 949·22~­
or 949-309\ 10 ,,

ALL STEEL &amp; ·
POLE BULDINGS
Slm ltllrt !rem 12'11&amp;'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Slrn lro116'tdi'

• to 24'136'

lnsulald

Up

•..

Dot HOUIII

......

ATON

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

PH. 992-2280

'h.-iliif}mf ' .

2·2J.I'c

I I
••

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON ·
Roofing &amp;$iding Co.

Dew1yne Wllliama

JEWELL'S

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofina - Sid in&amp; - ·Concrete
Patios - SideWalks New Construction - Rtmodelin&amp; - Custom Pole
Borns.

•Weahere •Diahwaahen
· ·Rangat
•Refflger.ton
•Dryen •Fraezera
PARTS snd SEIRVICE

4-21 -Ht

I

Hc,u/quar tcrs

A Phone Cot! brinp
Prompt Courteous Service
232 E. 2nd'
Pomeroy, 0.

992·5682

or 992·7121
3·24·tfc

1· 13-tlc

742-2328

CIJJII!Iini Aslina ftS.Im
Ho11 ,.,&gt;q

CONTACT 992-2156

992-2036

Middleport, Ohio

SEPTIC TANKS
A.SPECIALTY

12' rentJis.

fum5hed. Natural gis hell!.
new rools, ceiling tiles, carpet-,

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

PAT HILL FORD

Ch11tor. Ohio
Ph . 986-4289
tf No Answer, Call 915-4382

, Around
••0UI1)p TRICk

A-Fbll E- Countl)' kesh a~•
2 bedrooms, l&lt;ilg woodburner
and 1.34 acres. Ashing only
$35,000.

4 BlDGS.

.---DIAl,-----,

992-2196 -

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
. SERVICE

-~

$23,500.

BISSELL
SIDING CO .

me pd

'viNYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

towll

Two

1 1ll~ · l

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

soes

2 LOTS - 2 bedroom frailer on
124 in Syracuse. Above al
lloods llld all utilities for

R. E. HOME

'""'

Route 1
Lona Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12·20.trc

•DOZER

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•liMESTONE
•WATER, GAS 1nd
SI.WER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•lAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK
8(110(0 &amp;GIIMAIITHD
PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
2-7201
J.1.tk

8t Vicinity

Yard Ssle Sever1l Fsmlly
Thurs .. Fri. , &amp; Sat. O•kwood
Dr .• Clollipolio 9-1

Moving Sate·. Rt 1 Georget
C•••· 1 mi. from Fit. 7.
Toyt. clothing, yard equip·
ment. Mon.·Wed . 9~5 .

·-----F,-om&amp;rav·-------·

3

Announcements

Middleport
8t Vicinity

Auction Barn. Conalgn·
ments taken every Saturday
1 00 till
I I
:
sa e t me. Emm1
Bell AuctionHr. 304·428·
8177
·

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clesn uaed cera.
Jim MInk Chev .·Oidalnc.
Bill Gene Johnaon
448-3872
Wanted to buy uaed coal a
wood· heaters. Swlin F.urnl·

ture.

441-3159.

3rd. •

Olive St., Oolllpalio, Oh.
Wonted to buy Uoed mobile
homes. truck cemper. Colt
814-446-0175.
Wanted to buy e c'hevy
engine amall black. 307 or
360. Cot! 448' 2787 or
448-9254.

EKcellent Beegle rabbit dog.
Colloltar 5PM. 448-6322 .

SWEEPER and Hwing ma· BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
chine repair, pane, and furniture, gold, ailver dolouppliH.
Pick up, and lsra, wood Ice boxn. atone
dalive'ry, Davia Vacuum jsra. antiques, ..c ., Com·
Clnner. one half mila up plate hou11holda. Write:
Georges
Rd.
Celt M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 982-7710.
441-0284.

c.-

Oarsge Sale Fri. &amp; S1t.
30 .&amp; Oct. 1 . Debby
McQulni Subdivision. Beds.
atemp collection. atero's,
plenta • bouqueta.

•

1--------------:Greae Sale Bob McCormick
Rd. Thurodoy Only. Mon'o,
women'•· children &amp; baiby
cloth81. Antique deak. rockIng chair, loYe aeat. corn
plsnter, gardan duater,
booka, power sew, lots of
miiiC. 9 till 4.

Vard Sole Sept. 29. 30-0ct .
1-2 . Shirts. CB's, chell •
otMr itema. Fairview Ever·
green Rd.

CONTRACTING

.REClAMATION

~~~~~~~· S~~t. ;';~hrJI3'0t'h:

11

Help Wanted

There h11 never been a
better time to be an AVON
Repreaentative. Call 448·
3368.
Director for Sheltered Work·
thap, Gallle Co. Board of
MR-DD. Must m- cortlflcstion requirement• of the
Ohio Department ot Mentel
Retstdstion 1nd Develop·
mental Olnbllltlea. BA de·
gree 1 muat: eKperience and
background In bualneaa, lnduitrial ProduCtion .end aa·
lesmenahip 11 euentW. Ap·
plication• may be obtained
by writing P.O. Box 14,
Cheshire, Ohio 46620 or
colt 18141 387-0102 .

4f:1~0~5~.~~~~::~~-- ~~fi~ll~d~.l~ll~-~82~7~0~2~
- ~f2~1~7~1~8~44=-- donolnmyhome.
Exporlonc~d boby814-949sitting
7811 or 523-8729.

:

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

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

. SALES &amp; SERVICE

Hoc

THE·
TROPHY
KING

-o.

1

-Trophy

PIA8UES
ENGRAVING

• ------ -· --·---~ •••• ~-·- ~ - ·- · -'l

Pt Pleaeant
8t Vicinity

;
~

·······-·······~· ·· ··········~~
2004 Mt. Vernon Avenue.:
J friday and Saturday, ftOCIR •
to 4. Winter clothea from :
four fa'lliliea.
'J
Hugo 4 fomi"· yord nto,'.·.
'"
Thursday. 29th. Frtdoy.
h.
&amp;-•,
furniture,
cfo-301
thing. nick-nacka, ljliec .• 4\oi '
milea out Sand Hill Road.;
Point Ple11ant .
Vard Sale, 23 Burdette:
Addition, Thursday, Friday .•
s aturd sy, t9 -3) · Tl r11. boby '
clothea. mlacell1neoua.
.:
Junior glrlafacka, aw..tert,
&gt;'eon&amp;, kt' ds clot"·•· Thura·
...
day. Frld1y. Seturdly, 2935
Mndowbroc* DriYe, Point
Ple1unt.
·
-------'------

F.===:======i==========-f~~~~=;=~~==

Country Foltlvol,

BOGGs

3 family yard Ala . Oct . 1-~'
-11. Brook a S1yre realdenc,
in Syrscuae. Rein or ahine.: ,

.

Ptent • Ylrd Sale Lota of
cectua end hsnglng planta . Garage S1le 383 Cabby Dr.
Fri. Sept. 30-Sst. Oct 1, Sat . Oct. 1, from 9 · 6. Avon
10:00-6:00 . Tslce 326in Rio bonlea. Atsrl cartridge• plua
Grande, turn right at Vot many mlac . ttema.
clinic, 1 mllea, fJrlt road to Jlck'l Yard Sale 1145 2nd.
right, firlt houae. Janice
Sheets •1 4 246 6348
Ave Sept. 30 • Oct. 1, 9-5.
•v •
·
·
Couchas, chalra, dinetteaet,
3 f8mily Patio Sale. Sept. lempa, twin beds, ctothhtg.
29·30, 9-6. 3mllea North on end much more.
Rt. 1&amp;0 from Holzet Hospl· 1--F__o_m__i__ti_Cl_or_o_g_o_S_e__
le_O__c_t_:-:3
1
tal on old Rt. 160.
l!o 0
B tt R
C
1-:---:-::--::--::--:-::-::--:-:
ct. . omer o1 u
un
•Vinton. 4
~..~~rge 3 F1m1•ty y ard s a 1a oid l!o Von Buren St-&lt;ilt
TV
11 •
furniture, clothe• • . knick ::::• b':V: c~~ ~~~~~:~~~mp:
slmoat new womena dre11
805 w. College St .• Rio alacka al1e 7 thru 11,
d 8 Ohi H
9 "I 5 childrena clothing alzea 0
0
ran •
,o. oura tl · thru 4, and other nice
drapea , bathroom
Fomily Y.rd S ... 1 clothing,
b' t
on right p11t GrMne ca •ne I T"'""''" Traitor Court, Rt.
141. Thursday 9AM thru
S
ff S
Saturday 2PM. Mlac. itema. 3 Family Yard ale 0
t.
At. 21 8 on '.4 mi. Raccoon
Yard Sale Frldsy a. Saturdsy Rd. Thun., Fri. It Sat. Firat
128 Firat Ave .• .Gallipolit. Time 1 Furnit'ure. children It
odulta clothea.
Oh . 9 ·to 6·.

Racine Volunteer Fire Dept. Wsnted ta buy. New. used &amp;
gun i:hoot HIIOn will stan entlque furniture. Will buy 1
Oct . 8 at 1:30 p.m. at their piece or complete houaeholda. Alao comp ..te Auctl·
building in· 8t&amp;hln.
on..ring tervice . Cell Olby Live in female companion for
elderly lady in good heehh.
Abaolutely no hunting, tr••· A. Martin 814-992-8370.
Modern hone and car with
p11alng. fl1hlng, etc: on ou1
no upenaea. Generous sa·
property in Sunon end Le· Buying doltv gold, oliver lary to reliable peraon. Ref·
coin
a,
ringa.
jewelry.
tterllng
blnon TwP. Moine Olddte
ware, old colna, large cur- erences needed. Write Bo•
Sollo,. ond UIHon Proffitt.
rency. Top prlcea. lid. Bur- 729-P. Pomeroy, Oh .
kett
Iorber Shop, 2nd: Avo.
McDaniel Custom Butcher~
lng,open 8 dsya 1 wHk, Middleport, oh. 614-9!1'2· 12
Situation•
cloMd on Sunday. Phone 3471.
Weritad
304-882-3224.
Wanted old planoa. Psylng 1---------''-----'20.00 ond 140.00 Noh.
If your club or orgsnlretion Firat floor ontv. Write giving Tree trimming snd removsl.
needa extrs money, we hsve direction•. Witten Plsnos, Free ..tlmates. 614·992·
en excellenl fund reiaing Box 188 . Ssrdla, Ohio 8040 or 114-949-2128.
progrom. for lnfcirmotlon, 43948 . Phono 614 -483- 1-:---:--::---:-::-:--phone 304-871·1090.
' 1806.
Opening for on otd~rty mon
or women in my prlvste
The young lady thlt celled JlpanHe Sword• wsnted. hOme. Tuppera Plsina. Csll
Stephen Miller leot week Poylng 1200. min. Tom 114-867-1328 .
obout hor-. co1~304- 178- Winter, 824 Ponon. Spring- l-::---:-:--:--:--:-----::--;-

Steam • Gea Engine
Sot
.. Oct.
1 • Suncornrn81tl
.. Oct. 2 ·
Wheat
threahlng,
grinding. apple butter. elder
ond mot 11181 moklng. Pio'
nHr · crefta. aquere dance
Saturday night; church Hr·
vice Sunday. Meaon County
Aeglo.nal Sute Farm
Muaum.

..

Yard Sale Gigantic Sale Sept. 30-0ct. 1 . Behind
Thurs. , Fri . &amp; Sat. Plantz llcenae bUreau tn- Pomaroy. Subdivlaion. Bulavllle · Lota of jesna, baby clothe1 a
·
•
Porter Rd . Items to numer- · miac.
'.
'
oua to mention .
Yard Sale 641 S . 2nd. Ave.,
4 Family Carport Sele . 671 Middleport. Oh . Sept. 30',
Joy Dr .. Fri . It Sot .. 9-5 . Oct. 1 It 3. R&amp;aovl1n's.
Stero. child• organ, rocker:
portable TV, snd morel

• 1 NOTICE 1
THE OHIO VAL~EY PUBLISHING CO. recommend•
th1t you do buainns with
people you know. and NOT
to aend money through the
mliif until you have inveati~
gated the offering.

- ... -

••

31 Homes for Sale
three bedroom 2 atory hou•
on Park Or. New furnence•
1ir conditioning. dream kit· ·
chen whh eH eppltencel.
Owner wHI carry MCOnd or
111. Smell down payment.
304-675-2192.

22 Money to Loan

Anumeble loan. 3 bed·
rooms. 304-675-6110.

HOME LOANS Low fixed
rete. Lesder Mortgage, 77 E.
State. Athena. Ohio. 1 -814·
592-3061.

1974 Shultz 12x6~ 21erge
bedroom• with bult in Cl·
bineta, 2 betha. air condl·
tloning, l,lnderpennlng, in·
tercom. new ruga, dr1pea,
furniture, outalde entrsnoe
box, 2 Hta of extra II4JPI,

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower
pric.aa-ragular tuning•·
diacounta to Senior Citizena.
Churchea &amp; schoolt. Ward'a
Koyboord. 304-675-3824.

•

fire alarm, gaS tl•m, ftret

aid kit. fire extinguiaher;
$8,900. 1-304-882-2237.

2028 · Uncoln Av1nue. I

rooma and beth, 2 gtaea~ in
porchea, large out bulding.
garage, ·corner lot.
80"x1 30". Phone 304-875.PIANO TUNING-LANE OA- 2012 .
NIELS. 742-2951 .- Aioo
'caah for Spinet or Grind
piano'. (Even damaged con· 32 Mobile Homes
d•ticr:) .
for Sale
SUBKEN SERVICE co . l----------------lockamith aervtce, todlahe'r~ ·
paning. tcreen &amp; glaat In· TRI - STATE MOBILE '
stolted . Colt 034-876-3884. HOMES. USED- CARS. :
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS. •
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446-7872.

N-ly remodeled 2 story
frlrM, 1'h bath, 3Yz acres,
city achoolt, riverview~
'32,000. Colt 446-4222
batwaen 8 • 6 .

2779.
1-----~--------Wsnted : windahleld for 1-...------:-:--:--:-: 4 bdr. ranch home, large LR.
1987 Plymouth Fury Ill • Room . • Bosrd for elderly full bltaement, with g1rege.
wood burner included, city
304-8711-3089.
proforrad. Clood cera, res&amp;onoble .- 114-992-8022.
echooI1 ' 2 m It11 from town.
Coli 441 -0278.
..............
Will care for elderly wamen,
men or couple In our home:
By ownor
- . House
or leo&amp;with
•---2
LPN car• given. 814-992- acre • m ......
• uw.n
7314.
remodeled. orcllord. 87ft.
11
welt. 122.000. Colt 1143B8-9053.
-~Excavating
Help
wanted:
Socisl
Servi13
Insurance
4
· Giveaway
3 bedroom houM with firece• Deslgnee~Admilliona
"Ponds
pfsce. central air, 2 fuH
Coordinator for 100 bed
botho. in city llmlto. lmmo"Septic Tanks
tCF-SNF
Nur&amp;ing
Focltlty
In
SANOY
AND
BEAVER
ln-glo pup&amp;. Csl 814-379Southeeatern Ohlo. Rnpon- aurance Co. hea att.recl dilte POIMII~n . Clll 814·
"Hauling
2111.
.
~ble for Soclel Servicft end Mntlc:ea for fire lnauranc:e
246-8281
949-2293
Admlaelan~. knowlttdpe of coversge In Gellia County
2 twin ldttena, gr1y • white.
Racine, OH.
Medlcertr, MMicelri, ftn.i for slmoat e century. Farm • Middleport, remodeled, five
Coli 441-3732.
Morkatlng Hllpfut . r:~!logo homo ond porsonll property rooms and both. gil fur8·1-tlc
degree
In Liberal Artt- coversg.. sre evsllable to nsnce. cozy flreplecer. good
FI'M bok aprlnp for twin
neighborhood . Price rt·
Nuraing-Soclll
Services de· meet indivldu1l needa. Con·
bed. Col 441-4347 otter 6 . alreble. Equlv1lent
••pe- teet Kltll Burteaon. •aent. duced . Coll814-992-1841.
'
Molo Iengie typo dog. Colt riMce accept1ble. Send Phone 441·2921.
Beeutiful 2 ltory brick vi·
114-248-9532.
reaume 8818
to HIR
. . rtlend
of 1
nyle,locrolevoilotlesothon
Jockoon,
13.Jeek10 yrs . old. Reasonably
Oh 45540. Equot Op· 18 Wantad to Do
1 month old femole car. Coli son.
'Pf'lced . Csn be IHf1 on
ponunlty Employer.
Falrfteld· Centenlry Ad. Ap·
441·0743.
polntment only. Call 4.t8·
PARK MANAGER ResponU.S. RT. 50 EAsr
1 polr c:... m aalored klttons alble to the director of Psrkt Oenerel ·Hsullng snd Trash
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
to reoponolblo poroon. housa a RecrHtlon. Dutiea . In· removal Service . Rellsble 2488. ·
brokon : Coli 814-388- clude menegement, meinte- and dapondsble. Coli 448- Located In SyriDUM· Near
Aulhorized John DHr,
8842.
3159 batwson 9 ond 6.
n~nce, end operation of
school • swimming 'pool. 3
bedroom attueted on on•·
county perk and recrutlon
lllw Holllnd. Bush
Adult mole Cackopoa to IICIIitles. SUporvlllon at full- Lltwn Mowing no yard to big third IC"' I'Jt. $24,tOO. '"
Farm Equipment 1100c1 home. After 3 p .m. colt time, psrt·tlme atl8onel or tmlll. Aeleble snd depen- will rent fer C27fi mo.
· D•ler
114-181-4468:
'Stiff, end· manpow. pro· dable. For eatlmate call 304-8&amp;&amp;-39:14.
gremt. Auponalble far perk 441-3168. 9 to 5 .
F111rro Equipment
~--togoodhOmo . edmlnlatretlon,
Ronch typo (Brick!. 3 bedmaintt·
Parti &amp; Service
Min-... Approx. 3 yearo n1nce 111ndlrde end lite -wiH 1 ~ do ·blibyalttlng in my room•. fireplace. 1ttached
t-l·lk
old. Very gonlle ond good
pork -..rlty, homo. Ciill 114·379-2120. garage, full beiement,
I..---':------,-..,.;.,;..,-' I with - n . Good housa -rat!on&amp;.
newly ahingled roof, walking
end coordination of countypot, Coli 114-112·1188.
wide rect'llltlon ecttvftlee Roofing. esrpentry, end dlatence to Pomeroy El•·
atqtd at the perk lltu. aoncrete work, houH pilnt· rnontory School. •40.000 .
Ta good homo, 41onJ!::rad ' Roqul-.: T,.lning .,d ing ond gonaroi rapoir. 21 Coif 114-882-8143.
t&gt;layful ldttonl. 1
• 2
In pork m:=B:;, yro. experience. Coif 114biiCII ond wlllte. 1 collco. oxporlenca
n~~nt. grounda •d
379-2891.
3 bedroom ranch atyle
-104-871-1821.
rnllntenonco. fooesby
- - - - - - - - - - homo, corpeted, full size
related ftlld. D..,_ loonM To toke core of somooomo bo-.ont, t car gor-. In
Two nice omoll
1 required. tn edditlon to sick or neado home care. ground pool 111x32 .
brown, 1 bloak ond whho. resumo'. oppllolnto ore re- Ooyo only, good referancoo. Uii,OOO. 114-882-5818.
304-171·1230.
qulrad to oomplote county Coif 304-458-1 818 oftor -:---:---:----::-:--:-- '
employment 1ppllc1tlon IPM.
Sale by owner. 3 bedroom
a... o- _pupo to good avoillblo et the PMk Dlltrlat ~::-:::-::-=--:-----;-:-:-:- oectlonol
home like new.
~rers ho..... 304-171-7818 .
Offici. 01111 County Court· WELDING, · goo, electric, 100x200 tot. end of street.
houu, Oollipolfo_, Oh portoblo,· oxporioncad d• Arbough Subdlvl&amp;lon,
~- klltorll to • good 4813t. (114) 448-4812. cndsble, towrotoo. omolfar Tupporo Plolno. tll.800.
ho...., 304-871-1182.
oxt. 11. 1ha 0 .0. Mcintyre
'111 jobe, 304-878-387?- Will occapt mobile homo on
Peril Dlltrlat 11 en oquol
- - Flnoncing avaloble to
opportunitr employer. Dump - truck for hire. wMI quoHfted buyer. 114-IIZworking condition.
Doodllno: October 14, hout coal, Mnd, gravel, etc. 7034 dsys, 1114-812·7171
87a.I071 . .
1183.
304-178-3180.
eveninp.

M.L

Glrtge Sale Cententry
Thurs. • Fri. . 9 tit 5. S..IO
Carpet clesner, m1n1 ahirt•.
women• topa • al1ck1, kid.
clothea. 111 aizea . ·Some
macrame a.· Iota more.
•

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'

CENTRAL REALTY.

IN THE COUNTRY - Starter
home fur the beginning family.

On Sidinc and RoofinllGutter and Down$p0uts.
· "Free Eltim.lel''
..12 Years Experience"
"Work Guoronteed"

----··aaiiiP'oiis---------

Yard Ssle 2 nd. houae, O.J .
White Rd. Thurs .• Fri .. 9 -6.
Good children a clothea. high
choir. Coll814-388-9151 or
814·245-5039.

Stockermatic stove in good
working condition. Call
614-246-6204.

glfllifle

tho

SAVE '._L_~II!_CIII~Rf

Phone:
Rosidone.: 985-3837
Warehouse: 985~3509
·

5 P.M.
9-22- 1 mo. pd.

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

1.-ae

Md tho bllutiflll hrmn by llltty
8 1 - Also to Rw. SIM
Nolsoa for t .. pr;,.. ond -ice
Mdto !lrin&amp;'s Fu- "-.Our
U..lls"" food
from
lrionds Md tlliclilln •d tho

Aftir

LOST: Vicinity ol ,_, l knobStlversville Rd . 3 ctoga, 1
large brown. 1 medium
brown 1nd 1 1m111 black •
ten. Pt. Elk Hound . Tuea .
Reword . 814 -843-&amp;119.

SIDING

"If You Wonf o
/~lumber Bad
You Want Him Good"
IILICTRtC E£l SEWER CLEANER

Miterial

LOST: Rewsrd for return of
3'11 mo. ohfblock lov puppy.
Milling from Lo.wer Ger·
field. Sodly mi11ad by children. Pleeu Cs11 •41l· 8243.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

9· 1S

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

Lost and Found

'

N~'s the time·to ret yo'ur furnace reedy tor cold weater, 10%
Dtscount on any new fur~ICe Purchased before Oct. 15.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

POMERY
lANDMARK

SPORTSMEN
Have Your
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by
THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

AIR CONDITIONERS
RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
HEATING • PLUMB ING

11·26·ttc

Two Bedroom Home

742-2352

l

Pomeroy, Ohio

FOR SALE

-- ~

j

992-6215 or 992-7314

''"""'"''!

I

'

(F- lsrimalft)

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

LAFF-A-DAY

-

Residentiai.-New apd
re-wirina; Commercia(
and Industrial.
BONDED-All Work ·
Guaranteed

c..a... ...

1432 Egypt P1ke. Chtlhcmhe. · 457 50. 3-65 passenger
RESOWTibN
10 :00 A .M . a publ1c saleWll l.be
Ohto 45601 . 2-71
Separat,e and tndependent
Pursuant 10 the authonty held at 141 Mulberry Avenue.
passenger.
b1ds Will be ~ rece1ved wrth vested by Ohio Reviled Code ' Pomeroy. Oh1o 45769: to sell
V1nton Coun1y Sc hools. respect 10 the c~ass1s. body Sectron 6101 19 . Lead1ng for cas h the following
Memonal Bulld1ng. McArihur. type and 'ophons and w1ll state · Creek Conservancy Otstn ct. collateral :
Obto 456~1 . 4 - 55 that buses. when asse mbled Board of D1rectors has-passed a
197 3 Plymouth - senal no.
passenger
and pnor to de iNerv. coniply resolut1on' requrnng any com- VH23G3845020 1
Nevv l exington C1ty Schools. w1 th all school drstncrspeclfFca- pany. cor poratro n. . organ1 za1982 Plymouth PP2 1. Serra1
31 0 F1rst S1reat. New Lexmg- t1ons. all current federal safety Iron. or rnd1v1dual desrnng to lay No 1 P3BP51 D9CC 110440
mn. Oh 10 43 764. 2- 6 5 regulat1ons and current Ohro telephone hnes. 011 and/or gas
1981 Plymouth PP21 . Sed.
passenger.
m1n1mum standards tor school l1nes . or any Qther type o f lm e(s)
Se r I a I Nu mb e r ·
Eas1ern Local Schools. At 1. bus constructiOn of the Ohro across. above. along. beneath 1P38P51 DBCC 109 795.
ReedsV111e. Oh10 4 5772. 1-65 Department of Education or on r1ghts ol way or
The Far mers Bank and Sav·
passenger.
·
adopted 'by and w1th the easement:'i of tfle Lead1ng tngs Company. Pomeroy. Ohro. " ... andmakemebigandstrong
Lyn c hb u rg ·C iay loca l 01rector of H1 ~hway Safety Creek Conservancy 01strr ct to reserves the nght to b1d at this t lil&lt;dlorramy"
'
Schools. 8250 SR 134. Lynch· pursuant to SectiOn 4511 76 subm1t a requesl rn wntlng to sate. andtaw1thdrawtheabove I'
burg. Oh10 45 14 2 . . 1- 65 . of the Reyrsed Code and all the Lead1ng CreBk Conser- vehicle pr1or to sale. Further.
passenger
other pertrnent prOVISIOns a t vancv. Drstrrct to do so.
the Farmers Bank and Savrngs
Greenf1eld Ex. V Schools. the law Purchase of buses
A perm1t must be rssu ed by Company reserves the ngh t ro
200 N 5th Street. Greenf1 eld. advertiSed IS can t 1n gent upon the Conservancy Drsmct pnor reJect any or all b1ds 54J bmit1ed.
0 h I 0 4 5 t 2 3· J - 5 5 state approval for purchase.
to, the begmnmg ol •nsaalll.alton -1. Further. veh1cles are sold in
Real Estate General
p assen~e r .
Bid proposal forms and of the desrres ltne(s ) and
conditiOn they are in with no
Northern Lo'bal · Sc hools. mstruct1ons to brdders are on constru ction and
tJOn expressed or tmplted warran.
8700 Sher1dan Road. ThOrny Leadrng Ires given.
Oh10 45 692. 2-65 VIlle. Oh1o 43076 . 1 ..:.. 55 f1le af\d may be Qbtatned from must be appro
SEOVEC . 507 A1c htand Creek Conse ancy DIS tnct (9 ) 28. 29. 30 3tc
pas senger
.Passenger
Avenue. Athens. Ohro 4~ 70 I
Perso nnel
Zane Tra ce Local Schools.
Southern Local Schools. Box
A
10%
btd
bond
rs
216 r.. 2nd st.
946 St At 180. Chdlicothe,
176. Racrne Oh1o 4577 1.
w1th subm1SS1on o.f
to (9) 14, 2 1, 28, 3tc
Oh1o 4 560 1. 4 - 71 pas- 1-65 passenger.
school dts1ncts The Board o t
Phone
sr.nger. 1-36 passenger
Hunt1ngton Local Schools. Educat1on reservp,s the ngh1 10
Public Notice
Fa1 rlanct Local Sc hools. 188 Huntsman Road, Chill iH 6141·992-3325
~e1ec r ;my or all brds
Route 4. Box 201. ProctorVIlle. cothe. bhro 4 5601. 1-6 5 1917. -1 4. 21 . 28. 41C
O ht o 4 5669 . t -65 passenger
PUBUC NOTICE
NI.W LISTING - 76 acres on
passenger
Nottee is hereby g1ven that on
Athens C1ty Schools. 141
124 west of Lan~Yille. All
Soulhern Local Schools. Columbus Road. Athens. Oh1o
Saturday, October 1st. 1983. at
minerals. 7 room farm home,
Miller Htgh Schools. Hemlock 45 701. 1- 65 passenger .
bath, good woodburner, cell.-,
Oh•o 45743 . 2-65 1-78 passenqer
60a
passP.nger
barn and firewood. Owner wil
Real Estate General
Manetta C1 ty Schools. 70 1 ~4 Misc. Merchandise
E . MainaL.LIIII':IW.I..I
Wash1ngton LocAl Schools. 3rd Street. Manetta. Oh10
help finance: Only $44,000.
13th S1reP.t, W. Ponsmouth
POMEROY, 0.
Oh10 45662. 1'--van. 2-66
NEW LISTING - Tennin:ourt,
992-2259
AUTHO~IZED
SERVICE
passenger
in-grwnd swinl ~new 7rm.
ONAU
PAm t Valley Local Schools.
A 81-UVEL BEAUTY that ywr
ho!lse. t fklocllghts, 5 acres.
74 54 USA 50. 8a1nbndge.
living-rec. rm alxlut 201132.
lamily will """- Sets on over an
&amp;
Ohro 45612 . 2-65 pas·
Full basement, rec . room,
acre with garage and bacN
cathedral ceiling~. 2 htl.battts,
senger. 1 -24 passenger
deck ~re up the woodburner
buill-in caract. insulated
et~ $125,000.
. Fede ral Hockrng Local
and relax in ywr family room.
Schools. P 0 Boll 11 7. Ste.alum. sidina. blown ins.,
wa rt Oh10 45778. 2-6 5
Fully furn~hed $43,000. WrthNI.W LISTING - 6 rm one
storm windows &amp; doors.
passenger. 1- 48 passengr.r,
WE ALSO::SERVICE
out furniure $40,000.
lloof house w~h I&amp; carport;
lg.
kitchen.
carpet
&amp;
apBelpre C1ty Schools 201 4
chimney fol ~r woodbull18",
ALL OTHER MAKES
ARROW FLASHING
,pliances.
Washmgton Blvd. Belpre. Ohio
PLEASE. PLEASE look at me.
TP w~r available, snd one
SIGNS
45 7 14. 1- 65 passe nge r
FOR SALE OR RENT
You11 kNe my nell!, sleek
At 1624 Lincoln Hcts.
acre fol only $12,000.
Mergs Local SchoolS. 62 1
6". 8"
rooms. I have a · balcony,
South l hud S1. Ml ddlel1f&gt; rt.
Shirley Guinther
Replacement letters
wishing well, lois ol closets. and
Ohto 45760 . 2-65
YOUR PRICE RANGE - 9
JOHN'S AUTO SALES
pas sengp,r
614-992-2181
Mom all tile cUstom made
992
acres wih fru~ and a 3
We sell qoiolity used c.-s.
Morgan local Schools. Box
drapes go with me. My owner
bedroom home in the country
1-614-446-4712
Gol~ijtb
509 McCo nnelsv1Ue. Ohro
must seR me. Come and loo~
with In pond and 1rees.
45 756, 2-7 1 passengAr.
$35,000.
loQking fur $32.500. ·
3 -65 passenge r. 3-5 3
paSsenger
NEAT UTri.E 3 hedroom home
SAVE YOUR IIICOIE - Buy
Ohro Vallfly Local SchooiJ
thai makes yw want to m001e
th~ 18 acres in the country
123 W Ma1n St.. West Unron.
right il. Built-in'emng bocth in
and take life easy. PMte and
Oh•o 45693 . 9-65 pasthe k~chm and has a water
senper. 5-59 passen ge r.
convenient with 2 bedroom
3 ~CRES- IN RACINE- Surveyed flat land, private and pea2-54 passenger
soltene-. Has a lui basenient
horne and stand-by power
ceful location. Owner will ~elp finance.
Adena Local Schools. 1 19
and a good par~ng area.
Washers,
Dl)'ers
p(ant Asling $38,500.
West H1gh Street. P 0 . Box
$32.000.
.
NEW
LISTING
-Rustic
home
in
country,
3
bedroom,
fully
266-0. Fran kfort Oh10 4 5628
Ranges, Refrigerators · carpeted throughout. sets on wooded lot. stream in lront
EXCEli.EIIT HOlE - Modem
2-65 . passenge r. 2-54
SPECIAl FEATURES
Air Conditioners
3 bedroom c.-peted home ~
yard viewed Irom comlortable porch , has hooku8 for !railer
passenger
deck area. water softener,
pne rm with fireplace, 2 car
extra income. All of th is can be bought for $34,0 0, or trailer
Un1on-Scroto Local Schools.
WE ALSO DO
can be sold.
·
dishwasher, ran~~!-. relr~. meattachoo garage and nice
SERVICE CALLS
tal' building
dGposal
landscaped lot. Asking
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
and air cond. A nice 2-3
$125,000
.
1 Card of Thanks
Nancy Jaspers - Associate
bedroom horne
with all
Route 4, Pomeroy
Phone: !149-2901
these features. $35.500.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 family lg
9 .
Or 992-2751 To leave Allessa o
hom~ rented and level trailer
NICE
CARD of THAIIKS
next tn Wi~ sell ether.11 both.
The fomily of llttvlaa Dlvidlan
wishes to UIJOSS our spcill
lOCATION - 1'i acres on Rb.'
U..lls to Yttwts llomori.1i
33. 124 snd 7. Sil rms., l!lth,
llospitJI Duden ond llunts. to
Uy water and garage, near

Business
·services

.......

~~

3rd

HOTPOINT
GEMERAL ELECTRIC
APPLIANCES

.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• I 1 a and ..modeling

CAPS

OH 10 VALLEY Plumbtn~A~I~~:r~~~~uppltes

YOUNG'S

..

Public Notice

3-7-llc

·'

Up to 15 words . .. One day insertion ... ... .. .. S 3.00
Up to 15 words ... Throe day insertion ........ $4 .00
Up to 15 Words ... Six day insertion .... .. .. ... $ 7.00
(Average 4 words per line)

..

I'

I
I

Oh. 45769 ,
J-~--~----,...-----:--------~-.-.
Pomeroy,

81 -Home Improvements
82 -Piumbing &amp;.Heating
83-Excavating
84-Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeration
.86 -General Hauling .
·86-M.H. Repair
· ··
87-Upholstery

Public Notice

Relidentiel
llr Commercial
Call 742-3196

Streer. Manella. OtHo
Oh10 45 760
45750
Morgan Local Schools. Sox.
Ad r.n a Local Schools 1 19
509 . M cCon nelsville. Oh1o West Hrgh Street P.O. Box
437 56
266 -D. Franklord . Oh10 4 56 28
Oh10 Valley local Schools.
Sealed brds w11l be recerved
1:?3 W . Mam St . W es t Un1on
.:it Jhe address of · eac h of the
Oh10 456 93
above named Boards ot Edu caUnJon -Sc iOto Local Sc hoo ls.
IIOii on October 7 1983. at
1432 Egypt P1ke. Chllltcothe.
12 00 noon and at tha t t1mf!
Oh&lt;O 45601
opened
and publicly read by
V1nton CountY Schols. M em each respectrve l! easurer of
onal Bulld1ng. M cArtllur . Oh10
sa1d Board ol Educatrons as
4565 1
provrded bv Secl!on 3313 .40
New Le•,ngton C1 ty Schools.
of the Rev1sed Code at the State
3 10 F1 rs t Street New Lex,ngat Oh10. accordmg to specrtrcaton . Oh10 4 3764
tlons of sard Board o f Educa tron
Eastern local Sc hools, At 1, as follows
Reedsville. Oh10 45 77 2
local Schools.
Lynchburg -Clay Local BmcAlexander
337. Albany. Oh10 4 57 10 ,
Schools 8250 SA 134. Lyn ch3-65 p asse nger . 1-23
bu rg. Oh10 45 14 2
passenger
Greenf1 eld Ex . V . Schoo ls.
Wells ton C1 ty Schools. 416
200 N. 5!h Str eet Greenf1 eld .
N. Pennsylvan1a Ave Wellston.
Oh10 451 23

•

I

61 : Farm Equipment
62-Wanted to Buy
63- Livestock
64- Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed 8o Feriilizer

For all your wiring
need a; furnace• re- ·
pair ~ervlce end lnatelletion.

following telephone exclranw·-~ :..

r
1 1- Help Wanted
12-Situated Wanted

'

Classified paf{e.~ cover the

71 -Autos for Silo
7 2-Trucks for Sale
13-Vans &amp; 4 WO
74-Motorcycleo
75-Boaio &amp; Motors
. 76-Auto Parh &amp;. AccessorieS
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment

ELECTRIC
SERVICE

'•

..

'
a4pr;haRdlae

FhiiJiSial

'•

Mlll~R

\

CUSTOM WORK - AIR BRUSH

PH: 1-304-773-5634
Mason, W. Va.
C. L. Kitchen
A·2Q!mr·

9-22-l mo. pd.

\

'

1

- Gas Lines
- Septic Systems
LARGf or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

~r---------~-------r

I

CUSTOM PRI_NT
949-2358

*Vinyl liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel

- Water

,Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I

- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-, Lo- Boy .
-Trencher

Giv•way

7 puppies, 304 -875-2114
or 876-1877.
Print m:nylhina
On AL
htnt

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

- Dozera

4

CLEAN USED MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALlTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, OALLIPOLf&amp;,
RT 3&amp;. PHONE 448-7274.
' 1982 Vlndele mobile horne
10xl0· with rongo. n .ooo
or best offer. Cell 418·
2798 ·

·
)
1

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1986 10x80 Pontile C~
trailer good cond., I'Mtont·
ble price. Cell 448· 7113.
.

rT,12xl3.
~9~7~0t'V~i~n~~~~~~
2 bdr ..

,
.
,
,

total eiiCtric, unfum., prioe
U.OOO. ·can 814-248 - :
9222 ·
' .
Reduced from •18.800 ' :
t17,100. Ekcellenl buy on \
1980 Windwr 14x7!1 wlih :

:::r~1~lr !n:~u:h

':!'::: ~

Rodnoy-Coro Rd. neor Ootlipolia. Prevloua "lookere·:
wolcome. 304-175-1726
,_fo_o_r_1n_f_o_.- - - - - - . , ,Winsor 14x70 with oxpando, 3 bdr., 2 bsth. pr~d
sppr. payoff. Rodney, Oh .
Cott304·878-1728forlnfo,
1974 14•70 3 bedroom.
totll electric. 814·982&amp;187 after 6:30p.m.

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:
•
1

USEO MOBILE HOME , IN :
~-~ ~~ SHAPE. 304-578- ::

1

--------·
74 FREEODM, 12•88 . .oir '
conditioning • underptn· ·
nlng, partially furnlsh•d . :
t6,500. 304-875-1484 ..
1878 Boron mobllo homo,
14x70. 3 bedroomo, 1\ol
bstha, penlelly furni1hed,
central eir, good condhion.
prico. 19,000.00. Colt 304878-3288.

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1981 Shuit troller, 12,700.
or bolt offer. 304-1751578.
' .
12xl0 mobile home, flir ·
condition. ressonsbly ·.
priced . Phone 304-8712384 0&lt; -101-816-1100;;;,
3&amp; Lota •

Acreage

Nice 1-1 oC.. lot, driHed wolt.

•lflllc tonk, Southelde - - .

110.800. 304-937-2181 ar
871·3878.

�12

The

•

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

36 Lots &amp; Acreage
Wtrteon Ad. Owner financ-

Ing ovalloblo. can 448-B221
after I weekdays.
~ne acre lot with platform

RJr houH end in-ground
pool. tor informttkm. 813-

Fireplace insert-still In fac tory ruton - autometlc
contr?is · 'Z olowen·g lass
door·&amp;!lh pttft-fits 30 in . to
48 in . r pi ~ce-b urn a wood
or co 11. :..590. Call 61425&amp;· 1 ~13 .

1185-1232.
level Iota 6 mi. aouth of
G,allipolla. All underground

utilities, central 1ewage.
Call 4411 - 1241, fl - 6.
~onday- Frldey .

10 pairs of gii'ls blue Jeans
size 3 . Dishwasher, 2adding
machine•. end 1 quilt. Cell
446-3204.

•••utiful lot on Lower Rac coon Creek. land contract
!IVallable. Call Tom leslie
448-7901 .

Ben Franklin woodburner,
•175 . Call 614-388-9602.

220 ft. road frontage over
looking Raccoon Creek with
1970 mobile home.

814-258-1577.

c••• '

Atari &amp; 6 cartridges, $ foo.
Coli 446-2297.

44

61 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

'

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olive St., Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room aulte
448 - 49~8.
4 bdr. houM 6 acrea of land
with 8 inch flat arm• 8399,
on Rt. 180 In VInton. Centrer Furnished efficiency epu. bunk beds complete with
air, e360 mo .., ·~ ltW••II Good location in town. no bunkles •199, 2 place anref." Call 448-'31111:'
pete, dep. B. references req. tron living room suite• f199,
Cell Mr. Oobaon 448-30415 antron racllnara $99, other
3 bdr. house near Rio day1, 448·2802 evea.
reclinere $80, m•pla dinette
Orondo. No peto, t235 mo.
Htl $179, love , ..t•. $70,
Coli 614-.2411-5439.
Furnl~hed 3 roomi, with hide •a.· bed. $250. box
White frame, 3 bedroom privete bath. Reference pre· apting• • metue11 twin or
houoo with carport. Gorfiold !erred. Call 448-2215.
lull •100 aot rogulor-llrm
Av•. location. Phone 2 45 . 1 - - - - - - - - - - - 1 1120, maple dinette cheira
Jackaon Estate Apartments *36, wash etenda $34,
2 9
11 5 or 4 4 8 -BII79.
&amp;38 Jockoon Pike (Equal maplo rockero $59 . 7 piece
Houeing Opportunity) · hat chroma dinette'" 1149~ 6
Nhrly n~ 2 bdr. houM, 3 one bedroom apartment• pleGa dinette eat ·es9. uaed
mi. f.rOm HMC,' no pets, rent etertlng at $167 end bedroom eultea, refirgera·
t1911 mo .. •100 dop. Call two bedroom rent atartlng at tore. rangee, c!haat, dretlert,
448-3817.
t193. $200 depoelt. Cal wringer wuhan. TV'a,
448-274&amp; or IHve mHM,.. dryeree. &amp; shoee. Cell 448·
Smell ~odern country on anawarlnn aervice.
•- 3169.
home. Rfifarancea, depoait.
•
R""oonoblo. Write P.O. Box 1-F--I-h-d------LAYNFS FURNITURE
10 Gllll
Oh 4
um • e upltelra apt., 2
•
polla,
6631 .
rooma &amp; bath, clean, eduha Sofa. chair, rocker, otto·
2 bdr. houH In Eureka. Cell onl&gt;t. no
ref. req . Call man. 3 tablea, 1extr1 heavy
448-8. 11. 311 .
448-1111 .
by Frontier). f8811. Solo,
Chair -and loveHit, $276.
furnished 3 room cottage Furn. t bdr .. bath, kitchen, Sofea and chairs priced from
one bedroom. only Iorge large livingroom. large an· 1286. to •as&amp;. Teb.... *46
cloeed porch, adulte, refer- end up to t126. Hide·•·
enough
ed
It1 N0for one
d or it two encn, , 200 par mont h. p1ue bodo .• 440 . and up 10
u ·
peta, •t:oa and deposit. 458 Second Ave., •&amp;26., Raclinera, $176. to
ploaoo. a~4 ~" Galllpollo . Cell448-2238 or f350 .. Lampo from $28. to
43448-2581 .
$75. 5 pc;. dinottoo from
f99 .. to $435. 7 pc; .. '189.
TWO bedroom unfurniehed, 1 bdr. apt. with etova It end up. Wood table with tix
Camp Conley, •126. por refrigerator, near HMC. ' no cheire •426. to $746 . Oeak
month, 304•875-1371 or pota, •1 89 mo .. •so dop. t110 up to *225. Hutchee.
8711-3812.
$&amp;60. and up, maple or pin"
Coll448-3817.
finish. Bunk bed complete
THREE bedroom houn. 2 bedroom apt., furnla"ed. with mattre11a1. $210. end
Rouoh Rd .. Choohlro. OH. utllitloo paid, '27~ . e100 up to f395. Boby bodo,
Full batement. large lot, dep., adulte only. no pete. *110. ManretSII or box
gorogo. Coli 614-367 - Call 441-0952.
apringe, full or twin. *68 .,
7175.
firm , $88 . and f78 . Quoon
1 bod room Apt. t 1 98. mo. ooto. f1B8 . 4 dr. choato,
2 bedroom cottage, new Including utilities. Equal $42 . 6 dr. choato, f54. Bod
carpet. good loC8tlon, in houalng opportunity. Con- fremee, *20.and *25., 10
town, 304-876· 7834 after teet VIllage Manor Apte. gun • Oun cablnetil, t3150.,
5.
dlnotto cholro no. ond $26.
814-992-7787.
Oe1 or electric ranges, *325
3 ..bedroom houM, Rouah 1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished up to 1376. Bebv metreiMI,
Ro.d, Cheahtre. Ohio, full apto. 814-992-8434, 614· U6 &amp; Ull. bodlramoof20,
blleemMt. large lot. garage. 992-5914 or 304-88'2 - f26, &amp; t30, klngframo •so.
Collll14.-367..:7175.
Good •election of bedroom
2688.
aulta1. cedar cheata,
2 bedroom fumlehed Apt. rockere , metal cabinttl',
42 Mobile Homes
•1110. month. pluo utllitlot. ewlvel rockera.
for Rent
Available Oct. 1. Depoatt Uaed Furniture .. bookcel8,
required. Recine. 614-949- rengee, cheira, dinnett eat.
wood table end chelrt, dry2875.
era. refrigerators and TV'a. 3
3 bdr. doublowldo In John,
eone Mobile Home Perk. Apartmenu . 304- 871- mllea out Ruleville Rd. Open
9am to lpm, Mon. thru Fri ..
Privato yard. UOO per mo.. 6648.
9am to 6pm, s,,t .
Include• water, 11wage. garago pickup &amp; gao. Hao gao APARTMENTS , mobile 448-0322
range. wet• heater. Electric homes. hou11a. Pt. Pleeunt
TV &amp; Applloncea. 627 Third
~ot Included, no peto. U- and Galllpollo. 814 -448·
Avo .. Golllpollo. 448-1699.
mlted to 2 children, city B221.
oohool. clooo to K-Mort &amp; 1 - - - - - - - - - - Spin weahera. gas S. electric
dryare, auto w..hara, gas &amp;.
SII~or Brldgoy Shopping TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
Center. Cell 441-3547 or Apartment• now available to electric reng11, refrigere~41-402B altor BPM .
elderly &amp; dloabled with on tora, ~ aeta.
Income of I••• than
2 bdr. U:ellor, furnlohed. Call •12,300. Renting lor 30 REBUILT APPLIANCES
~.11!07158.
percent of edjuated income- w..hera, drya,., rangea,
refrlgeratore. Shop repair,
. Phone 304-876-8679.
bring It in &amp; Seve. Cell
fOmlohod 14x70 3 bdr.
trailer on private lot. 10 FURNISHED apartment, 448-8181 .
lftirtutea from town. $200 adults, no pets, phone 304·
Sofa and Chair. Gibson
mo. pluo utllltloo, UOO dop.. 675-1453 .
refrigerator . Corbin •
rofaroncoo. Coli 814-2118·
13!13.
ONE bedroom, unfurnlohod, Snyder Furniture. 446Clolllpollo Forry. $1711. per 1171 .
12xl0 2 bdr. unfurn .• mo- month. all utilities paid
bile home, weter • gea except electric. 304-176- Large woo4 ,burning add-on
furnace- brand new-heau
fumlohod, hooted by goo. 1371 or 875-3812.
hot water - automatic
Col1448-4319.
Furnlahad 1 bedroom ep•rt· controls-firebrick lln'ed .
Mobile home lata for rent, ment In Point Pleaunt. very f590 . Coll814-258-1218 .
wMif' HWir furnished, 1 cl.. n and nice, no pete.
Kanmora dryer •811. GE
omall chHd accepted. 304- Phone 304-875-1388. ·
dryer •95, Hoover portable
11711-10711. .
Furnlahed efficiency epert- waeher S. dryer *1 60, MayTWO bedroom, unfurnlahed, ment, ell utilltiee paid, dep- tag wringer weeher $76
Comp Conlay, •150._ per oolt required, •200. 304- electric renge 896, 30':
Hervaat Gold electric range
month. 304-875-1371 or 895-3450.
*160, froet free refriger1tor.
8711-3812 . .
Admiral •1110. Sooro tablo
12x60 Trell'er, 2 bedrooma, 45 Furniahed Rooma model t.v. •126. block &amp;
white FICA table modol,45.
fumlehecl.w•.tMtrenddryer,
odulto, no poto. •1 00 dop- For rent Sleeping Roome Whirlpool wether *9&amp;. new
"oatt end refer.ncea. 304- end light hou 11 kHplng unflnlahed I drawer cheat
rooma. Parle Central Hotel . *95. Amena upright fr"zer
6711-4174.
Call 446-0758.
f911 . lkoggo Applloncoo,
Upper Rlvor · Rd. Golliollo.
Sleeping room ,, 111. u~ll- _o_~_lo_._c_o_n_4_4~8-·_7_3_9_a_._ _
44 Apartment
till
paid. range • refrig.
for Rent
Shere beth. Men only. 448- 1 good ueed electric clothes
4416 altar 7 p.m ,
dryer. Coli 448-0429.

41

2bdr ., 2 beth. 11 Court St.
Ref. &amp; dop. U25 mo. Call

r.••·

21:"'"".,.

1----------

1---------

-

·
:
.
:

1

'

: ~ bdr. Regency Inc. Apan-

• :monte HUD Avollablo Utll:.~dn pertly fum., apartment•
...·tvelleble now. •zoo per mo.
-&lt; 4 room apt. utlltt .., partilllly
pold t1110. A:Ono Roal
: Eatet•. Carol Yuger. Real' tor. Call 304-876-8104 or
• ___.
304· 878-7311.

.

46

Space for Rent

64

KIT ,'N' CARL YLE'•

54 Misc. Merchandise 55 Building Supplies
Sligi'ltly irregular cerpeta.
remantl and wi'lole i'louse
size." Ideal for rental income.
etc. Pritreastarting at $2 .99,
•3 .99 oq.yd . Coll614-9926173.

31 acres at Rodney on W.T.

.Pizza oven, S4oo: Joea
Pizza in Chaehire. Call614367-0871 .
Doll. planto lit thlngo. Call
614-266-6629.
Fiah Aquariums made to
order. lrvin'a Gla11 Service,
446-4423.

New

Oak Furniture, tables,

chaire, cupboarda, pie ufe,
dry sinks. Paul Conkels
Antiquee, Tupper• Plelna.
Will-Burt etoker furnence
24' , good cond. Call 446·
1572.
Empire h8ating stove for
aalo. 814-949-266B.
Firewood for sale. Hard·
wood. 614-843-5188.
6 Inch RCA TV. am-fm radio
com~inetion. Battery or ac·
de aurrent . .814-992 -2060.
f75.

by LarrY Wright

r-----------------------~--~~

Building materiala
block. brick , nwer pipes.
windows , li ntelai etc .
Claude Wlntera, Rio Grande,
0 . Call 614-246-5121 .

56 '

-

. ... ..
HILLCREST KENNELS
Bording ell breeds. Seliing
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman pupplae ; Stud
Service . Call 446· 7796. ·

81

AKC Regieterad Doberman,
876, 304-a92-2Z3o.
Fioh Tank &amp; Pato, 2413
Jackeon Avenue. Point Pleeoant , 304-875-2083.
Monday- Saturday,. 11·8 .
Tame goffin cock-a-too and
cage, $426, BB parrot, •&amp;&amp;.
Love blrda, t40 each,
orange wing. $17&amp;, hamatera, $1 .99 end $2 .99, mice
89 cents.
·

57

Musical
Instruments

~ .-ld, 2 bdr.. 1311h 4th.

• GolllpoHo ••••• , 8 ~ 7
•
. - v - - a ...r
p.m.
.Uilfurnlahed, downatelre, 3
room apt .. 1 bdr .. no pata.
Inquire at 87 Vlno St..
Galllpollo.
fu;nlehecl apt. 2 bdr., near
HMC. '2311 utllitloo paid.
2ll3 Jackoon Plko, Oalllpo- 1

I

~

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

llo. 448-4418 altor 7 p .m.
61 Household
Smell turn. hauee 1 or 2
•duhe only, no pate. Cell ·
448-0338.
2 ulld bunk t».c1 m1ttrta
Hta, •111 each. Call 448For ..... modern. unfum .• 2 1837.
bdr. opt. Ov-oklng city
pork. lncludoo rongo • r• 1 Hotpojnt electric ::~~··
frill. •178 mo. Coli 448- 1· 11 cu. ft. Hotpolnt
g1111 or ovonlngo 448- orator uHCI vary little. Call
4fZI.
441-2101 altar I.

H·f

Ufl1J
ltj(tf
~

~~;~;;~;;;;~~--~~-~·~-~,.~·-~~~-·~·~c~•~·~·~·~·•~oo~
.... ..

63

~.

71

Livestock

Autos for Sale

Club calvoo E•ot
. lc near
crooooo-Sirod by Double
Tlmo. Tomodo. 1114-379260 6 -

1978 Automatic ranch etufe
·•
atetlonwagon. Walt Virginia
ln_,ed, -nlco. ,896 .00
negotiable. Coli 304-87&amp;19B7 or 875-2682.
·2 yr. old Jer11y milk cow - - - - - - - - - with calf. Coli· 448-4423. 1971 Mlvtrick. I cyl ~ etend ova. 1114-256: 1858 ·
ard, f360 . 1978 Comoro. 4
apeed, auume loan, ·both
C8rl run good, 304·876·
1848.
71
Autos for Sale
1974 Oldo Cutlooo. 4 door.
good conditon. $800 or.beat
offer, 304-8711-4431 or
TOP CASH pold lor loto 8711-3354.
. model uaed care. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eut- 1977 Camero, run• good,
ern Ave.. Galllpolia, 448· neede eame body work.
22B2 .
$2,300. Phone 304-8751818 · - 4 .
J:O Chryolor Now Yorkor,l----------•460. Coli 446-4399.
1989 Rod Dodge Oort, olant
6. new tirea, paint, A-1
1978 Honda Accord. Ex. condition. $6&amp;0. Phone
MPF (35 - hwy.) . Good 304-671-6730
cond .. alngle owner, price
below Blue Book. Call 446- 1972 Ford Muotong, t300,
2066 IVOnlngo.
304-876-3182.

!~~~~!~~;~~~

4

Chrlo Croft 1917 conotolla·
don cabin crul-. 36 lt ..
with troloo, t12,800. Call
814·387· 0!7B botwoon
10·3. 814-448-1343 altor

Mobile home lot v. acre, 1
mile ptllt Cantenery on Rt.
141 . Weter • electric hoo·
kup, dop. &amp; rot. roq. Call
814-24&amp;-!841 .

. . . .....
·--·
..............

Firewood· cut up, , eleba,
Ul pickup load. Call 814·
24&amp;-5804.

e.

78
1977 OLD8 QIIIOgO, :i d~or.
hatohbook, buclrot ooato.
PI, PS. automatic trenamlaolon, AM-FM, 8 troolc, n Il-. !&gt;rokoo &amp; ohocko. ongino &amp; tronomloolon .....,IN.
t1 200. Phono 304-4181012.

EVENING
6 :00

Home

Camping
Equipment

new campor, 18
ondem - · Call Tom
Loollo 448-7101 •

1179 ford LTO, lour door,
1utometla. 311 engine,
!04-112·!1110.

79 Mllto~ Home1

1177 ChiVy Morrill CoriD.
air, _..,., . , _
Coll304112-2111 oltor I , ,m,

1174

. llr C.mpare

vw

IJ

Answ:

..

BORN LOSER

I.f\CRE' '«??'Re; f\UI&gt;I~, KIDCO, ~

I'M 0011&gt;1{,:) 10 SVDT'HeR.A S'TE.AK

OIKJt.I&gt;S FeR 'lOU l

BRIDGE .

Afterthoughts

E &amp; R TrH Service, fully
lnaured, fr'e estlmetu.
Phone 814-387-0836, coli
after 5,
'

llfl£ YO// CRf/ZY,
C/efiGEf/5?.1 1101'1/H

IIECH WA5 I 5'POSE T'
I!;!ET ROMIINTfC WITH
T/IIIT ()()fill CIIT ,.,,. TTIN'
liT ME?'

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Ono
place cuetom fit your home.
Guareriteed. Advanced GUt·
tor, (Ooy 814·592-40611,)
(night 814-698-8205.)
Roofing and Carpentry
work, general repelra. cell
Anthony Wllll•meon, 614·
367-0194.
Got Your ·carpet IN SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
STEAMER. water removal,
furniture cleaning. Free Eeti·
motoo, 814-lt48-2107.
Stove and furnace cleaning
and ropolr, 304-875-8073.

•
,.

CARTER'S PLUMBING '
AND HEATING
Cor. fourth end Pine
Phone 448-3888 or'448-'
4477
'
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-,
lNG. Fomerly Dewitt'•·
Plumbing. Call 814-3870578.

..

Would you
like to play
cards, Rover?

Excavating

DOZER WORK By Ted
Henna. panda. ditchu,
baMft1anfl, etc. Cell 441·'
4907. Carter. &amp; Evane·
Treneportetlon.

•ovu•

Lonnie
Excavating.
Dour, backhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. Call"
4411-7903.
'
Cat 216 hoe, dozert, crane,
loedera. dump truck. C•ll'
II 1 4·446-1 142 botweon·
7:00AM • 5:00PM.
.
Good·1 Excavating, ball·
ment1, footera, drlveweya,
aeptic tanka, landeceplng.
Coli anytime 448-4537,
Jamal L. Oavleon, Jr.
owner.
Dozer Work. ground clearing
8t excavation. *26 hour. Cell
448-9838.
•
J.A.R. Conetruction Co.
Water Linea. Footera
Draine. All kinds of Ditching:·
Rutland , ON . 614-742 '
2903.
Mlllge EKcavetlng . Bulldozei
• backhoe Hrvlce. Beu~
menta, footera,lendeceplng.
drlvew•v•. farm ponde.
814-742 ·2407 or 814-7422068.

BARNEY

SEWIN9 Machine repeirat
IIN~e. Authorized Singer
Saloo • Sorvlco Shorpon'
8ciuore. Fabric Shop;:
Pomeroy . 892-2284.
,•

85

HOSS SHOES I&gt;ON'T
BRING NOBODY NO
LUCK-- NO SICH
THING!!

Ci!m mo~lle.

- -' cond.
· ....
A ng""utro
t1HII .
a14-448o7aae.

i

WHAT MAKES
I{OU SAV THAT,
PAW?

Goineral Hauling

Need aomethlng. hauled
away or aomethlng moved)
Wo'll do lt. Coli 446-3159
between 9 lnd a.

t'!l ~· ,,.~

a

"-:::-++-+-i:--

a

a

PEANUTS

Wator hauling, Foot Sorvlco,
low roteo . Call 814-ZIII1743.

AFTER A BRIEF INTERVIEW,

I WAS PLACED IN SED
WHERE TilEY ATTACHED
WIRES TO MY HEAD.-

Coli Jim Lonlar, 304-8711-'
7397.

87

KI l I Ill I ll J

I

Get your .carpet in ahiP
1h1pe. Water removal, FREEESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING.• CAPTAIN:
STEAM.ER 61 ...4f:2107.·

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

t
I J

~GYSSAR

Upholltllry

TRISTAtE '
, UPHOLIT!RY IHOP &gt;'
183 8oc. A..., Gal...-,:
441•7133 or 448-,833.

~1

.

a

u w c ivY E.Z

Rlalnl ltor'o 1Olh Annlv-

orury Femouo grodo of thia

,,
I

'•

[XJ . ( j

Water Weill. · Commerclll
and Domeltlc. Teat holu:
Pumpa Salea. end Service;
304-895-3B02.
.

84

..

1
Later'
(]) Tic Tac Dough
(]) Ploy Your Boat Tennis
HOW TO ISE.T
This show features 'Serve
A I!SIG ~O~IS FI~H
and Return of Serve .'
11-JTO A SMALL..
(I) Uttle Houaa on tho
Ffl:YINIS. PAN.
Prairie
(]) (jj) OVe Willie
Ill) Buck Rogers
Now arrange the clrcted letters to''
form the surprise anawer, as aug·
6 730 II CIJ C!1 NBC Nt1wo
goaled by !he above cartoon.
(]) Love That Bob
(]) ESPN'o Horse Rocing
Wkly.
Cii GIIJJ ABC News
USE
Iii (I) lla CBS News
(Answens tomonowl
[)) Buslnon Report
Jumbles: MAIZE SOAPY UNSOLD CAMPUS
(jj) Over Eaoy
Yesterday's
7 :00 D (IJ PM Mogozlno
Answer: Music that might accompany a turkey
(]) Bums • Allen
dinner - A "Y AM " SESSION
(]) SportoCentor
(I) Carol Burnett
'
(]) Entertainment Tonight
C!l Cho~lo's Angelo
Iii (I) Wheal of Fortune
(]) (jj) MacNelt/Lohrer
News hour
Lcot&lt;, I CQI'T PARTIC.'l.,t.RL'I
®News
CARE&gt; 1-\0J./ 1/' KIL.L IT. JU5f
lllllJ People' • Court
1!11 Jefferson•
'5m'£ IT UP!
7 :30 II (IJ Tic· Toe Dough
(]) Doble Gillis
(]).World Sportoman
(I) Good Newo ·
. (]) Ill (I) Fomlly Feud
® Whool of Fortuna
------------------------~
"
CD ()) Entertainment
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
Tonight
IB One Ooy at a Time
8:00 'I I (IJ (JJ Real People Today' s program features a
tour of Philadelphia·s Indehusbaud and wile alter ·
pendence Hall, a hot dog
South had made game and
vendor who wears bikinis
rubber.
· "
NORTH
0-28-IS
and a profile of disc jockey_
South won the spade lead ~
• 96
Don lmus. (60 min.)
HOW~~~~ y• HEY, t()W- YOU ~ND I
with the l'ack and ran ol{ ·
9
K J 10 8
ffi
MOVIE:
'How
to
Boat
aOIN T
8C1T'H HNE'M FROM THE
lour hear s. Husband Wes ·
tho High Coot of Uvlng'
t A73
chucked the club queen and
WINIIGE? VEIIY 15E61NNIN6 TH~T
(IJ MOVIE: 'Poydoy'
•• 6 51
diamond deuce. ' Then Soulb&gt; ~.
LIFE WAGN'T GOIN6 10 BE AiTOY- ·
(])I Spy
EAST
took his big)) spad~ and led
WEST
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho AmbuohRillE, AND WE'VE 5U!MVEO SO FAR. rid?
+H.I
a diamond toward dummy'• · +Qt0832
ers'
97653
ace. W!!St played the jack •·
• 91
(]) IIIIJJ Fall Guy Howie is .
tQH
t
KJ2
and was promptly thrown in ·'
critically injured after he re+1072
with the king. He cashed twb ·
+AQJ
places Colt in a movie stun1
spades,
but was then forced "
SOUTH
that was sabotaged t5y -an
to
give
South the contract •
+AKJ
eK-con. (60 min .}
trick
with
the king ol clubs.
9AQ2
0
(]) lla MOVIE:
Wife
East
remarked,'-'.
•
10
9
8
5
'Dempaay'
·
"Didn'l
it
occur
to you tQ
+K9 3
()) (jj) Llvo from tho Met
drop
the
diamond
king so I'
'Lucia di Lammermoor.' To·
Vulnerable: North-South
could get in with my queen ·
night' s program features
and lead a club? "
. ·.
Dealer: South
this special presentation of
West replied, "Yes, sweet- .•
Donizetti's famous opera
Weat Nortll East
So~!!J
heart! It dtd occur to me." · from the Metropolitan Op~
I NT
"Then why on earth didn't •
era, New 'Yor1&lt;, NY. (2 hrs ..
Pass
2+
Pass
2t
you
do it?"
30 min.)
Pass
2NT
Paos
3NT
"Well, you see, it occurred :
&amp;I MOVIE: 'The Wild
Pass
Pass
Pass
to me a trille too late."
Bunch'
For the record, West:; ·
8 :30 (]) 2nd Annual Legendary
Opening lead: +3
shOuld really have foreseen .-.
Pocket Bllliorda Stars
the end play. A point count
9:00 II m C!1 Focto of Ulo Blair
would show that East held •
recommends that Mrs . Gar·
either the diamond queen or ,..
rett be hired to cater her so~
club king. If East held the ·
rarity's party, but, in a fit of
By Oswald Jacoby
club
king, South would have .
anger, she suddftnly tires
aad James Jacoby
just 16 high-card points and
her.
(lJ 700 Club Today's proToday's
hand · is would probably have passed
two no-trump.
gram features author Jim
notewortht only because of at
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Simmons .
the conversation between
(]) II ll2l Oynasty Krystle
and Alexis face an uncenain
fate wben SOfl1BOne tries to
pull them from the burning
cabin. (60 min .) !Closed
Captioned!
9:30 II ffi C1J Family Tioo Ale•
anempts to tame the 'wild est gir1 in school.'
t ,(
(]) 'PKA Full Contact
Karate
loy THOMAS JOSEPH
10:00 II CIJ C!l Livo and In
Person Sandy GaiJin hosts
ACROSS
DOWN
this second of three nights
1 - cheap
I Clammy
of special entenainment fea·
5 Plebe
2 Thooghts
turing superstars from the
10 So loog,
3 Laughing
world of show business . (60
Senorita!
4 Youngling
min .l
12
Prince
5
French city
[}) MOVIE: '1, The Jury'
Valiant's
6 Wing (Lat.)
ffi MOVIE: 'Big Bad
Mama·
wile
7 Digress
(]) II 1D Arthur Halley' o
13 Butcher's
8 Perpetual
·~el'
'
need
9 Italian city
Yesterday's Answer _.
10:1 5 (I) TBS Evening News
15
Sylvan
deity
11
Tirade
10:30 (]) Star Tlmo
25 Mollusk
32 Color ""
11 Operate
14 Entice
(])
Vlolt
.w/Reginold
34
Majors ·:·
delicacy
17 Novelist
19 Raisond'Stewart Internationally re·
Z&amp;
TV
person·
and
others
now ned conductor /pianist
2Z "- Kleine
Levln
Reginald Stewan is profiled .
aUty
36 Gr. athletic
18 Bullock
Nachtmusik"
(jj) Nowo
28 Raised
contest" ~
20 Girl's name 23 Uke veal
1 1 :00 D CIJ (]) C!llil CD C» II
platform
38 Nest
21
Duffer's
cutlets
(jJ Nowo
31 European
39 Cardiriai's
need
zt Lasted
(]) SportoContor
river
office · . 22 State (Fr. )
longer
(I) All In tho Family
(])Dr. Who
23 Chainnan's
(jj) Pollloo,.
group
6ID Bonny Hill Show
Z&amp;Sky,
1 1 :1 5 (]) L.A. '83 Highllghta
to Italians
Highlights of Water Polo,
Z'l Hick
Swimming, Diving end Synchronized Swimming are
Z8 Newsman
featured . (90 min.)
Rather
11 :30 8 (IJ (!)Tonight Show
Z9 Greek letter
(IJ MOVIE: 'Chino 9,
311 Ward off
Uberty 37'
33 Shoemaker's
(]) Another uta
tool
[I) Cotllno ·
(]) Soop
MRecline
II (]) Pollee Story
35 Hawk parrot 1:::-+-+~f(]) Latonlght Amorico
THEY .JUST
3'1 EltJiress
(JI M•A•S•H
oneself
COST ME TWO
(jJ Nightlino
(sl.)
DOLLERS
• Twilight Zone
40
Singer
12:00 (IJ MOVIE: 'Biodo Runner'
Ford ·
,
(]) Bumo &amp; Allen
41 ''Takes Two
(])MOVIE: 'llolors Gun'
(]) Nlghtllno
to-"
(jJ MOVIE: 'Moon of IM
Gary Cooper
Wolf
'
fllmrole
r.
• Thlcke of tho Night
43
Adolescent
12:30
(IJ (!) Late Night with
Devld Lottorrnon
()}Jock Benny Show
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work.it:
tl (]).MoVIE: 'Captive'
AXYDLBAAXR
. ..,•
(jJ Newo
II
LONGFELLOW
.....
12:45 (]) Unlimited Hydrop. Roclng: Columbia Cup
Otte letter olmply standi lor ano1her. In thio sample A if
Coverage of the Columbia
used for the three L's, X lor 1he two O's, etc. Single letier1
Cup is presented from Tri Ctapootrophes, the length and formation ol the wordo ore JQ
MAY I STRA16HTEtol I-ll M
tles. WA . (60 min .l
,.
hiDIL Each day the code lettera are dUfererit.
OUT NOW, M~AM , OR
· 1 :00 Clll Morrlod Joan
(]) Entertainment Tonight
CRYPTOQUcn"ES
WOULD 'YOU PREFER I
(jJ
CNN
Hoodllnt
Newo
WAIT UNTIL
SCHOOL?
1 :15 (I) MOVIE: 'An Arnericon
VIH
QUH
JQZZDVM
Wo,.wolf In London'
1 :30 G
[}) NBC Nowa
QKA FHQPHYEZ MEPPHMMDUM DY
Qvomlght
Cll My Uttlo Marglo
(!) News/llvn Oft
JEZZHVM. - QJUQIQX
ZWKPDZ~
1:411 (])8~
Y"*l dot/1 Cl)pl ; 1fte: THE TEST OF AN ENJOYMENT lS
2 :00 (I) On Loc:etlon: Catch •
THE REMEMBRANCE WHICH lT !EAVES BEHIND.-'J:

ISENCHOI

-'· CAPTAIN EASY

.1 ""1--::::::--:==---JIMS WATER SERVICE.

~ke

........ •,.oo.oo

RINGLE' S SERVICE expo,
rienced roofing, lnclu~ing
hot tar- 1pplicetion, C8rpen.i
ter, etectrlcien, maaon. caU
304-871-2088 or 875•
4680.
•

83

I I I

Merker'

RON'S Tolovioion Sorvlc&lt;l.
Specializing In Zenith end
uotorola, Quaur. and
"""
houao colla. Call 678-2398
or 446· 2464.
F It K TrM Trimming. atump
removal. Call67&amp;-1331 .

Plumbing
.&amp; Heating -

TROIS

(IJ MOVIE: 'Sooner or

PAINTING - Interior en,:t
exterior. plumbing. roofing,
aome remodeling. 20 yra.
exp. Cell 114·388·.9662. :~
Marcum Roofing • Spout•
ing. 30 years experience
.,
epeclalizing In bu t up roof,
Coll814·3811-9857.
'
I

82

II CIJ (]) C!1 D (]) lla e
!lZ Nowo

(IJ MOVIE: 'Uttlo MI..

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Call 814-317-7471
or 814-387-01191.

Ertra nice Star Craft pop-up
camper. All equlpm•nt,
-oonoblo prlco. Coli 4484872.

1 elmcm: new cheln uw. 18
ln. cut. Call448-7273 oltor
IPM or anytime weekende.
MUST BELL 8 -lng
maahlnH acretohlld In lhlpplng _,. f280 now . , . or
. . . - - Col 4411·1301 .

9/~-8!83-

.

STUCCO PLASTERING .•
textured ceiling• comm•·
ciel and reeldentill. frH
ootlmatoo. Coli 814-2511·
1182. -

1980 Dodge Aapon. auto ..
P.S., P.B.. 6 cyl .. ounroot. 72 Trucks for Sale
Clarinau. flu ,t ea, . aaxa- real nice. John~, Au'i:o Sale•. •-- - - - - - - - - ,.76 Ford Courier 311.000
phonea, trombone1. 446-~782. Bulavlllo Rd.
EXTRA good top ooil. deli- trumpeta. Frankl Pawn
miles on overh•uled, toppe(,
'1 980 Renault LoCar, 4 apd.. CB, AM caooono. good tiro~ .
vered, phone 304-676- Shop. 448-0840.
em·fm, full aunroof, reel •1.1100. Coll448-1021.
7771 .
AKC Reg. Schih-Tzu male aherp. John'a Auto Selee.
For Sale: Lumber 1" end 2" puppy. 7 wooko old . Coli 4411-4782. Bulavllla Rd.
1980 Chovy 'lz T.. 4x4, 350
dlmanalon. p0pl8r, oak or 448-4676.
auto.. 44.000 mi.. wido
1979 Plymouth Arrow. tlroo, e&amp;,700 . Coli 448pine. For pricea end availability . Contact Millwood Uaed trombone and clarinet. auto., p.a .• p.b .• am·fm tepa, 0231 .
Inc .. 304-273-21122. Fit. 2 In good condition . Call814- ·aunroof. John'a Auto Sale1,
448-4782. Bulovllla Rd.
at Evergreen Hilla Road. 992-5824.
1978 Ford F-160 PU auto
Monday -Friday, 8 -4 :30:
trent, PS. PB, 1,.2 ton. good
Electra electric guitar with 1979 VW Rabbit. 4 opd .. con d.. 13,700. Call 446Saturday, 8-3:00.
HS ceae. crate amp·, 60 rma. am-fm, •'r cond .• eunroof. 2403.
'
Firewood. $30. truck load, Morley Vol. WAH. phase John 'a Auto Sekll. 4461 ton dump truck. Coli
or will epllt wood 6t your ahifter. electric tuner, corda. 4782. Bulovlllo Rd.
home . 304-676-4216 · atand, mlacellaneou• iteme.
441-9428.
.
•1500 value, 8600. 304- 1979 Oldemoblle Sterflre
eveninge.
Flrenze V-1. auto., p.a. , p.b .• 1978 Ford truck, ohort bod,
675-6843.
em-fm gpe. sporty. John'e 8 cyl. Call 448-2&amp;92.
Saeaoned oak firewood .
Auto Soloo, 448-4 712. Bu304-875·2767 after 4 p.m .
.
58
Fruit
lovllle Rd.
19e0 GMC 4•4 ~ ton.
105,000 BTU fuel-oil fur&amp; Vegetables
auto .. PB, PS. 30.000 mi ..
1972 Chovrolot Impala. u.aoo, can 448-2403.
nace Penwey, 1,000; 276
Runa good, body-fair. good
gallon tank, t22&amp;: player
piano, $50. 304-676·1423. Applea . Fitzpatrick Or- worlr cor. $4110. Call 448- 1988 Ford T850 tandem
dump truck. 814-992·
chordo. S.FI. 689 . 614·669- 0346 .
Woodburner, double door 37B6 or 614-689-4378.
11641 .
1978
Pontiac
Sunblrd,
4
!"'odel, Fieher stove, bought H~rs 10 a.m .-6 p.m.
cyl .. 72,000 mi., •1.900 or 1 977 Ford R - ·'II ton.
1n 1982. ueed one winter,
trodo. Coli 614-379-2728.
Phone 304-676-2636.
long bed. powM lteerlng.
power brakea. automatic, eh
Two whHI utility trailer, 4x8
condition.
V8. late of extras.
1978
dr .
52,000 Chevette
mi .. PS, air4cond.:
foot bod, $160. 304-773Good oh-. ooklng·u.ooo.
P8,
4
opd
.
e1,750
ortrodo.
11518
304-871-21183 alter 4.
61 Farm Equipment Coll814-379-2728.
Woodburning Franklin fireploco. $100.00. Coli alter 5 For 1111 or trade John Deere 1980 Camaro Rolley Sport, 73 Van1 llr 4 W.O.
p.m., 304-876-11B6 . .
7 lt. mower. Call 614-379- 45.000 mlloo. PS. PB. olr
cond., auto.. $6.300 or
2696.
198&amp; OMC School .buo 30
trade. Coli 11)4-379-2726.
1 cebinet, eaveral end tapeeaenger, 292 engine. 4
blet. 1 floor lamp, 1 table 40 ft . hay conveyor. Ueed 1
1978 Granda Prix 118.000 apd., new brekee, good tirea.
lamp. ceder wardrobe, mla- IOIIon . 614-843-51B6 . .
mllee, needa front end. •2.200. Call 446-2838 of·
celleneoua itema, radiof1,995 or trodo. Call 814- tar 5 .
record player. 2 epeakera 1 ~8;~-jJ.;;;tcicl;'--­ 379-2728.
cheir brown. 1 deak, 2 f~ot 63
1979 Joop CJ-5, 8 cyl .. 3
ltoolo. Collaltor4:30, 304·
·
1-:-:-:-:--:---~---~- - apd.,
exc. cond ., $3,300 or
8711-1438.
1974 Cedillac vory good
trodo lor pickup. Coli . 448·
Registered Polled Hereford condition. crulee, elr, PS •
Sofa · and chair, excellent bull. Appro•. 1150 poundo. ~=;!_ 1 .6,00-. ~!1.~14: 379- 0515.
condition. rulrt end gold,
1-:-~--------­
$200. Call 304-676· 1642 379.-2657.
Volkwegon body good
after&amp;.
bull cond .. new alternator. gen- 74 Mil,torcycles
814- erator, fuel pump, • brek8e.
'
'
Cheat type freezer, 18 cu.
Call 4411:4231 'or 448lt .. $160. 304-675-8073.
4836.
1982 Yamaha 126 CC 600
ectual mllee, exc . cond., in
Dreuer, cheet of draw era. 12 yr. old Pelamlno hor~efor
wordrobo. Phone 304-875 - nlo. 83'/z lnch'oo toll, •426. 1978 AMC Gremlin. Nooda otorogo. Coli 114-24112194. See at 903 Mo11man Bridle &amp; taddle Included. fender. Air cond. *100. 9268.
Coli anytime 448-2148.
814-742-2708.
Circle.
1974 Honda Chopper 30Jn.
Old clocke, electric and The melgt Co. BHf cattle 1972 Movorlck. Good worlr over -front end. CB 760 F.
wound up, oil floor furnace, 111ocietion in cooperetkm C8r, body e little rough. Call 814-949-2737.
.
eutom1tic, 37&amp; gallon drum with the . Meigs Co. exten- 814-378-6389.
and Oland, noo. 304-882- lion·tervice ere tponaerlng e
1978 Horloy Dovldoon porto
beef day Saturday, Oct. 1tt. 1979 Pinto, 4 ~. good for oola. Trona. 2.10. phooo
3590.
From 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. At tlroo, only 22.000 mlloo. 3· 3 ln. bolt drive, SU carb ..
Air conditioner, can aea et the Melga County feir - Aoklng only •1.800 . Coli front and. rNr wheel. ate.
Regency Apertmente, no. 4. t~rounda. There will be tome- 814-992-5988 or814-992- Boa ' 324 Palmer St ..
thing for everyone from the 2e48 oltoo 8:00.
304-675-3648 . '
Middleport.
producer to the conaumer,
Table with 6 cholro, '65 .. 2 Actlvttlee ~Ill include: Uve 1919 Cadillac, 2 door. Runo 1983 Suzuki OS 1100 GK,
good, good tirea. *396. lull-d-Ied, 1,300 mlloo.
and tablet, Raggedy Ann feeder calf demonltretlon
doll. Nlke track or b111abell 101 delicious waya to pre: Altor 8 p.m. 814-992- Phono 304-8711-7979. 871ahoea, 'aile 7 , At•ri pare beef. numeroua com- 7177.
7418.
ceaeett... Phone 304-875- mercial lkhibite. roaat beef
Hndwichll and drinka wHI 1971 Pontiac Cetelinl. 1981 900 Cuotom Honda.
7438.
be 1\tellable. Door prizes will Good worlr cor. t400. 1114- fully drooaod, Including ote·
Oat range. 2 ovana, excel- ~ given throughout the dey. 949-2849.
roo.anddriwoholt. U,700.
lent condition, uaed 3 yeara, Bring your family, frlerida
304-773-11944.
end nelghbore and come on
cloon , 304-1711-5881 .
down .
Sot of Chlldcralt booko, vorv 1-:----:-----76
Boat. and
Miac. Merchandise good condition. •75. 304Moto~ for Sale
882-2715 after 5 p.m.

Umeatone. Send. Gravel.
1 acre trailer lot on Fairview Delivered In Maoon. Molgo,
Rd. no month, •so clop.
can 8711-7748 or 814-2411· Oallia or pick up at Richerd•
• Bon . Call 448-77811.
11344.
1 - - - - - - - - - - UMd gee heltlf with fen
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Porlr R
• auto 33, North of 80,000 BTU ~oata 4 roomo:
Pomeroy. Largo Iota. Coli · Automatic off control . SH
at 87 Vlno St. Galllpollo.
982-7479.

WEDNESDAY

Improvement•

Judy Taylor ·GroOming. Cell
814-367-7220.

AKC English Springer Sponiel liver &amp; white, female, 2
4
yrs.
4051 old. e&amp;O. Call 46·
·
3 AKC Reg. O.ld Englioh
Shoop Oog puppieo, ohoto &amp;
wormed, UOO. Coli 4467905 • Iter IIPM .
Siemooo klttono. Available
Sept. 24. 1 female 't20 ., 3
males t30 . each. 614-9927201 .

Television
Viewing

&amp;Campe~

Pets. for Sale

Briarpatch Kennels Profa.sional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boerding fa·
cilltlea. English Cocker Spii·
niel puppies. Cell 814·3889790.
Minature Schnauzer pup·
piea, AKC Regiaterad. exceptional quality, 6 weeks.
Old · ,116 · Call 8,4· 3844509 .
·

TRACY

79 Motorl Home•

19

Ohio

1983

Buy Fao;torv Dlroct. Ugh: .
weight. fibergleaa Scamp
13' and 18' trovol trollaro •
now 19' lith - 1 . Coli now
toll froo 1-800-348·4812
for froo brochun ond lAVE!

11'; ot&lt;At Q\R~'II.t', I'M
~ A l&gt;ief. I WASN'T
~ROVII--11'46 "'T 'f04 .rf
Wf\S MY STOM"'-CI-I ·

_____ 1----------

~ Furnlohod opt . .• 186. Wator

28,

Wednesday,

Ohio

•,

.

RICfn'ER

'·

'I

�14-The Daily Sentinel

Mason County Country Festival set
The Mason County Regional
State Farm Museum will hold Its
!11th annual Country Festival
and Antique Steam and Gas
Engine Show on Saturday and
Sunday, Oct. 1-2.
The two-day festival Is ·cospon;;ored by the West VIrginia
Antique Steam and Gas Engine
Association. Several antique
steam engines and a large
number of old gas engines will
be on display during the two-day
show. Some antique tractors will
also be shown · and operated.
Various pieces of old farm
equipment will be exhibited and
will be operated periodically.
The two-day event features a
number of activities and crafts
that were quite common during
the late 1800s, but are seldom
ObserVed today.
On Saturday visitors can see
wheat threshing with an antique
steam engine which wUI furnish
power for one of the early

·threshing machines. There wtll
also be corn meal grinding,
apple butter, elder and molasses
making.
A number of pioneer crafts
wlll be demonstrated both days.
Mrs. Young of Charleston will
have some Angora rabbits
which she will comb and spin the
fur Into yam. C. G. McComas of
Huntington will demonstrate
.broom making.
On Saturday afternoon, Willi:
amson's Pallet Company wtU
sponsor a cross-cut saw contest.
Trophies and cash prlzes wlll be
awarded the winners.
Another Saturday attraction
wlll be a muzzle-loading rifle
shoot by Paul Fitzgerald and
Robert Fowler. Saturday even·
lng, Floyd Rayburn will call for
a square dance. Music will be
furnished by Everett Wedge,
John Smlth and Burl Tennant.
On Sunday, at 9 a.m. Rev.
Louis R. HusseU will conduct a

church service In the old log
church. In observance of WorldWide Communion Sunday, Rev.
Hussell wm hold a Holy Com·
mlinlon Service. The public Is
Invited to attend the service and
participate In the HolyCommun·
lty Service.
A hymn slng will be held
Sunday afternoon under the
dlre«tlon of Burl Tennant.
The Country Kitchen will be
open both days of the show. Iri
·addition to Its speciality of
cornbread and beans, the kit·
chen will serve corn meal pie,
hot dogs, Ice cream and pop.
VIrginia. Rayburn will be oil
charge of the Country Store
which has been · well stocked
with craft Items, souvenirs and
other merchandise.
All buildings on the museum
grounds will be open.
The Farm Museum Is located
four miles north of Point Plea·
sant just off State Route 62.

Kaiser's future brighter now
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP) Management and union officials
predict that production will pick up
at the giant Kaiser Alumnlnum &amp;
Chemical Co. plant and that many
workers laid-off since last wlntet
will be called back.
Aluminum Industry analysts and
other experts predict a marked
Improvement In prices for 1984, and
some say a worldwide shorlage Is
likely. .
Producers orders so far this year
are running up to 22 percent ahead
of the average monthly rate for
1983, the experts say, Indicating a
strong recovery In the recession·
plagued Industry.
A spokesman for Kaiser competl·
tor Allirnlnum 'Company of .AmerIca said his company Is booked up
for the rest of 1983 at Its flat-rolled
production planls.
Alcoa president Fred C. Fette_roff, said a shortage of Ingot
aluminum, the primary form of the
metal, has forced purchases on the

Weather forecast
Clear tonight with patchy fog.
Low near 50. Winds , light and
variable. Sunny on Thursday after
early morning fog. High 7lH!O.
EdendEd Ohio Forecast
Friday throogh Sunda_v:
Fair through the period. IUghs
near 80. Low~ In the mld..SOS to low
60s Friday and Salurda_v and In the
low to mld·50s sunday.

open market. He said orders were
ruMing so high that by the end of
the year when Alcoa smelters are
expected to be operating at 97
percent of capacity, the company
wUI "stW be · bt the market for
metal.' '
The rapid escalation In demand
has driven prices up as well, with
trading on the London Metal
Exchange placbtg aluminum at 72
cents per pound last week, up form
a low of 46 cents last December.
Alcoa last month pushed Its Ingot
price to 81 ~ cents per pound, aad
alumbtum analyst Perter Merner,
director of Merner Research, said
he anticipates prices to reach 96
cents per pound later this year.
. Despite the price jumps and the
production Increases, Kaiser spokesman Robert Irelan said the
company has made no decision on
when It will reslarl the second of the
Ravenswood Work's four potllney;.
United Steelworkers Union R.a·
venswood local president Gene
Richards was more optimistic
about the future, predicting that
production wlll rise dramatically.
The Ravenswood Works was the
world's largest aluminum plant
when It opened In 1955. The plant
was Jackson County's largest
single employer, with a work Ioree
of 4,300 In 1981, before 2,400 workers
were laid off and Us four potllnes
were shut down.
Now, one potllne Is making
aluminum and the work force
numbers 2,130. Talk amon!;' long·
time Ravenswood workers Includes

648 issue · ~elays
(Continued from page 1)
Jones replied, "As county com· Riebel Indicated additional space Is
missioner I amasklngyou to write to needed.
The bid from Asphalt Materials
the presldentoftheCICand ask him
for
the month of October was
to work hand In hand with the Meigs
accepted.
-County Regional PlannlngCommls·
Also meeting with the commls·
slon. Blakeslee to work with CIC up
to Jan. 15, 1984 and ask both groups stoners was Francis Andrews, Olive
to come up with concrete plans to Township Trustees who asked Phil
help guide this board In their search Roberts, county engineer about
· and efforls to seek out and provide securing applications far easeIndustry and new jobs for Meigs ments.Hewasadvlsed thathecould
County.I want a joint written report secure the applications at the county
garage.
from both groups for the board's
New hot Une service
review, with definite direction they
A letter was received from Mike
feel the board can move."
John Riebel, county superintend· Swisher of the Department of
ent, asked the commission about Welfare which advised that the
office quarters for the oounty board. Meigs County Child Abuse Hot Line
The county board, preSently service went into effect Set. 27. The
located in the former Children's numberfortheChlldAbuseHotLine
Home buDding, will have to leave Is 992·3658.
The Meigs County Welfare Detheir present location as It Is part of
parlment wlll provide tralnlng to
an elderly housing complex.
The county board is to move Into Meigs Coilnty EMS dlspa tchers as
floor offices presently being to how the chtid abuse and neglect
remodled by Pomeroy Council In the calls are to be handled. The Meigs
County Welfare Department will
City Building.
Jones stated that HUD has made provide to Meigs County EMS the
final approval on grant applications staff members and dates assigned
for the housing complex and after for after hours on call duty. Meigs
closing date moving procedure wUI County EMS liability endS when the
message has-been delivered to ·the
begin. Jones added that thecornmls·
slon did not want to Inconvenience Meigs County Weltare Deparln)ent
the"'?'lnty board. butmayhavetodo of the sheriff's department.
Attending were David Koblentz,
so.
there are 12 JonesandMannlngRoush,commls·
Riebel noted
employes. Pomeroy Village is stoners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and
preparing seven office spaces. Martha Chambers. ·

secooo

Wednesda_Y.. _September 28, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Free influenza vaccine now
available at health department
Influenza vaccine will be admln· who have received another type of
lstered this year free of charge by vaccine during the past 14 days, and
the Meigs County Deportment of people with a fever.
Medical experts have deter·
Health, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, as a part of the "your tax levy . mined that cer1a1n people are at
at work" program of the risk from flu. The following are
deparlment.
urged to receive the flu vaccine:
elderly,
65 or older, and people of
Norma Torres, nursing supervt·
with cerlaln chronic
any
age
sor of the department, reporls that
conditions
such
as diabetes, dis~
flu Is a respiratory disease caused
by Influenza VIrus Infection and that eases of the hear!, diseases of the
this virus Is seen In different types lungs or kidneys, and those with
from one year to the next and some severe anemia or lowered resist·
ance to Infection due to Ulness of
times even during the same year.
This year the Immunization Is medication.
against the A Brazil, A Philippines
The Meigs County Health Deparl·
an&lt;! B Singapore strains of flu as ment will give the vaccine on a first

come, llrst served basis. The first
go-around wlll be next Tuesday,
Oct.4, from 9a.m. tonoonandfrom
1 to 4 p.m. at the Metg;s Senior
Citizens Center and this time IS tor
senior citizens and disabled per·
sons. The vaccine will be admJnls.
tered to the general public on
Friday, Oct. 7, at the health
deparlment offices from 9 a.m. to
noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. Makeup
day wUI be Friday, Oct.14, for those
unable to attend on the earlier dates
and hours will be from 9 a.m. to
noon and ·from 1 to 4 p.m .
There Is a llmlted amount of
vaccine.

R.a·
Admltted··Cynthla
cine;
Permella Cox, Robson,
Middleport;
Carol Wines, Middleport; Velma
Herrick, Middleport.
Discharged--Joyce Smith,

Free clothing day
The Gallla·Melgs Community
Action Agency w1U hold Its free
clothing day for low-Income per·
sons on Friday, Sept. 30, from 9
a.m. until noon. The agency's
clothing bank Is now located In the
old high school building In Cheshire.

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

ENJOY THE GREAT FOOD AND
FINE ATMOSPHERE

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

applies only to evtnin&amp; dinner menu .)

r-=====----:-:=============-----....:.:=====

Crafts
open
house
Pages.
·

.

•

at y

•

enttne
2 Settions, 14 Pagel
20 C.nh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspape'r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tbwsday, September 29, 1983

Economists foresee budget surplus
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - - Two Ohio University
professors predict thestatewlllshow a budget surplus
ofupto$11 bllllon if a tax repeal issueon the November
ballot falls.
.
Cristina Sale, director of tbe OHice of Budget and
Management, disagreed. She forecast a surplusof$70
·
mllllon by the end of flscal1985.
Richard Vedder and Lowell Gallaway outlined their
projections at a briefing Wednesday called by Ohioans
toStopExcesslv~Taxatlon, the groupbacklngissues2
and3.
..
"Our best estimate Is that the bieniila! surpluswrnild ·
approxtmafe $1.1 billion and, even under extremely
conservative assumptions, tbe surplus should be at
least $00) mUUon," Vedder said.
"A conserv1ttve figure, which we would consider
•

very safe to use for budgetary planning purposes,
would be$lromUllon," he said.
Vedder said the budget forecast US!!d by the
administration was unrealistic and misjudged
economic recovery.
"For example, unemployment today IS below what
the administration predicts for 1985. The\lllllerestlma ·
tlon of revenues and overestimation of eJIIIendllures
results largely from the fact that lower unemployment
means more tax revenues and lower opending on
welfare than anticipated," Vedder said.
, The Celeste admlnlstratlon has predicted t!wt
repeal would cost the state $1.5 billion In revenues.
The economists pegged the figure at $14 billion and
said more than half would be covered by a projected
$aXl mtlllon surplus. Tl\at would reduce to*'IXJ mUUon

any needed spending reduction .
At the center of the difference Is the economists'
prediction that OhiO's unemployment rate wlli be
about 2.5 percent lower through flscal85 than the rate
anticipated by the admlnlstratlon.
Ms. Sale disagreed with their conclusion, sticking by
predictions of a $70 mtlllon surplus over the fiscal
biennium.
She said unemployment rates do not predict revenue
that will herecelvedfrom the personal Income, sales or
corporate franchiSe taxes.
Ms. Sale sald she did not feel it would be respdnslbie
to take a "highly optimistic approach"ln light of what
happened In recent years. That's when economic
performance failed to meet projections and the state
budget was bolstered w1th a series of permanent and

temporary tax Increases.
Earlier Wednesday, the Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association called on Gov. Richard
Celeste to remove himself from any leadership role to
defeat Issues 2 and 3.
Issue 3 would repeal the recently enacted 90percent
Increase in the s tate income tax. Issue 2 would require
a three-fifths legislative vote, instead of a simple
majority, to Impose tax Increases.
James Monroe, the group's executive director. said
such a step by the governor would block "partisan
posturing" by pro-repeal forces.
Monroe predl~ted that repeal would result In mass
state employee layoffs, destructive cutS In education
subsidies and "a total slaughter" of major state
economic development programs.

·Jobs hill tabbed model project
CINCINNATI (AP) - State and·-·
business leaders joined Wednesday
with U.S. Secretary of . Labor
Raymond J. Donovan to promote a
jobs training program they btlled as
a national model.
Donovan said the program Is what
the Reagan admlnlslratlon had In
mind when It went to Congress to
argue fbr replacing the old Comprehenslve Employment and Tralnlng
Actprogram.Hesald$58billlonwas
spentonCETA.
CETA's largest drawback was
that It didn't InvolVe a retraining
commllment by the private sector,
Dorovan said.
"There were some successes. But
thereweretoomanylalluresandthe
missing Ingredient was partnership

- the titvolvement, deep Involvement, the buylng·ln, by the private
sectpr Into this tJ:alnlng program,"
he said.
Gov. Richard F . Celeste, business
leaders and state legislators at·
tended the ceremony.
Celeste told Donovan, "Ijustwant
tO assure you and everyone here that
Ohio's wllUng workers are eager to
have the opportunity to participate
In a tralnlng program of this kind."
The program lstobeconductedby
the Greater Cincinnati Industrial
Tralnlng Corp., a non-profit coati·
tlon of schools, government organi·
zatlons and 14 companle~ led by
General Electric Co.
Donovan pronounced the
Cincinnati-area program a natt.onal

pilot project. Geneml Electric
played host to the ceremonies at Its
jet engine manufacturing plant In
suburban Evendale.
Donovan pledged his depart·
ment's Intention to Invest a $1.1
mtlllon grant In the program.
General Electric, which played a
lead role In forming tbe Cincinnati·
area tralnlng coalition, ligures It will
invest at least $2 mUllan In
developing course matertals for the
program at Its plant, wllich already
housesanemployeetratnlngcenter.
The program 1s Intended to train
poor minorities, workers displaced
by technological changes and
others.
It will provide them wlth training
materials and classes ln vocational

schools, scheduled to begin In early

198!1.
The Jralnlng is for Industrial
machining and fabrication work
such as turning, mUllng, drUllng,
grinding apd welding. The training
coalition also promises to help wl\h
job placement.
"I don't think bt terms of politics
when I'm talkJng about meetings
like this today," Donovan said. "If
there Is political benefit, so belt. But
Governor Celeste and I, standing
together, attacking jointly a problem that transcends politics-we're
talldng abQut pain. So that if good
comes ouf'of lt' for me or Governor
Celeste or President Reagan, that Is
Incidental to the historic thing that
we've done here today.",

I

Representative Boster says wage gap 'unfair'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Men
women and this Is unfair, says a
Gallla County lawmaker who has

~01fer

·

Voi.32,No. I 19

When you buy one meal at theregular price, receive another meal
of the same value or less, at

Note: If yoo chose am111l of lesser value rt will be at Y,
price, not the expensive meal.

·

Copyorlghted 1983

are paid higher wages In Ohio than

1/2 PRICE

Page7

e

Valuable Coupon

When you present this coupon.

Stoey on Page 3

Pages3,4

Village mayor ends
several court cases

of~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Community Comer

Local football wrapups

these are the strains selected by the r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~!!!!!!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w
&lt;::enter of Disease Control In AUanta
as being the rnatn offenders this fall
and winter season.
,
The vaccine will not give the
receiver the flu as It Is a killed VIrus
vaccine, MS. Torres reporls. How·
ever, the vaccine can cause mUd
side effects to a few people and
these, most commonly, are a sore
Holland bulbs give your
arm at Injection site, fever, chills,
garden
bright, beautiful
headache or muscle aches for 24 to
flowers
from late
48 hours. Most people who receive
winter
'ti)
June.
the vaccine have no pr only a mUd
reaction, Ms. Torres points out.
However, residents should check
with a physician If the vaccination
Is be!Jig ·considered for children ·
under three years; pregnant
Crocus, Hyacinths, Tulips, Daffodils,
women; people ~Uerglc to eggs,
Anemones and Grape Hyacinths.
chicken or chicken feathers, people

rumors tliat other potllnes will
begin production this fall.
'"The rumor Is that on Nov .1, they
are going to start up a second
pottlne," said Charles Georgi, who
wsa tald off ftir 19 months be!ore
being recalled In May.
. He said he has become more
optimistic recently.
"In May," Georgi said, "we had
the attitude, 'let's not lake our Shoes
ott just yet.' When I carne back, I
kept all my tools In a box so that
wben we gave them back, It
woUldn't he that difficult to round
One defendant was fined and five
them up."
And Rolin Kittle, who also just
Pomeroy MayorC!arenceAndrews
returned to work at the reduction
others
forfeited
Tuesday
night. bonds In the court
plant, concurred with Georgi . .
Fined
·$213 ·and . .costs on a·
"There Is talk that we are going to
!repassing
charge was Joe Vadlf
get another potllne slarled," said
Pomeroy.
Forfeiting
bonds were
Kittle. "I believe things are looking
Latimer
Jerlc,
Athens,
$51; Bar·
up."
bara
·
Nixon,
Steubenvtlle,
$45;
Despite the optimism from most
Dewey
Horton,
Jr.,
Mlddleporl,
$48,
experls and Ravenswood workers,
·and
Kent
Wolfe,
Route
3,
Racine,
·
aluminum Industry experts warn
that foreign lmporls could hurt the $43, all on speeding charges, and
!3flan Armes, Mlnersvtlle, $43,
recovery In America.
Since 9180, the analysts say, assured clear distance.
North American aluminum plants
have been exporting more metal
than fabricators have demanded.
But In 1983, with U.S. production Halloween on agenda
down substantially, Innports are
Plans for a community Halloween
running 69 percent higher than In
party
will be made at a meeting of
1982 as foreign producers have
the
Middleport
Chamber of Com·
moved In to fill the demand left by
merce
to
be
beld
at 8 p.m. Thursday
Idled production lines like those at
at
the
~e
Restaurant.RepreRavenswood.
The lnnporls have trimmed the sentatlves of the vUiage, the
North American net export margin Middleport PTo and others Inter·
to only 10 percent, analysts say, and ested In helping with the party are
could bite Into the home market Invited to attend the meeting and
· add lnputfortheplans. Mrs. Yvonne
soon lf the trend continues.
Scally, president of the Middleport
Chamber, has been named to
Deer killed in accident
coordinate the party by Middleport
VUiage Council. The party Is
TheGallla·Melgs post of the state planned In the town In lieu of trick or
highway Investigated a car-deer treat night.
accident on Eden Ridge Road, a
mlle east of Ohio 681, on Tuesday
morning.
Plan pep rally
Sharon E. Barber, 28, Reedsville,
was not' Injured In the accident,
Pre-game pep rally for Meigs
which occurred at 8:10a.m. when a
Marauders Friday, 7 p.m. on
deer ran Into the path of Barber's
parking lot by Pomeroy Area
eastbound vehicle and collided.
Chamber of Commerce in conjunc·
The deer was killed and Barber's
tlon with the Meigs Athletic Boos·
car was slightly damaged.
ters and Meigs Marching Band and
Another deer accident was lnves·
cheerleaders; march to stadium
ligated Monday night, the patrol
led by band following rally.
said.
A vehicle driven by Richard B.
HIU, 17, Racine, was eastbotind on
Ohio 338 at 9:48p.m. when the deer Surgical patient
ran Into the path of HIU'svehlcieand
was killed. The vehicle was slightly
Glada Davis, Dexter ,Is a surgical
damaged.
patient at Pleasant Valley Hospital
In PolntPleasant. Her room number
Veterans Memorial
Is 109.

Phils win NL East

introduced a bill to eliminate the
wagegap. "
Rep. Jolynn Boster, D.Calllpolls,
and representatives of the Com·

Gov. Celeste praises
his cost-cutting effort
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
Richard Celeste told the Ohio Public
Expenditure Council on Wednesday
that he has done more than raise
taxes to balance the state budget
and be criticized a tax repeal efforl.
In a prepared text released before
the speech, Celeste charged that
criticism of a state budget surplus
after .the tax hike was "political
eyewash from the very people who
failed In not one, or two, or three, but
four attempts during the last two
years to achieve a balanced
bUdget."

Celeste outlined live steps to the
spendlng-wa tchdog group he said
dldn'' Involve taxes but helped
Improve Ohio's finances from the
$500 million deficit he Inherited.

Those measures were:
-Orderbtg $282 mllllon bt cuts on
Feb. 1 to be shaved from the state
budget within five months .
-"An attack on waste and
Inefficiency" that Included abolish·
lng 8,&lt;XX! vacant state jobs, four
agencies. 29 print shops and 1,180
t.ake-home cars.

President considers
Watt matter 'closed'
WASHINGTON (AP) - James
Watt wUI stay on as Interior
secretary and President Reagan

"considerS the matter closed." a
White House spokesman said Wed·
nesday. But a survey of RepubU·
cans, coupled with a unanlnn6us
Democratic caucus, showed a clear
majority of tile Senate ready to vote
forWatt'souster.
And House Republican Leader
Robert Michel of Dllnols had harsh
words for the Interior secretary
following a White House meeting,
claiming calls for his resignation
"may not Ill! aU that far from the
mark."
The Senate may face within days
a resolution drafted by Minority
Leader Robert Byrd, D·W. Va.,
requesting Reagan to "request
withoUt delay the resignation of
Secretary James Watt" lor conduct
''uilbeftttlllg a ~entor cabinet

rnernber.''
The measure, wJ.llch could face a
flllbusli!!' by Watt's supporters, says
the secretary was "Insensitive and
. Insulting to all AmeriCans" when he
retem!d to an advisory panel last
Week as "a black .. a woman. two
Jews and a cripple."
•

Senate Republican sources, who
asked not to be ldentlfled, said that a
survey conducted privately by
MaJority Leader Howard H. Baker
Jr., R-Tenn., for the White House
suggested that the resblutlon would
prevaU, possibly by a comforlable
margin. '!'he survey showed the
measure would pick up more than 13
of the Senate's 55 Republicans.
Earlier Wednesday. Senate Democrats voted unanimously In a closed
caucus to supporl the resolution.
Chief presidential . spokesman
Larry Speakes told reporters at a
White House briefing that public
sentiment against Watt seemed to
be easing. While letters and
telegrams were running heavily
against Watt last week, they now
seem to be "evenlngup,"hesaki.He
declined to be more speclflc.
"The president conSiders the
matter closed. It'.s behllld us,"
Speakes said.
Baker said earlier In the day he
thoUght that the congressional
clamOr over Watt had crested.
Baker told reporters that Watt ll"a
Utile better off today than he was il
few days ago...

,,

munlcalions Workers of America,
Council of Public Workers, outlined
the proposal at a· news conference
Wednesday.
Mrs. Boster said she has a
commitment of support from Gov.
Richard Celeste.
Men are paid higher wages
generally and It lsunfalr"whenmen
and women are dolilg the same
thing," she said.
The bUI creales a 15-member task
fol'ce to study salary Inequities and
make recommendations for ellml·
natlngthemtotheOhioDepartment
of Administrative Services.
The measure further ""JUires the
department to Implement the task
lbrce recommendations within ttve
years. "That's the teeth nfthe bill,"
Mrs. Boster said.
Arthur L. Evans, dfrloctor of the
CWA, noted that the federal Equal
Pay Act was enacted 20 years ago
an!l similar provisions were put Into
the Clvll Rights Act 10
ago.
"Clearly, they arenotenough,"he
said.
Evans said women Hrn only 59
cents for every dollar'fnen earn as a
national average. "Here In Ohio, I
regret to say that we are even below
that average," he said.
Calling attention · to "59 Cents"

years

badges which are being used to
promote the legislation, Evans said,
"We should be wearing badges that
read 56 cents."
He called for labor, women's,
community, and civil rights organi·
zatlons to join together to work for
"the eradication of the obvious.
Inequities Iii wages among the
·
people of our state."
Carla Katz, coordinator of the
employee group's pay equity cam·
palgn, said that for every women
executive "there ai:e thousands of
secretaries."
She said &amp;1 percent of aU women
who work are In just 25 job
categories.
"Those Job categories are the
lowest · paid, lowest status, most
dead-end," Ms. Katz said.
"Iristead of unreaUstlcaUy urging
women and minorities out ofthe jobs
they hold ~ and often !Ike- we are
focusing on getting those jobs
re-evaluated according to their real
worth," she said.

Escapee
captured
John A. Park, 34, who escaped
from the Meigs CoUnty Jail on Sept.
8, has been apprehended by the

GIVEN BID 8Vi I Bl -

Interior IJecriary , _ w....

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'* 11111117l!lllilllnulllc
receive

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Pnlldl!llt B I iML P pn. (.\P
r uerpllat.o).

Columbus Swat Team, Gary Wolfe,
special Investigator for the Meigs
County sheriff's department reported today.
Park, who was returned here
from Callfornla on July 15 to answer
a child stealing Indictment was
talking with his attorney on Sept. 8
and was given permission to make a
phone call. When the deputy In the
sheriff' sdeparlmentwas busy at the
time, Park sUpped out the door. He
ran down Court St. being pursued by
a deputy. He ran into the Pizza
Shack. then btto the Meigs 1nn and
apparently out a rear door there.
Iri Columbus, Park Is being held
• burglar)', iwtlo theft and parole
vtllatlon chargl!s and will eventu·
ally be returned here to face the
child stealing charges as well as
failure to appear In court. 'The grand
Jury !ICheduled to meet on Oct.171s
expected to consider his case
furtber,

'.

NATIONAL PILOT PROGRAM - U.S. Secretary of labor
Raymond J. Donovan (left) talks with Ohio Govemor Richard F.
Celeste during a visit to the , General Electric plant In Evendale
Wednesday afternoon. The Greater Cincinnati Industrial Training
Corporatkln received a 51.1 mUUon grant to help fund an e&gt;&lt;perlmental
training program called the "National Pilot Program." (AP
Laserphoto).

Athens treasurer
pleads not guilty
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Athens
hefatis to appear at later hearingsCounty Treasurer Richard Coe has
the amount that a state audit
pleaded Innocent to charges that he
Indicated was missing from the
committed !heflin office and aided a
treasurer's office. Cqe also was
former employee in stealing public
prohibited from going to his
funds .
courthouse office or contacting his
Coe entered the plea In Athens employees.
County Common· Pleas Court on
Nolan described the alleged theft
Wednesday shortly after a grand
as "the scheme that was adopted
jury Indictment was filed. The
over a course of years." The
Indictment charges Coe with two
Indictment states the offenses
felonies - theft In offlce,and ai&lt;;llng
occurred between March 12, 1979,
or abetting theft In office.
and July 1, 1983.
Special Prosecutor Michael NoNolan said the money was
lan said the charges result from
missing from a pool of undeposited
what he alleged was a "scheme"
tax money kept in the treasurer's
between Coe and a former deputy
office. As people paid delinquent
clerk, now dead.
taxes, the money-lfpald In cashIf convicted, Coe faces a maxl·
was kept In the safe rather than
mumsentenceoftwoyearstnprlson · deposited at a bank, Nolan said. ·
and a $5,000 fine on each charge. He
At one point, the amount of
also would be banned from holding
undeposlted money In the safe
public office If convicted. His trial
reached $103,&lt;XX!, Nolan said.
was set for Nov. 15.
Nolan alleged Coe and the former
Coe refused conunent when asked deputy clerk, whom he would not
If he was considering resigning.
name, wrote personal checks and
Judge William Roland, based on
put them in the safe, then removed
recommendations from Nolan, con·
money. But the checks were never
tlnued the recognizance bond set
deposited.
earlier In municipal court. Coo's
Nolan said that from time to time,
attorney, Ron DeVeau, did not
cash was returned to the safe and the
object.
checks removed. Nolan said that on
Coe was released to the custody of occasion, cash was removed with·
his attorney and will forfeit $94,62311 out checks being left in the safe.
I,

I

\

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