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                  <text>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....

..................
'

: Lie

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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

\

�Pameroy-Micldleport, Ohio

Thursday, Septemb.r 29, 1983

...

Cnntment

Phils win NL East pennant; ;..
Dodgers need just one game .

·•

.

Pap 2- The Daily Sentinel
,_,_IIY Middleplllt, Ohio
Thunday, Sep,.mber 29,

Mlch"'l Bolender IIIli) ...... , ................... E

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Wrtter
The Phlllles are In and the
Dodgers are on tile brink. But a rare
rain shower in Southern California
kept Los Angeles from securing Its
division title.
Philadelphia won it s fifth East
crown In eight years , clinching It In
style Wednesday with a 13-6blitzlng
of the Chicago Cubs. Phlladelphla
has won 12 of Its last 13 games to
sha tter the division race.
. The Dodgers blew a 3.0 lead and a
4·3 edge In tho! loth Inning and then
saw the rains force a halt to thetr
game ·1n San Diego with the score
tied 44 In the top of the 14th inning.
The teams will play a doubleheader
today.
Leading by 4% games, the
Dodgers need only one victory in
five rema ining games or an Atlanta
loss to claim the title.
· After Atlanta split with Houston,
winning :Yl and falling 5·1, the
Dodgers' magic number dropped to
one. But the elements stopped th~
Dodgers !rom getting that one
Wednesday night.
Elsewhere, it was New York 4,

Steve Crow 11501 ................................. CB

Pittsbufgh2; Montreal4,St.LouiSO,
and Cincinnati 5, San Franc!sco 4.

Mexico laughs last ___:____w_u_ti.a_m_F._._Buc_k_ley_J_r

The Daily Sentinel
111 Coqr! Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVIJrEJ) TO THE IN'l'EltE'IT OF THE MEIGS-MASON !\REA
~~~

S!m~ .......__..__,..,,...,....,c:~o..,.

~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulstant Publishe r/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manacer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlolll and the American Newspape r Publisher Association.

Well, the United Nations General
Assembly Is In seSsion. The press
will report the main points of two or
three world leaders who address
the body, and then there will be 12
weeks of wrangling, for the most
part uMotlced, unless the United
Nations rediscovers that Israelis a
racist state, or comes 'tn wltll a
resolution to the effect that Great
Britain should suirender the Falk·
land Islands to Argentina, the
United States, l!uerto Rico and tlie'
VIrgin Islands to anybody In the
area otller than the United States.

And It Is not inconceivable that we
will hear an Interesting clalm from
Mexico, or so my Informants advise
me.
To put the General Assembly
business In perspective, a reminlscence. A few years ago the
ambassador (unnamed) of a coun·
try (unnamed) approached a high
official (uruiamed) In The New
York Times and said to him (I have
by now observed the frontiers of
discretion ' Imposed on me by the
narrator): "Sir, the prtme mlnlster
of my country Is giVing a speech

tomoiTOw al the General Assembly
which he considers to be of
historical Importance. It your
newspaper · doeoj · not cover that
s~h. I shall be tired." Tile
ambassador all but got down 011 hls •
knees to beg attention. Tile executive to whom be spoke said kindly
that he needed to be gutded by
objective standards of what his
paper deemed newsworthy. The
upshot was that the prtme mlnlster' s speech was reprinted In tullln
Tile New York Times. As a paid ad.
All of which Is by way of warning

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They sllould be less Cha• SOO words
lena. All letters are subje ct to edltlna and muM be sl.rned wllb name, addreu •nd
lelepbone •umber. No •n•lped letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
cood taste, addressln&amp;lat~uea, not pe1'8011aH&amp;Iea.

.·

Reagan diplomacy:
foreign &amp; domestic
President Reagan, modifying his position In negotiations to reduce
: - medium-range nuclear weapons In Europe, used his United Natlol)S
&gt; speech to gain ground In tile competition with the Soviet Union for a
· :favorable political position.
.
As such, his address dedicated to peaceful problem-solving stressed
: :each step the United States took to negotiate new arms measures In Europe
: : ~ to shrink the global arsenals of the superpowers.
• •. Buf Reagan, as In almost all major speeches, was also directing his
: ..WOrds at a domestic audience. Thl!' reOects White House concern about
::whether there Is politk;al support for his generally tough language aimed at
-: the Soviets.
.
. · While rife with pledges to be flexible In his arms control approach and to
.• negotiate, the speech was lacking In specWc proposals to demonstrate
: -~~Ctual flexibility.
,• · Reagan, perhaps In recognition of tbe diplomatic setting of his speech
:"before the General Assembly on Monday, used·Jess harsh language than at
:-any point In the lastfew weeks when he discussed the downing of a Korean
::Jumbo jet by the Soviets on Sept 1.
.
; Because the decision to deploy new weapons In Europe must have the
: · i:ontlnued support of the governments there, Reagan was playing to some
: •eitent ID an lnte1113tlonal audience..
.
· . ·.In Europe, there Is no unanimity over the North Atlantic Treaty
plan to begin deploying the first of 1~ Pershing 2 and 464
: · 8round-launched cruise missiles In December.
' : :Therefore, Reagan Is under some pressure lo convince the E\U'OI)eiiJIS
; :$it he Is sparing no effort to reach an agreement that would lead him to
::Ciincel the deployment decision.
:: •. A senJor Reagan administration official stressed that there was no plan
: ·ti&gt; stall the deployment without an agreement with the Soviets.
:; · .At the heart of Reagan's speech was an offer to reduce the number of
;;,i.:w weapons the United States will Install In Europe If the Soviets will
~·ieduce their global stockpUe of nuclear weapons. Reagan gave no ligures.
· ~; :For hiS audience, made up of dorens of foreign ministers and several
':Jteads of state or government, Reagan framed mucb of hls speech In the
; )lOtion that the United States has been the SIIJll!l'il'IWeln favor f1IUTIIS
;:i:ontml and the one making the most offers, while the Soviet Union has
''&lt; r c.,, each proposal.
his spei!Ch, Reagan said the United States was propoatng new g}mal
: ·tlmits on nuclear wetljlOilS. Soviet reductions, he said, would mean llwt the
States "will not offset the entire Soviet global mlsslle deployment
:through U.S. deployments In Europe."
:.; 1n addition, he said, the United States was tJI"''IIII'@d to show greater
: 'flftJblllty In the European talks and would seek a way to moo the Soviet
:{tistre lllat an agreement should limit aircraft as well as missiles.

&gt;

&lt;

i

::brKantzatton

:;· ii.

::united

.. ..

.'

.'

{Letter to editor
.•'..
.... ....
.·. ..

.•

.

work. Raising marijuana Is not only
against the law, It harms the people
who smoke It and a lot of young kids
are getting hooked on lt. Tiley go
from pot to harder stu!t. 'I'IIat guy
said a lot of the people who grow It
even go to church. They might go to
chu.ch but they sure don't go to .
Heaven. God wants his people doing
honest work.
I'd Hke to hear If anyone else feels
the way I do.
Nora Nltz
Pomeroy, Ohio

....
•'

•
In
{Today
history
.•

•

.

·: : Today Is Thursday, Sept. 29, the 272nd day of1983. There are93 days left
:: 'tn the year.
·
·•• Today's highlight In history:
, ,_;; • In 1789, the U.S. War Department established a regular army with a
:'!-:Strength or 700 men.
.
• On this date:
• In 1941, the United States and Britain agreed to send war supplles to the
: Soviet Union to help resist Nazi Invaders.
: In 1962, President John F . KeMedynatlonallzedtheMisslsstppiNat!onal
· :c;uard as state officials defied federal court orders to enroll a black
~:student, James Meredith, at the University or Mississippi.
And In 198J, a draft of a Senate report said the Justice Department had
. .shoWn no favoritism In Its probe or Libyan ties Involving President Jimmy
. Carter's brother, Billy.
Ten years ago: VIce President Spiro Agnew said he would not resign It
: Indicted, and he denounced the Justice Department for what he called Its
: ''unprofessional and malicious and outrageous" handling of Its
Investigation of charges he took kickbacks while governor of Maryland.
· Flve years ago: President Jimmy Carter ordered strtklngclerks back to
"·'·'Work for 60 days to end a crippling nationwide rail shutdown.
• One year ago: U.S. Marines i.ook up positions In Beirut, Lebanon. and
; 1eopetled the city's airport after IsraeU troop6 wltlldrew from the area.
• ' Today's birthdays: Gene Autry and Greer Garson are 75. Movie
.
: producer Stanley Kramer Is 70.
Thought tor today: "No ooe can worship God or love his neighbor on an
empty stanach." -President Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) .

1

'•

Tile htesls Is quaint, but also
prescient, In a way. In the llrst
place, we must remind ourselves
that during the 15th and 16th
centuries, the habit ol enterprising
explorers was to arrive somewhere, plant a flag wherever the
boat put In, and declare that all land
stretching In any direction from
that flag for 1,001 miles was the
property of His Most Majestic King
Ferdinand the Bull.

" ..

Paul
Todd Cullums,
MEIGS FROSH - Members of the
DeRDY Welllh, Mike lUDell, and Don Sleln. Third rOW,
lreshmall lootballleam. Fronj row, lefl to right, are
BD1y Ebllo, Tim Durst, Charley Barrell, Donnie · Sc!ott Powell, l. R. Kitchen, Steve MUSier, Jesse
Rowan!, Huey Eason, Kent Eads, and collllh Larry
Becker, PhD King, TlmBaaaell, Rex Haggy, and Sean
G..m-. Absent Wall RaYmond Rider.
Jeffers; manager. Second row, Brtan Tannehill, Don

-

Marauders seek third TVC victory
E~ : ·: : : : ::: : : : : : : : : :· :.: •.• :t!

, The long quest for a Trt-Valley
championship continues Friday In
the Meigs Marauders' home opener
against VInton County.
Meigs must win to remain
· unbeaten (2·0.1) andkeeppacewlth
· 3·0 Belpre and Warren Local, both
are expected to win this week.
The Marauders are fresh ott their
· biggest victory of the season, 7-6 ·
over NelsonvUle-York,
The Meigs· Vinton County match·
up should answer the question of
just how good are the VIkings' last
opponent, Belpre.
The Eagles romped over VInton
County 4&amp;.12, scorlng41 points In the
first half.
"We match-up size wise. Tiley
. had good execution In the Meigs
... ·, preview," romrnented Meigs coach
Charles Chancey on VInton County.
When VInton County's head
coach Jeff Whittaker said the ·
Marauders were pretty physical,
he no doubt had heard of the
block-buster at Nelsonvtlle-York
last week.
"'I'IIey're a ball-control team that
thl-ows well and have nice running
backs. Tiley showed they can come
up with the big play," said the
second-year coach of tbe VIkings .
Vinton County carne out of the

Now as we know, Mexico
achieved Its independence from
Spain In 1821, whereafter It grandly
assumed that anything that had
been Spain's became Mexico's. It
there are records on ·how many
Mexicans actually resided In what
Is now American territory, I have
not heel! able to find them. 'I'IIere
were a few Mexican settlers, and a
fair number of Mexican prtests
attempting to civilize American
Indians, whose title to the lands In
question certainly anteceded Mexl·
co's. But so preponderant was the
American lnOuence that Texas
declared Its Independence and
achieved It a mere IS years after
Mexico shook off Spain.

.'Computer ignorance ______;,__J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n
WASHINGTON - Tile Pentagon
has blundered Into the computer
age with all the recklessness of the
legendary Light Brigade.
' Computer contracts have been
bursting Hke shrapne~ scattering
dollars to the winds. The cost to tile
taxpayers Is already measured In
the hundreds of millions of dollars.
Here are three outrageous examples of sky-high overruns In Pen·
tagon computer contracts, all with
tile same suppUer - the Boeing

Co.:
- In 19f0, the Army signed a
contract with Boeing to streamline
recruiting programs. The Initial
cost was supposed to be $8.5 million
over a five-year period. 'I'I1ree
years later, the cost estimate now
stands at a whopping $120 mWion,
with no hard final figure In sight.
Tile Army expected to pay no more
than $10,001 a month for the
computer service; yet the first
month's bill from Boeing was $1.3
mUllon - nearly a 13,001 percent
overrun.
- During the same pertod, the
Navy awarded Boeing a contract

for similar services. Tile original
explained why · this problem may
Administration.
· cost estimate was $524,QX) over a
exist In all federal agencies:
It now appears that the GSA's
three-and-a-half year ')lerlod. The
Program managers' tenure Is often
Inspector general, Joseph A.
Navy now has revised that estimate
no more than ll! or 24 months, so
Slckon, Is more Intent on turning his
up to $13 million. The monthly cost
they're Inking for quick fixes
Investigators Into well-groomed
of the service was supposed to be
Instead of long-term results. Furth·
poodles than Into bare-fanged
$12,001; the first month's bill was
ermore, their backgrounds have
watchdogs.
1
$.li0,001.
not prepared them lo cope with
He recently ordered 32 audltrirs
- The Air Force gave Boeing a
high-technology problems - and
and office directors to attend a
five-year contrct for teleprocessing
the computer field Is still so new It's
tw!Hiay training course (at W a .
services, at a total estimated cost of _ hard even to find outside consulhead) that GSiinslders refer to as a
$426,001. Tile conttract Is only about
tants who know what they're doing.
"tlnlshing school for etiquette
a year old, so no exact figures on
Meanwhile, the GAO has recomtraining. II
cost overruns are avaUable yet. But
mended that all three services'
Tile offtclal title of the course was
In a letter to Rep. Jack Brooks,
COntracts with Boeing be terml·
"Effective Presentation and Be0.Tex. , the General Accounting nated and put out for competitive . havior Style Recognition." In hls
Office predicted: "Tills contract
bids. The Army and Navy have
wrttten justification for the $9,1188
could cost the government far more
shown a willingness to heed the expenditure, Slckon wrote that his
than has been estimated."
GAO's suggestion. But the Air office "has an Immediate need for
Congressional Investigators told
Force "has remained firm In Its
tralntog of Its top nianagement
my associates Indy Badhwar and
support of the contract," a GAO
staff In the theory and practice" ol
Donald Goldberg that the main
Memo said, adding: "We believe
bureaucratic behavior.
reason for the huge cost overruns Is
the Air Force Is wrong."
Tile course, described as "lnten·
quite simply bad management- or
SOME JUNKY ARD: President slve" In a GSA memo, consists of
none at all - by Pentagon officials
Reagan campaigned on a promise oral, audio and video presentations
responsible for tile comp11ter proto clean out waste and fraud In designed to prepare Sicken's
grams. Tiley don't know what
government agencies by appoint· sleuths "to present major briefings,
they're doing or what the compulng Inspectors general who were as conduct exit Interviews and lead
ters sboUld do.
mean as junkyard dogs. A principal ·discussion groups, Including situaAn analysts prepared for the target of Republican wrath was the tions where the audience could be
General Services Administration scandal-rtdden General Services hostlle or negative."

· Player of Week

'·'

'I'IIere Is a baste slmllartty
between what the United States Is
doing In Lebanon and In El
Salvador, but not the one Washing·
ton keeps trying to sell.
The official line In both cases Is
tllat American involvement In tile
respective conflicts Is In support of
threatened legitimate
governments.
The reality In both cases Is that
functioning governments, legttl·
mate or otherwise, do not exist.
What the United States govern·
ment Is attempting to do In hotll
cases Is create governments to Its
liking out of antagonistic Interest
groups.
In El Salvador, the "govern·
ment" that has Washington's polltl·
cal blessing and matertal support
consists of a president at tile head of
a powerless admtnlstratlveappara·
tus, a constituent assembly elected
to wrtte a new constitution. and the
military establlslunent.
Tile civilian authorities do not
control the military, which Is
nothing unusual In Latin Amerlca.
But neltller do the generals and
colonels have the ctvWan political
apparatus firmly In hand certainly not that part of It taking
orders from the far· right assembly
president, Roberto D'Aubulsson.
· As a matter of fact, the com·
m11,11ders don't even have complete
control of the mWtary. Elements
moonlighting as "death &amp;quads"
are responsible for most of the
civilian cSeaths In the four-year-old
civil war.
An additional element In the mix
Is the Salvadoran oligarchy, a tiny
elite that long ran the country as a
private bnslnen and would go to
almost any lenglbs, Including eUmlnatlon of a large part of the-

Salvadoran population, to maintain
a reasonable facsimile of the status
quo.
'I'IIat's El Salvador, and It Is
almost simplicity Itself compared
to Lebanon where the major
Interests so murderously Involved
are the Maronlte Christian Pha·
lange of President Amln Gemayel,
several other Christian communities Including non-Phalange Maronltes, Shiite and Sunnt Moslems,
and the semi-Moslem Druse, most

of which aresupposedtobepartof a
"legitimate" Lebanese government but most of which are now
shooting at each other.
Washington's efforts would ap·
pear to have the best chance In El
Salvador. There are fewer parties
to the conflict, political processes
are functioning to a degree and
forelgo Intervention Is less of a
factor. Nicaragua, whatever ald
the Sandlnlstas may be providing
the Salvadoran rebels, Is not Syria.

VflllonCowQ
(Oft-)

Tim GWland (100) ............................... TE
Mark Tholn!BOO (170) .......... .. ..... .......... ..T
John Wolnel.dorf tlBO ! ....... .. ....... ............ G

LyM DodrW (16li ) ........... ............ ...........C
Curt Pratl!l' iiiMl) .................................. G
MikeStrtte t210) ............ ............... ........ .T
Aaron Botthe (710 ) .......•.... :..................SE
Terry Rildekln (1501 :....................... .... QB

MJkeQI!esley II851 ....... .. ..................... HB
Tim Maloy (IJI)) ..... ............ .. ........... ·. · FB
Roger Mace (156~ ............................. .. . HB
(Del-)

l!uoNnK

Ali VIII A\'1 m
Jon Perrln .......... ... .......... 68 199 2.9 4
Shawn Eads .. .................. 43 182 4.2 1
Chrls Burdelte ................. 38 133 3.5 1
DaveFollrod ............... .... l7 75 4.4 0
NlckRiggs .. ... .. ............... 23 ~7 2.0 2
MlkeChancey ................... .2 11 5.5 0
James Acree .................... 4
9 2.3 1

6

2.0

0

IU:

.....

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

Shawn Eads .... .... ........................ 7 169 0

NEW YORK (AP) -The New
, York Jets of the National Football
· LeagUewillmovetoGlantsStadlum
. in East Rutherford, N.J., at the end
of the season, becoming the second
. NFL team to leave New York City
; . within a decade.
· Mayor Edward I. Koch an·
., nounced at a news conference that
the city was giving up Its fight to
keeP the Jets at Shea Stadium,
. where they have played since 1964•
The team has been dissatisfied
with the condition of the ballpark
and with Its lease, which It said Is tar
·less favorable than ti\at held by
baseball's New York Mets. The
lease expires after this season.

&amp;;JVV\IIt:'

-

to fully

·

rebuild

_ yourhome?
Now. if your home is de·.
;troyed by fire. Allstate s
new Home Replacement
Guarantee* can pay to
rebuild it. no matter
how high building costs
rise- even 1f at costs
more than you 're
covered for. Call me .
·Opt1onal ln m011 ~t•t.- on

Butch SIUE!I 1176) ... ,.... ...... ................... LT
Jay Wh!ttlngloo (154) ...................... .. .. . LG
Jay Evans (156}·..................................... C
Dave Barr (178) ..... ......... .................... RG
Tony Welch (240) .. .. .. .......................... RT

Dan Tbolnas (156 ) ..... .... ........... ........... RE
Nlclr Riggs (140) ............. ......... ........... QB

Chrla Burdette 1175) .......... .. ................ FB
Dave Follrod £155) ....... .. ................ .....WB
Jon Perrin U74)and Shawn Eads (161) .......................TB

Andy IannarelU (~~-~ .................. MG
Barr
....................... . ..... ..........T

5~e \:::

Mark Hammonds

: ..:.:·.:·. :: ••J
1162) ........................ LB

Follrod and MlkeWmford (1671 ····:······· CB
Jackie Welker (l!ill) ......... .......... ..... CB

-~

Dave F.Urad ................................ 3 62 0 ·
Dan ntomas .............................. 2 19 0
TOTAL'i
U m I

Scott Gheen ..... ...... .... .................. 1

0 0

6 a&amp; 0

TOTAL'i
!kortn11

TDEPFGTP

Jon Perrtn ............................4

0

0 24

Dave Barr .............. ..............0 !HI H 12
Nick Ria ............... ........... ..2
o o 12
Clwls Burdette .............. " ..... .I
0 0 6
Sbawn Eadl ......................... !
0 0 6
james Acree .. .................. ... .1
0 0 6
Mite. Chancey .................... .. .I
0 0 6
TOrAL'i ·
10 11-10 I·! l2
Solo TacklM
(Five or more)

No.
Chr1l BW'dette ... .................. .. ............... 29
Andy lBnnarelll .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . ............. 20
Mark HarniiiDIIIII ................. .. ............... 18

Tony WeiCh ............................ .. ............ 16

Davellarr ...... .. .. .......... ........................ 10
Jay Evans ................................... : ......... B
MlkeWutford
.... ................... ................. B
.
JackJeWelkEr ..................... .. ............. .... 7

We..,t- No: YIIITD
Mike Wuttord .... .... ........ :... ...... .... 3 36 o

Jay Wh!ttlngtC!II ................... ................. . 7
Dan 'lbomas ................. ..................... .... 6
Jon Perrln ........................................ ..... 5
Scott Gheen ..................................... .... .. 5

o

Shawn Eads ..... .......................... .. ... .. .. .. ~

Nick Riggs ........................ ...... .... 1
1

O

r;J~ac~kl~e~W~el~ker;;;;;.. ·~·.·~··~·.·~·.·~.. ~..·~·.·~··~.. ·~"·~;;o~o;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;1l

'

llike

All~u. t r

, Allstate·
ilood
t',.

hands.

Sonhhrooii . IL

See or Phone
Bill Quickel
"Across From Tilt
Court House In p~·
PH. 992-6677

Syrac:use, Ohio 45779
Phone
992-6333

[

IEIIIEII FDIC

Racine, Ohio 45771
Phone (6141 949-2210

W:S·

r-------------------------~----==-=======

(011.... )
Scott Gheen (148)
and Mike Chancey (173) .................... LE

Homt""'"'' Pn h c11•~

A llllll l•lo~ura oO!

Expos 4, Cardinals 0
· Bryn Smith s hut out the defending
World Champions for the second
straight Ume, hurling a four-hlttei'
for the visiting Expos.Agalnst St.
Louis In four appearances for the
year, S mith has permitted 20

Melp

lll~ur~t ml' Cv "'tando~rd Mnd Dt luJU'

You're in

Mets 4, l'lrates 2
1\vo youngsters the Mets plali to
buUd around, Darryl Strawbetry
and Ron Darling, were heroes
agains t Pittsburgh. Strawbei-ty
slammed his . 26th · homer lind
Darling earned his first major
league win, going a ll the way with a
seven-hiller.
'
Pittsburgh' s Da le BerTa se( a .
majo r league . r:ecord when :he
reached first base on catcher's
Interference for the seventll !line
this season .

' • ••• • • • • ' • ' " ' " " " " " " "

il?)&gt;eopll~
Will your
insurance pay

Braves 3-1, Astros 1-5
Pascual Perez threw a four· hitter
and tied his career high wit~ 10
strikeouts In the opener. But •the
Astros used a four-run eighth lnrilng
off Terry Forster, highlighted; by
Tim T olman 's second double of:the
game , a two- run s]10t , to grab ;the
nightc ap. J oe Nlekro fired . a
five-hitter Jn the second gam~ at
Houston.
'

I·Meigs grid statistics I
_,

:'"Jets will move in '84

Lance
(1£01
................... .... .... CB
~~"Bolender
.· .·.·.·.·. ·. ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.:·.·.·
.................................
~

~~~~-::::::::::::·:: : : ::: :: :::::::::::::::::: :: ::::~ ~~::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::: .. :::.:

Brad Robinson .. ........ ........ 3

Tile preferred solution. 11ow that
the Reagan administration has
backed off a bit from Initial gung-ho
effort at a mWtary solution, Is a
centrist coaHtlon that could hold Its
own against extremes of left and
right. As It was originally .hoped
during the Carter administration.
Hopes are that an upcomlns
presidential election will produce a
broadly based government meettnj
those specifications. But expe:
rtence to date along that Hne Is not

too encouragtna.

gate quick this year with a 21.0 wtn
over pre-season pick Zane Trace of
the Scioto VaUey Conference. Since,
they have faltered, losing three
straight TVC games, 7-6 to Alex·
ander, 42-15 to Warren Local , and
4&amp;.12 to Belpre.
A few of the Marauders have
come down with the nu, Including
fullback-linebacker Chris Burdette,
wingback-cornerback Dave Fol·
trod, quarterback Nick RIW, and
taUback·defenslve end Jon Perrin.
But all are expect~ to go.

Dave Barr, 178 pound guard and Brel1 Korn ......................... 1 ·I ·1.0 0
Ill •1 U
I
defensive tackle woo played a good TOTALS
p .......
· game both ways and kicked the .
PAPCYIIITD
. game winning point with 13 seconds
Nick Riggs .......................... . 22 II 335 I
Mike Chancey ................ ........ 2 4 II 0
left llas been chosen as the Jaycees
U 16 411 I
player of the week. The Marauders TOTALS
. defeated Nelsonvill.,.Yorek, 7-6last
I"C Ydl 'I'D
12165 I
. Frtday night.
MJ •-Chan-y

Nice try, but... __________no_n_G_ra_iff

Won't make heaven

:; ; I am writing about an article that
; ; appeared In the paper Sunday,
&gt; sePt. ll!. Tile title MeiKS County
·: Green, farming with a difference.
;. : The guy whom the article was
::.aboUt said he'd rather be working
·; tiut, until he found a job, tllat was a
::'&gt;l'ay ot making a Hvlng. I know a lot
• of people are out of work and jobs
:· jll'e hard to find but If a person
• wanted honest work, they could find
;: Something. I never had anything all
::_my lite and don't suppoSI! I ever will
:: but what I got came !rom honest

"I broke Into the Defense Department's computer system and sold them
our light bulbs for $9,000 apiece."

that some people In .MexicO
pressing a most Interesting claim
about, oh, 25 percent of America.
The thesis will not Sutt&gt;rtseyou. It Is
that California, Arizona, New Mex·
ico and Texas are properly Mexl·
can territory, seized from Mexico
by u.s. Imperialism, and since the
world Is engaged In undoing
Imperialism, wouldn't It be appropriate for the United States to
repatrtate these territories to their
rightful owner?

Tile Dodgers built a :\.0 lead
through four innings. Then San
Diego pecked away to tie It and
loaded tile bases with none out In the
bottom of the ninth Inning. But
Dodgers starter J erry Reuss got
pinch-hitter J oe Lansford to pop out,
andBobby Brown a ndAlanWigglns
to ground into force plays to end the
threat.
Derrel Thomas homered In the
top of the lOtll, but San Diego rallied
In its hall of the lnning when rookie
Kevin McReynolds walked, moved
to second on Doug Gwosdz' s
sacrl!ice and came hom e on Gar ry
Templeton's single up tile middle.
Phlllles 13, Cubs 6
Bo Diaz and ·Joe Morgan led
Phlladelphia's 19·hit attack. Diaz,
playing on his first division winner,
went 5-for·5, Including two home
;,ns, scored four t imes and had
three RBI. Morgan, partlcipatlng pn
a seventh division champion, had
four hits and drove In three runs.
Mike Schmidt contributed his
major·league leading 40th homer
and a triple.
Schmidt, who had been critical of
Manager Paul Owens earlier this
month, thought hls verbal outbu rst
helped straighten out the team.

ON THE SPOT
FINANCING TO
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS!

�Page

4

The

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, ~ptember 29, f983

Poma...y-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily

Scoreboard

Meet the Meigs
Marauders.~ ...

\ ·&amp; l•irnor'{'

lluo. um
..: · Chlr ~o

-~1 10
.532 12~
.,~

li~

TI.'~.U~

19

.. .,
!':!

Oill&lt;l and

•

i:!

7:.!

.\tlnn1~W

Calllornla

.456
.&lt;30
A28

"' ""

~an lc

,.,

.:rr:t

"

X-&lt;'lindll'd dlvl~!on IIIII'
,
\\'fdfttNia,l·'~ Gamn•

Chica.e-o 'i Oaklantl :1
J){&gt;frt,IT !J. llallimoO,&gt; ~
BMron :1. l'o: Po.o.· \'ark ~
Mllwaukt'(' ti, &lt;;lt•vt&gt;land -1
Mlm~ l Te:!:as 'o
l&lt;dnsas Ci t~ · ll. Sl.&gt;anlC' II
'111ul";d~.'l GiU'IU~

Tt'.'Ca~

1S!£Wart .'H I at Mlnn!•sohl
' Schrom l-l-81
I
DPtroll !W!Irox 10 IUJ a t Bahim:ll'('
1 f"lana~an

12-3), t n l
B:lston !Tudor 13-11 1 a1 !'Oew York

l{;t.ddr1• :JJ-\)1, 1n1
Cll'Vr land IBcheniU:I IJ.21 ;~t Mllwal.lkee
iC&amp;ndlo\1 1 H l. In I

Chi~ fBW'ns 10-lOi a ' OakJand tWar&lt;1-31. 1n1
,
Ka nSlls City (Dlack l{).(lt a t Seanle

DAVE .B ARR
. 6-0, 178 pound
Senior Guanl

6-0, 170 pound
Junior Guanl

I"N''

1Moort'6-H\ , ml

.

OnlY ,gamH scheduled
f'rtd.t•G~

Ney,· Vork at Baitlrno;n&gt;, 2, u -n J
Minnesota at TOronto. tnt
MIJwaukre at Oe1roll, m 1
aeo.oeland at Boston. 1n1
california at Texas, 1n1
KAnsas City at Oakland. / nl
Ch~ago

at Seattle. 1nl
NAo110NAL LFAGUE

EAST DIVBION
W L
~~: -Philadelphia
88 71

az

Pittsburgh

Pet. GB
-

-~
~'119

7fi

82 77
76 83
Chicago
n
88
New York
65 93
WEST DIVtiiON
:Los Angrlcs
fO 67
Atlanta
~
12

.516

6
12
-~ 17
.4ll 221h

Montreal

st.

.m

Lwis

Hwstoo
San Diego
San F'rsnct.ro

IC

7l!

T1
1ti
73

If)

.573 .544 i.Y,r
.,. 7~
.400 13

I

Moeller rated ·third
•In computer ratings
•
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cin- wark Catholic, weresirongcontendcinnati Moeller, the winner of the
ers In their regions.
big-school state playoffs six of the
Only Youngstown Mooney, the
last eight years, was running third In
Division II titleholder last fall, was
Its own region Wednesday In the not In serious contention. Mooney
Ohio High School Athletic Associawas 14th In Region 7 with 12.00
tion's computerized weekly football · points, 16.50 behind leading Young·
ratings.
stown Ursuline.
The OHSAA released Its ratings
St.VIncent-St.Mary. a playoff
lot the first time this season. Based champion the last two seasons, was
solely or!i11 team's won-lost record
third In Region 91n Division ill with
and Its opponents' won-lost records,
24.33 points, tralllng Leavittsburg
the rankings determine the post.
LaBrae with 26.50 and Steubenville
Catholic with 25.00.
season playoff berths. -·-· .
The first two finisHers In each
West . Jefferson, the winner in
region after the final weekend of
Division IV in 1982, was second In
play Nov. 5-6 will win automatic
Region 16 with 17.00 points. Canal
berths In the playoffs.
Winchester led that region with
The first round of the playoffs wlll 17.00.
be Nov. 11-12, the semifinals Nov.
18-19 and the championship games
Newark Catholic, the defending
NQV. 25-26.
Division V king, was second In
Moeller. despite a 4-0 start and the Region 19 with 12.&lt;X1 points to 16.50
state's No. 1 Class AAA ranking In
for leading Shadyside.
The Associated Press Poll, was
Other Division I regional leaders
third behind Clnctnna u Princeton were Mentor Lake Catholic, Sanand Middletown in Region 4 In dusky and Akron Garfield with
Division L Princeton had 31.50 Westlake, Kettering Alter and
points, Middletown 30.00 and
Cincinnati Forest Park also ahead
Moeller 29.50.
In Division II. ·
Three of the other 1982 playoff
The Division ill frontrunners also
champions, Akron St.VIncent- Included Elyria Catholic, Columbus
St.Mary. West Jefferson and Ne- StCharles and Urbana.

J :.

Capt. Crow predicts

WITH

l

.462 17Y.t

Wedaelda(s Games
• PhiladPlphla 13, Otlcago 6
Atlanta.3-1, Houston 1·5
New- York fo, Plttsbu.Jih 2
Ctnclnnatl S. San Franctsro 4
Momi'Nl 4, St. Louis o
Loll ~)es fo, San Qkogo 4, 14 lnning!S.
ppd., ratn
11twtdl,y's GamM
San Ftandsco tBrelnlng 11-121 at Cln·
ctnnatl tBeTmyl 9--141
New York (HOlman 1~ 1 at Pltt.\burgh

!RhOden 12-lJ\, In\
Loll Angl'Jes /Welch 15-12 and Pma 12Rf at San Dk'go (Whitson r:,. 7 and Hawk. 1M 4-7L 2, !1-nf

Southern at home; Eastern on road
By SCO'IT WOLFE
For the second conseciltlve week
Eastern and Scuthern will be lacing
West VIrginia opponents. Scuthern
wlll play Wahama's White Falcons
In Its homecoming tilt, whlle
Eastern travels to ... Huntington
Vinson. Scuthern hopes to unvell a
repeal of last week's uprising
against Hannan, whlle Eastern
hopes to tum things around for Its
first victory.
Scutbern, 3-1 overall, goes Into Its
last non-league game, while Eastern Is 0-4. LaSt week, Scuthern
breezed . past Hannan 49-0 and
Wahama, Scutheril's opponent this
week, .s napped its losing streak with
a 42-6 friumph over Eastern.
In a game IIi· which every
Tornadc excelled, Brian Allen and
Tony Riffle proved to be the SHS
workhorses. Via rushing, receiving,
and kick returns Allen grossed over
240 yards total offense, whlle Rlffle
rushed for one touchdown and
passed for three others. Keith Cook,

Rick Bable, Jeff Connolly, and Paul
Harris also cashed in on Tornado

scores.
This week Greg Nease and Wade

Connolly, two SHS regulars, are
expected to return to the line-up
alter being sidelines with Injuries.
Jason Hill who was out last week
may also see action.
The Tornadoes will be lacing
former Scuthern mentor Bill Jewell
and his 1983 White Falcons. The
White Falcons finally put together a
consistent effort last week and
swooped In for the kll1 against
Eastern. Scuthern's tough defense
wlll have to contain the. likes o!
Anthony DIVInverizo, Donnie Van
Meter, Phll Stewart and Ron
Bradley, who are capable ground
gainers.
Wahama also has an aerial threat
with Bradley's accurate arm and
receivers Chris Humphreys and
Mike Pethtel.
Meanwhile, Eastern has had Its

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

Young Marauders post victory
MoARTHUR ·- The Meigs Ma-

'BELLY

••

lllf[ll
EVERY MONDAY NITE
Starting Oct. 3 - 7:00-8:30
INSTRUCTOR: ALMAR - From Athens
CALL FOR REGISTRATIONS

EXEROSE OASSES

problems both offensively and
defensively. Potential Is there, but
Inexperience and Injuries have not
allowed the Eagles to mesh together with consistency. Last week
EHS rushed for lust 50 yards,
passed for 67 and tallied 117 In all.
Consistency and an Improved
attitude should form the foundation
for a better outing this week.' Both
games begin at 8 p.m:

rauder reserves upped their record
to 2-0 with a 26-20 win over the
Vinton County reserves here
Monday.
Four different Marauders scored
touchdowns including James Acree
on a 65 yard run, Brad RDbinson,
eight yard run, Brett Korn, one
yard run, and Matt Riffle, 20 yard
run. Acree led Meigs in rushing
with 112 yards In 13 attempts whlle
Robinson added 54 yards In 10

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lf~INO)
. A Dlvlsl9n of Multimedia,

J~c .

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley Pub!Jshlng Company . Mul·
timedla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 9922156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Membf:'r: The Associated Press, In·

la nd Dally Press Assoclaton and the
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POSTMASTER: Send address to The
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carries. Korn was four of seven

MAI L SUBSCRIPTIONS

passing for 60 yards. Riffle pulled In
three passes for 35 yards with Nick
Bush grabbing the other completion for 25 yards.

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TOP OF THE STAIRS

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FITNESS CENTER
Ill

W.

(Formerly The Kiddie Shop)
2nd St.
Ph. 992-6720
Pomeroy, OH.

tI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~;~~

.Sirloin TIP
Dinners
2for$fj'!

90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
WITH APPROVED CREDIT

RICE'S

FURNITURE

9:30-5:00

854 Second

Closed Thurs.

Gallipolis, OH.

446-9523

•'
.

•,

Reds' annual Fan Appreciation
Day Sunday tulftlled lo~ ol. dream&amp;
for the pr1ze winnerS, but probably
none more so than the day's two
grand pr1ze reclplentJ.
Karen Gibson ol. Pol!lt Pleasant,
W.Va., was expecting a ilft upon
graduation from Marshall University this sprllig, but now, It probably
lan't necessary .•• she drcJ\'e away
trom RiVerfront Stadium with a
new, 19113 Honda Accord four-door
llf!dan. CaDit belllnner's luck, If you
wll1, built wasnotonlyKaren'sflnt
Fan Appreclatkln Day, but her first
Reds' pme as well.
The Murphy family had been
looking at new cars for some time
before attending Fan Appreciation
Day, but when they won the day's
8I!COIId grand prize, a 1983 Ford
EXP, they knew tlw!lt search had
ended. Art Murphy, who held the
winiiiDI ticket bJ the r8mlly, Will be
drtvlng hilt .new Ford between
filllbtJ, he's a U.S. Navy pUot
worlclng out of the Air Force
Institute of TecbnoloiY.
Fan Appreciation Day, which
drew a crowd of21,c&amp;'l to Riverfront
Stadium Sunday, Is an event of
long-standing In Cincinnati OD the
ftnal home weekend of the -.on.
Another flnt·tlme Fan Appreciation Day attendee, Tei:ry Lindsey,
wW bave to overcome hilt fear ot.
tiytna before he can take advantage
of hilt
forthedl.y, a WC!I!k·loiJI
dream vacation In HawaU.
'

$6495
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m

iaJ 5avings 011 our especlllliY good Srrlom Tip
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baked potato, wmm roll and butter.
-·••

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extra heavy ool&lt; """"'·

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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Only

REGISTER FOR
FREE
PRIZES!!
We're celebrating our Finll Annivenary
in the Silver Brld@e Plaza shopping
eenter here in Gallipolis and we're in a
~ to celebnte! ! !

,

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Fri. &amp; ·Sat.

•

Only

Come in and say ..hello"; look at the
huf!!e selection of name brand merchan·
dlae, and when yoo purehtUe ANY.Color
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home a 12" Solid State B&amp;W TV for just
118 11.!1 our Annivel'881')' ~us!
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• 5 Cycle d ishwasher with
features to save water, energy,
money • Ught Wast\ , Rinse &amp;
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Fri. &amp; Sat.

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RCA
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RADIO

ZENITH
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$297'

$}97

l

Upper River Rd.
(Across from the Airport)
G•llipolis

BEND, Ind. (AP) Head football coach Gerry Faust ol.
Notre Dame coached at Moeller
High School bJ CIDcbmatl before
moving to thr Golden Dome In 1981.

I

'

COLOR TV

$318
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'

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Reg.. 1299.95

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

Point Pleasant
student wins
new vehicle

f

The ole' boy himself, Major
Wahama and Southern always
Hoople, must have set some kind of
seem to add a little something extra
record last week as he guessed
as the two crossrtver rivals battle
himself Into 17 of 20 picks for an
with the Tornadoes coming out on
(umph!) .850.
'
top.
This old bird winged his way to a
Huntington VInson rolls over
12-4-0 slate for .750. I stand at 48-18-3
Eastern while Hannan Trace nips
(.m) for the year while Hoop
the state's smallest football playing
comes In at 53-17-2 (.757) .
high school, Ironton St. Joe. North
This Friday sees the SEOAL In ' Gallla continues to Improve with a
two close encounters as Gal!lolls
win over Hamlin, andScuthwestern
wlll edge Athens while Jackson nips
wins Its first over Hannan.
ever-Improving Logan. Ashland's
Tomcats wlll stop Ironton's 57'I'Ve
game. regular season non-losing
Belpre 28 Alexander 12
Warren Local 47 Federal-Hocking 8
streak.
Meigs 24 VInton County 6
NelsonvUie-York will end Its
TrlmbJe 21 Miller 12
Nelsonville- York 7 Wellston 0
two-game TVC losing streak as It
SEOAL
nips those big Wellston Golden
Jackson 15 Logan 12
Rockets in the top Tr1-Valley
GaUipolJs 13 Athens 7
Ashland 28 Ironton 21
contest The state's 13th ranked
SV~C
"M" team, Belpre, will remain
Huntlngtoo V\nsoo 36 Eastern 6
Hannan Trace 16 Ironton Sl. Joe 13
unbeaten as it outduels Alexander,
Nort h Callia :ll Hamlin 14
while War ren Local. Meigs, and
Southern :!1 Wahama 13
Trimble all win big.
Southwestern 22 Hannan 8

HEAR IT
EVERY
FRIDAY
MORNING
=----FROM
9 A.M-.-12
NOON
BOB
KINGSLE
YON 92 FM
·-· . .. .. . .

w,s

.48:1

B:l
Ctnclnnad
B.'i
x&lt;-llnched division title

JACKIE WELKER
~10, 150 pound
Jwdor Wingback

!'i'f.r

Duvall, Milch Bable, Mad&lt; Saber, Tony Billie, Dave
Brylllll, lUck Bable. Back row, left to rtpt, Buddy
YOIDIJ, J118011 HID, Buly Flagg, Trevor C&amp;rdoae,
Kel&amp;h Cook, Wade Connolly, Erich Pldlloa.

· SOUTHERN SENIORS- Sev!lllleen ~rs ~!re
Included in the 1983 Southern Toma..,..' grid I'GIIteto.
First row, left to rlgN, Lee DID, Joey Wolle, 11m
Evans, Troy Ward. Second row, left to light, Grec

Torooto $, Call!O!"nl a .1

BUTCH STILES

CINCINNATI (AP) -Marlo Solo
has borne runs on the mind.
TheCincinnatiRalsrlght-~der
gave up another one Wecb!sday
night, upsetting him so much that he
went on to give up tour runs in the
eighth fn!lingof a !&gt;-4 victoryover the
San Francisco Giants.
Solo wasn't too happy, even
though he recorded a career-high
17th victory. The reason: be has
allowed a career-hl&amp;h 28 borne runs
ln34games.
"It gets to the point where I'm up
there with a man on base, and that's
all I think abwt because I'V!! been
giving up all tho8ehomeruns," said
Scto, 17-13. "That's why I've been
walking so many guys. When you
give up 'rl (now 28) homers, you've
got to be careful.''
Solo just let the ball fly for the first
seven lnninl!s Wednesday night,
with splendid results. .
The rlght-hander hall given up
just two hits as he took a 5-0 lead Into
the eighth. He also had a strlngo!l5
consecutive ba~rs retired.
Joel Youngblood led off the eighth
In haunting fashion. Youngblood hit
a high cl1angei,Ip for his 16th homer,
and Scto started fuming.
Once again, the long ball touched
ott a near nightmare for Scto.
The right-hander didn't walk a
batter In the first seven lnnlnp. He
walked two In the eighth, and gave
up a hit to toad the bases. Chill Davis
· then hit a. two-run single, and
shortstop Dave Concepcion bobbled
the relay .throw to let a third run
scoreontheplay.
Suddenly, the 5-0 lead had shrunk
toone run.
Scto struck out Darrell Evans to
end that threat, !ben walked two
batters )V!th two out In !he ninth to
get Into trouble again. He got a
called third strike on pinch-hitter
Jeff leonard, his ninth strikeout, on
a 2-2 pitch to end the game.
Giants starter Mike Krukow,
11-11, threw a wlld pitch to iet the
Reds go ahead 1-0. In the first.
Bllardello doubled In a run In the
second, and the Reds Scored three
times In the seventh on Dan
Driessen's FU3I double and Paul
Householder's tWo- run homer, his
sixth. Lead-off batter Eddie Milner
had three slngll!ll and three stolen
bases while scoring two of Cincinnati's runs.
Solo's earned run average only
lnchecf up !rom 2.69 to 2.70 as he
became tbe fourth 17-game winner
In the National League. But his
post-game thoughts were on 'the
hanging changeup.
Meanwlllle, play·by-play announcer Marty Brennaman has
been signed hy the Cincinnati Reds
to a three-)'!!ar contract that will
keep him on the radio broadcasting
team through the 1986 season.
' Brennaman has been the Reds'
radio announcer for 10 )'ears,
beginning with !be 1974 season.
Brennaman wlll continue to work
with broadcast partner Joe Nuxhall,
who has been a Reds announcer for
17 seasons. Nuxhall's contract
extends through 1984.

-

.!161

,.~

Kans.1s Cit\'

~

.till

ti;

81

Cl1•vf&gt;land

'

.

P« GB

" ,. -'~
"'
'
..,""' ·.&lt;ll
..
""
""EST DJYI'IK&gt;S
'"" ,. ....
.,....
·'
"
'
." •; ,."

'"
",.
91

:vtilll'll llk('l(l

.f.'/ ...
•'

... I,

EAST DIVIS lOX

:'\('10· "Y ork
Toronto

1

17th game

A.IHERICA."t' IL\GllE

[l(&gt;Jroll

-

Soto wins

Majors

i

RCA CAMERA
and RECORDER
Plus 12" B&amp;W
TV for $18

•IS

$1098

'

•

'•

�-

~-~7"-.-,
;r....-:,..-::'"'0"'•· ..

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thursday, September 29, 1983

Page 7
.

.

Letter.in antique desk holds thought from 1948 ·
By CHARLENE HOEFIJCH
lady -ted fn a rocker (about ,Ill).
"Then Mrs. Eaton spoke with home In the Northwest. In ·those
Dally SmtiDel Staff
She beckoned me ln.
much amusement of her brother,
times with traveling uncetlafn,
· Watching the
of the
''This seemed su'llrlsing as the President Benjamin Harrison. guests were always offered over·
Grant house at
patients rarely saw each other's When attending. a White House night shelter. His nefarious scheme
the corner · o!
rooms. But I 5ensed she was lonely function, a guest whispered to her, was unknown.
S~ and Maln
and wanted to talk. After compar·
'Have you shaken hands with the
"Her grandfather related, his
President?' She chuckled, then said guest was silent and seemed
SlreetsfnM!ddlelng aUments as patients do, (I
porttheothertlay
believe she was recovering from
I wanted to reply 'No but I've moody, and the serVants reported
reminded Judy
flu), I was astonished to learn her
shaken him a few times.'
he paced his room most o!thenlgllt.
Arnold, who lives
identity.
"Going to the Washington Monu · But the next morning the famlly
nearby, of a letter
had been
"She was so unassuming and
ment with a Colonel and party of witnessed an exampe of his fascl·
friends, the officials were deter· natlng manners.
.
wrltlen many years ago by one of . dreNed very simply fn a black
the Grant girts, Mary Isabella.
alp8!:11 sort of dress with lace collar
mined ·she take her place at the
"The servants · were passing
The letter was found ln a desk at and gold pln. Like all pe~ who
head of the line. .She refused . pancakes at the breakfast table. In
the Gt...nt home by Mtique dealer, have left youth behind she dwell on
absolutely saying 'These people serving one of the chlldren's cakes
Kay CecU, who sold It to Miss her past, and .what a remarkable
havebeenlnllnealongttme, lwlll hadbeentornandhebegantocry.
l\rnOld for $5.
past!
,
. . await my turn.'
Aaron Burr, seated next to him,
Judy kept a copy of the letter
· "Can you Imagine my delight ln
"Hut the crowning bit of history I leaned down and whispered somewhich-Is Miss Grahl's reflections on llearfng sbe was Aunt Betty Eaton, absorlled that memorable after· thing 1n his ear. Suddenly the chlld
so called - a sister of President noon was about that brilliant was all smiles.
a contact she made with Betty
Benjamin Harrison and a grand- traitor, Aaron Burr.
"Afterwards thefamUycurlousto
Eaton, sister of President Ben· jamln Harrison and a granddaugh·
daughter of William Henry Harri·
"When WUllam Henry Harrison know what was said, asked about it.
son.
\vas governor of the Northwest Theirguestknewhowtocharmeven
. ter of Wllliam Henry HBivlson,
whUe both were patients at the old
''She spoke Of her young school Territory, this man, Aaron Burr, a child. He had whispered, 'never
Christ HospitaL
days when she was a student at a
with a body servant, appeared mind, I'll get a needle and sew It up
young ladles seminary near Ma· unexpectedly at the Governor's for you.'
She dated the letter December 4, rietta,I believe. Shetoldofasudden rv;..;;;:H~~;;:c;;&lt;;;;~&gt;Mi.._~....,..--..,...,..,.,.._--'\
1948 and refers to her experience as ..Wit there of her grandfather, then
having taken p\ilce 47 years ago.
president. Realizing perhaps that
It reads, ln part:
'
the students w~re over·awed by
"When a young woman of about such a distinguished visitor, he
30 years, I suffered a tong nervoos admoniShed jler with these words,
breakdown and spent many months 'Young lady if I flnd you .have
ln the old Christ Hospital
become ·unduly h;lughty or tmpor.
"One day when walking along the !ant, out you come and home.'
hall rather forlornly, trying to gel a
."On steamboats z:etuming from
bit of exercls.., I reached the end vacations, she said . she often
. .'
where a door stood PartlY open.
' danced with tnysses S. Grent, then
"in$ide I nc;&gt;ttced a Utile elderly ayoungcadeton leave.
5

'

SWEEPSTAKES GIVEAWAY
MORE THAN 1,000 PRIZES••• COMPUTERS, TVs, CAMERAS, TELEPHONES.
Sale In Effect Sept. 30, Thru October 9, 1983.

A NATIONAL HOME FURNISHINGS ASSOCIATION PROGRAM

FAMOUS MANUFACTURERS
·FROM AROUND THE WORLD
.ARE REDUCING PRICES

MASON FURNITURE CO.
HAS BEEN ACC~PTED AS AN OFFICIAL HEADQUARTERS FOR THE NATIONAL FURNITURe SALE ANO
SWEEPSTAI&lt;ES... COME IN AND REGISTEILSEE DETAILS BELOW ... NO PURCHASE NECESSARY'

5 Piece

SO ARE WE•••

·DINETIE

$179

Manufacturers and stores all across America
have joined together tor the lirstllme ever to
present the greatest Home Furnishings sales
event in history . Special price concessions
PLUS storewide sale savings on all mer·
chandise guarantee you the greatest
opportunity to buy fine quality home
furnishings at extremely lOw ,
National Sale prices. For 10 days
only we have slashed prices
on nearly every item in our
huge stock. You gel the same
fine quality, lull selection,
and lull service you have
come to expect'-nolhlng
has been cut but the
prices!
·

Beaulllally
all wood collection.
Solid wood cbaln, wllb heavy eplndle
baeiL Tblck padded seala, ·sbowa In
rlcb, eariiHone vinyl cover, 31" x 48"
tresde·lable aDd f cbalra.
1
1

Save 220" Rea. 399.•

MATTRESS &amp;
BOX SPRING
00 ~:

$58

10

DAYS

Save •100" To e6()()0Ci
On All 2 &amp; 3 Piece

99
Selected
618Ups

NEW BLOUSE AND
SlACKS SHOP
IS OPENING

LiviNG. ROOM
GROUPS

1h

..

Price

.

Two Piece SUites Fn1111 '299.•
OWr 60 St;es Too Choose Fn1111!

· SLACKS

Only

S5, S7, 10

seated on a bench at the corH&lt;Jor's
end with fellow patients, Mrs. Eaton
came from her room with )1011118
rela tives to accompapy her'bornl!,
Seeing me she left thelll' and
cordially shook my hand thanking
me for affording her a pleasant
afternoon.
'
The Grant house was sold several
times before being recendy purchased by the Mlddleport F,trst
Baptist Church. The house was
auctioned off. the razir1g Is being
completed, and the lot will be ready
for useby the church.

.
.' '

'•I

COMPLETE STOCK....•

•EARRINGS •NECKLACES
•RINGS •CHAINS
•HIGH FASHION PILL BOXES .
•PINS •BRACELETS

•

,,

SIZES 10-20, 32·44

WESTERN BOOl'S -WORK SHOES- BELTS

RECLINER

BLOUSES

.mANS -LEE- LEVI - CIDC
CUSTOM "I" SHIR'l'S

'$129.

.

Only

SIO

SWISHER LOHSE

SIZES: Sm.. Med., Lg.

.,

10-JR l2-44

Pharmacy

'

In Set11 Only!

.

.••

Kenneth McCullough , A. Ph .
Charln Rillle , R. Ph .
RO!Mid Hln lng, R. Ph.

BLOUSE &amp; SLACK SHOP

318 North Second Avenue·
Middleport, Ohio 4576Q
(614) 992-3684

THRU MONDAY, OCT. 3

GOOD

DAN'S

Twin or Full Size

ONLY

"Aaron Burr left soon after never
dlsclos!ng the putp)Se of his visit. ,
But the Governor later suspected
that he had hoped to Interest him fn
his diabolical scheme to overthrow
the U.S. Government and establish
a Southern Empire.
"I have a greater appreciation
now of what a notable experience I
was haVing that dreary day in a
hospital room. Fewcanenjoy a chat
with both the sister of one president
oltheU. S.andthegranddaughterof
another.
"A few days later when I was

-·

Mon. thru 5•1 . 1:00 1 . m . fO 9 p.m .

Sunday ID : lO to 12: 30 and S to 9 .m.
PRESCR IPTIO N5
PH , nl -1t3J
Friendly Service

In Rear of Simon's Pick-~·Pair
Pomeroy

·'•

•

Pomeroy , O.

E. Ma in

. •'

O~nNnJhh till , f

Bought separately $10.00 extra per
piece. Never been priced lbll tow
before or probably never agala.

Model RTlfFl

Reg. '649.11
95

$499

Herculon® plaid cover .. eariiiiGIII!a,
Z podtlou.

© Copyright 1983,
Collier Advertising

Need To Mow n.. Items!
3-PIECE TUXEDO
STYLE LIVING ROOM
SUfi'E IN'-IiERCUWN
COVER.
Priced To Go

EMPIRE FURNitURE ·oF MIDDLEPORT IS CELEBRATING
THE NATIONAL FURNITURE SALE SEPT. 30-0CT. 19 .

1600 IRON ST ., N. KANSAS CITY, MO 64104

REGISTER HERE!

STOP IN AND .SIGN FOR THE NATIONAL SOLID GOLD SWEEPSTAKES

HERE'S HOW YOU ENTER...

$39goo

Just step in our store anytime in the
next 10 days, and register your
name. No purchase is necessary at all.

2 ONLY· GREEN
VELVET OUEEN ANNE
WING CHAIRS

249

$

~r

5 Piece
COUNTRY OAK

BEDROOM SUfl'E
You'Ve aot to see this suite

GraldPrize
$o(),OO()il

ODlD

to believe the value!
Includes door dresaer, deck mirror,
5 drawer cbell, headboard ud
footboard.

3 coloolal
accent
tables,
cocktail; 2 end

Alllbis
For Only

$599

•

SOFAS

Magazine Raek
baa
carrying
budle ud Iota
of room lor
.magullles and
bew a papers.

AvaUable In lull aDd
qaeen size, muy alylea
aDd fabrics to cb_.
from .

PriCetl
FIOIII

$24995

FLEXSTEEL SOFA '

Wf'ICI~~ ....... tot ........ M - - .

.,.,._too~

v . 1111n..-...t11t'aa.Dw

2 S ecoud PI i\ies. 50 Third Pllzes.
--.-c.---.u-p.
$5,000 in Silver. ZMIIh 181eoision ......................
4. Prildln"'*""':
Seta.
mo- Pna:sm.u.-.-Gold&amp;.n

""*' ..

Compulars.

.c.........

~Run~ P1ize&amp;

c-M

REGULAR '2195.95

. 11.GODI!Vw.U.f'l-lzltl • ~ ........

5.mrw..w~~~~~o...._.bt'..._....,...,.

_

......... r,..:a

~
--~~
~a...p.- ........... ~~..._ ... .

_____.. -lw...........,
__ ...... ......,_

-

~

0111111111 ...... . . . . ,. . . . _ _ _ _

-.--fl:al-

.

?.for ........ - - . - • . . . - . - mn,

III.Aaui, ... Sollll

THE "POT 0' GOLD" AT THE
END OF THE RAINBOW CAN
BE YOURS...No Purchase Necessary

FUll

DAYS

I

'

-----------.,
EARLY AMERICAN SINGER
•

BEDROOM SUITE
. ONLY $78895 .
RGULAR '1199.95
.
CONTEMPORARY WICKER SINGER

BEDROOM SUITE
EARLY AMERICAN SOFA RECLINER

$39995·

REGULAR '999.95

ONLY

REGULAR '1099.95

SOFA

REGULAR '1470

'

ONLY

..

•

FLEXSTEEL SOFA
AND CHAIR

REGULAR ssgggs

0

$69995

.TRADITIONAL

ONLY ~19995

REGULAR '299.95

ONLY

$49995

CONTEMPORARY SOFA CHAIR

TEMPORAR

$100,000 °
POT-0-GOLD

ljl .

ONLY

•

BEDROOM SUITE.
.
REGULAR '1799.95
ONLY $1 0999~ :.

$39995

ONLY

REGULAR '799.95

$39995

$.29995

SINGER DiNING ROOM TABLE W/6
CHAIRS
.
.

ONLY

THOUSANDS OF ITEMS NOT USTED HERE!
.
•
I
MANY ITEMS ARE ONE-OF·A·KIND OR LIMITED STOCK ... EVERYTHING TAGGED AT SPECIAL SAVINGS!

$44444

ONLY

REGLAR '599.95

10

. ONLY

· STARTING AT

·PINE TABLE With 6 Chairs

- . . , MllliDrlll ,....._ ~ Wftw'1l Ull " '

..

SLEEPER
SOFA

$15995

ONLY

REGULAR 1699.95

..llllt...,....hl'llllld ..... ~ltldil~lo ..

$79995

$69995

MAPLE TABLE With 6 Chairs

:.:::--..::.:=:~--=~.::-=-"'=
...
....,.

............. 11 ...

bonlc TeleJ)hones.

SIZ£

Store Hours: 9:00 a.m. To 8:00 p.m.
Saturday: 9:00 a.m. To 5:00 p.m. (Cosed Sunday)

""""''-XI

........
....--........
..... ""..................................................
l:zutf _,

. ONLY

STONEVILLE TABLE With 6 Chairs

11DI F..... ,__ ,.,._ .. ~

STARTING
AT

$99995

EARLY AMERICAN BASSETT

\

I!IO!'I'otd~ ; ~-.....-..s.ts

RECLINERS

REGULAR
UP TO '1,100

I

WITH DESIGNER COVER

QISe--a lltfti: S6,00011'1 . . . . _

ST.EEPER

Oak

REGUlAR '599.95

Boo~nM. aPW.III'I56..:Z.E-et~...,_ .. ..,........,

-

ONLY

EARLY AMERICAN SOFA CHAIR

...,..._

2. .... ......._...,.,.. ........ .....-......~ .,.,._
~-prinWig - - .......
!&gt;'.-c-GII.-c--~ •·-r-....-..

N,'"!-

ONLY

REGULAR '1399.95

..__
-·"'* . .,. ,

....,~_,_,...,..._..._

$89995

.EARLY AMERICAN SOFA, LOVESEAT, RECLINER

N
I,W
i . . ,_ _
inCl..-;!
_
_
_o
_ __
_
_................
_
1. n-_
...
....._._..
... ____
....,

.,._tlllll.,
__
...,..ID,......,..
__ _...,.,..._.
ol ...
__
_ _ 111.............
_ _ .....,...

10 Fourth PI izes.

REGULAR '1699.95

$199 9 5

OFFICIAL RULES

:J.M.........,tl ... \lnoiiiiii ...... III'III,__Noo •

20 Fifth Plizes.
New Nit liitlo 3D

RACK

NATIONAL FURNrruRE
SALE AND SWEEPSTAKES
"SOIJD GOLD SWEEPSTAKES"

ONLY

'169995

EARLY AMERICAN SOFA, LOVESEAT &amp; CH~IR

REGULAR '399.95

.. '

WIN! WIN! WIN!

SOFA &amp;LOVESEAT &amp; CHAIR

ODD
LOVESEA.T

00 For

Yours For Ollly

REGULAR

BROUHARDS EARLY AMERICAN

$29995

ONLY

$7999

•

SALE IN EFFECT SEPT. 30, 11tRU
OCT. 9, 1983

•

' '

DINmE WITH 4 CHAIRS
' REGU~R '149.95

.

,,

.

ONLY

.'

$9995

D!2DJJS3 NORTH SECON~ AVE.
M1
PHONE 992-3307

12 MONTHS FREE-FINANCING

. JoY-AWAY '

'

CONTEMPORARY BASSffi BEDROOM SUITE
·

REGU~R 'l099.95
,·

ONLY

$69995

'

�'
.PagEl--'8-The Daily Sentinei

Crafts open house
A big open house is planned for
thls Saturday, 8:30a.m. to4: JOp.m.
and on Sunday !rom 1 to 4 p.m. at
th!' ()"afty Ladles
1MJ4 •
. ~t., Pomeroy.
A feature will
-~ a " make and
tal&lt;e it " table
(tiat udng a
"timber of craft
i1~ll]S which you
. c:an learn to create
on
&lt;¢d take it with you lor a mlnlmal
f~. Special instruction will be in
w&lt;;OO burntng, tln ·punch work, soft
~culpt ure, stenciling, creating
~ llristmas ornaments and pot

pqurrt.
: ~monstraoons are designed to
$Ow the latest items and you can
le~ to create them lor yourself,
fP: Christmas gifts or perhaps, to
·take ·back to your organization
.mf'm bers to teach them how.
: fur plizes will be awarded and
t-ee copies of "Craft Gazette" will
behanded out. The edition explains
. some eight or 10 projects that you
- i'nlght be interested In besides
· c;oupons entitling you to free Items.
· There is a section on bazaars and
other lund-raising events. by the
way, you can have your event listed
J:n i he m agazine, published
monthly, by letting Lois Pauley at
the shop know ahout It well in
advance.

. Hope by this time that you've
contacted Brenda Roush or Majorie
Smith about your taking part in !lie
blke-a-thon Saturday at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
: Proceeds go to the St. Jude
Chlldren' s Hospital to light chlldhood cancer. There will be prizes
awarded a nd the ride will be on the
race track so there'll be lio lra!flc
problem to contend with. II you'd
_ like to take part call
..,-. 992-7357.

__

'

Jhe Middleport c;:hamber ol
Commerce a nd Middleport Village
Council are hoping that Middleport
residents who will be spared the
ordeal of trick or treat night will
kick in to help finance a community
Ha lloween party. The Idea lor the

community event came from vlllage councll because of unpleasant
events which have taken place in
other coinmunilies on beggars'
night. .
The chamber will meet to firm up
plans lor the party lind we'll pass
along information on how you as a
citizen can lend a helping hand . .

Delta Kappa Gamma initiation

honorary member. Nellie Parker
read thank you notes from Martha
Greenaway, Carol Eberts, and
Judith Fetherolf.
It was voted to raise dues S2for the
Dower fund and the Education
Foundation Trust was passed.
Barbara Litter, poUcy committee
chalnnan, distributed copies of
fonner policies. These are to be
discussed at the October meeting

Helmbrecht, second ceremonial
lady; Mary Crow, marshall; Ann
Smith, associate princess; and
Verna Ziegler, past high pl'iestess.
Members of the Twlri City
Shrinettes were Introduced by Mrs.
Moore and Included Donna Morris,
Carolyn Dalley, Mary Bowen,
Emma Clatworthy, Gertrude Mit· Personal note
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Steiner of
chell, Mary Stewart, Edna Slusher,
Cora Beegle, Shirley Beegle, and Cleveland were weekend guests of
his mother, Mrs. Marte Steiner,
Kathryn Hysell, guest
Middleport.
Stetner Is an electrical
The French City Shrinettes Introengineer
with
the Cleveland illumiduced by Mrs. Sutter were Sarah
Blazer, Lora Byers, Patsy Camp- nating Co.
hell, Pat Hemler, Phyllisi&lt;Dlght!ng, .-------,-------1
Mary M. Wlllls, Bea Kuhn, Vlrgtnla
Your· "Extra To11ch"
Myers, Mary Jane Neal, Betty
Florist Since 1957
Patrick, Dorothy Persons, Mary
Ann Woolf, Jewell Robinson, PhyDls
Rowan, Eloise Ward, Margaret
.
Waugh, Florence Wlllls, and Joan
FLORIST
Wood.
.
1
PH. 992-2644
Dinner ~as served by the United
·Methodist Women of the church.
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

Correction

The rlfle corps and not the Oag
ccrps took first place In the Eastern
Kentucky ·Band Festival held at
Ashland Saturday.

TEN DOLLARS OFF

*Tuxedo Jeans
•Baggie Jeans

*Black Denim
•Tuxedo Jeans
*Jeans Pants

•Marilyn Monroe Jeans
Offer Goad Sept. 29, 30 &amp; Oct. 1
Umit 1 Per Customer

OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 8

"OVER 41 YEARS IN THE SAME

son, James Ferguson, all of Columbus, · visited Sunday with Mrs.
Bertha Parker.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schaefer
recently called on Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Karr, Minersville.
Mr. Hartinger, Pomeroy, and
Miss Edna Carman, 'Rock Springs,
called on Mrs. Della Stahl. •
Roy Howell and Earl Roush wen\

to Canada on a fishing trip.
lng was by Pastor and Mrs: Mlller
and prayer was by Rev. Ray
Attendance Sunday School Sept.
Altman.
11 at the Free ]\'!ethodlst was 138.
Mr. and Mfs. Faye Countryman,
On Sunday, Sept. 18, the mort ·
Greenfield,
spent the weekend with
gage on t he Free Methodist Church
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy Howell.
was burned during the morning
and
Mrs.
Wyatt Schaefer,
Mr.
service. Invocation was by Dr.
Ro()ert Bl'ckley. Welcome was by · Mt. - Vernon, spent a weekend
recently with Mr. and MJ:s. Norman
Rev. Ray D. Altman, Ohio ConferSchaefer.

. ROCK SPRINGS - The the producer to the consumer in
Meigs County Beef Cattle Assothe live feeder calf demonstra·
elation In ·cooperation with the
lions, nwnerous commercial
Meigs . County Extension Serexhibits and ·the presentation of
vice, is sponsorlng' Jl beef day
101 ways to prepare ~Jeel. Roast \
Saturday !rom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m .
beef sandwlc)les and soft drinks
at the Rock Springs
WlllbeavallaiJiethroughoutthe
Oay and ·door prizes will. be
Fairgrounds.
'!be association promises awarded at interVals. The public
something for everyone !rom . is invited.

CRYSTAL &amp; SILVER
3 PC. SALAD SET

10% Off .

ONLY

ALL LEATHER
DRESS &amp; SPORT
BOOTS

FRUTH .PHARMACY
OF -OHIO, INC.

ALL
WATCHES
·.-.:n !NOW

I 0 ' Do wn

M1DDLEPORT, Ott.

HOURS. . MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00

14K GOLD BIRTHSTONE

AND DIAMONDS
NOW $129 9 5

H!!lrls ll

• SUNDAY 11:00 TO 8:00
PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3~06.

REG. 1169.95

[Iii L:lm:)[lll(h

SAVE 140.00

20o/o

OFF

•BULOVA
•SEIKO
•PULSAR
.CARAVELLE

MEN'S OR lADIES' .

DIGITAL WATCH

heritage house
OF SHOES

$13 9.5

·Makes A Great Gift
For
Occasio.;! i

BY DINGO, CONNEE. ,
KANGAROO, THOM MeAN

ON~Y $7 95

.

Middleport,
'.
.
.Ohio

EA.

.le Supply lasts

COMING SOON
SEIKO
TELEVISION
WATCHES

ALL

DIAMONOS

20o/oro30%
.

-

· 7 DIAMOND CLUSTERS ·
YELLOW OR. WHITE GOLD
..

OFF REGULAR PRICE ·
OUR DIAMONDS ARE PRICED
LESS THAN OTHER JEWELERS
AND OUR QUALITY IS THE
SAME..

1/4 CARAT TOTAL
NOW $29500
REG. 1395.00

FOSTORIA GLASS
NOW

Why- Pay More!

20o/o

OFF

-4 PC. SET

TAKE 12 MONTHS TO PAY

CARPET YOUR 'HOME
NO INTEREST!.

FRfQ4Y· thTU fHVRSDAY I

NO DOWN

PAYMENT
ON THE ;,T" IN MIDDLEPbRT

STORE HOURS·•

f-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
1

9:30 A. M. TO 6 :00 P·.M .
FRI. 9:30A.M. TO 8:00 P.M.

WE WELCOME YOU TO .TRY
OUR NEW SPECIALTIES FROM
~ . OUR NEW ~IGHT MENU

1

"Miller Comfort Week:'
Comfortable classic leather styles.
\

SAVE$5°0!.

12 MONTHlY
PAYMENTS
INTEREST FREE!

~

INTEREST
NO
DOWN

PAYMENT .

•

One week only.
.
Come in now and
save $5 on Stroll,
Stroller and
Ruffabout- your
Fall favorites. All
leather walking
· shoes specially
designed for
Miller to fit your
feet and provide
cpmfortable
support for your
active, casual
moments. A valiety
of styles and colors
available in a
broad range of sizes
to assure a ·
perfect fit.
Come in. nu_,

:PAY CASH
AND RECEIVE
8% DISCOUNT

WITH APPROVED
CREDIT

-'

lOOOA» Nylon Plush!

Sculptured carpet

Arnlslrcq 100% lone staple Nylon/cont.
.heat setlkq Wllrirc.

ENJOY THE GREAT FOOD AND
. FINE ATMOSPHERE

Lon&amp;.warina, 100% nylon, cont. heat set,
Scotqanl.

5 yr. warranty.

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

DO YOUR L.R. &amp; HALL
BASED ON 40 SQ YDS.

DO YOUR L.R. I HALL
BASED ON 40 SQ. ·YDS.

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

'

CARPET, f»AD &amp; INST.
FOR ONLY

CARPET, PAD &amp; INST.
FOR ONLY

·. $46•74

. 1/2 PRICE
When you present this coupon.

$49.16

• ••

llott: Hyou clloM 1 111111 of ltl• Y11ue illlill bt 111'1
price, 1101 II'• apnlw tlllll.
"
(Off• appll• •IllY to Mnlna ~lnnar monu.)

MONTHLY

MONTHLY

Armstrong

From Casual Scene -'- Ultra
Nylon/Ansa IV/Scotchgard

100% Anso continuous filament nylon
cut and loop styling with soft multitoned
colorations.
·
5 Yr. Warranty
DO YOUR L.R. &amp; HALL
BASED ON 40 SQ. YDS.

DO L.R. &amp; HALL
BASED ON 40 SQ. YDS.

CARPET, PAD &amp; INST.
FOR ONLY

CARPET. PAD &amp;INST.
FOR ONLY

$60.83.:

$.43.30

'

PLACE u,.ru

Super Plush Carpeting

. Anso Sculpture

MONTHLY

MONTHLY

OPEN 10 A.M. TIL 9 P.M •

.IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
'

"

••

•

i

·

SAVE 'IOO.OQ

•

~PTEMBER 23 thru ~

STROlLER

'LEE

Attendance at au services at the
Free Methodist Church Sept. 3 was
128. The Sunday School picnic Will
be at. the Gavin Plant 5 p.m. Sept.
10.
The mortgage l)urnlng service
will be Sept. 18. All are welcome t~
the service.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alk.lre. Miss
Cleo Parker, Mrs. Jeraldine Fergu-

Beef Day set at fairgrounds

.

786 N. ~ND AVE.'

POMEROY - Annual meet-.
lng, Meigs County Unit of th
AmerX:an Cancer Society will
meet Thursday, 7: :llp.J1!., tn the
east-west dining room of Veterans Memolial Hospital..

Happenings .

BOYS

~~

$10 OH

*Black Denim

MIDDLEPORT -:Middleport
Child Conservation League wll
meetThursdayat7:30p.m.atthe
home of Mrs. Susie Abbott, With
Susie SOulsby to have the
traveling plize, and Mrs. Abbott,
the ,devQtlons.

rjii~!~~!~~~

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

WRANGLER

.

The

Laura/ Cliff news notes__- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

TI-IDRSDAY

·Nazarene

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis (Pat)
Gallagher, formerly of Middleport,
have been visiting Mr. and Mrs .
WALKING - Amy Jo Davlll, who wOI be tour In December, 1s
Carl Brannon at their Middleport
'O!alldnc wllbout adult ltlpport lor the lint time tblll fall allbe CIIIWou
home. The Gallaghers are now · · School ID Syraeuse. Blllld since birth, Amy Is pldured walltlng a
living in Denver, Colo.
ballway a1 the 8Chool wtlb Eugene FIDk, Rutlaad. Fink created a special
bamboo cane wblch Amy Is usillg these days ·as she walks
My stupidity continues ...
lndepeodeolly. Previously Amy would cllog.!!!_ adults for support to
. Why is tt that when anyone
walk.
mentions reducing taxes, there is
this blg uproar that education will
suffer as a result? Surely, this
crea1!!5 the feellng that the pubUc
should tolerate any and all taxes tor . · Initiation wsas held by Alpha and voted on a t the November
Omlcrort Chapter of Delta Kappa _ meeting. Paullne Burson led 1n
the sake of education. However,
Gamma, at a recent meeting of the singing "God Bless America " "Old
aren't there other areas that handle
Society at Lake Hope dining lodge. . Gray Bonnet," and "Afu't She
cuts besides education' Even I can
Eleanor Essman condu&lt;;ted the Sweeet."
lhtnk ol some.
lnltlatlon assisted by Jo Ann Hays,
Members from Meigs County
·
JeanBoggs,DoMaJenklns,andthe
•
attending
were Wanda Farrar,
So that you can benefit from YOU!"
officers
of
the
chapter.
Initiated
Martha
Greenawy,
Fern Grimm,
tax lkvy money, the Meigs county
Department of Health will go into· were Chrtstine Rouse, Sandra Jo Ann Hays, Donna Jenkins, U!e
Evans, and Cheryl Snowden. Each Lee, Bernice Mapes, Nellie Parker,
giving free Ou shots, next week.
received
a red rose.
Rebecca Zurcher, Anna Elizabeth
Comtng l!rst in the program are
Fenn
Grtmm,
hostEss
committee
Turner,
and DorothY Woodard.
senior citizens and disabled perchairman,
led
devotions
before
the
Next
meeting
will be held at the
sons, next Tuesday at the Senior
cUnner
and
there
was
group
singing
HoPE:
United
Church,
Wellston, Oct.
Citizens Center. Next Fliday, Oct.
of the doxology. Other ·hostess · 17,6:30p.m.
·
7, the shots will be given tv the
members Were Emma Lou Mor- .
general pubUc and there is a make
up day on Oct. 14 lor the public. Will.
row, Luelle Downard, and Susan
Hours in all instances are 9 a.m. to
Viola Gettle, president conducted
noon and 2 to 4 p.m.
!he business meettng with treasSo you have a chance of heating urer, Esther Maerker,_reporting 62
the rap - and It's tree. You can't active member.;, five life member.;,
beat It!
12 reserve members, and one

?hrinette meeting
·; The French City Shrtnettes hoted
a dinner Tuesday night at the Grace
tlnited Methodist Church honoring
Helen Stumpf, high priestress, and
ller court of Thea Court 5, Oriental
Shri ne of North America ,
C::Olumbus.
·. ·Lo·la Mae Suiter , president of the
French City Shrtnet!Es, extended a
welcome to the Thea Court
members, Twin City Shrinettes of
Meigs County, and the host club.
Mary Willis had prayer.
: Terri Rowan, soloist, accompanIed at the plano by Joe Gully:
Gallipolis, entertained the group.
Gifts were presented by Jean
Moore, Twtn City Shrtnettes, and
[.ola "Mae Suiter, French Qty
Stirinettes. An invitation to the fall
eeremonlal on Nov. 5 in Colilmbus
'Was extended.
·The high priestEss presented her
officers, Violet Lamb, grand princess; Louise Waters, past high
priestess; Mary Bru'Sh, princess;
."lenny Church, outer guard; Jo Ann
Agnew, past high priestess and
iecorder; Frteda Jay, past high
priestess and treasurer; Francis

Calendar

Noami.Ohlinger hosted the recent daug~r bEinquet fund report.
.
meeting of the Evangeline MissionMrs. Spencer read a )ettl&gt;r !rom
ary Society of the Pomeroy Church IJer,ny Allen on mlssloits. 1be
of Christ.
mission study was given by M$.
Charldlne Alkire presided a t the Davidson. Cards were signed for
meeting with Eileen Bowers havtng several of the Ill and shutln.
Nel\J: meeting will be held at the
devotions ustng scripture from
Genesis and a prayer. Readings
home of Mrs. Andrews. Others
Included "A Lucky Guess" tiyJanet attending were Elizabeth Ohllll(ler,
Venoy; "Best Frtends" by Trudy Eva . Dessauer, LaDonna Clark.
Andrews; ''City Farmer" by Mrs.
Re!reshmentswe~servedbyMlss
Bowel's, and " In His FootSteps" by Ohlinger.
HelenMiller.
Anna Davidson gave the secre- .
.
tary's report, and it was noted tl,iat
·
she is m6vlng to Belpre. Befty
Spencer had the treasurer's report,
·
Mrs. Venoy, the Dower fund report ,
Plans for attending the Oct. n
and Mrs. Bowers, the mother· perforrilance of the Ohio Ballet
Company on !he campus of Olllo
University were made when the
anniv~rsary Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapler of .
The 75th anniversary of the Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met
Nazarene demoninatlon will be Thursday night at the RlYerlloat
observed with three special services Room of the Diamond Savings and ·
at the Syracuse Nazarene Church, LoanCo. .
the Rev. James B. Kittle, pastor,
Betty Ohlinger pi"EIHdE!cl at the
announced today. ·
meetlngattendedby16rnemben.It
Oct. 2 has be€n desJgnate&lt;) ·as was d€c!cled to cancel the Oct. 27
"launch Sunday" and tfUed "Let the meeting and the "hard times" party
Celebration Begin; "
Oct. 9 is planned for It and loattendtheballet
heritage day with the theme in Ueu of that meetlllg. Tickets wlll
"Heritage Sunday;" and Oct. 16 is . be purcll&lt;ISE'd lor the group wlleri
the birthday Sunday and designed they go on sale by Marge Crow, and
as "llll a pew Sunday" with. the members will have a ~
Harvest Trio to sing at 10: :ll a.m.
preceding the ballet.

Loca1 soronty
• .·
chapter meets

Ann Wiles, who Jives on Route 124 ·
below Racine, reports obvious
mockery at the state's posting ol
signs warntng a line of $500 lor
llttertng.
A sign was posted near her home
and then came a barrage of litter
Into her yard with even some people
pulling Into her driveway and
cleaning out their cars.
Ann asked the state to move the
sign to another location - It was
moved and the littering has been
ccnsiderably
reduced for Ann.
·

.
Ohia

·Evangeline Missionary meets

Beat of the Bend

By BOB HOEFLICH
Daizy- Sentinel Stall

'

Thul1day, Septe..;b., 291 1983

�'
Page-- 10-The Daily Sentinel

!'omen»y--Middleport,
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electrtc Co.
expects to Issue Its response to an
Independent management review of
theZirnmerNuclearPower plantby
Friday, says a company spokes·
man, who expects federal regula·
tors to be pleased with lt.
Joe Williams Jr., senior v ice
president of CG&amp;E, said the
company hopes to file with the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission a
response to the report by Torrey
Pines Technology. Torrey Pines
revlewedthe report wlththeNRCon
Wednesday.
George L . Wessman, director of
Torrey Pines, said it probably will
be some time before quality·
verlflcatlpn of the plant could be
completed.

'

CG&amp;E
answers
Zimmer
audit

Thunday,

Ohio

ordered due to reports of thousands
of posslblydefecUvewelds and other
problems at Zimmer, which Is at
Moscow, Ohio, Tl mUes upstream
from Cincinnati
When asked If be thought Zlnuner
would ever go on Une, Wessman
said: "I seenol')!asonatthlspolnt to
"uspect that It won't It really
depends upon the economic consequences of any corrections that are
needed.' '
CG&amp;E has Insisted that the $1.7
bUUon plant, which Is '¥1 percent
complete, Is belilg safely built. .
However, CG&amp;E dldn't dispute the
NRC order and brought In Torrey
Pines early this year to make the
Independent review and outline a
program for completing Zimmer.
Wessman
said the Torrey Pines
.

"Our guess was that the 9uaUty·
verification program woukl take on
the order of one to two years, and
then lt dependsuponwhatwasfound
in that program as to the amount of
remaining construction that woukl
have to be done and the actual
on-Une date," Wessmari said.
·
The 2;1mmer plant, which has
been under construction since 1972,
Is co.owned by CG&amp;E and the
Dayton Power and Light and the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric companies.
The NRC suspended safetyrelated construction work at the
plant Nov. 12, 1982, after Its· stan
found thai a program to try to assure
the quality of construction done over
the past decade had bogged down.
The quality-control review was

report I'E()OJ'nJJl€llded
changesata:;&amp;E.
" We recommended

pel'!l(xmei

The · Daily Sentinel

,.unday, Sep..mber 29, 1983

im 29, .1913

entire organization to give a better
spanofoontrol, bettermanagement
control."
In Its report, Torrey P1n1!s aiaO

that the
management up lhrouih the executlve vice president be replaced,''
Wessman said. "We recmunmded
that, ~ on Information we bad,
the CEO (a.Jef Executlve omcer
wuuam H. Dlckhoner) ought to be
retained 8Jid that the board of
i:llrectors ooght to be ... expsnded
but basically retain full responslblltty for the Zlmmerprojectu well as
other the activities of CG&amp;E."
W!Wams said the company aJ.
ready has made many personnel
changes.
urm one/' he said. "I have four
new assistant vice presidents on
site. Three of them have been for
some time. We restructured the

.

S.tw1

-CG&amp;E'stopexecutlveoftlcerbe
InvolVed In all lXliiCr declaiQnl,
Including quality assurance.
-The creation of a Zlmme!' :
Project Oversight Canmlttee that
would serve as an advisory ann ~ :
theiloard at dlrecton.

CUSIOI WOIII - AIR BRIJSII

of a senior ·
responsible for only :

Zimmer actMUes.

at an

experienced, ·

construction
verification.

and

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

·PHONE
992-2156
Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.

5-Happy Ads
6 -lostand Found
7-Yard Sale (paid in advance)
li -Pubic Sale

&amp;Auction
9 -Wanted to Buy

3 1-Homes for Sale
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Farms for Sale
34-Business Buildings
35-lots &amp; Acreage
26- Real Estate Wanted

l!a

.

,•

41-Housesfor Rent
4 2.'Mobile Homes for Rent
43-Farms for Rent

11 - Help Wanted
12-Situated Wanted
13-lnsurance
14-Business Training
15-Schools
'16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair

44-Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished Rooms
46-Space lor Rent
4 7-Wanted to Rent
48-Equlpment for Rent
49 -For lease
·

17-Miscellaneous
18-Wanted To Do

Public Notice

Public Notice ·

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNT'!, OHIO
BOARD OF TRUS:TEES ,
Cf(URCHES OF UNITED
BRETHREN tN CHRIST, ET
Al
Plaintiffs,
vs.
JOSEPH ERWIN and JAMES
SHIELDS . Trustees. United ·
BrEjthren Church and their
unknown successors and
assigns,
\
HI~AM
NEWLAND , SA·
MUEL BAKER, SA~UEL
BARBER, C. E. HULL. CHARLES STOUT. TRUSTEES,
Church of the United Brethren
in Christ and their unknown
successors. and assigns,
The unknown persons who

reversionary interest in the real

estate known as the United
Bret:hren Church, Olive Township, Meigs County, Ohio,
AKA Succeea or Pleasant

-t

G"""' Church. Olivo Townlhip, Meigs County, Ohio,
AKA Succeoo or
Grove Chwch, Olive Townlhip, Moigo County, Ohio, and
their unknbwn heirs at law,
next of tun, dDVilaaa, ~ees,

executora. adminlstretors. custodians. assigns or guan;liBns.
all of whom. MidlliHBI are
unknown,
Defendants.
-NOTICE BY
PIJBUCATION Plam!lfl has bmuy*lt thiS
act10n namtng you as Detendan!s 1n the above named Court

I ------~------------ -

•

1I
1

Curb

11
I

I

Pay

lnflaflaQn

.

I ',

I

.
C a s h 'f o r
.

I

1

1

d
an II
1__
1I
1

I

lilmg 115 Pet1t1on an September 12 1983.
The ObJeCt of the pet1t 1on •S 10
transfer. under th e prov•s•ons o f
the Oh10 Rev1sed Code of 1he
follow.ng descr1bed real estateand bounded and descr.bed as
follows
S•tuated 1n \he State ol Oh10.
County of Me•gs Townsh1p ol
Ol•ve and.lurt he r bounded and
d~ scr 1 bed as tallows:
In Fract•on thirtY-SIX. SectiOn
27 and 28. Town No. Fou r (4 1,
Rangr. No. Eleven (I I ) ly•ng
and be•ng on the North s•de of
em e1ghry acre tract 1n sa1d
-FractiOn No th1r1y-s•x one half
"ere of land. beg1nnrng on the
south line of BR lane land 1n
sa1r1 Fract•on. where two county
. roads crosses - thence South
!h1rt een rods on the road
lead1ng to Long Bottom the nce
wes \ s•x rods. thence nonh
thl fi P.e n rods to sa•d BR Lane
land-thenceEastsoxrods to
placn of beg•nn1ng lor the
P.xpress purpose oJ a Un1ted
Church and
REFEREN CE DE ED Vol 28.
Pagr. 626 Me•gs Cou nty Deed

.

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1
1

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10

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u.

2s .

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19 .

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JU .

II

l l.

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34
JS.

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f
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15
16

Mail Th i s Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel

11

PLUMBING

HEATING .

ALL STEEL &amp; .
POLE ·BULDINGS

UTILITY BUILDINGS
.Doc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

FOR SALE

Two Bedroom Home
Full basement, rec. room,
built-in prqe, insulated
alum. sidinc, blown ins.,
storm windows &amp; doors.
lc. kitchen, carpet &amp; appliances.

At 1624 lincoln Hcts.

Shirley Guinther
992-3593

ROOFING
'All types of roof work, or rtpair, autteB and

HOBSTmER
REALTY
Geor11 $, Hobstttttr, Jr.
Broltr
Phone 992-5739
RUTIAIIO -

Land Contract

Middleport, Ohlo
t·ll·llc

..

1n

Roolin&amp;
SAtE
DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% OR MORE

On ·Sitlinc and Roofing,

Gutter and Downspouts.
':F..e Eotirnoteo"
"12 Y-. E"'l8rionc:o"
''W!Jrl&lt; Guo-"

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992·6792

OHIO RIY£1 LOT - l.ocDI
above Racine. lot ~ 125'll200'
deep with fum~hed collage.

$7.000.

PART-TIME HELP, IN POMEROY
I
NEEDED AT ONCE.
I
I. RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY.
I'
GOOD PA f

EXCELLENT BUY - Very nice

7 room 2 'stlry home, 3
bedrooms, Ill balls, carport
Mtin

S1reet.

$20,0(1)

L-----~~:~~~~~!~~-------l/..___c_o_N_r_A_c_r_·9_9_2_·_2_1_·s_6_......~

Pomerov. On~

VllmtllidlllkJ1 ~

Pllonl 742-Mil

~~~~
I

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL
$3()0°

CHECK THE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Material &amp;·Labor
As lo• As

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
PH. 992- 2772
9-9·lllll.

li-26·11t:

r---------,l

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

MILLS'
'ELECTRIC

·

Residential-New and
re-wirlq: Commercial
and Industrial.
BONDED-All Work

Guaranteed

· Call 614-?U-2214 ·

· Phone:

.., After 5 P. M.

Roaidonco: 985-3837
Worehouto : 915-3509

9·22- I mo. pd.

9·15·1 mo.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

- Dozer•
-

,

CHESTER, OH.
9·12·1 mo

.Backhoes
Dump Truck•
lo-"oy
Trencher·

- Water
- Sewer
- Gas Unea
- Septic Syotemo
LARGE of SMAU .1015
PH. 992-2478
9-22·1 mo. pd.

Roofi!'l &amp; Sidin&amp; Co.

REPAIR

Trophy

Malllfacbirers
I

PlAQUES

ENGRAVING

S&amp;W TV

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

APPUANCE

. KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AND

SERVICE
Clltster, Ollio

Ph. 985-4219
II No Answtr, C'all 915-4312
Dewoyno Wllllomo
I Scottie Smith
All llokH tllld lodtls
Anlonno lnslllllllon
H01111 Calls ond Shop
Senico AYiiltblt

louie I
lone Softom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

12-2&amp;Hc

9·15-111'10.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. RT. 50 lAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Authorized John Dnr.
,... llolllnd, Bush Hoe

Firm Equipment
O.ltr
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
IJ.&lt;to:

pd.

It
I0 'uy ltLLEY

NAnoNALINE

Plumbin£ &amp; Heatinc Supplies

,..,,.r

"" r:ou Wa"t o

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

'

.AIR CONDITIONERS
RESIDENTI.Il • IDiMERCIAl

'
'•

All Makes

•Walh•a •DIIhW.ahar1
Ranges
•Refrigeratora
•Dryen •FrHnre
PARTS and BER,YICE

lad

You W•nt Him GHd"
tlliCTitC Ill SIW£1 CLEAIIEJ

••

985-3561

A Phoas C1ll llrillp
Pro•pt Coll'ltDIII Sonlco
Zl2 E. 2nd
Pom-. 0.
NOOI't till IIIII IO (II your lurMCO riiiiJ lor &lt;Did wutor, ·10% •
Olscoont on ony now"furneco porclwtd boloro llct. 15. 9 15

...

CONTRACTING
REClAMATION
"Excavatina .
"Ponds
•septic Tanks
"Haalina

'

\

•!!!!!~S. RfCLAIATION

1-1-llc

'

j

PIIOIIE Jll CLIFFOID

·Hie

..

2

Roootoro-Coll 814-992·
3287.

~~~.3~!11'
871_ .to18a2 .11DM
~~

r

-

u

gea atove In
-•king cond~lon, 304·
875-1078.
'

.

PH: 1-304-773-5634
Mason, W. Va.
C. L. Kitchen 8·29·1 mo.

'

DIIED'I- aiiiiiAIIIEID

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay caah for late model
clean uaed cera.
·Jim Mink Chev.-Oida Inc.
Bill Oane Johnson
448-3872

H your club or organlzatior1
needltliltra mon-v. we have
ari e~~~:callent fund raising
program. for Information, , Wanted to buy uaad coal &amp;
wood heaten. Swain Furniphone 304·87&amp;-1 090.
tu.,, 448-3169, 3rd . &amp;
The young lady that coiled Olive St .. Gallipolis, Oh.
Stephen Millar last week
Wanted to buy Used moblla
oboul horoeo, coll304·875· homes a truck camper. Call
4106.
• .
814-446-0175.
Country Feltlval. Antique
Steam Ia Gal Engine Show. Wanted to buy e Chevy,
Set., Oct. 1 I Sun .. Oct. 2 . engine oomoll black. 307 or
Whut threal:'llng, c'ornmeel 360. Cell 448-2787 or
grinding, apple butter, cider 448-9284.
and mo1aue1 making. Pianear craha. 1quare dance Stockarmatlc stove In good
Saturday night; church Mr- working condition. Can
vk:o Sunday. M110n County 814-248-&amp;204.
Regional Stell Farm
E~~tcellent Beagle rabbit dog.
MuulJm . .
Call alter &amp;PM, 445-8322.
T-ahirt1 printed,
' complete
ort ~eslgn nrvlco. Phone BEDS-IRON, BRASS. old
furniture. gold, ·eilver dol·
304-882-2766.
lara, wood Ice boxes. 1tone
jar1, antlquee. etc.. Com·
plata houteholdl. Write:
4
Giveaway
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4 . Pomeroy.
Oh. Or 992· 7780.
INgle pupo. Coli 814-379·
Wanted to buy. New. und •
2116.
antique furniture. Will buy 1
2 twin ldtten1, grey &amp; white. piece or complete ho"••·
holda. Alao corripleta Aucti·
Coli 448-3732.
oneering nrvice. Call Osby
FrH bo• apringt for twin A . ll!fanln 614-992-8370.
bed. Coli 448·4347 after 5 . Buying dally gOld. silver
Male ·Bangle type dog. Call coin1. rlng1, jewelry. starling
ware. old colna. large curlt4-245-8632.
rency. Top prlcu. Ed . Bur·
kett
Barber Shop. 2nd . Ava.
5 month old lomolo cot . Call Middleport,
oh. 614 ·992·
448-0743.
.
3471.
1 pair cream cofored kittane
old pianos. Paying
to r111ponalble peraon, houM Wanted
UO.OO and t40.00 ooch.
brokon . Coli 5t4· 3BB· Firat ftoor only. Write giving
8542.
dlrectlona. Witten Plano•.
Box 188, Sardis. Ohi.o
Avoc1do grHn refrigerltor 43948
. Phone 814-4B3 ·
nHdl repair. Coli 814-246 · 180&amp;.
9632.
Adult male Cocklpoo to J1peneae Sworda wanted.
good homo. Allor 3 p.m. aall Poylng 1200. min . Tom
Winter. 824 Panon. Spring·
114·185-4488.
fiotd, Ill. 82'#02. 12171 6447811 or 523-B729 .
Bilvor l'oodle to good ho-.
Mlnature. Approx. 3 v-re Wanted: wlndahield for
old.
pntla ond good
1987 Plymouth Fury Ill.
with clllldren. Oood hou .. 304-87&amp;-3089.
pat. Coli 8t4-892-881a.

GNit D1n1 pupa to good
homo, 304-875-7189.

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglau
*Stainless Steel

'.,

CLfAIIII8,
COIICHTf WOII

949-2293
heine, OH.

PERSONAUZED
POOLS

)

Garege Sale Fri. a Set. Sept .
30 lo ' Oct. 1. Dobby Dr.,
McQuire Subdivision. Beds,
ltamp collection, 1tero'l ,

home. Tuppers Plalnl. eall
814-867-6329 .

.

7 puppies, 304-875-2714
·
. or 875·1177.
4 mota puppiq, mother
oolla, nina ~old, 30._ ·
87&amp;.. 7337.

cectUI and htlnglng plenta.
Fri. Sept. 30 .sat. Oct 1 ,
1 0 :00-8 :00. Toke325. 1nRio
Grenda. turn right at Vet
clinic, 1 mlle1, flrlt road to
right, firlt houee. Janice
Shoats. 614-246-6348 .

3 Family Garage Sale Oct . 1
· • Oct. 3 . Corner of Bull Run
&amp; Van Buren St . in Vinto l). 4
boxe1 new ceiling tile, TV,
baby bed, car r!MIIo, lamp.
almo1t new womana dras1
slacks al ze 7 thru 1 1.
children• clot hing sizee 0
t hru 4. and other nice
clothing . drapea, bathroom
cabinet .

3 Fa mily Yord Sale Off St.
Rt. 218 on 3,4 mi. Raccoon
Rd. Thura. ,. Fri. &amp;: Sat. firlt
Time . Furnit ure, children &amp;
1dult1 clothaa.
Michigan Sale 60 Nail Ave.
Christma• items, clothu,
crib, 11ero, high chair, toy1,
' coats.

3 Family Urge Yard Sale .
Lower Garfield ••t. Fri. •
Set. Sept. 29 I 30. Lots og
·boy1 clothing tlaea10 to 18 .
Baby clothing 2 • under
(girls) . Old • new gleasware ,
king size tpread , 2 gal crock .
&amp; Iota more. Rain ceneel1,
Yard Sale Green Tarrece on
Rt. 141 Sept. 30. Workman'• Re1 . Cheap prices.
Don't mi11 it .

·.... ·r,-om&amp;;o;;------· ..
Middleport

8t Vicinity
~ ---·- - --- ·· -- -- -------·-- --··

3 family yard ule. Oct.1 -3 _
Yard Sale 29 Port1mouth ·n . Brook1 Sayre rnldence
Rd . Saturday. October ht . in Syracuae. Rain or ahine . ·
Room &amp; Board for elderly
9:00AM to 4 :00PM . Toys.
preferred . .Good care, raa&amp;o·
clothes, Iampi, sofa b,d, Sept. 30 -0ct. 1 . Behind :
3 Family Patio Sale. Sept. . 'mile.
Ucenaa bureau In Pomeroy.
noble. 614·992·8022.
29-30, 9 -6. 3 mlleo North on
Lot1 ot jeans, baby clpth•• • ·
Will belt¥ait Jn .miiJ!omo ol Rt. 160 f rom Holzer Hoapi· Fri. &amp; Sat. 9-6 . Green Acres misc.
Ruoflc HI~ JII•.Jyracuoe. 1 tol on old Rt. 180.
Sub. Div. soft sculpture
Yard Sale 641 S . 2nd. Ave., ·
dolls. clothe•. misc .
~~~
'
1
' ..,d refer·
Lorge
3
Family
Yard
Sale
old
Middleport, Oh. Sopt. 30• .
encoo. Co ·s14-992-703B . .
furniture, clothes. )t nick
Garage Sala Sept. 30-0ct. Oct. 1 &amp; 3. Redovla"'a.
Will care for elderly wo~. knacks. etc. Wed .. 11\ura .. 1. Joy Dr.. 9 -6. Good
3 family yard sale. Sept . 29
men or couple In our honfle. Friday . Sept . 28 thru 30th. clothing, hou1ehold items.
&amp; 30. 870 s. 4th Ave ..
LPN care given . 814-992· 606 W. Collage St .. Rio
Grande, Ohio. Houre 9 til 6. .Garage Sale 8·5:30. Thura., Middleport.
7314 .
, Sat. Rt. 7. North near
Three Family Yard Sale 1 Fri.
Moving Sale. 52335 Beld
Addiaon
. Watch for signs.
house on right peat Greene
Knob· Stlveravma Rd . Fri.,
13
Insurance
Terrace Treiler Court, Rt. Saturday 10 to 4 , 430 4th Sept. 30. 10-8. Sot .. Oct. 1
141 . Thuuday 9AM thru Ave. Baby &amp;: childr•n iteml, 10-4.
Saturday 2PM . Mlac . ltema. glesawera, misc . Rein
SANDY, AND BEAVER lnMonday, Oct . 1 . Sara
turance Co. h11 offered Yard Sale Friday &amp; Saturday cancel•.
Roush's, Ouaky St .. Svra·
services tor tire Insurance 128 Firat Ave., Gallipoli1,
Sat . Oct . 1, 9·6, Centenlllry cuse . 9· ~ ·
coverage in Gallia County Oh. 9 to 6 .
Townhouee
. Furniture .
for almost e c•ntury. Farm,
home and personal property Yard Sale' Several Family small appliances, sweeper, Church yard 111.,. 3rd . and
of Oct. on Sr. 124 at
coverages are available to Thurs., Fri., •set. Oakwood lamp•. dl1h11. knick knack•. 4th
Ruth
Clines reaidance. Call
clothing
meet Individual needl. Con· Dr .. Gallipolis 9-1
814-992·BB05. From 10
tact Kail Burleson, agent.
Family Oarage Sale Friday a.m. till 4 p.m.
Phone 446-2921.
Garage Sale 1 'h: miles past 230th.
Porterbrook SubdiviHolzer Hoapltal on Rt. 180. sion, fairfield Centenary Rd . Se~t . 30 &amp; Oct . 1et. 299
~1 8
Sept. 29 a. 30th . Lots ol'f'lice Follow signs. rain cancels. Wnght St. Pomeroy. Beby
Wanted to Do
clothe•. various 1lzea, home 9-4 ,
· clothes. patio door end o• ller
interior a. more. Hill 8t Neal.
mi•cYard Sale gray house 4 mUe1
General Hauling and Trash Garage Sale Rodpay-Cora .. below Eureka . 9 -4 , Thurs• Garage Sala . Fri. 30th tt'.t w
removal Service . Raliable Rd. 3rd. houae ·an Rt. Sat. day 6 Friday. Bunk bade, Monday, 3rd . Bet •l !·l'B n
and d8pendable. Call 446· 9 -6. Avo~ado range. baby clothes, misc.
Cline' a Fruit Farm 1nd !.uc.3159 between 9 arid&amp; .
clothes, 8t •wing . Prices
Cftl Rd. on Rt. 7 . Antlquea,
reduced.
Yard Sele Friday Sept. 30, hand tools, misc .• clothes &amp;
Lawn Mowing no yard to big
· 9-5- 3 mi. out Rt. 141 . jewelry. Leonarda realdence.
or small . Reliable and de pen· Yard Sale Sept. 29, ao. oct. Centenary red house. Lots of 9 :00-1.
dabla. For estifl')ate call 1·2. Shirts, CB's, chelf &amp; nice clothing~ baby items.
446-3169, 9 to 6 .
other J.te'ml. Fairyiew Ever- girls size 3. 4 I 6. bovato 18 Andy Grover residence. Bai'grHn ~d.
ley Run Rd. Oct. 1,3 . 9· 6 .
mo .
Wilt do bat»ysitting In my
Nice jeans. bloUHI . Coata,
home. Cell 614-379-2120. Yard Sale Gigantic Sale Yard Sale 911 2nd. Ave. Fri . Hurst Shifter. Rain ctncals.
- - - - - - -- - -1 Thurs .. Fri. &amp; Sat. Plantz &amp; Sat. Sept. 30, Oct. 1.
Roofing, carQentry, and Subdivision. BulavHie · Clothing 1U kind1, dishes,
concrete work, house paint· Porter Rd. Items to numer· tools. furniture , and many
ing .and general repair. 25 oua to mention .
misc. itmea.
yrs. experience. Call 8148t Vicinity
4 Family Carport Sale. 671
379· 2896.
Yard Sale October 61o 8. 10
Jay Dr.. Fri. &amp; Sat., 9-6. to
1
All
mu1t
go,
no
To take care of aomaaoM. Stero, childa organ, rocker, reasonable ofter refuaed .
sick or needs home care. ·portable TV, and morel
Rodney Village 11 . Follow 2004 Mt. Vernon Avenue,
Days only. good references.
Friday and Saturday, noon
sign•.
Colt 304·468 · 1818 alter Jack's Yord Solo 1146 2nd.
to 4 . Winter clothes from
Avo Sopt . 30 I Oct . 1, 9·6. Misc . Sale. Oct. 3rd. &amp; 4th . four familial .
8PM .
Couch as. chalra. dinette aet. Quilts, dishes, clothing, tur.Will cera for eldery person on lamps, twin beds, clothing nhura, tools, old lamps. Junior girl alacka, aweaterl,our private farm, *400 per end much more.
knick knacks, antiquea. Rt. jean•. kids clothe1. Thufl·'
mo. Coli 446-4326.
218, 1!. ml: from Rt . 7 . 9-1 day, Friday, Saturday. 2936
Large 3 Family Yard Sale Julia Caldwell. Call 446· Meadowbrook Drive, Point
WELD! NG. gas, electric. Good' mane • womena 9232.
Pleaaant.
portable, experienced de- clothing, furniture, applianpendable,lowratat,lmellor ce1. diahe1. jawerly. Yard Sale 642 6th Ava. Yard Safe. 1006 22nd
large jobs. 304-876-3877.
spreads, curtains. Sat. 9·1 Friday &amp;: Saturday 9AM to Street, Friday, Sept. 30th.Johnlonl Mobile Home 8PM . Ladie• large clothing, 10-3, boy• clothing. coate,'
Dump truck for hire, will Perk, Upper Rt. 7 .
and other llama.
furniture, miacellaneou1. ·
done in my home. 814 -9492779.

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

...... .,.f iiieas·a·rif ... ·

'.-'

.:- .:.·... : :: ~

T- nlca. omo!l pupo, 1
btown, 1 blodl ond whlto,
Phone 304-175-8230.

.
.,

Tree trimming end removal.
F'-- 011.•ma 18 1 · 814 -992 •
6040 or 614-949-2129 :

304-876-3190.
haul
coal, sand , gravel, etc.

•

21

Business
·Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LIS HII\IG CO. rocommondo
that you do buainesa with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have lnvelti·
gated the offering.
Water truck and route In
Maaon and Galli• County .
Serious inquiries only, 304875-1619. 6 to 9 p.m.

Help wontod: Social Servl·
cee Delignee-Admiaslonl
Coordinator lor 100 bad
ICF:SNF Nuning Facil~y In
Southea...,n Ohlll. Roopon libla lor laalal Borvicft and
Admlulono. Knowledge of
Modlcarw. Mttllcold. and
Morlt.tlng Hotpful. Collogo
•egreo In Liberal ArtoNu raing· Sociel Service• de·
slrobl• . &amp;quivalont exporlonce eooaptoblo ; Bend
rnume tD HHnland of
Jookoon, IIIII 1\13, Jookeon, Dh 45140. Equol Op. port unity Employer.

~~~~~~~~~~~t~~~~~~~==i~~~~~~~~::=
31 Homes for Sale

31 Homes for Sale

Middleport, remodeled , five
rooms and bath. gal furnance, •cozy fireplace, good
neighborhood . Price re duced. Coll814-992-6941 .

3 bedroom home. Aluminum 1iding. strom window•.
Warm Morning wood
burner, new chimney. range,
refrigerator, Kitchanaide'
dish washer, curtains,
drapes and ahaara. EJtc.
cond. 814-992-72B5 .

Beautlful 2 story brick vinyle, 1 acrelevei lot le11 than
10 yrs. old. Reaaonably
priced . Can be ~een , On
Falrfield-Centonory Rd. Ap·
pointment only. Call 446·
2469 .
Located in Syrecuse. Near
school &amp; awimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one·
third aero lot. $24,600. qf.
will rent for e275 mo.
304-B55-3934.

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS tow fixed
rate. Leader Mortgage, 77 E.
State. Athen•. 'Ohio . 1-814·
692· 3051.
23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING lower
prices - regular tuning• ·
diacounta to Senior Citizens,
ChurchBI &amp; schools- Ward's
Keyboard. 304-875-3824.

Ranch type (Brick} . 3 bedrooms, fireplace, attached
garage ~ full ba1ement,
newly 1hingled roof, ·walking
di•tance to Pomeroy Elementary School. $40.000.
Call614-992-8143 .
3 bedroom ranch style
home, carpeted, full 1ize
baaement. 1 car garage, in
·ground pool t 6x32 .
t46.000. 614-992-6868 .

Sale by owner. 3 bedroom
aectional home like new.
1 00x200 lot, end of street.
Arbaugh Subdivision,
Tuppers Plains. 835,900.
PIANO TUNINCl-LANE DA· Will accept mobile home on
NIElS. 742 · 2951 .-Aioo trade. Financing available to
'cllh for Spinet or Grand ~uoUfied buyer. 814-992piano' . (Even damaged con- '7034 doys, 814-992-7871
dition).
evening a.
SUBKEN SERVICE CO .
Lock1mlth service, toolahar·
pening, 1ereen 8t gl••• In·
otollod. Call Q34-876-3894.

v...,

992·2036

HEATING • PlUMBING

4·5-tlt

M.L

McDaniel Cultom Butcherlng.oper1 e day• • week.
cloaed on Sunday. Phone
304-882-3224 .

$250 hch

\\Free f1timot8s"

992-62U or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

AUTO
PARTS ·

Public Sale
l!a Auction

Abaolutely no bunting: tr.. peilling, fi1hlng, etc. on our
property In Sunon and Lebanon .TWP. MaKino Diddle
Seller• and Ulllan Proffitt .

Windows ·

Rd. Thur... Fri., 9-6 .
Good chlldrono clothes. high
choir. Col 814· 38B-9865 or
614-246-5039.

1-:--:---:---:--Ex.parlanced baby altting

Recine VoluntMr Fire Dept.
gun thoot . .10n will .tart
Oct. 8 It 8:30p.m. ot their
building ln .Ba•han.

Vinyl Replacement

Wh~o

Opening for an elderly man l .:p::-to_n_ti-:S.:-:bo:-u-:
qu-:et
:-'.'
1.'""7-:"-:
or women in my prlve~e Plant &amp; Yard S~le LQtl of

Control hunger and 1oM
weight with New Shap4-biet
Plan ·and Hydre&gt;. Wottr Plllo
at Fruth Pharmacy, 264
Jackson Pika.

3-lJ.tlc

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CHESTER

LQST: VIcinity of Bald KnobStiv.,IVIIIe Rd . 3 dogl', 1
large brown, 1 medium
brown an~ 1 1mall black &amp;
tan. Pt.' Elk Hound . Tues .
Reword. 614-B43-6119.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

No Sunday Calls

&amp; Viciftity

Situations
Wanted

Lost and Found

SIDING

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

......Gaiiijjoiis' ........

729-P. Pomeroy, Oh.

12

In Memoriam

Page-11

Help Wanted

I;~=;;=;==== Yard Sale 2nd. houae. O.J .

s.,-

Also Blown Insulation

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
Inc ~ Sidinc - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construcllon - Re·
modelinr - Custom Pole
Berns.

Two ttrey beagle hounds, at
Hidden Valley Country Club.
For information,
call 304875-3212
..

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

-l:iwlwook
(Froe hHonotoo}

•water Pipe
"Gas Pipe
"Regulators
•fittings
"Drips

-•Y·

Large rew1rd offered for ten
fomolo pit bull ond black
female garmll') ahepherd
puppy. Cell 614-742-2944.

The Daily Sentinel

Live In female compenlon for
elderly lady In good hHith.
MQdern hone and car with
no expen1ea. GenarDUI l!t·
lary to reliable peraon. Referencea needed . Write Box

Part Shephard puppies to
give
304-675-3212
afte r 3 . ~

6

Ohio

There hat never been a
bener time to be an AVON
Repre •entative. Cell 4•&amp; ·
33 5 B.

•

'

THE
TRoPHY
KING

2

11

'Auction every Tuesday
In Loving Memory of night. Pt. Pleooant. WYo.
FrHiand S . Norris who Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
~2Hic
PIIHd away two ye1r1 ago Center Bldg.. Camden St.
Sept. 27th .
614-367-7101 .
Love Ia a rainbow
with all ita colo,., mean- Rick P11r1on Auctioneer'
lng,ful of the things We Service. Eatate, farm , An·
1h1red:
• tlque • Uquidation selva.
lt1 red . .. love
UcenMd. • bonded In Ohio &amp;
' ita orl!nge .. .wermth
WVo . 304-773 - 5'786 ol
111 yotlow ... joyo
304-773-9185.
~Ool­
. ha gre., ... hope
--ho•
ltl blue ... loyollty
AUCTION Sunday , Oct. 2.
- Dump Truckl
Ito violet ... ou-ing
1983. At Vlllogo Trading
-Lo-Boy
Sodly miiHd by wlfo Poet. Front &amp; Cedar Sts, Oak
- Trencher
Lucille: eon Charles and wife Hill, Oh. ~uno. archery,
-Watar
Erma; daughter Luellle ; fishing, c1mplng. electron-Sewer
brother Fern: aliter• Flor- in, black powder; office
- Gas Unas
ence and France• and equipment. toola. applian-Septic:
Grandchildren .
ce•• ICOpll, and many more
LARGE OR SMAU JOBS
unmentioned ltema arriving
dally on truok . t100 dis·
PH. 992-2478
3 Announcements
count will be awarded to
8-18-1 mo.
bidder ~tth lergeat amount
of purcheH at the end of the
SWEEPER ond ..wing_ mo· day. Door .p rizes will be
chine r.epalr, part1. and award!MI to lucky bidders.
luppll...
Pick up and Food-drlnk-saating. Terms:
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
delivery. Davi1 · Vacuum caah or approved check, all
Cleaner, one haH mila up ..lea 'tA(ill be final. No
Cleorgoo Creolt Rd. Call atarting bide. All Item• put
up for bid will be sold .
44&amp;-0294. .
Phone: Local 682· 7767 or
I B.Uoona for Blrthdoya, Get 778B, Out of otote toll toll
Well; .t.nnlverNrya:, Swee· free .800-84B-4196, Ohio
thurta, parties. Call Bal- toltfree 1·800·282· 218B.
"Buutiful, Custom
loon• l!o Co .. 448-4313:
Built Garages"

.......... and

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Gttlr a1~

Giveaway

Good clothing. Pre1byterlan
Chureh Clotha1 Clos et .
Each Tuaaday. 10· 12. Mult
have referral from Ma1on
County Community Action
Group.

8

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

and.,...,

AND

949-3091·~ IO·tfc

Wt sill qUality used cars.

1~1~782

Also Tranemiosion

•tJ • •.........~
Raafil.
W1ft
-cwwllo ...t.

'

~II: 949-22~­
or

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

JOHN'S AUTO SALES

Certainteed

YOUNG'S

. VINYL
ALUMINUM SIDING

All Work Guoronletd
"Free Esti1111tes"

- On !lis 2 bedroom home
located on Mtin St lar(le I«
with pnlen area Terms
negdilble wilh 10'11 inlirest.
AsiGni$23.000. Call b'dellils.

Help Wanted

SERVICE

downspouts, &amp;Utter cleilnin&amp; IfNI painti~W, storm
doors 1nd windows.

Real Estate General

CARRI.ER WANTED .

i

Au~::s

JEWELL'S

POMERY
LANDMARK

~

675-Pt. Pleasant -'
468 - leon
576-Apple Grova
773 - Maoon
882-Naw Haven
895-Letan
937-Buffalo

1Q·QQatA14
M 1a Mulberry
publiCSl:llew1ll
be '
held
Avenue.
1----------..,.----------.,..---------Pomeroy. Oh•o 45769, to sell
fo r cas h t h e foll owtng
collateral .
1973 Plymouth - senal no
VH23G3B45020 1
1982 Plymou1h PP21. Senal
and
No. 1 P3B P51D9CC11 0440
&amp;
·
1981
Plymouth
PP21
.
Sed.
" Oh , I grant you the program
Se r 1a l Numb e r :
•Lowest
Ratas
was informative, but whllt was 1P3BP5 1DSC C 109 795.
•E•parienoed
Around
•lntulation .
it all about~ "
•AeatiCKIIble
The Farmers Bank and Sav•Storm Ooon
•Dump
Truck
•Work Guaran,_
Ings Company, Pomeroy, Oh10.
•Storm Window•
Service
reserves the nght to b1d at th•s
JOB - BIG OR SMALL
•Ropl-ment Wlnsale. and to w1thdraw the above
Public Notice
•New Roofing
SEPTIC TANKS
9.
9
2-6030
ve h1cle pnor to sale. Further.
FREE ESTIMATES
A
SPECIALTY
Minersville, 011.
d live Townsh1p ' Tr usteRs to the Farmers Bank and Sav•ngs
JAMES.
KEESEE
8/ 19/ 1 mo. pd.
hold sa1d real estate for Co mpany reserves the nght to
742-2328
PH.
992-2772
re1
ect
any
or
aU
b1ds
submitt
ed
cemetery purposes and to
Hl-trc
9·9·1 mo.
Furt her. ve h• cles are sold •n
transler the chLJrch build•n{l to
the
condmon
they
are
m
w1
th
no
Leonard Paugh and tor such
other nnd furthm rP.Iief as may expressed or 1mphed warrantieS gtven.
be JUSt and proper m !he
1
91 28. 29 . 30 3tc ·
prf,:m1ses
You are requ1red to answer
the pe11110n w1thm twenty-e1ght
128) days alter !he las t publ•caNew Homes - hlensive
Sizes start. from 12'x16'
!IOn of th• s not• ce. wh•ch w •ll. be
Remo~e.linc.
published once each week for
•Insurance WOJk
s1x successMl weeks. and the
.Custom Pole Bldrs.
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
last publlcal•on W1ll be made on
· to 24'x36'
&amp; Gorages
·
October 20. 1983 ·
•Roofinr
Work
In case o! your tailurP. to
lnsulatd
Houses
oAitlninum &amp; Vinyl Sidinp
answer or other...vJse respond
A TON
15 Yean Experience
as perm1tted by the Oh•o Rules
ol C1v11 ProoodurP. wt th•n the
GREG ROUSH
Racine, Oh.
t1me stated. JUd9men t by dP.PH.
992-2280
PH.
992-7583
.
l'h."61H4l-519f
fault Will be rendl! red agamst
or
992-2282
you for the rellet dema nded m
ID+IIt
tJ.I Hie
the pet1t10n
lARRY E SPE NCER. I--;;:::r-;:-:::-:-;:--;;---:-;Cie•k ol Cowts
Reai Estate General
ot Co mmon Pleas
Me1gs County, Oh10
H. L. Writesel
j91 1.5. 22. 29. [10)6. 13. 20.
61c

APPLIANCES

I
I
I

992·2196

·Business Services.

PIJBUC NOTICE
Not1ce IS hereby g1ven that on
Satu rday, October 1st. 1983. at

HOTPOINT &amp;
GENERAL ELECTRIC

"

PAT HILL. FORD

Public Notice

The follow•ng real r::Jstate
I
Classifieds
sotuate on the State ol Oh•o. '"
I
.the County of Me1gs. 1n the
I
Save
I Townsh•D ot Ohve and lurther
I
boundP.d and descnbed as
Beg•nn1ng 1n the
I Wri 1e yo ur own ad and order by mail wi th thi s I foll11ws
sout hwest corner of the Unrled
! cou po n. 'Cancel you r ad by phone when you get I Brmhmn Church yard or ceme1 resul ts. Mo ney no t refundabl e.
I t ~rv lH"~d runn1nq East 7 rods to
I
·I center of public road. thence
•N
I Sou th along SaJd road 5 rods
I . am e --;....,,...----------- 1 anct 12 let thence wes t 7 rds
I
.
1 thence north 5 rods. 12 It tO
I Add
I place of beg1nn1ng . conta•n.ng
I
re 55
one quarter ae&gt;e Sa•d above
I df!SCflbed lot ly1ng Soulh of the
1 Phone
I
Uno!ed B•eth•en Chu•ch lot and
1
[cemetery lot) descr. b!'!ed •n
I ·
follow1ng tract of land. VIZ
I Print one word in each
S11uated m the County of Me 1gs
space be low . Eac h in·
1n the State of Oh•o E1ghtyac res
I l1fial or group of figures
ol lund .n Sec110n No 27 and
I counts as a word . Count
28. 1n Tuwn No. 4. Range No
1 na m e a nd a ddr ess or
11 Oh•o Company Purchase
1 phone nu mbe r if used.
and .n FractiOn No 36 1t be•ng
I You ' ll ge t be trer r-'esults
1n the South West part of sa1d
if vo u describe full y,
Fr&lt;lciiOn No 36. as aloresa1d.
I g•ve pr1 ce . The Sentine l To 15
e1ahty ac res be the same more
54 Miic. Merchandise
I reserves the r ight to,
or less w1th the exceot•ons of
1Cl aSsif y, edit or r e iect To 'lS
about one half ac re on thA
1 a ny ad . You r a d w ill be ro 35
north pan of ~a 1 d e 1ghty acre
•
I put in the proper
tract ly1ng 1n the corner of 1wo
AUTHORIZED
SERVICE
cl assif lca fion if you ' ll
county roods deeded and se1
I c heck the proper bO)(
These cashra tes
I apart as a Un•ted Brethren
ON AU
I below .
•nc lude discoun t
1 Church and yard. the above 80
I
1 acres bounded on the North by
I
)Wan ted
I Ben1amm Lane and Dew11t Lane
1
1For Sale
I on the East by John Found s on
)A nnouncement
II .
__ , _ I the Soulh by Fract•on No 25
I
J For Re nl
and 35 and on the West by
I
Ill .
_ . _ _ 1 Robert H1ll The coal. oil and gas
WE ALSO SERVICE
I
19,
1 underv•ng the above descnbed
ALL
OTHER MAKES
acre of land.
I
10.
I oneREFquarter
ERENCE DEED· Vol 97.
I 1
11.
I Page519 . Me,gsCounty0eed
n
I Records
I 3
I ·
.,3_
1 ThP Pet1!11;;mers seek an order
1 4.
l
I to truns ler the real estate 10 the
614-992·2181
5
I . ·
I
" ·

I 6
I 1.
I a.

~•Tanka.

Mason Go., WV
Area Code304

·'

LAFF·A·DAY

by

~r~~;.;.~J"

992-Middleport
Porn~~ roy
9 85- Chester
343- Portland
247-Letart Falls
949-Aacine
742-Autland ·
6117- Coolville

illtnon. We lleo ....,...

Up to 16 words ... O~edayinsertion ·.. .. ..... . $3.00
Up to 15 words . .. Three day Insertion .... .... $4..00
Up to 15W&lt;Jrds . .. Six.dayinHrtion ., .. ...... . $7.00
(Average 4 words per line}

•

Public Notice

have a vested, contingent or

81.· Home Improvements
82- Piumbing l!o Haating
83-Excavating
·
84- EiectricaiS. Refrigeration 85-General Hauling
B&amp;· M.H. Repair
87-Upholstery

61 -Farm Equipment
62-Wanted to Buy
63-Uvestock
64- Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Meigs County
Area Code !114

ARROW FLASHINCl
SIClNS
FOR SALE OR RENT
6" ....
Reptacemont Lanara

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .
•.

Reaidentill

INe cen ....,... tmd reCIIte ..... _ - heater 001'11. We cen 1110
tlcicl boil and rod out ra-

.'

446-GaUipolio
367- Cheohire
·asS-Vinton
246- Rio Grande
256.:.. Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia Diot,
379.:. walnut

9· 2·fr

St, Rl. 124,-Pomeroy, OH.

Commerclai
Cell 742-31 95

Classifie
d pa/{e.~ cover the
.
foilowinl{ telephone exchanl{e.~ ...
Gallia County
Area Coda 614

742-2352
Route 4, Pometoy

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

RADIATOR
SERVICE

4 -Giveaway

New lime Rood
Rutl1nd, Ohio
PH. 742-2225 •,

For all your wfr:ing
needs; furnaces re- •
pair service and in·
ltelletion.

J'IAIA$111

71 -Autos for Sale
72-Truckslor Sale
73-Vans &amp; 4 WD
74-Motorcyclea
75-Boats &amp; Motprs
76-Auto Par.t s &amp; Acceuories
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

quality .

l ·Hie

61 · Housahold Goods
52-CB, TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53-Antiques
54-Misc . Merchandise
56- Building Supplies
5.6 -Pets for Sale
57-Musical Instruments
58-F;uits &amp; Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

Air Conditioners

construction company to manage

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

2 1-Business Opportunity
22-Moneyto loan
23-Professional Services

Washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators

external architect -engineer:

Or

·1 -Card of Thanks (paid in advance}
2 -ln Memoiy
(paid in-advance}
3 -Announcements

USED
APPLIANCES

SPORTSMEN
Have Your
Trophies
Professionally .
Mounted by
THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

CAPS
JACKETS
UMFORMS
T·BHIRTS
TROPHIES
QUANT'I'I'Y SPECIAlS
TRANSFERS- lETTERINCl
8-22-1 mo. pd.

-Establishment

-Hiring

4

Business Services

recommended:

exec\ltlve

Pomeroy-Middleport,

31 Homes for Sale
Newly remOdeled 2 atory
frame, 1% bath, 3112 aorH
city achoole. riverview:
U2,000. Call 441-4222
betWOOf1 9 I 5 .
4 bdr. ranCh home,l1rge LR •
lull ba1ement. with g1rage,
wood burner Included, city
achoola, 2 mlln from town.
Call 448-0278.

thre8 bedroom 2 story houn
on Pertr: Or. New furnance &amp;
air conditioning, dream kit·
chen wfth aU appliance•.
Owner will carry second or
aiL Small dOwn payment .
304-875-2192 .
Anumable loan, 3 bedroomo. 304-876·8110.
1874 Shultr 12x86, 2iorgo
bedroom• with built in cabinets, 2 bethl, air condi·
tlonlng. underpennlng, in·
t•com. new rug1. drapea.
furniture, outlidlt entrance
boll, 2 Hta of extre 1tep1.
fire llarm. a•• alarm, firet
aid kit. fire extfnguiaher.
t8,900. 1-304·BB2· 223;7.

New 3 bedroom hou1e for
rent in New Haven. Call
1-814-949-2470.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED- CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446-7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
AT 36. PHONE 448·7274.
1962 Vindale mobile hom'e
1 Ox60 with range. fl.OOO
or beat offer. Cell 448·
279B.
1988 1 Ox60 Pontiac Chill
trailer good cond .. reason•·
blo price. Coil 448· 7513.
1970 Vlnd1le eJtpendo
12x63. 2' bdr., centre! air,
total electric, unfum., price
t9 ,000 . Coli 614-246 ·
8222.
Wlnoo r• 14x70 with ••·
pando . 3 bdr., 2 beth, priced
appr. payoff. Rodney, Oh .
Coll304-876·1728 for lofo .
1970 12x44 Groot Lakeo
mobile homes, 2 bdr .. new
plumbing &amp; air con d. Owner
must aeU. $2,000 . Cell
614-266-1404.

1966 Shutt trailer. 82,700.
or best offer. 304· 676167B.
12x60 mobile home, fair
condition . reasonably
priced. Phone 304-876 2B84 or 304-87&amp;-1892.
35 Lots

&amp; Acreage

35 acral at Rodney on W.T.
· Wat1on Rd. Owner financIng available. Coii448-B221
after 6 weekdays.
One acre lot with platform
for house · and In-grOund
pool, for information, 813-666-1232.
level lots 6 mi. aouth of
GallipoUa . All underground
utilities, central 1ewage ..
Coli 448-1241 , 8·6 ,
Monday-Friday.
Beautiful lot on Lower Rac·
coon Creek. Land contract'
available . Call Tom letHa
448· 7901 .
2'20 ft . road frontage over
looking Raccoon Creek with
1970 mobile homo. Coli ·
814-268-1677.
2-approx . 1 1h acre Iota for
aale, level Iota, t3,900each.
Coll814-388-8801 .
For sale or lease 100 acre1, ,
mineral i'ighta. Call 614698-6370.
Co . Rd ~ 18, 6 acres land with
•Pring water end septic tank
e6.900 . 814-992-2803.

Nice 'h acre lot. drilled well,
septic tank. Southlide area.
•10,600. 304·937 -28Bll or
876 -3676.

1974 14x70 3 bedroom,
totol electric. 814-992·
6587 oftor 6:30 p.m.
1971 MobMo Home. Robel
12xl&amp;. New furnace , not
fumlohod. Coli 814-8927768 .
USED MOBIL~ HOME, IN
GOOD SHAPE. 304-5782711 .
.

By owner Houaa with 2
ICI81 more or IMI. bHn
remodeled, orchard, 87 ft.
well, '22,000. Coli 114-

2028 Uncoln Avenue, ·8
room1end beth, 2 g1e11ed m
porchoo. large out ... lldlng,
garage , corner lot.
BO'x130'. Phone 304-8762012 .

74 FREEDOM. 12•85. olr
conditio,ning &amp; underpennlng. partially furni1htd ,
U,600. 304-876-8484.

3 bedroom hou• with fireploco, oantrot air, 2 full
blttho, In city limits. lmmodlote poo-olon. CaW 114·
245· 5281

·""' reduoed::·tum-off Rt .
35 In Konarson, WV. go
aw1y from river. laat houee
on H....,....,n Btroet, Bob
. Kleollng, 114-448·2501.

1979 Boron mobile home.
14x70, 3 ·bldr'ooml, 1112
boths, Pllnlolly furnlohed.
central air. good condltio_n ,
prlco, t8,000.00. Call304575-32B8.

~88 - 8013.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

4 bdr. haute 5 ecres of land
on Rt . 160 In Vinton. Central
air. $360 mo., 1ec. dep . •
·
ref. Coil 448-317&amp;.
3 bdr. houee near Rio
Grande. No p&amp;tl, t236 mo.·
Coli 614-24&amp; -&amp;439. ·
White frame, 3 bedroom
house with carport. Garfiold
Ave. location. Phone 246·
6269 or 448-8879.
1-::-~--:----­
Noo~y new 2 bdr. houoe, 3
mi. from HMC. no pets,
e196 mo .. e1oo ctep. Coli
;446-3817 .

�12-The Daily
41
Smell

Sentinel

Houae• for Rent
modern

Ohio

54 Misc. Merchandise 64 Mlac .

They'll Do It Every Time

country

home. Aetweneee. dapotit .
R. .IIIINII&gt;Ie. Wrlto P.O. Box
10, Golllpollo, Oh 46831 .
2 bcfr. houM In Eureka. Call
448-113&amp;.

29, 1983

PROBLEM

t:;t(S TOM ERS.
!=L..EA •MARKET
VA,q/ET~....

THE'( WANT i H&lt;O STIAI"F ,
FOP&lt; PRACiiCAW f IIOTHIN ,
f3U1 WITH MOP&lt;E SIZGS,
C.OLOI&lt;S AN' STYLES THAN
- --.1. A 17EPA P&lt;TMGNT STOF&lt;G ...

Ai ari • 6 clrtridget, • 100. awirlpool ratriger•toc .
Coli 448-2297 .
f195 .00, 304-875-29;)1 ·.

llvlngroom: 2 bdr. and bath :
SM It 53 Garfield Ave ..
Oolllpollo.
fiurniahed 3 room cottage
one · bedroom. only large
enough for one or two
edulta. No pets, deposit and

Piut oven, t400 . Joea
Pine in Chethlre. Cell614387-0671 .

· reference please . Cell 4462643 .

Doll, ·PIIntl &amp;. thlngt. Ctll
614-258•6629 .

2 bdr. brick in Rio Grande,
full baaemant &amp; garage. No
poto, U16 mo. Call 814·
246-6439 . .

· by Larry Wright

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

' DICK TRACY

79 Motors Homes
&amp;Campara

Fish Aqu8rium• made to
order ..lrvln'a Gl811 Serv;ce,
448-4423 .

!'l-eAse

66 Building Suppllea

eM"

iT, CAli!~~ ~,.e.!

-..........

1:;:==::::======
66

81

Pete for S•le

(lJ

Cll 11) •

GZ Nowo

.

PERIT

I I I

Cll !lD •

I

CD ESPN'a SportsWeek
Cll Llttlo HouM on the

WH'I' PIP YOU -eo
AND DO THAT ~

[j

(J I

tGOSTEOI

Prairie
(J) (jj) Oya Willie
• Buck Rogers
8:30
(lJ (1} NBC N-s
Cil love That Bob
CD Bill Dance Outdoors
(J) G I)Z ABC Newa
Ill (J) (lit CBS Newa
Cll Buoln- Report
(jj)
Eosy
7:o0 8 (lJ PM Magazine
Cil Booms &amp; Allen
(1) SportaCentor
Cll &lt;;arol Burnett
CIJ En1ortainmont Tonight
(I) Chanle' s Angelo
II (J) Wheel of Fortune
(J) (jj) MacNeii/LI!hror
Newahour
!lD Nowa
1D Poople'o Coun
Jefferson•
7:30
())Tic Tac Dough
(lJ Coming Attrectlono
Cil Doble Gllllo
CD PKA Full Contact
Karate
Cll Good Newo
(J) Ill Cll Family Feud
!lD Wheel of Fortune
ID En1ertainmen1

CAPTAIN., EASY

HILLCREST KENNELS
Bordlng oil br-o. llolllng
Hoppy Jock Dog Food.
~Oberman puppiea: Stud
Service. Coli 448-778&amp; ..

J-.
·to. 1onn
lour ordinary_,._

(lJ MOVIE: ' Timo Rider'
' (lJ MOVIE: 'Tho Pursuit of
D.B. Cooper'
Cil Tic Tac Dough

Home
Improvements • .;

WHAT THEOISUYWHO

5'1'0L.E A 5ANAI-.IA
6AVE THE COPS.

e

Judy Toylor Grooming. Coli
114-317-7220.
.

Now onongo tho - . lo
1o1m
tho
IUiprloo · . . auggeotedbytho--.

a-

Woodburning Stoves. freet·
tanding, fireplace inMrtl.
mobile home tpproved, a.
furnance ad-on1. Jividen•
Farm Equipm'ent, 441·
1675.
.

BoblM

by Henri

Unocromblo- lour

EVENING
6:00 •

13

one -IDooch

9/29/83

..

11 WM 0 1t
SA~!

Building material•
block, brick, MWer plpea,
windows . lintela, ttc.
Claude Wintera, Rio Granda,
0 . Coli 814-248-6121 .

. ~ l.!!} ~~·

THURSDAY

1974 VW Cimpmol&gt;llo .
New tir... r.ew ptlnl, aitrj
good cond. Aoklng t181S .
114-448-7389.
-.

Sentinel--

'ilf}\lruliD'il ~'I'MATICRA!IIt•DWOIIDCIAME

Television
'
Viewing

0

Fuel oil ato,_ fo rced air
Siegler Brentwood, 2 "1.:! yr:
old . Tank Included, $~0 .
Call 446-2368.
Hobby Greenhouae, l~an ·IO·
type, 6 '3"x8 '7", IUIOmltiC
vent cloaure, 3 aided glan
and aluminum conatructlon.
May 446-3768.
be used u aoler room.
Call

HouM for rent large kitchen

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

The Dai

29, 1983

Print answer here:

(XI)(IIIJ
(--.lomoorow)

· v_estarday's l Jumbloo: DINER ORBIT CHOSEN GRASSY
Answer: How to get a big long nsh lnlo 1 amall'frylng
pan-USE S.HORTENING

a
e
e

THREE bedroom house,
Rouah Rd., Cheshire, OH .

Full basement, · large lot,
goroga . Coli 814 · 367 7176.
2 bedroom cottage, new
carpet. good location, in
town, 304-876-7834 oftor

1 bdr. apt. witk stove &amp;
refrigerator, near HMC. no
pets, $169 mo .. 860 dep.
Coli 446-3617 .

3 bdr. doublewide in John:
sont Mobile Home Park.

Private yerd. $300 per mo ..
includes water,.sewage, garage pickup 6. gas. t1as gas
range, water heater. Electric
not included, no pets. Limited to 2 children, city
school; close to K-Mart a.
Sliver Brldaev ~hopP.ing
Center. Coli '4 48-3547 or
446-4028 oltor 8PM .

2 bdr. trailer, furnished . Call
446-0756.
Furnished 14•70 3 bdr .
trailer on private lot. 10
minutes from town . S200
mo . plus utilities. 8200 dep.,
reference•. Cell 614-2581393.
1 2.1l60 2 bdr. unfurn., mobile home. water &amp; gas
furnlahed , heated by ga1.
Call 446-4369.
Mica 2 bdrm. mobile home.
convenient location on Rt. 7, no inside pets.
IOC. dop. Call 614-2456816 .
fu~mished,

Mobile home lou for rant.
water sewer furni1hed. 1
small chl!d accepted. 304·
676-1076.

.-~JWO bedroom, unfurnilhed.

.... camp Conley. •1&amp;0. per
; .month. 304-676-1371 or
...676-3812.
·c~~---

:~12x&amp;O Trailer, 2 bedrooms,
•: fumlahed. waaher and dryar,
:..!.• dults, no petl, • 1 00 dep·
aGeit and referencea. 304:,.75-4874.

~ 44

"·';'

Apartment
for Rent

'·
2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apanmenta HU D Available Util' .tiea panly turn .• apanmen~a
"'· ••'available now . •200 par mo .
4 room apt. utilitiea partially
pold f150 . A-One Raol
,., .. E..ates, Carol Yeager, Raal:ior. Coli 304-676-5104 or
0
304-878-7388.
Furnished apt. 1185. Wtter
..pold, 2 bdr .. 131Y, 4th.
· Gollipolio. 446-4416 oftar 7

....J&gt;.m.
::Unfurnllhed, downltalrt, 3
... room ept " 1 bdr., no patt.
a Inquire at 87 Vine St.,
:·-oalllpolls.
.
I

~

Furnl1h1d apt . 2 bQr .• near
• HMC, f238 utllltloo pol~ .
; 243 Jockoon Pike, Golllpo' llo. 448·441 8 otter 7 p.m.

'

~:----------------

&amp;,fj~~~!;~;~~

l 64 Mile .

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 1 2"·22" atocktd
In yo rd. HEAP vendor.
prompt dollvory. 114-2518248 .
.
limestone, Send , Gravel.
Dollvorod In Mooon, Molgo,
Golllo or pick up ot Rlchordo
• Son. Coli 441-7785.

REBUILT APPLIANCES
drylfl, rangea,
refr1gerator1. Shop repair
bring it in 6. Save. Cali
446-B181 .

Furniahed 3 room1, with
prlv1t1 btlh. Reference pre·
.!trrod. Coli 448-2215.

1 good uaed electric ctothet
dryer. Call 448-0429.

We~hers,

2 u1ed bunk bed

'

'•

Fioh Tonk • Poto, 2413
E &amp; R Tree Service, fu'lly
"Jtckao., Avenue, Point Pial· 71
Autoa for S11le
ln1ured. free eatimatea.
nnt. 304-875-2~83.
Phone 814-367-0636. call
firewood for 1ele. Hard· Monday· laturday, 11·8.
after IS .
wood . 614-843-5186.
Tame gofftn cock-1 -too 1nd TOP CASH paid for loto
cogo. f428. BBforrot. en. modal uHd Ctrt. Smith
SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Ono
6 inch RCA TV, tm·fm radio
love bltda,
40 each. Bulck-Por•tloc. 1811 Eootpiece oultqm fit your horrie.'
combination. Battery or ac - oronge wing. • 175. homo· orn Ave.. Golllpollo, 448Outranteod. Advanced Outdc current. 1114· 992-2080. tors, •1.99 ond 12.91, mice 22B2.
tar;' (Ooy ~·14-692-4086 , )•
f75.
89 cents.
(night 814-898-8206.)
.
.
1978 Hondo Accord. e..
EXTRA good top ooil, deliMPF 135-hwy.j. Good
Roofing
and
Carperitry
vered. phone 304-875- 67
Muaical
cond., single owner. price
W:Qrk, ganertl tepairt. eMf
7771 .
. lnatrumentl
below 81ue Book. C~ll 448Anthony Williamson, 814'·
2085 ovonlngo.
317-0194.
•
For Sale: Lumber 1" end 2"
dimension, poplar, oak or Clarinets , flute1, saxe- 1980 Dodge Aopon, outo ..
pine. For prices .end av•ll•· . phon•• · trombonat, P.S .. P.B.. I 'cyl., aunroof,
bility . Conttct Millwood trumpett. Frank• Pawn ,..1 nice. John't Auto Selea,
Inc .. 304-273-2522. Rt. 2 Shop. 441-0840.
448-47•2. Bulovmo Rd.
al EvergrHn Hilla Road,
UMd
trombone
and
clarinet.
Mondoy-Frldoy, B-4 :30;
In good condttlon. Coll'814- 1880 Reneult L~Car. 4 sad.,
Seturdoy, B-3:00.
·
lm·fm, full sunroof, rHI
992-5124.
Stove end furT)ace cleaning
therp. John't Auto SaJe1.
end ropolr, 304-.1176-8073.
COUCH, chair, rocker. otto448-4782, a..ovllla Rd.
men. 2 end teblaa, coffee Electra · electric guitar with
Truckl for Sala
tabla, otter 6, 304-6711'- HS C:IU, cra(e •mp, eo rml, 1979 Plymouth Arrow, 72
Morley Vol. WAH, phooo
4612.
&amp;
thlfter. electriC tuner. cords, outo .. p.o.. p.b .. om-fm tope, 78 Ford Courier 35,000
a~nroof . John't Auta Sales,
ttend,
mltc~l•neoue
Item•.
Seatoned oek firewoOd,
44t-4782; B-Ill• Rd.
miiM on overhauled, topper. I-----------------304·875-2757 oftor 4 p.m . •1500 voluo. •aoo. 304CI, AM - • · goodtl-.
875-5843.
11179 VW ·Robbh, 4 opd.. ,1,1100. CoH 448-1028.
CARTER'S PLUM81NG
Two wheel utility trailer, 4x8
ANO HEATING
tm-trri, air cond., tunruaf.
foot bod, f160 . 304 -773John'o
Auto
8oloo.
4481810
Chevy
'II
T
..
4x4,
35~
Cor.
Fourth ~d Pine
· Fruit
58
6518
4712 Bulovltlo II•
IUIO.. 44,000 mi., wide Phone 448-3888 or 446- '
&amp; Vegetable•
•·
llroo, U. 700. · Coli 448· 4477
'
:
Woodburnlng Franklin flra1979 Oldomoblle Storflro 0231 .
placo, f100.00. Call after 5 Applea . Fitzpetrlck OrFlren11 V-8. outo .. p.o .. p.b..
Ford F- 150 PU out'b JIM'S PLUM81NG. HEAT- '
p.m .. 304-876-1185 .
chordo. S.R. 889. 814.889- am~fm tape. eporty. John•• 1171 ,
lNG. Fomerly Dewitt' a;
3786· or 114-818-4378. Auto Soloo, 441-4182, Bu- trono. PS. PI, 'II ton, good Plumbing. Coli 814-367-·
1 cabinet, aeveral end ta- Hourt10 t .m. -8 p.m.
lovlllo Rd.
cond.. •3.700. Coli 448- 0576 .
blet, 1 floor ltmp, 1 tebla
lemp, cedar wardrobe, mis1178 Pontloc Sunblrd. 4 I ~1 -~---bo-d-.
17-1I-F_or_d_t_ru_c-k.
cellenaous ltemt, radio83
59
For Sele or Trade cyl .. 72.000 nil., .1.900 or •2403.
C
II
448
record player. 2 apaakara, 1
trodo. Coli 814-379-2728.
v cy · •
-2592 .
chair brown. 1 deak. 2 fool
1980 GMC 4x4 ~ ton,
otoolo. Coli ofter 4:30. -304·
1989 F&lt;&gt;rdo4x4. Trodafor cor 11171 Chevotll 4 dr .. outo.; PB, PS, 30,000 mi., DOZER WORK By Tod.
875-1438.
of aquol volue. 814-843- 52 .~00 mi .. PI, olr cond.. '5.900. Coll448-2403.
Honno, pondo. dltchn. •
PI, 4 opd. 11,750 or trade .
otc . Call 446-·
Sofa and chair, excellent 6119.
Cell 814-371-2721.
198e Ford T880 tondom 4BO?. Corter ·• · Evano
condition, ruet and gold,
:-:--:: ;-:----.
dump truck. 114· 192- TNntportatton.
1200. Cell 304-875- 1 &amp;42
1810 C-oro Rolley Sport, 5641 .
...
1-:--::-:-----after 6 .
'
4
1,000
mlleo.
PI,
PB,
olr
Lonnltt logge EKcavating.
. ' . .. .
cond.. outo.. U.30~ or 1117 Dodao 2 ton truclc. Oozor. baclchoo, dumptruck.
Cheat type frt!llze_r, 18 cu.
61 F•rm Equipment !redo. Cell 814-378-2728. Good condition. 814-985- Work bv hour or job. Coli
tt .. 11eo. 304-8n: 6o73.
4311 01. 114-1111-4133.
44t-7903.
.
1171 Gron9 l'fl• 18.000
DreaHr, cha1t of drawera. For ule or trade John DMre
need• """'' end.
C8t 2111 hoe, dor~rt. cra'l•·
wardrobe . Phone 304-1715· 7ft. mower. Coli 814-379- mHea,
•1.198 or trodo. Coli 114- 1977 Ford R -· Y, ton : loaders, dump truck. Call
2·194. See at 903 Moaaman 2898.long
bed.
ot-lng,
379·2728.
Circle.
power brobt. outomotlc, olr 014-448-1142 betwoan
condition. VB, loto of utroo. 7:00AM • 5:00PM.
Goorlohoipe. ooldng u.ooo. 1-----------~~Old clockt, electric and
304-178·2883 - · 4,
Good-1 Ex..votlng, booowound up, oil floor furnac:e,
mtnte. footera. driveway,,
autometlc, 376 gellon drum
11ptic , tank1. landtcaping.
Liveltock
ond atond,. f300. 304 -BUCoH onytlme 448-4637,
3590.
73
Vane. 4 W.O.
.Volkwogan body ilood
Jemet L. Oavlaon , Jr.
1------~----cond., new tltern1tor. een ~
ow,.r.
Air conditioner, ctn ._ at Regll'lered Polled He'retord orotor, fuel pump, • brokoo. 1118 11MC lchoolbuo 30
........ --Regenc,Apanmanta. no. 4, bull. A~proa . 11•0 poundo. Cell 441-4231 or 441- p.......... 212 ......... 4
Do1er WorK. gr~oo~nnd ~le11rina ~
304 -67 -3"48
v
v
·
379-Z 57-.
apd
...............
4B35 .
• . .CIVII1on, 126 hour. Cab
12,200. CoH 441·2838 of· 441-8138 .
•
.
Tobie whh 1 cholro, fiB .. 2 1 whlto foco Honford ·bull 111~ '!IW Rollblt zood aon- tor I.
end 1obleo, Roggody Ann R:ilotorod, f880. Coll814- dltlon. Coli ollor :3~ t14·
J.A.R. Conotructlori Co.
d II Nlk
k
bo bol
241-1183 .
troc
•• arlI -25
Water Linea, Faotart ,
• oh 0••• • • ,,
I . or
7. At
- --1523.
-----------Drain I. All klndt of Ditching,
coooottoo. Phone 304-1761112 Movericlc . Good -rft
7438.
Club colvoo Exotic Rutlond. Oh . 814-742'..
- - - - - - - - - - - - - crooooo-&amp;lrod by Double cor. bady o llttlo rough.
2103.
Time Tomado 114 371 11 4·378·1311.
Gaa renge, 2 ·oven a. exc_.. 2~oi.
'
·
Molp Elccovotlng. BuHdoz";
lont condition. u!led 3 yooro,
1171 Pinta. 4 apoed, 100d
•
- o o oorvlco. Ia•·
74
Motorcycl11
cloon, 304-171·5111 .
2 yr . old Jor*OV milk oow
onty 22.000 mlleo:
monto.lootoro, .. ndoceplng.
S
wMh cell. Coli 441-4423, Aoltlllt only 11,800. Coli
C
drfvew1y1. far.m pond-.
oto1 hlldcrolt-ko, ,.ry ovo. t1~·181- 1111.
114-112-1111 or I 14-812114-742-2407 or' 814-742xood condition. '71. 3042848 ottor e:oo.
2088.
.
1
912
\'omoho
121
CC
1100
82-2718 5 p.m .
Hogo • ohooto for lolo or
oatuol
mlleo.
uo.
aond
.•
In
trodo for holfor oolf. Coli 1Ill Codlllac, ~door. Runo otorogo. Coil 114-241Dry firewood, dollvord. 81-·311-1130 o_ftor e. ,
84
Electrical
,
100d. good · 1385. 12M.
phone 304-178-7771 .
After
p.m . 114-912• Refrigeration
7177.
.
1814 HoncloC"-3~1n.
I
.Cell 114-141-2737. 1ao F. lEWlNG Mtchlne
renein. ·
Mrvice.
Authorized
S•naer ;
1171 Hortey Dovtclaon porto
• • - • Sharpen .
for . . .. T - . 2111, ...... S.loo
lcl10ors . Fabric Shop. ·
3· 3 ln. drM, IU .. Pomeroy. 112-2284.
:
front end. ,.., wheel, etc.
leo 124 Polmor Bt . •
Middleport.
86 Gener•l Hauling
'
1113 ........ Gl 1100 GK
full·dr 11od, '· 1.300 mnn:
Ph-304-171-7878. 878- JONES BOYS WATER SER- '
VICE . Coli 114-367-7411 :
7411.
•
or 814-387-0591 . '

---·

oa-

Chrlo Crsft 1111
tlon cobln oru'-. 31 ft ..
·troNor, 112,100. Coli
· 814-317-0371 botw•n
10-3. 114-441-1343 L

78
1171 ''ord LTD. four.,_,
outomotla, »51 engine.
304-112-3810.

Camping
Equipment

Need something

--::::....-·-'"---=

Weter hlt~Hng. Fut Service,:
• - rotu. Coli 814-2581143.
.

8·l9

9:00

Hisqirl
friend, Effie,
hasqone ·

He's doing enouqh feelinq
sorr4 for himself for
everybody!

'I

Tokyo'
(lJ (I) Mama' s Family
When the band who was
supposed to play at the
school dance fails to show
up, Mama comes to the ra&amp;cue with a stack of records.
(J) Major League Booebell:

DOC' PRITCHART TOLD '
ME TO TAI&lt;E TH' DAV OFF

DID 'IOU GIT
A SECONT
. OPINION?

Clliii!D9to5
Ill ([) !lD Simon • Simon

(lJ MOVIE: 'Blood Rele-

VEP··LOWEEZV 'SMIF !!

tivea'
•

8

Bonny Hill Show

Cil Anotlter Ufo

(J) Soap
8 (J) T._r John. M.D.
Cll Lltonlght America
(lit M•A•IJ•H
ID NighUino
Twlllgltt Zone
11 :46 (1) NFL'I Grooteot Momenta NFL' a Greatest Momems presents the 1983
NFL Championship featuring
1ha New York Gianla vs. Chicogo and highlights of 1hll
1!165 Green Bay Packers.
~eo min.)
12:00 ())
MOVIE:
'Golden

a

a

WONPE~ HOW

I COULD

I-lAVE 6EEN WRONG ASOVT
A THIN6 LIKE THAT..

by THOMAS JOSEPH

• ACROSS
1 Tiny

DOWN

1 Fellow

2 Role in

compUter
circuit
·5 Table game

11

Salorne"

3 Sultan's
decree
4 Office
seeker (si.)
5 Part of a
sentence
Yeslertbty's Allswer
&amp;Celerity
1 Anglo-Saxon 2:1 Divided
SO Micbel·
letter
in a way
a'ngelo work
8 Curtail
24 The "Santa 31 Scandi9 Arranged in
Maria 00
navlan
8 sequence
•• Areawasonew,·thin 3Z Hackneyfld
12 Instant ...
3i Love (Sp. )
11 Uncover
another
sa Put on the
U Fido's treat IJ Tabled'ZZ Duffer's
!8 11 Messiah'!
shout

10 -and
. Leander
11 Tonsorial
need
13 Soviet
inland sea
14 Off the boat
15 Peas
enclosure
11 Except
11 Sunder
18 Degrade
!8 Ex-chess
chalnpion,
Mikhail - Z1 Mining

find

zz Greek

cheese
23 Play
segment
!II Endearing
· word
2'1Window
section
28 Jordanian
mountain
29 Curve part SO Leather

31 Stem

41 Dedicate

u Regarding
CL&gt;&gt; It .
43Beverage

DAILY CRYPTOQl,IOTE- Here's how to work It:
.

AXYDLBAAXR
II

e ())

LONGFELLOW

la

One letter simply 1lands for anolher. In lhla oample A
used for lhe three L's, X lor lhe lwo O's, etc. Single lellers
apootrophea, the length and formation of the wordo are
hinta. Eoch day lhe code leiters are different.

ari

Renduvoua·
(J) llums &amp; Allen
(J) Cotllna
.
(J) Nlclhllllll
(lit MOYIE: 'The Defection
af ..,_ Kudlrlco'
Thlclce af the Nl!'ht
12:30
ill Late Night with
David l..att8rmoin

I

(NEWSPAPER I!NTERPIUSE ASSN .)

~"IM "t'lz( 1

e

CBYFI'OQ\JOTES

JK

LG DV

CAFLVW
JK

RK

ov

OLGJ
J
MJU
OAJLKNJ

0 G TJ

MV

K

AW

AW

GMXV
EKOVC .

MOVIE: 'Mad Mox'

.-a.nnyi'-

MOVIE: 'TOWMI the

Unknown'
• (J) MOVIE: 'Women at

w... Polnt'

- ~--------..:.---·

I NT
Pass

possible.
.
An ·expert rubber bridge
player would have taken a
speclaUzed club safety play.
The safety play Is designed
to make sure of four club
tricks against any1hing but a
5-0 break.
The expert attacks clubs
by playing dummy's king
foUowed by a low club
toward his own hand. East
would. play his eight and
South.would finesse his nine.
East would then be held to
one club trick.
For the record, the expert
rubber player would win the
first spade in his own hand.
He would retain both major
suit aces in dummy, so that
he can set up and play the
fifth club.

35- '
etlabora
3'1 Dodged .

(lJ (I) Tonight Show

m·SportoCentor

I

Pass

after as many overtricks as

M Suffix

Cll TBS Evening Newa

PEANUTS

3NT

club to his ace and a second
club· toward -dummy. West
discarded the eight of diamonds and all rJf ·~.sudden
the expected overtricks bad
disappeared into' thin air. In
fact, while he might still
have brought home the
game, be wound up going
down.
He would not have bad a
bad · match point score. The
three no-trump contract was
a very normal one and every
declarer would have taken
the sitnple club play to go

33 "Silent -"

(J) Dr. Who

11 :30

Soool~

Duplicate Dave was playing rubber bridge for a
cbange. He arrived at a normal no-trump game ' and
wasted no tune in going
after overtricks. He won the
spade lead In dummy, led a

Jackie Robinson oh major
league baseball.
D (lJ CD Vl(e Got It Mode
Cl) 700 Club Today:s program features a discussion
with Phyllis George about
her media career and the

11:oo I~~ rna m .~».

BARNEY

Eut

By Oswald Jacoby
ud Ja111011 Jacoby

(J) (jj) Jau In Americo
'Dizzy Gillespie.' Diuy Gillespie leads an octet through
a session at Concerts by the
·sea, Redondo Beach, CA .
(60 min.)
9 :30 8 (lJ (I) Choaro Sam and
Diane announce that their
romance is on at last but
things do not Qo smoothiV.
(J) D (D) lt' o Not Eoay
(PREMIERE) Two households. intenwined bV marand
remarriage.
riage
explore the unexpected
twists of stepfamily life.
1 0:00 8 (II (I) Uvo ond In
Peraon Sandy Gallin hosts
this lioel night of tpepial entertainment featuring super·
stars from the world of
show busine&amp;S. ~60 min .)
(lJ Inside The NFL
(lJ MOVIE: 'Uoed Cora'
Cll • 1D 20/20
' II Cll !lD K-• Lending
Abby tries to persuade Gary
Ewi'19 to fire defense attar·
ney Mitch Casey. 160 min .)
.Cil A_,gers
(jj) Nowt
10:30 (J) Stor nme
liD Tonr_Brown' 1 Journal

WINNIE

NOI'th

Opening lead: +Q

new 'I love America' diet.
(1) Top Rank Boxing from
LloVogoo. NV
'

awdlj! .

Upholltery •

TRIITATE
Ukl new cornpor. · 11 ft.,
UI'H01,8TER\' SHOP
Tonclom ..... C.H Tam 1113 Soc. Ave., GoHipollo. '
IM!Ito441-7101 .
441-7133 Dr 441-1833 ..

Vulnerable! Both
Dealer: South

bera Veteran baseball announcer Red Barber describes · how his career
developed and 1he impact of

JIMI W...TER SERVICE . •
Coli Jim Lenior, 304-875- 0'
7387.

87

• 10" 3
• Q 10 8 7
SOUTH
.K73
YK852
.AQ6
.AH .

Atlonto ot Houoton
(J) Up Pompeii
(jj) Rod Barber Ro-mem-

houle~

We'll do 11. Coli 448-3159
belw-o 9 ond I .

min . ~

e

:.._-::.~

11-.

1011, 115 ooch. Coli 448-

'

--

8:30

--·

ew•v or •omathiMQ moved?

• KJ8

(]}) Sneak. Previews
•
MOVIE: ' Deotinatlon

----··
----- --

-

•s

min.)
_
(J) Sneak Prevlowo Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
frey lyons take a look at
what's happening at the
movies .

·-

.985

.Q 10

.J963

Magnum is caught in a current when his surf ski is capsized miles from shore. (60

bo""'·""'':

Boetl 1nd
- Motora for Sale

:in-.

stunt. 160

~~~~~§§~E=

good-.

WEST
.QJI064

Ill CIJ !lD Magnum, P .1 .

.,

1 Hotpoint .electric range.
1-18 cu.ft. Holpolnt refrigerator uaed ve'rv little. Call
448-2806 oftor 6.

.712
.KJS32
EAST

After Cutter performs surgery, Coh waits to see if
Howie will" survive the Injuries he received in a movie

- - -- - -

.1937.

YA71

CIJ Ducko Unlimited
CIJ Ill ID Trauma Center

·&gt;'

m~ttreaa

NORTH
.A2

Cl) I Spy

'111

Maytag wringer waahar
•eo. equare double tub•
wfth.otondo f36 , Joro •2.50·
Fum. 1 bdr .. both. khchen. ' 1 doz., ringe 6 ~1te1 71 1 0 ptirt of glrlt blue jHnt
' large llvlngroom, large en· canto o doz. Coll448~4325 . olre 3 . Dlahwnhor, 2 oddlng
mechinte. and 1 quilt. Cell
clooed porch, odulto. rofor1200,.... month, pluo
30 Inch gaa range. 441-3204.
9paolt. 411 Second Aw.,
love - 1 ond choir
B•n Franklin ~dbumar,
·Oinlllollt. Clln 44t·2231 or
ROII!Ingtan-typewrltor
':ke·2111.
•
. Phone 304-118-2115: f175 . Colll14-381-9102.

.,

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

-front-· c•

TV &amp; APpliance•. &amp;.27 Third
Ava.. Golllpollo, 448-1899 .
Spin washers. 011 &amp; electric
dryers. auto wesher1. g11 &amp;.
electric ranges, refrigeratou, TV 1ets.

f'Furniihed efficiency epts.
i_9od'd location in town. no
, peU, d-.&gt;. a. reference• req.
Coli Mr. Doboon 448-3045
'doyo. 446-2802 evoo.

.Jackaon Ettete Apenments
' &amp;38 Jeck1on Pike (Equal
Hou1ing Opportunity) h11
one bedroom apenmentt
rent atanlng 11 •157 end
two bedroom rent lttrtlng It
'1113. UOO dopoolt . Col
448-2741 or leave me111ge
,~n anawerlng service.

AKC Roglotored Dobormon.
f78 . 304·882·2230.

SWAIN
AUCTIO('i • FURNITURE
t$2 Olive St ., Gallipolis. 6
piece woOd living room suite
With 6 inch flat trma 1399,
Combination living- bed- bunk beds complete with
room, kitchenene, shower, bunkiea *199, 2 piece tnground floor , hH parking. tron livingroom auite1 $199,
Cloatt to downtown Pome.:- ~n~ron reclinere •9$, other
recliners 880, mepla dinette
roy. 814-992-5738.
Uta $179, love 1eata I 70
Apartmenta' . 304 - 875- hide - a - bed $260. bo~
apringa &amp; mattre11 twin or
6648.
full $100 1et regular-firm
APARTMENTS. mobile 1120. maple dinette chtin
homes, houtel. Pt. Pleaeent 136. wa1h atends 134,
and Golllpollo. 814-446 - mtple rocken $69. 7 piece
c~rome dinette tel $149, &amp;
8221 .
ptece dinette 1et •sa. uud
TWIN RIVERS TOWER. bedroom 1uite1, reflrgeraApartment• now availebla to tor~. ranges. cheat, drestart,
aldarly • · dloablad with on wnngar wuhere. TV'a,
income of leu than dryeres, &amp;. thoea. Call 448·
'
f12,300 . Renting for 30 3169.
percent of adjusted incomaLAYNE"S FURNITURE
. Phono 304-875-1079.
Sofa. chair, rocker. ottoFURNISHED oportment, man, 3 tables, laxtra heavy
adults, no peta, phone 304· by Frontier), ee86. Sofa,
175-1453.
chair and loveaeat, *276.
Sofa• and chalrt priced from
ONE bedroom, unfurnlthed, t286. to f895. Tobloo, f46
Oolllpollo Forry. f171i . per and up to '125. Hide-amonth, all utlliliet peld beda , ,440. and up to
oxcopt electric. 304-878- 1625 .. Reclinoro, •175. to
e350., Lampl from •28. to
1371 or 176-3812.
•7&amp;. 5 pc. dinette~ from
Furnished 1 bedroom apan- 199., to 1436. 7 pc .. 1189.
ment in Point Plea11nt, very tnd up. Wood table with ai•
cl .. n and nk:e, no peu. chaire •428 . to 1746 . Oeak
$110 up to t226 . Hutcttes.
Phone 304-876-1388.
. 1660. and up, maple or pine
Furnl1hed efficiency apart· finish . Bunk bed complete
ment, all Utilities peid, dep· with' mattre11e1, •250. tnd
ooh required, 1200. 304- up to" 1396. Baby bed1,
896-3410 .
$110. Manreae• or boK
apring•. full or twin, •sa .,
firm , $88. and t78. Queen
46 Furniahed Ro~ms ~eta , 8 1 96. 4 dr. ch11t1.
f42 . 6 dr. chooto. 154. Bed
For rent Slnping Rooms frameo. UO.ond U&amp; .. 10
tnd light houM keeping Sfun · Gun ctblnett, •360. ,
rooma. Park Centrtl Hotel. dinette chain *20. and 125.
Gtl or electric r~nge1 . •325
Coli 448-0758.
up to •376. Baby matreaaes,
SIO.ping room •115. utili- f26 • U6, bod !romeo UO,
till paid, range &amp;. refrig. •25. •no. klngfromo t50.
Share btth . Man only. 448- Good •election of bedroom
•uite1 . cedar cheatt ,
4418 oftar 7 p.m.
rockers , metal ctbinetl ,
swivel rocltera.
Used Furniture ·· bookcan.
46 Space for Rent
r1nge1. chalrt, dlnnett set,
wood table and chaira, dry·
art. refrlgaraton a"nd TV'o. 3
Mo bl Ia home lot v. acre, 1
mllao out Bulovllle Rd. Opon
mila paat Cant.nary on Rt. lam to 8pm, Mon. thru Fri. ,
141. Wotor • oloctrlc hoo.. 90 m to &amp;pm, Sot.
kup, dop . • rof. roq. Coli 441-0322
114-241 ·5841.

..:;!fmall
'·-------'-furn . houaa 1 or 2

~dultl only.- no pata. Call
;;.44t•0338.
~~----------------~ For IHee modern, unfurn. , 2 .
• bdr. apt . Overlooking city 1
: parte;, Include• range • re· '
• frig . f175 mo. Coli 446::- 1819 or evening• 448 • 4426 .

1

2 bedroom furni1hed Apt.
e150. month, plus utilities.
Available Oct . 1. Oepotit
required. Ra·eine. 614-9492875. ,

: 2bdr .. 2 bath, 11 Court St.
• .Jiol. • dep . f326 mo. Coli
•. 448-4928 . .

One Dav at a nma
8 :00 D CD (1} Glmma o llnlak
. The Chief finds Julie in 1he
hotel room whe're her favorite rock band is ·staying .
(lJ MOVIE: 'Amityville II:
Tho Po10e10lon'
.
(lJ MOVIE: 'Reourrection'

Siemen klttan1. Available
Sopt. 24. 1 fomole f20., 3
';'2~" ", f30 . ,ooch. 81,4-982-

1 &amp; 2 bedroom fumi•hed
apto. 614-992-6434. 614992-5914 or 304-882·
2588.

1 ocro troller lot on Folrvlew
Rd . UO month, t50 dop.
Coli 875·7748 or814-2461344 · ·
COUNTRY MOilLE Homo
Porft. Route 33, Nonh of
Pomeroy. Llrgo loto. Coli
992-7479.

It's not duplicate

Tonight

•

1 bed room Apt. 8198. mo.
3 bedroom haute, Roush. including utlllti~s . Equal
Road. Chaahlre. Ohio. full housing opportunity. Con·
b ..ement, lerge lot, guage. tact Villtge Manor Apta.
614-992-7787.
Call614-387-7175 .

for Rent

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

a

2 bedroom apt., furnished,
utiliti&lt;lo pold. $276. 1100
dep,. adult• only, no peta.
Coli 446-0952 .

5.

42 Mobile Homes

BRIDGE

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·--

ZVKCZV

BGFRKTGXR

Yeaterde)''l ClyptQpote: BALLOTS AR,E TilE RIGHTFUL

AND PII:ACEFtlt,. stlcx:ESSORS OF BUUETS.- ABRAHAM
UNCOLN

-·

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�Paaa 14-The Daily·Sentinel

Thursday, September 29,, 1983

Pomeroy-,.Middleport, Ohio

Judge O'Brien terminates 23 court case~

Local briefs
HEAP applications now available
Applications for the Heating Energy Assistance Program
(HEAP) are available at several locations in the two-county area.
according to Letha Proffitt of Gallia ·Meigs Community Action
~.
· Appllcatlons ·can be picked up at CAA offire&gt; in Cheshire .
Gallipolls and Pomeroy, senior citizens centers, county welfa re
• departments, post offices and other public offices.
Deadline for flUng appllcations is Jan. 31.
CAA staff is available to he lp people fill out applicat ions or answer
questions at CAA's main office at Cheshire, the Meigs Count y
.c ourthouse and at the old Thaler Ford building on Second Avenue in
Gallipolis. .
lnfonnatiOn is also available by calling the state HEAP hotilne,
1-lDI-282-00lO; CAA offices at 992·5605, '446-0011 or 367-7.144; or senior
citizens centers at 992-2161 or 446-7001
Eligible households must be at or below 150 percent of federal
poverty guidelines, or with an annual incomeof$7,290for one person,
plus $2,520 for each a ddltionai household member.

}f!Ycette Chapier mav start soon

Young women between the ages or 18-35 interested In fanning a
Jaycette chapter are asked to contact Missy Conde at 992-7114, Marla
Grimes at 992·5622 or Debbie Meadows at 992·2394.
Two organizational meetings will be held, one on Sunday, Oct. 2, at 1
p.m. at GalllpollsJaycee Headquarters and theotheronMonday, Oct.
'io, at 7 p.m . at Meigs County Jaycee Headquarters.
Persons unable to attend either meeting and are interested are
asked to call one of the above numbers.

Mine vandalism investigated
· Acts of vandallsm that occurred at Meigs Mine No. 1 are being
Investigated by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
A call was received from mine officials Tuesday evening that two
subjects , on dirt bikes, had entered the mine area by way of the .
beltllne.
'
They broke the glass on the door to the water lab, reached In an
unlocked the door and set fire to a plastic trash can.
AJlllne employe appeared in a safety car and saw the ~ubjects, one
thr.ew a rock and broke the back glassofthe car shewasdrtvlng. They
·
exited by the beltllne rQild towards .Mine No. II.
Tuesday evening, Lisa Cottrell, Rt. 4, Pomeroy notified the sheriff's
department that she was driving her bus on county road four, just out
of Dexter, when a person threw an egg In an open window. The Incident
occurred at appropxlmately 4: 40p.m .

Several marriages end in court
E.Chrlsline Qeland, Rutland and Floyd ii. Cleland, Rutland, filed ·
ior dis solution of marriage In MetgS County Common Pleas Court.
· Marriages dissolved were Diana Lynn McDaniel and Roger Keith
McDaniel; Janette M. Tiemeyer and Davld Tiemeyer. Janette M.
Tiemeyer was restored to ·her Iarmer name of Janette M. Roush;
Robert C. Hysell and Connie I. Hysell.

Twenty-two defe~dants . were
fined and one other forfeited a bond
in Meigs County Court Wednesday.
: Fined by JudgP Pa!lick O'Brien
were Kelly Nibert, Gallipolis, Mat;
thew Villani, · Marietta, and Kat·
hleen Carson, Athens, speed,$2l:and
costs each: H. L. Barber,. Reeds·
ville, Jeffrey .Life. Parkersburg,
David Burleson, ·Gallipolis, and
Kenneth Klein, Pomeroy, speed, $20
and costs each; Ma rgaret Sinclair,
Pomeroy, failed to yield when
turningleft,$1o a ndcast s.

Also Robert Rich~n. Reeds·
ville, failed to yield from private
drive, $10andcosts; Grace Richard·
son, Athens, speed, $22 and costs;
Gregory Hayman, Long Bottom,
!allure to control vehlcle, $00 and
costs; Eddie Russell, Jr., Reeds·
ville, DWI, $000 and costs, license
suspended 60 days, three days
confinement; Homer Cole, Jr.,
Tuppers Plains, disorderly conduct,
$00 and costs, fine suspended;
DouglasEblln,Pomeroy,speed,$19

and costs; Myrtle. Adkins, Mlllers- checks, restitution and costs; Ste- .
port, tailed to control, $a) and costs;
rllng Neville. Rutland, DWI, three
LawrenCe Manley, Middleport, In· days confinement, Ucense SUS·
secure load, $10 and costs; Guy pended 60 days, $250 andDcos~;
Shuler, Racine, failed to display Mavis McClain, Gallipolls, WI,10 ·
valid registration, $10 and costs;
days con!lnement , $250 and costs;
Johnle Brown, Langsv111e, tailed to, license sUSpended one year, left of
control vehlcle, $2) and costs; · center, $ro and costs, no operators
Gregory Hutfman, Racine, parked license, $75and costs.
on roadway, $10 and costs; Sue
Forfeiting a bond was Mlchael
Floyd, Pomeroy, · passll!g bad
Dillon, Crown City, oyerioad, $223.

or

Secrets
Total Suc;:cess

Vot32,No. t 20
Cofoyrightod 1913

by
Denis W aitley, Ph. D ·

Simple yet valuable truths that can unlock the door
to succeSs
. . and happiness in everyone's life.

.'

Open Friday Till 8:00P.M.

Middleport.Book Store
Mill St.

Middleport
Ph. 992-2641

.

Mostly clear tonight with patchy fog. Low near 50. Winds light and
variable. Mostly sunny Friday after eatly morning fog. High near80.
Extended Ohlo Forecast
Saturday throogh Monday;
Fair and wann through the perlod.IUghs ln mld-70s to low litis over
the weekend and In the 70s Monday. Lows ln the mid to upper iiOs
Saturday and the low to mld-50s Sunday and Monday.

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OFF-.

SAVE ON EVERY ITEM IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
.

VILLAGE HARMACY
PH. 992-6669

N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

at

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Boat launching facUlties and a park on the Ohlo Rlver at Portland
probably won't materlallze thls faD as was announced by Bill Quickel,
chalrntan of the Meigs County Park District, at a recent meeting of the
Melgs County Regional Planning Commission.
The problem, according to Quickel, has been the district's lnabUlty to
secure the land.
Efforts to get the land transferred to the park district or to obtain a long
term lease have been unsucCessful, although Quickel says district offlclals
haven't given up,
The land was. transferred to the Division of Wlldllfe, Department of
Natural Resources, by the Department of tbe Interior when the Corps of .
Engineers relinquished the former locks and dam at Portland.
Quickel reports that whlle waiting to get the land transferred or leased to
the park district. he has been In contact with Rep. Ron James and the offlce
of Congressman Clarence Miller about a grant tor the development of the
boat ramp. He said that both have been encouraging.
The Lebonan trustees are In favor of the launclllng and !lark facUtles,

Governor disagrees with OU economists
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - (iov.
Rlchard Celeste has given a .failing
grade to two economlcs professors
who forecast a big bodget surplus If
a tax repeal measure fails Nov. 8.
"I think It's just plain politics for
those economists to make· this
projection," Celeste said Thursday
when asked about the forecast from
Ohlo University professors Rlchard
Vedder and.Lowell Gallaway.
"I don't thlnk it Is responsible for
the people of this state topalntAllce
In WOnderland pictures and on the
basis a! those pictures suggest thls is
·~· you should make that decl·
stan," the governor said.
Celesle told an Impromptu news
conference he would give the
professors an "F" grade for their

report.

"You give people sharp pencils
and put them at a desk In a

university and aU of a sudden they and If they weigh what It means for · t6 the elderly by eliminating tax
can tell us how the world Is going to the state of Ohlo, going back to the
rellef, cutting basic state services
be," hesald.
crtses of 1981 and 1982 and the
and threatening Medlcald tuodlng.
VedderandGallaway,atasesslon debates about how we get a
-The governing board of the Ohlo
sponsored by the pro-repeal balanced budget then people will Consumers' Counsel Offlce also
Ohioans to Stop Excessive Taxa· not enthusiastically, mt feeling Uke
went on record opposing both issues .
tlon, said the budget surplus at th~ it's a gl'eilt tun thing to do - will
Consumers' Counsel William Spra·
end of !iscai1985 would be at least make a judgment that they're tley si!id passage raised the
$500 mUllan and more likely $1.1 · prepared to pay those taxes,"
prospect of across· the-board spend·
bUllon.
Celeste said.
ing cuts which would affect hls
"The claims that tax repeal will
Issue 3 would repeal all tax office, the Public Utilities Commls·
have a chaotic Impact on state measures passed by the General slon and the Ohlo Energy Credits
servtres are without !iscal founda · Assembly since January,lncludlng Program.
tlon. These predictions are being the 90 percent boost In the state
-The OhloPubllcTransltAssocl·
made by those who, 'Qulle naturally, Income tax. Issue 2 would require a
atlon, made up of regional transit
have a vested Interest In ~­ ~~J~l~lal,lv~ vo~A! 1 .11)&amp;tead BU!!u.&gt;rltles and public transit IIYO•
expenditure fucreases," the state- of a slmpleimijorlty, to ratse taxes . terns, also called fbr defeat of the
ment by Vedder and Gallaway said.
1n related developments:
measures. " lf state revenues' are
-Members of the Ohio Commls· decrea.Setl as a result of the.passage
Celeste said he had yet to meet an sian on Aging have adopted resolu · of state Issue 3, It Is a foregone
!Ions opposing both antl·tax mea· conclusion that deep cuts will be
Ohioan who likes a tax.
"I think that If they have the facts SUI'e!l· Former Director Martin made In all state programs lnclud·
in lerms of who benefits and the rest Janis said the Issues posed a danger lng transit," the group sald.

'

*20% OFF ALL CLOTHING
·*20o/o OFF A.LL FURNITURE

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The
government's main gauge of future
economlc strength fell 0.1 percent
last month, the Commerce Depart·
ment said . today. It was the first
decline In a year and another sign ot'
future slowing In the economy.
The forecasting gauge, the deparbnent1s Index of Leading Economic lndlcators,lsa compllation of
a &lt;I&lt;JzEn forward-pointing statistics
covering manufacturing, emp[oyment, prices and other areas.
1n a recent report on the gross
natiOnal product, the government
estimated that the economy In the
thlrtl quarter was slowing to a
still-strong 7 percent annual growth
rate a!ler racing at a heated 9.7
percent rate In the April-June
period.
And since the leading Index ls

designed toshoweconomlcchanges me recovery.
during the month were the length of
Today' sdecl!ne was the first since the workweek, manutactureres'
that will occur In future months,
today' s report appeared to be the0.1 slide In August 1982and worse new orders for goods and materials,
than Commerce Secretary Mal· contrac\S and orders for plant and
another signal that growth will
slacken for the remainder of the calm Baldrige had predicted. He · equipment, the price of sensitive
said last month that future months rna terlais, the money supply and the
year and Into next year .
The d&lt;:partment also revised would likely show Increases of 0.5 speed with whlch vendors deliver
percent to 1 percent - figures he goods.
July's Index to show a 0.8 percent
advance Instead of the previously said would be "consislent with the
Two components were not avaUa·
sustained economic recovery we
reported 0.3 percent gain . Still,
ble, changes In Inventories on hand
would llke to see."
July's showing was much weaker
and changes In consumer and
than earller thls year, when strong
gains of 3.1 percent In January, 1. 7
Today's reporl said four of the 10 business borrowing.
percent In February and2percentln . available Indicators declined In
The overaD Index fell in August to
March foreshadowed the vigorous August, with fonnaUon of new
158.1 percent of the 1967 base.
economlc growth In the second and businesses contributing the most to
During August, the accompany·
thlrd quarter of the year.
the drop. An Increase in average
lng Index of COincident Indicators,'
Private and government econcr
weekly lnltlal claims for unemploy·
mists have welcomed the et:Onomlc
ment also pulled lt down, as dld designed to measure current condideclines In building pe!mlts and tions rather than forecast those of
slowdown as further Insurance
the future, fell 0.4 percent to 140.2
against a heat-up In Inflation and
stock prices.
Interest rates, whlch could dampen
Componennts whlch Improved percent of Its base.

GIRLS FASHION &amp; WESTERN

LADIES OlYMPIC

BOOTS

HIKERS

ONLY $12 95

ONLY $3295

MEN'S LEATHER

MEN'S OLYMPIC

HIKERS

HIKERS

ONLY ·$29 95

ONLY $39 9 5

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*20o/o OFF ALL NOTIONs·
.

MEN'S TliOM MeAN

BOYS' &amp; MEN'S

DRESS SHOES

JOGGERS

$1900

~ALl' $700 AND UP

· STEEL TOED RUBB81 &amp;

liATHER

MINER BOOTS
ONLY $299 5

&amp;

$32 95

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
In The Heart of Pomeroy

Pilots urge ,
end to boycott

*20% OFF ALL HOME FURNISHINGS
.

$7 &amp; $9

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BUSYWATERS-Everytblnroee11111topdown towing a 1ar1e bulldln1 ~river.
lhe Ohio River. 'lbunday mol'lllllla barp

w•

10011

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*20o/o OFF ALL ACCESSORIES
SALE STARTS .
FRIDAY, SEPT. 30
SALE ENDS
SATURDAY, OCT. 8

FREE PARKING

IC ST.

.,
•

2 Sections, 12 Pages
20 Cenh
A ~ult i m.dia Inc. New1paper

Quickel said, although the township has no rnoney to put into the project.
Until the matter of land ownership Is stralghted out, Quickel concedes
the park district Is at a "complete standstill."
·
He also said that there Is some possibility that the Department of Natural
Resources mlght take over the development In which case, another site
down river has been selected for Improvement by the county park district.
1n talking with Kelth Wood of the Department of Natural Resourses, he
said that the Portland site Is now a publlc fishing area and acknowledged
that hls departJrent has talked about capital Improvements there.
"But that's down the road a few years" . he commented, noting that the
cost 1IJ develop the site would probably be between $70,001 and $100,000,
He said that the Divlslon of WUdll!e, Department of Natural Resources,
obtained the Portland locks and dam land from the Department of the
Interior and "cannot transfer It to the Park District."
He did speak of the posslblllty of a "concession agreement" with the ·
district, but said that to do that It would take an agreement from the
Secretary of the Interior.

*20% OFF ALL HOUSEWARES

LADIES'
POCKET BOOKS

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 30, 1983

"

LADIES' FASHION
BOOTS
$13 TO $3495

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Economic trend: SlowdoWn continues

.

STOREWIDE SALE

CAN

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Land acquisition delays facility

FALl SPECTACULAR

16 oz.

e

The 10 Best Kept

Weather forecast

AVAILABLE IN
CHOCOLATE
&amp; VANILLA

7

•

Admitted..Edward Capehart, Pomeroy; Paul Clay, Rutland.
Dlscharged..Gladys Moore, Robert Manley and Bernice Molden.

. "NATURAL WAY TO LOSE WEIGHT"

Weekly
sermonette
See

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.
.

Family Medicine colwnn P. 5

Wildlife update

Severed.lines.reduce service
CLEVELAND !API -TheOhio · service was cut to the lottery's
Lottery lost nearly $1 million In sales
computer center In Broadview
because severed telephone cables
Heights. •
knocked .out service to tlie lottery's
Wednesday night's drawing was
ticket machines across the state,
held on schedule with those wagers
lottery officialS said.
placed before the system was
· Charles R. Day, spokesm8ll fo~
paralyzed.
the Ohlo Bell Telephone Co,, sai&lt;j
· repair crews were working over·
night and service to most of the
Ohio lottery winner
ticket machines should be restored
today. He said Independence ExcaCLEVELAND (AP) The
vating lnc. accidentally severed the
winning
number
drawn
Wednesday
cables whlle excavating for a sewer
in the Ohio Lottery's dally gam
projects. ·
'·'The Nwnber,'' was 235.
"That knocked out phone service
1n the "Pick 4" game, played 11 e
to about 1,000 homes and businesses,
times a week, the winning numbe
Including the lottery's computer
was4485.
center," Day said.
The lottery reported earnings of
Day said theexcavatlngcompany
· $41,892.50 from the wagering on Its
also severed Ohlo Bell trunk lines
dally game, "The Number." The
last month.
earnings came on sales of$98,055.50,
· Thomas Chema, executive~ ­
whlle holders of winning tickets are
tor of the Lottery, said all machines
entitled to share $56,163, officials
were disabled at 9: 45 a.m. wheU
sal d.

Flu shots.••

See story on Page 3 ·

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

Veterans Memorial information

WE HAVE IT!

Golf sectional champs

.

.

Welfare, education face cuts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Celeste Admlnlstration said today
that welfare and educatloo would
abloril the bulk (#. budget ~Is that
would be b1!ptlll!d If a tax repeal
_ . . . ls approved ori the Nov. 8
lfl!lll!!'al O!lectloll ballot.
Though amounts for some agencies were previously announced, the
admlnlstratlollcalled anewscon!el'·
enoe to give more detall oo where
cuts Wlllld be mille to achle'Ye a$L5
• ·lltlllon llullget reduction If Issue 3
Plns voter approval.

Primary and secondary educa·
llon officials had already been told to
expect a $017 mDilon cut In Flleal
Year 199i, wblch beglnsJuly1,198il.
Higher education afl!clal• had hem
told to expect a $255 rnllllon ,...ldget

cul
1n a document prepared for the
news conJerence, Director Cristina

Sale of the O!!Jce of Budget and
Management explained other ex·
peeled cuts.

The second largest single cut WliB
$186 mUilon for the Department of

Publlc Welfare. OBM said grants
would be reduced to famutes under
the Aid to Dependent Children
program.
"Famllles will receive less than
they dld In 1979whlch Is the last ttme
grants were Increased. OVer 240,000
parents and over 400,000 children
will be hurtbythe5ereductlons," the
OBM analysts stated.
It also said medical care funded
by Medicaid and general reUef
programs would be cut, reducing
benefits lor about !l.li,OOO. people.

LONDON ( AP) - The lnterna·
Ilona! alrlinepilots'federatlontoday
urged an early end to the 6IJ.&lt;:Iay
boycottoffilghtstoMoscowthatwas
Imposed by many national pilots'
associations after the Soviets shot
down the South Korean alrUner.
The action by the International
Federation of Airline Pllots' Associ· .
at ions (IFALPA) came as some alr
links with the Soviet Union were
already being restored with the end
of a two-week fllght ban Imposed by
a daren WeStern countries.
IFALPA said In a statement
released by Its headquarters south
of London that 11 I'PC!lmmended to Its
member associations that the ban
on flights to Moscow be lifted as of
wichMeanTlmeon
mldn
Sun
(Sp.m . DTSaturday).
et !1gh s shot down the
_K
..;o-re
...an Air Lines Boelng747 on Sept.
1 when It strayed over · Soviet
territory on a filght from New York
to Seoul. All269onboard were kllled.
The two-week ban on flights to and
!rom the Sovlet Union Imposed In
response to the attack ended
Thursday. The Soviet carrier AeroDot and some Western airlineS
resumed· filghts, but other airlineS
were unable to resume Moscow
!lights because of the J&gt;Dots' boycott.
(

STEPFATHER INDICTED - Dale M. Johnston hugs his wife,
Sarah, In this Ocrober, 1982 file photo taken while they watted for
lnfonnatlon on the murders of Todd Sclwltz and Annetle
Cooper-Johnston. Johnston was Indicted Thursday lor murder by a
Logan County grand lillY In the death of his stepdaughter Annetle. ( AP
Laserpholo ).

Stepfather ·held
in Logan murders
LOGAN, Ohlo (AP) -ln the more
than 11 months since the dismern·
bered bodies oi two teen-age lovers
were discovered In this rural
community, residents bought guns
for protection and were afraid to go
out at night.
Today, one of the victim's
stepfather was In jail after being
charged Thursday with the
slaylngs.
HocldngCountySherlffJlmJones
won't say why It took nearly ayearto
arrest someone in the kUling and
mutilation of Alinette Cooper·
Johnston, 18, and her !lance, Todd
Schultz,19.
The victims' nude torsos were
found Oct. 14, 1982, on the banks of
the Hocking Rlver. Other body parts
were found two days later In a
nearby cornfield.
'
The two were last seen alive In
Logan on pet. 4 as they went for a
walk.
Ms. Johnston's stepfather, Dale
JohnsiOn, was Indicted Thursday on
two counts of aggravated murder.
A special Hocking County grand
jury heard testimony for nearly
three days before returning the
Indictments. Johnston was arrested
without incident at hls mobile home
about seven mlles from Logan.
"I feel good, relieved," Jonessald.
"Now is only the beginning."
He said resldentsofthls southeast·
ern Ohio city of 6,500 probably felt

just as reUeved.
Since discovery of the torsos and
other remains, sales of pistols and
other weapons Increased. As one
resldentputitThursday, '"They had
panic In them ."
Klm Smith, 18, who said she rode
the school bus with Ms. Johnston,
said women have been afraid to go
out at night since the slaylngs.
"I used to be scared to death.
Your're always thlnldng that someone's behind your back," she said,
"Right now, everyone just wants
justice done."
At the county courthouse, a crowd
of about 000 gathered as Jo~tpston
was booked.
Some shouted thanks to Jones for
hls work on the case. Jones read the
Indictment to the crowd, then said,
''It would make our job much easier
if you would goon homeandgoabout
your business."
Johnston was moved to an
undisclosed location in another
county. He was to be arraigned
today in Hocking County Common
Pleas Courl.
The crowd cheered as the cruiser
carrying Johnston drove off.
Authorities had never said they
had any s~spects, but Johnston
attracted attention because of two
search warrants issued In June for
his property. Most of the lnforma·
tion related to that search was
ordered kept secret.
\

SlAl'lNG INDICl'MENT - Tile otepfalher of AnneUe CooperJ ........., lhowii wllb Todd SclwMz 111 thlo ftle photo, was lndlcted
Tlninday b)' a Lop! c.u.&amp;y poud jury and charged ..tltt munJer 1n
the cllmlembennea&amp; drn'h Dille M. Jolilllton was atTeflted without
lncldenl ,.,.....,. (API en .......... ).

.,

.'

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