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                  <text>•

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By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff·

$299

, Traffic signals In the village.of Pomeroy are not in
compliance with state regulations. That's what Ted
Sushka of the Ohio DepartmentofTransportation told
Pomeroy Council Monday night.
Sus)lka Informed council that it is the village's
responsibility to replace and mairttain traffic devices
V{ithin the corporation even though the llgh!f; are
located on .state highways. ,Traffic devices located
the siate's responslbUity, .
outside of a corporation
Shuska said.
·
Sushk&lt;I said the state will help with the time
changes on the traffic light at Kerrs Run and the
Pomeroy Mason Bridge as soon as a study is
eompleted.
·
At Kerrs Run, Sushka suggested the village use·the
area where the railroad tracks were located for a
bypass lor traffic going up river to travel around the
light. According to Shuska, this would eliminate some
of the traffic congestion.

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Sushka Indicated a light
needed at Kerrs Run.
He agreed to help the village by advising it on how to
get the lights In compliance. He also noted that a
traffic count was needed at Kerrs Run to see how it ,
can best be timed. "It Is a bOttleneck right now,"
Sushka said.
Referring to the light at the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge, the ODOT representative said the delay there
does nE,'ed revamping. As soon as ODOT works out a
new time schedule, It will change the controller.
He said there is more t¢fic on Main Street than on
the bridge and he wasfoing to take time from the
bridge and give It to Main Street
Sushka also noted that the stop sign at U. S. 33 and
SR 7 was.in the wrong location. He recommended It be
moved ·alongside SR 7, five feet from the Intersection.
He also added that the flasher light at 33 and 7 does
not conform. Two flashers are need Sushka said. He
said he could not allow state highway employes to
work within the cltydue to liability, but he would send
a man to assist them. He said the village needs a two
signal phase at each approach.

Fa.ir prices increased
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IU-S Ill
CLAW HAlOS

I

· Infia lion has hit the Meigs County
Fair.
M~tlng Monday night at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds, the
Meigs County Fair Board Increased
prices for the l!WW Fair. The price
increases were approved by the
board after It met with Eric Bates of
the Bates Brothers Amusement Co.
which annual provides the midway
entertainment.
According to action-by the board
last night, general admission at the
fair which Includes free shows and
free rides was Increased from $3 to
$1.
Membership tickets which
entitle the purchaser to free
parking, admission to thelairevecy
day and free shows was Increased
from $6 to $7, and the handstamp for
persons with membership tickets or
passes who wish to ride on the
midway was Increased from $2 to $3
per day.
Fair board members noted that
the increase Is the first price

f

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NELSON'S DRUG &amp;
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OCTOBER
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ENLARGEMENT
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...Ill
•111 WITI .

2

Receive 2 · 5x7's for
the price of One

The board voted to rent ihe
fairgrounds from the first weekend
In April of 1!Wl4 through October for
the staging of flea markets, John
Rice presented revised plans for the
construction of a new building on the
grounds to hotJse swine and sheep
during the county fairs. The new
structure will be located on the hill
area of , the .grounds between the
show ring and the crionhunters
building.
A discussion was held on the
annual election of board members
to be held from5to9p.m.onNov. 7at
the b6ard office on the fairgrounds.
Five members will be elected and
Be!Uly Slawter. Fred Goegleln, Bill
Downie and Mr. and Mts. Wallace
Bradford wUI seiVe as judges,
Residents Interested In filing for
election to the board, te11'1'lli are

I"),

•

Dr. Donald Warehime, Galua'
County coroner, pronounced Slaninko dead at the scene of massive
head and chest Injuries at 1:015 p.m.
The body was later released to Willis
Funeral Home In Gallipolis, and Is to
be transferred to the Flynn Funeral
Home In Fords, N.J. , for further
disposition . .
Deputies at the scene were not
able to determine the exact cause of
the accident. ..
More than an hour later, deputies
and emergency medical service
personnel were sent to Teens Run
Road near Eureka when a grader
owned by the county overturned In a

ditch and Injured Its operator, Carl
L. DeWitt, 28, Rt 1, Bidwell. •
· DeWitt told depuiies was opera!:
lngthe grader at a speed of 25mlles
per.hour at 1: 15 p.m. when he pulled
the grader to the right for an
oncoming vehicle.
When DeWitt tried to get back into
position, the steering locked and he
was unable to turn left. The grader
then continued forward Into ·the
ditch and overturned.
DeWitt ·was · taken to Holzer
Medical center by the EMS and
later treated and released for a
broken rib, according to a hOspital
spokesperson.

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out, and started vomiting. The man allegedly passed
out on the sidewalk in front of them ..
A few minutes later the pollee cruiser came by and
the police officer driving just gazed at the river. "Why
on Main Street does is this allowed io happen?"
·
Cremeens asked.
Cremeens said this is certainly against the law,
adding he wanted city council to beawareofwh at was
going on.lje added that he was not putting the blame
on the pollee department. but he added," I hope it
doesn't happen again .; '
Police Chief George Still said if one·officer fails in
his duty the entire force is blamed ."There is a lot
going on that we don't agree with, there are problems
on each end of town," Stitt said . ·
Stitt told Cremeens he appreciated his coming to
council and offering the information
Harold Brown, who found i~ appalling, said we need
a report on thfs. Bruce Reed , president of council who
presided in the absence of Mayor Claren ce Andrews
who was ill, added that no officer should go by the area
without looking it over.
(Continued on page 8)

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I
LISTING EXPENSE'&gt; - Expenditures made by
Foothills A vial ion In Its operation of Gallia-Meigs
Regional Airport are outUned hy Kenneth Whited.
left, co-owne~ of Foothills, !o, from left, Gallia County

Commissiooors Paul Niday, Verlin Swain and Jaines
Saunders. Commissioners requested more time to
discuss features of a Iease with Foothills.

•

••

Gallia COIDDliSSIODers
delay airport decision
. GALLIPOLIS - After meeting
with Foothills Aviation co-owners
Kenneth Whited and Geareid Hitch·
cock Jr. for nearly two hours
Monday night, Gallia County com·
missioners said they would discuss
features of a lease agreement with
the firm next week.
Foothills, which operates the
Gallia·Melgs Regional Airport, is
seeking increased cOunty support In
running', the 15-year-old facility and
space to build more hangars.
Commissioner' noted they have
no problem with . putting more
hangars In, so long as It 's done a&amp; a
private venture, but continue to
have reservations about Increasing
its annual appropriation to pay

expenses.
"I just feel like it's !Jlegal for the
county to put any money Into il ,
because we're using public funds, "
'said Commissioner Verlin Swain.
"We'd be subsidizing a private
investor.''
Hitchcock told commissioners
he's open to "anything that's
feasible" in solving Foothills' reported financial problems In run ..ning the airport. One of the firm's
main expenses Is tied up in utilities
-operating the navigational beam
and runway lights at night
Foothills was given a five-year
lease with the county In 1981 to
operate the airport. The lease is
open for negotiation this year.

Whited and Hitchcock have said the
county's Sfl,OOO annual approprla·
· lion runs out in the latter part of the
year, and Foothills pa ys for the
remainder of !he year.
A lease agreement proposal, to
Increase the appropriation to$15 ,000
and a llow space for. hangars was
. rejE&lt;:ted by commissioners and the
airport authortty Sept. 23.
"J don 't feel it's right for private
enterprtse to suppo1i something
that' s for public US&lt;'." Hitchcock
said.
While commissioners and· ihe
airport authortty are S(\li!iing to gel,
the alrpon on a se lf-support ing
basis, Whited and Hitchcock in·
(Continued on page 8)

Applicants keep OBES office. busy

•

•·

$699

2 Se&lt;tioh, 12 Poges
20 Cenh
A Mult imedia In t. Newsp..,per ,

•

HEATH

• Ooos not apply to

enttne

A resolution was passed to enable the village to
request ODOT to journalize the speed limit from north
bound traffic to south hound traffic. 'This ls for the
area·from Craw's Restaurant to Butternut
Concerning school zones, Sushka said a 20 mile per
hour zone exists only when children are entering or
leaVing school which would include, morning, noon
. and ~missal time... •
He said al1 controlled traffic devises are the
responsibility of the village which Includes signs. He
said the cheapest place to purchase signs is from tlie
state penitentiary,
Offers opinion
Also meeting with council was Jay Cremeens, local
mortician, employed at Ewing ·Funeral Home· who
voiced his opinion on the lack ,of law enforcement or
Inadequate enforcement.
Cremeens, a former police officer for nine and
one-half years, said he and his wife were walklng
down East Main Street last week near a prominent
business establisment located on the corner in the
upper block on East Main Street'when a man came

tiu'ee years, may contact Mrs.
Muriel Bradford, board secretary,
to secure a petition. Petitions must
be returned to Mrs..Jilradford by 5
p.m. on Oct. 31. Attending last
night's meeting was Mrs. Lucille
Portraz, a board mem her who has
been liVing In Egypt for several
months. Mrs. Portraz' termofo!!lce
expires this year and she Indicated
that she · wlll not be . fWng. for
Mrs.
reelection to the board.
Barbara Fry, who seiVed as Mrs,
Portraz' spot dwing the fair In
August : has Hied for election to the
hoard. Others who have filed for the
·~ bOa@ to date are Roger Spencer,
Gerald Douglas, William Radford,
lncwnbentS, and Frank Casto.
Candidates m!!St be qualified voters
of Meigs Cowity and must hOld a
membership ticket In the county
agricultural society for 1983. Bill
IJQwn!e, president, was In charge of
last night's meeting.

PLIII 1111

FOR
HEATH'
PECAN CLU:STE~IS

luy 3 Lite Up $11ckt and pt
11.00 hfund ,from
marudocturer. See store
dllfllay lor dotollt.

and the
fun begins

IU-SKII
OYER THE HEAD

liSI

PATRIOf -:: An elderly Perry
Township man died from Injuries
suffered In .a garden tractor
.accident at his residence Monday,
while a county employee was hurt
when a grader he was operating
overturned later In the day.
Henry Slaninko, 71, Rt. 2. Patriot,
was found dead at his Roush Road
residence off Ohio 325 by a neighbor,
according to the Gailla County
Sheriffs Department.
'Thedepartmentwenttothescene
at 12:07 p.m. and found Slaninilo
lying under a Gravely tractor. The
report Indicated theupperpartolhis
cbest was crushed.

Snap,
&amp;

ITS MAGIC

Increase In five years since the
concept of one admission for free
shows and riding was adopted.

Man dies'in garden tractor accident

·HALLOWEEN
FUN AND SAFETY

liTE·UP.

•

Traffic signals not meeting state regulations
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3'/, Oz. Can

•

oo Page 12

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Octob'r 4, 1983

Copyrighted 1983

Molded latex ·rubber
for perfect fit and
great vision, F.antasllc
detailing
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One size fits all.

Story

'

Voi.32,No. M!2

3-DIMEIISIOIIAL LOOK

•

at y
•

e

Foote strike continues

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Story on Page 4

of Savings

•

!::it.;~~

No till equipment.. ·

·NL playoff preview

REIDY

N .T

Demands his'rights

«,

a J

v

''

-

111111 relrned 'lbe IUie Jlliltwa,y pMroliNIId IIGush
WM ~

,.,._,llld_reportediJHMhleklatoplora
ftlllcle 11-.1 rA her 111M
dDwll. &amp;all!'•
- ........ left"' cealllr ..... ('!........ wllll AniDkl'•
w IIK-mdl etl cJe. Roulll- clledfar .-.red dear

''re,

w. ........

.

A standing room only crowd was
on hand Monday at the ·Pomeroy
oftice &lt;Jf the Ohio Bureau of
Em!!.loyment Services as reglstra·
!ion got undeiWI!.Y for the new
' programs at the Jobs Training
Partnership Act
Some 70 un~mployed people
reported to the local office --In fact,
some were outside when the odice
opened at8a.m. At3p.m., residents ~
were still at the counter registering
lor the program.
During their visit, residents had to
·complete a work application, giving
a histoly of emploYil)ent and skills,
along with an application to
detennlne their eliglbillty which
was completed by employes of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment.

,

Eligibility will be determined by some $230.[XXJ for training and
the Pomeroy OBES. Records of
retraining wil han additional $36,000
· those eligible will be forwarded to
for training and retraining part of a
the Gallla·Meigs Community Ac·
seven county area whi ch will car 11,
lion Agency which Is serving as a
out the program. The P011smout1r
coordinating agency.
Community Actio~ .(&gt;.gency is sen·.
Workers at the local bureau office ing as the main coordinating
were kept busy throughout Monday organ!zatlpn .
Afler ·being referred to th~
processing the first day applicants.
Lucnh pertod were shortened ttnd Community Action Agency, resi·
breaks cancelled' in o!'der to cope &lt;jents will be offered such .feat ures
through the program as job seRrch·
with the respilnse.
The Jobs Training Partnership assistance, job cou nselllng, instltu·
Act was created by Congress on
tlonal sktll training. a private sector
Oct.l3,1982, providing federal funds
training program , vocational explo·
for job tralriing and restraining of ration and help In obtaining high
economically disadvantaged and
school equivalency. Help and par·
long-term unemployed youths and .. ticlpatlon from private Industry Is
adults..
needed to make the program
Meigs County has been allotted successful, CAA officials repon .
,.

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Comment

Page

(

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOl'ED TO THE ~REST OF THE MEIGS.MASOlli ..\REA '

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1'1~
_m~

fl!
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r"""r"'\-11.-r" II""'T""E!!= I F=='t

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ROBERT L. WINGETT ·
Publisher
J

'

PAT WHITEHEAD
A.. lslanl Publlshert Conlro!ler

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News EdJtor

~MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press AS;soctaUon and the American S"ewspaper Publisher Association .
..
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed . Th ey should he less than 300 WOI'd!i
lons; 1 All lette rs are subject to editing and must be .'ilgned with naiJl e, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published . Letters should he In
good tasie, addre5slng bison, not personalities.

..

·

·Straw polls: m~king
the best of the vote
Sen. Alan Cranston clearly was looking for a silver lining when he
proclaimed that the meaning of the weekend straw poll in Maine was that
"I am competitive with Jolm Glenn."
.
·
To the surprise of some of his listeners, the California Democrat
explalned " that has been the objective of.this contest ln Malne."
HoweVer, the re;tl objective of the Malne exercise, as acknowledged
weeks in advance by Cranston's campaign manager, was to reverse·the
trend of a dreadful summer, to remind people, especially flnanclal
contributors of California and Wisconsln, where Cranston won earlier
straw polls. '
..
·
The way to do tbat was to go into Maine and run ahead of or close to
former Vice President Walter F. Mondale.
Sergio Bendixen, Cranston 's campaign manager, conceded ln an
interview weeks before .the Maine straw poll that there had been two
s!gnlficant political events durlng the summer and that Cranston had been
hurlln both.
"
One was the July 15 financial report to the Federal Election Commission
which showed the Cranston campaign falling deeply in debt. The second
was the mid August decision of the AFL-CIO to move up the date of its
presidential endorsement to this week. Cranston had urged the labor
federation to hold off until December to give him more time to demonstrate
the viability of his candidacy.
Cranston wanted people to look at him as a presidential contender equal
to Mondale and Glenn. Frotn the beginning, the Cranston strategy bas been
geared to Mondale. The candidate and his manager spln out scenarios in
which Mondale is forced out of the race after the first month of primaries
and caucuses and Cranston is left in a one-on-one battle against Glenn._ .
The past weekend gave no indication tbat Mondale will easily be forced
out of the race and that Cranston will swvlve.
The Maine straw poll also raised some questions about the Glenn effort.
This still is the political exhibition season. No delegates are being chosen,
the events don't count, except as they might add to the perception of how
,
.
candidates are faring.
But It Is possible that questions will be raised within the political
community about when Glenn will demonstrate the public support his
managers claim Is there.
.
There was a lot of speculation in Maine that Glenn might surprise
everyone and finish third or even second. His staff and local supporters did
nothing to encourage the speculation and there was no sign they waged any
campaign for straw poll votes.
The specula lion was fed more by a feeling that Glenn ought to do well. In
fact, that is the basis of his campaign, the theory tbat with his background
he should be an attractive candidate who would win a mass following just
because he is Jolm Glenn, the astronaut with the "right srutf. "
It didn't happeo In Malne, Perhaps it will in some later forum.

Letter to editor
Demands his rights

.Eureka,. the

f~ct~ _

_..::.__....:...,..-__

•

tough lllini defense

i~llia~m_F_.B'--uc_k_ley~J~r

COLUMBUS, Ohlb iAP) -Ohio don 't throw \}le deep ones."
State'soffenseisproc:iuclngyardage • . StU!, lrl the last two games , Dave
at 426 per game, but that is not the
Moritz of Iowa and Jay Carroll of
Important figure when it comes to
Minnesota have caught touchdown
playing well In the Big Ten,
passes of 73 and 20 yards against the
Buckeyes' Coach Earle Bruce says.
Ohio State secondary .
"illinois has .the leadlng defense,"
Minnesota quarterback.· Greg
Bruce said Monday. "Tbat's ·the Murphy solved the Btickeyes '
biggest st;ltll!tic· (ln which) you . ~ndary Saturday for 23 c~rople­
would like to lead the league. Wllo Is tions in40 attempts for210yardsand
· leading · the league ln passing one touchdown. But Murphy was
offense? Iowa? Well, they're not too sacked three times for 29 yards in
bad.
losses and threw two interceptions
"Michigan is last in •passing and the Gophers lost 69-18.
offense, but they're alSO first in
About the Buckeyes' kicking
rushing offense."
game, Bruce said,
is not good .
The Dlln! share the league lead · We are not getting any serious edge ,
' with Michigan wlth a 2·~ Big Ten but we haven't lost any games
start. Purdue, 'the Buckeyes' oppo- because of it.''
nent Saturday in Columbus, Is third
· The Buckeyes picked up a
at 1.0.1. .Sixth-ranked Ohio State touchdown from the kicking game
shares fourth with Iowa , Wisconsin agalnst Minnesota.
and Northwestern.

w
·
:__

August Issue of Commentary mag, . robbing him of his power of speech. earns $50,000 per. year or more)
to assume that the figures so
azine, your attention will not have Put that down as one of · the amounted to three percent of the
diligently collected by Michael
been di'awn to an assembly of data sacrifices America may need to population. They paid 31 percent of
Novak ln his piece, "The Rich, the
the taxes collected. The post.
which, quite simply, destroys the endure.
Poor and the Reagan Adminlstra:
domestic case the llberalS have
"The rich aren't paying their . Reagan figures are not all ln, b!lt
tion," would be very widely venti-. been so dlllgently rnaklng against share ot taxes." Trult probably 1s prellmlnary returns suggest they
lated, it not by Walter Mandate, at
Reagan's tax.and welfare policies.
the most popular of' all the liberal are iww paying more ll\2ll 31
least by Elizabeth Dole, or for that · To lake 'these figures and put them shibboleths. The figures: In 1981, percent of the taxes. Remember
matter; Ronald Reagan. But so far
Into general ~ireulati0 n would have wealthy Americans (let us agree to that although you hit the 50 percent
as I cab see, unless you have the
the effect on Mondale of simply call an American wealthy who rate later under the Reagan tax
dp hit it. That !s, the 50
plan,
percent r~te did not diminish, .as
was originally contemplated under
Kemp-Roth. Unearned IncOme,
which bad been taxed at 70 percent,
1s now taxed at 50 percent - an
addendum to the Reagan package,
Interestingly enough, added by
Democrat Dan Rostenkowskl of
Dllnols.
·
It does .not surprl.se sup!W-slders
that, although \he flnal figures are
not yet In, early lndlcatlons are that
the lowerlng of the 70 perceilt tax
will result ln an increase In ol1r tax
revenues, for the simple reason that
gains will be realized, money
reinvested and the totality of
savings greatly lncreased. In sum,
'·'··
the top three percent are paylng at
least
five times· as many taxes as
\
the bottom 50 percent. Put that in
your righ·get -away·wltheverything gun, aim at Reagan,
and pray that someone changes the
.... ,,.
subject.
:•
On the matter of help to the poor,
'
Michael Novak ISOlates a very
interesting polnt that has escaped
I
the concentration of minds less
keen than his. Take, first, the
question of old people, where the
congestion of poverty bas been the
greatest. For them, the figures
suggest
that true poverty has
'"Oh, please! Just go away.';
"virtually ended:"

you

Illlnqls paces the league ln t0tal
defense, 265.2 yards per gam~. and
scorlhg defense, yielding 11.2 points.
Ohio Stale ls fourth ln total defense
(333.4 yards) and second in scorlng
defense (14.5) .
The Ohio State coach did not
reveal his evaluation of his own
team, o!her than worry about the
Buckeyes' pass defense and klcklng
game.
Oftbe Buckeyes' pass rush, Bruce
said, "I'm concerned about that.
"It's one of the weaknesses we have,
but few passes have been thrown
deep, They throw the 'unders' and
they are very hard to ~h. They.

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'

Legal

at least eight union locals at the
. same time that Blagg! slis on the
Education and Labor Committee. A
spokesman for the congressman
refuSed to discuss Blaggt's legal
fees.
- Rep. Michael Oxley, R-Ohlo,
earned ·7,500 In 1982 from his •
"family firm." The flrin's clients
Include IBM, Ohio Bank and
Savlngs Co. and no less than 16
Insurance companies. this year,
Oxley became a member of the
Telecommunications, Consumer
Protection and Finance subcommittee, which handles legislation
important to his firm's cllent.s. ·
Oxley played down his association with the law finn, saying he ls
"of counsel" and gives advice only
when asked. The American Bar
Association, however, says the
term "of counsel" implies "a close,
regular, personal relationship"
with a law firm.
- ReP. Frank Guarini, D-N.J.,
earned $17,800 in "administrative
pay" for managing his ~ix·member
law firm, which specializes In real
estate and corporate law cases.
Guartnlls on lhe tax-writing Ways
and Means Committee. He doesn't
think his polltla'fl position has

I

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MARK HAMMONDS

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The Meigs Marauder seventh
graders posted a 22-14 victory atoak
Hlll Monday evening. Wesley Howard was the main weapon used in the
Marauder attack romping for all
three Meigs touchdowns. JeffMcEI·
roy accounted for Melgs' extra
polnts.
The entire Meigs defensive front,
composed of Robln Qualls, Henry
Buchannan, Keith Hicks, Jeff Stone
and Ronnie Powell played well.
Coach Jon Amott's crew plays at
home next Monday against Belpre
beginning at 5: 30 p.m. at Middleport. Meigs ls·2-1overall.

brought his firm any cllents.
of the taxpayers' buslness. He
- Rep. Steny Hoyer, D·Md.,
refused to disclose any detaUs of his
made $8,825 representlng indivld·
law practice. St. Germain, who is
ual clients in 1982. He Insists his
chairman of the banking commit·
official position has no effect on the
tee, earned $7,(00 ln legal fees last
outcome of court cases. But a
year.
plaintiff who lost a small claims
BLUNDER OF THE WEEK case to a Hoyer client wrote to
How do you lose 10 Sldewlnder
complain that a congressman's
missile warheads? The anti·
place is ln the House, not ln the
aircraft warheads were found In a
courtroom.
·
private .warehouse in New Jersey,
- Rep. Dante Fascell, D-Fla:,
and nobody knows how they got
made $9,001 as a partner In his
there.
Miami law firm. He said the money
The Commerce Department,
was his cut of the finn's earnings
which 1s supposed to keep track of
and did not come trom his · military shipments overseas,
participation in specific cases.
passed the buck to the Pentagon.
-Rep. E. Clay Shaw Jr., R·Fia.,
l'he military denied any knowledge
dreW $7,000 trom the law firm that
of the warheads, though the Army
listS hlm. "of counsel." The finn • did ascertaln that they were
represents Cavlco-Aiama Aircraft
non-explosive dummies Intended
Sales and the City of Parkland, for tralnlng use.
Fla., among other clients. Sh~w Is
Aller much checklng, lt rurned
on the Public Works and Transpor·
out that the mlssUe warheads
tatlon Committee.
belonged to the Royal Saudi Air
.:. Other House members who Force. They apparently had been
earned legal fees In 1982 include
misplaced en route to Saudi Arabia
. Jerry· Patierson, D-Ca!lf., $4,001;
by a private shipper. The Saudis,
Davld O'Brien Martin, R·N.Y.,
understandably reluctant to trust
$3,450, anct Wllllam Dannemeyer, the American shipping firm again,
· R-Callf., $1;540.
then chartered a plane to pick the
Ferdinand St Germaln, D-R.I., · warheads up. '
thought his legal practice was none

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Southampton."
"Out of the question," Mr. Bone
sald angrily. "These people hope to
live happUy ever after. My. client
would not have a day of happlness II
he knew it would cost him a million
five plus the house in Southampton
to get out of the marriage.:'
Miss Tuff said, "How do you think
my client would feel it she knew she
could be tossed out In the stneet for a
lousy million dollars?"
Grace became upset. "This talk
ls so sordid it's destroying our loye
for each other. I'll take a million,
lw!l · hundred thouSa.nd, and the

IMeet the 1983 Marauder' fOOtball team

Meigs seventh
graders post win ..·•'

IDOOD)ighting_----:---~-J_ac_k_And__:_e_rs_on

WASHINGtON - In return ior
their government pay, members of
Congress are expected to serve the
publlc Interest. But some legisla·
tors do their most effective work for
the private ,Interests-of their law
clients.
And thanks to lawyer-client
confidentiality, the legal moonlight·
lng 1s done behind the backs of the
voters.
·
The Senate bas effectlvely prohl·
blted its member~ from practlcing
law on the slde, but ihe House
leaves it largely up to the lndlvldual
- subject to a rule llmlting outside
earnings to 30 percent of the
member's salary. This amounts to
a maximum of $20,!0l for veteran
congressmen.
My reporters Susan Benesch and
Jock Hatfield checked the ftnanclal
records of 10 veteran House
members who reported earnings
from legal practice last year. Most
of them lnsisted they do only "llttle
things" for their clients. They saw
no conflict of lnterest, therefore,
between their public and private ..
activities. You 'decide:
- ReP.. Marlo Blagg!, D·N.Y.,
earned $13,2'n from his Bronx law
firm last year. The finn represents

The Daily Senlinei-Pa!Jtr-3

·:rt

'· \

'Til divorce_do .

: Today in history

bsu offense against

.

It seemed safe for a whUe simply

The main message corning out of chicken feed to Dagmar but down
the Celeste Admlnlstration lately Is here, in Little Meigs its dough.
how awful things will be If voters
approve the tax rollback. Their aim
If our Governor Is that far off with
·Is the same as that of the liberals for
his eagle eye on flnances what else
the last 50 years. Tax and spend, tax could he be off on? Do you
.• and spend, tax and spend. Then
remember the allotment to the
when thlngs go wrong, they p oint counties? Aught, just an error, they
their self-righteous finger at some- said. Soon will fix. Remember the go
The prenuptial contract iS getting
entitled to 50 percent of all of her
one else. Governor Celeste wants
more
an:d more prevalent, as the
round with the business men over
husband's prperty. But we don't
not only big state government, he
their taxes? Remember .talk of four · divorce rate rises In the country. want to be greedy about this. We'll .
wants bigger state government.
more years and then the presid- Slnce getting married jn manl' settle for $10,(00 a mont!! untO she
Voclferlous old line liberal Demo- ency? This Celeste administration
cases ls not one of those things you gets marrted again."
crats got everything Uncle and
do forever, lawyers are adv!slng
calls to mind Jolm C. Fremont and
"Alimony Is out of the question,"
• Aunty had and now they want our
their clients to make out a contract, Mr. Bone said. "1 cannot permit my
the " knOw-nothlngs". They cut their
: scalp w~ether It has hair on !tor not.
specltyln~ who gets what, when
political, heads off. The Celest'ltes
client to enter the sacred institution
love flies out the wlndow and of matrimony unless he can get out
Governor Celeste made perrnan· handling of their constituents reent a 90 percent tax lncrease and
recrlrrilllatlon knocks down the of It by paying off a lump sum at the
calls the political treatment of the
door.
unbelievably bas tried to sell it to the
Indians. The Great White Father
dissolution of the marriage. How
people as "the larges~ tax reduction
I was the best man at a prenuptllll can we be Slife when and If Miss
loved his red ~hildren who huddled
for Individual taxpayers" in Ohio
legal contract ceremony the other Wlllowy will get married again?"
trustingly in their abodes. Give
• history. Celeste rammed that tax · those redsklns a few trinkets.
day. The groom to be, Horace
"How do you feel about it,
·: package through a compliant DePlpellne, was . attended by the Grace?" Miss Tuff asked.
Promise them anything. Promise
famed d_lvoree lawyer Roy Bone,
.: •mocratic leglslarure without one
them that we will keep our
"I love Horace very much and it
· dissenting vote. This wasdoneatthe
and the· bride-to-be, the lovely
commitments as long as the waters
be wants to provide me with a lump
exact time the state was beglnnlng
run, as long as the wind blows ani! as . Grace Willowy, was bi!tng given sum, I don't have any objection. But
away by Stephanie Tuff of the firm
: economic recovery. Voters are not
long as the
is green,
I want to kriowwhat numbers we're
Rock, Sock &amp; Needham.
.
; dwnb and know that the wlndfall
The GoVernor has promised to put
talking about before I say '1 do.' "
: these pol iticlans get will SQOn be me on easy stneet and give me a
The lflde and groom sat ln . the
Mr. Bone smUed, "You're a very
'• dissipated. A leading economist
love seat ln Mr. Bone's palatial
rocklngchalr. I do no want the chair
reasonable young lady. Would
office, which, for the occasion, had $500,001 satisfy you?" ,.
·: trom Ohio predicts that the surplus
unless it bas a motor 01111. I demand
, ·~
been decorated with rriagnollas ahd
&gt;• will reach ~million dollarsn'llat Is my·rlghts. •
Miss Tuff said, "No, it 'wouldn't,
white~.
: close to a bllllon. Tbat may be
Gayle Price, Portland.
Roy, and you know before we came
'
Mr. Bone, reading trom a yellow here we rese~hed Horace's •
legal pad, said, "Dearly beloved,
assets down to the last nickel. Now
we are gathered here today to bring let's be serious or caiL.ofl ~
thiS man and this woman together prenuptial legal contract' ceremony
•
ln a happy prenuptlal contract,
right now."
Today Is Tuesday, Oct. 4, the 2'nth day ot1983. There are 88 days lett in
"
...
,
spelling out the property claims of
Mr. Bone scowled, "As Horace's
the year.
both parties In case, for reasons we
lawyer I can't go over $500,000, but
Today's hlghllght in history: On Oct. 4,1957, the Space Age began as the
shall not go into here, thiS marriage it he wants to be more generous I'll
Soviet Union put the first spacecraft Into Earth orbit.
.
Is broken asunder. Do you, Horace
leave It to him. Horace, what do you
On this date:
.
agree that, in case you do think?"
Plpellne,
In 195'7. "Leave it to Beaver" premiered on CBS-TV, stan1ng Hugh
not choose to continue In wedlock,
"GJ'ace Is the only w~ I've
Beaumont, Barbara Bllllngs!ey, Tony Dow and Jeny Mathl!rs as the
you will bestow on Y!l'lr lovely britte every loved," Horace said. "I can't
·: ''BeaVer."
·
·
·
a lump 'lllllri equal tel five percent of
Imagine anything but death parting
:
In1965, Pope Paul Vladdresfif!d theUnltedNatlonsGen~lAssemb!yin
your present assets, excluding your
us. But just in case sometltlng did
: New York, appeaUng for world peace. ·
·
boat, your penthouse, and your
happen, I'm willing to give her a
:
In 1976, Earl Butz resigned as agriculture secretary, apologizing for ·
house In Scut!Wnpton?"
cool mllllon - the same as I eave
· remarks considered racist
·
.
"Walt a minute," said Mld'Tu!f.
my second wife."
: . In 1981, Pope John Paul ll said Mass II\ St. Peter's Square, his first
"Wbo said anything abollt a lump
Miss Tuff said, ''Horace's second
: · appearance In the square since he was shot there foor montlis earlier.
sum, aJid who said anything about wile was much older. than Grace,
•:· Tell years ago: Peace talks began In Northern Ireland In an attempt to
excludln&amp; Mr. I Pipeline's . boat, . and the mllllon he settled on ·her
:: end the hlistnltles that had taken nearly 900 !lv~ In tJve years.
·penthouse
and home in Southampwas before Inflation set ln. We want
: : Five years,ago: A tuneraLMass was said for Pope Jolm Paul I.
.
ton?
My
ellen!,1 under
law, 1s one mUllon five and the .house In
•
'
.

grass

2-The Dally

Pomervy-Midclleport, Ohio
Otlobet 4, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

..

Pomeroy-Midd~port, Ohio

Tuesday, Oclober 4, 1983 .

penthouse in New York. But that's
the bottom llne."
Horace said, ,"Don't be angry,
darling. You're asking for more
than I planned to give you, but I
want you to be happy. Give II toJter,
Roy, providing we ttave lt in writing
she doesn't go to court and try to
sock It to me for anything more.''
"AU right, Horace, it's your
money. I'D have this typed up while
a bottle of champagne and
we
drlnk a toast to tbe happy couple.
Please excuse my tears. Prenuptlal
marriage contract ceremonies al·
ways make me cry."

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Odober4, 1983

McNeil replacement leads Jets past Bills
While Harper's fine effort ln
replacing McNeil keyed the Jet
offense, It was the recently . maligned Jet defensive line that
probably won the game for New
York.
.
Mark Gastineau, Marly Lyons,
Joe KleckoandKenny Neil, the front
four of a defense ranked last.ln the
league against the rush coming lrito
the game, allowed the Bills only 65 .
yards on the ground.
The Jets held Joe GrlbbS, who had
career-high 166 yards the' week
1i was the fir st 100-yard game In before against Houston, to only 28
the seven. year running back's pro . yards on 13 carries. --- cru:eE&gt;r, and it was accomplished
Gastineau, whose post-sack
despite it being only his second dance precipitated a fight last week
game back followingakneelnjury.
against the Los Angeles Rams,
•
"U we keep winning like this, I'll danced three more times Monday,
play at whatever percentage I'm one more time than h~ had so far all
at." he said.
season.
ORCHARD PARK. N.Y 1APJEven at less than IOOpercent, Bruce
Harper was more than enough for
the Buffalo Bills to handle.
Harper, replacing the injured
Freeman iVJcNell in the New York
Jets backfield, ;que&lt;&gt;Zed 118 yards
out of only niue · drries as the Jets
&gt;luffed the Rii 2 '-JO Monday night.
His 11-;•ard !vuchdown .pass from
Richard Toc!d ga,·e the Jets a · 7-0
lead the sPCOnd period , arid they ·
eventually built a 17-0 lead.

·

'a

Gastineau also scored on a l·yard
return following ~ recovery of a
fumble by Cribbs In the third period .•
"It was fortunate forme," he said
of hls per!onnance, which garnered
hlmagameball. "Itcameatagreat
time.
.
"KieckoandLyonswerestopplng
the run," he said. "They had
everythlnguplhernlddle, while Nell
and I pinched In from the outside."
While the rejuvenated New York
Sack Exchange was keeping Cribbs
in check, Harper was cutllngdeftly
through the BWs defense.
"A kit of It was on cutbaci&lt;s," he
said, explaining the Bills move
quiCkly to the baU: Harper found
much of his running room by cutting
against the defensive flow.
"Our offensive tine came off the
ball teally well arid they were

blocking people, " Harper said.
"Buffalo has vicious pursuit and
with the kind of blocking I got, the
cutbacks were open."
, Todd, whowas20-31ror22J.yards, ·
added asecopdscorlngtossw~nhe
connected with Jolumy Hector from
22 yards out In the fourtn period.

Toda:r's

Sports World
By WW Grlllllley
AJ&gt; Corretpoodeal
.

firi~gs

Managerial

It was the late Fred Corcoran, Sj)Jrts entrepreneur and back pJCket
historian who, once said, "It's a short jump from 'Who's Who' to 'Who's
He?'"
It could have been the late Bucky Harris or snappy Leo Durocher who
matched that imperishable phrase with the comment. "Baseball
managers are hired to be fired."
"You can tell it's coming and all you can do is walt for the ax to fall," said
Harvey Kuenn, summarily dismissed over the weekend as skipper of the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Big Frank Howard's ouster was announced publicly while the New York
· Mets were sweeping a doubleheader from the Montreal Expos at Shea
Siadlurn . The Mets brass elected to choose this inappropriate time to pull
the rug from under him.
The New York television networks broke into Sunday's football games to
give out the news. Thus the amiable &amp;-foot-S, 270-pound giant became a
lame duck manager somewhere between the tim~ Mookie Wilson swung at
a Charlie Lea sinker and Danny Heep dwnped a ball into the stands In the
first game.
.
What was the urgency? Mets General Manager Frank Cashen could at
least have had the courtesy to wait untll the day's games were over and
ease Howard out with a little more compassion and class.
· But there's little personal warmth or sympathy In this game, or any
other, for that matter. It's a cold. hard business. • .
Expect no kid gloves.
,
Charlie Fox didn't wait for the execution. Havlilg Peen yanked from his ·
reasonably pressure-free front office to .try to bnng the Chicago Cubs back
to contention, a Ia St: Louis' Whltey Herzog, he told the Cubs he wanted his
old job back and let somebody else try to plug the holes In a team that
finished next-to-last, 19 games out of first place, In the same town where the
rival White Sox won their division by 20. ~
Fox's escape was similar to th&lt;\t of another kindly, low-key dugout
genius. George Bamberger, "-:ho had a restructured heart, said he could no
longer bear the frustrations of the futile Mets and walked away June 3,
. leaving the reins to Howard, who was told at the time it was an interim
assigrunent.
All managerial jobs are ·interim. There's always one coming and one
going. It's the riskiest, most insecure of all professions.
The disconsolate Howard dldn't go home after the long, agonizing tlay
Sunday. He bedded down in his Shea Stadlwn offlce,slept until almost noon·
Monday and went quietly, decllnfug to return calls. It was Jess than a fond
farewell.
Kuenn, 52, a onetime star shortstop-with a gOOd bat, had spent 13 years in
the Milwaukee organization. He took over as manager in June, 1982, and
led the Brewers !'rom !Uth place to the American League pennant and the
World Series, losing in the seventh game'to the St. Louis Cardinals. Hewas
the unanimous choice as American League Manager of the Year.
A great feat, it paled beside his trlwnph over personal misfortune heart surgery in 1976, stomach surgery In 1977 and ampuiatlon of his right
leg In 19!ll. In the World Series, TV audiences fell in love with his subdued,
easy .style - sitting in the dugout. his jaw stuffed with tobacco, and
occasionally hobbling to the mound to take out a pitcher.

..............
+
-•
-

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
aging Philadelphia PhWies and the
young Los Angeles Dodgers now can
forget the troubles and tunnoil of
their summer of 198,3 and concent~te on Thesday ntghi's opener of
the National League Championship
Series.
_ The Phillles overcame a July
managerial change, constantly
shifting lineups, anemic batting,
and public bickering to win the NL
East title.
The Dodgers surVIved a prolonged slump, the loss of their
first -and second-string catchers to
injuries, the continuing personal
problems of rellev pitcher Steve
HoWe, and a long period of
adjustment by some of their young
players to win the West title;
The managers, Philadelphia 's
Paul Owens and Los Angeles' Toni
Lasorda, feel vindlca)ed by the
results.
Lasorda, who has guided . the
Dodgers to four divis'lbn tides in his

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - For
the first time this season, an upset
has struck 'a leader in The
Associated Press' state weekly high
school football ratings and it cost
Newark Catholic the Class A lead.
Mogadore coupled Its 'ZI-6 victory
over Streetsboro With Newark
CatholiC's 20-14 upset Joss by Heath
to take over the top Sj)Jt among the
state' s small school powers . . ·
Mogadore, a Suriunit County
school off to a 5.(] start this season,
moved up from the second pJsltlon
with 290 paints from a sta tewlde
panel of sports writers and broadcasters. Fostoria St.Wendelln was
second with 240 pJints In Class A.
Newark Catholic dropped to
eighth place alter suffering its first
loss In five games this falL

Wins featured race
cor:UMBus, Ohio (AP)- Catllke, ridden by Danny iang, won
the $3,900 featured race at Darby
Downs on Monday to pay $6.80, $4

,

Moeller, 5-0 and a 42-7 winner over
Cincinnati Elder, had 327 points to
239 for secontl-rated Akron Garfield.
Urbana, also 5-0, blanked Spring·
field Kenton Ridge 34-0. However,
the Hlllclimbers' lead dwindled to
seven points, 261-254, over runnerup
Elyria Catholic, a 5&amp;-7 winner over
Elyria West.
In Class AAA, Sandusky used a
26-19 triumph over LorJI.ln 'Senior lo
advance two Sj)JtS ·to fJfth place
. behind No.3 Middletown and No.4

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Weeks ............. .......... .. ... ;..... $14.04
Weeks ........... .. .................... $27.30
Weeks ..... , ..... ...................... $51.48
Outside Ohio
Weeks ... .... ....................... ... $15.21
Weeks .............. ..... ............. $29.64
Weeks ................... ..
.. ... S56.21

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UpperAr~on.

FR UJ H pHARMACY
.

Cincinnati Princeton, a35-3vlctor
over West Chester Lakotp, stU! .
droppedfromfifthtoslxtbthisweek.
Austintown Fitch was seventh,
Berea eighth, Youngstown Ursuline
runth and Centerville lOth among
the largest schools.
Belpre, ~nbeaten In five games
thlsseason,wasthelonef\ewcomer
to the three top lOs this week. The
Washington County school moved

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Second was Handy Jeff for $9.40 .-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __r~~~~~~::::~::::~~~~~~~~~~~
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The lOth-race trlfecta, 7-2-10.Jl81d
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A crowd or 3,00! bet $312,553.

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Top Twenty
TOO Top 1'\l.'enry 1£&gt;ams tn the AS'&gt;OCI ·
atrc:! Prl'!l.'l coUl'J!.I' ICJ!)tball r.oll. with tlrst·
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The 6-foot-6 McClure, a sophomore from Ravenna, Ohio, com.
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· Corzsider ·vcR features before the · price

Charles E. Blakeslee, p'omeroy,
was elected president for \he third
year of the Ohio Association of
Historical Societies and Museums
at their annual meeting held at the
Ohio Historical Center In Columbus
last Saturday.
Elected to serve with Blakeslee
for the coming year were Wllllam
Jj. Nolan, ChU!icothe, first vice
president; Trella H. Romine, Caledonia, second vice president; Don
Cooke, Navarre, se!'ret~ry; Dr.
GeOrge W. Bain, Ath~hs, treasurer, ·
and Ruth Basner, North Cantpn.
past-president. Trustees at large
Include Eric Cardinal, ·Mentor;
Ray Schuck, Llma, and Steve
White, Napoleon.
As a result of the election,
Blakeslee will serv~ for the coming
as an ex-officio member of the
Board of Trustees of the Ohio
Historical Society.
· Attending the annual meeting
and the historical workshops. and
representing the Meigs County
Pioneer Society were vice presidents Norma Newland and Margaret and Daisy Blakeslee,
secretary.

Subscribers not deslrln,lo! to pay.thecarrler may rf'rnl! ln advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credll will be given carrier each
month .

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By the Editors
of Consumer Reports
If you are planning' to buy a video
cassette r""order. Consumer Re· j)Jrts electronics engineers say that
.
'
a VCR's features deserve your
attention first before you consider
Its price or format. They reached
that conclusion after testing seven
table methods and four portables.
The engineers haven 't rated the
VCRs tested because perfonnance
differences were so slight. For
example, -they found little variation
in picture quality from one unit to
the next, regardless of a set's price
or VCR format (Beta or VHS) .
But you •will have to choose
between the formats. According to
Industry statistics, recorders with
VHS formats ·are outselling those
with Beta tonnats. Current. VHS
tapes can report lOnger than Beta
tapes (up to eight hours with the '
new VHS T-160 cassette If you use
the VCR's slowest speed). The
engineers tried this new, longerrunning VHS T-160 and found that .

the picture it produced was about as
good as that produced by the

shorter six-hour VHS-T-12il tape.
If you'll use a VCR to make your
own taperecordtDgs with a camera,
a battery-operated portable Is best.
Most orthe portables tested come In
two paris - a recorder and a
tuner/ timer. You need only the
recorder section when you use a
camera.
The pJrtables operate on .rechar·
geable batteries or power from a
car's cigarette lighter. The two
pieces can also run together on
household cun-ent. They weigh
between 4Y,i liltd·j.J' pJunds.
,Most VCRs come with basic
features: programmable dally repeat, record, play, pause, fast
forward, rewind, eject, tape counterandsearch. The more expensive
models have special features that
the englnee'r s found quite
appealing.
·
Some automatically record as
man)l as eight programs on
separate channels during a 21-day

Interval. How 101\1! you record Is
beam. A remote with a search •
llmited pnly by the length of the
button Is far more convenient than
tape.~ epgtneers pJlnt out -\hat . one wlthou t. The search lea lure lets
entering the prograrrimlng for an · you move the tape foiWard or
extetlded schedule Is sometimes
backward at up to more than 10
tricky, so be sure you're happy with
times the nocrnal speed wlthotlt
a VCR's scheduling mechanism
losing the picture. The picture Is
before you buy it.
clear enough to let you sj)Jt . a
· Another attractive feature Is
particular scene. For Instance, you
one-touch recording. You just press cna pass three minutes of commerOTR button and recording starts cials In a recorded program In ·
Immediately with no further adjust- about 18 seconds.
ments needed. Ooe press lets you , . - - - - - - - - - - - record the next 30 minutes ; two
presses for 60 minutes, three for 90
minutes, andfourforthemaxlmum
DUNCAN HINES
two hours. Of course, you have to
· have a cassette 1'-lready loaded.
MUFFIN MIX
Sophisticated remote systems on ,
In Sunday's Newspaper
some VCRs ~an·, In addition to the
Should Have Read
· basiC functions, change channels In
both directions, cause the tape to
II Y, Oz. Sox
¢
pause/sWJ, and move the tape
forwardorbackwardeither quicldy
or In slow·motlon.
Theremotecontrolslntop-of-theline models typically transmit
Galli olis &amp; Middle ort Sto1es
signals to the VCR . by Infrared

CORRECTION

99

Johnson's
Supermarket

Blakeslee named..----=-------=---_:_:_....::::.._---,-_:___ ___::_,_ _:____:___·_:_·_ _ _
group president

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or :Motor Route
· One Week ....... , ...................... .... $1.00
One Month ..... . , ..................... .... $4.40
One Year ............................... 152.80&gt;
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Dally .................... ....... .. ..... 20 Cents

,.

~ber4, 198~
Page S

TWINS HOLDING 'IWINS- Joe and Sherry Roeeo, Cloolnna11.
announce their 8eeond SEt of twins bora on July 20. The children lire the
great-grandsons of Harley Linthicum of near Tuppers Plains. The
seven year old tWins, Jeremy and Eric, are holding Nell and Nicholas,
Mr. and Mrs. Rosen have two other sons.

Dally Senllnel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4~769 .

Into the No.lO Sj)Jt In Class AA.
Akron St.VIncent-St.Mary was
thlr9 again In Class AA with
Fostoria fourth, Steubenville fifth,
Ironton sixth, Millersburg West
Holmes seventh, Coldwater eighth
and Canal Fulton Northwest ninth.
In Class A, New Philadelphia
TUscarawas Catholic moVed up
from fifth to third following a 32.(]
blanking of Newcomerstown. Archbold was fourth among the smallest
schools, McDonald fifth, McComb
sixth, South Charleston Southeastern seventh, Berlin Center Western
Reserve ninth and Ttffln Calvert
lOth.

Tuesday,

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

Meanwhile, Cincinnati Moeller In
Class AAA and Urbana In Class AA,
both sailing along with 5-0 records,
remained in the leads in the
otherregular-season races.

Daily .Sentinel

From Consumer Reports

seven years at the helm, said, "It
League Championship Series series won by the Orioles, 7-5, while
wasaspeclalseasonfor.t.is.Wehada
Wednesday,
McGregor won his only decision
lot of bad times to overcome and we
Power, pitching and defense against Chicago.
dld."
carried the teams to the best , After a Thursday night game in
Heading into the best-of-flye regular-season records in baseball, Baltimore, with Floyd Bannister,
league championships opener at
withChlcago's99-63markonegame 16-10, oppJsing rookie Mike BodDodger Stadlwn, Owens and the better than the Orioles' 98-64. .
dlcker, 1&amp;-8, the series shifts to
Phlllles might Uke to forget someChicago, led by Rudy Law anti Chicago for the
thing else about the past regular
Julio Cruz, have a decided edge In
season - they lost 11 of 12 to the
speed, yet In the season .series, the
Dodgers.
Orioles stole nine !&gt;ases to eight for
Whlle the Dodgers nilght like to ' the Whlte Sox.
think the 11-1 mark against the
The playoff series will feature
The Daily Sentinel
Phillles could cari,- over to the three of the top sluggers In the
1usr-s 1~~-!t60)
championship series In the form of American League. Chicago rookie
A Dl\'lslon of Multimedia, lne .
Intimidation, they publicly sald the
Ron Kittle finished third In ·home
Published every after noon, Monday
regular-seasonresultsaremeanlng- ·runs with 35, while Baltimore's
tttrough Friday, 111 Court Street , by the
less now.
.-Eddie Murray had 33 and Greg
Ohio Valley Publishing Compa ny. Mulllmedla, InC., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.992Jerry Reuss, 12-u ; will face the Luzlnskl oft he White Sox had 32.
2156. Second class postage paid a t PoPhillles' Steve Carlton, 15-16, In
In addition, Cal Rlpken Jr. of the
meroy, Ohio. ·
Thesday's 5:30p.m. PrYr game, the Orioles slammed 'Z1 homers and
Membf'r: Thf' Associated Press, In first or two successive contests at Chlcago'sCarltonFiskhlt26.
land Daily Pr~s Assoclaton and .the
Dodger Stadlwn.
LaMarr Hoyt, the top winner In
American Newspaper Publishers Association, Nat ional Advert is ing RepreAt Baltimore, the Chicago Whlte the majors with a 24·10 reco!"', was
sentative, Branham Newspaper Sa les,
Sox and Baltimore Orioles, slmilar named to oppose Baltimore s Scott
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
-York 10017.
teams with similar records, will McGI'egor,18-7,1n the opener ..
Haythada2-lrecordlntheseason
begin the best-of-5 American
POSTMASTER; Send address to The

Upset gives Mogadore Class A lead

-- · - - -

By The.Bend

Scott Dierking ha,d the other Jet
TD on a 1-yard run in the closing
period. Pat Leahy kicked field goal
of19 and 32 yard~.
•
Matt Kofler hit CribbS With a
12-yard pais In the fourth period for'
Buffalo's only touchdown, and Joe
Danelo booted a 38-yafd field goal. ·
The Jets victory crea'es a lOgjam
at the top of the American Football
Conference's Eastern Dlv,lslon. Bat·
tlmore, Miami, the Jets mid the Bills
are all :J.2.

NLplayoff series begins tonight at LA .,
AVOIDING THE DEFENSE - Buffalo Jlills' nmnlrtgback Robb
Riddick (411) tries to avoid being tackled by New York Jets' tight end ·
Mickey Shuler (82). on a klckolf return Monday night. The Jets defeated
Buffalo, 34-10 in NFL action. (AP Laserphoto).

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Urbana team·
includes
local woman
Jewell . and Lelia Blake, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Elden Blake,
671l01 St. Rt. 124, Reedsville, are
members of the 1983 women's
varsity volleyball team at U~bana
College.
Jewell , a ;.3 junior, is a 1977
grad!Jate of Eastern High School,'
and Leila, a 5-5 junior, Is a 1981
g;i'aduate of Eastern High School.
A member 'of the Western
Buckeye Collegiate Conference, the
Urbana Lady Knights will play a
25-match schedule. They began
their season Sept. 'Z1 with a pair of
matches against Findlay and Wll·
mlngton at Wllmlngton.
Urbana College Is a fully-·
accredited, prtvate, llberal arts
college that Is also dedicated to
career education on Its campus in
Champaign County, as well as three
off-campus programs In Bellefontaine, Columbus, and Dayton, and a
campus-based evening school
program.
Founded In 1850, Urbana has a
continuing alflliatlon with the Gen·
era! Convention of the Swedenbor·
gian Church.

The new Certificate of Deposit
from BANK ONE that lets you
set your own maturitydate.

Gurhm assigned
to Keesler ·AFB
Altman James H. Gumm, son of
Barbara L. and J a me$ R. Gurnm of
23 Homestead Dr.; Williamstown,
W.Va., has been assigned to
Keesler Air Force Base, Miss.,
after completing Air Force basic
tralnmg.
During the six weeks at Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
studied the Air Force mission,
org~ntzatlon and customs · and
recelveil special training Ill human
relatiOns.
,
In addition, airmen who complete
basiC training earn credits toward
an associate degree In applfed
science through the Coinmulllty
College of the Air Force.
The airman wUI now ~ve
specialized Instruction In the
communlcatlons·electronlcs systems field.
His wUe, Sue, Is the daUihtef' of
Raymond C. lJt!vlng of West
Colulnbla, W.Va.
The atnnaD Is a 1977 jltllduate of
~High School, W.Va.

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Tua1 L y, 01:1 L n

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Racine News

· W aldnig reunion at Grove·City
'The annual Waldnlg reunion was

BUJ Waldnlg, Tim Waldnlg, Mecha·
olsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Jam~
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Moore.
· Chris Smith, GriM' City; Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Petzo, Shelley Perzo,
Kerrle Petzo, Wheaton, Ill.
Mr. andMrs.PatCapretta,Kelley
AnnandDomlnlc,Hllllard; Mr. and
Mrs. WayneBrlggs,AaronandLort,
Mike Moore, Andrea and Scotty
Moore, Chad Barnett, Brad Bar·
nett, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Waldnlg, Jr.,
. Columbus.
.
It was voted to the have the nellt
reunion on !he third Sunday In
September at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Petzo In Wheaton, Ill. It
will be a weekend affair.

. held recently attllehomeofMr. and'
: Mrs. James Moore, Alkire Road,
Groveaty.
· A potluck dinner was served at
· noon with the Moores furnishing the
ham and beet.~ went to Julius
Waldnlg, the oldet; Bobby Jo
Holman, the youngest, and Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Petzo who traveled the
farthest., Wheaton, Ill.
An egg toss, apple bobbing, and
volley ball were among the actlv1·
tleseJ!)Oyedbythegroup.Attendlng
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldnlg,
Racine; Jullus Wadnlg and Wanda
Lambert, Urbana; Mr. and ·Mrs.

Racine UMW meeting
•

By Mno. Fruc11 Monis
The Ethel Sarsons famUl!; held a
family reunion celebrating their
mother's 83rd , birthday at Forked -:·
Run Lake Sunday, Aug. 14. Those
attending Included Mr. and Mrs.
Wheeler Sarsons of G[andvtew,
Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sarsons of
Proctorville; Mr. and Mrs. Davey
Wolfe aJl\1 family ol Letart Falls;
Mr. and Mrs. Okey Meadows and
family of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs,
Chuck Lane and daughter of·
GaUipolls; Mr. and Mrs. Monty
. Ray Wolfe, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
WU!Iam Pickens and son, TherUI
Rapdolph and frlend,Mrs. Juanita
Justis of Belpre; Brenda Pettit and
. two sons, Middleport; Mrs. Billy
Justis and children, Minersville;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Justis, Belpre;
Tom WoHe, Bashan; Mrs. Margaret Wolfe and neighbOr, Mrs.
Meadle Long, local.
Mr· and Mrs. Ralph Shain and
Mrs. Garnet Ervine spent a recent
Sunday In Flemingsburg, Ky. They
visited Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Carpenter and Mrs. Alma Ervine,
also the cemeU&gt;ry where Henry
Ervine ls .bwied: ·
·
Mr. and Mrs. Solon Butcher of
Dunedin, Fla. visited her sister,

4,

Tuesday, ~ber4, 1983

1983 .

Notes------~~----,....;o.---Mrs. Gretta Simpson and Mrs. Mae
Cleland when enroute to ·cleveland
to visit their son Jimy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wads.wrth of
Phlladelphla,Pa.spentaweekwlth ·
her grandmother, Mrs. Edna
Pickens and visited other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Wllilam Lake, lilrt
and Sean. spent a Satunday with ·
their grandmother, Mrs. Francts
Morris .
'
, ·
Mr. and Mrs. Crttt Bradford Jr.
and Mfll. James Dougan of Wor·
thlngton spent a Frtday with Mr.
and Mrs. Crttt Bradford Sr.
·
Mrs. Garnet Ervine was hostess
at her home for the August meeting
of the Booster class. "Near the
Cross" was sung by the group to
open the meeting followed. \11th
prayer and scrtpture reading. A
business session preceded a pro- ·
gram of readings, "Frtendshlp," by
Emma Adams; "lilvest Thou
Me?," "Angel Food," by Amy
Wood; "A Sure Way to a Happy·
Day," by Abbie Wood; "Make Your
World Beautiful/' by Wanda Powell; "Utile Prtvileges," by Marte
Roy; "Today," by Geraldine Cleland; "Jesus Is Leading the Way,"
by Garnet Ervine; "Love thy
Neighbor," by F1orence Adams;

"Because of Thy Great Bounty," by
Wolfe; "The Gospel
Accor41ng to You,"· by Margie
Grtmm; "Let Not Your Heart be
Troubled," by Meadle Long;
" What Does Love Look Like?," by
Ura MoiTis. Durtng a fello\I!Shlp
hqur, refreshments were served by
Mrs. Ervine.
The Rio Grande Association Fall
Rally was held at Racine First
Baptist Church Saturday, Sept. 10,
with registration 2: :Jl p.m. Call to
order and devotions were by Hev. .
Earl Dale and welcome by Rev.
Dor. Walker,• 'I'hi!re was special
music. by Mlddi!!POrt trjo. Business
meetlilg and ·mission emphasis jl
preceded group meetings from 5 to
6 p.m. foUowed with dinner served
to mone than 100. In the everlillg
service, special music was by the
Racine First Baptist Choir and also
by the Middleport trto, followed
with ·the m~ by Mrs. SaWe
Blackwell, missionary to Japan.
She 1s a retired public school
pJinclpal and a member of Antioch
Baptist Church In aeveland, Oh.lo.
Mrs.BiackweUwasahouseguestn!
Mrs. Gnetta Simpson and attended
Sunday School and morning worship service Sunday.
Margaret

~·••••....,.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Mavis Hankey of Columbus will
be the speaker atthe0ct.13meetlng
ofthePomeroyChapterofWomen's ·
· Aglow Fellow$JP. to be held a!
Duffs Smorgashoand In Gallipolis.
The dinner will be at 6: :Jl p.m.
withthemeetlngtostartat7::llp.m.
Mrs. Hankey and her husband,
Bill, president of the Full Gospel
Business Men's Fellowship Chapter
In Columbus, have traveled exten·

Mrs. Velma Taylor boated the
Esther MlulDnaey Circle at her
borne recently tor tile September
meeting. Mrs. Florence Adams,
president, opened with song and
prayer and conducted the business
seulon. A program, 'The Holy Spirit
aDd M!IS!ons, was presented 'by
Mn. Marte Roy and an alphabet
Bible QuiZ by Mrs. A!lamS: Nine
members enjoyed retresllments

setVed by Mrs. Taylor.
Unley Hart Is convalelclng at' his
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Beegle and son,
BW, attended funeral services In
Marietta f91' Mrs. Beegle's aunt,
Mrs. Josephine Stiff d. West Palm
Beach, Fla.
·Millon Cantor of Canton, berefor
the squirrel season, • viSIU&gt;d . an
afternoon with Mrs.' Margaret
WoHe.
Mrs. Robert Stemple and ~
daughters of Dayton are visiting
bet •parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Sln)pson and family.
Eddie Baker of !'4cArthur spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Turley.
Danny McKay, of Newark spenf
Friday with his aunt and uncle, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Beegle.

GO!!PELTO~APPEARING.-CarleionChurchhomecomlngwW

TUESDAY

SUTI'ON 1WP Sutton
Township Trustees will meet
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

POMEROY - ChapU&gt;r 45 of
the Oh.lo Association of Publlc
School Employees will meet at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the Southern
Local High School.

.CHESTER - Chestl&gt;r Town·
sh.lp TrusU&gt;es wil meet Tuesday.
7: :Jl p:m . at Chester Town Hall.
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Area Chamber ' of Commerce
will meet Tuesctay.
the
Meigs Inn. Guest speaker wtll be
Sid Edwards :of Community
Action Agency. All members
urged to a ttl&gt;nd.

noon;·a:r

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POMEROY --' Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7:45
p.m . Tuesday at the Masonic
Temple. New olflcers will be

..

POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will observe Its 45th
anniversary with an open meetIng at the Forest Run United
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
Tuesday. Former members are
lnvllell to attend. Charter
members will be honored and a
, rogram will be presented.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Cub
Scout Pack will meet Thursday
at 7: :Jl p.m . at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ basement.

Happenings

Spaghetti supper
POMEROY - A spagettl
supper will be held Saturday
trom 4 to 7 p.m. by the Oh.lo Eta
Ph.! Chapter of ,B eta Sigma Phi .
Sorortty at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The charge
for adults wil be $3.25 and for .
children under 12, $2.25. The
dinner will Include spaghetti
with meat sauce, slaw, hotgarllc
bread, beverage and desert.
Carry out orders are available.
Tickets can be either purchased
In advance or at the door.

Singers scheduled
SYRACUSE -Singers for the
remainder of the week at the
revival underway at the Syra·

cuse Unltl&gt;d Methodist Chureh
are 'Harvest Trto, Reedsville,
Tuesday; Asbury Choir and
other local talent, Wednesday;
The Revelators of McArthur,
Thursday; Harmony of Racine,
Frtday, and Sunrise of Chester,
Saturday. Services start at 7
p.m. The Rev. Steve Nelson will
be the speaker each evening.

Health care center·~·
to have yard salel .
POMEROY - A yard and
bake sale will be held on the
Pomeroy Parking lot, Frtday
and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. with aU proceeds to go to
the Christmas fund for residents
of the Pomeroy Health Care
Center.

Lane.

Sponsor sheets were provided for
the group and are available trom

Susie Soulsby.
Mrs . Abbott had devotions using
"Mother's Morning Prayer" as her
topic. Committees named for the
year were ways and means, Susie
Soulsby, Peg Harrts, Peg Houda·
shelt; program, Nancy MoiJ1,s,
Helen Blackston, Janet Duffy;
remembrance, Susie Abbot!; and
U&gt;lephone. Clartce Kennedy,
Theme for the year and for the
con!erence · will be "Follow the
Rainbow." Peg Harris
the
hostess gift, and Mrs. Kelllllidy the
traveilng . prize. Others attending
wereElolseWhlteandAnnColbum.
Refreshments were served by
Mi's. Houdashelt and Mrs. Soulsby.

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The

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Daily .Sentinel

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INVITES_YOU TO THE

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present an all new copy and Layout

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ads that.. sell more.

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guish between the merely averag~ au and ,
the truly creative one."
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• ~lect The Ri&amp;ht · Uems ·•. Bow lo peck ,
itemsthatwcllpullcmmedtatestorelratlic.
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cam~igns enjo~consislently high readers 1p. How to 1ld ads that ~t immedi·

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for copy llld 11t,. . . 101111
J)I'ICticll tats to 1ld l'ltlllers llld other busiMssmtn In .....,q the producthtty CJf tMif
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enn.

Mrs.. Eileen Buck and Early
Roush spent Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Patrtck Greene at Circleville.
Mr. and Mrs. Greene have butlt a
new home them a new home and
they assisted them with their
moving.
.
.
Mr · and Mrs. Herbert Roush
spent from Thursday till Monday
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Durst at Niles, Ohio. Enroute to

...

Kevin Kane in charge of Retail Sales
programs of. the Newspaper Advertising Bureau, New Yott City, will

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"COFFEE AND DANISH WILL BE SERVED"

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of

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Newspaper Advertising B.ureau,.s
COPY
and
LAYOUT
CLINIC
For Retail Advertisers ·
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5Th
8 A:M. 'TIL 10:30 A.M.
at the
.
Holiday Inn - Rt. 7. - Gallipolis, OH. ·

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By Mrs. llerbj!rl Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell si:&gt;ent a
recent weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Blil~ Hart and son at Columbus
and attended the graduation of
Brice Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner
and Mr. aJtll Mrs. Saunders or
CheshlrespentaweekwithMr.and
Mrs. Bobby Wdoct at Brentwood,

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b~ic t~aining
Army National Guard Pfc. Kent
C. Yonker. son of Danny L. and
Charlotte L. Yonker of Mason, W.
Va., !las completed basic training
at Fort Leonard Wood. Mo.
Dartng the training, students
received ln~tructlon In drlll and
· ceremonies,' weapons, map readIng, tactics, muttary courteSy ,
mllltary justice, first aid, and Army
history and traditions .
His wife, Darlene, is the daughter
of Larry and Shirley Spears of Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
The prtvate Is a 19TI graduate of'
Wahama High SchooL

and an Aglow Bible

The public Is lnvltl&gt;d to·attend the
meeting of the Women's Aglow
Fellowship wh.lch Is a worldwld~
Inter· denominational organization
of renewed Clirlstlan women. Membership dues are$10ayear:

Wolfpen News Notes

Mrs. Helen Johnson recently Russeh and other relatives. Marspent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. guertte Boyce ·of Columbus was
Everett Ray Johnson and family of Tuesday visitor.
Orlando, Fla.
Julie Stevens, Barbara . SteadMr. and ·Mrs. James venarri,
Cassandra and Jacquelin John· man of Falrlax, Va. and Iva · Pomeroy and Harry Hall of Gaston,
son of F1ortda spent a few days with Johnson spent the holiday weekend
N. 'C. were recent visitors of Mrs.
their grandmother, Mrs. Helen • In Columbus visiting with Alta
Myrtle Harrison.
Johnson.
Atkins and Mary Greenler.
Mr. and Mrs. CharleySmlth were
Mrs. J. ~R. Mll!J&gt;hY and Peggy r;::=======~:::=;
Labor-Day afternoon visitors of Mr. spent Sundlly evening and Monday I ,
and Mrs. Harley Smith.
with Mr. and Mrs. John Downs and
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Frank and family of 1)imble.
.
Sarah Beth were visitors of Mr. and
Mr. arid' Mrs~ Harley 'Johnson,
Mrs. Eugene Haning and ROnald Tammy, Terry and John Slack Jr.
and other relatives.
spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nease were Mrs. John Slack and famlly of
Labor Day visitors of Mrs. Amber
Sandyvllle. Tammy Johns on
Warner and Dorothy Higgins.
stayed over and Is to go to
~arl Russell and friend Mary of
Pittsburgh, Pa. and visit a few days
ColumbUs, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
with her uncle and aunt, Mr. an&lt;\
To us you re lar more than
Russell were Sunday visitors of Mr. Mrs. Robert Slack and family . .
JUSt
a pG/ICyhblder You are
and Mrs. Robert Russell. Jl4&gt;rth" _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-1
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Personal note

Your Insurance ·

IS ITA
POLICY?
ORAN
ACCOUNT?

ar11nsurance account .

By handling all you r protec·
tton needs - personal or

bustness - as an account.

JOHN WARREN AMBROSE
Becky and Jamie Broderick, Shert·
dan and VIcky Russell, and the
Infant's godparents, Bob and VIolet
Campbell.

• we ·ll see th ai 1tts always
up

to date And that you

aren t paytng for unnec essary or overlappmg
coverages
We II revtew your account
ctrcumstances and needs.

Apple Grove News Notes

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GOOD COPY .AND LAYOUTS
PRODUCE BETTER SALES.....

~~~.SChool,

complet~s

regu larly to meet changing

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New o!flcers were Installed at the
For the program, Dorothy Smith
recent meeting o! the Wildwood gave a summary on the"No Work
GardEn Oubheld at the home Ada GardEn Book"by Ruth Stout and
Holter.
·
Richard Clemence on organic
Installed by Marcia Aniold Were gardening.
Betty Milhoan, president; Kathryn
Jane Harrts opened the meeting
Miller, vice pre5ldent; Debbie Ball, with a poem, ".Now Is the Time" and
treasurer; . and MasfY Nease, tor roll . call members displayed
specimens of drted !lowers and
secretary.
. ' Mrs. Arnold, retiring president, grasses. Mrs. Milhoan gave various
an artie leon preserving leaves. Ideas on prepii11Dg the yard and
she also announced the club's garden tor winter.
Mrs. Holter and Juanita
anniversary .meeting to be held
Tuesday night and the Christmas served retreshments. Guests were
!lower show which has been Mfs. Dale Warner and Mrs. Allen'
HoiU&gt;r.
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New Wildwood garden officers

A birhday party honoring John
Warren Ambrose on his second
birthday
given recently by his .
mother, Janet;ese.
A Tom an · erry theme was
carried out for
pMty. Attending
were Glenna, Pam and John Riebel,
. Norman and Daylene Bahr. Betty
Lou Moore. Norman and AncU Van
~ Matre, Rosanne M~. i!!!d Becky
Ambrose, Angle and Ray Russell,
'Cathy, Mandy, and Frankie Elliott,
C)ndy HarU&gt;nbach, Jay Manley.
Chris lind Angie Johnson and the
' bono~ guests' grandparents, Jack
and Conine Ambrose.
Sending gifts were his great·
grandmother, Bertha Manley, Cora
and Jerry Pullins, Herman and
Audrey Gaffney, Norman and Betty
Lou Snodgrass, uncles and aunts,

**

.CCL meets in Middleport : ·
· Participation In the cystic fibrosis
• fund project, "Bowl for Breath",
was planned durtng a meeting of the
Middleport · Child Conservation
League held Thursday night at the
home of Mrs. Susie AbbOtt.
Bob Brandeberry of Rio Grande,
who Is associated with the Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation, was guest
speaker for the meeting and showed
a film on thedlseaseandtheneedfor
research funds. He ·asked the
members·to take part In the "Bowl
for Breath" program to he earned
out Oct. 2,3 at the Pomeroy Bowling

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elected and dues will be paid.

Ambrose

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Mrs. Pearl Mora gave a progr&lt;1Jll
on the Treaty of Paris at the
Saturday meeting of Return Jona·
than Meigs Chaptl&gt;r, Daughers of
the American Revolution, held on
· historical Blennerhassett Island. ·
Mrs. Josepjl Cook had theopenlng
prayerfollowedbytherltualandthe
regent, Mrs. Robert Ashley. read
the president general's message.
Giving the·natlonaldefensereport
wasMrs.GeneYostnotingthatthls
Is the year of the Bible and for
,fl&gt;achlng Amerlcanlsm.
The vice regent, Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds lnt1;Qduced the program
leader. .
Grave markings were held for
Mrs. George Faris at Beech Grove
Cemetery. Read were two lnvlta·
tlons, one from the Marietta·
Chapter for a Saturday meeting and
theotherfromNathanle!Masssieat
Chllllcothe, Oct. 5.
A picnic lunch was served by Mrs.
Joseph Olok, Mrs. A. R. Knight,
Mrs. John Rose and Mrs . .Gene
Craig. Guests were Miss Carolyn
Smith,
Miss FlorenceSmith, and
Mrs. Mildred
Hites.

be held Suaday, wllhSUJJday school at 9:30a.m. and worship service at
10:30 wllh the Rev. Da.vld Curfman, pastor, glvlog·the m.....age. There
wOl be a basket dim..- at noon. Afternoon services wW be at 1:30 p.m.,
wiUI guest minister, lhe Rev. W.E. Curfman, Cheshire, and singers, the
Gospel Tones of Charleston, W.Va. The pubDc Is lnvW:ed to allend. The
church Is_ ~ on Kingsburg Rood, Pomeroy.

•••••••••&gt;Pf••••••*••H•....,.•••••••·••

.... . .

Yonker

slvely. She has accompanied him on
several World Alrilfts. Including'
trtps to Kenya, Scotland and the
Orient.
Mrs. Hankey has served as past
president of Day Chapter of the
Women's Aglow Fellowship In
Col.umbus, and has sppken a~ a
number of the Aglow ChapU&gt;rs. She
Is currently U&gt;achlng morning Bible
studies at Manna HouSe two days a
week, a Directions Class at Rose-

DAR meets at
B.1ennefhassett

home after a blp replacement at
Veterll!lS Memorial HOBjlltal.

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The Daily Senti'JI'I. Page-7

Middleport, Ohio

Women 1S AgJow speaker set

· Apple biltterwW bemadeandsold missions was raised to $125 and a
by the Racine United Methodist donation was made to the HenderWomen again thlsyear.
son Settlement.
Meeting recently at the church,
final plans for the · fund r$1ng
It was voted to give $1,001 to the
project were made. Members will ~eralfundtreasuryofthechurch.
meet at the·church on Tuesday, Oct.
Fifty shutin calls were reported
11, to peel apples, and the apple and cards were signed for Ill ·
butter will be made and ready for members.
saleatU&gt;r4 p.mon Wednesday, Oct.
Marlene Fisher conducted the
program using "AtU&gt;ntion" as her r----------------------------------,_.......:::::..::::,::...:::::,~~::_---12, and'all day Thursday.
The price will be$2 per pint, and$1 toplc. Scrtpturewasreadbyseveral
....
perquart. Thejarwlllbefurnlshed members on how God speaks to
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by the UMW. All members of the people and how he gets our
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church are urged to help.
attention. Disappointments, per·
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The UMW will also service a soup, sonal prayers and prayers for the
It
sandwich and pie dinner on Election nation werewrttten on sllpsofpaper
It
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Day.
wh.lch were then burned .with the
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Plans were announced for a flamesgolnguptoGod.
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MarleneFisherandAnnRadfford
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Oct. 23 at the church withacarty·ln served a desert course during the
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dinner that day. The pledge to social hour.
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Calendar

Pomeroy

·

NOes they visited
at
Columbiana
and Mrs.
Mr. Iva
andOrr
Mrs.
EveretU&gt; Parsons and daughU&gt;rs at
Negley, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. David Sayre spent
a recent three days visiting on the
Blue Ridge parkwaky. They visited
Thomas Jefferson's Home In Vtrgl·
nla and saw the Natural Brtdge.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson of
Pt. Pleasant and Mrs. Pearl Norris
spent Sunday with their sister, Mrs.
Etha Wamer ·at Fairview.
Mr. and Mrs.Ted Hayman of Columbus spent a recent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Delva Patterson
and family of Akron spent a weekend w)th'Mrs. Martha Anderson.
. Mr. and Mrs. BUJ Mitchell of Columbus and Bertha RObinson ofRa·
cine called on Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman a recent Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Webb of Racine
visited Mrs. TIU Webb Frtday
evening.
Howard Roush and Gladys
Shields visited Walter McDade at
Troy Wednesday till Frtday and
Edith McDade at Dayton Hospital.
Mrs. McDade Is In critical
coridlton.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson and
. sons of Sissonville, W. Va. spent
Sunday wluth Mrs. Kathryn Hiult
and famlly Sunday.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Donohue and
famlly of Marton spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Donohue.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hill of Moore
Haven, Fla. are spending three
weeks vacation with Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe and their sons, Marvin Hill,
Michael Hw and Leah Wailace HIU
and their families.
Mrs. Linda Jewell daughter,
Barb, of Letart, W.Va., Mrs. PhyJ.
Its Young of Middleport called Sunclay on Mr. and M~Ji. Gerald
Hayman and Keith.
. Mrs. Luella
and slstl&gt;r·ln·
law .of Falrplaln, W. Va. called on
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush

And we' ll see that claims
are promptly and fa~rly
se ttled
For accountabtltty. count

Ohio, a former resident, Is a patient
' at a Youngstown hospital in serious
condlton.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons at·
tended the Sayre Reunion at Buck·
eye Lake a recent Sunday.

on us . You 'll find we are
lnends yoU Can depend on .

STACEY JOANN ERVIN

Poets' Corner

Ervt"_n bt"rthday '

• "!"eel Meln Clourdl"
Meet me In church on Sunday,
Come sing one sweet hymn with me there.
Meet me In church .on Sunday,
Come over 10 God's house of prayer.
Meet me·cn church on Sunday
Christ's word Is ministered lh;....
Meet me In church on Sunday.
All _of our !Atrdens He'll share.

Stacey Joann Ervin, daughter o!
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell ElVIn,
Racine, celebrated· l\er first birth·
day recently with a party at the
home of her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Ervin.
She also observed her birthday
with a party at the home of her
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. James Cunningham of Pomeroy, RouU&gt;.3.
She received cards, gifts and

M~ me In church on Sunday,
Your troubles will just fade away.
Meet me In church on sunday,

At the dawn or a brand new day.
Meet me in church on Sunday
I'll ask you lhls o'er once again.
Learnmeln
how to be saved
from all ·sln.
Meet
on Sunday
Glorify thechurch
Lord Jesus._
Barbara James

money
from .relatives
frtends
Refreshments
of Ice and
cream
and.
cake were served to the guests.

Represemmg

State Auto Insurance
A f:"

ri~~~~~;~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~-i·~-~·~-~~~~

r.=================:;J
1519

Nye Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio.

'

~to tc

of &lt;9hio
f'cpertmcnt
of ~nsurencc
.

Now

CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE

0

The undersigned, SUPERINTENOENT OF INSURANCE OF THE STATE OF OHIO, hereby mtilies lhat
PEOPLES LIFE INS CO WASHINGTON D C
of

at
1312 Eastern Avenue
Next door to Pizza Hut

••

DC

Slcle of

THIS CERTIFICATE MUST BE PUBLISHE9 I~ A NEWSPAPER OF
GEN3RAL CIRCULATIO•! IN ~·1EIGS CI)\J&gt;1TY.

We've moved our clan, kit and caboodle, to new offices. But
we're still answering' door and phone with the money you
need when you want a loan . Call on us at our new place.

lh Finoneial condition is shown by ih annual statement to hove been

O!

fo llows on

December 31. 19.8.2.. _:

Loans ~P to !,50,860 !lojiAJ

ADM!TTED ASSETS ......................

' $736,030,487 .0

LIABILITIES. ... .. ... .... .. .... ... ... .

$652,392,990.0

SURPLUS ..... : .............•. . ........

- $76,980,682 . 0

. •• .• •.• . . • • . . • • . . . . • . . • . .•..

$175,171.450 .0

EXPENDITURES •........................

$146,760 ,037.0

NET ASSETS . . . . . . . . ., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .'.

$83,637,497.0

INCOME.

~

CApiTAL .....•..•... : .... ..... ........

$6,656,815 . 0

IN WITNESS WHEREOF,

1

h~ ..

hereunto tubwib•d

my name ond ccnntd my teal to be off i••d ot Columbut, "'
Ohio, thi1 day and date.

.

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Allp! Pt!1SOns of Ashland, Ohio
spent two weeks with Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll Wblte and Mr. and 'Mrs.
Dorsa Parsons. Roger Parsons and
son Jim Bob came after her and
stayed om'lllgllt.
Carpenter of WellsviDe,

WASHINGTON

has complied with the low! of thi!l State applicable to it end is avthoriztd during the
current year 10 transact in this state its oppropricte business of insurance .

Sunday.

_Sidney

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Crane

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446-4113

Superint1ndenl of lnl\lronc~ of Ohio

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8-The Daily Sen~nel

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Plant closing
follows strike
LANCASTER, Ohio (AP) .
Stuck Mould Works, makers of
moulds tor the glass indu~try, is
going out of busineSs following a
strtke lastSaturdaymldnlght by the
American Flint Glass . Workers
Unlon.
Directors of the company decided
Monday to close the · business;
putting approxirriately 100 employees out of.. work. ·
Harold Williams, attorney for the
firm, disclosed the decision and said ·
only tllat it was based on overall
·busines.s corlditlons. He could'not be
reached l!'&gt;t~}o elaborate and Don
Stuck;' eompany president, referred
all question to Williams.
· "There's . nobody here that wlli
make any statements beside hlni, •'
StuckSa.id.
Members of Locals 73 and 572,
American Flint Glass Workers
Unlori, struck after negotiators
failed to resolve questions on wages,
health insurance and other issues
during contract negotiations.

•

"We feel they wouldn't bargain In
good faith," said Richard Morgan,
International rwresentative of the
union. "They wanted to rewrite the
entire · contract, and there wa$
substantial concessions all the way
down the line, In wages and fringe
benefits, and several non-ecQnomlc
items they wanted to rewrite or
delete.
"They wanted to remove all the
people's rightS under the contract
and when we carne to an lippasse,
the Items on' the table were ·really .
ridiculous." He declined to comIl\E1DL·on the closing, saying he
wanted to confer with a union
·
lawyer first.
Morgan said Local 73 is made up
of skilled mould makers wlille local
572 are foundrY and misCellaneous
workers.
, . •·
He said the firm made cast irOn
moulds and that about ro percent of
its ··business was with Anchor
Hocking Co., a manufacturer of
table and decorative glass at
Lancaster.

Gallia Com.m issioners
(Continued from page 1)

need time to discus:; the issue
·
further.
sisted that ,goal can't be reached
"Let's kick it around a little
until the fa~Uity expands to handle .
more,"
he said. "I'll be the first to
additional traffic.
admit
I'm
In the dark on what we can
The bulk of money Foothills
do."
makes, they said, is from hangar
Both sides did come to agreement
space rental and fuel sales.
about
bidding the construction of
Prosecutor Joseph Cain told
hangars.
Hangars can be buUt by
cornrnls~ioners that legally, they
individuals
and companies, and
are bound to appropriate a certain
Foothills
would
help them, Hitchamount from the general fund.
cock said.
Swain said the county has "a
Hitchcock said possibly 10 hanproblem committing Itself to addi·
gars·
can be . built on space
tiona! funding when it's now paying
commissioners
can make available
off a $1.3 m.Jllion lOan to f~e
and comml$slonfor
lease.
Foothills
construction ·of the new courthouse,
ers
agreed
speclficl}tions
for han·
In addition to slashing county
department appropriations · by 5 gars must be obtained first, parlicu'Jarty to determine how ' the
percent to help pay that loan.
Swain added that commissioners structures can stand up against
wind and snow.

·Traffic·sign~ls--,-_ _ _ __

. Cheese distribution
centers noted again

,,

.

'

Octvber 4, 19113

.Plan annual
SWCDmeet

mil' ()FF -

Flllplno pn1 mliiEot woibn 1101t aut vld to the Pldll!pp!new aud two other
American aud Phllipplne fljlgs lor storage following !Wijons. 'lbe flap were latented to be dlilpllQied In ·
U.S. Pi1!sldent Ronald Reagan's c~ of his . city street during his vlsll. (AP LaaerpbotO).
·

BOGGS

-Roger Hysell
GARAGE

SALES &amp; SERViCE
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
. GIIYSVIllE, OHIO

._.::

,.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
· Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992.-7121

West VIrginia Corp., to Flowers
Baking Co. of W. Va. and Ohio, Inc.,
Lots, MlddlePQrt.
Lawrence E. Hysell to Larry D.
Hysell, Pa'm ela Hysell, 1.18 acres,
Rutland.
Robert L. Hawk, Nancy F. Hawk
toDonaldE.~ham,Norma

J. Cunnln;:harn, Sheriff's deed,
Mlddlepori Village.
Peter Y. Mooreetal to Harold D.
Graham, Janet K. Graham, Sheriff's ~. Scipio.
Debra L. Dailey to Donald L.
Dailey, Parcel, Rutland.
. WoodrowW. CaUIII,ChrlstyKay
Call to Charles William Bolin,
Judith Ann Bolln, Parcel, Rutland.
Gladys W. Voll, deceased, Paul
E. von, AffidaVIt, Syracuse. Andy 0. Doczi Sr., Charlene
nOczt to Herald OU&amp;GasCo., Right
of Way, Rutland.

Emergency runs
Five calls were answered by local
units Monday and Tuesday morn· ,
lng, the Meigs County Emef881cy
Medical Service reports.
At 1: 37 a.m: Tuesday the MlddlePQrt Unit went to the Storys Run
Road for Myrtle FUe:wbowas taken
to Vetesrans M~oJ?al Hospita . .
On Monday, the Racine Unit
11: 34 a.m. went took CharleS'
Mugrage to Veterans MemorW
HospiU\1 and at 4: 17 p.m. the Racine
Unft went to the scene o! a car
acc~llton Route 124 and tookCiu1s
Arnold, ·Missy Sprouse,. Peggy
Smith and Garnet Roush to VeteMemorlal Hospital. Tuppers
Plalnl at 9: l2a.m. tookAdda Herald
from Route 681 to Pleasant Valli!y
HospltalandTuppersPialnsatl2:1!1
p.m. took Susiut Cass from Eastern
High . !lebool to Camden-Clark
Hospital Ia Parkersburg.

rans

1 C"d ol lhonko ' ""'" onart.o~eo 1
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lpoodonod•o" oo l

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992 M'""""'""

367 CNohoro

Po-"1'

1R8 Y5tlton

9K- Chooto•

115

HJ - - . . . t

e

Real Estate General

In Loving Memory

Of

Albert Pettit
Who Passed Away
Oct. 4, 1979
As years go by and
time rolls on,
It seems you're
near, although
you're gone.
Each thing we do,
, each place we go,
We seem to feel your

ELECTION
LEGAL NOTICE
The Oh1o Soil and Water
ConservatiOn Comm1ssion will
·cause an election of supeiVI sor s al the Meigs Sa11 and
Water Co nservaliOn Dtslr1ct to
be held in accordance w•th
Chapter 15 150 -1- 14 of the
Rev1sed Code at Oh•o. at the
Salisbury - Elementary School
on November 1 0. 1983 at 7:00
p m · Nom1nees are: Dav1d
Gloeckner and Richard "Dick"
Manzey
Nominat•ons will be accepted from the floor at ther1me
of elect• on. One superv•sor IS to
be elected. You may cast your
ballot at the annual meeting,
the day of election at the distnct
office between 8:00 a m. and
4 :00p.m. or an ~bsentee ballo.t
mav be secured at the focal
district off1ce and retumed to
the office by 4 30 the day
preced•ng the elect1on
(10)4. 1B. 2tc .

lU

u.to" , ....

118l

...... " ......

!IQ

J7!1

742

Ao.,. ...
fhntuwl

917

.......... .

117

C-~ht

~ft

,
"

Q..,.,.,

Up to

. O..:.doy_.ion

fh,."""''"-"""
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Up
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to

Public: Notice
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS I;OUNTY, OHIO
WILBUR DAILEY,
Plaintiff

·v•

ANNIE DUNBAR, if living and
h.- husband if any, •nd to the
widower, hairs, diiN'iual, end
next of kin of docedent. oil of
whow nlmea or addre1181ere
unf!nown to tho plaintiff.
Delondama
Coso No. B3·CV-227
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION

I-

·.

CARRIER WANTED
PART-TIME HELP IN POMEROY
'NEEDED AT ONCE •.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY.
.
GOOD PAY. .

1.2-2().1fc

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

To Annte Dunbar. if hvtng and
her hu;5band · tf any, and to
wtdO'o'Ver. hetrs. devtsees. and
next of k1n of decedent. all of ..

9·1 5·1 mo, pd.

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

You ar e requtred to answer

you for ihe relief demanded tn
the complatnt.

DATED Aug ust

1983

Business
Services

AUTHORIZED 'SERVICE
· ONALL .

D&amp;J
SAVEMORE-MART

HOTPOINT &amp;
GENERAL ELECTRIC
. AI'PLIANCES

Coal 8a Kerosene
Heaters

WE ALSO SERVICE

Rldlos, Wetchta &amp;
GtnWII Verltty

· ALL QTHER IIAKES

POIERY-

~. LANDMARK

' 114·•2·2111

Residentiai...:.New and
Commercial
and Industrial.
BONDED-All Work
Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.

re~wiring;

9·22- I mo. pd.

the complat nt wtthln 28 days

Ctvtl Procedure. JUdgment by
default wll be rendered against

$99TO $189

AlSo ArmJ

S"'!plies,

2nd lt. ocrooi from
"""' Otllce
M•1on.
W. Ve, ,

773-6040
10.3·1

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

12'xl6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
6'x6' Up
to 24'x36' .

Sizes from

985-3561
All Makes

lnsulatd Dog Houses

•Washara •Dishwethers
Ranges

'Refrigerators
· •Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVI~~"'

Vinyl SidiQg &amp;
Roofing
SALE
DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% OR MORE
On Si4ing and Roofing,
Gutter and Downspouls
"Free Estimates"
.. 1 2 Years ExperienCe"
"Work Guaranteed"

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnwo1ation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windowt
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESE!'
PH. 992-27.72.
""h -1 mo

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Pomeroy. Ohio
PH. 992-8792

. 9·30·1 mo.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

- .'

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
•:_Adclano and remocloling

- -.. and guHI• w ....
~ IGUIU 'NOric
-l'lumbing and

oloctrtoal

w..r.

-Backhoes
- Dump Trucks

-lo-Boy
-Trencher

For all your wiring ·
needs; furnaces re·'
pair service and in-

- Wale{
-Sewer ·
- Gas LinttS

stalla!iori.

-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS

PH.

Residential

Call 742-3196
l ·7·1ft

r----·- -----.

CHESTER

AlTROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Lowest Rates

AUTO
PARTS

Around

AND

_.

REPAIR

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

CHESTER, OH.

742-2328

9:12-1 mo

4-2:1-ttc

(Fr.. E1timates)

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

1!·26-tlc

PLUMBING and
HEATING
•Experienced

'"'*

• .. .,.; &amp;~31::;@ ~ p:; l•k
" " !Ill tiiAIIl 011 ""'' , _

.

'·

JEWELL'S

,,

&amp; Commercial

•

992-2478
9-22·1 roo. fXI

•Dump Truck
Service

I

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION
}

ofleaaonabla

oWork Guaranteed

JOB-BIG OR SMALL
992-6030

Minersville, OH . •
IO.H mo. pd.

THE

TROPHY
KING

Trophy
• ftilanufacturers
PLAQUES

ENGRAVING

ARROW FLASHING
SIGNS
FOR SALE OR RENT

'PERSONALIZED POOLS"
PH. 1-304-773-5634
MASON 1 W. VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

II

Yard Sale Tues. 8a Wed. Oct.
4 &amp; 6, 9-6 . 2 doora aouth of
North Gallla High School.

9:00-5:00. Between Porter
&amp; . Cheshire. Brownie outfit
size' 10. children clothing,
TV, stero, 11ddle. wicker,
toys, coats, large clothing,
dishwasher.
Neighborhood Garage Sale
9-5, 6th S. 6th . Rt. 6BB
Rodney, clothing. kitchen
lterhs, ate.

, .. ' 8"

Replacement Letters

JOHN'S AUTO SALES
We sell quality used cars.

Hl4-44&amp;47ll~

Galif~~

I~
3 An;nouncemants

I!WEEPE. R and

aawo'ng rna·
chine repair, parts. end
supplies.
Pick up and .
delivery, Davis Vocuum
Cleaner, one halt mile up

3 Family Yard Sale, llrat
houae right past Sanders
Or., Naigtiborhood Rd. Oct.
6, 6, 9-6.
.Garage Sale 86 Grape St.
October 7th and 8th. 10AM
til !1PM. Olaaaware, books,
clothing, handmade ~ems,
etc . Sponsered by MUCAprocaeds to go for hospital
work.
Garage Sale Cedar ho-use on
Halze Ridge Rd . Foflow
signs from Teens Run Rd.
Wed., Thurs .. 8a Fri. 9 til?

Oct . 4,6,6. Including aofil 8a
chair, lavatory., bedspreads, .
some curtains, cl9thing-all
sizes. lots of misc. Gale
Millar residence 257 Lincoln
Gorage Sale Oct. 6 &amp; 1 . St., Middleport.
9AM-6PM, 4 mlleo from 1.----~----­
Holze'r on St. Rt. 160.
· Large 6 family yard sale .
Oct. 3-6. Three miles north
4 Family Basement Sale 9-7 of fairgrounds . Pomeroy.
Wad. H'oney•uckle Dr. Add:• . 614 -992 · 7668.
Oh. Clothlls all sizes, bad, -----~~-­
mil,cellaneous.
Moving sale. · Everything
must go. Homes with 12
Carport 1 Sale 450 Leriet Dr. acres. mobile home 12x60
Next to Ho~zer Hosp. &amp; with add on rooin. furniture
fairground . Wed. &amp; Thurs. &amp;: tools. Langsvill,, Fla~ey &amp;
Oct. 6 &amp; 6. Time 9 to 6. 72 Roy Sigmon place Yl 'mile off
Dodge Charge car. GE Dexter Rd. on the Crouser
washer, sink 8t dishwa1her Rd. Antiques. Leaving Fri .
conbinetion, bathroom 1ink, afternooQ . Must nil.
wooden lawrl chairs, jaan1,
bloulft, 1weetera, shortt &amp; Oct. 4 a. 5. 9-5 . 10 opaad
bike, bean bag. 2 miles from ·
tops.~ bathing auits, shoes,
puraes, &amp; games. 448- C &amp;: 0 Pennzoil Station at 5
Points on Flatwoods Rd.
0132.
Follow signs. lllavis
residence.
R;Ummage Sale at G"race
United Methodist Church ,
Fridoy Oct. 7, 9-4:30, Cociar
St. entrance.

...... P'o'rrierov--.......
Middleport .
&amp; Vicinity

NATIONALINE
•
Plumbing &amp;.Heating Supplies

Big garage_sale. Oct. 6 &amp; 6.
Wednesday a~d Thursday .
Charles Kings on Wolf Pen
Rd. Rain or shine.

3 family salE! across from
Minersville ballfield . Children&amp;. ad.ult clothing, dapr~;~4sibn ware, babybed and •
ma-ttress, mise: Oct.6·7 ; 10
till 17?. Rain or sJilaina .
Cha'rles Spires rasidenc&amp;.
Hutchinson Subdivision .
Rutland, Oh . Oct . 7 &amp; 8.
Garage sale-Harry Ball~y ·s
at E. Main in Pomeroy , Oh .
Oct . .6 -7 . Draperies. badding ~ clothing infanta to
20%. · Rototill or for . parts ,
double kitchen sink ..

·- .... P.t'Pieiisin:r·-··

·a. Vicinity

Rummage Sale , St. Paul
Church , Oct . 5. 10 a .m . to 2
p.m .
Yard Sale, lillian Harms
residence, Clifton, across
from Ct,ester Olivera, Tuas'day and Wedne•day. Clothing, nick-necks ,

"f

misc~llaneous.

2923 Mopla Ave . Oct. 7 a. B.
Curtains, bedspreads ,
cl~nhes, winter coats. toys &amp; ,
miSC .

Thur . 8a Fri. 9 to 5. 1 mile out
Sandhill Rd . Pt. Pl. Durst
y
Add. ~any Items.
Large yard sale Oct. 5. 10
a .m. to 3 p.m . 601 A
Burdette St. Pt . Pl.
~VERYTHING .

2 family yard sale. Oct. 5&amp;6.
48 Ill. 4th Ave .. Middleport
beside the Middleport Post
Office. Lots of · childrans
clothes. miac. 9-4.

Yard sale-687 Main St. Big yard sale Friday Oct. 7th
Middlepon·. Oct'.3rd. thru beside Post Office in
6th. Winter kids clothes. Tuppers Plains, 41t Tony
toys, misc ."
Jonas residence. Lots of
good items. Something for
Family yard ·aBle. Dele C . everyone. 9 till ??. Rain
w arner residence on Forest cancels.
·
Run at Minersville Rd. Oct .
7-8 from 9 to 7 p.m. Bed, Florence Slddars . Darwin.
I h'mg. Oct . 6 ~6-7. Lots of rtems.
• t ereo, toys, cot
bodks. curtains. and misc.
Living room suite. $20. ·

Wed. Thurs. &amp; FrL 413 A
First St .

3-fa~ily. T.ues. Wed. Thurs .

2304 Madison, Pt . Pl.
Dishes. furniture, bedding

clothing &amp; books.

·

October7-8,10 -6PM.Jackson Ave across from J h
son Mk"t Books Bobn·
18
·
·
arepclothes. curtains.
small
pliences. man's suits .' &amp;
1 th '
• 1 h'
co
mg. women s "cat mg.
&amp;. much mOre .. Special table
of merchandise for men ..

.
Call

at " Fruth Pharmo~y. 264
Jackoon Pike. '

Under NIW Management,
Las's Pool Room, 92 Ollv&amp;
St.
Racine Volunteer Fire Dept.
gun shoot season will start
Oct. 8 at 6:30 p.m ..at their
building in B'!'ah~n. . .,

CARWASH-Sponoared by
Modern Woodsmen of
America. At the Pomeroy
Fire St•tion. Oct.8. From 9
till 4. 614·992-7B02.
Racine Gun Club dues are
due. t2&amp;.oo .. Mutt be paid
before Jan. 1, 19B4.
Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m . .Factory choked guns
only.
If your club or organb:ation
needa extra money, we have
an excellent fund raising
program. for information,
phone 304·675-1 090.

4

Giveaway

Pile of scrap metal from
body ohop. Call 448-8528.
German Shepherd II St
Barnard, black collar, very
good watch dog, 2 yr1. old.
Coli 446-092' anytime.
Black a. tan Coon dog.,pupo.
6 wko. old. Call 675·1141.
German Shepherd 2 yra. old
fem•le. vary gentle, houu
broke.n. Call 614-2661664.
Found 1 mixed' female
puppy epprox. 5 mo. old, 1
male Angora hampster . Call
448-1364 afler 2.
Aduh male Cockepoo . to
good home. After 3 p.m. call
·S14-986-4488.
•Female Terrier type dog to
good home. Approx. 1'1•·
ynro old. Black wilh whita,
good wotch dog, good with
ohlldron. 8'14-992-5752
onytlmo.
' ·

&amp; Auction

'

·

Auction every Tuesday
night. Pt. Pleasant, WVa.
Auct. Lonnie' Neal. Youth
Center Bldg., Camdar1 St.
814-367-7101.
_
Rick Pearaon 4,
S
·
E
F
A .. _
erv1ca. 1t1te. arm. ~ .. -·
tique 6. liquidation sales,
Licensed&amp;. bOnded in Ohio &amp;
WVa. 304· 773-6786 of
304-773-9186.
·
'
--------Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. T~uckloads of new
marc~emd•• every week.
Cons•gments of new and
I used marc~ondloa alwayo
welcome. R1chard Raynoldt
Auctioneer. 275-3069.
AUCTION avery Saturday
night, 6 p.m. Mt. Aho
Auction Barn. Consignments taken every Saturday
1:00 till sale time. -Emma
Ball Auctioneer, 304·42B·
8177.

g

Wanted To Buy

11

Help Wanted

~SJI':~\d
~

.a·

t_..·..~, ~.&lt;~i-l,·.

&gt;

I::R.I·--··""-'-..:~,:.»;...&lt;~,

.

.

Medical Coordinator, RN for
group home. Project for 18 Wanted to Do
Senior Citizens. Coordinat-1---------ing all medical , services
within context of an inter- General Hauling and Trash
mediate care facility moet· removal Service. Reliable
in9 medicade standards. and dependable. Call 446Knowledge It skills of nun- 3159 between g and 5.
i n g p r o fa s 1 i o n . 1 - - - - - - - - - admini•tr•tive-supervlsory Lawn Mowing no yard to big
training. Knowledge of pa- or small . Reliable and depentient a11assment system dable. For estimot!) call
preferred. Salary range 446-3169. 910 5 .
$16,000-$17,000 a year.
Call Oh-Io Job Services in To take care o·f aome·s ome
Gelllpolil for application &amp;. sick or ~eeds home .care.
interview by Oct. 10ih.
Days only, gOod references. ·
Call 304·468-1818 after
Uve,in female companion for 6PM
elderly lady in good heaf.th. !--· - - - -·- - - Modern hone and car with Want to care for · elderly
no ·expenses. Generous sa· p'o1Jie in their home . Day
lary to reliable person. Ref- shift if possible. Will work
erencaa needed. Write Box evenings 8a weekends . Ref729-P. Pomeroy, Oh.
·1 bl
388
aval a ~ -~ ~-· ·····ro Tri-county mental health
board with an annual budget Dump truck for hire, will
of approximately h 1
1
d
1
$3,000,000 seeks on Execau coa ' san ' grave . etc .
304-676-3190.
utiva Director. Duties will 1- - - - - - - - - -

sa·;:.aa

PIANO TUNING Lowe•
prices - regul ·a r t.unings discounts to SeniOf Citizens ,
Churches &amp; schools. Ward's
Keyboard, 304-675-3824.
PIANO TUNING-LANE DA NIELS. 742 - 2951 . -Also
'cash for Spinet or Grand
piano'. (Even damaged condition) .

Newly remodale4 2 story
frame, .1 V2 bath. llf1 acres,
city schools. riverview.
$32 ,000 . Call 446-4222
between 9 &amp; 5.
,
4 bdr. ranch home,large,LR,
full basement, with garaga,
wood burner included, city
schools. 2 miles from town.
Call 446'0276.
By owner House , with 2
acres more or le•s. been
remodeled, orchard, 87 ft.
well. $22,000. Call 614·
388-9053 .

include
plennlng, coordl-~~~~~~~~~~§
nating, : monitoring,
financlbliiiiiiliiE
ing. and contracting for the
~
development and expansion
of mental health aervicea in 21
Business
the 1ervica area. Experience
Opportunity
in MIS with mental heah"Wanted to buy uaed coal S. organization• required. Tlie
wood heaters. Swain Furni· Board ia looking for an
I NOTICE I
ture, 446-31·69, 3rd. &amp; eKperienced Mental Health THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
Administrator end (or) clini- LISHING CO. recommends
Olivo St.. Gallipolis, Oh.
cian with a minimum of a that you do business with
Wanted to buy Used mobile Mester's level dem.ee. Com- people you know. and NOT
homes II truck camper. Call petitive compensation peck· to send money through the
age. Deadline f9r submitting mail until you have investi814·446-0176.
application Ia December 1 6,
Wanted waahers &amp; dryera. 1983. Senet resume to: _gate4:1 the offering.
Moat any condition. Call Search Committee, Gallla' Own your own JeanJackton-Meigs Community Sportswear, Infant-Preteen,
614·367-0660 .
Mantel Health Board·. Ladles Apparel, Combine ~
2 SQiidwood end tablea &amp;. 1 P.O.Box 614. G~lllpolio, tion, Acceaaoriea. or lage
coffee table. good cond. Call OhiO 45631. E.O.P.
Size store. National brands:
448-2831 ext. 48 ask for
Jordache, Chic, Lee. Levi.
Connie.
· ·
Volunteer activity aidu Vanderbilt, b:od, Gunne
need&amp;d at ~rcedia Nuralng Sax, EsPrit, Calvirl Klein,
BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old Center, Coolville. Contact . Sergio Valente, Evan Pifurniture, gold, 1ilver dol· Melodoo at 304-867.3165. cone. Claiborne, Healthtex,
lara. wood in boxes, 1ton1
300 othe11. $7,900. to
jera, antiques: etc., Com824.900. inventory; airfare.
plce t• household•. Wrlte: training. fixtures. grand opM.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomo1oy,
ening. etc. Mr . Dickson
Oh. Or 992·7760.
(601) BB2-6164 . '(601)
268·1361.

Ranch· type (Brick) . 3 bed rooms. fireplace , · attached
garage, full basement.
newly·shingled roof, walking
distance to Pomeroy Elementarv School. $40,000 .
CallS
992-6143.

Water truck and route in
Mason and Gallia County.
Seriou1 inquiries only, 304675·1619, 6 to 9. p.m.

3 ·bedroom ranch style
home, carpeted. futl size
basement. 1 car ·garage, in
groun~
pool 1 6x32 .
.46,000. 614-992·5B5B .

We pay cash for late model
clean uaed cera.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson .
446-3672

FrM to good home. male
dog. port Grut Dane, 30411711-71199.

L-~------~----~--------~~0~·3·~·~··~·~ ~ -~~~;:~:lo,s-.llmlx~
W1\
10 \lALLEY

"

~=========i.:·=========t:======~~=====t~~~~~~~~=
-.
;:r~,~~wi~~'N~~s~~~.~i~~
~,
!9·
23 Pr~~~~~~~~al
7 • --::::-:--::---::--:---1 ~liiijiiiijjMe•
Plan and Hydf'ex Water Pills 8
PUblic Sale
lar lqaa
!VVIUtl·l-~~

446-0294.
Georgia Creek Rd.

Absolutely no hunting, trespassing, fi1hing. etc. on Our
property in Sutton and Le·
banon TWP. Maxine Diddle
Sellers and lillian Proffitt.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

- Dozers

eSts .foreclosed .

whose names or addresses are (81 30 lSI 6. 13. 20. 27. (10) 4 .
6tc '
unknown: you are hereby not1f1ed that you have been named
defendants · 1n a legal action .
ent•tled W1lbur Dailey, Plaintiff
vs Ann1e Dunbar. if living and
her husband 1f any, and to the
w•dower, heirs. dev•sees. and
next of kin of decedent, Defendants. Th1s act1on has been
assigned case number 83-CV227 and is pefldtng in the Court
of Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Pomeroy,. Ohio 45769 .
The ObJeCt of the complaint IS
to partit•on you interest in real
estate located •n Sect1on 6 ,
Town 9. Range 15. Columb1a
Townst:up, Me•gs County. Oh1o
and the prayer IS to part•t•on
VOLlf Interest, for JUdgment ' for
•mprovemen.ts merle and taxes
pa•d an d to setoff that judgment
New um• Road
aga,•nst your •nterest in the real
Rutlond, OhiO
PH. 742·222&amp;
S:29·1 m~.
64 Mise:.

Q.,._

Chesler, Ohio
Ph. 986·4269
If No Answer, Call 985-4382
Dewayne Williams
8i Sconie Smith
All Makes1md Models
Ant111na Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

estate and to have your Inter-

. THE
TAXIDERMY
. SHOP

Wife and

·

S&amp;WTV

Public: Notice

as requtred by the OhtO Rules of

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

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Route I
long Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067

....'"''""'

after the last publlcatton of this
nottce whtch wtll be publtshed
on ce each week for' stx succes s•ve weeks. The last pubhcatton
will be made On October 4 and
the 28 days for answer w tll
commence on that date.
,
In case of your failure to·
al")swer or otherwise respond

Sizes start from

II.

Garage

ht. Tlma Yard Safa. Oct . 6.
Rt. 35, Jordln's G11, 'h Yard sale-Movi"ng out o.f
milo. Follow olgno. Iron bod, State. Across from Blue
furniture, carpets. .nice Tartan in Middleport. Thursmen' l IUhl, shirtl. WaJIOn . ~ay, Fr!day a'nd Saturday ._
Giant · Garaga~Patici Sale, · .wheela, Iota more.
Oct. 3-&amp;. Emerson John ~)ct .. 3-8, 9:00-6:00. One
~~~k east of Bi~well Po11 Yard Sole Wed. Oct . I&gt; at son'•; S.R. 124... Port1and .. ·
Tholoo Market on Rt. 160. 10 a.m ,- 7, Clothing , baby to
Jeane. topa, booJti. toys. adult, knick-knacks, much
'
more.
yard l!al~. 80 locuot St ..
boote, children• clothing.
Oct. 3. 4. 6, old McCoy,
veaea. Mr. Coffee. lamps,
Yard Sale October 8, 2'12. Rummag- tala .. Oct . 5 , 9-4 .
miac.
mil11 from Porter on Clark Sacred Heart Ch .• Mulberry
Chapel Rd. Rain, no sale. Ave .. Pomeroy.
·
Garage Sale, 32 Chillicothe
Ladles clothes aize 8· 46.
Rd. Mon·.. Oct. 3-Sat., 8th.
Miac. itema. Garnett Rus- 640 Page St. Quilts: whatCarpet, tires, ladders, , aell; 814·388·8449.
nota, dishes, ciOtt-)es, coats,
clo·t hes, crafts. quilts ; 1 . ~-----,------ misc. items. 4tt"l &amp; 5th.
afgena.
202 Kineon Dr . Thur1. &amp; Fri . 1 - - - - - - - - - Mena, women a clothes. girls Oct . 7· 0.ct , ~ - · 9-6 p.m .
Yard Sale 3-4-6th, '!r.l mi. out jeena. boya jackets. luita, . . ~~~~a S~ewart s. 524 Mui At. 7 on Rt. 218. · Rain couch, misc.
.
· ...... 1 He1ghta, Pomeroy.,

4 Family Yard Sale Oct. 3-6,

9·1 5·1 m~. pd.

CHARLES SAYRE
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
, AND SON .
Ph:
614~3-~!if
Roafing &amp; Siding Co. ,
lO ·S..Ifc

lot""

· Have Your
Trophies
. Professionally
Mounted by

Sadly Missed By

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof ..
in&amp; - Siding - Concrete ~
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
modeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

.•

'

&amp; Vicinity

Yard Sale 6 Familya 'A mL.
down Rt. 21B.Oct. 6,6,7.
9:30 to 5. Couch &amp;: chair.
tabla &amp; chairs. infant clothes
to edt.lha, chriatman dolls It
three mans suits.

*Water Pipe
"Gas Pipe
• Regulators
*Fittings
. *Drips

PH. 992-2280

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

,,/
~:

··-· --GiiiiiP'oifi·-·---·--

Yard Sale Tuaa. &amp; Wed. Oct.
4th &amp; 6th, 'I• mile off Rl. 7
on Georgeo Creek R~ad.

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

a.J .ttc

r

'----1- - - - - - - -- --J

U El&lt;tcu oo ol• Aolr'll"'" ''"" I

~o Sunday Calj~'-"'

9·9·1 mo.

""'-·

'"

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"
Ca II for free siding estimates, 949·2801 or
949·2860.

PH. 992-2n2

...
,.,.
"""-G•.,_
1ll ... _

SPORTSMEN

·

CONTACT ,992-2156

t

l-

$J()OO ATON

Racine, OH.

BIOW!l Insulation

...... c....., Jo-t
...

COAL

949-2293

J&amp;L

._,....,.,.c .. ww •

lli6
!Ul

85
1-hul•nll
8e ·M H Ro~ou
11'11 u~....,,~.,~

Public: Notice

LALU
II THE

c ........,.

Go!! ..

1$ fo•le . ..,

~

presence so.

Aa&lt;&gt;mo

II 5oo ce •c• Aon•

, Also Blownlnsu!ation

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Exfensive

STRIP

'Excavating
'Ponds
'Septic Tanks
.'Hauling

$2 50 Each

S'IDING

MINE RUN

RECLAMATION

"free Estimates;'

(,IJ.,wiltjl h•l••l•ltollll' o•.u •J.ttnJt.o•.• ...

SIIIOI"ltodo

-~ 4~~

l~ . fut~tlhl&lt;!

! S S&lt;h&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;lo

As low As

t:ld .. ifi···lt•ttJt-1',, 1"111"1',. rill'

72 ''""-''"'Solo

1 J · IIonoii4V,D
1• r.&lt;lot.,.&lt;ycloo
75 ll&gt;tiiO.. llllototo
715 AutoPorlo .. lilcconor••
77-.l"'o AOf&gt;on
78- Co.,.,O.~Equop .... nl

"""'li""'" Won"~

44 Apaftm""t ltlt A.., I

, • a...,, .,,,, .....""

,,.,. .,A lle!J*Iol&gt;le o

M.L.
CONTRACTING-

Material &amp; Labor

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

11 I [.ti c

9·1Z rrr

Vinyl Replacement
,Windows

·PHONE .992-2156

lou • Ac•••t•

11 """ ... ' laoR""'
ft 2 Mobol o l&lt;omN ' "' A• "'
l l ~"'"'" to• tlont

1 1 tlolp\'hnootd
1 1 s.......

~•

Route 4, Pomeroy _ ·

Certainteed

I 13 11c

3·7·li&lt;

•Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
oAiuminum &amp; Vin~ SidingS
1 S Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-75.83
or 992-2282

742-2352

or 949-3091•
. JlO.Ifc

992-2196 -.
Midd}oporl , Ohio

•lqsurance Work

SERVICE CALLS

Call: . 949-2263

AND

71 AuunlorSoll

Ro~"' ~ q"'p-nl

5l ... ~ .......

windows.

"Free Esti males" .

Or Write Daillr Sentinel Classified Otp1.
lli Court St .. Po11eroy. Ohio 4~769

• ., Owo"""'" '

and

Washers. DJYers
Ranges, Refrigerators
· Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO

All Work Guarantud ..

Athens man hurt
in Meigs accident

2 1 Mo""'"doon
1 ) Poolu "o"ol So"'"'"'

I A• MoofY:ooM~n . .

doors

PAT HILL FORD

ROU.SH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes Remodeling.

Thjl Daily ~ ·

Ohio

V ard .sa\es

We can repair .and ,._
core radiators ~nd heater cores. We can elso
add boil and r'9ll out radiators. We also repair
GasT.,ks.

PHONE JIM

USED ·
APPLIANCES

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING
All types of roof work, new
or repair, gutters and
~ownspouts. gutter cleanmg and painting, storm

James Schmoll, ideas for clearing
·

The Daily ·Sentinel

...

RADIATOR
SERVICE

BONDED &amp; WORK
I•

. brush.

.Las!week, whenreportsbeganto .
clrcufate that Reagan· might not
visit the Philippines because of the
political turmoU there, President
. Ferdinand Marcos and his Wife,
Imelda, warned that such a decision
could disrupt U.S.-Phlllppine ·reJatlons. But Speakes expressed confi·
An Athens man was Injured In a
dence. Monday that they would
car
.deer accident on0hlo7nearthe
1111derstand.
.
GaWa-Melgs
county lhte Monday
Manila, Jakarla and Bangkok
morning.
_ were to have been the first three
Raymond C. Rairdln, 62, was
stops on a 17.day, five-nationvlsltto
ireated
and released from Veterans
Asia beginning in early November.
Memorial
Hospital, a hospital
But Speakes said, "In view of the
spokesperson
said.
fact that Congress will be In session,
The
slate
highway
.patrol Said
that key appropriations bills have
Ralrdlnwassouthboundat7:33a.m.
. not yet been enacted and that a
when a deer ran out onto the road
continuing resolution has been
'enacted but wUi expire Nov. 10, it is · from the left iUid Into the path of
Ralrdln's vehicle. His vehicle col·
clear that the first two weeks of
· November will be particularly . llded, causing moderate dam~. ·
The deer was kiUed and Rairdln
demanding legislative "'eeks."
taken to Veterans by the Meigs
was
Speakes said Reagan made the
EMS.
'
decision to drop the three nations
Frank
Wells,
39,
Rt.
1,
Long
late last Thursday, only bours a1tet
injury
when
his
Bottom,
escaped
he and other administratiimofficials
vehicle
swerved
to
avoid
collision
were insisting the full trip was still
wltll a deer on OllveTowrishlp Road
on despite the poUt!cal turmoil in the
Phllippines, wherewldespreadanti- . 274at9:40p.m. Monday.
Welis' vehicle struck a cement '
government demonstrations and
culvert,
causing moderate damage.
violentconfrontationshavefollowed ·
The
accident
a mile norlh of Ohio
the assassination of opPQsltion
124.
leader Benigno Acq'utno.

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIM~STONE
:o'NATER. GAS and
SEWE·R LINES
•~ONDS. RECLAMATION
,WORK
·~NO CLEARING, .
CONCRETE WORK

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH ..

-

Authorized John Deer.
NeW Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment •
Dealer
- ...
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service .

~~:~~~~~~:;~.e::
sion problems .riong the river and

consideration," Speakes said.

WASHINGTON (AP} -'- Presl· for this November to the Republic of
dent Reagan still plans to visit the the Phllipptnes, · Indonesia and
Far East next month but has Thalland."
dropped the strife-torn Phllipplnes
He said deputy White House chief
and two other Southeast Asian of stat! Michael K. Deaver secretly
nations from his agenda.
left Washington Friday night to
Blainlng the press of congres· personally carry that message to
slonallnjslness at home rather than · leaders .of the three nations and to
the bloody antigovernment rioting Japan and South Korea, which .
In Manila, presidential spokesman Reagan ·still plans . to visit bUt
Lany Speakes said, "The president perhaps .later than originally
has most reluctantly and with regret scheduled.
decided to postpone visits planned
u.s. · relations with all three
·
countries dropped from the trip "are
excellent, and we expect them to
Weather forecast
remain so," Speakes said.
He said they could be added to the
Eighty percent chance of rain- agenda lor Reagan's return to Asia
tonight. Low around 55. Winds next spring when he goes to China,
becomlngwesterlytonorthwesterly although no decision has been made
·
about 10 mph. Wednesday, mostly on that.
·· cloudy and cooler with a 50 percent
&lt;;hance of showers. High around 70. _ Reagan said the Chilllge was
based "totally" on the situatiOn In
, ' ... Exleil'ded 0111o Forecas~
Congress,
where ~erai major
'lln1rllda3' through Saturday:
pieces
of
legislation
are pending,
Fair through Ute period. JUghs In
including
appropriations
bill$ and
the h north llild 718 soulh on
the
emergency
spending
resolution
·
ThursdAy aud In the 'liB the entire
state Friday and Satunl-.y. Lows that was adopted last week but
whichexptresNov.10.
45-00.
His spokesman;'however, did not
deny thatconcernforthepresldent's
s;rlety In ManDa played a role in the
Ohio lottery winners
decision.
"All aspects were taken into
CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Monday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, 11 TheNuinber,"was4fn .
ln the "Pick 4" game, played five
. times a week, the winning number
was9554.
The lottery reported earnings of
$634,388.50 from the wagering on Its
dally game

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

1-J.Uc

COUnty extension otfice, Ticket
deadllneisNov. 7.
Wes Oneth, deputy stateconseva.. tlonlsi, wUi be the guest speakers.
During a recent bolird session,
plans were made to get the annual
report printed. Other businesS
'discussed inCluded approval for
assistance for Harry Osborne and
Jack Bolen for PQnd siteS; Thelma
Banks, Albert Banks, Kathelne

Presid.e.n. t ..calls off Philippine vi.s_i.t

'

Business. Services .·

swCD-SCSo~,ASCSotficeorthe

Met·gs County
· •••
·
properly .t rans•~. 'ers

purchase lou~ tires and other items
.
made by Don Ward of the street .
department.
Letter distributed
Reeddl$trtbutedaletterfromthe
Department of Health stating that
fluoride could be Implemented in
Lola Bohlen to Ohio Powr Co.,
Pomeroy very soon. The letter also Right of Way, Sutton.
emphasized that community water
Chester H. Hutt0n, Margaret
fluoridation wUi provided the clti· Hutton to Ohio Power Co., Right of
zens of Pomeroy with a safe, Way, Sutton.
effective, and economical means of
Harold M. Smith to Ohio Power
preventing the pain and suffertng of Co., Right of Way, Sutton.
dental decay.
Mabel C. Roush, deceased, Early
A letter was 'illso read from the
M. Roush, Eileen Buck, Mf!davlt,
Department of Liquor Control
Letart.
regarding a hearing that will IJe held
Nina Macomber, deceased,
Thursday, Oct.. 13, at 11:30 a.m. at
the Meigs County Courthouse con- ' Ralph Macomber, Richard D.
. cernlng the transfer of a permit Macomber, Elaine Dyer, Ralph
Macomber, Cert. o! Trans., Meigs.
requested by Thomas L. Goett, dba
West VIrginia ~g Co., Inc., A
Sexy Tom's , B.ll \6 E. Main St.
Reed reported the telephone
company no longer will be renting a
storage area on Butternut. He also
reported that the Nye Ave water
project Is being advertised and bids
wUi be opened on Oct 19.
ChE)ese lor needy farnllles in
BliJ Young, who is In charge of Meigs County will be distributed at
remodeling the second floor of the 11 a.m. Wednesday at the following
city building, reported he had locations:
received the following bids. ForeMeigs County · Fairgrounds,
man anqAbbott, heating totallng$4, Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen368;· Ohio V!!lley Plumbing for stand ter, American 'Legion hall in Racine
pip/! in the amount of $2!!6.27; and the Tuppers Plains fire station.
Cl'lfative Contractors, fire doors;
One live-pound block of cheese
. palbttng and wall replacement In wUi be given to famllies, regardless
the amoimt of $2,350; Sherman of size. In order to receive cheese,
,Mill$, MUis Electric for an electric the following documentation must
bid In the amount of $91Kl.
be produced:
' Young said he had been apFood stamp card, AFDC card or
proached bY other PQtentlal renters award letle1', SSI award letter,
for spaceJn the city buldlng. The general welfare card, unemploysecond floor Is preyntlyundergoing ment book or application letter,
remod~llng lor the Meigs County Golden Age card or W-2 form.
Board of Education. '
Young suggested a Ietu:r be ·' Veterans Memorial
written to Columbus and SoUthern ·
Ohio Electric Co., ln 'regaid to the Admitted--Deborah Mullins, Dex·
status Of lights In the residential ter; Homl!f Gtaham, Racine;
area.
Melissa Wells, Long Bottom; ChaLarry Welirung reportedhe had a rles Mugrige, Racine; Mlchalll
few llligattve mnments on the Eblht, Rutland; Angela VanCoopaving. but otherw!Be the com- ney, Pomeroy.
. ' maits Were gOOd. It was pointed out
Discharged--Cynthia l'tobsqn,
.: that the paving was paid lor from Caol Drake, Darrell Drake, MeJI.ssa
money received from the $5 Wells.

...'.

. Ptans ruive been flnalJzed for
.
annual Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation District _ meeting
slated Nov. 10 at the SalisbUry
Elementary School. A baked steak
c11nner will . be served by the
Salisbury PI'O.
Tickets for the $5 a pljlte ballquet
may be obtained. from SWCD.
supertvosors, Torn · ~. Alan
Holter, David Gloeckner, Jim
Lucas and Rex Shenefield. nc~~L
may be also obtained from

Blli Young said an officer should permissive tax (license tax). Weh·
walk through the establlshment,~ng stated that councU I?"Ved the
adding it would do no harm
streets in need and those most
stilt said he was going to enforce
avlly traveled.
the"nololterlng"onllnancenotonly
Betty Baronick asked that win·
at Sycamore and Main, but on the dews in the city building be
. entire street.
measured for blinds. She also also
Stitt also added that to correct a suggested an ordinance bedJ:awn up
problem at Pomeroy Elementary to control perpetualyard•s;iles.
he was having officers change their
Also meeting with council was
shifts back ol!lN!our which wlli David Bassett. engirieer, in regard
·enable officers to be out totheschood to work on the 11)U!_·park. At the last
earller, and also be there when meeting corincn agreed to go ahead
school is ill$missed.
with the park and speild $:.ll,OOO o! a
Stitt reported that h1s department matching grant, vlllage share
drove 5, 782 miles In Oct. and made38 $10,000. .
Meet this evening
arrests.
Steve Hartenbach reported tht he
Stitt asked for a typewriter to be issued 1,0:11 parking tickets during
The Meigs Local Athletic Boosrepalrd, a new pollee scanner he the month of September. The
ters will meet at 7::11 p.m. this
purchased, and fire extinguishers mayor's report in the amount of
evening at the high school. Fllnns of
the Vinton County game wt11 be
filled. Council approved the- $2,442 was accepted.
requests.
___
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;;sh;;;own;.;;.;;;;·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _""
Council also approved a requestto 1

\

•I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Will ~re for elderly women.
men or couple In our hom•.
LPN ,care given. 1114·9927314.
. \

13

Insurance·

SANDY AND BEAVER lneurence Co. hu offered
..vlou for fire lnaur1nce
cover1g1 In Golllo County
tor almott 1 oent!Jry. F•rm.
home ond peroonol pror.rty
·c avar..•• ere IYIHib e to
moat lndhilduol noedo: Contact Kel Burleson, agent.
Phone 448,2921 .

Own your own JeanSportswear, lnfant-Pr•teen.
Ladleo Apparel, Comblno·
tion. Acce11orles. or Large ·
Size store - National brands:
Jordacho. Chic, Lee. Loul.
Vanderbilt. lzod . .Gunna
Six. Esprit. Brittanil. Calvin
Kllin, Sergio Valenta, Evan
Picone. Clairborr:aa. Healthtax. 300 others. t7 ,900 to
124,900, inventory, aidate.
training, fiXture•. grand op·
ening. etc. Mr. Keenan (61 2}
888·8555.

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS Low fixed
rote. loeder Morigigo, 77 .E .
Stote, Athens, Ohio. 1-814·
692·30&amp;1 . .

3 bedroom house with fireplace. central air,. 2 full
baths. in city limits. Immediate posSession. Call 614246·5281
M!ddleport, remodeled, five
rooms and bath, gaa furnanca, cozy firep_lace, good
neighborhood . Price re duced. Call 614-992·6941 .
1 2x60 Mobile Home, already set up on rented lot.
Mon.-Fri. call 8-6. 446 1241.
located in Syracuse-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre ,lot . $24,600 . or
will rant for $275 . mo .
304-B55-3934.

Sale by owner . 3 bedroom
1actional home like new .
1 00K2.00 lot, end of street ,
Arbaugh S~bdivision
Tuppers . Plains. $35,900:
Will accept mobile home on
trade. Financing available to
qualified buyer. 614-9927034, pays, 614-992·7671
evenings.
3 bedroom home. Alumi ·
num siding, strom windows,
Warm Morning wood
burner. new chimney, range.
refrigerator. Kitchenaide
dish washer, curtains,
drapes and •hears. Exc .
cond. 614-992-72B5.
Five be~oom hou1a in.
Pomer()V for s•l• or rant.
Call 614-992-2720 or 614-'
992-3589.

,.

·•

�D

•

10-The Dally Sentinel
· 31

for

8•1•

They'll Do It Every Time

TWo ICijolnlng propertiN on
Uberty uno, Pomeooy, Oh.

Konmoro dryor MIS. G.E
dryer •s&amp;. Hoover portoblo
woohor &amp; dryor 1160, Moy·
tag wringer wa1h1r 1715,
eleculc range 195, 30'.'
H•rveat Gold electric r•nge
t1150, froat free refrigerator,
Ad.,irel a 150. Seert table
model t.v. 1126, block It
white RCA tabla modelt46,
Whirlpool w81her $95, new
unfinished 5 drawer chest
$95, Amana upright freezer
f96 . Skeggo Applioncoo,
Upper River Rd. Galliolis•
Ohio. Coli 446· 7398 .

:end two houMI on · Eeat
. Moln St., Pomoroy. Oh. for
aele lndivlduelly or in any
·comblnetfon. · PI•••• Clll
614·992-3458 or 1114-982·
8144 betwoon 10 a . m, &amp; 8
p.m .
thrM bedroom 2ttoryhouae
-on Park Dr. New furftllnce &amp;
air conditioning. dream kit·

chen with all appliepces.
.Owner will cerry Mcond or
all. Small down payment.

304-8715-2192.

new

aeptic

Iii••

eyatem, city water.
heat.
Clifton, WV. •13 .500. 773·
5810.

~

..

LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa . chair, rocker, otto·
men . 3 tables, (e111tra heavy
by Frontier~. 888&amp; .• Sofa,
chair and lovasut,' •276.
Sot.,
chairs priced from
$286 . to $896 . Tables. 848
and up to 1126. Hide ~ a ·
beds. $440 . and up to
$625., Reclinera. 8176. to
$350 .. Lamps from 828 . to
$75 . Dook 111Pupto *225.
Hutch81, , 8660. , and up,
mltple ~bf pine finish . Bunk
. bed complete with mattreates, 8260. and up to
8395. Babv bode. $11 o .
Manreuet or box springs,
full or twin, 858 .. firm. $88 .
and 178. Queen sets, 1196.
4 dr. chests, 842. 6 dr.
chests. $64 . Bed frames,
$20.and 126., 10 gun- Gun
cabinets, 8360. Gaa or
electric ranges, $325 up to
$376 . Baby matreaset, t .26
&amp; $36, ·bod lramoo $20.
$26 , &amp; $30, kinglrome $60.
Good aelection of bedroom
sultee , eedar chests .
rockers. metal cabinets,
swivel rockers.
Used Furniture -· bookcase,
ranges, chairs. dinnett aet,
wood tabla and chairs, dryart. refrigerators and TV ' 1. 3
miles out Bulaville Rd. Open
9am to 8pm, Mon . thru Fri ..
9am to &amp;pm, Sat.
448-0322
1 - - - -- - - - - SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St ..· Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat arms $399,
bunk ' beds complete with
bunkiea S 1 99, 2 piece antron living room suites $199,
antron recliners $99, other
recliners $80, maple dinette
Htl $179, IOVB ·I81tS $70,
hido · a · bed $260 . b~x
tpringa Sa manresa twin of
full $100 set reg"ular-firm
$120, maple dinette chairt
835 . wash stands $34,
m_aple rocker• 8_59. 7 pi,ce
chrome dinette set 8149, 5
piece dinette Ht $89, used
bedroom 1uitea, reflrgera·
tors, ranges, chest, dre11era.
wringer washers. TV ' s ,
drva.r et, It shoes. Call 4483159.

2 bedroom country home ."
Cellar with o utbuilding. References required. 61 4· 742 2641 . lang1ville area.

1971 Zindale , 12x63
w / 6x16 expando, 2 BR,
wtlhllf &amp; dryer, cent . air.

$7600. Coli 448-4606 .
14x79 2 bdr. unfrun ., mo-

l bile home. carpeting. apcentral ajr lk heat
J pllancee,
•11 .000 . Coli 814-2566036, after 7PM 614-2561672 .

'.

1971 Mobile Home . Rebel
12x66. New furnace, not

lumishod .
7788 .

Coil 614-992·

THREE bedroom house.
Rous~ Rd .. Cheshire .. OH .
Full baaeme11t-. large tot,
garage . Call 614 -3677176.
•

12x60 mobile home. fair.
c ondition . reasonably '
priced . Phone 304-6762884 or 304-675-1892.
..
198114K70, Shultz li,!ted
mobile home, microwave,
dithwaeher. Central air, un ~
derpen 'n ing, three bed roomt , 1 V2 bath•. excellent
condition . · S1 6,600 . Call
304-675-6049 alter 6 p.m.
35 Lots

8t Acreage

• 36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financ ing available. Call446 -8221
1fter 6 weekdays.

---:--:-:--:--;:-• One acre lot with platform
for house and in-ground

pool. for information, 813886 -1232.
:·: level Iota 8: mi. south of
· Gallipolis. All underground

utilitiea. central sewage.
Coli 446 - 1241, 8 · 5 ,
Monday- Friday.

Beautiful lot on lower Raccoon Creak. Land contract

anilable. Call Tom Lealie
448-7901 .
2-approx . 1 Y2 acre Iota for
sale. level lob, $3,90_0each .

Cell 614-388·8801 .

~ ~e::;:ftar=4~·=3=0~4;·=8~82=·=3:3:29=.=
,
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. trailer, furnished . Call

446 -0756 .
---------Nice 2 bdrm . mobile home,
furnis~ed, convenient location on At. 7 , no inaide pets.
sac . dep . Call 614 -246*
581 e.
1 2x.60 2 bdr . furnished gat
&amp;. water paid, 8260 mo.,
8100 deposit. Call 4466583 .
Furnished 1 4x70 3 bdr.
trailer on private lot. 1 0
minutes from town. $200
mo. plus utilities, $200 dep .,
references. Call 614-.256 1393.
2 bdr. trailer with large
room, 1 mile out of Gallipolis
on Rt. 688. Call 614,246·
9170.
1974 ShultJ 1 2~66 , 21arQe
bdr ., with built-in cabinets,
2 baths, air cond ., underpinning, intercom, new rugt,
drapes. furniture. outlide
entrance box, 2 seta of extra
steps, fire alarm, ga• alarm.
first aid kit, fire extinguither.
$6 ,900 . 1 -304-882-2237.
Very nice 2 bedroom mobile
home. Furnithed . 1 2x60.
Burlingham area . No pets.
614 -992 -7479.

F.or ula or lease 100 acres,
mineral rights. Call 614596-5370 .

1 2x60 Trailer, 2 bedroom•.
furnished. washer and dryer,
adults, no pats, e 100 deposit and references. 304876-4874.

'14V, acres Roush Hollow Rd
off At. 664, nice road,
building space. rural water

Two bedroom . Sandhill Rd .
Deposit It Reference required . 304·675-4046 .

close . Coli 614·388-9718.
36

Real Estate
Wanted

-Wanted to buy. 1-6 reaaona.bly priced acrea in GallipoliaCheshire area for home site.
814-992-6177.

41

Houses for Rent

4 bdr. houn 6 acr- of land
on Rt. 180 in VInton. Central
' olr. U50 mo .. sOc:. dop . &amp;
rol. Coli 446·3176.
Smell mod-rn country
·home. Aeferencet. depotit.
Ae.,on•ble. Wri1e P .O. Box
10, Golllpolls, Oh 46631 ,

Furnithed upstairt apt., 3
rooms &amp; bath. clean, adulta
only, no pett, re"t. req.
Utilitie• paid. Call 448)519.

new apartment In Eureka,
large front porch . overlook2 bedroom cottage, new , ing Ohio River. 1 or 2 adutts.
carpet. good location, in Call614-256-1198 .
·town, 304-676-7634 after
6.
1 I;Mid room Apt. 1196. mo .
inCluding utilltiet . Equal
3 bedroom house. Roush housing opportunity. Con·
Road . Chelhira, Ohio . full tact Village Manor Apts.
basement, large lot : garage .. 614-992-7767 .
Call 614-387·7176 .
3 &amp; 4 room furnished aptl.
2 bedroom, large kitchen, 614-992 -6434. 814-992electric •tove, $176 a 5914 or 304-882 -2566 .
month, 304-676-2264.
1~--------­
furnithed efficiency and 2
3 bedroom home, dining bedroom Apt . in Middleport,
room or family room, 2 cer Oh. No pets. Montht rant
garage, •200. month. 304 ~ plus 8100 . security. 614676 -6640.
992-3874.

14x70 Skyline, $,1 6,000. 2
bedroom luxury model. cir*
culir kitchen. dining room
with bow wind,?w. bathwi1h
garden tub: separate
shower , carpet, washer,
dryer, atove . frige. covered 3 bedroom home, 2 full
patio, central air, under- . batht, 2 car garage, .heat
pinned utility building . N!ce pump. 304-676-6640.
lot . 614-992-3063 .
2 or 3 bf!lidroom house, alec.
Forsaleorrent-Mobilehome heat, Gloee to tchools .
wi1h 12x24 addition on own 8276. month . 304-875 lot. No children. 614-986· 5540 . •
42
90. .
·
7 room houae.in Pt. Pl. Call
IN
USED MOBILE
GOOD
SHAPE. HOME,
304-576·
11
27 ·
1966 Shult trailer. $2,700 .
or best offer . 304-6761678.

For lease modern, unfurn., 2
bdr. apt. 'owerlooking citY
park . Includes range &amp; refrig . 8175 mo. Call 446·
1819 or evenings 446 4426 .

REPOSSESSED Sl~nl Nothing down I Take over paymenu 168 .00 monthly .
4 'x8 ' flashing arrow aign.
New bulbs, lettera·. Hale
Signs. Cell FREE 1 · BOO·
626· 7446, onytlmo.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Apts. for rent. 614 -9925908.
For rent-new 1 bedroom
Apt,
furnithed, utilities
paid . 8260.· month. 614992·6304.
.Apartments . 304-6765648 .
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes, hous&amp;J. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis. 614-446 ·
8221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income of leas than
$12.300 . Renting for 30
percent of adjutted income.Phone 304-875-8879 .
FURNISHED apartment.
adults. no pets. phone 304676· 1453.
45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room•
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 446-0756 .

47· Wanted to Rent
Bachelor apartment or room
with cooking privilege• by
gentleman . Joe Vadl1h. Box
1'0 3. Pomerov. Oh. 45769 .

Swivel rocker with ottoman,
black Naugahlde flnlsh,like
now· &amp;100 . 304-675-6843
before 7 p.m.

Building materi&amp;lt
block, brick, taywer pipe• •
windows, lintelt, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Granda,
0 . Coll614-246-5121.
56

Pets for Sale

k----------HILLCREST KENNELS
Barding ail breeds . Selling
~appy
Jack Dog Food .
Doberman puppies: Stud
Service. Call 446· 7796 .

Walnut lumbar 8 and 10 ft .
long. Call 304-458-1897:
Fireplace insen-still in fac tory carton -automatic
controls- 2 blowen- gla11
door-ash pan-fits 30 in . to
48 in . fireplace-burns wood
or coal. $690. Call 614 266-1216.

j=

r

Judy Tay'lor Grooming . CaH
614-367-7220 .

t-;;;:::=~;==;=~==r;.==;=~;~:;;.~
66

Pets for Sale

AKC Reglst•red Dbberman
puppies. •76, 304· 882 ·
2230.
AKC Regiaterad Weima·
raner puppl11, Challplon..hlp bloodline in field and
thow. Own both parents end
are on pramlae1. Mother
from Ch. Ranah's Rajah and
Ch. K1msou London Fog.
Serious lnquiriee only .
Phone 304-489· 1719 oftr II
p.m . weekday• and anytime
on weekendt.

1--------:--AKC Aeglitered Doberman
puppi81, cqlon ere bl•ck.
red, blue, lawn. 304-1761822.

new.
Willrocker.
nil orCall
trade814for
racllnar
992·3430.

~
~!I'!~'~';IR;I!g~a~~-~~~~-;~~~
a
61

Farm Equipment

BN Ford frOnt end loader,
double action. hydraulic
bucket. '200. 8ft. dreg dlok
•so. Coil 614·388-8896.
63

Livestock

Rog . 3 vr. old 'Chlx' pa·
lameno gualding very gentle. Coil 446-9276 or 446~ 5.00.
.
Cherokee 2 horl8 trailer,
encloaad,largetize, padded .
Aloo 77 Ford LTO. Call
614·388·9787.
2 horoas It 2 Addles. 30· 06
Remington rifle. ~04- 8823242.

Briarpatch Kennels Prolas- 64 Hay 8t Grain .
sional All-breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilitie• . English Cocker Spa- Mixed Hov. 614-949-2424 .
niel puppi81. Call614·388- ·
979o.
I~

Pizza oven, 8400 . Joas
Pizza In Cheahire. Call 61 4367.0671.
Fiah Aquariums made to
order. Irvin's Glass Service,
446-4423 .

81

71

Autos for Sala

1981 Olds 98 Regency. 2
door, 26,000 mila~, fully
equipped, leather interior,
axe, cohd. Contact Marvin
Kaebeugh at 814 · 8876246. ·
1976 Ford Torino. Sale or
trade. Asking 8750. Call
304· 773·6013 ohor 5 :00
p.m.

CAPTAIN EASY

Home
Improvements

T~AT'!&gt; 1'-IG~T ... TH~ 5USUI'.BAN
&amp;RANC~ ... JU5T Lli&lt;;E Al.l THe
RE5T... JU5T THE PE~NIE5 ...

....'lE-AH, T HE ~E'!l A WITN555 ...
HE '!&gt;AW EVERYT HING ...

3 AKC Rog . 01~ English I~
Shoop Oog puppies. ohote It 7 1 ·
Autos for Sale
wormed, 1200. Call 446· .
.
?905 alter &amp;PM.
·- -.:. -_ _.:..._--:----

WoodtJurning Stoves, frees tanding, fireplace inserts. 2 young Coop dogs, 1 bl"ck
49
mobile home approved , &amp;
tan. 1 Walker . Call 614furnance ad-ons. Jividens &amp;
256- 1415.
Farm Equipment .. "'"' 446· - - - - - - - - - - ,
Retail Store , 1400 1q, ft . 1675.
Ragi•tared Portier pups. 8
carpeted, downtown loca- ·
old . Coli 614·245·
tion. Call 304-875 -3788 .
Firewood pickup or deli· wkl.
9439 .
vorod . Coli 614-266· 6889.

I~~~!!!~~~~~~

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart·
ments HUO Available Util- :
ties portly fum .. opirtments
51 Household Goods
available now. •200 per mo.
4 room apt. utilitiet.part"-lly
paid $150. A-One Real
Eetates, Carol Yeager, Realtor. Call 304-876·6104 or
304-675-7386.

TilE MAYOR 15 IRATE~
HE'S TALKIII6 ABOUT
GETT1116 UPA MILITIA

---

BE~ORE !;OMEBOOY
GET~ HLIRT...

PAINTING - Interior and
exterior. plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yn.
oxp. Coli 814-388-9652 . ·
Mercum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing . · 30 yean experience,
tpeclalizlng in built up roof.
Call 814-38B·9867 .

BORN LOSER
RON 'S Talaviaion Service. ·"'
Spoclollzlng In Zenith ond
Motorola . Ouuar, and
haute calli. Call 676-2398
or 448·2464.
-

ITI?q:15 l
'-K;V Si-IOJLD
AAV~BEW

F S. K Tree Trimming. stump
·removal. Call676-1331 .

AT
8:30!

~ERE

1979 Thunderbird. 83400. 1~--------614-~49-2890 .RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rlenced roofing, Including
1977 Chevy Monto Corio, hot ~r application, carpen- .
air. power steering. power tar. electrici•n. mason. Call
brakes. 11800.00 Coll304· 304-676 -2088 or 875882-2688 after 5 p.m.
4560.

TOP CASH pold lor lote
r'nodel u1ed cart. Smith
Buick·Pontiac, 1911 E.,t.
ern Avo., Gallipolis, 446· 2282.
..
------:--1978 Pontiac Sunbird. 4
cyl .. 72.000 mi .. 11.900 or
trod8. Call814·379-2726 .

1973 Camaro, goo d con d .

~;·l.7~;'9n~lt!~·~~~,;.. 304·

72

Trucks for Saie ·

1980 GMC 4x4 'A ton,
auto., ~B . PS. 30,000 mi .,
•5.91lo. Coli 446-2403 .
1978 Ford PU F160 Explorer 1h T.. p.b. , p.s .• radial
tire1, axe. cond. $3300. Call
446-2403.
'
Moving: 1970 Ford pickup
wrecker. 8500. 1974 Pinto
for pert• 160, 3 mi. down
Rt. 218, croll 2 bridges. end
of gu~rdrail with green
paint, turn right, gravel rd.
cro•sroads, make left, 1at
haute trailer left.

....

~

•

1979 4x4 Chevy truck auto,
sliding back gla11, 48,000
milet. Call 446-1092 after
6.
1972 Ford pickup. F100,
body rough. 8376. 814·
992·2849 .
73

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O .

l

AHA! SO THAT'll THE
REASON HE L.EFT IN
SUCH A HURRY!

~~i=~~~~~==~
82
~~~eating
'
·c ARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 Or 4464477

- - - - - -JIM'S PLUMBING It HEAT·
lNG . Fomerly Dewitt 's
Plumbing. Call 614 ~ 367 ·
0576.
83

I never miK
business with
pledsure!

Excavating

OOZER WORK 8v Tad
Henna, ponds. ditch,es.
basemantt, etc . Call 4464907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transponetion.
lonnie Boggs EKcavating.
Dozer, backhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or" job. Call
446-7903.
'
Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crane,'
loaders, dump truck . Cell
614-446 -1142 . between
7 :00AM &amp; 8 :00PM .

WINNIE

Good-1 Excavating. basements, footert, driveways,
septic tanka, -landacaping.
Cell anytime 448-4&amp;37,
Jam•• l . Oavi1on, Jr.
77 Jimmy 4x4 good cond., owner.
new 1ire8, new paint. Iota of
J .A. R. Conetruction Co.
extrao. Coli 448 ·4292.
Water lines. Footers,
1976 CJ-5, excellent cbndl· Drains. All kinds of Ditching.
11on, new tire1, 304· Y· 8 . Rutlond, Oh . 614-7422903 .
/'
Coli 446-97118.
·
1979 Jeep CJ-6, 6 cyl .. 3
spd .• ex.c. c~md . , 13.300 or
trade for pickup. Call 4460616.

74

Motorcycles

1974 Honde Chopper 30 ln.
over 814-949-2737.
front ond. CB 7110 F.
Coli

76

WA5

APAAIAN1'

U51NG TH15 ROOM

6EDROOM.

1-:;::;::=:;=:::::=:;:::==
I·
Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

Boats •nd
Motors for S•le

VOU CAN'T GO OUTSIDt
AN' PLAV IN VOUR

BECAUSE IT'S
FIX IN' TO RAIN,
THAT'S ''y"

5AriiDBIOX TODAY,

TATER

•

Furnlthed apt . 8186. Water
poid, 2 bdr.. 131 v, 4th,
Golllpollo . 448·4418aher 7
..
p. m.

.-rea•.

Hell'

Small turn . houee 1 or 2
adult• only, no pets. Call
448-0338 .

Cll Nlghlllno

)lrtGe • • • 1100.

Washer S. dryer, exc. cond.
Coll614-387-7141 .

~
Frlgodelro .woohor &amp; Ken·
moro dryor. Call 446-4781 .
2 bedroom ap1., furnlthed,
utiUtloo p~d. '2711, 1100
Clop .. odultli only, no poto.
Coli 448-08!2,

rn

Gl tHI Nlghtllno
Ill Twilight Zone
12:00 Cll MOVIE: 'Ono Stop to
®MOVIE&gt; 'Tho Coy of the
Locutt'
Thlcko of tllo Night
12:30 D Cil CZl u,. Night with

e

PEANUTS

Rent or 8111. R•cine·
··Romodelod two otory. Now
01roo\lng. 3 boclroomo, 2
tootho,
goo hoot.
CloM to ochool. 11115.
manti!. Dopoolt • roforon·
- · 814-742·2&amp;43. Solo

rn

(iD M•A•s•H

2bdr .. 2 bath, 11 Court St.
Ref. It dop. f326 mo . Call
446·4926 .

3 bdr. houte overlookif!g
rlwr, 2 bathl, family room,
city 1choolt. hat river fron·
tage, •3.00 mp. Witeman
:Agency. 4.4 6-3843. ,

CIJCIJ rn DCIJ ® . ,

tHI Now•
•
Cil MOVIE: 'Trouur.-111 tho
Four Crown•'
(]) '-w Treaaure Hunt
CIJ little Houoe on tho
Prairie
(() (j]) Y.E.S. Inc.
fil Buck Roaoro
,6 :30 D Cil &lt;II NBC Nowa
· Cil MOVIE: 'Tho Front'
I]) Rifleman
C!l ESPN'o llporttForum
Cll • !l]l ABC Nowo
Q Cll!ID CB$ Nowo
Cll Buoln- Report
(j]) Ovar Euy
7:00 D (]) PM Megozlne
(]J Bonanz•
C!l SporttContor
CIJ Corol B~mott
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
(I) Cl'fllrllo'o Angalo
0 I]) WhNI of Fortune
CID (j]) MocNoll/lohrer
N8wshour
®Newa
Ill G} People'a Cl&gt;urt
f.IJ Jolferoono
7:30 II Cil Tic Tac Dough
(!) ESPN;o Saturday Night
ot tho ~lghts Saturday
Night at the Fights pro·
sents coverage of a 10Aound Welterweight bout
featuring M-arion Starling
vs. Pablo Baez from New
Haven, CT. 12 hrs., 30 min.)
CIJ Good Nowo
CID 0 Cll Femlly Feud
® Wheel of Fortuna
Ill G} ·Entertainment
Tonight
&amp;l One Day at e Time
8:00 D Cil l1l Major league
Baseball: Notional League
. Champlonohlp Seriao
Cil MOVIE: 'The Toy'
Cil MOVIE&lt; 'The Browning
Version'
Cil High Chaparral
Cil MOVIE: ' A Counteoo
From· Hong Kong'
Cil Ill !DI ,Juot Our luck
Shabu tries to help Keith
~t his ..i_2b back .
0 Cll (1g Mlaolosippi Ben
defend$ a non· licensed
midwife who is accused of
mu rd er. (60 min .)
Cil ilJJ Novo 'The Animal
Imposters.'
&amp;l MOVIE: 'Tho Brotherhood'
8:30 Clllllll2l Happy Days 0~
Fonzie's advice, Chachi
transforms himself into a
romantic in order to win
J9enio.
[Closed
Cap·
tioned]
9:00 I]) 700 Club Todoy's program
features · holistic
healing end visits Alabama's new football coach .
Cll Ill G} Throo'o Compony
A magazine qu iz reveals .to
Jack that he's got a roommate who is lusting after
him and he's not sure who
it is. [Closed Captioned]
0 I]) ®I MOVIE: 'Sac"'ts
of e Mother end Daughter'
(() ilJJ Vla1nam: A
Televiilon History ' Root of
a War.' Despite cordial re-'
lations between American
intelligence and He Chi
Minh, French and British
hostility to the Vietnamese
revolution laid the groundwork for a new war. (60
min.l [Closed Captioned]
9:30 Cil Album Flash: John
CouQ!r
Cll Ill II2l Oh Madeline
Madeline's scheme to
spice up her marriage goes
awry when her friend accuses her of makinf a play
for her ex-husband.
10:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Venom'
Cil MOVIE: 'My Fovorite
Year'
!]) Billiards:
Women's
World Invitational Cover·
age of th~ Women 's World
Invitational 7-Bali Cham·
pionship is presented from
the Plavboy Club, Atlantic
City, NJ . 160 min .)
.
CIJ CIJ tHI Hart to Hart The
Hans become targets for
murder in a smuggling
scheme. (60 min .! [Closed
Captioned]
CID Firing Line
(j]) Nowa
&amp;liNN Nowo
10:15 CIJ TBS Evening News
10:30 Cil To Be Announced
(j]) lnalda Waohington
fil Comedy_ Time
11:oo
CIJI]) 111
®I 111
G} Nowo
Cil Another Ult
C!l SportoContor
CID Dr. Who
Ill Benny Hill Show
1 1:15 '® NCAA Football: Notre
Oomo ot Colorado
11 :30 U Cil &lt;II Tonight Show
Cil MOVIE: 'Amltyvillo II:
The Poaaeulon•
(])MOVIE: 'Yanko'
Cil Star Time
CIJ Cotllno
I]) Soolp
0 Cll Magnum P.l, Magnum is hired by a former
movie star to investigate
the suicide of a present
movie star. (R} (60 min .)
CID Latonlght Amerlce

u

Meigs EKcav•ting . Bulldozer
• backhoe aervica. Basemanti, footere, landscaping.
driveways. farm pondt.
614· 742·2407 or 614· 742·
2088.
84·

a

1:00

I~
,

1

1 11

3

11

!//!·~'-"

~.( ~I

171 Nch utod Woohoro •
I''
,
Orvor
•.
Nlco
•
cloon.
guo·~~~
rontHd 30 doyo, aov.,.l to
choooo from . Coli 614-2151,- 0
1207.

HE
NEEDS. A.
M lltROR
\0 liE
,..j\ ~" ,

',.

;;"I
01
\_;:m ""' ·.• ~~
~ I bolt

'1

4· ~
•

,

1877 Grande Prix P8, PB,
13,800, oxeollentcondltlon, ~·- -~~mper, 18 ft ..
ollvor, oun roof. Co11 4411· ,....._
_~,.. CoN Tom
1
29158.
1 -~!'-"''""'·
11·~~--~~;r,;:~~=;:
!:?.~m ~~~-' " : l_,;;;'q ~ llini

,,&lt;,;.,..,_-,::,.,,.,

"'"'"

·,

,...

-ia."'

1

,;.o

"'w

1
Ill!!",

~~- -.!"''d·
~~~+ 1172• ~!'P!t 1-3
;;..; .;.; : - ~~: or of!or 8 122 fl,
17.

I-·

'

wcL...,AcruALLY,

TWO

I'M

WIN IS ONE LIST
LON6ER THAN

THESE ARE fi.IIN65 I'VE
~ LEARNEI7 THE'HARD WAY !

Upholeterv

, :00

114:

._good1-ZIII.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 13 loc. Aw.. Golllpolis.
448·7833 or 448-1833.

1•115
· 1;.~ .

,,

•
"

11M MAKING A l:IST OF
.ALL 1"HE THINGS I'VE
LEARNED IN LIFE ...

'

87

rr

EVENING

1981 Cutla81, 88776; 1981 Water Welle. Commercial
Men:;ury lynx., $4396; 1.9 80 end Oomeatic. Test holes.
Camero. $6096; 1979 Cu- Pumps Salas and Service.
67
Musical
tloos, $5896; 1979 Mercury 304·895-3802.
lnatruments
Good electric stove, wood
Zephyr, $2898; 19711 Old• 1- - - - - - - - - cabinet1, butcher block ca0olto 88. 1895; 1970 Get vour carpet in ship
Pickup. $896 . BIG ohope. Water removal. FREE
::~e~:t ~~=c~.!~~n:rn~:~ Clarine11, flute• . uxa· Dodgo
DEAL AUTO SALES, Rt. 2 ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
with ttorm window. 304~ phones, trombone•. ondJorichoRood.304-876· CLEANING . CAPTAIN
67 5 · 169S.
1rumpets. Frankt Pawn 1769 oftor 6 p.m ,. 876· STEAMER 614-446-2107.
Shop. 448-0840.
6486.
'
REPOSSESSED SIGNI No- I~;::;::==:;:=====
E Sa A· Tree Service, fully
1 978 Matador; 4 door, good insured ,. free eslimates .
thing down! Taka over pay- 68
fruit
menta, , $68.00 month ·
condition, body and motor Phone 814-367.-0636, cell
orange with brown vinyl top, after 6 .
lv.4 'x8 ' flashing errow sign .
8t Vegetable•
·:I
304-676-2160.
New bulbs. lettera. Hale
Signs . Coil Ff!EE 1-800S.EAMLESS GUTTER~. One
626-7446, anytime .
Appl81. Fitzpatrick. Or- 1976 Chevrol·et Nova , piece cuttom.tit you r home.
chords. S.RI 689. 1114·669· 65,432 milet. Call 3f04· Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·
2 colo;TVo, 304·'676-2816 . 3786 or II 14-689-4378, 675-4646 alter 5:30 p .m .
tar, (Ooy 814-692-4068,)
'
Houre 10 a.m.·l p.m. 1 •· •..
!night 614-698-p205.1
"
'
1 969 Dart, alent 6 , new
Frost fr,e refrigerator - in
tir81, new parts, too numer~ Roofing and Carpentry .
excellent. condition . Phone
304-676-1388.
69 For Sale or Trade out to mention, A-1 condi- work. general repairs. call
tion, 304-8711·11730.
Anthony Wllliamton. 614Full olze bed, box ept·ingll.
367-0194.
·book eholl . • heod~b~~;;;ri:. 1969Fltrd4x4. Trodoforcar 1975 Mercury Cougar. 81--- - - - - - - $75.00. 3&lt;14-882-2246.
ol equal value. 814-843· cyt .. Power steering, power Get Your Carpet IN SHIP
brakes, air, now axhauot, SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
6119 _
1 Royal Srieze ttyle owal.rug,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.. need• work on drivers door. STEAMER, water removal,
eizo 42x66, $30. 304-676- Con•ole Motorola ltereo motor ex.cellent, 1600, 304· fum~ure
cleaning. Free Esti"
7262 . Brand new.
with AM·FM rodlo. Uke 882 ·2218 ·
motes, 814-446-2107.

55 Building Supplies

Sleeping room $116, utilities plfid. range &amp; rafrig .
Share bath . Man only . 448- 1 --~----:----4416 after 7 p.m.
MUST SELL 6 new J&amp;wing
machines scratched in shipping ware 8260 now $79 or
46 Space for Rent
$6 e woek . Coll448-9301.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
~ark , Route 33, North of
~omeroy . large lots. Call
992-7479 .

Couch, chair, rocker, otto·
man, 2 end tabl&amp;~ , and coffee
table. Phone after &amp;;00
30.4 -676-4512.

FirewOod for sale . $25 .
•
304-676· 1736.

Firewood- cut up, , slabs.
&amp;15 pickup load . Call 614246-5804.

Priwate trailer lot located 1 Vz
miles from City limits on Rt.
688 . Cali 448-3870.

Dry firewood , deliverd ,
phone 304-675· 7771 .

10/4/83

0111:Ja,NI~. IIIt .. IMNI U.S Pll I llol 011

For Sale : lumber -1"and 2" ·
dlmenl!iOn, poplar, oak or
pine. FOr pric&amp;J and evallability. Contact Millwood
Inc., 304-273-2522. Rt. 2
at Evergreen Hills ROad.
Mondday -Friday . 8 -4 :30:
Siturday, 8-3 :00.

Seaaon8d oak firewood .
304 -876-2767 after 4 p.m .

+

BCRAMBLEO WORD GAME
by Honrl Arnold and Bob lee

Television
Viewing

•

Motor~ Hom••
&amp; C•mper•

STUCCO PLAS TERING ·
textured ceilings commer·
ciel end residential, free
eotlrr: .too. Coli 614-2681182.

EXTRA good top soil. delivered, phone 304·876 7771 .

cabinets,
butcher
Good electric
stove, block
wood
Counter top, like new, 1
window with 8 etorm window. 304-875 · 1 695.

Um&amp;Jtone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Maton, Maiga,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
It Son . Call 448· 7785 .

.

Kelvinator tide by aide.
$200. Moytog Auto. •100.
Hoover ponable w11her and
drver. $276 . 614 - 74~ 2352 .

54 Misc . Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Oaliwerad. 12"-22"srocked
in yard . HEAP vende"r.
prompt delivery. 614-256 ·
6245 .

I

-

Sen,tinEti-Pa!!~&amp;--11

The

Buy Foctory Dlroct. Ught·
weight. llborglou Scomp
13' ond 16' trovol tralloro It
now 19' Btl! whool. Coli now
toll frM 1· 800-3411-4912
for free brochure end SAV~I

Will· Burt · stoker furnance
24'. good cond. Coil 44'61572.

COUCH , chair. rocker, ottoman, 2 end tables, ·coffee
table, after 6, 304-876·
4612 .
'"

Tuesday, October 4, 1983

Sb:tMn toot Cllmper for ~t,le.
11 .1500. '1114-882-2720 or
814-992-3181:

New Oak Furniture. tliblea.
chairl. cupboard•. pie ufe.
dry eink1. fl•ul '"' Conkel•
Antique•. Tuppert Plein..1.

' "d

Brick house, 3 BR1 , LR.
kitchen, 1 bath, 1 car
garage. large lot. K.C.
school diet . Cell 446-8204 .

78

Uted Ditch wh:ch trencher
model 2300. 1-814-6947842 .

Whirlpool washer excellent
condition. Guranteed, S 76 .
Coli 614-367·0560..

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

' by Lerry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

Now H1uilng Good lump or
Stoker Cool. 614 · 367 ·
7101 '
.

Meytag wringer Waahar
180, aquare. double tubs
with ttanda 836, jars &amp;2 .60
1 doz., ringa &amp; platee 76
cents a doz. Call 446-4326 .

·New 3 bedroom houae for
rent · In New Haven . Call
1·814·849· 2470.
~room.

64 IUU,,..

61 Hou•ehold CJoodt

af lpproxlmet-'y one ec,.

3

Oclobin- 4, 1983

Ohio

David Letterman
I]) Jook Bonny Show
D Ill McCloud ' london
Brldge1.' An American bus.
inenm•n'8 gueet becomes
the witnen to a murder
which ha el1o becomes a
ouo~ct. (R) (90 min .)
etHIN•(]) I Morrled Jotn
()) Entertolnmant Tonltlht
CNN HHdllne Nowo
(])MOVIE: 'flw Cap Ono
Summer'
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~SENTOL: .

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Answ9rhete: ( J

DIAMOND.
Now arrange the circled reners to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gasted by the above cartoon.

I I I )-(·I I I I]
(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles: AHEAD BLIMP CANNED HUNGRY
·
·. ·
It joy Is ij1e opposite of sorrow, what s the
OPPQSite ol woo?~GIDOAP . , ·

vesterdav·s

I ·Answer:

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A switch in time? ·
NORTH
10+83
+AJ6
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t9 7 32
+QJ95
EAST .

WEST
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• 93
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.JI0 873
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SOUTH
+KQ.i0!52

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+10 3

.

Vulnerable: Bolb
Dealer: South
Welt

Nortb

East

Dbl.
Pass

2+
Pass

Pass
Pass

Soath
I+
4+

Opening lead: +K

West decided · to ' open the
king of clubs against South's
four spade contract. East
dropped the deuce and West
had no problem about shift·
ing to the heart king.
South was in with the ace,
played the king of s~ades,
led a spade to dummy s ace,
ruffed dummy's last heart
and got out with the I 0 of
clubs to West's ace.
West was on lea d, thought
for a second and led uis ace
of diamonds, South claimed
the balance and chalked up
the rubber.
West said: "I coul d see
diainond discards .coming on
clubs. !.hoped tha t you could
prOdu ce the king of
diamonds."
East replied, "What you
mean is that you panicked .
You could have stopped to
count the hand." .
East was right West knew
that South had slarted with
six spades and one hear~
leaving him a total of six
minor

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

One of the toughest of the
myriad problems that lace
the defense is to decide when
to break into new ground.
Sometimes the switch
works, other times it leads
to disaster.

suit

cards.

That ·

meant that if West had just
led 'another club, South
would have gotten one diamond discard if he had been
dealt three clubs, or two
discards. in the actual case,
but eilher wav West would
be sure of \wo diamond
tricks if he 'just waited
patiently.
OII"EWSPAPER ENTE_RPRrSE ASSN.)
~

~t1..1tnd'
by THOMAS
ACROSS
IN. Scandi·
navian
5S. Amer.
country
.
10 Canyon mouth
11 Portly
13 Affair
olhonor
14 Immediately
15 Written ...
letter
16 Woman

JOSEPH

DOWN
I Heavy

with cargo
2 Mistreat
3What
politicianS
do while
campaigning
4 Buddy
5 Cowardly
6 French hosts
Yesterday's Answer
7 Japanese
statesman 22 ~ barrel
29 "- the
8 Cold cuts
23 Concurred
Boys Are"
9 Delight
24 Garment
30 Choice
12 Scarcity
features
31 Gunpowder
16 Uveliness
25 Poet
ingredient
19 Quaker .
27 One kind of 36 Never (Ger .)
J~~~-r.:-- Indian
37 Turhan-

personified

17 Tea variety
18 Snuggles
20 Scottish fog
21 In comp;~r:ison with
22 Confined

Z3 Pallid
Z5 John Wilkes

Z&amp; Merriment
r1 Admonish
Z&amp; Ring arbiter
Z9 Laborers
32 Lamprey
33 Coal scuttle
:U Hebrew
for Lord
35 Balanced
37 Enticement
38 "That's My - "

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n French
river

~ Here's how to work it':
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L 0 N G F E L L 0 W"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE
II

One teller simply stands for another. In th is samp le A~~
used ror the three L's, X for th e two O:s. etc. Si n gle letters.
apostrophes. the length and formati on or t he words a.re all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUQTES .

J

VOHPDYNPJHO CT,

H.O D Y W D 0 X 0 W C

SZGNPFFJ
, WA

X~

AWN

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OD

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X I !) D

KJ F P

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Yeaterdlly'a Cryptoqaote: PLEASE ALL, AND YOU WILL
PlEASE NO . .-AESOP
•'

•

10-+

WHA"T HEWAS,
AFTER HE 60U6HT
HE !&lt;: THA"T 151\St

...

�Tu..day, Oc. . . 4, 1983

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Scioto has largest jobless rate

No-till com planter
being offered again
Now that fall ha!vestlng Is well
underway imd the cold weather Is
comlng,Jt Is time io think about the
conservation practices and plans
that are needed for next year. The
Metgs Soil and Water Conse,rvatton
Plstrlct (SWCD) is entering the
second year of Its conservation
tillage program, havtngavallableto
~elgs County landowners a no-till
rom planter and Moore Unl-ill'UI for
&amp;fasses, legume and small grain.
There Is a rental fee for each piece of
equipment and dlstrtct teChnician
David Burt Is available to move the
equipment to the farm and assist In
-·""""filantlng operations.
Along wltil the no-till program,
soil conservation service (SCS)
personnel assist In developing
conservation plans for !ann. Ideas
and lnformallo~ on Improved management, conservation and son
erosion control are provided at no
'
cost to the landownl&gt;r.

Among the conservation .practlces that can be installed Include
diversions, sod waterways. spring
development for water and conservatlon cropping SYstems. All of the
mentioned pra_ctlces are ellgtblefor
cost share assistance through the
ASCS otflce.
A conservation cropping system
InCludes developing a crop rotation,
establishing contour strips and
using conservation tillage, together
or by themseives, and applying this
SYStem tooneormoreftelds. Now is
the time of year to be planning for a
conservation cropping system. Contour strips should be laid out bt the
field before the next cropping year
begins. Contourstrlpscostsabout$6
per acre to establish and are one of
the best soli saving practices that
can be established. Used In conjunc·
tlon with crop rotations, corn and
hay can be produced While protecting the soil from erosion.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Here
Monroe 14.7.
are estimates compiled by the Ohio
Bureau of Ernploymett Services r1
CllWity·by-&lt;.'OWI~ unemployment
per'Celltages tor August 1983:
Adams 19.1 perCent, Allen 11.2,
Ashland10.6.Ashtabulal5.5,Athens
9.8, j\uglal2e 10.3, Belmont __:gp,
Brown13.2, Butler10.4, Carroll13.4,
Cllampa1gn 12.7, Clark 10.1, Clermont 10.1, Olnltl!l 8.8, Columbiana
15.2, Coshocton 11.7, Crawford 14.6.
Cuyahoga 9.9, Darke 10.1, Defiance 10.7, Delaware 6.7, Erie 10.3,
Fairfield 8.5, Fayetti!l3.9, Franklln
8.0, Fulton 10.8, Gallla 14.0, Geauga
9.9, Greene 8.1, . Guernsey 14.7,
Harnlltl&gt;n 9.1, Hancock 6.6, Hardin
•FREE ESnMATES
11.5; Harrison 18.1, Henry 10.4,
omAINEO IN~TALLERS
Highland 13.9.
Hocking 17.9, Holmes 7.6, Huron
16.1, Jackson 13.0, Jefferson 12.5,
RAONE..
Knax 11.8, Lake 13.7, Lawrence 16.1,
Ucklng10.8, Logan 12.2, Loraln13.9,
PlANING MILL
lit. 124, Syr1cuso Ph. 992·3978
Lucas 11.3, Madison 7.8, Mahonlng
' "DIPINDAILE SIIYICI SliCE 1147"
· 15.5, Marion 14.6, Medina 8.9, Meigs
12.2, Mercer 14.2, M1aml 10.3, .

CABINETS

HELPS FARMERS -The Moore Unkti11118 Used lo seed cover crops
jnlo cropland 18 again available lo Melp ~ lannets. ·
·

·fALL SPECTACULAR

Foote Mineral. Plant strike .in third day
A strike at the Foote Mineral
Plant near New Haven enters lis
third day this morning following tile
expiration of a contract with Local
5171. United Steelworkers of Amer·
lea. Acco'l'dlng to a union spokesperson, members voted204-3 to strike at
midnight Saturday.
The spokesperson said terms of
the proposed contract btcluded a
$2.50oh thehourwagecutsoughtby
thecompany; theellmlnatlonofcost
of Uvbtg; the elimination of all
btsurance . coverage provided to
employees on layoff; elimination of
all Insurance coverage provided to
retired employees.
Eumlnatlon of supplemental unemployment benefit plan and guaranteed sub-pay; ellmlnatlon of
. extended vacation plan; ellmlnatlonofavacatlonbonus;ellrninatlon
of pension !annul" under tile
pension agreement lor calculation
.of future retirees' benefit levels; ·
elimination of 70-~ age retirement
provision; elimination of a 13-week
special payment; elimination of the
62-15 and 30-year early retirement
provision. Furthermore, the spokesperson said, the company
wanted a three-year agreement.
Foote Mineral Co. Graham Sta·
tlon plant manager Cliff Northrop
this morning read. a the following

prepa~ statement:

"Foote Mlner.al spokesman Pete
Thomas, vice-president for Industrial relations reported that negotiations with United Steelworkers
Locals No. 5050 and No. 5171 did not
result In an agreement prior to the
expiration date.
"The master agreement for our
Graham, W.Va., and Cambridge,

osal would be difficult for our
employees to accept. The steelworkers' representatives made a
sincere e!forttoreachan agreement
with us, however, the state of the
· ferroalloys Industry forced us to
·
take a finn stand.
"Thomas said that Foote bttends
·to continue to service all customers.
While the plants · will not be In

operation Immediately our Inventory levels are sutflclent to meet
customer needs. We have on
Intention of letting our eusiomer
base erode.
"No !urther negotiations. are
scheduled at this time.;,
Northrop said that the stlike will
affect apporxtmately 250
employees.

20°/o OFF
STOREWIDE SALE CONTINUES
ALL WOMEN'S WEAR

~====:::================:;!
JUNIOR ~ MISSES Capture Today's .Events For Tomorrow In
-Sweaters
Beautiful, Full Color Photograph
-Coats
Portrait.r
Wedding.r
-Coordinate Sportswear
A nniverrarier
-Professional Uniforms
Pauportr
-Blouses
Special Occarionr ·
-Belts
We a!JO carry a complete line of graduation invitation.r and
-Flannel-Shirts
accerrorier and a complete line of wedding a1zd anniverrary
..:.,;.Skirts
.invitation.r and acce.r.rorieJ at DISCOUNT PRICES. Come and

Ohio, plants
expired
Oct.l.
A strike
beganat
atmidnight
that timeon
at 11

bo~~ ~dicated ~ negotla·
tlons were tense and dlfttcult. Weal!
recognize that our concession proP"

Veterans Memorial
ADMISSIONS--Phillip Grenn,
Shade; Darrel Drake, Long Bottom; Lois Cornell, Pomeroy; Harold Jeffers, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES-.. Robert Grtmm,
Ed Capehart, Zelma Hawley. Dixie
Knotts, Wilma Anderson. ·

HALF SIZES .
"

'

-Jeans
-Knit Tops
-Ma.ternity
-Corduroys
-Dresses
-Scarfs
-Slacks
-Hosiery

.brow.re without obligation.
Call ur for more in/ormation or to make your appointment;
eveningr and weekendr.
Bob &amp; Charlene Hoeflich

Marriage license
A marrtage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
David George Nelgler, 25, Racbte,
and Tina Diane Duffy, 25, Pomeroy.

rJ'-.....

I ~:.~='"""-."-

THE

PHOTO PLACE

109 High St.

Pomeroy, OH.

e

erica's Favorite Brands.
/

/'··

,..

..

'

--·

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()ffer good on any style, any length of these brands.
(Full Flavor, Lights, Ultra Lights)
NOW SOFT PACK FILTER. MENTHOL, 1mg. "Ia!", 0.1 mg. nicotine, NOW SOFT PACK FILTER IOO's, MENTHOL100's, 2 mg. "tar", 0.2 mg.
nicoline. VANTAGE MENTHOL 9 mg. "lar". 0.6mg. nicotine, VANTAGE FILTER, FILTER·IOO's, 9 mg."lar", 0.7 mg. nicotine, CAMEL LIGHTS
100's, 12.mg."1ar", 0.8 mg. n1co1ine. CAMEL FILTERS, 15 mg. "lar",l.O mg. nicotille, av. per cigarene. FTC Report MAR. '83, WINSTON ULTRA
LIGHTS IOO's, 5mg. "1ar". 0.4 mg. nicoline, SALEM ULTRA LIGHTS, ULTRA LIGHTS \OO's, VANTAGE ULTRA LIGHTS, ULTRA LIGHTS 100's,
ULTRA LIGHTS MENTHOL, ULTRA LIGHTS MENTHOL100's, WINSTON ULTRA LIGHTS, 5 mg. "lar", 0.5mg. nicolint, BRIGHT, BRIGHT \OO's,
7mg. "tal", 0.5 mg. nicotine. MORE LIGHTS IOO's MENTHOL 7mg. "la(,0.6 mg. nicotine, MORE LIGHTS IOO's FILTER. SALEM SLIM LIGHTS
lOO's, 8 mg."tar", 0.7 mg. n1co1ine, VANTAGE IOO's MENTHOL WINSTON LIGHTS, 9 mg."tar".0.7 mg. n~otine, CAMEL LIGHTS. LIGHTS HARD
PACK, 9 mg. "te(, 0.8 mg. nicoline: SALEM LIGHTS. LIGHTS IOO's, 10 mg. "Ia('. 0.8 mg. nicotine, WINSTON LIGHTS IOO's, 12 m11- ':tar", 1.0
mg. nico1ine, WINSTON KING, 15 mg. "lar",1.1 mg. nicoline, MORE FILTER • MENTHOL IS mg."tal",1.3 mg. nialtint, WINSTON 100's, 17 mg.
"tar",1.2 mg. nioorine, CAMEL .
FILTERS HARD PACK, SALEM KING,
•
WINSTON BOX, 17 mg. "tar", 1.3 mg.
nicoline, SALEM 100's, 17 mg."la(',
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined ' · 1.4 mg. nicoline, CAMEL REGULAR,
21 mg. "ter",l.B mg. nicotine, w. pel
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your .Healtlr.
cigarena by FTC method.

OFF
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'ONE CARTON OF

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ANY ~TYLE. ANY LENGTH

CHE5JONE CARTON
I

\Wnston

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