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                  <text>-R app replaces Nixon

.Apple butter lime

See story oo Page 3

Beat of the BeDd P.6 ,

Tomadoettes win again

Irregular heart beai

Page5

Family M;edlclne P. 8

•

at y

e
H

Voi.32,No.l23
Copy•ithtod 1983

/

1

.
enttne
'

._ 2 Stcttons, 14 Pages
20 C.nrs
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, OCiober S 1983

P.,e'l'weaQ'

. '

10%

EDA denies courthouse application

DOWN
HOLDS
YOUR

By KATIE CROW
Senllnellllalf
The Economic Development Admlnlstratlgn has denied an application tiled by Meigs County cornmJs.
slor~ers to enlarge the courthouse
and place an elevator In the new
addition to serve aU three floors.
The commissioners were adVised
by letter that (EDA) did not select
the conunlssloner's application for
.-assistance under the Jobs Act.
'!be commissioners requested a
grant totaling $3l8, 715.
Richard Jones said, "It still
deprives the handicapped, It Is
unfortunate we weren't Included In
the funding. The board should
continue the project, one that Is
needed and one that Is good."
On the brighter side the board
. received !annal notltlcatlon that the
conununlty block grants were

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IIODEL11-40

The Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce made It official
, '"'"'''Ui!irday-the ~year old Big Bend
Regatta has nm Its course.
At a recent chamber board of
directors session, the pros and cons
of the Big Bend Regatta were
discussed and at that meeting,
opposlton was voiced against the
Regatta In that It did not center on
river actMtles. A majortty of the
board voted against continuing the

10-Cup Automatic: ·

REYNOLDS WRAP
ALUMINU

The versatility or larger mlrro111
In a uae anyplace, go anywhere
size. 7V. lnehee In diameterlor use on the ornalleat dreaa·
lng tables. 3\4 lnchlj8 high
when folded Into base. - lor
compact, safe storage at home ·
or while traveling. 360' circle of
light gives full facial Illumination. Truo-to-llle lncandeaeent
lighting with 4 light aottlngo nonmal, daylight, offlca and
evening. Lighting flltera lnclucled ana saally Interchangeable
and atore conveniently In the
mirror baae. WnljHIOUnd cord
atorege. Wall mountable.

By KATIE CROW
Sent!ne! lllalf

.

!

workers.
to Spencer that Is going out of Meigs CoUI1ty. Pomeroy Council
"Now we haveoneturtherrequest business.
recently paved the road.
regarding the Syracuse Flood Road.
Spencer said the county had been
rennlsslon given '
Since a large part of the section of renting one of It's roUers for the past
In other business, commissioners'
road discussed herein 'was con· three months at a cost of $1,500.75 granted permission to a requeSt
structed as the result primarily ol per month. He otfered the eqlllpmade by Bob Byer, director of the
the late Roy Jones' efforts whlle he ment to the commlssloners for Meigs County Emergency Medical
was serving as Sutton Township $W,OOlless the three payments.
Service, for personnel tO attend a
Trustee, we ask that the two-mile . It was brought up however, that National EMS Coilference In Cha·
section be named "Roy Jones any amount over $5,00&gt; must be
rleston on Oct. 11 and 12; approved a
Road" and approppr1ate signs submitted fclr bid. Spencer said If the
request . made by the county
Installed. If the county will take this 'c ommissioners bided the equip- · recorder to transfer $500 from
requested action, Syracuse ..VIllage ment his bid would be as he quoted.
Sl'.pplles to other expenses.
CouncU has decided to formaUy
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
Jones reported that after two
name thesectlonofthe "flOod road" said he would have to look at the
years, Buckeye Hills has received a
In the corporation limits the same county highway's financial
grant for the purpose of purchasing
and will lnstaU a sign at the situation.
a computer. The agency Is In the ·
Intersection of Brtdgeman Street."
Roberts reported his department
process of setting up the computer
The conunlssloners approved the will assist Pomeroy Village with
center to be located In Marietta to be
request. ·'
ditching along the road under the
used by various forms of
Meeting with the commissioners Brtdge. Jones said the road under
government.
was Benny Spencer of Dravo Marks the Pomeroy·Mason Brtdge was the
In order for Meigs County to join
Equipment, a company, according best thing that ever happend In
(Continued on page 14)

Kaiser recalls
.100 employes

Chamber ·e nds
annual regatta

·;.

25 SQ•. FEET

'

•1s~

LIQUIO
HAND AND 'F~CE

4-WAY LIOHTID .
fO'SMIG

Ho&lt;them 'IMw Look'
4-Wey Lighted Mirror

••••

-·'Ut

Mayor Eller Pickens Which ex:
pressed the village's appreciation
for the assistanCe given by the
commission to help Syracuse gain a
county-maintained, paved flood
outlet road.
The letter said,"As you will recaU,
the first step In achieving our goal of
having a paved flood outlet road
from Syracuse was taken some two
and one-half years ago when the
board of MelgsCountyConunlssloners graciously accepted the two mUe
section of graveled' road Into the ,
Meigs County highway system. 'I'!!ls
action was taken at the request of
both Syracuse Council and the
Sutton Township Trustees.
'Engineer Roberts' department
spent much effort In getting the road
properly ditched prior to paving 11.
We are very grateful for the efforts
put forth by Mr. Roberts and his .

approved.
Included In the block grants were
grahts tor the county home, Bashan
Fire Department, Chester Fire
Department, Olive Township,
Orange Township, Racine VIllage,
Salisbury Township, and Syracuse
Fire Department. The grants -tlltal
$87,600.
• .
Applicants wiU be sent notices
concerning a meeting scheduled to
review the projects. Grants cannot
be secured untU the meeting Is held.
Conunlssloners signed a procla·
matlon proclaiming the month of
October as Jobs Training Partner·
ship (JTP) month. The new equal
partnership joins togeth~r the
prtvate sector and local elected
officials with a common goal of
training the unemployed: The JTP
went Into effect Oct. 1.
A letter was read from Syracuse

'

Some board memblirs felt that
boot races kept away big pleasure
boatsand tleupthertver. Itwasalso
noted that the Regatta had lost Its
JlUJllOSI! and that the chamber
should promote commerce.
'!be board also felt that the
Regatta hurt business, tied up the
Iowa and didn't really help the
merchants.
Remarks favoring continuation of
the traditional event were that It
provided an opportunity til use the
rtver which Is special to Pomeroy
and businesses have an obligation to
thecommunltyblprovldesometype
of entertabunent.
A motion was passed by the

directors to do away with the
Regatta In Its present form.
Alternatives discussed were a
tomato festival, with a ski show,
enlai'ge the car show and help the
Historical Society to enhance Hertt·
age Sunday.
At yellterda,y's general ~.
..... llllllllldadtonbydleboardof
llndols·WIIIi given In detaD and a
voteWIIIItakenapprovlngdwoonlln-

uance of llle regalia. Only Fred
Crow voiced concern abool dropping the event. It was polnled out
lbat, perbaps, another group would
waul 10 iake over llle Be 1 "" and
coot1nue a as a ~·event In

Approximately 100 employes are
being recalled to their employment
at the Kaiser Alurnlnu;n and
Chemical Corporatkm at Ravenswood beginning Oct. 10 lor the
restaJ:tlng of a second aluminum
making potllne.
In addition, there wUJ be some 50
other employes recalled on a
short-tenn . temporary basis to
assist with the restart, It Is expected
that the second potllne will begin
producing metal In late November.
This will make the second potllne
to restart at Ravenswood, the first
having returned to production In
mid-August. Twoofthefourpotllnes
at the plant remain Idle. Each of the
potllnes has the capacity to produce
40,750 tons of aluminum annually
Conunentlng on the decision to
restart additional capacity at Ra·

llletowD.
'
The first Regatta was held In June
of 1965 with Jack Carsey, Bill
Grueser and Willis Leadingham
leading the way as chamber
members. 'The chamber also spon·
sored the Miss Southern Ohio
Pageant In conjunction with the
Regatta. The pageants were dl·
reeled by . Bob Hoel11ch and were
held at the Meigs Junior High
Audltorum.
The first celebrtty to appear at the
first Regatta was the famous Minnie
Pearl.
One ol the early highlights was
bOat races which were dropped
several years ago. At one time,
excursion boats and ski shows were
also dropped.
In the beginning, the Regatta, was
held under a huge tent on the upper
parldng lot. It was later moved to the
area behind the fanner Pomeroy
Junior High School.
Frog jumps were Introduced a
year later by Fred Crow and Dale
Warner. The first frog jump was
held on the parldng lot them moving
.the next year til Lynn Street. The
third year the frog jumps were
moved to the football field, Ma·
rauder Stadium. ·
One of the contestants In lbe Miss
Southern OhiO Pageant, Laurie Lea
Schaefer, Columbus, a studEnt at
Ohio University, won at Pomeroy
and went on til become Miss
America.

FLU SHOTS GIVEN - Nearly II® Meigs C01J111Y &amp;!alor Citizens
and dlaabled pel'80ns rerelved tree bdluenza vaccine shoes at the Senior
Citizens Center TuesdfQ'. The Melp County Department of Health set
up ~flu shot clinic which operated from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4,
p.m. Here Teresa Swatzel receives her shot from Nonna Torres,
nursing supervisor of the Heallb Department. FrldlQ' the vaccine wW
be administered to the general pubUc at the Health Department offices
from 9 a.m. to oooii and from 1 to 4 p.m.

Backs commission decision
Jim Gory, attorney for the Ohio Division of Tax Equalization, has
advised Meigs County Auditor William Wlckllne that recent action
taken by Meigs Commissioners not to continue collecting a .20 mill
levy for the Gallla -Jackson-Meigs Mental Health Board Is within the
la'w.
•
According to Wickline, Gory advised that what the commissioners
have done, based on section 57m-221 and 57l6-34 of tlie Ohio Revised
Code In within their rights as the taxing authority.

CAA director explains
johs training prOgram
SJclne:Y Edwards, executive dlrec· ·

With this program comes a large
torfoi-theGaJUa-MelgsCommunlty amount of money to admlnlster.
ActiOn Agf!(lcy, explalned ~the new MelgsCwntywlllhave$241,3l2and
Job 'l'ralnlll&amp; Partnership Act, Ganta Cwnty, $267,506. The tlltal
JTPA, at '1\lesday's · lunclleal · projected funding for the State ol
ma:tllltlofthePilmeroyChamberol Ohio Is $157.7 mllllon for tlscalyear

Cmunercie.

.

1984.

.rrPA prci\'IIB federal flmdB for
traliiiDi and retralnlng prolll'llfM that wOJ prepare economlca11y dlsadvan~ and 1008 tenn
11111!111PkJYa1 youth and adulta to

Edwards used a slide to make his
presentation. The operator for the
JTPA In Meigs andGaiUaCwntles
1a the GaWa·Melgs Community

~~employment.

They are ntee'lll~UIIIOIS)ble to the
Private Industry Council, PIC, and
t'.11i1 SDA for tbe pm'tonnance
lltalldards aet down by ~ .
The III!I'Yice dellvecy area In·
eludes seven· countlel Edwards
stated. It' Is not a work~
P11111118ll but ratber a Joblll'alnln&amp;'
IJIOillm Edwards cmunented.

job

•
Tbenewpqraritbrlnpaf8dlcal
change trom put Jea111at1on. Not
only Is JI'PA dell~ to Jnerease
private lectllr partiCipation, but It
a11o places 1espopnalblllty for
faleral~equarelywlththe

state. Ulltbellntl'l81teltalthenew
federalllm Eclwardl Doted.
,I

'

~Aamcy.

,jl

c

E;dwards said 1,700 people were
re!eiTed but that only 400 will be "
accommodated. "We will choa;e
the best candidate, It Is our
responsibility to place half of the
people served" Edwards said.
"We are betting on a turn In the
econOn!Y til make the program
work," ' Edwards said. JTPA will
pay50percentofthegrosswagesup
to 38 weeks. The Private Industry
Councll will Identify needs or jobs
available. There are a lot ol .
opportunltles ,for private Industry, '
Edwards noted.
. "W4'wtn train people In whatever
lleld Is needed Edwards said. It will
not \\oork unless everyone cooperates. I assure you It will not work
without the coopei-atlon of prtvate
(Continued on page 14)

venswood, Kaiser Alurnlnwn and
Chemical Corporation President A.
S. Hutchcraft, Jr., said:
"Demand and pricing for primary
alwnlnum have Improved signlfi.
cantly In recent months. Those
facts, combined with the excellent
efforts our people put forth In
restarting Ravenswood's first potllne, are why we are bringing
additional capacity at this location
on stream now."
The Ravenswood plant was the
world's largest aluminum plant
when ltopenedln1955. Theplantwas
the largest single employer In
Jackson County, W.Va., wlthawork
force of 4.ll0 In 1981 before 2400
workers were lald off and its four
potllnes shut down. With one potllne
In operation the work force has
totaled 213J.

Predict additional rain
TUCSON, Am. (AP) - Flood·
weary Arizonans dug through
mud-caked debris and riot pollee
guarded a mlnlng town ravaged
both by ralnsandstrlkevlolenceasa
forecaster warned the "same song,
second .verse" could renew downpo~ tonight.
The fierce flooding, which left 13
people dead or missing and
hundrEds of mllllons ol doUars In
damage In Arizona's worst disaster
of the century, receded Tuesday as
the sun came out.
But swollen rivers continued to
rage out of control in some areas,

forcing evacuations and Inundating
previously untouched communities
southwest of Phoenix.
Added til the desert state's
troubles, the National Weather
Service said a major stcrm from a
Pacific hurricane could hit tonight,
bringing more heavy rains to
devastated southern Arizona .
Emergency-service workers began moving heavy equipment to
likely flood sites ahead of the storm,
whlle government and disaster~
relief officials assessed the massive
damage already s~~red. estimated at up to $D) mi!Uon by
Arizona legislators.

�·-

..
)

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio -~

Wtdnelday, Ot:tobw 5, 1983

·c omment

,_The

Fag•
Daily Sentillll
Pameroy-MidclleP"f, Qhlo
Wednetday, Ot:luber 5, 1983

I

Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio

a(:b .

Bm~ r-T"\...-,1...__,.....~=·~

~v .
ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
BOB HOEFUCH

G:eneral Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The :\ssoclated Press, lnl~nd Dally Press Associ a·
tlon and the American Newspaper· .P.ubllxher Association.
LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcorited. They should be le8s tha:n :100 words.
·loor. AllleUen are s-ubJect to edlt1n1 and must beslrned wUh name. address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. LeUel'!l should bt 111
sood -taste, addressing issues, not penonalltlf!!l.

.. . . "Q

iGreat for consumers,
:cruel for producers
• ·A competitive market can be great for conswners but cruel for ·
J&gt;roducers, wbo sometimes get into fights so savage they forgetwhat.lt's all
a!Xrut and succumb to exhaustion.
"A market is identified as promising, the gates of financing are opened
.and tbere Is almost instan1overbuildlng," says Charles Wingo of Lomas&amp;
'Nettleton, which calls itself the nation's biggest mortgage lender.
' ·• Wingo, spoke ~ntly about the construction of rental real estate, a ·
t;Juslness that every four or five ~ears leaves Its dead, dytng and bankrupts
·in the cellars of uncompleted projects.
.
.
But be could'have,been talking about several other basic Industries- of
airlines, computer manufacturing, banking or farming- all of which have
, ·c ompanies that are involved in life-death struggles. ·
'-- . Major airlines, such as Western, have sought and won wage concessions
from employees in order to survtve. Falling to obtain concessions,
Continental Airlines has sought protection to reorganize under the federal
bankruptcy law.
Others could follow. Eastern, said it may seek similar protection lf its '
workers turn down a request to cut their Incomes by 15 percent. Many
others are feellng the stress of costs.
· ·Deregulation of the industry, which has pennltied newer, smaller
airlines - many of them with relatively small payrolls- to pick off some
of the more lucrative rolltes, is frequently given as a major reason for the
problems.
· The impact of deregulation is now at work in banking also, as you can
determine from the signs in the window of your local savings Institution.
Freed to offer rates of their own choosing on certificates of deposit, rather
than rates dictated by regulators, banks have been thrown into competition
that could produce stress or even !allure on some of them .
Although the deregulation of CD rates bas oilly begun, many banks are
offering bonuses to those who open new accounts, some have installed
Jlotllnes on which collect calls can be placed, and almost all have raised
savings rates.
~
. Already, a record-high 597 banks are on the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. " problem" list, meaning they have serious difficulties that demand ~
close supervision, and the higher costs of deregulation could worsen that
figure.
Many farmers greatly overexpanded several yearS ago, in some
instances multiplying their acreage and equipment several times when the
· market for U.S. grains seemed unlimited. A U.S. grain embargo against
the Soviet Union, falling product and land prices and the rising cost of their
variable loans left many farmers with a financial dilemma and eventual
bankruptcy.
: A somewhat comparable situation seems · to exist in the computer
industry, where companies have been lured by an expanding market into
some of the biggest financial gambles of their lives, and bankruptcies
already are occurring.

Measure -o f status
In the Senate, status used to be measured bywhetber you had a private
hideaway office in the Capitol in addition to regular office space in one of
the adjacent office buildings. But now, all100 senators may soon be getting
this fringe benefit - and reporters covering the chamber may have to
move aside to accommodate them.
Staff members of the Senate Rilles Committee have come up with a plan
to squeeze dozens of new , unmarked offices into the Senate wing of the
Capitol. It's part of a scheme set In motion by Majority Leader Howard H.
Baker, R ·Tenn., to provide every member with his or her own den near the
Senale chamber.
The tentative plan would chop 100 square feet off the already cramped
Senate press gallery to make room for the new hideaway otflces.
lt comes less !ban a year after the spacious, $137 million Hart Senate
Office Building opened, providing office quarters for 50 senators. And just
last Week, the Rules Commltiee voted to spend more than $1 million for
new fumtture for Hart offices.
But senators housed in the Hart building- the most distant of tbe three
Senate office bulldlngs - began grumbling the day the bulldlng opened.
The elevators didn't work well. The subway to the Capitol often broke
down. It was a long walk to the Capitol. The rooms were drafty and the
acoustics were bad.
Baker's egalitarian promise of Capitol hideaways for .au seemed to
appease some of the most vocal Hart critics.
In past times, only the most senior of senators had tbe right to have
secret offices in the Capitol. But in recent years, more and more junior
members have been getting them. Those without them beganclanunorlng
for the same treatment.
Baker's decision to give everyone a Capitol nook might have seemed the
most even-handed way of dealing with the situation. But Capltolarchlte&lt;;)s
are having a hard time finding enough space In the historic building to
squeeze in all the new offices.
Baker's aldes Insist that giving everyone a Capitol office Is merely an
effort to allow the Senate to work more efficiently- eSpecially dUI1ng late
night sessions when there are frequent vdtes.
"!twas a long-range goalratherthan something that had tobedonerlght
away," one Baker aide sald.
·
Baker and Rules Commitiee Chairman Charles McC. Mathias, R·Md.,
are expected to meet this week with the architects to see H the plans for the
new oftlces can be redrawn to avoid sacrificing press gallery space to
achieve the one-senator, one-hideaway plan.

Today in history
Today is Wednesday, Oct. 5, the278thdayof1983. Thereare87daysleftln
the year.
Today's highlight In history: On Oct. 5, 19-17, President Hany Truman
asked Americans to forgo meat on Tuesdays and l!flll!l and c~en on
Thu-ys to bUDd up a stockpile of grain for Europe.
On this date:
In 1!!02, Olrlatopber Colwnbus discovered Costa Rica.
In 183l; the :&amp;t president ot the United States, Chester Artbur, was born
In Falr!leld, Vt.
.
, In 1921, the World Series was broadcast for the first time, wtt11 sports
Witter Grantland Rice.describing the IC!Ion.

Both 1978 and 19(lj tu~ out to be carriers in the United· States, only
fairly good years for the alrllnes. ~ have reported an operating
Then carne the stunning Increases profit for the first six montbs rt 1983
in the price of jet fuel. The.strike of - U.S. Air, Pan-American and
air controllers disrupted schedules, American. In this period, Eastern
The nation's economy tumbled Into reported an operating .loss of $36
·recession. The ln~stry bas been in million, Con_tinental a loss of $65
something close 10 a tallspln for the . milli9n, United a loss of $7l mllllon,
past three years.
. ,- ·
and Delta a loss of $132 million on
In 1978 the alrl4tes had their best top of a loss in 1982 of $86 million.
rate of return ever -12.9 percent
Whataccountsfortbeseoceansc:t
on their .domestic operations. Last red ink? Higher costs for fuel have
year their rate of return was 2.7 played a part, of course, but these
percent. Among the 11 major costs· have stabilized and even
declined. The two big factors are
low discount fares and high costs of .
-labor.
The destructive fare wars are a
direct consequence of the Deregula·
lion Act of 1978. Discounters have
provided competition with a ven·
geance. The major carriers are .
taldng · in about 11 cents per
passenger mile .. The fare-cutlets
are operating on revenues of 5.5
cents per passenger mile, and
many of the small carriers are.
making money on those tariffs.
Among the major carriers, labor
casts average roughly n percent to
38 percent of total outgo. (Fuel
takes 26 ~nt, ticket commls·
stons six percent, interest four
percent, and food - this figure tells
us something - three I)I!Jcent.)
Among the new non-union carriers
that have sprung Into existence,
labor costs are much lower. Muse
A1r of Texas, which tiles from
Houston to the West Coast, places It
labor costs at 12 percent of
operating expenses.
These are the governing factors
that led to Continental's dive Into
would keep us from maintainbankruptcy late last month. Since
let them get away with it."
January 1979 !be company had
posted losses of almost $472 mllllon.

WASHINGTON - The stoty Is new policies specific: Henceforth
told of an economist pondering a we would have " maximum resuccessful innovation. "It works in Uance on competitive market forpractice," he said to himself. "I ces and on actual and. potential
wonder how It works In theory." It competition." The idea was to
Is the ntp side of that proposition develop and maintain "an . air
that now troubles tho! alrllne tiitnsportation system relying on
industry so sorely.
. actual and potential comJl"'titipn to
Jimmy Carter slgnro the Airline · provide. efficiency, innovation ·and
DeregulaUonActflveyearsagothls low prices."
month. Conservatives were jubi·
In point of fact; the av11
Iant . Their most cherished theories
Aeronautics Board had been easing
of a free nlarketplace were about to Jts regulatory powers for some
be put into practice. The act made l)lontbs before tbe act was passed.

DEVOI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.M.&gt;\80:\' AREA

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

IMeet the Marauder lf!!!~~!m...n,.E,e!_~Pf~2.~~~e~. of Red~
..

Unfriendly skies_-'---__:_____J_ame_s-:-J_.K_il;:.._pa_tr_ick

The Daily~Sentinel

"They're trying to create a situation that
ing a cease-fire - but we're not going to

WASHINGTON- It's easy tO get
billions of dollars from Congress to
wage war or prepare for it. But\! Is
almost Impossible to squeeze a few
pennies out for peace.
_[or 28 years in the House and
Senate, Democratic Sen. Jennings
Randolph, a gentle soul from
Elktns, W. Va., has been trying to
establish a Peace Academy. It"
would train young Americans to
promote peace, just as the three
mlll!aJY academies prepare young
Americans to figbt when war
breaks out.
· It's an idea wbose time haS come
- .from sheer necessity. War has
become unthinkable In the·nuclear

age, but It may become inevitable
- unless we have the kind of skilled
negotiators who can protect na·
tional Interests without resort to
mllitary fon:e.
, As envisioned by Randolph and
co-sponsor Sen. Spark Matsunaga,
D-Hawali, one-fourth of tbe Peace
Academy's budget would go for
grants to universities and other
Institutions for historical research
on successful and unsuccessful
peace negotiations ot the past. This
Information would be gathered In a
central clearinghouse.
There is no such facUlty avallable
now. For example, anyone examin·
ing President Carter's successful

negotiations of the Camp David
accords between Israel and Egypt
must dig through the National
Archives and the personal memoirs
of the people involved. The Arms
Control and Disarmament Agency,
which might be expected to keep
such background information, ,has

none.

Critics of the Peace Academy
proposal offered my associate
Kathy McDonald ·some strangely
contradictory arguments. They
complain that establishment of
such an academy would be viewed
by the Soviet Union and other
nations. as a sign of pacifist
weakness.

The Peace Academy's budget
.would be modest indeed by govern·
ment standards: $7.5 million for the
academy's site, a $6 million
operating budget for fiscal 1984 and
a $10 million budget for 19!6. The
Pentagon spends more than this on
a tank or airplane that o!ten doesn't
even .work.

They also argue that foreign
governments would cynically regard tbe academy as nothing more
than a front for tbe CIA. Yet they
also insist that the CIA sbould be
Involved in tbe academy by lawor at least be permitted to be
Involved.

~~On e~erges__________L_~_e_ll~W_in~g~ett

No matter what you have called
Richard Nixon.in the past, you were
probably right. As long as you
didn't 'Call him dumb! He stU! has
the shrewdest analytical n1ind In
Republican politics and be proved It
when he testified before Henry
Kissinger's Commission on,Central
America.
Just tp bring you up to date, the
Commission on Central America
was appointed by President Rea·
gan to study the problems of that
region and suggest cures. It Is all
part of the Reagan pian for
government by commission, which
means coming up with a solution
the pubUc will buy and which wt11
get tbe president off the hook. 'fllere
are . now urnteen hundreils . of
commissions prodding, prying and
sifting through governmental records and red tape looking for
answers to the umteen hundreds of
problems for which the president
has no solutions. So far, I have not
heard of any commission reaching
a remarkable conclusion but It does
. give the memberS something to do
and keeps them out of tbe presl·
dent's liair. The Commtsston on
Central America Is such a body,
chairmaned by ex-Secretary . of
State Henry Kissinger.
Since Henry Kissinger and ex·
President Richard Nixon were once
as close as two peas In a pod, It was
only natural that Kissinger would
call on his old boss to be the
Commission's first boss. It was
Nixon's first appearance before an
official government body since he
was compelled to resign . the
presidency nine years ago. To give
the ex-president his Just clue, be
didn't hide behind flowery rbetorlc
or blame the Commun1.it5 for the
deplorable conditions In the reaJon.
He blamed the economy! He told
the Commllll9n In etrect that
conditions In the regloo would not
lmprow. untu the economy Is
stab0)7.ed. That Is the .&amp;me thing I
have been telling you since exof State Alexander Halg
lllld President Reaaan started
throwing thetr mllitary weight

only two classes, the very-rich and
the very poor. Let's take El
Salvador, for example. This little
country about the size of Massachusetis has five million penple packed
within its borders who earn an
average yearly income of a bout
$750 a year. About halt cannot read
or write. It Is into this r!lthole that
the United States bas been pouring
mllUons of dollars .the past three
years. That money bas not been to
help the condition of the very poor
but to prop up a government that
pays only lip seNice"to Its promise
of land reform and help for its
desperate poor. In El Salvador
most of the wealth and land are
owned by, 14 famllles and their
minions In the government and
business. The average worker Is a
farm laborer who makes barely
enough for food and shelter.
Rewards are slow _a nd sparse,
retribution for transgression swltt
and terrible. A society such as this
Is a natural breeding ground for
revolution or any form o1 government which promises relief for

'

I

Pennies for peace _______;____.t_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n

intolerable conditions. At the start
the Reagan administration,
Alexander Halg looked at condi·
lions in El Salvador and concluded
the Communists were to blame.
That look bas cost us mlllions!
It.is only good sense to admit ihat
money coming Into El Salvador wtll
eventually find Its way into the
pockets of the rich. It doesn't
matter H the money is u.s. aid or
payment for coffee beans, the rich
will be the beneficiaries. That's the
way It bas always been since the
days of the Spanish conquistadors
and wDJ stlll be another three or
four hundred years unless some
more sensible solution Is found. Can
the Kissinger commission find that
solution? I think not. In spite ofstarting on the right track with the
Nixon suggestion, they are Reagan
appointees and will not want to
come up with a conclusion that even
hints that the Reagan-Halg as·
sumption was wrong. It wouldil't be
good policy to leave the present
OCCUpa!\t of the Oval Office with egg
on his face to !allow the advice of a

discredited former occupant.
I admit I have never been an
ardent admirer of Richard Nixon. I
think he had !laws in his character
that prevented him from being a
great man. In spite of his resigna·
lion, history may place him well
above the average In presidential
performance. At least his mean
streak was not directed at the poor,
the old and dispossessed. 1am glad
to see him come out of bls
self-imposed solitude to gtve the
country th,. benefit of what be
learned as vice preSident and
president. Right now, sitting on the
edge of a nuclear abyss, we all need
every bit of help we can get. I am
· less Pleased with the emergency of
Herur Kissinger Into the limelight.
lean tseewberehecandoanygood
and where his manta for self·
aggrandizement can do greai .
harm. Henry Kissinger has been for
Henry Kissinger first, last and
always. It Is another case of Ronald
Reagan picking !be wrong man at
the wrong time.
.
At least, that's one thing at which
be's good!

af

The Daily Sentinel-Page . 3

.'

f" / 1

I

·/

General Manager Bob Howsam
reached back to 1976 for his new
manager, Vern Rapp.
· Rapp was busy building the Red!;
!arm teams at Indianapolis when .
theBigRedMachineoftbel970swas
dominating the National League.
The Reds fired Manager Russ
Nixon on· Tuesday aftEr the club
finished last lor two seasons in the
Natlonal League West.
Nlll'on Said he was "shocked" but
said he was looking for ·another

baseballjob~

· Rapp, in the rninors, managed

.

Eastwlck, Wlll McEnaney and
Louis because of his IWUtatlon as a
Doug Flynn.
stl:lct disciplinarian .
"IguessConcepclonandDrlessen
Rapp, whose playing career was
are the only guys left," ~d Rapp. all in the minor leagues, was a coach
Theothersdepartlldintradesorfree with theMontrealExposforthepast
agency duri~f the reign of Dick ..:five yeafs. He had retired Monday
Wagner, who "'filS "ired as president when Howsam telephoned him,
andgeneraln.aru. c~erthlsswnmer.
"I'd .s aved some ,money, made
TheRedsbrought!.fowsambackout · somegoodinvestments.Iwasready
of retirement.
to call it quits," said Rapp, 55.
Rapp had left the Reds organiza"I'm just delighted with this
tlon in 1976 when he felt he had no opportunity.
futurethere,andjoined.theSt.Louls .
"I sat ~d watched and cheered
Cardlnalorganizatlon.Hemanaged thisteamwhen itwonin1975and
there in 1977 and part of 1978.
1976, and I hope we can get things

R;;ti~;s .;;.;:r;~ firi~;-/re ~r~~~~~~i
GEORGE HOBSON
HO, 154 pound
Senior Guard

five-year tenure the team won a anybody."
CINCINNATI (AP) -Fired Reds
Oester was diSl'Ppointed at the
division title and had the best record .
pitching Coach Blll Fischer was
the
strlke-sboriened
1981
season.
firings
but hopeful about the new
in
philosophical and second baseman
manager.
"TheRedshavegoodpltchers.
We
Ron Oester was cabn about the
"I'm kind of disappointed. I
made millionaires out of a couple of
change In managers.
thought
Russ did a good job with the
pecple. Mario Solo's one of the best
Fischer, whowas·flredalongwith
thlrdbasecoachRonPiaza,became · pitchers In the game. They need a - young team we had. We impoved a
few more people and they'll be all lot from last season and we owe a lot
unemployed with Manager Russ
of t hat improvement to him. I don't
right."
Nixon on Tuesday.
"! thougbt Russ (Nixon) did a think what he said in the newspapers
General Manager Bob Howsam
helluva job with what they gave about a few players' peformances
named Vern Rapp as the team's
(Cesar Cedeno, Bruce Berenyi and
him. Pitching was not solely ihe
·new field boss.
problem. We were last In batting. If Frank Pastore) should have been
"I've been In baseball36yearsand
we didn't have a well pitched game, the reason for firing him. Players
this Is the first time I've been fired,"
can speak up in the media, so why
we didn't stand a chance.
said Fischer.
't the manager?
shouldn
"lean
walk
out
with
my
head
held
"I pick up the newspaper every
"They
shouldn't be In the major
up.
I
have
no
animosity
toward
day and see where people got fired
leagues
if
they can't take a little bit of
or lost their jobs; so I know I'm not
criticism,"
said Oester.
·extinct," he said.
"Russ
treated
everybody the way
Fischer noted that dUI1ng his
they should be treated. He didn't
shOw any favoritism towaraanyone
player , whether he was a 15-year
. veteran or In his first year. That was
· the type of manager Russ was , anll
the type of manager a young team
DANNY DAVI'!
should have.
5-11, 230 pound
"! don't know a whole lot about
Senior Tackle
him (Rapp). I try to judge a person
bywhati know andnotwhatlhear. I
.
won't form a opinion about him until
I meet him and play for hlrn.
I'm sure he's a smart baseball
/
man, orBobHowsamwouldn'thave
hired him," said Oester.
NEW REDS' MANAGER Vern Rapp, lonner manager of
the Sl. Louis Cardinals, breaks
. premier running back, Eric Penick. ,
Into a snille after putting on a
Penick had another super nlght
Cincinnati Reds' baseball cap at
against Hamlin. He rusbed for 191
NIXON -RWIS
Riverfront Stadium Tuesday
yards while scortng both Pirate
Nixon was fired as miUiapr ol
afternoon. Rapp was named tbe
touchdowns.
tbe Clncbmatl Reds Tuesday. He
new Reds' miUiager by club
Southern scored first, but was
will be replaced by Vem Rapp.
president Bob Howsam. (AP
later blitzed by the White Falcons.
(AP Laserphoto).
Laserpholo).
A Tony Riffle field goal broke the
scoring Ice before Wahama's of·
tense exploded for 431 yards._Don
H~

J . GRIMM
5-9, 110 pound
Junior End

In Central America, and this goes
for 11108t of the Latin countries

!hell! Ia DO middle clau such as ~

have in the United States. 'I'bereare

•

~PT 30 thru -OCT~
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY I

'

, RO~SISSON

11-8,

m pound

Sophomore End

---

SVAC teams begin
loop season :friday
After five weeks of non-leag~~e
games, action within the league
hegins this week In the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference. Play
gets underway with the defending
cbamplon North Gallla Pirates
hosting Southern; Southwestern
travels to Kyger Creek and Eastern

goes to Hannan Trace.
GolnglntoFrlday'sgames, Kyger
Creek and North Gallla recorded 3-1
·rnarb against nOn-league foes
while the Wlldcats and Tornadoes
had 3-2 records. Southwestern won
,_Its first contest of the year last
,weekend against Hannan's WUdcats while the Eastern Eagles
·remain winless.
·
Coacb John Blake's Pirates go
· "into Friday's game against South·
ern ·after defeating Hamlin, 16-Q.
Southern, meanwhile, lost a 33-10
battle with Wabama.
: In order to win, Coach Bill
Porter's Tornadoes must come up
with some way of stopping NG 's

I

·FRUTH PHARMACY

VanMeterputWahamaaheadto
stay
with a four yard run In the
second period.

OF.OHIO 1 INC •

Hannan Trace defeated Ironton
St. Joe on a 68 yard 'I'D run by Allen
Balley. Quarterback Gary Kirk
passed to PhD Batley for another
and Jeff Barnes scored the third
Wlldcatsixpointer.

786 N. 2ND AVE.

HOURS• MON.-SAT. ~.:00 TO 9:00

of~th;es~~onr!!;tof~

and Tim Burnette and thepassingof

S~e Pe~.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

*Hunting licenses
*Jackets
*Guns
*Ammunition

•

SUNDAY

rf:oo TO 8:00

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-31 06

rusbed

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON W. VA.

~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I

".

.......

.Teom 1.. .. .....•. .. ······ ............... ....0 8 14!9
,.,_ HICh series - Nationwide Insurance 1m,
• THin 4 I~ POmeroy Heolth Care Cenle£

1101.
• lillb 1une - PHCC 613; Team 4 «J!;
' Nationwide Insurance 5113.

HIKh game - RufUs JeweU 322 Marlene
, Wlls&lt;J1 111$180; Raymond Smith aMI-Dottle
- 1 6 1 ; Ru!wo Jewell 195 Thelma Osborn

. 119.

.

:: Hlib aert• -

SAT .• OCT. 8 .

,

Burnette
for 57Tim
yards
put who
the 1~
Hlgblanders on the scoreboaM with
a two yard run. Hannan made a
game out of It In the first baU when
Harry Farris boomed a 32 yard field
goal and the Highlanders were
stopped for a safety.
Southwestern's second 'I'D came
on a 17 yard pass from Pelfrey to "
w. L. Tolal · Roy McCarty then Burnette scored
from the three. Brother, Jim,
Pomeroy Heolth Care
collected
yards rushjlng in 18
!t~r..:::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~ ~= attempts. 107
Kyger
Crl!ek was Idle last
Natlonwkle! lnluranoe .............. .. ..4 4 17a&gt;
1'Nm t Pat HOI
weekfollowlngitsfirstsetbackofthe
, Ford ..... ................ .. .... ............ 4 4 1712
year two weeks ago at Minford.
Teom 6 .•........... ..•...................... 2 . 6 1431

Local bowling

COMING SOON! " WAR GAMES" &amp;

HUNTERS

Rufus Jewell 005 Marlene
' Wlllmllll; Raymoad SrnlthiWDolt!eNebon
··Gil; RDn Smith 443 Thelma OSborne 414.

SVAC Stuullnp
Te~~m

All

01

10

~-CJ•

.

c.....

WLP OP
Kyger Creek .............. ..•......... 3 I 82 :ll
North Gallla .... .. ...... ....... ....... 3 1 'Ill 58
Southern ....•..•... ....•...••... ...•.•. 3 2 . 96 58
Hannan Trace ....................... .3 2 '106 93Southwestern ... , ..................... l 4 4112.3
Eastern ................... ........ ..... o 5 6 167
Frldllr'• 1ama: Southwestern at Kyger
Creek; Eastern at Hannan Trace, and
Southern at North Gallta.

CASH

GET

..

I-JERE'S HOW TO GET $5.00 CASH EATING AT HOME, !ion, Contadina and other products, plus grocery store cash
Just look for our display in participating stores-and get register receipts in the amount SP.ecified. You'll receive, in
your official "It's Payday" refund form. Then, buy the the mail, a $5.00 cash refund. Refund ojfer expires Decemrequired Items and mail with proofs-of-purchase of Cama· ber 26, 1983. Limit: one refund per family or address.

'·

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No preservatives, no cholesterol.

For great tasting
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Z..ty, tomatoey,
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Italian plzaa Nuca.

Secretan:
around.

"I feel there is a need for a fresh
start with this ball club and Velll
·Rapp is the man to provide It,"
Howsam said. "He's a winner. His
record shows that."
Rapp took the Cardinals, a fifth
place team in 1976, and led It to-a •
thlrdplaceftnlshin19'i1. Hewontw.o
division titles in the AmerlcaJI
Association with Indianapolis tie&lt;tween · 1969-75, and was Minor
League Manager of the Year in 1976
when his l)enver team won thtl
American A ssociatio n
Championship.

1

•

Juot add water
to make thick, rich
Italian spaghetti sauce.

tomato tomato paste ..• ·
• ·•
no salt added .
0

.,..
•••

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adds llavor to your life

Rich, authentic tolnato· o•••ce~

''Well, It does get pretty slow sometimes, but what I like about It 1 the
job security."
.
s
- ··- ~-

'·

Ill YM SLLQIL-rr'S NYDAY"._ RIIM WL1I DITW IT

-

51'0115.

8

.

,

'

.

.

' '

..• • •
'

•

....
'

.. .
.' .

..

'

. r•

.,

.. '

...

�t

.

~~~!a•::~4~nw;
· ;· ~Da::ily~·:Se:n:H:·~~----~--------------------------~~~m:~:~~v::NU::'dd::le~po:"~·~Oh::io;---------------::----~------~~-----W8d_nnda
__~Y~·-~~~~s-,_1_~~ .

0-~

Kaff-kaff

•

· rn
· dnve
Sooner to· thwart Te'xaQ Longho
.

Q

.

0

0

·
·
·
·
By MaJor Amos B. Hoople
will flnd Missouri edging COlorado,
Plpldo Prophet
••t4; and SUrprls ing' and I d0
-""
Egad, !rlends, do I have a treat mean surprising, Kansas thumping
for you. My two nephews, Alvln and
Iowa State, 39-19.
Leander, wUI handle the forecast·
"In a trio of SWC contests, TCU
lng chore for this ' Saturday's will take Rice, 3:;.21; SMUwiiJgive
contests.
It to Baylor, 36-18,· and Houston wUI
The boys have been working hard · hang on to beat 'l'elli A&amp;M, 17-i4.
for the past several weekS, boning
,· "The Pac 10 race will get a little
up on the major elevens, studying shaking down as UCLA runs over
the charts, and digesting the outmanned Stanford, 40-20; Wa-·
statistics. They are raring to go.
shfngton whacks Oregon State,
And I assure you, from past 30-18; Oregon stlps past California
experience, they wut make the calls 18·13; and Southern California
witl&gt;'the usual Hoople excellence.
triumphs over Washington State,
Har-rumph!
17·14.
First wE''ll hear from Leander
"The other big one in my ·
whose forte Is tlie Midwest, Sou thw·
territory pits the Wyoming Cowest and· Far West.
boys against Brtgham Young. And
"Okay, Uncle Bulgy - @r - I pit the poor Cowboys having tO go
mean, Uncle Amos. We'll get rtght
lip against- the passing and running
to the game of the week, Texas
Of .the Cougars' Ali·Amerlca QB
against Oklahoma in Dallas. The Steve Young, who averages better
Texas Longhorns, pride of the SWC, than, 400 yards total offense per
vs. the Oklahoma Sooners, peren· game. Give It to BYU, 42-14.
nlal power of the Big Eight, In !he .
"The Big 10 elte should go as
Cotton Bowl. Anything can happen, follows: Ohio State 24-14 ~·er ·
,.,~
and- heh-heh- usually does. In 71
Purdue; Towa28-14overNorthwest·
prevlous meetings (the Longhorns . em; Michigan 24-17 over Michigan
have \Yon 46, the Sooners 28 and State; Iltlnots 28-14 over Wisconsin;
there bave been three ties.
and Indiana 14-13 over Minnesota."
"This time the Sooners, a slight
Thank you, Leander, for an
underdog, wUI upend Texas on the
exceUent report. Har-rumph!
·running of Earl Johnson and
And now we'll hear from Alvin on
Marcus Dupree, with some passing what ' s doing In the East, South and
help from the strong arm of QB Southeast.
Danny Bradley and thE' lightning
"All rtght , Unc1e AmOS. Th e blg
speed of wid.e receiver Buster
ones In the East match Alabama vs.
Rhymes. The-Texas attack; led by
Penn State, Florida State at Pltt
QB Rob Moerschell, will keep the
an d rugged Maryland against
Longttorns In the game. But when Syracuse.
"Ra p klns'
·
the ffnal wlllstle blows It will be:
Y er
Alabama Crimson
Oklahoma 24, Texas 21! ·
Tide wtll swamp ,Penn State, 35-21.
"Nebraska, meanwhile, will
The Florida State SeminoleS and
move a step closer to the Big Eight
Pitt Panthers game ls a ·toss-up title by knocking off Oklahoma
with our "hung'' bet going on the
State, 49-21, with Mike Rozier,
Se In I I win 33-28
•
·•
m 0 es 0
Uncle Amos' choice for the Hels·
" Maryland has too much for an
man Trophy, having another great
' Improving SyracUse club, and will
day. Other games in the Big Eight

.

·
win, 33-16. The same goes for the
Alr F OI'Ce WouC
.. h ShoUld S ink Navv
., '
32-24.
"The SEC race will move closer
to the day of declsi on wi t h a 11 the
favorites wining. My charts show
Florida over V«rderbllt, 31-17;
Georgia ow .V. " .isslppl; 35-10:..1
And Auburn 0"01' Kentucky, 30-24,
In .a real heart-stopper. Jerry
Claiborne has really got the
Kentu cky WUdcats mov ing aga i num·kumph.
"In sold-old Neyland Stadium
(91,249 FANatics) , thevlsl tin g Lsu
Tigers_ wlU roll over the .host
-"
'" 14· LSU. Jrn ows
1ennef(see y o1s, .,..
how to score.
"The ACC loop wlU find North
Carolina padding Its lead W It h a
49·16 whipping of Wake Forest;
North Carolina State w!U take a
narrow 21·20 victory over Georgia
Tech. Tough Clemson will shade an
f?QuaUy toagh Vlrglnla Cavaller
outfit, 28-21 . .(Don't be surpriSed If
that score comes out reverSed as
George Welsh has Vlrglnla playing
top-note~ football. )
"Elsewhere Boston College will
be poUshfngoff undermanned Yale,
33-12. The very good Miami' Hurrl·
canes will dUIJIP LoulsvUle 36-21.
Troubled Notre Dame gets a shaky
vote to edge South'Carolina, 24-10."
There you are, dear readers. The
boys offer their excellent choices!
And fcan ·vouch for each and every
pick. Har-rumph!
Now go on with the forecast:
Saturday, Oct. 8
Alr Force 32 Navy 24

Alabama 35 Penn S1 21 .
Arizona .40 Colorado St 10
&gt;\uburn 30 Ken tucky 24
BOston College 33 Yale 12
Bo'ston Unlv 14 Richmond 7
. Brigham Young 42 Wyoming H
Cent Michigan 17 E Michigan 15
Cinclnnat I 27 Temple 22
Citadel 24 VMI 7
Clemson 28 VIrginia 21
Conn~tlcut 38 Lehigh 20

,

·

O..lawace33 Massachusetts 28
Duke 28 VIrginia Tech 26
E Carollna 02 SW Louisiana 26
Florida 31 Vanderbllt 17
Florida~~ 33 Pittsburgh 28
Georgie 35 Mississippi 10
Gram bUng 19 Tennessee srs
Harvard 10 Co.ne117
Holy Cross 28 eo ugat• 24 .
Houston 17 T.exas A.&amp;M 14
IUi nols 28 Wisconsin 14
Indiana H Minnesota 13
Indiana St 35 Ball St 28
Iowa 28 Northwes torn u
Kansas 39 Iowa State 19

., 1

LSU
Tennessee
14
Ma ryl42and
Syracuse

33
16
Miami (Fia·) 36 Louisville 21
Mi a mi (Oh io). ~7 Kent St 7
Mi chigan 24 Michigan St 17
MISsouri IS Colorado 14
Montana 37 Weber Sta ·
Nebraska 49 Oklahoma
St 21
Nevada-Reno
16 Fullerton 5 , g
N Carolina 49 Wake Forest 16
N Carolina St 21 Georgia Tech 20
N Texas St 21 Georgia Tech 20
Notre Dame 24 S Caroli na 10
Ohio St 24 Purdue 14
. Oklahoma 24 Texas 21
Oregon 18 Cal!tornla 13
Pennsylvania 22 Brown 21
Princeton 36 Columbia 10
R~tgers 32 Army 8 ·
Sout hern Cal17 Washington st 14
San Diego St 44 Long Beach St 20
San Jose St 32 Fr.. no St 22
. SMU 36 Baylor 18
S Mlsslsslppl22 Mississippi
is
TCU 35 Rice 21
Texas
Tech 27.New Mexico 13
Toledo 24 Bowling Gre&lt;'n 21
Tulane 20 Memphis Stu
Tulsa
Mexico
UCL:A 35.
40 New
Stanford
20 St 10

st

American League playoff begins today
BALTIMORE (AP) -DanFord,
Baltimore's hobbling rtght fielder,
was theonly question markThesday
. as the managers announc~ their
lineups for the first game of the 1983
American League Championship
Series between the Orioles and the
Chicago Wtllte Sox.
Orioles Manager Joe Altobelli
said Ford, If healthy, would start
Wednesday's first ~arne of the
best-of-five series, despite being a
rtght -handed hitter facing Chicago's
LaMarr Hoyt, also a right-hander.

"Ford was our regular outfielder
during the last part of the season,"
said Altobelli, who platoons at the
other outfield positions. "We'll talk
to him tomorrow (Wednesday)
morning. If he's capalj[e, he'll

!

start."

Ford has been hampetedlby a sore
rtght foot, injured when he stepped
on a base In a game late In the
season. If be cannot start, then Jim
Dwyer, a left-handed hitter, will
play.

,...----Sports briefs....--...,
TENNIS
.BARCELONA, Spain (AP) - Mats Wilander defeated Lorenzo
Fargas 7-6, 7-5 In the first round of the 31st Count of Godo Tennis
Tournament.
1n other matches, Damlr Keretic beat Jose Garcia 5-7, &amp;-3, &amp;-3,
Guillermo VIlas downed Javier Soler 6-2, &amp;-4, and Andres Gomez
ousted Blaine WU!enborg 7-6, &amp;-3.
BRISBANE, Australia (AP) -Simon You! upset Kevin Curren
&amp;-3, ~. 6-1 In the first round of the GWA Tennis Classic. Meanwhile,
Mike Leach ellmlnatect John Frawley 6-3, &amp;-4 and Brad Gilbert ·
ousled Craig Wlttus &amp;-1, &amp;-2. ·
.
1n other opening· round matches, John Fitzgerald disposed of Ctllp
Hooper &amp;-4, 6-3; Pat Cash overcame Chris Johnstone !&gt;-7, 6-3, &amp;-2; and
Francisco Gonzale-z outclassed Brett Greenwood, &amp;-4, &amp;-4.

delptlla's John Denny, 19-6.
Steve Carlton blanked the
Dodgers on seven tllts for 7 2·3
lnnlngs before giving way to ace
rellever .Al Holland with the bases
loadedandtwoaway!nthebottomof
the eighth. Holland got. Mike
MarshaU to fly out to right to end the
Dodgers' strongest threat of the

game.
Jerry Reuss was the loser in the
pitchers' duel, allowing five hits
before going out for a pinch-hitter In
the bottom of the eighth. His
performancewasflaWedonlybythe
fastball In the first lnnlng that he
threw In Schmidt's preferred tlltling
area, low.and across the plate.
Schmidt said hewasn'tcertain the
baD was going to clear the
centerfield fence.
After Holland turned the Dodgers
away In the eighth, they had. one
flnal chanc;e for a comeback, when
Derrel Thomas reached first as
Schmidt booted his grounder with
two away In the hottom of the ninth.
Thomas stole second, but Holland
then got Greg Brock to ground out
and end It

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Note: If you chose 1 mill of lasSilf Vlhll ~ wifl be at 1'1
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(Offlf applies only to ovoninl dinner menu. I

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59

Transactions

80 CT. GLAD
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY EVENING

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, m.

RACINE - Last night In local
high school volleyball action defending SVAC champion Southern
trounced league toe Hannan Trace,
1!).3, 1!).0. The Tornadoettes of
Coach Suzanne Wolfe displayed the
championship form that has given
. them a perfect 1.W record and
aUowed them to move into the top 20
among Class "A" schools. Cur·
rently Southern Is ranked 16th in the
Ohio High School Volleybll)l
Coaches poD, which Is voted on by
coaches around the state.
In posting the victory outstanding
team play by tbe Tornadoettes
found every weakness In the
Hannall Trace line-up and Ukewlse
raced on to the victory unchal·
lenged. The win boosts Southern to
7.0 In leagoe play, putting Southern
In the driver's seat tor yet another
SVAC championship.
Amy LltUefleld led the winnerS
with 18 8el'VIng points, including aU
15 In the finale, giving SHS the 1!).0
shut out win. Karen Hemsley netted
nve points while Becky Michael
taUied tour .
Monday night Southern con·.
tlnued Its dominance with 1!&gt;-0 and
15-3 wins over · the Mlller Falcons.
Southern played perfectly In the
opener as Jenny Bentley paved the
way with a totalof15servlngpofnts.
Becky Michael and Laren Wolfe
added four and Sandy Harden three
for the winners.
In reserve action Southern
claimed two more matches with
triumphs over H. T. and MU!er. SHS
claimed 15-3 and 1!).8 wins over the
WUdldttens, then posted hardlought
15-3, 11·15, and 15-9wfns to claim the
match over M!Uer. Against Hannan
Trace Becky Adkins led the way
with eight ·pelnts, Rachel Reiber
added sevep, and Jut Nease six.
Robin Clagg had six for the losers.
In the Miller .contest Mandy Hut
. netted nine, Tammy Adkins tipped
In eight, Wendy Wolfe seven,
Rachel Reiber six.
Anita Spicer had s_even fqr MUter
and Amy Bragg six. Southern plays
at GaiDa Academy tOI)Ight, then
returns home for an SVAC match
with Eastern Thursday. Both
games start at. 6 p.m, Saturday
morning beginning at 10 a.m.
Southern travels to Athens for a
bout wi\11 the lady BuUdogs and
Eastern of Pike.

l!!!ll

HAM SANDWICH

.

'

WEE~

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

HTgals

I -

Sentinel-Page-S

STORE HOURS ·

Southem
defeats

Ohio

13 Weeks ................ ................. $15.21

easy.''

DAVE DUNN
8 FT. COMMANDER DISH

No s ubscri ptions by ma ll permUted In
towns where home rarrler service Is
available.

MULLEN INSURANCE

Parkersburg Soulh 20 Ripley 14
M.ilton 7 Pt. Pleasant 6
Wheelersburg 28 Minford l2
Coal Grove 26 South Point 13
Beechcrott aJ Logan 8
PoMsmouth 26 Jackson XI
Marle~:ta 14 Athens 6
Ironton 38 Gallipolis o

Although Schmidt and many of
the players on each side predicted
heavy hitting In the games ahead,
Owens.sald, "With the. pitchers the
two clubs have, there could be more
games like tills coming tip."
Game 2 could provide another
such pitchers' showcase, consider·
ing the talents of . the oll\X&gt;slng
hurlers.
·
Valenzuela has not been as
consistent as in the past, Including
his 1981 Cy Young and Rookie of the
Year campaign, but he has pitched
brilliantly at times. Denny, with the
league's best record and second·
best earned run average (2.37), Is
the leading candidate for this year's
Cy Young Award.
one playoff veteran, Phlladelpllla .
second basen'1an Joe Morgan, sees
the second game as the potential
ctlncher for the Phlllies.
" If we win It, with our pitching
there's no way they're going back to
Philadelphia and sw~ us in three
games," said Morgan, a longtime
Dodger nemesis. "Of course, beat·
lng them in Game21sn'tgofngtobe

month.

AND

We Reserve The Right. To
umit auantities.

PLAYER OF WEEK Shawn Eads, lHO, 161 pound
·senior tailback for the Meigs
Marauclers, has been chosen as
the Player of the Week by the ·
Melp County Jaycees;' Eads
scored two toucbdowns In last
¥Oeek's victory over \nnton
County.

Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
r ler may remit In advance direct to
The Daily Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 m onth
basis. Credit will be given carrier each

tlOWNING-CHILDS

County 14 RusseU' 13

HOCKEY
MONTREAL (AP) -The National Hockey League has failed in
Its bid to delay hearings by the Restrictive Trade Practices
Commission on how the league operates Its franchises.
1n a unanimous decislo!l, a three-judge panel of the Federal
Court's appeals division ruled the commission should proceed with
Its hearings.
.

Dally ................................. 20 Cents

w

Phils take orie game lead
in NL playoffs
-·-

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mike game against the Dodgers In the
Schmidt says the opening game of 1971 Championship Series, but (hey
the 19&amp;3NatlonalLeagueChamplon· came back to win thenextthree," he
stllps Is merely hiStory now, but the said. "Of course, being up by one·
Philadelphia Phlllles slugger gamelsmoretunthatbefngdownby
played lhe major role in Its making. one.
"The game means nothlng now
"I know the Dodgers are a great
except !hat guys wiD write about It baD club, and there's going to be
for tomonuw and we'll think about It some hitting before this series Is
for a couple of how-s before startlng through.".
to · thlnk about the next one,"
There was tittle hitting In the first
Schmidt said Tuesday night after he game of the best-of-five series,
homered In the flrst lnnlng for the which resumes tonight in Dodger
onlyrunlnPhUadelphla'sHlvlctory . Stadlwn with Los Angeles' Fer(1\!er the Los Angeles Dodgers.
nando Valenzuela, 1!&gt;-10 during the
"I remember we won the first regularseason,goingagalnstPhlla·

EAST MEIGS- Despite good
won JbC6 and 15-2 over SWHS, then
effortstheEastemEaglettevarslty · lostl!&gt;-10 and 15-12 to Meigs.
voUeyball team recently dropped
two matches with league foe
SoUthwestem and Melgs. Easte m
' The Daily Sentin;l
dropped 15-8 and 1!).7 games to the
(USPS 145-11!1)
Highlanders, then got one stop
,\. Dlvlsloil of Multimedia, Inc.
d
closer to Meigs but lost 15-11 an ..
'
.l.
•
Published every afternoon, Monday
15-10 contests. ·~
.,
through Friday, lll Coun Streeti' by the
Angle Miller· led Southwestern to
Ohio Valley Publishing Company · Mu!·
Its victory with six serving points.
tlmedla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohlo45769, 9922156. Second class postage paid at PoMU!er's elfort paced a well bal·
'meroy, Oh io.
·
anced attack that include&lt;! five
Member: The .Usoclated Press. In·
· point games ilY Chris Jeffers and
land Dally Press Assoctaton and the
in
fro
Jessica Elkins, and for po ts
m
American Newspaper Publishers As- ...
soclation, -Nat.lonal Advertising Repre- "'
Tanya Adkins. Leading Eastern
sentat!ve, Brcinham Newspaper Sales.,
were Lea Ann Gaul will! six points
733 Thlrd Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.
and Krist! Gaddis with four.
Another balanced attack and
POSTMASTER: Send address to The
....v..
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy,
great teamwork by Melgl; led nu~
Ohio 45769.
Marauderettes to victory over the
lady Eagles. Ruth Fry sparked the
•
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Kyger Creek 18 Southwestern 6
Hannan Traco 8 Eastern 6
Nelsonviii,.York 7 AJexande- 0
Belpre" Mm,.
Wellston 28 Fedeo'al HocklngO
Meigs 10 Warren Local i2
Trimble 24 Vlnt011 County 8
Rock Hlll48 Ironton St. Joe u
Fairland 20 Oak HW 8
Chesapeake 26 Symmes Valley 0

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1111.d Ron Plaza, coach. N~ Vern R@"

SALAD DRESSING ...... ~!~ .. 89¢
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TOILET SOAP ......... -.... ~~~~8-9¢
BEEN IE WEANIES~~~ 2/Sl.09
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1983

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Oct. a. 1983

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'

Wednesday, Octobet 5, 1983 -

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, October 5, 1983
•

Poge

Beat of the 'Bend

By BOB HOEFLICH
OVP Staff
The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club will be entertaining District
Governor Carl -Dahlberg, Wellston,
ai Its meeting on
·
It's to be a
special evening.
Rot ary . Annes
will be present
and the annual
loud shirt contest
wtll be held. The
District Go~ernor
meet
club board of directors at 5 p.m.
preceding the entire club meeting
al6. The meetings will be at Heath
United Methodi st Church
Middleport .

in

Surely someone out there can
help.
·
Robert Gilmore; Middleport busi·
ness man and a member of vtllage
council, has been commissioned to
do a painting of the old Carleton
. College which was located In
Syracuse. The painting will hang In
the present Carleton School.
The problem Is that Robert Is
working from one. old dilapidated
photo. Actually, he needs photos
and postcards which are in rela·
tlvely good shape If he Is to CQme up
wlth a realistic painting. U a nyone
c.an help, would you please contact •
Gilmore at 992-6128•
·

•

Lucille Leifheit Portraz and her
husband, Irving, are back from
living In Egypt for several months.
I'm sure from an earlier communi·
cation from Luctlle that she saw
really a completely different way of
life than she's used to. However,
you can a lways depend on Lucille to
cope.
As I understand it, Lucille and lrv
wtll be living In Athens County for
the most part and Lucille wlll not be
running again for t he Meigs County
Fair Board since residency Is a
requirement. The board will miss
LucUle - and won't we am
However, we'll be count!ng on
LucUle and Irv for frequent visits.
Athens Isn't THAT far away.
It's apple butter time again in
Meigs County and members of the
Racine United Methodist Church

Maxine Griffith is exhibiting
some excellent photo enlargements
of work done by her daughter.
Karen, at her office In Bank I. The
photograp hs are beaut ffully
fra med - nice work.

--......

Suzy Carpenter, a Meigs County
Key Alumni of Ohio State Unlver·
slty, Is urging all Ohlo State home
economics alumni to celebrate the ·
new college status at the annual
· alumni conference on Oct. 22.
Acting Dean Lena Batley wlll be
the keynote speaker for activities
which begin at 9 a.m. Formerly a
school of home economics, the
board of trustees approved th'"
change to a college status In July.
The Oct. 22 observance will
Include educational . seminars, a
tailgate style lunch served by.•
current students, and tickets to the
OSU-Michlgan State game.
Reservations go to Ruth CahlU,
133 Aldrich Rd., Columbus, Oh.
43214 by Oct. 7.
Good heavens! I made the
mistake of opening the "memory
drawer" at home. Now that's a time
consuming n;~ove but a really
pleasant experience. I hope you
have a memory drawer. If so take some time and reflect. It wtll
PIVbably make It easter !or you to
keep smlllng ...

Shumate reunion held

'
: The descendants of George and BUlle Jean Dawson, Phlllp and
Amanda Jordan Shumate met for a Mary Burton, Mary Davis, Susie,
family reunion on Sept. 4_ at the Leanna, Andrew, and Andrea
Gallla County fairgrounds .
Savage, Paul and Janet Pierce,
-Qld family pictur:es were brought Randy and Scott Pierce, Mason,
ruict shared. The oldest family , W.Va. Shawnette Cook, Kenna,
member attending was Etta Shum· W.Va.; David and BonnieRawland,
ate Conn.
Stockport.
. Others attending were Mr.. and
Ivan and Connie Shumate, David
Mrs. Dan Stidham, Joe and Sheila Shumate, John Shumate, Ray and
Stidham, Nicky and Ryan, Chuck Lill Cline, Mansfield; Aileen Royse,
and Connie Bradbury. Becky, Karl Niles; Franklin and Wandaleen
arid Mandy Brown, Jo)ln and Jan Glover, Sharon, W.Va.; Johnny and
Sanders, Carol Stidham, Gallipolis; Brenda York, Vicki, Kathy and
Larry and Gloria Jbhilson. Gina, Kelly, Nashville, Tent\.; Bruce,
Tahnee and Brady Johnson, Todd Tammy, and Christie Shumate,
Snowden, Rutland; Cheryl Roush, Leon and Joan Shumate, Bandy·
ArVU and Eula Elam, Ca rolyn town, W.Va.; Etta and Allen Conn,
Elam, Pomeroy; Cbnne Burton, Phyllis and Austin Cateron, Otlve
Middleport .
Hill, Ky.; and Calvin and Joy
Marl and Hazel Burton, Ray and Tinsley, New Castle, Ind.

INSTALLED - Chester King, left, of Meigs County, Will! the
Installing officer for a Meigs C!lunly team which lnslalled officers
recently lor the SUverton Grange 506, Ravenswood. On the right Is Keith
Ashley of near Pomei'OY who was Installed as master of SUverton

Grange.

·

AOVUTlSID ITEM 'OliCY

A unanimous vote to go on record against the Issue.
A final bill on the Improvement of
as opposing the NoVember Issue
the
Belleville Locks and Dam
allowing carry-outs for sale of
beautification
was paid during the
alcoholic bev~ages In Olive Townbusiness
meeting
conduced by Roy
ship has been taken by the
Reedsville Community Builders Hannum, president.
Members had a cookout and
, Club.
The vote was taken at a recent potluck supper preceding the meetwhich she was selected for . the
meeting oftheCiubheldatthehome ing. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
·SEOAL AJI-LeagueTeam, selected
of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead Hannum, Mr. and Mrs. Harllss
the outstanding rebounder, and the
Frank, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Myers,
most valuable player . She iSc also ·, following a lengthly discussion.
Members cited two major rea- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown, Mr.
active as a senior class officer and
sons· for their stand - lack of Jaw and Mrs. Warren Pickens; and Mr.
varsity softball.
and Mrs. Whitehead. The October
enforcement
In the area, and
For the creative and performing
meeting w11 be held at the home of
making
alcohol
too
readily
accessiarts division of the program she will
Mr.
and Mrs. Denver Weber.
ble
to
the
youth
In
the
community.
present a skit.
Miss Riebel is active in the
Members also expressed the need
marching, concert and pep bands, of llrganlzed efforts of community ~----------­
treasurer of the band council, on the
organlzatins and churches to work
yearbook staff, and a member of the
National Honor Society at Eastern
High School where she is a senior:
Mrs. Kenneth Turley and sons
Active In 4-H for many years, she
attended the Turley reunion at
has served as a camp counselor for
Hurricane, W. Va . Sunday, Julyl7,
two years and was the 1983 Meigs
also a nother famfty reunion at
County Fair queen. She will present
South Charleston the week before.
a flute solo for the competition.
Mrs. Edna Deem returned from
No advance tickets wtll be sold
this year. The program is sponsored Veterans Memorial Hospital and
by the Southeast Ohio Junior Miss, went with her qaughter, Louise
Jackson, to her home in Belleville. ·
Inc.

lecl! ,.t thoto _._,.,,__, ltemt It r-.W'ire.. .. ~ ,.,....,.~

•••u.. ,., ,.._ '" . .-ch

The 13th annual Wood reunion
was held Sept.ll at the.Forest Acres
Park.
Prizes were won by Anna
Haliday, Marcella Steward, K. C.
Welsh, Weber Wood, Donna Davidson, Emma Cline, Joey and Teresa
Wade, and Shawn White. Oldest
m ember attending was Weber
Wood, 89, the · youngest, Shawn
White, two, and the one·coming the
farthest, Bernice Kelly Francis of
Winchester, Va.
Officers elected were Ivan Hall·
day,. president; Michael Folk, vice
president, a nd Jean Wood,
secretary-treasure~.

Attending were Mr . and Mrs. Leo
Davidson, Donna, Wilma and Anna,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman WUI, Ru·
!land; Anna, I van and Alan Haliday,
Dexter; Peart' Chase, Chauncey;

Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Welsh, Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Wood and Ronnie,
Mr. anc:J Mi-s. Weber Wood, Mr. and
Mrs.V!rgll King, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Wood, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Woody Neese, Rogersvtlle,
Tenn.
Elma Harris, Emma Cline,
Yvonne Wade, Teresa and Joey
Wade, Springboro; · Marguerite
Frank, Lloyd Bolin. Kenneth and
and Marcella Steward, Bernice and
Warren Hope, Hazel Chesser, John
Cotterill, A!hens; Marlene and
Ralph Coleman, Harold and Lllllan
Boggess, Columbus; Loretta and
Calvin Huron, Grove City; Bernice
Francis, Winchester, Va.; Jackie
Wilson, Michael Folk, New Lexington; Eric, Mark and Sharon Wblte,
Pomeroy; andPaulStephens,Leon,
W.Va.

·

.nw

r

s

Army National Guard Pic. Kent
C. Yonker, son of Danny L. and
Charlotte L. Yonker of Mason,
W.Va., has completed basic train·
ing at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
During the training, students
received InstructiOn In drUI and
ceremonies, weapons, map read- ,
lng, tactlca, military courtesy,
mWtary 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 private II a 1971 graduate of
Wahama HJall School, Mason.

'I

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l••rrthint you tlur •t 1Cro1•r I• t"'•ref!f.... for your tet.l
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.,

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MON.-SAT. 6:3G-10~
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STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Thurs.-Sat. 9-5 POMEROY. OHIO
Friday 9-8
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j

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~

'

. I

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I

Zirkle family association meets

Try Our. ....

•

4or• · Otll., ono ••ndor co.,.pon will N .cce,t.4 ,., lt.,..

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING

Mrs. Karen Werry and Mrs. Sue 50 mile tour of early Zirkle
Hager recently spent a weekend in farmland, the first Zirkle homesite,
~~ the Shenandoaha Valley of Virginia
Adam Zirkle's grist mill, several
where their ancestors ·lived before ·family cemeteries and churches,
moving on to the Ohio !Uver Valley. tile battlefield of New Market, and
wlth "He Keeps Me Singing'' and
They were there especially to . the grounds of the Endless Caverns
prayer by the pastor. Lenora,
attend thef!rstannualconventlon,of which were once Zirkle land.
Dorothy and Michael Leifheit sang the Zirkle FamllyHistorlcal Associ·
Through the !{ears the original
" He's Still Working on Me", and
atlon Convention held at Harris- spelling of the family name,
other music Included "Ever Gentle,
b urg, va., on Sept . 23 and 24.
. "Zekkel" has been changed to over
Ever Sweet" by Michelle Folmer,
The schedule of 'events included
twenty different spellings with
"Just A Utile Talk With Jesus" and banquets both evenings wlth
"Circle" being one. Sixteen states
"We're Not Strangers Any More" · speeches on German Immigration
plus Korea were represented.
by the choir. Sally Radford had a
andearlyyearsoftheorlgnalZerkle
Nwnerous books, tapes, charts,
solo, "There'sSomethlngAboutthat famll
and family heirlooms were on
Name", Tim Sloan also sang, and
A ~tortcal bus tour was the display.
· Angle Sloan had a-plano solo. There highlight ofthe trip. It consisted of a
was also a reading, "God's Super· fr~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~;;1
market" by Harold Blackston.
Accompanists for the day were
Corrlnelfuger,Lou!seRadford and
Lenora Leifheit.
'
Helium !lied balloons were released following the afternoon
program.

-·Yonker
completes basic

~. and Mrs. Harley Smith were
recent callers of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith.
'
. '
A recent Sunday after church at
Zion theY had a surprtse birthday

celebration for Mrs. Iva Johluon
and Lincoln Russell. Refreslunellts
of cake and Ice cream wete SeiVed.
Cards and gifts were given. ~­
Johnson will be 90 years Sept: 14
and her brother, Mrs: Russell, will
be 87 years Sept. 12. The cakes were
made by Mrs. Johnson's nieCe,
Sharbn Barr.

J0"''

J!..ock Springs church has raily
· Music, recitations, special recog·
nitton for Betty Leonard Conkle,
longtime secretary-treasurer ofthe
Sunday s,hool. and a carry-in
rally
dinner at noon highlighted the r1n
day program at the Rock P gs
l1nitf9 Methodist Church Sunday.
; Finger plays were gtven by the
nursery classes of Mrs. Leona
Lellheit during the Sunday shcool
hOUr. Taking part were Mike
Leilhelt, Jesse Little. Amber Black·
stan, Tamara O'Dell, and Bradley
Walker.
: Recitations by the primary class
taught by Judy Humphreys were
given by Brian Walker, "A Wei·
come", and Dorothy Leifheit,
"Rally Day News. "
.
Suzanne Richmond, teacher,
presented her class, the mlddlers
with recitations, " His Day" by Dale
Eblin, "My Prayer" byTracl E biln;
"Learn at Sunday School" by
Mandy Eblin, "My Heart" by
Danny Folmer, Sunday Schoo!" by
Chris Sloan; and "No Empty Pew''
qy Josh Bartels. Bookmarks were
(lven to those attending by Mr. and
~rs. Clifford Jacobs.
·· 'A potluck dinner was held at noon
ioilowing prayer by the Rev.
Richard Rothemlck. The afternoon
jxpgram was dedicated to Betty
t.~onard Conkle, secretary1fe8Surer of the Sunday School for
several years. She was presented a
gift from the church by Harold
Blackston. Jay leader. AppreclatiOII
was also extended to her husband,
James Conkle.
afternoon program opened

Iva John.lon was Wednesday
overilight guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley E . Johnson.
•

.

~.
.,.,., .._,. .
''"lflcell' ltet.4 '" th lt e4. M we 4e ""' evt .. •"
ollf.,ortlte4 Item •• will oHer fOil
c..ok• .t •
com,oroltlo ltom ........ o111olleatlo . r..ledl"t the .. ,..
towll'llft or o rol"ch..:• whkh will oatltle 7011 to pvrdtOM
tho o.t ... ortlt.d ltom ol tho o4vortlt.4 'rico wtftllft JO

Route 7
Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
667-6485

Wood reunion at park

Wolfpen News Notes

0.

Reedsville Community Builders
will oppos~ alcohol sale issue

Perso-nal note

saved -their own ljOeds from _one
year to the next.
The tomatoes" have always been
big, but this year were the biggest,
a8 were the vines on which they
grew.
·
'
In fact, the plants grew so high
that It look a sU!p ladder to reach
them so that they could be tied for
the third time.
AndtheBrog!IJIS' goaltor'84-to
raise three. pounders!
Now ·that's about the stze of a
How Ill« Ill It? Two pouncltl,
1
dinner plate.
three OUIICe&amp;

.

J1:1nior Miss competition·
scheduled for OCt:. 22 ·
Ten Meigs County High Sch~l
senior girls will be competing for
over $1400 In cash scholarships,
sa vlngs bonds and gift certificates
during the 1984 Meigs County Junior
Miss Scholarship Program, Oct. 22,
at Southern High School beginning
at 7:30p.m.
The !lrst two entries are Jennifer
Ellen Mead9ws, daughter of Dan
Meadows, Middleport, and Ina
Meadows, St. Petersburg, Fla.; and
Pamela Dawn Riebel, daug hter of
John and Glenna Riebel, Baum
Addition Road, Pomeroy.
Mlss Meadows Is a member ol the
National Honor Society, on the
student council, In the pep club,
Spanish club, Fellowship of Chris·
tian Athletes, an office aide and
- member of the yearbook staff.
She was recipient of the Danforth
Award her junior year, and plays
varsity volleyball and basketball in

'

Now that's big!
A tomato welgliinf tWo p(,unds,
three ounces, picked from a vine
that grew nine feet, lllnches tall.

Keith Ashley of near Pomeroy group during the meeting, having
was recently Installed' as the new Just completed a three year termon
master of Silverton Grange 506 at · the exi"C\\tlve committee. During
1 .
Ravenswood.
her last year · she served as
An lnsiallatlon team from Meigs chairman. of that .c ommittee. She
County installed all of .the offie&lt;!_rs was also appointed to be commun· ·
for Silverton Grange and·the group tty service chairman and deaf
consisted of Chester King, Installing ·activities chatnnan her second
officer; Opal Dyer, marshall; year.
Carla RUe, regalia bearer; Kevin
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley will -be
Napier, emblem bearer. Silverton serving 'as delegates to the West
Grange served a potluck meal VIrginia State Grange annual
before the Insta llation with session to be held Oct. lJ through
member.,s of the teain as guests. Oct. 16 and each win serve In
Ashley has been serving. as the ·various capacities. Ashley will be
Silverton Grange overseer, legis1a- · serving as state legfslatlvedlrector,
tlve agent ~ nd agriculture state pianist and master of tbe
chatnnan.
Degree of F1ora and Mrs. Ashley
. Keith's wife, Emma Ashley, was wtl) be serving as a member of the
Installed as Flora of the Silverton state lecturer's committee.

will take to thelr large open kettles
on Oct. 12 and 13 to produce the
tasty product.
Peeling will be done on Oct . 11
and everybody (rom church is to
turn out for that.
The first batches ofapple butter
will be avatlable at the church after
5 p.m. on Oct. 12 a nd purchasers
•
can go there for It from 4 to 8 p.m.
and from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m . on Oct.
13. The apple butter is $2 a pint and
$4 a quart wlth the church providing
containers.
A}ld - I possibly. ought to alert
you t)lat t he next visit of a ·
bloodmobile- to Meigs CountY wUI
be from 1 to ·5:30 p.m. on
Wednesday, Oct. 19. The location
wUI be at ·the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center.

6

Grange installs officers

It's apple butter time

The summer drought certainly
didn't affect John and WUda •
Brogan Sr.'s tomato patch on their
rural acreage .back of Dexter.
Of course, they admit that they
did have to water It almost every
day to get UJe growth.
The Brogans ·had 19 tomato
plants In their garden this year', to
of the pink variety and nine of the
yellow.
,
Twenty-eight years ago they got
seeds from Bill Brooks of Letart, W.
Va., and every year since then have

A tomato
grows big
iri Meigs
.

The_Daily Sentinei-Pog.e 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

INTHEDEU .

Sugar River
·Polska Kielbas.sa

Country Club
Ice Milk

'h·Gal.a
Cfll.

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Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

.Wednesday, Octobet. 5, 1983

-

Wednesday, October 5, 1983

Pon~)'-Middleport, Ohio

Family Medicine ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

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NO ITEMS WILL BE HELD BACK AT RUTLAND-FURNITURE$

Nat unusual for heart ·to skip beat occasionally
By Edward Scbreck, D.O.

A'IIetant Professor
of Famly Medicine
Ohlo Ualverslty Collee:e

of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: Sometimes I think
my heart Is ·beating dltferently
lrom normal. Can you tell me more
pout heart rhythms?
' · ANSWER: The
hUman heart normally · beats 60. lOO times per
minute and over ·
'Jl' day's t!nne t!&gt;e
-heart pumps an
·
:equivalent of 2,00J ·g-ru!ons of blood.
:· ::Usually the heart. beats very

rhythmically but It Is not unusual
for It to skip beats or to have an
extra beat every once In a wh!!e.
Electrocardiograms of people who
have no heart disease at all
sometimes show 100 or more extra
or abnormal beats over a 24-hour
_period.
The heartbeat Is controlled In two
generallociitlons- In the brain and
In " pacemaker" sites within the
heart Itself. The$&lt;! pacemaker sites
are connected with each other and
with the cells oft he heart. There are
four chambers to the heart. The
Impulse for the heart to heat begins
In a pacemaker site located In one
of the right upper chambers of the

heart . This site CQntrols the
rhythms and rate of the heartbeat. .
For the heart to beat properly, all
segments of the heart must receive
the electricill !nnpulse or signal In
the proper sequence.
The brain affects the heart rate
by detecting very minor changes In
the level of oxygen, carbon dioxide
and various chemical substances In
the blood and then directing
lmp~lses to the heart to change the
rate of beating.
·
QUESTION: What causes trregular hearttfeats and how .are they
treated?
·
ANSWER: Irregular heartbeats·
can have many causes and there- ·

fore need to be tully Investigated so quickly and Intensively. They ru:e
that treatment may he Initiated. A • sertous beCause they prevent the
disease process like hardening of
heart from pumping sufficient ,
the arteries can affect both the
amounts off blood to the rest of the
blood supply to the heart pacebody.
maker sites creating an abnormal
They frequently occur following a .
heart beat.
heart attack or some other serious
Atrtal tnbrlllation Is a common problem such as congestive heart
Irregularity of the heart .rate 1n
failure. These disorders usually
which the top chambers of the heart
require that patients he connected
beat much faster· and out of
to heart monitors In Intensive care
sequence with the bottom
centers and receive Intravenous
chambers. This ts treated by uslng
medications.'
•
drugs and sometimes by electrical
Sometimes arrhythmias don't
shock to t~ heart.
re.;pcnd to medication or electrical
Ventricular arrhythmias - ir- shock. Certain of these cases may
regularttle8 of the ventricles .or
lower chambers are life threatening and must be treated

The Brotherhood of the First
· Southern Baptist Church held a
prayer breaklast recently at
McClure's Three ln. One In

.

WEDNESDAY
NEW HAVEN W.Va. -A
'reytval wW be held at the New
Haven Church of the Nazarene,
312 F1fth St., · New Haven,
Wednesday through Sunday,
· with services at 7 p.m. nightly.
~ The Rev. Lloyd Johnson wllJ be
: the evangellst, and the Rev.
: Glendorl Stroud Is pastor. Sun· day school Is 9: ll a.m., and
~ morning worship at 10: ll.
·
. : MIDDLEPORT _ The Mid: : dleport Literary Club wllJ meet
: : Wednessilay at 2 p.m. at the
• home of Mrs. Charles Gaskill.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace wt11 re· view, "The Vineyard of the
: Lord" by Helen Steiner Rice: .
· Members wtll respond to roll call
: by giving a Rice quotation or
: poem. Dues of$4 wU be collected.

payable. Officers are to wear
street length dresses.

FRIDAY
RAQNE- The Racine Firemen's Auxiliary wW hold a soup
supper Frtday with serving to
begin at 11 a.m. and continue
through the supper hour. The
menu wW Include homemade
vegetable · soup, homemade
bean soup, chill, cornbread,
chicken salad sandwiches, ~es­
serts and beverages.
SALISBURY 1WP - Sallsbury Township trustees wllJ
meet Frtday, 7. p.m. at Rock
Springs Township Hall. The
meeting Is open to the public.

THURSDAY
: MIDDLEPORT - Regular
·:meeting of Evangeline Chapter
: ·112, Order of the Eastern Star,
wllJ be held at 7: ~ p.m.
Thursday at the Middleport
. Masonic Temple. New officers
will be elected and dues are

.

WAHAMA - Wahama AthletiC and Band Boosters wllJ
sponsor a homecoming spaghetti dinner, Friday, 4: :lJ to 7p.m.
In the high school cafeteria.
There wW be a charre for the
dinner.

Happenings

Special services set for Joppa Church
·,
'
I
·•
,

Po~J~eroy.

Jim Whlttatch, brotherhood director, will he 1n charge of planning
monthly breakfasts and using guest
speakers as highlights of the
program. Pastor David Hunt led In
the devotions and spoke on work of
the missionaries.
Next meeting will be held on Qct.
23 at the same place.
Attending were Jim Whitlatch,
· Da v!d Hunt, Sonny Mcaure, Bob

f

PRE!IIDENTS - June A.shley, president ol lfle Melp County
Genealogical Society and Robert Cunning, president of the Ohio
Gellealoglcal Society, confer tlwtng lhe recent visit of Cwmln&amp; at a
meellng of the local poop.

.

Calendar

POMEROY - Special servi- ModdesUt For homecoming
. ces to culminate with a home- Sunday there wW be a carry-In
coming on Sunday wW be held at dinner with the afternoon pro;the Joppa Church this week.
. gram tD be by the Gospel Boys of
· · On Wednesday the speaker Parkersbutg, the Search Ught
•
.will he Eric Starn; on Thursday, of ~ville and the North
· :Mike Pooler; on Frtday, Chris Bethel Choir. Those attending
·Leeson: and on Saturday, Roy are asked to take lawn clialrs.

FURNITURE 'SALE
'

Don't Miss One 'Of The Greatest .Sales Events In Home Furniture History•••••
BRASS

HALL TRE.ES
Reg:
. •4·- aoo
~29~
~ow .
·

, 8 PrECE WOOD
GROUP

Brotherhood prayer breakfast · · ·
conducted in Pomeroy restaurant

-Wingett engagement
.~McKnight
: Miss Barbara Jean McKnight

education at the Unlv!!tslty of
and James Duncan Wingett are Tennessee at Martin where she was
.announcing their engagement and a Little Sister of Alpha Kappa Psi
- 1orthcomtng marriage. .
business fraternity and was Swee· • Miss McKnight Is the daughter of theart for the 1981-82 year. She Is
Mr: and Mrs. Robert Pugh and the employed with Schumacher Mort·
late BUly McKnight of Frtendshlp, gage Company In Memphis.
Tenn., and the groom-elect Is the
Wingett, the grandson of Mrs.
.. son of Mr. · and Mrs. WWlam E. Wallace F. Duncan · and the late
; Wingett of Union City, Tenn. ·
Wallace F . Duncan of Union City,
: : The open-church wedding wtll and Mrs. Eleanor Wingett and
r
taJ&lt;e place Oct. 8 at 4 p.m. In the Lowell F . Wingett of Syracuse,
Friendship United Methodist· Ohio, Is the 1978 graduate of
Church with a reception imme- Westview High School In Martin.
diately following In the fellowship
He received a bachelor of science
hall.
degree In business admlnlstration
She Is the granddaughter of Mrs. at UTM where he was a metnber of
Rubye Prescott and the late Harry the Alpha Kappa Psi business
Prescott of !\lamO, Tenn., and Mrs. Ira ternity of which lie. was presil,una McKnight ahd the ·late Will dent and vice president.' He Is
McKnight of Dyersburg.
employed as a money market
.A 1978 graduate of Friendship analyst with Union Planters NaHigh School, she received a bache- tic&gt;nal Bank In Memphis.
lor of science degree In elementary

be treated by implanting manmade pacemakers. ·sometimes
theSe Implanted devices are necessary only on a temporary basis unt!!
the heart can re-establlsh Its own
113tural rhythm. In other ~ases the
patient receives a permanent battery operated Implant.
Disturbances In heart rhythm -a re
·among the most common forms of
heart disorders. Frequently !bey
havenoserlousmedlcal consequences. Nevertheless, you sbould ask
your qoctor about them so that the ·
causes of your symptoms can be
determi{led.
· •

Meigs Genealogical group
has yeafs first meeting

Mills, Jack Needs, Jeff Needs,
Duke Kennedy, and Keith Ashley.

P;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
1

Don't dell•y! H11ry In right no~l W."&gt;t• made a spec1al
arrangement witt! the manulactur•r so ltlll we could bnng you
thiS tremendOus FREE de1k. Choose your new lurniture tram the

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

IN ANTRON NYLON VELVET

8Ktrtllig seleCtions bEllow and you'll take hOITit ~authentic hand
cralled 1reasure !rom Rrverside- the most respte1ed _
.
manufacturer or desks fer 1he hOme

SYRACUSE, OH.

8 PIECES

Fall Hardy Mums - Assorted Colors

6" -$1.50 . 8" -$2.50

REG. $1200.00

Also Fo~age Plants and Cactus
OPEN MON.-SAT. 9 to 5
Closed SUndays
PHONE 992·5n6

OR'

MEN'S LEE OR LEVI JEANS

$5 Off

Sofa, Chair, Rocker,
2 End·Tables. Cocktail
Table, 2 Lamps:-" .

Receive a FREE Riverside rolltop desk
when you ~rchase all¥ ofU1e lovely
home furmshlngs shown tielow

With Coupon

PREWASHED &amp; NON-WASHED

· Reg. 118.99 to 120.99

18 99

Sale Priced S

WITH THE PURCHASE OF A BEDROOM
SUITE, DINING ROOM SUITE OR LIVING
ROOM SUITE S~ECIAUYMARKED FOR
THIS SALE RECEIVE AFREE ROLL TOP
DESK.

TO $1599

CHar Good T1vu Oct. 8, 1983

55

..
and will be' a combination of two
Immigration and migration were
Issues.
the topics of Robert Cunning,
Emma Ashley, program chairpresident of the Ohio Genealogical
man, presented the speaker. June
Society, when he spoke at the first
Ashley, president of the. Meigs
meeting of the new year of the
MIDDLEPORT
County group, presided over the
Meigs County Genealogical Society
meet~.
held at the Meigs County Museum.
~his talk,Cunnlnges~tally ;-------------------~~--------------------------------------~
concentrated on the ethnic groups
and the paths these groups took to
arrive In Ohio.
·
A professional engineer and
surveyor, Cunning Is currently
serving his third terrn as president
of the state society. He Is a llfe
member of the Ohio Society and has
been chosen as a fellow for his
outstanding contribution to the
organization. He Is a member of the
First FamUles of Ohio, an honorary
group of the Ohio Society recognizIng descendants of early Ohio
pioneers. He Is a llfe member of the
National Genealogical Society.
· Duling the meeting, it was
announced that the local society has
acquired two new additions to the
library. They are Way's Packet
Directory, 18481983 which des·
crlbes the various packet boats that
traveled on the Ohio River, and
Marrtage Records J.B03.1850 Gallla
County, Ohio. The society Is also
planning to acquire a book on early
marrtages of Washington County,
Ohio, which Included Meigs County
before 18m.
Keith Ashley, correspnd!ng secretary and newsletter editor,
announced that the next Issue of the
newsletter Is nearing completion

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

·coFFEE AND END TA
Pine Finish

WUson b;&lt;m Mrs. Weber.
"The calllng committee also . re-

$

8 8 OO

Set Of Three

BEDS
AU

Reduced

RECEIVE A FREE ROLL TOP DESK OR ASEALYPOSTUREPEDIC
MATTRESS, FULL OR QUEEN SIZE- VALUE OF S600.00.

STARTING AT

HIDE-A-BEDS
$

39995
.
AND

Charming Colonial
for Day and Night
UP
comfort

With Innerspring Mattress

Includes Mattress and Ladder Complete

RECLINER
WEEK
LA·Z-BOY

(Ottoman Option~!)

RECEIVE A FREE ROLL TOP DESK OR ALA-Z-BOY RECLINERs400 VALUE

SWIVEL

ROCKER SALE

.,-

1.0 99

The Meigs County Christmas Dower
show was announced for Dec. 3 and

4.

ceived glftsft:ml the president, and
Janet Connolly pxesented Mrs.
Weber with a gift trcrn the otJicet: s.
A report was given 6ll the Shade
Valley flower show at Che_sterwhlch •guest attending received a hOrne,
was attended by Mrs. Weber and made Halloween favor. For the
Mrs. Balderson. A blue rlbbon October meeting, theclubrnembers
arrangement made by Debbie plan to have a dinner party.
Weber tor the show was on display.

NOW

BUNK

program.
Speaker will be Dr. Hubert
Wllhe!nn, professor of geography at Ohio University. His
topic will be migratory patters
affecting early Meigs County.
The meeting Is open to \he
members and the publlc ..

Devotions using fall as her topic
wwereconducted by Mrs. Williams,
and members responded to roll call
by nanling their lavortte ornamental tree.
The program on ornamental trees
was pi'esented by Marlene Putman
and Margaret Grossnickle, using
material from a book by Jerry
Baker.
Games were conducted by Margar£\ Brown and Pauline Myers
with several wtnntng prizes. The
doorprlzewenl to Mrs. Weber.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mary Grace
Cowdery' Delore$ Frank, Cathy
Spencer, Nola Young, Debbie
Glllrore, Lll)1an Plckms, and Kay
Balderson. . Each member and

Reg. 1 199.91
· Per Set

•

._Riverview garden meets
The Riverview Garden Club voted
-.• al its September meeting to oppose
""tQe selling of alcoholic beverages In
Oll've Township, an Issue to be an the
November ballot.
Mrs.GraceWeber,presldedatthe
meeting held at the WilliamsBalderson home and hosted by Ruth
Anne Balderson, Mary Alice Blse,
,
and Margaret Cautboni.
Mrs. Weber Installed the same
Gfflcers for another year and
presented' each one with a gl.rt.
Potted mums were given to the
ftonorary members, Gladys WUIIams and Opal Harris who were
present, and a mum was sent to Nell

*599

$5 Off

:~ Meigs Pioneer and Historical
; : POMEROY - The annual
; :meeting. of .tbe Meigs COunty
: ·Pioneer arid Historical Society
; 'will be Oct. 23 at the Meigs
. :COunty Museum, Butternut
' •Avenue In Pomeroy. Potluck
'dinner wW he atl p.m., followed
by business meeting and

ONLY

95

AND UP

BlkiHDAY OBSERVED -

OFF
The quality, style and comfort

Of a

·

at o special price. But i ~s doubl y
nice with a choice of two of today's
most popular designs! f'.hlny others
are nowot simi lar ,savings!

and Mrs. 11o1JeK D. AaldeJ,
LeCari ...... llld - .......
RalicJy 1111111 Heidi Smltb, Cllloa,

w. VL

RECEIVE A FREE ROLl TOP DESK

. In hospital .

•

150
lo·Z·Boy Red ina·Rocker chair

.., were her~ Mr.

•

REDUCED
UP TO

Dual comfort Rec:linc ~---.._.1.!
Rocker'" Chair values
Your Choice

Altl1ey JDI Smllh ..........,. obllei'Ved '-leOODd ltlriloda,y .....
a coolwulllt her hame. Altrt ~

Bob Runnells a pe.Uent at Holzer
Medical Center. HUIUlel suffered a
heart attack and was placed 1n
lntenllve care. Since ·then he luis
been moved to room 4&lt;»-B. Canis
would be appreciated and may be
ll!llt to blm In care ol the hospital.

5
Different
Styles ·

•'

.'

--

'

STORE WIDE SAVINGSI

••

�-

•

Sentinel

..• ........ .
......

Ohio

Walesawins
peace _awardWARSAW, Polarid (AP) Lech
Walesa was out In the woods hunting
mushroomswhenhewontheNobelPeace
Prize today, but his wlfe said she wa:s
"very IU.ppy."
· A government spokesman, however;
said giving the prize to the leader ol the
outlawed Solidarity labor federation
" devalued the award."
·
. " It w as pol!tlcally motivated, " said
deputy government spokesman 7\n~j
Konopacki.
· Walesa, on sick leave from his job with
ulcers, was outside the city and not
expected back for several hours, acCord·
. lng to his wife Danuta.
"Oh God, I am very happy, very, very
happy," she said .when reached hy
telephone at their apartment In the Baltic
port of Gdansk, where Wa lesa led the
occupation strike which created the
Solidarity labor feder ation three years
ago.
Alexander Malachowski, a member of
Solidarity' s· loo-member national coordl·
natlng commission, said the prtze
"conf!nns that Walesa is a great mora l .
a uthority In our country. We, Solidarity,
feel great pleasure. It Is the cause the
counts.
A senior c le rgyman at Poland'sRoman
Catholic Episcopate said, " I am really
very happy . I think I'm going to dance on

my ears."

'\

tleswouldnotchangethelrattitudetoward
walesa.
The Nobel Peace Prize "us€&lt;! to be a
meaningful award. Now, it is deval ued."
the government spokesman said. ·
The governme nt suspended and
outlawed Solidarity under the December
1981 declaration of martial law, and
slammed Walesa into Internment ·for 11
months.
He was released last November, and
last spring res&gt;Jmed ~his job as an
electrtcian at the Lenin shipyard In
Gdansk, where he led the August 198J
strike which forged Solidarity, the orw
free trade union in the Soviet bloc.
Warsaw residents greeted the news
withjoy.
"I am overjoyed," saldonerniddle-aged
woman stopped at random on a Warsaw
street. " Justice has been done . And to
think \hai these guys (the aythorttles)
have been trying to trample hlrn into the
mud,"
A college student Inte rvieWed In
Warsaw described the award to Wa lesaas
"a big 'no' to the government sm ear
c arnpajgn."
For most of the year, Poland's
state-controlled media have been attack·
lng Walesa. The most recent sally was a
Sept.27 televisionbroadcastaccusing hlm
of having $1 million in Western bank

accounts.

Deputy Episcopate spokesman HeO!Jik
Brunkasaid, "Hedeservedtheaward. He
needs lt to keep up his spilits."
· In denouncing the award, Konopacki
.said he was speaking for himself and. did
not know whether the Polish government
would respond officially. He said author!·

Walesa, who turned 40 last week,
acknowledged he had been awarded
m oney from Western newspapers and
social organizations, but said he had
turned it over. to emigre Solidarity
activists.

Corn farmers need
•
government assistance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )- Normally he
· doesn't advocate government progranns
to reduce the corn crop , but John A.
Stevenson, National CornGrowersAssocl·
ation president, says the help Is needed
after this year's drought.
Stevenson said Tuesday that his
organization told Agriculture Secretary
John Block last week there should be a
government program thatwould lead to a
10percent reduction in cropvolumeanda5
percent paid acreage reduction next year.
1lut Stevenson said In a telephone
Interview from his 2,001-acre corn and
cattle farm near Circleville that Block
said a paid program like this year's
Payment·ln·Kind, or PIK, program
would not be possible.
Stevenson 's comments differ a bit from
those he m a de after being elected
president of the ll,OOI-member organiza.
lion In July, when he said that any federal
program should concen Irate on expand- .
lng demand r a ther than restricting
supply~

The drought has " really kindofthrowna
curve ball to all programs, " Stevenson
said Tuesday. " Having experienced
governme nt manipulation the past few
years, corn farmers have had to rely on
government programs· to get us out of
this."
Farmers In 29 Ohio counties have been
declared e ligible for federal disaster ald
because of the dry summe r.
He agreed with what other farmers
have said- they know that to keep plices

The ·Daily Sentinel

up they should keep production down, but
most will 11J1 to produce more to recoup
losses, so "the scenario is set for a major
overproduction next year."
If that happens, Stevenson said,
econometric models predict that corn
prices could fall to $2.60 per bushel from
the current level of about $3.3().$3.40.
Stevenson said the PIK program, whlch
paid farmers In grain for keeping land out
of production, " hasbeenasaviorthlsyear. ·
U farme rs had been In the situation of full
cropping, we would have had a worse year
this year."
H e :;aid farmers would have Invested
more In seed and chemicals for full
production, so they would have lost more.
Stevenson said the Corn Growers had
assumed PIK or a slrnllar program would
operate next year.
.,
He :;aid the group told Block that \'We
h,ave things under control now, and let's
try to keep them that way with a good,
sound conservation program."
He said Block said such an Idea would
" fall on deaf ears" In Washington.
As he said In July, Stevenson repeated
his offer of a compromise that would
freeze targe t prices, If the money saved
would go toward export -subsidies and
toward promotion of alcohol fuels made
from grain.
"We think there should be more federal
exemption of the alcohol fue l tax, and let
the states start remoVIng their taxes," he
sa\!.

$126 million sought
in airliner lawsuits
CINCINNATI (AP) -Lawsuits stem· Hills nightclub fire In Southgate, Ky., In
mlng from the Air Canada jetliner fire In 19TI killed 168 people. The MGM Grand
whlch 23 people perished June 2 center on was a hotel-casino whlch burned In Las
the aircraft's refurnishing, not fllght Vegas, Nev.
negligence, a lawyer says.
Chesley said Air Canada reassembled
"The unique thing is we're going after thetailsectionandrelurblshedthelnterior
therh on a joint venture In a products of the aircraft In' 1979.
The electrical system 1n the rear
liability ·case," said Cincinnati atlomey
Stanley Chesley, who filed suits seeking lavatory was changed and as a result,
$126 rnllllon Tuesday In U.S. District Court ''The electrical sysiem con!;lined latent
In nearby Covington, Ky.
·
and hazardous defects and was subject to
"It's not based on being a carrier but on frequent electrical faults," the suits
the basis of beillg the manufacturers of the contend.
·
product," he said.
The S\lltS said the cabin was modlfled
Chesley S!lld !he suits were filed ,on . withrnaterialsthatwere"hlghlyflamma.
behalf of live people who died and three ble, not flame or fire resistent or
who were ' hurt. All were Canadians retardant"and''whlchwerecalculatedto
aboard the Dallas-to-Toronto fllght.
and dld ... release largeamountsofhlghly
Eighteen passengers and live crew toxic fumes and poisonous gases."
members survived.
The victims on whose behalf suits were
A fire broke out In a rear lavatory and filed were Carole Diane Spruston,Shelagh
spread through the DC-9's Interior, M. Nicol, Catherine S. Rahal, Lorraine
aerordlng to the NatlonaiTranspoortatlon Drdul and Judith L.ijelston.
and ~ety Board.
,
The survivors named In suits are
The plane was diverted over lndlana to Brenda June Mayne, ~raid Bouchard
Greater Cincinnati International Airport and Audrie M. Ruttan.
In northern Kentucky.
Defendants listed are Air Canada,
Chesley said the suits asked that all McDonneHlougias, Heath Trehna, Gen·
present and future cases be consolidated eral Tire, duPont and Fairchild.
and heard in the federal court in
The lawSuits seek $46 million in actual
Covington.
.
damages and $81 rnllllon. bi punitive
"This Is the same way we did It In the damages, Chesley said.
Beverly Hills and MGM Grand cases," . The case was assigned to U .S. District
said Chesley, a member of the lead Judge William 0. Bertelsman.
counsels In both those cases. The Beverly .

'•

·-·

Real Estale General

o c ... ~

-·

~

'
.. •h•"•• ••"'d •noo...,.,,
"''"'"'"ood''"""''l

. •..a. ... ..,._,......,.........
~

1 ~ .... swop•"'·'"""•...
~ P .. boc IW
lillwoot ........... s ...

Pwl St. -

s ........

11

TY .I'IM "'h'""""""~l

l
l ""'"'""''
~ ~Moat M lltUIIC!IIO

..•......""=••-t•
..

c-•••

11

,..,..,,.,tva Cl

f'l,,,.~

u

f ..... f .... _

...

11 w....... t.o.,

WJI,..o

v,.,,.,,_,., . o..• ..., .....-

''·""'""-

u.,, ,,_... n._...,.._.._..

,,oo
uoo

Vll••ll .......

1700

Eoo &lt;~or:oo &amp;~~;.,,.,.,.,..,"

11 UpNOIOTII'

Monday-tD-Sumlay! ··
Printed Paltern

Front and rear J)O'Ches. nice back
yard 2 stcry llorre $2!;500.

~

949-2293
R1cine, OH.
8·1·11c

,w...-..

... ..

The Daily

Sentinel
(l..t . _ o1 your fllllOII
243 West 17 Sl, lew Yllll, NY

..

mu

MIOOLEPOIIT - IMI.,d Sl. 10 acres w~h 1~ ~cry hom~ 2car
g.-age, buildings. $26,900.

11

'

CONTACT 992-2156

OFF SCOUT CABIN ROAD New~ remodeled home on 5aaes,

· celul location. Owner will help linance.
NEW LISTING -Rustic home in country, ·3 bedroom, fully
carpeted thrQughout, sels -un wooded lot, stream in front
yard VIeWed lrom comfortable porch, has hookup for trailer,
extra income. All of this can be bought for $34,000, or trailer
can be sold.

IN THE COUNTIIY - Ranch oome
on 2 acres and fuM basemen\
st&lt;rage building $29,000.

NEW LISTING- Good reasonable buy on Unooln Hts. 6rms.;
bat~ carpeting furnace. basemen! and vinyl siding Asking

NAYuiR'S RUN - 7 room oouse,
&amp;05 acres, oulbu~dings, $29,500.
POMEROY - Mulbeny Ave. Orilinal wooclo&lt;rk and lrneh
doors, fun basement $li,OOO.
POMEROY - Rose Hill- HO!OO
in good r'll'ii, full basefoon\ 1.1
acres. come ""' $31,500.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
CARPET SHOP

$2.50 lor uch fllllom. Add ~
lor uch (lllllm lot postap

11td

hoodlin~

Alone AdoiiS Patterns

POMEROY .:_ lletch St. - foe
acres and nice OOuse in town.
$32.000.

54 Misc. · Merchandise

$13.95

AlJTHORIZED SERVICE
ON ALL

BAS HAN - Alarge ~mi~ home. 4
to 5 bedroom~ full basement on 2
acres. $35,000.

WE ALSO SERVICE
ALL OTHER MAKES

POMEROY - Lincotn Hill
Home with ~rge deck l&gt;r summe'
fun. $3!;50Q

'\?;.. _

RUBBER~BACK
·TWEED
•
$399 ~AJrRRY
I ROlL ONLY IN ·BROWN

,$21,500.

614·992·2181

POMEROY - Locust St. - T,..
stOI)', ots of cbsels. wishing wei
and balcony. $3!&gt;000.

UHIVL

r,

ll'fif

74£11'211

NEW LISTING - One~-~
acre hoose site fUst --:::·=-'·
Near Rock Springs for &gt;.&lt;.:ur

LANGSVILLE - Beaulilul wood·
w&lt;r~ """" hutch, enclosed rear
porch, apt and busines&amp; $36.000.

SPORTSMEN

Have Your
Trophies
·Professionally
Mounted by

IIIDDLEPOIIT - 3nl St. Equipped kitchen, central air,
nM:ely renJOdeled. $36.500.

~oofin&amp;

lEADING CREEl RD. - 53.29
acres, al min«al rights, 2Jl5 wets.
2 ponds, outbuil&lt;ing $38,000.

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

BEECH GlOVE RD. - Modular
with 5-jj acres, central ar, 2 bJths.

$311225.

Now Limo Rood
Rutland, Ohio
PH . 742·2225

TUPPERS PlAINS -Aflll'fii!OUS2
aae lot wilh one floor tun home.
' $311,500

.BOGGS
SALES &amp;SERVICE

'

Washers, _Dryers
Ranges, Refripratoi'S
Air Conditioners

Authorized John Deer,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

9-29·1 mo.

742-2362

&amp; Sidin&amp; Co.

CHESTER

AUTO
PARTS
REPAIR
CHESTER, OH.
!H2·1 J'IIO.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POlE BULDINGS

LIKE NEW - Country home
on 2 acres near Rutland. 3 bedrooms, 2 lui baths, full basemen! and carport with slcfage.
Re~~ nice for $45,000.

UTILITY BUILDINGS

101&amp; llOWII ...: I\\ baths, nice

lnsulatd Doc Houses

carpe!Oig modern ltit., dinin&amp;
3 bedrooms, and lg bui!Ong
for auto repair on StateRt 143.

P&amp;S llacint,
BUILDINGS
Oh.
'

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE

Sizts sbirt from 12'116'

SERVICE

. •Lowest Ratllll

Sizts from 6'x6' Up
· to 24'~

fill.'61-t-4fH!9I

IAIIGE HOlE - In Middleport wnh swimming pocj, natural gas furnace, full basement and _lots of ca&lt;pe!ing near

Around
•Dump Truck

Setvice
SEPTIC TANKS ·
A SPECIALTY

:,

742-2328

•-:rt·tft

10·6-tlc

school!. 3 or . 4 bedrooms.

Asking $45,900

YOUNG'S

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

3 APTS. -Rent two and live
in the other. Pomeroy loca·
lion near ·stores. Want only
$23,500.

I

•

CARPENTER
SERVICE

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

.

.,

oWothon •Dioh-ohoro ,
Rongu

Headquarters

imme&lt;iate ' rmsessmn .

your
marketplace

IIIITWD - lletch Grow Rd. 1m1ost new 3 bedroom home, deck
and priyocy. $38.900.

Vinyl Replacement
Windows

V. C. YOUNG Ill

•Dryera •FrHZera
PARJI ond SERVICE

992-6215 •• 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Ph. 981· 4289 .
,If No A"'-. Coil !115-4312
Dewoyne WUI!omo
• Scottie lrt\ltll
All lots ood lodtls

Material &amp; Labor
As low As

$2 50 Etch

"Free lsrimcirea"

Also 8101!11 Insulation

Anlttltll lnsllllttion

Houle Calli 111d Shop
Strv!ct AVIIIIbll

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation
'

9·9·1 mo,

ARROW FLASHINQ
SIQNS
FOR SALE OR RENT

IIIOOI.EI'Oir - Plum Sl New moduia', -r!WJ. ....
place, JI)Od localion. $39,500

I " . I"

Replo.....m Lettero

JOHN'S AUTO SALES
y, s_i)l qlittlliy ••d c.a.

LErAI! - , .. 001114\
endo!ed surwct\ 3 car -

1~14-446-4712

eo , - -$39,900.

~·

RADIATOR
' SERVICE

CONTRACTING

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, ·GAS tnd
S£W!R LINES
•PDIIDS, ltCLAIATION
WORK
.

AUTO '&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5612 ·
or 992-7121

SALE

:,

DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE lD'Ii • lORE
. 'On Sldllfl ud loolllfl,

We can n1pltir .... ,..

conr ,., ...,. .... r..-

ter - . Wo

8tlttr 11141 DOWISI*ltl
" f - Elllm-"
'"12
''Wortc: GUir8ntMd''

tt1eo
ldd boii .... IOCI out racllnn. Wo tt1eo n1pltir
O..Tinb.
can

y..,.fb......,_ ..

PAT HILL FORD

R. E. HOME
.IMPROVEMENTS

992-2196
Mlclclloport, Ohio

Ollfo
·PH . 112-11712

' ' Po-.

MIUER

D&amp;J
SAVEMORE-MART
Co•IJ'. .~•ene
$99To $119
Also ArtnJ Su~pUts,

ELECTRIC

SERVICE
For all yciur wh·ing
nBttda; furneclltl re·
pair aervlce end ln8telletlon.
·
Realdentiel
&amp; Commercial
Cell 742-319&amp;

REAlTORS '
Hlnfy E. Cleland. k.

Gil 992-6191
111111111 949-2660
Dottle Tumw 992·5692
Ollict 992·2259

Poll Oflloo

M778103n.5w04.vo·· .'
'

·t ="'::.:·..
~
L._ _ _ __.::•~::!l::.:.

.,

ROUSH.
CONSTRUCTION

EXCAVATING
-Dozer•
- BackhOOI
-Dump Truck•
-lo·Boy
-Trencher
-Wat*
-Sewer
-Goo Unee
-Septic System•
LA.GI "' SMAU JOIS
PH. 992-2478

f.)GoiiiO.

ROOFING

::.:;1=-

Alll)'lltiofroof...,IIIW

otn~~r~-wCHt
1,•r.:.:.olt
Bldp. .

or • · . - . . 11111

:
.
dooll.lllll tilltdolii.
~.I:

•Roolifll Wort
... _ _ &amp;·V1n!1 . .
15 Yoara lx-rtence

All, Won G111r1ntttc1

"F11t Esllllltts"

GRIG aOUSH

' Qalk 940-~-•

htensivt

'"· 992-7513 .
or 992-2212

''-.-.......---...:=.J:

'fll..______,.!•~··l_:;l·lk~

.,

'.
VInyl &amp; Aluminum

.J&amp;L ·BLOWN -

SIDING

BISSELL
SID 1t NG CO • ·

INSUlAnON

: •.

.,..TttlfJ!o,:'""., ,:

..

Cell...., frte 1ldl111•·
'"l

101

Lm:r..o~~-- ·~

'

:

"------....!,!!:!-! ·:
No SuiMitiy

'

.,___

VINn·&amp;
ALUIINUI SIDI'NG

.........
··-Doort
lftJplt

, JAMEI KEESEE

PH. 182·27{!1 ;..,

•
I

eu•t .w\...JtdOWI

.,._lleetlnt
Pllll H'1'1MATII.

3

Announcements

SWEEPER and Hwing m•'c hlne rep1lr, parts, and
suppllea.
Pick up •nd
delivery, D•vi• V•cuum
CINner. one--•haHndmileCupII
1
Ooorflll C• - ~ ·
4411·0294 .
Under New Man•g8ment,
laa"a Pool Room. 92 Olivo
St.
Racine Volunteer Fire Dept.
gun ahoot . . aon will 111n
Oct. 8 11 8:30p.m. ot their
bulldlng In B..han.
_ _...:.._ _ _ _ _ _
CAAWASH-Sponsered by
Modern Woodsmen of
America. At the Pomeroy
fire Station . Oct.8. From 9
till4. 614-892-7802.

MILLS'·
ELECTRIC tuttltntlll-llew

1- - ' - - - - - - - - -

Wanted to buy us~ coal &amp;
wood hMtars. Sw•ln Furnituro, 4411·31118, 3rd. &amp;
Olivo St .• Qollpollo. Oh.

2 aolldwood end tablea &amp; 1
cof(H table. goodc~nd. Call
441·2831 ext. 48 '"elk for
Connla.

BEDS-IRON. BRASS, old
tumhure, gold. silver dolIars, wood Ice
stone
J•rs, antlque1, etc .• Complata houaeholda. Write:
M . o. Millar. Rt ; 4 . Pomoroy,
Oh . Or 992·7780 .

bo••·

f;;;;;;d~b;,~i;;~~~
I'antique furniture.
to buy. New. used&amp;
Will buy 1

p 1eee or comp1eta house~
hold1. Also complete AuctlonHring Mrvlce. Cull Oaby
A M 1 614 992 6370
. trt n
•
·

dolly gold, ,alfvOt'
1colno. ringa. jewelry, darling
IWIIfo. old oolna. ltlrge cur~
Top prlcea. Ed. BurSh
2 d A
0~~· "8~ 4 : 9 92~

and

rt-wlriRt: CoiRJ!IIrclal
1nd htdtlllriiiL .
· IOIDED-AII .orlt

llllnlniMd

Clll 614-742·2214
After S P.l.

Yard Sale Thurs. • Fri. 10 to
? 2014, 2023. 2026. Cha·
th•m Ave. 2:01 81ft Eutern
Ave.

Bargain Yard S•la TuesdayThursday. 9:30·4. _Winter,
summer clothes for •fl. l'•by
bed. high choir, guitar,
books. furniture, toola, entiquu, dishes . 1 mile Teen
Run Rd, off Rl. 7. 2666031 .

We pay c11h for tote model
clun uHd catr1.
Jim Mink Chov.·Dido·lnc.
Ill Chne Johnson
448-31172

1~

Garage Sale 1069 Second
Ave . Thur•.-FrL - Sat.
9:00AM to 6:00PM . Good
clean clothing all sizes. other
misc. item1 .

Garage Sale Cedar houSe on
Hotze Ridge Rd. Follow
signs f~om Teena Run Ad.
&amp; f · 9 'I ?
Wed .• Thurs..
rl.
tl
carport Sale 9-6, Fri.-Sat.
Oct. 7 &amp; a. 167 Woodland
Drive. Lots of Goodkts.
·

Wanted To Buy

~lntud to buy Used mobile
C II
homaa • truck camper. •
a_._ _ _ _
111_t_4-_44_e_._o_1_7_
r Wan•·• woohors L · dryers.
uru
01
Moll ony condition. Call
, 8_ 1_4:..·_3_87_-_o_a_a_o_._ _ _ _

Avon Sale 2 Avon collet·
tions of over 600
Many mint
Acroas from linn ' s
Upper Rt. 7. Sat .
8 :30-6 :00. Mloc..
inside.

Garage Sale 86 Grape St.
October 7th end 8th . 1 OAM
til 6PM. Gl111ware, books.
clothing, hendmade itema,
etc. Sponaered by MUCAproceeds to go for hospital
work.

3 hmily Furniture, children•
clothing. Thrui .. Fri .. 8r. Set.
R•ccoon Rd. lA mi. off At.
218.
Porch Sole 37 Chillicothe
Rd. Thurs .• Fri. &amp; Sat . 9 to 6.
Clothes &amp; miac.

Yard Sale October 6, 21ft
miles from Porter on Clark
Chapel Rd. Rein, na 11io.
Ladloo clothes olze 8 -46.
Misc. itema. Garnett Ruasell, 614·388·8449.

Yard Sole Thuro .. Fri. 9 -6.
1 Yl mi. down Rt. 7. Barbie
dolls &amp; clothes, boy scout
uniform, jeans, stroller,
toaster oven. lots of toys I.
clothes.

1---------Klnoon Dr. Thurs. &amp; Fri.

Mens. women• clothes, girls
·
je•n•. boys jack eta, au1ts,
couch, miac.

Thurs. &amp; Fri . From Porter go
1 miles down Bul•ville·
Porter Rd. Books, lamps.
clothing. households.

1--------Rummage Sale at Grace
United Methodist Church.
Friday Oct. 7 , 9-4:30, Cedar
St. entrance.

Hugh ba.enient ..... many
families . Cleaning O\Jt banment, wHI bwgaln on prlou1.
Roger Coate• rNidanCa .
Thura .• Frldoy, end Satur·
d•Y · 3 m}laa north of
Choat.,.,
'
Furnhure, houMhold Items.
size• clothlntJ. Lady ,
PDovom~.4 0ctO . •~IIIley
.
lt.,
-.:....
• __
• _ _ __
1__·_·
,.
Collector'• Item y1rd Mle • •
Oct. 7•8: 8o.m.tH117.112
E. Moln 11. Pomoroy.
1----------·
133 Butternut Ave .. Porna.'
roy. Thurad•y and
Chain Nw, w•rm momktt '
hootor, dlnnotto, boby turuf·
tura, bikei. cedar werdroillll,-..
roll•way, Fenton dle..,l{ 1_
cryebi-INd .• Antlqull ~
oollec:tlblet.

•n

0

Moving sale. Everything
mutt go . Homea with 12
•crea. mobile home 12x80
with •dd on room, furniture
• tools. langwille, Flavey • 1 - - - - - - - - - Ray Sigman placeYtmUeoff 4 family. Oct. 8 &amp; 9 . 8-clllrk.
Dexter Rd. on the Crouaer
Ad .. betwM~n
Rd. Antiques. Leaving Fri .
Summer • ..
•tternoon: ft!'ult aell. ,...
I wolntor
m1ternlty
fum a •
3f.-mllyyordnlo. Friday7th ~~op~r~ln~g~t·~~~=~-..:_
only 11 Don. Walkor"o, Roclna. Oh.

-------

GJrage Sale. Harrisonville,
Oct. B &amp; 8 . 4 · 10. Men·o,
women's, children ' s
clothe•. Much more.

Oct. 7, Firat ·aver. Encyc·
lopedl••· roller skate•. misc.
mile out on Foreat Run
Rd.

*"

Big yard oolo Friday Oct.7th
booldo Poll Offici' In
Tuppers Plein_-, •t Tony
Jones realdence . Lota of
good ltama. SOmething for
ovoryono. 9 till 7?. Roln
cancels.
Florance Slddera. D.,wln.
Oct.li·ll· 7. Loti of lllmo.
Uvlng room eulto. no.
Big garage solo. Oct. 8 &amp; e.
Wednoadlly and Thurodoy.
Charles King• on Wolf Pen
Rd, Rain or ohlno.
3 . family sale •cr011 from
Mlnaravillo bollflold. Child·
ren • adult clothing, deprHalon ware, babybad •nd
matt.reu, misc. Oct.l-7 . 10
till 7??. Roln or ahalno .
·

Yard Sale 4 Familys Thurs.
6th &amp; Fri. 7th . Sot. 8th. Jull
off Rt. 141 -et Centenary on Chorloe Splroo rl81donco.
Lincoln Pike, 2nd traUer on Hutchinson Subdlvlaion.
Garage Sale Oct. 6 &amp; 7. left &amp; white house on right. Rutlond, Oh. Del . .7 &amp; 8.
9AM-6PM , 4 miles from Clothing men &amp; women• all
Holzer on St. Rt. 160.
slzH, boyo &amp; babies. 2 TVs. Garage Ale-Harry IIIley's
carport Sale 460 Lariet Dr. ·ch8in saw. rototiller tools, It E. Main In Pomeroy. Oh,. ;
Next to Holzer Hasp . llr lawn mowers, dlahet, pans • Oct. 8-7. Droparloo, bod·
li~i,rgr!&gt;~:Oct_ W&amp;d. 81 Thurs. jawelery, linen• S. miac . ding, clothing Infanta to
20111. Rototlller for pert1,
6 . Time 9 to 6 . 72 9 ,30-?
doublo kitchen oink.
Charge car. GE
sink s. dishwasher 3 Family Yard Sale Oct .. 6 .
bathroom sink. Drapes. curtains. jeen1 .. la- Yord Nlo Oct . 7 &amp; 8. 10 till
·
chair•. jeans. vatory. many other Items. . ?1?. 808 Maple 81. Middle·
blousas, sweaters. ahorts &amp; Rodney Vill•u• II. l11t pink port, Oh.
tops, bathing suits, sho&amp;J, houM on Firlt street.
Yard Nlo·Fridlly Oct.· 7 . ·
pureoo,
----------------~---- -. &amp; gamoa . 446· ---- - --Pomeroy
BedaprMdl. curtains, ruga,
0132
1---------fumhuro. clothing end etc:
Middleport
"A mile out New Lima Rd.
White uniforms clothing, nic
nac 1 , tools. furniture.
Turn right. 11t houM on
&amp; Vicinity
' right. N[cldntld'o roo. ,
dishes, etc . All week 225
3rd. AVe. Gallipolis . 9-6.
Oct. 8-7-8. 3 family . Pogo·
vHto. 1 0-dllrk.

...... 'Pt.Pieiilint·-·..
&amp; Vicinity

2923 Maple Ave. Oct. 8 &amp; 7.
Curtain• . bedspreeds ,
clothe•. winter co1t1, toys e.
misc.
'
Thur. &amp; Fri. 9 to l5 . 1 mile out
Sandhill Rd. Pt. PI , Durlt
Add. Many l_tema.
3-f~mlly, Tueo. Wed. Thuro.
23041 Modlaon, Pl. Pl .
Dish••· furniture. bedding,
clothing
&amp; booko.
·
_
_...:.._
_ _ _ ____c•

Octobor7·B, 10-&amp;PM.Jack-,
from Johnson Mkt. Books. B•bi•
cloth... curtains, small IP··
pllances, men' s sulta • ·
clothing. women' s clothin",·
&amp;. much more. Special Ubll
of merchandise for man.
lOft Ave. , ICFOII

Waterloo Rd. lorry Mo-.
thenya. Saturday 9 :003:00. Children •nd adutt"
clothing. gl..s fire •creun •.
miK.
Thurs . - &amp;.- Fri. Tools, high
chair, clothoa. boby bod, .
kttchen stool. 1081,12- Locult.
Henderaon.
Oct. 8, 7, 8th . 196 N. Porto
Dr. Pt. Pte..ant.
--------Fri. Sot . 9 - ? . Winter cotte.
jack~•. juna. etc. inaxpen- .
•ive.Upper end Marquette . .
2 -fomlly 1811, 22nd St. Pt:
pt, Lincoln. In alley ."Appltancea, misc. Wed .... Sat.
2-lomily. 131 &amp; 133 S . Pork
Dr. Oct. 8-7 . 9 :00 o.m.
1 38 Pork Or. Pt. Pl. Oct. 8th
• 7th, 9 to 4. Mloc. ltwmo.
2436 Lincoln Ave. Children•
•nd large clothing. •lso·.
knick kn•ch, THus. Fri. S•t.

Racine Gun Club duea are
duo. t26.00. Mutt be paid
before Jan . 1, 19B4.

--

-·r•••--

··-·-

-

--·----------··Giveaway

..

~

'

.

-

.

.MRk }IAN AGE II

lloi!Mri·

Black &amp; t•n Coon do·g; pupa, • .~tlon. Dutloo In·
e ..u. qtd. Colt 878·1 141 . Diu• . .n . . IIMftt. mllnt•·
_..., · ,ond operation of
Derman Shaphord 2 yro. old oquttiY peril ond ...,,._n
femele, vary .. ntl1. hou• foollltloo, luporvlllon rJI full·
broken. Colt 814- 288 · time. · Plrt-dma ••••onel
otoff. and man,_ lifO·
11164.
gramo. Ro-llbla!Ot porll
Found t mixed , female odmlnlltrotlon. malnto·
puppy opprox. II mo. old, 1 nonoo ... ndllrdo end tlto
mele Angora hampttor. C•ll -at!Ont. pork 18outfty,
end coorclnatlon of DOUnty·
4411·13114 ~ 2.
wide ,__tlon tctlvhloo
llagld 11 tho peril tltoo.
e kh1.,t. Cell 4411-71 oo.
fle4Julromonll: Trolnlng ond
HoopitAtl bod Jood , cond., OKporlenco In paoli m..,....
onent, groun" ond looQity
- · -trlc repolr. Coli maintenance. forHb v or
1114·241·111111.
r*tecl flold. Drlvoro UoonM
In odcltlon to
1·1.4 Beegle pupa. goodeara.
-umo•, opplloontl ''" ,..
Collt14·2S&amp;-1141,
qulred to oomplolo county
Moplo firewood .free for employment appllootlon
houllng. 1114 ht. AVo. avolloblo at the Pork Dllltlot
Oflloo. 0111• CountyCoun·
Galllpollt.
houoe, Golllpollo, Oh
411131, (llt41 441-41112.
Adult malo Cockopc10 to 1111.
11. The 0.0. Mcintyre
- d ltCI....,, After 3 p~m. coil
Dflttlot lo on oquol
1114·888·4·18.
opportunlty employer.
Femole T-Ier. type dog to De"adllno: Ootobor t "·
- " ' ltCime. Approx. 1 'Ia 1113.
YM'" old. Block ..rth white, Modioli Cowdi!Uitot, RN tor
1"11 wotoh dog, Good with lfOUP
homo. Ptojoot tor
children. 814-112·1711,2
1on1or
c-clnot·
anytime.
1n11 11 1n1dlul llf"WioH
.4 boby ldtl.... 1114·141· wliltln
rJI on ,......
-·
f8cllty
2771.
lnl mMioado otondllrdt.
KnowA1dg1 If lUll of nu,.
ln1 ,rofOIIIOn,
1411-f.-IW•IU,IMIIDfY
trill 111: bowh•a• of p...

Tri-county ment•l h..fth
bo81rd wh:h •n annual budget
of approx•m•taly
13,000,000 -k• on Exec·
utlv1 Director. Dutl.. will
Include: plMnlng, ·coordl·
natlng, mvnttorlng, financIng, end controctlng for tho
davelopme.,t and u:p.n1Jon
ol manti! hoaHh oervlcq In
the HrVIce are~~. Experience
In MIS whh monte! hHHh
orgonlutlono roqulred. Tho
Board I• looking for •n
wxpoflencod Mtntol HHHh
Admlnlotntor ond (or! cllnl·
ci•n whh a minimum of •
Maltll'l ltwl degrH. Com·
patltlve compenutlon packago. Dnclllno for oubmlttlng
application 11 Docombor tli.
1983. Send rauma to:·
a..rch CommlttM, Qilllla·
Jocklon·Molgo Community
Montol Hoolth Boord.
P.O.Box 1114. Oalllpolle.
Ohio 48e3t. E.O.P.
1------.,---Volunteer octlvlty old11
noedod 11 Arcadlo Nuralng
Center, Coolville. Contact
Mtlodeo ot 304-817·311111 . .
lbporllncod tolephone
llcltelr. 304-731-7418.

Appllcotlono now bolni:l
taken 11 Tall for woltroll&lt;io
ond waltero. Apply In
paraon.

B-··--.. .

• lolery rente

13

BANDY ANO ' lEAVEII
. , _ ' Ce. liN oll-

.....111 for . . .. .u,....

........ ca..

COunty
far ....... -.ry. form •
holM- ....property

w..t

to care for olderiy
peoplle In their homa. Day
ohlff If pooolble. Will work
evenings • w.ckends. R1ference1 av•ll•ble. 388 ·
83114.
Dump truck for hire, will
haul coal, .. nd, gravel, etc.
304-8711-3190.

21

Busineas
Opportunity

HOME LOANS Low flxod
,.,,, lndllt Morlfllfll, 77 E.
State. Ath.,l. Ohio. 1 · II 14I
1182-305 t ,

Services

1---------

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . to

.-.t ••wtdUII'...... Cont.at ICel hrh1an. ltllftt.
............. a•z1 . '

'

.

,.

..

~

.

Sale by owner. 3 bedroom
nctional home Uke new.
1.0Qx200 lot. end of otrMt ..
Arbaugh Subdlvilion,
Tuppora Plalna. 1311.900.
Will •cc:apt mobile home on ,
tr•d•. Fln•nclng•v•ll•bla to ,
quolltlltd buyer. 114·882·,
7034 doyo. 814-892-7871
evenlnga.
Two ldjoinlng properties on
Uberty Lane. Pomoroy. Oh.
of •pproxlmately one •crt ·
•nd two hoUHI on Eaat ·
Moln St .. Pomeroy, Oh. for
ule lndi.vidually or in any.
comblnotlon . Ploaoo coil·

...11 ad 2 _ ...ory
·
N-ly ..__..:.
r....uu
Ire.,., 1 'Ia both, 3\'a .._,
city achoola. riverview.
tS2,000. Coli 441·4222
bltwa., 8 •1.
1 !~!~~~~~~:~~~~_!lorli14·882··
4 bdr. ronch ltCimo, lorgolR, p.m. botweon 10 o.m. • II
full be....,.,,, whh gorogo,
wood bumor Included, city three bedrC)om 2atory houM
achools, 2 miiM from town.
on Park Dr. Nawfurn1nc1
Call 441·02711.
olr conditioning, dr11m kitwith •II apptlanc.s .
ly owner Hou11 with 2 chen
will carry MCond or
acrea rwtON or Ia... bean Owner
romodeled, orchard, 87 ft. all. Sm•ll down payment .
well, U2.DOO. Call llt4· 304-876-2192.
388·1013.
Now 3 bedroom hou• for•
rent
New Haven . Call·
3 bedroom hQUM wtth fire- 1 -111 4In
· 949·2470.
pl..._
olr. 2 fuD
botho, In city llmlto. lmmodloto po-ofon. Cell II t 4· 3 bedroom, new Mptlc
-vstem, city water, v••hw•t,
241-11281
Clifton, WV. t13,1i00 . 773·
Middleport. ,.mocltled. ftva IIB80.
room• ond both, gn fur·
nonoo, oozy tlroplooo, good 3 bedroom hQu•. Roush
neighborhood . Price re! llo•d. Choahlro, Ohio. tuU
duced. Collll14·182·1194t. bll1ement. large lot, garage.
Celt 814-3117-7175 .

e.

fn.1:;2;3~P;r:o;fe:H::;:Io:n:a;l==

.....
~·',~'~..!'"
9 u•••
a 1!'
..,. "'""'
'""" •
·

kitten, 1 block
tralnod. 304·

..

lneurence..

In

H41.

·" .

To tske care of some•ome
lick or need• home e~~re.
Day1 only. good referanca1.
Call 304·468·t818

Wll..,.
for oldotly
· 11~:;:;:===:;::===
,
_ or couploln
our
ltCimo.
Lo
LPN aare 1 twn. 1114· 812· 22 Money to
en
7314.

304-HI·JIOZ or 304·HJ·

1-22· I mo. pd.

Uwn Mowing no yard to big
or sm ..l. Reliable •nd depan·
dablo. For ootlmeto coli
448-3159, 9 to 6.

W1tar truck and route in
Mooon end Oollfo Co~nty.
Sorlouolnqulrilo only, 304·
e71i-1&amp;18, e to 9 p.m.

en,ooo .. ,.....
.loll .....

Qeneral Hilullng •nd Trash
removal Service. Reliable
and dapondablo. Coil 448·
3189 between 9 ond 6 .

Tree trltmnlng •nd relftoval.
free llllm-.~ 11-1 4·812·
11040 or 114·841·2121.

Want~

.......................
•

18 Wanted to Do

1-12
---..,---.---· Sltuiltlona

1---------

m•••u•oo.,.,.

-I · WMko
• tan qld.
- n JO&lt;t-171·
cfoa - ·
1141.

PIANO TUNING-LANE DA·
NIELS . 742 - 2961 .- Aiao
'caah for Spinet or Grand
pi•no•. _(Even d•maged con·
dition) .

· I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
USHING CO. rocommondo
that you do buainau with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mall until you h1v1 invelti·
gotad tho olfarlng.

c -..

Pt p;la~da.lmllntlad
breed.
• 1711-~14.

10·

Attontlon: lad too • anyone
wlohlng to ha.. Tupperwo,.
Party ond rocolvalreo glftl,
coR 304-e88·3B1 8.

-lrld.

PULLINS

HJ.tlc

H. L. Writesel

••rt·

M'f moat I Incere an d h '
fait thanko to tho many
relatives and friend&amp; who
olrtondod ' a muHHudo of
kl. n d ne•• du rl ng tho Illnell
an d d ea lh 0 f my bel ova d
wife, Alice M. Freallnd.
Your many acta will never be
f
tt
0
F 1 d
orgo. en . eorge ree •n ·

Auction,
&amp; mloc.
merchandiH, Sat. Oct. 8,
1983. 10:00 a.m. 3 miiN
from Ashton. Rt. 1.1n front
of MI . Olivo tchool. tntlquo
b.u ffat, clock, 18rge wrhlng
deak, recliner chaJr •nd Iota
of other furniture. At tho
home 0! Junior .Young.

tllilo11&gt; tlri cllootoi rJI Piitlo

SYIIACIJil - llalo V111J - 3

bedroom randl on lliCflll, wlh 2
...life homes .... $«},000.

Card. of Thanks

4

..••
VInyl Siding •
·
Roofing

1

11·26-tfc

9·15·1 IM. pd.

PH. 992·2772

J&amp;F

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

POIIERO'I - Rock St - 2 siOI)'
older home in JI)Od oollliion. lui
-$39.000.

Office .

Qarage Sale S•t. Oct. ,8,
9-4. Lake Dr., Rio .Gr•nde.
Large men clothea. win dQWI, typewriter. "lighta,
good clothet. a lots mora.

(l'rM hllmoiH)

•Retrlg~~moru

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chtsttr, Ohio

Certaintetd

9·12-TF

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Giant Garage-Patio Sale,
Del. 3·8. 9:00-6:00. One
block east of Bidwell Poat
Yard Sale 5 FBmilv• 1A mi.
down Rl. 218 ,Qct. 6,8 ,7 .
9 :30 to 6 . Couch It ch•lr,
table Ia chairs, infant clothes
to adultl. chrittman dolla &amp;
three mens suits.

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

SYRACIISf - Rustic Hills - 3
bedroom rancll, hardwood lloor&gt;,
~

Auction every Tueadly
night, Pt. ,._..nt. WV•.
Auct. Lonnie Nnl . Youth
Contor Bldg., Comdon St .
814·317-7101 '

•JJ wand'""""'"'""'
...,.
•• and.....,_...
Cane•• Wltfk
_...

H ·rfc

Roote 4, Pomeroy

l·J.tfc

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

12·20-llc

Housing

USED
APPLIANCES
.

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILL~. OHIO

_ 320 JERICHO _RD.
PY. PlEASANT, W.
1-304-675-13

OH.

AND

Rout• I
Lone Bottom, OH. 45743
915-4193 or 992·3067

OWNER FINANCING - N1ce
home in Racine. Has 8 rms., 2
baths, 2 furnaces, ca-peling
pantlings, garage with shop lor
$7,000.00 down and balance
like rent

SAVI A .Ill

flUTLAND

'

"'an!lfacturers

10.3 · 1~0. pd

CHARLES SAYRE
·AND SON

Business services

RUTlAND New c.-poling
throughout ranch home Attached
g.-age. $36,000.

Minersville,

Barns.

TRY US FOR A CHANCE,
SOlE ARE ·SELLING.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

POMERY

~LANDMARK

ANSO IV NYLON
.,., '• $15.95
Sq. Yd. Installed

SEAL

CONGoLEUM

HOTPOINT &amp;
GENERAL ELECTRIC
APPLIANCES

RACINE - Rl. 124- 3 rmta~ in
one, $500 rental P&lt;*Otial. stOI'age
M&lt;lng $3:;000.

. Sq . Yd . tnstallod

Good Selection Of
GOLD

POM£110Y - llulbeny Aw, E&gt;cellent oondition and locaOO~
buiH·in l&lt;itchen. $32,500.

STARTING AT
INSTALLED
WITH PAD

$1295

Send' to:

MIDDlEPORT - 4th A,., - 1~
~cry , dishwasher, disposal, air
oond, two ~, $32.000.

co.·s

I &lt;illi':'l Sl'h:1111111 In Sli!lllll:dslt:rn Uh1n

CARPET

Trophy

JOB-BIG OR SMALL
992-6030

Kttchtn Cabintls - Roof·
inr- Sid in~- Concrete
ldiWIIks Pltios New Consbudion - Rotlodtllnc - Custotl Polo·

TP water, and electric for
$6,000.

54 Misc. Jl!lerchandise
Monday-to-Sunday good looks'
Go off to work or relax in two
easy parts. Shirt-jacket zips up
• the front. pants have an elastic
waist. Choose homespun ,
polyester knit in checks or solid.
Sew now and save $$$!
Printed Pattern 4752: Misses
Sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20.

THE
TROPHY
KING .

•Experienced
•Reasonable
•Work Guaranteed

9·1i-l mo, pd

Or

"DOOIR - 1~ siOI)' lralrte !'om~
Oland kitchen, cO'pel in all 7
moms. $29.100

&amp; VicinitY

A Phone Coli brinp

PLUMBING and
HEATING

Phone:
Rtsidonco: 915·3B37
Warohou10: 985·3509

3 ACRES - W~h septic tank.

SEll

RT. 33 - He.- Pomo-01' - I ~
~Oil' remodeled home $29~00.

Phone
H6 14)-j92-332S ,

6Famlly0ct. 6 ,7 . 9 ·11 1"!111e· 'Thura., Oct. 8 . 9-~ . Turn
out Ooorgoa Creek Rd, turn right boolde WMPO. third
on McCully Rd. follow ligna. houl8 on right. Look for
All * size clothing, rungs. lign1l
curtains. more .. Rain or 1 - = - - - - - - - - - shlno .
Oct. 7-0ct. B. 9· 8 p.m.
leon• .Stew•rt'l, &amp;24 Mul4 Fomlly Yard Sole 1118 berry Helghto. Pomoroy.
Portsmouth Rd. Children• - - - - - - - - -lcclothes. shoes. coats~ sew- Oct. 4. ~.6. Including 10ta &amp;.
lng m•chine; atorm doors, chair. l•v•tory. bedtprNd•.
•guerium, bed fr•me . Oc· soma curtain•, clothinv~•ll
tobor 7 &amp; 8, 9AM·IIPM. lizH. loll of mloc. Golo
R1lna cancelt.
Miller residenCe 257 Uncoln
St., Middleport.
Garage Solo Oct . 7 &amp; 8 . 10 1----.:....----till 4PM . 331 Dobbie Dr. largo 8 fomHy yord nle .
Dr•pc•, 9x12 c:•rpat, toyi, Oct. 3-6. ThrH milll north
baby furn.iture . clothes of talrgrounda. Pomeroy .
dryer, odds &amp; ends.
11~'..992·7888 .

[ ,992-2036

'

3 ACRES IN RACINE- Surveyed flatland , private and pea·

1011EROY - Uncoln Hill tx pensive featu". fuD basemen\
woodburner, $28,9011
•

2t&amp; r , 2nd Sl.

stone fireplaces, furnace with
free gas, bank barn, l. flOOd
fences in Rutland Township.
Want $6j).IJOO.

CE-NTRAL REALTY

fireplace S2820Q

...... Gaiiliioils....... ..

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

NATIONAUN E
Plumbing &amp; Heating Supplies
" JI You Want a
Plumber Bad
You Want Him Good"

-JEWELL'S

"Water Pipe
"Gas Pipe
"Ragulators
"Fittings
"Drips

NEW USTING- 95 acre farm

Real Estate General

MIDDLEPORT - Third Sl. Shaded lawn, 3 bedrooms, 2baths.

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

with 8 room house, has 2 new

plenty of room and ~clusi:m.

PORTlAND - Cute Kitchen,
garage, 2 becl-ooms, ck&gt;se ID
Ra~~en5Wood Bridge $28.000.

2·23-ttc

111 ·11'

Real .Estate General

PART-TIME HELP IN POMEROY
NEEDED AT ONCE.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY.
GOOD PAY.

POMEROY- Union Ave. - Full
basemenl two baths, sewing room,
$27,900.

. \.

Prompt Cot~rteous Service
232 E. 2nd
Pom•oy, 0.
Now's the timt to aet your furnace ready for cold weater, 10%
Discount ~n any new furnac! purchased btfort Oct 15. 9.15

" They waqt to order a 'livingtogelher cake.' "

CARRIER WANTED

PoMEROY - Mult.ny Aw. Eigt,t rooms. finisl"&lt;d room on ode
ol house. $27.800.

Loat in or around Union
District, one year old, red ·
dish brown Heif•r c•lf, some
.w hite on f•ce , If seen plea~e

D I AI:,--__,
AIR CONDITIONERS
RESIDENTI.IJ. • COMMERCIAl
HEATING • PLUMBING

PH. 992-2280

Help Wanted

.

POMEROY - llulbony Aw. Excelont klcaoo~ formal dining
mom, 2&gt;1 batt-., $27,500.

53B6. &amp;14-2lni-9203.

&lt;ELICIRIC Ill SIWII CtEUIR

$3()00 A,TON .
, , ,.,., , _ _ _ _ " - - -

POMEROY - llulbony Ave. I ~ stcry, lour bedroorm $27.50U

VALLEY

STRIP .
CQAL

J31.Aij. I .... Quil1s
126-J11rifty Clifty howtn
125-PIIII Quilts

I0011. Print .NAIH, ADORESS,

'(ard Sa\eS

&amp;
pay forod
Call614·
246 ·
Grande
area.. Cell
to identify

8

l tt-l l ma

MINE RUN

LAFF·A·DAY

WINTER PATIERN CATALOG with
lree pattern coupon ($2.50
value). C.IJ!og, $1.50.
W. CRNT 100115 .. $2.10 uc~

1

FOUND Dog hunting in Rio

call 304·88'2 -2033 . Kenneth Rtitmire. •

PH. l-304-773-5634
MASON; W.VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

"Hauline .

ZIP, SIZE. ...
NUMBER.
121-Pillow ShGOHffs
THE RIGHT CLOTHES at the
Books and Catalog - add 501
right price are yours when you · each for postage and handling.
sew' Send now for NEW FALL·

MIDDlEPORT - p,.f Sl. Good neighb&gt;-loQd. garage and
fenced yard. $2!;000.

•

11

-· •

tilll-.... - . , . . .....1

41 foo lUM

1

743 l'l..elo,..j
Ml C.....rllo

'PERSONALIZED POOLS"

IU , . _ . . _
... L..t ...
tiJ"l' - ~ ..

ltGIII•oi HIUIIng

I I

.. ,.,.,

Sud &amp;~

Ruder lllil

, ...,Go_
_
ON...,

lU- , _ _

*Excavatine
"Ponds

•septic'Tan~s .

,. ...__,

·~

CONTRACTING
RECLAMATION

KITCH EN &amp; SON
C.ONSTRUCTION

l l Eooouo ln11

8)1•.... -~
II Ho.-1 Goooo

•§

l1t -

lltoklrnol,.........,..nn
IZ 1'11&gt;10011111.;. HtooloM

UWMIOdl~l.,y

-C-lCM

176

U7 -I.Mool1 .. - 1'1..0.0

Jlll - o...,... o;.o
143 - Ao.JI&gt;otO.OI

11"1'1'M...,I &lt;IIIII fquop.,.ftl 101 fl-

· t7fWI•~olloM'h&gt;

··-c-·

-~ .

141 - I'IMIOr.,....

.....,...,luol'leooo •
IWioiHio "...., .. ,,.. I'IHo
forOMIOII'IOftl
... _ , ... _, , IOtl'lotftl
f wro•no&lt;l ll onnoo
tfi Sp.ooot&lt;lo flono

H•k"'"'h

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

'

,)11
.. _...Clooolwo
_otft

41
11
IJ
41
OS

S.t,.OtdWo~oo ..

- c• . wv

~~~o-c-••"

•41 - 0....,W•

IJf'&lt;lol.... ooTro,.

Jt. . .....
11 llool ~"' ''" Wonou

Htoi~Won&lt;od

tho•

....,.c--.

Ooi•C_,.,.
~~~o ...

n.

' ' ''"'" I.V"¥1UI..

fM/(t'~ nlfl'f

JollooH i rl fl. /o•lo·,Jh:'"'' o• l"r•lt • " '"'" .~.

Pl._...,, .,. . . . o
74 IWioo..-o.,;ift

17 JIIUOloi:OI l!101rWrrlotftU

,

~···~·

t :l,uljit•tl

iiiUOMiot .....

nr,.,d,..,....._

15 ....... w.......
71 AwtoPor,. I Ill"'"""'"'
77 illlwtoll011n
71 c....p .. g f&lt;o ........

lwl&lt;lontl h _ . ,
Ui POUI&lt;Ir loto

JJ Mot,olo """' .. "'' Sooo
~

--I).Do&gt;ll·

~~

]J Foomo '"' .....
]

I 4 tu onMU 1 '"'""'~

HARRISONVILLE AREA - Si•
acres ·of lena!d cleared ground
pond, 2 bedrooms. equipped
MIOOLEPOIIT -

l l ll'tllflll... nM

n&lt;••

. '"'"'"""'"

11
12

• 992 ·22 59
HARRtSONVILL£ AREA - Gl3nd
old farm oouse. severallluil&lt;ln~ 5
acres $42500. '

·

IJCI

~~c ~c

0.

klchen, 12!;900

, , 11 ...

Jl 01 ............. ....

.a-...

E . Mair1W.U.
POMEROY ,

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

2llltii-1Cit o ...

11 . . , ..... .

6 lMI ...... f ... M

-

11 llw ...... .

lo .. - . . ,

'

Ohio

Busifiess Senices
;==t:::::::====:;t=========:r::======;::==ii
M.L

PHONE
992-2156
Of Write Dai•r s.t-. Cllssffit4 o.,t.

•

2nd lt.•...,.. trom

••

1983

.- . I . .

Radios, W1tchts &amp;
Gtntntl VI rilly

•

•

1983

111 eou• St.. PoM!Of. Ollio 4574'

$27,000.

•

. Octubtr

~

!:

•

,.

'*'''"'

12xll0 Mobile Homo. tl·l==========
r11dy Ill up on rented lot.
Mon.-Fri. coli 1·1 . 4411· 32 Mobile Homos
lor Selo
1241.
Looated In Sy..aul8· Nur
ochool • owlmmlng pool. 3
bedroom eh..,.tecl on on•
third acn lot. 124,100. or
wll rom fer U711 mo.
304·8111-383,. .

"/.
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED· CARS, ,
TRUCKS. OALLJPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
4411·7fi72".
'
.

Rench type (lrlok). 3 bod·
roomo, ftropl-. - l t d
g.,•••· full baa~ment,
newly thlngled root. w. .lng
dlotonoo to Pomoroy Elo·
monhlry lchoot . t40.000 .
Call 11 4·112·1143.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KEaSEL'S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE 'HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST QALLIPOLIS, ·
RT
4411-7274.

1

' I

�·.
12The

.· · t~ lip~ :

I '·

~~
Ohio

Sentinel

32 Mobile Homee

They'll Do It Every Tinie

for Sale

61' Household (3oode

Sofl

and

Chair,

Giblon

garden tub. eeperate

ehower, c.arplt, Wllhlr,
dryw, otow, frlgo, COYpatio, cent I'll air, · under. pinned utHity building. Nice
lot. 814-912-30113.

1171 .

hrlie wob.d burning add-on

FO&lt; Solo: Lumber 1 " and 2"

furn•c:•·br•nd new-he111
hot w•ter - autom11lc
controls - firebrick lined .

dlm.nelon. popf1r. o•k or
pine. For prk:•' and -IVIUa·

1590. Call 61 4·258· 121 e.

For tale or rent·Mobile home
whh 1 b24 1ddltlon on own
lot. No children. 814· 98&amp;·
4290.

.

~
KIT'N~ CARLYLE"'

~;l(c. ~&lt;:$.Tfi f

81

Se•toned o1k firewood. ·
oh•r 4 p.m.

Home
Improvement•

STUCCO .PLASTERING
textured ceiling• commercia.! 1nd re~iden1ial, free
aotimotoa. Call 11 4-256·
1182.
.

Ory firewood. dellvord,
phone 30"·171-7771.

1oro1sz

I I I

w w rna

• 8:00 •
CIJ 9 •
()JNoW8
· (I) MOVIE: 'Waltz Aorou

-1 KI

Texee•

... AND $0, THE

CITY FATHEI&lt;:. Altl'
H&amp;l&lt;&amp; TO FORMU•ATE
A STRAT&amp;6Y 'FOI&lt; D&amp;AL·
IN&amp; iOITH WHAT;S co·ME
TO ~E ~NOW~ AS "THE

SIEGE OF THE

If W&amp; USE- FORQ;,

I'L~ NEED TO HAVE
.SOLE CONTRO L

OF'

THE; OPERATION. 'I
DON'T WAioiT ANY
POLITI C~ INVOLVED.

I THI~K. l&gt;l THI5.
CASE, WS'Ve NO
CHOICE &amp;UT TO SUI&lt;·
l'tEHDE~ OUR POWEI&lt;
TO TH&amp; POLI CE&gt;,

(I) MOVIE: 'If Thlngo We,.
Oifle,.nf
•'
iil N - Truoura Hunt
-' (]) Play Your - t Tonnio
Thla show features 'Net
Plav: .
(() Llttl• · House .on the
Prairie
Cll ® .Y .E.S. Inc,
• Buck Rogero
. 8:30 • (I) C!J NBC Nawo
iil Rifleman
(J) ESPN'a Hcroo Racing

JU!i'T 'A SECOND, MEIJ. I
THINK THERE'S AIJOTHEI&lt; .
WAY TO H~NDLE TH15ol

P:080TS,"

1979 mobile home 14x80

:;;:;::=:=:;:::====

unfurn.\1ocrolot,chainllnk 1 42 Mobile Homes
fence
in Ohio. t13,600.
for Rent
304· 876·1297.

8221 '
TWIN RIVERS

Warm morning coal stove,
TOWER .

Apartmentsnowavailableto
elderly
&amp; dinblod with an
income oi lese than
.Phone 304-676-6679 .

?u"rnished 14x70 3 . bdr. FURNI!iHED apartment,
trailer on private lot . 1 0 adults, no pets. phone 304·
Watson Rd . Owner financ - minutes f.rom 1own. $200 676-1463.
ing av~ilable . Call446-8221 mo . plus utilities. $200 dep ..
attar 6 weekdays.
references. Call 614-25636 acres at Rodney on W.T.

One acre lot with platform
for house and in-ground
pool, for information, $13·
'

Level loti 6 mi . south of
Gallipolis. All underground
utilities. central sewage.
Call 446-1241 . 8 · 5 ,

Monday·friday.
Beautiful lot on Lower Racco,:m Creek. Land contract
available. Calf Tom Leslie
446·7901.

Call 814-388·8801.
14-V:z acres Roush Hollow Rd
off Rt. 564, nice road,
building spaee; r1.1rat water

cloaa . Call614·388· 9718 .

For late: 1 acre loti. $6,000 .
Five Points on Rt.7 . 614 ·
992·2571 . Paul Simon.

36

1393.

45

2 bdr. trailer with large
room, 1 mile out of Gallipolis
on Rt. 588. Call 614-246·
9170 .
'

Furnished Rooms

For rant Sleeping
and light house kMping

1062.

814·992-7479.

quired. 304·676-4046.

882·2486.

Wanted to buy. 1-6 reasona·
bly priced acres in GallipolisCheshire area for home site.

44

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

Park, Route 33, North of
Porneroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479 .

Two bedroom. SandliiU Rd .
Deposit &amp; Reference re-

Apartment
for Rent

47 .Wanted

'
to Rent

Bachelor apartment or room
with cooking privileges by
gentleman. Joe Vediah, Box
103. Pomeroy. Oh. 46769.

49

For lease

814-992-6177.

Houses for Rent

4 bdr. house 6 acres ot land
on RL 180 in Vinton. Central
...: air. 1360 mo ., sec. dep . &amp;
ref. Cali 446-3176.

..

... Small modern country
·' home. References. deposit.
'"' Reasonable. Write P.O. Box
'" 10. Gailipolis, Oh 46631.

Brick house, 3 BRa. LR .
';/ kitchen, 1 bath, 1 car
garage, large lot. K.C .
school dist. Call 446-8204.
2 bdr. home on lower River
Rd . $226 mo.. Wiaeman

•. Agency, 448-3543.

..

3 bdr. house overlooking
river. 2 baths. family room.
city schools, has river fron·
tage, 8300 mo. Wiseman
Aqency, 446-3643 .

Fe:- rlilni :n ca/3 5 r:ns. &amp;.
bal:h, large gar11ge, ,garden.
jua1 outside city. city
ac,hoola. Coil 446-4798.
3 bdr. house in country. ref.
&amp; dep. required. Call 614·
3,88·8453

~ay• .

~

to

ochool.

t1 95.

month , Deposit &amp; referan·
ces. 814-742-2643 . Sele
price $39.600 .

; 2 ~bedroom country hOme.
• Cellar with outbuilding. Ref·
~ erences required. 814·7422·&amp;41. langsville area.

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart·

Retail Siora, 1400 aq. ft .

manti HUO Available Util·
ties partly turn. , apartments
available now .•8200 per mo.
4 room apt . utilities partially
paid 8160. A-One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager, Real·

carpeted, downtown loca·
tion . Call 304·676·3788.

tor. Call 304· 875-5104 or
304-676-7386.

51

7,:;__...__ _ __
model no. KX606. Son Sui _bo_f_o_••_
1
amplifier A-9. pair of Pio· Good electric atove, wood

neer •a.peakera model no.
81.000. 304·
882-2782.
·
CS922A.

54

Misc. Merchandise

Household Goods

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12'' ·22'' stocked
in yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery, 814-2116245.

Umestone. Send. Gravel.
Dall~ered in Mason, Maiga.
Gallla or pick up at Richards
Firewood· cut up, • slabs,

1215.

Drapea, orange gold jac·
quard 120"x8"" &amp;
&amp;O"x4&amp;", now UO. 304·
882·2204.
Cor - t . wooden high cf1alr

and anow euit. 18 montha.

All good cond. 30oil·878·
7879.
•

Whites metal detec1or,
phon••· cer·

e.ooo w-head

BobbY.. M1c car aeilt. glass
fireplace encloaure with
screen a. andlrona. 4 alice

machine• scratched in at,ip·
ping were •280 now 879 or
$6

1

week. Coll448·9301 ,

to•otor.

30~· 8711·160oil.

Walnut lumber 8 and 10ft.
long. Call 304·458·1997.

Fireplace inaert-stlll in factory carton -automa1ic
controla-2 b.l owefa·glau
door-ash pan-fits 30 in. to
48 in. fireplace-burna wOod

66

Building Suppliea

Building moterlolo
btoclc, brick. HWW piplo,

wlndowe. lln1e11, etc.
Cloude Wlntoro, Rio Grande,
0. Cali 814·2411-5121.

Pirza ~van. *400. Joes
Pizza in Cheshire. Call 814·

56

HILLCREST KENNELS
Bording oil broodo. Soiling
Happy Jack Dog Fqod.

Doberm•n

pupplea: Stud

Sorvica. Coli 448· 7791.

Pro,.,.

Bri•!Potch Konnelo
oionol All·broed grooming .

2 young Coon doua. 1 bleck
&amp;. ton, 1 walker. Coli 814·
2118·14111.
Reglotorod Pointer pupa, 8
wka. old. Ca!l l 81 "'246·
9oil38.
~

: month, 304-1176-2284.

: 2 or 3 bedroom r-ouse, elec.
he•t. cloae to achoola .
1278. month . 304·875·
5540.

7 room houM in Pt. Pl . Call
altar 4. 30oil-882-3329 .

bedroom ept. at Gall.

1971 Matedor, 4 door. good

colldition. body 1nd motor
orenge Wtth brown vinyl top,

1100. Coli olloiiii·0'1110.

304-1711-21 eo.

68

19711 Chevrolet Novo.
118,412 mlloo. C"oll 3104·
878·48"11 after f:30 p.m.

&amp;

Fruit
Vegeteblea

Appioa. Flt1potrlck Or·
chordo. B.R. 1111. 111 .. ·8118·
3788 or 81oii·UI-.. 378.
Houro 10 a.m.-8 p.m.

119

For Sale or Trade

'
1189Ford4•"· Tradoforcor
of oquol volua. 81 oil-843·
11119.

Console

Motorola

with AM·FM

ltwao

rodlo.

Uko

recliner rocker. Coli 81 4·
112·3oil30.

1873 C•maro. good cond.
very , clean. .Z.OOO. 304·
878-7839 after 5 p.m.
1 967 Chevrolet, oil orlginol,

2nd owner. Exc. cond. 304·
878·8827.
71 VW Super • - • · out.
good cond. 73 I'Obuih eng.
1881.00. 72 VW . _.. for
porto e3711. 3Q4.loil58·1 92e.

19111 lheltli Cemper for

30"-871-8217 evonlnoo.

---------

11100. or treda for a pickup top, - " · 12100. 30oil·
tru.. of aquol value. Call ' 1178·8oil38.

":: :-:----":"""

72

.

Trucka for Sale

1878 Ford PU F150 ,.exploror 'h T., p.b., p.o .. radloi

Farm Equipment

tires, ••c. cond. 83300. C1U
oil48-2403.

BN Ford front end loodar,

double ICtlon.. hydraulic
bucket, 1200. e h. drag dlok

no. cott e1 oil-318·18911.

83• _ Llveatoclt
CharokH 2 horoo troller,
ancloood, • - olza, padded.
Aloo 77 Ford LTO. Col
. , 4·388-8'787.

2 bedroom ap1 .. furnished,
utilities paid, 1275, 8100

Wet« Wells. Commercial
tnd Dome.tic. Teat holea.
Pumpo Sales and Service.
304-895-3802.

Get . your carpet in ahip
ahepe. W1ter removal. FREE

Mixed Hay. 114·149·2424.

.

-.
'

71

Auto1

for

17151\GTERG L1 ~c

E &amp;. R Tree Sorvlca, fully

lnaurad, free eatimatee.
Phone etoil-387-0838, coli

Moving: 1 970 Ford pickup
wrecker, 1800. 1874 Pinto
for porto 1110, 3 mi. - n
Rt. 218. oroa2brldgoo,end
of guardrail · with green
point. twn right, gravol rd.
crauroacta. mike left, 1It
hOUM troller felt . .

Roofing and Carpentry
work, gen'eral repaira, call

Anthony Williamaon, 8 14·
' 3117-0194.
Get Your Carpet IN SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTAIN
STEAMER. water remoVal,
furniture cleaning. Free E1tl·

matH. 614·446-2107.

82

Plumbing
• Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth· ond Pine
Phono !4"'·3888 or "46·
olloll77
'
JIM'S PLUMBING&amp;. HEAT·
lNG. Fomerly Oewitt'o
Plumbing. Call 81 ..·387·
0576.

83

Sela

TV!

Not a lot, of
course, but..

DOZER WORK By •Ted

H1nna. 'ponds. ditch••·
blumenta. et:c. Call 448·
4807 . Carter &amp; Evane .

1871 oil•oil Chevy truck auto, Tronoportotlon.
olkllng back gluo. ..1.000
miloo. Call 441·1 092 llftar ·lonnie Bogga Exeaveting.

5.

Dozer, Rckhoe. dumptruck.
Vanl

•

llo 4 W.O.

Motorcycles

Work by hour or job. Coli
ollolll-7103.

Cet 211 hoe, doara. crane,

WINNIE
I THINK

HER

onytlme 446·4137,
Jamu L Davloon, Jr.

1974 Hondo C h - 30 ln. (--:-:-""::-·- ; - - - - - - : . _
o - front encl. Cl 780 F. J.A.R. Conatruction Co.
Coll81"-1"1·2737.
Wotor Llnoo, Footoro,
Draine. AIJdndaof Dhchlng.
Rutlond, Oh. 81"· 742•
715 Boeta and
21103. ''
Motora for Sale
...,go Excovoting. 8ullclolllr
._ N&lt;;khoo ewviee. Baoe·
Chrlo Craft 18117 conotoilo· ~menta. footere.landecaplng.
tlon oobln orul-. 38 h .. drlvew1ya. term pondt.
81"·742-2.-o7 or 81 oil-7oi12·
w~h tNIO&lt;, 112.100. Call
81oil·317·0371 batwoon 2081.
10·3,
e.

..

WdtCI1

Excavating

74

... .

ANNIE

ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
ClEANING. CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614·448-2107.

Good·1 Excavating. buemente. footers. .d rivew•ys.
tanka, land~~e~ping .

Ceil 448·0962 .

Furnished upf1:airs ap1.. 3
rooms &amp; bath, ctean, adults
only, no pets, ref. req.
Utilhiea paid . Call 446-

30 .. ·876-2088 or 8764580.

!oadaro, dump truck. Coli
1114·4411-1142 between
7:00AM &amp;. 5:00PM.

dep., adutts only. no pet1.

c:::::J
c:::::J

ter. alec1rlcian. m11on. C11l

1975 CJ.s, ..cotlent condl·
tlon, n - tlroo, 30oii·V·8.
Coil 4411·87111.

Lorge round bolao of hey,
420.00 -h. Will dollver.
Coil 441· 10112.
Doberman
175, 30 ..·882-

RINGLE'S SERVICE upo·
rioncad roofing, Including
hot tor oppllcotlon. carpen -

3 Bhotoo &amp;. 2 oowo. 1 boar, 1
rubber tlrod form wagon.
. , 4-841·2237.

ferred. Cali 446-2215 .

AKC
pupplao,
2230.

romovoLColl676· 1331.

73

Heeler puppiee. Exc.llent

446-2746 or leave meuag~
an anawering service.

F • K Tree Trimming, stump

2 horooa &amp; 2 uddiH. 30·08
Remington rifle . 30"'882·
3242.

pat, 12&amp; ooch. 111 oil-378·
21oil3. '
'

Jackson Estate Apartments
638 Jackson Pike !Equal
Houaing Opportunity) has
one bedroom apartments
rent 11ar1lng 11 •167 and
two bed.room rent starting at

0

1978 Mercury Cougor, 8
cyt, Po-r ot-ng, poEAMLESS GUTTERS, Ono
brell:11, 11r. new exhault, , . -•-··- custom fit your home.
need a work on drivere door,
motor.,...,,.,,, 11100. 304·
182-22111.
jnlght

7e Monte Co~o. tnt. cruiM,
air, exc. cond. r1Nye, new

..···- ... -...
:
- .. . .

BORN LOSER

after&amp;.

Furnished 3 rooms, · wilh
privata ba1h . Reference Pre-

715
•

111oil·441·13oil3

om mw om® m

•ttw~:~~~~~§E.~=
84

•

Auto Perta
ACC818Ciriel

m

ooh. Call 448,3617 .
1 bod room Apt, f196. mo.

including utll,itiea . Equal
houaing opportunity. Cpn·
tact VIII8Qe Menor . Apts.
814·982·7787 .

J

'

3 • 4 room fu;nished apta.
614·882·5434, 814-992·
6814 or 304·882·2588 .
Furniohod efficiency and 2
bedroom Apt. in Mlddloport.

'

PEANUTS

Farry. 30"·876-25oil8.

New Haven. 15 room houM.
bllsemtnt, nice lot. within
walking dl8tence of Power

Apto. for rent. 81oil·992·
11808.

111onti 8180 . ..,.. month.
182·24011. 882·2olloll7 or
875·11.110.

For ront·now 1 bedroom
Apt. • furnilhod, UtH~Ieo
paid. 1250. month. 81 oil·

I

9 M·A·s·H
1119 Nlghtline

L-

WHAT KiNciOF
A ~i.JY WA5
'THAT P~E55
PH OTO~~APHE:~?'

I WAs WONPERIN6 IF ,
Yoli:D CARE TO DO MY

• Twilight Zona
11:"5 Cil MOVIE: 'Roourrection' ,
12:00 I]J MOVIE: 'The loot
Dinoeour'
()J Nlghtllna
9 MOVIE: 'Such Good
FriendI'
• Thlcka of the Night
Cil Cll lote Night with
.12:30

• HOMEWORK' FOR ME,,.

_.____·---~-­
1 _2__bedroom
Apt. furnlohad

9 1 2 5 30 4

87

I teO. month pluo utllitiH
dd
-~
~--•
on apoM,, ovonv,..lngtha
Ohio Rlvw In Mln-ille,
Oh. 81"-112· 3324.

1171 l'ard Tortno. 1a11 er
1'110. Cell

::t;,:::,,-, . . . 1:00
•

·,

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

1177 ,..,.......... Hit

...,

~

....
- · ,Cell
4:JO,....
.,......
... after

David Lettermen

IF VOU DID, 'I'Oli'D .
I-lAVE MV EVERLASTING
GRATITUDE ...

Cll Jack Benny Show
•
(J) MOVIE: 'Lonteot
Drive'

mlfZN-.

lilt ITATI . •
UPHOLITIIIV IHOP ·
!!~ 8eo. A.... G•-a-lle. :

-·'71U

or..,.._,. ,

· ~· -

•
I'

."·

I

•'

J

I I I

Print answer here; A (

I XI

rI J

ONE

{AA...,. tomo1 row}
Ye~terday ' s

I

Jumbles: GROIN

BERTH

HOOKED

STOLEN

Answer: What he was, after he bought her that big

diamond-STONe-BROKE

.

Jumbll Book No. 17,cont8kllna 110puulea, Ia •••l.. bleiOfSt .ISplu!assC pO.tage
1rtd handling from JumtMe1 Clo thlt ~•paper, Box 341.Norwood. N.J. 07141.
lnc:llldlyourniii'M,addnt•.tlpcodtll'dmlkech.cktPIVIMtoN...,.pilfboob.
.

•

.

.

I

..
•

BRIDGE ·
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

•The bracket play
and knocks out the ace of
diamonds. Maybe East wins
· the first, second or third
NORTH
111+8S
diamond.
+10 7 3
It makes no difference.
'Ill 5
East clears the hearts' and
+QJ0983
South cashes all the clubs
+AQJ
and diamonds to wind up
with an overtrick.
WEST
EAST
+K61
No one has noticed that
+AJ92
,713
East could have shifted to a
'QJ982
spade. If someone does, it is
+61
t A 72
+a 6 3
mentioned that since East
+974
holds the spade jack, that
SOUTH
shift
would yield Just two
+QB5
spade tricks for the same
.AK6
result of three bid, . four
+KJ5
made.
+K 10 52
Now let's look at really
Vulnerable: North·South
expert defense in operation.
Dealer: South
East can C&lt;&gt;uot I 0 tricks
for
declarer if he leads back
West North Easl
South
a he&gt;rt, so he reali~es that a
I NT
spade shift is imperative.
Pass
3 NT Pass
Pass
Then he reviews h1s bridge
Pass
books and reca lis the
"bracket" play. This play is
Opening lead: "Q ·
designed to nullify some
high·spot card held by dum·
my when you hold tbe cards
that br~cket it. .
East leads the jack of
By Oswald Jacoby
spades. South can put up his
and James Jacoby
queen, duck, whlsl.le a sad
tune, but come what may,
Here is the sort of routine the defense is going to cash
hand that seldom receives four quick spade tricks and
any comment or attention. set him one.
South wins the heart lead (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

1
~~--v... ~,.!If'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
· I Cabaret
1 Showed
5 Stole
concern
11 Indigo plant 2Weak
12 "Kiss of
3 Office
Death" star
fixture
13 Tiny brook
4 Building
14 Bechann
wing
15 WaUach
5 Defame
16Not6 Lack
aneye
7 Call-day
17 Greek letter RHiss case
18 Silk
document.s
yarn size
9 Caustic
20 -row
10 Laughed at
21 Irish
16 Vanpyke,
sweetheart
e.g.
zz Vibrant
19 "Smoke"
23Speed
heroine
merchant
. 2li -down
(subdued)
211 African
antelope
27 Not on

Yesterday's Answer

20 Declivity

2!l Give
testimony
30 N.H. city
31 Binge
33 Raison d' 36 Skill
37 Tai native

22 Expiate

23 Practical
person

24 Tirana is
its capital

· the same
side (abbr. )

. 28 French priest
28 Prowls

32 Bunnese hill
dweller
33 Sheep ·
34 Vigor .
35 Natural
37 Nasty glance
38 Leone
or Madre
39Eng.
COllpo&amp;!F

41 Biblical

. prophet

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to
Ia

•

work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply itands for another. In this · sample A is
used for the three L's, X 'for the two O's, etc. Single letters
al'ootrophes. the length and formation of the words are ali
hmts. Each day the code letters,are different.
CR\'PTOQUOTES

.

'12:oill (J) ""' of Top Rank
Boxint
•
.1:00 (JJ MOVIE: 'The Bell ~•r'
!Ill Married Joan
(J) En-lnment Tonight
elD CNN H-llna Nawo
1:30 •
(JJ
NBC
Newo
Overnight
&lt;lJ MOVIE: 'The Oogo of
Wor'

Upholltery

Now orrongo tho clrdod loiters to
form tho JUrprioo .... SUQ·
~by t h o - cariocin.

40 Shred

e

Oh. No peta. Months rent
piua 1100. -urlty. 81 oil·
992·3874.

Nic• 3 bedroom -homo. 2
batha, 2 firopl~. hoat
pump, Iorge kite'-, garoga
• .. potlo. 1325. por
m onth.8e2-24011. 8822447 or 111-.8140.

1111 Cutluo, 187711: 1981
M«cury lyrm, 143911; 1880
Comaro. 18018; 1178 Cu·
tlaa, 1118H; 1171 Mwcury
Zephyr, f21181: 18711 Oldo
Dalto 88, e891: 1870
Dodgo Plcilup, e888. BIG
DEAl AUTO BALES. Rt. 2
J•rlcho Rood, 30oil·875·
1788 after e p.f!l .. 875·
5oi1Be.

4426.

Unfurnished 1 bedr. apt.,
nearly new, no pets, •119
wa1er furnlehed. *10 dep~

: 2 bedroom, large kitChen,
• •lectrlc atove. *176 8

vito cllrinet, good cond.,

1819 or evenings 446 -

I

li .

Shop, 448-0B.-o.

Indoor-outdoor boarding facllhleo. Englioh Cock•• Spa·
nial puppiao. CoU 111 "·381·
9790.

Auotrol,.n Shephard • 81uo

frig . $175 mo. Call 448-

1619 .

2 bedroom canage, new
' carpe1. good location, in
1 town. 304-876-7634 after

Clarlneta, flutee. IIXI·
phonea. trombonea,
trumpe11. fr•nka Pe,wn

81

1676 .

Uko now. 1150. Call 614·
388·9790.

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

1178 Thundorblrd. UoiiOO.
814·841-2880.

••4

Peta ~or Sale

387·0871.

Woodbuming S1ovas. freestanding, fireplace lnHrta.
mobile home approved, &amp;
furnance ad-ona. Jividen&amp;
Farm Equipment, 448·

67

new. WUI MA ar trade for

or coat. f690. Cell 514.
265· 121 6.

Sherwin·Williama Nova airleas electric paint sprayer.

Fqr Ieete modsrn, unfurn., 2
bdr. apt. Overlooking city
park : Includes range &amp; re-

ule.

MUST SELLe now oewing

model 2300. 1-614·894·
7842.

446-0338 .

Firewood ' for

rying con ond 1' Argo 1OOp
$390. 304-875-2808.

Uaed Ditch witch trencher

Small turn . house 1 or 2
aduhs only, no peta. Call

1_do_w_._3_0_4_·•_7_5_·_1_5_1_5_._ _

816 pickup lood. Call 614·
245· 6804.

vered. Call 614-258-8888.

2bdr .. 2 bath, 11 Court St.
Ref. &amp; dap. $326 mo. Call
448-4926 .

cablneta. butch•r block
t
Ilk
.
coun tr top.
• ·new, 1
window with 1 norm win304·178·1 735.

Firewood pickup or deli-

Furnished apt. 8185 . Wa1er
paid. 2 bdr .. 131% 4th,
Gallipolia. 446-441 6 after 7
p.m.

t

2

new t100. 304·17&amp;-15843

blook Naugohldo flnioh.lko

$193. 8200 deposit. Cal

:.._ Rent or Sale. Racine·
: AemOdelad two Jtory. New
• carpB1ing, 3 bedroome, 2
beths. garage. gae heat.
; Clooa

Kenwood cuaene deck

&amp; Son. Call 446· 7786.

Private trailer lot located 1 'AI
miles fro~ City Lim ita on Rt.
588 . .Call 446·3870 .

Very nice 2· bedroo-m mobile
home. Furniahed. 12x60.
Burlingham area. No pets.

Swivel rocker with ottoman.

rooms. Park Central Hotel.

Sleeping room $116. utilibdr ., wtth built ~ in cabinets, ties peid, range &amp; refrig.
2 baths, air cond., underpin - Share bath . Man only. 446·
ning, intercom. new rugs.
drapea, furniture. outside 441·6 after 7 p.m .
entrance box. 2 sets of extra
steps, fire alarm, gas alarm. 46 Sp.a ce for Rent
first aid kit, fireextinguither,
Trailer for rent, Call 446-

1----------

Call 446 ·0768.

1 974 Shultz 1 2x65, 2 large

3 br furnished. ac. clean
condition. 1 child. no pets.
above New · Haven . 304·

Real Estate ·
Wanted

41

~:~6~1·4~·~2~6]6~·~17~5~0~.~~~=

1-:;;=;;;=::::;::;::::;;=::::;=
Rooms I

$6.900. , ·304-882-2237.

2 -approx. 11ft acre Iota for
sale, level lots, $3,900each .

-·

AKC reg; 8hatlond llhHp·
dog lmln,.turo Cblllol pupo,
8 woolco old e1eo. ooch.
304·11711-2782.

cond., . f150. Coli

52 CB, TV,
2 bdr . traile r, furnish8d . Cell percent of adjuned incomeEquipment
446·0756 .

666-1232 .

good

$12,300 . Renting for 30

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

r.

RON'S Tel.vision Service.
llpoclollzing in Zenith and
Mo1oroli, Quezar, and
houH cello. Call 678-2398
or olloll8.'2454 . ·

(J) aJ ()J ABC Nowo
0 (J) 9 CBS Nowo
Cll Buoino11 Report
(!]) Over Eaoy
7:00 8 (I) PM Magazine
iil Bonanza
(J) SportaCentar
I]) Coral Burnett
(I) Entertainment Tonight .
· Cll Charlla'o Angola
0 (I) Wheel of Fortune
Cll (!]) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newahour
®NeW8
.
18 ()J P100pla'a Court
1111 Jefleraons
· 7:30 • Cll Tic Toe Dough
(J) 2nd Annual l.ogondory
Pocket Bllllarda Stars This
show features Willie Masconi vs. Irving Crane. (60
min.)
I]) Good Newo
(I) 0 (J) Family Feud
9 Wheel of Fortune
Cll ()J . Entartalnment
.
Tonight
ell One Day •! a Time
8:00 II (I) (J) Majer League
Jlaeeball: Ne~c&gt;nal League
Champlonohlp Sorleo
Cil MOVIE: 'Tho World
Accordint to Garp'
Cil MOVIE: 'Gloria'
iil HIOh Chaparral •
(()MOVIE: 'Sobrlna·
(I) Ill ()J Fall Guy Terri
sends Colt. Howie and
Jody to an island to retrieve a bail jumper. (80
min.)
0 (I) ® Whiz Kido
CPREMIERE) Richie Adler
and his pals use Richie's
computer to unravel the
death of an elderly woman
who left no heirs to her es·
tate. (60 min.)
())()])Cootie Tonight's pro·
gram looks etthe planning.
building, habita1ion and '
siege of a fictional , 13th
century Welsh castle. (60
min.)
ell MOVIE: 'Tho Gambler'
8:30 !Il World Sportsman This
show features Ballooning
and Shark Fishing with
guests Peter Bench ley and
Phil Harris. {60 min.)
9:00 &lt;II 700 Club Todey's pro·
gram features author Gary
Shilling .
I]J Cll ii2I Dynasty Krystle
~huns Blake to stand by
Mark who is accused of
Setting the cabin on fire
and Alexis believes a killer .
is stalking her.,(60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
Ill I]J ® MOVIE: 'Carpool'
Cll (!]) Vietnam: A
Telaviaian HistOry 'The
First
Vietnam
War
(1946-1954).' The French ,
expecting an easy time in
Vietham.lose a crucial bat·
tie and with it their Asian
empire. (60 f!!in .) [Closed
Captioned]
9:30 !Il PKA full Contact
1
Karate
10:00 1]). MOVIE: 'An American
Werewolf In London'
I]J 18 ()J Arthur Hailey's
'Hotel'
([) German Americana:
300 Yaaraln tho New lend
Tonight's program eval~
uate&amp; the religious, econ·
omic and political motive·
tio"ns
behind
German
immigration to this conti·
nent during the last 300
years . (80 min.)
(!]) Nowo
• ell INN News
10:30 Cil Coming Attractions
Cl) To Be Announced
·
I]) TBS Evening N-s
ell Comedy_Time
11:oo
ii2I N-o
Cil MOVIE: 'Ghost Story'
I]) 'A nother lifo
!Il SportaConter
Cll Dr. Who
@ Pallioera
Iii) Bonny Hili Show
11:15 (J) Auto Racing '83:
Formula I Italian Grand Prix
from Monza, Italy
11:30 G
(J) Tonight Show
&lt;II Star Time
(() Cotllno
I]J Soap
8 (J) Police Story 'The Vi·
alent Homecoming.' "pol·
ice sergeant leads the
Juvenile Division In an at·
tempt to head .off a gang
war. (A) {60 min.) .
(l) Lotenight Amorl..,

)

··-·---·--

EVENING

Wk~

3 bedroom home. dining
1981 14x70, Shuhz limited room ·or family rooni, 2 oar
mobile · home, microwave. garage. $200. mOnth . 304· Apart_m.,nta . 304 -676 ·
di•hweaher. central elr, un- 676-6640 .
6548 .
derpenning, three bed· 1 -:--:----'-----~ 1"-=--- - - - -1------~--~
rooms, 11h betha, exctt.llent 3 bedroom home, 2 full APARTMENTS. mobile Couch cheap. upright player
condition, *115,500. Cell baths, 2 . car garage, heat homes. houset. P1. Pleasant piano. Honda 6 atrlng b.njo.
304-875-6049 liter 6 p.m. pump. 304-676-6640.
and Gallipolis . 61 4· 446· ~~C-•1_1_6_1_4_·2_6_6_·.,:6_2.:.6.:.9_
. __

..

WEDNESDAY

~8~1i2i·6~1i8~3.~~~~~ '

m111n. 2 end t•blea.. coff•

toblo, •Iter 5. 30oil-878·
..1112.

13

Television
Viewing

18 ft. .Toiry comper. Fully'
telf-contalntd. 1leep1 I,
twning • wooderi camping
picnic table Included. Exc.
cond. U,OOO. firm. 814·

COUCH. ch•lr. rocker. otto·

../'

The Dloilv. Sentinel-Page

Buy Factory Dlroct. Ught·
weight, flberg,.u Scamp
1 3 ..... 1e' trovol trollero •
now 19' 5th whoot. c;on now
toll .... 1 '800· 3oil8·oil882
for freo brochure ond SAVEl

.HCI ! fH~ IR:&gt;I'.'&gt;

.... .,..

Otlubef 5' 1983

•

l!florryWrtght

~~~~--~~~~

bility. Conloat Millwood
Inc,. 304; 273-2522. Rt. 2
at EYIHflrHn H~lo Road,
Mondoy-Friday, 8·4:30:
Sl1urday, 8·3:00.

30~·1711·2787

•,

I

5, 1983

h '

EXTRA good top 1011, doll·
vared, . phcfne 304·171·
7771 .
'
'

refrigerauor. Corbin •
Snyder furniture . .t4fS ·

1"•70 SkyNno, 118.000. 2
bec:ftoo'TI luxury mod.l, clr·
cu ..r kitchen. dining room
with bow-dow,both.w~h

64 Mlac. Merchendlae

-·

SLCB
Q CF L

CRZ

0 QL

MICDMRCSV

GC I L

LFMBG
H fl.

LKK LJ 0

, 0 Q L.

QYICR
IMRZ.- GHYSJL ' YRWRHXR
Yalenlay's Cryplolplole: A WIDESPREADING HOPEFUL

DISPOSITION IS THE BEST UMBR.ELLA FOR 'THIS VALE

OF TEARS.-W.D,HOWEW

'

'

�'·

\

" p,q 0

'

•.

14-The Daily Sentinel

'

'
Pamerov-:-Middleport, Ohio

O..tobet 5, 1983
.w.dnetday,
.

EDA denies__(_c_on_t~n_·u_ed_fro__:n:'_pa_g_e_ll

__

the $YIIem, It wtl1 have to pay

lJilt!al fee

•

an

effort to . become a Part of !he

of $10,00) and approxl· · computer system.

l!llllb' Sl2,ml for various prjnters ' The comtillsslpners will attend a :. · ·

· 8

11Pkable

to the treasurer and

allllltor's office, For each year
thereetter, !t will cost $6,00) which
tbe comm!ssioners felt was

~~.

.

Cow!red ~under !he computer
system WOUld be property · taxes,
8Ei!Elal accounttog, fund account. m,, p&amp;yroU, and others.
Jones felt lt was a "real set up.".
Canmt.ss!oners must make a.dec!·
slon as Soon as possible. The
contract was sent to Rick Crow
proeecuting attorney for review:
Based on money ava!lable !he
COI'nrnlss!oners . will make every

Cystic fibrosis fun_d s

semhnnual.general policy councll
meeting of Buckey Hllls Hocking
Valley Regional Development on
Tuesday, Oct. 25.
A meeting will be atranged to ,
meet w!lh George Co-llins, couty
treasurer and Bill W!cklbte, county
auditor to review all county flnan.
ces. Jones stated we must see where
we are now and what lt~ksllke for
!he future.
Attending were David Koblentz,
president, Manning Roush and
Jones, commissioners, Mary Hol&gt;stetter, clerk a nd - Martha
Chambers.

See Page 7 •

Family tradition goes
Stnry on Page 4

Mrs. Blanche Stone, 101, a native
of f'9!neroy, dled Tuesday at !he·
Alliance City, Hospital.
Mrs. Stone was born Aug. 17,1882
in Pomeroy. a daughter of the late
Jolm and Caro!lne Spencer Carsey.
She was a practical nurse and
worked as a live-In companion to
older women for a number of years.
She formerly resided on West First
St., bt Minerva but had been a
resident of !he Alliance Health t:are
Center for !he past nlne years. Mrs.
Stone was a member of !he East
Liverpool Church of the Nazarene.
She was preceded in death by her
first husband, Talt Rohrbaugh bt

•

•.

eVoi.32,No-.t24

at y

Emergency runs.

Four people fmed

Three calls were answered by
local units Tuesday, !he Meigs
Cour!ty Emergency Medlcal Ser·
vice reports. At 3:29p.m ., Pomeroy
took Torn Boso from Route 7 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
4: 10 p,rn. , Middleport took Freda
Carsey from Vaughan's Bakey to
Veterans Memorial and at 8:16
p.m., the Middleport Unit treated
Paul Lauderrnllt on Route 7 but
provided no transportation.

Four defendants were fined' in !he
Pomeroy Mayor's Court Tuesday ·
night. Court was presided over by
Council President Bruce Reed in !he
absence of Mayor Clarence An·
drews who Is ill.
Fined were Tom Goett, Pomeroy,
$63 and costs, littering; Pe.te Haley,
Middleport, $213 and costs, assault;
Alfred Roush, address not recorded,
$113 and costs, intoxication, and Gall
Thoma, Long Botiom, $100 and
costs, reckless operation.

Veterans Memorial

•
F1GIITING THE FIRE.· Pobtt P~asant llremm carry a hose Iowan!
a burning section of a railroad bridge located beldnd Point Ple•sant's
ftoodwall at Seventh Street across the rtver to Kanauga. Fireman
battled the 12:50 p.m. blaze Tue!lda.v, which destroyed 48 ties, for 5~
hours before extinguishing !he blaze with foam. A spokesman for

..
.
Conrail Railroad, wblch has an oftlce bt Charleslon, said the ties wblch
burned bt II¥! incldeat were old and !l(lbech•led to he replaced yesterday
an,vway. c - of the lire Is under btvelltlptlon, but has not yet been
detennlned.
. .

Seven ·c andidates obJain petitions "
Seven residents have flied declarations Jp•r un as write-in candidates
for postS bt !he Nov. 8 election, !he
Meigs County Board of Elections
reports.
In the Eastern Local School
District where six candldates flied
petitions to run lor !he three seats
opening this year on !he board of
education, Keith Weber has flied as
a Wiitl"ln candldate:
· The six candidates whose names
w!ll be on !he ballot are Roger C.
Gaul, James R. Smtih, David L.

Chadwell, Carolyn Sue Heines,
Thomas A. Gaspers and J!rnmy C.
Caldwell.
In Lebirnon Township, !here Is an
unexpired term for trustee and Guy
A. Rose flied a petition for that post
In August. Harry W.. Richard has
tiled as a wr!te-bt candidate for the
unexpired term.
.
In Pomeroy VIllage, Bemadet!e
Anderson has f!led as a write-bt
candidate for !he clerk·treasurer's
post. Other candidates who fUed

earlier are WU!lam Snuffer, a
Democrat, and Ellen Jane Rought ,
a Republican. Mrs. Anderson Is
currently serving as acting clerk·
treasurer.
1n !he August filings, Charles F.
Pyles, Incumbent, was the only
candldate to fUe for !he position of
Racine VUlage Mayor. However,
Harry R. Lyons, Sr., Is now a
wpte-bt candldate for the post.
Syracuse VIllage had no candl·
dates fU!ng for two seats on village

coun~U

opening !his year. lncum·
bents, Kathryn Crow and John
Bentley dld not flie for reelection.
However, Glenn·I. CUndi1f and Oris
A. Hubbard have flied as write-in
candldates lor the positions. Rober1
L. Cunnbtgham has declared hlm·
self a wrtte-ln candldate for !he
Syiacuse Board of Public Affairs. ·
Onl)' !he names of candldates
who f!led petitions of candldacy by
!he Aug. 25 deadline wW be prbtted
on ballots for !he Nov. 8 electiOn.

~GRANT-Gene lmbodeo, Syracu.se
part of the Ohio Department of Natural Resourees.
Fire Chief, right, was prellented wllh a Royal ., 'lbe 50 percent matchbtg gnmtwWbeused to purchase
Community Fire Protection Grant for Sl,OU from Jbn llreprotectl\'eclothlngendequlpmentlortheflremen.
Milliron, forest milnager at ShadeRiverStateForesta

Supreme Court ·g rants Autry's death reprieve
HUNTSVll.LE, Texas (AP ) Conyict.ed killer JamesDav!dAutry
laystrappedtoadea!hhousegutney
with a needle bt h!sarrn today when
he was told -lourm!nutesaft.erh!s
executlonwastohavestarted-lhat
a U.S. Supreme Court justice had
granted a·reprteve.
The 29-year-old dr!ft.er, con·
demned for klll1ng a store clerk bt
19SO over.a six-pack of beer, showed
neither joy nor sadness at !he ruling
!hat prolonged h!s l!fe, oft!cals said.
A proexecut!on crowd outside !he
prtson, however, reacted with
obscenities, and !he daughter of
Autry's victim said, "It figures."

. Board sets special-meeting date

A special meeting of tne Eastern Local Schoo! District Board of
EducatiOn has been set for 7 p.m . Monday. The board Is expected to
ratify a new contract wilh !h~on-certl!ied employes of !hedlstrtct. A
tentative contract was agr
pon by negot!atorsof!heboard and !he
employes last week. The non- rtlfled employes are expected to act
upon the contract Thursday evening,

ALL TIMEX
· WATCHES

2 5ot:ction1, 1.4 fbges
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NeW1paper

Not Guilty plea entered
· in recent traffic·deaths

Admitted ..RusseU CUne, Racine;
Two defendants were fined and a
Loretta
Campbell, Dexter; Tommy
!h!rd forfeited a bond in the court of
Bass,
Portland;
Marvin Price,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Pomeroy.
Tuesday night.
.Dtscharged ..Lols Cornell, Ml·
Fined $425 and costs and given a 10
chael
Eblbt, Eliza Hughes.
day jaU sentence on a charge of
driving whl!e intoxicated was John
D. Pridemore of Rutland. William
R. Hall, Jr., Pomeroy, was fbted
$100 and costs on a charge of fleeing
a police officer. Forteltinga$50bond
posted on a charge of traveling !he
wrong way on a one way street was
Roger Barnett, Scottsburg, Ind .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
Richard Celeste has requested that
Weather forecast
eight more Ohiocounttes be added to
Marriage licenses
the \1st of those declared agrtcultu·
Considerable cloudiness tonight.
raJ disaster areas as a result of th!s
Two marriage licertses were year's prolonged drought.
Low around 50. Winds westerly 5-10
Issued bt Meigs County Probate
In a letter on Tuesday to U.S . . mph. Partly cloudy Thursday. High
Court to Danny Chris Buffington 24, Agriculture Secretary John Block, 68-72.
Pomeroy, and Hope Donna Mac- !he governor requested lheaddltion
Extended Ohio Forecast
BUI!!:h, 28, Pomeroy; Wayne Lee of Belmont, Clermont, Gall!a,
Friday through Sunday:
Capehar1, 20,' Pomeroy, and Lee Jackson, Monroe, Montgomery,
Fair llll Friday. Partly cloudy
Renee Sayre, 17, Middleport.
SattJrcla.v
and Sunday. UUJe Varia·
Morgan, and Monuw Counties.
t1on In temperatUres with daytime
'hlgbs mostly In the 00s and
nlgbHUle lows In the 408.

Gallia among
Ohio counties
seeking aid

e"n ttne
•

son.

Surviving are a sister, Mrs. DeUa
Stahl of Pomeroy; a granddaugh. ter, Mrs. Veronica Sweitzer, Clevelancj, and a granddaughter, Mrs.
Diana L. Conn, Cuyahoga Falls,
eight great-grandch!ldren, six
great-great-grandchlldren and one
·great·great-great grandson.
Services will be held at 2 p .m.
Thursday at the Gotschall·
Hutchbtson Funeral Horne bt Ml·
nerva where friends may call one
hour precedbtg !he service. Burial
wlll. be in !he United Presbyterian
Church Cemetery at Calcutta.

••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·T hurscby, October 6, 1983

C:eyriphted 1983

1936 and h~r second husband,
Darwin Stone in 1965, 1hree daughters, 10 brolhers and sisters and a

Meigs County happenings

Mayor ends cases

See Page 10

.l

Area death
Blanche Stone

Cardinal Cooke •'dies

Justice Byron White granted the
stay at 11:32 P·'r: CDT TUesday,
based on !he question of "propor·
t!onal!ty" - whelher or not the
sentence !s comparable to !hose
g!v~ olher people for similar
cr!rnes. The state falled bt a bid to
have the order overturned
· !mmedlately.
The stay carne·one day after !he
entire U.S. Supreme Court turned
down by a 54 vote a request by
defenseattomeyCharlesCarverfor
a stay so he could pursue an appeal
basedonad!ffererlt!ssue-whether
a witness should have been granted
lmn'lunity from prosecution to
testify in Autry's behalf.
A sallne s&lt;llutlon already was
runnlllg btto Autry's arm bt prepa·
ration for !he lethal jolt of chemicals

Nov. 7. Shesa!dsheunderstood!hat
Justice Wh!te stayed Autry's case
had received an application for a
untu !he Callfornla case Is decided.
stay from Alvbt Bronstein of !he . Texas Attorney General Jim
Amer!can Qv!l Liberties Union's Mattox said the Callfom!a matter
National Prison Project.
"deals wilh !he question of proporAnn Arnold, press secretary to tlonallty of !he sentenCe- whelher
Gov. MarkWh!te,saldlhestaywas or not !he sentence granted one
granted on the basis of a Callfomla personglvenlhedeathpenaltylsthe
case !he high court plans to hear same or comparable· to a sentence
given someone else for en equal
crime."
.
1
Autry, called "Cowboy" by fellow
!runates on dealh row at the Ellis
(Continued from page 1)
Unit of the Texas Department of
Industry""Edwards observed.
Corrections, wOUld have been the
Edwardssaidwagesaresetby!he ninth lrunete executed nationwide
employer.
and the second bt Texas sinee the
GreggG!bbs,ownerandoperator SupremeCourtrelnstatedthedealh
of Sears, felt busbtess should take penalty In !976.
advantage of this program. -&lt;
Edwards also noted !hat 11 was a
•
·
when the reprtev&amp; was granted, wonderful program and ·requires Ohio lottery winn
. er
prison officials said.
'
thecooperatlonofprlvatebtdustry.
B •
ut..,.utry 'dldnotsayonewordor
Edwardsstatedihatabrochurels
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
have any response," when told at belngprepa:redwilh'-'
lo
·••~~•M number drawn Tuesday
11: 39 p.m . !hat !here had been a
uuormat non
~ uu~ ...
delay, said Texas Corrections •!he progrann !hat will be mailed to night bt the Ohio Lot!ery's dally ·
game, "The Number," was 106.
Gallia and Meigs Counties.
De I1rn t
k
pa
en spo esman Rlc k Har·
For further Information contact
1n the "Pick 4" ganne, played five
tley. At 12: ma.m ., !he condemned 1h h be
k !he w1nn1ng
rruin learned of the stay and "once
ec am r office at992-50lifrom9 ~·= a wee ,
number

. COL,UMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A Senate Republican
leader and the Office of Budget and Management
have drawn cillferent conclusions from !he same
report of state tax collections tor September.
Their assessments came amid debate on anti-tax
measures on the Nov. 8 ballot.
Pro-repeal forces say !he statewlllrecordasu'lllus
of up to $1.1 billion if repeal falls.
Senate Mbtortty Wh!p Sam Speck, R·New Concord,
said Wednesday . that. a Legislative Budget Office
report showed tax collections last month were above
adm!nlstratlon projections.
"Tax collections bt September alone were $25
mDI!on above official estimates. On a biennial basis,
!hat would represent a budget surplus of at least half a

CAA d•JreCtOr

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -House
SpeakerVerna!Ri(feJr.hasmoved
qulckly to quash published reports
!hat ·raised !he prospect of a pay
raise for key state adrnbtlstrators.
Rltfe, D·New Boston, was
strongly crttlcal today of plans
oulllned by William Sykes, director
of '!he Department of Adrnlnlstra·
t!veServices, fortheappobttmentof
a citizens committee to review
salary levels.
Noting !hat any change bt !he
state's salary schedule for adJnlnls·
trators would require legislative
approval, Riffe saki he feels !he
current schedlile Is adequate to take
care of !mmedlate and future
requirements.
·
"Some &lt;If the people !hat the
governor has placed bt high
positions were broughtbtfromoutof
state. Iknowthey'requal!tledorlhe
governor wouldn't have selected
them, but I don't th1nl( they
understand how Ohioans view their
state government, nor do I agree
with some of their views on how

4

.conn1e:s
got 1t!

to~;p;.m;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w;;;es;;9:m;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~';;;;;;;
.

FALL SPECTACULAR

20o/o

•

STOREWIDE SALE CONTINUES

TAILORI,NG THAT TRAVELS EVERYWHERE.
Near or fa r. Con nie's tailo re(J traveler wanders with you to
every location. every s1tLiation. on a path of absolute
soph &gt;st&gt; cat •on. It's a versatile · voyager in luxuriously
appomted lea the~ . packed with just eno ugh detailing
stacked with Just the right amount of heel for a look that
trave ls first class all·the way. Wine. Black and Dark Sand.

ALL HOUSEWARES
REDUCED 20%
-RU8BERMAID
-CORNING WARE ,
..:.sMALL APPLIANCES
-WESTMORELAND
-BROOMS AND MOPS
-KITCHEN GADGETs
-CLEANING' ITEMS
-CUTLERY .

SALE ENDs SATURDAY, OCT. 8

..

-AlARM CLOCKS
-DUTCH BULBS '
-COOKWARE
-GlASSWARE
-CROCK POTS
-POCKET KNIVES
-:-HAMPERS
-FIGURINES

'
state dollars should be spent," Riffe
. said.
"I have discussed my feelings
concernbtg these rnat!ers wilh !he
governor and hlsexecutlvestaff. We
arelnagreement.Idon'tappreciate
any attempts by the cabbtet and
lower·level admln!strators to sidetrack lhese pollctes. If they want to
make policy on state spendlng, let
!hem run for !he Legislature," he
said.
Riffe also shot down any talk of
raising the state's gasollne tax next
year.
The Department of Transporta" ..
tlon has said that Ohio would lose up
to $100 mUllan bt federal highway
funds because !he existing tax dld
not provide ei!Ollgh mat.clilng
revenue.
"Those people In the Department
of Transpor1atlon are going to !)ave
to learn to live wi!hbt their budget.
At t)lis time, I can foresee no
justifiable reason why the Legisla·
ture would consider an·!ncrease bt
the ·gas tax.

Father, chil~n: perish in fire
.'

LORAIN, Ohlo (AP) -A man and
two children perLsbed early today bt

a house fire bt Sheffield Township,
authorities said. The v!~im's wife
andanolherchDdwerebosp!tal!zed.
A spoke&amp;penlqa at st. Joseph's
Hospital here Identified the dead as
Jeffrey Mead, 26, h!s 2·year-old 1011
Jeffrey Jr., apd his stepson, ~wn
Smith, 5.
Hospltal!zed bt fair condltlon with
bums and smoke Inhalation were
Me~ Mead, 26, end daughter

Angela, a.

.•

·.

bU!lon doilars/' Speck said. "Wilh the national
economic recovery apparently acceleratbtg, !here's
strong reason to beUeve !hat !he tax collection
overage w!ll become more pronounced and !he
budget surplus will mount even h!gher !han !hat. "
· Ann Nolen, an OBM deputy dlrector, said the sales
tax produced ~.2 rnl!llon more !han forecast bt
September whl!e revenue from btcome taxes was up
by $2.2 million. But she said sales tax revenue for !he
fiscal year·to-date was down by four-tenths of 1
percent whlle revenue from !he income tax
yea&lt;·to-date was up 6 percent.
She said total tax revenueforthef!scalyear-to-date
exceeded earUer estimates by just 1.7 percent. And
when all revenue - from the federal government,
lot!ery and other sources - was considered, the

House Speaker moves
to quash raise report

H--

.

lng, he said'.
Norcross said !he fire started In
the living room near a chair wired
for apparently heat or vibration.
Mrs. Mead and her daughter
eecaped the . burning home by

jur'nplnaout a second·Ooorwlndow,
Norcroas said. They were outside
when flreflahters arrived after 3
a.m., be said.
The .,.wtant fire chief said Mrs.
Mead and her husband, who slept bt
a downstairs bed!oom, lll!parelltly
went to thelrchl!dren'sbedrooms on
tbe aecond floor when they d!acovel'8d the flre.fiOI'CI'OIIIIIlld Mead
and the two boYS were apparently
trapped by the fire and cooldn't

The Cause of tbe fire has not beell .
determiDed, saJd Asal8tant Fire
' Cblet Frank Noi'CI'OIS. The otrke of
the state F1re Marshalls lnvestlgat: . escape.

·CHAPMAN.
Next to Elberklds In Pom...Oy

••

acctctent, but was not treated, !he
patrol said. A passenger in h!s truck,
Dale Little, 45, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, was
btjured and was treated at !he scene
by !he Meigs Emergency Mecllcal
Service.
Decision due today
Meanwhile, Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas .Judge Charles Knight
will Issue a decision today on a
suppression of statements hearbtg
!n !he Pamela P. Spencer case held
Wednesday in Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court.
A motion was made by Steven
Story, attorney for Pannela Phyllis
Spencer, 23, Syracuse, on Aug. l, to
supress statements given by
Spencer to law enforcement officers
and evidence seized .:\1Y~ !he state
followbtg her 1ndlctment by !he
grand jury on charges of endanger·
ing children and Involuntary mans·
laughter. Spencer has been declared competent to stand trial.
Shewasbtdlctedbythegrandjury
on June 16 on !he two charges.
The case evolved when a baby
boy, found on May :ll wrapped in a

plastic bag bt a car bt Meigs County
was taken to Holzer Medlcal Center.
Accordlng to' a prellmbtary autopsy report at !he time from Gallla
County Coroner Dr. Donald R.
Warehime, the baby was not
stfubom
·It was reported that !he baby was
horn In a car In Syracuse and placed
111 a plastlchagbeforebelngtakento
Holzer Medlcal Center where it was
pronouced dead. The body was
transported to !he Franklin County
Coroner's Office for !he autopsy.
Takbtg !he stand Wednesday
were Dr. Margaret Hamish, obstetrician and gynecologist at Holzer
Clinic Llmlt.ed, who treated and
pertormed surgery on Spencer; her
two sisters, Cheryl Franko and
Vickie Cundiff bolh of Syracuse;
Gary Wolfe, Investigator for !he
shertff' s department; Paul Gerard ,
Investigator for the prossecu tlng
attorney and the defendant.
Dr. Harnish said she treated and
performed surgery on Spencer
following her admittance to Holzer
(Continued on page 14)

Officials draw different- conclusions from collections·

E:1fty minutes before !he execu·
tionsc~forl2: 01a.m., Wh!te

again there was no reaction."
r;a;.m;;.
Autry was led back to his cell next
to !he deat)J chamber.

Steven R. Peckham, 23, Rt. 1,
Middleport, plead not gul!ty to a
charge of vehicular homicide Wed·
nesday in Meigs County Court.
A pre-trlal hearbtgwas setforOct.
27, atll a.m. Peckham was released
on h!s own recognizance.
• Peckham was charged followbtg
a Sept. 20 ace!dent on Ball Run Road
near Pomeroy, where Lelia M.
HeDman, 69 and her husband,
Walter R. Hellman, 83, bo!h of 38811
Hellman Road, dled ·from internal
btjurtes suffered in !he head-on
collision.
The Gallla·Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said !he Hel1mans'
1965 Chevrolet collided with a 1979
Cherolet truck driven by Steven R.
Peckham.
'
The patrol said the He!lrnanswere
soulhbound, about a half-m!le from
Ohio 143, when !hey met Peckham's
truck on a curve.
Peckham was subsequently cited
for fallure to yield and aodlt!ona!
charges bt !he btcident were
pendbtg.
Peckham was Injured bt !he

'

..

r

btcrease was one-tenth of 1 percent.
· "We're on target. I think !he revenues are coming bt
wi!hbt our est!mates and !hey are corning In at a
·
reallst!c level," she said.
Also Wednesday, two members of the state Board
of EducatiOn lined up in support of tax repeal.
Jean Bender. elected to the board from !he 14th
District, and Robert Johnson of !he 7th Dlstrtct are
among 18 people listed by Ohioans to Stop Excessive
Taxation as members of "Educators For Repeal. "
They Issued a statement saying tax btcreases
enacted this year were "grossly excessive."
The Board of Education, by a vote of 13-2 with two
abstentions, Is on record in opposition to bo!h anti-tax
measures. Opposition has also come from !he Ohio

Education Association; !he state superbttendent of
public instruction, Franklbt Walter; and college and
university presidents.
Bender, who at one time had four chlldren In
school, was a member of the Coventry Local Board of
Educat!oo Iil Summit County for 11 years before her
election to !he ·state board last year.
"I have seen a lot of things and I reaUy believe that a
lot of money Is being wasted. I !hbtk we really need to
re-evaluato{wiiere the money Is gobtg," she said in a
telephone /"ter,tlew.
Issue 3 would repeal the 90 percent income tax boost
!hat took effect March 1. Issue 2 would make !t more
dJfficult for the Legislature to raise taxes by requ!rtng
&lt;\ three-fif!hs majority. •

Ms:

•

Motorcyclist
hospitalized

A Reedsville man Is In !he
Intensive care unit of St. Joseph's
Hospital, P arkersbu rg, W.Va ., for
injuries suffered in a motorcycle
accident on Ohio 681 Wednesday
night.
A hospital spokesperson wouldn't
release additional information on
Rorm!e L. Barber, who was transferred to St. Joseph's from Veterans
Mernortal Hospital.
Barber, 21, was a passenger on !he
motorcxcle , operated by Therlll L.
Randolph Jr.. 26, Reedsville.
The Gallla -Melgs post of the st·te
highway
patrol said·Randolph and
l,
Barber were eastbound at 8: :ll p.m .
when Randolph reportedly lost
control on a curve, went off the right
I
side of !he road and overturned.
The motorcycle 1hen struck a
mailbox, throwing Randolph and
Barber from !he motorcycle. The
VIrginia arrive at the N atlonal Academy of Science
ATI'END CONFERENCE - Govs. Richard
accident occurred five nnlles east of
this week bt Washbigton to aUend 1111 acid rain
Cel...te, left, of Ohio '!I'd Jolm RockefeDer IV of West
Ohio7.
conference. (AP Laserpholo).
·
No Injury was llstedforRandolph,
and Barber was taken to Veterans
by Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad. The patrol.sa!d the accident
Is still under 1!1vestigatlon.
Sandbtls!as,
broke
away
under
!he
Federal
Aviation
Adm!nlstratlon
Three car-deer accidents were
NEW YORK (AP)- A plane that
crashed last monlh during a rebel from that goyernment last records the plane plloted by Roman investigated Tuesday by !he Gallla·
December.
had been re8tstered for most of this Meigs post of !he state highway
bombing raid bt Nicaragua was
He has sbtce been aligned wi!h !he year to Investalr Leasing Colll. of patrot
registered for much of 1983 to a
McLean, Va.
A car driven by Dale L. Gable, 26,
company managed by a man. who Revolutionary Democratic AI·
lnvesta!r Is managed by a fo!TT'.er Ravenswood, W.Va., was moder·
has had ties to !he CIA, The Nelli Hance, a rebel group led by
York Times reported today.
ex-&amp;nd!nlsta leader Eden Pastora top off!ctal of a company !hat was a ~ely damaged when it struck a deer
In the aftermath of the Sept. 8 raid that has been tiylng to overthrOW owned by the CIA, said The Times, on Ohlol24nearRacineat12: 15a.m :
on Nicaragua's mabt ·air base and the Sandlnlstas. Pastors's group quottna Investa!r officials and !he The deer continued on, !he patrol
said,
.
btternatlonal airport, Nicaragua's has denied any connection wilh the manager's wife.
The second company, IntermounModerate damage was also
foreign mjnlstry had claimed !hat CIA. But The Times said It had beeri
the plane, a
404, had been told by adm!nlstration and congres· tain Aviation Inc., Is defunct. The reported to a car driven by Sherry D.
given to !he rel)els as pert of CIA · sional soorces that !he CIA had Times said !hat pubUc records Roush, 31, Syracuse, after !t coll!ded
covertly supported !he group wilh indicate the company fonnerly wi!h a deer on Ohio 7 In Salisbury
assistance. Noprootwas offered.
·
provided air support for paramUI· Township at 12: :ll a.m.
The plane was pUoted by Agustin money and small arms.
tary
CIA
activities.
Nancy L. Neutzl!ng, 30, Syracuse,
A separate rebel group, the
M. Roman, former general manlnvestalr offlclals acknowledged escaped btjury when her vehicle
ager ot the Nicaraguan national
Nicaraguan DemoCratic Force, has
havlngowl\ed theplaneatonet!me · struck a deer on County Road ~ bt
beell widely reported to be backed
airline. Roman, alsoformerchletot
but decllned further comment, !he Sutton Township at 8 p.m. Her car
operationS for his country's air force
by the CIA.
was slightly damaged.
The Times said !hat according to newspaper reported.

'

.

t' (

\ ...

Crashelf plane ·has CIA ties ? ?

Cessna

t

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