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                  <text>THERE'S A TLlNE THAT KE:Effi
RUNNINEi THI&lt;OLJCiH MY MIND,

AND

Marshal given support

by J)ick Cavalli

WINTHROP
HOWDOE5
. ITqQ~

r CA.N'r IDENTIFY IT.

ITOOES,
II LA L..A LA LA,
DAH D.AH ...

What's Cooldng? Page 7

See JeUer on Page 2

"TA -DA I TA-DA,

.

00 DEEDAH ...

Story on P~e 12

Photos, story Pages 3-5

,

II

THATS NOT A. TUNE,.
THATS A WHOLE
SYMPHONY.

BINeS- Bl~ TA-DA'

DA DADA DEE DA,
LEE LA LEE. ''

BA BA BLJM BL1M BLJM ...

_

?

MEN 9EEM TO LAUGH
A L..OT MORE TI-tAN
WOMEN

N_O ,
I HAVEN'T....

BUT Now ·
THAT YOU
MENTION
IT.......

THE MORE YOU HUMOR THEM,
THE MORE THEY ,EEM 1l' l-IKE IT .1

DO YOU THINK 11-IEY
HAVE A BETrER
g..._5
. EN9E OF HUMOR? -

® 1982 Hargreaves and
Distributed by NEA,Inc.

PRINTED IN CANADA

·ott&gt; Btl/E." HV
6/K£, WIIS

1?/PPff) IJI"f'(!

t&gt;ON'r Jlot~Y. J' OFFER YOU MY

PfOFt5SIONIIl. EXPERTISE TIJ
.SDLYE lli!S &amp;11$£ IINO RECOII&amp;R

I./AS -''tJL!J .BLllt "

liP?

YtJUR PURltJ/Ne/J
8/CYCl.C.--·

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - If the long and that Ohio's economy Is going lD continue to experience
emotional campaign over the taxJssues on Tuesday's and accelerate what so far this year has been a
ballot proves anythlng, lt's that government by modest recovery.
On the other hand, Democratic Gov. Richard
plebiscite, except perhaps on philosophical issues, ·
Celeste's administration says tax revenues so far this
can be flawed.
Ohioans, many of them contused, are being asked year are only 0.9 percent above projections.
If that Increase holds steady, there would· be a
in 1\tesday' s election to decide complex economic
Issues affecting the future of the state without the surplus of $00 mllllon at the end of the blennlur(l,
Budget Director Cristina Sale said last week. ~
benefit of uncontested facts.
Citing continued high unemployment and escalatl'here are sharp disagreements not only between
weHare costs, Ms. Sale asked "how do we get from
Ing
the Warring factions but also among the state's
here
to im $!llO mUllan surplus?"
leading economists as to whether this year's state tax
(On
Friday, the U.S. Labor Department said Ohio's
increaSes should be repealed as proposed In State
seasonally
adjusted rate In October was 11.0 percent,
Issue 3.
down
from
11.5 percent In September, compared wtth
Voters have heard from the pro-repeal forces, for
rate
In October of 8.8 percent, down from
a
"national
Instance, that a 90 percent boost In the state Income
9.3
percent
the
month
before.)
tax ias.t March Is going ~ help produce an $8Xlmlllion
'There
have
been
other
serious discrepancies In the
511rplus by the end of the CUITent biennium on July 1,
broadcast and print media and elsewhere· between
1985.
1n part, the Ohioans To Stop Excessive Taxation SET and the Committee for Ohio, the formal
(SET) bases its claim on Its tax experts' predlctlons anti·II!peal group, wtth regard to the impact of Issue 3

.

1

•

if it passes.
,
l'he Committee for Ohio enylslons gloom and doom,
wtth drastic cuts In education, social services, mental
health and other vital state services.
But that , picture envisions that the Legislature
would not replace any of the repealed taxes at a more
modeSt rate, which Is what SET has suggested.
SET, at the same time, contended that there is a lot
of fat In the state. budget, and that the schools and
most other services will not have to be slgnlficantly
cut. SET built much of lis campaign around claims of
"deceitful scare tactics" by the opposition.
While no one could deny outright that there is waste .
in government, SET left a void In Its campaign by not
saying- except for vague claimS of welfare fraudwhere it Is.
' And if a 90 percent Increase in the state income tax
!s too much, SET didn't say how much of a boost Is
enough. "That's something for the Legislature to
decide," said Curt Steiner, a SET spokesman.
Further complexities which voters wUl face involve

WASH1NGTON (AP) - Con·
The Democrat-controlled House
gress, its attention for the past two turned back a challenge to the MX
weeks riveted ·to· hostUlties In mqney by a nine-vote margin last
Lebanon and Grenada, returns this week before approving its version of
·week to the spending battlefield and the legislation.
renewed skirmishes over major
An attempt may also be made in
money bills.
the RepubUcan-led Senate to restore
l'he Senate was to resume work money to the bill to aUow the
today on the largest mWtary · Pentagon to begin producing a new
spending measure In the nation's ' generation of nerve gas weapons.
_history, one that would earmark SponsorsarehopefulthattheSenate
$252.5 bllllon for the Pentagon fur the can vote Dna! passage of the bill by
fiscal yew: that began Oct.l.
late Tuesday.
· But before the Senate can finish'
' '
the bill, It Is expected to deal with
Meanwhlle, Congress faces {1
several major amendmeitts midnight l'hursday deadline for
including one by Sen. Dale ·· providing funds to keep much of the
Bumpers, D-Ark., to eUrnlnate $2.1
government operating: Theprocess
bllllon for construction of the first 21
may be compllcated H House
MX international ballistic nuclear Democratic leaders follow through
mlssUes .
with their plans io try to add to tlie
emergency bill nearly $1 bllllon for

.

various aid·t~ucation programs,
a move that could provoke · a
)&gt;residential veto.
The spending bill - due up in the
House on Tuesday and In the Senate
on Wednesday -Is needed because
many federal agencies have not yet
received money from Congress and
an earlier measUre, giving them
temporary funds since Oct. 1. Is
about to expire.
At the same time, Senate leaders
were expected to p~s their search
for a compromise that would avert
another possible fiscal .crisis - the
need to raise the national debt limit ·
ahove its current $1.389 trllllon.
The House has already approved
an Increase in the debt limit - the
government's borrowing authority
- but the Senate refused to follow
suit earller last week.

Ailing'Soviet le~der misses parade
MOSCOW (AP)- President Yurl
V. Andropov was too ill today to
attend a major military parade
marking the 66th anniversary of the
Bolshevik revolution that brought
the Communist Party to pvwer.
lt was believe(~ to be the first time
a Soviet leader has failed to be
attend the annual celeb~atlon In Re!l
Square.
Italsowasthesecondmajorevent
of the holiday wl!ekend marked by
the GS-year-old Andropov'sconsplc·
uous absence, further fueling speculation that he Is seriously W.
A government spokesman said he
missed a speech Saturday night at
the Kremlin Palace of Congresses
bec11use of a cold. He has not been

seen in pubUc In 111 days,
unseasonably high 46 degrees as
Andropov's predecessor, Leonid tanks, armored personnel carriers
I. Brezhnev, last year cUrnbed the and missiles mounted on trucks
stairs to the reviewing sland btop · rumbled over the cobblestones.
Lenin's tomb and stood an hour In
Despite his absence, evidence
freezingweathertovtewthepaiade. that Andropov remained flrmly In
He died three days later of a heart pawer was plentiful. A 9-foot-tall
attack.
portrait of Andropov was displayed
Thlsyear,RedSquarewasbathed in the first float that followed the
In sun and the temperature was an mllitary hardware.

FAILED TO APPEAR _
Soviet President Yarl V. Andropov, not seen ln public since
Aug, 18 and officially reported

·W, failed to appear Salurday at

the annual KremUn meetln lri
honor of Revolution Day. rAP

Laserphot0 ) •

SATURDAY

FRIDAYNIGift'

.

ttb11 a department cenlflclte to Syracwte Fire
Chief Ei'IIMt E. Imboden. Otherll plciured are, sealed
from Jeli, ~ Aleslire and Wanda J. bnboden and
bave received CliilllftflMialor CIIDIII' IPIIIIIII houn. or
............ ilre -dee ~ .... lour GUier et•pdln,, from left, Ebert Pickens, Karea GuiDtherr
Earl Plckenll, Malt: Clay, Danny .Riffle and David
memben baw beea aWM'ded ladlvldlllll ce•••tl!ll
for campi IL11 tbe • boun Buill Flrellpllu1· · SmW&amp;.CbQI, Earl Plclrenland IUIIIe, alongwllbJuUe
Nuce, wlill Ia not pldw ed, received the certlllcales
Coune. 'l'lle ootl""ltell ud 0111'111, u well u the
lor tlie 31 hours basic llreflptlllg course whlle the
IDIIr d
I llllleNI lilllllollled 111111 made
aYdllllt bJ llle 'l'nde IIIII llid1IIA'III Service. othen compl~ the tire !len'lc~ l1'alnlng. Also
complelfnc the lire ~ervice training, hat not pictured,
lllv'•a e1 Vac "e" -3;1 lhn e1 lbe ll&amp;8te
are members WOllam JlalleJ,Jellrey Hubbard, Chris
DI~Ul I I ' or -c Ill... PI -pelltloa with
.Jaclo&amp;, Rlllpla Laveader, David ,..,....., Mary
'l'IK'I II VO' u
3• ' Ill, N 3 tllle.lliltniclor
Pickens and Clyde TrlpleU.
~ W, Lepr, ..
I M far lip&amp;, Ia llhowD

RBCBIVE CIJIIJ.ihCATE8 -

mcmben or 8J•*' W'1 Va' '1er tire

I

Fom1een
depanment

)IrE I

3

'.

•

ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada (AP) -American officials say a gravesite
has been discovered on Grenada that may contain the lxxly of Pr!me
Minister Maurice Bishop and others killed in the coup thai prompted the
U.S.-led Invasion.
State Department official John Steinmetz said In Washington that tests
wlll be conducted to determine the identity of the lxxlles, wl\!ch were found
Sunday. He said department personnel In Grenada did not specify how
many bodies were In the gr~veslte, but other reports indicated more than
100 bodies had been found.
·
Bishop and a number of key supporters were killed Oct. 19 after a
confrontation with soldiers loyal to the hardline Marxist leaders of the
coup. Several witnesses have said Bishop and the others were executed.
Governor General Sir. Paul Scoon, recognized by U.S. officials as
Grenada's acting head of government, Is expected to a!Ulounce today or
Tuesday the fate of Gen. Hudson Austin and former Deputy Pr!me
Minister Bernard Coard, architects of the coup.
•
, ,
The two men were moved Sunday from aU .S. helicopter carrier lying off
the coast of Grenada and were taken , handcuffed and stripped to the waist
to a prison in St. George's. The two had been held on the vessel fortheirowr:
safety, mllitary authorities said.
Today, residents or the small Caribbean island were working to end the
disruption resulting from the coup and the Invasion. Telephone and cables
lines were resto~ed over the weekend, and commercial flights were
scheduled to resume today.
.
Go
vernment workers were to receive their first paychecks since U.S.
Marines and Army paratroope~s invaded Oct. 25. And the [irst load of
bananas m two weeks - the chief export crop here- was shipped off to
Great Britain.
U.S. Army helicopters dropped hundreds of leaflets Sunday over
northern and central Grenada, urglng resident~ to cooperate in locating
Grenadian army or Cuban resisters still holding out against the occupying
forces. Children scrambled for the swirling sheets of paper in hopes dollars
were falling from the sky.

.

.

Columbia announces
gas c~sts reduction

Seven die on
Ohio highways

AKRON- Bridgot Daugherty, 16,
Akron, In one-car accident on a
Summit County road.
HAMll.TON .' - Jeffrey S. Gorman, .14, Clnclnliati, a pedestrian,
wheli struck by a car on Ohio 125,In
Hamllton County.
CINCINNATI- Chris Anderson, .
18, of Clnelnnat~ In a motorcycle
accident on Ohio 264 In Hamlltoo
County.

•

Ballot Issue 2, an SET propOsal requiring a
thr~flfths vote of the Legislature to enact future tax
Increases .
.
SET said the proposal would make !I harder for the
lawmakers to raise taxes because Issue 2 would
require bipartisan support of tax measures.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
who opposes repeal, said the thr~fifths provision
woGld bring minority rule to the Legislature.
He also said It would lead to pork-barreling to get
votes for legislation, Increasing the costs of
government.
Meanwhile, the voters, trying to sort thrQugh all of
this after being bombarded with at !east $2 miUion
worth of advertisements, must be wondering what
they are paying their representatives to_do.
Still, there were indications at week's end that
ahout !lO percent to 85 percent of voters had made up
their minds , apparently from the ads, group
associations, Involvement In government or by other
means.
(Continued on page 12)

Mass grave'
uncovered
•
In Grenada

'

resumes $$$ battle ·

LEBANON - Chester Miracle, 27,
Loveland, a mo!Drcycllst, ln a
collisiOn With a .car on U.S. 22 In
WarrEll County.
LANCASTER - MarkS. Snapp,
26, Lancuter. Marion F. Calllll, 31,
Btemen, and Velina J . Calllll, 33,
Bteillell, In a twoar cruh on a
Fairfield County road.

•

2 S..:tlon• . 12 Poge1
20 Cenh
A Muh;mod;a In&lt;. Now&gt;papor

··Repeal issues cause voter confusion

A lrlple-death traffic accident
Friday night spaDed what could ·
have .b een a relatively safe weekend
on Ohio's streets and highways, the
Highway Patrol said.
No fatal accidents were reported
on Sunday all. Ohio logged seven
traffic dealhli for tbe weekend.
The patrol counted traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday to mJdnlght
Sunday.
The dead:

YOU HcAN_ WHEN 010 I F/R5T
l'tALIZE!TJIAS /tf/SS!N&amp; AND I'D
NEVEK .5!£ IT I{G/1/N?

1

'- ~~=-~--------~----~--~--~~~~~--~~------------------~~~

.

WII!N DIO YOIIFIKST
rtllUZC IT JIAS 1'115SIN~ ?

enttne

at y

pomeroy-.- M"ddl
.
Oh
d
N _ b
1
eport,
io, Mon ay, ovem er 7 , 1983

Vet32,No.146
Copyrighted t
913

Co~gress
HAVE YOU NOTICED

•

•

e
'' [)Ct)Df...EY DOODLeY Tl N€f,

Election referendums

Tornadoes rip Eagles

DO~EDLE

I

.

...

•

•

A three percent reduction In gas
costs to &lt;;;oiumbla Gas of Ohio's one
ml!lion customers- tncluding2,400
consumers In Meigs County - has
been announced by company chairman Marvin E. White. ·
The quarterly gas-cost adjustment wlll be reflected In bllls mailed
after Dec. 9. It will amount to an
averagedecreaseof$1.65permonth
to a Columbia customer who uses
11,001 ,,:ublc feet of natural gfl per
month on an annual basts:\ .T his
reduction follows Columbia's five
percent, or 30 cents per l,OOl cubic
feet, decrease announced in August.
The lower gas costs are a result of
successful efforts by Columbia apd
·us prlnctpalsuppUer, Columbia Gas ·
Transmission Corp., to lower cOsts
of gas pJChased from producers and
other lrlterstate plpeUnes, White ·
said.
The reduction in COij's natural
gas cost recovery (GCR) level Is the
result of thOSe actions and appllca·
lion of the of the GCR roles of the
PubUcv Utllltles Commission of
Ohio, White said.
The GCE was filed today with the
cmunlsslon.
Ohio's gas cost recovery mecha·
nlsm aUows a utlllty to collect its
costs for gas purchases from

.

•

"

suppllers, withnoprofittotheutility.
Costs of company operations not
associated with thecostsofpurchas lng gas supplies. amounting toahout
18 cents of each dollar of an average
bill, are covered in separate general
rate filings.
" Based on the best information
now available to us, we see an
excellent possibility that residential
gas rates will do no more than
closely track inflation through
1984," White said.
The recenl reduction means
COH's gas costs have Increased by
approximately one percent since

Dec.1982.
"The madera ting trend !n gas
prices has arrived, and we believe It
will contln\le to Improve, particularly if Congress enacts needed
legislation which Columbia h;lS
suggested," Wh!tesald.
"This legislation would help
correct pricing and gas contract
problems-b€tween gas purchasers,
such as Columbia Gas TransmJs.
s!on, and producers resulting from
provisions of the Natural Gas Polley
Actof1!rnl."

.

'

�.

Monday, November 7, 1983

Commentary
Balance

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF TilE MEIG!)-MASON AREA

~lb

•

B:m~ r"T'\..-J~~·~o·~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
' PAT WHITEHEAD
~ssistant

BOB HOEFLICH

Publisher/ Controller

Pag• 2-lhe Daily Sentinel
~~~~meroy--Miclcllepa~ Ohio '

Monday, NcMmlm 7,

sheet·~

WASHINGTON- Now that the
shooting has subsided in Grenada,
it may be possible to draw up a
preliminary statement of profit and
loss on this astonishing Investment.
On balance, I find a clear net gain.
But the gain Is not large, and the
assessment Is indeed preliminary.
We will know more In December,

invasion has exposed to tbe world-.
and most especially to the natons of
Central America and South Amei'·
lea - the magnitude of the Soviet
Union's plans for expanding Its
communist empire through Its
Cuban auxiliary. The capture of
Immense stores of military supplies
was a stroke more of luck than of

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR• .
News Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
·
LE'ITERS. OF OPINION arr weloomed. They should he less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject lo edlllngand must be sl,ned wllh name, address and
tel~phone number. No unsigned letlers will be published. Letters should be In
~ood tute, addn!5sing Issues, not personalities.

Why not use our
ex-presidents·?
Why doesn't the United States make be«er use of its presidents once ·
they've left office? Right now we've got three of them sitting in mothballs,·
their minds still sharp, human libraries of the kind of knowledge that only
can come from having been there.
'l'he cheapshot answer, "'ith variations on the theme. is that they had
plenty of time in the White House to make a mess of things. Still, we paid for
their on-the-job training and we 're still paying them well, so why not- as
Jimmy Carter might say - get the best advice?
Harry Truman, who lived 20 years after he left the White House, had
strong ideas about what ought to be done with retired public o!flclals.
''A man who has had the experience of a president, or a \1ce president, or
a speaker of the House gets a chance to become much more familiar with
our government than anyone else ," he said. "We must not shelveortl)rust
into obscurity men with such unique expelience."
But shelfdom is what the United States bestows on its former chief

executives.
Richard Nixon was discredited and brought down by his flaws, but he
also achieved detente with the Soviet Union and opened the door to China.
He wlites and.talks extensively about foreign affairs. It was onee rumored
he would be appointed ambassador to China and why not?
Gerald Ford, who calmed a nation rent by Watergate, knows from 25
years' In the House all there is to know about how administrations can work •
their will with Congress. It was knowledge that could have benefitted his

successors.
Carter. the president who sat on Menachem Begin and Anwar Sadat
until they reached their Camp David agreements, now sits in Georgia
carvlilg chairs while blood flow ~ wlth renewed Vigor in the Middle East.
Special envoys rome and go, using the Camp David accords as their
benchmark, but none of them Is Carter.
All three former presidents testified recently before the Kissinger
commission on central America. It was the first time there was a formal
bid for their advice.
Fonner presidents do, of course, have many forums to make their views
known, Nixon has wlitten four books since leaving Washington. Ford Is on
, , ,the lucrative convention circuit and he' s lectured to more than 130 college
audiences sinL'e leaving Washington . A news conference called by any of
the three js bound to be well a ttended ,
No sitting president, of course, would be willing to be upstaged by a
former president. 'W"hen Ford sel a kind of deputy president role as the
plice for being the Republican Vlce·presfdential candidate in 1~. Reagan
deCided the cost was too high and turned to George Bush.

Letters to editor
Liked Haunted House
missed all the excitement, and the
Gillilan and her helpers for a great · !licks and treats.
We realize the work and effort
job they did on the haunted house in
that
was put into this project. Agatit
Chester.
thanks. -Gary R. and Flossie Dill.
Those of you who did not Visit the
haunted house (free of charge)
We would like to thank Linda

./

R.O~ 1ME MAlLS 01= IN»m.%~ ... ANP ~ ... ANO I.EM«lN..,

WASHINGTON - Fidel Castro wire that would rouse the U.S. giant Better to stop Castro now, the
has set off alarm bells Inside the to action..
hawks contend, than to walt until he
'
He·has maintained the attitude of has subverted Mexico and transWhite House, the State Department
and the Pentagon. He not only lias one who, fearful of the enemy's formed that country into a hostlle
been stlrrtng up revolutions in overwhelming If unmoblllzed ' mllltary power on our border.
Central America, he has now strength, minces forward as far as
They say that Castro Is already
ordered his trained terrorists he can while remaining prepared to fomenting revolution in southern
throughout the world to "kill retreat at the first sign of counterat· Mexico. Intelligence reports claim
Americans."
tack. For all his posturing, he his agents and agitators are
This has led to renewed talk in ihe 'seems aware that he Is unloved by building a rebel government In the ,
backrooms of seeking a provoca· most of his Latin American neigh· provinces of Campeche, Chlapas,
tlon that would permit the United bors, that he Is far removed from
Oaxaca and Tobasco.
States to invade Cuba and eject the Soviet sphere and that he Is
But unlike the Invasion of Gren·
Castro from ~ hemjsphere. The geographically vulnerable to board· ada, an assault on Cuba would be no
argument has been made that his lng parties from the U.S. fleet .
piece of cake. Castro has turned his
If he goes ahead with his terrorist
Soviet friends don't have enough
sunny Island into an armed camp,
firepower In the Caribbean to attacks on Americans, however, he guaroed by 202,000 troops and
protect him and wouldn't risk a may finally snag the tripwire. This
policed by a 129,000-man security
nuclear holocaust over Cuba.
could be the provocation tlja t would
force. A paramtlltary youth army
For more than two decades, bring a final confrontation with of 100,000 could also be thrown
Castro has put up a magnificent . Castro.
against an invading force.
It has been argued In the
, bluff on his tropical Island. He has
I have seen secret military maps
been daring enough to keep the backrooms that the best way to rid of Cuba, which show 30 divisions
the hemisphere of the Marxist strategically dispersed on th~ main
United States off balance and
dashing enough to claim reVolution- threat Is to crush the head of the Island and another division enary leadership of the Third World,
snake, not to stomR on Its tall.
trenched on the Isle of Pines. A
without crossing the invisible trip-

Suspicious

Appreciates .overall effort

.

·~

•

design, but those photogi"aphs of the
Cuban arsenal spoke volumes. Only
the most naive observers wW ,
continue to cling to the pretty notion
that Grenada's new airport was
ihtended solely for tile pleasure of
touriSts.

"We gnt there just In time," the
president said, and I see no rel\SOn
to challenge that appraisal. Had the
six Caribbean nations delayed
much longer in their ~ppeal for
help, the murderous thugs who had
seized power would have consolidated their grip upon the Island.
Grenada Is strategically Important
to the control of sea lanes carrying
Venezuelan oU. With the Soviets in
effective control of Cuba tn the
north and Grenada to the south, the
whole Caribbean would be in
jeopardy. That danger bas now
been reduced.

SIDE BY SIDE - Erich Philson (62) senior tackle for the Southeni.
Tomadoes gets ready to provide some Nocldng support as benms close
to numlng back Wade Coonolly durlngSalurday'sSVACgameagalnst
Eastern. Southern dwnped the wlnleo8 Eqles, ~to llnlsh third In the
loop slandlnp behind Norih GaDia 1111d Kner Creek.

Symbolically, the president's ac·
tlon has value. The pa!tern of Soviet
provocation Is to probe here - and
here, and here - pushing until
resistance Is felt. The Cuban crisis
In Kennedy's day was such a probe.
The. Soviets probed in Angola, In
Ethiopia, In South Yemen. Through
their Syrian surrogates they are
probing In Lebanon. An aphnrism Is
attributed to Edmund Butke: The
only thing neQessary ·for the
triumph of evil Is that good men do
nothing. In Grenada, Reagan acted
decisively. He shunned tile furled
umbrella and chose assault instead.
He sent a message. For a time, at
least, the message will be felt.

~-;=~~=======~~~~~~~~~~~~~ : ·

Your Vote &amp; Support Will Be Greatly Appreciated ·

crack brigade, Identified as the 38th
Infantry Frontier Brtgade, Is de. played around the U.S. naval base
at Guantanamo.
According to the secret U.S.
count, Cuba Is also bristling with 236
Soviet-supplied missiles - 158 of
them surface-to-air missiles, the
rest sw-face-to-surface. None roula
threaten the continental United
States: They are deployed for
coastal defense.
Castro also has a formidable Air
Force of 416 planes and helicopters,
194 of them ' ~ts. He could scramble
171 jet fighters, for example,
' Including hlgh·perfonnance Soviet
MlG·21s and MlG-23s.
Will the United States repeat the
Bay of Pigs but this time, In the
words of one Pentagon source, "do
It right?" Certainly no invasion Is in
the offing, and thEi odds are against
It happening. But It Is newsworthy
that the Idea. Is being serously
debated.

MIKE WILL
CANDIDATE FOR

CLERK
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Pd. Pol. Ad. By Cand.
NOV. 8, 1983

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.B engals bombard
Houston, 55-14

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We, the undersigned, are in strong opposition against the establishment of CARRYOUTS for
the sale of alcoholic beverages in Olive.Township.
Major reasons for our stand:
(1} the lack of law enforcement iQ our area;
making alcohol too readily accessible to
the youth
additional empty containers littering our
properties and roadways.
We are urging you, our neighbors, to join us
in our efforts to keep our communities SAFE,
CLEAN, and RESPECTABLE.
Please vote NO on the WET ISSUE on the ballot in the coming election NOVEMBER 8.
Thank you.

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Paid Pol. Adv. by the Following:
Long Bottom .Senior Citizens' Club
Riverview Garden Club
Reedsville-Long Botlom
Community Builders' Club
Olive Township Firemen's Auxiliary
Reedsville Church of Christ
Reedsville United Methodist Church

Eden EUB Church
Long Boltom Christian Chut ch
Long Bottom Methodist Church
Success Church of Christ
Joppa United Methodist Church
Mount Olive Communty Church
White's Chapel Church

BIG Pn..E UP - Southem's Jell Connolly (26) arrives too late to join in
as Eastern !llld Southem players baltle lor a loose baU during
Salunlay's cross county rlv~ at Racine. 'Jbe Tornadoes woo 00 lo
finish their season at 1\4· The loss left Easlem with 1111 &amp;-9-1 record.

_Eastern Caribbean States.
A thoroughly obscure organlza·
tlon composed of eight o( the
world's smalleSt, newest and most
politically Ineffectual nations,
OECS suddenly commended rapt
attention and unquestioning obedience at the highest levels of this
country's government.
The OECS treaty which supposedly legitimized the invasion
requires "external aggression" and
a unanimous vote of OECS
members prior to military actionbut both elements were missing In
the case. of Grenada. The only
external aggression" anywhere In
sight was tile Intervention of three
non-OECS members - the United
States, Jamaica and Barbados.

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DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR

motives---:------~-R_ob
......e_rt_~_a_lte_rs
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being pushed dee:&gt; nto their own Paul Harris were also among team
end
of the field, EHS was forced to leaders with other outstanding
RACINE -The Soutbem Torna· •
punt after lour downs and a efforts. Connolly scored a touch·
does, behind a roaring offensive
explosion, finally broke a six-year penalty. The ensuing snap soared down and again led the Tornadoes
over.,the Eagle punter and senior with 156 yards on just 1B cames,
jinx dating back to 1978, In h8J!dUy
defeating winless Eastern ~ here endGiennYoung·recoveredltlnthe while Harris picked apart the
endzone for a two-point safetY. the Eastern secondary for two touch·
Saturday evening. The win allowed
downs on three catches that netted
score no~ 1.5-1! at the 6:49 mark.
Southern to end the season wl!h a
The end result of tile safety forced him over 54 yards. It was South·
6-4 overall record and 3-2 league
the Eagles Into a tree ldck thai ern's team effort apd ~utstanding
sla\e, while EHS closed at 6-9-1 and
again gave the victors the football.
Continued on Page 5
().4..1 in loop play.
Elgh.t plays later quarterback Tony .--~....::.:::::::..:.:;:..;;.._ _;;~---1
Initially a stubborn Eastern
defense repelled Southern's first Riffle threaded the needle to senior
possession. EHStnokoverondowns end Paul Harris, who came down
just tWo minutes Into the ballgame. With the ball and another slx points
For tile next five minutes Eastern · for tile Tornadoes with 3: 51 left In
made a game of It, charging down the opening round.
That TO was set up by a sldllfully
field towards a score in 14 plays
Your Fann
only to have Southern defender mastered 35 yard Riffle-to-Harris
·Sean Grueser intercept a Royce pass that gave Southern a crucial
Equipment
Bissell pass to stall the drive an\1 first down. The PAT pass failed and
the score stood 21.0 until the half.
any other Eastern hopes.
Early in• the third two good
~tore
From· that point on, Soutllern
992-2668
puiiM out all the· stops totally running plays by Troy Guthii.e and
Pomeory, Oh.
dominating the game. · Eastern, Mike Lance put Eastern back into
bowever, didn't give up, making
'those
swaying
the
Itself kriown with a good physical ·erased
the hunt,
but efforts,
an Eastern
fumble
momentum
back
to
the
hosts'
side
effort· in tile trenches.
Southern's lgnlted Its offensive nf the field.
Just seconds later, however,
name in tile first quarter behind
Eastern
was back in control after
speedster Wade Connolly, driving
cornerback
Royce Bissell picked
70 yards In four minutes to hit
at the SHS 32 yard
off
a
Riffle
aerial
paydlrt ori Tony Riffle's two-yard
line.
Two
plays
later,
that too came
plunge. The PAT kick failed and
to
an
end
when
Glenn
Young
SHS led !).() with 2: m left In the
lassoed
a
Mike
Jones'
pass,
then
opening round.
63
yard
foot
race
to
the
won
a
While the Tornado defense tight·
(2}
SHS
score.
The
endzone
for
another
ened, Its offense quickly marched
Into 'the endzone on a three yard PAT kick !ailed, the score now 27.0
burst by senior Wade Connolly. in the third frame.
(3)
According to statistics, It could
Tony Rlffle's PAT kick split the
uprights for a ~ score with 8: 37 well have been Glenn Young night
at Racine as Young had an
left In tile second round.
When things started going right interception, a sate'iy, a touchdown,
for the Tornadoes, the opposite and led the defense in tackles with
jlegan to plague the Eagles. After nine, although Wade Connolly and

By SOOTl' WOLFE

Pushing for a fight __________Ja_ck_A_nd_ers-.--on

Supports village marshal

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The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

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' the have rescued ... a number of
There may have been some promotlong democracy thr&lt;lugh
justification· for tile military lnva· use of military force.
Americans" but conveniently lg·
slon of Grenada, but the subsequent
nored the fact that approximately
At a press conference on the day
actions of President Reagan and his following the invasion, Shultz des·
half of those "rescued" resisted
efforts to evacuate them from
most senior advisers serve only to troyed hls own credibility by
Mrs. Snodgrass also stated In her
I am writing this because of the
'
Grenada and clearly preferred
inspire suspicion about their repeatedly refusing to acknowledge
tener that appeared last week by anlcle that someone said Mr.
remaining on the island.
that
thlscountry'sfearofa
SoVIet
or
motives,
Mrs. Snodgrass. I am really Lyons didn't do anything because It
The real object of Weinhergl'r's
There is little doubt that the Cuban takeover of Grenada was in
was so close to election. What would
surprised at the things she said.
Soviet Union and Cuba were any way related to the decision to . removal plans became readily
I really can't believe that Mr. that matter to him? He's an
apparent when he referred to the
moving aggressively toward mil- Initiate the military strike.
Lyons rea.cted to her problem the appointed o!!leer not an elected one.
of "a very large nun! her of
capture
The
only
official
hint
of
ldeoiogi·
election
being
so
close
ltary.
political
and
economic
domi·
Maybe,
the
way she described that he did.
prisoners"
and discussed
Cuban
cal
motivation
during
tile
fighting,
was
Mrs.
Snodgrass'
reason
for
nation
of
the
Island
nation
in
the
Anyone who knows. Mr. Lyons
"arrangements
to
evacuate
them
'
buried
amid
a
torrent
of
sanctlmon·
her
Jetter,
after
·au
Mr.
southeastern
corner
of
the
writing
knows he's a good, decent and
as
quickly
as
possible."
lous
Reagan
administration
rhe·
Lyons'
son
Is
running
for
mayor
oi
_
.
Caribbean
.
.
honest man. She stafed that
In a despera!.e search for a legal
The Soviet Union's ambassador torlc about the restoration of
someone told her that Mr. Lyons Racine.
rtloral justification of Its
and
came
from
the
democratic
values,
I'm
one
of
many
people
who
Is
tn
Grenada
Is
a
four-star
generalwouldn't take care of her problem
actions,
the Reagan admlnlstra,tlon
president's
brief
reference
to
"a
glad
that
Mr.
Lyons
Is
the
marshal
an
extraordinary
·form
of
dlplobecause some of his. family was
constantly
cited tile ostensibly ,
brutal
group
ot
leftist
thugs."
in
Racine.
He
Is
a
good
officer
and
matlc
representation.
When
U.S.
involved. Thl.s is ridiculous. U his
spontaneous
request for military
At
another
press
conference,
he
Is
doing
his
job,
and
doing
It
well.
troops
landed
on
the
Island,
they
family or relatives were .)nvolved,
encountered
not
only
Cuban
confrom
the OrganiZation of
assistance
proclaimed
that
"we
Weinberger
he'd handle It as If It were anyone La st week , one nl g ht a t 2. a.m.,
struction workers equipped wlth
else. Anyone could have written· while everyone in Racine was no
small arms but also a full battalion
those obscene things on her win· doubt sleeping, Mr. Lyons was
dow. They could have been from out taking some law-breakers to Pome.. o! Cuban military forces.
Grenada's location accounts for
of town even, and Mr. Lyons Is roy, to the sheriff's office.
•
I think Mrs. Snodgrass attacked much of Its ~trategtc Importance·
human and he does have to eat and
sleep. He can't watch Racine all the Mr. Lyons unfairly and maybe slie because It stands astride shipping
should weigh the pros against the lanes to and !rom the Panama
time. .
I think Racine Is a quiet place and cons. Maybe she would change her Canal. The Island could be used as a
tune about things.- Barbara Stahl, l!ase to disrupt not only that
1 firmly believe It's due to Mr.
Racine.
marttime traffic but also the
Lyons' strictness in l:)andling people
shipment
of crude oil from the
who break the law.
Middle East to Gulf Coast refineries
and of petroleum from Mexico and
Venezuela across the Atlantic
Ocean.
The Community Halloween Thanks to all who happily donated.
In addltlnn, the unstable military
Party held .In Racine Monday We are proud to say It was a huge
evenll1g was a huge success thanks success and we are proud of our · junta which seized cotitrol of
.• '·
community.
·
·
. 'mostly to the people of our
Greiiada's · government in . mid·
Some e&lt;:&gt;uld have grumbled,
October might have become descommunity. Our organizations deperate enough tn take ashostages
cided to join together and plan a some· could have complained, and
nice party for the children of the some could have even refused to
some of tile more than 1,000 U.S.
citizens living In the Island.
community and the surrounding take part, but no one did. This goes
But none of this justifies the
areas the Volunteer Fire Depart· to show that when asl\ed to join
men! serves because of our united together for a S!JClal event, or'even
revival of "gunboat dlploniaey" a root of haired, fear and suspicion
concern for the safety o! the for a more serious cause, our people
are
·always
ready
and
Wllllng
to
ot this COIQitry virtually every·
children,
where south of the Rio Grandi!- or
When solicited for donatlnns, the help. So this 1s just to say to the
the deception and duplicity wiJich ·
businesses and tile public re- businesses, organizations, and peo.
rapidly became hallinarks of the
sponded very generously with pie of our community who offered
Invasion.
offers of allldnds ot candy, cooldes, their help, thanks, a bunch. You
Moreover, tile president, Secredoughnuts, elder, and monetary made It happen. - Racine Town
Council,
Racine
·Volunteer
Fire
tary
of State George P. Shultz and
donations.
We were happy to work and plan Department, Racine Fireman Ailx·
Secretary of Defense Caspar w.
tile party, and to make It a Joyous lllary, President, Beulah . Weinberger appear to lie tJto.
occasion for each and every orie. Autherson.
roughly 0\Jllvl!JIIS to . the Irony . of
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_______· ___.__Ja_me_s_J_._Kl-=-"lpa_t_ric_k

when It may be possible to weigh
the Impact of the president's action
upon the balance of nuclear forces
In Europe. We will know still more a
year hence, assuming the president
runs for re-election, .when the
residual effects may be detectable
at the polls.
This much Is pure profit: The

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Southem rips Eagles;
completes 6-4 season

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ment with his offensive line prior to
HOUSI'ON(AP)-Thepersonnel
the
game and he played the game
changes In Clncinnatl's55-14VIctory
unmolested.
over Houston Sunday evoked strong
"I didn't have to worry about
emotions from the players Involved.
getting
hurt today because noone
Quarterback Ken Anderson .recarne
close
to hitting me," said
gained his starting job and led a
Anderson,
returning
after spending
34-point first half. He was happy.
three
weeks
on
the
injury
list. "ltold
Oiler quarterback Gifford Nielsen
the offensive line If they took care of
lost his position to Oliver Luck. Luck
me I'd take care of them.
was glad, Nielsen was puzzled.
"We didn't get specific about what
Earl Campbell left · the game
It was but I'll have to think of
midWay in the second quarter and
something."
·
did not return. He was mad.
Anderson
completed
7
of12passes
But as tile players' emotions rose
for 1U1 yards and dld not throw an
and fell, the Oilers remained steady
lnter&lt;:eptlon
after missing three
and extended their losing habltto17
weeks
of
action.
straight games and became the only
The Bengals put the game way
winless team In the National
'
quickly,
jumping to a 34.0 halftime
Football League with an 6-lOrecord.
on
Anderson's
14-yard touchlead
ancinnatl, headed in the opposite
pass
tn
Chris
Collinsworth,
down
direction, won for tile third straight
Pete
Johnson's
touchdown
runs of
game, now Is 4-6· and !eels
five, one andoneyardand field goals
confidence returning by the minute.
of 44 and 29 by Jim Breech.
Houston · Coach Chuck Studley
Second-half scores came on runs
benched Camp11ell after the Oilers
of one yard by Stanley Wilson, three
fell behind 24-0 In the first quarter.
Campbell gained 42 yards on 16 yards by Larcy Kinnebrew and a
59-yard fumble return by linecarries before retiring for tile day
backker Reggie Williams.
·
and was upset afteiWards
The
Oilers
dldn'
t
get
on
the
.
"I think now the only thing they
scoreboard
until
the
fourth
quarter
(Oilers) can do Is put me off this
when Luck completed a 21-yard
team," ·Campbell sal&lt;l. "The Hous·
touchdown pass to Tim Smith and
ton Oilers treated me bad today.
Curtis
Brown dove one yard with 34
They treated me llke'a dog today.
seconds
lett to play.
"I have individual goals, Nobody
"They
wanted to see Ollie (Luck)
said nothing to me about coming out
and
see
what
be could do," Nielsen
of the game. I feel like I've done
said.
·
nothing wrong. I wme topractlceon
Wllllams
plagued
the Oilers
time every day and prac\fce bard
througltout
the
game
with two
everyday and theri play only the first
fumble recoveries, two sacks and
quarter."
. .
.
AndersOn said reached an agree- his 59-yard touchdOWn.

7

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A VOTE FOR QUALITY EDUCA liON

DAVID L. CHADWELL
CANDIDATE FOR

Eastern Local Board of Education
16 Years Experience in the Field of Edu'cation
VOTE NOV. 8

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Paid for by the Candidate

the whole fa1nily.

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(Clip and Save.)

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~tick these
ideas on your
refrigerator.

1e
2.
3e

Whenever possible, use a toaster, toaster·
oven or an electric frypan instead of your
large oven or range.
Never use th~ ov~n as a heater.

Pia~ pans on the surfa~ units of your
range before .you.. turn on the heat.
c'

4.
5e.
6e
7.
8.
9.

Use a small amount of water when boiling
eggs and vegetables. Usc tight-fining lids,
too. -

Pia~· the most often used items in the front
of your refrigerator shelves so you can g~t
to them quickly.

The more you use,
the more energy
you'll save.

10.
11.

12.
13.
14.

If yoil can, use an ~lectric razor. It uses
less energy in a year than the hot water
your hand razor uses in a week.
Set your water heater's .temperarure at a
moderate 140°F or as low as possible to
allow for enough hot water.
Take shorter showers.

.,
Wash and dry only full loads of clothes.

Keep your thennostat·at 68° or less in
the winter, at least 78° in the summer.

Make sun: rcfrig~rator door seals arc tight,
free o,f grease.
..

15e

In winter, open drapes and shades .to let
sun heat yow- home. When sun sets,
close them.

Don't wash your dishes until you've got a
full load. That's usually an~r dinner:

16
17.
18.

In summer, close drapes and shades to

Twn offth~ lights, radio and TV before
you leave.
·

Don't let the hot water run whll~ you're
shaving. Ell the sink halfway instead.

e .keep your home from gening overheated.
Don't heat or cool unused rooms. Close
them off.

Keep the damper on your firepla~
closed when not in usc.

For dozens of additional ideas, call or visit our office and
ask for·our free folder.

L------~--------we giweitour best.
OHIO POWER COMPANY

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flag•

Pameroy-Middleport,

~io
. The l)fily Sentinel

Randle's status bleak after defeat
games against AppaiaCIIIan State
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) andVMI, theHerowouldflnlshwith
Marshall University's football team
Its best reronl Since 19QI.
has broken Its own national record In
As one ~rter covering Saturpostljlg an 18th consecutive losing
day's
game put It, "Randle reaDy
season.
shouldn't
be fired If the team goes
Wllllam &amp; Mary's 48-24 blow-oot
5-6,
yet
I
have
my doUbts whether
\llctory at Falrfleld Stadium on
a
good
enough
coach to dO tbe
he's
- Saturday turned the trtck, dropping
Jobin
the
longrun.''
the Herd to 3-6 with two games
remaining. Indian quarterback · Marshall'sfansalsoseemtohave
Dave Murphy, who riddled the doubts. Falrfield Stadium was half
Marshall secondary with 28comple- empty for M;lrshall's last two home
tlons for four touchdowns and 401 games, even though theHenl was In
yards, put the nail In Marshall's a mld-seru;on surge. On Saturday,
only about 4,001 spectators ~
coffin.
The game may ensure the malned to hear the final gun.
The dwindling attendance may
departure of coach Sonny Randle.
carry
more weight than the 5-6
MU A thletlc Director Lynn
.
reconllhatseemswlthlnMarshall's
Snyder, wholastyeargaveRandlea
vote of .conlldence. . was non- grasp this season.
Marshall undoubtedly will Ill!
comml1;tal Satunlay.
favored
to win next Saturday at
"We'll evaluate the football program at the end of the season," he Appalachian State and the following
said when asked about Randle's weekend at horne against VMI.
Appalachian, which lost to North
status.
Carolina State on Saturday, ·has
The Herd entered the season with
been depleted by a series of Injuries
FATHERLY ADVICE- Mike Chancey (14), Melp quarterbackits division's longest losing streak.
and VMI Is considered the weakest
end, receives some offensive lmtructlons from his father, Coach · Over the past five seasons, Randle's
team In the Southern ConferenceCharles Chancey during Friday's TVC malchup agalnsi Federal
teams have won 10 games and lost
a role Marshall played WIW this
Hocking. Mdgs won 28-6 to llnlsh In a second place tie In the TVC.
four times that many. However,
season.
should Marshall win Its last two
The question Is whether vlclortes

In thele pmes wauld Ill! t!IDiih to
save Rlllldle'1 job.
IMt SitllllkY, after watcbln&amp; tbe
Herd Jive up 111 bllhelt p!lnt IDialof
tbe -.on, a deji!cted Randle
ackniM'Iedged that bla team jUSI
eculdn't stnp ·tbe lndlans. His
comments oonry!ed famiUar to
those Wlx&gt; have Ustened to a stringof
Marshall coaches tbe past 19

seasons.

rt===========1~

MILWAUKEE (AP)- When the
Green Bay Packers focused thelr
attention on tbe running game, they
figured It would be In stopping the
Cleveland Browns.
Uttle dld the Packers realize that
thelr own running game would be a
factor In the 35-21 National Football
League victory Sunday In Milwaukee County Stadium.
The Packer defense, led . by
linebacker Mike Anderson's eight
tackles. held Cleveland to just 119
yards rushing. And the Packer
offense, which had been averaging
only 96.2 yards rushing a game,
picked up 154 yards en the ground.
"Taking Cleveland out of, the
running game was our main
objective," said Green Bay Coach
Bart Starr. "Qeveland is capabieof

running the ball against anyone.
That (rushing defense) has been our
nemesis lately."
But Starr wasn't surprised by the
rushing game, which was keyed hy
Gerry Ellis' 86 Yards on 17 carries
and Jessie Clark's 50 on 12 rushes.
Green Bay quarterback Lynn
Dickey, who completed 20 of 33
passes for 228 yards and four
touchdowns and who was intercepted three times, was appreciative of the running game.
While the Browns were able to
amass 365 passing yards, several
key turnovers and mistakes
knocked them out of scoring
opportunities.
Green Bay took a 7-Oiead with3: 08
left In the first quarter ·on Dickey's
18-yard scoring toss to John

Scoreboard ...
E&lt;llson 21. CollinS w. Reserve 6

NFL

Elyria W. 1&lt;1 , WarrensvWE1 8
Fostoria Sl. Wcndelln 54, Dltawa Hill! 0
F'Mnon1 St Joseph ·~ ClyQr 14
.Mfenon 13, Wa.JTH'I Champion 0
Keuertng Aller 21, Day. Olam.Jul 20
Lake Cath. 14. Oe. Centr.d Cat h. 6
l...edgtmont 6, Vena:tgo (Pa .) Otr. fi. tit'
U!tk' Miami l!, Batavia 7
l....clf'aln M , Elyrta 0
Matv('fl\ e . Cmonon Val. 0

-

N~ Football~

American Conl'erencr

W L TPct. PF Pi\
1 J 0 . .700 219 \6-1
6 ~ 0 .8)) JliJ 211

1\'llaml
Balllmore
B&gt;dfa\o
New Engtand
N.Y . Jets

6

4

0

.!ill 00 'n1

5

5
li

0

. ~211196

'
5

0
0

H(Ll~ton

'
'
0 10

0
0

LA Ra kX'rs

1

J

o .100 zro 2U

4
4
6
1

0
0
0
0

4
. (:UIIral

'
5

w....

Omver
6
Seanlf.'
6
Kansas City
-1
San Olef:o
3
NBI:km.lll

9

""'1

0

8

Mlllill"'oot.a

5'

5'

00

•
J
l

5

0

7

0

Detroit
Chic~

Tampa Bay

San

2

0

• '
0
3 '
1
2 6 I
&lt;&gt;nlml

.... LA Rams
New Orleans

'
0
" '!Mt

6
6
nanctsco 6

~
~

0
0

4

o

4 6 0
Sunday's GlllntS

AUnnta

.rm

'.53 168
:m 'bll
Z!i 195

.[D)

..m

JDJ "166

]}J

.600 172 1n
.£00 m 125
.o!OO :m l88
..DJ 2:24 278

Marlon Ca!h. 29, Ca rdington 28
\1a••;.-;1Uon
WlL"lhinglQfl
I&amp;
McKlnley 'T

.900 31B
.IJXI 319
.400 158
350 '!Ii
278 ll'ii

215
218
194
314
214

"'

&amp;ltlmorc 17, J'I/PW York J£&gt;ts 14
• Washinglon -1), St. Louis 1
•
.~'.!IOame
N('l.l' York Giants at DP!rolt. (n l

Branham Newspaper Sale.,

711 Third Avenue, New York, New

York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Dally sentinel, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy,
Ohtom~.

George A.
(Alfred)
WOLFE

For Chester Twp.
Trustee
ON NOV. 8, 1983
Thank You For
Your Support
Paid tor by Candidate

One Week .. :.......... .. ................... $1.(1()
One Month .... ............................ $4 ..0
one Year ~iiiNoi:E.ooi&gt;Y........ ts2.1Mt

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Subscribers not des trine to pay the car·

rter may remit ln acsvance direct to
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Outside Ohio
13 WeekS ................ ... .............. $15.21
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Halftime
band shaw

RE-ELECT

Charles H. "'Chuck" Bartels
CANDIDATE FOR

RIFLE CORPS PERFORMS ·- The Meigs lf,lgh
SchoOl band rUle corps perfanned Friday night during
halftime ceremonies at the
Meigs-Federal Hocking
game. The perfonnance was
led by head majorettes,
Susan Arnold, bottom right.

Salisbury Township

TRUSTEE

••

'

Paid for by Candidate

'

RE-ELECT

WANDA L. EBliN

•

•

Candidate For
CLERK-Salisb~ry

•-.

Township

RELIABLE &amp; CAPABLE

'

NOV. 8, 1983

•

Pd. Po. Adv. by Cand.

••
•

Crusaders face Princeton Saturday·

PEACE.OF MIIID

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cin- that will extend bver three weecinnati Moeller, Ohio's current kends. They wind !IP with all five
schoolboy football dynasty, must title games being played In Ohio
whip an old nemesis for the second Stadium for the first timeNov. 25-TT .,
The other 1982 winners returning
straight week If the Crusaders are to
are
Akron St.VIncent-St.Mary,
win their eighth playoff title In the
Its third consecutive Divseeking
last decade.
Moeller defeate,d Cincinnati Prin- ision ill title; West Jefferson In
ceton 28-21 Saturday night and now .. Dlvlsiel) IV and Newark Catholic In
DlvisionV.
Is rematched with the VIkings In
Only Youngstown Mooney, the
back-to-back games for the second
Dlvlslon·JI champion last fall, failed
time In three seasons.
The rematch also will be played at to qualify. The Ohio High School
Galbreath Field at Kings Island Athletic Association uses a computer to select the top two teams frQm
Satunlay l!ight.
In 1981, Moeller nipped Princeton each of 20 regions.
St.VIncent-St.Mary (9·1), bidding
14-131n Its last regular-seasongame
and then eliminated theVIklngs28-3 for Its fourth overall playoff crown,
In a first-round playoff game In will face uiavlttsburg LaBrae
(10-0) at. Kent Roosevelt Friday
Division I.
night.
Princeton was the last team to
West Jefferson (9-1). also the 1976
defeat Moeller In regular season
state
playoff king, takes on Colum·
play, posting a 13-12 trtumph In the
bus
Ready
(8-2) at Groveport
5eCO!ldgameofthel978season. The
Crusaders have rebounded for a Friday night while NewarkCathollc
state-reconl 58 consecutive victo- (91). the small-school cl)amplon In
1978 and 1982, collides with Woods·
ries In the regular season.
field (8-1-1) at Newark Satunlay
Moeller has lost only 18 of 229 night.
games In Its two decades of football,
Only two other former ·state
a winning percentage of 91 perrent playoff winners made It this time.
for the all-boys parochial school in Mogadore captured the Class A title
suburlJan MOntgomery.
In 1979 while Mlddletovm Feriwlck
Moeller is one of four 1982 ruled the small schools In 1973 and
champions who have qualified for 1974.
the 40-team, five-division playoffs

"Eiwolled to Pllctlce Befole The lnllmll RMnut
Service."

Canton

TJU.COuNTY -

~SBIVICE
&amp;11 £. lllin St. H&amp;R
Pamuvy, Ill

FRUTH PHARMACY

tr7
llffln Calvert :H, 5andusky St. Mal)' 6
To!. St. Fr.illC'Is 33, J'Ol. LlttJey 1
To!. Scoll 28, Tol. Woodward 0
'IUscarawa~ Val. 14.. Tuscara1•:as Cath.

.OOJ 7Z2 214
.8XI Zll 2lJ
.too 778 ~
.400 :Di :ni

, Tampa Da y l"i. Minnesotll 12
Donas '!7, Ph.ltodclphla "ll
Grt"('n Ba y :ti, 0£&gt;vetund 21
Los Angf'leli Raldeni 28, Kansas Cit)' '!1
Plnsburgh 26, San Qlo&gt;go .1
Nt"&lt;' Enjtland 21 . Buffalo 1
Miami~ . San Fhnclsco 17
~all if" '17 , Dower 19
La; Angeles Rams 21 . OIICAAO 14

American Newtpaper Publl.ahft'l .U·
soctatlon. National A.dvertlllllf Repre-

.MARY C. KEBI R

Salr.m 23, w_Bnu1Ch t6
Smeca E. R, Loc&amp;S 0
Sharon (Pa .l KmM:ty 8. 'r'oung. L!Mr·

7

NC'&gt;V Oril'arni '!7. Atlanta 10
Clndnnatl $ , Hrustoo l4

I

Member: The Auodated Prets, In·
land OaUy Press Alaoclaton aDd the

R.ocj(;y Rl\'f'r 21. Ba)' 14

.fffi 'Uf 242
.500 Z75 :&amp;
.#1
1~
_:,JJ 1.84 219
.100 1.'l! ~

:m

Another Cleveland mistake led to
another Packers' score In the
second period. On a fourth-and-two
punting situation on the Cleveland
42, the Browns were penalized five
yards for havlng12 men on the field.
Six plays later, Including corner·
liack Rod Peny' s.pass Interference
at tbe 6, Dickey hit Paul Coffman on
a four-yard strike.
A third Green Bay touchdown
carne after Tim Lewis picked off a
McDonald pass and returned it 46
yards to the Cleveland 22. Four
plays later, wlth1:46togolnthehalf,
Dickey flipped a 10-yard pass _to
Gary Lewis for the score and a 21-7
lead.
Green Bay Increased its lead to
28-7 In the third quarter on Dickey's
twO-yard pass to Ellis.
Cleveland wasn't able to generate
any offense until Rutigliano sent In
Brian Sipe midway through the

third quarter. The Browns' only
points had come with 1: 19 left In the
first qulmer on nose tackle Bob •
Galle's 7-yard pass Interception
after Dickey's ann was hit by
linebacker Chip Banks.
Slpe, who completed 16 of TT
passes for 231 yards, cut the margin
to 28-21 In tbe fourth quarter on a
20-yard pass to Bobby J.OJil!S at3:47
and 19 yards to Dwight Walker at
13:35.
Ellis gave Green Bay the clincher
on a 25-yanl run with 56 seconds togo
In the game.
"It was In our best Interest to put
BrlanSipe In there since he'shaclslx
years In that situation," Rutigliano
saldofthechange. "He'susedtolhat
and has thrived on it."
The victory, coupled with Minnesota's 17-12 loss to Tampa Bay,
thrust the Packers Into the NFC
Central Division title chase with six
games to go. Green Bay (5-5) plays
at Minnesota next Sunday.
The loss, thetr third In four games,
dlnuned the Browns' hopes · of
making the playoffs In the AFC
Central. They now tran the Pittsburgh Steelers by three games.

. NeWark Cath. J2, Johnst~M'n Northrldge, 6"N!ies McKJnley 34, Wam!n Howland 6
Par ma Holy Name 2, Akron Hoban 0
Parma Valley Forgt&gt; 71, Shaker Hts. 6
Poland Seminary 14, Canfield 7
RJtcinf. S. 41 , R«&gt;dsvWe E . 0
Rld!.mond Ht.s. M, Newbury 3

Conteren~

Washington
PhliOO£-Jph.la
St. Lools
I".Y . Giants
G~n Ba~·

-

o ..too'.Dl m

Jefferson. The10-play, 89-yarddrive
started l;lfter linebacker Mike Douglass recovered Willis Adams'
fumble, which had come after an
18-yard pass play from Paul
McDonald.

Tampa Bay posts first win;
Rams d~feat Bears, 21-14

Frtday, w counstreet, 11y the
Oblo \'auey Publllllllla C o - -lollll·
- · ..... P&lt;llno&lt;oy, Olllo4mll• .,.
21541. Second cluo pootap paid at Po-oy.Ohlo.

sentattv~.

OF OHIO, INC.

Warren LaBmr '!7, Bn:JOktkold 0
W. HOirTI('S .13, Fairless 6
¥oung. Chan!.")• :11, Young. East l4
'r'w~. Mooney 31, Boardman 0
Zanes. R.ose::rans 20, Buckeye 'J'raU 20,

786 N. 2ND.AVE.

'

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3106

Nllllonal Hockey Lupe
SMuJ'Ga)l's Gart1fti
N.\' . ISIMI.PT'S 4, Bu1fakl 0
N.Y. Rall~rs ~.Quebec 4, tie

Ha rttlrd 2. Los An~les 1
Vano:."'Ollv('f l , Defmil 2
EdmOnloo 7. PlnsburJ:h J
lhston 10, Mon!Jt'al 4
Calgary ~. Toron to J
St . Louts 7, Ph1lad£'tplll a 6

Mlnnesol{l.10, Chicago

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

· S. MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
, OU·R
H
• SUNDAY 11:00 TO 8:00

NHL scores

When you need a
loan on your home

!)

Sw.c~Q•• Gamftl

lni Ang.&gt;le!i at Boston t n~
Harttlrd at F'tilladelphla tn l

Qurixoc at Buffalo ( n)
Ot&gt;!rol! at WllShk!gton (rll

High school scores
0t00 ID&amp;h School F..IU!Kll
Sawrday'!l Rftlull8
Akron F'lrcstone 24, Akroo Kcnrmrc 0
AshtabUla 24 , MadisOn 22
BellaJrC' 29. Manlns Fcny 0
&amp;&gt;rkSillrf! 29, Beachwood 0
• Bloom·Cl!rroll ll. Ftshl:&gt;r Cath. 8
. C&lt;1dil 22, 1..1Jgan ii
Centerburg 34. Cin . Landmark 0
Cirl. MoellC'r 28, Cin Prln('("tOn 21
Cln . Summll ;1). Ctn. Country Day 0
C11'1 . TUrpin 17, On. McNicOOlas 1l

Cle. St.

lgn&lt;~tlus

Otkago at Nf'W Jerscy !nf
Edmonton at Win~ trll
Mol.la,r'• GMM!I
No games sdledulal
~•0*"*"'
MlnlK'!IOto at Hartford fn l
Edmontoo at Quebec (n)
N.Y. Ran~ at N£&gt;W Jersey (nl

Tran!laction!l
Wedleftd SpoN 'l'ruiMcUOnl5

,._........,
a•snUL

21i. Walsh Jt"Sult 0

C J(&gt; S t . J osep h 10. Lakf'Wood
Sl . Edward 0

CIE'. 1'rlnlty :!), Bedford Chane!

o

Oe. UniVersity 28, HudSon W. Rl!Sl"ive

0
' Col. St. Charles 7, Col . Ready 5
· Day. Meadowdale 32. Day. Belmont 0
[){'tptm Jf'ffersctl lB. Spmcervillf. 0

PERRIN SCORES - Melp' tailback John Penta, 114 pound
senior, scores one of two touchdowns on the night ~y agaiMI
Federal Hocking. Meigs won tl;le TVC contest, 28-6. The Marauders
llnlshed the 1983 campaign with a 6-3-1 record.

NEW YORK METS-NIU11ed Mel Stott·
lemyn=o pttchln8 roacll.

You own your home. And you
want to borrow back somB of the
money you've socked into it. Smart move!
.
We'll answer with the money you need- nowwithout disturbing your first mortgage. Calf today!

NEW

JERSEY

GENERAI..S-SignM
Gary Barbaro. satf'ty, to a

t~~ar

contract.

RE-ELECT

ROGER C. GAUL

HE ·R-EALLY CARES

Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand.

Paid For by Candidate's
Daughter, Beth "Vaughan" Schneider

... ,
.

-'

Cl!!v£&gt;1Mid

A.t Elacld
St. Joseph 6-4

-

Saints 27, Fal0011810
the achlevm~e~~ts of Chicago runDave
Wilson, playing In place o!
. ntng back Walter Payton. He
lnjuredquru;terbackKennyStabler,
carried 14 times for 62 yards to
become the fourth man In league threw for 146 yards and a touchhistory to top ll,OOl yards In career down, while reserve fullback Holde
rushing. With 11,020 yards, he trails Gajan ran for two touchdowns as
New Orleans defeated Atlanta.
only Jim Brown, Franco Harris and
Atlanta, which took a 10-0 lead
O.J.Simpson.
Payton alsocaughtfourpassesfor before the Saints began their
32 yards to move ahead of Simpson comeback turned the ba.Jloverthreeand belllnd only Brown on the times - twice on fumbles and once
all-time combined yardage Ust with on Steve Bartkowski's fourth Interception of the season.
14,440.
.
Patrlols 21, Bills 7
Cowboys27,Eagtes20
Two long scoring passes by Steve
Quarterback Danny White compleled 21 of 24 passes, Including two Grogan to Clarence Weathers and
for touchdowns, as Dallas stoppect · aimther . 35-yard Grogan pa.Ss to
Stanley Morgan to set up another
Phlladelphla.
The CowboYs trailed 10-0 In the touchdown keyed New England's
second period when they put vlctory .
togethei- a 39-yard field goat by . Grogan capped a five-play, ~
Rafael Sepl1en and a touchdown yard drtve with a 40-yard scoring
passtiUnWhltetoTlmhyNewsome pass play to Weathers, giving the
Patrtots.a 14-0 halftime lead.
within a 3: &lt;P3 span to tie the score.
Buffalo had Its chances. Joe
Tony Dorsett, who had mlnus-5
Danelo
missed a 24-yard field goal . : :
yards rushing through the first 214
attempt
and the Bills had a •
"periods, had a~yard TDsprlntand
flrst-and-goai
situation at the PatriWhite teamed up with Tony Hill on
ots'1 after a pass Interference call,
an 18-yard TD pass.
but couldn't score.
Sealtawks27,Broitcosl9
Dolphins 20, 49ers 17
Dave Krieg, starting his second
Rookie quarterback Dan Marino
strajght game after being replacing
and Nat Moore combined for two
~ Jim Zorn at quarterback, passed for
two third-quarter touchdowns and touchdOwns and defensive end Doug .
ran for another In the fourth period Betters recovered two San Francisco fumbles In the closing minutes
to lead Seattle over Denver.
The Broncos lost quarterback to give Miami Its fourth straight
Steve DeBerg for virtually the victory.
Uwe von Schamann broke a 17-17
remainder of the season when he
tie
early In the final period by
sutrered a separated left shoulder.
kicking
a 23-yanl field goal. A pass
Krieg passed 14 yards to Steve
Interference
call set up the winning
Largent and 30 yards to Paul Johns
kick.
for touchdowns and rookie Curt ·
Colts 17, Jets 14
Warner rushed 25 times lor an NFL
Two
touchdown
by Curtis Dickey ·
career-high 13tl yards to become the
led
Baltimore
to
Its
victory over the
Seahawks' single-season rushing
New
York
Jets.
record holder. The American FootThe second of Johnny Hector's
haD Conference's rushing leader
In Jet tenit01y set ·twofumblesdeep
Improved his season total to 889
up
Baltimore's
go-ahead
touchdown
yards.
In the thin! period

r----------------------'!·

IMPROVE OUR SCHOOLS
VOTE FOR

CAROLYN "Susie" HEINES
ON NOV. 8th- CANDIDATE FOR

HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - Nell
Bonnett outran Buddy Baker to win
the Atlanta Journal 500 at Atlanta
International Raceway.

··-

vs. Mentor

EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD
"Your Support and Vote Appreciated"
Pd. Pol. Ad . by Cand.

PLEASE VOTE

Lake Cathollc 8-J..i:l

f"Tmlont

Ras,; 9-{).J vs. SandU.'iky 9-1

At Canton

Alllant'f' liHJ YS. 1\k:rm Carfleld 9.()
AI Dip lslaftd

Cincinnati Pl1nt:t&gt;ton 8-2 vs. CLnctMall
Moeller 10.0

Dh:Wo. n .
Friday" 7:!10 p.m.

At Berta
WesUllke

1().()

'

vs.

BrccksYIIIC

Jl}(]

AI Tftl:y

Kettering

Aller 8-2 vs. Celina tQ.(}
At. Steubemille
..ru:~~t~n Ursuline 9-1 . vs . .Steuterl·

NO ON ISSUES 2 AND 3
•

IUMl-

YOU WILL BE VOTING:

Cinclnnatl Grcenh1ll5 ID-0 vs. Monroe

Lemon-MOnroE' 9-l
' DM!IIonM
Fridq, 7: :t0 -p.m.
.4.t Kftlt lkww!vf'lt
Leavlllsburg LaBrne 1().()

\'5 ,

Akron

St. Vlncent·St. Mary 9·1

IU......,
Fostoria 10-0 vs. Elyria Catholic 1().0
P.t Gahanna

Co lumbus St. Otarles fi.M
St aalrsvllk&gt; 9-0-1
At Sprtn(llleld

vs.

Washingtoo Ca.nt Hoose !H vs. Urbana

100

..,_IV

t)ida,y, 7:JI p.m.
AI.Cutan
.
Onvllle 7--3 VJI. Loulsvffie Aquinas 6-4
At Mansfield

. .,_

Castalia Marpretta 8-2 vs. IJ::IUdonvllle
Belpre 10.() VI. Coal Grove IIJ.O

.tt GfO\.'t'I'Orl

Wf'Sl Jetferson ~1 vs. Co\umbJ.s Ready

M

••

r------------------,..,.-----------1

RICHARD BAILEY

1312 EASTERN AVE.

CLERK

attempts.

"Next Deer .. the Pluo Hut"

PHONE 446-4113

•
I

'I

••

.,

p.m.

v..,.

FOR

""YOUR VOTE AND
SUPPORT APPRECIATED."

'.

.

-- '

N0 ON HIGHER. PROPERTY TAXES
NO ON LOCAL INCOME TAXES
NO ON TAX INCREASES FOR WORKING
COUPLES, SMALL BUSINESSES, FARMERS,
AND RETIRED PEOPLE

NO ON CUTS FOR SCHOOLS AND HEALTH CARE
N0 ON UNCONSTITUTIONAL MfNORITY RU.LE

...._

Richard "Dick" .Vaughan
MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL BOARD

7::11
..,_,

~.

__
---...-

VOTE FOR
AND RE-ELECT
·MY DAD .

EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL BOARD

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

'
Posts 500 victory

•.
•

OW. ILS. Poetbd

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

POO'I1IALL
Ullled 1Jt.Ma Ftolbllll Leape

State playoffs

llhlolon V
Continued !rom Pace
fumble recovery to his USt of
s.&amp;llrtiQ'. '7:. p.m.
., 3
overall Individual effort that led to' heroics, while turning in nine
McDonald 9-l vs. Mopdon!o 10.0 ·
tackles .
the vlctory as every Tornado did his
~ '-1 vs. McComblO.OAt Nf'Wal'k
' Timmy Evans recovered a furpjob well.
Waodsarid 8-1·1 vs. N!'Wark CaUl&gt;Llc 9-1
M•Mrtmn
Continuing with third period ble for the Tornadoes as did Jeff
South Olar!Hton SOUthf'Ostt'l'n 10.0 vs.
Connolly. Royce Bissell had . an
action HarriS found the end zone for
Mlddlt!town Fenwi$ 5-5
Interception for the Eagles , while
the second time on an ll yard pass
from Rl!fle pushing tbe score to James Nutter pulled down · 13
Ohio eoUege !!COres
· 33-0. At the end of the third period, tackles, followed by Guthrie and
most of the SHS contingent started Bissell.
.. .. eon •.
-~to see action, how~r. the heart of
Ohio St. ~ !Dtbla 17
E
~
s
the line-up took turns staying on the Flrot
downs ....................... ....... 16
8
Bow-ling Green ~. 8aU St. :II
field to assure what was dubbed "a Yards niShlng ....................... JS-275 36,98 .
Kent SL :rl, E. Mlchlian 1J
'o
Yards posslng .. .................. ....... !IO
Ohio U. 17, Miami Ul
very sweet win" for the Tornadoes. Total
Toledo a!, W. Mtchipn 16
yards ............... ......... ...... 355
98
•
(IWD
c.af.
After a lengthy third round, the Passes (comp.·att.) .................. 6-14 0-11
Akron 49, Ywrwstown St . .21
3
finale breezed by rather quickly Intercepted ....... :...... ......... .. ....... l
Fumbles-lost .............................2-1
4-3
With CorutOJ!y concluding the scor- Pena1Ues
AJh)and 21, ·EvaO.vtne 16
.......................... .. .. 16-1!il
&amp;;&lt;;
.
.
OIIID Coni.
Ing at the 9: 26 mark with a 41 yanl Punts ..... ................ :................ 2-49 5-:ll
Byquorten:
. sprint Into the ehd ZQne. 1!-lffle's Southern ... ;........... .. ....... .-....6 15 12
Batawtn·WallaL'e ~ . Woos~ 16
7--«l
C8ptral f.l, IWI&lt;I!ol'tl!rg :tl
'
. kick was good and the score·rode at Eastern ................... ,......... 0 0 0 0--:0
Mlllklngum 14, Mount Union IJ
40-0 WI!U the finish.
Connolly' led all rushe.J&amp; with his
156 yards, whDe teainmate Keith
Cook turned In a great complemenVOTE FOR
tary effort of iOO yards to just 13
carries. Guthrie ended the evening
with 43 yards on 10 can1es for
Easte~n. while Mike Lance '
CANDIDATE FOR
!lC1'8mbled for 48 yards on .17-

"

By A-oelated ~
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers
flnallycooldcelebrateavlctory, but
there were no celebrations for
Houston, Denver, Minnesota and
the Los Angeles Raiders- the latter
despite posting another National
FootbaiiLeaguevlctory.
"l think our rallylngcryoflatehas
been, 'Whatever It takes,'" said
quarterback Jack Thompson after
Tampa Bay captured ItS first game
of the season after nine losses by
downing Minnesota 17-12. ."James
Wilder had the right stuff. It wasn't
artistic, but the bottom line is we
won."
Wilder banged out 219 yards In 31
carries, Including a 75-yard touchdown sprint that put tbe Bucs ahead
to stay In the third quarter. The 'I'D
rpn was tbe longest ever by a
Buccaneer and the219 yards broke
the team's single-game rushing
. record.
WUder's performance came a
week after he canied the ball a
league-reconl 42 tbnes against
Pittsburgh.
WUder's broke the RJcky Bell's
single-game team rushing mark of
167yards. The 219yardsalsowasthe
second-most rushed against the
VIkings. Chicago's Walter Payton
had 275 yards In 1971.
Three teams lost their quarterback, while Houston running back
Earl Campbell threatened to leave
, the OUers after being benched In the
second period.
·
Steve DeBerg suffered a separated left shoulder and will be lost to
Denver for vlrtually the remainder
of the season. The Raiders' Marc
Wilson will Ill! sidelined for at least
six weeks because of a broken left
shoulder, while Minnesota's Steve
DIIs was hospltallzed overnight for
ob;ervatlon after becoming dlsor·
lented after taking some heavy hits.
Rams 21., Bear814
RookleErlcDickersonranforlZ7
yards and scored twice to power the
Los Angeles Rams wer Chicago.
Dlckersol) ran his 1983 rushing
total to 1,223 yards and scored his
16th and 17th touchdowns of the
season, both tops In the NFL.
The Rams' vlctocy overshadowed

The victors this weekend will
move onto the state semifinals
Friday and Saturday, Nov.lS-19.

~·

Southern whips Eagles

Phlladelphla at N.Y. \&amp;landers (n)
Calgary at Pitt~ (nl

lhe Dally Sentinel-Page 5: ::

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~~~==============~~~--~----~~~~~~·

•

Publllbecl ovttry lfterllooB·, Mooday

No_,., 7, 1983

SUIISCBIPTION RATII8
By Carrier or Motw Ro.te

RE-ELECT

Running game factor in .35-21 Packer triumph

t-

Monday,

(UIPS Ul·•t

ADMol_ooollldlmodlo, ....

,,

Paul 114rr!s had two .touchdOWllS
via tbe air, h&amp;ullllgln lhreecatcheil
for M yards, while Joe Wolfe had
two for 17 yards, and Connolly one
for nine yards.

Defensively. Young added a

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
"Your Support Appreciated"
Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand.

.

VOTE NOV. 8, 1983

DON'T HELP . THE RICH GEl RICHER,
WHILE THE REST OF US PAY FOR IT!
.

(

,.-..

.

.

·,•'

DON'T OPEN THE DOOR TO LOCAL INCOME
TAX, OR HIGHER REAL ESTATE AND
PROPERTY TAXES!

'·

.,·.
•

•'\

VOTE

NO ON

'•

..••

-.'

PAID FOR BY THE MEIGS COUNTY ASSOCIATION FOR RETARDED CITIZENS
•

�".

~y,NO~r7,

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

By Dale M. stoU
divides up the cookie-baking chores
add eggs and vanilla . Combine
Into several parts. Mertngue-type
Meigs County Extension
flour, salt and soda and add to
Home Economist
cookie doughs do riot freeze well.
creamed mixture, mlxlngweJI. Stir
Christmas Is less than two Bar cookie dough can be spread in a
In oatmeal and nuts.
months away! If your visions' of an
prepared pan and frozen. Bake
Form dough Into rolls 1 'h Inch in
old-fashioned Christmas, complete without thawing . .
diameter. Wrap well with plastic ·
with traditional Christmas goodie:;,
Following Is a recipe for a baste wrap, then with aluminum loU.
fade as the holidays grow nearer, oatmeal dough that can be kept in
Store In the refrigerator up to a
than plan to begin your holiday · the refrlgerator for _a Week or so or
week.
preparations now.
frozen for later use. Be sure to thaw
When ready to bake, cut In
Frantic cookie-baking sessions ·frozen dough, unwrapped, at room
one-fourth Inch slices. Bake on an
temperature for about 15-45 min- ungreased cookie sheet at 350
that stretchlntothewee hours of the
utes or until dough Is soft. Slice and
night can be ellmlnated by begin·
degrees for 10 minutes, or until light
bake. Cookie dough rolls should be
brown.
nlng cookie-baking early when days
are less busy. ln order to maximize
thawed just until you can slice
Baked cookies can also be frozen
but you need to take extra care to be ·
your efforts, though, you need to them.
Mom's Crispy Oatmeal Cookies
know all about cookle .preparatlon,
sure that cnsp cookies do not break.
. Makes ~ dozen
baking, storage and freezlng.
First, bake cookies and cool
1 cup brown sugar
thoroughly. Place· fragile cookies In
Cookies can be mixed and then
1 cup white sugar
a rigid freezer container with
stored In the freezer unbaked for six
1 cup butter, margarine or waxed paper separating each layer
to 12 months. The dough should be
shortening 1
packed In freezer containers,
of cookies. Cushion cookies with
2 eggs
sealed, labeled and dated, and
crumpled loU or waxed paper. You
1 teaspoon vanilla
can also place cookies on waxedfrozen. You can also · shape the
1% cups ail-purpose flour
paper-covered cardboard. Separdough Into logs for slice and .bake
1
teaspoon
salt
ate
flavored cookies so that the
cookies. Wrap well In moisture and
1
teaspoon
soda
.
flavors
do not mix. Wrap and
vapor-proof freezer wrap, label and
freeze,
3 cups quick oatmeal
freeze. Thaw baked cookies In the
'h cup chopped walnuts
package at room temperature.
Most cookie doughs freeze very
Cream shortening and sugars;
Baked cookies can be kept In the
wen and help a busy cook because It

HOLIIMY BOUTIQUE - Handcrafted angels of all
kinds will be included in a demonstration and display
by Pal Wolf to be featured at the Holiday Boutique to be
held Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m . at St. Paul's

Lutheran Church. Com husks, seashells, candleWlcklng, ribbon, stulfed are just a few of the variety of
m~ In the angels made by Mrs. WoU, pictured
here with her daugher, Anna.

Church group hayride at farm

Calendar

Members and friends of the First
Southern Baptist Church had a
haynde and weiner roast Saturday
night at the Sonny McClure farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Griffith
provided the wagon for the evening,
a nd members brought hot dogs and
b~rs, wlthotherrefreshmentsbelng
provided by · the fello~hlp
committee.

MONDAY
LETART- Letart Wownship
Trustees will meet Monday a t i
p.m . at Letart Falls.
MIDLEPORT - Voices of
Liberty will hold a practice
session Monday at 7:15 p.m. at
Middleport Heat h' Church.

Games were played during the

RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star,
will meet in regular ' session
Monday. 7:30 p.m. a t the
Masonic Temple . Dues are
payable at the meeting.

evening.
.
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.
David Hunt, !)1r.andMrs. Bob Mills,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Needs, Mr. and
Mrs. Sonny McClure, Mr. and Mrs.
John Riley, Mr. and Mrs. Troy
Zwilling, Mr. and Mrs. Ed King,
Donna Wilson, Julia Spencer, Scott
Stout , Pam Holcomb, Susie Bailey,
Josephine Malloty, Helen Cnibtree,
Maxine Black, Brian Carr, Billy
Coy, and VIr~ Saunders.

Revival begins

TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - Syracuse PTO
wUI meet Tuesday at 7 p.m . at
the school. Third grades students will present the program.
RACINE - ·Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM wlll meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m . There wUl be election of
officers and presentation of
veteran servtce awards.

The Rev. Charles Norris

The Rev. Charles Norris, formerly of Meigs County, will be
evangelist for revival services
which start Wednesday and end
Nov. 13 at the !Wclne First Baptist
Church .
Noms attended Southern High
School, Ohio University, Rio
Grande College and Trinity Theological Seminary located at Evansville, Ind. He Is a former pastor of
the !Wclne First Baptist Church
and Is currently serving as pastor of
the First Baptist Church in Grafton,
W. Va. He has been minlstenng as
pastor and evangelist In both Ohio
and West Virginia for 21 years.

Pickens reunion in Westerville

RACINE - An Election Day
dinner will be held at the Ra cine
firehouse by the Firemen's
Auxiliary with servin g to begin
at 10: 30 a.m . Chicken and ham
dinners wlll be served.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Pome roy
Chapter 80 RAM a nd Bosworth
Council 46 Royal and Select
Masters will hold a business
meeting Wednesday a t 6:30p.m.
Roya l and Select Master degrees will be conferred.

In hospital
Nonnan Weber, superintendent
of theOhioDepartmentofHighways
In Meigs County, underwent
surgery Monday at Canden-Ciark
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Cards may be sent ot Room 514.

The Bev. Rob Ruter

Speaker set
Rob Rutter will be the guest
speaker at the anniversaty meeting
of the Pomeroy Chapter, Women's
Aglow Fellowship to be held
Thursday night at Duff's Smorgasbord, Gallipolis.
Rutter was .ordained with the
Ohio District Council of the Assemblies of God. He Is married and has
three children. His talk will include
comments on his healing of Crohn' s
disease and the insight which he
gained
as a result
The dinner
wlll of
bethat
at 6:healing.
30 p.m.
with the meeting to follow . No
reservations are needed.

Williamstown, W.Va .; Naomi
The descendants of Hams
Pickens, Linda, Christopher, Jason
Warren a nd Josephine Randolph
and Bradley Cowdery, Chillicothe,
Pickens hold their annual reunion
all descendants of Frank Pickens.
Sunday at the Mt. Vernori farm of
Paul and Wanda Pickens Meredith,
Warren and Lillian Pickens,
Denver' and Grace Weber, ReedsWesterville.
Following the picnic dinner the
ville; William andGladysMeredlth,
afternoon was spent boating, fishBeverly, and Fay Sauer, MiddleIng, taking pictures, and reading a
port, all descendants of Harry·
Top weight losers for the past
recently acquired family history.
Pickens.
.
month of TOPS OH 1456wereLinda
qt the four children of the Hams
Josephine Hull, Connie Rowlen
Bailey, Pauline Tillis, and Vickie
Warren Pickens family, (Clara, · and SheUy, Waldo; Carolyn Dane
Ferrell.
·
and Chad, Marion; Steve and
Frank, Harty, and Clyde, ali
The runners-up were Sandy
deceased) there are living descendRosemary Needels, Shawn and Jim
Sergent, Linda' Bailey, and Sherrle
ants of the three sons.
Ashby, all descendants of Clyde
Darst. Clara Phillips won .the'
Present at the reunion were
Pickens,
kitchen contest. Members were
Guests were Betty Bates, Manon,
Walter and Margaret Brown,
asked to take In Items for tbe
Reedsville; David and Peggy
and Irwin Meredith, Westerville.
bathroom durin!~ tlie month of
Brown, Columbus; Paul and Wanda
Next reunion will be held the first
November. Meetings are held on
Meredith, Westerville; Rick, MarSunday tn October at the home of . Tuesday nights at 6. p.m. at the
William and Gladys Meredith,
sha and Brtan Selzer, Columbus;
Rutland Civic Center and anyone
Beverly.
Charles, Pat and Chen Plck"!!S,
interested Is invited to attend.

·raPS 1456
meeting held

Available

Wllllam Windon plays "Thurber"
has been scheduled to replace the
third program In the Ohio University Periormlng Arts Series. The
program. "Country Matters" has
been canceled due to financial.
difficulties beyond their control.
Senes tickets for "Country Matters" may be used for "Thurber."
Clever humor and sharp acting
skills are the Ingredients for
Windom's play .. "Thurber" will
appear at the Memorial, Auditorium Wednesday, Nov. 9, at 8 p.m.
Windom says, "Thurber's work Is
Umeless, dealing with relations
hetween men and women and other
topics In an off-beat way."
As ·one of America's greatest
humor writers, James Thurber has
contributed many short stones and

essays to the literary world. He
worked as a cartoonlstfor the "New
Yorker" In the19:lls and '40s, where
his famous Walter Mltty comics
appeared.
As a former television and rum
star, Windom has received an
Emmy award for best male actor
for "My World and Welcome To It,"
a sen.S based on ThUrber's life
works. He has appeared In Rod ·
Serllng's "Night Gallery" and the
series "The A Team."
Tickets for "Thurber" are available at the' Mernonal Audltonum
Box Office for $5 and $8. Box Office
Hours are noon to 4 p.m. Monday
throug~ Friday. For more Information concerning "Thurber," call
(fil4) 59-1-68«7.

take place at the Laurel CUff Free
M~lst Church on Nov. 12, at 6
p.m., with music to begin at 5: ro
p.m. A reception will be held
immediately following the ceremony at the, Diamond Savings and
Loan Co.

rr:============~=========::;

~ghSchool.

The contest Is annually cosponsored by Ohio University and
the local pioneer ·and historical
society.
Dlll and Mournblg are 'two
winners from the 19,1XXl high school
seniors In Ohio who took part In the
history contest this fall. Only 230 of
the total were winners. As winners,
Mourning and Dlll'wlll be In Athens
on Nov. 11 where they final essay
examination competition will be
held at Ohio University. Both wtu be
guests of the university for the day
and their parents also are Invited to
beguestsataiuncheonandprogram
at the university.

Pre-holdiay dinner in Middleport
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walburn
entertained Saturday with a preholiday dinner at their home In
Middleport.
HerefortheobservancewereMr.
and Mrs. Steve Walburn and
daughter, Knoxville, Tenn.; Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Walburn, Jill
Walburn and Brittany, Mrs. William Forbes, Sissonville, W.Va.;
Marte Roush, New Haven, and Bill
Lambert. Visiting later 1n the day
were Amy Hill, Racine; MlkeSayre,
Middleport, and Rhonda Kaye, New
Haven.

Omitted
The names of LUa Mitch, Bernice
G$I11es, Connie Jones and June
Eichinger were unintentionally om. ltted from a llstingoflhoseattendlng
or presenting gifts to Shari Mitch,
bricle-€lect of Joe Garnes, atarecent
shower held at Trinity Church.

,'
Your Vote &amp; Support Will Be Appreciated

Steve Walburn Is a second year
law school student.

DAR topic will be
fulfilling duty
PO_MEROY - Return Jonathan Meigs ChaP.ter, .Daughters
of the American Revolution wtu
·meet Friday at 1; :JJ p.m. at the
Meigs IIUI. The program will be
"Fulfilling OUr Duty to DAR
Schoofs" by Miss Mary Frances
Winchester, national vice chairman, East Central by Division,
DAR Schools. Hostesses for the
meeting wtu be Mrs. Ronald
. Reynolds, Mrs. Paul Elcb, Mrs.
Clyde Ingels, Mrs. Irving, l&lt;arr,
Jr., and Mrs. Charles Lewis.
Members are reminded . to
bring articles for patients at the
Chlllleothe
Veterans Hospital.
.
.

Lawrence (Larry) Wolfe

\

NOV: 8, 1983
Paid For By Candidate

~=====================::::=~

Sample Ballot
w..

~ CHI••• te v ... Olhre
C........
Wit..• 1-.-.. I ..... WI....... .....,, c..a...,._

hf.11H

, ..., ..., 01t1e ..m

OINHAL BlmoN • ...V. I, 1911

UN.OFFIUAI. S.\MPLE IIALLOT

A ~orlty lfflnnaUvt vo\111 n...u)' lor pulllll,

"Your Vote and Influence
Appreciated"
Pd . Pol. Ad. by Candidate

NO

...

J&gt;oncb Hon

NEWMEMBERS-'lbeeelournewmembel'IJwere
welcoined .Wtbe 111111181 preleradlaltea of ohiO Eta
Phi &lt;hlptS-·Bela Slpna phi Sorority, beld at the.

SPECIAl. EI~E!:TIOI\I RY PmDON
Upon th• Qutttton or 'thll $ale or 8Mr Py ' lloklm of "C" or "D"

Blverboat Room of the ~ Savlnp and Loan
~
left, Cathy 8J¥Unal', COrky

..,._,,_,.,,trim

~"""""' Pam Dlcldle and Pam VIIIJI!m.

Can~idate

VILLAGE OF RACINE

Your Vote and Influence Appreciated
Pd. Pol Ad by Candidale

DEBORAH BLACK GILMORE
CANDIDATE FOR

1-Y;.;Eli:;:__ _:;:::
..:...J P,ncb Hore

CLERK-TREASURER
RUTLAND VILLAGE
'

NO

...

'

'

~.

Your Vote And Influence Appreciated

ELECT

HERSCHEL
NORRIS
C"ndid1te For

JAMES R. SMITH

LET ART TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL BOARD

NOV. •, 1983 '
Pd.
llOIM

Plld FOJ by 'tillnm To Yatt 011¥1 Wet Coi'I'Hfllttft

~··'I,

~Atff~

for~ -

"Shill the Mlt or btn u &lt;letlned in ~~HUon 430&amp;.08 or the
Revlted Code, be permitted wt\tllD U\a foiJow\n(dtiCI'ibtd
dlltriri"'"1'1unely, Oltw- Townehlp?"

. ELECT

71/2 Years 'Experience R'etaii'Cierk &amp; Pharmacy
Bookkeeping Assistant
Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand.

litHE

Permitl

'

HARRY
LYONS,
SR.
Write-In
For
MAYOR

others !rom Athens, Gail! a, Hocking, Perry Washington and Vinton
County schools. The two day
program for gifted students was
financed through a grant of $6,500
from the Marlha Holden Jennings
Foundation, Cleveland. Those attending were high schol seniors
ldetttlfied as outstanding scholars
by ·their respective school dlstlicts
In southeastern Ohio.
J
During the two day residential
program, students were exposed to
the latest developments and chal·
lenges In five areas:
business,
technology, government, medicine
and the humanities.
The flrst ·day was spent In Athens
on the Ohio University campus
where there were presentations by
Jim Plnchak, Ohio Career Development In!onnation Supervisor for
the Ohlo · Career Information Sys- .
tern in the Ohio Department of
Education, speaking on Leadership
and Careers of the Future; Tom
Sweeney, professor of guidance In
the School for Applied Behavioral
Science and Educational Leadership, speaking on Building Dreams
and Setting Goals; and George
Pantalos, staff member of the
ArtUlcal Hearl Program, University of Utah, presenting Looking
Toward th~ Future in Science .
In addltlon to the above speakers
the students had a choice of
attending small discussion groups
on medicine, pbyslcs, education,

aru

"Bh&amp;U lhl ... of wlnl, and mlatd brmTIIIH br Ulfpulup, IWitr per-

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP

Knowledce of Law

Randy Bahr, Eastern High
School; Gerald DUI Jr., Southern;
and Vaughan Spencer and Sherry
Arnold, Meigs, were selected to
attend the Regional Scholars Program, a · two day honO~il!;Y- and
motivational workshop · ldr high
school students, held Monday and
Tuesday by the Southeastern Ohio
Voluntary Education Cooperative,
Athens.
The three local seniors joined

Council

...

County Pioneer 1111d Historical Society 1buroday
evening. C.E;. Blakeslee, society president, right, Is
sbown pres&lt;!ntlng both young men with copies of the
Meigs County History published by the society In 19'7!1.

Local students attend workshop,

RACINE VILLAGE

A. majority afflrmatin votrla n~

Available

WINNERS- James Mlchae!Moumlng, left, Meigs
lligh School, and Lee Dill, Southern lligh School, were
hoiiOI'ed as Meigs CouDty winners of the annual Ohio
Unlvel'!lity American History c.mtest by the Meigs

Republican Candidate For '

YES

.

'

cents each! More elaborate cookies money In ~ long run.
Your baking sheet should be as
contaiitlng chocolate, nuts, or spi·
Oat
as possible to Insure even
ces may cost as much as 25 cents
•
heating.
Baking sheets with sides
each. It may be worth your while to
dtstnbute
heat unevenly, resulting
sit down and figure oui the cost of
In
poorly
browned
cookies. Cookies
your cookie recipes so that your
are
also
harder
to
remove. If you
budget Isn't totally destroyed.
don't have a Oat baking sheet,
Many times a cookie gift Is Invert a 9 x 13 pan and bake on the
Intended as an Inexpensive remem· top of it.
brance. This Is possible If you
Avoid dark cookie sheets as the
control the types of cookies that go
sheets absorb too much heat and
Into the gift. Containers, like cookies may get too dark on the .
Christmas tins, trays or bowls, may bottom. Cookie sheets should be
add more cost, too. There are narrower and shorter than your·
aliernatlves to expensive contain- oven to allow for good air ch..;ulaers. For your free copy of Inexpention. Allow two Inches of space on
sive Ideas for containers lor food
all sides. If baking two sheets at one
gifts, contact the Meigs County time, be . sure they are evenly
Extension Office at Box :r,!, Pome- spaeed to a !low for even cooking.
roy, or call 992-6696.
Rotating pans will help with even
Avoiding Cookie Disasters
cooking, too.
j;:verybody at one time or another
Grease pans only under areas
has had a cookie disaster. Spending where cookies will be placed to
tlme mixing cookies only to have avoid hard -to-remove baked on
them burn Is a real disappointment. shortening spots. Let cookie sheets
Be sure to pre-heat your oven to the cool cOmpletely before placing
correct temperature. If you're
more dough to bake . A hot pan may
unsure about your oven's reliability cause the underside of the cookie to
on this count, invest In an oven darken.
thermometer. It may save you
Storing Cookies
For short-term cookie storage,
separate cookies by type. Soft
cookies should be stored In a
container with a tight-fitting lid.
Add a slice of apple or a piece of
bread to. keep the cookies moist.
Change the bread frequently.
Separate strong-flavored cooIdes, too . Minty cookies may
Influence vanilla· cookies to taste
vaguely mnty otherwise. Crtsp
cookies should be stored In containers with loosely fitting !Ids. Re-crtsp
soft cnsp cookies by placing them
in a 300 degree oven for five
minutes.
For additional Information about
cookies, Including a receipt lor a
rea lly good and easy to handle
rolled cookie, please contact the
Extension Office.

Church plans
turkey supper

mit~ which a\IUtoriae tall ror otf.premllt con1wnpt1on only, bl pmnltWd !n Ol!ve,Townlhtp'?"

TRUSTEE

. . RACINE VILLAGE ·
"Your Vote WiU Be Appreciated"
Pd. Pol. Ad . by C~ndidate
NOV; 8, 183

Two seniors from Meigs County
high schools were honored as top
local winners in the 37th annual
American History Contest by the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society Thursday night.
As winners, the two received
copies of the 1979 Meigs County
History complled and publlsbed by
the society. Normally, there ts only
one such award but this year the two
·-James Michael Mourning, son of
Mr. and Mrs. James Mourning of
Middleport, and G. Lee Dill, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Dill Sr.,
Racine, - tied In their scores.
Mourning ' attends · Meigs High
School and Dill attehds Southern

Jeffers -Bell plans completed
POMEROY - Plans have been
completed lor the wedding of Rhoda
Jeffers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Jeffers, Pomeroy, and
Shawn Bell, son of 'Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Bell, !Wclne.
The open church wedding will

freezer for six to 12 months.
Begin .Christmas Baking Now
Now that you know that cookies
or cookie dough can be kept In the
freezer, then .perhaps now Is the
time to begin your Chr1stmas
baking. There are a few other
secrets to successful cookie baking
that you may want to file away for
reference In the weeks to come.
The quallty of ingredients In a
cookie recipe naturally tnnuence
the quality of the cookies. Using
fresh, pure Ingredients wtU help
Insure good cookies, Many peole
choose to give cookies as gifts. This
may be a good idea If you're fairly
sure that the recipient will enjoy
them. People with diabetes or
weight problems may appreciate.
some other gift, however, as sweet
Items may present a great temptation. For a busy mother orfarnlly, a
gift of cookies may alleviate some
of the pressures assocla ted with
·entertaining.
One thing that cooks may
overlook is the cost of a cookie-tray
gift. Some cookies, such as sugar
cookies, may cost as little as three

Two Meigs seniors
fare well in.contest

- ' OLIVE TOWNSHIP

CANDIDATE FOR

CLERK-TREASURER

Themeetlngwascomblnedwitha
halloween parJy. Games were
played with refreshments being
sen~ed Peach Mugrage, Resa
Sawyers, and Cathy Clark, all of the
scouts were awarded ribbons and
prtzes for costumes.
OtherscoutsattendlngwereMark
Theiss and James Walls. Parents
and guests there were Mrs. Mugrage and Travis, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Petrel, Mrs. Sai&gt;JYers and Shelly,
Mrs. Oark, Beth and Cha(i, Mrs.
Beverly Dowell, and Don
Stephenson.
Next pack meeting will be held
Nov. 22 at 7 p.m. at the Racine
American Legion hall. Parents are
urged to a !lend atid all sponsors are
welcome.

~·· .14L•..ol OJdlun
•
EIC'etlaa

Denver G. Hysell

CANDIDATE FOR.·

Melanie Stethem, · Betty Dean.
Shirley Hust6n, the Meigs County
CooPerative Extension Service,
VIrginia Qradwell, Oarlce Krautter, the Chester Garden Club, Mlllle
DunCan, and VIrginia Wyatt.
Door prizes donated by Individuals and OOS!nesses wtU be awarded
at the end of the day.

starring William Windom

VOTE FOR ON NOVEMBER 8, 1983

D. GENE LYONS

Publlc U!rary, the Fabric Shop,

Peggy Crane, Country Craft Cottaie. Jane Ranis, Pat . Wolf,

.OU schedules 'Thurber,'

•

Experienced

Citizens Center, the Meigs County

·Racine Scout awards ·
Awards were presented at the
l1!Ceflt meeting of tbe Racine Cub
Scout Pack 2!11 held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sawyers,
Racine.
·
Receiving awards were Donnie
Stephenson, webelos aquanaut, athlete, artist, and engineer activity .
badges; Lenny Dowell, Webelos
forester, activity badge; Kenny
Clark, three silver arrows; Trevor
Petrel, three sliver arrows; Jason
Lawson, bear patch, gold arrow,
and silver arrow; Chad Gra,nen,
wolf · patch, gold arrow and two
sliver arrows; Eddie Sawyers, four
sliver arrows; Tyson Mugrage, four
sliver. arrows. Also quautylng for
awards was Colin Maidens, webelos
forester, activity badge, gold arrow
ant\ sUver arroW.

7

•

Holid~y ideas meeting set. for Pomeroy
After the potluck dinner, Ann
Lambert lind Dale Stoll wtU ·have
;'Hollday Fabr1ganza," VIrginia
ChadWell will present "Fabric
Ribbons;" and Shirley Huston wtu
show "StencUing."
Betty Dean will display and
discuss her madonna collection, and
the conclusion of the day wtu be a
delljonstratlon by Mrs. Stoll on
"Wraplng ltUp! "
Displays w1ll be provided by VIcki
Ault, the Meigs County Senior

•

Page

Christmas cookies can be started then frozen

Pa!f• 6

Holiday ideas ranging !rom
hal)dmade angels to holiday suivlval tips will be presented at "A
Christmas Boutique" to be held
Thursday from 10.a.m. to 3 p.m. at
St. Paul's Lutheran Church In
Pomeroy.
·
The meeting which will (eature
displays of the latest Christmas gift
Ideas, Is designated tor any person's
schedule. Parllclpants are Invited to
come and go, viewing exhibits,
samptlng foods and taking home
copies of hollday Ideas. Thepubl1c Is
Invited to-bring In special hollday
creations to share with other
participants. A table will be
provided for these.
The Meigs County Cooperative
Extension Sen~ite Is sp&lt;msoring the
meeting. The theme of "A Christmas Boutique" focuses on ways to
have a. pleasant, .meaningful holiday. Old-fashioned ideas With a
modern flair, plus ways to survive
the holldays without going crazy or
broke will be presented.
The ~hedule for theday includes
a potluck lunch at noon. Those
wtshingtoeat lunch are requested to
take a family sized dish to share,
alongwlth the recipe, and their own
table service.
The day's activities will begin
with reglstJ1itlon of 50 cents at 10
a.m., followed by a welcome. Dale
Stoll will talk on "How to Get
Through the Holidays Without ,
Going CrBZ)' r:ir ):lroke; " Pat Wolf
will have a display and give a
demonstration on maklnf,: angels for
decorations, Melanie Stetht'm wUl
show decorations from nature.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

What's Cookin'?

Monday, November 7, 1983

.,

1983

I
I

Pol. Ad by Clnd.

Candidate For

. Paid For by the Candidate

radio and television, business,
engineering, careers and foreign
languages. The group went to
Nelsonville for presentations at the
Hocking Techrllcal College and the
Tri County JVS. They visited the
heat processing and ceramic department as well as drafting,
forestry, computer science, broadcasting and the culinary arts
facilities.
They were honored at a recognition luncheon held at the Hocking
Valley Motor Lodge where Tom
Snider, District Marketing Coord!·
nator, Digital Equipment Corporation, Columbus, was the speaker.

Plans have been completed forthe
annual Thanksgiving turkey supper
to be held at the St. Paul United
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains
Wednesday, at 6: :iJ p.m.. In th~
church basement. A short program
In the sanctuary will follow the
dinner.
The church recently had a weiner
roast at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Gorrell with 28 attending,
loU01fed by a hymn singwlth Sandy
Archer at the plano.
The church also Observed a
homecoming recently with a carry.
In dinner. The Rev. Waiter Frost of
Belpre had the plesslng, and the
afternoon program lea lured the
KJng's F ellowship Gospel Group
from Marietta and Williamstown.
New steps have been Installed at
the outside of the church and a
permanent ramp has been built.

Fall festival held .
First fall festival of the Carleton
School was held Saturday night with
David Might belngselectedki11gand
Mary Jane Curry, queen, of the
festival. First runner-up was Sarah
Harman. The princess was Amy Jo
Davis.

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE

20°/oALLTO
40°/o
OFF
SUITES IN STOCK

~,~--------~---~------------

New 2 Pc ..E.A. livinc rm. suite .includes 3 cushion couch , matching
chan, all w1th arm caps , wood tnm, sweatheart back , covered with eKpenslve 100%, nylon antron floral cover . .

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

�•

Monday, November 7, 198:i
November 7 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Nelson reunion
held at park

The Daily Sentinel

::::::::::r===-------T----------,----------'T"_________J

PHONE
992-2156
Or

r"

W1ilt Dl•llr S.ntinlri Clanifitd Dtpt.

Mr. and Mrs. v..raltC'I' Nelson and

I &amp;\oMou..- ..,....

Aaron. Mr. and Mrs. Ter&gt;..,'
':1 Pickens,
Ten;,· and .Jill, Mr. and Mrs. Bill

_:~....t;.:r. . .""
4

and Marilyn Geor~e.
fS"

1

Mr. and :\1rs. J!m :\'filler. SaJlvJ
and CharUe, Mr. a nd Mrs. Tom
Schoonover and Tommy, Mr. and

~'

--

k~ '\

GRANDPi\RENTS GALORE- JennUer Renee Poling, daughter of
J eri Block Poling, fonnerly of Meig-s County, now residing in Savannah,
Ga., l&lt;l the fifth Hving geoeratlon of both the malemal and pate mal sides
of her mother's famHy. Pictured above Is the malemal five generation
line, JennHer Renee Poling being held by her mother, with her
grandmother Unda Wolfe Black of Carron, left, and her great-great
grandmother, Mattie Beaver Hill, ·columbus. In the photograph below,
MJ:s. Poling bolds her daughter Jennifer, and Is seen with from Jell the
·infant's grandlalber, Larry Black of Carron, her greal-~other
Helen Lawson Bllick and her greal-greal grandmother, D. .y Lawson:
both of Portland. The baby has a total of 12 Uvlng grandparents and one
step-grandparent.
·
.

Literary club has recent meeting
Two books were reviewed at
Wednesday's meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held at the home
of Mrs. Richard Owen.
Mrs. Hal Johnson, introduced by
prOgram chairman, Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, reviewed "The Way of the
Wolf" by Mart in Bell. a young
Epl,scopal minister who lectures
an~giveconcertsof o rigina l songs. in

churches of all denominations.'
She noted that his gospel included
whlmsica l stories, poems and songs
Intended to presenta fresh approach
to the good news of Matthew, Mark,

Luke and John .
Mrs . Wallace also introduced
Mrs. Charles Gaskill who reviewed
the novel, "A Mother and Two
Daughters" by Gail Godwin. She
noted that the book Involved the
fictional life of a close family and
their comic and traumatic experiences in the late 1970's projecting into
1984.

Next meeting wiD be held at the
·home of Mrs. James Clatworthy
Nov. 16. RoDcaDwas answerectwlth
each member giving a favortte
Bible verse.

Mrs. John Yost. Retha and Jessica,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Green and
Tasha, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Miller and
Jeff, Penny Biggs, Bonnie Miller
and David Bates. Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Nelson, Gloria, Martha and
Darlene, Flossie and Johnny Nel·
son. Dottie Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Walker and Stephanie, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Dill and Tanya,
Betty Dill, Gary Gilmore, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Barrett , Mr. and Mrs.
George Folmer , Danny and Mi·
che)e. Linda Foster , Ryan and
Missy, Cathy Scarberry, Gina and
Cortney, Wilma Gilmore and Kenny
Hysell.
Kay Gilmore and Sheena, ·Jlin
Werry. Mr. and Mrs. BII Smith,Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Leach, Mr. and
'.Mrs. Rick Yost and Ricky, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Yost, Donnie and
Dawn, and Ryan Foster .

Layette shower
A layette shower honorlog Mrs.
Franklin (Jolene) Martin was held
recently at the American Legion .
hall in Middleport with Emma
Moodispaugh and lda Martin as
hostesses.
Games were played with prizes
going to Iva Powell and Tammy
Daniels, who also won the door
prize.
Cake and punch were served .
Others attending were Mary Miller,
Octa Jennie Ward, Margaret Sheri·
dan, Darla Hawley, Emma Fox, .
Donna Gilmore, Pam Haggy, Kim
Haggy, Connie and Wendy Moodispaugh, Frances Martin, Teresa
Snider Hoffman, Susanne Johnson,
Jody and Jean Johnson, Lil Moodls·
paugh, Bonnie Brewer, Cora. Lee,
Rachel Wilson, Angela Seller.;,
Edna Stobart, Vena Neal, Donna
Knapp, Steve Martin, Ada Henry,
Sue Johnson, Judy Amspach, and
Joan WeyersmJller .
Sending gifts were Eva Robson,
Patty Barton, Brenda Haggy ,
Janice Mash, Janice Haggy, Eva
Moodispaugh, Patty Johnson ,
Marie Dudding, Mable Tracy,
Delores Surface, Bonnie Friend,
Roseann Manley, Mrs. Norman
Van Meter, Neva Wise, Mildred
Jacobs, Shirley Meadows, Tina
Jacobs. Dorothy Bailey, Kate
Parker, AmberLohn,Linda Friend,
Doris Smith, Marie Steiner, Joy and
Tammy Clark, Edith Spencer,
Missy and Terry Brewer.

VICA members
attend conference
Several members of the Meigs
High School VICA (Vocational
Industrial Clubs ol America) attended a regional conference held at
the Buckeye Hills v ocational
School.
At the meeting a new regiona l
VICA queen was selected and new
officers were elected. Amy Sisson
was Meigs VICA's queen contestant. The three Meigs students
competing for regional office were
. Sherr! Ritchie, Cheryl Burris, and ·
Danny Davis. Barb Chappalear, a
regional officer, gave her farewell
speech at the conference _

Meigs personals
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Wallace

BrlanneGibnore

have retumed from washington,
D.C., where they visited their
son-in-law and daughter, Mike and
Nancy Wollard for a week.
Nellie
Horgan
and
her
slst~r
Brandee Gibnore
Frashlre Dowden, recenily had ~
three )lleek vacation traveling
nearly 2500 mtles. They toured
Washington, Baltimore, Md., Cape
Cod, Martha's Vineyard, tooliaboat ·
great-grandparents: Louise GO· ride on the Atlantic, visited Buzmore, Margie .Kapple, Brynda zards Bay, Nalltuckett Island,
Faulk, Cindy Faulk, Lynda Ste- Provincetown, MontgOmery Island,
wart, Heidi and Lyndsey, MOdred Plymooth Rock.
·They also vts1ted ~!dent
Karr, Bev Nesemeler, and the
honored guests' brother-, Justin, · · Kennedy's home, his Ubrary, and
the church where the Kennedy
and \heir parents.
family
attends which is in the shape
~!)ding gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
of
a
cross.
From there they went to
Jerry Black, Gl.adys Parfitt and
Roy Sorrell. Burdell Black was also Black Water Falls, Davis, W.Va.,
honored and presented a .cake In before returning borne.
observance o( his 82nd btrlhday.

JJ~ nlo•Solo

l. &amp; lllf""'
''"'"'•"•••
&amp; Accoooo•••

,, ft~L~a:'!~

l~w!IIIU

44 111-om... l too A..,. l

11

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

Plolmifls

Trudy J.

Case No . 83-CV-196

l)rtv vnd par aliP. I w1th th e ali!'N.
·:""'50 teet to Lpc ust StrA~ t th encfl
F!aster ly on Locust StrP.e t 30
lf'f't to th e p tacP. of beq1nh1ng
bP1nq a tr ac t o f land lacmg 30
feet on ~ocus t Stret and
extendrng at th at w1dt h 1n ' a
northerly d1rec! 10n 50 !P.et . and
bAing the samP propf!rty con vf!VRd by Martha Brvant to Ray
H Rawlinqs by deed dated Junfl

15. 1934. rr.co rdf'd Jn Soak
139 o f th P. 0Pf'd Reco rds o t

992-2259

LANGSVILLE - One f\oor plan
wrth one huge bedroom and
another · average sized bed·

room. Almost new aluminum
siding new roof, new carpet in
living room, aereator septic·
sy~em, ~rge

bath wrth utility.
lV. acres pa rtly fenced.
$21,500."00.
A. nice

Name

·No 59 as fol lows 50 feet
ta cmg Th1~d Street and 65.fP.At
on Locus t StrE&gt;et 111 M1ddiP.po rt .

garage. Now $45,000.

.

Oh•o

·

Pr1or· Instrument APfP..rencA
D !=!ed Boo k 2 79 . pagP 403.

MIDDLEPORT - Nice quiet

Mo&lt;gs Coun&lt;v Doerl Records

1\.? story home
wfth part basement Relax on

.

Property AddrAss 1s 796 s
Th ird Srre !'! t. Mlddlt&lt;!port. Oht o
Th P, propPrtY IS appraised at

a

s25.300 oo and canna! be

the concrete ITont porch. Big'
kitchen &amp; dining room. Some
new carpeting artd paneling.

Geolog;c n a m~ and depth of

lnJectron z:one- F•rst Bereaappro)( 1.570"
M trx1mum proposed mwc-

A 2 STORY HOME with 3
bedr.ooms,large beautiful living
room and dining roo, I'h baths,
balcony, patio and a wishing
well. loU; of dose! space, new
plumbi ng and new wirin~
$35,000.00.

Meigs. stu~ents attend College Day
Twenty-eight college prepara- attending career planning and
m
seniors at Meigs High School financial. aid sessions. They were
Martha Vennarl
attended the Ohio University Col· accompanied
by

lege DaY program held at Athens
recently.
over 100 colleges were representect there with the students

and John Redovlan, counselors,
and Cecelia McCoy, senior English
teacher.

'

CHECK THE

~lA551flf05

bv contact1ng .the

obtdlnP.d

followmg
Hera ld Oil &amp; Gas Company

35857

Mi ddiP.port

oH

614 -742 -2160
Oh1 0 Department of Natural

01 1 and Gas.

of

recovP. ry wpll protect
shall t,l e such commflnts or
ObJeC ti Ons w1t h thfl "' UNDERGROUND INJECTION CO N·
TROL SECTION. DIVISION OF
OIL AND GAS. FOUNTAIN
SQUARE. COLUMBUS OHrO
43224 ·· Such commen ts o r
ob1f!Ct10ns shal l be ftiP.d wl!h the
diVISIOn no lat er than l1fteen
calendar days I rom th e publi ca lion date •n a newspapPr o f
gP.nr.ral c•rculatmn m the area
ot r flVIP.'v\1

[11 1 7. l1C

•'
'
'
;

:

~

THE .
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

New Lima Rood
Rutland. Ohio
PH . 742 -2226
9-29-J mo.

aro

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
1¥• M. East of Poaeville
On Township .Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Oply

1 COUNTRY HOMES - 4
acres plus 5 rm. house or 2
acres plus 6 nn ranch near
Rutland.
RUTlAND - 6 homes to
choose from. 3 on Rt 124 - 1
two on Oepot Street with level
lois.

PH. 992-3466 .

10/ 1912 mo. pd

MIDDLEPORT- II furnished
apts. near schools and stores.
Asking only $85,000. Approx.
$34,000.00 income.

, ''That bad, huh1' '

3 Announcements

ANNUAL BAZAAR
THURS. NOV. lOth
Ham and creamed
chicken dinners from
4:30 to 7 p.m.
Games of all kinds.
Door prizes every half
hour starting at 7 p.m.

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and II
I
Savell
I
I
-

EvtTyone Welcome! ·

54

Mi~e .

Merchandise

'

Write your own ad and order by mail with this

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

- Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
- Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
- Sewer ·
-Gas Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS

985-3561
All Makea

•We1hara •Diahwaahara
•Rangaa
•Refrig•r•tora
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-ttc

Save 45%

9et
--

House....

Serviceman On Duty
Monday-Friday
8:30 to 12 and 1 to 5
Saturday
8:30a.m. to 12 Noon
Also complete service 011
all Hotpoint and General
Electric Appliances.
Other makes also serviced a~d we also service
Kerosene .Heaters.

shed, 2 car garage. 50 acrs
tillable, 40 acres pasture. ,IJI
mineral!. Make an offer.
POMEROY -Older home thai
needs some wor~ but hilS
. much remodeling completed.
Fireplace, 7 rooms, 3 bed·
rooms, foyer, original wood·
work _and ~ont sitting porch.
Bargam al $15,00.00. But
owoo- wan~ offer.

m

9

~

~
RUt.IOI

Fireplce Insert

·s·sss
...Automltic Controls

Landmartt

•2Biowlis
•Finbrick Uned
•Bums Wocid or Coli

614-992-2181
I
I

· ( )Wanted
( IForSale
( lAnn·ouncement

1/.
IS .

( ) For Renf

Starting At

$}295

IY,

Reaular

l.

10,

$15.95

1.
3.

11.

KITCHEN CARPET

ANSO IV NYLON

•5.

Rtaular $15.95

AI&amp;- $11.95

6.

r::~lled

7.

NowS1595

B.

1 1.

. - - -· - - '

.

14.

15.

. -.-··- -'

9.

Rubbtrblek

SlriPt

TWEED
Rea. S7.95

.n

10.

19.

11.
12.

JO.

. - - -

NOW S4H

, 16.

1s.

16,

- • --·------~-

We can repair and recor8 radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Discover Enpge-A-car, the
modem answer to soarin1
new car jl'ices! Drive the vehicle of your choice ... ;rny
make and model. No down
payment. lower monthly
payments. Read all about H
Send for FrH Booklet l-16:
Bob Blackston, an autltor~ed independent ErlpgeA·Car Broker. Box 326. Po·
meroy, Ohio 45769. •
Want Faster Information?
Call 614-992-6737

PAT Hilt FORD

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

Your NEEdS

THE
TROPHY
KING

GRAVEL
HAULED

Trophy

(t'anufacturers

Al TROMM
742-2328

'

- --- - - - ... ·-·--·· -- -. -- --· ----·---

. - ---

31.

- ·- -

32.

- . --

-.

PLAQUES
ENGRAVING
.

JERICHO RD.
PT. PLEASANT, W.
1 -304-675-1
320

10/20/ t.f.n .

~itchen 9abinets - RoofIn&amp; _- Stdinl _- Concreto
Paltos - Srdewalks New Construction - Remodelina - Custom Pole
Barns.

Washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

CHESTER

AUTO
PARTS
AND

REPAIR

CHESTER, OH.

742-2352

Route 4. Pomiroy

tFI.

p.m. F•ctary choked gun•
only.

10:13·1 mo.

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE1

"LAowest Rates '
round
"Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

GOOD SELECTION

SHOTGUNS &amp;
HANDGUNS

We buy, sell or~ trade.
Good prices.

Frank's
Pawn Shoo
430 Second, Gallipolis

742-2328 Hl-tfc

446·0840

UY-26·1 mo.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS 1nd
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION

WORK
•LAND CLEARING
.CONCRETE WORK

BONDED &amp; WORK GUARAIIIIID

PHONE Jill CliFFORD
992-7201

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
A'uthorized John Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
t .J./1&lt;

3-7·tf

JEWELL'S
PLUMBING and
HEATING
•Experienced
•Aaa•anable

•Work Guaranteed
JOB- 8/G

.

OR SMAll

992-6030 .
Minersville,
OH. .
'

10-3-1 mo. pd.

l!o Scottie Smith

House Colts and Shop
SeJVict Av1i11bl1

33 .

•

3• .
JS.

• - - -·

MILLER
ELECTRiC
SERVICE

.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

e.

387-7826.

3 white female kittens-6
moe. old. 1 white-gray.
female long-haired cat. Call

446·7816 altar 6.

LOST-•.400. •20 and $60

bills . Jones

Boys, Super
Americ•, or Aevco. Cell

446-3626.

Help Wanted

cant mutt meet low1income
guidelines of the Senior

2 fam•le kittens, someone
droppad •t my house.- Call

.

Giveaway 3 adult female
golden hamlten . 446 -

Employment Program. Will

be reaponslbleforcoordlnating special projects and
activities sponsered by the
Agency. Other dutle• will
include general office work.
Some travel required . Applicant must have accaiS to
reliabletransportation . Send
Reaume to Joyce Shang,
Area Agency on Aging Dist 1t 7 1
p o B 978
·'RGc C. ' Rio
nc.. Granda
· · ox , Oh'
46674. Deadline for appli·
cations is November 16,
,983. An e qual opportunity
employer.

12

cond. 614r992-6006.

Situations
Wanted

Hunting dog . 614-742· Tree trimming and r emoval.
2686. Rod Tick.
Free estimates. 614 -9926040 or 614-949-2129.
6 week old kittens. Real
cute. 614-949·2627.
l;!abyaitting in my home .
Two yellow kittens. 304-

896·3621 .

Agu 1· 6 years . B a .m.- 5

p.m. 814-986-4392 uk for

Sherri. Will pick up at $6 .00
at your home, radius of 16
miles.

Small , short-leg. brawn.
black • white Be•gla pup. In
G•lllpolls vicinity. Reward .

ted

female

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleuant, WVa.
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg.. Camden St.

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 11'116'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10·6-ttc

For all your wiring
needs;_ furnaces re·
pair service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

,3-10-tfc

M.L.

S4YI

NO~

Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns
Only ·

RECAMATION

PARCEL SERVICE

'Excavating

SIDING

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

"BINiutiful, Cultom ,
Built G•ra""s"
1
Call for free sidin&amp;estillllttsA 949· 2801 or

"Ponds

•septic Tanks
•Hauling
949-2293

f'

New Homes-Extensive
Remodelint
Insuranc1 Work
Culto.m Pole Bldas.
GIIIPS
Roolinl Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
16 Y•ro Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992·2282
u-I-ttc

949-28o0

f ·l·tlc

Gqod 6 roome &amp; bath,
ga rage, good tobacco bam. ·
&amp; other outbuilding, 1,1 00.
lbs . plul tobacco base. C•ll

446·11108.

1-::------ - - -

Comp!tremodeled. I ~
rooms. ·
. Carpel. LarQ•
lot. 3 PQr . - I. Urge ball·
ment . Must ,.ell. Immediate 1
pasaes!lion. Only 818.600.
last house away from River.
on Henderson St., Hendar-son, WV . Phone number In ·
yard .

3 BR . 3 acres ground . Ne•r ~
Porter Old , 60 . Taka mobile ,
·
home trade in. Call 446·
4202 or 446-28&amp;7.

~::-:~--,----­

4 BR bi -level, eat-in kitchen,
LR . dining area, f•mlly
~oom , 2% baths, 2 car
garage , gas heat. central air.

$68,900. Joy Drivo. Colt
446-7923.
3 BR house, with carport,
Garfield Ave. location. Call

614-245-5259 or 448·
8579.
Located in SyracuJe-Ne•r
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situ•ted on on•·
third acre lot. $24.600. or
will rel\t for 1275 mo.

304-855-3934.

bedroom renoh atyle
home, carpeted, full alza ::
basement. 1 car garage, In' -·
ground •ool 16x32 ;: ....
$46,000. 114-992-6B68.

ment water proofing, foundation work, free estimates.

,:

5.6 acr•"•irficod price.::.
$12,000 .
1 Va b•th,

droom tnrfter, ··
ure, fenced, -::

pond, gordan. 614-742·'
. ..
_2364._
_ ___;;·'e
-:4 rooms. bath and utility ~

.

house, nice location, 304-· -~

SANDY AND BEAVER In·

675•1090.

- - - -- -

.•.
surance Co. haa offered
services fo r fire insurance -;3;-;2;-;M
-;o
~b
:ci::le
~
H-;om
_e
_s__ ·•·
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm,
for Sale
home and personal property
cover•o•• are available to I - - - - - - - - - meet individual needs . Con· TRI - STATE MOBILE
tact Harry Pitchford . agent. HOMES . USED- CARS
Phone .446-1427 .
TRUCKS. GALLtPOLtS &gt;'
18 Wanted to Do

CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL 446· 7572.
,•
'

..

General Hauling and Trash
3169 between 9 and 6 .

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Canter. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Conaigments of new and
used .m!frchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynold•
Auctioneer. 276-3069 .

Mt.Aita auction

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small. Reliable and dependable. For eS1imate call

446-3169, 9 lo 6.

Housecleaning for those
that work or j ust need extra

help. Call 446-2006.

Sat.
night, 8 p.m . Starting
Chriatmas seton. No mare
consignment• will be taken
until •her Chriatmas. Emma

rienced per1on willing to do
yard work. roofing. carpentry, odd jobs. No job too big

9

or 4:00-&amp;:00PM, Monday
thru Friday.

every

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

Wanted To Buy

Reliable, retponsible, upe-

For sale by owner, 1972 2 '
BR , 12x66 · tr•ller, with
water. bed. beautiful caardi~
natad livlngroom, large
handmade tile shower .
Owner moving muat

••II

immediately . Cafl448-7171

or 448-8288 oflar 6PM.

We pay cash for late model
clean u..d car~ .
Jim Mink Chev. - Oids Inc.
Bfll Gene Johnson

446-3672

PH. 992-2280
2-23-tlc

COUNTRY CRAFT
COTIAGE

317 N. 2nd St.
Mrddleport , Oh. 457~0
Cross Stitch and
Candlowick Supplies
Giving Lessons
Toke Crafts on Consicn·
monts, also have craft
cilts.
HOURS: 9-3 Mon. thru Sat.
9·6 Friday
10·31· 1 mo.--c

D&amp;J
SAVEMORE-MARK .
Coal &amp; Kerosene
Heaters
199 TO '189
Also Army Supplies,
Radios, Watches &amp;
General Variety
2nd St. Across From
Post OHice

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- New 1984 Skytlno 14x70·3:
BEDS-IRON. BRASS. old LISHING CO . recommends BR, HI ~oth , complot~ty&lt;.
furniture, gold, ailver dol· tht you do business with. fum .. delivered and Mt. ...
816, 600, Speci.. ....
Iars. wood Ice bolles. stone people you know. and NOT regul•r,
814,500.
French City Mlk :
to
send
money
through
the
jara. antiquiJ, etc., Com ~
bile Homes. Coii446-9340.:'
plata households. Write : mail until you have investi'
M.D. Mitior. Rl. 4. Pomoroy. gated the offering.
New , 984 sectional 130.~:
Oh. Or 992· 7760.
THE CORNER CUPBOARD . sq. ft .. 3 BR .. 2 full both'a. ' ·
Shop
to open aaon. Now family room , delivered and '•
Wanted to buy. New, uaed 81
seeking
h•ndmada country HI ragutor $24,500, Speclol :
antique furniture. Will buy 1
place or complete house- cr•fts to sell by c:onstgn ~ $21 .995. French Clly Mo.' holda. 'Also complete Aucti- ment. If lnterelted c•ll 448- bile Hames . Caii446·9340.. -·
oneering aarvlco. Colt Oabv 1806 after 6 :00. Also buy- 4 mobile hom••· 1 o· •nd , 2' :~
A. Merlin 614-992-6370. ing •ntiques.
ft .. wide . 2 bedroom .
. low pric•d
10
Buying dolly gold. attvar N,~~. I•~Jes••··~w~ ''""' furnishedTFIJU"Ur
Park. 814: :
colna, rin_Qf,jol'!fl~•'lf!V'111 llofmi. Earn •76to 6,60 no _9Brown's
92-3324.
w•r•. old cb\n1. lir9• cur· investment . C•ll 446-8284 .
nrncy. Top prlcea . Ed. Bur-

I 974

ken B•rber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

Mlddt.port. oh. 614-992· 22 Money to Loan
3476.
1- -- - - - - - RowFur8uyer. Boafl!oDeer HOME LOANS FIXED

Hide•-Oinseng. Tr•pping RATES 12'/z % purch•• ar
SuppU•. George Buckley, refln•nce, ,1'1•% •dju.table
Rt. 2, Athena. Oh. Phone . rate . Le•der Mortgage ,

814-884-4761. 1-9 Oollv.
Would

Athens, 1-800·341 -8864

pickup modol '69-'72. Coli
botwoen 4-8, 304-882·
2714.
PIANO TUNING Lower

..
..
-................
'"

'

'

' '

11

Kirkwood I 2•66. 1y,

:

acres. Carpeted, under ... ·.:
~.

pinned, garden , fruit trees

out.,uildings,

9q&amp;-4488.

well.

114: :·

".

1974 New Moon Mobile
Home. 2 bedroom, large
utility room, on 1 acre of
land. Off Leading Creek Rd

614-992-7406 or 614-742:
2801 .

like to buy GMC

.

3·ll·HC

Homes for Sale

WVa . 304-773-6785 or removal Servic,e. Reliable
and dependable. Call 448304-773-9186.

No Sundey Cello

Racine; OH.

31

Belt Auctioneer. 428-8177. or amatt. Call 44e-8537.
Call between 6:00-9:00AM.

10·10·1 mo.

Vinyl S. Aluminum

CONTRACTING -

Pomeroy, Oh.'

Rick Pearaon Auctioneer
Service. Estite, F•rm, Antique II liquidation sales.
Lican1ed 8r bonded in Ohio&amp;:

Nov. 10,11 ,12. 9-4.

House raiaing.lavallng , reail·

614-992-6022.

Carl

Thomoa 304-676-1577.

WY,

3

ling, concrete work, base-

Beagle.

Hugo tnoldo Yard Solo, SL

J oseph Pariah H•ll . M•aon,

Have vacancy for elderly,
Room, board and care.

Identity •nd books in return . 304-675-3908.
448-1798.
Insurance
LOST black and White apot- 13

S3QOO

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Call742-3196
3-7-tfc

Call 949-2263
or 949-3091

DE.LIVERY

Bashan Building

11 -4·1 mo. pd.

~DOOR TO DOOR

II
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
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I
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I
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I
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RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Att llokos and llodots
Antenna lnst1ll1tion

All types of roofwork,. ·
new ir repan, gutters ,
and owospours.-cut- .
ter c eam ng and
paintipg, sform doors
and wtndows.
All Work Guaranteed
"Free Esti111atas"

NOW IN

AND

P•wayne Williams

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
. - Route 1
long Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12-20-tfc

ROOFING

GUN SHOOT

Chest•. Ohio
Ph. 985-4269
If No Answer, C.tt 915-4382

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

SA VIi
NOW

Giveaway

laat: Brawn pocketbook In
Pic-Pee vicinity. Appreciate

BOGGS

Porch Sole, Nov. 7.8 9 4
milea below Pomeroy b'ridge
On Route 62 in W. Va. , 10till

Th8 Are~ Agency oo Ag ing is
seeking a qu•lified person
a ver the age of 66 to work
20 hours per week Appli-

B•by bed mllttr;n, medicine cabinet, lav•tory-old.
twin size bed springa. Good

GUNS

&amp; Vicinity

1'1

7711.

S&amp;W TV
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
.
U.P.S.- PUROlATOR

prlce1 - regul., tuninG• ·
dlacaunts to Senior Citizens,
Church•• • Rhoola. W•rd'l

Keybeord. 304-876-3824.

..,
1981 14x70. Shultz llmijod ·
mobile home. microw~V.. diShWIIher , Centf'ltl lir

un-

I

derp~nn.ing. three bed -~·
rooms, 1 Vz b•ths, txcellent

VInyl Sldi"'l &amp;

/o"t'81
"F,.Ef=;,
y_,.
..

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:
DIRECTONS:
Ohio At.

below

aoon

RIC-

lrtdge

- Follow l1tr11.

j

OHll nu DARK

1
I

SAVE
MORE
On Sldlnc and Rooflna.
Gutter alfcl Downspouts

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE

"12

"WCHtl OUINiUIId•

279 Main St.

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

Pomeroy, Oh.
,t..,.::..o lot:altd In Hll ~~
Bloc- BulldiRI "-

PH.

Tri-County
General Welding
Slltm Twp. Rd. 110
Dexllr, Oh .. 45726

1111 hltw
PH. 742-2456
Llddtrl for

100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip T•nkl
"Your "•• or Ml,.."
10112/2 mo.

condition, 815,500. Cot! · ·
304-876-6049 oftor 6 p.m.

3 Announcement•
SWEEPER ond aowlna mo- 1------ - - -chl,. ,.polr. porta, ond langu•a• Development
auppllea.
Pick up ond Speclotlat-Ouldlng Hond
dellvM'y, D•vil Vaauum Bohoot. BA or BS dogroe
Cluner, one half mR' up from ICOredlted unlvertttyQoorgea Creole Rd. Colt callege In Speech and He•r.
.
l,g. Cont•ct: D•vld Ratliff.
,448-0284.
Prlnolpol. P.O. Box 14,
Young teecher Wllntl • Chelhl,., OH 48820. Colt
fr!end (IQI 30-401 for frldly 114-387·0102. Avollobllly·
ond loturdly ....,.no oootlvl· Oeoembor 2. Appllcollon
tloo. Cell 44a-Z1 31 oftor 8 d••dllne- November 11.
p.m. Aok for Nodine.
1113.

e-..

Mobllo Homo Moving. Li-'

'31

cented and lnaured, FrH

4 bdr. r•nch home, large LR,

~· 8100. por hookup mlmmum. Phone 304-

full baaement, with garage,
wood burner included. city
schools, 2 miles from town .

Colt 44e-0278.

Mlddtoport. prlcod for lm·

mediate po.....lonl Co1y
home with floor fum•nce

fireplace. rMIIOft•ble utili:
1112-8941 .

lloa. lll

;

576-2711 or 576-28t8.

USEO MOBILE HOME ;
Phone 304-576-2711 .
· '
2 bedroom completely furnilhed
~ryor.

wtth wuher •nd
olr condition, -

•nd underpennlng, 304- ..

871-3030 or 878-3431 .

I

------·-~------------------1
'

1

10-17-1 mo. pd

USED
APPLIANCES

.... ··1',-t"Pieiiiiiit .....

614-387-7101 .

DEPOSITORY

I

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Ill court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

For All

· REG. S995

I
I
-- --- I
---·--- I
- .. - - - - I
·-· - - - . .. I

18.

13.

Oun thoot Racine G~n Club.

Every Sund•y lt•rtlng

Call 446-9525.

H. L. Writesel

25110 TO 5000 SQ FT.

Pomeroy

,_

Warehou&amp;e: 985 ·3509

PH. 992-2478

Heat Your Entire

implement

PHONE:

Re1idenc:e : 985•3837

Pomeroy

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coupon . Cancel your ad by phone wl'len you
r e su lts. Money not refundable .

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Sacred Heart Church

-- ~ -----~-------------1

CHAIN SAW
SERVICE AT

BONDED

te.oo eo. Lunch ovolo·

ble. For more lntarmetlon
end retervetiont cell Brenda
c..... '1146-7887. hi .
come, 1at. serve: b1111.

All Work Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.
11-1-1 mo. pd

lli211Jn

Housing
Headquarters

·-- ·- -~-- -

FOR FUTURE USE"

RADIATOR ·
SERV!Ci;

LOTS AND ACREAGE -I acre
lo 145. Some on water line and
hard road. Lots at $2,500.00.
large acreage at aboul
$300.00 per acre. Call to see or
drop in.

BEAUTIFUL FARM! River Iron·
· ~ge. AppioK. 182 acres, 5
bedroom house in e&lt;c~lent

Good Selection Of
GOLP SEAL
CONGOLEUM

Have Your
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by

M FI!;JS Coun ty

~

,$12

SPORTSMEN

olhers.

1101 24. 31 [11) 7. 31c

IF AMINI FORM is what you're
looking for, then here rt Ll! A
newer three bedroom ranch
home, carpeled lhroughout,
heavily insulaled - wood
bUrner sel up, unfinished 54 Misc. Merchandise
basement gas forced air heaL
on appK. 19 acres ol wooded
land. Some hard wood, all
minera~. This Ll itl Asking
HOM ELITE
$35,000.00.

NOW

"CUT OUT

5 FARMS - Some river
ixltlom, some hills, woods and
crop land. All sizes and price&amp;
Two 12 acre 011es and many

LAFF·A·D/W

"Regulators
"Fittings
"Drip~

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

Residential-New and re·
wirina; Commercial and,In·
dustrial.

"Gas Pipe

10·2·U mo

Free

TRAILER SETUP -level~~ in
town or 3 acres in the country
lor $6,1100.
.

h.:~n ce d

And See A
KiTbY Demonstration
Completely "FREE"
limited Offer
Call 985 -4225
Ask lor Guy Shea
lndependont Korby Dealer

You Need Glass You Need Us ... We Can Handle
Your Every Glass Need!
"Wo Want And
Buslnesa" . " ·

NEW LISTING - 7 acres with

l

Have 1 Carpet
In You( Home
Shampqoed "FREE"

"AUTO GLASS
OUR SPECIALTY!"

homes lor jusl $7,500.

Any per son dP.s1 r1ng to comment or to make an ObJflCtton
w1th rP.ference to an applic atiOn
for a pt'!rm1t to const ruct
convert to. or operate a e n~

Sherlf1

RACINE - Three rentals in
one - two units wrth two
bedrooms. one wilh three
bedrooms. $500 monthly ren·
tal potentiaL Two unrts are
furnished Building has aluminum siding Storage buildi ng
a~o. As~ng $35,000 00. Make
offer.

CALL NOW

- ~,_----~--~~

2 septic setups lor mobile

614 -265-69 17

·water Pipe

blo

4

/ PAouintt • Mason
0 Glass

NEW LISTING - 10 rm. home.bath, furnace, woodburner,
bath, walher-dl'jer, on two I&amp;
lois in Syracuse for $_25,000.

Wells Road

II THI

'
· Installed With Pad

•
GLASS • GLASS • GLASS

NEW usnNG - 2.5 acr" 011
Rt. 124 in .Racme with 6 rm.
lwo ~OI'J home, bath, gas FA
furnace &amp; full basement for.
$40.000.

tlon pressure 300 lbs ·
Pr oposed average da1ly lntecltOn volume - over BOO bb l
Further 1nlormat1on m av be

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

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

VIRGI L' S. srL- IEAI.IOI ·
216 t. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(614) ·992·332$
NEW LISTING - Nice older 3
bedroom home. Stove, relriger·
ator, hot water heat carpetin&amp;
lull basement near stores, in
Pomeroy. Asking $39.1100.

f--jera!d 011 &amp; Gas Company
3585 7 WP.Its Road
M1dd 1eport. OH
Locat1on of proposed salt
wat er lnJf!CIIOn well - Frac110n
34 , Sahsbury Townsh1p, Me1gs
County Oh10 T1m01hv Wood yard lea se

sold to r lAss than 2 / 3rds o f thA
appra1sed pr1ce
Terms Cas h 1n hand on da..,·
at sai P
James J Pro ff1t1

·

CARPET

10-3-1 mo.

" " '" ""

TEAFORD
'

of

applicant"

Gilmore birthdays celebrated
Brandee and Brianna Gilmore
celebrated their fourth birthdays
recently at . the home of their
parents, Mike and Deb! Gilmore
Rutland.
·
·
'
Gifts were presented to the
' chlidren, along with Pac-Man
cakes.
·
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Warren D. Black, and Mr. and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, grandparents; Nora
Gilmore, a great -grandmother;
Mr. and Mrs . Burdell Black,

1)1

Real Estate General

address

Founta1n Squar e
Col umbus. OH 43224

Locus! Street a dtslance ol 65

full baserilem and a one car

and

kn()l;vn as Lot No 59 bP.gtnn n1 g
at the southwf'st co rnr. r o f Lot
No 59 on the cornP.r o f Th1rd
and locu st S trf!f!t. runn1ng
norrh on Th ud StrP.At a di stanc e
o f 50 IAP.t thP.nce running ea st
parall el w1th Locust StrAe t on

IP.P.t to the place a t bf'g1nn ing
being a parcel o f land ou t o f Lot

beautiful bath, large living
room, dining room, big pantry,

~

lt.. IOM

CA- " • 4 - f o .... l"'ol

Rf!su rce s
DIVISIOn

Lot 59 a d•Slance ol .65 loel.

lot·in a good nBghbor·
hood with four bedrooms.

A

1• l

IU ~~~ -~­

u~oo

Vtllagr. of M 1ddlepo11. Countvof
M e1qs. StatP. ot Oh1o. and

th encP. runnu1q sou th ·toward s
Locust StrP. fl t a d 1stancP of 50
tef!t. thence ru nn1n~ wP.st along

corner

cond~ion. Barns,

71'l .... ~

u"'""-"
UWonh 1-••"'-s..,.,,,._,,.,.

UpiOOiou·~

LEGAL
NOT1FtCAT10N

E. Main
,...,....,.11 3 22
.
Also thP. follow1nq descnbed
POMEROY, 0 .
rJ!al es tat P. s1tuat P.d 1n thP

S19,f)(X).00.

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

::;.=:- '" -

Ua t o l t - do

Public Notice

Me1gs County . OH1o. at p age

608

with

. . . l ..~

Also Transmiuion'
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-14-tlc

•

$1tuatf'd 1n thf! Vlllag~ of
M1ddiP.POl1, Cou.ntv of Me1gs
an d Slate of Oh10 and bou nded
·and descnbf'd as tallows
Beulq a pa n of Lot 59
r1f'SCn bed as follows BeQin·
n11'9 at the sou thfl.ast corne~r of
sa1d lot 59 on locus t Street
thence northmty on thfl west
S1 d P. o f the allev. 50 teet. thPnce
WPSt and para llel w1th Locust
Sllf'P.t. 30 leet thence so uth·

Farmen Bank S. Savings Co.,

MIDDLEPORT -

,

I IJ c ·
r · - - - - - - - - -- -- --1

lllloiMII-•
11

..,._."' ·

J&amp;J ,.. ,.,.,.,..

)"71 - Wol""'

11-EIHIIcOI.II.t l'l"f i "C'"
II G..... oiHI"""I

Saturday. th e 26th dav o f
NovP.m ber 19 83. at 10 00
o'c lock· AM . the f-ollow1ng
lands and tMements. 10-w1t

M ortgage Co., and

PU1suaru to an ORDER OF
SALE ISSued by the Court of
Common PIPa s upon 1udgmer1t
rendPrP.d rn th P. abovf' stylpd
casP I will expose r ! or salf' at
publiC auct10n on th r. trent
S!Pps o f the Me1gs County

••-c- •

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Cour!house. Pomeroy, Oh10. on

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Roush,
Defendants

Jl7 Clio..,.,.
.SM 11..,,_
161 ltooO'"""

... .., __

'PERSONALIZED POOLS" '

GARAGE

At. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

PH. 1-304-773-5634
MASON, W.VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

Public Notice

Public Notice

vs
Roger F. Roush and

•·z w.. •d • ~•...,.
·~

•Jw
... ••d•o"'""'
U Equo~..,.,.,
ouo llonl

""""'"'""no

H&lt;lm1 1mP"'"'"..,."i•
u "'~"'"'"' • Hto1"""
I.Sot • u•• •"''l

•• ~to••
a... ~
lood. , ...... ..

,,II M•t&lt;tl
... ~......
.. c•ll•o•·•
l,.n'""'

,, _ ~eo~

11

Fon"h~•"'• "'

13l·- •od

•~r~'""~"~-·
U
S,..CO luo 11...1

u .. ~ a.......,...

::.~==

::±5

•z
.... ~~ ......, ...... ~~.ft.
4 3 fO&lt;It'Oi&lt;U I! Oftl

-.. c.-

~~~- e-ll•

;:~;::,":;:-;..,_ ...

~ s...... · -

61

it11( ,,.,,.,,,H/Nr' ,.,.,.,H.,Ijl•"• ...

" ....

u "'••lflnou'luou

'"
"""'""~
U """""
!i&lt;:OO OI&gt;I~

street

' " "" "

••• ••~"&lt;~IP

1&gt;'!1 ...

·~
...,,"w.~ •• ~

Chem~l

n v..... otWO

74

!!~::::':~':;.~:::~·

,H •~•neuluMdoo..
JS l ~ h 6 """'""""'"

11 S&lt;l .... lfll Wonlotd
I .!

"'"'"'~··

'• ""'"" """''""""''"

"',_IIi!"'"""·

~~~::,~:.:.o~":'"s...

9 .... ~..::::;~.

'

ll

at!ltttHW
)lto""'"'"'Solo

~;;"b':,';~~·.."···~·•·c~ •

Mrs.Ralph Blosser, Mr. and Mrs.

Curt Baker and David Napper, Tim

P.~loUoDnal5e......

'l

a.• -......

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

'·

9

Etememery
School.
Sat ..
Chrinm
Bozoor
Addovtllo
Nov. 19...11AM·4PM.
Open

to thtt public. Tablet ewtllt·

Il l Coort St . PoNrey. 011~ 4.5769

Roger Hysell

Pag•

3 Announcement•

.Business Services

The "'elson reunion' was held
recently at the Forest AcresParkon
New Lima Road with 85 persons
attending.
-- - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - ~~~-~iiiii~iiii~T-:-------'-----l
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. •
- "';o;- · :Richard Nrlson. Pa uline Nrlson,
'c ... ~ no •~ ......... ~ .....v....,•l 11 •u....... o..,v"~"''•
~·~lCI
............-.G-••
71 ,.,... ,., • •
(:fn•.•ifwrl ,,..~~,-· n•n•r /11o·
.'ln ............
lpooft on•&lt;IUncOI
11 Mo,..,IOIOI~
. T Y &amp;IIooholot ,.,"'...,.
UTo...,. . lcwSalo

Moore. and Earnest I'\elson. Mr. and

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

.

I

'

I

,.

�Ptlg•

10-The Dclily Slntinel

36 Lots

Pomeroy-Middleport,

It Acreage

'!

W.T. I~~~~~~r-~{rl--;-~ -"""'
~-~-~ri;'L~"'l~~~~~
1

W1t1on Ad . Owner flnanc-

_.C717_A&lt;'K'o

In~
avolloble.
C•H 44"8·8221
311 •c•••
., Rodney
on

eftar 8 wHkdays.

· ~-

~

·

_;,_-~-

~

, )

~

q

r ,.

fi_

Twp . Rd. 814-986-4116 .

~

'\J..r/i
M:.?__J1~it.,S,_.J
.::
-/c
q"

M:lwt./SrEN--·

l()lll;

·

r: ,I!...,
I{IP!:'_...
t!t!f'l

A ,.._

~.,;,~ ~~

IJ

r-

~ ct1if.. ~-..; ·r;: ~' ~

Houses~ ~~~f ~ ~

:~~

t

,;'? Jf

4 bdr .' house 6 acres of land
on Rt. 160 in Vinton. Central
air . $360 mo .,_sec . dep : &amp;

~

~

~

6 mos. leaJe
required
. Call
446-3667
alter
5.
House beautjful 3 bdr., 2
bath, LR r FR. wall to · wall
carpet. dishwasher, gas
heat. air cond., in Gallipolis .

Rlif. req . Call
aft8r 6 .

446-1409

2 bdr. central air, equipped
kitchen . $300 mo ., 41
Spruce St. Call 446-2158 .
Two story house. 4 bdr ..

$250 per mo . $250 dep.
req. Call 446-4222. 9 :305:00.
House for rent 5 rms ., bath,
central heat, with full basement, adults only, ref. &amp;

dop. Call 446-1 163.

3 BR house between Centervllle and Oak Hill. $175 / mo .
Also Country store for lease,

S125 / mo. Call 614-245 9315 .
House for Rent or Sale,
suitable for 1 or 2 persons,
quiet location, ref. &amp; deposit

required . Call 446 -3384.
S235 . month. 3 bedroom .
Fully carpeted, gardener furnished, Stove and refrig .
61 4 -992 - ~8 1 5 !rom 9 to 5
or 614-992· 2362 from 5 to
7 p.m .

- - - - - -- - - lc-

2 bedroom house in langsville area . Qeposit &amp; referen ·
ces required . Country home,

large yard. 614-742-2541.
Small ·4 room house in
Racine. Unfurnished, adults
only, $125 . month plus
utilities S. deposit. 61 4-949-

2619 .
2 bedroom with garage.
Salem St ... Rutland. $180.
month . Unfurnished. 614·

742 -2378.

1

~========= :;::::====::==1
I.
44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished apt. $186 . Water
paid, 2 bdr .. ·131% 4tl'1.
Gallipplis . 446-44'16 after 7
p.m .

Three bedroom home on
Park Drive, 9 300. per month
plua deposit. Call 304-6754340 and aak for Mr. Clark.
House on 5 acres of land, 2
full J,.ths, utility room, 3
bedrooms, kitchen. dining,
living room , 1536 sq. ft .

304-675-3099.

1~19 .

3159 .

2 bdr . apt., utilities partially
paid . 3 room apts. utiltKts

paid . Call304-676-5104 or
304 -675-7386.
Furnished apt . S2bdr., 196,
water paid, 1 136 Second
AVe ., Gallipolis. 446-4416
afte~; 7 p.m.
Furnished apt. 607 2nd. ,
Gallipolis. 1 bdr.. adults,
8200. utilities paid. Call
446-4416 after 7 p.m .

3 or 4 room unfurnished apt.
utilities paid, adults only, no

pets. Call 446 ·3437.
Furn . effiency epanments.
Choice of three, for single or
couples only. Newly red&amp;Co·
rated, starting at $150 mo.
Security dap. &amp; ref. Call Mr.
Dobson, 446-4607 days,

446 -2602 ova.

614-992-7787.
2 bedroom furnished apts.

614-992-5434. 614-992·
5914 or 304-882-2566.
Small furnished apt. for 1
person. All utilities paid.
614-992-6262 evenings or
mornings.
Apartments .

304 ~ 675-

5548 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipoli1 . 614-446-

8:t21.

"

2 bdr. mobile home. CAll
446-0508 .
2 bdr·. trailer partially furnllhed. Bulaville Rd . Call

446-3437.
2 bdr. partially furnished .
Kerr-Harri1burg Rd, $175

mo. Call446· 9384 .
Verv nice 2 bdr. mobile
home in good location near
Green School. Unfurnished
excii!Pt new carpet, stove.
ref., drapes. C · A , S200 mo.
includes water, sewage Sa
garbage. Call eve. 446 -

025A.
In Merf;:erville, 2 bdr. trailer.
Clo .. to scho9l. Call 266-

62&amp;1

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

Call 446 -0756 .
46 Space for Rent
Furnished office for rent.
Close to city building and
court house. Call446·0866
days. $125 . mo.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large loti. Call

992-1479 .

12x80 2 bdr. modern furnished trailer. convenient
location, Upper River Rd.
depOsit req . Call 614-446-

Floor space for Flea Market.
308 3rd St ., Racine. Mon.-

Thuro. 614-949-2317.

86118.

2 ~droom mobile home in

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

62 Olive St., Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room tliite
with 6 inch flat arms t399.
bunk beds complete with
bunkies S199, 2 piece an 2bdr .• 2 bath, 11 Court St . ,
tron livingroom suites $199,
Ref, &amp; dep . S32"5 mo. Call antron recliners $99. other
446-4926 .
recliners $80, maple dinette
sets 8179, lo"e seats $70,
Small furn . house 1 or 2 hide-a-bed 8250 , box
adults only, no pets. Call springs &amp;. mattress twin or
446-0338 .
full $100 set regular-firm
$1 20, maple dinette chairs
Furnished 3 rooms. with 835, wash stands $34,
private bath. Reference premaple rockers $5'9·; 7 piece
ferred . Call 446-2215 .
chrome dinette set $149. 5
piece dinette set 889, used
Furnished upstairs apt.. 3
bedroom suites, refirgerarooms &amp; bath, clean . adults tora, ranges, chest. dressers,
only, no pets. ref. req . wringer washers, TV's,
Utilities paid , Call 446 dryeres. &amp; .ahoes . Call 446 ·

Newty remodeled 2 bdr ..
Middleport. $325. 3 bed- unfurnished, equipped kitrOom. dining room , full
chen , central air, $250 mo.,
basement, garage, nice
821 2nd . Ave. Call 446·
neigl'1borhood. Security
2158 .
deposit required . Al9o refer-. 1- - - - - - ' - - - ences. 614-992-2517.
One bedr. apt ., 513 Third
Ave. $135 per mo., includ·
Five room house, two bed - ing water . -call 446-4222.
rooms, carpeted. $260.00
9:30-5:00.
plus deposit . 304 -6754072.
1 bed room Apt. $196. mo.
Including utilities . Equal
Two years old three bed - housing opportunity. Conroom, two car garage, heat
tact, Village Manor Apts.

pump. 304-675-5545 .,

5, H
·
ouse h0 ld GOO.dS

49

For Lease

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker. ottoman, 3 tables, (extra heavy
by Frontier), $686. Sofa,
chair and loveaeat, $275 .
Sofas and cl'1airs priced from
$285. to 8896 . Tables, t45
and up to $126 . Hide-abeds,$440. and up to
$626 .. Recliners. $176. to
$376., Lamps from t28 . to
875.6 pc. dinettes from

&amp;99 .• to 435. 7 pc. t189
and up ; Wood table with six
chairs S425 to S745. "Desk
8110 up to $225. Hutches,
$550. and up, maple or pine
finish. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, 8260 . and
up to $396. Baby beds,
&amp;1 10. Mattresses or bo~
springs, full or twin, 168 ..
firm, 868. and 878. Queen
sets, $196. 4 dr. chests,
S42. 6 dr. ehests. $64. Bed
frames. $20.and 826., 10
gun · Gun cabinets, 8360 .
Gas or electric ranges t376.
Baby rriattreuas, $26 8.
835. bed frames 820. 826,
&amp; 830, king frame 860.
Good selection of bedroom
suita1, cedar cheats.
rockers. metal cabinets,
swivel rockers.
Used Furniture •• bookcase,
ranges, chairs, dryera, re frigerators and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri., 9am
to 6pm, Sat.

446-0322
TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
Ave ., Gallipolis, 446-1699 .
Spin washers. gas 8. electric
dryers. auto washers. gas &amp;
electric ranges, refrigerators, TV sets.
#

Large wood burning add-on
furnace-brand new-heats
hot water-automatic
co nt rols- ·firebrlck lined .

81

I

elllmotao. Call
1182.

- - - - --

Queen size hide-a-bed, vinyl 1 Blue tick male 3Y.t years
recliner, 2 and tables. plat- old. Triple registered,. 2·
form rocker , all 1 v, yr. old. started dogs-1 red bone
Call 445-8085 or 446 - bench champ and one. pup,
4482 .
PCA &amp; UKC registered. Trial
on older dog only . 614- 742·
1 · 6 fa I. Terrarium $16, 2364 .
indoor green 1'1ouse $25,
plant stand $1 6 &amp; misc. 1 registered beagle-male10
items . Call 446· 2481 .
mont1'1s old and running .

- ' -- - - -· 1614·992·7883 .

Howard 2 dr . stainless steel
upright display cooler, per- AKC oolld black female
fect for grocery store or Garman Shapard, 8200.00.
carry out . Priced to move. 304·675-7711 .

Call 446-9174.

AKC Registered Doberman

WOODSURNING STOVES. puppies. One black and one

freestanding. fireplace In- fawn . 850. to S85 . Phone
serts, mobile home ap - 3.04-675· 1822.
proved , &amp; furnance ad-oils.
Jividen• Farm Equipment, AKC Reg; Doberman pupa,
446-1675.
black &amp; rust, 5 male 2
femalea, $75 ea . 304M468Go cart and 2 yr. old 1513.
------~---

Beagle pups 6 months old.
Amana radarange complete S76. each, 1 AKC registered
cooking center. Includes female 6 years old , 8125.
microwave oven, conven - 304-676-41 54.
tional oven. and glass top
range. Clean and in· exc. 57
Musical

-=::=::=-= :::::=:======

eond . Ca11614-245-5160.

Instruments

Wild C1'18rry lumber 60centa

'

oft. Call 446-8038.

.

Kimball electr;ic organ • .J.t~•L
29 gal. fiSh tank &amp; stand
with fish plus 20 gal. long

new. Call448-7230 . .

tank . Call 446-2004.

ARP OMNIII STRING lilA·
CHINE SYNTHESIZER. Coli
446-1968 or 446-1012 end

CustQm furniture built to
your speci~icatlon . O,rdera
now being taken for Christmas. We also repair and
refinish furniture . Bidwell
Country Furniture. located 1
on Rt 554, Bidwell, OH .
Open 9-5, Mon .-Sat. Call

aSk for Chuck.
Plaomar 300A C B Unear

Amplifier. 304-675-1584.

Drifter acoustic guitar . Six
string $86. Gibson les Paul
614-388-8453 .
custom copy, Black $80.
Sekova copy of • Fender
Grain fed beef. Call 446- Strato'9aster $76 . Thirty si~
1427.
S-track including: Aaie, AC·
DC. Boston. Journey, led
Tappan gas range. Vitam- Zeppelin. Two tape caMa
aser treadmill jogger. both holds 24 each 825. Everynew eond. {614)446-8237.· thing in good condition.
Firewood, Delivered &amp;
Stacked, $36 .00 a load.

304-675·5974 or 614-3889321 .

675-5644.

58

Fruit

Antiques, oak furniture re- [
&amp; .Vegetables
production, mi1c. items. Use - - - - - - - - - our Christmas layaway plan .
Conkels. Tuppers Plains.
Apples from German Ridge
Orchard, handpicked and
Maytag washer S. dryer drops. 82.60 and 83.60
$125 ., General Electric pecks. 10 lb. medium and
washer &amp; dryer $225 ., G.E. large. 86 .00 and $8.00 bu.
self· defrosting green refrig- Drops S6.00. Cider $2.60
arator $100 . 614·742- 1 gal. Featuring Red Delious,
2362 .
Gold Oelioua, Winesaps, and
Wood burner supplemental I Rome Beauty. Call 4488598 or 614-379-2303.
furnace. for use with present -:-:------,--- - - heating system. Call 614- Kanabec Winter Potatoes·

bolt
., 2·16"
T
Bird cutters
hubcaps,815
spoked
$10.
ea., AMF 10 SPMd bicycle
$36 .• country all time gree-

tell hill $15., Arrow heavy
duty hammer atapler $ 1 8,

30' coppertone range 895,
30' alec. range 865, Tappan
alec. range avocado green
top &amp;: bottom oven 8176,
Cold1pot retrlg . a$5, frost
free refrig. ess. 6 refrigerators to choose from, Ken more aU1o. washer $95,
Kenmore auto. dryer 165,
Maytag wringer w11her

new, Swingline staple
hammer tacker. new 812.,
McCullock 14" chain bar
$10., 2-McCullock chains
86. ea., various sockets,
inquire. 614-992-7617.·

.,6, 5 drower chell $44, 4

55 Building Supplies

Sofa and chair.

•so.

Mrs.

Gail Miller. 614-992-3196 .

Farms, from Pomeroy Take
124, 10 miles above Racine .
Phon~ 614-843-5193.

61

Farm Equip!"'ent

Complete tobacco

atrlper

266-8476.
JD model KBL 6 ft. pickup
dloc. JD model 248 corn·

=

61

Farm Equipment

3487.
44

Apartment
for Rent

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apertments now available to.
elde~Y

&amp; dlnblod with on

Income

of

leu

than

e 1 2,3QP. R•ntlng for 30
percent of adjuated income·

.Pilon• 304·876·8879.
2

. polio. Oh. Ph. · 8t4-44~3994. Evans Enterpriees.
9-15, ~on. thru Fri.

I~

Pets for Sale

cue. Coil 814-387-0637.

Two bedroom apertment in
Maaon, W. VI . Adulta only,
no pets. 304-676·1452,
after 8 :00. .

New dozer, very reasonable.

1977 Ford Granada. New
paint. new tires. new ex·

Call 448-8038 ,

Siegler fuel oil Jpace heater,

0uplea 8 roomo, both, booo- · w-fulnlollod. Lock - - - - - , . - - - 211 llood. Paint PI••Nnt, BrMn couch •40.00. Phon•
1-114-448·0231.
' 304-871-4072.

..

THEY

Farman 480 Oienl. Plow1,
mower and disc. Trade for
amallar tractor' 304-

nl-

5428 .

hoult. Aoklng 81.800. 304773·501 3 "alter 6:30 p.m.
1967 Ford Muotong. 6 cyl.

304·675 -2088 or 676·
4560.

automatic,

no rust. runs

good. 82,500 . 814·992·
7408 or 614-742-2801.

&lt;HI Ovor &amp;ay

62 Wanted to Buy

...

- ' - - - - - ' - - - - --

Good dependable

1976

Delta 88. 8795.' 614-7422421.

Wanted to lease: 1 9 8 3 1 - - - - - - - - - Tobacco Poundege. Call 1979 Ford Truck F-150.
446-7380.
4x4, Excellent condhion.

Tobacco

Ouoto for

ule.

304-675-1869 olter 4:00
PM.

304-896 -3802 :

•475.00.

Cell

304-676-8688.

-.........
YE5w 1 JU5T
FIETUFIHED

P~CV. FOR .•. Tt!E

after 5.

your carpet

&amp; Grain

72

Trucks for S81e

'
1982 GMC S-16. auto.
trans ., AM-FM, stero cess..
wide bed "peckage. with
fiberglall "topper, 37,000
.miles, $6 ,300. C~l 446·

8060.

1972 White tractor, aingle
axle, w·•leeper, 60,000 mi.
on meior. good tirn. new
clutch, prnsure ptate. pivot

446-1052 .

changes this continent went
through that resulted in the
American Southwest. (60

fJI MOVIE: 'l.o,. Story'
8:30 I]) Auto Racing '83: ·

ALt.EY OOP'

1 9'79 Chevy 4x4, 4 op.•

\979 .Ford pickup. 16,000

83

DOZER

WORK By Ted

e4,800 . North of Roclna on
~ _c_•_r_m_e_I_R_d_._o_•_vi_d_P_•_roo_n_•_·

Henne,

ponds,

71

Autos for Sale

mile1. like

1982 11\ ton Dodge pickup
with topper. Standard ahift.

Poy off. 814-992-6434 or
614-992-5914.

4907. Carter
Transportation.

1980 Camero Roll11y Sport

76 Jeep excellent condl'

Good-1 E;w;cevating, basements. footere. driveways.
uptic tanka, landscaping.

V-8, 6. 700 milea. euto., AC.

P8, PS. AM-FM S-trock
llero. Cell 814-379-2726 :
1977 Oldo Cut1111 Supremo
canette tapa, PB. PS, euto .•
280 cu. onglno. 2 brl. good
gaa mi.. ex. cond.. good
rubber, $2.400. Call after

4:30PM, 742-2748 .
1980

For~

Pinto 4 cyl..

1976 Monte Carlo exc.
cond •• good tlrea. Call after

7. 614-246-9H9.

304-6711-3388.

N.A.S. Matthews awaits
the fate of hi9 navel career
and Maggie is introduced to
ex-Marine Lt. Col. Willie

....'
"''
••
m
...

SheiL {60 min.)
81 INN News
t0:1 5 (]) One Man'• Fight for

""

Portrait.' Fritz
an
American
Indian painter of Interne·
tionel acclaim, is profiled.
ill) N•wo
• Comedy Time

L. Davison. Jr.

11:00 1J (I) (IJ II (I)® Newo
C1J Another Ule .
(!) SportoCanter
(I) Dr. Who
ill) To Be Announced
Banny Hill Show
I t :1 5 (!) ESPN's Saturday Night
lit 1htt Flghll Saturday
Night at the Fights presents
a 1C)·round Featherweight

"'I

•('

1973 Ford pickup F-100

Weter Lines. Footers.
Draina. All kinds of Ditching.

.' '

with flborglaeotopPIIr, Runs Rutl•nd, Oh . 814- 742·
good. 304-875-2038 ofter · 2903.

Jl

Van11t 4 W.O.

American
Scholder,

., '

J.A.R. Conotruction · Co.

73

10:30 (]) Orzle and Harriet
(I) TBS Evening Newo
()) Fritz Scholder 'An

..••

Call anytime 446·4537,

1980 '10 ton F250 Ford.
t4,000. 304-871-7768.

6 p.m.

LHe

WINNIE

e

'

,,
.I
,·

'

==========
84
Electrical
It Refrigeration

bout featuring

'·

I'

.&gt;&lt;''

1979 Bronc 83,000 mi..

1971 Su.,.r liMit• ,.built
motor. n - p•lnt. e1.396.
164SocondAve.,Golllpollo.
Call 448·18111 or 448· 1243.

show features ice climbing,
fishing and whaling with
guests larry Hagman and

~

814-448-1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM.

Jamea
owner .

Paaquale Electric Co . all

peckog•, loodod, •8.200. phone of electric work; all
CoM 114-387-0131 or 448- work guorontood . A•rial
178911fternoono.
truck rentol. Cell 814-448·
- - - - - - - - - 2716 .
1881 su ...rior ohort b u • . l - - - - - - - - - 78.000 ml.. goodcond. Coli SEWING Mochine ropalro.
448-2838 or 8711-2432.
urvlce. Authorized Slngar
Sales &amp;. Service Sharpen

BARNEY

M'l HEAD

IS COLD AS

•

Fabric Shop.

A FROG

PAW--"fOUR SOCKS
DON'T MATCH

THIS OUGHT
TO WARM

IT UP

Nurwe•

General Hauling

(l] Burna It Allen
(I) MOVIE: 'Se1111rate

8to,. •100. •nd ll.trlawo~r UOO. 304-171-7478.
O•k flrowood. pt,one 304·
8711-ZO?J:

&amp;horp,

•13oo. CoH 441·1300.

z.

1871 Chwf Mon• 2 pluo
VI, n - ..._ PI, PI,
•uta:IIIMII tn11 nlutan. til

.-... . -=-.,.,........
~..........
11,000.00. 304IU-14411.
·

78

•

Auto P1rt1

Ac«110rle1

B7

400 Ford •ngiM, -omlooh.tt. lluna
_,.,elld1121.
AI•
1172
1111111110 ..,.mo...........
-anddrMoMtt.l1:11.

PEANUTS

114-IIZ-2178.

'I
l

I

'
•

()) , . . . Benny

VES, MJ!..AM, I'M
AWAKE! MOST OF

STILL AstEEP...I PON'T
EVEN KNOW WIIERE IT 15 ..

IS AWAKE ...

EAST

+6 3 2

• Q 10 9

"J
• 9 762

"97543

86

• J3

tK84

tiO 7 6

SOUTII .
+K81

"AKQ2
+K10814

+2

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

,.

North

Eas1

South

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2t

2•
34

5t
5+
7t

2 NT
4 NT
s•
5 NT
Pa ss

'

invaotlgatea the murder of
an adYanillng man' • ex·
panner, 1Rl180 min.)
.
1

'119 ~~Tonight

'

..

,.

-·

.

dum.my's ace and queen, not-

. ..

trumps were cashed and

.• • I

West discarded two small
hearts, allowing South lo
cash lour hearts. Then all

Oswald: "In the first days
of the Bridge World magazine, Ely Culbertson wrote
about experts at their best

•'

... .. ..

ing the fall of the jack from
West. Then he led ace and a
small club, which he ruffed
in hope that the king would
fall. The king and 10 of

Opening lead: t3
By Oswald Jacoby
aad James Jacoby

- ..

- '
.• -.'
''

,.- :

South needed was a sUccess·

spade finesse to bring
home the silly grand slam."

lui

..

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

·.

~MLW'&lt;'tar'
THOMAS JOSEPH

by

ACROSS

DOWN

1 Director,

1 G111w toward

Fritz 5 Humble
10 Region
11 Prison
release
13 Topic
-14 Chief
15 Within
(comb. form)
16 Average
' 17 Greek
letter
18 With
neatness
20 Stannum
21 fl.ussian city
22 Popular

·....

~

night
2 Sports
ambience
3 Very low price
4 Gun

oDismay
6 Singer

.
Manilow
Yesterday's
Answer
7 Late Onassis
8 Unbelievable 22 European 29 Biological
river
person (sL)
duplicate
23 Looked
9 Joy
30 Typeface
aghast
12 Kind of bird
31 Wisconsin
24 Calif.
16 The late
city
city _
Angeli
35 Fr. shooting
23 TV Jack
19 Waste
match
27 Battle cry 37 Before SWl.
allowance
It~

comic strip

23 More lucid
25 Enamel, e.g.
26 Run along
27 "Rollerball"
star
28Take
action
29 Noble
steed
32 Cheering
word
33 Malay
gibbon
34 Wallach
35 Newsroom
employee
37 FaiUng
38 Breaking
bread
39 Regarding
tO Concur
n Adolescent

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

to work it:

how

A X Y D L B A A X R.
L 0 N G F E · J,. L 0 W

II

One letter simply stands ·for

an·o~her.

In

l'h~s

sample A is ·

used for the three 'L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters, · . .

apoltropltel, the· l~ngth ahd formation ·Of the words are all

hints. Each day the code letters are different.
•

CltYPTOQUOTES

K

GBRU .

DVXUP
YFB

PFXXUG,
GTUX

EUGGUB

AFUP

GKJUP
FB

UVATG
K

GRBX

OFBPU,

KXM

.(liN,_

(I) MOYIE: 'Troll of the
PlnkPw;dw(
(l] MOVIE: 'Riclw'd Pryor
Uve on 1htt 8uneet Strtp'
1:30 •
(I) NIC
,._
1 :115

•'

a...

'

'
.,
"
.. ,

.-

Owen tight

\

()) Love That BOb
CIJN.wo/SignOff
J •

•\

+AQ
tAQJ953

Show

rn•
Cll Nithtllne
• ()) Calllmbo Columbo

I THINK ONE HAND IS

:.
''
'

Upholstery

TIIIITATE
UPHOLITEIIY IHDP
11113
A,.., Oolllpollo.
441·7133 or 441-1833.

e
e

I

I

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Cell Jim lonler, 304·876·
7397.

e

()I Nowo
(ll MOVIE: 'The Interne·
elM Project'
Thlcke of 1htt Night
.1 2:30
(I) (IJ ~ Night with
Devid ~ David IS
joined by Richerd Lewil end
Olnoh Shore. 180 min,)

(I)

ton. 614·387·7101.

"'"-· c - .

11-7-S!

" 10

DAILY

T-'

Now Hauling Good lump or
Stoker Coal. Minimum 4

1173 Plymouth Rood
llunn.,, r•d with gr•v 1-:::-::---:--:--::~:--­

Juan LaPone

vs. Gerold Hayes.
1 1:30 8 (I) (IJ Tonight SMw
Johnny is joined by James
Stewart and Mac Davis. IRI
(60 mir\.)
I]) MOVIE: 'Dnogonal.,.or'
(]) Doble Gillie
(I) Cltllno
•
()) Hert to · Hart The
Harts tangle with dangerous
members of a gambling ring.
lA) {60 min.)
()) Lotenlght America
&lt;lll M•A•&amp;•H
:rwlllght Zone
12:00 I]) MOVIE: 'The S.nsuous

e

Waur hauling, Feat Service,
low rotoo. Coli 114-2118·
1743..

bed, 114•

NORTH

..

and worst. We have a policy
never to mention names
unfavorably, but let's show
some modern examples of
experts goU!g wrong:"
lim : "Today's article
involves a couple of Canadi·
an world class players in an
important match. The bidding is as it actually took
place. We don 't approve of
It. The actual bidders don't,
either. In fact , we won 't try
to show the proper way to
bid the hand excepl that six
clubs is a fair contract and
was reached at the other
table."
Oswald: "The play at seven diamonds was almost as
bad as the bidding, but there
was almost no way to go
down the way the cards lay."
Jim : " A trump was
opened . South castied

+AJ74

· 10:00 (l] MOVIE: 'The French
Ueutenent'a Woman'
I]) World Sportsmen This

--

topper.

tion. '78 Luv truck, V8 cbn·
veraion, blazer whMis, roll
bar. auto. tren1minlon.

.It's just not right

1!1 ())&lt;Ill Newhart JoAnna

Diana Nyad. {60 min.)
1!1 (I) ® Emerald Point

446-7903.

..

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

is enraged by a 100 year old
Vermont tradition .

..

lonnie · Bogga Excavating.
Dozer, backl'1oa. dumptruck.
Work by hoUr Or job. Cell
Cat 216 hoe, doters, crane,
loadere. dump truck. Call

with

9:30

Evans

8.

84,000.00. Soion whirlpool
for bolh. uud vary little.
304-895-3618 or 895,
3621.

speed,

tive period of Verdi's life -is
_ examined. (90 mWl .)

ditches.

· Smhh

8ulck-Pontloc. 1911 Eoatern Ave.. Gallipolis, 448·
2282.

CIJ liD Greet Performance•

booemenu. etc. Coil 448·

---------e
1980 Chevy luv 4x4. four

model used cera.

ge'r becomes the hospital's
official O.J.

Excavating

new,

1ctuel

BRIDGE

a

6 parts. The extremely cr"a·

·,

lock-out hubs. new black
peint, roH b1r, white apoke

SHE MUST AAVE RETIJRNED
FROM HER F'ORA!aiNG TRIP
IN THE WOOPS!

9:00

NASCAR
International
Sedans from Rockingham,
NC
1J (lJ (I) MOVIE:
'Prlnceos Daisy• Part 2
(]) 700 Club
(I)
~ NFL Football:
New York Giants lit
Detroit
lit (I)® AfterMASH Klin-

'The life of Verdi: Third of

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
Dewitt's

V"VAS

THA'T~

' PROBABLY DR.GETTERICH!

•
'.•'.

..

614-367-

\ll&gt;lAT

,,•

4477
lNG . Fomerly

... MID I COMPLETELY
FOR60T TO 1EL.L THE
SHERIFF ABOUT IT!
I ... ..

.,

or 448·

Plumbing, Cell
0676.

her books were this- IN " TIERS "

min.)ICiosed Captioned)

Houns Raised or Moved.
Floors leveled, joiat's sill's
replaced, basements dug
beneath house, e~cav_!tio •
ponds or roads made, All
work guaranteed. Free Eatimates. ''In business for over
a quarter ot a century .. ,
HOUSE MOVERS - 5762711 ..

truck, 70 Uncoln flatbed
trailer. Cell between 6-7.

wheelo . C•ll 256· 1484.

CORN. 304-8711-3997 of·tor 8:00.

a

'S TEAMER. Water removal.
furniture cleaning, free estimates . 614-446-2107 .

446~3888

(Answers tomorroW)

·1Jumbles: TWINE FAITH BISHOP PLURAL
Saturday's Answer: The librarian also cried when she saw that

WEST

(I)
MOVIE:
To
Be
Announced
(I)
(J2I
That's
lncradlblel
1!1 ()) ® Scarecrow M&gt;d
Mn1. King
(I) liD Making of a
Continent 'The Great Basin
and the Lava Plains.' To:
night's program looks at the

SHIP

81 Jeep truck, 711 Ford
446,0181.

large roUnd beln of hay end
square baled hay, Will deliver around Gallipolia. Call

1------,.,.-=-t:&lt;i!l

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

Phone

Hey

Rama·
(l) I Spy

HONEY~OON••

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One

GET

TO

KI I I I XI X)

PrJntanswerhBre:

(60 min.)
(I) MOVIE: •An Officer and
a Gentleman·
(])MOVIE: 'Nino Hou,. to

JONES 80Y6 WATER SER·
VICE. Colt 814·387·7471
0. 814·387-0691.

•

gested by the abOVe cartoon .

est flubs and goofs never intended for public viewing .

..

Inc.. 6422 E. Main St.. boaring. $6,600. Cell 675- 1:::;::=~==;====
Reynoldoburg, Oh 43068. 3008.
Ann: Dale Thompoon.
82
Plumbing
-;;::=:;:;:===;=== 11979 Ford Courlar pickup,
&amp; Heating
c63
Livestock
reol oporty. 12.995. John'• I- - - - - - - - - Auto Selea. Bulaville Rd .•
448-4782.
.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Pigs for oolo. 304-882- 1982 S-10 Chevy pickup
Cor. Founh and Pine
3448.
truck. Collll14-2611·8270 .
64

.._

1---------!night 614-698-8206.)

produce tobacco on
YOur land. 1,000 lb. max.
quote per tillable ocre. Pay·
ment by certified check only,
Sale subject to available
quotaand qualified determination by Dept. of Agrlc.
Submit writ-ten proposal
with bad price. quota
amount delirad, county location and . advise the
amount of tillable ·acres
avalleble to aupport your
quota requesta. No Vlirbal
bids accepted. Offera end 12
Noon ·N'ov. 14, 1983. Meil
bids to: Crown City Mining.

•

Phone 614-367-0636. call

opproprlote county Intent to condition.

a~tively

•

E 6. R Tree Service, fully
'in•uretl, free estimates.

piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed, Advanced Gut·
tar, (Day 614-592· 4066,}

8711-6368.

For Sole hond mode log
cabin dollhou1es wtth furnlture,UII .OO. 814-448 ·
4130.

Now arrange the circled letters to ·

torm the surprise answer, as sug·

MacNellflehrer

N~~Wahour

•

.

locetlon-Gallia County, - - - - - - - - - - - , 107.9741tts. Min. bid 1.00 1973 Chevy Capric Claasic,
per lb. bid rag. Owner in 4 door; good tires, excellent

large Spinning wheal'.
thraadle sawing machine,
electric bunar churn. 304br..i

liD

CDNewo
• CD! People's Court
•Jafferoono
. ·7:30 • !ll Tic Toe Dough
(I) Fraggla Rock
(I) a.tte Mldlor: No Frlllo
()) NFL'o BI'Nttllt Moments NFL' s Greatest Mo· ·
men11 presents highlights of
the 1976 and lhe 1980
World Champion Oakland
Raiders. 160 min.)
(I) Oood Newo
I])
Family Feud
CD Wheel of Fortune
CD! Entertainment
Tonight
• One Dey It 1 Time
8:00 8 (l] (IJ Bloopero Special
Dick Clark and Ed McMahon
co-host this special which
features some of the funni-

Antiques

2411-9448.

HIM WASIH I ~.

7:00 • (l] PM M.gozlne
(J) AJieo Smith ond Joneo
()) SJI!IfhCenter
(I),Coral Burnett
I]) Entel'llllnmont Tonight
(!) Charlie' o Angelo

'

Antique

iHAi ALL THE PICK·
POC:!&lt;E.i ~OT F~Oi\1\

a

Water Wells . Commercial
and Domestic . Test hoi...
Pumps Sales and Service .

85
53

HE W/JS 50 BROI&lt;E

a ())

.

•

MU~HAS.

OH... t{OU WAf..lT
ITAMitJ Bb!

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing, Including
hot tar application. carpen ter. electrician, maaon. Call

Scluors .

One kitchen dloploy, ocldo

like new. G-E auto waehtr
with now motor: 304-87112088.

THe

Pomeroy. 992-2284.

1=--=::----==---:---::64 Misc. Merchendise l.
end ends kitchen cabinata.
Dele'a Kitchen Center.

CAL.L.~D

WERE A VERY ORDINARY PEOPLe,
&amp;ENE~~~V SPEAK ING, EXCEPT ....

BORN LOSER

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quaur , 1nd

F &amp; k Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Coil 676-1331.

61 Household Goods ·

bedroem apt. at Gall.

Forry . 304·8711·2648.

1978 &amp; 1979 Oodge Vans.
13.000 for both. 446-4119
botwoon 7 :30-4:30 Mon.Fri.

auto .• cruif8. XlT Ranger

56

TRIEIE

··-..•••

1979 Pontiac Firebird, V-8;

bed. •20.00 . 414-9926189.

Pomeroy . 614-986 -4290
6 p.m .
For lease Modern office
suite especially good for
insurance, real estate or
accounting . 1300 aq .ft .
Four rooms plus lge. clerical
office, kitchenette and atorage room . Nat. gas. central
air, carpet. Rent vary reaaonable for this quality office.
Corner Third &amp; Olive. Galli-

Autos for Sale

very good coild. Call 614689-8311.

TOP CASH Pllid for late

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

71

houoa cello. Cell 576-2398
or 446-2454.

21.000 mlleo. U.OOO. exc.
cond. Coli 448· 7383.

0. Call 814-245 -5121 .

THERe WAS A Sl'iiPL.e FAi&lt;IVIING

''...

planter, MF 3-14 plow with - - - ' - - - -- - - spare moldboerd, PTO 3 1979 Red Camero. Needs
point polthole euger, ell in li«la work, h8v1 perta. Baby

afte~

Trailer for rent In Tuppers
Plains. 8166 . month plus
utlliJies and deposit. 867-

614-268-

"
'f

a

cattle on trede. CeN 11 4·

auto., AC, 3 dr.• Runabout.

Elec. hotwater heater. Maytag wringer Wa•her, alae.
dryer, wood cookatove,
laundry ltove. bedroom suite, lamp, and tables, coffee
tables, new baby furniture,
cherry rope bed, oak book-

8:30 • !ll (IJ NliC Newo
(J) fllfleman
I])
CD! ABC N•wo
• ()) &lt;lll CBS Nowa
I]) Buolneu Report

oet up. 2 strlppan, 1 outo. AT. PS, PB. AC. excellent
conveyer • press box. axe . .condition . Contact 446cond. 12,000. Will conoidor . 1195 alter 5 p.m.

Appliences, Upper Rivar Rd,

Building materials
block, brick, sewer pipes.
windows, lintels, etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.

I I K 0

Cll em 3-2-1. Contact
•Bucltllagors

I])

drawer chest •36. deuar 1----~----­

Skaggo

. Pnolrle

0 ()) Wheel of Fortune

. 742-2521 .

gualding. Coll446-1456.

•

(J) N-T.....,,. Hunt
(I) Uitl• HOIIN on the

IT WAS THOUSAI&gt;IDS OF VEARS
AGO ... I~&gt;~ THE HIGHEST PEAK?
OF TH&amp; Al&gt;llll!&amp; 11\0VI&gt;JTAII&gt;I!!- ....

texWred ceilings commercial and residential, free

430446-0840
Second Ava
Col
. .. Gallipolis. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 Trained Beegle R,bbit doga.
Lima stone delivered f~r Male &amp; female . Also pups.
$10 . a ton . Call 614-256- Will trade for guns. 614-

1207.

446-7398.

PLASTERING •

Guns : good selection shotguns, rifles , &amp; handgl!ns. We
buy. sell or trade. Good
prices . Franks Pawn Shop,

- --

!ll (JJ(IJ • ()) (ll
Gil N.we

8:00 ' •

CAP'l'AIN EASY

..L

Firewood for sale $35 a
pickup load delivered, 10
loads for S300. Call 614~

1427.

EVENING

Home
Improvements

STUCCO

Dolly t20., Dremel electric
cl'1ain sharpener 820 .• Bluegrass hatchet. ew $10., G.E.
•moka alarms, new $5. ea ..

838.

''\I

..•'

\

,.

11/7/8~

..'•·

5804.

Used sofa &amp; chair, love seat,
cedar wardrobe. 4 drawer
c~est &amp; bed. Caii44B- 1111.

desk

•'
'

out •wnlng. Call 448· 7230.

Briarpatch Kannel• Profea·
sional All ·breed grooming .
Fireplace i 1ser1 · still in fee · Indoor -outdoor boarding fa tory c r t o n - automatic cilities. English Cocker Spaco ntr u l ,.,- ~ .JioVI(era - glass niel puppies. Call 81 4 -388·
door-astt pan -fits 30 in. to 9790.
48 in. fireplace-burna wood - - - - - -- - - or coal. S590. Call 614· Dragonwynd Cattery 256-121.6 .
Kennels . AKC Chow puppies, CFA Himalayan , Par·
Firewood · cut up. slabs. S16 sian and Siamese kiHens .
pickup load . Call 614-245- Call 446-3844 after 4.

11

Television
Viewing

"'••

1979 Wlldarnesa ••If~
cont1ined cemper, wi1h roll

.

The

D1CKTRACY

•800. Coll448-2078

avea.

61 4-387-7220.

-9_9_2_·_6_4_61._ · - - -- - I $14.00 per 100 lb. Horrio

$67,

Noven iber 7, 1983

8 ft. elide In camper with

Judy Taylor Grooming. Cell

$590 . Call614-256-1216 .

$75 each used waahera &amp;
dryers guaranteed 30 days .
Number to choose from .
Call anytime, 614-256 ·

.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

J~~e:ko.

256-1427.

ref. Call 446-3175 .
3 rooms and bath, 142 4th
Ave ., $160 mo .. $100 dep.,

tiy Latty Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

&amp; Son . Call 446 -7785.

~ 'vfll~=~

~ 7}{EN NG ltB1T!?I!iS..f

Pets for Sale

Knauff Firewood Pickup Or HILLCREST KENNELS
Delivered. 1 2"-22 " stocked Bording all breeds . Selling
i n yard . HEAP vender , Happy Jack Dog Food.
prompt deliwery. 614· 266- Doberman puppi11 : Stud
6245.
Service. Call 446-7796 .
Limestone. Sand. Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards

:1.

land contract . 304-875 · 1·11JI
2449 .
I II
Grandview Height a, two lots
for 11la. 304-676-3626 .

, \..

'•

acres 824,000. Meigs Co .
neer East8rn High ·S chool on
Five acres of land with
electric and water. Downpayment and pay balance on

\

~~~~

For hunting or hom81He. 80

41

!i4 Misc. Merchandise 56

They'll Do It Every Time

Nowmber 7, 1983

Mouday,

Ohio

AFUP

PVL

FB

U V·A T G

DVXUP
'

NFBU

BFEUBG

YBFPG ·..

'1'~1 CryptGqeite: 00 WE WANT TO HELP PEOPlE
.
BECA
WE-FEF!L SORRY FOR 111EM OR BECAUSE WE

GENOINELY WVE'l11EM?-THOMAS G. KEU.Y

...

&gt;

�'
Page 12-lhe Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Transportation,
moose, smoking
big election issues

·S triking workers
approve new pact
CUYAHOGA FALI..S, Ohio lAP)
-

Strlldng auto workers at a
Chrysler Corp. stamping plant \In
Twinsburg approved a local con·
tract Sunday tllat puts thi!m - arid
about 21l,OOJ other workers nation·
wide - back to work.
The proposed settlement reached
Saturday after a five-day walkoui
was approved by a vote of 8l1·293,
United Auto Workers local President Bob Weissman said. Some ·
workers at the Twinsburg plant
were called back Sunday, and full
production was to resume witil tile
midnight shltt.
The3,:mTwtnsburgworkershad
struck Tuesday, alleging forced
overtime, poor working conditions
and safety and health issues In tile
local contract.

'

By SCOTl' KRAFT
A!6oclaled Press Writer

A zoning change In Rancho
Mirage, Call f.. h3Jl given voters the
The annual moose hunt could be chance to side with a famous
banned in Maine, non-smokers In· crooner or a former president, both
San Franclsco offices could ·- be residents.
guaranteed smoke-free workspace, . The Issue is whetiler to change
and Cambridge, Mass., could tum local zoning laws to block construe·
Itself Into a ''nuclear freeze zone'' In tlon of a luxury development on a
voting '!Uesday on state and local mountain plateau. Frank Sinatra
ballot issues.
.
opposes the project; former PresiIn other voting, New York state dent Gerald Ford, an investor in the
wUl decide on a $1.25 billion project, is one of its chief backers.
transportation bond Issue, and St.
A celebrity has also entered the
Louis considers a $63.5 'million fray over moose hunting In Maine.
school bond Issue as a way to finance Bullwinkle, tile cartoon character,
court-ordered desegregation.
is appearing on TV advertisements
There are 54 measures on ballots for an organization· calling !!self
, In 11 states and the Dishid of SMOOSA, Save Maine's Only OffiColumbia. Including Initiatives, ref- cial State Animal.
erendums and constitutional queslf moose hunting is banned In
tions, according to tile Free Con· Maine, .it would be the first time the
gress Foundation in Washington, hunting of a game animal has been
which tracks referendums. There outlawed tllrough tile ballot box,
were 'l:.rl ballofquestions in 42states iccordlng to David F. Allen,
executive director of the .proand the district in 1~2.
California's Proposition 13 in 1977 hunting Sportsmen's Alliance of
triggered dozens of tax-cut Initia- Maine.
tives, but this Election Day there is
The alliance claims tile six-day
only one. ·Ohio voters have an hunt, held each September ,is a form
opportunity to reduce their taxes of wildlife management . A thousand
and make it tougher for tax of tile 25,1XXl moqseln thestatecan be
Increases to pass the state killed il• any given season.
Legis Ia tu re.

•

I

Supports Issue I

Ohio Eta Phi Sorority Will meet
Tuesday, Nov. 8, at 7:15p.m. at tile
Senior Citizens Center.

The Meigs Cooperative Council on
Ministries at its October meeting at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church voted unanimously to support Issue L
The fl9sitlon was taken after a
study of statistics showing the
number of deaths following wrecks
involving alcohol among the 18 to 21
age group.

Plan bake sale
A yard and bake sale will be held
at the Long Bottom Community
Building Wednesday, Nov. 9, from
10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Sponorsed by
Long Bottom Community
Association.

Election day luncheon
An election day luncheon will be
held at the Trinity Church, Pomeroy, Tuesday from 11 a.m. until 2
p.m.
The menu will include vegetable
soup, chili, sloppy joes, ham
sandwiches, pie and beverage. To
go orders will be available.

Closing.at noon
The Meigs County Court House
will close· at noon Tuesday for
election day and will be closed all
day on Nov. 11 in observance of
Veterans Day.

Council to meet
Racine Village Council wiU meet
in regular session this evening at 7
p.m. at the town hall . The public is
invited to attend.

Boosters to meet
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
meet at 7:30 p.m. '!Uesday at tile
high school. A film wUI be shown of
tile Federal Hocking-Meigs football
game.

Mee1s Wednesday
The MiddleportAma teu rGardeners will meet Wednesday at8p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Walter Crooks .
Mrs. Dan Thomas wUI be cohostess. A program on something
for Christmas wUI be presented by
Mrs. Betty Dean.

Quiet weekend
The Meigs Emergency Medical
Services e njoyed a quiet weekend
with only one run and that was to tile
Riverview Apartments for Tina
Carter who was treated but not
transferred.

Election day dinner
An election day soup dinner will be
held tomorrow at the Forest Run
United, Metilodist ChuVh from 11
a.m. to6p.m. Homemadevegetable
and bean soup, sandwiches, pie,
cake and beverages will be
available.
•
•

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Marvin
Price, Pomeroy; Homer Graham,
Racine; ·Gerald Morris, Rutland;
George Molden, Pomeroy; Nancy
Neutzllng, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges--Willtam
Morris, Brtan Allen, Richard Swanson, Kenneth Lunsford, Clara Riley.
Sunday Admissions--Richard
Bearhs, Pomeroy; Tammy Sable,
Racine.
Sunday Discharge --Minford
Jewell.

Police cite driver
Moderate damages were incurred t9 two vehicles and one
driver was cited to court as the result
of an accident Saturday on Pomeroy's East Main St.
Police said an eastbound car
dirven by Donald E. Bush, Gallipolis, stopped in the lane of traffic and
was struck In tile rear by a second
eastbound car driven by Velma
Doug:as, Pomeroy.

Weiher, .Jr. and Lee 0. Wood became the llnl Kypr Creek employees
to receive the OVEC-IKEC 3&amp;-year aervlce award. Louie R, Ford, Jr:,
Plant MJuuller, center, made the preoenlallon on Oct. 4. Both men
Jolni!d OVEC Oct, 4, l!ICI3, servtnc on the auard Ioree wldle the plant wu
under conaruction, In 1955 Wether, left, lransferred to the operatloM
depamtlellt and has spent hla enllre career In tlul&amp; deplllirnent,
~ ~ u -'•am lhllt operat:lns eqtc er. Wood,·rfcht.
I'IIIIUIIDed oa the pard fol'l:e unllllfiO when llell'lllllferred to the 111orea
deputmelll. 1n tm, he lralllferred to hl8 ....-c poelllor o1 fire
eq111pma1t m"•mer,
·

Meets this evening

Bruce
J. Reed
Republican • Incumbent
CREA:rlON ON GlASS-'This portrait ol Ouiol on a
piece of five by three loot plate glass was created by
Richard Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. WUUam Clark,
RockSprings. Sandblasting was l1!!ed byC!arklorthl.s
portrait which Is cuJTenlly being displayed at Ute
Rutland Church of the Nazarene, 'lbe portrait was
created especially.
lor Donna Grate.
.
'

Jaycees will provide
transportation to polls
As a public service the Meigs
County Jaycees wlll be providing
transportation to and from tile
'"Middleport and Pomeroy polling
places not only for tile elderly but for
anyone else need transportation.
Meigs Jaycee President Brian
Conde announcing the project for
tomorrow commented: "We understand tilere are many people here In
our community who are unable to
get to tile polls for one reason or
another. These people have every
right to vote and we will make every
effort to Insure tilese people tilat
theycanexerclsetheirprlvUege. We
also realize that in recent election

Repeal
(Continued from page 1)
The two camps did not reveal tile
figUres 1n tileir latest polls, but both
said Issues 2and3werecloseenough
tliat they could go either way.
Reportedly, those 11th-hour polls
showed Issue 2 passing by a narrow
margin and tile tax-repealing Issue
3 trailing slightly.
A former state official who now
practices law In Columbus said he
deplores tile idea of putting such
technical questions on the state
ballot, "causing millions of dollars
to be thro'¥11 around by speciaL
Interest groups."
He said the issues should be
discussed at lengtll and then
resolved by tile Legislature. "It's
not like they want to decide a
philosophical or moral question
such as capital punishment or the
legality of a leg-hold steel trap," he
said.
The fanner official, asking that he
not be quoted because hehasfliends
on both sides of the campaign, said
"tile Legislature can do it, and tile
. people have recourse. If 1hey
(lawmakers) don't do It right, they
can be voted out of office."

years, a relative small percentage
of people across tile country ·have
been dictating tile outcome of
elections. For tills reason the United
States Jaycees bave adopted the Get
out the Vote program In which we
are participating."
Conde added tila t due to til?
expenses Involved the Jaycees will
only be able to cover the villages of
Middleport and Pomeroy.
To schedule a pickup tlme in
Pomeroy, residents may call 9925005, 992-6800 or 742-2178 and In
Middleport they are to call 992-00!
or 992-5622.
Pickup times In
Pomeroy wUI be 11 a.m. to 12noon; 1
to 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. until the polls
close. Pickup times In Middleport
will be from 2: 30 p.m. until tile polls
close.
The Jaycees is a leadership
tralnlngorganizationforyoungmen
between 18 and 35. Those Interested
In joining the local chapter may
contact any Jaycee or Ray Wilford,

Pomeroy Village

Council

Your Vote Appreciated
the candidate

ELBERFE.LDS

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR
Complete Selection of Sizes for Men and ·
Boys - 2 layer construction - ·Also
Hanes Thermal Colors. Plus Big Man/Tall
Man Sizes - Stock up now.
·

PRICES
IN
EFFECT
WHILE
QUANTITIES
LAST!

.. OUR ENTIRE STOCI Of

WALLPAPER

1/2

OFF
REIULAil
PRICE

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS

-··~

.

S4Vt If ' ' ' ' '

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r~r:ec:ru:l:trn:e:n:td:lr:ec:t:o:r,:at:7~42:.:-2:178::_.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ftttau1.4
'llt]of'

~11.0
IIJ

CLEVELAND (AP) - One
person will receive a record "Ohio
Lotto" jackpot of $2,368,919, Ohio
Lottery officials say.
One winning ticket was sold
correctly naming all six numbers
selected Saturday night In tile
weekly Lotto game. The winner wUI
receive tile jackpot In 21l annual
Installments of $11B,445.95 each,
orllcials said .
. Next week's estimated jackpot
for the game is $250,00J.
There were 198 players who'
correctly chose five of the six
numbers drawn, and each will be
paid $768. There were 8,595 who
selected-fourofthesixnumbers,and
each won $48.
The winning numbers were 2, 5,
11, 25. '1:7 and .14.
.

Mostly clear tonight. Low near 40. ·
Win~ soutilwesterly around 10
mph. Swmy Tuesday. High In th~
mld.Qls.
.
Extended Forecast
Wednelday thnugb ·F riday:
Chance ol llhowen Wednesday
and 'lllunday. Fair on Frlclay,
rup 1n tile upper, 5011 to tow 8011
Wedneaday, mid to upper 401
'l'llundar and upper • to low 4011
J!'rldal, l.owii3HO Wednnday, Ia
llle • 'l'llundar and mid IIIIo low

.

8111Frlday.

Dear Valued Customer:
It is with regret that we must niake the following announcement.
Due to unavoidable circumstances and after
ower 40 years of business in Pomeroy, Ohio we
find it necesssary to close this store.
The building that we are in has been leased to .
another retailer; consequently we must sell out
in the shortest period of time. Every item in our
store will be reduced 20% to 70%. Due to the
hasty decision we have thousands of dollars
worth of new winter and hoRday merchandise
on orde_r that will be arriving daily. This
merchandise was not subject to cancellation;
C~Jnsequently you will receive large discounts
on this merchandise•. Shop every 'day for these .
new values.
We appreciate your patronage over the many
years we have been in Pomeroy and again we
thank you.

u

,,
·I

T
I

II
II

u

s
I

.::ao118 OUT OF BUSIIESS81" X96" MT. MIST POLYESTER

QUILT BATTS
88
'5"

. REGULAR$

EACH

SALE STARTS TODAY!
Ll MltED ANTillES!

Ohio lotto winners

Weather forecaSt

JND'IAL SHEAR SERVICE AWARD WNNERS- Rqmond C,

..

Take Pride In Pomeroy
ELECT

Single parenting
program announced
A program on "single parenting' '
Will be conducted this evening at 7
p.m. by Fatiler Miller, rector of
Grace Episcopal Church, at the
parish hall ot"the church.
In connection with tile program
the film, "Sunday Father", the story
of a divorced man and his daughter,
featuring Dustin Hoffman will be-·
shown. The program Is open to the
public.

AFTER 40 YEARS I PO EROY
STIFFLERS STORE IS

The plant, which produces all front
doors and most of the steel
underbodies for Chrysler. cars, has
beenoperatlngsewmdaysaweekto
meet demands for parts.
The company also agreed to
provide more jardtors at the plant.
Unlon oltlclals sald sanitary rondl·
lions and oil spllls had worsened as
production Increased,
''I think It's an improvement over
wl\at we had," Velma B. Pryer of
Akron, a conveyor loader, said after
the contract was approved, "Before
we weren't offered any time off,
Now we have something to look
forward to."

Chester Township Trustees will
meet this evening at 7: l'l p.m. at lhe
'C hesterTown Hall. ·

Udder tile agreement; plant
workers will· have every third
weekend off beginning in'January.

Meigs County happenings
Tuesday meetmg

-

Monday, Noven!ber 7, 1983

-IIIII OUT OF BUSIIESS(VALUES TO $8") BOY'S

JOGGERS AID ·
GYM OXFORDS
·'

Urc&gt;o·mtoday.
·Let'US spoil you.

.....:.&amp;IIH OIT

Farmers

Bank

Yow Ca•nNnltJ· O'W111d .....

M...... rFDIC

$3!!

SORRI10 UI·IWIIS
1111111 1111111 GilliE
-IIPILLI iiiiP1D

I

BUSIIESS-

SPECIAL GROUP-ODD LOT
lADIES DRESS AND CASUAL

LARGE GROUP OF
INFANrS &amp; TODDLER'S

FOOTWEAR

SPORTSWEAR

ASSORTED STYLES AND SIZES

'

WE'RE SELLIII&amp;
OUT. TO THE BARE
WILLS! DOI'T II.SS IT!
-10111 .UT OF BUSIIESS-

·$&amp;0,!.

VALUES TO 17"

BIG
. GROUP OF

BOYS I
GIRLS

TOYS

ll~

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