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                  <text>SVAC All Stars

Nutritional nuts

~ries on Page 4

In the Spotlight colmnn on Page 9

Redmen open·season

Hardening of arteries

story, photo on Page 4

FamDy Medicine colmnn on Page 11

•

at y
Reagan, Democrats draw battle lines

e

Vol .34, No.147

By OONALDM. ROO'HBERG
AP PoUtical Writer

President Reagan and the Democratic opposition In Congress are
losing no time drawing partisan
battle lines, with Reagan calling his
te-electlon landslide proof of public
approval of his conservative program and the Democra Is pledging
opposition to "any wild Ideas" for
new budget cuts.
"People made It very plain that
they approve of what we are doing,

approve of the fact that things are
better, the economy Is expanding,
and th~t's what we are going to
continue to do," the president told a
news conference In Los Angeles on
Wednesday.
Reagan, who defeated Walter F .
Mondale In an unprecedented
electoral vote landslide, vowed to
continue fighting for his conserva·
tlve program and said that if
Congress tries to block It "we'll take
our case to the people."

LEAVING FOR HOME- P....ldeat and Mrs. Ronald ReagaD
ges&amp;ure' 118 they board a heUcopter helldlnS for their Santa Bar~a
ranch Wednesday In LcJs Angeles after a big night In which he won the
Presidential election. (AP Laserphoto).
·

However, the election also put In
doubt the extent of Reagan's
coattails.
While he was winning easily,
Democrats picked up two Senate
sets and held Republican gains In
the Houseto14seatswith three more
to be decided. Republicans were
leading In two of those and a
Democrat In the other.
Republican Leader Robert MIchel of Illinois complained that
Reagan could have done more to
extend his victory to other GOP
candidates, particularly in the
House.
"As good a communicator as the
president Is, he really never, in my
opinion, enjoined that lssueo(what it
really means to have the numbers in
the House," said Michel, addingthat
Reagan's campaign concentrated
loo much on a personal victory.
Mondale also met with reporters
In St. Paul, Minn., before flying to
Washington, and he sounded some
of the themes of his unsuccessful
campaign.
He predicted Reagan would be
forced to call for a tax Increase and
said the administration also will
" have to go after Social Securily and
Medicare" In an effort to cut budget
deficits.
Mondale called a tax increase
"one of the biggest meals of crow
this administration wiU eat."
MondaleandrunnlngmaleGeraldlne Ferraro and their families got
together In Washington and for the
first time In their political relationship the two publicly embraced.
Throughout the campaign, after
his unprecedented choice of a
woman as his vice presidential
candidate, Mondale, on the adviceof
aides, avoided any physical contact
with Ms.' Ferraro - not a hug or a
haridshake was ever seen. ·
With the race over, Mondale

greeted the New York congresswoman with a bear hug on Wednesday.
Earlier, at a news conference In
New York, Ms. Ferraro was asked
about suggestions she may have
cost Mondale votes.
"Why did more than half of the
female electorate go for Ronald
Reagan? Because he's a very
popular president. It's !lOt that we
lost it. It's that hewonitandhewon it
handily," she told reporters.
"No one ever said we'd win an
election because therewasa woman
on the ticket," she said . "Am I
disappointed In American women?
Absolutely not. We're.on our way.
We are not monolithic. We have
wonderfully independent minds. We
assess our votes carefully just like
everybody else."
HouseSpeakerThomasP.O'Nelll
Jr., 0-Mass., challenged any suggestion that Reagan had a mandate
for his program.
"While there may be a mandate
on the popularity of the president of
the United States, the people
certainly show they want both the
Democratic House and Democrats
In the Senate to be a safety net
against any wild ideas the president
of the United States may have out
there about Social Security or new
taxes,'' O'Neill said.
"We are going to tX.very fair with
the president ," O'Neill said. "He
made a tremendous amount of
promises and pledges to the
American people. We are going to

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CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP)
- Shuttle Discovery vaulted spectacularly into orbit today and began
pursuit of two wayward satellites
that free-flying jet-propelled astronauts are to retrieve in a daring__..
salvage mission.
During eight days in orbit, the
crew of four men and one woman
also Is to deploy two communica ·
tionssatellltesforpaylngcustomers
andconductcrystal-growlngexperl-

mentsthafcouldleadtoamajornew
Industry In space.
With tens of thousands watching,
Discovery roared away from this
spaceportal7:15a.m . ESTandrose
swiftly through partly cloudy skies
on 7 million pounds ofthrust, darting
eastward over the Atlantic Ocean.
Nlnetnlnutesafterllftoff,Mission
Control center In Houston reported
the winged ship was In orbit 184
miles above the globe, speeding

I
I
I

...1

along at 17,400 mph.
"We look good," said astronaut
Rick Hauck,' mission commander.The others in Hauck'screw are
pilot' David Walker and mission
specialists Anna Fisher, Joe..Allen
and Dale Gardner.
Within an hour, the astrona uts
triggered Discovery's maneuvering engines in the first of 44 firings
designed to track down two off.
course satellites for the rescue
attempts next week. They were to
capture the first payload Monday
after a chase of 1.6 million miles, 64
times around the globe.
Liftoff was a day late. The flight
was postponed Wednesday, just 32
minutes before the planned launch
time, because of strong highaltitude crosswinds which could
have severely damaged the shu tile.
Shuttle managers decided later
Wednesday to proceed with a new
count after analysis of balloon and
radar data showed the wind threat
had vanished;
The flight Is the 14th in the shuttle
program, the second for Discovery.
Mrs. Fisher, a physician. is the
fourth, American woman and first
mother named to a space flight. She
and her astronaut-physician husband, BUI, are parents of a
14-month-old daughter, Kristin.
The astronauts' goalsdurlngelght
days in orbit are to deploy two
commercial communications sate!·
Utes for paying customers and to
track doWn and capture the Palapa
82 and Westar .6 payloads, which
have been drlftlng In useless orbits
since last February.
They also will operate an expert·
men! for 3M Company, exploring
the properties and behavior of
organic chemicals In space
weightlessness.
3M recently signed a multimillion
dollar contract with · NASA to
conduct experiments on 72 shuttle
· missions over the next decade and to
develop an Industrial chemical
research laboratory aboard the
space station planned for the eariy

1990s.
MilliON I1A LIFI'OFII'- MlllloB IJAC!IIIIellpMe'Raraleprojed
llllllr from pd .A at the Kamedyt!p8ce CaMrNdy'l11anday after a
-ay delay bec11W1e of wludlllean Wedn d•31· (AP ._,....,).

Allen and Gardner are to make
the rescue efforts during a pair of
six-hour space walks Monday and
Wednesday, with the shuttle flying
35 feet away In each case.

tial retrea 1 Camp Da vid to spend
four or five days of rest with his wife
Barbara.
F ina l popul ar vote totals in the
presidential race gave Reagan
53,314,171 or 59 percent, toMondale's
36,862,510, or 41 percent. Reagan
received 525 electoral votes , the
highest total in history . Monda lehad
13.

~-1

I

Banks cut prime rate;
stock market declines

Shuttle Discovery vaults into orbit
PCNDE~OSAefOR DINNER!

give him the opportunity to keep
them ."
Vice President George Bush
returned to Washington from Texas
Insisting he's undecided about
making a run for !he White House
himself in four years .
"I have the luxury of plenty of
time to make up my mind ," said
Bush. who borrowed the presiden-

LET'S GET GOING - Walter Mondale gives his son WIIUam a
shove onto the plane as' they departed Minneapolis Wednesday
following Mondale's election night defeat to President Ronald Reagan.
( AP Laserphoto) . ·

'

PDNDEROSAefOR DINNfR!

J Sections, 16 Pages
26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-. Middleport, Ohio, ,thursday. November 8, 1984

Cl'pyrighted 1984

The Putno LC~I R:1h:
Reochcd Its H19hc!'ot POH•t .
21 .5 Percent. In Dcc t:mbt•f . t9110

CITIBANK CUTS PRIME
RATE - Cltlbank. the nation's
second-largest commercial
bank, cut Its prime lending rate
Wednesday by a quarter-point to
11.75 percent. ( AP Laserphoto ).

HEAP
program
underway
CHESHIRE - Monday was the
first day Gallia and Meigs County
residents became eligible for the
Heat Emergency Assistance Program, according to Gallla-Meigs
Community Action Agency Executive DII:ector Sid Edwards.
"The program provides funds,"
Edwards said, "to prevent cutoffs of
electricity or any PUCO regulated
utilities."
The program, which wlll run
through April 12, provides· a
one-time maximum amount of$200
to prevent cutoffs to thosewhodo not
have the funds to pay theli' heating
bills.
"Only those who have lost service,
received a cul·off notice, or if they
are bulk fuel users," Edwards said.
" have less than a 10 day supply of
fuel are eligible."
"The funds are not a subsldance."
Edwards continued, "but are for
crisis Intervention. "
Eligibility for the program Is
determined by Income and need .
According to Edwards those who
make less than 150 percent of the
poverty guidelines are eligible,
provided they have the proper
documenta tlon and have either
received shut-off notices or have
been shut ott for non-payement of
bills.
The program can only be used one
time during the winter heating
months. Edwards said.

NEW YORK (AP ) - ThE
financial markets relrea ted in the
first sess ion following President
Reaga n' s overwhelming election
victory , despite a move by several
major banks to reducP the ir prime
lending rates.
Mea nwhile. two moreoil compan.
ies announced cuts in the prices they
will pay for domestic crude. joining
a spreading move that analysts said
.already has led to lower prices for
gasoline and hea ting oil.
In the stock market Wednesday,
the Dow J ones average of 30
industrials, which had risen 27.50
points Monday and Tuesday, fell
back 10.93 to 1.2.13.22. DecU nes
outnumbered advances by aboul 3to
2 on the New York Stock E xchange.
Prices also fell in the bond
markets , with those on some
actively traded 30-year Treasury
bonds plunging as much as $17.50
per $l,&lt;XXl in face va lue.
In the currency markets, the
dolla r slid to a nvo-monlh low in a
decline analysts attributed to falling
interest ra tes and lo rumors, quickly
denied , that Federal Reserve Board
Chairman Paul Volcker was about
to resign.
The move to lower 1he prime

lendin g rate was led byCi tibank, the
na ti ol'l 's second·largest commerci&lt;.tl
bank. It lowered its prime, or base,
lending charge to 11 .75 percent from
12 percent. The reduction was
quick ly followed by Chase Manhattan. the third-largest bank, and
seventh-ra nked First N&lt;:~tional
Ba nk of Chicago.
Chevron Corp. a nd its Gulf Oil
Corp. subsldiaty said in separate
announcement s they each had
lowered their posted price for West
Texas Intermediate crude oil. the
U.S. benchmark blend, by $1 a
ban-el to $29 .
In other eco no mi c news
Wednesday:
- Umon officials in Toronto said a
new Gl nadian contract offer by
Ford Motor Co. m ay avert a strike
set fo r noon Friday by the 14,200
United Auto Workers members a t
F ord's Canadia n s ubsidiary.
- A leading com puter ma ker ,
Control Data Corp .. said it was
considering the sale of its fina ncial
seiv ices unit, Commercia l Credit
Co. The sale is being contemplated
so tha t Control Data can focus on
certain of its C01'!1PUt er businesses,
the Minneapolis·based concern
said .

Fire guts Reedsville residence
A two-story Reedsville house
owned by Roger Davis, was gutted
by fire Wednesday afternoon.
The Olive Township fire depart ment was called 10 the sce ne al 2: 10
p.m .
Two families , the Charles Hensley family and a Griggs family , lived
In the house which had been
converted to apartments. None of
the occupants Wt're injured .
Orange Township, Coolville , and
Little Hocking fire departments
were also on the scene, as well as
workers from Sh ade River
Forestry.
An Olive Township fireman
received a cut which required
stitches.
The fire's origin and the amount of
loss have yet to be determined.

•

Meanwhile. a vehicle-deer accident occurred at 5a. m. Thursday on
Sta te Route 124 west of Racine, was
re ported tot he Me igs County sheriff
department .
According to the report , Bonnie
Matthews, Route 2, Racine, was
traveling west a nd saw two deer
s ta nding in the road. She rej)Prtedly
drove her vehicle left of center then
one deer jumped into the side of her
car. Damage was light. She was not
injured. The deer was killed.
Wa ller Haggy, Jr., reported to the
de pa rtment on Wednesday evening
tha t his brother 's 10-speed bicycle
was stolen from along Happy
Hollow Road . The bicycle was
recovered after being found lying In
a yard on Happy Hollow. There wall
no damage to I he bicycle.

�Thursday, Novemb&amp;r B. 1984

Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Alb

.

.

~m~ ~._....,..,,...,..,d,o=o

"q:tv

.

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
.Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland DaUy l'ress Assocla·
lion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

WASIDNGTON -The Supreme
Court will be grappling this term
with one of those two-sided cases of
crtmlnal law that cause judges to
earn their pay. The case Involves a
bullet In the shoulder of Rudolph
Lee, and the .question before the
court Is: Should the b~l)et be
extracted?
These are the facts: A llWe before 1 a.m. on July 18, 1982, a merchant named Ralph Watkinson was
closing his market at 201 N. Lombardy St. In Richmond, Va. As he
locked the door and stepped to the
sidewalk, he saw a man armed

with a pistol coming toward him. _
Watkinson drew his own pistol and
fired, apparently wounding the as- sallant. The other man also fired,
shooting Watkinson In hts legs.
Fifteen or 20 minutes later, eight
blocks from the scene, a cruising
pollee car found Rudolph Lee. He
was bleeding !rom a gwiShot
wound ln his upper chest. ·Pollee
summoned an ambulanCe to take
Lee to Medical College of Virginia
hospital. At almost the same time,
another ambulance was taking
Watkinson to the same hospital.
They wound up In the same emer-

Reagan's el~ction
victory: mandate
without a blueprint

offers free space
:for 'Thank You' letters
As a community service project, the DaUy Sentinel is offering
residents free space for special "Thank You" letters .next month.
. It's the lime of year we should reflect on the things for which we are
thallldul We SOIJ)elirnes forget the people to whom we owe thanks.
We all have someone we wouid like to thank, but never have the
chance. Now you do.
The Dally Sentinel, In its combined Thanksgiving-Christmas
edition on Wednesday, Nov. 21, wlil publish, free of charge, "thank
you" letters from area residents.
The letters should be brief (around 100 words or less) and contain
the persoo's Inti name, the reason for the thank you and the writer's
riame and address and phone number. Letters need that inforrnalion
to be pubUsbed.
Deadline for receipt of the letters.is 4 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14.
They may be sent to "Thank You," The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45700, or hand deUvered to the editorial office.

Let the older folks have a chance

gency room. Watkinson took one order compelling Lee to submit to
look at Lee and said, "That's the the surgical removal of the bull!;'! as
evidence against hlm.
man who shot me."
The case mUled around through
Lee denied it. He said that he had
state and federal courts until the 4th
))een held up and robbed by two
men who shot him. The story . U ,S. Circuli finally affirmed an insounded phony to the cops. One junction forbidding the surgical
thing led to another; both men were procedure. From that order the
released from the hospital; Lee ·Richmond sheriff and commonwas Indicted for attempted wealth's attorney have appealed.
r?bbery. The Commonwealth of The case Is Winston v. Lee.
What about It? The commonVirginia, which had only Watldnwealth's
argument proceeds on
son's unsupported ldentlflcatlon to
that Lee dld In
these
assumptions:
go on, then !Ued what ls known as a
fact
attack
Watldnson
with a gun,
motion to compel evidence. In sum,
that
the
bullet
In
Lee's
shoulder
can
the commonwealth wanted a court
be positively ldentlfled through ballistics tests as a bullet that came
from Watldnson's pistol, and that
only with this positive evidence can
a conviction be obtained against a
dangerous crtmlnal.
The defendant's position Is that
he Is Innocent, that a spilt-second, 1
o'clock-in-the-morning ldentlflca:
tlon Is worthless, that doctors say
he Is not llkely ever to be bothered
by the bullet In his shOulder, and
that It ls a violation of his Fourth
Amendment rights to make hlnn
submit to the surgery. The bullet, It
should be added, ls about one Inch
under the skin ln a part of the
shoulder muscle where permanent
damage to a nerve ls possible but
highly unlikely.
The chief prec~ents have to do
with a case from California ar.d a
case from New Mexico. In the
former case a narcotics suspect
was seen to swalloW two capsules at
the moment of his arrest.

2-year-old colts and geldings. It Wtn .
be raced over one mile on a dirt
track.
Script Ohio was broken and
trained at Darby Dan Farm near
Columbus.
Smart and Sharp, Ohio's cham·
pion2-year-old In 1981, haswon15of
40 career starts while finishing
second three times and third three
times for earnings of $261,11!5. HJs
earnings place him seventh among
cUn-ent Ohio thoroughbreds a;ndNo.
16 on the state's all-time Ust ,

WASIDNGTON - The problem
the CIA spy masters faced was a ·
toughie: How to get their man In
Honolulu in a position where he'd
be rubbing elbows with foreign potentates and mllllonalre
businessmen.
The answer: polo.
According to Ronald Ray Rewald - a Honolulu Investment
counselor charged with fraud in the
failure of what he Insists was a CIAfront company - hls bosses In the
agency ordered him in 19&amp;! "to use
polo as a vehicle to cultivate social
and business relationships" with
prominent foreigners.
·As lt turned out, their Hawaiian
eye dld better than expected: He
eventually became the owner oft he
polo club. "
It wasn't all Plmm's cups and panatellas for Rewald, though. First'
he had to spend six months learning
to ride horseback. This became
trtclder than usual when he discovered that he was allergic to
horses, and had to avoid any skin
contact with the critters.
But Rewald rose to the challenge,
and soon acquired enough eques-

llospital

MVPBack

SVAC Dream Team

Royce Blsoell
5-10, 200 pound
Junior quarterback

mendous source of 11\formation on
The sultan, .a n avid polo player,
Irian expertise to qualify as a parthe thoughts and movements 'ot
was a prestlglous coup for Rewald
ticipating member of the Haw&lt;~_ll
President Marcos and his
and the CIA. Hls tiny country on the
Polo Club. Its well-manicured
government."
northern end of Borneo Is one of the
greensward has kissed the mallets
Rewald told his attorney that
rtcbest per capita in the world.
of local and International polo pros,
Zobel "was not a fan of Marcos, but
as well as titled aficionados like · thanks to Its oil.
The friendship Rewald cultihe had a close relationship with
Prtnce Charles of Britain and King
vated
between
chukkers
paid
off
at
Marcos."
He elaborated: "They
Edward of Malaysia.
a
tlme
when
the
United
States
was
would
have
dinner together, enterIn this exalted company, Rewald
competing with other countries for
tain other pollticlans and world
was soon mini'!!: a rich lode of usethe sultan's attention - and cash.
leaders together. And he'd come
ful information, useless tlps and tit·
Encouraged by Rewald, the sultan
back and tell me about lt, with no
illatlng gossip for the delectatlon of
idea ln the world that I was with the
made his first vlslt to the United
his superiors In Langley, Va. There
States, and the relatlonshlp has
OA."
were always half a dozen 'or more
flourished since.
The two men went Into business
CIA agents at the yolo club "workBut lt was Zobel, the Flllplno · together, and Zobel even artanged
Ing the foreign visitors," Rewald
banker, who was probably the
a private meeting between the CIA
confided to a· friend.
greatest source of worthwhile Inforspy and Marcos, Rewald said.
According to an affidavit filed by
mation for Rewald and hls CIA
The Cost to Rewald of his poloRewald , other documents and lntelmasters. One of the world's richest
playing assignment was a bad back
lgence sources Interviewed by my
men and chairman of the Bank of · from a head-on collision with
associates Dale Van Alta and Indy
the Phlllpplne Islands, Zobel was a
another horseman, and a 100-pound
Badhwar, four contacts made at
close friend of President Ferdinand
Indictment from his colllslon with
the polo club were a particular bothe securities laws.
Marcos and hls Influential wife,
nai)ZS for the CIA. They were the
Imelda.
The cost to the Investors In ReGuatamas, a wealthy Indonesian
Tapping Into the Marcoses had
wald's Investment firm was at least
family; Saud Mohammed, a crown
been difficult, because of the first
prince of the United Arab Emi$500,!XXJ, according to the Indictrates; Enrique Zobel, a leading . lady's hatred and suspicion of the
ment. Whether lt was all worth lt,
OA. But It wasn't lo.ngbeforeZobel
Philippine banker, and Sultan
only the CIA knows for sure - and
became, In Rewald's words, "a treMuda Hassanal Bolklah of Brunei.
the agency isn't talking.

Player--Scbooi-Pos.
Ht. Wt.
Royce Bissell, Eastern, QB ................. .................... &amp;-0 1&amp;l
Brent Bissell, Eastern, HB ...................................... 6-0 170
Karl Smith, Eastern, C ................... ........................ G-O 175
John Rice, Eastern, FB ..................... .. ................... G-2 185
Jeff Bissell, Eastern, E ... ....................................... 6-0 180
Frank Swanson, Kyger Creek, T ............. .... ......... .... S-10 175
John CarroU, Kyger Creek, C ........................... ....... S-10 1ill
Garry Pennington, Kyger Creek. QB .............. .... .. .. .. G-1 140
Chuck Vogel, Kyger Creek , RB-LB ...... ........ ........... 6-1 160
Barry Ma,tthews, Kyger Creek, SE .......... .. .............. 5-7 150
Mark Foreman, North Gallla, TB ........ .. .................. 5-8 183
Joe Moore, North Gallla, T-LB ................... .. ........... 5-11 205
Brtan Hawks, North GaUia, FB-LB .......................... 5-10 170
Jackie Glassburn, North Gallla, SE-DB ...... ... .... ....... 6-1 150
Bill Harden, North Gallla, G-MG ............................. 5-9 175
Steve Pelfrey, Southwestern, HB-S ........................... 6-0 155
WUI Halslop, Southwestern, E-CB ............ ..... ........... 5-9 145
Jeff Burleson, Southwestern, QB-S .. ...... .... .. ............. 6-0 160
Bennie Boyd, Southwestern, MG ................ .. ............ 5-10 170
Ron Saunders. Hannan Trace, C-LB ..................... . .'.. 5-9 15.1
Deke Barnes, Hannan Trace, TB-S .................... ...... 5-9 145
Kelley Grueser, Southern, LB. ........... ...................... 5-8 145
Special Honorary Mention ·
Steve Waugh, Kyger Creek
Honorable Mention
EASTERN - Ron Hensley and Mike Lance.
KYGER CREEK -John McGuire and Larry Edge.
NORTII GALUA -Scott Williamson and J. D. Colley.
SOUTHWESTERN -Jim Burnette and Tim Burnett.
HANNAN TRACE - Gary Kirk and Jamie Montgomery.
SOUTHERN - Greg Nease and· Jimmy Wolfe.

John w. Rice

6-0, lllO pound
Junior back

Yr.
11

9
12
11
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12

12
12
12
12

12
12
11

12
11
11

North Gallla's speedy senior
tailback Mark Foreman and Kyger
Creek's sure-handed receiver,
Bany Matthews, a small, but
aggressive senior, captured the
SVAC's Most Valuable Player
hooors at Wednesday's annual All
League baUotlng conducted at
Kyger Creek High School.
Foreman rushed for 1,261 yards, a
6. 7 average In 189 carries this
season. He scored 16 touchdowns,
kicked tWo field goals anq 22 extra
polnls for a total of 128 points,
Foreman 's best outing was 212
yards against the Hannan Trace
Wildcats. He, accordlngtoflrstyear
coach Dave Angles, showed lasts of
speed during the season along with
break-away ability. "Most teams
keyed on stopping Foreman , but he
was still able to score and gain good
yardage," Angles said.
Matthews was Kyger Creek's
clutch receiver and his statistics
prove that. During the season,
Ma !thews made 34 receptions for
463 yards while scoring eight
touchdowns and two, two point
conversion. ln addition, he com pleted one pass and punted 15 !Innes

- - - - Volleyball pairings--...;....Plil*p
AI ottHbetll [c;&amp;p
CLASSo\AA
CindMIIIi Seton 26-1 vs. Rockey Rh'E'r
StaleTCJUmament

Brent Bissell
.&amp;-2, 155 pound
Freshman back

Karl Smith
6-0, 170 pound
$enior center

ZJ.3. Frida y. 6 p.m .
Canmn -McKJnk'y n. 1 \~. Ri'ymldsburR
Zl-6. Friday. 7: lJ p.m .
Ch;unpk:mhlp~~- 4: ,lJ p.m.

Sprll1Jiflcld Nol1h\l,'t'5ll'm 2H vs. Bl-11&lt;'"-

Plans made for
hunter safety event
Meigs County Game Protector
Keith Wood will hold a hunter safety
course for beginning hunters at the
Shade River Coon Hunters building
on the R!lCk Springs Fairgrounds.
Proof of completion of the course
is required for new hunters and
pre-registration is required . The
course will be givenm Nov. 13 and 14
from 6 to 9 p.m. and Nov.17 from 12
noon 104 p.m . Those attending are to
attend all three sessions to complete
the course.

FREE $149s
CURliNG IRON
With Each Regular Price

\'\If'

Starts Mon., · Nov. 12
Thru Nav. 21

SHEAR DESIGNS UNLIMITED

:!J-3. Sa iUrda y. I p.m.

Warsa w Rlvl'r VIew 27-1 \ '!i. A.k.ron Hoban 26-2, Saturday, 2:.ll p.m .

Route 62, Mason, W. Yo.

304-773-5352

Champlonstup. Saturday. 7:;ll p.m .

CL&gt;Ilti.
Dol&lt;~ H ardin No n~rn 2IHJ vs. Sullivan
lll.aC'k Ri\'er 24-.l , sarurday. 10 a .m .
NewarK C~ thJ!k' 2.1-5 \'S. [~(&gt;!on 22-4.
Salurday, U: ll a.m .

KEEP COLD OUT!·

Champ\on.&lt;;hlp, Saturday. 6 p.m .

With Warp's •....

*Weather Stripping
*Window
Plastic
*Door Seals

EBERSBACH HARDW
Jeff BlsseU

her leg and anchored me to the
spot. The nurse's call button and
my medicine bottle were . on her
side of the bed .and I was firmly
anchored fore and aft.
There was nothing left to do· but
scream for the nurse. It wasn't the
hospital's fault and It wasn't the
.large lady's fault because she was
sleep walking. Lord knows It wasn't
her fault for In my condition, I
couldn't have made It with Brooke
Shields so there was nothing else to
do.
·
Laugh and forget lt!

PH; 992-2811

KeUy Grueser
~8. J-Ill pound
Junior guard

~. 100 pound
Senior end

110 W. Main

Pomeroy, Oh.

Be~gals face

tough Steelers
CINC1~NATI
Mark
Malone of the Pittsburgh Steelers
(AP)

-

5ays aU .he needed to develop Into a
startlngquarterbacli: In the National
Football League was some regular
playlng time.
Malone, a five-year WL veteran
who has performed well in place of
injured Pittsburgh starter David
Woodley, is playing like a man who
doesn't want to surrender his
newfound No.1 status ..
"I'm a lot more confident. I've
Improved a lot and my confidence Is
better," he said Wednesday by
telephOne from Pittsburgh. "I never
believed 1 didn't have the skills
necessary and the talent necessary
to start In this league."
_
The Steelers. who lead the AFC
Central Division with a 6-4 record,
play ihe Cincinnati Bengals, 3-7, the
diVision's No. 2 team, Sunday In
ClnciMatl. A Pittsburgh victory
could assure the Steelers of their
second straight division title, and a
playoff berth.
Malone, who turns 26 on Nov. 22,
has thrown three touchdown passes
In each of the Steelers' two
consecutive victories, over Atlanta
and Houston. ·
Tile Steelers pressed Malone Into
service as a receiver In 1981 when
lnjurtes.thlnned their pass-catching
corps. He had one memorable
· moment as a receiver when he
caught a 90-yard touchdown~ In
a 1$1. game Pittsburgh lost to
Seattle, 24-21.
Malone said he hasn't forgotten
the extensive ruruilng and concen·
tratlon required of receivers.

Berry's World

Today in history

'
"Just think how much FUN press conferences
w/11. b6 now that you don :t have to worry about
being re fllectedl"

, ii"''WTi&amp;V
~ . ··

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·to the 200 you get with other brands.
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That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
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nationo1200 ~carton cooni name bmnd!o .

Fttn:R: t5 mg."tar", t.t mg nicotine av. per cigarllle by FTC ml!lhod.
)

•

for a 36.4 average and returned
seven kickoffs for 79 yards. Defen- '
slvely, he had 25 tackles, six
Interceptions and one tumble
recovery.
Eastern, Kyger Creek and North
Gallla each placed five players on
the All Dream Team chosen by the
loop's five football coaches. Southw-.
estern bad four hooorees, Hannan
Trace, two and Southern, one.
In addition. coaches gave two
honorable mentions to each league
member and aspeclalmentlonwent
to Steve Waugh of Kyger Creek who
fractured his ankle In the school's
first game against Ironton St. Joe.
Coaches making the selections
Included Ray Watson, Eastern; Mel
Coen, Kyger Creek; Dave Angles,
North Gallla; Jack James, Southwestern: Brett Wilson of Hannan
Trace and Frank Porter and Darrell
Dugan of Southern.

$32so PERM ·

tales~_________________L_~_e_u_w_in~~-u
tlr waste bag by about 20 feet of
small garden hose and an Intravenous needle In my arm feeding me
medicine from a bottle suspended
at the top of my bed. There was
never a horse hitched more securely than I!
It must have been sometime In
the wee small hours of the morning
when 1 was shoved out of bed. 1 had
taken a sleeping plll and was still
groggy but by the llght from the
hall I could see I had been evicted
by a large lady who seemed sound
asleep. In taldng my place she had
wrapped my garden hose around

Barry Mauhews
MVPUneman

Mark Foreman

Agent riding roughshod ____Ja_ck_And_e_rso_n

My wlfe has just returned home she Is fairly comfortable and satisafter several days In the hospital fied with the smaller portions. After
for treatment of a vertebral prob- all, I have never heard of anyone
lem ln her cervical spine area and actually starving on 1,500 calories
for various other ailments which per day.
the doctor attributed to 'hyperten-.
After years of ·working in the
sian and over-weight. Now, for the Medical Record Departments of
umpteenth tlme in our 20year mar- various hospitals, Mary Is famlllar
riage, we are on another diet - so with hospital routlne and after a
- here WE go again!
few d,ays ln which she was ln conOf course, this diet Is different siderable pain, she enjoyed her
from all previous efforts to control stay at Pleasant Valley. She made
the calories. She ls convinced. for new friends and found several old
the first time that the grim reaper · ones among the employes. I had a
Is grinning ghoullshly over her · more difficult tlme last sprtng
shoulder and watching every bite. when I was hospitalized for an operworthy and didn't get any.
The cheese and other commodiOther diets were more fads than ation. To me the word "hospital"
Why not divide the age group so
ties are handed out at fa irgrounds.
genuine weight reducing efforts symbolizes hypodermic needles,
the older ones wouldn't be pushed
Many senior citizens have no way
and we tried them all. When I say enemas, hard X-ray tobles. cathearound?
to go and don't know any one to get
"we" I mean that no husband has ters and pain. Except when I am
· Also have it where the older ones
It for them. Many are not able to
ever watched from the sidelines visiting a friend or relative, I go to a
at least could sit down until their
stand in line any length of time. The
while his wife diets and he remains hospital with fear and misgivings. I
tum?
younger people of low Income
unscathed. I have eaten more have found' that 1 must expect the
The younger citizens usually
crowd and push the other people
strange meals than I care to recall unexpected and am reasonably
have families and get several
around . Their income may qualify
and I have lost the weight while sure the unexpected will happen
pounds of cheese while some older
them but even if senior citizen has a
Mary has had all the fun going to and lt will be neither painless not
ones don't get any but need It just as
llttle more It is taken up by doctor
reducing classes to be weighed and pleasant.
bad or more.
bills and medicine.
enjoy the mutual consideration of · Last spring 1 was told by Dr. Rl•
Let's give the older seniors a
They had cheese le ft over and
the other ladles who are sharing the chard Slack thilt I must eventually
chance! - Nora M. Mills, Senior
was distributed to some senior citinight out with the girls. This time undergo an operation for a male
Citizen, Middleport, Ohio.
zens but several I know were
the fun and games are forgotten. I complaint which he · assured he
have finally made my first convert would only become worse If postto the PYSAFTT diet which I have poned. So 1 bravely mustered up a
advocated for years. It means stiff upper lip and said, "All right,
" Push Yourself Away From The how about next week?" He said,
Table" after eating as many calo- "Fine" and on the appointed day
Today ls Thursday, Nov. 8, the 313th day of 1~ . There are 53 days left In
ries as the doctor specifies. So far lt Mary delivered me to the hospital,
is w&lt;irldng well.
tbe year.
outwardly pomposed but with my
. Today's highlight In history:
Mary came home from the hospi- innards quivering with fear. '!'he
· On Nov. 8, 1793, the Louvre Museum, In Parts, opened Its doors to the
tal bringing her daUy diet sheets
rest of the day was spent with tests,
public for the first tlnne.
prepared by the hospital nutrition- X-rays and aU the preliminaries for
lsi limiting her dally calorie Intake the operation the next mornfng. I
On this date:
1n 1837, the first U.S. school of higher educatiim exclusively for women,
to 1,500 per day. I have always been won't bore you wtth the medical de· a Ught eater and to me 1t seems to taUs but the operation was perMount Holyoke Seminary, opened In South Hadley, Mass.
. 1n IB89, Montana became the 41st state of the unlon.
be enough fOOd for the average formed on schedule alld I was
, In 1923, Adolf Hitler launched his first attempt to gain power In Munich In
ditch digger but Mary claims the
returned to my. room trussed up
what became known as the "Beer-Hall Putsch." Hitler was arr~ted, Oied
first three days she had to restrain like a Christmas turkey with jill the
and convicted of high treason.
herself to keep from taking a few
necessary ·hospital hiuness de1n 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated Incumbent bites of the hand that fed her. That signed to keep me In bed and out of
urge declined, she said, after her
Herbert Hoover for president.
the way of the nurses and orderlies.
1n 1933, President Roosevelt created by executive order the Civil WorkS stomach accustomed Itself to the Among the shackles confining me
smaller amount of .!ood and now was a catheter connected to a plas, AdministratiOn, des~ to create jobs for rmre than 4 million.

Letter to editor

By The Associated Press
The $10 m!IUon Breeders' Cup
Series, to be run Saturday at
HollywOOd Park In InglewOOd, Cal.,
will Include two Ohio horses; Scrtpt
Ohio and Smart and Sharp.
Smart and Sharp, a 5-year-old
gelding owned by FlemingB. "Don"
Fraser of Cincinnati, will run In the
$1 mllllon one-mile race on the grass
for 3-year-olds and up.
Scrtpt Ohio, a 2-year-old colt bred
In Kentucky by Daniel Galbreath of
Columbus, wlll compete In the $1
mUllan Breeders' Cup Juvenile for

·B ullet in the sholllder____.J,_am_es_J_.K_il_pa_tr_ick

good tas te, u.ddresslng issues, not personalities.

~Sentinel

Thuredl • November 8 1984

.

.Foreman, Matthews
cop honors in SV~C·

'

Pomeroy-Mid~leport. Ohio

LETTERS OF OPINION a-:e welcome. They should be less than 300 words
Jon,. All letters are subject to editing and must be slrned with name , address and
telephunt&lt; number . No unsigned letters wUI be putJilshed. Letters should be In

. President Reagan has a mandate without a blueprint after his last, best
landslide - a triumph he could not transfer to the rest of the Republican
ticket.
The re-elected president vowed to extend his conservative renaissance
"Into the next decade and the next century," but to do It, he will have to
fashion new alliances and power blocs In a divided government. That may
require some compromises.
Reagan's victory over Walter F. Mondale rivaled the great runaways of
American history- Roosevelt In 1936, Johnson In 19&amp;1, Nixon In 1972. But
for coat1ails- or, rather, the lack of them -his re-election was most
comparable to Nixon's.
The president carried at least 49 states. jV!ondale led in his MiMesota
home with ttie outcome still in doubt, won In the District of Columbia, which
never was In doubt.
Reagan was polling 59 percent of the popular vote, and had 525 electoral
votes. Mondale had a maximum of 13.
Despite the Reagan sweep, Republicans faced a net loss of two of their 55
Senate seats. Their gain in the House was unlikely to reach 20 seats.
"What we've done only prepares us for what we're going to do," Reagan
said in Los Angeles as he celebrated victory.
Reagan's re-election campaign was short on specilics on what it is that
he's going to do. To do much, he will have to get Congress to vote his way or
see his programs stalemated. And Tues&lt;lay's numbers point to continuing
administration problems with the Democratic House.
Furihermore, the 198&gt; elections could well put Congress back in
Democratic control. Republicans will have to defend 22 seats, Democrats
only 12.
All of that weighs against the prospect of bold, brand -new proposals to
keynote Reagan's second term.
Reagan's first term· undertakings didn't always please his most ardent
conservative allies. They said he was getting bad advice from aides who
valued pragmatism over conservatism. and that he sometimes took it.
"Let Reagan be Reagan," said James G. Watt. then secretary of the
Interior, and it became a slogan for conservatives who felt their man was
sometlnnes 'misguided by the peopll;' around him.
As second-term governor of California:, Reagan showed he knew the arts
of compromise as well as the tenets of conservatism. As second term ·
president , he may well do the same.
·
The last election is over. and Reagan will indeed be Reagan .

Two Ohio horses
in Breeders' ~ Cup

Pege-2-The Deily Sentinel
)

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

,.

'

�·..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday,

November B. 19B4

Rio Grande opens- 1984-85
basketball season Saturday

Aggressive play puts· Black
on Cleveland BroWns' roster

Marty Schottenheimer, who was helmer said.
elevated from defensive coordinaBlack's best chance for offensive
tor to head coach two weeks ago.
work this week, however, would be
"We were really looking for a guy as part of the kickoff return blocking
who could help us In the kicking wedge, Schottenhehner said.
game." Schottenhelmer said after
After he was cut last summer,
Black was signed Wednesday.
Black took a job as a hotel clerk In
Black took the roster spot of Columbus. He says he kept in shape
offensive tackle Ted Petersen , who by working out at Ohio State.
Joining Mowery in the backcourt
was waived.
"We were talkingwtth the Browns
will be 6-3 sophomore Mike Smith
Although listed as a running back, and Seattle about next year and also
from Cambridge. Smith last season
· the 5-foot-11,190-pou nd Black will be to the United States Football
became the third Redman guard In
used primarily on the Browns' League," Black said. "But what 1 as many seasons to be named
kickoff coverage unit, which has really wanted was to come back
" Rookie of the Year" In the MOC.
been mediocre this season, Schot- here. I'm going to have about 15 The Rio Grande front line should be
tenheimer said.
relatives here Sunday, and about!Ul
strong wl th a senior anchoring e;tch
"The thing that impressed me fans and friends.''
position. Dan Curry, a 6-7 fmward
about him was, he was tough,"
from Derby, Ohio, wtll solidify one
Schottenhelmer said as the 2-8
forward slot The Westfall High
Browns began preparing for SunSchool graduate has been a starter
day's National Football League
since he first set foot on the campus
Skyline Lliru.'fi
game against the 9-1 San Francisco
Monda)' Nltc Owls
of Rio Grande.
TciUn
Points
49ers. "He'd get beat around out
f'.a llt•ry Ha ir Arts ...........
. ............ 44
Last season, Curry carne Into his
there and he kept coming back. With
Pharmacy North ..... , .... . ...... .... .............. 43
own
scoring 15 points per game
me, those types of guys will be
Powell' s Supe r Valu .. .... .. ................... 37
No.
2
..........
.......
..............
...............
36
while
being tabbed first team All·
around for a while."
Whal&lt;'y' s Used Aut o Parts ................ , ... .. 32
MOC,
All-Distrtct 22, honorable
Black rushed for an average of No. 6 ...........
. ............. .. .. ... ... .. 22
Ch"'pman
Shoes
..
.........
.....
.....
..
.............
~
mentioin
AU-American and team
142.5 yards per game as a senior at
No.7 ........... ..................................... 12
Most
Valuable
Player. Bob Shaw, a
the University of Akron, the
High Ind ividual game - Th£&gt;lm &lt;l Osborne
6-8 senior from Wheelersburg, will
l£8: LauriC' &amp;tz!ng 150: Kathryn Hall147.
second-best average in NCAA
Hig h Individual serle&gt;s - Thelma Osborne
start at the post position. Shaw has
Division I-AA last year. He scored
419: Ka thty n Hall 4l5: Chris Bailcv 396.
been a s tarter for the past two
nine touchdowns.
Hl~h team garilP- No. 6 &lt;&amp;SO; G.3 11£&gt;ry Ha ir
seasons.
For the Browns, though, he will Arts 469: No. 6 461.
High tea m series- No. 6t'fi7, Ga ll pry Ha ir
not likely see much action as a
Arts 1314; Chapman 1296.
Rounding out the starting lineup
runner , Schottenheimer said. The
Tri-County &amp;wllnr League
will
be 6-3 transfer from Findlay
Browns need him as a defender on
Starwllng
College,
GJ,'eg Verhoff. Whlle play:
' Oc"!t. 29, IDS1 •
kickoffs . because they have given up
'l'eam
Points
the Oilers, Verhoff was
tng
for
an average of 23.2 yards on kickoff Bill 's Body Shop
a2
named All-Buckeye Conference
returns while returning opposing Fraterna l Order of Eag les
!'(I
and
AII-Distrtct 22. Greg is the
Roach's
Gun
Shop
48
teams' kickoffs for an average of Hyst'll"S Used Cars
42
brother
of 6-4 sophomore Joe .
oilly 18.8 yards
·
Shoemaker Oil &amp; Gas
24
Verhoff.
·
High Indiv idual Sf'Jies -Charlie VanM&lt;&gt;ter
" I'm not sureoneguycanmakea
Buster P helps 568: Bill Sm!th 566.
Expected to come In quickly will
difference, " Schottenheimer said . 616;HJgh
Indiv idual game- Charlie VanMeter
be 5-9 junior guard Kent Wolfe, 6-3
"What the total impact might be, I 258: Rufus Jewell 2l5: Shor1 fiLissell 215.
junior forward Ron Fumier and S-4
HIJ:"h team series - Bill's Body Shop 266..1:};
don't know. We're ta lking about a
F'raternal Order of EC~gles l'iOl; Roach 's Gun
sophomore
Joe Verhoff.
guy running down the field and Shop 2442.
The
Redmen
will open up their
High tpam game - Blll" s Body Shop 925;.
hitting a guy with the opposite color
Fraternal Order of Eagles !nl: Roach's Gun
1984-85
campaign
on Saturday,
jersey, preferably the one with the Silo p lll2.
Nov.
10,
as
they
host
the DYke Colball. It doesn't take a lot of talent.
You just have to want to do it."
r------------------------~
The leg injury that will keep
veteran running back Mike Pruitt
sidelined for three more weeks
"!orked in Black's favor, Scholten-

BEREA. Ohio (API ~ James
Black's running ability was not
strong enough to win him a spot on
the Cleveland Browns' roster last
summer. He was cut by then-coach
Sam Rutigliano In August
But Black is back with the Browns
today bequse his aggressiveness
during . the pre-season impressed
another of Cleveland's coacheS,

Transactions
81\SEIII\.LL
Arntricula«ue
CAI.lFORI\'lA A.NCELS-WaivrU F:llls
Valmrtne . ootfk&gt;IOt&gt;r. As.~lgncd Anl'lf'l
Mort'l\0, Jay Klblx- and BUI Moonf'yhum
pit("hc-rs , and Pctt K{:""(:.'d;.', lntieldrr. \(1 Ed·
rrnnlllfl o f till• Parlflc Coa.~t !.Pagul'.
ClilCAGO WHITE SOX-f'\lamt'd F'm:!

Local bowling

N~•lson

assisl tmt dlrt'Ctor of pluyrr dc\'d·
in thr minor IC'~es . Named
Sll'l"l' Dillard rnllflll,l,'£' 1" and Pa1 IV&gt;lly

oprTH'n t

pllt"hlnj;t c•oach r ~ lhl:&gt; &lt;'IU t,.s Gl('ns F :1lls
&lt;Jffl llatf' i n 1~· EiTSin'n IA'a,l.,'\11".
TEXAS RANGERS-1'radW Daw Hos·
Tl'!k•r. · fi~r ll&lt;!!itman, t o tOO Montr ral
Expos lor Chri.• Welsh . pildiN". A.&lt;&gt;signrtl
Wr-lsh ro Ok!Elhoma Ci ty of rtr !\mC'rlca n

rusocia tio n.
Nllllonlll Leagtlt•
MONTREAL EXPOi-Asslgned Dave:

IIOiill'tiC'r. fi rst baS&lt;.man. to lndtan DJXl ll S
uf ttl• American A:;socia ticm.
Pll"TSBURGH P IRA"fT_&lt;;;,_Ai)1t&gt;d Sam ·
m}" KhaiUa, lnfk&gt;kll'r, to !IF #man ros·

'"·

~N
F"RAN&lt;lSCO
Chtwk H l!lrr. Hock.\'
M!IIN " roach!'S.

G!AJ&gt;.'TS-~anlL~
Rtidgps and Bob

BASKETBAU.
:"' i&amp;UunaJ &amp;o.k~ hall .-\o;.ttoclatlon
C I. F: V ~~ L A N D
("AV ,U_ IJ-~ RS- t •t:K'Nl

lton ,\Jldl:orr.oo , forward. on the' mjw·rd
l i~r .
nt~TRO n"

P I STON~ -S[SmK1

. i on• ·~. fllr"Ward ...."'l'nf{'l".

MajOr

an"d Ten:· Tr~IC'.

j..'U ill"ll

1'\ E\\' Jf.RSEY . !':E"l'S-Piitt.""l-d

O; m~

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n;rw kin ~.
N'nTI'r. n n rtw• inj urm 1"("-l'!"&gt;"P
llsl. ,\ C'tiva l&lt;d ;'IIJ'rl KinJ!. lono~· a rd.

f'OOTRAJ..L.
N.tional Football Lt·ugut·
offc n s ll·r

ta ~klc .

IDS A!"GF.l.F:S RA IDERS-.'3ii..'Til,_r .lt&gt;r·
f".ols t C'~-n.

ry

lba).

Jan. 8 - Malone - •.
Jan. 9- Central State University.
Jan. 12- Mt. Vermn Nazarene . •
Jan. 1.5 - Urbana • •.
Jan. 19 - Tiffin • •.
Jan. 22 - Walsh . •.
Jan. 26 - CedarvUie . • .
Jan, 29- Otll.o Dominican . •.
Feb. 2 - Maiotle - '.
Feb. 5 - Mt. Vf'mOn Nazarene - •.
Feb. 9 - Urb:lna . •.
Feb. 12 - 1ltfln - •.
Feb. 16- Walsh - •.
Feb, 17 - Dyke.
Feb. 19 - Cedatvllle .
Feb. 23 - Ohio Dominican . •.
March 4, 5, 6. 7 - NAIA DL,.trll'l No. 22
Piayo!!•.
• - MOC games.

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Thr Dally &amp;-nlin£&gt; 1on a 3. 6 or 12 month
basts. Ci'Pd lt wil l be give n carr!&lt;&gt;r E-ach
month .
No subscriptions by mail permitted tn
tow ns where home ca rrlC'r serv ice Is

available .
Mull

Su~crlpUons

l~lde

Ohio
1:1 Wc:&gt;eks ...... ......... .... .. .... ......... $14.56

26 Wooks ........... ...................... $29.12
52 We-eks ...... .. ......... ...... ......... .. S58.24
Oulslde Ohio
13 Wf:'PkS ........... . .. ..... . ............. $]5.60

26 Wf't'ks ...... ............. .... .... ....... J.11.20
!'\2 Weeks

.......... ..... ..... . $59.80

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serv ! CP d('sk at 992-2156 Jx&gt;fore 6:00 p .
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1-------..,.-------------------

l l .E\"E L ·\.J\"0 BROWJ"o;"S-SI,I:IIt&gt;d .lamPs
BlaC'Ic ru nninll: bac·k . Walwd Tf'd r'r-tl'r·
~ 'II .

Dec. 12 -Oakland Ctty College.
Dec. :11, 29 - Bluetteld State Tournament
(R.k:l Grande, Blueneld State, Concord and

qttmC'rbark . a nd Rick 1\Ck ·
r&gt;rman, d&lt;'lrn~ l\·r lltlf'IT\an. Plact&gt;d D;"ict
llumm. quur1rrback. on the Injured r
~·rw tlsl . Wail'l'd Gn.~ Bu.l'd. Llf'ft•nslv!'
llnPman .

Mli\MI IXJLPHl NS - PlaN'd Ron Hrs·
linr-barkrr. on Iht.· Physica lly un&lt;J bl£'
m Jl't"fOITTl lis! .
• i\ E \\" E:\"I.LAND PATRIOTS-Rf'.
sl~ncd
Mlkl' Kl•nig:an, {JlKII1('r·OO c k.
Wal\"£'1:1 Sctlll Vlt"lru:;. ckf!'nsl\'l' t•nd.
~F. W YORK .IE'I'S-Si~tml Skip l.&lt;lm'.
llrlf'n!; i\"t~ bark.
f('l".

Chillicothe to host
annual run Nov. 11
Chillicothe's Great Seal Running
Cl ub. Ross County YMCA, Domino's Pizza and Newberry's Sporting Goods will sponsor the fifth
annual "Five Mile Challenge" a nd
a "Two Mile Fun Run" on Sunday,
Nov. 11. at the Scioto Trail Stare
Forest loca ted on Route 23·, eight
miles south of Chillicothe.
Entry fee is $6. The race will
begin at noon. First place overall
winners in boih the male and fe-ma le divisions will receive jackets
and-medals. Awa rds wtll be given
for first through fourth places In th&lt;'
following divisions :
Men: 15 and under, 16-19, 20-24.
25-29, 30-34, :IS-39. 40-49, 50-59, ro and

over.
Women: 15 and under, 16-19, 2029, 30-39, 40-49, 50 and over.

Last

PILLOW
- ARM
SPECIAL

*NOV.*
SPECIAl .

$299 95

,
1 Best Salad ll~o~lfet'" wilt\
Includes ttle WGrld s B~~~ei.l) ~ked potato anll

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$1850°0

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two Mtsou?.s !all·you

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11

ON RT. 7

SILVERBIRD

TUPPII PlAINS. OHIO
8Y Till POST OFFICI
HOURS: Mon.·Fri. 2·7
Sat. 10-6
I

MI'EI.LI'Al
SlliTEJIS

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..._ arortl'l Bl,;,.,t, Bill
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$}9995

378-6158
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"'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Tony Welch has lived the dream of every
high school lineman, He ruslled with the football.
.The 5-foot -11, Z70-pound tackle for Pomeroy Meigs rushed i5 times for 60
yards late In the game Friday night as Meigs pounded Stewart
Federal-Hocking 48-7.
Around Ohio: AI McKinney of Elyrta Catholic flnlshed . the regular
SC!8SOii with 2,002 yards rushing, 45 touchdowns and 'nO points. Hubert Bobo
of Chauncey-Dover set the state single-season mark of 323 points In 1952.
Streaks- Cincinnati Moeller, a state record 68-straight regular-season
victories; Elyria Catholic, ll . consecutive regular-season trtumphs;
Centerville, 28 straight regular-season trtumphs; and Belpre, 20
regular-season victories in a row.
Sam Grida has broken Ohio State flanker Mike Lanese's rushing record
at Mayfield with 1,651 yards this faiL Mayfield was 10-0 for first Its
unbeaten season since 1958.
·
Mark Norbut of Dayton Carroll Intercepted four passes and scored the
first touchdOwn Iii Carroll's 13-0 qeclsion over Xenia.
Fairfield bas beaten Hamilton Badin or its predecessor, Hamilton
Catholic, for the first tlmeslnce 1952. Badin Coach TerryMalonewas24-0-2
vs. Fairfield. Lhna Central Catholic, 9-0-1, has the best record in its 28-year
history. And Dresden Tri-Valley has its first big wtnnJng season at 9-1. The
previous best was 6-4.
Carlos Snow, second as a freshman In the state's 100-meter race last
sprtng, has turned into quite a football player as a sophomore. Snow led
Cincinnati Academy of Physical Education over Ironton with 311 yards In
29 carrtes.
Lars VIgen, an exchange student from Denmark, kicked a 23-yard field
gOal on the final play to give Ravenna Southeast a 10-7 decision over
Peninsula Woodridge.
Add 1,®yard rushers- Judd Garrett, Cleveland University, 282-2,011,
:li TDs; Danny Reid, Portsmouth, 1,499; Rodney Evans, East Clinton,
1,483, 15 TDs; Rick Harren, Clyde, 1,319; Chrls Gaiters, ZanesVille, 1,313:

,,

Of course, six oiher Division I
playoff schools, Lakewood St.
Edward, Mayfield, Lorain King,
North Canton Hoover, Toledo St.
FranclsandFindlay, wlllhaveasay
about that.
In the other Division I openers
Saturday night, St. Edward (9-Hl)
plays at Mayfield (10-0-0), King
(9-1-0 ) at Hoover (9-1-0) and St.
Francis (9-1-0) at Findlay (9-1-il).
The winners advance to the
semifinals Saturday night, Nov. 17.
The Division I title game will be
played Sunday, Nov. 25, In Ohio
Stadium.
Centerville, the Western · Ohio
League winner for the last decade,
has done It tills year with a defense
llrniting opponents to 46 points.
" The strength of their team Is
thelrdefense.It's veryimpressivP,"
said Moeller Coach Steve Klonne .
The Elks outscored opponents
355-46. Moeller handled its opposition 390-104, but the Crusaders
probably played a stronger schedule. Moeller, Ohio playoff champion In 1975,1976, 1977,1979,1980and
1982, yieided83oflts points in the last

Brad Robinson, Pomeroy Meigs, 172-1,258, 17 TDs; Tom Titus, Marion
Elgin, 1,245; BUI Collier, Marion Catholic, 1,179; and Ernie Williams,
Belpre, 1,107.
.
1,IXXI-yard passers - Lee H~lder, Belpre, 141-249, 2,087 , 25 TDs; Mark
Kamphaus, Cincinnati Moeller, 123-174, 1,800, 27 TDs; Mike Chancey,
Meigs, 64-H3, 1,263; and Shawn Johns, Miami Trace, 1,002.
1,IXXI-yard receivers- Brent Riggenbach, Paulding, 1,132.
Career capers- Dave Stacy, Williamsburg, 442 completions and 5,519
yards passing; Greg Nared, Wilmington, 4,&amp;J1 yards passing; and D' Juan
Frapclsco, Moeller, 4,032 yards.

ISport~ briefs I

NEW YORK (AP) - Running
back Eric Dickerson of the Los
Angeles Rams is the National
Football Conference Offensive
Player of the Week and defensive
end Richard Dent of Chicago, iook
defensive honors for games played
last weekend .
Dickerson, who led the National
Football League in rushing wl th
l,!lll yards as a rookie In 1983, took
over the league leadership last week
when he carrted 21 times for a
career-high :nl yards In the Rams'
16-13 \1ctory over St. Louis.
Dent, an eighth-round draft
choice in 1983out ofTennessee State,
was credited with 4~ sacks in the
Bears' 17-6 victory over the LosAngeles Raiders. Dent's 12 sacks
lead the NFC.
GENERAL
SAN DIEGO (AP) City
residents, responding to a media
blitz thatfeatured San Diego Padres
star Steve Garvey and team owner
Joan Kroc, voted against a measure·
that would have removed Jack
Murphy's name from tl)eir 00,-®
seat stadium.
The measure, which would ·have
shortened the stadium's official title
to San Diego Stadium, was defeated
by a 55 percent to45percentrnargin.
It was voted down, 178,3'lllto147,226.

Local bowling
Skyline Bo"'·Ung Lanes
Morninr G&amp;ories
Oct. :11, Team

18 WHEELER

Fra ncis F'Jortst ... ..... ......... ..................l3
S!mrnnm; Olds . Cetdlllac

and ChE.&gt;v......................... .................. 32
Pools Plus .................. .................... .. ll
The Fabrt c Shop ......... ."...................... -- ~

H1gh tndhidual game- Mary Woods 219;
June Lambert 211: June H awkins 1.99.

High

524.95 VALUE

Individual

three-ga mes

-

June

Lambert 543: June HawkltL'&gt; 517: Ma ry Woods
516.
High team game- Orenda 's BoutiqueR'i7;
The Fabric Shop 826 : Dan 's 814 .
High !.£&gt;am three- games Brenda's
Boutique 2'!66; D&lt;Jn 's 2275; P ools P l us 2234 .

Morning Glories
O&lt;t. i!l.tll84
Team
F'r·ands Floris\.
F'ra nrL~

Points

.................... ... 44
....... ......16

F' loris1

Dan·s...... . . ....

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Simmons Old:.. Cadillac

and ChPv...

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Thr F'abrir Shop
Puols Plu ~
High indl\idua l game

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~ U?nora M c Knight

~3: S hirl ~· Sim mon!&gt; 191: Jun(' Lambert 189.

H igh Ind ividua l threp..gam(&gt;S Mar)'
Woods 51!;; Barbara Wll itlinJnon :,02 : Shirl ey
Simmons -181
High tcum f:!LJ.mf'- Simmons Ulds. Cadillac
and Chev. SH: Dan 's &amp;ll . Orenda'11 Boutique

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sggs

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ELECTRONIC

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We will ~ heertully give a full refund or e:&lt;·
change fqr any item purchased at th is store
when the part 1s returned in resaleable condition and is accompanied by the ori.ginal recelpt .
Parts that have been installed are not resa leable

and therefore wtll not be refunded or exchanQed.

Battery

MUSI

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any 12v negative ground system ~
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:

Hueston leaves Bucks
--cbLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -.Earle
' B~.
13th-ranked Ohio State
- ~· '" '
University's football coach, said
Wedtle$day that starting Olltside
linebacker Pennis H\IE'Ston had left
the team tor what Bruce called
personal reasons.
Hueston, a 6-foot-1, 210-pound
junior from Toledo, had been a
regular since early In the season. He
played In aU nine of Ohio $tate's
games this fall, making 14 sollr
tackles and asslstlng on 21 others.
He had three tackles tor kisses, two
sacks and three pa8S!!S broken up.
Bruce gave no indication of
whether Hueston wolild return for
the 1985 season.

Fremont Ross, Belpre (10-0-0)
battles Loulsv!lle Aquinas (9-a-1) at
Dover, and Clncinna tl Mariemont
(9-1-0) faces Columbus Hartley
(9-1-0) at Groveport
All of Friday's games begin at
7: 30 p.m. except the PhiloPortsmouth contest, starting at 8
p.m. Kickoffs for Saturday's contests are 7 p.m . except the St.
Francis-Findlay pairing, scheduled
for 7: ll p.m .

four games.
Moeller's offense Is led by
quarterback Mark Kamphaus, who
holds nine school passing records,
and tailback D' Juan Francisco, the
Crusaders' career rushing champion. Kamphaus threw for 1,lll2
yards and Tl touchdowns tills fall.
Francisco has accounted for 4,032
yards rushing In four seasons.
The playoffs open Friday nigh t
with first-round activity In divisions
II, Ill and V.
In Division II, Cleveland Benedictine (7-2-0 ) plays Westlake (8-1-1) at
Berea, Kettering Alter (9-1-0) faces
Dayton Chamlnade-Julienne (9-1-0)
In Dayton 's Welcome Stadium,
Steubenville (10-0-0i battles Youngsto)VIl Ursuline (9-1-0) at Youngstown State, and Columbus Eastmoor (10-0-0) goes to Columbus
Whitehall (10-0-0).
In DiviSion III, it will be Warren
Kennedy (9-1-0) agatflst Orrville
(10-0-0) In Canton Fawcett Stadium.
Lima Bath (9-1-0) at E lyria Catholic
(10-0-0), Philo (10-0-0t at Portsmouth (9-1-01, and Carlisle (8-2-0)
against Cincinnati McNicholas 19-10) at Galbreath Field.
DMsion V openers match Windham (7-2-1) against Smithville
(9-1-0) a t Massillon Perry, McComb
(9-1-0) against Holgate (10-0-0) at
Defiance, Canal Winchester (9-1-0)
at Newark Catholic (10-0-0), and
Sidney Lehman (9-1-0i at Middletown Fenwick (8-2-0).
In Division IV Saturday night ,
Mogadore 18-1-1) plays Loudonville
(9-1-0) in Fawcet1 Stadium, Metamora Evergreen (9-1-0) takes on
Collins Western Reserve (10-0-0) at

&amp;

Wtllhtllll Ull/14
. · ·

·Reg. 1299.95
NEW SHOWROOM OPEN

.

warm roil wrth ~tt~r ·A.~~~rticipalino steatc.nouw.
counts Tax not 1nt rtw•b:•

.

AP Sport&amp; Witter
Cincinnati Moeller and Centerville, ranked one-two In the state In
The Associated Press poll, will
deckle who's best on the field
Saturday night In the first round of
the Ohio high school football
playoffs.
Moeller's Crusaders, u\ pushing
their state record to 68 straight
regular-season victories, were
ranked No. 1 In Class AAA In the
final AP poll this week.
Centerville's Elks, winners 'of
their last 28 regular-season games,
have qualified for the Division I
playoffs for the .first time and wt11
rna tch 1040 records wl th the
six-thne playoff champions Saturday night at Galbreath Field at
Kings Mills.
.Centerville ranked second In the
AP's final big-school ratings In 1!&amp;.
. "At least this year," Centerville
Coach Bob Gregg said, "we'll win or
lose on the field. We won't getlt by a
computer. I think the game is going
to be for the state championship."

Streaks continue

FOOTBALL

While
They

The two Mile Run Run will be on
a nat course and wlll begin at 11
a .m. All finishers will receive their
time and ribbons. Awards will be
given to the top finishers . The entry
fee Is $2.
Registration for the race and fun
run will start al9: 30 a .m. Splits will
be given at each mlle. All registrants who are present will be eligible for a drawing. · Previous
winning time in the men's division
is held by Larry Cox from Chillicothe, 24:50 and in the women's by
Iris Black, 30:25.
Mall entries to the Y.M.C.A. ·at
100 Mill Street, Chillicothe, Ohio
45601. For further information call
Melissa Higgs-Horsell after 4 p.m.
at (6141 772-4036.

By GEORGE S'l110DE

By George Strode

NEW YORK (AP) - Oddibe
McDowell of Arizona State University, an outfielder on the U.S. team
which won the sliver medal at the
Surruner Olympic Garnes, was
named winner of the I!&amp; Golden
Spikes Award as the nation's
outstanding amateur baseball
(iayer.
Oddibe, a 5-foot-9, 165-pounder
from Hollywood, Fla., was selected
In the first round (12th overall) of the
June amateur draft by the Texas
Rangers.
He led the Sun Devils in every
offensive category, hitting .400 with .
23 home runs 69 runs batted In, 17
doubles, eight trtples and 31 stolen
bases In 33 attempts.
RUNNING
NEW YORK (AP) - Ylanrus
Kouros of Greece set a world record
In the 100-mlle road race Wednesday
by covering ihe distance In 11 hours,
46mlnutes, 36 secondsduringtheSrl
Clllnmoy 24-Hour Run.
·The previous record was held by
Don Ritchie of Great Brttaln In 1979
with a tlmeofllhours,51mlnutes, 12
seconds. Ritchie's reco.rd' was set
during the Sri Chlnmoy event.
The Sri Chlnnnoy race began with
56 starters and was schedul¢ to end
at8a.m. Thursday.

Sentinei ~ Page-. 5

Cmsaders-Centenille .tangle in AAA playoffs

..

-blllS..._

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio
Sportlight

guard Gary Sprecher, 6-2 junior
RIO GRANDE - With eight re- Jeit! Deinons.
_
"I am expecting DYke to be very guard Scott Martin or 7-0 junior
turnees and three AII-Distrtct 22
iood and quite improved,"· added ~enter Cleery Stewart.
cagers, the Rio Grande College basTip off Is scheduled for 7: ll p.m;
ketbilll ~men are looking for big Lawhorn. "They gave us a good
at
the Paul Lyne Physical Educagame near the end of last season
things to happen tills season.
tion
Center. For ticket lnfomiation
and they have some good reCruits .
Coming off a 28-8 season tn 1983contact
the Physical Education Of.
who have come in."
84, fifth-year Head Coach John Laflee
at
the
college, (614) 245-5353,
Coming off a 13-15 season, the
whorn has plenty of reasons to be
extension
393
or In Ohio call toll free
Demons wtll once again be under
optimistic about. the future of hls
at
1-!0}.282-7201.
the leadership of Head Coach Miseasoned club.
"Physically we came back to ·
chael Friedman.
The DemonS
are r-::::::=========~
expeeted
to counter
Lawhorn's
school In the best sbape ever,"
squad with 6-3 senior guard Willie
stated Lawhorn. "Our players have
The DaUy Sentinel
Hightower, 6-3 junior guard Barret
worked extremely hard In the
(USPS 111-HO)
jones, ~ senior fmward Ken Corweight program so physical
i\ Dlvl~lon of Multimedia, Inc.
rado and 6-5 junior transfet from
strength should be a major asset.
Published every afternoon. Monday
Cleveland State . University Keith
We wtll also have more depth this
through Friday, 111 Court St. , y the
Golstan. Rounding out the starting
season than the four previous years
Ohio Valley Publlshlng·company t Mulllmedla. Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, h,
lineup will be either 6-1 sophomore
I have b!len here."
992-2156. Second class postage paid at
The Redmen wtll be led by backPOmeroy, Ohio.
court artist Jerry Mowery, a 5-8 seMember: Th £&gt; Associated Press, Innior from Williamsport. The Rio
lt~Ma­
land Dally P ress Association and· the
American Newspape-r Publishers AsGrande quarterback pumped In 15
sociation, Na tional Advertis ing Reprfl.·
!DoG-~
paints an outing while connecting
Nov. tO'- Dyke College.
senta tl ve. Branham New,spaper Sa les,
on 90 percent of hls free throws last
733 Third Avenue. Nf'w 'Vork, New
NOv.l6. 17- MOC Tip-Off Tournament a!
York 10017.
Cedarvti.Je (Rio Grande, Urbana, CedarvUle
season. For his efforts he was
and &lt;Jllo DominJcan).
tabbed second team All-Mid Ohio
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
Nov. 11, ~- WUmJngton College Classic
to The Dally SentlnP!. 111 Cou rt St., Po!Rlo Grando, Ohlp North..-n, Donlson and
Conference, All-District22 and Acameroy, Ohio 45769.
Wllmlll,:ton 1.
demic All-American.
N011. Tl- PlkevWe College.
~UBSCRIMION RATES
Nov. J), Dec. 1 -Alderson-Broaddus Col"l've been pleased with the leadBy Carrier or MGtor Route
lege lnvltatk:lnal (Rio Grande, G lemrtlJe
On• Week .. .... ... ................ .......... Sl.JO
ership that we have gotten out of
State, Alderson· Broaddus and LaRouch).
One- Month ....... ................. ... .... .. 54.80 •
Dec.
3
Bluefield
State
College.
our point guards, Jerry Mowery
One Year .. ............................. .. $57.20
Dec. 5 - Pikeville College.
SINGLE COPY
and Kent Wolfe," .c ommented LaDec. 1, 8 - Bevo Francis. Classic ( Rlo
PRICES
Grande, Edward Waters, W . Va . Tech and
whorn. "We start butldlng our l)asDally ........ ....... ..... ,......... ..... 25 Cents
Dyke).
ketball team from that position."
Dec. 11 - Glenvlllt&gt; State.

1984-85 Rip Grande College Redmen

Thursday. November B. 1984

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�Thund&amp;y,NovamberB. 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

November 8, 1984

slated
today
Baseball's free agent draft
.

Progress oo a Comm\lnlty aware- Uona Club, Nov. 14, Clvttan Club,
ness program for tbe Family . Nov. 19, Heart Asaoclatlon and XI
Support Network was reported by Gamma Mu Sorority, Nov. :20, alid
Noreen Ondrusko, projectcoordina· the Rock Springs Grange, Dec.13.
tor, at the Friday meeting of the
A program Is also bejng planned
advtso~ board held at the Senior
for WMPO. Next meetlngwtll be a
Otlzens Center.
luncheon on Dec. 71n the East-West
Ms. Ondrusko noted that she Conference room · at Veterans
spoke to a number of civic and Memprtal.
religious organizations last month
Attending themeetlngwere board
and will be talking to many more members, Nancy Berg, Florence
this month. Presentations have
IUchards, Dr. David Sutherland,
been made at the physicians' staff Scott Lucas, Teresa Collins, R.N.,
meeting at Veterans Memorial Sid Edwards, the Rev. Rolll!rt
Hospital, the United Methodist Robinson for the Rev. James
Women's group In Racine, and the Corbitt, Dr. James WlthereU, and
CatholicWomen'sCiubofPOI'I)eroy. Mike ' Swisher.. Senior Citizens
PrOJVams have been scheduled for Center staff members at the
this week at the Laurel Cliff Better meeting were Eleanor Thomas,
Health Club, Missionary Club and executive director, and Susan
Chamber of Conunerce, Nov. 13, Oliver. assistant director.

'

around. Wtth the draft, theY have a was re-signed by the Yanks. In 54
NEW YORK (AP) - If all 26 last played.
teams can draft all 56 eligible
But In the strike-bound year of '81, starting point to gauge how much games In 1984 he hit 10 home runs
and batted In Zl runs with a .185
tree-agent players, why go through the collective bargaining agree- lnterestthere might be in them."
average.
Or how little. Every year, some
tbe procedure at all?
ment did away with that 13·team
He was In the free-agent pool
players
are
Ignored.
Those
picked
"It's easier than a player picking . limitation. Any suspense, that a
up the phone and lllllklng 25 cans." player might be .drafted by the by fewer than four teams are free to again today, seeing who -If anyone
sals Barry Rona, the counsel to maximum number before some negotiate with all teams. Oscar - might be Interested In him.
"That's really the only . real
Gamble Is one example.
major league baseball's Player Clubs got their shot, was gone.
rematnlngutlllty
of the draft,'' Rona
He
went
through
free
agency
In
"We responded thatonceyoutake
Relations Coinmlttee, the owners'
said.
"In
the
early
days, you'd find a
1977,
signed
a
hefty
contract
with
the llmlt off, you make the draft
bargaining unit.
lot
of
top
management
people and
San
Diego,
was
traded
after
one
The re-entry draft, a procedure of unnecessary because It provides all
scouts
heavily
Involved.
There was
about 1'h hours, beginning today the clubs with the opportunity to year to Texas and later by the
a
real
ari
to
drafting.
Now
It's come
wlth a few big names- pitchers like select whoever they want" Rona Rangers to the New York Yankees.
down
to
some
administratlvo;'
assist·
Bruce Suiter and Rick Sutcliffe ahd said. "The players association A year ago, designated hitter and
ant
coming
In
with
a
list
of
names
on
first baseman went through free
hillers like Fred Lynn, Andre couldn't diSpute that
a
piece
of
paper."
"But they said the draft was stlli a agency again, went undra!ted and
Thornton and Dave Kingman - In
the hopper.
good Idea because It's a barometer fp~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
The draft became a part of for the players, and the clubs, to
baseball in 1976. Untll1981, a player
know what Interest there Is any
~fS
could be drafted by no more than 13 particular player," Rona said. "It's
teams andcouldnegotlateonlywith more of a convenience to the
them and the club for whom he had
players. Theydon't have to call

Family
Support
network
meets

HA R 1

The Daily Sentinei-Pege-7

Ohio

Moodlspaugh, Andy Robinson, most
original; Floyd Cleland, ugliest;
Bethany Cook, prettiest; 5-8 years,
Jeremy Grimm , most origtnal:
lsrael Grimm, ugUest; Megan and
t abttha Swearingen, prettiest; 9-12,
RandaU Johnston, most original;
Bllly Doczi. ugliest; Jennifer Chas·
teen, prettiest.
Door prize winners include Chad
Hanson. Misty Birchfield, Tara
Schoonowr, Catina Wolfe, Elizabeth Smit h, Amy Hysell, Ja mie
Titl is, Frank Pickens, Brian Smith,
Cluisty Waugh, Mindy Riggs, Amy
Johnson, Ashley Hoover, Jonathan
Pickens. Rachel Hysell and Rox·
anne Williams.
Officials of the cemer ext.e nd
thanks to contributors and volunlf';'rs for their help in staging the
successful party.

Numerous events were featured
and judges for the evening Included

Rutland
•
communtty
Halloween _
party held .
· Well over 500 persons attended a
Halloween party staged at the
Rutland Civic Center under center
sponsorship.

Ga~ Wolfe. Rex L. Roy and Debbie
Pickens. Winners In a pumpkin art
contest are04 years. A.J . Vaughan;
5-8 years, Ray Russell, first; Carrte
Wlltlams, second, and Beckie Ell!·
ott, third; 9-12 years, Carl Williams,
first; Jim Bill Stewart, second. and
Angie Elliott. third. Winners In a pie
baking contest are Shirley Mil ler,
Julia Vaughan and Bebea OTleU,
fi rst. second and third, respectively.
Coloring contest winners, first
through third, respectively, are: 04,
Stacy Will iamson. Tonya Miller.
A.J. Vaugnan; 5·8. Lori Russell.
Ra y Russell , Travis Gral&lt;&gt;; 9-12,
Angie Elliot t, Shelby Napper, Phil·
lip Smith.
Costwne prizes went to0-4, Adam

OF SA JllNGS••••

- - - - - Thistledown results------

BASEBALL PLAYER OF THE YEAR- St. Louis Cardinals'·
relief pitcher Bruce Sutter holds the Seagram Trophy presented Ia him
Wednesday in New York. Sutter, whose t5 saves this season established
a new National League record and equalled the major league mark,
was named the Seagram Sports .\ward 1984 Player of the Year. (.\P
Laserphoto).

'Role players' sought
by Cincinnati Reds
CINCINNATI lAP)- Cincinnati
Manager Pete Rose says the Reds'
are looking for pitchers, relief
pitchers and catchers. However, the
team isn't necessarily looking at the
free agent draft.
"Our Interest will be In 'role
players,' those who can flll a
particular need, everyday players
who can fill a position and help us he
more competitive,'' said Btu Ber·
gesch, Cinci nnati's general
manager.
Reds President Bob Howsam said .
he:s hoping to rebuild the team from
the minor league farm system. The
Reds finished fifth In the National
League West last season after
finishing last the two previous years.

This year's pool of free-agent
.talent Includes St Louis reliever
Bruce Sutter and Chicago Cubs
starting pitcher Rick Sutcliffe.

NORTii RANDALL. Ohio (AP)
-Brian Mllis rnde Iva Amber to
victotylnthefeaturedTemperance
Hill Purse at Thistledown on
Wednesday, touring tbe mile and
one-sixteenth In 1:541-5.
·
The winner paid $5.80, $4 and $3.

THE OHIO ·VALLEY'S
URN PI f AUTO WAREHOUSE
OF GALLI POLIS, 0.

Colerado Tom was second retuming$5and$3.40,andCallcoTom
Cat returned $2.40 for coming In
third.
·
The last race trlfectaof4·5-2 paid
$1,121.40.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT

CONTAC

Special thanks to Boob, Nancy and the
Kids. Thanks to Dave Koblentz for a
dean campaign.

DON E. MULLEN
Paid Pol. Ad by Don E. Mullen, 583 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport

Sutter Isoffering
reportedly
lookinga year.
for a 1
contract
$2 millllon
1-~=====================::J
Sutcllffe, the National League's Cy
Young award winner, Is said to be
!'-~ O"
. s..,. -18
seeking a $1.5 million-a-year offer.
"I don't thinkwe'llbeinterestedln
~"'"~..
o,
the Sutlers and Sutcllffes," said
Bergesch.
"I'm not saying we won't draft
11
them just to he In the ballgame. You
almost have to do that to protect
"THE BOOK" is special new
yourself. You never know what's
edition of the Living Bible. It
going to happen and you want to be
features many benefits for the
e\igible to talk With these people If
inexperienced Bible reader,
the opportunity artses."
such as contemporary .design,
easy-to-read wide-open layout, twenty pages of reader
ment on the matter at this time,"
helps, individual book · introBruce said in a prepared statement:
d~ctio.ns, and chapter subTherewas noanswerWednesday
night at Bates' telephone.
heads. Don't let America disAlthough a summons Issued for
cover Yau without "THE
Bates said he is to appear before
BOOK".
Judge George C. Smith at 10 a.m.
Be sure to lislen to the
Nov. 19, the player's attorney, John
"Pat Boone Show" ~very
Zonak, told the Columbus Citizen·
Journal he mlght seek a probable·
Sunday evening at b:OO
cause hearing In an attempt to get
P.M. on WMPO Radio
the charges dismissed.
Stalion.
Several people, including some
friends of the alleged victim,
reportedly witnessed the Incident.
Zonak said he talked to some
83 Mill St.
. · Middleport .
witnesses and acknowledged that
two are menibers of the football
992-2641 .

Lt N OLN

446-9800

10 CAPSULES

ONLY

PRESENTS

''PRICE BUSTERS'

$2·19

BIC

SHAVERS ••••••••• :~~·.~.~.; 37(

1985

Come In snd See
The Book"
a

ECONOLINE

.Giant Savings on
Wrangler Jeans

F-150

BRONCO II

CHRISTMA~

GIFT WRAP

3 Rolls, 100 Sq. Ft.-Reg. '3.49

$22 7

ONLY

WAS S8,516.25

CHRISTMAS
CARDS
Deluxe Assort,_. By Americ111 Greetings

NOW

'

32cards
·
$319
log. su9 ONLY

$6~81

NOW

SPRAY COLOGNE

''FREE

ONL\~$849
INGLISH LUTHER

rain trres. traction lockrear axle.
WAS 113,724.00
NOW

$12,60900

NOW

$832800

414

as affordable as

ITS

a Volkswagen.

YEAR

Introduci n g th e nli!w Volkswagen .lefto.
The best way to1lppreci al e Its pe ricnn•m,e, its
handling, and its (Omfort is to expN·ifmce the JN"I&lt;l
you rsdf-wilh alt~sl drive. 'todoy.
Yo v ( auld always buy o Germ(ln rood cor. No"'
y o u can afford one.
@It's not a car•
The new Jetta. $8,19 S \S1t'lt's a Volkswagen.

II

AFTER SHAVE LOTION
4 Oz. - Rtg. '6.00

GOOD
SELECTION

ONlY$393

tory air cond., tinted glass. all te r·

German road car

NEW CAR

Reg. 11 1.00 ·

power steering, power brakes. fac-

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANY NEW '84 or '85
'
RANGER PICKUP

$12,452°0

WHEN YOU PURCHASE
A FORD ESCORT or TEMPO
DURING NOVEMBER WE'Ll .
RUST PROOF YOUR

1&gt; Ton Prckup. 6 cyl. engme. 4 speed
lia ns .. po wer steefl ng. power brakes.
long w1de bed . l1 mrted shp rear axle,
rear step bumper, l1nted gl ass
·
WAS 110,410.00

6 cy engine, automatic trans.,

was 115,31 5.oo

300

CIARA-10 Strength Conctntraltd

I Oz. -

V-B engine. auto. trans., P. steer1ng. p.
brakes. gauges, chrome bumper. auxiliary
fuel tank. heavy duty chassis eQuip., p. win·
dows, factory air cond ., tmted glass, tilt
steering wheel, AM/ FM radio. stereo tape,
WSW ttres. wheel cover s, radial tires, bucket
seats, p. door locks.

4 cyl., 4 speed, rear step
bumper, bright low mount
mirrors, radial tires.

Middlepoft ·Book Store

MI.DDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

1985

1985

.,.t

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Roman Ba tes, a junior from Memphis,
Tenn.., who had been starting
fuUback for Ohio State University's
footbaU team, faces a court hearing
Nov. 19 on misdemeanor charges of
assault and sexual imposition.
Criminal complaints, flied by
OSU police, were lodged against
Bates, 20, in Franklin County
Municipal Court.
The 6-foot . 202-pound Bates has
been excused from the team
indefinitely at his request pending
further lnvest!ga tion, OSU footbaU
CoachEarleBrucesaidWednesday
ni~.ht. .
. .
Thisact1on1snotmeanttoreflect
on
eitherBates
the guilt
or instance,
Innocencebut
of •·r ~te::am~·---------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Roman
In this
rather to provide him the opportun·
ity to concentrate on his defense of
tM charges that have been levied
ana to protect the team from any
distractions In preparation for the
games ahead," Bruce said.
"There w!ll be no further com-

NEW YORK (AP) - A decision
on whether to eliminate the desig·
nated hitter, adopt it in the National
League or leave it just In the
American League could rest With
baseball fans, says Commissioner
Peter Ueberroth.
Ueberroth said Wednesday that
he will set up surveys next spring to
see how fans feel about the DH and
will announce a decision next
summer.
"This day and age there are
enough chances, With good surveys,
to ·find aut what the baseball fan
thihks. They pay for baseball. The
fans buys the tickets, buys the
products ... so they should have a
say," he said.
"So we're going to do a survey several of them. I have some that
have already been done, but I'm not
going to announce anything until we
get a pretty good conclusion."
Ueberroth made his remarks
during a luncheon honoring Odlbbe
McDowell of Arizona State, and a
member of the U.S. Ollymplc
baseball team, as winner of the
Golden Spikes Award, given annu·
ally by the United States Baseball
Federation to the amateur player of
theyear. '
·
The AL, lit an eftort to Increase
offense and fan Interest, Introduced
the DH In 1973.
The NL has never approved the
Idea.

MERCURY

I

· Bates faces court appearance

Ueberroth
place DH
issue with
diamond fans

FORD

Q

1984 Vollo.w•{ICJ•''l ol l\rn~'"' ,, I S.·o•hch~ '"'"r!;;]

33

@4 [~51PG·

151
HWY

•Use lor comp anson.
'
Your mrleage may yary.wrlh speed ,

trrp leng th, weather Actual h.ghway ligures lower

and when you
see them, enter
the WRANGLER
Giant Jeans Guess. the
St1tches Contest
and become
eligible to win a
Free Prize. It's
really easy. The
Giant Jeans
have the same
durable stitching
as our regular
high quality

WRA'NGLER
Jeans.

JEEP CHEROKEE
In 1984. the newJeep Cherokee became the f~r s t vehrcle ever named "'4! 4 Of The
Year"' byall three leadmg off ·road ma gaz1nes NowCherokee's berte rthan before.
With new 2.l i1ter Turbo Dresel availa ble, and nol one, butl wo shrli -on-the-tl y 2
WD/ 4WDsystems. Dnve a w1nner

..

®~rangier

Painter's Cap
One per customer

BENYLIN

COUGH
SYRUP

And Fot The

GilANT

JEANS

. ,r~r

20 °/o OFF All WRANGLER
JEANS
GUESS THE SnTCHES CONTEST AND . .
WIN JEANS fOI THE FlMIL Y
. 3 PAIRS WILl IE AWARDED 12 PAIRS Of ADULTS AND
1 PAll Of CHILDIEN'SI ·
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL. 11:00 P.M.

"Over "48 Vltll In Th• Stml Pltcl
Und11 Th1 S•~rt• MtniRIMIIII"

_...

l(ldt,

10.90fa

A.P.R.

oz.$219
ONLY

-(Wrangler Balloon
W6~~~ $11pplg lttlt.

4

ON

FREE

•MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
CORDUROYS ..

QUEEN ANNE'S BEST, 3 IN 1

BOX OF CHOCOLATES
24 OZ.-leg. IS.990NLY

$429

•MEN'S FASHION JEANS
•JUNIOR BLOUSES AND

SWISHER LOHS E

KNIT TOPS
•JUNIOR DRESS PANTS

Phurmocy

•TODDLER JEANS

ltnnot~ ltC~IOO&amp;II,

lftnnlo, Uh.

o,..

1111 I

NOW

S1495

GRAN MARQUIS
V-8 en~ne. I~ rond. heater.
aul&lt;l trant, pow. ':;,t disc brakes.
..ndcws, se~ &amp; door 1oc s, flocw mats,
bod~ lllJilld~P., linl!d glass, cruise
ron ~ AM/FM rid&lt;, wsw rad~allifes.
wheel covers, remote rontrot mirrors,
bumper guards, rear ..ndow delllll!eJ.
was 112,995
NOW

$11,600

195 Upper River Road
·Gallipolis, Ohio

lo1. tluu S.t. 1:00 u11. to 9 p.m.
Sundlf 10:30 1.m. to tUO p.m. lftd 4 to 1 p m
PIESCIIIPIIONS
'
PH. 992~2S55
ftl•d~ Smlct

lilt ltift ll

1978 VOLKSWAGEN
STATION WAGON
4 cyl. enr~ne, heater, automatic
Irons .. body side mouldings, dual
m;rrors. tinted glass, AMIFM rad~.
wheel covers. new tires.
WAS '2295.00

9n MERCURY
MARQUIS 4 DR.

V·B engine, factory air cond ., vinyl
roof, heater, auto. trans., p. steer., p.
disc brakes. body si de mouldings,
tinted glass. AM! FM rad1o, wsw ra·
dial tires, wheel covers, remote con·
trot mirrors.

197
THUNDERBIRD
V-8 en~ne. factory air rond .. heater.
auto. trans. p. steerin~ p. dO&lt; br•kes.
body side mouldrngs. tinted glass. lilt
steering wheet, cruise ronl. AM / FM ra·
dio, wsw rad1alllres. remote control mtr·
ro&lt;s.

was s199s.oo

WAS S2995.00

1979 FORD
FAIRMONT 2 DR.
6 cyl. engine. heater, 4 speed
trans., power steering, tinted
glass, AM radio, wheel covers.
WAS S329 5.00

1983 FORD
RANGER
4 cy . engine, 4 speed· tran s..
long w1de bed, rear step
bumper, tinted glass, AM radio.
was 15995.00

NOW

$2395

NOW

$4995

Pof!Mroy, Oh.

,,,

,,

cal taus and ftts.

LTD 4 DR.

V·B engine. factor)' atr cond., ~My!
roof, heater. auto. trans., p. steenng, p.
disc br~kes, body side mouldtngs.
tinted i!SS. tilt steering wheel, cru rse
control AM/ FM radio. wsw radial trres.
remote control mirrors.

WAS 13995.00

$ 2

$2195

1978 TOYOT~ SRS ·
PICKUP w /TOPPER
4 cy. engine, 5 speed tran s..
rear step bumper. factory air
cond., tinted glass. AM IFM ra·
dio.
was 13495
NOW

$2995

1978 FORD
FAIRMONT FUTURA
6 q engt ne. fa cto ry atr cond . he a·
te r, au to trans .. p. steertn g, p drsc
bra kes . body srde mouldtn gs , tmted
glass. wsw radtal !I res, wh eel cov·
ers. remote control mtrr ors.

WAS 13395.00
NOW

$2495

1979 FORD
F-250
6 cyl. engine. 4 speed trans.,
pow. sleering, pow. brakes, long
wide bed, gauges, rear step
bumper. tinted glass. AM rad&lt;o.
WAS $4995
NOW

$4495

ON THE SHOT
FINANCING
TO QUALIFIED
APPLICANTS
AT FORD
MOTOR
CRE0/1 AND
BANI&lt; RATF:S

SHOWROOM HOURS:

-446-9800 !

Cllorlts Rflflt. R.Ph.

U!.

Jo01fd

AU 1984 CARS AND
TRUCKS IN STOCK

*1 0. 9"1o Annual Percentage
Rate Fiancing o" new 1984
Cars and Trucks for 48
~onths, S1 0,000 Maximum
Amount to Finance, with
20% Down Payment, with
"Approved Credit through
November 17, 1984. This .
means a monthly payment
of $2 5.80 per $1,000.00
borrowed.

no purchase ncccisarv

OTHER WRANGER
BARGAINS

FINANC~G

Only in a Jeep®

•Price quotttl is manufacturer' s bcin price ucluding freight, optiom anti stcite and lo ·

URN PI

FORMERLY RIVERSIDE MOTORS
\

'

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
8:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M.
SATURDAY
8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.

�Thursday, November 8, 1984

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel.

I Area groups meet I
Scout troop 1276

Girl Scout Troop 1Z76 met on
Oct.16 at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
An election of officers was he ld
with Kim Ewing chosen to seJVe as
secretary, Angela Larkins as treasurer, and Mandy Elliott a nd Tanya
J enkins as reporters . Magazine
orders were passed out for the
scouts to sell and refreshments were
served. The meeting was closed
with the slngingofthe girl scout song
and the girl scout hand squeeze.

Builders club
A discussion was held about the
removal of the hlstoical marker
from the Belleville Lo&lt;;ks and Dam
Park when the Ra&gt;dsvllle CommunIty Builders Oub met' rcently at the
home of Mr. and Mrs . Donald
Myers.
Refreshments were served to Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Brown, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead , Mr .. and
Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mr. and Mts.
Roy Hannum, Mr .•and Mrs. Harllss
Frank, .and Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens. Next meeting wUJ be with
- the Osbornes.

Pomona Grange
Jackson County Pomona Grange
members were guests at the recent
meeting of the Meigs County
Pomona Grange held at the Rock
Springs Grange halL
A potluck dinner preceding the
meeting was served to 45 people
attending.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Dan . Stewart,
deputies of Jackson CountY, and Mr.
· and Mrs. Mendal Jordan, deputies
of Meigs County, conducted the
Installation of officers.
The

officers

conference was

announced for Nov. 20at 7:30p.m . a t
the Rock Springs Grange hall with
officers from a ll subordinate
granges in the county being asked to
attend. Plans for the coming year
will be made.
Next meeting will be held Jan .4at
8 p.m. at the Rock Springs Grange
hall. Officers are asked to come for a
7: 30 p.m. rehearsaL Harrisonville
Grange will be·hosts for theJanuary
meeting.

Willing Workers
Members of the Ea rl Pean Willing
Workers Class of the Chester United
Methodist Church met a t the home
of Mrs . Kathryn Mora Tuesday
·night for a masked halloween party .
Guests were taken to a decorated
basement. Prizes were awarded in
four cat.egories-the uglies t, Made lene Branch: the pre ttiest, P aul
. Karr: the furmiest, Leona Machir;
and the most origina l, Wilma
Parker. Judges were Jackie Frost.
Paul and Denise Mora, and Janel
Eblin . Judy Grate was a m ystery
guest costumed as an ape.
Games were conducted by cohostess, BetTy Lou Dean, and Wilma
Parker.
Maurita Miller conducted the
business m eeting with Sidney
Branch giving the blessing. Cider.
donuts. a nd a variety of sandwiches,
chips, breads a nd cookies werP
served to I hose named a nd _Ruth
Karr, George and Helen Wolf,
Grace Gumpf, Kathryn Windon,
Harry Holter, Woodrow and Ka thryn Mora , Richa rd . .Jennifer a nd
Jason Mora, a nd Mike a nd Debbie
Frost.
November meeting will be a
Thanksgiving dinner onNov.11. The
December meet ing will be held at
the home of Mrs. Dean with Mrs.
Mora as co-hostess on Dec_ 26.

Eight-Forty
A total of $1,750 was sent to the
Ohio Chapter of Cystic Fibrosis
designated for research purposes as
a result of the county fund drive
' -carried out by Meigs Salon 710,
Eight and Forty.
A report on the fund drive was
given at Monday night's meeting
held at the home of Florence
Richards. The Salon also donated
$100toDr. Gordon Youngtobeused
for cystic flbrosil; children at
Children's Hospital In Columbus.
The salon also gave $10.50 to the
nurses scholarship fund.
Speaker at the meeting was
Norene Ondrusko of the Family
Support Network, a program of
tralnlng for families with a fraU
elderly person In the home. Emphasis of the network program is to
provide families with expertise In ·
handllng the problems of elderly
relatives In a home situation; rather
than take them to a nursing facility
or other Institution.
Loretta Tiemeyer, chapeau, conducted the meeting with Pearl
Knapp, second member of the state
chUdren and youth committee,
cUscusslng Items to donate for tund
raising work for the committee.
Veda.Davis reported on plans for
providing food baskets for the
tamlllesofchUdrenwlthresplratory
IllnesseS for Thanksgiving and
Christmas. A cash gift for transportation was made to one of the

familles.
-The annual Christmas dlnnerwlll
be held Dec. 3 at Trinity Church with
a 6: :lldinner and a$5giftexchange.
It was announced that the dinner
dance honoring Linda Eclmondson
DeJlllrtrnent chapea\1 will be held
Saturday night at the Bexley
American Legion Post. Going will
be Mary Martin, distinguished
guest chairman, Pearl Knapp, Iva
Powell and Julfa.Hysell.
Fund raising projects were dis·
cussed and It was noted that pecans
are still for sale, along with several
other items. The December pouvior
will be held Dec. 2 and 3 at the
Ramada Inn, Worthington.
A card and flowers were sent to
Betty Van Meter, an active
member,andacardwasalsos!gned
for Gladys Mowery who remains In
a Point Pleasant nursing home.

Harv~t

Jeffers birth

dinner
planned at church

The annual harvest dinner will be
held Sunday at 6 p.m. at the
Presbyterian Church. All members
and friends In the community are
Invited along with congregation and
friends of the Presbyterian
churches In Syracuse and
Harrisonville.
Roast turkey, dressing, homemade noodles, rolls, beverages and
dessert will be furnished by the
Middleport ileacons. Tiiose attending are to take a salad or a cooked
vegetable ..

.....

_.....,

' '' '
Jonl Murray Jeffers, daughter

Des and Jon! Jeffers of Harrlsonville are announcing the birth of
their first child, a daughter, Katie
Elaine, l;lornon Oct. ~at the Holzer
Medical Center.
The Infant weighed five pounds,
two ounces and was 191nches long.
Maternal grandparents are I)eibert
Eugene and Barbara Murray,
Pomeroy; and maternal greatgrandparents are Mrs. Ada Murray, Smithburg, W.Va. , and Frank
Captelna, Charleston, W.Va. Paternal grandJlllrents are Mrs. Bernice
Jeffers of Bradbury and the late
Eugene Jeffers.

New officers were named at the
recent meeting of the Meigs County
Women's Fellowship of the Meigs
County Churches of Christ held at
the Hemlock Grove church .
Elected were Ida Murphy, president: Ma rge Purtell, vice president: Vada Hazelton, second vice
president; Eleanor Hoover, secretary: Jane Hazelton, treasurer;
Ruth Underwood, card chairman;
and Eileen Bowers, news reporter.
Installation will be held on Nov . 29at
the Middleport c hurch. A money
treewUJ bepreparedatthatmeetlng
for benevolent causes.
A reviva l was announced for Nov.
25-:ll at the Pomeroy church with
Gene White as the speaker.
On Nov. 19 at 6::1) p.m., a
Thanksgiving dinner will be held for
all of the Churches of Christ with
Hoyt Allen to be the s[leaker, Also
announced was a meeting of the
Bradford, Bradbury and Rutland
church to plan a retreat for next
year.
The meeting was opened by Janet
Venoy and the group sang "A Story
to Tell to the Nations." Prayer was
by Trudy Andrews. Peggy Brlckies
talked to the group on prayer,
women and voting, and read some
scriptures. There was group singig
of "My Country 'Tis of Thee" with
another prayer by Mrs.Venoy. Ida
Murphy conducted themeetlngwith
Mary Nelson giving a reading, "Are
You Dialing."

Adult Class
Plans for a holiday dinner party
were made and Christmas projects
were discussed at a recent meeting
of the Adult Class of the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.
Meeting a t the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Smith with Elizabeth
:qutty as hostess, the group set Dec.
13 for a dinner tn Parkersburg
followed by a Jllllty and gift
exchangeatthehomeo!Mr. and Mr.
Elwood Bowers.
Names were selected for Christmas fruit baskets and arrangements made to send a gift to Denny
Allen, missionary.
Betty Spencer presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Bowers giving
devotions. She read from Psalms
andhadmedltatlons"LordKeepMe
Going," and "Down In my Heart."
E lwood Bowers had the prayer.
Reports were given by LaDonna
Clark, secretary, and Olive Smith,
treasurer. Mrs. Bowers read "I've
Missed Somthlng," Trudy An·
drews, "Words to Grow On," and
Mrs. Clark, "Grandmas are
Adults."
Next meeting wlll be held In
February at the home of •Mrs.
Spencer with Ellzaheth Ohlinger to
have devotions. Attentllng besides
those named was Gertie Bass.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess·. -

Nuis to you! Delicious delight -adds nutrition to foods

James and Della MU!lron of
Darwin are announcing the birth of
their first child, a son. James
Edward Matthew, Nov. 2 at the
PleasantValleyHospltal. The infant
weighed eight pounds and was ~
inches long.
Grandparents are Della G.
Mohler, Darwin, and Nonnan
Milliron, Apple Grove. Greatgrandparents are Marie Milliron
and Anna Mae_ Mohler, both of
Middleport.

By CINDY
OUVERJ
County
Extension
A ent
c h. estnuts contain very little ~roHome Econornl ; !H
teln. Nuts also contain B vitam. :s.
On a recent walk ';"hro h th
Nuts may be purchased shelled
ug
e or unshelled with the exception of
Na- cashews which are only sold
of bl k . In t
umper arop shelled. Most nuts, except peanutS,
ac ,wa u s and hickory nuts that are sold In shells are not
thlis yeark. Trips to the supermarket roasted. Check the label to see if the
a so rna e us aware that the holi
rod t h bee
day season is fast approachingwith P Sh~~ed a~uts na~a~~~- raw or
shelves full of ail type 1 drled ·
fruits and nuts for baklnsg ~nd eat- rThoaeystedmaayndbesopmetihmsedes bianchded.
urc a
groun or
1
parades and
In whole kernels, broken pieces,
es.
slivers and slices.
t rich flavor and
. Be a smart shopper and compare
N
ure o m a ny foods.
prices before purchasing dried
uts are not only tasty, but nutri- fruits and nuts. Compare costs of
as well . They are filling bedifferent brands, forms and packca:::':~f ~~1riat content. Most nuts age sizes before buying. B11lk packing can be a real cost saver. Shelled
a percent protein and
can be an added source of protein ln
nuts and processed coconut cost
meals. Peanuts are highest in pre&gt;
more than nuts in shells but they
tein at 25 percent. · Coconuts and
are -convenient and take less star-

·1!Je WAKTAOJ'

••

llll!llllllllllllMIIIIII

/l.in~sid

Bsttett
Pulstki

~~:~sip~~~=!~~~ Moth~~

f:t~~f:~elevislon
c:n~~yc~~~:bute
~~us

1

age space. Buy the most economlcal or convenient form for your use.
Quallty of nuts can be cheeked at
the grocery store Shelled nuts
should be plump and fairly unlfonn
In color and size. Limp, rubbery,
dark or shrtveled kernels may be
stale. Nuts in the shell should be

~r:'es~rom

splits, cracks, stains or

Tot maintaeedln best eating quality,
mas nuts n
protection from oxygen in the air and high temperalures that may cause the fat In the
nuts to become rancid . Shelled nuts
will keep fresh for 5everal months
stored In tightly closed containers
in the refrigerator. Shelled nuts In
unopened containers keep well in a
cool dry place but will maintain
quality longer ~~ the refrlgerator or
freezer
Shell~ or unshelled nuts can .be
frozen In tightly closed freezer O'O n-

Sinfet

ON

,(

/

,o

Holiday Dining Room Specials
Regular S279995

Speeis/ Ho/idsg
Pl'ice ·

tr \lstle tab les wi th (l r~r.,a t t c ltam t matcho•l
ve n ec r ~d IO tl l
Chona hutc h ha s liq ht ed rn teriors ,
adjl.lstable gl;,ss sh~ l 11e~ and t!ra wcr and
door sto ra ge A mota n a I R I nl dstoc tO() on
the ~rv e1 ma~ n ot ~l&lt; l •em c ly pra( toca!

.

HEALTH PJWGRAM GIVEN - Dr. '111omas
Morgan of the Holzer Medical Center and CHnlc staff,
recently gave a sessloo lor Meigs Senior Citizens on
health maintance. Here, Dr. Morgan and staff nurse

$199800

WOOth lll d k~ lilt 100111 ~'\.~!l ChL'ei!CI hy tUSI

ond uselu t.
S~:l~ t 110 w diiCI l&lt;l~ ~ on t he 1~: lo w mroo
!JU(IO!V II' l(;t'S '

I

12 Payments
of'

$166 50
GER.

BASSETT

HUTCH, TABLE, .6 CHAIRS
Pecan Finish .
Reg. sl399 95 Special $1 osooo

HUTCH, TABLE, 6 CHAIRS
Cherry Fmish
Reg. s2099 95 Special S1 soooo

Pay S57.7S Sales ·Tax Down Payment

Pay 182.50 Sales Tax Down Payment

$8750

12 Payments of

PULASI&lt;I
HUTCH, CLAWFOOT TABLE, 6 CHAIRS
Oak Solids

Reg. s3799 95

Special S2 7oooo

Pay 5148.50 Sales Tax Down Payment

12 Payments of

S2 2500

12 Payments of

HUTCH, TABLE, 6 CHAIRS
. Oak Finish
Reg. sl&amp;9995 Special S124800
Pay S68.64 Sales l'ax Down Payment

Pay $54.78 Sales Tax Down Payment

12 Payments of sa3oo

TABLE.~ 6 'CHAIRS
Lt. Pine tin ish ·

HUTCH,
Reg. $2199

95

12 Payments of

Pay SU6.95 Sales Tax Down Payment

12 Payments of

S20750

S13300

Students at Portland Elementary
School have been, and will still be,
learning about the democratic way
during this week of the general
election.
Teachers at Portland have taken
the opportunity to Integrate principles of democracy into their
curriculum through puzzles, books,
spelling words and definitions of
words.
Discussions on famous people
have been initiated with Bob
pudding, bus driver, dressing as
Paul Revere, and sixth graders,
Juni~ Beegle and Mack Russell
dressing as Betsey Ross and George
Washington, respectively. Sixth
grader Michael Kin!'aid served as
narrator during the presentation of
these historical cha racters.
A film on the American flag was

••rh•"• ••6·1•os
••••
~allipelh

shown to students and the four flags
that have flown over the count ry
since the revolution are on display in
the school's hallway and will
continue to be displayed throughout
the rest of the week.
On Tuesday, students ·came io
school dressed in pa triotlc colors
and enjoyed eating a pati-iotlc lunch
which among other things. included
red jello with white m arshm allows
and blue whipped cream.
The fifth a nd sixth grade classes
studied this year's presidential race
and also the local county races.
Third and Jourth graders decorated ballot boxes for Tuesday's
mock elec tion during which all
students a t the school had the
opport un ity to cast votes for
president, state representative, a nd
county sheriff. The third a nd fourth

Returns

In:~~
~tan~':a:!wn~=~a~

:~:ga~~ ':t~~n~~~~en~:~t~

poo~ =~n~ ~~a~t~;~~~~a~r

games w hich were enjoyed by about
70 persons attendin g.
A halloween pany was held at the
Chester skating rink with Ms.
Friend conducting a cake walk .
Winners of cakes were Lloyd

a roasted flavor.
Chestnut shells should be slashed
on the flat side of the nut. Place cut
side up in a 400 degree oven, until
tender, about 20 minutes. To test for
tenderness, insert a fork through
the cut in the shelL
Nuts can be used in soups, appetizers, sauces. m ain dishes. a nd salads, as well as in breads and
desserts.
Did you know that peanuts aren't
nuts, as is widely believed. They
belong to the pea a nd bean family .
One pound of unshelled black walnuts will give approximately threefourths or three and one-half
ounces of shelled c hopped nurs. For
additional information on nuts In
fa mily meals and a peanut and sunflower seed guide, contact the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service at 992-6696 or Box 32,
Pomeroy, Ohi o 45769.

•

Pat Boone show
sponsorship named
Meigs Tire Center and the
Middleport Book Store are sponsoring the Pat Boone Show on WMPO
92.1 FM a t 9 p.m. every Sunday. The
one hour show Includes contemporary Chris tian music. artist Intervi ews and comments by Boone.
Amy Grant, Ke ith Grant and others
be will broadcas t weekly.

GARY LINK
DANCE

ENTERTAINER FROM Ft. MYERS, FLORIDA

FRIDAY, NOV. 9, 1984

Arts Council
plans meeting

At 8:00 P.M.
ROYAL OAK PARK ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

The Southern Hills An Council
will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. in the
Fine and Periorming Arts Center at
Rio Grande College, Community
College. Ail members and interested persons are invited to attend .

Sl 500 · Per Couple

TICKETS ON SALE AT THE DOOR
CASUAl ATTIRE
Sponsored by Frank Herald Production Company

B.Y.O.B.

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;,;;;-;;;-~~;;:,;;-;;;·;;;;;;~;:,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~

NOVEMBER SPEC.IALS
Sale ends November 30th
MEN'S

1 lOT OF LADIES' WINTER

SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS

COATS &amp; JACKETS

REDUCED20°/o TO 50°/o

REDUCED 30°/o

MEN'S PANTS

lADIES' LONDON FOG

COATS

REDUCED 2 0 °/o

REDUCED 20°/o
lADIES lONG &amp; SHORT SL£EVE

BLOUSES
REDUCED 20°/o

REDUCED 20°/o

LADIES' lEVI

1 LOT MEN'S

BENDOVER SLACKS
REDUCED 20%-30%

JACKETS
REDUCED 20°/o
MEN'S LONG &amp; SHORT SLEEVE

LADIES'

SPORT SHIRTS

SUITS &amp; BLAZERS
REDUCED 20°/o

REDUCED 20°/o
- -

MEN'S LEVI

lADIES'

DENIM JACKETS

CORDUROY SLACKS
REDUCED 30°/o

REDUCED 20°/o
MEN'S LEVI

DENIM WORK SHIRTS
Req. 522.95

Hosptialized

Elaine Muter and Althea Miller
were called to Allamagordo, N.M.
recently by the illness and death of
Kelly Danieile Miller,lnfant daughter of• Jeff and Linda Miller. The
Infant died before they arrived and
the body was returned to Meigs
County for buriaL Jeff Is stationed at
the HoliiJmanAirForce Base In New
Mexico.

first
nd second
graders.
Toafinish
out the
week. the Chapter
I reading program students will
st.age a play on Friday about Betsy
Ross and the makingofthe firstfl ag.

Wright, Rose Butcher , Marvin
Friend. and E va Robson .
Costumes were judged with prizes
going to Amy Friend, Travis
Friend, J essica Wright, Jenny
Friend. J .R. Blackwell, Kim
Haggy, Alicia Haggy, MissyFrlend,
Kristin Stanley, and Deanna Haggy.
in the children's judging. Adult
winners were Brenda Haggy, Jean
Wright, and Marvin Friend. About
65 a nended the pa rty and enjoyed
skating.
The church's youth group recently had a hayride, a long with a
trip to the Pa rkersburg mall and to
the haunted house there. The
teenage group meets each Sunday
at the church . Sharon Wright and
Karen Stanley are the directors.

r-----------------------

TOPCOAT &amp; CAR COATS

and Mr. and Mrs. Nial Salser have
returned from a tour of several
Southern states in thP Salser's
motor home.
They visited in Alabama with Mr.
and Mrs. Rocky Trampler and
daughter, In Christrna, Fla. ~&gt;1th
Renee Welsh and family , and then
traveled on to Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
where they met Todd, thesonofMr.
and Mrs. Mugrage at P01t
Everglades .
Todd is with the U.S, Navy aboard
the U.S.S. Nimitz. The couples
joined Todd on I he Liberty vessel to
be taken to the a ircraft earner,
Nimitz, which was anchored three
miles out in the Atla ntic. They
toured the carrier, and joined Todd, ·
nephew of the Saisers, for lunch
there, before retUrning to shore.
His address is FN Todd Mugrage,
A. Div. Engineering, U.S.S. Nimitz
CVN68, FPON.Y .. N.Y. 095t2.

Gina Griffith Humphreys, Pomeroy, Is a patient at University
Hospita l, Columbus , Room 812.
Mrs. Humphreeys suffered a heart
attack Wednesday night , was confined to Veterans Memorial Hospital, for two days and then transferred to University Hospital friday
where she is undergoing'treatment.

grades were also in charge of the
special election day lunch .
Pictures of flags were colored by

Pauline Atkins. Esther: Joan Kaldore, Martha; Brenda Kennedy,
Eiecta: Mildred Jeffers. warde r:
and Nonnan Will, sentinel.
A potluck dinner will be sPrved
following the meeting. Members
are asked not to lake desserts.

MEN'S LONDON FOG

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mug-rage

Called away

HUTCH~ TABLE, 6
·
Solid Cfierry

Reg. S3465°0

Special $1 59600

Pay S87.78 Sales Tax Down Payment

_.1&lt;/NCAID

CHAIRS
·
Special. S249QSO

$1 0400

BASSETT

6ER

HUTCH, TABLE, 6 CHAIRS
Pecan Finish Reg. sl499 95 Special S99600

$12 500

S/ QER

12 Payments of

Mary Harrison, R.N ~ show artificial arteries to
Loretta Beegle. Ms. Hanison is the coordinator for
the sessions, of which more are planned for the future
In Meigs, GaWa and Mason counties.

School learns about democracy

Pay Sales Tax of 5109.89 Down : ·

.·

~~ts ;~ ~~s~

New officers will be installed at
the Wednesday night m eeting of
Harrisonville Ch;~pter 155, Order of
Eastern Star, · 7:30 p.m . at the
Harrisonville Masonic Temple.
To be Installed will be Clara Mae
Jeffers, worthy matron; Larry
Well, worthy patron: Karen Fac.meyer, associate matron: James
Sheet, associate patron; Gracie
Wilson, secretary; Donna Nelson,
treasurer; Lois Pauley, conductress: Dorma Branham, associate
conductress; Goldie Reed, chaplain: Chester King, marshall;
Jane Wise, organist; Beverly BIshop, Adah; Ruth Erlewine, Ruth;

~

lletnQihere
Hancuoml' pi&amp;ee~ com tJit! l l:' tn~ select ton
tall w mg !Jack cha tfl wo l! t p &lt;olid ed har. ks J ml
seats or snir•t ll € hack ch ;ur~ . Ootfl t urn ~C:
douhl~
t lNi e~ t a l
talll r l Ot Pml ext ensonn

place
'
·
puMrcahnaysed
nutsOatre
herrseady for use las
.
may requ re
shelling, roasting, toasting, or
cutting.
Hard shells are easier to crack
d
t
ts b ak 1
if
1
soa:!ct
:;ter
several hours s
and 'let them
d before stalin
~
g.
·
the
ing is done In the oven and ioastlng
rna bed
the ~ang:ne in the oven or on top of
T
·

Installation planned
•o /

S€1ec t Bt:d lord VrUage by Bassett no t
ooly fo• th e grea t &gt;tvh rtg ~nd masstve scale ,
hut lor the h~nd painted IClok o f the door~
A bea&lt;!l• lul qlow on g San1p ler Pone fon osh on
tWl!.' v croe~n . pmt: solu.h. and ~lec t tm herd

:t:r~~::p ~fh~~ ;o:~~n~~

FaU activities of the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church included a
Sunday school picnic at the Gavin
Recreation Center, Cheshire. Linda
Frtend, special occasion chairperson, had charge of the picnic and

PAY SALES TAX ONLY AS DOWN PAYMENT

by

nutmeats, if desired, for richer flavor and even browning. Spread on a
shallow pan or baking sheet and
heat at 350 degrees for flve -12 minutes or untU lightly browned, stirring occasionally. Sprinkle hot
roasted nuts with salt If desired .
Toasting may be done lp a heavy
pan on top of the range. Heat nut·
meats slowly-10-15 minutes untO
lightly browned, stirring frequently . Nuts continue to brown
slightly after remf)ving from heat,
so avoid overbrowning in roasting
or toasting.
Cool nuts on absorbent paper.
A few variations of these directions are necessary for peanut.s and
chestnut s . Peanuts s hould be
roasted 15-20 minutes. A test for
doneness is to shell a nut. The skin
should slip off easil y and the kernel
should be lightly browned and have

uurel Cliff Church names acttvttes

12 MONTHS FREE . FINANCING

Bedford Village

tainers at Odegree F . or lower. Nuts
in the shell will keep well in a nut
bowl at room temperature for a
h
·

•

Oak • Pine • Cben•g • Ftulfwood

Early American Country Pine
always a cheerful selection.

The Daily Sentinel- Page 9

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

In the spotlight

NAME BRANDS•••••

Busy Bees
The Mason Busy Bees 4-H Club
met recently at the home of Patty
Maynard.
The club sang "West Virginia
Boys aDd Girls" and gave the 4-H
pledge. Michelle Grimm had devotions. Emily Bumgardner· gave a
report on National 4-H week . The
club won blue ribbons on their
displays a t the Mason City building,
the Mason Ubrary and the Mason
Elementary School.
Samantha Maynard talked about
the officers' training school held at
the Ordinance G rade School In Point
Pleasant. A halloween Jllllty was
held Oct. 30 and plans were made to
rake leaves for the elderly as a
community project.
Attending the meeting were
Samantha Maynard, Tracy DeWees, Emily Bumgardner. MIchelle Grimm, Betty Lake, Tommy
Cline, and leader, P atty Maynard
and Peggy DeWees.

1984

Miliron birth

7

Women's Fellowship

Thu~y.No~ber8,

' ' •'·•••

''A

SALE

LADIES' SKIRTS

$18 95

1 LOT MEN'S
LONG &amp; SHORT SLEEVE

REDUCED 30°/o

DRESS SHIRTS

1 RACK

KNIT TOPS, JACKETS
SLACKS, ETC.
lf2 PRICE

/2 PRICE

1

MEN'S HATS
REDUCED 20°/o

LEATHER HANDBAGS
&amp; SHOULDER BAGS
REDUCED 20°/o

MEN'S SWEATERS
REDUCED 2 0 °/o

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Calendar
11-IURSDAY
POMEROY ;_ There will be a
potluck dinner with meal and
rolls to be fum!shed at the
Thursday night 111eet!ng of
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star.• Officers are
asked to wear their chapter
dresses.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7: :lJ
p.m . Thursday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. past matrons
and past patrQns wUI be honored.

Thursday, November 8, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY- Annual bazaar
at Sacred Heart Church Thurs·
day with serving of dinners to
start at 4: :lJ p.m . Games and
· crafts.
POMEROY - Southern local
Band Boosters meeting 7: ll
p.m. Thursday In high school
band room.
BAILEY'S RUN - Revival
services will be held at the Faith
Tabernacle Church, Batley's
Run, beginning Thursday and
continuing through Sunday.
Worship will begin at 7: 30p.m.
nightly. Everyone welcome.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter, DAR, w1U
met at 1: :lJ p.m. Friday at the
home of Mrs. Clarence Struble.
Col. David Mitchell. ROTC, Ohlo
University, Athens, will speak on
national defense.
ROYAL OAK - Gary Link,
Fort Myers, Fla., entertainer at
Royal Oak Park Recreation
Building, 8 p.m . Friday; tickets
on sale at door,

SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM - A teen
rock dance wUI be held Saturday

trom 8 to 11 p.m. at the Long
Bottom Community BuUdlng.
The dance wiU be chaperoned.
RU'ILAND - The Rutland
Bowhunter's Association will
meet Saturcjay evening, 7: ll
p.m., at the clubhouse. Nom!·
nees for thls year's offices wiU be
speaking. AU club members are
urged to attend.
SALEM CENTER - The
annual Salem Center PrO fall
festival Will take place on
Saturday from 5 untU 9 p.m. at
the elemen,tary school. Games,
fOOd, and a drawing for a boom
box wUI wiU be among the

p.m.

activities at the festival.
RED BRUSH - Weekend
meetings Will be held Saturday
and Sunday at the Red Brush
Church of Christ. Services wiU
at 7 p.m. on Saturday
evening. Sunday morning wor·
ship wiU begin at 10 a.m. and
Sunday evening services at 6
p.m . Denver HUI wiU be preach·
lng. The public Is Invited to
attend.

be!ltn

Happenings

at 7
Monday at the hlgll
school. All parents of Meigs High
Sfhool choral members are
asked to attend and show their
support for the vocal program.

Meeting postponed
ROCK SPRINGS - Thurs·
day's meeting of the .Rock
Springs Grange has been post·
poned untu Nov. 15 due to other
community activities.

Boosters meeting

Boosters meeting
POMEROY -TheMetgsHigh
School Chora) Boosters will meet

POMEORY - The Southern
Junior High Athletic Boosters
will meet Monday night at 7: ll
p.m. at the school.

Thursday, November 8, 1984

Family, medicine ·
By Edw~ Sc~k, D.O.
Assistant Professor
· of FamUy Medicine
Ohio University CoUege
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: My doctor wants
me to have a special test for something he called HDL in my blOOd.
He already tested my cholesterol
level. What will this other test
measure? · ·
ANSWER : In recent years most
of us have heard a great deal about
lowering the l~vels of blood fats
such as cholesterol to help prevent
heart disease, especially "harden·
tng of th e arteries"

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

-Cholesterol level not the only factor in ·atherosclerosis
(iltherosclerosls).
. Much research has Indicated,
however, that It Is not just the level
of cholesterol that Is Important, but
the proportion of the cholesterol
that Is attached to something called
httm density lipoprotein . It Is the
high density lipoprotein, or HDL.
balance that your doctor Is trying to
determine.
Lipoproteins are part of everyone's blood plasma. BlOOd fats
such as cholesterol and trlglycerldes attach themselves to lipoprotein compounds a.nd become a
soluble part of the blOOd·. There are
two major types of lipoproteins; low

density (LDL) and the high density
tentlally harmful effects of cholestype already mentioned.
terol a nd other (ats may be
Low density lipoproteins seem to
·
lowered.
serve as "delivery trucks" in the
used In combination with a
blood, picking up cholesterol part!·
measurement of total cholesterol,
cles and depositing them In the cells
the ratio of total cholesterol to the
of the blood ,vessels. High density
amount attached to HDL Is though!
lipoproteins, on the other hand, aJr
to be a better predictor of heart dispear to resemble " garbage trucks"
ease risk than the cholesterol count
that collect excess cholesterol and
Itself. lt's possible for somebody to
carry it off to the liver, where h Is
have a healthy cholesterol level,
excreted.
but still have a dangerously high
A persiln's susceptibility to heart cholesterol to HDL ratio.
disease depends In part on the rela·
QUESTION: What can I do to
tlve balance of the delivery and · raise the level of HDL In m y blood?
removal systems. If the proportion
ANSWER: Diet Is the most lm·
of HDLs to LDLs Is raised, the poportant factor in controlling the lev·

When

a diet pian for at least sill monthS
before they use drug therapy.

els of lipoproteins In the blood . The
American Heart Association has a
number of guidelines for reducing
blOOd fat levels. These include low·
ering the Intake of foods rich In cholesterol, especially red meats,
shellfish and organ meats.
Some research also shows thai
rt&gt;gular aerobic exercise is helpful
tn promoting high levels of HDLs .
However, diet still appears to be the
primary factor . When diet alone
can not bring the blood ' fat level
within an acceptable range. medl·
cations may be used , but because of
the drugs' side effects, most dOC·
t~rs want the ir patients to stick with

Before closing I should point out
1hat much research on chOlesterol ·

and lipoproteins is curently under·
way. One scientist here at the Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine Is studying the relationship between the type of fat In·
gested and nervous system control
of the hean muscle membrane.1IIs
research, though in Its early s.tages,
indicates that som e modification .
may event uaily be required in dietary recommendation if optimal
health is to be maintained.

Pulpit exchange set for Su.nday
The United Methodist Churches In
Meigs County which have chosen to
participate wlll be having a pulpit
·
exchange Sunday.
.This exchange will given peopleof
the county an opportunity to hear
preach e rs from Methodist
Churches other than their own.

The schedule for the evening
Includes: Heath United, Rev. Paul
McGuire; Pomeroy United Metha;
Cillst , REv. Keith Rader; Rutland
Charge, Rev. Florence Smilh;
Bethany, Cannel, Sulton, Portland.
REv. Roger Grace: Racine Charge.

REv. Steve Nelson; Syracuse
Charge, Rev . Richard Roth(nlich;
Enterprise, Rock Springs, Flat·
woods, Rev. Bob Robinson; Mom·
lng Star, Morris Chapel and Apple
Grove, Rev. Jim Corbitt ; Radio
program. Rev. Andrew Rubenking.

Harrisonville community events ·
ARMSTRO~G

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Mr. a nd Mrs. Phlllip Smith,
Darfene Casto and children, Tracie
and Terry, Pomeroy, Mr. a nd Mrs .
Robert Jewell and Cheryl Lynn ,
Harrisonville, and Ralph Anderson
and Allee Hoffman, Cleveland, were
Tuesday evening dinner guests of
Mrs. PauUne Atkins. Anderson and
Ms. Hoffman have been guests of
Mrs. Atkins for the past week.
Mrs . Ellen Berge of Dayton spent
severat' days here visiting Mr. a nd
Mrs. Cecil Blackwood.

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Boggs, owner of the Mlddlepori
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pair
pants is now underway at the Mlddlel"'rt
establishment. The three people coming closeSt to
guessing the correct number of stitches In these

detlnlllll~ for pants this

Pvt . Rhonda J . Fisher, daughter
of Harold A. and Betty G. Fis her of
Rural Route 2, Letart, W.Va., has
completed training as an Army
military poUce specialist under the

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By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Those visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Hupp at Portland Saturday
night were Mr. and Mrs . Sherman
Reeder and children Kelly, Melanie
a nd Craig of Mineral Ridge;
Ronald Durst of Niles, Ohio: Susie
Reeder of Niles; Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Roush. Mr. a nd Mrs.
Russell Roush, Mr. and Mrs .

'

BEGINS TRAINING - Patrl·
cia Ann Jones, daughter of
Donald and EUa Jones, Reeds,
ville, has started her basic
training with the U.S. Navy at
Orlando,FJa.She wUibetherefor
12 weeks. Jones Is 19114 graduate
or Eastern High School.

· Hoffman

Jewell
Marine Cpl. Ter ry L. Jewell, son
of Pearlle F . Jewell Jr. of Route 1,
Rutland, has been awarded a Meri·
torlous Mast while serving at Ma·
rtne Bar racks, Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba.
.
A Meritorious Mast is an o!flcia'I

Hunter safety course set
Meigs County Game Protector
Keith Wood will hOld a hunter safety
course for ~ginning hunters at the
Shade River Coon Hunters buDding
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Proof of completion of the course
Is required for new hunters and
pre-registration Is required. The
course will begivenmNov.13and14
from6 to9 p.m. and Nov.17from12

recognition from a Marine's com·
mandlng officer for superior lndl·
vidual performance. It Is issued in
the form of a bulletin published
throughout the commanq, a nd a
copy is e ntered In the Marine's pe~·
manent service records.
· A 1981 graduate of Meigs Hig h
School, Rock Springs, he joined the
Marine Corps In January 1981.

noon to 4 p.m. Those attending are to
attend aU three sessions to complete
the course.
Reglstra lion can be taken care of
by contacting Wood at 9854400.
Topics covered Include gun safety,
hunter ethics, law a nd archery,
wildlife Identification, personal
safety-first ald. and muzzle loading.

James D. Hoffman, son of Lyta
M. Roush of Rural Route 1, Letart,
W.Va.. has been commissioned a
second lieutenant In the U.S. Air
Force upon graduation from Of.
fleer Training School a t Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas.
The 12-week course trained selected college graduates to a pply
communicative skills, professional
knowledge, leadership a nd man ·
agem ent to take positions of
respnslbllity.
·
Hoffman will now be
at

The first six Wet'ks grading jlf'riod honor
roll at the Racin(&gt; Elemmtary Sc hool has
tx&gt;t"&gt;n an nounced. Making a ~a d€' of B or
nbove in nlltllelr,subjects to bl- named 10 lht&gt;
roll w('re:
SPcond grad£&gt;- Gra nt CirclE'. EMC'a Dugan .
Ek&gt;th HySf'll, Jeremy lmbod('n, Travis
Mugrage, Kt:'ndra NorriS. Courtnrv Roush.
,J£'remy Smith. J('ni Stewart.
~
Third grndt' - Robert Reitx-r. Rasche!
Rowe. Beth Cla rk . J enny Clf'l•k. R.:1ehP&lt;ll
H ensler. Michael VanMerer. Bra ndi Mallorv.

Jeremy North up, Jenni Hlll .
·
Four1 h grade- JC'remy Dill. HPaftl('r H111.
.Ju ll Hill. Nlkkl Ihle. EddiP Sawvcrs.
FifTh grade- Ke ll i Erv in, J~nney Hol ter.
David lhl£'. Robin Manuel. Trr&gt;voi· PPI r1:.•l.
.lt&gt;nny Varne.v .
SixTh wad£'- Shawn B&lt;lkcr, J arrod Ci rcle.

Jason C!rrle, Shannon Counts. ,Jf'llnv Dam·
ron. .John Hohack, Mellssa .JustiS. Colin

was enjoyed b~ all.
Robert Lawrence and son. Edward
Mrs. Linda Jewell of Letart,
Roush. Becky Teaford, Mr. and
W.Va .. Lorena Hands of West
Mrs. Douglas Sands a nd J oey. Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Lewis, Mr. and Mrs . . Col umbia. Mrs. Lillie Hart of
Racine visited Mr. and Mrs . Gerald
Roger Roush and children Kim and
Hayman Sunday.
Jenny.
Mrs: Erwin Gloeckner spent a
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ralph . Dursl of
month
with her da ughter. Mr. and
Gall ipolis e nt ertained with a wiener
La
rr)· Badgley a nd family at
Mrs.
roast aand hayride recently at
Fairfax,
Va. Mrs. Badgley was
Mcin tyre Park. Gallipolis . A
confined
to
a . hospital there for
wiener roast was enjoyed around a
major
surgery.
big fire and the caretaker took ail
Mr. a nd Mrs. Glen Swartz of
present a ride on a wagon filled with
lllinois
are visiting her mother,
hay through the park. Those
Mrs.
Eu
la Wolfe and son Aaron for
present were Mr. and Mrs. Boyce
a
few
d
ays.
Swartz, Mr. a nd Mrs. Russell Jones
ol Pt. Pleasant: Mr. and Mrs. , - - - - - - - - - - Herherl Rous h. Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa
Your " Extra Touch"
Parsons, Mr . a nd Mrs . Russell
Florist Since 1957
Ro ush, Mr. and Mrs. Doug Sands
and Joey, Nancy Russell, Mandy
and Michaell. all of Racine: Andy.
Kennetta J e ff e rs . Marianna
FLORIST
Jeffers, Xyipha Saunders and Greg
Hoffman of Gallipolis: Mr. and
PH . 992-2644
Mrs. Ralph Durst and children
352 E. Main , Pomeroy
Mary Ann , Judy a nd J ulie. Refresh·
Your FTD Florist
ments were served and a good time

.~~

Maldffis. Norma n Matson, J oyC'C' Pickens.
Jrnnlr&lt;'r Smi Th, l&lt;&lt;'lly Smith. Angel Snidf'r,
Jan Wllllam."i. Sh£'ll y Wlnebrenn£'r. May la

Yoacham.

Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Colo.
His wife, Sheri, is the daughter of
Margret A. Reid of 8356 Benton
Way , Arvada. Colo.
He is a 1984 graduate of West
Virginia Institu te of Technology,

•

I wtnt to extend mg motflinme tbsnh to tbe totm ol
Gt/111, M1111 tnd Atbm Countie~ wbo tuppm,d ""
in m~ inifit1 hid ID' tbe olliee olttflte 'Bptmnftfire ol
tbB 94th /Jisttiet. ltincmlg spp'BeiBte gou, ellotft.
Tbtnk gou.

Jennile, L. Sheefl

THANKS!

Paid by Sheets for State Rep. Com .. Mary Gilmore, Trus ..
Rt. 7. box 243. Athens. Ohio 45701

My sincere thanks to all of the Meigs
County voters who supported me in
Tuesday's election. I appreciate you.
JOHN H. RIDGWAY

Candidate for Meigs County Coroner

Pd. Pol. Ad. by the Cand .. Rideway Rd .• Pomeroy, Oh.

Meet a
casual acquaintance
from Dexter.

'

10 Year Compressor Warranty

$499

one station unit training iOSUT)
program at Fort McClellan , Ala.
OSUT Is a 13-week training period which combines baste training
with advan~ed individual training.
Students were trained In civil and
military law, traffic control, map
reading .a nd self-defense.
- · She is a 1983 graduate of Wa·
ha ma High SchoOl, Mason; W.Va.

Army Spec. 4 Leon G . Gray, son
of Lloyd G. a nd Gertrude C. Gray of
102 Third and Anderson St., Mason,
W.Va.. has arrived for duty at Fort
Benning, Ga.
Gray, a supply specialist with the
197th Infantry Brigade, was previously assigned at Camp George.
South Korea .
He is a 1982 graduate of Wahama
High School, Mason.

Auto. Color · Auto. Fine Tuning

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participation.
·

Gray

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Jumbo jeans, win each win three pairs of Wranglers.
'The conteSt ends this weekend and the winners wUI be
announced Monday. The correct answer Is sealed In
an envelope which won't be opened untO the store

- - - - I n the·service---- Honor roll ·
Fisher

599
nell

Tuesday for Florida wheretheywUI
spent the winter.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire spent the
weeke nd in Columbus visit ing Ray
Alkire and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Gibson .
Mrs. Esther Brandan of Vinton
was the weekend guest of Mrs. Lola
Clark .
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. d~d ·
Mrs. Earl McGrath and Chancey,
a nd Mrs. Rhonda Jones and
children, Rutland.

Apple Grove community happenings

SYLVANIA 8 HR.

NE-660

Mrs. Pauline Atkins a nended the
112th session of the· Oh io St•te
Grange held recently in Columbus.
Sunday dinner guests of Stella
Atkins and Ruby Diehl wereGiona.
Linda and Lisa Riggs, Hal and
Wanda Johnson, Mr. and Mr , Bob
Jewell and Cheryl Lynn. PaulinP
Atkins, Frances Young, Norma
Lee, Alice Hoffma n, Ra lph Ander·
son, and Mr.. and M1·s. Duane
Stanley.
Mr. and Mrs. K.C. . Welsh left

$249
Not Exactly As Pictured

LIMITED QUANTITIES - NO RAINCHECKS
614 Sll VER BRIDGE PI.AZA
446·8051
MON.-FRI. 10·9; SAT 10-7

SUNDAY ClOSED·

PINE&amp; THIRD
OPEN MONDAY

THRU FRIDAY
9 A;M. Til 5 P.M.

Chapter 53 DAV to
Several state and district officers
will be on hand when Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans,
. meets at 6: :lJ p.m . Monday at the
chapter home on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
Vlsltlngthe unit wUI be James F.
Vollmer, ninth district commander; Ar\hur Leach, senior vice
commander, department of

me~t

David Helton, second junior vice
commander, department of Ohio,
aild WUlle Roe, past ninth district
commander and commander of
Chapter45.
The meeting wiU be opened to a
question and answer session and aU
veterans of Meigs County having
questions are Invited to attend the
session.

TI:IE DAILY SENTINEL
Is Now Taking Applica'tions For

Silver Bridg~ Plaza
Ph. 446-8051

CARRIERS
In' The Pomeroy Area
CALL 992-2155
Between. 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

*Wheel Chairs
*Crutches *Walkers
*Hospital Gowns
*Neck Braces
*Bath Tub Security Rails
·*Disposable Incontinent
Briefs .in Bulk Packages
*Orthopedic Cetvical

The hardest thing to do these days is to dress up without looking overdressed. Dexter's dress casuals come to
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In today's world of fashion, put your best foot foJWard in
dress casuals from Dexter.
Colors: Gray &amp; Cinnamon S
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OPEN UNTIL
7 P.M. FRIDAYS
MIDDLIPOitT

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

�Page-12-The Daily ,5entinel

Thursday. November a. 19a4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

U.S. offic ials. who asked not to be
identified, said the, warning was
delivered through diplomatic chan·
nels on Tuesday, the day before the
vessel anived at Corinto, on
Nicaragua 's Pacific coast
Nicaraguan Foreign Minister
Miguel D'Escoto said shortly after
the Vessel docked that the cargc did
not include MiGs.
But one U.S. official said, " Nobody's dead sure. It could be toys for
tots. " He added, however, there was
no question that the cargo loaded on
to the vessel at a Black Sea port In
late September was contained in

Pastor vows he'll
defy judge again

PITTSBURGH (AP ) - A de·
Crocked Lutheran minister who
champions jobless steel workers.
saying he was "called to be a pastor
and not a ppea r before judges,"
vows to stay in tlis church despite a
court order banning him from
conducting services .
Allegheny County Common Pleas
Court .Judge Emil Narick on
Wednesday found the minister, D.
Douglas Roth, guilty ofcontemptfor
defying an injunction banning him
from conducting services at Trinity
Lutheran Church in Clairton.
Narick ordered Roth to appear in
court Fti day or, "l'llhave thesher!ff
do what it takes. This court is not
powerless."
Roth was defrocked and · dis·
m iss e d by thee Western
Pennsylvanla·West Virginia Synod
of the Lutheran Church of America
in late October after 71 of Trinity
Lutherar's 190 members protested
his involvement with a militant
group that demands jobs for Ia id-off
steel workers.
Narick told a t1orney Thomas A.
Cra wford that Roth could "purge
himself" Friday by promising to
obey the injunction, issued at the
request of Lutheran authorities.
Roth did not at1end the two-hour
hearing.
''I'm going to stay here at the
church, " Roth. 33. said Wednesday

Legion dinner planned
Feeney·Bennett Post 128, Ameri can Legion, a nnounces that there
will be a dinner at the post home for
the annua l Eighth Disrict member·
ship round-up train visit Saturday.
Members of the Ladies Auxiliary
will serve the dinner at noon. All
members of the post and thetr
spouses are invited to at1end.

by telephone from the church,
where he is holding a week-long
vigil.
"I'm called to be a pastor and not
appear before judges. The judge has
na.jurisdiction over this maner .·' he
said. "I'm willing to go to jai!'tor the
unemployed. If they want to ja il
pastors who fight for the unem ployed , then that's up to them. "
Roth faces fines or a county jail
sentence if he fails to appear or
refuses to obey Narick's order .

Clay E . Green. 85, Tuppers
Pla ins. died Thursday, Nov 1, at an
Akron Hospital.
Mr . Green was born and reared at
Tuppers Pla ins. He went to Akron in
1926 where he was employed by the
B. F . Goodr ich Co. for 37 years. He
had been a resident of Tuppers
Pia ins for the last 10 years.
Surviving are a brothe r , Vern of
Phoenix. Ariz: a stster . Florence
Booth of Phoenix, and severa l
nieces and nephews. Preceding him
in death were his parents. Herbeti
and E va Green. and his wife, Della
.May Downs Green.
Servtces were held Monday in
Akron and 6ur ia l was there in the
Holy Cross Cemetery.

Wayne H. Chase
Wayne H. Chase, 86, Route 2,
Albany, died Tuesday night a t
Veterars Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Chase was born in Athens
County, a son of the late Gartlner
and Kate Wells Chase. He was
·retired from the Agriculture Stablli.zation Conservation Service where
he served for 30 years and he was
also a farmer .

Weather forecast
'fonight, mostly cloudy with a
slight chance of showers. Low near
45. Friday, cloudy with scattered
showers. High ~. The chance of
rain Is lJ percent tonight and 50
percent Friday.
Extended Forecast

·SaiUrda:l' through Monday:
Scattered llhower!ISalurdayand a

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE , OHIO.
.

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Freda Duffy, Syracuse, died
Wednesday in Veterans Memoria l
Hospital.
.
Arrangements will be announced
later by Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason. W.Va .

Spaghetti dinner set
A spaghet11 dinner, sponsored by
the Bradbury PTO, will be held
Saturday at the Middleport Masonic
Temple Basement. Serving ttme
will be from 4 to 8 p.m. with
carry-out orders available from 4 to
5: 30 p.m.' Prices will be $1.75 for
children under 12 and $3.50 for
adults.

Dinner, dance set

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

'
.
amendment was favored by 424,965
voters, or 66 percent. Those oppos€d
numbered 215,006, or 34 percent.
One of the major opponents to the
measure was state rax Commissioner Ned Rose, who doubted thata
lottery could show a profit lnltsearly
years. After that, a lottery could
generate$5milllonlnagoodyear, he
said.
Rogers said Rose opposed the
lottery amendment from the start
and searched for the worst'(!ase
scenario in criticizing the proposal.
"The figures that Ned Rose had
were based Ofl the state of Maine,''
Rog&lt;ers said. "Maine lssolsolated. It
was a lonery that was not
promoted."
Rogers said that in the states with
lotteries , an average of $72.10 was
bet per capita in 1983.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) West Virginians could have a state
lottery within a year thanks to their
overwheiming approval of a consll·
tutional amendment allowing the.
state to get into the gambling
business, the amendment's sponsor
says.
State Sen. J .R. Rogers said he
already has ordered copies of
sta tutes from the 17 states that
currently run lotteries.
"Hopefully we can review them
all and compile the best, ' ' the Boone
County Democrat said Wednesday.
"We'll start working on It immediately so we can have somethillli
for introduction on the first day, or
the first week the Legislature

r'•

'

convenes.''

With 99 percent of the state's 2,246
precincts reporting, the lottery

.
For his projections, which indl·
cate West Virginia could realize S25
rnlillon · to $30 million per year,
Rogers estimated that West VIrgin!·
ans would bet an.average of $33 per
year. Some 42 percent to 18 percent
of the $66 mllllon grossed would be
returned to the winners, 10 percent
to 12 percent would pay for
operating expenses, and the state
would net the rest, he said.
Keys to the lottery's success
would be aggressive promotion, the
us.:&gt; of several different games, and
at1ractlon of benors from surround·
lng states, Rogers said.

Office closed Friday
Meigs County's Planned Parenthood office will be closed Friday for
a staff meeting and again on
Monday for Veterans Day. Tuesday
office hours will be 10 a ,m. to 7 p.m.

Judge Patrick O'Brten concluded
30 cases Wednesday In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Fined were Lyle W. Hysell,
Pomeroy, $250 and costs, three days
in jail and a 60-day license
suspension. or, driving school and
jail with $100 of the fine suspended
for DWI, costs only for driving left of
center; Da\1d Young, Albany, $100
and costs, reckless operation:
William J . Wise,Mlddleport,$75and
costs, three days suspended jail
sentence. and one year probation for
no driver's license, $.lJ and costs for
an improper turn; Terry Williams,
Racine. $50 and costs, unsafe
vehicle; Charlie M. Mathews,
Racine, $25 and costs, failure to
control V!'hicle resulting In an
accident; Claudia Kruskamp, Che-

LARQE 11 SNAU IOU
PH. 992-2478

912711 mo. pd.

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Middleport. Ohio
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SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd .

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-4269
II No Answer, Call 985·4382
We Service All

Mal&lt;oo t1o Models
Antenno Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

"Servtce that Towers Above
The Resl"

costs: Wilham Workman, Metropolis. Jll., $W and costs; Jotm
Hutchinson, Galloway, $23 and
costs: Robert McClure, Letart,
W.Va .. $Wand costs: Gary Hutton,
Albany, $26 and costs; Keith
Barret1. Hartford: W.Va .. $22 and
costs; Richard .Jeffers, Pomeroy,
$20 and costs: Randall Kimes, Long
Bottom, sw· and costs; Jeffrey
Crum, Chauncey, $22 and , costs;
Roger Jeffers, Pomeroy, $22 and
costs;, Edward Sofranko, Gallipolis,
$20 and costs; and Gabriele Sat1Ien,
Gallipolis, $24 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Gregory
Dickinson, Gallipolis, $70, no driv·
er's license; JuQa.l S. Terry,
Parkersburg, $50 for speed!I.g; and
Claudia Tuggle, Rocky Mouht,N .c..
$45 for speeding.

shire,$20ardcosts, failuretocontrol
vehicle; Ephrlam Herdman, Pome·
roy, $20 and costs, e xpired registra·
tlon: Jotm Casto, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, insecure load; Thomas
Moore, Langsville, $10 and costs,
failed to display valid registration;
~ld Dill, Minersville, $10 and
costs, parking on roadway; Kristen
Watson, Thornville, $10 and costs.
speed excessive for road conditions;
and Kay Woodyard, Albany, $5 and
costs, defective brakes.
Fined $10 and co&amp;ts for running
stop signs were Bessie Hamm,
Morehead, Ky:. anp William Gil·
more, Middleport. _
Fined for speeding were Jotm
Kellis, Athens, $21 and costs:
Charles Carter Jr. , Belpre,·$20 and

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PH. 992-5.6 82

Free Estimates

or 992-7121

949-2969--949-2263

J-U ·llt

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

· No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
. BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
For Faster Servtce
Call 614-992-6737

Complete Guner Work

CLEVELAND (AP l - Ohio
Loti ery officials say no one correctly
picked the six winning numbers
drawn Wednesday night in the
semiweekly "Ohio Lotto" drawing.
The six winning numbers were 2,
9,14,15, 21 and 34.
The winning number drawn
Wednesday night in the Ohio
Lott ery's daily ga me, "The
Number, " was 781. The lottery
reported earnings of $574,009 from
wagering on "The Number. "
The earnings came on sales of
$1,196,491, while Molders of winning
tickets a re entitled to share$622,4(12.
In the "Ohio Lotto" game, sales
totaled $1,916,236 .
There were 250 tickets sold that
listed five of the six winning
numbers for $575 each. The 9,970
ticketholders who picked four·of the
winning numbers each win $40.
The jackpot for the next "Ohio
Lotto" drawing on Saturday Is
estimated at $1.6 million .

('

"

I

" '·"!'MIA*

c .. ~ ~I'~ ' ""- ' ~"' " ' """" ""''

21 fl•••nouOpp ~n ......,

Nni~o•d •n""'"'"" '
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2) P&lt; OIWUoO .... j iO ..

B P"t.c 5olo

J JJ.,..,,,., I olo

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l. "'"c" o"
9 Wo•ttO 10 llu•

J 4 h 01,..11 B..,.ofon.,
l l loto &amp;
zetllooll ii MIWo"'o•

11 f uol oOo • • ' ' ' ""

-

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' ~ ~e ~oo t •
~Odt O TV &amp;

I6

C B lluoot

I 1 Mto&lt;tUonn • •
tiWonMd l oOa

:~~=:~~~:.~'Ront
" 5 ........ ~ •• "· ~"' ·
&lt;II Spore lm ~..,,
" 7 W ontod oo fl on&lt;

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FtOUCIARY

On N ov~m b,EH 5. 1984 1n th e
M mq s Coun ty Probate Dourt
CJse No 2 4 . 537 An n a
SornQue 3550 5 Sheets Street.
Dext ~&gt;r Oh•o 4 5726 wa s a p PO•nterl fxecuTnx of the P.sta te
of OlJrJes Robert SpriJgue. de ·
r.e.:t c;f'd . bte of 35505 Sheets
Str eP.t Dexte1 , Oh to 45726 .
Robert E Buck
Probate Judg'e

Bv Lena K. Nesselro&lt;id

It 118 I 5 23 3Jc

Clerk

Troop members sought
Public Notice
Boy Scout Troop 244 has recently
been formed in Racine. Any boys in
Racine or the surrounding area are
invited to join the troOp for fun and
adventure. For information, call
Bill Roberts, scoutmaster, at 949·
:JXJ2, or Ro~ Dowell, assistant, at
949·2232.

'

Bll ·•~lt ndo

S.O•• &amp;

'' '"'JI 1'1 ' ' " ' ·r Ill,.

Gall • c~"" "'

AA c•g•

l tto too- 11 ••

C o ~ ~h

"' ' • •• C•NI•t;l 4

048

GOII II&lt;&gt;'• •

IU

C l'&lt;'• • "~

H6

v·~ ·~~~
~ .~ c

1 !tll

G•••• O•to

......... c .

.... ~ .

~~~ ~

c,. ,. ~

Ractne. Oh.
Ph. 614·843·5191

106 lit

YOUNG'S
CA~PENTER

SERVICE
- Addons and ramodehng
- Roof•ng and gutter work

] OJ

p~' "" ~~

14 7

l e iJn • • " •
~49 - R • &lt;• M
f

U 3 "••1&gt;•• 0 11
J l~ "'"""'

~ :~ ~ ::::~;::.,

r,.,,,,.,

" c..,.,,,H••' ""
B R N ~ ~ '"'"

:

llp o o l~

.. o•d •

un '" I~ .." '"'

87 Up... I•U 'Y

U..t o i S Woo do

OnoO• ••"oG!Ito "
Tnou o .. '"'"'oM
s, , ~""""'""n

'•on
A a~lt

Gm•o

7JJ .... . ,..,
6~1

N• • Ho.o n

IQ~
tl7

'''"'
II !J II• &lt;o

-J

'JOO
~ " 00

• 7 00

!&amp;"'"8'04 "'"'"' d~ lone t

q uest J mflP.IlnQ reCJ:Hdo nq ;my
no n-hnal ac t1o n w tthln 30 rl.Jys
of th e date 1nd1cated Act1on".
as used above does not 1ncl ude
re cetpt of a venf 1ed co mpla1nt If
S1Qn1f1ca nt publ1c tn terest exISIS a public meet1 ng may be
he I ~ , As to anv ac110n. tncludtng
rece tpt o f vertf1ed complal nfs.
any person may obta1n no t1cP.
of furthe' ac ttons. and additiOnal 1ntormat10n Unless oth·
erw1se provtded 1n not1ces of
part •cular acttons. all commun1cat1ons shalt be sent to Heanng

Ph.

16 t 4)466·603 7. Cons"IJ ORC
Chap. 3745 and OAC Chaps.
37 45·47 and 3746-5 fm

'

Admissions--John Metzger, M!d·
dleport; Sidney Burton, Middleport; Ella Stewart, Middleport;
Martlri Mollohan, Pomeroy; Ray
Ellls, Pomercy.
Discharges---Harold Smith.

St . Colu(flbus. OH. 43215 No·

1•ce of any appea1 ·shall be flied
w rth the D•rector wrthm 3 da ys.
Proposed ac t1ons w111 become
fi nal unless a wn nen adJUdi Cati On hea nng reques t IS subm tt· ·
ted w 1thtn 30 days of th e
[

Thts f•n•l actton not pre·
ceded by pr oposed act1on and

. •s appealable to EBR 30 5
acres.
( I I ) 8.

MOTEL

PARTS and SERVICE

9/1312mo. pd.

turo , 446-3159, 3rd. I!&lt;

3 Announcements

Ol ~ ve

SWEEPER and sewing ma chine repair, parts. and
1uppUes. Pick up and deliv ery, Davi" Vacuum Cleaner.
one half mile up Georges

Creek Rd . Call 614·446 ·
0294.

CHIMNEY KING
CHIMNEY

SVI!~EP

'DOZER · BACKHOE
'RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL FIELD SERVICES
' DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
' CONCRETE WORK
' CUSTOM BUILT HOMES

'WATER . GAS &amp;
OIL LINES

Complete Dustless
Chimney Cleaning

11·1 lie

SKATE-A-WAY

RENT A CAR

CHESTER. OHIO

CALL
446-4522

Avcilable for Birlhdays
&amp; Private Parties
Skates &amp; Aaessories
Public Skating
WED., FRI. &amp; SAT.

"We Rent

For

10·16. I mo.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
,
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

I

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

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

949-2860
·No Sunday Calls

~

nttmll 911

Country Cr9ff

$bow

Cl

2 Milts 'OUt Flatwood1 Rd.
Off St. Rt. 7

z

ii2

Nov. S-Dec. 8

~

Mon.·fri. 9-9

i-

Sat. 9-5; Sun. 1-5
Kim Nelson
992·2903
Ruth Ann Toylor
992-3566

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
8/ 13/ lln

~~~W~N~:N~~G~I~:S 1~

. ;r; tl-.
~.

I~

SA VI ON FUlL IILL
INSULA. J1 YOU II A. TTIC 011 WHOLf ;'
HOUSf

Golf lessons
Sat. &amp; Sun.
AdtAts 6/'40- S""'"" 6/13

hitting area. Christmas

East Meigs
10/1 211 mo.

~=II

Econoline Home Insulation Inc.
,

,_

t.l. I!UIN

·

gifts. trophies, plaques.

JOHN TEAFORD

11llflltlfMII
RtpiiCitlltrll

~~· l. 1 mo. pO

)f.;;,_~~·

.

t.l. ltttG .
Sola.,_

_llntt Offkt 111,., 01111 . 114-42l-7!il•

POl ••• IITIMAtiS •

/ ~ PHONIIIOINI llt.IAIANI, 104-67S-a961.

Real Estate General

~w:t"

M. l. 'Bud" McGHEE

M~GHEE
~

Broker -Auction Service

Cheryl Lemley.
Metgs County Assomte

Phone 742-3171

, Now Accepting listings in Meigs Co .

Rea I 'Estate General

11·5·1 mo.

riB\

e

II 1111

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
Or
843-5424
liMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL- FILL DIRT

9·1J.ltn

CLINIC
IN MIDDLEPORT

E. SHOCKEY. D.V.M.
OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT.PLEASANT OFFICE

Pj\UL

3305 JACKSON AVE.

SMALL ANIMAL HOURS
llondoy 3 p.m.·5R.m.
.
T111dsay 6:30 p.m.·8 p.m.
Wodnoodoy 3 p.m.·5 p.m.
Thursdoy 3 p.m.·S p.m.
Fridoy I p.m.·2 p.m.
Sltl'dly 10 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
LARGE ANIIIAL AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT
10·18·1 mo.

Chimney
Care

Kitterls to good home ap prox 7 wks. old, calico &amp; all
shapes &amp; sizes . Call 614-

2 black kittens. 8 wks old . 1
'w hite female cat, 2 yrs . old .

Call 44);·3790 after 4pm .

9 pups, % German She pherd, 'h Doberman , 6 wks.

old . Call 367-0243 altar
4pm .

2 kittens &amp; 1 poodle, 1 part

beagle Call 446-0770.

Female A1rdale mixed
puppy, 6 to 8 months old.

304 -675· 7660 or 675 ·

4133 after 5 .
shephej.d Collie pups. 10
Free tq good home beautiful
inside cat . Declawed.
spayed. has litter box . bowl .

food . 304-675·6053.

6

lost and Found

Found in Cadmus area black
Great Dane or labrador.

Please call 614-379-2262

after 4PM .
LOST. Black, brown and
wh1te male Beagle and re d
and white ·temale Beagle in
Bunker Hill area . Please call

1- - -- - - -- - .11 Help Wanted
1- - - -- - -- - Secretary &amp; Office Manager
wanted for local company .
Experience needed in work ing with salespeople Salary
plus comm rsst o n . 10 -4
Mon-Sat . Must be dependa ble. Please send resume to
P O. BOx 729 Athens. Oh

446-2062

10·8·1 mo.

23

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning and Repa1r.
Brunicardi Music Co ., 446 0687 . Twentieth year of
quality service Lane Da -

niels. 614·742·2951 .
REMOVE UNWANTED
HAIR : No patnl No needJet
Approved depalator me ·
thod . Removes unwanted
hair permanently . Cal l

todav-61 4-992 -6720 . Top

45701 . or call 614·593· HAVE YOUR LIFE INSU ·
RANCE POLICIES RE ·
5245
VIEWED ANO UPDATED .

Medical record s tec hnician
full time positton. reqUirtng
eXcellent communication
sktlls, typing of 50 words per
minute , experr~nce and
knowledge in workmg both
medi c al terminlogy an d
medicpl records . Appl y 1n
per son at Scent c Hills Nurs·
ing Center by Fr1. Nov . 9 ,

9·00AM .

.

Oak Hill Commun ity Med ical Center. Inc .. 1s currentlY
ac cepting applications for
AN's for · both full and part
time positions . To apply
please contact Sheri John·
son, RN, D irector of Nursing

at 614·682·7717. ext . 239
Monday thru Frtday from 8
to 4 .
We are looking for aggres·
siva professional to manage
our growing meat operation .
Our super market is located
in a small town in Sou theastern Ohio . Please send
resume to P.O Box 729V in
care of the Dailey Sentinel.
Hygemc Aid . 7 days on 7
days off. 7 AM to 9 AM ; 2
PM to 10 PM . Contact
David Eakl e. 304 -762 2522 . Equal opportunity
employer .
Earn extra m oney f or Chrtst ·
mas with Rawleig!l Pro ·

Martin·6 1 4-992· 7022 .
PIANO TUNING t1o RE
PAIRS - Tune up for the ho ·
lidays. Spec1al diScount tor
limited time . 304 - 675 -

5500

Rea I Estale
31

Homes for Sale

Three bedrooms, central air.
vmyl wall paper. carp et
throughout . well insula t ed ,
new paint , attached garage .
gas outdoor grill, awn1ng s,
many extras . Calf 446 -2583
til 5 :00PM , after 6 :00PM

call 614·245·5659 .
Middleport home priced to
senr We MEAN priced to
soli I! . Call 61 4-992 ·6941 .
Sale o r Ren t : 1% y r. o ld . 3
bdr . h o m e o verl o okking
Ohi o A rver. full u nftnished
basem ent . lg kitchen &amp; livrn g r oom Call after 5 ;00

p.m. at

4~6 · 8095 .

By ow ner, modrhed A -frame
w1 th f ir epla ce and woo d burn er o n 5 acres. Hard w ood and frui1 trees wi t h
gard en spa ce Fully car pe1 ed Owner moving . Re duced for qu1ck sa l e .

7

12

Thre e b edroom home for
sale by owner in Bradbury .
So m e furniture included .

·······c;aiHi&gt;oHs...... ···
&amp; Vicinity
Gerry Grubers, second
house -Turkey A un Rd. Che·
sh~re Oh . Thursday, Friday 8
to 5 , clothes. cheap, misc .
1 mi . N . of Eureka , Teens
Run Rd .. 1 mi.. Fri .- Sat ..
win1er wear , furniture, Rainshine.
lots of Dishes &amp; Misc . ! 24
Crozet Ave ., Gallipolis ,
Ohio. Fri &amp; Sat.

.......PfPieiisiliiC ..
Porch Sale, Starts Nov 8
thru Thursday. Something
for everyone , antiques. Two
miles off Rt. 87. leon Satan

Situations
Wanted

Will do babvsittong in mv
home. have referen ces &amp; ex perience. Call 446 -7336 .
Female room ma te to shd re
two bedroom apartment in

Middleport. call 614 -992·
5009 alto' 5PM
Will do general ho usekeeping at a reasonabl e price
Dependable·. Call 614 -7 42 -

2669 or 992·63J; 3.
18 Wanted to Do

hom e . Full basement . Cen tral heating , 1 V2 bath, upper
Middleport Good home or
rnves tment property. Must
sell · reasonable offer Only
r eally interested persons
please c all E R Yost 614 ·

949·2582.

Fo ur bedrooms, kitchen family room with firepla ce ,
finished basement , Poin1
Pleasant . Shown by ap -

1 1h bath, living, dining, TV.

-Jc Baby sitting in Pome rov and
Middleport vicmrty call 614 -

rooms . large kitchen . large
utility room , new roof , sid ing, gutters . painted, carpet ,
porches . 3.4 acre ,
$46 , 000 00 negoti a bl e ,

wood . Call 256· 1528.
992 · 7598 or 614 ·992 ·
5616 after 4pm .

304 -468 -1800.

Two women wrll do house
cleaning and office cleaning ,
reasonable rates . 304 -675 -

Priced reduced total el ec .
central air . new wood
burner , small alec . bill, wall
to wall carpet, 3 br, brick ,
large garage, wood shed ,

5356.

Yard Sale. 58 Burdette.
New and Used mdse. Nov.

676-6512 . You name it we

3069 .

4 bedroom . N icer solid older

ARBUCKLE . 3 bedrooms.

Need anything fixed call or
bring to Ftx -lt · Shop , 86

Auction every Friday night ,
at the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise avery week .
Conaigments of new &amp; used
merchandise always wel comed. Richard Reynolds.
Auctioneer . Call 304 : 276 -

Call 614 -992 -3187

pointment, 304-675-3079 .

Road . phone 304-458 ·
1892 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Call 614 -843 -

f~re ­

Will cut and deliver

Gallipolis Forry. 304-675 6851 .

Burdono Addn, Pt. Pit. 304- 1- - -- - - - -- -

work on il .

3 br ranch . 7 miles from

Holzer Hospital on Rt . 160.
No down payment. 304 -

Will baby sit in my home,

676-7746 .

Will do baby sitting and
house cleaning. 304 -675 -

BY2 acres. 3 bedrooms , 2
baths , outbuilding, pond ,
8 Y2 a s sumable loa n

$65 .000 .00 . 304 -675 ·
2885 .

Vacancy for one elderly lady

in my home . 304· 773 .
6958 .

House on double lot near
New Haven Grade School.

E x per i enced seamstress
would like to do sewing,
preferably •11eretions. Call

New underground home ,
1 ,200 sq ft. 3 •eras, price

week dayo be foro 8 :00 PM
304-676· 7624.

House, 3 bedrooms, J~ir ,
pool , Mt . Vernon Ave ,

2 car garage, pond, reduced

to S40,000.00 . Phone 304·
576 ·2320.
.
1974 Acodomy 12x50 2
bdr .• extra clean. central air.
7x12 porch 1 and skirting .

Call 614-379-2341 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST. GALUPOLIS ,
RT 36 . PHONE 614 ·446·

7274

1- - - - - - - - - 12X60 mobile home, 2 bdr ,
all new appl. with washer dryer. new carpet . O u ts ide
deck &amp; storage garage. Mu1t
see t o appreciate . Call 446t 805 otter 5.

t 976 Festival 14X70. 2
baths, garden tub, fully car ~
peted. 2 bdr. underpinning .
$2,000 down &amp;. taka over

payments . Colt 245 -9472.

wall hanging fireplace $ 50 .

Call 614·256·1 968.

M ust Sa crifi c e ! Whirlpool
Imperial w ashe r, 2 spd .. 5
cycle . su per size. 1% yr s .
old, eK . co nd ., Call 245-

5430.

Bedroom suit, c ou ch . 3
ch airs , lamp s, pictures, &amp; ta bl es. ex . co nd . C all 446 1731 aft er 6pm .
Port abl e co lo r t elevr sion set,
16 " -18 " scr een . ex c . c ond
&amp; st and S 15 0 ., Pec an
dres ser, ex
sha pe S85 .,
h1d e- a - b ed couc h w it h
mat c h i n g c h a i r " Early
Am en ca n " -so il resi stant,
ex. . sha p e. S300 , 192 1
Croeler &amp; Campb ell uprigh t
piano , solid w alnut , c ast iro n
harp , ex . co nd . $800 ., 6
st ring gu itar &amp; 12 su ing ~ Ui ·
tar. Yamaha A co ustic $250

ea Call 446 -8175 or 3670654 eve .
Fo r sal e . 1 4 x.70 m o bile
home. Three bedroom s, two
full baths . garden tu b, cent ra l air, underpi nning an d
blocks included . Take over
payments Cal l 6 14 -985-

4497 .
1974 Aca demy 12x50 2
bdr., ex. u a cle an , ce nt ral air,
7 x 12 porch. and s k~rttng .

Call614 ·379 ·2341.

12x 60 , 2 bed roo m mob1le
home . 1 V2 bat h , n ice c arpet
$5000 DO Ca ll 614·992

5858

1981 Kirkw ood 14k70 . 3
bedroom , 1 % b at h . Wood
s tove . elt! c tri c heat

51 1,000.00. Call 614·843 ·
5244
1975 Holly Park m ob ile
home. 14 x70 , pa rtiCally f u r nished , centr al a1r Ph o ne
1972 Cam ero n , 1 2 x50 ,
good c on d. price neg otab le.

304-675 ·4 154

538 .000
5384.

Yard Sale

Homes for Sale

304·458· 1727 .

ducts . 304-675· 1090.

6128.

Phone

3051 .

Sell AVON make 45 %. Call
446 -3358 .

304·675·6995.

a.

C""llied Chimney Swoep

RATES Below market rates ,
Fixed conventional FHA VA . Leader Mortgage ,
Ath ens, collect 614 -592 -

992-5889 "' 992·6985

8

•complete Chimney Cleaning
•certified Chimney Relining
Repair
*Experienced and Insured

Roy Bickle

HOME •LOANS FIXED

Employmenl
Services

Some life insurance policies
allow the insurance co m panies to keep your savings.
upon death We offer a wide
variety of insurance . IRA ' s
and tax sheltered annu1ty
products . Conta ct Osby

3 yellow k fttens 9 wks, old ,
male and female . Call 446 -

1 . a. 9 .

446-2062

22 Money to loan

Waitres se s needed part ·
time, evening shift For in terview. send name ,
address , and phone to Bo x
800 in care of The GallipoliS
Da1ly Tribune, 825 Third
Ave , Gallipolis. Oh 45631

446·0885.

&amp; Vicinity

Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
You Were Going To CoH Us?

Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614 992-3476.

7748.

of the Stairs Beauty Salon .
Pomeroy .

64 Misc. Merchandise

VETERINARY

fireplace; formal dining room, delu•e equtpped kitchen, break·
fast room, 21x20 lamix room, 4large bedrooms wilh cedar lined
closets, 211 ballls, custom drapes, central heating and air, full basement all situated on J peaceful acres near Royal Oak Park.
Shown by appointment only.

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

I 0·8·tln

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

BEAUTIFUL EXECUTIVE HOllE- lll'leiy cedar home w~h over
3,000 ~uare feet livinH area, 'features a 20~26 ~vtng room ~ith

73·80 Chevy Tr
D·5D Ood&amp;e T&lt;.
Fenders ......... ............. '70
Fenders .............. .. ........ 61
81 -84 Chevy Ti:
76-82 Chmtte
Fenders ..................... liD
Car F~ndm ................. 60
S-IO·SI5 Chevy Tri.
79·80 llustona
Fenders .................. ... ... 80
ear Fendm .......... ·....... 60
73-79 Ford Tr.
81·84 Escort-Cynx
Fenders ....:.......... ... ..... 59
Fenders ...... ................. 49
80·84 Ford Tf.
Omni -Horizon 2 dr. or
Fenders ............... ....... 110 . 4 dr. Fenders ................ 75
Ford Ranger
Chevy &amp; Ford
T&lt;. Fenders ... ...... . ...... 98
PU Bumpers ....... ..... 69.95
72-80 Dodge Tr.
79-82 Chmtto Grills ........ 38
Fenders .. .............. .... 115
Ford Rancet Grills .. .......... 75
Ford and Chevy Tail Gatos

Buying daily gold. silver
coins. rings, jewelry. ste·
rling ware. old coins. large
currency . Top prices. Ed .
Burkett Barber Shop , 2nd .

Small neighborhood Conve·
ntent type store for sale,
Point Pleasant, 304 -675 -

Saleman wanted to work
out of local office. Salary
plus commission Send Re sume to box 729 Athens . Oh

wks old. 304-675 -2254.

licensed Clinical Audiologist

dealer pre -opening
sale. A cces sories for Shops·
mith available . Christmas
order s due November 28
Cell Bob', collec1 at the
Woodworkers Shed even ·
ings and Sundays 614 -886 ·

Puppies part Beagle &amp; part
Norwe1g1an Elkhound . Call

lveeks old. Call 992·2779 .

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

ch~aed

45701 or Call Collect 614 ·
592-6151 .

5 puppies to gtve away . 6

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Dependable Hearing Aid Servtce

5· N-1 WOODWORKING
MULTI -TOOL: Now fran ·

huskoy . Call 614 -266 1393.

11l" r

JI .J I mo

lfn

8 puppjes % shepherd &amp;' h
1

246·55107.

BISSELL

8:00 to 5:30
Monday thru Friday

CHESTER-985-3307

Givealll(ay

Coli 614 -256 -1772 for

We are looking for an ag ·
gressive professional to
manage our growmg pro·
duce operation . Our super
market is located in a small
town in southeastern Ohto.
Plea se send your resume to
The Deily SentineL Bo x
729V. Pomeroy .

53.50 for adults and $2 .00

for children under 12 ' with
seNing to begin at 4 : 3~
Lots of craft items. fancy
work and novelty things.
Games for adults and child ren . Door prizes to be
awarded every httlf hour.
Come join the fun!

Vinyl repair kit , earn extra in·
come . professionally repair
&amp; clean vinyl upholstery.

Hill. Oh 61 4·682· 7448

Annual banar at Pomeroy
Sacred Heart Church.
Thursday, Nov. 8 . Dinners itt

3551 .

WANTED
RAW
PINE POSTS
C. V. POSTS

Shop Technidan

KOUNTRY . '
KLUB

Residentia I
&amp; Commercial
Catl 742-3195
Or 992-5875

Gallipolis, Ohio
7/ 11/ ttn

working •and cabmets . Will
be glad to see my friends and
customers. Watch · for date
and location . H.R .leamond.

tl"let you do busineu with
people you know. and NOT
to aend money tl"lrough the
mail until you have invettigated th.e offering .

8429 .

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

31

priced to ooll. 304-676·
I NOTICE I
5104 .
THE OH IO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. recommend &amp; 5% acres . 2 houses, 2 barns,

Raw Fur . Top prices paid.
Lake Jackson Fin &amp; Fur . Oak

45769 or call 614·992·
7760 .

Club ovory Sunday, 1:00

4

For all your wiring
needs ; furnaces repair
service and tnstallation .

Less"

St. Rt. 160 North

992-7201

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

RENTAL

Phone 985·9966
or 985-3929

.--

PH.

U-SAVE
AUTO

7:30-10:00

(/

JIM CLIFFORD

PH. 949·3046
From 9:00 to 6:00
10 19·tln

toll free 1-800-553-8021 .

p.in . F-actory chocked gUns

Wood Shed . Custom wood -

CONTRACTING

Old Oriental Rugs Wanted .
Any size or condit1on . Cell

Gun shoot· at Racine Gun

REOPENING SOON : Tho

J&amp;F

St ., Gallipolis, Oh .

FURNITUA r; , Beds, iron ,
wood, cupboards. cha irs.
chests, baskets , dish es.
stone jars. antiques. gold
and silver . Write - M . O .
Miller, Rt.2 , Pomeroy. Ohio

Balloons for Get Wall, Anni versarys, Birthdays, parties .
Singing Gorrilla. Call Bat ~
loons &amp; Co. 446 -4313.

Bueineaa
Opportunity

details .

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni·

Entcrtainmr•nt

A.A.A.
304-675-6276

HOISTimR REALTY
tic

Ph. (614) 843.-5425

New Homes- Extenstve
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu5tqm Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
· or 992-2282

Jr. tour, putting green,

Rtslilttr;ln!

Recel\ltng ·Waters Unnamed
Tnb. of Ohto A1 ver
FacJ IIty Descnp t10n Str 1p
Mmes

SM

EUGENE LONG

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

• K IICtl(IO('It£!5

req u•rernents .
Ftnal •!.suance ol NPOE S
permtt
Dark 01a mond Coal Co rp
Sal1sbury Twp . OH. Effec t1ve

The 1ollow•ng were recetved! mepared by The Oh1o Envtr·
Permol No OIP00157·AD
onmen!al Protect1on Agencv
Th• s l•nal ac110n not pre !O EPAJ last week El!ectlve
ceded by pro posed actio n and
datP.S of !mat acllans and ISSu·
1S appealable to EBA
ance dales o1proposed ac tto ns '
F1 nal tssua nce of perm •t to
are s ta l e ~ Fmat actiOns may be
tnstall
appealed rn wntmg. w1th ~ n 3 0 .
Dark D1amond Coal Cpr.
days of th e date of tt'11 s not1ce.
Salisbury Twp ' oH· Effec tlVI:!
to The Enwo nmental Board of
date 10/ 29 / 84
Revtew. Am . 101 , 250 E Town
Apphr.atton No 0 6 -020 12 -

Veterans Memorial

Po me roy-Mason Bridge

·24 Hour Switchboard

dale 1012 9/ 84
COUNTY: MEIGS
PUBUC NOTICE

"Free Estimates"

446-3672

· Frvl'MBO

Cle1k. DEPA P 0 Bcix I049.
43216

a mi les•trOm

· Livl'

StJhm1 t comments and/ o r re-

OH

PT. 62 NORTH
POt lilT PL~ASAIIIT
WESTVIRGtllltA

•Washers •Dishwasher•
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

We pay ca1h for lat e model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

~--------~~~-.· ·~y.

THE

Sl NGLE $24.95
304 675 6276

~ s~: 1 i1 nc e dare or tM Dnec10 r
rf'v lses/ wl !hdl avvs the pro·
pose&lt;1 ac t1on Any person may

Columbus.

Pomeroy , Ohio

Jl •ooaCMo J no
4SI)
S I~

All Mokes

20 veers

PH. 667-671 S

WI/

en .., ~......,,

Worked in home area

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

1

1_ _ _ ___:.::.._::::...__ _ _ _ _ _ _

U li d&gt; II. Gt oon

n

I

'" ,.,I ,,

j"J/'"'Irr ~ l t/l ' jl /l• on o • l ' \!li fl ll f ! ' l

. 985-3.561

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992-6215 or 992-7314

Public Notice

Page446

13.

I

:;
~~·:,:,"'r.::~·~::;~~·
I
~: ~ ;~~~ : ~·.~ hh o~ ro oM n

8 1 f"'m t q u ..,...~nt
UW on t.,dt o a.,

....
..............
"9 .t ....
_ .. ''" ~·"'

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF CHARLES ROBERT SPRAGUE
OECEASED
Case No. 24,637 Dodcet 12

The Tuppers Pla ins-Chester Wa·
ter District will be closed Monday in
observance of Veterans Day. Payments normally due by Nov. 10 wlll
be accepted without penalty when
the office reopens on Tuesday, Nov.

I

a~

.. , Mnbolo HonmMI .., lh nt (

Public Notice

11 ... ,.."" ' " ' s··~

? 1 T,..c oot.. h • ~
1J VO.. II O I'IIl
H "'"' Ot'&gt; &lt;loo
7~ 8 oOO • I ... 01 01\
?I A, uto Poo h 6. A«•u~•., ,
7 1 ., ulfl ll~~ · "
? IC•"'P .,~h··~ "'' "'

i!ijpJ

41 HIIUH t l""l'_.t

•o e.,.,•., , , ,.,;"''~

'

SJ M• ooo: • tno • • ""'"''

"'«••••

1 J lnoutonr:o

Closed on Monday

1 Jo\ntiC!I'U
U loll " "'"' &lt; "'"~ " '
II l u~"' "' l~p pt•H
~~ """ I&lt;&gt;• s...

9 1 H..., .. , .. loll
J 2 M (&gt;II~o llomn l ... l -

H el ~ Won tt~
1 2 ~· 1 ..... ~ w..~

The Number: seven-eight-one
Ohio Lotto: two, nine, fourteen,
fifteen , twenty-one, thirty-four

e l • H OUI~OI&lt;I Goo&lt;l &lt;

1 1 Cl , TV .. llod "' E &lt;I~ •P"' " "'

OI:..

~ Hop~ r "~'
6 l&lt;111 1n d f ou ~ &lt;l
J h•~ S o lo rp o od ono ~·••« l

11

W'f@Niip!iii!..

Comploto Remodeling
Roofing of all Types

Tuppers Plains, OH.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

· ~-~~----~~--~ I

• IU!II\' iii!Ji!M

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE'

on Duty

I Fr:ee Estimates I

Or Wnl1 Dlnl' Senltnel ClaSSified Oept
Ill CoUrt St .. P~Jmeroy , Ohto 457&amp;9

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

We H•ve A Full Time

· - Plumbing and electrical
work

PHONE.992-2156

10/4/tfc

Wanted To Buy

An noun cem enls

Only

10·19·1 mo

to drive the vehicle of your

9
"Farley, I'm arr11 icl we're going
to have to let you go We need
your company parking spot "

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns

Storm Doors
Windows

Also Trarsmission

468 -1572 .

lashan luilding
EVE~Y

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to. 24'~36'
.
Insulated Dog Houses

- Concrete work

No lottery winner

21

Thursday. We buv t.tsec;l fur·
niture and appli•nc es: also
sell large items on consign·
ment. Stop in . or call 304·

RACINE
FIRE DEPt

Pointing

. choice.

West Virginia ·lottery gains approval
'

Fin~nctal

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Leon Flea Market open dai·

New - Repair
Guttes • Downspouts
Gutter Cleoning

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Eneaee·A·Car. the modern way

Nicaraguan government has denied receiving the
planes. This MIG Is shown on display at the Moscow
air show In 1967. &lt;AP. Laserphoto ).

8

LAFF·A·DAV

GUN SHOOT

Roofing Co.

We'd like to introduce you to

OPENING LAW OFF1CE - D. Michael Mullen, attorney-at-law,
will open his Pomeroy office with an open house-reception from noon to
:i p.m. on Friday. The office, located on the second Doorofthe Bank Orie
building at 105 East Second Street, will be open for business on Tuesday.
An 8:30 a.m. to 4:30p.m. schedule will be followed thereafter. Mullen,
Mike to his friends, graduated from Capitol University In Columbus in
May and look the bar exam In July. Three months later he received
word that !)e passed the bar and was sworn in on Oct. 29. Mullen l• a son
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Mullen, Middleport.

Freda Duffy

Howard L Writesel

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

-

A veteran of the U. S. Army in
Worl(l Wa r I, Mr. Chase was a
member of the Snowville United
Methodist Church where he had
served as treasurer, teacher a nd
Sunday school superintendent . He
was a member of the Gideons
Internationa l.
Surviving are his wife , The tma
P ratt Chase; two sons, Wa yne
Mervin Chase. Route 2. Albany . and
Law·en G. Chase, Shelby, and a
daughter , Thora Maxine Benson,
Mobile, Alabam a. Seven grandchildren ard llgrea t·grandchildren
also survive. '
Services will be held a t 2 p.m.
Sai:\Jrday at the Ewing Funera l
Home with the Rev. Howard Ma yne
officiating. Friends may call a t the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Friday. Burial will be in We lls
Cemetery.

Roger Hysell ·
GARAGE

I J tf,

...
"'

I

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Ho&amp;
Farm Equipment
•
Dealer

Judge O'Brien concludes.30 cases

'
A dinner and dance will be held
chalice olllhowen or-~
Friday evening at the Meigs ~nlor
conlinulnl Ill &amp;he nottbea8t Sunday.
Chance of showers de\lelopllig over . Clttzen's tenter. Dinner will be
served from 4: lJ to 6: lJ p.m. at a
&amp;he state 111a1n Monday. mpsm the
cost of $2. DesSert will be ~xtra.
liOR Saturday and 4HII Sunday and
Mooclay. Lows:J5.45Salurdayand In Round and square dancing will be
featured from 7 to 10 p.m.
the 3011 Stmday and Monday.
t'

. .' r

.'

. Area deaths
Clay E. Green

SALES &amp; SERVICE

ARE MIGS GOING TO NICARAGUA? - U.S.
officials have said that' Sovlet-lialll MIG's may have
arrived In Nicaragua· Wedneaday on a Soviet
frei«hler hut added their data Willi not conclusive. 'The

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

toy 9:00 to 6:00 except

BOGGS

"MiG boxes."
Ironically, he said , the vessel
embarl!:edon Its journey at about the
same time Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko was m eetlng atthe
White House wit h President
Reagan.
The official, who spoiie on
condition he not be identified, said
the administration believed Initially
that the vessel was headed for Cuba .
After the ship headed into the South
Atlantic and then traveled north·
ward along the west coast of South
America. ·analysts believed if would
stop in Peru, with which the Soviet
Union has had military ties for
years, he said.
When it proceeded to Nicaragua ,
the administration was surprised
beea use the Soviets had always
relied on other countries, such as
Cuba , for military deliveries to
Nicaragua, the o!flcial added . He
called the Soviet move·· audacious."
In a post-election news conference
in Los Angeles on Wednesday,
Reagan said he would regard the
delivery of advanced combat a ir·
craft to Nicaragua as a serious
mat1er and a "threa t" to Central
America.
Reagan declined to say how the
United States might t:espond If the
delivery contains MiGs. Other
officials said, however, the United
States is considering air strikes to
destroy any such pla nes .

·'.

a, 1984

Business. Senrices

Intelligence information says
"MiG boxes' on -Soviet ship
WASIDNGTON (AP ) - The
Reagan administration's concern
over the an·iva l of a Soviet vessel at
a Nicaraguan port is based on
intelligence lntonnatlon indicating
its cargo included boxes specifically
designed for carrying MiG jets, U.S.
officials say.
The appearance of the vessel in
Nicaraguan wa ters touched off a
public sta tement of "utmost con·
cern" by the State Department on
Wednesday and private warnings to
Moscow abOut the gravity with
wtlich Washington would view the
introduction of advanced combat
aircraft into Nicaragua .

Thursday, Nowmber

304·773-6586

1980 Fai rmont . 14k 52 . f ur nished . 2 bedroom s, f irepla ce. air co nd . refrigerat o r.
sto ve, underpenning , porch ,
assumabl e loan . 30 4 -6 75 ·

6729 .

Conco rd 60 x 12. 2 bed room, good co nd . c all K &amp; K

MOBILE . IN C. 304·675·
3000.

33

Farms for Sale

U-Build it or we will I Beauti·
ful . spa c1o us 5 BR ho me
56995 / up . Se e new model!

Call6t4-B86·731t.
200 ac re farm f o r sale . Will
subdivid e. Rutl and Town .

shop Call 614 -373·0456 .

U11 · 50 acres of1 Board
Road . Good h u nt mg area
Own e r f ina nc e

511 ,500.00. U1 3

21 3

acres, Un 1on D 1st rict on
Sapsucker Roa d . 2 pond s.
estimat ed 4 0 a c r e s of
cleared land . F2 0 · 5 3 ac res
2v2 m iles fro m state Rou t e 2
on A shton - M ilt on R oad
House and utility building
Goo d Pasture
Town &amp;
Countr y R ea l E s tate ,

Broker, 304 ·675 ·5548
35 lots &amp; Ac reage
l o t f o r sal e tn M erce r v1lle , 3
tra 1ler hook ups. elect nc. ru ral wa te r . septi c t an k,

$8 ,0 00
6618 .

Ca ll 614· 256 ·

Build~n g

lo l N eigh borh ood

Rd . 65&gt; 150. $5,000 Call
446 · 384 4 after 7PM
Sale or l ease. l ot s, zo ned
f o r business. J ack son Ave.

304 675 ·5104

Rentals
Houses for Rent

41

2 bd r house w 1th full base m ent , 4 2 C h i li co t he

Rd .. S210 mo.. 575 dep.

Call

446 - 1 3 40

3670.

or

446 -

Jbdrho m eon 141 - $2 75 . 4
bdr home in Tara -$400 3
bdr home in Addiso n-$250.
5bdrh o me intown -S325 . 4
bdr home i n town -S350 . 3
bdr home in Spring Valley $450 .
3 bdt home in
country - S250. 4 bdr home

in Cha,lois Hills·S500 . Ref·

erences and security deposit
requi red .
Wiseman Real
Estare Agenc y . 446 -3643 .
3 -4 bdr, 2 baths, stove, re frigerator . washer &amp; dryer
included . $300 mo. Call

reduced. $30,000.00. 304446-01 16.
773 -6474.

�•

Page-14-The
41

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

Houses for Rent

Home on river lot in Che·

shire, 3 bdu, 2 bethl,'fam .
rm ., stove. refrigerator. dis·
hwaaher, CH 11o A, 1ec. dep.
&amp; ref. required . Call 387·
7667.
.

54 Misc. Merchandise

7NE S/loR1Sr:ASr.E!'.
i.AVPS 011! AAIII!',q

7P ?HE ~11:$ •••

Rite Way cool &amp; wood
burner. 75,000 BTU , 3
standing, $390. Call 245 ·
9375.

3 bdr. house in to~n with
carport. private location.
$275 mo. Call446-8293 of·
ter 5PM.

llg. baonbogchalr, 1 10gol.
fish aquarium with stand, 1
littlo tricycle. ·cell · 446 3732.
.

For Rent: 4 rm . house, raas·
onable. L.L. Holliday . Call
446·3374 .

7'h .,__ Meyeq snow ·plow.
fully autonl&amp;tic, half price of
now pne. Call446-2974 ••·
eninga ~r 446-0768 .

4 rms. &amp; bath, 26 Central,
garden space ., Call 4461473 or 446 ·1987.
4 bedroom colonial brick
hou se for rent or sale. in

Pomeroy. Call 1-373-0456.
Newly remodeled house. 2
9
bdr.
fun bath.
. turn.
chen,1 located
in 1Middleport.

kit··~::=::======:-r;=;:;:~::~:;:~~=::-"i
I

3 bedroom. 2 car garage

44

Apartment

51 Household Goods

for Rent

apt .. furn . orunfurn . Middle·
port remodeled $225 .00
plus utilities. 2 bedroom duplex !'louse , dow!"'town
Pomeroy . Furn. or unfurn .
$226 .00 plus utilities. Call
614-992 -2381 day"' 614·
992 -6723 night .

'
Riverside Apts. Middleport
.
Special rates for Senior Citi
zens . $130. Equal Houaing
·Opportunities . 614-9927721 .

Five room brick home, close
to Point Pleasant. heat and
air, city water, 14 acres,
pond. small barn. 1 year
lease $475 .00 month , 304·
675 -6276 .

1 and 2 bedroom furnished
apartments for rent. Call
992 -5434 or 992 · 6914 or
304-882 -2566 .

3 bedroom duple.11., full base·
ment, nic e yard, close to
school. will accept Hud.
304 - 675 -30.30 or 6753431 .
2 bedroom house in Belle ·
meade for rent With option

to buy . Cali 304-675-4174
or 6 75 -4072 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished 2 bdrs. TV cable,
clean, quiet. beautiful river
view in Kanauga. Fosters
Trailer Park , 446-1602 .
2 bdr. mobile home ex·
tended livingroorn all mod·
ern. $250 mo . plus utilit.e s.
$100 dep. 314 3rd .St . Ka ·
nauga . Call 446 · 7473 .

4

Apartment for
992 -2807.

rent. Call

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614- 4468221 .
Apt for rent, 2 bedroom, 1
bedroom. 304-675-5 104 or
675-638'6.
2 bedroom apt in Mason.
adults only, no pets. phone
304 -675-1452 or 675 ·
2996 after 5.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and ligtlt house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 614-446-0756 .
Furnished room, $125. Utilities, range, ref. Share bath.
Men only . 919 Sec .. Gallipolis. 446-4416 after8p.m.
Sleeping room for rent. Call
446 ' 9865 .

3 bdr . in city. $235 mo . Call
446 -2192 .

46 Space for Rant

Trailers for rent. Call446·
3371 .
.
Furnished 2 bdr, all modern,
step up kitchen . city school
dist . See at 314 Third St. Kanauga . Call 446 -7473 .

Trailer lot for rent . Call3677438 .
Nice trailer spaces on Rt. 7
near town . Call 367-0232
or 446 ·4265 .

Glali• top t8bla 4 chairs
$150. Black
Portable color te ..vision s&amp;t,
16"-18" scrae.n, exc. cond .
llo stand $150 .. Pecan
dresser, ax. shape $86.,
hide-a.-bed couch with
matching chai·r "Eirly
American" -soil resistant.
e• . shape, $300., 1921
Croeler &amp; Campbell upright
piano, solid walnut. cast Iron
harp, e•. cond. 8800., 6
string guitar &amp; 12 string guitar, Yamaha Acoustic $260
ea . Call 448-8175 or 3670664 ave.
- - - - - : - - - - · l cHotpoint refrigerator,
8295.00 . Electric stove.
s100.00. Call 614- 446 7307 alter 4:30.
12x60. 2 bedroom mobile
home. 11/z bath . Nice carpa1 .
$6000.00. Call 614·992·
585B .
.

Used U-30 Ditch Witch
trencher . 1-614· 694· 7842
or 694-5006 .

G.E. refrigerator, Tappan
gas range, carpet, radio stereo console. fire place glass
and screen, childs play stove
11nd sink . Phone 992-7378.

Pickens used fufniture . 304·
675-6483 or 675 · 1450.

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE . Used stoves
and f'efrigerators. Compare
our prices. save today.
Phone 304-773-5430.
42 in Hotpoint alec stove.
same as new. $300.00.
304-875 -7353.

couch and chair $100.00 .
'78 Jeep PU, 4 wheel drive.
VB. $2,500.00. 304-6762265 .

Large dining room table with
4 chairs, 304·675-5201 .

Sorgums $12.00 per gallon.
304·675-3603 .

1 bdr trailer for rent. Call

367 -2469 .
Mobile home, 2 bdr., fur ·
nished . Call446· 1232 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . L8rge lots. C811
614-992 -7479 .

2 bedroom mobile home far
rent . Unfurnished . Call992·
2707 .

2nd . floor office space for
rent. Court St., Pomeroy .
Call 614-373-0456 .

2 bedroom mobile home.

SPACES FDA RENT. trailer
lots sewer and water fur·
nished , small chil dren ac·
cepted . 304-675-1076.·

5150 .00 month, utilities
partly paid . 304·675·2049 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunitvl has
one and two bedrooms. rent
starting at$, 63 tor one bedroom and S 198 per month
for two bedroom, with$ 200
deposit located near Foodland and Spring Valley
Plaza , pool and TV ant. Call
446 · 2745 or leave
message.
513 Third Ave . 1 bdr .. water
furnished , adults on ly. 5135
mo.. dep . required . Call
446 -4222 between 9 &amp; 5.
Completely furnished all
elect . 458 Second Ave ..
One 2BR Apt. $220 mo.,
adults only. security deposit. References. Call 446 2236 or 446 -2581 .
Downstairs. 2 rooms &amp;
bath, furnished . clean. no
pets. adults only. Oep&amp; Ref.
required . Call446-1519.
Gallipolis: 2 bdr . lg . clean
rooms , central heat-air,
water-trash pd ., S235 plus
dep. Call446 -0116 .
Nicely furnished modern
mobile home in city .• 1 or 2
adults only. Caii446 -033B.

1 bdr apt., 2 bdrapt., S160·
&amp;250 . Call 304-675· 7263
676 -5104 or 676-6386 .
2 bdr. apt . at Rio Grande,
414 E. College St., will ac·
cepi 2 children . Call 4460157.
Mercerville. 1 &amp; 2 bdr. apts. ,
from 9175 &amp; up. Call 4461167or367-721B .
2 bdr apt.! carpeted. com·
pletaly furn . kitchen, air
cond., located down town.
Cell 448-0678 or Contact
Roger Hood at Haskins
Tanner Co .
Furniahed apt., ne111.t doorto
Library, one . profeasionel
edult only. Call 448-0336.

Furnished efficiency; 607
Second Ava . Gallipolis,
1146 mo ., utilities pd. Coli
446-441 6 after 7pm.
2 bdr. duplouxc.locotionln
town *250 mo. with a
fenced backyard. CoN 446·
8293 alter 5PM .

53 ·

Antiques

10 speed bicycle.- Atari with
tapes. saxaphone. 304576 ·2316.

Antique:t; Duncan Phyffe
dining room suite: table six
ch•irs, buffet, china cabinet.
Exc. cond . 8900 . Call 9926114.

Cabbage Patch Dolls. same
size as real ones with plaster
molded head and fa ca . 304895-3581 .

54 Misc. Merchandise

Fi~ewood $20.00 pick up
load , S30 .00 delivered .
304-458-1728 .

Knauff Firewood Split· 95%
hardwoods . Seasoned or
green. You pick up or we deliver. HEAP vender. 614 256 -6245 .

Merchan dise
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
62 Olive St ., Gallipolis. New
&amp;. used wood-coal stoves. 6
pc wood LR suite $399,
bunk beds $199, antron rec liners $99. used bedroom
suites . ranges, wringer
washers, &amp; shoes. Call614446-3159 .
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, (extra heavy),
$686 . Sofa , chair and loveseat, $275 . Sofas and chairs
priced from 8 286. to &amp;895 .
Tables, a 60 and up to 19125.
Hide-a-bods, $390. and up
to S550 ., sola bods $145,
Recliners, $2B6. to 6375 ..
lamps from &amp;28. to $126.
pc. dinet1es from 81 09., to
435. 7 pc . S189 and up.
Wood table With six chairs
$285 to S746 . Desk 8110 ·
up to $226 . Hutchea, e660.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses, 19276. and up to
$395 . Baby beds, 8110.
Mattresses or box apringa,
full or twin, 868., firm,
and $78 . Queen aata, 8196 .
4 dr. cheats, 842. 6 dr.
chests, $64. Bed framea,
$20.ond 826., 10 gun · Gun
cablneto, 8360. Gas or
·electric ranges e375. Baby
mattreues. 825 &amp; 835, bad
frames 820, 826, &amp; 8'30.
king framo 860. Good Mlac·
tion of bedroom luitea.
rockers. metal cabinets.
headboards e38 &amp; up to ·
S65 .

•ea.

Used Furniture •• head
boards, and 2 bedroom auitea . 3 miles out Ruleville
Rd. Open Bam to &amp;pm, Mon.
thru S1t :
614·448-0322

1----------GOOD USED APPUANCES
Waahera. dryere. refrigera tori, rangea. Sklgga Applioncot. Upper River Rd .
bealde Stone CNat Motel.
614-448-7398 .

1------::-----:"-

County Appliance. Inc.
Good uMd appliance• end
TV lett. Open 8AM to &amp;PM .
Mon thru Sot. 4411-1899,
827 3rd. ·Ave. Gallipolis,
OH .

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

Trade Center Kanauga,
Ohio. Furniture outlot, Why
Pay Morel

Build your oWn 3 or 4 bdr
home, $6995 kit delv .. Our
new model is open. see it to·
day. Call. 1-886-7311 .

Plastic cisterns state approved, plastic septic tanks.
plastic culvert metal cul verts, RON EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jackson , Oh
614-286·5930 .

Rough Cut Lumber. oak, poplar , and pine. 2x4's, 2x8's ,
1 x6's . 1 x8's . Assorted
lengths. Call Hogg and Zus pan Materials Co .• lnc. 7735554, daytime.

Firewood cut up slabs. $1 6
PU load. larger loads delivered. Call ·for prices. 614245-5B04.

2h151naulated steal building. must sell. Coli 614742·2225.

For sale fill dirt, and top soil.
Call Call614·266 · 1427.

Now open for business,
Mountain State Block. At.
33, New H•ven. Complete
masonry supplies. 4.'', 8",
12" block . Delivery serVice.
Phone day 304-8B2-2222,
evening 882-3.2 39_.

Slate roofing pieces for sale.
Coli 36-7· 7653 .
No credit rejections, siding,
windows. o1~er home imj)rovements . Call collect
614-279-6041 .
-:----:-----Attention: Plants or Organi·
zations, toya &amp; misc. gifts of
all kinds, wholesale prices,
Don't wait·Call oarlyl 387·
7563 .
Furgunson 30 runs good
$1600 or beat offer. Trailer
axles 8150 or best offer.
Call 388 -9686.
·
Ueed: aofa, twin mattress. 8t
floor lamp. Corbin end
Snyder Furniture, 956 Sa·
cond Ave . 446-1171 .
Paperback books, buy, sale
tnoda. Higley's Sorber Shop.
Uppar Rt. 7 Gallipolis.
Atari 2600 with two cartridges $60, 1/, karat dia·
mond ring • 126. Ode... flat
top guitar new •150, 1978
Z· 28 Camara good cond .
low mileage $3,900. Call of·
Ulr &amp;PM 446·1346.

Full length block robblt fur
coat. aile sm., e111.c. condition, 8100. Call 114-3B89819 alter 6:30PM .
Wood. coal heaters. fireplace ln~e.na. Efficient thormoetat control for
converiMtnce • economy.
For details call 114· 2511772 .
Gemlenh.,dt flute. ex .
cond. UOO.. Hotpolnt olr
conditioner. ex. cOnd., mutt
1011.
Coll441·2022 .

•too,

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Qoarding all braeda. Heated
indoor -outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Call614-448·
7795 .

CliMbrf'RA.W.C.

•---------'T"---------~IH&amp;;;H-;.;;;1,;;;;.;;,;;;,;;;
H &amp; S Home Improvement•·
61

Farm Equipment

71

Autos for Sale

4

John Dere die•el tractOr
with frontend.loader for "le
or will trade for real estate.
304·458·1672 .

AKC Registered Apricot
Poodles, 8 wks. shot In-

cluded, Call 446-9866.
Regis~ered AKC, Boston terriers. Black and white,
warned and sh0ts.Call304863-8378 . e150.00 each.

Farmaii'M' tr8ctor with 3
point llitch and 9 .pieces
equipment and lowboy
trailer $3,500 .00 . 304675-3190.

AKC registered Beagle. Call
992-7883 .

63
6. month old U.K.C. regis·
tared Redbone Coonhound
pups, ready and eager to be
trained . $60.00. Also must
sell mother. U.K.C . regis·
1ered, good hunter, doesn't
run trash . 3 years old. Call
992-3989 or 992-3947.

Livestock

12 head of feeder pigs, have
be&amp;n wormed and on self
faadar. Good piga. $30.00
each , call 614 -667-3368.
Five Angu• heifers ages $·
14 mont.hs. Two Angus bull'
6 and 19 moriths. Rocking G
Ra'nch. Harrlaonville. 614·
742-3033 .

A.K.C. female "Doberman
Pinscher with paJ)era. Red
and rust, 11 months · old.
$75 .00. Call 992-3577.

We•tern Saddle for sal&amp;. almost new, call after 6, 304·
676-87jl2.

Six beagle rabbit dog·
s,trained and untrained . Will
sell or trade for guns or anything of equal value. Call
614· 742 ·2521 .

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

NOW OPEIIIII 8 &amp; S PRQ·
DUCE, 206 Viand St, Pt. Pit,
Many kinds Apples, Potatoes, Onions, Vema, Toma toes, Citrus and morel! 50 lb
No 1 Potatoes $4.96 .

F~1111 Supplit~s

&amp; Ltvestock
61 · Farm Equipment
1976-135· Mania Ferguson diesel farm tractor. extra
good shape. new diak. bush
hog, &amp; plow. Priced 86,260.
Coli 245·9105.
1976-135-Mnsie Ferguson
diesel farm tractor, extra
good shape, new disk. ·bush
hog llo plow. Pricod f68p0.
Call 245-9106 .
Farnall Tractor with cultiva·
tors, mowing machine. Call
266·6701 alter 6pm .

1976 Pontaic for aale or
trade, 4 door, good cond,
phone 304 -676·604B.
'74 Dodge Part, 4 door se·
dan. 6 cyl, auto, good cond .
$850.00. 304-578-2866.
1977 Malibu Classic Wa gon, $1 ,660.00. Phone
304-675-6961.

.1 981 Pontiac T 1.000
standard transmission, good
C:ond, AM·FM cooetta ,
82,700.00. 304-8822787.

large round bales of hay.
$20 ea.ch. Coli 446-1052
after 5pm.

Good quality mixed hay.
61.50 a bala . Call814-949 ·
3059 alter 6 pm.

'78 Century Buick Station
WagQn, good cond, priced
reasonably. 304-675-1090 .
'73 Nova, good cond.
$450 .00. 403 Locust St ,
Henderson, W. Va .

72

Trons porI aI ion
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid lor '80
model and new.e r used carr.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eastern Ave., GallipoliS. Call
614-448-2282.

Musical
Instruments

Auto Harp for sale. Very
good conition with case.
Call 614-742 -3003,Bave
Rupe.

1983 Olds Omega, PS, PB,
AC. AM· FM stereo, cessott.
low mileage, 88,200.00,
304-675-2571.

1981 Chevy Citation, AC,
PS, PB. A~to transmission,
·r ear window defroster,
phone 304-576· 2381.

For sale. round bales of
hay,$16 .00 a bale. Call
6714-742-2180 Monday
thur Friday 8Af'll to 4:30PM.

Rat Terrier puppies, 304675-1506 .

ludwig snare drum with
case &amp; stand . Call 614-3889819 attar 5:30PM .

78~0;

Hay &amp; Grain

1

57 ·

' 79 Ford 'Fairmont ,
$1 , 900.00 . 304·675 ·

Good second car ~or family.
1977 Mercury Monarch
priced' to sell 304; B8·2·
2213 .

64

2 year old wall train8d
brown and white copper
nose Beagle $100.00: 304·
676-6761 .

Set of drums 8600 .00. 304·
675-1646.

Limestone. Sand. Gravel.
Delivered in Mason , Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son. Call 446 -7785 .

ll.lftfff

Y2 Ctlow puppies, black .&amp;
beautiful, mother Reg . •
S25. Coli 388-9932.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block. brick , sewer pipes,
windows, lintels , etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Call 614-245-5121 .

Marcum Roofing &amp;: Spouting. Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 years experi~tnce,
apecializing in built up roof.
Call 614-388-9867.

LAErU

Service
1271 . . Call 614-2S8- I,..

Firewood, 100 per cent oak
640.00, mixture $35.00 . . For sale: AKC registered fepickup loed 304·675 ·421 6. male Chinese Shih-Tzu . Will
taka bast offer. Call 992·
Model M 14. Bell Saw, saw 3581 .·
mill 40 in blade. 2 yrs old,
$2,000 . 00. 304 - 675Parakeets and cages, 304·
775B.
676' 5030 attar 6 :00 PM
and week ends.
26 piece.s of ·Avon Chess
pieces for sale. Phone 304·
Coon Hounds. have some
675-1484.
top dogs for sale. If 'y ou are
looking
for something ch8ap
Bell and Howell 8 mm ca ,or want to trade dogs don't
mera and projec1or, like
new . $80 .00 . 304 -576 - waste my time or yours. I
break dogs from deer, fox
2866 .
and rabbit $50 .00 each.
Early American matching 304-458· 1572.

For sale: Whirlpool 36 inch
electric range. Harvest gold,
good condition . 875 .00 .
Call 614-949-2543 .

Trucks for Sale

O.and M. Contractors. Re·
modeling, vinyl siding, pain ting(indoor and outdoor),
replacement windows . Call

1r~'.w" I HNOW..

AU-TOO ·
COMMON

FACE. J FEAR.

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 304-675 ·
1331 .

RINGLES 'S SERVICE, il•·
perienced carpenter, electri·
cian , mason, paintar ,
roofing (including hot t8r ap·
plication! 304-675-2088 or
675 -7368 .
.
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump saleS and services . 304·B95-3802.
Builcling·Remodeling. Concrete, dry~all, electrical,
kitchen·bathro6m installa ·
tion, door·windoW framing .
304 -675-2440 .

82

1 9 83

SORRY. YOU HAPPEHG ~LL
AN AI'IFUL THE TIME.
I THIG
MINE 16 AN

RON 'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Call 304-676·
2398 or 614-446-2454.

19BO Chevrolet C 10,
Cheyenne cab . PS, PB, a Lito,
air, AM-FM. One owner.
$4996 .00. Call 992-7354
evenings

New VESTPA MOPEDS
t695 at Betz Hands Sales.
Call 446-2240.

m

304 - 773 - ~131 .

K 8o K MOBILE HOMES.
INC . blowers. motors, 304·
675 ·3000.

1-----------.

.

Plastering &amp;: Plaster repair.
free estimates . Call 614·
256-1182 .

1977 Scotsdale, PB, PS,
eKe . cond. Call 256-6744 .

1966, 2 tonCtlevrole1 truck .
1976 pick-up Ford truck .
Call 614-247-4793 .
1977 Mercedes, 300 D, · f - - - - - - - - - axe. cond ., e11,500, Sa- ·1 976 Ford Pick-Up with
rioua Inquiries OnlY! Cell topper. new paint, duet
446-0548.
t11nks and in A-1 condition.
S2200. Call 614-9921978, 2dr Nova, auto, am- 3194 .
1m-tope, $999. John's Auto 1'------:::----:--::--Salas, Bulavillo Rd., Gallipo· 1975 Chevrolet hall ton,
lis, Ohio 448-4782.
new tires, . good engine .
304-675· 1 296.
Make good motor home or
camper. 1970 mini-bus, Two '55 Ford pick ups for
318 Dodge engine, exc. 8850.00,. 304-876 -2630.
eond .. 81,500 . Call 446·
9660 .
73
Vaos &amp; 4 W.O.
1966 Mustang 2B9 V-8 mo- 1----:----:----:-:tor. auto., exc . cond. Call 1978 Chevy Blazer. V-8,
614·268-8674 .
auto, PS, PB, Call 245 ·
9214 evenings.
1!p6 Monte Corte cleen, 1- - - -- - - - - - muat sea to appreciate ,
$1,600. Call 614·245 · 1975 C J 7 Jaap, 6 cylinder
5637 altar 4,
with 54,000 miles . Excel lent condition. Coli 614 ·
82 Pontiac Bonnaville 4 dr., 992-6293 .
low mileage. Coll448-6215 1---:-:::--::-:-:-:--......,after 3PM .
1976 Ford E 100 econo-line
Van, Auto. 11400.00. Call
For Sola orlrode: 1979 Ford 614-992-6624.
8o 1966 Oldsmobile. Call
446 -0181 or 446-3243 '77 Ford Courrier pickup
eve.
t850.00. Phone 304· 576 ·
2010.
1968 Buick, good running
cond. Call 256-1559 or
446-9780.
74 Motorcycles

1;:;:::;-n;:;-;;;--;;;::;;:;:-;;-:

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional life.t ime guarantee. local references
fUrnished . Free estima1es.
Call collect 1·614-237·
0488, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Rogers Baseme ·nt
Waterproofing .

Shut out cold winter with 8
new exterior door from K &amp;.
K MOBILE HOMES, INC ..
304 -676-3000.

77 Pontiac Grand Prix 301'
good condition. Call after
5PM, 448-0137 .

1982 Olda Fiarozo sports
coupe, 2 yrt off lot, 28,000
mi., 4cyl .• auto, ac. em-fmcall., velour Interior, sharp.
Best offer above pey·off.
Call 446-2306.

vinyl siding, roofing, room
addition, storm windows,
stone. Call 614-367·0409
or 614-367-7244 .

1968 che"'' pickup short
step side bed. new p8int,
runs good . Call 614-388 9819 alter 5:30PM.

1981 Yamaha 60, ell . con d.,
1977 Cordoba, 1985 t360. Call 446·0335 alter
5pm.
Dodge, 1965 Ford parts.
•·
Coli 304-773-6861 alter 1---:-:H-:-o_n_d~a-~~:-:C~X-cuGrain Claimer. Ex·
6:00.
1
collont condition. Call 614·
tom motorcyc •· exc cond,
985·3B31.
under warranty,
I ___________J;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:~ 1989 J1guor XKE Roadster. stilt
RUn• good. NHdl restored. 11,800.00. 304 - 773 H ·a ve aome perta . 6233.
14996.00. Call 992·7364
evenings.
OUIIIIOARIIING HOUII! ®wllh Mojcir JIOopte®
76
Auto Parts
1976 Uncoln Continental in '
&amp;
Accessories
good 1hape. All power. New
tlraa. Wlllllll 11 belt offer.
Call 91!2· 7208. Wrecked 1'972 Buick Skylerk. 360 engine and trans1979 Dodge Omnl. Front ·
minion . • -1 60.00. Coli
whHI drive, air, good tirea.
992-7403 .
AM·FM ca...tte deck. AskIng U650.00. Call 992Two 8ft. tool boJC.ee for truck
6184.
•65.00. Coli alter 5 ~M
304·671, 501 8.
1988 Comoro,350 three
•peed automatic. Good con - · Four 15 In Crogono, Z Kelly
dition, tSOO.OO. Coli 614·
Supercharger tlru oH • C•843-8368.
moro Z·28. Co\1 304-.8 82 2245 evenings.
1976 Ford LTD. Very good
condltlon,cloon lnsld~ and
out. 1 B mpg, reg gos. Con be
79 ·Motors Homes
bought on time. A 350
CHEB motor 73 and up.
&amp; Campers
noo.oo.coll 814 -9854392.
1977 Dodge Sportsmen
1974 Olda Cutlou. New
wegon window Vln, ln 'good.
tirea, runa · good. •410.00.
shape, ·U,OOO. Call 814Call 992· 7403 .
258 -1561.

r

Home .
Improvements

II·S

'AKC Reg. Blue Chow puppies. Also AKC Chow Stud

1972 Cadillac 4 door hard·
top, as is, $300.00 . locust
posts,$1 .75 lor 7ft. 53.50
for 9 ft. corner posts. Call
992-6706 alter 5 :00 pm .

Firewood, $20.00 pick up
load , $30.00 delivered.
304 -675-2991 or 675 ·
6762 .

81

GASOLINE ALLEY

You nas to know,
Mr. Bicker befo'
you kin ars.~e
hirn! ,-::..-... 1"'1

l .can't believe
you won, Melba

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

You did

nothing•

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614 -446 -3888 or
614 -446-4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1, Box 355, Gallipolis. Call 614-367-0576.
SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating, 211 Sixth · St.,
Point Pleasant. W . Va. 304675-5420 . Licensed and
insured .
83

Excavating

Goo«;t-1 Excavating, baae·
ments. footers. driveways.
septic tanks, landscaping.
Call anytii1J.B 614 -4464637, James1.. Daviaon, Jr.
owner.
Dozer Work by Ted Hanna.
Ditches. ponds, roede. land
clearing, etc. Call Motor Car
Brokero, 448-6692 . .
J.A .R.Construction Co.Ru ·
tland, Oh,6 14 · 7.42-2903 ;
8asementi, Footers, Con crete work. Backhoa'a .
Dozer a. Dltcher. Dump
trucks, &amp; water· g8a-sewer·
electrical lines .

BARNEY

NUMBER 6 !!

IT'S '-/OUR TURN,
NUMBER 6

D . A . 8oston Exclveting
Dozer and Dump Truck Ser·
vices . Call 614-887-8628
or 614 -378-6288.

84

&amp;

8 60

Electrical
Refrigeration

85

General Hauling

Jamee Boya Water Service.
Also pools filled. Coli 614·
218 -1141 or 8~4 - 448·
1176 or 81.4-448· 7911 .
Ken's Water Service. Welle,
clatorna, paola filled. Phcina
614 · 367·0623 o'r 614·
387-7741 night or doy.

c

PEANUTS

Dump truck for hire, will
haul coal, llme..one, ate.
304-675 -3190.

Upholate!'Y

TRIITATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc. Avo., Oolllpolla .
614-448-7833 or 814·
448-1133.

. ''

t

IODUXTE
I K) J

.

F~I END MARCIE ...

I

"'Kl
60N·

STA'f lAMERE '1'0\J
ARE, ~AM .. WE

WON'T COME

NEAR VOO!

THE: ONL.Y R'EA50t..i
IHeY CAL.L.EP HIM A

6 1G $HOT WA6 THAT
HE WASAI..WAY$
DO IJ.JIS THI$.

Now arrange the cirded leners 10
form the 1urpt1H answer, as aug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Prlntanswerltere:

r XI XXI XI

I]

(1\niiWers tomorrow)

Yesteraay·s

Jumbles · PATC H

I Answer:

CIVIL

HICCUP

TAUG HT

Wha t a marr iage propos al isA H ITCH PITC H

BRIDGE

James Jacoby
NORTH
• AJ 2
9 A961
t Q 10 9 8

Thrown in
with no way out

11 ·1-11

• 52

By James Jacoby
As usual with ambitious final contracts that have very little play, the
bidding is neither recommended nor
admired. South bid four diamonds
because he treated the jump to three
diamonds as a forcing bid, but why
North bid five is a mystery to all of

WEST
.K98 6 5
9QJ

EAST
•10
9!08H32

t53

t l2

. . AJ98

us .

+KQ 74
SOUTH
tQ 74 3
9K
t AKJ 76

+ to 6 3

If the defense had started by taking

Vulnerabl e: East-West
Dealer: South

their clubs, there would have been no
reallstic play lor II tricks. Instead,
West led the heart queen. On the

Wett

NC]rtb

East

Soutb

Pass

l9

Pass

lt

Pass
Pass

lt
st

Pass
Pass

1+

surface, bringing in this contract
seems to depend on not losing a spade
trick. Th.at can be managed in the
normal course of events only if West
holds the king doubleton. South saw
one additional chance and took it.
He won the heart king, pia yed a low
diamond to the 10 and trumped a
heart with the diamond ace. Another
low diamond to dummy drew the

••
Pa"'

Pass
Opening lead: •Q

defenders' remaining trumps. Declarer played the heart ace, shedding a wha t else? East had no second spade
· club, and ruffed dummy's last heart. to play, and West would have to play
Next a spade was played to the jack. away from the king. If any suit other
When declarer now exited with a than spades were played, declarer
club, the defenders were helpless. would simply trump in his hand and
They could cash two club tricks, but discard dummy 's l ow spade.

mo

~~·~by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Exhausted I N .H . river
6 Diaphan· 2 Contrivance
3 Spirit lamp
ous
11 Falsify
4 Man's
12 Golf term
nickname
13 Dinner
5 German city

6 Calmed

treat

15 Three

down
- match
7 Lincoln's
16 Stowe
secretary
harac~r
8
Minced
C
17 Speck
oath
18 Unoriginal 9 Elsie 's calf
20 OtheUo, 10 Remainder
14 Diabolical
e.g.
18 One' s
23 High
pledged
spirits
word
27 Passion
19
Elicit
29 Bequest
r ecipient 20 Deface
21 Rich r ock
30 Kind
of grass
32 " Mildmannered
reporter"
33 Scout
or Silver
35 Somewhat
1suff.)
38 A.A. pros·

~~~!~~~

Yes~rday 's
22 Un·

34 Accwn·
matched
ulate
24 Conunon 35 Ait
suffiX
36 Trumpeter
2li Nwnber 37 Crowd
f or Moses 39 Lay
26 Though
conc rete
28 "41l Caesa r 's
Cogburn"
hi ghway
! Wayne
41 " - B oy "
lilm1
43 Conceit
31 Stage item 44 Cap

peel
39 Dilly
42 Musical
instrument

45 More than
average

46 One of
Noah's
birds
47 Witchof 48 Corundwn
DAIL V CRVPTOQUOTFS- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR •
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Sing le let~rs .
apostrophes, the length and fonnati on of the words are all
runts. Each day the code letter~~ are different .

CRYPI'OQUOTE

m

I wAS 601NG TO
SHAAE IT WITH M'(
• I

87

I I I
·-·------

m

u

SEWING Machine repairs ,
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp;: Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 614 -992·2284.

by Heovl AmoldlndBoblH

EMZIA

EVENING
8:00 . . Clllll 11) . ([)liD .
(I2i NIWI
Cil MOVIE: ' Morclano·
ill Hot Potato
ell Lucy Show
(I) Dr. Who
(j]) 3-2-1, Contact
fJ) Oiffrent Strokes
8:30 ·• .Cil 11) NBC Newo
(I) Rifleman
(]) Mezda SpartsLook
(]) Carol Bur~att
Cll Cll il) ABC News
0 ([) il) CBS News
(I)
Nightly.
8usinoas
Report
(j]) Body Electric
f.ll One Day at a limo
7:00 U Cil PM Magazine
(I) Hera Coma tho Brides
(]) SportsCenter
ell Gomer Pyle
Cll Gl il) Entarteinmant
Tonight
C2) Whaal of Fortuna
0 ([) Wheal of Fortune
(I) !Ill l'llacNoii/ Lahrer
Newshour
(j]) News
.@I Jaffarsona
7:30 U Cil Tie Tae Dough
{]) Talking Sex w/ Your
Kids Here are the how-to ·s
for explaining the birds
and the bees to your ch ild ·
ren.
(]) PKA Full Contact
Karate
lightweight
Contenders Bout Coverage
of th is karate bout is presented from Atlanta, GA.
(90 min.f
IJ) Andy Griffith
Cll U (]) Family Feud
Jeopardy
® Wheel of Fortune
OJ il) New Nama That
Tune
fJ) WKRP in Cincinnati
B:OO U Cil 11) Cosby Show
Cil Inside the NFL Len
Dawson and Nick Buoni·
conti review this week' s
NFL action .
C2J MOVIE: 'Promises in
the Dark'
r]J Circus
ell NBA Basketball: Saattla
Supersonics at Houston
Rockets
(]) Gl il) MOVIE: 'Groat
Imposter'
U (]) ®J Magnum P.l. A
psychic hi res Magnum to
investigate a vision she's
had in wh ic h her own mu rder takes place . (60 min)
[l) Forum
f.il MOVIE: 'Hang 'Em High'
8 :30 U C2JCLI FamilyTiasWhile
Steven and Elyse are away
on vacation , M811ory has
an accident with the fam i ly
car and is desperate to fix it
before their return .
(!]) On the Money The costs
of having a baby and the
ins a'nd outs of. investi ng in
gold are examined. [Closed
Captioned)
9 :00 U !Il (LI Chaers Fi rst of 2
parts. Coach falls niadlv in
love with a woman he's
never seen before and asks
her to marry him .
C2J MOVIE: 'Oh, Godl'
700 Club
..
@ Top Rank Boxing from
· Merrillville.
IN Marvin
Johnson vs. Charles Wil·
Iiams ·in a 10-round Light
Hea~weight bout.
0 IIl ®l Simon &amp; Simon
(j]J Mystery! 'Rumpole of
the Bailey: Aumpale and
the Female of the Species.'
Rumpole defends a small·
time crook i n an armed·
robbery charge and he lps a
young female barrister
make a start in the chambers. (60 mih .) [C losed
Captioned]
9:30 U C2JCLI NightCourt Billie,
believing that Harry is ser·
iously ill. exposes her tru e
feelings to him .
([) Bach Castle Concerts
10:00 U !Il (LI Hill Street Bluas
Furillo is under pressure to
fi nd the killer when a res·
pected community leader
is sla in. (60 min .)
C2J MOVIE: 'Blue Thunder'
(]) OJ il) 20/ 20 [Closed
Captioned]
0 Cll ®l Knot's Landing
([)
Constitution:
That
Oelic8te Balance ·cam paign Spending : M oney
and Media .' Conclusion
The i mportance of the me·
dia in national elections
and thB attempts to reform
campaign financing are
discussed . (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
CiJ) Newswatch
f.il Independent News
10: 15 ([) MOVIE: 'The Andromeda Strain'
10 :30 CIJ My Litt le Margie
(I]) Tony Brown's Journal
@I Soap
11:oo
!Il CIJ
CIJ ®'OJ
(J}I•News
C2J MOVIE: 'Tho Balled of
Gregorio Cortez'
(I) Bill Cosby Show
([) Two Ronnies
(j]) Media Probes 'TV
N8ws.'
This
program .
tlosted by John Cameron
Swayze. shows us t he
lengths that newsrooms
will go to in order to get
good ratings . (Rf [Cl osed
Captioned]
f.il Benny Hill Show
11 :30 U C2J CD Tonight Show TO·
night's guests . are the
King 's Singers and Thal assa Cruso. (60 min .)
Boot of Groucho
(!) SpanaCen1er
(J) WKRP in Cincinnati
D ([) Newhart Tho Lou - ·
den's plan on a great time
but end up with noth i ng
when they entertain 'the
most fun couple ln the
world.' (A)
([) Latenlght America
(j]) Berney Miller
(j]) World Chess Championships
«&amp; il) Nightlina

~THAT BCRAIIBLED WOIIO GAME

Unser""*"' theM tour Jumblet,
one llttef to Nd'IIQUitt, lo 10fm
four - r y '"""'"·

11/8/84

Serv rces

2 Coon dogs for sale 1 Reg.
Leopard C'-'r male 16 · moa.
old ready to ba trained
6100. 1 block Coon dog 3
yr. this dog will tree a coon,
$100. ·call 6 14-258'1561.

ftfllll.\0 OOft

15

~ ~ ~~ ·

THURSDAY

Century Camper Trailer, 24
ft. Roof, air conditioned. aelf
containad. Pr.iced at
$2000.00. 31216 Bowles
Rd ., Dexter, Ohio 45728.

1 yr. old Rage block Cocker
Spaniel mala. wish to sell
$175. Colllllntareated 614266 :6641 .

Firewood for sale. Call 949·
2237.

One pair of Sunn Model 15
PA Cabinets $460.00. One
pairemptyALTEC Bass Bins
$100.00. One Fender Bass·
man 2-15 Bass Amp.
$300 .00 . One Farlisa 61
note organ $150.00. Call
614·992-6524.

Television
Viewing

1~ ft. 11lf·conteined Midas
camper, e.-.c. t;:ond., C•ll
614-3 79 -2686 .

Dragonwynd Cattery Ken·
nel . CFA Himaleyen, Persian
and Siameae kittens. New
litter AKC Chow puppies.
Coli 814·446·3844 after 7.

Shopsmlth Mork - 5,
11 "Bandsew. 1 0" Tobie
IIW, 16Y2' Drill . press·
Horizontal-Vertical. 12"
Disc Sander, 34" lathe,
with all toola, one piece unit,
Reg. cost $1800, sell for
$1200. 1984 Modal. Coli
446-3064.
- - - - - - -- ·ICOak furniture. tables.chairs,
cupboards, pie safe, tela·
phones. desk. also antiques
and gla11ware. Open Sundays. Conkal's Tuppersplains, Rt.7.

The

Make good motor home or
camper. 1 970 mlni-bue.
31 8 Dodge engine, exc .
cond., $1,500. Coli 441·
9650.

Indoor-outdoor boarding fa ·
cilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppiel . · Cell
614-386-97,90 .

tum tables; 1·7 ft. Sears
Pool tllble. Call 388 ·9020.

1984

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Briarpatch Kennell Profel·
lion•l AU-breed grooming .

2 SoundeaiGn automatic

Furnished house. 2 bdr, 241
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
$196 mo. water pd . Call
448-4418 altar 7pm.

KIT 'N' CAlli.'11.11 ®by l.arr7 Wrttht

Pets for Sale

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
814-387-7220.

Smith &amp; Wo11on 357 Mag ..
Pollee grips U&amp;O. Call446·
7737 alter 6:30.

Good clean 3 bdr house at
Addison, Ohio. Coli 614·
446-0175.

Send resume to Daily Sen·
tinel, P . O . Box 729-V .
Pomeroy. Oh 45769 .

56

Thunday. N~ber8.

Thursday. November 8. 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

YERM

AOSBNAM

WKTFXFRF

USNRNTYXT8
RSXJXOA
PKVT

XF

11-8

RVOR

KQ

RVN

WSXRXWOA

QKHANF

Yesterday's Crypt.oqaole : A DIFFERENCE OF OPINION IS WHAT MAKES HORSE RACING AND MISSIONARIES. - Wlll. ROGERS

'

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