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                  <text>Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 14, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Weather forecast

Ohio in line for increased heating aid
·
WASHINGTON (AP)
_ Ohio
stands to "do very well" among the
Great Lakes states Ill the amount of
federal low-Income energy assist·
ance it will receive In fiscal 1986
says a national -research
organization.
The Federal Funds Information
for States, a research arm of the
National Governors' Association
and the NationalConferenceofState
Legislatures, estimates Ohio wlll
receive $127 .miUion from the
Low·lncome Home Energy Assist·
ance Program In 1986, a jump of 16
percent over its 1985 allocation.

The program provides grants to
the states and can be~ to assist
low-Income residents In paying
energy expenses and reducing the
slzeofth:lsecosts.
In flscal1985 Ohio is to receive

$109mllilontro~theprogram,a2.9

percent lncreaseover$106 mUllan In
19&amp;1 and the 1\fth·largest amount
among the 50 states. The estimated
$127 mlllion the state will get In 1986
would be the fourth-largest sum
na tionwide, the group said.
Mary Williams author of the
study, cautioned' that the 1986
estimates are based on formula

figures sub)ectto ·change, as well as
the presumption that Congress wlll
appropriate the maxlln\lffi author!·
zatlon level that year.
.
Ms. Wiliams said the increase for
Ohioprobablyisbasedonthelevelof
heating bOis In the state and the
number of program recipients. She
said Ohio will be one Qf the major
beneficiaries In the Great Lakes
region
"Ohio and llllnois both do very
well," she said. "Michigan Is going
to get a small increase. Wisconsin
and Minnesota ;~re going to have
losses."

. acting program
. Dave Knowlton,
admlnlstratqr for Ohio's Home
Energy Assistance Program, said
beundersta~ thestatewlllreceive
an Increase In fiscal 1986 funds.
However, he said he expects the
totaltobeabout$118mlllionrather
than $127 miUion.
Knawlton said the increased 1985
funding allowed recipient beneeflt
levels to jump from a maximum of
40 percent to 42 percent of home
heating bills and boosted the
number of benefiting households
from 441,(lX) to 500,000.

annual parade through Middleport
and Pomeroy, co-sponsored by both
of those chambers. The parade will
take place on Saturday Nov. 24,
starting In Middleport at 10 a .m.
The chamber is encouraging both
businesses and individuals to take
part In the parade and an Increased
number of floats this year is
anticip&lt;~ted. Anyone · wishing to
participate should send their entry
forms to. the chamber office, of for
more information, call the office at

992-5005.

Money sought in court actions
Two suits havebeen filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
RKE Federal Credit Union,
Ravenswood.
One suit , filed against Charles E.
COle, Wadsworth. requests a judg·
ment of $5,249.57 plus Interest and
costs for non-payment on a promis·
sory note issued April7, 1981.
The second suit, filed against Dan
C. Heslep. Syracuse, requests a
judgment of $7,755.76 plus interest
and costs for non-payment on three
promissory not es. The not es were
exeeuted on Dec. 17. 1~. April22.
1981, and May 6, 1981.
Probation ended
The probation of Joyce J ewell ,
entered on Jan. 24, 1983. has been
terminated In Meigs County Com·man Pleas Court.
In a reciprocal action for child

Accident clarified
Robert Sisson, 17, Rutland, driver
of a truck involved In an accident on
the parking lot of Meigs HighSchool
a t 11:15 a.m. Friday was in an
a utomobile mechanics class at the
lime of the accident.
Meigs County Juvenile Officer
Carl Hysell said Sisson was taking
part in the class '-'!hen he moved the
truck which was blocking the
entrance to the automobilemechan·
lcs area. Sisson cut the wheel too
sharply ca using the vehicle to slide,
officials said. The truck hit a par ked
vehicle owned by Steve Coleman,
Reedsville, which was pushed into a
third vehicle ·awned by Charlene
swa11z. Pomeroy. Damages to the
vehicles were heavy.
Sisson has been cited to juvenile
cou11 on charges of reckless
operation and not having a driver's
license.
He has neither a driver's license
nor a learner's permit and therefore
is not allowed to drive motor
vehicles, his parents state.

55 arrests made
The Middleport Police Depal1·
made 55 arrests during
October, Chief J. J. Cremeans
reports.
The department investigated 11
accidents during the month and
:collected $603 In parking meter
·receipts and $43 in.merchant police
fees. There were 284 parking meter
violation tickets written and all
vehicles were driven 2448 miles
during the month.

support filed by the State and
Mildred Fowler against Donald
Fowler , the court ·has ruled that the
defendant is behind in child support
payments In the amount of
$10,005.00. Fowler was sentenced by
the court to10daysln jail withthejall
sentence suspended. He is to begin
making support payments atld is to
remain curren1 In those payments
or the jail sentence will be imposed .
Two cases have been dismissed in
common pleas court. The case of
Shirley Ann Evans, et al against
Lewis D. Telle,M.D. , was dismissed
with prejudice at the request of the
plaintiffs. and a reciprocal action for
child support filed by the State of
North Carolina and Mildred Harris
against William W. Harris, was
di smissed without prejudice.

The theme, "An Old-Fashioned.
Christmas," wlll be carried out by
merchants in both Pomeroy and
Middleport.
In Pomeroy, Santa and some of
his elves wlll be on the streets from
time to time to pass out treats. A
schedule of these times will be
announced later.
Joe Clark, a chamber member,
announced on behalf of the Big Bend
Merchants Association, that plans
are underway for some stores In the
area to have open houses on Sunday
Nov. 25 fromlla.m. to5p.m. These
open houses will be much the same
as ' those held by the local flower
shops and greenhouses. Marean this
event is also to be announced later.
Ash reported at the meeting that
the community Halloween party
was "successful and well·
orga~ed" and stated that he had
heard many favorable comments
about the event.
He further reported a decision to
recognize Jim Hill, manager of
Pomeroy's Burger Chef, for his
contribution to the party was made
at thechamber'sexecutivecommit·
tee meeting held last week. Hill
donated certificates for over :nJ fun
meals which were given away at the
party. A letter of appreciation for
Hill is to be sent to Greg Wagner,
head of operations at Burger Chef's
home office.
Ash also extendect a special
thank-you to Sherri Hart, chamber

percent tonight and 10 percent
Thursday.
'·

Knrvle

1

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Court to
David Andrew Hysell, 22, Middleport, and Alberta Kay Schultz, 22,
Pomeroy; Toney Warren Manley,
29, Middleport, and Gloria · Sue
Oliver, 25, Wellston; James Ronald
Mlller,Jr.,W,Cheshlre,andMellssa
Mae Collins, 17, Mlddlepbrt, and
David Richard Jenldns, ?:1, Racine,
and Sally AM Price, 21, Middleport.

1·~;=======================;

Aed
A Hearing I
s Less
Con·Spl·cuous
Than Your Hearl·ng Loss•
•

Center, discussing a "Family Support Network" progfam which will
soon be under:way In Meigs County.
Meigs County's Council on Aging
received notification in late August
that a grant for this program had '
been approved by the Department
of Health and Human SeJVices.
The program is designed to offer
physical, emotional, and educa·
tiona! support for people caring for
elder family members at home.
Twelve training sessions, beginning
in February, will be offered. Until
mid-December, project activity will
be geared towards finding the
participants who will best benefit
from this program which will
accomoda.te 25 families from the
county. No Income guidelines need
be met to qualify for the program
which will be free of charge.
Inquiries about the program
should be directed to Ms. Ondrusko
at the Meigs Senior Center at
992·2161.

.

•

Millview Clini'

rr
&amp;

603 W. Union

Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone:(6141 592-2163

udiotogy

hearing :aids

Audiologist, CCC-A

Jane Ann Karr, M.A.

Earty !lhclpP&amp;s Get the

*

$BfSf ctiRlSD1ftS BUYS

r--------------1

BULOVA, PULSAR
AND CARAVELLE

WATCHES

Area death
Litchfield Daylong, Middleport ; one
George A. paylong
son, Richard Lee Daylong, Colum·
bus, Ohio; one stepso_n, Granville
George Andrew Daylong, 74,
Wamsley,
Middleport, two sisters,
Middleport , died Tuesday morning
MaryVoiers
Barrett, Rutland, and .
in the Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Tressie
Carver,
Printer, Ky.; one
Pomeroy, Ohio, after a ·lang iftness.
..
brother,
Edward
Daylong,. GallipoHe was born May 11, 1910, in
lis
F
erry;
eight
grandchildren,
twa
Henderson, to the late Robert W.
great-grandchildren
and
several
Daylong andKa teCa thertne Sophia.
neices and nephews .
Riffle.
Funeral services will be Thurs·
He was preceded in death \)y one
day at 2 p .m . at the Wilcoxen
sister Regina Slivinski, and one
Funeral Home with the Rev. Amos
brat her Worthy Day long.
Tillis officiating.
He was a retired construction
Burial w.Ul follow In the Concord
worker with Labor Local 543 of
Cemetery
in Henderson.
Huntington, a veteran ofWWII, and
Friends
may call at the funeral
a member of the Church of Christ
home
between
7-9 p.m . Wednesday
and Christian Union in Leon.
Surviving are his wife Esta

Send the Nut Bowl" Bouquet
from your fTD ® Florist
Plan to Attend

Our

Christmas Open House
Sun .. Nov. 25, 11;00-5;00

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AND LAND CONTRACTS

GIFT ITEMS

white gold. Visit

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lay-Aw·ay Now For Christmas

Are you collecting payments on a real estate mortgage,
but would prefer to have a lump sum?

FROM KEEPSAKE

Send your thoughts

with special ·~ care:•

~09'

KEEPSAKE

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'

Story, photo on Page 10

Vot.a4, No.1 52

•

at y

enttne

Pomeroy-MiddiQport, Ohio, Thursday, November 15, 1984

. Copyrighted 1984
·,

•

e

USE OUI FREE
PAlliNG LOT

2 Sections, 14 Pages

25 Cents

A Multi media Inc. Newspaper

Marietta imn begins
dismantling old bridge
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel stall Writer
The Ohlp Bridge Company, Ma ·
rletta, today began dlsmantlilig a
bridge on Township Road 3 in
Columbia Township.
County Highway Department
Crew Supervisor Ted Warner reported at Wednesday's Meigs
County Commissioners • meeting
that the bridge will be closed to
traffic for approximately two
weeks.
While In the area, the company Is
also expected tQ begin construction
ori a bridge on Township Road 239 in
Orange Township.
May construction dale
Although the Tuppers Plains
sewage· project is being held up for
EPA approval on changes made for
drainage to Route7, commissioners
reported the project should go to
construction by May.
Commissioner Rich Jones ex·
pressed a desire to set up a publlc
meeting as soon as possible with
John · David Jones Engineers to
discuss the matter. Jones called the
public meeting " long overdue."
An· 8 by 12 foot building Is under
construction at the county landfill .
,·

Once completed the Insulated
building will provide storage space
and shelter for the landfill operator.
Associated Fabricators, ·Pomeroy,
is constructing the building at an
estimated cost of $850.
Commissioners asked what per·
centageof county roads have settled
to the point tha tthey'reready for hot
mix.· Warner opinioned l)lat one
third to one half of the county's
blacktop system Is ready for hot
mix . Roads specified include 28, 3!,
36,and46.
Warner reported that County
Road 30, (Forest Run ) has been
hand patched. Warner also stated
that highway crews checked on
reports of rough roads In the Keno
area and on Success Road , but found
no problems.
Problem areas
Commissioner Manning Roush
Informed Warner of a problem on
Hysell Run Road. A waterilneunder
the road has settled causing a dip
which now needs to be filled and
packed. Residents have been trying
to take care of the problem
themselves.
A problem has also developed on
McCumber Hill Road near the siteof

an emergency reclamation project
being carried out by the Office of
SUrface Mining. Workmen have
been moving heavy equipment
across the road to a waste dump.
Some r~idents are now having
trou bie getting vehicles through the
crossing .
Warner reported the county
hlghway department is presently
helping Salem Township In raising.
about 400 feet of Township Road 18
which lles in a flood plain. The
county Is hauling dirt from the bank
on County Road 10 which is being
used to raise the township road
approximately 5 feet.
Warner also reported the depart·
ment will be assisting Letart
T ownship Ttustees in repairing the
roadway in the Letart Falls Cemetery. However, to prevent the loss of
any hot mix matertals, the work will
probably not begin until sprtng.
A new dump truck, ordered
several months ago from the
Simmons company, Pomeroy, cost ·
ing$22,500, has bee.n delivered to the
highway department'.
Brush has already been cut from
the proposed site of the heliport to be
(Continued on page 101

monitoring the tax deliberations with concerns
similar to BASA' s.
Hl!uck's statement came as majority Democrats in
the Legislature adjourned the lame-duck session until
Monday. But they confirmed that Democrats, as well
as Republicans who will take control of the Senate in
Jan11ary, are at least toying with the possibility of a
tax cut.
senate President Harry Meshel, D·Youngstown,
said; "It's stili up In the air, Anything could happen ."
House Speaker Vern Riffe Jr.. D-New Boston, said :
"I'm not ruling anything out." However, he then
reeled off a set of conditions that seemed toprecludea
cut In the near future.
Riffe said he would support a tax cut if there is "a
proven SUllllus" and If enough revenues have been

Hopes for balancing
budget fading further
WASIDNGTON (APl -Adminis·
tration officials preparing the
spending plan President Reagan
will send Congress early next year
are ali but conceding they will have
no more success balancing the
budget in Reagan's second term
than they had in his first. ·
A dozen senior officials drafting a
budget outline for presentation to
the president at the end of the week
are grappling with forecasts of
deficits soaring above $200 billion,
requests from Cabinet departments
for more money and Reagan's
insistence ihat he will not allow tax
Increases.
While there are ways to achieve a
balanced budget on paper, admlnls·
tration officials and private economists agree that political and
special-Interest pressures make the
goal virtually Impossible to reach
even by the end of the decade.
AcCording to administration officials who spoke on condition they not
be quoted by name, White House
bUdget director David A. Stockman
told the president &lt;Wd his Cabinet
earlier this week that rising
government farm .Payments and
unanticipated govern.ment securi-

ties costs are pushing the deficit for
this fiscal year Into the record range
of S205 billion to $210 billion.
The current record for red Ink was
$195.4 billion set in fiscal 1983. The
deficit was '$175.3 billion In fiscal
1~. which ended Sept. :Jl.
"There is no (realistic) way you
can propose cuts in a spending track
alone that can get to zero deficits"
even by the end of the decade, said
an actrTtlnistration official familiar
with the budget planning.
Alien Sinai, chief economist at
Shearson Lehman-American Ex·
press, projected a 1985deficit of$185
billion, rising to $215.7 billion by the
end of the decade.
Asked the likelihood of a balanced
budget without tax hikes by the end
of the decade, he replied, "It's
extremely unllkely."
·
Meanwhile, Cabinet departments
are. making their own pitches for
consideration In the budget process.
Housing and Urban Development
Secretary Samuel R Pierce, Jr.
said Wednesday he wants to add
45,500 families to those receiving
federal help paying their rent, and
avoid cutting grant programs
designed to attract private money to
urban development.

Thefts, vandalism investigated

CAMAUFLAGE JACKET
·
CARHARTT BROWN DUCK HUNTING CLOTHES
s57 49

Cake sale underway

SeePage4

RECOGNIZED -Teachers and other employes of
Meigs High School were presented apples and cookies
by the American Legion Auxiliaries of Lewis Manley
263 and Drew Webster Post 39 Wednesday morning in
observance of American Education Week. Accepting
the apples and cookies on behalf ofthe stafffrom Lula
Hampton, left, and Frankie Hunnel were John

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Proposals to reduce
Ohio's Income . t~ 1\lay draw opposition from the
same coalition which successfully fought a sta tewlde
ballot Issue to repeal the tax In November 1983.
One member of that coalition, the · Buckeye
Association of School Administrators, d'escribes as .
"alarming and disturbing" an upcoming Republican
bill to cut the t;1x 30 percent.
Exeeutlve Director John G. Hauck said Wednesday
that such a cut would make it "extremely difficult for
the General Assembly to adequately address the
needs of Ohio's schools" and that a tax reduction of
any size should be considered carefully.
Other statewide groups representing schools,
teachers, labor, mental health and others concerned
about the level of state services are known to be

registered., and set In

Pomeroy. OH .

TVC All Stars

.KREMENTZ

SELECT GROUP
OF

106 Bu uernut Ave

See column on Page 8

Old coalition may oppose

... to give her a
Starfire engagement
diamond. Guaranteed, permanently

elegant 14K yellow or

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
PH 992 -2039 or 992-5721

Story uri Page 3

20°/o OFF

JEWELRY
20°/o OFF .

AThanksgiving ~ift
with all the trimmmgs.

Talking turkey

Marriage licenses

The state reeeive&lt;,l $1.8 million
secretary, for the efficient manner
from the bank in 1~, more than
in whlch she canies out her job al)d
twice the $700,(lX) In the previous
for all the time she puts into helping · year and nearly 5 percent of the
with chamber projects.
.
national total.

•.

Eaglette preview

ExtendedForecut .
Friday through Sunday:
Fair on Friday. Chalice of rain
S!Uurday and a chance. of rain or
soow SUIIday. Highs In the 50s
Friday, the mld40s to the rnJd.SOs
Saturday and the «&lt;s Sunday. Lows
mostly In the :lis.

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

Storts,
representing
the Sundry
Portsmouth
businessman,
Rich
stores, was welcomed to the
m eetingbyAsh.
Featured speaker at Tuesday's
meeting was Noreen Andrusko,
from the Meigs Senior Citizen's

.

60-65. Thechanceofra!nlsnear~ro

"We would
the expect
followinga similar
year "
lncrear
ld of the number ~f
0~ :
the said hecouldn'tbe
rec P nhetlt;
would mean an
sure w In be 11fit levels .
Increase Os ne de oftheOfflceof
Stephen, I~ ~ said more
Consumers
uru: ~ce is needed
home heating assls a th
a~
"Total funding f~rt .e~~~not
might be going up, u cek t
,
at the pace we would 11 e 0 see,
Ostrander said.
said Ohio also
The research grouf th greatest
~~:~:= f:::in~ fro~ the Solar
d eonse·JVation ·Bank
Energy an
•

Celeste willing to me.et with leaders
(Continued from page 11
sent to state officials to apprise! hem
of the petition drive effm1 , acknowl·
edgments were received from
Celeste and Speaker of the House
Verne Riffe.
Christmas parade
E nthusiasm for the upcoming
Christmas parade and promotion
was voiced several of the approxi·
mately 30 people a Itending the
chamber meeting.
This year's Christmas shoppin g
season wiU officia lly begin with the

.

Tonight, partly cloudy. LoW~­
Thursday, partly cloudy with a high

A report of vandalism In a
cornfield owned by Mike Burke,
Pomeroy, was received Wednesday
by the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department.
According to the. report Issued by
Sheriff James J . Proffitt, an
unknown vehicle was driven
thrOUgh the field. Barbed wire was
also strung throughout. The wire
became entangled In Burke's ·
cornplcker.
Cynthia Misner, Reedsville, reportedsomeoneenteredhercamper
parked on theM. A. Hall properly In

v

Reedsville and stole a radio and a
heater. Time of entry Is unknown.
A reportwasreceived Wednesday
morning from Marshall Slater, ·
Albany, st.atlngthatagaragenextto
Rapp's Grocery at Snowvute had
been entered. Various tools were
taken as well as paint guns, an air
drill and an air sander. Also takeq
was a 1976 Suruld dirt bike that was .
being repaired.
Investigation by the sheriff's
department is continuing In all three .
cases.

•

Income tax cut

ra ised to adequately fund important state programs,
especiall y education.
Br ian T. Usher, Gov. Richard Celes te's press
secretary, reiterated that Celeste is will ing to work
with the Legislatu re to sec if a tax cut is possible. Bur
Usher said Celeste "wants to do it in a bipartisa n W"Y·
during (next year's ) budgetary process."
The tax -c ut talk among Democrats gtmerally is
believed to have been prompted by their loss of thr·
sena te In the Nov. 6 eiee tion, and by GOP plan s to
introduce in .January a measure Ia cut Ihe incom e ta x
· 30 percent.
Republicans claim that Celeste's ~perce nt in com e
tax hike in 19&amp;3 was excessive and is producing a huge
sulllius which Democrats are trying to hide. Celeste's
fiscal advisers deny !here is such a surplus.
Sena te and House leaders a lso said thev do not plan

i'ELLS1DN- A Mason County.

Administration sources ....Jr the federal deficit may
reach $210 Bilr.on this
fiscal year, much
higher than officially
estimated.

200
175
150
125
100
75
50
25

··········

·:··:·

W.Va. woman \Va s kiUed when her

-¥.

vehicle collidro ~&lt;·i th a tractor
tra iler ncar here WC'dnesday.
The victim

·.·.;

..

.;.

lnblions
ofdolars

\Vas

idPntified as Jo

Ann Shinn, 42, Appl e Grove .
according to the J ackson post of the
state highway pJtrol.
The patrol said Shinn was
northbound on Ohio 327 at9: ~9 a.m.
and reportedly fa iled to stop for a
slop sign at Ohio l2i a1 rhe Berlin
Crossroads int ersection.
Her vehicle 1ravelled onr o 124 and
\Vas struck by the tractor trailer.
driven by Ha rold D. Da,is . .17.
.Jackson. and owned by Blue Grass
Cooperage Co. Da,iswaseaslbound
on 124 when thC' crash occuned.
Thf' collision forcf'd both ,·ehicles
into thE' pdrking lot of Fulton's

Grocery. A parked pickuptmck was
s truck th2rC'.

Davis recPi\'ed mino r injuries in
the accident and was treated at the
scene. The Wells ton Fire Depart m ent used a "Jaws of Life"
extraction dE'\iCC' to reman " Shinn
from the vehicle.

Shinn was a n emptoc·('(&gt; of
Sou t hrastern Ohio Business Col iegp
of Ga iii polis. He r· bodv wa s reiPased
to Wilcoxen Funl'ral Home of Poin t
Pleasa nt
It was th~ sPcond fatu litY in
Jackson Count .'· this wt'l'k . On
Tuesda,·. Will iam Lucas. 19. Well ston. an empioc·E'&lt;' of Da,·is Rcfrac·
tor irs of Oak Hill, t'C'U into a cia,· bin
at the plant and was rrpm1edlY
smothered wirh :;o tons of cia.' . ·

Project repair funds approved

FISCal 80 81 82 83 84 85

D
Source: Offlce of Management and Budget
White House
Projection

FEDERAL DEnm- Faced with a new prediction that this year's
federal bud(et deficit could be a record saJ5 billion, IAlp administration
ottlclah are conducting an lnteuslve search for ways to cut govenunent
spending and reduce the red Ink. 'The graph shows the dlfterence In
deficits predicted by the unamed source t111d that of ReagiUl's
adrnlnl!iralien. ( AP La8erphoto).

..

to schedule noor action until the week of De&lt;:. 10 on
· bills to draw new congressiona l di stricts and pro,·id~
lawmakers and county elected offic ials with a pa,·
raise.
Those proposa ls rn a,· be intmduced neXI w!'&lt;-'k and
assigned to committN.'s for rhe start of hearings.
Rep. Terry Tranter, D-Cin cinnati, was ser
Wednesday to introduce a bill shaping new district s
for Ohio's 21 members of congress. He withdrew th~
measure a t Riffe's request after the· speaker sa id h ~
and other lea ders wa nt to di scuss the mat1~r fu t1 her.
The pay raise remained under study behind the
scenes and has not emerged in rhe fonn of a bill. rr
reportedly will call for a boost for lawmakers from
S22.SOO a year ro between S29.())).$32.000. Legislators
got their last raise in 1978.

Mason County woman
dies on Ohio highway

Tracking
The Deficit

.·.:

Redovian, .James Sheets, and Fenton Taylor, from
Jell. 'The Auxiliary members also gave copies of the
hook, "Need a Lift," a resoun.:e for infonnation on
loans, scholarships, career and employment oppor·
hmities. Copies have also been placed in the
Middle port and Pomeroy lihrari&lt;&gt;s.

State Rep. J oiynn Boster reports
the Sta te Controlling Board has
approved a request for $77,mJ ro
help ihe Village of Pomeroy to m ake
emergency IT'pa irs on Union AvP.
The situation on Union Ave. is
Clitica i and t11e village simply
ca nnot pa y for it s share of tlw cost.
Rep. Boster commented . "The
result of my discussions with stat&lt;'
officials is that Union Aw. will be
repaired without putting an impossi·
biefinancial burden on the people of
Pomeroy ... she said .
The Ohio Department of Trans·
portation had earlier agreed to
direct Federal Aid Secondary
Funds to provide 75 percent of the
construction costs for repairing the
street. The Village of Pomeroy is
responsible for the other 25 percent .
The UnJon Avenue repair is
urgently needed because, In a Oood
situation, the road provides the only
safe, reliable passage for emer·

gency rescue, national guard and

vehicular tra ffic. Rep. Bost er I'!'·
ports. Soil slippag0 ca used the
roll ap."' of a section of th~ road
which led to util ity line breaks a nd
erosion of thr road lx'd .

Meigs men escape
injury Wednesday
'1\••o Meigs County men escaped
injurv in an accident' on Meigs
County 5, near the Middleport city
limit s Wednesday aftE'moon .
The Gailia·M&lt;' igs post of the Stare
Highway Patrol sa id cars driven by
James R Grimm , 31, Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, and John R.
Hamilton, 17, Middiepot1 , were
westbound on 5. According to
troopers, as Hamilton attempted to
pass Grimm, he reportedly lost
control of his car. weni off the left
side of the hlg hw:J~· and struck a
guardrail .

i

'

�Thursday, NQvember 15, 1984

.Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DE\'O'I'ED TO 'I'HE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
A~

~m~ r'T"\....-1~-.-·~=·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publis her
Pi\T WHITEII EAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB IIOEFLICII
General Manager

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assoda-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thu~y. No~bar15 , 1984

Michel in wildentess ___. ___J_am_e_sJ_._K_ilpa_t_ric_k
perhaps it always will be this way,
but In this lull before the 99th
Congress the joint leadership could
perform a most useful service by
cons idering a few reforms. Robert
H. Michel of Dllnols, minority
leade r In the House, has offered
som e suggestions that are understandably partisan but are constructive nonetheless. In a "blueprint" widely distributed last week,
he talks about the lower chamber.
He ought to be listened to.
"There are too mary commit-

WASHINGTON The 98th
Congress wound up its work In
October in its usual state of
disarray. It Is a condition that
a nnually approaches total discombobula tlon. In the final days of a
sesson, members are voting on
amendments to amendments to
bills they never. have seen or even
heard about. The session crashes to
a dissonant close, a nd the few
members who a re left in town take
off for the hills.
It a lways has been this way, a nd

tees," says Michel, "and they cost
toomuch.''
·
He has a point. The House now Is
organized. so to speak, In a
structure that Includes 22 standing
committees, four select committees and 141 subcommittees. Over
the past 10 years we have seen these
things divide and multiply like so
many a moebae. There Is no reason,
says Michel, wlty there should be
one subcommittee on postal opera tions a nd another subcommittee on
postal personneL Why have one

lion and the American Newspaper P ublishers Assocltd lon.
LE'M'ERS 01•~ OPlN ION Ue Wf'lcome. They !!ihould be less than 300 word~;
long. All letter s are !OiuiJj t&gt;l'l to edltlngiUld must be s igned with name. address a nd
h.i ephonl" numb.·r. No unsig ned let~ers will be pub lished. Le tters should be in
JtOod tast(', addressing issues, n~t personalltlt&gt;S.

Strike over, but
evaluation •is on
The first test of how Ohio's new collective bargaining Jaw works in a
teachers strike has deepened the sentiments expressed by educators when
the law went Into effect in ApriL It has resulted in delight for teachers and
dismay lor school administrators.
A 24-day job action that ended Sunday in the Washington Local school
distric t here was the first such walkout since the law took effect a nd thus
becam e the first legal strike by Ohio teachers.
The dispute is over and the district's 462 teache rs are back at work, but
a na lysis of the new sta te system unde r which the shi ke occutTed is just
beginning.
"That new law sure didn't prevent a strike," says Kenneth Bishop,
Washington Local school superintendent. " I would predic t that this is only
the first strike, teachers' strike, undert hecollectivebargaining blll in this
state. There'll be many ot hers. I think teachers In other districts wUJ be
encouraged by it ."
Bishop is bitterly disappointed with the bargaining law a nd said he will
write to state legislators a nd ask for helplrom·other school administrators
in an effort to reverse what he sees as a change ln power provided for in the
law.
"One of the law's worst features is it gives teachers the power to hold on
indeflnitely, because they know thP s trikP (days! "ill be made up," Bishop
said, referring to the lega lly req uired minimum number of school days ,
which a utomatica lly mean teachers as well as students can make up da ys
- a nd wages- missed beca use of a strike.
" It has kind of transferred the c lout from the board of education or the
community to set11e the thing," he said.
·
He sa id his fa ith in wha t he considered the law's strong point - the
naming of an' impartia l fact-finder to cla rify the dispute- dissolved when
the fact-findt•r's suggestions. most of which favored the school toard , were
summarily rejected by the striking teachers' associa tion.
But Bishop's dissa tisfaction is the Ohio Education Association's delight.
" I would probably say the law was helpful to us," said Connie Hall.
director of organizing and bargalning for the OEA. "Because the la w was
allowed to work. it forced the settlement a t the bargalning table."
Before collective bargaining, a teachers' strike was in effect set1Jed by
court orders forcing teachers to return to work before a settlement was
worked out. taking away any chips they had to barga in with, ]I,Js. Hall sa id .
She sa id the new law isn't likely to prompt a dditional strikes.
"I think what it docs is encourage' employees who have decided it's time
to sttike tl)at if they do. there will be rules to follow," she said.
The barga ining syste m it self worked as it should have, but would be
aided in the future by some adm inistrative changes a t the State
Employment Relations Board. which monitored the labor action, Ms. Hall
said .
Grievances filed with the SERB have been delayed because of lack of
personnel and experience on the boa rd . She said those problems are mostly
political a nd would nero to be conected by the Legislature.

Letters to editor
Proper dog care
Now

tha t cold wea ther has

a rrived lf'l mf' rPmind

ownPr~

of

outsidP dogs that pm per a nd
adeq ua te shelte r Is a must. P lea s&lt;'
don 't let )'Our dog be cold and
miserablP \•.'hPn a minimum of

effor t will keep it comfortabl•'·
Steel ba rrels do not providf'
necE'ssa ry prot ection in winter 1or
sum m er e ither). for obvious rea -

sons. Wood is thP recommended
material for dog house construction. The house should have lour
sides. a good roof and fl oor , and be
at it'ast two inchPs up off thP

ground . The opening should be wid&lt;'

enoug h !'or the dog to ga in entry.
Tht' dog house should not be 1itt e&lt;J.
It mus t a llow thp dog to assum&lt;' all
normal posi tions. and slt'f'p in a
stretchC'd out posit ion. T he Ideal
ix'dding is straw. A board fixed
over the bott om of the door wilt
pfi'wn t the bedding from tx&gt;ing
draggE'd out onto the gmund .
An old piece of rug s hould tx&gt;
na iled over the door to help keep out
rain and snow. Also an extension of
tlw roof over the door of the dog
house w ill help keep rai n and snow
out. - Mrs. Dorothy Davis, 560
Syca more St. , Middleport . Ohio
457fi(l.

PTO appreciates help
The MiddleP.Ort ElrmC'ntary PTO
wishes to tha nk' !'veryone who
he lped make our F all Carnival a
great suecPss. We wish to express
our apprecia tion lor all the time,
effort. and items donated by ma ny
area businesses. pa rents. and the
school staff. We would also llkC' to
thank Denver Rice and I he Middle-

port BrC'ak Dancers for providing
the entertai nme nt.
Wit hout all of yol.l the money WC'
made to help our children a nd their
school would not have been possi ble. Our goa l for this year is to
purchase some new pl aygrou nd
equipment. - Pam Sellers. Middleport PTO.

Likes to read ads
One reason I subscribe to the
Sentinel is because I like to read the
_offerings of the syndicated columnists. and my favorltC' is James
Kllpatrick. Several times during
the past year you have deleted a
paragraph or two from toe end of
Mr. Kilpatrick's column, a nd · al·
ways on those days when Mr .
Winge tt had an ex tra long letter
Informing us of the ma ny ~hor:tcom ­
lngs of President Reagan a nd his
administration.
I had thought !bat things might
change alter we "fools," as Mr.
Wingett refers to us,· decided to
keep our President for another
term, but on Nov. 8, I again find that

Kilpa tric k has been shortened by a
paragraph or two, while we are
treated to the iong, a nd to me,
torlng account of Mr. Winge tt and
his wife's visits to the hospit a L
I asked my wife why we
subscribe to this paper, and she
lnforrned.me tha t If we did not, she
would not know wha t Items were on
sale each week at the local stores.
So, as of now, that is the only reas()n
we are still subscribers · to the
Sentinel. Meanwhile, I shall try to.
determine If we save enough on the
bargains offered each week to pay
for the subscrlptlon, Dick .
Flnlaw, 34500 Rock Springs Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 992-3921.
I

subcommittee on International development and another on international trade? Why, Indeed?
One answer Is that the subcommittees have proliferated for two
reasons. They serve the va nity of
House members (Good morning,
Mr. Chairman! ) and they provide
jobs for deserving s tuff. In the 93rd
Congress of 10 years ago, committee staff numbered 1,143. In the
Congress that just adjourned , staff
numbered 2,014. "It has gotten to
the point where on some commit·
tees there are three or four staff
members for every member of the
committee." All this costs a bundle.
In 1973 co mmitt ee f u nding '
amounted to $17.4 million. Last
year committee fundlng came to
$34.6 million.
·
Michel's idea is to cut back
sharply on the number of subcommitt ees a nd the hordes of staff. He
also begs for fairness in the
appdrtionment of committee seats
and staff positions. In the Congress
tha t assembles In January, Republicans will hold about 42 percent of
the sea ts in the House. Michel
wants them to have 42 percerit of
everything tha t isn't nailed down,
but in this wholesome desire he
probably will be sorely d isapplnted.
~peaker O'Neill doesn't play beanbag. In the mosCrecent Congress,
the Ene rgy and Commerce Committee had a n Investigative staff of
109. Of these, 100 were Democrats,
nine were Republicans.
Michel has other ideas. He would
pro hibit proxy voting in committees. He wou ld put House television
cameras unde r the jurisdiction of a
small committee from the press
ga llery . .

Aladdin and his magic lamp

Eavesdropping popular_____J_ac_kA_n_de_rs_on
WASHI NGTON -Next time you
phone Amtrak wit h a complai nt or
call Social Security with a quest ion,
be careful what you say. Big
Brother may be li stening.
These are just two of the 14
federa l agencies that have admitted they sometimes sec rC'tly monitor telephone calls. Ot her confessed
eavesdroppers include the Agriculture and Commerce Department s,
the'Postal Service a nd the Veterans
Administ ra tion.
Of a ll the agencies that engage in
this form of snooping, only five
might have legitimate reason to
worry about security: the Pentagon. the Central In te lligencf'
Agency, the State DE'partment and
t he N u clea r Regula t or)'
Com mission.
Eleven months ago. U.S. Information Agency Director Charles
Wick was caught a t the keyhole. He
admitted secretly taping ma n)'

their listening de\1Ces.
Now the House Government
Operations Committ ee has drafted
legislation tha t would make It
illegal for federal officials to make
secret tapes of their tele phone
conversations except under
circ umstances that are carefully
spelled out and Involve legitimate
inte lligence or law-enforcement
activit ies.

The mystifying fact is that the
White House Is Vigorously op posing
I he prposed legisla tion. even though
it would do little more than

reinforce

re·stric tions that

are

alread y on the books against
indiscriminate eavesdropping. Robert McConell . a n assistant attorney genera l, put the administration's objection in writing . He
notified the House com mittee, in
effect, that it would discomfit the
burea ucrats.
" It is important that admini stra-

te lephone conversa tions, includ ing

tive flexibility be maintained,"
McConnell wrote . "A statute tha t
would flatly prohibit consensual
monitoring excep t In very fixed and
limited circumsta nces would severely restrict thi s flexi bility."

some wit h While House chie f of
sta ff James Ba ker.
· Although the disclosure ca used
a n uproar, it apparently didn 't
deter ot her government snoops.
They have continued to operate

The word "consensual, " which
McConne ll uses to describe the
secret taping of phone calls. refers
to the fac t that the targeted
e mployees have been given notice
that the phone system is subject to
monitoring. So " by using the
system , thE'y have thereby consented to the monitoring -of their
co mmuni cat io ns·," McConnell
explilined.
But wha t about the unwitting
citizen whose ca ll is taped without
his knowledge or permission?
McConnell dismisses the caller's
rights with this indiffer ent com m ent : "As to individua ls who are
communicating with persons utilizing a monitored system, since at
least one of the parties to the
commimtcatlon has consented , the
monitoring is lawful."
Without m e ntionin g na mes,
McConne ll desctibed the proposed
legislation as " an over-reaction" to
Wick's overenthusiastic taping activities, a nd added, " We believe the
nature of .the activity here does not
merit a federal c riminal sta tute,
but would be better addressed
administrativ e ly through

regu lations."
But McCon nell con veni e ntly
overlooked the fact that there are
already regulations on the books
that federa l agencies pay little
a tte ntion to. The rules . require
agencies wishing to tape-record
phone calls secretly to justify the
need a nd iss ue ap propri a te
guidelines.
Yet of 72 agencies surveyed by
the House com mittee. only 14 bad
tothered to Implement the regulations , a nd only about one-third had
seen fit to issue a ny guidelines at all.
According to a committee report,
"Despite the fact that these regula·tions had been in effect for almost
three years, it is clear that they
have been essentia lly Ignored by
federa l offt cials ."
Footnote: Govern me nt Operations Committee investigators told
my associates Donald Goldberg
and Indy Badhwar tha t many of the
agencies have reasonable-sounding
excuses for monitoring conversations. Amtrak a nd Social Security
officials, for example. claim they
are simply checking on how
employees handle the public's
compla in ts.

Lucky Hector _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

Iu~!!.,~en
E~~~~~.
~~~~.
~
~,,!0~.-~.~~~~'
:
-ms

The Victory Circle

By SCOTl' WOLFE ·
II doesn't seem pilsslble, but football season Is now behind us and
basketball Is just around the romer. Just when 'tt seemed like football
season was getting Into full swing, off came the sboulder pads and cleats In
exchange for the white leather converse sneakers.
This weekend basketball officially gets underway as many leagues
host cage previews.
Friday evening beginning at 7 p .m . the SVAC ldcks offlts season with
the girls' varsity basketball previews at Kyger Creek. The boys' preview Is
slated Saturday evening beginning at 7 p.m. at Kyger Creek. In each case
Eastern Is scheduled to play rival Southern in the finale at 9 p.m. as each
school In the league will be playing Its biggest rival.

I have. Just received word that former Southern High School. running
back and SVAC a ll-league selection Wade Connolly rushed 82 yards for a
touchdown. netting 115 total yards ·to boost West VIrginia Wesleyan to Its
first victory of the season.
Another·Sou them football sta ndout, Dennis Teaford Is a lso a me mber
of the varsity squad.
Connolly is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clift Connolly of Racine, while
Teaford Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Teaford, Portland. Another
instance nf local toys doing well!
Congratulations to the 1984 Eastern High School football team for Its
fine season and for its determined play that earned It a share of the SVAC
grid c ha mpionship with Kyger Creek and North Gallla.
Also a sincere congratulations to head Coach Ray Watson and
assistants Don E ichinger and Ron Hill for an outst&lt;tndlng job In putting the
Eagles back on the winning track.
For those who don 't know coach Watson, he Is a very remarkable men,
who reflects a colorful personality as well as a vast knowledge of the game
of football It looks like the Eagles a nd Coach Watson are heading in the
right direction.
Ma ny times we often hear the bad publicity about sportsma nship,
however, so many times this season and In the past I have seen several
truly "good" cases of sportmanshlp. A true "winner" Is a good sport sma n
a nd li~ew i se a "good loser" is a good sportsman, despite the hurt·lnvolved
in s uffering the loss .'
· The "BEST" example of sportsmanship I have seen In quite a while,
however, was during the Eastern-Southern football game. Both coaches ,
officials, a nd fa ns had favorable comments about the game and the clean
play during the game.
The perfect e nding to the story was when two Eastern players, one onf
each s ide, exited the field after the game with their arms arou nd a
Sou thern player. Needless to say, friendship and sportsmanship will
always prevail.
Eoth teams, coaches, and all others Involved In that final game a t
Eastern are to be highly commended for their efforts. Both team s were
true winners in the long f\l n.
The seventh and eighth grade squads at Meigs produced a winning
com binat ion this season on the gridiron. Keep up the good work and keep
working hard er lor the championships to come a t the varsity level. Good
luck in the future!
At Southe rn's football ba nquet last Saturday, Coach Bill Porter
com mented on the progra m a t the school and announced that more than
100 kids participated this season from the elem entary· teague through the
varsity level. This. is really a big step in the right direction for a solid
football future a t Southern.
Coach Porter also related stories of his team's visits to pro training
camps, college ca mpuses, and to college football games, a treat the kids
always look forward to as a foo tba ll player.
As the story progressed Coach Porter said thts season Southern visited
Wesi VIrginia Wesleya n and the Cleveland Browns' tralnlng camp.
Sout he rn a nd the forementioned teams enjoyed relatively good seasons
last year, but this year a ll suffered disappointing years, prompting Coach
Porter to deliver the a ppropriate punch line: Wonder which one of us
rubbed off on the other?
Whether or not the Tornadoes visit the training camp of this year's
Super Bowl winner. they have all the cOmponents of a winning season next
yea r with co-coa~hes Porter and Darrell Dugan at the helm.
Who "ill win the SVAC basketball championship this season? Well. I
have no predictions yet, but Southern and Eastern could be contenders.
Sout hern will not be overpowering asd In the past, but It will be consistently
good a nd Eastern has the potential as a darkhorse candidate with a lot of
young talent.
NPvertheless I hope everyone reaches the victory circle In wha tever
task you unde rtake.

ter went unanswered.
The imprisoned Salvadoran labor
leaders became a cause a mong
American unions a nd human rights
groups. The governments in San
Sa lvador and Washington were
pressed repea ted ly for thei r
release .
The rC'sponse finally came on Oct.
R, 1984. Speaking before the General
Assem bly of the United Nations,
Sa lvadoran President Jose Napoleon Duarte invited the rebel
opposition to begin negotiat ing a
peaceful resol ution of the count ry's
civil war. Simult a neously, he announced the release of the union
leaders .
They refused to leave Mariana
without safeguards, however. In
April, a trade unionist ha d been
fired. A month la te r, he turned up
dead on a San Salvador street.
On Monday, Oct . 15, the d ay of
Duarte's meeting with rebel leaders in the mountain town of La
Palma , the union members did
leave the prison under escort of the
Interna tional Red Cross. American
la bor representa tives were also in
attendance.
The freed prisoners were taken to
El Sa lvador's tntematlonal airport
where they were joined by the
Dutch a mbassador to Costa Rica,
who represents his government Jn.
all Central Ame rican countries, on
a flight to Guate mala City. There,
they boarded a flight to the
Netherla nds and asylum.
Most were accompanied by
family members.
Hector R.econos, however, was
alone. The week before his release,

,,

he learned that his wife a nd
daughter h ad died in 1982, 16 days
after their arrest by the treasury
pollee.
There are still three sons,
however- 16, 13 a nd seven years of
age. Now In Los Angeles, they may
eventua lly join him in the Nether-

la nds. Anot he r possi bility is that the
entire family may be gra nted
asylum In the United States.
- Under the circumstances.
Hector Recinos may s till consider
himself lucky- luck being relative,
·especially In El Salvador.

Eastern SdJeduJe
OILI.t' - Oppm~nt
Nov. 2IJ - Ft&gt;deral H oc k in~

Nuv. 'n - Meigs ........ .
OPt· 1
. - Port F rye ..... ..
I)«:. 6 - Ky-'!er CrP.Pk .
[)(.{ , I,:~- North Callla .
f H'I:· ~~- !Ianna n Traer.
[)(·t' Z7 - FE"dt?r al Hocking
.Jan. 10 - Souther n ... .
Ji:l n. 14 - Mcigs·....
Ja n. 17- SolJthwe&gt;sl{lm
.Jan. ~ - KygPr' Creek ...

J&lt;J n. ~;-

f o rt

Frye .

.J;; n ~ .l&lt;tn ;t: ) -

F or !

F r;&gt; t'.

A l ht ·n ~

Expos hire Rodgers
MONTREAL (AP) Buck
Rodgers, described as a n aggres·
sive manager whose communicatlons with players are open to
debate, will try to solve the puzzle of
the Montreal Expos, a team steep in
talent tha t usually falls short of
expectations.
"I think Montreal is hungry for a
good, winning baseball team,"
Rodgers said Wednesday after
being named manager of the
National League club. ''I' m aware
that Montreal has a lot of pride in its
sports' teams a nd Identifies with
them.
" In the sam e vein, they tend to be
more critical, and I think that's
good. I think if we pl ay bad, people
will write and report that, but if we
play good baseball I expect them to
do the same."
Rodgers rroplaces Jim Fanning, .
who moved back Into the tea m's
front office after finishing the 1984
season following the firing of Bill
Virdon.
A lack of communtcationwassaid
to be one of Rodgers' failings with

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.. Al.l.'a .\ '

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F('b

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f f'b. 11 - Southf'rn ..
F'l'•h 1~ - Marif'tta .

Fe&gt;b. Itt- South 14'C&gt;swrn

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NOV.19,

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NOV. 16th &amp; 17th

lOO's

LIMIT

THAN!&lt; YOU

-----------------~•

Sincere th.anks to all of . you who
supported my candidacy on Nov. 6. Special
thanks to the many volunteers who
assisted me throughout the county. I shall
endeaver to justify your faith during the
next four years.

Amity

GIFT
WRAP
SINGLE ROLL

BILLFOLDS
MEN'S OR WOMEN'S

30 SQUARE FEET

.

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Only

RICHARD E. JONES

.~

Pd. Pol. Ad by Richard E. Jones. Rt. 2, Pomeroy 45769

· PRICE

PRICES

. 19.9926.99
'14.99
29.99
32.99

14.99
21.99
9.99
24.99
27.99

T
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Vinza

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24 oz.

FRIDAY Ttl

"COMPARE TO

TYLENOL EXTRA STRENGTH"

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EACH

Only

$247

RUBBING
ALCOHOL
16

oz.

S
S
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Quality Apparel. Affordebly ~~iced

9:30-6:00-

ACETAMINOPHEN 500 mg.

SWISHER LOHSE

.

GALLIPOLI5-43 Court St. (Across from Mu~tct~l Parkmg lot)
MIDDLEPORT -l29 Mtll St. (On the T m Middleport)
DAILY

''

ISOPROPHYL

Trade your Chic rebate check alonx with the

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Ginn proof of purchase and we will1ive you
a merchandise certificate wonh ...

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Mail -in information available in store

LAYAWAY .

.. Home
.... Home

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Milwa ukee Brewers, the only other
big-league team he has m anaged. In
the strike-shortened 1981 season.
Rodgers guided them to an Ameli ·
can League East playoff berth, but
was fired the following June after
fe uds with pitche rs Rollie Fingers
a nd Mike Caldwell a nd catc her Ted
Simmons, among others .
" I made some m istakes in
Milwaukee," Rodgers said . "We a ll
make mistakes when we're starting
out."But I think I've learned fmm
that experience."

REGUL~R REBATE

VESTS

... HOmt"
.... A wa }'

I

Clic and get $5 back
FASHION TWO·TONE

A"'•a y
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.Ju n. 31 - ~ ort h G;illia ..
F'Pb ~ - Wilt£•r1nrd

WET-n-WILD

FASHION CHECKS

..... Hom e
...... Awa y

1/2 PRICE
DAN'S

.
Pd. Pol. Ad. by the Cand.
Philip M. Roberts. Rl. 2. Patriot , OH. 45658

FASHION STRIPES

Place
, Hom e
..... ,A way
....... A wa y
..... A wa y

TENNIS SHOES
OR ATHLETIC SHOES

PHILIP M. ROBERTS

S POCKET BASIC

9
9

All REMAINING STOCK OF

Thanks
voted for me in the Nov. 6 election. It was
greatly appreciated.

Today tn history

.,,

Aprll Ritchie, G .... .... ........ 5-5
Arle ne Ritchie, G ............ ·5-3
J anet Werry , F .. .............. 5-6

SVAC selection Dee Dalley, who champions hip seasons at Eastern. r-;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
was a key rebounder a nd top
Accordlng to Douthitt, "This
scoring threat. Also mislng are
year's team attitude Is a very good
one, and .It will play a big part tn the
guards Kris Wilson, Kelly Whi '
victories we get this season. If we
tlatch, Tammy Capehart, and
Mary Hibbs, along with Forward
playtoourpotentialweshouldhave
Ann Diddle. .
a good season .
On the shiny side of the coin are
"With only three girls returning
the bright prospects of returnees
from last year's sq uad, we are
Angle Spencer, Mindy Mankin a nd · lacking varsity· experience. I am
Margaret Horner.
looking lor a Jot of leadership from
BY KANGAROOS &amp; LACROSS
Spencer, a 5-8 senior point guard. these three girls. We should be a
.is a three-yeat le tterman who
faster team than last year.
"Although it's kind of early to
started as a freshman . Spencer has
been na med to the first team SVAC
well we're beginning to look like a
team!"
a ll-league squad on two occasions,
being na med as honora ble mention
Eastern plays a full schedule th is
FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
her freshma n year . For two years
year. Opponent s include Athens .
Marietta, Waterford, Logan. a nd
she has led Eastern In free throw
percentage and earned "best defen- Fort Frye In non-league e ncoun ters, a ll of which are noted for fi ne
slve player" honors one year.
Joining Spencer is a nother SVAC
girls' a thletic programs.
IN THE MIDDLEPORT MASONIC BUILDING
firs t team nominee Margaret
Eastern kicks the season off this ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~:::::::::::::::::~
Friday in the SVAC preview at ~
Homer, a5-10junior center, who led

THANK
YOU
to all those who supported ond

•

Today is Thursday, Nov. 15,J_he320thdayofl984. ThPreare 46days left ln
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Nov. !c. 1m, the Continental Congress approvC'd the Articles of
Confederation. a prec ursor to the Constitution of zhl' United !&gt;tales.
Ratification of the Articles by the 13 slates took more than three y&lt;'ars.
On this date:
In 1~. e xplorer Zebulon Pike sighted the m ount a intop tha t la ter
became known as "Pike's Peak.''
·
In 1966, the flight of Gemini 12 ended success tully as the spacecraft,
carrying astronauts J a mes A. Lovell a nd Edwin "Buzz " Aldrin Jr.
splashed down In the Atlantic.
In 1969, 22.~ protesters agains t the VIetnam Wa r sfagE'd a peacPfu l
demonstra tion ln Washingt on.
In 1978, anthropologist Margaret Mead died in New York of cancer atthe
age of 76,
In 1982, funeral serv ices were held in Moscow's RC'd Square for the late
Soviet President Leonid .!. Brezhnev.
Ten years ago: President Gerald R. Ford refused to permit the
American delegatlon to the World Food Conference In Rom e to commit the
United States to a million-ton Increase in food aid.
·
Five years ago: President Jimmy Carter assailed the holding of the
American hostages ln Iran, calling It "a n act of terrorism totally outside
the bounds of international law.''
One year ago: By a narrow vote, the House of Represent a tlves defeated
an attempt to revive the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the ·
Constitution.
Today's birthdays: Senator Howard Baker, R-Tenn., Is 59. Actor
Edward Asner is 55. Singer Petula Clark Is 52. Actress Joanna Barnes is 50.
Tlioug ht for today: "One has to grow up wfth good talk In order to form
the habit of it." - Helen Hayes, actress.

her size Horner handles the ball
Eastern's games with Southern Is
well and Is a top scoring threat. Also
s lated for 9 p.m .
returning Is a steady ballhandler
a nd good all-around player, MeEAGLE'ITE ROSTER
linda Mankin . Mankin. last year's
Players - Pos.
Ht. Vr.
most Improved player , Is a 5-8
Angle Spencer, G ...... .... .. !'i -8 12
senior forward.
Melinda Mankin, G-F .. .... .. 5-8 12
Rounding out the squad Is 5-8
Margaret Horner , F ... ...... 5- 10 11
Junlor Amy Young of four sophoAmy Young, F ........ .. .. .. ... 5-8 11
mores; KrtsU Hawk , Tonya Savoy,
Klish Hawk, F .. . .......... 5-8 10
Lesa Rucker a nd Beverly Wigal.
Tonya Savoy, G .. ... ...... .. .. 5-8 10
These Gals are up from last year's
Lesa Rucker, G-F ....... .. .. .. 5-7 10
SVAC champion reserve team .
Beverly Wigal. G ........ ...... 5-6 10
First year varsity coach Pam
Rfflerves
Douthltt, who has been an assistant
Players- Pus
lit . Yr.
for several years under Coach
Michelle Capehart, G-F .. .. . 5-4 9
Susan Thompson Arnold, replaced
Patty Durst. C-F ...... .. .. ..... 5-6 10
Arnold who chose to retire from
Melissa Hensley, F -G ...... .. 5-3 9
coaching last season after several . Melanie Mankin , G ..
. ... 5-3 9

EAST MEIGS -It
almost
Impossible, but basketball season Is
just around the comer. At Eastern ·
High School girls' varsity basket·
ball coach Pam Douthitt has been
working with 16 candidates, vying
for starting positions on the varsity
and reserve squads .
In some areas Eastern is very
strong, however, In other areas the
young Eaglettes are a b.lt unproven.
which leaves the outlook of the
1984-85 basketball season uncertain.
On the darker side df the coin toss
Eastern lost six .players from last
yea r 's SeCtional Championship
team which advanced to the
District Tournament In Chillicothe.
Gone from that club Is first team

MEIGS CO. ENGINEER

Let me tell you a tout Hector
Reclnos.
I met him briefly this past spring
in the politica l section of Mariana.
the men's prison in E l Salvador.
He considered himself lucky
then. An·ested and "interroga ted"
Salva doran style, he had su rvived
the process. Those who don't end up
as corpses alo ng Sa lv adoran
roadsides.
A leader of the hyd roelectrical
workers union and secretary genf'ral of a trade union federa tion, he
participated in a general strike In
August 1980. T he walkout , called in
part to protest the dea th or
di sappeara n ce o f 18 uni o n
membecs. effectively ·shut down
most of the count ry's m aj or power
pla nts.
Reclnos was picked up with other
union leaders on Aug. 20. Taken to a
national guard jail, he was questioned a nd tortUFed for 70 days before
being locked up In Mariana.
The unionists were to be held
there for the next four years without
formal charges ever being flied,
·without access to legal counsel ,
without trial.
During those years, word
reached the m of family members
killed or "disappeared." In August
1982, Reclnos learned that his wife
and 13-year-old daughter had been
taken Into custody by the treasury
pollee, which does not restrtct Its
operations to financial affairs . Its
human rights record IS possibly the
worst among the Salvadoran uniformed services.
Repeated requests by ~!nos for
Information on his wife a nd da ugh·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

8:00

I

lI
I
I

I

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullour;h. R.Ph.
Ch1rles Riffle. R,Ph.
Ron1ld Hanni111. R.Ph.
Mon. thru Sat 1:00 1.m. to 9 p.m.

Sunday 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 4 to 8 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Frie ndly Service
Eu1 Main St.
Pomeroy. Oh .
Open Nitht s till 8

,.

·---------------------t

�Page- 4 - The Daily Sentinel

~

•·

INDIANAPOLIS (APl - India·
napolls Colts Coach Fra nk Kush
says he's giving strong consideration to starting fanner Ohio State
quarterback Art Schlichter against
New E ngla nd Sunday.

ATHENS- Belprp's Lee Holder

It would be the first professional
start for Schlichter, s uspended from

NEW YORK (AP) - In a sense,
the first round of J!ego tiatlons tor a
new baseball contract could be
characterlzed as encouraging, says
union head Don Fehr.
In one sense only.
" All I can say is this: The_parties
said a ll the f'ight things ... people
were stating their intentions to
reach an agreement without rancor,
without threats," he said. "They
pledged to do that
"So, to that extent, it was
encouraging."
F ehr, actlngexecutive dlrector of
the Major League Players Associa tlon, and h is associa tes met for
about 1',2 hours Wednesday with a
managem e nt negotiating team that
included the owners' P layer Rela lions Committee President Lee
MacPhaU and three owners. It was

the National Football League last
season for gambling. He was the
fourt h player overa ll selected In the
1982 college draft.

r-:===========::;
The D a lly S e ntinel
t liSPS 115-1160)
A Divis ion of Multime dia, Inc.
Publlsht'd &lt;'VI?ry aftNnoon, Monday
throug h Friday, 111 Court St., y the
Ohio Valley PubllshlngCompa ny/ Mult i m~dt a. ln('., Po meroy. O hlo 4~769 . h.
!192 - 21~.

c l ;,~ss

SC'C'ond
Pomeroy, Ohio.

pos tagl.' paid at

Mf' m be r: T h ~ Assocla II'd Press, Inla nd Dall y Press Assocta iiOn a11 d !he
American Newspaper Publishers AssoC'la t lon. National Advertising Repre·
~f' nt atlve. Bra nha m News paper Sal~ .
7U .Thi rd Av('nue. New .Yqrk, New

York 10ot 7.

POSTMASTER: Send addrf'Ss changes
to T he Dally S&lt;on11nel. 11 1 Cou rt St., Pom&lt;'roy. Ohio 457fi9.

'

;&gt;

Dan

PRJ&lt;:ES

.

Daily .............. ............. .. ..... 2:i Cents

Senior End

Sub!lcri bpr.s not dC'sl r:l n ~ to p&lt;.~y t he carriC' !' m ay n•mil in udvanc(' dirf'cl to

IAn'S OF MEAT -This 12point buck, I!IOpound'ifleldddressed, was
taken in · the Forked Run Lake area · by bowhunter Gary Reed,
Reedsville. Reed has taken nine bucks since he began bowhunting for
deer 12 years ago •

The Dally Se nll nC'i on a .1. 6or 12 mo nt h
basis . CrPdlt will !X' glvPn car rie r each

mo nt h

Nn

by mal l IX'I' mi lled In
whl'n' ho me currlf'r servl c£' Is
availab iP.
sub~criptl ons

. t m~; n s

Steams' elbow sore;
he insists its not gone

Ma ll Subscrlptlon!i
l11sldt• Ohin
JJ W«&gt;ks ................................. $14 .56
:!ii \V('('k r; .................................. $29.12

!1:! WC'ck s ................................. $5R24

TVC All League

Oul ... hh• Ohio

J:l WcP ks ..... ... ... ....................... $15.60
2fi \V('(' k s . . ......... .. .............. .......

s:·n .20

!12 Wcf'ks , ........ ....._. .. ............... 859.80

,Ja£1de Welker

If you ha\'C' S('fv lre probiC'ms cal l our
s(' r VI&lt;'(' dP~k a1 9fl2-:ll:lfi bfofv rr 6:00 P.

Tony We lch
6-0, 272 pound
Senior tackle

i&gt;-10, 155 pound
Senior Wingback

M . M ondo.1.V I hl'u· F'rlda~'.

HEAR All THE ACTION OF
OHIO STAlE BUCKEYE FOOTBALL
and OHIO UNIVERSITY BOBCAT FOOTBALL

''A

, _

*NOV.*
SPECIAL

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with Uniden Receiver

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VICTORYMIDDLEPORT,
BAPTIST
CHURCH
OHIO

ON RT, 1
TUPPER PlAINS, OHIO
BY THE POST OFFICE
HOURS: Mon.-fri. 2· 7
Sat. I 0-6

REV. JAMES KEESEE, PASTOR
Y ou're Inv it ed to Our

.,

378-6158

SUNDAY I NOVEMBER 18, 1984
10:00 A.M.
525 NORTH SECOND STREET. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GUEST SPEAJ&lt;ER
THE MOORE FAMILY FROM MANSFIELD, OHIO
ALSO SINGSPIRATON AT 1:30 P.M. SUNDAY
AFTERNOON AT THE CHURCH

r-sn:,'~l $8!JJ!

PASTOR JAMES KEESEE INVITES YOU TO

I

1111

JEANS
LEE &amp; LEVI

S1599,o$1799
3 STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM
STRIPES. CHECKS &amp; SOLIDS

DAN'S

290 N. 2ND

992-3684

IN THE OLD MIDDLEPORT MASONIC BUILDING

;·""' .
........,
·~

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BILLED
TOBOGGAN
NGCAP WINTER

I

Sale Prices Good Thru Nov. 21, 1984

BLADES &amp; REFILLS

"If your
car Is four

WIPER
BLADES

years old,
replace
the be"and hoses. 'TtiKJST"

No maHer

EVENING SHOWS
7:00 P.M. AND 9:00 P.M.
SAT. AND SUN. MAnNEES
1:00 P.M. AND 3:00 P.M.

. New 2 pc. Early Americant~ -~r~~~
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Suite With Ma le Trim ..

Reg. 1499.95

$299 95
SAVE' ·
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Covered With Herculori
Solid Cover Only

New ?. pc.
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Reg.

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11oey were a f.vnlly
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Each

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K.ITS

..

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811 cltoJ~ stHir Dlt111nt

Bl1 Chot~stHJtDIMrm
3 for '6.99

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Pd. Pol . Ad . by the Cand . George M. Collins
5104 9 Rice Run Rd . Reedsville. OH. 45772

II

SEVENTH ANNIVERSARY

REV. RON VARNEY FROM COLUMBIANA, OHIO

r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::=:;;;::::::::::=::::::::=t

GEORGE M. COLLINS

a rm.
CINCINNATI (AP) -Freeagcnt
catcher John Stearnssays he has not
"blown out" his • a iling e lbow,
a lthough he is bac k home In
Boulder, Colo.. from Puerto Rico
where he .hurt his throwing arm
playing winte r ball .
The Cincinna ti Reds, the Montrea l Expos a nd the Pittsburg h
P irates have drafted the fanner
New York Mets' All-Star catcher.
Stearns , who missed most of two
seasons with elbow su rgery, had
tr ied to showcpse himself playing
for P once, Puerto Rico, in w inter
ba ll.
" ! hurt it . It's sore. B~t it 's not
gone. I have a loto ! il::Jprovement to .
m a ke before I a m ready to play
every day for someone, but I'm
ha nglng in there. I' m not g iving up
on m y ca reer. I just thought I might
be putting too much s t ress on It r igh t
now," Stea rns said in a telephone
Interview Wednesday .
" They ran on m e · r ight aw ay,"
Stearns said of his first gam e last
F riday. "! threw out three-of.!our at
second and I had a n infield play. It
hurt me then. By the sixth inning, I
knew I wasn't going to beable\ogoa
60-game schedule."
He had two hit s in t he game . .
"I knew my com eback had
suffe red a blow. I d idn 't blow my
a rm, though. I don ' t know how th at
report got started, but il was sore
a nd it did hurt . It hurt enough tha t I
knew 1 couldn 't catch the next da~' · 1
· came out (Saturday) a nd tr ied to
loosen up, but it was no use," Stearns
said.
When Ponce Gene ral Manager
Jose Cangiano learned of Stearns'
condition, he im meditely met " oth
Stea rns .
"They lake their baS&lt;'ball ve ry
U.S.A.
seriously in Latin Am erica . He hired
m e as his everyday catcher.! d idn 't
• Solid steel construction
think. after Friday's gam e, I was
• shatter-proof windshields
ready for that. It was a mutua l ,
• stay-on wheels.
agreeme nt tha t I leave, as ba dly as I
ha ted to," said Stea r ns.
For a limited time, you can buy this WIX Toy
"Please don' t m isunder stand .
Wheel Truck, $22.95 retail value, for
I'm not trying to hide wha t
·on $9.95 with the urchase of 2 WIX Filters..
happened down the re. My ann d id'
hurt, but !didn' t blow it ou t. I still fed
like I'm in the hunt ," he said.
Stearns sa id he w ould ra the r not
have to try to wi n a posit ion in s pring
GUARANTEED AS LONG AS YOU OWN YOUR CAR
training with a ma jor league clu b
ARVIN
but will if he ha s to. He sa id he might
even be int erested In a minor league
ALUMINIZED
team as a mea ns o f improvin g his

Mark Belanger, and four current
players, Don I!aylor of the New
York Yankees, Steve Rogers of
Montreal, Kent Tekulve of Pittsburgh and Jlrn Beattie of Seattle.
The management team Included
owners Bud Sellg of Milwaukee,
John McMullen of Houston and
Edward Bennett Williams of Baltimore, and both league presidents,
Bobby Brown of the American
League and Chub Feeney of the
National League. In past negotiations, owners have not been repres. ented at the bargaining table.

a

$5 $6

Wll TOY 18WHEELER

SILVERBIRD
SATEUI'Rl
!il'STEMS

NEW SHOWROOM OPEN

put .up the one-thind tiJis tlrne
because It represents
lot more
money than under previous televi sion deals.
" I don't want to uy and measure
this against some of the other Issues
or combinations of Issues," Fehr
said. "I don't think it makes much
sense to do that : But it 's no secret it
could be a major Issue, and It could
be something that would cause us a
lot of problems ."
Present lor the union a long with
Feh r were his special assistant,
former major league shortstop

· I would like to thank the Voters of
Meigs County for the good . faith and
trust they showed in me and my em·
ployees on Election Day;·
And ·a special thanks to all of those
who worked so hard for' me.
THANKS AGAIN

SINtJLE CO P Y

1&gt;-0, 165 pound

the first session to negotiate ·a
contract to replace the one that
expires on Dec. 31
''There was a better tone," said
MacPhall, who was American
League president during the last
negotiations which broke down and
resulted in a seven -week strike
during the heart of the season. ''I
think both sides learned from the
problems in 1~1 .
The strike was over free agency,
and it could again be a topic of
discussion.
However, if any issue poses a
strike thrpa t. it is expected to be the
manner In which $1 billion in
televlslon revenueisallocated to the
players' pension fu nd. Fehr says the
union will maintain its "historic"
appr oach that it should get onethird. Owners may be unwilling to

THANKS

S!I JI.~CRIPTIO N R ATES
B)' Carrie r or Motor Route
One Wcf'k ............................ .. ..... $1.10
One Month ................ ... ............ $4.80
On&lt;' YC'ar ..... .. ..........
. .... $57.20

Mark Hanunonds
11-8, 170 pound
Senior Fullb:wk

The Daily Sentinei- Page-:-5

Baseball negotiations described as encouraging

Schlichter may .s tart Sunday

was named both the "Offensive

'HIE 1984 .&lt;\LL-TVC FOO'rBALL TEAM
Players-School- P as.
Yr. Ht. WI .
, Rya n Ca rsey, Alex.', TE-E ............... ...... ..... .................. :. 12 6-1 . 17.'&gt;
Cli nton Sanders. Alex .. RB-LB .. ..................... , ................. 12. 5-9 165
Nathan Carr. Belpre. TE-LB ....... .... ...... ....... .. ................ 12 6-0 172
Lee Holder. Belpre. QB ............ .. .... .... ................... ~ ...... 12 6-1 176
Russ Logue. Belpre, WR-S ....... .. ....... ......... .......... ........... 11 5-10 155
Roger Ruble, Belpre. WR-S ............ .. .. ....... .. .............. ...... 12 5-10 140
Ernie Williams. Belpre. RB
.............
. ................. .. . 11 6-0 182
Mike Cha ncey. Meigs, RB-DB .......................... .............. 11 6-4 190
Ma r k Hammonds. Meigs, rB- LN ........... ............. .. ........... 12 5-9 16.'&gt;
Brad Robinso n, Mcigs,-TB-MG ....... ........................ ......... 11 5-9 165
Tony We lc h. Me igs, T-T ........ ................ ....................... 12 6-0 270.
Ray .!Pnks. Miller, TB-T ................................................ 12 6-0 195
Ja son Andrews, N·Y, RB- l.B .......... ... . , ..... .. ...... ............... 12 5-10 170
Pat Bohyer, t'J·Y . QB- HB ......................... ............... ... .... 12 6-2 160
Jay Kline. N-Y, E-HB ., .................... .. .... .... . ,.. ......... : ... 12 6-0 160
Mar·k Campbell, Trim ble. SE-CB ......... ... ............. ............ 11 6-0 175
Paul J ewt'll, Trim ble ............................. .... ........... QB-CB12 6-1 165
Danny Lackey, Trim ble. T-LB .. .. ..................... ................ 12 6-0 205
Aaron Boothe. .Vinton Co .. WB- HB .............. .. .. ................ 12 5-9 -150
.J. 0. AndPrson, WL. FB-E .............. .. ...................... ..... .. 12 6-0 185
.Jeff Cht'atwuod, Wellston. RB-S ...................................... 12 5-7 160
SECOND T EAM
!Saone-Schooi- Pos.
Yr. HI. Wt.
Tim Boggess. 1\lex .. T-T ...................·....... .. .................... 12 6-3 2.10
Brent El liott. Alex .. G-LB .. ... ... ...... .. ..................... ......... 11 a-8 l50
.John Hanson, &amp;&gt;!pre, C-E .......... ... : ................ .. ...... .. ....... 12 6-1 195
Scott Lewis. Belpre. T-1' .... . .. .. .. .. .... .. ............. ...... .. ....... 11 6-3 260
· Sha m' Sim mons. Belpre. WR -S ........................; .............. 12 5-101 55
· Richie Kasle r, F -H. C-LB ................... ........... ...... .... ........ 12 5·8 180
Da r ren W('!eh, F-H, rB-T ................................ .. ..
.. ... 12 5-9 188
Dan T homas. Meigs. E-S.... ...... .. ...... .......... ....... .......... . 12 6-0 165
.Ja ckie Welker. Meigs, WB-CB ...................... .. .... .. .. ........ 12 5·10 15!1
Ron Bragg, Miller. C-LB .... ...... .. .......... ........... ................ 12 5-11 205
. Keit h Roberts, Miller, QB-E ............... .. .. ..... ....... ..... ...... 11 6-1 175
' C)luck Nung('slcr. N-Y. G-NG.....
.. ....... ........... .. .... ... 12 5-8 17!i
· Sonn;· Ca in. Trimble. E ....... ...................... .. .................. 12 5-9 160
' Sieve Ca mpbe ll. Trim ble, rB-LB .................................. ... 12 6-1 195
: Ron Huiss . Trimble. TE -NG .............................. .... .......... ll 6-0 190
Rob Mil ler. Trim ble. C ....................... .. .. .... .. .... . .......... 12 6-1 170
La nce Bolender. Vi nt on Co .. TB ............ ... ... .... ..... ............ 12 5-10 155
Mark Thompson. Vi nton Co.; T-'1'. ........ ... ...... .. ................. 12 5-10 180
, Doug Huffm a n, WL. QB-S .... ...................... ... ................. 12-5-6 135
· Mike Sm ith . WL. C-T ........ ..... .. .. ... .. .............. .. ..... 12 6-2 17.1
: sa n Stalnaker. WL. T .............. .·................... ... .......... ... 11 5-8 165
: Doug Kisor, We llston. RB-LB ....................... .. .......... ....... 12 &gt;·9 170
Offensive Player of the Year
Lee Holder, Belpre
Defensive Player of the Year
Danny Lackey, Trim ble
Outstanding Special Team Player
Lee Holder, Belpre
Coach of the Year
Ralph Holder, Belpre

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

I

.

Seniors dominate
1984 TVC squads
seven and Meigs six. Warren
followed wit h five selections,
Playpr of the Year" and the
" Outstanding Special Team · Nelsonville-York a nd Alexander
had four each, Miller and Vinton
PlayC'r" while Trimble's Danny
County placed three each, a nd
Lackey was awarded the " DefenWellston a nd rederai-Hockirog had
sive Player of the Year" in
two each.
receiving top honors on the All-TVC
T he left -handed Holder quarterfootball team voted by the league's
backed
Belpre to Its second str a ig ht
coache-s.
· 1()-{) regular season as the threeThe Holder household will have a
year starter passed for over 2,000
third memento as Lee's fat her
yards this year a lone and threw a
Ralph, was named the "Coach oi
sensationa l 25 TD passes in the
the Yf'ar " for the second consecuregular season. The cha m p ion
tivt\ year.·
Eagles were knocked off by the
Seniors dominated the 44-player
state's fifth ra nked class AA schoo!,
roster with 16 of 22 on the firs t team
LouisvU!e At. Thom as Aquinas,
and a nother 17 of 22 on the second
40-24
In fi rst round action of the Ohio
team. rederai-Hocking was the
division IV state playoffs last
only team without a first team
Saturday.
berth but the Lancers were tabbed
Meigs' Robinson was the league's
with two second reamers .
leading scorer as the Marauder
&amp;&gt;!pre placed five on the fi rst
streaky ta ilback scored 15 touc hteam while Meigs had four a nd
downs and six extra points for 96
Trimb le and Nelsonv ill e- Yor k
points. The loop's second top scorer
threc each.
was Belpre's E rnie Williams with
HoroorPes for the Marauders
84 points on 14 touchdowns. Both
included firs t teamPrs seniors
junior running backs gained over
Mark Ha mmonds a nd Tony Welch
1,200 yards. Belpre had the loop's
a long with juniors Brad Robinson
top scoring offense with a whooping
a nd MikP Chancey. Named to the
.'l43 points, a 34.3 average. Meigs
second team for Meigs were a pair
had the conference's best defe nse in
of seniors. JackiP Welker a nd Dan
point s a llowed with a sticky 84
Thomas . With both the first a nd
point s for a n 8.4 average (Tota ls
second teams combined . Belpre led
include overall games.)
wi th e ight picks while Trim ble had
'

Thursday, November 15. 1984.

Thursday. November 1,6. 1_~84

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

• 650 colu cranking amps in
an 8-inch case.

$4295

virtually every car and light
truck on the road.
'
.
• Delco quality.

21 SERIES

• Maintenance-free, never-addwater, no-worry, sealed-lor-life

EXCHANGE

fit

U&lt;HANGE

battery.

N24-50 124F-50
N70-50 m-so

• Available with side or toppost terminals.
• Delco quality.

114-50 '

SALE

C~"-i1U.
6.Q.A .Inlpecled100% CMPJI8d
•

215 UPPER RIVER RD.
Across from the Airport

FURNITURE
AND JEWELRY
106 N.·JJNI Ave.
992-2635
(

· Midlhporl

GALLIPOLIS.
240 THIRD AVE.
446-1113

I AM 'nl 5:30 PM

1704 EASTERN AVE.
446-4204
I AM 'TIL 7 PM

POMEROY

MASON. WV.

119 W. 2nd AVE.
992 -2139
PM
8 AM

ROUTE 33
773-5511

8 AM 'TIL

PM

POINT PLEASANT. Wy•
S15 MAIN ST.
675-1520
I AM 'Til 5 PM

2611 JACKSON AVE.
675 -2731
8 AM 'TIL 7 PM

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, November ;5, 1984

The . Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

January Clearance In November

Thursday, November 15, 1.984
PBQe-7

Fellowship Thanksgiving speaker set

We usually try to beat the
tax man in January, but
we're gong to be the Early
Bird _this time. We have
hundreds of items at January Clearance pric-.
· These have to be out 'of
otW inventory before tqx
time so we're starting
early to save our customers before the holidays,
not after. Now is the time
to beautify for the holidays!

Hoyt W, Allen Jr., Jackson, a
former Pomeroy pastor, will be
speaker at a Thanksgiving dinner to
be held by the Meigs County Men's
Fellowship of the Churches of
Christ.
The dinner has been set for 6: 30
p.m. Monday at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.
A native of Follansbee, W.Va.,
Allen has studied at the Johnson
Bible College, Tennessee and Is a
graduate of K entucky Christian
College. He has done graduate work
at Cincinnati Christian Seminary,
Allen has been a revival speaker
in West Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania; Kentuck y. and Indiana. He has
served as pulpit minister for the
Plum Run Church of Chri st.
Rayland; Pom eroy Church of
Christ; First Christian Church in
Chester, W.Va.; Mt. Orab, Ohio
Church of Christ. I nthespringofthis
year, he became a full -timeevangellst for the KYOWVA E vangelistic
Association based in Ironton and he
began a new congregation in

Help Us Beat the Tax Man
'

_ TAAN SOFA, LOVESEA

SINGER PINE

REG. $1999.95

BEDROOM SUITE
Slightly Damaged

Cletuqnce
Pficed .

BLUE GROUP

$98811

Clu,,e, p,leu

FLEX STEEL

RATAAN END TABLES

REG. 5359.95

· Cl"""e' p,;eBd

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

$1 7 77

Cle•,•nce p,leu

Cle•,•nee
p,leed

$22222
REG. $999.95

$488

88

RUTLAND - Rutland Lions
Club will meet Thursday . 7 p.m.
at the Rutland Civic Center.
VIsitors are welcome.

Sofa, Loveseat

SOFA--

POMEROY The Rock
: Springs Grange will meet at 7::.1
. Thursday at the halL Twenty.
' five and 50 year certificates will
· be presented.

BLUE AND BEIGE

GREEN FLORAL

REG. 51799.95
CIIINIRCB

,,,c,

REG. 51299.95

ClemfleB P1ie1

$588 88

CONTEMPORARY. BEIGE &amp; WHITE SOFA .

Cl,,nes

R~G. $999.95

PIICB

564 444

• PONUEROY Pomeroy
• Chapter of Aglow will meet for
: : dinner at 6 p.m. Thursday at the
· Holiday Inn. A meeting featurIng Karen Jackson as speaker
: will follow at 6: 30 p.m.

.588888

•'

CHAIRS

25°/oro 60°/o

2·DARK GREEN

VELVET WOOD TRIM
REG. 5419.95

FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Kingsbury
Missionary Circle will hold a
bazaar and bake sale Friday,
8: 30 a.m. to 1 p.m., at Krogers.

25°/o To 60°/o

$19888
3 pc. SECTIONAL
REG. $999.95
Cle~,qnes

Stls P1lce

POMEROY. Southern
Alumni Band practice, Friday,
7:30p.m., In the high school band

.SOFA, CORNER TABLE, CHAIR
2 END, 1 COCKTAIL, 1 TABLE
REG. S2499.95

room.
RACINE ~ The Racine
Grange wlll hold its annual
Thanksgiving dinner Friday,

Clu,nee p,lee

$588 88 5168888
RECLINER

Cl1srenee Priced

$8888
RUST CORDUROY

ROCKER RECLINER
REG. S399.9S

$244 44

POMEORY"-=-Meigs County 's Democratic - Executive
Committee will m eet Thursday
evening, 7:30 p.m ., at the
Carpenter's Hall on East Main
In Pomeroy,

WAll UNITS

Clumree Prle1

. BROWN VINYL

POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter, Aglow, will have a
dinner meeting Thursday at 6
p,m _ at Duff's Smorgasbord,
Karen Jackson will be the
speaker.

REG.
5149995

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
CLEARANCE
PRICED

'1HURSDAY

10 PIECE PITT
BROWN VELVET
REG. S1199.95
Clu,nee p,leed

$88888
3 STYLES

Flexsteel Recliners
REG. 5699.95
Cl'''"" Pll~td

$288 88

Happenings
RUSTIC
WOOD TRIM
BROWN-BLUE PLAID

.Sofa, Chair
REG. $1499.95
Clt~rtnee

P1lced

$68888

XiGammaMu
to meet Tuesday

6: 30 p.m., at the grange hall on
Oak Grove Road. Ham and
turkey provided. If coming,
bling covered dish and table
service. Pig In the poke auction
following the dinner.
POMEROY - The Willing
Workers Cl_ass of the Enterprise
United Methdo!st Church will
ineet at 7:30 Friday at the home
of Agnes Dixon.
MIDDLEPORT - The. Middleport Child Conservation
League wiD met Thursday at
7: 30 p.m. at the Ohio Power .
Office. Jim Blower of RawlingsCoa tes·Blower Funeral Home
will show the film on "Helping A
Child Cope with the Loss of a
Loved One! '
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Council will meet In continued session, Friday , 7 p.m .. at the municipal building,

SUNDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Genealogical Society will
meet Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
Meigs County Museum: -A work
session on preparing charts will
follow the meeting.
RUTLAND - Hysell Run
Holiness Church in the Rutland
area wlll be holding rally-day on
Sunday with Sunday School
services at 9:30 a.m., worship
service at 10:45 a.m., and other
specia l services continuing
throughout the day _ Pastor
Theron Durham Invites the
public to attend.
POMEROY - A count y-wide
prayer meeting sill be held at 2
p .m . Sunday at the Church of
Christ of Christian Union , Hobson, with Glen Bissell as class
leader,
POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society meeting, 2
p.m. SundayatMe!gSMuseumln
Pomeroy. Workshoponcompletlng papers on First Families of

POMEROY -Ado-vour-ownthing a uction will be_h.eld at the

~~~r ~~h~h~:;.n!f 0~~ ~r~~n~a;~~; a;u~~~e~~~:~tic
Sigma P hi Sorority, 7:30 at the .
home . of Mrs. A.R Knight ,

Job's Daughters
has meeting
Inspection of Bethel 62, International Order of Job's Daughters;
was heid Monday . night at the
Middleport Masonic Temple following a dinner at the MeigS Inn.
The inspecting officer was Melody Brown. Bethel 81, Dayton ,
holder of the Royal Purple Degree
' as well as the grand guardian. She
was introduced along with Monroe
Booth, associate grand guardian
and past associate guardian of
·Bethel ~of AkrQn. Also introduced
were Lla Estep, grand bethel
honored queen, and Bethel 3,
Columbus, honored queen.
Past honored queens presented
were Paula Eichinger, Beth Mayer,
Theresa Van Meter, Debbie Glaze,
Amy Sisson, Mandy Sisson, and
Tw!laChllds, aL&lt;;oworthy matronof
Evangellne Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star_ Others introduced
were Jenny Walters, fifth distrlct
representative, a member of Bethel
40 lin Marietta. Heather Bouman ,
also.of the Marietta Bethel •. guardIans and associate guardians, Meni
Amsbary and Kenny Wiggins,
Bethel 62, Melody Ude, Bethel 47.
Springfield, Arthur Tracy, Bethel
79; and past guardi ans, Vanna
Tracy , Bethel 79; E mma K.
Clatwort hy , Sue Starr. Julie Byer,
and Kathy 'Johnson. past guardians,
and Mike Walker, worshipful master of Pomeroy Lodge 164.
lntlatlon was held for Alisa
Willford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
.Ga1y Willford , Racine. The honored
queen reported that orders for
household products ·and Christmas
things are to be turned in at the Nov .
26 meeting, A t that meetlng there
w!ll also he proficiency tests and
election of officers for the new term.
Present a Iions were made by 1he
honored queen and grand guardian,
with remarks by severa l of the
distinguished guests.
Refreshments were served following the meeting to the over 50
members and guests attending,
1111v. rl!!ll
11111
' ·~&amp;6.6.

IIMT•T111/J/F

lwmlt1 t111

WITH

§mstm
THANKSGMNG CARDS
SPEAKER ...,. Hoyt W. Allen
.Jr., fonner pastor of the Pomeroy Church of Christ, wiD he
. guest speaker at a Meigs Cou!Xy
Churches of Christ Men'sFellowshlp Thanksgiving dinner at 6: 30
p.m. Monday at the Ponneroy
Church of Christ.

1

Middleport ·Book Store ·
MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT

992-2641

----------...I.----------------------

.-:-

':;
~'

,.
)

Dec.

'

'

t
r.onnle.'s
got 1t!
REHABIED CITY STYLE.

.{ :

Con n .a pump1 rew ~fe •nto o c iOssic footwear Slll1oueMe Th•s pumo·s oleol ed
vomp '' vefY uotown lls Sl"lopetv 1'100IIs s triCti ~ down10Wf1 And ot s sot1 ganuor.e
IBOfhef uppers W~ l tOk e yOu Oil (YQUn(llo,..·n IO!I Ih Co l lhecl ~ 11oSI ICCII ion

BLACK &amp; TAUPE 135,99

Specially priced to celebrate openin g o ur
new Leather Shop. Hand some Room Saver
Wall Recliner in beautiful top ·grain
leather. Built with the F lexsteel quali ty
so essential to fine leat her furniture: kil ndried hardwood frames are doubl edowelled, corne r-bl ocked , g lued a nd
- SGrewed for ex tra stabilily . The fam o us
Flexsteel seat spr ing carrie s a wri tt en
lifetime warranty .

War Cry
ready for sale

asked

There is no ni'ore appropriate time of the year to tell
others how much you wish them the blessings of the
season. We have a co llection of Thanksg iving cards
for everyone you know . See how many wonderful ways
Gibson can say " Thank You" . Vis it us very soon.

\..:

Dinner set

:, POMEROY - The Christmas
J,ssue of " The War Cry," dlstrib, uted by The Salvation Army Is
now on sale In Middleport and
·Will be on sale there all next
:week. In Pomeroy, the edition
:will be 'sold the week of )'lov. 26,
:Anyone wishing a copy, but who
·IS missed In the sale, Is
to .
call 992·54T.l or 992·78!.

'

trr~~~~~~~~~~!:==~-~-~-~--~-~-~--~--~-~-~=d

sponsor. Household product .
orders are to turned in a t the
meeting.

EAGLE RIDGE - The an·
nual Thanksgiving dinner will be
held at 2 p.m . . Sunday ai the
Eagle Ridge Community
Church. Meat and beverage w lll
he provided. Tho~ attending
are io take a covered dlst., The
Rev. Carl Hicks, pastor, extends
an Invitation to the public.

Dennis, Chesapeake, who is also a
graduate of Kentucky Christian_
College.

music. flclured here, singing Ill the recessional are
Gl'l'Ce &lt;ltureh choir memhen~, left lo right, Betsy
Stivers, Yonlece MUier, Roberta O'Brien, and Mary
PoweU. Also singing with the group not pictured were
Nancy Reed, Dorothea Fisher, and Nellie Brown,

Calendar

$688 88

3 Piece Living Room Suite

REG.
$2599.95

East~oftheEplsoopaiDioceseofSouthemOhlo
In a fall h;vmn festival . The festival held aUhe Church
of the Good Shepherd, Athens, featured the combined
choir singing old favorite hymll!l as well as !IOOle new

Slightly Torn in Back

RATAAN SQ. COCKTAIL

REG. 5459.95

FALL KVMN PPBTJVAL - ~race Ururclt choir
memhei'!i p811lclpated recentlywlthothercholrsofthe

Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen have two
children, Syndl, East Liverpool, and

OPIN UtmL 7 P.M. fiiDAY

lAVAWAVNOW
FOR CHRIITMAI .

;; --

.,

- ' .
; h!Titll_gt house · 1
'

11

moE PLACE . ,,

.,..._~.::-::. ·.·~--

-

.

-

:y,._

I

Our new Leather Shop br ing s you the
widest choi ces possibl e in colors and
sty les in Flex steel leather furniture , yet
makes them remarkably affordab le. See
our man y_elegant leather selections __
Traditi onal, Contemporary and Transitio nal ·- to grace your home . Lea ther is
pres l igious and un ique, beautilul but
co ml orta ble , luxurio us but pra cti cal. It' s _
a natural for you r hom e.

ca:s_
~

._.__ ------"-·~ A- ••·-"""'--_;:;------~-·~-. . -.--;-.~--

�Page- 8 - The Daily Sentinel

In the spotlight

Thursday, November 16, 1984 :

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Talking turkey, hotline, for the

By CINDY OIJVERI
Comity Extension Agent
llome Economles/ 4-H
Thanksgivfng Is just around the
corner and folks will be shopping
for the spec ial meal in the days to
come. For many families turkey Is
the main a ttraction of Thanksgiving Dinner. So let's talk turkey!
Turkeys com e in all sizes to fit
c&gt;veryone's holiday meal plans.
They can be purchased whole as in
the traditional manner or in .parts
suitable for small families or those
who prefer whlteorda rk meat only.
They can be purchased fresh,
lrozen. sm oked. self- basting a nd /or
pre-stuffed . [t's more important
than ever to read the label carefully
ro be sure you are getting_ wha t you
want.

There are two important things Jo
look for o n the label before you
make your selection. An inspection
mark on the label lets you know that
1he tut·key has been inspected and
thai it is sa f&lt;&gt;. wholesome, and
accurately labeled.
Another symbol you will fi nd on
many packages is a USDA grade
mark. Turkeys that are Grade A
are meaty , have a well-developed

layer of fat In the skin and are
practically free from pinfeathers,
bruises, cuts, tears on the breast
and lf&amp;'S and broken bones.
How m uch turkey to buy Is
another q uestion ho memakers
often ask. Figure ori one pound of
turkey per person. This will provide
generous servings with enough for
leftovers.
Thawing turkey safely Is an
Important part of your pre-holiday
preparations. Thawing your turkey
In the refrigerator Is the preferred
m ethod for safety reasons. A turkey
can also be thawed In cold water If
lim e Is a factor. The thing to
remember about either method Is
to keep the turkey cold while
thawing. This Is the key to
preventing excessive bacteri al
growth. F rozen pre-stuffed turkeys
should not be thawed before
cooking.
Thawing a turkey on your kitchen
counter Is not recommended beca use of the possibility of bacteria
growth as the turkey thaws. You
ca n't rely on cooking to destroy all
bacteria .
After thawing, remove the neck
and gible ts, wash the turkey inside

- - - - - Attend seminar- -- - Three members of the Big Bend
Civitan Club attended a club
building seminar, Nov. 10. held in
conjunction with the West Virginia
District Meeting in Charleston.
Yoniece Miller, president of the
Big Bend Civilan Club, Drca ma

Knight, club director. and Lee
Miller, were among a group of 16
from the Ohio District.
The B ig Bend Club is currently
making prepara tions to build a
Civitan Club in Gallipolis.

and out and drain well.
Stuffing can be enjoyed with yoQr
· dinner whether or not you decide to
sluff the bird. If you are In a hurry
or prefer not to stuff the turkey, you
can bake your siufflng In a gi'eased,
covered casserole d uring the last
hour while the turkey roasts.
It may seem a good idea to save
ti me by stuffing your turkey in
advance, but that's Inviting trouble,
because harmful bacteria can
m ultiply In the stuffing and cause
food poisoning. Tur keys should be
stuffed at the last minute before
roasting the turkey.
After closing the neck and body
· cavities, the turkey is - ready for
roasting. A few tips on roasting are:
P lace the turkey breast side up on
a rack In a shallow pa n.
Cover pan with lid or loose tent of
heavy duty foil to prevent overbrowning, keep · the turkey moist
and reduce oven splatter .
A roasting temperature of 325
deg1·ees is recommended. Cooking
a t very low temperatures increases
the chance for bacteri al growth ,
and may cause tu rkey to dry out .
A meat thermometer can be
Inserted through the foil into the
thickest part of the thig h mu scle
without touching the bone. The
inner thigh is the area that heats

most slowly.
Remove foil or lid 20-30 minutes
before roasting Is fi nished.
Cook until the meat thermometer
reaches 185 degrees F . Stuffing
should reac h at least 16.'\ degrees F.
P lan roasti ng time for a large
turkey so It will be done 20 minutes
before serving. Cover agai n with
foi l. This standing time makes the
meat easier to can;e and juicier.
Do no~ roast a turkey partially
one day and complete roasting the
next day. Interrupted cooking ·
enhances ·the chances for bacteria
growth.
As scon as your turkey Is
com pletely cooked, stuffing Should
be removed from all cavities, to
minim ize cha nces for harmful
bacteria growth . .
En joy your Turkey!
One of my favorite parts of
Th anksgiving Dinner Is t he stuf·
fing . A qu ick and easy recipe "o th
lots ot variations could ad d a new
taste to your holiday table.
BREAD STUFFING
Makes about 4 cups, uncoo ked
Celery, finely chopped, % cup
Onion, finely c hoppect, 2 T . up to
'f.i cup depending on fa mily'~ taste
Parsley, chopped, 3 tablespoons
Butter or margarine, \1., cup
Bread cubes, soit, 1 quart

GOSPEL MEETINGS

GIFT CATALOG

AT
WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
CORNER OF COUNTY RD. 76 &amp; LAUREL CLIFF RD .

NATIONALLY ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE
AT DISCOUNT PRICES FROM

POMEROY, OH .

DATE: NOVEMBER 12-18

SERVICES EACH EVENING AT 7:30
Evangelist: Paul Casebolt, Speaker
EVERYO NE WELCOME

••

\6 cup Of cooked, pitted, chopped ;;~
Salt, \1., teaspoon - or to taste
.
Pepper, \{, teaspoon - or to taste prunes.
Did you know that : Americons .
Cook celery. onion, and parsley In
IA1ll consume
million pounds _,:
buller or margarine until tender.
Mix ·lightly wit h remaining of turkey durtng the holiday season .. - ~
there is a toll-free Tur key-Talk-Line __ .
ingredients.
'
with
specially trained professionals ·:
Stuff inside the tur key. or bake
to
answer
your question~ about
·
covered In a· separate pan duri ng
turkey
preparation
.
This
service
Is
last hour of roasting the tu rkey,
Allow about 'A cup of stuffing per In operation Nov. ~Dec. 24 MonclaYpound of ready-to-cook turkey, For F rlday lorn Sa .m.-8 p.m . (CST) and
more m oist stuffing when baked the two weekends prior to Thanks-.
separ11tely, add. 1 tablespoon of giving from 8 a.m.-6 p.m. (CST).
chicken cir turkey broth per cup of They will a lso be available on . ·
Thanksgiving Day and Christmas
uncooked stuffing.
.-Eve! Last year theyanswered over
VARIATIONS
Oyster Stuffl!lg - Reduce celery !JO,!nl calls.
to y, cup and parsley to 1
ta blespoon. Add 12 fluid ounces of
Your " EJitra TOuch"
Ftoriot Since 1957
oysters. heated for three m inutes In
their own liq uid and drained.
Cornbread · Stuffi ng Omit
bread cubes. Add 1 quart of
cornbread crumbs imd \1., teaspoon
FLORIST ..
of thyme.
·
PH . 992-2644
Fruit Stuffing - Omit par sley.
352 E. Main. Pomeroy
Reduce bread cubes to 3 cups. Ad
Your FTD Florist
1 Y, cups of chopped tart apple a nd

VILLAGE PHARMACY

FREE
TURKEY

m-900

"'~~
.

-~--'-;fi·4

STOP ·ay AND PICK UP A

1984-85

HELP

•.•

ROll

fl'ee Tutkeg/

New Shipment
LIMITED
QUANTITY

-

NEW AT DAN'S ,, ;
FREE GIFT
REGISTRY
SANTA/ COME IN AND %·

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY
MAJOR APPLIANCE
VCR's, 20 YDS. OR
MORE OF CARPET,
COLOR TELEVISIONS.

VIDEO RECORDER
COLOR TV

$

$

8 HOUR
VHS

8/fJ 3 DAY

SALE!

REM6TE CONTROL

REMOTE CONTROL

HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION

REGISTER YOUR SIZES AND SELEcnONS -

RANGE

S699

THOSE REGISTERING WILL BE ELIGIBLE FOR
FREE DRAWING OF MERCHANDISE CERTIFICATE FOR $5.00.

·$299

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

1979 FORD FAIRMONT
WAS

NOW

5995

3495
'2795
1980 PLYMOUTH HORIZON TC3 .

2 d oor

hat c hb .;~ ck ,

1981 TOYOTA
4 whee l dr ive, 4 cyl ,, S speed, short wide

4 cvl. , air cond., heilfer, 4 spe ed, PS,

6495

4295

1

1980 CHEVROLET CITATION

rotlbar .
WAS

NOW

3695

NOW

'2795
1984 FORD RA"GER

4 cy I., 4 s peoed , short wid c bed , re ar s tc p bumpe r , A MIF M

Coupe, 6 c v I. , a ir cond ,, r a I ley whee ls. heate r, auto . tra n s. ,
P5, PB, b o d y sid e mo u ld ings, tinted gl i!ss, AM/ F M radio ,
S t.o c k# 5591

1

1979 FORD LTD

ro:~di o,s t e re ofil pe.

S tock # S5862

SPECIAL

5695

'5995
1980 VOLKSWAGEN PICKUP

WA S

4295

Slock # 46881

.

COLOR

VIDEO
CAMERA$

I

599

:"--

~~'

4695
'3995
1978 TOYOTA PICKUP WITH TOPPER

'3695
1977 FORD THUNDERBIRD

HEAVY DUTY

AUTOMATIC DRYING

DRYER

nen

MICROWAVE

RCA
XL-100

$199
TV
STAND

•25 Min . Timer
•6 Power Levels w I Defrost
•500 Watt Cooking Power

MODEL 1130

$}495

$

4 cyl ., S speed, PB, short wid e be d, rea r s te p bumper, i1 ir
cond ., AI\-VFM ra dio .

V-8, air cond ., vinyl roof, heate r, a uto . tran s., PS, P B ,
body s ide mouldingS, tinted gla ss. crui se, AMI FM radio ,
ws w re1 d ia I tir es, wh ee l co\le rs , remote mirrors.

W~ S

s lock #5580t

1

3495

s 1 ock # 5S322

WAS
1

1978 FORD F-100

NOW

'2995

GERALD
COMPACT

' ' ton pickup, V-8 , s tand. tran s., PS , f"'A , long wid t' bat ,
re ar step bump e r, tinted gla ss , AM r11di o.

3495

WAS

Sfock H4SS6l

14 CU. FT. FROST FREt

FREEZER

REFRIGERATOR

- $289.00
RETAIL VALUE
FREE"

10 Year Compressor Warranty

S249

11

Wilh the Purc ha se of ony
new 1984 or 1985 11onger
Pic kup .

Truck s to

Auto . Co lor - Auto. Fine Tun ing

MICROWAVE

STAND

25"1COLOR
DIAGONAL

CONSOLE TV

LITTON

NOW

1

Speed Queen·

MICROWAVE ·
OVEN

Model C C016

' 1 tm pic-t&lt;up, 4 cyl., 4 s peed, rear s te p bumpe r, tintm
glass , AM radio , WSW fire s .
·

NOW

1

S tock # SS 231

NOW

4d oor , V-8, air cortd ., he ate r, aut o. trans. , PS, PB , pa.ver
door loc ks, body side mouldings, tinted gla s s , tilt wheel,
cr uise, AM IFM ritdip, s te reo tape, WSW radial tires .
W~ S

'149.,

wid(l be d, g.luges, r ear ste p bumper, tinted glass , AM
r a dio, mud a nd s now tir es.
S lock N55491
NOW

5995
'5495
1980 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME

6295

~

1977 FORD F-100

SfockJf4 5561

1

NOW

WHIRLPOOL

unoN

non

. '5695 .

4 w hee I dri ve, 1 , ton pick up , V-8, iiUt o. tran s., PS, p a ·, long

v -B, tlir cond ., vi nyl roof, hctlte r, a uto. tra n s., PS , PB , .
hnd y s id e moulding s, tin ted gl ass, tilt wheel, c~ ui se,

WAS

S lock N48403

'2495

'2895
1981 FORD THUNDERBIRD

WAS
1

'5295

4 wheel d r iv e , ' 1 "ton pickup, V-8, 4 s pee d, P S, PB, ~h&lt;r t
whee l base, rear s te p bump e r, tinted glilSS, s te reo tape,

4 d oor, 6 c v 1., a ir cond ., h eater , .au to. tr e~ ns., PS , P B, tinted
g lolSS, AW FM r.J dio, WSW r ndia l ti res, wheel cove r s.
S to ck # 50042

1971 FORD F-100

W/ Push Button Tuning

$347

NOW

bed , rear s tep ·
bumpe r, tin.ted glass, AMIFM radio, white s Pok e wheels,
oversiz e mud i1 nd snow.tire s.
WAS
Stock # 56061
NOW
1

PB, tin Je d glclss, AM/ FM r a dio, r emote mirrors.
WAS
S tock #4938 2

WAS
1

5tock* 4930t

1

VHS VIDEO
RECORDER

WASHER

4 cyl., 4 speed, long wide bed, rear step bumper, AM radio .

whee l cov £'r s.

SYLVAN IA B HR .

$299

With Thermal Steel Dome

RANGER ·

4 d oor, 6 cy l., her1 fe r , 4 Speed , tinted g la ss, AM radio,

Insta ll ed

COLOR TV

(HEST FREEZER

1

WITH PAD

19" DIAGONAL
CustomSeries

MICRO.WAVE
OVEN

9695

.

HALO FRESH NYLON

~ A19oaw

NE-660

S I oc k #432 31

S t ock #4 16t1

13~.~.

SPECIAL
WITH ANSO tV.

~,.._,.

Y·8, .1 ir cond., vinyl root, heater, auto. trans .• PS , PB ,
powe r wind ows, powe r seat, powe r door lock s, tinted
glass, t i lt wh ee l, cruise, AMIFM ra dio, s te reo ta pe, WSW
ra di a l fires, wheel covers wir e , r e mote mirro r s.

WAS

ROll
CARPET

ELECTRIC OR GAS

$299

WAS
1

ARMSTRONG

MAGIC CHEF

PH. 992-6669

271 NORTH SECOND

Pomeroy- Mid41eport, Ohio

Thursday. November 115, 1884

10.9%

•10 .9% Annual Percentage
Rate Financing Qn new 1984
Cars alii Trucks for 48 Months,
$10,000 Maximum Amount to
Finance, with 20% Down
Payment, with Approved
Credit through November 17,

Not Exactly As Pictured

LIMITED QUANTITIES

NO RAINCHECKS

•

614 SILVER BRIDGE PI.A lA
446-805 I
MON.-FRI. I 0-9; SAT I 0-7

SUNDAY CLOSED

PINE&amp; THIRD
· OPEN MONDAY

THRU FRIDAY

9 A.M. TIL 5 P.M.

Silver Bridge Plaza
Ph. 44.6-8051

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

..
... -

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

'

m

~ Smokoout:
By 'lbe AMoclated Press
Smokers strugglli1g to ldck the
habit durlng the " Great American
Smokeout" today wUI get munchies,
moral support and gentle persuasion from friends, relatives and the
American Cancer Society.
"In seven short years, Smokeout
;. Day has become a national Institution ," said U.S. Health and Human
· Services Secretary Margaret M.
: ·: Heckler. "It you smoke, help us
. strengthen this new tradition · by
trying not to. If you don't smoke,
lend your moral support to someone
who does."

..,llKndey. November 1&amp;, 1984

a day for quitters

Across the country, hospitals are ·OJie of those things that you just
serving up cold turkey meals for wakeuponemomlngandsay, 'Let's
successful quitters and people are do It.'"
fiUing "survival kits" with celery;
In Aurora, Colo., !OJ students at
gum, Candy and other munchies to North Middle School will release
keep smokers' hands -and minds helium-filled balloons with their
- ott cigarettes.
names, addresses and "a bit of
In Falcon Heights, Minn., broth· youthful wisdom about quitting
ers Lowelllll!d Bruce AndersonwUI smoking," according to the cancer
no longer ·sen tobacco products or ·society.
paraphernalia In their Falcon
Starting today, Indianapolis and
Heights Pharmacy In honor of the New Jersey smokers can call a
smokeout and the state's lOth Smokebusters holllne to hear a
annual D-Day.
special message from former
"We've wanted to do this 1or smokers. The call will cost 50 cents
years, but we never had the courage - about half the price of a pack of
before," said Lowell Anderson. "It's cigarettes.

Police said they had no suspects
but were conducting a massive
search. Capt. Thomas Henry, chief
of detectives, said there has been a
steady flow of telephone calls from
the public.
Bradley, 40, pastor of the Church
of Our Sa vlor, underwent four haurs
of surgery early Wednesday. ·
Pollee and church officials said
Bradley was wearing clerical garb
when he was shot and robbed at the
door of the rectory of the Cathedral
Basilica of the Assumption .
The Rev. Stanley Fleming, who
waited with another priest.• the Rev.

Area deaths
: Haiel M. Proffiu
Mrs. Hazel Marie Proffitt, 78,
· Route 1, Portland, died Wednesday
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
' · A, housewife, Mrs. Proffitt was
born Nov. 1, 1!:106 at Apple Grove.
·Ohio, a daughter of the late Robert
and Nellie Wolfe Dow.
. She is survived by three sons.
. Raymond Proffitt, Racine; Meigs
' Sheriff James J . Proffitt, Pomeroy,
,and Dale Proffitt, Racine, and two
brothers, Ernest Dow, Tampa, Fla ..
and Herschel Dow, McKeesport,
· Pa. Thlrteeo grandchildren and 22
. great-greatchildren also survive.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
. James V. Proffitt in1976, a sister and
· five brothers. She was a member of
the Great Bend United Methodist
· Church.
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
·with the Rev. James Corbitt
officiating. Burial will be (11. the
·Great Bend Methodist Cemetery.
·Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
. ·today.

-Harriell M. Spencer
Harriett M. Spencer, 72, 1600 Nye
Ave., Pomeroy, a retired Pomeroy
school teacher, died Wednesday at
·Holzer Medical Center.
.· Mrs. Spencer was born Oct . 22.
1912 in PomE'roy, a daughter of the
late Howard and Della Weeks
. McintOsh. She was a member of the
' :Enterprise United Methodist
Church having served as secretary treasurer, organist and assistant
:superintendent of that church. She
had taught in the Pomeroy schools
, 'for many years before her

retirement.
Surviving are a brother, Edward
H. Mcintosh, Floral City, Fla.,; four
grandchildren, Brtan, Melln.da,
Amity and Brant; two nieces, a
nephew, four grand nephews, a
grand niece and several cousins.
Preceding her in death were her
husband, Ralph Spencer in 1972 and
a son, Marvin.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Horne with the Rev. Richard
Rothemich officiating. Burial wlli
be in Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may cali at the funeral
home from 7 to9p.m. Friday.

JoAnn P. Shinn
JoAnn Powell Shinn, 42, Apple
Grove, died Wednesday morning In
a car accident in Wellston, Ohio.
She was born Dec. 31, 1941 In
Ashton.
She was a member of the Jordan
Baptist Church in Gallipolis Ferry, a
graduate of Poinl Pleasant High
School Class of 1958, and employed
for several years at the Southeast em Business College of Gallipolis.
Surviving are her parents Mr. &amp;
Mrs Kenneth Powell, Apple Grove;
her husband Glen Shinn, Apple
Grove; one daughter Vickie Lynn
·Shinn, Apple Grove; one sister Mrs.
Betty Sargent, Apple Grove; four
brothe rs. J a mes and Charles Powell .. Gallipolis Ferry,. and Junior
and Lawrence Powell, Apple
Grove; three neices, five nephews
and three great·nephews. '
. Funeral SetviC€s will be held in
the Wilcoxen Funeral Home Saturda y at 1 p.m. with the Rev:Charles
Moses officiating.
Burial w!U .follow in the Leon
Cemetery .
.Friends may call at the funeral
hom~ from 7-9 p.m. on Friday.

'-.Meigs County happenings
Judgment granted
· A judgment for $27,350.98 plus
int.e rest has been granted in Meigs
_County Common Pleas Court
against Doug's Marine Sales and
SeJVice, Inc., et al. Suit was brought
against the former Po":'eroy busi ness by Farmers Bank and Savings
Company.
. Co-&lt;lefendant, Mercury Marine, a
llivlsion of the Bru11~wick Cor p.,
flied a cross claim in the matter.
Based upon stipulation of that
'defendant, the court found Doug's
Marine to owe an open account in the
above mentioned amount.
RKE Federal Credit Union,
Ravenswood. was granted a default
judgment for $4501.71 plus btteresl
and costs from Roge r G. Meadows,
·'Gallipolis.
1
: A date for a jury trial in a suit filed
by Roberta C. O'Brien, Pomeroy,
against George Collins, Meigs
· County Treasurer. et al, has been set
for Dec. 6, beginning at 9a.m.
A suit for $3362.16 has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Couri
by Sears, Roebuck, and Company,
Columbus, against . Thomas
Weaver, Syrac\!li('.
I

_Plan rurkey supper
The Ladles Auxiliary. of the

Orange Volunteer Fire Department
stage Its annual turkey supper
at the fire station In Tuppers Plains
beginning at 4: .ll p.m. Saturday.
· ·· The menu Includes turkey and
ilresslng, mashed potatoes and
travy. homemade noodles, green

will

beans. a salad bar, hot rolls, pie,
coffee or tea . 111e price is $3.50 for
adult and$1.50forchlldren under12.
F or furthe r iiltormatlon ca 0378-6333
or 667·3288.

To end marriages
A petition for a dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Carolyn J. Tripp, and Robert A.
Tripp, both of Tuppers Plains.
Adivorce has been granted Kathy
A. Jacks, Pomeroy, from Joseph
Jacks, Erlanger, Ky .. onJ:I'Otlndsof
gross neglect of duty. The plaintiff's
maiden name of Campbell was
restored .
Len Capeha rt, Middleport, was
granted a divorce from Wayne
Capehart, Pomeroy, also on
grounds of gross neglect of duty.
A dissolution was granted to
Hillard Conley, Chester, and Margaret June Conley, Shade.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--}&gt;ansy Ohlinger, Mid·
dleport; Ba~ll Haines, Langsville.
Dlscharged--Nicole Wolfe, Helen
Carpenter, James Meadows.

Meeling sellonighl

Anthony Deye, for Bradley to return
to the rectory, said they heard the
shot , ran to Bradley and telephoned
the pollee.
"Father said, 'I'm shot.' Call the
ambulance,'" Fleming said. "We
kept him comfmtable. Police were
there wltljin two minutes and then
the paramedics."
''He knows he shot a priest,"
Fleming said of the assailant. "He
would have shot anybody who had
easy money.''
Bradley, a Philadelphia native,
has served at parishes in Maysville
and Fort Thomas for the past 14
years. The bingo was sponsored by
the cathedral, the Church of Our
Savior and Bishop Howard Elementary School.

People w1nt.d to try new
herbal weight lots program.

Call 1 -814-377-2491
1 -814-3n-21&amp;8.

RENT A CAR
CALL

Windows

volunteer their Ume to work
together In projects to make life
better In their communities. The
club's local projects include Special
biympics, Clergy Appreciation
Week , community recreation, and
Junior Clvi\ans.
The Claxton Fruit Cakes are
availablt&gt; In one or two pound sizes
and may be purchased from Senior

Govemor em. barkSon
·

or Junior Civltans or from many
local merchants.
Cost for the cakes will be S3 ·a
pound. Bulk rates are also availble.
For orders or more Information,
call 992-5656 or contact sales
chairman Herbert Carson at Frut\:1
Pharmacy.
The club will deliver quanity
·.
orders.

I0-19·l mo .

ment department officials also will
be part of the delegation.
Other participants listed Include
Ohio State University President
Edward Jennings; Milan Marsh,
president of the Ohio AFL-CIO;
Lewis Smoot, Sr., president of
Smoot Construction Co., Columbus;
Richard Kelso, president of East
Ohio Gas Co.; and Eva Poinar,
president ofCurlls Steel, Akron.
Ms. Pizzuti said there may be as
many as 45 people in the &lt;tetegation.
Up to a dozen fillY bepubticofficials
or staff, while the rest wUI be private
business people.
When the final bills are paid, the
trip Is expected to cost about $6,(Xl)
per person, a figure that includes
airfare, most meals and hotels.
"The public officlais who are
going ... are being paid for by the
state. The private folks are paying

' hitting eree. Christmll
giftl. trophies. plaques.

JOHN TEAFORD
East Meigs

R~~~Ofl/
We

can repair and re' core · radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Middleport, Ohio

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

'

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Cqmpleta Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Typea
Worked in· home area
20 years

Marriage license

"F_r:ee Eatimates"

EUGENE LO.NG

A marriage license has been
issued In Meigs County ·Probate
Court toCariCaster,84,Dayton,and
Golden Stansbury, 79, Pomeroy. ·

Ph: (614) 843-5425

Tonight, cloudy, breezy and
turning colder. Low In the mld-.lls.
Friday, variable cloudiness with a
high in the mid-4Q;. The ch,ance of
precipitation is ~ percent tonight
an!! Friday.

Extended Forecast
SalurdiiY lllrough Monday:
Chance of snow llunies northeast
Saturday: othenvlae fair weather.
Hlp In the upper llslo upper 408
sa&amp;urday tllld Sunday 111111 ID lhe till

The Rutland Uons Club will not
meet tonight as stated In the social · Monday. Lows In lhe 21111 SUurday
calendar.
and Sunday and In the 115 Monday,

..... ,. ....

~

.....

We'd lito to introduce you lo.
• En111•·A·Car. tho modern woy
to drive th vehicle ol your

One lottery winner

$49.87, $20,813.69; sanitary sewer
escrow, no receipts, no disburSE'·
CLEVELAND lAP 1-There was
ments , $136,717.29; fire house im·
one winning ticket soldmatchlngthe
provement , $8,899.37, $199.41,
six numbers drawn in Wednesday's
$22,437.40; water tank, no receipts,
"Ohio Lotto" game, entitling the
no disbursements, $00,917.58; waticketholder to the $4.3 million
ter, $9.984.47, $9,011.95, $27,594.41;
jackpot, Ohio Lottery officials said.
sanitary sewer, $7,094.15, $.'i,892.ffi,
today.
$33,875.62; swimming pool, $63.11,
In the semiweekly " Ohio Lotto"
$432.26,. $5,442.12 deficit; cemetery,
drawing, the six winning niunbers
$2,016.11, $1,438.1o, $4.003.1JJ deficit;
were 7, 8, 22, 27,38and39. The winner
water meter trusts, $.'!35, $444.86,
· will receive the Jackpot in~ annual
$10,790.49; economic development,
installments of $215,027.
no receipts, nodlsbursemcnts,$2&lt;m. ·
The winning number drawn
Receipls for the month of October
Wednesday night In the Ohio
totaled $:/;11,697.07 while disburseLottery' s daily game, "Thl'
ments amounted to$166,071.72.
Number," waslX&gt;3.

11 h!IPM" OnpM uM .
~ ~ Mune•tOloo"

choice.

No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster Strvice

Call

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

· SIDIIIO

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
Call for free sidit!i es;
timates~ 949·2801 or
949-28u0

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writt

2 J.

r. ... . ....

~ - H "!&gt;P r

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~

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11 · t!e l plhnlo~

1 ' Srluolt&lt;l Wano od

13 ,. .... . . &gt;&lt;.
14111...... ""'""'~
1$ k•O&lt;&gt;I•
11 ll liJ,o l V II Cl lh ou
11 lrtlltco . ."'""'

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lJ '"'"'' ' '" Sol •

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~~

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oMo H""'"'"'" -'"
4 J ,_,..,,,.,, n..,,

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4 1 Sp•ro l~r ll o"l
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.. II C•oon
6$ S•~•l &amp; I""''""'

41 fiN'P"'""' lit• A•••
41. ,.,..L .. ,o

,. ,..,IUi ltD~

I

No Sunday Calls

M~l o&lt;nc t ••

1~ R no " '- "" " ' ""
1 6 ~~, ,,,,. Pao u !. I&gt;&lt; o~' '''''"'

"··· ·-···
-

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.

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A• • ·• l,n~•· b14

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Hoonftlmoto•-nl•

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Yloln"l

I

I REAL ESTATE I .

PW61NTO
CLRSSIFIEDS
992-2156

M""'''11""

!I"~ ·~.7::;·:,:.
)~1

"""l"· ~

14 1 , , , . , """'
!on
n ... . .,..
141 lll u oton:l
1111 r:~wt ...u..

::
~~·::'!!i:;': ~ ~ ..!1.-•"o~ :~-=-- - - -· a, o.......
H~•"''&lt;I ·
U M II R•p•••

IJolo ,., ,. .,.,,

a r u~""" ' "'w

.... ... """""'~'

OJoto l !I*&lt;NU

Not1 ce IS hereby QM !n by thP.
Or anqc Bomd of Towns hi p
Tru s WA~ u f Mo1g s Cou n!y,
Ollr o, tha t SJ1ci Bomd of
Tr us t ~P. s w1ll hold a pLJbl1c
'heanng on Novem ber ' 26th .
1984 at 7:30 O'clock PM. a1
thn F1 1e D Aparlm cnt 1n Tuppers
Pb 111s. Oh1o. Oran ge Townsh1p,
M etqs County
lor ttre purpose of allowmrJ
Ca ble Televrsron CompanteS
and representahves to pres ent
1he1 r proposal of franchise
J g r 8f~ m q nt to the tr ustees and
public for Cable Televts1on
servrce rn Ora nge· Townshrp
M ergs County _ Oh1 o. Not1ce
shall b e. SP.q t to the appr oprrat e
poh!I CaJ SIJ bd iviSIOnS
By ord er of Oran~e Board of
Townsh1p Tr.usrees
G1ve n under my hand th1s

M'"""'' \IV
II•··· r: .. ~ .. ln1
f&gt;/5

p, ........... ,

1 SII
!&gt;lij

Loon
...... ,., ..... . .

I UP

... ~ .. ~~ ......

64 Misc. Merchandise

171 ~~o~ ......

11!1'. t . ...,

,~, ' ''""~'

12th 'day of November. 1984.
N1na Rob1nson'

' TO~NSHIP CLERK
11111 5. 1tc

&amp;Commercial

SALES &amp;SERVICE

Call 742-3195
Or 992·5875
1

U.

S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Authorize4 John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer

1n
Counllg C,lt

f1r11t EqalpMent
P1rt1 &amp; Service

2 Milts out flotwaods Rd.
Off St. Rt. 7

mime~

Sat. 9-5;

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

KIM'S

APPLIANCE

Sun.

1-5

•Washer• •Dishyvaahere
·.•RifiQIII

•Refrigerators

Ruth Ann Taylor

992-3566

......

We Hen Ahll Tl••

t••t Tu.lltlll

CHESTER......985-3307

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

•Dryers •Freezers

~ARTS a,;d SERVICE

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

CONTRACTING

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201
3-JS-If

ad and

C ln r~

11118. 1lo. 23 . 3t c

Vcrlfc!Mr-a,.

BLACKWOOD
HOME SPAS
Pomeroy, OH.
Call 98S·380S

I IJ 12/l

MlllMWAIINJf

mo

20.

21.
22.

5. _ _ _ _ __

23. - - - - - -

1

chine repair. parts. end
aupplies.
Plclc up end
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Ctaener, one half mile up

Goorgos Creek Rd.
1114-446 -0294 .

30.
_
_
_ 29. -_
--_
-31. _ _ _ ___

33· ---~--

I
; I
.

J..~~..,::N,::o:w:.:;A::;c;c:ap~t~in::r.;;.:::.::;.:&amp;;:•.;i;;n.;M~ei;,;9:;;1.;C;,o~.-~oltl

MaiiThJsC•JI(Iilwlth Remittance.

Till O.IIJ Slllflllll
111 Court St.
. Pemii'OJr OIL 45769

·

1
I

I

II

&amp;..----------------------·
.

Yard Sale

JOin the West Virginia Na ·
tiona! Guard. Receive a
monthly paycheck , 935.000
life insurance, educational
opportunities . retirement
pay, other outstanding be-

nefits . Call· 304-675 ·3950
or 1 -800 ·642-3619.
Excellent Income for part
time home assembly work.
For info call312 -741 -8400

ext 31 3.

Situations
Wanted

Middleport.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Fridav night at
the Hartford Community
·Center. Truckloads of new
· merctumdise every week .
Consigments of new &amp; used
merchindise always wel comed. Richard Revnolds.
Auctioneer . Call 304 -275Leon Flea Market open dai-

ley 9:00 to 6 :00 except
Thursday . We buy used
furniture and appliances;
also sell large items on
consignment. Stop in or call

304· 458-1 5 72 .

Wanted To Buy

446-3672

Single working man or ma ture college student to live in
with elderly gentleman in
good health . Rent free min ·
imum chores . Ref. required .

Call 614-446-1214 after
5PM .

Santa for hire, evenings
after 4 p.m . and week ends .
Excellent costume . 304-

675 · 7746.

18 Wanted to Do
Will cut and deliver fire -

wood . Call 256 · 1528 .
.Housecleaning experienced.
good references . Call 446 ·
1004 ask tor Pam .

Financial

21

wood, cupboards. chairs.
chesu. batkeu, dishes.
Ctit stone jars. antiques. gold

and 1llver . Writt·M . D .
Miller. Rt .2. Pomoroy. Ohio
Gun ahoot It Racine Gun 45789 or call 814-992Ciub every Sunday. 1:00 7780.
p.m . Factory chocked g u n • l - - - - - - - -- only.
Buying d1ily gold, silver
coins. rings, jewelry. sterling
HAVE YOUR LIFE INSU- w•ro, old coina , large cur·
RANCE POLICIES RE· roncy . .Top prices. Ed. Bur·
VIEWED AND UPDATED. kott Berber Shop , 2nd. Ave.
Some life Insurance policill Middleport. Oh . 814-992lllow the inauranca com- 34 78.
·
panift to kHp your uvings,
upon dHth . We offer a wide
wuiety of insurance, IRA's Good quality logumo or
end tlx sheltered annuity l~ume·greaa. mixed hey.

1-------- - -

'products . Contact Oaby
Martin-814·992 · 7022.

Business
Opportunity

! NOTICE !
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8 LISHING CD . recommends
that you do business with
people vou know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until. you have investi ~
ga1ed the offering .

5 -N -'1 WOODWORKING
MULTI -TOOL; New Iron ·
chised dealer pre-opening
sale . Accessories for Shops·
milh available . Christmas
orders due NOvember 28 .
Call Bob. collect at the
Woodworkers Shad even ·
ings and Sun·dBys 614 -886 -

8429 .
Small neighborhood COnve nient type store for sale .
Point Pleasant. 304 ·675·

squ1re bele1. Call Warren

Pickens tt 1114-378-8289.

Colt 814 -992-6941 .
2 bedroom waterfront
home, baae.ment with w9()d·
burning furnance. will take
mobile home on trade •
finance . Call 61 4-266 ·
1216 .

5 yr. old home, 6 rooms. 2
baths . large metal bam &amp;
garage, machinery thad. On
45 acres with good fence. 2
wella
rural water. Call

a.

388-8775 .
For sale by owner . Large
brick home with 3 large
bedrooms, 2 Vz cermaniC
baths. large livingroom with
fireplace, diningroom, famiiy room , new kitchen 'cabinets, single car aarage
with office area. patio with
aluminum roof and gat grill.
Storage area in attic with
desending stairway end
basement area . Located on
large lot in very nice neigh ~
borhood. Will consider Ieese
w ith option to buy for more
information call 446-2734

or 446-2206 .
3 b~r . large Uvingroom,
pool. 1 ac., storage build ·
ings. assume 9%% loan. Will
help finance balance . 01111

446- 75~5 .

•

Must Sell! 2 bdr. 4 yr. old
home , 5 minutes on Rt. 160,
nice ·yard , 3rd. beL easily
could be built . Double alid ·
ing glass doors onto large
porch, new paneling and
wallpaper throughout .
Country living in peaceful
surroundings . 81:,500 do,_,n
take over mo.nthly payments
$235 .40 . low interest im·
mediate possession . Call

Phone 61 4 ·696· 1 205 . ·

3 badroom home by owner
in Bradbury . Some furniture
included . Cell
3187 .

614 ·992 -

acres , rural water ,
14x70 all electric home .
Two rooms added ,brick
stove . fire place .central ai r.and carpeted . Good build·
ings . Three miles from Ra -

cine . Call 614 ·949 -2672
Four bedrooms. kitchen family room with f i replace,
finished • basement. Potnt
Pleaun1 . Shown by ap.

pointment, 304-675-3079 .
Priced reduced total elec .
central air , new wood
burner , small elec. bill, w1ll
to wall carpe~. 3 br. brick,
large garage, wood shed ,
Gallipolis Ferry . 304 · 675 ·

6851 .
7 Vz

$28 ,000 . 346 -6311
342 · 1214 .

or

3 br house , comPletely
remodeled in Pt. Plea•ent
$35 .000. Colt alter 6 ' p:m .
304 -675 -2749 .
4 bedrOom

house,

1716

Jefferson Bl•d . , 304-6761850 or 675 ·3262.
1% story house, Mason, 4
bedrooms. living room with
f ireplace . dining room, kitchen, ·sitting room . All carpeted . full bath, full beaement , total electric. large lot
100x186%. 2 outbuilding&amp; .
W i ll sacrif i ce for
S36.500 .00 . Moving out of
state. See anvtime, beside
Les ' S Carryout, MUOn .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

7748 .

22 Monev to loan
HOME

LOANS

FIXED

23

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Beds, Iron,

Owner Mull aott. Middlapon

Pliny. WV. 2 br all elec .
house. fireplace • . carpet .
3 .79 acres . mostly flat

Old Oriental Rugs Wanted .
Any size or condition . Call
toll free t -800-563-8021 .

446 ·4298 .

e~~rege.

Hruse, 4 bedrooms.
acres. 304 -675 -5367,

ture , 446 -3159, 3rd. &amp;
Olivo St .. Gallipolis. Oh.

1 H - 1 V2 horse single phase
electric motor •. 270 , Winchester, bolt ecteon XLT . Cell

new paint, attached

gas outdoor grill. ewninga•
many utrta. Call 4411-2ti83
til 6:00PM. aft-. lloOOPM
catt614-246-6869.

J IJ2

Room. board. ~md laundry .
Men only . &amp;200.00 per
month . Call 992 -6022 or

RATES Below market rates .
Fixed co nventional FHA VA . Leader Mortgage ,
Athens , colle ct 6,4-592·

Wi.nted to buv used coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furni -

Three bedrooms. central aii.
vinyl well paper, carpe1
throughout, well in1ut.ted.

Three bedroom home . Full
basement ,garege. carport
end pond . 2.16 acres . Possi·
ble land contract. 938 ,900 .

sale Fri. and
Sat .. 8;00 to 6:00. Dining

furniture . brown chair. complete twin bed. bricks ,
ladders . shovels. chairs.
misc . 463 S . Fourth ,

1--- - - - - - - -

614-245-9219 .

12

Moving

Hill, Oh . 614-682 ·7448 .

SWEEPER and sowing ma .

32. _ _ _ _ __

•
•

7

Raw Fur. Top pric,s paid .
Lake Jackson Fin &amp; Fur. Oak

'

'·------ 21.------

35'------

Road· and Rt . 2 , REWARD ,
childs pet . Phone 304 -675·
7966.

3305 JACKSON AVE.

3 Announcements

2~. -_
' -_
-23.
_-_
_-

I. 15. - - - - - 1 1 6 . - - - - - - ~- -----1

Emergency Room
Receptionist · immediate opening for full time emer gency room receptionist , to
work the midnight shift.
Excellent working condi ·
tiont end benefits. Mature
individual, personable, and
able to communicate with
the public . Knowledge of
insurance billing end medi·
cal terminology preferred .
Interested applicants may
call Veterans Memorial Hospital at 992· 2104 between
the hours of 1:00 p.m . to
4 :00 p .m . An equal oppor tunity employer.

985 · 4416 .
LOST small black Cocker
Spaniel in vicinity of Jericho

We PlliV cash fo, late model
cleao used cera.
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnton

Ann ou nceme nt s

8. - - - - - - - - 10. _ _ _ _ _ __

Reel Estate General

offered . 614·992-3146 .

9

1018-1 mo

11.
211. ·___
_
_-

1
3_
. -_
--_- t4. _
_

Wanted person to do light
office and telephone work.
Apply in per1on Gallia Co .
Volunteer Emergency
Squad , Monday between
10-6 . 228 Jackson Pike St .
At . 160. Also person to do
light delivery . Must know
area and have car.

lost and Found

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-~

17. - - - - - 11.------

7. _ _ _ _ __

10·6-llt

6

3069 .

SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT

I.

"·------

Female Airdele mixed
puppy, 6 to 8 months old,
shots and heat shot. 304-

8

JJril· (· ~"

19,------

12. _ _ _ _ __

2 yellow kittens, 1 grey and
white . 304 -895 ·3637 after
2:30 875-3442.

· ···-~twl'inllr~trwlw · ror_,

mail wifh !his

2.
3.
4. _ _ _ _ __

0 .0 . Mcintyre Park

.

Monday l p.m.-5p.m.
Tuedsay 6;30 p.m.-8 p.m.
Wednesday 3 p.m.-5 p.m.
Thursday 3 p.m.-5 p.m.
friday I p.m.- 2 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m.· 11 :30 a.m.
LARGE ANIMAL AND

6. _ _ _ _ __

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-5191

Phone'742-31,71

~

•Relaxing
"lndoor-Ouldoor Use
"Yeor Round Pleasure

( · JWanted

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

~n'Y+-

10· 16. l mo

0 Thtraptudi&lt;

Experience

lnsullttd Do1 Houses

Ml'GK££
I"'\ :II

or 985-3929

SMALL ANIMAL HOURS

Sires from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'

Utter trained . Cell614-7422971 .

'"'"'(i(jififji(jy' """"
Middleport
8t Vicinity

PT.PLEASANT OFFICE

UTILITY BUILDINGS

give away.

Phone 985-9966

•Affordable

llew Homes-Extensive
Rimodelinc
Insurance Work
· Cu1twn Pole Bldp.
Garaaes
Roofin&amp; Work
·
·
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinp

11. L. "Bud" McGHEE ·
Broker-Auction Service
Cheryl Ltmiey.
.
Meias County Auociatt

Parties

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

Sizes Start From-12'116'

"&lt;1. .. .1'
V"""'

CHESTER, OHIO

VETERINARY
CLINIC

OhiO -1 572 6

Hv l_,.nn K' Nr!SSf~lroarJ

1\ / 1211 mo

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

POLE BUILDI"GS

Or~ NrJv~&lt; lnb nr 5. 1984 11 1 thi •
M1'1q&lt;; CrJitr lty Proi);Jfi·J O'r) rut.'
r.i i ~P. No
24.537 An n a
SpHHJII''· 15fJU5 St1eet!'-&gt; SuP,e l.
D(!X!f•/ Ohh ) 45 726 Wil'i 01 pPfllllll'cl t ·-.;•·nr lr rx I"Jl tho P.~il a l e
of Ch;HI"" I11J IJ0.r! Spra(j w t ylf~ ­
cr\n.,nd. lo~t• · IJI 35505 Sh')nls

or

Nant•----~--------------

ALL STEEL &amp;

House cat to

Black and ~tan dog lost, part
Airedale . end part hound .
Lost in Gold Ridge and
landakar Rd. area . Reward

742·2225
742-2167

•Portoblt

coupon. Cancel your ad by I)I10ne when you get
results. Money not rl!lundabte.

( )For Sale
,( 1Announcement
( )For Rent .

dr8wer metal filing cabinet .

446-1179 .

Perfect Fam;lv Gift

,......

Yea,.

2 wall-iway recliner chairs.call 6t4-843-5384. Four

WED., FRI. &amp; SAT.
7:30-10:00 .

Curb Inflation
J Pay Cash for
i· ·Classlfleds and
l
Savelll
I ·
own
order by
I
.I ;
Wrill! vour

with kids. Call 814-9922597.

Public Skoting

:I

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
or
843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL·FILL DIRT

The

Skates &amp; Accessories

'CONCAHE WORK
'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER, GAS&amp;'
OIL LINES

' ..

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

2 year old part Collie, to give
away to good home . Good

LOST : Beagle female , black,
brown &amp;r white with red
collar on Mill Creek Rd . Call

•coal &amp; Limestone
•B!Jnded &amp; Licensed

&amp; Private

•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

10/4/tfc

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tr••••IIIIOI

Cats and 2 kittens to give

Home• for Sale

furnance , storm windOWI•

Sell AVON make 45%. Call
448-3358.

Avtilable for Birthdays

'DOZER • BACKHOE
"RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL FIELD SERVICES

Only

Rt.. l24,Pomeroy Ohio

CONSTRUCTION

SKATE-A-WAY

J&amp;F

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

1

676-7660 or 675 -4133 after 5 .

A.M.

•· '

. . . ."luiloling

9· 13·11 n

Phone:

GUN SHOOT

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

a.

0770 anytime.

446-2062

•Dump Truck
•Septic Systems

98S·JS6t
All Maku

992.2903

11 -1-tft

Ruhert E Rtt&lt;.:k,
Prohme Ju r~ (lfl

2 kittens litter trained

part Beagle dog. Call 446-

•Backhoe

SER~ICE

Kim Nelson

•SYLVAN.IA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

•

PROBATE· COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHtO;
ESTATE OF . CHARLES ROBERT SPRAGUt!
DECEASED
. '
Co• No. 24,537 Docket 12
Pogo 448
'
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
.
OF FIDUCIARY
'

'

"CUT OUI
FOR FUTUH USE"

Nov. 5-Dec. 8

· GREG ROUSH
PH, 992-7683
or 992·2282

1M•·~ ·" ' ~'~' ''""
!1.. .... '""'' '''"'

Public Notice

367-0482 .

Phone

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

$boll

1-l·tf•

16

- -·= - -· -·-j

0""'"' '""" '''"

St H!Pl DO ;tll'l

BOGGS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

/!J, .

'"""'"81 . ........ 0•' '""'

. Tht s sp i'!Cral ITlf.lettng IS held

'

!1~1

10 Roo f~ o .-Oo
~Mi 0"1'"0'"

·NOTICE

CARS

.

Goll,, r: " ""~

Public Notice

I

/UI ~r · • , ..,, , ,,

,..n.. ,. 1" ~-' ,, .,,.,,,, , ,,,. . ,. , , ,,,me•·· ·.

HVo •o r.t.,. n
H

'" "j f i,. ,/

I ~:! e:;.~~··

! ~ ...,....

u. w.., ,~"

1 1 "" " ' "• l o•S"I~
l l lr &lt;&gt;eh lnr Solo•

Albino guinea pig, long
haired with cage . Call 614-

73-80 Chevy Tr.
0-50 Dodce Tr.
Fendm .... ................... 170
Fenders .... .................... 62
81-84 Chevy k
76-82 Chmtte
Fenders ................ ...... 110
Cat Fenders .. ............... 60
S-10·S15 Che'} Tri .
79-80 Mustang
Fenders ........................ 80
Cat Fenders ...... ....... ..... 60
73 -79 Ford Tr.
81-84 Escort·Cyn•
Fenders ........... ............. 59
Fenders .... .. ............... ... 49
80-84 Ford Tr.
Omni·Horizon 2 dr. or
Fenders ...................... 110
4 d1. Fenders.. ...... .... .. . 75
Ford Rancor
· Chevy &amp; Ford
Tr. Fenders ................... 98
PU Bumpers ........... . 69 .95
72-80 Dodge Tr.
79·82 Chmtte Gritts ........ 38
Fenders ..... .............. 115
Ford Rancer Grills ............ 75
ford and Chevy Tail Gotes

Residential

614,992-6737

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

S l - H ou oo t.ol ~ a .. ~,
ti i •CII, l'tl. ~ on oo fQ"'PI~~r u
BJ An hQ"~'
~ 1- Mo oc M o, rh o"'IM
5S ll .. ~ d o op l .. p po,.,

p,...,.,. 0-1•

446-

away. Coll614-986-4451 .

For all your wirin&amp;
needs: · furnaces repair
service and installation.

J/ Uf2110. pd

J.I!IIC

1 c"'"' '"'""' '"";~~ ,,.~
~""'"" 'e1
~,

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 ., 9J.2· nt4

Can

TV.

31

home Nowll . Fireplace. gal

6688 .

10·8-1 mo.

Mon.-Fri. 9-9

Ms. Pizzuti Said parilclpan(1;
would seek to open or expand
mar~ets for Ohio exports as well as
encourage Investment In the state
by businesses in other countries.

Giveewav

Bickle
Certified Chimney Sweep

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE .

tFroe Eatimates!

1· 13-tfc

D1illr S.nlintl Classilid Dttt.
Ill CGurt Sl., Polltro)'. Ohio 15769

~ -··Mo
l • ~ o n.,oo&gt;C:OinOf\1 I

- Plumbing end elec:1ricel
work

10!12/ 1 mo

"We're trying tti get . business
people from different sectors of the
economy and different geographic
areas to ... meet with business
prospects In general (and) to
encourage (foreign) business in·
vesiment in Ohio," she said.

7!122 .

Roy

A.A.A.
304-675-6276
11-5·1 mo.

Help Wanted

coordinator . Call 446 ·46 1 2 .

2· veer tpayed black female
Greet Dane. Gentle, to good
home in country. Call 446-

- Concrete work

Jr. tour. putting green,

their own way," Ms. Pizzuti said
Wednesday.

.The Daily Sentinel

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Addon• end remodeling
- Roofing end gutter work

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Village funds total $606,401

Emergency squads
answer six calls

'

· ll'ilchrmctres .

Giveaway

ohor 6PM. 614-388-8895 .

•complete Chimney Cle"ning
·•certified Chimney Re!ining &amp; Repair
•Exparienc;ed and Insured

· 74 Mou r !i w itchbQ,1 rd
· Pestaur;,nl

11

District is now accepting
applications for ' sports

4 c1t1some male 1 dog. Cell

446-2062

· l ive Entrrl&lt;~ inment
· F rcl' H, fLO .

YOUNG'S

AIWts 6~Stuclants 6/13

trade mission

Sl NGLE $24.95
304 675 6276

949-2969-949·2263

THE
.•
KOUNTRY ' . -; •
Golf lessons
Sat. &amp; Sun.

Serv1ceo

ext . 256 .

Chimney
Care

MOTEL

Free Estimates

4

.

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

Storm Doors

7111 / tln

. ~~

RT. 62 NORTH
POl NT PLEASANT
WESTVIRGINIA
8 miles from

Painting

t60 ert~
••,lltolle, ~I•

Clarence l . He11on prop·
erty , Sand Hill f';oad.

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

Gutter Cleaning

tL
St.REN
Rt.

IW8

F111 pI oy111 ~~ nl

Road.
~o hunting or tresp111lng on

New- Repair
Guttes • Downspouts

U-S VE
, AU 0

Marietta

Weather forecast

BII 31Vn ·

Howard L Writesel
. Roofing Co.

446-4522
..,, #tilt [ft 1m. .. .

on Sunday. November 18th
and 25th. location io 3Y,
mile• south of Ch1111r 11
thejr farm on Shade River

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Galli poll~. Ohio 45631

. ding. at 949-2600. ·

Civitan Club offers cakes for ·sale

or

ahoota. aterting at 1 :00 pm

...........=-----11-12-1 .... .

UNWADING- Truck driver Harvey Lenhmloads 1,000 pounds of fruit cake lo he sold by lhe Big Bend
. · .
· Cl~ Club as a fund r~g project.

BUYING RAW FURS, Beef
and DHr Hidao,GinNng and
yellow root : Selling ·
trapping aupplios . Wh. .t
lighto. night lights. George
8uckloy,phono 1114-11114·
4761 ,houro 12-9PM dailey ,

Tho lzaak Welton Club will
have 2 more rifle slug

Lic,nstd Clinical Audiologist

Any business or patrons who would
like to place an ad,
contact Donnie Dud-

Wanted To Buy

.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Meigs County's Big Bend Civitan
Club received more than 1,(Xl)
pounds of Claxton Fruit Cakes to be
sold to provide funds for the club's
many community projects.
Harvey Lent, truck driver for
Putnam Transfer, made the deliv. ery on Tuesday to Yonlece Miller,
president of the Big BeJ1d Civitan
(Continued from page i)
Club:
constucted In the Veterans MemorCivitans are men and women who
ial Hospital area. Commissioner
DavidKoblentzanticipatesbulldoz- ..
btg on the site will begin right away
with forms for the concrete pad to be
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -For
laid soon after.
the
second time since taking office
The question of assuming control
almosttwoyearsago,
Gov. Richard
of a Columbia Township road was
Celeste
is
about
to
lead
a delegation
brought up, but, no decision has been
of
state
and
buslness
·officiais
on a
made concerning the issue.
in
search
of
foreign
trade
mission
Several special · concerns which
jobs
tor
Ohioans.
are hoped to be included in next
Celeste and about 44 other people
year's county budget were mentioned by the board. Those concerns are to leaveNov. 26on a trip that will
include Installing an elevator in the take them to Japan, Korea and
courthouse, and painting the build· Taiwan. The joumpy ends Dec. 8.
"It's a fairly major trade mising inside and out.
sion,"
said Majory P,izzuli, a deputy
It was suggested that a low
director
in the Ohio Department of
Interest long term loan might be
She said It was more
Development.
obtained to pay for the elevator. A
extensive
than
last spring's Europortion of revenue sharlng money
pean
trip.
could then be obligated for use in
Celeste will be accompanied by
paying off the loan .
Senate
President HarTy Meshel,
It was also pointed out that
DYoungstown.
Other legislative
because the courthouse is a public
leaders
from
both
parties were
building, the painting project would
invited to go, but their participation
not qualifY for block grant funds.
has ye t to be confirmed. DevPiopCost of painting the building,
including scraping and painting the
dome, has been estimated at $7(00.
A request from Bob Byer, Meigs
County Emergenc;y Medical Ser:
&gt;'ice director,- that the commissionAli Middleport Village mon&lt;'y as
ers begin advertising bids for a new of Oct. 3ltotaled $600,401.98, Village
emergency vehicle for Rutland was Cle rk-Treasurer Jon Buck reports.
approved.
Receipts and expenditures and
Certification of an amended end of the month balance· of each
budget from the auditorwas read to fund. respective~v. Include: gen· ·
the board with additional mon!,"y era!, '$42 ,779.98, $16,511,24,
appropriated into two accounts $58,631.59; street maintenance,
$1331 .69 has been added to the $6,871.88, $6,840.32, $1,875.75 deficit;
correction grants budget; $3,647.82 HUD, ' $13~.000, $122,045 .22.
has been added to the landfill $19,878.41; federal revenue sharing,
budget.
$3,034, no disburSements, $3,967.75;
· A departmental transfer offunds street levy, $4,516.5o, $100.44,
fire equipment,
within the probate court office was S24,902.24;
also appr&lt;ilved by the board.
$10,999.22, $1,445.28, $5,492.17; fire
truck, $.1,30i.l3, $73.70, $62,745.44;
Next week's meeting of the
commissioners .will be held on
general bond retirement, $2,198.77,
Tuesday at 1: .ll p.m. at the
courthouse.

Six calls were answered by local
units Wednesday !be Meigs Counfy
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At 1:59 a.m . Middleport took
Carolyn Davidson from North
Fourth Ave., to Veterans Memorial ; 3: .ll a.m., Rutland to Sand
Ridge Road for Constance Witt, to
O'Bieness Hospital, Athens; 2:26
p.m., Middleport., Kimberly Follrod
from 1he scene of an accident in front
of the Sears Store to Veterans
Memorial; Racine at 4: 47 p.m. to
Route 124 for Carl Shultz, Jr..
treated but not transported; 9:36
p.m ., Middleport to North Second
Ave. for Mae Lewis, to Holzer
Medical Center, and 10:12 p:m.,
Rutland to Salem St. for Verna
. Gibbs, to Holzer Medical Cenier.

9

3 Announcemenu

·Priest critical after shooting
COVINGTON, Ky. (API - The
- Rev. Allen W. Bradley, 40, shot but a
gunman who robbed him of bingo
, receipts, remained In critical condi·
· · .tion at St. Eliza beth Medical Center.
The Roman Catholic priest was
: returning from a parochial school
bingo· Tuesday night when a
· - gunman appro;~ched him ;~nd took
· the bag containing about $3,(Xl).
· , Pollee said the man then shot the
: ' priest in the a txlomen.
• The gunman, chased by Joseph
. Heimer, a parishioner, dropped the
: unopened bag as he fled down an
· alley, pollee said.

The Daily Sentinel-Pegs 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

3061 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAlITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
AT 35 . PHONE 614 -44fj7274 .
1971 Torch, 1 2x65 2
room ,

~­

unfurni shed . Cell

446-7132 .
New set of mattress &amp; box

Professional
Services

Piano Tun ing and Repair.
Brunlcardi Music Co., 4460687 . Twentieth year of
quality service. Lana Daniels . 614 -742· 2951 .

springs
9584.

$75 . Call

446 •'

1974 Academy 12x50 extfa
chum , appliances , central
air . 7x12 porch &amp; slcining.

Asking 64,900 . Colt 614379-2341 .
.
Small 1 bdr . trailer $1~
mo . i!'l Kanauga, utilities .

Call 446 · 7406 .

Sewing machine repairs .
Authoriud Singer , New
Home and Bernina dealer.
Repairs on any make machine . In home tune -up
special S15 .95. The Sewing

14 x 70 Mobile home. Thr"
bedrooms, 2 full bathS,
garden tub. central a;r, uflderpinning and bJocka It~ ·

Bee 446 -4172 or 446 -7742

eluded. Cett6t4 -9B5 -441i1,7

after 6PM .

REMOVE

UNWANTED

HAIR : No pain l No n~tedlel
Approved depalaior method . Removes unwanted
hair permanently . Call

today-614-992 -6720 . Top
of the Stairs Beauty Salon.
POmeroy .

PIANO TUNING AND RE·

PAI-R. Reduced rates limited
time only . Ward' a Keyboard.
304-675 -6600 or 876 3824 .

.

OWner must sell 14N70 all
electric mobile hom.. .
12x28 built on far'nily room ,
wood burn~r. acre land,
sto~age build1ng. good road,

osk•ng sn .&amp;oo .ao . Jo....,·s
Run Road , Apple Grv~.
304-675-2368 .
••
1980 Fairmont. 14x62 . furnished, 2 bedroom•. flreplace , air cond, refrigerator,
stove, under-penning, PGf'i:.h.

S8.900 . 00 . 304 - 87.. .
6729 .

�Page 12-The Daily Sentinel
33

54

U· Build It or wo wllll Beoutl· ·
lui, opoclouo S .aR homo
U9 9&amp;/ up. SM now modoll
Coli 614-888·7311 .

·~

love Time end Monnl Coin
oporotld -ohtr In your
horne. 71 aonta per loed . No
addltlonot aharooo • .Call
448· 1842, after S :00 coil
304· 743·3333.

200 ocre form for oole . Will
subdivide . Rutland Town·
ship . Coil 614-373 -0456 .

35

lot for sa le in Mercerville, 3
tra iler hookups, electric. ru -

ral water , septic tank.
SS.O OO . Call 614 - 256 ·
6618 .

than 600 actual mile1 . Rea-

tared 1961

ship to $ell on land contract.

53500 .00. $500 .00 down.
Call 614-843 -5231 .

Gold trash masher $160,
doublewide . trailer A·C
$190, antique love seat a.
chair frame 875 . Call 614·

246 -9646 .

Rentals
Houses for Rent

3 -4 bdr, 2 baths, stove,
refrig'e rator, washer &amp; dryer
included. S300 m o. Call

44

51

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal

Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedroomr, rent
446-0116 .
starting at S1 63 for ·one
bedroom
and $198 per
3 bdr., 2 bath , basement
with woodburner, double month for two bedroom.
sta ll garage, $325 month.· with $200 deposit located
Dep . &amp; ref.. option to buy . near Foodland and Spring
Call 446-7044 after 5, Valley Plaza, pool and TV

. ant . Coli 446-2745 or leave

446-BOBO .

message .

Furnished 3 room cottage in
t own one or two ad u It s no
pets. ret. Call 446-2543 .
House for rent . Call 304-

675-7263 675 -5 104 or
675"5386 ·
3 bdr. house built in kitchen
and range , new oak bath ,
ne.w curtains and drapes
provided. low utilities . min utes from Gallipolis. 614 286- 5447, may ca ll collect .
HQuse for rent in Mercerville
area . Call Kenneth Swain
614 -256-1552 evenings.
2 . bdr. house one or two
·adults. Reference . Main St.
Crown City. Ohio . Call 614-

256 ' 6058 .
4 bedroom colonial brick
house · for rent or sa le in

Pc)meroy. Call 1-373 -0456 .

N~wly remodeled house, 2
bdr. 1 full bath, lg . furn .
kitchen , loca ted in Middleport . Send resume to Daily
Sentinel. P.O. BoJ~. 729 -V.
Pom eroy , Oh 45769 .
2 bedroom dupleK house,
downtown Pomeroy. Furn .
or unfum . $225 .00 plus

utmt;es. Coll614 -992 · 2381
day or 614-992 -6723 n;ght .
Hom e for rent on Vine St . in
Racine . 2 bedrooms, 1 b8th,
la rge lot for ga rd en. Call

992 -2756 .or 985 ·4231 .
Two bedroom house ,for
r ent. Close to sc hool .

Month

and

$150 .00 deposit . Call 614 -

742 -3154 .
House on Wohe Terrace in
Pomeroy for rent. 3 bed ·
roo m s, 1 1f2 baths . $200 .00
per mont_h, $100.00 deposit . Call after 6 :00 , 614-

992 -5815 .
Five room brick home. close
to Point Pleasant, hea t and
air , cit';! water. 14 acres,
pond , small barn. 1 year
lease $475 .00 month . 304-

675 -6276 .
House . small. 3 br. 2111
Lincoln Ave. $275 . month,
Dep osi t and referen ces .

304-675 -2749 .
Mobile Homes
for Rent

513 Third Ave. 1 . bdr.,
kitchen w ith dishwasher,
washer-dryer hookup, $165
mo . Call 446 -4222 between

9
5
l~
&amp;_~
· ~~~~~~-

Downstairs, 2 room s &amp;
bath, furni shed, clean, no
pets. adults only. Oep &amp; Ref .
required . Call446-1519.
Gallipolis : 2 bdr , lg . clean
rooms . ce ntral heat- air.
water -trash pd ., $235 plus

dep . Coll446 -0116 .

)both) . Coil 614 -245 ·5B1B .
Fullv furnished, 2 bdr .. air
cond ., adults only . Call

446 · 4110 .
Furnished, $190 mo ., water
pd . S 100 dep . Ref. required .

Call 446 -9346
3100 .

or

4.4 6 -

Two bdr. . new wall to Wall
ca rpet, gas furnance , air
co nd .. in Gallipolis . Cal l

446- 1409.
Trailers for rent. 3 bdr . &amp; 2

bd&lt;. Call 446 -3371 .
Furnished 2 bdr. all modern
step up kitchen, city school .
See at 314 Third St ., Ka nauga . Call 446 -7473 .

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, · chair, rocker, otto man , 3 tables, [extra heavy),
$885. Sofa. chair and loveseat, $275. Sofas and chairs
priced from $285 . to $895 .

Tables, S50 and up to S1 26 .
Hide-a-beds,$390. and up

to S660 .. sofa beds S146,
Recliners, · $285. to $375 .,
Lamps from $28 . to $126 .
pc. dinettes from $109 .• to

odults only. Call 446-0338 .
bdr apt.,

2

$285 to $746 . Desk 8110
up to $225 .' Hutches. S550.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses. $275 . and up to

S395.

Baby beds·, S11 0 .

Mattresses or box springs.
full or twin. $68., firm, $68 .
and S78 . Queen sets, $195 .
4 dr. che,ts, $42. 6 dr .
chests, ~54 . Bad frames.
$20 .&amp;!1d $~5 ., 10 gun· Gun
cabinets, 8350 . Gas or
electric ranges $375 . Baby
mattresses, S26 &amp; 536, bed

bdr apt .,

$150-$250 . Call 304-675·
7263 675-5104 or 676·
5386 .
Mercerville, 1 &amp; 2 bdr. apts ..
from $175 &amp; up . Call

king frame $50. Good selec tion of bedroom suites.
rockers, metal cabinets,
headboards S38 &amp; up to

$65.
Used Furniture .. head
boards. and 2 bedroom
suites. 3 miles out Bulavilte
Ad . Open Sam to 5pm, Mon .
thru Sat.

446 -1157 or 367-721B .

614-446 ·0322

Furnished apt.. next door to
Librai'y, one profession~!

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

adult only. Coli

4~6 - 0338 .

Furnished effi c-iency, 607
Second Av e, Gall i polis .
$160 mo .. util ities pd . Call
446 -4416 after 7pm .
1 bdr. apartment inside citv
limits. $150 month pi\J s
deposit . Call 446 -8178 or
446 -0104 a1tcr 6 :00PM .
New efficiency apartment
with garage. Private yard
maintained, goo view, coun1ry privacy 1-0 minutes from
ci ty limits, carpeted,
washer -dryer hookup, disposal, ceiling fan , $250 per
month . lease S. deposit
required, water included.

Call 446 · 7209. Northup .

Washers.• dryers, refrigera tors, ranges . Skaggs Ap pliances, Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel .

61 4-446-7398 .

627 3rd . Ave . Gallipolis.

OH .
Trade Center Kanauga ,
Ohio . Furnit'ure outlet. Why .
Pay Morel
12x50 Pontiac Chief. furnished, on rented lot . Call

446 -290.5 between '10AM
and noo.,, Monday thru
Fridav. as"- for Cindy. No
rental inquiries please .
unfurnished . Call

446 -7132 .
$75 . Call

446 ·

waser &amp; drver
$150. Call 61 4-3B8-9305 .

Portable

Wringer washer and tub
good cond .. 14 ' rally

wheels. Call 446· 704B .

ref . l!o dep. Call446 -1163.
Kenmore heavy duty dryer
for sale. Excellant condition,

$86 .00 . Ca ll
5069 .

614 -992 ·

19 inch B.&amp; W. TV . Very

992 -5434 or 992-5914 or
304-B82 -2566 .

good shape . Asking $75.00 .
Call614·992 -6732 .
Pickens used furniture . 304-

675-6483 or 675-1460 .
RICK 'S NEW AND USED

45

Furnjshed Rooms

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

Coli· 614 -446 ·0756 .
Furnished room , $126 . Utili ties . range . ref . Share bath .
Men only. 919 Sec ., Gallipolis. 446 -4416 after 8 p.m .

46

Space for Rent

FURNITURE . Used stoves
and refrigerators. Compare
our prices. save today .

Phone 304-773-5430.
SWAIN
AUCTION i!. FURNITURE

lot for

rent.

Bassinatta. baby bath. girls
clothes 0-18 mo .• boys 0 · 6
mo .. Womans 6 -7, bean

bogs, toys. Call 614-2661982.
New 4lfax8 utility trailer, all
steal. loclitted &amp;cross high•
way from Silver Bridge

S275 . Call

446-

Small color console TV, 20"

bike. Call 446-B694.
5 piece . new dinette set
$69.95 , new foam mattresa

l!o box springs $39 .95. 1
new couch $129.00. 1 new

couch llr choir $179.00. 1
new couch 8t chair $229.
Call Torri Kaosel, 446-7274 .
--------lcOak furniture, tables,chairs,
cupboards, pie safe, telephones, desk, also antiques
and, glassware. Open Sundays . Conkel's Tuppersplains, At.7 .
Firewood for sale. Call 949-

367-743B .

3283 .
55, 000 BTU automatic circulating natural gas heater
with fan. Good condition.

614-992 ·7479 .

1 2 x 50, 2 bedroom .
$135 .00 per mo,th . Lo-

2nd . floor office space for
rent . Court St ., Pomeroy .

catad in Pomeroy . Call992 ·
7034 or 992-5732 .

Call 614-373-0456 .

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

SPACES FOR RENT, trailer

lots sewer and water furnished, small children ac-

cepted . 304-676 -1076.

614 · 992 ·

'

Merchandi se

2 bedroom mobile home.
$160 .00 month, utilities

portly paid . 304-676 -2049 .

51

Household Goods

water

bed

$126.00. 304· 675-6995.
gifts,

Fall clearance at Spillman
Shrubbery Center. All

·shrubbery half price . Call
304 - 773-9187 for en
appointment.

l!o Son. Call 446&gt;77B6 .
Plastic cisterni state approved. plastic septic tanks,
plastic culvert, met*l cui.

verts; RON EVANS ENTER PRISES. Jackson, Oh 614286-6930.

Merlin 30-30 rifle, scope
and sling 8200 .00. 304·
675 -2835 .
Marvel and DC comics 111 in
mint cond, all in · bage, call

Bald_wln .a lec, ric organ 's two
too chooae from. Both dou ble k•v.,oards. very reaaona-

ble. Call614-367-716!!.
Martin D-36 guitar with

Apartment
for Rent

8200.00. Clooet·Cabinet,
wood, SBO.OO. Phone 304·
675-6747 .
Building Supplies

Apartme~t

for rent

cu se. Phone
7689 .

i~

614 - 992 ·

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Ptea1ant

and Gallipolis . 614 · 446·
B221 .

Phone 304-882-2038 ofter
4:00 .
5 .months old Saara Kenmore partible dryer. used
only 3 months, axe cond.

304-676-1176.

New .

&amp;

Apples

600

buohels,

all

fruita. vegetabtes. candy and
nuts. Jacks Fruit ·Market,
Rout&amp;· 35. Hend~rson, W.

Va.

Rough Cut lumber. oak,
p,oplar, and pine. 2x4's.
2x8 ' s, 1x6's. 1x8's. As-

sorted lengths . Coli Hogg
and

Zuspan

Materials

Co .. lnc. 773 - 6554.
daytime .

&amp;

LIVI'SIIIi.k

61

Farm ECI,uipment

1976- 136-Mootiia Ferguson
diesel farm tractor. axtra
good shape, new disk. bush

hog &amp; plow. Priced $5BOO.
Coli 246 ,9106.

Phone day 304 -882-2222,
evening B82-3239 .

cylinder. Coli 446-7838 af·

Firewood for sale 100%
h' ardwoo~

seasoned

or

grMn, oplit and -delivered.
Call 614-379-2662.

1 979 P~mtiac Grand le·
Mens, 2 door, auto, air,
ps/pb. cruise, tilt whe,l,

14" roily wheels. Call 446·
7048 .
1977 · Cutlus 8800. Call
614-367-7238.
1979 Malibu Classic PS. PB.
air, low mites. Call 446-

dows. $3.760 . Call 4463100 or 446-7122.
1979 Chevrolet Monte

2 box tobacco baler with air
ter 5.

Boarding all breeda. Heated
indoor-outdoor. facilities.
AKC Dobe'!nan . puppies:

1--------------

Drago.,wynd Cattery Kennel . CFA Himalayan, Persian
end Siamese kittens. New
litter AKC Chow puppies.

Shepherd pups, $76.00 .
Call 614-986-3849.

1 ---~----~

Parakeets and ceges. 304·
676-5030 after 15 :00 PM
and week ends.

Carlo. V.'S engine, loaded,
49,000 miles , e)tc. cond.,
serious buyers only. Call

Sider~

l;:qulpment, Hender-

2000 Ford po, like new .. gao.
Ford 601 cleen, goo. MF 66
gas p.o. N"'Y Ideal No. 7
com picker . 304-676, 2328
or676·2606.

62

or trade for a 73 and up
Chevrolet motor plu1

8600.00 . Call 614-9B6·
4392 .
.
engine,

runs

good.

8600.00 . Call 614 -9927403.

1-------- - - - - - 1980

Dido

wanted to buy used tread

mill. Call 614-286-6622.

;.
.•

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

GASOLINE ALLEY

mo. old AppaloN colt good

color with blanket 1250.
Call 448·6612 .

11 ewes &amp; 131ambi:. 7 hent
&amp; rooaters, 1 · guinea. Call

614-388·907B.

50.000 miles. 86.300.00.
304-1176-2486.
1970 Chevelle 55 327, PB,
PS. good cond. $1,500.00.
Coli oftor 6:00 PM 304675·2099.
'7~

Chevy Monzo. 4 cyl. exc

studded

snow

tires,

1325.00. Phone 304- 773 ·
6619 .
'70

8oracuda,

tixc

383

Young laying hena. Buff ·motor, needs body work,
Rocks, Arlcaunas. ·4x8 out 8200.00. Phone ~04·458-

building. 304-876 · 542B or
676-6665.

1500.
' 74 Chevy ·Impale.
675-3190.

MN. 190 min .l

JIM'S PLUMBING l!o HEATING. Rt. 1. Box 355, Gallip.&gt;lio. Coll614-367-0676 .

Point Pleasant, W . Va. 304-

675-6420.

CD

awning $76 . laundry 11ova

AKC reglsterad mala Poma-

63,800 ectuel mHes. Ac. PS ,

860. Ro01e hitch $100. Two

ronian. 1 yr. 5 mo. old. oil

bull. ' 1-304-675-3110 or
1·614-247-3684.

7 -24 tractor tires

shott and wormed. house

2 year old Sorrel colt for

broken. 304 -675-6393.

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

$3,800 . 00 . 304·6766761 .

:

Grain

1978 Pontiac Flrebird.
PB. blue-black, exc cond,

72

Trucks for Sale

Liteosed

and " ·

·

·

Q (()

EKcavating

DoZer Work by Ted Hanna.
Ditches, ponde. roeds. land
clearing, etc . CBII Motor Car

cussed. IRII60 mrn.)fCiosed
Captaonedl
@ Newswatch
fj) Independent News
10:30 CD Not Necessarily the

Brokers. 446·6592.
J .A.R .Construction Co.Ru·

News

tland, Oh,614 -742 -2903; ~

Baaements. Footers. Concreta work, Backhoe 's,
Dozer II Ditcher. Dump
trucks, Ill water-gas-iewerelectricallinea.

~ News

CD Toxic Time

Bomb .
()) Bill Cosby Show
I]) NFL's Greatest Mo·
ments 1972 World Cham ·

D.A . Boston Excavating
Dozer and Dump Truck ·

Services. , Call 614-667·
8628' or 614-378-6288.

pion

!1 ,;nspt,rldllllll
71

Autoe for Sale

TOP CASH paid for '80
mod.. and·nower uald ..,.,
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1811
Eoetern Avo .. Galllpollo. Coli
614-4&lt;'11·2282.

John' e

Auto Soleo, Bulovllle Rd.
448-4782. Gallipollo, Oh.

84

Electrical

Iff) Media Probes 'Lan·
guQge .' The powerful im pact that language has on
culture is explored . (A)

SEWING Machine repair•.
aervice. Authorized Singe,
Saln &amp;: Service Sharpen
Sciasors. Fabric Shop,

i__
1

P.omeroy. 814-992·228'4.

SNAKE!!

85

Ganer1l Hauling

-.

Aloo pools filled. !;ali· _
6 14- •
2111· 1141 or 61--·446- '
1176 or 614·4411·7911 .
•

Ken '1 Water Service . WeU1.
114·317-0123or614· 387-

7741 night 0&lt; day.
Dump truck

1983 S-1 0 Chovrolot long
bed, V-1, 4 opd., 211,000
ectuol miles. iii.IIOO. Coli
614-38B-8816 ·otter IPM,
614-388·8921".
'1970 1 ton truck Chevy. Call'
before II, 304-175·31011.
1974 Dotlae 'plcll up, IWB.
PS. Pl. AC, 8800.00. 304·
8711-6128.

Dolphins

Highlights .

~

"T'HERE'S RE:.f'OR'fEDI-Y

IT

A CRIME HERE S:vERY
1'WO MINUTE6'!

L-OOKS

F'R:e.if'Y ·
QUIE"f

1"0 ME.u
"'

-

....

will

haul coal: llmeatone. etc.

304·675-3190.

87

.;

Upholetery

TRIITATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11113 Sec. Ave .. Golllpollt.
614·441-7833 0&lt;614-44$1833.

1

Of( I(E5 .. 1VE SEEN
IN '!'OUR CLASS
ALL YEAR ...

YOU JUST ~AVEN'T
NOTICED ME

THE J ANITOR KEEPS
SWEEPING ME OUT!

1

LON THE AIR

[)

·----·-- CJ r J

NHAT THe N!:R'VOU&amp;

D ISC: .JOCI&lt;:E'l'
L I VE~

i· SIFOSYj
rxx i
Answer:[

ON.

Now ilrrange !nt etrcleel lerters lc.
form !ht SUI'PfiH anawer. as aug
~:steel by the aDOve cartoon

IIII

J&amp; [

XI I I X I

j

1Answers tornon-ow
YesiEHd ay s

Jumbles BATO N

I Answe r

AGI LE

ENJOIN

HITHER

Whalto do lfl ,Hder to nave soft wh iff'
nanOs- NOTHIN :.

James Jacoby

The timing
is delicate
By Jam.. Jacoby
When North discovered his side's 4·

4 spade lit, he launched into the
Blackwood convention. When he
found that there were no missing
aces he asked for kings. As he expect· •
ed 'there was one king missing
between them. North bid seven '
spades anyway . If South did not have
the spade king, maybe the lmesse
would work. Luckily South did have
the sp~de king, but the contract still ·
went one down because of declarer
carelessness.
Declarer won the opening trump '
lead in dummy and saw immediately l
that the contract was safe if he could
trump two diamonds in his own band.
Accordingly be played A-K of diamonds and trumped a third diamond
with the spade ace. West disearded a
heart. A low spade was led to dummy,
East showing out, and declarer
trumped dummy's last diamond with
the spade king. West diSCarded hiS
other heart. Now when South played a
low heart toward dummy, West
ruffed . Down one.
Declarer's approach to taking 13
tricks was fine. but he made one shp.

I

NORTH
•. II ·IW&lt;
tQJ 10 9
.KQJ 2
t AK~ 3
t4
WEST
EAST
t8643
t5
.84
.10961
+to6
tQ984Z
tKt0853
tQU
SOUTH
tAK 7Z
• A73

tJ7
tAJ 7 Z
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

t

West

Nortll

East

S..tll

Pass

zt

Pass

Pass

4 NT

Pas!

I NT
zt
It

Pass
5 NT Pass
Pass
7t
Pass
Pass
Opening lead:

•3

6+
Pass

Alter trumping a diamond with the
spade ace, he should at that point
have led a heart to dummy. West will
at that time still have a heart. Now
the last diamond can be trumped high
and a low spade led to dUIIltDY to
draw trumps and claim the contract.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

~tUa1,. 'fJt,t
by THOMAS JOSEPH.
ACROSS 40 Trouble
1 Skein
ofyarn
5Sty
8 Wahine's
dance
t Vinegar

41 At that
time
DOWN
1 Burn

2 StarUing
3 Slur over
4 Much

13 Dry
14 Bring back cash
15 Get - of
5 Prison
16 Of Rome
release
17 Corrupt
6 Smyrna

Yesterday 's Answer ,, ,,

18 On the

house
19 Mobster's
figs
21 Singer
gWl
7 Russian
Jerry
1
Actress,
river
22 Lab vessel
Charlotte 10 A Rogers 23 Lofty
11 Fly
24 Adrenal
Zl Presid~n- 12 Clergyman and others
25 Beatty
tial ~~ no" 11 Iranian
coin
in "Reds"
22 A must
with lox

zo

27 Thirty ( Fr.l
29 Conductor
Walter

30 Zero ( sl. )
31 Finnish
lake

33 Sketched
35 Yemen port
37 Tm·roof
prowler

25 Less
common
:~&amp;French
11

27 -

she"
Aviv

28 Brazilian
tree

28 "The and!"
(1940song)
32 Relatives
34 Actress

b-4-++-

Balin
36 Football
play

31 Dressed

38 Take
wnbrageat

39Land
measure

DAILy CRYl"l''qUO'l'E'I- Here's how to work It:

himself in the middle when
an ignored Senator's wife
announces thai she· s leav-

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

ing har husband. IRI
Cil Lotenight America
® Barney Miller
Iff) Worid Chess Cham·

One letter stands for another . In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes the iength and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

01 ilJ Nlghtllno
81 Twilight Zone
12:00 CD MOVIE: 'Rumble Fish'

J

.

tor hire,

!Closed Captioned!
f!l) Benny HiU Show
11 :15 ® MOVIE: ' Fool 's Parade'
11 :30 II CD CD Tonight Show
CD MOVIE: 'Southern
Comfort'
ill Belt ol Groucho
I]) Sport.Center
CI1 WKRP in Cincinnati
Q Cll Newhart Dick finds

pionahipa

ciettrno, poola filled. Phone
1976 Ford 4 whool drive PU
good cond. Call 814-2111·
1268.

Miami

Cil Two Ronnies

Chevy

hay,l11.00 • bolo. Coil
8714 -742-2180 Mondoy
thur Fridoy BAM to 4 :30PM.

()) My Uttle Margie
(fil Tony Brown's Journal
fj) Soap
11 :00 II CD Cll CD Q Cll 00 Ill

BARNEY

cletorns, poolo filled. Phone ,t
814·317-0823 0&lt;614-31.7- ,•
.7741 night or day.
:

For sale. round balea of

Delicate Balance 'National
Security and FrePdom Of th ~
Press.' The extent to which
the Constitution actuallv
does grant freedom of the
press in regard to governmen1 foreign policy is d is-

4537. James L. Davison. Jr.
owner.

Ken's Weter ServfGe. Walla.

auto.

Knot's Landing

from finding out. (60 min.)
Cil Constitution: That

DO NOW?

-~--~-

Luv

®

Abby learns that Gary is the
father of Va lene·s babies
and tries to prevent Gary

THAT&amp;OES
FOR ME TOO,
e.ILLY. WHAT
WILL YOU

.:lames Soya Weter Seryice.

1984 Mazda 6 opd. , 1981
Ford Courrler 4 opd .. 1980

'National

Cil lll 11J 20/20 !CCI

1982 GMC 8.2 . dieoel,
20,000 act. mileo. orginel
larg' round balea of hay . . owne~. equipped to pull Air
$20 eech. Call 446·1062 . Stream trellar, 17.500. Call
after tlpm.
·
448-29117.
Round hay boles. Call 4464484.

MOVIE:

lampoon's Class Reunion'

.

WINNIE
83

II CD (D Hili Street Blues
Bates finds a soft spot in her
hean for a parentless street
urchin and decides to take
him home . (60 min .)

SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating, 211 Sixth St ..
insured.

Coverage of th is karate bout
is presented from St. Paul.

10:00

304-

Peklngeoe puppies $50.00 .
304-B82-2683.

sale. 304·676-3287.

And be sure you pui/G
out all ihose un,siqhtly
tacks!

&amp; Refrigeration

3 ragiatered Angus cows.
2'1/z yra old. pattured ••·
posed to registered Angus

&amp;

614 - 446- ~477

Call anytime 614-446- •

'81 Olds Supreme. air cond,
AM-FM caasatte, cruise,

onolotterloNChsquaro, totorm
four ordinary woros

byHennArnoldandllobLao

160 min .) iCC)
9:30 II CD CD Night Court
CD Assaulted Nuts
I]) PKA Full Coniact
Karate : Ught Middleweight ContenderS · Bout

or

1970 VW. Rebuilt motpr

304·676-6535 after 5:00.

a

Hay

Phone 614·446·38BB

.. that posters m~s· be remove
within thu'ty days afterth'
e-lection!

Th' ord'na nee distinc'/IJ
s-tate', Mr. Biclr\er...

Good-1 EKcavating, basemenu. footer•. driveways,
septic tanks. landscaping.

Two extrl tires. $600.00.

Livestock

1 Reg. AppoloN mare1100
lb• .. 7 yrs. old, real gentle&amp;
good riding more $450. 11

64

Cll @ Simon &amp; Simon
A .J . and Rick are hired to
protec t a popular actress
from murder . (60 min.)
Iff) Mystery! 'Rumpole and
the Sporting life .' The new
female barrister begs Rumpole to defend her sister
who is on trial f or murder.

Q

Rotary or cable tool drilling-:~::
Moat wells completed same ~ .day. Pump salea and servi· . :

304-676-7690 .
17.000. No rust. New paint.

63

ill 700Ciub

Cutlass

'79 Ford Fairmont. $1,900 .

$B5. 304-896-36B1 .

IN "f 1-\E JAApe.,
l-'11\ JUST PLP..IN
MIDNIGHT!

THE RICE AND
SI&gt;.LT, ACE!

304·675-2663 after 5 p.m.

Wanted to Buy

AVenue. Point Pleasant.

HooPLE!

UP Ft&lt;O"'T WITH

.

ces. 304-896-3B02 .

Cheers Conclu·

sian. Coach is elated when
Irene accepts his proposal,
but begins to wonder about
the relationship when she
wins a lottery .
(I) MOVIE: 'All the Right
Moves'

IT SHOULD BE

304 -675 ·

RINGLES 'S SERVICE. ex-

All

Brougham, low miles, very
beautiful car, must sell.

10 gallons ·tank, • 1'1.99;
"''dlum angel fioh. 13.99;
20 gallon long tank, e17.00.
Fish Tank. 2413 Jeckoon

MR~.

removal. Call
1331 .

II Ill CD

9 :00

good

1972 Pontiac Lo Mana. 350

wood · Only Fri, Set, Sun
1:00 · 700 P.M .

$JSTER'. l!&gt;lJT

..

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump

out. No rust. 18 MPG. reg. •
gu. Co~ be bought on time

Monzo.

AT ME'&gt;!

hou11 colla. Call 304-676239B or 814-446-2464.

82500.00. Call 614-9853B65 or 614·986-3868.

1 979 Chevy

SHOOr/11'

SpeciaNzing in Zenith and
Motorola, Qua;ur. and

condition. Clean inside arid

of Sugar 8ero. Call 614·
2B6-6622.

·N0130DY C,O..I.L&lt;$.
ME RODNE~ E)(a':PT

--------------------"
RON'S Tatevision Service.

Cor. Fourth end Pine
Gallipolia, Ohio

1 0 gallons set' up, 824.00;

'ft-IAAK$
FOil. Tr\E T IP,

304-773-6131 .

1976 Ford LTP. very good

Somerville's • East Ravens·

f---.--------•---------""'"'1

0 .and M. Contractors. Remodeling, vinyl aiding, painting(indoor and ouJdoor),
replacement windows. Call

... THEN 'IIHY
1'/EI'IE THEY

I 1:

266-1182 .

New Idea 1 row corn picker.
Excellent · CQndition.

Reg . Quarter colt grandson

$200 .

' HUH? HOI'I C'H YOU OH- I HAVE /liY
6E 50 SURe WE'LL l'IAY5. tlrY PEOPLE
FIND OUT I'IHO 1
1'/0R~IHG ON
Afll. A6NER?
IT Al&lt;lHT NOW.

Plastering 8t Pla1ter repair,
free estimates. Call 614 -

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Rat Terrier puppies. 304676· 1506.

Ragi•tarad Beaglet, fema le,
16 months,atarted running.

AN NIE

Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

condition . Phone 614·9923191.

1-------------

304-676-2083.

-.

Call collect1 -614-237·
0488. 9 a.m . to 6 p.m.

shel batch grain dryer. Call
992-7302.

Surplus · Dsnim Jackets
$21 .00, Camouflage army
clothing. packs. boots. insulated coveralls $27. 60,
orange · camouflage rever -

sable jackets $27.60. Sam 1 ----------~-­

Unconditional lifetime guarantH. Local reference•
furnished . Free estimates.

black .low mileage.

Call 614-446-3844 after 7 .
AKC Reg. Blue Chow puppies. Also AKC Chow Stud
Service . Call 614-266·
1271 .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

6x20 ft. gooseHeck livestock trailer •. New floor and
paint. Also Myers 260 bu-

Firewood cut up slaba. • 16

Firewood 1 00% hardwood
split l!o dollvared f30 pickup
load or ~ loads $76 . Call
446-7624 after 6":00.

cond .. $7000 . Mun Sell -Getting Marriedll Call 446·
8049 or 446-7739.

446-8241 .
Pets for Sale

Coil 614-367-0409 or 614 ·
367-7244 .
.

1980 Mazda GLC wagon

plows and grader blade. Call
614-28li-6522.

II CD CD Cosby Show
(I) Inside the NFL Len
Dawson and Nick Buoniconti
review thi s week 's NFL action
CD MOVIE: ' Snoopy,
Come Home·
ell Circus
([) MOVIE: 'The Victors'
(() II) ~ U.S. Olympic
Medalists
Professional
Boxing Debut The pro.fes ~
sional debuts of Mark Bre·
Whitaker ,
land,
Pernell
Tyrell Biggs, Meldrick Tay·
lor , and Evandcr Holyfield
are feawred in this boKing
special. 12 hrs.l
Q (()®I Magnum P.l.
Cil MOVIE: 'Graat Expec·
tations·
(jJ) Forum
fj) MOVIE: . 'The Great
Santini'
8:30 II CD (D Family Ties Alex
bas mi)(ed feelings when his
frien·d Doug becomes engaged and asks Alex to be
best man .
I]) Super Bouts of the 80's
Sugar Rav Leonard v s. Rob erto Duran !Montreal, June,
19BO). (60 m;n.l
Iff) On the Money Tonight's
show deals with the whys
and wherefores Of buying a
house and shopping for a
personal computer. ~CC)

H &amp; S Hol"!''ft Improvements
vinyl &amp; aluminum ti,ding,
roofing, seamless gutters,
storm windows, overhang.

75 ,000 miles, e»ec. con~ .•
mag wheels. tinted win-

AKC registered German

lumbar. $1 .25 ft. Gravely
Sulky, $100. Saddle tanko
for 1973 to 79 Ford pickup

eK.

()) Here Come the Bridea
I]) SportsCenter
ffi Gomer Pyle
Cll • I]J Emenatnment
Tonight
CD Wheel of Fortune
Q Cll Wheel of Fortune
Cll Iff) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newohour
® News
f!ll Jefferson&amp;
7 :30 II Cil Tic Tac Dough
CIJ Braingamea Word
scrambles , number puzzlers
and history and mystery
games are all here to teas e
your brain.
I]) NFL' s Greatest Moments: Beat Ever Coaches
(J) Andy Griffith
Cll Q Cll Family Feud
(D Jeopardy
® Wheel of Fortune
Ill IDl Ne.w Name That

Tune

Marcum Roofing &amp;: Spout·
ing. Now lnetalling rubber
roofs. 30 year• e"perience,
apeciallzina in built up roof.

256-8701 after 6pm.
Ferguson 30 tractor with

molded haod and face. 304'
1-------~B95-35Bt .

heat

miles .

1,9 ~~ .,

8 :00

Ing (i~cludlng hot tar ·
application) 304· 875·2088
or 676-7368 .

9790.

maxi

original

II CIJ PM Magazine

@I WKRP in Cincinneti

Famali Tractor with cultiva·
tori. mowing machine. Call

Now open for business.
Mountain State Block, At . .
33. New Haven. Com.,ete
maSonry supplies, 4", 8 " ,
12'' block. Delivery service.

56

.•

perienced cerpenter. elec~tri­
cian . mason. painter. roof-

Quan canning jars, $2.60

304-469-1728 .

Horne

30~4 .

P235 -70R16 Co op steel
belted M· S. $10.00. Call
614-992-3337 evan;ngs.

Firewood $20 .00 pick up
load, $30 .00 delivered .

1957 Chevrolet Beleire 2 dr.
hardtop. 6 cyl.. 49,000

Priced to sail I Call ·446·
2153.
.

ocn, 304-675-7421.

Cabbage Patch Dolls. same
size as re81 ones with plastic

1 9B2 Chevy Chevette 4
spd .. 1981 chevy Cheveue

1961 Willy's pt~nel wagon
60,000 miles. ·New tires,
new brakes, · just tuned .

f. Mill SIIIIIJII!!~

Bria.r patch Kennels Profes·
sional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilities . English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 814-388·

load, $30 .00 de livered.
304-675-2991 or 6756762 .

81

Call 614-3BB·9B57 .

1975 Camero Rally Sport
PS, PB, auto. trona, 8996.
Call 446·2538 .

good condition. call 13041
676-1551 after 6 pm

Build your own .3 or 4 bdr

home, $6995 kit delv .. Our
new model is open , see it
today. Call1 ·886-7311 .

&amp;PM. 446-0137 .

Salas, Bulaville Rd. 446·
4782. Gellipolis, Dh.

Fruit
Vegetables

SORGHUMS. $1.60 pint,
304-676-6086.

Building Materiels
~lock , brick, aewer pipes.
windows. linti!tls. etc.
Claude Wintars. Rio Grande.

$10 .00 each. 2 commodes.

Firewood, 620 .00 pick up

--------------

Aspen auto . John's Auto

58

1972 Oliver Tractor 110 hp,
reedy to work, $6,500.00 .

per dozen . Cell 614-B435384.

Servir.es

loire auto.. 1978 Dodge

245·6804.
Syra·

Like

good COJ'ditio.n . Call after

auto. 1979 Plymouth Vo·

vared. Call for pricat, 614Sears maitraSB and box
springs, swivel rocker. G E
makeup mirrow, blander.

&amp;9150.

304-773-6667 ..

304-676-6888.
Kenmore electric range with
continuous. cleaning oven.
white, uted 11h years ,

Cell 614-843·

Autos for Sale

77 Pontiac Grend Prix 301'

PU load. Larger loads deli·
44

71

Musical
Instruments

case

266-6245.
Limestone. Sand. Graval.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards

57

Afghans

end Pillow1 . 304-675 ·
2016.
.

55

It; I

Improvements

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220.

304-676·4004 .

deliver. HEAP vender. 614-

..

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

mith automatic natu'r al gas
w~ter heater. 2 mOnths old.
$100 . 00 . 2 lavatories,

ings a25 ea. 17 ft. porch

green. You pick up or we

Thur1,

1973 Honda· 8200.00 .

Chrietmas

ACCOr.\P~IS~ TMIW~.

T~ATTMIN&amp;

5231.

evening (U.S.A . railular bib

Queen size

Auto Parts
Accessories

s 160 .00.

heovy jecketo. This weal&lt; ·
Wed,

50MI!Tir.\&amp;9 TMER! AR&amp;
P&amp;ACEFU~ WA'ff, TO

t;AW

HOW 9TROiJG

304 engine and · transmiJ·
1ion . Good condition.

Stud Sarv;ca. ·call614-4467795 .

8 in. used ·c oncrete blocks.
30 cents each, cherry

Knauff Firewood Split- 95%
hardwoods. Seasoned or

8i

S160.00. 30gallonoA.O.S·

bunk beds 8199, antron
recliners S99, used bedroom
suites. ranges , wringer
washers, &amp; shoes. Call 614-

Misc. Merchandise

~6

childrena clmouflage euiteIJCtra

CAP'fAIN EASY
!I~T YO~

SAM SOMERVI'LLE'S
ARMY SURPLUS. all sizes.
open

-·

304·

HILLCREST KENNELS

woodburnar. 50,000 blu.
reasonable 304-BB2-322B.

54

Remington 30~ 08 for tale or
trade. 304-468-1541 .

Blue fox jacket for sale.
Wom one ·seaion. Call 992-

Glow

Mo1orcycles

Now VESPA MOPEDS
8695 ot Botz Hondo Sole,.
Coli 448-2240 .

0 . Call614·245-5121.

Warm

Call

446-2565 .

Call

446-44B4.

$100. 3-34 in. alum. awnTrai ler

Park, Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy . large lots . Call

dapos;t .
7680.

Ruger 243 rifle with scope
and reloading supplies. Call

62 Olive St., Gallipolis . New

446·3159 .

Double wide 3 bdr .. 2 bath .
Kerr - Harrisburg Rd . Call

Two bedroom mobile home
in Syracuse . 1!1170.00 per
month plus utilities and

Shop, 430 2nd . Ave., Gam·
polis. 446·0B40.

&amp; used wood-coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR suite e399.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

· ·· -· --·--· ··--- ---------·-- --

Remingtom 234, others to
choose from . Frank's Pawn

$10 .00 each . 2 tires. size

New set of mattress &amp;: bo"

446 - 1243 .

1 and 2 bedroom furnished
apartments for rent . Call

12 go .. model 760 Rem;ngton 30.06. model 700 bol

All.lminum build ing , $150 .00. Good condition. Sarah Ramsey at Co.
Rd . 25.near Meigs · High
School.

room.

Riverside Apts . Middleport .
Special rates for Senior
Citizens . $130 . Equal Housing Opportunities . 614 -

ga., ·light .twelve Browning
12 ga ., Frarchi 3' magnum

TV soh. Open SAM to 6PM .
Men thru Sat. 446-1699,

just remodeled. large fire plac e. References rOquired .
$225 . per month. 154 First
Call 446-1615 or
Ave.

4 rooms &amp; bath . carpet,
stOve, refrigerator , fur f)arlce . adults only. no pets.

12 ge .. model11 Remington
t ~ ga .. modal 37 lthace 12

2237.

1971 Torch, 12x65 2 bed -

446 -7572 or 446 -19.00.

Guns: model 1 2 Winchester

County Appliance , Inc .
Good used appliances and

BACHELOR APARTMENT,

3 ro om furni shed or unfur·
nished . 1 or 2 adults. Call

10 l!o 14 K gold. Prices $60
&amp; up. Frank's Pawn Shop.
430 2nd. Avo.. Gollipolil.
446-0B40.

Plaza .
7406.

74

7 :00

~f}~1.\ftmft ~THATSCRAMIIL!DWOAOOAME

~

Unaer8l't'lble tneu lour Jumbles.

EVENING

'77 JMP Wagon Mr. 4wh"l
drive. I~ oxc · cond,
82 ,100.00. Phone 3048811·3418.

h"vy podded. Coil 114·
2111·1413.

Pho~e

11/15/84

C~III14·14:S·IZ31 .

ool.or formic• · 1talnfe11

bed ·complete,
895-3456 .

Television
Viewing

4 W.O.

V1n1

1110 Wlll¥1 ~~~~~· lluni •
good. 1100:00 orbootofflr.
llota-TIIItrlar.oole, 110.00.

Goo oompor etovo 4 burMr
with o111n, bUilt til oeblnet
new. 2 dinette M11 · aOid

·overalls
$16.00, regular 1
coverallo 122.00).
~

Now 'available: Nice selection of diamond clusters far
below regular retail prices.

Wood table with six chairs

frames $20, 525, l!o S30,

Nicely furnished modern
mobile home in city ., 1 or 2
1

Hau$ehold Goods

435 . 7 pc. $189 and up .

992 -7721 .
Nice 3 bdr . unfurn . mob .
home. 2 bdr . furnished mob .
ho me. At . 7 &amp; water paid

73

MerchanclrH

Want•d to buy, a good twin

Top so;l and fill dirt and
landscaping. Cell 614-266 ·.
1427.

--- ----------- ---- -----------

42

MIIC .

614-682-3969 .

I

6 a c res in Lebcl non Town-

$ 150 . 00

Falco~ .

mechanic tools. Cl!ll befpre
coming. Winifred Abele :

Building lot Neighborhood

41

154 Mlac.

8 ft. ~ 4 ft. wooden utiUty !Coal D!Oilvo,.d) good lump
troller new Ught pluo troftor · houoe cool 1 to Non. call
Jim Lanier 11711·73g7 or
hitch for car *125 or take
304-117J·1247.
gun or color TV on tr•de. K &amp;
K Mobile Homo off Rt. 7,
1 00 per cent oeuonld Ool&lt;
Gampolla, anytime.
1 -------'-~-:- firewood, big loacla, -quick
1984 wreckar like new,leso delivery, 304-675-421 ,8 .

Lots &amp; Acreage

Rd . 65x150. S5 ,000 . Call
446-3844 after 7PM .

Mlac. Merch1ndl18

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Ohio

Thursday, November 15, 1984

Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

Ferme for Sale

ThUI'Idey, November 16, 1984

'

(l) Bumo &amp; Allen
I]) Mazda SportoLDok
Cll Nlghtllne
g ·· Cll MOVIE: 'Happily
Ever After'
(j) MOVIE: 'Witneso For
the Pfosecution'
I1Z Eye on Hollywood ·
81Gunomoko
12 :30 II (f) CD Le1e Night with
David Letterman t on;ght' s
guest is Susan St. James .
160min.l
()) Love Thot Bob

e

.

-

CRVPTOQUOTE
TSSM

JBTT

VPSDB;
NSE

PS

11-15

PG8

HTT

PG8EBLD

HUBELIH

GBHEPG·

TLBV

GSY B
IHTXLD

. ISS .TLWAB
•
Yeetenlay's Cryp&amp;oquote ; IT IS A SIMPI .E FORMULA :
00 YOUR BEST AND SOMEBODY MIGHT l.IKE IT. OOROTHYBAKER
.
OIM&lt;i t&lt; i"U Features Sync:h c• le l nt

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

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