<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14386" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14386?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T04:47:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45493">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8fd6c9f37f3c6dba1057e37e88eb0773.pdf</src>
      <authentication>14c8f8acd05011721e215c7e6d535979</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44920">
                  <text>Wednesday, Oct. 13,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, Page-16--The Daily Sentinel

Recovery outlook still cloudy
i

By The Assocla!t_&gt;d Press
Inte res t ra tes have fa llen to their

owes t level s ince Septe mber 1900
with some bankers saying they'U go
still lower, but a preside ntia l adviser ca utioned there are no signs
t he eco nom y will improve
immedia tely.
Preside nt Reagan, mea ntime,
sc hed uled a " non-partisa n" speech
on thecconomy tonight a t 7: 30 E DT,
to be broadcast by two television
ne tworks. Democrats cha rged the
ne tworks were giv ing Reagan o·ee
time for a poli tical speech only two
the Novembet'
"'-"
Weeks ~rare
e lections.
Four m a jor ba nks c ut their prime
le ndin g ra te to 12 percent on Tuesday, a nd the government said it was
lowering the inte rest-rateceiling on
certa in feder ally-backed home
loans to 12.5 percent.
Mea nwhile, the average ra te pa id
on new six-month Treasury bills
a uctioned to the public plunged
near ly J r;, percent age point s, to
7. 734 percent.
Tha t means people _buy ing six-

I

month savings certificates sold by
banks a nd savings in t!tuti
in
. .
s
ons
mmunum de nominations of$10,00J
will earn 9.15 percent interest start,ing today, down from last weeks
9.643 per cent.
The falling rates a lso could signal
eas ier credit for retail sales.
But Ala n Greenspan, a m ember
of the Preside nt's Economic Polley
Advisory Board , told reaes
d
1 t a teevelopers in Boston that despite the
drop in rates, there is no indication
of improve me nt in the over II
econom y.
a
"The economy 1tse if shows no
s igns of change," he said.
A growing number of investors
apparently think such a turnaround
will come sooner rather than late r.
Activity in the stock and bond
mar kets has been extreme ly heavy
in recent days, although stock prices turned mixed Tuesday after severa l days of spectacular increases.
Bond prices were mode ra tely
hi gher.
The Dow Jones aver age of 30 in-

Area deaths

Harold E. Cowderv

Harold E ugene Cowdery, 67, died
Tuesday at his home in Reedsville
following an extended illness.
He was a son of the la te Cecil a nd
Sarah Kibble Cowdery. He was retired from the F.M.C. Corp., a t Par kersburg a nd had been a far m er in
the Reedsv ille ar ea. He was a
mem ber of the F irst Luthe ran
Chu rch in Parkersbu rg.
Su rviving a re his w ife, Ida M.
Cowdery: two sons, Richard ,
Palms, Ca lif., a nd Lee of Reeds·
v ille; a da ug ht er , Betty Ann Myers ,
Phoenix, Ariz.; three brothers,
John a nd Riley, Marie t1 a ; Dale of
Colum bus, a nd a sis ter , Sarah Ann
MmTison.
Besides his pa rents . he was preceded in death by a brother a nd two
sisters.
Serv ices will be held a t 2 p.m .
Fr·iday at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville with the Rev. David L.
Scharf officia ting. Buria l will be in
Eden Ceme tery. F r iends ma y call
at the fu neral home any1 ime after 2
p.m . Thursday.

Benjamin E. Boggess

I

Benjamin E . Boggess, 57, 49419
SR 338, Racine, died Tuesday
evening.
Mr. Boggess. was the son of the
la te Charlie and Osa Anderson Boggess. He was also preceded in death
by two brothe rs, Gle nver a nd Denzel Boggess.

Mr. Boggess was e mployed on a
river boat on the Ohio. He was a
member of the Dorcas Pe ntecostal
Assembly.
He is survived by his wife , Zelpha
Boggess; one step-son, Wa yne Roseberry, Racine; two brothe rs,
Charlie and Razel Boggess, Racine; one sister, Alberta Marie
Spa un, Racine, and seve ral nieces
a nd ne phews.
Funer al services will be held Friday a t 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with
William Hoback officia ting. Burial
will be in Letart Fa lls Ce metery.
Friends m ay call a t the funeral
home after 7 p.m . this evening.

Mayors finish cases
Six defenda nt s forfeited bonds in
the cou rt of Pom eroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
They are Her bert Re ibel, Pomerov. $43, improper backing; Michael Smi th, Huntington, $48, Vicki
Gilmore, Pome roy, $48, Richard
Gilmore, Pomeroy, $.'i0, John Davis, Syracuse, $45, Lea nna Beegle,
Rac ine, $45, a il posted on speeding
charges.
Seven persons were fined in the

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Ad mi t te d -- Sus ie Va na bl es,
Pomeroy; Anthony Shamblin, Ra cine: Shirley Smith, Rutla nd: J e nnifer Bar rett, Rutland: Dennis
Palmer, Racine: Victoria Morrison, Pome roy:
Linda Eblin,
Pom eroy .
Discharged -- Ama nda Hawk, Bill
Kennedy,Gle n Hudson, Victor Braley, Ke nneth Keiser, Clarence
Longst reth, Rhonda Barnhart.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

DISCHARGES OCT. 11
Ric ha rd Bla in, Shawn Cox, Anna
Craft, J a net Crea me r , Mrs. Dona ld
Curtis a nd daught er, David Da iley,
Mrs. Daniel Davies a nd da ughte r,
Leona rd Davis, Mason DeWiss,
Sharon Drum mond, Cha rles Este p,
Elijah Es te p Sr., J oel Fa rrar, Wa lter Morris. Christin Murphy, Mrs.
Pa ul Sexton a nd son, J essica Shoo k,
Patricia Spotloe, Helen Stumbo,
June Turner, Marga ret Werry,
Ramona Yonke r.
BIRTIIS
Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert McClure,
son, J ackson; Mr. a nd Mrs. Len
P reston, da ughte r , J ackson; Mr.
a nd Mrs . Rona ld R ~ssell, da ughte r,
Oa k Hill; Mr. a nd Mrs. Ha rry Va nme te r , son, Clifton, W. Va.

court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Halfman Tuesday night.
They are Wllliam D . Whit1ington,
Pome roy, $100 a nd costs, driving
under suspension; Jane t Oiler, Middleport, $10 and costs, assured clear
dist a nce; Ben H. Philson, Racine,
$10 and costs, failure to m a intain
control; Roy Brown, Langsville,
$10, no costs, improper starting and
backing; Rick McClella n, Middleport, $100 and costs , criminal teep ass ing;
Robe rt Stewart,
Langsv ille, $100 and costs , criminal
!repassing: Timothy He rdman,
Middleport, $100 and costs , pet1y
theft.

Court actions filed
A suit in the amount of $6,098 plus
inter est was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by the Racine
Home National Bank against
J a mes Hubbard, Potneroy.
In other court action two suits for
dissolution of marriage we re filed
a nd one divorce.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
we re Jan B. Clark, Pomeroy, and
J oe N. Clark, Pomeroy; Mary Beth
Clark, Pomeroy a nd James Oliver
Clark, Pomeroy.
J a net Romine, Dexter, filed suit
for divorce against Kenne th H.
Romine, Rutland.

.
dustna l stocks, measuring the performance of ma jor corporations
feli 9 . llpointsto 1 , 003 _ 68,0ntheN~
York Stock Exchange, 932 stocks
d
ced 318 t ks
a van
,
s oc
we r e unchanged and 776stocks declined.
After the four major banks cut
their prime lending rates Tuesday,
the government a nnounced that
home
brak buyersalsowouldbege tting a
e ·
'7~inte~est·;:,;;:, c~Uing on Fede ra
ous g
in1Stratlon and
Veterans Administration loans for
single-family homes was cut 1 percent from 13.5 percent, the lowest
ra te since August 19~.
Meanwhile, the Comme r ce Departme ntsaldretailsales rose 1percent in September from August, led
by a 4 percent ga in in a utomobile
sales.

Cards even serie~

The Daily
Vol.31 ,No.114
Copyrighted 1982

lost a $28.5 million patent suit in fed·
eral court in Rock Island, Ill. In a

lawsuit filed in 1976, Deere &amp; Co. had
charged Harvester infringed on its
patent for a device tha t c uts cornstalks and feeds the m into
combines.
- Chrysler Coil&gt;- a nd the United
Auto Workers announced they wlll
return to bargaining Friday in the
face of overwhelming rejection by
the rank-and-file to a tentative contract settlement.

POSTER WINNERS - A large group of students and adults as weU have been lending their tal·
ents to the Eastern Local School district campaign to
support Its upcombtg levy in November. Winners of a
recent poster contest were announced Wednesday at

North Perry, about 35 miles east of
CLEVELAND (API - Some
cam e dressed as ghosts and mu- Cleveland.
Another part of the rate hike is to
tants, but no mat1erwhat the attire,
most people at a public hearing on a . guarantee a fair rate of return to
investors. If the full increase is
~ percent rate increase for Clevegranted by the Public Utilities Comland Electric Illuminating Co. were
mission of Ohio, the ave rage consuagainst the proposed rate hike.
mer's bill wouldrisefrom$45 to $54 a
"Suc h a request a t this time is
month, company spokesman J . Lee
unconscionable and obscene .. .. The
Bailey said.
number of soup kitchens spr!ilging
CEI is Ohio's third-largest electup at the present time gives eviric utility and serves 711,(XXl custodence, " said Hortense Da vis, who
mers in five northeast Ohio
represented the Weste rn Reserve
Alliance at Tuesday's hearing.
counties.
The staff of the PUCO recomCEI seeks a rate hike ofabout$235
million, the largest part of which is
mended rejection of all but between
for construction costs of its$4 billion
$70 million and $90 million of the CEI
nuclear power plant being built in
proposal. That money, the staff
said, should be allowed as construction costs for Perry.
Members of the audience of about
100 people, many of them elderly,
Local em ergency units we re kept
waved small flags with the term,
on the move Tuesday and Wednesday morning.
At 1:10 a.m. Wednesday, the Rutland Unit took Allee Chapman of
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - LongCounty Road 12 to Holzer MediCal
Center and the Pomeroy Unit at8: 54 range weather forecasters at Ohio
a.m. took Roy Smith from County University and Cornell Unive rsity
Road ~ to Ve te rans Memorial agree this winter will be colder than
normal in Ohio, but they diffe r on
Hospital.
Tuesday's runs Included Racine how much colder.
Cornell meteorologists predict
at 6:53p.m. took Helen Hayes from
Great Bend to Veterans Memorial temperatures in Ohio will be 6 to 11
Hospital; Rutland at 9:25p.m. took degrees below normal this winter,
Robert DlVltro from Meigs Mine 2 but Ohio University forecasters say
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pome- they will be 3 to 4 degrees below
roy at 11: 26 a.m. took Susie Venable average.
Cornell used sunspot activity for
from Kerr St., to Vetera ns MemorIts
conclusion and Ohio U. studied
ial; Pomeroy at 9: 55 a.m. took
Helen Augustine frpm E . Main St. to the jet stream.
"Ohioans can expect a consideraVe terans MemorW; Middleport at
12:44 p.m. took Mildred Mllburn bly colder than normal winter, but
from Coal St., to Veterans Memor- we foresee temperatures running
Ial; Pomeroy at 4:37 p.m. treated about 3 to4degrees below average,"
Velma Siders on E . Second St., but said Ronald Isaac, who directs Ohio
did no transportation; Pomeroy at U.'s Scalia Laboratory for Aimos·
7: 32 p.m. took Linda Eblin from pheric Analysis.
Last winter, from December to
Route 143 to Veterans Memorial.
February, Ohio temperatures aver - '
aged 1.2 degrees below normal, said

Squads kept busy

'

I

'
Pomeroy, OH.
"Located at the End of the
PomtiOI·Mason Bridre."

less sentinels dressed as gbosts proclaimed what they said were the
past. present and future of electric
rates.
Along another wall, two women
stood clad in ill-fitting garb, designed to show potential deftlrmlties
they contend nuclear radiation
could cause. They carrledsflnssaying "Mutants For Nuclear Power."
"It Is a cruel joke, but it'Sllboutthe
only way we can make our point,"
said Dee Dee Garslene ot North
Shore Alert, a group fighting construcllon of the Pertjl plant

Open forum set

!Cas tern Local School District wlll
hold an open forum meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. at Tuppers Plains Elementary School. The ~bile Is
invited to attend.

PAC MAN AND
"DUKES OF HAZARD
PARTY SUPPliES

Jon Skindlov, the lab's assistant
director.
The Ohio forecaster s predict an
early-season freezing rain followed
by s now befor:e Thanksgiving.

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
PH. 992-6342

SWEEPER SALE
EUREKA ESP UPRIGHT
This Eureka Upright has the. power.to
make your cleaning chores easl•.

Page 7

NOW AVAILABLE
Two phone numbers
to obtain results on
OHIO DAILY
LOTIERY GAME

Meigs County Probate Court to Daniel Greg Wooten, 26, Vinton, and
Brenda Kay George, 24, Vinton;
Verne Alvin Ord, 26, Syracuse, and
Crystal Elizabeth Simpson, 30,
Pomeroy; Wllliam Oscar Carney,
85, Ripley, and Mabel Clare Landfried, 73, Rt. 1, Ripley.

50°/o Extra
Suction Power

Call: 992-5786
Or 992-6798

•Triple filter system for dust
free cleaning.
•Vlbra-Groomer"' II beater bar
brush roll loosens deep"grlt
and ground-In dirt.
•6 position Dial-A-Nap" cleans
carpets from low naps to
high shags.
•Bright headlight to see in dark
·
dark areas.

ALL LADIES
ON

Bpitool HI.
tnchrded

SPECIAL THIS
THURSDAY,
FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY

20o/o OFF
CHAPMAN SHOES .

NEP TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY ·.

his recovery program must be
changed.
"I was disappointed that thepresident failed to propose a single new
measure to create jobs and put
America back to work," said House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Nelll, DMass.

"If he thinks we should stay the
course, he should ask those mllllons
of American famllles who have already reached the end of the line,"
O'Neill said in a statement. "If he
thinks Reaganomics Is working, he
should ask the fellow who isn't.''
Speaking from the Oval Office

Wednesday night, Reagan said,
"Nowidonotpretendforamoment
that in 21 months, we have been able
to undo aU the damage to our economy that has built up over more
.than~ years.''
He said the current recession "Is
part of a long series- a series that
hasn't stopped because, in the past,
when the crunch came, too many in
government resorted to quick fixes
instead of getting to the root cause.' '
Sen. Donald M. Riegle of Michlgan, giving the Democrats' formal
response to P.eagan, said the economy "is on a downhill slide ."
"Morepeople areoutofworknow

than at any · time since the Grea t
Depression," said Riegle. " And it's
get1ing worse."
"What kind of course is it that
creates more business failures tha n
at any time since the Depression? "
Riegle asked.
The senator called for cuts in Reagan's ma5slve Pentagon buildup,
and said Democra ts would seek legIslation to protect American industries from unf a ir forei g n
competition, changes in the credit
system to reduce interest ra tes and
restoration of cuts in Social Security
benefits .

Council says petition statements untrue
By KATIE CROW
Statements contained ina petition
presented to Syracuse Council Wed·
nesday night have been branded
UNTRUE. Council upon receipt of
the Kenneth Cundiff circulated petition bearing 253 names was disturbed by the fact that residents
were mtsled by untrue statements.
The first paragraph read: "We
the undersigned residents of the VIllage of Syracuse, do not favor the
borrowing of money for the water
system and lncre'll'lng rates to repay the loan.'" ·
Council explalned that It was necessary to borrow a line of credit
between $14,00J and $22,00J to pay
for a new well and pump.
What was not explained was the
fact that rates will not be increased
to pay off the loan. If and when rates
are increased, revenue from collections will be used only for the operation of the water company.
The second paragraph read, "We
feel that the money for payment of
the new well, pump and other bnmedlate necessities should be taken
from present sull&gt;lus funds.''
This too is misleading-- council
has invested$:ll,OOJincertlficatesof
deposit (CO"s) . Thatmoneylsdraw-

By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVPnewsstaff
The seven-member committee
formed to investigate the !delivery
and funding of mental health services in GaWa, Jackson and Metgs
-countieS wlll meet for the first time
:Friday, but at least three members
are unhappy with the state's role 111

NOW,$14995
()NLY . . . ::'.
.ELB5RfiELDS
IN.·POMEROY
'

·

the ctmmlttee.
The Ohio I&gt;epartrnent of Mental
Health has too much power and Is
making undue restrictions_oo the
ctmmlttee, accorillng ID commlt·
tee representatives trom the three

coontJes.

'

.

.

The cornmi~· known as a Com·

t

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!dent Reagan, Insisting he Is forging
a lasting economic recovery, cautloned voters not to be tempted by
those advocating a retun\ to "big
spending and blg taxing.''
In a speech broadcast over Democrats' protests ~ days before the
election. Reagan said the country's
problems were years in the making
and were the fault of blg spenders
and people playing politics with the
economy.
Democrats, however, pointed out
that unemployment has soared to
lts h!ghestlevel infourdecadesduring Reagan's presidency and said

ing inte r est for the village and Is
used in the best interest of the
village.
The interest received from the
CD"s is greater than the interest due
on the loan. Council note that when
you look at it very closely council Is
not really paying any inte rest at aU
on the borrowed money since the
interest from · the invested money
exceeds the loan interest.
The last paragraph in the petition
read, "In addition, any revenue
realized from the investment of water funds, now and in the future, be
returned to the water system.
This too is incorrect. The law
states that any interest derived
from investments can be placed in
the general fund. The larger portion
of expenses for the village Is paid
from the general lund.
Janice Lawson, clerk, informed
council that Glen Blevins, a state
auditor, had advised her that interest from the CO's may be placed in
the general fund .
The money was invested in order
to pay off the indebtedness due on
the water system which at the present time totals $55,00J.
George Holman, ~asurer, presented council with a breakdown of

receipts and expenses of the Board
of Public Affairs which showed a
tremendous loss of money since 1979
According to Hoiman the Board of
Public Affairs in 1979lost $10,918.01.
Council in 1979 cashed a $5,00J CD
and in addition loaned the water
board $2,00J to continue its operation. In addition, the board lost
$3,918.01 making a totalof$10,918.01.
In 19ffi the Board of Public Affairs
lost $9,272.03. Again council cashed
a$2,00JCDanda $5,00JCDandpaid
the water board $1,200. Coupled )"lth
the board's loss of $1,072.03 this
made a totalloss of $9,272.03.
In 1981, the Board of Pulbic Affairs showed a slight galn of$972.81.
As of August of this year the Board
of Public Affairs has lost $5,171.32.
Jack Wllliams, councilman, said,
"The water board should be making
12'h percent profit. No business can
stay alive if they spend more than
they take in."
Council noted tha t if it cashed in
the $ll,OOJ in CO's and water rates
were not raised to meet the cost of
operation the vlllage would be in
deep financial trouble.
Council felt that it has not been
taken into consideration the amount
of money the village pays out of the

The environmental review for the
county landfill determined a finding
of no significant environmental impact. The waterline extension in Rutland passes through a 100year flood
plaln.
Anyone who wishes to express
their concern about the environmental impacts of this project
should send written comments to
the commissioner's office prior to
Oct. 30.
Anyone wishing to comment on
any of these projects or any part of
the application are invited to submit
written comments to the commissioners prior to Oct.
Meigs County is certifying to
OLGS that the Meigs County Commissioners and Richard E. Jones as
the board's certifying officer, in his
official capacity as commissioner
consent to accept the jurisdiction of
the Federal courts if any action is
brought to enforce responsibilities
In relation to environmental reviews, deciSion making and action,

and that these responsibilities have
been satisfied.
The legal effectofthecertificatlon
is that upon Its approval, Meigs
County may use the Block Grant
Funds andOLGSw!ll have satisfied
its responslbllltles under the National Environmental Polley Act of

1969.
OLGS wlll accept an objection to .
Its approval only if it Is on one of the
following bases: (a) that the officer
of applicant approved by OLGS; or
(b) that applicant's environmental
review record for the project indicates omission of a required decision finding or step applicable to the
project In theevnironmentalreview
process. Objection must be prepared and submitted in accordance
with the required piocedures (24
CFR part 58) .
Objections to the release of fundS
on bases other than those stated
above will not be considered by
OLGS: No objection received after
Nov. 15, 1982 wlll be considered by
OLGS.

general fund for the wa ter board
such as paying audit fees, a nd repairing of streets torn up by the water board to name a few .
Council stressed that TH E MONEY INVESTED DID NOT COME
FROM WATER COLLECTIONS.
TilE MONEY INVESTED CAME
FROM PROPERTY T AX
ASSESSMENT.
Loan payments will be made
from the genera l fund a nd revenue
sharing.
Council hasas kedmembers ofthe
Board of Public Affa irs meet with it
to discuss the conditions ofthe water
company. Howeve r, the members
of the water board have not as yet
attended ·any council meetings.
The water board must recommend raising of rates for council's
approval. However, council will investigate the situation to see what
other procedures it ca n ta ke.
It was noted that the only control
council has over the Board of Public
Affairs is in the allocation of funds
which is done the first of each year.
(Continued on page 81

ECONOMIC TALK - President Reagan poses for photographers
just after his speech on the economy Wednesday evening In the Wltite
House Oval Office, in which he said the nation is "recovery-hound a nd
the world knows it." The president said his economic progra m will
bring a resurgence "buHt to last" because it will create m•w .inh'
without rekindling ioDation. ( AP Lase.,hoto)

Youth charged in B&amp;E incident
A 17-year old juvenile has been
arr ested in connection with the
breaking and e nt ering o!the Candlelight Inn tha t occurred a week ago
today the Meigs County Sheriff' s
Departme nt re ported.
The juvenile had previously
broke and entered the Candlelight
Inn in July and was out on a stayed
committment to the Ohio Youth
Commission. Juvenile Court authorities advied that the juve nile

will be tra nsport ed to a Youth Co1· '
m ission fac ilitY.
Bill WinebrennPr , Svracusc'. rl'ported that a boys bicycle was taken
from his property somct ime Tuesd ay night. The 26 inch bike was
green with gold trim wit h a I.Janana
seat.
Anyone having any informat ion is
as ked to contact theshcritf' sdepartm e nt or Winebrenner a t 992-3277.

Old Ohio Hotel being razed
The nearly 100 year old Ohio Hotel in Middleport is coming down due to it s deplorable conditi on
Worke rs have begun razing the structure, owned by Chad Humphreys, whic h overlooks the Ohi o
River on First St.
First foundation for the Ohio Hotel wa s laid in 188.1. but was washed aw ay by the nooct of tha t yea r.
The following year the structure was constructed. In the early 1920s it was known as the Seyfried
Hotel and in 1925 was purchased by Billy Bowen of Pittsburgh. He had elec tricity added to the hotel as
well as a steam hea ting system. He also maintained a restaurant in the hot e l.
Two years later the hotel was purchased by ~n Andrews of Columbus and he leased it to the Owen
family who operated it for a year a nd the n to the Sayre famil y which operated it for another year.
In September, 1929, before the stock market crash. the hotel was purchased by the late Lee Pra ll
who operated the business until his dea th in 1944.
Mrs. Pratt opera ted the hotel until 1947, at which time she sold it to a son , Ra lph Pra tt. i ~a l p h
operated the business until 1974 whe n he sold it to a corporation.

Members unhappy with state's role

'

,,

1 Sec! ion , 12 Pag es
15 Cents
A Mvhimedio Inc . New , po per

Reagan insists economic
recovery lasting thing

Meigs County Commissioners announced today approval of their application to the Department of
Development of the State of Ohio for
$89,500 in Community Development
Block Grant money.
Projects funded under this year's
allocation include a new county
landfill, $59,551; a waterline extension in the village of Racine, $4,!XXI;
a waterline extension in the vlllage
of Rutland, $1,995, and road im·
provements on TR 235 in Bedford
Township, $5,00J.
Work on a firehouse in Chester
Township in the amount of $2.600
and one in Orange Township, in the
amount of $7,404 were funded
respectively.
Commissioners intend to request
the release of funds for these pro. jects on or about Oct. 30~fthisyear.
An environmental review record
for each project excluding the village of Rutland has been completed
and Is on tile at the commissioner's
office.

r.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;­

entinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Oct. 14,1982

$89,500 grant approval given

Marriage licenses

Adolph's Dairy Valley
570 W. Main

"Whip CW!P," which stands for
"construc tion work in progress." .
Jay Westbrook, a Cleveland city
councilman, said, "ThisCWIP-offis
just the most recent example of CEI
burying its mistakes under piles of
money.' ' He said the Perry.plant is
unnecessary because of a continually de clining de mand for
electricity.
The Ohio Consumers' Counsel
promised to fight the construction
costs whe n PUCO's hearings begin.
"We will have nuclear witnesses
who will testify that the plant is not
75 percent complete," said Susan
Butle r , a spokeswoman for the state
group.
Bailey said the plant is about 80
percent complete and thus eligible
to recove r construction costs.
In one corner of the State Office
Towe r a uditorium, three motion-

Colder than normal winter predicted

Fish-n-Chips
$}14
r
I

the high school. Shown are first place winner, Arlene
Ritchie, Traci Schu~ second; and Susan Swain third.
Ritchie and Swain, both eighth p-aders, and Schul a
sophomore at Eastern participated. in the contest
held in conjunction with the classes of Mrs. Nancy
Larkins.

Majority opposes 20 percent rate hike

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!

PH; 992-2556

BHCC
nursing grads

Page B

Annual smorgasbord
The annual smorgasbord of the
Pythian Siste rs at Wilkesville will
be held from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday at
the Pythlan Hall in Wilkesville.
Chicken. ham, meat loaf, assorted
vegetables, home made noods, rolls,
pies and salads will be available.
Admission is $3.;ii for adults and
$1.;ii for children under 12. There
wlll be music provided during the
a nnual event.

Pages 8-12

Page3

In other economic developments:
- International Ha rveste r Co.

Marriage licenses were issued in

Area deaths...

Meigs telephone
·,
rates gomg up...

i

\j.

munlty Services Review Group,
was formed by former mental
health director -Myers Kurtz last
week.
The group Is ID investigate
charges of mismanagement and
waste brought aglllnst the Callia·
Jackson-Meigs )'&lt;fentl!l Health Cen·
ter artd the tri-county 648 board.
The organizational meeting of the
group will be held in Athens at 10
a.m. Friday.
Members were asked by the state
ID sign an agreement which in·
cludedactausestatlngtheycouldbe
removed from the commlttee
"without cause" artd "without'
notice.''

The Gallla and Jackson county
members struck that clause from
thecontractbeforesigningltandthe
Metgs representative has report·
edly said he wm do the same.
Jackson County representative
John Brunton said he "will not go .
into a investigative piocedure with
those restrictions."
Brunton sald·Ufe state ts trying to
tell members that If they "get too
close to something we don't want
you tp know, we'll get rid of you."
Paul Niday, Gallla County commissioner and group member,
agreed.
"If we should stumble onto some(Cootlnued ori page 8)

DOWN - 'lbe 98 year old Ohio HOtel oo First St. In Mlddlepori Is coming down. Work~rs are In
the process of 1\Jttlng the Interior of the hotel which overlooks the Ohio River. After that the walls
wlll come down.

·

�•

Commentary

The Daily Senlinei- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thu~y,Cki. 14,1982

Cardinals rally to even series
I

Episcopal snares

The Dai ly Sentinel
II I I uun "'""'I
J' .. mt •rnl . llhtu
til4-'l!l! ·! J)ti
PI \ot~llnti'IIFI\Tf&lt;IIF~IOI II U· \ll· h,..... \1 \'11 '\ \Ill 1

HOilEHTI .. 1\ 1!\GFT'I
l'nhlt, lwr

I' IT 1\ IIITEIIF!\1)

!lOll HOFF I.I I' II

OAI.E llOTfi (;Efl. JH.
' ''"' bhtnr
\ \II· \11\t-:H uf l"hr• '""lllth'( l l'r•·" · lulaucl Uarh l' rt·"
an \ ,..... p:qwr I 'uhl"twr1o '' ·" '" ·ia Liun .

" ""' t:tl10111 :wei tho

\ tlh"t "

II Tli· H ~ l tF 111 ' 1\ltl\ :rn· ~.~, - 1, unu·c l. Thr·• ~ huulcl lw ), ..,., th;m :mn "'"''t..lnn :: . ,\ II
lo·tto·r ., :rrt· ""hJt·r ·t ''' o·rlrltr1 l! :tnt! OIUI'l lw "if.!iwrl ~o~ith n:tnlt· . :uh lr •·.,., atultr ·kpho otunun rho·r ' " uns r)! nr•rl kl k r' "'r ll lw tJUhlbhr·rl I ~ · 1 lt•r.. ~huu lr l ht· 111 c uolllt:r ~ l• • . :otldn·"' tn l!
"'uo·o;. ll••lfJt' r '" naliLto•,.

Perspective helps
In 1965, with Lyndon Johnson's Great Society program symbolizing an
attitude that anything was possible, the Dow Jones Industrial average m ade
its first stab at l.(XXJ points.
It topped that level for the first time early In 1966, b4t then dipped below
1.00.1 again before the day was out. But in November 1972, it did manage to
sustain its gains and for the first time closed above 1,00l points.
Since then, according to the Wall Street Journal, the same average, which
measures the performance of 30 blue chip stocks, closed above the I ,&lt;XXJ
l~vel on no less than 109 trading days through Oct. 12.
The point : Perspective helps In understanding.
For example. perspective helps in understanding the prime interest ra te.
Big news was created Tuesday when Morgan Guaranty Trust lowered its
prime rate a fu ll poin t to 12 percent. or 9.5 points below the aU-time high of
21.5 percent in December 1980.
In the perspective of the past two years, such a decline represents an
enotmou s accomplishmmt . But in the perspective of decades, it suggests a
long way to go.
The prime throughout the early 1960s was about 4.5 percent. And while the
1. :\ percent ra tes of the 1940s may never be seen again , the under-7 ra tes of
1~76 and 1977remaln wit hin the rea lm of posSibility.
Perspectiv~ helps in understanding the unemploymen t rate, too. Sept~mber's 10.1percent ra te has been sutTounded wit h perspectlvedur ingthe
past few days, having reached the highest m onthly level in 42 years, and
brin!(ing on comparisons with the Great Depression of the 19lls.
But without underestimating the terrible impact on famil ies brought on
b!· the joblessness ofll .3 million workers and the involuntary acceptance of
part ·time wor k by more than 6.5 m illion ot hers. the comparison L' probably
not fair.
There ar~ numerous reasons why. Among them : Many more families
with two or more wage-earners ex ist today, many of today 's unemployed
ore not heads of households and most oftoday's unemployed have some type
of joblPSs insurance.
Perpscrtive also can enhance the understanding of the CPl.
HisPS in the CPl. or consumer price index, hav2 shriveled to single-digi t
1&lt;-\·~ls. " major change when com pared with the double-digit range of the
pJ ..t thrf'!' years- 10.4 percent In 1981. 135 in 1980 and 11.3 in 1979.

Letter to the editor
Open letter to Wingett
I f some compelling justification
wa s rPqu ired to write this letter, it
is bE'Cause I had noticed a distinct
tendency in your Mideast articles
to the lopsided flattery and glori fication of our Zionist m~
·
.
which at the Silme till)p-IIl'i(u'
1ligeren t about Itl!':iti!Bnt' o propagandize and conquer territory in its
uwn behalf.
Your last week's article "The
Beirut massacr e" seems to be an
at1 empt to lessen the horror at the .
terrible slaughter of defenseless
Pa les tinian refugees in Bier ut.
To blame the Phalanglsts. therefore. in an effort to exculpa te Israel,
is like blaming the weapon instead
of the cri minal behind it. Murder Is
In the intent . and we sec this intent
by the light of the flares the Israeli
army sent up after unleashing the
milit ia forces of qulslingers from
the Phalange and Haddad's thugs
on the "terrorists." Had not this intent been alr eady demonstrated by
t h~ Indiscrim inate death and destruction Inflicted by Israel, my dear
Mr. Wingett , is almost 100yearsold
and dates back to the Intentions of
the first Zionist Congress. But the
current version of It lies In the very
definition of all Pa lestinians aster rorists, tottering old men, women
and children alike. That is the real

massacre.
. As a part of thi s odd ly unbalanced state of affairs, It has been
painfully easy to see at work a process of r eshaping biolgraphlcal history so as to suggest tacitly or
avowedly, that practically every
notable person - every gener ous
and enlightened one, surely- was
likewise an unquestioning partisan
• of Zionist-Jewish causes. Yet, my
knowledge and research of IntPIIPC tllal culture tells me that It Is
qui te 1m posslble to Impute such
feelings to many If not most of the
personalities whom hasty and misInformed pro-Zionist " liberals"
and " conservatives" alike have
drafted fDr their pantheon of allies.
It ts out of sadness, not anger,
that I am forced to state that In
embarking upon the new path that
· organized Jewry has hewn for It,
prophetic Judaism has Incurred an
Incaicuable loss In moral values,
which author Moshe Menuhin - a
one-time Zlonlst advecate - has
described as "the DecadenCe of

own

Judaism in Our Times."
I t Is time to speak out loudly and
clearly that " Judaism is not Zionism. Zionism Is not Judaism. AntiZionism Is not anti-Semitism ." It Is
also time for Americans of the Jewish fai th to stand up and throw off
the yoke of Zionist hypnosis, which
has made them bound, whether
they like it or not. to help, assis t,
give, lend, etc., t he foreign State of
Israel In a manner In which other
American non-Jewish citizens do
not have to do. Whether a man be a
good Jew ought in no way be judged
by his an !tude toward the State of
I srael. A good A merica n-Jew
should absolutely refuse to substitute fea lty to a foreign sta te for the
worship of Yahweh. and should Insist on the doctrine of separa tion of.
chu rc h a nd st ate for w hic h
progressive-minded peoples have
so long sought. It was you. Mr. Win gett, that In one of your last year's
articles repudiated Jer ry Falwell 's
preaching by refusing to wor ship or
Identify with God through any Intermediary. Yet. you &gt;;eem to toler ate
Israel's Intermedi ation. Such paradoxlty passes m y comprehension!
Perhaps the final judgment as to
whether I sraelists and Zionists can
be considered good Americans
should come from Woodrow Wilson
who, about sixty-five years ago,
said: "You cannot become true
Americans If you think of your selves In groups. A man who thinks
of himself as belonging to a particular national group has not yet become an Am erican, and the man
who goes among you to trade upon
your nationality is not worthy to
live under the Stars and Stripes."
If the Isr aeli-Zionist Jews and
those who parrot their line could
only be this wise, they could clearly
discern that peace can only be
achieved through the blnationalist
thliiklng of Albert E instein, Martin
Suber, Judah Magnes, and other
universalists, which was so sue. clnctly stated In the conclusion of
that remarkable 1919 document
presented to President Wilson by
the thirty-one sages: " As to the future of Palestine ... We do not wish
to see Pal estine either now or at
any time organized as a Jewish ·
State. "
Very sincerely yours:
Mutlh Sketnl

"

In recent days there has been cir culating here and there In America,
primarily but not exc lusi vely
among Catholics. a draft of a document prepared for the considerati on of American Catholic bishops,
the Idea being that they should endorse It when they next convene. It
Is a substantial document , 70 pages
long, and is called, " The Dra ft Pastoral Letter on Peace and War. "
Mrs. Clare Boothe Luce is,
among other things, a member of
the board of directors of the Pope
·John Paul IT Center of Prayer and
Studies for Peace, and a copy of the
draft accordingl y came to her attention. She did a very sensible
thing with it- as is her wont - and
tur ned It over for comment to the
principal adviser to President Reagan for nat ional secur ity affairs,
Judge William Clark. His "Dear
Clare" response Is a 4,000-word
model of diplomatic restrai nt by
Judge Clark. who begins by describi ng himself and the document
respectively: "as a cit izen. religious layman, and official, I am impressed by the document' s attempt
to provide a comprehensive analysis of the ethical and technical
issues involved in fostering the
peace we all desire."
But. you see, the document was
hardly comprehensive In any tolerable use of the word. And on this
point, however pa tiently he wr ote,
one can detec t Judge Clark's mystificat ion of the draft' s attempt to appeal to American Ca tholic bishops
with a document that simply falls to
take significant note of diplomatic
reali ty.
To begin with, the draft speaks of
the deterrent force of the Western
nuclea r arsenal as " m arginally justifiable." The last world war ended
37 yea rs ago, with the first nuclear
explosion. Fifty m illion people had
been killed In that war before the
a tom bomb fell on Hiroshima.
There have been over 100 armed
contest s since Hiroshima, but none
has reached - not nearl y - the
scale of a world war. The notion
that the appetite for a world war

suddenly disappears from the face
of the earth is as convincing as the
notion that original sin has been
cured by penicillin.
What happened during those 37
years Is that the United States developed and stood by an arsenal so
devastating In Its Implica tions that
the most sustained aggressive
power In the history of the world the Soviet Union - has elected not
to risk a world war, even as Japan
decided, Immediately after Hiroshima, to end the world war . To say
that our possession of the nuclear
bomb Is only marginally justifiable
Is to say, In effect , that 37 years
without a world war Is marginally
j ustifiable.
But the measure of Clark 's surprise comes when he wonders, in
the letter to Mrs. Luce, how It Is that
In a 70-page tr eatment of the problem of war and peace. the drafters

M ILWAUKEE l AP) - M ost
pitchers shudder at the sight of the
slugging Milwaukee Brewer s.
Not B ruce Sutter.
That' s because most ba tter s
shudder at the sight of him.
Sutter marched out of the St.
Louis bullpen Wednesday night and
slammed thedoor ontheBrewersas
the Cardinals battled from behind
for a v ital 5-4 v ictory that tied the
1982 World Series at one win apiece.
The teams had a day off today as
the Series moved to Milwaukee
where Pete Vuckovlch faces the
Cardlnals' Joaquin Anduj ar in
Game Three F riday night.
The St. Louis victory was built on
speed, a controver sial walk tha t :~
Brewer s thought was a strikeout
and Sutter .
The relief ace had watched from
the bullpen as the Brewer s ra ttled 17
hits around Busch Stadium to capture the opening game of the Series,
10-0.
" I was impressed, " the reliever
said. "Butiwasn't scared of them. "
Very fewteams frlghtenthismaster of the split-finger ed fastball,
whose scraggUy beard m akes him
look llke a mountain man when he
comes lumbering ou t oftbe bullpen.
Manager Whitey Herzog never
had a chance to go to his trump card
in the opening game blowout. So he
seized the opportunity when It presented Itself In Game Two.
" I wanted tostaycloseandnot get
blown out," said Herzog. When
middle-inning reliever s Jim K aat
and Doug Bair accomplished that,
Herzog called for his main man with
two out in the seventh inning.
" I would hate to have a World
Series and not have Sutter pitch,' ' he
said.
Sutter confounded M ilwaukee's
slugger s, allowing only two infield
hits. And he got the boost he needed
from ba tterymate Darrell Port er,
the hitting star with a two- run double and a clutch single in the winning
r ally.

William F. Buckley Jr.
of the draft should proceed without
any refere nc~ whatever to current,
let alone past, Initiatives taken by
the United States government to do
something about the danger of
atomic confronta tion.
There is no reference made to the
offer of President Reagan to cancel
the deployment of theater weapons
In Europe In 1983 In exchange for
the elimination of t he Soviet
counterparts.
Ther e is no reference to Reagan's
proposal to red uce all warheads to
t he level of 5,00l, only one-half of
them land-based; and to goon from
t he r e to sc h ed ul e f u rt her
reductions.
No reference to President Reagan's suggestion that Instr uments
of verification be perfec ted; that
exchange of Inform ation be accelerated; that existing trea ties, e.g.
the banning of chemical and blolog-

leal warfare, be enforced.
Wh at you have cl. r culatl.n g
around American Catholic bishops
Is a document that proceeds without any reference to what one
might call the spiritual factor.
Means of blowing people up have
been around for a long time, and
our knowledge of how to do that definitively has proceeded apace with
our knowledge of how to land men
on the moon.
Clark welcomes the opportunity
to review the draft sent over by
Mrs. Luce. One devoutly hopes the
final draft will bear Utile resemblance, Insofar as the points lie had
touched on are concerned, to the
current draft. Because Catholic
laymen, like Judge Clark and Mrs.
Luce. cannot. at their age and with
their experience, be talked to in the
language of a William Sloane Coffin
or a Jane Fonda, not by men they
wish to continue to respect.

mEY'RE mE WINNERS - St . Louts Cardinals reliever Bruce
Sutter and catcher Darrel Porter cei ehrate after the Cards 5-4 win
Wednesday night over the Milwaukee Brewers in the second game of
the World Series. Sutter's clutch pitching shut down the Brewers and
Porter's sixth Inning double tied the game for the Cards. l AP

werphoto)

In the ninth, when pesky Paul
That brought up Porter. The
Now, with the score tied in the
seventh Inning, Herzog knew it was
Molitor opened with a bunt single, Brewer s were playing him to pull,
Porter gunned him down trying to but he lined a double to left, chasing
Sutter 's time. With two out. Cooper
steal second base. Then Sutter,
both runner s home and ty ing the
looped a double to right. the first hit
whose 36 saves led the maj or score.
off Ba lr.
leagues this season, mowed down
the final two batters to complete the
victory.
T he Uail y Sentin el
This game began Uke a another
Brewer breeze. Milwaukee built a
!USPS IU·. . I
3-0 lead In the first three innings
A Dlvlslun uf Multlm ~la. lnr .
against rookie John Stu per.
Pubhshcd r•vt·ry ii llt• rnuun, Munday lhr uu~h
In the second, a walk, wild pitch
F'rilhty, Ill Cuurl Sln·d . by the Ohw Vcrlh·)
531 JACKSON PIKE ·At . 35 WEST
Pu bli !ih m ~ Company · Mu ltimt•thcr . lnt". .
and Charlie Moore's REI-double
Phone 446· 4524
P11111t'roy , Ohm 4 ~769 , 992·2156. S..·r·tmt..l d a1&gt;..'
made lt1-0. Aninninglater, MilwauBARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT .t SUN
JlltSllif.!t' patt..l cr t Pot llt'roy , Ohw.
All SEATS JUST S 200
kee added two more. M olitor
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $ 200
Member : The Assur:icrlt'li Pres.-;. lnl &lt;~ nrl O;nsingled , stole second, reached third
ly Press Assot:lii tlun anti lhr.· At11t'f1t·;m
~ FRI!l4Y lhtu THURSDAY I ~
Nt·wspupt•r Publisllt'rs A.'i.'!Ot"JHirun, Ncrlrunal
on a wild pitch and scored on a
A d vc r l l !i lll ~
Rcprcscnli:l l tvc . Branha1 tt
OCTOBER 8 thru 14
groundout. Then ex-Cardinal Ted
Ncwspapcr Salt•s, 7l1 Th1rt..l Avt•nut•. Nt•w
York . Nt•w Yurk 10017 .
Simmons slammed his second
home run of the Series, this one a
POSTMASTER . Scnt..l at..lt..l rcss lu Tht· Dati}·
Scntmd, I ll Cuurt St. , Pnuwruy . Ohw45769
shot Into the second deck In r ight
field.
SURSCRIPTION RAT E.'i
Hy C11 rricr ur Mutur Ruu k
The Cardinals could do litt le with
Ono· wt•t•k .
1100
Br ewer starter Don Sutton and Her0 111" Munth
$HO
Ont•Yt·ar
$52 80
zog went back to basics- the runSINr.J.f. ("OI'Y
nlng game- to arouse his team .
I'RICF.&lt;;
With Willie McGee on first and
one out In the third, the rookie
Suhsntho-rs ll tt l • it ·.~ tr ltl t.: tu jtay tlw o·anu-r
lii&lt;IY l" l'llll \ Ill advathT tltt•t·r·t \u Tlw Dath'
swiped second. Running when
St·ntuwlun ;r :l.li 111 12 munlh \..last., . Crt"t!it
you' re three runs behind?.
wrl l b•·t.:l\"r•nt·a rr ll·r r·;u ·h ttHrnl h.
" Why not?" asked Herzog. ''I'll
Nu .~ u bsr · npt mn.~ hy m;ul]lt'rt mltt•tl tn \uwn ~
run when I'm five runs ahead or five
Wh t• n • htt ll lt' l"liiTit 'l" St' f\" 11"1 ' L
S&lt;IVatfaiJitruns behind. If the other m anager
•
MA II . SURS( 'RI PTIONS
wUI promise not toget slx runs, then
ln.o;idr Ohin
1:\Wr·r·ks
.
$1~ (\.1
I won' t run."
26 Wr•o•ks
$27. :10
The steal 1\'as followed by a run$5l ~8
llutsirlt· Ohin
scoring double by Tom Herr and an
J :I W • ·•· k.~
~IS :!I
RBI single by K en Oberkfell. Sud26 Wt•r•ks
$:!9 r.~
$Jii :! I
denly , the slumbering Cards wer e
back in business.
In the fifth , Robin Yount doubled _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
and scooted home on a single by 1
Cecil Cooper , making It 4-2. Kaa t
and Bair prevented any more dam age, but the Cards weren't making
any progress "}ainst Sutton. He-retired eight stra ight ba tters before
OberkfeUsingled with one out in the
sixth.
Oberkfell stole se&lt;'ond on the next
pitch, took third on a long fly ball and
marked time as George Hendrick
walked.

NEED A NEW COAT?
Bahr Clothiers Has A
Great Selection
LADIES'

Marauders face Logan in pivotal game

Next governor will decide fate of regent's plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio iAP) - The
fate of an ambitious Ohio Board of
Regents proposal for creat ion of a
business and industryextensionser v lc~ will probably rest with the
state's next governor .
That' s the view of Senate President Paul Gillmor, R -Port Clinton,
who says the governor's reaction
will be the " key factor" In the plan's
fu ture.
Gillmor says tha t if funding for
the program is not included in the
next biennial budget, the legislature
likely will not take money from
another part of the spending plan to
pay for it .
Regents have asked for $11.9 million over two years to develop the
Ohio Business, Educa tion and Government Alliance. It would serve

business and Industry in much the
same way the Ohio Cooper ative Extension Serv ice now serves
agriculture.
Regents Chancellor E dward Q.
Moulton urged support of the proposal, drafted at the request of the
Gener al Assembly. In a repori to
Glllmor and House Speaker Vernal
G. Riffe, D-New Boston.
" In regard to economic revitalization, It is our conv iction that Ohio
must or ganize for unusual efforts
throughout the balance of the century," M oulton said. "The task will
not be finished In a year or two.
''Within these new organizational
structures we will work to prepare
our higher educational Institutions
and their talented researchers and
scholars for assisting in the urgent

work of economic revitalization."
Glllmorcommended the r egents for
the report. "We're going to take a
serious look at the recommendation," he said .
One Important point to be consider ed Is whether the plan wiU produce enough new j obs to justify the
expense.
Under the regents' plan, the alliance would be headed by a coordinating cou nell composed of
representatives from management, labor , government , the Gener al Assembly, univers ities,
colleges and the r egents.
In addition, three operating councils would be responsible for
educa tion -training progra m s,
technology-knowledge tra nsfer,
. and r esearch and development.
Each council would consist of 20

mem ber s, wlijl staffing for their
work provided by the r egents.
The report said specific responsibilities of the coordinating council
would Include development of "an
objective and factu al description of
Ohio's current economy" plus Identification of " the m aj or opportunit-Ies, directions, and potentials for
economic regener ation to be
pursued by the oper ational

"You're wrong, Alan. We have to
make money. If the kids would
r ather play with joy sticks than
tune in 'Dallas,' we can'tlgnore the

market. "
"There's still a lot of people out
there watching television, Sidney."
" F or the moment, yes. But In a
couple of years there will bi&gt; m ore
people who are going to be playing
'Donkey Kong' and 'The Empire
Strikes Back. ' That 's our audience,
Alan. We have to think of the future.
One good video game will m ake
more money than 'Gone With the
Wind ' and ' Sound of Music'
combined."
" I've got a script here that would
be perfect for Paul Newman, Robert Redford and Burt Reynolds.
You want to bear the story?"
"Are you talking about a theatrical movie with live actors ?"
" I think so. We could get Louis
Malle to direct it. "
" Alan, I can't go the board of dir ectors and tell them I want to
make a movie with Newman, Redford, and Reynolds. They want

a

something that the kids will plunk
down $29 to play, like an atomic
submarine which will tor pedo Russian aircr aft carriers as they move
across the TV scr een."
" But this film will make you
laugh and cry and scare the hell out
of yuu all at the same time."
" Kids don't w ant to laugh and cry
and be scared any more. They want
to shoot down unidentified objects
from outer space. They want to
keep score, so they can do better
than they did the Ume before.
That's what the movie business is
now all abot .. "
" Then I guess you don't want to
hear about Barbra Strelsand's next
picture."
" I want to hear about 'Yar's Revenge,' and why, with all the highpriced talent we have on the lot, we
can't cqme up with a game like it."
" ' Yar's Revenge?' "
" Don't play dumb, Alan, you
read the trades. 'Yar's Revenge' is
the ninth highest grossing video
_game In history. It's a classic.
Here's a tape. Go home and play It
with your kid tonight, and you '11 get

I

Work of the three councils would
Include:
-Assessing the training needs of
employer s and devising programs
to support such activities;
- Providing ways to transfer
technical and managerlallnfonnatlon available within univer sities to
the use of business and government
leaders:

some Idea of what I'm looking for."
" Sidney, all I know Is the movie
business. I don't knoW how to develop something that gobbles up
werewolves."
"Alan, r emember when there
were silent movies? Then someone
Invented talkies and silent movtes·
had to go. Then someone Invented
technlcolor and black and white
movies had to go. Well, now they've
developed video games."
"And that means movies have to

go?"
"Not all movies. There will still
be a small audience out ther e who
wants to see a picture every once In
a while. But the masses are going to
dem and something they can get Invol ved with like Atarl's 'Bezerk'
game, or Actlvlslon 'Chopper Command.' They want to pit their skills
against demons and rockets and
black spiders that scream In the
night. And we, Alan, as creative
people, owe It to the public to gtve
them what they want.' '
" That's It, Sidney?"
" No, Alan,'that's show business."

pivotal game as the SEOAL title
chase picks up the pace.
The dark hor se Chiefs. at 3-0 leading I ronton, Ga llipolis, and Meigs
by a nose, have surpr ised most everyone and may be nobody more
than their first year head coach

Steve Coa te.
"Obviously coming off a 1-8 record last year, I'm surprised we're
3-0. No one expected anyt hing from
us. We'll have to prove, however,
we're good enough to stay where
we are," said Coa te.

Meigs-Logan lineups, stats ...
LE
LT

Dav&lt;' Ba rr il!l}) or
Brian Spencer (16.'ll

LG

c

Gn&gt;g Taylor 069 1

RG

Ma ll Van Vranl«&gt;n 1m1
ruck Edwa rds 115Al

RT

RE
QB

Ni ck Riggs 11401
MlkC' Jackson 11721

TB
F1l

Chris Bunk-lie 1IT.'II

Shawn Eads 11!'61 or

WB

John Pt&gt;r rtn 11741
(Ot•fc nst~ )

Randy Stt'Wa rl

0 ~101

or F.v&lt;J ns

I. E
l.T

Bill Holcomb t2121
Andy la nnaJ1&gt;1ll 1152 1
W£'1Ch

MG

.Jackson

RF.

RT

LB
LB

Taylor
Burdell£'
Davf' FOIIrod 11621

LCB

RCB

Ead•

s
s

F..dwards
Ri ru;l:S or R. Chanct&gt;y

LOGAN

(Offen.ow• )

Mlk(&gt; Sharp 1tOO t
Tom PhC'bou.c; rmt

RiC'k WISE'

John PPrry 121fl t

Rr.
RT

Brad Daulx&gt;nmlrP !1 7fl!

RF.

Rick Edwards
NIC'k Riggs
T OTAL';

c

Scoll Way la nd i l Rll
Trrry MacKJntosh 11701

(Offense )

Rick Cha n('('y 11111 or
Da nny Thomas t l401
Tony Wt&gt;lch 12121

LG

Lenny Woltz t l!rlt

STARTING LINEUPS
MEIGS

Jay Evans 0561

councils."

Get me 'Pac ManL-'________A_rt_B_uc_hwa_ld
News from the West Coast Is that
video games are now making more
money for the movie com panies
than motion pictures. The people
who keep track of these things estimate that m illions of televi sion sets
are being used to play " Pac Man"
and "Night Stalker " every night .
So e-6eryone In Hollywood Is r ethin ki ng th e ~ nt e r ta inm en t
business.
"Sidney, I got a great Idea for
TV series. It's about a cop who lives
wi th three girls and .. ."
" I don't want to hear about it.
What do you have In a video game
like Star Strike?"
"I don't know . The writer s aren't
too good at thinking up Ideas for
video games."
" Then get me som e writers who
are. I'm running a movie studio and
we're not going to make our nut If
we turn out stor ies about people. I
want som ething hot like a highscoring dragon·eatlng MX missile
or a two-headed monster who
shpats down B-1 bombers."
" But what about our fllm divIsion? We've got to make movies. "

By KEirn WISECUP
Halfway down the backstretch,
jockeyed for position, and nearing
the far turn, the Meigs Mar auders
will attempt to draw alongside the
leading Logan Chieftains at Logan
Friday night in the season's most

LE
l.T

.IC'ff Morga n 1Hlll

QB

MlkP Crothers rlSOI
Dav(' MC'Brldf' 1150)
Rodney Mowrt'y I ISS I
(Deferrooe )

HB

FB

HB
LE'
LT

Rudy Riggs 11101
Roger Klump 12.1:11
.JOC' Phill ips 051
.Jeff ORg 0 701
Dou ~

Mr.
RT
RE

Spl('('r 1 1 ~11

Eddie Vanovt&gt;r !1791

.Jeff Dannis 111fil
Eric Kllnf' 1lflh
Kellh G&lt;&gt;lger 11~1 1
M ltC'h 1'ruC'ro 11701
Orla n Waik&lt;'r 11101
MEIGS MARAUDER

LB

l.B

CB
CB

s
s

~'TA TL"iTI CS

IIUSHING
AT. Vds. Avg.
97 444 4.1i
Mlkf' JaC'kson
Chris BurdertP
51 '.!41 4.7
.16 115 .1.:.!
.Jon Pc&gt;rri n
J:l
7Y ti.l
Sha wn Ead!-&gt;
Mike Hammond
10
40 ..J.IJ
. .larrK's AC'rt'
H
:11 lR
Dave F'ollrod
!!
'tl "l.h
Jcx• Barton
5
IH .1.6
Mik£' Cha ncPy
5
·I 0.'!

m

CI NCINNATI (AP ) - The manager for WBA Junior Welterweight
Champion Aaron Pryor has filed
suit to block Pryor 's title fight Nov.
12 in Miami with Alexis A rguello.
Restaurateur Buddy LaRosa,
Pryor 's longtime m anager and
m entor, contends- in the suit tued
Wednesday in Hamilton County
Common Pleas Court that the contract for the fight was signed without his approval. He seeks $179,8W
in damages.

RJck Chancf'y

14

0
0
0
4

1
I

6
1

94640
~
2
R ECEM NG

1
K

7629

TOTALS

PC Vffi 11&gt;
10 lf1.1
0
7 ~
I
6 I.tl
1
:l
5.1
0
1 'Kl
0
I
ii
0

Rir k F.dwards

Scan Pkkf'ns
Sha wn Eads

oil

Dan Thoma."
,Jack Wf'lker
Mlk£' Hammond
Chris Burd('! IP

ii

TOI'AL!ii

2

1
5
29 oll6
SOLO Ti\CK.I.E.."\ ( 10 or mon•)

{;N'g Taylor
Andv la nnall'lll
B ill ·Holcomb

Chris Burd£'11£'

Pryor, 26, has a 31-0record with 29
knockouts. He is getting a reported
$1.6 milllon for his fight with A r·
guello, the biggest payday of his
career .

0

Pi\ PC Yd.&lt;4. TD Int.
.17 10 19'l
30 15 1 ~

RiC'k Cha nC'£'.V
Nick Riggs
Mike ChanC't'y

I
I
0
II
II
ll
()
0

LaRosa also alleges that Pryor
violated their exclusive contract by
diverting $540,00l in purse money to
his own company, Hawk Productions Inc., " for thepurposeof avoidIng the payment of 3-11-3 per cent of
the $.'i40,00l to plaintiff as ltsshareof
the boxing purse."

9311 3.7

~

I

PASSING

"}.

LaRosa files suit to stop fight

·:l.O
. Ill ·2.5
·I!! · 19.0
.2() ·1.4
·:.!

I
·I
I

Mik(' .JaC'kson
RlC'k Edwa rds
Scot! P\c\(('ns

Dave Follrod
Sha wn Eads
Nkk

R ig~s

12

.Jon Pf'ni n

•

NBA results
Nullonid Rutikrth&amp;AII

"""""i"''""

ExhlhiUon Nd w.ochall•

Wt'dnr~ 'M ( iwnr~

Milwaukl'f' IIY1, f1cJSlon liW
IIIIU Siflrt ~ PhJiaddphJ;r IOi
[)c •llllil 1·-11 . ("lp,•(') ;llld 1111
~ul l ll' 11.1, lJ iuh ~ ~. ur

..,.....R••iiiiiiiiii1

I~iiiiiiiiiiiii~~l!i~~~~lii

We Carry A Full
line of
Prescriptions and

Pt. Pleasant at Huntington High
Wahama at St. Mary 's
Coal Gr ove at Chesapeake
Ri&gt;ck Hill at F airland
Newar k at Portsmouth
Oct. 16:·
Athens at Bellaire

Health &amp;Beauty
Aids .......

DOONESBURY

~' 71131611 '!Of/I(-/IASel)
~ a:llfWIY, IS
tOll 5~/.JJNfHtlt. i6 A Slflll'e.
I~ 7HAT'~M'M7D
N:flJIIe ctNflllXJHj lim WI

STOP BY TODAY
NEW OPENING

"'

3rd St.. Recine

Center Qf Town- Lots of Games

•

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Sun.·ifllilnl. ~- 11 p.m.- Fri. 3·12 p.m. - SAT. 10 B.m.-12
p.m. .
.

Poo1·Toum111111111t1 Ellery Wedrielday II. Sunday

III·H

at 7:00 P.M.

l

-- -·

..Shop Us First"

THE SELECTION - ..GREAT"
BAHR CLOTHIERS

MANAGE
YOUR MONEY
J~~

'1' . ~

j'·:~'{

"!

,l · ~)

l''1)~
first . choice for bill
poylng convenience is
a Checking Account. It
Is 10 convenient .•
and safe. Open your
Checking Account
here.

HALLOWEEN
CARDS and CANDY

VILLAGE PHARMACY
•
N. 2nd Ave.

PH. 992~6669 ·

.j '

~-

Nylon - Wool - Leather - Wool Blends

NOW IN STOCK!

G&amp;S RECREATION.CENTER
In the

All WATHER COATS

WITH CHECKS

Friday's area high school games
Gallipolis at Jackson
Meigs at Logan
Waverly at Ironton
Kyger Creek at E astern
North Gallla at Southwestern
Southern at Hannan Trace

One of the more frightening
facets of the Chieft ains has to be
their offensive line, which averages
218 Ibs. fro m tackle to tackle.
Another problem coach Charley
Chancey's Marauders must deal
with Is the Chiefs have 22 differ ent
starter s for the 22 positions. It takes
a mighty good horse to deliver mall
faster than two fresh ones.
The Mar auder corral could be
m inus senior Scott Pickens whose
injured arm lists him doubtful.
Pickens Is the second leading
Meigs receiver and seventh top
tackler.
Logan. a place Meigs hasn't won
at since 1972 (Meigs was given a 2-0
forfeit win in 1978 due to Logan's
teacher strike), lost to ninth ranked "AA" powerhouse Columbus Whitehall 10-7 and defending
division IV state champ Nelsonville
- York 35-13 while tying New Lex·
lngton 7-7 before league play began.
Their loop wins are over Athens,
Wavey, and Jackson.
Coach Chancey knows his M ara uder s have their hands full.
" They'r e big physically. A real
good defense Is their strong point, "
stated the Meigs mentor, whose
abili ty to motivate a team has
coach Coate concerned.
" We know they'll be a very fired
up ljlm. Last week (a 29-0 loss to
Ga i~lis ) was no Indication of how
good Meigs Is. We'll have to be
ready to play a ball team ." com mented Coa te.
A Meigs win would put them no
lower than a tie for second at 3-1.
The Marauders ar e presently ti ed
for third with Gallipolis. A share of
first place could also be In the offer Ing if Waverly 's hard-luck Tigers
can upset 1ronton .

*COATS
*JACKETS
*SUBURBAN COATS
*PANT COATS

\OH. ·

3RD ST., RACINE , OH .
Member FDIC

�.......
Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Oct. 14,1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Southern visits Wildcats Eastern ~~! K!O

By SCOT'!' WOLFE
RAC INE_ - The "Cinde rella"
Southern 1 ornadcx•s do n't b&lt;'lic\·c
In fall'\' ta les. but the recc ntl)· hot
T
d
'dd
orna u gn crs do " bclic1·e"
hard work and ck'Ctiration ha,·r
writ t£'n thP script for thPir most sur·
Cl'ss ful sPason in n-'Crnt \'('&lt;:lt's.
Th is WPC'k 's sc hrdu l(' f~rccasts a

ramtlagi·ng 'l'o 1·n,·.1do 10 hi.llh", - 1.1•.111 _
dt'll 1-11 M,.,.,.,,,._
nan Tr u"r&lt;• \'' \ 'I'Idr·,·•t
.
1i llc. wher", the .'-,'1
Torn,
·ldOP.', m""l
,,
"
,.
the t -:t-2 Wilde"•... is· ,, ,.,·d,·'·' "\'"ni·no
, ,r. 11
7: :~1 p.m.
La st WE'&lt;'k. Souihern uncag!'d ils
hun grv running barks bL•hind its
,.,,s-ultl·ng 1-n ,. 1 fl.tl",
Protecti ve II' no.
'
offe nsive d!'s pl".\'
.... fOI' lh"
, l' llll'l,L' '·'"'~.' liS'
team
. Tale
R nted J·unior qu;H'tt•rbal'k
.
1 on~'
iffh~ had a n outst andin g

ga me for the TornadOPs: passing

for two touchdowns and running in
two of his own in Southern's big :16-R
di'ubbi ng of Sou thwes tern.
Wade Connol\.1· ramb led 85 ya rd s
on 11 carrif's for two touc hdowns
while also rPrr h·ing for ;)7 addi:
tiona! \·ants.
La s t. Fricl&lt;J~· - th r TornadoC's co n-

~ somf' un surf' Southern fans
.
"'
.
.InfO 1ll'm
111.' 11('\'('t'S With fhPi l' 0V('I'·
''
IJS
.
11
1
" p av . ·' •. ga med
:m tota l ya rds
.~ 1 ~ · .1rd s . dC'spit e
~ tnc1 a 1so a 11 owr d ::."
;~llowin g SWHS just :1 first downs in
!he S&lt;'&lt;'ond half.
This wee k lh &lt;' Tornadoes find
. a pos .t liOn
.
11lf'nlSC' 1\'C'S 1n
t ha t has
I '" t I10m rormi-ln.v sC'asons; tied
l' Iuu,l
fo r 1I1e Iea d 1n
. lhe.S','AC WII. h a pertf'c t 1-0 mark. Thr Tornadoes join
\'f'l' ll'-1

Nelsonvilleyork keep top spots
I ll'alll in that region las t week, fe U
to se"und place with liO.JJ points.
S&lt;1ndusk) in Region 2 a nd Ga·
hanna in Region :1 kept the other
DivL'Ion l lr ads. Sandusk)· had 67.!11
poin ts while Gahanna owned 6.1.00
point s .
Other nC'w lc·adC'rs this week were
Struthers and New Richmond in
Divls ion Ill. Cincinnati Mariem ont
in Di vis ion IV a ndMingo .Junclion in
Division V .
!&lt;;('('ping thr ir leads were Solon.
F:lida. Allia nce a nd Cincinnati
Forest Park in Di1·is ion II . Bellevue
and l l'OnJon in Di1·ision Ill . Wellington. Wauseon a nd 1\rlsonv ille-York
in Di vis ion fV a nd McCom b a nu
Bradfo1·d in Division V.

MEN'S

Th P association u.5f'S thf' r atings,

based on 1he st rr ngt h of a school' s
schedule a nd those of it s oppone nt s.
to scire! it s field for the post-season
pla)·offs. For the fir st tinw. the top
two finishrr s in rach of thf' :W 1'('--gions will qualif.v for the ' fin··
SC'rf'a. lh! '

l~7R

with its offensive- a ttack. However.
HT made sevC'ra l staunch defensivC' stands to claim two ties with
Sy mmes Va lley a nd Qreen. Last
wf'ek . thf' Wildcats suffered a home

ZIPPER &amp; BUCKLE

$}Q95 PAIR

Class /v\A nm-

loss to win less K_v grr Cr('('k. who
oulclawed Ihe hosts 14-6.
Hard-running Jeff Ba rn es leads
Ihe bulk of Ihe HT runn ing ga me
last week pickingup his tea m's lone
TD with several lengthy run s. The
Wildcats of Coach Brei! Wilson
ru shed for 105yards . but had minus
rneight
ya rd s passing for a 97 y ard
t totaL
"
Hannan Trace will be pulling il s
usua ll y Ioug h defense up aga inst
Southern's offensivE' unit , who ha s
broken lhc JO ya rd barrier quite
easil y i~ three of lis starts. sout h·
ern's a bility to pass effec tively has
a lso helped open up holes for it s
young runne rs in the backfield.

ALL
BULOVA AND
CARAVELLE

YOU DESERVE
A PROMOTION.

WATCHES
REDUCED

It 's time we
made it easier for

you

get ahead .
So for a limued

to

\

ume, we're offeri ng

-

a compl c1e Ap ple'

a;;;D

;Ji

2Q%m4Q%

.•

II System for a
· ......;,.•
speed pncc of unde1 $2 000
---.1'•
The App le II System has cvery th mg you
n eed to gc1 mto pe rso nal computmg
The Apple ll - 1hc most popular personal co m·

EVERY BULOVA AND
CARAVELLE IN STOCK
IS REDUCED

availahlc 1han fo r a ny &lt;Hhcr Plus d 1sk syste m and
di sp lay monitor wi 1h desktop stand .
Pl us the Apple Writer· software package .
All of whic h ca n save you nm e - a nd help you
make more of yourself
So stop hy dw store AnJ we'll sec you gc1 the
promor1un you dcscrvl' .

potn~ ~

·~·

nf'lllp to Princf' ton. m o\'&lt;'d into the
Divis ion I IC'acl in Rrgion 1 with h7.:)()
point s. Clr1·e1and St.. Joseph. 1he No.

enem·s11ng

Vere Smith

JO Year~
o f Quality &amp;. Serv1ce"

AUDIO·VISUALS, INC .

593-nOI

16 W.Unlon Athen• . Ohio

OPIN Mon.·frt. 9 a.m.·S p.m.
Sat. 9 a.m. till noon

342 2nd AVE .
GALLIPOLIS

446-2691

CASH-N-CARRY ONLY

CASH-N-CARRY ONLY

SHAWNEADS
155 Pound
Junior Tailback

'

~eattle fires
•

SEAITLE (AP) - Coach J ack
l&gt;atera a nd General Ma nager John
Thompson were fired Wednesday
by the Seattle Seahawks, who
named Mike McCormack Interim
,PJach for the remainder of the 1982
;National Football League season.
· McCormack, fired as head coach
'Of the Baltimore Colts a t the end of
last season, was lhe Seahwaks' dl·
'rector of football operations.
• Don Andersen, the Seahawks dl·
rector of non-football operations,
will become director of admlnlstra·
tion, filling In for Thompson for the
rest of lhe season.
Announcement of lhe firings was
made by John Nordstrom , whose
family Is majority owner of the
team.
; Nordstrom said the Seahawks'
·ownership had not made contact
with anyone about filling Patera's
old job on a permanent basis.
McCormack will return to his du·
lies as director of football opera·
lions with lhe Seahawks next
,season, Nordstrom said.
• The existing contrac~ of Patera
~nd Thompson will be honored by
'the club, Nordstrom said.
Nordstrom described Patera as
"surprised" by lhe dismissal, a nd
:satd Patera asked, "Why. now?"
Under Patera and Thompson the
Seahawks hada35-49record, lnclud·
an 0-2 record before the 23-day·
National Football League

Si n ce 1929
.
Pom e roy , O~to
M · 5 B: OO to S: OO

HARDWARE STORES

$2991

SOLID-PERFORATED 10' SECTION....

6" 1500 LB. CRUSH
SOLID 10' SECTION •

. u •••••••••••••

WITH FEET
ASSORTED COLORS

REG.

'18.99.

88

PAJAMAS
SIZES : Sm . Med .. Lg .

SALE PRICE

REG .

$600

' 9 .95

HOODED

'

$

WITH HOOD
Sizes: Sm, Med ., Lg .

GIRLS PRAIRIE.

SKIRTS

WITH PASTEL STRIPES

WITH BELTS
SIZES 4· 14

$800

f

Here'nNow

King's Wish

A rich solid-color saxony plush ·

Richly multicolored sculptured
saxony to add elegance to your
best rooms. 100% continuous
filament ny lon that wears well
without shedding. And cut-and -

of 100% continuous filament
nylon that won't fuzz or shed.
Twisted continuous heat~set
yams minimize the unraveling
of fiber tips under traffic . A

loop construction hides soil .

lu xurious beauty that keeps on

looking great!

WILL CLOSE

RECEIVE 2 FREE
DISCS FROM RCA
170.00 VALUE
t

~

I

I

I

•:._

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

o992·3307

Elliott's Armstrong
Carpet Studio

NOW

With Pad &amp; Installed

$999

SQ. yd.

AT NOON
SATURDAY

Heat-set yams keep looking new
longer.
With Pad and Installed

NOW

$1 Q99
SQ. yd.

Series 600
An exciting multicolored
sculptured-saxony carpet o f
100% Anso IV nylon that 's
soi l-resistan t, stain-resista nt and
will not fu zz or shed. Heat -set
ya m red uces unraveling , keepin~
it n ew · l ook in~ longer.

With Pad and Installed

Now$1299
SQ. yd.

, FOR THE WEDDING
OF DICK OWEN
AND JEANNIE Mca.URE

,

49¢

-

19" CUSTOM SERIES TV•

• SuperVideoflangeTuntng

50 LB.
FOOT

Wolnut ftntsh

(Freight Damaged)
(Sold As Is)

SALE PRICED .

$

6 00

PRE-CUT

ALUMINUM FIBERED

STUDS

ROOF
COATING

2"x4"x8'
ECONOMY GRADE

92%' CONST.-GRADE
2"x4'~x8' CO'NST.-GRADE

'

.)

•

99¢

V1904

• Auto-Control Color System
• Beautiful Slmula1ed Grained

·REGISTER
FOR
FREE
PRIZES!!

SALE PRICE

ROBES
REG.

10' &amp;
20' SECTIONS

SALE PRICE

ROBES

110.99

and

$399

$799

ROOFING

WHITE OR BROWN

SIZES : Sm .. Med ., Lg .

MEN'S FlANNEL

SIZES 4·14
SAlE PRICE

GUTTER

BUNNY SLEEPERS

RED BRUSHED NYLON

'9.95

heritage house
of Shoes

ONLY

SMOOTH
ROLL

5" ALUMINUM

REG.

~ecord,lncludlnga2·14rnarklnBal·

llrnore last season. McCormack
was 5-8-1, 7· 7 and 4·10 at Philadelphia from 19731hrough 1975. In 198:l,
he had a 7·9 record at Baltimore.

VIDEO DISC
PLAYER

SEWER &amp; DRAI·N PIPE .
4" SDR35 ..............................~~:.~~~!!?.~..$8. 99
4" 1500 LB. CRUSH

SALE PRICED

players' strike began.
In two previous NFL head coach·
lng jobs, McCormack has a 25-48-1

three-set victory over young High. lander splkers, 15·7, 12·15, a nd 15-11.
Joyh Bra nnon led the winners with
12 serving points, while Michelle
Wilson had 11, and Terre Wood 8.
Eastern dropped lis varsity tilt
with Alexander In two games. EHS
managed just 13 points In both
garres as E ly led the way with four
points.
Eastern 's reserves held off a
sparkling Alexander come-back to
claim 19·17 and 15-11 wins. Joy
Brannon had 11 points, Pam Reibel
9, Michelle Wilson 5, Te rre Wood 4, ·
Kim Dent 3, a nd Aleshia Holsinger
two.
Eastern 's varsity, now 4 and 11
overall a nd 4-6 In the SVAC, will
host Miller today, then travels to
Kyger Creek Saturday for a trl·
match with the has~ a nd Berne Un·
to n. Eastern 's reserves are now 6-6.

how much money you can save

-~

In Black and Teal
PANTS. TOPS. VESTS

Junior Guard

Eaglettes drop volleyball matches
EI\ST MEIGS - The Eastern
High School varsity volleyball
team-dropped two volleyball bouts
recently, but Its young reserve
squad looked quite Impressive In
picking up two wins over Southwestern and Alexander. Eastern first
dropped a match to Southwestern
15-9 and 15-13, before bowing down
In a non-league encounter with
Alexande r, 15-7 and 15-6.
Despite two close games wllh a
talented Southwestern contingent
EHS suffered a disappointing loss
to the Highlanders. The trio of Tara
Guthrie, Krlstl Gaddis, and Kelly
Whitlatch had five serving points
each to lead the Eagles. Lea · Ann
Gaul and Dee Dalley had three
each and J~lle Ely had two.
Eastern's young, but talented rl'serve team continued to Improve
througbou t the season and gained a

JAY EVANS
156 Pound
Junior Center

RANDY STEWART
1!10 Pound

Petera,

.. f

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

You'll never believe..

EBERSBACH ~~ HARDWARE

RED EYE
VELOUR

Marauders

'

•WOODBURNERS
•STOVE PIPE
•STOVE BOARD
•STOOl DESTROYER
•AXES •MAULS
•WEDGES
.CHAIN &amp; BAR OIL

1J QW . Main St.
Ph . 992 ·28 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meet the

up more
llian tt
really responsible for, has spent ~
considerable amount of time on tlie
field so far this season. Last week
EHS gained '!1 yards, while a worn
down EHS defense gaveup442 total
yards.
Eastern will be out to handle hard
running sophomore fullback Steve
Waugh a nd KC quarterback Chuck
Vogel. Both had fine performances
In last week's blgSVACvlctory. KC
defeated HT 14-6.
E nroule to the win KC pounded
out 179 total yards, 107 on the
ground a nd 72 In the air.
Wllh Kyger Creek's lrnprovl'men! this could develop Into a good
ga me, however, the favorite Is
Eastern with I~ homecoming edge.
Ga m e time Is 7:30 with a 20 rnhr
ule h a lftim e cere mon y at
in termission.

SVACcha rnplonsbouncebackwlth
a big victory.
As for as the SVAC goes, the race
Is still on for all six contenders.
Eastern, who brought about Its lopsided score as a resull of many rnls·
takes, dropped a 43-0 league opener
to North Gallla. ·
North Gallla Is lhe tea m picked
by ma ny lo win lhe . 1982 crown,
however, several first round sur·
prises Indica te this co uld be a n
upset year. Kyger Creek a nd South·
ern are tied wit h Nort h Gallla a l 1.0
In the SVAC.
Although Easte rn has produced
very little total offensive output In
lhe past few games, Troy Guthrie
has consiste ntly been Eastern's
leading rusher. Mike Jones is now
at quarterback for the Eagles.
The Eastern defense, who has

putcr of nll timL' wuh m ore progr11ms ;:m d 11ccessori es

ARCTICS

cli v l5ional !•liminatons.

S~~e to~!~~~~~ ~ven

EAST MEIGS - "Homecoming" coupled wllh three straight
losses a nd a lot of det ermlnallon
hopes to spell relief for the Eastern
Eagles Ihis Friday evening as the
hos ts celebrate homecoming fesllv·
ilies wll h the Kyger Creek Bobcats
here at Easte rn High Sc hool start ·
ing at 7:30p.m.
Reli ef hopes to spell not onl y "vic·
lory" bu t a lso hopes satisfaction for
the local gridders.
At Ihis point Ihe 2-4 Eagles. faring their sllffesl sc hedule in recent
years, are corni ng off three consecolive s hellings, thai combined, add
up to a lop-sided 155-0score. This no
doubt has "fired up" the Eagle
locker room a nd forced the·poten·
lially dangerous Eagle crew to
bu~kl e down for a good periorrnance this Friday .
The Eagles are despera Iely seek·
lng revenge; "someone to lake il
out on" , !hey say. Nothing wou ld be
more pleasing to the home town

L

Ironton~

COLLl\11lUS. Ohio 1 AI' 1 - Ci n·
cinnati MoC'IIC'r a nd Nl'wark Ca tholic. two former stale• football
pla~ ·o ff winnC'rs. an· thr n0w IC'adPrs
this W('('k in their rl'gions in the OhiO
High School At hletic ,\ sscx·iation·s
compulerizf'CI ra tin g&gt;;.
Moeller's C!1lsaders. the 1~7o.
1976, 1977. 1979 a nd 1980 big sc hool
champions . moved to the top of lk ·
gion 4. Moeller. li·0-0 this fa ll . had
76.ro point s to 70.W for second -place
Cincinnati Prinre ton. thr leader last
week .
Ncll'ar k Cat holic. thr Class ,\
stal e pla)·off 1·ic10r in I ~I OH. mO\'f'CI
into a Divi5ion \ ' lrml. \'J ulling all
the wa)· from a fo ul'lh·placr tic in
Region 19 et Wt'f'k ago. Th(' GrN"n
Wa ve's point total was 26.111. Shacl)'·
side. atop Region I ~II as t wCf'k. fell to
1hird wit h 22.:XJ points.

'
North Ga llia a nd Kyger Creek. who
also posted firs! round wins.
Southern 's fOP. Hannan Traer.
earlie r In the season. had trou ble

••

Thu~y,Oct. 14,1982

Roof
Coating

5 GALLON CAN

$2395

.

..

WE
HAVE
SERVED
THE AREA
FOR OVER
46 .YEARS.

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Oct. 14, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
)' ' ,._,. I

lr~

I

Correspondence
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wood iol Ox·
nard, Calif. spent several days wit h
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley. Other
visitors were Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Cundiff, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Cundlff, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cundiff
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hysell of Syr·
acuse: Mr. a nd Mrs. Charles Hysell
of Middleport and Mr. a nd Mrs.
VIrgil Teaford of Pomeroy.
Miss Wilma Rose of Columbus
spent two weeks with Mr. and Mrs.
Ward Sayre and visited her aunt.
Mrs. Mildred Wolfe at Pomery
Health Care Center .
Mrs. Irene Webs ter of Sa n Diego,
Calif. and son-in-law a nd daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Lesniak of
Porto Rico called on Mrs. Hazel
Carnahan on a recent Friday.
Mrs. Mattie Allison and brother

John ~orrlson and wife of Zanesvi lle visited friends here Monday.
Mr. a nd Mrs. George Roush of
New Brighton, Pa., spent Tuesday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. CIIIlord Morris and Mrs. Sylvfa Pool of
Raci ne route was also a guest.
Mrs. Lenora Campbell of Ma rion
spent a week with her cousin, Mrs.
Carrie Nease.
Weekend guests of Mrs. Edna
Pickens were Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Hall of Hamilton.
Mrs. Paula Self a nd son and Mrs.
Sheridan Russell, Jr. of Mason, W.
Va., spent Sund ay with Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Turley.
Mrs. Cha rles Wagner of Circleville visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Wagner and Mr. and Mrs. Olden
Thaxton .

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE

20°/o ~ 40°/o OFF
ALL SUITES IN STOCK

OBSERVE WORLD FOOD DAY - The filth gnidescienceclassol
SyrdCUSt' Elementary. who are observing World Food Day, Oct. 16.
dlsplay some of the posters they made to be distributed In businesses In
SyraCIL'&lt;' '~ong with coUection jars. Pictured are haH of the class

members, front row, left to right: Mlsty Swisher, Ray Sayre, Denise
Richards, Chad Taylor, Chris Stewart, Candl Smith, Trlcia Mlehael;
hack row: Brad Maynard, Doug Lavender, Doug Stewa rt, Brent
Shuler, Jon VanMeter, Jerod Moore and Mrs. Sandra Baer, teacher.

How is it possible for Rice's to sell high quality suites for
such unbelieveabl• low prices??? Here are 6 reasons:

1. Low overhe~d.
2. Family ope.at ion
3. Direct factory buying.

4. Volume buying.
5. Volume selling.
6. Small mark-up.

Fifth graders observe World Food Day
The fifth grade soc ial studies

class at Syracuse F:lem c nt ary: a rr
observing World Food Da;·. Oct. lfi.
World Food Dav was s tarted b\'
the Food a nd Agr i ~ ulture Organiz;.
tions of thr United Na tions.
On World Food Da;·. 100 coun tries including the United Stat&lt;•s.

will meet together to disc uss world
hunger and how to end it.
The class to help the situa tion
have made a nd distri buted posters
a nd placed money jars in local businesses in the Village of Syracuse.
Donations will not onl y help the

aware of the needs of other people. Rummel with the proceeds fro m
The students' ideas ca me from the jars. Major Rumme l wi ll explain how the money will be used
their Weekly Readers.
The money will be collected Mon- r - - - - - - -- - - - -----1
clay and presented to Glenna Rummell who will ma ke dist ributlon
throughout Meigs Count y. On Mon- '
SYRACUSE &amp; RACINE
clav stud ents wi ll present Mayor

ATTENTION

ca use but w ill make students more

RESIDENTS

Meigs area organizations hold meetings
Women's Fellowship
Tlw n('('(l for c lottting a t the
Grund\ Mission School in Grund\',
Va .. was notf'dduringa recent meet -

ing of the Women's Fdlowship of
the Meigs County Chu rches of
Chr ist.
It was notC'd du ring the mrcting
that the teaspoons hm·e ix'en purchasC'd for th!'Ohio Va lleyChristian
Camp. A committ rc to select officers for the coming year was appoint('(] by Ann Lambert. president .
. M""ting at the Middleport Church
of Chrlst. R.uth Underwood had
charge of thr song serv icf' w it h

a just society. For better understanding the purpose. s he read a
defi nition ol " fa irness" a nd
"justice."
H_vmns sung werr "Stand Up for
.Jesus" and "What a Friend We
Have in Jes us" accompanied by
Helen Wolf at the piano. Verses of
scr ip ture relat ing to Chris tian just ice were read, and a discussion was
held concerning just ice a nd fa irness
as fou nd in the community or appearing in newspapers a nd on televis ion. The program closed wit h a
read ing "This Is Toda y."
Kathryn Mora, vice president ,
cond ucted the business meetin g. Of-

Debb;· Melton gi\·ing the pra ;-cr.
Devot ions were by the Hemlock
Grovr Church with Vada Hazelton
readin g two poems. "The Watered
Lilltes" a nd "The Old Hym ns_" She
concludC'd with prayer. Norma Russell rrad a let ter from Peggy Russell regardin g the Mex ican
Children' s Hom&lt;' and thr need for
monry.
The program was b;· Mrs. Melton. Ke,·in Lo,· ing ga,·c a demonstra tion on oriental cockin g. with his
dis h being served with_!iandw iches
and relish tra ys prcparC'd by women
of the Middleport Church .
Next meeting will be held Oct. 2ll
a t the PomcrO\·C'hu rrh with a craft
display.

fi rers were elected and plans fina lized for the E lect ion Day din ner a nd
bazaar to be held in the fe Uows hip
room of thr chu rch on Nov. 2.
Informative ma terial concerning
the Eastern Local School levy was
distributed and the group agreed to
endorse the levy. Money was donated to be used toward purchase of
gam e prizes to be given to Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
Forty sick calls were reported for
Sept ember . Next meeting will be
held at the chu rch on Nov. 4at which
time the new officers will be
installed.

Now at Ponderosa!

Two Steak Dinners

only'-99
' I

OlesterUMW
R1beye
Sleak
01nner

;.Fairness a nd .Just ice: a Chrlstian Viewpoint " was the pi'Ogram
topiC a t the October mrcting of
Chli;ter United Methodist Women .
Mrs. Kathryn Ba um and Mrs.
Gladys Spencer wNe the program
le&lt;tders wit h Mrs. Baum giving the
scripture and a statement of purpose for the program. She sa id that
its objective is to help clarify the
Chr.isti an impPratiw• in issues of
falr nC'Ss and justicP and to ex plore
how wP ca n wm·k toward the goal of

All dmners

1nclude
unlimi ted
sa lad bar,

and wa rm
rol l w1th
bu tter.

I"Ribe;sTeakDln:'r;""•aii:'e;:'~:k'Din';;;;"1

TEX ••CARTER
and CALABASH.
Toddler to Size 14

Now
Reg.
•a.oo ................ •5.60

1
I

I
I
I

Dinners

2 for $4.99

1I or Big-Chopped
St~ak 1
Dinners
I

I

'10.00 ....... ... .... •7.00
'12.00 ............. •8.25
•14.00 .............. •9.50
•15.00 ........... •1 0.50
.,:6.00 .... .. ..... •11 .20
*17.00 .... ..... .. ' 11.75
•:23.00 ......... .. •16.00

' FREE ESTIMATES '

CALL BOB CAMPBEll

949-2224

New2Pc.

liVing Rm. Suite
Rtg. $239

SJ38

'

I

POMEROY Wesleyan Holiness Church located on State
Route 143, Harrisonville Road
will start revival services Thursday night to continue through
Oct. 24. Rev. LawrenceJewellof ..
Dayton will be the evangelist.
There will be special singing
nightly with services to begin a t
7: ll p.m. Rev. Earl Fields, pas·
tor, Invites the public.

BHCC NURSING GRADUATES - Front row,
left to right, Sidney Watson, Galllpoll!i; Teresa Ross,
PatriOt; SheUa Kay Cox, Henderson, W.Va.; Debbie
Carter, GaWpoll!i; Jeanie Miller, Jackson; Lori Boorum, GaWpolls; Carrie Guinther, Syracuse; Eliza·
beth Addington, Oak HW; second row, Helen EWson,
Mason, W. Va.; Sharon Henry, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va.; MeUada Demosky, Mlddlepo\'1; Pam Moran,
Instructor; Betty Plymale, Instructor; Mary Sue
Weiland, Coordinator; Mary Woolen, Instructor;
Cathy Brown, Jackson; Lori Kloes, Middleport;
Lynn Bowman, ROOney; Stephanie Rees, Rio

Grande; third row, Daria Shafer, Ewington; Mary
Allison, GalllpoUs; Lisa Toppings, Huntington, W.
Va.; Sabrina Baker, Jackson; Eva Young, Wellston;
Debbie Brandau, Wellston; Deana Peck, BidweU;
Unda Ryan, Racine; fourth row, Sarena Robinson,
Scottown; Rocky SturgW, Jackson; Jan Holcomb,
Gallipolis; Tanya Barnhouse, Wellston; Lesa White,
Vinton; Maxine Church, Beaver; Tami Phillips, BidweD; Susan OUer, Jackson; Dianna Lee, Pomeroy;
Mae Grueser Hupp, Uttle Hocking; Diane Patrick,
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

BHCC graduates 34 nursing students
The 1982 graduating class of the
Buckeye Hills Career Center Practical Nursing School recently took
part In the school's lOth annual
commencement exercises. About
400 friends and relatives watched
as 33 women and one man received
their diplomas and school pins at
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
James York, assistant director of
Adult Education of the Gallla-.
Jackson-Vinton JVSD, presided '
over the ceremony. Featured
speakers were Class President
Rocky Sturgill, Jackson; Class

VIce President Dianna Lee, Pomeroy; and Class Representative Sidney Watson of Gallipolis, who a lso
led the class In the Practical Nurse
Pledge .
.
Two students were recognized
with awards for achieving the highest academic grades. Jan Holcomb
of Gallipolis received her award
from Anne Bowers, R.N. , Director
of Nursing Service of Holzer Medical Cent ~ r . Gallipolis; and Helen
Ellison of Mason, W. Va., received
her award from Marge Grinstead,
L.P.N., representing Pleasant Val- .

ley Hospita l, Pt. Pleasant. W.Va.
Three graduates received specia l awards for perfect attendance.
Elizabeth A1ldlngton of Oak Hill,
Ta nya Barnhouse of Wellston and
Helen Ellison each received a gift
cerlfflcate from Paul Davies Jewelers, Gallipolis.
Helen Ellison a lso was presented
the award as the gradua te selected
by the class and faculty as thene
who most exemplified the quality
and spirit of the licensed practical
nu rse. Her award was a gift certificate dona ted by Carolyn Grove of
Carolyn's In Gallipolis.

Long Bottom church honors its minister
Rev. and Mrs. Richard Thomas
were welcomed back for another
year with a social hour held reBolt
u !ted
ti
t Lo
cen Y a
ng
om
n

Methodist Church.
Agiftwaspresentedtothem. The
youth e-roup led by Sandy Roberts
sang "Everybody Out to Know Who ,

Astrograph
October 15, 1982
The desire to travel and get around more will be accentuated within
you this coming year. You may now.get to see the places you'vealways
hoped to visit.
LIBRA (Sept. 2S-Oct. 23) This could be a very restless day, so you'd
better schedule what you hope to accomplish or you may not get
anything done.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) The opinions of others will be very
Important to you today. If you are too concerned about wha t they think
of you, you'll fall to express your true personality.
SAGrrfARIUS (Nov.•:3-DeC. 21) New friends will find your Interest In them flattertng, but you must be careful not to ask questions
which they might deem to be none of your business.
· CAPRICORN (DeC. 22-Jan. 19) YoiLf friends and associates aren't
apt to hilve any trouble determining where you stand on ma jor Issues
today. Speak your mind, but do so tactfully.
AQUARRJS (Jan. 20-Feh. 19) Others m ay be ta ken In by what
someone says today, but not you. You'll be able to differentia te between
what's fact and what's. fiction.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Today you will be both sensitive and
intelligent ln. dealing with others. You'll know how to plant positive
thoughts which could transform their thinking.
ARIES (March 21·Aptil19) Normally you' re pretty good at making
snap judgments, but today It will prove wise to delibera te before m a k·
lng any decisions.
TAURUS (AprU 20-May 20) Try to focus your efforts tod ay on
projects requiring mental effort, rather than phys ical. Your muscles
may not perform as well as yoiLf mind.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Try to associate today with persons who
are young at heart and who do not take life too seriously. Being with
stodgy types wUi bore you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You're likely to be extremely restless If
you feel confined to your home or apartment today. Don't climb the
walls. Think Instead of ways' to Improve your surroundings.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're a good conversationalist ~nd you are
likely to come up with some brtght ideas today. However, you may not
do anything more than talk about them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-&amp;pt. 22) Where your spending Is concerned,
you're apt to keep a tight lid on largeexpenditiLfes, but you could empty
your wallet on a number of small buys.

Wedding plans have been completed for the ma rriage of Penny
MU!er and David Ray Riggs.
The double ring ceremony will
take place on Saturday at 1: 30 p.m .
at the Harrisonville Presbyterian
Church. The Rev. Dr. Ernest Stick·
les wUI officiate. Prenuptial organ
music will be presented by Armond
Turley.
Maid of honor will be Robin Ric h·
· mood of Athens, and the blrdesmaids wUI be Tammy Daniels of
Canton, and Diane Reed, Columbus. Wendt Dawn Daniels of Canton
will be the flower girl.
Mark Riggs of Pomeroy will
serve as best man for his brother,
and the ushers also brothers, will be
Danny and Paul Riggs, Pomeroy.
The custom of open cliiLfch will
be observed. A reception will be
·in the Mll!OniC hall at Harrl·
sonv!Ue Immediately foHowing the
wedding.

Mid

Richard Is" with Cathy Spencer at
the pla no. Jared Spencer recited
the first chapter of Psalms. Readlogs were given by John Suttle, Joe
Connolly, Richard Roberts and
Ronnie Cowdery. A skit entitled,
"The Scandal" was presented by
Mae McPeek, Leona Hensley,
Eloise Connolly, J anet ConnoUy,
and Mary Grace Cowdery.
Also honored was Mrs. Ada Bissell who has retired as custodian of
the church a fter serving m any years. She was presented a gift. Five
of her childre n were present a nd
also presented her with gifts.
Refreshments were served to the
Rev. and Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Ada
Bissell, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Greneoveld and Tommy, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Bissell and daughters, Kenny
Bissell, Orva Jeana and Judy Holter, Violet Smith, Norman McCain,
Mae McPeek, Leona Hensley, Mr.
and Mrs. John Suttle and Chipper,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Roberts,
Tammy and Tim, Cathy and J ared
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Harlls
Frank, Connie Connolly, Mr. and
Mrs. J oe Connolly, Ethel Carson,
Mildred Bissell, Margie Welsh, Melissa, Melinda alld David Wells,
Lisa Driggs, Tracl Newlun, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Cowdery.

111

w. 2nd

•z
Fomeroy, Ob.

'

· ~~RIST

PH .'992~2644

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your F-TD Florist

POMEROY - The Meigs
High School Class of 1978 will
meet Oct . 14 at 7:30p.m. at the
Meigs
Innmin
are being
adePomeroy.
for a fivePlans
year
reunion to be held In June.

TUPPERS PLAINS - A corn
bread and bean supper will be
held Frtday night at the Tuppers
Plains firehouse by the Tuppers
Plains Ball Field Improvement
League. Serving will be from
4:30 to 6: 30-p.m .
RUTLAND Church of God
Junior Boys Sunday School Class
wUI have a yard sale Friday a t 9
a. m . The sale will be held the
third house above the Nazarene
Church, with a bookcase bed,
mattress, clothing, and miscellaneous items to be Included.

SA11JRDAY
POMEROY _ E mployes of
the Pom eroy Health Care Center wUI stage a yard sale beginning at 9 a. m . Saturd ay at the
parking lo t a long the Ohio River

In Pomeroy. All proceeds !rom
the sale wUI go towards purchasIng Christmas gifts lor residents
of the center. Anyone having
items they would like to contribute to the sale is asked to contact
Jua nita Spencer a t 992-6606 or
985-4192.
MIDDLEPORT- The Peaceful Valley Gospel Singers will
sing Saturday evening a t 7: ll
p.m . at Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church In Middleport. The
public Is Invited.

SAHJRDAY
MASON - A chicken barbecue will be held a t Mason Unl·
t e d Methodi s t C hur c h,
Satu rday, 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m .
Homemade pies will be a specialt y along with baked beans,
slaw, roUs, coke and coffee. The
public Is In vited a nd the event

rr,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w;il;lbe~;he;l;d;r;ai;n;o;r;s;h;ln;e;.~~~

ROCK SPRINGS Gra nge,
7:30 Thursday evening at the
hail.
SOUTHERN Band Boosters
Thu rsday a t 7:30 p.m . In the
music room at the high school.
All parents are Invited to attend.
POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi, 7: 45 p.m . Thursday at the
Riverboat Room, Diamond Sav·
lngs and Loan Co.
EASTERN Local School District will hold a public forum
ThiLfsday at 8 p.m . at Tuppers
Plains Elementary School. The
public Is Invited to attend.

w

~

Boss's
Day is

Jr. &amp; Misses
ESP Stretch,
london Rider, Baggie
Basic Cotton Jeans
New Tape red Rider
Corduroy
Some patterns
In the new
Petite length

Oct. 16!
Surprise the boss
with a thoughtful
Hallmark card
for Boss· s Day,
Saturday, October 16.

Cl 1882 H111mark C.l'dl. Inc.

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, OCT. 15 &amp; 16 ONLY
8:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.

LLFROZEN FOODS 50% OFF
LL DIARYFOODS20% to
30% OFF
- Our pharmacists are qualified
through years of training and
experience to .dispense drugs.
You can depend ron \II for the

belt.

5 UJ ISH ER l 0H5E

Your"E)Ctra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

Upper River Road
, (Across from the Airport)

LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, a nniversary observance Thursday, 6 p.m . potluck dinner with meat
furnished a t the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church. Sunshine sisters to be revealed.

FRlDAY

FINAL 2· DAYS.....

OPEN MON .·SAT .

9:30·5 :00

Calendar

THURSDAY

Miller, Riggs to wed

haked
pota to,

I or Big-Chopped Steak

NEW SEWER HOOKUPS
NOW BEING
SCHEDULED .

Floral cover tn
extra heavy oak frame.

t__

The

Ohio

Pharmacy
CMf'IIII ....., I .Pit.
IIMII4 HIIMftl, I . Pfli.
•

IC ...... MCC•I ...... 1."-.

.

.
MeR.tiW•IIt.l :• •·"' · .. ' '·"'·
.
tuft!My 1t:.tt11lMIMJtet.M.
PlaiCIIfiTIONI
PH . ftJ ·Itll

··-

...

· Pr~yhrVICI '

o,NNielthtlllt

,..,..,.,,0.

Cashiers wifl deduct 20% from your total. Some items will be ·
reduced 30%, bringing you savings of up to 50%.

ALL SALES- CASH or FOOD STAMPS_
NO CHECKS, COUPONS, OR
BOTTLE REFUNDS
ALL' SALES FINAL

RIVER VIEW
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

�Thu~y,()d.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

14,1982

I

,.~ Elderly housii.g complex dedicated
By Tim Davis
The River Bend Place, a new 25
apartment housing complex for the
elderly or handicapfled, located
along Rt. 33 was dedicated Tuesday
morning ln New Haven.
Congressman Mlck Staton, who
was on hand for the ribbon cutting
ceremonies, told a large crowd
attending the dedication that
government needs to find ways to
service individuals with only the
necessities and to know when and
when not to interfere. "Government
needs to provide the UtUe extra
things people need. It needs .to find
businesses that build good and

comfortable things lor people,"
Staton said.
The $100,000 housing complex was
federally funded through the
Department ol Housing and Urban
Development (HUD).
The building was designed and .
bunt by Colonial American
Development, Inc., Columbus,
Ohio. Construction on the building
ended in late August and units are
now available to rent.
To qualify for a tennant individuals must be 65 years of age or
handicapped and pay
ap·
proximately 30 percent of their
adjusted income.

The two-Story, 20,848 square foot .
complex ls complete with modern ·
facWtles. There are 24 apartments
and one for the · apartment
manager. Four' of the 24 IDiita are
equlped for the handicapped.
The apartments consist of a living
room, kitchen, dinning area and
bedroom . Each apartment ls
electrically heated and air conditioned. Also included in the
complex are a meeting room,
laundry facilities, manager's
quarters, shuffle board and a horse
shoe pit. An elevator has also been
Installed for ease and comfort for
the teMants.

NEW HOUSING FOR EWERLY-The River Bend Place, a new apartmenl complex for the elderly or
handicapped, was dedicated Tuesday morning In New Haven wltb rlbhon cutting ceremonies. Sbown above left to
rlghl are Rev. George Weirick. George Vlrglts, Colonial American Development, Inc., representative;
Congressman Mlck Slalon; George Kontoglannis, Presldenl of Colonial American Development; Grace Brown,
River Bend Place Apartment Manager ; and Joan Ramsey, Twin Rivers Tower Apartment Manager In Point
Pleasant. I Photo by Tim Davis.)

Telephone hills will increase
following latest PUCO ruling
MonthJ\· rates for Genera l Te lephone Co. of Ohio's customers will
increase an average of three per·
cent as the resu lt of a rehearing of
the compan,• s las t rate case filed in
J9H1.
Bills for one- party residentia l cus·
tomcrs wilt go up an average of .11)
ccnl s a m onth. Th e increase was

appro\'('(] b\' the Public Utilities
CommL" ion of Ohio on Wed nesda\·
and took efff'Ctthat day.
C. Michael Crawford. Marion. di·
rector of regu latory a ffairs. sa id
General of Ohio appealed severa l
issuf'S in tilt· 19Rl case. It as ked the
Pl'CO to rf'Consider the wa y it cal·
culatC&lt;:l .tllowa nces in deprecia tion.
fcdl'ral inromf' tax and toll revenue.

,\fit ·r stud,·ing General's appea l,
the l'l 'CO authorized the company
$2 million additional annua l rP.
vcnuP. This boost ed General's rP.
,·enut• n•cei\'t'&lt;l in 1he 1981 case from
$27 tu $:!!mi ll ion . The company had
originall\' soughl ti:U million .
In the rPhmr ing. the PUCO a lso
reduct'(] CPncral' s ra te $19 to $12
mont hl v for customers ha ving an
off prcmisPS extension placed a t a
loca tion ot her tha n their bus iness or
residence
ThLs redu ct ion applies to custom C'rs situated in thf' base ra te area,

the most dcnsel\' populated pot1ion
of the•exchange. Customers out side
the base

r&lt;:~lf'

area will contin ue to

pay the$19 rate. Crawford sa id .
In addition. the P UCO a pproved

an averagP tlu·ee percent increase
for zone rat f'S. This a mounts to 10
cent s mont hl y for one party users in
zone /\ ; 15 cents in zone Band 2.1
cent s in zone C. It is in add it ion tot he
awrage:t'i-eent mon thl y increase of
basic exchange rates . .
Zones rates were esta blis hed ye·
ars ago to pa rtially recover higher
costs associated with serv ing customers in r ura l and sparsely popu ·
lated areas. Crawfo rd noted. They
apply to customers res iding out side
the base rate area of an excha nge.
he added .

Area deaths f
Woodrow P. Campbell
Woodrow P Campbell. 64, 118
Peacock Ave .. Pomeroy, died early
Thursday morning at Veterans
Mem orial Hospi11ll.
Mr. Campbell was born March 18,
1918, a son of the la te William and
Mary Friel Campbell. He was a lso
preceded in death by a sister. Marie
S!1lnley, and three brothers, Field,
Owen and Floyd.
Mr.Ca mpbell was employed .as
deputy recorder In F ranklin
County. He WdS a veteran of World
War II and the Korean Conflict. Surviving are two sisters, Grace Camp- .
bell, Pomeroy, a nd Laura Mllner,
San Mateo, Calif., and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 1: :ll p.m .
Saturday a t the Ewing Funeral·
Home with the Rev. Robert McGee
officiating. Burial will be in Green:
lawn Cemetery at NelsonviJie.
Friends may call at the funeral
ltome anytime after 7 p.m. Friday.

Genera l 1981 case was adjudica ted las t April 26 a nd new rates
took elfeel May 5.
The company serves more than
572,1XXJ cus tom ers through 244 exchanges in 80 of Ohio's 88 counties.
Meanwhile. on Oct. 1. the com-

pany filed a nother ra te requ est
seeking $32 million. Resolution of
that case Is not expected until August . If this request is a pproved, it
would raise m onthly bills a n average of 12 cents a day.

Council claims

In his trial, Mays testified that
Wamsley approached him In
Huntington the month before the
crime and offered him $300 "to
shoot somebody." But Mays said he
did not know Wamsley was to be the
victim until after Wamsley drove
him to the shooting scene, on the
abandoned Mae Moore Farm off Rt.

2 in Mason County, the night of the
crime.
Mays testified that he at first
refused to shoot Wamsley but did so
after Wamsley pointed a pistol at
him and said, "You shoot me or I'm
going to shoot you."
The court did not rule Immediately on whether lt will accept
the Mays case for review.

Levy promotion plans
given additional push
Plans to further promotion of the
five rnlll tax levy tobevoteduponat
the Nov. 2 election were made when
the Committee of Concerned Citizens for the Eastern School District
levy met Tuesday night.
The next meeting was set for 7:30
next Tuesday at which time a work
session will be held to make posters
and other promotional materials.
Plans were made for a telephone
program Oct. 25 through Oct. 29. On
those days residents of tbe district

The

(Continued from page 11

having questions pertaining to the
levy may call 985-3329 or 985-4292
from 4 to 7 p.m. and qualified persons will be on hand to answer those
questions.
Also a discussion was held concerning Eastern residents who
don't have a way to the polls on
Nov. 2 or who should be voting via
the absentee ballot. Persons with
these situations may also call 9853329 or 98!&gt;;1292.

PHONE
Also meeting with council were
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Arnold concerninga dil chnexttotheir property that
was damaged when the sewer lines
were lald by Ontario Pipeline Co.
Mayor Eber Pickens reported
council must submit in writing a list
of work to be comple ted by Ontario.
Council prepared a list which will
be mailed to Ed Tinkle of Commonwealth Engineers.
It was a lso noted that the $5 inspection fee being charged residents to inspect sewer hookups was
set by the Syracuse-Racine Regiona l Sewer Dis tric t.
Gene lmtxxlen. fire chief, informed counc il he had recevied a
grant of $1,100 from ODNR for part
payment on the pagers. Council
paid half of the cost of the pagers.
The money was given to Mrs Lawson for deposit.
Council agreed to purchase a ntifreeze for a ll town vehicles.
Council a lso discussed a wa ter
problem located behind the property of Margaret Cottrill and the
Eddie Lawson property.
It was disclosed by Mayor
Pickens tha t there is still a leak in
the swimming pool. John Bentley,
councilman agreed to contact
Hornsby a t Coolville to checkout the ''

I

situation.

992·2156

Or Wrolr O~ol f ~~"'onr l ( ln~o lt tcl Orp1

Council also agreed to place a wa111 Cour t Sl , Pomeorf . Oluo • u••
ter follnla in a t the former Sta te
Park.
John Phllson, councilman asked
__nos
if there was an ordia nce regulating
Ct.uifi«l ~ rocorr u.,.
II
Bu" no"o-'""'''
'&lt; ... a ••
""" '" "''
.." ,,,,.,
the placing of posters in the village.
'' .......... ....
II (I .
• . .o.o lou Qmcn&gt;
11 p,,. . .........
11 '"''"""'
,0....
""""""'""'''"''
\) Ant-\
followU..
f•dep#IOfle ucle."'(~..
....
He was Informed there is not .
, , ... ,..
,." ............
.... .
s.,....oii\
..........
\\ l woldo"" ~-''"'
............
.
.
.
"AwtoO'
&amp;
A,,..,.,.,.,.,
,. "'• "'"' \ o~
Phllson also discussed the possi• ........
•••u\•''"
c. . w..",.,
........
. .. ......... ...
....,................,..,.. ,,..,. ,
, \ u•·u·~ •d• •"•
11 Awto•ooo"
,_.,
. .,"'-n_,,,
,wol\ t, " - ' " " " '
_.
.
.
.
........
_,
bility of designa ting a collection
•oo ,_,,
" ""''"" '" "~ ·
,_ a-c,,..,.
~- ,IIt,.. ftu••"'"" ftu••n•""'
point in Syracuse to pay sewer bills.
• A' "'• '""
_ _...,.....,0..,
~',.NI....- .._
'MI-II
.. o...11 lo"
~
["" '""'" ~"' "
L-h"'
·---=-- ·.-- =------=
..M-U"•'
. . _""'""
..... a, • .,...,.,,
It was noted that a collection point
-. 'ijtn.,.._.......
..,_,
_
w
-·
~·­
" .............. .
should be located in Syracuse as
.............................
,
.,~t ...........· - .
.. ... . . ,... _ "'
"'''""'"""
"' ""'""
".....,
"'
.,
........
.
.
••
f«&lt;•·•···
""''""
..
'""""
"""''"
""•
well as Racine for the convenience
•J&lt;••••I&lt;If•
""'0"""'"' O.... d··· ...,..,_
.•ft"''"'" " •.•.•.••
..
••••
"'''"""""'"'"'
A""'''""'"' loo ll .. n•
"'.._" P•P•"
"plol!wO&lt;M lh•HO•o ..,....,...,.
lolll
.......
. . . .. c........
,..,
.....................
"
"u,.,
......
. (ft
of residents.
.......
.. . ..........
, ..........,
,
''"'
UPIO" " "' "' ~ , .... ,
-·111111
" ,.........
.., .... .
.
....
Phllson also noted that school bus
...............,
' . .....
signs are needed as the ones located
in the village are in poor condition as
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
well as other signs.
May.or Pickens reported that 14
LEGAL NOTICE
concurr1ng mo rt gage deed
street signs are needed in addition to
PUBUC NOTICE
Ray E Just1s. Jane Doe. Un · gJVen to secure I he payment of
ThP. annual electiOn nf the
those that have been put In place.
known Spouse. •f any. of Ray E sa1d no te and convey•ng the M e•~ s County Aqncultural SoMayor Pickens a nnounced that J11St1&lt;; Don•e L Just1s. aka. Dot- premrses descnbed. have been Cif!ty O~rec t o r s wrU be held
tw JustiS. aka. Do11 1e Lou Jus tiS. broken and the same has be- Monday. Novem ber 1. 1982 m
paving will begin in the Village Mon- · .:Jnd
John Doe. Unkn own come absolu te
'
lhf! Sec retary off1ce at the Falf
day, weather permitting.
Spouse 1f any of Dott1e L' Jus·
The pla1ntrff demands that Grounds at Rock Sprmqs. Oh10
Attending were Mayor Pickens, t1s aka Doll•e Just•s. aka. Dot· the defendan ts named above fr om 5 10 9 pm
\If'
Lou Just•S. whose last be requ•red to answer and set
Ouali!rcaltons lor d1rec!ors
Janice Lawson, clerk, Holman, Mil- known
placP at rcs1dence was up the1r mterest 1n sa•d real est- &lt;HP. lr,at th ey must bf! oqualii1P.d
ton Varian, police chief, Willie 3 73 Pearl. M1ddleport. Ohto ate or be forever barred fr om voler ol MP.IC'JS Co umy and
~1 60 will take not•ce that on assert•ng the same. for foreclomusl have a memberShip 11cket
Guinther, Bentley, Kathryn Crow, 47-21
82 . F1rst Fam1ly Mort - sure ol sa•d mortgage. the mar sard socrety ol 1982
MOVING SALE
Mick Ash, Philson, and Williams, gage Corporat1on. filed 1ts shalling of any hens. and the 1n Cand•dat
P.s· pet•l•ons m11st
SAT., OCT. 16-10 A.M.
council members, Jean Hall, Im- Complo1nt 1n Case Number sale of sa•d real estate. and th at bP. lded w11h the Secretary no
18264 1n the Court of Com- the proceeds of sa•d sale be latP.r !han 5 p m Monday. Oc·
John Wells Property
boden, Kenne th Cundiff, a nd Naomi mon Pleas of Me1gs County. appl1ed
to the paymen t of pla•n- lOber 25. 1982 Only persons
51962 St Rt. 338
Oh•o alleg•ng thai the defend- t•lfs cia1m •n the proper order of holdrnll membersh1p tickets at
London .
ants. Ray E Just•s. Jane Doe. li S pnonty and for such other thP. close ot th e .1982 Co unty
Apple GrOYe
Unknown Spous~ . 1! any. of Ray and further rel1 ef as •s JUS! and Fa1r or at least ! 15) .: alendar
Bedroom
suite. living
E Jus t•s. Oott•e l JustiS. aka. equ1table
days before !he date of elect•on
room suite, kitchen lumi·
Dollre Lou Jushs and John
The defendan ts named arP. Qualll1ed to vote Pe t•t •o n ~
Doe. Unknown Spouse. 1f any. above are requ•r ed to answer can bP. obtamed from the Fa•r
lll'e, tools, large tool
ot Oott •e L ::Just1s. aka. Uot11e on or before th e 18th day of SecrP.tary
chest,
saw, skill saw, boat
Just1 s. aka. Dollie Lou JustiS. November. 1982
The Me•os Aqnculturat So- and motor, dishes, pots &amp;
have
or
cla1m
to
have
ah
InterC
iely
By
Mrs
Wallace
Brad
·
Brunton
said
he
will
release
any
!Continued from page 1)
F~rs t Fam ily Mo rtgage
est 1n the lollow• ng descr1bed Corporat1on
pans, linens, 10 gal. jar,
ford. SecrP.tary
information the co mmittee
rea l estate
BY
CARLI
SL
E.
BIR
GE.
many misc.
thing, we s hould not be 11lken off the discovers.
REAL ESTATE
1101 7. 14. 2 1. 3tc
McNELLIE ANO RINI
DESCRIPTION
committee," he said.
R1 chard L McNelhe
" I don 't intend to be a part tocovSITUATED IN TH E Townsh•P
Attorney for Pla1n!lff
Another issue for the county erin·g up any1hing," he said.
ot Chester. COUNTY OF Mergs
100 1 Euclid Avenue SUite
members is the department of menBrunton said he will ask the com- IN THE STATE OF OHIO. ANO 600
Real Estate - General
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS
ta l health' s control of the mittee to investigate several "speCleveland. Oh•o 4411 5
TRACT ONE
1216) 861 ·5282
committee.
Berng m Sect10n 36 and becific areas" suggested to him by
WE UNDERSTAND THAT
q1nn1ng at the South west YOU
The group is "out of bala nce" be· county residents.
WILL. AFTER THE lAST
corn er of a 27 acre tract of real
OF PUBLICATION. PREca use four of the seven members
1
U the s11lte comr:tittee members
estate conveyed tp Roy H DATE
PARE AND FILE WITH THE
E. MAIN
were chosen by Kurtz, Brunton
Pooler and t1s1e J Pooler by CLERK
will not agree to examine these
OF THE COMMON
deed dated June B. 1951 . and PLEAS COURT.
sa id.
AN AFFIDAVIT
areas, "there will be some firerecorded 1n Volu me 166. page OF SUCH SERVICE
POMEROY, OHIO
BY PUBLI"They (the state appointees! can
~79 . Me•gs County Deed· Re- CATION. PLEASE FORWARD
works," Brunton said .
cords. reference to wh1ch 1S
outvote us on any thing, " Brunton
US A COPY OF THE FIRST
He declined to name what areas
hereby made. thence North TO
said.
EGALNOTICE OF SERVI CE BY
he will ask to be Investigated.
396 feet. th ence East 330 feet. L
PUBLICATION IN THE ABOVE
NEW LISTING - Racine - Building ~te or !railer lot. ApproxiAlthough Kurtz has said the state
th ence South 396 feet to the CAPTIONED
In addition to Brunt9n and Niday,
MATTER FOR
mately 2 113 atres, of which most is wooded, wrth a'Septic tank.
center of the 8ublrc road; OUR RECO RDS
will decide If the findings of the com- the committee will include Paul
thence West 33 feet to the
Water and electric are dvailal*!. $5,000.
mittee will be made public, local
Case!, the MeigsCountyrepresenta- place of begmnrng. conta1nrng (91 16. 23. 30( 10) 7. 14. 21.
3 acres. but su bJeCt to all legal 6tc
members said they feel the public
tive, and the four state appointees.
NEW LISTING - Racine - Approximately one acre of nice la~~g
h1ghways
should !mow wha t the group
laod which is set up lor a Ira~ wrth septic tank, drilled well, publrc
PRE MI SES CO MMONLY
discovers:
KNOWN AS Rt 3. 36659
waler, and electric. Also, a new lwo car block garage with storage
Te)(as Road. Pomeroy. Ohro
room and a coocrete patio. $8,1XXJ.
"This (controversy) has gone on
45769
so long that, good or bad, what we
The pla•nt•fl furt her alleges
MIDDLEPORT - Athree or four bedroom home wilh a fireplace in
that by reason of default of the
find should be made pubUc," Niday
the dining room, large master ,bedroom, almost new furnace, new
defendan
ts
rn
the
payment
of
Veterans
Memorial
said.
promrssory note. accordrng 10
water lank, new carpet lhrougllout Asking $31.~.
•ts tenor. the condrtrons of ~
Admitted--Matilda Rowley ,
PRICE REDUCED- On lh~ beautiful brick and 'lrame ranch with
Workers sought
Pomeroy; Catherine Mees, Pomea fuU basement lhree .bedrooms, l'h baths, lamily room, and a
roy; Bertha Nichols, Middleport;
Gordon Wooten, area leader of
large nice laying lot in Fairview. Blended rate loan availal*!. Now
Blended Rate Program.
$47,500.
the Green Thumb Program, an- Robert Manley, Mlddleport; EiiT'~r
NO CLOSING POINtS
Pickens, Racine; Fanny Hale,
nounced today he Is seeking two to
PRICE REDUCED - On lh~ 1wo story horne with almost new
and
Pomeroy.
three workers age 55 and up.
siding and roof, tour bedrooms. 2'h baths, nice front porch, back
Discharged--Bessie
Turley,
He will be at the Senior Citizens
BELOW MARKET INTEREST RATES
patio, and in good nei&amp;hborhood..Now $29.~.
Center Tuesday, Oct. 19, from 9 Randy Smith, James Yeauger, Docould SAVE you up to $1000
rothy Kimes, Beatrice Rairden.
OHIO RIV£~ fROfiTAII( - Is pert 'of the-charm Ollh~ 75 acre
a. m. until noon taklng applications.
•'
farm and owner'despenlely needs to sell. Tills~ a deal you can't
or more on homes currently
,.
resist Home has lhree bltdroolns, new bath and septic system.
financed at Diamond Savings.
Nice big bam. anct aflfiiOlllrnatBI five primitive cam~tes. Near
,.
the new bridle. $52,000.
· - .
,
'·
'
REAL TORSI
'
Llmltecl
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI ... . . . . ....... 992-6191
Saturday through Monday:
time
Jtln Trussell ............... . .... ...... 949·26110 • ••
offer.
DoHte s Turner .. . ....... . .... . . . .. ... 992-5692
Cloudy with a chance i:&gt;f showers northeast and fair elsewhere
:,
Ofllce .' ...... .'..... ..... ....... . . ..... 9'2-22"
•:
Saturctay. Fair Sunday. Chance of showers Monday. Highs in the 50s
'
__,
•
to low 60s Saturday, wannlng to mostly 60s Sunday and ,Monday.
•
Morning lows in the upper lis and low 40s Saturday and mostly in the
40s Sunday and Monday.
~~~" " , .,..~

n ._.. , , a ~

~ ·

I ( " " ' " ' " • " ' ' '"' " ' " '"' ' " "' '
)

· --c.-,

&gt; ~Oil&lt;l o M\

.

,.~

~,

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

...

........

·····-····""'''"'
~

&amp; ...

~~-~·"'

~

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

~

II ~ ' '~ "

, y

/l ~A

-· t~A""'"'

. ........_.

.. .. . . . o

~

!~

_

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

~-- ""

·-

1 1 - l f O I I f l .............

..

..

1)

_,_ .,.
._,_,
===-·- - . ·-L-__
--·. -

IJ&amp;t

01(,..,.., ..... . . .....

··--

Members unhappy

608

PH.992·2259

.•'

,,

.......

Extended Ohio forecast

..

John Wells
John Wells, 68, Route 2, 'Racine,
diedThursdaymornlngatVeterans
Memorial Hospital. Arrangements
are being made at the Ewing Funeral Home.

'

·A .
[B ....••::
£!i:i________
L----------"IL_;,;,.._
IIUUUII

I

.......J ,! '
1

'I

S

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rl. SO East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
F
E ·
t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC

'

Po111&lt;!roy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174

•

arm'

INSULAT.IQN

2 26

LAFF·A·DAY

~

breed. ~~
J
r-::::::::::::::--...:::..._

•Storm Windows •Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

Rod bone puppies. Call 446 _
3846 .

qu1pmen

J ames Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

homo call 446 . 46 75 or af·
tor 5 ca11446-8647.

9-22 -1 mo

1:=======·=="='=-~=========t=========+=========~ Cell614-245·6688.
Kittens. long hair &amp; short .
Need home for loving pets .
FOR SALE
C.
R.
MASH
Puppies &amp; kittens. For info .
MILLER
10 USED
cell Meigs Co. Humane So·
ROOFING
CONSTRUCTION
cioty . 614 -992-6606.
ELECTRIC
MOBILE HOMES
4 part Beegle puppys. 6
"FURNISHED"
Custom . kitchens . and
H. l. WRITESEL
weeks old . 985 -3567.
SERVICE
10' &amp; 12' WIDE
bathrooms. ;_,·Remodeling,

Olfice Ph. 742-2003
MIDDLEPORT - Close lo
shopping and park. like new
three bedroom home, large ltv·
ing room, family room with fite·
place, new carpe( gas furnace.
Asking $45.000
NEAR RT. 7- Five rooms and
bath home ~IS on approx. 2'A
acres, spring· water. apple
trees, grape arbor, gas heat.
Asking $15.000.00.
CHESTER - Beautiful brick
and cedar 3 bedroom home.
Full basement 2 car garage on
approx. 7.60 acres. 'A miles
from Chester. Asking $75,000.
POMEROY - SUPER BUY on
this 6 room home on Brick
Street Payments as low as
$125 after down payment Ask·
ing $12,1XXJ.OO.
ST. RT. 143 - Two doublewide homes Jo be finished inside, srtuated on I acre lois
wrth septic tanks. Call for more
details.
. velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Phone 742-3171

add-ons, new homes,
plumbing, electric, siding.

S3,000 to S4,500

• c nwn, pno·ts
• N ew or ~rp.w

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces

•

• f ' ,1 11lfll1q

BROWN'S
Trailer Park

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992·2791

6

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

1.....-;;;;-;;N~·:;;;eiilis tieke'y~r
1.:::
~:'·:,~t
~ ~h~~~~~ni~;.
···;__ ,_~~;

..,

Help Wanted

AVON . Give yourself 11
Christmas Bonus . Sell
Avon . Earn good money, set
your own hours . Call 614698· 7111 collect .
Ladies. need extra money for
Christmas? Jobs available.
full or pert time . For inter·
view cell 614-949 -2360 or
write P.O.Box 26. Pomeroy,
Ohio.

9-4. Womens &amp; boys clo·
thing . Some small appliances, motor-cycle. Thomas.
437 Grant. Midd leport.

JUST graduated 8o unsufe
about your future7 The West
Virginia Army National
Guard can help you decide.
We ara looking for high
school seniors &amp; graduates
to train in communication•.
administfation, supply. ma chanics. &amp; many other
fields . If you qualify you may
be eligible for an enlistment
bonus and college or VoTech assistance . Be one of
West Virginias best. For
more information , call 304 ·
675-3950 or toll tree 1800-642-3619 .

Yard sale-180 S. Second
Middleport-Friday and Saturday. Oct. 15 &amp; 16. 9 a.m.
till 7177.

WANTED : female vocalist .
bass guitarist . for pop rock
band. Call weekends, 304 273 -2130.

11

y,
Doberman, female to good

---------JReal Estate - General

Geo. S. Hobstetfer, Jr.
Broker

~-

11-.-.:.:';:;,:;;;.,._,_==.o-~i111
1

v. German Shepherd a.

Free Estimates

jl

2 puppiao ready to go. Call I I ~ 1
614-268-1932.
L~
Pert Redbone female, 4
mos. old . Call after 9AM .
614-246-6666.
l-:-' 11--

•Insulation oStonn Doors

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM SIDING

11

~rm

Giveaway

7 wkold pupo. mixed
Call 446-2962.
Datoun fran;te 8o cab lor juck .
Call 614-379-2469.

Parts &amp;Service
I·Hfc

tS• aear :

Yard Sale

7

Yard &amp; moving sale. Friday .
9·6 . 2 mi. north of Chester.

Lost and Found

123 Park Or. 3-family , child - Have a Basket Party. Earn
rena clothes large adult free baskets for gifts. 304 ESTIMATES
inst~~~~~;~tial
LOST all black female cat at clothes. Iota of what nots .. 675-2069 .
corner
of Bob McCormick 8·3. Tues . Wed . Thurs.
or949-2263
I
&amp; Commercial
Rd &amp; 588 . If found please
. .:
Rl. 124
Minersville. Oh.
7 " '' '
Call 742-3195
Situations
3-femily garage sale. Rain or 12
cell 446-1765.
8 20
shine. Oct. 14&amp; 15, 8 :30to
Wanted
PH. 992-3324
9-29·1 mo.
LOST 8 mo. old. brown and 4:30 . Fairview Rd . Camp
I~:::::::::::::::::~
white spotted. Tree and Conley. Pt . Pl. Elec. stove.
~
Welker Coon Hound pup, in GE dishwasher, swag lights, Tree trimming &amp; removal.
vincinity of Mudsoc and curtains. glassware, old mir - 614-949 -2129 O f 614 SYRACUSE-RACINE
EUGENE LONG
Fairfield-Vance Rd., Satur- rors, pressure canner, brand 992-6040 .
RESIDENTS
day night. Reward. Call name toys, Sears toy riding - - - - - - - - lcSuperior Siding Co. Torry
Reynolds, 446-9741 tractor and wagon. picnic ta- Have vacancy tor elderly
NEW SEWER
992-2663
ble. patio table. lounger. man or woman in my private
alter 6PM .
HOOKUPS
POMEROY, OHIO
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
porch swing, childrens home at Tuppers Plains .
Plaster Craft and
INSURED
LOST: In Hemlock Grove books, tricycle, bicycle. little Good eK perienc e . .667 Complete Gutter Wot1t,
area on Sat .. Oct. 9. Female girls and womens clothing , 6329 or 667 -3402 .
Ceramic Bisque
BUILT AND
FREE ESTIMATES
Complete Remodeling,
Walker Hound, black &amp; misc.
REWORKED
Teachers,
Scout
Roofing of all types.
white. Collar with name.
to Do. Exp. mother
Eber and Bill
Leaders and Organiza·
GARAGE sale. 1st. hou se Wanted
614-992-7548.
Wot1ted in home area 20
will babysit in her home . Mations , Come In and
on
right
on
Greer
Rd
.
Friday
years.
son. 304-773-5758 .
Take A look At Our
Found -Collie type dog . &amp; Saturday. 9 -1 Misc.
Package Deals. Dis·
FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-7181
black &amp; white male. 614Vacancy in boarding home
counts Available.
992 -5809 .
CAll 843-3322
or949-2182
for
elderly . Room &amp; board
LESSONS STARTING o
Public
Sale
8
reasonable. 614-992 -6022
9·20·1
mo
pd.
CALL or STOP IN E .
9/ 24 / 1 rna
9-17-2 mo Pd
FOUND : Doberman, long
&amp; Auction
or 614 -992 -6748 .
TO SIGN UP .
Bottom area . 614 -985 SALE ON
M
3524.
Woman nee ds work, will do
'ORNAMENTS
' Auction . Sat . Oct . 16 . all kinds of clea ning. small
lost . long haired female ca· 10:AM , Buckeye Wood Pro· pai nt jobs also. 304-675 Kitchen Cabinets
lico cat in vicinity of 'I• mile ducts, At . 217 &amp; 218 , Scot · 9100 .
_
FOR FU TUR
OUT
EUSF. "
Roofing · Siding · Con·
8
out Sandhill Rd . Anyone town, Oh . Sawmill
Public Sale
crete Patios
Side·
finding this cat please return equipment. conveyors. ma &amp; Auction
walk s · New Construe·
to Robert Watson or call Jo rs, steel building for ramo· 13
Insurance
ton
Remodeling
304 -675 -6145 Of 675 - val, JO 360B dozer. Cat 910
Custom Pole Barns .
5604 .
lifts . Chipvan, fl at bed
And Home Maintenance
trailer, Int. &amp; Transtar tan·
• Roofing of all types
FOUND · Biack &amp; whit e dams. Ford dump, Chev . SANDY AND BEAVER In• Siding
CHARLES SAYRE
puppy, Sandhill Rd ., near fl atbed. other misc. (land suran ce Co. has of fered services for fir e insuran ce
• Remodeling
304-675·4097.
cemetery.
All Makes
for sale thru owners) . Star coverag e in Gallia County
AND SON
• Free estimates
• Dish·
• washers
Ind . Auctions. V. Trageser for almost a century . Farm ,
e20 Yrs. experience
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
washers
Auction ee r . 716 - 457 - home and personal property
• Ranges • Refrigerat·
Route 1
3005.
coverag es are available to
TOM HOSKINS
Yard Sale
7
ors
This is the last of a large fami ly who has kept everything
Long Bottom, Oh. 45743
meet individual needs . Con Ph.
742-2834
or
949-2160
• Dryers • Freezers
985-4193
Auction every Fri . night at tact Foster Lew is, agent .
from their grandparents and Eva was 88 years old when
OO·tl c
Yard
Sale
Fri.
&amp;
Sat.
.
9AM
PARTS
and
SER~I~~
c
9
1~
1
mo
the
Hartford
Community
she passed on. from Racine. Ohio take Co. Rd. 28 . Watch
to 5PM . Green Acres Sub. Center. Truckloads of new Phon e 379-2204.
for sale signs.
Oiv. (Rt . 141). Clothing, merchandise every week . Are you paying to much for
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
~---------+----------+----------j stroller, car seat. pans. bed Consigments of new and your hos pital -health insu·
Cupboard with glass door. htghback bed, spool bed, pump
spreads. macrame and X- used merchandise always ran ee. Call Ca rroll
mas crafts.
orga n. oil lights. lanterns. dressers. sewmg rocker. ktlchen
welcome. Richard Reynolds Snowden , 446 -4290.
ROUSH
coal stove. stands, wash bowl &amp; ptlcher. baskets. copper
Auctioneer. 275 -3069 .
Yard Sale Thursday Oct .
wash botler. chest of drawers. mtsc . hair combs, old dtshes.
ALL STEEL &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
14th &amp; Friday 15th at Pete MT. Alto Auction Sale, evchurn. misc. cha1rs, couch. wagon seat. treadle sewmg
POLE BU LDI NGS
New Homes - extensive
CARPENTER
cox residence on Old Route ery Saturday night, 6 p.m.
machine, and lots more.
remodeling,
160 at Evergreen .across Open Saturdays noon till 15
Schools
Sizes start from 12'x16'
"Electric work
SERVICE
from OeWhitts P1umbing .
"MISC. "
Sale time for consignments .
Instru c tion
UTILITY
BUILDINGS
·custom
Pole
Bldgs.
'lddonsond
remodeling
Step ladder, misc. garden &amp; yard tools. push lawn mower,
Emma Bell, Auctioneer . Will
Sizes !rom 6'x6' Up
&amp; Garages
-Roolinl'"diulteowool
Yafd Sale Oct. 15 8o 16 . buy your estate or sell for
plow. stn gle tree. and exlension ladder.
"R00fi W k
-Concroteworlt
10Am -4PM , 101 Chilli · you . 304-428-8177 .
t0 24'136'
Karate the uttimate in self
·
ng or
-Piumbinf and
cot he Rd . Gallipolis . Tools,
Insulated Do1 Houses
•Alumt'num
&amp; Vt'nyl
ESTATE Of EVA ARCCHER-Case No. 23881
defence all priva te lesso ns.
electriu work
clothing. furniture &amp; house Men: women. &amp; children . In ·
RUSSEL ARCHER - EXECUTOR
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
SidinJIS
(FteeEstimalesJ
hold items.
9 Wanted To Buy
struction thru black belt .
IS Years Experience
V C YOUNG Ill
Dan Smith
Jim Carnahan
Rt. 3. Box 54
GREG ROUSH
• •
Two Family Gafate Sate
Also available Karate uni 949-2708
949-2033
Ph.Rm~~4~~i59l
PH. 992-7583
992-62 15 or992·7314
Charotais Lake, OJ White WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni- form s puching and kicking
ture
and
Antiques
Qf
all
Eats - Cash - Posil ive J.D.
bags, and protective equipor 992-2282
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rd. Friday Oct 15 and Satur·
10 .6.11,
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, ment. Jerry Lowery &amp; Asso"Not reponsible for accidents or loss of property."
446-3159 Of 256 -I 967 in ciates Karate Studio . 14 3
=========:+-====9=·S:·I:::m:o====-~======9=·3:0:·1:1c~ day Oct. 16. 9:00-5:00 .
Burlingt on Rd .. Jackson .
Garage Sale Friday and Sat· the evenings.
urday Oct . 15 &amp; Oct . 16 . Buying Gold. Silver, Pfati · Oh . Call614 -286-30 74 .
Annvqnsvmvnll
Good winter clothing. coats, num, old coins. scrap rings
I
jackets , pants suits . &amp; silverware. Daily quotes Finishing charm, skin care &amp;
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
sweater. househo ld items . available. Also coins &amp; coin modeling classes. Also Loll I
SIDING
i-pop ages 7 thru 14. For
3 Announcements
Down Rt. 7, Clipper Mills
I
tum right 3rdhouseon right. supplies for sale . Spring Val - more info. call Gail McHugh
I
ley Trading Co., Spring Val- at 614-992 -7440 .
ley Plaza, 446· B025 or
I
Baird'
s
4
Family
Gigantic
SWEEPER and sewing ma - Yard Sale. Oct. 14,16,16. 3 446-8026 .
I
chine repair, parts, and
Syracuse- R seine
I
supplies. Pick up and deliv- miles out Georges Creek &amp; We pay cash for late model 18 Wanted to Do
Area
Creek. 1st house on
"Beautiful, Custom
I
ery. Davis Vacuum Cleaner, Mill
Bunce Rd . X-large to small clean used cars.
Built
Garages"
one
half
mile
up
Georges
Frenchtown Car Co.
I
FREE ESTIMATE~
Call for free siding
Creek Rd. Call 446-0294 .. clothes. knick knacks. childBill Gene Johnson
General Haulin g and Tras h
I
ren clothes. etc.
PH. 614-992·2681
estimates, 949·2801 or •
446-0069
-' remove\ Service . Reliable
I
949-2860.
Di's Craft Supply, Spring
or 614-992-3752
and dependable. Call 446 - - - - - -- - -I Write your own ad and or - - · ... , u1cril with this
No Sunday Calls
Valley Plaza. 446-2134 . Garage Sale Sat. Oct. 16th. Would like to buy A No. 1 3159 aftef 6PM 256-1967.
ANYTIME
anHousehold
items
and
Winter hours: Monday thru tiques. 3 mile South of Cad-. female Rabbit dog . Call
I coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you .get
Friday 10 to 5, Saturday 10
3·11-tfc
446-1962.
1017/1 mo.
I results. Money not refundable.
to 4. All cross stich supplies. mus. Rt . 141 . Watch tor
fiRBfHjiHI
signs.
I
BEDS-IRON . BRASS , old
1
I Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
~--============~t;::::::::::::::~-o_.M_._c_.___________ Garage Sale Friday· 1 Kit- fumiture, gold. silver dol·
I
Dance Class. Ballet. Tap.
Business
Iars. wood ice boxes. stone 21
cabinets. flour bin · jars.
Jan, Jazzercise. Registera- chen
antiques. etc ., Com I
Opportunity
misc.
Off
588,
,clothes,
S&amp;WlV
tion Oak Hill Teen Center, Fairfield· Centenary Rd .
plete households . Write:
Address...:.·- - - - - - - Oct. 16, 11AM. Call 614M.D. Miller, At. 4, Pomeroy,
AND
245-6568 .
Oh . Or 992-7760.
Earn S700 -S1,200 monthly
GArage
Sale
Fri.
&amp;
Sat.
Oct
.
APPLIANCE SERVICE
operating your own part 16 &amp; 16. Clothes many
1Phone--------obac!&lt;l&gt;oe
Shooting Match every Fri· sizes,
's white shirts, Gold. silver, sterling. je- time , in -hom e business .
eoexcav8ting
dey, 7:30PM. Robert Burns mens men
Chester, Ohio
good
suits, roller welry, rings, old coins &amp; cur- Qualify for company car,
1Prinl one word in each
eseptic systems
home, on Harrisburg skates,
books,
toys. miscel- rency. Ed Burkett Barber travel. retirement program .
space below. Each in·
edump truck service
Adamsville Rd.
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382
low
prices.
Approx . Shop. Middleport . 992 · Repeat profit s on co nsume ·
laneous.
I tilial or group of figures.
eseedlng end reclaiming
Dewll'{fle
Williams
ble products. Doesn't inter·
1%
mile
out
Bulaville
. 3476.
I counls as a word. Count
•Recine and Syracuse
Anyone who is kin to anyone lett onto Kerr· Bethel Rd
8o Scottie Smith
fere with pres e nt
Rd.
1 name and address or w ••~. 1
6 · ._10
-hoolcup
by
nen:re
of
Stimel.
Please
Old
furniture,
glass
&amp;
china
.
AI makeo end models
employment . Not door to
8th house on right. Watch
Wotlc lnoun&gt;d and
contact me. Mrs. Everett for
1 phone number If used ....... d•Y ida-y 1 d•vs l il~vs
Ant.w1na Installation
signs
at
160
&amp; Bulaville Clocks. phones, fans . quilts, door . We train you Call
Guaranteed
Hamilton,
Rt.
1
Box
269.
ll gel beller results --+-...:..j.:.:~~.,;_+--·i
paintings. baskets, banks. 446-1988.
Hoooe collo and ohop
or call 446-2826 .
I ifYou'you
PH. JIM CLIFFORD
Flemingsburg, Ky 41401 .
describe fully,
1•••• S •••
coin machines, oil &amp; electric
service available
I give price. The Senllnel To 15
1...... f ...
992-7201
- - - - - - - - - l c3 Family Carport Sale Satur· lamps, railroad items, war
9 -20-1 mo. Pd .
1017/tlc
Golf Lessons. John Teaford. day.
I reserves the right lo -:;::::;f--t:;;;;i;;-.;-;;;
••
Oct. 16th, 10 to 6. on items, weather vanes. tools. 22 Money to Loan
Chester, Ohio.
1classify, edll or relect 2.To&gt;~25f---+l":.;.·~"'':;.;.;"'·~··--!
road to Cheshire·Kyger knives &amp; swords. marbles.
base-bell cards. indian arti·
1put
any adIn. Your
wi ll be ~~
~ ..~.,~
~~
lhe ad proper
To 3~5 l._l·~···~·!..~...~,~
Gun shoot, Recine Gun School.
facts, comic books. post
1 ctasslftcallon
If you'll
Club. Every Sunday starting Yard Sale Wed., Thurs., Fri., cards. pocket watches, gold HOME LOANS 14% fi xed
These cash rates
1 check lhe proper box
1 p.m. Factory choked guns 4 Fmaily. New items every· &amp; silver. Osby Martin . 614· rate . Leader Mortgage, Ohio
Include discount
on ly 1 -800 -341 -6554 ,
I below,.
only .
dey. 4 miles out 775 on 992-6370.
WVa . 614-592 -3051
I
Recine
Fire
Dept.
is
sponaor·
Wanted-Used
coal
&amp;
wood
right.
I ( )Wanted
ing 1 gun shoot every Set. In Southern Football build - l _n_o_v•_._6_1_4_-7_4_2_·_3_1_8_6._-Dozers
)For Sole
23 Professional
I (1 )Announcement
night otarting Oct. 9 at 6:30 ing in Racine Sat .. Oct. 16,
-Backhoes
17. - - - - - Services
I ( )For Rent
in
Beahan
.
Factory
p.m.
-Dump Trucks
18.
choke 12 gauge shotguns to 5. Proceeds toward foot ·
I
-Lo-Boy
10:00 to 4 8o Sun., Oct. 17
19,
-Trencher
lntulu -----Atern
_only.
_:__ _ _ _ _ _lcI
ball building.
------C&amp;l Boo\keeping
-Water
I 1.
leeelpll
20. ------~
Juliea Attic Book Exchange. 4 family Garage Sale. Thurs.
Bookkeeping &amp; taJt service
-Stwtr
II 2.
Open Oct. 11 from 12-5.
for all types of businesses.
21. - - - - - -GIS Lines
CANDLELIGHT INN
Monday-Friday . Rt .124, 8o Fri .. Oct. 14 8o 16. 10 a.m. 11 Help Wanted
I 3. _ _ _ __
Carol Neal 446-3862
-Septic
Systems
22. - - - - - to 6 p.m. Wilma H. Casto, - - - - - - - - -Batwoon Cheshire &amp;
outakle of Recine.
Llrao
or
Smotl
Jobs
I 4. _ _ _ __
S.R.
124.
Portland.
lllddloport, Ohio
23. - -- - - '
PIANO TUNING 8o REPAIR
PH. 992-2478
~
P~RMANENT
PRESENTS
IO·J.I
mo.
""
24.
-Moving Sale starts Oct. 14, Need 6 local persons to help Call Bill Ward for appoint ·
I~ ·----...
HAIR
REMOVAL
1 6. _ _ _ __
Mmhall Tenq1nt Band
., Fri., Set ., Sun . teach &amp; sellcreftcl111ses. No ment , Ward 's Keyboard .
25. - - - - - Profeaelonal Electrolysis Th'ura
7, _ _ __ __
Glauwere,
pots, pens, experience necessary, good 446-4372 .
Wed.,
Fri.
&amp;
Sat.
Canter. A.M.A. approved. clothes. tables,
26. - - - - - earningsforthosewhoquel·
8, _ _ _ __
in October
Doctor referels, by eppolnt· lamps, beda. Udleschairs,
briog ify. Interviewing next 3
27. - - - - - ment only. 304 - ~76-8234 .
Weti.·Draft Nile
,
9, _ _ _ __
your men . Hemlock Grove, weeks. Write Trl Chern, P.O.
28. - - - - - Oh. 33 walt turn right onto Box 2266, Columbus, Dh
to. _ _ _ _ __
(all draft beer' Yt ·price)
29. - - - - - Thurs.·Pool Tourn. Nih
I""
18 than loft on old 33, at the _4_3~2_1_8_.- - - - - - - 31 Homes for Sale
' 4
Giveaway
y turn right on 39 come peat
11. - - - - - - 30. - - - - - Daily Specials
. .
I
Hemlock Grove pool office, Qualified teacher to come to
31
12.
t.
Not Mentioned
\
tum right on gravel rd. one my home to teach 9 yr. old
ANY PER SON who hooany·
girl full time. Wages dis· In grourid concrete pool on 2
13.
32. ---~-- I
Open 7 days a week
s
..
'·
ARUTOI.
124 P&amp;omTRtrUCoy,KOH ·. thing to give oway and doeo mile. Watch for signs.
cu11ed
time of inteNiew. acre lot. Also has a 3 bdr. air
14.
33. - - -- - - - 1
Carryout Beer &amp;.
not offer or attempt to oHer · 226 E. 2nd. St. Clothoo, good 2nd Income. Contact conditioned house with full
34.
1·
Wine Available
any other thing for ule may
stove, dish weaher. Steven Jackson., At. 1 Box basement, 2 WB fireplaces,
I•
Extra Special
· REPAIR
1 place an ad In this column. elec.
new carpet. Would consider
35, _
16
mlec. Next to Luther•n 16, Ewington. Oh 45627
lower valued property in
·
lH
- j'
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10 to 2
Also Transmission · 1 Thera wit be no chorve to church. Oct.16 &amp; 16. 9 to 6.
tho odvartl-.
:
Mall Thll .C oupOn with Rem . ance
Drink any drink
PH; 992·5682 ·
Eam extra money for Christ· trade or will finance with
Roln
or
ohlnt.
•
·
1
_ mas. Sell Avon. E•rn good low down payment 8nd 10%
·I
The Dally Sentinel . ,
·'
1
for llow PIICt
or 992·7121
Puppteo 9 wks. otd. 2 mole,
.. • Frict.y, Oct . 15. Urry •••· set your own houra. interest, reduced 1$6,000.
8
I
,
111 Court St. · ·
1
Phone 992·9913
3·2Hfc
3 femele, vory ployfu1 ond
~
Located 123 Garfield
Lemley
res . Hutchlnoon C• 11 448 · 3368 or 446 · Call446-164'6.
: Avo.
4
2168.
' - - - -- - - , - - Sub.-Div. Rutllnd.
to-_3-·t_m_•·,;,...t' IL..,..,....----......--''' t..:.g_en_t_r,_._c_._n_3_e_7_·7_8_7_2_.
FREE

PH. 992·6011

repair service and

L~==~==~~·"~cj:========
-~·+======~3~·7~·~tf~c~

FIREPLACES

'DABBLE SHOP

&amp;

CHIMNEYS
CALL AL
742-2328

~====::.!:=:====~

;-

·~ c~T

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

a

ESTATE AUCTION

Daily Sentinel

4

Business Services
from theSEs:ffest Heater
Core to the larpst Radiator.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

-

The Daily r

Ohio

r,:::::::::::=:::::::::::;-r;:::::::::::::::::;-r;:::::::::::=::=::=~;=;==;:7:;:77:~~~~==~
COMPLETE
J&amp;L BLOWN
RADIATOR
BOGG

HOBSTETTER REALTY

Representing Mays before the
Supreme Court was Point Pleasant
attorney David Nibert, who
represented him in the original
trial.
Mays was sentenced to Ufe in
prison with mercy, meaning that he
would be eligible for parole after
serving a minimum of 10 years.

....

ft

54 Misc . Merchandise

•
•
•
Mays requests convtctton
revtew
PT. PLEASANT - Dexter
Mays, convicted of first-degree
murder In Mason County Circuit
Court last August, asked the S!1lte
Supreme Court Tuesday to review
his conviction and !He prison sentence because the victim of the
crime paid to be killed .
The Associated Press reported
that according to Mays'
appeal petition, John Wamsley of
Huntington, formerly of Point
Pleasant, wanted to end his own Ufe
and tried to circumvent a suicide
clause in his life insurance policy by
paying Mays $300 to shoot him.
Mays, of Chesapeake, Is appealing his circuit court murder conviction for the Oct. 14, 198l, shooting of
Wamsley.

. • ()d,,14, 1982

SAT., OCT. 16, 1982
10:00 A.M.

Backhoe SeNice

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

YOUNG'S

1

r--..;,-;.. ___._.;...;;"____ . .:;__ ..., ____ .... l

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for .
Classifieds and
Savell I

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

H&amp;G SEWER
HOOK-UPS

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

I

;t--i

PULLINS
·EXCAVATING

2 ~ ~~~~,~~~~~

Roger HVCAII ;
GARAGE

"'''

•••• ,,

't

15.------

t

L-----!~':~~;.0:~ !:!~-----~-J '·'----·____

~

I·

1

I

�1G----The

Sentinel

• Thursday,

Oct. 1 1982

Ohio

Oct. 14,1982

The Doily ~ntinei-Pa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DICK TRACY
31 Homes for Sale

They'll Do It Every Time

For sale by owner . 3 bed room home . large family
room , $5,000 down assume
• 9 %%, 44. 000 mortgage .
Monthly payments only

eXCEPT
"'THE

Ei..ECT~C

MCTEP.,
7HAT
IS --··

• until 2:00 PM. October 22.

only -cont act 614 - 245 -

$250. and up to $395. Baby
beds , $99. Mattresses or
box springs, full or twin .
$58 ., firm , $68. and $78 .
Queen sets , $196. 4 dr .
chests, $42. 6 dr. chests,
$54 . Bed frames, S20.and
$25., 10 gun - Gun cabinets,
$350 .. dinette chairs $20.
and $25 . Gas or electric

32

Mobile Homes

Mobile Homes

for Sale

for Rent

CLEAN

USED

MOBILE

3 bedroom hou se for sal e. HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL1 112 acr e level lot. ha s barn , ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.

Rental

pr operty

for

sale.

Sound inv es tm ent.
614 -70B3 .

Ca ll

S17.500 . Call 61 4 -3BB ·
B153.
Hou se for sal e or rental pur chas e . Fair v iew Sub division . 614 -992 -5348 or

614 -992 -2064.
Middl ep ort : Sale , lease op -

tion . 3 bedroom. dining .
basem ent , garag e . Ni ce
neighborhood . Owner fi nanc ing . S40 's. 614 -99 2 -

2517 .
9 yr . old bi -level , 4 bd .room ,
2 bath . Approx. 1&amp; % ac re. 1/ •
is wood s. Fully equip . kit chen with dish -wa sher . Air cond ., carpet . full patio .
Moving - pric e d l o w .

S49,000 614 -992 -7414 .
HOUSE M eadowbro ok Ad dition, 3 bedro oms . family
room with firepalce . central
air . basement. phon e 304 -

675 -1542.
NEED to sell 6 room hou se
with air co nditio ning . gas
heat. st ove w ith re fri ge ra tor. 2 larg e lot s. large garden
space. 200 yard s off o f main
road in Clift on . Will se ll

cheap . 515000. 304 -773 9192
3 bedroom all elec tric , 105
1st St . Ma so n . WV 304 -

773 -539 2.
For rent or sale. 3 bedroom
house with ba sement . For
infor .· c all 304 -895 - 3516 .
FOUR bedroom ho m e, assu mable mortgage, 7 3/a per cent interest, 1/ • mile on lett .
At . 62 South off At . 2, Pt .
Pleasant , phone 304 -675 -

5265 .

32

1981 14ft x 65 Ventura . 2
bdr ., exc .cond ., set - up. Call

614 - 256 - 17B5 or 614 256 -6265 .
1980 Happy House 14x70 ,
3 bdr . , total e lectri c ,

S11 . 995 . 197B Nashua
14x70 , 3 bdr ., fir epla ce
$11 , 595 . 1981 V entur e
60x14 , 2 bdr ., ga s.
$11 . 495 . 1979 Skylin e

56x 14 . 2 bdr.. S9 .495 .
1979 liberty 60x14 ,
$8 ,795 . 1973 Champion

2 bdr..

$7.495 .

1973 Dartan 60x12. 2 bdr .,

S6.495. 1970 New Moon
60x 12 , with 12 ft!. expando ,
set up in park . S5. 995 . 1966
New Moon 55x12. 2 bdr ..
$4 ,495 . Call Johnson ' s Mo -

: bile Homes. Call446-3547 .
· 1970 El cona 12x65. 2 bdr ..
wood

burner .

Call

For sale one and half acres
more or les s. approximately
600 ft road frontage on
Cora -Centerpoint Rd . neaJ
C ent e rpoint . $3 , 000 .00

Phone 6B2 -6944.

379 -

2124 .
79 Bayview trailer 12 x 65 .
Take over payments . Phone

614-949-2446. Call even ·
ings after 8 . Charles Ritchie .
1973 - 12x60 Baron Trailer .
with wood burner, 8 x 16
porch . Must sell. Moving .

Two acre lot s- 150 ft . road
frontage , city water, behind
84 lumber . Call 304 -675 -

6B73 or 675 -361B .
THREE a cre s, fen ce d ,
12x 60 trail er, welL septic
sy stem , let art , 9 ,000.00 .

Call 304 -895 -3605 or 614 367 -0612 .

dryer. Call 446 -43B3 days.
446 -0139 eve.
Furnished 3 r . private bath ,
845 2nd . Ave ., Gallipolis.
Ref. preferred . Call 446 -

Houses for Rent

room . 614 -992 -7406 .
12x52.

2

bd .room . ga s. partially furnished . und e rpinning .

30 days. Call
1207.

614-256-

Whirpool portable washer.
24 in . wide. real nice, $80.

Small furnished effiency , 1
professional type male only.
Center air &amp; heat . Call 446 -

0957 .

tor. Call 304 -675 -5104 or
675 -53B6.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved . 1.000
gal. tank , price $340. Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup truck . Call614-286 -

V2 acre , thr ee bedr . home,
ba s em ent , c ity school ,
county wat er . Call 216 734 -3734 , ev ening s.

First floor unfurnished apart ment. Inquire at 631 4th
Ave ., Gallipolis.

Firewood $25 .00 pick ·up.
95% hard wood . Jet. Rt .

Very nice 2 bdr . duplex
hou se . Furni sh ed, Main St .,
Ches hire , S185permo ., w ater paid . C all 614 - 245 -

3 bedroom unfurnished apt .
103 Court St. Gallipolis.
S215mo ., S100deposit, no
pet s. ref requir ed . Call446 -

5B1 B.

2572 .

Three bed ., Spring Valley
area. two baths , family roo m
with fir eplace . double gar age, nice neighborhood .
S325 per mo . Depo sit and
refer en ce r e quired . Call

Furnished &amp; part furnished

apt .. adults. Call
or 446 -0171 .

446 - 373~

2 large apartments for rent
in Rio Grande . Call after

614 -3BB -96BO .

7 :00. 61 4-6B2· 70B3 .

Hom e for r ent Hwy 160, 4
mi . from ho spt., $250 per
mo .. pr efer adults , ref . Call

614 -992 -7206
BB2 -2566 .

446 -7322 .

Ca11614 -256 -1413.
For rent two bdr . hou se in
city, full basement , car peted, adults. no pets . Call

446 ·095B .
5 room unfurnished hou se .
10 Edg em ont Dr., Galipoli s.
Adult s only . Call 446 - 1370
aft er 5PM .
Pom eroy -2 bd .room unfur ni shed ho u se. S195 . mo .
Sec urit y d epo sit. $100. plu s
utilit ies . A ft er 6 -ca ll 614 -

992-22B B.
Middleport : Rent, lease op tion . 3 bedroom. dining, fire place . basement, garage.
nice neighborhood . S350 .

614 -992 -2517 .
Sale or rent, Pomeroy . 6
large room house, 1 bath ,
basement . Call for more

info . 614 -992 -72B4 .
Hou se for rent -all new paint .
Some ca rp eting . no inside

pet s. 614-992 -3090 .
$100 . in

Hartford. 304-BB2 -2371
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

or 304 -

Efficiency Apt . Suitable for
1 or 2 people . Roush lane.
Cheshire , Oh . 304 -773 -

5BB2 .
Apartment s.

5 room ho u se in Eureka, un furni shed. deposit require d.

Hou se for rent

2 bedroom furnished apt .

304 - 67 5 -

554B.
APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, houses . Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 -

B221 or 614 -245 -94B4.
Three room furnished apart ment, adults, no pets. Point
Pleasant . Call 304 - 675 -

2453 .
Unfurnished apartments for
rent . Call Automotive

Supply. 8 till 6. 304-675 221B. 304 -675 -6753.
Furnished

apt s.

Adult s.

304 -675 -2257 .
TWO bedroom apartment .
Newly painted . Quiet neigh borhood . Reference re -

quired. 304 -675- 1962.
THREE room furnished
apartment . air condition ,
utilities paid . Private en trance . S226 .00 month .

Trailer on Mill Creek Ad and
trailer space on bulaville Rd .

Call 446 -1052 alter 5.

$4,000. 614 -992 -7324.

$3 , 500 . 00 . 304.-875 1370.

79

r

58

&amp; Vegetables
Cider $2.00 gal. , German

Ridge apples. Red end
Golden Delicious, Rome
Beauty and Wine Sap, 87.00

bushel.

&amp;4.00 y, bushel.

Corner of LeGrande Blvd.
and Portsmouth Rd . Call

446 -B69B.

Firewood . Slabs $101 - - - - - - -- - pickup , cut up slabs $15 , 55 Building Supplies
round wood $20 . Rio
Grande area . Call 614 -246 5B04.
Building materials block 1
brick . sewer pipes, win Blue Ridge Mountain fire - dows. lintels, etc . Claude
place inserts now in stock at Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . Call
Swisher lmphunent Co .• St . 614-245 -5121 .
Rt . 7 North . Gallipolis, Oh.
446-0475.
Build your own garage
24x24 all lumber furnished.
House coal for sale $24ton . S695. Can deliver. Barn
Call 614 -256-6B16 or 614 - pattern also . Call 614- 886 -

256 -6747.

7311.

APPLES-Fitzpatrick• Or-

tion 553 &amp; 218 . Call 614 - 614 -667-30B5.
256-6245.

For sale Restaurant Carryout equipment, used,
lowest prices . RADCO .

304 -523-1378.
One wooden gun cabinet .
holds fiv8 guns. Double
glass doors, 5 shelves. big
drawer In bottom . Complete
with locks, $75 or trade for
pop gun or rifle or trade for
freezer or refrigerator freezer . Can be seen at Rt . 4
Texas Rd .. Box 25. toward
end of Road. house on hill .
20 gallon aquarium. Full
hooded light. All accessories . Fish heater, loader all
$45 or trade for gun. Can be
seen at Rt . 4 Texas Rd .• Box
25, toward end of Road,
house on hill .
Good Siegler fuel oil stove &amp;

275 gallon tank, $150. Call
614-245-5329 .
16ft. goose neck trailer . Call

675 -13B6.

6091 .

45

Capehart AM -FM stero with
8 track, like new. Call 676-

56

DRAGONWYND CATIERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pup-

830. 614-992-621B.

1977 Flot X-19. 4 opd., AC,
52,000 mileo, good cond.,
8 2, 600 or best offer. Call
304·675-3641 after 4 PM
or coll614-379-2262.
19B1 Cutlou Supremo Die·
ael with everything . Will

$9.00 per 100 lbs. Your
containers . Reedaville, Oh .

614 -37B-6296 . No Sun .
Sales.

19BO Chryolor

Cordoba .

low mileage, axe . cond.,
new tires. 614-992-7667or
69 Cadilac . 2 door, new ex-

Mango's. Hot and banana
peppers . You pick-84 .00

bu. Call 843-21B3 after 9
p .m .

aust. $650. 614 -992-7177.
HARTS Uood Cars,

New

Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensive cars in

stocl&lt;.
JEEPS, cera, trucks under
8100. available at local
gov' t sales in your area. Call

!refundable) 1 · 714·6690241 ext. 1B55 for dil8cFarm Equipment

Backhoe will fit just about
any tractor . $3,000. Sandera Auto Sales. 1 at &amp; Sycamore St., Gallipolis. Call

446-B640.
1963 MinneapoHs Moline
tractor, $700 or beat offer.

tory on how to purchase. 24
hra.

1975 LINCOLN Mark IV.
4B,OOO miles, loaded, 30445B-1B54.
74 Chovelle .
4824.

Weened pig, 7 wks. old, for
sale 836 each and hay for

21 •tear, 600 -700 lb. &amp; 93

Registered Nubian mala
goat. 6 years old . Papers in-

Trucks for Sale

1974 GMC PU 360 engine,
auto ., 3A ton . Call 614·388·

HILLCREST

milking . 860. Shade-614696-1234.

with

CLUB calf ohow &amp; sale, Fri·
day, October 15th. 7:00.
Quality oteoro for 4-H &amp; FFA

1976 Ford-1 ton truck .
Good cond. 614-247-3896.

POODLE GROOMING. Cell
Judy Taylor at 614-367 7220 .

goat,

rabred.

now

projects. United Uvaatock
project, Mineral Wells, WV,
Information: call 304-489-

2266.

6 weeks old male Beagl es-

64

Border Collie pups for sale, 8

Hay round bales. Will load.

wks old . Call 614-3792350.

Hay

&amp; Grain

full blooded. 525 . Call446 465B.

Call 446-1B7B.

Rag . male Walker pup . Rag.
Arabian mare. Reg . Quarter
horse stallion . Also metal
bed, mattress free. 614-

clipped,
2062 .

8100 . 304-8B2-

57

Musical
Instruments

1.975 Ford. F 150. Loodod
extras .

614 - 949-

2544.

8 :30
HA! \'OU GO BACK
AND TELL -.otJR
GENERAL I RE.JECT
HIS PROPOSAL!

1976 Ford Bronco, lock in
lock out hubs, 4 · wheel

drive, 3.900 miles. 82700.
304-675-1036 .
1976 Ford % ton

Tranepprcatlutt
71

Autos for Sale

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

1977 Chevy Blazer. good
cond. Call 446-2647.

or 676-

9 :00

1950 Chevy for sale foir

van, customized paint &amp; interior, with captian awivel
chaira, ice box, sink, cabi ~
nent space, couch to bad, air
conditioned, cruiae control,

cond ., partly reatored . Call

53000 mileo. Willing to

614-446-1617.

trade

74-Chevy Malibu Classic. rebuilt angina. new tirea.
mu~flar. ahocks, brakaa.
Cra1g_stereo, Pioneer IPMk-

on. f1 600 or boll offer.
Cell 446-8382.

for

4-whael

drive

aport,

Gutter- Doors. Offering con~
tinuse guttering. sM mleaa
siding , roofing. garage
doors, free eatimates, 614-

HOME .

1973 14x70 mobile home,
3 bedrOOI"· 304-BB2 -2820.

2 bedroom trailer 12x60. 1
ecre of ground. Rt. 2 below
Hendenon •10.000. 3041$75-3882.
1979

22

ft.

2 bedroom furnished .
Adults preferred . No pets .
Deposn: required . 614-992 -

9 :30

304·

CARPENTRY &amp; 18modoling, siding, painting. aome

electrical &amp; plumbing. 304·
578-2989.

2749 .
Furnished 2 bedroom on 1
acre. Coup'e with 1 child

only. $200. month plus dopoal1. 614-742-2753.

1 UNDERSTAND
YOU'VE 5tNT
FOR A
NURSE.

l CAN DO THAT.
I'VE LOOKED AFTER
MY MOTHER AND

FATHER, MY

HUSBAND.
CHILDREN,,,

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

HMMM.MAYBE
WOVJ.J) BE

IT

A

GOOD IDEA

HAVING SOME .

MMIJ.Y HERE.
ORVILLE'S 50 ALONE
IN THE WORLD.

8 . •5800. 304-B95 -36 36
oftor 5 p.m .
14x70 CAMERON. ell elect•
ric, 3 bedroom, both and
centro! olr, t9,000. ~
n3-11143.

Pt.

Pleasant

are1 ,

trailer

•176.00 month pluo utili·
tleo end depoalt. Greer Rd.
Pt. Pleasont . 304-875·
1724.

0

(I)

CD Hill Street

Blues Capt . Furillo is affected by a fellow officer's
suicide and Bates and Coffey arrest a self-proclaimed
extraterrestrial. (60 min .)

Karen is certain she has
found her husband's killer ,
who happens to be employed by her. 160 min.)

Cll

SEWING Machine ropeiro,
service. Authorized Singer
Sciuors.

Fabric

Shop,

(j])
10:15 ffi
10:30 CII
Cl)

BARNEY

Pomeroy. 992-2284.

Newswatch
TBS Evening News
Ster Time

em

Now Heullng houoo coal,

or stoker up to 8 ton.

Limo store, top ooll, fill dirt.
Coli 814·387-7101.

ies of misadventures keep
Quincy from the office, the
police ask a celebrated
pathologist to take over.

(R) (60 min.)

PEANUTS

1----------

CON6RATliLATiON5!
:·

Auto Repair

•

'"
"

·,
•

CIJ PBS Late Night

'fl.U5 DINNER I I-lAVE •
FIXED FOR 'I'Oli TONIGHT
15 PR08AAV THE FINEST
DINNER AN'!' D06 IN
HIS'TORV l-IAS EVER MD!

••

r.c~..
~~~~~~~~~--------, ~ r-------------------..,
I SUPPOSE IT WOULD 8E

IMPOLITE TO ASK FOR

A SECOND OPINION ...

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soolag
Here is a bridge teacher 's
bridge hand. South is in a
four-spade contract. There
is a simpl e way to play it.
South c an
win th e

cart.

r ea lly

ent erprising

tr act by not givmg West a
chance to cash that trump
queen early . He would duck
the first diamond, win the
second. cash just one high
trump and play hearts. West
would take his ace, get out
with a diamond or heart,
watch South cash th e top
clubs and the last heart or
hearts before throwing him
in with that trump queen.

~VHtt'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
6 Dross
I Social grouping 7 Part
6 - plug
of PLO
11 Dog-tired
8 Blackbird
12 Birchbark item 9 European
13 Rodgers and
deer
Hanuner·
10 Ob tributary
s!P.in show
14 Jungle
15 Ginger
heroine
16 Fabric
17 Wife
17 Leghorn
18 Buy
22 Obtrude

Yesterday's Answer

19 Female deer 24 Affectation 35 Ferber
20 No second
27 Dugout
36 Shipshape
chance
VIP
37 Child

25 Prong
21 Equal
29 Snuff out
26 Boarding
22 Made angry 33 Royal title
house sign
23 Lawn
34 Easy
27 Use a blender
destroyer
1 job
28 Besides
29 Fighting
spirit
30 Judge
31 United
32 Continent
34 Movie stage
37 See 13 Across
41 Exterior
42 African
antelope

43

~~ - 's

38 Exclamation
39 French
season
40 Festival

No

Tomorrow''
44 Compensate
DOWN
I Bivouac
2 Sheltered

3Smack
4 Type of foil
5 Roundthe-dock
)0·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEIs

Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this umple A Is
used tor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apootrophes, the length and formation of the worda are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilrerent. ·

()I All In the Family
• ()J Nlgh111ne
11 :4&amp; (I) Sc:reenlng Room
(1) MOVIE: 'Toward the

CRYPTOQUOTES

Unknown'
12:00 (I) Burna &amp; Allen
@ . Auto Rocln.11 ' 82:
•. Worid of Outlewo from
OclftN. MO
(I) Nlghtllne
()I MOVIE: 'Rage to Uve'
•
()J Vagi$ Dan seeks
revenge after being caught
in the middle of a. gangland
shooting. (R) (1 hr., 10
min.)

diamond, play his ace and
king of trumps and lead a
heart. West will take his ace
and if West continues
diamonds, South will be able
to make his contract.
He ruffs the third
diamond, cashes the top
hearts and the ace-king of
clubs and throws West in
with the queen of trumps.
West, who was dealt only
two clubs, will have to lead a
r ed car d. South will ruff in
either hand , discard a club
from the other and score his
game.
West will be mad at himself for not having cashed
his queen of trumps when he
was in with the ace of
hearts. That pia~ would
have upset South s appleA

Opening lead: +Q

liJ

JIMS Wotor S.rvi,.. Cell
l.onlor, 304-875· 7397.

I

of

Goldman .
® Coping with Kids
11 :00 U (I) Newscenter
(I) MOVIE: 'Jazz Singer'
(!) ESPN Sports Center
Cll 0 Cll
Ill ® News
CD Nowo/Sporta/Weather
Cll Dave Allen ot Ultge
11 :15 Cll Allin the Family
11 :30 U (I) CD Tonight Show
CII Another Ufe
Cll Benny Hill Show
Cll Quincy When a ser-

JONES BOYS WATER SER'
VICE. Call 61.4-367-7471
or 614 -387-0591.

FURNITURE repeiNd. an·
tiquu rwatored~ custom ca .
bln•o. 304·178-3871 liter
lp.m.
_

Yrs .

Screenwriters ' William
Goldman.' Tonight's program looks at academy
award
winner
William

General Hauling

Upholstery
300 8-cyl, engine t280. 87
tronomloalon, •1110. Roor
ond •100. Utility bumpor
tiiO. &amp; odd on olr tiiO.
TRISTATE
Frolfto for F1 00 Ford, Y, ton
.UPHOLSTERY SHOP
pickup 1988 Ford _Olloil'* 11 e3 Soc. Aw ., OIIUpollo.
1100 t250. 304-8711·28811. 448-7833 o,r 448· 1833.

Amazing

Cinema

Soloo &amp; Service Shorpon

lump

a....

10:00

academy
William

Electrl'cal

84

We'll do h. Col1448-3169or
814-268· 1987 after 8.

SPECIAL Compl•• enonwl
pelnt joba from •300.
roafa lnstolled from UZII.
Auto Trim Centw, 448·
1888.

gram looks at
award
winner
Goldman.

(I) MOVIE: 'Paper Tiger'
ClliD ® 20120
0 Cll ® Knots Landing

away or aomethlng moved?

77

(1) Taxi Rev . Jim

Phone 446-3B8B or 4484477

Holiday

R1mbler, Free Spirit tr avel
tf'lil•. aelfcontai ned . sleep&amp;

U (I)

(f) Wodehouse Playhouse
(lJ) Screenwriters ' William
Goldman.' Tonight's pro-

WIN N I E

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

HAMMER

South could insure his con-

(j]) Fawlty Towers
0 (I) (!J Cheers Carla

rescues Alex frqm a gam·
bling binge in Atlantic City .
ClliD (121 It Takes Two

675-112B .

Honda CX 500 Deluxe·oheft

Good uaed metol tool box
for wide bed plcku p. Coli
445·0849 otter IIPM.

Pass

Jeffrey lyons take a look
at what's happening at the
movies.

gas. 614 -992 -3401 .
USED MOBILE
676-2711 .

Pass

(f) Good Neighbors
(fi) Sneak Previews Cohosts Near Gabler and

89B-B205.

drlva·w•ter cooled·priced to

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Pass

riel's love life suffers .

Need something houlod

76

(I) HBO Theatre: Came -

0 Cll ® Simon &amp; Simon

•460. Coli 448· 4428.

'

4+

Comfort Henry and Mu-

Motorcycles

all

Pass

700 Club
Cll 1D (JZ Too Close For

ADVANCED Seomleu

85

Three wheeler.

2+

CI1

truck . 304-773 -9192.

74

Pass

gets into an alt ercation
with a New York Yank ees
fan .

&amp; Refrigeration
1978 Fairmont Ford, extra

mOVIBS .

(]) Wild America ' Watching Wildlife .' Ques tions are
answered as to how Amer icans can see animal s in
the wild .

NEED to 10U or trade Dodge
clean, good cond ., et ,996.
Coli 446-4782, Gallipolio.

South

Family

matic, with topper, $3996.

73

East

Cll ID IUl Star of the

1977 CHEVY picl&lt;up, auto74 Monte Carlo, 81B96.
phone 304-675-52B1 .

Nortb

Boxing
feature s
Alvino
Manson and Marvi n J ohn son in a 12-round Heavy weight bout. (2 hr s., 30
min.)

304-B96·3B02.

82

$1200.

West

(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Indianapolis, IN Top Rank

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe -

rior, free estimates,

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : South

lot Thi s magical love story
evokes memories of a better world .

PAINTING interior &amp; oxto·

ooll-614-992·8639.

1976 Windsor 14x70. Cen tral air &amp; heat. underpinning.
concrete s t e p s, storm windows. set up for propane

0 Cll ® Magnum, P.l .

Cor. Fourth and Pine

9B5-3891 .
AKC registered Doberman
pup, 9 weeks otd . has shots,
has been wormed, tall

B543.

EAST
+6
A652
• 10 8 4
tQJ108
t K 654
+ 54
+QJI0 92
SOUTH
+AK1094
• 973
tA9
+AK7

([) Sneak Previews Co hosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey lyon s tak e a lo ok at'
what' s happening at the

rienced mason, roofing, carpenter, aklctricilln, general
repaira and remodeling. Call

Water Walls. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Salea and Service.

WEST
~.'Q82

Chachi Joanie receives an
unexpected visit from her
parents .

removal . Cell 675-1331.

$1300. 304-B96-3657.

• 732

MOVIE: 'The Great
Smokey Roadblock '
Cll ID GZ Joanie Loves

ALLEY OOP

10-14-82

+8 6 3

aired .

RON'S Television Service .
Speciaiizing in Zenith and
Motorola, Ouazar, and

304-676-2088
4560.

NORTH
• J 7 53
• KQJ

ffi

FREE WORL{)!

ing, aiding, apouti ng.
fencing, painting, repairs &amp;.

Roadrunner, 318 engine,
Power steering. power
brakes, good gas mileage,

72

"DADDY'
WAR6UCK5!

CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUCTION . Constr .• roof-

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump

INTONE

Four spades, simply

gram will be pre-empted
and 'NFL Film s' will be

tractlng. Rt. 1, Ewington .
Coli 614-388-9939.

196B Camaro 2B3. 3speod, $1000. 304-676 7436 after 5 p.m .

(Answers tomorrow)
VALUE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

strike continues , thi s pro-

YOUR:

Maaonery work, Logue Con ~

houoe cello. Col 676· 2398
or 448·2454.

International combine . Call

ABAMDOM YOUR PLAM
TO CONTflOL THE
ELECTION5 OF Tl1E

2107.

304-676-3016 .

1976 PLUMOUTH Volore

THERE'll'S

IF YOU REFUSE TO

Bros1:hers Custom Carpets .
Free estimates . CaM 446 -

NEW Idea no. 10, 1 row corn
picker. New Idea no. 323
corn picker . 304 - 273 -

rI I 1 I1 )

BRIDGE

(!) ESPN Sports Center
(1) Andy Griffith
Cll 0 Cll Family Feud
(f) Buainess Report
(j]) All Creatures Great
and Small
Gl GZ Entertainment
Tonight
0 (I) CD Fame Julie tries

CII I Spy
(!) NFL Story: Line By
line If the NFL Players

LOOK!

... I WILL ONLY ltiGK

CAPTAIN STEEMER C.rpot
Clooning feotuoed by Heffoh

auto . trans . ps, pb, maroon
with silver interior 87,000.

1974 Plymouth Valiant, 6
cyl. $700. 304-882-263B .

Now arrange the drded letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as sug·
geslod by tho above cartoon.

Jumble Boot No. 20, containing 110 purziH, Ia available for SUS pottpakt
from Jumble, c/o this news.,..,.,, Box 34, Norwood, N.J . 07641. Include your
name, addrua, zip code and make chKka
able to News
.

Man'

opaciolizing In bull up roof.
Coli 814-38B-9622 or 6143B8·9B57.

evenings only .

MOTH!:~,

A MOUTHFUL

(I) MOVIE: 'The Elephant

Marcum Roofing &amp;: Spouting . 30 ye1ra experience.

cleening. 448-2000, call be·
fo"' 8 and eftor 5:30.

A

Answer: What the gossip turned an earful Into -

Coco discovers Leroy is
quitting school . (60 min.)

oxp. Call 814-38B ·9652.

Gono Smith, 992-6309.

I Jumbles: FOCUS

Yesterday·s

to reunite her parents and

terior. plumbing , roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yl"'.

1975 Corvet T-top,

Livestock

8:00

PAINTING - interior ond ex-

sale. Call 614-3BB-9930,

3447 .

II

Print answer here;

to next week 's games .

814-268·

leage, 304-773-5B89.
a-c,

FO~

'THE 60N AL.WAYS
DOES 'THIS.

conti analyze this w eek · s

-

complete 8176 . low mi-

350 engine

male

Call 446 -7795.

Home
Improvements

Gene's Steam Carpet CleanScotch Gaurd - Frea
estlmates-apring apaciala-

1977 Chevy

Call 675-7726.

304-675-

liT

NFL action and look ahead

ANN I E

992-2902 .

Call 446-3B44 after 4 p.m .
Boarding all breeds. A'&lt;C
Reg . Dobermans pups and
Doberman Stud Service .

81

BORN LOSE R

IT'S UfJOOVBT~Dt-'/ 111£
I\JO!l-K Cf SQl..\e WN
MWTA!.IT'/ ...

ollinotes. Call
1182.

cluded . 890. 2 year old fe-

-

dhlon f4BOO . 304 -6763009.

1974 Pontiac Catelina. 4 dr.
sodon, good cond. f750 .
614-949-2B34.

Potatoes. Humphrey Farms
have a good supply of Kennebec potatoes on hand.

I TEBICSj

Report
®News
Gl GZ People's Court
7 :30 U CII ® You Asked For
It
(I) inside the ~FL Len
Dawson and Nick Buoni -

71 MoWH Home. good con -

in . 614-742·2416 .

pies. CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens.

KENNEL

kord camping tripo. Price
nogotloblo. Cell448·2666.

chard on St.Rt. 6B9 or call
669-37B5.
- - - - - - - - -lc-

614-256-1393.
Firewood . Cut &amp; delivered.

to sell. Call 614-388 -8773.

(J

II I

CD Charlie's Angels
0 Cll Tic lac Dough
Cll · CHI ·M acNeil-Lehrer

1974VWcampmobile.ldMJ
for
hunting, flahlng at wee-

STUCCO PLASTERING

6625 .
860 bushel portable steel
slat corncrib, $250. Call

1977 Corvette excellent
condition. T4op, lots of extras. reasonable price. eagar

I NUKKS
tJ I

()) Entertainment Tonight

textured ceiling&amp; commercial and residentilll, free

614 -3BB-B4B3 or 614471-1472 .
- - - - - - - - - l cHOLSTEIN HEIFER
CALVES. 614-992-519B.

Pets for Sale

Motor Home
&amp; Campers

conaider older car as trade

63

Firewood . Cut to length . Metal sheets for all building
Delivered in dump truck purposes. Flat porcelian
loads or may be picked up in enamel coated. 4x8 thru 4 x
yard . Crown City , Oh Junc- 12. Prices, 87.00 to $9 .60.

7 :00

chards has plenty of picked
appkls for apple butter or for
winter storing. Visit our or-

61

KING size bed, good condi-

Autos for Sale

71

Fruit

(I) MOVIE: 'Silver Boa,.·
CII Bull's Eye
(1) Carol Burnett
(1) 0 Cll ® ID GZ News
CD News/Sports/Weather
(f) CHI 3-2·1, Contact
U (I) CD NBC Newa
CI1 MOVIE: 'Force of Evil'
(!) CFL From the 55 Yard
Une
(1) Bob Newhart Show
(1) Ill (JZ ABC News
0 Cll
CBS Nowa
Cll Dr. Who
CHI Over E11y
U (I) P.M . Magazine
(I) VIdeo Jukebox
(!) ESPN Sportsforum
(1) Gomer Pyle

em

c .. .., ...........

304-675-3445.

21B &amp; Rt. 553, Crown City, tion , $70.00. call 304-45B 1606.
Oh . Call614 ·256-6245.

7 -8 .00x14.5 tires on Dayton wheels , 10 ply nylon ,
like new . Call 614 -245-

46 Space for Rent

75.000_8TU's. 1 Freestand ing gas heater 70,000
BTU's. 4 Natural gas floor
furnaces. 1 up flow basement furnace . natural gas.

evenings .

Furnished one bedroom apt .
Extra nice in Pt . P1easant .
Adults Only . No Pets. 304·

Furnished room . $115 . utili ties pd, single male, share
bath . 919 2nd . Ave ., Galli polis . Call 446-4416 after 7

water tanks. 1,26 KW ul8d
electric furnace . 1 Used 2
ton add on air conditioner . 1
Free standing gas heater,

1-614 - 256 - BABY bed. excellent condition , $45. 304 -675-2295

614-256 -6230 .

Nice 14x70 Mobile Home,

446 -2192 .

S450 . Call
1216.

phone 304 -675 -6730 .

Furnished Rooms

23YJ foot self cont8ined
sleeps 8. refrlgentor fTeezer, axcelent condition .

plete. like new, $300.00.
Wood burning .add on fur·
nance. Still in factory crate ,

033B .

THREE 30 gal . used gas hot

6 :30

CORSAIR camping troller,

135,500 BTU' s. 304-676 3099 .
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON I - - - - - - - - -EVANS ENTERPRISES
TWO white twin beds, com -

Nicely furnish e d mobile
home, central air, 1 mile
below city overlooking river ,
aduhs only . Call 446 -0338 .

Small furni shed hou se. 1 or
2 adult s only . Call 446 -

Sears electric range S26. an tique rocker 816 . 304-676 -

7436.

446 -4497.

2nd floor furnished effi ciency apt . Apt . 4 , 729 2nd
Ave. Adults only . 446 -

B95-3821 .

6:00 U (I) Newscenter

~

onej~=========~~~=~==~=~=~

7 :30 p.m. Friday, Saturday,
Sunday, (Monday evening) .

EVENING

Camping
Equipment

t2495. Locetod Moln ond
Sot:ord, Middleport, Ohio .
6\4-$.92-2828 .

Harvest special whole

Army clothing , boots,
packs. (surplus rental) Sam
Somerville's Warehouse, 7
miles east Ravenswood, old
route 21 (New Era). open
this week only evenings 6
p .m . regularly open 1 :00-

10/14/82

Starcraft fokt - out, used
twice, excellent cond.

304-676- 2693.

REMINGTON 700 BDL.
30.06, New Redfield scope,
304-675-5214.

Television
Viewing

-lc-

8200. Sears 12' fibregla11
boat, 4'12 HP motor. 8360:

Bed and dresser, ex . condition, complete warm morn ing heating stove . Call

78

LIITLE John add on furnace.

Coal and wood stove. 304-

GE dryer like new, $80.

chongod. AN wort&amp; guoron·
tood, 18aoonl&gt;lo pricoo. Coli
448-6839.

ot 816,000. value. Cell Robert L Harper . 304-6761293.

CAMOUFLAGE new U.S.

Whirlpool washer, $110 . ex tra nice. Whirlpool dryer
$90. extra nice. Guaranteed

Byerly ond Folta Automotlc

BUYING and oelling uaed

Farm, Rt. 35, Pliny, WV.
304-675-2275.

DICK TRAcY REPRESENTS
A D'YIN~ BREeD-He•s
A DINOSAUR GOING
RAPIDL.Y EXT~NCT. ..

Tr1namlaaion. AebuHt or ••·

heavy equipment (agricultu ral, construction , mining,
chemical industry, etc . )
through consignment for a
national company . Starting

446 -0322

Caii446 -B1B1 .

Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr. apart ments for rent . HUD pro gram available . A -One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager. Real -

Rentals
41

2 bdr . downtown , all carpet ,
complete kitchen , all elect ric heat -air cond ., Washer -

r--::::==========~1

Fl REWOOD, cut, oplit &amp; delivered. f26 . a lood. 1972
Chevy Impala. 2 door, hard top, 304-676 -147B.

shelled corn 85 .00 per 100

Auto Repair

77

Call Robert Harper for Gin -

lb. your
sacks . Woodlawn
86 .75
sack
. Morgan

Furniture for sale. Selling
cheap . Couches. end table.

PM .

1974 New Moon trailer .
Range &amp; refrigerator. Total
~ectric . 2 bedrooms. utility

Lib erty

Apartment
for Rent

033B .

·6t4-742 -2B97.

1971

44

2215 .

6 14 -367 -0646 .

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 -7572 .

Trailer for rent , Kanauga ,
Oh . Call 675 -3475 .

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE••

seng and Yetlowroot prices.
304-675-1293.

$326 . Baby me $25 &amp; S35. bed
frames S20, S26, &amp; $30 .
Used . Furniture · · bookcase.
ranges. chairs, end tables,
recliners and TV's . 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 7pm . Mon. thru Fri .. 9am
to 5pm , Sat .

etc . Call 446 -3937.

2 bdr . h ou se, fuel oil fur nan ce , h as chimney for
w o o d stove . in Vinton . Call

Mobile Hom es
for Sale

60x 12.

4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
AT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .

35 lots &amp; Acreage

For sal e by owner . Price r educed, 2 bdr . hom e, 10 yrs .
old, 112 acre of land , only

Model 73. •500. Stocl&lt;
chopper 4-row f600 . 9B53581 .

ranges ,
r-~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~1 tresses
,

5363 , ex t . 217 . Th e coll ege
reserves th e right to reje ct
any and all bids .

and 2 out buildings . Call
614 -379-2550 .

Sofa. chair, rocker, otto man , 3 tables, (extra heavy

and up to S 126. Hide-abeds. $440 . and up to
S626 .. queen size, 8380 .
Recliners. $176 . to 8326 .•
Lamps from $18 . to $66. 6
pc . dinettes from S79 .• to
S385 . 1 pc .. 8189. and up.
Wood table with six chairs
$396 . to $660. Desk S11 0 .
Hutches. $300. and 8660 .•
maple or pine finish. Bed room suites - Bassett
Cherry , $795 . Bunk bed
complete with mattresaes,

Madison, Ohio 44067

Manag er. Hou ses m ay be
viewed by appointm ent

Oliver two row com picker,

S2B5. to 8B95 . Tables, 83B

216 -42B -5320 after 5PM .

1982. at which time bids
will be opened, r ea d and
evaluated for remova l of
both hou se s. Remov al o f
houses mu st be m ade o n or
before November 15 . 1982 .
Direct bids to Rio Grand e
College , Rio Grande, Ohi o
45674 , ATTN : Bu sin ess

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

chair and loveseat, 8276 .
Sofas and chairs priced from

I

Offered by Board of Tru stees , Rio Grande College,
Rio Grande, Ohio , removal
of two 121 houses lo cated on
the former Beman property ,
518 East College Ave ., Rio
Grande. Ohio . Sealed bids
will be acc epted in th e offi ce
of Business Manager, Allen
• Hall . Rio Grande College.

54 Misc. Merchandise

by Frontier), S685. Sola.

$424. Send letter expressing interest to Mr.
7231 North Ridge

51 Household Goods

PA

MAUU

BY C P

DHY

X

ICF

DGA . - DGNAHA

BXUU

MAUU

I C F

I CF

UCLA
BVDM

YCFNNDI A

Yesterday's Cryploquote: DICTATORS ALWAYS LOOK GOOD
UNTILTHELASTTENMINUTES.-JANMASARYK

I

I
\

�Poge-12- The Doily Se ntinel

Thursday, Oct. 14,1982

Pomeroy"-Middleport, Ohio

Leaf pickup slated in Middleport

Area death s - - - - - - - - - - Clara C. Am hm~w
Mrs. Clara Compton AmbrOSl',
R1, of :,03 Parrish Av&lt;· .. Poi nt Plm ·

sanl , died Wedn&lt;&gt;Sday morning in
the Holzer Medica l Cent er a lkr a
short illness.
She was born Aug. 211. 1~11. at Sit·
Jotms R un . W. \'a . to lhl' i&lt; ll l ' ( ~t ·n rgr•

and Ida Clark Compton
Her husba nd. J ohn 1\'i lliam ,\rn
brose. preceded her in dca 1h in 1'!:Xi.
She is SUI'V i\'('&lt;1 iJ.'· 0 11&lt;' d;tughlt'l'.
Mrs. Norm an L. 1Ek'IIY l.uc 1Snodgr ass. Point Plf'asant, with \\.'hom

s he lived; one son . .John tJark 1 Am·
brosc J r., Pomcro,·. a daug hlf•t· in ·
law , Corrinnf' AmbrusP. Poml'rO_\·:
and son-in-law.

~ornw n SnodgTass.

Point Pleasanl; 1\\'0 gra nddaughters. Janel a nd Rl'iJ&lt;'&lt;'Ca Ambrose.
Pomeroy; one great gra ndson .John
Warren Ambrosr. Pornr1·o)·.
Funeral serv iC'f's will bl.' held un

Friday at 11 a .m. dl thr CtO\\'
Hussell Funeral Hom&lt;' \\'ilh 1111 •
Rev. Ra lph Sagrr .Jr .. officiating .
Burial will lx' u1 lhr Su ncn&gt;SI
Cemetery.
Friends rna\" call al lhc funf'ral
home lodav from :, p rn . unl i1 9 p.m.

Willard Fn•e
..
Wi llard 1 Bill! F1-yc, 79, of Ches hire, died Wednesday a t the Holzer
Medica l Center a ft er a lingering
illnt'SS.
Born on Sept. 25. 1902 a t Ra nger,
W. Va .. he was the son of the late
.John H. a nd Ida Ca usby Frye. He
II'JS prcceded in dea th by his wife,
Ma ry, Ju ne 3. 19H2, SC\'en brothers
and lhrcc sisters. A coal miner. he
ll'as a member of the United Mine
Wo rkers.
Hr is surv ived

b~'

two da ug ht e rs

a nd sons-in-law, Margie a nd Ra ndall Peck. Ches hire. a nd Jea n and
.Jack Corns. Da vin . W. Va.; three
sons and daugh ters-in -law, Otis and
I'al mas FJYP. Toledo; William a nd
Donna Frye. Jr .. a nd James Ed" ard and Linda F1yc, both of Cievel;uJd; one brot her, Ca leb Frye,
llunt ington. W. Va.,a nd two sis ters,
:vlargarPI N('('('ea nd Pearl Mullens,
IJO!h of Cha uncey. W. Va . Also sur,.i,·ing arc 2:1 grandr hldren a nd 21
gTPat grandchildren, a nd sever al

nieces a nd nephews.
FUnera l serv ices will be held a t 2
p.m . Saturday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower FUneral Home with
buria l in the Cheshire Gravel Hill
Cem etery. The Rev. Keith Atkins
will officia te.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Thursday. 7 to 9 p.m . and on
Friday, 2 to4 p.m. and 7 to9p.m .

Cora P. Soulier
Cora P. Soulier. 83, 546Anna Mae
Dr, Mogadore, formerly of Meigs
Coun ty, died Oct. 6 afte r a brief
illness.
Mrs. Soulier was bom and reared
in Long Bottom. She was a da ughter of the la te B. A. and Bell Zora
Whiteside. She was also preceded
in death by a sister, Wilma Buckley, on May 22, 1982.
Surviving are a brother, Hobart
Whiteside, Parkersburg, W. Va ..
and a sis ter, Esta Qullla um, Ka nsas City. Mo.
Services were held Oct. 11 a t the

, - - - - - - - - -- - - " ' - - - - - - - - - - ----1

Ht&gt;len M. Haqwr
Mrs. Helen M. Ha rper. 79, died
Wednesda)· at her hom&lt;' a t 110-l F. .
Main St.. PomerO)'.
Mrs. Haq::&gt;c\r was an activP
member of the Mt . Moriah Baptist
Chureh in Middlcp011 . She was serving as chu rch pianist and pres ident
of the chur,·h Missionaf)· Society .
Shew as a ch;u·tcr member a ndpasl
pres ident of the LPII'ts Manlev Pos t
Amer ican L&lt;'gion Auxil iary and a
past president of lhr Hocking Dis-

J

tric t Miss io n ar~~ Co tl\'C'nt ion.

Mrs. Harper "'"' a daughter of
the lair Fred and l'k&gt;rl ha Hudson
Jackson. ShP was born Aug . 11. 1903
in Middlepol1 . Ek&gt;Siclcs h('r parent s,
shP was prPCedrd in deal h b\· hrr
husba nd. Campl~·ll Hat·pet·. and a
brot her
Su r;;i\·in g a rr

Eckard - Baldwin Funeral Home
with the Rev . Larry T . West officiating. Burial was In Hillside
Memorial Park.

Final reading set
The fina l reading of the by-laws
of Meigs Aerie 2171, Fra ternal
Order of Eagles. will be held at 8
p.m. Monday . There has been a
change also In age membership requirements, Increased from 1R tn
21.

Anything goes with

~

Fivecans were answered by units
Wednesday evening and Thursday
morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 1: 49 a.m. Thursday, the Middleport Unit took Emma Wayland
from her Middleport home to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 4: :ll
a .m., the Rutland Unlt took Ida
White from the New Uma Road to
Veterans Memorial.

The Precetor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet a t 7:45 tonight in the Riverboat
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co. The program theme will
be Octoberfest.

gra ndchild .
Scn·ic&lt;&gt;S \\'ill tx• ll(·ld a! :1 p.m.
Friday at thr Middleport !VII. Moriah Baptist Churl'h with lhr Rrv .

Omnl comes in a
range ol autumn tones

Navy / Grey / Wine
Brown / Ombre

Ht'nr: · K&lt;)y. thf' Hr\·. Ca h·in Menn is

and lh&lt;• Re,· . F.rtdiP Bufli n);lon officiating. 8Utial \\'til ix• tn !VIirl('rsvillr
Hill CPmetrn·. Fri!'ncl.s rna\' rail a!
the Ewing Fun£'ra l Ht ,r m· from 2to4
and 7 lu 9 p.m. Joda \ .

Pay Your Columbia Gas Bills At:

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OH .

BENSON &amp;HEDGES

$1 59

Tube
Socks
7 14.
9 15.

Boys' sizes to
men's to
White
with color tops - made by Springfoot

Big selections in all sizes - solids and
patterns Electric blankets included - Save
Now.

STEREO
8-TRACK-TapeSYSTEM
- AM / FM Slereo Receiver
Counter
95
$224
With
m&lt;~1rrhil~a

$119 SKEIN

and Big Talis.

Sl5.95 Flannels
Sl8.95 Flannels
Sl9.95 Flannels
S21.95 Flannels

............... Sl2.45
............... s14.75
............... sl5.55
............... s17.15

118th Anniversary Sale

LITTLE BOYS'

Jeans &amp; Corduroys
Quality Lee's, Wrangler and Buster Brown
denim jeans, corduroy slacks, dress pants
and knit pants
·
Sizes: 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4 and 4 to 7.
REG. 17.00 ....................... SALE 15.59
REG. 112.00 ........ ........ ..... SALE 19.59
REG. 116.00 ................... SALE 112.79
REG. 122.00 .... . .. ........ .

1

Anniversary

STORE- WIDE

COAT SAlE

All winter

coat~

and jackets for men,
boys, children, ladies and juniors.

ANNIVERSARY
SALE PRICES
LADIES'

Open a box today.

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

Our entire stock of Misses and extra size
coordinate sportswear is reduced for the
final two days of our Anniversary Sale. .
Don't miss this chance to buy quality
sportswear at Anniversary Sale Prices!

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8

Warning: The StJ'rgeon General Has De1ermined
~hat Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

KETI'LES - Meigs County senior cltizeM are
pictured stirring four kettles of apple butter as the
annual apple butter project progressed. The senior
- · ml!ll..blllli:I'J9£ Ie¥ $1.~ fr.om the annual sale of the

118t.h Anniversary Sale

Quadriga and Heirloom

$2.49 to $2.79 Valli

3112 ounce

36 and 45 inches wide - solids and pall·
erns - good selection

$ 99

YARD

the people of Ohio from electing
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Suptheir own utility commissioners,"
porters of a ballot Issue to require
he said.
election of state utility regulators
Kent B. McGough, campaign
say a group opposins the Issue Is
coordinator
for the coalition opposdodging questions about how much
Ing Issue 3, said Thursday that conmoney utilities are contributing to
tributions would be spelled out In a
defeat the proposal.
campaign expense report filed with
Henry W. Eckhart, a Columbus
the secretary of state next week.
attorney and former member ofthe
"I think It probably will put a lot of
Public Utilities Commission of
things, at least from our point of
Ohio, made the allegation after he
said questions asked the opposition
view, to rest," he said.
The former Ohio Republican
group, Coni;wners for Responsible
Party chairman dismissed claims
Utility Reform, went unanswered.
from Eckhart's group that utility
Eckhart Is co-chairman of the
Committee for Dlreci Election, the , companies are projected to spend
group backing Issue 3 on the Nov. 2 $2.5 million on the anti-Issue 3
campaign.
ballot.
"These figures that are being ban"The voters are entitled to know
about are absolUtely ridicudled
how many utilities have contributed
lous," McGough said. " I know that
toCRUR's budget," Eckhart saldln
our total contributions are going to
a news release Thursday.
be way less than a million."
· "Apparently CRUR doesn't want
He said It would reflect the particithe voters to know just how deeply
pation of utilities as well as other
Involved the utilities are In this enorgroups "that will be substantially
mously costly campaign to prevent

Anniversary

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR
Corduroy blazers, blouses, skirts. dress slacks. denim
skirts and 1eans, knit tops andiumpers.
Pre-Teen Sizes.

REG. $16.00
................ SALE $12.79
REG. $22.00 ........................ SALE $17.59
REG.
.. ...................... SALE $23 19
REG.
.. ...................... SALE $29.59

Anniversary Sale!

Boys Shirts

Sizes 8 to 20. Velours - knits - westerns .flannels. Entire stock included.

Boys S6.95 Shirts ............... S5.60
Boys s9.95 Shirts .............. ss.oo
Boys Sl2.95 Shirts ........... s10.so
Sl6.95 Shirts ........... SlJJO
/18th Anniversary Sale

more than the utilities, I think."
McGough said he was not surprised by results of a Colwnbus Dispatch statewide mall poll which
showed the proposal approved by a
72 pereent to 28 percent margin.
The survey of 1,531 people was
conducted Sept. 27-ll.
"We've found out conclusively ...
that when people understand the
Issue they come down on our side, "
McGough said.
"We're trying to make the people
understand what the Issues are
through the use of personal contact,
mall and media," he said.
Eckhart said the opposition committee has bought hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of television
commercial time "to twist the truth
and confuse the voters."
Issue 3 ts a proposed constitutional amendment which would require members of the PUCO to be
elected In statewide, nonpartisan,
publicly financed elections.

Legislative panel considering
repeal of special tax breaks
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A legislative panel seeking ways to revamp the state's tax structure is
conslde riing taking away some industria l and business tax breaks approved in the J970s.
A joint tax study committee decided Thursday they should be reviewed because the state Is pressed
for money.
Rep. William E. Hinig, D-New
Philadelphia, co-chairman. and others on the committee stressed that
repea l would not represent a departure in indus trial development
policy.
Most members of both political ·
parties s till believe government
should provide tax and other incen·
tives for business and Industria l development which creates jobs.
Hlnig, along with Rep. Robert L.
Corbin, R-Dayton, and others said
the Reagan Administration's 1981
tax package provided incentives
which surpassed any extended by
the state.
The Tuscarawas County lawmaker mentioned accelerated depreciation which allows businesses
to claim greater tax credits over a
shorter number of years for wear
and tear on their equipment and
machinery.
Richard Levin, who heads the
Tax Department's research div-

lsion, gave thecommll teeestlmates
of wha t one state tax break bill has
cost ln lost revenue since Its enactmenl in 1978.
Tha t enactment provided lax
credits for businesses for their lnveslments in new m achinery and
equipment. The first yea r, the revenue loss was $17 million. It
swelled to$30 million by 1981and the
estima te for this year is $55 mll1ion,
Levin said .
Levin and other officials estima ted the loss will continue to Increase until after the first 10 years,
when II should level off.
Corbin said that at the current
ra te of increase, the price tag could
balloon into hundreds of millions of
dollars a nd be devastating to state
finances.
The committee is reviewing
Ohio's tax structure and Is to submit
suggestions to the 115th General Assembly, which convenes in
January.
On a nother matter, the committee reviewed a proposal calling for a
uniform statewide utility tax to help
equallze per pupil subsidies to
Ohio's 615 local school districts.
Sen. Richard H. Finan. RCinclnnati, the panel's other cochairman. said the plan " is fraught
with administrative difficulties"
which will take much tinne and
study to resolve.
For ma ny years, lawmakers and

officials have been trying to solve
the problem of having both rich and
poor school districts in which state
and local per pupil a id combined
can vary from as much as $1,300 to
$4,500 a year.
One factor is the local lax base. A
district with a major industry or
utili ty, for insta nce. will collect a
large amount of property taxes to
fund its schools, while those with
only argicullural ;md residential
properties collect less on a comparatively small tax base.
The committee is lqoking not only
a t a statewide persona Iproperty tax
on utilities. but a lso state collection
of the same tax from other industries for distribution to school
districts.

Weather forecast
Considerable cloudiness tonight.
Low 40-45. Winds mostly westerly
1().15 mph . Saturday. partly sunny.
High around 50.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair Sunday and Monday.
Chance of showers Tuesday. Wghs
In the upper 50s to low 60s Sunday
and mld-OOs to low 70s Monday and
Tuesday. Lows In the 30s early Sunday, warming to the mid to upper
4lls early Monday and Tuesday.

Meigs' jobless figures show
demand for additional nurses

Junior Dresses

Beautiful Fall colors and fabrics in jumpers, pant
dresses and fancy dreses. Poly/ cotton blends, denims. knits and wool blends.
Jr. sizes 3 lo 15.

REG. $20.00 ................... SALE $15.99
REG. $28.00 ................... SALE $22.39
REG. $36.00 ................... SALE $28.79
REG. $47.00 ................ .
· Anniversary

trades classification, and another
one-tenth had clerical, sales or ser.vlce experience.
Of the women, two-fifths were In
the cJerlcal-sales category, onetlilrd were In the service area, and
one-tenth had held bench work jobs.
A nwnber of applicants had been
office clerks, nurses aides, carpenters, welders, assemblers, material
handlers, l!iind packagers, sales·
workers, walters' and waitress&amp;,
truck drivers, and construction, fac·
tory, foondry and store laborers.
Manulacturtng employers 1n the
county ~ally of!er'l:d beginning
workers hourly wage rates wljlch
According to OBES figures,
varied as follows: unsldlled, $3.35 to
three-tenths of those people who
$4.50; ~ldlled. $4 . to $5.25;
were actively seeking work through
tile Pomeroy~ of the Ohlo Bu- skilled, $5 to $7. For the past several
years, average-weekly_earnings ot
fi!IIU ot Employment Services were
county factory emploYees covered .
women:AmongthemaJeapPIICants
during the r'ererence month, ap- • by the Ohlo Unemployment Com·
pensatlon Law have lieeil approxt.
proximately two-ftfths had blick·
one-third below the average
mateJY
groun!Js 1n stnlcturJ) work,
for.the state.
me-tenth were In the machine

Although Meigs County's jobless
rate stood at 10.7 perce11t during Au·
gusi there was a demand for registered and licensed practical nurses
during that period which could not
bernet.
That disclosure came Wednesday
In a release tram the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Servtces.
In August, the Meigs County civIlian labor force ,was estlmaied at
ll,!KXJ people based on the place of
residence. Appi'Olllmately 10,550
peoplewereemployedwhllethejobless total carne to 1,250.

MEN'S OR BOYS JEANS

Denims
&amp; Corduroys
All sizes - basic jeans ·. fashion looks - fuller cut
jeans. Entire stock men's and boys.

S16.95 JEANS ................. '12.71.
S19.95 JEANS .......•.......... S14.96
.'21.95 'JEANS .. ;.............. S16.46
................. '18.71

SATURDAY TIL 5

6mg ·'tar;· 0.6 mg nicotine av. per cigarette. by FTC method.

1. •

}

apple butter and this will he used for programs at the
county senior citizens center. Thirty-two b11'ihels of
apples were used to make the toO quarts· of apple
butter thi• yea~ .

Issue 3 opponents won't say
how much $$ utilities donated

Cotton Prints
1

the prices paid by retail customers - had surged 7
percent in 1981 and 11.8 percent in 1980.
Economists have a ttributed the better results on
inflation to the stifling recession and the worldwideoll
glut as well as bumper crops.
In September alone, producer prices dipped a seasonally adjusted 0.1 percent . compared with 0.6 percent increases in July and August. the report sa id.
They also fell by 0.2 percent in February and by 0.1
percent in Mareh and May.
[( prices fell for 12 straight months at September's
0.1 percent, the yearly decline would be 1.7 percent.
The a nnual ra te reported by the Labor Department is
based on a more precise calculation of monthly
changes than the figure the depa rtment makes public.
The new report said tha t for the 12 months ending in
September, producer prices rose 3.6 percent .
The department provided these details on producer
prices last month:
-Food prices fell 0.5 percent after rising a small 0.1
percent in August and twnbllng 1.5 percent in July.
Prices declined for pork. poult ry, soft drinks, beef,
veal, a nd processed fruits a nd vegeta bles. Prices were
up for fish, fresh fruit. sugar. dairy products and
coffee.

- Many Olher Quality Features.

SAVE $100.00

Wintuk Yarn

New shipment of colors skeins. Stock up now.

WASHINGTON lAP)- Fueled by sharply falling
automobile costs, prices a t the wholesale level fe ll in
September a t a n a nnual rateofl.7percent, the government said today.
The monthly decline, the fourth this year, a lso was
driven by lower food and energy costs, the Labor
Department said in its new report on the Producer
Price Index for finished goods.
Prices for new cars tumbled 6.3 percent from August a nd costs for light trucks were off 3.5 pereent as
dealers cut prices to make room for 1983 mode ls, the
report said .
Food prices, partially reflecting a bunda nt c rop
harvests, fell 0.5 percent In September. the second
sizable drop in the past three months.
Gasoline prices dropped 0.9 percent in Septemher
after rising in each of the previous three months. T he
cost of home heating oil fell1.6 pereent after a sma ller
decline in August.
The new figu res meant tha i for the first nine months
of the year infla tion a t the wholesale level was running
at a n annual rate of 3.1 percent. If that ra te held steady
for the rest of the yea r. II would be the sma llest Increase s ince the 2.2 percent rise recorded for a ll of1970.
Produce r prices - one merchandis ing step before

REG. $324.95 CRAIG

RED HEART $1.49

1 Sec! ion , 14 Pag es
15 Cents
A Multim edia lnc. Newspaper

Wholesale prices
continue decline

Blouses. knit tops, sweaters. sweat shirts. capes and
velour tops.
Lee's, Wrangler. Calvin Klein and Buster Brown
1eans. knit rJ~nls, corduroy slacks, jogging panls.
Sizes: 6 to 24mos.. 2 lo 4, 4 to 6x. 7 to 14.
REG. $5.00 .. .............................. SALE $3.99
REG. $7.00 .................. .............. SALE $5.59
REG. $12.00 ..... .................. .... .... SALE $9.59
REG. $16.00 ...................... ........ SALE $12.79

- 8-Track Player/ Recorder

entinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Oct. 15 1982

Tops &amp; Jeans Sale

118th Anniversary Sale

WORK SHIRTS
Regular sizes - extra large sizes - Tall -

Only 6 mg yet rich enough to be called deluxe.
Regular and Menthol.

Voi .31 ,No .115
Copyrighted 1982

Ll TlE GIRLS

MEN'S FLANNEL

tOO'S

The Daily

Anniversary Sale .

Reduced 20°/o

I 18th Anniversary Sale!

BENSON &amp; HEDGE

Page 14

On Wednesday evening at 6:01
p.m., the Racine Unlt took Elmer
Pickens from Letart Falls to Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at 7: 10
p.m . took Fanny Hale from Pomeroy Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial and at 8: 28 p.m. the
Tuppers Plains Unit took Josephine
Meyers from Chester Township to ·
Veterans Memorial.

/18th Anniversary Sale!

All Bed Blankets

')('\·f'n gra ndchildrf'n anrl on&lt;• gl'Pa I -

Page 14

JUST TWO DAYS OF OUR 118TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
IT'll PAY YOU TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL SALE
PRICES All OVER THE STORE -THE VERY IUMS YOU'll BE
NEEDING FOR FALL AND WINTER USE- PLUS EXCELLENT
CHRISTMAS GIFTS AND USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN.
MEN'S AND BOYS'

Livestock reports

Liberace faces
palimony action

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

118th A nniversary Sale

:vl rs. Ma ry Ellen Smith and Mrs.
Phoebe Coal s. both of L'olumbus:

Cards-Brewers
•
resume series
...
Page3

ELBERFELDS·IN POMEROY

Hush Puppies ii_

two daught1 ·rs.

Residents are asked to rake their
leaves Into the street along the
curbs and they will be picked up by
the village street department as
soon as possible.
Pickups will be continued dally
until the ma jority of leaves are dls·
posed of.

Ernergencyruns---------------------------

Meets tonight

Casual sandals love your feet
They take you through the day with
comfort and style. This tall . show
off and save on the pleasures
o t Hus h Puppies' Shoes.

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman said today that pickup of
leaves In the village will begin on
Monday, Oct. 18.
Pickup will begin In the northern
portion of the community and will
move southward as time permits.

I' .

~.l

According to 1970 U.S. Census Information, close to two-fifths the
county's resident jobholders commuted to work In neighboring counties. In August, about three-tenths of
all workers living In the county held
mining jobs and about one-eighth
worked for various government
agencies. Annual average employ·
ment data for 1981 lndlcates the
leading factory Industries In the
county ~re fabricated metals,
el!lftrtc equipment, lwnber and
wood products, food, chemicals,
and transportation equipment.
Items turned out locally Included
bakery products, non-alcoholic bev·
erages, processed salt, wooden
pallets, electric motors and relays,

and cono:ete blocks.
In the 191ilcensus,MelgsCounty's
population was llted as 23,600. Middleporl was the Jariest cOJ;nmunlty
with3,1mresldentswhllePomeroy,
the county seat, had 2, 700
Inhabitants.

SEWER HOOKUPS - Rellld;,.. of Syracuse Syracuse. There are approximately 700 homes In the
and Racine are hooklnl! Into the new sewer sy~~tem. . vlllqes of Racine and Syracuse that wW be hooked
Shown It! Jim Cllflord of J 6 F Cootracton running a
lnlo the new system. Six contracton are available 1o
line Into the residence of Sadie Tluener, 'l1drd &amp;reet,
do the hookups.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="196">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2786">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44922">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44921">
              <text>October 14, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4403">
      <name>ambrose</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="852">
      <name>frye</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="905">
      <name>harper</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="536">
      <name>jackson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7419">
      <name>soulier</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7317">
      <name>whiteside</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
