<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14391" 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/14391?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T12:14:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45498">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/f53b1efa923275bf962dc6c1ba08be53.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d6ca82411f47a46214a641e38e796a3b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44935">
                  <text>QUARTZ CLOCK

45 INCH WIDE
CHRISTMAS PRINT

STitH IT ANYWH£R£
•VELCRO BACKING STICKS TO ANY
SURFACE!
•NEVER NEEDS WINDING!
•COMPLETE WITH REPLACEABLE
BATTERY!

RE~~,!-IR

FABRICS

Cards t•ven series,
rip Brewers 13-1

(REGULAR 11"I

s3C) 7

'I~!

EACH

The Daily

FABRICS ·
-STIFFL~R'S

5Chh

ANNIU~RSARY

SAL£-

ANNIU~RSAAY

7" DECORATED
IRONTSTONE

DESIGNER
PLASTIC SALAD

ASSORTED CERAMIC
STACKING

BOWLS

BOWLS

MUGS

'

(REGULAR 79'

(REGULAR 89')

SAL£-

2

MAT
CHOICE OF BROWN

25~

PROTECTORS

KITS

ASSORTED COLORS

PRINTS AND SOLID COLORS

(REGULAR P')

(REGULAR 1°)

30x40" SIZE
PASTEL COLORS

1

1

\

-~~~~

-STIFFL£R'S 5Chh

'I~

ANNIU~RSARY

SAL£-

l/lf&amp;;:..- .-·""·
··'+· ; ,
PILLOWS ( ~' . , ,·

STANDARD SIZE
ACRYLIC BED

LACE CHENILLE
CURTAIN

PANELS
63" &amp; 84" LENGTHS
ASSORTED SHADES

STRIPE COVER

(REGULAR 12")

(REGULAR 1211)

2--'5

5

5

~
~ I
I

371,4"x6' WHITE
WINDOW

I

I
I

SHADES
1

(REGULAR 1")

2

5

3

FOR

26x44 INCH CUT LOOP
SCULPTURED DESIGN

RUG
RUNNfRS

POLYESTER
REGULAR 2

JODI BRAND

JUTE BACKING
ASSORTED COLORS

(REGULAR '6")

•WOOL
MOP

•SPONGE MOP

SAL£-

ASSORTED COLORS
OVAL SHAPE-MACHINE WASH

(REGULAR '6")

5Chh ANNIUSISAAY SAL£-

QUILTED

PACKAGE OF 2
NEVCO WIRE

POT
HOLDERS

BEATERS
8" &amp; 12" SIZES
WOOD HANDLES

ASSORTED PRINTS

(REGULAR 39')

4 FOR
-SDFfl£R'S 5Chh

ANNIU~RSARY

1

5

SAL£-

-STiffL£R'S 5Chll ....WAA'Iaau:-

-STiffL£R'$ 5Chh ANNIUWARY SAL£- .

6x81NCH BLACK
PLASTIC FRAME

CLARK O.N.T.
WONDURA 4-PLY

36x54 INCH
SCULPTURED -

MILL ASsORTMENT
45" PRINTED

P-ICTURES

YARN

RUGS

FLANNEL

ASSORTED PRINTS
(~EGULAR 79')

ASSORTED COLORS

ASSORTED COLORS

ASSORTED COLORS

(REGULAR '12")

(REGULAR '1")

2 ...
(

5

1

SAL£-

RUGS

1 1
'

(REGULAR 1111)

A7f

.,

SKEIN

1

•a•!

LOGAN, Ohio (AP) -Authorities In southeastern
Ohio have discounted any connection between the
mutilation murders of a Hocking County couple and a
recent slaying In VInton County In which a man was
decapitated.
"He has talked with (Vinton County) Sheritf
(Delno) McClure, and they've discounted ... any connection," .said a spokeswoman for Hocking County
Sheritf James Jones. She said the meeting between
the two men took place Tuesday morning, but would
not elaborate.
The torsos of Todd Schultz, 19, and Annette Johnston, 18, were found Thursday on the east edge of
Logan. Other body parts were discovered Satuj'day In
shallow graves In a nearby cornfield.
The teen-agers had been missing since Oct. 4, and
authorities estimate they had been dead 10 to 14 days
before their bodies were found.
Tuesday's meeting between Jones and McClure

was to determine whether the.re was any connection
between the Hocking County slaylngs and the Aug. 2
discovery of a decapitated man In neighboring VInton
County. That body remains wnldenti11ed.
Quoting an unklenti11ed source, The Columbus Dispatch on Tuesday said the teen-agers' bodies. were
dismembered with "great pl'eclslon ... by a sldlled
professional"- such as a surg:eon, butcher or hunter
experienced In field-dressing animals.
The Dispatch quoted a second source who described the cuts made to the bootes as "very clean"
and said the limbs were neati_y cut at the joints with
an extremely sharp Instrument.
"This guy !mew what he was doing," the second
source told the newspaper.
Jones' office refused to comment on the newspaper
report.
Meanwhile, the top crtmlnoJ:ogy professor at Ohio
State University says the killer of the teen-agers

1'-

'I!!

'

By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVP news staff
Gallla County has a new representative on the Community Services
Review Group, but he was not allowed to attend Its meeting tQday.
Thomas E. Hairston, Bidwell,
was named by the county commls·
stoners to take the place of Com!sstoner Paul Niday on the
committee. Niday resigned due to
Illness.
W.H. Davis, chalnnan of the review group, said Hairston could not
sit on the commltee meeting today

-

--------·~

-··

Routine personnel and financial
matters were voted on by the Meigs
Local Board of Education at Its
Tuesday night meeting.
The board opened the meeting
with a 70-mlnute executive session,
and afterward several Items were
added to the agenda.
The board agreed to adjust the
salary of John Lisle, on asslgrunent
as principal at Salisbury and Rutland elementartes, to bring It up to
par with the present principal's salary scale.
Vera Jane Holllday was hired as
an Instructional aide at Pomeroy
Elementary for the 1982-&amp;'1 school
year In the Disadvantaged PupU
Program Fund (DPPF) project.
Board member RDbert Snowden
voted against.
Marsha Radabaugh was hired as
a Title I teacher for the district,
whUe Mary Beth Musser was given
the g&lt;&gt;-ahead to work as a substitute
aide and substitute secretary. Marlene Barrett was also hired as a
substitute custodian.
.SUpplemental contracts were
granted to Tim Saunders, freshman
basketball coach; Rusty ljookman,
eighth grade boys basketball
coach; P..onDrexler,seventhgrade
boys basketball coach; and Gordon
Fisher, printing for the school
distrlct.
The board turned down, at the
pre$ent time, ~cal leave requests from Ernest Triplett and
Kenneth Uttle. Snowden ~uggested
the matter be referred to the dis-trlct'sattomeys, andlnthefonnbta
motion,. the suggestion canied

because he has not yet received official apj:uuval from thestatedlrector
of mental health.
Becausethecommitteelsdeating
with "sensitive matters," Davis
said Hairston should not be seated
until he received official approval.
Davis said he expects Hairston
will be approved for the committee
today and be able to attend the
·group's meeting tomorrow.
Davis said he will brief Hairston
on what the committee has done
before they meet tomorrow.
Hairston said he wjll enter the In·

graves because blood was found there.
Schultz and Miss Johnston had been dating for
eight months and planned to marry. Schultz' mother.
Sandra, said her son didn't smoke, drink or use drugs.
Hocking County authortties Tuesday returned to
the cornfield and river where the dismembered bodies were found last week. Sheriff's crews. who arrived at the scene at mid-afternoon, used a metal
detector to search the river. They also checked the
scene for additional evidence.
Meanwhile, Logan Mayor Evan Hand announced
that Halloween trick-or-treating will be eliminated
this year, but a party will be held for youngsters on
Sunday, Oct. 31.
Hand said a parade will be held and a city street
will be roped off for Halloween activities. Including a
costume judging contest and a dance. Candy for the
youngsters will be donated by merchants.

vestlgatlon with an open mind.
"I'm trylilgtobeposltlveandconstructive," he said.
Hairston was superintendent of
the Gallla ( :Ounty Local School Dls·
trlct from 1976 to 1979.
He Is currently working with the
GreaterOh loCorporation, a Columbus flnancl al holding company he
helped tom, In 1965.
The rev1:.ew group Is currently
meeting &lt;tt the Gallla-JacksonMelgs 648 'tboard office on Jackson
Pike to ln1terview employees and
bol!rd men 1bers.

·-

~

,.

.

'" ~

The group was formed by former
state director of mental health Myers Kurtz on Oct. 5 to Investigate the
operations of the Gallla-JacksonMelgs Community Mental Health
Center and the trl-county 648 board.
The decision to form a committee
was In response to the con tinulng
conflict between the two agencies
which Kurtz characterized as "allout war. "
Each county Involved chose one
member for the committee. Four
members, Including the committee
chairman, were chosen by Kurtz.

.

Highway
answer
promised
Cheshire area residents concerned about the stretch of Ohio 554
between Gravel Hill 'Wad and
Roush Lane will get an answer from
the Ohio Department ofTransportation on what the state can do about It
In a week or 10days.
Three residents met Tuesday
morning with ODOT District 10 officials In Martella and came away
somewhat encouraged about their
prospects.
"It might do some good," said Bill
Prtce, who lives on Stingy Creek
Road. "They acknowledged the fact
there's a need for a road."
The half-mile of road under scrutlny has been closed slnre November
1!BJ because It's covered with lowlying water from the Kyger Creek.
Although a detour was created on
Roush Lane, the Issue has been a
sore point with the locals.
A January 1981 meeting between
ODOT officials and residents at
Cheshlre-Kyger Elementary
School resulted In the officials bemoaning ODOT's shaky financial
situation, which prevented Immediate action being taken to raise the
road or put In a new thoroughfare.
''I brought It up that we were tired
services produced In the nation,
of
them using money as a whipping
rose 6.2 pe1 :cent to an annual rate of
boy,"
Price said. "Nodoubtlt's been
$3.091 trilllon.
part
of
the reason, but some of the
Inflation, as measured by the
money could be used from other
broad-bas€1d GNP Implicit price deprojects."
flator, rose at an annual rate of 5.4
Prtce, VlrgU Wamsley and Jerry
percent during the period, up a bit
Schoonover
met for nearly an hour
from the 4..6 percent rate In theseWalter
G. Smith, Dlstrlct 10
with
cond quarter, the report said.
deputy director, and one of Smith's
engineers. They presented Smith
I .
with a petition signed by 350 Chebusiness &amp;!CUned 0.6 percent comshire
Twp. residents, photographs
pared with adecreaseof0.9percent
I
fiooded area and other
of
the
In the secmild quarter.
lnfonnation.
Buslness1 1nvesbnent, net exports
PrtcesaldSmlthwas "real receparidsta~!J'Idlocatgovemmentpurtive" to problems created by the
chases
decll!led· ·
1
H""'ever;, those decreases were road closing, and plailned totakethe
matter to ODOT Director David L.
outwe!ghtd slightly by glllns In per·
today. An engineer was scheWeir
. sona1
spenlllng, fed·
duled
to meet with Prtce and others
er'8l govenunent purchases and
at
tlie
road around 1 p.m. today.
residential &lt;mstructJon,
.
'
·
1\eSldentshadbroughtthematter
' Treasury ~~ Donald T..Reto the attention of State Rep. Claire
. gan has t~ir:ecaat a pickup In real
"Buzz" Ball Jr., R·Aihens, who set
GNPtoamEra.teot3percentt.o , up the meeting with Smith.
4percent(l: lhecurrentfQUrthquar·
"We told them aD the problems
ter. HIJWe' · , most other ,econoIt's created, sowe'Uaeelttheycanor
mlsf:l, bQI~ lnalde ml O!Jtslde can't do.sillnethlng about It," Price
goyenulll!ll!!, 5ay another I small
(C~tinued .on page 8) • , •
gain II mll(~h more likely.

U.S. economy sltows

during third qu;arter

WASHINGTON (APl -The U.S.
economy slowed In the just-finished
third quarter of the year, Inching
ahead at a 0.8 percent annual rate
canpared with a 2.1 percent rate In
the ·spring quarter, the government
reported today,
Two quarters of growth In
ln1latlon·adjustecl_ gross natiorial
product- the broadest measure of
U.S. economic actMty- nonnally
unantmously.
would be accepted as marking an
Five protesslonalleave requests end t.o a national recession.
. were approved by the board, and It
But the gains have been so small
also okayed a request froiTI T. Ed· that few epliiOmlsts are wllllng to
Win Harkless to allow the ·Melp declare that genuine recovery 'Is
High School Collegium Muslcurn under way. Typical recessions In ·
choral group to travel imd pe!fonn l'ecel\t years have been fOllowed ey·
at Colonial WIIUamsburg ,In AprU ·rilbust growth at annual rates of
1983.
'
about 7 Del'cent.
.
• The board entered Into aareeReal GNP, which had talJen at
ment with Janet WllllamBon t.o ~ ·IIMWII rates ~ 5.3 percent IIJIII5,1
vide traniportatlon for a· c11sabllid percent In the laat quarter of 1981
stuclentt.oandtrornschool WWlarn· . and. tJii! fll'\lt quarter~ thla year, '
aonls t.o be relinburled ~cents per · roee t.o a &amp;eUOIIally adjustediiMWII
qt~~e tor the f9 miles she will travel' rate ~ $1.4111 trllllcn In the July·
round trtp.
. Septanber period, t.oday'a Com·
. Hilh Scbool Driver 'n'aJnllw, III8I'Qe Department repclt ald.
Inc., wu liven the 4'0iltnlct ...
Bllore 8lljultment tor ln1latlon,
(C&lt;IItlnued.on page l2)
GNP, a meuure rL aD aoods and

: ,,-

0

likely Is a psychopath and a loner.
The killer probably Is "psychopathic ... (and) has
little or no conscience," said Joseph Scott, 39, director
of OSU's criminology program.
Such macabre killings, Scott said, are "very uncommon." He said the killer probably became "so
angry ... that he absolutely lost any control."
Similar slaylngs In other parts of the country have
shown that such a killer usually Is "very Introverted
... a loner who lives In a make-believe world," Scott
said.
To others, the killer might appear completely normal, the professor said. Chances are the killer Is a
man, Scott added.
Officials said Monday that each of the teen-agers
had been shot at least once before the bodies were
dismembered, but no official cause of death has been
released. Jones said authorities believe the victims
were slain in the cornfield about 50 feet from the

Snag develops over new Gallia appointee

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP news staff

ANNIU~RSARY

1 Settion , 12 Pages
15 Cents
A Multim edia Inc . N ewspaper

Pome1roy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Oct. 20,1982

Meigs Local
has routine
board session

I

TRANSLUCENT

-STIFFL£R'S 5Chh

SAL£-

SAL£-

-STIFFL£R'S 5Chh

24x72 INCH
BROADLOOM

ANNIU~RSARY

SAL£-

TOWELS

-STIFFL£R'S 59th

ANNIU~RSARY

ANNIU~RSARY

&amp; KING SIZE PILLOW

'20~.

-STIFFUR'S 59th

-STIFFL£R'S 5Chh

MARTEX HAND

(REGULAR '2")

-STIFFL£R'S 59th

'I

BABY
AFGHAN

BLUE, YELLOW &amp; WHITE

FOR

FLANNEL
REMNANTS

5Chh ANNIU~RSARY SAL£-STI FL£R'S 5Chh ANNIU~RSARY SAL£~.XI~RI NTS-SOLIDS-JACQUARD
REGULAR, QUEEN

RUBBERQUEEN
BATH TUB

2

FOR

entinel

No link seen in mutilation murders

112 TO 1 YARD
LENGTHS

(REGULAR 79')

59!
ANNIU~RSARY

5')!.

SAL£-

ASSORTED
COLORS

ASSORTED DESIGNS

STRIPE TRIM

Voi.31,No. 118
Copyr'Yhlod 1982

PRINTS AND SOLIDS
(SLIGHT IRREGULARS)

-STIFFL£R'S 5Chh

Article questions
Halloween's meaning

l'ap:l' I:.!

60 INCH
MILL ASSORTMENT
TRICOT LINGERIE

Otl08£R 21st THRU OtT08£R 30th (WHIL£ QUANTITI£5 LASn

Atty. Fultz heads
Miller campaign

~

~~ad~es!ies'~~~:

ConsLmlitton

I

I

Governor ]ames A. Rhodes

Rhodes feels Ohio
near recovery period
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - Noting the decline In lnteresl rates
nationwide, Gov. James A. Rhodes today said he believes Ohio is on
"the verge of a recovery pertod."
"Our economic Indicators have been reflecting more positive
trends since the end of the first quarter. but high Interest rates have
been keeping consumers from buying large ticket items such as
houses, automobUes and appliances," Rhodes said .
"There Is a tremendous demand for these things. and the drop In
Interest rates should begin to encourage people to buy now."
Rhodes said the number of people oul of work in Ohio last month
droped from 657,1XXJ to 629,1XXl, another positive sign.
"As consumers begin to buy again, inventories will be reduced and
workers will be called back In many industries. Ohio traditionally
leads the nation out of recessions, and I believe it will this time."
flhodes said.
The governor said the state's Industrial development programs
are helping hold the line on unemployment. "Many of the industries
we have attracted to Ohio are preparing to come on line In the near
future and they will be providing thousands of new jobs, .. he said.

.Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND -The winning number drawn Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 442.
In the "Pick 4" game, played three times a week. the winning
number was 5193.
The lottery reported earnings of $381,170.50 on Its daily game. The
earnings came on salesof$814,219.50, while holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $433,049, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy tonight. Low4045. Winds westerly 10-15mph. Thursday, partly cloudy; High In the low 50s.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Friday through SIUiday:
Fair through tile period. IDghs In tile 5ns Friday Wid In the 60s
Saturday and Sunday. Lows In tile~ Friday and Saturday Wid near

40Sunday.

�..
'
VV~nesday,~. 70,1982

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel.

The China viewL_ _______W_il_lw_m_F_.B_uc__;k_ley.:....J_r.

1\ll 'u tHI -" InT I
j',. llll ' fUI . I lhtto

6if..99:!-!Ht4i
HI- \OTt:UTOTIIF "lF HI' ..' l lll· \Ill \1 1- U, , . \1 \ ... 0 \ \i\1· \

A~
~m~ ~L--,-.~c:::::~.~

.

~v

ROBERT 1.. "1'\(; FTr
l'uhlt!&lt;ho·t

P.H WHITEHEAD

IIOB fiOEH I!' II

DALE ROTHGEB. JR .
:\ .\ IF\IH F n uf Tl'h· ' -"~"' t;,~h-d t'rt·"· lnhuul ();u h ,.,.,." ' '"" t; tlwlt aud ilu.\ nwrwau ' ' '"' :. jtltfM 'r l'uhlt,ho·r:. 1\ .~~·w ial tu n.
I .I TI' FRS I WI WI '\Ill" an· \1 o·lnomt·tl . Tht'l , h••uhl ho · It ·~, 1hau .Wtl "'" th loou c .\II
h•lh·r' an· ~ uhjt•r l lu t~hlllll! :11HI ntu:.l bt· ' i)!tU'd loltlh uanw. ;ultln·" ami h •kphot!lt'
numht•r . N•• u n.~il! IM'd It•\ h ·r~ ~o~tll hoi· jJoUhlis ht·d . I A' lh•n. ~ twuld ht• 111 l!'""' t:l' h'. mhlrt·~&gt;:o.itut
i!.SIM'.~ . I}U\f)l' f !&lt;.lllllthlit •:-o .

.t\ growth sector
in home financing
:Seldom do you see or hear advertisements urging you to take a second
mortgage on your home, and yet the practice Is proliferating, perhaps to the
~tent of being the only growth sector In the home financing Industry.
• Anxious sellers are using them to encourage buyers, owners are relying
them to cover balloon payments on first mortgages or to finance
education, and lenders of various sorts find them a more secure form of
()laking loans.
·:One lender, Advance Mortgage Corp., estimates that thedollarvolumeof
~nd mortgages doubled between 1979and 1981, while first mortgages, the
traditional vehicle of home financing, were cut In haH.
.; Dollar figures are difficult to assemble, but Walter Blass, Advance's
executive vice president, estimates that In 1979 new first mortgages totaled
$liD blllion and seconds only $9.5 billion . A year later, he says, newly made
ttrst mortgages fell to $93 bllllon while second mortgages rose to $19 billion.
·: Blass believes the trend has accelerated this year.
:: Effectively dlsquislng the second-mortgage practice has been the ten(lency of both lender and borrower to refer to such financing by the
~uphemlsm "home equity loan" In a n attempt to avoid the stigma of the
@:enerlc description.
. By whatever name they are called, the National Association of Realtors
estimates that far more than haH of single-family home sales in the past
couple of years were facilitated by such loans to buyers from sellers.
· : They have also helped California homeowners retire big short -term loans
.-- so-called balloon mortgages that were Issued for two or three years by
sellers eager to move their properties. And they have made It possible for
homeowners to finance a variety of costly expenditures, Including college
tuitions.
: The basic change that has made such loans possible was the tripling In
value of the U.S. housing stock between 1970and 1!m, when It reached about
~trillion, with unmortgaged equity of about $3.1 trillion.
· But other factors too have been involved, Including a change In the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code In October 1979 that sharply Increased the lender' srtskon
signature loans. After that, many consumer finance companies moved Into
Second mortgages and away from their traditional business in small loans.
: Blass estimates that since 1977 the small loans outstanding among
tonsumer finance companies have Increased barely 10 percent while
~nd mortgages outstanding have multiplied five times. Spurred also by
tt&gt;e rise of bank credit cards, which often fill the same function as personal
loans, several consumer finance companies have been cutting the number
tit offices.
: The result of all the changes has in effect been a savings bank for
homeowners.
;. The practice of second mortgaging, politely referred to as the home
·'l'iqulty business, has become the source of liquidity for mlllions of families
Qtherwise squeezed dry by recession and Inflation.

e(l

:Letters to editor
Satanic celebration??
As we are reminded (through
newspapers, TV, radio, store advertisements, and decorations )
that the time of the year llas once
~gain approached the 'Holiday' of
Halloween, and since that Halloween is being pushed at us from all
sides, wtth only the traditional side
tJelng presented, I would like to
sllare wtth the citizens of our area
!he following arilcle entitled HALt.OWEEN by Gloria Phillips that
appeared In a recent copy of The
i4arturlon, page 16, as follows:
HaUoween
)Wlllons of Christians w\11 allow and even
ehCOUr4gt' thetr chlk1rento pay respect to the
df!ov1.l on October 31 . Churches wiU fully sane·
tJon the event wtth parties held on the prem,lses that w:lll be decorated with witches,
Hrooms, cats. jack-o- lanterns and bobbing

;ipples.

• What L~ the hann ? How did thts originate?

71)e custom of Halloween Is traced to the Ro-

rban Festival ot

Drukls whiCh was for thP

ciood.
. 1l)e Roman Pantheon was built by the Em pPjor Hadr1an in 100 A.D. as a temple to thP
(Ipddess Cybele-and other Roman deltles. It
tJetame the prlnc1pal place of worship. Ropagans prayed for their dead. then
Rome was captured a nd the Pantheon fell
tnlo disrepair.

mJn

·Emperor Phocase captured Rome and

IPf.'i" the Panthem to Pope Bonlface IV who
~ated It

to the VIrgin Mary and there

WM a resumption In using the temple to pray
tor the dead only now It was "Chrtstlanlzed."

Jn 831 A.D. Gregory tv extended the feast
tor aU the church and It becamse named All
SaiDII Day.
'lldl celebradcr:a ~ the dead honored the
11181 o1 the dead and on tills particular night,
uit·Druldl belleYed, the souls c1 the dead "'
tu,...s to their lonner homes to be enter·
by the llvtni. Bonfires were bullt atop
hiJo lo Jlllrt the wya for the dead, Suitable
food utllboller wu provldedf&lt;r these oplrlts
c r - IIIey would cut Jpells, cauoe havoc.
naif - · dellroY crops, kiD farm anlm
II(. uti .....,fe t*ror 11 they haunted the
tMc. 'l1tOie aplrltl demllllled to be plicated
b)«atvitlltbom a typo 11 ~or 11!ertng.
!1le ~ ttleiiiDCiulled the uoe ol nuts,
llfl"l• - - · wttrheo and black cats.

Black cats wei'E' considered reincarna ted be-

Ings wtth the ability to divine the future.
On thls occasion supernatural beings teni·
fled the populace. Even tOOay practitioners of
the witchcraft declare October 31 as the most

conducive time to practice their arts.
The Ct\rlsllan c hurch llied to eliminate the

Druid celebration by oHertng All Saints Day
as a substitute.

These delstlc cults held periodic meetings
as wttclK&gt;s' Sabbaths, the most lmpor·
tant one being October 31.
Pranks and mischiefs began to be played

known

out to represent the mischievous behavior at-

tributed to witches and fairies. The "trick or
treat'' came from an ancient Irish Druid practice. One of the basic tenets In witchcraft Is to
force or control others ln tb:!lr behavior to
come under control of the one practicing
witchcraft .
l'radltJonal Halloween symbols appeared
In the U.S. during the late UKOs. Among these
were figures of witches, black cats, death's
head cut from a pumpkin, candles, bobbing
apples, masks, parties, and pranks.
In rural areas aggravating and destructive
acts were done as removing gates and placing
them atop barns and doing the same wtth
wagons. Outhouses were pushed over and
windows were soaped .
No where In scripture are we Instructed to
pray to or for the dead.
Scripture teaches that to be absent from the
body Is to be at home with the Lord lf one is a
believer (2-Cortnthlans 5:6). The Bible aLso
makes clear that all believers are salnts, not
ooly a special few. Scripture also teaches that
It Is appointed Wlto man once to die and after
that the Judgment, or no second chance and
no reincarnation.
We are told to have no part In the deeds of
darkness. Both Chrtsttan and Jew are forbidden In Deuteronomy 18: 10,11 to parUctpate ln
anything of the occult cr witchcraft 1n any as
It Is an abomlnaUon to God.
The reply may be, "But we only do tills at
Halloween ln tun.'' One ts never to handle the
thlngs of Satan "In fun" as he takes you seri&lt;&gt;usly and since you are In forbkldel1 territory you can get hurt.
Halloween Is a Satanic celebration c1 Satsnlc orlg!n and hal no pla&lt;e In the lffe or
church of the Clu15t1an.

The Bible teaches that "my pea.

pie are destroyed for a lack of
knowledge" In Hosea 4:6. Need I
say more? - Paul Jones, 722i4
Beech St;, Apt. a; Middleport.

Today
ln
history
,.
'

·

There Is advantage to be gotfrom
being far, far a way when the president speaks on Important domestic
matters. I was handed a copy of
Mr. Reagan's address on the economy by the U.S. Embassy In PekIng, and the 400 Americans I
traveled with during the ensulng24
hours exhibited no curiosity concerning It: They are a hardy group
of travelers, who, In a single day,
were forced to meditate the lnllnlte
preparations made for the death of
the Mlng emperor 700 years ago,
and who accepted stDically the a!).
solutely unheralded death of ooe of
our number at the railroad station
In Peking - who, after touring the
Forbidden City, keeled over, and,
at age 85, died most gracefully, and
is at this moment, I devoutly hope,
telling the Emperor Chang Ling
that, really, all that fuss and bother
was really unnecessary .
So how does a Reagan speech
read In the Middle Kingdom, away
from the Instant analysis al CBS,
James Reston, Democratic Truth
Squads and surreptitious Republican critics?
So-ro. Mr. Reagan, as usual,
shows that he is on to a lot of things;
but does not reveal that there are a
lot of things he either Is not on to or
does not choose the moment to
speak about.
Concerning what he calls the five
major economic concerns, he correctly lays claim to having done
something about four of them. Inflation is lessened, so are Interest
rates, so are taxes, so Is the rate of
growth In government spending.
Left over Is- unemployment.
Mr. Reagan went on, by means of
charts, to demonstrate that lnllatlon and deficit spending have had
In the past 14 years the effect of.
giving us up; and downs In the unemployment rate, but every time
we get an up It Is lower then the
previous up: so that, for Instance,
when employment bottomed out In
1968 it was 3.6 percent, rtslngthen to

a high of 5.9 percent, from which It
retreated to 4.9 percent ·-but that
was 30 perceht higher tlu~n the previous bottom. So, said Mr. Reagan,
It has been going - because of the
lnftationary fuel, down. ' But once
we truly lick that, then Interest
rates will coine down, savings wlll
Increase, revitalization "111 come to
Industry, and we will be happy ever
after- fit to relax In my favorite of
the emperor's lesser res ldenees In
the Forbidden City, his Palace of
Accumulated Elegance.
Now what Mr. Reag;an said is
certainly correct. Insofa r as his
prescriptions to, I.e., Inflation,
taxes, a cancerous growth of the
public sector, all these nave con-

tributed to what we call structural
lmemployment.
Buttherearectherproblems. We
know, of course, that It wasn't lnllatlon, or deficit spending, that sus.
talned our great unemployment of
the '30s - queasy encyclopedias
have been written, Inquiring Into
the causes of that Inflation. Whatever the verdict on the mismanagement of the '30s, we seem to be
facing In the 'Ills a problem that In
some respects seems to be transIdeologized. We have severe unemployment
In
free-enterprise-oriented economies
(our own); but also In socialistoriented economies (India's, for Instance). Once again, people are

..........

--

'1\vo down and tlll'a! to go, that's
the pbrase that can be heard these
.days from North Gallla Pirate fans.
Coach John Blake's Pirates winner
of six out of seven tries this fall now
' put their energies ioward beating
each SVAC opponent as they face
'them. Friday night, NG hosts Hannan Trace In another important
league battle which could mean the.
all Important SVAC crown three
weeks from now.
Winners of two lopsided battles
· wtth Eastern and North Gallla, the
Pirates are averaging 23.8 points
per game while their defense has
permitted 6.4 points per outing.
Eric Penick, NG's slick running
back, topped the l,(XXJ yard rushing
mark Friday with Z76 yards on 26
carries.
Penick got the Pirates moving
against Southwestern wtth a 62yard
run. That run set up &amp;ott Pickens
for a one yard sneak. A pass to Mike
Mays from Pickens was good the
NG's second first period score.
Mays grabbed another Pickens toss
for the extra points.
Penick scored In the second period on a five yard run and later
added a seven yard run. Paul Hoi' llngshead added a six-pointer on an
18yard run and Pickens got the final
,Pirate TO on a 16 yard run.
• Southwestern broke Into the scor. Jpg column In the fourth period on a
bne yard run by David Nlda.
.. The victory continued North Gal• ita's winning ways against Southw~. estern since Blake football coach
· there.
Last Friday night, Hannan Trace,
the Pirates opponent Friday was
beaten 14-0 by Southern.
In a game played during a heavy
downpoqr, Southern got a first period TO from Wade Connolly on a
five yard run which stood unttl the
Tornadoes managed to cross the
goalllne In the third quarter on a one
yard blast by Greg Nease.
Southern later added a safety for
• Its Qnal margin.
Melvin Clagg led both the Wildcat
offensive and defensive.units. Clagg
collected 35 yards rushing In 17 carries and tied with Mike Beaver In
defensive stats.
In other games this week, Southem.vlslts Kyger Creek while Eastem plays at Southwestern.
Last Friday night, Eastern and
Kyger Creek battled to an 0.0 tie at
Eastern.
Both teams mounted sustained
drives but were unable to push the
ball across the goolllne.
Troy Guthrie ledEastem'sattack
with 115 yards on 25 canies while
Clluck Vogel led KC with 32 yards
rushing.

wondering whether the old rules
apply after society reaches certain
levels o.f technnloglcal
sophistication.
The basic proposition was named
after the Frenchman JeanBaptiste Say. He said, In effect,
back In the early llKXls that production will breed Its own demand.
This crucial Insight derives from
axiomatic knowledge of human tJe.
logs and of nature. Human beings
are never satlslled; always, we
want more. Accordingly, there cannot be overproduction. But nature
is stingy: There Is a scarcity. More
people ~~want" than nature "provides."

~. "1\lt~ lliSfl''ltM/W.~

fVOLU1ION

~SOCIE:Irf

Wanted: consultant accountants for Ohio
Wanted: Ohio consultant-accountants with expertise In utlllty nnatters to
provide technical assistance In rate Increase cases.
Apply: Ohio Consumers CounseL
The agency which represents consumers before the Public UU!ltles
Commission In rate cases brought by natural gas, electric and t« ~lephone
companies spends over $1 mUllon annually for expert, outside hel)p.
As large a sum as that is, Consumers Counsel Wllllam A. Spra tley said
utllltles spend 10 times that much for the consultants and attorney:&gt;: they use
to win approval of their requests.
And It is a relatively small amoimt compared to the multl-mUllon dollar
size of many big utlllty cases.
But hiring non-Ohio flnns to work on those matters has drawn criticism In
the past from legislators who believe the work should go to in-statt.e flnns,
especlally In view of the tough economic Urnes.
Slate Controlling Board approval of three consumers counsel 1requests
recently o!fered a case In point.
The panel agreed to hire Berkshire Consulting Services, Ridgefield,
Conn., at a cost of $33,085 to provide technical assistance with bperatlng
Income and rate base Issues In a General Telephone Co. case.
The utility, which has 564,1ll6 customers In lllofthestate's88countles,ls

seeking a $32.5 mUllon Increase In rates.
Controllers also released $19,9al to hire Wllllam W. Dunkel of Pleasant
Plains, m., to provide technical assistance with other Issues In the same
case.
They hired Wong, Chan and Co., Cincinnati, at a cost of$19,l!i0, to work on
operating Income and rate base questions In an East Ohio Gas Co. rate
Increase proposal.
The utlllty wants to boost Its Income by $88 mUllon. It has 932,Z74 customers In 18 counties of northeast Ohio.
Spratley said he agrees that Ohio consultants should be used whenever
possible but adds there Is a shortage of such flnns available.
"The problem we face, frankly ,Is finding Ohio contractors who will work
on our side of the street," he said.
Spratley said most of the big accounting !Inns work for utilities. And he
saldtheconsumerscounselo!flceseldomusesacontractorwhobasworked
for one of the regulated companies.
He said In the past the breakdown between Ohio and non-Ohio flnns has
been roughly 50-50.
"We have to let 15 percent of our contracts to minority contractors herein
Ohio. Last year that was aver $:nl,(XX)," Spratley said.

The approaching election No~. 2 their customers In Easte1~n Meigs
new construction.
a part, Is fortunate In bavlng an emwill have the most Important conse- with no chance of securing new bus.
- According to all the people I have lnently qualllled candidate for the
seen, Richard Celeste will replace post, Attorney Jolynn Bosler r1 Galquences of any election In Sou- !ness In return, they will . need to
the astern Ohio In my memory. On support the access highway with
Governor James Rhodes In the llpolls. She Is opposing Incumbent
It wlll depend whether this section more enthusiasm than th•ey have
state house next January. That "Buzz" Ball of Athens, who has
of the state Is part of an Important shown In the past.
:
seems to be an accepted fact and done little for Meigs County during
Anyone who has traV,f?ted the whether Meigs County recognizes his term In ofllce. Boster has promnational highway system or stays
In the fringe area of progress.
freeways of America kniow that
the political fa~ts of. life and gives lsed full time effort on behalf of the
l am referring to the extension of prosperity has always follt:JWed the
Celeste a majority vote Is up to the proJXIsed access highway. In an InRoute 33 from Rock Springs to the highways. Almost I;'Very ·~xlst lJe. · Individual voters. It will make little tervlew with The Ravenswood
Ritchie Bridge at Ravenswood, W. comes a beehive of buslne\'ls actlvdifference In the state-wide result News, she had this to say about the
Va. and the rebuilding r1 Route 33 lty bringing new money tnto the . but will make a great dltference In bridge access road:
from Darwin to Athens. There Is communities and spo nsorlng the economic future of Meigs and
"I cannot understand why State
little doubt In my mind that If the ·· growth within the comm.unlty ItAthens Counties. For as long as I officials are dragging their feet.
access highway Is not built In the self. As an example, connlder the can remember, Meigs County has Even In VInton County people are
next four years, It will not be buDt. I growth around the Ohio a.pproach
been a "safe" haven for Republl- asking, 'When Is that road IJ)lng to
remember the high hopes for a !DthenewbrldgeatPt.Pleasant.In can candidates. As a result, when. bebullt?'Thatstretchofhlghwayls.
Republican administrations are In crucial for the development of the
North-South artery when the the few short years since the fallen
power In the state house, there has entire region and 1 don't care If 1
Pomeroy Bridge was built 50 years Silver Bridge has been replaced by
ago. 'Ilxlse hopes plummeted dur· the new four-lane structutre, busl·
been little Incentive for state lm- have to work 10 hours a day, seven
lng the dreary depression and by ness ·growth In GalHa Cout1lty near provements In "safe" Meigs days a week, for the next two years
the tbne the economy had recothe bridge approach has be~n phen- County. The same has been true for to get it. We haves!Xlleoftheflnest,.
vered the bridge had come to be omena!. There Is no reaS&lt;:m to tJe.
Democratic administrations. Why brightest, most outstanding people
accepted as a span connection two I!eve that similar growth In Meigs reward lxlstlle voters with state lm- here In Southeastern Ohio. We have ·
communities rather than two sec- County will not be possible when provements? So, whatever admln- the most beautiful scenery In the
lions of the country. That Is what Route 33 becomes the main artery lstratlon Is In power, Meigs County state and we have some of the most
wlllhappentothebrldgeatRavens- of traffic between Columbus and
loses. Wehavenostatelnstltutlons, needed natllfal resources. Yet,
wood. It Is now only a tlnk betWI!ell Cllarleston and between NcM'thwest no state schools and.damn few good even with au of this, many times we
two communities In Ohio and West Ohio, Michigan and Cana~~ to the state roads. This year, I hope will .lire stlll thought li tn a negative
VIrginia, v!lluable because It draws Southeast United States. Jl!ll .that Is jle different.
way. I plan to let Columbus know
these communities closer together; needed Is a decent hlglnilily from
There would he little wisdom In that we are a vital area and that we .
but worthless to attract large Athens to Darwin and frdm Rock electing a Democratt: admlnlstra- areofvltallmporiancetotheentlre
numbers ·r1 the traveling publlc. Springs il the Ritchie Brll~, a to- tloo 811d not electing a Democratic state."
Suddenly, I feel encouraged!
Unless the merchants of Pomeroy tal distance of less lhan·ootmnesli representative il the State House.
and Middleport are content illose
The 94th district, of which M.elgs 1s ·.

f1i7¥.9011 ANIJSO~

w. /I,J6I(f, PAU.?

.---------.

.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

IN'OURGRANDPRIZEDRAWINGS!

298 SEOOND ST.

HERE'S HOW TO PLAY

POMEROY, 0.
THRU OCT. 23, 1982

Pick up a FREE game tlclcet and collector
• card at Super Valu. (No Pun:hue
Necessary.) You can also get a free game tlclcet
and/or collector card (please epecity) by mailing a
eetf·eddressed,'stamped envelope to Fabulous
Fortune of Prizes, Free Card and Tlcl&lt;et Request.
P.O. Box 26272, Birmingham, Al35226. Use this
address for ticket and card reques1a only. UmH one
tlclcet per request. one request per peroon per day.
Eacl! , _ 1 ,...II be matted separately.
Simply punch out the perforated po&lt;tlons
• on the game llcket to reveal your game
ITIIJI&lt;eno. Matl:h the martce~ to the squares on your
collector card 8Ad you could be a winner. Some
markers say "You Qualify for Grand Prtze
Orawtng(s)." H you obtain one of these martcers,
you are eligible to enter the Grand Prtzo
Orawlng(s). For more details. - the bed&lt; of your
ooHeclor card.

~~¢

RADEA

Whole Fryers .........
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$
199
Round Stea·k......l~·
•••

FRESH

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

PORK STEAK or ROAST. ............... ~~·..$1.29
COUNTRY STYLE
SPARE RIBS .......................................~~: .$1.29
WILSON'S
$
SAVORY BACON ..............................~~·.. 1

Chuck Roas!

Nldonal Hockey leapt'
w.a Ccnrrmt't'

hl:rtdliMvWoll

WLTGFGAPta
6 1
0 34 lB
12

r'l'llslel
Phllalk'lphla !i

2

Nt'W .k&gt;J¥Y

0

:1

I

.1

Washlnglon 2
NY ftans;:er.~ 2

3

0
0

P1tlsiAIJll:h

4

~

Boston
Quebec
Buffalo
Harlford

18

4•
2
2
I

I

0

:11

IR

l

2
1
I
2

2..1
77

2!1

10
10

22

--.._
l
2

!I
4
4
J

2-1
1!1 J1

I

.1

10

25
31

..........I

~

Monll"l'81

:II 24
:!i 21

~

19

'

26
20

•'

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

II

5013219

a.~...,

411

St. Lou!!
Toronto

2925

9

3"
021 24
04
21725
0511231

6

""'"''AnRI'Ies ......,..
3 1

2

J
2

2

1

Calg8ry

:f)
:II
3
2 ~ :It
251~.!1

Vancouver

1

5

1

l..n&amp;
WlruUpet

Edmorlton
.

21

2
I

•

18

22

7
6

'

'17

3

'1\tMday'AOamrJI

Is..,..,_ !S. Vancwwr 4
Hollon J, CaJ.aary 1

--·-

NY

Montreal at Wasllln«ton
QLk'bec II Detroit
St. LoW at Plttlbull[h

. VIJK'OUYft' at NY ~
~atTormkl

&amp;arraJo at CNcago
Hartbd at F.clrnookWI

.....,..o.....

New -~

at Lol AnaeleB

SWEET SUE

Chicken
CAMPBEU.'S
$
I
-Tomato ·Soup~..oz.4/
. .
10.1s

MontrNI at Ph1ladelctia

Pln.....,at-

Wub&amp;nlfon at NY IJlanclen
Boltoll at Edmonton

-~ .. Calpry

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

_.........,_ '

/~"¥'

.......,....... Til

·-

BETTY CROOCER

MaaiWL

.l

'

•••

J'

ATLANTA
Jim

!!

.,

•'
I

---0111Jo&lt;
INDIANAPOLIS ·

IOLIJI!( !JUIII, -

• PAeERS;.

IIILWAIUZ ~- .
1111; pord. . . . _,.., -

' ' .
l'lo!-l-~-~-

(

j
,'

69¢

.... It
- . ud

K&lt;lpldO.-"'.
..

McElroy. ,...,.t; Jim -

-

CA~E . MIXES

HAWK~-PiuH

~

~

••
,•

J

1

2

TI'IU188ctions

,•

THE ODDS ...

Hockey

.'

01 OCt. Jl, 1918, Gemi8I\Y accepted U.S. tenns to end World War I and
. . .ed ltllllbriW'IIItW baCk to their horne base.
'
' 011 tldl date:
~ -.. ~ ll:tiJioiK«ea declared~ emperor•.

•3,000 CASH!

Scoreboard

DOON~ :

~ahllblliht'tnldstOI'Y:

OR

STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm

'

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
W L T P OP
TEAM
North Gallla
61016745
4 3 0 143 109
Southern
2 4 1 38lll2
Eastem
14250103
Hannan Trace
16080178
Southwestern
Kyger Cr&lt;ek
15134137
SVAC ONLY
2 0 0 g; g·
North Gallla
20050 8
Southern
101146
Kyger Cr&lt;ek
011043
Eutem
020 628
Hannan TraCE'
0201678
Southwestem

Access prospects •encouragin""'g~_Lvw_eu_w_in_ge_tt

ewRY /DI IRJ71f1UIE
(1i '/AmllliHT' liKe 1D
IN'II7B A/JIJ!illlf!!!6'rtc1X11 .

.,

Pirates
•
contmue
·countdown

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Weclnetday, Oct. 20r 1982

The Daily Sentinel~

l'omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The I&gt;JIIIy Sentinel

....

I 18,5,0Z.
Umit3.Ptease ·.

I

·

BANANAS.......................................4LBS. $1.00
BROUGHTON'S

COTTAGE CHEESE ....................... ~.~-?~:.~1.09
RAVORITE IND .
CHEESE SLICES............................ ~~-~~: .sl.29
RAVORITE REG. or CRINKLE CUT
FRENCH FRIES ............................... ~~.?~: .. 7'1

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Cards force seventh game

OUT STEALING HOME -St. Louls Cards' runner Lonnie Smith
dlves lor home plate as Milwaukee Brewers' catcher Ted Simmons
reaches to tag him In the third Inning of Tuesday night's World Series
game In St. Louis. Smith was caUed out on the stolen base attempt.
Cards' batter George Hendrick watches the play. (i\P Lascrphoto).

Troup looks beyond latest win
FAIRVIEW PARK, Ohio iAPIGuppy Troup already is looking
beyond his victory In the $90,1XXl
Northern Ohio Open.
"My goal is to be bowler of the
year, " said the top-seeded Troup, of
Columbia. S.C., who won the tournament Tuesday night. "We've got
four tournaments left and it looks
like I'll need at least one, probably
two more championships to have a
chance."
Troup, 32. on Tuesday became the
third person this year to claim three
Professional Bowlers Association
titles. The others are Earl Anthony
of Dublin. Calif., and Ar1 Trask of
Fresno, Calif.
Troup outscored Jeff Bellinger
246-22&lt;; to win the Northern Ohio
Open. He converted a 1-2-4-lO spare
in the second f·rame and followed
with six straight strikes to take the
lead. Spares in the ninth and lOth
frames secured Troup's $1].(XXl top

prize.

"Picking up that spare in thesecond frame gave me a big lift," said
Troup, who has earned $81,247 on
the tour this year.
Bellinger, also of Columbia, S.C.,
the third seed, won$6,1XXlforhlsbest
finish in a three-year pro career. He
defeated Jim Pencak of Highland
Heigh is 219-IDI and Steve Fehr of
Cincinnati 245-2(ll to face Troup.
"Guppy's a great front-runner,"
Bellinger said. "U he gets out in
front he's exceptionally tough to
catch. I've bowled him many times
and I feel when I get out in front I
have a good chance to beat him." .
Fehr collected $5,1XXJ for finishing
third, while Pencak made $4,1XXJ for
fourth place. Marshall Holman of
Medford, Ore., finished fifth to earn
$3,500.
.
Troup won tournaments earlier
this year in Anaheim, Calif., and
Windsor, Ontario.

IMeet the Meigs Marauders.. \

ST. LOUIS (AP) - The pretimi·
naries are over. Now, the St. Lou is
Cardlnals and Mllwaukee Brewers
are ready for the main event .
The rolierroaster 1982 World Series, which has twisted more times
than a belly dancer, is down to one
decisive, final game with the world
championship on the line.
The Cardinals forced tonight's
seventh-game showdown with a
marathon 13-1 rain-delayed victory
Tuesday night in Game Six, a game
during which temperatures
plunged more than~ degrees.
Clear but cold weather, with lows
in the mid-:»&gt;, is forecast for Game
Seven with Joaquin Andujar going
for St. Louis against the Brewers'
Pete Vuckovich in a rematch of the
Game Three starters. St. Louis won
that game 6-2 but Andujar was
forced to leave in the seventh inning
when he was struck on the right leg
by a batted bail.
Cardlnal Manager Whitey Herzog said he had no hesitation about
using the fiery Dominican right·
hander, who was the best pitcher on
· the St. Louis staff for the-season's
final month.
"Joaquin gets the bali," said Herzog. "U I don't give hln the ball, I'm .
sure I'd be one dead manager."
Rookie John Stuper had the ball
for Game Six and responded with a
four-hitter. He was backed by a
high-powered Cardinal attack that
included home runs by Keith Hernandez, who drove in four runs, and
Darrell Porter, who delivered two,
and a Series record three extra base
hits by designated hitter Dane Iorg.
Stuper thought the Cardinal hitters seemed awfully famtllar.
"We looked like the Milwaukee
Brewers," he said.
St. Louis climbed all over Brewer
starter Don Sutton, tagging him for
seven runs and seven hits in 41-3
innings. Sutton left an instant before
the first rain delay, a 26-minute
teaser in the fifth inning.
Then. in the sixth, a deluge hit

Busch Stadium, halting play two
hours, 13 minutes in the rnlddle of a
Cardinal rally that produced six
runs and wrapped up a victory St.
Louis had to have.
Stuper waited out both delays and
came back without problems each
time. He retired 15 consecutive bat·
ters over the middle innings and had
a two-hit shutout untll the ninth
inning.
"Considering the circumstances
and the importance of it, this is ~
best game of my life," said Stuper.
Before he started, he had been a
tittle concerned about the pitching
pairing, a rookie going up against a
17-year veteran with 258 career
victories.
"I said that thematchupofSutton
and Stu per seemed like a huge mismatch," he said. "But in the game of
baseball, anything can happen."
And on Tuesday night, just about
everything did. There were four errors by the Brewers, two apiece by
second baseman Jim Gantner and
shortstop Robin Yount, who carried
a .524 batting average into the game
but went 0-for-4. When Yount made
his second error in the ninth inning,
the remnants of the crowd of 53,723
hooted him, mimmtcking the MVP
chants he has heard so frequently
from Milwaukee fans.
This nightmare siarted early for
Milwaukee with the Cards strllcing
for a pair of unearned runs with two
out in the second inning. Iorg
doubled on a ball that glanced out of
left fielder Ben Ogllvie's glove. Wll·
lie McGee followed with a bouncer
that went right through Yount's legs
for an error and then Tommy Herr
doubled, scoring McGee.
In the fourth, George Hendrick
opened wit)! a single and trotted
home on Porter's homer, making it
4-0. Then Iorg tripled and buzzed
home on a suicide squeeze bunt by
Herr.
In the fifth, Lonnie Smith singled
and Hernandez, who had snapped

No big winners, revenues up
CHJCAGO !AP) -The Big Ten
suffered the embarrassment of not
landing a single team in The Associated Press Top ~ poll this week
and Commissioner Wayne Duke
doesn't llke it one bit but attendance
and television revenues are
rocketing.
"!don't believe inthepolis, " Duke
said Tuesday. "Unfortunately, they
dictate the bowls and television.
They are instrumental in the promotion of college football but are not an
accurate barometer.
"Big Ten football is America's
most popular spectator sport and
Big Ten football is at lis zenith," said
Duke. "We'll establish another a ttendance record as we have every
year and we will receive $1,226,636
from television this week."
The ltllnois-Wisconsin game will
be carried by CBS Saturday while
the Ohio State-Indiana game wtll be
televised by ABC. Each ' network

V/ednesday, Oct. 20,1982

Wednesday, Oct. 20,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi9

will pay $613,318 for the regional
telecasts.
"Our previous record of $3.3 million from television will be surpassed this year in an attempt to
bring Big Ten football to the people
who can't get to the stadiums to see
our games," added Duke.
One reason the f~~ can't get to
the stadiums is because of sellouts.
Last week three of the five conference games were sold out and the
other two came with 1,500 of selling
out.
The Big Ten has attracted over
2,J75,1XXl fans this season for an average of67,870 per game, a rate that
will surpass the Big Ten and NCAA
record of an average of· 64,074 per
game set two years ago:
But why the dropoff in rankings?
And It didn't start this week. TheAP
poll began in 1936 and last year, for
the first time in history, theBigTen
falled to place a team among the
Top 10. Michigan finished 12th.

&lt;X&gt;CKEYSVILLE, Md. (AP) Thirty days Into the National Football League strike, the ·owners are
beglnntngtohittheplayershardest

IUSPS I - I
A DlvhdiHII of MuiUmtdll, fat'.
Publi11~ evl'ry afternoon, Mornllty lhrou.:h
Frhhty, Ill Court Strtet, by the Ohio Yllllt•y
Pltblishin~ CumpMny • MuiUmedl11, Inc .,
Pmneruy, Ohio 4S769, 992-2158. ~'Ond cl11u
~lil.ltl' pllif.l ul Pomt'roy. Ohio.

Mt!ml&gt;er : ~ A.uochtlt.'d Preu, Inland Dw i-

New11papt!r Salt's, 733 Thjrd Avenue. New
York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send address to The Daily
&amp;!ntind , Ill Cuur1 St.. Pomeroy, Ohio45769.
SUIIii:R!PfiON RATES
By Carrier or Mulor Ruutt

One WL't! k • .
. .. •..•.. ... •....• . $1.00
One Month
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.40
One Yeilr . . . . . . .......... ....... 1$2.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Durly .
. ....... .... ... .. . !SCents
Subst'nlwrs nut lh:sirinl( to pay the cctrrlcr
rrll:ly remit rn ~tdvanl'e direl'l tn Ttw Diiily
Sl·ntinl'l un &lt;1 J. 6 ur 12 month basrs. Crt!t.lit
will hl ·l!rvcn l'a rricr cat'h month.
Nu subst"riptrun..'i by mttil pcnniUL'tJ in towns
wlwn· hurne t'arrit•r scrvit't! is avuilablt'.
MAII. SUB$CRIPTIONS
huildeOhlu

IJWeeks .
26 wc.·lt'i .
~2W • ·•·k:; .

.. . . -- ...... . --- .. - 114.04
.. .. .... .... ---- .. 127.30
.. ............. 151.18

IJ Wt·•·ks .

Oulsldt'Ohin
. . ........ . .... $15.21

2fiW,·t·k.i .
~2 Wl'l'k.~ .

.. ....... ..... 129.6&lt;
.. . 151\.21

ATTENTION
SYRACUSE-RACINE RESIDENTS

WE NOW HAVE IN STOCK, THE SPECIFIED
PLASTIC SEWER PIPE FOR YOUR HOUSE
CONNECTIONS.

&lt;(.-~~
VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY
Ph. 992-6611
•

RUTLAND

DEPARTMENT
STORE
Prices Elfective Thru Octohr.r 23 . 1982
~

ECKRICH
LB•. S2J9

HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD ............. ~s~Sl.49
,JOHN WNGSTRETII
191 pound
Sophomore tackle

BRYAN ZIRKLE
148 pound
J unlor guard

VISION EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT lENSES

BRlAN SPENCER

165 pound
Senior Guard

MATrRIFFLE
165
Sophomore wingback

Pound

'

I ARTCARVED SILADIUM®
H.S. CLASS RINGS

INOWONLY$84'5 .
I.

WITH THIS AD

·•ELECTRIC HEATERS
•WOOD &amp; COAL BURNERS
eGAS .. HEATERS

1PLUS
up to $26 worth of custom
features fREE!
Bllng In fhls od to get super savings on
yoor ArtCaved'Silodium • class ring.
Every ring Is tJocked by the ArtCOIVed
Full lifetime warranty. This offer expires
Novembel 30. t982 and Is .to be used
only fOIIhe purChase of ArtCOIVed
Rings. •

1
I

PHONE
992-6545

tivesMark

PAPER
TOWELS ..........~ ~~99¢
17 OZ. DEL MONTE
FRUIT COCKTAIL ....... ~~~- 79¢
10Yz OZ. HILTON
OYSTER STEW ......~~N.s 2JS1.59
. 15 OZ. ARMOUR
CORN BEEF HASH .... ~~~ Sl.09
TRDPICANA
.

ASST. DRINKS
5.6

oz.

.

10 OZ. CANS . 3/79¢

··~········

.

·

,.,

~0~. SL29 ..'

..........

SWEET PEAS.

..........:a:.

,,.

17 OZ. DEL IIONTE

HUNTS KETCHUP

2/99

4

. .. '

--

HOT COCOA MIX •..• :·~~~~. s1:49
9 OZ. FRANK'S REGULAR

•••••••••••

,.:;,.

"··

•••••••~~L~,69~

12 PACK CARNATION

ARD

.•.

'

DREAM WHIP

14 oz.

....

'·'

ter of ceremonies, and several ot
Leonard's public statements point
toWard retirement.
'i):beysayican'twalk·awaylrom
tbe•money and adulation/' the 26yelir-old Leonard, who had earned
abOut $35 million In the ring, said
eaJ11er this month. "Money is no
lOI!fl!r a factor, see. Itdoesn'tdrlve
llle1anyn'l~. If I fight (undisputed
middleWeight champion Marvelous
Malvin) Hagler, I beat a middleweight. So Whal"
· Leonard could make many mil·
lionS more by fighting Hagler.
Slime other Leonard statements:
..,.''Thl$ InJury Is a message. If
not, It's &amp;,.heckuva hint. It doesn't
take a genius to tlgure out the optionS available to me."
-7"I'd like to sl)ow kids that a person •can be a champion In other
fields."
..!"Every day I stay away (rml
boxing, CllaDctlS are less-that I will
. go back Into tbe ring."

•

I
i

.
.

' ~ bas not fought sinCe he
knocki!d Out BniceFinchln !be third
round ml rib. i5. He was to haw
def81ded hJa title ilgalnst lqer
~ Oil May 14, but the eye InJury wu·'dllcovered and the tight

table."

1l o••lou''"""'""'"'""""""''
,i&lt;M,....,._."" ......
...... - ., ..
.....,..,
,.,..,_.,,.. ..""",
_.., ....,..... .......... ..................

...

Go&lt;lortJir•nC.O.Q • •·-

~ . ,.. , .- ~

,~

f.:lo C..~ """"" r!'lfl ""' N ........ lrt"'lt&lt;' _, .. •01110

-

t •• -

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

l&amp;o,,., ...... ..-

\t.lfll &lt;llln ltc_o. .... GGool...., ,.us • l'wtr1o~u oOGU S
" /'0' '""""" • "\ '"" N _ ., •'
111 1-IMIIIW""G""""""' '11"'&lt;•1 00 00"1 or or ... o • "" 011 ....
or ..,, ""''- " or """""'"'~ .,.,...,,., ~ "
'-001' ''" ,_.,.or~~~ -~

""' ' ,,,,..Coo",...,.
,,..,, o"''*''o"

'" Ill...,, '"""""''"'

....... . ncl .. _

, _ , ,. .. ..

r.. ...... """' '"''

. ..,,..... .......,.,. ..... ,..............""
•OJ .."'''" •t 11091l1

' 0 floo

' '"' "''""" ~ ""'' ""Pro'&lt; """ '"

L,.., "'' ,..,.. " ' urc •ou

GENERAL FOODS CORPORATION

SG04D18300

• Save an extra

mall the attached certificate
to receive up to six $1.00
Mainstay 20 lb. coupons.

---

Alpha·B~the cereal that

provides wholesome
. fun at breakfast.
Fun to eat letter shapes in a
delicious oat and·com cereal.
NOW 2 new fun to play games.
One game on the _back of eac:h
specially marked box.

star Refre~hed
=·~-r

For
·

I

WHEN YOU BUY
A 2-LITER
BOTTlE OF

COKE. OR TAB.

TIIADIMARII"

TRADEMARk"

" Coci·Cola" and " Coke·· are reglelered tra&lt;Mmarks which ldentlly
the 11me product of the Coce·Cole Company.
" Tab" Ia a reglatered trademark of tnt Coca·Coia Company.

SAVE 25¢
WHEN YOU BUY
A 2-LITER
BOTTlE OF
,~]!~ OR ,.T~l.

The Corn Flakes
with the fresh
corn taste
that's light ·
..
and crisp
,,'\ '

HURRY!

Offer Expires
January Jl, 1983

.. ,,..

,.

·. , .

I
............................u.. . . ..
Gt:N ER AI. t'OOUS (;( )M tJ'&lt;)R ~I'I()N

SG04D23300

I

~u.~~

canceled.

'"

tempt by the owners to break the

with the Mainstay
everyday
low price.

ence, with invited guests in black tie ·

and Howard Cosell serving as mas-

strike and was tied dlrectly to the
Management Councll's withdrawal
of the $1.6-blillon package. "As they
open the camps," he said, "they'll

• Save now ...

But the elaborate news confer0

There was no immediate comment from the BengalsorRedskins.
Murphy, also a member of the
union's executive committee, said

Post' packs three packs of
plump, delicious raisins In
each box of Post' RaiSIN BRaN
(20 and 25 oz.).
No wonder It's "The Fruit
and Cereal Lover's Cereal."

news media, ~neral public and invited guests Nov. 9atthe8altimore
Ciylc Center, the arena where the
undisputed weltetweight champion
launched his pro career in 19'T1.
Charles Brotman, a spokesman
tor Leonard, told The Associated
Press that Leonard plans tovtsttDr.
Ronald G. Michels once more befo!f making a decision about his
ttghttng fUture. It was Michels who
operated on Leonard last May for a
a partially detached retina in the lett
eye.

MARGARINE
.. .79' Head
ONIONS .... ~~-59'
.
12 Oz. Kraft Pimento
LETIUCE .... ~:·.d 49'
36 Stice Individual Processed
10 lb. Idaho Bakin&amp;
.
CHEESE
ATOES ~~. Sl.59

and Mike Fuller ot the Bengals said
they had been contacted by teammates who told them ot being called
by their assistant coaches and ad-

R81SINBR8N

Bert Sugar, publisher of the mag·

HOURS: MON. THRU FRI. 9:00·12:00, 1:00-5:00
OPEN WED. EVENING 6:00-9:00
CLOSED THURS. AFTERNOON

443 Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
Middleport

$1.6blillonwasneverreallythere.It

azlne and also of The R.lng, said
Tuj!Sday that Leonard will announce his retirement before the

JAMES L. SCHMOLL, O.D.
DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY

will nol help the atmosphere but we
will continue to.bargain here."
Then came the next jolt, the
threattoopenthecamps.

"The fruit
and Cereal
Lover's Cereal"

J:o~EW YORK (AP) - Boxing ll·
lustrated, a monthly publication,
will announce Sugar Ray r,eonard's
ret;lnnent in Its December issue due
to come out Nov. 11, two days after
Leonard has scheduled a news con·
terence to announce whether or not
he will tight again.

ONION LOAF .............L~-. S2J9

additional commercial revenues
next seasiln.
Ed Garvey, the uniQn's executiv~
dlrector, said ot the Management

Save~

•
retirement
announced

Phone 742-2100

HAM &amp; CHEESE LOAF

5

r1Co~un~c~U:a~c~tio~n~:~·~·rt~j~us~t~s~h~ow~s~the~~~Sa~te~-ti~es~and~~~~~~~~~vised~~-the~ir~tr~alnlng~~cam~ips~w~o~ul~d~~the~thre~~a~t~w~as~th~e~t~trs~t~ov~e~rt~a~t-.~ott~e~r~to~pu~t~th;e~m;o~ne~y~ba~ck~on~the~

walletandontbetleld.
in On
twoTuesday
vulnerable'
spots -mediator
in the
afternoon,
Sam Kagel said the two sides were
involved In "serious'' negotiations
covertng the players' economic demands, an area barely touched during the talks tbe previous seven
days.
But on Tuesday night, the owners
said that becauseotthecalllngoffby
the league ot a fifth regular·season
weekend (Oct. 24-25), they had decided to withdraw from the table
their guaranteed five-year, $1.6bttllon otter.
"We spend so much time marching In place, and.then the first step
anyone takes is backwards," said
Philadelphia Eagles linebacker
John Bunting, a sott-spoken, hardliner on the union's executive
committee.
And at nnldntght, barely two hours
later, reports were circulated by the
union that the Washington Redskins
and Cincinnati Bengals were paging their players and threatening to
open training camps, an apparent
violation ot Kagel's "status-quo" dt·
rective at these talks.
·Tuesday staT!ed with reports that
tbe negotiations were on thevergeof
being recessed by Kagel for a
cooling-oft periodofafewdays. The
recess request was made by the
owners - but a recess has to be
bilateral. Otherwise It's a walkout.
And when the union refused and
insisted on staying at the table tor
more talks, tbe Management CouncU, the owners' bargaining unit,
walked back into the room with Its
$1.6-blillon bombshell, withdrawing
that guaranteed package.
"We based that guarantee on tlve
years of uninterrupted revenues," a
management source said, referring
to the $2.1-blillon television contract
signed last March with the ABC,
CBS and NBC networks. "We are
experiencing a substantial drop in
revenues because of the missed
games and tor every game we miss
~revenues fall further."
Next weekend's games are the
flist ellmlnated which will cost the
NFL dearly. Two of the wiped-out
games will be made up later in the
season and tw.o others, although
cancelled, will be paid for by way of

ly Prl'lf:! Associlttion and lhe Americ11n
NcWIIplll)l!r Publi11her11 Auociation, NMtional
Ad vc rti !lin~~t Rl'pruentative, Branham

555 Park St ., Middleport, Oh.
Hours: Mon. -Fri. 7:00 to 5: 00
Saturday7:00to3:00

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Owners take $1.6 billion offer from table

The Daily Sentinel

out of an 0-for-15 Series slump with
three hits in Game Five, ripped his
home run, making it 7-0. At that
point, Sutton departed, a moment
before the rains came, delaying tbe
game for the first time.
"I just couldn't put the ball in the
r:tght spots," said Sutton, "and you
can't get away with that with a good
hitting club."
Asked about the home runs, the
Brewer pitcher frowned .
"They were not good pitches because good pitches aren't hit that
far."
The rains let up and after a 26minute mini-dalay, play resumed.
But in the sixtli inning, the rain began in earnest.
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn said
there was no thought to calling the
game. No World Sertes game has
ever been shortened by weather and
the tradition was~'! about to be
changed now.
"We knew we were going to play
nine innings in fairness to everybody," said Herzog.
Milwaukee Manager Harvey
Kuenn wasn't about to surrender
three innings worth of swings just
because of a little rain.
'

Pomeroy-:Middleport, Ohio

'J•

•••

J

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,Ckt.20,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

VVednesday, Oct. 20,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Girl Scout Diary

Brownies, juniors, cadette hold meetings
Rutland Junior Troop 1292
A hayride and wiene r roast was
planned for late October when the
Rutla nd junior troop met at the
school recently. The girls a lso discussed ba bysitting for the Rutland
PrO, and selected names for penpals. Na me necklaces wen&gt; made
durin g the craft peri:&gt;d.
Pat Hysell and J udy Eblin are
the leaders an d members at the
meetln_t'were Shellle Black, Angle
Elliott·, Tracy Mil am, Stephanie
Wa lker , Am ber Eblin , Amber
Hanklln, Daisy Haggy, Tracee
Leark, Tracy Rice, Eulonda Van
Cooney, Lori Black, Erica McCIInock. Mem bers not a t the meeting
wer e Jody Tillis, Missy Pett ry, and
Angle Rider .
Salisbury Brownie Troop
1220
An in ves titu re and rededication
ceremony was plan ned for Oct. 23
at the recent meetin g of the Saltsbury Brownies at the Enter prise
United Methodist Church.
Meeti ngs are held by the troo p
fi·om 1 to 3p.m. each Satu rday at
the chu rc h a nd a t the recent m&lt;l' t·
ing Emily Lay h was registered as a
new mem ber. The new brownies
"111 wear their uniforms for the
first time a t the Investitu re a nd the
leaders advise that some secondhand uniforms ar e ava ila ble.
The " na me the frog" contest was
announced an d is open to any register ed scout. The prize w1 ll be a
green frog. Magazine sale time for
the scouts is th is month and the
girls were rem inded tha t the sale is
to be co nducted w1th fa mily and
fr iends not doo r-to-door.
Me mbers made a booklet with
the pro mise and several songs In it.
Refres hments were served by Elizabeth Downie and Ma ndy Eblin .
Southern Cadettes Troop I 115
A candy sale w111 be held by the
Southern Cadettes ll?glnnlng Nov.
1. P a rt of the profit will go to the
J uliette Low World F rie ndship
Fund. Orders may be placed with
Mrs. Mary Ash, 949-2420.
Salisbury Junior Troop 1100
Badge word was discussed at the
rece nt
of the

Junior Troop which opened w1th the
pledge being led by Marsha ·King
and Amy Brothers. Pla ns were
m ade to work on the sign of the
ra in bow. The girls sang songs,
formed a fr iendship cirCle and sang
taps a t the conclusion of the m&lt;l't·
ing. Refreshments were served by
Ste ph a nie Ba nk s a nd Trac t
Ba r te ls.
Brownie Troop 1271 Pomeroy
A Halloween costume party was
planned for Oct. 19 durin g a recent
m eetin g of the Pomeroy Brownies.
Also planned during the meeting
was a birthday par ty for Juliette
Low , founder of gir l scouting In
Amer ica, a t the Nov . 2 meeting.
Kandt Bac htel, Stephanie Price,
a nd Beth Roush gave the flag ceremony with Stephanie . Pri ce giving the promise. The laws wer e
rev iewed.
Lyn ne Arms read a Brownie
story from the hand book. Several
songs wer e learned, an d refreshments were served by Kandt Bachtel an d Tracy Collins. Registering
at the meeting were Debbie Alkire,
Andrea Dillard and Angle Swiger.
Members were reminded to turn
In their permission and medical
forms. April Ta nnehill and Stepha nle Price served refres hments.
P arents a t the meeting were Barb
Smith, Kathy !'rice, Bev Roush,
Donna Klein , Mary Dilla rd and
Charldine Alkire. Scout s besides
those na med there were Jody
Smith, Candy Anderson, Rhonda
Anderson, Melind a Dalley, J eanie
Tay i:&gt;r, Melissa Neutzllng, Ta mmy
Klein, Barbie Anderson, Jennifer
Ba rnhart , Julie Buck, Ka trina
Tu rner, and Lee Hende rson.
Troop 1276
P repa rations to make a Orst. aid
kit for the troop were discussed a t a
recent meet In g. As a s pecial Chris tm as pro ject the girls sta rted on orna ments. Plans were made for the
troo p to go to the Meigs Coun ty Infirmary to sing Ha lloween songs
and to ta ke each res ident the re a
treat. First aid reports we re turned
in and the Ms. Pac Ma n Patrolled
in the pledges.

'

RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education w111 meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. In thecafeteria at the high school.

The 75th anniversary of Ha rrisonville Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star, was observed recently at Harrisonville Masonic Temple.
Pauline Atkins and Chester King
presided at the meellng which
opened w1th group singing of
"Sweet Hour of Prayer", the pledge
of a Uegiance, and "God Bless Amer-Ica " w1th J ane Wise, organlst.
Gracie Wilson, deputy grandmatron of District 25, was Introduced
and escorted to the East. Bernice
Hoffman, past deputy grand matron of Harrisonville was a lso recognized a nd escorted to the East as
was Avone!le George, page to
Louella Locke, Mrs. Wilson, page to
Sylvia Midkiff, a nd King, aid toEstelle Ankrum, all membersofHa rrlsonviUe Chapter .
P ast m atrons and past patrons
were recognized and commended
for their part in helping to build the
history of the chapter over the past
75 years, as was 50 yea r member,
Ruby Diehl .
There was a skit, "The J ewel
Box" , presented by the star points,
w1 th Stella Atkins as Ada h, the blue
gem; Frances Young as Ruth, the

topaz gem; Neva Nicholson, Martha, the em erald gem; Clara Mae
Jeffers, Esther, the sapphire;
Karen Facemeyer, EJecta, the
ruby; and King, the diamond of 75
years.
In costwnlng of 1907, Norma Lee
and Anna Elizabeth ·Turner discussed the Instituting of Harrisonville Chapter by officers of
Wilkesville In Oct.1906. The charter
was received by Harrisonville In
Nov. 1907, after the Grand Chapter
meeting w1th 32 chapter members.
The history of the chapter was
given In three parts by King, Miss
Diehl, and Mrs. Lee. A robe worn
some 50 years ago was modeled by
Mrs. Young.
"The Side Hill Ramblers", a
seven piece orchestra conslsllng of
J ennifer and Jim Sheets on .dulcimers, J ew's harp and wash board,
Roger and Mary Gilmore playing
autoharp, dulcimer and mandolin;
Tim Glaze, the bass fiddle; and
John and Mary Beth Lohse, guitar
and banjo, presented mountain,
folk, spiritual and patriotic selections w1th several vocals.

Is a surgical
patient
a t Cabell
tlngton
Hospital,
Room
209, Hun·
1340
Hat Greer Boulevard, Huntington,
w. Va. 25701

r-----------ADVERTISED ITEM POLIC Y
Of !hew idvtf"hsed olemS 1$ I IIQUift&lt;l 10 be
•Nd•l'f' 1v1rliblt tor wle "' ..ac h Kroger Store e•cept u
~ roter:~ .,.. 11'16 ad If we do 1\Jn out of an ~Mfl
ttem we NIH oHet" vou vour choice of a COfnplll~ otem
'Nhen ilviolible. reflecllng the wme wv•ngs or 1 ra onc l'lec:~
'Nh•Ch w rtl ent•lle vou to pvrchne' the advenrsed •tern 11 the
tdvertrsed puce wllhon ]) davs
f.lcl'l

GOOD SUNDAY , OCT . 17 . THROUGH SATURDAY . OCT .
23 . 1912 . IN GAUIPOltSAND POMEIKIY

29
CHOICE

California
Cauliflower
Country Club.
Ice Milk
V2-Gal.
Ctn.

$109

7

Proven Energy Saver!

~ :;....-GENU\NE

Cf1'{5

TAI- CL.

EAFI· .fl.

Grade A
Large Eggs .... Do•.

Adolph's Dairy Valley
PH. 992-2556
570 W. Main

AND REGISTER FOR PRIZES

IN THE DELl DEPT.,
SUGAR, CHOCOLATE CHIP,
OATMEAL-RAISIN OR
PEANUT BUnER

Pomeror OH
"located all he End otthe
' '
Pomeror-Mason Bridge."

·20-0/o ~-0 FF

ElliBL.E.
...._,LET THE/

-:::-SUN WORK FOR YOu!

1

80 EASY ANYONE CAN DO ITI

1

CUT PLIX..O.CILAII TO IIZI
AND TACK , DVIR IC~IINI

011 WINDOW OI'I!NINCIII
·
colT• ao uTTu
DNLT
.
AIIYONI
Run . f1•
, CAN AI10RD ITI
36" Wldo
Alst 21', W &amp; S4" Wldllls

For addi1ionlll_ informalion. Call:

63C

. . . . .-£lJ

Also, with eech sport shoe you
may pun:hlte
'"' lellher illlllld&gt;
1

receive 5.00 Off.

••VICI

'

'

1741.2-0!1:415.

q,. '

.
•

'

I

.

tl'o ·Kroger thor .., ... you with a opec;lol "customllt'&lt;o,..·flrst" prkl,_ln
every .,.playM, from coshlllt' lo chairman of ihe board. Our ,._
flectronlc checkouro ore desiQ!led to moke yow thopplft9 quick &amp; host!•·
frH. And Jn every deportment you'll _find &amp; frtencfty people
eager to-lot you.

,.,

.

•

.,

low prices on quolily guoronleed products, day-in and doy-oul. Ovllt' 100
differenl ilemi. Products wllh a nome you con trutl and a quollly gr'ode
you cqn counl on. Products you con depend on..,.,., day and priced oslow
or 'lower than, "no nome foods" at Krover you know exactly what ~u're .
~nino when you-buy II; nol when you open 11. W - h "'!~every Cost
Cunel· ilem is backed by Krogllt''o Sollofactlon G\goniH.

Storm Doors, Porch Enclosur,111

)

t

.

Kr~r

Cottage Cheese
24-oz.
Ctnr.

c

·rhe

•cost cena ~

Msk1 Your Own Storm Windows,

69C

49

88

IS WEEKEND ALL CONNIE AND
·FOOTWORKS 'SPORT . SHOES
INCLUDING
LOAFERS AND OXFORDS

1-lb.
Pkgs.

Springdale
2% Milk

Fresh Baked
Cookies

PHONE:
992-7582

t--~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;=~~====:;;:===;;:==========;;;:~-:--1
'liJ.~
· A

KROGER

With Fries .;........ $1.49

GRAND OPENING OCT. 22, 1982
10:00 A.M.
HOURS:
WEO. &amp; THURS. 6 P.M.-9 P.M.
FRI. &amp; SAT. 10 A.M.-4 P.M.
' &amp; Other Times By Appointment

Kroger
Saltines

PIZZA BURGER

COUNTED CROSS STITCH
SUPPLIES

I~

c

Head

SPECIAl OF THE WEEK!

.....Loolli:.C.-:.&amp;..,.,OC.'i:o...,.~LoliiJ::"!!I~I
THE WATERMELON PATCH

COME

USDA

lb.

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

Jl.,..looli;looi..,.,.._...,~,._...,.._LAi

Cake Decorating
Supplies

Vile P.T.O. and Athletic

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Roast

WE RESERVE THf: RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE

SOLD TO DEALERS.

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

;--------------------------1

ANN'S

Trophies and prize money will · be awarded.
Sponsored by Harrison-

U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
BEEF CHUCK

COPYRIGHT 1912 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PJICES

MULLEN INSURANCE

FIVE GENERATIONS - Two week old Erin HaYman
great-great-grandmother, MOdred WoUe, 94, and a resident of Ute Pomeroy Health Care Center, for this picture. Erin Is the daughter of April
Hayman, Racine, whose mother Is Jean Bun)Side of Florida- Daisy Sayre
. of Racine Is the great-grandmother of Erin.

.. . ~ . . -

Weigh-ln: ,6:00 P.M.
Entry Fee •3.00

ROCK SPRINGS Health Club
w111 meet at the home of Nancy
Grueser Thursday at 1: 15 p.m.
Members are to meet a t the
church.

AND

a_ '

HALLLOWEEN
CA~DY SUPPLIES
·ARE NOW AVAILABLE

School .

MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League w111 meet Thursday at the home of Susie Abbott .
Devotions will be given by Susie
Abbott . Hostesses a re Peggy

DOWNING-CHILDS

·;+~i..
.·,t
' t ,1.!k-,

GARDEN
TRACTOR PULL
~lementary

There were comments by Bessie
Kling of Evangeline Chapte r, grand·
mother chapter, and Anna Elizabeth Turner of Wilkesville Chapter,
the mother chapter.
Refreshments were served In the
dlnlng hall. Gold mumS In sliver
vases carried out the annlversary
them e. The mums were from the
garden of Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Will and arra nged by Mrs. Atkins.
Also on display were the original
emblems purchased 75 years ago,
pictures of past matrons and past
pa trans, aud those receiving grand
appolnlments, the original temple,
the temple under construction In
1976, and three Bibles which have
been used through the years.

500 LINCOLN HILL
POMEROY, OHIO

To be held
October 23rd at
Harrisonville

MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society, 7::Jl p.m. Thursday at

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Hospitalized

Ja y Tracy, Wright St. , Pomeroy,

TifURSDAY
P OMEROY - Episcopa l
Church Women, 12: 30 p.m.

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

guson, state auditor; Howard M.
Metzenbaurn, .U. S. senator; J ennli&gt;r Sh&lt;l'ts, representing John W.
McCormac, Supreme Court Justice; Jolynn Boster , O a ire M. Ball,
Jr., 94th District, House of Representatives; Oakl ey C. Collins, 17th
dlstrict, s tate senator; representative for Cla rence E. Miller, lOth
Congressiona l district; John B.
Marshall, judge of the Court of Appeals, Fourth Appellate District.
Issues to be addressed during the ·
meetin g will be the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service Levy
and the Meigs County Health Department Levy.

Thursday at the Parish Hou~.
Clara Lochary tobe.t hespeaker .

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

'Candidates' Night' tomorrow

,.·,:

C!atworthy.

Ha rris and Susie Soulsby.

Harrisonville OES observes 75th .anntversary year

Beverly F aulkner Voss recently
passed the Sta te Boa rd of Nursing
a fter graduating from Maysville
Communlty College In May. She
works at Ada ms Count y Hospital as
a registered nu rse. Mrs. Voss, who
attended Meigs High School, Is the
da ughter of Ma rga re t Eskew,
Pomeroy, and Charles Faulkner,
Kansas. She a nd her husband, Pastor Paul Voss, res ide In Peebles.

Dr. Thomas D. McGowan, Mason, is a patient In a hospital In Boston, Mass. It was reported that he Is
sufferi ng from a broken hip. Cards
ma y IJf' r)la iled to him in care of
Andrew Ca nale, 38 Ellison · Road,
NeW1on Centre, Mass. 02159.

MIDDLEPORT Lit e rary
Club will meet Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Marvin Wilson,
Rutland . A book revlew.will be
g i ve n b y Mr s , Jam es

the Meigs Inn.

jor Rummel spoke to the class about the needs In
Meigs County. Pictured are, front row, 1-r, Chaslty
J acks, John Barlon, David Custer, Christi Bnunfleld,
Cindy Foley; back, Major Rummel, Petie Hendrix,
Tlnnl Boggess, SheUey Arnold, Chuck Buckley Gary
Freeman, Kevin Burgess and MlcheDe Harris. StandIng behind MicheUe Is Mrs. Sandra Baer, teacher of
the class.

PRESENT COLLECI'IONS - The fifth grade
students at Syracuse Elementary School observed
World Food Day, Oct. 16, by making posters and
placing them along with containers In businesses In
Syracuse. Monday they presented the containers
filled with money to Major Glenna Rwnmel who will
distribute the money throughout Meigs County, Ma·

Passes state
nursing board

The Fifth Annual Candidates
. Night will be observed at the Senior
Citizens Center Thursday. Dinner
w11l be servedfrom4 :30to6:30 p.m.
w1th the candidates to begin speak·
tng at 7: 30p.m .
Scheduled to participa te are
Chester Wells and Mannlng Roush,
commissioner; Emogene Holstein,
reco rder ; Willia m Wickline, auditor; Cha rles Knig ht.' judge of the
Court of Common Pleas.
Morris Tipton, representing Richa rd F . Celeste, governor; Dean
Ka hler, representing Anthony J .
Celebrezze, attorney general; representa tives for Thomas E . Fer -

Calendar

WEDNESDAY

Re freshments were served by
the Slic k Chicks Patrol and the E.
T. P a trol had clean-up duty.
Meigs Coumy Senior
Troop 1208
Officers were elected a t the recent nneetlng of the senior troop.
Ele cted were Tammy Capeha r~
president ; Shari Cogar, treasurer;
a nd Melinda Mankin, reporter.
Shirley Cogar Is the leader.
It was decided that meetin gs will
be held twice a month, every other
Sunday, and dues w11l be 50 cent s a
meetin g. Plans were made to sell
candy as a fund-raising projec t.
The troop sponsor Is the LaSa lle
Corpora tlori .
Nex t meeting will be Oct. 24 at
the home of Shari Cogar . The troop
is open to new members, ages 15 to
18, and a nyone wan tin g to join
should call 992-7631.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

•IYIIYIAY

fiiCIS

Kroger otocb o
Mlection of national and riiiJionol brondo at
ev.,ydoy low prices, campclrllbl•lo any oupermorket In thi1 area.

•mAL SA-leMI HAIAIID
Everything . you buy at Kroger is guaranteed for your total satisfaction

regardless of monufacturllt'. If you ore nor salisfied, Kroger will replace

·••••• CIP C;lh&amp;l ,
.
Everyday low rrlces on pantry lloples. Save up to ..,,., on Sooper Cost

your Item with the same brand or a comparable brand or refund your

Cullllt'f compared to other lttondt 01 !Crager. (For 101M Sooper Cost Cuttllt'f
'no olhllt' comparabl• brpncjo ore flocked. ) Check the yellow price ltot of the
OYIIt' 400 Soo,ier Cost Culler pantry llaples, only at KrOger,

•YAIIIIT

,.,

•IIIIIIW IIUitlll ' ..

....

C

You'll find a wide Miectlan of hoUtehold "'"" tn our
merchandtM
~IP: tnHMI. ~ riNd to make lpeCtol lflpl tO a ' - at ~~~ ln-t

.

"

.

purcho.. price.

In Every Department. You can Ml,ct from over 10,000 ilems and ove• 200
kinds and cull of meat, lncludlft9lamb, Veal, Fresh Seafood and 7 kinds of
Ground Meat. You will alsa find one of rhe wideor Mlections of fresh fruirs
and vegetables, pluo a Deltcat-n, lnle&lt;notlonof foods seclion, gourmel
and diet foodl, lnttltullonal olr11 and more.

''

�,.

Sentinel

Oct.

1982

Emergency runs

Franklin J ewell, 20 and Joseph
Bartoe, 25, both of Rutland, were
sentenced to six months to five years in the Ohio Corectionai Institute
when they a ppeared before Judge
John C. Bacon on bills of infonnatlon Rick Crow, prosecuting attorney reported.
The men plead guilty according to
Crow to charges of breaking and
entering of the Rutland Furniture
Warehouse and receiving and disposing of stolen property. The incident was discovered on Fridav. Oct.
15.
.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Eloise Pickett , Pomeroy; Eva Norris, fulcine; Cha rles
Craig, Jr., Rac ine; J essie terrell,
Pomeroy; Nanna P arker . Pomeroy; Wayne Cla rk, Dexter ; E llen
Couch, Pomeroy.
Discharged-· Victoria Morrison,
Homer Graham , Joanne Morris,
Cathryn Mees, Cha rlotte Eakins,
Ida Young, Robert Manley, E lma
Reuter, Viginia Riffle, Cha rles
Craig, Jr.

Seven calls were a nswered by local units Tuesday, the MeigsCounty
Eme rge ncy Me dica l Se rvice
rep011s.
At 10:02 a. m. the Middleport Unit
took Joe McKnig ht !rom Dr. Dayo's
office to Vetera ns Memorial Hospital and a t 3:00 p.m . took Nanna
Parker from her residence to Vetera ns Memoria l.
Pomeroy a t 1:50 p.m . took E loise
P ickett from her residence to Vetera ns Memoria l a nd a t 3: 34p.m.took
Velma Siders from Court St. to Vetera ns Memoria l. Tuppers Plains
a t 4:57p.m . took Mark Griffin from
Eastern High School to CamdenCla rk Hospi ta l in Parkersburg and
the Rutland Unit at 7: 25p.m . took
Wayne Harry Clark from his res!·
dence to Vete rans Memorial. The
Middleport Fire Department wemt
to 175 Vine St. , at 8:19p.m . Tuesday
where a car was on fire .

Money actions filed
James B. Titus, Botkins, Ohio, et
al, filed a judgment and breach of

'
COMPLETE HOME
MAINTENANCE

Discounts to Senior Citizens &amp; Handicapped
PH. 742-2266

,.

'

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG
obockhoo

eexc:oVilting
~ayllomo

MOVING - Effective Nov. I, Dr. E. W. VIDaneuva will move his family Blldi)'Jiecology pracUce
from lhe Meigs Medkal Bulldlng on Mulberry
Heights to this home, fonnerly owned by Mr. 8IICI
Mrs. Roger Hovalchlk, also on Mulberry Heights In

odump trucll oorvice
- . g and rec:toiming
•Roclne and Syrocuoe

Pomeroy. 'Die howie bas been remodeled to meet the
doctor's requirements 8IICI a parking area will be
made ln front of the house. Scott Lucas, administrator of Veterans Memorial HOt!ipltal, reports that hospital bas one pi'Ot!lpect for the quarters being vaCated
by Dr. VUianeuva.

-hoolcup

WOtlc lnounld and
Guarantoed
PH. JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201
1017/ttc

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

PHONE 992-2156
I I I ( ... r t U ,

.BISSELL
SIDING CO.

p_,_.,, Ofloe 4!111t

Tux Touch!

111d h.. dline. Send to:
Anne Adlms
4

Patltm Depl

91

The Daily Sentinel
243 West I 1 Sl, New YoR, NY
10011. Print NAME, AOOIIESS,
ZIP, SIZE, end STII£ NUMBER.
Be smart, be successful. sew a
new wardrobe with our NEW
fALL-WINTER PAnERN CATALOG.
Over 100 easy styles' Plus free
~oupon for any $2.25 pahern.

'

VIRGIL 8. SR .
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

Joyce Stewart, squad leader; back, Amy Molden,
Kristin Bailey, Becky Rife, Debbie Porter, Julie Sisson and Sonya Wise.

NEW LISTING ...., 80 acres in
Sutton Twnshp. near Racine
and new proposed mine Has a
3 bOOroom farm house and
nice laying tractor land.

Mayor's court
Three defendants were fined a nd
three others frofe ited fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Stanley Michael,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs, reckless
operation; Ronald Landake r ,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, litter violation; Greg Cundfiff, Pomeroy, disturbing the peace, $50 and costs.
Forfeiting were Thoams Harris,
Middleport, $50; David Findley, fulcine, $45, and Mary Meredith,
Pomeroy, $53, ail posted on speeding charges.

Highway•..
(Cootinued from page I I
said .
The petition asks ODOT to "take
ali necessary steps to repair, alter
and relocate, or .to build a flll" on the
road, "so as to make it passable to
residents of Cheshire Twp. and
other individuals us ing said
highway."

Vehicles sustain
light damages
Light damages were incurred to
two vehicles in an accident on Main
St., at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Pomeroy
Pollee report. A cardrlven by Sherrl
Holtz, Syracuse, struck the rear of a
vehicle driven ·by Richard
Chambers; Middleport, stopped in
the -Jane of traffic. There were no
lnjurtes.
~lice also reported that Clifford
Murray, Jr., Pomeroy, received minor Injuries at 11: 30 p.m. Saturtlay
when he lost control of a motorcycle
hewasdrtvlngon West Main St., the
velllcle coming to rest against a
camerctallomeat4l7W M~t"

Military rites set
MilitarY rlteB will be conducted by
· Drew Weblter Post 39, American
J..e8IOn, tor Wlnlleld Bailey, 91, who
died MondaY evening. Rites will be
held at 1: ~ p.I!L at the grave site at
. . .MemorY Gardens, Pomeroy,
Qrivnander Roulbt requests that
111 rn8mbel'l -polllble to please

attend

"

'

i'

EASTERN - Modern 1700 sq.
fl home, I\\ baths, 3 bedroom~ IP. basemenl and gas
furance with contracted heat
for $17.50 per month.
DOUBLE - live here with income from these 2 br~k apts. 3
bedrooms each. Storm drs. &amp;
wiooow~ 2 ~Is in Middleport
Only $28,500.

9% lAND CONTRACT Fenced 24 acres, 2·bedroom
remodeled home, carpelin&amp;
furnace &amp; basement. $5,000
down. $258.53 a mo. for 180
mos. $27,500.
Make the fresh new tuxedo
front look yours; choose sideways
stripes or crisp white for the b1b
of this crisp shirtdress. Choose
silk crepe, poly knits. co«on.
Printed Pa«ern 4841 : Misses
Sizes 8, 10. 12, 14, 16, 18. for
individual yardages, see your
pa«ern.
$2.25 lor adl pettem. Add 504
lor . uc:h petlem lor JIGIUce

field commander.

I

Property transfers..

Kenneth W. Madden, Jr. to Kenneth W. Ma dd en, Sr. , Lot 330,
Sa lisbury.
David Wooten, Wanda Wooten,
Dean Wooten to Minnie R. Wooten,
Parcel, Columbia.
Minnie R. Wooten to Clifford
Wooten, Parcel, Columbia .
Robert E . Schaer, Terese M.
Schaer to Michae l T. Rossiter, Eliza beth A. Rossiter, Parcels, Olive.
Trustees of Rutland Township to
Frank Herald J r. dba Herald Oil
and Gas Company, Easement, Rutland (556731.
Leona Hensley to Columbia Gas
Transmission, Corp., Easement,
Ollve.
Willia m A. Wa tson, Nancy L.
Watson to Craig C. Foley, Ruth S.
Foley, Parcels, Orange.
Ruth Ervin Houston, Wllliam D.
Houston, Pres . of Int. in Land,
'OIIiutland.
Thomas Edgar Ervin, Nonnan
Ervin, Pres. of Int. in Land,
Rutland .
Elaine E. Haworth, Ellis Haworth, Pres. of Int. in Land,
Rutland.
Sara Ervin Brown, William
Brown. Pres. of Int. In Land,
Rutland.
Trustees c1 Rutland Township to
Frank Herald Jr. dba Herald Oil
and Gas Company, Easement.
Rutland. •
Trustees rJ the Third Kyger Free
WUI Baptist Church to suver Run
Free Will Baptist Church Third'
Kyger, Inc., One-fifth acre,

f

Salisbury.
Donald A. Maurer, Betty J.
Maurer to Gregory A. Cundiff,
Vickie L. Cundiff, Right of Way,
Sutton.
Ernest Lambert, Mary Lambert

to Pa ul Lambert, Irene Lambert, 6
acres, Rutland.
J . M. Wells to Walter L. Shepherd, Buena W. Shepherd, Pareels, Letart.
Leona Hensley to Long Bottom
Community Association, Easement, Olive.
Weiser,
Pres. ofWeiser,
Int. in Robert
Land,
Jean Ervin
~
Rutland.
Clara Ervin Stewart, Jack Stewart,Pres.oflnt.inLand,Rutland.
Sherman H. Basham to Dorothy
E . Basham, Parcels, Rutland.
Kate Jarrell and Tom A. Crisp,
Right of Way, Salem.
Clair Spencer, deceased, Betty
Spencer. Roger Spencer. Phyllis
Spencer, Donald F. Dixon, Judith
D. Spereer Dixon to·Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co., Right
of Way, Bedford.
Denver Well, Florence D. Well to
Columbus and Sou them Ohio Electric Co., Right of Way, Becttonl.
James Meredith, Mary Meredith, Sherwood L. Meredith,
Mildred L. Meredith to Columbus
and Sputllern Ohio Electrl~ Co.,
Right of Way, Bedford.
Otto A. Marcinko, Sandra Marcinko to Columbus and Southern .
Ohio EJectr!c Co., -Right of Way,
Olive.

v•~.

fOR SALE
REPOSSESSED
HOUSE
.

3 - . . , ,.al flfinished, now
carpet lhnHI&amp;floul Sits on 3 .
acres. l.oc-..1 on lllshln Rd.
be. to rWht,.rty. Contact
..,. Ont
992-

orr-or

RUTLAND - 2 level lots, 7
room~ I II baths, 3 bedroom~
range, nice woodwork and 2
endosed porches.
SYRACUSE - 5 lumished
room~ 2 porche~ fenced yard,
2 car garage-shop, level 1m
50x200 near store. Reduced to
$28,500.
LAND CONTRACT - Rec.
room, carpetin&amp; nice kit, formica bath, 3 bedrooms, Ele.
B.B. heat, insulated, storm fiKtures, for $5,000.00 down,
$295.53 a mo. for lBO payments at 10%. Asking$32,500.
RACINE - 6 room one floor
plan next io store and schools.
Carpetin&amp; paneing and remodeling done. Natural gas heat
and level loL Only $18,500.

catalog, $1.50
AU CRAFT BOOttS .. $2.00 each
!IS-Ripple Crochet
!11-Eesy Art of Needlepoint

123-Stitch 'n' Petch Quilts
129-Quick 'n' Eesy Trenslers
Books and Catalog - add 501
each for postage and handling . .

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF EVA ARCHER
DECEASED
'
Caoe No. 23881
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 7. 1982. 1n the
MP.,gs Cou n!y Pro bate Court
CasP. No 23881 . Ru ss eli
Archer. Rou te 2. Box 7. Guys.
viiiP.. Oh10 45735 was apPOin iP.d Executor of the P.Stare
of Eva Archm. dP.cP.ased . late o f
Rou te 1. Ra c1ne. Oh1o 4 57 71
Raben E Bttck
Pmbare Judqe CIArk

54 Misc. Merchandise

Housing
Headquarters

~~21~33~-======~·f~~~~~;;;~~

PuBLI c'AU CTIQN
24

SUNDAY, OCTOBER
A~
A.M. SHARP

11

On State Rt. 371, ennsvjlle, Ohio, between McConnelsVille and Cltesterllillll the Bill Janes Fann.
Selin&amp; entique llmiture, chlla, glass, poilery, guns, old items
taken "1111 some very old homesteads in AtlullS, Mor111n, Mus kingum and Washil&amp;t!Jn coumes.
Approdmllely·SO pus, 1 1.- of JIOd oak, and mher good antique
tumiura
·

Tllilwll 111M Ill dly alt. PriPR to slly lite. Slit held inside
1... IIIOdlm illlllll buldl~ • pllllly of
5Mtll lice Clllllld trucb IIIII Ill offend for SilL Good food
on the prni•.

Mil"'

T111111: CISh or Check wlttl PosHIIII 1.0.
Not nspo~~~lltlt fai' loa oracckltnts. Notlin&amp; shown before
diJ.of ule;

YOUNG'S

AlUM . ROOFING
SPECIAl

SERVICE

Ct·.ll X Curv
I II Willi

Meets All Specifications
HIGH PRES. REGUlATORS
LOW PRES. REGUlATORS
Free Delivery
PH. 985-3892
or 985-3837
Greg Winebrenner
10/17/ 1 mo. pd.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozers
-Trencher

- Water
- Sewer

-Gas lines

-Septic Syslams
tarae or Small Jobs
PH. 992-2478
10·3·1 mo. pd

!

H(fr,
"II /0
· I ~ 4r)
I '• 10
. I I '!(I

!.~ f t

·-1 1 'JII

H II
Ill ft
I? I!
I,1 II
if,

f

-Roofiol 114 "'"" won
-(Gmrtll """
-" um~OIIftd

tlo&lt;trlul won
ifrH EstlfOitnJ
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-30-lfc

I'IIMIROY
lANDMARK
b 14 9'1/ll81

:101 13. 20. 27. 3!c

Chester, Ohio

'Ad4oosiM ....... iOI

Puppv 'It trioh Satter 'It Gorman Police. 3 mos. old.

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

AUCTION

,,'

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 7:01f P·.M.
"EvelY Saturday Thereafte(' "The Old Crew is Back" 3 miles west
of Albany, cOnllf of 143 and 50. Several truckloads of nice
merchandise. Something lor eve~YQne. "Bri11 a chair."
Terms of Sale: Cash or check witH positive I. D. Not responsible
for accidents.
SILK FLOWER SALE
Thursday and Friday, Oct. 21·22, 11:00 A.M. to 4:00P.M. or by
appointment Last chance to buy silk ftowm at 25% to 50%
below wholesale. Also dried and silk flower arrangements, vtiY
low prices, plus wicker baskets, fans, shovels, etc. Call 6986592 lor information.

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

Real Estate - General

ljliiliiiiillliliiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiii!iiiiiiiiiil ..
..' '
CENTRAL
REALTY
..
SYRACUSE - W~l kepi home on ellra ~rge ~l5 bed10oms, dining
room aoo kitchen are spacious. Kitchen is fully equill!Jed including dishwasher. As~ng $32,1XXJ.
OWNER MOVING - 2 weeks aoo you could be in ltlis 3 bedroom,
~rge !wing room, utility room, and add&lt;Jn mobi~ home wilt! corner ~~
Owner anxious to worli term• Ult's tal~ Aslting $16,500.
HOME ON APPROX. 2ACRES- Bashan &amp;Eagle Ridge. Needs
handyman. 14% interest avaiable. Asking $25.1XXJ.
VACANT 3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME - Living room has
woodoorning firetiace, 1~ bath, hardwood l'ooo, well ~ aoo
IOSU~ted._ Asking $35,1XXJ.
NICE FLAT LOT IN RACINE -Good dean area. One 3 bedroom
mobie home rented aoo second trai~r spot Aslung $17 txXJ.
RENTAlS: $220 to $250 !Ji:e range ~us deposrt 1n Porooroy, Letart

FIREPLACES
&amp;
CHIMNEYS
BUILT AND
REWORKED

742-2328

mo

SKATE-A-WAY

•·
MAIN

_,

f. ;:..

..
••
,
"
; •t

...,,••..
'

Private Parties Available
Mon.-Tues.-Thurs. Nitos
Sat. -Sun. Afternoons
Chock our sklto prices.
Phone 915-9996 or
915-3929
10·20·1 mo.

0Glen~"?Pc!!!l!!!
A.
Kousn

REALTORS!
•
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI' ., ... . . · ' .·.. .
. Jean Trussell .. . . , , .•.•. • . , ... ... . , . •.
Oottle s . Turner , . , , .. ... , . ..... , , ,
Office . .. .. , • , , .. ... . , ........ ...

992·6191
949-2660 ,
992-5692
992·2259

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S . Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,

New Holland, Bush Hog

$J

Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-3-lfc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

P:.9~~~~~~~

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
Core to the uraest Radiator.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 YB. EJperience
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
2·26-ttc

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes start from 12'x16'

Kitc.hen Cabinets ·
Roofing · Siding · Con·

crete

.••••.

Ceramic Bisque

AND SON

Teachers ,
Scout
Leaders and Organiza·
tions, Come In and
Take A Look At Our
Package Deals. Dis·
counts Available.
LESSONS STARTING o
CALL or STOP IN E
TO SIGN UP.
SALE ON
M
. ·oRNAMENTS
oi&gt;

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1

Long Bottom, OH., 46743
986-4193
1011 8/1 mo. pd.

••

,.:·

Side·

Custom POle Barns.

TOM HOSKINS
Pit 742-2834 or 949-2160
OO·IIc

OUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - extensive
remodelinc.
'Electric work
'Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
'Roofing Work
'Aluminum &amp; Vinyl
Sidin&amp;S
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282
9·5·1 mo

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Cus tom kitchens and
bathrooms. Remodeling,
add -ons, new homes,
plumbing, electric, siding.

fREE
ESTIMATES

PH.

"CU
FOR FUTURE USE "

'S
KEN
APPLIANCE

_
992 6011

We will ME
or
BEAT anv legitimate
price you receive on
any new piano . or

HOOK~UPS
Syracuse-Racine

. Area

- All Makes
• washers
e Dish ·
washers
• Ranges • Relrigeralors
• Dryers • Freezers
PA RTS an d SERV ICE ·

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 614-992-2681
or 614-992-3752
ANYTIME
t0/ 7/ 1 mo.

IO·J. I mo

.

nrmvpngvrnvn11

arga'li~'&amp;~:~~~D·

Card of Thanks

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH.
AUTO

&amp; TRUCK·

arru

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation •Stonn Doors
•Storm Windows •Replacement Windows

•New Roofing

Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772 ·

IIRI

9·22-1mo

Lost-long haired grey cat

with flea collar. In lower end
of Syracuse . 614 -992·
6175 . Name Rascal.
7

Yard Sale

antenna, box springs &amp; mat·
tress. fonnals, tools. lawn
mo'N8r cart, sweet potatoes, peanuts.
2 Family Yard Sale lots of
clothes. shoes. boots .
household items. some ap·
pliances. draperies. books.
misc . Halliday Htgs., turn
right at top of hill off Gar·
field Ave. Fri. &amp; Sat . Oct 22
&amp; 23 .
Garage Sale Friday 8 to 4.
Salford School Rd. 3 rd
house on ri\11 t, off Rt. 141 .
Moving Sale Oct. 22-23,
Spring Valley Green. Apt .
1 05(facing Foodtandl. Babv
clottBs. ladMis size 6-20.
mens large sizes. boots,
coats. small appliances . Ev·
erything excellent condi ·
tion . Rain cancels.
Large Family Yard Sale
Household h.ems. bed. re·
fr ig .; st c:we. dothes all sizes,
baby clothes. drapes. rugs,
dishes. Thurs. 21 . Fri. 22 &amp;
Sat. 23. 1 third mile from
Layne 's on Bulaville Rd . 9 til
5.

BIG yard sale, across from
StelA fBr Plant. Thursday &amp;
Fridav. 9:00 .

2

8

In Memoriam

INTERNATIONAL
HARVESTER
PARTS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

colter. 614 -992-6606.

eral
Home
for kindness
and
wlings.
Coats.
Blowers
Funefficent
service
. Thanks
again, the Family .

In MemOf'y of our father
on his birthday Oct . 20.
~=====~~~;~ P~ase.
God, forgive a si·
1
le':: f':',:;ent wish our Dad
was here.
There are others. yes, we
know .
n
But
him
so.he was ours, we f!}Ved
Dear God, take e message
AVAILABLE AT:
To our !ether i" heaven
TRADING
above
S
Tell him how much we
miss him
POST
And give him all ou

~==~~~~~~:::!:~=======:;i

REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH ." 992·5682
or 992-7121
3·24-llc

Found on Middleport Hill .
YeiOYI male cat with flea

Carport Sale. Oct. 18, 19.
20. 257 Lincoln St ., Middle port . Millen . Children 's
clothes &amp; other items .

61 court St.
Gallipolis
Pf'l. 446·0687
9-16-1 rpo.

Syracuse, OH ·
Contact Fem or C. T.
PH. 992-7301
10/ 18/ 1 1110.

Lost and Found

The family of MiktrodT. Bee son wishea to express sin·
cere thanks and gratitude to
friends, neighbors a"d rela tives for kindness and aympathv shown us. Special
thanks to Pomeroy Health
Care Canter and stoff, Vale ra"s Memorial Hospital.
doctors, nurses. the First
Unitod Presbvteria" Church.
Middtapon, Ohio. The Rave rand Wanda Johnson, the
pall bearers. ·those sending
flowers and food, and Ra -

DJ '

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

6

Garage Sale Oct. 21 . 2 mi.

CANDLELIGHT INN
Between Cheshire &amp;
Middleport, Ohio
PRESENTS
Marshall Tennant Band
Wed'., Fri. &amp; Sat.
in October
Wed.-Dralt Nile
(all draft beer 'h price)
Thurs.·Poot Tourn. Nile
Daily Specials
Not Mentioned
Open 7 days a week
Carryout Beer &amp;
Wine Available
Extra Special
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10 to 2
Drink any drink
for I tow price
Phone 992-9913

Wanted To Buy

11

Help Wanted

7-8 WEEK old v. Baagto puppioo, Cal 304-895-3581 .

1------------l from HMC Rt . 160. 20ft TV

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of alllvpes
eSiding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e20 Yrs. experience

9

Wanted -200 bales good
614-992-5534.
hay . 614-992-6616 after 6
tf puppies. mother part p.m.
white Sheplwrd . 304-6766141 after 4.
English Springer Spaniel, 6
viloro old, mate. 304-468 _1_6_35_._ __ _ __

Thurs .. Oct. 19, 10 -6. Co .
32, Eagle Ridge, 3 mile off
7. large white house on left.
Also nice girl's coats size
10 -12, boys jackets size 6·
16.
Ronald Beegle residence. 1
mile East of Racine just off
Rt.124. Thursdav &amp; Fridav.
Oct. 21 &amp; 22 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa State Champion Aucti·
on ear Rick Pearson . Estates.
antiques. farm. households.
Licensed Ohio-WVa. 304·
773-5786 or 304-773 9185 .
Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. TruckJc:ads of new
merchandise everv week .
Consigments of new and
usrld merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 275 -3069 .

p~~-~n~=====;=:;==

s .sadly
Drake missed
&amp; Famitv:
by O,•vid
Smith &amp; Femitv: end Diana 9
Wanted To Buy
Smith .
1 - - - - - -- WANTED TO BUY Otdfurnitu re and Antiques of all
3 Announcements
kinds. call Kenneth Swain,
446 -3169 or 256-1967 in
the evenings.
SWEEPER and sewing ma- 1- - - - - -- -chine repair. parts, and Buying Gold, Silver. Plati ·
supplies. Pick up and deliv· num. old coins. scrap rings
ery, D.avil Vacuum Cleaner. &amp; silverware. Daily quotes
one half mile up Georges available . Also coins &amp; coi n
Creek Rd . Colt 446-0294 .. supplies for ule. Spring Val·
lev Trading Co., SP&lt;ing ValFlea Market Open air, Chilli- loy Plaza, 446-8025 or
cothe Mall Shopping Center 446-8026.
Oct. 22-23-24 .
1- - - - - - - -We pay cash for late mo da I
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson
446-0069

Will train 2 qualified individ ·
uals in Ute &amp; Health lnsu·
ranee. Must be serious.
Rumley lnsu ranee Agency,
446 -3320 .
Wanted Ucensed Nursing
Home Administrator for ap·
proximately 100 bed skilled
nursing home in Southeast·
ern Ohio . Please send re ·
sume to Box 1088 ,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .
MONEY . TRAVEL Too
young for the airlines? AI·
ways wanted to travel? If
you are between the age of
17-26. high school graduate
or not. here's your chance to
travel. 3 weeks paid train·
in g. transponatiJn and lodg ·
ing furnished . For more
information contact Nick
Se llm an , Circles Motel
Room 12, 11AM to 4PM .

New Haven, W, Ya. 25265
PH. {304) 882-2657
'

10-20·1 mo.

NOW

$}295 ·SPAD,
Q. YD. WITH
tNSTALUO

AVAILABLE IN GEM BLUE, AMBER, RUST AND
BROWN.

'::' •

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered ser·
vices for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet indivi:lual needs. Con ·
tact Foster lewis. agent.
Phone 379-2204.
Are you paying to much for
your hospital-health insu·
ranee . Call Carroll
Snowden, 446-4290.
15

Schools
Instruction

PLUS tiSlMIATIOit

$499

FARM BUREAU
Annual Meeting
Thurs., Oct. 21
1:16 p.m.·
At
.

Chetter Elem .

2 Rolls of Brown •nd Blue
~~J~ E;x~l~ra~~~~~~~----------------

1295

NoW 5

Gotd. silver, uariing. i•-

wetry, rings. old coins &amp; cur-

6 Rolls ol Ansa t\1 Extra Good Nylon
5 Year Presldonl~t Wear Warranty.

NOW'1695 sa. vo. INSTA.LLED

111-'11" 1
'Rolls of 501 Nvton

'17",

Giveawa'y
AllY PERSON w"" huonything to give oway ond tloeo

' S••k Dinner
Admllllon U.SO
ChlldNn n .00
Eneruln,nent .

not offer or atttfnpt to offer
any ofl• thlng~r .... may
llloc• on lid !n 1hll column.
there wit be no cho111e 10
tlw odvlrtloitr.

Call na-2111 ·

Little ldlten 4 moo. old 10 o
good home. Colt 448-2378.

roncy. Ed 8ll'kett Berber
Shop, Mlddtapon . 9923478.
Old fumituro, gtaoo &amp; chino.
Clocks, phones, fana. quIts,
plinttngo. boal&lt;oto, bonko,
coin mochlneo, oM &amp; atactric
lamps. railroad items, war
ltenw, wHther va., ... too Ia.
owonlo, merbteo,
lb111e-bott ....... lndlon ortl·
oomfc booko, poll
pocket wotdlos, gold
Osby Martin. t1 4992·8370.
----.,

21

Business
Opportunity

LOOKING for people who
want tb aam between *600
and $60 , 000 monthly
through this " newest and
fastest growing company in
the "atio"" · Call 304-6761293.
Own your own Jean ·
Sportswear. Infant-Preteen
or Ladies Apparel Store. Of·
faring all nationally known
brands such 11 Jordache.
Chic, lee, Levi. Vanderbih,
Calvin Klein. Wrangler over
200 other brenda. f7,900 ..
to $16,600 . includes beginning inventory. airfare for
one to Fashion Center. training, fixtures . grand opening
promotions. Call Mr. Koatecky t5011 327-8031 .
BIG MONEY IN SPORTS!
Own your own sporting
goods business! Sport Clrcl~
will show you the way. a..
affiliated with a national:
franchise. earn big profite.
full or pan-time I $2,400.01)
gets you started I Call collect
to Bill (7171 421 -8910 or
Sport Circle. Inc .. S. 9th St ~
Stroudsburg, PA 18360

HOUSE FOR SALE BY
OWNER Large modern brlcll :
home. with orwithoutfurnlture. will consider land contract, central air and heatrtg
system, built in birch Cl·
binets. hardwood ftoor and
carpet, well insulated. nice
garage. basement and back
yard, priced for quick sal•. ·
OPEN HOUSE Located at
610 Third AVe., Gallipolis,
Oh. House w•ll be open for
inspection Oct . 29 and·
30th , from 9:00AM to.
9:00PM. each day (oubiect
to prior sale). 446-2917.
acre. three bedr. hom4,
basement , city school,
county water. Call 216734-3734. evenings.
%

Nearly new 3 bdr. home. 11f.l
baths, dining room. kitchen
with dishwasher-garbage
disposal, all drapea, nice flit
lot on Shoal Creek Rd in
Crown City . Call 614
·
256-6560 or 614-266- •
1366.

Gun shoot. Recine Gun 1- - - - - - - - Ctub. Every Sunday uarting Wanted to buy a good used
1 p.m. Foctory choked guns 12 inm planer and molder.
only.
Call 446-1080.
Roci"'l Fire Dopt.looponoor- BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
ing a gun lhoot every Set. fumiture, gokl. silver dol ·
night otortlng Oct. 9118:30 lara, wood ioa boxes. stone
p.m. -In Butwn. Foctory jan, 1ntiquea, etc.. Comchoke 12 gouge ohotguno plete +tousehokla. Write:
only. '
M.D. Millar, Rt. 4, Pomaroy,
Oh. Or 992 -7780.

Would like to bobyo~ In my
home. Any age children up
to 6 yu. old . Anytime. Con· ·
tact at 461 Hedgewood Dr,
or call 446 -4380 .

AVON . Give yourself a
Christmas Bonus . Sell 22 Money to Loan
Avon . Earn good money, set
yo!A' own hours . Call 614·
698-7111 collect.
HOME LOANS 14% fixatl
rate. leader Mortg1ge. Ohio
Applications being accepted only 1-800 -341 -6664,
now for a part · time teller po· WVa . 614-692 -3051
sit ion in a local financial in·
stitution . Prior experience
would bo helpful but not no - 23 Professional
ceuary . Typing &amp; good
Services
communication skills re ·
quired. Submit resumes to
P.O. Box 729-G, c-o The
C&amp;l Bookkeeping
Daily Sentinel. Pomeroy, Bookkeeping
tax service
Oh. 45769 . No later than for all types of&amp;businesses.
noon Sat. Oct. 23 , 1982.
Carol Noel 446 -3862
JUST graduated &amp; unsure PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR.
about your future? The West Call Bill Ward for appoint-·
Virginia Army National ment, Ward's Keyboard ;
Guard can help you decide .
We are looking for high 446-4372 .
school seniors &amp; graduates
to train in communications,
administratioo , supply, me ·
Baal lwcwcv
chanics, &amp; many other
fields . If you qualify you may
be eligible for an enlistment 31 Homes for Sale
bonus and college or Vo·
Tech assistance . Be one of
West Virginias best. For In ground concrete pool on 2
more information , call 304· acre lot . Also has a 3 bdr. air ··
676 -3950 a&lt; toll free 1- conditioned house with full ..
basement, 2 WB fireplacea, ,
800 -642-3619 .
new carpet. Would consider
AVON . Earning extra money lower valued property In
in Point Pleasant &amp; New trade or will finance with ·
Haven area . 304-675-1429 low down payment and .10%
interest, reduced $6,000.
or 304 -882-2645.
located 123 Garfield Ave.
CLEANING lady for office Call 446-1546.
after hours Point Pleasant
Area . Send resumes only to Offered by Board of TrueAt. 2 Box 8-D leon, WV tees. Rio Grande College,
Rio Grande, Ohio, removal
25123 .
of two (2) houses located on
PERSON needed for local the former Beman property,
business. medical terminal · 518 East College Avo., Rio
ogy and basic nursing skills Grande. Ohio . Sealed bidl
and office procedures pre· will be accepted in the office
fer red , able to deal with pub· of Business Manager, Allen
lie; send resumes .to At. 2 Hall. Rio Grande College,
Sox 8-D Leon, WV 26123 . until 2:00 PM, October 22,
1982, et which time b1do
PERSON to do dictation a will be opened, read and .
few hours a day for 5 days a evaluated for removal of
week, medical terminology both houses. Removal of
a must. Send resumes to At . houses must be made on or
2 Box 8 -D Leon, WV25123 . before November 16, 1982.
Direct bids to Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande. Ohio
45674, ATIN : Businon
12
Situations
Manager. Houses may be ·
Wanted
viewed by appointment
only -contact 614-246axt. 217. The cottage
Want to form a car pool to 5353,
reserves
the right to reject
Rio Grande College . 614- any and all
bids.
949 -2241 .
3 bedroom hou111 for sale.
1% acre level lot. has barn, .
Insurance
13
and 2 out buildings. Call
614-379-2550.

Insurance
Company
116 Layne Street

18 Wanted to Do

Will babysit in my home. Call
446' 7761 .

21 inch TV, floor model

RL 124
Minersville, Oh,
PH. 992-3324
9-29·1 mo. '

ABBLE SHOP

Metropolitan life

,,

I'•

·

walks · New Construe·
ton · Remodeling

Sales ·Representative

h

' , I"

Patios

6PM .
Rooster to givewasy he will
fight people, cato, dogo or
anvthlng . Call 446-3732 .

4 SOO

K~chen Cabinets- Roof- ll---- - - - - - - - - 1
inr- Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole
_
992 2663
Bams.
POMEROY, OHIO
Plaster
Craft and
CHARLES SAYRE

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195
3-J.tfc

10' &amp; 12' WIOE
$
to
,

•000

9 ·

like to do babyolttlng I" my
home. Call 446-7411·.

Ton and whitatigar, otriped
cat, mala, 6 mo., wormed
and had all ohoto, litter
trained. Cal446-2826 after

BROWN'S
'(railer Park

Backhoe Service

Farm Equipment

'!

UNCOLN HIU LUXURYI Outstandng llome with 4-5 bOOrooms,
211 beths, knotty' pne den, fireplace, study, large utiity, beautiful
·kitchen, covered patio. low interest re!e available $65,000.

'

BOGGS

•

CALL AL
9/2 4/ t

PH.992-2259

'

FRE~N:~T~~~TES
.ll
Eber and Bl

YMJ~~I

Free killen a. Cat1448-4449.

"FURNISHED"

~===~9-~1~7-~2~m~o~Pd~~t=~:;;:;;;:::::~========~t~~~~~~~~~
H&amp;G SEWER

,,

Real Estate - General

paymenbol$~1) on~ol$34~. \:1 price$39.000.

MOBILE HOMES

9·20·1 mo pd.

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1
Long Bollom, Oh. 45743
985·4193
9·15·1 mo.

7:30-10:00

10 P~RCEIIT IIITERfSf RATE AVAilABLE - Owner willinance ·
this I\\ story, four bedroom mcilem home With "II\ be\hs. full
blsement, prqa, carJI(lrt. on eppn111. 2\i acres. Easlem school
district $5,000 down )liYI11Iirt. 10!1 int lor 20 11, will monthly

NEW SEWER
HOOKUPS

7 1.1 11(

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. l , Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-B43-2591
10-6-llc

OPEN
WED., FRI., SAT.

PRICE RfDUCED - Beautiful three bedroom miXiular home, two
baths, prden tub, WB FP, central air, electrk: heat buit incooking
units, rear screened porch. Middleport! Now only $37,500.

Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263

ytall.

..

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers- Associate
PH , 843-2075

lARGE FAIIILY.7 This is the fMx!se for you. Walk to school and
sh~png in Middle!M Two story home with three bOOrooms,
famiiy_room,Jarge kitchen, full basement ref. and range, fireplace.
$25,000.

FREE ESTIMATES

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

and RaiCne.

JUST RIGHT lOCATION! Many n~e features in th~ four bedroom
home in Pomeroy. B\ baths, separai! dining room. Wrap ~round
porch, basemelt $32,500.

• • ',Hnttnq

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'xl6'.
Insulated Doe Houses

CAll 843-3322

---~----.J - ..'

PRICE REDUCED - Acute ranch style home wkh two bedrooms
for $26,750? Right! Near nines, brand new klchen and bath.
Attached garage '" acre tot Ci\1 to see! $26,750.

P-h. 985-4269 or 985-4382
Dewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith
AI mlll&lt;ea and models
Antenna lhltaHation
House calls and shop
servtoa available
9 -20- 1 mo . Pd .

fOR SALE
10 USED

.

' 'V Il \pr l f &lt;,

e r •('IV f' f P t ·p. nt

Complete Gutter Wort.
Complete Remodeling,
Roofit1 of all types.
WOibd in home ~rea 20
FREE ESTIMATES

1-

608 E.

l. WRITESEL

SYRACUSE-RACINE
RESIDENTS

1

EvwYOne w.~oome·
' -

ORANGE
PLASTIC
GAS PIPE

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE

CARPENTER

•

G&amp;W CO.

3·11 -lfc

POMEROY, OHIO
COUNTRY HOllE - Reasonable 8 room~ bath, 2 IJOfChes,
cheslef waler, barn and 2
acres on hard road. Wil take
$17,500.

1

H.

10-20·1 mo. pd.

-S.ckhoes
-Dump Trucks
-to-Boy

Beautiful, Custom
Buill Garages"
Call lor tree siding
estimates, 949·2801 or'
949-2860.
No Sunday Calls
'

COMMANDERS - Roxanne McDaniel, back, Is the field commander for the Meigs Marauders, and Unda Noel, front, Is the assistant

ROOFING

•Appliances •Refrigeration •Heating
•CoolinJ •Air Cond. •Electrical
•Piumbtng •Roofing •Gutters
Carpentry •Residential or Business
Mobile Homes

To confer degrees
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will
confer the E .A. Degree upon two
candidates Friday at 7 p.m, at the
Masonic Temple. All E.A., F .C. and
Master Masons are invited. Refreshments will be served.

LAFF-A-DAY

Giveaway

r========::!:::=7=::::::=::::::=;r.========::;r::========~========j 814-388-9763.
needa home in country. Call

contract against James Pierce, RD.
Rutland, in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court . The suit is for failure to
pay for lumber.
In the same court Robert Fetty
and Wanda Fetty, Pomeroy, flled
against Phillip E . Dallman, Wooster, et at, for royalty due from oll
removed from their premises.
A suit for$10,00Jwas flled by Thomas Anderson, Middleport, against
Tecumseh Products, Co, Tucumseh, Mich., Roper Corp,. Kankakee,
Ill., and Sears &amp; P-nebuck and Co.,
Chicago, for injuries, loss of earnIngs and hospital expense as theresult of a defective mower
manfactured by Tecumseh and
Roper.
Sharon Russell, Pomeroy, flled
suit for divorce against Wayne Russell, Pomeroy.

Of" Wrok O.oly s.ftloowt C~ u ol~ 0..1.

Two defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined Tuesday night in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman .
Forfeiting were James S. Stewart, West Columbia, W. Va., $225,
posted on an assault charge, and
Michael L. Connolly , Leon, W. Va.,
$300, driving whiie intoxicated.
Fined were Edna A. Smith, Middleport, $250 and costs, three days in
jall, drlving while intoxicated, and
$100 and costs, leaving the scene of
an accident; Ronald D. Anns, Long
Bottom, $50 and costs, driving while
under suspension, and J a mes E.
Morrison, Middleport, $50 and
costs, disorderly manner .

4

Business Senices

The Daily Sentinel

MEIGS FLAG CORPS - Members of the flag
corps for tbe Meigs Marauders band are, front, 1-r,
Christi Qulvey, and Karen Spencer, squad leaders,
Robin Barrett, captain, Amy Sisson, co-captain,

Page

Ohio

Meigs County happenings
Pair sentenced

~·- .

18 Wanted to Do

General Hauling and Trash
removal Sorvlca. Rotlobte
and dapandabta. Call 446·
3159 oftar 6PM 266-1967.
Bobyoltter wonted , 2nd
shift, K1nauga 1rea. Must be
rahbto: rafaranceo needed.
Call 448-2526.
Pto-saionalland s11veyi1g.
Colt 448·2526.

Middleport: Sale, leaae option. 3 bedroom, dining,•
buoment, gorogo. Nice
neighborhood. Owner financing . $40's. 814-9922617.
9 yr. old bi-levot, 4 bd.room
2bath. ApProx.1&amp;'1tocre. •ti ·
Is woods. Fully equip. kit-: ·
chen with diah -washer. Aircond., carpet, full patio :
M o vi n g · p r 1c e d tow. ,
$49,000. 614-992-7414.
,

--------~ "
House &amp; 10 acrea of land

f.;_. ::1

Hie or rent. Newly 'remo- ...
dated. 8 rooms, 2 baths, also . ·
utiNty, Cloeo to Vote,.na '
WII core for potfentsln their
t on M u t berrY ·
homoo, ttvoln or 8 hr. ohlfto. I~::~~~~
Pomeroy, Oh.· ,
Hove rlferoncoa. Colt 814· 1.,
Nov 1 Colt 1
387·0394.
4-444-8S01. co·, ''·

1- - - - - - - - -

�Wednetday, Oct. 20,1982

10-The Daily Sentinel

"

"

31 Homes for Sale

larg e garage, 2 bed room

7NE TIGNTii!R 7NE

rental. la te mod el c;a re
t•ade . 614 -367 -0611 .

.....

QU«TERS, 7HE I$/GOE!&lt;

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

~

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

7Nt:At4He ··· ·

by Frontier! . UB6 . Sofa.
chair and love11at, $276.
Sofas and chairs priced from

H O US E M eadow br o~ Ad dition, 3 bedrooms, family
room with fir epa lce. ce ntral
air , basement. phone 304 -

S286 . to $B96 . Tableo, $38
and up to &amp;126. Hide -a beds , $440. and up to
8626 . , queen size, 8380 .
Recliners, $176. to $326 .,

675 -1542 .

$58 ., fi•m . S68 . and $78 .

.!'

~"'

~t~l'l_~~;..._

Pf!af7P'U•
~--

HousesforRent

992 -2288 .

Sale or rent, Pomeroy . 6
larg e room hou se. 1 bath .
basem ent. Call for mof8

6 14 -38B -8126 .
1969 12x65 Wi ndsor mo·
bi l e home . 2 bdr .. ex c . co n d iti on . $6 . 500 . Ca ll

446 -7761 .

614 -992 -2617 .

info . 614 -992 -7284 .
2 bdr ., unfurnished . car·
peted . S 100 deposit. adutts
pre ferr ed . near Pomeroy

3 bedroom house on Flat·
woods Rd . Dep osit &amp; Refer ences required . Call

614 -985 -3846.
Mod ern 3 bedroom ranch
near Pomero y. 'I• acre. din ing room . carpeted, nice.
gas heat . $2 00 month plus
utilities . 1-614 -261 -1441 .

Furni shed house. 7 rooms. 2
baths . Gravel Hill area . Mid ·

dleport . 614 -992 -6516 af ter 6 p .m .

Reduced bea utiful 64x24
doub le wid e. exc . co nd .. 3
bdr .. 2 baths . large kitchen .

Com pl ete ly redecorated .

516.500 . Ca ll 992 -2638

STUCCO hou se . si mi ·
attac hed garage. ac r.e lot .
Beech Hill on 35 . All elect ·
ric . Phone 304 -274 -2216

19 7 1 liberty 1 2x52 . 2
bd .r oom . gas . underpin n ing,
partt all y fumished . S3 .800 .

Coll614 -992 ·7324 .
1979 Governor 14 x 70 . 3
bedroom .. 1 112 bat h , wood ·
burning fireplace wrt h ce n tr a l ai r . C o nta c t
6 14 - 992 - 3007 . C e ntr al
Tru st . S12 .000 .

USED MOBIL E HO M E.
576 -271 1
1973 14K70 mobile h om e.

3 bedroom . 304 -882 -2820 .
1 4 x70 CAMERON. all el ec t ·
ric. 3 bedro om , bath and Y2.
centr al air. $9, 000. 304 ·

773 -5143

Ph on a 682 -6944 .

446 -0322

614 -985 -4321 .

or

304-675 -2757 . Rent

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

etc . Call 446-3937.

Furnished &amp; part furnished

Kenmore washer· dryer pair
8200 , GE washer dryer pair
8260 . 30 day guarantee.

apt., adults. Call 446-3733
or 446 -0171 .
2 large apartments for rent

in Rio Grandi . Call after
7 :00, 614 -682 -7083.
2 · 3 room furnished apts ,
utilities paid , 1 upstairs, 1
downstairs. Call 446-0962 .

Call 614-266 -1207.

I;;:========
53
Antiques

1- - - - - - - - -

6873 or 675 -3618 .

ter 7 p .m .
1 bdr . apt . in Rio Grande.
Oh . Furnished. C.all 446 -

0157 .
Unfurnished 1 bdr apt . with
stove &amp; refrig ., no pets ,
$169 per mo ., water in·
eluded. $60 deposit. Call

446 -3617.
3 bedroom unfurnished apt .
1 03 Court St., Gallipolis.
S216 mo .. S100deposit. no
pets, ref. required . Call446 -

2572 .
2 bedroom furnished apt .

614 -992 -7206 or 304 882 -2 666 .
'
3 room apt . furnished utili ·
ties paid . No pets , drunk's,

dopa. 614-367 -0611 .

plus deposit and utilities.

42 Mobile Homes

ties. 614 -992-3201 .

for Rent

Apt . for rent -upstairs-one
bedroom. furnished with
utilities paid . Call 614 -992 -

2 bdr . trailer total electric.
S150 mo .. one mile back of
Evergr ee n . Call 614 -245 -

9170 .

3173 o•614 -992 -7515 . No
children .
Apartm e nts . 304 - 675 -

5548 . '
2 bdr completely furnished
trailer at Kerr . Call 446 -

9669 .

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. houses . Pt. Pleasant

2 bdr . mobile home 12x65
furnish e d. co nvient loca ~
tion . Upper River Rd . Ref .
dep . required . Call 446·

and Gallipolis . 614 -446 8221 or 614 -246-9484.
Three room furnished apart ·
ment. adults. no pets, Point
Pleasant . Call 304 -675 -

2 bdr . mobil e home. fully
fum ished. adults. Call 446 -

4110 .

Call 304 -895 -3605 o• 614 36 7-0612 .
6 1f1 acres . Harri so n Tow n ·

ship , Gallia County, 2 m i. off

Rt. 775 . 54,000 . 304 -882 2428 after 5 .
5 V&gt;

ac r es . loca t ed on Hic kory

Chnpel Rd . 304-675 -2373 .
ONE ac re . excellent building
site. on At . 2. 6 miles north
of Pt . Pl easant , 304 -675·

31 12.

Furni shed 2 bdr . mobile
home in Crown City . Call

614 -256 -6520 .
12x65 2 bdr . trai ler partia lly
fumi shed in Eureka . Call

614 -245-6640.

FOR rent in Middleport, 1
room efficiency apartment .

Call 1-304 -882 -2566.
Trail er &amp; lo t for rent . Call
2 bed room trailer . Real nice,
adults only . Brown 's Trailer
Pari&lt;. Miner sville. 614 -992 -

6 room apt . New Haven, un fu r nished $126 . month .
Deposit required . 304-882 -

3366 .

45
2 bedroom furni s h e d .
Adult s preferred . No pets .
Deposit required . 614 -992 -

2749 .
Furnished 2 bedroom on 1
ac.re. Couple with 1 child
only . $200. month plus dep-

osrt. 614 -742 -2753 .
Two bdr . trai ler utilities paid .
adults only, deposit required. no pots . 2 miles out
143 in Pomeroy . 992 -3647 .
12x66 Mobile Home in Ma son. 3 bedroom. 2 baths, to tal el e ctric , partially
furni shed . 8160 . month
plus deposit . 614 -992 -

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room . $116. Utili ties pd , single male, share
bath . 919 2nd. Av"t ., Galli -

polis . Call 446-4416 after 7
PM .

46 Space for Rent
large trailer lot on Bulaville-

Addison Rd . Call 446 -4265
o• 446.-4736 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Paril , Route 3 3, North of
Pomeroy . large lots. Call

992 -7479 .

7841.

"""'''

Houses for Rent

Mobile home 14x70 all
electric $226 . month
S'\00 . deposit . References:
TWO

bedroom

mobile

2· adults only . Call 446 - home, 304-676-4046 .
033B .

5 room house in Eureka, un fumished, deposit required .
Call 614-256 -1413.

6 rm . house 8t bath in coun try for sale or rent . Dep . S.
ref. roq . Call 446-B220.

.

3 bdr. houoo 2 mi. from
Holzer Hosplt1l on 160.
*176 per mo .. •so dopooit.
no poto. Col 448 -3817.

-8 room hou• •

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished 3 r. private bath ,

845 2nd . Ave., Gollipollo.
Ref. prafarrad. Coli 4462216 .
Small furnished efflency, 1
professional type male only .
Center air 8t heat. Call 446-

'
.,.th, nice 0338.
garden ..,..,., locoted 1 10
4111 Avo.. Gallipolis. Coli 2nd floor furnlohod effl. ciency apt. Apt. 4, 729 2nd
448-3870.
Ave. Adults only. 448 4 rms • bath with garage, ...0957.
location-52 Mill Crook, GalHOu ses and 1 8t 2 bdr. apart·
lipoUo. Call 446-3B70.
rnents for rent .. HUB pro·

For rent smollcott8118 hou ..
In city Umlta. ...,...,lillie
odulta. dopoolt noqulrod.
Coli 448-4787.

Mervh1edl~
51 H.ousehold Goods

304 -676-6B71 '
Small furnished house, 1 or

chongad. All work guorantoed, reooonblo pricoo. Coli
448-6839.

78

Camping
Equipment .

grom available. A-Ohe Rool
Ellatn. Corol Yeager, Reeltor. CoN 304-87&amp;-8104 or
8711-UB8.

304-896-3821
CUSTOM built hutchoo &amp;
gun cabinets 8o vanityo.
304 -675 -2969.

.

load. delivered within 20
miles of Glenwood, WV

Pwrnw lgwllww

304 -676-29B9.

61

-.ci Building Supplies

6930, Jackson, ·oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
Wood burning add on fur nance . Still in factory crate.

$460 . Call
1216.

1 - 614 -256 1

Firewood $25.00 pick up .
96 % hard woo* Jet . Rt .

218&amp;Rt. 553, ownCity,
Oh . Call 614 -25 -6245.

Firewood . Slabs 810
pickup, cut up slabs $16,
round wood $20 . Rio
Grand e area . Call 614 -245 -

1979 20C Maooay Ferguson
grodor blade. •1 0,&amp;00. Call
446·2971 .

614-246-6121 .

56

6240, wnh 30" mower disc,
Pets for Sale

hours. $1700. 304-6766266.

KENNEL

Boarding all breeds . AKC
Reg . Dobermans pupa and
Doberman Stud Service.

62

brand . 614 -992 -3090.

Call 446-7795.
Wanted to buy small farm in
Mason County or vicinity.
Please contact 304· 676·

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

7B88 .

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
· KENNEL AKC Chow pup-

63

Call 614 -388·9661 .

for Paul.

--------lcHOLSTEIN HEIFER
CALVES. 614-992· 6198.
POUED HEREFORD Cottle

614 -742-2246, days or ev-

Sale . Arrow Farms 1nd
Jeffers Hereford Farm 'will
hold their 1nnual aale Oc-

enings after 9 p .m .

tober 23, 12 noon, at tho
Musical
Instruments

Athens County Fairgrounds,

Athono. Ohio. 80 head of nationally competitive cows,
calves, heifers and young

herd bulo will ool. National
Champions as reference
sires l For your catalog , write
or call Jeffers Hereford
Farm, Route 1 Athena, Ohio

legitimate price your receive
on any new piano or Dfgan .

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO ..
61 Court St .. Gallipolis. Call
446 -06B7.

46701. Phone: 614-593B635.

Piano forsaleu preight. completey rebuilt and refinished,
excellent shape, $360. Call

64

Harper. 304-676-

THREE 30 gal. used gas hot
water tanks. 1, 26 KW u.ad
electric furnace . 1 Used 2
ton add on air conditioner . 1
Free standing gas heater,

76,000 BTU ' s. 1 Freestanding gas heater 70,000
BTU's. 4 Natural gas floor
fumaces . 1 up flow basement furnace , natural gas,

136,600 BTU's, 304 -6753099 .

Bundy Flute, with stand. Ex·
cellent con d. $100 . Also
fireplace grate. 22x26x12 .

$2.80 bu. coli 304-676430B.

l iiiiii~~i

Cider
Ridge $·2
apples
.00 gal.,
. Red
German
and I ~
Golden Delicious. Rome

and Portsmou1h

polis . Couch, loveseat and
chair, t199.; wallhuggers

$126 .: bunk bodo whh bunkies, $170.; box apring and
mattress, t100.
Firm ,

71

Autos for Sale

Rd . Call

446 -869B.
1950 ChtiiiY for oalo fair
cond ., partly restored . Cell

59

For Sale or Trade

For sale or trade 2 male 14
month old rabbit dogs, also

squirre l
1070.

dog .

304-875-

Rare 66 Mustang 2·2 Footback 289 automatic, Wll
trade or sale. 304 -676·

41B1 .

614-446-1617. •

condition , T ·top, Iota of ex·
tras, rea1on1ble price, e-uer

to 1011. CoM 814·3BB-8773.
1976 Comoro 3&amp;0 engine,
auto trono, AC, 81,000
mlln. Cal 814-246 -94&amp;9.
1973 ChtiiiY PU fltlly corpoled, compor. n - bonory,
new tlroo, body ru1 good,
motor excell., new exheu.t
front to bock. AM-FM otero.
PS, PB, auto .. good In gu.
*1.300or best oflor. Con bo
- n ot box 2&amp; Toxoo Rd .. It
· ond of rood. OoiNpotlo.
1974 Volkowogon Super
Boot to. Good c ond .
•9oo.oo. 814-742-3137.

was hera,. refrigerators·
,dinette aeta, cheat.
dreaHra, bunkie mattre•.

74 Chevy Moll&gt;~ ctooolc,'&lt;obullt onglno, now tlrao,
muffler, brokH, ohoOito,
Crolg otero, Plonaor ..,....
.... .1 ,eoo or best offer.
Coli 441·1382.
'

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- walhora, dryora, refrlgoro.
tors, . ,.ngoo. Skoggo Appll.,oot, Uppor River Rd ..
baolcla Stone Creot · Motel.
448 -7398.
• •.
Uvlngroom oofo • ~olr, ~
otudlo oofoo • table.
-odon dining room tilllle •
4 cholro. Col . 114-3870838.
.,

•(

304-676-

roof, air conditioning, low

mileage, $4,000. 304-6766646 or 676 -4628 after 6.

72

Trucks for Sale

FOR Nla or trade for bigger
pickup, 1961 Ford 'h ton
pickup with now rebuit 302
engine, automatic transmit·

olon. In good condition,
304-676-6B64.

1978 Ponllto lunblrd, 4
cyl., 3 opel., AC. AM-FM
t~oro, 41.000 mi.. lhorp,
•3.411. Col 441-7811 or
446-1317 llft8r I.
"11711 ' CoNeit'i .wy ~
-.d.. lltll•· GT tlrM.
1.710 finn. Call.... 71'M,
: ?S-7147.
•

M I'D ~Vl~R't
IJJNJTA Ll'/~ ~ -

Marcum Roofing 8a Spouting . 30 years expertence .
specializing in bult up roof.

Call 814-388-9622 or 81438B -9867.

W . O.

1979 Chevy Van culllom ized, new mag wheels. new
,.dial tiroo. Coli 614-38B8374.
197B Oodgo Adventure ,
•2.600, 37,000 mi. Call
448 -7761.
1967 Jaop 4-Whaol drive
pick up &amp;00, 992-7789.

1979 Dodge, 4x4, excellent
running condition. 38,000
mllu, *4.100 .00 . 304&amp;78-27B4 batw•n B:0011:00 p.m.

74

Motorcyclaa

Hondo CX &amp;00 Ooluxo·ohaft
drivo-woter coolod-p~ood to
ooll' 114-992-8&amp;3i.

Boat~ end
Motor• for Sala

76
'

Cll

MOVIE: · 'The Sea
Wolvoo'
(I) MOVIE: 'Father of tho
Bride'

(I) I Spy
Cil World Champlonohlp
Tennis: Fall Finals from
Italy • Flnalo
(I) MOVIE: 'Walt Until
Dark'
&lt;IJe!Dl Tales of tho Gold
Monkol._
&lt;ll (lg Seven Brldao for
Seven Brothers
(() liD Groat Performances

Maaonary work,logue Con -,
tracting. At . 1, Ewington .

Cell 614-388-9939 .

a

CHRISTIAN'S CON STRUCTION . Conotr., roofing, siding, spouting,
fencing, painting, repairs 8a

ALLEY OOP

'Live from Lincoln Center:

cloonlng. 446-2000. call before 8 and altar 6:30.

New York City Opera: Madam• Butterfly.' Giacomo

Hi"V"'M! IF THEY
HIT WATER INSIDE
THE FORT, THEN
WI='RE IN
TROUBLE!

RON'S Television Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Ou1zar, and

Puccini's famous opera is
presented in both Eng lish

and Italian subtitles. (3
hrs.)
9:00 (]) 700 Club
CIJ Cll IDl MOVIE: 'The
Main Event'
llJ &lt;ll (lg Allee A newspa-

q

removal . Call 676-1331.

per story revea ls that the
former owner of Mel's Diner could have buried money under the building .

rienced roofing, including
hot tar 8pplicetion, e~rpen ­
ter, electrician. mason. Cell

9:30

304 -676 -20BB or 676 4660.

a 'real man.'

cert The Commodores perform their biggest hits.

There's
nowa4

ADVANCED Soamlooo

a &lt;IJIID Tucka(s Witch

Ama nda has 'flashes' of

Melba
can be
elected
mayor.
Walt!

Gutter- Doors. Offering con tinuM guttering, s011mless
siding, roofing, garage
doora, free estimetes, 614-

69B-B205.
PAINTING interior • axta free estimates, 304-

675-112B.

82

danger when a neighbor
gets i nvolved in a fatal

shooting. (80 min.)
10:30 (]) Star Time
(I) TBS Evening Nowo
11:00 II (I) NowiCinter
(I) MOVIE: 'Halloween II'
(I) MOVIE: 'Take Thlo Job
and Shove It'
Cil ESPN Sj)Orta ,Center
&lt;IJD &lt;ll ® CIIIDl Nawo
Cil Nowo/Sporti/WNthor
(() Dave Allen at Lorge
1 1:30 II (I) Cil Tonight Show
(]) Another Ufl
(I) liD All In tho Family
CIJ hnny Hill Show
&lt;ll Archlo'a Place Ar-

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTE,R' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

WINNIE

a

EVERYTHING WILL
~E ALL RIGHT AS

Phone 446-3BBB or 446 4477

chie's bookkeeping practices get him into trouble.

LONG As ORVILLI:

DOE6N'T RECOGNIZI:

83

(() PBS Leta Night
CIIIDl Nlghtlino
12:00 (I) Bumo • Allen
Cil Profollional Rodeo
from Moaqulto, TX
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho !AftHanclacl Gun'
CIJ Nlghtllno
D &lt;1J MOVIE: 'More Then
Frlondo'
liD MOVIE: 'Tho Miracle
Worko(
(I2i Love Boot Capt.
Stu bing is reunited with his

ME.

Excavating

Trenching -water lines, gas
linea, drainega . Cal 614-

245-6193.

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

e

SEWING Machine rapairo,
oorvic o. AuthOrized Singer
Salas • Service Sh•pon
Scluora. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992 -22B4.

85

love child. a woman tries to
catch up with the times and
two disagreeing jurists

BARNEY

take their battle to sea. (R)
(t hr .. 10 min.)
12:30 G (I) Cil Loto Night with
David Lottormon
Cil MOVIE: 'Greon tea'
(I) Jock a.nny Show
CIJ Love Boot Capt. Stub-

-- GOT PAW FOR

WAIT'LL 1./0U SEE
WHAT 1--UH--

General Hauling

HIS BIRTHDAY

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE . Call 814-387-7471
or 614-367-0691 .

ing ia reunited with his love
child, a woman trias to

Need oomothlng houlod

•w•y or

catch up with the times and
two dloagreoing. juriots
take their battle to ooa. (R)
(1 hr.. 10 min.)
(() Coptlonocl ABC Nowo
12:41 (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Offlnoo'
1:00 (I) I Marrlod Joon
N1:30 •
Cll NBC N-1
Ovomleht
(I) My Little Margie
Cil Nawa/llgn Off
CNN Hoedllno Nowa
2:00 (1) IIDhalor F1ther
(I) FutuN Sport
&lt;IJ MOVIE: 'Locly From

something moved7

Wo'H do k. Coll448-3169or
814-266-1987 oftor

e.

NCMI Houllng houoa cool,
lump or uoor up to 8 ton .
Umeto no. top .,I, lUI dirt.
Cell 814-317-7101,
jiMS Woter lorvioo . Coli
Jim Lenior, 3~87&amp;-7397 .

87

Uphol1tery

1171 .... Tracllor Ill, big
motor naodo ropolr. Coli
1114-1111-4331 ofter 4 p.m.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY I HOP
1 113 Sac. A .... Oollpolla.
448-7833 or 441·1133 •

71$

MOWIIE.YI Upi)Oinol¥ Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pliooont
'
304-8711·;41 84, I

Auto ,Perte
.&amp; Acce110tle• .

Ovorlood ........._ . .
and llr..koll lor lllollup

~ok.

t713.

1181. 10•·111·

tiJ

"

YOU'D THAT'S AL~ ~16!-IT..
JUST TII~'S TOO MUCH
LOSE EMPIIASIS TIIESE
li'AVS ON WINNING

SOMETIMES I WONDER

.ID

IF SOME ATIII.ETES ~N
ENJOY' PLAYIH6,;.

THAT'S W~AT I'D LIKE

to 8E .. sOMEONE Wi-10

DOESN'T ENJOY' PLAYING,
BUT WINS ALL n!E TIME!

Loullla"''

~

l

,UIINITUIIE rapalrwd, an·
. _ IW llrod, CUllom CO·
...... 304-171-1171 ......
I p.m.

'
J•

'

liD CBS N-. Nlehtwotoh
2:11

t]

Yestarday's

Now arrange the drded letters to ·
form the surprise answer. as sug·
geslod by lhe above cartoon .

I I ] -( I I I I I )

Answer here: A (

I Jumblu: CEASE

(Answers tomorrow)

OFTEN

BESIDE

TROUGH

Answer : You may aet no rest from these slngers-

" TENORS''
JumbMi loOk No. 11, contltntng 110 puzzles, II IWIIIabll tor lt.iS po~tplld
from Jumble, clo this news~ptr. Boll 34, Henwood, N.J. 07Ma. lncludeyour
Allmt, ICklrnl. ztp codt 1nd make checta payal* to Nrnpaperbooks.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Living life over again
\ spade bid. Not that it isn't a
contract in theory, btit •. ·
rather that I know all missIIORTH
I0-211·11
ing aces are right in back of
• Q 10 8 3
my kings."
•8 81
After that thought, South
+Q96
might well find a way to get
+Q74
his 10 tricks. He starts l&gt;y
playing a second trump.
WEST
EAST
Both opponents follow and
+75
+42
.AQ97
.J10.53
things are looking up. Now
+A81
+543
South goes after diamonds.
+AJ93
+10865
West wins the second diamond and leads the suit
SOUTH
back. South wins in his own
+AKJ96
hand and things look a Jot
.KI
better. In fact, South really
+K J 10 7
expects to make one of his
+Kz
four losers disappear.
Vulnerable: Both
He leads hts deuce of
Dealer: South
clubs. If West takes his ace,
South will get to discard one
West North Eaot
heart loser on dummy's club
queen, so West ducks.
Pass
DbI.
Pass
South is in dummy with
Pass
the queen. He comes to his
hand with a trump, _Plays his
Opening lead:
last diamond and dtscards a
low club from dummy. Then
be leads his king of clubs.
West takes his ace. It is
his turn tb wish he had his
By O.wald Jacoby
life to live over, since he
and Alan Solttag
must either lend a heart to
South looked over dummy establish South's king or a
and thought, "If I had my club to give South a ruff and
life to live over, I would discard.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
start by taking back my four

11 'flood

•5

li~"trl
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

1 Russian
villa

Cll

3 Pacific
t Price boost

SMade
paraUel
helmet part 6 Empty
7 Suffix
11 Use
meaning
12 Ad- per
somewhat
aspera
Yesterday's Answer
13 "That's easy 8 Printing
U
United
34 Over-t!Je-hill
to say!"
tenn
22
Acquire
Gl
9
African
15 Its capital
24 - long
35 Whetstone
is Yerevan
seaport
36 Barren
10 EnthraUed 25 Marsh
16 Explosive
26 SmaU child
36 Nucleus
14 Original
initials
30 Oscar-winning 39 Colored
17 Danube
actress
40 Puzzle
tributary
18 Bogus
volcano
19 Scoundrel 31 Musketeer
19 Tone
33 Ring
41 God (Chin.)
rombination 20 Not
arbiter
43 Canis
23 Crime
vert.
.,..-r:--r..-,,......,.,,...
27 TOJH1otch

8 Knight's

Z8 Zone
29 Indulge
in fancies

31 Revise
32 Young
salmon
34 Gotcha!
37 Perrolates
42By(oraUy)
44 Ragout

ingredient
45 Dunne

48 Shelf
47Car

DOWN
!-

processing

zCaucasian
language

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

.(1)1

PEANUTS

1978 11 'h ft. Blho oklboot.
110 Mercury •4.1100. Coli
114: 311-1713,-"-r 4.

MOVIE: 'Animals Are
Beautiful People'
llJ &lt;IJIID Filthy Rich Mar-

10:00 Cll Commodorea In Con-

304-B96-3B02.

IINLARM

(J

Cil

shall sets out to prove he's

GASOLINE ALLEY

Water Walla. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holaa.
Pumps Sales and Service .

NEED to •M or trodo Dodge
van, customized paint 8a interior. with ~ptilln swivel

BEEN!

air at their regularly scheduled times.

2107.

Cor. Fourth and Pine

4

ple, The Facts of lila, Fami ly Ties and Quincy will

Brosthers Cullom Carpeta .
Free estimates. Call 446·

good gas mileage,
ltaridard shift, feir condi-

yana &amp;

COME B~C/1., DO YOU HEM?.'
..,~ YOU WILL BE 50R.Il/Eil
THAN YOU ~VE EVEK.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet
Cloonlng featured by Haffolt

gil!.~

73

e

not necessary, Rea l Peo-

oxp. Call 614-3BB-9862.

rior,

for

a

PAINTING· interior and ex terior. plum.bing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs .

RINGLE'S SERVICE axpo -

1979 MUSTANG Ghia. oun-

DeBolts

the

e!D

ostmatos. Call 814-266 11B2.

'steering, power brakes.
cruiae control, air condition ·
ing, velvet interior, 48,000
actual miles, super sharp,

6:00p.m .. B96-36B1 .

lD 5T".ARI" A

PLASTERING

F It K Tree Trimming, atump

condition. e400 . cell after

~'!..ALE

textured ceilings commer·
cial and residential , free

69 MUSTANG Ghio, with
ounroof, 2.B V-8, power

1973 Sl6, Plymouth Duotar. runo good, body good

.. .IT'S At.liMft/5'5\BI..E.
CON~Tl()t.l.

houoo callo. Call 678-2398
or 448 -2464.

304-876-6431.

joins

International Racquetball
(I) Gomer Pyle
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
Cil Charlie's Angelo
D &lt;1l Tic Toe Dough
(() (fi)
MacNoll·lohrer
Roport
liD N•wo
.Peoplo' o Court
7:30 II ClliiD You Aokad For It
Cil ESPN Sports Contar
(I) And~ Griffith
CIJ &lt;ll Family Feud
(() Bualno11 Report
liD VIctory Gordon
IDl Entertainment
Tonlg!&gt;t
B:OO 8 (%) CZ) World Series
Game #7 If this geme is

Home
Improvements

STUCCO

documentary

Cil

BORN LOSER

lee lu••
81

follow·up
Christmas .

8. $6800. 304·B9&amp;-3836
after 6 p.m .

6867.

chalro. leo box, oink, cabl79 Trano AN •6.400. 19BO. nent ap1ce, couch to bed, •ir
Flrabird t6,300. Cell 614- conditioned, cruiae control,
3BB-9981 or 446-1324.
&amp;3000 mlleo. WHiitg to
trodo for 4-whHI drive
1977 Corvette excellent truck. 304-773 -9192.

$120.; reclln•o. UO.; 9 x
121inoloum rugo, $22.: maple rockoro, •49., wringer

•40. Coli 448-31&amp;9.

wagon .

tion, *2400 . 304 -8767466.

whole

OLD e1r or stwlled corn .

Beauty and WineSap, $7.00
buohel. $4.00 'h buohol.
Corner of LeGrande Blvd.

1980 Dodge Diplomat alation

Harvest special

Farm, Rt. 36, Pliny. WV.
304-676-2276.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

w -ul

7B CHEVY pickup, 306 on-

lb. your sacks. $6.76 par
sacked. Morgen WoodiiiWn

$6 .00. 614 -949-2225 .

trodo. 304·876-260B.

Hay for lllrlo $1.60 per bale.
Cell 446 -1062.
shelled corn $6 .00 per 100

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

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olive St., Galli-

Hay &amp; Grain

992 -7206 morningo, 4469510 afternoon. Ask for
Paul .

will take gun or antiques on

both raglotored. 304-6766763, call anytime.

448 -9610 afternoon. Aok

304 -675 -1293.

bert l
1293.

Livestock

dog . Spaded 8t all shots .

58

76 BUICK limited. 2 door,
60,000 mlloo, 304-8B2 3116 .

One 1979 ChtiiiY Chavotte,

eaoo.

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

57

.1300. 304-B95-3667.

excellent condition; 2 Tennessee Welking t1orses.

Super Chlx colt for aale 18
mo. old, blaze face, 1 white
sock, beautiful conform• ·
tion and temperment.
992· 72 05 'before noon,

American Pit Bull puppies.

Call Robert Harper for Gin seng and Yellowroot prices .
BUYING and selling used
heavy equipment (agricultu ral , construction, mining,
chemical industry, etc .)
through consignment for a
national company . Starting
at &amp;16 ,000. value . Call Ro -

Wanted to Buy

Roedrunner, 318 engine,
Power steering , power
brakes, good g11 mileage,

1988 Chevy lmpolo Super
Sport convertible, •1000 or

We will MEET or BEAT any

Utle boys cowboy boots.
like new. Size 2 '12 D . Texas

tory on how to purchase. 24

with dual blades 8 hp, like
new, used less than 40

7 -8 .00x14.6 tires on Dayton wheels, 10 ply nylon,
like new . Call 614-246 -

Call 614 -266-6065 .

gov't sale• in your area. Call

(refundabl e) 1-714-6690241 ext. 1B65 for direc-

1976 PLUMOUTH Volaro

986-3891 .
tion 653 8o 218 . Call 614 . 8 month old Pit Bull female
266 -6245 .

32' wood lathe, wood chisel
set. 18' jigsaw. 1 table nw.
electric motor with each .

$100. available at local

Gravely tractor model No.

446 -0476 .

3 White 's meta l detectors. 3
Smith 8t Wesson 357 mag .
rev ., Wickliffe rifle, all new .

JEEPS. care, trucks Under

3447.

Call 446 -3844 after 4PM .

6091 '

Ferguson 1 rC'IIN corn picker .

stock .

12. Prices. S7.00 to $9.60.
614 -667-30B6.

Blue Ridge Mountain fire place inserts now in stock at
Swisher Implement Co ., St .
At. 7 North . Gallipolis, Oh ,

304-623-1378.

HARTS Uood Cars. Now

hrs.

pies , CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens .

For sale Restaurant Carryout equipment , us8d.
lowest prices . RADCO ,

19BO V. W. Rabbit Diooal. 2
door, olr-cond .. •4.200. Af ter e p:m. call 814-992 7380.
Haven West Virginie. Over
20 less expensive cars in

NEW Idea no. 1 0, 1 row corn
picker. New Idea no. 323
corn picker . 304 - 273·

sheets for all building
purposes . Flat porcefian
enamel coated. 4x8 thru 4 x

HILLCREST

1lJ

trailer, aelf contained. sleeps

ln. 614·742-2416.

Corn criba-wire typo, 900
and 1,200 bu. Call 614246 -6193.

$260 . 614-986-36BB.

M~ta l

5804 .

Firewood . Cut to length .
Delivered in dump truck
loads or may be picked up in
yard . Crown City, Oh Junc -

Farm Equipment

end loader, plow, diac, cultivator, tinea , brush hog,

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . Call

pattern also. Call 614-8867311 .

G (I) Cil NBC Nowo
(I) MOVIE: 'Unolo Horry'
Cil Boot of tho NFL ' 1970
Oakland Raidora Highli hll.'
Bob Newhart Show
CIJ e9 ABC Nowo
D CIJ liD CBS Nowa
(()Dr. Who
(fi) Over Eaay
7:00 G Cll P.M. Magazine
(I) Stopping Out Tho
O.Bolta Grow Up This

8:30

gotlablo. Call 446-28&amp;&amp;.
1979 22ft. Holiday
Rambler. Free Spirit traval

19B1 Cutlaoo Suprema Dlooal with overyfling. Will

tJ I

Cil Nowo/SPC!rti/WNthor

79 Motor Home

consider older car 11 trlda

54 Misc. Merchandise
Plasti c Septic Tanks . State
and county approved. 1 ,000
gal. tank , price $340 . Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup truck . Call614 -286 ·

1976 rod Corvette oxc .
cond .. T·top. Call 1·6142B6-66B8 or 614-286·
6160. Aoklng *6.900. must
ooll.

CAEPIE

(() (fi) 3-2-1, Contact

week end camping. price no-

SALE or trade: Pure .Aipino
~~~-~a~i; ,2 yearoold, 304 '

tJ I

Cil 8 (I) liD e9 Nawo

~·~-~~-::w~~ ;~~&amp;~C~a~m~p~e~r~s;id;;
r~=========T~:::::::::·
74 VW Campmobllo Ideal
59 For Sale or Trade 1'71
Autos for Sale
for huntoro, flohormon or

WOOD, cut. i plh and delivere d · $30 ·00 30 4 · 676 ·
1478.

Build your own garage
24x24 all lumber furnished,
8696. Can deliver. Barn

. CAPTAN EASY

1971 CONCORD 12x80
with 4x10 tlpout. Con ooa 3
to 8 p.m . 1404 lawlo St.,
lot 6. Pt. Ploooant.

$196 . 304-675-3424.1
Practically new wood atove .

(I) N--nter
(I) Wild &amp;.biN Twin
fawno, acrobatic flying
aquirrolo and wid. .yed
wolf pups learn td ourvlvo
and take their firat stops!P(I) Bull'a Eye
Cil Ski Sohoot
(I) Carol Burnett

*2496. Located Main and
Second, Mlddloport, Ohio.
814-992-2829.

12 gauge Winche1ter pump
brand new, never •fired

G

ward independence.

Starcraft fold-out, used
twice, excellent cond .

I· .
I.

Black Bart stlve. 304· 6762765.

614-992 -2684.

Unfurnished apartments fQJ . Call 446 -0548 .
rent . Call Automotive
Supply, 8 till 6, 304-675 - Double bed, spread &amp; can2218, 304 -676 -6753.
opy cover , bed spread &amp;:
chair set, handmade
Furnished apts . Adults . afaghan . Call 446 -7369 .

3324.

THREE ac r es . f e n ce d .
12x60 trail er. well, septic
system. l etart , 9.000 .00 .

8:00

Tr•nemluion. Rebuilt"or ex -

lane Hope Chest. like new .

paid. Adults. 446 -4416 af -

5 rooms in Pomeroy , close
to stores-married adults . No
pets. $125 . mo. plus utili ·

446 -1052.

Two acre lot s-150 ft . road
frontage. c ity water. behind
84 lumber . Ca ll 304-675 ·

10/20/82
EVENING

FIREWOOD $30.00 pickup

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

304 -675-2257.

19 acres close Ch es t er .
Bea utiful wooded ho m esit e.
Con side r lease purc ha se or
land co ntrac t . $ 1 2 .000 .

41

ranges . chairs, end tables,
recliners and TV's . 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 7pm , Mon . thru Fri ., 9am
to 6pm , Sat.

only . Call 446 -033B .

2453 .

For sa le one and half ac r es
more or less. approxi mately
600 ft road frontag e on
Cora -Centerpoint Rd . nea r
Cen t e rpo i nt . $3,000 . 00

APPROXIMATELY

614-992 -3090 .

9558 .

35 lots &amp; A c reag e

a du~s

t•esses,
$36, ma
bedrang es. $25
$326 .8o Baby
t.ames S20, $26, 8o $30 .
UsedFurniture -- bookcase,

Jackson Pike . 8236. utilities

992 -7706 after 6 p.m.

ga s 6 14 -992 -340 1.

Nicely furnished mobile
home. ce ntral air , 1 mile
below c ity overlooking river ,

Bridge. 773 -5962 or 773 Furnished Apt ., 1 BR, 243
5775 .

Furnished house . Call 614·

1976 Windsor 14x70. Ce n tral air &amp; heat , underpinning,
co n c rete s t eps . sto rm wtndows. se t up for propane

Apartment

for Rent

511 , 49 5 . 1 979 Sky line
56x1 4 , 2 bdr., 59 .495 .

1978 Gove rnor . 1 oW ner,
12K60. lP gas. all furniture
stays , plu s ex tr as. Extra in sul ation . $ 1 0 .000 . Call

826., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$360 .. dinette ~airs S20 .
and 826. Gas Or electric

~=========~-:::========:1
41
44
Pomeroy -2 bd .room unfur·
ni sh ed house. $195 . mo .
Security deposit. $100 . plus
utilities . Aft er 6 -ca ll 614 -

sets, $196 . 4 dr .

~W~S425dr~w~
864 . Bed frames. $20 .and

-

Middleport : Rent , lease op ·
tion . 3 bedroom . dining, fire place . base ment, garage,
nice neighborhood . $350.

$7 ,495 .

~~

*

1980 Happy Ho use 14x70 .
3 bdr. . total el ec tric .
$ 11 , 995 . 1 978 N as hu a
14x70. 3 bdr .. fireplace
$ 11 , 595 . 19 8 1 Venture
60x 14 , 2 bdr . . gas.

1973 Darian 60x12 . 2 bdr ..
$6 ,495 . 1970 New M oo n
60 x 12. wi th 12ft. expand o .
set up in park . $5 , 995 . 1966
New M oon 55x 1 2 . 2 bdr ..
$4,495 . Ca ll John son ' s M o bile Homes . Call446 -3547 .

Queen

11

'

Byerly ond Folio Automatic

Plants and flowers for ule.
Call 446-3169 .

ducts. Julll call 1-304-676 maplfit or pine finish . Bed 1090.
room suiJes
Bassett
Cherry', S196 . Bunk bed
Portable gasoline welding
complete with mattresses.
$260. and up to $396. Baby 176 amp, Exc. cond. $900.
304 -676-6694.
beds , &amp;99. Mattresses or
box s,rings, full or twin,

Page

Television
.
Viewing

Auto Repair

Hutches, S300. and $550 ..

.

60x 12, 2 bdr ..

DICK TRACY

77

SPECIAL Comploti onomol
point jobo from 1300 . Sunroof• lnstollod from •22e .
Aulo Trim c,ntor, 4481988.

5395. to $650. Oesk 5110. care products. laundry &amp;.
household cleaning pro-

32 Mobile Homes

1 979 liberty 60x14 ,
$8 ,795 . 1973 Champion

TRAPPING SUPPLIES Buying Ginseng . GeOrge Buck·
loy. Rt. 2, Athono. Oh.
664-4761. Houro: W•k·
dayo 6-9 PM. Wookondo 12
noon-9 PM .

Wood t. ble with six chairs

5265

CLEAN US ED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S DU AL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SA LES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPO LIS ,
RT 35 . PHONE 446 · 7274 .

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

Rawlaigh Products·
Distributors. All klnda flaS386 . 7 pc .. $189 . and up. vorings , a_aasoninga &amp;
spices. Mr. Groom animal

FOU R bedroo m home . assu ·
mabl e mortgage, 7 % per ·
ce nt inte re st. 1/ • mil o on left .
At . 62 South off At . 2 . Pt .
Pleasan t , phone 30 4 -675 -

C HECK 0 u A P R 1C E s .
CALL446 -7 57 2

by Larry Wright

pc . dinettes from 679 .• to

chenp . $15000 . 304 -773 9192 .

r A I S TATE M 0 B ll E
HOMES . USED · CARS ,
TRU CKS . GALLIPOLIS .

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Oct. 20,1982

lamps from $18. to S65 . 6 W.T.

NEED to sell 6 room house
with air co nditioni ng , gas
heat, stove with re fri ge rator, 2 large lots, large ga rden
space . 200 yards off of m ain
road in Clift on . Will sell

for Sale

'"

51 Household Goods ·54 Misc . Merchandise KIT 'N' CARL YLE••

They'll Do It Every Time

Mason. 2 acres. 3 bedroom,

'

II

AXYDLBAAXa
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply otonds for another. In thiJ umple A

Ia

UHd for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten.
opoatrophea, the Iencth and fonnation of the words are aU
hlnta. Each day the code !etten are different.

caYPTOQUOTBS

TV

BCXVGYOC

KBG

JKBRVR

TOSJ

FWKBS

KBG

MOVIE: 'SIIonof of the

North'
.z:30 Cll Life of Riley

HGFCOSV. ;

2:41 (I) MOYIE: 'Fiddler On tho

JFWbSR ' FOX KBG NOPVR?-SJKGVFB
Ye.terday'l CI7J*qaole: GRIPING ABOlTI' TROUBLES: IF
YOU OOUIJ) KiCK tHE ONE RESPONSIBlE FOR M&lt;:m' OF

Cil EIPN 8porta Center
lloof'

3:00 (() 700 Club
~:JO Cll World Chemplonahlp
T-Ie: Fall Flnall from

TJFS

l'HEM, YOU WOUUIN'T SIT DOWN FOR A WEEK.-{)REN

AJQiOLD

.,

,.

�Page---12- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Oct. 20,1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Meigs board. &lt;Cootlnued from page 1)

PVH administrator
• •
accepts new position

•

Robert M. Carper, executive director of Pleasant Valley Hospita l,
has announced he Is resign ing his
position effective Dec . 31.
He has accepted the pos ition of
senior vice president of Lancaster
1Pa . ) General Hospital. a 555-bed
facility . He assumes his new duties
in January.
Carper has been PVH executive
d~·ector since January 1\llO. Before
coming to Point P leasant . he was
administrator at Roane General
Hospita l, Spence r. W.Va .. for three
years.
Prior to that. he was with Bryn
Mawr (Pa.l Hospita l for eight years, first as assis tant vice president
of administration and for five years
as vice president of administration.
He is a graduate of West Virginia
University with an assoc iate degree
and a master's degree in biochemis-

try. He Is a lso a graduate of the
University of Pittsburgh, with a
master 's in hospital administration.
Carper completed his admWstra·
live residency a t Magee Women's
Hospital in Pittsburgh.
Carper is a member of the Amerl·
can College of Hospital AdmWs tra·
tors, th e American Hos pita l
Associa lion and Is currently serving
on the board of directors of the West
Virginia Hospital Administra tion,
where he's chairman of the pla nning council.
Locally, Carper has been a
member of the Rotary Club a nd
served as a board member of the
Maso n Count y Chamber of
Commerce.
PVH officials said the hospital's
board of U11stees are now in the process of selecting Carper's
replacement.

Prime suspect blamed
firm for child's death
MEMPHIS, Tenn . !API -The
"prime suspect" in the Tylenol
murders in Chicago, James W. Lewis, once blamed the maker of Ty·
!enol for the death of his young
daughter, a newspaper !'!'ported
Wednesday.
"Jimmy blamed J ohnson &amp; Joh nson for the death. apparently beca useof the medication the littlegirl
was taking," police Sgt. Jake Dyer
of Carl Junction. Mo .. to ld The Com mercial Appeal of Memphis. Tenn.
Authorities in Chicago have ide ntified the suspect as J ames W. Lewis. 35. who was given the name
Theodore E . Wilson when he was
born in Memphis on Aug. 8.1!M6. He
is a fugitive sought on charges of
llying to extort $1 million from Tylenol's maker, McNeil Consumer
Products Co .. a Johnson &amp; Johnson
subsidia ry. A letter threatened
more poisonings unless the money
was depos ited in a Chicago bank
account.
Meanwhile. a photo of a Ty lenol
murder victim in the Chicago-area
store where she bought her tainted
medication is being ana i\"Zed by
computer to determ ine if a ma n a lso
seen in the picture is Le\\'is.
Seven people died in Chicago after taking Extra-Strength Tylenol
capsules laced with cya nide.
Wilson was adop ted as a child and
moved toM lssouri where he went by
the name of James Wilson. authorities said.
Dyer sa id Lewis· :&gt;-yea r-o ld
daughter. Toni. died of heart disease in 1974.
"She went to the hospital for openheart surgery and, as I unde rstand
it, she came through the surgery
OK, but a few days l"ter her heart
exploded," Dyer said.
Illinois Attorney General Tyrone
Fa hner, head of the Tylenol investi gation task force. has sa id that a u-

thor!ties want to question Lewis a nd
his wife about the Tylenol killings
beca use "everything in his prior
background was motiva ted by money" and they are the "kind of people who are capable" of such a
crime.
Dyer a lso told the newspaper tha t
Lewis was committed to the Nev·
ada, Mo., State Mental Hospital
where he was diagnosed as
sc hizophrenic.
" 1 realize that that diagnosis covers the whole landscape, but tha t's
what they said his problem was,"
Dyer said.
Fahner labeled Lewis the "prime
s us pect" in the case, while conceding there is "no tangible evidence"
against him .
After the extortion charges were
filed against Lewis last week, investigators learned he once had been
charged with murder in Kansas
City. The charge was dropped because the victim's cause of death
wasn't determined and some evidence was obta ined illegally.
During the weekend officials established that his background included a "pattern of fraud and
extortion." Fahner said.
Over the years, F ahne r said, Lewis has used 17 aliases. Investigators believe he has not used his given
name since he was adopted at age 3.
During the nine man ths or so that he
in lived in Chicago - after fleeing
Kansas City under a fraud chargehe was known as ~ober t
Richardson.
The photo being ana ly-zed shows
Paula Prince, 35, a n airline stewardess, who died of cyanide poisoning
within a few hours after the picture
was taken by a drugstore surveil·
lance camera. Investiga tors believe she bought her Tylenol at
about the time thepicturewastaken
Sept. 29.

driver education instruction in the
Meigs district. Superintendent Dan
Morris told the board tHe flmn wlli

All automobile owners whose last
na mes begin with R or T should get
their new license sti ckers during the
month of October. The new stickers
must be on by midnight on Oct. 31.
To obtain new license stickers
owners must ha\'0C0rtificateoftitle
and registration. The owner must
obtain the license or s ign a power of
attorney form for someone other
than the owner to pick up the license.
The office ·
in the former

Gibbs Grocery building on Mul·
berry Ave. a nd Is open on Friday
ev.enings until 7 p.m . The office is
also open on Saturday morning.

Page4

Page3

PageS

PageS

•

The Daily
Voi.31,No .lt9.
Copy•ighlod 1982

Pomeroy

a ttorney, has been rena med Meigs

Additional police sought

Logan citizens form
crime-watch groups

Fultz, who has been the Congressman's Meigs Coun ty Chair·

~o~~r~~~ro:~~~·sfi~~ g~gr~~

siona l District, appealed to local
residents Interested In assisting

Congressma
reelectiona
with theign,
campa
either byn's posting
Miller for Congress lawn s ign or bY
helping with the distribution ofCon-

_

P'fDEMIE
. R E DIAMOND
t
REMOUNT SHOw
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 9:00 A.M. TO 8:00 P.M.

gressmanMlller'scampaignmat~

rials to contact him through his
office at 992-2186 or his home a t 992·

Remount your diamonds in o new,
more impressive de-

3346.
In Clarence Miller. Meigs County
residents have a Congress man dedicated to hard work and a common
sense approach to government , a
Congressma n who knows the needs
of our district and serves them well,
comment ed F ul tz. Pointing to the
promising economic indicators of a
grea tly red uced Inflation rate a nd a
constantly declining prime Interest
rate, F ul tz expressed confidence
that the economy was on its way
back a nd appealed to Meigs Coun ty
Voters to send Clarence Miller
back to Washington to continue the
fine work he has done for our part of
Ohio in th is regard.

14 K GOLD

srgn .

•aoo

concrete sidewalk In front of the county court house ill
preparation for a new sidewalk. The county commissioners are having the sidewalk replaced.

REPLACING SIDEWALK- County employes
were busy doing back breaking work Tuesday mornIng as they used a jack hammer to break up the

COMPLETE REMOUNT

Miniature
course out

Ingels Jewelers has
hundred s of new
styles to choose
from .

· Ingels Jewelers ·Premiere
Diamond Remount Show offers:

Revival planned
A revival wlll be held at the Ru·
!land Chu rch of God, SR 124, Ru·
!land, beginning Oct. 24 through the
31st.
Evangelist will be the Rev. Don
Stacy. Services are 7 p.m. nightly
with special singing each evening.
Pastor is John Evans. The public Is
invited to a ttend.

Convicted killer chief suspect
SAN FRANCISCO - A ~onvlcted k1ller recently sentenced to
prison for choking his wife'scousin Is a suspect In thestrangulatlonsof
12 women In the San Francisco·and Seattle areas, pollee say.
" Women start coming up dead" in places the suspect visits, one
homicide detective said.
John Norris Hanks, a 35-year-old former tannery foreman and
computer technicia n from East Palo Alto, was in jail Wednesday in
San Mateo County south of San Francisco. A warrant has been Issued
charging hinn with twice assaultfng his wife of two months, Laneyse,
in Seattle in September.
·

• BETTER than reasonable prices
on a V.:ide selection of precious
gold rmg, pendant, and earring
mountings.
Priced as low as$8800

But the
Setti
. ."'JJ
IS lrlflf

50°/o
off savings on 0
"NO ..large
selection of loose diamonds
LABOR and precious gems

Truman seroices set today
INDEPENDENCE , Mo. - Nancy Reagan a nd twootherpresiden·
tlal wives topped the list of dignitaries planning to attend the funeral
today offormer first lady Bess Truman, who died this week at age 97._
The service for Mrs. Truman, who died Monday of heart failure at
her home here, was set for the Trinity Episcopal Church, where s he
married Harry S. Truman on June 28, 1919. She was to be buried
beside her husband in the courtyard of the Truman Library here.

tosr· r--~--=---.....

Candidates night set this evening

. This heavy duty vac Is light
In weight lor MSy handling
and pacl&lt;ed wlth
IMtures to do
the wort&lt; lor you.

Upright with
Power Driven 12"
beater bar brush roll
beats, sweeps,
cleans deep

down dirt .

The fifth annual candidates night will be observed this evening at
the senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. A dinner will be served from
4: 30 to 6: ll p.m . Prices for the meal are $2.50 for senior citizens and$2
for children.
Candidates or their representatives will speak beginning at 7 p.m .

EXPERT DIAMOND SETTER WILL BE
IN OUR STORE WITH ~ HUNDREDS OF MOUNTINGS. HE IS BRrNGING HIS/COMPLETE SHOP·
·OF ·FINE EQU.IPMENT ,IN ORDER TO DO ALL
REMOUNTS. . • •"AS YOU WAir'.

.Columbia plan not good enough
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Although Columbia Gas of Ohio has an·
nounced a plan to help reconnect service to some low-Income, delin~
quent customers, the leader of a community group says that's not
enough.
The Rev. T. William Filbern, spokesman for t11e Columbus Com~
nwnlty Coalition, said Columbia Gas should guarantee service to ali
families this winter . ,
He said thousantls of customers lack service because of back debts
to the utlllty running as high as $1,1XXl. Liberalized repayment plalls
won't help them, he said, because new fuel bills for this winter also will
be high.
"There's little hope that he or she can keep up with this winter's bill
while paying off the rest of last winter's bill, " Filbern said.
'The only viable solution Is to guarantee service to every family
that pays Its bills or a certain portion of m onthly Income, whichever Is

JEWELRY DEPARTMENT SPECIALS
Lucky Lady

7 DiaJnond
CluSters

WE HAVE

HALLOWEEN

C"ro.ln"ln!J~D

OOlitNUifll (I

Magnificently
Masculine

~qQg 95 7Diamond

less."

CLEVELAND - The wlnning number drawn Wednesday night In
the Ohio Lottery; s dally game "The Number" was 481.
The lottery reported e~ ot$153,349.50from ~wagering on Its
'dally game. Thee8fll!ngs came on sales ot$831,745.50, while holders
ot winning tickets are entitled to sh\ll'e $678,396, lottery officials said.

· W~ather forecast .

•2 poaltlon Dial-A-Nap ®
rug height adjustment

"

seeking headlight
NOWONLY

$79 95

.

Clear tontghtwlth generaliybelow·treezingtempera~ by mom~
ing. Low 28-32. Winds northWll$!erlY less than 10 mph. Friday, sunny
with the high 00-55. .
.
.
.
•.
.

·~uldlrt

Exteaded Oltlo Fo~
·
~ throup Monday:
'
.
.
Moldy aumy days and c~ear; ooo1 n~mta tJirooab the period. mp
In the ... 8alurday and mlcHOII to low eoi ~and Moada.V.'',

MODEL
6720

~ . . lnthe301.

ELBERFELDS

'

·'

IN POMEROY

---

been canceled; and many people
hesitate to leave their homes a t
night.
"A lot of elderly people, a lot of
teen-agers, are frightened. We hope
to be able to ease that fear," said
Mrs. Whalen, a mother of two teenagers and a 6 year old.
As the meeting ended, at leas t ~
people left their names and telephone numbers as volunteers for
the crime-watch program.
The Hocking County Sheriff's Department did not send a representative , but Capt. Steve Mowery
att ended for the police department .
" I'm very encouraged tha t people are wanting to take an ac ti ve
interest and become more crime·
conscious. Sometimes it takes a
tragedy like this to pull people together," he said.
"People are very tense, emotions
are running ,·ery high. I felt it would
be a good ideo for someone from
local law enforcement to be here
and remind them that something Is
being done. People are looking for
an outlet for their tensions and fm stration. This l' a good forum to do
that," he sa id .

SR 554 improvements
put on 1983 calendar
By KEVIN KELLY
OVP news staff
Improvement of Ohio 554 in Cheshire Twp. Is expected to be on the
Ohio Department of Transportation's calendar fo r 19&amp;3, officials
said this morning.
This was the result of a Wednesday meeting between Walter G.
Smith, deputy direc tor of OOOT's
District 10, and Transportation Director David L. Weir.
Smith brought information and
concerns of the area's res idents to
Weir's attention after Smith was
presented with a petition Tuesday
by township trustee and two other
resldentsaskingOOOTtorepairthe
stretch of 554 between Gravel Hill
and Roush Lane roads.
n oush Lane has been used as a
de tour to 554 since Novem ber 1980,
when the state ordered the section
between the two roads closed due to
low-lying water from the Kyger
Creek.
The meetings with state officials
was set up by State 'l.ep. Claire
"Buzz" Bail Jr., RAthens, who was
contacted by Virgil Wams ley, the

course.
The Gllmores countered with
their own petition with 143 signa·
lures of area residents supporting
such a facility, but the commission
refused to submit the request to
council.
I~ their request. the Gllmores as·
sured the Commission that the golf
course would close with the 11 p.m.
curlew, that there would be no
music, no food or drink on the premises, and that It would conform to
all codes, including fencing; tha t it
would be attractive to adults as well
as to children. It would also have
added at least a couple of jobs to the
village.

a

Board okays
commitment

Cheshire trustee.
" We do expect them to make it a
high priority item next year. and I'll
stay on top of them until work beg·
ins." Ball said.
Smith sa id survey work and preliminary pla nnin_g_ on fixing 554 has
been complete, but more deta iled
·planning is yet to be done.
"In an exaggeration, just determining where every spoonful of dirt
will go." he said .
The specific solution to the problem, he said, is to prov ide adeq ua te
drainage and to raise the road from
its present level. The type of surtace
to be Installed , asphalt or concrete,
hasn't been determined yet.
The last estimate 0001' had on
the project was estimated in excess
of $500,1XXl. Once the planning is
complete, then then funding remains, a lthough Smith reiterated
the hope the project can get under·
way by early 1983.
"That's about as definit e as we
can get ." he said.
On Wednesday afternoon, Wamsley, Bill Price and Jerry Schoonover

- who met wit h Smith Tuesday participated in a tour of Roush Lane
with Larry Coler. district operations engineer for DL,trict 10; Ted
Sushka, a traffic engineer wit h the
Marietta office; Coun ty E ngineer
James Baird a nd Jack Mills, state
highway garage superintendent.
Coler said he a nd Sushka wet'P
there to de termine how safe Roush
Lane is as a detour a nd if it ' ssuita bly
maintained . The state and the
county entered into agreement two
years ago. when the road was
closed . to help in maintaining~oush
Lane so long as it' s a detour.
The residents told officials Roush
Lane has never been meant as a
public highway a nd is heavily used
1 not oniy by regular traffic, but by
coal trucks andvehiclescarryingoU
we ll rig equipment.
" We figure this has been a detour
long enough." Price said.
After inspecting the road and sev.
era! deep culverts a long the side,
Sushka said hp'd recommend advisory speed limits for Roush Lane
and postin g of hazard signs whPre
the culverts are located.

Meeting In regular session Wed~
nesday night the Southern Board of
Education passed a resolution com·
mittlng itsel! to upgrading condl·
!loris in the entire district If voters
approve a three mill tax levy on ,
The resolution reads as follows: "Whereas, the Southern Local
School' Dlsbrict is opeating with in~
adeqUate text books, lnsutftcietedu·
catlonal matertal and equipment,
deteriorating. facUlties and the absence of a numblir of state min·
·imum requirements, Including an
~program.
.·
"\Vlii!I'eas. Umt!ed funds have
prevented meeting these educa·
tiona! needs therefore, be it resolved
tllat the Southern LoCal Board of
Education upon approval of the
three mill levy wDl vigorously
pursue the remediation r1 the afore
mentioned areas otJle!ld, ·
,'rTheretbre, ·be It further resolved
(cOntinued on page 12)
'M

--- - \

The Middleport Planning Commission has denied a request for
permission to construct a mlnia·
ture golf course near downtown
Middleport.
Bob and Jean Gilmore, owners of
the Lazy Day Cafe on Race St., had
requested permission to demolish
an old house on the same lot as the
restaurant and build a miniature
golf course as an expansion of their
business which In 1965 was zoned
R-3. The restaurant cannot be
changed:or enlarged without a zoning change In variance.
The zoning coml)llsslon fi rst felt
It was a good Idea, but before submitting the request to council
memebers contacted six affected
neighbors within 200 feet of the
Lazy Day property. The neighbors
circulated a petition containing 20
signatures opposing the golf

"Until that person's ca ught, we
won't be safe. The family wants
pressure put upon the city and
county commissioners to see that
we have enough officers to see that
this Investigation Is not hampered
by lack of manpower. If that means
firing a secretary, so be it, " he said.
Kernen said the Logan Police Department Is doing an "excellent
job, " considering it has only 10officers. He said the county sheriff's department Is not much larger.
The Loga n-area residents, called
together by Kathy Wha len, who said
she was a friend of the Schultz fam ily, vowed to work with a uthorities
to form neighborhood crime-watch
patrols a nd to lobby for more pollee
officers in both the city and county
departments.
Logan's pollee depart men I has an
aut horized strengih of 12, but budget
problem,s have plagued Logan's
city government for mont hs. Voters
rejected a temporary hike in the
city's income tax last November
and again in June.
Many parent s In the Logan area
are walking their children toschool;
Halloween trick or trea ting ha'

Nov. 2. .

Winning Ohio lottery numbe~

CUPCAKE PICKS
NAPKINS &amp; FAVORS

•

LOGAN, Ohio (AP) -More pollee are being demanded in this southeastern Ohio community, the
scene of two mutilation murders,
and residents are forming crimewatch g roup s to protect
themselves.
The torsos ofTodd Schultz, 19, and
Annette Johnston, 18, were found
last Thursday in the Hocking 111ver.
Their heatls, arms and legs were
found in shallow graves in a nearby
cornfield two days later. They had
been miss ing s ince Oct. 4.
Investigators have no suspects in
the deaths of the two, who had
planned to marry, Hocking County
Sheriff Jim Jones said Wednesday.
Many of the 200 people attending a
community m eeting Wednesday
night fear more crime if they fail to
act.
Will Kernen, a former city law
director and a neighbor of the
Schultz family, said he attended the
m eeting to deliver a message from
the famil y. "They asked that you a ll
look out for each other. but what
they feellsthatonegood, professionally trained pollee officer Is worth
100 of us ," Kernen said.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
ONE DAY ONLY

County
Chairman
for lOth Miller's
District
Congressma
n Clarence
reelection effort this fall .

1 Sect ion, 12 Pages
I S Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

•

PH . 992 -2039
Or 992 ~ 5721

Pomeroy, OH.

entinel

Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Oct. 21,1982

" Th e Way Ame ri ca Se nds Loll&lt;'"

105 Butternut Ave.

-

·

CAROUSEL
FECTION

Livestock reports

~rna~ Ful=~o=~:P~fl~a~i~gn~;;U;~~U~Z,~·n~;;~~;;~. :~ ~r:~c~ce~pt~A~I ~M~a~jo~r~Cr~ed~it~C~ar~d~s.:;a;nd;;;;~~~;;~

A marriage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Charles Wayne Thomas, 35, Middleport, and Tammy LaVonne Clela nd , 24, Middleport .

ON SALE FOR

Property transfers

.

Attorney rD.Ult7: leads
M ll
I

Cardinals now
World Champions

•

SUN., OCT. 24th
Call Pomeroy
Flower Shop
For Complete
Details Today!
POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

DISCUSSES CAMPAIGN- BelJW'd Fultz, Meigs County Chairman for the Miller for Congress ReefecHon Committee, is shown discussing the current campaign with Congressman Clarence ~Hiler at a
recent campaign strategy session In Athens.

Marriage license

Wilton's New Complete Book of ·
Candy. Reg. $12.95.
$lQOO

' t .•

Seud The Preserves Jar
or Salt Box Bouquet
Rll'MotherDay.

ity College Board of Trustees for a
five year term.
The commissioners hired Mary
Beth Musser as part time employe
at the county home.
Attending were Henry Wells,
president, Richard Jones and David
Koblentz, commiss ioners, Mary
Hobstetter. clerk and Ma rtha
Chambers.

R, T motorists must obtain stickers

Hoople forsees
victories for
·Meigs, Southern

provide cars, coursework and text~
books for the program, at a coot ot
$45 to each student

REMEMBER MOTHER-IN-LAW DAY ...

Block grant procedur,es discussed
Guidelines and procedures imp!e~
menting the Community development Block Gra nt were discussed
when the Meigs Coun ty Commissioners met Tuesday with Frank
Davis of Buckeye Hills a nd Diana
Allen of the State Dcpar1ment of
Development.
The board reappoint ed Orion
Roush to the Rio Grande Commun-

,

,

~.'

'

CONSTRUCI'ION cOMPLETED -

ConsmJc..

!*\ of The ~ Nliifonal Bailk, Syt'8C118e Branch,

located on Thlnl"lltreet In Syt'IICII8e, has been complded. Open boule of lbe ni!W branch wlli be held on

•

.~

Sunday, Nov. 14 and the bank wlU open for business
on Monday, Nov. 18. Da)'s and hours the bank wlU he
open wlU be announced later.

\

�</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="44937">
            <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="44936">
              <text>October 20, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
