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                  <text>T~···•r· ~

· Pege 10-the Daily Sentinel

•

mWion.

11le Democratic vice presi~ntial
nominee sets her end of the f;unlly
fortuneat$700,00l-with$525,001of
It attributed to her tullf·lnterest in
• residences In Forest Hills and Fire
Island, N.Y., and St. Croix, VIrgin
Islands, and sole ownership of four
. lots at the Fire Island resort.
Ms. Ferraro said in the·various
financial docwnents made public
· Monday that the balance of her
assets Included anywhere from
$75,001 . to $110,001 In taX-free
municipal bOnds, her f~ralretlre­
ment plan and one-third interest In
p . Zaccaro Co. !nc., one of her
husband's New York City real
estate firms.
As expected, Zaccaro's tax returns and net worth statement were
heavy with real estate, Including
partnerships or companies owning
eight · Manhattan bulldlngs and
condoml,nlums In New York and St.
Croix.
Ms. Ferraro reported no debts.
Her husband listed $310,lro In
llabilltk!s, InclUding loans from

Area deaths
Ethel F. Hoback
Ethel Flora Hoback, 92, Racine,
cUed Monday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·A homemaker, Mrs. Hobac)(.was
!)om Swt. 3, 1891 at Portland, a
daughter of the late Ed E!lld Allee
Eaton Easterday.
Siuvlving are two sons, Charles
Hoback, Syracuse, and William H.
Hoback, Racine; two daughters,
Mrs. Joseph (Lucille) Burke, Jacksonville, Fla., 1 and Mrs. Audrey
Bolchyn, St. Claire Shores, Mich.; a
sister, Mrs:EdnaSmltb,Cieveland,
and a brother, Gilford Easterday of
Delaware, Ohio. Fifteen grandchildren, ~great-grandchildren and six
great-great-grandchildren als()
survive.
Besides her parents, Mrs. Hoback
was preceded In death by her first
husband, Dennis Hoback; her
second husband, J . D. Hoback; a
son, Dwight Hoback, and a daughter, Sarah Mae Hoback. She was a
member of the Pentecostal Assembly, Racine.
SeiVIces will he held at 1 p.m.

Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
H~wlth the Rev. L;lwrence Bush
officiating. Frtends may call at the
funeral home frilm 2 to4 and HO 9
p.m. on both Tuesday and Wednesday_ Burial will he In Browning
Cemetery at Portland.
'
'

Leon~ T. Smith

'

Emergency squads
answer seven calls

. Seven squad runs were reported
bY the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service.
.Tuppers Plains went toReedsvlile
at 1: ffip.m . tor Christina Smith who
was ta)cen to O'Bieness Mmmrlal
Hospital; at 2:22p.m. Chester went
to a structure fire at the George
Mora residence; at 2: 35 p.m.
Pomeroy took Paula M,ora and son
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland went to State Route 143 at Veterans Memorial
5: 45 p.m. for Felix R. Alkire who
was transported to Veterans MemADMISSIONS---Felix Alkire,
orial Hospital; at7 :04 p.m. Middleport went to Stonewood Apt. 1ffi for
DISCHARGES-- Anna Koenig,
Pomeroy.
Esther Klssell-non-transport; Ra- . Beulah Kaptelna, Margaret Johncine went to SeDars Ridge at 8: Ill son, Pearl Poulin, Christina
p.m. for Robert Codner who was Grimm.
transferred to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and at 9: ~p.m. taken by Maniage license .
the transport vehicle to St. Joseph
One marriage license was Issued
Hospital In Parkersburg.
in the . Melg!: County Probate.Court

motorist
• ,
escapes ffiJUry
Meim~.

Prices Effective thru Saturday, Aug. 25th

9 a.m.
the high
The Infirst
day school.
of school for all

:.:~~ilt~~~~de~=~~
will follow the same routes as tast
year. Students new to the disbict
may register Aug. '17 at the various .
schools.
Lunch prices are$lfgr highschool
students and 90cents for elementary
students. Extra milk is 20 cents.
Meanwhile, parents of kl!l~r­
garten students In Eastern Local
School District ate Invited to a
pre-kindergarten meeting 9. a.m.
Aug.24attheTuppersPlalnsschool.

_8EEf

SPECIALS
STOP IN AND SAVE BIG
ON OUR FAIR DEMO.NSTRATION
MODELS
..

· RIDENOUR'S

or

Wealher forecast
Sunny today, high Ill to 85.'
Tonlght: mostly clear, low 00 to~.

WednesdaY: mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstmns. high Ill to 85. Chance ofrain
near zero percent today and tonight
and 40 percent Wedneflday'.

$ }69

GAL

$} 09

'h GAL.

BUTTERMILK
\\GAL.

994

Cottage 'Cheese
24 oz. $}19

R.C. COLA

pg

'

/.

BREAD
16 oz. 3f$}l9

.

R.C. COLA

4/S}

.DR. PEPPER
$}09

COCA-COlA

6 PACK
12 oz.

16

994 '

CAKE

NEW SOFT KEEBLER

. 14oz. $}29

120Z. _

SHUR FIN£

. TOMATO SOUP Saltine Crackers
4
10¥. oz. 29'
16 oz. 69

......

WE WOULD LIKE TO BE YOUR INSURANCE AGENT
WE HAVE: -~ STAFF o ·F NINE LICENSED PROPERTY. CASUALTY AGENTS
(FOUR OF WHOM ARE ALSO LICENSED LIFE AGENTS), WITH OVER ONE
HUNDRED YEARS OF COMBINED INSURANCE EXPERIENCE.
WE SELL: HOMEOWNERS, AUTO. BUSINESS, LIFE. HEALTH. BONDS, FARM
OWNERS ... EVERYTHING TO HANDLE ALL OF YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS,
WE REPRESENT: MORE THAN OI)IE COMPANY TO OFFER YOU COMPETITIVE
,
.
PRICING AND COVERAGE.
WE OFFER •COMPUTER PROCESSED QUOTING AND ON-LINE-TO-COMPANY
SERVICE FOR GREATER EFFICIENCY AND QUICKER E~VICE. ~
•NOTARY SERVICE
,• 'DT.A. ~
..._.
•
eCOPY SERVICE
.
; x-,en ~
•FAST AND FAIR CLAIM SERVICE
••• 1 •••
' '
.
WE ARE: DEDICATED TO PROFESSIONALISM THROUGH,THE CONTINUING
'
EDUCATION OF OUR AGENTS.
.

10 LB.

I
1

CANNING JARS
YOUR CHOICE
Llllllll

Coupon Expim 1/25/14

C.K. SUPUIAIKET

1

.

1.

1

89

lmh IICh
$30.00 Joctiy order tX·

chilli.. Ill 16 01. Pop,

CREAM SODA·

C.ll. SUPEIIAIKET . .

I

I

$109 Plus.o.,. :I .

By BOB ROEPLICII
ltaff
Three new teachers were em·

tnar, It was brought out by board
member Bob Snowden that volunteers are helping with the coaclllng
work on the field. Snowden pointed
out that be is sure that thedtstrlct's
Insurance does not cover any such
individuals. He urged that such
people stay oil the training field and

s " ...

w.

1I

Co•po• Expires 1/25/114 •
C.l. SUPERMARKET

'

.J1

certt11c:atlln
Du1'flll a dlacusllon on the

I

1--------------L-------------

shot outorthettres wereshotout, but
the car was pretty shot up and that
stopped him," Weith said.
No charges had been flied against
Glenn by Tuesday evening, but
Weith said: •·we have been advised
through teletype that there will be a

employmellt

or Amott and BJaet-

Supt. Dan E . Morris Indicated his
agreement with Snowden's opinion,
The board granted maternity
leave to Pamela L. Crow, Karen
Walker and Carolyn Snowden and
accepted with regret the resignation
of VMan Pierce as food supervisor,
due to health problems.

New Meigs -policies
have more flexibility
Under the proper clrcumstances, students of the Meigs Local
School District can attend a school other than thP one In their regular
attendance area.
This was the provision of a policy adopted by the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education Tuesday night provldlng more
flexlbillty In Jts regulations on what schools students attend.
Students had earlier been permitted, under certain condltlons to
attend, schools 1n the dlstrtct other than the one to which they were
assigned by their place of residence. However, It was required that
parents provide transportation !or such students.
Last nlght'saction changt'(\ that situation and the district may now ·
provide transportation for elementary students to o•her than their
regular.attendance school under these circumstances.
' 'l1le parents-guardian shall make application In writing using the
prescribed form to the principal of the school where the parent or
guardian wishes the cbtld or children to attend. The students will be
picked up and diiJPI)ed oil at a place of residence which shall be
desJgnated In the application. No bus will be rerouted to pick up or
drop off the students and no request will result in the overloading or
potential overloading of a bus, accordinl! to t~ new policy.
11le policy provides that the principal must give approval in
writing before the transfer Is made and the prlpclpal in doing this will
consider class size, and any other factors which are ~lent to the
transfer request and confer with the Director of Transportation
before making the tlnaJ deCision.
Appllcatlons must be made annually In the swnmer and the
parent -guardian will be notified beti'ro the school year starts of the
principal's decision. Approval for requests may be rescinded If .
circumstances or condltlorul warrant lt.
· The policy revision prOvides that lran8fers to other schools may
also be made If parents do provide the transgortation and the
appllcatlon Is approved.
\

•

I

j

warrant In the morning for aggravated murder."
.
The slain olllcer was Identified as
Lt. Jerry Dragosln, 34, a Cambridge
native and a member of the pollee
force since -1972. Sgt. Eugene
Woody, 38, who was ott-duty at the
time of the slxiotlngs, was In
guarded condition at Guernsey
Memorial Hospit;!l with multiple
gunshot wounds. Both men were
married.
I ,
•
The o!flcers were soot In the pollee
station parking lot around 7: :Jlp.m .
TUesday, pollee said.
The armed suspect fled, and shots
were fired during the ensuing car
chase, said Wheeling Pollee Cpl.
Robert Rockwell.
Weith said the suspect was
pursued by Ohio troopers Into West
VIrginia and through a partial
roadblock.
"With all the traffic going through
there we couldn't block It off
entirely, so be scooted through
there.'' Weith Sild.
·
AI 8: ~ p.m., the suspect was
apprehended·on 1-'10 eastbound just
west of the West VIrginia State
Pollee barracks In Elm Grove, five
to six mtles east of Wheeling,
Rockwell said.

Meigs hoard hires 3 teachers

James Diehl, Jolm
Barcus, Jr..
Grace Hawley, Rebecca Edwards,
Donna 'lbornpeon, Marjllrte Blake,
Milly AIM~my, George Nlcbols, .
Betty Hutddaon, Rose AnnJenklni:,
YOntece Miller and Beth Barber.
The board accepted the reslgnaUoa of John Amott as lunlor high
football coach and named Amott as
~ football coach. Rick
Blaettnar waa hired as junior high
footbaD coach pending!* es entation
of CPR and sports medicine

I Pick
16 Or. ·

C.K. SUPEIIAIKET

......,.il'

list tllr the next school year were

Plu Dtp.

Coupon EIIPIIIS 1/25/14

FUU OF BULlETS -'Die IJ='I-* riddled car of anum u I!liM by
pollee M Don•" Gltlm, 28, of EM&amp; Liverpool, 01*1, 111111 aioD« 1-'lD
IIIIer a lba 4•c 1a Calpbrlclp 1111c1 a tqtHp E2 • diMe
1nvo1v1nc 18 pollee ean over 511 nJes. Glenn Is amrred olldlllai' a
Cam!Jrtd&amp;e pollee ofllcer and -·ndlng IIDOther. (AP In pldo).

Named to the substitute teacher

I.

------~-------~----~--------d .
I
GEN~IIC 2-LI1ER
'I PEPSI COLA t
t
POP
I
$139
I
II
79¢ Lillit 4 . II ' ~/:~COIIpon Et111irts 8125114 II
t
1

"I'm oot sure bow the stop
happened, whether the gas tank was

Baltlwrsvllle, W. Va.
Harkless wiD Start his new dulles
Monday. Meantime, the fru:nJlyy.tlll
continue Its residence In Middleport
until smnet1me in October. AccordIng to plans, Harliless will also be
_ doing aome vocal music leeching at
Marsball University.

4 ·
pun:'- of

~----------------------------\
.
I
.
I

Sl 00 OFF EACH DOZ. I

wounds.

Schools for the past five years, has
..-cepte11 emplayment at the BarbJursvllle Junior High School In

SUGAR·

'

CAMBRIDGE, IZihlo (AP) - A
man who allegedly ldlled one pollee
officer and seriously wounded
another Jed poljce in a I1!Jining gun
battle during a 60-mlle, high-speed
.chase on Interstate 70 before being
shot and captured in West VIrginia,
autborttle$ said.
Details of the Incident were
sketchy. But Wheeling, W.Va.,
Pollee Chief Ed Weith said his
dl!partmeitt was told the shooting
began Tuesday evening when the
man, who was facing a we8(lOIIS
~. went to the Cambridge
pollee station to get back a gun that
ofllrers had cmflscated.
The man susp:cted In the
shootings was ldentlfted by Weith as
Donald M. Glenn, 29, of GtJerii!!I!Y
County. He was listed In serious
condition early today at Ohio Valley
Medical Center with three gunshot

the Melp Junior and Senior High

$}39

County Welfare Department, made recommendation
on a contract to be entered Into with Lutherart SOcial
Services of Central Ohio.
Mma1n Jlllrpose of this Columbus based organluitlon 1s to assist 1n finding suitable homes for adoptive
cbUdren. L.S.S. agrees· to perform this service !or a
set amount of money. This money comes from the
state Child Welfare Subsidy Fund and not !rom loCal
fUnds.
Swisher Is hoping this agency will find homes for
two partlcular cbtldrell.
Following Swisher's recommendation and exptanatlon of the procedure, the commissioners voted in
taver of the contract with L.S.S.
Commissioners Jones and Manning Roush were
present for the meeting. Commissioner David
Koblentz is on vacatiOn.

•.,.

Harkless, vocal music teacher In

COOKIES

Sian up for 10 speed bicycle to ,
be aiven uy. NHd not be present to win.
· '

.

Dtp.

DOUBLE CQLA
$}09

SPANISH 8AR

CAMPBELL'S •

oz.

26 Cents

Officer killed;
·suspect shot

sprlnggraduateofRioGrandeasan .
elemental)' teacher; Detn Scott as
· a developmental dlsabllitles lnstruciDr, and Kelvin King, Dayton,
a recent ailo l)ntverslty graduate,
!or vocal music replacing Ed
Harkless whO has resigned.

8 PACI$}39Plus

ROOT BEER

BANANAS

3us./Sl oo

fo'ri . Only

FROSTIE

2 Socdona, 16 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

County ·Road 46 (Success Road) and County Road 50
(Eden Ridge) has already been finished, highway
officials said.
· A county road crew began grading yesterday on
County Road 1. Tentative plans are to seal about one
mile o.t this .road Including the big hill near Salem
CentertoPainterRJdge. Tblsstretchotroadbasbeen
a problem for quite some time.
Highway department crews have also been hand
cutting brush along several roads In the county and
will 50011 begin to cut brush with .a mower and
continue doing so on throogh the fall and winter until
badweatherpreventsthls!rombelngdone,accordlng
to the report given the Commissioners Tuesday.
A Ford BI'OIICO was purchased from Pat 'Hill Ford
!or usebytheeoontyenglneel-'sdepartment.
In ~r action, Mike Swisher, Director of the Meigs

played and a llllrnber of substitute
teachers for the 1~ year were
named when the Meigsl..ocaiSchool
District Board of Education met In
regular sesslm Tuellday night.
The t)oard hired Jeriell Kelly, a

AMERICA FAVORITE

16 OJ.

$}59
GAL.
· Th,.,.. Onl;.o

Woodyard was cited by the patrol
followlngthe6:40p.m. accident.
A Ravenswood, W.Va., man
escaped Injury when the car he was
drtvlngwentolltherlgbtsldeofOhlo
124 and struck a signpost.
·
. The patrol said 23-year-old Jerry
K. Butler was westbound on 124,
approximately one-tenth of a mile
west ot0hlo338, at11:15a.m., when
hereportedlyswervedtoavoldadog
In the road.

Pod$}49 Plos '&gt; Real Fruit Pies
Dot&gt;.
00 _

I

2% MILK

I

HEINER'S

All Week

ICE CREAM
\\GAL. $ }19 '

PREI.

Thu.-•lnv Only
IPACK $
II OZ.
p 01 Dop.

59 4
SOfTY BUNS
a cr: · 59 4 ·
20 oz.

$ 109 ,

'h GAL.

A Pomeroy man was cited by the
Gallla-Melgs post of the state
highwaypalrQiforanlmpt....,.turn
In an Intersection follow1ng a .
· two-cat accident on Meigs Co. 24
Tue!lday.
·
The paiJ'Ol said Brtan K. Woodyard, 16, 1 Bull Run Rd., was .
southboundon0hlo7,whenhemade
a left tum onto Co. 24andreportedly
struck a car driven by Acoysuls A.
Grueser Jr., 42, Long St., Rutland.

.READ

VIT. D MILK

VIT. D MILK

YOU DON'T BUY A POLICY ....•.YOU HIRE ~
AND AGENT
. ·

AT

Patrol investigates two .traffic muhaps
GAY 90's

$ p9

'h GAL.

;

'

LB.

ICE MILK

2% MI-LK

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

Ohio lottery winner

$-149 .

. .

VALLEY BELL

'

McCONNELLSVILLE, Ohio .
(AP) -A Morgan County grand
jury has Indicted aStockportman oo
murder charges in the Aug. 14
killing of a 39-year-i&gt;ld woman who
was found stabbed In her
apartment.

LB.

BROUGHTON'S

CHESTER, OH.

985-3307

Any Si~e Pk&amp;.

LUNCH .MEATS .. .-....

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
'

¢.

.'-·

.STORE SLICED

Faces murder charge

CLEVELAND (APJ The
winning nwnber drawn Monday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, ''The Nwnber," was 155.
In the "Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the wtn-1
nlng nwnber was 8689.
The lottery reported earnings
Monday of $403.132 from wagering
on Its dally game, "The Nwnber."
The earnings ' came on sales Of
nWT.009 w1t11e holders w1nn1ng
tickets areentltled tosbare$6lt,537. .

'

GROUND

Rev: James Corbitt presiding.
Burial will be In the Beech Grove
Cemetery.

Parents may sign up !or lndlv!dual conferences to be held with the
kindergarten teachers Aug. 28-31.
Tile 'nrst day of school for kindergarten students Is Sept. 4.

I

We Accept fo9d Stamps &amp; "WIC" Coupons

I

Eastern Local School District bas
announced school opening · tln)es
and Information.
Tile first day lor teachers will be
Aug. '17, with meetings beginning at

,I

OPEN 9:00A.M. TO 9:00P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
We Reserve Jhe Right to Unlit Quantities

FRESH-LEAN

enttne

• Several people were named to high SCII90lstudents and 90 cents for
.attend ~tate cant~ when the elementary students. Pay raises
Eastern ,Local School District met In were approved for the superintendregular session Monday lllght.
ent's secretary, the assistant treasTheboardnamedR.ogerGaulasa urer and the treasurer. Two new
delegate to the Ohio !'icbool Board freezers were purchased .and the
Association conference wtihJ:!o!;Sel·, llOarU ..greed to accept bids for a .
Larldns serving as alternate. The walk-lntreererfortheblghschool.
two elementary school IJI'incipals
Substitute employees ~ lnwlllattenllthe0ct.3ruid4meetlngof elude: Cooks, Eileen Swain,' EIIzathe $tate. elementary prtnclpals beth Lyons, Dorothy Calaway,
meeting.
·
.Donna Jacks, Rose Wolfe, Nola
Approvedfortheschoolyearwere Yqung, blxle Bealr. Darlene.Buckthe high school student handbook, ley, Dorma Good, Erma Bay,Unda
the t~acher handbook and the · Edwards; teacher aides, Patty
student Insurance contract with tKe Martin, JW Holter, Dorothy CalaB['()gan;)V~ Ag,ency, ~- . way, . Darlene BQckley, Diana
A tepr'tsehtatlve of Eesley, Lee, Nelson, Cathy :!!p!!IICI!r, ErtMBay~
Vargo, Cassady discussed prepara- Nola Yoling, Carlotta Reed; bus
tlonsforabulldlngprogramwlththe drlvers,GaryDill,ArchRose,Cindy
board.
·
.
Rector, Bruce Mym;, Elonora
The board employed Ron Hlll, · .~. Elmer NeweU; secretarlearnlng disability teacher for his, Pat Martin, Jill Holter, Dorothy
Chester and assistant varsity foot- Calaway, .Donna GQod, Diana
' ball &lt;;O&amp;Cb; Joy Wlerslha, reading Nelson, Cathy Spl;ncer, Erma Bay,
teacher for Riverview; Shirley Carlotta Reed, Nola Young; lllrary
J 'ohnson, cook, Chester aides, Melissa Colem8n, Nola
Elementary.
, Young, Darlene Buckley, Cathy
Lunch prices ~ set at $1 for
Continued 011 Page 7

SUPER

AFTER

•

at y

project is off the drawing board and ready to begin.
The Dlv1$1on of Reclamation will ,MK&gt;n begin taking
bids !rom Independent contractors to reclaim that ·
particular site In Salisbury Township.
.
Vepde"'m ltlll problem
.
Road sign vandalism continues to be ·a problem
within. the county too. I
Highway Departmmt Crew Supervisor Ted
Warner reported all county road signs, Including the
Syracuse Flood Road ilgn, have oow been put In place
but that sign~ llli County Road 28tn the Dorcas area
. were torn down this p!!St weelt.
Warner also reported about 60 state owned road
-signs have been lost In Meigs County over the past
three or four mollths.
SeallngonLocustGroveRoad!romKalotoRoute7
should be completed IOO'Iet1me today. seaJlng ori

Eastern hoard
hires personDel

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

"FREE PARKING"

·-

The Me~ County Commissioners e~t word
wlth,in the a week on Whether the county will receive a
$400,1XXJ hoUsing rehabilltatlon grant filed before the
,Juty 16 deadUne.
At Tuesday's commissioners' meeting, It was
reported ihe county's application was one of 119
recel~ by the state. It is presently undergoing the
step-6y-step process necessary for state approval.
According to Commissioner Richard Jones, If the
grant Is appproved, the countY commissioners will
establish an in~nt bOard to determine the
elegtbillty of housing rehabilltatlon applicants.
County Engineer Phil Roberts reported he had
spoken with Mitch Farley from the 01\rtslon of
Reclamation, Ohio Department of Natural Res!lurces; and the Willow Creek Road mining reclamatiOn ·

one;

ON THE '';r''

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. August 22, , 1984

~ staff

W~havebeencutonMulbenj.

• I~MARKET
'M)DDLEPQRT

SCory, phoCo on Pap 9

'

By NANcY YOACHAM

slilni

•

Lawmen training

CommiSsiori awaits grant approval

and llilechanlc Slfl!ets, as well a(
along the river bank and rallroalf.
A Pomeroy man escaped Injury - tracks and from around the parking:
when thethecar bewasdrlvlngwent lot and from under the bridge.
;;,
offtherlghtsldeofMelgsCo.19,over
Trash bas been cleaned up fro"'
an embankment and struck a tree under the bridge and potholes have;
Monday eveJ!ing.
·
been patched on M,aln Strellt~ ·
':
The Gallla-Melgs post o!tbe state
Several street slgJIS ha\l'e alsQ: .
highway patrol said Jason J . Davis, been reset, two on Uncoin Hill.
28, Kingsbury Rd., was southbound on Bunernut, and a dead end
on 19 at 7:15p.m. when theaccldenf bas been placed on Peacock.
l
took place.
Cleaning and mowing has a~
The patrol said the accident been done in Beech Grove;
causedbeavydarnagt&gt;toDavls'c;ar. Cemetery.
e"'

~meatlla.m.Wednesdaywiththe

Eastern classes open Aug. 27 .

Vol.34, No.92

.
·Pomeroy's street ~rtment
to Jeffrey Douglas English, 23, • crew workers have been busy wit!);
Pomeroy and Heidi Lee Jones, 21, maintenance work the · past twO'
Pomeroy.
weeks.
!

The Pomeroy Pollee Department
has issued Its report for the llXlnth of
July .
Fifty-four arrests were m8de
durjng the month and the cruiser
traveled a total of 2,478 mtle5.
Money collected from street
parking meters came to $571.50.
Money from the parking lot meters
came to $698.00. The total amount of
parking meter mone&gt;¥ collected
&lt;luring July was $~Ji0.

See names on Page 'I

e

Capyrlghted 1984 ·

..

Monthly report given

colmm on Pap.,

I stoi')"'Gn Pap 6

where
Street crews busy ·;
mowing, patching ~

l.-

Jury duty rosters

Auburn

ohn McEnroe· upset

~waspaldort.Sbesaldshe~
be moving to ROchester • · N.Y;,
her fiancee lives.
. ·;

·
•
·
d
M.
•
C
.
H appentngs aroun
etgs . ounty••

Leona Tracy Smith, 88, of
Pomeroy died Sunday at Veterans
Memorial Hospllal.
She was a member of the Eastern
Star Chapter 186 and past president
o£ the American Legion AuxUiary
Drew Webster Post.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Horne anytlme Tuesday.
Funeral will be held In the funeral

Omitted from the recent obituary
ofMUdredTerrellwhodledonAug. 7 ,
was a stepson, Robert Terrell of
Texas.

'

A new EJOOJD Mallon,on al!lo OWII8 11110t11er ste!loee 011 WeRt Main~ 'l'he
Pomeroy's EaM Main Street stands reAdy 10 service station wiD open w11111n a month.
custonlt'rs- 'lbe statlpn Is owned by Dan SldweU, who
•'

See

A Canton woman was directed to.
inakerestltution for badchedcsona
feloiiY charge In Meigs CountyCommon Pleas Coort.
Mary Yourkosld, 19, wasc~ , .
1n a check passing scheme, atona: •
with Daryl Miller. Yoo.rlllskl'
pleaded guilty on Thursday, ~
Meigs County Prosecutor's o!!lce;
bas begun extradltjon p~
for Miller.
':
Common Pleas Judge Chari~
Knight IIEII.tenced Yolirkoskl to one.
year 1n thestatepenallnstltutlon.Ht;
suspended the IIEI!tence and re;.
qulred her, to make restitution and:
pay court costs. Court costs Include:
a trlp to New York to lxint
Yourlalskl to Meigs County for trial).
Yourimskl said her llancee ll84l
agreed tQ pay $i00 a week until •

NEW BUSINESS -

·

Names omitted

H~p)e . Jike

~·

business associates totaling from
$8),001 to$all,OOlln the past year.
The couples' tax returns- a lolllt
!lllng In 1978. and separate tlllngB

slncesbeenteredpmgres&amp;ln1979sbow that during these six years
they took In $1.!l'l9 mllllon and paid
$4.Jl,OOI In f~ral, state and local
taxes.
' The tax Wl rose slightly on,
Monday when, a spokesman said,
thecouplesentthlilnternalRevenue·
Service a chectdor$53.459. Thlswas
to cover an underpayment of$29,709
ori a 1918 real estate sale and$23,750
in Interest owed the government.
Their overall tax payments of
about 40 pen.'ent of their Income
appeared to he on the high side,
considering Zaccaro's profession
and the real estate tax sbelters
lega1Jy available to reduce the bite
on personal income.
The couple's taxreturnsshowthat
neither took advantage of the
common sheller InVolving real
estatespeculatlonwhereUncleSam
effectively pays !or the Investment
and any subsequent profit Is treated
as a capital gain that is taxed at a
rate lower than the Income being
sheltered.
. In her tax returns, Ms. Ferraro's
principal source of Income was her
congressional salaly. Zaccaro's
annual Income from 1979 ~
1983 was on a roller coaster: $91, 'Tl5,
$107,510, $41,000, $90,585 and $lll3.039
last year. His Income came principally from real estate endeavors,
Including salaries from familyowned businesses.

21. 1984 .,~

Restitution ordered by
\Judge Knight ~

.Farraro, husband .
disclose finances
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Flnanc.lallnfonnatlon released by Geraldine Ferraro and John . Zaccaro
paints a straightforward picture of a
successful mWionalre husband and
wife who don't use shelters to dodge
taxes.
The self-portrait- a composite of
tax returns. disclosure to the
Federal Election Commission and a
tlnartcial statement - is one of a
· politician and a real estate broker
with a c6mblned net worth of $3.78

••

'

'

'

'l1le board granted permission for
John W. Blaettnar to attend the fall
meeting of the Ohio DECA Executive Council In Columbus, Oct. 4-5,
and gave Blaetlnar permission to
attendmarketlngeducaUondisbict
coordinators meetings durtng the
next school year with the provision
that he Is to notify high school
principal, James Miller, In advance
of the meetings.
The board votP.d to purchase Oeei
Insurance from the Downing-Childs
Agency, an action postponed at the
last board meeting. Snowden voiced
objections to the fact that only one
firm had bid on the Oeet Insurance
and Indicated thathew1llcontact the
state Insurance conunlssloner on
the matter.
Sni1Nden contended he feels there
should be some explanation as 'to
why only one finn would bid on the .
Oeet Insurance and he dldnot know If
the price offered by Downing-Childs
Is competitive. The board acc;wted
the bid of tlie Meigs Tire Center on
tires for the next school year after
Assistant Superintendent James
Carpenter reported that the prices
are On!)! a few cents over the prices
offered by that linn last year.
Extemlon llppi'O\Ied
Approved bY the board was the
extension of wage increases negotiated with OAPSE . to exempt
non-certified employes and the
board approved a basic membership contract with SEOVEC for the
new school year.
.
Early graduation was approved
for Lori Tanner, Trlna Bowers arid
Denise Stegall Phillips. Jamie L.
Blaettnar was named junior high
cheerleadlng a~visor . and junior
high andsenlorhlgh student-faculty
handbooks were approved.
It was voted to Increase from
Coo&amp;lnued on Page 7

.J

�J

Wadna1day. August 22, 19M

C
.·.

-o tn.m.entary
_

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
,.,~

~m~

.............._-r,...,.....,.c::j,""

"qjv

.

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
·
General
Manager
Assistant Publisher/Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Pohllshers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are weloome. They shoUld be less than 300 words
lone. AU letters are subj ect to editing and must be s igned·with name, "address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published . Letters should be In
goOO tRSte, addressing Issues, not personalities.

St~te

prepares ·for
major expansion of
park ride inspections

r=.:v--~~=~:

·

~edneeday, AugUit 22.

lronman Davis pace~ Cubs;.
Padr~s· defeat f!lding Mets

1$&amp;:'

Enemy of progress.___~__w_ill~i.a_m_F~.n_uc_k_Ler~J_r.
Those who hunger (honorable
men, all honorable men) for major
changes In the government of South
Africa, such as would recognize the
fraternal obligations to the elimination of racial barriers. should
pause, just about now, to recognize
that the worst enemies of racial
progress In South Africa. are
Western liberals - most speclflcaUy ,.. Angi!)-Amerlcan liberals.
Wlien the elections that brought -on
the government of Robert Mugabe
were (:oncluded , In early 1980, I
wrote in this space, "Try. If you will,
to describe a worse bungle than our
Rhodesian policy. II you succeed.
you qualify as Anglo-American
director for African affairs."
The news last week, of course. Is
that prime Minister Robert Mugabe has, vouchsafed to the world
what will be the "future" of
Zimbabwe. It wlll be a "one-party"

municatlng Is that the country over
which he rules will be fueled with a
kind of patois-class warfare dialectic that will seek to elevate very old
traits Into modern Ideological
dogma. SpeclficaJiy, Mr. Mugabe
wants one-man rule, and the
suspension of any civil rights that
might get In the way of his
exercising such a rule. And the
targets of the Marxist-Leninist
state will be, Inevitably, old tribal
opponents, such as tbe Ndebele that
were organized around the defeated Nkomo, and the remaining
120,lffi whites.
Such caution as he exercises
between' now and the consummation of his totalitarian grip on
Zimbabwe will reflect not any sense
of morallnhibillon or respect for the
const!tutionallnslrurnent he signed
In England In December of 1979. He
)las only to worry about an exodus

state. That means that it will not be
ruled democratically, since oneparty states honor democracy
about as pigeons honor statues.
Moreover, that om;·party state
will preside over a "MarxistLeninist" society. Mugabe Is a
tutored man and somewhere along
the line, perhaps when he was 15 or
16, he ruust have !Parned that the
doctrines of Marx a nd Lenin were
designed for Industrial societies !n
which proletariat Is pitted against
bourgeois. To have a "Marxist"
society In an agricultural area In
which farming Is about the highest
known forril of technological life Is
as 'absurd as establishing a Marxist
society In Angola or In
Mozamb_ique.
This does not mean that designating Zimbabwe as a MarxistLeninist society is entirely without
meaning. What Mugabe Is com-

. TqCKSd! .
We nee ,
more taci&lt;S.

Despite the approach of Labor Day, there are several weeks left before
the portable amusement rides which the Ohio Department of Agriculture
Inspects for safety are dismantled for the season.
But the agency is already gearing up for a major expansion of its
insjiection program when a new state safety law takes eHect Jan 1.
The measure requires permanent as well as portable rides to be
· insJ?E'Cied aru\ually.
And what the department Is trying to determine is how much more
money and how many more employees are going to be needed to en!oi'(E'
the law.
.
Herb Helfrich, who superviSes the department's fair and amusement
inspection section, said tbere are 29 inspectors available to handle the
cwrent workload,
But starting next year they will have to add another 4()1 rides at
permanent sites sta tewlde to their Inspection lists.
Helfrich said the cost of the added work and other program details have
yet to be determined.
"It is being formulated. There are people working on it," Helfrich said.
"Definitely It has to be in place before Jan. 1 because we have to have the
additional people who'll be involved In training and so,forth."
.
dtticials have determined there are 31 permanent sites that will require
insll€Ction.
"They're not all the size of Cedar Point, Geauga Lake and Kings Island,
narurally. We have some that only have one ride," Helfrich said.
Attention on ride safetY has .been focused by recent aceldents in Ohio and
and other states and a push in Congress to enact federal legislation.
Ohio's new law requires the department to issue safety rules and fine
vioGnors; sets an age limit of at least 16 in order to operate a ride;
maitdates that ride owners keep up-to-date maintenance, repair and
inspection records; and requires owners to keep records of all accidents
involving riders.
Owners of permanent or temporary rides will have to obtain a permit
before opera tlng a ride. The deparlment must inspect each ride within 30 ·
WASffiNGTON - The White risk being seen as putting mere
days before a permit can be issued.
· ·
House
is sitllng uncomfortably on
dollars above the welfare of
Supporters said making the law effective Jan, 1-lnstead of In time for
an
ambitious
Veterans
Administraveterans and their famil!es.
the current summer season - ·was aimed at giving the industry time to
tion
proposal
for
future
b
ealth
care
But the VA's draft report to the
prepare to comply with the inspectlon..and other provisions.
of the nation's growing number of White House makes two thingS
older veterans. The costly plan Is · clear: The problem of aging vets is
something the Reagan administra- ·one that won'g go .away, and Its
tion would rather not deal with solution will cost plenty. My
before Election Day.
associate Donald Goldberg has
The reason Is simple: If Presl· obtained a copy of the closely held
'
dent Reagan doesn't endorse the draft, titled "Csrlng for the Older
multi-bllllon-dollar proposal, he- Veteran: A Shared VIsion for the
risks offending more than 28 million Future."
. Many investment advisers claim they foresaw the stock market eruption
veterans who may need VA medi"Americans are growing older,"
that propelled the Dow Jones average !rom less than lim points In late July
cal care as they retire and lose their the repott points out, "but veterans
to its current ~point range.
employee health-insurance plans.
are growing older faster than the
Not many of them did, says Mark Hulbert, whose Hulbert Financial
But If the president· accepts the general population. ... In this
Qigest compares the before and after, hacking through a jungle of words to
VA's fearfully expensive proposal decade, 4.2 million veterans will
find the enshrouded meaning of forecasts, and then rating those who issue
to start spending now for future pass the age 65 mUestone.... By the
them.
needs, it will make his stand against year 20'll, 63 percent of all
In fact, his findings suggest a generality: that there may very well be a; tax increases even less believable American mates over 65 will be
correlation between market bottoms and the beru1shness, or pessimism, of than It already is.
veterans. Under current eligibility
stock market advisers.
The VA, whose militant consti- rules, this means that by 2(X)) two
·This, of course, isn't thewaylt should be.lfforecastersaregood tbeywUI tuency and bipartisan clout on out of every three elderly males In
not fall into the trap of simply projecting the existing mood.
capitol Hill have made It virtually the United States will be eligible for
·Hulbert's rating of advisory sentiment registered 57 percent a year ago, untouchable among federal agen- VA health care If they elect to use
repPesenting the amount of Investor funds that advisers felt could be cies, has timed Its proposal it.
eXpOsed to the market. On July 31 the percentage fell to 49.
shrewdly. No candidate for ConThe cost of VA medical programs
·nat 49 percent reading, reached on the day before the most explosive gress or the White House is likely to Is already more than $9 blll!on a
palt of the rally began, was the lowest since just before another important
event, the laun~hing of a big bull market in August 1!112.
.
' A forecast of a broader kind, this one ahout the economy in general, cait
~ demonstrate Its track record.
·ThE' National Federation of Independent Business ecOnomic forecast. ·
ceptpiled by Prof. WilHam Dunkelberg of Purdue University, foretold the
"Mr. President, can !have a voice
"Not yet, sir. But we're awfully
iritensity of the current economic expansion, generally underrated by most ' level, please? We go on the air in a close. Could we try It once more?
ec:Onomists.
I
few minutes."
Why don't you recite 'Mary Had,A
:Now Dunkel berg sees a change coming. The economy, he says, Is about
"My fellow Americans, I'm Little Lamb?' ''
to cooL
pleased to tell you today that I've
"I don't know thatoile. How about
'i}te NFIB optimism index, based on responses totO questions asked of a
signed legislation that would outlaw · 'Give me regards to the Kremtln,
~piing (2,131) of NFIB's 560,00&gt; member firms, reached a high of 11().3
Russia forever. We begin bombing say hello to the big Red Square. Tell
~ l9'l8 equals 100- In 1984's first qUarter, and remained at lOO.Sin the
in five minutes."
all the folks on Gorky Street that
seciln1.
'
·
"Mr. President, you're not com- we'll soon be there.'"
:f"pr the third quarter tile Index Is back down to 99.9, or roughly towrn;relt
Ing through very well. What I'm
"That was good, Mr. President.
in the first quarter of 1983.
getting on my earphones is 'that you An~ you comfortable with the
•That's still good, Dunkelberg says, because it tr11nslates Into real gross
saldweweregolngtobeglnbombing volume?n
~anal product growth of 4 percent. But it also represents a decline, a big
the Russians In five minutes."
"Why shouldn't .I be comfortable
O(le; from the actual 7.6 percent growth rate of the Aprii-Maay-Jurte
"You heard rue correctly. There with the volume? Are you taping all
Is nothing wrong with the sound."
q~er.
I
,
these teSts?"
Still another lndlcatlonn of economic change Is sbowlngup In the venture
"Of course not. It's just a joke, like
"Yes, sir."
capital area, where small or beglnnlngc6mpanies that are deemed to have
9-.8-.7-6-$-4-3-2-1." .l
"Good, you never can tell when I
a future find cash.
,
"I don't know that joke."
want to use one. How much time do
A year ago it was widely !K!id that too many venture capital dollars were
"Well, tbere's two guys on this we have?"
chasing too few deals.
American nuclear sulnlarlne and
"Two nilnutes. Would you HJ&lt;e to
C. Richard Kramlich, a partner In New Enterprise Associates, a large
!bey start wondering what would
try another test?"
venture capital finn, says that today, some venture capital partnerships
bappen If they both put their keys
"How's this? I never saw a
can't raise money to Invest
Into the mlssUe cornPJter at the mushrOOm cloud.! hopenevertosee
As a consequence, he forecasts a wave of mergers Involving small
same tbne. ''
one. But if I did I know I'd rather see
high-tech compailies, not only marginal ones but sound compailies tbat see
"Mr. President, you're fading on than be one."
no other way to fmance tbeir growth.
j
me. Could you speak up just a
"Mr. President, I hope I'm not out
'
little?"
of line, but do you know something I
"How's this? I'm sick and tired of don't know?" .
the commies turning down all my
"How's that?"
dlsannament plans. I say let's nuke
"Well, all these voice tests
'em and get It over,with. How'was ' Indicate there seems to be somethat? ~' .
thing on your mind. A lot of guys.ln
Today Is WedneSday, Aug. 22, the 235th day of 1984. There are 131 days
"You'r vol&lt;:e was loud and clear, the control room are calling their
left In the year.
but I'm oot sure lheardthemesaage wives."
Today's highlight In history:
correctly. Dld you say SOOlelhlng
"~'I be ridlcUtous. I'm just
On Aug. 22, $1, the schooner Amerlca outraced the Aurora off the
about nuking the Russians?"
trying to make the voice tests more
Engllsh Coast to win a silver tlqlhy that came to be known as the
"I'm just having a little tun with Interesting•.They have 110 1'18bt to
"America's Cup." The United States held onto the cup tor 132 years until · the mike test. We're not on the air, call tbelr wlvl!s becat111e anything I
last year, when a team af Australians defeated the Americans.
are we?"·

a

By MIKE ClARK
phla scored 10 times In the eighth to
Dudaa. 4, Expoe
overcome San Francisco 12-5.
AP $poria Writer
Candy Maldonado drove In two
The iron man of~ChlcagoCubs
Pa*eB 7. Mda4
runs, lncluc!lng the deciding tally In
1s beginning to sbow a little wear
Gra!g Nettles stroked three iuts, the third, to · give left-bander .
around the edges, but be wouldn't Including his 18th homer, and Tony Fernando ValenZuela,l0-14, hisfirst .
have it any other way,
Gwynn ra1aec1 his teague-leading
vlctocy since July 25. Maldonado
"There are some days when lam battlne averaae to .Ji1 wlth three capped a three-run Dodger first
lirl!d," admlts catcher Jody DaVIs, hits and two RBis roc San Diego.
against Dan Schalzl!der, 64, with a
"but the excitement of winning and
Nettles doubled and scored In the double, then drove In Mike MarShall
being In the pennant race has second, hit his sixth bomer tn five wlth a single In the third.
everybody up. Every day we are games In the sixth, and s!np!d In a ·
Andre Daweon drove In two runs
playing before thirty-thousand n~~~In the seVenth. Gwynn drove Ina with a triple and scored on Gary
..
people."
run in tbe third wlth a grounder and Carter's sacr1flcefly In the Montreal

of white men and white capital a tan
economically disruptive speed.
What he need not worry about Is :
any call tor the Imposition af
sancl!ons. Sanctions are only for
white people who attempt to hold on
to power.
The penultimate elections In
Rhodesia returned a black moderate, ·Bishop Muzorewa, to pow~.
But when that happened, back in
early 19'79, Great Brjtaln hesi~ated,
as also tne United States. Mugabe' .
(and Nimmo) decian:d that they
would not be satisfied with the
constitution under which Muzor·
ewa was prepared to guarantee to
the white population In effecl a veto
against one-party rule. Rather than
move vigorously to support Bishop
)1,1uzorewa, we dallied, while Lord
Carrington effectively subverted
the moderate . government, . ac- ·
,cepted the United Nations re,fusal to
end economic sanctions, and
created · the revolutionary amblan&lt;;e that resulted in the 'fil'!!t
election by a solid majority (62 .
percent) of a 'self-declared Marxist.
The British might, with the backing
of the black government of Muzor. ewa, have disqualified Mugabe as a
tt!!Torlst ideologue. Instead we
launched. with much fanfare a new
democracy. And once again we
achieved one-man one-vote once.
If It is difficult to understand the
adamance of South African par- '•'
theldlsts, one should renect on '
~velopments' In Rhodesia. True,, .
the blacks more predominantly , .
outnumber the whites In Zimbabwe ;
(70 to one as compared to four to :
one). But the. principles don't . ·
change. If under the scrutiny of the ;
West a constitution! baptized with
champagne In London that ostensl- ;
bly guarantees white civil rights Is ' ·
-so soon transformed Into an ·:
ideological despotism, why experl· ·:
ment with racial equality?

The Cubs, again j:)laytng . well slngledinanot.herrunlntheseventh. first. But Valenzuela survived to
beforetheiradorlngdaytlmecrowd,
nm Flannecy hit his .second snap a personal three-ga~M lOSing
ripped Houston 11•5 on Tuesday, oomer of the season In support of streak and a three-game Dodger
withDl!Vbsupply!ngfouroftheruns Tim Lollar, 10-10. who went 5 1·3 sldd. The defeat ended Montreal's
~th a bases-loaded single and a • Innings. Craig Letterts pitched 31-3 six-game w1n skein.
two-run home run, his 18th.
Innings ·before SUITI!I1derlng two
PhllliM 1!,
'nleoutburstgaveDavis82RBis, runs In the ninth. Rich Gossage
Plncb·hltter Slxto t;ez,cano deUsecond In the league behind another recorded the final out tor his 24th , vered a pair of tun-scoring singles
every-day catcher, MontreAl's save.
duriiJi a 10-run, eighth-Inning rally .
IIAPPINI!S'! IS A HOME RUN - W Reds game ap1not 8t. Loulll. Redus wu on bue wben
Gary Carter, who has 88.
Ed Lynch,~ iook too loss.
that allowed Philadelphia to civerpinch
nmner Gaey Redus, rtp&amp;,
welcomes ~ hit the t - wialcb gave 1be Redl a 4-1
Dennis Eckersley, 7-7, allowed
Plrates5,Bravellf .
come !13-2 Giant lead and extend Its
.
.
teammate
Eddie
Mllaer
to
bonae
plate
after
Milner victory. (AP La8erphoto ).
only one run over seveillnnlngs for
Marvell Wynne -slapped a bases- winning streak to four games. The
hit a lwo nm homer In thele\lendl ituJina'ol'l'ulwday's
·
·
thevlctocy.MikeScott,5-ll,tookthe loaded single with one out In the P!llls lashed O!lt 10 h!.ts oft relievers
loss,despltehomerunsupportfrcim ninth innlllg .to cap Pl~'s Frank WWlams, 6-2, Gary Lavelle
Blll Doran, Jose .Cruz and Jerry . cmneback. The Braves led 4-3 after and Greg Minton.
' •.
Mumphrey,
Dale Murphy hit his league-leading
·~ailo, plnch-hittlngforPhlllles
CINCINNATI (AP) -:: Pete RDse tougher to pinch-hit when you're the stxth with his stxth mmer for St.
TheviCtory,Ch!cago'sfourthlna 28th homer, a three-nul shot o!f reliever Kevin Gross, 7-5, singled In
made
all tl)e right moves as a loslng5-0withoobodyonbasethanlt LouiS.
row, swelled the Cubs' lead 1ft the _ PlttsburghstarterJolmTIIOOrlnthe the first nm af the uprising, then
.
manager
Tuesday night, then Is If there's a one-nm ballgame and
NationalLeagueEasttoflvegames sixth. The Pirates !Jed the game In knocked In the ninth with an Infield
over the fading New YorkMels;7-4 the seventh on a two-oot single by hit.
savored the results as a player.
runners on base. You bear clown
The Reds' player-manager dl· becauseltmeansmore."
losers at San Diego,
Lee Lacy against Braves reliever
Al Oliver &lt;!elivered a two-run
reeled a sacri11oe bunt to PJI -Ron
His soft single to right field off
In other NL .games, Pittsburgh Jeff Dedmon, 3-2.
single during the r.ally, giving him
nipped Atlanta 5-4, Cincinnati
Don RoblnBon, 2-5, picked up the four RBis agal1ist the team that Oesteratsecondbasewithoneoutln starter Kurt Kepshlre, 3-3, scored
For Information
the seventh Inning, then ealled on Oester and ended a streak of
stopped St. Louis 4-1, Los Angeles win In rellef, striking out five of the traded him away on Monday.
Leading
to ' the re·
Wayne Krenchlckl to deliver a personal frustration.
got by MontreAl 4-3, an(J Phlladel- six Braves be faced
covery of my. car
pinch-hit single for the winning run
"I've had a rough go of It,"
trailer takM from
In a 4-1 vlctocy over the S(. LOuis Krenchickl sAid. "in my last four
Wolfe BO.~Y Shop,
· Cardl1lals. ·
pinch-hits, I've had three line-drive
It was the second victory m·five outs. This makes up for It"
·Main St. tn Racine,
gaJi'lei;forRDseasplayer-manager.
. Kepshire, making his tenth
Oh. on Monday, Aug. ·
· • "That's the kind Of lnningyoo like major-league_start, took .a three13, 1984.'
to see as a player," Rnsesald. "The · hitterlntotheseventh.Oneofthehits
MARC FRENCH
man gets 01) base, you sacrifice hlrfl was Parker's solo homer In the
over, thenyouplneh-hitforapltcher sixth, his 14th of the season tytlethe
992-2679

GIMta. .

.

Reds post "Second ·w~ under Rose

.

r.:==========:;
$200 REWARD

a

you
game-winning
whoget
hasa pitched
a good hit."
game, and
Oester started the textbookperfect. rally with a soft lead-off
single to'extend his hitting streak to
:ll games. It's the kilgesl since RDse
hit safely In 44 consecutive games In
1978.
.1
Tom Foley's bunt put him lh
!lCOt'\Jig positloil, and Rare called on
· · Krench!ckl to hit for starter Joe
Price, 6-9, woo acaltered six hits
over his seven Innings.

Thai Is the Inevitable Impact of ·'
events In Rhodesia on South ·
Africans.
As for the godfathers of Zlm·
babwe, we have here another .
triumph of the post-colonial epoch.'

~igns

of the
.
economic times

.

It

~es

l
I

Today in history

J,

·'

S23.95

tSoFF
. ·

RIO

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Men's &amp; Women's

IIOif *18,95

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Indians po$t7th straight -win;
rookie records 15.strike«;»u.ts
'

By BEN WALKER
AP Sports Wrtler ,
Every so otl€11, a major-league
pitcher who has just struck oullol)
bunChafbattet'slsaskedwhetherhe
was trying to strike out.people.
And most of the time, the pitcher
says he wasn't worried about
strikeouts and wasn't thlnicingahout
them • .

"That's not the point, sir. I think ·
when we're going for a voice level ,
we ought to stick to safer subjects
such asMondaleand taxes."
"I'm the president and I can say
anything I want towh€11 I'm testing.
It's my mike and I paid for it." _·'\'

•.

t&gt; aael'lblr watr, ueRe'z

a NoTe: t• LPVe, ANNe BuRFoRD."
•'
'

Introducing Roger -clemens, a
hard-throwing rookie for the Boston
Red Sox.
"I Uketostrikepeopieout. fllketo
do that. It's not going to happen all
the time, but if I'm going good and
there are real tree swingers, I'll go
after them," Clemens said after
striking out 15 as Boston routed the
Kansas City Royals 11-1 Tuesday
night. .
Clemens' strikeout total was the
most for a Red Sox'pilroer since BUI
Monbouquette fanned a teamrecord 17 Washington batters In·
1961.
The 22-year-old right-hander a1:
lowed seven hits and did not walk a
Jim. Rice cracked a two-run
mmer, his 23rd of the season and the
299th of his career, In the bottom of
the tlrst. Rice singled home two
more runs In the second to boost Ills
RBI total tor the year to '!1 - two
behind AL leader Dave Klngrilan.
· Tony Armas belled his major
leegue-leadlng 34th horner In the

six~run=~ ~rlcan

League

games, Detroit hammered Oakland

17.-6, New York downl!d California
~2.

'

•i

Cleveland beat Toronto 3-1,
Seattle topped Baltimore 4-3, Texas
nipped Chlcago4-31n lOinnlngs, and
Mlnne9ota atMIIwaukrewastalned
out.

Jawlans S, lib! ila,. 1
Oeveland ran its winning streak
to seven games, Its longest Victocy
string In two years, thanks to Jerry
Willard.
wlliard belted a twooot. pw-run
Inner In the top of the ninth In
Toronto. 'The homer came oil Dave
Stleb, 12-5, who has not woo since
July:;!9.
.
RO)i Smith, $-4, gave up five hits
over the first eight Innings. Ernie
Camacho pitched thetinallnningtor
his 17th save.
. 'flaoen 1!, 'A's •
. At Tlgoer Stadium, Lance Parrish
crashed a grand-slam lOner In the
first Inning and Da!Tell
hit a
three-run blast ~ by Larry
Hei;Ddon's solo shot during a six-run
1

Evans

sixth.

continued to haunt his fanner
·teammates.
Bannister delivered a pinChsingle with two outs In the bottom m
the lOth, driving In Larry PIIITISh
troin second base to lift host Texas.
Bannister has hit .349 against the
WhJ.te Sox sln&lt;;e,being traded away
In 1!81.

M.-

e 8, AnaeJs 2
Y
Phtl Nk:kro won the 283rd gameof
his career and raisedd his recoro
tpls season ta lS-7 by going seven
Innings and yielding. five hits In
sending California to Its Sevmth.
straight JoSs.
New York has WOII. four straight
games,• scoring 33 ruits over' that
spiUI. Mike PagllantJo and Bobby
Meacham had lhree •hitll apiece to
lead a 14-hlt Yanlteeassaultagalnst
the viSiting Angels. Meacham 'stlrSt

PIIITISh's fourth career slam and
29th lOner of tbeseason came after
Howaro Johrl!on ql(!lled the Detroit major-Jeallue hon1ei- highlighted -a
first with a walk and Alan Trammell ~IUD uprising In thetl\lnllnnlng
that pui the Yaftkees ahead to stay.
and Kirk GillioR singled.
MRI'Iaen 4, Ortolel s
Milt WUcox upped his tewad to
Jack
Peiconte entered the game
14-7, his career-high In viCtories.
with
three
hits In his last :rl at-bats.
Rickey Hendenon led oil the
That
quickly
changed In Baltimore.
game with his 13th hoitlft' Tor
Perconte had three doubles and
Oakland. (arneyLansfonloftheA's
extended his hitting streak to 24 drove In two runs to lead Seattle's
games, tying Huble BrookS of the 13-hlt attack. Loser Storm Davis,
New York Mets for the longest 12-7, allowed 12 of those hit$ as he
dropped his third straight game.
· string In the majors this year.
SAlome ' Barojas, . !kl. got the
RRII&amp;"'ft 4, WNie Sox S
Vlctocy
and Edwin Nunez went the
AlanBannister,wmplayed~
flnal31-3lnnlngs
for his third save.
af five seasons with· Chicago,
. '

flj;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;l · . ,· ·

Speech ariel Language 11Mirclpy--_
JQUN A. WADE, M.D.

•·

:·····-····"·----.-SA.VE·SID0·;;;:;;;..-:::.;:::.·1

'

Ear, Na11 anclthroat Specialist
Now

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l

Offcrlnt~

With .Therapist ·
'

·

PAMILA ADKINS, M.A. · .
'i

IIIII

~.

I'

REG~

..,... pane. Pllft'llh Cllllleuplalbe bultulii of the
.CVTOFF - Dealot cMdoer Luce Pa1111h, left, _ tap ()ek!agl's C8raleY. 1 a ' · d •ll!l tried 1!1 relicll llntwllh a p rts'im homenaa, IM!Bdlollbes ea ; lld.
pldo}.
home on Dave Klnpaaa's double Ia t1ae lint laadal of (API

all

to
eligible older veterans,';
the report states. 'New construction
'
'
and service to "underserved
areas"
will Increase bed capacity by at
least 'll percen~ by the year 2(0), ,
~ "Th.e ambulatory care stra- ,
tegy has a goal of providing ...
non-lnstitutioinal capacity designed
to provide essential health and
supportive services to· eligible .
veterans of all ages, emphasizing a ·· ·
fuU array of )lealth care services
designed to decrease the need for
hospital treatment to the maximum
extent consistent with high quality
care."
- The extenc!ed care strategy's ·
gOal calls for a 250 pe~cent Increase
by 2010 tn the capacity of nursing
homes operated or supported by the.
VA, Plus expansion of home care
programs and day health-care
services.
In addition to veterans' medical
services, the report estimates that
by 1990, anywhere from $5 biiUon to
$8 billion a year wUI be needed to
meet pension payments, plus $10.4
blllion for other compensation.

batter.

was

*SHOE OF THE WEEK*

;;I~t~w~as~~
tbe~•~klnd~~o~f;rc~;i~JJ!::l~~~~::~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~;Jl
C

Testing, 9-8-7-6 _______A_rt_Buc_h_wa_ld
say before my radio broadcast Is o!f
the record."
·
"Yes, sir. But suppose the
Russians pick up on the tests and
think It's the real thing?"
"Just let them try It and see bow
fat they get."

r;games~l~·l;-~W~IIII~e~M~cGee~;ha~d~led~ofl~~~~~~~~~~~~

Krenchlcki was wAiting for.
· "!want tohitwithguyslnscoting
posilion," Krenchlckl said. "It's

Militant constituency______'.J_ac_k_An_d_er_so-,-n
year. If the youngest World War II
veterans and those who served In .
Korea and VIetnam are to be given
the same level of care that older
vets ~re now getting, the cost
increase will be slgnlflcant."The magnitude of the increase
will depend on factors whose
Impact·can only be estimated, but It
will approach an Increase of $6
b!lllon (a year) from 1985 levels at
Its peak In 2(0)," the draft report
warns. "In addition, proVision for
the facilities necessary to meet the
needs of the older veteran will
require an estim!lted $6.6 billion
Investment above current commitments, primarily between 1990 and
. 2f.il&gt;."
The VA report lists several
targeted areas or "strategies" that
will require sizable expansion over
the next few years. Among the most _
Important:
- "The goal of the hospital
strategy Is to provide suHlclent
capacity In VA Hospitals to assure
availability and accessibility of
needed Inpatient acute care servi-

'

The Daily Sentinei -Page-3

Pon181'0y-Middleport, Ohio

I

304 675-1244
lAIICUAGE • VOICE • SIUITERIIG ~

SPEEQI DELAY • HEARIIICi IMPAIRED

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ON ANY ~ISfER
OF 0\RNATION ~

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RETAILER ~

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~t~alue

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potliiCI:CARNATION COUPONS, Bort7t , Plco Rivera.
CA90685. Cash value 1120' COUPON EXPIIES:

Novemb.r 30. 1984

I

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(COLI
50000 130141
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Page_:_4-The Daily Sentinel

J'igers can··r oar in '84
By Major Am01 B. Hoople

,

The Hurriea-•

. illjuries. HJ.t

picture, -

Egad, frieo&lt;la, rm back for mono In cesaful co.cll at otlaboma state,
'84.
tabs over from biPIY nprcled
'Twill Indeed be more for Auburn Howard Schnel!e9berpr, wbo JDOYed
; during this collece football season.
on to the pn11 of the USFL.
· • The Hoople Fprecut pre-aeuoa
However, JC1bnlonlDIJerlta a wealth
. No. I cbolce will 11art the year ill - of taleut, led by !!Opl!omore llerllle

: , kaff-kaff -

roaring fubioa. The
. Tlce'" wlll pool a dazzling 2S:17 t.J:i·
· umph over the defendln&amp; national
champions, the Miami Hurrleanea, ·m
the second annual Kickoff Cla,tslc
(Auc. 27) ln the Meadowlailds 111 East
.Rutherford, N.J .
.
Yes, dear reade!B, Auburn ..., whooe
11· 1 record in '83 was only pod for
the No. 3 rating, two nolcbel beblnd
Miami, which 1!'81 ab!o 11·1 -

wiU

poliSb off the Hurricaaeo. Miami ta
ranted No. 1o for '84 by the Hoople

system.

,·
"·
On• thing for sure, the Kickoff
ClaBSic will ill' a thriller. Um-kumpbrAuburn's Reisman Trophy candl·
date, All-American runner Bo Jackson (110 yards per game, 12 TDs In
'83), and its Heel fullback, Tommie

Agee, are joined by f4 other letter·
mea on Pat .Dye's current club. They
know their way to the goal Une!

MAJ. HOOPLE'S
TOP25 '
1.AUBURN
2. PlnSBURGH
3.NEBAA8KA
4.CLEMSON
5, UCLA
8. PENN STATE
7.8MU
B. ALABAMA
8. OHIO STATE
10. MIAMI (FI8.)
11. NOTRE DAME
12. OKLAHOMA
13. TEXAS
14. ARIZONA STATE
1~.IOWA

18. LSU

,
17. BOSTON COLLEGE
18. SOUTHERN CAL
18. FLORIDA STATE
20.BYU
21.GEORGIA
22. NORTH CAROLINA .
23. ARKANSAS
24. WASHINGTON
25. TEXAS AAM

aooc1 rl&amp;Jit

81'111

llloilld

perba.. the natloullille, IF IIIey cau
1t&lt;1p lllebruka at home Sept. 22. Umkwnpla!
Penn State, rated No. e, cot off to a
dllutroua atart.lul year,loliJie U!ree
ill a row before ...,._Ina back. 'l'bla

Kooar, wbo.last seaooa toot Miami to fUI' .coaciiiDf pa1111 Joe Pa~ lias
11 atralpt victories, lncliJdlnl. tbj! ........ QB .Dou&amp; StraDa .._&lt;ly · to
clUlbanalal 31-SO Oraqe Bowl will "throw anciiCI!IUIII!tiniiOpb tailback
over Nebtuta.
'
• DJ. Doaler avinable to b&amp;nclle the
Mlaml · ~~~£y need a few .pmes to · Infantry attack. Tbe Nlltany Lloas.
adjut to the J~ syatem: .
!!cl!edule features Iowa, Tens, MaryThe HuiTicaDeo faee a '"""ll!lllelltal lal!d; Alabama lloatOII COlle,. Notre
task ID &lt;lefe!)CIIn&amp; lbelr natiDI!al Dame ud Pltuburp. Not ~uetly
CI'OWII. Ill )1111 13 days, tbroup ~pt. loll toncw.
·
I, they m111t face Auburn, ardl-rlval
Coadl ~ ColllDa of SMU our
second string.
Florida (Sept. 1) and perennial Bil · No. 7 101eeUoa, baa ~eci an ·
Ten power Mlcblean (Sept. 8). ADd, to aJDaZiq •1·1-1 ~ In bla two-mate matters, wone all three games . 10111 u boa of tile Nunanp Now he
are on tile road. UGH!
bas a probleniNplaclac all atar Q8
Auburn, u mentiooed, is loaded Lanee Mcilhenny. But· the 1'1IIIIII!IC
With only a bit of luck, It could go '11ame, SMU'sstronc poillt, wi1.l escel
undefeated to reprete~~t the SEC In · ;u usual. The "Pony Ellpreao" of
the S!!pr Bowl once again. .The j'Ugle Dupard and Jeff Atkins
Tlcen played nine Bowlleamaln '83 totaled 2 116 yardl and 18 tiluchLOS ANGELES (AP) - ABC 'Monday Nlgljt Football's popular·
and beat eight of them! Jove! What a · dowDs Jut year. It's back lor more.
· sportscasterHowardCOI;ellhassald lty, had hinted earlier that he was
record! . .
AI Alabama, No. 8, C-.cb Ray Per01Jr No. 2 team, Pltuburp, •Ill ldJi's Is •lartlnc bla IOCOI!d IOUOD and
again tllat he's getting out of ·unhappy with ·the long-running
probably be favored In eadl of Ita be's loolliul to better his 8-4 of lUI
Monday Night Football's broad·
fonnat.
.
upcoming 11 conlelu. One reason is fUI'. Tile CrimooD Tide baa a forml·
casting booth after 14 years to
The
Miami
Herald
quoted Jrv
almple - BUI FraUc, a 6-foot-5, 270- dable . defllllive alignment retUl'l!ing
assume
other
network
sports
Brodslcy,
an
ABC
spokesman,
as
pound senior offensive tackle, 1Jho and that's all to the cood u they face
assignments.
saying that Ca;ell one month ago
will make a determined oaalaufbt on a toup a•Icnment In rep~K~nc QB
"It's the end of the
chapter"
the OUtland, Lombardi ud HeJI!lWI Walter Le-Wis.
•
asked Jim Spence, vice president
'
awards. He rnl£1!1 win them all. HarOhio State's Buckeyes, our pick for
CoseU told the Los Angeles Times
tor sports, to be relieved of his
rwnph!
No. 9, will be formidable u always.
from his summer ·home In Wes·
football duties.
Ill the third spot for '84, we bave The Bucks bave sev~ral positions to
thampton,
N.Y.,
where
he
has
beeil
CoseU was described as being
powerfat Nebruka. Tile Comhlllken fill with QB beiDc ah UDeXpeCted
vacationing
since
the
Olympic
"boied" with the fnolbaD assign·
saw a dropped two-point conversion problem. Veteran QB Mike 1'umclak
· Games.
attempt rulo their chances for the broke a lee durlnl clrllll. U be baa
· ment, tired of traveling and un·
national Ulle lui year. But Tom trouble comll!c bact, tbe Budul will
The controversial Cosell, who
happy with the elevation of former
Osborne's team ta back - Juat·aa blc, be burt Back to move tbe Bucb ta
became a cel$aled .. television. sporls stars Into the broadcast booth
fast and u stron1 aa ever. The soph tailback Keith Byars who ram·
personality on the strength of . without benefit of prtor e)[perlence.
offenoe wUI be buill around spUkllns bled for 20 touchdowns
'13. HarHe critlc12Ed . television football
runner•.Jeff Smith, who baa lai/Orecl In nimphl ·
.
the shadow of departed Hellman
Walch for our flnt reauJar weekly
broadcasting as a "jockocracy"
Aw~ winner Mike Rozier for three foretut comJnc your way next week.
•
•
•
by ex·athletes.
years. Nebruka'a defel!le baa !!lne
_,...........,...._
vrctory dominated
CoseUsaidhewWcuthlsschedule
otarten ntlll'lliDI - 'naf laid!
.this faD to hosting ABC's
No. 4 is· Clemaoa, wblc:h baa the
COLUMBUS. ohio (AP) -A will ~
"SportsBeat" and handling sane
Majot Hoople's
best record In the counlry over the
last week apparently wasn'tenough · baseball and horse racing whlle.
put three years - 30-2-2. Belleve It
to convince ~ betting pilbllc at
doing his natlonal radio show.
or not, the two C101111011 ~ came
at tbe bands of lloaton Collete and
. Scioto Downs Of the readiness· Of
"When a man gets· into his
Georgia, and the two ties were
~tei'NewCo;tt. -'d brown..,......, mld-iills,lt's-ttme to cutback," said
aplnst lhl* l&amp;llle two teams. Truth
. e seven;year-w
. .,...~. Cosell, 64.
.
can be strancer than fiction - kaff.
which
was
sent'of!at
better
than
7-1
cosensaldsomeofhlsreasons
for
kaff! Coach D.umy Ford, a study In
odds, made his move early in the
leaving the football booth to Don
lnlellllly, baa another ucellent offen·
dve ~lub, beaded by QB Mike Eppley
fea!"red nln~h race ~Y. .IIIght. · . Meredith, Frank Glf!om and o.i
'"
and tailback K~ Flowen. Tile
Oliver Dan Aler .urged New Coat · Sbnpsori '8.!'!! "very private "but he
Tigers an a clnch lor the ACC crown,
intotheleactattheflrstQ!Iarter-mlle added tl)at ·he wOuld
011
If 1101 tbe naUoaal lltle.
mru:k.andthei?Dgshotnevertralled
them
in
hiS
forthCOI'Qlng
,book,
"I
· UCLA'a Brulaa, our No. 5 dloice,
agam in the course of the contest. . Never Played The Game."
shocked Dllnols In the Role Bowl by a
· Entering the stretch, the margin
wboppiDc 45-t m&amp;rJin. Tbat wai
of the leader was two !engtbs, but by ·
probably a pod Indication of what's
In store from tile '84 IIAIDL QB Sieve
the tbne of the flnlsh, clocked In
Bono lias recovaed frllll! bla lboulder
1984
2:02.3, New Coat had extended his
lead to almost four lengths.

.

Cosell confinns he's
·leaving, Don, Frank

.

tn

New Coat posts
tmpressme

exP&gt;uoo

ever.
situations.
"We're .now trying to l;leterin!ne
"The Une Is shaping up for us,"
who would he our tour most Rutigliano Said. "Gollc Is very, very
1&gt;roductlv~.&gt; guys at . rushing the
quick, an aU-out pass rushe1&gt;1 and·
passer," Rutigliano said. · '
Camp and Baldwin are coming
The 'Browns empley a tliree-man along fine. Puzzuollls playing very
llne in running situations, bUt play well, and Franks Is versatile.
'four linemen on probable passing Hairston hasn't played mucl), but
downs:
the knee he Injured last year is
In the three-man setup, nose responding, and he's a tough
tackle Bob Gollc Is flanked by left veteran."
·md Reggll' Camp lind right end
The Browns announced that free
Keith Baldwin. Dave Puzzuoii
safety Mike Whitwell had major
!lacks up GoUc, while Elvis Franks . surgery Monday on his left knee to ·
Bl,ld Carl Hairston are the second
men on the outside posts.
Allslxl)le!fwillbeglvenextensive
playing time. PuzzuoU wiD often
1speU Gollc' since the nose tac!de slot
Is so physically demanding. And
Franks and Hairston wlli most
llkely be included in pass rushing

.I

Majors

on

Dottoil
New York

Chiefs.

Whitwell was placed on the
injured reserve Its!, dropping the
Browns' r~er to 60 players.
Oeveland moved their training

camp on Tuesday from Lakeland
COO'Illlunity College in· Mentor to
Baldwin Wallace College In Berea,
where they wm remain throughout'
the regular season.

EARLY Bl RD SPECIAL.
.I.e\us· install your LP Gas System

~

29\1

Detroit

Pfld.. rain
«Y•O...

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Dail~

The
•

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MlnnNota tftl11Morl 12·9 and Schrom
Ut at MUwaulcifo !Caldwdl &amp;10 IUld
l..azorkl ll·(h, 2. ll·n)
Clcwland IBiyi('WII J3.51 111 :rOI'CIItO
I CI~ 1o-m . tn !
~ CI IY IWWs 1·21 at Bolton
/Hurst U -71. 1n 1
1
. Qakland '!Krutwer -8-9t at Dcrrou ffier.

Sentinel

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.•

83

TorontO

Mltlhl!wt..

repair cartilage artd ligament
damage suffered in Saturday's
game against the l&lt;imsas. Clty

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Scoreboard

r-------_....,__..__...;,..___....,.._;;,_...___

I

,,

"I'm ,JIOI going tQ lie and say It
didn 't bother me," Harris said,
"Every year, I felt in my heartthatt
coUld ~at him out, but It never ·
maleria!Jzed. But In my mind, I was
always a starter whether I was
the field or nor."
.Harris still has a gimpY knee tllat
kept him out of pr;~ctlce Tuesday.
"[ still don't know what the
problem Js;" he said as he prepared
tor 11 heat treatment.
Harris still hill! faint hopes of one
.
day playing defense.
"But I don't think I really can now.
I'm not as light as I was In college,
and'l'm no spring chi~. I'D play
tight end I! that's whatlbeywant. I'd
rather give than recelve,ltyouknow
what r mean," Harris joked.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

coach feels ·defensive line v~ry strong

BEREA, Ohio (AP ) · - The
Cleveland Browns "probably" have
more talent and depth on their
' d~fenslve Une than at any time since
; he became head coach in 1977, Sam
; Rutigliano says . .
• -There Is a simple reason for tllat.
"It COI!Id be because many of the
defensive linemen we've drafted
over the years just didn't make It,"
Rutigliano said Tuesday as the
Browns prepared to meet the·
Phlladelphia Eagles· Thursday
night in lhe Browns'finalpre-season
game.
Since the la te 1900s, the Browns'
constant wea kness has been the lack
of a dominating defensive front.
Cleveland Improved significantly,
.last . season in halting opponents'
·running attacks, but the Browns'
pass rush was as nonexistent as

Rt. 62 North

defense."
Harris, 30, coune to the Bengals in
1!81 after f9ur yea!'!! with the
Toronto Argonauts ·in the Canadian
Football League, where he played
"slot end," a position which required more ~ss,ca tching skill
than blocking.
Former Coach Forrest Gregg
brought him toCinclnnall. "Forrest
wanted me to play light end," too,
said Harris.
"When I lll!ked to play safety, they
laughed at me," said Harris of his
coaches \11 hls earlier years. He was
a capable backup to·Ross, catching
41 passes for 487 yardS and seven
touchdowns in four years.
.
But Harris never got used to being

CINCINNATI (API - M.L.
Harris Is a tight erld wlih a~ Identity
problem . He looks Uke a tight end,
but In h.is heart he'd rather play
defensive safety.
"It's hard to play offense when
.your heart's on defense," said the
Cinclnnall Bengals starter. The
&amp;-foot•5, Wpound Harris sa.id he
wanted to play defense in college at
Ta!ppa and Kansas ·State but they
also said he looked llke a tight end so
tllat's where they played him.
While Harris Is happy to start,
following tbedepartureofDanRoss,
Harris . says playing offense Is
"sometimes a chore. Youhavetodo
everything just so, be real precise.
I'd rather jUSt let go and, bam," he
said, smacking his pabn. "I love

wblle, ta - heb·beb - a bit cloudy. carry Terry Daaabue'1 team 1o Ita
Jimmy Joll111011, Jut year's very llle- Udrd ....-uliYO ROle Bowl.. Alld

FeariHI Forecuter

For The

August 22. 1984

Identity problem bothers M.L~Harri~

Har-rumph!

~Browns'

Wed~sday,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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...

�.'

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. August 22, 1984 •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedn111iay, August 22. 1984

Pomeroy.:...Middleport, Ohio

Meigs board _~_eon_tln_ued.._.

Little known· Amriiraj upsets McEnroe·
· · MASON, Ohio (AP) - lndla's
VIJay Amrltraj produced a major
tennlsupsetbydefeatlngtop.seeded
John McEnroe In the first roull(l of
the $375,(XX) AssOciation of Tennis
Professionals tournament, only
McEnroe'ssecondlossofthe year •
.· At the same tbne, second-seeded
Jlm!nY Connors ~ Ro,s(;oe
Tanner 6-1, 6-3, and Will meet Mike
Bauer. this evening
In the second
.
round.
Arnrltraj will face fellow Iildlan
~ Krlshnan and defending
ctyunplon ·Mats WUander plays
Australian Jolm Alexander. ·
Br!lzlllan Guillermo .VIlas,
seventh·seeded,
Is matched against
,
Rollney HarrMn after VIlas took
three hours and ~ minutes to put
downastubbomRoscoeTanner7-6, "
, 6-7, 7-6, TuesdaY night .
McEnroe was beaten 6-7, &amp;2, 6-3 .
by the ve!eran Vljay ~traj who
- admitted playing his ~t tennis In
""81'S
' "
,.
. .
"It brought back · memories of
when I was 19 and. tn
nta••n~
JU15 Rod.
Lavertnthe U.S. 0penlnl!n3,'' said
Arnrltra).Atterllyearsthere'sstlll
~~
,

w~~son

FOlLOWING 'IHROUGH - Nmnber two Seeded Jimmy C..Ors
rerums a shot during his match versus Ro&amp;coe Tanner at lbe
AS!oclatlon of Tennis Professionals . Toumameol Tuesd'Q' night a't
King's Island. Coruronrs advanoed wllb a6-l;'-3wln. (APLaserphoto). ·

Bills cut Leaks

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Jose-Marla Oiaz8.bat thE&gt; British

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Watson takes e~tlon to lnvlta··
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AKRON, Ohio ~Af&gt;) - Tom . will·. play the par-10, 7,lnyard
.watsonsaystheWorldSerlesofGolf FlrestoneSouthmonster.
has grown too qtg.
'
For Instance; Fuzzy Zoeller, the
"It's not as special as It used to be. U.S. .Open champion, has been
under the old fout·man format. It hospitalized In Blrmlngllarn, Ala.,
was very special. I like It that way." with a nagging back II\jury.
this year's leading PGA Tour · Jay Sigel, the U .S. Amateur
money-wlruier said TUesday of the champion, Is skipping this event to
$700,lXXl NEC Wo{ld Series which concentrate on ·a bid for a third
begins Thursday.
'
successive Amateur crown next
The .Serleli. began In 1962 with a · week.
four·man, 36-hole format mati:h!ng
Bernhard Langer ·of West Ger·
the winners of the ,annual .fout many. a qualifier
the wtnner' of
rnajors. It was expanded In l!n6. ·
the·Irish Open and the Casto World
This year'$ tournament had 43 Open,ls playing In the West German
lllvltees, but not tl)at many actually Open.
· ·

ON,_J'IA)mt_.._OIIIoGcwemar.J- p\aw., K 1 rq, 'f! J1Q on tbe tiDar .,lhe
A. ft 1 • left, m.a. will! d I t* 1!'.111'1 au.. of
17
Cillo• ra, emir, IIIII dd ph Louie Nurm, for111er .,......,._~..._. C..V...,._ (AP
plattu).

For Four

feels golf series is too·hig .

•

Meigs Junior Hlgtl School gymna·
slum It will be six to eight weeks
before the Items will arrive, Supt.
Morris said.
Approved as substitute bus drlv·
en for the 19&amp;1-lli year were Vlckl
Carpenter, Ca,rol E. Hamon, PJ'e.
ntla!l Hess, Linda Morris and Mark
Searles. 1be board extended a
medical leave tor bus drtver, Leo
Morris, tor one more Year. 'Ibis
brought up a discussion on Linda
Morris whom Leo Morris had ,
1'EQUesled be named to fliJ his route
during the next year.
, 1be discussion brought out that
Mrs. Morris had worked as a driver
for the district tor 10 years before
being Injured while drtvlng and has
bee!! off work for five years. 'lbere
was concern that Mrs. Morris could
not be put on 11\e Morris bus route as
requested bec~use the board has a
contract with anotherdrlvertowork
the route until Leo Morris returns to
drlvtngorhismedlcalleaveexptres.
However, board members felt that .
the narnli1g of Mrs. Morris would
violate Its policy adopted In lJe,
cember. After a rather · lengtby
discussion, M actiOn In hiring Mrs.
Morris as a regular drtvet was

"""Ft.,.,.....,, .......

...

8'. = $5.11
10' = $6.39
12' s1.61
14' = $8.90·
16' = S.l :22

said.

for participation, Morris
)\,Jrrls also reported that a klnder·
garten aide will be needed tor the
Middleport School this fall and be
announced the opening of the new .
school year for Aug. Z7.
•

fl!mlli to S&amp;1Xl frml the Watklnl taken and the 'boar!i moved on to
EOOilwnlellt Fund ~ needed . other qenda matten.
Supt. Morris announced ,that the
tor the pwdlue of new curtains,
cyclorama and hardware tor the district will be ~lcipatlng In the

.a Uttle bit lett. I thought I served
berg, Larclunont, N.Y., ))e~t Brad .,J~~~~.
ir":':~'i:i:
tremendously,"
•
. Drewett, Australia, 6-3; 4-Q,' 7-6; · ,.,;
"You know you're going tol play John Lloyd, Great Britain, ellml· N.::'1i..'::':rl~~;:"..'t
$0011! bad matches;" said McE;nroe, . nated Slo ZJvojonvlc, Sw!tzerlan(,!,
Ba""' Ta..;..,..
Gtanot
59-2 on the year. Mentally, I did rot
64, 6-2; Marty ))avis, San Jose, "',::;:.~'"~,; '""''"· del u.. k
have the right attltl,lde. 1be key
Call!., beatSan(,!yMayer,Atherton
~'~'"'"· Bal&lt;eni!Pld, c.ur.. • ••1
thing here Is to learn. You srould
Call!•• 1-6• "2.
;,3.
Peter Fleming'
u.. del. """'
"
V
•
·
,
[)avbi, Sanla Manka c Callt .. ~ s-4, 6-0.
learn by your mistakes," said
Seabrook Island, S.C., defeated Per
""' r .... nnan. """'.." · Tmn.. del.
7
McEnroe who argued with officials
Hjertqulsl, Sweden, 6-2,64, and Dan "'~~:\"~IT';:y, ~y . del. ..,.... ,
In the first andla$tgames. His only
Cassidy, Hollywood, Fla., trimmed """GQnza!m. P"""'Y· .a"·...
nrevtous
loss
was
in
the
French
Terry
Moor • Memphis • Tenn. • 6-1 • Ml:Enll)("
vtJ•Y 1 Amrl'"'·
'""'"·
del. """
Y~
New Y!rk , &amp;7.
6-2, ~.
Open to Ivan LEnd!.
Guw'""" vuas. Aoimlllla, del. Tom
"I also returned his serve well, "
MASON, Ohio tAPI - Here ... ..;..,
Guuucsoo, Patm c"'"· Fla .. 7~. H , ...
which I rarely do," said"Armrttraj .
::X,~~!"';,~:'::'~:!:!'!
"IthiRkhewas.a Uttlesurprlsed. He
"""'"'"'" •• '"' J"'k ~ldcla"' Sil&gt;•"
R~NTA
played a tremendous tie-breaker In
· c..,,.,
_.,.,,...
the flrstset.Butatterthat,ljustput
.,.....,..
the first set behind m e."
Connon.
Miami
&amp;a&lt;h.
ftairoeo Tanner,
Kiawah.
Wand.
S.C.. ""'
&amp;1.
"I can't take anything away from
&amp;.~.
him,''· McEnroe said. "I was
ar:t=~.;..::!,':'~';..~;';;,· clef
surplsed at how well he played,
"""'" ,...riciu, ,..,.,~ del. .,.,....
no::~rtjcuf
KricUtebl. Gf'Cllllll! Pdnle, Mich .. ?.fi, &amp;-1.
,.... •
ar1y on hi$ st!fVt!, ,
Mats WllancO&gt;r. , . . _ , del. f'rttz
In other matches Tuesday, Sha·
_.,.._.,-·N.J., H ••
ONLY
A MONTH
bar Perldss, Israel upset fourth·
Zt;;,~ ~ !':'~· clot. sto
seeded Aaron Kricksteln of Grosse
Marty n....,., ""' .-. caUl.. ""'
Po'm,
t MJcb., 7·6,.,.
"1.
Sandy Maye-r, Atherton. Call.. 1-6, 6-2. s,
l ·
Thlrd·seeded Wllander. Sweden,
""'"
SeeOrool\ loJand, s.c.,
2
defeated Fri. ~ Buelmlng of Short
""·Din,..,.Castldy,
H,.,quHolly'A.·ood,
... ,.._,Fla.,
" · "'·
df'l'. TerHills, N.J.,.t;-1, 6-2:,
.
"'Moo&lt;. Memi&gt;tu, 'l'c!M.. H &amp;~
In matches
earlier,
Andy Kohl·
-LloYd.
Bn...... del. Sic&lt;"'
r
,
dan
~OJonoY6c, Swltzlf'r'lalld. &amp;-4 , &amp;2,
.
.
'

J""""'

,The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

i •

,,

Drawing tor the September
oftheMelpCooniygrandandpetlt
juries was held Tuesday morning In
the office of Mel,tls County Clerk of
Courts Lany Spenrer,
Selected for possible grand Jury
duty were Donna . Mlarte Hill,
Ra:ine: WWiam G. Rusae.ll, Pooleroyrt, ThnotEstherhyL L, Forrest, Mld!!Je.
P.0 ;
·West, Racine; saJiy
LY,M Ervbt, Racine: Nellie N.
Hudson, Middleport; Elizabeth
Templeton, Pomeroy; Lois Maxine
Whitehead, Reedsville; ·ScOtt
N~pper, Langsville; BillY Ray
0 Brien II, Shade; .James M.
Soulsby, Pomeroy; Doris Evelyn
Well, Pomeroy; Walter Jewell Jr.,
Dexter; BeulahG.CorneU,Raclne;
Thomas William Bowen, Pomeroy;
Darrell G. Roush. Portland; Lettie
A. Spencer, Syracuse; Maude E .
Gray, Reedsville; Jolm David
Edwards, Pomeroy; Audrey M.
Pattersoo, Rutland; Randy. A.
Hamon, Albany; • Richard Loyd
. ,Coleman, Long Bottom; MUtoli L.
Hood, Middleport; Johnnie H. Nash,
Middleport; Thebna Irene GOes,
Pomeroy,
Petit jury duly
Names drawn for the petit jury
Include Etollla L. Cassell, Middleport; Bllly J. Br-:er, Portlandf •
Ethel Ulllan Orr, Long Bottom;
Ruben A. Collins, Middleport;

Larry Fr~ Eakins Racine;
Keith Bailey Middleport' RobertT
Olrlstofer A. Allen, 'Pul•~e~oy;
Southern, Middleport; jolm ~
Bernard Paul Lavalley Sr., RaCine;
vlaJi Jr., P!meroy; Cynthia M.
Kenneth RaymondFrecker, Reeds- ~ler, Dexter; Marlene Janet
ville; Harold David Leach, PtJme. Kimes Reedlvllle· Roo1a Lynn
roy; EnnaCieland,Oiester; Bessie Sayre,' Racine;
R. Baker,
I. Heck, · Portland; Bertha M. Milklleport; Mary Kay Deeter,
Hawley, Clieshlre; Elma Jean Syracuse; Danny R: White, P1Jme.
Owen, Middleport; Roeer Mowrey, roy; Byron Baney, Potiii!Ioy;
Pomeroy; GeorglaJ. Ward,f'ome. HaroldW. Circle,Racine;JobnCarl
roy; Rlcl)ard D. Ash, Syracuse;
Pratt, Long Bottom; Renee Lynn
WUma L . Osborne, Pomeroy; Nona Willis, Pomeroy; Raymond 0.
E. Nelson, Pomeroy; Vernal H. Lambert, Rutland; ,VIrgil R Lee,
Well, Shade; Ethel A. Lowery., Pomeroy; Margaret Ann BishOp,
Middleport; K~t Duane Wolfe, Rutland; ' Gary L. PriddY. P&lt;imeRacine; Milrtha Anderson. MlddJe. roy; James M. lfannon .Jr.,
JDI1; Gladys Helen Heiney, Reeds· Portland; Karm Lee Walker
ville; DaleF.Brlckles,Shade; Anita Shade; Dorothy Demosky, ~
L. Casto, P!meroy; Nancy F. port; Edward E. Kitchen Sr.,
Freeman, Pomeroy; James P. Middleport; Charles 1. Blake,
Teafon!, Syracuse; Ralston D. Racine; HenrlettaL.Balley, PtJme.
Hemsley, Plmeroy; Thomas L.
roy; VIda Mae Green, Vlntcn;
Kelly Jr:, Middleport; Roy Arthur Harold . Ralph Sisson, Pomeroy;
Ellis, RuUandd; Lee Roy Fryar, Clyde Stone. Albany; Walter C.
Coolville; Stanley G. Wells, Long Wears, P&lt;meroy; Kathleen M.
Bottoo1; Sheryl LynnBush, Racine;
Mllhoan, Long Bottom; Betty Lou
Kenneth L. Buckley, Coolville;
Dean, P&lt;meroy; Donald Feymyer,
Catherine K. Sclmelder, Tuppers Shade; HowardKnlght,Pofne,toy. -.
Plains; Cheryl R. Howard, Racine;
Attending the jury selection
Melvin Clay Reed, R.eedsvtiJe;
Llirr.Y Spqlcer'. Clerk of Courts,
George Edward Cummins, Racine;
Diane Caruthers and Marlene
James E. Eskew, Dexter; William Hanison, deputy clerks of ,court,
Hess Chapn\all, Tuppers Plains; . Don $nyder, sheriff's office, Wal·
~r E. Riggs, Rutlanc!: Carl , lace Bradford,JuryCCIIUIII5slonand
Eugene Mitch, Prmeroy; Sarah " ~ Pleas Judge Charles
Grace Yonker, Pomeroy; WIIUam
Knight.
.

Anieta

were

Open house

Trt-County Education Medical Cen·
ter activities during the next i;chool
year. Thecenterhas$500,lXXlworth
of equipment which will be brought
Into the dtstrlct from time to tbne
and there Is M charge to the district

(Contln~ed

•

!rom page 1)

-

Spencer; custodians, Mary Welres, . •
Mike Footlock, Erma Bay,
Jackson; maintenance; Don Jack·· •
son: teaclltlrs,. Julle Byer, Susan : •
Hannum, RoberlaMaldens,Brenda ::
CLEVELAND (AP) - . The McGuire, Barbara Matthews, Fern :
winning number drawn Tuesday Grtnun, Jert Holter, Jon! Jeffers, :
night lit the Ohio I.Alttel)''s dally VInas Lee, Margaret Lewis, Helen : game, ••1beNumber,''was155.The Maag, Dorothy Petrel, William :.
same number, 155, was drawn Robinette, Kevin Sheppard, Donna •
Thonipson, John Barcus Jr., VlckJ : •
Monday night In the dally game . .
In the "Pick 4" game, played Johnson, Rebecca Edwards.

Don: .

Winning Ohio
lottery number

rp;:;;:;;:::;:===:;::=::; i)()WNING-CHILDS

Monday through Friday, the win·
nlng number was 8312.
I!
1be lottery. reported earnings of
$791.299.00 trom wagering on ,Its
dally game, "The Number." 1be
earnlllg:scame on sales of$1,00,494,
while holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $250,194.:'A).
·.
In the parimutuel "Pick4" game,
played Monday through Friday,
sales totaled $161,599.00. H~ of
winning tickets are entitled to 45
pe~cent, or fT2.7fn. A winning $1
stralght ticket

earns $4,176. A

AND

• ••

MULLEN INSURANCE ' -~'
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992•2342

•

••
•

:l

..·-·".'
..

r,wlnnlng==$1=boxed~~tlcket;;eams;~$1;7~4.;~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;~

•

A 'FRIEND WHEN YOU
NEED A

1be public will have an opporun·
tty to view the m,(XX) worth of
Improvements to the Meigs Junior
High School In Middleport aver the
past monthS at an open boose to be
held trom 2 to 4 p.m, Sunday.
Extensive remodeling has taken
place at the structure so that all
junior high studenta can be In that
h1lldlng rather than also using what
ts known as the Central B&gt;rlldlng,
Refreshments will be served during
the open house.

·

Eastern..••~

FRIEND
WHITE-ETHRIDGE

Veteran8 Memorial
ADMISSIONS···Wayne Chase,
Albany; Maxine Hobbs, Dexter;
·Esther Kissell. Middleport; Corllett
Ratliff, Middleport; Tracy Euts;
Mkldleport. r
DISCHARGES-.Ciaudla 'fho.
mas, Alex Blrchfleld, Patsy Spire,
Milford Music, Clair Dorst.

!F~~

&amp;61-3110

SINCE 1858

5th STREET

42J.6300
I 25 LEE STREET
I Bel''llnd Pas! Off•cel

BELPRE. OHIO 45 7"

OOLVILLE. OHIO 4572:&gt;

'

l.EE ETHRIDGE

=

I

HNION

_h. p--1·-··

DISSTON.

99
'

With Columbia's .
Budget Payment Plan,
your gas bill won't change
w1th the seasons. . · ·
1

Teenager
joins Tribe
CLEVELAND (AP)- Wielder
Junior Noboa, who was called up
t$n the Class AA Buffalo Blsons, Is
~ first teen-ager to play with the
Cleveland Indians since Infielder
Kenny Kuhn played with the
American League team In 1955 al
theageof18.
:Noboa, 19, joined the Indians
Tiiesday to replace third baseman
Btook Jacoby, who was placed on
~21-daydlsabledllstMondaywtth

a fractured bone In Ills left hand.
Noboa was hitting .253, with 18
doubles, four triples, one homer and
45runs batted ln,alongwlthl2stolen
b&lt;ises In 19 attempts, In U7 Eastern
League games with Buffalo.
The 5-10, J.55.pound Noboa also
had 17 sacrifices and scored 54 runs.
"I was surprised, but It feels
great." said Noboa, addbtg that he
expected someone to be called up
from Class AAA Maine.
Jacoby Injured the hamate bone
1n: his left halid when he swung
during the second game of a
double-header against Milwaukee
on Sunday. Jacoby will have
surgery on the hand todayy at
Lgtheran Medical Center. He will
~ar a cast for10daysandwill then
n8ed three more weeks of
rehabHitatlon.
Jacoby was one of only five
Amer'lcan League players to have
played In every game this season.
He was hitting .264 with seven
OOmers and 40 RBis In 126 games.
He had an ll-game hitting streak
broken when hewas pulled from the
second game Sunday.
'J

,·

.
You can take the' surprises out of next wi~ter's heat
b1lls w1th the Columbia Gas Budget ,Payment Plan. With the
plan, your monthly natural gas bills will be averaged out
over 12 months. So you'll pay a manageable amount each
month- eveo when the temperature drops.
It's easy to get on the plan, too. All you need to do is
pay the "Budget" ~mount on your August bill. Npthing further
IS needed . Theres no extra charge, and your meter will be
read as usual. Each month 's bl.ll will continue to show the
exact amount of gas you actually used along with your
budget amount. A review in February determines if your
budget amount .needs to be adjusted because of weather.
.
At. the end ofthe Budget Plan year-next July-you
w111 be b1lled your budget amount, p_lus or minus any differ·
ence between your total annual amount and the actual
amount you used during the year.
To simplify bill paying even more, Columbia also
sugges~s a new se.rv1ce called Checkfree;" which provides
the option of havmg your monthly bill paid by the bank
where you have your checking account- but not until about
te~ days after the bill has been sent to you. Columbia Gas
off1ces and most banks have application forms. Check into it.
S? make your gas bills more predictable ... even if the
weather ISn't. Look for. the explimation of the Budget Payment
Plan and Checkfree m your August bill.

....

Hand
Saw

The biJdQet saw. A hard-Working general purpose
saw, 25::)nches long wilt! molded plastic handle
lor balanced control. (64H011T39..CHt 1-8)

Shovel
American ma&lt;le oon-ner tool at a rock boltOtn

price. Strong steel head with flame hardened
handle. (389-3201W18·1 FS)

88

Silicone
Caulk

Ballcock

Seals, weatherproofs and insulates doors and
windows. (599·209/Ciear; 599-191/White)

99

Reg. $10 .65

""'
..

..

Sponge
Mop
ChrOme head, spring clip holds squeezer firmly in
place. 4-foot handle. (88H771H311-101M)

COWMBIAGAS

HARDWARE

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

RIDENOUR'S SUPPLY

Pomeroy, OH 922-2811

Chester, OH 992·2811

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.

STAR SUPPLY CO.

Mason, W.VA na-5583

322 Third Street Racine, OH
949-2525

One size fits all tanks. Has everything needed lor
installation. (229-500/P13·200A)

99

Reg . $15.()9 .

Belknap

Lockset
For use on all exterior doors, features key·in·knob
lOCking or use interior turnpiece . (299·974/667·

104DL&lt;H&lt;A2)

REED'S COUNTRY STORE ·.........._.....,_ _ _ _ _...._
4th &amp; Main St. Reedsville, OH
SALE ENDS SATURDAY
378-6125

.'

\

•

J .

•

�.
.

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 22. 1984 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

•

•.
•

*4 Convenient Locations

'--M'III~R

·wE SELL

MONEY
ORDERS

Wednesday, August 22, 1984

Page-9

STORES

OPEN

*Weekly Specials
••~,nev Saver Items

.'fhe Daily Sentinel

By .The Bend
.

'•

Beat of the bend

DAILY

9 Alll-10 PM

SUNDAY

•

·Labor_Day activities tn store

By BOB HOEFLICH
of education Including lnfonnatlon Sunday at the Rlckenbacker Air Hetzer of the Long Bottom area
S..!Ciruel Stall Writer
about the "Plains Seminary" which
National Guanl base.
attended the 25th anniversary of the
The Olive
Volunteer was established In 1B81. There wm
The. United States Air Force National Trappers Assoclaton on
Fire Department
he OOzeliS of old photos of people, Thunderblrds will be on hand and. Friday. There were some 16,(0)
has set Its fourth
places and things or the Tuppers · there wW be blp~e races and . persons attending that day With
annual Labor
Plains area .In the hardbound cMIIan stunt flying. Some 100 hot every state With the exception of
Day weekend
· edition which will be avaUable In air balloons will be at the field also Hawau represented. The event was
celebration tor,
early · 1!18i. However, advance and that alone should be a sight. . held at Tennessee Technological ·
Sept. 1. rrom 12
· orders must be placed with Mrs. These things are only a part or the University at COokeville.
110011 to 10: :llp.m.
HW whose address Is P.O. Box 172, overall presentation. The C06t to
at the fire station area.
'1\Jppers Plains, Ohio, 45783.
attend, by the way; Is only $2 a
Before the Meigs County Fair
The firemen will not only. serve
carload. ·
· gets too far Into history, I dowantto
barbecued chicken plus hot dogs
Don't forget, the annual door-toreport that the junior yearling
and sloppy loes. butwlllalsostagea door fund raiser for the Muscular
The scholarship fund program of female and the grand champion
hOrseshoe pitch, a country store, Dystrq&gt;hy AssociatiOn Is scheduled
ArtcaiVed cta:ss Rings, Inc.. co- female awards In the Hereford
a:lni the cane game, balloon dart for this Sunday In both Pomeroy sponsored by participating Ohio judging went to Earl Cox and
liame. flsb pond and truck rides and Middleport. Anyone who can jewelers Is continuing and once family, the Breezy Acres Fann
with Smokey the Bear. Don Carr spare an afteiTKlOD to help save again 10, $500 scholarships wW be near Coolville. A clerical enor
and the Drifters band will play from young Jives Is Invited to help.
awarded to Ohio high SChool made and the farm wa5n'tproperiy
7::ll to lO::ll p.m.
Volunteers for the drive are to students through a random drawing credited With the win.
meet at the Arnerlcan Legion Hall held In mid-December.
· A flyer Is making Its way aboUt In Middleport at ll::ll a.m, Sunday.
· Meigs County students can regisWeren't thOse physically-fit peD'
announcing the upcoming history or
ter tor participation by registering ' ple taking part In the . Olympics
'1\Jppers Plains IIJid the surroundAlan Wallace, fonnerly or Mid- at K. &amp; C. Jewelers, 212 E , Main St., ~ethlng! They could gjve one a
Ing area by Agnes C. HW. ·
dleport, sends along word that the Pomeroy. No purchase Is required complex - especially someone like
'The book will Include family annual Rlckenbacker Memorial· for taking part.
me who has to resort to scissors to
history and genealogy, cemetery Airshow and the Fly ohio Balloon
get the M&amp;M bag open. Do keep
records, old coort records, a history Rally wlll be held this Saturday and
Richard Coleman and John smiling...

lOAM-10 PM

FOX ASSOITED

FROZEN PIZZAS

01· 88~

"'as

•

" FRESH

GROUND CHUCK.

BONELESS TOP

LB.$}59

SIRLOIN
STEAKS

$2

VIVA

ICE MILK

99 LB.

lAW ~ JN8'11tUCI'OR - Eric Cblmben,
Mlddleplri, llllcel....t by the ..... to .......'(! llllllic remdt """oo'olor .
law enforcelnent ~-. One of Ida apedallzed areu ol deffiiBive
.lalitnlctlon II the Pft..U E'xtenMd handle batAJG, a cleffiiBive lilltnmeftt
.U8ell by peaee omcen ror pt'Qteclion and a1110 to codrol and l'eltralll
11811' l-Ie lndlvlcluals.

Officer self-defense
.
job to local instructor

~Gal.99¢

ByNANCYVOACHAM
. Stilitlnt4 SWf Writer

To preseiVe the peace, protect
the lnnocenl and to enforce the
law - these are the common
' goals of law . enforcement
officers. ·
·
But looming In the distance ot
tlxlse goals are some staggering
statistics With which law enforcement officers must always deal.
The national average reveals
one In 12 po1lre otflcers will qmw
' a weapon .In ·self-defense si.xrilltime during. his Qr her career.
Last year marked the first time
1n this countJy that 1ess than 100
pollee oftlcers lost their lives. ·
Seventy-eight \!'~re killed.
·. Also, -the average age of death
tor a · male Jaw enforcement
oftlcer ·1s 58 as compared to the
age or 71foi'anyotheradultmale.
This dltference can beattrtbuted
to the constant stress of a law
enforcement otflcer's job.
And the criminal element In
thtS coontry has undergone
many changes. Lawbrealairs
are often highly trained people.
This fact alone demands elite
training . for Jaw enforcement
personnel. .
,I
And more and more extensive
specialized training seminars
are conducted In the .United'
States and around the world.
The 1984 Tenth 'International
Pollee-Sheriff Training Seminar, was held In Pittsburgh.
Aug.2to5,andErtcChambersd
Middleport, was there as one of
the pol)ce defensive tactics
'
lnstnletors.
While participating . In the
Pittsb!lrgh seminar, Chambers
tauabt classes on the use or two
· detmslve weapons: the ex- ·
tended handle and the pefS!Jader
'batOiiS.
The extended handle baton is
similar to a billy club. The
per!lllllller Is much smaller and Is
easily~- But both can be
U8ell to tnruct great pain when ~
.police otllcer Is p~ trained
to use them.
,·
"'Ibese 'seminars are ·not tun
and games. Serious law enforcement omCt;TS attend these lypes
of seminars to learn both
pbyalcal and tactical defenses.
In this day and age, effective law
entorcement requires both phYsIcal abUlty and brain J20W!!r,"
Chambers sa~.
"The name or the game Is not
· sell-defense. It' a otflcer survival.
Whether a phYsical or tactical
resporwe Is required," he added.
'"Jllat respolllle must he swttt,
certain and !IE'II:ere. Anything
Jess, and the ot11cer pits him or
henelfln Jeopardy. The assumptloll must be that any assault Is
one In whldl an otncer could Jose
his or her life."
Cliamben ftrst became Interested In Jaw · entorcement

DAIRY MAID

REA! BUTTER

LB~ 199

MEADOW G&amp;t.D

BUTTERMILK

~Gal.99¢

Chambers heglin the study of
martlai arts and ended up
as$1stlng Manley In statemandated training for GSI
· employees.
One thing led to another uritll
·he decided to attend sessions at
the pol1ce academy at London.
Unbeknownst to Chambers was
that COITII'!!Ifllobed pollee otnc1!1'5 wem.to a~ theacad@iby.
When he was llnally Informed of
this oversight, he went to
Middleport Pollee CliJel J.J.
Cremeans who arraJigl!d for the
Caiunlsslon.
,
·
- Chambers continued to train at
the academy and Improve lmtU
he was qualified· to Instruct and ·
since 191!0 has been licensed by
the state attorney general's
otflce to conduct basic recruit
schools for Ohio.
He will tell you his standards
are high, for his students and
himself.

He points out he has had the
good fortune to train withscxneof
the best. However, he Is considered by some to be one of the
best In his particular field of

LIQUID DETERGENT

$ 19

.

Officers and conunlttee chalrwo- September through April on the . materials for her particular office.
A lllstrlctcoordlnatortr'(II'IICtrcl!!' .
men of the Middleport-Pomeroy fourth '1\Jesday of each month were
·Area Branch of 'the American planned. It was noted Fay Sauer, vOle has been appointed and wW
Association of University W~ · ·Helen Smith and Kathryn !(night, visit each of the 12 branches In the
met at the Meigs Inn recently for a au officers, had attended a division southeastern district during the
year. The next district meetlngwlll
planning session In preparation tor workshop In Columbus. Each rethe 1984-S5 year.
ported on changes and updated be held at Rio Grande, and the
national convenilon Is scheduled for
Monthy meetings held from
Columbus In 1985.
The first meeting of the year wW
be Sept. 25 at 7: :ll p.m. at the Meigs
Inn. Pro!lpectlve members are

New Haven woman joins PVH

Having-conducted schools·for
Buckeye H11ls and for Gallipolis,
Chambers is greatly concerned
With the proper training of taw
enforcement people. He said
Ohio has the second highest
training standards In thecountcy
· next to California. However, he
feels Ohio' II'aining Is not always
what It slxluld be.
As far as his own schools are
concerned, he Is a stickler for
excellence. He believes
martdated-tralning seminars
should be held monthly rather
than annually which is the nonn.
· Chambers wUI tell you he is an
effective Instructor because ot
his background as a public school
teacher.
•

POINT PLEASANT - John and ·assistant, John Carrington',
Wade, M.D., otolaryngologist (ear, received an update on the latest
nose and throat physician), with research In allergic reactions and
officeS at PJeesant Valley Hospital,
Intensive courses on au-rent rnehas_completedaweek-Jongsemtnar thodo; of diagnosing and treating
1n advanced allergy diagnosis and allergy problems. Specific a~
treatment.
covered were recurrent headaches,
Jiunes WUloughby, M.D., Kansas astluna, allergic oasai problems
City, Mo., well known leader In the and skin rashes.
fleldofaUergymedlclne,conducted
The seminar was sponsored by
the program held In WUI!amsburg, •the Amertcan Association of OtolaVa.
· ryngology and Allergy.
During the seminar, Or. Wade

·•

t
{

•'

Clark Hospital In Parkersblrg,
W.Va. His nxm number Is B

North.

speaker.

Attending the planning session
were Helen Smith, KathrynKnlght,
Dorothy Woodard, Maxine Philson,
Maxine Wingett, Judith Arnold and
Fay Sauer. Mrs. Sauer, president,
was hostess with dessert and coffee
served. ·

S/GIARS
FRIDAY, AUGUST 24th
SATURDAY, AUGUST 25th

Beginning at 9:30 A.M. Each Day

TENDER BONELESS

RIB EYE OR SIRLOIN FILET

Ste
EACH

~

Solu Only
By The Box Frozen
4'1• oz. ea./15 Per Box
S14.85 Box - No Limit
Tender &amp; D•llcloua
USDA Inspected
Available Only At Seers

\

Legion Post 39 hosts veterans
A party for~ veterans who are othersfortheparty.Cake,icecream
patients at the Athens Mental and soft drinks were seiVed by the
HealthCenterwasheldThursdayby auxiliary members.
• the American Legion Auxiliary of
With funds from the Glfts to the
Drew Welister Post 39, Pomeroy.
· Yanks Who Gave, cigarettes were
Assisting With the party were given to. tjte veterans and the Ohio
members of !he junior unit Of the Auxiliary provided Instant coffee for
auxiliary. A decorated cake and them.
gifts were presented · to a retlrtng
Attending were Iva !'&lt;7NeU,
employeewhohasbeenactlvewith Rhoda. Hackett, Pearl Knapp,
volunteers. Games were played Janice Hankla, Laney Hankla, and
with prizes going to the winners. Amber Hankla along with Mary
items were sent to the rooms of two Martln,staterepresentatlvesforthe
veteranswhowereunabletojoln the American LegionAuxWary.

Lunch mrnus for 'hl&gt; Meigs Local School
Dtstrk'1 arr as follows:
Aua. Z1-A111&lt;. lt-Monday-stoppy Joe on
IJ.m, buttfft'd rom. pears, milk.
1\I(ISda\1 Macaroni and ~; grren
tK"ans, rN11 salad. tJnoa.:1. bl.f1('1", milk.
· WC'dM'Iday- &amp;a niP wiPnles. 1osted salad.
practlt'S, milk.
ntursc:ta_v - BoiOJtTUI with cheese slice on
oon. mixed ~tabtes. pineapPle, su~ar

Trimmed To
Steakl1ouse
Specifications
Great Buys on

Meigs lunch menus

Sea Food,

Friday - Cook's Cho\re.
Sept. ~Soopt. 7 - Monday. S.,t. l - No
schooL
•
Tuesday HOI OOg, baked beans,
pineapple. milk.
,
Wedn('S(Iay - Ham and ('t\e&lt;v, .sunshine

Steaks And
Other Specialties

salad. pears. peanut butler cookie and mHk.
Thu~ y - Spa~!\ with meat sauce.
JUl'l'R beans. applcsat.IC.'t', bread, bu'tE&gt;r. milk.
Friday - ~oo)&lt;'s choice.

rooklr. milk . .

SPECIAL OF .THE WEEK
11 PC. SHRIMP

$1.39
WITH FRIES: ..... $1.89

\

I

will work prtmartly at tlte Nursing
Care Unlt, an extended care skilled
nursing facUlty, whose residents
are prtmarlly senior citizens.
Before comlrig to Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Ms. Campbell worked at
the Morgantown Health Care Center In Morgantown, also on the
Gertatrtcs Ward at Lakin State
Hospital as well as Ben Franklin In
New Haven, Tookles Fashions of
New Haven and Bob's M;uket In
Mason._ ,
She is a member of the National
Association of Social Workers and
Alpha Delta PI Sorortty.

·Attends allergy seminar

c.w.

Leollard Basa. SyraDJse, Is a
!III'JIIOII patient at the Camden

,b\vlted to attend.
The Oct. 23 meeting wllt)le at the_,.
Pomeroy Lutheran Church with
'Thomas E. Ferguson to be tile guest

\

. Pleasant Valley Hospital has a
new Social Worker. Annette Camp·
bell, a New Haven, W.Va. native.
Ms. Campbell attended ParkerSburg Community ,College and graduated from West VIrginia Unlver,
slty In Morgantown with a
Bachelor's Degree In Social Work.
Her studies at West Virginia
University Included a wide array of
theories pertaining to psychology,
sociology along With many skills
and techniques In communication
Interaction, and counseling. Her
Social Work studies were cpncentrated In the area Of Aging.
At Pleasant Valley, Hospital. she

expertise.

By choice, the training manual
which hewroteforthepersuader
baton does not carry his name.
However, his scyle of teaching Is
so recognizable people In the Jaw
enforcement protesslon know lt
was written by illm.
Chambers left the public
scliools for a few years after ·
getting Involved In the Jaw .
enforcement field. He has retunied to teaching at Eastern
High School.
In addition to hisquallftcatlons
as a defensive tactics instructor,
he holds a bachelor's of science
degiee In secondary educaUon
from Rio Grande~. DeYelopmentai Disabilities CertlllcaUon from theOhloJ)epartmentol
Mental Heelth and a master's d
arts degiee In political science
trom Ohio Unlvqty. He is
thrGiqjb a ~
Manley, completing a ~'sdsclence
who wu chief ot aecurlty at the · detP'ee In crtmlnal juatlce at

· SUNLIGHT

22DZ.

Gallipolis Developmental
Ceilter.

_· Area A.~4 UW
makes p/anj for upcoming yr:ar
.

ADOlPH'S.

.DAIRY VAUEY

'

~
~
til
,...-·

1'111 I CY OM.
PH. 992-2556
...~y.·Ma--~·~icl-=ge~
" :::..l!i'
': ~,-• .:::":"'::n...:~lnd-ol_the_1'1.·.·(I

f
HOURS: Mon.·Tuu.·Wed.-Frl.
9:30 to 5:00
Thurs. 9:30 to 12:00
Sat. 9:30 to 2:0

USE
YOUR
SEARS

�Page~ 1 0-The Daily

Sentinel

In service news

By IDA MURPHY
Femwoo4 Garden Club
Aloe Vera Is a BlbHcal plant and Is
referred to In the book of John 19,

Pvt. Anthony "Tony" Deem, son
of Nonnan Deem, Syracuse, and
Janice Curry, Pomeroy, has com·
pieted basic training' at the U. S.
Anny Tralnlng ~nter, Fort Dlx,
N.J.
Dwing his training he received
two letters of commendation tor
outstanding acompUshments. One
was presented for performing an
tasks on the EOCT and the other for
achieving one of the highest scores
ln rtfie marksmanship. He was also
awarded a certificate of achlevement!orobtaln!ngaperfectscoreon
the end of cycle test.
Deem Is presentlyenrolledlnHght
vehicle mechanic school at Fort
. Dlx. After completion of the course,
he plans to attend Ohio University.
He will be attached to the Army
National Guard Unit of Logan.

Rhodes

Airman George U. Hobson,
Airman Kenneth L. Rhodes, son
whose mother and stepfather are of Delmer G. Rhodes of Rural
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Sorden Jr. of
Route 1, Leon,' W.Va., .and Joy M.
323' Condor St., Pomeroy, has been
Gable · of Rur&lt;l) Route 2, Ripley,
assigned to Sheppard Air Force W.Va .. has graduated from the U.S.
.;Base, Texas, after comletlng Air
Air Force carpentry specialist
'Force basic training.
course at Sheppard Air Force Base,
~ During the six weeks at Lackland
Texas.
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
Duling the course, students were
studied the Air Force mission, taught cabinet and building con·
organization and customs and struction, maintenance and repair,
received special training in human
assembly of prefabricated struc·
relations.
lures, and the use and care of
In addition, airmen who complete various carpentry tools . They also
basic training earn credits toward earned credits toward an aSsociate
an associate degree in applied . degree through the Community
science through the Community College of the Air Force.
College of the Air Force.
Rhodes ts scheduled to serve with
The airman · will now receive the 4th Civil Engineering Squadron
specialiZed Instruction In the civil at Seymour Johnson Air Force
engineering field.
Base, N.C.
He Is a 198l graduate of Meigs
He is a 1982 graduate of Point
High School, Pomeroy.
Pleasant High School, W.V.

verse 39, where Joseph asked for
Jesus' !Xldy and "there came also
. Nicodemus, which at the first came
to Jesus by nlgllt, and brought a
mixture of myrrh and aloes." Other
reference to aloes are made in
Psalm 45, verse 8, and Proverbs 7,
verse17.
In. Biblical times, approximately
3,!i00 years ago, as desc:rlbed ln the
papyrus, it was used by · ancient .
. Egyptians as a beauty aid ar.d for
· treatment of evei'!J'thlng from
falling hair to ulcers. Hippocrates
used aloes for medicinal purposes, .
Alexander the Great used It
extensively for many things, and
today the plant, which has been
approved by the Federal Food and
Drug Administration, Is used both
extemalty and Internally for a
variety of aUments. ·
'Ibealoeplantcanbeusedseveral
ways. It can be cut and the jell
applled to the wound, or the leaf can

,· Marco Polo foundtheChlneseuse mtxed wlthcranbe~, apple or
aloe for stomach ailments and for other non-citrus fruit drinks has
the treatment of rashes and other long been consk14!red a remedy for
sidn diSOrders, the Phlillpplnes use a host of Internal problems.
the lealfS to relieve headaches, to
Pure aloe vera juice has a light
poultice edema of beriberi sufteres, amber color, similar to that_of
and to preserve hair. Columbus'
ship log contained notations on the bourbon. If purchasing the Julre,
medicinal useol aloe.
and itdoesJ1Qthavethearnbercolor,
Spanish ~lonaries can1ed the then It has probably been watered ·
plant for comforting the sick, Cuba do~ aloe vera Juice has a taste
usedltasacoldremedymlxedwlth differentfromanythlngeJse.ltwill
sugarandrurn,andlnColumbla, the taste like the jell 00 the Inside of the
children's legs and feet were coated aloe vera leaf. lt,s Prwonents claim
with jell to protecttllefll from Insect that It cleanses the Intestinal tract
bites.
·
.
wheri taken Internally removing the
In the W!'St Indies, the leaves of encrustation and accumulatloi!S of
the aloe plant are shredded and .
added to the drl"blnw
water of fats,
~.that
andaccwnulate
othi?r: twm1ul
u~.,;
substances
and
poultry during molting, 111\d ln
Central America, the jellls used tor food
block the natural flow ot digested
nutrients.
all types of stomach and Intestinal ,...:;;===:;;::;;...___,_____
disorders, as well as to inctease
sexualprowess,controlbladderand
kidney Infections, and for the
treatment of ulcers.
Moe Vera lulee
One ounce of pure aloe juice

bespHt lengthwLseandeltherlai(lon
.whole or the jell scraped out and
applied like an ointment. The most
common source for aloe Is a topical
preparation made from the jell
rather than the latex. It Is used tor
treatrnentQtbumsandwoundsand
is now recommended for Internal

use.

It Is useful ln the treatment of

sunbu{n, Insect bites, diaper rash,
acme, polson Ivy, bolls, bruises,
chappedHps,teverbllsters,chaflng,
brown spots, cams, excema, scars,
hemorrhoids, skin blemishes, fun·
gus, heat rash, peptic ulcers and
other ulcers.
Ulll!ll around the world
In Atrtca, aloe has ben placed
over the entrance of homes to
Insure long and !lou""·~'"" life tor
• ~~..,
the Inhabitants. There alSO some
trlbeshaverequlredthepeopleof
the village to bathe publicly to
ward off an epidemic, while others
rubbed their bodies with the aloe
jell to reduce persptra tkln and
eliminate human scent.

Wednesday, August 22. 1984

Calendar

·Aloe Vera has many uses

Green Thwnb notes

Deem

Hobson

Wednesday. August 22, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

will also be served. Entertain·
mmt wl!1 be held throughout the
evening.

FRIDAY
BASHAN -

An Ice cream
social wm be held at the Bashan
FlrehouseFtidaywlthservingln
begin at 6 p.m. The soclaf Is
sponsored by the firemen and the
auxiliary.
Sandwiches, pie, cake and
cookies, along with beverages

Trinity
ice cream sale
~MEROY

,,

~ Meigs
•

Four Meigs Countlans have
erutsted in the U.S. Air Force
belayed enlisted program, accord·
~g to SSgt. John McGuire, Air
Force recruiter, Ga!HpoUs'
·: TheyareRobertD.SptresJr.,son
Jlf Sue Grueser, Rutland; James R.
t\cree Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
·J ames Acree Sr., Pomeroy; Robert
~- : Staats, son of Mr. and Mrs.
)&lt;enneth Lee, Pomeroy, and Brian
C. Jacobs, husband of ChriStine Y.

The annual Nelgler reunion was
held recently at Lake Alma with 41
persons attending.
At the reunion were Forrest and
Gertrude Nelgler, Junior and Edna
Neigler, Drucy , House; Dorothy
Yates, Jack and Jeanette Duffy,
Kenny. Brenda, Scott, Jason and .
Matthew Neigler, Jennifer Cum·
mlns, Clyde, Linda and Lisa Davts,
Kent Brownell, Don, Nola, Sabrina
imd Marc Smith, Phil, Karen, and
Meiody Weaver, Jim, Louise and

~!ese:~clng

Names in
' •

Wolf Pen notes
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy, Jeff,
Joey and Jessica, spent several
days ln Columbus at the Ohio State
Fair and. the Columbus Zoo. They
also visited their brother and
sister-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
McElroy, while there.

•

aeg\sterto

•

lWISTER

•.

210 East M1in
.

•

992-5272

~~~r=£~:r:r

broadcasting tor the ~
station, saki the guest hosts were
orlglnally seen as short·term replacements, but the station liked the
. results so much It decided to try the
format for at least a year.
Larry Hasselho!f, star of NBC's
"Knight Rider," will be the first
guest host when the show resumes
orlglnal progranunlng on Sept. 24.
Miss Kellog.Joslyn saki some of
the actors, musicians and athletes
will work for a week, while others,
like Hagman, willdoonlyoneshow.

1

I
••

nstal

'
J . M. Jones will be back In
Gallipolis, OH. again Friday,
August 24.
Ebb's Hair Specialists,
Inc.'s Representative will explain hair care to every man
and w~man now losing hair .
You should take advantaser
of this Free and private consultation.

I

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~AME

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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.

.

ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - CtTY--------fi'ATE

WIN-- 100
In Cash

ZIP

--·

I·

I

No Purchase Necessary

I

.

NEED N'OT IE PRESENT TO WI~ . ,
KROGER EMPlOYEES AND THEIR .

'

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'J

I•

PHONENO .

.

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--

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IMMEDIATE fAMtltf5 NOT EUGtllE

·

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-1

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.JI

~-------~-------------· -

Contest valid . only at your Belpre. Marietta,
Gallipolis, Pomeroy &amp; Ironton Kroger Stores.
Register at any of the above stores.- Three dolls
per ston1 will be given away each 'week, plus 1
winner in ·each store each week of $100 in cash.
No purchase necessary, enter as often as you like.
New drawing every week through Saturday,
'
October Z7, 1984

Just drop your entry blank in the
Drawing Box of you•r nearest
participating Kroger Store or Mail It To:
BUCKEYE SWEEPSTAKES
THE KROGER C0.-2007 E. 7th. ST . .
PA"RKERSBURG, W . VA. 26101

I
I

GOOD IN CABLED AREAS ONLY

CABLE-TV
LESS THAN
28¢ A DAY!

·

I

Heinz ·
Keg '0' Ketchup

$199
.

Homogenized
Milk ........... Gal .
KROGER lil NU 2%
Lowfat
.
$179
Milk ........... Gal.
KROGER 0.5%
Lowfat
$159

KROGER

32.oz.

18

. . •. • . . . . . . Gal. .

.

IN OIL OR SPRING WATER

Star-Kist
Chun~ Light Tuna
6.5-oz.

•

c

•

GUARANTEED
You will be eiven a written
guarantee on a pro-rated
basis from the beginnlnl to
the end lf you decide to we
the Ebb Proeram.

=:::

~of$9.1mllllon.

·

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Entry Blank

·

OFFER CLOSES AUG. 31,1984

The crowd was only briefly
dlsljppolnted when Eastwood and
-»!5 party stepped from a red station
"....:J.V~gon, skipping a true Hollywood
; - ."firrlval by chauffeured limOUSine.
Eastwood,54,roamedthroughthe
~wd and greeted fans before the
~ef noon ceremonies at the movie
'l!)eater.
• "When I was a kid I used to come
~this theater, and now I'm proud to
-re part of Its history,'! Eastwood
~d before wrlllng his name and
::lYoumademyday" andputtinghls
~dprlnt In the wet cement.
- Eastwood's latest turn, "Tigh·
:Jtolle." a story of "a cop on the
~." topped the weekend •box·
Z!f!ice gross ln_lts debut week with a
... Eastwood Is best known for his
:jiortrayal of San Francisco poHce
"Inspector "Dirty Hany" Callahan,
LWho has dared cornered bad guys to
~t with the Hnes, "Go~­
•TJ18ke my day" aJid "Do you_feel
lucky,_punk?" '·

~omtroy

- ._

Also

•

----~--------~-----·-,
·I

Register To

HARTLEY
SHOES

will never
repeat this spacial .

'

'

1.

r-----

Steve Ed·

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Alison, 12.

Women Interested ln jolnlng the
barbershop chorus or acqulrlng
musical 'training should contact
Linda Walls, membership chal!woman, at 593-'TU) or Jane Sheaffer,
president, at 593-lilm.

•

,_

the
news
. ·'
' .,.
•HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Writing
"You made my day" alongwitll his
signature In the wet cement at
Mann's Chinese Theater, actorCHnt
Eastwood dropped his "Dirty
Harry" image to smile and shake
hands with fans .
Greeted by a cheering crowd
along Hollywood Boulevard on
TUesday,Eastwoodwasaccompan·
led by longtime
companion and
..
frequent co-star Sondra Locke and
his son, Kyle, 16, and daughter,

winners.

arranging, admlnls!ratlon and choreography were taught by thi!Sweet
AdeHne Music faculty. The t~
day school was completed with a
concert featuring International and
regional quartet and chorus

Zerkles-Zirkles-Circles reunion held

-----.....---------------:------....JL----------

MartySmlth, BobHarden,Johnand
Tammy Nelson, Brtan Harden,
Bobby and Theresa Wllliams, Ralph
Harden, Pam Foreman, Dorothy
Harden, Don, Angie, D. · J . and
Michael Harden.

area. Classes In vocal production,

ftll: CT·•SS

Dallas star
to host
TV show

Neigler family gather

Orders lor

Eleven members of the Hocking
VaHey Chapter Sweet AdeHnes ,
recently attendedtheSweetAdellne
Region IV Summer Music Camp at
Mlaml University ln Oxford.
The guest mf:'Uliy member there
was Internationally famous ar·
ranger Renee Cralgofth!!New Yo~

!OPSDT

Those attending locally were:
The Zerkles, Zlrkles, and Circles
of the Meigs County communities Lula Circle, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
held their family reunion on July 22 Harden, Sandi and Ralph, Mrs.
at the Senior Cltlzebs Building at Larry Circle, Shane and Grant,
Harold Circle, Steve and Chris, Mr.
Pomeroy.
.
A potluck dinner was served at and Mrs. Carl Circle, Patrece,
noon with grace being offered by Jarrod and Jason, Kimberly Fol· '
Steve Circle. Sue Hager welcomed ·!rod, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle,
everyone. The highlight of the day Florence Circle, Mindy Hill, Dixie
was Jack Zirkle of 'Ar~lngton, Va., Circle, Mr. and Mrs. James Werry,
who Is present of the national · Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ashley, Mr.
Zlrkle-Circle Family Historical As· and Mrs. Curtis Johnson, Mr. and
soclajlort. He gave a talk on the Mrs. Harold. Hager, Robert Lee,
family lineage and welcomed Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle and
everyone to the annual convention · Brenda, Linda Patterson, Tedd
in Harrisonburg, Va. ln October Schmidt, Mrs. Mae Spencer ·and
and a family trip abroad to Vance, Pamela Foreman. David
Sigman, and Miss Nellie Zerkle,
Germany In July.
COAT OF ARMS - Jack
A commlttee was selected to pian Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circle, Jeffrey
7Jrlde, president of the Ztrldebasic tralnlng earn credits toward
next year's reunion. It Is composed and Nikki.
Circle Family Historical AsSocian associate degree through · the
Those attending from out of town
of Mr. and ·Mrs. Jeff Circle, lla
auon, Arlington; Va., displayed
Community College of the Air
Meeks, Pamela Foreman and June were Mr. and Mrs. James Betz,
the
family Coat of Anns a1 the
Force.
G_allij:xllls; Mrs. Freda Wakefield,
Ashley.
Anyone
Interested
is
wei·
recent
Zlrlde-Zerkle-Circle reunThe airman will now begin
Shelby Wilson, Debbie and Marc
come
to
join
this
commlttee.
Prizes
ion
held
a1 the Meigs County
on-the-job training ln the transporMoore, East Liverpool. Ohio; Mrs.
were
won
by
Elva
Hammer,
Nell
Senior Citizens Center,
tation field at Minot Air Force Base, •
Marks, Jack Zirkle and Steve Elva Hammer, Findlay: Mrs. John .. Pomeroy. '
N.I).
Rasp. · Fostoria; Mr. and Mrs.
His wife, Maurlca, ts the daugh-· Circle.
James Circle, Charleston, W.Va.;
tet of janice and Jimmie Goodnlte
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Marks, Minnora, tained family members on Saturof New Haven, W.Va.
W.Va. ; Mrs. Mary Russell, Wav- day evening, July 21. before the
erly, W.Va.; Mrs. A11na Cleland,. reunion on Sunday.
A light evening meal was served
Columbus, and Jack Zirkle. Arllng·
to
Mrs. Lula Circle and Dixie, Mrs.
.
ton, Va.
Elsie
Circle, fMtss Florence Circle,
· The reunion will be held next year
Linda
Patterson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jacobs, Route 1, Rutland and son of
on the fourth Sunday ln July.
James
Werry, Mrs. Mary Russell,
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Prlddy,
Volleyball. swimming and visitMr~.
Freda
Wakefield, Shelby
Pomeroy.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Larry lng were done at the home of Mr.
Wilson,
Marc
and
Debbie Moore,
AU four will be 1984 graduates of
Hagman will take time out fiom his and Mrs. Larry Circle and family of
Mrs. John Rasp, Mrs. Elva
Meigs High School and .are will
dlabollcalbuslnessdeallngsonCBS' · Racine following the family
Hammer and David Sigman. Fam·
receive tranlng ln the mechanical
"Dallas" to play co-host on a local reunion.
ily albums and documents were
career field. They will be earning
teleillslon show that mtxes fealjlres . • Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hager and displayed.
·credits towards an associate degree
and travel pieCes.
Kimberly Foil rod of Racine enter·
through the Corilm~nity CoUege of
Actors
Mike
Farren
and
Martin
the Air Force while attending basic
training and other air fOrce technJ.
SheenandformerOlympianRafer
Johnson wUI also joln Melody
cal tratntng school.
Rogers on KBS' ''2 r;m the Town" in

countians enlist

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·

The Daily Senti""- Page . 11

Ohio

ll attend regional Sweet Adeline music camp

homemade lee cream are being
· taken by Trlnlty Church, Pomeroy, 992-Mill. 992·37'77, or 992-3222
for deUvery on &amp;!pt. 13 ~ 14.
, Flavors are chocolate, vanilla,
peach, Ptneapple, banana and
lemon. Homemade hot fudge
topping will also be sold. At the
social on Sept. 13 and 14 at the
church, hincheons will be served.

Happenings

Parsons
Airman Stephen C. Parsell$. son
of Sankey E . and Joan C. Parsons of
1311 Walnut St., Kenova, W.Va., has
. completed Air Force basic training
at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
Duling the six weeks at Lack·
land, the airman studied the Air
-Force mission, organization and
:Customs and received spectal traln·
Jng In human relations.
~ In addition, airmen who complete

Pom!tfOy~Middleport,

CAN'T HELP
lllale pattem
.._

of •

~

~Tea~

Ia lbe

......,. Dl

pson White
Seedless Grapes

....... bal.._ .... _ .
119e llalr ' - f• wlllelo n•
-u.od Ia offeetlft. Db llalr

Speelallata eauo&amp;IMJp U...
wbo an lllell: bald after ,.• ..,.

.. lftl)aal balr ....

Mr. K fry~r. Virginia Born·~s
and 11..W. Hensley show rhey
regre~ fiair . They did nor have
male pattern baldness.

Many eondiUODI can eaLLM
hair lou. No matter whlc:b
one II CaUiinl ;your hair '-•
If you walt unUl &gt;'oil are 111dt
Bald ,and your hair I'GOI8 are
dead yoll are beyQIId help.
So, now 11 the time to do
10111etbln1 about II before It'•
too lata.

Pound

r .... .

'

c·

Diet Pepsi
or Peasi Cola
iPak

· l PLUS

We accep1 MASTER
CHARGE and VISA.

DEPOSIT
'

ON fRIDAY, AUGUST 24TK. ~OUt.lo 1 '.M. TO lo:IO P.M.
AT HOLIDAY INN, 450 PIKE ST., GALLIPOLIS, OH.
I

.

PINT RETURNABLE BOITLES,
MTN. DEW, PEPSI FREE,

I

. r

....,'

•

�; Page- 12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedne•dly,

Wednesday. August 22. 1884

Property
transfers

~

•TltiNCHtNG
•lACK HOE &lt;QOZEA
•END LOADER

~~~i:~TIIUCK
IJ~VICE1
GAl. IEWEA
UNEI.
County Conlflo4
Pll~

KTIMATIS

_
-.........
-

_

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

?FME&amp;&amp;g

,.

c.,•httlwllo,.,.llt..,.,..." '
.............
l..-41•..._1

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

.,.,,

,,~

_..

tlct.Wa.....,, ........

=-=~,.

,...

.

_

_
,.
..,_

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

,, ..............
,,,......_tv•c•...,_
........._.
IIHliltl ......

...........
=~·..................

lll--

t41..,......t .........

....,_____
_
......
..··-=_......
_-. .

*TROPHIES
*AWARDS
Cr.. •th ily

I~

Our

Sp••ioh~

MIDDLEPORT
PLASTIC ARTS

Public Notice
NOTICE
Not reP rs hereby grvcn that
111e und ersrgned 6 rnrend s 10
• m,1kP npplrcatron 10 the Com

man Pl eas Cour1 Probate Drvr :&gt;ron of M orQs Co1rnty Ohro.
for an ord er to chanqe her
c hilds name 10 Heather lrerie
Ba:. ter
~ Sarrl applrcatron w rtl be
hy PP trli on to bP. fri ed rn sord
Court on or niter th e 26 th day
nf SPptPmb~r. 1984
O at eO thrs 15 th da y o l A rr · ilUS t 1984
Anna M arre Ba :. tor

i6 14i466-6037 Consuli ORC
Chao 3745 and OAC Chaps
3745 -47 and 37 46 -5 for
reQull ements

i81 22 li e

Issuance of prclr mrnary staH
det('rmrn atron

Public Notica
PUBUC NOTICE
: County Meigs
fhP. lollowrnq were rP.cerved - /prepar ed by the Ohro Envrronr1'1en t&lt;H Pr otec tro n Agency
'( OE PA) las t wePk Ellec trve
dmes of l m,;t ac!lons and
rssu an ce dates of pro posed
,1ctr ons are Sti) ted Frnal actr ons
m,1y be ;~ppeale d rn wrrtrng
wrthrn 30 days or th e dote of
thrs notr ce tQ the Envrronmentnl Board ot Rrvrnw Rm 10 1
250 E Town St . Columbus.
OH . 43 215 Notrce of anv
t1J")pP.Ill :&gt;hall bP. frlf!d wrth
drrector wrth rn 3 days Pr onosed actrons wrl l OOco mr frnal
unle s~ il wrr !!P.n .:rrltudrcatron
hP.urrnf) rnq uPS t rs ~ ubmrttP.d
wrthrn 30 dnvs of thr rss uancP.
'd &lt;ll f" or th r. drrector revrses·
/ wrt hdraws thf' proposed ac
trnn Anv person mnv submrt
comrnl'nt -; ;'Inti /or rP.ques t a
rneetrnn reqard rnq nnv non
ftni'll ;;c!lon wr l hrn 30 c1avs of
th F! da te rndr ca ted Actron" as
usRd e~ bo vP does not rnclutic

1

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
We are deeply grat·
eful to.our friendsand
neighbors for the loving concern shown us
during the death of
Lowell McNickle.
Special thanks to Rev.
Don Walker, Laurel Cliff
Methodist and Antiquity
.Baptist Churches, the
'police escort, and Ewing
Funeral Home, those
who sent flowers, food,
cards and your presence
at the funeral home. and
_the pallbearers.
Lowell .McNickle
Family
3

Announcements

RABIES CLINIC
PRESENTED 8 Y
Mei&amp;S Co. Hunwne Socitty
&amp; Meip Co. Hulth Dept.
At

Columbia Twp. Firehouse
SATURDAY, AUG.

25

I P.M.· 4 P.M.
Dr. Carol 01borne
RABIES '3 .00

Otto.- IMOCulltions Alllilllllt
Dop 11ust be ltoshed. Cats

l

in carriers.

Abundant Lrle Cor~l Corp
Merg:&gt; Co LaQdhll Ad
Sal rsbury Twp Oh ·
FaCrl llV Oescnptro n· Arr
Appl rcatron No 06- 1266
Commenrsto OhroEPASEOO AIR 2 195 Front St Logan. Oh,
43138 Web ster Mrne

181 22. 1u:
Public Notica
ENVIRONMENTAL
ASS&amp;SSMENT
FOR
Moit)s County Roadbant..
RC&amp;DMea,....
'
Th e propose d protect rs a Re·
source Conserva tron and Deve lop ment M easure (RC&amp;D
Crrh cat Are a Treatment ) near
Pomeroy, l oc~l1ed rn the Buck·
eye hrlls AC&amp; O Area ' Mergs
Coun ty Ohr o
Over 30'acres of land owned or
co n1rolfed by the county rs
unstable because of problems
w1th erosron or land Slippage
ThP.se problems are adversely
affectrnq water qualrtv 1n local
steams and ca us11:1g excessrve
road mar ntenance cos ts
The proposed rrnprovements
wrll control erosron and slrppr~ ge alon g co unty roadw ays
and stnwms Sues proposed
tor treatment wrll be srabtr zed
through the use of grode sta brhzatron StrliCiurcs drversrons
and en treat area plantrng
The measure purpose rs Crrtl ·
cat area treutment It tS spon sored by thp, M erqs Sort and
Wat!f. r Conservation Orsmc t
and th e Mergs County Commrss ronP.rs
An envrronment al evaluatron
has been com pleted and "the
basrc da ta rs on frle tn the
USDA. Sort Conscrvatron Serv•ce Offr CA 200 North H1qh
Street Room 522 Colum bus.

Ohio 4321 5
The evaluat• on rnd rcates th at
the proposed actron Wtll not
adversely &lt;lffcct th e qualr ty of
the human envuonment. or srgntftcan tly al ter or des troy valua ~
ble wettanns pnl't'fe or unrque
farmland. c t~IIU r at resources.
threatened ' and endangered
speqes. water qualrty, frsh and
w rldlrfe habrtats wrldr.r ness
and scenrc Lrre&lt;ls or perennrat

54 Misc. Merchandi1a
GOOD USED
a ELEC . DRYERS
11hon II m tch Upri t
AS

~'""''·

f_pin

~••~.rs. at

Whirlpool, W1yto1.
·
TV a APPLIANCES
627 !fd A,.., GilliiiOiis, Oh.
lilpoft Doiy &amp; S.to.Uy t1l I r .l .l
PH. 441·1199

- -~

. ....!. . . . .

··---- .,.

"""='=='=~===~===I State

Conservatronrst
Sort
Conservatron Servrce. Federal
Burldrng
200 North Hrgh
St1eet Room 522. Columbus.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMA
/
TI ON The e n~o nm en r al as
-- .:-:II .
au
sesssnent ol t
federa lly as""- ·-... - - ~ - - srsted act ron rndrc at es thai th e
.. He always keeps up hi protect wrf l not c auo:e s1 gnrfr .tlimony. She threatened to go can t local regronal, or nat1onal
back to him if he didn't!"
rm pac ts on the envrronment As
a result at these trndrnns Harry
W Oneth, State Conservatr onrst. has d€termrned t~a t th e pre paratr on Md rev1 ev-.• of an envr·
Public Notice
ronmenlal rmpac t statement
are not needed for th1S pro1ec t
stream ecosystems The rnstal
Thrs measure concerns a
lalron of th rs measure w• ll not
plan for crrtrcal area treatment
cause any adverse en•monon an 1nactrve sanrtary landfrll
mental 1mpacts or cause the srte an d along count".' roads
loss· of any Important envrron - Pl anned works of rmpr ovement
mental amenrtres There are no
rn cl ude drversrons grade staother vrable alternmrves tha t brh zatron s!ructures. and crrtl ·
could ~ cons1dered wh rch ca l area ota nung
would meet the sponsors ob
The Notr Ce o f Frndrng at No
1ectrves The rns tallatron of thrs
Srqnrtrc ant lrnpac t (FONSII has
measure writ not forclose the been fo rward ed to the Envrronenhancement of s1gnrftcan t
menta l Pro teclton. A ~e ncy and
long -t erm produ c trv rty of !he to varmus federal. stat e and loarea or rrre trteva bly com m11
cal ngencre s and rnterested
the use o f a S1g nlf• canr
part res A lrm• ted nu mber of CO·
am otrn l of.a r'ly res ource
ptes of the FONSI are available
For th ese reasons- rt has been to lr ll srngle copy requests at the
determ1ned that an Envrron· above address Ba src data df!·
mental Impact St.Jtement wrll vetoped durrnq the envrronnot be needed fo r the r,nsralla - mP.ntat assess ment are on lrle
UO'l of thiS measu re ~
ar.d m ay he revrewed bv conHarry W One th
IJCttng Harry W Oneth
Sl ate Conservattonrst
No ad m•n•stratlve ac tron o n
Dat e 8/t 0/8 4 •rnntemcnlat• on of the pr oposal
Billing Code: 34t0-t6
wrtl 'be takBn tmt; t 30 days after
DEPARTMENT OF
the date of th•s Pllbl•catron
AGRICULTURE
Harry W Oneth
SOIL CONSERVATION
St&lt;'l te Conserva tron, st
SERVICE
Auqus t 9 1984
Meigs County Rooclbonlu
(Cmatog of Fed era l DomesRcao M-.... Ohio
Ire Assrstance Proq ram No
AG ENCY
Sorl ConseNatro n
10 90 1. Resou r ce Conse rva Servr ce. Depart ment of Agrrcu l- tr on arid Developmen t Pro ture
gram O ff rce of M anagemen t
ACTION Notrce of Frnd•ng of and Budget C1rcutar A-95 re No Srg nllrcant Im pact
gardrng state and local clea r SUMMARY Pursu ant 10 Sec - 1nqhouse rev1ew of Ied er at
Iron 102(2) (C J I the Natron a! and federaHy assrsted pro ·
Envrronmental Pohcy Act of grams and prOtec ts rs appl r·
1969· th e ~ou n crl on Envrron- cable 1
mental Oualrty Gurdelrnes (4 0 iBI 22. 1tc
CFR Part t 5001. and the S011
ConservatiOn Serv rce Gllrdetrnes (7 CFR Part 650). the So1l
Conservation Servrce. U. S De
partment of AgHcu lture. grves
not1ce that an environmen tal
tmpact statement rs not betng
Real Estate General
prepared tor the M e1gs County
Roadbanks HC&amp;O Measure.

SAVE UP TO

$}0700 Freezer
Per
On This Big
TRUCKlOAD
SALE
While They Last

MGM
FdM CITY, INC.
8

U{lt HOUSE
FOR SA
~oE •
1111 CHfmR:
line acres wittl a niCely
construefld cont:l'lte liloet
lion·• · 3 Wucinw,
·001 .

room

bllh, 12xi5 livitw
and 241124 familY

Partiltly CIIJIIIIId.
fuel otllurnlce with faeil~
ties for~- 12115
bkd stqa btikq.
20x3D bloti ....... llilt1t
oil Rt 248. counlly ~
y,' nile •st of CllesW,
Qhi.Q... . . ....
.
(2) TWO STORY ~OUSE
IN RACINE: · Dow(l·
stairs· IIJUipped witll '
kitchen, livil• room,
dininc room tnd den;
1'08111.

h11

·

:., a«•
Nl lit-

., I. L.. ..,.. llcGHEE

Bro%.,! I

,~r:ce

ltip ~AIUciate ·

Phti-.'D-1171
·•
Co.

BUS.: 985-3813
RES.: 985·3837

11tnl. Lot size approx.
4fx3111'. Needs wort
If interntld contlet
The H011tt NttiOilllltnk
in Rtcint, 141-2210.

8/f4/l

STEP LIVELY in (IUr newest
divided-smrt 1umper thafs 1110 a
dress. One shoulder bultolls, ibe
WIISt is eiiSiicized. [ISI'sew.
MULTI-SIZE pall!t'n &amp;ites 4 •zes
on one t1ssue. Stnd!
Prial!d

mo

Bonded

3-5-tlc

G&amp;W PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLIES
GAS-WATER
SEWA~E PIPE

REGULA TORS &amp;
FITTINGS
VOLUME DRIPS
Wa.ohoUM 985-3813
looidoo
985-3837
711911 mo pd

d.

Real Estate General

ZIP, SIZE, 1111

-Ill

Real Estate General

TEAFORD :
•••

1

216 E. 2nd St.
•
Phone

1-(6141·992-3325
NEW USfliiG - Lincolnlfts.
2 BR home, basement. refrit!er·
ator, range, IIISUiated, new car·

pelin&amp; and myl sid1n' u~

new.

RUTWID - 7 rm lrame, 3
Br, lillY nice kitchen, garagl,
gas heat. some furnrture.
$27,500.

I'OIIEIIOY - Nrce location on
ltiis 2 rm. bu~ IJidt, lurnace, and land. Priced rWitt it
~13,000.
.
YOUR CHOICE
' - ' 01'1 tpe

2 nice

edit ot bwri. 5

1'1111 each, river view, 51111
111111 iocltion. $25,000 lild

$34,00J.

8/13/1 mo.

POMEROY - Blum Additian
- Beaulilul·brid&lt; ranch !II a
great neighOOrhood f.ll1 ba!ement. paW, ~ 'garage,
family room. rec. fO!HI\ alit ex·
cellent condiion. lstaf1y llillure&amp;
Must II! seen. $57,90100

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

•cuSTQ:M BUllT HOMES

'WATeR, GAB.
Oil LIN!&amp;

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992·7201

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

It-nabla
Quality Workmanship
Dehumidifiers, Porta

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

-~·rt•iiiK Ut••;c... ""·" "' d.
l ;ttlltfl ( umrlu•o IJ• r•r I! \ n

'KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

PH. 614-992·3718
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

985-3561

7

All Makes

NEW USTING - TP.'
Plains - Allilllll Addition
- Your chance to DWn a 3
bedroom ranch home wiiii 2
~ lull basement, garage,
elec. heat. air condilionin&amp;
eqwllll!d kKchen, dmir!g milm,
on a lOOx36IIot ~1,500.00.

30 Yrs. Experience
Mechanical Work •
Tractor~ • Cars •
Truck • Automatic
Tran1mission

PH. 614-

'

POI£ROY - 11iwrvi1w Centrally located mfhe
c;.
lie! Cqnvement locatJon. 1\?
story, 3 bedrooms, I~ base·
ment. &amp;targe
lot targe dining
room
IMng room. Vlf!YI sid·
ill&amp; ntCe 'lront sitting porch

r..,

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

:;r:.c:rnpc~

Sim Start Fro111 12'116'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsulalld D~Houses

IIDDUPORT- Slllely Ol4ei

llcltlt, Oh.

•

·
1111T1MD - New L1ma RQad
- In tre roUI'!IiY. .Thill. bed·
100111 ranch with full basement

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

!tOme with up lD 4 bedrootr5, I
P~. 614·843-5191
24x28 recreation room, family
10.6., ,
room &amp; basement, 2 car gar· 1 p-------...J
age, onaii)Od siYeel. You must 1
see this one! Priced to seht '

•Waahert •Dilhweahera
•Rengea
·
•Refrigeraton
•Dryers •FrHren

A CAR

CLI, THIS NOTICE FOI

WELDING &amp;
FABRICATiON

CALL •
446-4522

PARTS and SERVICE
4 S.tft

horne, 2 baltts, ·cerpelin, fiJI
besemlltl. Only $32.000

MITINIII- 4 rm. renovlled

home.·iitll fll'nlct.'carport and

nice lot Ollar welcomed.
TUI'PEIS PIAIIS - Allllllll
- 6 rm. one br home on
llfle lit FA f\miCe. $32.9011

II(AI ,_EIOJ - 2 t.d-

room 1rliler and liCit II eiBc.,
range, illrit. ~ and IIIII ·
locltion mltt 7. Only $12,1*1.

STIACUIE ..:. Good 5 room
horne, 11M lnd refri&amp;lnlar.

::,-llllt:llld . . .

$45,900.00.

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

St. lt. 160 North
Gallipolis, Ohio ·
,
1111111n

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION :

Rt. 12Vo1Wtroy Ohio

AUTO. &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also

New Homes-btansive :
Rtmodelinl

lnsuNnct Worl
CultQ.m Pole Bld1s.

Al•minum &amp; Wnyt Sidillll
15 Ye1rs hperlenct
GREG ROUSH
PH. 112-7113
or 992-22B2

I

11-1-tft

IEAI.fORS

SMALL ANIMAL HOURS

Jr................. tn-lltl
Jun frulllll .....Mt-HIO

Tunilly 1:30 p.•.· p.11.
.....,., 3 , .... 5 p.lll.
nur.., 3 p,lll,·l p.m.
I p.a·! -p.a

... ...... .................
Doltit T11t1tr .....lt2:Mtl

._,a ,.•.·5:·•·

&amp; Vicinity

Yord Sola Thuro. 23rd a Fri .
24th. Te.c.ea Ad, 9th houll
on the left. Good cl.. n
rclothino &amp; adults. Toys,
knick knacks S. Iota more .•

Gellipolla Fl•• Merket Fri ., 111 Time Yard Solo 22. 23.
811. &amp; Sun. Indoor-outdoor. 24. From 9·8. Jlt. 7 bllow
New Fridey Night Market Green Geblu. loto of boby
llano 3PM till ? Rt . 36 a itema.

110. Coi1441-7037.
_F_r_o_z-la_r_o_B_o_t_t _o _m _F_I_e_o
Market. Every wukond .
U.S . 35 Fra1iera Bottom.
WVe. 25082 . Deolero Wotcome . Don FraJ!er ·
Operator. 304· 766·2779.
Yard Sale lincoln Pike off
Rt. 141 . Tuoo, Wed., Thuro .
Aug. 21 · 23. 7th houoeright,
6th houH loft.

Yard Sole Aug . 24th, 21th.
9-5. 361 Manln Dr. Galllpo·
lie. Bicycle•. color W 't,
Western boots , 'oya,
clothng .

...... P.om&amp;rov .........
Middl~port
·~···-········--····· · ····-··-

-BACKHOES
-DUIP TRUCKS

ACCINT ,

,.1...;
PH. m ..,,,

'.

-!RENCHER

-WATEil

-SEWER .
-GAS liNES
-SEPTIC SYSTEMS
lAIIGE or SMAll JOBS
PH. 992·2478
7/ 30/l mo. pd.

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
46353 Scout Camp Rd.
Chester. Ohio

Ph. 985-4269
If No Answer, Call 985-4382
We Service All
Mekea ·&amp; Models
Antenno Installation
House Calls and Shop
Serv~ce h1il1ble
Loco! Serviee Calls $15.00
7·26·i mo.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Raaflng of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
.
"Free Eatlmatea"

EUGENE LONG

Ph. (614) 843-5425

Licensed Clinical AudioiO&amp;ist

-·

tu-.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Stcond Avenue, Box 1213'
Gtllipotia, Ohio 45631.

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT..50 EAST
GUYSVIUE, OHIO

1U.IIW If AI'POimEIIT

Farm lquipment

Parts It Service

•

Vinyl

21----------

c-

-LO·BOYS

•
PINa It IUflfll.Y·

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

"oom

LISA M. KOCH. M.S:

,rr:

304-675

949-2969-949-2263
· 8·10·1 mo.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Compu.. rized Httrin&amp; Aid Selection
Swim Molds · lnterpretina Services

Airt.orflld Jolin Dltfl,
111w HelitiMI, luh HOI
Fn E...-m
O.llr

........:10 ....
· lAIII AIIIW Allll

...... Giiiiipoiiii ........

t1ii?a--;4';;Q3''b;;b;;;;

811 3/~n

. 220 I. .....

I yeir old countoy home, 3
Home1 for Sale
bedroomo. In-ground pool.
-::--:--::--::-----:---:--- I Priced on h1apeclion . 304·
Only 9 ~ 14 aooumllble loon Ba2-2986.
~--------:"'::::on thlt 3 BR brick ranch 3 bad
3
ld 8 'L
houae, aecludM on 2.9
rooms. years o • n
ocr., of land with term 111umoble loon ofter &amp;.
pond, loc:ot8d - r Oak Hill 304· 676-1713.
and Centerville, epprox .' FOI' 1111 or rent, houSJ near
t49t mo. INIY-"· Only Pt . Ploount . 304-89&amp; ·
U . 750 do-. 371-2803 3818.
otter 8 P.M. do"y.
II% down peyrnent 11 .26% 2-ttory·flnlohed baHment, 3
intereot rote up to 30 yeoro. br, family room, fireplace.
Coli N.L. Stovon1 a Aoooc. dining room, 21h betha.large ·
Jeri Allie 8t4-371-2789 kitchen. 304-882· 2091.
after 8PM 0&lt;814· 4n·2443 By Owner. 3 br, 11h blth,lr,
IAM· IPM.
dr. re&lt;rMiian room In be••·
ment, nlw ~•x24 uerege.
Gr"n Twp. new beeutlful 2 Cloae downtown, Shown by
ttory home, 4 or I bdro.. 1'tl
beth, Iorge llvlngroom •
appointment . 304 ~ 8715 ·
kitchen, torm11 dlnfngroom. 4 604.
Utith:y room. gar-. con·
Juat Completed 3 br wrth
creta drive, nice lot, city
1Choo11. 4'h mi. from 01111· att ac hed large garag e. pr rpolls. larg1ln priced. va l e. 3 1mr n ut es to town.
t64,900. Wilt conolder mo- aopr ox 12 acre 533 .000
bile homo trade ln-. Call 304.-675 - 1690 f o r
app~rntment
448-8038.

31

&amp; Vicinity
Sun .. Aug. 28, Che-r BoI
II II Ill /
" I !
whunter end Archery Club 5
terget 3 -0 d"r tr" 111nd
, Jf' 1 V I I ,
2 FomllyThuro. a Fri. 23rda V1rd aale: Clothes, coats,
ond 28 torgoll ohoot.
24th. Boyo ctothlno. an- ahoea. )lrt, lamp, picturesMen. women,junlor end cub
tiquea. mlac. 1103·11 05 , camere. bowling bill·
clasaes. Reui•tretlon 1t
.Thurs., Fri., end Set. Five
Teodora Ave .• 9·6.
12:30·4:00 p:m . Entry fee 1 1 Help Wanted
Poinll. 992 -6344.
Duple• completely aeperete
15 00 both ohooto or t3 00
3 bdr. carpeted, 1
M"lnly new item1. Bake
unh1.
good
invettment.
ree·
per sho(Jt. Food and drinks
inground awlmmklg pool,
....,. roffle at ValuntHr Moving Sale; furniture, clo·
witt be told . For more
U&amp;,OOO, e11.000-n bal· oanably priced . 304-67&amp;· ·Emergency Squard. 24th, thing, books, plantl, new
4
Information - 1·814· 985· SoN AVON moke ll%. Call once on lond contract with 4824 eltor 6 p.m.
26th Fri . • Sat. 8: 30·8:00. h•ndmade Items, miac. Low
4 41· 3368.
3364.
B% lntoreot. 128 Fourth
pricoo . See at 138 Lincoln
ad---.- -C-11 AVe .. GeltipOIIo. CoN 441·
_l_P_N_ _ _
Gigantic Garage Sele Wed . Hill. Pomeroy from 10:00
Songf111: Silver Run B1ptiat
want • part tune. a
3204.
32 Mobile Homes
8o Thurt, 9·4. Bob McCor· a.m.-8:00p.m.
Church, Aug . 25. 7 :30p.m.. _4_4_1·_7_141_._ _ _ _ _ 1----~---for Sale
mick Rd. behind American
1
Sing.,l will be the Gotpol
Legion. Antiqoea. picture
Hiring now·Demonstretors.
Inspirations ..
framet. clothea all afzea,
Work your own houn. No Reduced t&amp;.OOO. Nlco c:IHn
c:olloctlng
61' d-ing . No maintenance fr•. pa hut. NEW AND USED MOBILE Iampi. Iota gl1uware. pots
McDaniel Butchering open
&amp; Vicinity
cent. olr, flat fenced In back HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
every dey. No W(lric 'on inveotmont. Free UOO kit. yerd, 1 car 111rev• with ITY MOBILE HOME SALES. It p1n1 largeet ever. ,
Call Debbie 441-41113 .
Sundays. 304-882-3224.
et..tric door'- · 10•12 4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS, Movln9 Sale Etectric stove. Gient yard .. Ia, Set till ?.
ta· 9 :30 till doric. Paint Ploennt
The Meigo Local School wooden out-dingo, ~­ RT 36. PHONE 814-446· refrigerator,
utility blllo. Pri.. to ntl 7274.
blet,
jeans.
currondy
-ing
Dietrict
It
~·:. mileo out Send Hla Rood
4 · Giveaway
Vinto-'n Beptlat
oppllcodono from_ c:ertlfoad immediately. Clll44e-0109
·
turn
on Shrine Club Road 1
. ,.. 5:30.
3 bedroom 70x14
Tuel.·?'
mile follow ligna. F urnltyre,
Mixed breed, 3 yra. old, oppllcontsfor a Junior High
total
electric,
dilhea, clothing, all air•.
spayed, shots, good with Football Coach, • Junior Nice 2 bdr. utility room. Good condition, ohciwi1
Wilkeovllto Aug. 22-26th, Avon, doll collocl olztlon.
High
Cheeriooder
Advilor
children. Coli 448-9490.
garage, otce yard, ,.._ fur· appointment . Cell
end a """"'" Glrlo' VoHav· nance, hot Wlt8r tenk, 1167 or 8~4- 367- 7218 three miles down 160 to Ct. tools. knic knek. couch and
Rd. B. CottreH's Gerege chair. Mlac .
belt
Cooch
for
tho
1184-86
2 puppies.
448-3797. ·achool year. AppUcenta priced right. Call448·118&amp;. lete.
Sola. Roin-Shlna. 5t4-8897722 .
mutt hold 1 valid Ohio
Featuring Jenny Lind bed.
White female Gerrrlen Shl· teaching
Bv own0.3 bdr. ponflnl1had Mobile home with Flaridli
eertificlte'
end
pherd. aH ohotii, 7 mo. old. muat meet certiflcetion ,.. beu. Carpet. Evono Hgu. room. on wooded lot, at Yard Sale Fri. 24th. Sat. other furniture • antiquea,
mioc. itomt, 8-S Aug.22 •
prefer county home. Call
qu!romontl of Ohio for By appointment. Call 448- Tycoon loka. Financing 26th. 1/.a mi. below 218 of 23. 24. 26. Gilibo, 1008
814·367·0401 .
ovoHoble. Coli 448-0706 or Rt. 7 or 218 Clay Twp . Simpton Place, 304-876."
3229. '
oporta medicine ond CPR .
--9882.
Community Building, 8 -7
inl-led - l d
3108.
Beagle dogo. Coli 614-387·
4bdr. renchwhh-2,000
oonllet
Don
E.
Morrio,
Su·
0663
147.100. v.,., oanve· 1871 12x60 Uberty, remo- Yard Sell 4 Family 23rd •
Bob'o Morlcot,ll!lo·
peo'lnt-t of Meip t.oc:ol oq.lt.
nlonlly located. 'tl bloctc ta deJed. wood hMtlf, 1wning, 24th. 3'h miloo from HMC 3-lomlly,
•tlchoalo,
ot
,I:U
loudr1'hlrd
ton. Tues. Wed. Thura. 9r5 .
2 male kinena. Cell 814·
c:ily Khooll, 3\&lt;1 - · AC, blocko. Coli 614-379· on Old Rt 180.
Baby itema 2 full size tHida,
~\venue 1ft Mlddltp art. Ohio.
261-t210.
Buyon prot-ion plan. Call 211&amp; .
mens clothes.
Wlaemen Reehora, 441·
Large Family Yard Sale 'I•
Set of twin size bQK .P,inga Pen-time -mary - d. 3143 . .
1881 Noehuo 2-3 bod · mile out At. 776. Wetch for Thurodey, 2924 Meedow·
Mutt
ba
able
to
do doriall
• mettrfta. Cell only bt·
room•. e.c.tiea. will neao· ~igna. lots of good clothes. brook Dr. 9 :30 to 1. Miac.
twHn 9 a t2AM. Wad. or worlc a -keeping. Call
liote. Call 6t4-246-6802.
houuhold items, dlahea, Items.
lt4·112·17BI.
Thurs . Call448· 2008 .
Groot !Oc:etion, 1410 oq.lt ..
furniture , Something for
tertii family room, 3bdr., 1'11 Mobile home with add on everyone. Thura .. Fri., Sat. B·femily Thurs. S. Fri. At. 7
rece~·
2 puppiel 10 wlc . old, port Ptn ' lime
betho, llor- bul!fingo. fuH patio, t ocre lend. Call 9-6.
.
tionitt.
1
uporionce
above Bowling Allay ,
Doberman &amp; pert Pit BuU,
neceiNry,
Send' reeume to Groen School Dlotrict, . . 446-7242.
Gaii.O. Stoves, furn ., school
maloo. Colt 448' 2062.
lig Yard Sale 8·6, O.J. clothing. misc.
P .0. lox 410, ,oint Ploe· ouma 8'11% mortgage with
down poy..-t CeU 448- 1178
bedroom White Rd. Clothes, ahoe1,
Holf Gormon Shephord • lint. wv 2&amp;110.
1293.
Hillehome with coeta, booka. eir cond.
148 Layne 81. New H 1ven,
half Collie, 7 w-1 old. Bobyoitter neo&lt;led in my
new fu.mi.,.ngl, set up on
Wad .. Thuro, a Fri.
New itemt d•ily. Thurs. •
1
femole . Cell 614-246-6662 home
when achGGI atarrta. 3 bedroom homt, 3 h acres. rented lot ln . Park · Lone 1------~--­ Fri . 9 - 7.
or 114-246-9838.
2 cor ger-. 2 mi. from Mabile Home Court Coli
Port Drive, 304-876·4444
HMC. Coli 441-2a&amp;7.
,Iter &amp;PM 448-1380.
3 f1mily gerege sale, 2 2 &amp;
Puppies to giveaway born
23. 9 tilt 4 :00. 303 7th St.
July 4, Terrier·S..gle mi•. 1 2
Ownir muot ntl NOWI A 1976 Rtchw&lt;ao4 trailer
New Heven, WV.;
Situations
Cltl814-379-2aoa.
Nil 8AROAINI Home doN
Wanted
bought14•16
to ochoot1. Mlddloport. Call homo.
, _ ond
owned
in good
condby..
Cock·o·poa, Call otter 6,
814-992-e941.
2 6atho.
oingio
girl.
2
bdr
..
F
f
1
41 Houses for Rent
Mon.-Fri. 448-8031.
Hko n - corjet 1n LR. ~ko 33
&amp;rJ'!IB or a e
.
~
VANCANCY:
ond 2 -"""· a rm. 2.2 - · c1tv new wood burner nove,
Uaei.ble couch. chair, full board for elderly - n o. achJot dimiet on Rl. 141 . pc. LR Maite, renge, nice 40 A ferm, 7 room houH, Beum addition. leaH wtth
abe bed frame a. full eize bo• Reaoonoble. 992·1022 or Auumobltl. CoU44e·8147. cabineta, ea,OOO. Can be barn, tobaCco base. pond, option, 3 bdrms. 2V:z b1tha.
springs • mettrns. Cell 986-4418.
.... on Bua.ville Rd. ne•t to fenced peature, for inform•· 2 acre&amp;, fenced yard, wood
8t4-317-7828.
For ule by o - Modem 3 . Loynn Fumituro. Coli 448· · lion coli 446·2371 . For burning fireplace. family
Ride wanted to, Buckeye bedroom houM ideal tar 217Z.
room, e. c., eppliencea',lerge
oppt. 6t4-B37-1081.
Part SiameH mother Cit HAlo ...ning
6 :00· newly weds or a couple
bnement.city water &amp; g11.
2 kltton1. 2 bliic:tc 1 0:00 p.m.SIIrtintl Sept. looking for offordlble family 1969 Ricftordoon 2 bdr ..
1600 mth. with 1100.
female puppioo . Cotl 614· 11 . WHI help with gao. Call residence, nice yerd, kit· u.&amp;oo. 1919 Elcono. 2 35 lots &amp; Acreage
applied to purchase price.
689-4706 or 742·2328.
912·1207 .
chan, beth. utility roam.
Cai1814-986-43B7
bdr., 14,600 Coll614-266·
aingle car garage. 2 miiH 1068.
Collie puppies to give awey. Vecancy for elder1y man or from Hofzer Haopitel at
North Meigt County Route
7 wlco. old. Coli 992· 7683 . woman to be taken cere of in Rodney 'VIIege II. U7,000. 1978 Neahu•. all elech'ic, 2 Lot for sale in Mercerville. 3 33. Small farm &amp; houae 3
trailer hookups. electric, ru·
my homtr. Resonable retH. Coli lodoy 814-44e·131111.
bdr. will rent lot. Cell ral water, septiC tenk, bedrooms A appliances with
Puppiet to give ewey, p1r1 Call 614-187· 3402.
446-0t81 or 446 -3243 $8, 000 Call 614· 266· free gos a water well. t260
Chihuahua and pan hound.
Older homo camptetoly ...,.
monthly. 18 ecrea of lend •
8618.
Cotl 742·2889 or 742·
ovotad, ;..cad yord. geroge,
rent nootiablo. Coli 1·6142476.
3 bedroom•. refinlohod Mull tell 1976 Rosemont. 1 , 14 ac level lend with 253· 2323. .
1 8 Wanted to Do
wOod floora throughout.
14x70, 3 bdr. Ready to basement. located in
Old refrigerot&lt;&gt;&lt;. It wortoll
terge mod... olt·in kite'*&gt;.
m'ovo. French City Broker· Twp Elec. a. water. Pri"*l'l 2 houHS for rent and bar for
Coli 992-3237.
bloment. ful olze dlnlng oge Sorviceo, 446-9340.
reasoneble. Consider trades. ule or lease With option to
Tree trimming end setting room with bay window ,_t.
buy. 304-773·6116.
Cell
448-3044.
Medium ailed clog. mostly up. P1inting tower, have l•rv• livingroom with boy
Collie to give -oy. Famolo eJI.perience, F,.. ntimatu. window, NmDdllld liMb.
Building lot Neighborhood 2 bedroom houH; 2314 Mt.
hot been opoyecl. G - dog. a.,.. Osborne. Coli 814- lovely ' - · willlin 1 block
Ave. 8225. month.
Rd.
65•1&amp;0. ee,ooo. can Vernon
245-6141·.
Catl 843·6366.
at all city ochoolo, down·
Adultl,
1
child. ref . a dep .
446· 3844 after 7PM .
town, grocery. An e.:cellent
Call Mra. Buxton, 304-6?6·
3 year old small t...-rier type Chrtstiln lady wiU do bebys· location in good neighbor·
2661 .
black dog to give awey. itting • .typing in her home hood. CoN 448-1197.
Prefers good country home anytime. Ap8che fold-down
House 2 or 3 br. electric
For ule or rent 3 bdr hOuR
with children. Cell 2'47~ e~mper. can 448·9836 .
heat, lincoln Avo. 304-6711·
4866.
In vtntan. Lorge lot, tM~d
5646.
Win do bebyaitting in my contract IVIIilable. Cal 814·
Purebred coon d~ . 304- homeloc:etad in Rio Grondo. 379·2562.
2 story 3 bedroom hou11 on
Ref. ovaioble. Anytime. Colt l - - - - - - - - - 882·3261 or 882-2981 .
Mt. Vernon Ave. t30o ~
614·246· 9229
8 yrs. old , 3 bad rm, 2 -•
~~h o,
month . 304-676-6546 .
femily room with wood
6 Lost and Found
Water wella. drilled • .... ~ burner. Sinole,cargar.ge,on
vlced. Free estimates Call 8 . flet ecr" With .stocked
42 Mobile Homes
Lost in 5 Mile· O.llipolia lt4-992·1i006or814-742· pond. City water in Racine.
for Rent
Ferry eree. bteck end white 3147. ·
Coll6t4 -949-2841.
with some tan. merle Bugle.
long-legged. bo•ey face.
4 bodroom.LR.DR, kitclion,
2 bdr mobile home. Cell
John Buoh, 304·8711-4t06 .
f lllonwl
bath, amen wash. room.
446-0390.
REWARD.
..._.... in porch. 100x100
tot on lith Sl.. Svrocu•.
2 bdr mobile home. Call1
lott Prince tennia rec:quet.
Paneled walls, buift In Cl·
448-0390.
Rentols
Jon Haddox . 304· 675 · 21
Bu1ineas
t,inm. Cenbe.-nanytime.
3388.
Opportunity
Furnished air cond .• ideal forHCKfle for Nte: 3 bedroom.
1 or 2 men . No city tiJI.ea .. ·
Found large bleck dog, 1
r.anch. with ger1ge .
Foster!l Trailer Park ,Call
white tpOt on cheat . Call
For
sale
or
rent·
10JC50
2
I NOTICE I
e50,000. Cell 992-631t or
446· 1 602.
304-8711·4845. 8 · 6 p.m.
THE 01:110 VALLEY PUB· J-::-99_2_·~638_2_._
. -:---:--:-:- bedroom trailer. Rent $175 3 bdr. house for rent t350
mo. plus $100 deposit or mo Call 304-875-6104 or 2 bdr. extrea nice 1cro••
brick
loot blick ond white femole LISHING CO . recommends ot•-· t ,,L t - 8
will sell for $3000. Call 304-67&amp;-5388.
b
.
h
"'~·•
room
from Ponderoaa. ideel for
houu, lrd • Andnon, M.a · 814-367-'7267.
cat on Jefferson Ave . that you do uatnns wit
working couple, nicely fur·
pooplo
you
know.
ond
NOT
eon.
u
,
or
HOUmeble
Answers •o the neme of to send money through the
2 000
4 bdr. specious living room niahed, adultt, no pets, ref.
Sam. 304-1711· 791 1 .
'1 end 2 bedroom mobile &amp; kitch on 5 ,a crei with pine. 8o dep. · Celt 448-2491 or
meil until you have invetti· loen. Cell 304o6621.
homes, furni1hed or unfur· Rt. 160 Vinton. Coli 446· 446· 8262 .
gotad the offering.
Hou1e in Pomaroy. · 3 bed· niohad. Cell 992· 7479 .
· 1372.
!I
Public Sale
rqom,
lorge
'
b
a
'·
Mony
8 unit 'apertment. Wellston.
12•60 mobile home in Syra·
Auction
Ohio. Resident manager, inside improventenla. low 1973 Holly Pert mobile Smell furnithed houae, cuse. partially furnished .
utilitiu. Anxious to alii. home for aale. .Call 614· aduttt only. Call 448-0338. $200 mo plus deposit. 1
· Pooolble
For your nut .... c.ll Emma pooiti.. c:eoh child accepted. Cell 614mongogo. Call 814· Mokl us en offer. Coli !192-7819 after 5 p.m .
Bell, auctlonMr, licensed -ond
114-742· 3021.
Large modern home. 3Y2 992· 7680 .
ond bonded Woot VIrginia 592·11a9, 9 -11 Mon.-Fri . - - - - - - - - l e' 198t Schultz ltd. 3 br 1~ acres, barn. 4 miles from
114·114·2874 any othor
lnd Ohio. 428B177
For aale by owner: 2 bed· · ba1h. total elec. central eir, Gallipolis ••25 mo. plus , 12 X 65 trailer. 2 bedrooms.
time.
room hooM very cloH to microwave. dishwasher. deposit . CaiJ Relph Beret~• 1 v, bath, country localioh .
Gen
. Harting• Pert. In Mid- stove, refrig, underpinning, 614-215-9t7&amp; alter tiPM.
Reference and deposit, Call
'Own your own Jeen·
9
Wanted To Buy
dleport . Coli 814·992· redwood porch. 304·675·
992-2272 .
Sport•-·· lldiH · - · · 3467.
8049.
6 room house, 2 bdr .• 1 b.,
children'• · Notional
We pay cooh for tete model or
LR , DR , K. Excellent tOC:I· 2 bedroom trailer, ki1chen
Nomn. 114,100 lndudoo
clun uHd cera .
t983 Schultz limited Edi· tion . Ref. 8t . deposit re· fumished. couple, 1 small
initial inventoty. atore fix. Reduced. nice 3 bdrm homo,
attic, baeement, garage, tion. 14x70. with 11•7 quirod. Coli 441-1370 after child aCcepted. reference•.
Jim Mink Chw.· Otdo Inc.
ldinlno much
IHtGoneJahnoon ·
304-875 · 1076.
,..,., Mr. Tote 704-274'- ••c. location. option to buy. EJII.,.ndo. 3 bedrooms, 1 'AI 5:00.
Dwnor mey carry. CoH 112· bltha, al etec:, central air and
448-3872
11985.
261l.
.•
flreplece, e•tre inauletior'j, Brick homo. 3 bdr.. 2 batho. Mobile home for rent 3
buill in oter.., . 1· 304·468· garage, 1'12 miles off At. 36, M&gt;droo'm unlumiahed, e2oo
Wonted to buy u - cool a
Home tar nle: 111 N.
1594 0&lt; 304-773-6417.
wood heetere. Swain Furni· 22 Money to ,Loatl
Rt. 110. Call 446-7013 or month. Call 3!)4-8'76-t371
Second Ave.. Middleport,O·
ture, 44e-3111, 3rd. a
446-4327.
or 675·3812 .
hlo.E. R. Yoot.ll2·2174 or 1986 Notlonol12x51. good
Olivo St.. G1lllpoNo, Oh.
949·21112 . .
condition. call 304· 676· Rent or ule freme home, 2 2 bedroom mobile home
HOME LOANS FIXED
1191 or 304-468-1964.
Wonted· Junk eutoo any RATES
bedrooms, fenced lot. in 1200 month . 304 -676 llelaw m ....et ,.,... 8~ aooumeble loon, 3 br, 3
condition. Call 114·388· Fi•ed convention•l
town. Call 446·7013 or 4154 .
.
FHA·
.,.... old. low 80' •. 304- 14x85. 2 bedroom, front
9303.
VA . ltader Mortg1ge . 175-1713 oftt&lt; 4 .
1-:;~=~::::::::::====den mobile home: EJ~tre 448-4327.
AthonL collect 114·112·
nlco, MUST SELL. Phone 4 Roome a both, locetad 68 44
Hondo 70 porto wonted. Call 3051
Apartment
.
By Owner • llench olyle 814-448-0176.
446·1H4 alter 4:00.
Mill Creek. 1126 mo . H6
for Rent
perm~ ttone. 3 bedrooma,
deposit 446· 3870 or 448·
lull -ment, ,_..don Two bedroom' mobile home 1340.
Cooh peld for Ieney Iron or ·
room. Alto- ~~~-. 2 for Nle on EvanMtele Cem·
heavy ln&gt;n bld1. •110 and
Service•
2 bdr. apt. newly decor..ed,
loto, Manmon Circle, Point pua in Morgantown. For Nurty new 2 bdr. house, 080
up for certain Meigo Co.
1146 .,... mo. utHtleo
P!oolllll. By appointment more informetion ,;:all 304· •1&amp; mo. $100dop .. nopoto. p 1rt. to
otone Jere. Old time oup·
poid. Coll875-5104 or
only. 304-171·1119.
board . colt 1·304-881·
Co11 .446-3817.
&amp;7&amp;-1079 &amp;:00.
875-6386.
2711
Plano TunJno and Ropelr.
Brunioenl Millie eo .. 448- 18 ..,,.. ....,. ar leoo, 7 Amorlgo largo truck.,.mpor, 2 bedroom houn In Pomo· Nicely furnished mobile
Wonted to buy ~lftllllll, 26 0117. Clip IIIIa Ill for 20% room houH, - · .,..t. oloopo e. fuUy equipped. roy . Furnilhed or unfur· home in ctty, CA , 1 or 2
mite- of Paint l'loeunt. dl10ount. Lone Donlelo. billldlngo. Polutlne Creek good condlllon . 11900 . niohad. Coli 814-992·2381 adult• only, no 11011. Call
llood, 304-1171·2214.
304-1711-tiiO.
dayo or 992-2609 evenings . 446-0338 .
Rt. 2. 304-782-288t.
• 1... 742-~1111 .

a.

' OPEN EACH

3105 JACIIOII •n.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. lad1. Iron,
w -. cupbolrdl. chelrt,
cheelt, b1aket1, dlahea.
otana lora. ondquoo. gold
end tllver . Write· M .O . .
Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
M•.I'-r,
~
41781 or coli 11 4 ·992·
7780.
Wented old pU.noa. Plying
UO.oo ond e40.00 uch.
Firat floor only. Wrltogiving
directions. Witton Pionoo.
Box 188, jlordlo, Ohio
43941. Call-' 814·483·
1101.

,..,.tory,

Gutters
Downspouts·
Gutters Cleaned
Painting
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

lii~PI

CLINIC

a:~

NEW-REPAIR

loolin1 Worli

IN II DOLE PORT
PAUl £. SHOCmY. D.V.M.

1·8

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

·

I

THURS. , EVE.

Homes for Sale

p.,._,

7/912 mo. pd.

•

::z:

PT. PLEWAT OFFICE

"-J E. Cltflnd,

Transmfssion

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

'

.

PRICtD IEDUCED - A1115e
prtien with I river view -the
larle front pon;h - WIJ ~
the • witll two IllS of d!MIble hnch doors. Th~ cfl!sy
home IS feallar tolllrllifoin1
or iuS! plain old comlorll t.t-

CHESTER-985-3307

''We lenf lor Leu"

1

IIIDOUPORT - Qullity 8 rm ·

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

SCOTT'S

•

FURTHER REFERENCE

•ZENITH
tSYLVANIA
•SPEEO'QUEEN IAUNORY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
We Have 1\ Full Time
Shop Te~;hnician
on Duty

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

For all your wirin&amp; .
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

,

PIANO TUNING

773-5839 or
773-5788

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUA~TERS FOR

CONTRACTING
'DOZER · BACKHOE
'REClAMATION WORK
"Oil FtElO SERVICES
'OUMH~ui;K SERVICE
'CONCRETe WORK

GAS LINES

FREE ESTIMATES
E.M11111WM
POMEROY,O •

, J&amp;F

PIANO TUNING
&amp; REPAIR

SEWAGE LINES

31
· $ ·90000·

992-2196
•

DITCH WITCH
SERVICE
WATER LINES

9+2·2259

243 ... 17~Ytn.•Y
1.11. Prill
MiliUS,'

PAT HILL FORD

I

Middleport, Ohio

your= •ze.

Daily

Insured

.............--------:-~ :.

Pa""" 4776· Misses

........ Seminar

&amp;

PH'. 742-2328 .

Sim (6, 8, 10, 12), (14, 16, 18,
20). Order
$2.75 Ill' . .
M4 !1M

Ill' .. ...... Ill',....
- - s-Ill&lt;19t
..IIIII
.............

We can r•pair and recort radiators . and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

•GRAVEL HAULED

Call For Free Eotimoto

742-2167 or
742-2225

· RADIATOR
SERVICE

..SEPTIC SYSTEMS

BACKHOE
DUMP TRUCK
. CONCRETE WORK
TRENCHER
SEPTIC TANK
COAL &amp; LIMESTONE ·

I

FREEZER
SALE

FREE ESTIMATES

•LAND CLEARED

AM
CONSTRUCTION

Oh10 43215 lelephone i614i·
469-6962

MGM FARM CITY

•

'

TROMM .
EXCAVATING ~

New Chevy ftuck.. ..
FENDER ............. '76.95
DOORS ... .. .. ..... '149.95
HOODS ............ '174.95
BUMPERS .... ,, .... '69.95
GRill ................. 142.50
R; SUPPORT.. ..... '84. 95
TAIL GATE.. ....... '85.00
FORD FENDER .... '69.95
BUMPER ....... .. ... '69.95
Alto Some Car
Fenders Available

Mergs County Uhro
FOR FU RTHER INFORMAl'ION
CONTACT Harry W Oneth.

5·

.'

'

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992-7013

Public Notice

-=-544iMlwslc'c:. -M.;ct;;ii(iil;;

GAS UNES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES

7/19/l mo pd. · ·

,.,_

LAFF·A·DAY

-

••

THE
DITCHING
SERVICE

_

rooms
~~~~2~~~~~~~=====!1
upstairsand · one
two beth;
bed·
~
house. also his· blse-

M'GH££

•

31

.. .... Pt.Pieiiaa·n·i .....

Business Services
.

mo.

Call 614·992-6737

I

•

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

Public Notice
recetp! of a venlted complam t It
s1gnrfrcant public Interest 'e)(t·
sats a public meettn g may be
hel d As to any ac tton lncludtng
rece1pt a t ver rlred complamrs
any person may o btarn notrce
of funher actrons, and addr tr onal 1nforma tron Unless oth·
erwrse provrded rn notrees of
partr cul ar acrrons . all communr
cat ron s shall be sen t to Heanng
Clerk 0~ PA. P 0 Bo:-: 1049
Columbus. OH 432 16 Ph

....c. ....,
...,:::='--·
... ,...._,

'

MoJ1Ihly Payment

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Futer Service

8/10/1

PHONE·992-2156

EAPII·A·Car, Ihe modern way
to drive the v•hicle ,of ygur
choice.
No Down Payment
~ower

Wanted To Buy

caliber. The• fun gun a are
trenat••bl• to mo.-t any
lndivlduol. Prlceo U60·
1·760. Call for dltollo or vloit
ut ol 2310 Eootern AVe.
6 -BPM woedoyo, ell day Sat
a Sun. Coli 448·1122.

We'd like lo 1nlroduee you to

992·6128

Printed Pattern

Loreua'a Guna.we now have

a selection of nlect fire gune
from 22 caliber to 44

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

*PLAQUES

Middleport, Oh.

~ . .___ .. ...
u .•
u. ......
.. ,..... _

11 lillfMII~TUI•

'•

-.. -a........ .

fullnflll•ft ,,.,.,_,.,.,.,..... ,..,...,..., ..

Reduce Slfe a feat with
Go8on copouleo a E-Vop
' water pill1' fi:ruth
Pharmacy.

Pomeroy, Ohio

50 Riverview Dr.

curotte Jumper!

- Concre1e worll

- Plumbing end electrical
•worlc
(Fr. . Estimates)

992·6215 or·992-7314

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Co,urt St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

t

- Rooting .-.nd gutter W9rk

V. C. YOUNG Ill

•

Secretary of State Sherrod Brown
reported today that articles of
Incorporation have beEr! llled with
his oftlce tn,CQJumbus,by Sllverblrd
Satellite Systems, Inc., Reedsville.
Incorporators are Ellen c. Shelburne, Davld L. Shelburne and John
·F. CookwltbDavldL. Shelblmeas
agent.
.

,

- Addonl and remodeling

SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLEQ

Bob &amp; Jean Gilmore

The Daily Sentinel

CARPENTER
SERVICE

9

The Daily Sentinel Page 13
Se\es

Announcement•

SWEEPER on~ oewlng ml·
chine repair, part1. and
8Uppliea .
Pick up 1nd
delivery , Dtvlt Vacuum
CJ11ner~ one half mile up
G..,rgao CrMI&lt; Rd . Coli
814· 4411'0294.

YOU

,•

Become corporation

.

Allllllltltt.l' lllt'ltl:
3

team will also be on hand to discusS
the soU survey. T'hewaaontourwlll
end at the bam,'1:J!ere Mlc!J:aels has
under construction 11 new sJlo and
feed system for his bee! cattle. The
Meigs ~WCD Ladles Auxiliary will
provide refreshments to conclude
the evening. The Michaels farm Is
located on Coonty Rood 25 t;n
Chester Township between Chester
and Five Points.
•

c.

Pometoy- Middlepon. Ohio

"Business Services

Twilight tQur planned

Dyke to Royal Petroleum Prop.
Na than E . Vanaman, Beati'lce B. Colwell, Uoyd D. Colwell,
Inc., Ratification of Right of Way,
Vanaman to James E . Vanaman Sandra L, Colwell to John R. Acors,
Columbia.
Parcel, Rutland.
' ' Lot '1:1, Ollve.
The Meigs .SOU and Water
Alfred M. Conard a ka AHred '
Alfred Randolph, deceased, Ber·
James David BaJTett, Vtrgtnla
Copservatlon
Dtstrjct along with the
John Partlow to Don Mills, J .B. Conard to Sally Ann Conard a ka
nice Randolph, Alfred Eugene Gao Barrett to Rodney, Keith
Meigs
Cooperative
Extension Se!'·
Sally Conard, Tracts , B€dtord.
O'Brien, 3 acres, Salem.
Randolph, Betty Jan Riebel, Atfi. Bailey, VIrginia Gau Valley, 5
vice has planned a twilight fann
davit, OUve.
Floyd A. Hawk, Mary A. Hawk to
acres, Rutland.
Victor L. Brown, Allee M. Brown
tourattheMichaelsFamUyFarmln ·
Bernice Randolph to AHred
Adm. of Veterans Affaf? to
to Al\ie B. Parilow. Anna Mae Carl E . Smith Petroleum Inc.,
Chester TownShip fQr 6; 00 p.m . on
Right of Way, Ora nge.
Partlow. Parcels. Sutton.
Eugene Randolph, Betty Jane Lawrence M. McQuaid, Audrey M.
Tuesday, Aug. 28.
Ra ndy 0 . Dudding to Ohlo Power
Riebel, Lot, Ollve.
McQuaid, 1 acre, Rutland.
Allen C. Hellma n, Jean F.
1be tonn Is a 450 acre operation
Charles M. Sauters to Leading
Glepnls H. Hottman, Dolores K.
Heilman to Royal Petroleum P rop. Co., Right of Way, Sutton.
wit~ chickens, beet and crops as the
Steve Price, Mary Pr ice to Ohio
Creek Cons. Dlst., Right of Way, Hottman to James E. rl!ddle, Right
Inc .. Ratification of Righi of Way,
main
entellll'ises. Operator Gacy
Salisbury.
of Way, Chester.
,.
Power Co. , Right of Way,
Bedford
Michaels also rents additional acres
Glenn~ !-Iottman, Dolores Hoi·
Ralph Day, Retia Day to Robert
Robe11 E. Preston, Patricia S. Salisbury.
for crop production.
Ernest
F
.
Baker
,
Phyllis
E.
Tammy
Klein,
Pt.
Lot
302,
fman
to James E . Diddle, 1.4117
Klein,
Preston to Royal Petroleum Prop.
Items of Interest to be vieWed and
Sutton.
acres, Chester.
Inc .. Ratification of Right of Way, • Ba ker to Paul C. Hammack,
discus!led
on a wagor1 ride around
Delpha J . Ha mmack, Parce ls.
Colum bia.
Uoyd Michael Harmon (X His
Gretta Louise Carnahan; j{atle S.
the farm arech!~ ~.spring
Mark) to JuanltaDarleneHarmon, HIU, deceased, Wallace C. HIU,
Madge J. Dye to Royal Pelro- Sutton.
develoPlll!llt that supplles the
Parcels, Rutland.
Ralph C. Hill, Atfldavit, Sutton.
le um Prop. Inc.. Ratifica tion of
Uoyd Wol!e, Kathryn Wolfe.
chicken billdlnes. corn productloo,
Gary L. Gearhart, Kay A.
Gretta LoulseCamahan,,WIIllace
Right of Way, Columbia.
Marlene Thompson, Donna Van
Snodgrass, C. Hill, deceased, to Raipli 1:::. Hill, pasture J'TUIII8il'llllt, woodlan!l
Rodney C. Howery. Ma rilyn Meter, Eldon Eugene Van Meter to . Gearhart to Robert
lnfonnatlon InclUding clear-cut opEmma J. Snodgrass, Lot, Scipio.
Atfldavlt, Sutton.
Howery to Roya l Petroleum Prop. Nara E . Hartman, Henry C.
erations and some of the conservaGarnet L. Harbrecht, deceased. , . ConardAtor, NevaAfortoPhllllp
Tnc., Ratification of Right of Way, Hartman, Lots, Chester.
tion practices established on the
Dorothy
Debra Ellis, Cert. of E. Hawk, Ste~e L. Hawk, Lot, farm 01/er lbe years.
:Columbia .
Bernice E. Vanaman; deceased,
Col~bla.
Trans., Pomeroy VIllage.
W.E . Engle, Garnet Engle , Nathan E . Vanaman, Affidavit,
'lbe Meigs Coonty SoU Survey
Roger Van Dyke, Kathryn Van
Rutland.
George L. Colwell, Jr .. Barbara

22, 1984

&amp; Aluminum

SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

~2~3=;P:ro:f;e:ll:;:io:n:e~l==

"BNutlfut, Custom
Bull~ Garage•"

1...:---------

Clll fer"" sidinltS·
tllllltts, 949-2801 or
949-2160
Na Sunday Coli•
3 llllc

•

'

�'·

4The
44

They'll Do It Every Time

Apartment
for Rent

J ACKSON E STATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) hal
ond

S198

per

mon1h for two bedroom ,

11

with S2DO dapos1t locatad
n•ar

Foo~lend

64 Mite. Merchandiae

and Spring

Musical
· Instruments
Girl's thoe ,1latea. size 4 : 2 1 -~-------­
prs. used tOO. boota,.slres 1
111~ 3. Girl's dre1111, ai:ze 7 .
For Sale: Conn trombone
Call 446·0185 after 4 p.m . ~lth extra plastic mbuth·
pleciand mute, S75.00.Call
992-2712 anytime.
Firewood. pickup load .
•40.00. delivered; •30 ot I·
farm. 304·B96· 3396.
58
Fruit
&amp; Vegetables
Almost new square tub;
Maytag aluminum wringer
waaher. used 4 times. 1200.

Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Call448-2746 or leave

message.

Furnished apt. 919 2nd ..

304-BB2-2267.

Red rnpberries. Taylors
Berry Potch. Call448·8892.

z08

Dunro~in Fruit Farm .
Grapes, wine. juice. e. t•ble.
You pick or buy at ulel
room. Al1o have applee·. St.
Rt. e&amp;1 S .E. of Albony.
1PM· 7PM , 814·898 ·629B.

Scottlman Ice machine.

Gallipolis.. $176. Men only. ": • r...
Call 448· 4418 after 9PM .
• ""l\C:::I

needl work. Make . offer .

304·876· 3010.

Newly remo4eled 2 bdr ..
equipped

kitchen,

67

KIT 'N' CAN. YLI ®br Lerrr Wright

cen1ral

air, S200.' B21 'h Second
Avo.. Gallipolia. Call 446 · ll'i"'·2158.

4th Ave .• Gallipolis.

Shrubs pruned. lewn reseeded, retaining walls,
sidewalks, patios ; bark
mulch &amp; aawduat . Contact
Bruce Davision. Call 614·
266·1427.
1977 Cue const. King
bockhoe. len than 1500
hrs.. excellent condition.
Call evenings after 6:00.
Call614· 698·8189.

BoY• Winnie-the-Pooh snow
auit 21 · 281bs. u . Boya size
6 coat with hood 83. boys
sire 1 8 mos. coat $1. lnfant
car ..at $1 6, highchair • 1 0.
Call 4411·3.3 89.

Fllrished garage apt.. 4
rooms 9 bath . adults only.
Call 446· 9279 otter 4PM .

Queen size hide·a· bed · $80
end Bobby Mac car seat
$35. Coll446·1.097.

Rlveraida Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Cit.izen1. $130. Equal Housing Qpportunltiea . 61 4 ·

992-7721 .

8 ft. bed liner. 8xc. coftd. ,
8110 . Coli 814-245·9525.

'

Newly ramodol8d 2 bed·
room. equipped kitchen .
8226 . Deposit required . Call
614-992·6319 or 992·
2B16 .

Firewood for · Ale dump
true~ a, pick up load. Call
after &amp;PM 1114·258·8689or
304-,526· 7768.
Smith a. Wooaon model 520
revolver. 357 ·magimum.
brush finish. fix sided, 4 in
barrell. exc. cond., '300
firm. Call448-9478 after 5.

Newly redecorated. 1 bed·
room. partially furnished ,
S226. Dopoolt required. Call
614 · 9'92·5319 or 992·
2B15 .
VIllage Manor Apts.. Mid·

dleport. (E .H.O.) has 1
bedrm apt a. for rant. the rent
starts at $201 a month that
includes all utilities. plus a
S200 security deposit is
required. We just laid· new
carpet In them S. they're
located near a doctor's Used Furniture ·· dryen. and
office&amp;: 1hopping areas. Call TV:s . 3 miles out Bulaville
614-992 ·7787.
Ad . Open 9am to 8pm. Mon.
thru Fri .. 9am to Spm, Sat.
Now 1 bedroom opts. in 614·446·0322
Middleport., Furnished or
unfurnish8d .Call 814·992· GOOD USED APPLIANCES
5304.
Washers. d,Yars. refrigerators. ranges. Skaggs ApIn Middleport on N. 4th pliance•. Upper River Rd.
Ave.. 2 room apt. No beside Stone Crest Motel.
children . call 1-304-B82· 614·446·739B .
2666 .
County Appliance . Inc .
1 bedroom lower apartment. Good Used appliances and
Total electric . Located TV sots. Open BAM to 6PM.
acrosa Pomeroy Fire Dept. Mon thru Sat. 448-1899.
Call 992· 6216 or 992· 627 3rd. Avo. Golllpolia,
7314 .
OH .

l----------

Apts for rent in Middleport,

Why pay more Trade Center
Pomeroy, 81 New Haven, W. Furniture Outlet, Kanauga.
Va. Call614-992·7611 .
Ohio. Open 9· 7 PM .
5 room unf':'rniahed apart~
ment. 3 room furnished:
apartment . Call 992-6434
or 1· 304·B82-2586.

Dinotto ·sot 4 chairs. UO.
28.000 BTU window air
cond .. S250. Call614·446·
2677.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. houaes. Pt. Plea11nt
and Gallipolis . 814- 446·
8221 .

Chest of draweri. 15 dr~wer.
Call 446·42B9 after 4PM.

Nice 1 and 2 bedroom
unfurniahed J!~Pirtments .
304·675-2218 before 6
p.m .
Sleeping room with kitchen
privilege: No drinking. 304676·8B74Mtwoon 3-7 PM .

Living room suite . 100 per·
cent nylon cqvering, orange
and avacado. Very good
condition. 1225.00. Call
992-3688 .
Picken a used furniture . 304·
676-64B3 or 676 ·1460.

Oak tobacco sticks 26 cents
aa. 2 tobacco pr111us. Cah
814·38B-9727.
·.
White vi.nyl under skirting fOr
mobile home. used approx.
8 mo,.' $100. Call 448·
B141 .
.
8 HP gas air compressor 30
gallon tank. CaH 614-256·
1260.

-:-------·1•Country Crafts Oak products, dealer of aolid oak
reproduction furniture. Con·
kle's. Tuppers Plains. Ohio.
Also open Sundays.
4 chain sawa for aale. All like
now f100. each. Call 614·
742·3010 avos.
·

64 Caliber Hawken Muzzle
Loader with full length brass
scope. New with powder,
bolls, S. pouches. $250. Coli
814· 742·3010.Even .'
2'h ton cantriol air condl·
tlonor, complete with H coil
• tubing, new compressor.
U60. Call814·992· 5437.
Caae con1t. · King
bockhoe. len than 11100
hrs., excellent condition.
Call oveninga after 5:00.
Coll 614-898·6189.

Building Materials
Block. brick, sewer pipes,
windows, llntela , etc .
Cloude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . c111 814-24&amp;-5121 .

House fOr sale or will conNow open for bu1ines1, sider trade for mobile home
Mountain State Block. Rt. of equal value, 304-773·
33. New Haven. Complete 6174.
masonry supplies. 4", a:·. 1------~--12" block. Delivery service'Mill St,pplll'\
Phone day 304·8B2· 2222,
l'iening 882·3239.
,
II ciV 1 ,tuc~

NOw doing custom saWing,
304-a82· 3416.

61

66

Pets for Sale

Farm Equipment

9 N Ford tractor, front end

l9ader, unicorn WQOd ·splitter, boom pole carrier. box
r~bbit pens with teederJ, lug
nms, truck topper. Call
614·742·217B.

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all bre•ds . Heated
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppies':
Stud Service. Call614-446· 1 -::-:-----:----~.~
7795 .
'
Cub tractor with cuttivator&amp;
plow . Phone 614 · 949 ·
2545.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
814-367-7220.
8 N Ford Tractor. grader
blade, good cond. S.900.
BrlarPatth Kennels Profes·
slonal All-brood grooming. Coil after 6 p.m . 304·676·
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa- 6393.
cilities. English Cocker Sp ...
· tractor. 4 inCh
niel puppies. Coli 614-388· Gravely
mower with 1ulky, good
9790.
•
•
cond. S1 ,000. Coli after 6·
D,.gonwynd Cattery Ken- p.m . 304-875-6393.
nels. AKC Chow puppies,
Siamese kittena, new litters
livestock
CFA Himalayan and Persian 63
kinono . Caii614-448· 3B44
affor 8 .
Pee fowl, fancy Bantam&amp;,
5 good looking, well pheasants, goaso. Call 446·
marked, Reg. Walker pupa. 7241.
Out of 2 good coon dogs,
with good breeding. I own Paint mere. 66 inches at
both dogs. Come ·and go side, bred "-ck. Black Appy
hunting . Can 614- 268· sire, t460 or "-st offer . Call
1415.
614· 742·2110.
Baby rabbits pedigreed Re~t
t3.00 each, aloo 3 mo . old
while flo• dooa $5.00. Call
1114·245· 6457.
AKC Regiaterod Shetland
8hHPdog (Shehle). male,
nood8d for bro8dJng. 448·
21112. Tri ·color or dark sable
preferred.
Malo Pit Bull for Ale. Call
614-266· 1210.
'
Siam... . 9 mo. neutered,
declawed. to good home,
UO. Call 446-8042.
1 -::----~----­
3 yr. old tiNy, chestnut color,
gentle but not broken . Call
614·258·8779 altar 6PM .

Pigs for sale. Ashton, W. V.
1
Phone 304· 676· 2743 or
304-676·2126.
.Cows with c1lves. bred
heifers. Now Idea No. 323
corn picker. Phone 304895-3319.

64

Hay

M•tching couch, love Hit:
chair, and 3 tablea. Good

AKC Reg. Chihuahua. Call
614· 38B-8532.

1---------AKC German Shepherd pupplea, 7 wHico old. Shotoand
wormed. f100. 304· 876·
4883.

71

Autos for Sale

1978 Chevrolet Monze
""'ka offer. Call 814· 246·
9668 .

ahape.
1300.00.Call
Exorciaa~
1980 Honda Accord 6 opd.
bike, 145.00.
949- -~~;;;~;;~~~~~
AKC reglotored
3039.
Terrier for stud
hatchback, AC, cruiM con·
304·875· 8781.
trol. f3,000. Call 814·246·
Yanama Acou1tlc guitar 1---------~ 9328 . .
1100.00. Woman's size 8 23 conoolo colored RCA TV,
roller okatos. •46.00. Call 3 pc. Hdroom auho. 20.000 1976 l!ontiac Gr•nd Prix
992·3209.
BTU air conditioner. 304· auto.. PS, PB, •1.000. Coli
7;73-91B5.
448· 2354 .

B/~2/84

Luv fiberglas• truck topper ... ...,'
Call814·246· 6163 .
. ,

EVENING

s~rViCBS

&amp;:oo

81 .

Home
Improvements

71

. Autos for Sale ·

1979 Pontiac Trans Am for
sale. T top, outlt'linding
condition. Call 992·6945 .
78 Trans A.m. perfect 1hape.

$3900.
1848.

Call 814 •992·

19B4 Monte Carlo SS blue.
Fully equipped, now condi·
tion. No tradea. Call 814·
949·2181.
1 968 Chevy Cornaro 350,
iutomatic, good condition.
$1 ,000. Call 843· 5368.
t'977 Buick Regal. V· 8, a.c.,
am·fm radio. new radi1l
tires. SUiOO. Coli 992·
3379.

72

Trucks for Sale

1970 ChavV PU truck 307, 3
1pd. tran1. good 1ire1. new
paint, 1.9 50. Call 614.· 245·
9456.
1978 International 4070ii
KT460 13 apeed, 2 now
rurs. E~cellant condition.Aoady to work.ll14·247·
2083.

® Rudlng Rook.,_
Dat.Trek
8:3o • (J) (!) f'48C News

1977 Ford pick· I!P f · 100,
runo good, S1,000.CaU 992·
5981.
67 Ford "h ton ftat bed truck

$160. 304· 773-6966.

73

Vans &amp;

4 W.O.

1979 Chevy Beauville van.
loaded, ·~•· cond., $4,660.
Call 304·176-7746 or 6.1 4·
446· 0830.

197B Scout 4-WD, auto.
PS, PB, AC, AM· FM caaa.,
tilt wheel, lu-ge rack,
aunroof. Call 448-9340 or
304-676-6B98.
1967 Joap. 4 cyL ·F·heac(,
hard top, new tiraa and
pans. 304-875-5885 after
6:30pm.

196.6 Pontiac Tempest 1 mint

condtion. with' rri'anye•tres,
Aol&lt;ing $2,000. Coli 9923732 or 992·6776.

74

For Sale:

Harley o ·avison 1979 Super
Glide only 6,300 miles, like
now, garage kept. Call614·
367· 7750.

~!dorado .

19J7 Cadillac
Phone 992· 7462.

:n

Motorcycles

@ Mutle Sportai.Aiok
(]) .c.a~ lkirnS1t '

(]) D ()I.BC News

• Cll III en News
® IlDdy Eleotlto
7:00 e (J) PM Mra IN

._,

.

Monte Carlo. new motor. exc interior. good tiraa. I ~--------­
S2,200.00 firm . 304·676· 1978 Honda K modal e• .
cond., S BOD. Call 446·
3383. call otter 6:00 .
3262.
1973 Nova. •soo. Good
condition, 304· 676· 3180.
19B1 Honda 760 cuatom,
like new, garage kept, 2, 6QO
1 976 Corvette, low milaa, mi. Call 614·367-0394.
AC, PS, PB, aloe windows.
AM-FM c~a1011e, T top, 19B2 Harley Davison wide
must tell, 304· 676·2163 glide, e•c. cond .. 3,000 mi.
or trade fOr 4 WD PU truck.
after 6 PM.
·
1----~--- Call 448· 7363.
1977 Plymouth Volaro. blue
ttetionwagon. air condition. 19BO XII 80 din bike. good
AM-FM radio, 4 door, 304· cond . Call 614-245-9687
anytime.
676-2989 or 676· 2372.
19B3 Hondo Goldwing In·
terstate; fully drened. includes am·fm cusatte. ater80, 3 light bara, pfu1 many
eJCtra chrome acce11oriet
$6600. 304-773·6944.
70 Choville Malibu, vinyl
top, a-c, bucket Hill. 1
Super bargain $1060. 304·
876-6053.
Trucks for Sale

1--------,- -Truck Toppers . .Moat aiua,
different colors. John'•
Auto Sileo, Bulavlllo Ad,
GalllpoUa, Oh. Open til dark.
Call 446-4782.
71 OMC stop van, 14 ft.
boat • trailer· 40 Hp John·
son engine. CaR 448-4:!37.
1981 Ford Courier with
topper, 5 opel., mint cond.
For oalo or uado for .uood
9"'· . Call 814·216· 67B3
even~nga .

1979 .GMC 'It ton pickup
with topper. Oood condl·
lion, 446·28a3.

197B Hondo O'd yosey.
$700. Call614-992·6437 .

Marcum Roofing • Spou~;r·:w,
in g. Now installing rubber _:-:
roofs. 30 y~ars experience. f r

roof. ··~

76

Boats and
Motora for Sale

1973 Thompoon Trl·hull,
111 hp Mer. cury.
d.ooo.oo. 304· 676-385B
or 671·441B.

76

Auto Parts

. &amp; Acce11ories
8 h . truck topper good cond,
•ISO. Ca11448-73113.
2-new Ford fendera &amp; 1 new
loft hond Chevy door. Coli
114· 218· 1280.
1979 Rovena Flat whh
aidel, aprud with air ride.
Excellent condition.' Aoady
to work. 114·247-2013.
Cheverolet 310 turbo tranamioslon, 150. Call814·119l!17B7.

78

Camping
Equipment

7:30

(!) . . _ Coo•-tlon

(ll Dr. Who
!II WhMI"'.One o.y at • Time
8:00 D (J) (!) Fecta of Ufe
Bleir' a aell·coufodeuce suf·
fora- Jo lOoks Ike al)e

a,.,._

oappoarecl.
(J) Duren Duren·· VIdeo

c:on-1

~.0:. ~ '84: SCCA
lkuhw ' rT,..·ArnCov·

arage of this nocing event is
preaent8d from Elkhart
Lake, WI. (60 min .)
.
(() D Ill Fel Guy Colt,
Howie and Jody become in·

ALLEYOOP

\lolv8d in stopping a perom-

ilitary op8fatlon led by •
Iormor Groan Barer Colonel.
(R) (60 min.l
D (() (II Cm r itt Bill
Moyers and Char1es Kurlllt

look II iasuos and people
across tho country. (60

"
•
I

Building-Remodeling. - con- ·
crete, drywall. electric;:af.t...
roofing, flooring, framing, ~
kitchen-bathroom installlll'- ~·
tiQn, door-window fr.lming. ' :
304-676·2440.
'

.•

pioo-.

Jane Goodall who lives

among tho wild chimpar&gt;zoos of Gamba Stream National Park in Africe. (II) (60
min.) [Closed Captioned!
D MOVIE: 'The 11oiorna
CrownAfr.ir'
8:30 • (J) (!) ..... Slept
.... Joey • nude caleridor photo of Jet • oileo that
his father wants to auction

GASOLINE ALLEY

All we have
left is forty
dollars?

;

•

9:00

.'

1973 Torry Campar 22 ft.
fully Hit contein8d, good
cond. 12500. Cell after 5
p.m. 304-171-5393.

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Lorr Iota. Call
814· 992-747 .
Trailer spaces for rent, eewer
and water fumiohod. 3041175-1071.

79 Mo~or•' Home•
•

Cempere

,_..

(J) MOVIE:

o--11oe

WINNIE

(J)
@

BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES • IEIIVICE, Open
dilly I to I:Jq, lat. t 10 4,
Cloearllu......,. U.S. lit. 10.
Coolville, Oh 114·187·

3381,

'One Flew
Nat"

c.-·.

100 Club

ESPN'a
Ringside
R..,._
(]) e ()I '84 v-: The

J MVEAGUT
FEELING )IOU
THINK SHE'S

SH ULAW\S Plumbing and
Heating, 211 Sixth St1,
Point Pleaunt, W. Va. 304·
671-6420. llcenaed and
inaured.
·

RepubliCan NaticiMI Con·
vwotlon Coverage of tho fie.
publican National Convention Is prosant8d from
Dallas, TX. (2 hrs.) [Oosad

COME EIETWEE~

oe.

Captioned]

e (])

• '
·~·

Ill

Republican

CorN•••·

Nedonlll
(]) Survivll Spooial 'Tiger,
Togor.' Tonight's program
looks at tho lifo, history and
habits Qf tho Bengal tiger. tRI
(60 min.) (Closed Captioned]

Good-1 E•cavating. booements. footau. driveway•.
Hptic tankt, landscaping.
Call anytime 614-446 '.~
4637. JomoaL. Davison, Jr. ·.
owner .

® w... Throutlh 1he 20th

Century with Ba Moyers

BARNEY

"The Twenties.' Bill Moyers
talks with nineteen Americans who iv8d through tho
1920' s when tha nstion was
not quite formed. 160 min.)
[Closed Caption8d]
9 :30 @ PKA Ful Contact

J .A.A .Conatructlon Co .Au·
tland, Oh.II14 · 742 - 290~;
Baaementl, Footers. Concrete :work, Backhoe's.
Dolor a. Ditchor, Dump
trucka. 6 water-ges-sewar-·
electricellina•.

Kar8bi

10:00 (])

w... Through the 20th

Century with

.•

e

SEWING Machine repairs ••
service. Authorized ; Singer .
Sales • Service Shef'llan lo
Scluora . . Fabric Shop, ·•
Pomeroy . 814·992-22B4. •

_.

®Goepel-'~

--:::;=:::;;:::::::::::
:•· :
-==
.
85 General Hauling ••

Tonight' a program recounts
tho eflona of a born-again
group of former hippies who
ware able to convert o Guo·
temalan general to their

- - - - - - --- ""·

James Boya Water Servin.
Also paola filled . Call 114· ;::
251· 1141 or 814-441· ,.
11711orS14-446-7911 . , •

church. (60 min.)
1 1 :00 • &lt;Il (]) • (]) !II •

.._

.

Ken't Water service. Wells. J.~:
cloterna, poola 11118d. Phone' t367· 0123 or 367· 7741
night or dey. •
JIM8 WATER .SERVICE.
Cell Jim Lanier, 304-1711·
7387.

()I
.

(J) MOVIE: ' Pcorky'all: The
Nato.(
()) Anilther Ufe

PEANUTS
~·s

TJ.IE WORLD

FAMOUS SUROEON ON

lollS wAV TO TJ.IE

.108

.A7

ByOaw.Wud .
JIUFieiJeeeby

+AQJ87

WEST

....
•n

DO 'I'OU 'Tl41HK

uyoae

z•

•'

\

always plead that tJoe dlamood eipt
dDeard a club wbile ruffinl in wu milled up with biB hearts. After a.
cl1rmnry. A cltzb lead would marcb heart lead, Eut will take two ...,.
and a king Ill the major suits, edt
illto llle jaws of A.q.
Wbat'a tJoe 8111Wer? We suggest with a diamond and walt to take the
tbat Eut adopt a pbUooopby of caleu· oetUng trick in clubs.

• .,.,r

..

t~~u

br THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROIIII

DOWN

1 "You -Me
Love You ... "
5 Ertents
11 Metal
u Dried
comfood
U Salamander
14 Primates
1S Girl'sllllllli!
11 Mellie
mea••re
17 Conceit
II Snake
• Sailor
n Maintain
Z! Spanish
lady
23 BGrrndary
Z4 "South
Pacific"

1 Indian
lower

zSports

palace
3 In half
Hnner
(p~ixJ
5 Showed

mercy
I Scottish

Yesterday's Answer

Jl1US1Clall 19 Carry
7 Olemistry Z! Gossip
suffiX
23 Nautical
8 Concenrope
trate
zc Dilatory
' Opulent Z5 Put
11 Mrs. in
away,
Spain ·
as
U Auk genus cargo

•As aof fact

Z8 Portion
Z8 Lariat
31 Asian
COWltry
35 Gender 31Arab

gannent

'P"'.,......,"""t,.-,.....,,..,

girl

Z51clentieal

• Pla)'1mgtrtl;rl-+-tConnelly
Z11breefold

~~~:"ted

32Ccmmon

suffix
32Born(Fr.J Y H 34 Doohickey ...
31 Nipa pabn L,-Hn Intertwine "'
. :18 Greek
b-+-1---&lt;
letter
31More
pt'l!(ound

41 Soviet lake '--"--"--"--"--..__
DAD.Y CRYPTOQU()'I'a-Here's bow to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter sland5 for another. In this sample A is used for tbe three L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single letters,
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPI'OQU()'I'a

IPHU

TVXPAQGH

XYPA

YM

..()) ...c"'

.

(J) MOVIE: 'Emenuelle in

Gnlucho
(]) WKRP in C1r1c1nnM1
• Cll_ New •~overs

TII18T·ATE
'
UPHOLSTERY 8HOP
1113 lee. Ave., GaHipolla
I 1 4 ·441· 7133 or 114.4441: '
1133.
.'

'
Jated risk and overcaU with one heart.·
U the result ill unfavorable, he CIIFI

Doom

~ng
Weeldy
1 1:30 D (J) (!) Tonlgllt Show
•

EAST

QOP KYAP LGM FMVKA QOGQ

DOdd Couple
11 :111@ UPN'a HOrN

DIET iS IMPORTANT
. 'AFTEl SUR6~?

.A

Ia our bridle iDiocy we are told to
•AK14
.Jt7U
~ dllc:retlolllll our overcalls. U
+un
.QJ101
we clorr't bave • pod ault, we may be
.KUS
tloubled aad rt a boi reroMus number
of trlcb. Altbougb that's good advice,
soum
+KQ1U2
iloowiDC wileD to !pore Ibis iostruc·
•Qs
-tiollll tbe marli: of e~eoce.
.KSf
Ia tbe dlagamed blddln&amp;, East
.102
pa..cl after tbe openlnc C~~HH:tub bid
by Nortb. He bad takeout-double
Vulnerable: Both
streDph, but be lacked apade support .
Dealer: North ·
Wbea Nortb railed to two spades,
West N- Eut S..rlo
Ert tbeD doubled for a two-lllit
· 1+
Paa 1•
.._.. Doell
blame West for
Pus
Dbl.
4+
leacllllc ooe of tbe two aulta - dla·
Pus Paso Paa
EFIOEICil - wbere lie felt more tricks ·
mlebt be lakeD? Note the bad result. .
DeClarer could see that the eon- ·
Opening lead: +Q
tract would -waly ~pend upon the '-----'-1_______.
club o-. He allo saw a slight

~ :.~1a/W--

(]) llndenb •rv= Ship of

OPERATIH6 ROOM ...

Uphol•terv

liH Mor••

'Tho Twllr)ties.' Bill Moyers
talks with nineteen Ameri·
cans who livod through tho
1920' o - tho nation was
not quite formed . 160 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
(jJ) Newawatch
Colaae Plglldn Prev·
lew
10:30 ())My uttlll M8rgle
(]) MOVIE: 'The Bucca-

S. 'Refrigeration •••••
- .,...--------'-·'.,

87

off. (II)
D (J) (!) 1184 Republic¥
Nlltloia.l Conwentian Tom

Brokaw •""""" . . , _ .
of the Republican National
Convention from Dallas, TX.
(2 hrs.)
(]) MOVIE: 'Rillky au.;.

i

Oo•or Work by Ted Hanni. '•
Dltchea, ponda, ro8da. land
clearing~ etc. ~all Motor Car
Brokers, 4411-8692 .

NORTH

UI098

estra clwlee. Aftet' playlac ace and
lllfll of dlamonda, he trumped a tbird ·
min.)
di•EfMlD'I in dummy. Now he Jed a
(])(lf)NaticiMIGeogi .... oic:
.
apade.
ud poor Ert bad to wi!l the
lp 1 cilll '/'mong tho Wild
~.·
Tonight'a . p!fll"m ace. Eut cabed the A·K of
bMrta, but.wa eod played. 'l'be lead
progrorri docunWtts the
og .......,.. of Dr.
"' • reo! ou1t would allow declarer to

~

Rotary or' Cable tool drilling. · ·~ :
Moat wells completed aa~ . .-!day. Pump sales 1nd Mrvi· \
cas. 304·896-3902.
· ·

judgment
for an overcall

io adopting to college life
l&gt;enor then lhe io. (II)
(J) Miulng , _ ... Four
Tnaa ~ Thia doc:u"*""'V fOCUIOII on a gradu.te atudlnt, • houuwife, e
Blptist ..........
who hove mystorioully ct;.. .

''
'

-::---:::---:-----

Jam9JJac~y

A11enta M PltUIIurvh

GET your carpet SHIP .,
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal, , .
furn,iture cleaning. frH esti-.
mateo. 304·876· 2296 .
.,•
BASEMENT WATER ··-.
PROOFING . Unconditional
llfeti.me guarantee. local
references furnished. Free:. .,. :.
eetimatea. Call coll.c::t 1· ,~· •
614· 237· 048B. e a.m . to &amp; ' ·
p.m . Rogan Basam,nt-.:~
Waterproofing.
)

Electrical

and

(]) D (() Femlly Feud .

"
••

1983 Shaata 20 foot
camper ••cellent condition,
•10.100. One ow-. Call
attar 6 :30 p.m., 304-195·
3803. ,.

(J) Tic Tee Dough
@ lneide the POA Taur
(]) Mejor Lr ra • lrebell:

.

84

EnterUIInment

D

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump ·
removal. Call 304-876· "
1331 .

Excavating

-.

....,...,.

,Motorola, Ouazar; arid
houao calla. Call 304-678· •
239B or 814-446-2464. · •

83

Ytlllrelly'al JumbiOo RAPID CRAWL ICEBOX LARYNX
AniWIM': What he got when he read ll'le story about
thOse body snatchers-CARRIED AWAY

MMNIIII/Lahrer

D Ill ·
ToniJht

ANNIE

JIM'S r&gt;LUMBING I! HEAT·
lNG . At. 1; Bo• 365, Galli·
polio. Call 814·367-0678.

r

Newroloour

RON'S T~evl8ion Service.
Specializing In Zen~th and.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Nightly

®

..
\\
'

Hariev Davidson 19B.I FLH
Clonic 614·247-2063.

FOR SALE: 400 KTM Bike,
1800.00 .. Call 992-6904.

=(])

~

GENE ' S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN,
acotchguard·water extrac tion, deodorizers, FREE; eati- .
mates. Re ..onabla rates.
Gone Smith, 992-8309.

82

I XI

(!) WhMI"' .....• (() WhMI "' Fonune

LOSER

H &amp; S Home lmp,ov~menta ·'
vinyl siding, . roofing, r(K)m ~
addition, storm windoWS. "
atone. Call 814 ·387-0409 · ··
or 814-387· 7244 .
· ,:) '

76 Electric Glide FHL
Dre•ser 83900. Sporster
Chopper t1900. mustoooto
appreciate. Call 814-992·
8846.
.

Honda Urbaf' Exprea1. E~t ­
cellent condition . Cell 614·
992·3612 .

•

)FoR(

Thla

[lot18118ir;ment

w....

~

C:IIRTEA'S PLUMBIN9
AND HEATING
,,·
Cor . Founh and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614·446· 3988 Or -··
..
814·446·4477

1980 Hondo Hobbit Moped
$225.00 Call 992·8961 .

(])

"c.

(~IOI•IOII'OWI

()) .... CGme the llrldn

(]) lwobd - ' Son

WHAT " HM-5

PINAFOFI:!i.' COULD
UNc:&gt;oue"T!PL."(

XXX

Anawerltete:"(

@.......-:-

specializing
in 9B67.
built up
Caii814· 3B8·
·
•
PAINTING· Interior and ••· "
terior'. plumbing, roofing, 0
•om• remod•ling. ;zo yrt. ~ ._
a•P· Call 514-388-9862. ·•. .
...:_:_

AINGLES ' S SERVICE. ox·
perienced carpenter. ·electrician .. m~aon , painter, roofing llncluding hot tar
application) 304-675-2088
or 1178·4110.

)

tMUGNIP'

(J)R"'- ~

~~

I

INAEVLE
I
r J ·I JJ

(])
MMNellllahrer
NewetiDur

·~~

C It S Painting. Now-Sept.
$26 off. Sign-up time of
eatimate-additlonal $215 off.
Free estimates: Cell 4461097.

rJ

CI)Ne~~WT-HWII

~·

K)

·=-~-- -

(]) III D Cll

@ EIPN'a SportaWomen
(]) Andy Griffith
(!) News/llpor1a/WNihor

~

_______,_..

(J) (]) D

~

-~,--,...--~··"..,

b~;;~~~;~~;:r~~~;;;~;;~

D

I

(J) MOVIE: 'Giarlal'

----:-:-----~\:;'}

72

1977

at Gallia Co . Camp Groundlt j•
18,300.
•

•
·..;''llo

&amp; Grain

Good milled hay in bern.
$1 .60 "-'•· 304-676-4800
or 304· BB2-3329.

WEDNESDAY .

be,...., _.,

Can,ing tomatoes , pick T!)P CASH paid for late
your own for .4.00a bushel. model u't ed cars. Smith
Delbert laws,on , County · Buick· Pontiac, 1911 East·
Road 32 , Eagle Ridge Rood, ern . Ava.. Gallipoil1. · Call
Racine. Call 949-2069 . ·
614·446· 2282.
Tree ripened canning or 83 Sappora. take over payments. mu1t Hil . axe. cond.
~r=~i:a
9it~~~~j: Call446·2146.
Call for current variety .
Pleaae bring containers for
bushels. Also; early crop 1976 Ford · 4 dr, good
apples, Bartlen pe1r1 and engine. ciHn inside, $700.
prunq, plums re1cty in late B58 4th AVe.. Gallipolis
August. Bob's Merket. Ma· after 1 PM.
son, W. Va .. 304- 773·
1961 Pontiac 4 dr .. rebuilt
5721 . Open doily till derk .
ttr:~9ine, auto., PS, PB, good
radials. everything works.
59 For Sale or Trade S400. Call 448·1822 avo.

1- - - - - - - - - -

••'

71 ArlstXcrat travel treiler·, ~
aelf contained. Can
at til-at houte on Lincoln Pike •
at Centenary. Call614~2a&amp;- ·~
1343,
•

1 ;.::h:9:

3 rms . &amp; bath . Inquire at 122

Television
Viewing .

----------------~~ · ·
19B4 Sponan 30 ft. aol
contained, awnlnu••lr. sM ::

CANNING TOMATOES :
Pichd,$4.00;Pick yoUr own
83·.&amp;0; Bring containan.
Houra 10:00 to 4 :00. Other
ti~" by ttppointn1ent. Raymond Rowe phone
(814)247 4292.
For
tomatoes.
Pickuleyourcanning
own, bring
your
own containers. Eugene Davu.o, call614·247·3263.

3 bdr. apt w·family room,
St. At. 141. &amp;260 mo. Clal
446-4940 attar· 6PM .

&amp; Campera

'

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 15

Pameroy Mid llepol1, Ohio

79 Motors Homea

1;;===;:=====

one and two bedroom•. rent
sta rting at • , 63 for one lu'~~

"-droom

22.1984

.Wednesday.

Sentinel

22.1984

VE

QOP

THBSPMDP

A Q P PH Y M W

NU

Q OP

KYMS . - NGXQGAGH WHGDYGM
Yeaterday's Cryploqaote : MAN'S REAL TREASURE IS
mE TREASURE OF HIS MISTAKES, PILED UP
STONE BY STONE niROUGH 1110USANDS OF
YEARS. - JOSE ORTEGA YGASSET
l.

�'.

Wednesday. August.22.

- Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

.

:Mayor's Court

1SM

'

JTPA members reappointed

Mayor Richard Seyler fined eight s~ . $47; Cheryl Thomas, speed,
people while 17 forfeited Uielr bonds $43; Terry Laudermllt, Middleport,
Tuesday In Pomeroy Mayor's traffic light, $63; Timothy Walker,
Langsville, speed, $43.
Coort.
· Four cases were dismissed and
Seven persons were tined whlle
two cases were turned over to the
six forfeited bonds In the court of
M:eigs County Court.
Fined were Thomas McClung, · Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Mason, DWI, $375 and costs- served Tuesday evening.
Fined were Ronald Ginther,
five days and expired Operator's
Pomeroy,
no operator's license for a
license, $63 and costs; Randy
motorcycle, $25 Qlld costs; Shirley
S!!!wart, dls0rderlymanner,$63and
c'osts; Richard GUkey, Middleport, Bush, Middleport, disorderly
stop light, $53 and costs; Edward manner, $25 and costs; Kenneth F.
Stiles, Middleport, speed, $8 and Mitchell, Langsvllie, possessiOn of
c;osts; David Persons, West Colum· marijuana, $100 and costs; Sleven
bla, W.va., consuming beer In a Snyder, Columbus, red light, $10;
motor vehicle, $63and costs; James Sandra Reltrnlre, New Haven,
A. wm, Pomeroy, consuming beer speed, $15; Hobart templeton Jr.,
Pomeroy, left of center, $10 and
In a motor vehicle, $63 and costs;
David FoUrod, Pomeroy, destruc· costs and DWI, $425 and C\)SIS-·10
tlon of property, S3J3.·suspended to days; Hugh D. Thompson, Langscosts and restitution; William vUJe, DWl, S425 and costs--3 days.
Forfeiting bonds were Ronald J.
Cleary, public Intoxication, $ll3 and
Patrick, Gallipolis, speed, $47;
costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Betty Peggy Gllbeaut, McConnelsvllle,
Sheaf. Columbus, speed, $43;. Gre- allowing an Intoxicated person to
gory Knapp, Middleport, speed.~; operate her vehicle, $lDl; Debra L.
Patrick Soulsby, Pomeroy, traffic Johnson; Wllkesvllie, DWI, $450;
light, $63; Jerry Hicks, Charleston, LarryR.~es.Addlson,DWI,$450;
speed, Sl'&gt;; Rick Shaefer, Middle- Jimmy Anderson Jr., McConnelsport, no eye protection on a vUJe, DWI, $450; Don Lovett,
motorcycle, $43; Marvin Craig, Middleport, disorderly manner,
Pomeroy, Wegal left tum, $43; $100.
Larry Stewart, disorderly manner,
$63; Max Wilson, Pomeroy, public
Intoxication, $115; Roger McDa· Special meeting set
nlels, Langsville, open flaSk, ~;
A special meeting of the Meigs
Daniel Taylor, Middleport, expired
CountY
REACT wW be lleld at 7: JJ
operator license, $63; Jeffrey
Stamper, Peytona, Ohio, speed, $50; Frtday evening at the Meigs Senior
Arthur Conant, Athens, speed, $45; Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights,
James Couch, Pomeroy, open flask, Pomeroy. All members are asked to
$88; Harry MQZ!ngo, Bermeo , attend.

Eleanor Thomas d Pomeroy and
James R. HlllorSyraCU~ehavebeen
reappointed to the Private Indu$tl'Y
Coonttl, a group which oversees the ·
Job Training Partnership Act
programs In seven Soulbeastem
Ohlocountles.
·
Chosen by county ~Ions.
councll members review and a~,
prove budgets and serviCes otteied
througllthe new training act.JTPA.
which replaced the Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act

(CETA) last QctOber, fOCIIMI CCI
fundlni

Football

tralnlni pfOII'*rna ID help

the uneinployfl!l ttnd Jobs In privati!
!ndustty andencourageethepnvate
sectllr's participation In shaJIIJI¥
programs.
In Ron
Mrs. TllOmJias and HUJ jo ..
.
Ash of Rac!IW as ~igs CoulltY
representatives on ·the ccui1C11 ·
wlilcb covers a 'se!Viee ~
area Including Atllens, Gall.la,
Jiocklllg, Lawrence. Meigs PenY
and Vinton Counties.

prev~ew

See ~tory 011· Paae a

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17 thnl ~
FRJUAY thru THURSDAY:
'liial
And triu~h.

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By The 4"'0"l•ted ~
economy · ~a slowing from Its 8.9
Continuing their seasaw ]ll!rfoi-. Pe!cent groWtb rate lll!t In the ftrsl
.....mance of. recent months, o~ to half of l98l. ~ ·saJd..Most
. factories for dutable goOds rose 2.2 economists predict the expansion to
peacent In July after .falling 3 slow to halt that figure In tlle lastslx
pel'Celtt In ·June, the Commerce months or tlieyear.
'
Department reported.
'lbe July gaiD was "essenllaJ1Y
IAtlatlon at the retaU level, -catch-U~Jy followtng an un•••eUy
meanwhile, edged up only 0.3 rapid decline In June," said Jerry
pel cent last month as a sharp drop Jaslnowsld, chief economist or till!
In gasoline prices ·helped otrset National Ass.Q..clatlon of
Increases lnJIWslng and food msts, Manufacturers.
the Labor Department said.
. In Its lnDatlon report for July, the
· Orders . for durable gOc;ds Labor Department said food pioes
so-called' "big-ticket" Items such as rose 0.3 peacent and housing costs
major appliances and aulllS - had · climbed 0.5 percent. But gasoline
twnbled 6.5 percent in April and
prt"ces fell 1.8 per t·e11t and 'are now
reboonded 4 percent In May before down 14.7 percent fiom their peak
fa,lllng In ~~and then rising again level of March 1981.
In July.
'
The cmunerce ..· Departnlent's
Tile movement indicates the chief economist, Robert Ortner,
said there wa5 "still no sign of
acceleration in Inflation, whlcll
sJiouid make everybody . very

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Although. Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce President Paul Krotts has
also been consulted, he felt he could not speak on behalf of cl1amber

members frorri that area, sheets reported. ··
. ·.
However, he assuted ,Sheets, .he would call an .ex~tlve meeting ot
chamber members Ill discuss the·nuitter.
•
Knotts.alsO told Sheets that.lftheGaulpoUsChamber agrees to back the
driVe, 11 clause focusing on Route 35 IIi Gailla COunty would probably be
added tQ the petltloJL
'
'
'
'
· The Middleport Chamber Or Commerdl wW meet Tuesday to deckle
Whet!ler ilr not to back ihe petition drive.
The pe!itlon ~ort got wlderway at Ialit week's Meigs County Fair with
Sheets ga~ l,!OO.stgnatures herself, In addition, to the signatures
gathereil by otht?r chamber members and Interested Individuals.
·. The petltlon Is to be circulated by Nelsonvllie citizens at Nelsonvllie's
upcoming Parade of the HWs.
'lbJ8e wanting to circulate petitions on behalf of the chamber, should call
the chamber' otrlce at.992-51ni or Mrs. !;heets ai 99Z·215l.

•

•

New .health corm-niSsioner
appointed in ·Meigs County·

5 SUBJECT

WET-N-WILD

Ohio, Th'urs~ay, August 23, 1984

•

.

$2 79;· .1

-e nttne

By NAN()V YOAaL\M
SaOM .tall writEr
·
A pilltlon drive for j~patures favoring the prqxJSed access road from
·Routee 7 and 33, In the Rock Springs area to the Ravenswood Bridge, plus
the COIIlPletlon of Route 33 to Athens Is going well, according to Jeilnlfer
S1!eets, appointed last week to head the driVe.
·
Petl,t!OIIs inay be signed at Various Poinel:vy and Middleport businesses
and wW 10011 be avallable In buslnesaes throughout the entire county. .
The ~ of Comine!'Ce Is backing this drive which Is
gaining support from other area chambers.
'
Roo' Aall, president of' the Pomeroy Chamber, has contacted Richard
Gullitll, executive director of the Logan Chamber ol Canmerce.
· George Drach, exeCutive dlreclm' .of _the Atllens Chamber and Earl
Parldna, presl&amp;!nt or Nelsonville's Chamber; llave also been contacted.
'lbJ8e men _elqll1!lllll!d Interest and optlrnlsmregardlngthe pilltlondriVe
effort, acaJI'ding to~. ~. a candidate for State Representative.
PetitionS have bEen sent to each man so that signatures might be
gathered In tho8e areas.
·

THE MOVIE PlACES

SUNGLASSES
Chic Fashion - Mirrored

•

Road petition drive doing well

RENT MOVIES AT

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUN., AUG. 26TH

See Charlene's oohanll on Pap 9

at y
.

MostlY cloudy with scattered

A marriage license bas been
ISsued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Kevin Gregory Be1zlng, 26,
and Laura Lee Provence, 22, both of
Pomeroy.

Art show reflections

•

e

weather forecast

·Maniage license

Slory oo Pap 7

Stoey~Pip6

.Six emergency squad runs were
veterans MB'Mrlal Hosp~; at
madeTuesdaybytheMetgsCoonty
4:44 p.m.. PorJ1ei'OY went w 1 •
Errlel'gmcy Medlcai,Servtce.
Lincoln Heights for Elza GUrnore to
RJitland was called at4: ll a.m. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; • at
StarHollowRoadforMaxineHobbs
6:50p.m. RacinewenttooakGrove
to Holzer Medical Center; MiddleRoad lor Carl Schultz to V~
port went to StoneW(IOiiApartrnents
Memorial Hosplta~ at 10: ~Racine
at 1: 39 pm. for Eslhter Kissell to
went to Southern High SChool lor
Holzer Medical Center CUnlc; at
JamesAcreetoVeteransMemorWI
2: 53 p.m. Racine went to BUnd
Hospital.
Hollow Road for Homer Delong to ...----------~

Several court cases completed

·

Connors ·wins again

Emergency squads answer six calls

showers alld thunde1'9torms this
attemoon, high near !l'i. Tonight:
WINNER ANNOUNCED- Paul Barker, clrculalion dlredor or the
cloudy with a chance of showers, iow
Ohio VaHey Publlsldng Co. which publishes 'lbe Dally Sedlnel, the
near
60. Thlll'!lday: some morning
G•Dipolls ~ and the Point Pteaeant Reglater, )ll'ftlfllt8 Cbrtsty
cloudiness
beccmlng mostly swiny
Ramsburg, 40illi Kingsbury Road, P•navy, wiUI a mlc..-ave oven
by
aflemlon,
high 75 to Ill. Chance of
which sbe won through a prize ollerlng at 'lbe Dally Sen&amp;luel's
rain
10
pel
rent
this morning, 50
oommerdal emiblt at the Meigs Coway Fair last week.
percent this afternoon and tonight
and near zero pacent Thursday.
Ext M FOI"llCCIII&amp;
Fair Friday Uawlh Sunday.
Several cases have been heard by pay a Judgement of $8,121.00 to the HJsh8 711 to 80 Friday, near 80
SaaurciiU' 11111180 to 81 Sundl!y. Lows
Judge CharleS knight In 'he Meigs National Mine Service Company.
County Corrunon Pleas Court.
A trial byjurywasdeniedRoberta In the liBII Friday and'Salurda,y and
Coal Power, Inc., was ordered to C. O'Brien, et al, In a case agallist 81'0111111 . S..nday. 1
------:------~-------------'---------.. George Collins, etai. Thlscaselsto ,..----------~
be continued.
Tile case of Eva Marie Dalley
.._\t\.tL0/1-'~
,.
Enterprises, Inc. against Property
· ,. YIJEO ~
Protection Company, Inc. has also
been continued.
STATIO!
In other court acttoll, the cases of
Jack L. Ritchie against Dravo and
the Racine Hmne National Bank
against James M. saunders, ~t al,
have both been dismissed.
. ALL FRUTH PHARMACIES

56 pints ·of blood .

..
I

I

· ta · 111w ,.,.; ua•l'lgurM

'

..,..: eo...n•oe CuJf'DL"**f

· RilE IN Dl.JJL\BLE UOOD8
- Orden for durable podl to
U.S: factotlea .-e by $U billion
!q luiY, tllie pamalii5ilt n!ipGiill.
(APia· .....,) .

In other developments
Wednesday:
-u.s. workers' weekly eernlilgs,
adJusted for Inflation and seasonal
factlll'S, rqae0.1peacentlnJulyafter
a 0.4 pea cent Increase In June and a
0.9 peaa:ot decline in Mliy, the
Labor Department said.
-Dun ,. Bnldslreet Corp., the·
business servlDes coocern In New
York, said Its lndl!x ot hrsten
failures continued to CJecline In the
month ended Aug. 10, reflecting the
strengthortheanlllnicexpansbt.
-Cmstnlctlon or new houJing
units in tJie t1rst half or 19111 roae l3
pel'Celtl from a )'1!111' eerller, to
931,600 units irorn 8K, 748, said F.W.
. Dodge, a divlskln of McGraw-HW
lnfonnatlon Systems Co. Secood·
quarter housing starts rose. 9
pea cent to 529,W4 units from 4116,5:l5.

A ·new beaJth cmunlsSI6ner
and a new member to the Meigs
County Board of Health have
been .a ppointed, Jon Jacobs,
county deputy hilalth commissioner, BnJIIIt!IICed today.
The new health commissioner
Is Dr. Margie Lawson. Racine
dentist, who has been appointed
Ill a two-year tenn, replacing the
late Dr. Sellm Blazewlcz.
The new member ol the health
board Is Robert C. HW, Racine, ·
who has been ilamed to till the
unexplled tenn, March, lll85, of
bll late father, Albert (Babe)
HW. Jr.. Racine.

Dr. LaW8011 ifaduated from

1

t

. ~ Hlgli School at AI·
bany and dld her IIJl(lergraduate
WQI'k al Oblo Un!Vl!l'll!ty, gra·
dilating cum laude 11119'15 With a
bacbeJor or 8Cience de«il!i! with

. :r.ooloiY as her maJor and rnloors

In cllffnistiy' and Spanlsll. She
also studied in Vera Cruz,
Mexico. She graduated from the
Ohio State Dental School In 19'18.
A member or the Ohio State
University Dental Alumni Assn.,
Dr. Lewson was named the
YOUIII Career W1D1811 ol Meigs '
County In 19lll and was named to
Outstanding Yciung Women In
America In 19111. She has served
oo the Planned Parenthood or
Southeast OhJo Board of Trustees and sei'Ved as a comrnlssl·
Clled officer with the Public
Health Service. She Is a member
ot the American Dental
Association.
A member of the Sacred Heart

Cllureh in Punemy and Beta

$6.4 million
sought 'in suit
A Columbia Township man Is
asklngfor$6.4 mlJllon in damages to
his farm, aJJegedly caused by
mining ~atlons or Soul\lem Ohio
Coal Company.
Mark Spezza, Route 3, Albany,
filed the suit In the Meigs County
. Cmunon Pleas Court Wednesday
asking to berepaldfordamagetohls
bam, weli and water supply, pond,
timber and tlelds and streams. Tile
suit also alleges the , damage
continues to occur.
sWthem Ohio Coal Company,
along with !he other defendants · American Electric Power and Ohio
Power Company, used the longwall
mlnlng technique of mining under
the S~a property, Spezu
charges. A special permit from the
Ohio ·J:lellartment or Natural ~
sOurces was needed to use the
technlque,itls reported.
.
' · Thii suit alleges the coal comJl"ny
assuml Sppna ".no notlcable dilm·
age or effects" would occur. The
damage Is not the "natUral result ot
the removal• of coal, but ratht?r
caused by the removal of (lounda·
lion) support to the property,". the
cwrt action continues.
· Spezz•

has receiVed threats

8i,8fnsl his~ and]ierson, the
suit charges.
A Jury trial Is demanded by
Spezza. .
American Electric Companies
·and the Southern Ohio Coal Company 111!\oe 28 days to reply to ·
Spezza' s claim.

Coal talks collapse
WA.SHJNGTON (AP) - F.peds for an earb' and aanlcable
ooa*actaeUI&amp;n&amp;itbetwdeotheiiOft
COlli !qci!'*Y 111111 the United Mine
Wadllen lla\'e cotrar 1, !!pillre&amp;m&amp;J for both sides CGIIfllln.
'Die 1•,-.n.mber United Mine
Wui Ilia. of Amalea and the
Bllumlllous Coal Operaton Aaiod·
alliin 3flllll'l'lltly had been making
Poe lleadwa,y ... wrlous lsru8.
Bolb llkles prlvateb' voiced OOIIfl.

ASSUME DUI'IES - Dr.
Margie La-, Ractae cit• 'hi,
who bu been named to a two

year term ·as Mefp ~
lledb
~.above, Is
and her husband, WWiam Mlcllael, and their 'two children, . welcwued to tbe I • depertMichael Gene, 5, and Laraine ment by..Joa Jaco!B, deputy

Slima Phi Sorority, Dr.I,A\VS(lil

L_....

... ....:.
,Brook, ·2. reside on the Bashan· ,._..., biiiMI'I I lllfil • 1M
uuv
Keno Road. Rwte 1, Long . tom ....... Roberi c. BBI,
Bottllrn.
RacW, ._ 11eea llllllll!d to
A natlye of MelliS County, HW
the . . . . . . tenn ol Ids latf!
atte,n~ . Racine High.' School
and the ParkersiKil'g &amp;lslness ' fatber, .A llen (lWJe) Bill, Jr.,
011 tbe Melp Cowlty Board ol
~. He has bi!en employed
with the Westem-Soutbern Ute BpjJth.
Insurallce Co. for the past :,()
yetii'S. He Is a graduate
Ute
Uncleiwrlter.l Training Cooncll
(Continued on ·

•.

nn

ciJence ahout~llllaooordwell
llbeadolthe!!ept.*lexplratlonolthe

current pact.

II*'P feD apart Tuesday .
oflldals of both sides confinned, allhough neither side would
But

DIJbl,

ot

say what problem developed or
what dlllerelllleS precipitated the
ba I Imp of negotlalions.

Reaga)ll prepares_to accept s~cond nomination
'

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Mon . ttwu s.t. I:Ma.m. tot p.m.
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·Prices Good
Thru Sun.
Aug. 26th

E . M•In

PH, fn ·2fS5

Fri.,.dly S•vlct

Pomtroy,O.

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Rush ·in_and take advantage
before he ·returns!

DALLAS (AP) - President Reagan, .refUeling Ills
and dreamers and great sools al!d heroes- the kind
rhetorical attack on the DemtJCiats llours before
ofJII!OPI!!Whomadelhlscountiyandwhokeepltgolng
.ilcceptllla nomination for a second tenn, said today
every day.
an "eccentric clique" had reduced the DemocratiC
'"lbere Is one pax:ty that sees the future not as a t:lg
Party to a ''wOm-oo.t, dlscredlted,'far·left ldeolo&amp;Y·"
black cloud waiting in rain on yoo but as a .great and
Reagan told a Sl.lma·plate Republican lu~ that
happy challenae waiting to be seized." ·
''we will be cootent to be the minority Jliii"r no
Callln&amp; his own party "the party lJl new Ideas and
more.''
fresh initiatives ... the party of tilt future," Reagan
He said the DemocraQ. wllo tor half a Century haw!
said the choice Ill November wW be between thAt and
en~ a two-IIHJIJe ildvalltaae in voter •lilkb•tloD.
''the"other p&amp;rtywlth ltswom&gt;Qit,dlacredlletl;far·left
ldeuqy that caters to special ~ ''
·no Jonaer speak' ''for the Wlll'ldnl peqlie d thla
cnmt~y.'' ·
.
Earlll!r, In remariiB ~ for a lun"'ICII""'-"" of
''The leadersi!IP or the DenpczatlcP.rty -llld by
HIIP""'C RepubllcaiiS, Reagan dellcrlbed Hlspan!cS
that 1 mean the eeet!lltrlc clique that wucanq tile · · aa "an IDcreaaliiiiY lmport3lll part or the Republican
shots In l!an Franciii.'O and aot the rank-ad-fill!
ClOilltlm.''
•
mimben - the leadl!nlllp or the Danocrallc Pu1y
In remarks prepared b' a lwdleon organized by
has abendolled the prlndpleB that ftamed their
the RepmJican NatiCIIal Hlspanlr ~bly. the
ptesldentuld, "The oilier party COilllders Ameri·
PIJ'IY,''Reagansald. '"ibeyan!nolongierthepartyol
JtUeiiCII and JackiCII, and ·t hey speak no more for
calli Of Hl~pe~~IC elM
a. aepai'ate lntereilt llfOUP.
the worldnneqlle ollhll COODily.'' •
. We Republica"' aee you u ··repr· t'~ "'t 11!1;.
It Ill the GOP, Reapn said, -"'bat speekl tor
mUimBam of cur p1rty anct' our countiy:" '
.
Wlll'ldnl people and enbepn:aeun and rtak·talierl
·
'.

Citing the Issues Ills strategists hllve been saylllg his
administration shareS with a broad SI!I'Ctrum of
Hispanic voters, Reagan predicted "that In the years
to cane Ills the Republican Percy that Americans of
Hispanic descent will tlock to In ·ever-Increasing
numberS."
..
''We are nOt for handOuts and welfare,'' Reagan
said. ''We are for Jobs and opportunity.
·
''There's been a lot of talk lately abQut famlly.l'm
, glad to see some or the other side have flniilly
illscoilered traditional
Well, we don't walt for
, eleetlm years to proclaim wr aJleglance to tho6e,
thln&amp;S fulldamtDtai to wr way or lltl!.'' · ·
·
EarUer, at an ~ prayer breakfast on the
ammlng after Ids nmiliultion withOut opposition,
.Reapn warned, ''We pois!ln our society when we
remove Its ~~.~;.. we coort
conupttm wllen we leave II be!:eft.l( !Jelfef." ·
· "I do not speak as a tbeo"''l!•n ·~ aCliolar," Reagan
'said. '
As for ~·· acceptance speech tonlgh.t, White
HouR Chll!f or Staff James Baker said on the NBC-TV

values.

•

~'Today" show t!W.t the president would offer "a ·

revieW of what he found when he got to Washington,
and what he's been able to do In four years to restore
this country's pride and confidence In Itself and what
he sees for the next four" years.

Reagan's unchallenged renomination, as well as
that of VIce President George Bush, went as scripted
Wednesday night.
Along with Ills running mate and Barbara Bush, the
president and tlrl!lia4Y Nancy watched the roli call or
states on te!eVlslon !rom Ills suite at Loew's Anatole
Hotelliear downtown.
The vote was 2,233 for Reagan with two
abstentionS; 2,231 tor Bush, two for others and two
abstentions.
"We've· been sweating this one out," quipped
Reagan, who had noq~poSitlon. ''Wetlnallymadell,".
he declared In mock seriousness when Mlssourl's
votes put·lilrn over the ~.
Asked whether he would accept the nomination,
Reagan replied facetiously, ''I g~~ess so.''
•

i

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