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                  <text>Fage

JUesday, OctOber 25,

12-The Daily Sentinel

Consumer prices
.rose last month
WASHJNGTON (AP) - Consumer prices, propelled by higher car,
food and housing costs, rose 0.5
percent last month in the biggest
Increase since May, the government reported today. Price. had
risen at the slightly more moderate
pace of 0.4 percent ln both July and
August.
·
For the first nine months of the
year, prices · paid by consumers
have risen at an annual rate of 3.7
percent, rais!ngthepossibUltyofthe
lowest one-year figure since the 3.4
percent ofl972.
Prices climbed 3.9 percent last
year in what most economists say
was a recession-linked improvemen! from the 8.9 percent increase
of1981 and the 12.4 percent 19&amp;l.
In all, pricesrose2.9percent In the
12 months ending in September.
ioday's Labor Department report
said.
' ·Prices rose 1 percent for new cars
and 2.1 percent for used autos,
increases reflecting "the discontinuance of the latest domestic rellate
programs and low inventory of both
domestic and imported 1983 models," the report said.
Used . car prices have risen
sharply in each of the last five
months, increasing at an annual
rate of almost 20 P.E'rcent !rom April
to September. ,
Food prices.. rose 0.4 percent in

Subdivision

September, the biggest gain since
the 0.5 percent Increase of April.
"The lrnpact of the prolonged
summer drought was reflected in
higher prices tor fresh vegetables
(up5.3 percent ), fatsa!)dolls (up2.6
percent) ....and poultry (up 1.9
percent). "
Food costs had gained 0.2 percent
in August after declining in the
previous two months, and they are
up 1.9 percent over the last year ..
Meat prices have been falling
because many ranchers, faced with
soaring feed bills this year, have
greatly re&lt;juced their herds. However, that action also has cut the
potential supply of meat for next
year, making higher prices likely at
that time.
Today's report said housing costs·
rose 0.5 percent in September,
including increasesof0.5percent for
homeowners and 0.7 percent for
renters. Housing prices. which had
rtsen just 0.2 percent in August, are
up 2.1 percent from one year ago.
Gasoline prices rose 0.4 percent In
September compared with a sharp.
1.1 percent In August. Such prices
are 8 percent below their peak level
of March 1\R!.
Overall transportation costs rose
0.8 percent last month, with car
prices accounting for most of that
gain. and havegained2.8percentfor
the year.

Moore receives prison tenn
Jerry Ray Moore. 19, Pomeroy,
was sentenced to a term of one year
in the Columbus Correctional FacUlty by Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight Monday.
Moore on a bill of information
prepared by the ,office of prosecut!ng a ttomey Fred W. Crow ill plead
guilty to a charge of breaking and
entering of Modem Supply Store,
Pomeroy last week.
Prosecutor's investigator, Paul
Gerard reported that Moore had

three prior felony convictions, all for
breaking and enterlng and was on
parole at the time of the latest
offense.
Moore was apprehended last
Thursday as he was leaving the
Modem Supply Store and all
properly taken In the breaking and
entering was recovered. Moore was
remanded to the custody of the
sheriff to be transported to Columbus to begin serving his sentence.

Mas()n County_ _.:.:&lt;C:.:.on::.:.ti::.:.nu::.:.ed_tro_m_p:_a.:::.ge_l_l_ _
various ways to find out if her
husband was alive and were
overjoyed when they thought they
!f3W him on some footage on
television . .
"We were watching television,
and we thought we saw hlrn on
television picking up some rubble
from the explosion," she said.
Family members also te lephoned
a hotitne number In North Carolina
set up!orMarlnefatnilies to check to
see if William, who has been a

Marine for seven years, was still
alive.
"They just told us how many were
killed and they told us it was hard to
explain, and to keep watching the
news and they would try to keep us
informed," Sarah said.
The Edwards', Jackson and
Marie, aiso have another son in the
service. Wilbur Roy, 19, whoisln the
Navy. He is presently aboard the
carrier Kennedy which is steaming
toward Lebanon to relieve the ship
presently stationed off its coast.

Meigs County happenings•.
Missing person's
report filed here

Veterans Memorial

(Continued from page 1)
used tosupplementcandysupplleslf ·
necessary. Feeney-Benneit Post
128 American Legion, haS given
$3)) and the town has given $400 to
help with party expenses.
Schools are preparlng arl work In
·. conjunction with the party and
· prizes will be awarded for the best
entrles. The art work will be
displayed in business houses of the,
town. The Middleport PTO will
stage a festival on Saturday and
Vaughan's Cardinal will be holding
its annual pumpkin pie baking
competition on Saturday. En;ptoyes
In stores will be ln · costume on
Saturday and possibly Monday and
stores will be holding special sales
on Saturday as a parl of the
observance, Mrs. Scally reported.
Judges for the costumed are being
TRUCK OVERTURNS-'11ds IS-wheeler !IEflli coal !lllck road. 'lbe ~er, Eugene Gulgnet, said that he selected and among them will be
left lbe -road 1ft order to avoid strlddng anoiher
tnack look to the ditch where II overturned ~
Rep. Jolyn Boster of Gallls County.
vehicle which had stopped to make a left band tum
momlng. 'lbe tnack was traveling south on the Hoole 7
At the sugg,estion of Councilman
Into Union Ave. 'lbe truck Ill owned by William '1'.
by-pass near the Union Ave. lnlf:l'!leCIIon on the rain
Allen · Klngl council voted to plant
Herron,~
evergreen trees along Broadway
near Logan St. as a beautification
project.
Council also voted u11anlrnously to
install a new street light betWeen
MUl and Race St., near the William
Grueser properly to discourage
loitering. This was done· after
By DEBORAH ZABARENKO_ television plcrures, radio, ln phone because he didn't want to scare us,
Councllma'n
Bob Gllmore said that
AssoclaUd Press Writer _
numbers passed hand-to-hand but he sometlrnes" would say he
he feels additional light in the area
didn't really know what his mission
Death wore a uniform and life among servicemen in Lebanon.
will dlscoorage loiterlng and the
MaryCiokonofSanDtegolearned was," the elder Price said. "I feel
came with a phone call for the
sometimes resulting vandalism
agonized families of U.S. service- I· her husband, Navy Senior Chief my son was sacrificed."
"I get so nervous when the which is occurlng in that area.
men In Beirut today, as those who Journalist Joseph Ciokon, 43, was
already knew the worst treasured safe after she recognized him in a telephone rings, wonderlng 'what Council recently passed legislation
aimed at discouraging the loitering
telecast from u.s. mllitary head- I'm going to hear," said Michelle
last letters and railed against a
and patroling by police officers In
the
wife
of
Marine
Cpl.
Calbert,
quarters
in
Beirut.
massacre that "didn't have to
the problem area has been beefed .
"I
was
happy
and
I
felt
guilty,"
28,
of
Wichita,
Kan.
Robert
Calbert,
happen."
up.
"u
a
man
In
uniform
came
up
to
the
"I want someone to tell me why saidMrs.Ciokon. "Somanyhadnot
Attendlng the session were Mayor
my son had to die," said Lou Meurer heard about whether theli-men were frontdoor,l'dgoout the back door. I
Hottman,
Counellmen King, Gilof Louisville, Ky., whose 21-year-old safe. I saw Joe on 'lV last night and I couldn't face him."
.
more,
Carl
Horky, Jack Sattedield,
Marine Lance Cpl. Michael Balson Ronald was killed in Sunday's am grateful he Is OK. I feel for the
William
Walters
and Dewey Horton.
terrorist bombing. "I guess I don't wives and familles who are still com of Vernon, N.Y., was reported
waiting for word."
dead Monday, but three hours after
matter ·because I'm just a dead
"The only thing I want to know Is his famlly got the o!flcial word of his
Marine's mother. ButT hope a lot of
people start asking this question . whetherornotmyson Is alive," said demise, Balcom called home from a
(Continued from page '1)
Irene Henry of East St. Louis, ill., hospital in West Germany. He had
now."
The parents of Lance Cpl. Duane talltlng about Lance Cpl. Eric A. only been wounded.
he remained determined to convene
Nancy Goen learned her son,
. Wigglesworth, 19, of Naugatuck, Pulliam, 19. "All I know Is that his
a scheduled reconcillatlon conferConn., lirteved in private, but the platoon was to pull out of there in Lance Cpl. Dennis C. Goen, 20, Was
ence in Geneva, Switzerland, next
slain man's uncle criticized the November. He was supposed to be safe ln a second-hand message
Monday, the Le,l lanese state radio
'1ow-key" security at the Beirut home for Christmas."
relayed by one of his buddies.
reported.
For many, no news was good
"I was sure my baby was dead ...
airport, where the bombing
The meeting of representatives ol
news.
__
then the telephone rang. It was the
occurred.
Lebanon's rival religious and politi"We haven't heard a thing and wife of one of Dennis's friends over
''Qther than the fact of shook right
cal factions is aimed atendingyears
we're
delighted,". sald Lavon Sin- there," Mrs. Goon said. "She told
now of what happened; the family
of civil war, a confllct touched oflln
feels that It didn't have to happen, gleton, father of Lt. Mark Singleton, me she had a message from our son
~t~rge part by Moslem demands that
that lt shouldn't have happened," 24, of Conway, S.C. "We're really to call him and she gave .me the
the Christian minority give up Its
said Grover Wigglesworth, the glad and we're thlnking Mark Is all number."
dominant.political role here.
right."
"This ls the way Vietnam
corporal's uncle.
The daybreak atlack on the
For others, waltlngwas agony.
The crushing irony of a jaunty
started," said Richard Devlin, 28,
Marines, most of whom were
"It's like you heard the first shoe brother of 21-year-old Pfc . Michael
letter received Monday morning
sleeping at the time, was made by
added to the pain for the parents of drop when . you heard of the Devlin of Westwood. Mass. The
the driver of an explostws-laden
Pfc. Mark Hehns of Dwight, Neb., bombing, and now you'rewattingto Devllns learned of Michael's death
pickup truck who crashed through
who learned of their 19-year-old hear that Second shoe drop," said from two mllltary officers, who
and swerved around security barrison's death from Marlne officials Sue Freeman, whose son, Lance were accompanied by the family's
ers at the airport base. He then
after reading "Hello, I'm still alive" Cpl. Clayton J. Freeman of Green- clergyman and a police detective.
~mashed his truck into the lobby of
Just the appearance of a univille, was In Beirut at the time of the
ln a missive !rom Lellanon.
the command post building and
"Of course last night was a attack. "You can't relax."
formed Marlne was enough to
detonated the estimated one ton of,
Three uni1ormed soldiers came to unlock grief for Guillermo San
sleepless night, sitting and waiting,
TNT.
hoping for a phone call rather thim a John R. PrlceathlshomelnAttalla,
uniform," said Marvin Heims, Ala., to tell hlrn of the death of his Pedro
"AreSr.
you
because
ofhere
Hialeah,
Fla. !"Y son Js
Mark's father. "Then this morning 20-year-old son, Marlne Pvt. Chris- dead?" San Pedro asked. When the
the Marine Co11&gt;s came and told us topher James Price, after the father Marine nodded, acknowledging that
that is was the end of it for our son." had spent a wlde-€yed night on the Lance Cpl. Guillenno San Pedro Jr.
As the grlrn news came formally, telephone trying in vain for
had dled, thefatherscre8llled as his
wife, Edllja, cried and held their two
with a visit from an officer In dress information.
illllform, good news filtered In on
"He didn't say much in letters younger sons.
531 JACKSOI'I P1I&lt;E- RT. 35 WEST

U.S. families warit answers

Why did massacre occur?

Explosion

,,rii~~!~~~£1

---4524

Admitted: Oris Hubbard, Syracuse; Ada Starcher. Pomeroy;
A missing persons report has been Mary Ann Myers, Langsvtue.
Issued for a Candy Riffle, 14, Apple ·
Discharged: Jennie Bearhs,
Grove according to the Meigs Glendon Faulk, Betty Friend, Lora
County Sheriff's Department.
Cleland, Josephine Mallory.
The girl was last seen Sunday
when whe left..bome with another
Fence damaged
girl from the Apple Grove area.
Riffle is 5 feet 4 inches tall. has
A fence near the Pomeroy Church
blonde hair, and was last seen of the Nazarene, Union Ave., was
wearing a polka dot shirt, blue jeans, ext'?Dsively damaged early Sunday
and tennis shoes. She was last seen morning when it was struck by a
tn the company of Sherry Butcher.
vehicle driven by Eric Lee McKinAnyone having any information of ney, Route 2, Point · Pleasant.
the whereabouts of either girl are
Pomeroy Police said the car was
asked to contact the sheriff's office traveling northeast on Union when it
apparently went out of control
at 992-3371 or 992-3889.
strlklng the fence. McKinney allegedly left the scene of the accident
but was later found at the Pomeroy
Clitf Apartments. He will be
charged with leaving the scene of an
A Racine woman was cited for accident. Damages were over $150.
failure to stop within assured clear
distance of another vehicle Monday Petition denied
morning following an accident on
s.R. 124 near Racine reports the
A petition filed by Virgil P . Phillps
Gallia-Meigs post of the Ohio for post conviction relief has been
Highway Patrol.
denied by Common Pleas Judge
Teresa A. Wilson, 22, was travel- Charles H. Knight, on the basis of an
Ing west on the high'riiY· ' Julle earlier voluntary plea of guilty.
GibbS, 21, Rt. 2, Racine, driver of a
In other action in the court, Ada Y.
vehicle ahead of Wilson, was ' ~ttlngton was granted a divorce
slowing down for a vehicle in front of from Leslie L. Whittington.
her. The patrol reported Wllson
faDed to slow down her vehicle Tea slated tonight
str!klng Gibbs' vehicle to the rear.
Ohio F;ta Phi Sororicy wUl have a
Both vehicles sustained moderate
preferential
tea this evening at the
· damage ln the 8:15a.m . accident:
River Boat Room at Diamond
Savings, Pomeroy, at 7::ll p.m .

Racine motorist
cited after accident

Emergency runs
l

Four calls were answered by th&lt;j
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service Monday.
At 1:51 a.m. the Pomeroy unlt
went to the Main Street residence of
Dale Peck and transported him to
veterans Memortal Hospital; at
12: 53 p.m. the Rutland unit transported Joseph MeCaU ' from Long
Street, Rutland, 'to Veterans Memorial; at 1:46 p.m. the Middleport
unit took Gladys Wines from her
., Hlgh Street reidence to 'the Holzer
Medical Center; and at 2: 28 p.m.
George Kom, Jr. was taken from his
Middleport home by the Mlddleport
unit to the Holzer Medical Center.

1983

Boo!tters to meet

BARGAM IIIATJHEES SAT.&amp; SUN

SET rejects forum invitation
COLUMBUS (AP ) -The group
seeking to repeal Ohio's 1!&amp; tax
hikes has turned down an offer to
parlicipate in a forum on the
constitutionality of Its ballot
proposaL
"A kangaroo court," was the way
Ronald L. Braucher, executive
director of Ohioans to Stop Excessive Taxation (SET), on Monday
depicted the forum.
He referred to a statewide panel of
law professors th~t will conduct the
forum Friday at Capital University
ln Columbus.
Panel members were named by

House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr. ,
D-New Bcston, who said some legal
schOlars had told hlrn that the tax
repeal proposal (Issue 3) on the Nov.
8 ballot may be unconstitutional.
Although Riffe insisted the investigation ls non-parllsan, Braucher
called the forum "an 11th-hour
campaign event" and said he has no
intention of participating in it.
He had been invited by Louis A.
Jacobs, law professor at Ohio State
University, who sent Invitations to
people on both sides of the ballot
issue.
In other developments, Common
Cause of Ohio, a citizens' lobby, said
Monday lt will engage Its 7,000
Weather forecast
members In a statewide voter
education program .to try to defeat
Ooudy and cooler tonight with a30 Issue 2.
percent chance of drizzle. Low40-45.
That proposal, also inftiated by
Winds northwesterly 10-15 mph.
SET, wouldrequlrefuturetaxhlkes
Mostly sunny Wednesday. High in Ohio to be supported by a
near 55.
tJtree.flfths vote of the Legislature.
Extended Ohio Forecast
'l1nlrsdlly through Saturday:
lottery winners The
Fair weather through the period. Ohio
CLEvELAND (AP) Wghs ln the 60s on 'l'hursday and In winning number drawn Monday
the upper 60s and low 'lOs Friday and
night In the Ohio Lottery's game
Salu~. Lows 35-40 'l'hursday
"The Number" was 548.
momlng, 40-45 Friday and in the
lnthe"Plck4" game, the winning
mld-408 to arowid 50 on Saturday.
number was 9712.
the lottery reported earnings of
$594,825.50 from the· wagering 011
Thursday meeting
•"rite Number," played dally except
Sundays. The earnings came 011
Twin City Shrinettes will meet
sales of $961,115, while holders of
Thursday, Oct. Z7, at7 p.m. at the
wlnning tickets are entitled to share
home of Cora Beegle,
cine.
$.li6,289.00, lottery otrtctals said.

Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet
this evening at 7: :ll p.m. at the high
school. Film of the Belpre--Meigs
game will be shown. ·

PHARMACY

•

OHIO, INC.

Marriage licenses
Marriage liC€!15€5 .was Issued tn
Meigs Cpunty · Probllte Court to
Robert Petry, 54, New Haven. ·and
Marvel Quillen, 38, Middleport;
Wllliam Matthew Smlth, 21, Ewington, and Unda Ashburn, 19, Rt. 1,
Ewlngton.

ALL SEATS $2.00

E.

MIDDLEPQRT, OH.

MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
S•• SUNDAY
11:00 TO 8:00.
-6491 OR 992-31 06

.-

ADMISSION EVFRY TUESDAY 12.00

Only a simple majortty Is required
now.
Sue Burk, Common Cause's state
director, said Issue 2 would impede
the Legislature in its dally bustness
to the point that It "could cripple the
democratic process ln Ohio for
years to come. .

. .

Meets Wednesday
POMEROY - Meigs County
Commission will meet Wednesday, 1:~ p.m., Instead of today,
due to an out-of-town meeting.

Meets Oct. 31
RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Oub, which was to have
met Monday, has reschedUled
the meeting ·for Oct. 31, 7: :ll
p.m., at the home of Mrs. Roy
Snowden.

f~~~;:~~~~~;;~;;~~~~~;:~

Major Hoople's picks

Fainting causes ...

Weekly eolwnn on Page 4

See Famlly Medicine Page 7

Baseball's all stars

Smoking and cancer

Story on Page·6 ·

See Cancer AMwerline on Page 9

•

at y

e

4t

.

enttne

Voi.3~,No.t31

Pomeroy

Copyri!lhtod t983

Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 26,

198~

.Steps taken
to retnove
airport lessee
By LARRY EWING
Tribune staff Writer
County commissiOners have taken first steps toward evicting the firm
operating the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport . A co-owner of Foothills
Avlatlon, however, says he intends to remain in buslnessatthejotnt-county
facility.
·
By a unanlrnous motion, the commission directed Prosecuting Attorney
Joseph L. Cain to "take whatever legal action necessary" to remove
Foothills A viatlon from the p~;emlses.
This rnomlng, county officials were pfeparlng to deliver notlfica tton to
Foothills' management that they are being asked to leave the premises.
That notification, drafted by the prosecutor, specifies the firm should
vacate by Nov. 1, 1983.
The actlo11 to evict came exactly two weeks after the commission moved
to Invalidate Its lease a~ment with Foothills by informing the firm of 1~
tntentlon to bid the operation of the facility.
"It Is our position that the contract no longer exists," Commissioner
Verlin Swain said durlng discussions prior to the motion.
"We now need to get someone up there to operate the airport," he added,
"and we would like to move as swiftly as possible."
In a separate motion, the commission directed commission clerk Joan
Davis to proceed to advertise for bids for the operation of the facility. The
advertisemellt for bids Is expected to begin Friday, with bid openings
·
scheduled in approximately two weeks.
Contacted following the meeting, Foothills co-owner Gearied Hitchcock
said, "It will be our attitude that our lease ls still good... and, we are not
going to leave."
Citing the speciflcs of a Nov. 2, 1982lease agreement between Foothills,
!hi county comrnlsslon and the Gallia-Melgs Regional Airport Authority ,
Hitchcock said he found "no logic behind the (county's) recent decision. "
"We have· not vlolated the terms of the contract;" he said, "If we choose
to we can stay here for the next 15 years."
The recent dispute · arose tD September, when Foothills sought to
rmegotlate.the terms of the contract. A clause in that lease arrangement
allowed for renegotiation of the amount of county contribution --: to the
airport authority- on Sept. ~of each year.
The 1982 agreement specified that amount at " ... $5,000 for use by the
airport authority, which shall use all of said sum for payment of expenses
at the alqlort, Including all utlllty bills, insurance bllls and normal
maintenance expenses."
(Continued on page 12)

2 Settiona, 16 Page•
20 C.nta
A M11ltimedia Inc. N•wapaper

-

.

Armed
Cubans
•
continue
fighting
~

•

BRIDGETOWN, Barbado~ (AP)
- Armed Cuban workers who
· · e luded capture by invading U.S.
Marines and Army para troopers on
Grenada continued to fight back
today despite sUffering casualties,
U.S. and Cuban officials said.
The Defense Depariment In
W.asbington said two members of
the U.S. force have been killed and23
wounded since the assault began
Tuesday. Other U.S. officials satd
three Grenadian soldiers were
killed and up to 600 "Cubans
captured.
years;
standing,
I
to
r,
Ada
Holter,
Genevieve
LONGEST-Representatlng the longest period of
President Fidel Castro of Cuba,
Guthrie, both 53 years, and Pauline Atkins and
membership ln the Meigs County Fann Bureau
Marxist-led
Grenada's staunchest
Vernon Nease, both65years. Thosewithover50years
Federation attending Tuesday nigjlt's annual meetally
,
said
today
that some Cubans
of membership were presented gifts while those with
Ing ln Chester were front, I to r, Juanita Sayre, Eula
been
killed
and
wounded in the
had
50 years and under received pins.
Wolfe, both 40 years; Zlba and SyMa MldkHf, 45
invasion, but vowed his countrymen
would not surrender. He said he did
not know how severe the Cuban
casualties were because of bad
'
communications with Grenada .
He raised the possibiili ty of
evacuating the Cubans, who have
been helping build a new airport that
was one of the first areas .seized by
Trustees for local dlstrlcts and a
State resolutions passed last night adequate .access be built to the
U.S. paratroopers Tuesday.
delegate to the state convention included: Support of legislation Ravenswood Bridge from the ap"We will not remain ln a country
were selected at the annual meeting which would make it mandatory !or proach o~ Route 33 with enough
that was invaded and is occupied,"
of the Meigs County Farm Bureau utilities to purchase nature gas flexibility to avoid damaging proCastro said durlng anew conference
held Tuesday night at the Chester available In Ohio before out of state
ductive farm land.
at the National Palace in Havana.
Elementary School.
natural gas can be purchased; that
National resolutions
H e ruled out sending
Trustees elected to three year due to' the erosion l!long the Ohio
National resolutions adopted .In- reinforcements.
terms include Mrs. Pat Holter, River, a re-evaiua tlon of this land be
cluded: Support United States
A strongly pro-Cuban military
Route 3, Pomeroy, distlict 1; Eula made to determine the true acreage
House Bill HR4 which would force regime took control Oct. 19 after a
Wolfe, Racine, district 2; Sylvia and aiso how many acres . have
utilities to transport local natural power struggle in theruiingsocialist
Midkiff, Route 3, Pomeroy, district washed away and that there be an
gas to consumers · which · would party. Grenadan soldiers killed
3, and Catherine Colwell, Route 1, equitable way to reemburse the
result in lower cost for customers;
Prime Minister Maurice Bishop In
Vinton, district 4. Maida Mora, owner for his loss; that pressure be
support leglslation which would the coup.
Route 3, Pomeroy, was . elected brought on governmental agencies
enable the Corps of Engineers to
President Reagan, calling the
delegate to the 1~ state convention.
to assist farmers with drought
stabilize and secure critically erod - military regime "a brutal group of
ing areas along the Ohio_River to . leftists thugs,' : said the Invasion was
County resolutions approved dlsast.e r problems; that the conti·
nuation of state and federal money
reduce the amount of soil lost due to undertaken to protect some 1,lXXJ
Include--support ofiegtslation which
erosion on private or public land; Americms on the island and to
would force utllltles to use more be made available !or reclamation
bring pressure on governmental restore order and democracy.
Meigs County wells so that local of properties damaged because of
agencies to assist farmers with
landowners will receive more strip mine and run-off and residue
The Americans, most of them
not
presently
covered
by
restoration
disaster problems; com'
drought
revenue; stringent enforcement of
students at St. George's University
plete eradication of the multiflora
hunting laws which would require programs; opposition of the legaliMedical School, were reported
zation
of
marijuana;
that
elected
·rose
; support of a supply and
written permission on prtvate
Tuesday to be safe. Arthur Massoio,
ties, and the attackers were not properly; that the Meigs County township trustees and county comdemand concert and oppose lmpor'
a school spokesman, said in nearby
Identified.
missioners
be
given
a
uthority
on
,
lations of all farm products which
Commissioners instigate a thoBarbados that university officials
locating hazardous landfills ln their
would be detrimental to the Amerirough
feaslbillty
study
of
the
Meigs
were
"shocked and surprised" by
Lebanon's state radio said Bush
respective county rather than the
can farmers; oppose the legaliza - the invasion since the students could
County
Highway
system;
that
the
and his wife, Barbara, wore
tion of marijuana; continue to
seriousness of the drug situation in State using statutory authority to
have been evacuated "peacefully."
bullet -proof flak jackets and ~tee!
monitor all foreign investments in
Meigs County be fully realized and overrule local officials; that com ·
The Reagan administration offihelmets as they toured the ruins of
plete eradication of the multiflora
the United States and an immedia te
that
authorities
be
encouraged
to
cial,
who spoke on condition he not
the Marine compound.
study to determine an equitable
rose be mandated with matching
to
take
lrnmedlate
and
continue
be
named,
said units of the Army's
Robin Gray, a White House
limit as to what this Investment
funds made available from state
forceful
actlon
with
stronger
en·
82nd Airborne Dlvtslon would probspokesman. said Bush would be
and federal governments; that
(Continued on page 16)
forcement
and
stiffer
penalties.
ably be sent to control one of
brtefed by Beirut-based Marine
Grenada's two airports, which were
o!flcers on the current military
seized
by ·the . invaders, and free
situation and meet with Lebanese
Army
Rangers
to attack pockets of
President Amin Gemayel to express
resistance.
district's
siX
'
Improvements
to
the
ment or new building funds and 20
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -This
U.S. suppori for his embattled
"There was more resistance thqn
elementary schools and will be In bond Issues.
year's increase in state funding .for
government.
we
thought there would be, " the
effect
for
a
22·year
payoff
period
.
State Superintendent of Public
schools notwithstanding, voters wUl
official said.
Beirut newspapers, meanwhile, be asked to decide 155 local
Officials have noted that money will Instruction Franklin Walter said the
The assault on Grenada by nearly
be used to put up new buildings to number of measures was not
published a statement they said was school-related tax issues on the Nov.
2,lXXJ
U.S. trocps began before dawn .
issued by )ranlan otflclals to · 8 ballot
replace Cadmus, Centerville and unexpected.
Tuesday.
Some 300 soldiers or pOl tee
congratulate those responsible for
Vinton elementaries and replace
"That's not a surprise. We
By comparison, there were 211
six
Caribbean na lions from
the twin bombings.
portable classrooms at Vinton and !mticlpated that there would be a
measures considered at the NoJamaica,
Barbados,
Dominica, St.
The latest Pentagon flgui'es vember 1\R! general election when
Hannan Trace elementaries. Im- numbero!them .Obviouslyifwehad
Vincent,
Antigua
and
St. Lucia provements will be performed at not had the increase in state funding
placed thedeathtollfrom the suicide state government was still in the
·
joined
the
Invasion
.
terrorist bombingattheMarlnepost midst of Its budget problems.
Cheshlre-Kyger and Addaville.
the number would have been at least
The Reagan administration conOhio Department of Education double what lt is," Walter said.
to 216 dead and 70 wounded. The
Among those isSiles that wUl be
r
tends that a 9,00l-foot runway under
_French command today put Its decided will be a 4-rnlli bond Issue in
records show 35 of the 155 levies or
In the November 1982 election,
casualties at 47 killed, 15 wounded the Gallia County Local School
Issues on next month's ballot are 41.2 percent of school-related tax construction on Grenada would let
new or renewal emergency · Issues were approved. The approval Soviet and Cuban wa11&gt;lanes land .
and 1l still missing in the rubble of District.
measures. ·
what liad been a nine-story building
rate had been about 45 percent ln Bishop had deni~ thiS , saying the
new facility was bullt to encourage
The bond issue will finance $11.6
In addition, there are 51 continu- general elections over the last
in a west Beirut residential
tourism.
mllllon worth of construction or
ing levies, 49 for capital improve- several years.
neighborlX&gt;od.
.J

Trustees chosen, resolutions
given Farm Bureau support

Bush inspects
explosion site
BEIRIJI', Lebanon (AP)- Vice
President George Bush, wearing a
heinie! and flak jacket, today
lnspe~,:ted the devastated Marine
base where a bomb ktlled 216
American servicemen and said
"lnsldlous terrorist cowards" will
not change U.S. policy.
At dawn, before Bush's arrival,
the Mar~ were fired upon with
small anns, mortar and bazookas
and ffn.od back, said Maj. Robert
Jordan, a Marine spokesman.
Bush, standing before the mountain of rubble where rescuers were
still looking for bodies fi'Qm Sunday's . terrorist bombing, said:
"We're not going to let down friends
because of terror."
"We're not going to let a bunch of
Insidious terrorist cowards shake
the foreign policy of the United
States," he told reporters. "Foreign
policy Is not going to he dictated or
changed by terror."
Jordan, describing tbe shooting
attack on the Marines today, said
the Americans "fired ·two rounds
tnxn 81nun mortars" toward the
eastern perimeter of the base at
Beirut airport.
Tltere ~ no reports of casual-

School issues on November ballot

Domestic . problems apparent motive for shootings
It's bulb planting seasonwe've got the flneat selection of quality
spring-flowering bulbs.

Tulips
. Daffodils
Hyacinths
Crocus

contents. Both had been shot in th~ Enterprises.
·
·
head. The ofllcer said o!lly the ~ A colleague of Ted Fisher at
known problem the couple had was Zlnuner said be was a quiet
domestic.
person," Pennington said . .
"She was gojng away for a whole
Mrs. FISher. a Republican, was in
week by heTself . to do some her firSt term ln the Ohio Leglslathlnklng," said Marte Tolin, a close ture. The first person to be elected
friend of Mrs. Fisher. She saki Mrs. from thenewlycreated66thDlslflct
Fisher, a reglsten!d nurse, had tn western Clemlont County, she
planned to leave Tuesday.
was a legislative member of the
The couple has a !lOR, Mark, in Power Siting Board of the Public
NewYorkCityandadaughter,Jan, UillltlesCommlsslollofOhio:
ln Calffomla, pollee said.
Mrs. Fisher co-sponsored leg1slaFlsherwasanelectr1lllk:engineer lion concerning health, education,
111 the Zimmer Nucle..- Power_ ~justice and local governStation. Both he and his
also " ment. She was the sponsor of a bill
operated acoosultlngbwdness, TCF that prqlOIIed increased criminal

wife
'

'I

Representatives and to the entire
penalties for rape.
Fisher totally supported his wife's · state."
political life, relatives said.
In a joint statment, House
"He was right behind her, and she
Minority Leader Corwin Nixon,
always acknowledged lt," said his
R-Lebanon. Assistant House Minorcousin, James FlsherofC!ncinnatl.
Ity Leader Waldo Bennett Rose,
"She always said she couldn't
R-Llrna; and GOP Whip Dave
Johnson, R-North Canton, said they
have done it without Ted,'' said
were shocked by the deaths.
James Fisher's wife, Lou.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe,
"Sue, as a freshman representative, was well on the 'way to
D-New Boston, said he knew Mrs.
Fisher only a short ttnie, but she
becoming an outstanding legislator," Nixon said. "Her personal
"proved to me that she was a very
capable, articulate and fair person. strength was ln mobillzing the
This Is a great loss to her legislative talents and concerns of her home
dlstrlct, -to the Olilo Rouse« of . district "to nelp make l"!Pslatlve
decisions."

Rep. Sll8 Fisher

�,,

n ·

l:omment

hom~rs ____.J_ame~sJ_._Ki-=-lpa_tr_ic~k

COLUMBUS, Ohio· (AP) - Suspended Baltimore Colts quarterback Art Schlichter said Tuesday
that rumors ol his continued
gambUngareunfoundedandtliathe
expects more · allegations in the
future from people to whom he still
owes.money.
Schlichter was questioned In a
· live, televised Interview Tuesday by
sports director Jinuny Crum of
WCMH·TV in Columbus. !
Schlichter, a former Ohio State
University standout taken In the
first round of the 1981 pro draft by
Baltimore, was suspended tndefi·
nltely by the National Football
League tn May after admitting he
had run up $389,1XXJ In gambling
debts between January and March.
The NFL says it will review
Schlichter's case beforenextsprlng.
He has undergone treatment by Dr.
Robert Custer for compulsive
gambling.
Schllchter said he has been
tempted to gamble again, but that
·lie so far has not yielded.
"I think lt'spartofthedisease,"he
said. "I've had many times, when
I've been so tempted I didn't know
what to do. And I've learned how to
deal with It:"
The quarterback said he expected
allegations of new gambling to arise
and that he believes tbey have been
planted by people trying to get back
at hlm for old debts.
"I thought there would people

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTt;:RlliT OF THE

~v

.-\IlEA

.

~

~~

~IEIGS.MASOS

r'""T""L-.1'---r•

.

~d·~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT .WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Publtsher; Conti-oller

General

Man~:~.ger

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Association and lhe American Ne"'spaper Publishe r Association.

Like so many ot her occupational
" 'orlds. t he \ll;orld of writing is
divided into professionals and
non-professionals. We have a right
to expect higher standards from the
pros tha n from ttJe non-pros, but
from time to time our expectations
get deflated. This has happened
SI?Y('ra ltlmC's la tely .
On Oct. 7. United Press Int ernational sent out a S('('Ond·day story on
the funel'al of Kew York's Card inal
Terence .J. Cocke. This was the
eighth paragraph: "As the coffin
was liJted a nd carried to the altar,

more than 3,1XXJ mourners sung the
hymn '0 God Our Health and Age
Has P assed.' "
Ylpes! Never mind that the
preferred past tense of "sing" Is
"sang." How could any wire
service editor have so mangled the
name of one of the most familiar of
a ll hymn s'! On inquiry, .I find ll)at
UP caught Its blunder 30 minutes
after the story had gone on the wire,
but the correction somehow missed
the Greenville (S.C.) News, where
it ran as first · dispatched. UPI's
explanation is that it was one of

those things that happen through
dictation. Shame on ~verybody
concerned.
.Not In passing: I was brought up
to write of Terence Cardinal Cook,
but I'm now told that this formal
nomenclature, whlle permissible, Is
considered archaic.
UP! fumbled again a few days
later. In moving the text of
president Reagan's letter acceptlng the resignation of Interior
Secretazy James Watt. Reagan
said that' Watt had completed "the
principal objectives" they had

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should hl' less than 300 -words
lon«. All letters are subject to edltlni!Uld must be s l~tned with name, address and
lelepaoae num~., No anst,ned Ietten wUI ~published. Lel~en should be In
JOod lasle, addr~Mng issues. not personal\t\@!ol.

No laughing matter
Ronald Reagan made a small joke the other day.
He observed that he didn't hear much about "Reaganomics" any
more. He thought this was probably because· his critics were more than a
little embarrassed by the term now.
They had plenty to say -almost all of it derisive- about his policies
back when the economy was a basket case. But now that it gives every
Indication of being in a state of advanced recovery, they don't want to talk
about it.
Certainly not in any way· that might' give him credit.
Well . maybe he had a point. Still. there's anything but a consensus on
the why and who of the recovery.
: Many believe- such as economist and sometimes·toyalisr Herbert
~tein - that the r!"'ponsibility rests primarily with th.!' f~era l Reserve
·
r.ather than the White House.
For this school of thought, "Voickernomlcs" might be a more accurate
label for the sequence of tight money measures that slowed inflation to a
walk, at a considerable cost in the job market. 'followed by last year's
expansion that quickened business activity.
: .: Allan Meltzer, a monetarist of note at Carnegie-Mellon University.
thinks there's more to it than that. He believes the Reagan tax cuts have
lnd~ had an effect on the economy, but the bigger effect has been th'at
those cuts were accompanied by real spending cuts to hold the deficit
down .
Others aren 't so sure. Martin Anderson of Stanford University's
Hoover Institution. writing In the November issue of the American
Spectator. points out the reductions In personal income and business tax
rates were offset by increases in Socia l-Security and local taxes.
' "The net result was essentially a wash," Anderson said.
So there you are - or we are.
And now I'd like to tell you where Rob Seitz is.
Rob is the recession \1Ctlm I reported on a year ago, -the one passing
oUt handbills in New York's Grand Central Terminal after effons to find
gainful employment through the usual channels had failed.
. So did the handbills. The bad news is that Rob is still without a full -time
job.
· The better news is that he is, nevetheless. working. And he is not doing
a)l that badly as a free agent .
. His experience is in public relations . He has been upgrading his skills
through graduate courses, with a high-tech 'emphasis.
He has picked up writing, editing and consulting assignments. Earlier
t~ls year he felt encouraged enough to turn down a couple of job offers that
he felt would not take him where he wanted to go.

Letter to the editor
Put education first
,&lt; " Facis and figures" about Issues we do not make the reforms
. Two and Three are assailing us - necessary to improve our schools."
daily. I have no Intention of adding
The state Board of Education of
Ohio
has just recently adopted new
to your boredom by re-quotlng or
Interpreting .these. Personally, af- minimum standards for the schools
t~r much study, I am opposed to of Ohio. These new standards at:e
both Issues and I wUI vote against
necessary If we are going to meet
(hem.
the educationa l needs of our young
· Last May, I received a copy of "A people a nd the educational needs of
Nation AI Risk: The Imperative for this state if it is to remain in the
mainstream of the economic
Educational Re!&amp;m." "A Nation at
Risk" is a report of·a study done by growth of this nation and the world .
a commission·. ·created by the Their implementation will co.st, but
Secretary of Educatl.on, T . H. Bell.
it must be done.
The memhef5 · of this commission
The Bell Commission has called
were made ~:'of l~aders from the upon the people to provid ~ the
business cotru:nunlty, the govern.. money necessary to carry out the
reforms that are needed In educamental community, and the educa·
tlonal community.
tion. Normally, I believe in the old
It was, to say the least, a blue saying, "You get what you pay for."
ribbon commission. The purpose of However, I belleve that when one
stops to consider the importance of
the commission's study was to
analyze problems and concerns education today, one will have to
that are In our schools and to make say, "W.e will be gettlng more than
recommendations to correct the
what we have paid for." Over the
past three years my school district,
areas of weakness that were fou nd
Southern Local, has lost $189,1XXJ
to exist.
· According to the report. schools because of mandated budget cuts
by the state due to In adequate tax
In general are not prepartng
revenues.
youngsters for today's · complex
And, iJ Issue Three passes my
society and because we are not
preparing our youngsters adeschool dlstrlct \\1ll lose another
.P,..tely, both our youngsters and
$284,285 effective next school year. I
our nation will lose.
am left confused that people want to
cut school funding at a time when
To quote from "A Nation at
the leaders of this nation and state·
Rlsk'1': "The people of the United
are calling for reforms in our
States need to know that Individuals
schools that will necessitate larger
In ottr society who do not possess the
levels of skill , literacy, and training
sums of money than ever before for
esselj~ial to Ihis new era will be the education of our you ngsters.
effedlvely disenfranchised, not
We as educators want to meet
this
challenge. We want to offer our
simply from the material rewards
youngsters
an education that wlll
that accompany competent perforproperly
prepare
them for adult
mance, but also the chance to
living, but to do this we must have
participate fuUy In our national life,
adequate and stable fi.mdlng. We as
"A high level of shared education
citizens concerned for the welfare
Is essential to a free, democratic
of our young people, for the welfare
society and to the fostering of a
of our state, and for the welfare of
common culture, esiJeclally In a
our nation, whether It be at the
country that prides itself on plural·
ballot box or be It at the state
Ism and Individual freedom. I do
l!'!;lslature, must make It known
not want my children nor do I want
that we want our students to have a
my grandchildren to be left out of
quality education - Nothing Jess.
the mainstream. I sam sure that
.. ~... you do not want your chlldren and
I want to finish with another
quote from "A Nation at Risk."
grandchildren to be denied !He's
"Excellence cpsts. But In the long
opportunities.
"And, none of us wants this
run mediocrity costs far more." I
want my tax dollars to pay for
nation, which Is the greatest
country on this globe, to become
Bobby J. Ord,
excellence. second class. Accon:llilg to "A ., Superintendent, 'SOuthern School
NatiOn at Risk" this will happen H District.

;..

..·.,.,.

• -'~ -· l

-.

,.., \ -

r.

agreed upon, but UP spelled It
"principle." At least a dozen
readers have sent me clippings
from a dozen newspapers In which
the error, went blissfully uncaught.
Doesn't anybody edit copy
nowadays?
Even The Wall Street Journal has
Its problems. This is from a story
about a new home computer from
IBM: "Details about two models of
the machine are being bandied
about among dealers, InduStry
observers and consulting organlza·
tions, .some of which have had a
peak at the machines." A peak at
them?
In another story, this one having
to do with hurrtcanes, tllll Joornal
treated us to a verb tllat was new I&amp;
me: to plateau. "While the ability ICl
predict the course of hurrtcanes has
plateaued," said the Journal, "the .
population growth along coastal
areas hasn't." Webster's New
Collegiate says that pleateau, as a
verb. has been around since 1938,
meaning "to reach a condition 111
stability," but I never saw It before
and would as soon not see It again.
It's enough that campaigns peak or
crest. I'd let them reach a platMu.
In any event, my point ill that
these things ought not to happen at
the level of UP! and TheWall Street
Journal. Because I've blundered a
few thousand times myself, I l&lt;rlow
that errors In sPelling, grammar
and usage are easily committed. A.s
professionals we ought ICl try
harder·not to make such errors.
This week's mangled sentence
comes from a piece in the Los
Angeles Times about tile signing of
an accord at tile Madrtd confere~
on security In Europe: "AI~ It
Is deeply flawed, the united States is
joining Canada and 33 Europe811
nations In signing the document."
While we are trying to do better, let
us do better with clauses that gQ
dangle-dingle-dangle.

Symbol

and down on its target thousands of
miles away. The Soviets' existing
missile subs are designed to launch
missiles from their home ports or
far out at sea. It takes high·
trajectory missiles at least 15
minutes to land on their targets after they've been launched. The
traveli ng time of depressed·
trajectory missiles would be a
!\action of that.
The Joint Chiefs acknowledged
this in a top-secret report to
President Reagan, which warned
that "(one) signiflcan problem
concerns the a billty to Inform (the
president) of the origin and character of an SLBM attack In sufficient
time to respond before missiles
Impact on Washington ... "
Reagan took the warning se-

When House Speaker Thomas P.
"Tip" O'Neill announced recently
that action on a controversial
immigration reform bill would be
indefinitely postponed, Hispanic
leaders were quick to claim credit.
"This was a major victory for the
Hispanic caucus," said Rep. Robert
Garcia, D-N.Y., caucus chairman.
But when right-wing Sen. Jesse
Helms, R-N.C., agreed that same
day to halt his filibuster against
legislation making Martin Luther
King Jr.'s birthday a national
holiday, no similar claim came
from the Congressional Black
Caucus - despite heavy support
given the measure ,by black
lawmakers.
Fear of the nation's four million
Hispanic voters Is given as the
major reason for temporary defeat
of the tough Immigration measure,
which would crack dowtPOn illegal
allen workers.
But no one credits the 14
million-strong black electorate for
passing the King bill through the
House and assuring Its eventual
passage In the Senate and endorsement by President Reagan.
Rather, the King bill's success
Is seen as a way for white
legislators to "give a vote" to their

made it diJficuit for many blacks to
said, would lead employers to
~ave a job to take a holiday from." , refuse to hire any Hispanic The immigration return bill,
citizen or illegal ent-rant alike. They
called "Simpson-Mazzolo" after
promised that Democrats would
Sen. Alan K. Simpson, R-Wyo., and
profit from election-season remindRep. Romano L. Mazzoli, D·Ky.,
ers of the role the Democratic
had passed the Senate.
.House speaker played In killing the
bill.
It was supported by the Reagan
administration.
Support for the King bill. meanDemocrats feared passage by the
while, would allow the administraHouse would permit a Reagan veto
tion to shed :.._ at least partially - despite the administration's
the anti-black reputation it has
previous endorsement. The;Repub- ·earned. But the King birthday bill
llcan president's probable turnawould have little effect except as
round would allow him to curry
symbolic recognition of the marfavor with Hispanic voters, whose
tyred leader's contributions tp the
support the Republican Party
nation.
badly needs iJ it Is to carry
Although the King Measure has
California and Texas In next year's
been pushed most strongly by Rep.
presidential election.
John Conyers, D·Mich., Its success
Hispanics objected especia lly to
to date Is the result of bipartisan
sanctions aimed at preventing
support. Only fringe politicians In
employment of Illegal immigrants.
either House - the late Rep. Larry
The sanctions, Hispanic leaders
McDonald, D·Ga .. and Sen .. Helms

The Ken Amsbary Chapter of
Izaak Walton near Chester, In
conjunction with the Ohio Division
of Wildlife and tbe Cass Knife
Company, is sponsoring a membership drive In this area for the TIP
Pro!iram (Turn In a Poacher).
A statewide project, TIP Is being
sponsored by the local chapter and
other sportsmen clubs In the area to
help enforce wildlife regulations,
thus enhancing the beauty o1 nature
and wildlife recreation for all.
A county-wide membership drive
Is currently. underway, where
membership cards can be purchased by donating one dollar to the
campaign. The donation by a
contributor also gtves him the
opportunity to v1e for a set of Case
Collectable Knives, valued at more
than $400. The Case Knife Com·
pany, active In the program, has
provided to each county a sheath
knife and folding knife with a deer
head and the leiters TIP on the
blade. It is tloped that this program
will be rewarding to all who
.participate.
Each county winner will then be

_:_J_ulia_n_B_ond._

~~.
.,• .•: •...-' ...
•

. ...

.. "

::c:;,~s:;~~~~ futute ~o~~~h:~
15

will affect blacks mote than the
holiday the King bill establishes.
"It's symbolism vs. substance"
said a clv11 lights lob~yist who
requested anonymity as he com·
pared the King and Immigration
bills.
"The King bill is an easy vote for
a member of Congress who wants
to please his minority voters after
he has gutted sqcl~l.programs for · ·
three years," he said. "He can tell
his Men's Day audiences In black
churches that he.voted to make Dr.
King's birthday a national holiday,
whlle lgnortng the votes he cast that
'

,• , I

.··w

..

Tight end Gibler signs with Bengals
CINCINNATI
(AP)-TheCincln·
nat!
Bengals put
running back r;;;;;;~~;;;;p;~~;;;~~~~;~~~
Rodney Tate on the'lnjurro-reserve
list Tuesday and signed tight end
Andy GII)Ier.
Tate bruised his thigh in a 28-21
yl~tory over the Cleveland Browns
EAST MAIN STREET
on Sunday. He has carried 18 times
POMEROY, OH .
for 50 yards and ca ugh! 14 passes for
118 yards this season. He also had
returned 12 kickoffs.
Gibler, a 6-foot4, 234-poundrookie
from Missouri, was waived by the
Bengals Aug. 29. The Bengals had
picked him up on waivers from the
Browns Aug. 23.
The Bengals needed to shore up
their tight end position because
THRU OCT. 31ST
starter Dan Ross will be out for an
undetermined time with a sprained
knee and ankle suffered In the
Browns game. Backup M.L. Harris
also has a sore knee.

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011 WINDOW ONNING81
liLY

COI'J.~g,:jffU
CAll A''OIIII ITI

•

Batey; third, Sharuton Newsome, Leann !lleweB,
Rainy Duff, Khn Haning, Shelly PuBins, Crblsy
Weaver, Missy Nelson; rear, coaches, Don Haning
and Mike G,erlach. Not plclnred are Coach Don Poole,
Valerie Baker and Nick Meier.

IF YOU CAN'T FIND. DON"T GET OR HAPPEN TORECEIVE A PAPER THAT IS JUST UNREADABLE, DON'T
GIVE UP. CALL THE DAILY SENTINEL

c~"fsrAI.

.

soon."

DUSTERS - Pictured ore the Middleport Dusters
who had a successfnl season taking second place In
the league and first place In the Mason toumament.
They are front from left, Alison Gerlacll, Sherry
Johnson; second, Tara Gerlach, Tricta Boer, Tracy
El&amp;, Pam Baggy, Tabby Phllllps, Abby Blake, Love

defeated zanesville Church, H. Team members
were, froot row, left to right - Mike Wright, Bob
Carlon, coach, Randy Hawley, coach. Pastor Bob
MWer, Bennie Wright, Terry Wyatt. Back row,left to
rlpt - Richard Friend Sr., Steve BlackweB, Joey
Bartqn, Mark Frh!nd, Malt Weaver, Jack Stanley.
Richard Friend Jr. was absent.

j-

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. .•.....• • ••• ..•
·.."' ,·:···~
...

"Well, I think the NFL under·
stands the dt1Jg problem a little bit
better;' he said. "I don't think they
understand the compulsive gam· .
bli'ng problem. I don't they realized
what compulsive gambling was
until I entered the picture. I would
say lt'sfair In the fact in !hall broke
the rules. But-It's unfair In the fact
that •I don't think they really
understand it."
Schlichter said he expects mixed
treatment if and when he is allowed
to return to football .
"I don't think everything will be
rosy, but hopefully people wUI
understand," he said. "I'll just deal
with II when It comes. As far as my
future, I would hope I can play
football again as quick-as possible.
I'm very excited about It and In the
best shape I've been 1rt in my !He,
and hopefully I'll get the chance real

eligible for awards at the state outdocrsman, but to preserve,
level, tentatively scheduled for protect, and propagate wildlife In
March 11, 1984 at the Ohio Ohio.
Objectives Include the coopera·
Historical Society In Columbus. The
winner will receive a fully engraved tion of the public to report persons
gold Inlaid set of knives worth more who are, or are suspected of,
than $2,000. With prizes like this at violating laws in connection to
stake, the division Is hoping enough . wildlife regulations. Suppcn of this
menles are accrued with the program will be significant to its
membership In the first two years • success.
Wlldllfe Violations
that enough money to sutaln
Wildlife violations can be rereward payment for years. Watch
for your county sportsmen and ported by calling the toll-free
purchase one or more member· number, 1·800-POACHER. The
ships In support of TIP. "Turn in a Identify of Informants will be held In
Poacher today and enjoy WlldlHe strict confidence unless Informants
tomorrow!"
wave confidentiality and permit
TIP Program
Identification. Rewards will be paid
The Ohio Division of WlldliJe upon conviction and confirmation
recently formed the "TIP" pro·
of facts
by from
a division
range
$25 toemployee
$599.50. and
, gram to promote tl!eir goal of can
By the first of September, TIP
reducing wildlife violations, allow·
lng people to have the opportunity had received 467 calls assigned as
to share more equitably In wise use TIPS and many more unassigned
of the wildlife resource.
due to lack of evidence. Sofar$3,956
"Tip's'' dual purpc55e Is to make has been awarded to 33 Individuals
the division more accessible· to the for 66 convictions. Most callers
public and to better enforce our don't want rewards, feeling that
wildlife regulations. These regula- their real reward Is seeing the
tions are not to discouarge the violator get his true "reward."

: ME1110Dl8T CHAMPS - Laurel CUff Free
Methodist Church recently won the Free Methodist
Ohio 'eonfenlllce Invitational Softball Toumarnent at
·Zaaiesvme. VIctory came with a forfeit from the
Mamfleld team - winning the second game from
Akron Church, 14-5. 1blrd victory came lrom Gallon
Church, 111-5. In the championship game, Laurel Cliff
'

caucuses.

.

'

"I really feel like I have a lot of
enemies out there that I've made in
the last year'... I owe a lot of people,
tllegal debts that I'm not going to
pay, that I can't pay. They've
drained me with everything I've
had . And I think these people knew I
was sick and they contmued tolilrain
me all through the Y.ear."
Gambling was a Illelongpasttime
that only recently began to get out of
hand, Schlichter said.
"I enjoyed the thrill of the w\Ji an_d
the risk that was involved," he said.
"III went back again, Iknowlwould
be the same way. It makes my
anxiety level very high. ·
,
"And I was a social gambler, I
would say, clear '!P until I maybe
was a junior In college. And then I
started using it as my drug, or my
alcohol, or my release, to get away,
to be able to be somebody else, to
relieve some of the pressure. It just
got to be a horrible habit ... "
Schlichter said bee Ignored .the
warnings of frtends at first, -then
began to realize he had a problem
early this year.
"! knew I was sick In some way,
and I didn't know why. And I was,
very scared and embarassed to be
able to come for help with anybody
... You Ue, you cheat, you borrow,
you do things that normally.

•.'

- strenuously objected to It, saying
that King's politics were Marxist
and his personal !He suspeCt.
Most members of Congress
embraced the leglslalt011 after
rejecting It for se-reral yetlrs
running. And several said they did
It to appeal to black votes.
Hispanic leaders have won a·
victory by defeating a measure
they were convinced wOIIld hurt
their community.
Black leaders have won a victory
as well. But the King blll will offer
only a symbolic v1ctory for black
Americans, ravaged by thl'ee years
of hostility from congressional
Republicans and Democrats alike.
That's the difference - Syrnbo·
!ism vs. substance - between the
congratulations being passed
around the Black and hispanic ·

. 'ell'

The Daily Sentinei-Page--,3

characteristically I wouldn't do. Art
Schlichter wouldn't do those things .
"Gambling was In my mind,
telling me, 'You'renotacompulsive
gambler. Hey, it's your other
problems. You don't have enough
money. Your friends aren't good to
you.' It makes you feel sorry for
yourselL"
In light of the recent four-game
suspensions of four NFL players for
cocaine Involvement, Schlichter
said he had mixed feelings about the
length of his susi?E'nsiori.

•

riously . He ~ded 10 move his
"doomsday" command pi&amp;M from
suburban Washington to a site In ·
Indiana. In the event of a Soviet
submarine-based misslle attack, .
he'd never make It the few miles to
the airport and be able to take off ·
before the bomb went off. He'd have
to stay In the White House bunker
until it would be safe to fly to
Indiana.
·~
·
From the Kremlin's · point ·of
view, deploying sul;ls close to the
U.S. coasts Is a reasqnable response
to the deployment of sophisticated ·
Pershing II nuclear mlsslles close
to Soviet borders.
If the Soviets carry out Chervov's
threat, it would keep much of the
American strategic bomber Ioree
on high alert.

vs. substance__:_____--'--__

trying to hurt my opportunity to get
back in the NFL and I expect it
again," he said.

Meigs Chapter_ co-sponsors
•
statewide sportsman's proJect

Balance of power___________::J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - An ominous little time to retaliate - or to
threat by Soviet Gen. Nikolai determine whether it was a genuine
Chervov drew little public notice Soviet attack , a false alarm or an
last week. But Chervov's warning accident. The time for a decision
that the Soviets might deploy whether to launch a global nuclear
submarines armed with nuclear holoca.ust would be counted · it)
missiles 100 miles off the U.S. coast seconds. There would be no oppor·
was taken seriously by the Joint . tun-lty for a president to weigh the
Chiefs of Staff.
available options, get on the hot line
The 'Pentagon's alarm is under· to Moscow- or even make it safely
standable: Soviet submarines close to his getaway plane.
,
to our shores could hit major U.S.
The t hrea I posed by close-to·
targets - including Washington, shore Soviet subs lobbing nuclear
D.C. - with virtually no warning.
bombs on the U.S. mainland is
And using a stl1Hheoretlcal tech- explained In frightening detail by
nique called "depressed trajec- the CIA and the Pentagon in
tory," the subs could fire their top-secret documents seen by my
nuclear missiles like anillery shells associate Dale Van Atta.
and hit targets we II inland In six
The standard submari n e minutes or less .
launched ballistic mlssUe (SLBM)
This would give the United States flies a high trajectory up into space

'Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Schlichter denies gambling
allegations in latest intenriew

2-lhe Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednetclay, Cktober 26, 1983

Page

Our nodding

The Daily Sentinel

Ass~stant

•

Wednesday, October 26, 1983

.,

,I

•

70C

Ru!. ·~·

31 Wtdt
A111 zr, w a M'Wicl111s

-..-c~~

.SERVICE DESK
.
992-6111 i
WE'LL BE SURE YOU RECEIVE A NEW
CRISP DAILY SENTINEL THAT EVENING
SERVICE DESK IS OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY FROM 5 TO 6 P.M:

THE DAILY SENTINEL
"HERE TO SERVE YOU BETTER"

5h k "

�..

!':r

4 11te Daily Sentinel

Wednnday, 'October

Wednesday, October 26, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

· Um-kumph!

1983

Meet the Tornadoes

rigers .q uench thirst for Gators
.· . , M*"" Amos B. Hoople
·:
Peerless Prophet
:. Ea:..S, friends, you are . in for a
:Feat treat this Saturday. No less
!han eight of the college football
~per powers ·collide head on for
~lory, conference crowns and
major bowl assignments. Har·

with a JX'riccr 4.0 grade point
average, tossing against tvpami's

tumph!

kumph~ 1

the - heh·heh - ''hit
'parade" Is the Auburn Tii(ers·
Florida Gators c las h at the Tigers'
Jordan·Hare Stadium, with the
Winner having a good shot at the
SEC crown and a ticket to 't heSugar
:Bowl.
. Fighting to stay in the elite .top
five are two ·rugged independents.
ihe West Virgin ia Mountaineers
and the Miami Hurr icanes, who will
get it on at the Orange Bowl.
· And more: the North Carolina
tar Heels (7.() ), determined to keep
their undefeated status, ~Ni ll face a
'tougn ACC clash with 15th·rated
Maryland on the Terps' home
grounds.
. Meanwhile, the top attraction In
the Big Ten matches Michigan and
Illinois, in their 69th renewal. with a
possible Rose Bowl trip on the line.
l(aff·ltatU
: The Auburn·Fiorida clash pits
the traditional infantry attack of the
Tigers , featuring the tricky ball·
handling of QB Randy Campbell
and hard· running fullback Tommie
/&gt;.gee, against the Gators' devastat·
ljlg. air attack ma sterminded by
ialented QB Wayne Peace. The
lioople Hunch - hak·kaff - is the
home field advantage wlll carry
Auburn to a hard·fought 2!\.22
vjctory. Um·kumph!
Both West Virginia and Miami,
meanwhile, are on a roll. Both have
aspirations to be the Orange Bowl
foe of the .Blg Eight rep on Jan . 2.
This should be a great aerial show
with West Virginia's QB Jeff

Sonny Jaxonville, our Florida
rep, sadly report s'the West Virginia
lad s wi ll 5core a close 27 ·24 dcciston
over the hoSt Hurricanes~
In another passi ng duel, North

&gt; Leading

sensational freshman throw£&gt;r, Ber·

nie Kosar. Jove!
(Were it not- kaf!·kaff- for the
press of very im)Xn1 ant business. l

wou ld be in the Orange Bowl to
watch this spectacular duel. l!m·

Carolina's Scm Stankavage, th£'

nation 's leader in passing effi·
ciency. will go up against the
brillia nt Bloomer Esiason of Mar,··
land. Stankavage's supporting cast
of runners, Tyrone Anthony, Ethan
Horton and Eddie Colson, will
enable the Tar Heels to put more
points on the board than the
Esiason· to·Greg· Hill passing
combo. Make it North Carolina,
3U7.
The Fighting lliini have defeated
Stanford, Iowa and Ohio State at
home this year. They will add
Michigan to the list as they win a
bruising battle with the Wolverines.
24·21. Michigan has won the last 16
games in the series going back to
1967. But this year that is not in the
cards. Kaff·kaff.
Looking to the ot her top.rated
tea ms, Texas will stomp Texas
Tech, 35-12, and SMU will ta ke
Texas A&amp;M, 22·19, in a pair of SWC
meetings. In the same loop, watch
for Arkansas to boil Rice,' 30·13. and
TCU to slide past Houston, 17-14.
On the Big Eight f.ront. Nebraska
will keep it going as it whips Kansas
State 28-14; Oklahoma will win a
close one from rough and tough
Kansas, 24-21; Missouri will mea·
sure Iowa State, 35·18; and Okla·
homa State wUI overpower Colo·
rado, 35·14.

"Hoss'' Hostetler. a talented senior

•••
Colga tc 28 Lafayette 24
Dan mouth 33 Yale 14
E Carolina·45 E Tennessee St 7
Florida A&amp;M 36 A.Jcorn St 14
F'rt&gt;Sno St ll Cal Poly 10
Fullerton St 17 Idaho St 16
Furman 26 Davidson 12
Grorgilt Tech 28 Duke '0.
G('Orgia 34 Temple 17
Cra mblln~ 21 Tl:'lffi.S Southern 13

The fea tured contest in the Pac 10
sends Washington against UCLA ~ith the Hu skies rating the Hoople
nod to· t~ke the Ucians, 24·21. in a
squeaker.'·Up·and·coming Oregon
"ill prevail over Washington State.
11·H Stanford will do in Oregon
State, 31·24: and Sout hern Ca l will
battle back to subdue California,
24·21.
On the independent fro nt , the
awrsomr Brigha m Young Cougars, w!Th · masteriul All -America
QB Steve Young at the controls, will
roll over the Utah State Aggies
42·20. The Georgia Bulldogs, look·
ing ahead to their important SEC
clash wit h Florida next week, will
double the score on Temple, 34·17:
Boston College will win a bruising
contest from resurgent Penn State,
31·28, as Doug Flu tie outdueis Don
Strang; and Arizona State wUI
fini sh on the front end of the wild
and wooly contest ·with Florida
State' s Seminoles. Make It Arizona
State 28·24 over Florida State.
And watch forOhioSta te toknock
off Wisconsin 35·14, and Iowa to
defeat Indiana 28-7, In the Big Ten.
Air Force, " 1th an ear lier 44·17
conquest of Navy under their belts,
can claim the service champikon·
ship as they whip Army, 35·14.
Finally, Pitt and Syracuse will
tangle for the 39th time and Notre
Dame and Navy will butt heads for
the 57th time. The Hoople System is
. ca lling 'em, Pitt 28·13 over Syra·
cuse, and · NO 38·14 over Navy.
Har·rumph!
Now go on with my forecast:

W.. Reoerve The Right To·
umit auentities.

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Harvard 10 Brown 7
Hawaii~ Texas·EI Paso 13

~

Holy Crass l) Col umbia 27
IdahO 27 Pacific 2~
Il linois 24 MldUgan 21
Iowa 2S Indiana 7
K('ll lucky 3.1 Cincinnati XI
U:&gt;hlgh 21 Bucknf'll 00
Long Beach St ~ E Wash 2'1
LSU 18 Mississippi 12
Ml c h l~an St )) Minnesota 10
Missouri 35 Iowa St 18
Montana 'll Montana St 13
Nebraska 28 Kansas St 14
NPV·Las Vegas 'l7 San Diego St 26
N('W Mexlco 38 Colorado St 21
North Caorllna 31 Marvland 17
14

I.

~~~~:~e ~a~1o ~ 14

Ohio State 35 Wisconsin 14
Oklahoma 24 Kansas 21
Oklahoma St 35 Colorado 14
Or('f':on 17 Washington St 11
Pennsylvania 17 Prlnce!on 11
'Pittsburgh 28 Syracuse 13
PurdUe ~ Northwestern 14
Sout hefn Cal 24 Calilot11la .21
S CarOlina 26 N Carolina St 24
S Mississippi 24 SW LouiSiana 10
SMU 22 Texas A&amp;M 19
Stanford 31 Oregon St 24
TennesseE' 31 Rutgers 17
Texas 35 Texas Tl'Ch 12
Texas Christian 17 Houston 14
Toled:llS Kent Sl 7
Tulsa 26 Wichita St 19
VandE'I'bllt .'ll Memphis Sl 24
Virginia TPC h 21 Wm &amp; Mary 7
Washington 24 UCLA 21
W Mic ht~a n 22 Ohio Univ 22
W Virginia Z7 Miami {F) 24
Friday Night Games
Logan 28 Gallipolis 0
Jackson 26 Waverly 6
Ironton iS Athens 20
Wheelersburg 7 West 6
Hurricane 20 Rlpif'y 14
Bluefield 21 Pr. Pleasant 6
Wahama 1B Buffalo-Putnam 6
Coal Grove 14 Rock Hill 12
Asllland aJ Boyd. County 8
Warren Locaill Alexander 0
Belpre 28 Wellston 6
Vinton Counry 6 Federal· HOCklng 0
Meigs 26 Trimble 14
Nelsonville-York 40 Miller 8
Kyger Creek~ Southern 8
North Gallla 36 Hannan Trace 8

Saturday. Oct. 29
Air Fore!.' 35 Arrny 14
Alaba ma 33 Mississippi St 21
Arizona St 28 Florida St 24
ArkAnsas.)) Rice 13
Auburn 26 Flodda 22
Ball Sl 14 E Michigan 13
Baylor 31 TulallE' 24

BOstoo Collegp :n Penn St 28
Bowling GI'E'en 17 Cent Michigan 14
Brigham You ng 4.2 Utah Sl 20
Clemson 'Zl Wakt' For&lt;'SI 14

points against the Highlanders has
taken a sizeable lead In the
incllvldualscorlngbattlein the area.
Penick has scored 21 touchdowns
and 150 points for a 21.4 point
average In eight games. Inside the
SVAC, he has 46 points or a 30.6
average.
Southern's Tony R1ffle and Kyger
Creek's Steve Waugh and Shane
Stover are also among the top
scorers.
defeated
Eastern,
32.0.Kyger
The Bobcats
Creek
Last Friday
night,
scored their first three offensive
series. Gelling KC touchdowns were
Waugh on a seven yard run; Larry
Edge on a 36 yard pass from Garry

'

AND

MULLEN INSURANCE

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

WLTP OP
. ..... 6 1 0248 47
. .... 6 1 0 164 ~

Sout hern ...
.. .. 5 3 0 185 129
Hannan Trace
.. .... 3 •I 1 126 145
Southwestern ................... 1 7 0 55 274
Eastl.'rn .......................... 0 7 1 12 ?Xi
S\'.o\C Only
1\orth Gallia .
.. 3 0 0 162 20
.Kyger Cre(&gt;k..
.. ..... 3 0 0 92 0
Southf&gt;rn ............... .... .... 2 1 0 R9 71
Ha nnanTrace
.. .. 0 2 1 'lJ 52
Eastern ... ....
. .. .. 0 2 1 0 S3

Office Hours by Appointment Only

H 151

.

(\JSPS IC5-IIO)
A Dl\llalon of Multimedia, Inc.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street , by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company· Mul·
tlmedla , Inc., Pomeroy, Ohlo45769, 992·
2156, Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

MIXED

loii8 at Belpre.

Member: The Associated Press , In·
land Dall y Press Assoclaton and lhe
American Newspaper Publishers As·
soclatlon, National Advertl.slng Representative, Branham Newspaper Sale5,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10011.
POSTMASTER: Send addresS to The
Dally Senllnel, 1,11 Court St., Pomf'roy,
Ohio 45769.

By' SCOTI' WOLFE
BUCHTEL - Much detetmlna·
tion and second effort allowed the
Eastern Eagles to make a respecta·
ble showing In the Sectional
Volleyball tournament at
Nelsonvllle-York High School. The
Eaglettes defeated Miller In the
opening round before bowing to
Crooksvllle In the championship
game.
Eastern opened with a 15-ll, 5-15,
and 16-14 wln over Miller's Falcons,
then had to settle for runner·up
· honors In the sectional finals with
H5 and ll·15 losses to champion
Crooksville, who advances to the
'
Dlstrtct at Chillicothe.
Lea Ann Gaul led Eastern to Its
triumph over Miller with.12 serving
points, Krtstl Gaddis followed with
six points, Ateshla Holsinger added
four, Tara Guthrie five, Susan
Batley four, Dee Dalley three, and
Michelle Wilson two. C. Nutter and
D. Husklnson led Mlller with 11
pints, while teammate Rho~da
Hehich added eight.
Despite the loss In the champion·
ship game, Coach Pam Douthitt
praised her team, saying, "I'm
very proud of our girls. they ha,ve
nothing to be ashamed of. We have
next year to look forward to since
we only lose two seniors, Dee
DaUey and Terre Wood.
In the nightcap, sectional cham·
pion Croo~vllle had its hands full
for most· of the game, however,
good team play led them to the
victory. April Russell, Lynn Barrin·
ger, and Brenda Brown led the
winners with six, six, and five points
respectively.
Eastern was led by Lea Arm Gaul
and Krtstl Gaddis with five each,
Bailey three, Wilson one, and
Horner one.

8\JBSCRI......ON RATES

By Carrier or Motor Route

Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
rler may remit in advance direct to
The Dally Senllnel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis . Credit will be given carrier each
mon th.
No subscriptions by mail permitted In
towns where home carrier service Is

ava ilable.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
l111lde Ohio
13 Weeks .......... ......... : ............. 114.01
26 Weeks . ............... ......... ....... 127.30
52 Weeks ... ..... .... ~ ..... ...... ......... $51.48
Out!ilde Ohio
13 Weeks ... ............ ......... ......... $15.21
26 Weeks ................... .. ............ 129.64"
52 Weeks
........................ $56.21

.

GET READY
FOR THE
.HEATING
SEASON
WE HAVE
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AND
OTHER ACCESSORIES

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MASON, W. VA.

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25% LESS SALT
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'"

"
·:RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP)- The
Cleveland Cavaliers have signed
second-round draft pick John Gar·
r:ls, officials of the National Basket·
!Jiill Association team announced
1\Jesday,
• The s.toot·S forward from Boston
College was the 27th choice overall
l!ithe 19113coilegedraft. Last year at
Bllstoa. Gan1.s averaged 19.7 points
J;iergame.
• The signing of Garris left the
GavallerS iwoD players over their
U.ma Hmtt, io they waived Carl
Nicks llld Llallln Townes.

"

After all, it's
Fleischmann's.

25%LESSFAT

Qlvaliers sign Garris

I

100% DEUCIOUS

When you begin to add them up,

..

'

Meigs Junior High Football
teams played tWice In the rain this
past week. On Tuesday the seventh
· graders hosted a team from Oak
HUJ. Meigs took an early lead but
could not hold it. The game ended In
a 12·12 tie. The seventh graders are
now 3-1·1 on the year.
The Marauders were led by the
running of Jeff McKelroy, who
accounted for both Meigs points.
Last Thursday, the eighth grade
Marauders hosted VInton County.
The Marauders, behind the strong
defensive play of Buckley, Melton,
Brothers, Jones, Nickles, Little,
Bartrum, WDDams. and .SisSon shut
out the Vikings, 8-0. The Meigs'
·touchdown came in the second
quarter, a three-yard run by
Bartrum; the conversion was
added by Brothers. The Marauders
are now 4-1·1 on the year. They wiD
close out their season at Belpre
Thursday . .

I
I
I

i:i l

'

25% LESS CALORIES

§I

Game time moved up

:.I

Tbe ~m-Unlolo DIIU!ct
Volleyball pme olated for lhll
. Saiurday at the Ohio Unlvenlly
Cld&amp;oothe bnuleh In ~he

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In fact, no regular margarine
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~~~~ Cl Nabosc o Brands, Inc. t9B~
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11M been moved up Ill a 1 p.m.
~ time. Orl&amp;lnaii;J lhe
,pme W.. ltCbeduled lor S P·lll;
Tlclullll lor the coMelt wiD be
IGid .a lite door aab' for $UIQ
eadL Tbe ellamploalldp coaleal
lallllled for J p.m.

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.•••

Bana'nas.............

•

.• ST. LOUIS ( AP )
Despite
suffering the worst night of his
career, Neil O'Donoghuecan appar·
. ently plan on rem aining the field·
jjoai kicker for the St. Louis
Cardinals. '
Coach Jlrh Han!fa n backed the
kicker Tuesday during his weekly
theeting with reporters. In fact. he
almost went so far as to exonerate
him for a 2().20 tie Monday night
against the New York Giants.
·· "He just missed it," said Han!fa n
~ respect to O'Donoghue's most
tormenting of three misses, , a
19·yarder with 1:03 to go in the
tll'ertime of the National Footbaii
J:.eague contest.
:· "We'll get into technicalities. The
tllg thing in that situation in my mind
Is that No. 1, Neil O'Donoghue has
won ballgames for us before," the
coach said. "He's com e through In
dutch situations for us in the past. I
~peel him to do It again ."

.

Round Steak ... ~~-...

Young Marauders
in tough battles

'

¢

Fryer Parts....... ~~·..

Eaglettes
eliminated

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

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., OCT.

JAYCEE PLAYER OF WEEK
- Jay EvaDS, 4H, 1116 pound
seniOr center 111111 delenl!lve end
, has been chosen as the Jaycees'
, Player of · the Week for 1m
coolrlbuUons In last week's 14-7

.·The Daily Sentinel

I

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

Friday's games:
Kyger Creek at Southern: Sout hwes tern at
East&lt;&gt;rn and Non h Ga llla at Hanna n Trace.

O'Donoghue
won't lose
J.dcking job

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

•
r;:===~=================:.-1

AUGameo~

Southwestern . ................. 0 3 0

FreShman back,

DOWNING-CHI LOS
.

Pennington, Stoverona29yardrun;
Trace, 2!\.14.
Chuck Vogel on a 77 yard pass play
Wade Cormolly enjoyed a tine
from Pennlnglon and the junior
offensive night for Coach Bill
quarterback got the other six
Porter's Tornadoes with two touch·
pointer 011 an eight yard run.
downs and 185 yards rushing. Joe
In addition to Penick's seven
Wolfe caught a nine yard 1D pass
touchdown and four conversion
from Tony R1ffle for the first score.
points against Southwestern, Mark
Later, Keith Cook added another
Foreman scored the other ID. Tim ' touchdown.
Burnette scored SW's touchdown.
Jeff Barnes and Phil Bailey
Southern scored two fourth pertod
scored for the Wildcats on a five
touchdowns to defeat Hannan
yardrunand64yardpassreception.

SV.4..C Standing!"

NorthGallia .
Kyger Creek .

Freshman back

One Week .................................. St.OO
One Month ........... ................... .. S4.40
One Year ............................ .... $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally .................................. 20 Cents

Oak Hill 0

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
T"am

JAMIE HENSLER
11-8, 145 pound

CINCINNATI (AP) - Joe Nux·
hall, a Cincinnati Reds broadcaster
for 17 seasons, has signed a new
three·year pact, Reds President
Bob Howasam announced Tuesday,
The Reds recently hired Nux·
hall's broadcast partner, Marty
Brennaman, to a three·year
contract.
Nuxhall has been with the Reds as
a player or a braoadcaster for 38 of
the past 40 years.
Nuxllall, a pitcher, slgnedhisflrst
contract with the Reds In 1946, at 15
years of age, to become the youngest
player ever signed. .

Bobcats-Tornadoes in top SVAC game
Kya:er Creek, tied with Nortt,
Gall!a's Pirates, for the leading ;pot
1n the league race, travels to
Southern for the top contest this
week In the SV AC.
In other games, Southwestern
goes to Eastern and North Gallia
plays at Hannan Trace.
Coach Mark Hartman's Bobcats
~goafterthelrsixthshutoutofthe
season against the Southern Torna·
does. Kyger Creek has the top
· defe~~~~lve clllb In the area. The
Bobcats have yielded just 20 points ;
In seven games, a 2.8 defensive
averljle.
The defencllng champion North
Gallla Pirates have vaulted atop
area alfenstve teams with a 35.6
~ver,.e by virtue of last Friday's
62-6 crushing of Southwestern.
:. Defensively, the Pirates show a
6. 7 average.
· Kyget' Creek and Southern have
similar offensive sta tlstics. The
Bobcats have scored 164 points for
an average of 23.4 per outing whlle
the Tornadoes have scored 185
Jio!nts In eight games, a 23. 1
average.
·· North Gallla's Eric 'Penick with
seven touchdowns and four exra

TONY CONNOLLY
:t-1, .96 pound •

Nuxhall gets riew pact

Eastern 22 Southwestern 14
C h esa~ake 6

298. SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

$ 59
2o/o Mi Ik... :~::r!::~~L~: ...
II' VALLEY BELL
$ 09
"' Cottage Cheese.2!~~·.
VALLEY BELL

HUNT'S

Ke·tc hUp

32 OZ. BTL

···~···········

99

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BANQUE!

. TV

·.

.

·

¢

Dlnners~ .....~:.o;~.

·····couPON·······•

CHATEAU BLEACH
GAL

59¢.

•••••

BETTY CROCKER

FLAVORITE

CAKE MIXES

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

18.5 oz.

BOX

3/$'2

7V. OZ .

BOX

4/$1

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JIF

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·~· ...: ,-:'C.~ca my ot Ch unky
~·2·s~oi. JAR.

·;

$}9 9

limit One Per CustQmer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer bpires Oct. 29, 1983

•

�Wednesday, ' October 26, 1983
~Pa~ga~~6~The~~Da~i~ly~Se~n~ti~ne~l~--------------------~~~~=-----~~~m~e~ro~yt:M~id~d~le~po~rt~,~Oh~io~-------------::::-~::~----~--~~~::~~~~~~---,

Murphy· leads AP All Stars
· NEW YORK (AP) - Dale
Murphy of the Atlanta Braves,
coming within one vote of unanimous selection, was one of only tlJree
National League· players nam~
t.Od,ay to The AssoCiated _PreSs
major league baseball All-Star
team.
Murphy, the league's 198"2. Most
Valuable Player, received 95 of a
possible 96 votes to nail down one of
three outfield positions. Murphy,
who batted .302 in 1$3 with 36 home
runsand 121runs batted in, also was
the top vote-getter in last year's
s,election.
·
The next highest vote-getter,
Montreal Expos outfielder Andre
Dawson, also was a National
Leaguer. Dawson drove in 113 runs
while hitting 32 homers and received
91 votes as a nationwide panel of
sports writers and broadcasters
was- asked to select three
Olitflelders.
;The third outfielder was Boston's
Jim Rice, who led the American
t;,eague with 39 home runs and tied
~U Cooper of Milwaukee for the
le'!lgue lead in RBI with 126. Rice
received 78 votes.
.The other NL player on the team
was Philadelphia third baseman
Mike Schmidt, who led the major
tal!gues with 40 home runs and had
1~ RBI. Schmidt received 40 votes.
·The rest of the team: Eddie
rvbrrray, Baltimore Orioles , first
base, 51 votes; Lou Whitaker,
· Detroit Tigers, second base, 80
vqtes; Cal Rlpken Jr., Orioles,
shortstop, 64~ votes; Lance ParrrSh, Tigers,catcher,36votes; Greg
L]Jzlnski, Chicago Whiie Sox, designated hitter, 61 votes; LaMarr Hoyt.
White Sox and the American League

Cy Young Award winner. righthanded pitcher, 47~ votes; Scott
McGregor, Orioles, left-handed
pitcher, 49~ votes, and Dan
Quisenberry, Kansas City Royals.
relief pitcher, &amp;'l~ votes.
.
· In some cases, editors voted lor a
tie, accounting for the half votes.
The closest race was for third
base, where Schmidt's vote total
was. only eight more than the 32
received by Boston's Wade Boggs,
who led themajorleagueswitha .361
batUng average. Bill Madlock of
Plttsburgn, the NL batting champion with a .323 average, was third
with 15 vot"'.
Murray, who hit a career-high 33
homers and homered twice in
Baltin)ore's decisive World Series
victol)', also won a close race,
edging Cooper by 11 votes. Parrish
won the catching spot by 11 votes,
beating the White Sox's Carlton
,fisk. Parrish drove in 114 runs with
27 homers, and Fisk had 86 RBI with
26homers.
The most lopsided races were for
second base and relief pitcher.
Whitaker, a .320 hitter, outpaced
Manny Trillo of Montreal by 77
votes, while Quisenberry, who set a
major teague record with 45 saves,
was 75 votes ahead of Jesse Orosco
of the New York Mets.
Dickie Than of Houston, with 12 ~
votes, was runnerup at shortstop to
Ripken, who led the league with 211
hits and drove in 102 runs. Luzinski.
who set aDH record with32homers.
outpolled Hal McRae of the Royals,
who had 17 votes.
Hoyt, 24-10, won easily over
Detroit's Jack Morris, 20-13, who
had 14 votes for right-handed
pitcher, while McGregor, 18-7. was

Voling results
F'h~l

CHICAGO (AP) - Although
LaMarr Hoyt won 24 games this
season, more than anyotber pitcher
in the American League for the
second Straight year, his .thoughts
about winning the Cy Young Award
were clruded with doubt.
But there was little doubt among
the voters for the award honoring
the league's best pitcher. Alter
winning by a wide margin, the
soft-spoken Chicago White Sox
right-hander described the honor as

~ Eddk' Murra) , lla l limfll'~&gt;
C~•r. Mll'&lt;'il U!wr l·lth : Hod

BaSf'

10,11: C'('('!l
C'a n"U , C'aliJor-nl a •'• ·

~dR.tSt•-1 U1 \\1-u:O;t•r, 0riLUJ! tffll :

Mann.\ 'l'rl!lo. ~] (ult t ,] r1• : .)u ll.J r ru 1,
O.ICil.':O Whltr f:.
1'!1 ll&lt;~ma ...o CMI"ia.
TOI'0/110 Ill; i1 ,, ~~ l r. S1. l..ri.Jb. I~L
F't'lln~ Whlll'. Ka nt-.1 ~ tl\ 1:!1; .tlm C'.anrno.•r.
Mltwaukf'l' rl ' · I •. t it'\ l .o!J("l&gt;. Oald:md cl ):
,)()(&gt;

Mori!:IJI. Phtl.lll• ·lphia

t\1.

Third Hasc- M ik(' Schmidt. Philadelphia

1-10 1: \\'adfl Bop::$, !~ron 1:t! 1: !:I Ill Madl ock,
Pimburllh 11"!1: P&lt;1(1ro t.ur rrrro. l.o~
An~P]I.., •i•. I\ IITt•l! E1·; m.~ . San FLJI'I('ij;{li
111 : Paul :Oinlltril . Mill~&gt; illlkt't.' tl •
ShOrl.slll) - Cui R'iJlk£'11 Jr .. ll.1ltimor"C'
tli·l', 1; DitkK' ThOn . Hou ~1on t 1 ~' 2 1: Hobin
Younr . l\lllu. tmKC't• 1\11: AI,Hl Tr:rmnv&gt;ll,
Dt;troit ~~~: nawS.milh St l.oui si.lt. R.tflwl
Ram irf'l'.. ,\rlanl3 , I'
OUiflt'ld- Da lt' ~lurphy. Atlnnra t!fit:

B::l!iton 1n,: Da\'f' \\"mfle ld. l"&lt;•w York
Yankflt"'!i , il . Ron 1\1!11£•. Chic~o \\'hire So.~
t5r: LJo,·d MllS!'In . l bronro t31 : Rick~·
Hrntrrscln, Oakland r:.!1; Grorec- Hrncbidl,
S1. Louis 12 1: JOSl' eM. llouston 01 : K(.'n
Griff~·, f\:(".1 ' York Yankt~~ r l 1; Tf'rr)' Pull!,

-.r. Louh fl ).

C&lt;tlch('f - Lann • ra msh. [)I:&gt;U\111 13tit:
Carlton t'lsk, Chlca~o WMr So~ 1251: T&lt;'d
"tmmons, Mrlwaukw !1.:.!1: Ten)' K()f!IK'd}'.
San Dk&gt;go t7 1; BI'I.K'{' Ol&gt;nOOict. Atlanta 1$1:

Cal)' Cartf'r. Momrrnl 1~ 1: Ton,\ Pr'fw ,
Pittsburgh 131: .JQ(!:\• 0;11is. Chlca~o Cubs
111 : Daml.IPon('r.St . LOUi)-;( 11 .
])(&gt;signaled

Hllll'l' - Cr(J: LU2lnSkl,
Chinij!:o Whit P~ i6l 1: Hi!IMcFtae, Klmsas
City tl7 1: DJn Raylor, NN' York Yank(I(&gt;S
161 : Jim Rke , Jloston 121: Rod Ca~',
Ca\lforn.Ja !lr: Cliff Jolvl~n. Toronto 1U:
Tro Simmons, M llwaukC'(' Il l; C&lt;~ rl Yastl'a.&gt;msld. BosJon ill .
Rl,;:ht·hancWJ PIIL'h••r -

I ;,rMarr Hqyt,

Chkago Whllf' Sroo: j ~7171: Jack Morris.
[)('trol! iW; John IX'nn~· . Phl!adelphln !IH:

Marlo Soto, crrclnnatl 19~ \; Stf'\'l' Ro.o:ers.
Montreal (9): Rld1ard OO!.son, Chleago
Whil e Sox 121: S10rm Davi!o . &amp;ltlmure 01 :
Nolan Ryan. Houston 111.
l...l,'ft·IIMdrd PI!Chf'r - Sroll McGregor,
Baltlmor(l i-19'-hH R on Guidry, NPI'' YOrk
Yanka."S !281: St~ Carlwn. Phtbdt&gt;lphia
1:11 : Mlkt&gt; F1anaAan . Bal timor•• 131 ; L&lt;ln-y
McWllliams, Pit1sbur~h Ill : Davr Rlgh!'tti,
New York Yanl&lt;C'eS Il l: Ali('(' Hammaker,
San Franc!sro (21; Floyd Bannisl('r, ChiC'JRO
\\'trite&amp;,. 11171.
·
Rei~ Pltdlf'r - D&lt;lnQui!;('lt l:rtl)' , Kansas

City

t83~ 1:

JcsSC' Orosco. Ne\o\' York Mf'ls

(8Y.! 1; Rid\ Cioss.1gl', Nf"A' \'orkYankC&lt;'S (3\:
l..p(&gt; Smith, Chicago Cubs t l l.

CY YOUNG AWARD
WINNER - LaMaJT Hoyt, the
barrel-hellled Chicago While
Sox righthander who led the
major Jeagties with 24 victories
this year, was named the winner
of the Cy Young Award in the
American League on Tuesday.
(AP Laserphoto).

'.

Scoreboard
Hockey
Nlltlonal Hodt:ey ~a,rue
By 'Jbe i\98oclaled Pl'ess
\Vale!l Conference
Patrick Dlv!UJn
" ' l. T 1'1.5 GF GA.
NY Ranfi:ers
PIIIIDdt'lphla
1'\Y !Sit'S

!1 1 0184.126
72 1 154727

460
1 7 I)
Nf'W Jersey
7 0
PltT.Sbutl(h
8 0
Adums l)lvWon
7 3 I
&amp;Jsron
5 3 I
5 3 I
Hm1krrd
J I

8:!1
"
'll
2 Zl
:! ll!

Washln~:1on

Browns ponder · 4-4 record
BEREA, Ohio (AP) -A4-4mark
at the halfway point of the National
Football League season has left the
Cleveland Browns wondering why
they haven't done better.
Four weeks ago, the Browns
authored a thrilling 30-24 overtime
vlctol)' against the explosive San
Diego Chargers to become 3-1 a nd
snare first place in the American
Conference Central Division.
Then came a loss to the Sea ttlc
Seahawks, a victol)' over the New
York Jets and losses to the
Pittsburgh Steelers and Cincinnati
Bengals.
The Browns are two games
behind the f&gt;-2 Steelers in the
division, but they are better than
Cincinnati, 2-6, and Houston, 0-8.The
winless Oilers are in Cleveland

that went 3-1, except we've lost three
Sunday to challenge the Browns.
of the last lour. Guys are giving 100
•·r can't put my finger on percent. I know that. We can make
anything," says veteran quarter· the playoffs, but we'll have to win
seven of the la~t eight."
back Brian Sipe, who has start.ed
Fullback Mike Pruitt, who suf- '
each of the eight games. "There is
fered
a rib injul)' three games ago,
nothing wrong with us that beating
ume for the team to take a
said
It's
Houston won 't c\ire.l'm confident if ·
good
look
at itself.
we take care of business on Sunday,
"Maybe
we're tl)'ing too hard,"
everything will fall into place
Pruitt
says.
"But we can't point
again ."
fingers, and we've got to stop that
Ozzie Newsom, the Browns'
before It goes too far. It' swhy we had
a team meeting 1on Monday). Only
All-Pro caliber tight end, leads the
losers point lingers." '
·
league in pass catching at the
halfway point. He's caught 46 for 467
Receiver Bobby Jones says the
yards, and he insists the team can't
best sUlllies ahead for the Browns.
solve a problem if there . Is no
"There's nobody left on our
problem to solve.
schedule that we can't beat," Jones
"Notldng is wrong," Newsome
says. "The Important thing Is that
says. "We're still the same team
we don't lose our confidence."

Bowl trip Buckeyes' only salvation
ByGEORGESffiODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- Tight
end John Frank calls 16th-ranked
Ohio State's football season nightmarish and says the Buckeyes' oniy
salvation could be a 12th straight
bowl trip.
" It's almost like a nightmare that
we lost two conference games
already. It's big disappointment.
We hoped to win the Big Ten and go
to the Rose Bowl, especially the
seniors," Frank said Tuesday.
Ohio State, the pre-season Big Ten
title favorlte,lost at lowa20-14andat
Illinois 17-13 to fall two games from
the conference lead, currently
shared by Michigan and the lll!nL
Frank refuses to point the finger
at any certain phaseolthegame, but
It certainly Is not his fault .
He !)as become the first tight end
in Ohio State history to account for
100 career receptions and produced
his best single-game pertorrnance
SatUrday with five receptionsforll5
yards and a 39-yard touchdown in a
21·11 victol)' over Michigan State.
"It's hard to put the blame on
anybody. It'sl\ard to believe an Ohio
State would play like that," he said.
~'rank admits Saturday's game
with visiting Wisconsin is a big one
for the 5-2 opponents, both consi-

a

dered strong candidates for postseason appearances.
"We've been told If we go'9·2, we
have a good chance of being invited
to the Fiesta Bowl," he said. "It's
most certainly our goal now."
To do that, Ohio State would have
to beat Wisconsin , Indiana, Northwestern and Michigan.
Earle Bruce, the Buckeyes'
coach, marvels over Frank's intensity In both practice and games.
Other coaches notice it, too. "!wish!
had 30 Franks on my team. In my
opinion. he's a first-rounder (pro
draft choice)," Michigan State
Coach George Pertes said.
However, Frank concedes these
are tl)'ing times for even his
attitude, saying, "It's difficult to
·motivate yourself when your goals
areshotdown."
His 1,181 receiving yards and r
eight touchdowns in his four college
seasons are a surprise to Frank. The
product of Mount Lebanon, Pa.,
came to Ohio State because he loved
to block.
"I caught a lot of balls in high
school- over 50 in myseniorseason
- and I figured )hat would end it. ·
But the passing offense has opened
up in the Big Ten. Mark Herrmann,
Dave Wllson and Art Schllchll!r
started a precedent," he said.

The 6-foot-3, 218-pound Frank
wants to play pro ball before he turns
to a career in medicine. Hecarriesa
3.&amp;1 academic average in pre-med
and has applied lor a Rhodes
Scholarship.

By The Bend
.

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15
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ll

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9

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0
8
Camptx&gt;U Cmlef'm oe
NcJm~ Divl~lon

O!lcago

7
6

St . Louis

n·

14

12

33

31

I
I

9
7

43

47

37

46

'

27

31

..

2

6

5l - 39
51
X 3!l

'

6

29

'

25

,,

Varuxouver
Los Angel£'!\

2

Winnipeg

2

Ca lg:~ry

2

40

0

;
2 3 2
SmytJ.• Olvkbl
7 I I
15
4
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9

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31

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MJnnC'SOia

44
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38

5
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1\retOd:l,y '~&gt; GIUll&lt;"~

Minn'-&gt;sola 4. M&amp;llll'&lt;ll 3

"
37

especially with ihe streak I had at
the' end of the season, that !'d be
considered pretty heavily," he said
after arriving in Chicago on
Tuesday night from his home in
South Carolina.
"I figured the only thing that
mighthavestoppedmewastheyear
(Royals reliever Dan) Quisenberry
had," hel)dded.
Quisenberry finished second with
81 votes to Hoyt's116. Detroit's Jack
Morris was third with 38 points .
To be sure, the portly, 28-year-old
pitcher, had reason to be uncertain
,
about his chances.
Despite a league-leading 19vlctortes for a third-place team ln1982,he
dldn 't get a single first ·place vote lor
the Cy Young Award, which went to
18-game winner Pete Vuokovlch of
the Milwaukee Brewers. Hoyt also
faUed to make the Amertcan League
AU-Star team either this year or last.
Thls year, he was ihe ace of a
pitching staff that led the White Sox
to the West Division crown, their
first pennant title of any kind since
winning theAL in1959. They lost the
playoffs this year In four games to
the world champion Baltimore
Orioles.
In 2602-3 innings, Hoyt struck out
148 batters and walked only 31, a

Faintillg caused by decreased blood flow to brain
By Edward Schreck, D.O.
QUESTION: What causes a
tainting spell?
ANSWER: A dt"Crease in blood
flow to the brain causes
syncope (sin-&lt;:opy) as It Is called
in mediCal terminology. These ep!
isodes last only a .
few seconds and

...,_4524

BARGAIN MAJNES SAT A SUN
AlL SEATS 12.00
ADMISSI~

a person is usu- ..,.

EVERY TU£SI:Mr $2.00

Beat of the Bend

wu.~hlngtoo

1. Pittsburgh o
Chlrago 5, Bostett 1

Hflr1Jord 8. Los Angt"les)
\'anrover 7, St. Lc.trl~ 1

By BOB HOEFLICH
DaDy Sentinel Staff
An appearance by the Meigs High
School Band should certainly put
some life Into the
Cor)ununlty Halloween Party
be staged Monday night at the
Meigs Junior
High football
field.
A parade wlll pn&gt;ce&lt;le
with participants,
costumed,
parents, teachers and evel)'onemeeting at 6 p.m. at the Fruth-Se;u-s
area. The band wlll be a part of the
parade and will &lt;1lso present music
at the party which Immediately
follows the parade. Middleport
Chamber of Commerce President
Yvonne Scally was delighted to be
able to announce the band's
partiCipation.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3106

Wedneftdey's GAmes

Teachers of Meigs High School
wW be avallable to meet with
parents next Tuesday fromn 6: 00 ttl
8 p.m. so you probably will want ,to
meet wiih some of the teachers of
your chlldren.
Efforts are bell'lg made by the
teaching staff to contact parents in
order to encourage participation in
the conferences. Carl Hysell, Meigs
Juvenile Officer, wlll be available
also to meet with parents.
Parents who desire to be on hand
to meet with a teacher or teachers
should contact John Redovlan or
Mrs. Martha Vennarl at 992-2158 or
992·2159 no later than Monday.

Thlll"!lday's GIIRH'S

Boston a t Minnesota, tnl
~ ul Philadelphia, tnl
Pltt.~buq;~tr at ChlcaJ[n. In\

Transaclions
8,\SEllA.LL
American l£11g\K'
CALJF'OR.;-JlA ANGEl.S-Signf'd Doog
0A:!J1(('5, ttllnl ba!Kman, To a three-year
ronlrocl.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Named Bob
Humptu't&gt;YS coorcunator of pl2yer drve&amp;opmmt.
TORO!\'TO BLUE JA '1'5-Named Cloyd

Boyer minor league pitching lnslructor.
Natlornll l.f!ague

Marshall tops
Redmen, 18-41
HUNTINGTON, w. Va . - The
Rio Grande College cross countl)'
squad was defeated 1841 by
Marshall University recently .
Mark Peb;son was the top runner
for the Redmen finishing fourth
with a time of 26: 11.
Darren MU!er was sixth (26:28),
Kurt Herron ninth (28:40), Devron
Steele lOth (30: 04) and Randy

LCS

1\NGELE..~

DESIGNED WITH
YOU IN MIND ...

HA."'KETBALL
NatiOnal Ba.,kcthal Amocladoo

C

Members of the Racine Emergency Squad will stage their annual
ham and turkey dinner Sunday at
llie Southern High School Cafeteria.
It's a big undertaking and anyone
wishing to donate any Items please
contact a squad me,m ber. Cash
donations may be sent to the Racine
Emergency Squad, Racine.
Serving wW start and 11 a.m. and
continue untll the supply of food Is
exhausted. . Proceeds wlll go for
purchasing accessory .equipment
for the heart monitor.

OOOCERS--Sigr\ed

Rick Monday, ootlll'lder, to a onc--yc'ar
contra(' I.
L E V E L A
CA\ ' ALIERS-Signro

N

D

.Jnhn Gfln·ls. ro1ward.

These aren't just shoes for jeans ...
these are shoes from Levi's'" Shoes &amp;
Boots. Designed for a sleek, up-dated
look that complements today's jeans
and sportswear. The Kraton 01 rubber
bottom is new. too, with the " high
tech" Influence of the. 80's. Try on
Ieday's Levi's'" Shoes &amp; Boots.

I N D I AN A
PACERS- Cut
Hank
McDowell, forward.
NEW JERSEY NEIS-Acquln&gt;d FWggit!
JohnSon, forward, from the Philadelphia
76ers In ('l)ll'htmJ."C' ror .Eddie Ph!U!ps, for·
ward, Hora~ ~'('liS, R\J:ltd, a 1!117 S«'·

ond·roond draft pkk and cash. Cut Dirk

MIM!efll}ld, ,.ard.
PHOENIX SUNS-PI11C"l'd Charles Pitt·
man, forward, on till' Injured rt"Serve lbt.
SAN OTEGO Q.IPPEftS.--..-C\11 Kevin
F'1garo. guanl
•

-

~P:e~ir~so~n~12t~h~(30~:55~)·:.__ _ _ _~===========~

Ann Barrett ofRutland had a close

caD but Is making progress at

OU.O.UIY"""'-•OOOtatftoott••r

University Hospital in Columbus.
The family Is extremely grateful for
aU of your kindnesses, prayers and
help during the emergency.

Suede

$J200

'

Due to tbe rainy weather tha
second annual Fall Expo New Car
and Recreational Show sponsored
by WMPO Radio last Saturday was
postponed untU this Saturday.
The show wW be held at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds from 10a.m. to
4 p.ll'). and Is free of charge. .
There will be 1984 cars as display
as well as new tractors, motorcy·
cles, home energy and recreational
displays, heat pumps, home and
business computers, home siding,
storm doors and windows and other
ltemsfOryou to look over.
TheMelgs,Southem,Easternand
Kyger Creek High Schools Bands
wjJJ play beginning at 11 a.m. and
rwmlng through 3 p.m. ·

We Weclome You To Try Our New

.

Specialties From Our New Night
Menu .

ENJOY THE GREAT FOOD AND
FINE ATMOSPHERE

Smooth
Leather

.$JSOO

TUESDAY • SATURDAY
5 fi.M. • 10 P.M. ·

Lounge Open Monday
Thru Saturday

··
The Orange Fire Department of
Tuwers PlainS frequently stages its ·
chicken barbecues to raise much
needed money lor department
projects. However, what would
these events be withoUt the great
pies and cakes made and contributed by the ladles? Girls - Fire
Department President Joe Lantz
ttsaes a big "THANKS" your way.

11 A.M. • 1 A.M.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

Deacon Giles

.....
&amp;

Saturdt~v

Nlights

Hartley Shoes Located in the
Upper Bloclc in Pomeroy

HARTLEY SHOES
STORE HOURS:

Moldar·Thurs., Sit. t--5
Frtd1y 9-1

lti healthy people, the decreased

Standing still in an upright
position for a prolonged period of

blood flow to the brain is caused b.v
a temporal)' malfunction of that

time ('as a band member or soldier
rna~· have to dol can lC'ad to a

th~

nervous system

pooling of blood In the tegs. When

which normally detects drop in
blOOd pressure. During such drop$,
the nervous system usually s ignals
the heart to pump more rapidly,
increasing blood flow to the brain.
But if this process is inhibited, the
result is a decreased blood flow to
the brai n wit h. a subsequent
passing-out or fainting spelL

the person has TO move suddenly, it

portion or

I'OIIEROY, OHIO
992·5272

takes " while for the blood to return
to the heart and be propelled on to
the brain, causing fa inting.
Excessive hea t a lsoca n trigger a
faint. Hot weather or being in a
stuffy room may cause increased
blood flow to the skin and muscle.
This leads to a decreased blood
return to the heart, with a

subsequent lesser amount sent to

a t 7 p .m . . at the James Rhodes
Community Center, Rio Grande
College.

the bra in.

•

. Be sure to mark Nov. 19 on your
calEI\dar. 'IbiS IS !he date set tor !he ·
·second annual art auctiOn of the
four-county Big Brothers-Big Sis·
ters Program. 'I1Ie event wll1 begin

•

,

~..•-.

Nervous tension also can bring on
physical reactions that end in a
fai nt. Although the exact physical
process is not completely under·
stood, we know that fear, surprise
or nervousness can start a chain

How carne I can remember the
names of movie stars from man)(
years ago and I only saw them' like
once a year and today , I can't
remember the names of theardyol .
television stars who appear weflkly 1
or more often? Well ·- you keep
smiling!!!

reaction of responses that result in
syncopy.
QUESTION: Are fainting spells
symptoms of disease"
ANSWER: Although healthy people sometimes faint, recurring
episodes may signal heart disease
or other serious problem. A recent

Edward BeairofChester has been
transferred from the Port Clinton ·
Hospital to theOhioState University
Hospital where he Is a cardiac
patient. Cards may be sent to
Edward Beair, Room 804 Rhodes
Hall, Ohio State University Hospital, Columbus, Ohio.

OF OHIO, INC.

Butlalo at lktroit. (n)
......
Wlnnll)('f:: at N.Y. RanRl'rs, tn l
W 11.~hington at New Jf'rsey, (n)
Edmonton at Toronto, (n)
51. Louis at Calgary, lnl

seconds to a minure. '

The life of the party

. MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
HOURS
.
• SUNDAY 11:00 TO 8:00

PhlladNphla 4. Quri:ft' 2
Wlnnlp(.'g t f" .Y. Islun&lt;rrs 2

"'

ally unconscious no more than 15

FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2ND AVE.

'
' '
Wednesday, October 26, 1983

Family Medicine

531 JACKSON P1KE • RT. 36 WEST
PhOne

'

The Daily Sentinel.
Page-7

remarkable average of only 1.07
walks per nine lnnlngs- and four·of
the walks were Intentional.
Hoyt had prediCted that " If I win
20 games, I should get a vote this
year." So after a season ol success,
he and his wife, Sylvia, bought a
bottle of expensive champagne just in case.

''better than a dream.''
"I felt like with the games I won,

AndrY' Dawson , Monnu11 t!ll "•: Jlm J{lre

Hoostoo (1 r: [ mmll' S.nlth.

'

ChiSox's Hoyt
Cy Young winner

SiD:Jic

in a closer race with New York
Yankees lefty Ron Guidi)', 21-9, who
had 28 votes.

'•'

SAVE IS¢

New England Journal of Medicine
article pointed out that probably the
most effective means of finding the
cause of fainting is taking a good
medical hlstol)' and · doing a
complete physical.
Your doctor w!ll be especially
careful to look lor any disorders of
the heart or vessels. This is because
many clrculatol)' problems can
lead to fainting. For e)!&lt;ample,
skipping many heart beats sometimes leads to fainting spells.
Impro perly functioning heart
valves which obstruct blood flow
are another cause of fainting.
Blockage of the large neck vessels
due to hardening of the aneries can
also decrease blood flow to the
brain and bring on blackout s.
Some blood pressure medications
may cause fainting, especia lly In
older patients as they stand up or
move quickly. The dosage of the
medication may have to be adJusted for these people.
Certain types of epilepsy cause
blackquts which must be treated
differently !rom fainting caused by

heart problems. Dt~betics who are siguiflcance. Recurring problems
taking either Insulin or tablets for
should be investigated. As with any
controlling blood sugar also may . medical problem, the sooner the
experience syncope from low blood disorder iS brought to a physician's
sugar, and should receive prompt attention, the more likely that the..
and appropriate treatment.
underlying cause ca n be deterThe ordinal)' fainting spell which mined and treated properly without ·
occurs under emotional or physical further 'complications lor the
stress probably has no medical patient.

SPECIAL
CREAMED BAKED CHICKEN, MASHED POTATOES,
HOMEMADE NOODLES or CHOICE OF VEGETABLE &amp; ROLL
Try Our Daily

LUNCHEON &amp; DINNER SP~CIALS ........... s2.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS ......................... s1.99
DINING ROOM CLOSES AT 7 MONOAY-SATIJROAY
DINING ROOM CLOSES AT 4 ON SUNOA Y

NEW FALL HOURS

5:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m. Weekdays
8:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Sunday
~'7W'lrr:t:..,;

�r

•

: Wednesday, October 26, 1983

Wednesday, October 26, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'Alfred UMW meets, plans for holiday
. Plans for their Chrt.stmas giving
tD commUillty members who are In
the arm!!(! forces or are shut-Ins
were made when !be Alfred United
Methodist Women met at !be
church.
The group made plans for their
annual Christmas party with the
date to be set later and members
slgnoo friendship cards for Emma
Lou Finch, June Stearns, Kate
Rodehaver and Helen Woode and a
get-well card forOsle Henderson.
Martha Poole presented the
prayer calendar and chose Doris
Fair, latty leader In Oklahoma. The
group signed a birthday card lD be

meeting.

sent to her.
Nine members answered roll call
and 14 sick calls were reported.
Thelma Henderson gave a missions report sent by Shlmba Ngole
Bulayaa, a leader In the UMC,
Zaire, Africa. In her article It was
emphasized t'hat Africans, despite
their poverty, raise money to match
funds sent from the Unltoo States
ahd Europe. This money Is
for
church buUdlng and repair, evangelism and leadership tralnlng.
Nina RDbtnson, Clara Follrod and
Nellle parker reported on the UMW
annual meeting. Mrs. Henderson
reportoo on the county councU

Cancer AnswerLine

·Smoking ·
and ..
cancer

.

Mrs. RobinsOn presented · !be
program, "TeJevtsion: Some Fam·
Uy Portraits" with aU merilbers
taking part In readings and !be
disCussion.
During the social boor refresh·.
ments were seiVOO by F1orence Ann
Spencer and Mrs. Henderson to
those named above and to Anna
Thompson, Osle Mae FoUrod and
Gertrude Robinson.
The next meettngwUI be Nov .15at
the home of Mrs. Parker and Mrs.
Poole.
Members are lD take
readings pertaining tD Thanksglv.'
lng and Christmas lor the program..' -

usro

Pomeroy-Middl~port, Ohio
A regular featurp prepar'ed by thP
American Cancer Sociery. to help
save youdlfe .from cancer.
QUESTION: Do nonsmokers get
lung - ~ancer•
..
·
. .ANSWERlil&gt;e: Yes, but among
· them II Is relatively rare. C!garetre
smoking Is responsible for about 7~
to BO.percentof al!lung ca ncer ln tho .·
United States.
· ·
QUESTION: How manv smok:
ers:would like to quit?
•
ANSWERllne: Surveys have
shown tha t 85 percent of cigarette

smokers would like to stop, and that
great many .have tried at least
·once to rid themselves of the' habit .
QUESTION: Should constant
pain in the stomach be cause for
concern? . Could it be a cancer
warning signal?
ANSWERJine: Pr6Mbly not. but
sometimes .when you body tries to
tell .yqu .that something Isn't right It
may send .a confusing signal. One
person's cramps may be another's
symptom of an ulcer. gall bladder
disease, or maybe even cancer. Ask

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

your doctor to make the diagnosis .
II there's a problem, it can be dealt
with. If not, you'll have peace of
mind.
•
QUESTION: Do anticancer
drugs sometimes have dangerous
side effects that might even kill
people or cause other can~ers~
.
ANSWER!Ine: While it ts true ·
tha t some anticancer drugs have ·
very powerful side effects, the good
they do far outweighs the bad. For
example adriamyc!n can be "card!- .
otoxlc" · temporarily harmful to

a

one's heart
yet thousandS of
cancer P&amp;.t ients owe their l!vesto Its
use. Methotrexate also Is very
toxic, but an anti-toxic agent clrtovorum ~ has been found to
offset Its potentially destructive
effect on normal cells. ·.
QUESTION: What about pipe
smoking? Is it dangerous too?
ANSWERline: Pipe smokers are
less likely to develop lung cancer
than cigarette smokers. But pipe
smokers run as great a risk of

developing cancer of the mouth,
lips, or throat.
QUESTION: What Is meant by
"occult" cancer?

ANSWERLtne: An "occult"
cancer. I.$ one that develops silently
without. any sign of trouble or
discomfort. Eventually the disease
wUI appear. It wUI not go away.
That's why It's so important to get
regular health checkups and follow
a Prudent ltle-sty!e.
For more information call 9927531.

.,

Chester
council
conducts
meeting
.

Inspection by Faye Hoselton, ·
Deputy National Co11ncU of Oltlo, of
the Chester Co\lllcil 323, Daughters
of America, was held recently at the
hall.
FolloWing her Inspection, Mrs.
Hozelson compUmentoo the council
on the work.
Those received
officially during the Inspection were
Mrs. Hoselton, Dorothy Ritchie,
state council conductDr; Esther
Smith, deputy of District 13, Eileen
Clark, deputy state councilor,
Guiding Star 124, Syracuse, and

,.
Sellers. Pictured, left to right, front row, are Linda
Chapman, Corissa MuHord, Sberry Johnson, Abby
Blake, Trls Roosh; second row, lA!e Luckeydoo,
Brooke Coates, Heather Frankwlck, Dorothy Older;
and third row, Jessica Capehart and Kyla Sellers.

BROWNIES INVESTED AND REDEDICATED
- These Brownie scouts of Middleport Troop 1.254
were Invested and rededicated in ceremonies held
Monday altemoon at the Middleport E lementary
School. Troop leaders are Sara Johnson lutd Pam

Betty Roush, deputystatecounc!lor,
Chester.
Frlendship night was announced
for Nov. 3 at 6: :ll p.m. at Golden
Gleam Councll25l, Marietta, with a
potuck supper. Members are to take
a covered dish and table service.
Flag bearers escortoo Mrs.
Hazelton anti Mrs. Betty Rcush to
the altar and Carolyn Holley, oh
behalf of the Council,' presented
them with gifts. The flag bearers ·
also escorted Ada Morris and Ada
Neutzllng to the altar where they

Xi Gamma Mu readies holiday
Debbie Flnlaw and Carol Adams,
discussed plans for the holiday gift
shop noUng that additional workshops will be held. The cultural
report on hobbies was given by Mrs.
Quillen who ·Introduced her hus·
band, Tom. He talked on running

A workshop In prepara lion for the
annual holl!day giftshop to be held In
theoldSears bulldlnginPomeroyon
Nov. 5 was held following a recent
meeting of XI. Gamma Mu held at
the home of Joyce Quillen at Racine.
Charlotte Hanning presided at the
meeting and the social comrnlttee
reminded members of the Twig
bazaar to be held In Columbus with
the sorority to attend In a group.

Kathleen Scott had charge of the
program which was taken from a
book, "Women Who Win" written by
Mary Crawley. Each member gave
a readlng on goals and Important
women of the Bible.

JUNIOR scour INVESTITURE
Debbie
Cleland and Susie Stewart are leaders of !be
Middleport Junior Scout Troop 1039. Investitures and
rededication ceremonies were held Monday evening
at the Middleport Elementary School and participatIng were left lor right, front row, Amy Searls, Kelly

Stewart, Tara Gerlach, Dodle Cleland, Kbn Hanning,
and Tricia Baer; second row; Stacey Duncan, Missy
Nelson, SheDey PuWns, Susan Houchings, Mary
Creameans; and Udrd row, Sharla Cooper, Lisa
PooUn, Tabby PhUllps, Nikki Meier, Heather
Davenport, and Mary Beth Stein. ·

Reedsville UMW meets

__.._..._........... ._
, _ ........_.

The Reedsvl!!e UMW met at the Pat Martin; program leader, Mrs.
church basement with Mrs. Sue Sue Reed: news reporter. Mrs.
Douglas serving as hostess. ·
Lillian Pickens. Games were
The meeting opened "1th prayer played "1th prizes awarded .
and scripture reading from J ohn .
Potluck 'refreshments were
and Romans. Mrs . Sandy Cowdery served to the fo llowing: Mrs. Mary
led the devotional program, using Alice Bise, Mrs. Nola Young,
the topic "Lose As a Gift from guests, Mrs. Verna Rose, Mrs.
God."
Doro!ha Riebel, Mrs. Violet SatterMrs. Violet Satterfield presenled field, Mrs. Dolly Reed, Mrs .
recorded music. Mrs. Dorothy Marlene Putman, Mrs. San dy
Riebel gave the closing prayer. Cowdery, Mrs. 1\:lamie Buckley, ' 111o...
Thirty-seven shut,ln calls were Mrs. Vivian Humphrey, Mrs. Ltl· , ~reported. Cards were signed for !ian Pickens. Mrs. Cowdery was
""'
several shut-ins . The fo!!owtng awarded the door prize.
~
officers were elec ted for the new
The next meeting wUI be at the
~
year: president . Mrs . Marlene
Putman; vice president, Mrs. Sue church
Humphreybasement
seiV ing as hostess.
with Mrs .
Douglas; secretary-treasurer, Mrs.

.SPECIAL OF THE WEEK ~-'!tllll
fOOTLONGS

~

$J 1o
·

o

._"\
~
~

.

Regular Hot Dog ........ 55'

~
-,

ADQLPH'S
.DAIRY VAUEY
" At The End of the Pomeroy-Mason BrKige·'
'
PH. 992-2SS6

River v iew Gard e n Club
members had dinner at Sebastian's
Restaurant at Parkersburg for its
October meeting.
Attending were Margaret Cauthorn, Marlene Putman, Nola
Young, Cathy Spencer, Mary Alice
Bise, Opal Harris. Pauline Myers,
Margaret Grossnickle. Maxine
· Whitehead, Marilyn Hannum , Susan Hannum, Margaret Brown.
Janet Connolly, Debbie Gilmore.,
Janice Young, Grace Weber, Dolores Frank, and Ruth Anne
Balderson.
, A thank you was read from Mrs.
• E lla ·Osborne lor flowers she ·
recelvoo ·whlle shew"' Ill !&lt;'or the
Nov. 17 meeting, a Christmas
' workshop wUI be held atthe home of

..
.

TOTM SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

. r.-:,,,., r~ , ,ou buy ot !(rot•; .,• .• v·a ronteed for yor.n total
sot~,f~ct•o" rego,rdleu .of . "'C!"~fo.cturitr . II 'a"' are nat
tahtf ted l&lt;rog~ will replace yovr Item. with the tome
.b r~"d or o COf!tpGroble brand or r•fund , 0 ,.,, purchot•
· pr•ce ·
·

•·

appealing feeling

Mr. and Mrs. Steven R. Hoover,
Reule 2, Collins Road, Pomeroy,
announce the birth of their third
child, a son, Michael Ryan, Sept. 28,
at the Pleasant Valley Hospital. The
infant weighed seven · pounds, ten

1n

Grey and Taupe .

HAM SALAD ........... JA •• Sl.59

5

•

-lb.

ROLL SAUSAGE ...... :P.~~ .. Sl.89.•••••• .aA ••

Sl.98

· - ~oc

ONIONS ..... saG. ..... Sl.IO

~etergent

16 OZ. CELLO PACK

.

13 -0Z . PKG.

COCKTAIL1c4~~ JS1.59

I&lt;

'

.

' '

.

~

-

CHAPMAN
SHOES
·.
.
.
Next to Elberfelds In P!Jmeroy

-.-.

12 OZ. HORMEl CANNED

SPAM LUNCH

MEAT~PJ. s1.79

$18 9

Kroger Multi~Grain Bre~·d
ATTHUtEGU1AR PRICE

.·· GETONE

from holiday turkvys .and hams ta
ff'ult cakvs, gift cvrt.iflcates In any.
dollar amount : .. Krogvr .holiday ·
gift -cvrtlficatvs makrt a great hall·
day gift.
.
, ., .
•

CONTACT YOUI STOll MANAOII 01

Carol Bush (304) 347-2641

0

lO'AF

· :

OZ. CAMPBELL'S VEGETABLE

BOUNTY TOWELS .·... ~on. : .. 89 4

BOY
ONE
J6,oz.

[I)OJttfcc• ~ - ~
-

JUMBO

88

VAC PAl&lt;

~~~$599

Kroger
Coffee,...
KROGER
.

Grade A
Milk ............ ..~:!' .. · · · Large Eggs

INSTANT TESTEA .... J~~ .. $2.69
BEEF SO'UP ........... .tc~'~/994

$

H~111Qgenized

4 oz.

PH. 992-3982

'·

•

NAVY BEA.NS ......... e~~.. Sl.Q9

•

...

·

FREE!

.

c

.Deli Gourmet
Shaved Meats

2 LB. PEAK

.

··Kroger American
.Cheese Food

SANDY MAC

Lintoni' s Pepperoni Piua :

12 ENVELOPE SIZE

HOT COCOA MIX .... eoJ.. Sl.49

10~

' •

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED. SLICES

13-0Z . .PKG .

GET ONE

SPINACH ............ l~~~$ J$1.19

Syracuse. OH.

.

·.... Box

:. tintoni'
s PeDDeroni Pizza.
.·
AT THE H~!JLAR PRICE

CHICKEN LIVER$ ... AQ~ •••• 79¢

Plus Tax &amp; Deposit

$28_9

84·01 .

CARROTS ...euiU:lt ...... 39'

15 OZ. DEL MONTE

Open. MON.-SAl
.
For Jhe Both Of You Styling Salon

OFF LABEL

JELLO PUDDINGS .. ~.~~.D.m/89¢

'~=~~~~~
PERMANENT SPECIAL

For The Entire
Month of November

16 Oz.
BtJs,

BUY ONE

CARNATION INSTANT .

38

·a

Tide Laundry

1 LB. BOOTH

oz.

· Die·t Coke
or Coca _Cola

•

3 LB. YULOW

lb.

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES ,
SPRITE, TAB.

,, ' .. , '5185.

MARGARINEhll~.fS1.19

3'1.

Grade A
Turkeys ...... .

Bag

AGAR OR SMITHFIELD

FRUIT

Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. lA!e Wood, Rutland.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Hoover, Middleport. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Hoover have a son,
Steven, Jr. and a daughter, Ashley.

. Fresh
Ground Beef

48

'

ECKRICH 1 LB. FRESH

17 OZ. DEL MONTE

ounces.

'

Domino
Sug11r

~.

BOILED HAM

..

lO·U-lB. AVG . FROZEN YOUNG

1 LB. TASTY.BIRD FRYING

and mooth leather uppers comb1ne to capture a most

.

. .....

'

lb.

..
WIENERS ................
P.~~.. $1. 99

-

You'l l want to get togethe r with what Connie's got : two
tou c hable textur es 1n one beaut, ful boat. Coord1ntmg suede

'

K .ROGER
GLADLY
. WELC()MES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

1 LB. KAHN'S PACKAGED

I LB. TE£N QUEEN QUARTERS

IWOLEATHERS TOGETHEI!.

..

U.S. GOV :T INSPECTED
COST CUTTER ·

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU OCT 29. 1YS3

HOMEMADE

,. ..
,

PERCH FILLETS ..... ~.P.~~ .. Sl.99

Mrs. Grace Weber. Members are to ·
bring gifts for Athens Mental
Health Center.

Hoover birth

,.. ..

Phone 742-2100

30 COUNT MICHIGAN
CHEESE ...... !KG...... Sl. 97. CELERY
......BUIU:H ...... 49'

Ri'Verview garden has meeting

NONE:

DEPARTMENT STORE

:.;,

Ir;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~

SOLD ONLy IN 5-LB. ROLLS $·4.95 .

,

.,
,

IN .GALliPOLIS ANll POME80Y. -STORES.

WE: lfUIVf rHE: liGHT TO liMIT QUANTJriU
SOLD TO DU,lUS

RUTLAND

KRAFT 12 OZ. 16 SLICE
AMERICAN INDIVIDUAL
WRAPPED PROCESSED

~

POMEROY OH .

Route 7
·Old VFW Hall '
Tuppers .Plains
667-6485

...-------___:--.,----~==========~

Evelyn Hollon presided at the
meeting reading a poem, "Tender

'' !"'

ANN'S
.•
••
CAKE
DECORATING

Class," with Mae Hollon having a
reading from Ideals and the Lord's
Prayer. Mary Nease was the
co-hostess for the meeting.

Scripture readings from the book
of Proverbs were read by the
members, and Kathleen Scott had a
poem, "I Didn't Have Time to
Pray." Lillian Napper read from I
Corlntheans 13. Thirty-eight sick
calls were reported.

COPY.ICHT 1913 · THt kitQCU CO . ITEMS AND PRICE:~.
C.OQO 'UN OA Y OCT ll THIQUCH SATI,JIO-.Y OCT

r.:==========:;:

and jogging and the benefits.
Maurlsha Nelson and Janet
Peavley were hostesses, and the
next meeting was announced for
Nov. I.

Forest Run UMW meeting held
"Goals tn Life" was the theme of
the program presented at the recent
meeting of the Forest Run United
Methodist Women held at the home
of Mrs. Uswin Nease. ·

were presented birthday gifts by the
Council and cards by the members.
· Keith Ashley was piartist for !be~
meeting. Refreshments were
served by Lora Damewood, Betty ;
RDush, Iva Powell and Genevieve ;
Ward.
.
,
Others attending were Ada Bls· ·
sell, Vlrgln!a Lee, Doris Grueser, '
Jean F'rooerick, Eva Robson, ,
Elizabeth Hayes, Goldie Frederick, '
L~ma Hensley, Mae McPeek,Zelda ;
Weber, PauUne Ridenour, Mary ·
Hayes, Charlotte Grant, Alta Bal· .
lard, Penny Smith, Ethel Orr, Sadie :
Trussell, Todd Bissell, Erma CJe. ·
land, Cora Beegle, ,Jo Ann B;lwn,
Letha Wood, Thelma White, Fern ,·
Morris, Mary Showalter, Vlrglnla .
Newlun, Margaret Tuttle, Chester :
Council members; and Iva Shutts, ·
Belle Prairie Council, Belpre; :
Margaiet Eichinger, Mary Donrui '
Simms, Pauline Morarity, Guldlnsi
Star 124, Syracuse.

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U.S. NO. I

·Round White
Potatoes

16·0Z. LOAF

Kroger Multi·Griin Bread·.

FREE!

. . 79c

20
-I•.

$

48

Bag

IO·LI. lAG ... Si.29

�Page

1G-- The Daily Sentinel

VV,dnesday,Ck~r2~ 1983

Wednetday, Oo:tober 26, 1-913

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CCL appointed event coordinator
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doesn't matter whether you're a
weekly bowler; someone who bowls
onceayear,orsomeonewbo'snever
even been In a bowling alley..

The Middleport ChUd Conserva·
tlon League has been appointed
coordinator for the Meigs County
Bowl-for-Breath to be held Sunday
from 12 noon to 5 p.m. at the
Pomeory Bowing Lanes . The money ralse.d. wUJ be used for the
treatment and research of cystic
fibrosis.
Susie Soulsby, president of the
CCL, urges Meigs Countlans to
partlclpale In the bowling • . "The
Bowl-for-Breath is truly for everybody," Mrs. Soulsby said, "and It

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49'7 General Hartinger Parkway bt Middleport. Robert Day Is manager
of the Middleport Swre.

be awarded for the most sponsors
signed up at the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes, not the score of the game.
Each player llgns up 9p01180CS,
friends, relatives, schoolmates, coworkers, who pledge a cerlaln
amount of money for each point
scored. After the games .lire
completed, players collect their
pledges, turn llll!m In and receive

Calendar

A talk on "Women's Nutritional
Needs" was given by Linda Aikman
at a recent meeting of the Third
.Wednesilay,Homemakers Club held
at the Syracuse VIllage hall .
Ms. Aikman was assisted in her
presenta tion by Ralph Gibbs. Elma
Louks presided at -the meetlng with
several programs being announced
Including the fall fashion show at the
Pomeroy Elementary School and
the Christmas boutique on Nov.!Oat
the St. Paul Lutheran Church.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -Mason Chapter 157. Order of the Eastern
Star. will have grand visitation
by Mary V. Corbitt, worthy
grand matron, and Raymond L.
Lusk, worthy grand patron.
Wednesday at 7: :lJ p.m. at the
chapter hall in Mason. All area
members are invtted ro attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Lee Rick·
enback of Faith Mission will
speak at Middleport Independent Holiness Chun::h, 7: :lJ p.m.
this evening; public invited.

The pledge to the flag and Psalms

RDbert used " A Morning Prayer"
for her devotional topic and r oll call
was answered by school memories. ·· A potluck dinner was served at
noon, and the afternoon was spent
working on various projects.
Attending were Jane Teaford,
Genevieve Schneider, Margaret
Eichinger, Goldie Radcliffe, Irene
Parker, Elva Dailey, Elma Louks,
Margaret Bailey, Linda Ferrell,
France Roberls , Pauline Morarity,
Delores Whitlock , Sara RDush, and
Jean Hall.

prtzes.

RACINE
Shrinettes
Qct. 27, at
of Cora

's Fe I·
County
meet at
7::ll· p.m. ,
Thursday; ele;;hon of officers
and Pal Arnold will speak on

Gancer.

have gone to their home In Winter
Haven, Florida;
Dr. and Mrs . BU!y R; Allen, Katie
and 'Robert, Westerville, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen.

The Rev. Don K;rrr of Leading
Creek was the guest speaker at the
Sunday night services of The
Salvation Army. His message was
on God, the Holy Spirit and one
seeker was recorded during the
service.
At Thursday night's service at
The Salvation Army, Charles Jones
of Middleport wUI be the guest
speaker. He will be accompanied by
his pastor, the Rev. Earl Fields of
tbe Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Chun::h whose children, Mary and
Tlmmywillplaythegultarandslng.
The public Is Invited to attend.

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Pledge forms are available at t)le
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes or ~
Mrs. Soulsby, 992-2371, Mrs.
Houdasbelt, 992-3445, or Mrs. Peg •
Harris, 992~7J69.
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$1199

•

Deluxe
Cruet Set

Wayside Furniture
241 THIRD -·

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GALLIPOLIS, OHiq

$1999

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A dream gift for
any collector. 25
cpmpartments
.for tiny treasures.
Glass doors keep
your favorites
dust-free.

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House
Shadow
Box

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Brass Hall Tree
A welcome gift, or to brighten your
own entry haH for the holidays and all
year long. Sturdy brass hall tree has
room for lots, ofcoats, scarves and hats.
Each brass "branch" ends in marble
accent for added beauty.

Two croets, salt shal&lt;er,
pepper m/H all fit In ~r
own lazy-susan tray with

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Wood
and Cane
Magazine Rack

Brass &amp; Copper
Spittoon
A decorative addition to any $999
room and a great family gift.
Brilliant brass is accented with
copper bands. A finishing touch
is the hammered des~gn on front.

R egu lar
179.99

Portable magazine rack with carry
handle, goes from chalrside to
bedside. Cane insets $
accent the wood.

1399

easy-cany handle.

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$999

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The dinner will be served by
Trinity Chun::h with Ralph Werry of
the Meigs Inn tohardletheca terlng.
The Lord's Prayer and devotions
by Kathryn Miller entitled "Wings

.

of September" opened the meeting.
There were also readings, "Let Us
Count Our Blessings" and "A Word
to the Living."
.
The program by Mrs. Ella Smith
included readings and riddles.
Games were played with prizes
going to Edna Slusher. Georgia
Watson, Doris Grueser, and Ellen
Smith. Refreshments were In keeping with the halloween season.

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INCLUDES: PEDESTAL-DECK-HEATER-LINER
FULL WE MATTRESS-FULL KIT PATCH KIT

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0 NE WEEK 0 N LY

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Marble
Table

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The perfect occasional table.

For entry hall, living room,

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bedroom, any room that needs

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· RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees meeting. 6::lJ p.m.
Thursday; public welcome.

FRIDAY
· BURLINGHAM - Community party, 6: :lJ p.m. Friday at
Woodl].1an's Hall, Burlingham;
prizes, games, refreshments.
RUTLAND - Carport sale by
Rutland Chun::h of God 9 a.m. to
4 p.m. Friday at Bob Eads'
residence, Salem St.. Rutland;
proceeds to ohun::h building
fund.

POMEROY -Sunrise Gospel
Group will perform at the Ash
St., Freewill Baptist Church
Saturday, 7:3) p.m.

SUNDAY
. ROCK SPRINGS - Bruce
Stone wUI be at the Enterprise
United Methodist. Chun::h Sunday, Oct. 30, at 9 a.m. and at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Chun::h -at 10 a.m. The public Is
invited to attend. A freewill
offering will be taken.

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Burl-Top Wooden
· Table With
Magazine Rack

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Wooden Candle
Set of two, 7" high wood holders in
Earlly American
Maple finish.

$499
'

Nut Bowl Set

100% Nylon taxtured. Soil and
stain resistant. Treated with Anti
Stat with a long appearance life.
You will not believe this value.
Example: 12x15 Room
sq. sq.yard-$220.00 Installed

"INSTALLED
W/PAD
Textured Saxony of Enkalon Nylon
Resist soil and spills. Heat set yarn.
large color selection.
Example: 12x15 Room
20 sq. yd.-$280.00 Installed

"INSTALLED
W/PAD
This richly colored cut 8. loop
is made against soiling and static
Insured against soiling and static
shock with Scotchgard anti-static control.

*INSTALLED
W/PAD

Haunted house

Dense textured saxony plush of -1 00%
Anso for easy care and long wear,
Sturdy but fine texture for increased
resiliency and elegant contemporary style. ·

"INSTALLED
W/PAD

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SQ. YD.

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90
DAYS SAME AS
CASH

Velvet plush made of Anson nylon,
luxury at a moderant price. Feature11
a variety of warm earthtones so popular for today decorating preferences.

'·

SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY

'

Your favorite collector will love any
of these original handpainted
Graisa Monte figurines They're
made from a special blend of clays
and have amazingly detailed .
lifelike features .
Choose from eight $
delicate treasures. 999
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ARMSTRONG VINYL

$2 99

RACINE ~ The Great Bend
Hunt Club wnl have a fox hound
bench show and trade day on
Saturday at the American Legion hall In Racine at 6 p.m .
Saturday.

($1.00 Minimum)

Graisa Monte
Porcelain Figurines

.

SQ. YD.

A pretty "oral or print borciertrames·
the channing characters on~ left,
and that "special someone s
picture that slips into
the right hand secbon. $199
Folds to go anywhere.

Until Dec. 24 .

A gift for frumd. who are nuts about '
nuts. Golden "nail head" detailing ·
oocents the wooden bowl. Corne.•
complete icith nutcracker
and four picks.
1599

CASH' AND
CARRY
.

·Fox hound.
bench show

I

10% Holds

1Your Laymooy

Folding
Picture Frame

Holders ·

Wooden

NSTALLED
W/PAD

Layaway
Now

The ideal chairside table. Clns.oic burl
wood top add&lt; beauty. Maguzine rock
keeps favorite rTIIJ80Zines handy and
organized. An
SJ999
ideal family gift.

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SQ.YD.

Happenings .

CHES'IER A ha_unted
)1ollse wUJ be held In the old
Chester courthouse Friday, Saturtlay and Monday evenings. A
group of Cheter community
people headed by Linda GUlllan
has prepared the haunted house
Wblch Is open to the public free of
t$arie. Hours wUJ be from 7 to
!()p.m.
•

$1SJ99

59

SQ. YD.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse E lementary School fall carnival
Saturday night, 7 to 9 p.m. at
school; games. country kitchen,
spook house, refreshments, door
prizes, costume judging.

or in pairs. Marble with goldtone
trim on base.

"..

MON. &amp; FRI. 9 TO 8
T-W-TH.-SAT. 9 TO 5

9

a touch of elegance. Use singly

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Wayside Carpet Sale
HALLO-WEEN CARPET SALE

241 THIRD AVE.
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

SATIJRDAY

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Mr. and Mrs. Oris Frederick

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Aceordlng to Mrs. Soulsby, the
proceeds will fund research to
Improve medlclil trealrnent and
ultimately find a cure for cystlc
fibrosis, a genetic respiratory and
cHgestlve disease.
TWenty years .ago, Mrs. Souldby
noted, "few chUdren with cystic
fibrosis lived long enough to enter
school. Now thanks tO research
funded by actMtles 1~ Bowl-for·
Breeath, about half live past 21."

Magnolia club has· meeting ·
Plans for a holiday dinner party
were made when the Magnolia Club
met recently at the home of Cora
Beegle.

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Susan was klUed In a car accident in
Wisconsin on Sept. 26. Memorial
services were held In St. Paul on
Sept. 30.
Greg Hibbs has been returned to
hls home from the Holzer Medical
Center.

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THURSDAY

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the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvtn Allen and
sons Davlc'l and Scott, St. Paul,
Minn. spent a lew days with Mr.
and Mrs. Clayton Allen. They also
called on Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Frank. Their 18 year old daughter

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Oct. 9 and Is doing vE'ry well at this
tiJlle. HE' wishes to thank all who
send cards and prayers for hls
r~overy, also, the Chester garden
club for the fruit basket. Special
thanks to Rev. Don Archer and
Rev. :;tevE' NE-lson for their vtslts at

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Homemakers club meets

By CLARICE ALLEN
Denzel (Bllly) Cleland has been
returned to his home after spending
five weeks In Holzer Medical
Center, where he underwent major
surgery. Mr. Cleland quietly celebra ted his 90th birthday at home on

11

Mrs. Soulsby noted that prizeswUl :

Salvation Army
guest speaker

CONVERTED- Ashland OU Inc., recently converted 39 Save Mart
convneieace stores in the Kentucky, Ohio and West VIrginia to the
Superi\merica brand. One of the new SuperAmerica stores is Jocatro at

Chester
·News Notes

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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12 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

France, Sweden den~~nce
U.S. invasion of Grenada
.

By CARL MANNING

Associatro Press Wrlwr
The United States round little

international support today lor it'
surprtse invasion of Grenada. with
many of its strongest allies joining
traditional foes in expressing shock,
regret and condemnation.
France and Sweden denounced
the invasion, \Vhile newspapers in
London said U.S.-British rE'lations
were under severe strain. Demon-

strators burned an American flag in
Amsterdam on Tuesday nigh! and
several hundrE'd protesters
marched in Copenhagen.
At the United Nations, Guyana
iniroduced a resolution calling for
the SE'curity Council to condemn
"the armed intervention in Grenada" and call for "the Immediate
withdrawal of the invading troops"
!rom that country.
Mexico said the assault c reates
new dangers for peace in the
Caribbean and Central America
and urged the Security Council to
take steps to force the withdrawal of

"the foreign troops" from Grenada.
ME'xlco is a supp011er of lefti st
Nicaragua, which alsO condemned
the invasion, and is one of the four
Latin American nations working to
negotiate a peaceful end to Cent ra l
American con flicts.

In Canada, PrimeMinisterP.ieiTe
Elliott Trudeau said he was waiting
for proof that American lives ll'f'rP
in danger beforesaylnglfhe thought
the invasion \vas justifil!d.

Britain warned the United Stares
several times against invading

Grenada and Prime Minister Mar·
garet Thatcher told Parliament
members, "We rommunicated our
very considerable doubts .. . and
asked them to weigh carefully
several points ·before taking any
irrevocable action.''

A spokesman for Mrs. Thatcher
said she had a five-minutetelephone
conversa tion with Reagan early
Tuesday. Sources said the talk was
"sharp and to the point."
The French government said no

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unknown.

On Maine's rocky coast, Etta
Kathieen Wilcox knewTuesdaythat
her son David had been wounded in
the Marine bombing in Beirut. But
three clays after the terrorist a tt.ack,
she srlll had no word of whether
David's younger brother - also
stationed in the Lebanese capital had survived.
Seven hundred miles away, in
rural western Pennsylvania, Orlando and Janice Valore had
learned that their son Terrance was
also injured in Lebanon. But they
feared that his elder brother was

headed for the fighting in Grenada.
"My wounded Marine - If it
wasn't for unemployment, he
wouldn 't be there," Mrs. Valore
said. "He enlisted because he was
unemployed and the boys have
nowhere to go except the1.service."
"I've got to go througp this whole
thing again," said Vatorre. " I want
my older son out of there. I feel my
family has given enough!"
"! get up early and put.the TV on,
the first thing, " said Mrs. Wilcox, of
Machias, at the northeastern tip of
Maine's coast. "Then I go around ·
the channels. lt'sallyoucando-or
go crazy."
Mrs. Wllcox heard of David's
injuries, reported to include ''fractured ribs and cuts and stuff." when
two Marines knocked on the door of
· the family home Monday morning.
The 20-year-old rorporal was reported to be in "stable and fair"

state has ·the right to intervene in
another nation unless invited by the
lawful authorities of that country or
b)' th0 Uriit'txi Nations.
As expeCted, the Soviet Union
rondemned the invasion. calling it
"an a~t of open international
bligandage."
" ... Peaccloving humanity demands an immediate withdrawal
from Gr&lt;?nada of thE' interventionist
troops of the United States and their
puppets, " said the official Soviet
news agency Tass. .
Among the few nations initially
supporting the Invasion was South
Korea, which called it an "inevitable" action to protect foreigners and
maintain peace.
In Cairo, an Egyptian official said
his goverrunent believes the U.S.
action was legitimate under the ·
U.N. chatier.
In Tokyo, the Japanese government said the invasion was "regrettable" but that it understood the U.S.
concern for the safety of Americans

issued a letter to Foothills Aviation
calltnc thi&gt; proposal "tota lly
unacceptable."
Ott Oct. 11, the commission act!RI to cancel its .contract with
Foothills - Informed Hitchcock of
its inlention to " .. .bid the operation
of the · Gallia-Meigs Regional
AirpOrt."

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At that tirlle, the commission said
the ...rract required the lease·
holder toriotlfy thecounry90days in
advance of the Sept. 30 deadline if
they chose to renew the agreement.
Commissioners said no such notlfi·
cation had been received.
·The firm's' attorney, Hamlin
king, disputed that statement last
. Tuesday. He told the commission
the lease required 90-day prior
notification only lf thefirm elected to

nan~.

runway Snow removal and

utilities."
The commissioners told King
their decjsion to go to bid for airport
opera tions was unchanged.
"The position doesn't make a
whole lot of sense," Hitchcock said
yesterday, "it borders on gross
negligence on their part."
''I know the commission Is against
me personally," he added, "but
personality conflicts are irrelevent
to the validity of the agreement we
have with the county."
During the course of recent
negotiations, Hitchcock - who
purchased half interest in Foothills
Aviation from Gallipolis attorney
Douglas Cowles in August - had
been critical of both the 7-member
airport authority and the Commun-

• Size: 345 square miles
e Populat Ion : 120 th ousand
• Industries: Arrowroot starch,
coconuts, carrots,
sweet potatoes,
nutmeg and mace

Admlsslons .. ·George Scott,
Pomeroy; Jamie Barrett, Middlepart; Amanda Savage, Albany;
Ronald Diles. Jr., Shade.
· ·Discharges .. -John McDaniel,
Frank McElwajne, Jack Adams.

Eight forfeit bonds
Elghtdefendantsforleltedbondin
the court .of Pomeroy Mayor
Clllfence AndreWs Tuesday night.
• Forft!lting bonds were Ronda
Phelps, $375;- DWI; Dol!altl L Lambert, Rt. 2, Racine, $49, speed;
EIVts Peck, Racine, $63, disturbing
the peace, $113, public intoxication;
Phillip A. Moon, Pomeroy; $63,
squealing tires; Richard DeMess,
Pomeroy, Harold F. Pettit, Pomeroy, and Larry L. Lutter, Pomeroy,
$43 each, assured clear distance; ·
George R. Holman, Racine, $63,
traffic Jlght Y!Qiatlon.

Emergency runs
Five runs were made by local
en"" It'!ICY lllllts'I'uesday the Meigs
County Elllll'gency Medical Service reported.
At 10:57 a.m. Pomeroy was called
to the Pomeroy Health Care Center
tor Gelqe 9oott taken to Veterans
Memar1ll Hllpltal; at 10: 21 a.m.
TuJlllll'l Plaln8 to Hickory Lake
Ro-t b' !IelJa McGill taken to
~ Cllrk Hospital; at 6:44

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p.m. Pomeroy to Spring Ave., for
James Weyersmiller taken to
Holzer Medical Center; at 7:53a.m.
Middleport to· Pearl Street for
James Nelson taken to Veterans
Memorial; a t 3: 04p.m. Syracuse to
SR 124 for William Morris taken to
Veteran Memorial and later transferred to Ohio University Hospital.

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T ~UU lfOMdnU•&lt;I~II'IUI

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The waiting has made her third
son, 17-year-old Allan, "a nervous
wreck," she said. The high school
junior also plans a military future,
she said, adding, "He's going Air

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)!; loto &amp; Atro"'ll•
Jl ll..ttooo,.W..ntod

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0.] f oomolu• "-nt

Tl ·tn ... o.....:•

44 A.,..tm.,llvt Flono
·~· fwrniofMd lltiiHOIO

71 -llooto "•'" a.
'n llootaii.,.N

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1 Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
.
1 Print one word In each
Circle
space below. Each in·
I Tit ia l or groUp of figures
Ad Wanted
I counts as a word . Co.u nt
1 name and address or
1I phone
number if used. _~'~~~,,.~~~~~~~~~
You'll get
better results

Two marrtage licenses were
issued in Meigs, County Probate
Court.
Issu~ licenses were Nelson Ray
Morrison, 20, Mlcldlepbrt, and VIcky
Lynn Schae(er, ~1. Rutland, and
David Earl Bass, 24, Syracuse, and
Angela Kay Barton, 21, Pomeroy.
I

if v ou describe fully,
give price . The Sentinel_·r::o:_:t~S+--~;jb=t-~
I reser'ves
the ri 9ht to
1classif y , edit or reject ..:·r..:o..:2::,S+--f-"'-1F.:.:if--!
1 any ad. Your ad will be
I put in the proper 'Tt~o~l:SL-~~E~~~'j
classif ication if you'll I check the proper box
These cash rates
1
I below. .
inclvde discount
1

!Announcement
) For Rent

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or earthAlthough the gravitational pull of . J 9.
lhemoondoesnotactuallycausethe i · 10

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The Rutland Community will q."""'sponsor a Halloween party In lieu of
trick or treat Monday, Oct. 31from6
p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center.
POMEROY - The Eastern
Candy collections will be made
Local
Boanl of Educatilll wilJ
this week or may be lett at Miller's
meet
In
special session Wednes. Grocery. For add! ilona! lnfonna·
day,
Nov.
2, at 7: :Jl p.m. to
tlon call Carolyn Nicholson at·
dl9cuss
personnel
and llnances.
742-2454.

Special

se~sion

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137 a.. tt.~.

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Tto .... NT oiOr.eU-

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14 00

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noo

COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Mary Ann Orhnsk1.
Secretary
I 101 26 I IC

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•Automatic Controls
•2 Blowers
•Firebrick Uned
•Bums Wood or Coal

POMEROY - Mulberry Ave.
- Extensive remodeling:
equipped kitchen. $49,®o.OO.

REG. $995

APPLE GROVE - Farm
appr011. 75 acres, I story oome,
barn, river front acreage.
$47,500.00.
sYRACUSE - Rustic Hi~ :!'bedroom ranch, family room.
fireplace $48.000 00.

CHESTER AREA - 3 bedroom
brick veneer ranch, rec. room.
woodbumer, equipped M·
chen. $53,Clll.OO.

POIIEROY - Uncoln Hill Big &amp; beautM trash compactor. $55,Clll.OO.

OIRECTONS:
South on Ohio Rt.
7, 6 miles below
Gallipolis to Rec·
coon Creek Bridge
- Follow Signs.

RUTIAIID - Brick St. - A
home witti everythin~ out·
s!Jnding family room with bar.
$49,900.00.

REEDSVILLE -681-Family

comfort with plenty of room,
ga!age &amp; workshop.

$-16,000.00.

IIIDDUPOI!T - Business
buldin&amp; 4 apartment and 2
commercial rentals .
$45,000.00.

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•

Rtaular $15.95

$}2

~-~==--· !
I

-. - - , _ -

~!

· : •~ ==-= !J

r::t.lled

Good Selection Of
GOLD SEAL

CONGOLEUM

Reeular

$}295

KITCHEN CARPET
NOW

RUTlAND- New Lima Rd.47 acre farm, with a dteam of a
oouse. $57,!m.OO.

Starting At

Installed With Pad

lu...::.:=:.

32 .

35.

CARPET

$15.95

ANSO IV NYLON

•

Now$1595

..

lnllllled

CandJ Stripe

•

Atl. $7.95

NOW $499

- · ••• .., -·

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
.111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

RACINE - Rt 124 - Shade
trees, gara~e on II acres of
canping sites. home has 3
bedrooms. $66,000.00. .
RUTWID -

••, $11..95

TWEED

1
I

105 acres of
6,1XXJ sq. It
liMn. frae gas to house.
$85,000.00.
good l~ng land,

PQRTIAIIO - 182 acre farm,
t.n size ol Noah's Ar1&lt;, river
view, gigantic house .
$290.000.00.
RfALlORS ..
Henty E. Cleland, Jt.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dttltie Tumtr 992·5692
Jo Hil 985-4466

I

I

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

GUYSVILLE. OHIO

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'K36'
Insulated Dog Houses

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Pn. 614·843·5191
10·6·11C

I -3-ffc

USED
APPliANCES

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
l¥o M. East of Pageville
On Township Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only

Washers. Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

PH. 992-3466

10/ 19/2 mo. pd

742-2352

,,

Pair service and in·

stallation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

Limited Offer
Call 986-4225
Ask for Guy She.a
Independent Kirby Dealer.

3· 7-lfc

MINE RUN

---···-----·-··-··-·--·--·- --Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

STRIP
COAL

$30~ 0
PH.

992-2280

Three family sale. Thur1day
and Friday, Rain or Shine .
Garage Sale. Fri .. Oct. 28 . 1508 Kanawha St., Point
Don Walker's, Racine, Oh , Pleasant. W.Va .
Wood burner used less than 1
- - - - - -- - - a year. Craftman gasoline 52 Burdette Addn .. Pt. Pit .
powered edger, tools. air Clothes. books, glatisware,
· co mpressor, Home Interior small applia nces, misc.
items.
Thurs ., Fri ., Sat. 9-6 .

GUN SHOOT

RADIATOR
SERVICE

GENERAL WELDING

RACIN'E
. FIRE DEPT.

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Salem Twp . Rd. 180
Dexter. Oh. 45726
Bill Eskew

PH: 742-2456
Ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And. Drip Tanks, Also
10/ 12/2 mo. d.

Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns
Only ·

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

1-13-tfc

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

10·10·1 mo.

JEWELL'S
PLUMBING and
HEATING

New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

•Work Guaranteed
JOB - BIG

15 Years Experience

or

742-2328

OR

SMALL

992·6030
Minersville, OH.

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
992-2282
ll·Hfc

SEPTIC .TANKS
.A SPECIALTY

Free Billy goat. 304-675 -

6

BONDED

All Work Guaranteed
Call 614·742-2214
After 5 P.M.
9·22·1 mo. pd

D&amp;J
SAVEMORE-MARK

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

·Coal &amp; Kerosene
Heaters
199 TO 1189
Also Army Supplies,
Radios, Watches &amp;
General Variety
2nd St. Across From
Post Office
Mason, W. Va.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

10-3- 1 mo. pd.

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
ing - Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

949·28o0

Route I
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992-3067

Call for free siding estimates~ 949·2801 or
No Sunday Calls

773-5040

3-11-tfc

10·3-lmo. pd.

12-20-ttc

~

THE
TROPHY
KING

"CUT OUT
FOR f ·UTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AUTO
PARTS

PLAQUES
. ENGRAVING

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CHESTER

Trophy
Manufacturers

985-3561
All Makes

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 986·4269

AND

If No AMwer, Call 985-4382

REPAIR

&amp; Scottie Smith

Dewayne William•

All Makes and Models
Antanna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

CHESTER. OH.

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-ttc

Landmark

10-13-1 mo.

9·1S·l mod. pd.

614-992-2181

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

216 [ . 2nd St.

Phone
1-(614)-992·332$

Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

NEW LISTING- Modern type,
one bedroom home, ideal lor
tetiees. in Racine on large lev~
ki Bath, gas turance, storm
windows and ~nyl sidint\ On~
$12,500.

Lost and Found

LOST: 1 'grey billfol d. El1her
at Holzer .C linic or Fruth 's
Drug Store. Pomeroy ; Re·
ward . 614-992·5070 .
LOST two Beegle dogs, one
black and ta n. One white,
black, tan mix . Vic inity
Krebs Chaple Church , No
identification. Leo Roush,
Sand Hill Road . 304-675 -

4478 .

Public Sale
&amp; Aucti'on

8

M.L.
CONTRACTING RECAMATION

H. L. Writesel

ROOfiNG

All types o roof work,
new repatr, gutters
and ownspours, gutter c eanin&amp; and
paiptipg, storm doors
and wmdows.
.

ir

·'Excavating
'Ponds
'Septic Tanks

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimate!"

'Hauling

Call 949-2263
or 949-3091

949-2293
Racine, OH.

3-24-tfc

1\IIIIQ QI 1$11 I !lUI t&amp;

3- tO-tit

8· J.tk

Auction dvery Tuesday
night, Pt . Pleasant, WVa.
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg .. Camden St .

614-367-7101 .

GRAVEL
HAULED

COUNTRY HOME AND 9
ACRES - Some woods, pond
and a 3 bedroom one floor
horne. Equipped Mchen, full
basement w~h wood burner lor
only $32,500.

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckload t-' of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 275-3069.
AUCTION svery Saturday
night, 6 p.m . Mt. Alto
Au.ction Barn . Consign ments taken every Satu.r day
1 :00 till sale time . Emma
Bell Auctioneer, 304-428 -

8177 .

Al TROMM

742-2328

IIIDD1EPORT - 8 room, 2
story oome near Cardinal. 5
bedroo~ I~ eat-in k~chen, lg
loing and full baement for
$38,000.

10/20/t.f.n.

WILli WOOD ESTATES- 5yr.
o~ brick ranch with I~ family
rm. Has woodbuming fireplace,
3 bedroo~. radiant heat 2car
fin~hed garage and lg level lot
$59,900.

G&amp;W Plastics

-

Addons 1nd remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing 1nd
electricl woril
(Free Ettimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

PH. 992-2478

11·26·«c

9-11·1 mo.·pd

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .
'J im Mink Ch1ev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

446-3672

.

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furniture, 446-3169, 3rd . &amp;
Olive St ., Gallipolis, Oh .

and Supply
'Water Pipe
'Gas Pipe
'Regulators
'Fittings
'Drips

MIDDLEPORT - Brick II!
strries on Second SL Nice balh,
new kitchen cabinets, stove,
refr~erator, natural gas FA
furnace, good carpeting and 2
porch~ Asking $45,000.

'PERSONALIZED POOLS"

kids. Call 614 -388-9763 .
6 pUppies, 7 wks. old.
Mother min. Poodle. Call

JO.j.J mo.

Vinyl Siding &amp; '
Roofi

WANT A GOOD BUY - You
may be able to take over
payments on t~ (\ homes
after a rio-t I)VW!'1t 8oth
have .()~'Mrhauled, good
c;rpeling and nice balhs.
Pomeroy and Racine locations.

SAVE 30%

GLASS • GLASS !' GLASS
,"* __..,-

cia IIORE

,;' Point • Mason
1 . Auto Glass

On Sidin1and Rooflna.
Gutter and Downspouts
''Frae Eltm.t.i''
"12 Yeero Experience"
''Work Guorenteed"

R. E. HOME
You Need Glass You Need Us,, We Can Handle
IMPROVEMENTS II ~/hen
Your Every Glass Need!

WE ADVERTISE YOUR LiST·
lNG FOUR TillES A MONTH.
CALL US TO SELL OR BUY.
992-3178 FOR AN

Ohio
PH.

·'

· 446-3266, oltor 5PM .
Female mixed breed . Been
spaded. Good home only.

10-17-l mo pd.

POMEROY - 2 oouses, 21eve!
Ids; view of river and all utilities
for just $21,000.00 or good
offer.

446-2686 .
Small German Shepherd
puppy, 9 weeks old, loves

PH. 1-304-773-5634
MASON, W.VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

PHONE :
Rttidtn&lt;e: 985-3837
Warehouse: 985-3509

4 kittens. 7 wks. old. Call

H01rs: lo•.·fri. 1:00 to 7:00
..
S.t. 1:00 to U :OG noon

939 ASsh St .. Middleport.
Eveningo 614-992-3267 .
Puppies. Pan Lab. 1 male, 1
female. 8 weeks old . 614·

742-2841.
Baby long haired black &amp;
white or cr~tam 8. white

kltteno .

6t 4-992 -3283.

Kittens to give awa'y . 1 male
&amp; 2 tamales. Black &amp; gray
tiger striped. 614 - 985-

3559.
3 kittens . 614-949 -2779.
Heavy cheat type freezer .
Doesn' t work. 614· 992-

POINT-MASON AUTO GLA-SS

7764 .

Rt. 33

Cats. 614-992· 5275 .

!304) 773-5710 . n3-5118

..

Only . 304-5711-2151 .

•lnsuranco

13

services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs . Contact Kail. Burleson . agent .

1 8 Wanted to Do
General Hauling and Trash
r emo vel Service . Reliable
end dependable. Call 4463159 between 9 and 5 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small . Reliable and de pen - .
dable . For estimate call

446 -3159, 9 to 5 .
To take care of someone sick
or needs home care . Days
only, Point Pleasant or Gallipolis area . Good references .

Call 30.4-458-18)8 .
Brushhogging $15 per hr .

Bookkeeping Service in my
home. Experienced. references furnished . Send to bo~t
1 34 in care of Galllpoli1
Daily Tribun e", 825 3rd .
Ave ., Gallipolis, Oh 46631 .
McDaniel Custom Butchering. Open six days a week,

7 30-6o00 PM. 304-8823224.

BEDS -IRON. BRASS. old
furniture. gold, silver dollars, wood ice boxes. stone
jars, antiques. etc .. · Complete households . Write :

Oh.
992-7760.
M.DOr
. Muter,
At. 4 , Pomeroy ,
Wanted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique furn iture. Will buy 1
Piece or complete households. Also complete Aucti oneering service. Call Osby
A . Martin 614 -992 -6370 .

Now open. New home for
elderly people. Nurse on
duty at all time _ Phone

i iiiiiiii
304-675 -7610 .

I

PlriiiRslitl

21

Business

Opportunity
I NOTICE I

Part-time leglfl secretary
H1s . 9-12 AM , Mon .- Fr.

Giveaway

1------~~-

446-3369 .

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings , jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins, large curSWEEPER and sewing. ma - rency . Top prices . Ed. Burchine repair, pans. and kett Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave .
supplies .
Pick up and Middleport, oh . 614 -992delivery , Davis Vacuum 3476 .
Cleaner, one half mile u p - - - - - - - - Georges Creek Rd.
Call Raw Fur Buyer . Beef&amp;. Deer
446-0294.
Hides - Ginseng. Trapp in g
Supplies. George Buckley,
At. 2, Athens. Oh . Phone

4

Dump tru~k for hire . Will
haul coal. gravel , send. etc .
304-675· 31 90.

Babysitting in my home . Call

Wanted To Buy

3 Announcements

Deloris Ann's Beauty Shop,
Center St., Mason . SPE·
CIAL Acidium Perms, &amp;26.
free gift tor trying Acidium
perm. Also, hair cut, $7.50 .
Bring your friend get one for,
86 .00 . Operators Deloris
and Carla, 304-773 -9692 .

Phone 3.04-675-6357 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

Call 6 14-256-1427 .

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump rrucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
- Sewer
-Gas lines .
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS

Typin g and office work by
para legal secretary a1 resi ·
dence, pick up and deliver .

Phone 4~6 - 2921 .

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm , An tique &amp; liquidation sales.
Ucensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

YOUNG'S·

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

6040 or 614-949-21 29.

SANDY AND BEAVER In surance Ca . has offered

614-664-4761 . 1-9 Daily.

NEW LISTING- Old 8 10m, 2
story oouse in Rufland on large
itl lor$12,500.

Tree trimming and remov•l.
Free estimates. 614 -9 92 -

Private home care . Lacties

1833.

9
J

!i~L Pomeroy

Ridet' needed to commute
with to OU. Cafl446-3737 .

•Experienced
•Reasonable

Situations
Wanted

7699.

LOST-Brown goat and black
dog. Bo1h wearing collarts .
Rewa r d if caught . 304 -458 -

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

'lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

12

Giveaway

WVa. 304· 773 - 5765 or
304-773-9185.

Residential - New and tewiring; Commetcial and In dustrial.

Serviceman On Duty
Monday-Friday
8:30 to 12 and 1 to 5
Saturday
8:30 a.m. to 12 Noon
Also complete service o~
all Hotpoint and General
Electric Appliances.
Other makes also ser·
viced an-d itte also service
Kerosene Heaters.

&amp; Vicinity

2-23-tfc

54 Misc. Merchandise

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

...... P.ffiieiisa·nt .....

10·24·1 mo

TRI ~COUNTY

lfll.

Headquarters

..'•

Have 1 Carpet
In Your Home
· Shampooed "FREE"
And See A
Kirby Demonstration
Completely "FREE"

For all your wiring.
needs; furnaces re ·

Route 4, Pomeroy ·

Housi11g

~

•

U. S. RT. SO EAST

M'I'OIIITIIEIT.

-------~-------------~.

.,

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

IIIDOLEPORT - 5th St. Colonial with modem features,
PQOI, fireplace, central air.
$49,900.00.

64 Misc. Merchendlae

1

1

St. -

$48.~.00.

OPEN TILL DARK

1

1I

Pea~

IIIDDI.EPORT - Grant St 3 car garage, beautiful kitchen,
formal dining room .

1
1

1

MIDDLEPORT -

Wicker . bathroom, corner lot,

BRADBURY - 2 year old
ranch home, ,!Voodburner, I&gt;
acre lot $43,000.00.

$588

LEGAL NOTICE

$40.~.00.

ga!age, 4 } edrooms .
$45,000.00.

Fireplce Insert.

Not•ce •s hereby g•ven that
AT&amp;T Commun1Ca11ons of Ohto.
Inc (heretnafler th e appltcant)
has apphf!d to the Publtc
Utiht1es comm1SSton of Oh1o tor
authonly to prov1de tnterexchange tP.Ieco mmu n1Cat10ns
serutces w11h1n. the Stat e of
Ohto Any mUHF!S ted person.
hrm. co rp oral!On. or entity who
can show good cause why such
appl,cat1on should not be
-grantfld should fliP. wtth the
Comm1sston a wnnen statemen t de!atltng Said reasons
or before November 10. 1983
Unless the CommiSSIOn ·re ceiVeS wr•ttP.n stalemenr'(s) to
th ai effect and an accompanyIng request for oral heanng 1n
thts matter. the case Will be
dec1ded on affidavitS to be
submttted by thP. ·applicant
herem Further tnformat1on may
be obta1ned by contac ttng the
Pubhc Ut1h11es Commtss•on of
Ohto. 375 Spu th H1gh Street.
Columbus. Oh10 432 15
THE PUBLIC UTI LITI ES

BOGGS

yard.

EASllRII DISTRICT - Spl~
entty, family room, dec~ large
utility, still like new.

CALL NOW

4

MIDDLEPORT - Brownell
A..e. - Cool central all, nice
decorating 3 acres, low
heating $35,000.

2500 TO 5000 SQ FT.

thanlts to the Masons, York
R~es and the IIIIi• of the
Eastern Star. our thanks to
the R111. Mart llcaun&amp; and
the Pallbearen.
Mrs. Lewis Tom Payne
Mar aret Martin

nice

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

J.l·lt

MIDDLEPOI!T - Second St.
- Rustic ~ home, open
kitchen, loft area. $25,900.00.

1

1
-. ~ ~--.. _-_ I

•. • - - .. .. - - _

.. _ • .. _ __

quakea~tlvi~.ong no

_ • _ . __ _
. .... _ ___

1

lsts at UCLA belleve that
3.
correlation t!Xlsts between the 1 1 •·
behavior of the moori and earth- ; 1 5.

l1

_______ _

2.

•

1411

I

)For Sale

I
a1 I

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

1

IWante&lt;j

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Selent-

]43

loan,

$25,000.00.

an

I .

I
I

Plot_,,

Heat Your Entire ... .
House....

Thanks for the beartiful flow·
en and all the food. A special

I
1

PI

I,. """' Gm ...
J1l · · I I] Ho.,Hoo MI

lnlon , ....

POMEROY - Mulberry Ave.
- 3 bedroom oome &amp; I
bedtoom rental unit.
$22,500.00,

interest

Save 45%

Card of Thanks .

our loss.

f Address~---------

~~ a::\heSan~fault

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201

SYRACUSE - College Rd. Some new ca)Jlt!l. ii$Ume low

"!.e lM&gt;n

CMo l "'

~·-~·--o~-o-~-1

CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank the many
friends and nei&amp;ftbou for
their kindness and sympathy, s))Own at the time of

.Curb Inflation III
I
Pay c·a sh for
I
I
Classlfieds and II
Savel J- b~ I
.I
I

I/'\

Mo-.... ,

IM

141 .-.........

Up to 16 _.,,
Up Ia 1fi -~·
u,.ta t~w .....

1~' -HM-&lt;

i Name _ _ _..;.......,.._ _ _ _ __

Moon-quakes

llouCH ~30 4

247

], ..,._,

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

• ---------------------~I

I

....._,,

16-0,.ooOIIH.......

3 ACRES IN RACINE- Surveyed flat land, ptivale and pea· ·
ceful location. Owner will help finance.
NEW LISTING:._ Rustic home in country, 3 bedroom, fully
carpeted throughout, sets on wooded lot, stream in front
yard viewed from comfortable porch, has hookup for !railer.
extra income. All of this can be bought for $34,000, or trailer
can be sold.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - Associate
Phone: 949-2901
Or 992·2751 To Leave A lhssa&amp;e

.,

lhnCO&lt;Iel14

-.....

c..,... o,.,

••.f..., .... .~.""'-""""

Oooin

Wr it e your own ad and ord; r
mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you qet
r es ults. Money not refundable .

Mo ...~c~ . wv

IIU

c..tlopoloo
Qoooto.o

3 M Y•"""
2«&gt; ll .. c.... .
2M
SoU .t..-Otot

. ,................ Hot. . . .
ll ·lo.--ai"'O

···"•v•
.... , .... .. ..
l~s.

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

71-Co....,, E _ _ ,

CENTRAL REALTY

Marriage licenses

Auoo •..,,.,

POMEROY ·- Maple St Cute oome, cute price, nice s~e
yatd. $22.500.00.

POMEROY - Wetzgal St. - 3
bedrooms, full basement fru~
trees. $24,000.00.

75..................

Real Estate General

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

t.'lnu•fi•·•II"'W'' "''''''' ,,,.

/••"""';"!! '' ''''t'l"'"'' ,.,,.,, rmp.•·• .

74 Mot..t:-,.dn

nw..,,..,,.,,"~'

01 SINct lor "-"'
01 w.. wdtt&gt;llo~•
01 (a,..pmont tor ll..,r
4J feo loOM

w-.. &lt;th Oo

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

n .t ..'"~ .. .. .,.....,

OJ MDt*o"DIOIH !DO Flont

12 S.t... o..tW•~•"

......,

71 AotoolooSMt

19-f &lt;&gt; • Sale"''"""

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

11· KelpW..,IId

::·:;:;:.:• r .....'111

been negligent in supplying full
financial disclosures and proof of
liability insurance- as required by
the lease - to the county.
Under the terms of that agreement , Foothills is required to pay as
rent 10 percent of the annual net
profit from operations - including
flight school training, sale o!
gasoline, hangar and tie-down fees:
Foothills has reported a financial
loss during their tenure as opera tors
of the airport. ·
Foothills co-owner Kenneth
Whited said recently, however, the
firm's financial records have been,
and are, fully available to the county
for inspection.

•lAND ClEA RING
• CO NCRETE WORK
80 NOE D &amp;WORK GUARANHEO

POMEROY - Heats \lith coal
&amp; wood. remodeled and added.
on to. $25,000.00

H '""""'' ,_ s.to

nv... oa.owo

U- llu~d"'ii '""""•
51-Pootoloo IMo
I?· Mu .C MI"'a" ....""
51· f• ..••. v......... .

3 1 · ~""'"'"' S..o

t w..,tooi tvl w

·Force. "

•• t~ ... - .. d Gooclo
•
12 Cl , l\1 a. llad!CI Eq"'P""'~'
ll· ARioq ... o

=·

4 ·Ci ..... "'

5 ~'~••• 'ci•

Gallla·Melgs CAA wUI hold. its
free clothing day Friday, Oct.· 28,
Ellen Mae Stewart, Pomeroy,
from 9 a.m. until noon for low
incomepersonsattheclothingbank filed suitfordlvorcein Meigs County I
I
· Joeated in the old high school · Common Pleas Court against Carl 1
E . Stewart, Cheshire.
building in Cheshire.
1

Halloween party set

lTII~o.,.. u Oppo rl uMy
l l· MG ... T 10 l.,..,
2J-Poolu•o,..I SI"'0CII

lin - . , y
1- d IIIMI~Inclll
lAII"'OIAC...,IIftll

RUTtAN D - St. Rt 124 Two bedrooms, carpeting,
lorced air heat, sheds.
$17,100.00.
BASHAN - New roo! &amp;sKiing,
full basement like new inside.
$21,500.00.

Ill Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio45769

.

I Puk5.._

Seeks divorce

A soup dinner wUJ be held at the
Trinity Church, Pomeroy, rorner of
Second and Lynn, Friday, Oct. 28.
The menu Includes bean and
vegetable soup, cornbread, beverage, purnpkln and appleple.Servtng
will be from 4 p.m. untll 7 p.m.

United States on the Island of Grenada. ( AP
Laserphoto ).

Or Write D1ill' S.nHriel Clusifitd

to.''

Free clothing day

Plan !lOop dinner

• Size : 133 square miles
• Population : 1 t 0 thousand
• Industries: Tourism, bananas.
cacao, nutmeg, mace.
sugar and coconuts

PHONE .992-2156
Dept.

move toward
eviction, Niday · said the ilnn had

PJ-! . 742 -2225
9.· :?9- '

RUTlAND - Crouse Rd. New lllof 1· carpet exceptional
large bedroom, utility.
$21.50000.

I~~======================================-.

to

•DOZER

•8ACKHOE
•SE~TIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTON E
•WATE R, GAS and SEWER l1NES
•P ON DS , RECLAMATIO N
WORK

l ima Road
Rutland, Ohio

POMEROY - Vale St - Cute
one floor plan llilh basement
$20,800.00.

I luoo.,dh•.,.,.
1 Yard 5*'.,."'"' o&lt;Won.,.l

action

CONTRACTING

New

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
CHESHIRE- II&gt; lots ollevel
glllund with n~e oouse, ~·trer
wants to finance. $20,000.00.

condition, she said.
But authorities had noword on her
19-year-old son, Burton, a lance

sions

J&amp;F

Have Your
Trophies .
Professionally
Mounted by

E . Motn

mOUBLED REGION - This map detalls tile
six Caribbean nations which landed forces with the

ity Improvement Corporation.
"We don't need someone who
comes in here to run down the
airport authority and the · C!C,"
Commission Pre5ident Paul D.
Niday said last week.
Yesterday, following the commis-

SPORTSMEN

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP
601

I

!rom
Camp Lejeune, N.C., just two
corporalwhohadsailedforLeba
non
months ago on the same ship as his
brother.
The Marine messengers told Mrs.
Wilcox they hadn't been aware that
she .had another son in Beirut. The
next day, she said, she telephoned
U.S. Rep. Olympia Snowe's office
and received assurances that
staffers were trying to track down
Burton.
.
Mrs . Wilcox said she hadn't
spoken to David yet, "but I'd llke

627 lrd Ave., Glllipolis
Ph. 446-1699

f~lah'7}))~~ ~~~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. .~~~~~;;. .~~~~~. .~~~~

onGrenada.

Happenings around Meigs County...
Veterans Memorial

•nd

Dtytn, Aulo.~lnltm . Gas I •lee.
IMps. l•frl&amp;tralon, h stU.

•

Steps taken to remove lessee...
would increase- th at alltration to
$15,Clll.
On Sept. 30, the commission

alid fru41

Spin W.aiWI, Gla •d Eltc.

•

II

ca ncel the agreement.
During last Tuesday's meeting,
King said Foothills was willing to
live under tenns of the past
agreement, if therountywould take
financial responsibility for mainte-

SID: t .. ICIIIIM ml..l
• Population: 2t0 thouund
• lncluatrlea: Supr, Clttfl

Real Eatate General

II · A•Go. TVa. CBR•P"'
11loll--o••

(Continued from page 1 )
Foothills had proposed a new
arrall(lemenl by which the county

Business Services

627 3rd 4vt.-P-. 446·1699

e

e Silt: 171 equ-. mllll ·
• Populltloft: 74 tlloutand
e lndualtln: Cotton, aupr

• Size: 4,411 squa,. ml..a
e Populallon: 2.3 million
e Industries: Bluxlte, rum,
molasses, cement,
paper and tourlam

13

The Doily

Ohio

TV &amp; APPLIANCES

Maine couple shares double·agony
By The Associated Press
For hundreds of parents awaiting
news of their servicemen sons this
week, the pain of uncetiainty has
been inuneasurable. But two !ami·
lies have faced a double tennent each with tWo uniformed sons in
hostlle lands, one whose fate was

'

,26, 1983

Call 446-8693 .
Farm Worker with Dairy
experience. Write to Bo~~;
1010 in care of Gallipolis
Daily Tribune. 825 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis. Oh 46631 ,
Outline expa;iance, give
references .
RN Part-time. exp. or new
graduate. Challenging, fas1
paced enviornment, in a 100
bed akilled facility. If this
aounds like you apply at
Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
536 Buckridge Rd ., Gallipo·
lis, Oh . Call Mon .-Fri., 8 -

4 : 30 . Call 446 -7150 .
E.O.E.
- - - - - - - - l cRetail Salea Clerk in Pomeroy. 30 to 35 hours a week.
Must be able to work
evenings, typing preferred .
Send resume to P.O . Box
729· T, c-o The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy, · Ohio

45769.

'

Leasing firrn looking for
associates. ~~~t ~ high
sc!lool graduate and 25

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mall until you have inveatigated the offering .
1 .::.-~.------.:..

For informat ion about Synthetic Lubricants an ·excellent business opportunity.
Contact Rodney Stapleton.

446-7414.
Own your own Jean Sportswear. Infant -Preteen.
Ladies Apparel, Combination, Accessories. or Large
Size store . National brands;
Jordache , Chic, Levi, Lee,
Vanderbilt , lzod, Gunne
Sax, ESprit, Brittania, Calvin
Klein, Sergio Valente. Even
Picone. Calirborne. Health·
tex . 300 others. $7,900 to
$24,900, inventory. airfare.
training, fixtures, grand opening . etc. Mr. Keenan

(6121888-6555 .

22 Money to loan
HOMf LOANS · Low fixed
ra1e . Leader MortgaQe. 77 E,
State, Athens. ·Ohio . 1 · 614-

692 ·3051 .

Professional
Services

23

PIANO TUNING Lowor
p rices - regula-r tuninga ,
discounts to Senior Citizens,
Churches &amp; schools. Ward 's

Keyboard. 304-675 -3824 . •
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR . Service with skill and
integrity . Lane Daniels· 614 742 - 2951 . (Retiree ,
Teacher DiSco unts) ,

yoero of ogo. Colt 614-9492892 or write P.O.

Bo~~;

86,

Racine, Oh . 45771 .
IN-SERVICE-STAFF DE ·
VELOPMENT COOR,DINATOR . Prole• B.S.N. or R.N .
with educational or tea ch ing
background who w ill be
responsible for o rga nizingconducting-coordinating
training programs for hospital penonnel. Salary negotiable, extensive benefit pack age, Send reaume to
Personnel Office, Lakin Hoa-

pital, Lakin, WV 25250.

4 bdr. ran ch home, large LR ,
full basement, With garage,
wood burner inclUded, city
sc,ools, 2 miles from town.

Colt 446-0276 .
Or will trade for anythi~g of
value . 3 bedroom hou1e
with fireplica, central air. 2
full ba1hs, in city limits.
Immediate possession . Call'

614· 245 -5281
\

I

�.
'

.
49

ly owner houM with 2 acres
more or leas, been remoU2.000. Call 614-3888053 .
'
PrlcJIId reduced . 3 bdr. in
Henderson,· new carpets,
city water &amp; sewer. Natural
g .. 'furnance . last house on
Henderson St. Toward Red-

mond Ridge. $18.500 . P.O.
45631 .

For Lease

Oh

pickup load . Coli 614 -2455804 .

piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat arms S39.9,
bunk beds complete with
bunkies $199, 2 pi,ce an tron li11ingroom suitac $199 ,
antron recliners $99. other
recliners SBO, maple dinette

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~sets

~

hide - a - bed $250, box
$179
love seats
$70.
springs
&amp; ,mattress
twin
or
full $100 set regular-firm

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

44 .' ~ ··Apartment
f
R

days ,

614 - 992 - 7671

evenings .
10 Pet . . interest, owner
financing, new 2 % story,
mod -A-frame. 1% bath, 314
acre . $50 , 000 . 1 - 895 -

1981 14x70, Shultz limited
"!}.9bile home., micrciwa.ve,
dtshwasher, central air, underpenning, three bedrooms , 1 % buths, &amp;l'I:Cellent
condition, $15, 500 . Call

304-675 -6049 after 5 p.m.
Mobile Home Mo11ing. licensed and Insured. Free
Estimates S100. per hookup minimum . Phone 304-

576-2711
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd . Owner financing available. Ca11446-8221
after 6 weekdays.

446 -0338
Furnished 3 rooms , .with
private bath . Reference preferred . Ca11446 -2215 .
Jackson Estate Apartments
536 Jackson Pike (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one bedroom apartments
rent starting at S157 and
two bedroom rent starting at
S19 3. $200 deposit. Cal
446-2745 or leave message
·o n answering service .
Furn.ished upstairs apt., 3
rooms &amp; bath. clean. adults
only . no pets. ref . req .
Utilities paid . Call 446 -

1519 .

..

Unfurnished 2 bdr. in

41

849.500 . 00 . 304 -675 ·
2358 or 675 -5904 .

Small turn . house 1 or 2
only, no pets . Call

adults~

CrO~~Vfl

City. Ohio. Call 614-2566520 .

3071 .
Nice three bedroom home in
Gallipolis Ferry. W.Va .. one
acre, brick front and siding,
city water . Price

$120. maple dinette chairs

or ent

304-855 -3934 .

Sale by owner. 3 bedroom
sectional home. Like new .
Lot at end of Street . 'Arbaugh Sub division. Tuppers
Plains. $35.900 . Will accept
Mobile Home on trade .
Financing available to qualified buyer. 614-992-7034

Houses for Rent

2 bdr. kitchen , furnished. 1
bdr., kitchen, furnished . AOne Real Estates. Carol

4 bdr. house 5 acres of land Yeager, Realtor. Call 304on At. 160 in Vinton. Central 675-5104 or 304-675 air, S350 mo., sec . dep. &amp; 7386 . ref. Call 446-3175 .
Furnished apt. S2 bdr., 195,
water paid, 1136 Second
AVe ., Gallipolis . 446-4416
after 7 p.m .

2 year old home. 3 bedroom.
2 bath , garage and heat
pump . 304- 675 -5545 .
.Sa,b2,fclar56

2 bedroom home, gas.
adults, no pets. deposit,
references . 1936 Chatham

AKC reg . Oot)erman pup-

· 4 room apt. utilities paid, all
2 bdr. Central air, equipped carpeted ; Adults only, no
kitchen, $300 mo . 41 pets. Call 446-3437.

pies . 304-675 -1822.
3 bedroom house, Gallipolis

Ferry 304 -675 -6335 .

Avo . Call446-1680.

Spruce St. Call446-2158 .

4 rooms and bath in Vinton.

Tri-level. excellent condi tion . 566 .000 . 8 % assumable loan . $11 ,000. down .
Phone 304-675-1529 , after

5 :00PM ..
Four room house, 17 acres,
located Kanawha 8 Mile,
$18 ,600 .00 . Phone 304-

895-3503 .
Three bedroom . two car
garage, assume 1 0 per cent
loan . At . 2 . Point Pleasant .

614-446 -8603 or 304-675 1248.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

$125 month . Call614-3888472 .
S235 . month . 3 bedroom .
Fully carpeted, gardener furnished, Stove and refrig.

614-992- 2815 from 9 to 5
or 614-992 -2362 from 6to
7 p.m .
Chester- Newly remodeled .
fully carpeted, 6 rooms, full
basement. S176 . mo . plus
security deposit'and rBferen ces. 1-866 -1731 .

New 2 bdr. apt for rent 15
minutes from Gallipolis. Call

614 -256-1198 .
Need someone to share
expenses in apartment. Call

446-2892 after 6PM .
One bedr . apt . 513 Third
Ave . $135 includes water.
Call 446-4222. 9Am to

5PM .
Newly remodeled 2 bdr ..
unfurnished, equipped kit chen , centrl'lll air. $250 mo ..

821 2nd . Avo . Call 4462158 .

3 bedroom house in Tuppers~ ----------­
Plains . Available Nov. 1. Available Nov. 1 . Nice 2 bdr.
614-985 -4133 or 614 -985 - apt .• carpeted, W-D hookup,
3988 .
1 mi. Nonh of Bridge. Call

304-273-9745 collect .

TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS ,
TRUCKS . •GALLI POLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446-7572 .
N~W

AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT ,5. PHONE 446-7274.

- 4 bedroom house for sale.
Eastern District . $250 .
month plus deposit . References required . 614 -9492660 evenings.

1 bdr. unfurnished apt .,
nearly new $169 mo., $50
dep ., no pets. Call 4463617.

Nice 3. bedroom home, 2
ba.ths , 2 fireplaces , heat
pump, large kitchen, garage
&amp; patio . $326 . per

1 bed room Apt . $196. mo.
including utilities. Equal
housing opportunity . Con tact · Village Manor Apts.

month . 882 · 2405 , 882 2447 or 675 -5540 .

614-992 -7787.
Apts.

1972 14x70 Kirkwood, 3 Two bedroom house in
BR. 1 V2 bath, new carpet, , Hendeerson . Phone 304·
675 -1090.
linoleum. 30 h . awning,
back deck .. OKC. cond. Call
House and t~o acres, lo446-8382 .
•
cated on 100ac. farm near
3 bdr., 14x70, with ex - Cornstalk . Built-in Country
panda, wall to wall carpet, - kitchen , fireplace, air. etc .
cehtral air &amp; heat. Call Available 'i n November.
$250 .00 per month plus
446 -1687.
security . Call 21 6 - 327 ·
1970 Vindale with expando, 7548 aftrer five .
12x63. 2 bdr .. totaar electric. unfurnished. awning.
42 Mobile Homes
underpinning. deck, central

lrir. 614-245-9222 .

for Rent

Windsor 14x70 with expanda. 3 bdr., 2 bath, priced
at approx. payoff. Rodney,

Qh . 304 -6 75 - 1726 for
iRformation .
1Ax60 mobile home, 2 bdr .•
take over payments. Call

4:46 ·9595. after 4PM .
family room, AC , microWave. underpinning. total
electric. Rio Grande. Call

6",.4-246 -9225 .
1974 Shult:r 12x66, 21arge
bdr ., with built-in cabinets,
2 b•ths, air cond .. underpinning, intercom. new rugs,
dripel, furniture, outside
entrance box, 2 sets of
extras steps, fire alarm, gu
alarm. first aid kit, fire
extinguisher. $6,900 . Call

1-304-8B2-2237 .
1 972 12x60 mobile home.
great shape. turn .. washer,
dryer. dishwasher, fully car-

potod . Coll614-367-7175.
1976 3 bdr., Granville,
underpinning, t&amp;,&amp;OO. Call

2 bdr. mobile home. CAll

446 -0508 .
1969 mobile home for rent
or sale. E~tcellent condition.
Available furnished or unfurnished with price negotia·
2 bedroom furnished Mobile

Home. 614-992-5443.

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-578-2711.

2 bedroom furnished apt.

614 -992-5434. 614-992 5914 or 304-882-2566 .

81

WEDNESDAY

34

7841 .

mile out Sandhill Rd.

4 :00P.M . 304-676·1661 .

Martin. 614-992-6370 .

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished apt. $185 . Water
paid, 2 bdr., 131Yl • 4th

Golllpollo. 448-4416 after 7
p.m.

Little girls clothing . Size
4T-5 . 2 winter coats; exc.
cond ., dresses &amp; tops
614-367-0560.
$20.00. 1 pair little girls
GE Dishwasher good cond .. white majorette boots, size
$126 . Call 446 -2836 attar 11 with taps S10. Cell

6PM .

614·9 92-2428 .

Baby bed , 1 mo . old mattress, S25 . ca11446-1176 .

Dry firewood, deliverd,
phone 304 - 67~ - 7771.

5548 .
home!l, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 -

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

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now available to
elderly S. disabled with an
income of less than

. Phone 304-676-6679 .

45

Furnished Rooms

Pets for Sale

For Ieese tobacco base for 5
year period. 20c a poUnd .

304-675-3631.

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

I:;======;=:;==
1-

71

Autos for Sale

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call 1--~-------614-367-7220 .
TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars . Smith
Briarpatch Kennels Profes- Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastsional All-breed grooming . ern Ave., Gallipolis, 446Indoor-outdoor boarding fa · 2282 .
cilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 614-388- 1978 Fairmont Ford Future
-9790.
2 dr ., 4 spd., 4 cyl., radio.
PS, PB, air cond. , real nice,
Dragonwynd Catteiy- $2,295. John's Auto Sales,
Kennels. AKC Chow pup- 8ulavillo Rd. 446-4782.
pies, CFA Himalayan, Per·
sian and Siamese kittena . 1978 · Honda Accord ex.
Coil 44_8 -3844 after 4.
MPG, good cond. , single
owner. price below blue
Rag. Pointer female 2 yrs . book. Coli 446-2066
old, good hunters. All shots evenings.
&amp; wormed, 8200. Call 4464472 .
1976 Impale Chev. 4 dr.,
PS. PB, AC. stero . 5 new
Registered Red Cocker Spa- tires. new brakes, orginal
niel puppy $150, registered
paint, no rust. Call 448miniature Schnauzer $200.
Both male•. 614 - 992 - 1714.

2807 .

1- - - - - - - - - AKC registered Weimaraner
puppies, 9 week• old. 304-

489-1719 .
AKC Regl1tered Doberman

78 Ford LTD AT. PS. PB. air
cond .. 302 over, 81.800 .

Call614-245-9106.
1980 Camaro Railey Sport
V-8, 5, 700 miles, auto., AC,

Thomas organ. lighted keyboard. 2 keyboards, foot

podelo. $600. Call 8·4 446·
3144 ask for Pat, after 4 call

446-B327.

$300. Call 814-256-1608 .
1973 4 dr. Matifor, 67
Dodge pickup. Call 446-

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables.

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12"-22" stocked
in yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery . 614 -256-

gal. Featuring Red Deliou•.
Gold Delious, Winesaps, and
Rome Beauty . Call 446-

1989 Cadillac. 2 door, new
tires, runs good. $326 . After

Good things to Eat. Flt:rpa-

trlcko Orchard. S.R. 689.
Pumpkins. gourds , and
10me apples left. Open thru

Oct. 29 from 9-6 .
69 For Sale or Trade
For sale or trade Coondog.

5492 .

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; S\. Coil 446-7185 .

Two twin bed upholst . headboards, exc. cond . Complete
w -mat. &amp; b. springs. '$200.

Fireplace insert-still in fac tory carton-automatic
controla-2 blowers - glass
door-ash pan -fits 30 in. to
48 in . fireplace-burns wood
or coal. $590. Call 614-

_2 56-1216.

367-0611.

1- - - - - - -- - - Would like to trade male
hound walker and beagle
mixed tor VJ redbone Yz
airdale mala. 2 to &amp; years
old. Starting to tree or wilt

11811 for f1 00. firm. No
checks. No Sunday tradea or
sale. Elbar Johnson, Pomeroy. Oh. R.O. 4, Bailey Rurt

Rd .

.

Sesame oak fire~ood $30 .
pick - up load . 304 - 676 -

6245 .

for sat. 304-675-5604.
Oelu.11e weight bench &amp;
weights .S55 . Exercise cycle

ssp.

8 p.m . 614-992-7177.
1972 Nova . Easy on gas.
Body fair, runs good. $650.

614-992-6969.
1982 Pontiac Grand Prix.
l·top, AM-FM cassette,
many e"tras, 9,000 miles,

$9,400.00. 304-675-1849
before 3pm.

1972 Chavy Railey Novo.

61

Troybilt Tillers Sales &amp; Service. Swishers Implement,
St . Rt. 7, North. Gallipolis.

614-446-0475.

0. Call614-245-5121 .

Corn cribs wire tight, new

900 bu. &amp; 1200 bu. oize.
Celi614-246-6193.
Farman 300 for parts. 614Apache two horte trailer,
••c. condition. •1100. 304·

876-1618.

Model 742 BOL 30-06.
304-675·3246.

f--------..L.--------l63
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Farm Equipment

55 Building Supplies
Building materials
bl~ck. brick. sewer pipes,
Windows , lintels, etc .
Claude Winters , Rio Grande,

menu . 304-676-1 84B .
67 Camero, good cond. 350

outo.
8761

f2.000. 304-675676; 2231 .

Of

1978 Dodge Monaco. PS,
PB. air, automatic. Excellent
condition, •1.800.00. 304-

675-8429 .
1977 Chevy Monzo, 4 cylinder, excellent condition.

843-6311. '

...

Phone 614-367-0636, call
after 6.

Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·

675-7691 otter 5PM.
1980 GMC 4-WD. PS, PB,

auto. trans.~ lockout h'ub1, JAr.
ton, long bed, good cond. ,

$4,900 firm.
2403.

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

1979 Ford bploror pickup
truck. A.C .. p.o .. tMt, radial
tlrea. •m-fm stereo. 614-

843-6188.

4x4.

Excellent

73

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

e3,4815 , Coli
6463.

Slmmontal bull, 8 moo ••

epprox. 100 lb., ..c. stock.

Coli 814-387-7419.
MaN. 6 YNrl old. Polamlno.
304-871-11582.

614·258-

1978 Oodgo4•4 318auto ••
*3.100. Coli 614-268 1427.
1979 Jeep. 304-675-3248.

14

Hay •

Grein
74

46 Space for Rent

big round baiH 120. · 1978 Honda CR121i good
. 304-675-2377.
cond. Cell 448-9710 after
SPM.
1181 lntermtoHondo.oxc.
cond. Call814-387-7118.
for

cover

&amp; lleggld.
• 14-245-li 183.

crop,

Coli

ALLEY OOP

CARTEit•i PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine

ING . Fomerly Dewitt's

Havin'~ qame while
Miz'Wallet decide wher'
'pi.it it!

Lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer, backhoe. dumptruck.
Work by hour or job.' Call

446·7903.

9:00

Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crane,
loader~, dump truck. Cali

614-448 -1142 between
7:00A~&amp; 6:00PM.

CD

Good-1 Excavating, bf!SI·
ments. footers. driveWays,
septic tanks, landscaping,

1974 Honda C'"'- 30 ln.

.,.., front - · Cl 760 F.
Coll814·141-2737.

(J) 01

WINNIE

J .A.A. Construction Co.
Water linea. Footers,
Drains. All kind• of Ditching.

YOUR CHECK WAS

HAND·

DELIVERED 10 AlE Al

Oh . 614· 742- .

lHE OFFICE TODAY.
WHAT ARE YOU TRYING
PROVE?

Meig1 Excavating. Bulldozer
81 . backhoe service. Beaements, footers. landscaping.
dri11eways, farm ponds.

®

Dynasty Steven

tle. (60 min.) !Closed Captioned)

NOTHING,

Ill (I) MOVIE: 'Happy'
IB MOVIE: 'Midway' Part

DEAA. JUST
REPAYING .
OLD DEBT.

2

9 :30 I I CD

Cil Family Tiaa Ala•

makes Jennifer accept a girl
on her baseball team even
though she can't play the
game .
(l) Not -Necessarily The
News This show promises
to be everyrhing the current
news is not .

Electrical
Refrigeration

CD

PKA

Full

Contae1

Karate

10:00 I I CD
·

Pasquale Electric Co. all
phases of electric work. all
work guaranteed . Aerial

truck rtintol. Call 614-4462716 .

BA'RNEY

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scisson . Fabric Shop,

Pomeroy. 992-2284.

MV

MAW!.'

·

Uve on the Sunset Strip'

COLD!!

85

()) Gl &lt;HI Arthur Halloy'o
Hotel
til INN Nowo
1-0:16ill TBS Evening News
·1 0:30 CD Blondle
at Comedy Time
11 :00 I I CD CIJ Cil D CIJ GJ 01
&lt;HI News
CD Another Ufo
CD SportaCo.ntor
All 1n
• Bennv Hill Show
11:16 CD Auto Racing "83: CART
Laguna SECA 300 from
Laguna Seca, CA
1 1 :30 G CD Cil Tonight Show
CD Album Fluh

· General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE. Coli 614-367·7471
or 614-367-0691 . ·

,,

Need something hauled
away or something moved?

::
'

m

We'll do ~ - Coli 448-3159 • '

between 9 and &amp;.

•.. .

Water hauling, Fall Service,
low rates. Call 614-256-

'

1743.

PEANUTS

Now Heuling Good Lump or
Stoker. Coal. Minimum 4

ton. 614-387-7101 .

,
.,

.

JIM&amp; WATER SERVICE
Call Jim Lonlor, 304-875:
7397.

.,

~~;:=;:;=;==== ~-•

Cil St. Elsewhere

Season Premiere. A city
health advisor refuses to
give Dr. Craig permission to
do a heart transplant and a
husband refuses to accept
his wife·s diagnosis after
she has had a heart attack .

(60 min.)
CD MOVIE: 'Taps'
CD MOI(IE: 'Richard Pryor

FEET
ARE

II

6NT

Pass

Here i.-a hand that is very
similar to one misplayed by
Oswald Jacoby in a rubber
bridge game at the late P.
Hal Sims' home a trifle over
!o years ago.
We don't remember the

(I) Soop
8 (I) Police Story
&lt;ll M'A'S'H
8 ·&lt;DI Nlghtllne
• Twilight Zone
12:00 CD MOVIE: 'Firot Blood'
CD MOVIE: ·- 'Kentucky
Fried Movie'
()) Bums • Allen
(I) MOVIE: 'The Bullflgh·
ter and the Lady'
(I) Nlghtllne

Upholstery

1---------- •'
TRISTATE
UPfiOLITERV SHOP
1 1 U toe. Ava .. GelllpoNo 448· 7833 or 441·11!33. · --.

.

That safety play is wellenough known today so that
no expert would go wrong. It
IS to play the ace of diamonds first and then lead
toward the K-9 in dummy. A
3-2 break can't hurt declarer. If West holds four diamonds and plays the eight
dummy's nine IS played. Ii
West held a singleton honor
the king is played from dum:
my and a thtrd diamond is
.led toward the jack.
By the way , the firstround finesse taken by
young Jacoby would have
been his best play if. he needed five diamond tricks.

..

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

..

ti~"jd(

by THOMAS JOSEPH
. ACROSS
39 Fencing
1 Gyrate

foil

5 "Your

DOWN

Cheatin' - " 1 Precipice
(1953 song)
2 A bear
10 Volcanic
3 Hereabouts
apex
4 Recent
11 Famous
(prefix)
crooner
5 Brei 12Palo 6Eel (oldEng .)
Yesterday's Answer
13 Threatening 7 Everywhere
words
8 Fidgety
21 Dismissed
27 Fruit
It Let's hear
9 Squirrel
22 Italian
28 Wipe out
itfor!
monkey
city
29 fuljah's
15 Bottom
11 utter
23 Drape
wife
16 Baseball
15 Boundary
24 Sell
34 - Dieu !'
great
18 " The
25 Hoist
35 Kicker's
17 Foreword
Ipcress - "
26 Uncover
gadget
' 19 French We
~-r.--r.-r::20 Evil
21 Wine's
deticacy (Fr
22 Exasperate

23 In our
presence
24 Marathon
25 Bombast
20 Midianite
king
27 Cougar
30 Half a score
31 Outfit
32 Epoch
33 Ill will
35'Federal
agent
36 Chant
37 Ughten
38 QB Bobby of

·,

football'

fame
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

tho nmnv'

Ill Catlin•

break."

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

Is

how to worli it:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for Lhe two O's. etc. Single letters
apostrophes. the length and formati on of th e words are aJi
hints. Each day the code l•tters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

Ill Doble Ollllo

I SIIPPOSE
IT'S FOOLISH
TO WONDER
W~V NOONE
PICKS US UP

-.

'

Club · Today's

may lose his courtroom bat tle to retain custody of his
son and Bla~e 's Iawver
threatens to destroy Krys-

owner.

&amp;

700

guests to be announced.

Call anytime 446-4537,
James l. - Davison. Jr.

Rutland.
2903.

Metropolitan Opera Cen tennial Gal~;~ Part 1
(jj) Uve from the Met Tho
Metropolitan Opera Cen tennial Gala.' The Metropolitan Opera celebrates its
tOOth binhday with this
special performance . (4 hrs.)
I I (l) IIl Facts of Ufa
ThingS become spooky
when a customer is missing
and the girls fear that he may
have become an ingredient
in Mrs. Garrett's bratwurst.

Pass

Soutb
2 NT
Pass

Opening lead: +10

City.' (60 min.!
()) Uve from the Met: The , ,

GASOLINE ALLEY

East

Pass

show features mountain
climbing and search for 'Ciu dad Blanca -The Lost White

WORK By t:od

North

·

Hal Sims, who was watch ing the game, said, "You still
have a lot to learn about
card play. You had a perfect
safety play to guard against
anything but a 5-0 diamond

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: So~h

8:30 CD World Sportsman This

Hanna, ponds, ditches.
basements, etc. Call 4464907. Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation.

slams.

+AK

field Minnesota Raid'

ExcaY.ating

DOZER

+AK3

West

\

Jacoby thought awhile,
led a diamond, rose with
dummy's king and the slam
had gone into the land of lost

'QJ2
tAJ532

01 MOVIE: 'Great North·

Call 614-367-

a second spade.

SOUTH

teams his computer ingenuity with private eye A .J . Simon to· intercept the sale of
a 11lal of nerve gas . (60 min.)
())
(jj) Marl!
Russell
Comedy Spec. Comedian
Mark Russell presents his
own special brand of politi·
cal humor.

condition:

801 Ford Workma1ter trac- 1:P::M:----:-:--:--:-=-=-blade almoat new, turns
everyway and tllt1, bfuah-

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.

304-6715-1859 after 4:00

tor e•. cond. Ford dozer

STEAMER. Water rem~el.
furniture cleaning. free esti·

10-26-83

+7&gt;12
WEST
EAST
+10 9 8 4
+J7 2
.97513
'8 6
• Q 10 8 6
--. 4
+J86
• Q 10 9 3

head. {60 min.l
(l) MOVIE: 'It Came from
Hollywood'
(l) MOVIE: ·~st Horizon'
CDI Spy
ill MOVIE: 'The Great
Smokey Roadblock'
(I) Gl ® Fall Guy
Ill (J) GJ Whiz Kids Richie

Coli 446-

1978 Ford Truck F-150
Livestock

..

HALLOW

exact bidding, but when
young Jacoby looked at ·
dummy, he saw that Jour
diamond tricks would give
him his slall).
·
He won the spade lead in
dummy, led the seven of diamonds and finessed his jack.
West took his queen and led

• AK 1.0
t K9 7

night's program features a
'Sci-Fi Ball,· an interwiew
with Elv ira, a TV horror
movie
hostess
and a
psychic who claimS to have
antennae in the back of his

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One

piece custom fit your home.
tor, {Ooy 614-592-4068.1
lnight 814 -898-8206.)

NORTH
+Q6.

Jimmy Moore vs . U,J. Puck·
ott. {60 min .!
ill Good Naws
(I) Ill ()) Family Feud
ID Wheal of Fortune
UJ (]2) Entertainment
Tonight
l!li) One Day at a Time
8:00 I I CD(!) !l..l People To-

For sale 1979 dodge 4x4,
lots of extras. ax. cond. Call

~

Pomeroy.. Large lots. Call

HEY- WHAT'fiE
'f' 00/Nf:i?!

YOUR ANSWER
WILL BE?

84

Trucks for .Sale

Coil 446-0756.

992-7478.

DECIDED WHAT

72

hog ond 3 pt. loft. Coli
814-379-2198.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Peril. Route 99, North of

E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
insured, free ·estimates.

814· 742-2407 or614-742- ·
2068 .

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light hou1e keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

Furni•hed office for rent.
Close to city !Juilding and
court house. Call446-0866
days, •126. mo.

tlti'IP.IA! l'M BACK/

614-446-8603 or 304·6751248.

Jeep Honcho 4x4. topper,
white spoke wheels, blue
jean package, pr-~ced

Vacancies for ladies or man
In private partial care home.
Room &amp; board, handicap,
24 hr. nursing care. Rea~o­
nable in Crown City. Call

HAVE Y(XJ,..Ep;...

OUTING

Which way to go?

Pocket Billiards Stars This ·
show features
Cowboy

304-895· 3802 .

83

BR IAR

7:30 I I (l) Tic Tae Dough
CD 2nd Annual Legendary

Water Wells. Commlrclal
and Don\estic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales ·and Service.

Plumbing.
0678.

992·6190.

I Jumbles: VENOM

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

fB Jeffersons

304 -675 -2088 or 675 ·
4560.

614-949- 2082 . After 4

"t I I I)[ I I J'

BRIDGE

GJ News
OIII2! People's Court

RINGLE' S SERVICE expe-

Now arrange the circled letters 10
form the sutprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Jumbl• Boot. No, 1.4, cont1lnl~ 110 puut••. l• 1v1llabletor S1 .8S plu1 SSe: pottlge
1rtd hll'tdllf'IV lrcm JLH!'Ible, CJo It'll• newtplper, Bolt 34 Norwood, N.J. 07648.
Include your n1me, tddr•tt, Zip code 1nd m1h Check I P•Y1b11 to Newap1perboolo;e .

Newshour

rienced roofing. including
hot tar application, carpen·
ter, electrician, mason. Call

WHAT 1He LAV«C:R
c::&gt;eMAND!::t:' iO HAVe:
WITH · HIS Di'&lt;: INI&lt;.

Answer : The minor didn't know whether he had
:,truck th is- IRON ORE WHAT

Ill (I) Wheel of Fortuna
()) (jj) MacNeil/Lehrer

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump
removal . Call 676-1331 .

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-

largo. $6 .00 and .$8.00 bu.
Drops f5.00. Cider 82 .50

Vesto,day·s

IIl Charlie's Angola

1979 Ford Fiesta, sun roof ,
good condition. $1,600.

Apples from German Ridge _P_
.m_.-----~--­
Orchard, handpicked and 1 1964 Corvette. 85,500. Ap.
dropo. $2.50 and $3.60 paloosa mare $500. Walk
pecks, 10 lb. medium and behind Gravely 8500. 614-

t

()) Entertainment Tonight

or 448-2454.

Phone 446-3888 or 446·
4477

p.m .

Used R66 ditch witch
trencher. 1 -614-694-7842.

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quaur. and
house calls. Call 576-2398

(]

(Answers tomorrow)

7:00 I I CD PM Magazine
CD One Man's Fight for
Ufe
CD Alias Smith and Joneo
CD SportsCenter
ill Carol Burnett

BORN LOSER

614-446-4068.

9782 .

Avocado green refrigerator.
white gas range , other furniture. Call 614-256-6307 :

675 -5029 .

Gallia Refrigeration Co. Call

f

Print answer here:

()) Business Report
(jj) Over Easy

Co9llng. Sheet Metal Work.

82

76 Camero ~50 4-speed or
le\ someone take over pay-

5'4 Misc. Merchandise

a.

Avontia compact refrigera tor, 1 .6 cu.ft. new $96 .
1973 Plymouth Satellite
runs · great, rough body,

Musical
Instruments

IJOADIN

Sl Buck Rogers
·
6:30 I I CD (!) NBC News
()J Rifleman
CD ESPN'o Horse Racing
Wkly.
(I) til (HI ABC News
0 (I) GJ CBS News

Appliance Service All makes
models refrigerators,
washers, dryers. ranges.
compactors, dishwashers,
microwaves . Heating .&amp;

57

Forsaleortrede. Good home
in Mason, 2 acres. Call

Franklin wood stove . 304-

~

Prairie
()) (jj) 3-2-1. Contact

mateo. 614-446-2107.

SEASONED oak firewnod :
304-676 -2757 after 4:00

Hand mede log cabin style
doll house with furniture .

SAYII&gt;JG

Marcu~

1975 AMC Gremlin. $300.
Caii614-38B-9088 .

Coli 614-256-1415.

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

5-TAND WHAT I'M

HIDE-OUT1

IOESSUR
KJ I

show illustrates traveling ar·
ound the mountain and intrOduces the turn with a
'Christie'
or 'Controlled

Skid .'
(I) Uttla Houoe on the

puppiao. Call 675-1822.

304-675 -2757 after 4 p.m .

firewood,

YO U UND ER-

up. Call 614-388· 9662.

P8, PS, AM-f.M 8-treck
otero. Call 614-379-2726.

One kitchen display, odds
and ends kitchen cabinets.
Dale's Kitchen Center .

$12 ,300. Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income-

56

good cond. 304-675·1972
or 578-2193.

oak

CA~

M&amp; TO YOUR

Cell 614-388-9867 .

8598 or 614-379-2303.

Whirlpool washer. exc .
cond. guaranteed, $95 . Call

TAKI'-1~

Roofing 8t Spout·
ing. 30 yean e•perience,
specializing in built up root.

HILLCREST
K E N·N
EL S
Barding all. breedl.
Selling
19' ponable color TV &amp; 2 1 Hoppy Jack Dog Food .
gas warm moring stoves.
t;)oberman puppies: Stud
Call 614-367-0409 .
Service. Call 446-7796 .

6959 .

AR&amp; YOU

PAINTING · interior and
exterioi-. plumbing. roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs.

Call 676 -7967.

1 40" General Electric
Stove $1 00. 1 large Norge

CAPTAIN EASY

11 B2 .

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

dryers. auto washers. gas &amp; 1
electric ranges. refrigera - Miner Steel Toes $24 .95 .
White &amp; Black Cc;mverts
tors, TV sets.
S15.00. Panty hose % price.
large wood burning add-on Simon 's Pick-A- Pair. •
furnace-brand neW-heats 1----------..l...
hot water - automatic Ladies Blouses S. Slacks
controls-fi·rebrick lined . $5.-$6.-$8 . ladies pocket $590. Ca11814-256 -1216. books $7 .' &amp; $9. Simon's
Pick· A-Pair :
Used furniture : hide-a-bed.
rocking loveseat and rocker- 18 in . 14K heavy gold chain
recliner . Corbin &amp; Snyder S170. 14K gold egg shaped
Furniture. 956 Second A)le . bongle B $200 . 614-992-

Cal1446-1171 .

ceilings cOmmer·
cial and residential._ tree
estimates. Call 614~266·

6PM .

Avo .. Gallipolis, 446-1699. deep freoze $100. 614-992Spin washers, gas&amp;: electric _5_6_1_6_a_tt_e_r_5_:_p_.m_
. ----

Apartments . 304 - 675 -

614-256-6509:
44

TV S. Appliances, 627 Third

new efficiency apt . 1 or 2
people. No pets. Osby A .

South of Middleport. R-7. I·C-ou_rt_
. -3-04_·_6_7_5_·2_9_4_6_.__
Call 367-0611 .
Apartments in Henderson .
Phone 304-675-1972.

6510 or

446-0322

I I I

. CD MOVIE: ' Gloria'
CD New Treaaure Hunt
CD Alpine Ski School 'Up
and Down the Slopes .' This

STUCCO PLASTERING ·

Ithaca 12 ga .. auto, full
choke. 30 inch barrel! S200.
Call 614-245; 9127 after

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Guns: good selection shotSofa , chair, rocker, otto- guns. rifles , &amp; handguns. We
man, 3 tables, (extra heavy buy, sell or trade. Good
by Frontier). $685. Sofa, prices. Franks Pawn Shop,
chair and loveseat. S276 . 430 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Sofas and chairs priced from ,_c
_ al_4_4_6_-_o_8_4_o_._ _ _~S285 . to $895 . Tables, $45 ~ and up to s 125. Hide-a - Phil co floor model radio,
beds ,S 440 . and up to library table &amp; buffet . Call
S525 ., Recliners. S175 . to 0 6
- 14
_·_2_4_5_·_5_6_9_5_._ _ _ __
$360., lamps from $28 . to •$75 .5 pc. dinettes from Antiques. oak furniture remisc. items. Use·
s99 .• to 435 . 7 p·c. $ 189 production,
C
and up. Wood table with six our hristmas layaway plan .
chairs S426 to S745 . Desk Conkels, Tuppers Plains.
$110 up to $226. Hutches.
$560. and up, maple or pine Firewood for sale-$30 .00 a
finish . Bunk bed complete pick -up. Plus delivery . 698with mattresses, S250. and _7_1_B_9_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
up to 8395 . Baby beds, 1
$110 . Mattresses or box Air compresser-$1 85 . 2-8
springs, full or twin, S58 ., in. table saws-$1 00. S..
firm, $68 . and $78 . Queen $125. Alum . awning, Sx 18.
sets, S195. 4 dr. chests, $150 . 8 walnut wall
$42 . 6 dr. chests, S54. Bed cabinets -$ 80. each. See Elframes, S20 .and $26 ., 10 don Walburn at 380 S. 3rd.
gun - Gun cabinets, $350. Middleport . 614-992Gas or electric ranges $375. 2805 .
Baby mattresses. $25 &amp;
S35, bed frames S20, $25, AR -15 (Colt) rifle • . 223
&amp; $30, kin.g frame $50 . caliber, as new S435.
Good selection of bedroom Browning Hi-power 9 mm,
suites, cedai chests , 14 shot auto . pistol,like new
rockers, metal cabihets , $425 . 1000 round case.
new .223 caliber · ammo
swivel rockers.
·
Used Furniture .. bookcase, $200. , 614-992-7617.
lcranges , chairs, dryers. refrigeratorS end TV's . 3 miles 120 lb. set of metal weights
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am S40. 20 rolls solder 50· 50 1
to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri. . Sam lb. rolls $3 .00 ea. 614-992·
7617.
to 5pm, Sat

~II

4 room downstairs apt.
water, garbage paid. 8150 .
month. Henderson Trailer

2 bedroom in Middleport .
F.urnished . S160. monthly
plus utilities, Deposit required .
614- 992-

3159 .

CUEJI

lion people is examined .

_c_a_
ll_6_1_4_·_
2_5_6_·6_2
_4_4
_ ._ __

Stoves, gas heater with pipe
S20, large bottle gas heater
with blower, askirig $76.

I ()

6:00 I I Cll CIJ C!l 8 CIJ 1B 8
(HI 'News
())
Flashback:
Great
Plague of 1918 The epidemic that claimed 20 mil·

te~ttured

b

RUETT

10/26/83

Home
Improvements

j.j\16.

3 mobile home axles new, 2
marble top end tables, coffee table, 2 chairs, couch,
dineue set, 3 table lamps.

$65. 446-4630 .

2 bedroom mobile home,
utilities paid . 1 kid accepted.
no pats, " dopa or drunks.
John Sheets 3 ,12 miles

992-3324 ,

110.000. 304-773-6023.

5858 .

month . 446-3703 .

Two bedroom· mobile home
in Henderson, phone ahrer

1878 14•70 trailer, 3 bod·

bedroom Apt . in P.Jint
Pleasant, W.VA . 614-992 -

742-2753.

4mobllehomes. 10'and12'
ft . wide . 2 bedroomfurnished . low priced .
Brown 's Trailer Par;k. 614-

room. 2 btlths, targe kitchen,

·1

2 bedroom Mobile Home 2 bedroom apt. at Gall.
furnished on one acre. Prefer _F_e_r_rv.:.._
· _3_0_4_-6_7_5_·_2_5_4_8_.__
1
older couple or 1 Child only. 2 bedroom, 205 Poplar St.
$175. plus deposit. 614· in Pt . Pleasant . $ 176 .

304-876-3834.

2364.

A feW MoRe

S150 to' all . Call446-4423,
ova . 614-266-1656.

Seasoned

B221 .

after 4 614-367 -7630.

6 .8 acrea. ,S acrificed price
*12.000. 3 bedroom trailer ,
1 Vz bath 1 pasture. fenced ,
pond, garden . 814 -742 -

for rent . 614-992 ·

S35 , wash stands S34,
maple rockers S59, 7 piece
chrome dinette set $149. 5
piece dinette set $89. used
bedroom suites. refirgera =..
tors, ranges . chest, dressers.
wringer washers , . TV'~ .
dryeres. &amp; shoes. Call 446 -

5908 .

APARTMENTS . mobile

blo . 614-992-7 4 79 .

1e79 Duka 14•70 2 bdr ..

•

'4ef 1-d.:&gt;f.
&lt;;.ee Me AfTeR

Fish aquariums 1 -30 gallon.
1-25 gallon, with stand, ~II
accessories, including fish,

1

ftj'}~~fi}~ ~THATICRAMILEDWORDOAME
~ ~ ~~.!!h
b)'HonliAmoldllldBobLee
Unocramblo lhoso lour Jumbloe,
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary -.lo.'

Television
Viewing
EVENING

~iflt Ttli~ f&gt;o!.;cy, 'tJ,J
~TAiN 'fo~ IP'Iell

CAK e.e
llNe'J WOI.j. Be ~;!lei&gt; ~
iNi\e ~T...

256:1427 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olive St ., Gallipolis. 6

Middleport, one floor plan,
energy saver! Cozy tire~lace, gas iurnance. Priced

614-949-2122 .

TRACY

7842 .

446-2481 .

3 bedroom. 2 story home. 2
car garage. Former Baptist
Parsonage . 5th St ., Racine .

N"YY

The Daily

Ohio

614 -367 -0378 botwoon
10-3. 614-448-1343 otter
6.

Used J20 D itc h Witch
trencher . Cell 1-614- 694 -

15 room house. 3 baths.
basement. large lot . 9' fire places . Historical landmark.
Serious inquires only. Calf

$45 ,000 . 614-992 -5858 .

1983

Chrlo Croft 1957 cono,.llo-

Firewood for sale $36 a
pickup load delivered, 10
loads for S 300. Call 614-

old Rt. 160. Call 446-4202
or 446 -2857 .

3 bedroom ranch style
home, carpeted, fUll size
basement. 1 car garage. in
ground pool · 16x32 .

DICK

26,

tion cabin cruiser, 38 ft ..
with trailer, $12,800. Call

Wood splitter hyraulic A
horse power. gas motor.
exc. cond . Call446-3171 .

acrea ground, near Porter,

Located in Syracuse-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one'third acre lot . S24,500. or
will rent for S275 mo.

October

FirewoQd - cut up, elaba. $16

3 bedroom house with 3

to oall. Call 992-6941.

1983

76
Boats and
. -MetQN fer Sale

51 Household Goods

For lease Modern office
suite especially good for
insurance. real est"e or
accounting . 1300 sq . ft .
Four rooms plus lge. clerical
office, kitchenette and stor age room . Nat. gas, central
air. carpet. Rent very reaso·
nable for this quality office.
Corner Third &amp; Olive. Galli polis . Oh . Ph . 614-446 ·
3994 . E\/ans Enterprises.
$ -5 . Mon . thru Fri.

deled. orchard, 87 ft . well.

Gallipolis.

October

Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

533

.

....

Sentinel

Box

~·

CZT P

CZTP

HMW

SMM

HMW'ET

GFKTGFDD)
CF H,

ETFBZ

R S 'K

SM

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· Yesterday's Cryloqaole: THE GAME IS NOT ONLY WORTH •
THE CANDLE, IT IS WORTH THE ·WHOLE BONFIRE -M • .

.GORKI

..

•

.-

�.

'

Ohio

Inside today:

FmHA works on loan delinquency .
WASHINGTON (API - An
o!flcial of the Farmers Home
Admtnlstratlon says the agency Is ·
working to improve thedeUnquency
rateofFmHA!oansinOhlo.
Michael Brunner, associate administrator of the FmHA, testified
Tuesday before the House Subcommltiee on Housing and Community
Development that Ohio "is a place
we want to work on."
Brunner's remarks came durtng
questioning by Rep. Chalmers
Wylie. R-Ohlo, on the status of the
FmHA program in the state.
"Last year, Ohio was referred to
as .a problem .state as far as
delinquencies were concerned,"
Wylie said. "I'm led to believe that
~ P.~blem is being resolved In

0

Brunner Said, ''We know It's a
prtority. we're working with that.
n'I'ENTY·FIVE-These 25 year members were
among those honored at the annual Meigs County
Farm Bureau Fedel'!ltion meeting Tuesday night.

They were, from the left, Mrs. Fay Sauer and Mr. and
Mrs. R&lt;ly F. Van Meter and son, Mike. ·
·

'

Eight injured in. coal mine accident
·-·-·

GLEN DANIEL, W.Va. iAP JEight coal miners were injured, one
critically, when the underground
vehicle they were riding broke tree
and rolled out of control more than a
half-mile before crashing into a
wall, authorities said.
Five of the miners remained
hos~italized early today. spokesmen at two Beckley hospitals sa id.
The accident occurred at Beckley
Coal Mining Co' s Beckley mine
about 4:10 p.m . Tuesday after
members of the day shift had
boarded the m a n-trip, or trolley- like
car, for the trip to an elevator and a
ride to the surface.
"The chain or the sprocket
running the thing just broke," said

Jordan Wes~ who was abOard the
vehicle. "Whenever that happened,
there wasn't anything to hold us. We
just went freewheeling into the
cinderblocks."
Jordan, 44 , of Pemberton, said he
suffered cuts and bruises on his face
and wrenched his neck. He was
treated at Appalachian Regional
Hospital and released.
Listed in critical condition with
head injUiies at Ral"lgh General
Hospital was Robert Beard. ll.
Listed in guarded but stilble
condition were Harry Williams, 39;
John Miller, 27, of Beckley; and
Anthony Roguusky, 46, of Eccles.
Ronald Justice, 36, of Glen Daniel
was listed in stable condition at
Beckley HospitaL

Ron England, 35. of Mullens was
treated at Raleigh General and
released, wh!le Donald Hambrick
28, of Crab Orchard was treated at
Beckley Hospital and released.

Weather forecast
Clear and cold tonight. Low 35-40.
Winds northwesterly 5-10 mph.
Sunny on Thursday. High near 60.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
Fair weather Friday and Saturday. Chance of showers Sunday.
llighs in the low to mld-OOs on
Friday. in upper 60s and low 70s on
Saturday and In the low 50s north to
the low 00. south on Sunday. Lows
35-40 Friday and In the low to mld-40s
Saturday and Sunday.

Tastes better than ever!
I Plumper Raisins
I Crispier Flakes

SAVE 25

4

Mostly clear tonlghl. Low in
the mid-40s. Mostly sunny and a
k?t warmer Friday. High ?0-?5.

Vai.32,No.l39
Copyrighted t983

.

221.

.

Capt. Wayne Jones, a Marine spokesman, said
bodies of those kllied tn the suicide truck-bombattack
on the Marine command post were being flown to the
American Rhine-Main Air Base In West Germany. He
provided no specific figures on what the military
called its "live list," but the Pentagon saki there were
1, 700 servicemen not kllied or wounded in the
bombing and began releasing the names in batches.
Jones said more than 450 servicemen at the camp
had called home on telephone circuits that had been
set up for them.
Tile command center at Beirut's International
a!Jtx&gt;rt was flattened by a truck bomb driven Into the
building's lobby by a suicide terrorist at daybreak

Size: ..
Perftct Fit
wrangler New Horizons not
only come in a wide range
of sizest they also come In
three rits - 'Slim, Regular
and Full.
Five-pocket construd;ion
features shield embroidered
back pockets, front watch
pocket with the Wrangler
horse logo, and signature
waistband patch.

.,

Sunday.
Search efforts continued today both at the Marine
post and at the wreckage of a nine-story headquarters
of a French paratroop company about a mlle away.
The French Defense Ministry put Its casualty toll
from the almost simultaneous truck-bombing at 54
killed, 15 wounded and four missing and presumed
dead.
·
Cpl. Randy Barefoot, 21, or Kenly, N.C., who was
helping to .dig through the wreckage at the Marine
camp Wednesday, salp: "We've given up hope
anybody is alive. All the fioors are pressed down and
everything 1s squlshed."
Promise Eiectloni
Meanwhile a U.S.-led attack force fought the last of
Grenada's stubborn defenders, and one of the
invasion's staunchest supporters said elections for a
new Grenadian government would he held within
three months.
By early today. 375 American residents or tourists
had been evacuated from the tlnv Caribbean island

.
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners Wednesday entered Into an agreement with the
U.S. Environmental -Protection
Agency for a $1111,010 grant for the
purpose of correcting the sewer
sltuatlonln!)leTuppersP!ainsarea.
Comffilssloner Richard Jones
said. " The board of commissioners
has a chance to do for 1\Jppers
Plains what needs to be done - so
much for'so Utile- and theThppers
Plalns people have anopporiunltyto
correct situations for less money
than it would cost-to go In any other
direction."
The engineer's estimated cost of
the project is $3ill,660. According to
Jones. this figure could be more or
less while the county's share Is

~lt; SECOND ANNUAL
q:

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL in coop·
eration with the Meigs county '
Unit of the American Cancer So~
ciety will again sponsor their
Amateur Pie Baking .C ontest.

SATURDAY
OCTOBER 29th, 1983

$49,500.
Tbe grant wUJ cover 85 per-Cent of

the construction costs and th.e
residents wW payl5 percent of their
individual construction cost. Cost to
p!operyownerswillrangetrom$100
to $1,00l each, depending on the
severlty of each problem.
If the cost of the total project is
less, the cost to residents would 1.,

Pies to be submitted by 4:30 P.M. Contest will be ,held in the
former Saw Shop corner of General Hartinger Parkway and
Beech Street, Middleport.
·

Jess.

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Construction will begin within a
year and a half or two years.
Jones said In order to cover the
county's cost, COITll'llisslon w!ll
make application for additional
grant fwlds, with the help of

The judgin~ will be.gin at 4:30P.M. with an auction conducted
by Dan Sm1th, Auctioneer, to follow at 5:30.
·
·
All proceeds will go to the Meigs County Unit.

Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley'
Regional Development- possibly a
block grant - use revenue sharing
funds or general revenue funds.
Jones added. "Itisnotgoingtobe
easy, but the job has to be done In
Tuppers Plains ana we've got to do
11."
A letter from the State Of Ohio
Welfare Department was read In
regard to reimbursement for social
services for the fiscal year from Oct.
1983 through June,l$1. '
.
Comrnlssioners have an opportunlty toreceivetherateofmoney as
received previously, 99 percent
federal funds and one percent local
funds, or choose 75 percent federal
funds with 25 percent toea! funds
with a little greater amount of
money.
The commissioners felt they
shoUld stay with 99 percent federal
funds. They will receive approxi·
mately $46,001.
Behind Schedule
The conuntssloners were notified
by the U. S. Department of
Agriculture, SoU Conservation Service the soU SU!Vey to be taken In
Meigs County Is running six months
behind.
It is expected the operation wlll
get undeiWay aroond the firSt of the
year. A similar operatiOI\ Is just
, beingcanpletedtnGalllaCounty.
Tile soU survey is for all of Meigs
Countywithmorethan279,040acres
to be surveyed.

'

~.p~ ' FOR MORE NFORMATION CONTACT:.
~~,too~~ JEANETTE LAWRENCE AT 949-2228
..
DON VAUGHAN AT 992-3471

.o~

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·rt;,

- -- ~
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12 Pag es

20 Cenfl

A Multimedia Inc Newspaper

and flown to Charleston, S.C. Pe~tagon officials put
U.S. mUitary casualties at six dead, 33 wounded and
eight missing after two days of fighting , but estimates
varied on casualties for the Grenadian army and its
Cuban allies.
Prime Minister Tom Adams of Barbados, one of six
Caribbean .n ations that called for tile invasion, said in
a broadcast late Wedqesday that the "mllitary
Intervention",had been successfully completed,
"An interim government will _soon be appointed, "
Adams said. It will take about three monthS to set up
computerized registration for the elections, he said ,
"and three monthS or less after that we will expect the
Interim administration to hand over to an elected
government."
President Reagan had cited the safetyofsome 1,00l
Americans ori Grenada as one of the main reasons for
launching the invasion 1\Jesday. His other reasons
were to restore order after Marxist mllltary leaders
seized power and to bring democracy.
"! don't think there's a more beautiful sight than

Corn01ission moves to
•
•
·correct proJect tn
TUppers Plains area
"

~~dd~ area businesses and indivduals are invited to participate by
I
:ng on one of the best pies in the county and making th'
test a huge success.
1s con-

2 Sections ,

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BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - U.S. Marines today
completed a list of survivors of the terrorist bombing
of their Beirut command pOst and searched the
wreckage for more victims as the death toll rose to

Professional bakers' pies are welcome and will be auctioned 0 ff ·
separately, with proceeds going to the Cancer Society.

enttne

Election promised in three months
as fighting cOntinues in Grenada
By FAROUK NASSAR
Associated Press Writer

There Will Be ABlue Ribbon and A
· ssooo Gift Certificate for the First Place
A Red Ribbon and As25oo Gift
Certificate For Second Place
AWhite Ribbon and a '1~ Gift Certificate for Third Place

at y

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 27, 1983

:'1'..

"The Fru~ and Cereal
• Lovers Cereal" . .

•

Lebanon death toll climbs to 221

-Trustees

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Tuesday
night in the Ohio Lottery's game
"The Number" was W.
. In the ''Pick 4••game, the winning
number was 6034.
The lottery reported a loss of
$239,878 from the wagering on ''The
Number," played dally except
Sundays. The loss came on sales of
$W6,7!!6, while holders of winning
tickets are entitled to share
$1,146,664. lottery officials said.
In the parhnutuel"Pick4" game,
played Monday through Friday,
sales totaled $126,523, Holders of
winning tickets are entitled to 45
percent, or $56,983. Ally winning $1
straight ticket earns $6,840, and any
\)'inning $1 boxed ticket earns $285.

Halloween .safety•••Page 6
•

~RaiSIN BR3N

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e

fr~,~~~;;;;;;;~~;;;;c;;;;.;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~~

(Continued from page 1)
should.lle; thatallfutureembargoes
of farm products by the federal
government a means of protection
be given to the fanners harmed by
the decisions; support acceleration
of the new Gallipolis Locks and Dam
System.
Preceding the meeling, dinner
was served by the Eastern Band
Boosters and after dinner entertain·
ment was by the Gospel Notes.
Rex E. Shenefield gave the
welcome; Norman Will. the resolutions; John Mander, the Nationwide
report; Ken Walters, Farm Bureau
benefits report; Mrs. Paul Gearhart
and Glenn K. Lackey, state trustee
reports, and Rep. Jolyn Boster
spoke briefly. Local Manager Jack
Carsey gave the treasurer's report.

were, front, I tor, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Carl, and
Joyce and Larry Hollon; back, I tor, Eugene Holliday,
Edison and Evelyn Hollon, all 3o years, and Frances
Young, 35 years.

Area deaths ........ .. ....... Page 2
By the Bend ........ .. Pages &amp;-7-8
&lt;;lassHied ads........ Pages &amp;-9-10
Sports ..... .............. Pages 3+5
TV-Comics ................. Page 11

as:

Lottery winners

30-35 YEARS OF SERVICE- Theseresldentswere
recognized for 30 and 35 year memberships In the
Meigs County Farm Bureau Federation Tuesday
night at the annual meeting held In Chester. Tbey

Marauders host Trimble••.Page_3

Weather

We think It's improving."
· repairS on their homes. Some wen!
In earller testimony, attorney told thf~ could remain in theit
Michael T. Roblnsonsaidatleast153 hOmes {or as long as lheydeslred,hj:
residents of VIrginia 'seas tern shOre added .
had been affected by the agency's
"The unfortunate thing about
attempts to deal with a rising loan
these representationS and prornJSe,;
delinquency rate tn that area.
(is that they ) are unauthorized
"Farmers Home Administration under Farmers Home Admlnlstra~
officials ... came up with a scheme, Uon regulations," Robinson said:
or an Idea, 1n which they would Subsequent FmHA officials
suggest, or strongly suggest, to signed to theareadecldedtoseU ~
borrowers that they tum their properties, he said.
,
homes back to the government 1n
"Care was not taken to explain so
exchange for Section 8 subsidleo;," that the individuals-whO signed t)Jeii\
said Robinson. managing attorney property back to the govemment
for the Eastern Shore of Virginia understood," Robinson said. "Itt
Legal Aid Center.
many cases, the papers were ri&lt;Jt
He said the homeowners were told even read to.the individuals."
"
they wouldreceiverentalassistance
The FmHA is tiiecreditarmofuE
that would reduce their monthly Agriculture Department. It p~
payments and that they wouldn't vldes about 12 percent of all farm
have to pay !or !axes, Insurance or
redlt
•

The su!Vey will take m~ than
five years to complete. and wiD cost
$2!l],OOJ. The commissioner's share
will bE&gt; around $45,430.
Jones reported. the Elderly Hous·
ing9Drp., is tn theprocessofclosing
a laon with HUD and shOuld be
completed withing two weeks.
Jones. who is president of the
Elderly Housing Corp.• stated that
they hope to actually begin construe·
!Jon by therniddleofNovember. The
housing complex will be bull! near
Veterans Memorlal Hospital alkl
will Include renovation of the former
Children's Home.
Bernard Nlehm, director or
Woodland Centers, Inc., asked ·
oomrntssloners to meet at the Multi
Purpose BuDding on Nov. 9 at 10
a.m. to review their program and
services. The commissioners will
meet with Nlehm, but at the office of
the commissioners , as suggested by
Jones.
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
advised Columbia Township Road
T-13 is closed between SR 143 a!ld
county road C-ll. to through traffic,
due to a bridge replacement. Tile
road will be closed approximately
three weeks. As a detour route.
(Continued on page 12)

To discuss contract
. Steelworlun Union Local 51'71
w111 meet lldllevmlng at 7o'clock 1n
Union Hal, Harlford, lo dlticwle
thetr contract.

being back in the United States or seeing the (Arrny )
Rangers ... to save us, " said J ean J oel, of Albany,
N.Y., a student a t St. George's University Medical
School in Grenada. She had just landed at Charleston
Air F orce Base.
Officials in Washington sa id about 500 Americans
had asked to he evacuated and would be flown out
within the next few days . Most of the evacuees landed
in Charleston, while a few stopped in Barbados .
U.S. Defense Secreta ry Caspar Weinberger said in
Washington on Wednesday th at the U.S. toll among
2,8:Xl Marines and Army para troopers was siX dead,
33 wounded and eight missing. La te in the day,
Weinberger said scattered fighting continued against
"diminishing Cuban res istance. "
The Cuban government reported on its media ,
however, that the last resisting Cubans had
"sacrificed themselves for the m otherland ."
Invading fo rces met "a lot more r esistance than we
had expected," Si!id Gen. J ohn Vessey J r .. chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

•

NEW ELECTION BOARD MEMBERS
Nonnan C. Will, right, R!Hlle I, Rutland, was given his
oath of oftlce as a new member of the Meigs County
Board of Elections by Meigs County Clerk of Courts
Larry Spencer, left, Wednesday afternoon. WUI was
recommended for the post by the Meigs County

Democrat Executive Committee and his appointment by Sherrod Brown, secretary of state,_hao; been
received. Will, a Democrat, will flU tbe unexpired
tenn of Russell I. Wlls&lt;&gt;n on the Meigs County
Election Board. The tenn expires on Feb. 28. 1986.

Gallia officials to Foothills: 'Getout'
By LARRY EWING
OVP staff Writer
A one-page document labeled a
"Termination of lease" and "Notice
to leave the premises," was
hand-delivered to Foothills Aviation
management Wednesday by Gallia
County Commission President Paul
D. Niday . .
The document, an apparent
prelude to· formal eviction action
against the firm operating the
Gallla-Meigs Regional Airport, was
prepared by prosecuting attorney
Joseph L. Cain In response to a

Tuesday commission directive
authorizing the prosecutor to "take
whatever legal action necessary" to
remove Foothills from the
premises.
" Please take notice your existing
lease of the premises at the
Gallia-Melgs Airport is hereby
term inated ... " the notification
reads. "You will further p~ase iake
notice we want you to leave satd
premises you now occopy ... not later
than ... November 1, 1983."
"You are being asked to leave the
premls.es.'' the county document

concludes. "If you do not leave, an
eviction action m ay be initiated
against you. ''

Foothi lls Avia.tion co-ownerGearied Hitchcock said immediately
after receipt of the notification he
had " no intention of obeying" the
county's request , adding that his
ftrmwas in the processo f con.~ulting
Its legal advisor .
"It is our opinion tha t our lease is
Still good," he sa id, "and we are not
-&amp;I least not at present -prepared

to move.\'
(Con tinued on page 12 )

Manchin request hits snag, must wait 15 days
By JEFF MORRJS
OVPStaffWrlter
·~
NEW HAVEN - Secretary of
State A. James Manchln has hit a
511811 In his quest fD have Nuckols
.and As!loclates Securtty, Inc., th6?
security finn iUJII'dlng Foote MJneral Company's Graham plant at
New Ha'ml, evicted from the state. ·
Under Secretary of State Charles
Capet said Manchln had planned to
seek a court injUDCtXtn today to ban
the firm, which the secretary of
state has claimed Is not authol1zed
ID do bulll8l in West VlriiAJa, but

"We knew there was a possibillty
of this,'' Capel said. "The Attorney
General's office did some research
and found that was the way to
proceed."
Manchin, who actsasadmlnlstra ·
torofthestate'sSecurttyGuardiaw,
has alleged the securtty firm has
been using a house In Ravenswood
as a "mall drop" address, when In
fact, the corporation is not au thor1zed to do business In thls state.
Cassius H. Toon,anattorneywith
Toon &amp; Castelle of Charleston who
has been hired by Nuckols and
badacllan&amp;etlplansafterldtolflce ASSOCiates, said he had his secre. dldaomel'llll!8l'Ch.
tarycontact the secretary of state's
"'lbey tell us we mustwaltl!ldays olflce and she was told the security
andhaveaheerlng,"Capetsald.
finn was Ucensedand had paid its
~ALMNTERIN8PBCl'ION-fte• aal..._l 51 ....
Capet sa1d If the court foond th6? fees and taxes.
a1 tnclalllllli e~~~~ILI"'·• u 111e SUte
Genp, sa,, r••..,.
teelll'lliYflrm to~IDvlolatlanat the
Toon &amp;aid-he-hasn't explored the
e.o1t pillce WedamhJ nwc :'
Pldurect are N.-mu Weber,
Bring the II!CI'etary c1 slAte's -possibility of whether a finn must
wpallimlimnt, 1101111! aldie enJPLoJee, 8lld eeventalllle._....: by ·
oiDcecould then get an injunction.
have an operating otflce In state to
111e ..... linen&amp;.
·

z.

llllh•"'

be licensed as a West Virginia firm . Cincinnati (Ohio) ," Manchin added.
" What they are doing is pet1orrning
"I'm not certain of that," Toon
an illegal actin the sta te. They a re
said. "I haven't explored that In any
strike-breakers , pretending to upway or answered any charges. and
hold the law while they them selves
I'm not going to until a formal
are In violation of the law."
charge is made and I find out what
Manchtn said he has talked with
they are pursuing.. ''
Capel said the hearing may be Foote Mineral Company officia ls
held at the secretary 6f state' sofflce. . and spoke briefly yesterday with the
captain of the security guards at the
He said Nuckols would be notified
plant's main gate.
today about the scheduled
" We got no response (from Foote)
proceeding.
just like the captain here," Manchln
Manchln visited striking United
said. "They say they are not
Steelworkers Local 5171 members
at their picket line at Foote Minerai
supposed to say anything until they
talk to legal counsel.' ~
·
Company yesterday.
The captain 1t the gate told
"Thesepeople (Nuckols) here are
posing as security guards represent.
repot1ers he had no comment on the
matter and referred them to the
lug a West Vlrglnla firm out of
firm's attornies.
security
Ravenswood. which they are not,"
Manchtn said it appears Nuckols
Manchin told union members In
Intentionally defrauded the state b)i.
front of Foote Mineral Company.
"Everything directly comes !rom
(Continued on page 12)

·-

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