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I

b Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
TOMORROW'

~l:ff-IT . IS

HA LLOW~EN ... I

~

I

HAP.DLY WAIT!

IM &lt;::rQIN~ lt'&gt; 5TAY UP .

AND SAT A LOr CF

REA.L LATE AND RLlN
ARa..ll-JDALL-OVER 10/v'N ...

5T'UFF THAT ISN'T'"

See letters on Page 2

SeePage5

ornadoettes
eliminated

€i'COD RA&lt;: MF!5 •.• .

Photos, story on Page 6 ,

Photo, story on Page 4

•

at y

,.
. Voi.32,No. 141
Copyrlghrod 1983

I'LL PROBABLY BE
SICK As A ocq.!

By LARRY EWING

•

MR~

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b Ha·-reaves and Sellers

·MEN AND LITTLE MISS

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© 1983 Hargreaves and Sellers
Distributed by NEA,Ine.

,
SPEEDWALKER PRIVATE EYE

PRINTfD IN CANADA

Cris Hammond

mrs RNf ORtENTAt (/fj/cT ollRr

1.5 II RII!?E /6 -IJ CENTlJ!(Y
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enttne

-

I Section , 10 Page•
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc:. New•paper

31, 1983

Committee questions
· Gallia's action to expel
airport firn1 's contract

MY MOM SAYS !M
A REAL CHIP OFF
THE OLD BLOCK.:.

AND 'THE NEXT DA-Y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Oct.

•

OVPstafl
A five-member corluntttee plans
to meet with Gallla County commissioners to question the reason for
action by the board to terminate the
lease of Foothllls Aviation and to
evict that firm from the Galli a·
Meigs Regional Airport.
Committee make-up and plans
were drawn Sunday afternoon as
approximately 40 supporters of the
finn operating the joint-county
faclllty met to discuss recent events
centering on the . Clllltroversy between county commissioners and
.Foothills management.
On Wednesday, a document
labeled a "termlnationoflease" and
"notice to leave the premises" was
hand-delivered to Foothills personnel by Commissioner Paul D. Niday.
The papqr delivered by Niday
threatened, "If you do not leave (by
November 1, 1983). eviction action
may be lilltla ted against you."

Unemployment in Meigs County

reversed a three-month downward
trend by registering a modest
Increase, according to the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services. In
Gallla County, however, jobless
cl;Ums continued to decline during
September.
Meigs County, with a reported
Septern~r rate of 12.8 percent,
registered a slx -tenths of one
percent increase over the August
figure of 12.2 percent.
The Meigs- posting shows a
reversal of a three month decline tn
the unemployment rate. From May
through August, Meigs teglstered ~
steady 2.8 percent downward spiral.
The OBES posted a September
jobless rate of 13.1 percent for
Gallla, the third straight montbly
decline for the county. September's

I WANT HY BrJ/IUS
CASH Tllts77HE!

figure represents a reduction of
nine-tenths of one percent, down
from the August rate of 14 percent.
Since May, Gallia County unemployment has declined by 3.8
percent.
According to OBES figures, 1,941
of Gallia's civilian labor force of
14,855 were without work during
September. In Meigs, 1,525 of that
county's labor force of 11.883 were
jobless during the Month.
Both Gallia and Meigs counties
had jobless rates above the Ohio
figure of 11.1 percent. Across the
nation, the OBES reported an
unemployment rate of 8.8 percent.
Unemployment percentages for
surrounding counties durtng September were reported by the OBES
as follows: Lawrence. 17; Jackson,
13; VbJtdn,10.7; and, Athens,10.4.

Across tile state, the number of
newly unemployed workers 1n Ohio
flllng initial clabns for benefits
durtng the week ending Oct. 22 rose
10.9 percent to 16,022 compared to
14,452 lor the preceding week,
according to Dr. Roberta Steinir ·
acher, OBES administrator.
Continued clabnS of those unemployed one or more weeks were
estimated last week at 165,393.
An estimated 186,804 clabns for
unemployment compensation were
reported last week 1n Ohio under all
federal and state programs, up 4.3
percent over the 179,039 total for the
preceding week.
Dr. Steinbacher stated that 5,741
jobless Ohio workers had exhausted
theirbenefltsunderallprograms for
the week endinl( Oct. 22.

Death toll hits 16 in Grenada

Union accepts
mRGET 17;SP£EO!

Hitchcock added, "I am not going to -·
be, goaded out of here .. .I'll.stick it
out."
Crisp said· his own review of the
contract between Foothills and the
county showed ". :.nothing that
coul~ constitute a violation (by
Foothills) of the lease."
"Are we to asswne," Hitchcock
asked, "that any contract signed by
the county can be dishonored .. .what
would the comrnlssloners do If the
parties they have contracts with
violated those agreements?"
Those present at the meeting comprised primarily of airport
users, both commercial and private
- were unanimously supportive of
the operation of the facility under
Foothills' management."
One man, who said he had been
using the facillty since the late 1960s,.
said the.airport had made' 'fantastic
advances under 'Foothills."
"I don't understand why the
(Continued on page 10)

Meigs County's jobless
rate up -in SepteDlher

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (AP)
-Grenada's citizens began restoring order to their battle-scarred
island today as defenders' guns
were sUent and the leader of the
short-lived Marxist milltary regime
. was reported tn custody'
The American death toll 'tn the
Grenada campaign rose to 16, with
71 wounded and three missing.
A man who clalmed to be Gen.
Hudson Austin and was carrying
Austin's Identification papers was
captured by U.S. paratroopers, the
Pentagon said Sunday. Austin was
phalrman of the Hi-member People's Revolutionary Council set up
after the Oct. 19 kllltng of Prime
Minister Maurtce Bishop.
Austin had been reported on the

fT'S A 20fJ CENTlJRV?!AI(J-RJNtJ
!Jiltt. IV/TII CRAWN /JRIIW/HtJS Or
fi&lt;'tJGS, .577JCK Ttl A STIIN'O W!Tfl
KKIItY Gt.Vc.'

Meigs County resident Jack
Crisp, who serves as head of the
Leading Creek Water Conservancy
District, chaired Sunday's meeting.
He asked Foothills C(K)Wiler Gearled Hitchcock what "justification"
the county had used in its decision to
termlnate the lease.
Hitchcock answered he had never
been given a reason. "The most
recent excuse was that we didn't
have proper liability insurance," he
said, "but we've got !Land they
have a copyofthepollcy... otherthan
that, there have been no reasons."
"Even If the Insurance were a
problem," he continued, "according
to the contract, we have 30 days to
correct any problem or defiCiency
the county finds ·and submits to us."
The group had invited both the
Gallia County commission and the
Gallia-Meigs Reg!OJ18l Airport AU·
thortty to atlend Sunday's meeting.
Neither board was represented.
"We feel we have a good lease,"

run in various locailons across the
133-square mile Caribbean island
since the u :S, led .Invasion last
Tuesday.
Some reports said he had with one
or more women hostages, and he
reportedly made at least one
abOrtive atlempt to escape from the
island on a yacht.
On Saturday, U.S. Marines 1n the
suburbs of St. George's, the capital
of Grenada, captured Bernard
Coarct, another architect of the
bloody coup tht ousted Bishop.
Coard, a Marxist economist and
deputy prime minister, led a faction
that believed Blslxlp's pro-Cuban
regime was not radiCal enough.
In St. George's, there were no
reports of fUrther fighting Sunday

~hree

year deal

the Steelworkers.
Earlier negotiations resulted in a
spokesman Peter B. Thomas, vice
strlkecommenclng0ct.2atFoote's
president of Industrial relations,
reported today that negotiations last Graham and Cambridge plants.
Thomas lndlcated negotiations
week with the United SteelworkBsLocal 5171 of the Greham plant at weretntenseanddU!Icult. Duetothe
· Tew Haven lllli! . !!llll of -the· State- of the femlalloys- industty;
Cambrldge,Obloplant,resultedlna both the company and union
three-year agreement expirtngOct. realized that conceoslons 1n the area
of wages and benefits were essential
1,1986.
.
Members of Local5171 met at the for Foote Mineral to remain
union haD 1n Hartford Sllturday . competitive, Thomas said.
'Employi!es returned to work at
attemoon to vote on the contract.
Local union o1riclals coold 1101 be Grabam at 12:01 this morning and
reiiCIIed this l1lDl1lln&amp; forcomment, employees wfll .be retumlna to
and Thomas did not release the Cambridge 011 Nov. 1.
iletalls' of the contract approved by

NEW HAVEN - Foote Mineral

AIRPORT CONTROVERSY A "Citizens
Oversight Committee" was formed Sunday as
approximately 4ll individuals concerned with Gallia
Counly's recent action to remove Foothllls Aviation
as operawrs of the Gallia-Meigs Regional Aliport

met. Originally brought together over the airport
controversy, the group decided to question the
commission on a nwnber of Issues facing county
govenunent.

Foothills files $1.6 million lawsuit;
Guiding Hand wins j~dgment

GALLIPOLIS - Foothills Aviaand reporters were allowed to walk
tion flied a $1.6 million lawsuit
. the streets without military eseorts
against Gallia County commissionfor the first time.
ers and Gallia·Meigs Regional
"There Is no life-threatening
Airport. Authority thls morning in
situation at the present," said a
common
pleas court.
report issued by U.S. representaThe firm, through Gallipolis
tives of the Agency for International
attorney Hamlin King, has .also
Development.
requested a mandatory injunction
or
"such other equitable remedy as
ReporterS saw smashed windows
the
caul') may deem appropriate"
and empty store shelves as a result
for
commissioners
to provide fundof looting after the invasion. The
ing
to
help
with
Foothllls'
operation
only restaurant open in the area was .
the
facility.
of
selling beer, bul no food .
A declaratory judgment "that it
Patrols of soldiers and sallors
(Foothills) has a good and valid
lease" tothealrportisalsosoughtby
from the 400-member, seven·nation
Carlbbean security force were· Foothills.
The suit alleges that Foothills
serving a~ pollee.
In an address to the nation late
relied on terms of'the Nov. 1, l982
Saturday on slate-run Spice Island
lease. claimlng that the amount of
Radio, the British-appointed gayer- · money appropriated tq operate the
nor general of the tslarid, Sir Paul
airport was to be renegotiated each
.Scoon. urged stores and ~hools to year·
open and government employees to
No agr:eement was reached
between all three parties, but
report to work today.
In Barbados, high-ranking pollee Foothills claims it made "pertectly
said a contingent of u.s. Marines
clear" at all times its Intention to
captured an undisclosed number of
continue with the lease.
Cuoon resisters Sunday on Cania·
Commissioners' action last week
~cou, a 13-square ~mlle-lsland__JI!)! to renew the ~~~e- ~~ts
deplindencyofGrenadatothenorth.
anticipatory breach of the written
But there Wll$ no &lt;tflelal word from
agreement with Foothills, the suit
military spokesmen.
~
says.
.The Pentagon on Sunday sald the
Footbllls claims in the suit It has
Cuban golfenunent's count of Cu- invested $43,357.39 in operating the
bans on Grenada- a total at 784- a1Jllortandstandstolose$1.5milllon
may. have been correct, despite In anticipated profits.' Adverse
previous military est:tmi.tes rangpubllclty allegedly generated by
lng hliher. Nearly 700 Cubans are defendants against Footbllls will
being held as prisonerS.
result in the Joss of another $125,001,

the suit clabns.
·
County must pay
Meanwhile, a declaratory judg-1
m&lt;:nt 1n Gallia County Common
Pleas Court has found for the ·
county's board of meental retarda· ·
tion and developmental disabilities
ih its dispute with the county
commissioners over fUnding.
Judge George F . Burkhar1,sitling
in on assignment from Monroe
County, ruled that commissioners
are mandated to provide funding for
the board's operation- the Guiding
Hand School at Cheshire- " in so far
as sucb funds are available."
The decision m ay end a two-year
disagreement between the board

Triple fatality

'

and commissioners. The board has
maintained the county is responsible for funding the school, and
commissioners said they were
unsure of theirfunding responslbilities under Ohio law. They also said
there are notenoughfundsavallable
for the county tO' help operate the
school.
The budge t conunlsslon, County
Auditor Ronald K. Canaday and
County Treasurer Myron L.
McGhee were also named as
defendants in the suit. Burkhan
ruled that "no controversy" existed
between the. board and those
officials.
Burkhart sa id a controversy .
"exists for \he board of commissioners as to their rights and duties .
(Ohio). Revised Code 5125.05 places
.upon the commissioners a mandatory duty to levy taxes and make
appropriations sufficient to enable·
. tlle board of menial retardation and
developmental disabilities to per·
forrn its functions and duties.

CANFIELD. Ohio (API -Three
passengers died in a one-car
accident about ·seven miles west of
here, but the driver survived and
"Mandatory duties imposed upon
suffered only minor injuries the theeommisslon&lt;&gt;rsrequlresfundlng
Higbway.Patrolsald . .- · - .:._~ __ and financing sufficient to allow the ,
The patrol identified the dead as
tKlru'll llf-menlal&gt;el;mlatlon and
Linda F. Chester , 18, Youngstown, developmo;ntal dlsabllities to pro- .
Anthony .J. Crtsafl, 20, Austintown,
vide seiVIces mandated by (the
and Michael J
Costello 18
state ) in so far as such funds are
Youngstown.
·
'
'
ava ilable." .
.
The driver, Scott A. Chester: 17,
Theboard!lledthesuit mcommon
Youngstown, was lreated at South
pleas court in June. At the . time,
Side hospital and released after the Commissioner erlln Swain said he
accident early Sunday hospllal
welcomed the suit If It would legally
officials said. He is Linda:s brother.
settle their dispute with the' board.

Y

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�~.day,

Mouday, Oct. 31, 1983

To the rescue____,...________W_il_lia_m_F._._B_uc_k-:-ley_J_r•.

The Daily Sentinel
DEV~ED

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy , Ohfo
TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

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~v

m.:_.,_-r' ....,.....,c::t .....

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

·

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER or The ..\ssoclated Press, Inland Dally Press A~socla­
tion and the Amerlcan .Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION ar e welcomed . The)' .should be less I han 300 wonb
long. All letters are suhjed to editing and musl be 11lgned " ·Uh name, address and

lelephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters shoukl be In
10od taste, addressln&lt;ls sues, not personalities.

Letters to editor·
Try it, you may like it
• Have you ever heard the saying , these grants. So far, only 20 people
'1 wish someone would do some- · have responded . At a planning
meeting on Oct. 18, only four
thing?" Well, now so!'le one can,
anended (and two of those were
but that some one has to be you:
library employees\.
In the reeent past, our l!brar!~s
So to all who use our libraries and
h;lve endeavored to expand the
care about our youth, please
educational and cultural services
contact the library and find out how
through a vailable grants . Those
you can participate In the plans.
t&amp;a t use . the library have been
And· to all who don't ·use our
s~rveyed and encouraged to rE.'l!brarl.es, try one, you might learn
spond about the adm!nist~a tion of
something. - Peggy Crane.

Who is really ripping you?
. I am writing to urge voters to get
facts on Issue 3, the repeal of
new taxes and tax breaks enacted
this year. Supporters of Issue 3 1ike
w compare it to Califor!lia 's
Proposition 13 of several years ago.
Though the state of California
predicted disaster. t he issue
passed, the eeonomy improved and
.. the government still functioned .
But that is NOT the case !n Ohio.
California had t h~ highest tax
rate in the United States. Ohio's
combined state and local tax rate
was 47th before the reeent tax
t~e

increase, and we are noW r anked

38th (figures from the non·partisal
Organi z ation o f State
Legislatures ).
Despite being among the lowest
taxed citizens. we have many
serv!,Ces ranked !n the top 10. such
as highways, health , law enforcement. wlldille a nd reereation. We
need only look across the rlver. Our
neighbors In West V!rgtn!a pay
more than Th1CE as much state
taxes as Ohioans, and goodness
knows they don 't get much in

return.
Ohio was $500 billion In debf when
Celeste took office. Schools and
colleges had been running In the red
for 5o long that the state' s educa·
tiona I system has slipped out of the
top 10. Cutting out the fat is one
thing, but when you cut . into the
lean, It takes a while to heaL

One blatantly false clafrn made
tiy the Issue 3 people must be
rejeeted. Nearly Everyone feels
strongly about welfare, so they
have claimed that a lot of the new
taxes are going to welfare. That is a
lie. Ohio ranks 49th in welfare
(ADC) payments. Only Mlssisslppl
expeets reelplents to get along on
less .
Finally, we must all realize that
slnee we live In a low·tax state with
a high level of services , we face a
choice. We can pay more Income
tax, which taxes us on our ab!lity to
pay. or we can pay more property
taxes, or we can dfsmantle one of
the most efficient state ,govern·
ments In the eountry.
Property taxes are an antique
from the good old days when
everyone owned property. They
have beeome terribly unfair, but
they are sure to go up if Issue 3
passes. Nobody likes to pay taxes,
but if the taxation Is fair and we get
our money's worth. we are bener
off than people In most states.
None of us loses much money to
the state. We would all be bener off
if we pushed to lower federal taxes.
Look closely at your pay cheek
stub. Compare state and federal
taxes and compare what we get
back from each. Is the state of Ohio
really ripping you off? - Michael
Cullums, Route 2. Albany.

Repeal: A big step backwards
. The Southern Local Education
Assoelat!on President Robert Beegle Is urging voters to &lt;;ast their
votes against State Issues 2 and3on
the November eleetlon ballot.
Issue 3 would wipe out all tax
increases and REFORMS passed
by the last legislature while Issue 2
would require a superord!nary
majorlty (60 percent) vote in each
house to pass any future tax

- As citizens, we will lose the tax
reforms eliminated, by Issue 3. This
means working couples wlll find the
marrlage penalty increased again
... the personal exemption we now
have when !Uing our Ohio !neome
tax will be cut !rom $1 ,(0) to $650 ...
our retirement years could be
affeeted through a reduction in the
current tax credit for persons over
65 and an increase in the state
ineasure.
income tax on retirement !neome.
· Taken toget her, these two issues
.:.., Increase the estate taxes paid
mean immediate and 1ong-range
by a surviving spouse. Current law
problems for teachers and students
allows a widow or widower to
in our school dlsirict. Consider reeelve up to $500,000 In an estate
these !mpllcalions if Issues 2 and 3 tax-free . Issue 3 would slash that
are passed:
exemption to only $60,(0). Aceord·
~ - The loss of state dollars to our
!ng to the Ohio Department of
district In fiscal 1985 would be
Taxation, the average taxable
$284 ,285 with schools across the
estate In lim was worth ~.IDJ.
s1ate losing $637 milllon! Issue 3
There are many other serious
would cut state support of schools
implications of Issue 3 and Issue 2
more in the school year 1984-85 than
that affeet the teachers, students,
ALL of the funding cuts made
parents and also a!feet the eCon·
between 19'79 and l!m by the ·omy of this state. Passage of these
Rhodes Admlnlstrat!on!
Issues will put us back in the days o(
: - This loss of state money could
budget cuts and school closings. We
put some teaching jobs In jeopardy
cannot afford to move backwards.
... mean fewer classroom supplles
The education of Ohio students
... cut down on the textbook
and the welfare of tbe state will
:replacement ... cause tbe building
depend upon the DEFEAT OF
'maintenance to be deferred ...
ISSUES 2 and 3..
oireate some larger classes as
Education your frlends , rela8peclal programs are eliminated.
tives, and neighbors about these
• - Our school board will be under
issues and urge them to join you In
~res8ure for asking voters to . voting "NO." - Robert Beegle,
approve property tax levy ... it will
President, Southern Local Educatake 12.63 mills to replace the state tion Assoeiatlon.
l)lOney.

Today Is Mol)day, Oct. 31, the ~th day of~. Thereare61 days left In
the year.
Today's hlgh!lght In history:
On Oct. 31, 1968, President Lyndon Johnson ordered a halt to ali U.S.
bombing of North Vietnam, saying he hoped this wr:Alld lead to fruitful

peace lll!llllllatlons.
On this date:
In 1674, Dutcb forces evacuated what Is now New York City.
In 1861, Mlssrurl !leCEded from the Union.

.t _

l'age

3

,

The Great

..

· because our flag Is not hoisted
THE AZORES- Circumstances erers who were busily engaged to · and conceivably also Amerlcans,
beyond that point.
and some soldiers !rom other easthave placed me 2,(XX) miles a way try to do to Grenada what the Soviet
Without knowing details of the enem Caribbean nations, but because
from the good old U.S.A., more or -·trnlon trled to do to Egypt untll, on
gagement,
It Is predictable that the
the United States has !tnally acted
less at sea - in fact , at sea, the that bright day In 1972, Sadat
usual
people
will deplore this "redecisively In its self-evident Inter·
victim of radio commun!catlbns so kicked them out. The strategic obsort
to
the
rnllltary."
It Is at such
est. The polnt o! having Mannes Is
erra!lc that an entire week has jeetlve of the Spviet Union was
moments
that
the
Rip
van Winkles
to use them when necessary. It is
gone by without the news. Then plain: to convert llnle Grenada,
need
to
remember
that
the mllltary
always depressing when the use of
suddenly the 'airwaves open up and wjth a population of 00,000 people,
arm
of
a
free
nation
has
'got to be
force beeomes necessary, diploa flash co1nes in: The United Into a little Gibraltar, guarding the
sheltered
from
the
prevalent
bias
macy having been exhausted. But
St ates, in company with !our Carib- eastern channel into the Carlbbean
that
assumes
that
any
use
of
the
It Is even more depressing when
through which the Vital foreign on
bean nations, none of which can
mllltary
!s
Intrinsically
evll.
The
force, though appropriate, Is not
mot ely be thought of as a satellite of passes to sustain the Unlted States
used, putting off the say when the _ !allure to use the mllltary when the
with
neeessary
energy.
the United States. has invaded
situation calls for!ts use'lii'tlie Interchoice beeomes to use greater
Without knowing the details of
Grenada. The purpose. according
national arena Is an enexcusableas
force, or give up. In the memory o!
to the BBC announcer, Is to safe- the rnllltary operation, or of events
the
!allure to use the pollee w~
most
living
Amerlcans,
as
many
guard foreigners living in Grenada immediately antec;edent, how does
the
domestic
peace Is threatened.
Marines
as
have
currently
landed
and aparently endangered by the one spontaneously react on heartng
There
are
those
who accuse the
tn
Grenada
might
have.
landed
.In
such news?
communists who overthrew, and
president
of
a
return
to chauvinism
Havana
and
done
a
~umanltarian
This Rip van Winkle deelared It
killed, the antecedent eomrnunist,
and
lmper!allsm.
But
ID suggest
service
to
the
Cuban
people
whlle
who had brought misery to the little to be champagne time. Not because
that
the
United
States
has
secretly
guarding
our
geopolitical
frontiers
Island of Grenada and opened It up Grenadians are presumably being
Grenada
requires
the ac.
c
oveted
that
do
not
end
In
Key
West
simply
killed as these words are written,
to Soviet a·n d Cuban military plund·
cuser to assume a most astounding
and prolonged American conti6ENATO'R RAI'tPOt..!&gt;H W6 BEEI&gt;I 'TRI(iNC:. TO GET
Tlo\E COST WOUL.P 8E A 9F.OP IN THE
nence. If our objective all along was ,
CONGRESS TO ~EATE A PEACE ACA'PE,.,._'(
BUCKETCOM~Eli' TO 'THE MIL.ITA'RV
to
take over Grenada, it beggars :
FO~ MORE THAN A QUAR~ (f!'A CSIIITUI':Y••
8U~6EiS THE'( AL.WA.Y5 APl"'tOVE ••.
the lmagtnat!on whywedldn'tdoso ·
early - say In 1920. Or even a de- :
cade ago, when Grenada was given:
,..;;_~
Its Independence by Great Britain. :
The search for evll American mo- •
tlves will stretch the resources of ;
the most adamant critics of Amer..;
lea. Not that they aren't up to thej
challenge: They we~ pro-Soviet in •
their crltlclsm of Lyndon Johnson;
when, !n 1965, .he sent the marines;
to the Dominican Republic. When:
you ask them exactly what !mpe'·
· riallstlc or other heinous objectives
the Marines could serve In 1965,
they will change the subject. For
some people It suffices to accuse
America of cruel and atavistic
motivations.
The Rip Van Winkle aboard this
little vessel, ven In the absence of
more speclflc news than you can
get from a two-minute short-wive
broadcast, when tested In the So.u th
Atlant!c a few months ago, found
themselves saying, with speelal
meaning, God save the Queen.

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

Witch H~gatha
CASTS

MOONLIGHT
MADN-ESS

l'aa• 2- Tha Daily Sanlinal
flell•""t' Midd!.port, Ohio

Comment

Pomeroy

Oct. 31, 1983

•

re.

. -=:

)

\

TlVO

rean's Insistence that It was a government 'informant who first
suggested a cocaine transaction as
the way tD bail the flamboyant automaker out of his financial dl!llcul·
ties. He then went along with the
deal, he told my staff, because of
threats against his family.

'

c::

The government's case isn't as
airtight as the attorneys have been
claiming in pretrial motions over
the months. For example, onemotion states that "the conspiracy Is
vividly depleted and preserved on a
·series of audio and video tapes."

But court documents and Inter·
nal government memos studied by
my associates Indy Badbwar and
Tony Capacelo show no eoncluslve
evidence to prove the govern·
ment's elalm that "DeLorean in·
ltlated his participation In a
nareotlcs transaction," and that
"nareotics were discussed openly
from July through the date of his
arrest" tn October 1982. The vital
conversations simply weren't
recorded.
'
According to an Internal Drug
Enforcement Administration reo.

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Andropov.
I admit I lose patience with
people who meekly allow themselves to be led to the slaughter.
Personally, I have no· Intention of
going sjlently to a planned prema·
ture death. There can never be such
a thing as the "limited nuclear
war" President Reagan envtsages.
The Union of Concerned Scientists
believes the spread of nuclear
weapons to many nations, some
with a history of !nstab!lity, could be
the trigger that sets ort a world wide
conflict. However or whenever it
comes, It will eome needlessly
because it will seltle nothing.
There wlll be nothing left to .
settle!
,

'

.....

••
......
•,.
•

( -

The DEA report admits that Hoffman made the first call to DeLoi'ean. The report says Hotfman
called "on a personal matter" In
'late June - with no further
elaboration.

Berry's World

~------------------~
16 oz. ICED TEA
ORiEVERAGE
. GLASSES

Grey or White

port, U.S. Attorney James Walsh
decided to open an Investigation on
July !6, 1982. His decision was ·
•
based largely on a !().minute eonversatlon with the DEA agent who
handled James Timothy Hotfman,
the Informant DeLorean swears set
him up.

grim future In prospect for AmerIca, Russia and. the rest of the
world, I wonder why the people are
content to let tbe world's leaders
dismiss the scientific 'facts as
propaganda. A Newsweek poll
revealed that the majortty of
Amerlcans expeet a nuclear war
within the next 10 years. That
means that majority think they
have a life expectancy of 10 years or
less. The rlch will die with the poor
for nowhere have I read evidence
that a hefty bank account will
protect you from being Incinerated
or eating radiation tainted food. All
this death and destruction could be
halted by two foollsh old men,
Ronald Reagan and Yurl

ALL
HALLOWEEN
COSTUMES
'DRASTICALLY
REDUCED

6 PACK

old fools ___________________L_~_e_ll_W_in~~-tt

Everyone who has lived long That was only the beginning. I've
enough to become a Senior Citizen
watched the momentum for the
must realize they are very. small
Freeze spread and grow since then.
frogs In this complicated puddle we
And today, I am pleased to say, In ·
call the World. It was here long every state of the Union, in big cities
before we were and undoubtedly
and small towns, the American·
will be here long alter we are gone.
people have made their feelings
The only thing questionable Is
about the Insane arms race heard
whether it wlll be populated · by
loud and clear. They want a Freeze
humans .or by weird mutations
and tbey want It now! This was
resulting from a nuclear holocaust.
made 'm ost apparent In the 1982
Only a fool would deny we have election. At that time, this country
gotten too smart too fast. We have
had the closest thing It has ever had
learned to produce an awesome
to a national referendum. In nine
energy without learning how to
out of 10 states and 35 out of 38 cities
control' lt. Now two of the most
and counties where the bilateral
powerful natiolis tn the world, the
Freeze proposal was on the ballot
United States and the Soviet Union,
voters said, "Yes, we want it!" The
are led by two old men who seem to
people of the United States spoke
disregard the fact that they are
but the gov~rnment has not
sowing the seeds of destruct!n for
listened!
the whole world. They are two old
A few weeks ago the Kennedyfools too arrogant to admit they are
Hatfield Nuclear Freeze resolution
WI'Qng!
passed by a substantial margin In
I am referring to Ronald Reagan
the House of Representatives. It
and Yuri Andropov. Both men
had been defeated a year earl!er by
mouth " Peace" but are preparing
the same body under pressure by
fort he most horrlble war In history.
the Reagan adnttnlstratlon. In spite
Both anempt to fool their citizens
of continued opposition and ridicule
by talking of deterrence when m· by administration big·wigs and the
fact they mean extermination. It
president, support for the movewill be not only the soldiers of the
ment has grown steadily for the
two nations wbo die but rnllllons of
past tw.o years. Many groups and
clvlllans who will die terrible deaths
professions not usually eonnected
while their leaders face doubtful
with political causes bave joined tn
future In some extravagant bunker.
actively supporting the F'ree2e
Make no mistake about it. A
movement. One such group Is
nuclear war between the U.S. and
Physicians for Social Responslbll·
the U.S.S.R. eould mean the end of
lty with 18,(0) phy,c;lcians, scientists
humankind as we know lt. The
and concerned citizens banded
possibilitY of such a war Is very
together because they think a
real. Although no one really wants a
nuclear war wUJ be the ftnaJ
nuclear confllct, the generals on
eldemlc with no possible effeetive
both sides are actually preparing
medical response. They believe
for one rlght now. As these deadly
there Is no effective clvll defense
preparations eonttnue, the ground
and most of the survivors of the
swell of public opinion for a Freeze
blasts would soon die. If you would
-on nuclear weapons Is growing and
like 10 know ~mre ~abour-the
Is the only real hope the people of
medical consequences write to
the world have against the ldlotoPSR, 639 Massachusetts Ave.,
~racy of their leaders.
Cambridge, ,Mass., 03139.
A couple of years or so ago In this
space I told you of a movement that
It Is estimated In the first few
was then growing lit Etii'Ope for a
hours it would take for the missiles
bilateral, verlflable Freeze on ali · to fall on the U.S., 140 rniiilon people
further · testing, production and
would be ldlled outright. Those who
deployment of nuclear weapons. At escaped the blasts would die more
that time I predicted you would slowly from radiation el!pOStlre,
hear much more of the movement. disease and stanoallon. With such a

, QUICKIE

.

Entrapment________,_--'--_____J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so'---n.

WASiflNGTON ~ Despite video
tapes that show him clearly hjW·
dl!ng a satchel lull of cocaine, auto
wizard John DeLorean's conten·
lion that the government entrapped
him into the illicit drug deal may ·
still hold in courl.
The reason is that crucial conver- ·
satlons In the early stages of the
bizarre Incident were not reeorded.
So the government's claim that DeLorean Initiated the narcotics deal
cannot be proved by eleetron!c
evidence.
Neither, of eourse, can DeLo-

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•

'

�Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Motlday,

Pomeroy" Middleport, Ohio

Oct. 31, 1983

Pike-Eastern ousts Tornadoettes from district

By The Bend

...\

By SCO'IT WOLFE
CHILLICOTHE- "The thrill of victory and agony
of defeat" greeted the Southern Tornadoettes in the
Distlict Volleyball Tournament here Saturday as·
Southern scored its- first-ever district triumph over
Unioto, then bowed to Eastern-Pike in · the
c hampionship contest to take runner· up honors at
Ohio Univers(ty's Chllllcothe branch.
Southern ended the season with an outstanding 23-2
record, while earning honors of SVAC a nd Sectional
Tournament. champions.
.
In claiming its 'first-ever triumph at the district
l!?veL Southern score-d a 1,manimous win in just two
sets, 1.1-6 a nd 15-13 over the Unioto Sherman Tanks.
Unioto wit hdrew from tournament play _;i th a l6-6
record.
Early in the initial bout Unioto locked itself into a 2-2
tie until Jenny Bentley dropped in three successful
serves, giving SHS a lead it never relinquished.
Southern rolled on to a 13,51ead before Unloto added

another marker, then Debbie Micha'el drilled the next
two gam&lt;&gt;-wlnnin~ serves lor the Tornadoettes, the ·
score 15-6.
.
Cnioto rallied in the second game, ,grabbing an
early 3-0 lead. Laren Wolfe lofted two tantalizing
serves tor a 3-2 score and Karen Hemsley pushed
Southern into the lead at 74, however, the Shermans
came back one polrtt at a time and again tied the scar~
at 8-8. After four straight side-outs Southern went
ahead and stayed on top for the 15-13 win.
Southern was led in scoring by seniors Amy
Littlefield and Debbie Michael "ith eight each.
In thE&gt; seeorid m~;~ tch nf the afternoon Eastern-Pike
defeated South Webster 15-12 and 15-9 to earn a spot In
the tournament finals with Southern. Eastern-Pike's
record now stood at 22-2. its only losses coming to
Class "AA" Jackson, tbe SEOAL champion , and to
Southern In a tri·match with Athens.
As the script for the rematch began to unfold , a

classic battle developed on the ·coun. SHS went up
first, but soon it was tied at 44, beginning a battletbat
did not end until an hour and a half later.
Injured Amy Littlefield put her team back on top
5-4, but Melody Brown took awaythatadvantagefora
5-5 score. Laren Wolfe boosted the Tornadoettes to a
two-point advantage that Southern maintained
despite persistent threats by the lightning quick Eagle
team.
Finally after much effort the Tornadoettes claimed
the first game of the match 15-10. The second game
didn't seem to be much of a threat for Southern as
they raced to an early lead and held It throughout
most of the contest. SHS built up a 74Iead one-point at
a t_lme and could have blown the game wide open , but
failed to take advantage. of five straight Eagle
turnovers. SHS sailed to 10-7, and 13-10 leads, just two
points away from a .trip t9 the regional, but the
momentum quickly changed and a tire&lt;! Southern .

crew started to buckle. Amy Doll and Sandy Schroder
added single scores for a 13-12
then lollowlr\g a
ttme-cut Stephanie WIUtams put the final touches on
an Eagle win.
The Tornadoettes took command In the finale, 4-1,
but things soon fell a pan at the seams and the Eagles
ripped off nine straight points for an 11-4 lead, before
coasting tp .the 15-6 championship triumph.
Amy Doll led the wtnnel'$. with eight points. Laren
Wolfe led Southern with 10 points.
The Southern Seniors of Coach Suzanne Wolfe
ended an Ulustrious career, complllng a 43-4 record in
the last two years; 20-2 last season and 2J.2 this
season. They broke the school record for most wins
ever in one S..ason, beSting the 22-1 mark of two years
ago. '
The Southwestern Highlanders dropped their first
match to eventual district winner, Huntington-Ross,
15-1 and 15-1.

score,

Marshall
defeats
The Citadel

Jet~s

dump 49ers,
Minnesota upset

By KE:-1 RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Pride was the motivator and the
San Franclsco 49ers were the

ignited slow-starting Seattle with a
12-yard fumble return for a touchdown and the underdog Seahawks
went on to beat Los Angeles for their
victims.
second victory over the American
Playing a virtually mistakE&gt;-Iree Conference West leaders in three
game, thE&gt; struggling NewYork Jets
weeks.
Robinson made his big play with
knocked off the high-powered 49ers
18
remaining In the second
9:
27-13 in one of three major National
quaner
and the Seahawks trailing
Football League upsets that caught
divlsion leaders Sunday. In the 7-0. Linebacker Keith Butler shook
others, the St. L9uis Cardinals the ball loose from running back
outscored the Minnesota Vikings Marcus Allen of the Raiders,
41-31 and the Seattle Seahawks Robinson scooped it up and !urn·
whipped the Los Angeles Raiders bered into the end zone.
steelen 17, Jluccaheers 12
34-21.
Frank Pollard ran 2 yards for a
Meanwhile, comeback efforts by
Pittsburgh and Cleveland continued touchdown with 31 seconds lett as
the frustrations of the league's two the Steelers overcame seven turwinless teams, as the Steelers beat noversandanNFLrccord42carries
FRONT LINE READY - Southern's Jenny
the Ross County team but leU to Eastern of Pike in the
Tampa Bay 17-12 and the BroWns by Tampa Bay's James Wilder to
Bentley (8) and Debbie Michael (11) get ready to send second set of games. The loss ousted the Tornadoettes
tripped Houston 25-191n overtime.
beat the 0-9 Buccaneers.
the ball back over the net during Saturday's rn.trict
from further action.
Wilder gained 126 yards with hls
voUeyball ,;arne against Unloto. Southem defeated
In other NFL action, Dallas
ha mmered the N~w York Giants petiormance, wlping out the pre38-20; Atlanta tripped New England vious record of41 attemptssetbythe
24-13; Baltimore edged Philadel- Steelers' Franco Harris In a 1976
phia 22-21; Detroit walloped Chi- game against Cincinnati.
C&lt;lwboys 38, Giants 20
cago 38-17; Buffalo outlasted New
that carried the Bengals to a
CLEVELAND (AP)- Cleveland a field goal and scored a touchdown
Danny White threw for :xt4 yards Browns' Coach Sam Rutigliano _ to tie the gatne 10-10 laie in the first
Orleans27-21; Miami tripped the the
comfortable 27-7 halftime advanLos Angeles Rams30-H; Cincinnati · and a career-high live touchdown wasn't too pleased about barely hall.
tage against the NFL's worst
crushed Green Bay 34-14 and passes, including two to wide - winning, and Houston Oilers' Coach
defense.
receiver Tony Hill, and the Dallas Chuck Studley was downright upset
Denver edged Kansas City 27-24.
Quarterback Turk Schonert,
Rutigliano tried to _a waken his
- In the Monday night gam e, defense forced six turnovers as the about barely losing.
making
his third straight start in
club by having quarterback Paul
Cowboys improved upon the NFL's
Washington vis its San Diego.
place
of
the
injured Ken Anderson,
The loss was the second straight in McDonald - subbing for the
Richard Todd hit 20 of 28 passes best record at 8-1 with their victory
tossed his ttrst two professional
overtime lor the Oilers, 0-9 this sore-armed Brian Sipe - throw a
lor 201 yards to lead the offense and over the Giants.
touchdown passes and ran for
season, who lost 13-10 to Kansas City 14,yard TD pass to tackle Doug
Drew Pearson, who caught one of a week earlier.
the Jets' defense shut down the San
Dieken on the fake field goal with 25 another to complement Johnson's
Francisco running g(lme to - key those scoring strtkes, said he felt hls
running and help the 3-6 Bengals
Cleveland, 54, which snapped a seconds to go in the first half.
their triW11ph over the National quanerback had a "so-so day, for
record their second straight victory.
two-game losing s~ak. needed a Dieken, who scored the first
Danny White."
Conference West Division leaders.
last-minute field goal from Matt touchdown of hls 13-year career. The Packers, 4-5, suffered their
Falcom 24, Patriots 13.
Cornerback Jerry Holmes ran
second straight loss.
Bahr to send the contest into was llned up as a tight end.
Rookie linebacker John Rade overtime. Rookie running back
back an interception 43 yards for a
The Bengals, with the NFL's
Meanwhile. F'lllback Pete Johntouchdown in the !Ina! minute to seal returned a fumble 16 yards for a
top-rated defense, limited the third
Boyce Green, who finlshed with 107 , son has convinced the Green Bay
the victory lorthe Jets, now 4-5 after touchdown as Atlanta's defense yards rushing - all In-the second Packers that he,'s back in form.
)Jest offense in the league to
SJ1apping a three-game losing forced four critical fumbles In the
touchdowns on quarterback Lynn
half - bolted :b:l yards for the
Johnson, making his first start of
Falcons' victoryoverNewEngland. wlnnlng touchdown with 8; 26!eft in the season, rushed lorll2yards and
streak.
Dickey's 1-yard run In the first
"I never even had an intercepCardinals 41, Vlldngs 31
the extra periocl.
quarier and running back Gerry
a pair of touchdowns to help the
Neil Lomax fired two touchdown tion," Rade said of the score that
Ellls' 11-yard TD pass to tight end
The run was designed to move the Cincinnati Bengafs drub the
passes to Roy Green and one to Pat came after rookie Mike Pitts ball into goodfield goal position after Packers 34-14 Sunday.
Paul Coffman In the third.
TUley. and Ottis Anderson ran lor stripped the ball away from New Mike Whitwell had intercepted
Dickey completed 16 of 31 passes
After serving a four-gamesuspen136 yards and a touchdown, leading England quarterback SteveGiogan - Houston quarterback Gifford sion for admitted cocaine pur- lor 231 yards and was Intercepted
St. Louis' upset of Minnesota. the during a nine-yard sack.· 'I was !Ired Nielsen on the previous play. But
twice. Wide rCCE&gt;iver James Lofton,
Johnson played only partup. and I was lucky. "I just Green, an lith-round draft pick time in the last three Bengal games
l'&lt;"FC' s Central,Dlvlsion leaders.
leading the league before the ganne
The Cardinals, 3-5-1. the NFL's happened to be there when the ball from Carson Newman, slipped as he worked hls way back into
with 800 yards receiving in eight
most error-prone team , stayed was ripped out"
through a hole at the line and then shape. He was expected to see
games, didn't catch a pass, and was
Colts 22, Eagles 21
away from fumbles and intercepforced from the game in the second
fought his way to the end zone.
limited action again Sunday, but
Raul Allegre's fifth field goal ot
tions until the final period. St _Louis'
ball with a bloody nose.
Green's play was one of the few starter Charles Alexander was
Neil O'Donoghue, who missed three the game, a 30-yarder wtth2:07left, things Rutigliano liked about the hampered in warmups by a groin
He ld-goal tries ina a20-20tiewith the carried Baltimore over Philadel- game. Hedisllkedhaving to gamble pull and Johnson got the call.
New York Giants the previous phia. The Eagles had li;lken a 2H9 on three separate occasions- twice
Johnson· bulled Into the end zone
game, made good on attempts of 52 . lead on.an eight·play, 44-yard drive when the Browns ran for first downs from 1 and 5 yards out for a 13-7lead.
capped by quarterback Ron Ja- on fourih-down plays in their own
and 47 yards.
His second touchdown ignited a
worski 's &amp;-yard scoring pass to wide territory, and once when they laked
Seahawl&lt;s 34, Raiders 21
three-touchdown second quaner
Linebacker Shelton Robinson receiver Harold Carmichael.

Browns, Bengals post wins

cJ'ilses.

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR
Your Farm
Equipment

Scoreboard ...
Football

DaliM at Philadelphia
\IS . Gl'f't"''' Bay at MUwauklr
Los AAA£11cs Raiders at Kansas City
San Dlt&gt;go at P1nsbutRII
Buffalo at New England

Clevcland

-

NMton.l: Foolballl-cue
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Anwrtcan Collference

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6 3 0 . . Qi? J7J 18'.!
6 3 0 . .861 199 14i

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Plttlb.II'Jh 17, Tampa Bay 11
Blltkncft Zl, F'hllldr\lbla 21

'•

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-·-''

Atlanta at New OrtNnt·
CftiMatl at lbliiDn .

(n)

13, Akron E . 6

A.shtaiJJia St . Jotn 21. MadiSOn 6

·~Ct-1 . Modlt'f 42. Walsh Jeallt 12

•

Cin . Phys. F.d. 47, Ctn. Cwntry Day 0

Clr1 . Surnmll lt, Lockland 0
Cle. Bml'dlellne 22, Oe-. St. lgnallus 2J
Cle. St. JlW'ph ll, Barbmon G

19!1

POMEROY - Southern Athletic BoosterS .wui meet Monday at the high school at 7; ll
p.m., to finalize plans lor the
football banquet to be held Nqv.
12. Members are urged to
attend.

TUESDAY

The uniqueness of United MethodistWomenwastheprogranntheme
at the recent meeting of the
Afternoon Circle of · the United
Methodist Women of the l'tutland
Chureb.
Held at the home ol Mrs. Carl
Denison, the meeting was conducted by Mrs. Ruth Erlewtne wlth
Mrs. Denison giving the devotions,

class postage paid at Po-

meroy, Ohio.

Member: The Associated Press, In·
land Dally Press Assoclaton and the

Peace of Meditation/' "Prayers
Are the Stairs to God," and "Thank

11

American Newspaper Publishers Association, National Advertising Repre-

God for Little Things."

sentative, Branham Newspaper Sales.
733 Third Avenue, New York, New

·and

POMEROY - Meeting of
Pomeroy Lodge 164 will be held
Wednesday at 7: ll p.m . at the
Masonic temple. Annual dues
are to be paid and there wlll be
election of officers. Refreshments will be served. All master
Jru\SOns are invited.

Mrs. Ann Barrett of Rutland
remains a patient at the University
Hospital, Room 911, Columbus.
Cards maybe sent to her there.

Ohio 45769.

POMEROY - In accordance
with the unllonn lunch policy of the
Meigs Local School District, the
menu tor next week, Oct. 31-Nov. 4
Is announced. The junior and senior
high school menus are the same
with a lew additions.
MondaY - Witch's fingers in
fodder shucks, bat's eyes in tomato
sauce, Smurfettes, Jack·O ·
Lanterns, milk.

SUBSC!UPTtON RATES
By Carrier or MDtat Route
· One Week ... ............... ... .. ........... $1 .00
One Month ..... , ............... .. ......... $4.40

One Year ........ ..... ..... .... ......... . $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally .. ..... .... ... ..... ....... ........ 20 Cents
.
Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
r ler may remit tn advance direct to
The Daily Sentinel on 3, 6 or U month
basis. Credit wUI be given carrier each
month.

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT

'

786 N. 2ND AVE.

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

Badllftftml
I UU

and Footboard
·
Extra)~

.i

~

•

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELERS
'

MIDDLEPORT

Vwrw. Chaney 22. ea.• .,._•
YOUfW. WIB:x!H, Ywrw. ~~

.

992-2635

Admiral
Home Appliances

presents ....

Come in
and ~ook
and
we will
give
you a

GL..~

And with these spec1al fea tures
to make life a little easier.

CALORIC®

Color
of your
Choice

• lc::e and cOld .... ~to r rigru

CREDIT TERMS

·~
~- ~

95
$349
.::-'=~ln::.:th=e middle!~~36" RANGE

IDIIIII'I ..... N . . I . . ........,.. .. _ _ ., '
........... MIII ... I.--1
•

RICE'S

• R"' rogc r~tor door deep enough
ro store~ 51x -pac:~ or hallgellon

8 "- loldmg wme ctlhtr

of m•lll '
• And iV1 ~utorn~t•c mrm-rce
cube ma~er

• The Vtr.·Cokl draW!lr th at •e~ms
rnt!AI 5. lrsh a11d poultr\0 fresh

and moo!llong~~or
1 An en.~rgv saw1g de~&lt;gn m~t
reduc:: u energy consumptoon
' " " ' " " " " .., _ , , ,..

00

-

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$200 OFFt.

~~m~~a~~!Jll
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Why
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~

n J

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GAS OR
ELECTRIC

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i!

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II

IsAM PCI
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CREDIT
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I

Tip-PrOof Wire Shelves, pl us She lf over
Cnsper • Twir1 Glide-Out Cnspers • Dairy
Compartm ent w 1fh Server Tray • Deep
Refrige rator Door Shelves • Wheels'
• Aevers1ble Tex tured Steel Doors

Pilot 3 Piece Console
3-Way lntegr•ted
Audio System
• ContemporarY Aud•o 3 P•ece Console
1n Oak Color Fmtsh

K 1903..._ Wllfl "ln·llmt Picture TuO. "
Auto

Tunlna

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• Advanced IC and FET ClrCUtlry
• Full ~eature 01g•tai Clock I T•mer
• Stereo Cassette Player / Recorder w1th
2 vu Meters wJth LED lndtqator s and
Twin level controls, FE / CrO. Selec to•
and p1lot no• sc rCOuC110n system

_

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Clolld Thurs.

Assorted

IN

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AND UP

"Next Door 1e the Plua Hut"

""'523

SKb 8005

446-4113
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BY
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20 Cu. Ft.

loudness contour ar-d lly wheel luntng,

TWT,-te:o-power

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• Sens111ve AM /FM Stereo Tuner
• oower Ampltlter Featunng 40-CIJCk
Detent Control. h1gh and tow hlters,

_
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854 Second
Glltipolls, OH.

• Mrcrowave r e~v star age trBys

• A tutured steel door lor euy
clean up

, RLA3~2-30" Gas Range

• Till-Top COOkiOp Wllh Support
Rod • Lth · Ofl Oven 0001'
• Separate Broiler Drawer
• Kaep-Warrm Oven Sel!lng
• Sturtb'·Steacly Oven Rad(s
• Energy-Saving lnsulalron
ano Door Seal

8 FrOten food librarv ~llelve~

Ill rough th e door

(Opttonal) • Dee p Freezer Door Shelf

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FURNITURE

-

the first

• FUlly Integrated Stereo System no complicated w~rmg

Flli'llllli

.

Temp Contro ls • Automa1ic Ice Maker

. ..

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c

IIIAO flllAI

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Admiral

..-

lhlry . . . . . . . ~

WNllb 1), Roc:lty River 0
WlWJina: fW. Va.) Ca11ra1 10, Martins
Fmy7, OT
Woodllfld 21, W11trt1n:1 at dr

PH. 992·3795

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3106

19"

Beach'NO."Jd 7
Rielg'eWOOd ll. Ma.lven! 0
Shakl!'l" Hts.·21;-Parma 0 - - - -.,...

Wa.rTI!II Kennedy :18. Pollllld Seminary 0'
Warrm W. Reserve :n, Ywrv. Ursullne

H&amp;R Block Office Location .

NT·1504T
't4.6' cu. ~ - Destgn ll • Up-Front Dual-

Jetrenon 1S

Steubenviie Cath. 31, River 0
S!ra:DII'I7. n...wu Cath. 6
Tol. Bowlher 2, Tol. Walle 12
Tol. DtVUtot 7, Tol Wocdlwrd 0
'l'ultwawu Val . .It, Falrlesa 0

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy. OH .

• Oulck-GhiU Ice Cube Trays• Glide-Out,

GT"''w'('ppO'f 25, Westland 0
HudSon W. R.cscrvc 12. Oe. Hawken 6
Mc:Dmald 28. Petenburg Sprtng. 21 ·
Medina BLJdl~ lfo. C\e. Lutheran-W. a
New Miami 1.!, Cln. !Anltnark 6 '
Newark Catl'l. U, Hetron Lakewood Z!
Parma Holy N~ 7, Cle. Tr1nl1Y 6
Parma Plldua &amp;. LakN'OOd St. Edward

~

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING .
SERVICE

. OURS MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
H
.
:SUNDAY 11:00 TO 8:00

Tuesday - Hamburger gravy,
mashed potatoes. buttered carrots;
cake with raisin sauce, mllk.
Wednesday - Chicken and noodles, green beans, peaches, hot rolls
and butter, milk.
Thursday - Sloppy joes, French
fries , pineapple, peanut butter
cookie, milk.
Friday- Cook's choice.

Day. MeadowdaM&gt; 54, D&lt;~y. Olam.Jut 7
J:)eSaiEs Z!; St Charles 9
E. Canton 28, Southlllgton o
Goshefl 61, Batavia 0

'Ul

Service.

FREE

You own your home. And you
want to borrow back some llf the
money you've socked into it. Smart move!
We'll answer with the money you need- nowwithout disturbing your first mortgag~. Call today!

.

THURSDAY~

Enrolled to
Prac-t ice
Before the
Inter nal

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

/,iiiiiWe answ:er witl:l

0

FRIDAY thru

MARY C.
KEBLER

FRUTH PHARMACY

Several shutin calls were. reported. A bake sale was announced
for Nov. 5 by the Evening and
Afternoon Circles.
It was announced that the Nov.10
meellng will be held at the home of
Mrs. Harry WIU!amson, with the
blessing boxes to be brought In at
that time, and Mrs. John Caldwell to
be the IeiJder. Othersattendingwere
Mrs. Andy Rubenking and Amy,
Mrs. Harry Williamson and Mrs.
Dayton Parsons.

a

~CT 28 thru NOV~

Reven ue

0

~

SERVICE
Dependability
_Peace of Mind

Mrs:

When you need a
loan.on your home
'

a SUN

ALL SEATS S2.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 .00

.
Past Matrons Club of Harrison- Parkersburg restaurant
On
the
outing
were
MrsJames
ville Chapter 255, Order of the
Eastern Star, for a fall outing made Nelson, Mrs. Stanley Kaldore, Mrs.
a tour of the Fenton Glass Co. In Don Wilson, Mrs. Norman WID,
Williamstown, W. Va. The group Mrs. Eugene Atldns, Mrs. Dana
Fred George, Mrs.
watched the progression of glass . Hollman,
Doug
Bishop,
Mrs.
Paul Pauley,
items being created, saw a movie
Mrs.
Robert
Ca-naday,
and Mrs.
about the process, visited • the
m1.seum, and then had dinner at a Ruth Erlewlne.

No subsc:rlpllons by mall permitted In
tow n s where home carrier service Is
available.

w..ks ...... .... .... ...... ------------ 151.48

531 JACKSON PlKE · RT.35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524

)HONDA ANN COLLINS

Meigs Lunch Menus

POSTMASTER: send address to The .
Dally Sentinel, 111 Cour1 St., Pomeroy,

Mrs.'· Collins graduated from
Oawson ·Arbaugh, Bryant High
School in 19!1l. She has accepted a
position In the operating room at St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntln~on .

Hospitalized

OF OHIO, INC.
WEDNESDAY'

Arbaugh, Tuppers
Plains, and the late Mr. and Mrs .
Ralph Parker, Chester-

~er grandparents are Mr. and r-.~liiji~~i~~i·~

•

York 10017.

Outside Oblo

tl. Kbld !Pa.) Prep 21
CoUinS W. Reserve 15, Norwalk St. Paul

Area Chamber of Coml'llerce
will meet TUesday, November 1,
at noon at the Meigs 1M.
Scheduled guest speaker will
be a representative of General
Telephone Company who will
discuss ~ upcoming changes
with AT&amp;T. AU members are
urged to attend.

M ~ John

rt--'- Jhonda Ann Collins, Route 1,
Ironton, recently graduated !rain
St. Mary's }lospital School .of
Nursing. The commencement ce-·
remony was held at the Highlawn
Baptist Church In Huntingtoli;-W.
Va.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Parker, Coal Grove,

Past Matrons visit Fenton Glass

Afternoon Circle UMW meets

13 Weeks .... ....... .. ...... ..... ......... ru.21
26 Weeks ......... ... ................... .. $29.64
52 .Weeks .... ........ .... .. ...... ... .. .... $56.21

Cle. UntverslfY

Woman graduates nursing sd)ool

tion allocated funds.
Purchase of straws lor use by the
children was approved, along with
weekly readers for the second
semester. Both Mrs . Stearns and
Shirley Sayfe, reading teacher.
described them as valuable teaching aids.
Action on providing a new bllind
for the sixth grade was postponed
until the November meeting when
cost ligures can be presented.
Needed repairs to the duplicating
machine were also dlscussed.
As lor another lund raising
project, tag day was proposed.
Following the meeting Mrs.
Janice Deem's second grade pres·
ented a program entitled "A
Children's Ctrcus Parade."

POMEROY - .T he Pomeroy

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
OhiO Valley Publishing Company. Mult imedia, Inc., Pom~oy. Ohio 45769,992-

Includes triple dresser4
hutch mirror
, 4·dr. chest·On·chtSt
Cannonball Panel Headboard

' Richmond
42..
Hts. 31.

DdM 38, Ney/York Giants~
~ 25. H&lt;a~a!On 19, ar
Miami Jl1 t~ ~ Rarnll4
Seattll! 3t. Lei: .Anat~rs Raiders n
Deliver 'IT, KMSU CIQ' 11
New Ytrit Jets 7J, SM FnmciJco 13
Cftinnatl lfi, Gre!n O.y 14

Wuhlllfcn at San oteeo,

Ken~MI;e

POMEROY .:.... Ladles AuxUlary of the United Pentecostal
Church will have a week long
bazaar at the house beSide the
church, Monday through Fr1·
day, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. There will
be homemade Items and baked
goods. Bonnie Baker Is president of the Auxiliary.

lnskle Ohio
13 Weeks ..... ..... ............... ... ..... $14.04
26 Weeks ... .......... .. ................. .' $27.30

992-2668
f'omeorv, Oh.

SAVE '300.00

Cadiz 11. Buckeyt&gt; N. 6
Cln . McNidlolas 0. Hamlhoo Badin 0.

f?ny

Allatlta ~- New EnJiand 13

HIP ScMol FocMbaD

Ansonia !1. National TraU 6

3 0 .667 ~ 184
5409JEJI!DJ
5 4 0 S:ln :.ll3
4 5 0 .+14 ]gj 179

fi

Detro!! • Chicae&gt; 17

·.

Akron

MONDAY

$59995~rb811111C8
ever.... Pilla

~'8Reall:s

.333 l'Kl 1!11

0
0

St. Lwis " · Minne!ota 31

RIGGS TO PAYDIRT - Allanta Falcons' Gerald Rlsp (42) lakea
the ball 1o pay dirt lor a FalcoNI' touchdown bi lhe lint part of the
second qwuter d1lrln&amp; At!•• Ffllooai.New Enlland PllhioU' adlon
on SundaY at Allaa&amp;a Fullon Cotmly Sladlwn. Ftlicon8' WOllam
AndrewS (31) lollowR hbn ln. (AP Lue~).

on1t

Calendar

REG. 1900

High school

.444 :m 1811
.444 lrll 'lf51

•
'

m

·Miami at San F'ranclsco
Denw.&gt;r a1Sealllt&gt;
Chic~ al Los An8'0'1es Rams
Baltlmorr at New York .kts
Sl. Louts at Washlnglon

secretary reported thatuponrevlew
Various -fund raising activities
of the past PrO mlnu tes, no vote had
and school prolects were discussed
at the recent' meeting of the · ever been taken on purchasing
backdrop curtains for the stage. The
Syraeuse PrO at the school.
Current cost ls $825 and action was
R.ogfr Allen presided with Sherry
postponed until the November
Harris reporting on the Fund
meeting.
RaiserS Products Co., Inc. sale by
The room award for attendance ·
the students. She noted that tt is
went
to the second grade. Room
projected !bat $1,001 will be raised
tnothers
were announced. Janice
on the sale with the company
Lisle
presented
information on
fumlshlng the prizes for students
behalf
of
the
Southern
Junior High
with sales over $3.
·
Athletic
Boosters
on
a
1984
calendar
Ailsa Finley assisted In organiz·
$3. One
which
can
be
purchased
for
ing the sale and the PTO president
commentecl the two for their wiD be purchased for the school.
A question was raised about the
success in raising money. A report
candy case sponsored by the school
on the fall carluval held Saturday
and Mrs. Ruth Stearns, principal,
night . was given by Jill Hobbs
advised that proceeds from the sale
• including reports on the vartC)us
• actMttes, .commlttees, and donaare to be used to purchase items for
the school. Most of the items, she
tions from merchaitts.
said, are not ones which can be
It was announced that the trophy
purchased by the Board of Educacase ls not complete yet, and the

(USPS t4$-MO)
A Dlvistoa of Multimedia, lac.

S2

Oct. 31, 1983
Page-S

Syracuse PTO plan fund-raising activities.

The Daily Sentinel

21~6. Second

Monda~,

- ---·

MAIL SUBSCRIPriONS

Store

Tampa Bay a1 Mlnne50ta

IIDNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) With three games lett to play, Larry
Fourqureanha5becomeMarsha!J's
all-time •rushing leader and the
Thundering Herd has become a
second-half football team.
Fourqurean, a senior tallback
from Low Moor, Va., picked up 64
yards _on 21 carries Saturday as
Marshall was whipping The Citadel,
26-10. Hls efforts left him with a
four-year total of 1,!Jl2 Yards and
pushed him ahead of the legendary
JackieHunt, whd'gai!ted 1,956yards
for the Thundering Herd back In the
193Js, long before Fourqurean was
born.
The victory boosted the Herd to3-5
on the season and 2-3 in the Southern
Conference. It also left Marshallwhich plays Wllllam &amp; Mary,
Appalachian State and VMithenext
three weekends - with a chance to
post its first winning season since
1964.
Bates, a senior defensive back
who transferred from a junior
college In Artzona,'Set up Marshall's
first touchdown with a 47-yard punt
return. Then, with the Herd leading
by a touchdown, he picked off a
fourth quarter pass by Bulldog
Robert Hill

The Daily Sentinel

I

- $299 .95
YOU TRIED THE REST
NOW TRY THE BEST

. Both
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•

�- - - - - - · - - -·
Page-6--The

Sentinel

--·-~~----

Monday,

Ohio

~~y. ()rt, 31, 1983

The ·Daily Sentinel

--

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. ...... c .. . "••• C-304

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Business Services

D1itly

111 Court St., Ptlnroy, Dt.io 45 769

I

The

· Pomeroy- M iddleport, Ohio

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wri te
Sentlltl Classified O.pt.

,.....,...

' U-CI . fll ·ll-f~

.1&amp;·-~·
•a-...
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Oct. 31 , 1983

Wont And

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6 :30 P.M .

- Addona end remodeling
- Roofing and guttflr work

- Co ncrete work
- Plumb ing and
electr ic! work

Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns
Only

Your Business"
Houn : Mon.-Fri. l :o0 to 7:0i
ooJiiidiiiiOiiijjii;i;jll '------~:.::;.~;.J

f111

CARPENTER
SERVICE

{Free Estimatesl

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-73.14
Pomeroy, Oh io
11 ·26-tfc

H. L.

~"-"'il

·-·

Writesel

ROOfiNG

Rl. 33

bpr,efit of Rutfand Township for vembe r. ·1983. the questton of
valuat•on. for fl'lla years.
The Polls for sa1d Elecaon w.l ~ the ·purpose of provid1nQ and levy1ng, in excess ot the ten m1tl
open at 6:30 o'clock A.M. and marntaining ftre apparatus. ap- lim1tat1on. fo r the benef1t of
buildlngs. or Sites Rutland ·Tovvnsh1p for the prev·
rema1n open until 7:30 o'clock
sources ot water ent1o.n of. contr.ol and abateP.M. of said day.
· 1
therefor. ment of alr pollut1o n. ·
By order of the Board of
Said tax bemg: an ad dit ton ~
and malhElect•ons. of Meigs County.
Ohio.
ftre alarm tax of 1 5 mills to run for five
VI
,
·
;
e
-~H~.
r:F~u~
l
t
~
t:.t~!~%!~:0
m•vment
of years.
Rogeo- F. Routh and Trudy J .
C
permanent. oa~ri\time. or vol un- at a rate not e•ceed•ng One and
Rou.tt,
f1ghtmg f1ve tent hs mtlls for each one
teer firemen
Dohlncllnll
Frances M. Johnson compan1es to ,
the dollar of val uat ion, whic h.
·
Director same.
C.. No. 83·CV· 195
,
amounts to fifteen cents for :.:
Pursua nt to an ORDER OF Dated OC16ber 7. 1983
Sa1d tax bemg: ·a ren·eo.Nal of each one hundred doll ars of '
SALE •ssued by the Court of
an exist1ng tax of 0.3 milt to ru n vafuat1on. for fwe years
:
SUPER TROOP A\\'ARDS-Receivlngsupertroop Cogar, Meigs Senior Troop 1208; Sue Metzer, Chesler
Commorl Pleas upo n 1udgment 11 01. 10.C 7 24. 31 4tc
for
f1ve years. •
The Polls lor sa1d Electro n w•lf
BroWnie Troop 105'7; Edna HwmeU, Racine Brownie
award&gt;; at the district meeting were from the le ft ,
rendered 1n 1he above stvled rc..:=-"="--:-::---:-:c-::-~- at a rate not e•ceed•ng Three open at 6:30 o'clock A.M. and
Troop 12.'l9, and Mary Ash, Soul hem Caddele lll5.
MarUyn Meier , Pom eroy Brownie Scouts; Shir ley
tent hs m1ll for each one dollar rematn open until 7 :30 o·clock ..
case. I wrll expose for sale at ,.
P••biiC' Notice
public auctron on the front
...
of valuation. which amounts to P.M, of said day
StP-p S at the Me•gs . County
th ree cents for each one
Bv order of the Board of •
Courthouse, Pomeroy. Qh,o, on
hundred doll ars at va luallon. Eleet1ons. of Me •gs County.
Nonct!
OF
Saturday. the 26!h day of
for f1ve years.
EU!CIIONON
OhiO
November 1983. at 10 00
The Polls for sa1d Elect1on wtll
Leslie F Fultz.
TAX
LIVY
IN
a·clock AM . the lollow1ng
open
at
6:30
o·clock
A.M
.
and
. Cha1r man
EXCE88 OF TNE
lands and tenements. to-w•t·
rematn open unt1l 7·30 o"clock
TENMIU
· S11uated 1n the V1llage of
P.M. of said day.
Frances M Johnson
UMITAOON
M1d dli'!POrt , Coun1v. of Me1gs
Bv order of the Board of
O ~r ector
NOTICE
,;
hereby
g"-n
that
and State ot Ohro. and bounded
in pursuance of a Resolution of Elect1ons. of Me1gs Countv. Oat ed October 7. 1983
and· descr1bed as fol lows
OhiO .
Berng a part of Lot 59 the Council of the Village of
Leslie F. Fultz 1101 10. 17. 24. 31. 41C
Pomeroy.
Ohio.
pused
on
the
deswbed as .follows BegmGhatuna,.;
20th
day
of
Jun,.
1
98~ 11\ere
n1ng at the southeast cornF. r of
.
.
sa1d Lot 59 on Locust Street: will be submitted to the vote of
Frances M. Thomas
Numerous awards for the year's
Public Notice
th Ance northerly on the west the people of said Pomeroy
0 1rector
Village
at
a
GENERAL
ELEC·
work were presented at the annual
s•de of th e alley. 50 tee t. the"nce
Dated October 7. 1983
NOTICE TO
west and parallel w1th Locust TION to be held in the Vill- of
fall meet of Area 3 of the Black
Pomeroy.
orno.
at
the
regular
BIDDERS
Streel.
-30
fRet.
thence
south(tOI 10. 17. 24. 31 . 41c
Diamond Council held at Veterans
REPAIR OF MASONRY
P-rlv and parallel w1th the alley. places of voting therein. on
Memorial Hospital Thursday.
MONUMENTS
50 leP,t to Locust StreP.t . thence Tuesday. the 8th day of No·
Public Notice
B-UFFINGTON ISLAND
eastedy . on Locust Street 30 wmber. 1983. the Question of
Mary Ash of Pomeroy, the Area 3
levying. in excess of the~ mill
STATE
MEMORIAL
IP.Pt
to
the
place
of
beg
•nnmg.
chairman presid€d at the meeting
limitation. lot the benefil of
PORTLANO. OHIO
,
be1ng a tracl of land lacrng 30
Pomwov Village fa• the purattended by representative,s of
Sealf'd Proposals will bP. N.OTlCE OF
feet on Locust S!ret and
rP.ce1ved at the office of Ch1ef
EUCTlONON
Meigs and Athens Counties In Ohio.
f!)(tend1ng at that w1dth 1n a pose at prov1dmg and maintainot Propert1es
TAX LEVY IN
northerly d1 rect•on 50 teet. anC ing f1re apparatus. appl•ances.
.and Wood, Wirt, Ritehie, J ackson.
EXCESS OF THE
The Oh10 H1stoncal Soc1etv
be1ng the same property con· buildmgs. or sites therefor. or
Roane, P leasant and Ty ler in West
TENMIU
1982 Velma AvAnue
vevad by Martha Bryan t to Ray sou rces of water su pptv and
UMITAT10N
Columbus. Ohro 432 11
Virginia, along with severa l Black
H Rawlrngs by deed dated June matenals therefor. or the estabNOTICE is hereby gl\l8n that until November 1 5. 1983 . at
15. 1934. recorded rn Book lishment and ma1ntenance of
..D iamond Council officials and
in pursuance of a Resolutin of 2 00 p m. Daylight Sav1ngs
139 ot the Deed Records at lines of f1re alarm telegra ph. or
board members.
MP.•gs County, OH10. at page. the payment of permanent the Council of the Village of 11me and opened tmm001ately
part-t1me. or volunteer firemen Middleport. Oh!.o. passed on thereafter. fo r furn•sh1ng thP.
Penny Lehew of Senior Scou I
322
Also the fo!low1ng descnb~d or f ~re f1ght1ng co mpa n•es to the 8th day of August. 1983 matflnal and pBri orm1ng th P.
Troop 1267 of Waverly, W.Va. was
real estate Sttua ted 1n thP. operate the same or to pur- '""'' """." be submitted to a vote labor for thP. P.•ecut1on of
presented the gold award by Nancy
il
R epa~r
of Mas onry
V1llage of Middleport County of chase ambulance equ1pment.
Gretzinger, a Council mem ber. In
Monuments
Mergs , .State of Oh•o. and or to prov1de amb ulance or
Village of Middlepon.
Buff•n gton Is land Sta te
known as Lot No 59. beg1nmng emergenoy med1cal set"VIces
her presentation, Mrs . Gretzinger
at the regu lar places of Memor1 al
at the southwest corn r. r ot Lot operated by a fire department
noted that only five ot her such
l lvo,t1ng therein, on TuesdQV. the
Pe nland, Oh10
No 59 on thP. corner of Tht rd or f.re f1g ht1 ng comp&lt;iny
. awards have been made in the
Sa1d tax being : a renewal of
of November.· 19S3. 1n accOrdance w1t h plans and
a11d Locust Street. runn1ng
question of IENying. in spec•f• cat•ons prAparP.d under
Council. She compared the gold
notth on Thud Street a dtstance an ex1sting tax of 1.0 mi ll to run
for f1ve years.
excess of the ten mill limitation. the supervrs•on of Oellas H
50
feet.
thence
runn
mg
eas1
of
award to the Eagle rank in boy
par aiiP.I w1th locust Street on at a rate not exceedmg 1.0 m1lls for the benefit of Middlepon Harde r. Archtlect
scouting and spoke of the tirrie and
The lnfo1mat10n for B•dde rs.
Lot 59 a d1stance o f 65 feet fo r each one dollar of va luat1on. V11lage for the purpo ~e of
effort in earn ing the award.
thencA runntnQ south towards wh1ch amounts to ten cents for providing and manta1ning f1 re Form of Proposal. Form of
Locust Street a dtstancP. of 50 each one hundred dollars of apparatus, appliif"lces, build- Contract. Plans. Specrf•catlo.ns
The silver award, next to the
ings, or sites, therefor. or and othP.I contract documen ts
SILVER A\\'ARD- Mary Ash, Area 3, Black Diamond Girl Scout
teet. thence runn1n g W P.S\ along val uatiOn. fo r five yea rs.
The Polls lor sa1d Election will sources of water supply and mav be obta1ned by pnme
highest in girl scouting, was
Locust S1ree1 a diStance of 65
Council, presented the second highest award In girl scouting to Kbn
ft'lP.t to the place of bP.g1nn 1ng open at 6:30 o·clock AM and matenals. therefor. or establish- co ntractors at'!he oft1ce of
presented to Kim Cogar of the
Cogar at the laD association meeting Thursday. ·
Ch1ef of Properties
bf!1ng a parcf!l of land out of Lot remain open unt il 7.30 o'clock 1ng and ma1ntam•ng of lrnes of
Southern Cadette Troop in Meigs
tire alarm telegraph or the
The Oh•o Htstoncal Soc1ety
No 59 as follows 50 fP.et P.M. of satd dCfi.
By order · at the Board of psyment of per'manent pan1982 Velma Avenue
fa cmg Th1 rd Street and 65 feet
County, by Mrs. Ash. Kim is the
Brownie Troop; Mrs. Cogar. Big "Cadettes on Horseback" outing
Columbus, Ohto 4321 I
on Locust Sln'!et 1n Midd leport EleCtions. of Me1gs County. time or volunteer firemen or fire
daughter of Williann and Shir ley
Bend East Meigs Senior Troop 12ffi; and showed a series uf slides from
Oh1o .
fighting companies to operate
(6141 466 , I 500
Oh1 ~
Cogar .
Sue Metzer accepting for Carolyn the activities there.
leslie Fultz the same.
CapiAS of thP. 81dd1ng dOcu Pnor lnstrumAnt Reference
Said tax being: a ren81N81 of men ts Wlll be forwarded Wit hCha1rma n
Mrs. Cogar was a !so given
Smith of Chester Brownie Troop
Deed Book 279. page 403.
The lOth birthday of the Black
an existing tax of 1.0 mill to run out deposit, however. a charge
Me1gs County Deed Records
recognition for showing the largest
1067; E nda Hunnell, Racine Brow· Diamond Council will be observed
Frances M . Thomas for five years.
· of s 10 00 per set Will be made
PropertY Add1ess IS 796 S
increase in membership in Area 3.
nie .Troop 1259; and Mary Ash, on May 5 at Huntington, and the
Otrecto r at a rate not &amp;~ceed t ng 1.0 mill for pl ans and sp~l f1 ca 110n s
Third StreP.t. Middleport. Oh•o,
!tor each one dollar of l(al~;~ation. wh•ch arP. not returnP.d. sht pShe had a 41 percent increase in the
Southern Cadette lll5.
ThF.! propArty 15 appra1sed at Dated October 7. 1983 ·
natinal convention was announced
'
amounts to teA cents for P•ng charges prepa1d. w• thrn
S25.300 00 and cannot be
1982.&amp;1 year and was given a
Pam Ash, daugher of Mr. and for spnng, 1984 in Detroit.
(10) 10. 17. 24. 31 . 4t6
hundred dollars of ten ( 10) days aher 1he dale'i b1ds
for
less
than
2/
3rds
of
the
sold
Mrs . Ron Ash, Racine, talked on her
certificate.
On display at the meeting was a
appra1sed pnce
--,-":"-:-:-:--;;-::;=-::--- 1/va~oatii o'"·· for live years.
are rr.ceiVed
Super troop awards went to summer trip to Girl Scout National quilt made by the troops of Meigs
Public Notice
for said Election
Terms Cash 1n hand on day ~
No Brd Secunty w1ll be
open at 6:30 o'clock A.M. and requrred. h o~ve r P.ach b1dder
•'
of sale
Marilyn Meier, accepting for Lynne Center West. She displayed items Co4nty.
remain
open
until
7:30
o'cloctc
must Clccompa,ny h1s btd w1t h a
James J. Proff111
Arms andd Debbi Buck. Pomeroy she brought back from her
P.M. of said day.
Shen ft
s1gm:d
cert1f1cate from a surety •
Nonct! OF
Bv order of the Board of company acceptable 1o The ..,
MP. tQS County
• • ELECliON ON
Elections.
of
Meigs
County.
110124. 3 1 II 117. 3tc
Oh•o Secunty Soc•P.ty. that " 1
TAX UVYIN
Ohio.
such surety company will ~'
,. EXCElS OF TNE
leslia F. Futtz prov1de the bidde r. tf awarded •
Public Notice
TENMIU
Chairman the contract. w1th a proper ::
.
UMITATION
Pe rformance and Payment .,
LEGAL NOTICE
·:NOTICE is horebv g'- that '
Frances M. Thomas Bond . covP. rmg the ful l amount
The Wesley Chapel Church, 1r.1 ~rsuance of a Resotc.eon of
·
Dirac:tor
ot the contract pnce as sP.Cuntv
now dtsbandect." bui lding, con- the .Council of the 111t11c10 of IDated October 7. 1963
for consldEHat lon thereYmh
te nt s and land w111 be offered for S\IJecuse. Ohio. passed on the
The Owner reserves the nght
sale by the Athens D1stnct 7th day of July. 1983. there Will 110110. 17. 24. 31. 4tc
to warver •rmgular111es and to
Un1ted Method1st Un1on 30 be submitted to i vote .t the
- - I reject btds.
days from th1s date. Build1ng IS
of said Svr~~tuoo Villoge
Public Notice
Dall as H. Harde r, AlA '
a frame structure and sound. oll.a GENERAL ELECTION to be
Property ts located on Town- hllkt in the Village of Syracuse.
Ch1ef of PropertH'!S
Ship Road 10. 1n Chesh1re Ohio, at the regular place of
Thf!
Oh10 H•storrcal
NOTICE OF
Township. Subm1t b1ds by varing therein. on Tuesday, the
Soc1ety
ELECTION
ON
November 15th, 19 83 to 81/1.day of NCM~mber. 19113.
1101 31. 1tc
TAX
LEVY
IN
Athe ns 01stnct Methodist Un- the • ques1ion of levying. in
EXCESS OF THE
IOn. P. 0 . Bbx 57 . The Plams. ~~ of the ten miH limrtat1ort
TEN MILL .
Oh1o 45780. Seller reserves for -the benefit of . Syracuse
UMITATION
the nght to r~ect any and .all Vlll"'le fO&lt;' tho purpose of
NOTICE is hereby g1ven that
bidS
pr.oviding and maintaining fire 1n pursuance of a Resolut1on of
~
.. '
apporotu~ appliances. buid·
!he Board o f Trus tees of the
1101 17. 24 . 3 1. 31c
inp. and sttes therefor or Townshtp of Rutland. Oh1o,
sources of water supply and passed o n the 4th d ay of
""'erias thentfor. anti the
Public Notice
J10Y1Mn1 of 'IOiunteor fir-n Aug ust. 1983. there wtll be
submitted to a vote of the
!Q,operllo the_some.
people of said Rutland Town. NOTICE OF
~d t• being: a rene.al of 1
ELECTION ON
lrl.ecisting tax ol 1.0 milf llO run I ship at a GE NERAL ELECTION
to be held in the Townsh ip on
TAX LEVY IN
fqr.fiw .,.. ..
EXCESS OF TNE
11 a rile not "'"'eoding 1.0 mill Rutland. Ohio. at the reg ular
TENMIU
tor each one dollar of valUilion. place 3 of voting there1n. on
UMITATION
which emounta to ten cents for TueSday. the Bth day of NoNOTICE IS hereby given that """' one hundred dollars of
m pursuance of a Resolutton of velultion. for fiYB
1
64 Miac. MerchandiH
the Board of Trustees of the . The Polls for
I
Townsh•p of Sc1pio. Ohto,
6:30 - -,:•.:-_
passed on the 1st day of July, -r,mlin..opan
1983 . there w111 be s ubmined ~.M. of oaid day, ·
.
to a vote of the people of said
By order of the Board of
Sc1p1o Township at a GENERAL EIIICiiOftl. of Meigs c_,..,.,
ELECTION to be held 1n the 01\io.
Townshr p of Scipio. Ohio. at the
reg ul a ~ places of voting therei n.
GOlD A\\'ARD - Penny Lehew, a senior scout Gretzinger, shown here pirmlng Penny, to the Eagle
.a n Tuesday. the Bth day of
November. 1983. the .quest1on
Frances M. Thorn•
from \\'averiy, \\'. Va., was the Black Diamond Scout award of Boy Scouts. Mary Ash, areachalnnBII,
Reeular
of levy1ng. 1n excess of the ten · ,. .
DtriiCtor
'
CouncU's slxthreclpientoftheGoldAwardestabiished joined in the presentation ceremony for the
mill )1m1tat•on. for the benefit of Dllod October 7, 19'83
Installed With Pad
Sl5.9s
In · 1980. The award was compared by Nancy Parkersbw'g Community College student.
Sc1p10 Township for the purpose of providing and maintainIng fi re apparatus. applianCes.
Public Notice
•
buildi ngs. or Sites therefor. or
'• I0
sources of water su pply' and
. Rec. $11.95
NOTICE OF
materials therefor. or the estabELECIIONON
family have moved Into their new lishment and maintenance of
Visiting recently with Mrs. Hazel Sarah.
NOW
TAX LEVY IN
l1nes of f1re alarm telegraph or
Kim Reed, Kay Balderson,
home on Rt. 681.
Barton and Mrs. Pauline Atkinson
EXCESS
OF
THE
the payment of permanent.
TENMJU
Mrs. Helen Archer Is a patient at parH1 me. or volu nteer firemen
were Mr. and Mrs. J . D. Kibble, Tammy Roberts and Kirk Reed
UMITAnON
.
Crestview Nursing Home at or f1re fi ghti ng comp&amp;nies to
spent a day at Kings Island at
Mrs~Janle Hanbock and ~aughter,
openue the same or to- pur-· _ !40~ICE ]§_herl!!r;__gMI&lt;Lth•
Thcfn
natr·
---·-Lancasrer.-Carol, of Florence, Ala., and Mr.
chase ambulance equipment or 1n pursuance of e Resolution of
Mrs. Robert Sams of Weston, w:
~nt guests of Mr. and Mrs. . to provtde ambulance m emer- the Board Trustees of the
and Mrs. Her b Everly of C!ncin·
Va . spent severaldays wtthMr.and
Hugh Martin and family were gency ·medtcel service! oper- Tow ns h1p Rut land, Oh io.
..• • $7.95
nat!. They also visited with Mrs.
on the 28th dey o1 July
Mrs. Gene Wllscn.
Thomas, Patrtcla, Tommy, KJm. · ated by a fire ftghting company passed
Qladys W11Uams and Mrs. Ruth
1983 there will tie submift_. tO
'
a fir4 d~pe~ment.
.. ·
IIOW S499 .
Mr . and Mrs. Warren Pickens
berly, Renee He!!lnger ol Rich· · or Said
Anne BalderSOn and other friends
•
tax being; an add1t10nel a vote of the people et Mid
Rutland
Townsh1p
at
GEN·
1
and Mr. and Mrs. Er:nest White.
mond, Va.
and relatives.
tax of 1.5 mills to run for five EAAL ElECTION to be held in
Mrs. Verna Rose visited with her 1 years.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead head visited with Mr. and Mrs, Ed
lhe Township of Rutland. Ohio,
ate fate n01 81CC&amp;ftdinn On,. And_ et the regular places of voting
Hensch
a
t
North
Canton
and
Mr.
slster,
Mrs.GraceReedatCoolviUe
visited with Jean Frydman and
liVe ae~ha milts for ~ one therein, onTuesOay, the 8th dey
and Mrs. Wait Hensch and Lisa of who recently returne&lt;) home from a
daughter,. Sarah, at Hylandpark,
doUr Of veluetion 1 wh1ch 9f November. 1983. tho Queo·
Marietta hospitaL
Mrs. L.
DL recently. They were there to Massillon.
amounts to fifteen cena for tlon of levying. in excess of the
each one hundred dollars ol ten nvll limitatton. fdf' lhe
Mr. and M rs. Larry Barton and Balderson.
help celebrate the tltth birthday of
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
Chemic:el M - Co., and
Formoro Bonk 6 Sovinga Co ..
Ploin1iflw

13041 773-5710 . 7'73-51 18

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCTION
'PERSONAliZED POOLS"
PH . .1-304-773-5634
MASON, W . VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

1------- ---

Scouts
awards
presented

r

·-·-···--·---~------- - --- · -- -·

9

Call

-r- Dozers
- Backhoes
- Dump Trucks
- Lo· Boy
- Trencher
- Water
- Sewer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
I,ARGE or SMALL JOBS

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL
$3QOO

USED
APPLIANCES
Washers. Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO 00
SE~VICE CALlS

742-2352
Route

4,

Pomeroy
JFN .

3

Announcements

COUNTRY CRAFT
COTIAGE

317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Cross Stitch and
Candlewick Supplies
Giving Lessons
Take Crafts on Consignments·, also have craft
·
gifts.
HOURS: 9· 3 lion. thru Sat.
9·6 Friday

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes
•Washers •Diehwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryere •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4·5·tfC

AND

REPAIR

CHESTER, OH.
10·13·1 mo.

PH. 992-3466

3 Announcements

CALL NOW
Have 1 Carpet
In Your Home
Shampooed "FREE"
And See A
Kirby Demonstration
Completely "FREE"
Limited Offer
Call 985 -4225
Ask for Guy Shea
Independent Kirby Dealer

10·24· I mo

D&amp;J
SAVEMORE-MARK
Coal &amp; Kerosene
Heaters

199

TO

1189

Also Army Supplies,
Radios. Watches &amp;
General Variety
2nd St. Across From
Post Office,
Mason. W. Va .

773-5040

10·3· 1 mo. pd.

10/ 1912 mo. pd

RADIATOR
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

BISSELL

Serviceman On Duty
Monday-Friday •
8:30 to · 12 and I to 5
Saturday
8:30 a .m. to 12 Noon
Also complete service on
all Hotpoint and General
Electric Appliances.
Othe! makes also ser·
viced and we also service
Kerosene Heaters.

SIDING CO.
''Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates~ 9-49-2801 or
9-49- 28o0
No Sunday Calls

HHic
Real Eatate General

9
~
ft_

EAFORD

Pomeroy
Landmark
614·992·2181

216 r. 2nd Sl.
IEIITQI ·
Phone
1·(614 1·992· 3325

Real Estate General

RIVERVIEW - You can buy
lilis beautiful home with 3
bedrooms and aoove allloods.
Has garage, carpeting, l'h
baths, lurnace, elc. For only
10% down.

992· 2259
NEW LISTING'- Need storage
lhis winter for boat 0' camper?
30x30 bklck garage with 2
large doors. Could be auto
shop. Has electric, air hose.
concrele floor, elc. $10,800.00.
0

FARM- Price reduced on th~
75 acre farm with 3 bedroom
home, barn, ootbuildings, river
frontage . Now only
$44,500.00.

IDEAL FOR COUPLE inrome if yoo want Walk to the
st&lt;res, and view of the river.

SYRACUSE -Two nice level
lcts with a 3 bedroom oom~
dining room, part basement,
utility room. $11,000.00.

300 acres.

Good hunting &amp; fishing. free
gas.

IIDDLEPOin - Level lot and
NI.W LISTING- SyriCUst lovely 3 bedroom home, 2
baths, S!Jiral staircase, fireplace
in family room, new carpel!~
Large lot Cali to see this ooe.

lnliler or eil'«.

NI.W LlmNG- SY(ICI!st3 bedrooms. famo~ room, new
roof, vinyl ~di ng on 3 lois.
$25,000.00.

one

$12.000.

$700 DOWN -

$296.58 for
24 payments at 12% wi! buy
this $7,000.00 home.

PRICE REDUCED - RuUattd
- 2 bedroom home with
approx. I II acres. F'onancing
available at II '16. $500 down,
30 year term, $158.10
monthly . Total price
·$17;100.00. - -

UNCOlN HTS. - New ~nyl
sidilg covers this 3 bedroom
· home. Gls ·furnace end aH

U1liii!S. LDw 20'r

.

--

REAlTORS

IIDOLEPOII - Older home
in pd mndillon thlt you can
mM rillht in on ~na of

Henry E Oeland, Jr.

GRJ 992-6191
Je.. Tiussel 949·2660
Dollie Turner 992·5692
Jo Hil 985-4&lt;166

deed. Wtl consider • pxl
ofltr.

IE ADVEIIISE AIL umNGS
418 AIIOliTil

Uuu

.I

o~ntJ

H, ',Ull/li.lf(IH s
•.

,

0.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE , OHIO
Authorized John Deere ,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Service

POME;ROY, 0.

$39,900.

OUT OF TOWN - 5 room

AL TROMM

SEPTIC ·TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328

1onottt.n.

742-2328 4·2l·tiC

SPORTSMEN

Tri-County

SALES &amp; SERVICE

&amp;

HAULED

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck '
Service

General Welding
Salem Twp . Rd . 180
Dexter, Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew

.PH. 742-2456
Ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks
\\ Your Place or Mine 11

t01 t2/2 mo. pd.

Have Your
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP
New lima Road
Rutland, Ohio
PH . 742 · 2225
9-2 9-1 mo.

E . Moi11 . . .a

RACINE - Older 8 rm. home
with 4 bedrooms. gas furnace
&amp; central air. Reduced to

11oor home on one acre llr

BOGGS

SERVICE

GRAVEL

SWEEPER a nd sewing ma ~
chine repa ir, pans, and
supplies.
Pick up and
del ivery , Davis Ve c \.lum
Cleaner , one half mile u p
Georges Creek Rd. Call
448·0294 .
Gun shoot .Racine Gun Club .
Every Sunday starting 1
Factory choked guns
10 pet. discoun"t on all
product s _except s~ c ial for
each church bulletin brought
in . Sundey only. McClure' s
Dairy lste, Middleport &amp;
McCiures 3 in 1, Pomeroy .
Call in Orders 614~ 992 8292 .
Vacancy: Julia 's Personal
Cere Home . formerly
Mercer Canvale s en c e
Home. 18 yean expSrience.
Clifton , W.V. 304 · 773 ·
6873 .
Sister wants to hea r from
Sister. Frances"Waugh law ·
I•1 ~~i~~]w~~antsto Dorothy
Waugh
contact her at
P.O . Box 541 , Mt. Vernon ,
Go . 30445 . 912·583 ·2155 .

4

JEWELL'S

CONTRACTING

PLUMBING and
HEATING
•EKperienced
•Reasonable
•Worll Guaranteed
JOB - BIG OR SMALL
992·6030
Minersville, OH .
10-3-1 mo. pd.

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEM S

, •LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SEWER LINES
. •PONDS. RECLAMATION

WORK
•LAND CLEARING

GOOD SELECTION
SHOTGUNS &amp;
HANDGUNS
We buy, sell or trade.
Good prices.

Frank's

Koa:!!o~d. t~~~~

•CONCRETE WORK
BONDED &amp; WORK GUARAN1EEO

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992· 7201
l·Hf

CONTRACTING
RECAMATION
*Excavating
*Ponds
*Septic Tanks
*Hauling

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tlc

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start F1om 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses
· Racine, Oh .
Ph . 614·843·5191

Racine, OH .
B·l ·llt

1~·26-1

GARAGE

Rt. 124,Pom•oy Ohio

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

949·2293

446-0840

Roger Hysell

Also Transmission

M.L.

GUNS

Beautiful. playful kittens to a
good home. Call446 · 2686 .
3 puppies. Goo d home.
F1,1zz:y &amp; cute, small dogs.
814 ·986· 3558.

2 freezers . Call after 4 p.m.
614·992-2679 .

10·6-tlc

Vinyl Siding
- ....1 .

a

61

"Fr. Ell...._.••
"12 YNIJ bperionM"
··'Work QueNm..d.,

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

R. E. ' HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

Roofing &amp; Sid ing Co.
Route I
Lone Bottom, OH. 45743

PH .

Wa nted to buy washers &amp;
drye rs in any condition . Call
614 ·367-0660 .

Old freezer for scrap metal.
304-675· 4575 .

6

.For information about S yn thatic Lubr icants an e~~:cel - ·

lent busi ness opport unity.
COntact Rodne y Sta pleton.

LOST:9001b. Hereford cow
on Rayburn Road , Flatroek

community. Call 304 -273 3447 collect .
2 black and white treeing
walker dogs, femele$, vici nity 8 Mile ftoad, Le on ,
304· 675· 3424.

Wa nte d t o buy . New·. used &amp;
antique .furniture. Wil t buy 1
piece or complete house holdS, Al so complete Aucti·
oneeri ng seN ice . Call Osby
A. Mart;n 614 ·992·6370 .

l mplu•'m&amp;Rt

Auctio11 every Tues day
night, Pt. Pleasant, WVa .
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Yout h
Center Bldg., Camden St .
614· 367·7101 .
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estat,, Farm. An tique &amp; liquidation sales .
Licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio 8t
WYo . 304 -773 · 5785 or
304·773 · 9185 .
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of nev.'
merchandlte every wee k.
Conaigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Ri chard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 275 -3069.
Mt.Aito auction every Sat .
night, 6 p .m . Starting
Christmas n son. No more
consignments will be taken
until efter Christmas. Emma
Bell Auctioneer. 428-8177 .
Wanted To Buy
We pay cash for late mode l
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chtv.- Oid s Inc.
Bill Gena Johnson
446-3872

·

CORNE R CUPBOARD.
Shop to open soon. N ow
see king handmade country
crafts to sell by consign· ment. If interest ed call 446· •
1805 after 5 :0 0 . Also buying antiques.

l easing fi rm loo king for
·associatos. Must be hig h
~choa l graduate and 26
years of age. Call 6 1 4 -949·
2892 or write P.O. Bo x 86.
Racine. Oh . 45 771 .

IHF.IS91i

11

He lp Wa nted

Farm Worker with Da iry
experience . Write to Box
1010 in care of Ga llipolis
Daily Tribune, 8 25 Th ird
AVe .. Gallipolis. Oh 456 31 .
Outlin e ex per ie nce , give
refe rences.
The Gallipoli s Parks and
Recreati o n Dep t . nee ds
part-tiina instructors for th"'e
foll owing ac t ivit ies : coo king , quiltin g, chess, and
we ight lifting. Pick up a pp lication form s be fore Nov . 4
at the Recreation Dept ., 5 18
Sec ond Ave.
Hickory Farms of Ohio Gift
Center will be opening in
Gallipolis soon. Neede d are
top quali ty pe rson ne l to
sample and sell Hic kory
Farms of Oh io fin e food
item s. Work part-time . AU
s hifts available. Retail s tore
sales e~~: peri e nce prefe rred.
Apply in perso n Wed., Nov.
2 . 53 Co ur t. St. Gall ipolis.
10AM· 5PM .

22 Mo n e y to loan
HOME LOA NS l ow fixed

tate . l eader Mortgage, 7 7 E.

Strtte, Athe ns, Ohio. 1 -6 14·
592·3P5 1 .

23

P.ro f es sional

Services
PI ANO ,T UNING low e r
prices- re gular t u ning sdiscounts to Se nior Citizens.
Chu rches &amp; sch ools . Ward's
Keyboard , 30 4·6 7 5·3824.
PIA NO TUNING AND RE ·
PAIR . Service with skill and
integrity, lane Daniels-6 147 4 2·295 1 . ! R e t i ree .
Teacher Discou nts).

31

a full -time manageme nt per-

4 bdr. ranc h home. large LR,
full base m ent , with garage,
wood burner included . city,
schools, 2 miles from tow n.
Call 446- 0 276.

s on to operate its seasonal
sattelite gift c e nter in Gall ipolis. Prefer a pplicant s with
retail sales manage ment ex perience. Apply in per son
Wed., Nov. 2. 53 Court St.
Gallipolis. 10AM -~ PM .

Or will trade for anything of
value, 3 bedroom house
wi th fire place. central air. 2 ·
f4 ll baths. in city limits.
Immediate possessio n . Call
614·245·5281

12

Situations
W a nte d

Aider neede d to commute
with to OU . Call 44 6 · 3737.
Single lady co mpanio n to
share apt. &amp; e xpenses. Call
446 ·2572 .

By owner house w ith 2 acres

more or less, been rem odel ed, orchard, 87 h . well,
C22,000 ; Call .. 614· 388· · ·
9 053 .

---------Priced re duced. 3 bdr. in
Hende rso n, new ca rpets,
city water &amp;. sewer. Natural
gas fu rn a nce, las t house on
Henderso n St. Toward Re d-·
mon d Ri dge. S1 8 .500 . P.O.
Box 533 Gallip oli s, Oh.
4 56 31.
3 bedroom house w ith 3.

ncr~s ~ r o un d, nea r Port er, ·
o ld Rt. 160 . Ca11446· 4202

or 446· 28 57 .

Midd leport . one fl oor plan,
energy saver! COzy fireTree trimming and removal. place, ga s furnance . Priced ·
Free estimates . 614 · 992- t o salt. Call 992·6941 .
6040 or 614 -949· 2129.
8 1f4% Loan Assumption. 4
Typing end office w ork by bdr., 1 v~ ba ths, dining room,
para legal se cretary at resi- LR roo m, utility ro om, large
dence, pick up an d deliver. 1 car garage, C·A gas heat,
Phone 30 4-675-6357 .
large leve l lot. Y2 mil e from
Holzer Hospita l. $9 ,000
Dum p truck for hire., Will dow n, assume loa n. Serious
ha ul coat, gravel, sand, ere . inqu ires onl y. Ca ll 67 5304 -675 ·3 1 90.'
7547, 7PM . 10PM.

13
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

446 · 74 14.

1_--,- - - - - - - - -

01'1 . Or 992- 7 ~60

lost and Found

Male, black -white-tan Beagle wea ring collar. tag s
No.-4 -6. Sat. Oct .22. believe stolen. Seen Oct. 24.
Near dogpound. Any information leading to whereabouts of dog value $600.
will be appreciated . OWner
Clifford Eckard . Southside.
304· 675·2806.

Business ·
Opportunity

Insuran ce

Hous e, reqmtly remodeled.
32

ac r es

i n · Eu re k a ,

- - - - - - - - --.1 $37,500 . Ca ll446· 22 0 5.

SANOY ANO SEAV ER In· Located in Syracuse- Near
surance Co . has offered school &amp; swimming pooL 3
services for fire in sura nce 'bedr oom situated on onecoverage in Gallia County third ac re lot . $24,500. or
for almost a century. Farm , w ill rent for S27 5 mo.
home and personal property 304·855 -3934.
coverag es are availa bla to
meet individual needs . Con- 3 bedroom ra nch style
tact Kai l Burleson , a gent . homo. carpeted. ful l !lize
Phone-446· 2 9 21.
bilse rnent , 1 car garage, in
gro un d p oo l 1 6x 3 2 .... S45,000. 614 .992-5 B5B.
18 Wanted t o D o

10 Pet . interest. owner
finAncing . new 2% story,
mod -A-frame, 1 '12 bath, 3-'t
General Hau1ing and Tra sh acre . $50,000 . 1 -89 5 ·
3071.
r~ movel Servi ce. Relia ble
omd dependabl e. Call 446Tri·level, e•cel lent con di315 9 betwet"n 9 and 5.
tion, 566 ,000 . 8 % assum aLawn Mowing no yard to big ble toan . S11 ,000. down . •
or small . Relia ble and de pen · Phone 304 - 67~-1529, after
, da bl 8. For estimate call 5 o00 PM .
446 · 31 69 , 9 t o 5.
Th ree bedroom, t w o car
Brushhogging $1 5 pe r hr. garage, assu me 10 per c ant
loan. At . 2. Point Pleasant .
Call614·256· 1427 .
6 14·446 ·8603 o• 304 · 675·
Will do babysittin g in mv 1248
home. Located 3 mi. from
HTHS. Cell 6 14·256· 6215. Ho use for sale - New
A·frl\me, 10 percent inter- '
McD aniel Custom Butcher - est, owner fina nce, 11ft ·
[ng . Open six days a week , bath s, :~;. ac re, S50.000 .
7 :30· 6 :00 PM. 304· RR2 · .30 4 695-3071 .
3224 .
Now open , New hbme for
elderly peopl e. Nu rse on
duty at ell time. Phone
304-675· 761 0 .

32 Mobile Ho m es
for Sale
·
------ ~

-

SAVE 30%
MORE
1nd RoOflna.
Gutter 1n~ Downspouts
On Sidin&amp;

21

Insurance In spector , Pa rt
Time. No se lling. w e w ill
3 klttena. 304·675·2474 01 train , need 2 full days pe r
575&lt;7677 .
week in Gallia &amp; Mei gs
County . Reply to: Comme r· ,
Mother ca,, two 7 week otd cial Services, Inc., P.O . Box
kittens, Tabby type. 304-• 12187 , C o lunlbu s, OH .
876-312e .
4 3 21 2.

'

·

'

J&amp;F

Giveaway

Wa n~ed To Bu y

BEDS· IRON . BR ASS. old
furnitur e. gold, sliver dol ·
Ia rs, wood ice boxes, stone
jars, antiques. etc .. Com ple te househo lds . Wr ite :
M .D. Miller, Rt. 4 , Pomeroy,

V ici n ity

YARD SA LE gigantic, two
mites out Jericho Road,
Sat. , Sun .• Mon .

Hickory Farms of Ohio needs

8

&amp; 3 bedrooms.

$1295

1- 13-tfc

Al TROMM'S
BACKHOE

1-3-"c

acres, level, equipped kilcheo

Startina At

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

Ports

OUT OF TOWN - little neat 6
rm. frame just oil Rt33 has II\

A-FRAil£ - in the rountry,
new with 1.34 acres. Reduced
to $35,000.

PAT HILL FORD

Farm Equipment

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bu~ness
bidgs. with lois of storage.

WID, lAND -

SERVICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores . We can
also li.Cid boi I and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

Card of Thanks

Syrac use PTO wishes to
thank everyone who helped
to make this year's carnival
possible.

2-23·tlc

PH. 992·2478

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

AUTO
PARTS

1

PH. 992-2280

1

Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Pl111t
J¥, II. East of Poeevlile
On rownship Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only

0

1

New Homes- Extensive
Remodel inc
Insurance Work
Cust~m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
Rooting Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
16 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992- 7583
or 992-2282
ll·l·tfc

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

320 JERICHO RD.
PT. PLEASANT, W.

742-3196
3-7·tfc

SCIPIO RECYCLING

$1595

f

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

CHESTER

ANSO IV NYLON

,,

Trophy
Manufacturers
PLAQUES
ENGRAVING .·

Residential
&amp; Commercial

,

0

TROPHY
KING

For all your wiring
needs; ~urnaces re ·
pair service and installation.

-1•

Oood Selection- Of
GOLD SEAL
CONGOLEUM

THE

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

0

Reedsville News Notes _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

... . ...............
······-·······
·--·. . .........,

_,

10·3·1 mo.

•

CARPET
.

Mason,

&amp;

Garage Sale. Harry Bailey's,
1126 E. Main St., Pomeroy .
Nov. 3 &amp; 4 . Clothing,
canning ja rs .

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

··-···· ··· ····P'fPieiis·a-r.·t ··· ·-

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

All types o roof work,
new ~r repa1r. gutters
and ownspoufs , gut·
ter c eaning an 1
painting, sfor,n ( :ors
and windows .
All Work Gua ranteed
" F1ee Estimates"
Call 949-2263
or 949-3091
3- 10-tfc

Sit. 8:00 to 12:00 noon

Public Notice

·-- ~=,.c&gt;.n~·rav ·-

985-4193 or 99H067
IZ· 204fc

were,
rency.
kett Berber
Middleport, oh .
347 6 .
Raw Fur Buyer. Beef &amp; Deer
Hldes· Cilnoong, Trapping
Supplies. George Buckley,
Rt . 2 , Atheno, Oh . Phone
614-864· 4761 . 1 ·9 Dolly.

NEW ANO USEO MOBIL E
HOMES KESSE L' S QUAL'
lT ~ ".~ DSI LE HO ME SALE S
.. . n . \i ,,,~S T . GAL LIPOLI S,
R'l : ·' PHC'NE 446·7 274 .'

! NO' ;~~E I
THE OHiC • '&lt;1 tr.::Y PUf
LISHING CO ;•·•.'l• Jnli.'"t Js
that you do bus tnB!-.A Ntth 1~72 1 4 x70 Kir kwood, 3.
people you know . and NOT ~R. 11h bath, new carpet,
to send money through the hnoleum, 30 ft . awning
mall until you have inveJ11- back de ck ., exc. cond. Cali
gatf!d the offering .
' 446-8382.

�Page-S The

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1979 Duke 14•70 2 bdr ,
family room, AC. micro·
wave. underpinning, total
electric, Rio Grande. Call

They'll Do It Every Time

51 Household Goods

1974 Shultz 12x65, 2 large
hdr., with built-in cabinets,

drapes, furniture. outside

e ntrance box, 2 sets of
ext ras steps, fire alarm, gas
alarm, first aid kit. fire .
ex tinguisher. $6,900. Call

1-304-882-2237,
19.72 12•60 mobile home,
great shape. turn .. washer,
dryer. dishwasheJ. tullv ca r -

I.

peted. Catl614-367-7175 .
3

bdr ..

I

Graoville,

underpinl"!ing, 86,5 00. Call

alto• 4 614-367-7630 ,

-

··---=----~:--::

10-31

2 bdr, 12x50. S3,500. 3

bdr .. 1 2x70. tOtal electric, 2
I.Jaths $7,500 . Call 614 -

446 -0175

4 mobile homes . -10' and 12 '

, . . wtde . 2 bedroom ·
fur nished . L ow · pri ce d .
Br\,w n 's Trailer Park. 614 -

992 -3324 ,

1981 14x70, Shultz limited
mobile home. microwave .
· dishwasher, central air, und erpenning, three bed rooms, 1V2 baths, excellent
co ndition . $15,500. Call
304-675-6049 after 5 p . m .
Mobile Home Moving, Li censed and Insured. Free
Estimates $100 . per hookup minimum. Phone 304-

576 -27tt o• 576-2866 ,
USED MOBILE HOME ,
Phone 304-5 76 -27t1 ,
For sale by owner in Hillview
sub div Greer Rd . v- mi . off
Rt. 2 . Mobile home with
add . rooms, 3 br,living room
12x24, kitchen 12x1 2. dr
,2x11 . utility r. 12x12.
24x,2 outbuilding . 1 24x 10 outbuilding, fruit
house 10x10 on three large
lots . Good water. Elec .
stove , frig .. air co nd. dryer.

304-773-5282 ,

'

'

44
41

Apartment
for Rent

•4 bdr. house 5 acres of land
on Rt. 160 in Vinton . Central
air. $350 mo .. sec . dep . &amp;
ref . Call 446-31 75 .
3 rooms and bath, 142 4th
Ave .. $160 mo .. $100 dep .,
6 mos . lease required . Call
446- 3667 after 5 .

S235. month . 3 bedroom .
Fully carpeted, gardener furnished, Stove and refrig .
614 -992 -2815 from 9 to 5
or 614-992-2362 from 5 to
7 p .m .

3 bedroom house in Tuppers
Plains. Ava ilable Nov .

1.

Furnished apt . $185. Water
paid , 2 bdr.. 131 'h 4th,
Gallipolis. 446 -4416 after 7

446-4926 ,
Small furn . house 1 or 2
adults only. no pets. Call
Furnished 3 rooms ; with
private bath . Reference pre ·

forred , Cell 446 -2215,
Jackson ' Estate Apartments
536 Jackson Pike (Equal
Housirlg Opportunity) has
one bedroom apartments
rent starting at 8167 and
two badr'oom rent starting-at

$193 , $200 deposit, Cal
446- 2745 or leave message
on answ8ring service.
Furnished upstairs apt.. 3
rooms &amp; bath. clean. adult.s
only. no pets, ref. req .
Utilities paid , Call 446 -

2 bedroom unfurnished
house with full basment .
Very close to General Hartinger Park. Middleport. 614-

1519,
Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
City, Ohio. Call 614-256-

ville area. Oeposit&amp;references required . Country home.
large yard . 614 - 742-

furnished apt. $2 bdr.: 195.
water paid, 1 1 36 Second
AVe., Gallipolis. 446-4416
after 7 p.m .

Nice 3 bedroom home. 2
baths, 2 fireplaces . heat
pump , larga kitchen , garage
&amp; patio . $325 . per

Available Nov. 1 . Nice2 bdr.
apt .. c~rpeted, W· D hookup,
1 mi. North of Bridge. Call

446-0501t,

3 bdr. 1% bath, mobile
home, on Rt . 35 . Close to
hospital . Call 614 - 388-

9760,

Five acres of land whh
and water. Downpayment and pay balance on
land contract. 304-676 •
~ectric

2449,
Farm·PIIny 70 acres, good
wall. reflnhhad house,

paid , Call446-1788,

teet Dovld WIHmon, 44&amp;3844, WIMmon Rnll!otote
Agenay,

R65

ditch

insulated

coveralls

7:00 p.m., 304-676-3334
before 9:00a.m.
Oak firewood, large pickup
load $35. Average load $30.

304-675-4218,

Apts. for rent.

30 inch General Electric
•ange. 195, 304-675 -1390
after 6 p.m .

55 Building Supplies
Building materials
block. brick, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Granda,

Pats for Sale

HillCREST KENNELS
Barding all breeds. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppies: Stud
Service. Call 446-7796.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

1 bedroom Apt . In Point
Pleasant. W.VA . 614-992 -

Call446-3844 after 4,

, bedroom apt . in Middleport . Utilitie1 included .
$200. plus deposit . Aher 6

Reg . 2 yr. old Pointer, good
hunter, 8200. Barker tree
stand &amp; climber $60 . Call

448-4472.

oeaoon. 304-675-5035.
63

Livestock

Furnished Rooms

Registered Quarter horse
mare, 6 y11. old. Call 614-

75 lbs, 816. to $30, 614985-4104,
Fifteen 1,200 lb. A.l, b&lt;ed,

64

Hay

••adytogo, 304-675-52t4,

58

5804,

Fruit

lit Vegetables

Wood

splitter hyraulic A
power, gas motor.
axe. cond . Call446-3171 .
hor~e

Apples from German Ridge
·Orchard, handpick.ed and

Firewood for sale $36 a
pickup load delivered. 10
Ia ado for eJOO , Call 614-

d•ops, $2 .&amp;0 and t3,50
-pecks; 1 0 lb. medium and
large. t6 .00 and 18.00 bu.

266-1427,

Witch

7842,

&amp; Grain

Mix hay for sale. Call 4460382.

I----------:---------Hoy, big ro'und bales 820,

71

Autos for Sale

model used cars.
Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, 446-

2282,

1978 Chov, Comoro 4opd.,
AM -FM tilt whoel, T-top,
new rebuilt 380 engine, new
exhluat. new clutch, new
shocks, •• · cond., 86,20.0 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pa•k. Route 33, North of

:~~-~ms. Larga
49

lots, Call

For Lease

1;~

polio, Oh, Ph. 814-44&amp;3994. Evans

Enterprl ....

9-11. Mon. thru Fri.
Wan1od to
Tobacoo

448-7380,

LN~o;

Poundage.

l

814-3B8-9905.

f2 , 296. John'a Auto Sales,

Call ~

-1 1pony. t2,995, John'o

1 \:~~

, _~.!.~.:
~~~ ,_?lt:-11" :...~
~:';;,:: ~E ~!~D. c .. :.~ ~
E:"':: 1 .U.i -~M• • &gt;N
2_~e aui::f' H . Li ~If p
;r-al!G

IJ r ..

;&gt;";&gt;

'V

- 1-

~~-·

l'f?

f!

l-

\.

'

,

1979 Ford Truck F-160,
4x4. Excellent condttlon.

304-895-3818 or B953521',
1977 Heavy duty ton
pickup, 35,000 miles, no

1

\"" __,~-

"·'·'~~

1

1

1•

,"~"
·
-~Y-.,
1
~" i'f.J,

1675, 304-875-2377,
73

Vans

lit 4 W.O.

1978 Dodge 4x4 31 8 outo ,,
83,100, Call 814-2681427,
1980 GMC 4•4 PS, PB, Iock
out hubs. %ton. automatic.
long bed, good cond .,

14.900 firm , Call
2403,

446-

1965 GMC buo, 292 4 spd,
good cond.. new brakes.

Call 446-2838
2432,

or 875-

1972 Blazer. good cond. 4

19U M-124 Troton 11'1 yd.
4 WD loedtr. good condition, •esoo. 304-175·
2377,

Newshour

7:30

1979 Oldomoblla Stlrffre,

:'.:!."~!:i· !;!,!'.~· t3~;=~

John•sAutoSiiea,BulaviUe

Rd,. 448-4782.

l----::--:-:----11BO Dod go A - outo ..
Pl. Pl. II oyl,. sunroof, -1·
nlco, t2,985. John'o Auto
Solet, Bulovllle Rd, 4411- ,
!l782.
•

1171 Ford LTO 4 •.• 1u11y
;Tclp, ••· cond. Coli 44107.
•
1175 Monto Corio aood

- d.•

nta,. ..,

f874

Novo Ull•, Coi448-7Z44.

197B Hondo CR128 good
cond. C.ll 4411-9710 ahtr
&amp;PM,

;

RINGLE'S SERVICE expeB:OO

ANNIE

304-676-2088 or 6764580 ,
Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sale1 and Service.

Z ....,..,.. on 1-holo l'or&lt;l

Call 114-317-?IM.

(]] Wheel of Fortune
II)
(12)
Entertainment
Tonight
fJ) One Day eta Time _
8 (I) CZl Boone When
Boone decides to become
a singer. he and Rome plot
to deflect his mother's pl an
to have him become a min·
ister. (60 min . ~

E &amp;. R Tree Service, fully
'i nsured, free estimatn .

(]) MOVIE: 'To Race the

Phone 614-367· 0636. call
after B.

Cill Spy
I]) MOVIE; 'The Night That

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One

Cll Ill II2l That's lncradiblel
liJ ([) (]] Scarecrow and

Oswald: " I cer tamiy do.
NORTH

piece custom fit your home .
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·

your

carpet

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER , Water ramoval,
fumiture cleaning, free estimates . 614-446·2107 .

82

(60

ALLEYOOP'
,..WE'LL GET HIM
HOME AS SOON
AS THE SHERIFF

8:30

ARRIVES!

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

fJl MOVIE: 'The Grea1
T•ain Robbery'
® Auto Racing '83:
NASCAR Fall 1 00 Cover·
age of 1ho NASCAR Fall

9:00

is

presented

North Wilkesboro, NC,
~ MOVIE; 'When

Your Lover leaves'

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

ill Ill liZ NFL Football;

83

WORK

614-367-

0

GASOLINE ALLEY

By Ted
9:30

Lonnie Boggs e..cavating.
Dozer. backhoe. dumptruck . '
Work by -hour or job. Call 1

room

()) iiDJ

10:00 (lJ MOVIE: 'Ghost Story'
(lJ MOVIE: 'Tho Stunt Man'
(!) Unlimited Hydroplane

8 t4-446-t142 bat wean
7;00,AM &amp; 6:00PM.
Good- 1 Excavating, ~••­
menta, footera. drivewaya,
septic tanks, landscaping.
Call anytime 448-4637.
Jamae L. Davison. Jr.
owner.

Racing This show features
the San Diego Thunderbo lt
Regatta . (60 min .}
Iii ([) ® Emereld Point
N.A.S. The court-martial of
Lt. Matthews comes to a
point when f:tilary and Kay
take the stand to give crucial testimony. (60 min.)

WINNIE
I'VE PUT NIY OTHER
1

fiiiNN News
10; 15 (5} TBS Evening News

Oh. 814-742-

10:30 (3) Ozzie end Harriet
(() Oill A Crude Warning
The evolution of the oil industry in the United States,
is examined .
ill) News

Meiga Excavating . Bullclorer ,
• backhoe nrvice, Ballmanta, footera.landscaping.
drlveweys. farm ponds.

fJl Comedy_Time
11 ;00 0 (I) ~ 'Ill CIJ (JD NJIWS
Cil Another Lila
® SportsConter
(5} All In 1he Family
®Dr, Who
ill) Inside the White House
fil Benny Hill Show
11:f5 ® ESPN's Saturday Nigh1

614-742-2407 or614-742- ;•
208B,
Electrical

lit Refrigeration

BARNEY

et the Fights from San

Remo,ltaty Saturday Night

MAKE THAT
H
A MINUTE

WHEN's SNUFFY

GITTIN' UP fROM

at the Fights presents at
Weherweight
10-round
bout featuring Nino Larocca vs. Harold Volbrecht
from Sen Ramo. Italy.

HIS NAP. LOWEEZV?

1 1:30 0 (I)~ Tonight Show
Cil Doble Gillis
(5} Catllno
Ill ()) Hart to Hart Jonathan winds up with e bird

Soleo &amp; Service Sharpen
Scluors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284.
General Hauling ::.;

when Jennifer places an
order wi1ti theoWner Of a
candv store whose operation is a front for murder.

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

••
JONES BOYS WATER SJSR· _.
VICE. Call 814-387-7471 ::
&amp;14-387-0691,
..

(A) (60 min.j
® Latenight America
(JD M"A•s•H
aJ Twilight Zone
12;00 (I) MOVIE; 'A Stranger Ia
Watching'
Cil 8umo &amp; Allen
([) MOVIE: 'House of Wax'
--~ - W Cll liZ New• - ---- ..
til MOVIE: 'The Marcus-

Of

--------------------~
Water hauling. Fast Service~

PEANUTS

-

JIMB WATER SERVICE.
Coli Jim Lanier 304·875- !
7397.
•

cept a local dance school's
offer w stage a party for
the patients at Genera l
Pershing Hospital
® (fi) Greet Performances
'Life of Verdi.' Second of 6
parts .
(!) WinterWorld Series
This show features ' Record
of Time. World Cup Downhill SkiinJ!·
phanie's ex-husband and a
stray sheep dog stop by the
Loudon's Stratford Inn .

base·

Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crena, ;
loaders. dump truck. Call ,

84

an-

Ill ()) 1101 Newhart Ste-

t' th'

446 -7903,

Rutlond,
2903 .

be

AltarMASH
D'Angelo decides to ac·

Hanna. ponds. ditchet.
basements, ate. Call 4484907. Carter &amp; Evans
Transponation.

J.A.R. Construction Co.
Water Linea. Footara,
Drains. -All kinds of Ditching .

to

-TI-l rs- 'l'f'AR ! KNOW· --HE'S 601N6 TO COME !
'

WHAT-WAS TMAT?- I
HEARD A NOISE!
IS IT? IT IS!!

3+

~8;7=;;u:p~~o;l~•t:erv===1

David Letterman

(l) Jack Bonny Show
()) Ill liZ Nightllne
g ([) Columbo ·A Case of

TRI ITATE
,.. ,
";1 ,
UPHOLITEIIY IHOP
1 113 - - ,..., Gotllpollo. ""
441·7133or44f.1133,
''·

Immunity.' A pair of foreign
dignitaries eliminate a pol -

' :.

Pass

4+
st
6+

a•

Pass

5 NT

s•

Pass

Pass

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

defensiv e

Jim: "We won the match

by a big margin so. that our
gain, when the olher Sout h

went down , was just icing on
the cake, How did he bid an d
play the hand ?"
Oswald: " His four-spade
bid invited . the sla m. Since
we were bidding simply, I

Blackwaoded to six after
suggesting seven by· a five
no-trump calL He won the
spade lead, led a low trump
and du cked in dummy after
West had played the eight
East won with the 10 and
forced dummy with a spade,
Jeff cashed my ace of

trumps

diamonds.

and started on
Since the suit

broke 4-2, he got to set up
the fifth diamond for a discard of his la st spade. "
Jim: " Again st us. South
ruffed a spade immediately,
cashed North 's ace of

trumps, came to his hand

Jim : "Now , that you have
played two shorl Swiss

matches as his partner, do

with

the

diamond

king,

ruffed the last spade, cashed
the top clubs and tri ed to
ruff a club. Clubs broke 5-2

. you think Jeff Meckstroth

and West overruffed to leave
deserves his reputation as · East's quee n of hearts to se t

· one of the world's top 20
players'"

~

the contracC'

(NEWSPAPER EN TE:R PRISE ASSN )

~Ut.."tl"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Corres-..._

DOWN
1 Till now
2 Kind of acid
3 As a surplus
4 Purpose
5 Belgian city

ponding

5 Whipped
11 Arab
sultanate

12 Breathe in
13 Discovery
14 Tooth

6 Meara
of comedy

7 Shinto

substance

temple

15 Some
16 Mature

8 Never stops
9 Component

Yesterday's Answer

17 Madame (Fr.) 10 Crosses out 24 Fonner
18 Revolve
II Rose essen.ce 25 Inherent
29 Jury list
20 Measure
19 Ward off
21 Arner, herb
22 British

28 French
composer
23 Sang

composer

· 33 Jourdan
film

36 Historic ·
' period

30 Fight site
31 Air safety

37 Feminine

device

suffix

, 23 Anjanette
25 Police
arrests
(sl.)
26 City of
Manasseh
27 Italian
hour
Remainder
29 Of old
vintage

z8

32 Sioux ,
33 Initiated

(poet.)l mne~~~j~
34 Man'sn;
35 Like some
servants

37 Scrutinized IH-t---t----j'il
38 Come out
39 Yemen's
capital

40 Throw off

the track
41 Preeminent

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE II

~~ =~~t;·~~~

Here's how

to work It:,

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

simply stands for anolher. In this sample A 11
three L's X for lhe two O's, etc, Single \etters!
U,~-lenglnand forffialiO!Io f !~'Words -Aft Al '

the code letters are dilferent.

f.ll Thlcb ol tho Night
12:16 Cil MOVIE: 'Sex With the

Storo•
,12:30 IJ (I) ~ Late Night wi1h

----------~--------- :: 1

South

Pass

4.4NT

Neleon Murders'

•

I.

East
Pass

brilliant

r.-; qgnificently ."

Todey's

washington at San Diego

Excavating

DOZER

Club

guests are
nounced.

Fomerly · Dewitt's

Call

700

t+

Opening lead : +1 0

from

0 (I)

North

Pass
Pass

Cil

Plumbing,
0576.

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Phone 448-3888 or ,4464477
lNG.

Vulnerable: Bolh
Dealer: North

Cap-

100

three

plays and handled one slam

+s

tioned]

I TEL~ 'IOU, THERE WAS
A BODY HERE! I ... ISAW
IT! I KNOW I DID!

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

min.) [Closed

hand s. Came up .with two or

tAt0754
+A K 10 9
WEST
EAST
+Q10964
+K 8 3 2
•Ks
.Q 10
• Q6 32
tJ9
+15
+QJ842
SOUTH
+A 7 5
• .J976 53
+K8
3

®

SHIP

10-31 -!3

• A 42

Mrs. King
ill) Making ol a
Continent 'The Colorado
Plateau .' Tonight's program looks at the shaping
of the Colorado Plateau.

tor. IDov 814-692-4086,)
!night 614·698·8205.)

He made no mistakes in 14

+J

Panicked America'

min .)

•

·Expert-line of play

Wind'

itical adversary, IR) (90

f

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Season of the Witch'

. .. . 1

whllll. dow- L71-11.

BRIDGE

(I) MOVIE; 'Halloween Ill;

. 304-895-3802 ,

Hauling Good Lump or
Stoker Coal. Minimum 4
- lone 1-14·317 · 7101, -~

• Aao .. IOrlel

NFL's Greatest Mo-

le,., (60 min ,)
(l) Good News
Cll Ill Cll Family Feud

rienced roofing. including .
hot ter application. carpenter, electr~cian, mason. Call

1979 lu1ulcl450. CoH 44&amp;22011.

AutoPiiu

8 (I) Tic Tac Dough
(I) Fraggle Rock

Champion Pittsburgh Stee-

removaL Call 676-1331,

low rates. Call 814-2581743,

11

m Jefferson&amp;

of the t977 o·allas ~-Cow·
boys and the 1978 World

F 81 K Tree Trimming, stump

1 981 lntorototo Honcloo. oxa.
cond. Colll14-317-7111.

11lB1 4 wll, Odo....,.g_t
Cllrlotmu gift, 105. Ctl
448-7244.

Ju~lt Bool..No. 13, conlalrMng 110 puulea, Ia •"•ll.•bla lor S1.85 plut 55c postal!*
and h1ndllng from Jumble, clo lhls ntwtpapat. 601( 3-t , Norwood, N.J. 07648 .
lllCIUdl yowr nama, addr1111,J.Ip coda and make cl1eckl payabl1 10 NtWIPIPtlbOokl .

menta NFL's Groatest Moments presents highlights

houoo calls, Call 576-2398
or 446-2454 ,

86
Motorcyclas

"BRIEF-lY"

®News
Ill 1!2l"People's Court

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

GET

I

{Answers tomorrow)
Jumules : LYRIC BULLY FORMAL PILFER
Answer: How she slipped Into her blkini -

CD Charlie's Angels
Ill ® Whoe.l ol Fortune
Cil ill) MacNeil/Lehrer

aarvk:e. Authorized Singer

74

44&amp;-4782,

1979 4
vw Robllltt.
outo., Pl. Am·FM. t1r oond.,
oun I'Ool, -1 nlco,$3,111.
John's Aom. lolot. lulovllle
Rd, 441-4782.

1_
1 -

rr ~
:;:~
~ I•t
n

ord. Pay off. 814-992-5434

saturday's

Cil Carol Burnett

(X Xr.t XI XI ~I J"

Answer here:

superstars.

(!) SportsCenter

®

or 8t4 -992·5914 .

Auto Sales, Bulavile Rd .•

*··

A-rlie . ._'
'!'( ')
,

••

['.,

(!

!.' "·,
•:

,
\~y

r Y,~

, ,

!~

1 ~- '7 PJN:r·

_.

~

:&lt;, E'

~•·&gt;

1~ 183

With Major

~orts

C3J Atlas Smith and Jonas

814-446-4066,

197B JMp CJ5, 304 V-8, Pasquale Electric Co . all
41.000 mlleo, Good shope, phaaes of electric work, all
. work guaranteed. Aerial
304-895-3347 .
truck rental. Call 614-4481971 Dadg1 van camper, 2718 ,
CB Llnear-2. 304-1171- .-----:-:---;---;- '
, SEWING Moohlne repalro, ,
15&amp;4.

Bulovllle Rd., 446-4182.

• ..;.;~r.;.;-;:;
.

H~Ff'.,,-

with topper. 4 speed, ltand·

Now arrange the circled letter~ to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by !he above cartoon.

Sugar Ray Leonard hosts

Appliance Service All makes
&amp; models refrigerators.
washers, dryers. ranges.
compactors, dishwashers, -,
microwaves . Heating &amp; ;
Cooling. Sheet Metal Work.
Gallla Refrigeration Co. Call .

1983 Renault Alliance
6.100 miles., ex. condition,
loaded, consume loan. Call

8598 or 614-379-2303,

~e~~~-v~
"'
V o; -~ -~"'R.~~'· 'l'l."'
"'"~"' 9,~ :;;r
' 1!;1~ ·• ·: ',1,'- ) ~!::w•-•~,;o:-r:;~t~~ir~~~ •.n.;,• .~~-- v~r,.,
:~~.

t982 't. ton Dodge pickup

liD Over Easy
8 (]) PM Magazine
this show where kids get a
cl'iance to work out with

Cor. Fourth and Pine

axla, P.T.O. 614-669-4'p3,

~EL. IEVE.

(]) Entertainment Tonight

"'w rodiol tlroo. t2500,
304-773-5974,

2 dr.• 4 spd., 4 cyl •• radio.
PS. Pl. 1lr cand .• real nice,

~

Marcum Roofing S. Spouting, 30 years experience.
specializing in built up roof.

614-669-4773,
1966. Chevy 2 ton truck.
Good tires. 4 speed. 2 speed

P'LET5 JUST COtJL r:&gt; N'T

(]) Sugar Ray'a All-Stars

IROIJIC. 'THAT THE
PRESIDEIJT HM ORPelleO NATIONA• &amp;UARD
TROOPS TO SEEK OUl'
THI~GS THAl' GO MORE
THAN BUMP IIJ
THE NIGHT,..

Coll448-2403 ,

gal. Featuring Red 081ioua,
Gold Dellous, Winesaps, and
Rome Beauty. Call 446-

OUR BOARDING HOUSE
1"!"~

wide bod pockoge, w~h
fiborgle11 topper, 37.000
milao, 15,300, Call 4488060,

1975 4 WD IDodga) pickup,

I ::::::::::::::::;::::::l==========~1ii?i~;;_;~~~~~~~
1879 Ford Courier pickup.

court houoo, Call448-0855

7:00

~16-Hli IT SEEM5-

trans., AM-FM, stero Cl!ll.,

rust, U.OOO, 304- 773 6974,

Furnished
oHice
for rent.
Close to city
building
•nd ~
·days, 8126. mo.

auto,

1980 Chevy Luv 4x4, four
apeed. with topper,
8!1,000.00. Sears whirlpool
for Nth, used vary little.

Drops 15.00, Cider U,50 1978 Ftirmont Fo.-d Future

Used J20 Ditch

1982 GMC S-15.

304-675-Hi&amp;s ahar 4:00
PM,

Pigo, 304-675-3224,

AKc "'Basaene puppie•. 7 1976 AMC Gremlin, 1300.
weeks old. Shots, wormed, ' Coli 814-388-908B,

Firewood- cut up, slabs, $15
pickup load. Call 614-245·

Space for Rant

York Land race cross pigs.
Different ages &amp; -sizes . 36 to

, 1980 Camero Railey Sport
V-8, 5. 700 milao. auto., AC,
AKC Registered Doberman PB, PS, AM-FM 8-trock
otero, Coll614-379-2728,
puppies . Coll676-1822,

446-9301,

.,,AI&lt;JD SO, OI-l
THIS HA •• OI'IEEN

••P· Call 614-388-9652 ,

1965 Chevy 1 11.1 ton truck
for parts. 6 cyl., 4 speed .

992-6883.

Must Salt new demonstrator
Sewing Machines with freearm, 12 designs etc. were
over t400 now $98. can

,Phone 304-675-6679.

no poto, 304-&amp;78-14152,
oher 5:00,.

Sperry New Holland 596
Tobacco stripper, used one

---~-------

trencher. Call 1 -614-894-

Two bedroom apartment in
Mason, W.Va. Adulta only,

Road. 304-895-3874,

TOP CASH paid for loto

AKC Cocker Spaniel pup·
pies. Champion blood linea.
.Pedigrees available. Shots &amp;
wormed. S200. &amp; 1250.
Serious inquiries only. 614-

304 - 675 -

6548 ,

Phone 304-675-1206,

304-675-1859 alter 4 :00
PM .

complete line of Homelite 1248.
sawa and we are e Homelita
full service dealer. New 1970 Monte Carlo, dual
Holland Model696 Tobacco exhaust. body perfect. runs
otrlppor. opeclo112.650, We great. 304-675-7968 after
have aoma fantastic deals on 7:30.
new Allis Ch•lmen tractors ------.,-------------in the 4th quaner. See us
before you ' deal. Keefer's
Service Center. At. 87,
Trucks for Sale
Point Pleasant and Ripley 72

low mileage, neada work ,

614-446-0476 ,

Vacancies for ladies or men
Homo, 6t4-992 ·6443,
in private panial care home.
Room &amp; ·bo8rd. handicap,
Two bedroom furnished 24 hr. nursing care. Raasotrailer, $150 .00. Plus dep- . nabla in Crown City. Call
osit . Crab Creek Road . 614-266-6609,

Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income of leu than
112,300. Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income·

$60, to S200. A 614-446-8603or304 -675-

446-7781,

Troybilt Tillers Sales 8t Service. Swlshers Implement.
St. At. 7. North , Gallipolis .

p,m, 614-992-7177,

13.950. 614-949-2273,

Apache two horse trailer, 1978 Pinto, 4 speed. 8900.
ex.c. eondition . • , 1oo. 304- 614-992-7403.
676-1818.
19n Pontiac Grand LeBark buster. 3pt. hitch wood Mans. Good running cond.
splitters. 1345.00. Trailer Need• body work. 814-992mounted &amp;hp. hydraulic 3717 aher 3.
wood spUtter. 14 ton split- --------------------ting force, $976.00. We 1977 Chevy Mond, 4 cy·
have 19 good used chain Iinder, excellent condition.

each, 304-875 -2377,

or coal, &amp;590, Call 6t4256-1216.

2 bedroom furniahed Mobile

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .

Farm Equipment

AKC Reg. gold Cocker Spa·
nial, female, 6 mo. old. Call

Fireplace insert-still in fac tory carton - automatic
2 bedroom apt. In Middle - · controls - 2 blower.s · glass
port . Utilities included . door-uh pan-fits 30 in. to
S2, 0 . plus deposit . After 6 48 in . fireplace-burns wood

Call 446-0756,

8221 ,

61

Nov. 304-273-2848,

limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Maaon, Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446-7785.

2 bedroom furnished apt.
614-992-5434, 614-9925914 m 304-882-2566 ,

4607 day. 448-2602

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 814 -446-

1981 Diesel Rabbit LS.
60,000 miles. Exc. cond.

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilitieS. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 614-388Dragon wynd Cattery Kennels. AKC Chow puppies. CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kiHen1.

I

~

calfhood vaccinated, Holltein heifers. will freshen in

6246,

For rent Sle~ping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

Apartment
for Rent

~~~~~~;~·~~!!I ville.
siva Cars
81 Trucks . Langs814-742-2734,

614-367-7220,

9790 ,

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12"-22" stocked
in yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 614 -266-

614-992-

5908,

46

Foreman's for Less Expen-

oows,

54 Mise , Merchandise

614-992-7787 ,

588 . new carpet. ready now,
S 176 mo . Security dep. &amp;.
ref . Catl Mr. Dobson 446OVO ,

1983, 614-992-3517 alt01 1 VW Super Beetle, 197t , 1
5 or 614-446 - 7389 vw Bug, 1974, 614-9923517 alto• 6 or 814-448anytime.
7389 anvtime,

tren9her. 1-614-694-7842.
Camouflaged new Army clo· 1
thing size 2 children's - 52
man's, heavy denim jackets

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

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

Apa-rtments .

For Sale or trade VW Rabbit,

witch

S27.50. heavy jean• 810.,
rental surplus, Sam Some·
rville's, 7 miles Eaat Raven•·
wood. open only Friday,
Saturday, Sunday 1 :00-

paloosa mara 8600. Walk
behind Gravely 8600 . 614-

992-6190,

p.m.

Used aofa &amp; chair. love seat,
cedar wardrobe. 4 drawer
chest &amp; bod, Ca114f6 · 1t7t,

"

For lease Modern office
priced in 40' o, 304-937suite especially good for
~ 2031 - - Pionto1ion-.Roolty,- .2 J&gt;tllro!ml .J!I!I, _H__G.!U~ insurance. - real estate or
'
Ferry, 304-876-2648.
accounting. 1300 sq.ft.
8 r oker.
Four room a plualga . cleri~l
Apartments in Handeraon. office, kitchenetta and stor:
Phone 304-IF5-1972 .
Real ~state
age room. N8t. gat. centr1l
36
air, carpet. Rent very reaeoWanted
1979 Ford Truck F-150, . nabla for this quality office.
4x4 . Excellent condition. Cor)lor Third &amp; Olivo, Golllwe have a buyer 'or a
tobacco farm. Mud have 60
ac. of vroplend. PINM con·

firewood ,

245-5815,

2 BR . all elect.. 2112 mi .. Rt.

44

oak

McKEE INDU$TRIE$ .,,

Coli 614-388-9857,

1984 Corvette, $6,600, Ap69 For Sale or Trade

304-675-2757 after 4 :00

$21,

Autos for Sale

proolad, ooklng 13495 , Call
446-6626, -

5316,

SEASONED oak firewood,

56

Downtown furn . 1 br. apt.
carpeted &amp; modern. $200
per mo . plus u111.. water

45

2.t96,

u1', *2500, 614-742-2369,

Seasoned

Used

Vegetables

71

1989 Datoun 31 0 GX. am-

304'-676-2767 alter 4 p,m,

Babt beds.

. &amp;.

Fruit

Turnips for sale, 304· 676- fm radio, great mpg, ru11

0. Coll614-245-6121 ,

p,m, 614-992·7177 ,

Nov . 1st .. 2' bdt. trailer,
private lot, washer -dryer, 6
minutes from hospital &amp;
town no children . ref. required. Call 446 -4063 .

..

614-992-3001,

S590 , Coli 614-256-1216,
'

month ,882 - 2405 , 882 - 304-273-9746 collect ,

2 bdr . mobile home. CAll

,

6t4-992-

614-256-t198 ,

2447 or 675 -5540.

1-

Cleveland Dornback coal &amp;
wood furnace . Thermostat
control. like new. $460.

pets. Call 446 " 3437 ·

25431,

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 Iota in Wast Columbia.
Rt .62. Gas and utility hook-

15 tt. Hotpoint refrigerator.
Very clean, 3 years old.

large wood burning add -on
furnace-brand new-heats
hot water ~ automatic
controls -firebrick lined .

5868 .

3a;. acre lot, flat, soma trees,
re1trictad , 6 acre lot. flat,
between 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park
&amp;: Cinema. rural water city
sphools. Call 614 -379 -

$285 , to $895 , Tobloa, $45

_ 0 -."NEA.~~~e., TM~~~rg. uu•oo_ a nt10t1

LATE~ AT

WHAT THE NEW'
OF qU INTU-

FATHE~

(I) Bualneas Report

PAINTING · interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing,
some ·remodeling. 20 yn.

I ~::;;;:;::;;::;;;:;===::;;;:;:;::!:=:::;;:::::;=;:==::::-1
58

Ave., Gallipolis. 446 -1699.
Spin washers. gas &amp; electric
dryers, auto washers, gas &amp;
electric ranges, . refrig&amp;rators, TV sets.

2 bdr. kitchen , furnished . 1
bdr .• kitchen . furnished. A One Rual Estates, Carol
Yeager. Realtor . Call 304 ~
675-5104 or 304-675 -

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

7308 ,

3'5 acrea- at Rodney on W .T.
Watson Rd . Owner flnanc·
ing available. Call446 -8221
aher 6 weekdays.

Antiques, oak furniture "re·
production, misc. items . Use
our Christmas layaway plan .
Conkels, Tuppers Plains .

A FE,\11 HOUR$

PLASTERING -

1t82 ,

,.

t

I CEHOP

fJl Buck Rogara
8:30 , U (]) (I) NBC News
Cil Rifleman
())Ill &lt;I2I ABC News
Ill([) ® CBS News

CAPTAIN EASY

textured ceilings cammar~
cia! and residential, free
estimates. Call 6'1 4-266-

....ll ~m
.......

1 ..

(]) liD 3-2-1, Contact

Home

STUCCO

I~

0250,

(]) New Treasure Hunt
(J) Little Houae on tha
Prairie

lmprov~tments ,

Blue beige striped couch. ex.
cond., S190. Call •446-

Asking
3517.

1

81

446-2205,

TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third

6520 ,

8:00 UCD([)~O Cll® Ill
&lt;I2I News
(I) One Man's Fightlor Llfa
(I) MOVIE: 'Pier

~~~~:

Wo_od &amp;. coal stove. auto.
thermostat, brick lined . Call

_9_9_2_._3_4_5_7_·------:---:---- . 4 room apt . utilities peid. all
, l an gs - carpeted. Adults only, no
2 b ed room h ouse m

house. $200 . a month,
deposit required . Located on
Jerricho Road . 304-676 -

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

eves. ·

r........._._
J_____ _ J

EVeNING

,

446-0322

614 -985 -4133 o• 614 -9857386.
3988 ,

Tw o bedroom unfurnished

304-676-2711 ,

$350 , Cell 4;46-2813 .

$110 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin , S58 .,
firm. $68 . and S78. Queen
sets. $195 . 4 dr . chests,
$42. 5 dr. chests, $54 . Bed
frames. 820.and S25 ., 10
gun • Gun cabinets, $350.
Gas or electric ranges $375.
Baby manresses. $25 &amp;
1$35, bed frames $20, S25,
&amp; S30, king frame $50.
Good selection of bedroor)"'
suites. cedar chests,
rockers , metal cabinets,
swivel rockers.
Usei:J Furniture -- bookcase,
ranges. chairs, dryers, refrigerators and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri .. 9am
to 6pm. Sat.

446 -0338 ,

10/31/83

------- ~

Woodburner fireplace in&amp;ert.
Can be converted to free
st~mding stove." like new.

Sofa, chair. rocker, ·ottoman, 3 tables, !extra heavy
by Frontier). $685 . Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S275.
Sofas and chairs priced from

up to $395.

'

8 ft . slide in camper With ,
Jacko, $800. Call 446-2075

614-388-9807 ,

$99, to 435, 7 pc , S189

2bdr., 2 bath, 11 Court St.
Ref . &amp; dep . $325 mo. Call

'

79 Motors Homes
lit Campers

Hospital bed wilh side rail•.
over bed -tlible. adult and
child size wheelchair. Call

and up . Wood table with six
chairs $425 to $746. Desk
S1 ,0 up to S225. Hutches,
$550 . and up. maple or pine
finish . 'Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $260. and

p.m.

Television
Viewing

EXC~ ~:L~OO'(WH!Re. 0 '"IOU •••

CB. lnear-2 . 304-675 ··

Cal 446 ·0840,

and up to $1 ?5. Hide·a·
beds. $440 . and up to
$525 .. Recliners, $175. to
$350., lamps from $28. to
$75 .5 pc. dinenes from

Houses for Rent

House and two acres, lo ~
cated on 100ac . farm near
Cornstalk . Built-in Country
kitchen, 'fireplace, air. etc.
Available in November.
$250 .00 per month plus
security . Call 21 6 · 327 7548 aftrer five.

198414'wide, 3bedrooms,
1 '12 baths, 6 inch outside
walls . all - electric. com pletely furnish e d ,
$13,996 .00 ; 14'x60' 2 bed·
rooms all electric Fleetwood ' mobile home, del ivered and set up on your lot
$9 995, 10 percent down,
lo~ bank financing
available.
All -S tate Modular
Homes
located halfway betwean
Huntington and Point
F-'leasant on St . At. 2.

1664.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

1982 Buddy 60x14 . lo ·
ca ted Country Mobile Home
Pa rk . Lot 1 0 on Route 33
House beautiful 3 bdr .• 2
near Burlingham . Excellent
co ndition t hru-out. lived in 2 · bath , LR , FR , wall to wall
Carpet, dishwasher, gas
years . Already set up, ready
·hea't,
air cond., in Gallipolis.
to move in . Fully furnished
Ref. re q. Call 446· 1409
wit h heritag&amp; pine LA furniafter 5 .
t ure, intersprin g mattres s
ond bo,; springs in both
2 br. house for rent in
bedrooms. fully carpeted .
country. adults only. Call
Hotpoint washer and dryer.
446-0924, ,
house type insulation with
tiedowns and vinyl skirting .
5 rm . house. 2 br .. gas heat.
S12,500, 614 - 992 ~ 7479 ,
city limit. $200 mo . &amp;. dep .
Call 446-4757 . 9 to 11 or
1981 3 bedroom 14x70
after 5 : ~0 p.m .
Shultz Mobile Home . 1 1Jz
baths with front porch
Addison , 3 bdr., washer,
, 2x55 . 61 4 ·2 47 -2 664
dryer , refrigerator , range,
S250 mo ., good cond. Call
1 976 14x70 trailer, 3 bed446-0175 ,
room. 2 baths. large kitchen.

$ 10.000, 304 - 773 · 5023 ~

Call 614-367-0409 ,

2205 ,

1972 12x65 mobile home,
good cond . Call 446-7171
or 446 -8288 after 5PM .
Windsor, 14x70. w ith ex panda, 3 bdr ., 2 baths,
priced at approx . payoff.
Ro dney . Oh . 304-675 1726 for information .

1971 Dodge Van camper

3159 ,

"'&lt;J•

Ohio

430' Second Ave. , Gallipolis .

bunk beds complete with
bunkies $199, 2 piece antron livin :.rocm suites $199.
antron - rec'·ners 1$99. ottter
reclintw StJ'1, maple dinette
sets (J 1 9 1 J VB seats $70,
hide -~:~- b e d
$260. boK
spring s &amp; manress twin or
full $100 set regular -firm
$120, maple dinette chairs
$35, wash stands $34,
maple rockBrs $59. 1 piece
chrome dinette sBt S149. 5
piece ~inette set $89, used
bedro,im suites, refirgera tors, ranges. chest . ctressers.
wringer washer s, TV's ,
dryeres, &amp; shoes . Call 446-

2 baths, air cond. , underpin ning, intercom. new rugs.

1976

1 g· portable color TV Ia 2
gas warm moring stoves .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; fURNITURE Guns: good selection shot62 Olive St ., Gallipolis. 6 guns, rifles, &amp; handguns. We
piece wood living room StJite buy, sell or trade . Good
with 6 inch flat arms S399. prices: Franks Pawn Shop,

614-245-9225 ,

Oct. 31 1983

Camping
Equipman,t

78

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

64 Misc. Merchandise

Mvrphwnd~

1'11A7'/.J.IM
1'11E PA'I···

Monday, Ott. 31, 1983

Ohio

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Yesterday'&amp; Cryploquote: WE HAVE CONFUSED THE FREE
WITH THE FREE AND EASY.-ADLAI E. STEVENSON

'•

,

,

�Page

10-The Daily Sentinel

I

Area deaths

Evelyn V. Faudree
Evelyn Virginia Faudree, 76, of

Mason, died Saturday In the
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
She was born Jan. 26, 1907, In
Mason, to the late John and Ethel
FoxEUasSr.
.
She is a retired employeelroin the
lakin State Hospital and was a
member of the Mason United
Methodist Church.
She was preceded in death by a
brotber. John Ellas Jr.
SulV!vlng are her son and
daughter-In-law, Conley D. and
Bernice Dudley, of Mason; three
sisters, Mrs. Ernestine Folden and
Mrs. Laura Will, both of Mason, and
Mrs. Marjorie McDaniel, of Clifton;
one brother, William Elias, of
Mason; five grandchildren, Rebecca, Marianne, Janet, VIrginia,
and Conley Dudley Jr. ; and one
great grandson, Conley David
Dudley In.
Graveside services were held
today at 11 a.m. at the Graham
Cemetery: Rev. Bennie Stevens
officiated.
In lieu of .flowers the family
request contributions to the Mason
County Cancer Society.
Funeral arra ngements were
under the director of the Foglesong
Funeral Home of Mason.

Lawrence M. Withers
Lawrence M. ( Jiggs) Withers,I!J,
Boise, Idaho, formerly of Pomeroy.
died Wednesday in Idaho .
Mr. and Mrs. Withers had retired
In January and had recently sold
their home in Boise. They were
enroute to Bristol, R. 1., where they

..

.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, a,io

I

Election of officers for the newly
formed Meigs County Jaycee
Women' s Chapter will be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday when the group meets
at the Meigs Jaycee Headquarters ,
E. Main St.. Pomeroy.
Mary Beth Feid, . Re~on 8
director, met with the group
recently and explained functions of
the new organication. Attending the
session were Missy Conde, Marla
Grimes, Debbie Meadows, Jeannie
. Oween, Cathy First, Robin Harris,
Lynn Bookman, Suzanne Weaver
and Joshua.
All women between the ages of 18
and 35 and all wives of Jaycees are
invited to attend tomorrow night 's

session.
'

Public meeting will
be "well-controlled'
Racine's public meeting at 7:30
tomorrow night in the village hall,
will be well-controlled and is open to
a ll residents of the Racine area, E.
A. Wingett. former Racine mayor,
who has called the session said
today .
The meeting has been called to
discuss the large number of
mlsdeameanors which are occurring in the Racine area, Wlngett
said. Problems heing encountered
will be aired Tuesday evening and
the public will be asked to come up
with solutions on handling those
problems, Wingett commented . He
asks that people "get involved"
before incidents of a more serious
nature take piaee in the town.

Sarah Gibbs baked
•
•
•
•
pnze
wmnmg
p1e
'Tis .the season for pumpkin pie
and 23 Meigs Countlans competed
for ribbons and prizes at Vaughan's
Cardinal in Middleport Saturday
evening.. and all for the benefit of the
Meigs County Unit of the American
Cancer Society.
The 23 pies baked by the
contestants were auctioned to the
[ill bile following the judging and the
local cancer unit received $1,. from
the pte selling 'done by Auctioneer
Dan Smith.
Winner of first place honors was
Sarah Gibbs of Pomeroy who
, 'recetved a $!ll gift certificate and a
.blue ribbon. A red ribbon and a $25
'gift certificate went to Peggy
· Schmoll of Middleport, and third
place, a $10 gift certificate and a
white ribbon went to Cheryl Folmor
of Route 3, Pomeroy. D. J.'s
Trading Post of Middleport bid the
highest to purchase the ltrst place

.. .Weather

Committee
(Continued !roril page 1)
cmunlsskmers .are doing t!very·
thing In their power to downgrade 11
needed and wanted service."
,
"We need to approach the
cmunlsston," said Crisp, "and
make them aware of the Intense
publlc lnterest...to work with them
to solve the problem."
"Foothllls Is absolutely not In
violation of the contract," he added,
"I can't keep !rom believing that
theY (the commissioners) are
getting bad advice .. .! wonder If theY
aren't UsteJ:Ung to Someone with a
pet peeve."
It was suggested by one of those
present that the county was pursu·
lng a "personal vendetta" against
Hitchcock.
"That may be," responded Crisp,
"but tbere Is no provision In the
contract that says the lessor must
like the lessee...and, the fact Is, the
airport Is being operated better now
than ever."

were moving when Mr. Withers
became ill. He died in' a hospital
about~ miles !rom Boise.
Mr. Withers was born Oct. 18,
19al. He was a 1938 graduate of
Pomeroy High School.
SulV!vlng are his mother, Mrs.
Eleanor Withers of Pomeroy; hts
wfie, Genevieve Duchnich·Wtthers;
a son, Lawrence M. (Bud ) Withers
D of Portland, Dra.; a daughter,
Carol Wardwell, Bristol, R. !., and
three grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his father,
L.awrence M. Withers.
Services were held today in
Bristol, R. I.

Della Curtis
Mrs. Della Curtis, 92. Route 3,
Pomeroy, died early Sunday at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Ahousewife, Mrs. Curtis was born
In Meigs County, a daughter of the
late Hiram and Martha Inman
French. She was also preceded In
death by her husband. Clarence; a ,
son, two daughters. two sisters, a
grandson and a great .
granddaughter.
Mrs. Curtis was a member of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church ,
the Laurel Cliff Better Health Oub
and the Me)gs County Senior
Citizens organization.
SulV!vlng are a daughter, Ruby
Frick, Pomeroy, and a son, Homer
'Curtis of Sheelsburg, Ia.
· Services will be held at 1 p.m .·
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert Miller
offlciattng: Burtal will be In Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
atthefuneralhomefrom2to4 and7
to 9 p.m. today.

Meigs County happenings
Election highlights
Jaycee function

pte and Central Trust Co. of
Middleport purchased the second
and third place entries.
The pte baking contest is annually
sponsored by Vaughan's Cardinal
with the cancer -unit receiving
proceeds.

Parents, counselors
to discuss problems
Parents of students of Meigs High
School will have the opportunity to
meet with teachers at the high
school Tuesday night to discuss any
problems which they are
encountering.
Teachers will be at the school '
from 6: :Jl to 8 p.m. and are
encouraging participation .
Teachers want to discuss positive as
well as negative aspects. Carl
Hysell. county juvenile officer, will
also be on hand to meet with parents.
Parents who wish to meet•with
teachers should contact John Redovian or Mrs. Martha Vennarl.
guidance counselors, at 992-2158 or
992·2158 so that some system of
scheduling might be completed.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Dennis
Hart, Middleport; Elvira Barr,
Syracuse; · Eunice Nutter,
Reedsville.
Saturday Discharge--Eva
Lawson.
Sunday Admissions--Richard
Swanson, Pomeroy; Homer Cra·
ham, Racine; Mary Cropper,
Pomeroy;
Oarence
Hayman,
Ra,
cine;
Chester
Mundry,
Reedsville;
Sharon Wyatt, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges--none.

'

~·

FAMILY ESCORT- KarenSosnickiofClalrton,
Pa., is escorted from mllltary ceremonies by Marine
Capt. Thomas McGee of Washington, D.C., as the
mllltary honored thefr dead from Beirut and

around 10 mph. Partly cloudy
Tuesday. High around 70.
Exte11ded Ohio ForecMI

Wediwdllll' throup Frida¥:
Filii' llawP tile perlod.lfilhsln
the
m the mid-'lUll. I.Dwllln
Jbe .._

mkl•

His brother, Rick, was wounded in
Vietnam. and his great-grandfather
was killed in combat, his father said.
West had been living In Jacksonville, N.C., with his second wife,
Kathy, whom he manied only ·a
month before he left for Beirut, his
father said. She wlll meet his
parents for the first time when she
travels to New Richmond for the
funeral.
The Pentagon ep.rlier had confirmed the deaths of Cpl. John
Buckmaster, 21, of Vandalia; Pfc.
Marc OJie, 19, of Ludlow Falls;
Navy Hospltalrnan Bryan L. Earle
of Painesville, and Lance Cpl. Virgil
Hamilton, 20, of Middletown.
Lance Cpl. Bruce Hollingshead,
19, Fairborn, appears on the
Pentagon list as missing, but his
family said last week the Marines
told them he had been k!Ued.
·
The family ol Cpl. Scott Luckosavlch, 21!, of Cuyahoga Falls, was told
late last week that he was safe. He
had been listEd as missing.
Still listed as missing were Cpl.
Paul Callahan of Lorain, Cpl.
Edward Johnston of Struthers and
Lance Cpl. Michael Spaulding ol
Akron.

Gangur volunteered .lor a second
By Associated Press
trip
to Lebanon so it would fulfill his
Four more Marines from Ohio
requirements and he
overseas
died in the Oct. 23 bombing of a
would
behomebyDec.15,
the family
Marilles barracks ln Beirut, Le·
banon, according to the latest list said.
Lewis, of Garfield Heights, near
released by the Pentagon.
In all, ten Ohioans now are . &lt;;:ieveland, also had signed for a
reported killed in the terrorist ' second tour with the Marines,
artackThreeothers still are listed as family members said. He worked as
a storekeeper in Beirut, issuing
missing.
Reported Sunday as killed were supplies.
The 1979 graduate of Lutheran
Cpl. Terry Abbott of New RichEast
High School had written one
mond, near Cincinnati; and Cpl.
letter
saying, "If I were not here,
George Gangur of Cleveland, Cpl.
things
would be worse," said his
David Lewis of Gartield Heights and
Lance Cpl. Stanley Sliwinski of mother, Betty Jean Lewis. But she
said other letters expressed his
Niles, all in northeastern Ohio.
Gangur, 20, enlisted In the frustration with sniper attacks
Marines in 1981, after he . was . against Marines In Lebanon.
Abbott, 25, enlisted in 1980 and had
graduated from Cleveland's MaxS.
Hayes Vocational High School, taken to Marine life, according to
family members said last week, Ricky Willis, a close friend who had
when he was llsted as missing. They been corresponding with him.
declined comment Sunday, saying
In fact, Abbott hail .decided to
they stood by their earlier re-enlist, although he missed his
friends in New Richmond, Willis
comments.
"The first time he was In Beirut said.
Also reported kliled was Gunnery
was when theyl were sent to
evacuate the embassy (inApril)," Sgt. LloydDennlsWest,28, formerly
said Dimitri Gangur,li!S father. "He of New Richmond. West was a
was there, came home and went career · Murine and the fourth
generation ol his family In the
back again. It was his second lime.
He was supposed to be home by Marines. said his lather, Charles
Cbrlstmas."
West.

Granted divorce
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Elaine Mitchell was granted a
divorcefromBobbyRayMitchellon
charges of gross neglect of duty.

Emergency squads kept busy
Nine calls were answered by local to Veterans Memorial; Racine, l: 35
units over the weekend, the Meigs a.m. toBowman'sRunforatruckon
County Emergency Medical SelVI· · fire, owner Henry Lyons; Racine,
8:04a.m. to Antiquity for Clarence
ces reporls.
Sunday calls Included: 1:04 a .m., Hayman, to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy Unit to Crew Road for Tuppers Plains at 5: 22 a.m. lor
Whitney Ashley, treated; · Pomeroy Mabel Bearhs, treat€d but not
at 8:22 p.m. to State Route 143 for 'transported. On ·Saturday at ll: 41
Charlotte, Patterson, to Pleasant a.m., Pomeroy went to Dark Hollow
Valley Hospital; Middleport at 8: 27 Road for Ray Landers, taken to
Veterans Memorial and Racine
p.m . to Stonewoods Apartments for
Iva SteWart, to Veterans Memorial went to County Road 35 at 4: :Jl p.m.
for Beverly Wilson, taken to
Hospital; Racine, 1: ll a.m. to
Pleasant Valley.
Antiquity for Homer Graham, taken

school ratings

Austin has surrendered. Tite resist·
ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada (AP)
ance Is over.''
- U.S. helicopters buzzed a sniper
Gen. Hudson Austin, who led the
on one side of Grenada while
Mlirxlst mllltary junta which seized
searchers45 miles away cleared the
control and killed Prime Minister
rubble of a mental hospital whereas
Maurice Bishop, was taken by U.S.
many as 2D patients were killed
parairOOpers after they were tipped
when U.S. jets bombed the facility.
that the general was hiding In a
The helicopters swooped In low
house on the southeast coast, Willey
over the treetops after sniper fire
said.
Mo.nday !lent U.S. soldlers scrambling for cover.
Without firing a shot, the para·
Despite the snlplng,l,200Marlnes
were · leaving for Lebanon, their troopers seized Austin, along with
original asslgrunent before being two militia officers and two young
diverted to Grenada. U.S. Army men, Willey said. Whether the
soldiers were taking their place young men Were hostages,"! cannot
today, a week after the u.s..Jed say," Willey said.
White House spokesman Lariy
Invasion of the 133-square-mlle
Speakes said Austin was being held
Caribbean Island.
Oepuly Secretary of State Ken- "for his personal protection" on the
neth Dam said Monday night there USS Guam, the flagship of the U.S.
was no timetable yet for U.S. troop fleet off Grenada.
:. withdrawal because tt. was not
The Pentagon said 18 U.S.
· known when all the resistance would servicemen have been kllled, 86
wounded and one is missing slr.ce
end.
Capt. Barry Willey, an Army the Invasion.
publlc affairs officer In Grenada,
In the capital, the stench of dead
bodies
pervaded the ruins of the
said he knew of no bands of resisters
still fighting on Monday, but added mental hospital, but otherwise life
that soldiers combing the Island began to have some nonnalcy.
Students went to school Monday
were finding more caches of
for the first time slnce leaders ol a
weapons and arrununltlon.
"I don't want to mislead you that mllltary coup imposed a shoot-on·
the whole island is now secure," sight curfew. Tite pupils iraded
stories of life during the Invasion.
Willey said.
• • V!!hlcle!l ·with loudspeakers Stores reopened.
The Pentagon said that during the
fanned out over the roads, blasting
first hours of the Invasion, U.S.
this message over and over:
"Members of the People's Revolu· troops encountered heavy fire from
tionary ArmY. Cuban defenders. --Fort Frederick, 500 yards !rom the
Lay down your arms and surrender. hospltlil on a neighboring hlll
You will be allowed togo home. Gen. _overlooking St. George's harbor.

·Teenager injured
in Meigs accident
A Rutland teenager suffered
minor visible Injury after her
vehicle went Into a creek off County
Road 5 Monday.
Mary E. Jacobs, 16, was south·
bound at 6 p.m. when she reportedly
went right In a curve, through a
fence and Into the creek, two-tenths
of a mile south of Ohio 124.
, Jacobs was not treated at the
scene and her. vehicle was moder·
ately damaged, the Gallia-Melgs
post of the state highway patrol
reported.
Earlier In theday;the patrol cited
a 68-year-old Chester man for
failure to yield In a two-vehicle
accident at the Intersection of state
routes 7 and 248.
The patrol said Gudrun E .
Schaekal pulled from 248 onto 7 Into
the path of a northbound vehicle
driven by Ronald G. Davis, 40,
Rutland, at 8: 10 a.m. and struck the
left rear of Davis' vehlcle,.causlng

Convection

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INSERT STOVE

. By DALE LEACH
Aeeoc'e!etll'res8 Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
chairman of the Public UtllltteS
Commission ofOhiofav&lt;irscomplet·•
lng the Zimmer power plant as a
nuclear-generating facility despite
estimates that the plant could cost
more than $3 billion to finish. '.
But. Michael Del Bane aid
Monday that his prtmary interest Is
nidshlng the Plant - with the
empbasts on flnlshlnl!·
· "Our job is to see that the serviCes
are.provlded," Del Bane saki.
Tite owners of the plant
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co.,
- ~- ~- ---~ ~
Dayton Power &amp;: Ught w., ....
Co!umbus&amp;SoutbemOhloElectrtc.
Co. - ilppeal'ed before the PUCO
here to dl8cuaa their oPtions lor

AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT
GREGG AND PAm GIBBS ·
.
litldleport
N. 2nd Ave.
·

·ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
MECHANIC

$}4999

"-

·1

PH. (Ohio) 992·2178
(W. .Ya.) 773-9577

Mon., T•.; Wed., Fri.
. 9:30 to .5:00
HOURS Thtn. t.lo to 12:GO
Sit 9:30 Ill 2:GI

'

.
'

..

ZJmmer.

' ,
' While CGaE end ca:SOE said

~

they arestm.,......, Inc a~

r1 opllona lor CCIJijAelbiC ~.

.. wen ... ahenclnnlng the plant,

OPAL PresltleDI Peter Fenter said
Ids cornpaity faVOJ:S coovertlng

.•

,

•

slight damage to both vehicles.
Tite patrol ticketed Ronald H.
Graham, 46, Marietta, for assured
clear distance follo)vlng another
accident on 7 near the Pomeroy
corporation llmlts that morning.
Graham was southbound at 9: 10
a.m. and reportedly failed to stop for
a vehicle driven by Carl E. Qualls,
74, Pomeroy, that was stopped in
traffic, and struck Qualls' autotnthe
rear.
There was slight damage to
Graham's vehicle and moderate to
the Qualls auto.
The patrol also Investigated a
two-vehicle accident on 248 at the
Intersection with County Road 36.
A vehicle driven by Linda G.
Giillian, 29, Pcrneroy, pulled Into the
path of a 'westbound auto driven by
Juanita G. Lodwick, 51, Chester.
The resulting collision caused
m~rate damage to Lodwick's
vellicle and slight to Gillilan's. No
citation was Issued.

WILKESVILLE- VlntonCoun~
National Bank officials closed their
Wilkesville branch bank Monday lri
response to an attempted bank
robbery last week.
'

Robert Will Jr., the bank's
president, said "lVe cannot risk th~ ·
personal safety ofvaiued employees
further."
Will added that the decision to
close the bank, which handles
payroll for nearly2,00lemployeesof
Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs
Mine No. .2. was " painful" and
"made with great reluctance."
The branch closed at the end of
business hours Monday. Three
full ·tlme employees .at the branch
have been transferred to the home
bank in McArthur.

SEl'l'ING- Members ollhe memorial oommlttee
ol Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, were
hard at It Monday aftemoon . seUing this historical ·
marker near Middleport VDiage HaiL The marker is
In tribute to lhe late James Stewart and the late
Edward Bennett, Middleport residents, who won tbe
Congressional Medal of Hooor for bravery In the
anned forces. The marker will be wweiled at a

l)el"emony later this month. Members ol the
conunlttee are Robert GDmore, James Clatworihy,
Charles Edw~, John Metzger, Albert Roush, Bill
GUmore, Bobby Hooten and James Hudson.
Residents who ~h to niake contribution&lt;~ to ·the
marker hmd may sent them tAl Henry Clatworlhy, S.
Third Ave., Middleport, Ohio, 45700.

Deadly fires, other vicious
acts mar Halloweef.1 holiday
By Associated Press
Benign vampires capered
through New York City streets amid
Groucho-masked nuns and human·
sized bread sllces, but Halloween .
took a gruesome tum elsewhere,
with deadly fires set by Detroit
pranksters and shootings In two
states that k!Ued one girl and injured
another.
Reports of tainted candy and
goodies laden with pins and needles
marred Monday night's holiday In
Arizona, just over a year after the
Tylenol poisonings In the 'Chicago
area worried parents of trick-br·
treaters.
But · officials in other ' states
reported a calm Halloween, made
safer by curfews, organized eve.nts
for children and X·ray stations
where parents could bring treats to
spot tampering.
"We just dldn 't see many trlck -ortreaters out tonight," said police Lt.
Jim Webb In Muskogee, Okla. "The
city had little programs for the kids
to go to- carnivals- and that kept
a lot of them of1 the street."
However, In Macon, Ga., a
9-year-old girl died in a Georgia
hospital today after she was
wounded when an unknown gunmanflredlntoagroupofchildrenas
theY were trick-or-treating Monday

Night, the 24-hour period that ended
night, pollee said.
at
noon Monday, fire officials said.
And in upstate New York, police ·
Officials said the fires were set by
said a man who answered his door
teen-age pranksters, not profesexpecting trick-or-treaters was shot
sional arsonists.
with a rifle by one of two meil in
army fatigues and blackened faces .
His 3-year-old daughter was also
An l&amp;year-old Phoenix woman
·
wounded.
who ate poisoned candy, contaml·
nated with an unknown substance,
The streets of New York City's
was
sickened and felt d~. and her
Greenwich Village were thronged
16-year-old
sister reportedly swal·
Monday night, but most of thE!,
lowed
a
needle
that was embedded
250,00l revelers were grown-ups
Halloween
treat,
police said.
in
a
playing at being children for one
In
New
Jersey,
curfews
for those
night for the loth annual Halloween
under
age
18
were
enforced
in the
parade through the Bohemian heart
towns of Marlboro and Westwood.
of the cily.
Costumes ranged from the sedate Westwood police Sgt. John Dexter
- a red, white and black painted said the curfew has "greaily
face over a business suit - to the reduced Incidents of vandalism."
But Freehold police Lt. Don
outrageous: a carton of milk, a
seven-slice loaf of white bread, and Burlew said Monday night's haunt'
Ing was the quietest in his 12 years on
an entire family
of ancient
the force, and he had a theory about
Egyptians.
the drop In vandalism:
Seven witches on stilts swept
through the crowd Wtth long brooms
"I think the old crowd Is finally
and 10 nuns wearing Groucho Marx
moving on and doing bigger an
masks marehed In single file.
In Detroit; one man died and two better things In life and their little
firefighters were slightly injured in brothers and sisters have better
as many as 600 !ires set on Devil' s sense."

Two Licking County men attempted to rob the branch Friday. The
attempt was foiled when one of the
men; Carl E. Knorr of Pataskala,
was shot and wounded by Wilkesville Marshal J ack Sorrell as he and
John Lambert, 28, Hebron, were
exiting the bank with an undisclosed
amount of money.
Knorr was shot in the leg by
Sorrell after Knorr allegedly shot at
the marshal. Lambert escaped in a
car and was arrested later in the day
by Licking County sheriff's
deputies.
Lambert was returned to VInton
County Monday and appeared
before County Court Judge Michael
Brame, who placed himonbondand
remanded Lambert to the custody of
Sheriff Delno McClure. A preliminary hearing wili be scheduled later.
Knorr was still belng treated for
his injury in St. Arlthony"s Hospital
in Columbus and was reported ln
good condition.
McClure said Knnorr a nd Lambert allegedly entered the bank
.wearing stock ings over their faces.
Knorr fired a gun into the a)r to
surprise one customer and on-duty
tellers. Sorrell was alerted to the
robbery by a village resident.
MCClure said that after the pair
demanded money, they received a
" modest" amount that was recovered after the shootout "1th the
marshal.
It was the second time the bank
had been robbed this year. Au thorities are still investigating an AprilS
robbery at the branch In which two
armed males fled •with an undisclosed amount of cash.

Completing Zimmer No. I priority

Provides up to 11 hours of
heet on 1.6 pllons of kerosene. Electric push-button i&amp;·
nit!on, automttic tip-over
swttch. UL listed. . Rec.
$199.99 thru Nov. 23 .

•

Robberies ·
force hank
closure at
Wilkesville

U.S. b~rnbing

B~T.U.

SAVE $50

1 Section, 10 Pages
20 C.nb
A Mult imedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 1, 1983

'

19,700

"Miss Lillian' dies

ent1ne

20 killed in

"We need to make the comrnls·
ston aware of our feelings," trlsp
added, "Most people- unless they
are Involved In aviation or operate a
business served by it -areunawa.N!
of the Importance of an airport." ·
"Even th!&gt;se not concerned Wlth
the airport itself," he added, "should
be concerned over the Issue of their
county government and the Integ·
rity of the contracts it enters lnto." •
The recent dispute arose In
September, when Foothllls sought
to renegotiate the term of the
contract - dated Nov. 2, 1982. A
clause In that agreement allows for
renegotia!ion of the amount of
county contribution ~ to the
Gallia·Meigs Regional Airport Au·
thority - on Sept. 30 of each year.
Those funds- used to payutUity,
maintenance and related costs ·are channeled through the county to
the airport authority. Foothllls has
no control over expenditure of those
funds.
Foothills does, however, asswne
financial responsibility for _utility
costs over and above the amount of
county contrtbution if the eounty
money is depleted during the year.
Foothllls had proposed a new
arrangement by which the amount
of county allocation to the aiipGrt
would Increase !rom $5,00Jto$15,00l
per year.
On Sept. 30, the commission
issued a letter toFoothlllscalllngthe
proposal "totally unacceptable."
On Oct. 11, the commission acting to cancel Its contract informed llitchcock of Its Intention
" ... to bid the operation" of the
facility.
Last Wednesday, the firm was
directed to vacate the faclllty by
Nov.1,orfacethepossibilltyoflegal
action.
While most of Sunday's meeting
centered on the airport · dispute,
other Issues - including a suit
CUJTently pending over the lease of
the bulldlng housing the Gallta
County Volunteer Emergency
Squad- were aired.

IN STOCK-READY TO PICK UP

erate damage.

a1 y
! -

' Voi.32,No.t•2
Copyrightod 1983

KEROSENE
HEATER.

a

•

•

e

ON THIS

Lambert'svehiclesu~inedmod­

Halloween activities
See photo, story Page 6

SAVE S50° 0

The Gallia-Meigs post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol investigated a
single-vehicle accident on S.R.l24 in
Rutland Township Sunday at 9:35
a.m.
Dennis G. Lambert, 29, 1890 Big
Run Road, Seaman, waswestonthe
l)lghway when he lost control of his
vehicle on a curve. The vehicle ran
oft the right side of the road, came
back on and then off the left side
striking ditch.

wife, Rosa!ynn, were at Mrs.
Carter's bedside when she died,
along with her other son, Billy, and
her daughter, Gtorta Carter Spann,
said hospital administrator James
Griffith.
. c
Dr. Paul Broun said Mfs. Carter,
who unde!went a radical mastecumy In 1981, died of cancer after a
period of declining health.

See stories Page 4

'jr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

OSP checks accident

Area business news

te issue stand

I

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

lormer

Variable cloudiness tonight. Low

Granada. She is the sister of Corp. Richard Morrow
from Clairton, Pa., wllo was k!Ued In Lebanon. ( AP
Laserpholo ).

Ohio's Lebanon casualty list grows

AMERICUS, Ga. (AP) ·- LUUan
Carter, the spry and forthright
mother of former Pres!dentJinlmy
Carter whose lull life spanned
politics, the Peace Corps and the
limelight of her son's White House
years, is dead at the age of 85.
Mrs. Carter, affectionately
known as "Miss Lillian," died of
cancer at 5:05 p.m. Sunday at
forecast
Americus-Sumter County Hno~pltal.
- - - - ·-- ~ ·-.. - Tile
presidenl' affil Ills

in the mld-405. Winds southwesterly

.Monday, Oct. 31, 1983

I

l

0&gt;

Dickhonerblamedpartofthecost .
LJmmer to a natural gas-fired
Increase
on runaway Inflation and
facility.
nearly
300
changes In Nuclear
Ali three bwners are reconsider·
Regulatory
Commission
guidelines
tng their stake in Zimmer In the
the
1970s.
He
said
alterna·
during
wake of estimatEs that place the cost
Zimmer
as
lives
Include
completing
lor the completed plant at $3.1
a
nuclear
plant,
convertlngthep!arit
billion. When Zlnuner was begun in
1969, Its cost was estimated at $240 to anotherfueisourceorabandonlng
it.
MOlton.
"What we really get down to is
Del Bane said· he called the
meeting, which lasted less than an there's no easy solution. to the
hour, to help the three Zimmer Z!mml!!" problem," Dlckltoilersald.
Forster said DP&amp;L now Is
owners reach a COI1Il'IIIUI oo the
plant's future. The PUCO Is ·spending about~ mOlJon a month
conducting Its own audit r1 Zlnuner In direct costs lor Zimmer, located
to determine whether the plant's on the Ohio River 'II miles from
Cincinnati. He has estimated It
~ has . Ia!!!. -~bt_ - would cost about 13!10-rn!Won and
Del Bane. asked who should pay take ajlout 28 IJQ!ths to convert
lor any Zimmer mlsmana&amp;ernent, Zimmer to a ga.s·llred plant - tjte
said: "I expect the stockholders to bption currently lawred by DP&amp;L.
"But we'll adopt anything that
pe.ylorlt."
looks
as . ~ It'D ~ the job
· CGaE PPJJ.,.addeniltlo&gt;nt WIWam Dlckeconomkaliy,
Forstersaid.
hoaerrnadethe lenlthleBt lftlll!!lta·
C&amp;SOE
has
hired
an bldependent
tim! blliretlle PUCO,IWIUIIarlzlni
conaultaDIIDdetermlllewbethel'the
Zimmer's problema IUid ~ to
·expiUi bow the plallt'a COlla bid · .lateltcostllllmallestOrZimmeran!
bal~s~thelSelteatlrnate.

aCcurate.

MOVJNG 00~ PAST ZIMMER - A barae loaded
rib _ . .. pl...., )IIIII lbe .-npleted Zluaner

dtanpover of Zhnmer !rom nuclear to coal.
CIDdnDaU Gas aad Electric and Colmnbus aad
• .._. pill&amp; aJoac lbe Olllo River at M08COW • Southern Ohio nectric Companies are !11111 "'M11Iccer~ Power aad ~ Cootpany bu [IIGjiOiii!Cl the lng c¥lcuilor the plant. (AP Laaerpholo).

•

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