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                  <text>w•ufay, Slplwnlber 2_9, 1912 .

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OteDSIC

Center board
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reliukes allegation
The director ofthe Shawnee Forenslc Center branded as "substantlally lncoJTECt" allegations that the
center will provide Jess serviCeS for
this area than the former Southeastern Ohio Forensic Psychiatric
Center.
DtrectorPhiiPaulucclsaldhehas
received "no severe resistance"
from area judges to moving forenslc services to the Shawnee center
In Portsmouth.
"No one's wringing their hands
worrying about thedellveryofservlces," Pauluccl said.
Forensic centers provide courts
with evaluations of persons found
not guilty of crimes by reason of
Insanity, those Involved with drugs
andthosesuffertngtromothermental health problems.
Marshall Gordon, director of the
former Southeastern center ,
charged that because the local center Is closed, areajudgeswW be less
Ukelytorequestpsychlatricevaluatlons of mentally disturbed
defendants.
The time and expense of taking
persons to Portsmouth for evaluat!ons wW dissuade judges from requesting evaluations, Gordon
claimed.
Pauluccl said Gordon's argurnents "don't make any sense."
Evaluations will be conducted In

(Continued

the local jail, and judges wW not
have to transport them to Portsmouth, he said.
''Transportation Is our problem.
not the judges," Pauluccl said.
By law, conumns pleas court
judges must request psychiatric
evaluations of clients under some
circumstances, Pauluccl said. And
the Shawneecenter'wWcontinueto
provide mandated services to the
common pleas court at no cost, he
said.
The center charges "a very min·
lmal fee" to municipal courts because the center Is not mandated by
the state to provide services to
them, he said. The fee just covers
basiC costs.
Gordon's charge that the Shawnee center will not contract with 1&lt;&gt;cal agencies to provide services "Is
premature to say the least," PauIucci said.
Shawnee otflclals are speaking
with local agencies about theposslblllt;y of purchasing services, he
said.
Paulucclsald thetransferotoperallons to Portsmouth wW also save
money.
"The move wW mean significant
savings tothetaxpayersotthestate
of Ohio," he said. "Obviously the
state thought so, because we got the
contract."

Belpre seventh graders down Meigs
BELPRE- Scoring two touchdoWns In the final 50 seconds, the

Belpre Golden Eagles 7th grade
team whipped the Meigs Marauder
7th graders 36 -12 here Monday
evening.
Scoring tor the Marauder Babes
was tailback MIChael Bartrum on a

run and end Billy Brothers hauled In
a David Petrie pas5 for the other
Meigs TD. Caoch Jon Amott &lt;;redlted Petrie wltha fine overall
game.
Meigs, now (}.2 on the year, play
their third startght raod game next
Monday when they go to Oak HW.

1bey said they have not received
cmtlrmatlon from stateotrlclals regarding. a meeting between the

three coonty commissions Involved
and the center and 648 boards whiCh
has reported\Y been set tor Oct. 5'lit

Columbus.

Meanwhile, 648 board Dff!ctals
said · tuxedos rented by staff'
member!l at a New Yorkconventlon
were paid for through the sale of a
board-sponsored book.
It was revealed recently that two
employees charged the 648 board
for tuxedos they rented dw1ng a trip
to the World Psychlatrlc Colfer·
ence In October 1981. The tuxedo
rentals (:08( about $103.
648 board execuUvedlrector MaxIne PlummEr said the sale of ''The
Mountains and Valleys are Mine: A
Symposium on Rural Mental
Health" paid for the rentals.
648 board staff attended the ~-

P!l~Jnrr~e!' said.

·

naUve means ol revenue, such as
the book, to compensate tor the
growing scarclty of federal and
state funds, Plummer said.
She said that while the board Is
seeking alternative fwldlng sources, It also has kept·admlnlstratlve
costs to a mlntmum.
'lbe 648 board spent 4.5 percent of
its fllnds on admlnlstratlon In flscaJ
year 1981, she said, canpared to a
state average of 5 percent.

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Cab drivers protest surcharge

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to 9:00

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Baked Steak
Southern Cheese Grits
Limas
Homemade Cherry Cheese Cake
Hot Rolls &amp; Non$795 Plus Tax

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ONLY IN SALONS

DOCTOR
RIGHT NOW. 11

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Wednesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 540.
The lottery reported earnings of $323,133 from the wagering on Its
dally game. 'f!Je earnings carne on sales of $826,814.50, while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to share $503,681.50, lottery olflclals
said.

EVERY SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY FROM 9 AM TO 9 PM

Weather forecasst

"Miniature Rose CoDectJon"

Mostly clear tonight. Low 52-57. Winds light and southwesterly.
Friday, wtlY cloudy. High 78-81.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Saturday tlroogh Moaday:
Pl!I1J.y cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstonnsSunday
and ~y. Highs In the 70s Saturday and Sunday, dropping to the
~and mid-'lOs Monday. Lows In the 50s.

URGENT CARE CENTER

Timeless
Beauty

What if you or a family member said that this weekend?
If it was a life- threatening crisis--such as a heart
attack or major accident--you'd. know where to turn.
You'd go straight to the hospital emergency ~oom.

.

But what about the hundreds of other medical situations
where you want to see a doctor. If you have a family
doctor, he can care for you during office hours.
But what if you work days or need a doctor on the
weekend?
That's where a new approach to health. care locally
can help you and your family. It , called Veterans
Memorial Hospital Urgent Care Center. Our doctors
work when you often need them the most. Weekends.
No long watts or need for appointments. And their
fees are extremely reasonable.

!.

IF ...

HOURS:

,

9 AM to 9 PM Saturdays and Sundays

FEES:
Reason~ble and usually le!S than cost of an emergency

~oom

V&amp;Stt. We accept bank credit cards, checks, applicable

msurance or cash. Most msurance companies will pay

our fee on behalf of policyholders, as they would in
a.n emergency room.

LA&amp; AND X-RAY ON PREMISES

Our_facility 'utiliz~s the Hospital x-ray and
equtpment rtght .across the street.

l!lborato~y

~ You do ~ot have a private doctor 1 or your doctor

not available.

.

• You want prompt and expert ge~"ral m"dical care
Without an appointment or long waits for:
Uu, rashes, sore throats, childhood iJiness, iinmunizations
pap smears, pre-marital blood te$ts, ·venereal disease
•

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

Come whenever yoy Will)! during the weekend oflice
hours. 'Our Urgent Care staff is 'ready to serve you
and your f~mily.

checks, anll physical "xaminations or almost anything
seen in a doctor's office.
·
THEN • • •
You'll be glad to know about Veterill)s Memorial Urgent
Care Servtces located in· the medical complex across
from the hospital.

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FOR

M9R£ INFORMATION CALL m-2IO.

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At your request, all reports are sent to your fiirnily
doctor aft~r your visit.
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entthe
1 Section , 14 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 30,1982

Bad economic news!

Claims soar,
index declines
benefits, a drop !r. factory orders lor
WASHINGTON (AP) -The g&lt;&gt;consumer ·goods, a big decline In
vernment's main gauge of future
economic health turned down In Au- building permits lor future congust, and Initial claims for unemstruction and a drop In prices !or
ployment benefits soared to a
sensitive crude materials.
Five Indicators rose, but not
record level In mid-September, officials reported today In a new batch
enough to balance the b!g drops In
of bad economic news.
the five tbat!ell.
The decline of 0.9 percent In the
Those rising Included delivery
performance and Increases In
Commerce Department's Index of
Leading Economic Indicators fol- . orders for new plants and equiplowed four monthly gains, which
ment, stock prices, total liquid
had buUt hopes of recovery from the
assets and the money supply.
Today's Labor Department relingering recession.
The 703,00J Initial clatms for state port on Initial unemployment
jobless bell!!!lts for the week ending clalnis showed that that Important
Sept. 18 - as reported bY the Labor component or the leading Indicators
Department - seemed to Indicate Index had continued deteriorating
that things weren't lniprovlng In September. Initial claims had averaged 597 ,OOJ In August.
much In September.
Labor officials said the Sept. 18
Commerce's repoJ:l also said a
separate measure of current condi- figure was the highest since they
tions Indicated the economy hft the began keeping track of the numbers
Iciwest point of the recession last In the present seasonally adjusted
form In 1967.
month.
The Commerce report also InOfficials had said last week the
leading Indicators Index probably cluded the Index of Coincident Indihad dipped In August, so today's cators - a current-conditions
news was oot a shock. But ltstW was gauge tbat showed the economy
bound to be read as a discouraging was still declining In August, 13
months Into the recession .
economic sign.
The Index Is designed to forecast
The coincident Indicators
dropped 0.6 percent In August to 132
future trends In the economy.
Today's report said five of the 10 percent of the 1967 base or 100, dipleading . Indicators showed worse ping below the July level of 132.8,
performailceln AUgust than In July. which had been the recession· s low
point. The leading Indica tors Index
They Included a decline In the avfell to 128.6 percent of the base but
erage workweek, an Increase In Inremained abOVe the 125.1 percent
Itial claims for unemployment
March low point.

FLAGS - This Is the flag corps this fall participating In the Eastem High School Band shows. Included are lront, I. tor., Robyn Pitzer,
Valerie Woods; sec~nd, I. tor., Allee Ritchie, April Smith; third, l.ror.,
Terri stout, Lori Hudson. Not pictured Is Coonte Hendrix.

Marines search
coast for mines
BEIRliT, Lebanon (AP)- Flakjacketed Marines swept war-tom
Beirut's coast for mines today to
prepare an amphibious landing of
armor and the last contingents of
the multinational peacekeeping
force, a U.S. spokesman said.

ashore today, bringing to more than
3,0Xl the strength of the multinational force that also Includes
French and Italian troops.

The 6th Fleet landing vessels
Nashville and Hennltage canied
U.s.DefenseDepartmentspok~­ the remaining Marines, five M-OO
man Army Lt. Col. Lee Delorme tanks, several armored assault vehsaid the leathernecks' landing oper- Icles, and anti-tank rockets, Deation whlqh began Wednesday was lormesald.
The Lebanese government reresuming around noon and would
quested
the multi-national Ioree retake several hours.
turn
to
Beirut
foUowlng the Sept. 14
Besides mille patrols along the
assassination
of
President-elect Babeach, underwater demolition units
shlr
Gemayel
and
the massacre of
also mapped the coast, Delorme
Palestinian
refugees
at two Beirut
said. Other Marine units ringed the
Sept.
16-18.
camps
Lebanese capital's airport, where
The force was first In Beirut In late
the first civilian O!ght since the IsAugust
and early September overraelis Invaded nearly three months
seeing
the
evacuation of Palestine
ago was scheduled to land In a symOrganization guerrillas
Liberation
bolic return to normal.
under
the
pressure
or a protracted
President !Wagan said WednesIsraeli
siege.
day the Marines would stay at least
Delorme said the Marines would
until all foreign armies have left the
be
fully deployed In their positions
beleaguered Middle East nation,
around
the airport and In south of
and that the leathernecks might rethecltybyevenlng.
The French and
main beyond then.
units
already
are deployed In
Italian
Defense officials said between !OJ
the
Sabra
and
Chatllla
refugee
and !MXl leathernecks landed Wedcamps,
sites
o!
the
massacre.
and
nesday and the rest of the 1,:m-man
other
sensitive
central
city
Marine contingent of the 32nd Amphibious Task Force was coming positions.

Funds In the amount of $12,0Xl
are available each year tor resurfacing streets from the three mill
currelft expense levy pa$1ied by vUIage voters. The other halt of this
levy Is Used for payment of street
lighting bills.
Since this levy was passed·originally five years ago, over $70,00) In
local tax funds f1ave been used for
BROOKHAVEN, Miss. (AP)-A oneshotlntoShertt!Posey'schest,"
resurfacing ofvill~streets In var- county sheriff who exchanged him- saidpatrolspokesmanEddJussely.
self for a woman and lhl'eechlldren Posey slumped out of the car and
lous areas ol town.
Funds for street resurfacing In belngheldhOstagewasshi:lttodeath officers opened · tire, killing
areas affected by water and sewer by his captor, authorities said. The Coghlan. .
line cortstructlon are paid from
8ssallant was then killed by olflcers
The hOstages were ldentWed by
HUD funds which have been allo- at ihe scene.
the Highway Patrol as Eve Welch,
Franklin Councy Sherttf James 41, her son, Charles, 14, and daughWill also be completely resurfaced cated to the village tor the past sev. Posey, 37, was slain Wednesday af- ter Marla, 17, all of McCall Creek,
along with portions of Beech St: and eral years.
The mayor also stated tbatmajor temoon as he sat In a deputy's car and an Infant, Lany Hawley, whom
Grim! St. which were affected by
repair aJld maintenance work has
next to Derald V. Coghlan, 25, of !hi! family was babysitting.
the water Une conslructlon.
Dlsll1ct At!Qmey Don Lampton
The mayor said ~ Is to b 1 no · lleeO completed on two of the four · Brookhaven, ·saki Highway Patrol
said Coghlan had been awaiting
par!dng'on anyct these streets dur- w_e11s In the 'village, water iupply · Chief Donald Butler.
Coeh1an had taken the c&lt;tPUves trial for manslaughter In a 1!m
bta the day until the resurfacing system. The two wells located In
afla 1m attempted robbery, c:iffl- shooting.
proJect Is completed. Cooperation Gen. Hartinger Parlt have both
Wedneiday's Incident began
of n!lldents Is 1111181 In order that . been clealled, With a new pump be- ellis said. He agreed to swap the
8ha:1ff b: the hostages,· who were · when Coghlan apparently ti1ed to
the proJect can be completed aa J111i !nsta1led In one which will pn)notbarmed,aftlirbelngstoppedata 1"Qb a grocery store owned b)l his
quJcldy as PoalbJe. Reoldnh Ill vide a !11011! iJepeadtlble water
)Wdbloclc wtalde Brookhaven.
gtrlflllend's father, Melvin Jordan,
llleoe ~ are advised that there supply for the vtnage. It Ia al8o anwiD be eome d\lst In the areas aa tlclpated tbat the new water tank · abouU5 mllauooth of Jackson: · saying he needed mroey to !lee to
"Widlelheywerelnthecar,Cogh- Mexico, said Franklin County Con•treeta, are &lt;;leaned before ~ be In use Wlthln the next two
weelu.
~had a gun and he tired at least stable Joe Spring.

~:r:;-C:tr'!rv:e~t!:

WE WORK WITH YOUR FAMILY DOCTOR

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Street resurfacing
work starts Friday
Middleport Mayor Fred Hofman
anrlounced today that the a!Uiu.ii
street resurfacing program In the
village wW begin Friday.
The following streets have been
selected by the s~t committee
for resurfacing this year. •
South Third Ave. trorn·MWstreet
to Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.; lntersec-.
,tlon ·of Ash Sl and South Third;
High St. from Ash St. to Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.; and the alley betWeen Ash St. and Gen. Hartinger
Pkwy. and'Broadway and High St.

• You need to see a doctor on the weekend
IS

Suspect left son in van

Winning Ohio lottery number

AND A'l' VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL URGENT CARE CLINIC YOU CAN

by Krementz
Creators of

MASSll..LON, Ohio....:. A 7-year-olagirl was believed abducted as
she left her elementary'school and pollee say there Is a· 'possible link'·
between her disappearance and the kldnap-slaylngs ortwoother girls
from the same area over the past year.
Dawn Marte Hendershot disappeared Wednesday afternoon after
she left Gorrell Elementary School, pollee said. There Is no tangible
'-8VIdence, but pollae feterred to a "possible link" between her disappearance and the abductlon-slaylngs of Krista Harrison ot Marshallville In July and Tina Marie Harmon of Creston last October.

CIRCLtviLLE, Ohio - A man arrested In CO!Uiectlon with a
break'inatahardwarestorehadlefthls5-year-oldsonlnaparkedvan
outside the store, pollee say.
Pollee &amp;aid a patrolman spotted a man Inside the store Wednesday
I
evening and called for help from other olflcers.
The ~n Inside the store jumped through a glass window and was
arrested In front of the store, pollee said.
Carl /foley Jr., 49, of Columbus, was being held In the city jail
pending arraignment.

ZOTOS PERMS...

1NEED TO SEE A

992-3629

COLUMBUS, Ohio- Taxicab drivers refused for a time Wednesday
to take travelers wanting to leave Port Columbus International
Airport by cab.
No taxis left the airport between2: 30a.m. and9: 30a.m., and three
taxies which left about 9::ll a.m. did so amid harrassment by other
drivers.
1
The drivers were protesting a move bY airport olflclals to Increase
the surchage lor taxis !rom 25 cents to 75 cen~ per tare, effective Oct.
1. They also clalrnedtbat Umouslnesforhotelsandcarrental agencies
were taking passengers as regular fares.
Airport officials called !or additional limousines to break thetravelers'logjarn.

Police seek missing girl

POMHOY,OH.

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TOP OF THE STAIRS
FITNESS"C)y.,&amp;theBEAUTY
STUDIOS
Dollar O.nfttll Sto,.."

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'ol
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·,&lt;&gt;;'''

Let mr perming expertS treat your hair to Zutos Freedom Design
perm. You'll have all the lxxly l)nd silky feel you nero to speak any
language you want. ·

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~~··'.I '~ \\II~~ I' I .. . U'

Ham Loaf with Raisin Sauce

~.

15o/o
OFF

s'f!y lots of things· about you .
Romantic. Sporty. Dressy. Sexy.
Body gives hair a subtle language of its own.

Put our bulbs to bed now.
Have beautiful Holland bUlb flowera next spring.

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~;lots of OO:Y~~,;-~;~; ~;s

Starts this Fall
I

C:er•iphtod t982

stressed.

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Voi.31 ,No.104

Some :llpatrons and employes of the Eastern Local School District
met at the Eastern High School Wednesday .night to disCuss the
upcoming five mill taxlevytobevoted upon at the Nov. 2electton.
The lirrup named Chlorus Gaul as chalnnan and Nancy Larkins as
treasurer for the promotional group and adopted a slogan, "We Do
Care". They discussed absentee voting, registration of voters, telephoneanddoor-to-doorcarnpalgqstopromotethelevy.Itwaspolnted
out that residents are Invited to visit the schools to view the needs for
repBJrs and Improvements. Resl,dents wishing to make such visits
are aslted to caD the various schools to make arrangements. Another
meetlilg of the group was set for 8 p.m. next Tuesday at the high
school. The need for texttxioks and building rEpairs are being

participation. The ride wW be stmliar to the one heldeachyeartorthe
benefit of the mentally retarded.
Fairgrounds.
There wW be prizes awarded and
Brenda Roush Is heading the ac- refreshments will be avaUable to
tlvlty to raise funds for the hospital the riders.
which was established by enterMrs. Roush Is placing awllcatalnerDannyThomasandlsahospl- tlons In the schools for registration
. of participants and anyQne with
tal tor children.
The event will begin at 9 a.m . and questions or needing registration
rlderswW be on theracetrackatthe !onnsmay contact her at992-73S7or
grounds. There Is no age llmlt tar 992-2347.

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Group discusses school levy

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Spring's

Country festival
steam engine show
set this weekend

52 enroll in Rio
nursing classes..
Page8

648 boards must !ll!8l'CII for alter·

A blke-a-thon for the St. Jude Hospltal fund drive has been set tor Saturoay, Oct. 9, at the Rock Sprtngs

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

•

Meigs football
teams prepare
for Fri{lay games

Buckeye briefs

Miracle

MEIGS
INN
Pvmetoy

to promote the bpok.
Plummer said.
.
In a prepared statement. she said
she belleves the eXjlOIIUI'e ot .till!
book "to such a ptBIII&amp;IWs· aucllenre" wW help the book "gain
world-wide recognition."
The sale of the book was the
board's first marl!ellng effort"~
It promises to be a profttable one,'

Bike-a-thon scheduled

SPECIALS

126 Main St.

1)

MARKS ANNIVERSARY- Edlloa BolJeteUer, Pomeroy, bepn
his dultea rib lbe Pomeroy NMional Balik Ill a salary oll55 a moatlt M
years ago • ~.Sept. IS. Be waa aUned a lrta• caalllerln 11111,
C88hler In ltl2 and tlult same year waa Jl1llde a bulk dlredor.ID 1Ml be
waa elected PI "ent and waa named chalnnall of lbe board of dlreelon on Deo. !Ml, 111110. He Ia preaea&amp;Jy chalnnaa of &amp;be board of Dlredon
at Balik One Pomeroy, NA. Edlllonalllocelebraled hlsblrihdayoallept.
13.

EVEN THOUGH WE'RE REMODELING
WATCH FOR SATURDAY NIGHT .

Every Saturday Night'

~
terence

MAJORE'ITES - The Eastern High l'chool Band majorette line
for the new school year Includes front, I to r, Kelly Whitlatch, Veronica
Provo; second, I to r, Lori Louks, Krlstl Sheppard; _ lop, Be&lt;&gt;ky
Eichinger.

Sheriff killed after hostage exchange
Coghlan left the scene In his own
car, returning In a stolen pickup
truck about an hour later as Spring
was Interviewing the girlfriend who was not Immediately Identified
- and Jordali. Coghlan !Ired a shot
from the truck, but no one was hit
and he drove away, Spring said.

Butler said.
After olferlng Coghlan a cigarette. Posey asked the gunman,
"'Why don' t you let these people go?
They ain't done :10thlng to you,"'
said Highway Patrol Capt. B!Uie
Hughes.

Coghlan agreed, got out or the.
Continental. and both men headeil!or a deputy's car. The hostages ran
Welches, whom he apparently
knew, forced them lntothelrcarand · to safety before the shooting began..
had ·Marla Welch drive back roads
•
until they were stopped by more
Authorities said they did not know.
tban a dazen olftcers at a Highway why Coghlan shOt J:'osey, who was
aJtrol roadblack In Llncoln County dead on anival at Ktng's Daughterabout 15 miles away, Spring said.
Hospl(al, said Coroner Morris;
After a standoff lasting about 20 Henderson. A Hlgliway PatrohP&lt;&gt;-''
minutes, while Coghlan held a pistol . kesman said Coghlan was shot 9E!V-: .
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on Mrs. Welch and her baby, Posey era! times.
persuaded Coghlan to free the hosPosey, first ~lected sheriff In 19'16,'
tages In exchange fo~ htmself, was In his second term.
Coghlan drove to the home of the

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Commentary

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Page 2-The Daily ~IIIW
Parnervy-MiddlepoP, C1No
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SoutherwMiller·:
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Thunday, ~ember 30,1982

l

Maraude,rs .seek
·. s.econd.~ \rictory ·

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cont~st, tQ~Sup ·

.••And, she'sg
_.;._la--:d_
1

The Daily Sentinel

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ROH~:RT

1.. WINGt~TT

l'uhlbhl'r

ROB HOEFI.I('H

I'H WHITEHEAD
\ -.~ 1 !-I Unl

l'uh!islwr/( 'oullro•lloor

DAU; ROTHGEB. JR.
~ ' '"~ Eclilur

,\ :\IFMRt:R nf TIM' . h~udu lt'd l'r• ·~~. lnhu"l ll11ih l'ro'"" h"'"·iallull liiMI th o·
,\ nwrn m1 N' ''"'fiiiJM'r l' uhlhho·n As~u•· lwl inn.
·

I.I·T r t-:H!'i Ill' IJI'I NII 1\ an· OAdntmt•ll . Thf\· shiiUkl ht· ,,.,.,_ thun :JO(I II • •n l~ hlll t.: . All
ll'!h •r, :~rt· suhjnl lu t'4 1illll~ 11 11rl mu~l Ill· ~ ljtiwd "'lth nanw. :ultln·~~ wnd ldt•pilllllt'

numh1•r l'lu

urud ~tnt'1 11t•llt • rs '&lt;I ill

bt· puhlbdwd . IA•IIrMi ~ h nuh i!M· in t.! •H Mi itl~ h ·,

:~dtlr•·ss illl:

iM .. IIt'.ll. nulfM'rsnnwlil it'ti.

Reagan's theme:
Dems to blame
for nation\ woes
I

President Reagan has been preaching the same sermon aU year: today's
economic woes are the legacy of yesterday's Democratic decisions and his
policies are the path to salvation. That well-rehearsed lhemels the one he'D
be taking to the voters In the campaign for the Nov. 2electlons.
Actually, there lsn 't much choice. The recession persists, Wlemployment
has been rlsiJ)g, and the Republicans willhavetomakethelrcampalgncase
withOut benefit of the economic upturn they had expected by now.
That doesn't give them much to boast about, so the emphasis will be on
blame. It tits with the public opinion polls which show that despite misgivIngs about Reaganomics, people tend to agree with the president's Insist·
ence that Democrats created the circumstances that led to the CUJTellt
economic situation.
·Atfourofhisslxnatlonally·televlsednewsconferencesthlsyear,Reagan
opened with a keynote statement making the same case, and promising
progress under his policies of budget and tax reduction. But he has been less
bullish lately In predicting when that progress wUl become evident.
He said It again Tuesday night: "When this administration tooko!flce, we
round America In the worst economic mess since the days of Franklin
Roosevelt."
;Reagan aclmowledged later that the economy still Is lnthedoldrums, and
said It Is possible that unemployment might reach 10 percent In the new
llidex due on Oct. 8. The rate has been at 9.8 percent for the past two months.
So It wouldn't take much of an Increase.
. But the unemplo)l'ment rate hasn't reached double digits since 1940, and
the new statlstlcs wUl come out less than a month before the congressional
elections, underscoring an Issue Democratic campaigners are hitting hare!.
Reagan'saclmowledgement that "wemlghttouch 10percent" seemed an
attempt to take the edge off that Issue by antlclpaUng lt. He said he hopes It
won't hap(len, but It It does, It won't be his fault.
:"No, we haven't solved~ years of problems In our t1rst ~months In
offlce,"Reagansald. "ButwehavemadeabeglnnlngwhereothersfaUedto
act... We're better off than we were."
That'sthethemeRepubllcanstrateglstshopewlllprovepersuaslvewhen
the nation elects a new Congress In November.

Letters to editor
Stand-up, cheer
Miss McDaniel's letter was cor·
rect and to the point. Meigs fans do
Nai' cheer. Are you ashamed,
liash!ul. cat got your tongue or just
\11slting with your neighbor? Hope
none of the above.
Our Marauder band competed at
Wellston his past Saturday along
with 15 other bands. The bands In
e!ass B were 160. 140. 110, and 90
members In Meigs band. Of course,
tlte largest band took about all the
awards. Meigs was three points out
Ot fourth place, which Is very good.
We're proud of them.
· People. when our band and team
comes onto the field this Friday
night to play Athens, stand up and
Cheer. loud and long. Show these
10ung people you love them. We
may be smaller than previous ye-

ars, but the boys and girls partlcl·
paling are children and
grandchildren of the Old Spirit,
"Pomeroy, Mlddleporet and Ru·
tland" . Let's buUd on what we
have, and It's good. Stand behind
oor director. Miss Goodnight Is
really working hard, 5o are the
band members. They put In long
hard hours practicing.
I'd like to see signs and nags In
stores. Also a parade for homecom·
lng this weekend.
·
This town could do anything wJth
spirit. Help us help the director and
coaches do this. Stand up and cheer '
your school. No one else wUI. They
cheer their own.
Pat Thoma, band parent and
team supporter.

How do we pay?
: I am writing In regard to the Ra·
cine and Syracuse sewage. You
know now that we have all gotten
letterS ready for hookups and my
concern Is how people are supposed
t;o pay for the hookup on Social Se-

curlty or other fixed Income? Yes,
we are some of those people.
Charles Snider, Sr.
P.O. Box 352
Racine, Ohio

·Today i.n history

Clare Boothe Luce has got Into
hot water by giving an Interview to
Geo magazine In which she says
things she probably would not have
said 45 years ago, when running for
dramatist of the year, 35 years ago
when running for congresswoman
o! the century, 25 years ago, when
running for aml;!assador of the sea·
son, or even five years ago when
running for reigning' elder states·
man of the Western wOrld.
What she has said Is that cultural
pluralism doesn't necessarily
work. To say such a thing In the
land of the melting pot Is not easy,
because Inevitably It Is transcribed
as racist.
Here I think one needs to proceed
carefully. It Is not·"ra'clst" to prefer
the ways of one's own culture. Mrs.
Luce said, to the Interviewer at Geo
magazine, that she could not truth·
fully admit that she was .not optlm·
lstlc about the future of America.
Because, she said, America Is beIng - do we dare use the word? "overrun" by people who are not
given to white Western folkways
and mores.
Specifically, she talks about
Latin America. We may as well,
since the argument has become In·
tense, quote her words exactly:
"Soon," she said, "there will proba·
bly be as many Mexicans In TE(xas.
New Mexico, lower Callfornla and
Arizona - and as many Gubans
and Latin Americans In Florida as there are natives. I do not !mow
how many more we can absorb."
Of course, she was then asked the
question about America, the Melt·
lng Pot. She answered by saying
that during the 19th century the assumption was that people who
came to America would seek to ad·
., just to American values. Such as?
Well, such as, for Instance, democratic rule. The notion that the majority can write society's laws and
that others must submit to them·until the next election - Is, quite

simply, foreign to most cultural
experience.
Another was that those who
came here would learn the lan·
guage - that there was only' one
native tongue, and that was English. Still another, I suppose, was
the notion that (we used to call It
liberalism) the role of the government should be restr1cted. Mrs. Luce' s point Is that people who are
coming to . America In gr.eat
numbers are neither brought up to
believe In these cultural axioms,
nor are necessarily encouraged to
change their old ways In order to
come around to believing them.
The result Is what used to be called:
an unasslrnllable minority.
Forget, for a moment, whether
Mrs. Luce's fears are objectively
justUied. Turn, rather, to the most

controversial single line she ut· ers of a starving mother with her
tered, which had to do with the child holding out Its hanil. I think It
question of the responslbWty of the would be bypocrltlcallf I didn't say
United States to the poorer nations that I would feel a little more comof the world. Mrs. Luce began by passion It one _of my pet birds had
using a disarming cllclul- she said broken a leg In Its cage In my own
that she always believed that char· house."
I confess I regret Mrs. Lure's forlty begins at home, to which obser·
vatlon people will gellf!rally nod mulation. What she might have
their agreement. So? Mrs. Luce - said, and probably would have It
then came In with a zinger, a state, her pristine Instincts had governed,.
ment altogether shocking- to the was: "Although It Is wrong to pity.
an alllng cat over al) aU!qg chUd, In
present writer Included.
Here Is what she said: "Amerl· fact people do. What makes the dlf.
'cans Identify with America, and In· terence Is proximity. An American
who Is capable of sleeping the night
creaslngly there are people Poles, Italians, Israelis - who through notwithstanding thE! air
Identify with two countries. Bull do stract lmowledge that there are.
not !mow of any other Identification people starving In India, wtU rouse
that! can make, say, with theeondl· herself In the middle of the nigh! It
tlon of the people of the Sahara. I she sees her cat vomiUng, drlve
repeatedly see pictures In the pap- him to the veterinary and ·knoCk
down his door untu her creature Is

0

Win.

Tailback Tracy Wlnterm11te, a
: speedy Falcon back, produced the
~bulk of Miller's 173 Illshlng yards.
• Wintermute also score two touch~.downs In the MU!er comeback.
Miller gained 92 yards In the air; a
, credit to Its potential aerial attack.
The Falcons of Coach James
· Cook stack up fairly evenly In size
with the Tornadoes, perhaps the
· latter having a small advarttage.
Determination and quickness
'·

NEW YORK (AP)- To Uncle
Sam and all his 232 million nephews
and nieces, a happy new fiscal year.
Sept. ll marks the end of the government's fls~al1982. a year that
didn't turn out so well on a lot of
economic and financial counts. Unfortunately, few of '82's problems
seem ready to disappear overnight
when fiscal '83 begins on Oct. 1. Old '82 will be remembered as the
first year ever In which the federal
government spent $100 billion more
than It took ln. To be precise, the
deficit stands at $1('8.95 bllllon, with
the figures for September still to
come ln.
It will be remembered as a year of

unrelenting recession In the private
economy. LaborDepartrnentstatls·
tics due to be reported next week
could show thatflscal '82 ended Wtth
the unemployment rate at or above
10 percent for the first time In more
than a generation.
It will be remembered, also, as a
year of dramatic faUures - Drys·
.dale Government Securities, Penn
Square Bank - and a year In which
the smooth, liquid financial statements of some companies andcoun·
tries with a stake In oU turned to
slu~.

New years traditionally bring
new hopes. Those given to consult·
lng the stock market for an eco··'
'
',.

nomfc forecast point out that share
prices are higher, on balance, than
they were a year ago.
On Sept ll, 1981, the Dow Jones
Industrial average stood at 850.
Thanks to a strong rally since mid·
August, It was hovering In the low
9005 this week.
The spirit of risk-taking Is by no
means dead as the new fiscal year
begins. Oct. lis theopenlngdateof
Walt Disney Produ~tlons' EPOOI'
(Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow) , a billiondollar project In Orlando, Fla.
The same day, speculators not
content with the action now available In options and futures wUl get
their first crack at options on fu.

It Is easler to drift Into a situation pread publicity. You have all read
than I~ Is to control· it or extricate of the task force on drugs that Is
themselves. Anyone who lived headed by VIce President George
through the Prohibition days !mows Bush which has dried up some of
this Is true. There Is no reason for the Importation of marijuana and
me to repeat the story which ap. cocaine from Colombia to South
peared In The Sentinel, probably Florlda.ln the seven years we have
the same day, except to cite a few lived In Flor1da, the drug problem
has grown from a local Industry to a
pertinent facts.' .
giant
racket controlled by the mob.
One Is the enormous prqflts that
can be reaped from even a few ma- I can just Imagine the gang leader
r1Juana plants. The prtce Is $400 per telling his mob, "Cbeck up on this
pound for low-grade marijuana to story about the. Meigs County
$3,(0) a powtd for the highest qual- Green. We could use It to replace
Ity, sinsemilla or Meigs County · the Colombia shipments the feds
Green. With money like that, It's no have cut o!f." So the gangsters, If
wonder that Meigs Courlty'sofflclal they have not .alieady done so,
cash crops of tomatoes and sweet could take ov.er Meigs County and
corn takes second place. The other the rest of Southern Ohio.
This Is not so farfetched as It
Is the dl!flculty In putting the off!·
would
seem. 'file garigsters have
cia! finger of the law on the grow·
.already
taken over Sol)thei'll Flor- ·
ers. Much of the time the plants are
Ida,
Including
the banks. They have
so scattered they defy any attempt
know-how
for IUeial actl~tles.
the
of the authorltle)l to Identify the
'Iltey
have
the
money to finance a
growers. No arrest of growers In
widespread
operation.
As the fedAthens or Meigs Counties has been
made In the last two years, the art!· eral officials, the navY, the coast
guard arid the air force shut down
cle states.
In spite of the gentle jibe by my their operations In South Florida,
frtend that I had left Meigs County they have moved north. Tennessee
lias already asked for federal help
tob soon to make my fortune In the
marijuana trade, I can see some In prevenlng gang encroachment In
real trouble coming to M~ · that state. But an admlnlstratton·tnCounty as a result of the ~- tent 011 cutting school IWIChes and

But some otller events In the new
fiscal year are likely to have a more ·
famlllar flavor. Wrangling between
the Reaganadmlnlstrahon and Con·
gress over the budget !s expected to
be as Intense as It ~ ever been. '
After major tax bills lnl981andl982,
possible new tax measures are a!'
ready being discussed.
Mld:term congressional elec:
tlons, only a llttlemorethlma month
off, will be studied closely for aver·
diet from the voters •on
·
Reaganomics.

'

neup. Big sophomore tackle Tony
Welch, out lf.st weej( with an In·
JUred band, IS &amp;ted as probable on
both sides of the line.
Senior tackle Mike Jackson Is
coming off ·bli best .g ame or the
year' with 01«11' · lOO yards against
Waverly. JacksOn was voted the
Meigll County Jaycee player of the
week. Jackson leads the Marauder
rushers with 251 yards.
•
Maybe the unsung hero for Meigll
has been the steady play of Rick
Edwards. The senior end leads
Meigs with 8 catches for 92 yards
and has played well at his defensive
safety slot.
,
.
Weather fo~ast tor Friday's
contest calls for ' temperatures In
the 60s with a chaiJce of. showers. ·

'

, '

I'BOIIAIIUI: 8TAa'1111111
(-)

SCOtt PICkens tl!ll
MaH .Van Vranlo!ft

'

TROY GUTHRIE

100 pound
Junior back

I

J

l'Cl8.

I:Dil

Greg Taylor (IIIII!

JayEvaJW (IS!
Davt' Barr (11!1)
BID lli&gt;lamb 121lll or
Toey Welch 12121
Rick Edwa.nll (1Sl)

Nick JUajo (110!
Mike Jaclllon (!Til
Chris Burdette (1'191
Jon Perrin (1'16!

RE
RT

RG

c

LG

LT

LE

QB

TB
FB
WB

(Dol.... )

Pickens
llol&lt;cmb
Andy lannareiU (156)
Barr or Welch

Jackson
Dave Follrod 1166!
Sllawn !!:ads 11!11
Burdette

LE

LT

MG

RT

RE

LCB

RCB
LB
LB

Taylor

s

Rlus

s

Edwards

ATHENS
(011. . . )

1"0!1.
Woody Mayles (]901

Ken Kastedy

(190)

or

Jell Jackson I:US)

LE

Kar-

LG

Tony Tei!O(!IIa (1851

RG
RT

Jimmy
(11111
Mike WUJiams (1101

Mike McNary 11951
Corl Mathany i1iilll
Cooey Kannon 11'191
Mike Jones (1851
Danny~· 11'151
Steve Robe 11'19!
(Dol.... )

Jackson
McNary
Brad aJne (lffi)

Phil Perkins (IIIII
Danny Brlnkley llll!il
Tenoglla

Jones

Phil Flnnlty il!iOI

Micky Prtsely 11!111
Robe
Trevts

DAVE HAwrHORNE
150 pound
Junior back

LT

c

~~

FB

~:

MARK HOLTER
180 pound
Senior back ·

Quarterback
injured

DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) -Mike
Wallace, a quarterback on the Ohio
RE
LE Wesleyan football team who has set
MG numerous school, conference and
LB
LB national records, has a broken arm
HB and Is not expected to play again this
LT

RT

HB
HB
HB

year.

Wallace set 18 records at various
levels In 1981. He Injured the arm
late In the first halfSatufdayduring
the Ohio Wesleyan loss to Capital.
Just before being Injured, Wal·
.. lace broke a school career record In
completed passes bycompletlng290
ln523attemptsfor2,myardsand14
touchdowns.

By SCOO'r WOLFE
EHS head Coach Arch Rose, who
EAST MEIGS -Saturday even· last season gulded.Eastern to one of
lng the Eastefll Eagle football the best records In the' state, says
team will explore a new frontier as his team Is taking optimistic attl·
It ventures northward to challenge tude Into this week's game.
Class AA. PQWer cadiz•.
Easuim has revamped Its decadiz? Where Is cadiz you may fense and made some chllllses oiask?f Well, for those Interested or . fenstvely since last week's game.
ot~rwtse Cl\r1DUS followers of the
Defensively EHS wUl showoa whole
Eastern team, cadiz IS a small city new alignment along with varta·
In nortlieastern ohio. A town of ap. lions of Its PiiSt defense.
Coach Rose said, "Hopefully we
proximately 3,060, cadiz lies some
can
use these neW things we've
25 mileS Inland froT(l Steubenville .
and the bordering Olllo River.
been going over to be more effec·
Incidently, Cadiz Is allio the home tlve. We just want to bemorerepreof the Class AA Cadiz Cardlniils, sentatlve to the school than we
who currently own a perfect 4-0 re- were last week. We hope we can get
Cord. That recotd stacks up against
a variety of class single A aiid dou· rious
thrOUgh
the game
without
se- . . : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
InJuries
and make
thisany
learnlng experience for the rest of our
ble AA rivals.
As defendln~ SVAC champion games."
and Ohio Class A powerhouse of a
One big change In the Eastern
.year ago, Eastern hopes to make lineup has Mike Jones at quarter·
·the trip a learning experience, back. Jones, a junior, will replace
·while also being representatlV!! of. Roger Bissell, who suffered three
'the area,. Eastern currently owns a cracked r1\IS In last Friday's game.
2-2 record, after suffering a 53-0 Bissell, hdWever, wUI stay In the II·
rout by Wahama.
neup at flanker.
Currently cadiz owns a: powerful
Below Is a probable lineup for Sa·
defense that has not allowed a foe to turday's 8 p.m. game.
pet"ltrate Its end zone so .far thiS
c
.sea.Soll. AlsO It owns a strong weiJ. Jimmy caner
Alleo Jaclol
LG
bala!\ced often~e. Offenslvj!ly,, LanyLJfe
LT
LE
·cadiz Is capable of doing ITUlllY ~J~~t
Gaul
RT
things, being able to pass and ruil , David
Bob Mallnn
RG
.
equally etr~tlve.
.. · ,
Kenny Browning
Rl!:
Mllle Jdleo &gt; ,
QB
It uses the.wishbone, pro-set, slot,
-Holter : '
FB
and I formation, uiillzlng each lorTroy .Gtlthrie
TB
Roger lllsoell
FL
matlon to Its full potential.
The Cardinals are coached by TocJoi·CieniiiOn
NG
.Sam ForsagUo and overall are a Tom Everelt
T
T
'much bigger team than the local Alletl Jaclol
DaWIGaul
LB
Ea,glejl. , Its line averages 200 Troy GutiU1e
LB
1!:
pounds on the line. Butasmostfoot· Mark Holter
E
ball tans.t!naw. size !sh•t every· . BobMallon
R&lt;&gt;ae&lt; lllsoell
s
.thing. WJih this In ~· Eastern
Deroo Jewett
S
HB
wUI !alee 811 enthUSiast!~ attitude In CUll Gr!iltlll
(pend!~ !nluryl
Its trip north thl.s weekend.
Mark
M

Wins eighth race
COLUMBUS, Ohio ~AP)- Raise
Ya Tee~ . rtdden by Brent Bartram,
wonthefeaturedelghthraceatBeu·
!ah WednesdaY to pay $8.~. $3.~
and $2.~.
The winner went the mile and 70
yards In 1:443-5.
Second was Clean Air for$2.60and

]_$2~.~~.
$2.60. f;ollo;w~ed;by~N~o;be;I~D~a~n;ce~r~f~orj~~~~~~~~~~~~
Acrowd of 3,233 bet $399,941.

supplementary social security Is
.not likely to spend much money to
fight crime. The task force In FlorIda, another party publicity scam;
has been about pumped dry of publicity value and I predict lllf'lll pull
aut after the November 2 electlo'l.
Then It wlil be again business as
usual for the mob!
The local law officials In Florida
as well as Metgs and Athens Counties do not have thepersollilel or the
money to fight the fiood of mart·
Juana that has engulfed them.
Much of the time they should spend
apprehending sertous offenders Is
spent pursuing pushers and growers. The public, as In prolilbltlon, Is
secretly In sympathy with the ntartjuana trade. They remember the
legal excesses of Prohibition and
view the hue and cry o~er marl. Juana as l"ore of the. same. In a · .
country that spends millions ,flghJl
lng sntoklng and more millions on
tobacco allot merits, It Is Jiard.~o e~
list (XIbllc support for a flgllt tha~
could l,le easily ended with legallza~
lion and taxation.
,
·i
1
I must confess that I am )ialve
about modern sin. I Mve 'nev~··
smoked marijuana, snoniod
·
'
I
i
caIne or taken quaaludes.
What
squ~te!
· •
. :1
.. .

'

By KEml WISECUP
Coming off an ui;laet 7-6 win over
Waverly lastFrlcll.y, theMeigi!Ma·
, ra~ now tum their attention to
the winless Athens Bulldop at Ma·
rauder Stadium this Friday nJght.
With a 1-3 and 1-0ieague slate, the
Marauders couiii conceivably set
atop the league standingS alone
W\th ll win, coupled with an Ironton
win over Gallipolis and a Waverly·
victory over Logan after this
week's play.
·
Fact It may be, but everyone
north of Lawrence County wUl be
rooting for the Blue Devils.
· A long-standing cross-country ri·
valry may come to an end Friday
against the Bulldogs. The Maraud·
ers, Tri·Valley Conference bound,
have met the Bulldogs 14 times before with Meigs winning five, In·
ciudlng the last two. Meigll won last
year, 1&amp;-7.
Although Athens, coached by
flrst.year and 1973 Athens High
grad Les Champlln, are wtn1ess In
four outings, they have met some
robust opposition.
The losses have .been to Morgan,
both state-ranked W11shlngton C.H.
ancl ClrclevUle, and last week to
Gallipolis. All four of these squads
have won at least·three games thus
far.
Coach Charley Chancey agreed
that the Athens record Is dece1vlng.
"'Il~y're a typical Athens team,
and I haven't seen a bad one yet."
Coach Charnplln noted, "We've
made some mistakes at bad times
that hurt us.
Meigs' win last week shook a few
heads around the league, Including
Champlin's. "They're tougher than
we first thought. We !mow you have
toug)l kids down. there. We'll have
to hit them before they hit us.
They're a good football team and
we can't rriake many mistakes
against them. I look for a real; good
football game," added Chapmlln.
Quarterback Rick Chancey,
though Improving, wUl probably
not play. The senior has been sidelined since the season's first week
with a blood clot In his leg.
Senior guard Brian Spencer has
come up with a muscle bruise that
!mocked him from the starting II·

'

Marauder statistics

tures. In Chicago, trading begins In
options on Treasury bOnd futures;
In New York, options 'on sugar fu.
tures Will be !ntroducell.

Meigs Courity__G_r_e_e_n______L_ow_e_u_W_in_ge~u
Depending on your point or view.
It could be called either fame 'or
notoriety. However you view It and
In spite of all you can do, Meigs
County has It advertised from coast
to coast.
I had read the Associated Press
story In The Sentinel without too
much concern over adverse public·
lty. After all, It .was a hometown
story In a hometown paper about
marijuana and we all knew there
had been marijuana around for years. Last week I received a note
from a friend In Freeport, Texas,
with a tear sheet from the Sep.
tember 15 Issue of The Bnirosport ·
Facts. My friend Is a substriber of
The Facts, a newspaper of general
circulation In the area of Texas just
across the Gulf of Mexico from the
town In Florida where I live. The
story was featured In the paper
with a slx column head "Marijuana
Is Ohio County's Top Cash Crop."
No one can fault the Associated
Press. That Is what they are In business for, to supply their member·
papers with the latest news from aU
over,the nation and the world. If the
citizens of Meigs County and surrounding counties iet a problem
grow to the extent that It Is national
news, theyhavenoonetoblamebut
themselves. But they will find that

make up a big part of Its attack.'
Last week Southern ha.d an often·
slve hey-day as It churned out :116
total yards ·and 14 tlrst downs.
Wade Connolly had an outstanding
game scrambling 160 yards for
three lmportanl toucbdowlls, Keith
Cook added a SHS score and PAT
convenlon In ·a good performance,
while sophomore Greg Nease had a
tine 60 yard game.
These three Southern backs,
lieacled by Connolly's outstanding
effort, picked up the slack during
the absence of senior tallback Dave
Talbott. Talbott, who was Injured In
the Wahama game and had more
than 100 yards In each of his starts,
Is believed to be out for the se85011
with a lmee Injury. He currently Is
In full leg cast.
. Tony Rl!fle did another outstand·
ing Job at.quarterback for the Tor118d011 of Coach Bill" Porter and
I&gt;arreU Dugan. rume had several
completions Including an extra
point conversion to Connolly. To
this point the SHS combination has
been the only team to score against
powerful Wahama.
On the other side of the coin,
South~ has enjoyed strong defensive outings In each of Its four
games.
Although Wahama broke that
game open In the latter stages
Southern's defense held most of the
game before folding.
\ In last week's shutout, Glenn
Young had six assists and a safety
to add to the score. Cook, Connolly
and Rl!fle also excelled defen·
slvely, while big Dennts Teaford an·
chored the Southern line with eight
assists and a couple of unassisted
tackles.
On paper this week's game ap.
pears to be a "dandy" man-to-man
measuring out to a close contest.
Game tlml! Is 8 p.m. Friday at the
Southern 111gb School field.

Eagles face big test
against Cadiz Friday

Fiscal'82 not to hot a year economically

. Todayls'Thursday,Sept.ll, the273rddayoflrel. Thereare92daysteftln
·theyear.
·
: Today's highlight In history:
: On Sept. ll, 1946, an International military tribunal In Nuremberg.
Germany, found 22 top German Nazi leaders guilty of war crlmes, and 11
were sentenced to_death.
: On this date:
- ..:.1n 1787, the saUing ship "Columbia" left Boston on th!i tlrst voyage
around the world by an American ship.
·
: -In 1846, BostondentlstWilllarnMortonmadetheflrstuseofetherasan
anesthetlf).
.
. .
: -In ~. Pakistan and Yemen were admitted to the United Nations.
-1J11966,NazlwarcrlmlnalsBaldurvonSchlrachandAibertSpeel'were
rele8sed from West Berlin's 8pandall Prison, leaving Rudolf Hess as the
6nly prisoner at ~u.
.
.
Ten years ago: U.S. tighter bombers destroyed 1'4 planes In heavY strikes
against tour air baseS In North Vletllam.
,
·
.
: F'Jve years ago: 'Ibe United States and Soviet Union piedg!!d tQ use tlielr · JllliiPh
utmost efforts toward lrlilglng about a Mldeast ~·
·
·
.....,.__

..

w_u_zw_m...;-~-·B_u_ck_l~_Jr.

_ _ _ _ _ _

By SCOTI' WOLFE
RACINE -Currently the. South·
em Tornadoes have two winS under
their· 1lelts and a third would certainly "cbann" the. hometown
Souther~~ tans this Friday evening
as the Tornadoes host MU!er's Falcons In an Important non-league
bltttle.
The TQrnadoes own a 2-2 recoro,
Its best mark In several seasons at
this point. The visiting Falcons also
own a 2-2 record.
Any way you look 11t It a "South·
ern Local" learn will win Friday
night, as Miller lies ln.the Southern
Local school diStrict In Perry
County, makln,g the town of Hemlock Its home roost.
O( course, ,die Tornadoes reside
In Meigs County at Racine, also In a
Southern Local School District.
As a coincidence both clubs are
high fiyers, although somewhat dlf.
ferent In nature: Facons and
Tomadoes.
Last week, Southern enJoyed Its
biggest, victory In recent history ·
with a 31:0 romp over Hannan, W.
Va. Meanwhile, an unpredictable
.MU!er team buclded down and de•feated previously .Wlbeaten North
Ga!Ua, who many believe to be ~
favorite In the SVAC race.
, In a see-saw battle at North Oa!·
lla Miller rallled late In the game,
took the lead with 8: 09 remaining,
then held on to claim a narrow 19-18

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

~.Ohio

Thunclay, Septenlbir 30,1982

-Oil-

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Member FDIC

�Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Po~neroy.....Midaleport,

Ohio

11\vltday, September 30,1982

take

.game

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Buckeyes lead region IV ratings
'

: COLUMBUS, Ohlo(AP) - Akron
$ 1. Vlnc e n t-S t.Mar y and
Nelsonville-York were the only de-

.
au were In the tap ten of their own
regloris.

lending playoff chilmplons leading
McKinley, which stunned Cincintheir regions Ulls week In the Otllo nati MoeUer for the big school crown
High School Athletic Association's
last season, ranked fourth In Regipn
computerl2ed ratings.
2 with 26.50 points. That rEgion w~
: St.Vlncent-St.Mary, Division ill led by Sandusky with 38.16 points,
Winner last fall, led Region 9 with
Benedictine was seventh In Re28.50polntsafter ro~weeks or regu- gion 5 with 19.00 points to 28.00 for
lar season play. Nelsonville-York, leading Solon. Calvert stood eighth
bivtston IV champion' last taU, In Region l8 with 6.50 pointS.
Qwlled the Region l5lead with 18.00 McComb was No. 1 In that region
points. The ratings were released with14.00.
Wednesday.
.
The as~lat1on uses the ratings to
; Meanwhile, the other thr~ dlv· determine Its post-season playoff
'tonal playoff chilmplons In J981, berths. This year the first two fin.
€anton McKinley In Dlvlslon I, Is hers In each of the 20 regions when
Qleveland Benedictine In Dlv!s1on the reg\Jiar season ends will qualjty
01 and Tiffin Calvert In Division V, for the playoffs.

Computer rlJlings
COLuMBus. Ohb jAP I -'llK'OI\Io HIRh •
Scl\ool Athll&gt;tle Ahoclatkrl's (.'()ft'{llltf'li:rl!d
rq;~lorlal roott:all ralinRJ~ thls weril: j thl' tlrtt
two ftnlstrrs In each re8krl at tte ~of tt!P
I'Q(Ular S4'81101\ q u~y for tt.&gt; playoftsl:

Bowslrr )1.00. :1, Columbl.ll EutrJl)Or 23 .~
' 4. Upper Arllnl{too 2100. :i, Groveport :J.l.~- G.
Tokdl Central Cat toUc 'll!ll.
OIVIUON D
Re5(kln ft - 1. CQJu(llbLis Whitehall ~~'\1. 2,
w~t l'f'VUk&gt; North 24.~.\ !: &lt;?lnelM"atl P\u"ccll
23.J7. 4. Clnclnnat\ FOI'(!8t ParW 2U5. _S. Ml·
wnl 1"r''K'l' tHO. 6. Cdum~ Befcha:oft

: CLEVELAND (AP ) - George · four Innings In reUef of starter Jay
~ler doesn't mlnd If he's notthe Howell, 2-3. The Yankee pitchers
t!l-st name mentioned In discussions were supported by an 18-hlt attack
$1Jut the New York Yankees' led byKenGrlffey, whodrovelnflve
lipUpen, as long as he gets to make runs, and Jerry _Mumphrey, woo
lis fair share of trips to the mound. knocked In four.
Cleveland starter Lary Sorensen,
:He has had no complaints In that
atea this season. He turned In hls 1().15, surrendered seven of the runs
6Srd appearance Wednesday night
- and earned his first save .,-In the tn~~=~;;~twodoubles
Yankees' 13-6 victory over the . and a triple to push his average to
Cleveland Indians.
Saves, which are awarded to a
relief pitcher who successfuUy fin- clnnatl Reds, went 4-for-4 to lrn·
Ishes a ballgame won by a team- prove to .28t.
•·
mate, are customarUy earned by
"There's a lot more brealllng
New York's Rich "Goose"Gossage, balls over here on the American
a 'hard thrower often called upon In League) and this team sees a lql
the late Innings. Frazier appears more left-handedpttchers, so I think
more often during the middle In-.. he (Grlffey) had to get adjusted If/
those tlllngs," Mumphrey said!
nings of a game•.
"I don't get thOse (save) situa- "Butthegtiy'sautetlme.~hlttet,
tions, because they're usuaUy re- soyouknowtheguy'sgolnglnhlt."
Mumphrey tripled a,n~ scdred on
served for Goose," Frazier said.
"The middle Innings - Iongrellef- Grlffey'ssacrlftcenytntheflrst,bljt
that's fine with me, just as long as I the Indians went up 3-1ln their halt
get the white ball."
by Toby Harrah and Andre
· Gossage has earned 29 saves In 55 ers
of the lnnlngonrun-scorlngground:
.
Thornton
and Mike Hargrove's RBI·
appearances this year.
single
.
. Frazier. though, recorded his first
save Wednesday night by pitching

::~':~:':~:~:~~6~

'

~~- Is going to play;" said Ted

Podleskl, geilefal manager of the
National BasketbaU A!Bldatlon
club. "We'll determine later how
much and 11ow .otten."

23.50. 3, tron&amp;on 11.8.'1. 4 Uk'l, Columbus()(&gt;..
Slk&gt;s and Manlns Fen)' 16.00. 6, Cdumtu
Bt&gt;11k&gt;y 1~.!10.
~kin ~ - l, Urbuna 26.33. ~. ClnctnnaU
l.Ovl'land 24.~. 3 (Tiel, CII'IC'Innall Det'r Park
and HarnUtm Badin 2Uil. !\, Nt&gt;w Rlrt\moM

Mter the.6-foot-ll
undergoing acenter
physlcljl
X-rays,
whoand
led
the Pol1land· Trall 1;1~;~ the
NBAttltle lnl.977, 1lew back lnhls law
studies at Stanford University. He
sald he would go to the Cll!iPers'
training camP on Frtday. · •
Walton played In several p,ck-up
games this · summer, apparently
testing his foot to his , own
satisfaction.

21.00. 6, West MUtonMillon-Unlon 19.00.
1

Crooksllle 14 . ~. 3, Cadiz LlCII. 4, ClowltCI'
T'rlmtk&gt; U.ti:l. ~. Belprt' 9. ~. 6. TIITOI'\5\Illk'

Buckeyt&gt;Soo lb 9.00.

·

DIVtiiONV
8ePM~ll - 1.

Nt"W P'tiUadelphlaT\LYer awas catholic 15..00.·2. Shadysldl' 14.00 3. Oak
HU1 12.00. -1, &amp;allsvilk&gt; 10,(11. ~ Itiel, Mklvaklndlarl Val~· N0n hand Vlnloll NortiiGaiDa

... .

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'INSTALLED S25.95

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KEROSENE HEATERS:-11,000 BTU TO 18,000 TUB
., ·
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*8.00 GAL ,,
TOYS 10% OFF ., GlJNS &amp;A·~
-. REDU~'ED
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DAN UTI.LEfl ELD.. ~.S MOORE'S
~~1~2~·~~~~S~-~-~~~~~~-~E ~~~~-~·~§~~
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GET VALUE~RICE"&amp;'
SERVICE
AT
.
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.RUTLAND, OH . .

•

······
·
·····
·
·········
·
···············••i
''
'TANK
RENT
FR
. EE· . :,
••
•
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i.
•$
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1oo·GAllONs GAS .
AND 'NSTAII ATIQNS

i·e .,..

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,:·~~1499~ &lt;I;~

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;Np_COUPONS

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,. ,.YOU ,. 'GO QUALITY SEIYICE
~ : , WHEN YOU . DW.WITJf LOcAL
..
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PAY YOUR COWMBIA GAS BILLS AT:

1HURSDAY
CHESTER - An open forum
' wiU be held at.Cbester Elementary School Thursday at 8 p.m.
to dlicllss the nve m111 levy. The

' '
IJ'
I • il
Streak.
'
I '
I
Mike Proly, 5-3, got~~
his flrit start for aucago, beaWill&gt;
'ttle'''Mets for the fourth time UU:
season wtth reUef relP, fl:om Lee: ·
Smith, woo gained his 16th1save. :
ThE! Cubs tagged lo8ei- Walt Ter~ .
reU, 0-3, tor aU the runs~ needed~
1n tre first lnnlngwllen Ryne Sand-;
berg walked and Buckrier hlt hill:
15th homer.
.
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pubttc.IS.Invtted to attend,
I
'

PO~ROY

Army, ,- Pomeroy, Thursday
from 10,a.m. untll noon. AU area
~Ill In need of clothing are
welcome.
POM!ilROY - Meigs County
Uriltof the American Cancer Society, annual meetltlg, Thursday, 8 p.m. Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Awards to be presented. ·Refreshments. Public
Invited.

!'adreii3,Redl2
'
two-run single:
In the 10thledSanDiegooverClncln-:
natl. Tralllng2-1, !he Padres
the bases on singles by:Brpderlck.
Perkins and Alan Wiggins and
walk to George Hlnshaw.·Brad Les-:
ley, 0-2, strU&amp;outplnch-hitter~k :.
Lan,ce,Uottl, but . ~ ,followed :
wlth}IIS game-winning IYtlhat gave '
him~ RBI for the year.1
Luis DeLeon, 9-5, ;iot the victory:
with 12-31nnlngs of relief)
·:
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loaded:
a:

POMEROY - Food co-op
orders to be placed betWeen 1
and 3: ll p.m. Thursday at the
Senior Citizens Center for delivery on Oct. 7.

· FRIDAY
· SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
trustees, Friday, 7 p.m. home of
• Clerk Wanda Eblin, Laurel CUff
:' . Road. Open to public.

The Daily Sentin' l
fUIPIII-1 ;

ADI.vW..t~Jac.

ov..-y .n.,.,..,,Mondooy 1hr...h.

MEIGS COUNTY Fox Chasi · ers wm meet Friday at their
· cabin on Eagle Ridge Road at
, 7:30 p.m. Everyone ts welcome.

Ohio-·

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RtrrLAND -There wiU be a
revival at Rutland Bible Methodist Church starting Oct. 1 and
' conttnulng through Oct. 10. Rev.
Paul Haron, Portage, Will be the
speaker, and there wiU be special slnglng nightly. The Rev.
Amos TIIUS, past'or, Invites the
public.

I

Pa!TMASTER: Send N~reu d. nw Dolly ·'

1

SIJIISCIIIPTION IIATIII

,

Ont!wt't!'i .......•...•. , . . ,, .. ,., .... • 1.00 .
Ont! Moolh . ...••...... , . . •. .~.... . 14.40
ontVt!ar ..... . ......... . ......... • • ·
SINGLJ;; COPY
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MIQDLEPORT

t

Sub&amp;:rilx•nt not dt.&gt;tilrilll( W PIIY l.t1t carrier

SATURDAY

'

IIlli)' remjt in atlvalll~ tlif'l'!l~ lo ~ DYIIy
S..·nlil"lt'l on f1 3, e or 12 month blahi.' Credit ;
Will bt•~iVt'n l'IITit!t t!jl;htJUlh.

Nn :4ubiH:riptioru by u-...iJ pm"Jtlal in towflll
whl•rt&gt; hut r\e l'llrrier ~rvlt't! I~ lvallllble.

1

MAILSUIISCRJPriONs
IMidoOIIIG
UWt.'t!k." ................... ,... . ..
216 w. .,.q .. . ..... . . .. .. ..... ... ...
&gt;2 w. ~~o~ .................. __ .....
Ou..Wt-OIUII '
13 W1·t·b ....... . ............ . ....
211 Wt'Cb •.• ..... . ........ &lt;, I • : i ....
52 Wt't•ks ~ . , . . . . . .. .. . . .... .. . . ..

f14 .04
f27 ,JO
151.11

$lU I
f2t.64
S$6.21

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CHESTER -The annual car·
:' nlval ofdeterPTOw!Ubeheld
: Satunlay with games, prizes, a
• sweetshop, country store, cake
: walks, 111111 door prizes dljrlng
: the evening. A ham or steak
' . dlimer will lie served at $2.50 and
. ' wiU lncl)lde the meat, potatoes,
· , green. beans or corn, cole slaw,
roUs and beverage. Also for sale
wiU be hotdogs and sauce and
pie. The-pubUc ts Invited.
RIPLEY ' ' The Jackson.Arts
il~:~~ Is p~tl!igtlleSirigtiig
~1:
of Pennsylvania, In conon Satul-day at 7:30p.m. at
I:RIIDlell High School, Ripley, w.
Admts~n Is $4 for adults, $2
students and $3 for senhr
t;cttiZEm.
POMEROY -Car wash Saturday, lOa.m. to4p.m. by Meigs
. High School H.E.R.O. Club at
Burger Chef, W. Main, Pome$3 OUISide and S51nslde and

"
liEAT\lRING AFINE ASSORTM~NT
OF
COMFORT 1;l.OW

POMEROY PTA will hold a
bake Sale Sai\JI'day at Powell's
Super-Vatu and at the Jones
Boys. The sales wiU both start at
9 a.m.
LEBANON Township Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. Monday
at the township garage.
MIDDLEPQRT - The youth
ofEccelesla feUowhslp will sponsor carwash at EUls Solllo, on
Gen. Hartinger Blvd., Middleport, Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m.

a

· PORTLAND - A fall festival
wUl be held at Portland Elementary on Saturday from 4 p.m. to 9
p.m. Dinners will be sold and
music wUI be provided. There
wUI -also be games and door
p~.

~

SUNDAY

' ·

Pi!hwroy,
111-1111. SO.'OIId dau
.,....paidltPolneroy, Ohlo.:
'
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I
M"nbor: nw -laled Plwr: Inland 0.~
ly Prall Alloclltioo 1nd the Amerlc1nl
N&lt;wll*ll"r Publillwl'll ~INI, NIUONII
Advertit lftll, Repro~nlltlve , r BranNun
Slko, 713 1llird Alen.., H&lt;W ,
Yortl. Ntw ,YO&lt;IIIIIUI7.
.. ·
1

II)' Clrrkr or MoloORooite

POMEROY - . Meigs County
Fish and Game wiU meet Saturday at·7p.m. A workaesslonWIU
be held beginning at 10 ·jl.m. AU
members are urged to attend.

'

1rldor. n~c.tBINel, br U.Ohi• Voll•r
Pubilillillji eao_, - llllliiiiiOdll.• Jnc..

~11&lt;1.111 CourtS!., Pumoroy, Ofiiol$711.

outside. Customers receive a
certlllcate for-a free top shef provided by Burger Cbe'f.

day wiU be held at 1'he Salvation

~!"Y Kennedy's

""-por

- Free clothing

RACINE - llOth Anniversary, Carmel-Sutton Church, to
he observed Sunday at Sutton
United Methodlsjt Church, Ra·
cine - Bashan Road, wlth Sujnday School at 9::Jia.m., worhslp
service at 10:45 a.m.; basket
dinner at 12:30 p.m. and afternoon services at 2 p.m. with special speakers, and mujslc. The
Rev. Mark Flynn, pastor, In·
vited the public.

POMEROY - South Bethel
New Testament Church home. coming Sunday, SUver Ridge.
Potluck dinner at noon. Afternoon service at 1:30 p.m, Music
by Inspirit and Russ and the
Gospel Tones. Public Invited.
RACINE - Ham and turkey
dinner wiU be served at Southern High School Sunday from 11
a,m. to 2 p.m. Persons may eat
In or take food out. The menu
Includes met, mashed potatoes,
green beans, slaw, noodles, dessert and beverage. Dinners at $3
for adults and_$2 for children.
It's sponsored by Racine Volun. teer Emergency Squad. .
-

,_

THE·
'SHOE .801 ·.
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LANGSVILE - Homecoming
will be held at LangsvUie Christian Church Sunday with Sunday school at 9: 30 a .m.;
morning worship at 10:30 and a
dinner at 12: 15. An afternoon
service will begin at 2 p.m. with
special vocal music bY Har·
mony. The public ts Invited.

KEROSENE HEATERS ·~ · ~
.

'

ALL PRICES.. EFFECTIVE THRU,

EBERS8ACH
110 w. Main St.
Ph. 992-2811

oct:2, -1~

John and Debbie PoweU entertained Sept. 26'with a party honorIng their son, Jason, on his eighth,
birthday.
.
An "E.T." cakeweasserved with.
Ice cream, chips, Iced tea and KoolAid. Garnes were played willi
p~ going to Regina Lee and
Bobby Willis.
Attending were Jason's younger
brother, Tommy, Linda, Bryan,

Others presenting gifts to J ason
were Lisa . Jones, Bev Bishop,
Mabel Roush, Eunice Christy, and
Stan and Betty Johnson.

Derek and Corey Yonker, Jerrv
Margaret, Juanita and Crystal Powell, Glenn, Connie, Anita and
Becky CoUins, Ray Proffitt, Sr.,
Ray Proffitt, Jr., Adam Triplet! ,
SCott and Stacey Hubbard , Cllffonl
Smith, Ray and Clyde Sayre,
Teresa and Regina Lee, Mark
AUen, John Bentley. Chrts Grindley, Bobby and Tim WUl!s, Chris
Gulnt~r. Brent Shuler. and Mark
Brown.

Astrograph
October I, 1982
U you feel you have a worthy project or enterprise to offer Ibis
c,pmlag year, don't he hesitant to launch II. You could be extremely
lucky with thlnp which you originate.
LIB II A (.o;,.1,t. 2.'1-0cr. 2.1) The results will be hettertoday If you attend
to matlerB pei'IIOIIally ,Instead of delegating them to someone else. Keep
the control In your hands.
SCORPIO IO&lt;·r. 2~N... ·. 221 There Is material opportunity around you
today, but II may he veUed and dl!!lcuH to perceive. Rely upon your
llllltlncts aad you'U spot it.
·
StiCIITAIIII 'S (\.., ·. 2.1-lh•c. 21! Nunnally you are optimistic, hu(
today you might be apprehensive regarding the outcome of events. Be
hopeful Your fears are groundless.
C:ti i'IIICOIIN (/)&lt;•c. 22-/m• . 19} 'Ibis can be a day of major achievements, and I hat which you desire can he accomplished-. However, you
may lMl a trifle slow getting out of tbe starting gate.
ti QI A II II'S /Jan . 20-Fd•. 19} Valuable knowledge could come your
way today from I be least-!Uspeded sources. Be a good listener, even to
those whose opinions you seldom respect.
1'/S(;f;S /F1•b. 20-Mnrclt 20} You could be rather lucky materially
today, but ll' s nol .Ukely to come from the course 'which you have
charted for yourseU. Providence wW provide tbe path.
AII If:~ /Marc/• 21-AI"il 19! Let your heart rule your head wber eyour
mate or speclal someone Is concerned today. Thlnflll wDI work out
better than If you plan every step logically.
TAl' Ill 'S /At&gt;rif 20-M")' :!fiJ This Is a good day to launch ventures or
projects of an arilstlc or creative nature, even though you might feel
that they stW need more development.
CKWINI/MtrV 21·/um· 20} You should do quite weUtoday In Involvements having etements a4 friendly competition. This Includes vying for
tbe .attention of someone to whom you are attracted.
C:MvO :H /J•n•• 21-/uh· 22! You're not Ukely to take as much Interest
In your own work today ail you wW that of another who needs yourbelp.
You'D then put forth your very best effort.
u ;o /Jrrlv 2.1-Au~. Zl} InStead of trying to change someone you're
fond of, potnt out his or her virtues and huUd upon tbem 'instead.
f 'IRCO lli rrA', 2.'1-~&lt;'1" · 22! You could he rather fortunate today flnanclally or materially If Y9U are Involved In something with 1111 lmaginaUve partner of tbe oppoelte sex.

Riffle-Muser
A birthday party was held for Joseph Riffle, son of Randy and Robin
Rlffie. recently at the camp site of
his
Larry
and Maxtne grandparents,
Dugan, Roy Oak
Park.
Mlndl Muser of Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
also celebrated her fourth birthday
at the same party. Small Smurf
cakes were presented to each of the
youngsters.
Att ending were Amber Young,
Sarah. J eremy and James Dean,
Dale and Mandy Eblin. Adam Riffle. Dorothy and Rudy Mussel. Ml·
chael and Wendt Krautter. Virginia
and Anita Dean. Vermont Marklns.
Donna Young, Susie Riffle. Tom

ONE RACK OF JEANS
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cago beat New York andJ~~awed:'
the Mets' tour-game ' wlrlnlng

Publlshod

Meigs CouQty residents observe birthdays

Calendar

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The Daily Sentinel Page 5

Pomeror Middleport, Ohio

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DrvEIONm
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Nor1 hwe;;t 22.00. -t Warwn Krnnedy 19.:111. 5,

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Walton will return

Ul.~.

fleRion

eu•t,Mdsi

Btu Buclmer cracked four hits,
Davis, who lllso stole his 24th
base, left the game with an ankle · Including a tw~run homer, as Chi-

DIVISION I

Yankees
rout Indians •

Injury In theseventhbllllngll!l'l was
l'e\)ortedly fln!shed for the season,
' Plr.t. 7, CArdlaall s
Jason 'Ibompson's iwo-run double ~ked a four-run ftrst Inning
that Carried Pittsburgh over St.
Louts.Thompsoruilsodoubledln too ,
tJ\frd before leaving the gamewttha
jammed right wrist sustained sUdlng safely Into home on a single by
Riehle Hebner. ·
·~
Thompson's two runs batted In
gave him 101 tor -the season arid
made him the first Pirate with 100
RBI since Dave Parker drove In 1117
lnl878.
'
Reliever Enrique Ramo, ~. was
the winner, holding the Cardinals
scoreless over the final 41-3lnnlngs.
Phlllles t, Expoa f)
Steve Carlton pitched his sixth
shutout of the season and 18th complete game as Phlladelphla beat
Montreal. The lelt-hander·allowed
only Joel Yowigblood's single with
two out In the' fifth Inning and Tim
Raines' leadoff single In the ninth.
Carlton, 22-11, struck out.furee to
boost his league-leading total to273.
The 37-year-old would be the oldelt
pitcher to lead the NL In strikeouts• .
E&gt;azzy vance fanned mto ~the
league at the same age for. the
Brooklyn ~rs In 1928.
Loser Bryn Smith, 2-4, went five
\Mings In his first majqr league
start, allowing aU ·tour ·runs. The
PhlUies scored In the first on Mike
Scrunldt's RBI single. Manny Trillo
and Ivan DeJesus opened the secOnd with doubles to. make It 2-0.
Garry Maddox tripled_and scored
on ·P!!te Rase's groundout to complete the scoring.

needed.

ReRloo .1 - 1. Gahanna :mm. 2. 10km

~II

'

By AIIM'CfehJCI.._
The Los ,Ange_les Dodgers haye
been virtually left' for dead II! tre
National League West IJy the hlt&gt;and-run Atlanta·l:lm'ves.
The victory, ' Atlanta's sixth
straight, put the Braves tWo games
up In the NL West racewtthoniy four
games togo. In losingfo~ theelghth
Straight time, the Dodgers drqlped
Into a Second-place tle with the San
Francisco Giants, who beat the
Houston Astros 6-1.
In order for the defending world
'champion Dodgers to make a comeback, they'll have to play nearperfect basebaU the rest of the way
- and hoPe the BJilves don't.
"We're not going to die," saJd
Dodger catcher Steve Yeager. "We
don't give up: We can't look back.
, What we have to do now Is win four
games In a row and hope we get ·
some help."
.
·
Harper, who homered earlier,
single!! home ~hi! tie-breaking run in
the 12th for tl)e Bflives and Jerry
Roster's base hit brought In the
eventual game-winner.
Rellever,Cene darber, 8-10, who
gaveuptheDOOgers' fin.al run In the
bottom of tre 'lnnlng on a doubleplay ball; WaS the Winner.
Glanls 8, A8tros I
Home runs by Jeff !.eonard and
ChlU Davis pawiited Sari Francisco
c*er Hiluston.
~ ' Leonard hit his eighth hOmer af·
ter a leadoff single by Rtjgg!e Smith
In tre second lnilln.!:. accounting for
the game's first runs. bavts'led off
the flfth wit)) a l!onler, his 19th, off
Joe Nlekro, 16-12, giving the Giants
a 3-1 lead and all the runs they

tng the LqsAngeJes Dodgen w~ nllht In Los
Angeles~ In 121nnlnp. Garber pitched the final four
lnnlnp In reUef for the win as the Braves take a ~
pme lead In the welltem division. (AP Laserphoto)

:
WINNING IN RELIEF - Atlanta Braves reUef
;'lJIIeher Gene Garber, seoond from left, receives con. p-atu1at1ons from teammates Bmoo Benedict, right,
, Chris Cbambll8s and Malt Slnatro, leH, aHer defeat-

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'lhUndGy, Septa1tlbet 30,1982

_.. ' L

Br~yes
twoJ
l~ad
with ;victory
over:
Dodge~
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THIS IS AGREAT TIME TO PURCHASE A ~EW BULOVA
OR CARAVELLE WATCH ,FOR CHRISTMAS OR ANYTIME •
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR lAYAWAY WHERE ASMALL
DEPOSIT WILl HOLD YOUR SELECTION TILL
CHRISTMAS.

'

STORE
342 2 AVE.
OAWPoUS
. 448-2691

113 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH.

W2-2064

OCTOBER
SAVINGS
SPECTACULAR

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Thu!ICiqy, Sepleml.

......

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OCTOBER.1st t

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

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COLOR

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WE.ARE OPENING OUR SECQND STORE FRIDAY,·
OCTOBER 1ST TO BffiER SERvE THE TRI-COUNTY .
AREA. OUR OTHER- STORE, LOCATED AT THIRD
AND PINE IN GALLIPOLIS, OH., WILL CONTINUE '
TO REMAIN .OPEN AS USUAL - OUR SERVICE
DEPARTMENT WILL BE LOCATED AT OUR DOWN·
TOWN LOCATION. WE WOULD LIKE TO TAKE THIS ·
OPPORTUNITY TO INVITE EVERYONE TO OUR NEW
STORE!

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Selection made simple. Special display areas,
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Of course, ~hen you buy your Armstrong

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Thurtday, September 30,1982

Page · 8-The Daily Senti~~

Fifty-two enter Rio·· ·
Grande, HMC .nursing
L

)

FlRST YEAR NURSING STUDENTS - Forty·nlne women and
three men llnl among; the 52 ftrst.year nui'slng; students enrolled In the
Wo Grande College and Community College-Holzer School of NUJ'!IIng.
Memben of the first-year olass are (first row, from lett): Denise
Hollillpbead (GaDipolls); VIcki Shreve (CIIIUlcqthe); Dawn Newlun
(CidUlcothe); Mona Reed (Middleport); Melissa Beckley (McArthur):
Bonnie Conley (Kitts HW); Sharllyn Mllier(OakHW); SU81Ut Warning
(Oak HW); Caml Carnes (Troy); and Chrlsll FeDure (GaDipolls. Second row, NatalleShong (Bidwell) ; Heidi Simpson (Jackson); Melissa
MelloU (Old Fort); Debbie Hammann (New London); Nancy Levernler (GaDipolls) ; Kim Stout (GaiDpolls) ; Debbie Slden (Henderson, W.
Va.); Usa Weaver (Beaver); Pat Eggen (Oak HW); Andrea Cook
(Rio Grande); and Jane Dailey (Gallipolis). 'lltlrd row, Kathy White

(Jackson); Connie Johnso.n (Hamden); Dlnna White (Centerburg);
Mellndfa Board (GaDipolls); Rhonda Puahkar (GaiDpolll); Shart1
Dixon (GaDipolls); Karla Lester (Columbus); Rebeooa' Durham
(Portamouth); Jerry Gooldln (GaDipolls); David Stlfller (Jackson),
and Reeca Sexton (Minford). Fourth row, Brenda Craigo (GaUJpoiJs) ;
Dawn·Landrum (Jackson); Beckyl.eltermaD (Jackson) ; Stella Bachtel (Jackson); Mary Payne (Jackson); Nora Ramsey (WeiWoo); Rebecea Bowman (Waverly); Krista Wedge (Letari, W. Va.); Laura
Egbert (LucasvWe), and Terri King (LucasviiJe). Flf!h row, Mike
Hu11hes (Wellston); Carolyn Bowen (Pomeroy); Sheryl Hardyman
(GaiDpolls); Brenda Davis (GaDipolls); ,Lenora Rhoads (Ewblpon);
Marge Adldns (GaDipoBs); Susan Roulll (Galllpolla); Lori l'relltAln
(GaDiwJls), and Tania Bichsel (Greenfield) .
·

Organi~ation mem~rs gather
PomeroyUMW ·
Plans to Contribute more to the
buUdlng fund were made when the
UnltroMethodlstWomenmetTues·
day night at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
Durtng the meeting reports were
given on the dellvery of sunshine
)loxes. Several thank you notes
were recelvro from the recipients.
It was note&lt;! that new officers will
bf elected at the next meeting. It
was vote&lt;!' to keep the pledge to the
district at the same level. Seventy.
Jllne sick calls were reported.
: orttcers' reports were given and
dues were coUected. Ada Warner
had prayer preceding the collection
of the least coin, Betty Baronlck presided at the meeting with Polly El·
ellinger giving devotions.
. The district meeting was an)lounced and a donation to . the
"McCurdy School was sent. Myrtis
kay Parker had the program with
'Evetyn Clark giving a skit entitled

"The Old and the New DoUar Bill. "
Pledge cards were passl'd out. Refreshments were seJVro by Mrs.
Baronlck, Mrs. Eichinger, and
Leona Cleland.

Forest Run UMW
New officers were electro at the
recent meeting of the Forest Run
United Methodist Women held a t
the church.
Electro were Evelyn Hollon,
president; Hilda Yeauger, vice
president; Mary K. Roush, secretary; Edith Sisson, treasurer; and
Sandy Hawley, assistant secretary.
SixtY-three shutin calls were reportro. Mary Nease presided at the
business session with meetings at
ChestervUle and Dayton being an·
nounced. Betty Blackwood had the
program using scripture h'om
Isaiah 26 and a reading, "Worry',
Wart. " The program by the Rev.
Stanley Merrifield was a report on
his 10-week course! this past

summeroncllnlcalpastorlalroucatlol) .at St. Joseph Hospital. ReadIngs on fall were given by Mrs.
Nease.
Kathleen Scott and Mary K.
Roush were haitesse&gt;. Others at·
tending were Erma Roush, Naomi
W;yatt , Faye Hamilton, Nancy Merrifield, and guests, Butfy and Todd
Merrifield and Mary BelleWarner.

Alpha Omicron
JoAnn Hays of Meigs County and
PeggyGreathouse ofVIntonCounty
Oml·
were Initiated Into the
cron Chapter of Delta KapPa
Gamma at a meeting held recently
at the Meigs Inn.
·
Eleanor Essman had :charge of
the Initiatory work and was aSslstro
by Donna Jenkins, VIola Gettles,
Anna E . Turner, Neljle Parker,
Esther Maerker, Margaret Benson,
Barbara Litter, MUdred Hawley,
Margaret Parsons, and Judy
Fetherolf.
Roberta Wilson had the lnvcicatlon and used "Things to Be Thankful For" by Helen Steiner Rice,
before the dinner hnostecl by Martha Greenaway. Mrs. Wilson, Geneva Nolan, OllvePage, Faye Sauer,
Dorothy Woodard, and Maxine
Phllson.
Approximately 50 attended the
dinner from Jackson, Meigs and
VInton Counties. Those members
from Meigs attending were Ethel
Chapman, Martha Greenaway,
Fern Grimm, Mlldrro Hawley,
Donna Jenkins, Lee Lee, Nan
Moore, Geneva Nolan, OUve Page,
Nellle Parker, Margaret ParSons,
Maxine Philson, Mary V. Reibel,
J1!atrlce Rinehart, Fay Sauer, Carolyn Smith, Emily Sprague, Rosalie Story, Rebecca Tate, Anne E.
Turner, Ann Webster, Wykle Whitley, Roberta Smith, and Dorothy
Woodard.

AlPha

.

J oin the 50 mllllon consumers
who SI!W their own wardrobes, sug·
gests Dale Stoll, county Extension
home economist. September Is Na·
tlonal Home Sewing Month and the
perfect time to Investigate the benefits of home sewn clothing.
Create Individual wardrobes that
enhance your personality. Home
sewing provides the opportunity to
select colors, and fabrics In the
styles you want and that flatter
your figure. Readlly avaUable designer patterns and fashionable fa,brlcs . duplicate the look of

Selected for awards ,
The board of advisers for the Out·
standing Young Men of America
Awards Program reported that
three Meigs County men have been
selectro for Inclusion In the 1982rol·
. 1.

lion of Outstanding Young men of
America.
They are James .J.. Wilhelm,
&lt;:;hester, Eastern Local Band Dl·
rector; Robert Paul Melton, Mid·
dleport,. pastor of the Middleport
Church of Christ, and Brian Keith
Conde, Middleport, active Meigs
County Jaycee.
1
Tile criteria for selection Includes
voluntary service to community,
professional leadership, academic
achievement , business advancement, cultural accomplishments
and civic and political
participation.

ready-to-wear but are tailored to
your Individual needs.
Come and see new fashions for
faU at the FaU Style Show, Sunday,
Oct. 3, from 2 to 4 p.m. at Pomeroy
Elementary School. Sponsored by
the Fabric Shop and the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice, the style show, "Fall Options,
Bold and Basic" will feature local
models wearing garmerits creatro ·
at home. . ·
savings frOm home sewing adds
appeal, Estimates of 50 percent or
more are normal savings·and may
be even greater. with tailored and
children's appan:L Rising clOthing
costs and tough economic times are
turning many people to this coste!·
fectlve hobby.
_
Creativity Is the response when
lndlvld 1s
many
ua are askl'd \VhY
they ~. ItlsarelalQngoutletafter
a day at the otflce and an bpportun-

W

WI~ sal«'~=~ Ilyu·
' Shln62~~ .
Ia~ right,
Shotlntothewoodsandcauglltflre.
,; A -~ ~ spollel~ aald the
ca~ of lbe1crash was no~ lrJune.
' ~a't~tennlned and that casu·
1iJity
,were being revll!!d as
SPVdleJscombedthewoodsforvlc!I-ns of the crash, which occurred at
8:23p.m. (3: 23p.m. EDT).
Inltlalr'es;*lrts puttbedeathtoUat

;!:J. ~twaal'evlseddowl!wardto12

.and later lnthenlghtapollcespokes,inansalfl thenumberofdeadwasno
higJier than 10. He aald the pilot and
.
fO'Pilot \Vet'e slightly Injured.
., , Hesaldl\p~countwouldnot

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'

better

·uons

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FLORIST

pH • 992·2644
352 E, Main, f1ome'rov
Y
FTD Florist

----------_j-======::;;::;::=:;!-

...
'·

-------.
-·--·
pnc,f!."' --:c-. ....:........,.:.

Rllieye Steak Dinners
I,~rBI•-Ch.P~ Steald
I
Dinlier•
1

2 for '4.99 .I

I
1---.. - -- .. 1
"'-·- -IOCirtJIOtl
· - I·I
'"""" ~~-.

SOMEONE
SPECIAL

names

· Vlsftorsatthe!estlvalwillbeable
to obSerVe the demonstration of a
number of ploneer'crafls;'tncludlni
the making of ciqer, apple butter .
and mlasaes and blacksmithing, ,
Each of thesecratts will follow the
same methods that was used more
than a century ago, Including the
powering of the cane mill with a
horse.
On Saturday at 1 p.m. some of the
oldUmers plan to have a muzzle
loading rifle shoot. Anyone owning .
a muzzle loading rifle Is Invited to
participate In the shoot.
Also on Saturday, weather permlttlng, .tbere will • be a wheat
threshing demonstration.
satUrday evnelng, F1oyd Ray·
bum will eau a square dance. Everett Wedge; John Smith and Burl
Tennant will furnish the music.
Fortheenertalnmentofthechlldren there will be a "petting zoo:•,
stockro wit)( the usual farm yard .

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In Brownsville, said Larry Todd, a

of Gal!,la County and the surround· Texas Department of Publlc Safety
lng al!eas of Ohio and West Vlrgl- spokel;man.
· outh haveslgnro a letter of Intent
separate entity and·wlthtl)e same nla," Vetter added.
DPS agents, FBlagents and local
. mer~.• Gallipolis savings, with
personnel," said David Vetter, Clv·
The Gallipolis Savings board of authorities used 10 cars as they
, ts of. more than $10 million,
lc's president.
.
directors wlll consist of Graham,
, ves Gallljl C&lt;!'lnty from Its office
"Purpose oflhe merger Is to pro- Raymond WUIIs, William Cherrlng~ Gallipolis. Civic savings, with
vldealargerbaseforThe,Galllpolls ton, Robert Richards, Qr. Keith .
lis sets of li'tOI;f! than $100 million, savings and Loan, makb)g It possl· ' Brandi!berry, all of Gallipolis. and
~es Scioto, Pike, Jackson, and
ble to provide a much wider range Vetter and Jim Strafford of
·. Marns counties with six offices.
of flnandal services to the residents Portsmouth ..
Mrs. E. A. Wingett will entertain
with
a n open house at her Racine
• ·; "Our customers will now enjoy
1
\ ·enhanced avallabWty of financial
Sunday from 3 to 6 p.m.
residence
Election board sets special w~end houl'8
·,; prOducts and services, many of
honoring Jolyn Boster, Gallipolis,
TheMelgspxmtyBoardofElec- noon saturday. On Monday, theflDemocratic candidates for district
wl\[ch 'we simply could not'offer betlons has established special hours
nal date for registration the office representative to the Ohio.House of
for this weekend In Order to provide 'will be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Representatives.
moreqlporlunltyforvoterstoregls- Persons who hav~: movro or
Others Invited to the open house
~for!1JeupComtngNov.2electlon.
changl'd trelr name since the last
,
'contlnuro;'
savto meet the publlc are Chester
The office located In tre Masonic . electkln are required to note these Wells, Democrat candida te for
h;i,s, an lrbp~lve record In
on Mulberry Ave., Pornechanges With the board of elections Meigs County Commissioner; Bill
Temple
·
lng lplthem .Ohio and we look
roy,
will
be~ fi'&lt;Jm 6 to 9 p.m.
If they are to vote In the Nov. 2 Wickline, Republican candida te for
,Owai-~ 1c1 • good relationship with
Frld!lyevenlngandfrom9a.m. to12 electloil.
county auditor, and Imoge ne Holth~.'\ I
stein, Republican candidate for
•. '·~ ~·,
county recorder.
Mrs. Wingett Is urging all residents to attend the affair In order to
know better candidates whom they
1 CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio (AP)
their reactions and she has been
The writing course song list lnwill be voting for at the November
-t'AilQI!~ ~:ibenpeoplehavecom· . very successful In motivating eludes "Unborn Child" b)! James election. The Wingett reside nce is
· ~#!ned {10 the Cuyahoga Falls
students.''
SealsandDashCroft; "Teach Your
on Route 124 (Elm Sl.) across from
scllool ~ about a teacher who
Ms ..Eastlncouldnotbereachroat Children" by Graham Nash; "Fa- the new Racine United Methodist
~yu:~!l')llllc II? Inspire her high
home Tl)ursday evening for com·
thet ~nd Son" by Cat Stevens;
Church.
SchOOI.~cla$8.
mentaboutlheCWJPlalnls.
"Mother' ' by John Lennon; "She's
.The complaints were promptl'd Leaving Home" by the Beatles;
Name clarified
. ~~~ Harold · Wilson
said tbe cornplalnt Is being studied. by the patents of lqlhomore Cindy "Feel Like a Number" by Bob
·~members Ttm_Jennlngs and .Boll. 16, who sat out of a class In ' Seeger; "Space Oddity" by David
A Ust of defendants who forfeltro
which students Ustened to rock · Bowie; and "Stairway to Heaven" bondspostedonspel'dlngchargesln
RObertl)llcolwerenamedtoacomh)lttee to r,eport to the boilt4. ·
music andthen were askl'd to write · by Led Zeppelin.
the court of POmeroy Mayor Clar1Wns9n.S8Jd Tllursdljy Jllght that'
their feellllgs aboutthe music.
-. School Board President Gary ence A.ndr~s and publlshro In
~Sue Eastin ha9 used rock .
Her rather,' Larry Box, who told Marslllill said the Issue was blown _wronesday s Dally Sentinel lnmitstc as -adeaching !Qol In her the board he Is a born-again Chris- out of proportion. "I think It could be " eluded the name of Terry Guinther.
classes:torseveralyears.
tlan,contendedrockmu'slchassuch settledveryeasllywlthbettercom- Syracuse. PomeroyVIllageHallad"It:s a w'rt11ng t:OUrse," Wilson topics as ·abortiOn, witchcraft' and munlcatlon;" Marshall said.
vises that the name shotlld have
said. ''She is ustngthesesongs to get · overtfirowlng governments.
·
, read Carrie Guinther Instead of
.
Terry Guinther.
p. and Civic savings of Ports-

"The Galtlpolls savings and

Loan 'wDI cont!Jiue to operate as a

Candidates will
attend open house

Ei

chased White for more than 30 min- him away, pollee said.
Hamllton said they drove aimutes, exceeding 100mph, Todd said.
lessly for hours a nd that White
Pollee slowro him to ~ mph by
callro himself a "political terror" buinplng_ him off the road," said
Ist." On Monday alternoon, White
DPS agent Bud P eters.
put Hamilton In the tnJnk of his car
"We didn't try to run him off the
and left the auto near the town of
road any earller because we didn't
George West. Hamilton freed him·
know If he had any hostages . Besell hours la ter as a wrecker was
sides, we knew the countzy and he
towing the car away.
didn't," he said. "We knew he was
running out of road.•:
White stoppl'd after pollee con·
tinued to bump his car and did not
resist arrest, Peters said.
"He was armed ," Todd said .
Three San Benito pollee vehicles
collided whllesettlng uparoadblock
on the ru ral patm-llnro highways,
Todd said.
Officer Debra Sanderson, 'l7, was
In good condition today at VaUey
Baptist Hospital In Harlingen with
minor Injuries, nursing superviSOr
Susan Edwards said. Another of·
fleer was treated and released at a
San Benito hospital.
In the second of the three kidnappings, Houston firefighter Coby
wear,
Garland Harnllton was approached
Underwear.
outside a convenience store about 2
WE NOW HAVE
a.m. Sunday by a m an who claimed
CHRISTMAS TOYS.
his.car had broken clown. The ma n,
OPEN MON.-SAT .
later Identified as White, pulled a
9:30-S:OO
gun and forced Hamilton to drive

CLEARANCE ...
NOW IN
PROGRESS!

Correction
Edison Hobstetter, Pomeroy , began his duties with the Pomeroy
National Bank 54 years ago not 24
as was reported Wednesda y. The
Information was Incorrect due to a
typographical error.

WIN UPTO

'6400

00

"CI\~Ic

,,
r.

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IJfliW.

'"
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·- )~ity,: ~ecom·~ends

HeMh' 'p~~tY

WORTH OF

FURNITURE.
BROYHILL &amp;
BERKL.INE

~~

•Nickel Eyelet
•81»9rt Ulce
•Unild

'

.Bring Your Papel;' In And See If Your
Number Matches The Winnin~ Number In
The Store.

PRIZES - PRIZES - PRIZES - PRIZES

·•VInm Lug Sole
~Pidc*l

Collar
CllllDIUS SIZES
·~ liD 6

51,30() BEDROOM SUITES, $2,000 UVING ROOM
·SUITES, '2,000 DINING ROOM, $700 SET OF COQ&lt;.
TAIL TABJIS AND 2 END TABU:S, $40Q BERKUNE
REQJNER .

•n
.....,........

Occasions

DURING THEIR LUCKY NUMBER SALE,
THROUGHOUT THE MONTH OF OCTOBER.

r.;;;~=~-===;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;!
•Rugged Shoe

on

It's 8 Gift. It's a Plimt. It's 8 Beautiful

SIZES

. &amp;Vt liD 12

GET ONE TODAY FOR SOMEONE SPEOAL

"

RIO· HONDO, Texas (AP)- A
self-described "polltlcal terrorist "
wantro In three kldnapplngs, Ineluding the live burial of a young
man, was arrested aflerpollcecars
bumped him off the road at the end
of a 100-mphchase, authorities said.
Two pollee officers were Injured
In the chase late Wl'dnesday on a
south Texas highway, neithe r
seriously.
Roliald F1oyd White, 38, was arrestro a t about 8:40p.m. on an aggravatro kldnapplngwarrant In the
abductlonofMichaelBaucom,2l ,of
Santa Fe, Texas. Baucom was burtroSept. 211nacoffln·llkeboxwhlle
his kidnappers demandl'd a $75,00l
ransom from his father.
Baucom was freed four days
later, and three people were arrestro, although pollee accusl'd
Whlteofmastermlndlngthecrtme.
White was being held early today
at the Brownsvtlle Mrolcal Center,
where he was adrnlttro with an un'dtsclosed "personal Illness," nursto the Cameron County JaU.

1

GREEN THUMB GREETING
That Grows for All

animals.
On Sunday morning at 9 a.m. I.ewts Hussell will conduct a church
service In he old log church.
The Country Kitchen wu be open
on bothdays ofthefestlval, and will
be serving cornbread and beans,
AU museum buldlngs will be open
for visitation.
Some of the . outstanding string
bands of tl\e aree will play old time
country music during the festival.
AU strihg bands 1n the area are In·
vitro to participate.
' Th~ annual, country festival Is
one of the major events during the
year . The main purpose 1s to preserve some of our pioneer crafts
and to create a better understandlng and a deeper appreciate 'bf our
farm ute heritage.
There Is no admission charge.
The Farm Museum Is locatro
four miles north of Point Pleasant,
just off Rt. 62.

and Loan agrees :'d~=~ds:~l~:=~
·tQ.meraer
e ' with
. Portsmouth company w~~c:~:¥~:~~~~~=

GIVE A

Thought

flwnes just after landing at Luxenbourg airport Wednesday nl11ht, according; to airport officials. (AP
Laserphoto)

SOVIET JETLINER EXPLODES - Firemen
Dgttt the IJames after a Soviet jetliner veered off a
runway, plunged Into a stand ol trees and exploded In

{J~o/-d studies r()£k muSic complaint

RiDe yo
Steak .
Dinn'er

rqll with
butter.

To

or

:

and warm

·Let Your Love Grow.....

munber

sever81

~GaJJipolis ,Savings

]~~all~m

All din\ie;s
inctu·de
ulil.imited
; .. tad bar,
baked
pdtato,

are

be ~ until tlw! .Sovlet ER1- EufJ~and appi!lln!d tohaYI!made
bally In Lwu!mbow'a IJI'0\1dl!i} a , a proper Iandini untD It suddenly
palllf.'Q&amp;Ief list ~ the
f# t tumecl to ,q,e rlihl and .~
InJured In
holpl~ \VaS ., ~lx!uq,IXXly8rd&amp;. ·
'. ·
c&lt;mpared to the list. :
"
~~ 's119t ovi!t' a ~ pond and
. "l!o far, we b8ven•t received the · ·• plunged Into scme woods, knocking
~~lell&amp;l!l' list," the spoJ(esmaiuaJ:cl, . down trees for about 100 yilrd&lt;l beabrut II!YI!II how's after the crash'. ' fo~ It came to li halt at the end of a
Many tre InJured sutrei'ed se~¥alley, according to airport
verebW'naandweretakentoabw'n officials and television rePorts.The
center lnMetz, France, 37mlles to · ~ follolyed and the plane
tbeii0Uti1-'lbeolhersunotvorswere caugtliflre.
•
takentoflvehospltalsllttbeclty. ,
About 250 ~beJ::s of emerPll.llll!llkers scrambled out of t!Je , gency medical and TeSCUe teams
bumlng jet as a S1!f!i!S ot.explcslons
were at the scene. 1be SOVIet ~rockl'd It and
engulfed the
bassador and other ~-busy per~
fuaela&amp;e,wltnesaesSI!id. ·
sonnelalsowereatthealrport . .
· , "W~ 111\ard ali extremely loud en. Rescue WOrkers brought power·
i!tne noise that lasted for a few se- fulllghts to the scene of'the crash
conds," aaldamlinwhpnvesnext.to and callro out for survivors In sev·
FlndelAirport.
· erallanguages,lncludlngRusslan.
'"lbl!n therewassllence," he said,
RTL televlson said It was the first
followed tiy a sel'les of explosions
major air disaster In the history of
that continued for about :a! minutes.
this tiny grandduchyofabout:.&gt;,IXXl,
Ah]Jort officials saJd the alrcrafl
surrounded by Belgium, West Ger·
landed at 8:23 p.m. (4:23 p.m.
many and France.

~~:::::h~-:~:~~~

' '

TALL- Tills has been a big year In Meigs Comity for sunDowers.
• Homer and Belva WWard of former Roote 33 near Pomeroy
pic: lured with taD plants which they grew thls summer.

Wid,Woofl

! The Gallipolis savings and ~

'

u..,.1),

!&gt; •MASON •- lfhe Mas6n County
Regional state FamfMuseum will
spoasor Its Fourth Annual Country
Festival and AJitlque Steam and
Gas Engine Show on saturday and
Sunday, Oct. 2-3.
• Aia added attraction at ihlsyear's
):wntry festival Is the Wood Fair
lovhlch Is being sponsored by IlK!
·'fest Vlrglnl8' University· .E xtenk\On Service and Mason County bu·
S)nesses. The Wood Fair will have
~moostratiOIIII and exhibits, both
!-'qmrnel'!;lal and l'duoatlonal. Wllll·
l!mson J&gt;apet Company will spon·
IKir a c~ cu,l saw.contest which Is
1
~ to anyonewhowlShestoenter
tile competition..
·
·!,:,There 1~ also be exhibits of
SllWB, fl,reWoods, stoves and heat.
I!TS,
splitters.
. The antique engine sllQw features
steam 'engi!)es, one cylinder en~ and a fiUmtie of old tractors.
Mosto(theenglnes will be In opera~&lt;?n durlqg ~ show. ' ·

I

'I'Ol'r " F. ,. tra Touc:h"
Florist Since 19S7 l

lty for lmmrolate sattsfaetlon from
work done. In a world comprised of
machines, numbers and computers, the personal aspect of something totally yours Ill design and
constru~tlon adds appeal, states ·

The Daily Sentinel PGge 9

gas engine
:.~ho~ set O.et.:,2 -3 in Mason County 'Live burial' suspect arrested

Mrs. Stoll.
Since people don't come In per.'
feet standard sizes, home sewtDg ,
provides for Individual differences: ;
Home sewers easlly adjust for long
arms, short waists, narrow
shoulders and wide hips. Achieve'
clothing tailored to your Individual''
figure through home ~- w~
fitting clothes help you present a'
Image to look ybwl best.
•
CooPerative Extension· Invites ,
consumers to dlscovl!r or reclW
CQVer sewing for enJorment, sav-,
lngs and ~t. National Home Sewing
Month will be the perfect Jmrlth !IS
local stores offer specllll 1prorOO-.
to new, renewro and avid;
SI!Wers.

~
,

•

~~ual country festival,

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lr~·

cur-

TOPS 1456

Ruth Dugan was presentro a
cash gift and ribbon for losing the
most weight during the last meet-'
lng of TOPS 1456, Rutland. Runner_up was Sandy Sargent. Marcia
Elliott presldro at the meeting. A
CPR course was startro and will
continue under the direction of
Janet Bolln. IrUormatlon on the
club may be obtalnro . by ealling
742-2233.

(AP)-..,.. A~
with T1 peQple aboard
a runway at Luxem,
airport Wednesday,
. Into a grove of trees and .
'!'to ~- Police aald as '·
~ny .u ~ were killed,and
l .we others ~ . bu'ns and ·

Ll1XEMBouRG

viet

Bowen and Mona,~.~ Vlntoq
- Melissa Beckley ~ ~
Johnson. Sixteen are h'om o~
Ohio counties: Tania Bichsel
(Highland) . RebecCa Bowman
(Pike), Caml Carnes; (Miami),
Bonnie Conley (Lawrence), Rebecea Durham (Scioto) , Laura Eg-,
bert (Scioto), Debbie ,Hammann
(Huron), Teresa King (Scioto),
Karla Miller Lester (Franklin) ;
Melissa Mellott (Se~a) , Da~
Newlun (RDss ), Recea~ (Sci·
oto) , VIcki Shreve (ROss), Jackie,
Tagg (Pickaway) , Usa Weaver
(Pike), Dianne White (Knox).
,
Two students from West VIrginia
are new In the program,p ebor!lh,
Siders of Henderson, lind Krls\ll
Wedge of Letart. ·
'
New additions to the nursing traculty this year are Nancy·Gooldln
of Gallipolis, Donna Dlxorrof Ham:
don, and Gloria Young of Galllpolls.
The Nursing PrOgram at Rio
Grande consists of a two-year
rlculum for the preparation of reg~
lstered nurses with em~ op
giving direct nursing care to 118·
!Ients within a stnJctured health'
care Sl!ttlng where superviSIOn and'
guidance are avallable. The nurs· •
lng curriculum provides both gen.:
e r a I education and nursing ·
roucatlon courses.

Style show slated for Sunday

,.

l 0 die i:ri Soviet crash·

• •j

Rio Grande College and Com·
munlty Colege • Holzer School of
Nursing openro Its third year recently with 52 first-year students
enrolling 1n the program.
According to Janet M. Byers,
dean of the School of Nuslng, the
number of freshmen In the program matches last year's enrollement for new students. She said
there are 86 students overall In the
nursing departl)lent.
Tlletl\jrdcjass In the nursing program will lnclusle a cross section of
penons vat:Yfng In age and experlence. 'lbe overall program will
have four men enrolled In 1982-83.
Tile students represent a number
of Ohio counties, Including the following: Gallla ·- Marge Adkins,
Melinda Board, Andrea Cook,
Breitda Craigo, Jane Dalley,
Brenda Pavls, Sharrl Dixon,
Christl Fellure, Jerry Gooldln,
~ryl Hardyman, Unclnda Denlse HolungShead, Nancy Levernler, Lori Preston, Rhonda Pushkar,
VIcki Rhoads, Susan• Roush, Natalle Shong, and Kim Stout; Jackson - Stella Bachtel Patricia
'
Eggers, Michael
Hughes, Dawn
Landrum, Re'becca Leiterman,
Sharllyn Mlller, Mary Jane Payne,
Nora Ramsey, Heidi Simpson,
· David Stiffler, Susan Warning, and
Katherine White; Meigs- Carolyn

.

'Thunday, Sepl81i. ..30. 1982

.' Only . .$350 '

,VILLAGE ·PHARMACY
, Pti. -992·6689
• t -f (

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"
ao,1982r

,

Ohio

10-The

'f

Revival services
planned at Syracuse
John (Dick ) Sauvage, LeSage, W.

va. will be the evangellstforrevlval
services to be held at the Asbury
United ' Methodist Church In Syracuse, Oct.. 3-7,7 p.m . each evening.
The speelal singers each evening
wlll beGospelCrownSingersotLeSage on Sunday, the Angela Ires of
Sugar Grove on Monday, Dennis
Moore, Judy Pape, KeMy Wlgg1nS
and Mary Bentz on Tuesday. the
Syracuse C harge choir and John Llsle on Wednesday. Sunrtseon Thursday. Rose Ann and Roy Jenkins and
daughters a nd Betty Blackwood on
Friday, and the Gospel Tones on
SaturdaY
Tonight a special prayer meeting
will be held at the church to kickoff
the revival services. The Ambassa·
dors will have the message In song.
Bill Amott will be the leader.
At the revival services a nursery
will be provided. The public Is
Invited.

units' Wednesday, the

cal
M!!lgs
County Emergency Medical· Ser- ·
vice reports. At 8:44 a .m . Ru\llwd 1
took Gary Halxson from Meigs
Mine 1 to O'BleliESS HOspital;
TupPers Planms at 3: CTI took EstU
McGill to Camden Clark Hospital
and Rutland at 9: 25p.m. took Luzon
McQuaid from Meigs Mine 1 to
Holzer Medical Cenlel'.

Wreath demonstration
planned at garden meet
The Middleport Garden Club will
meet at 7:ll p.m. Monday at the
home of Mrs. David Bowen In Syracuse. Hostesses will be Mrs. Bowen
and Mrs. Fred Kessinger and for the
program Mrs. John Redovtan will
demonstrate making wreaths using
grape vines and corn huskS . Program bookS for 1982-83 will be
distributed.

I

Three calls were answered by lo-

"I had the time of my life."
This was one of many comments
made by Major Glenna Rummel
(R ), retired, Salvation Army, when
she returned to her Meigs County
home Wednesday from a trtp to
Bombay and Calcutta, Indta.
Major Rummel attended theCen·
teMial Congress of the Salvation
Army held In Bombay and then traveled k&gt;Calcutta whereshewassta·
tloned 'as a missionary for five
years.
Residents contrtwted funds for
Major Rummel to make her return
trtp to India and Rummel was ex·
tremely pleased to learn upon her
arrival homethatresldentshadcontrtbuted more than enough to payoff
a $500 riote which was signed In
orderforhertohaveenoughfllndsto
make the trtp.
"I just want to thank everyone. I
am overwhelmed," Major Rummel
commented.

Fire damages home
The upstairs of the Richard Gilkey residence, 269 N. Third ~ve.,
Middleport, was e&gt;&lt;tenslvely damaged by ftreon Wednesday. Middleport firemen were on the scene two
hOurs battling the fire which started
In an upstairs bedroom. There was
alsO smoke and water damage.
Cause of the blaze was electrical,
!tremen reports.

r

.The annual-tall festival Of tile Por-

tllbid

E;lementarY School will be
held trom4 to9p.m . SatUrday under
the sponsorship of ihe Portland

PI'O.
I'!fuslc

f,

.

CANDLELIGHT ~~~
!!etv,{een.Cheshire.l,
Middleport, Ohio

Mr.Janeywastakentoveterans Memorial Hospital. where he
was
dead upon arrival,
bytheRutlandEmergencySquad.
He was bornJullE'2G,19001nPolnt
Pleasant, W. Va., a son of Dallas R.
and Dorothy Bertha Brewer Jl\lley
of Langsville. He was married on
Jan. 10, 1981 to Brenda K. WUilams
Janey. Surviving besides his parents and his wUe are four sisters,
Mary Faye Crisp, Langsville; [)e.
bra L. Blevins and Joyce A. Janey,
both of Columbus, and Klmberly D.
Janey, at home, and a brother, Paul
Jay Janey, at home.
Mr. Janey was employed as alaboratory technician with theAmerl·
can Electric Power Co.
Services will be held at 11 a .m.
Saturday at the Langsville Christian Church with the Rev . Gene
Musser officiating. Burtal will be In
the Salem Center Cemetery.
FrtendsmaycallattheHunterFuneral Home-In Rutland trom2to4 and
7 to 9 p .m . Friday.

Also surviving are the paternal
grandmother, Mrs. Bertha Janey
and the maternal grandmother,
Mrs. Margaret Brewer.

PRESENTS
11NL-Ia4ioo """
AltllriOU .......... flo4.-l)OIIIRI&amp;M
!II ~e. II '•k•

ill"* '-·

Dedication ~unday
Dedlcatlon.qll!!l house of POI'I'leroy's new city hall buDding set for
Sunday, Oct. 3, has been cancelled.

Communion service
The sacrament of Holy CommunIon will be given at the Trtntty
Church Sunday, Oct. 3, In observance of World Wide Communion.

Thomas R. (Jack) Cowie, 72,
former Meigs County resident and
newspaperman, died Wednesday at
Riverside Methodist Hospital In
Columbus.
Mr. Cowie was formerly· on the
editorial staff of The Dally Sentinel.
More recently he had been a reporter for The Columbus Dispatch
primarily covering statehouse activities. He also did public relations
work for the Department of Public
Transportation, State of Ohio. He
was preceded In death by his first
wUe, Louise Burford Cowie of
Middleport.
Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth;
a daughter and son-In-law, Cathy

I

• auut Garaoes"

C1ll lor free siding
esllm•tts, 949·2101 oo"
949·2160.
No sund1y Colis

HOOKUPS

IIISUIEO

3·11 -tlc

FltEE ESTIMAltS

and daughlel'-ln-laW, Robert
and Constance Lynch, Columbus.
Services will be held at 12 noon
Friday at the Schoedlnger Northwest Chaptel, 17~ ZolJinger Road,
wheretrtend&lt;lmaycallfromlla.m.
Friday untU time of services . In Ueu
of tlowers trlends may contrtwte to
the Columbus Cancer CBnlc or the
American Heart Association In his
memory.

KEN'S

•

We will M
or
BEAT any teo1t1m1te
price you receive on
anv new piano or

• wuhera
• Dishwuhers
• Rlntes • Rolriter•t-

orga~RUNICARDI

ors '

MUSIC CO.
61 court St.
G1ilipolis
Ph. 444-0617
9-16·1 mo.

son

• Dryers • Freezers
PARTSind

S&amp;W
GUNSMITHING

Public Notice

Flanders, VelmaSmithandGlenna
Grim.

"""" reslMr. Flanders Was a life Nl'6
dent of Guysville. He was a tariner
and aU S mall carrier In the Rt 1
' '
· '
Guysville area untU he retired In
Aprll of this year aflel' 45 years of
service. He was a Lodl Township
clerk for many years, a member of
the AUred United Methodist Church

AND CUSfOIIIZIIIG
PH. 992-765&amp;
Rtt-Biue and Rtt-Finish
Restock, Parts, Etc.

STUAIT WAYIIE
PULUIIS
HUNTING &amp; TRAPPING

SUPPUES

9· 1·1 mo.

· ~~"' '" "" '~"''

I

"" ' ~"' "

........
'"""''""
. ,.. ... .. ......,,,
... _,..................
~

....
'n,._,,.l
""·-·o--··

ll ...................... ,.

where he taught classes and was

l l ...............
~.

. ~

-~

\ •1&lt;

~~.

_ aasjalll'
='

~

t!m:- -

11 ,.~.,w""'""

111•""'' ............

-

~~·-··
::~=~:;.:::r.:..

,,..,
.....
....... I&lt;'CIIOIMI

!lRH"' IY &amp; CI " - "

11.._.., ..
IJ-·'*-'"'l.o'
•
....... ...,h..
~­

u~

Just•s. Oott•e

FIREPLACES
&amp;
CHIMNEYS

L Jus11s." aka.

Dotlle Lou Justos and John

Doe. Unkno'Ml Spouse 11 any
ot Dollie l ~usiiS. aka. L&gt;onoe

Jusus. aka. Dollie l ou JustiS.

•

have or cla1m to have an lnter-

Iores Jeanne Flanders, Guysville;
daughter and son-In-law, Kathleen
and Ben JackSon, Reynoldsburg;
fivegrandchlldren, LYMe,Timand
Todd Flanders and Tammy and

eSI on 1he fotlow•ng descnbed
real esoate
REAL ESTATE
DESCRIPTION
SITUATED IN THE Townsh1p
of CheSler. COUNlY OF Meogs
IN THE STATE OF OHIO. AND
DESC RIBED AS FOllOWS '
TRACT ONE

Doug Jackson; iwo sisters, Ethel
Burson, Athens, and Opal McNall,

Ft • W ayne, lnd·

Bemg 1n Sect1on 36 and be:
gonn1ng at the SouthweSI .

Funeral services will be held Sat·
urday at 1 p.m. at the Hughes Fun·
eral Home,168MorrtsAve.,Athens,
with the Rev. Herbert Householder
- . Rich d Tho
..,
and the n
'"'" ·
ar
mas Ou•·
elating. Burial will be In the Asbury
Cemetery, Guysv ille. Friends may
call at the funeral homeafter2p.m.
on Friday.

corner ot a 27 acre tracl of real
eSiate conveyed to Rov H
Pooler and t 1s1e J Pooler by
deed dated June B 19~ 1 and
1ecorded 1n Volume 166. page
379 . Me1gs· Co un1y Deed Records. reference 10 wh1ch ''
hereby made. ohence Nonh
396 teet thence East 330 teet
ohence Soulh 396 feet to the
ce nter of the 8ubhc road.
lhence West 33 Ieel IO the

PHONE 992·2156

~~

~-

BUILT AND
REWORKED

n loh6. ·~~~-

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

&lt;I"..............
"-"-'"~""'
&lt;Jf_. . . .....

.....'''"'"·-·-·
....
" .,~·-·...... ,.. ....

·~

,....

.......
_..
••o.n.t•"-

.-JhUUI....
Nf'"'ff&lt;.... _.,,_,._

., ..... f ...- •
u"'...,
.........

c .....

Custom kitchens 1nd
b1throoms. RemCHielin&amp;.
1dd-ons, new - homes,
plumbinc. electric, sidinc.

Pomeroy, OhiO

u ..... .. .........

IIUIII'OI''" '

NATIONAL FLOOD
INSURANCE
PROGRAM

~Detorminollionl

AGENCY: FEMA.
ACTION: Prep- Nte.
SUMMARY:

Techn1cat 1nfo rma t1 0n or
commen ts are sollc1ted on the
p1 oposed base 11 00 -yearl
flood elevat1ons l1sted below for
s~o tec ted locat 1ons · ~ n the nat1on

These base I100-year) fl ood
elevatiOns are the bas1s for the
flood pla1n management measures that the community IS reQUifed to either adopt or show
ev1dence of be1ng already 1n effect m order to qualify or rema 1n
qual1l1ed for part1C1pat1on 1n the
Nat1onal Flood Insurance Pro-

gram iNFIP)
DATES:

The penod for comment Wtll
be n1nety (901 days lottow1ng

the second publ1cat10n of th is
proposed rule 1n a newspaper
of local C1rculat1on 1n each
commun1tv.

Washongton. D.C 2047·2
SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION: .
The Fe deral Emergency Management Agency g1ves not1ce
the proposed determln&amp;tlons

or

of base I100-year) flood eleva-

tiOns lor selected locations 1n
the nation. m accordance w1th
secuon 110 of th e Flood Disaster Protect1on Act of 1973

!Pub L. 93-234), B7 Slat. 980.
wh1ch added secuon 1363 to
the National Flood Insurance

Act of 1968 (Totle XIII of lhe
Housmg and Urban Develop-

menl Act of 1968 !Pub L 90448). 42 u.s.c 400 t -4128.
and 44 CFR Part 67 4 lal
These elevations, , together

,...,h the flood ptatn m.anaoe-

ment measures requ~red by
sect1on 60 3' of the program
regulat1ons. are the m1nirnum
t~at are reqUired They should
not be construed to mean the
co,mmumty ~ust change any
ex1st1ng ord1nances that are
more stnn{Jent ir'l thelf flood
pla1n management requ~re~

meniS. The community may at
any t1me enact str~cttr ~equlre­
ments on 1ts own. of pursuant

10 POiicoes establoshed by other
Federal. Slate or .Reoional enti·
FOR FURTHER IN~ORMA­ lies These P&lt;OilOsed'lllrNat10ns
wilt also be 4Sed •tO calculatt
TION CONTACT:
oho appropnate ltood insU.anc,
Mr. Robert G Chappell
National Flood Insurance premium rates for new buildmgs and tHeir contents ohd for
Program
the second IJIVIIr of insurance
i2P?I ? 87 -0230
· Fede1at 6morgencv Manage· 9n eXIsting b"'ld'n~s •rill lhtlr .
contents·
mont Agency
'
Purs,uant to the proyislons pf

)o o...

Public Notice ·

that the (proposed) flood eleva-

t1on determinations, 1f promulgated. Will not have a S1Qn1f1cant
economiC 1mpact on a substan t1al number of small entlttes. A
flood elevat1on determ1nat1on

under sectoon 1363 forms the

...

sate of s01d real estate. and that
proceeds of saod sale be
apploed to the payment of plaon·
toH s ctaomonthe properordel'&lt;lt
ots / roonty and. for such other
an fu nher relief as IS lUSt and
eQUitable.
The defendonts nomad

~~

Source of Floodmg - Oh10
A1ver. .LocatiOn - About 700
feet upstream of confluence
w1th Rose Cr9Eik Depth 1n feet
above grou~d x- Elevat1on 1n

teet tNGVD 500-x

on
"" before
the 1tlth day of
above'
are reqund
November.
1ga 2 to aoswer
F11st Family Mortgage
Corpor~uon
BY CARLISLE. BIAGE .
McNElUE AND RINI

·

Source of Floodmg - Oh10.
Loc at1on - About 3 2 m11es upstream of confluence w1th Rose
Creek. Depth 1n feet above
ground x-Eievat 1on 1n feet

tNGVD) _ 581 -x

bas1s for new local ordinances.

Richard l McNelhe
Attorney for Pla1nt1ff
1001 Euchd Avenue. Sune

6

'

ogewtond: Ohio 44115 ·
1216)861 -5282
WE UNDERSTANC THAT
YOU WILL AFTER THE lAST
,DATE OF PUBLICATION. PRE~E~A~~M
CLERK OF THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT. AN AFFIDAVIT
OF
SUCH'PLEASE
SERVICE FORWARD
BY PUIIUCATION

' Maps ava1 lable for1nspect1bn

whoch. 1f adopted by • local • at the V11tage Hall. State Route
commumty. w1ll govern future 124. Syracuse. OhiO Send
construction w1thin the flood, comments 10 Honorable Eber
pla1n area. The etevauon,deter- ,Pd:ens, Mayor V1ll~e of Syram1nat1ons however 1m pose no 'C,use. V1llege Hall. State Route
restrictiOn unless and unul the l 24, Syracuse. Qh 1o 45779
local commun1tv votuntanty

adopts flood plaon ordtnances

m accord With these elevations

'. 191 23. 30. 2tc

=
•
*

.jff .

Even '' 01d1nances are adopted
, In M•-riem
m
compliance
with
Federal
~ii-~·~·-~~==;
standords. the etevat1ons pres·
•
cribe how h1gh to build on the
!1
,Of,
flood pte on and do not pros·
cribe development Thus. this . , . ;
~ ~;· ~
act1on only forms the basis for
Y
~~
future local actions. It 1mposed
•
1111
4
no new reqwements: of otsetf it
ll Atllilt . ....... 1 aaittlt

1

LEGAL NOTICE OF SERVICE BY
PUBliCATION IN THE ABOVE
TO
US A COPYMAT,TER
OF 'THE FIRST
CAPTIONED
FOR
OUR RECORDS

7

191 16. 23.30 110) 7, 14. 21 .
6tc
•

a

has no econom1C i m~.
.

•

·Lill·of·ln44CAII'Irt

17,

o

(JI I w.

I

••

'Tha proPOsed ba!l« 1100·
year) flood e!e'!llions for .sa·
lected locatlotis lito: " ·
PtOP,Oied Base (1 OO·voar)
FlOod Elevations
· •·
State· Oh1o
Village: Votlage of Syracuse .
County Me1gs Counrv

\

'

t

· illltll lllr ....., ,. .
...

Flood ineunnce.

~

._

~

I

ni. ... ..;lllt._'

att:,

i

- . . ..- '~
·
· ' ,_.,., ... ,. """"• ·
. , W.
· ·.
11t1lr fllllld !ly 't ' d,

Ellllr;

M. .Iaiii. lllallill

ud

l1111rtt,

8foN:Ut•.

of any liens, and the

t~e

Public Notice

5 USC 605tbl. the Assocoale

D1rector. to whom authontV has
been delega1ed by the D~rector,
Federal Emergency M anagement AgencY. hereby certifies

shalhng

*'•

..... ....

u4

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

·

PH • 992·5612
or992·7121
.
3-2Hfc

11...----..:....----'

tAppi1C3t 1on

•

t l~., t~r

Wat.r,Sewtn.P0118

: Real Eotate - General

Phon·e 949-2293
or 949-2575
8-J0-1 mo.

9-17 -2 mo Pd

THE

' I

KOUNTRYKWB

CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY

I
I

REALTY
S. Hobstetler, Jr.
Broker
Office Ph. 742-2003

ICEW

4-

S27.!XXl.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

lirge esta1e situMI on apprux.
3 acres in Pomeroy is an execUtive style home. Many elegant
f~tulllS. Terms available. Call
RIITIAIID - 3 bed1110m
fiame home situated on mce
level kt Full basement and carl¢, look at litis home It
~

SAI.f$ &amp; SERVICE·
u.s: ~t. so EISt

~·20· tfc

1

1

I

of only $12,500. Excel~ terms avliilible.
"EW umNG "- One acre lot
l4ith 3 or 4 bedruom double
~tie. 2 baltts. Needs 1D be parli!llly completed. Won11ast long
• $10,500,
NEW LISTING -3 bedruom
dlublewide with 2 baths. Natu~1 gas and ~qter avaiable. On
!J!4l acre lot wiJh se,mt. DAy
$9.500.00.
Velma NiCIOSky, ASSOC.

Phone 742-3092
C:heryl Lemley, Assoc.
•· Phone 742-3171

fOR SALE
992-....
3
~. .

USED

MOBILE HOMES

Rf!Bl Esteta •

er

Ceramic B~ue '

Teach~rs, '

•

's
Leaden and Ortlailila-'

tions,

BROWN'S
Trat'ler Park

Take A L,ook At
,Package Rfa fs . •
counts Ava liable. ·

H

CALL or STOP IN
TO SIGN UP.
SALE ON
ORN/lMENTS

It 124
liotrsvillt, 011.
PM. 9t2-3324
,9·29-1 mo '

J&amp; L DI,OWN
INSULATION ,·,'
.

tl~eSQmDoon

.

~~~~

' ..,......
t

.

James Kr11•1
Ph. 992-2772

fr~~~;;~~~il~~=~~~i~~~~~~~~~$,~
$&amp;W JV

Port Terrier-part Poodle,
white. fem1te dog. Coli 446ono.
- - - - - - -··IC2 nioo lont hoired block end
white puppin. 10 weeko
old. Port Engildh She;!p dog.
814-992-6000.
\

Write your own ad and order oy mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad bV phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

Name ____________________

I

4nven week old kitteno. litttl t11ined. uoed to being
handled. 2 yellow mateo. 1
yollow a 1 gray female.
814·992-2249.

Near Hanison·
~ 66 acres lena!d and open
liJrlease on hltd road. ·
'1• .
jWlGIUN ..:;: 2 hou!es with

only"

. Wiler

Spring

Vtlloy.

I &gt;Wanted
1 &gt;For Sale
I )Announcement
&lt; &gt;For Rent
1.

17.
18.
19,
20. _ __ __

2.
3.

21.-----22. _ _ _ _ __

4, _ _ _ _ __

5. ---;c--,---,-

6. _ _ _ _ _

~

7. -.......:.--,---

8. - - - - - : : - - -

. 9. _ _ _ _ __
10., _..,..:,_ _ _ _

11. --::--..,---'&lt;~12.
13.

1~.
15~

23.

.

2~.

coverage in G1ltio County
for almoat a c:entury. Farm,

home 1nd peroon1l property
coveragea ere IYIIIable to

meet indivlduof needo. Con·
tact Foltll' L-il. •gent.
Phone 378-2204.

- h tubl. Thlo Thu•o.. Fr~
dey a 81turd1y. 13Z Butter·
nut. 1'1111'. Po,.,oy, Oh.
Fiolt tlmt y1rd Mle. S•t., 9
a.m. Upper Lourai Cliff Rd ..
Po,.,oy. Kitchen cobinlt.
ru(ll, -tort! llll'ge itemo.

•

Mobile Home lneuranc•·

. "lltelryau're JOOdlooking."

•

French City Mobile Homelnourlnce Agoncy . C1ll
44e-9340.

1.- ---------

ThUtl. 6 Fri. 2 mi. N. of
Cheoter on At. 7 . Good clothing, dtlpll. dioheo. 1 Utile
of everything. Y'oll comet.
- - - - - - - - · i c64824 SR . ea1 Roedovilo.
Oct. 1 a 2 . Noon till dotk.
Clothing, kitchenware. oppttlncea a mioc.

11 Help Wanted
---------Par1 time take Inventory In
local stores. Car neceeury
Write phone number, expe·

rlenco to: ICC 468, Box
&amp;27, P1remuo, NJ 078&amp;2.

YARD SALE S1t., Oct. 2. 9 7, Atheno Rood. Pomeroy. Lldv to live in port time with
Baby Clr oeot, high ch1ir . Mmi inv11id female. Colt
walkar. crib, other misc.
1114-387-7124, 814-387·
7646. 814·992-3680. 01
Corport nle-918 S . 3rd . e14-992-6703,
Middleport-Soturdov. Oct.
2. Moftd1y. Oct.4- 10 to 4. Looking for 1mbltiouo oelfmotlvattd penon who
Llat •le of the y11r. 810 S . wants to go to Tha Top, Be
2nd. Middleport. October 1 linlnCIIIIY lndepent. C1tt
thru 9. Bedding, tlneno. fur- 44e-4273 ofter 6:00PM.
niture, avon, lampa, toola,
toyt, drepM, C:urtelna. mite. Day ' program lnatructor
Behind Ucen.. Bureau In
Pomeroy. Friday • Satur·
day. Coats. jeana, curtelna,

a

Y1rd a Moving S•le It Chi- gla11wara.
till Grlfll1h. Ewtngton. Oct.
1-2, 9 til 8. Uving OOOm IU· G•r•u• S111. 299 Wright
Ito. ond t1bleo. coffe t1ble• St., Pomeroy. Oct. 1 &amp; 2 .
Iota of winter clothea, Kero- B-1.
oene hell•. Loti of mloc.
Chtrtn Knight taoldence.
Come R1ln 01 Shine. 2 D1y1 Chooter, Oh. Sot .. Oct. 2, 9 Only. Garoge Sole , 9 to I. 3.
October 2·3. Sot. 1nd Sun.
Rodney VIllage II, follow 6 I emily. Mopf-ood Lake.
llgno. Childton to tdulto Racine, Oh. Oct. 1 a 2 .
clothn, fireplace accHto· Tooto. · •
till. typewrher, furniture,
air-conditioner, Aterl geme Fri. 1nd Sot. 10 to 1Tupper1
oy111em with 8 certridgn in- Ptoln. Rt. 7 . Kido ctotheo,
cluding Pee Man and much mlac. merch1ndl1e. Third
much mora.
houn below ceution light

nHded by agency aerving
mentally retarded adults
with behavorial diaordera .

Ruponoibilitleo include
tttchfng cliento AOL okilto,
prwocotionol okilto, vocotlonal t11ka and developing

4 Fomlly Gltfll Solo, 111 oizeo 8 ond 12. &amp;09 29th
Tlmt in 2 yro. Fridoy a Sat- Street
urday, Oct. 1 and 2. From
9 -5. 2 mllu north 1 eo from 2 Femily yard sale at Hickory
Holzer hoapital , Monica Hilla E111ato. Rt . 2, Point
Adom·.
Pleasant. Oct. 1-2

Yord Sole Fri ond Sot. Oct.
1 a. 2. Old Rt. 180, Porter
Oh. Roin or Shino. 6 miteo
from

Holzer.

wetch

for

neme. turn left
brown house.

U,.t and Found

29.~---~

30. _ _ _ ___;

LOIT long hllo~~toy oat In
Kerr - · Cell
-~711.

31. - - - - - 32.

LOIT White PoOdlte ,..,...,
named ~. !.at In vlnofnlly of Woooten'i Treifer

33. ·--..,~':-''--:::-r-

Court, ,..._

"''·Alfred

~- oWI-1024. 1100
~

34.

"· Mall Tllll Coupon w~tit -R~em..,.
, -:tc:-:n·.-nc-.~~

...

tloll oooo.:-nd, ....
At. 12 an.
IIHII. Atrr lnformetlon ...U
104-171-1131 or 171IJ77.AeUorH-orfeeye
~II~S~U~I~I~I·:__ _;_~·~-

-

I

•

kinda , call Kenneth Swain,

448-3159 or 2&amp;6-1967 in

Yord Sole Oct. 4 . Cornto of
3rd. &amp; Olivo St .. Galfipolia .
Jeans. clothn and many
other miec . household

itemo. 9 to 4.

Yord Sole 2 doyo only Sot.
1nd Monday. Pool tablaa.

LOBT Brown min1ture Docohund, 2 ..Ollar 1nd Ug. Loot
In viliclnity of Raybum Rd.
- · "EWAAD 11711·8898.

2 8 . - - , - -- -

:1.4 mile,

winter

Buying Gold. Silver, Plati-

Previous related 1.11perlenca

opeciol needo people a
mull. •10.000 per yatr M·

w~h

lary wh:h liJOOd benefite.
Health and dental Insurance
availeble. If intereated aend
reaume to Ohio Residential

Servlceo. Inc .. ATTN Day
Program Coordinator, Rt. 1

clotheo. 270 Jockoon Pike .

Bill Gene Johnoon
446-0069

C1rport Slit 117 Woodland
Dr., Goltipolio. Sat. 9-6. '5
FomUieo. Loto of goodieo.

Standing timber. Call 614388-9908.

G1rago S1il Fri. Oct. I
8AM·8PM . GIIIIW118.
dloheo. dothing, boyo oizo
12, mioc. ittmo, houllhold
itemo. 2 Edgemont Dr ..
G1lllpollo.

collect.

1-,-...,.--":":'--::---

formation . Equal Opportunity Employer. M-F -H.
Need baby sitter in Racine,
Mintooville oreo, 2 children ,
1 ochoot oge, 1-2 vr. old
814-949· 2624. Need im·
medietely,

JUST graduated &amp; unsure
about your future? The Welt
Virginie Army National
Guard can help you decide.

....

·--,_.;...--f!oI

.:==v!'::\:

and dapondebte. C•tf 4483159 otter &amp;PM 266-1967
Will do b•byoitting in my
home Can give references .

Coli 440·4047.
Wanted to do, winter11lng
homes, mobile homea end
automobile•. free aatlmataa.

304-675-3591
Babysitting in my home
Rodney erea, 2 children of
my own. can give r1f1rence.

Call 614 ·24&amp;-9262 after
IIPM .
Middle -aged lady d1airea
live-in houeekeeplng per·
aonal care type position.
Reference&amp; provided . Call

304-882-2096 or 882 2390.

21

Business
Opportunity

Garfield Ave .. Gattlpotio.
chlled . Call 446-8694 .
Own your own Jeen ·
Sportawaer, lnfant·Preteen

or Ledieo App•ret Store. Offering all nationally known
brenda such as Jordache.

Chic. Leo. Levi. Vonderbitt,
Calvin Klein, Wrangler over

200 other btondo. e?,BOO.
to e16,600 include• beginning inventory, airfare foro
ne to Fashion Center, train·
lng, fixtures, grand opening
promotiona. Call Mr, Kos-

tecky (501 I 327-8031 .

22 Money to loan
HOME lOANS 14% fixed
rete. Leader Mortgage, Ohio

only 1 -B00-341-6664,
wv•. 614 -692-30&amp;1 '
Busine11 Loan for e1 0 to
t60Thouaand. Nofrontmonev . Send lnquirea to

C.P.H.C .. Box 1 Country
l.ano. Shode, Oh 4&amp;778 .

23

Professional
Servicas

·''

cJi.L 8ookk88ping

Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
for all typea of buainenea.

Carol Noel 44e-3882
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Colt Bill Word for appointment .

Ward's

Keyboard,

448-4372.

~ ~~~~~~~~~~
31 Homes for Sale
In ground concrete pool on 2
acre lot. Aleo has 1 3 bdr, air
conditioned house with full
ba1ement, 2 WB flreplecaa.
new carpet. Would consider
lower valued property in
trade or w1ll finence with
low down payment and 10%
Interest Located 123 Gar-

We are looking for high

field Ave. Coli 448· 1646 .
teee, Rio Grande College,
Rio Grande, Ohio. House

bonus and college or VoTech 111i1tanca. Be one of

Sealed blda witt be accepted

Offered by the board otTrusknown 11 BOHN HOUSE, located at 221 Weot Cottage
St., Rio Grande, Ohio ,

Weat Virginiu beot. For In the office of the Business
more information. call 304- Manager, Allen Hall, Rio
876-3950 or toll free 1- Grande College until
2 :00PM. October 1, 1982
800-842-3619.
at which time bids will be

A non-drinking man to do
dairy work, experienced in
milking COWl 1nd running
farm machinery. Referancea

Yaod Stt!e Sot. Oct. 2, 9tli 1
410 Hldg-ood Dr.. Glllipolio. Winter outer - r . Gold. tilvll'. sterling. Ja·
afgh1n, clo• door. mucll welry, rin(ll. old coino a cuomore. C~oop. AlooquHt. Colt roncy. Ed Buritm Blrbor RN IYoii•ble lor quoiified
448-3891.
Shop, Middleport. 892- dependable c:hild coro. Sole.
inotl!lCtlw play tituotlon.
f...-~------ 3478.
RteeOIIIIbfe rlteo. Raflll'en3 F1mily Y1od lela off At. 7
coe. CIII448-2B81 .
on Geoogee Crllll Ad. Firot
tnilar lifter railrold triCk. Old furniture, giuo a c:hln1.
Firlt Oftl thio yell'. Fridoy a Clocb, phoneo, f1n1, qulhl, Tree trimming a remove!.
llturday. 1 Ill dllk.
paintln(ll, beeketo, benko, 814·949-2129 or 8141
912· 8040.
coin
oil • ttlectric:
Gll'llfll Bile Fridoy • laturWill do bebytitting in my
doy 10:00-4:30. Clothing,
home. C1fl 814-8,1-2738.
mite. hou11hold ilame.
• cardl,
-··
marbtee,
Krllti Drive off 311 Weet ltnivee
beee-IMII
incl.,
lrti- • from Gllfil Auto fecto. I comic booko, poot Room, ~d 1nd ilundry.
C8tdo, pocket -tcheo. gold Udiea only. 614-gl2-11022
b--'-:.....__ _ _...:, a ohar. Ooby Menin. 814- or 814-992-8748.
VAliD iALE, Set.. oct. 2, 812-1370.
.
Will do bellvelttfnt in my
10 a .m. R - Hill. Sponhome. Mon.-Fri. DIY lllift. 1
-ad by t!nt_.. UM ~. LoCII Buyer. 1· .child.
114-g12-3724.
.
304-7.-z-21111.
Youtll Group."

~-=:-

General Hauling end Treah
removel Service Relleble

achool aeniora &amp; graduet11
to trein in communicatione,
adminietretion, 1upply, me·
chanice.
meny other

BEDS-IRON , BRASS, old
fumituro. gold, oliver dol-. required. reply c-o Box B2B.
lera, wood i~e boxes, atone Point Pleuont Aeglttor,
jlrl, lntiqueo, etc .. · Com· Point Plotsent, WV 25560.
ptote houooholdo. Write:
M.D. Millar. Rt. 4. Pomeroy.
Oh. 'Or 992-n8o.
12 ' Situations
Wantad

mac:hl-.

18 Wanted to Do

a.

oupptleo lor Mle. Spring Volley Ttoding Co .. Spring Volley Plozo. 446-8026 or
e.
448-8026.
fieldo. If you qu1ilty you may
be eligible lot on enliatmont
We pay, caah for late model
clean uaea cera.
Frenc'htown Car Co.

Oh Calf 814-286·3074.

Equipment may be pur-

the eveninga .

num, old coins, scrap rings
6 silverware. Deily quotes
aveilable. Also coins • coin

defence ell private lee10n1,
Men , women,&amp;. children. In·
atruction thru black belt.
Alao available K1rate unl·
forms puchlng and kicking
bage, and protective equip·
ment . Jerry lowery 6. A110·
clatea Kerate Studio, 143
Burlington Ad , Jackaon.

QMRP tiigibttity preferred

a.

Wan1ed To Buy

·Kor1ta the ultlmote in lllf

Dairy Freeze for leaae No , 1

a.

9

Schools
lnstruc1ion

sourceful. &amp; fle~~:ible
Pr•vloua teaching ·
inatructlonalexperlenca and

Auiatant Chief Technolo·
gilt Labntory Jackson
General Hoapttal. Ripley,
W, V. is now interviewing for
an a11iatant Chief Technolo31 Burdette Addition , Point gilt for the labratory. Job
Pleaeant. Set. end Mon . will require 1billty to work in
Sweeper. TV 's and etc . all areas of the lab, achedulChildren's clothing.
ing training, a11i1t writ·
ing procedure manuala ,
maintaining quality control
8
Public Sale
record . maintenance of
equipment induding min8r. Auction
imal repair&amp;. calibration and
some weekend work. Quali Auction every Fri. night at fied penon will ha•e 2 veon
the Hertford Community of experience in a medicalle Cent•. Truckload• of new btotory. hiVe o B.S. d~gree
merchandiae avery week. in Medicol Technology
be
Conalgmentl of new and ASCP regi111ered . lntere111ad
uud merchandise alwaya
welcome. Richard Roynotdo person•
cell Pereonnel
Dept. Itmay304-372-2731
Auctioneer. 276-30119 .
Monday· friday for more in -

Yard Sale Saturday 9 -&amp;. Rt . WANTED TO BUY Old furni36 W, 2 mitoo beyond Cl- ture and Antiquea of all

Nice calico cot, 304-e7&amp;2636 .

LOST 1 Cocker Sp1niel
puppy. I moe. old, wearing a
tirown colilr. Brown whh
white mlloldng, Moweoo to
Ceooll. REWARD. C1ll 1142411-11118 or 448-8002.

25.

li-!'0!.!!!'_~ ... "":.,.. •• "!'~'--··~~·~-·"'~'~·"!'""'"-~'

Yard Sale Oct. 1. 9:30-7 V.
mile out Rt. 218 from Rt . 7.
Something fotiYeryont.

Puppieo, 304-882-3380 efter4:30.

LOST BliCk at1n fom~le
Dobtlm1n with whHe 1po1
on chest. If anvone ' " ' her
~· 814·218-1314.

.

The DIIIV Sllltlnel
l.. 111 Court St.
'Pom.,...,,OII...J76t,

Oct. 1-3 V. milo from Rod-

16

oppropri1t1 tHP'o. Apptt.
cent• muat be patient, re-

ren'a and women ' 1 clothing, Call now 814-698 -7111

Garage Sale1111. a 2nd. Oct.
Seven miloo oouth. on Rt . 7.
9AM . Ook deoh with owlvel
chair, TV with AM a FM radio a misc.

8

26. _ _ _ _ __
77. _ _ _ _ __

..

aurance Co. h11 offtred lit·
vicea for fire ineurence

r

dual

loto of children• clothing

tire1, dresser,

These cash rates
Include discount
'·

'

,\

from

3 cuddlY onow white kitten ' eizet 0 -12 yeara. lteme toi
a 3 bf1ok a. white kittent.
numeroua to name. More In814-9811-4189.
formation ooll 448-92415.

whltelomoie kitten, opp11ting to be
1bout 2 months old, to o
good home. Litter bo•
trlined, would lillke on eK.,.u.,t houoa cot. Coil 304876·11172.

ces. carpeting; 2· car gan1ges
lnd only ll yrs. old. Excellent

'
'INEIWS -

St.

oigno. Childrtno clothing

rooms (one enormous), 2~
baths. famiy room, 2 firepla-

4nd large levellot. 1ust
$27,000.

Acro11

Yord Sate Sat. Oct. 2nd ..
998 4th A•a .. Gailipollo. 9
to 4.

I
1

OUAUlY- Brlc:k.veneer w1t11
about 4,000 sq. It cowred paIJ9; landscaped Ylfd. 3 bed·

NIENT - .One lbir
peted 31J!droom home. ,
4iY uijifies, gllfl&amp;t, carport,

Gerage Sale Fri. • Set. 1()..

4, &amp;03 &amp; 60B Circle Avo.

6 kittono. 2 cotl. Coil 446334&amp;.

!

Pho"'e
614 )·9?2-3325

'

mlac.

Curb Inflation '
I
1 ·Pay Cash for
I
1 Classlfleds and
Savell I

I

•Stonn WllldOM •flrpiloeeuent W1rrrun

clothea, end

Foom 9-6, Sot. Oct. 2 .

nay on Rt. 688 9·dark. Rain
or shine. Cloth.. , miac. 8t
truck equip.

Ceil 448-40156.

Be~utiful block 1nd

NICE - 2 bedi:oom oountry
home. Bath 8lllorttatic heal,
t.P. water, pra~_ai1d 2 acres
~ han! !Oid.•~ooo.

etero,

Stbfo a White mote Collie. 3
yoo. old. To home in the
country. Ceil 446-2741 oftil 4:00PM .

I

1e1t1, old recorda,

SANDY AND BEAVER tn-

9 Wantad To Buy
S1t., Oct. 2. 9-4. RoiNn Redfood' I , Mile north loirgrondo . Old 33 . Rock W1nted 1970 to 1874 VW
engino, good cond. 446Springo. Pomeroy.
2072.
•ve .• Pome1 33 Butternut ~
Middlo-ogod lody deairoo
roy. Sept. 30 thtu Oct. 2 . II
I h
k
I
V1rd Sole Friday only. Good Btlt
Clbineu, r•naa hoodo,
vo- n ouoe top ng porwom.,. a childr., clothing . entert•lnment cent•. TV, 10n1l cere type poaitlon.
3~ miioe out180onold 180
rodio, odding mlc:hlllll, tv· Roforencn provided. Colt
It Evergreen.
,_ritar, golf ciubo a b1g, 304-8B2 -2096 or 304Chllt of dr-too, ktooMne 882-2380 ·
Porc:h a Y1rd Slle Friday htltOr, bedopottdl. KIWI·
1nd 811urdly. 930 Second 11ki 2110KX . Antlqueo a cot- Couch, will m1ko bed and
A••·· Gallipoiio. Wide ver- ltcttbltt: "blttoon bock" couch. Cheap or give away,
iety of morchondln. 9 to 4. o1k rocker, two mentle 304-675-5201 .
clocks, well olllemp with re~
Five Fomity Yood S1la Friday ftector, oigned Coke troy, Good used or new coal
October 1 from 9·8. 728 Se- depreaa&amp;on gleu. old glees. otoker, c•ll 304-882-2873 .
cond Ave.. Gllllpolio. Bid old ink wetta. big A•on
llnena, clothea, drepea, eto. collection.

Pup part Terrier, 4 mo. old.

!

Llr11 btoement ••It-Old
lurnhure, cfothea, knick·
kn1ck1, n - . oar bucket

3 F1mlly G1r1go S1l.t 334
Debby Oo .. Frld1y &amp; Soturdly, 9 to a. Girio. boyo,
merta. &amp; womens clothing,
diohtt. p1no. jewelry a
mile.

I
,----------------------~

¢ortdition

;

. . . . . Roqlng

1 young cat to give away.
2003 Golflo Avo , Gotllpolio.

VIRGIL B. SR :
il6 E. ~ftd ~t.

Come : In

LESSONS~TARTING

Ceil 448-11186.

Phone~---------------

,n

•

tumltura, mlac.

Tree cut down for wood.

Address-----------

POIIEIOY,I)IUO
Plast
C1_,.11 d

"FURNISHED"
·10' &amp; lZ' 'WIDE

992-6191
949-2660
992-5692
992-2259

A

tixlav!!!

BOGGS.
G,uysllille, Ohio
Authorized \lohn Deere, ·
Ntw ltoll1ftd, Bush H"'!·
Firm Equipment
Deller
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-3-tlc

REAL TORSI
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .• GR t .......... ....
Jean Trussett . . . .. .. ... .. .............
Dottie s. Turner . ........... . ..........
Office ...... . ............ . . .. .. . ......

,.

Ylll'd Silo 1117 1nd 1113
Sunlit D!.. GailipoHo. 81t·
urdly ltlrting &amp;AM. Toolo,
toyo. clothing men a lldieo,

1~
/r-

lnaurance

------------

1----------

avaolableo$25,000.

"RICE REDUCEDII '- On this
ltveiy 2 ~ bOCk home. This

Yard Bttle Friday C.nt.,ory
TownhOuee. lloyo ohlrtolb:e
18, bed a Vlf'lty a mloc.

3 f1mily gorlgt 1111 on Fri.,
Oct. 1 at 9 1.m. In Rultic
HMio, 8yriCUee, Oh.

~-=
LA~FF
~-A~-D~A~
Y---i t3

Bo• 7 Mill Creek Rd .. Gattipolio, Oh 46631 . ·
C1rport Sole Oct. 2, 9AM- 2 F1mlly Oct. 4 a &amp;. Fifth
4PM, 1121 Sunlit Drive.. ond Pearl. Racine. Oh
Weatern lead player
Goiitpotio. 60 pc. lit chino· Toole, bicyclee, TV. chine Country
or stMI player for 1 Country
180. 45 pc. 111 ironotono- cabinet, collector• recorda, Weotern Bond. Muot be u. *60, Croaabuck atorm guitar. amplifier. gla11w1re, tiouo. Colt 448 ·3109.
11 month ol.d Pomerrl•n door-e&amp;&amp;, sewing moohine
;holnt broken. to good end cebinet - e56, other wordrobe, youth bed, and
mlac.
Insurance Sale start up to
home. Colt 814-2&amp;6·1236.
mlac. itema
f300.00 per week, ali be·
Goroga Sato, 1304 Mea- neflta, training progrem ,
Puppieo. C•ll 676-5702.
Booement Sole Sat. Clo- dowbrook Drive. Thur., Fri. , C1tt 304-736-3433.
thing, quilting frames, youth Saturday. 9 till 1 Rott owoy
Engitoh Cocker Sfl'lnlel febox bed with dra\!Oere and beda, jeane. coats.
AVON . Need eKtro monev7
mtie. C•tl448-1741 .
mloc. itolno. Henry SkidSet your own hours. Sell
more Rt. 1eo.
Friday, Oct. 1, 10· 1. Child- Avon. tMu111 be 18 or over)

NEW UmNG - SYRACUSE - Energy efficienl2-3 bedrooms,
new carpet, remodeled bath, level lot. assumable low onteresl loan

ffuot trees. Askong only

ltKne. and~ os at an affonlable

3l y rs. f" &gt; pcroonro ·

APPlllrr:E SERVICE
•
. Cllestir. Ollio
Pii.........

- POMEROY

l'iOuld make a nice slarler

VINYL. AWMINUM SIDING

. .i .....
...,

LISTI~G

3 kitUno, wko old. 1 mole, 2
female, Jonu hair, 2 1h yr okl
dog, mole. good w~h children. 2 puppln 1 mole ond 1
ftm1te . C•ll e14-268194&amp;.

NEW umNG - POIIERCIY- Three bedroom house, two story,
fireplace, bath, gas hot water heal $8,900.

Lovely 3 or 4 bed1110m

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who hll lnything to give owoy and doeo
not offer or attempt to offer
ony other thing for Mlo moy
piece 1n 1d in thil column.
There wHI be no cherge to
the 1civerttm.

NEW LISTING- POMEROY - Six room house on lourlms, three
bed1110ms, bath, garage, gas space healers. Rental · Building~
$6,500.

4m

Betininger 1nter.
ALL AGES
TRIPS WEEKLY
Beautiful Goi.f C'"'rses :1 ,
Driving flanges .
,1 ,
Call John Teaford
Chester ~
~ 11
At so
PROSHOP
'''
CLUB RE, PA'IR
·,
Open Year Round " ·
9·10-1 mo.,J. 1

p,, doMor !·P«••·'"'

··· Pomeroy,Oii.
rh. " 2. 2174

4

NEW LISTING - POMEROY-Two story, three bedroom,storms.

horrie. Alumioom siding stonn
and wtndcws. Modem
lllchen. natural' gas furnace.
Smle furnishings. Nice lot with

'o I

FA~L GC!!-~ TO\JR

CHARLIE HATFIELD
OPERATOR
PH . 742-2'03
9·3· 1 mo. pd.

'

phone 304-87&amp;-2834 or
876·6737.

etec baseOOard heal bath. $13,900.

I

J.•A.R.

'

teinment and adml11ion.

NEW liSTING - POitiEROY - Next to nature. Oose m- ~~
acres, nice 1~ story fnlme, three bed1110ms, equopped new k~·
chen, family ruom, stnrage buoklmg gartlen space, gas hot water
heater. $29,500.

We Specialize in
Racine &amp; Syracuse
Se-r Hookups

10

Coun1ry Feotlvoi - Antique
8te1m a 011 E ngina Show.
Farm Muteum, October 2,
· 3. Apple buttto. cider. moluMa making, free enter-

NEW LISTING - RUTWD - II&gt; mry frame home with 2-3
bediOOI!IS, aluminum sidmg, woodburner set up and a garage
Mostly paneled and carpeted. $24,900.

F......... IICIMIIIIaM
"nEE ESTIMAltS"

the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

&lt;$&gt;-

608 E. MAIN

1~

NII '• HI~I .lfo'·

992-66661 · - ·

I Fimily G1r1ga Slit.
Thura.
Fri. K011Mi AHI·
•denoo, ~ mHe out Mill
Crllll. Baby heme. mite.
Cell 441-2311. .
.

Coke doconling ct111e1 8 F1mily Yotd Stle Fri. Oct.
otorting Oct. 4. Cell now lor 111 1nd Sit. Oct. 2nd. 9 -1
Information or to reglotto. Loto of good merch•ndite.
Caroue•l Confectlonery . 2nd houoe bllow A1ccoon
Middleport, Ohio .48780. Bridge on Rt. 7, South.
814-992-6342.
Gorege Solo Oct. 3rd. a 4th.
THe Moigo Co. Fioh a G1mt Huge Hlection of everyd1y
Club will hiYI regul1r meat- mloctil1noouo ond collocti·
ing S1t . Oot. 2nd ot 7 p.m. biN. 9AM till 8PM . Corner
Also a work enaion ttlrtlng of 184 ond Bidwell-Rodney
at 10 a.m. all membera
Ad in Bidwell.
ur~~ \O 1ttond.
Rummago Solo Ftidoy Oct.
PERMANENT
1-9Am to 4PM. Sot. 2nd.·
HAIR REMOVAL
9AM to 1 PM . Ablfllil Unit,
Profeuion1i Electrolyoio Gr1c1 United Methodiot
Contto. A.M.A. 1pprovld. Church, Cedar St. entrance.
Doctor reftoolo, by oppointment only . 304-676-11234. Yerd Sate 709 3rd. Ave.,
G1llipolio. Houeo llowero,

Raal Estata - Ganeral

•~~o~~~ &amp;...... Senlca,

~ m,, ll cs t

&lt;orr. tn
l arqcst 1\'adiatnr

i

19130. 1tc

CONTRACTING

COMPl F TF
l&gt;f. Dfl\ 1 Of'
•.r I&gt;Vt lf
th e

- - - NIQL.OIW COMriWt

Gun

McD1nlel Cullom ButcherIng. Welt Coiumbii,W.VA.
304·882-3224.

Limited
time
offer.

Nofsl

Recine

Club. Every Sundoy ot•nlng
1 p.m. Fectory chokld guno
only.

and
BELOW MARKET INTEREST RATES
coutd SAVE you up to $1000
or more on homes currently
financed at DlamQ[ld Savings.

l Rutland. OH. Eflect1ve dale
o.-24-82

~:::=:;;;;:;:;::==~;~~=E~~~=;t:::::::::!~~~~;
f r f' m

Gun ahoot,

NO CLOSING POINTS

oq53000023 B002

'3,000 to S4,500

Also Transmission

Blended Rate Program

u ~r eme nt s

tJ

ate or be forever barred from

Golf Llooona. John Tttlord.
Chntor. Ohio.

lnal ISSuance of not1ce of
reg1strauon
ttotumb1a Gas TransmiSSIOn
Corp, Rutland
Twp Ad 102

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Pit. 742-2134 or IM9-2160

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH ·

.. '

ML

TOM HOSKINS

GARAGE

Announcement•

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

ESTIMATES

II '·
Rncrer
U..a
-a IIJilfi

3

Belloono foo Birthd1y1, Get
Wttllo. Annivtonrioo, 8wthearto or Ponioe . Ctll 1•1toono 1nd Co., 448·4313.

II!

FREE

,~

(Also Silt II Chlunce;. OH., Gddtn Wiltp C8 Club Houso
Fridly E~is., 7:00 P.tl.

Meigs Co.-$31 .00 Ton
!Plus Delivery)
·
4 Ton Minimum
~
C.O. D.
PH . 992·2280 or
992-2618
"'

II,___.__.....;!;]U!U.

assertmgthesame. forforectosure ol said mortgage the ma1-

llllt

_,_,

·--~-

"'forluw

Public N otic a

Tho plamtoff demands that
be requ~red to answer and set
up 1he1r 1nterest 1n s01d realest-

~- -

.,., .. , _ . .

,

9-IS-1 mo

And Home M1intenance
• Roofing otatl types
.Sidint ,
• Remodeling
• Firee tstim1tts
ezo Yrs. experience

PH. 992-6011

the defendants named above

·~

""''""- o-w-... -·~ .. u_.. ,......, .. , - · -

Route 1
Long Bottom. Oh. 45743
9U-419l
·

eGas

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

come ab solute

...
.,~"­

~­

.,_...
.................
.,,.,_....,l

Ul• ....... •

.. M .. t

..

- c-.wv

-.

» ""''e••••*•"'""

r:· - ;.§

C(prk OEPA. PO Bo&lt; 1049.
C~lumbus. OH 4321 6 Ph
16/14) 466-6037 . Consult ORC
C~ap 3745 and OAC Chaps
3~45 · 47 and 3746 -5 for

:----------+-----:-----4---------.,..,.

saod nole and convey1 ng the
p1em•ses descnbed. have been
broken and lhe same has be-

-c-.
.
__
_
___
_,_
___
-.....-- -·--,.,____ .,

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

• Water lines

9/24/1. mo

!'REMISES CO MMON LY
KNOWN AS At 3. 36659
The pla1nt1H further alleges
that by reason of default of the
defendants m th e payment of
prom1ssory note accord1ng to
1ts tenor. the cond1t1ons of a
con curr1ng m ortgag e de13:d·
giVen to secure the payment of

folio"""' ••,.,......... _

AND SON

esewer

CALL AL
742-2328

3 acresof but
subJeCt contain1ng
to all legal ·
place
beg1nnmg,
h1ghways
Texas Road

Cla.lfW,.,.......,. Mt!

~

....

WI~•••" I. ~-~­
,.F0&lt;\,11!0' 1• -

I&lt;B.,~•Iw•""""'

Public Notica

ADDRESSES:
See table below

.................
""''''"' ..

\S ivldo... ~ ...... ~

•~~'~

I ~obi I

r~,...,. ~·

CHARLES SAYRE

For all vour wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
Installation.
Resldentlill
&amp; Commercial
Call

Co1f1 Supply. Sprint
Volley Pitu, 448-2134.
Wintto houro: Monday tllru
Foidly 10 to 5, S1turdly 10
to 4. All crouotich oupplin.
D.M.C.

AUCTIONEER-Bill BROWN

h ld As to a loy actoon mctud1ng

re e1pt of venf1 ed comp laints,
arw person may obta1n notice
Of! funher _,actJons. and addl·
t1qnal mform&amp;tion Unless oth·
er:w1se prov1deb- 1n not1ces of
P&lt;irt1cular act1ons. all commun1 cd110ns shall1be sent to Hearmg

l

Unknown Spouse. '' any, of Ray
E

Calaway Flanders; son and
daughter-In-law, Ronald H.,and Do-

,.,, ......
..... ..
............
........ ......o
"-'"
11 ....... -....0&lt;.
" .............. ....... . .
,.,
""'"'"·.....,., ...._....

111'1. . -~

•• • •..,..
.,nc•
...,._..
Willol&lt; IN'ttNIIIt"

Kitchen Cabinets ·
Roofing - Siding · c;on·
crete Patios ' · Sidewalks . New construe·
ton . Remodeling
custom _!'o!e. Barn~ .

ant s Ray E Just•s. Jane Doe

45769

o ( . . dOl~~·~··

Mlu.ER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

I

LEGAL NOTICE
Ray E J ustos. Jane DQ!l. Un
known Spouse. 11 any. o(Rav E
Jusus Donoel Jusus. aka, Dot·
11e JuStiS aka. Don•e Lou Justts
and John Doe Unknown
Spouse. 1f an~. of Dottle l JusliS aka Dolloe JuSIIS. aka. Dot·
he lou Juslls. whose last
known place of reSidence was
373 Pearl M1ddleport. Ohoo
45760 w1 11 1ake notoce lhal on
7-2 1.82 Forst Fam1ly Man·
gage Corporato on. fi led '"
ComplaiOI 10 Case Numbel
18264 1n the Court pi Comman Pleas of Meogs Counly.
Ohoo allagmg that the defend·

I l l (O&lt;Irl 5I , Pemeo.-r , O..ooU"I

,IC.,nO!In.,,."""'
. , ........ .......

7 14 Yl c

PiHsburgh No.8 A
Mine Run !Strip)
Dtlivtred Price:
POMEROY-UI.DO Ton
MIDDLEPORT
AND RACINE-132.00
Ton

AP~PLIANCE

9-20-1 mo pd.

Howard Flanders, 68, Rt. 1, Guysville, died Wle!'Jlf'Cted!Y Wednesday
evening at Camden Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg.
Mr. Flanders was born In Guysville the
of the late Charles F.
and Luella Buck Flanders. He was
also preceded In death by one son,
Larry Lee, a brother, HaroldFlanders, four sisters, Nellle and Edna

"-w

or949-2263

Di ~l

Not mponslblt fof ~idlnts.
TIRIIS: Clllt onlY.·

ptoposed aciiOFIS w1ll ~ome
fi~al unless a wntten adfud1Ca·
t1e&gt;n heanng reQUest 1s submlt·
lt:f w11h1n 30 days of the
1~uance date, or the Director
fiV1Ses -w1thdraws the pro p~se&lt;! act1on Any person may
s0l:1m 11 comr'nents and-or request a meetmg regardmg any
OO'I"'·fmal act1on W1th1n 30 davs
of; the d~te, 1p41cllted "Acuon "
a~ u'ed abOVe dqes not1nclude
reFe1pt of a venfied complaint.
lf~lgn1f1cant public mterest e,I(IS , a public rneet1ng may be

Ph.tt~-27t1

HOUSE COAl

r011 F ll

PH. 992-7111
01949-2112

Or INrolt O• tl r s ..,''" ' ' (lu"lrecl Ot pl

~ 3

F~~E ESTir,1~TES

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-tfc

111ile West of~. Olio on the eon. of 50 and 143
Trucldoeds ol new ~hlndise, name brand Otristmls toys,
appliances, fumitu~e, 100IS, rldios, bisque, (Jt'Oduce, autu and bike
aa:estOries. and imdt nm. Dealers welcome.

Rilv1ew, Am 10 t. 250 E Town
SJ .. Columbus. OH. 432 15 No,,~e ol any appe~t shall be toted
~t h the Director Wlthm 3 davs

re

Backhoe Service

:========================================ii
= sp .

ate stated Final act1ons may be
a~aled in ,wnt1hg, w1th1n 30
d
of the date of th1s nottce
t
he Env1ronmental Board ot

Y~rd Sele

7

-----------

Yard Sale

a

Announcamanta

11

TheDai Sentinel

,Ohio
7

SWEEPER l~d -ing machine repair, p11t1, 1nd
ouppiill. Pick up •d delivery, Devil VICUum Cleaner,
one hill milt up Gooogao
CtNII Ad. Ceil 448-0294.. '

SAT. M. OCT. 2.:....7:00 P.M.

a~ .ce dates of proposed aat1ons ,

Eber and Bill

Howard Flanders

The Daily Sentinel

"Btlutilut, Custom

SliiACUSE-RACIIIE
RESIDE IllS
flEW SEWER

d:tes of f1nal actions and tssu-

e N CW nr P f.poll t ·
• f' flll')~lflQ

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Al)CTION

ental Protection Agen c't ,

I EPA) last week. EffectiVe

' :·'
• t ,wnspf111h '·

'·' ' '
_..............
.. .

Public Sele
• Auction

3

~

ao

e GtlftN &lt; i

-==

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

' '

H. L WHITESEL

(flit blitlaltll

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

PHONE 992-191J
9·2·1 mo.

I

ROOFING·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

8

COUNTY: MEIQI
PUBLIC NOTICE
T~e fotlowong were receiVed
eQared D.t.The Ohio Envoroot

::=.-=.r-""'

Large or Smlll Jobs
PH . 9t2-2471
9·3·1 mo. pd.

flch
Ri&amp;llt ol tlit tiiH.
Cony oolllttl
&amp;
1liM
·
OptoMII..fri.
2:G0 1"•··2:30 LJI,
511. I !at. 4:110 P,ll.-2:30 LM.

YOUNG'S
'A44111 ... . - I

- Gas Lines
-Septic Systems

-llflloi

prizes.

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Trucks
Lo-Bov
Trencher
water

- sewer

Ail llriOU II Pritt
TillS 11011111'$ IMD

songleader.
.
He Is survived by his wife, Myrtle

Jack Cowie

-

•

will be provided by Ron
Rigsby and ihe OneWay Tra,ck and
wWincludeBlueGrassandcountry.
SteakdiJinersatoitiwithsoup,sandwioCI!Es, desserts andJleverages will
be !;eiVed during the evening. There
wW be games, danCing and door

son

ElVin Ray Janey, 22, of Langsville. died unexpectedly Tuesday

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Parneray-M·

Publk: Notice

Business Senices

FaD festival set

and Phillip Whitt, Port Clinton; a

Rummel night.
'J
pronounced
retUrnS h Offie
Ma~or

../:

'

Area deaths

Ervin Ray Janey

Emergency caUs

.

I

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

Tfiunday, Septen tber 30,1982

•••

..

Meigs

1'-----,--------------·--------.. _.,.______________ . . - .

opened, reed, and evalu·
ated. low minimal accepte-

bfe bid ia •14,000 !Fourteen
Thouund Doitoro)
Ail bido should be directed to
Rio

Granda College,

Rio

Orondo,

Ohio 45874
Marked to ATTN · Buaine11

Manager,
Houae may be v iewad by appointment only · contec:t

614·246-5363, 8Kt. 217
The college reaervea the
right to reject any and ell

bldo.
Nice 3 or 4 bldroom Lahaped home. fully car·

pttld. both •nd 1 holl, utility •
room, and a large 1 ~car gar~·· Central air,
fur·
nance. diahw11her and

a••

dloponl. Ve,.., 111y to main·
tlin on a tt1mo11 'h acre level
lot . Locoted on Rt. 311 cioN
tO HOller Hoaphll. With 1n
aaaumable

8%

loan,

t47,000. Clii 1176-71147 If·
tor ePM .

I room hou4:_1 on alx tentha
ac••· 2 giordln •PD1*- glr·
111• and outbuilding. Celt
.814-387-0818 .

I

�Thunday,~ber30,1982 .

Ohio

Sentinel

64
9 room houM with 2 baths.
111~· 992· 7414.
HouM, 2 loto. 890 S. 2nd ..
Middleport . 114 . 600 .
HouM or trailer lot, Bred·
bury. Coli 814-992- 2602 .

Television
Viewing

OH, A't.. Ri6HT, CAfiLV!e, He CAA
Sf~'/ ~ tliNNe~ . BUT P6 S£UI
N. He~ bOHe 6!iTlN6, OOT 11e
C:toes!

WettlnghouH

Unfurnished houH for rent
or aele, New Haven and

..

by Larry Wrl&lt;ghtl

Furniture for nlo. Selling
chup. Couchu. ond toblo. TIRED .. of being "oil
gummed up" from tho
etc . Colt ~~8-3937.
oymptono of ouch thlnga oo
Aponmont ailo Whirlpool hoodochoo. oonotlpotlon, or·
dryer) and
thrhlo, olllf!IM8, ond oboowUhtr, other Kenmore, ttv1 Coli 304-8711.1211:1 for
Moyteg, Whirlpool ' O.E. htrbol onlotonct from
woohoro 6 drylfl. Call 81~· Noturollfo.
258· 1207.
Colt Robort Horpol' fOf Oln·
Whirlpool auto w1aher, real Hl1g ond Yellowroot prlcu•.
nice •110. Frl,llldolro rtfrlg· 304-8711-1283.
orotor t70, Whirlpool
woahor UO . Coil 448·
Table ond 1111 ehotro. hutch.
8181 .

9/30/82

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dltlon, 3 bedrooma, family

()) • ()) !It • llJ

-

()!) 3 ·2-1, Contact
8 :30 • CIJ q:) NBC NIWI
(1)1110.000' Pyramid
()) CFL From 1he 55 Yard
Uno
()) Bob Newhlln Show
()) • (ll ABC Nowe
!It CIS Nowo
())Dr. Who
(j)) Ulloo. Yoga ond You
7:00 G (J) P.M. Mogulno
CIJ Video JuUbox
Cll Bull'• Eva
()) ESPN Spartaforum
()) Oomor Pylo
()) Entortalnment Tonigltt
(IJ Chortle' o Angola
Tic Toe Dough
()) (j)) MacNoii·Lohror

PLABTEftl'-f. ; ,
colllngo co-.,. ,
clot end nnldontlol, trw
ootlmotu. Cell 814-2111·,.
1182.

ond other mlecellanoouo

~mo. 30~·1175·4808.

4 bedroom home, auuma-

blo mongego, 7¥11 percent
lnternt, % mile on left. At.
62 oouth off Rt. 2, Point
Plt•••ont, Phone 304-676·
6285.

Plootlc Soptlc Tonka. Stoto
end oounty approved. 1.000
got. tonk. price t340. Othor
lb:ft In stock. ·haul In your
pickup truck. Co~. 0.1~:2.88·
8930. Jockoon. Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

32 Mobile Homes

Newa ·

TYTIK

rJ

(IJ Newa/Bparta/WNthor
()) Electrtc Compeny

64 Misc. Merchandise Moving, muot ooll, oppllan·

876-1 642.

·::s..~

8 :00 •CIJ~r
(I}Cervl Burnett

30~·875- 3478

room with flrepalce , central
air, ba1ement, phone 304·

I tJ .......- I

MNINO

1- - - - - - - -

Pomeroy. Telephone: (6141
992·8069. Alter 6 :00 p .m .
81~ · 992 · 7611 .

The Daily Sentinel _Pag• 13

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

a ())

Good uood outamotlc Whirl·
pool woohor, •as.oo, phone
30~·898-3801 .

Furniture, moplo hutch, co·
lonlol dry oink (n-1. 304882-2095.

for Sale

IBERROKj
II K

1 Ox60 mobile home,
t1 ,800. Coil 814-388·
8847.
1971 ForHt Pork, 12x80, 2
bdr., total electric, excellent
condition, (on rsnt lot(. Coli
448·9340.
1982 Clayton 1~x86. 2bdr ..
2 lull botho, 3 ton, control
air, delivered and Jet,
f12,900 . Call ~46 · 9340 .
Tralllf ond two loll owned
by tho Iota Zuelollo Smith,
272 W. Main Street. Pomeroy, Oh. For Information,

colt Lulo Bello Hampton,
101 Kerr St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio. 614· 992 · 2021 or
Fred, W. Crow. Anorney.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Colt 61~ ·
992-5132 .
1973 Boron Troller 12x80.
Undor pinning, 8x18 porch.
40 got. hot wotor hooter,
woodburner.

Lot

can

be

In Raclne-2 bd.room home.

Completely furnlohod .
t350. Utllltleo pold. Pluo
depooit. 614·949-2801 .

ThrH room fuml1h1d apart-

for Rent ·

Pltannt. Coil 30~· 875 ·
2463.

Two-2 bdr. traUer• com -

pletely lurnlohod. Call 448·
9889.
14x70 3 bdr. mobllo homo.
Call 448-2192.
Trollaro for rent. Cell 446·
4224 or 448-0768.

1969 2 bedroom Buddy Mo·
bile Homo. In good cond ..
central air. partially furniohod. te.ooo. 814·8~3 ·
3376.

Park, Mlnanvlllo. 814-992·
3324.

cond., lncludea underpin·
ning end wheel1. Mutt Hll.

call 304-882-2248.
·2 ' bodroom trailer, $3,600.
Phone 30~·895 · 3856 .
1973 12x60 mobile home,
$4,600, 304· 773. 6166.

33 Farms for Sale

TWIN Rivero Tow., now
rantlng to quoiHiod appfl·
canta 60 or older. 304-875·
6679. HUO 011lltod project.

1---------WOOOIURING STOVEB
Froo otondlng flr!Opllot In·
oono, mobllo home end fur·
nance ad-one . Jividen ' •

New Havan. 3 bedroom un·

F1rm Equlpm•nt, 448 ·

turn apt. 304-882· 3358.

18711.

Nice 2 bdr. mobile homo,
furnlohod, upper Rt. 7, $18&amp; Unlurnlohod oponmonto for
par mo .. wot8f pold. Colt rent . Call Automotive
Supply, 8 till a, 304-675·
814·246·6818.
2218, 304-876-8763.
2 bedroom trailer. Real nlbe,
aduhe only. Brown' a Trailer

1988 HomoUto 12x85 mo·
bile home. 2 br, ciNn, good

1--------Largo troll., lot on Bulovlll•
Addlton Rd. Coli 4411-42116
or 4~8·4738 .

1----------

rent. liii~~~~~ii

Re1ldentlal
commercial
paid. 6 rm end
houee
for
propertltl for nle or lease.

Business
Buildings

A·One Real Ellotn. Carol
Yeage~. Realtor. Colt 304·
675·6104 or 676-6388 .

Bu11nua for sale. 06 Night
Club licence, equipment &amp;
Inventory. Presently In oper·
ation. Reaaonable rent on

61 Household Goode

• Two acre lots-150 ft . road
: frorit&amp;to-.~ e~'Wllter, belilind

SWAIN
complete kitchen, all elect· AUCTION 6 FURNITURE
ric heat-air cond., Waaher- STORE 82 Olive St .. O.UI·
dryer. Call 448·4383 doyo, polio. Couch. loveaolt ·ond
choir. 1199.: wollhuggoro
448-0139 ....
•126.; bunk bedo with bun·
kloo. •110.: box aprlng ond
Furnlohod 3 r. prlvlte both, mettraoo. $100.
Firm.
945 2nd. Ave.. Golllpollo. t120.; rocllnera, f80.; 9 x
Rof. preferred. Colt 448· 12 linoleum rugo, 122.: m•·
2216 .
pie rockore, •49 .. wringer
wa•hera, nfrlgeraton,
dlnatto ooto. ehut. drOIOOfl.
Small furnl1hed etfiencv. 1 bunkie mottrou, $40. Cell
professional type male only. 448-3169.
Conter air &amp; heat. Coif 446·
0339 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
2nd floor lumiohed elf(. • w11hera, dry!ltrl, refrlg&amp;rl·
ciency apt. Apt. ot. 729 2nd ton. rongoo. Skoggo ApAvo . Adulto only. 446· plioncoo, Upper River Rd ..
0967.
boaldt Stono Craot Motel.

.--------'

Deluxe garage apartment, 1
bdr. , central air. Flrlt Ave..
no peto, ref. required. Colt

building. Located In Melgo
Co. Ohio. e26.000 or beat
otter. 614-992·6186 bo·
twnn 2pm S. 2:30am.

For ule one and half acres
more or lesa. approximately
800 ft road frontage on
Cora-Centerpoint Rd. near

.Centerpoint. 13,000.00
I f&gt;hone 682-6944.

:==-------'
, 84 Lumber. Call 304·676·
~ - 8873 or 676-3818 .
; 1 acre lot, 3 miles from
• town, 304-876-1664.

' ~=;:::;;::===
36

~,..

Real Estate
Wanted

:~.--------------: Wanted: out of ltltt buyer

Write

• noodo houllt or opt. building

! with owner financing .

Box 1 0081n core ofTho Gel·
' llpolla DoNy Tribune, 826
: 3rd. Ave.. Gollipollo. Oh
: 46831 .
1

.~_4_8_-8_2_4_1_
. ---~--

••e.

Apanment
for Rent
10ocre farm mootlycloared, 1- - - - - - - - - houM, born, 1,800 lb. to·
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
becco baoo. aprlng water, HUD oveiloble 2 bdr. deluxe, Pork, Route 33, Nonh of
t17,800. Colt 614-379· kitchen furnlohod. good lo· Pomeroy. Largo toto. CoU
238~ .
cotlon, utllltleo plrtlally 992·7479.

34

FOR SALE: Soloflox Weight
lifting moohlno. *380. Ph .

,.
Plonoor IX · B38 otero
One bedroom furnlehed, rocoiver-empllflor with 2
new apartment. waaher and opookora, oxcollont condl·
·
dryer furnlohod, 304·878· tlon. Colt ~~- 7388.
9780.
2 C78·1 ~ block Will IROW·
1 bedroom oponmont, •150 tlroo, •~ · 1· 18 ft. 1p11n. on·
1· 3
month, ponl.llly lumlohod or tonne with rotor,
unfurnlahed, phone 814· yr. old Whltt·WHtlnghouM
llova, oelf ciNnlng, t480.
448-2200.
Coll814-379·21171 .

2 bd.room lurnlohod mobile
homo. Paid utlitleo. Aduho 46 Furnished Rooms
only. No poto. DIIPOiit rt·
Furnlohod room. t115. utili·
qulrod. 61~·992 · 3847.
tloo pd. alngfo malo, ohare
2 bedroom troller on Grur bath. 918 2nd. Avo .. Golll·
Rood, t176monthpluoutll· polla. Coll~48·4~ 18 ,ft., 7
It leo, partially furnlohtd, PM.
304-875-1724.
•- - - - - - - - '
2 bedroom troller, kitchen
furnlohod. couploo only, 46 Space for Rent
304· 676·1078.

44

Coll814c268·82~1 .

Flrowood. Slob• t1 0
pickup. cut up elobo t11.
trance, outlkJrt•Hendereon, round wood UO . Rio
utllltloo furnlohod. U25 . Granda orN. Call 814 · 2~1 5804 . .
month. 304·871-8730.

12x70 2 bdr. troll.,, unfur·
nlohod. Colt 814-286- 88~.

2 bedroom furnlohod .
preftrrod. No poto.
Dopoo~ roqulrod. 814·992·
2749 .

herd wood. Jet. Rt.
&amp; Rt. 663, Crown City,

Thraa room turn. apt .
ground floor, prt\flte an·

rented. 814· 742·2B97.

USEO MOBILE HOME .
678-2711.

APARTMENTS, mobilo
homn, hou001. 1'1. Ploount
ond Oolllpolle. 81 ~ - ~48 ·
8221 or B14-248-9Q~.
I448-4:Z37

1-;j,:;;:;;,jfiS':OO'";i;;-;;;
mont, odu~o. no poll, Point II
t211.00 pick up.

42 Mobile Homes

Adu~o

Cottu table •1 &amp;.. wicker
otyle bar, 120.. 3 drawlf
ohoot. •10. 304-875·8833.

2 bdr. downtown, all carpet,

Ohio BA cool. Dallvtfod
prlco Galllpolla t38 o ton
ond 1'1. Pluoent U7 I ton.
Colt ~~8- 1488.
C obu k
·
·
roo
c otorm door. Colt
,_4_4_8_·8_3_2_9,...- - - - - ,.
Girl' o ohot okotu olze 2 ond
glrl'o clothing. Colt ~411·
0195 oltor 4 PM .
King Wood bum4r end o
1974 1~•86 Young Amerl·
con troll•. 2 bedroom. good
oond.. •8.000. Call ~80770.
Go-Cort, Early American
couch ond choir. Wood
dlnatto table &amp; cholro. Colt
4~8-2323 llttr 4 :00.
Wooden atonn door, 1 ecroon 6 glooo. Coli ~~~ 1885.
Eloctrolux - • r . Hko • with Ill ottechmento lnclud·
lng power nozzle. Colt 304·
235-3824.
For ulo · Uotd Dovle
Trencher . 1-814·89~·
7842.

~ : 00.

;;;:::==:;;;:::;:::===
68
fNit
a. Vegatabl8 s

10 home blood prooiUI'a
IIIIo, upoclolly dulanod for
- y UIO, retell dO, 1111 Gtrmon Ridge apploo. Rod
ond Golden Dollclouo, Rome
.26, 304'175·2888.
Boouty ond Wine lop, t7 .80
Ook bunll bode with mot· buohol. •4.00 'Ao bu-.
tron••· no. 30~· 812· Cor- of LoGrondo Blvd.
ond Portomouth Rd. · Cell
3872 .
~11-8588.

Seooonod ook wood, 111" to
20" U6 pickup lood. You Mlchlgon opplot, Cortland.
houl, VIrgil Durst, 304-896· rod ond yollow dollclouo,
Cindy Rode. McContloh.
3894.
SIJe 2'Ao lnchtl up pototooo.
Quill topo, colt 3~·1175· ,_3:-0:-4--8:-9-11:-·MOO
_ _. _ _ __
11388.
"
GOOD THINGS TO EAT:::
10 _ . . Stridor bicycle, CANNING PEACHES. Yol·
like new, 890: 8 foot gold low Fruotono conning
oofe. t25. 304-1175· 21135. peochoo now nellebiowhile
tho oupply lutt. BOBI
MARKET·· MOion W.VA.
66 Building Supplies 773-8721 open 7 doyo •

....···- -·
...
. ,, .
-.. .....
'

61
Build your own garage

24x24 ell lumber lumlohod,
11180. Coli onytlma, 1-814·
Bill· 7311 .

Farm Equipment

7 ft. - r otuffor bHf cattle
f-or. t200. Aloo round
hog t -. •so. Coli 814·
245-111516.

_____;___ ,c_

Motol thooto for Ill buHdlng 701 Unl· oyltom. ~row com
purpoou. Flot porcol.lon hood &amp; ohollor. 814·g811·
enamel coated. ~.a thru 4 x 3537.
12. Prlcoo, n.oo to tt.8o.
814-887· 3085.
livestock

66 Pets for Sale

s~'/oUMI/e
OP ~I&lt;I!Jb '?

2 Holotoln boby celvea. Call
~8·2111~ .

one owner, low miluge.

Colt

~8-4782,

Golllpolla.

Dodge pickup, •noo.
Dole' • Kitchen Conter, 304·
1175-2318.
Or trodo · 1975 Chovv Luv
Truck, toto ixtru, 73,000
ICIUII miiH, good COndi·
tlon. t1,000. ortrodo1971
or72Chovallo. 2door.equol
voluo. Colt 304·6711·2873.

1988 Ford truck, flot dump:
1988 lntornotlonol dump,
good condition, 304-773·
8383.

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boordlng oil br-. AKC 1,000 buohol oer corn.
Rog. Dobermono pupo and *2.70 bu. Old corn. 814Dobormon Stud lervlco. ,_e_&amp;_2_·7_4_11_.B_._~--Coll 448· 7796.
I

1980 Ford F160 4x~. Shon
bod pickup. ('!!! toni. Pluoh
- • with flip-up troy, rtlllo,
111111 aldo fendoro, cor·
pttlng, fog pointing. 814·

-

'

73

Vans &amp;

4 W .O.

7~2·3038.

Fonzia comes for a visit.

(I) ID Mognum, P.l.
Season Premiere. Magnum
end TC put their lives on
the line to protect an old

Novy buddy. (2 hrs.l
()) Sneak Previews Co·
hosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
tray Lyons take a look at
whot' s happening at the

New faring, IOta of extraa,

E•tataa Apart·
536 Jeckoon Pike,
Golllpollo. Equal houolng op·
ponunlty hu 1 bedroom
epartmontl, rent ttarta at
81152 per month. Colt 446·
Jackson
mo~t1,

AOVANCED Sumtni
Gutter·Dooro. Offering conl
tlnuoo guttering. oeomi.U
oldlng, roe&gt;flng, uorogw ·
doora, froo Hllm-. 814-,
898-8206.

hor dad .

(I) Good Neighbors
(j)) Monoymakora
(I)
(!)
Cheers
9 :00 U

!PREMIERE) After being
stood up at Cheers, Diane
accepts Sam's offer of
being a cocktail waitress .

PAINTING interior &amp; oxte:
'rlor, frH Htimotoo, 304875·1128.
. ...

..

(1)700 Club
Ill at Too Cloee For
Comfort Season Premiere.
The Rush household dis·

..
PAINTING. lntMior or euo;
rlor, buldlng ond remodel;
lng. rep!- or lnotoll aiding,
ond rooftng. 'Experienced'
304-11711-2440.
• {

covers that the only way

Take
them off
ihis
instamf

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourtlt ond Pint .
Phono 448·3888 or 4!48·

iii3~~:c;;&amp;;Ur;;--­

OH, NO, NOT !II LL.
HE JUST CAN'T
STAND TO Sff

3 bdr home, 81 Loculi Bt.
Co" ~6-4110 before 5 Of
~8 - 116~ ott.. 5,
3 bdr. 1M-level, famHy room;
flropl.-. gor-. gu fur·
non. u, l•r•• yard. city
ac11o01. Poullllo rantol pur·
oh- Coli 448· 7438.
2 bdr. houoe on Lower Rt. 7.
• Unfurnished. dop. ref. Cell
!14·;1.68· 1413.
Poi'!Ofov·2' bd.room unlur·
n'iohiid hauoo. •111. mo.
hoUi'itydeJioell. •1oo. plu•
utlllloo. After B-coll 814·
882·2288.

3 bd . ....,m opt. In Mlddl•
port. Equip. ldtohen. •110.
ma. pluo -urttv dopoolt.
814·9&amp;2·11892.
.

movies .
(J) (IJ Taxi (PRE·
MIEREI Latka and Simko

D

host an old country match-

Blues Season Premiere .
Captain Furillo is determined to capture those
responsible for an attack

SUCH INJUSTICE
INNOCENT PEOPLE
BEING HARMED.

Backhoe and Dltchor worti.
Froo ootlrn-. Fronch City
Mobllo Homu, Inc . Colt'
~4B· 9MO.
·

Renko

.
USED tlr11, Honehowe
Tlroo; Lucoo Leno. 1'1. Ploo·
- · phone 304-8711· 7'80.

...,Ice.

M~hlne

·nopoln,

Authorbtd Slnlio!
8...0 • SlfVico Shoriet)
8cluoro. Fobrlc Shop',
po~oy . 992·2214.
'

I CLEAN
FERGOTr
SNUFFY-·

'iOU'RE
SUPPOSED TO
BE IN SOLITARY

DADBURN
PICKY

VARMINT!!

find

an

adulterer

tratjl&gt;ed by tho bathroom
plumbing. (60 min.l
(I) MOVIE: 'Airplane!'
CD TIS Evening Newo
(I) Ill (ll 20/20
D (I) (iO Knota Lending

22Town Z5 Before hopper
28 Torn apart

Season Premiere. · Valene

28 To be (Lat.)
%9 Visigoth

Duryea

decides to make Gary pay
for his affair with Abby. (R)
(60 min.)
1 1 :00 U Ill Newscenter
(I) MOVIE: 'Outland'
(I) Noohvllle RFD
()) ESPN Sparta Center
(I) Ia ()) (jJ Ill at News
(IJ News/Sparta/Weather
(I) Dave Allan at Lo'lJe
11 :30 G Ill (IJ Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE: 'American

• king
33 Wcely
34 Exclamation

35 Late
Greek tycoon
38Head
adornments
:18 Imitated
3t Cantankerous
tt Eat by
candle light

a

1·
-~

.
•
..

. JUST THINK Of THE

MIWONS OF 1liiN6S THEV
I-lAVE 1t) TALK fJ«1JT

b-+-+--4-

27 The late

Gigolo'
• (I) Another Ufe
(I) S.nny Hll Show
(I) Clulncy Quincy tries

Heullng
lump
or
llollor '-oo
up to 1
Llmoot-. tOll ..,..,. fiR
1:111 81!$-317-7101. .

DOWN

-r--T.'...;;;,r;..;;;r.._.,

on a nun and Hill and

3 room furnished opt. UIO.
month lncludoo utMhloo. In·
quire It Molgo Inn In
Pom.,oy.

9 :30

U Desert shrub
42 European river

I Attack
2 Vibrant
lShip
essayist
4 Fall behind
II Placid
5So - !
12Troll
6 Sea eagle
Yesterday'• Auwer
13 Ignite
7 Sign of emb&amp;r·
1t Second name
rtlS!Iment
22 Inventor
31 "Smoke"
15 A Nixon
8 Invigorate
Z3 Breathe
heroine
1&amp; In shape
9 Unstable
24 - replay
3Z Apple yield
17 Three lines
11 Emulate
Z5 NarraUve
34 RuSJc
rhyming
Hamill
27 Dagwood's
setting
19 Except
15 Seckel, e.g.
dog
37 Caddoan
20 Sheila
18 Greek island 30 Uke some
Indian
Mac 19 Italian city
transit
38 Fuaa
%1 Frosting
device

(AI [Closed Captioned!
1 0:00 U Ill (IJ Hill Street

Avolloblo Oct. 1. Nice 2 bdr.
opt. It Koneugo, fully corpotod with llovo 6 rofrlg.
Waohor &amp; dryer. hookup,
81911. Coli collect ovenlnga

Nice 3 bdr.. furnlohod gor·
opt. Inquire et 832 2nd.
Ave .. Oolllpolle. Ref, &amp;
required. Coli ~11·3788.

at what's happening at the

ACROSS
1 "Mame"
film star
5 Basque
.. beadwear
10 English

(I) Wodohouoe Playhouse
(fi) Thlo Old Houoe Host
Bob Vila helps install o coal
stove and shares ..some
tips on selecting wallpaper .

.

will call you bock.

a~a

to get Muriel to tho hos pi·
tal is on Monroe's motor·
cycle. 160 min.)
(I) Fawlty Towers
&lt;ID Sneak Previewo Co·
hosts Neal Gabler and
Jeffrey Lyons take a look

making party .

1

lEWlNG

~tUJM"w
by THOMAS JOSEPH

(I)

1-30~·273-9746 .

Small furni1hed house, 1 or
2 adu~o only. Cell 446·
0338.

()) Top Rank Boxing from
the USS Yolt&lt;town Bat·
tleohlp. Cherleoton, SC
1121 Star of the

(

2746 or leave meauge we

Bdr. oponmont with kit·
chen, temolu o~ly. Colt of·
lor II, Thurodoy or Frldoy
448-1888.

ter'

()) e

4~8 - 7398 .

614·258·8508 .

Ill MOVIE: 'Rollarcoeo·

8 :30

Family Season Premiere.
The singing talents of Jen·
nie Lee create chaos for

Motorcycles

flrll offer token. Contact
Andy Vaughen. 814-742·
2897.

+s

movies.

ESMIAALDA, I THINK
IT'S iiME I TURNED
'VOU LOOSE!

Wotor Wollo. Comm•~
ond Domeotlc. Toot hotoo-.
Pumpo &amp;oleo ond Borvlc#i
304-895-S802.
. ~:

~"

.,

D

·'·

74

1878 K_...kl 860 SR .

RUIN!

F 6 K Tru Trimming. otunlp,
removot. Col1 .1175· 1331 .

All Br- Oroomlng, 7 doyo
a week. Pick \lp ond delivery.
Colt 814·3117·7877.

1977 Harley Dovldoon
druoor. Colt ~8-8392.

-EVEICIICCa;lfK1ii'U.Y.IT COllO C{o(.l5f WORLIJ

.

1·97t Doclgo Poworwogon
110. ~ whoot drive, 38,000 I ~ai:
21iiW;;jj;frHI-mnu. 304-8711-4188.
11 2
&amp; Haatlng

1980 Pof.tloc Flroblrd. AM·
FM c N -. olr, te.OOO
firm. Colt 81~ ·251·1598 .

HAMED

"CR.OE5U5~
·~wv·?

\.

NORTH
.._
tAQ64
Almost every bridge play·
•Jios
er likes to play no-trump
.AJ73
contracts. Today'a North
+u
was one of a rare species
WEST
EAST
who )1151 doesn't want to.
+snu
tKJIO
He held a perfect !&amp;·point
.Q743
•en
no-trump, but elected to bid
tQVS
tKIU
one diamond. He had a per·
+7
+KQ4
feel hand to try two notrump over his partner's two
SOUTH
clubs, but bid two spades.
.AK2
Finally, after the three club
.10 8
bid he went out of his way to
tJIIIIIII
bid a three-card heart suit.
South didn't like the Idea of
Vulnerable: Both
playing In no-trump, but be
Dealer: North
fell he had to bid it and did.
West Nortll Eut Sot1111
West opened the three of
1•
Puo ~
spades. South looked over
Puo 2+
Puo a+
dummy and was happy
Pasa . ,.
Puo SNT
about the whole thing. He
Pau Pan
Puo
did have a slight problem at
trick one . A spade finesse
was there for the taking.
Opening lead:
Should be take it? He decld·
ed not to.
You don't have to climb a
mountain just because it is
there. You don't have to take
a finesse either. South
played du!l)my's ace of
him It would be up to l!'.ut to
spades and conUnued with
lead
back a heart. Thla lead
ace and six of clubs. Eventuwould ltnt)Ck out one of tile
ally, South scored game with
two entries to tile South
five clubs, two hearts. a
hand. Since l!'.ul held lwo 1
spade and a diamond.
club
stoppers, that seven· '
He might have taken that
card
club
suit would have
spade finesse and made his •
been
wasted
cards.
contract. In order to beat

field trip into a memorable
experience. (60 min .)
Ill MOVIE: ' Brt~ekor
Morant'
Cll Nlltlonel Geographic
~cia I
C!J NFL Story: Une By
Una
CD MOVIE: 'The Am·
buahera'
()) G 1121 Joonle Lovea
Choc:hi Season Premiere .

"CROE505'? 110- TlfAT'S WHAT I
Y'ACTUALLY CALL HIM ! IF 115
11.1(()1'1 A
RElit. !ME l'fRf
ff.ICH6UY TO &amp;ECOME HNOflll(

anl1·

POODLE GROOMING. Colt ~=~==;::;:~
Judy Toylor ol 814· 387· :
71
7220.
Autos for Sale

By Oswold Jacoby
aad Alaa SOIItag

Premiere. Bruno is given
total control of his own
musical and Lvdia turns a

houoo calLI. Colt 878-2318•
or 448·24114.
· '"

.

No-trump the hard way

Fomlly Feud
()) Buolne11 Ropon
'(j)) All CNoturao Great
and Smell
G (ll Entertainment
Tonl!!..ht
8 :00 G (I) (IJ Fame Season

88 Oodgotruck, 225, 8 c .. 3
op-. good condition. 82
Pontlec TOfnpoot, 4 c.,' 3 RINOLE'8 SERVICE expo•.
opood. Cell ~11-9393 or rltnced mooon, roofing, cor~·
4~8-7691 ovo.
l. ~·nn~n. oloctrlclon. gon~ol
repelro ond remodeling. Cllll
197~ Dodge Club Cab, 304· 876· 2088 or 876··
_
_ _ _ _ _ _L __ __
11100, 304-876-8211.
4880.

-------·lcORAGONWYNO CAnERY HOL,STEIN HEIFER
• KENNEL. AKC Chow pup· CALVES . 814·892·8198.
pin, CFA Hlmoloyon, Per·
olin ond SlomON kltteno.
Colt ~8·38~ oltor 4 p.m. 84 Hay &amp; Grain

..... "......
. .. ....
.. . ....
. .. ..

Motorola, Quezer,

to next week· s games.

()) D ())

-.

Trucks for Sale

BRIDGE

NFL action and look ahead

()) Andy Griffith

.,

72

Dawson and Nick Buoniconti analy:ze this week· s

cil ESPN Sparta Center

CHRISTIAN'S CQ. N·'
8TRUCTION. ,Conatr., @Of··
In g, II dIng. IPO 1! tl ng .:.
tonclng, pointing, ~ • ·
ciNnlng. ~8-2000. c"~·
·,
1971 Conoord. Con be ooon foro 8 end ott.. 5:30.
otter 8, 1 ~04 Low II Stroot,
lot 8. Point Plo... nt.
BINGS CONCRETE CON· ,
OrTrodo -1978 Plntoforou· STRUCTION Spoclollzlng .ln ,•
tomollc, t1, 700, 30~ · 1175 · concrete driveway•. al~ •:
walko, flooro. polloi. otci. 1
30~4.
yr. oxp. C,e ii814-3B7· 7881,
1978 Plymouth Volar•
RolldruMer. 318 onglno,
, .... 1
PS, PB, good gu miiNgo, Gono'o Stum Corpot·Cieon··
Scotch Gaurd· Fro,e,
.1300. 304-891·31157.
utlmoloo· oprlng opecl•·
1873 Comoro. 8 cyHndor; Gon~ Smith, 882: 8309. ;
1978 Ford Pinto, axc!Op·
tlonol condition, 30~·882 ·
'.
2312.
.
RON'S Television Service.'
Spoclolillng In Zenith end'

I I ]

J..-_

Cll Anoth4r uta

1888 Chovv 11. ~ op-.
87,000 Oflglnol mllu, oxtrl
,..rta. 11500.00. Call ofttr
II p.m .. 304-8715·~77.

1980 .,. ton Chevy pickup,

Building motortole block,
brick, MWif plpn. win·
dowo. Hntolo, etc. Cloudo
Wlntero, Rio Gronde. 0 . Colt
814-245-6121.

I'V~ IJ€.~ ~T ~T~R
OR~I~M{ 1.-lf=e.

HOOS ITeol~

rI

Jumble BooO No. 20, cootalnlnt 110 .,.-,II OWl-lor 11.1111, lrom
clo 11111-par,llca M, N . . - N.J. ~-namt, MdrMI,
codt end m~•• ctwc:kt DIV.&amp;Ie lo M

Ill lnelde the NFL Lon

Wood clorlnat, excellent
oond. Clll 448-2323 iltar

.,.0 PO "Tl-11-$,

1"'-tomor•ow)

II

Flr-ood • ook and hickory,
aplit or dtllv.-od, 304-8711·
2118.

OW, rT'6 &amp;E:5T NOT

Yostofdey'ol Jumbles: EXCEL OUILD UNTRUE THRESH
Anewor: A woman usually atopa telling her ogo when
It starts this - TELLINO ON HER

Report
()I News
• (ll P-t··· Court
7:30 G (J) ID You Aoked For

Autos f ~r Sale

71

IF' YOU C'()l(j HAVE
A L.E.iS "TO 6TAND

Prlntanswerhete:

a ())

Musical
ln.truments

1

I

1=-+--+-t---+--+-

to find the source of toxin
in a stadium before a w'orld
socclf match. (R) (80 min.l DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
()) Cllptlotlld ABC News
AXYDLBAAXa
1D A!l In the Fondly
II LONGFI! 1LLOW
• (jJ Nlghtllne
12:00 (I) Bums • Allan
One letle~' aimply stands for another. In thll umple A 1a
()) Auto Racing '82:
CART
Detroit Newa llled for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin11e lelten. .
apootroph .., the len&amp;th and fonnallon of the words ore aD
G,..i Prix. 1110
hlnll. Each day the cOde 1etlers are different.
(I) Nightllne
()) PBS 1.1141 Nlg~
caYPTOQuans
()I MOVIE: 'Tho R_.ncornetlon of p - Proud'
•• at VegaS Binzer EBTBI RBOIE VM HM OEZVXNEP .
oearcheo for, money to
meet. tho price tog on Den ·
ZMD HME'V
RBOIE
ZMD'RR
Torine'o life. (RI (1 hr., io . NU

mln.l

'

ORQOZA UNEH AMYBMEB BRAB VM
12:30 • Cll (IJ 1.1141 Night with
.
o.vJd Lettennon
'
(I),... Bonny.,_
HM NV . U~ll ZMD . - SOEB WRBYBEA
~~ina' oeorchei
lot money 10 moot the Yesterday's Crypltlq-: HE WHO IS {(NOWN AS AN EARLY
price .109 on Don TIIIINI'I
RISER CAN fttAY IN BED TIU. NOON.-YIDDISH ~
life. (R) (1 tw., 10 min.) ,;..
VERB
&amp;'

. ()) v.s·
,.
I

;

.

�Page 14-The DailY Sentinel

Ohio

REG. $324.95 CRAIG

LBE
SINtE 1864

•

STEREO 8-TRACK SYSTEM
-AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER
-8 TRACK PLAYER/RECORDER
-TAPE COUNTER

SAVE 1100.00
SPECIAL $22495
W/Mitchin&amp; Speakers

-TAPE STOP INOICATOR .
-M.INf STAN_I1ARD F_EATURES

WRAHCILER

BEGINS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1st AT 9:30 AM
Special Sale Prices to Mark the Beginning
Of Our il8th Year In Pomeroy

CRAIG SPEAKERS
.

$1988 PAIR

Mens
Western Shirts

118th ANNIVERSARY SAL£
JUNIOR

WINTER COATS
&amp; JACKETS

Men's $14.95
Western Shirts
Men's $16.95
Western Shirts
Men's $19.95
Western Shirts
Men's $24.95
Western Shirts

Rea. 159.00 ............ Sale 141.oo
Rea. '65.00 ...........Sale 152.00
Rea. '73.00 ...........Sale 158.00
Rea. 1115.00 .. ....... .Sale 192.00

118th Anniversary Sale!
BOYS WINTER

.............. ...$11.95
.............. ...$13.50

Men's $19.95 Jackets
and Vests ...............$15.50

Special poup of emi11$. necklaces. brlcelets, heldblnds, pins,
ri11:5 and hair combs.

................. $15.90

:·:!4-~.~ .~.~~.$19.40

REG. 12.00 ..........................................~..~ .
REG. !5.00 .........................................
13. 9
REG. '11.00 ....................................... SALE .4
REG. '15.00 ....................................... SALE ~~.29

~ Men's $49.95 Jackets

.................$19.90

and Vests ...............$38.90
Men's $69.95 Jackets
and Vests ...............$54.50
118th ANNIVERSARY SALE

118th ANNIVERSARY SALE

SPECIAL

lndudes velou~ · kn~s • flannels ·

You'll like the selection of styles
and colors.

JEANS
&amp; CORDS
Quality Lee's, Wrangler and Buster Brown

REE
GLASS DOORS!

Boys '6.95 Shirts ....... 15.60
Boys 19.95 Shirts ....... '8.00
Boys 112.95 Shirts ... 110.50
- . Boys 116.95 Shirts ...113.70

W'rth the purdhase of any size Buck
Stove you'll pt the &amp;tass door kit
($54.50 value) absolutely FREE.
Buy your Buck Stove Now!
-FREE DELIVERYMechanic St Warehouse

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

118th ANNIVERSARY SALE

I·
Jewelry Spec1a s·
•

:~c~u~~~~~~~~~~

western shirts. In sizes 8 to 20.

I

REG. '11.00 ............ SALE '8.79
REG. '16.00 ......... SALE 112.79
R£G. 121.00 ......... SALE 116.79
REG. 128.00 ......... SALE 122.39

duded br this sale.

Boys Shirts

and colors in warm~ lined jackets and
vests. Many w~h hoods.

blazers, vests, kill WI" and
blouses.
:
Jr. Sizes 3 to 15.

COidUIUiS,

big selectiln of stytli Waist length

118th AnniveBarY Sale

JACKETS
&amp;VESTS
Boys' s~es 8 to 20. Fine selection styles

QuallY Wranp jackets. pa~

JACKETS
&amp;VESTS
Re~lar and extra l&lt;rae sizes in a 1--~ -1!1111!!11~~~....~..~.1111!11'!1--.-!!,.......
. ~.. •. 1::

Sizes S, M, L and XL Solid colors,
colorful patterns, flannels. wash and
wear cotton poly blends. Authentic
western styling. Big selection.

Sk1 jackets, fur looks, hooded ir~ets,
reve~ible jackets, betted ""·
Jr. Sizes 5/ 6 to 15/ lb. ~.,.,.._

'

118tlt Anniversary Sale
. MEN'S WINTER

118th A!WVEI!.¥!!Y SALE!

Boys 111.95 Jackets &amp;Vests 19.30
Boys 119.95 Jackets &amp; Vests '16.10
Boys '26.95 Jackets &amp;Vests 121.00
Boys 139.95 Jackets &amp; Vests '31.10

· JUNIOR .
SPORTSWEAR
.

118TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

REG. $35.95
-POWER RATING OF 5 WATTS
- DURABlE 61NOi SPEAKER SPECIAL
-HANDSOME CABINET

118\11 AnniVa'slry Sale •

denim jeans, corduroy slacks, dress pants, .
knit pants.
Sizes 6 ID 24 mos., 2 ID 4, 4 ID 7.
REG. $7.00 ................... SALE $5.59
REG. $12.00 .................. SALE $9.59
REG. $16.00 .................SAL£ $12.79
REG. $22.00 ................. SALE $17.59

118th Anniversary Sale

Girls' Tops

118th Anniversary Sale
LADIES'

PANTS.
&amp;JEANS
Lee's • Wrangler -Calvin Klein • Buster

Bkluses, knit tops, sweaters, sweat shirts,
capes and velour tops.
Sizes: SID 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 71D 14.

G.E. COLOR ....,
PORTABLE T;t~·.

Quality. name brands like Andrea, Sport,
Trissi, Summit, Sassoon, Dotty Mann,l&amp;K
and levi Blaze~. skirts, slacks, blouses,
pullover sweaters. knt tops, jackets, vests.
Misses Sizes 6 to 20.

Brown denim jeans, knit pants, cordu·
roys, pgging pants, balloon pants.
Sizes: s.to 24 mos., 2-4, 6-Sx, 7-14,

Reg. $5.00 ............. Sale $3.99
Reg. $8.50 ............. Sale $6.79
Reg. $12.00 ............ Sale '9.59
Reg. $17.00 .......... Sale $13.59

118th ANNIYEilsARY SALE

Soortswear Sale

REG. $15.00
REG. $23.00
REG. $38.00
REG. $47.00

REG. $7.00 ............... SALE $5.59
REG. $11.00 ............. SAL£ $8.79
REG. $16.00 ............SALE $12.79
REG. $21.00 .... ~ ......SALE $16.79

-19 inch diag. screen
-100% solid stiie
-VHF-UHF tuner
-General Elecbic quality

............ SALE $11.99
............ SALE $18.39
............ SAL£ $30.39
............ SALE $37.59

SPECIAL

118th ANNIVERSARY ,

MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUS,E

118th ANNIVERSARY SALE!

CARPET SPECIAL

MEN'S FLANNEL
·WORK SHIRTS

-100% nylon pile
Heavy jute back
. -3 different brown tones
-12 It width

118th Anniversary ~lei
'

Men's Sweaters
&amp;
Vests seletion
L.

Our entire stock heavy wei&amp;ht flannels for m..
- plaid, patterns in sizes S, M, L. XL plus big
men's sizes 18 to 20 and Tall men's M (15151'2), L (16-161'2), XL (17-17Y.). You'll really

Sizes S, M,

$15 ~n~lled

With Pad

FLANNEL SHIRTS
FLANNEL SHIRTS
FLANNEL SHIRTS
FLANNEL SHIRTS
FLANNEL SHIRTS

Men's $15.95 SWeaters
Men's $21.95 SWeaters
Men's $24.95 Sts•ters
Men's $29.95 SWeaters

118th Anniversary SaJe!
118TH ANNIVERSARY SALE!

MEN'S BASIC
DENIM JEANS
Straight leg or boot flare 1417 ounce pre-washed No
Faull blue denim sizes 27 to 42. Also men's stretch
denim boot flare jean~ pre-washed. Sizes 291D 42.
Your choice.

Afine selection of prints and solid colorS
in fine quality prints. 36 and 45 inch
widths. Regular prices $2.49 to $2.79 a
yard. This sale

selection.of colors. ·

s1.59 .White w/Color Tops Sl.l9
Sl.89 Grey w/Color Tops .Sl.49

$1 99

3~

118th ANNIVERSARY SALE
118th Anniversary Sale

BOYS JEANS

J.r~

YARD

;

Big selection of colors and patterns dish
cloths. Many with matching dish cloths '
and pot holders.

,·

· Our entire selection of denim and cor:
duroys - Regular, slim and husky ·
sizes'S to20 andstudentwaistsizes26
.to 30 (lengths 30 to 36 in~. Wrangler
and Lee br,ands.

118TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

Bed
Blankets
• ·.Big selection solid colors and

WRANGLER '11.95

REDUCED
'

I '

Save 20%

.

,.

F~ANNEL

.SPORT SHIRTS

20%:

r

'•

118th Anniversary Sale

Sizes S. M, Larid XL Cdortul ~ patterns.
. TYio pockets ·long shirttails. Excellent quality,

.,.. ~949

'

COAT SALE
~~

•'

Nt!W from Playtal •

Perfect

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AIIMt,a....;,.. ...

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ll'l!aAL IIIDODUCftlm'iifnlil

S2Q2~

,...

... .......

Oflef~: ........ fl.ltll

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00111. J*1ts 00111. slldilm aJits.
dr. COli .,d swelllr 00111.

TMd. wool blends,

No.B9c1Ys

'S~ECI~~ ·sl49

·-·

118th Anniversary Sale!

pall·
erns. Twin • lull and queen bed .
sizes.
.. Included in the sale all of our elect·
ric blinkets.

~

and

fur looks.
~ 8 to 18 and 411 ~ :24\1, '
•;

,

ounce skeins. Made by Coats and~rk.
Big selection of solid and variegated·COIOIS.

•

,.

...........$12.76
...........$17.56, ·
......... ~.$19.96 .
...........$23.96 '

RED H'EART .:
KNITTING
YAR ·
.

..

Blue. champagne or pink.
, Sizes s.M-1.;XL

.

.118th Anniversary Sale

QUADRIGA &amp;
HEIRLOOM PRINTS

MEN'S AND BOYS
TUBE SOCKS
Boys sizes 7to II men's 91D 15. Famous Springfoot quality. Big .

OUR REGULAR PRICE '19.95

SLIPPERS
Fleece scuff or ballerina style slippers.

•

~ .

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

SPECIAL sALE

of • ,

Buy now for ywrself or Christmas gNing and

save.

.................$12.45 ·
.................$14.00
.................$14.75
.................$15.55
.................$17.15

MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUSE

DISH TOWELS
DISH CLOTHS
&amp;POT HOLDERS

XL in an excellent

cardigans •V·necks •s1ipa;ers •crew neckS -ski
sweat~ and vests · pui(Ner or button front,_ .

save now.
$15.95
$17.95
$18.95
$19.95
$21.95

$3 99QQ

·REG. 141.00 :............ SALE 132.00
REG. 152,00 ............. SAlE 141.00
.REG. IQ.OO ............. SAlE 155.00
R£8. .,.00 ........ :.... SAlE ....,
R£8. 1119.00 ........... SALE '15.00

: SAlE.
PRICES

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