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NEW YORK (APl - Morgan Guaranty Trust, the nation's fifth
largest bank, today slashed Its prime lending rate a full percentage point
to 12 percent, the lowest level for the key business borrowing rate In 25
months.
The move followed earlier sharp declines in Interest rates and amid
growing expectations of further relief, which also have contributed to a
massive rally in the stock market.
Just last Thursday, major banks adopted a L'l percent prime rate , and
on Friday, Mellon Bank of Pittsburgh cut Its prime rate to 12.75 percent.
Today's action was the first full point cut since the prtme started to fall In
mid-July, when It stood at 16.5 percent.
The prime Is the base upon which banks compute Interest charges on
short-term loans to their most creditworthy corporate customers. Many
large businesses borrow at rates below the prime, while small bust·
nesses typically pay one or two percentage points more than the prime
rate.
Conswner loans and mortgages are not tied to the prime rate.
The prime rate last stood at 12percenton Sept.12,198l, a perlodwhenlt
had started to rise and was climbing to a record of 21.5 percent, reached
In December 198l.
Meanwhile, stock prices soared Monday for the fourth straight ses·
slon In near-record trading as the Dow Jones Industrial average pierced
the 1,00polnt mark for the first time in 15 months amid growing belief
Interest ra tes wUI keep falling.
"The stock market Is responding to the same factors that eventually
will cause an economic recovery - more available and cheaper money," said Michael Metz, vice president with the Investment firm Oppenheimer &amp; Co.
About five stocks rose In
one that fell on the New York

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Weary firefighters mop hot spots
LOS ANGELES - Weary firefighters mopped up hot spots today
after containing the biggest of 11 weekend brush fires- many of them
deliberately set - that burned 75,&lt;XXl acres, injured 147 people and
destroyed 81 homes.
Close-mouthed Investigators also continued searching for whoever
was responsible for five of the fires In Southern California's dry
hillsides, spurred by desert-hot Santa Ana winds howling toward the
Pacific Ocean at speeds up to 60 mph.
In all, the flres causedanestlmated $20.7mllllon in damage as they
blasted across parts of five counties before the last was controlled or
contained late Monday.

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Reg .

Alleged ~efrauder arrested
' In Ohio, llllnols and Washing·
SAN FRANCISCO- A man wanted
ton for investigation of real estate fraud was arrested Monday In a San
Francisco hotel.
Kenneth F. Ha ines, 40, was taken Into custody at 5 p.m. by pollee
acting on a tip from Investigators for a ball bond company'In Seattle ,
said Sgt. Dennis Schardt.
SchardtsaldHalneswaswantedona$500,&lt;XXlarrestwarrantln0ak
Forest, rn .. and a no-ball warrant In Xenia, Ohio. Haines also Is
wanted in Seattle, where a warrant was being processed, he said.
Schardt said the warrants Involved allegations that Haines fled
with money gtven him to Invest in real estate.

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FREMONT, Ohio- Jack Gall. charged with the February 198l
murder of 19-year-old Debra Sue VIne of Genoa, escaped along with
two other Inmates from the Sandusky County Jail Monday night,
Shert!f Joe Kindred said.
Gall, 35, had been serving a sentence at the Marlon Correctional
Institution after being convicted of extortion In connection with the
VIne case. He was Indicted in August on kidnap and murder charges
and transferred to the cpunty jail.
He Is a former Sandusky County sheriff's deputy and former pollee
officer In the Toledo suburb of Woodville.

No . 65

Winning Ohio lottery nuf!lber
CLEVELA.ND - The winning nwnberdrawn Monday night In the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Nwnber" was 817.
·
The lottery reported earnings of $4'12,883 from the wagering on Its
daUy game. The earnings came on sales of $881,421.50, while holders
of wlniilng tickets are entitled to share $4(11,538.50, lottery officials
saki.

·W eathet forecast
SOUTH CENTRAL Tonlgl': and Wednesday: ll'lllStly cloudy with a
Chance of rain. Low tonight IA!Bl' 50. Hlgh Wednesday 58 to 63. Winds

.

2 Sec t ions, 14 Pages
15 Ce nts
A Multimedia Inc. Newspa per

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Oct. 12,1982

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entinel

Prime lending rate at 25 month low

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Chip prnof . Flameproof non·
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Page4

The Daily

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Vol.3l ,No. t 12
Copyoightod I 982

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Glitter Plaques
Thousands of brilliant glowing multi·
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NANCARROW'S PHARMACY

variable leSs than 10 mph tonight.'Chance of rain: 50 percent tonight
and Wednesday;
0b1o Extended Forecallt
•
· 'l1lunclay ~1!1 Sa1uniaY ..: lair 'l1lunda.v and l!'rkh\v· A ·
dulnoe oiiiOOwen~. Jllp.ID 1be upper IlOilo mid 81111
'l1lundiiJ ... Ia lbe mid . . . low . . ll'rlday .... SI!Qtrday.
ManiliaiiDMirom lbeapper. Ill mid. 'lbllntlay udla lite 418

,~,

•

Stock' Exchange.
The Dow Jones average of 30 Industrial stocks, which rose 79 points
last week, surged an addltional 25.94 to 1,012. 79 - Its highest level since
It finished at 1,016.93 on Aprll 28, 1981. The last time the closely watched
measure closed above l ,(XX) was on June 23, 1981, when it stood at
l,(Xl6.66. The average has risen about 236 points In two months.
Trading volume also kept up Its fierce pace. Some 138.53 million
shared changed hands on the New York Stock Exchange. the second·
highest one-day total behind the 147.07 million shares traded last Thurs·
day. It was the third straight session In which volume surpassed 100
million shares and the lOth time since Aug. 18, which was the first day
volume ever exceeded 100 million shares.
The market, which oft en reacts to expectations about the futu re, has
been rallying despite news showing the economy remained weak last
month, such as the 10.1 percent unemployment rate reported Friday.
"You can' fight the tape: we' re In a bull market, " said Alan C. Poole,
vice president of Laidlaw. Ada ms &amp; Peck Inc.
Aboard Air Force One, as President Reagan flew from California lo
Dallas for a campaign appearance, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said "many economists bellew" that the markel's
rally "expresses a long-ra nge confidence" In the economy. "Thai's
what we believe we are seeing," Speakes sa id.
Foremost of the factors cited for Wall Street's euphoria is investors'
perception that Interest ra tes will keep fa lling and spark economic
recovery. With money costing less, consumers should be encouraged to
spend more - especially on more expensive items req uiring credit .
That would allow retailers to order more goods, spu rring manufaclur·
ers to Increase production and perhaps hire back workers.
Also, Investors and many market analysts are convinced that the
decline In the Inflation ra te Is not a fluke.
The new encouragement about interest rates reflects a growing con·
vlction that the Federal Reserve, concerned about I he recession and the
weak state of many Industries , Is temporarily adopting a more accom·
modating monetary stance that will keep lnteresl rates falling.
Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said Sa lurday thai the
bank's basic monetary policy had not changed. But Wall Streel was
more Impressed on Friday when the central bank cui its rate on loans to
financial Institutions - the discount ra te - lo 9.5 percent from 10
percent.
That raised the prospects for ot her rates to fall and caused "a reviva l
In Investor confidence."
Some analysts contend the stock market Is being overly oplimistic
abou 1he chances for economic recovery, but many disagree. Ot,hers
say it Is too soon to say.

The Monthlv Trend
Of The Dow Jones
Industrial Average

f

02 5
1.000
97 5
950
925
900

·-·-

H;gh

Close
-

t

Low

87 5

•t~

85 0
825
800
~7 5

AL~~~~·~·~o~JLI~~~·~,LL·~~'LoL'~J~-L~·~·J•-LLIo 750
1980

81

82

MONTHLY TRE ND OF DOW JONES INDUSTKIAL AVERi\G E
- This graphic shows the monthly trend of the Dow J ones Industrial
Average from August 1980 untO October II, 19il2, when the Dow opened
at 991.54, rose to a high of 1,021.59 and closed at 1.012.19. (AP
Laserphoto).

Gas proposal given approval ·
By BOB HOEFUCH
Middleport Village Council meet·
lng In regular session Monday night
approved a proposal for submission
to Columbia Gas of Ohio on a new
contract with the village.
The present contract of the town
expires on Nov ..12.
John Koebel, localmanager of the
gas company, discussed aspects of
the contract. Koebel Indicated he is
willing to take any suggestions !rpm
town officials back to management
for consideration.
There was a lengthy discussion on
the new contract and at the end of
that discussion five councilmen approved a contract proposal prepared by Mayor Fred Hoffma n.
Councilman Allen King abstained
from voting on the proposal which
Koebel will take to his management
for consideration.
Contents of the proposal were not
disclosed. However, the discussion
Indicated that the new contract will
contain a minimum charge clause
ratlfer than a customer charge provision. Under the minimum charge
plan, customers would pay a set

amount of money although the pay·
minimum fee, for example $4.95,
ment distribution might vary.
and would be permitted the use ofa
Koebel said the company will ex·
certain quantity of gas at that price.
peel a 6.4 percent increase with the
Under the present contract, all cus·
new contract bringing the com·
tamers pay a $4.95customer charge
pany's ra te of return on its invest·
and then all gas used is figured on
ment to 13.68 percent . He said the
top of the customer charge. Mayor
increase would bring the bill of a
Hoffman commented that all prior
user of ll,&lt;XXl cubic feet of gas to
contracts until the last one had the
minimum charge plan rather than $67.56 compared to $63.51 under the
the customer charge plan. In other . present contract.
Councilman Allen King took ex·
words, customers had to pay a min·
ception to several aspects of the dis·
lmum charge, but they were per·
cussion on minimum and customer
mltted the use of a certain quanity of
charges. He said that he felt that a
gas In that figure.
customer who did not use any gas
It is believed that the proposal
should not pay any fee. However,
from Mayor Hoffman also Includes
Koebel said there are expenses in
a provision for free gas for village
maintaining such customers in the
buildings.
Koebel will take the suggestions system. Some businesses shut off
from Hoffman and return to the next service In the summer time, espemeeting with the decision of his cially service stations, Koebel
stated. King charged that the rate
management.
However, while Koebel Indicated system is a "distortion" and is mis·
company management Is open to leading and that the small user is
various ways of leveling cha rges to helping pay the way for larger
customers he stressed that what Is users.
given away on one end Is picked up
King asked that residents let
on the other end by the company. councilmen know their wishes on a
The company will receive the same
plan to be followed In setting up a

new contract.
Council. in other matters, apc
proved the report of Mayor Hof.
fma n showing receipts of $5396 for
the month of September and set
trick or treat night for Ocl. 29 from 6
to 7 p.m., the same schedule as In
Pomeroy Village. It was agreed
also in the future to check with other
towns such as Mason and New
Haven. W.Va .. to attempt to get the
observance on the same night.
Mayor Hoffman reported that the
new water tank has been pu l lnto use
although final phases of the project
off VIne St.. are not completed . Off I·
cials discussed the street repaving
project and felt that the Shelly Co.
had done a good job for the toWn. It
was agreed also to place permanent
markers on the J ames Brewer property noting the location of the easemen! over that property for the
water tank. Floyd G. Brown and
Associates will hand that project at
a cost not to exceed $1125.
Councilmen Bob Gilmore and
King reported thai they had visited
the Brewer residence on Sunday fol·
!Continued on page 101

Shipyard workers
protest union ban
WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Thou·
sands of shipyard workers shouting
"Solidarity Is alive! " struck in
Gdansk today for a second day to
protest the ban on their union and
were joined by thousands more In
the nearby Baltic port of Gdynla ,
witnesses said.
Western journalists, drlvlng out
of Gdansk to nearby Elblag to
breach a telephone blackout lm·
posed by Communist Poland's
martial-law regjme, said the Paris
Commune shipyard In Gdynla had
joined workers at the v .I. Lenin
shipyard In Gdansk.
An estlniated 5,(XX) workers could
be lnvolvi!d In the Gdansk protest,
with se\teral thousand more jol!llng
the strike In Gdynla, the reporters
saki.
.
They saki the strike Iuid reswned
tn Gdansk at 6 a .m. and that pollee
backed by water cannon had sur·
rounded the giant shlpbulldlngcom·
pJex at 9 a .m.

Western corresponde nts In
Gdansk sald strlkersclosed the shipyard to demand release of union
chief Lech Walesa and others jailed
for violating the martial-law edicts
ofDec. 13.
Pollee routed stragglers who refused to disperse Monday night fol·
lowing an illegal but peaceful
eight-hour strike to protest the government's latest labor crackdown,
which banned Solidarity and nullified reforms !hi! union won for Pol·
Ish workers.
State television said pollee used
"means of coercion" on "several
groups" of onlookers who defied
orders to disperse after dusk fell
outside the giant Lenin Shipyard
where Solidarity was born during
s~August 198l.
Western reporters In the Baltic
port said the protesters decided to
strike again today (or eight hours
and tQkl the worlters to assemble
outside the gates .

FALL - Entrances of Meigs County homes are taking on special
faD effects In spite of the warm temperatures. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon
Bartrum, Rulland Road, are using 1'- six smUing pwnpldns on their
doorway this faD. Many are colng to the painted pumpkins In prefe,.
ence to carved pumpldns this faD.
·

�•

Commentary

Pomeroy7 Middleport, Ohio ;·
Tuesday,~. 12,1982

Registration resisters

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Unemployment angers
Democrats, GOP
stands with Reagan
Former Vicf&gt; President Walter Mondale a nd AFL.CJO chief Lane Kirk·
la nd are demanding that the Reagan adm inistration find a way to cure the
nation's economic woes without high unemployment.
But White House Chief of Staff James A. Baker lli says the admlnistra·
tion has no plans to alter its policies, which emphasize cuts in the federal
budget and in individual and business tax rates to get the economy going
again .
"The unemployment situat ion is tragic and the president deplores the fact
tha t so many people are out or work," Baker said Sunday on ABC's "This
Week With David Brinkley."
However. Baker maintained tha t "the ~ percent (of the American
people! that are working are considerably better off than they were two
years ago. They've got more purchasing power ... " because or reduced
Inflation a nd the tax cut s.
Kirkland. decrying double·digit unemployment that leftsomell.3 million
people jobless In Sept em her, said time has run out on President Reagan's
pursuit of suppl y·side economics.
"This administration has tested a nd tried and had its way In trylngout two
errat ic cultist throrics." the AFL-CIO president said on the CBS program
"Face the Nat ion."
"Never hefore In history have two crack·brain throries like supply·side
economics and cult ist monetarism had a more extensive tria l and been
proved so wrong to the great harm or so many people so quickly," he said.
MondalP, who was a lso Interv iewed on the ABC broadcast, said Reagan
was misleading the public with rhetoric with his assertions that the presi·
dent inherited an unemployment rate that had already reached 7.4 percent
when he succeeded President Jimmy Carter.
"What !think is troubling Americans is that we have politicians dealing
with the politics or the problem. not the problem," said Mondale, considered
a candidate for the [)(&gt;mocratic party nomination for president in 1984.
"The present course is not working .... I think in all respects, he's tRea·
ga n 1 wmng. But what really cou nts is thatwegetonanddosomethlngnow to
help these people that are suffering so dreadfully right now." ,
Mondalc accused Reagan or "blam ing others, try ing to find a political
position that solves his political problem. I think what Americans want now
is a lot less blaming and a little action now to put people back to work."
Baker disagreed with assert ions thatthedouble-dlgit unemployment rate
in September, the last such figures to he reported before the fall rongres·
siona l elections. will erode Republican party chances at the polls.
"I do not think that the 10.1 percent unemployment figure will he a
dramatic event so far as the election is concerned," he said . "I don't think it
will he a wa ters hed event ."

Extreme days in
financial markets
These are extreme days in the financial markets, andwhileextremescan
be enormously profitable to some, they can he exceedingly dangerous to
others- such as you. perhaps.
Moderation. it appears, is out. 1\venty·fl ve stocks on the New York Stock
Exchange and 24 on the American Exchange rose at least 21 percent last
week. And many stocks plunged, such as Internation a l HaJVester, off 27.8
percent.
It is a situation that strains reason, and leaves casual Investors In a
dilemma of greed and rear so great that reason is clouded and destructive
impulsiveness is seen as the only relief.
Compounding the problem Is that you can search In vain for the reasons
whv Wall Street issoexcited. Even thosewhoarecommittlngfortunes to the
market. It seems safe to say, must be wondering If it's all real.
The economy, supposedly the basis for stock market movements, shows
no strong evidence of a certain recovery.
The economic forecasts have been remarkably restrained. There are
extremes - there are some who say we are headed for either the biggest
bust or the biggest boom or a ll time - but the consensus is for only a mUd
recovery.
Even that seems far off. At the very time the financial markets bubbled
with enthusiasm. the labor markets were reaching their worst condition In
42 years, with no les~ than 19.5 mlllion Americans directly affecte? last
~~h.
.
That total is made up of 11.3 million workers who sought but falled to find
jooo, 1.6 million •'discouraged'' workers who gave up looking, and 6.6milllon
who for lack of better job opportunities, accepted part-time employment.
The job situation lsn'tllkely to improve soon either, judging from consumer actions and business statements. Consumers are reluctant to spend the
economy Into expansion, and buSiness leaders say theywon'tspenduntll the
consumer does. A stalemate. How, then, do you get the economy moving?
It is that question that produces one likely explanation for why markets
have gone on a rampage, with stacks rising 188 points since August (as
measured by the Dow Jones average) and bonds recovering from their deep
depression.
·
The economy will get moving, the market appears to be saying, because
Interest rates will continue to drop. Lower Interest rates wlll get people Into
carsagaJn,andhouse5too,andthenlndustrywillspendtomeetthedemand.
And how should you as an Investor react to high tension market? With
moderation. Beware the extremes.
,

WASHINGTON - The Justice
[)(&gt;partment Is wrestling these days
with a problem as old as Socrates
and as contemporary as a speed
trap. As an abstract proposition,
the laws of the land must be en·
forced. As a practical matter, the
proposition defies easy application.
The Immediate Issue Involves
young men who have not registered
for a potential draft. What should
the government do about them?
The Selective Service System
says that roughly 8.5 million men
affected by the registration law
have dutifully s igned up. Another
500,(XX) have not registered, but of
those 500,!XXl, about JOO,!XXl are In
the military reserves or the Na·
tional Guard. There presumably Is
no problem as to them.
That leaves perhaps 400,000
young men In violation of the law. It
is a reasonable surmise, predicated
upon oooerved levels of public
knowledge, that 300,(00 of these
men have falled because of simple
ignorance rather than willful defiance. If their Ignorance of the law
ca n he esta blished, and their wll·
ling registrations obtained, It would
be a was te of judicial resources to
take them to court.
Assuming these figures are more
or less accurate, that still leaves
about lOO,!XXl prospective regis·
Irants who are In knowing, dellber·
ate violation of the law. For them, it
seems to me, there can be but one
answer. This is to Indict a thousand
of them at a time, based upon ran·
dom sampling, and to prosecute
them jus t as violators of other laws
are prosecuted. The government
cannot ignore them. That way lies
destruction of the rule of law on
which our democratic freedoms
depend.
In San Diego las t week, one of the
defiant ones. Benjamin H. Sasway,
contended that the registration law
is unconstitutional. The contention
is frivolous. The Constitution ex·

WASHINGTON !APl - In the
age or high·lf&gt;Chnology politics. the
experts have a special formula for
forecasting the outcome of off·year
elections. They guess.
Election forecasting Is a game
anyone can play. although some fig.
ures dress up the guesswork and
make It sound authoritative.
For example, the party holding
the White House has lost an average
of 14 percent of Its House seats In
each of thepastll off·yearelectlons.
Applied to the Republicans' current
192Houseseats, that would point to a
Democratic gain of 28 seats on Nov.

2.
For another. the last time Republicans held the White House In an
off.year election campaign·In a per·
sistent recession, they lost 47 seats.
That was In 1958.

--JUST

~ur UPl ""

I

The trouble Is that national sur·
veys are not necessarily a gauge of
the435 separate elections which will
decide who goes to Congress.
And the trouble with averages is
that there's no such thingasanaver·
age election. The [)(&gt;mocrats lost 70
·seats, a record, in the 1938elections.
They lost only five In 1962, and only
five in 1968. Average those three
showlngsandtheWhlteHouseparty
lost 26 and two-thirds House
members.
The five-seat [)(&gt;mocratlc losses
were In the first elections after the
Inaugurations of two [)(&gt;mocratlc
presidents. The Republicans lost 18
seats In 1954, after Dwight Elsen·
hower became president, and 12 In
1970, after Richard Nixon got the
White House.
This is the first off·year balloting

of the Reagan presidency, so maybe
those lower loss rates should be the
precedents that count.
Overall, the pattern is clear
enough to ,make It a safe bet that
Republicans wlll lose SO!Tle House
seats next month. Despite compu·
ters, polls, voter profiles and the
other technical tools of modern politics, the guesswork begins when It
comes to assigning specific
numbers to the likely House
outcome.
But, with the same track record to
guide them, the expert forecasters
are all over the lot.
Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, chairman
of the House Congressional Cam·
paignCommlttee, said theGOPwlll
overrule history and gain House
seats.
Edward J. Rollins, a Reagan

The

between Good Guys and Bad Guys,
gift In a secretary of state, who
replete with ambushes, doubledeals every day with some of the
most Intractable people and probcrosses and similar derrlng·do. In·
evltably, such a personality
lems In the world. In Schultz's case
provokes a like response In others.
however, we must guard agalnsi
And whenever Haig entered a
supposing that the man's core Is as
room, people chose up sides for and
unabraslve as his exterior: The
against him. In retrospect It was
Bechtel Corporation, which he
served as president before taking
probably Inevitable that he would
rome to regard his State Departhis present post, Is a huge, multi·
national conglomerate which prement colleagues as the fellows
sumably doesn't give Its high
wearing the white hats, whlle those
executive positions to softies.
dirty so-and·so's up at the White
Since taking over at- State,
House just as obviously all wore
Schultz has shown a deft touch In
black hats.
laying down policy In such tricky
No doubt there Is a Job someareas as the Middle East, com.
where for such a person, but It as·
suredly isn't the secretaryship of
blned with a personal loyalty to
President Reagan and the pres!·
state.
Grorge Schultz, regarded purely • dent's Intentions that must make
as a personality, is about as differ- Mr. Reagan wish he had a dozen
ent from Alexander Halg as It Is Cabinet members like him. "This Is
possible to be. His outward appear- the President's policy; now let's get
ance Is as calm as a mU!pond. He on with Implementing It" such Is
borders on the bovine. Let him walk reported to be Schultz's general atthrough a crowded room, and five titude, and It is hard to Imagine a
minutes later thoSe present would better one. Gone are the bad old
swear that nobody had even en- days of the Black Hats and the
White Hats, when the State Depart·
tered or left.
.
This abU!ty to avoid getting other ment and the White House were ripeople's hackles up Is a priceless val power centers In a never-ending

18-game winner this season. "Whl·
tey wanted to build a team on speed
and I never really ran that well."
The Cards do, though. They are a
first-to-third oriented team, seldom
satisfied to advance around the
bases 90 feet at a time. And their
defense is just about flawless with
only 124 errors.
"From what I've seen, they're
personalized with Whitey Herzog's
stamp on them," said Caldwell, the
Brewers' first game starter. "They
have a lot of slmillarlties to the
teams he had In Kansas City. They
don't strikeout a lot and they hltthe
ball upthemlddieandlnthealleys."
Herzog's Royal teams reached
the playoffs three times but never
could get past the New York Yankees. So this will be his first World
Series. He's looking fmward to it.
"I don't know what It's like," he
said. "I've never done It before, But
everybody wants to. Now I've got
the chance."
The Brewers' big bats don't
frighten the Cardinals, who think
their spacious ball park will equal·
1ze Milwaukee's power and that Its
artificial surface wlll benefit St.
Louis.
Vuckovlch remembered Busch
Stadlwn' s roomy dimensions but
didn't think that would trouble the
Brewers.

".............
,~·.

WORLD SERIES TICKETS- St. Louis baseball
Cardinals' fans Bob Brueho, Millstadt, ru., Steve
McCarty, Belleville, m., and Robert McCarty, Beneville, m., prepare lor the long walt to buy tickets lor

MARK HAMMOND
157 pound
Sophomore back

memorable occasJons. But since

CINCINNATI (AP)-ClubPresl·
dent Dick Wl!gner has told Clncln·
nat! Reds season ticket holders that
some player moves prior to the 1982
baseball campalgrf were "mls·
takes," but says the team's reluc·
tance to pay premlwn salaries has
not changed.
"First of all, let me report that
we're all alive,'' Wagner said In a
letter this week to ticket holders. "!
guess maybe that' san achievement
In Itself, considering the way things
have gone th!S year.' •
The 1982 Reds recently finished
their worst season In nearly 50 years
with a 61-101 record- poorest In the
National League. The Reds had
compiled the best record In baseball
In 1981, but falled to make the
playoffs because of the split-season
format.
"I've been In baseball for nearly
half of my llfe-morsthan25years
~ and I can honestly say I've never
gone through a year like our 1982
season," Wagner wrote In the two-

'

Schultz took over at State relations
seem much closer to room
temperature.
"
Above all, George Schultz shows
every sign of understanding that
foreign poUcy Is, and must be, es'
sentlally under the control of the
president . The president can and .,
does delegate day-to-day manage- '
ment of U.S. foreign policy to his
secretary of state, but the kind of • ....
~
w hoIesale turnover of responslbll· . "
lty that Alexander Halg seems to ~
have wanted Is out of the question,
even If Ronald Reagan desired it.
In recognizing this, George Schultz .. .
has taken a big step toward a sue· "''
cessful career In Foggy Bottom.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio
State, thepreseasonB!gTenConfer·
ence title fav(lrlte, blessed with nine
regulars back from a team that averaged 33 points a game, has not
scored In the last six quarters.
In fact, the Buckeyes have not
scored Jn the third quarter, or 75
minutes of football, In their 2-3 sea·
son, their poorest beginning since

DOONESBURY

1967.

"'

"I don't know why It is that the
· third quarter Is so disastrous offenslvely," Earle Bruce, Ohio State's
football coach, said Monday.
' 'We've got togetsopll!conslstency
In our attack, consistency In our
quarterbacking and our offEmSive

..,"..
.....

Bruce says game films show why
Ohio State's attack Is a mere.
shadow of Its once-famed potency.

... .

.

'

page letter, dated Oct. 6.
"We made a lot of player moves
before the start of the season "
Wagner wrote, "and a couple ~f
them turned out to be mistakes."
Wagner also complained that·the
Reds were hurt by Injuries to play·
ers early In the season.
"Someofourveteransdidn'thave
the season we'd come to expect
from them, and that added more
pressure on the youngsters," he
wrote. "Pretty soon, everybody was
pressing."
But Wagner said that the club's
basic philosophy hasn'tchanged regarding player salaries. He noted
that the Reds payroll In 1975, when
Cincinnati won the World Series,
was $1.4 mllllon. Last year, salaries
jumped to $6 mllllon despite the loss
of stars like George Foster, Ray
Knight, Ken Griffey and Dave Col·
llns from 1981.
"On the matter of salaries, we're
not convinced you can satisfy the
lifetime financial goals of your play·

ers and then motivate them to per·
form on the field as If their jobs were
on the line," Wagner wrote. "Some
cluoo are finding that approach
doesn't guarantee a winner and
often can produce a fat, lazy
ballclub."
Wagner said the RedS would try to
improve.
''I'm not convinced our ballclub Is
as bad as the 1982 record," he wrote.
"I said at the All-Star break that
there weren't four or five clubs In
baseball that I'd trade our 25-man
roster for even·up. I still feel that
way."
He said putting together a ball·
club is a challenge In Ught of the
changes In baseball over the past
decade.
"I'm just saying that one season
when everything seemed to go
wrong Isn't going to be enough to
make u.s tum our back on the basic
philosophies that have made the
Cincinnati Reds so successful over
the last decade,'' he wrote.

Buckeyes scoring drought puzzling

...

~'

the World Series. The trto wlll brave ch!Dy temperatures overnight while they walt lor tickets to go on
sale tomorrow momlng lor the 7:30p.m. CDT game.
(AP Laserphoto).

Despite poorest season Reds
won't alter club philosophies

battle for control of U.S. foreign
policy.
We even seem to be hearing less,
these days, about collisions tJe.
tween the State [)(&gt;partment and
the Pentagon. There are bound to
be differences of opinion, and even
of policy, between these two Important departments from time to
time, and Defense Secretary Weln·
berger went to the mat with Secretary Halg on a number of

.

Une."

'

'.

Page-3

RICK CHANCEY

TREY CASSELL
165 (Miund
Sophomore guard

I7J

(M)Und

Senior end, QB

Southern volleyballers take 17th win:
The Southern Tornadoette volley·
ball team raised Its overall record
to 17·1 with wins over league foe
Kyger Creek and the Galllpolls
Blue [)(&gt;viis. The win ovey Kyger
Creek completed an unllefeated
Southern Valley Athletic League
season at HI·O. The Kyger-Southern
match was a thrtller as the Bob!'ats
surprised the err.or·proned Torna·
doettes In the first game, 15-11.
Southern led once at 8-6, but Kyger
came back to win the exciting first
game. This was the first time all
season the Tornadoettes had lost
the first game of a match. Kyger
was led In serving by T. Proctor
with six and Amy Roush with five
serving points.
Southern came back in the second game to take a 4·2 lead after
the first four rotations. Laren
Wolfe, having her best serving
game of the year, put the Torna·

doettes In a commanding 14·2 lead.
faced the Gallipolis Blue Devils at'
with 10 straight serving points.
Rio Grande College and came :
Kyger rallied to score two more
awa y \Vith a two gitme match win, ·
points, but Southern's Jenny Ben· 15-4 a nd 15·7.
tley served the final point to win the , - - - - - - - - - - game 15-4.
In the df&gt;Cidlng third game the
Bob!'ats took a n early 2·1 lead, but
Amy Littlefield put Southern ahead
with two serving points. The lead
changed hands against Kyger's L.
The Buckeye State has
Nibert and Tammy Proctor putt he
88 counties and 85,000
miles of roads. To travel
Bobcats in front, 5·3. Senior Tonja
and find the opportunities
Salser, hav ing the hest serving
it ha s to offer · land, lakes,
game of her high school career. fin·
streams, forests or wildlife·
ished off the Bobcats with the last12
county maps become almost
. a necessity.
winning se1ves to make the final
A county map book is cur·
15-5.
rently available. AU 88
For the match Southern was led
large scale maps · one of
by Tonja Salser with 15 points and
each county together with
an index to communities
Laren Wolfe wit h 12. Proctor and
and useful information, are
Roush led Kyger with seve n each.
conta ined in the 148 page
On Saturd ay the Tornadoettes
book. You may obtain the
Ohio County Maps book,
with largo 22x 16 inch double

88 County
Maps in
State Book

spread size pages, by sending $10.70 to: County Maps,

Attn: M.E. Goodenew, 1486
Mulford Rd.. Columbus.
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (API- [)(&gt;f.
score came on a 28-yard toss and
Ohio 43212. This charge in·
enslve tackle Randy Taylor and
pushed Eastern into a 21·10 lead.
eludes handling and UPS
widerecelverSteve Bird have given r - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . t . . ._ _d_e_li_ve_r~y·--~---­
Eastern Kentucky a sweep of the
Ohio Valley Conference's player of
the week awards.
Taylor led the Colonels' defense
during Saturday's .J5.10 victory over
Middle Tennessee State University
with nine tackles. five assists, two
quarterback sacks and one other
tackle be hind th e lin e of
scrimmage.
The Clnnclnnati, Ohio. nat ive is a
6-foot·4, 2ll·pound senior.
The 5-11, 171·pound Bird ca ught
six passes for 1.27 yards and two
touchdowns. The Corbin, Ky., senior's first scoring catch was for 45
yards and broke a 7·7tle. His second
'life. Home . Cor. Business. One nome says It oiL

.Auto-Owners Insurance

Wagner admits trade mistakes

William A. Rusher

l.li~~~ll~..::::::::::J ~iiiiiia1llillt:.:::;~::::J t.~iiiE:i!!.!:Ult.C:......::::::::::I

Daily Sentinel

Meet the Meigs Marauders

-

aide, forecasts "a great triumph
over the Democrats In November,"
although he doesn't define trtumph.
James A. Baker ill, the White
House c,hlef of staff, said a while ..
back that anything less thana loss of
38 House seats, the off-year average, should be regarded as a Republican victory.
The GOP floor leaders, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. and Rep. Bob Ml·
chel, said on Tuesday that the GOP
probably would lose only 10 to 12
seats In the House. Richard Rl·
chards, the Republican cha!ITnan, ~
agrees.
Democratic National Cha!ITnan
Charles T. Manatt says hls · pwiy
will gain 10 to 15 seats, and would do
twice as well but for the fact that
Republicans have much more money to spend on the campaign.

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

l~~~M~~~~3

Middleport, Ohio

Taylor, Bird, 0 VC players of week

:Today iri history
Today Is Tuesday, Oct.12. the285thdayofl!&amp; Thereare~days lett In the
year.
Today' s highlight In history:
On Oct. 12, 1492, Christopher Colwnbus discOVered America.
On this date:
-In 1822, Brazil became Independent of Portugal.
.
1
-In 945, theAlliedContro!CoonclllnGemlanyorderedthedlssolutlonof
the Nazi Party after world war rr.
. ,.....,,

ST. LOUIS (AP) -This river. whlletheBrewersrounterwlthlefty
front city on the banks ofthe Mlssis- Mike Caldwell, who was battered by
sippi where the Gateway Arch ' California In theopenerof theAmer·
signals theway.West, welcomes the lean League series.
World Series for the first time In 14
1\vo ofthe Wallbangers are alllng
years tonight as the St. Louis Card!· and Kuenn said he would not know
nals face the Milwaukee Brewers.
untll gametlme whether outfielders
Baseball could not have rome up Gorman Thomas and Ben Ogilvie
with a more Intriguing matchup to could play. Thomas, who shared the
major league home run champion·
battle for Its world championship.
Whitey Herzog's Cardinals are a ship with 39, has a sore knee, and
modern Gas house Gang, who won Ogilvie. who hit 34 homers, has a
the National League championship bruised rib.
with speed and defense. They stole
"I won't know If they can play
~bases and Herzog thinks they're until! get to the park," said Kuenn.
capable of 75 more than that. And
"U they don't, 'I've got all kinds of
they hit 67 home runs, fewest In the other guys who can."
majors, proving that you don't have
Marshall Edwards and Mark
tohittheballoverthewalltowlnball
Brouhard, who both made Jmpor·
games;
·tant contributions to the playoff vic·
Don t try to tell that to the Man· tory over California, are Kuenn's
ager HaJVey Kuenn and his Amerl· outfield reserves.
can League champion Brewers, a
The Game 1\vo pitching ma t·
team of sluggers that hit 216 ho- chups will be veteran Don Sutton for
mers, tops In the majors. The Brew· the Brewers against rookie John
ers llve by the long ball and, In StupeF for the Cardinals.
tribute to their manager, they are
When the Series shifts to Mllwau·
called HaiVey's Wallbangers.
kee for Game Three Frtday night
So It wlll be a ;lash of opposing Pete Vuckovlch, traded away !non~
philosophies.
of Herwg's early remOdeling
Right-hander Bob Forsch, who moves, starts for the Brewers
pitched a three-hit shutout In the against Joaquin Anduar for St.
opening game of the National Louis.
League playoffs against Atlanta,
"The trade was part of the busi·
starts for the Cardinals tonight,
ness," deadpanned Vuckovlch, an

prison rather than a~lde by the reg.
lstratlon law. Eller'.s position Is
rooted In morality; Sasway's posl·
tlon has no roots at all.
The judge In San Diego, to his
credit, refused to play sasway's
game of l·wanna·lJe.a-martyr. A
punishment of five years'lmprtson·
ment and a $10,!XXl fine could have
been Imposed.
For the record, I was lukewarm
to the registration law when the law
was passed as a response to the Soviets' Invasion of Afghanistan. It
seemed a feeble gesture, for one
thing, and 'I shared the doubts ex·
pressed In Congress that little
would be gained In preparedness by
registration for an actual draft that
may never rome. Never mind. The
law passed. Fairly, systematically,
judiciously , It now must be
enforced.

5Hur up!

New attitude at State
NEW YORK !NEAl It Is of
course too early for any sweeping
conclusions about how George
Schultz will turn out as secretary of
state, but It now seems perfectly
sat.,; to say that he Is a distinct Improvement over Alexander Halg.
Halg was a good man In many
ways: clever. highly competent
and well aware that there is nothing
In the least "Inordinate" about this
country's fear of communism. The
media tried from the"start to bring
him down, for the sin of having
served In the Nixon admlnlstra·
tlon; but Halg hung on grimly, and
they gradually turned their atten·
tlon to easier targets.
Toward the end of his tenure at
State, It seems clear that Halg had
pretty well been captured by his
staff, and was battling the White
House on the department's behalf
on a whole series of issues. This
would probably have resulted In his
downfall sooner or later anyway,
but the process was undoubtedly
hastened by Halg's prickly
personality.
Halg Is one of those people whose
natural habitat Is controversy. His
mind just naturally, runs to battles

Pomeroy

World Series tonight

]ames]. Kilpatrick

pres sly vests In Congress the power
·statements, Sasway Is such a viola·
to raise armies and to provide a
tor. No religious convictions are In·
navy. It Is Inconceivable that the
volved. This 21·year·old simply
Supreme Court would Invalidate so
opposes the registration law and
plain a manifestation of the 'delea bhors the foreign policies that led
gated power.
to the law's enactment. In a free
Sasway also raised this defense
society he certainly Is entitled to his
- that he was the victim of selec·
opinions, but It Is absurd to suggest
tlve, arbitrary and capricious
that he Is entitled to pick and choose
prosecution. Of all the thousands of
the laws he will obey.
resisters, why had the government '
True believers In "civil dlsotJe.
picked him• But there is a large
dlence," unlike young Sasway, do
body of law that supports the necesnot enter pleas of not guilty and hire
sity of selective enforcement. Not
lawyers to plot stratagems. Soall highway speeders can be arcrates took the hemlock. Martin
rested, but radar traps deter some
Luther King put on his go·to-jail
of them. Prosecutors must be
clothes before he led a protest
granted wide discretion. It Is only
march. It is the notion that the
common sense to go after the open
young resisters may violate law
and notorious violators who flaunt
with Impunity that Is so offensive.
their own defiance and seek to proIn this regard, we may even ad·
vide a lawless example for others.
mire a young ministerial student In
On the record of his own public
Virginia, who Is prepared to go to

Oct. 12,1982

Cards~ Brewers open

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel ':,

The Daily Sentinel

I' \T WIIITFHt:AD

Tuesday,

•• v

Ij

The Buckeyes have dwindled from
282groundyards lnanopenlng21-14
trtumph over Baylor to only 143
rusl)lng yards Saturday In a 6-0 loss
to Wisconsin.
'
"Our execution Is going wrong on
offense," he said. "The turnovers,
themlssedfleldgoals-thoseareall
from lack of execution. We've got to
get them to execute. ~·
Sowhytheblgdlfterencebetween
Ohio State's offense In 1981, when
the Buckeyes shared the Big Ten
title, and 1982? ·
"The explosiveness of u;" Bruce
'·•safd. "Last year we had big plays,
blg plays from the run. Obviously,
we haven't gotten that."
Then Bruce hinted' tor the first
time that Ohio Slate misses Art .
Schlichter, the team's starter for
ftillr straight seasons who now Is

,,

)J)

I

with the Baltimore Colts.
"They had to respect our passing
last year," he said.

ighest
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Beulah results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- FacUItate, driven by Dave Gehrl, won the
fl'l!tured ninth race at Beulah Park
Monday to · pay $19.~, $7.~ and
$4.~.

The winner's time for slxturlongs
was1:12.
Second Will! Judgement Call for
$3.60 and $2.60, followed by Phillip
J.C.for$3.
. .
·
The lOth race trlfecta, 9-6-11, paid
$9,936.90.
.
A crowd of 3,490 bet $428,137.

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�Tue5Ckry,()ct. 12,1982

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

NFL ownership
ready to modify
cancellation threat

Washington keeps
•
•
top spot tn
rattngs
By n.., Associated Press
The stateofPennsylva nia has had
enough of Alabama for one
weekend.
The Crimson Tide not only beat
Penn State Saturday, but also
bumpro Pitt out of second place in
the Associated Press college foot ball poll
Penn State plunged from No.3 to
~ o.8 as the result of its 42-21 defeat
bv Bear Bryant" s team Sa turday. In
the process. Alabama moved from
:\o.i to :\o.2. knocking idle Pitt dmm
to third.
The Crimson Tide received 13
first-place v·otes Monda y from the
nationwide panel of sports writers
and broadcasters and collected a
tota l of 1.016 points as the result of its
impressiw) \' ic tory . Pitt rf'&lt;'e inl(j
nine firs t-place v·otes and a tota l of
996points.
The Crimson Tide's total left
them behind the No.I Was hington
Huskies. who recei ved .31 of the :&gt;l
first -place ballot s and J.!Wi of a possible l,!BJpointsas theresultoftheir
5(). 7 triumph over Ca lifornia . lt" s the
fifth week in a row Was hington has
been on top of the rankings.
Florida State showed up in this
year's polls for the first tinne, mov··
ing into the " o.19 spot after trounc·
in g So u ther n Illin ois 59 -8.
Mea nwhile. Clemson. the defending
na tional champion. climbed back
into the Top Twenty at No.)) after
routing Virgiria 48-0 for it s third
straight victory . The Tigers had
sta11ed the season with a Joss to
Georgia and a tie with Boston
College.
Georgia. which received theother
first-place ballot. moved up one
place to :\o . ~ following a 3.:\-10 tri·
umph over ML&gt;SL&gt;Sippi. and was fol·
lowed in the rankings by No. 5
Southern Methodlst. ~ o. 6 :-Jebraska . r\o.7 Arkansas. ~ o. 8 Penn
State. ~ o. 9 t\otre Dame a nd No. JO
Arizona State.
North Carolina led the second ten
in the :-Jo.ll spot. followed b)· UCLA.

West Vlrgiria, Southern Cal, Illinois, LSU and Miami, F1a. Texas
fell to No. 18, while Florida S'3te,
No.l9, and Clemson completed the
TopTwenry.
F lorida, No. l41ast week, a nd Boston College, No.19, dropped •out of
the ranklngs after weekend losses .

College Top Twenty
Tiv· Tc~l l'Wmf\ tf'am~ tn Th• A..soct
,rtf'll p, ,-..., &lt;'Oik\!f' loorbal l IX)II. wit h ftr.r
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High indiv idual gamf' - Tamm~ .lohn&lt;;On
l'it;, Debi K i n ~Z: \il. C"arolv n Bac hnf'r 150.
H112:h SC' fi('S - Carol\ n Rac hll('r .tr.: Deb!
Kim! -lffi. Tam m v J ohnson .J(ll. Diana A'i h

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Hig h ind ividual ga mf' - T ..tml Parw n-" IT!.
C.trol\ n Bac hnf'r 1 ~: 11arh Kl£&gt;i n J'i';".
!l igh Sf'l"i('!; -Ca r ol yn &amp;chner -1+1 . Mar
tha C r uf'Sl'r ·~ : Barb Klf'i n :~n

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grimlley
AP CorretpoDdeat
Baseba ll"s v·ersion of the Perils of Pauline goes into its fina l chapter
tonight in St . Louis' Busch Memorial Stadium.
Will the Milwaukee Brewers allow themselves again to be pushed over t he
edge of the precipice only to gra b a linnb a nd hang perilously until rescued by
some a non~rrnous passerby?

Or will the Jaw of averages preva il a nd the linnb brea k, erasing the
Brewers from the script and a llowing the systematic St. Louis Cardinals to
ride off into the sunset, leading characters of a new specia l?
··we keep getting into life-or-death situations and clawing our way out of
them ,"' says Brewer manager Harvey Kuenn. "These are the gutsiest guys
I'vepverseen.' '

Certainl v the 11£2 World Series is one of the most unpredictable of sports
events as it takes off on itsbest-of-sevenga me joumeywithalltheea rmarks
of one of those 15-minute movie serials we oldsters used to see as kids.
It shapes up as a battle between two clubs of contrastlng styles and
philosophies- the Brewers. loose, free-swlnglng a nd devil-may-care; the
Cardinals. coaly disciplined, methodica lly cutting down obstacles with
textbook flnesse .
One of them swings a sledgehammer. the other uses a sca lpel.
These a re not the two teams that should be Ln the World Series anyhownot , that is, if you listened last week tothe highiy touted stattsticalwizard Bill
James. origina tor of what publishers call a "mlnd-boggling a na lysis of
major league baseball."
What James did was throw all the numerical indica tors into one big tub,
scra mble them gi ngerly a nd come up with the California Angels and
Atlanta Braves as pennant winners. with the Angels a sure-shot to captu re
the World Series .
The formula , he cla imed. was strictly science- no fudge, no room for
inta ngi bles. That"s w11ere he blew it.
What was the re in .James' system to account for rightfielder Charlie
Moore's rifle throw tha t nailed Reggie J~c kson a t third, snuff_Lng out an
incipient Angel ra lly? Or the great Jea plng catch by Marshall Edwards,
filling in for German Thomas? Or Pe ter Ladd, the unheralded relief
.pitching ace?
These heroics, llnked wit h a ga me-winning hit by Cecil Cooper, a .12\
hitter in 16 previous at bats, provided the non-statistical, unpredictable
quantities that gave the Brewers a 4-3 1astgasp victoryover the Angels In the
showdown American League playoff game.
They may not be a resurrection of the famed Gas House Gang- just as
the Brewers aren't yet the Bronx Bomqers of the 1920s- but they have
sinnilarities.
So keep tuned. Anything can happen.

LAST TICKETS - The last tickets which the MUwaukee Brewers
said they had avaUable for the World Series were sold Monday to fans
standing in long lines at Milwaukee County Stadium. Among the buyers
were Ralph Derderian of Racine (left) wtth 20 standing-room-only
ducats, and Gary Schrimpf of Sheboygan wtth 60 grandstand seats wtth
Sl8 each. (AP Laserphoto).

Summit Country Day
replaces Newark at
top of Class A rating
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- Clnclnna ti Summit Count ry Day,
known for its basketball growess,
now is bulldlng a reputation Ln Ohio
high school football .
TheSilverKnights,a sta tebas ketball semiflnaltst in 1979andl98l,are
the state's top-ranked Class A football team this week, replacing Newark Ca tholic.
Summlt Country Day, which lost
the 1980 state basketball title game
to Sandusky St.Mary's, has started
this football season wit h six innpres·
sive victories.
That was enough to move theCin·
cinna tl school into the No. 1 spot with
269 points, 22 more than Newark

l"O l. L" MBUS . Ohio 1.\ P 1 - Ho"A' a st a ll~
wldf' pa nd of ~por1 ' V.'Tl1 ('f~ an d broad
! "&lt;L&lt;;! f'f', ra nk.., Ohio h\jzh school footh; tll
t f':tn l~ Thb w('f'k . wlth won.lo!it n'l''orfl&lt;.,
,md l!llil l JX~inTJo ! Wit h dJ \"l&lt;; lon.~ \n palf'fl l

tu"""' '

'

..

,

Metp

Gallipolis

Wa..rty

J aoklon

t1 k' 1.

Ma....~U ·

1. f lnf1M &lt;tti

Modlr•r

and Struthl•n. 2-J _21, Wa!Tf'fl
K111nt'(lv 2.1 t2 11it•1. St . Marys und
C"l t'\·Pland CPntral Catholk 'll. U. Columnu.~ Rf'x!(&gt;v 17 li Lima Bath 16. :a&gt; «1 k' 1.
Marion Plf'a.~lflt and A(('hbold 1.1. ~

&lt;I I. 1)-Ml. 'r-.li

r• 1int ~

2 M a.~~ Uion II• . 1&gt;-fl.(f, ~1
1 Cmo nnar i Prtnwtun d 1. CH~U. !J~
-t. S..ndu.~ k:o d 1. 1&gt;411. "J~
·,. (;ahannCJ d o . n.~. l¥1
1\. Cant on McKinlf'\ 1! 1. -~ J-41. t:l."l
7. Tnlrdo Cmtr«l C'a tOOllr d o. '.H l. ]If\
I( ~lr11t or Lakf' lathOllr ' r '· ;.(I.( ), 9'1
'1. CJC"\·f'!and Sr .IW 'Ph d •. '.I .(I. ~
IH. :\11am r Tf(l('(· r II '· f.-niJ . .lfi
O ttw'r 'i('hool.,
I:W Jll"l t" II. Parma

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!lie' I. Wt•l\ington, Ravmna Southl'a.~ l a nd

WPSt Milton Milton· Union 14 31 . Sprtn~~:·
1)1"11"0 111

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hi' 1V1. -&gt;1 -11. 141
4 !lk· •. Hamilton r-.:&lt;"&gt;'· Miami 1\'1 . '&gt;1-fl.
and Mld\'alf' Indian Val li'\' :-oorrh 1\ "1. :HJ.

ll'I(Jfl ··

Padu.J '1-1 12. Bf&gt;rro :!!!

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M ad ls-:~n and Columbu.~ Ea.~ t ITJ)Qr 21 IIi.
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&lt;t il ••. AU.'&gt;IIniO\I"n Fitch and 00\ UII
Wa \ nf' 16 ';11. Y(JJJWitoo.o.·n Moon(&gt;)' J:'l 21
! I if' 1 Shf'lb\' &lt;ond WOOS!Pf 1:1 ~. A \Han&lt; "f'
t ! ·,w !Ill'•. Ellda . UWf'r Arlington and
l.ur .t!n KlnR \0

Meigs reserves top Blue Imps
The Meigs Mara uder reserves
won their third straight game Man·
day night . 16-8 over the Galllpolls
Blue Imps.
After a scoreless first half,
Meigs' Scott Gheen caught a 25
ya rd Mike Chauncey pass In the
third quarter breaking the deadlock. Matt Riffle ra n the two point

the offense. Meigs will host VInton
County next Monday.

The Daily Sentinel
lUSPS IU.MOI

A Olvlwiua of MullJmrdla, IDf .
Publi~ht.'t.l t'\lcry aftcrnoun, Momluy throuJ,!h
Friday, Ill Coort Str~t. by the Ohio Vallt•y

conversion,

Pubhshinl( Cornp.~ny • Multim~iH, Int.·..
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769, 992-2156. S...•t:o nd d as.s
posllil,~tt' pMitJ HI Ponwroy , Ohio.

In the fourth qua rter, Joey Barton ra mbled 20 yards for Meigs'
other six-pointer. Jack Welker ran
In the extras.
Gallipolis scored Its TO wtth 30
seconds left In the contest.
De fen s ive s ta ndout s we re
Welker with an Interception, Jay
Whittington with a fumble recovery, Mark Ha mmond a nd James
Acree. Barton and Welker paced

Mcmbt'r : The A.+i.sot.' iHt~ Prt$S, lniHnd DHt·
ly Pr~ A~· iation and the Amerit-Hn
Nc wsp.~pcr Publi11hcr~ Association, NationHI

AtJvcrti11in.:

Branham

N t'WIIp.H~r &amp;Illes, 733 Thin.J AVt'nuc.

POSTMASTER : Setll.laddre~S to The Daily
Scntind. lll Court St ., Pomcroy ,phio45769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Cw nil'r or Motor Route
Ont· Wt't'k .
Ont Munlh
_Orw Year .

. .......... .... $1.00
, . $4.40
. .... , $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES

Subsntl&gt;1· rs nut tlt·sinnJ.! tu Jli:IY the ~.·arrit'r
rnt~ y rcmtl 111 t~dvam ·c tltt"l&lt;t"l lu Tht· Diiily
S.·nluh'l "" a .1, 6 ur 12 ttltHIIh b.HsLs. Cl"l't.lit
wtll bt· crvcn t·~tr rtcr t'Ht"h munth.

Nu substTtplltJn.-; by

m~:~tl

pt'nntllt'tl

tn

towns

wht•rt· hum~ t'&lt;trrlt'r ~c rvwt• is »VHi l ~:~blc .

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
13Wt•ck..~

.
21iWt•t•k..o;.

52 Wt•t'ks .

lruildtOhlu
.. . .................. $14.04

.. . ..... . . . . . .... 127.30
Oubiltlt' Ohin

...

13 W· · ~ ·ks .

151.~

w,..

f"~ KIIl

![\' •. l).li.it, ·l'i

Pomeroy, 0. -+5769

r
'!in"'"' Biter~

winter tires
MOUNTED

11112 SEOAL GOLF

18
II

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8 It
8 It

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Il l
...

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FREE

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WE ALSO OFFER

.j-.:

BRAKE SERVICE - ALIGNMENT ON MOST
CARS, PICKUPS &amp; VANS

CHAIN .

SAWS

·~flf'll
~

You might need money lor a lot of go00 reasoos-Io
take are d unexpected bills, to fix up your home,
oc perhap; to take a well-deserved
vacatioit WhaleVer the cause, City Lmn ---.:-.-;';1
and Savi!li' has the money to meet it.
J.QA.N
So sle4J by one dour ciftc;es, oc call
1 n .. ii"'C

us. Find out how quickly we can supply

money foc your faVII'ite cause.B«ause
nolxxly knows you like wed·
126 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-2171

CJTY

&amp;. SA~ JJ~
£ST lllll

Oh - a nd while we're looking
back ...
Garnett B. Schafer sent us a copy
of the natural gas blll of her father.
the late J. M. Burchett who resided
at 404 Fisher St. In Middleport. The
billing was for ~ part of January
and a part of F ebruary In 1936. The

a mount of the bill sent by Ohio Fuel
Gas for the month period was $4.35.
Ga rnett - whom I am sure many
of you wUI remember as a great gal
- now resides in Columbus.
Marge and Jim Kelly of Miami,
Fla ., are on the local scene visiting
a mong others her sister, Charles
a nd Betty Archer Ln Middleport,
and another sister, Esther Ln the
Clevela nd area. Marge who has resided In Florida ma ny years has
had some health proble ms over the
past summer but seems to have
them pretty well under control.
And that's good!

RECOGNIZED -Area camp secretaries recognized at the recent Modern Woodmen of America
banquet in Athens were front, left to right, Garland

Ja nice Carna han, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Carnahan of the
Racine a rea, graduated from
Southern High School and worked
fo{ three years at several local businesses. This fall Janice decided to
go to school a nd is now studying
pre-med a t Ohio University. Go tor
It, Janice.

Davis, Gallipolis; OrtheUo B. Bennett, CarroU; Marilyn Martin, Athens; Juanita Hart, Shade; second

wtll also have a junior leader's
training program on Nov. 20,9 a. m.
to noon.
The "Girl Scout Diary" In the
DaUy Sentinel was discussed by
Debbi Buck who advised of the
deadline for getting Items In to the
paper. Mrs. Buck will ha ndle the
Big Bend East reports, while Cathy
Coates wtll handle the Big Bend
West. Her address is 47390 Eagle
Ridge Road, Raci ne.
Troop cookie chairmen and Susta inlng Me mbers hip chairme n
were named for each troop. There
was a discussion on the "Growing
and Gcing" pamphlet a nd the
meeting on Oct. 27 at the Christ
Lutheran Church in Athens. Registratlon Is to be In by Oct. 20.
Recognized by the Black Diamond council as "super" troops
Juniors, a nd the Meigs County Sewere
Reedsville
Juniors;
Syracuse
mlnars.
Others are
expected
to be
na med soon.
The need for church bulle tins was
noted a nd troop leaders are to advise the SeJVJce Unit Directors of
the number needed .
It was decided to Invite Area 3 to
have Its spring meeting In Meigs
County. New slogan for this year's
recruiting Is "It 's Great to be
Green" a nd the deadline for the
"name the frog" contest Is Nov. 1.
Plans for Thinking Day were discussed with leaders to submit three
countries with one to be selected at
the next unit meeting. For the event
the troops wUI be asked to prepare
a booth, a typical food, and some
entertainment . Costuming a nd

row, George Greenley, Rock Island, 01.; Mildred
Ziegler, Ethel Hart, Burlingham, Clarence Mercer,
Waterford, and Ralph Henderson, Coolv1Jie; and
third row, Ralph HUt, Richmond, and Kenneth Siders, Marietta.

Banquet recognizes secretaries
Modem Woodmen of America
area camp secretaries were recognized at a banquet held by the MWA
of Rock Island, Ill. at the Ohio University Inn, Athens, recently.
George Greenley, assistant director of fratern al activities, home
office, outlined preparations for
celebration of the 1983 Centen nial
Year of MWA. Ralph Hilt , district

1f anyone advises you to take a
Tylenol and call them In the mornIng, please don't do It. We need you
around ... a nd of course, smUing ...

nags wtll be optiona l.
At the next meeting a n lnvestitu re will be held for new leaders
wit h a rededica tion ceremony for
other leaders. Dee Lawrence of the
At hens office will have charge of
the ceremony. Leaders were ad·
vised that they must buy their own
pins, 85 cents , a nd service bars,
$1.20.
Ideas for the Christmas meeting
we re discussed a nd T-shlrts were
passed out to those who didn't get
them at day camp.
Lynne Arms a nd Shirley Cogar
presided at the meeting attended
by J udy Eblin, Pat Hysell , Pamela
Pennington, Debbie Coffey, Marllyn Meier. Ha rold Norris, Rhea
Norris, Janice Haggy , Janet Slmpson. Debbl Buck, Judy Humphreys.
Susie Stewart , Sandy Luckeydoo,

ma nager, Richmond, gave special Frances Henderson, Gallipolis.
recognition to leaders of junior ac- r------------tivlties clubs, Including Ethel Hart
a nd He len Ha rt , Burli ngham:
Jua nita Ha rt , Shade, a nd Garla nd
Davis, Gallipolis.
Outsta nding ac hievements in
ma tching fund drives a nd communit y service recognition activities were outlined by Ra lph and

Meigs County service news note
Airman C h ar le~ S. Hite, son of
Robert G. Hite of Rt. 2 Dixie Road,
Letart, W. Va .. and Martha Wa tt erson of Apple Grove, W. Va., have
been ass igned to Kessler Ai r Force
Base, Miss., a ft er completing Air
Force basic tra ining.

cia li ze d in stru c ti on i.n th e
communica t ions· el ec t ronic sys·

terns field .
His wife. Diana, is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Larrv Blai n of Apple Grove.
The a irman is a 1976 graduate of
Point Pleasant High School. W.Va.

During the six weeks at Lackla nd
Air Force Base, Texas. the a ir man
studied the A1 -Force mission, or·
ganiza tion and customs . a nd receved specia l OJ1raln ing in human
relat ions.

NOW AVAILABLE
Two phone numbers
to obtain results On

OHIO DAILY
OTTERY
GAME
L

ln addition, airmen who com·
plete bas ic tra ining earn credi ts toward a n associate degree in
a pplied science through the Communit y College of the Air Force.
The airman will now rece ive spe-

Call:

992-5786

r~Do~n~na~Good
~~e~,~C;a~ro~ly~n§Sm~it~h,~S~u;-~~~~;~~~~~~;J~~~~~r~~~2~-~~9~8~:;;~~k~~~~~~~~~~~
san Jett, Pa tty Capehart, Mary
Ash, Betty Dlll a nd Cathy Coates.

CASH-N-CARRY ONLY

Calendar

POMEROY - The Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority w111 meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs Inn. Belinda Johnson and Tanya Davis
wUJ have the program, and hostesses wUJ be Jenny Smith ahd
Darla Kelly.

600 East Main Street

new winter tire1l

Gettlng Meigs County Gtrl Scouts
In uniform Is a priority of the local
organization and during a recent
county-wide meeting of leaders In
the Big Bend Area a "uniform cupboard" was established.
Mary Ash a t 949-2420 Is In charge
of the cupboard to which any girl
scout wtli be able to go for a used
uniform. Residents with uniforms
no longer in use are asked to either
donate them or put a price and
name on them and leave them at
the "cupboard" until they are sold.
the money wUI then be turned over
to the uniform owner.
Materials for the Center of
Science and Indust ry outings were
distributed and cadettes are reminded tha t they should register as
soon as possible after Dec. 27 because of the limited number being
accepted for the cadette program.
The magazine sale campaign
was discussed and scouts were reminded that sales are not to be conducted door to door but only
through the family. The scouts retain 40 percent of the proceeds.
Girls who' sell two magazlnes receive a patch; five, a patch and a
stuffed kitten, to be dellvered
within 10 days after the deadline of
Nov. 12. Checks are to be made payable to the Black Diamond Girl
Scout Council.
Mrs. Ash, area trainer, announced the "Let's Get Started"
training for new leaders to be held
at Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Oct. 12, 19 and 26, 9 a.m. to noon,
and 7p.m . to 9:30p.m. with only one
dally session to be taken. Mrs. Ash

EAST MEIGS- A meeting of
Eastern Local School District
Band Boosters has been set for
7:30 p.m. Tuesday Ln the band
room of the high school. Parents
of band members and all other
interested persons are invited.

POMEROY HOME ~AUTO

An ordinance In effect a t the time
stated that if any person 14 or older
should profanely curse and damn,
or profanely swear by the na me of
God, or J esus Christ, or by the Holy
Ghost, each person should be fined
not more than $5 or less than $1. I
guess if you were under 14, you
were expected not to swear or you
could swear like a trooper under
the disguise of "the Innocent age."
And Sunday behavior way back
then was a concern of city fathers.
They ordalned that if any person of
the age ofl4 (again, the magic agel
or older should be found on Sunday
to be sporting, rioting, quarreling,
hunting, fishing, shooting, making
a noise to the dlsturbanceof the citizens, performing common labor that person upon conviction would
be tined not Jess than $1 nor more
than $5.

GS leaders establish 'uniform cupboard'

POMEROY - A missionary
meeting will be held at the Hysell
Run Hollness Church, Tuesday,
7: 30 p.m. wtth the Noggles, In·
dian missionaries to be the
speakers. The public Is invited.

.Juoctlon 10

Phone &lt;61-+&gt; 992-209-+

By BOB HOEFLICH
I have good news for you. I've
decided for you to beat the high cost
of water in Pnmo•rr
hours and conditions are a little
strange - but
what the heck!
You'li be enllghtened to know
that back in 1909,
Pomeroy VIllage
an ordlnance which forbid any person 12 years of age or older from
ba thing In the river unclothed between 4 In the morning and 8 In the
evenlng. That apparently meant
that you had an all clear from Sin
the evening to 4 in the morning and, perhaps, you still do. It you
violated the ordinance you were
subject to a fine of not less than 50
cents or more than $5. And - if you
were under 12- well, you had all of
the freedom In the world to do nude
river bathing around the clock.
And the magic age for profanity
was 14 back in 1909. You might have
noticed that profanity does ring
through the a ir these days. However, the town fathers back Ln 1909
were concerned about the problem
too.

TUESDAY

OU...r sch[.()l" r«"f' }\· tn~ 10 or mot'f'
11 . rY.rlln O.•ntc'l" WMII'fn Rf'.
&lt;;('1"\-"f'H tl. M~adorr.C Ll Col umw ~
Madf'm.v .11. It Ar1tngton r._15. Cl'dar·
\1lh· U . IIi-. Milford CC'Ti tf'r FalrOO.nk.~ Zl
17 l tM ·I. Bmdford, LanC'astf'f F'lshl•r and
~ ~l'lln~ on Chalk('r21. '.II nk't . Shad\'·
" ldrand Edgmon :11. 'll. . Raw•;on Cory .
Flu~'!oOn lq. 2l Bun on BM"k.shlrf' 15. :.!t
Thorn~ U&gt;Qztmont 11. :tl. OaM Hill 11 .
~ llk·t . lnd(&gt;pmck'n('('. \'Inion N01·1h fia l

''

0 ld city ordinance may be new
way to beat high cost of water

. . $.51i .21

pollllli

.,

Beat of the bend

.. $15.21
. 129.6&lt;

2fi Wt•t•ks .
52
•ks

I! a. Fairport HurOOr HardinR&lt;tnd Min go •
Ill

New

York , New York 10017.

Calls at second
NEW YORK lAP ) - The toughest calls for ex-umpire Ron Luciano
seemed to come at second base
when he was calling them Ln the
American League.
''Runners never seem toslide lnto
second the same way twice in a row.
It became a game of angles. Some
guys use a hook sllde, some go Ln
head first ," Luciano said. "Some
guys reach out with one arm, some
. with the other. You needed a different angle to call the play for each
runner."

Rcprc!lcntativc,

i. -A

I l"r!J.tnd • 111 •. 1&gt;-Jl..(l. 2bl
:.!. l rnnton 1Tlll . 1).0-Jl, 2.l !
1. Stf'\lbf'n\"lllf' +Ill . 0-I~·H . Zll
I. Ak ron St. Vint"f'fll St Mar. dll •. '•I
n. 1!&gt;1
·,. El nia Ca tOOIK' dl1 1. t&gt;-1)..(] . 11'.1
" · Fll•llf'\'U(' dll •. ·~n-o. ~~ ··
7. Columtus Vo.lillt"tlaJI 111 1. n.-0-0. !r.
,.. C"irdf'\'1111' t il l. ~Hi-ll. !Jl
'l. ~11lJpn;hur~ Wl"iT Jlolrllf'S d \1 1. ti-1~0.

••

Atv.·atf'f Watf'l"loo 26. 19

!)(

~~~~ Tuslaw

Our lowest priced ·

...

Ottrr school' fl"('t'i \" \n J! W or mon·
po\n ls 11.C"Ivd('4! U . llamlltonBad \n
~ 1.1. Marv sv!ll(' :r •. It Wausron :n. 1.1.
l"lrriPv lll!' l.DJ!an f. lm ~ . I n. Nf'lsonvUl('Ynrk )-~_ 17. Mrl"oofM'I~- UIP MoriZ'Ul "!1

There have been no lonnalnegotla lions since Oct. 2, when talks broke
off after there was no agreement
even on non-monetary issues, let
alonetheunlon'sdemandlorawage
scale that is the major Issue in the
strike.
Since then, much of the verbal
sparring has been over a mediator
- management has sought federal
mediation; the union, while finally
agreeing to accept a mediator, has
Lnslsted that he not be with the Mediation and Concutatlon Service. Last
week, they submitted a llst of nine
men they would accept, but management summarily rejected it.
On Sunday, in an Lnformal meetIng In Rye, N.Y., the two sides fina lly agreed to ask McMurray to
choose a mediator. And both said It
was time togetonwithnegotlatlons.
The length of the season came up
last week, when Rozelle was quoted
as saylng that 13 games was the
mlninnum number that could be
played. Each team has each missed
three and next weekend's games
are alnnost sure to be scrapped. The
league has said It could make up
two, which would inean one more
weekend - Oct. 24-25 - couid be
missed before 13 is reached.
Last Saturday, Chuck Sullivan,
chairman ott he Management Coun·
ell's executive committee, said "12
or 13 games, somewhere around
that," was the rnlnlnnum. Rozelle
echoed that Monday.
"Everyone asks me. Everyone
asks Chuck Sullivan. Everyone
asks the owners," he said. "Why
don't they ask Garvey how long a
credible season should be."

Firestone

with a 311. Logan was second with a
328, followed by Meigs with a 328;
Gallipolis, 359; Waverly, 368: Ironton, 384 and Jackson, 419.
Other top shooters were Parker
Long, Meigs, 81; John Neal, Ironton, 89 and Mike Foster, Jackson,
87.
Other Gallipolis scores were Tom
Moore, 80: Bo Allen, 101; Kev
Carty, 107 and Rob H111, 107.
Gallipolis finished the year wtth a
23-23 season record.
Final league standings:
Team

Ca tholic,lastweek' sfront-runner ln
the small school poll .
Summit Country Day whipped
South Charleston Southeastern last
week 40-14 while Newark Cathollc
15-1-01 slipped by Newark Licking
Va lley 7-0.
Meantinne, Cinclnnati Moeller in
Class AAA and Urbana Ln Class AA
kept the top spots Ln the other dlvts ions. Bothareunbeatenanduntied
in six games this fa ll.
Moeller's Crusaders continued to
collect the highest point total of the
three classes. They had 356 points
this week to 281 for runner-up Mass Ulon (WOI a nd 269 for No. 3Cinc1nna t! Princeton (5-0-0).

- - - - - - H i g h school ratings

Athens keeps SEOAL
.golf championship
Athens retained the Southeastern
Ohio League golf crown Monday by
defeating all six confe rence teams
on the par 68 Gallipolis course.
The Bulldogs, 12-0 going Into the
league tournament, finished conference play with a perfect 18-0
mark. Runnerup Logan was 15-3all three losses were to the champion Bulldogs.
· Gallipolis' Tim Madison captured league medalist honors with
a 3.:\-38-71.
Madison, along with Athens' Ray
Finnerty (73), Logan's Chip Patterson (74). Athens' Dave Mathews
(76), Logan's Carl York (79) and
Waverly's Lane Patrick (79) were
J!8rned to · the 1982 All-SEOAL
Team.
Athens won the league match

..

Pt.•.

Blu(' T ar1 &lt;tn
;\o -1

~·1 f'ig ...

'\

By n.., 1\s!ioclaled Press
With both sides Ln the National
Football League strike apparently
Ln a mood to bargain and a mediator
about to be named, the NFL seems
ready to miXllfy Its threat to cancel
the season if no agreement is
reached by the end of October.
As the two chief negotiators were
meeting Monday at the Federal Mediation and Concllia tion SeJVlce to
decide on a mediator, Commissioner Pete Rozelle was saying the
league would be nexlble Ln deterrnlnlng when the strike had cancelled too many games to a llow the
season to continue.
In the past, Rozelle had said that
thirteen was the mlnlnnwn number
of games that could be played to
make the season viable. That would
mean a settlement would have to be
reached in Iinne for the games of
Oct. 31 to be played.
But on Monday, he told Associated Press that It would be possible to play the season with 12 games
or even less. "None of this is etched
Ln stone, to borrow a phrase," he
said , referring to a statement commonly used by union president Gene
Upshaw about union contract
demands .
Meanwhile, chief management
negotiator Jack Donlan and his union counterpart, Ed Garvey, were
meetlng with Kay McMurray, chief
of the Federal Mediation and Concilia tion SeJVice. They em erged to
say they hoped for a quick announcement namlng a mediator to
help end the walkout, which enters
its fourth week today.

•

Tuesday, ()ct. 12,1982

MIDDLEPORT - A Celeste
for Governor lundratslng dinner
wtll be held at LaSalle Restau- 1
rant, North Second Avenue, .
Middleport, at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Tickets are available lor $10 per
person. All Meigs and GaUia
County residents are welcome.
For tnfonnatlon, call LaSalle
Hotel at 992-9917.
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting, Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM Tuesctay, 7p.m. Work In
tellow~raft degree; refreshments followllig meeting.

RACINE -Regular meeting,
Racine Lodge 461. F&amp;AM; 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday; all Master Ma·
sons Invited.

POMEROY - The Aglow Bl·
ble study will be held Tuesday
from 7 to 9 p.m. at the home of
Joan Wolfe. Thursday evenlng
the Aglow Fellowship meetlng
wUI beheld at MeigS Jnnat7p.m .
with the speaker, Karen Jackson, Ravenna, at 8 p.m.

$8.99

13' SECTION
4" 1500 LB. CRUSH SOLID

Roof
Coating

PERFORATED 10' SECTION
HIGHLIGHT 6" 1500 LB. CRUSH

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Regular meetIng, Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.; regular
meeting Bosworth Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters, 8: 30
p.m.; AU companions asked to
attend.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Amateur Gardeners w111
meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Lillian Moore, Lincoln HUI. Mrs. Jean Moore and
Miss Kathryn Hysell wUI be cohostesses. The program wUI consist of a workshop in ceramic
Dowers.

PRE-CUT

UNDERPINNING

STUDS

79

2"x4"x8'

ECONOMY GRADE
92%' CONST.-GRADE /~ $}25
sps
2"x4'~x8' CONST.-GRADE

POMEROY - Meigs County
. Women's Republican Cll!b, candidates night, Meigs Inn, 6 p.m.
covered dish dinner; 7: 30 p.m.
meeting for all Republican
women.

PER SHEET

5" ALUMINUM

SMOOTH

GUTTER

ROOFING

WHITE OR BROWN

1HURSDAY
POMEROY Wesleyan Holiness Church located on State
Route 143, · Harrisonville Road
will start n:vtval services Thursday night "to continue through
Oct. 24. Rev. Lawrence Jewell of
Dayton will be the evangelist
There. wW ' be special singing
nightly wtth services to begin at
7:ll p.m . Rev. Earl Fields, pastor, Invites the public.

10' &amp;
20' SECTIONS

49¢

FOOT

50 LB.
(Freight Damaged)
(Sold As Is) ·

HOGG AND ZUSPAN
MATERIALS COMPANY
PH. 773-5554

"'

5 GAlLON
CAN

"

MASON, W.VA.

�Page---6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,

Oct. 12,1982

Meigs County and area organization members hold meetings
was given a third reading It was
noted that the jumor eonference for
the dlstrtct wUI be held In Middleport on April 16 at 1 p m
Refreshments were served by
Mrs Jenkins and Catherine Welsh
Next meeting will be0ct, 26

readmg on What It Means to be a
Jumor " The membership chair
man noted that a total of 106
members had patd dues with 42 still
needed for goal
Mary Martin and Pearl Knapp
gave a report on a recent meeting
for children and youth and veterans
affairs telling of new scholarships
for JUniors Several new grants and
scholarships have been added this
year They also discussed nag
ettquette
It was noted that theOhtoDepart
ment htstory was the first m the
nation, and that one of the Pomet oy
JUmor auxiliary member's scrapbook was dtsplayed at the natonal
convention m Chtcago
It was reported that Iva Powell
and Hazel Etchlnger had prov tded
cake lot Nellie Tracy, a res tdent at
thP Kimes Convalescent Center,
At hens on her birthday
Mary Martm was appomted veterans representative at the Athens
Mental Health Center The budget

Chatter Club
Ahce Jacobs. Chestet hosted a
recent meeting of the Chatter Club
Gifts were presented to her Games
wete played with pnzesgomgtot he
wt nnet s Next meetmg will be Oct
21 at the home of Dottle Jones

Legion Auxiliary
POMEROY - Mustc month was
observed at the recent meetmg of
the Amencan Legton Auxthary,
Drew Webster Post 39 Pomeroy
held at the hall
Dorothy Jenkins. mustc chatr
man, mt roducl'd Thomas Reuter
who opened the meetmg by smgmg
the national anthem He then enter
tamed with '1 Asked the Lord and
' I Know Who Holds Tomorrow'
and then JOined the membership m
slngmg ' God Bless Amenca
Lorena Tiemeyer pres tded at the
meetmg Robm Campbell gave a

TOPS
Last week proved to be a no gain
week for the Tops OH 1466, Rutland
group'' It was noted that If the
group can have a no gain week each
week for the week of October, each
member will receive a charm'''
Honored as the Weekly Best Los
ers wet e Dixie Sayer and Judy Eblm Each was presented a ribbon,
dollar while the other members
sang the club' s weight loss song to
them In their honor Mrs Snyder
was presented a ribbon for losing
the most weight of September
Points were added to the "Get on
Target for TOPS" contest this eon
test wtll eonclude with the weigh In

Dorothy Ritchie, councilor, presided at the meeting attended by 36
members
Esther Smith reported on the
chartered bus trip to the National
Home, Daughters of America, at
Tiffin on Sept 26 She noted that the
home Is located on 52 landscaped
acres and that It Is tastefuily decorated and furnished with many
rooms available for Immediate occupancy The home Is open for tours
by anyone
Mrs Smith also noted that there Is
a tree there given by District 13 years ago along with a white bench
given In memory of Edith Wakely,
past state associate councilor, by
Golden Gleam Council, Marietta,
several years ago At present they
have 'r7 residents, three men and 24
women
A thank you note was read from
Cathy Clifford for gifts at a recent
layette shower Margaret Am
berger thanked the council for her
gift and the members for cards, food

of October 20, the winner at that
time will receive towels from the
other members of the group
Leader, Shorty Wright read an
article entitled. "Weight Loans and
Its E ffect On Your Health " Discussion was held aft erwards on the
subject
Weleomed Into the group was
Pam Pennlngion Mrs Wright
went over the rules and by laws
with her
The funny money auction wUI be
held Oct 12 Members are to bring
In gift wrapped Items for this and
their funny money with which to
purchase the Items
Information on joining the group
can be obtained by calling 742 3062

Chester Council
A practice for Inspection to be
held on Oct 19 was held when Ches
ter Council 323, Daughters of Amer
lea, met recently at the hall
Officers were reminded that they
are to wear white for Inspection

The Daily Sentinel

PHOht

and phone calls during her Illness.
The Past Councilors Club wUI be
at the hall on Oct 13,7 l:Jp m Mary
Showalter and Thelma Whltewlll be
hostesses
Games were conducted at the conclusion of the meeting by Dorothy
Ritchie, chairman of the District
Good of the Order Corrunlttee Refreshmfnls were sold and proceeds
went to the district
Attending were Fern Morris,
Nina Windle, Thelma McMannis,
Ada Neutzllng, Charlotte Grant, Letha Wood, Ada Morris, Thelma
White, Penny Smith, Mary K Holter , Carolyn Holley, Elizabeth
Hayes, Ada Bissell, Lora Damewood, Doris Grueser, Alta Bailard,
1nzy Neweil, Mae McPeek, Leona
Hensley, Sadll! Trussell,Marcla
Keller, Erma Cleland, Opal I-nion,
Ethel Orr, Sandy White, Zelda
Weber , Mary Showalter, Everett
Grant, Goldie Frederick, VIrginia
Newlun, Goldie Wolfe and VIrginia
Lee

992~2156

Real Estate -

LAFF-A-DAY

General

-=::oamouncements

- Lo Boy

MIDDLEPORT - Close to
shopptng and par~ Ltke new
three bedroom home large hv
1ng room, famtly room wtth fi re
place new carpet gas furnace
Asktng $45 000
NEAR RT 7- Ftve roomsand
bath home s1ts on approx 2'•
acres, spnng water apple
trees grape arbor gas heat
Ask1ng $15,000 00
CHESTER - Beaultful bnck
and cedar 3 bedroom home
Full basement2 car garage on
approx 760 acres •• mtles
from Chester Asktng $75,000
POMEROY - SUPER BUY on
lhts 6 room home on Bnck
Street Payments as low as
$125 after down payment Ask
lOg $12 ()()() ()()
ST RT 143 - Two double
w1de homes to be ftmshed 10
stde ~tuated on I acre lots
wtth sepltc tanks Call lor more
deta1ls

- Trencher

W
= s.'!:;

1 t.. nr d of Thank s (pn1c! 11 M lv n nr('J
7 t..nrct o f 1 !l OOk S ( 0(11(1 1n ldVr'l nCC'I

3 A nnouncf'mcnb

71 Gu s tness Oppor t un1ty
77 Mon e y to Loa n

13

d G 1veawa v

5 H a pp y A d s
t'l L os t and F ounct
1 YMdS OI C'IPilld lnr'ldvnnr,
R Pub l c Snle
&amp; A uc t 1on
Q Wrln tcd IO Buy

__EmploYment ser"ices

~rge

or Small Jobs
PH 9922478
10 J 1mo pd

NOTICf o; ht&gt;lr&gt;by q VPn tt1at
1fl pur o;u tnc f&gt; n f a RPsolut iOil ol
th~' Boilrel o f I 111S tPP'&gt; o f thf
To w nsh lf) o f Rut land M P1qo;
County Oh n pc~ ss ~d nn rhr
29th C"l 'ly () I J1 ly 1982 thPI C
wdl bP. '&gt; Jb n1tT f' I tn il vntP of
the p~&gt;o pl t- ot &lt;&gt; N l Ru!lanr1
Town sh n lt J GENERAL ELEC
TIQN to h~ ht td on thP To wnsh1p
ot R u lla~"' 1 Oh1rr dtthe 1Pquta 1
places ot vat nfl thPre1n on
Tuesday thr&gt; ?nd rlav u f No
ve mbr1 1982 tho-&gt; q PSI on of
IPvy1nf) n e • r r&gt; &lt;;s 0 1thP !Pn mill
t m1t at o n to 1 thr&gt; hpn; f 1 nl R J
[land Townshq1 tor t 1 l ~ purn0Sf'
o f Ma1ntd1n1nn &lt;~ ncl o w 1at 1nq
t.emeterrPS
Sa1d tax b• 1nq ) rPnewll nf
an ex1St1nq 11• n f 0 1 lth rr&gt;f'
tentt sl mill to n to r hvr yP'lr S
at a ra te not Px C. PPr1 n 1 () 3 rn II
tor each one nottar n t val uat1on
wh1ch amo unt s ro th1r&gt;P cen ts
tor each o ne hu n(lrr&gt;d dollar s at
vat uat10n lor livP yPill s
The Poll s to r sa ret EIP.&lt;.I 10n wil t
onen 'll 6 30 o ctor k A M )n(f
rema1n open 1H1til 7 30 o r loc k
PM o f sad dav
Bv ordP.r o f lh' BrJJid n t l i ~ r
[IOnS of M e1Q&lt;; Co1 rntv Ot11o

r

Firl r;
(harmctn

I P.SI II

Fran ces M Thona::.
OuPCtor
Da tPd October 1 1982

110!5 12 19 26 41C
Pubhc Notice
NOTICE OF
ELECTON ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

Public Nottce
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMtTATION
NOTIC E 1S heteby g1vP.n that
1n nwsuancP ot a Resolut1on o t
thP Board ol Trustees ol the
Townsh1n ot ChPster M e1gs
Countv Oh10 passed on thP
1 I rh d.'ly o t Auqus t 1982 thPre
w II he subrn tt ed to a vote of
thP peoplf' o f S.'l ld Ches ter
Townsh1p at a GENERAL ELEC
TlON to be heln1n the Townsh1p
nt ChestE&gt;r Oh10 at thP requla1
plac es ot vo11nq the1er n on
TuE&gt;sday the 2nd day ot No
Vf~mbPr 1982 thP quest on o f
levy n(J n exces ~ o f I he ten rn II
lim tar on lor thP benP.I1t at
ChPster Townsh1p tor the pur
pose of M a1ntatn1ng and oper
l trnq ce m ei~"IIP.S
Sa1d tax he1nq an ad d1t1onal
tax at 0 5 lonp h'll t) mdl to run
for live year s dt a rate not ex
cP.ed1nq 0 5 m II tor P.ach Ollf!
do l la r o f valudon wh c h
Jmounts to hve cents to, each
onp hundr ed dollars o f valua
t1on for live years
The Polls for sa1 d Elect,onwdl
open at 6 30 o c ock A M and
rrma1n open mtd 7 30 o clock
P M of sa1rl day
Bv 01der o f the Board o f Elec
t•n ns ol MP.tqs County Oh10
Lf'SIIP. F Ful lz
c na11 rnan
F1ances M Thomas
01rPCIOr
Darrrl Oc tober 1 1982
riO\ S 12 79 36 4tc

Pubhc Notice
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

NOTICE s hereby g1ven that
NOTI CE s hereby g1ve n that 1n pur suan ce at a Resolut1on of
1n pursuance o f a Resol ut ion of the Board at Trustees of the
the Counc1l of the V1llage o f Ra
Townsh1p o l Letart M e1gs
erne Oh10 passed on the 16th County Oh10 passed on the
dav ot Au oust 1982 th ere w1ll
16th day o f Auqust 198 2t here
be subm1tted to a vote o f the w H be submr lt ed to a votE of
people of sa1d Rac1ne Vill age at the people of sa1d Letart Tow n
a GE NERAL ELECTION 10 be shrp ot Letart Oh1o at th e regu
held n the V1llage of Rac1ne
tar places o f vat ng th erem on
Oh10 at the re(jular place o f val
Tuesd av the 2nd day o f No
.ng there1n on Tuesday the vember 1982 the question o f
2nd day o f November 1982
levymg rn excess a t the ten m1ll
the oucs110n o f levy1ng 1n ex
hm1tat10n for the benelit of Le
cess o f the ten mrll hm1tat10n
tart Tow nsh1p 'for th e purpose
fo r the benef1t o f Rac1ne Village of Ma1 nta1n1ng and opera!lng
lo r the purpose of Current cemeter1es
Sa1d tax bemg a renewal o f
expenses
Sa1d tax be1ng a renewa l ol an ex1st1ng tax o f one mill to run
an ex1s11ng ta11 o f 1 7 mtlls to
for ftve years at a rate no t e11
run for f•ve years at a rate not ceedmg o ne m1ll for each one
exceed1ng 1 7 mills for each
1 dollar of valua t1on wh1ch
one dollar of val uat1on w h1Ch
amounts to ten cents for each
amou nts to Sevent een cents one hundred dollar s of valua
for each one hundred do ll ars of
uon for f1 ve years
Valuat 1on for f1 ve years
ne Polls for sa1d El ectiOn w11t
The Polls fo r sa1d EleCt ion will op .;~ n at 6 30 o clock A M and
open al 6 30 o clock A M and remarn open until 7 30 o clock
rema 1n open unt1l 7 30 o clock PM of sa td day
By order of the Board of Elec
p M ol sa•d day
By order o f the Board o f Elec
!Ion s of M ergs County Oh10
t1 ons o f Me1gs County Oh1o
Leslre F Fultz
Lesl1e F Fultz
Charrman
Charrman
Frances M Thomas
Orrec tor

Dated October I 1982
(I 01

5 12 19 26 4tc

Frances M Thomas
Otrector

servlees

245- Rro Grand e
256-Guyan Drst
643- Arabra Or st

576-Apple Grove

8 It

742- Rutland

83 Excavat1 n g
84 E tec n c a t &amp; Relr,qer at10n
85 Gen eral H a uling
86 M H RE'pa1r
87 Upholstery

61 Farm Equ1pm ent

6'1 Wa nt f'd to bu y

10 I I
I? I;
14 It
15 I I
IR II

63 Ltvestock
64 Hay &amp; Gra1n
65 Seed &amp; Feriii1Zcr

~

p t ii:&gt;V\&lt;rn~

Up to 15 Words

SJOu

Onr rt;'l y lnc;,.. rt,o n
T hn 1

fliY•

&lt;.,rr l fll'l

$4 00
$7 00

S•x day

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMtTATION
NOT ICE IS hereby g1ven that
n pur suance o f a ResolutiOn ol
th e Counc11 o f the V1ll age of
Pomeroy Oh10 passed on the
18th day a t Auqu st 1982there
wilt be subm1 11 ed 10 a vote o t
th e people a t sa1d Po mero y V I

lace a1 a GE NERAL ELECTION
tn bE&gt; held 111 thP V ll aoe r
PomPIIly Oh1o at the reqular
ntac:P::; of vot1nq thP.re1n on
TuPsrlJy thP 2nd day a t No
vP.mher 1982 the QUPSI10n o f
IPvylnfl n excPSS o f the ten m II
1 rn tat on
fo1 the benet 1 ot
Pome roy V ll aqe for the pur
posf&gt; o f Cw rent expenses
Sa1d tax be1ng a renPwal o f
an ex1St1ng tax o f 1 9 m•lls 10
1un lor t1vP years at a rate not
excerdrnq 1 9 m1 lls for each
nnP doiiJr o t v~ lua t 1un wh1 ch
amoun ts to N neteen cen ts 101
f'ach one hund rr.d dollar s of va
lua1 10n fo r I ve yecu s
ThP Polls for sau:l Elet11on wtll
open at 6 30 o clock A M and
•e ~a 1n opPn unl d 7 30 oclock
P
ol sa1d day
y ordPI o f thf'! Board o f Etec
t ons at M f' qs Co unty Oh1o
LesliP F Fultl
Chd rman
Fr ancPS M Thomas
Dlle(tOr
On tPri October 1 1982

NOT ICE 1S h er eby g1ven I hat
1n pu rsuance o f a Resol ut 1on o f
th r Board o f Tr ustees o f th e
Town sh p of Sutton M e1qs
County Oh1o passed on the
1st d ay o f June 1982 there
will be subm1tt ed to a vote o f
the p eople o f sa1d Sutl on Town

Public Nottce

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

NOTI CE 1S hereby q1ven th at 1n
pu1 sua nce o f a Reso lu t1on o l
the Boa1d o f Tr us t ~&gt;es of the
Townsh1p o f Sulton Me1f]S
County Oh10 passed on thf!
1st day o f June 1982 therewtll
be subm 11t ed to a vO!P. of t he
peop le o f sa1rl Su tt on Townsh p
a1a GENERAL ELECTION 10 be
held 1n thf' Townsh1p o f Su u on
Oh10 at the reqular placP.S o l
vot1nfl therPm on Tuesday the
2nd day of Novemhm 1982
thP. QuP.St iOn ol IP.Vylr1fl rn ex
CPss at the ten mil l l1mll al1 0n
for thf! bem'!l t o f Su11 on Town
sh1p for the purno se of Ma1n
\ il1n1n() and o pera t 1nq
cemPi er 1es
Sa1d tax bPtnfl an add1110 n
lax o f 0 6 (s1x \l"nlhsl m1ll to run
101 f1vf! y~&gt;ar s at a rate not ex
Cf!f!d n11 0 6 m II for P.ach one
doll ar ol vJiua t o n wh 1c h
am0u nts to s x o:nts for each
one hum1rf¥1 doll ;1fs of valua
110n !01 hvf' yf'JIS
ThP Poll s lor sa1d Elect10n w1ll
on en at 6 30 o clock A M and
rf'mam opP.n t~n t d 7 30 a cloc k
P M a t sa1rl day
Bvorrlf! r ol thP Board o l EIP.c
t10n&lt;&gt; ot Me1qs C011nty Oh10
LesliP. F Ful tz
Cha1r m an
Fr &lt;~n c es M Thomas
01rec tor
Da tPd 0( tobf!r 1 1982

(1015 12 19 26 41C
- --::---:--:-:----:--:---:----1 (I 01
Pubhc Notice
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

Public Nottce

5 I2 I9

26 41c

NOTICE IS hereby Qlven 1hill
1n pursuan ce o f a Resolut1on o f
the Board at Edu ca\IOn o t the
Southern local Sc hoo l D1stn ct
M e1qs County Oh10 pass ed o n

lhe 271h day ol July 1982

Frances M Thomas

By order of the Board of Elec
11ons of Me1gs County OhtO
Lesl1e F Fultz

D~rector

Daied Oclober I 1982

Dated October I 1982

(10 5 12 19 26 4tc

(101 5 12 1S 26 41C

11 01 5 12 19 26 41c

(1015 12 19 26 4tc
Public Notice

NOTICE OF SALE

Frances M Thomas

PM of sa•d dav

Frances M Tho mas
D1 rec tor
Dated Oc tober 1 1982

NOTI CE IS hereby g1ven that
1n pur su ance o f a Resoluti on of
the Board of County Comm1 s
s1oners o f the County o f M e1gs
Pomeroy Oh10 passed on the
27 th day o f July 1982 there
w il l be su bm1tted to a vote o f
the people of sa1d M e1gs
Co unty at a GENERAL ELEC
TI ON to be held 1n I he Co unty of
Me1gs Oh10 at th e reg ular pia
ces of v0t1nQ I herem on lues
day the 2nd day o f November
1982 I he ques11on o f levy1ng
n excess o f the ten mill lim1ta
11on lor the benef1t of Me1g s
Cou nty lor the purpose o f
M e1QS Co unty Board of Health
and 10 su ppl emen t the general
fund for the purpose o f mak1nq
appropna!lons for the M e1gs
Counly Health Depanment
Sa1d tax be1ng an additiOna l
tax of 1 0 (One) mil l to run for
l1ve year s at a rate no t exc eed
1nq One mill for each one dollar
o f valua110n whtch amount s to
ten cents for each on e hundred
doll ars o f valua!lon for f1ve
years
The Poll s for sa1d Elec!IOn w1 1l
open at 6 30 o cloc k AM and
rema1n open until 7 30 o cloc k
PM of sa 1d day
By order of thP. Board o f Elec
\Ions o f Me1gs County Oh 10
Leshe F Fultz
Cha1rman
Fr ances M Thoma s '
D1rec tor
Dated Oc tober 1 198 2

!10) 5 12 19 26 4tc

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

Cha ~rm an

to be held 1n the Townsh1p of
Sutt on O H1 0 at the reg ular pia
ces o f vo!lng there1n on Tu es
day I he 2 nd day o f Nove mber
19B2 the quest1o n o t tevy1ng
1n excess of th e l en milt hm1ta
110n for th e benef1t o f Sutl on
TownShip for the purpose of
M a1nt a1n1n g and o p erat 1n g
cemetenes
Sa1d tax be1ng a r enewal o f
an ex1st1ng tax o f 0 4 (four
tenths) m1llto run for hve year s
at a rate not exceed1 ng 0 4 mills
fo r each one dollar of valualton
wh1 ch amou nt s to four cent s
for each one hundred dollars of
valuat1on for hve years
The Polls for sa1d Eleci!On wilt
open at 6 30 o clock AM and
rema1n open unttl 7 30 o clo ck

NOTICE IS hereby Q1\en that
n pu1 su a ncr. o f a Resoluti On a t
the Board o f Coun ty Comm1s
s1onet s o f the County o f Me1gs
Pomeroy Oh1o passed on the
3rd day o f A ugust 1982 there
will be su bm 1tted to a vote of
the people o f sa1 d M e1gs
Co un ty at a GENERAL ELE C
li ON to he h eld 1n thf! Cou nty o f
Me1qs Oh10 at the re\"]ular pia
ces of vot1nq !herem on Tues
day lhe 2 nd day of November
1982 the question o f levy1nq
1n excess o f th e ten m ill ltm1ta
liOn for th e b enefl! of M e1gs
County lor the purpose at pr o
v1d1nq a to tal emergency med1
cal serv1ce 1n M e1QS County
Sa1d tax be1ng a rehewal ol
an extS I1ng tax o f I 0 (One) M 1ll
to run tor a c ontmu ~n q oenod o f
t1 mf! at a ral e not P.xceedtn g
1 0 mill lor each one dollar of
val ut10n wh1c h amounts 10 Ten
Cents lo r eac h one hundr ed
dollars o f vatua1 10n for a con
t1nu1ng penod o f t1me
The Polls lor satd Elect1onw1 ll
open at 6 30 o cloc k A M and
rema 1n open unt1l 7 30 o clock
P M o f sa1d day
By order of th e Board of Elec
11on s o f M e1qs Count y Oh10
Leslie F Fultz
Cha1 rman

Frances M Thomas
0 1r ector
Dated October 1 1982

Public Notice

therew1ll be subm•tt ed to a vot e
of the p eople of sa1d School
DI Stri Ct al a GENERAL ELEC
TION to be held at th e reg ular
pl aces o f votmg there1n on
Tu esday th e 2nd day o f No
vember 198 2 the Quest1o n o f
levy1ng 1n excess o f the t en mill
lim1tatton for the benef1t o f
Southern Local School 01 stn ct
for the purpose o f current
expenses
Sa1d tax be1ng an add1!10 nal
tax of three mills to run for a
con!lnw ng pen od of 11me at a
rate not exceed1ng 3 0 mil ls for
each one dollar of valualton
wht ch amount s to Th ~rty cent s
for each one hundred dollars o f
valuat1on for a conttn u1ng pe
nod of t1me
'The Polls for sa1d Etect1on w1ll
open at 6 30 oc tock AM and
rem am open unt1l 7 30 o clock
P M of sa1d day
By order o f the Board o f Elec
110ns of Me1gs Cou nty Ohto
l eshe F Fultz
Chauman

sh1p at a GENERAL ELE CTION

NOTICE IS hereby Q1ven that
1n pursuance o t a Rf!SOiut on o f
thP Ao ar d ol Educat1on ol the
FastPm Local School D1Sl!1CI
M P.rQs County Oh1o passP.Cl on
the 29th rlay ol July 1982
thf rP will bP ~ ubrM1f!d to a vote
a t thP. nroni P. of sa11i Sc hool
D1stn ct at a GE NERAl ELE C
fi ON to be held ut th e reqrrl ar
placPs o l vot1n11 therP.rn on
TuP-Sd&lt;w the 2nd day o l No
vemhe' 1982 the question o f
IP.Vy1nq rn excess a t the ten m rll
11 m 1tat on for the benelt o f
Eastern Local Sc hool D1stn ct
lor the purpose o t pr ow11nq for
the r.merq encv requi rement s of
the SChOOl d1S tr1CI (Or JVOid lnQ
an operat1nq def1C1t )
Smd tax bP1nq an add1 t1onal
tax o f l1ve mills tn run for f1ve
yPar s il l a r Jt f' not exceed 1nn
f1vc m li s lor eac h onP do ll ar at
valtra t on wh1ch amount s to
l1f1 y CPnts lor each one hundrAC1
dollars of valua110n lor liVe
years
The Polls lor sa1d Elec t1onw111
open at 6 30 a clock A M anrl
reman1 opP.n until 7 30 a clock
P M o f sa1rl clay
By order o f thP. Bo ard o f Elec
lions of Me1gs County Oh10
Leslie F Fult z
Cha11man

By wtu e of an Pr ec1pe For
O· der Of Sal e 1ssued out o f the
Common Pleas Court of M e1gs
County Ohro 1n the case at
Par k F1nan c1al Inc Columbus
Oh1o agamst Robert P D1V1e
tro upon a 1udgm ent ther e1n
re nd ered bemg Case No
182 16 1n SaldCourt l w1ll Offer
lor sale at the front door o f the
Courthouse 1n Pomeroy Me1gs
County Oh 10 on the 13th day

ol Novembe• 1982 at 10 00

o clock AM
the fotlow1ng
lands and tenements to w11
Situated 10 t he Townshtp of
Rutland County of Me19s and
State of Oh10 and descobed as
follows to wrt
1
Be1ng 1n Sect1on No 1 Town
No 6 Range No 14 of the
OhtO Company s Pur chase and
beg1nn1ng at the southwest
corner of land owned by M1les
M Hysell 1n the pu blic road
where the land o f satd Miles M
Hysell and the I and CVo~ ned by
the Cook he1rs 1010 thence
north along the Cook line 209
feat thence east 209 feet
th8n ce south 209 feet or to the
publi c road thence west along
the road to the place of beg1 nn1ng conta1nmg One ( 1) acre
more or tess
Appra1sed val u e

$22 50000

Cannot be sold for less than
two thrrds th~ appratsed value
Terms of sale Cash

JAMES J PAOFFITI
Shenff of

D~rector

Dated Octobe• I 1982

Me1gs County Ohto

_11015 12 19 26 4tc

(9)21 28 (10)5 12 4ic

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION
NOTICE IS t)ereby g•ven that
1n pursuance o f a Resolu!IOn o f
the Counc1! o f the V1llage of Au
tland Oh10 passed on the 3rd
day of Augu st 1982 there w1ll
be subm1tted to a vote of the
people of sa1d Me1gs County at

a GENERAL ELECTION to be
held tn the Vrttage of Rutland
Oh10 at the regular pl ace o f vat
1ng there1n on Tuesday the

2nd day of November 1982

the questron o f tevy1ng 1n ex
cess o f the ten m 1ll hmrtatton
for the benef1t o f Rut land Vrl
lage for the purpose o f Current
expenses
Sa•d tax be1ng a renewal of
an exrstlng tax of two (2 0) mtlls
to run for f1 ve years at a rate not
exceedtng 2 0 m1tls for each
one dollar of vatuat1on w htch
amounts to twenty cents for
eac h o ne hundred dollars of va
tuat•on fo r frve years
The Polls fo r sa1d Elect10n w tlf

open al 6 30 a clock A M and

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By w tue of an Prec1pe for
Order o f Sale ISSued o ut o f lhe
Common Pleas Court of Me1gs
County Oh10 1n lhe case of
Chem1 cal M ortgage Company
aga1nst Paul D l aney and Ca
rolyn E Laney etal upon a
tudgment therem rend ered be
rng Case No 1824 7 1n sa1d
Court I 'fit II offer for sale at lhe
front door of the Courthouse 1n
Pomeroy M etgs County Oh1o
on the 4th day o f December

PARCEL NO 1

By order of the Board o f Etec ..
uons o f Me•gs County Ohto
Leshe F Fultz
Cha1rman

t1015 t2 19 26 4ic

p11r

FREE ESTIMATES

Stdtn~

15 Years Expenence
GREG ROUSH
PH 992-7583
or 992-2282

Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
7 14 11(

The lollowmg desc 11bed real
estat e sttu ated tn l hP. County o f
M e1gs State o f Oh10 and 1n the
Vill aqe ol Po mefOy bou nd ed
and desc nbed as follow s
Beq ,nn'nfl on th P. w es111ne o f
a 30 foot alley a1 the southeast
corner o f a certa1 n 4 0 acre par
eel sold to Stan ley B Jones and
Anna L Jones by W 1ll1am L
Thom as and Marqarel L Tho
mas th ence sou th 3 1 degrees
west 14 feet &lt;~l o nq sa1d alley
thence no rth 66 deg rP.es and
4 5 w est par allel w 11h Stanl ey
8 Jones southwest corner
thence fotlowmg Jones l1ne
easterly to the pl ace o t beq 1n
nmg hemg a p arcel o f land
fr on\lnq 14 feet on I he alley and
runn1nq back at that w1dth s d1s
tan cP. of 60 feet

Vo

lume 2 35 paqP. 20 1 Volume
1 55 page 109 Volu mP 158
paqe 6 4 6 o f the M e1(JS Coun ty
Deed record s
Apnra1 s ed V Jilr P. S32 600 00 - canno t hP. so ld
for IP.SS than IWO lhlf {IS o f I he
appr a1 SN'I vil lue
TP.rm o:; o f sale Cash
James J Proffttl
ShP.nff o f
M e1Q S Cou nty Oh10

11 011 2 19 26 1111 2 41&lt;

1982 at tO 00 AM the lot

tow1ng lands and tenements
IOWII

SHOP LOCALLY
COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS'THAN ONEI
a, lhoppl1111n JOUr home.,... JOU -on
pa, the - l l l d tMr on JOII' Clr and IVOicl
thl hlzlrcll of hlahwiJ and ,....,
lrlvlllna. h .,.,. to lhop ,where you llvel

The Daily Sentinel

obackhoe

IMOMARK
614 991 118 1

Kttchen
Cab1,ets
Roofing • S1dtng
Con
crete Pattos
Stde
walks
New Construe
ton
Remodeling
Custom Pole Barns

SYRACUSE-RACINE

~~m

NJ~~~~~R

608 E. MAIN

AND SON
Roofing &amp; Sidmg Co.

Eber
Bill
Backhoe Servl'ce

POMEROY, OHIO

Long Bo~t'::'~~ i,h 45743
985 4193

PH. 992 7181
or 949 2182

r

and

915 l mo

•

992
949
992
992

6191
2660
5692
2259

[H
REALTOR

Yard

Sale

160

at

Beauttful Golf Courses
Ortvtng Rang es
Ca ll John Teaford
Chester
Also

PRO SHOP
CLUB REPAIR

r oRr

And Home Maintenance
: :~~~~·;g of all types

Evergreen across

a
u•Rrggs
mg restdence to
Gene
cated top of the htll on Rt 7
above Eastern H1gh School
Oct
11
1982 Runntng

16

t 982

1661 ltncoln H e 1ghts
Pomeroy O c t 13 9 a m 3

pm

BOGGS

iding

VINYL &amp; AlUMINUM

SALES

&amp; SERVICE

us Rt 50 East
Guysvtlle, Oh10
Aulhomed John Oeere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equrpmenl
Dealer
'
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Servtce
I 3 lie

Complete Gutter Work
•
Comp Iet e Remodellng,
Roofmg of all types
Worked In home area 20
years
FREE ESTIMATES
CALL 843-332 2

: ~~;';':!~::;::,es
e2o Yrs expenence

All Makes
•washers
washers
• DISh

TOM HOSKINS
Pit 742 2834 or 949-2160

• Ranges
ors

4 20tt c

0

Refngerat

eDryersefreezers

9

Wanted To Suy

4463159or2561967m

orga~RUNICAROI

Srzes start from 12'xt6

MUSIC
61 court Sll~ _ ~Wtitpot is
h 4'
P

16 0

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Srzes from 6 x6 Up
to 14 x36
Insulated Dog Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3 Box 54
Racme Oh
Ph 614 843 2591

Syracuse - Ractne
Area
FREE ESTIMATES
PH 614-992-2681
or 614-992-3752
' ANYTIME
l0/7/ l mo

r~==:=:==~~~~~t======~~~j
Vonyl &amp; Alumonum
SIDING
Custom

kttchens and
bathroom~
Remodeling,
add ons, new homes,
plumbmg, elecluc, stdmg

10 3 I mo

FREE
ESTIMATES

PH. 992-6011

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
But It Garages"
Call for free Sldtng
est• mates, 949 2801 or

949 2860
No Sunday Calls

3 11 lfc

446 8025 or

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
Frenchtown Ca r Co
Bill Gene Johnson

poundage

Ca ll

Would like to buy A No 1
female Rabbtt dog
Call

BEDS IRON

Creek Rd Call 446 0294
Dt ' s Craft Supply

Valley Plaza

Spnng

446 2134

Wmter hours MOflday thru
Frrday 1 0 to 6 Saturday 1 0
to 4 All cross such supphes

DMC

lc -

Golf lessons John Teaford
Chester
Ohto Ractne Gun
Gun
shoot
Club Every Sunday startang
1 p m Factory choked guns
only
Racme Ftre Dept ts sponsor
mg a gun shoot every Sat
ntght start rng Oct 9 at 6 30
p m
tn Bashan
Factory
choke 12 gauge shotguns
o nly

- - - - - - - - -lc Juhes Atttc Book Exchange
Open Oct 11 from 12 5
Monday - F.rrday
Rt 124
outstde of Racme

&amp;

CHIMNEYS
VIRGIL B SR
216 E. 2nd Sl
Phone
1-( 614) -992-3325
NEW LISTING - 4 yr old 3
bedroom bnck home tn the
woods Famtly room wtth ftre
place 2 baths large front
porch and large rear sundeck
One acre level lot $62,!Kl0
DOUBLE - Both rented, 6
rooms and bath meach Good
for wnte off All ultlrttes tn M1d .
dleport for JUst $27,000
3 ACRES - of trees, water tap,
electnc and gas avatlable Will
sacnfice at $4,500
POMEROY - 6 room honte
with 3 bedrooms, bath, basement, nat gas Ilea~ on level lot
near stores for $17,500
2 8 ACRES - 6 room home
near stores, out of all floods
Basement with garage, balh
and all utilities. $25,000

BUILT AND
REWORKED

CALL AL
742-2328

Chester, Oh1o
Ph 985-4269 or 985-4382
Dewayne Wtlhams
&amp; Scott1e Smith

AU milk• and models
Antenna lnstal11t100
House calls and shop
sarviC8 avatlabfe

9 20 1 mo Pd

9 1 24 1 1 rna

1-----------1-----------1
FOR SALE
10 USED

ABBLE SHOP
Plaster Craft and
Ceramic Bisque

S3,000 to S4,500

Teachers,
scout
Leaders and Organtza
t1ons, Come In and

BROWN'S
Trailer Park

Take A Look AI Our

Rt 124
Mrnersv1llt, Oh1
PH 992-3324
9291 mo

ment only 304 875 6234

4

GIVeaway

BRASS old

Oh Or 992 7760

Gold stlver sterling Je
w elry nngs old cams&amp;: cur
rency Ed Burkett Barber
Shop Mtddleport 992
3476

Old turmture glass&amp;: chma
Clocks phones fans qu11ts
pamtlngs baskets banks
com machmes otl &amp; electnc
lamps ratlro_. Items war
Items weather vanes tool s
kntves &amp;: swords marbles
base ball cards rnd1an art1
facts comtc books post.
cards pocket watches gold
&amp;: stlver Osby Marttn 614

Dts·

LESSONS STARTING o
CALL or STOI? IN E
TO SIGN UP
SALE ON
;;;
ORNAMENTS
"'

ANY PERSON who has any
thmg to gtve away and does
not offer or attempt to offer
any other dung for sale may
place an ad tn thts column
There wtll be no charge to
the adverttser
2 part Beagle pupptes, 1
male, 1 female Call 676

6702

Cockapoo housebroken
good w1th children
Call

448-8274

Pupp1es 9 wks old. 2 male,
3 female very playful and

gentle Call 367 7872

2 pupp1e1 ready to go Cafl

614-268-1932

to
FOUR beauttful k1ttens
good home. call after 5

304-876-2474

SYRACUSE - 2 level lots and ir--"'---------1----------~ TO good ~omo 1n Country,
AKC, Garman Shepherd, 2
older 7 room home Needs llr----- - ----.::..----- - ----11 yeare
old, 304-773-6062
some repatrs but wtll sell
reasonable
TWO part Beagle pupp1ot, t
mota. t female, 304-676TUPPERS PLAINS - Modern
5702
8 room residence on 2 level
ONE-two veer old male rab·
lots. Bath, gas furnace and
VINYL 8o. ALUMINUM SIDING
bit for pet or breeding only,
equtpped kttchen Asktng
304-882-2741
•Insullltlon •Stonn Doors
1
$31,500
I
•Storm Windows •Re~ment Windows
POIIEROY - 4 large room~
•New Roofing
6 Lost and Found
bath, sundeck. basement and
Free
Esti!"'ates
larla lot for only $17,000
LOST all block femolo t:&lt;~t ot

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

James Keesee

corner of Bob McCormick

9 22 t mo

12

Situations
Wanted

Rd &amp; 588 II found ploaoa
coli 4411-1786

Tree trrmmmg &amp;: re moval

614 949 2129 or 614
992 6040
CLEANING SERVICE
Homes offtces s mall
busrness and rental proper
tr es R es onable reliable
Have refere n ces 614 992

Want ed to Do Exp mother
wil l baby s tt tn h er home

Mason 304 773 5758
Va ca ncy rn boardrng home
for elderly Roo m &amp;: board
reaso nable 614 99 2 6022

or614 992 6748

Woman needs work w1ll do
all ktnd s of cleamng small
pamt Jobs also 304 675

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER
lnsuranc&amp; Co has offered
servtces for frre msurance
coverage tn Galha County
for almost a ce ntury Farm
hom e and personal property
c overages are avatlab le to
m ee t tndtvtdual needs
Contact Fost e r lewt s
agent Phone 379 2204
Are you pay1ng to mu ch for
your hospttal h ealth rnsu
ran ee
Call Carroll
Sn o wden 446 4290

15

Schools
lnstructton

992 6370
Wanted Used coal &amp;: wood

stove 614 742 3186

Wanted 1 6 ftbre glass rn
sulated truck topper for 82

Dodge p1ckup
3145

304 882

ltnplv nnnn
IIF*lhjll

11

Help Wanted

Karate the ulttmate m se lf
defence all pnvat e lessons
Men women &amp;: c h1ldren
ln structton thru black belt
Also a vailabl e Karate
uniform s pu c htng and
kt ckrng bags and protective
eq urpment J e rry lowery &amp;
As soc 1at es Karate Studto
143 Burlington Ad Jack

so n Oh
3074

Call 614 286

Frnr shmg charm skm care &amp;
model1ng classes Also
Lo ll 1 pop age s 7 thru 14
For mor e rnf o ca ll Garl

McHugh at 614 992 7440
Need 5 loca l persons to help
teach &amp;: sell craft c lasses No
expenence necessary good
earn1ngs for those who
quahfy lntervtewmg next 3
weeks Wrrte Trr Cham P 0
Box 2255 Columbus Oh

43216

kandt, 446 4173

MOBILE HOMES
"FURNISHED"
10' &amp; 12' WIDE

Package Deals
counts Available

ProfessiOnal ElectrolySIS
Center A M A approved
Doctor referals by appotnt

K1ttans to gtve to a good
home Call after 6 or on wee

992-2663
POMEROY, OHIO

304 882 2645

9100

furntture gold stlver dol
Iars wood 1ce boxes stone
Jars anttques etc
Com
pl ate household s Wrrte
M 0 M tller Rt 4 Pomeroy

Amerrcan legton
New
Haven W V Tues Oct 12

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL

AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE

O•

6329 or 667 3402

'----------+---------~ Jackpot
1982 at 6 30 p m $500

S&amp;WTV

Av o n Earmng ex tra money
rn Potnt Plea sa nt &amp;: New
Haven area 304 676 1429

ley Plaza
446 8026

1

FIREPLACES

JUST graduated &amp;: unsure
about your future 7 The West
Vtrgtnla Army National
Guard c an help you dectde
We ar e looktng for htgh
sc ho ol se mors &amp;: graduates
to tram tn communtcat1ons
a dm1ntstrat1on s upply ,
m ec hantc s &amp;: many other
f1eld s If you qualtfy you may
be ehgtble for an enlistment
bonu s and college or Vo
Tech asststance Be one of
We s t Vrrg1n1a s b est For
more tnformat1on call

Hav e va ca n c y for elderly
man or woman tn my pnvate
hom e at Tupp e rs Plarn s
Good ex perrenc e
667

446 3592

SWEEPER and sewmg rna
ch me reparr
parts and
supplies Ptck up and deltv
ery Davt s Vacuum Cleaner
one half mtltt up Georges

For all your wtnng
needs;
furnaces
repatr serv1ce and
onstallat10n.
Resodenttal
&amp; Commerctal
Call 742·31

698 71 11 collect

&amp; Silverware Dally quotes
ave•lable Also coms &amp; co•n
supphes
forsafe
Spnng Val
ley
Tradtng
Co Sprrng
Val

446 1952

H&amp;G SEWER
HOOK-UPS

G1v e yours e lf a
Sell
Avon Earn good money sat
your own hours Call 614
Chr~stmas Bonu s

6208
- - - - -- - - -lc -

Tobacco

10 6 lie

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

AVON

Buytng Gold St iver Platt
num o ld cams scrap nngs

446 0069

3 Announcements
CANDLELIGHT INN
Between Cheshne &amp;
Middleport Oh1o
PRESENTS
Marshall Tennant Band
Wed , Fu &amp; Sat
10 October
Wed -Draft Ntte
(all draft beer y, puce)
Thurs -Pool Tourn Ntte
Datfy Speetals
Not Menltoned
Open 7 days a week
Carryout Beer &amp;
Wme Available
Extra Spectal
Fu &amp; Sat 10 to 2
Dunk any drmk
for I low puce
Phone 992-9913

742 3094

WANTED TO BUY Oldfurnt

ture and Antiques of all
kmds call Kenneth Swam

s li e

We W
BE AT any r!~~:~:~:~
pnce
any
nyou
ew
P an 0

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

91 7 2moPd

Call today about havmg a
Mem Mac party Earn free
toys for Chnstmas 614

304 273 2130

~==~::;:::::::::::~~::::::::9:2:0:1:m~o~p~d~~~::::::::::::::::~~==P:A:R::T:S:a:n:d:S:E:R:V::IC:E::~ _th_e__ev_e_n_•n_g_s___________
EUGENE LONG
'
S
upenor
Co.

t 6 Ew1ngton Oh 46627

~

4

S

Qualtfted teacher to come to
my home to teach 9 yr old
gtrl full t1me Wages d11
cussed at ttme of mtervtaw,
good 2nd mcome Contact
Steven Jackson, Rt 1 Box

WANTED female vo c alist
ba ss guttanst f or pop rock
band Call we e kends

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

Auction every Fn n1ght at
th e Hartford Commun1ty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandtse every week
Constgments of new and
used merchandtse always
welcome R1chard Reynolds
Auctioneer 276 3069

~~~~g~~ " r

Help Wanted

304 675 3960 or toll free
1 800 642 3619

8

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
S£RV1CE.

ROOFING

Oct

tn Southern Football budd
1ng 1n Racme Sat Oct 16
10 00 to 4 &amp; Sun Oct t 7 2
to 6 Proceeds toward toot
b It_
b_
td _:__ _ _ __ lc _

Open Y ea r Round
9101 mo

OHIO VALLEY

Thursday

986-3696

ALL AGES
TRIPS WEEKLY

1017/Hc

Ph. 992-2772
t

toolo. clothing, antiquo p1c
turo framot and much more

Home tnterror 1tems fall &amp;:
wtnter clothtng and many
free clothtng rtems 614

Begtntng or I nter

PH JIM CLIFFORO
992 7201

elec
heater , humid1f1er
lane. Galhpolts
Coal stove,

through Oct

KOUNTRY K LUB
FALL GOLF TOUR

i'OMf ROY

CHARLES SAYRE

H enry E Cleland, Jr , GRI
Jean Trussell
Dottte S Turner
Off tee

THE

eexcavattng
-septic systems
ec:lump truck 18Mce
eseedtng and recla1mmg
•Racme and Syracuse
sewer hookup
Work Insured and
Guaranteed

Garage Solo Oct 16 &amp; 16
9 00-6 00 36 Burkhart

from DeWh•tts Plumb1ng

Also TransmiSSIOn
PH . 992·5682
9
or 92-7121
3 24 lfc

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

9 5 1 mo

PARCEL NO 2

Frances M Thomas
Otrector

Daied October t 1982

,., r JO'r

INSURED
FREE EST! MATtS

REALTOR S•

The follow 1nQ deswbed real
estate 1n the County o t Met(JS
State o f Oh10 Salisbury Town
sh1p and be1nq m the Vtflaqe o t
Pvme roy and 1n the s01 1theast
corner o f Sect1on No 8 Town
2 Ranqe 13 and b eqmntnq at
an 1ron stake at the sortthwest
corner o f J Edward Foster s
one acre tract thence sout h 4 3
deg rees no m m u tes west
123 5 teet aloof] lhP. west s1de
o f a 30 foot road lhencP. 8 3 1
deq no m1nut es w es t 103 5
feet alan (] sa 1d road thence
north 66 defl and 45 west 60
feet thP.nCP non h 2 1 deq 00
P.ast 23 7 feet 10 the wnst hnP. o f
sa 1d J Edwa1d Foster thence
sout h2 7 deq 00 east 103 feet
atonq sa1d J Edward Fos ter s
we!&gt;t line to the pl ace of beg 1n
n1no r:onta1 n1nq 40 100 acres

rema1n open unttl 7 30 o clock

PM of sa•d day

N('W

• f'.'l llll Ill q

'I'' 10
' I ! 'J()
',I q '10

OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE - Is part ol the charm of th1s 75 acre
farm and owner desperately needs to sell Thts IS adeal you cant
res~st Home has three bedrooms new bath and septiCsystem
N1ce btg barn and approxtmately five pnm11tve camps1tes Near
the new bndge $52 000

Public Nottce

REFER ENCE DEEDS

,·"c

11

14th &amp; Fnday 16th at Pete
cox reSidence on Old Route

REPAIR

992·62t5or992·73t4
p
omeroy, Oh10

PRICE REDUCED - On th1s two story home w1th almosl new
s1d1ng and roof four bedrooms 2\7 baths mce front porch back
patto and 1n good neighborhood Now $29 !KJO

(Aver age 4 w v rds per llne l

Public Nottce

•

. I 110
Tl 4',

PRICE REDUCED - On th1s beautllul bnck and Irame ranchw1th
a full basement three bedrooms l 'h baths famtly room and a
large mce laymg lot 10 Fa1rv1ew Blended rate loan available Now
$47 500

667 -Coolvllle

\J p mlli\A r rrl &lt;..

H. L. WHITESEL

~ Hq~~

MIDDLEPORT - Athree or four bedroom home wtth ailfeplace 10
the dtntng room ~rge master bedroom almost new lurnace new
water tank new carpet throughout Ask~ng $31 !KlO

773- Mason

882- New Haven
895-Letart
937- Buffato

949- Racme

379- Walnut

81 Hom e Improvements

458- Leon

Pomeroy

985- Chester
343- Portland
247- Lelart Falls

-~~:,7~~~f::!

v. c(F·'"vo[Jtu•mNIIOSIG Ill

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes extenstve
remodel tnt
'Eiectuc work
'Custom Pole Bldgs
&amp; Garages
'Roofing Work
'Aiumtnum &amp; Vtnyl

• C IIHC' r s
e 1 r&gt;w n c;p r t t c;

I I I Willi

NEW LISTING - Ractne - Approximately oneacreol ntce lay~ng
land whtch IS set up for atratler wrth septictank dnlled well public
water and electnc Also a new two car block garage wtth storage
room and a concrete palto $8 000

675-Pt Plea sa nt

omeroy • OH
AUTO &amp; TRUCK

- Rool••j"d IUittl"'"'
-Concrtewort

Yard Sale

Garage
Sate Wad &amp; Thurs
Bob McCorm1ck Ad 9 ta4

St Rt 124 P

'~ddons ond 11modtl1n1

Pomeroy, Oh
Ph
_
992 2174

22

ROOFING

ALUM ROOFING
SPEC IAL
I~ ,t '-~I :.', r: ,JI I;

NEW LISTING - Ractne - Butld1ng s1te or trailer lot Approx1
mately 2 l /3 acres of whtch most ts wooded w1th a septtc tank
Water and electnc are avatlable $5 000

81 Plumb1ng &amp; Hea t1n g

43 F arm s for Rent
44 Apartm ent for R f' nt
45 Furn1 shed Room s
46 Spn ce f or r ent
47 Wan t ed t o Rent
4R Equ1pm ent f or R ent
49 For Len se

14 Bus tness Tr nt ntn Q
15 Sc hoo l s In s truc t to n
16 R n d• O TV &amp; CB Rc p rltr
JJ M•sce llan cou s
lfl Wan ted To do

Area Cod• 614
992- Mlddleport

SERVICE

MOTORS, INC.

ROUSH

54 Mtsc Merchandtse

PH.992-2259

Mason Co , wv
Area Code 304

Me1gs County

446-Gallrpohs
367-Cheshrre

farm supplies
&amp; thesteelc

41 M obll t• Ho mes f or RE'nf

13 tnsu r c1 ncf'

Gallla County
Are;l Code 614

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

CARPENTER

l~==::::======::::!-t========"'="=~~======9~30~1f~c::!_f==========~

Real Estate - General

following telephone exchanges . ..

388- Vinlon

41 Hou ses for Ren t

I ? Sl! u a t ton Wi'ln l cd

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

31 Hom es tor Sa le
31 M obil e H o m es l or Srllf'
33 F arm s for Sal e
34 Bu s1ness Bu!ldtnQs
35 Lo ts &amp; Ac r eng e
36 Rl"a l Es tat e Wn n tN I

Rentals

t 1 H e l p W o nt £"&lt;1

Public Not1ce

P ro h~· SS I On ill Srr v1CC'S

Heal estate
1

71 A utos f or Sa te
77 Tru ck s lor Sa le
73 va n s&amp; 4WD
74 Motor cyc l es
75 Boa t s &amp; Motors
76 A uto Parts&amp; A c c essor 1es
77 Au to Repa1r
78 Camp 1ng Equ1pment

51 H ou sehold Goods
51 CB TV &amp; Rad10 Equ1pm e nt
53 An t1ques
54 Mt sc Merc h and ise
55 Bulld1ng Supp l 1es
56 Pe t s f or Salr
57 Mu sc 1al tns tr ume nt s
5R Fru1t s &amp; V ege t ab les
59 For Sa le or Tr ade

SMJTH NELSON

=~::.~;-::stems
,_

Cheryl Le mley, Assoc

Classified pages cover the

theSEs:f~st

From
Heater
Core to the L111est Radtator
Radaa tor specaa 1tst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs Experience

- 0ozors
Backhoes
-- Dump
Trucks

Olf•ce Ph 742 2003

YOUNG'S

COMPLETE
RADIATOR

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Geo S Hobstetter, Jr
Broker

Phone 742 3092

1ranspqrtatlan

Merthandlse

I~::~~:;::::~~:::::;'lr;====:::::====:;,r==========~~========d

HOBSTETTER REALTY

V elm a N1cmsky, A ssoc

Or Wnte Daoly Sentinel Classtfoed Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

7

Business Senices

Phone 742 3171

F jnanclal

The

Ohio

Htckory Farms of Ohto Wtll
be mterv1ewmg for both
management
and Galhpohs
part ttme
posttton
for the1r
Chrrstmas Gtft Center Oct

t 2 1982 from 11 until 6
We need top quality person
net to aggresstvely sample
and se ll Htckory Farms of
Ohto f1ne food Reta1l sales
experrence preferred Apply
tn person at the Old J C
Newberry locatiOn 53
Court St Galhpolts Oh
Htckory Farms of Ohto
Need tmmedtately-2 It
censed 1ns urance agents
Mtn 2 yrs expertence
Rumley Insurance Agency
446 3320 for appotntment
Cleantng lady apply 1n
person at Best Western
Wrlltam Ann Motel
Accoutmg manager Ac
counttng degree &amp; 2 yrs
expenence preferred Send
resume along w1th work and
salary h11tory to Box 2000.
tn care of the Gallipolis Darty
Trtbune. 825 3rd Ave

Goltrpolrt , Oh 46631

Replys held
conftdence

in

18 Wanted to Do
Genera l Hauling a nd Trash
re moval Serv1 ce Reliable
and dependable Call 446

3169 alter 6PM 256 1967

! !~~!~~~~~~
rhilfiGial
--~

21

LOOKING for peo ple who
want to earn between S600
and $50 000 monthly
through thts " newest and
fastest growtng company 1n
the natron ' Call 304 676

1293

Earn S700 $1 200 monthly
operatmg your own part
ttme m hdme bu atnau
Qualify for company car,
travel retrrement program
Repeat proftts on consume
ble products Doesn ' t 1nter
fare w1th present
employment Not door to
door We tra1n you Call

446-1988

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS 14% f1xod

local realtor Expertence
pe f aon preferred Send
resume to box 2001 1n care

rate leader Mortgage, Oh10

only 1-800 - 341-6664
WVa 614-692 3061

of Gothpotls Ooily Tnbuno,
826 3rd Avo , Gathpohs, 23
Ohio 46831
extra money for ChristSell Avon Earn good
set your own hours

***·
Call 448-3368
166

Busmess

Opportunrty

strrct

Real Eotatas Salaoporoon for

mas

- ~- -"

or 448-

Professional
Services
C&amp;L Bookkeeping

Bookkeep1ng

a. tax serv1ce

for all typeo of buoinaooe1
Carol Naot 4411-3882

�·· · ·

·

~ -~~·-· ··

-.. · ······

·

..

·

.... ... ... .. .
~

'Oct. 12,1982
Page23

S-

The Daily Sentinel

Professional
Services

54 Misc . Merchandise

46 Space for Rent

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

Ca ll Bill Wa rd for appo int ·
ment . Ward's Keyboa rd ,

Park, Route 33, North of
Po m eroy . l arge lot s. Ca ll

992 · 7479 .

446 -4372

TWO tr ail er lot s. wat er and
sewer furni shed. 304 -675 -

Bval !state

Mvrshandt&amp;e

In ground co n cr ete pool on 2

acre lot. Also has a 3 bdr . air

51 Household Goods

co nditio ned house with full

basement , 2 WB fir ep laces .
new carpet . Would co nsi der
lo w er valued Property in
tr ade or will f ina nce w ith
low down p ay m ent and 10%

SWAIN
AU CTION &amp; FURNITURF
STORE 62 Olive St .. Galli·

mterest , reduced S5 ,000 .
located 1 23 Garfield Ave

poli s. Couch . loveseat and
chair. S199.; wallhuggers
S125 .; bunk beds with bun ki es , S170.; bo x sprin g and
mattr ess. $ 100.
Firm
$ 120.; rec lin ers. S80 .; 9 ~
12 lin oleum rugs . $22 .; rn apie ro cker s, S4):1 .. wringer
wa s h e r s. r efrig lha tors , din e tt e se ts , c h es t .

Call 446· 1546.

e Road
723 1 N.orth
Ohio Ridg
44057or
call.
Madison

21 6· 428 -5320 aft er 5PM .
Off ered by Boa rd of Trustees . Rio Grande Co llege,
Ri o Gra nde, Ohio . removal
of two (2) hou ses loca t ed on
th e form er Beman pro p erty ,

518 East Coll ege Ave .. Rio
G rand e. Ohio . Sealed bids
will be accepted in t he office

of Business M anage r. All en

Hall. Ri o Grande Coll ege .
un til 2 :00 PM , October 22
1982. at which tim e bid~
will be ope ned , read and
eva luat ed for remova l of
both houses. Remova l of
hou ses mu st be made on or
before N ove mber 15 . 1982 .
Direct bids to Rio Grande
College. Ri o Grande. Ohio
45674 . ATTN : Bu si ness
Manager. Hou ses may be
viewed by appo intm ent
only -c o nt act 6 14 - 245 5353. eKt . 2 17. Th e college
rese rves th e right to reject
any and all bid s.
House for sa le or rental pur c ha s e
F airview Sub division. 6 14 -992 -5348 or

614 -992 -2064 .
M iddlepo rt : Sale. leas e op tion . 3 bed roo m, dinin g.
baseme nt , garage . Ni ce
neighborhood . Owner fi nancmg . $40 's. 614 -992 -

25 17 .
HOUSE M eadowb rook Ad dition, 3 bedrooms. family
room witt) firepalce . cen tral
ai r. basement. ph one 304 -

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

N EE D to sell 6 room house
wit h air co nditioning. gas
heat. stove wi th refrig erator . 2 1arge lot s, large gard en
space . 200 yards off of main
road in Clift on . Will sell

cheap . S15000. 30 4· 773 9192 .

42 Mobile Homes

for Rent

For. sa le one and half acres
m ore or less. approximately
600 ft road frontage on
Co ra · Centerpoint Rd . near
Ce nt e rpoint . $3 , 000 . 00

Ph one 6B 2· 6944.
0 .33 of an acre on Lin coln
Pik e. Electric hook up. Ideal
for trail er. 55,800. Ca\1446 -

1 4 x70 M obil e Home. Appl e
Grove. 2 bedroom. partially
turn . 5230. m onth plus utili ties . S l 00 Sec . depo sit . Call

7934 after 5:30PM .

after 4. 304-576· 2009 .

House or trailer lot in Brad bury . Water , gas. electric.
septi c tank . Call 614 -992 Tw o ac re lots - 150 ft . road
frontag e, city wat er. behind

84 Lumber. Call 304 -675 ·
6873 or 675 -3618 .
THREE

446 -0139 eve .

ac re s . f e n ce d ,
trail er, w ell, septic
system . letart, 9.000 .00.
12~~;60

Call 304-895 -3605 or 614·
36 7·061 2.
36

Wanted : out of state buyer
needs hou se or apt . building
with owner finan cing . Writ e
Bo x 1006 in ca re o f Th e Gal lipoli s D aily Tribune, 825
3rd . Ave.. Gallipolis. Oh

45631 .

Houses for Rent

Small furni shed house. 1 or
2 adults only. Call 446 -

57 .49 5.

1973 Darian 60x12, 2 bdr .,
. $6.495 . 1970 New Moon
60x12 . With 12ft. eK pando ,
Jet up in park . S 5.995 . 1966
New Moon 50~~;12 . 2 bdr ..
$4,495 . Call Johnson ' s M obile Homes . Call446 -3547 .
1970 Elcona 12x65. 2 bdr .,
wood burner . Call 379 -

446 -0322

EVENING
Byerly and Felts AUtomatic
Transmission . Rebuilt or exchanged . All work guaran ~
teed, reasonble prices. Call

256-6245 .

On e wooden gun ca binet,
holds five guns . Double
glass doors. 5 shelves. big
drawer in bottom. Complete
with locks, S75 or trade for
pop gun or rifle or trade for
fr ee zer or refrigerator freezer . Can be seen at At . 4
Tex as Ad ., Box 26. toward
end of Road . house on hill.

78

Furniture for sa le. Selling
chea p. Couches, end tabl e,

First floor unfurnished apart ment . Inquire at 631 4th
Ave.. Gallipoli s.

Whirlpool washer, S11 0 . ex tra ni ce . Whirlpool dryer
S90, ext ra nice. Gu arant ee d

3 bedroom unfurnished apt .
103 Court St. Gallipoli s.
$2 15 mo .. S100deposit. no
pets. ref required . Call 446 -

5B1B .

2572 .

4 rm . 8c bath. ni ce garden
space. without building . Lo ca ted 110 4th Ave. Call

Furnished &amp; part furnished
apt .. adults. Call 446 -3733
or 446 -0171 .

446 · 3B70.
Three bed .. Spring Valley
area . two baths , family room
with fireplace , doubl e gar age , ni ce neighborh q_od .
S325 per mo . Deposit and
reference requir ed . Call
61~ · 3B8 - 9680 .

3 bd .room apt . in Middl eport . Equip . kit chen. S150.
mo. plu s security deposit .

614 -992·5692 .
1 bedroom apt . furni shed .
utilities in clud ed . $185 .
month . Middleport . 614 2 bedroom furnish ed apt.

614 -99 2-7206 or 304 ·
882 -2566.
New furnished apt . 614 992 -3590. Middl eport .

gas. 614· 992 -5443 or 614 992· 5572 .
~iddleport :

Rent , lease op tion . 3 bedroom. dining. fir ep~ ace.
~asement .
garage.
n1c e neighborhood . S350.

614· 992· 2517 .

Up stairs. 1 bedr oo m furnished apartment with utili ·
ties paid. no children. Call
after 4 p.m . 992 -7515 .
Efficiency Apt . Suitable for
1 or 2 peo pl e. Roush Lane .
Cheshire. Oh . 304 -773 -

5BB2 .

Sale or rent. Pom eroy . 6
large room hou se . 1 bath ,
base ment . Call for m ore

info . 61 4-992 · 7284 .

Ap a rtm ent s .

3~4 - 675 ·

5546 .
APARTMENTS . mobil e

House for rent -all new paint .
Some ca rpeting . no inside

pets . 614 -992· 3090 .
in

homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 -

8221 or 614· 245-9484.
Three room furnished apart ment, adults. no pets. Po int
Pleasant . Call 304 -675 -

2453 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

614·256 ·

GE dryer like new, S80 .
Whir poo l portable washer.
24 in . wide. real nice . $80 .

Caii446·B.181 .

992 -7177 .

Pomeroy -2 bd .room unfur nished house. $ 195. mo.
Security dep osit . $ 100. plu s
utili.ties . After 6-ca ll 614 -

30 days . Call
1207.

New Haven . 3 bedroom un -

furn apt . 304 -882 -3356 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

5930, Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
Wood burning add on furnanc e. Still in factory crate.

S450 . Call
1216.

Corn f ed beef for sale.
Ready for butchering . Call

I I I

Camping
Equipment
CAPTAN EASY
THIS 16 EVERYTHING
YOLI'U. N&amp;ep WHet.J
YOLI MfET NA.J AT
THe AIRPORT IN

Starcraft fold - out , used
twice , excellent cond .
$2495. located Main and
Second. Middleport, Ohio .

n:~

614· 992 -2828 ,

COYPIL

r -----.

MeeT AN&amp;If - LIH-ANGE~A
LIVIN66TOW, SIR ••• MY
NeW PARTNE~ .

AZAA .

9 'h FOOT. self contained
truck camper. $650. 304-

245 ·5695.

firm . Coll614-266-1698 .

dition $4800: 304· 675·
3009 .

Fiberglass slide up garage
door. Electric dehumidifier.
Excellent condition . Call
446 -0094 evenings and
weekends .

57

1980 Chevy Luv 4x4. Coli
446· 3229

Svr lsvs

16ft. goose neck trailer . Call

614 -256-6230 .
Homelite

string

trimmer

$75. King Trumpet $225.
Honda Trail 90 motorcycle
S350. All like new . 614~

992 -7539 .
Cal l Robert Harper for Gin seng and Yellowroot prices .

304-675· 1293.

top, 304· 675· 1478.
BUYING and selling used
heavy equipment (agricultu ral. construction. mining.
chemical industry , etc .)
through consignment for a
national company . Starting
at $15.000. value . Call Robert l Harper. 304-675 -

1293.
MAYTAG wringer type
washer. S50 . 304-773 -

5967.
LITTlE John add on furnace ,
S200 . Sea rs 12 ' fibreglass
boat , 4 % HP motor, $350 .

REFRIGERATOR $100.00.
17'10"x 9 ' 10 " . phon~
11 :30 - 4 : 30 . 614 - 446 ·
2174 . Alt er - 304 - 675 6531 .

SEARS 3 wh eel bike, eKcel l ent condition . $90 . 00,

614-446· 3375 .
DOWN spouts, gutters from
2 -story house, $10 . Three
pair wooden outdoor shutter s, S10. each. 304 -675 -

door. red. black vinyl top. ex cellent running condition ,

Fruit

$700. Call 614-388-8561 .

Call614 -379 -2571 .
2 Early Am erican wingback
chair s. 1 living room couch
all excell ent con d. Inquire at
918 2nd. Ave.. Gallipoli s.
Blu e Ridge Mount ai n fire ·
place if)serts now in stock at
Swisher Implement Co .. St.
Rt . 1 North. Gallipolis. Oh

614 -245-5121 .
Build your own garage
24x24 all lumber furnished
$695. Can deliver. Bar~
pattern also. Call 614 -886 -

7311 .
Metal sheets for all building
purposes . Flat porcelian
enamel coated . 4x8 thru 4 x

669· 3786 .
- - - - - - - - ·lc -

1970 Chevy Monte Car lo ..

Potatoes. Humphrey Farms
have a good supply of Ken nebec potatoes on hand.
containers . Reedsville, Oh .

Call 614·256 ·6816 or 614:
256-6747 .

1977 Ford Granada. 2 dr.

$1,900. 614-742-2352 .

II

_.

'

I

" " - .. ,

····-

,,, ,. ,

.....

4

61

matic. 304·675 -5505 .

1979 FORD Mustang Co·
Backhoe will fit just about bro. loaded, $4500 . 304·
any tractor . $3,000. Sand- 675 -7752.

265 Maney ferguson trac tor. 9ft. disc, 3 row bottow
plow~. 300 gal . sprayer,
plastiC mulch layer brand
new . Will sell together or sa-

per ate. Call 446 -1700.
Solar stainless steel bulk
ta~k holds 240 gals. 2 surge
umu &amp; pumps , 3 point 4
bottom Massey - Harris
m~&gt;unted set of plows.
Pnced on inspection . 388-

1976 FORD 4 door sedan
power steering, powe;
brakes. air conditionhtg,
cheap, good condition, 304 -

458 -1854.
1975 LINCOLN Mark IV
48,000 miles. loaded. 304:
468 -1854.
76 CHEVETTE,

2 door,

hatchb,ack, very clean, see at
395 Jacklon Pike, next to
HaHelt Carpet Co.

1981 CHEVETTE, 4 door

BJJB .

automatic, AM -FM, radio:
low mileage, excellent con -

1953 Minneapolis Moline
tractor, $700 or best offer.

dition, 304· 773 -5586 .

DRAGONWYND CATIERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pup -

74

Chevelle .

4824 .

736·6170.

~-----------L...---------~

63

RON 'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar . anJ:t

house calli. Coli 676· 23911
or 446 -2464.
removal . Call 675 -1331 .
rienced mason. roofing. car...
penter. electrician. general
repairs and remodeling . Call

I
Wh4 are ~ou
lookinq at that,
Roverr You
can'i: read!

304 -675 · 2088 or 67S:.
4560 .
Water Wells . . Comniercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

304-895-3802.
ADVANCED Seamles•
Gutter- Doors. Offeriog con tinuse guttering. seamless
siding, roofing . garage
doors. free estimates. 614·

698 -8205.
PAINTING interior &amp; exte rior. free estimates, 304 -

675· 1128.
CARPENTRY &amp; remodel·
ing, siding, painting, some
electrical 8c plumbing . 304 -

WINNIE

576· 2989.

82

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

complete $176. Low mi -

leage, 304· 773· 5889 .
72

Trucks for Sale

"

"•'•i{

CARTER 'S PLUMBING · :
AND HEATING
.-:
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446-3888 or 446·
4477
84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
SE~ING Machine repairs.

V2 Ton serv1ce . Authorized Singer
21 steer. 600· 700 lb. &amp; 93 Pickup, 1296.00. Ph. 246· Sal_es &amp;: Service Sharpen
International combine . Call 9670.
'
Sc1ssors . Fabric Shop-: ..
614· 388 -8483 or 614·
Pomeroy. 992·2284 . , ' :
471 -1472.
1976 Ford. F 150. Looded
-:-:-:-------·lc- with OKtros . 614-949 ·
HOLSTEIN HEIFER 2644.
86
General Hauling
.....::_ ::.CALVES . 614-992·6198.
1976 Ford -1 ton truck .
Regiuered Nubian male Goodcond, 614· 247-3895.
JONES BOYS WATER SEA · :·
goat. 6 years old. Papers included. taO. 2 yeor old fe- 1978 Ford Bronco, lock In VICE . Call 614-367-747\ ;
'
or 614-367·0591.
1972

Chevrolet

________

male goat,

rebred

noW

milking. $60. Shod'o-614·
696·1234.

2 bdr. trailer.in country . Call

lock

out

huba,

4 ~ wheel

64

IT'S A PLUMB

VOUR MAN

SHAME ME

SNUFFY GOT
THROWED IN
JAit.:rHIS
MORN IN'

AN' LOWEEZV
AIN'T ON
SPEAKIN'
TERMS

Hay &amp; Grein

BARLEY for cover crop or

- .
.....
•

PEANUTS

0

&lt;

•

&lt;

o

A

~ . - ·

.. ···
•

o

11

YOV cAN CllOOSE YOUR
FRIENDS. BUT YOU CAN'T
YOUR RELATIVES''

I GUESS IT DIDN'T
WORK OUT••• REMEMBER

&lt;

WHAT MV AUNT MARIAN
USED TO SAY?

Auto• for Sale

acre of ground. At . 2 below

33 Farms for Sale
2

bedroom

furniahed .

Adult1 preferred. No petl.
Oltpooh .roquirod. 1114·9922749.

1rs TOO SAD.. WITH-MY
INFLUENCE, I COULD

I-lAVE 60T filM A 600P

JOB IN TilE INFANTRY...

-·

3:00 (I) 700 Club
3:30 (I) MOVIE: 'The Man
Who Would Be King'
(]) CFL Footboll: Montrwelll CalgMy
' 4 :00 · (I)
MOVIE:
'EndleN
Love'
.4:115 (I) M~ lmpoeolble

Henderson $10,000. 304·
676-3662.

46 l·ocre form, plenty of
timber. oil mlnerol rlghle. oil
for tiiii.OOO. Coll814-3792688 or 114-379-21138.

ot

..

food, oloo wheotond rye, coli
304-878-1807.

71

BARNEY

drive, 3,900 mileo. 82700. Need something hauled.~
304·676-1036.
away or something moved? ' -..,
We'll do it. Calf 446-3159 or ;
614· 256-1967 otter 6.
•
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

614 -256 -6B13.

.....

~~wd'

opd, Bell offer. Coli 446·
9393 or 446-7596.

Livestock

nished, 304· 676-1972

2 bedroom troil•r 12x60. 1

WE:'LL GIVE
11-IE REDCOI&gt;.TS
A CHANCE TO
SURRENDER!

~

1977 Chevy 350 engine

62 Pontt•c Tenlpest, 4c .• 3

shots, 304-675· 7877.

STRUCTION . Constr .. roofing , siding. spouting,
fencing , painting, repairs &amp;
cleaning . 446 -2000. call be fore 8 and after 6 :30.

304 -675 ·

For sakt o'r trade 66 Dodge
truck, 226, 6 c .. 3 opd., end

Call 446-3844 after 4 p.m.

AKC registered Schnauzer
puppies, Poodle puppies,
$160 . each . wormed &amp;:

CHRISTIAN ' S CON ·

RINGLE ' S SERVICE expo•

Farm Equipment

HAM .

Caii614 -38B -9939 .

F &amp; K Tree Trimming. stump

76 M&lt;_m za 2 ~ 2. 4 cyl. auto -

•••THIG IG THE ... BRR -PLACE!
AHO I'IAR6UCit5' IHSTR.UCTION5
!lEitE FOR. ME TO WAIT FOit
HIM OUT AT THE
END OF THAT PIER.-

2107 .

0241 ext . 1B65 for directory on how to purchase. 24
hrs.

I

ARE SEEING

Cleaning featured by thffelt
Brosthers Custom Carpets.
Free estimates. Call 446P

(refundable! 1· 714 · 569·

.......

HA! IT 15
BECAUSE FOR
THE FIRST TIME
THE REAL

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet

JEEPS. cars, trucks under
$100 . available at local
gov't sales in yqur area. Call

·

Ei·EiEE. MIG5 HAN ...
l'iHAT'5 HAPPENIH'?
1'/H-1'/HY. DO Y'
LOOK. 5() •••

Call614 -388 ·9622 or 614·
388 -9857 .

F~~ trade 70 VW. goOd condition , rebuilt engine,
13.000 miles, for tractor in
good working condition

NEW Idea no. 10,1 row corn
pi~ker, good condition.
pnced $1696 . located near
leon, call Huntington. 304-

Coli 446· 7795 .

exp. Call 614 -388·9652 .

59 For Sale or Trade

Pets for Sale

Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Do.bermans pups and
Doberman Stud Service .

PAINTING - interior and ex·
terior. plumbing. roofing.
some remodeling . 20 yrs .

Gene Smith. 992 ·6309 . . .

phone 304·675· 1704,

.K

1182.

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock .

56

.

PLASTERING

Gene's Steam Carpet Clean ScQtch Gaurd - Free
estimates-spring specials-

sale. $1,500.00, 304·576·
2784 .

HILLCREST KENNEL

STUCCO

1967 VW Beetle. $450 .
614-949 -2789 .

61 4-378· 6295 . No Sun .
Sales.

Call 675· 7726 .

pies , CFA Himalayan. Per sian and Siamese kittens .

a.c .. $260. 614 -667 -3085 .

BRIDGE

textured ceilings commer~
cial and residential. free
estimates. Call 614 -256-

Masonary work . Logue Contracting, Rt . 1. Ewington 1

12. Prices. $7.00 to $9.60 .
614 -667 -30B5 .

POODLE GROOMING . Coli
. Judy Taylor at 614· 367·
7220 .

House coal for sale $24 ton

I I ) ( I I)

Unlucky? No, careless

APPLES -Fitzpatricks Orchards has plenty of picked 1981 Cutlass Supreme Dieapples for apple butter or for sel with everything. Will
winter storing . Visit our or - consider older car as trade
chard on St.Rt . 689 or call in . 614·742 -2416.

850 FORO farm tractor for

2 C78 - 1 4 black wall snowtires. S40. 1 -16ft. span. an t enn a with rotar . S45 . 1 - 3
yr . old White -Westinghouse
stov e. self cleaning , $450.

(]

e

BORN LOSER

Home
'Improvements

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing . 30 years e~tp er ience ,
specializing in built up roof .

446 -8640.

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

81

74 Chevy Malibu Classic, rebuilt engine, new til'es .
Cider $2 .00 gal., German muffler, sh.ocks. brakes.
Ridge apples . Red and Craig stereo, Pioneer speak ·
Golden Delicious. Rome era. $1600 or best offer.
Beauty ani:t Wine Sap, $7.00 Call 446 -8382 .
bushel. $4 .00 Yl bushel.
Corner of LeGrande Blvd. 1979 Ford Pinto. exc. cond ..
and Portsmouth Rd . Call 4 cyl .• 4 spd .. low miles. ra dials, AM -FM . rustproof .
446·8598.
one owner. Call 446 -8676.

ers Auto Sales. 1st S. Sycamore St., Gallipolis. Call

55 Building Supplies

porto .. Coli 61 4-446-4867
or 742· 3193.
1975 Chrysler Cordoba. 2

&amp; Ll ewtpgk

Harvest special whol e
shelled corn $5 .00 per 100
lb. your sacks . $5 ..75 one
sack. Morgan Woodlawn
Farm, At . 35 , Pliny, WV .

67 Camero 250 engine,
body good cond.. needs
paint, asking $900, negotible, include• 67 'camaro

&amp; Vegetables

-

stero . Call 675 -7379.

ONE bedroom apartment in
Henderson, partly fur -

304 -676-3238 .

6751 .

10.000 air conditioner &amp;

2065 .

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO ..
61 Court St .. Gallipolis. Call
446 -0687.

$9.00 per 100 lbs. Your

Armstrong , no wax . lino l e um used 1 month

71 Motor Home. good con-

We will (1EET or BEAT any 614·446-1617.
legitimate price your receive
on any new piano or organ.

58

ivered, $25 . a load . 1972
Chevy Impala, 2 door. hard -

1980 Pontiac Flrebird. AM FM cauette, air, $6,000

1960 Chevy for sale fair
cond .• partly restored . Call

FIREWOOD. cut, split &amp; del·

5804.

446 -0475 .

Musical
Instruments

LOWREY organ - Genie,

Oh . Call 614 -256 -6245 .
Fir e wood . S l abs $10
pi ckup . cut up slabs $ 15 ,
round wood $ 20 . Rio
Grand e area. Call614 -245 -

() I

rI

882 -3180.

6 weeks old male Beaglesfull blooded, S25 . Coli 446·
465B .

1-614 · 25€ ·

Firewood S25 .00 pick "u p.
~5 % hard wood . Jet . At .
218 8c At . 553, Crown City,

I RANEY

I

304-675· 2275 .
Pl as ti c Septic Tank s. State
and co unty approved . 1.000
gal. tank. price $340. Oth er
si_zes in stock . haul in your
p1 ckup truck . Ca11614 -286 -

D Cil Newacenter
(I) MOVIE: 'L' Incorriglble'
CIJ Bull'o Eye
Cll Carol Burnett
Cll D Cll &lt;iD G (D Nowa
10
ii.
(I) Newa/Sporta/Weather
Cll ClD 3-2-1 • Contact
8:30 II (I) (I) NBC Newa
EXP'ECTct:' TO 6fT
CIJ MOVIE: 'The Return
IN TOUCH WITH
Of Jeeoo Jameo'
A ~ECEIVS~.
Cll Bob Nawhert Show
Cll • (D ABC Newo
D Cll &lt;iD CBS Newa
Now arrange lhe cirded letters to
Cll Or. Who
fOfm the surpt1se answer. as sug·
ClD Over Euy
golfed by lhe above cartoon.
7:00 D Cil P.M . Magazine
Cil MOVIE: 'Summer
Solotlce'
Prlntanswerhere:
(]) ESPN Sportsforum
Cll Gomer Pyle
(Answers tomorrow)
Cll Entertainment Tonlght
Yeslerday's
Jumbles:
ROBIN
BASIN
DREDGE
FACADE
(I) Chortle's Angels
Answer : He stopped taking her out when she started
D Cll Tic Tac Dough
having thls- " BRIDE" IDEAS
(I) ClD MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
&lt;iD News
&lt;D People's Court
7:30 U Cil ® You Asked For
It
(]) ESPN Sports Center
Cll Andy Griffith
Cll D (I) Family Feud
(I) Bueiness Report
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
ClD Thle Old House
G
&lt;D Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 II (l) (I) World Series
Gome #1
protect both hearts and diaCil MOVIE: 'Endless
Love'
monds as part of his one noCil MOVIE: 'American
trump response.
NORTH
l0-12-82
Gigolo'
North didn't criticize the
+874
(])I Spy
bidding either , but he sure
54
(]) NCAA Football: Stan·
had plenty to say about
t KQJ 2
ford at Arizona State
South's play.
+J 52
Cll MOVIE: 'Lover Come
South had won the club
Back'
WEST
EAST
lead and played his ace of
Cll Ill ~ Happy Days
+10 53
trumps. West showed out
'The Cunningham household
• A62
~ Q 10 8 7
but South merely paused fo~
is upset with Jeanie's deci·
+96543
t A 10 8
~ milli-second before playsian to move to Chicago.
flo10984
+Q 7 6 3
mg
to more h1gh trumps.
D (I) ®I Bring 'Em Back
Then he led his seven of
SOUTH
Alive
diamonds.
+AKQJil 2
(I) ® Nova 'The Case of
• J 93
East rose with the ace and
the UFO's.' Tonight 's pro·
t7
led a second club. Even tual·
wa~ investigates the fact ,
+AK
ly, South had to attack
f1ct1on and hoax of unidentified flying objects. (60
hearts and had no way to
Vulnerable: Both
min.)
avoid
losing three heart
Dealer: South
8:30 (I) Ill ~ Laverne &amp;
tricks, his contract and his
West
Nortb East
South
Shirley Laverne and Shorley
partner's confidence.
1+
are ass1gned to live in a
Where had South gone
store window .
Pass
I NT
Pass
4+
wrong ' Wasn 't he unlucky'
9:00 (]) 700 Club
Pass
Pass Pass
Not rea lly unlucky, just
CIJ Ill ~ Three's
careless. When West showed
Company Janet and Terri
out on the first trump, he
Opening lead: •10
fear Terri 's boyfriend den·
should immediately have led
tist may extract more than
a diamond to East's ace.
Jack 's teeth after being
East's best play would be a
jilted.
second club. Now South
0 (I) ® MOVIE: 'Take
By Oswald Jacoby
could lea d a low trump to
Your Beet Shot'
and Alan Sontag
dummy's seven spot. East
(I) ® Mystol'(l ·sweeney
Todd.' A young girl mas·
would take his 10, but would
Tbe game was rubber have no way to keep South
querades as a boy to find
bridge and South wanted his from getting to dummy with
out why a barber's clients
100 honors. It's not that we the eight for two heart
mysteriously
disappear.
can find any real criticism discards, game and rubber .
(90min.l
9:30 (I) Ill ~ 9 to 5 Judy,
of his four-spade bid. He
Doralee and Violet delight
didn't know that North could
a security guard with their
office stories.
10:00 (I) MOVIE: 'Arthur'
(I) MOVIE: 'The Offence'
CIJ Ill &lt;D Hart to Hart
The Harts witness a murby THOMAS JOSEPH
der involving a spirtual
mentor
and
Jennifer's
ACROSS
DOWN
aunt' s
bridegroom . (60
I
Dorothy
I
- widow
min .)
or UJJian
2 Anc . Greek
10:16 Cll TBS Evening News
10:30 (I) Star Time
5 Foundation
colony
(I) Firing Uno
10 "Schoolboy" 3 Stuck-up
ClD Nowswatch
of baseball
4 Cut
11 :00 D (I) Nowacentor
(]) .ESPN Sporta Center
11 French
5 Move
CIJ D (J) &lt;iD • (]21 News
sleuth force 6 Suffix
(I) News/Sports/Weather
12 With fresh
for cow
11 : 16 Cll All In the Family
vigor
7 Cocky
Yesterday's Answer
11:30 D (I) (l) Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE: 'First Monday
13 Funny
8 Go over
21 Overwhelming 27 Keystone
In October'
Cops
in the head
9 Reserved 22 Quarantine
(I) Another Ule ·
14
Yellow
ocher
11
European
23
of
specialty
(I) Benny Hill Show
llJ (I) Quincy A hil-and- 15 Marsh
river
contention
28 Qui ck bread
run accident in front of
16 Monk's title 15 Swiss
24 Moor's
29 Mortise fitter
Danny' s Place could mean
17 Cracker
wind
tom-tom
34 Publicaruin for Danny. (AI (60
min.)
19 Bell the 18 Playing
25 Pat or
tion (sl. )
(I) PBS Late Night
20 Gaelic
card
Debbie
35 Before
&lt;iD All In the Family
21 Ballot
r.--..-~~rG (D Nlghtllne
22- fixe
11 :45 Cll MOVIE: 'Fanny'
12:00 (I) MOVIE: 'The French
23Woe
Woman'
:U
Burnt
(I) Bums &amp; Allen
25 Winter pear
I]) NCAA Football: Penn
State II Alabama
• 26 Golf-club
CIJ Nlghtflne
part
&lt;iD MOVIE: 'Frenzy'
Ill &lt;D Fantasy Island A 27 Oppose
night watchman dreams of
30 Wing (Lat.)
being a private eye and a
31 Fanner's
woman horse rider stands
need
in for Lady Godiva . (R) (I
32 Chill
hr .. 10 min.)
·
12:30 II (I) (I) Late Night with 33 Hero's foe
David Letterman
~;Kind
(I) Jack Benny Show
collar
(I) Fantaoy Island A night
watchman dreams of being
36 Comfortable
a private eye and a woman 37 Nevada city
horse rider stands in for
Lady Godiva . (AI (l hr., 10 38 Cliff's brink
39 Biblical
min.l
,
0 (I) MOVIE: 'McMillon
paradise
&amp; Wife: Face of Murder'
(I) To Be Announced
1 :00 CIJ I Married Joan
GI&lt;D Now•
1 : 15 Cil
Commodores
In
Concert Tho Commodores
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
perform their biggest hi1s.
1 :30 U
(l)
NBC
Newa
AXYDLBAAXR
Overnight
Ia LONGFE_LLOW
(I) MOVIE: 'The Rain
Poopla'
One letter eimply etands for another. In I his sample A· is
CIJ My Uttle Margie
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single l etters,
(I) Newa/Sign Off
opoetrophea, the len(lth and formation of the words are all
•
(]21 CNN Headline
hints. Each day the code !etten are different.
News
.
2:00 (I)·Bachelor Father
&lt;iD CBS News Nightwitch
2:115 (I) MOVIE: 'Arthur'
CRYPTOQUOTES
2:30 (I) Ute of Riley
(]) ESPN Sporta Center
TR
(I) MOVIE: 'Beach Cua- T
NUUKBX
SAK
BXLKTBXU

8:00

446 -6t39 .

20 gallon aquarium . Full
hooded light. All accessori es . Fish heater. loader all
S45 or trade for gun . Can be
seen at At . 4 Texas Ad .. Box
25. toward end of Road,
hou se on hill.

304-675 -2693.

5 room hou se in Eureka un -

10 acres. 12x60 trail er plu s
2 new rooms . City w ater .
near Racin e . 614 - 949 ·

614-742 -2897.

$395 . to S650. Desk S110.
Hutches, SJOO . and $550 ..
maple or pine finish . Bedroom s uites - Bas set t
Cherry, S795 . Bunk bed
co mpl ete with mattresses.
$25 0 . and up to $395. Baby
beds. $99. Mattresses or
box spring s, full or twin .
$58 .. firm . S68 . and S78.
Qu ee n sets. $195 . 4 dr .
chests . $42 . 5 dr. chests.
$54 . Bed frames. S2 0 .and
$25 .. 10 gun - Gun ca bin ets.
$350 ., dinette chair s $2 0 .
and S25. Gas or electric
ranges. $325 . Baby rna tresses. S25 8c $35, bed
fram es S2 0 . S25 . 8c $3 0 .
Use d Furniture .. bookcase,
ranges . chair s, end tabl es,
recli ners and TV 's. 3 miles
o ut Bul av ille Ad . Open 9·am
to 7pm, M on. thru Fri., 9am
to 5pm . Sat .

erat or. gas range, electric
dryer . Corbin 8c Snyder Fur niture. Call 446 -1171 .

2124 .

1973 - 12x60 Baron Trailer .
with wood burner. 8 x 16
porch. Must sell. Moving .

and up to $125 . Hid e-ab e ds , $440 . and up to.
$525 .. queen size. $380.
Recliner s. S175 . to $325 .,
lamps from $18 . to $65 . 5
pc . din ettes from $79 ., to
S385 . 7 pc .. $189 . and up.
Wood tabl e with six chairs

USED APPLIANCES Refrig ·

larg e hou se in cou ntry . Free

60 x12. 2 bdr ..

S2B5. to SB95 . Tabl es, S38

Ni ce ly furni shed m o bil e
home. ce ntr al air, 1 mil e
below ci ty overlooking riv er.
adults only . Call 446 -0338 .

198114ft x 65Ventura. 2
bdr .. exc .con d., set -up . Ca ll

1979 lib e rty 60 x 14 ,
S8. 795 . 1973 Champion

Hou ses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr . apart ments for rent . HUD pro gram available . A -One Real
Estat es, Carol Yeager. Rea l tor . Call 304 -675 -5104 or

Sofa. chair, rocker, otto·
m an . 3 tables . (extra hea vy
by Frontier). $685. Sofa.
ch ai r and loveseat, $2 75 .
Sofas and chairs priced from

12 acre. thr ee b ed r . ho m e.
ba se m ent , ci ty sc h oo l ,
co unty water . Call 2 16 734 -3734 , evening s.

1

992 -2288.

511 , 495 . 1979 Skyline
56x14. 2 bdr , $9 ,495 .

0957 .

LAYN E'S FURNITURE

675 ·5386.

0338 .

ter 5PM . 614 -245-9226 .

1980 Happy Hou se 14x70 ,
3 bdr . . total el ect ri c ,
511.995 . 1978 N as hua
14x70, 3 bdr., fireplace
s 11 . 595 . 1981 Venture
60 x 14 . 2 bdr . , gas .

2nd fl oo r furni shed effi ciency apt . Apt . 4, 729 2 nd
Ave. Adult s o nly . 446 -

446 -7398.

etc. Call 446 -3937 .

Very ni ce 2 bdr. duplex
house . Furni shed. Main St. ,
Ches hire. 5185 per mo .. wa ter paid . Call 614 - 245 -

614 -256 - 17B5 or 6 14 ·
256 ·6265 .

0338 .

614 -256 -6506.

773· 5392 .

For sale or rent 81 Nas hu a
mobil e hom e, 3 bedrooms.
front de c k o ff kit ch en .
woodburn er , stove and refrigerato r included. Ca ll af -

2215 .

Delu xe garage apartment , 1
bdr .. central air, Fir st Ave..
no pets, ref . required. Ca ll

Rancaki
41

Furnish ed 3 r. priv ate bath,
845 2nd. Ave., Gallipolis .
Ref . preferred . Call 446 Small furni shed effienc y, 1
profess ional type male only .
Ce nt er air &amp; heat . Call 446 -

Real Estate
Wanted

furni shed. Deposit required .

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. downtown, all carpet.
complete kit chen. all elect ·
ric hea t -air co nd ., Washerdry er. Ca ll 446 -4383 day s.

Ca11614 ·256· 1413.

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES USED · CARS,
TRUCKS GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 ·7572 .

44

2602 .

3 bed room all electri c, 105
1st St. M ason , WV. 30 4 -

32 Mobile Homes
f.or Sale

TWO bedroom hou se trail er A shland -Upland Ad . Galli poli s Ferry, 304 -675 -4088 .

e-9

10/12/82

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

- w as hers, dryers . refrigerato_rs. ranges . Skaggs Ap pliances. Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Crest Motel.

The Dail Sentinei- Pa

1968.

r~~~~~~~~~~1~~~;~~===~~ drS40.
esseCal\446
rs, bunkie
mattress
-3159
.
·

675 -154 2.
3 bedrooms , bath and Y1 by
own er . phon e 304 -675 2623 after 5 p.m ., $42 ,500.
new furnace

SPECIAL Complete enamel
paint jobs from $300. Sun·
roofs installed from $226 .
Auto Trim Center. 446 -

Firewood. Cut to length.
Delivered in dump truck
loads or 111ay be picked up in
yard . Crown City. Oh Junction 553 &amp; 218 . Call 614·

Ohio

Television
Viewing

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

1076.

31 Homes for Sale

For sa le by ow ner. 3 bed room home . large fam il y
room , $5,000 down assume
9 111%. 44 , 000 mort gage .
Monthly p ay m ent s o nly
S42 4 . Send letter eKp ress·
ln g lnteresttoMr . Gemme\1,

Oct. 12,1982

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport,

DICK TRACY

·-·

,FURNITURE repolrod, on:_;
PU toppere, one 8ft, two 'IIV. dqun rfttored, cuttom ce·
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441- blneu, 304-175·3671 ofter
7~22.
5p.m.
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Yettenlay'a Cryp&amp;oquote:
OFPAINS.-YOUN~

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A MAN OF PLEASURE IS A MAN

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Page-l 0---

The

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,..

--

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,Ckt. 12,1982

Alabama group
•
top entertai-ners
NASHVILLE, T enn . !API - The
young band Alabama, knmm for its
progressive style, capped a rags -to-'
riches saga by dethroning Barbara
Mandn&gt;ll as entertainer of the year
at the Country Music Association's
annual awards show.
" There's a lot of gn&gt;at entertainer s." lead singer Randy Owen sa id
after thf' nationally televised
award s program Monday nigh!.
"To be the fi rst group to win it. it
fee ls good ."
The four-pit&gt;Ce band from Fort
Payne. Ala .. was playing for tips
j ust two years ago and was rejected
severa l times by recording companies until RCA signed it to a contract.
Alabama. which has reeled off a
string of hit s including "Feels So
Right," "Old Flame," "Take Me
Down" and "Mountain Music." also
won for top instrumental group and
top vocal group .
They are more progressive than
traditional in style. although some
of their instrumentals have a bluegrass na\'Of'
After rcceivi ng the bullet-shaped
trophies at the Gra nd Ole Opry
House. Alabama led its roadcrcw in
a backstage cheer. "Ain 't We Having Fun N ow~"
Miss Mandrell. who wa s co-host
with Mac Davis of the 16th annual
program . won no awards.
The petit e singer. who has dominated country music awards shows
in recent years. was among five finalists for enterw iner of the year
and top fema lev oca lisl.
Willie Nelson. who was writing
songs before members of Alabama
were bam. wontwoawa rds- single
of the year for the tender "Always
on My Mind " and album of the year
for the LPof the same name. He did
not att end the ceremony.

Grand opening set
. for Middleport store

"Always on My Mind" also won
song of the year for writers Johnny
Christopher, WayneThompso~ and
Mark James.
Young Ricky Skaggs, acclaimed
for his piercing tenor, won top male
vocalist over Nelson, Merle Haggard , George Jones and Ronnie
Milsap.
"Well, hmm. Didn't plan no
speech," said the 28-year-old
Skaggs, who has had a r t&gt;Cording
contract less than a yea r . Skaggs,
who also won the Horizon Award as
most prornlsing newcomer, hit the
top of the charts In April with "Crying My Heart Out Over You ."
Janie Fricke, who toiled In obscurity for years as a backup singer
at Nashville n&gt;eordlng sessions before making such hlts as "Baby, It 's
You" and "Piayin' Hard to Get,"
was named fema le vocalis t of the
year.

Coordinators chosen forT AG

!Continued from page I 1
lowing heavy rains on Sa turday.
They stated then&gt; are definitedrairrage problems at the property
caused by the installation of the new
water U!nk. They asked that each
council member visit the site and
view the problems so that som ething can be worked out forthesa tisfaction of the Brewers .
Attending the meeting wen&gt;
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Jon Buck, and Councilmen Gilmore, King, WiUiam Walters. Dewey Horton. Carl Horky and Jack
Satterfield .

Two Meigs County residents
have been named district coordina tors for the Talented and Gifted
tTAGi Program for 1982 -83. according to Paris Roland , regional
TAG program coordinator.
Dan Morris. superintendent . was
named to the post for Meigs County
School Distri ct and Dan Salmon. tutor. has been announced coordina tor for Southern School District.
The TAG Program is a coopera tive projt&gt;Ct of ar ea school districts
with the goal of providing enrichment and accelera tion for talented
or gifted students. Rola nd sa id .
According to report s by ar ea
school distric ts. more than 1.700
students have been ident ified as tal ented or gifted.
District coordinators in the progr am develop spt&gt;Cial programs for
talented and gifted students. Roland said . they will att end inservice
educa tion programs conducted by
the Southeas tern Ohio Voluntary
Education Cooperative in Athen s.
an agency of the public schools.

Meets Wednesday
Syracuse Village Council will
meet Wednesday at 7: 30 p.m . All
members are urged to attend .

Area deaths
Goldt&gt;n R. Canaday
Golden R. Canaday, 81, Rt.l. Nor thup. died at 2 a.m . Monday in
Cabell-Huntington Hospital. Huntington . W.Va .. following a btief
illness.
Born Feb. 3. 1901. in Gallipolis. son
of the late Naamin Canaday Jr and
Anna Gene,·a Switzer Canaday . he
was a uustcc of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation and had served the
federation' s District No. 22. including Ga llia. Meigs and Athens counties. since 19:16. He tra velled to
Hawa ii. Puerto Rico and Cuba with
the federation. has been honored by
severa l agricultural societies and
was commissioned an honorary
Kentucky colonel in 1 ~79 .
He mar ried Vesta Dan ner on
Sept.l9, 1921. and shealsoprf'Ceded
him in death on July 20. 1966.
Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Richard tDorothy J Madison of Clinton; five sons. Larry and D~n-ell.
both of Northup, Carroll of Crown
City. and Wayne and Robert, both of
La Mirada. Calif. ; 14 grandchildren
and 10 great -grandchildren; three
sister s. Mrs. Farrell 1Edna I Niday
of Richmond. Va .. andBiancheCanaday and Mrs. Harry I Mary) Bailey. both of Ga llipolis; and four
brother s. Robert of Pomeroy, Marshall of Rio Grande. Gerald of Holt.
Maine. and Ronald of I ;aJiipolis.
Two brat hers a Iso preceded him
in dea th .
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m . Thu rsda y in the WaughHalley-Wood Funera l Home, with
the Rev. Everett Delaney officia ting. Burial will be in Mound Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Veterans Mt&gt;morial
Adm itted -- Rhond a Barnhart,
Pomeroy; Margare t Bowles, Middleport ;
Anthon y Hoy lm an,
Marmet. W_ Va .; James Yeauger.
Long Bottom; John Wells. Racine.
Discharged-- Donald Roush. Harold Hammon.

Boosters to meet
The Meigs Local Athlet ic Boosters will meet at 7: .JO p.m . this evenIng !Tu esday ! at the high school.

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses were issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to Carl
Shane Smith. 19. Middleport, and
Paulett a Sue Tiemeyer, 19, Middleport; Randy Joseph Hysell, 26, Rt.l,
Rutland, and Andrea Eugenia
Grover , 20, Rt .. 4, Pomeroy.

Emergency runs
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Meigs High School at
9: 30a.m. Monday for Mike Manley
who was taken toVeterans Memorial Hospltlll.
At 1: 03 a.m . Tuesday, the Middleport Unit took Helen Quillen from
her Second St. · residence to Veterans Memorial and atl: 34 a.m ., the
Tuppers Plains Unit took Clara Cas·
sidy from her residenCe In Tuppers
Plains to St. Joseph Hospltlllln Parkersburg, W. Va.

REOPENING -Cookie Salser, left, Racine, and Pal Smith, Ba·
shan, Middleport business woman, will mark the grand reopening of
The Middleport Book Store In new quarters at 83 Mill St., this Friday
and Saturday. They are shown In the gift section of the store wWch they
have operated for the past nlne years.

Gas proposal

Wednesda y.
Grandsons will serve as the
pallbearers.

redecorated In preparation for the
grand opening. The Middleport
Book Store Is believed to be the
longest continuous business In
Middleport .
The bok store features many
types of religious materials and pic·
tures; a gift section featuring Fen·
ton, Pfaltzgraff, Cape Craft
Woodward, Carolina Candles, pic·
lure frames, jewelry, gift wrap and
cards. Then&gt; are Bibles, church,
school and office supplies, child·
ren's books, religious records, religious sheet music and many other
items. The shop serves churches
and Bible schools with spt&gt;Cial
supplies.

The Middleport Book Store, operated by sisters, Cookie Salser and
Pat Smith, will observe a grand
reopening In new quarters at the
corner of Mill and N. Sf'Cond Avf.,
Friday and Saturday.
Spt&gt;Cial hours will be In effect this
Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m . and
how·s of the observance on Saturday will be9: 30a.m. to 5p.m . Then&gt;
will be hourly drawings for Bibles,
books, musical Items, recordings
and gift Items throughout the
observance.
The two business women have
operated the ston&gt; for the past nine
years having purchased the estal&gt;lishment from Mrs. Bernice Baker.
The store has been located at 99
Mill St.
However, the business women
purchased the corner property at 83
mill St. from Jay Hall. It has been

Southern Band Boosters will meet
Thursday, Oct.14, at?: ~p.m. In the
music room at the high school. AU
parents are welcome to attend.

'

--

The Saving Place®

Sale inda Sat.,
October16

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

!18th ANNIVERSARY SALE

Most of the programs in the southeastern Ohio school districts re
operated with local r evenues
(neither Meigs or Southern is listed
for receiving funding supplemental
funding from the Ohio Department
of Education .!

~t~

F~~~~L

Court actions filed

"Santa Cruz"

SLEEPWEAR

A $3,!XXl suit was flied in M eigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Henry Cleland, Jr., dba, Cleland
Realty, Pomeroy, against Samuel
John Crow and Judith Crow. McArthur, for commission due from the
sale of property.
In the same court . Letha Hope
Valentine Wilson, Pomeroy, filed
suit for divorce against Joseph Leon
Wilson, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Gaylord L. Young, Albany and Maun&gt;en
K. Young, Shade, filed for dissolution of marriage.
In other court action. Audrey
L ynn Grindley was granted a divorce from Roger Edison Grindley
on charges of gross neglect of duty.

100% cotton flannel pajamas, baby doll
dormer sets and long gowns. Assorted prints
in sizes Petite. S, M and L.

Reg.

ss.so ........... Sale S6.79
.l
I

., J/111

'

I
•·,,,1

"

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

2

ssBath ,
For
Towel
"Sa~ Cruz" lath Towelly Cannon•
·Attractive towels for your. bath. Sheared cotton/polyester terry with dressy jacquard
border design. 22x44" Decor colors.
12x12" Washcloth, $1; 16x26" Hand Towel, $2

Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 1-6

WED. THRU SAT.
The Saving Place ®

Saves3o

2.99Tol99
"Santa Cruz" Bathroom Accessories
Beautifully plush nylon cut-and-loop pile. Latex
non-slip backing. For a decor look. Save.
Our 3.76, Udcover ..... 2.99: Our6.18, 20x34" Rug ...... 4.99
Our 4.63, 20x22" Contour Rug, 3.99: Our 9.27, 26x~3" Rug, 7.99

"Montclair"

Our Reg. $269
Take-with Price

SAVE

$}39

Our
Reg.

AM/FM Stereo With
Built·ln Cassette
_ Player/Recorder

TAKE-WITH PRICE

Sl54

·-

9 97

Automatic record changer with
diamond stylus. ceramic cartridge. Plus quality speakers.
power-touch controls and automatic frequency control. Save.

Stereo With Cassette Recording
AM/ FM wrth Record Changer. Cassette Recorder, 2 Speakers

Save•3

•
Our 12.97 20x26" Std.
Quallofll" Pillow With Dacron"113
Durable polyester I cotton tick.
Dacron• ]13 polyester fill. "Our Best."
• Ou Ponll?eg. TM

"Montclair'' Or "Countess"llanket
Quality-constructed of washable
acrylic in solid colors. Cozy "Montclair"
or thermal "Countess." 4-in. binding.

13"
Diagonal

Available At Your Neighborhood K marf Store

PORTA
COLOR®
TV

100%
SOLID
STATE
CHASSIS

Y1310PT

$299Takewith
Price
Sllm·llne Color TV
Tri-focus picture tube.
auto-color control. more.·

Model 13AC3504W
Cabinet co n stn,~cted of h1gh -1mpact plast1c

Programmable Scan

$349

Takewith
Price
Roommafel!l Color TV
"AccuFilter" picture
tube. auto-controls.

$388~:t
Price
GP Color MonHor TV
Adjusts color picture
before you see Ill

Our
Reg.

S287

GE • Performance · Color Television
Vivi-Color System for locked-in channel tuning * In-line
black matrix picture tube *Automatic Color Control.lOO%Solid State chassis.

$399
Touch Microwave

SAVE

2971

TAKE~WITH

$30

PRICE

E-Z
1.5 cu. ft ca'pacity, 650 watt. automatic frost cycle. Solid State

ASK ABOUT CREDIT TERMS

cootroi ·panel.

JVM51

$

'

.5 78

.

Tak_
e-wlth Price
GE® Sp-ceinaker® Microwave Oven
C.onvenlen.!J'ye-level touch controls, .
auto-roasf, cook-top light, clock.
'

185 Upper River Road, Gallipolis
r

' -

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

Meets Thursday

1

'I

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