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CII·IIC OWIE~

Reoc~~~~~~ t~ILCULITOR ~
any light source!
Never worry · about
batteries wilhthls
so I a r.- p ·o wer e d
calculator. 8-diglt
capacity. Full floating
decimal, many other
features . Madel · 1
Sl701.

Compact motor that produces auction that picks up dirt, dual, ashes,
crumbs and pel hairs which accumulate in your cor. Plugs Into
lighter. 12 vall .

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Gas contract, pay hike pass illitial readings ·
By BOB HOEFLICH
•
Middleport Village Councl has given first readIngs to ordinances providing for a new contract with
Columbia Gas r1 Ohio and a pay Increase for VIllage
employees beginning In January 1983.
John Koebel, local manager of Columbia Gas of
Ohio, again met Monday night with village officials to
discuss provisions of the new two-year contract.
Under !be new contract, Middleport's Columbia
customers will have a $4.!6 minimum charge as compared to a $4.84 customer charge they havepald under
the present contract.
The minimum charge provides customer use of up
to 500 cubic feet of gas under the $4.!6 charge, while

under the customer charge they have been paying
$4.84 month!}!, with ~n gas used added to that charge.
The new contract benefits the sman gas user of up to
about 13,(XXJ cubic feet. Under the new contract. the
user of 10 hundred cubic feet wm pay $5.471n comparison to$10.39, that customer would have paid under the
old contract. This Is a decrease of 47.4 percent.
However. the average and largeruserwlU be paying
more. Under the old contract, a customer paid $106.00
for 1~ hundred cubic feet of gas. Under the new
contract. that customer will pay$114.88, an Increase of
$8.87, or 8.87 percent more.
Under the new contract 17,(XXJ hundred cubic feet of
gas will be provided to the vlllage for heating various

ECOLOIIZE~

2000

'

The Daily
Vol.31 ,No.132
CopyritJhlod 1982

~=:After
.,
Rebate

3''

By JEFF GRABMEIER

&amp;·PIECE
KITCHEl TOOL
SET

Members of the Gallla-JacksonMeigs 648 board Indicated Tuesday
they would consider taking legal action If Gallla County does not coilect
the board's 198llevy.
But first, the board voted to seek a
written explanation from Gauta
County officials as to why the the .2
of a min levy has not been given to
the board.
The 648 board met In a regular
session Tuesday which was moved
ahead a week to discuss several controversies Involving the board.

No. 262- 12 Qt.

'139
NELSON'S REG. n.99

THERMOS
SCHOOL LUICH KITS

No. 269-1
Hurriane style. Great lor
power Interruptions .

Chef D~slgn or
Porky Pig Design

YOUR CHOICE

'379
NELSON'S REG. $4.99

nsylvanla Tuesday morning. Trumka Is trying to unseat Incumbent Sam Church for the presidency. (AP
Laserphoto).

ELECTION DAY SMILml- Candidate for UnltedMineWorkersi'TesldentRichTrumkalsallsmlles
aa he 8lgruo up to vote at the Nemacono Mine In Pen-

-· .

.

By KATIE CROW

'459

-

'lbe jury In the paternity suit trial In Mel County Common Pleas Court
decided In favor of plaintiff Christine Tu er after an bour of deUberatlon
t!ols momlng.

NELSON'S REG •• 6.99

- GaryWoHehaslhus

aslatheroltbechUdTuckerclalms

abe had by Wolfe. 'lbe jury's decision was given to Judge 'lbomas Moulton,
•Coal lip, chrome barrel • Ready dot swivel cord
•Counter rest protects table lop.

'3'9 .
NILSON'S RIG. U.99

siWng In on asslgmnent from Gallia County, at 11: 45 a.m.

. Six witnesses for the prosecution took the stand Monday In the paternity
Cll5e filed by the Meigs County Welfare Department against Gary Wolfe,

Investigator lor !be Meigs County Sberl(f's Department.
Primary testimony was.~ken from Christine Tucker, Racine, mother of
the child Involved, who told the jury the suit was tbe action of the Aid to
Dependent Children program for redetermination.
She said the court action 1 was taken by the Meigs welfare department
whl';jqcCQrdlngto 1'\Jcker's testimony wben questioned by defense attorney Doug Little, IS done every six months.
'1\lckef~~went to Rocky Mountain, Va., togetawayfrom Wolfe and
find a job In October 1974.
··
Tucker Sll)il,ilie began dating Gary Wolfe when she was 13 years old and
they had lie'xdlihelatlons approldrnately a year after dating. He was 19 at
lbetlme. ' .
Tucker said she moved from Meigs Countr to Vlrglnla and that Wolfe
an1ved at Rocky Mountajn 1!1 October or N&lt;ivember of 1974.
. Tucker ldentlfled letters that were prodlie!!d In evidence as those written
byWolfetober. Theletterswerehand-dellveredtohertromWolfe,shesald.

, 1\t,theitfue~thls~.~ Wolfe~~~~-Tuc~rreadseve.ralof

the.letterstothejury.Inoneof~!eti!P~;\fojfe~,)YI:9ti!.Jt:l!~!ed
he·(Wolfe) loved her and sM' (Tuokl!f-!..~ ~~,Qf,~ Pf his
children.
· '
' ·
·
·
Little objected to the Introduction of !be letters as evidence.
The letters Introduced were written, Tucller said, after the birth of her
third child who Is now 7 years old, the child Wolfe alleged1y fathered.

#.,'

'
'ti
.,:..,.

ti\'

Maxine Plummer, 648 board executive director, said Gauta Coun·
ty's levy brings in about $85,(XXJ a
year.
"We have programs that need
these dollars," Plummer said.
The funds are especially Important because the state provides
matching grants to these local
funds, according to Plummer.
She said the Ohio secretary of
state's office has told her there Is
"no justification" forGaiUa County
not collecting the levy.
According to the Sept. 17. 1~1
minutes of the County Budget Commission, the levy was not collected
partly because the 648 board dld not

properly submit a budget.
However, Plummer said Tuesday that a budget was properly submitted to the Meigs County auditor.
who handles the 648 board's financial records.
She said the board Is not required
to send a copy of the budget toGa uta
County.
The budget commission's minutes also Indicate Plummer told the
· county commissioners the 648
board would not need the levy money, a statement Plummer denies.
The commissioners were told the
board would not need additional millage, Plummer said, but were not
told the current levy funds were not
needed.
.Meigs and Jackson counties have
paid the board their levy monies,
and Plummer said the commissioners In thetwocountiesareupsetthat
Gailia County Is not paying Its
share.
They may request their counties'
levy funds be returned If Gauta
County does not collect Its levy, she
said.
Plummer said the board was not
Informed when the budget commission decided not to coilect the levy.
Although 648 board officials have
talked to county officials several
tlmes,about !be situation, !bey have

Jury finds Gary Wolfe father of child in paternity

$179
Asat'd. Styl" and d"lgns

,

1 Section 10 Paget
15 C.nh
A. Multimedia Inc. Newtpapet

GJM Board may take
•
legal action on tssue

Replacement Filters No, 3325. Reg. $3,59 only n.99

l1f2" SAFETY
LIITERI

entinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,.Ohio, Tuesday, November 9, 1982

Reg. Price . . . . ........ , .. , ... $25.99
Ad Price .. . ... . ............. $18.99
Mig Rebate . ................ $ 5.00

!

month of November since his 10.month contract has
expired. Fultz will be paid$500amonthas he was In !be
previous contract. He was also hired to do legal wor'k
on the HUD water system Improvements project at a
fee of $2,(XXJ.It was pointed out that Fultz has returned
all of the money paid him to the vlllage and will return
the funds being paid for the HUD project and !be
November legal work.
The council voted to enter Into an agreement with
Flayd G. Browne and Associates Ltd., Marlon, for
engineering work on the lot across from the swtnunlng
pool on General Hartinger Parkway.
The firm will be paid $al,500 for Its work which will
(Continued on page 10)

NILSON'S RIG. $15.95

NILSON'S RIG. $7,99

•5" High
•6 Aut'd. Styles

buildings at no charge. Koebel said that under !be
original rate Increase asked by !be company, !be
Increase In revenue would have been 6.4 percent had
that arrangement been approved by vll1age council.
With the contraCt given Its first approval last night,
the company will realize a 4.5 percent Increase In
revenue, Koebel reported.
Council gave a first reading to an ordinance providIng a 21k:ent, across-the-board wage Increase for an
village workers effective In January. Council approved Mayor Fred Hoffman's monthly report showIng receipts of $3,CG!.!61n fines and fees for the month
of October.
Bernard Fultz was hired sas vlllage solicitor for !be

not received a written reason as to
why the levy was not w llected .
Several board members said an
other alternatives should be exhausted before they consider taking
legal action.
Plummer also reported to !be
board on sales of the book •'The
Mountains and Valleys are Mine."
As of Sept. 16, 83 copies of the
board-sponsored book had been
sold. earning S1,889in royalties, she
said. The board spent $15,(XXJ to publish the book,
Plummer predicted sales will Increase when the book Is marketed to
physicians.
She said Columbia University
Medical School and a major pharmecutical firm have expressed Interest In purchasing a large volume
of books.
Two board members were promoting the book at a New York convention when they rented tuxedos at
board expense, Plummer said.
She said she did not know the
tuxedo rental wouid cause the controversy It did.
"If we had to do It over again we
wouldn't have done It that way," she
said.
She added that an anonymous
person has stocedonated $100 to pay
the costs of renting !be tuxedos.

•

SUit

Joseph Tucker stated he was 6 years old when he moved to Rocky
Tucker told of ilvtng with Wolfe In Virginia and ofhavlngsexonceaday.
Mountain.
One letter read by Tucker. allegedly written by Wolfe, stated he (Wolfe)
Icy Tucker said shl' had known Wolfe for 13 years.
hadn't been good for her for the past 10 years and he would not be seeing her.
She said when she told Wolfe he should see the doctor about the hospltal bill
All the letters put Into evidence were written after the birth of the child In
and he allegedly answ!'red, "What do you want me to do about 11 7 "
question, Tucker saitl.
,
Icy Tucker said Wolfe brought gifts to the children at Chrtslmas. Asked If
Under Little's cross-examination, Tucker said her last employment was .
she approved, she said she disapproved, but didn't disapprove of Wolfe.
at the White House In Pomeroy where she worked as a bartender. She said
She also said she h!'ard Wolfe caned "daddy"ln Wolfe's presence and he
she did not have sex with anyone except Wolfe.
never denied it.
When questioned about other melf; TUcket said she had no relationship
Rebecca Hail, Christine Tucker's sister. confilmed testimony Wolfe lived
with them- "they were just friends."
with Christine In 1974 at Rocky Mountain. From her observation, she said
The first to take the stand was Woodrow Hall. Tucker's former brother-inChristine loved Wolfe.
law.
Under cross-examination, Hall said she separated from her husband 1n
Hall told of ilvlng In Rocky Mountain at the sametlmeTucker lived there.
1974 and was divorced In 1976. She also told of the Christmas party which was
He described a Christmas party which Wolfe and Tucker attended. He said
held In 1974 and she attended with her husband and left the party.
Wolfe and Tucker got Into an argument and Wolfe slapped Tucker and left
She also confilmed the dispute between Wolfe and Tucker at the party.
the party. He said he didn't know what the argument was about.
The child In question was born Oct. 7, 1975.
Tucker later revealed Wolfe got mad when a man held mistletoe over her
Hall said Wolfe left Rocky Mountain In May 1975.
head and kissed her. Wolfe then left the party for about one bour.
The trial was recessed until 9 a.m. today.
Tucker said Wolfe did stay with her and they shared the same bed.
Others on the stand were Eva Zuckerman, supervlsorofpaternlty, typing
lab a!Ohio State University.
Zuckerman showed slides how HLA blood tests are conducted. The tests,
according to Zuckerman, showed a 94.4 percentprobablntythatWolfelslbe
father of the child In question.
Mostly cloudy tonight with a 30 percent chance of showers. Low
Ondercross-examlnation.ltwasshownoneoutof34couldhavesametest
42-47. Winds easterly 5-10 mph. Wednesday, partly sunny and a Utile
results. It was alsO brought out that there is less than 1.3 percent of a chance
warmer. Hlgh 64-69.
the tests are Incorrect or show a variance.
Others on the stand were Joseph Tucker, 14, Christine Tucker's son; her
mother, Icy Tucker and her sister, Rebecca Hail.
Joseph Tucker, an honor student at Southern High School, said he Is the
sbn of Christine Tuck~r. and Identified Gary Wolfe as is his father.
Thursday through Saturday: Mild with a chance of showers or
Under Little's cross-examination, young Tucker was asked If other
thunderstorms Thursday and Friday. Turning cooler with a chance of
people had told him that Wolfe was his father.
showers Saturday. Highs In the ros Thursday and Friday and in the
He was also asked by Little If there was anything on his birth certificate
50s Saturday. Lows In the40s and low 50s.
identifying his father. The youngster said he didn't know.

Ohio forecasts

Extended forecast

Pomeroy to host public hearing on Rt. 33 project Dec. 7

...111'111

By BOB HOEFLI;H
TheconstructionofRoute33from
Rock Springs to the Ravenswood
Bridge has been listed as the top
priority In road construction by tbe
l{lghway Users Committee of !be
Southeastern Ohio Regional

slon to work on securing a large .
representation from the pubUc, not
only In Meigs County, but from
other coQnties, to sit In on !be Input
session.
In hi$ report, Cleland pointed out
support for !be project Is growing In
CouncU.
Athens, Fairfield and Hocking
This was the report r1 Frank Cle- Counties and again he siressed tbe
land, Racine, Molllay afternoon Importance of'publt: participation
When he presented aspects of tbe at the December meeting. Cleland
cammlttee's work to the Meigs also spoke of a meeting last niursCounty Regional Planning Com- day when various chamber r1 commiSSion, meeting at !be Farmers merce representatives met near
Bank sundtng.
Pomeroy and traveled to !be Ra·
Cleland and Theodore T. Reed, venswood. Brtdge, discussing tbe
Jr., Pomeroy, havebeenservlngm need for !be extension of the high- •
the highway users committee for a. way to that location.
year or so.
&lt;;:ounty Commlsslooer . Richard
. Cleland announced !be Ohio De- Jones COl'IQiended Cleland for his
work with !be highway users com. pu-tmept af Hlahwaya wDl hold a
mlttee~lntlngoutthatlbecommltpublJc
a11
p.m.
oo
tlec.
1
r:
tile Me1p County Senif?r Cltlzella ·• tee ' ''will mllke things happen."
CeDtet Ill J'an!eroY oo lbecollltmc- Jones said that gretllllg the project
tlllll ol Route 33 lo the bfld&amp;e. He lnlo the number ooeprtortty spot Is ·
Ulled the kicat pla!mlDJ oammll-- . quite a JI'OIIII!ildve step. Jones also

•35 Miniature Clear
•35 ¥1nlciture Asstd.

YOUROIOICE

'2"

nieetma
•

at

1
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• .........

will give accurate Information not
only on location but acreage Involved. A computer system may be
required to effectively carry outthe
program.
Meigs County Superintendent of
Schools Robert Bowen reportedona
litter control program which ~ In
the planning stages.

In regard to the sewage problems
In the Tuppers Plains area, Jones
reported the consulting film will
stage a meeting at the Tuppers
Plains School on Nov. 30 to outnne
alternative plans of action. Jones
said tbe alternatives probably will
provide a plan that people can afford and ooe that can be accepted. If
a plan Is accepted probably construction will be resumed In !be
Tuppers Plains community, Jones
pointed out

The committee has met monthly
to plan t'* program and has met
with township trustees throughout
the county to seek lbelrcooperatlon
• BID Quickel repocted a new law
and todetermlnetbelrlnterestln !be
has gone Into effect providing stiff
program which would provide
prlrnarDy for cleaning up many
penalties for persons who have
roadside dumps.
mare than two junk cars on lbelr
It was brought !lUI a $25,000 grant
property unless they secure an autO
Is being sought and muchQfthatwlll · salvage yard permit. Qut:kel also
be for aclmlnlltratlon wtth welfare
charged ~ r1flces In scme InstanCounty Engineer Ph11Up Roberts recipients and law Otlenders being
ces are not using !be new ,house
spale on !be property transfer pro- . used for much of the cleanup work.
numbering system set up In !be
cess, stating It Is hoped as early as' All r1 the trustees have been asked · ·county and the coureil'sconsultant,
J8buary,1983, a system can be put to report tbe worst litter problem In
James Jennings, will be asked to
lnlo effect whereby transfer deeds tbelr respective townships•
look Into that matter.

Orten Roush, who presided, appointed H. E. Shields and George
Collins to the nominating committee and council executive secretary,
C. E. Blakeslee, Indicated he will
notify the county commissioners
the terms of Roush and Shields on
the council will expire on Dec. 31,
this year, andhewillaskthatthetwo
be reappointed.
Jan. 24 was set as the next meetIng andltls subjecttocancenation If
there are not many business matters to come before the grour..'
Blakeslee reviewed clearing
house Items and Qut:kel reported
!be establishment of a parkdlsh1ct
In Meigs County Is at a standstill
because of lack of fullls. He Indicated a stody needs to be made,
adding that the Portlalll Dam site
would be an excellent location for
such a park district. Attempts will
be made to secure some financing
.for tbe study.

•
~I

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

reflected on the Interest shown by
out c1 countY chamber representatlves attending last Thursday's
meeting.
A report on !be Meigs County Elderly Jiouslng Corp., was given by
JQnes, who said that thecorporation
had been approved for a $1,000,(XXJ
HUD loan for i'efurblshlng the !ftS·
entchlldren'shomebllldlngandlbe
construction of a 46-unlt boustng
complex for ·sel)lor cttlzens·nearby.
An ardlltect has been employed for
lbeprojectandJooessaldltlshoped
worlc will get underwll.y by mld. summer. Jones commented !be project will provide employment for
Meigs Countlans In addition ti&gt; provldlng the hOusing for senior
citizens.

'

)

�.

!T~::::r:·No::ve::m:~:·=9~·=198~2::::::~::::::::::::::~~~:;::/7:7~P~om~e~R7~~~:·~d~le~po~rt~,Oh~,i~o------------~------------------~The~~Da~ily~Se~n~ti~ne~I~Pa~g~e~3~:
r
Pirates finish 16th in AP poll

Page-2- The DcliiY.. Senti~!
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ;
Tuesday, November9, J982 ;•

Comment.ary

Scoreboard ...

~--~----------------------------~------~----------------------------------~----------------------------------------------------------------~------~-~~. --~;.:r

Nixon and Chinaa-______w_,ill_ia_m_F_.B_uc_k_Ley_J-r~--l

The Daily Sentinel
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:!•"

''' U''' . Ih!l pt·r, unalt lw•

Unemployment: a
persistent problem
Among !he ma ny sad aspects of the unemployment situa tion Is tha t It
seems likely to grow worse, even as the customary factors that throw people
out of work seem to be letting up.
That cont rast Is nothing new tothose whofolloweconomlccycles, because
It Is a fact tha t employment improves more slowly than the overall
economy.
Wha t Is different this time is the extremeness of the cont rast.
The ra te of infla tion, which has a direct link with unemployment, has
fa llen more sharply than most people had foreseen. Interest ra tes, also
directly connected . have plung~ from their record highs. And big lndustlial Inventories . ca use of many layoffs, have been pared to acceptable
levels.
Those three fac tors have led to elevated spirits in many areas of the
economy. Wall Street has gone wild. Car dealers are talking about a buying
surge In spring. And even homebuilders are climbing up from the pits.
Unemployment, however, Is likely to rise. Who says so? Just about
everyone who takes a n analytical look at the job picture, and that Includes
Robert Ortner, chief economist of the Commerce Department; Donald
Ratajczak, the Georgia State University analyst who forecast the 10.4
percent October jobless rate; and Robert Theobald, who foresaw the 10-plus
rates back in 1980.
Theobald's views are especially upsetting. Considered a maverick by
, some economists but admired by others for his creative Insights a nd
: independence of thought, he points to a cont radiction In thinking a nd
• economlc policy.
: The Arizona-based economist and futu rist asks how the na tloncan pursue
:a policy of creating more jobs In the private sector while at that same time
: encouraging Industry to become more productive by automa ting.
• The most profitable factory, he points out, Is the one with the highest
: productivity. Inevitably, he asserts, that means the factory with robots and
·other forms of automa tion handling the repetitious assembly line jobs.
: Such a structu ral change In the job market, he asserts, mlght even mean
:job-sharing. Sharing wouldn 't necessarily mean l.:&gt;SS income; the higher .
·produc tivity would permit more Income to be shared. And It wouldn'tmean
Idleness In the current sense; Instead, training and upgrading would be
emphasized.
Futuristic as tha t mlght sound, It Isn't a brand-newchalienge. At the turn
of the century, the majority of the na tion's workers were In agricultu re,
working hours tha t modern workers would equate with slavery. Although
painful a nd disruptive to many, the transition was made to the factory.
All this suggests the job problems of the United States are not the result of
recession alone. They appear to lie deeper, and their solutions seem to be
more complex - to require greater amounts of time and training than
heretofore.

Berry's World

Richa rd Nixon has written (for
The New York Times) a sta tement
of sorts on the ma tter of U.S.-Chlna
relations- "The Next Ten Years,"
he calls the piece, written aft er his
fourth visit to China . It Is a curious
a m a lgam of p la titud es a nd
romance.
Mr. Nixon begins by re minding
us tha t what brought him to seek
reconciliation with China 10 years
ago was the need for a partner to
resist the aggressive designs of the
Soviet Union. The United States,
which feared the Soviet Union, had
a common Interest with China,
which feared the Soviet Union.
Tha t fear, Nixon tells us, Is greater
now than ever given the enhanced
strength of the U.S.S.R., which has
"overta ken the United States In
both strategic a nd theater landbased nuclear weapons; VIetnam,
Cambodia a nd Laos have become
Soviet satellites; a nd Soviet troops
are in Afghanista n." T he threat
posed to China is correspondingly
greater, and so, then, the reason for
China to seek close cooperation
with the United States.
For a brief period a bout 10 years
ago there was talk of a pre-emptive
strike by the Soviet Union against
China. Herma n Kahn of the Hudson
Institute gave a t once the most In·
terestlng, and the most profound,
answer as to wha t was probably the
marginal deterrent. Not the United
States. There Is, says Ka hn, a single threat the Soviet Union will not
run, a nd that Is the destruction of
Moscow. Most countries can Imagine, however horrible, the elimina tion of any single city. Not, for
the Soviet Union, the loss of Mos·
cow. A mystique opera tes there,
much like that of Jerusalem for the
Jews. As long as China could conceivably deposit a single nuclear
weapon in Moscow, It Is deemed
safe from Soviet adventurism , and
this has little to do with the strength
of the Soviet Union's satellite tier of
nations in Indochina or Its Increase
in orthodox military strength.
But Mr . Nixon correctly reminds
us tha t allia nces based on common
fear aren't enough, and counsels vigorous economic excha nges with
China.

Now, given that v;e are prepared
to trade with every country In the
world except, a t last count , Albania
and Cuba , It Isn't easy to frame an
objection to this Injunction. Trade
wl th China Is greatly Increasing,
but Is limited by the Intrinsic sltua·
tlon, na mely that China Is not really
rich in a nything save manpower,
and the problem In America right
now is that we have unemployment
manpower of our own.
But Mr. Nixon goes on to make a
provocative assertion. "Economic
strength Is Indispensable to milItary strength." The Soviet Union
has proved that this Is not the case.
Soviet economic backwardness Is
an objective scandal, the delight of
anti-Marxist theoreticia ns, and of
no apparent concern to the Soviet
military establishment. It China
were to ac hieve Deng's a mbition of
$1,000 annual per capita Income by

W. Mk:h!Ran

Ohio

NaliorW BIMkfthMI I\IIIOli aUon
RyThfo biolill&amp;t&gt;d Pnw1
FA"ml\N {'ONFER£Nf'E
1\Uant k· DtvWon
W L Pti.
Philadelphia
~O HUI
Bol&lt;loo
5 1 .K\.1
Ntw Jl'rst"'.'
.1 .1 .m
.l .1 .~If
Washin~ot~OO
N&lt;w York
0 5 .01)

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2 .fi67 ~
:! .lifil 'l 3 .m \ 1.1
:! 1 ..m 1•11
1 l
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(1['1,'(')81ld

0

M1dwN Dtvfilon
San Anronlo
5 1
Dallas
~
i!

Kan.'IBII City
Clfonvf'r
Utah
Hoo!iilon

I

0

•

Anlilf' l~

"""""~Sla11•
GoldPn

3
I

2
5

.ltifi 5

0

fi

.(01 +i

Montm~.J

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Pl•

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'
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"

II
10

7
7

"""""'
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70

.1

Hanford

!"ll

f wnptrll r mlerml'f'

"We'll be right back to help you -

10 I
I W• \'i
7 :!
."1
It! .1!1
7 7
I ~~ .'16
.1 10
.1 "'"1 T.l
2 7
5 46 Iii
Smylhr DtvWon
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li li
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76 n
WlnnlPf'll
75
11\1&lt;111
Ca l ~ ry
li H
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T7
Vancoovf'r
li R
2 i'i 51

next spring!"

HOa&lt;EY .

17

horkey~.

OETROrr RED WING."- Called ~ b
Pal€'rson, l£ott w\njl, and Corrado MIC'all'f,
R:oall€', from Glms Fall~ of tht:&gt; Am£'r1can
HOC'key ~- St&gt;nt Jtmnw RuthPrford.
~ l k&gt;: Mark Klrtoo. ('{'flll'r. and Dennis Poklnk'h. rt]ithl wtng. toG!ms Fa ll\.
P~GH PENGUINS- R«'a Ued
Pl&gt;ter )..('('. rtjlht wing. lrom lhP Baltl.JnoNo
Sk.lpjaC'It.'l of thf' Am€'ric'an Nock('V U&gt;~.
OOIJBJE
NCAA-Namfd Cht&gt;cyl Lfovk'k Asz;Jstant Dt·

escalating demonst ra tions tha t
would culminate In a nationwide
general strike next spring.
The first of these demonstrations
Is the eight-hour work stoppage
called for tomorrow, the second anniversa ry of Solidarity's legal recognition by the communist
government. The next show of
strength will be a protest on Dec. 13,
the first anniversary of the decla ration of martial law.
Poland-watchers In the administration were unwilling to predict
the outcome of tomorrow's strike,
much less the probable results of
Solidarity's ambitious strategy.
They point out that for the grand
stra tegy to succeed, each new dem-

onstratlon must build on the one before It, with a "crescendo" effect
tha t will finally convince the mllltary regime It must retrea t from
Its hard-line repression.
The boldness of Solidarity's gamble Is a sharp cha nge of course,
born of desperaton a nd dlsiUuslon.
In the 11 months since the mtlltary
c rackdown shattered the union
leadership, Solidarity has often
been Indecisive and Ineffective. Its
remaining leaders have come to
the realization tha t they must regain the offensive If the movement
Is to survive at all.
Part of Solidarity's passive behavior In recent months can be
traced to the leaders' hopes that

21
1!1
15
9

17
l+i
L'i

l'l'C'1oro1Women's Programs.

WIOIITA STATE-Annwncf'd rtwo n&gt;B~·
natiOn of Tt&lt;l Bn&gt;dPOOn. athJelk' dirK' tor,
('ft'('('ll\of' NO'o' . lti. AppolnlE'd C. RUSS('Il Wt"\1
wort h lnlf!rlm at hiMlC' dlmf:r.

15

14

Monday' II Gamel
Edmonlm 5, QuMlf(' 5, tk·
Was tllr!J{Ion 2, N('W Jf'~' :!. tk'

Jack Andersori.
.
'

'
I

Gen. Vojcek Jaruzelskl wasn't a$
bad as he seemed to be, and thl!t h~
would keep his promlse to end .rna~
tlallaw and allow Solida rity to funt"
tlon again.
"
The union leaders' Illusions wenl
finally shattered when J a ruzeJskt
decla red Solidarity lllega( 1fasl
· .. ~ ,

month.

. ·i~.1

'l\lfMIIM)''MGllllM'M

Sl. Lwls a t NC'W York lslaru:i'r.;
Moo tl't'll l at MlnJK'IIOta
La; A n~k'S at Calsfary
W~IQ"'IIGIUI\efl

AP Top Twenty

Qul'ln' at Ha rtford
Phlladf'lphla a t Bulfakl
F.dmontoo at Pllt.o;buf"Rh
Nrw Jri'Sf'Y a t Wa~ hlngr on
Drtroit a t Toronto
Mont rt'lll a r Chk'ago
St. Loul&lt;~ at NC'W York Ran~·r.;
La; A n ~ a l Vancou\'r r

""AP'I'op'IWenty

n...

By
AMatila&amp;ed PreM
Th€' Top 'l'wmty t€'ams In Thl' As.sorl·
ated Press ~ football poll, with ftnl·
pla.re vott'5 In paM! theses, season
l'l'C."'O'd.&lt;J and Iota! points. Points basPd m
:J&gt;. l!HI-17-16- ~ 14·1J.l2·ll·l0-9-8- 7-6-54-3 ·2·

"2.I. So.
Georgia fl'll
Met- {19)

Grid Standings
-

Colep F......,

By'l'be~Praa

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

1

BIJ TatConf.

!

Administration sourceS ·:~ my,
associa te Lucette Lagnado.' ilfere Is!
no question that disturbances wtll:
occur as Solidarity embarks on Its:
collision course with the nitlltary
1
reglne. The only question Is justl
how widespread and effective they:
will be. That nobody can predlch
I
with accuracy.

WLT W...L T

Michigan
OhloSt.
Iowa
Wlnols
Wtscor.ln
Indiana

70 0
5 10
4 20
53 0
430
3 40
34 0
260
16 0
16 0

Purdue
. ' Northwestern
Mln~

720
630
540
640
540 ·
450
36 0
370
36 0
180

' Mkhigan SI.
MttJ..\merlam ecn.

Art Buchwald
,,

MJamL Ohio

620

6 20

52 0

72 0

S.l..O
S.Hl

7-().1

8111

7. Washlnl'lton

&amp;.1..0

II . Ciem~oa

12. UCLA
IJ. Notre Dame
14. Michigan St.
15. Okla homa
16. Southern Cal
18. MarylaAd
·19. West VIrginia

WLT WLT

Gt'ft'n

l ArlzmaSt. 151
•· Nebras ka fH
5. Peno St.fl )
6. LSU

1,150
1.126
1,{)19
984
!!i5

8. Plrt
9. Flor1da St .
10. Arkansas

....... 0....0
Bowling

Gas lighting

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports WURITER
NEW YORK (AP) -The war 6f
words .continues In the Na tional
Football League Qlayers' strike,
with union leader Ed Garvey discounting a n apparent crack In the
Players Association's solidarity by
noting tha t 25 teams had rejected
the owners' latest offer. •
Garvey accused the owners of
further " Uiegal tactics" Monday
night a t a n NFLPA news conference and said that a vote by the New
Orleans Saints In favor of accepting
the NFL's most recent proposal In
principle " Is just oneof28 teams and
we're not too concerned.
"Once they see aU the facts, I'm
confident they will reject It, too.
"Most of the teams felt there was
not enough there to warrant a vote.
Twenty-four teams rejected It In one
way or another. (Anotherclubvoted
against the proposal several hours
after the news conference; the
Houston Oilers said they would vote
today and one other club had not
reported Its vote.)
"We are delighted tha t management's la test Ulegal tactic has
faDed," hesald."They players don't
think It's a representa tive offer .
They know It' s not the bottom line. "
The Saints voted 45-1 with one abstention to accept the owners' offer
and urged other teams to do the
same, according to Guido Merkens,
the Saints' alternbte player rep.
The Saints "agreed to accept
management's offer In principle
while realizing there are de taUs tha t
need to be refined," Merkens said.

NalloMIIIodl.ey Lu p e
BOSTON B RUJNS-Tradfd Stan Jona.
. than, koft wing, to lhePitto;burgh fllonfil\lln'J tor
t\Jturt&gt; ronsltk&gt;ralklM.
Ofi CAGO BLACK HA~- Called up
Mlkf' Fldkor, forward. tromSprin¢k&gt;ldo tt tv&gt;
AnK&gt;r1can HockE'Y U&gt;aaur Hd Ken Yarem·
rhuk. forward, from IN.&gt; Portland junior

"
"'"'

~. Texas

8.0.0
9.0.0
~

T-HI
7-1-0
1-1-0

!ill
471
:1!3
:I! I
:1!4
liS
:119
211

5-J.()

6'7

;

•
"

!

,

-

.. ""

.....

Today in history
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 9, the313thday of1982. Therea re52days lettln the
' year.
Today's highlight In history:
On Nov. 9, 1937, J apanese troops took Shanghai, China.
On this date:
In 1962, the United States completed Its emergency airlift of arms and
ammunition to India In that country's border war with China.
In 1963, a coal mine explosion In Umuta, Japan, killed 452 miners and
Injured 450 others.
In 1971, Mainland Chinese representatives took part In their first conference as Peking's full delegation headed for New York.
In 19'19, the United Nations Security CouncU tried unsuccessfully to
resolve the American hostage crisis In Iran.
Ten years ago: President Nixon said he hoped to use his second term to
lead the nation out of a crisis of spirit.
Five years ago: Israeli fighter-bombers attacked targets In Southern
, , ...... ~n, and the Lebanese government said at least 60 clvWans were
(
~

j

supply. We don't enjoy raising our
prices because everyone thinks
we'n: making a lot of money, which

Team

W.L.

~6

~

Zlde' s Spa1 Shq&gt;

46

EaJil ,.ctub
Tony'sCarryOut

42

Smith-Nelson Motors

33

38

tettyTreeS..VIce
25
High ser101 - Bob Remley 503. Debl Hemley51D; Oyd e Sayrean4RayRoach498, Helen
l'llelflll 489.
lllgh game - Ray Roach 19a Debl He nsley
178; Bob Hensley 187, Debl Heltiley 17~
Team ser11!1- No. 61!162.
Teamgam e-No.SIIl

.

we're not. "

"There seems to be an awful 19t
of Mercedes Benzes out In the parkIng lot.''
"They belong to the people In the
gas pipeline end of the business.
Perhaps you ought to talk to them."
"Where do I find them?"
"I believe they're somewhere on
this floor. Walt a minute, I'D call
rrty brother Fred. I think he's In
charge of our pipeline division. Or
perhaps my brother George Is. In
a ny cas e they both driv e
Mercedes. "
George was out buying a new
Lear jet for his son's birthday, so I
got to talk to Fred.
"You can't blame the pipeline
people for this winter's big Increase," Fred told me. "All we dots
ship the stuff for a modest fee which
we base on the cost of gas. If the
tariff goes up then the shipping
costs have to go up, too. It takes a
lot of energy to get gas from Texas
to VIrginia, and somebody has to

foot the bill. If you wa nt to know
who Is jacking up the price, go out
and talk to the producers at the
wells. They' re the guys who know
wha t Is going on In the natural gas
m arket."

I borrowed Fred's Mercedes a nd
drove out to the Casa del Bunkum
Oll and Gas Corral.
Bunkum Invited me for a horseback ride. There were wells everywhere on his 50,000 acre spread.
"You seem to have a lot of gas," I
said.
"Too damn much gas," he said.
"It makes the whole ranch stink. "
" How come, If you have so much,
the price Is going up this winter? I
would think you'd have to sell It
cheaper."

"That's true If you wa nt sell old
gas. But nobody's going to sell old
gas when he can get a much better
price for new gas. I've shut down aU
my old gas wells untU the govern. ment wiD allow me to sell It for the
same price as I can getfor new gas.
Some day Washington wlll pllase
out all gas regulations and then I
might sell my old gas. But for the

, "That's not our ··~!::::::~~

job. If they have any
they should take them uo vv!th
local gas compliny.'' '

21-3004
1 Great Gemea •. • Uaeful Programa-AII on

Our

lnetant-Loadlng Pi'ogram Pak'" Cartrtdgea
• Educatlonal-Halpe With Math 1nd Rtldlng
• Leam BASIC Programming In Color
• Euy to Expend • Attachea to Any TV

'

-

·. . . II

II

II t f

Umr.J •JI ...

COmputers with ~xtended
BASIC for Great Graphics
'

...

u~l

.. .,. . . .

u, ..

.... ....

u

u_ .. _ _

""!'!uu••...,...,..., • • • _

R

-

•

aoo

-

'· yean old. Former VI President Spiro Agnew Is 64. And astronomer Carl
. Sacan 11411.
•
. .
1,
'J'IIOUibt tor today: '11e who Is merely just Is severe." - Francois Marie
! vo1tatre. French wrtter: (11114-1718) .

l

~ 1 -0.

:u

Ol lv'r se hool~ m:"l'lv lnJt 10 !'I'" morr
polnl!ii: . II . l ndf'prndf'nrt' 31. t!. A.~ hiB ·
bula St . .John :n l l M ln j;,'O.Iunctlon ~ .
It Nrw Phlladl'lphla 1\J.c;ca rawas Ca!Mllr ~ - 15. Cl'darvllk&gt;:M.. 18 Uk•). Ymton

North GalllM and Ll'f'lonla 71 . I ~ 111£'1,
Crook.&lt;;V1Jir and Mll rord C1'111rr F'alrbiUl k.s
l.'i. !ID, (i lou!i&amp;er Trtmhk• R 21. La fa,vrtlr
Allm Eas! 1.1

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1 ldlled.
Qneyearago: IsraelldefensemlnlsterArlelSharonsaldhlsnatlonwould

ft M

~oo••w~~nw••••

Low14

..........

n

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..... ,. .. mm•a•·-·

For current rates, call our toll-free number: 1-800-325-9601.

I

• mire miUtar:Y action against Syrian and Palesdnlan Liberation Organlza·
i tlllll politlonJ 1n I..ebii!IOJI!f U.s . peace Initiatives tailed to produce results.
f Today'a birthdays: Former Peace Corps director Sargent Shriver Is 61

n ..~AA

1. Urbana 1Tn 1. tMn. 'UI
Z, lrorCon (WI. IM-0, %16
.1. StNirnv Uir 1111 . 11}{l-fl. 211
.1. El.v r1n Ca th:ll k' 1111 1. 9-1}{1, 1+iti
5. Akron St. V!n«'ff t·SI. M;uy i1 1l 1 "·I
1. H2
fi. EIC'llfovur 111!1 . !MO. nl
7. Cadiz 1IV1 . 10.0-ll. Ill
K. NH~onv llif..\'orlt 1rv 1. 10+6. "'Il
9. Miik'r':\bu!llWr!i l H oi ~ IIII I. U~O

·city Loan &amp; Savings also pays
incredibly high interest on
3-Month, 6-Month, 12-Month,
24-Month, 30-Month and
·36-Month Certificates."

Reg. 399.95

--•
•"""""'""
.,.
.... .., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

,.

n.A~MA

I, Clncln MU M()('lk'f !I l. l().(HI. .112
polnls
2, Ma'iSIUon 111. 10.0.0. 'IIi
J. SanWs!(,v 111. 11~. '1.11
4, Brrro ti l. 10.0.0. 15.1
5, Mltnd Tnw.'f' (0 ), 1....0, 1!7
li, Cincinnati Prlnn.&gt;ton 111.11. 1-0. IIW
7. C.ahM na II f . 9-HI, Ill
R. Mmt&lt;r Lakl' Cath:llk' Ill !. 7.0.2. 7:1
9. Canton Mr Klnk&gt;y 111 . 11.2.0. 71
10, AIISIII'I town F il t h t i l. !4- 1 ~. 4.'i
()hl&gt;f Sl·hool'l m'l'lv ln ~ 10 or mono
polnls:. 11 Ok&gt;L F.lk1a and Upprr Ar11n ~
1on 1A. 1.1. Crnt£'1VIIk&gt; 2'i. \4 , Vou nw;town
Moonr \" 19. I~ n k'l , l .anr-dSif'l" and Tok'Cio
St . Franct.s 14 . 17. Mm t&lt;r 1.1. IH tlk&gt;l . Columlno; ~fl and Columbu.o; East·
moor 11 !1, Tolrdo Cmrra l C&lt;i ttiJ llr 10.

City Loan &amp; Savings pays 8%
interest-on Statement Savings
Accounts, compounded daily, for
an effective annual yield of 8.33%.

'

"Then In your opinion It Is not.the
gas producers, but government
regula tions that are drlvlilg up the
price this winter?"
·
" Daffill right. We barely can feed
our famUies on what we're getting
for the stuff now.''
I flew back to Washington to talk
to the people at the Department of
Energy In hopes they could teD me
why gas was going to cost the consumer so much mQre this year.
The man they turned me ove r:,to
said, "You came to the wroifg
place. We don't concern
·
with the price of gas. The faster
government gets out of the gas
ulatlon business the better It will
for aU of us."
"I'm sure of that, but aren't
concerned that a lot •of tii!OIDlemJ:Iillt
freeze this winter when the
goes soaring?''
·

10. Stn.Hhrrs 11l1 1.IW:!. ~ I
Ollv'r S('hool~ fl'{'(&gt;lv in ~~: 10 or rmrt'
points: II . C'lrrll'\'1111' ll tl. Cll'\•f'iand
Cmtral C'attiJllc .\1 1.1. Mc('on!V"lsvllk&gt;
Mor~~:an .l 'l . 14. Hamllton Badin :n. l'i.
ArdltDld 22. IIi. WI'S! M!lton Mllton-Unkln
19. li t tlrr , Ra ~·m na South!&gt;ast and
~ - M a ry ... l+i. 19 nk•1, Maron Pk&gt;asanr
and BW1on Bl'rk.o;turr 1J 21 1!11'1 . Colum·
bus BrK~' a nd Oak tla rlxil" 12. 21. I.Lma
Bat h 11 . 24 ll k&gt;l , l..wlw llll&gt; Aquinas.
Mar\'svUW and C'lnelnnal l Dl'f'r Park 10.
I "I A'\."il\
l . WI'S! .Jf'ffl'rson !l VI. lfl.H.O. ~
2. Nrwark C'attiJiir 1\' 1. 9-1.0, !!Ill
.1. MI'C'om b • \' 1. J0-1).(1. I!*I
~ . Clnelnnatl Su mmli Coull!JY Day 1V1 .
10.0.0, !IIi
'l. Ashland C'rl'!'h '" · t V I . 10-6-!l 11\'i
li, Bradfon.l 1V 1. !fi.O.(l, J.'Wi
7. Mldvak' Indian V all~· Nonh 1V1. 9.o.
I. 121'C
M. F'll'ilorla St Wmdf'lln 1V1 . !H O. IQ
9. Rawson C'ory·Raw!iOO tV I. 9-J.O, 41
10. Ik&gt;rlln Cmlrr WC'!!tl'rn R.rsrrvr dV1 .

•

a mount It's going to stay In the
ground until I can makeafalrproflt
on it. "

0, 56

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP I - How a stalt'
parw1 of ~ JI)I1 ~ writm a nd broodC'a.,l('f!'l
rank.o; otUo hlW\ !OC."'hool football lt&gt;ams lhl'
fin al Wf.'f't( for 1'tv' Assorlatl'd Pnos.o;
1namf' of S('hool.'l. playOI'f dlvl&lt;;lol\'i In par
mt lrse!;, won-lost N'C'Ord.'l and points \:

"City Loan &amp; Savings pays 10%
interest on NOW Checking
Accounts, compounded daily, for
an effective annual yield of 10.52%.

-l;yWedn"'daJ
Mlxedt..qae
NovemberS, 1982

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

The price of natural gas will go up
between 20 to 40 percent this winter
for the consumer. There Is a very
good reason for this. But for the life
of ·me I couldn't find out wha t It
was.
I first went to my local gas company, and talked to a very friendly
man who anticipated the question.
"It's not our fault," he said. "We
just buy the gas from the wholesaler and have to pay whatever he
wants to charge us. If he raises his
price we have to pass It on to the
consumer. If you want to know why
the price has gone up, talk to the
people who sell us the gas.'' He
gave me a free book titled "Cooking
With Gas" and showed me to the
door.
I went to see a vice president of a
wholesale gas company In Houston.
"How come the price of gas Is going
up by W to 40 percent this winter?"
' 1I'm glad you asked that question. We buy our gas from producers, and now with deregulation they
can charge us any price they want
to, so we bave to pass their costs on
to the lQCal gas companies we

hadl96.
In Class AAA, Berea finished
fourth , Mlaml Trace fifth, Cincinnati Princeton sixth, Gahanna seventh, Mentor Lake Cathollc eighth,
Canton McKinley ninth and Austin·
town Fitch lOth.
Elyria Ca thollc ranked fourth In
Class AA, followed by AJaon
St.VIncent-St.Mary In fifth, Bellevue In sixth, Cadiz In seventh,
Nelsonvute-York In eighth, MIUersburg West Holmes In ninth and
Struthers In lOth.
In Class A, Cincinnati Summlt
Country Day wound up fourth, Ash·
land Crestview fifth, Bradford
sixth, Midvale Indian Valley North
seventh, Fostoria St .Wendelln
eighth, Rawson Cory· Rawson ninth
and Berlin Center Western Reserve
lOth.

AP grid ratings

"I took what I heard up there (In
New York at Players Association
meetings during the negotiations,
which broke offSaturdaynlght) and
explained It to our players here as It
was explained to me," Merkens
said on ABC-TV's 'Nightllne.' "We
asked, 'What do you want to do, accept It In principle or reject It altogether? We think there Is a
workable framework there.
"It's not true that management
persuaded us (on how to vote ).
We're trying to let the union reps
know how the New Orleans Saints
feel.''
Garvey didn't seem worried by
the New Orleans' vote.
"Twenty players met with
(Saints owner) John Mecom Jr.,"
Garvey said, "and then tbey voted.
The owners are seeing If they can
sell thalr latest offer to the players
by going over the headoftheunlon."
Garvey had a stronger reaction to·
a sta tement made by Philadelphia
Eagl€6 owner Leonard Tose. Tose
charged Monday that a player representative had been threatened
with bodily harm If he continued to
appear on television making statements not approved by the union.
Though be refused to Identify the
player, Tose said at a news conference that a player rep was told they
"would break both arms and both
legs If you don't stop being on television. And, not only that, but we'll
violate your wife.''

PomOI'OY Bowiii(Laneo

m

6-H
S.l-1
7-2.()
7-1-0
6-2.0
7·2.0
7·2.0

school ratings for the seventh time
In the last nine seasons, totaled :m
points after posting a 1().().0 record.
MassUlon, the winner of a record 12
AP state championships, finished
second wlth '}f{{ points while Sandusky was third with '}J)7 In Class
AAA.
Urbana was Involved In the toughest battle. The Hlllcllmbers, 1().().0,
beat springfield Northeastern 14-8
Saturday night and edged runnerup Ironton by just four points, :!W216, In the Class AA ratings.
Steubenville was a close third with
211 points.
West Jefferson, the Class Achampion, posted the biggest margin.
' The Rough Riders, winning all10 of
their games, plled up 259 points, 61
more than second-ranked Newark
Catholic. McComb, In third place,

Local bowling

766
686
S72

6-J.I

Crestview just missed making the
playoffs. They finished third In their
regions. Cadiz was fourth In Its region, Fitch fifth, Summlt Country
Day sixth and Western Reserve
lOth.
The governing Ohio Hlgh School
Athletic Association took the ftrst
two finishers lneachofWreglonsfor
Its 1982 playoffs that begin Friday
nlght.
Moeller, crushing Cincinnati
Princeton 56-71n Its last regular season game, earned Its fourth straight
· Class AAA title trophy In the AP
voting by a statewide panel of sports
writers and broadcasters.
The Crusaders, leading the big

Players reject latest
offer from owners

lineman: Daw Conlnotll. tac'kk&gt;: Glm
Walkl&gt;r, (*nlf'r; Frank Jordan and Gllber1
AJvarN, plaN'oti.IC'kef!l; Gl'f!R WWiarns. Jim
Duft'I'K'r and Grol'$tl' Banks. ltnroackers; lr·
wtn Cast illo. ~hi m d: ~Kubitz and Jim
Weathl&gt;rtv. RUBrds: ~Ga!ca . quar1er·
bark: 1'\m Cumlnl!;ham . .Jimmy O lntoo.
Lonnk&gt; 'T'u l"lll'f', Melvin Fields and LaRUC'
HaiTinJllon, wkle IWf'IVf'n; Dennis Cole and
Dennis Wylk&gt;, ror!IE'rbacb; and Scotfy By·
m .Chuc.'k &amp;Jdl andP'ti~GUtJeort , sa.feUes .
Namt'd Bob Rose pubik' re&amp;amm dlm'tor.
NEW JERSEY GENDtA.LS- ~ \fk'.
lor Hldl:s, ~t md: DaDa NOP! an d ~f'
Raeford. dl'fenslvt' bat1cs: Jerr Kestnl'l'". of·
fenslvfo fi!Wir¢ Kennan Slart7t&gt;ll, piBC'l'lt·
k'k('l'. a nd J arT'K'!I Bf'rry , Nll\lngback.

No~DI\ohlon

MJ nlli'MIIIl
Chkago
Sl: . Lo.l1~
Drfrolr
Toronto

[2

1 .1 I

0 50

llNlt'lii~ Foott.l Lr-aw
t..ai ANGEJ..EC; tAPI - SI.IUled Rkh

''' ' "" ""' ""1.1
"' 12
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7'

1\dar'n'l Dtv~lon
10 2
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Boston

72 0
540
., 0
252
() ~ 0

32 0
230

Dimk'r. Lre Ingram, James Wall«&gt;r.
Tonuny Lllllt&gt;r and David Doll&gt;. dPfenstvr

Mo'Mb ( 'oafermc«"
PM&amp; rick DlvWon
w L T GF GA

P1t l.~rfi:h

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andNI JorCcoplor, ('('fll.,-.
fooni,W.

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ClNCINNATI RF.DS-Sr&gt;n t Charllt' Li'l·
brandt and Brian Rydrr. pllchrrs, a nd Mlkr
O' Bf'rry. r a tc hrr, lo Indianapolis of tlv'
i\rJlerlcan AliSOl'latlon. ,\ddt&gt;d F'n&gt;d ToU\'l'f".
Jl'ff Russcll and Ron Rbbtfw:m. pllc hrrs:
S!t'\'f' ctu-lslmas. r atchf'r: ETk' Davis. our
nrldrr. and Dan Tartabu U. lnfk&gt;lci'r. 10 lhl&gt;lr
wlnlf'r I'Cllk&gt;r.
IIASKEI'IW.L
Nala.J 11.-kftMI I\!Ml.Ullon
LCfi ANCELE:" l..AKERS- Actl\!al«&lt;
C'lay Jotmon. guard. from thl' lnjum1 ll'11

Hockey

",
'
'
•'

"-Ohio Northern
Wlllenbl&gt;rJt

5 4 fl
5~

IW!EBALL

'l'lleltdQ"'II Garnet
New J&lt;'rsey at New York
Drlroi l at Washln J{Ion
Utah at San Antoolo ·
San Olf'Ro a t Indiana
&amp;&gt;an II• al C l\lC'~
Phombt at Hw slm
Atlanta ar Dl&gt;nvf'r
Kansas Clry at l..c:f;; An~k'!i
Gokk&gt;n St.alf' at Ponland

NY lslr!i
Phllad&lt;'lphla
NY Ranlilf'rs
Nf'W Jrr.;roo,·
Was hin1-rtori

18 0
270

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Mond&amp;y'8 Gam ~t~

..

0 50

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.00:1 2LJl

Si&amp;turday',. Gamt'fl
Phlladl'tphla 119. Boslon 115. 2 ar
Allanta !¥i, Dl'lrolt !1..1
WB.!!ihington 119. Indiana ll5. 01'
Otlrago 129. San 01~ ru
Phoenix 112, Dallas 100
Los Anlil('INi 101. Uta h 101
Dmver 1Z7, Goldm Stair lUI
Ptlrlland 110. New York 102
SUnd!Q"'11 Gam801
Seetfl£' lltl. Mllll."auk(r(o 90
Boston l!Yl NI'W J PI'Sl'\' tm
San Antmkl 101. Ptmmlx 100
l..a! AnR('k&gt;s 103, Portland ~

•

M' L T

Transactions

I~

~"lli67:!

Portland
S.o """"'

"""""

14 0

Ohio W('Skoyan
Denlroo
Mark&gt;fla

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl - Led
by cha mpions Cincinnati Moeller,
Urbana and West Jefferson, 22 of
the 30 teams In The Associated
Press' top 10 will be Involved In the
Ohio prep footbaD pl;lyo!!s.
Only Canton McKinley and AustintoWn Fitch In Class AAA, Cadiz
and MIUersburg West Holmes In
Class AA a nd Cincinna ti Summit
Count ry Day, Ashiand Crestview,
Rawson Cary-Rawson a nd Berlin
Center Western Reserve In Class A
failed to qualify for the post -season
com petition.
McKlnley, -.West Holmes a nd

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Indiana

u.

Bait St .
Tok'do

Twenty-two of 30 top-rated AP teams
advance to post-season grid playoffs

62I

42 I
4 'l 1
4 .1 0
4 .1 0

c. Mlchlaan

No ~~:am('§ scheduled

New, dangerous course
WASHINGTON - Tomorrow
the first real test of strength wiD
come between Solida rity a nd the
Polish military regime since the
workers' movement was outlawed
last month,
It will also, according to top administration sources, mark the beginning of a new a nd dangerous
course decided on In recent weeks
by the union's unde r ground
leaders.
The strategy reflects the courage
and stubbornness that have been
both the hope a nd despair of Poland
In the two years of Solidarity's history,. The union leaders' goal Is nothing less tha n to force the general•
to back down through a series of

Basketball

fore they refined an lniernatlon~
nuclear delivery system would, 1
should think, heartily commend
Itself.
~ '
I
Mr. Nixon's optimism presup.
poses tha t, as he puts It, " Mr. Dens
has solved (the) problem of (sue:
cession) In China." Deng has lndt;
cated who will succeed him. So dl&lt;l
Mae, whose successor has been de:
posed. Moreover, the Chinese com•
munl s ts ha ve lea rned the hi
economlc lesson. "The key to Cht1
na 's future economic success lies lrt
Its becoming less Communist anct
more Chinese. Its failures durin~
the third of a century since Mal!
Tse-tung took power - a nd thesefa ilures have been staggering .....,'
have been a direct result of Com~
munlst dogma gener ally a nd.
Mao ist dogm a pa rticula rly.' .
Right. And Deng the pragmatls~
holds sway. -

the end of the century, one cannot
safely reason that China's military
power would grow correspond·
lngly. By the same token, China Is
a t once the poorest major na tion In
the world, along with India, and a
nation; along wlth India, armed
with nuclear weapons.
"The plain fact Is that even If
there were no Soviet Union, the opening (with the United States)
would have been In the Interest of
both sides." Either this Is a statement to the effect that International
trade Is always a good thing, In
which case the sta tement would
hardly need making. Or It Is a statement to the effect that political disagreement should never stand In
the way of economic exchange - In
which case It Is questiona ble. If
there were no Soviet Union, the argument for getting very tough with
the People's Republic of China be-

\

&amp;A 1:\ CI~Y LO\N &amp;.. SAVINGS
\:::1 r:tl a Control Data Company
·

YOUR·ftEAREST
SHACK STORE, .
' ·COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER

J

•

GAwPoUS: 358 Second Ave., 446-1973

POMEROY: 125E. Main St., 992·2171
PAICU MAY Y/III.Y AT INDIYiouAL ITOIIU AND

&lt; lla Toncly COrp,

•II

\'·

••

�Pomeroy-Middleport,

November9

Tuesday, November9, 1982

Ohio

Meigs organization members gather for meetings
Happy Harvesters

ANYONE'? - Does any Meigs Count ian know the iden Hty of tllisCivll
War soldil'f''? Tiw phr~o W&lt;L' lalll'n from a tintype found hy Mrs. C. C.
H&lt;'ilman, Rmrt e 3. Ponwroy, and w&lt;L' among the helonginw- of the late
l\hnt•r and Eliza Smith( 'tlrti..; of lta&lt;·int•. Mr. &lt;:urti"i wa."i a vetrranofthe ( 'ivil
War. Anyont&gt;ha\'ing any infurma.tion ('an rt&gt;ach Mrs.lh•ilman at 002-2R41.

Safety observed in Tuppers Plains
" Sa fet y' AwarPnPss WC'f'k" wa s

obse rved at th~ Tuppers Plains
School with stu d ~ nt s r~virwing the
srhoolr"Uies a nd making pos ters de·

picting one or morP rul es .
Prizc&gt;s werf' awarded those who

made th e bes t three posters in each
c lass a nd the winners respectivel y,
i nc lude : six th g rade . Chri s
Spencer. J ason Drennrr. J ay ne Rit ·
r hle: fifth . Amy Murph v, Dan

Tri pp, Patty Hetzer: fourth , Bobbl
Robinson. Aaron Wilson. Brandl
Stacy: third . Jenny Deem, Kristina
Connolly. Michael Smith; second,
Tracv Murphy, Chad Savoy, Susie
Fra ncis: fi rst. Teresa Putma n,
Randy Kay lor, Jaime Wilson; kln·
dergart en. Tuppers Plains . J a net
McDonald , Heidi Nelson, Ora Nel·
so n: Chester . .J essica Cheva lier,
Miche lle Pooler and Ryan Bur kley.

DAR meeting set for Friday
R.f'turn .Jonathan Mcig... Chaptt ·r
of tht' Daughtf•rs of thf • American
Hr\'O iution. will mPf'l at J::to p.m .
F'rl da y· at thC' Mrigs I nn .
Curs! " Pf 'a kf•r willlx' Mrs. HPI{'n
F os trr of Point Plea sant who wil l
talk on "( 'orn..,t ;llk '-; Curst ' nn Point

P lf'a san t."
M t?m tx•r .., &lt;11'f' to takt · us!'(!

glassf's and it e m s for pi.i l iC'nts a t 1hf'
VPterans Hospital in Chillicothe.
suc h a s magazi nf'S. p&lt;:tpcrbark novl'is. pla)•ing cards and pu7Zics.
Hostesses will be Mrs. Paul Eic h.
Mrs. Dail' Dutt on. Mrs. Eve rett
Ha.ves. Mrs. Irvi ng KarT. J r .. and
Mrs. Harold Sargent .

f'\ 'f'

R.N. protnoted to assistant director
Pa l Drakl' . ICN .. B.S.N.. o l St.
Charlt's. Ill. h;ts bf'f'n prom ntr'&lt;J !I J
a sslo;;ta nt din'(·for anrl m :.m agf•r of
1tx" CPnt•\·a ()f fi rr nf ('onn•rnt'(l
Ca r r. lnr . , a homr tlf •alfh f'JI'&lt;'
sf'rv irf' .

Drakl'. daug ht er of \"iok·t Sm ith.
Rf'eds dJIP. a nd thfo latP O;n ·id A.
Smith. is ;t g raduJtf' llf l &lt; &lt;.~ s t f' rn
H igh Sch ool and rf'f'f'i vpd ; t )),:whf . _
lor of sr if'n( 'f·d f'g t't"f' in nu r "i ing from
Ohi o St a tf · l · n ivf'r ~i t ~ · with gra duat P
lf'\'C' l
cla~sPs
in
public
ad mints! ration .
Hrr profP..,sionJ I f 'X JY'r if' rx:·r inc ludC's f'ig ht months on in!Pnsh'f'
rarr cmd coro nar;.: c a rP s taff at St.

Anthonv 's Hospital in Columbu s,
and ninr• .vPars with thr publi c
hea lth departmen t in Col umbus.
Shr was assista nt s ufX'rvi ~or of thf'
drpa r1mcnt whr n shf• &lt;tnd her hu sband . Tom . wrrP t ra nsf f'rrPd to t hP
Chi cago arc·a .

Tht• DrakPs li v£&gt; in St. Charlf'Sa nd
ha \-f'il ci&lt;Jughtrr. An nr .
Conct&gt;rnr d CarP. wh ich has offi ('l's in Drs Pl a inf's and Eva nston, as
\Vf' ll as Grnrva. provk:ies nu!'S(lS,
1icPnS£'(1 pra c tic&lt;:~l nur~ es and aides

Holiday part y pla ns were m a d ~
during the Nov. 3 meeting of the
Happy Harvesters Class at Trinity
Churc h.
The dinner wi ll be held on Dec. 3
wit h members to meet at the
church at 1: 30 p.m. There will be a
$2 gilt excha nge and program Col·
lowing dinner, the place to be an·
nounced later. Each member was
also asked to ta ke two dozen homl'made cookies for the coo kie
exc ha nge.
Mrs. Edna Slus her and Mrs.
Wilma Terrell report ing for the
nominating committee req uested
the present officers to continue for
anot her yea r . Officers' reports
were given and the United Church
Women's Friday program was
announced.
The meeting followed a potluck
dinner held In the church social
room . A unison grace was given.
Erma Smith presided at the meet·
ing which included prayer and
hy mn si nging. Mrs. Terrell had di'votlons using Psalm 46. "Be Still
and Know I Am God" and then
asked members to bow their heads
while she read "Father. We Thank
You" and "Jus t For Today."
Psalms 96, verse 2, concluded the
devotions.
Members sa ng " Happy Birth·
day" to Ada Holter. Get-well cards
were sent to Beulah Ewi ng, Norma
Goodwin. Lillie Hauck, and Charles
Rlrne. There was group singing of
" I Love to Tell the Story" and the
Lord's Prayer In unison to close the
meeting. Others there were Mrs.
Georgia Watson, Mrs. Edith Lan·
nJng, Mrs. E lla Smith, Mrs. Ruth
Massar. Mrs. Caryl Cook, Mrs.
Edna Slusher. Mrs. BunnJe Kuhi
and Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart.

Middlep.lrt
Garden Club
Participation in the Meigs Coun ty
Garden Clu bs' Christmas flower
s how was discussed during Monday
night' s meeting of the Middleport
Garden Club held a t the home of
Mrs. Daniel Thompson .
"Christmas in the Country" is the
themeo!thes how to be held on Dec.
4 a nd 5 al the Rutland Civic Cent er.
The club will be responsible for
!urnls lling classifica tion a nd ent ry
signs. Artistic arra ngement classes
were dicussed a nd the members
were urged to exhibit in the var ious
classes.
For roll call members told of fa·
vorite memories of Thanskgiving.
It was noted that Mrs. Hal Johnson

has been lll. There ·.vas a discussion
h~ ld concerning winter plantings in
th~ pots on the "T" In Middleport
a nd it was suggested that small
evergreens be planted in them .
Mrs.Carl Horky p; resented the
program on the flower show which
is held a nnually in Chelsea, E ng·
land. She showed slides on the va·
riouis ac tivities and methods used to
complete the s how and also gave a
his tory of Its establishme nt a nd the
months of labor which precede the
ac tua l staglng.
At the conclusion of the meeting
refres hments were served by Mrs.
Thompson and Mrs. Pat Hill. Gu·
ests were Mrs. Bernade tte Ander·
son and Mrs. Helen Byers. A
rornJcopia filled wit h fruit and
gourds fla nked by yellow tapers In
brass holders decor a ted Ihe refresh·
menl table. Mrs. J ea nne Bowen
pres ided a t the coffee service on a
table decorated by Mrs. Dorothy
Morris with yellow mums and yel·
low tapers in silver holders.
Arrangements displayed for the
m eeting Included onP of driftwood
with fire thorn and dried grasses by
Mrs. Thompson , and rosebuds in a
green conta iner by Nellie Zerkle.

Ministerial
Association
The Meigs County Minis terial Association has established a social
concerns committee being con·
vinced that solidarity in action a l
th is turning point in huma n llistory
is a matter of urgency.
The committee perceives Chris·
tla ns as have the right and duty to
proclaim the principles of justice on
socia l, national and international
levels and to denounce injustice
whever it ls found. a spokes person
reports.
Primary responsibili ty of the
committee wil l be to identify the
socia l issues and problem s which
obstruct the crea tion of a just society, especially in Meigs County.
Appointed to serve on the commit ·
tec arc Ha l Johnson of the Un ited
Presbyteria n Ministry of Meigs
County; Sister Jan Rectenwald of
Sacred Heart Church a nd Bob Robinson of the Hea th United Me thodis t Chu rc h.

TOPS
Na ncy Vance was the winner of
the contest, "On Target lor TOPS"
held by the TOPS Club OH 1456.
Ru tla nd .
Kresha Fields was the weekly
best loser with Ruth Dugan as
runner-up. At last week's meeting,

Linda Batley was the top loser with
Cindy Hartenbach was runner-up.
A new contest was started and
will continue through Christmas.
Plans were discussed lor the Christ·
m as party to be held Dec. 21. Nancy
Vance was queen for October.
Anyone interested In joining the ·
group m ay ca ll 742 ·2233 for
Inform ation.

Middleport
Amateur Gardeners
Committees, Including one for
the annu al Chris tmas lighting con·
teSt In the community. were appointed at Middleport Amateur
Gardeners' meeting held recently
at the home of Mrs. Ferman
Moore.
Ma rjori e Fetty presided a t the
meeting. Committees appointed in·
elude Daisy Blakeslee, Emogene
Crooks, Martha Slater, E lizabeth
Lohse. Katie Swanson were named
to the holiday lighting contest;
Gladys Cumings, Jean Moore.
Nina Bla nd and Kathryn Hysell to
the flower show committee; Beu·
la h Strauss a nd Bernice Durst to
the civic committee; Rose Rey·
no ids to the scra pbook committee;
Veda Davis , Mrs. Swanson to the
telephone committee: Mrs. Davis,
Mrs. Swanson, a nd Mrs. Reynolds
to the publicity committee; and
Clara Controy, E lizabeth Lohse,
Elizabeth BurkNt, .Jea nett e Thomas, Grace Pratt and Lillian
Moore to the ways and mea ns
committ ee.
Pla ns were discussed for partiri·
paling In the count y Christmas
flower show to be held Dec. 4 a nd 5
a t the Rutland Civil Center. A dol·
lara member will be glven to help
cover ex penses of the show a nd the
club will furnish three dozen cookies a nd one dozen sandwiches for
the sa le table .
In theart is licdesigndivlslon, the
club drew for exhibit the classes of
"Downh ome Hos pita lit y, " a floor
arra ngement ; "Count ry Church"
including Madonn a a nd c hild;
"Snowfla kes," a stabile; "Calico
Christmas." a mantle arrangl'ment ; and "Country Ga thering, "
·
using a basket .
Mrs. Caryl Layh of the Carleton
School asked a t the couny meeting
reported on by Mrs . Fetty If each
rlud would donate a tree for the
school landsca ping, and at the
meetin g it was voted to do so. A
resuml' of the progra m for the co m·
ing yea r was given by Mrs.
Swanson.
The project in ce ramics was

Calendar

worked on following the meeting,
and Mrs. Ferman Moore, Mrs.
J ean Moore and Hysell served
refreshments.

TIJESDAY
HARRJSONVR.LE Senior CIt lzens will sponsor a free. blood
pressure clinic at the townhouse
Tuesday !rom 10 a .m . to noon.
Ferndora Story, R.N. , will have
charge of the clinic.

Preceptor Beta Beta
A demons! ra lion on hair styling
was given by Mary Powell and
Trudy Roush of the Top olthe Stairs
a t the recent meeting of the Preceptor Bela Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority.
Held In the Riverboat Room of
the Diamond Savings and Loan
Do., Nellie Brown Introduced the
hair stylists. It was announced that
the Nov. 11 meeting will be In the
Riverboat Room at 7:45p.m. with
Roberta O'Brien and Norma Cus·
ter to have the program.
The annual tea was announced
for Nov. 21 at the home of Ann
Rupe, 3 p.m .
Mary Morrts and Ruby Baer
se rved refreshments to. those
named and Donna Jones, Ruby
Baer, Shirley Beegle, Marjorie
Crow, Vera Crow, June Freed,
Mary Morris, Betty Olhlnger, Rose
Sisson. fu&gt;va Vaughan and Janet
Theiss.

RACINE - Southern Band
Boosters will meet Tuesday at
7::.J p.m. at Southern High
School.
SYRACUSE PTO will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m . The third
grade class will be In charge of
the program.
PU~Y . W. Va. -TheGrubb
Family Singers wlll be at Mt. Un·
ion Church on Tuesday at 7: 30
p.m. The public Is Invited to
attend.

Troop 1259
An Investiture and rededication
ceremony was planned for Nov. 28
when the Racine Brownie Troop
1259 met recently at Ihe Racine Ell'mentary School.
The ceremony will be held at 2
p.m . at the Letart Grade School.
During the meeting attended by 22
Brownies, new patrol leaders were
electro. Dues were collected and
the next meeting was announced
for Nov. 10 at the Racine Baptist
Church. The new girls are to take
$1.451or the ir pins. Anyone wanting
to order a Brownie handbook Is
asked to take their money to the
next meeting. Jenny Varney and
Michelle Brown serve d
refreshments.
tcontlnuro on page 6)

RACINE"LODGE 461, F . and
A.M . Election of officers, All
Master Masons Invited to 7: 30
p.m. meeting.

Gene Riggs of Reedsvllle, Ohio,
has been named Meigs County
chalnnan of the Area Business
Campaign for Rio Grande College.
The appointment was announced
today by Don Thomas, chairman of
the Gallla·Jackson·VInton-Melgs
Area Business Campaign. Riggs Is
a representative lor the John Han·
cock Companies. Riggs' office Is In
· Pomeroy.
"We are extremely pleased that
Gene has decided to head our Meigs

l 'uhlt~huh: !'tllnp;Hl} - Mu ltunt•tll&lt;L l u1 ·•
l 'o utwru.l , ( Jin u ~ ~7 1;9 . 9':12·2 1!)6 S t T ull d · · la .~s
p":-.ta ).!•' p;wl ;d l'ottwt·u.l Ohw

lht·

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WITH GENUINE G.M. PARTS

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Plus 754 Tax
Parts Additional

ATARI

•

For Most American
.Cars. Trucks Slightly
Higher.

,..

PH. 992-6614

301 E.
.,

competttlon were from the left, Shwmon Gilmore,
&amp;bin Giemoth, and J ean Mario Dohr.

JAZZ DANCE TEAM- Taking second In recent
competition at &amp;Ubtg Meadows, IU. In a showcase

will be eight on Nov. 15.

County residents record area births and birthdays
Macomber

Barr

Sellers

Lawrence. an d cou sins. JerE'my

and Melod;· Lawre nCI'. Portland .
She also received gift s from her
grandparents, John and Mild red
Crooks. Columbus. Bob and Patri·
cia Srhleppi. cous ins. Kelly a nd
John Schleppi. Hilliard. and Mrs.
Julia Hysell. Syracuse.

POMEROY - ' Produce and
bulk orders as well as Christmas
candy orders through the Meigs
County FoodCooparedueThursday, according to Vernon Nease.
Orders wUl be taken from 1 to
3: :.J p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center with delivery to be made
on Nov. 18. Nease advises that
pickup of orders should take
place before 3: :.J p.m. on dellv·
ery day.

County effort," Thomas said.
"We're fortunate to have a man
Uke Gene who Is well respected by
business and professional leaders
to direct this worthy drive."
Rio Grande College and Com·
munJty College Is an institution of
1,400 students located just west of
GaUiolls.
Riggs and his wife, Judy, reside
In Reedsville with iheir two sons,
Jason and Kenny.

Barr

Macomber

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Barr, Route 3,
Athens, are announcing the birth of
their first child , a daughter, Sarah
Ann, born on Aug. 7 at O'Bleness
Mem.ortal Hospital, Athens. She
weighed four pounds, ]Jounces and
was 181nches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Jack McGee, Millfield;
and th e paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Barr, Reedsville.
Materna l great-grandmother is
Mrs. Louella Moody, Athens. and
the paternal great-grandmother Is
Marie Offutt, Tupper.; Plains.

Mr. a nd Mrs. Rick Macomber,
Chesllire, are annouocing the birth
ri their second son, Michael Alan,
born on Oct. 16 at the Pleasa nt Val·
ley Hospital. Mr. and Mr.;. Ma·
comber,have a not her son, Chip, age
three.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Johnson Johnston, Langs·
vUie, a nd Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ma·
comber, Dexter. Mrs. Birdie
Johnston, Langsville. is the baby's
great-grandmother.

Aeiker

Aeiker

Aeiker

Patrick and Patsy Aeiker
The fourth birthdays d. twins, Pa·
trick and Patsy Aelker, and thesev·
e nth birthday of their sister, Penny
Aelker, was observed on Oct. 27 with
a party at the home of their parents,
Pat and Cindy Aelker.
Attending and presenting gilts
were their grandparents, Clarence
and Maxine Jordan, Randall and
Shirley Gibbs, Rhonda and Gina,
Patty Capehart, Michelle and
Tammy, Tim Tom Michaels, Jo
Ann Newsome and Rod.
Re'fl!'es!ilileiiiS "Of a Smurf cake,
Ice cream, coffee, and Kool -Aid
were served to the guests.

a:ru

~

The seventh birthday of Penny
Aelker was observed Oct. 7 with a
party at the home of her parents,
Pat and Cindy Aelker.
Attending and presenting gifts
were her brother and sister, Patrtck
and Patsy Aelker, Jimmy and
Sarah Pullins, Tyson Rose, Jared
Ridenour, Stephanie and Roble Hoi·
!man, Marcia Robinson, Arnie
Friend, Amber We II , AdrIa
Frecker, Rod New!Dme, Debbie
Frost, Rhonda and Gina Gibbs and
Michelle C!i.Qe..bart. Sending a gift
was Andy WoiTe.
Games were played with the
winners being Marcia Robinson,
Rod Newsome, Stephanie Hollman,
Arnie Friend, Amber Well, and
Sarah Pullins.
An E .T. party theme was carrted
out with an E .T. cake and napkins,
cllips, fudge sickles, and Kooi-Aid
being served to the guests.

Sellers
Marla Lynette Sellers. daught e r

d. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Sellers of
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy. ceil'brated her fourth birtt.:lay recently
with a dinner at the home of her
parents. Guests were Ruth Powell,
Lawreoce Powell, Alan Wilson,
Beverley and Aja McGlothin , and
Ollve Lawson, grandmother.

Lawrence

Lawrence
A birthday party was held rl'cently at the home of James and
Barbara Lawrence honorin g their
daughter. Je nnifer , on her fifth
birthday.
A Smurf theme was carried out in
the decorations. Ga mes were
played with all attending winning a
prtze. These Included J a mie Ord,
Courtney Roush, Rochelle Jenkins,
Jas on Lawrence. Jesslka Codner,
with Kendra Norrts and Kyle Ord
winning the door prize.
A luncheon of corndogs, potato
chips, and punch were served with
Ice cream and a Smurf cake. All of
the children received a miniature
SMurf and a balloon. Also a ttending
and assls tlng with the party were
Kelly and Kenda Rizer.
Later in the evenlng,JennJ!erwas
aga in honored with gifts from r ela·
lives. Presenting herwlthgiftswere
her parents and brother, Jason Law·
renee, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Lawreoce, Joe and
Brenda Johnson. Melvin and Jill

53 1 JACKSON PIKE -RT J5 WEST
Phone 446· 4524
BARGAIN MAfiNEES SAT &amp; SUN

AU SEATS S l 00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY Sl 00

M \UUH
TilE 'S
Ht~\T

!\ln\lt'.

ET

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•

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Ill/ I ""IH \
11 1/W ., fHJ.l.l

I I.
Zlst WEEK ~ 7:00 &amp; 9 :00P. M.
SAT &amp; SUN MAT I NEE S 1:00 &amp; 3:00

•

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POMEROY HOME~ AUTO
600 East Main Street

Phone (61-+J 992-2094

Pomeroy, 0 . H769

Firestone '
Snow Biter'
winter tires

"' Size

P155/ 90013
879- 13

'

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Atarl®VIdeo Computer System With Combcit'" Cartridge Program

' . r' '

,

SIMMONS Ol.DSCAD~.atEVY., .INC.

Gilmore

A78 -13

'

..

Gilmore Is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gardner We hrung
and Mr. and Mrs. Eiza Gilmore,
Pomeroy . Neva Gilmore, Pomeroy, and Georgia Wehrung, Mlddll'port , are great-grandmothers.

LAUREL CLIFF Health Club
meeting, 7: 30 p.m . Thursday at
borne d. Leona Karr.

November 10, 1982
Don't hesitate this coming year to become Involved in larger ventures than you have In the past. It may take awhile to adjust to the new
envlrorunent, but later You wUl fit In comfortably and do well.
S(X)RPIO (Oct. U.Nov. 22) Substantial strides can be made today
regarding something you've been hoping to bring into being. Take active
me851lreS to get things rolling.
SAGnTARlUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) There are a number of promising
developments behind the scenes today you might not be aware of.
Persons with your Interests at heart are engineering them.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Wan.)9) Plans that you have !odaywhlch are
beneficial to friends as well as yourself should prove to be lucky. Be sure
to Include others In what you envision.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. 19) Don't be disturbed today by any
changesor,!lhlftlngconditlonscareerwlse. Whatensuescouldlaterprove
to be of advantage to you.
PllCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your greatest asset today Is your
willingness to be cooperative. Put ti.ls to maximum use. You could
benefit !rOm team efforts.
ARIES (March 21-Apr1119) This Is a good day to catch up on tasks
you've been neglecting. Theywon'tseemsotoughnow,andmanycanbe
accomplished.
TAURUS (April ~May 20) Involvements today with members of
.the opposite 5el' should tum out to be lucky for all concel)led. Cupid and
'Dame FortUhe are both on your side.
'
GEMINI (~2l.JIDie20) Ityouhavebeenthlnklngaboutbrlghtenlng your surroundings either at your office or home, this Is the day to do
something about it.
CANCER (June 21.Jul;v 22) Your words carry more weight than
usual today. You are especially adept at Impressing persons who have
real clout and who ca'n ~lp you.
LEO (Jul;v ZS.J\UI. II) Give priority today to matters of material
Importance to you. "It ypu stay atop -t hings, your chances of wrapping
them up as yoo desire loolq~ood.
·
VIRGO (Aq. ~.II) You havetheablllty!oday to gain support
· for Ideas or projects about which you are enthusiastic. Sell them with
s rity.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-()d. :13) You could be rather lucky In financial ot
~terlal ways today trQm a set of ctrciunstances not of your making.
Wilen opportunity knocks, don't get IIliis way.

Tl11· '"~"' tttlo·o l Prt·:o..-. . l nlantl Oii l·
ant i

The girls da nced to "Greased
LlghtnJng." They trav eled last weekend to Milwaukee to dan ce for the
Symposium Cmpetltlon. All three
are students of Kim Kalla 's Studio of
Dance.

Astrograph

M Uittil-tl t hnt u ~o: h

Frrd t~.l . Ill l'uurt Sit &gt;T I. IJ} tht• O h tu V&lt;~ll• ·)

M t•l rlbt. ·r

Shannon Gilmore, daughter of
Joe and Linda Gilmore, Walworth,
Wis., formerly of Pomeroy, Is a
member of a jazz-acroba tic dance
tea m which too k second place in
competition a t Rolling Meadows,
Ill. recently .

POMEROY- Veterans Day
service Thursday, 11 a.m . in
front of courthouse by Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion; public urged to attend.

Reedsville student announced
chairman of Rio Grande group

t USPS 14 ~960 J
A l&gt;i 1 i ~ iotn uf Mullinwdht. Inc·.

I} Pn ·-..:-. A:.."wla\uut

TIIURSDAY

GALUPOLIS - Pomeroy
Chapter Aglow, Duff's, Galllolls,
7 p.m . dinner, followed by Orner
Roberts of Dayt&gt;n as speaker.
No reservatioos necessary.

HARRISONVILLE Chapter
OES, 7: ll p.m. Tuesday at the
Masonic Temple lor practice lor
Installation.

Th e Doil r Se ntinel

,tfh·rn'"'n.

POMEROY Chapter Ill, RAM.
7:30p.m . Wednesday night at the
Pomeroy MasonJc Temple, lol·
lowed by Bosworth Couocll 46,
RSM, 8: 30p.m .

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty, Tuesday at 7: ll p.m . at
Meigs Inn. Connie Dodson and
Tanya Davis, hostesses.

EAST MEIGS - Eastern
Band Boosters, 7: 30 p.m. Tiles·
day, In band room d. high school.

to people who ~Pd ass ista nce but
wa nt to co ni inuP liv ing on th eir ow n.

Pub lt .-.. ho ·tlt ·l t'l"}

HARRISONVILLE Chapter
OES. a nnual installation of ollie·
ers, 7:30p.m. Wednesday a t the
Masonic Temple.

POMEROY - Aglow Bible
studies, 7 to 9 p.m . Tuesday, ·
home of Joan Wolfe, Joyce Hlad
on "Promises d. Healing."

POMEROY - Meigs Vocal
Music Boosters will meet at the
high school Tuesday at 7: :.J p.m.
AU parents are urged to attend.

Mrs. Austin (Maxine) Phillips,
formerly a cook at the Pomeroy
Elementary School lor a number of
years, is a patient at University
Hospital in Columbus where she underwent major surgery a month
ago. She Is expected to be confined
to the hospital for considerably
longer. Friends may send cards to
her at University Hospital, 410 W.
lOth Ave., Columbus, OH 43210.

MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. F erman Moore. Mrs.
Harry Davis and Nina Bland,
co- hostesses. Final work on Cl'ra mlc project.

POMEROY -PreceptorBeta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:45 p.m . Thursday,
Riverboat Room of Diamond
Savings and Loan Co.

CHESTER Township Trus·
tees wUl meet Tuesday at 7: 30
p.m. in the town hall at Chester.

Hospitalized

WEDNESDAY

Jazz dance
team takes
second place

·

i •

,

:

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1

Enjoy fast-paced action and true-to-life sounds with the Atari" Video Computer System'". lfh •
eludes console. 2 joysticks. 2 paddle controls and Combat Game Program'"'. ·At Kmart•.
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Millie Command Program~· .•.•••• , 21.97
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SLINDERELLA DIET . QASSES

", ·.'

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD GALLIPOLI S

I

'I

.,-v ' ....,

NEW MEMBIRS ALWAYS WELCOME

G79- 15

:2.1)9

H79-15

2.21
L78- 15
... ll'lldot-lii!IMIIM.

WE ALSO HAVE MUD 8t SNOW RETREADS

STARTING AT

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Plus 50' F.E.r.

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And RecaPPible Trade-In

0299

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SAWS

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WIIOII*.OH.

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2.16

79 · 14
£78-14

MON. NIGH.T-~b" Poi$~:00 ·P.M .
TUES.- NIGHT-MaSon, W. Va,-10:00 A.M.
THURS~ MORNING-Five Points-10:00 A.M .
CAL(: JOANN NEWSOME, 992:3382

'

C7 9- 14

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The Daily Sentinel

- --

-- - -- - - ---

----·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Tuesday,

November9, 1982

Helea help us

November

1982

Ohio

Public Notice

. Woman's young voice fools even a hospital (telephone friend'
•
By HELEN BOOTEL
DEAR HELEN:
. I know this Is more In keeping
With what a teenage girl would do,
but maybe my maturity matches
my voice, which I guess never grew
lip.
I'm 46. People say I sound more
Uke 20, and sometimes It 's fun to
pretend on the phone ...
· A week ago I called a friend at the
hospital. Didn't realize •·ntll a man
answered, that she had checked out
the day before. I sta rted to hang up
and he said, ''I'm lonely, won't you
talk a while?" So we dld.
He asked tor my num ber and
we've been. talking ever since. I
have learned he's around 30, fairly
new In town, a nd will soon be able to
have visitors (probably by the time

.
Meetl'ng notes

you get my letter) . He was In a serious automobile accident.
Naturally he wants me to come
and see him, but I'm sure he thinks
I'm In the 20s. ( I haven't lied; just
Implied.) I keep making excuses.
He keep suggesting da tes after he's
"sprung."
Sha ll I walk In on hlm cold,
braced for hls surprise a nd disappointment? 1I'm well-preserved
and not unattractive, but stllllook
years older than my voice sounds.)
Do I just stop calling rather than
face hlm? Or do I tell the truth,
fina lly? We seem to have so much
In common. - YOUNG AT
HEART AND OF VOICE
DEAR YOUNG :
My suggestion: Call this man up
and tell him you'll be visiting him

___

,.,

today. Then add, "BY the way, I'm
a grea t deal older than my voice
sounds," and hang up before he can
ask questions.
Prepared thus tor a mlddle-ager ,
he'll be pleasantly surprised when
he sees an attractive, youngish
"older woman." Nay whatever develops be as unique as Its beginning! - H.
P .S. To Readers: Knowing my
column -answer would a ppear
much too late for anythlng but hlnd·
sight, I sent " Young" a personal
letter by return mall and yesterday
received her reply. She wrote:
"I followed your advice, Helen,
and thanks a million! When Randy
and I first saw each other, we both
burst out laughlng. He'd borrpwed
a phony gray wig from a nurse - It

looked great with hls red moustache. His first words were, "I
thought you said 'much older,' and
here you're about my age!" Which
endeared hJm to.be forever.
"This Is developing Into a great
friendship ... l'U keep you posted ...
By the way, Randy Is 38- he sort of
" Implied" he was younger to
ma tch my young sound - THE
VOICE
Ah, happy endings, I love 'em! H.
HELEN:
You were completely out of line,
publlshlng the letter from a man
who said that years ago a nun In a
Catholic school barebottom
spanked hlm before the class.
No nun would ever do that! Thls

________________

__:_:
'(continued frompage4)

Candystripers
. Ceramic item s for patients a t
Veterans Memorial Hospita l wlll be
made by the Candystripers, It was
decided a t a recent meeting held at
the hospital.
· The group also agreed to held pay
for a new pair of curtains for one
room. Two year pocket calendars
are being sold as a money making
project.
At the next meeting to be held
Dec. 14 at 5 p.m . members wUI
make the holiday pa tient gifts and

have a gift excha nge. Sixteen
m embers and four advisors were
present.

Literary Club
" My Life" by Golda Melr was revlewed by Mrs. Nan Moore at the
Wednesday meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held a t the home
of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
Mrs. Forrest Bachtel introduced
Mrs. Moore who described Mrs.
Melr as a courageous woman who
was dedlca ted to her work and coun-

try and put that before her husband
and children. She noted that on a
vlslt to the United States, Mrs. Melr
helped raise $50,(0),(0) for Israel.
Her chlldhood was one of terror In
Russia where she was born, her adolescence was stormy In Milwaukee
where s he grew up and her adult life
was devoted to Israel.
For roU call members answered
by naming a favortte person.
Mrs. Richard Owen presided at
the meeting with Mrs. James Clatworthy and Mrs. Dwight Wallace
being elected by secret ballot to the

The Meigs 4-H Plt&gt;aSUI'f' Ridl.'rs rCCf'ntly VI·
tCOSi tln Colum bus. The ir fa vorttf' displays
w ere thE' rE&gt;pllca of a coa l m i ll£', a hangman
computer game, a str1:'&lt;'t of ~es tf'ry&lt;'ar, a pia·
nelarlum s how. a n old·lim£' movlf', a nd thE'
transparent ta l kl n~ woman s hoo:.
' Members rna kin~ theUipweN'ErlnAnder·

Son. Jeff

Arnold , Daren Hayes, Lori HayPS.

Setty Jo Hunt. Kt&gt;lth Hunt . Richard Hunt.
Susan Jones. Judy Mrt&gt;s a nd Kristen Slawter
The young PfOPil' wf'rr transiXlrted by Ra ·
chael Down1P, Ben Slawtf'r . and Mr. and Mrs
Earl Hunt
A t a recent m eelln~ of th&lt;' cl ub hPld at St .

Paul' s Lutheran Churrh. plans Wf'r'P dis·
russed for skat I~ ar Byrd An•na In A thens at
the next nl('(&gt;f lng, Nov. 15. A Christmas part ~·

nard and Df.&gt;bbi(' Va n Mett&gt;r and r efrt&gt;ShiT"I£'nt s
serv('(l br Tracv Df' Wees and Todd
Zuspan . The Officers; tratnln~ school was
anoo un&lt;rd.
Thf' club h(']d a Ualloween costumE" part~·
Oct . 27 at the Sisson horne where f;!:ames were
played and refrC'ShmentsservPd. M oney m ak·
In~ projocts were d iscus sed and s u ~estlons
forth£' Chrl&lt;itmas floo rmadf'by the members.
It was noted that Nov. 11 has been set as a day
for raking lf'av£'S forthPelderlyas arommun 11~· ser v1('(' proj('('f. ThP club d('("'i&lt;Pd to ex·
changf' glfrs for Chri stmas and tt.&gt; party was
Sf't for DPr. IR. F'or nf'xt month 's meetlng, L isa
Starcht&gt;r and Ju stin Crandol wU I hilve d(&gt;v(}
lions and Debbif'Van Meter and Jasen Cra n·
001 "111 have rf'frf'S hmmts.

wf'rf'

was also planned .
Members worked on r.hcir saddle

rraft~

An achJ(&gt;V('rTI(&gt;nt ba nquf't to tx&gt; hctd on Nov
1.1 was dlscug;t"d at thl&gt; rf'('ent m f'f1i~ of tilt&gt;
Mason Bu sy &amp;'f'S held at thr rome ci the
leader . M rs. Jacklf'Sisson .
[)(&gt;l.•otkJns werr given bv Sam antha Ma~··

The Country Clovers 4-H Oub met Monday
at the home of JlmandJennySheets,advtsors,
for thelr annual fall presentation of awards
and certillcates.
All members present recelved4-Hmember·
ship cert111cates and Meigs County Fair premi·
UJ"n'i. Aaron Sheets, Burt Kennedy, and Jim
Carpenter were ~ as first year

DEAR HELEN:
Just couldn't help writing In response to your column on spina bitIda children. We are the proud
parents of a 7&gt;,2-year-old son who
was also born with S.B. As with
most parents, we had never heard
of the birth detect until Michael
came; our fears were great.
They were mostly larger th an
life! Today our special chlld Is a
special joy and blessing. He has
been In several local tournaments
and last year won two golds and a
sllver In the State Tournament of

Films to be shown at Carleton
School have arrlved,lt was reported
at a meeting of Meigs Association
for Retired Citizens held at the
school Thursday night.
Mrs. Russ Carson announced that
"Mary Popplns" and "Love of
Benjl" have been secured by tiE
Assoctatim. Mrs. Ernest Whltehead ot Reedsville received a comforter donated by Mrs. Paul Karr
for a fund-raising project whlch
brought In $376. A products party
was held with the money to go toward buying equipment for the
school. PaullneReuterwon the door
rlze
p
·

membersandrecelvaf4-Hplns.
Grandchamplonrooetteswerep-esentroto
Jason RJggs ror woodworking, Wesley Howardlorlleldc ~ andJ-~Sheetslorsmall

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motor.;. Recelvtngreoervechamplonrosettes
were Bret Howard for lleld cropo and Aaron
Sheetslorpocketpets.
llolllntblementlonrll&gt;
bons were also preoenlel!
to Bret Howard,
Jaret Sheets and Wesley Howard rorarchery,
and Jesse Howard for lleld crops.
ftrst place In MelgsCoonty4-Hsafetyspealdng
contest and horaable mention in the area
safety speaklng contest. He was presented a
public speaking pin. Three other members
also received 4·H award pins, Jason Riggs,
woodworking, Wesley Howard for lleld crops,
and Jared Sheets for smaU rrotors.
Jason RJggs was glvon spedal re&lt;.'OIIJIItlon
lor being selected to participate In the Ohio
State Fair WOOOworklilg show and received a

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Alfred Sunday School attendance
Oct. 24 was 39; church attendance,
16; On Oct. 31 Sunday school attend·
ance was 40; church attendance, 21.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yost visited Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
LS.ncaster Rt.
. The community was suddened by
. the death of Mike Kestner, son-In·
law Or Mr. and Mrs. Garland Cald·
Among those calling at the
tuneral home and attending services were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee
Henders&gt;n, Mrs. Roger Pullins, Mr.
and Mrs. Sherman Hender!lln, Mrs.
WDber Parker, Mrs. Joseph Poole,
Mrs. Sibyl Dorst, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henderson, Nina Robinson,
mara Foilrod, Mr. and Mrs. ClairE.
Follrod and Kath y, Pam
Henders&gt;n.
Clara Follrod, TIElma Hendereon. and Nina Robinson visited Myrtle Flanders, Dutch Ridge.
Sibyl Dorst attended the funeral
of ber brother-In-law, Reid

well.

Eilltft'day.

Nellle Parker attended the

50th
~· anniversary r1 John and
~th Hay~ at Chester and
c~.oll r "~ Smith and Elma

1!euter. ~

p ..

-'111iil~Meil&lt;lerson accompanied

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Monis
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart at·
tended the wedding of their nephew,
Mark Hayman and Miss Laura NevIns at the St. Phlllp' s Episcopal
Church at Laurel, Maryland.
Floyd Farra has returned home
from Veterans Memorial Hospital
after surgery. His chlldren, Joe
Farra of Rome, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Farra, Jr. of Columbus and
daughter of Florida have been here
at his bedskle.
Mrs. Hazel Knight and brother,
Fred Baumgardner ot Lesage, W.
Va. visited their cousin, Mr. and
Mrs. Crttt Bradford a recent
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ingels of
Bloomington, Ind. were recent gu·
ests of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Turley.
Miss Debbie Wadsworth and
friend, Davld Schness of PhUadel·
phla, Pa. were re:ent weekend gu·
ests of her grandmother, Mrs. Edna
Pickens.
•
Mrs. Mike Hayman, Tate, Travis
and Tasslca ot Gray, Tenn. spent
Friday with Mr. and Mrs. BW
Hayman.
Mrs. Mildred Swift of Columbus
and Mrs. ChrtstlneGould r1 Nelsonville spent Saturday with thetr
mother, Mrs. Ura Morris.
Rev. and Mrs. Don . Walker,
Gretta Simpson and Edna Pickens
spent a couple days at Meadow

:gttiae~ named office assistant
A Meigs Cwnty student has been
named as a student assistant In the
of11ci! C4 admlsslqns and records at
.ftlo Grande CoUege and Conunun-

JtyCoDege.
1

-.Jean Horton, daughter of Mr. and

Mj.. Dewey Horton, ThlrdAvenue,

Mldllleport. Is tiE local student
~~at Rio Grande.
• ~ Grande College and Com·

RnuiJty College Is an Jnstltullon of
I

Bridge, W. Va. with Mrs. Glenna
O'Connor.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Miller of
Mllton, Fla. visited his mother, Mrs.
Carolina Mlller.
Mr. and Mrs. DavldBoyerotEast
Fultonham, Ohio spent Sunday with
their aunt, Mrs. Edna Pickens.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Long of Ml·
nerva, Ohlo spent the weekend with
MTs. Wllllam Long to visit Mr. Long
In Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Wtllard Fan-a of
Sandyvllle, W. Va. vlslted Mr. and
Mrs. Edison Brace.
Mrs. Gloria Manuel and Mrs. Edtson Johnson spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Prater and family
atHamden.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace and
Mrs. Pearl Adama visited Mrs.
Donna Brace at Davlsv!Ue, W.Va.

Property
transfers..
Mae M. First to William J. Smith,
Shirley A. Smith, 72~ acres,
Rutland.
Thelma Boyer, WD!ard F. Boyer,
Nettle M. Boyer to Columbia Gas of
Ohio, Inc., RIJht of Way,
Middleport.
SheUa D. Slnclalr to Lyle R. Sin·

clair, t;.ot, Bedford.

PatWood,AudreyWoodtoDavld

A. Lewis, 2 acres, Chester.
Robin L. Wotq to Dale E. WU·
tong, .6475 acre, Olive.
James H. Duncan, Zola Duncan
to Law.rence F. lloyd, David L.
~ Pl. 60, 61, MINieport.

approxlr1!ately 1,400 students located In the roiling hlllsotaoutheast·
ern0hlo. A176-acreparcel~la,ndls
J111De
..tiE foundation for 22.campus buDd- AnDell! W11lon Millin, ~Lee
togs Including four resldellce halls, Martin, ChrJatlna Kay W11lon ~
a llbrary, Student-aJinrmmJty ceD- ~· Errol ~ Roberta, Rita
ter, athletr romplex wltban Indoor · Jayne Wlllon, Ariella Lou wnpoo1, cal~, bookstore, IICience WIWarnl, Bruce Edward Wllllama,
laboratories, fine arts center, tech- JeuDifer Alln
Burton. Cbanlcalcenter, and lots ofcoml:lrtable lis Bilrtoa toJoJua,Willon Jr., Par·
cJaaroom space,
cela,lallabury.

Eii&amp;'Ncirma MJI.wn-,

wn-

'.

I

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FIRE DEPARI'MENT mrrs- Members of Middleport Fire Depanment visited Clteshtre-Kyger Elementary School during Fire PrevenUoo Week. Firefighters Bobby Duckworth and Larry Byer demonstrated
fire apparatus and allowed students to examine a fire engine. The visit was
spo1180red by the fire department and Cheshire- Kyger School teachers.

Ph. 742_2834

........ .......... ,
• • olo lo 100 olo l

· ·~

1 • ol

I

•&gt;.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and 1 awing

machine repair, parts, and
supplies . Pick up and
delivery . Davis Vacuum

"What are you in for ~"

8

Public Sate
&amp; Auction

ACCEPTING eppllcotlons .
port time help .• 11 e . .
weekly, 10-12 houra
weakly. If you have apere
time a nd cen uae extu
money , we may h1ve 1
position for you in the'
Maig 1, Maaon . Oellle
County areas. showing CAA
County S.fety film for OUft
co mpany . Three, pert tim•
management poaitiona·
available. Must be married&amp;.
emp toyed in immedi1ti
area . Phone 304 -2736676 .
EARN up to &amp;70,000 •veerY
Use your wortl skills overseas. Writ ~. J . O ~;-- P . O . Bo*1
369: Boston. MA 02129 .•.

PUBLIC AUCTION Ford
Dealer s hip , Saturday ,
November 13. at 11 :00 a.m.
w1th
thP.
South
hnp
of
Si11fl
S+"'l
Georges
Creak
Rd
.
Call
!hence '""""'" E'5t ""'"liel
Cleaner, one hot! mile up Smithers
WV. D S. D Motor MATURE christian lady tO
t•on to thP. cP. ntP. I nl s. 11rl S+"'r
448-0294 ..
t1on thencr South to thP CP.n tf'r
Sales on St. At . 60 East of provide daycara for gentle:'
of a Run called Walke1 Ann ,
TOBACCO FARMERS We Charleston. WV or 30 miles man in his home near Let1rt.1
d•stance ol s•., &lt;ads 1henre
RAD!ATOR
will haul your tobacco !rae Southeast of Charleston . Prepare lunch&amp;: evening
Sonth 49 de.gcees w,., 32
SERVICE
to the Huntington Pride in WV at Smithers. WV. Stay meal, soma light houaekeep•Ods to lhe mon th ol a rf•a•n
tobacco market . Call Paul on At . 60 to the Ford ing . Non-smoker, must ha'le
!hence Sonlh lo lhe Se.CI •on
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
We can repair and re·
Ooinoo at 1-614-266-1363, dealer s hip . Having sold own transportation o.r,
property and giving up Ford consider livilg in. If sehnp thence WP&lt;;l on thf' South
after 6PM 446-6286 .
lone of sa•d Sect•on 1o the
•Appliances •Refrigeration •Heating
Co let Gutt Wort
core rediatora end
franchise will sell : complete riously interested call collec(
PLACE OF BEGINNIN Gcoo ta•n
•Cooling •Air Cond . •Electrical
mp e
er
'
heater cores. We can
line of shop equipment . after 6 p.m. Dallas Taxa.,,
Emblem Club Christman office equipment, part. etc ., 2t4-233-7679 .
•no 60 ac.es mw 01 '""
•Plumbing •Roofing •Gutters
Complete Remodeling,
also acid boil end rod
Bazaar.
Fri.
&amp;
Sat.
Nov
.
12
SAVE ANO EXCEPT lhr coal
·
Roofing Of all types.
out rediators. We elso
4 air conditioners . much
un dellv•no s,,,rl P•rm .ses
Carp!lntry •Residential or Bustness
Warted in home area 20
&amp; 13. Fri. 9· 7, Sat. 9-6. Elks misc . Nothing shown before MASON County Commun..
wh1ch 15 not convP.yP.rl or 1n
Mobile Homes
repair Gas Tanks.
Building .
day of sale. Terms cash or ity ActionGroup , nee'd_,
tPnded to hP r:onvPyP.rl hv th1~
years.
PAT HILL. FORD
---=------ -lc - check
with positive I. D. Not outreac h worker for Senior
Golf lessons. John Teaford . responsible for accidents or Perso nal Service Progrem..
co~~~VE~~I~G AND RESERV
Discounts to Senior Citizens &amp; Handica'pped
FREE ESTIMATES
992·2198
Chester. Ohio.
loss . Every th ing must be Must have car, be 56 year•
lNG a'''" PSIN!e only 101 Elma
CALL 843· 3322
Middleport, Ohio
EppiP. a onfl story tr amP. hornP
PH. 742-2266
11·8-1 mo. Gun shoot, Racine Gun paid for day of sale. Bring of age or older and meet
your lunch . Be on time . in come guidelines. 4 houra
df!SCHbrd
propenvon
1 p.m.Every
Factory
choked
guns Owner: Harman l. Skaggs: pe r day minimum wage _.
,thf"!
1nr1 nbovf!
two 12\
ilCrP.s locatnrl
Club.
Sunday
starting
phone 304-632 -1419 or Apply in per s on to 812
S&lt;ud Pr P.m1ses located 1n
only .
ChP.s ter Townsh1 n MP1QS
304-442-9592. In charge of Viand St . Pt . Pleasant. WV:
sale: Bill Janes &amp;: Assoc .
Racine Fire Dept . is sponsor - Auctioneer: Duana Smith &amp; No e~~: pari a nce required fo,r,
Aopra.sed "
ing a gun shoot every Sat. Assoc .
this high income opportuns, 20.100 oo anrl cannot bP
night starting Oct . 9 at 6:30
sold Icc tess than lwo-th,rls ol
ORANGE
ity with national oil C\om·
p
.
m
.
in
Be
a
han
.
Factory
thatTHIS
amount
PLASTIC
pany in Point Pleasant 1re1.
SHERIFFS SALE OPER•
choke 12 gauge shotguns 9
Wanted To Buy
Regardless of axpei-ience ,
ATES uNDER THE DOCTRIN E
Custom kitchens and ,
eblc:khoo
GAS PIPE
only.
Write P.M. Read, bOX 690,
_.:..__ _ _ _ _ ·ICOF CAVEAT EMPTO R TH E
bath 1ooms. Remodeling,
_,.yating
WANTED TO BUY Old Dayt on. Ohio 46401 .
MEI GS CO UN TY SHERI FF
ooepticovrtams
Meets All Specifications
Sacred Heart Church Baz- fumiture
and Antiques of all
MAK ES NO GUARANTEE AS
add-ons, new homes,
edumptruckoervico
HIGH PRES. REGUlATORS
aar. Nov . 11 . From 4 :30 -9 kinds , call Ken nath Swain ,
TO STA rus OFTIT LE PRtOR To
plumbing, etecllic, siding.
OMedlng onc1 rocllimlng
LOW PRES. REGUlATORS
pm . Dinner , games, fancy
Situations
446-3169 or 266-1967 in 12
SALE
eRecinoond Syracuoe
work. baked goods &amp; many
the evenings .
TERMS OF SALE Ten pe1 ""U1
-hookup
Free Delivery
Wanted
other stands . Door prizes
cen t 110 pe1cent1 cash •n hand
1~ • '
WOfklnouiedond
PH . 986-3892
every
%
hour
a
her
6
p.m.
Buying Gold, Silver, Plati on rlay of sal£' w1th hatance to
Ask me about Allstate's
Gu.anteed
or 985-3837
num, old coins, scrap rings Dressmaking and alteri- ·
hP pa•d 1rpon dP.hvPry o l ciPerl
Short -Term Htalth PolicyCUFFORD
The Ken Amsbury Chapter &amp;:
James J P•oll•tl
H.
·
PH . JIM
Greg Winebrenner
silverware . Daily quotas tions. 614-949-2202.
of lzaak Walton, Chaster. is available
Sheu ll
helps to protect you
992-7201 10-7 u
1011 711 mo. pd.
coins &amp; coin
Me,qs Countv. Ohi O
between jobs, etc .
8·20 ·tfc
-uC
sponsering a Big Whitetail supplies. Also
for sale . Spring Will care for elderly person in
Oths FoiPy HP ISP. r
Disability Income
Buck and largest Grouse Valley Trading
Co .. Spring my home. Room, board and
and Coif!
Prottetion-when you
I -------------....:.t========::;-t=========~ isTailNov.
Contest . Entry deadline Valley Plaza , 446 -8025 or laundry.
A Lena I Prolf!ss1onal
become totally disabled.
614-992 -6022 .
28 . Entry fea -$6 .00. 446-8026 .
Assooat ,on
Comprehensive MedicaiPrizes Awarded! Judging is
Att ornevs lor Pln1nt!l!
provides Major Medical
Man:h 12, 19B3. Forlurther
Insurance
information or to enter , We pay cash for late model 13
_
,
and
Hospital/Surgical
1101 19 26 11 11 2 9 111
used cars.
- -- - - -- - contact any member or call clean
expense coverage.
Frenchtown Car Co .
614-992· 7212, 9B5-4266.
Bill Gena Johnso n
9B6 -3606, or 9B5 -432B . 446-0069
SANDY AND BEAVER
Allracksmustbetaggedond
3 Announcements
In su ran ce Co . has offer.•~
Syracu~!;.Racine
killed this year.
services for fit•e insuranc"
Wanted to buy toba cco coverage
in Gallia County
You're in good hands.
poundage
,
will
pay
top
BUILT AND
The Ken Amsbury Chapter
for
almost
a century. finn ,
AUIUie Llle lliiW"tln CoJ No11lllwooi. . IL
Tho Rio Grande Colege
price. Call 614-379 -2155. home and personal
property
~EWORKED
FREE ESTIMATES
of lzoak Walton. Chester, is
CETA Pmgram io -ing
See or phone
PH . 614.992·2681
sponsoring its annual Slug Juck Cars with reusabl e coverages are available to
penicipenta for • clua·
Shoots Nov . 14, 21, 2B .
mea t individual need1 .
room okiU training program
or 61 4 · 992 · 3762
Will consist ollraehand and parts . Call614 -3 88-9303. Contact Foster law it ",
for a food oervlce. Para proANYTIME
bench rest eVents. Rifles and
agent. Phone 379-2204.
feaioneta (This io not •
ll -3-l mo.
scopes not in same cata · Want ed to buy snow blade
q&lt;llr1tity cooking program.)
to
fit
a
wheel
hor
se
riding
l0/7/ l mo.
gory . Muzzle shoots on Dec.
Are you paying too much.fot
lntererted persona who
10-28-lmo.
19 , 26 and Jan . 2 . Atl mower . Call 446-9780.
your
hospital -health insu"Across
From
The
have been unemployed for
rance . Call Carroll
Courthouse in
RAW
FUR
BUYER
Beef
&amp;
• mininurn of _ , (7)
matches
begin atmon
1 p.m.
Prizes include
e y , deer hides, Ginseng, trap· Snowden , 446-4290.
doylllhotlld talophol10 their
Pomeroy"
tu.kays, bacon and ham.
ping s uppli es . Geo rge
locll Ohio au...u of Em·
Buckl ey, call 614-664 p1oymont Sorviceo Office
4761 . Hours week days: 5to 15
for more dotoils end to or·
Schools
4
Giveaway
10/24/ l mo.
9PM . Weekends: 12 no on to
range for on • .,.......,, Rio
Instruction
9PM
.
G111nde College io on Equol
•Gutters
Opportunity tmp~aver.
ANY PERSON who has Wanted to buy a good used
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH
•Downspouts
anything to give away and doghou se. Call446· 7136 or Karate the ultimata in 1~ff
LIMITED
SUPPLY
•New or Repair
defence all privata lessoni;
does not offer or attempt to 675-1333 .
&amp;
130.00 ton
•Painting
Man , women . &amp; children .
offer any other thing for sale
may place an ad in this LOST A silver -gray fender In struction thru black bt&gt;ft .
W~hin 10 Mile Radius
column . There will be no -skirt, left side of Pontiac Also avai lable Karate
of Pomeroy
Also Transmission
charge to the advertiser.
Bonneville. Reward if found . unif o rms puching and
$32.00
Within
20
Miles
PH.
992-5682
Cafl614-367-0619 .
ki cking bags, and protective ·
Ph. 992-2791
kitchens. ba$35.00 Within 30 Miles
equipment. Jerry lowery&amp; ..
Free to good home. German
or 992·7121
throoms. roofing,
or 949-2263
Shepherd mala. good with BEDS -IRON , BRASS , old Assoc iates Karate Studio,
3·24·11c
PH. 992·2618
children . Call 614-367 - furniture , gold , silver 143 Burlington Rd., Jack."
carpet, ceramic tile,
10/21/ 1 mo.
7-14-Uc
0624.
dollars, wood ice bo xes, son, Oh . Call 614-288 1 •
cement wori&lt;, paint3 74
jars. antiques
, etc ... ::::0: ::::::
·
ing, storm windows.
Kittens , 6 wks . old . Call stone
Complete
households
1
aiding. andy type of
----------------,1 _44_ 6_·_
B2_6_4_._________
Write : M. D. Miller, Rt . 4. 18 Wanted to Do
Pomeroy , Oh . Or 992 ·
remodeling.
"CUT OUT
3 kittens -2 months old. 2 7760.
Commercial or
male, 1 female . 614-742 FOR FUTURE USE"
232B .
Gold , silver, s t e rling, General Hauling and Trash ,
Residential
.
jewelry , rings. old coins&amp;: removal Service . Raliabht
OVER 16, YEARS
Puppies. Garman Shephard . currency . Ed Burkett Barber and
. Call 448-' '
4 months old . 2 mala , 2 Shop, Middleport . 992 - 3t69dependable
EXPERIENCE IN
after
6PM
256-1967.
female . 614-949 -3070.
3476 .
BUILOI.~G NEW
AVAilABLE AT:
For all your wiring
Nursing in private home'.
HOME$
5 puppies. 3 famala -2 male . No Item to large or to Small. Daytime only in Gallipolis or"
needs;
furnaces
Pert beegl e . 614-992 - Will buy one pie ce or Pt. Pleasant . Will give ref. if
repair service and
2514.
Real Estate • General
complete household . New. required . Call468-1818 . .
All
installation.
used , or antique furniture .
•Wellhen •Dish·
Syracuse, OH.
DOG,
part
German
She·
614-992 -6370 .
wasi•en •Ranges
Would like to care for elderly
Residential
Contact
Fern
or
C
.
T.
phard
&amp;
Collie.
3
'h
years,
•Refrigerators
people in my home. Expe&amp;
Commercial
good watch dog, 304-45B- Wanted to buy· Basement rien ce d . Call 614 - 248 ~
PH. 992-7301
•Dryers •Freezers .
HOBSTETlER REALTY
Owners:
10B6.
Call
Jacks. 614-992 -2969 .
PARTS and SERVICE
54B6 or 446 -4964.
10/ 181 1 mo.
Gtorae S. Hobsletter h.
Oaby A. Martin
4-5-Uc
Broiler
1
7 weak old kitt an s, hou sa · POT bally or wood burning
Rodney Howery
PHONE 992·5739
I
broken, call aher 4 p.m. on stove, old bricks, reusable
PH . 992·6370
1Mondey-Friday, 304 -773 - barn wood . Have small
Jlhtanu!al
Call for an appomtment
10/24/Hc
9505 .
plumbing &amp; electrical job to
COMPLETE
WE HAVE MOVED TO
be done . Call 304 -675 - 21
Business
Turnips, 304-896 -3404 .
RADIATOR
215 MULBERRY AVENUE!!
7888 after 6 p.m.
Opportunity
SERVICE
AU day or wenilw
English Springer Spaniel, 5 Wanted 3A HP Submersible
From the Smallest Heater
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
year old mala . good with pump and tank. 304-675 Sizes start from 12'd6'
&amp;
C01e to the Largest Radiator.
Phone 741-3171
children . calf 304-458 - 14BO.
LOOKING for people who
Radiator Specialist
U.S. Rl. SO East
El'llti!WS
UTILITY
BUILDINGS
1635.
want to earn between $600 1
NATHAN BIGGS
Guysville, Ohio
Velma Nicinsty, Assoc.
Sizes lrom 6'x6' Up
a nd $5 0 , 000 monthly
Authorized
John
Deere,
35
Yrs.
Experience
to
24'x36'.
Phone 742-3092
through this " newest and :
lmplv
New Holland, Bush Hog
Insulated Doc Houses
fast est growing company in&lt;'
6 Lost and Found
Farm Equipment
th e nation" . Call 304-876Dealer
1293.
'
FOUND
Pu
"a
in
Gallipolis
Real Estate • General
Farm Equipment
Rt. 3. Box 54
area. Owner call and indan- 11 Help Wanted
Racine, Oh.
Parts &amp;Service .
tify and pay for ad . Call
Pomeroy, Ott.
Ph.
614·843·2591
Mature parson to babysit in
1-J·IIc
446-0275 .
Ph. 992·2174
10-6-tlc
my home . 5 days a week . 22 Money to Loan
.,
2-2ti-tlc
Phone 446-2959 .
Yard
Sale
7
608
AVON . Give yourself a HOME LOANS 14% fl•e~ ;
Wdstbrook Subdivision . 'I• Christmas Bonus . S e ll rate . l eader Mortgage. Ohio ,
mi. out But avilla Rd., Wad .. Avon . Earn good money, sat
Cabinets - Roof·
9 to 5. Stero &amp;. misc.
your own hours. Call 614- ~nJ: ~i~?5~-2~jd5·16664,
69B· 7111 collect.
ing - Siding ~ Concrete
Garage sale-Nov. 11 &amp; 12 .
Patios - Sidewalks John lhle 's, Co . Rd . 30, WANTED-Out of work-out 23 Professional
NEW USTING - Approximalely 6 ~ acres in the oounly wilh a tine
New Construction - ReMorning Star Rd . Lou of of money . Need a new
bedroom l*&gt;dl and kame home. HugeiMI1 tOJitt wlhfireplaoe,d~ingil'ea •
Services
modeling - Custom Pole . good clean clothing, toys, job-Ambitious people. For
·w~h jjass ~idng &lt;blrs, ~ool and re• pa-ch. $26,900.
SYRACUSE. 011.
auto wheals. and tires. misc. interview call 614 -992 ·
Barns.
FALL PERM. SPECIAL
33B2 .
NEW USTING- Count!Y Estale- tlree y11r old bridl ranch lype home
C&amp; L Bookkeeping
·.,
Porch
Sale,
leon
Baden
1
- - - - - - -- - .;th tlree baths, up i&gt; IWe blllrooms, r~~:. roan, stx11m0' ifjcltot Many
Privlll l'llties Availlbte
Bookkeeping &amp; tax servi~
Road,leon, WV,Joe Roush, NEED EXTRA MONEY or
dher det!Jxe leatures, oo aplfOX. six acres ol Kr.lllnd cau ilr appfittlmeftt
llon.·TUII.-TIIIn. Nitn
lots of old It uff. Nov . help with college expanses? for all types of businesaes.
AND SON
Slt.·Sun. Afi.moon
11 -16th.
The West Virginia National Carol Neal 446-3B62
NEW LISTING ...; Approt fotl andone-ltel aaes ol groond,o~ house, dd
&amp;Siding
NOV. 2 lliRU DEC. 4
Chlct our sbtl prices
Guard can help. If you are a
!railer. AI k&gt;' $5.400.
Yard Sale 1604 Chatham Junior or Senior in High PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIRR-1
up.., Tues. 11vv Sot.
Long Bottom.
Ava. Gallipolis. Oh. Nov . 10 Sct\ool or a Graduate, you Call Bill Ward for appoin't:'"
Of
Pli. 992-3982
FARII- Rettrldeled tfur bedroom larm house. TwMiy-oro acres, b•nand
11o 11 .
may qualify for a $1,600 ment. Ward ' s Keyboe;d-:""~
'985-3929
For Appoittlment
other buid~. SDJded oount!y sellilg oo goo! rlld. $1.200 down
bonus or up to $4,000 446-4372 .
10-27-1 mo.
10-20-1 mo.
collage Tuition assistance.
iJlymMLII perrenl~lerest.l5yearlerm. $414.68p.- Ollrthon$36.500
plus you will have a secure
Public Sate
aplftJ. balance. caulnclfy. .
part time job after training.
&amp; Auction
Learn skills in Maintenance,
NEAR POIEIIOY'nEIIIITARY - three 01lo11 bed~cms, huee lami~
Supply, Clerical. Electron- 31 Homes for Sale
· Viny1 &amp; Aluminum
room. tul basO'nM\ nice levellql $31,900.
·
ics. Good Pay - Good
WVa State Champion A~cti ­ Troln ing-Good Benolks. The
SIDING
11011 AFFOROAI.E...; II Pert:tl'l! !xed r.teinteret wilh5percentdown.
oneer Rick Peerson . Eatetu, West Virginia National
' 11.625 percent varialje rate. · . •
·
antiques. farm. houeehold1. Guard is No Ordinary Part House for sale. lend · c~1
Llcenoed · Ohlo-WVe. 304· Tlmo Job I Call Sergeant tract, 7 rms ., b.-sement
Sales 'Representative -Biclthoes
•. , :
REALTORS:
.
773-6785 or 304· 773- Lutton 304-676-3960 or garage , workahop, get¢
-IM!tp
Trucks
.·; •
91B6.
Hanly E. Cl.llld. Jr.. GRI ............ ................................. 992-tl91
toll free In WV 1·B00-642· fumoce . 3BB ·B278.
~etropolitan
-Lo-lloY
Dotllo S. Tum• ...... ........................ ............ ...... ......... 9!12·56!12
3619
onytina.
• I
-Trencher
•~ 'Bteutlful, Custom
Auction every Fri. night It 1- - - - -- -- - - for Sale - Repoa•••••d
Mt-2111
Built Gara goa"
·-Willer
. O!flll ....................................................... ............... 9!12-22!19
thl
Hertford
Community
ATLAST
ProfoulonolmoHouse
.
3
bd.rooma,
all
Call for free
- Sewer
Center. Truckloeda of new deling in your area Includes refinished, ne• carPe'f;
estimates, 949·2101
-Gas liles
merchendiae every week . akin ~re, cOmmercials, dre- throught . Sits on 3 ocr..,!
I
f49·2NO.
·
116 Layne StrHI
Conalgmonts of now ond motica, photogtophy. Aloo Locotod on Bos~n Ad. !!19
No Suilday Calls
-~~L)OIIS
u1ed merche!1dlae elweya mele modela. Umlted eppli- torms to right P&lt;trty: Co~1
New lllnn, W. ~·· 2~26$
wolcomo.
Alchord Roynotds cations accepted. Cell Getl Bonk One of Pon\oroy ;
PH.
992-2478
.
PH. (304) 882·2.57
3·11-lfc . Auctlonoer. 276-3089 .
IUlTOI '
McHugh at 1-992-7440.
. l':T'
614-992-2133.
·
10-20-1 mo.

~~=======~P~h~-=99~~2=-2~7~7~2~===~1~0-~5-~1m~o~-~~~~~Or~94~~~2~160~t~0~/2~5/~U~c~~~~~~~===~
EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding_Co.

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

'J f
CONTRACTING

G&amp;W CO.

FREE
ESTIMATES
p 992 6011

Davis-Quickel

,_

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Clno-Go o

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-·-

Write your own ad and order by mall with this I
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get I
1
I results. Money not refundable.

I

I

1I Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,
I

IJ"'

u•

t~•

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JAMES W. SUTTLE AND
GRETA M. SUTTLE,
Plolntlffo,

SitUated m lebanon TownShip. Me1gs County, Ohto. and
more partiCularly descnbed as '
follows:
The North East quaner of the
North East quarter of Section
No Twenty-S1x {26). Town
Three 131: Range Eleven (11). '"
the Oh10 Company's Purchase.
contatntng Forty acres. berng
the same more or less. Being a
part of the same property conveyed to the said S.A. AUttencuner by W.E. Ruttencutter by
deed of record in the office of
the County Recorder of Me1gs
County. Oh•o.
and the prayer •s that \the ·
above descnbed,real estate be '
part11toned: that the interests be
set off or ordered sold 1f it cannot be part1!10ned: for an allowance of attorney fees herein
and costs.
Yo u are reqUired to answer
the Compta1nt within twenty-.
e1ght days after the last publication of th1s not1ce wh tch writ be
published once ecich week for ·
s1x consecut1ve weeks. The last
pubhcatton wil l be made on November .30. 1982. and the
twenty-etght days for. answer
w11f ·commence on that date.
In case of your fatlure to
answer or otherwise respond
as r8qulrAd by the Ohio Rules of
CiVIl Procedure. judgment by
default wrlf be rendered aga1nst
you fat the relief demanded m
th e ~om pl a•nt. •

·VI-

1

·R.
---+-+...;..+-..;..+--i

I

I

I

'I
I

;1.."'--~..!=~.!:.~~~~--~--~-~1

Dated October 26. 1982 •
larry E. Spencer
Clerk of Courts
M~1gs County
Common Pleas Court
11OJ 26. 111 I 2, 9. 16. 23. 30.
6tc ,
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S BALE
OF REAL ESTATE
·
Tho S.• o of Ohio, Moiga '

~-OHIO
NATION~L .
BANK.

.

...

HOOK-ups

Plltlnttff

ROGER EPPLE, 01 II
o.t.ndant:l
.
.•
No, 1no:i • ·
In pursuance of an Order of ~
Sale dated September. 1982 •n .
the above enutled act1on. 1wijl t
offer lor sale at public aucuon .1
at t!1e door of the COurt House '
(Continued on P8&amp;te 7) :

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

COAL
DELIVERED

AUTO TRUCK
REPAIR

====;:==-

I

HAZEL M. CURTIS, ot el ..
Delondonta.
Addreu-------Ceoe No. 1B097
NOTICE BY
1
PUBUCATION
Phon•--~-----TO: Hazel M. Cu rtiS. 1f l1v1ng.
1
whose last known address IS At
1 Print one word In each
1. long Bottom. Oh'1 o 4 57 43:
Circle
space below. Each In·
the unknown spouse. 1f any.
I filia l or group of flgurn
whose name and address are
I counts as a word. Count
Ad Wanted
unknown: the unknown he1rs.
I name and address or
dev1sees. legatees. admtniS!ra1 phone number If used.
tors, executors and -or ass1gns
of Hazel M. Cun1s. 1f de ceased.
I You'll get better results
If vou describe tully,
S.A. Ruttencuner. 1f hvmg,
1 give _
price. The Sentinel- To 15
whose address •s unknown. the
unknown spouse. •I any. whose
1
reserves edit
the or
right
to ~~~=:t~~~~=~ nam ~ and add ress are un·
1classify,
reject
known: the unknown herrs. de·
1 anv ad. Your ad will be
,.,. vrsees . l ega tees .
1put In the proper To U
adm"lnrs trators. executors andclnslflcatlon If vou'll ---.L......Ji,.;.;.;~:.:.;...:.:J:...
ass1gns of S A. Ruttencutter.
I check the proper box
These cash rates
1 orif dece
~sed .
I below.
Include dlsc9unt
1 G. Ruttencutter.
rf livtng,
address 15 unknown; the
I
I whose
I { JWanted
1 unknQINn spouse. 1! any. whose
I ( J For Sale
I name and address are unknown; the' unknown he1rs. deI ( )Announcement
17
t I For Rent
·
I VI Sees . legatee s .
executors and 18.
I oradmintstrators.
asstgns of G. Rutt encutter. if
I
19,
I deceased.
W.H. Berd1ne. 1f l1v1nQ. whose
I 1.
20.
I address
1s unknown; the un·
1 2.
21.
I known spouse.
if any, whose
1 3.
22.
I name and address are unknown; the unknown hetrs. deI 4.
23.
VI Sees . l egatees .
5.
24.
I adminiStrators. executors andor aSstQI"jS of W.H. Berdine. 'if
, '·
25.
1 deceased:
I 7.
26.
1 Jennie B. Berdine. 'if living,
address IS unknown; the
I 8.
21.
1 whose
unknown spouse. if any, whose
1 9.
28.
I name and address are uO- ·
known; the unknC~Nn heirs. de·
1 10.
29.
I vi
s e e s . Pe g a t e e S , ·
I 11 .
30.
adm rntstrators. executors and -1 12.
31 .
1 or.assigns of Jennie B. Berdine.
I -13.
32.
1 if deceased.
You are hereby notified that
you have been named Deland·
I 1.c.
33. - - - - - - - - - 1 ants in a l~al action entitled
:\ 1s.
34.
I James W. Suttle and Greta M.
Sunle. Plaintiffs. ·VS· Hazel M.
I 16.
35.
Curtis. et al.. Oefendal'\ts. This
action has t):o'ln assigned Cttse
Number 1SC. ' 7 and iS pending
Mall Thll Coupon with RtmiHince
in tbe Common Pleas .Court of ·
County, Pomeroy, Ohio
;J
Till Dally Sentinel
I Meigs
.
.
111 Court It.
I I45769.
The oblect ol the Complaint
lis a partidori action conce.rning
·oil and gas underlying the lol·
lowinq described real estate: .

I

H. L WRITESEL

FREE ESTIMATES

...

Ml- ( -

I)~ .. .... "'11

l o (I '"&lt;"U ' &amp;

ROOFING

PH. 992-66n

telepllmee u_clu"'fn . .

G-(-ly

SEPTIC
TANKS
D
STALLE
IN
CALL AL
Ph. 742-23 28

H&amp; GSEWER

~~===~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~ir==~~1iif==~
HOUSE

"••"" ' "' \ o,.

"''"'"'"'h
II VOO\&amp; nr• D ..

CALL AL
742-2328

Agency, Inc.

f:I.uifa.ed fMKe. oowr the

u .............., c.;_,,

FIREPLACES
&amp;
CHI MNEYS

Allstate·

Daily Sentinel

II Curb Inflation II
II Pay Cash for
II
II Classlfleds and II
SaveJ II
I
II

'I

-TOM HOSKINS

r

~---------·~····~·------------------------------------~
' ,------------~---------I

I

20 Y•s [xpeftenct

James Keesee

for

,,.,.,~,

" .. ......,,.,. A.,..o

free Es .
t1mates

insurance

)\
10 &amp; . .. [ ... .. .... ~1&lt;0

sited Mr. a nd Mrs. Garland
Caldwell.
Alfred Youth hl!ld a costume
party on Halloween Eve.
Charles Woode, Dayton, returned
after a vlslt In the community. He
stayed at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Arihur Atherton. he visited hJs wife,
Helen, at the Kimes Convalescent
Home, Athens.- Mrs. Wllber (Nellie) Parker.

•Insulation •Storm Doors
•Storm Windows •Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

AND HOME MAINTENANCE
' Roolin• ololilypes
Rtsksentill &amp;.
Comm-111
' Remodel"" ...
' Storm wi~ows &amp; Doon
FREE ESTIMATES

15% OFF
ON PERMANENTS
Mon.-Tues.·Wed.
Now thru Dec. 31
KAYS BEAUTY SALON
169 N.. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992·2n5
We Honor Gokten Buckeye
lArds Except on P.-m.
Specials.
11·8-1 mo.-

..

Which kind
of health

1\ l w•"".,.~- ....

' • .,. "~ •• • ,,..,a'" •••• ., ,.,

I PI.O&gt;io&lt;

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM SIDING

Cos;~P~~~~•ses

==--~

lOIIv••nt"O- " '"'''

VALLEY
ROOFING

0

nGrcood Fsor

Help Wanted

~==========t====I:0:-2:0-:I:m:o:.pd==t====9-=1=7~-2~~~jt::~;;~;:~~=~

O r Wrtt. D~•IY S...ltMI (lln of .... Otpt
I I I Court Sl , P~-Y · Oflo•4SI•'

-====
n _ , ,.L.,.n

J&amp;L B•·QWN
I,;
INSULATION

11

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

PHONE 992-2156

l•

Alfred
Social Notes

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk It over
In her column If you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this ne'"'s~18IM!r.

~~~

..The

State Fair medallion.
Tiu;e p-esent enjoyod a wtener roast and
other outdoor games aM actlvtlles.
An.endlng besides these named were Eva
Howard, adviser, Marc Howard, and Kevtn
Stanley.

~;::====~===:!=========:;,r====;~~===llr-::::;:;:;;;:~;:==n
OHIO
B' Thi Ad

COMPLETE HOME
MAINTENANCE

Aruron~tsw~~fur~ r--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Meigs County correspondence
Edith Harper, and Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Harmon to vlslt Maurice
West at Columbus.
Nina Robinson and Thelma Henderson attended the School ot Religion a t Chester and studied
Revelation.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brooks celebrated their own Kevin' s birthday
with a hayride and party.
Mr. and Mrs. Charl:&gt;s Caldwell,
Carrie and Crlssy, Columbus, vi-

Cha mpion s, racing with his
crutches and braces.
The determination and lndepend-·
ence that Michael has always
shown ass ured me that he will go
far, and nothing will stand h• his
way. I've seen this same courage in
many other so-called "hand!·
capped" children. Not one of them
wants to be pitied or pampered.
Michael Is a first-grader doing
third-grade work. I'm sure God
makes up for what he takes away
by giving each child a special gift.
They seem to live by the old saying,
"If life hands you a lemon, use It to
open a fruit stand. " - PROUD
PARENTS OF MICHAEL

Meigs Association
for Retarded Citizens

I ( tr G ot "'• ~•&gt; IN•• .~ oct••"&lt;•"l
)C.oO ot
~ oct••"' ' '

Mrs. Carol McLaughlin hs returned from Summervllle, S.C.,
where she visited her 9:J n and
daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Duane McLaughlin and famil y.
Duane Is stationed with the U. S.
Navy In Charleston, S.C.
Arriving here Saturday was
Kevln McLaughlin and his wife.
Terry, daughter of Ruth and Ken·
neth Yeauger. Kevin has been discharged from the U.S. Marines.
On Thur.;day, Mrs. McLaughJn
will enter Holzer Medical Center for
treatment and possible surgery .

named
County.
Pomeroy.
Ohro.onrn thSaturday
e abovr
the 20th day ol NovPmber
1982. at 1000·o·clock. AM
the lo llow•n~ descnbed 1eal
estate. Sl\uat o 1n th e Coun ty o l
Me•gs
and hrp
StalQe] of
Oh10 !tHNtt
and '"
lhf!
rowns
(hf'S!PI
S• tuate •n !he Townsh•n of
Cheste•. •n tre Conmv of Me'n'
and Sta tf&gt; n l Oh10 and furtllf' r
bonndecl anrf rlesc nlwcf "''
follows
Beq•nn1oo
"' the SouthweSI
01
cocnec
'"
Town No 3Sert•on
AanrwNo
No 35
12 ot
t h~ Ohro Comrilny·s Pur r h.J &lt;;!'
thence runnu1q Nonh on t h,:&gt;
Wf&gt;st llnr. at si11 rl SPc!IOn
No
35 a d1stanr:P of 64 1 . rod&lt;;

nominating committee. The committee wlll report on new officers for
the coming year on Dec. l.
The hostess served cheesestlcks,
candy, cooliles and coffee.

.Meigs County and area 4-H news
sited the Ct?nter of Sclenct&gt; and Industry

constitutes a sexual offense and
nuns are never gullty of such
things. How dare you print such a
lettr! - DISGUSTED WITH YOU
DEAR DIS:
The letter was well documented.
Never say " never," friend. - H.

Business Senices

(Continued from page 6)
rn

LAFF·A·DAY

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVtCE

DJ's TRADING
POST

985-356f
Makes

FREE

INTERNATIONAL
HARVESTER
PARTS

ESTIMATES

~========~~===-------t----------1
ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

BOGGS

SALES SERVICE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

- - - -- -

E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

1-------------...:_+-------------+-----------j

SKATE-A-WAY
OPEN
WED., FRI., SAT.

FOR THE
BOTH OF YOU
SlYLIN.GSALON

7:30-10:00

20% OFF

ALL PERMS

PliO~~

Glen A:--Roush

Life

.-r,._. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

, Insurance
Company ,

[B.'

ijl

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Jt

CHARLES SAYRE

Roofing

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

Co.

�.•

.,
The Oqily Sentinel
31 Homes. for Sale

"

They'll Do It Every Time

8 roo m house. two lots. very
goo d locatio n . 680 South
2nd .. Middleport . $10,500 .
Ca ll 614 -992 -260 2.
3

or 4 bedroom hou se f or

sale or rent with option . 1 1/ 2
baths, full basement . 1 acre .
Fairview subd ivi sio n .

614 -99 2 - 2 0 64 o r 614 992 -5950 .
6 room hou se. full base m e nt , separate two car

garage. 1 . 3 ac re lot . Rose
Hill. P o m e r oy . Forties .
Ph one:614-678-25 13 .
HOUSE M ea d owb r ook
Additi o n . 3 bedrooms.
family room with fir ep alce .

~ .

~

304-676-1542 .
LOVELY 3 bed •oom . well
insulated . full base ment.
fenced b ac k yard , k ou t
buildin g, cur ti ans includ ed .
priced r e du ced $7 , 000 .
Must se e t o app r ec iate .
304-675-4338 .
FOR sa le or rent , 4 roo m
house . on Chest nut Ridge .
larg e lot . $ 14 .000 or rent
S1 25 . a month. S75 . dep os it . ph one af t er 3 p.m ..
304-675-7689 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOME S . USED · CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL446 -7572 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI. WEST , GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .
USED MOBILE HOME .
576 -27 11 .
1 4x70 HILLC REST m ob ile
ho m e , 2 bedroom . all gas .
kitchtn furni shed. exce llent
conditio n·, $10.000 . Own er
financing ava il able. 304 -

2 73-5506 .

34

Business
Buildings

M ode rn brick apt . buil ding .

2 0 Grape St.. Gallipolis . 4
a pt s . . stea m h eat . oil
furn a n ce . 2 ca r ga r age
(brick) . Could be used for
o ffice s pace o r eas il y
converted to 4 condo uni ts .
Price $140 ,000 firm . Call
446-9637 after 5 o00 PM .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
For sa le one and half acres
mo re or less, approx im ately
600 ft road fr o ntag e on
Co ra -C enterpoint Rd . near
C e nt e rp oin t. $3 ,000 .00
Ph one 682-6944 .
Ce m e ntary plot . 4 si t es .
Ohio Vall e y M e m o r y
Gardens. Call after 4 or on
weekend s 614-245-9533
19 ac res close to Ches ter.
Bea utiful wooded homesit e.
Consider lease purchase or
la nd con tra c t . $12,000 .
6 14-985-4321 .
Two acre lot s-150 ft . road
frontage . city wate r, behind
84 lumber. Ca ll 304-675 6873 o r 675 -36 18 .
1 .027 ac re pl ot on 8 Mil e
Rd . with roofe d basement .
Unfini s he d in s id e . Drill ed
well. $15 .000 or best off er.
Call 304-675 -6395 .
6 1f2 ACRES. Harri so n Town s hip, Gallia County, 6 mil es
out on At . 775 , from Galli polis. S4.000. 304 -882 2428 after 5 .

eentals
41

Houses for Rent

Small furni shed house. 1 or
2 adults onl y. Ca ll 446 0338 .
5 room house &amp; bath , nice
gard en space. loca ted 110
4th Av e ., Gallip olis . Ca ll
446 -3870 .
Furn is h ed h o u u 2 bdr ..
$195 . w a t e r p ai d . 241
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 after 7PM .
Hou se f o r re nt in Cro wn
City . Call 614 -367-0242 .
1816 Chatham Av e ., Galli poli s . 2 bdr . unfurnished .
Ideal f o r e ld e rly co upl e .
$175 mo . deposit S175 .
Call 513 -434-4368
2 or 3 bdr. farm home. 4 mi .
from town . garden spots
availabl e . sec . depo s it
requir e d . Ca ll 446 -0648 .
after 6 .
1 mile below Eureka 2 bdr.,
beth. $160 per mo . Call
614· 643·2916.

'

'

Newly remodeled . unfurnilhed. 2 bedroom ho~se . 3
miles back of Add•son .
Security deposit and references required . Call 4463776.
very nice two bedroom
email houte in Add,iton .
reference• • dlpos•t re ~
quired . Terms negotiable.
Call 1 ·
614-592-4350.
2 or 3 bedroom house ,
excellent condition and
neighborhood. 2 bedroom
epertm41nt. excellent c~ndl·
tlon. reference requ~red.
304-87&amp;-1882.

.;11-9_

I\.\ '

ce ntral air , basement. phone

I

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&gt;;j, ~

~

~

~~ ~

=

t'f, ·

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41

Houses for Rent

Rent or lease with option to
buy , immediate possesston .
Nea r Holzer. $350 monthly .
Ce ll 614-367-7260 .
2 bdi". house in city , deposit
required. S225 per mo ., Call
Th e Wi se m a n Agen c y ,
446-3643.
Pomeroy -2 bd .room unfur nish ed house . $195 . mo .
Security deposit . S1 00. plus
utiliti es. After 6 -call 614992 -2288.
Hou se for rent . Four
bd .room . full basement, fuel
oil. hea t with wood burner .
S200 . per month . Call
614-992 -7724 after 4 a .m .
Close to Meigs High school.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished 2 bdr . mobile
hom e in Crown . City . Ca ll
614-256-6520 .
5 hou se trailer, and 1 trailer
lot . Call446 -1052 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished 3 r. private bath,
845 2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis .
R_ef.• preferred . Call 4462215 .
Small furnished effiency, 1
professional type male only.
Center air &amp; heat. Call 4460338 .
2nd floor furnished effi ciency apt. Apt . 4 , 729 2nd
Ave. Adults only. 446-0967.
Hou ses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr. apartments for rent . HUD pro gram available . A-One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager, Real tor. Call 304-676-6104 or
675-6386 .
Nicely furnis hed mobile
home , central air, 1 mile
below city overlooking river ,
aduhs only . Call446-0338 .
First floor unfurnished apart ment . Inquire at 631 4th
Ave ., Gallipolis .
Furnished Apt., 1 BA , 243
Jack s on Pike. 6225, utilities
paid. Adults. 446-4416 af ter 7 p.m .

For sa le or rent very reasona ble, total electric, 1 mi . ba ck Furnished efficiency 5175.
qf Evergreen. Call614-446- Utiliti es pd. 920 4th Ave ..
Gallipolis. Adults. Call 446 9170.
4416 after 7PM .
2 bdr . fully furni s he d, aduhs
Furnished apartment . All
only . Call446-4110 .
utilities paid . Adults on ly .
Two bedroom 12 x65 ft . Older couple preferred. Call
hous e tr ailer. gas &amp; free wa· 446 -9623.
te r. Adults prefe rred . Ca ll
4 rm turn ., apt., adutts only,
446-2471 .
no pets. Call446-1945 .
2 bedroom trailer . Rea l ni ce,
adults only. Brown 's Trailer Garage apt .. furnished, 29'h
Parit . Minersv~l e . 614-992- Neil Ave., Gallipolis. $230,
utilities pd. 1 bdr . Call 4463324 .
4416 after 7PM .
2 bedroo m furnished . Adult s
preferred . No pets . Deposit 2 bdr. apartment, Qewly remodeled. 12 State St., Gallipo required . 614-992 -2749 .
li s park front. $200. Call
3 bedroom nicely furnished . 446 -3919 .
Tota l electric . Nice location .
POMEROY -2 bedroom un 614-992 -3955.
furnished apt .. S160. 2 bed 3 bd .room trail er for rent . room ho use $1 B5. Deposit
Washer and dryer . $150. $100. Call614 -992-2288 .
month . 614-992-2777 .
1 bd.room Apt . Unfurnished.
3 bedroom Mobile Home. Darwin area. 614-992 Appro ximate ly 5 miles from 2807 after 5 p.m . Before 5
Pomeroy or Middleport. AI. ca ll 304-773-5118 .
143 . 614-992 -5858 .
Apartm e nts . 304 -675 For rent -Trailer , two 5548 .
bd .rooms. level lot. garden
spa ce. ga rage , Syracuse, APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, houses . Pt . Pleasant
Ohio . 614-992 -2282 .
and Gallipoli s. 614-446 TWO mobile homes. garage 8221 or 614-246 -9484 .
apartment, 5 minutes from
town on At. 2. call after 6 Unfurni shed apartm8nt s for
rent . Call Automotive
p.m .. 304-675 -6277 .
- - - - - - - psOS Supply, 8 till 6 , 304-676btwo bedrotm mobile home. 2218. 304-676-6753 .
Kitchen turnishel , nice &amp;
clean . $185 . plus utilities .
Married couples only, one
sma ll child accepted , refer - 46 Space for Rent
ences. 304-675-1076.
TWO bedroom mobile home.
Kitchen furnished . ntce &amp;:
clean . S210 . Gas , sewer &amp;
water paid . Married couples
on ly One small child ac ce pted, referen ces. 304675-1076 .
TRAILER space for rent in
Mason. located on Horton
St. Phone anytime. 304773 -6160.

43 Farms for Rent
Secluded, mini farm. all
fenced. remodel farm home ,
with 4 bedr., $300 per mo .
Cleland Raahy 992-2269 .
For rent-Farm home .6
room s, bath . Oil heat. hot &amp;
cold water. Nice lawn, big
garden . Storage room.
chicken house S. garage .
s 136. mo. Raine Rd .1 . 614949-2889 . Avaii .Dec .111.

Trailer lot Addison -Bulaville
rd . Call 446-4736 or 4464265 .
Trailer space for ,·ant in cludes water &amp; garage, $65
mo . Call 614. 245-6486 or
446 -4954.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Parit , Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . large lots . Call
992 -7479 .
Trailer lot for rent 3 miles
from Chester on Scout
Camp Rd. 986-3979 .

1- - - - - - - - - - Merehaedlae
51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTIONS. FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olive St., Gallipolis . King coal &amp; wood
heaters with fan 8469, sot
boK spring &amp; amattress
44
Apartment
8100. lirm 8120 , sofafor Rent
loveaeat &amp; chair $199,1ove
seats 8 70. new coal &amp; wood
IN Middleport , 2 room effi - heaters 11 low •• $399 with
ciency apartment, 304-882 - btowars. uted coel S. wood
heaters, new dinet seta 875
2566 or 614-992-7206 .
&amp; up, relrlgeratora. ranges,
APARTMENT, 6 rooms, bunk beds complota e11o.
yard &amp; basement, ground bunkiaa mattrouu UO,
floor . 304 - 676 - 7641 chnta, dreuara, TV' s. Call
446· 3169.
evenings.
ONE bedroom apertmWit In
Henderson, 304-875-1972 .

FURNISHED. 3 room apartment. profe11ionel male or
married working couple. No
children or pets. 304-676·
3788 .
T
A
wo ""l room apartments,
e126 month, efliclency
epertment 860 per month, 1
pereon. rat•ence requi'ed,
304' 876-2948.

•
1t h tlmd elficloncy cottoge,
All electric home w
e120 _month. e110 depoolf,
ge rage. • n d fu ll·•lzed no peta, reference requhd,
besamen,t , 1250 • month. 304· 773-5944.
Phone 304-876-3217.
J_ _.;__ _ _ _ __

I

Ohio

51 Household Goods

54 Misc . Merchandise

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa , chair , rocker , otto·
man , 3 tables, (utra heavy
by Frontier). t686 . Sofa .
chair and loveseat , $276 .
Sofas and chairt pdced from
$286 . to 8896. Tables, 838
and up to $125 . Hide- abed s,$ 440 . and up to
$626 ., queen size, 6380 .
Re cliners, $176 . to S326 ..
Lamps from t18 . to S66 . 6
pc . dinette s from $79 .. to
8386. 7 pc .. 8189 . and up .
Wood table wtth six chairs
8396. to 8660. Desk $110 .
Hutches. $300. end $650 ..
maple or pine finis h. Bed room suites - Ba ssett
Cherry, S795. Bunk bed
complete with mattr esses.
8260. and up to 8396 . Baby
bed s. $99 . Mattre sses or
box springs, full or twin ,
$68 .. firm , 868 . and $78 .
Queen sets. $195 . 4 dr .
chests. $42 . 6 dr . chests ,
S54. Bed frames. $20 .and
$26 ., 10gun - Guncabinets.
S360 .. dinette chairs $20 .

Call Robert Harper for
Gin se ng and Yellowroot
prices. 304-676-1293.

Fir e wood , S100. Dump
truck lo ad. Delivered . Call
614-388-9687.

TRS -80. 4K Radio Shack
co mputer , $300 . phone
614-992-6783.

Two Canvas Jeep tops, t76
each . 304-676 -6646.

BEAGLE pups, 6 weeks old,
will make good hunters .
840 .00 each, 304-676 6146 .

55 Building Supplies
Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows , lintels . etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande , 0 . Call
614-246-6121 .

77

57

Musical

· 6 :30
CAPTAN EASY

Auto Repair

58

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

59 For Sale or Trade
73 CAT D-6 96J Hyd St
blade with tilt ROPS
CAT.No. 55 winch. Re paired S. painted . Call
614-286-4646. 6-7 p.m.

-

1978 Cutlau Sup.,me V-6
engine. 83800. 882-3180.

F S. K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 676-1331 .

livestock

1973 Buick Electra 226 .
eKcellent condition, inside
and out. Must see to appreciate. 81,876. Call 304773· 6944.

RINGLE 'S SERVICE expe·
danced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpenter, electrician. mason. Call
304-676-2088 or 6764660.

Beagle rabbitt dog . 1 yr. old .
Call 446-1943 .

Reg . Quarter horse , bfoodmare, 10 yr. old, 8860. Call
446-2684.

1970 VW Sedan, 4 apaed,
motor and body both in good
condition, 8660. 304-8963664.

Be autifu I male , Siamese
kitten . 3 mos . old . Call
446-7432.

Freezer Beef·grain fed . 700
to 1200 lb. 614-949-2194 .

72

AKC REg . English 8ulldog
puppies . Champion blood
lines, $500 to $800. Call
614-698-8671 .

Hydraulic lift for tail gate of
truck . Call 614-388-9909 .

Old Englis Game Bantams 6
varieties . Call after 5 :30
PM . 614-379-2608.

Turkeys fo• sa le . Ca ll
614-256-6842.
Full length black rabbit fur
coat. axe. cond .. S100. Call
614-388-9819 .

Two Beagles , 304-6
3626 .

AKC Registered Doberman
pups, black and rust, two
females , 8 weeks old . Call
304-458-1613 .

Fuel Chief 85.000 BTU , oil
fumance . Call 446-2757 .
GAs floor furnance S50,
65,000 BTU Siegler gas wall
fumance $75. Call 614367-0317 or 614 -367·
7697.

57

Registered Quarter Horse.
Also grade. Saddles. bridles.
winter hone blankets .
Wellem boots. 614-6983290.

'f; -

4 year old male registered
blue -tick coon hound , for
more information, phone
304-882-2420.

Case Knife Special Case XX
sod buster, stainless steel
lo ck blade, list price $31 .95,
sale price $18 .75 . Spring
Valle y Trading Co .. Spring
Valley Plaza , 446 -8026 .

63

64

Harvest special whole
shelled corn 86.00 per 100
lb . your sacks . $6 .76 par
sacked . Morgan Woodlawn
Farm, Rt . 36. Pliny, WV .
304-676-2276.

Traewpuawclgn

Musical
Instruments

We will MEET or BEAT any
legitimate price your receive
on any new piano or organ .
BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO .,
61 Court St .. Galllpois. Call
446-0687.

Firewood, $36. truck load .
S65 . a cord. Split and
delivered. 61-4-843-3603.

lowery Organ, 2 keyboards.
foot pedals, cas•ne re corder. and different accompanyments . Cell after 4 or
on week-ends 614· 2469633.

For sa le - Hard wood , split
and delivered. $36. 614992 -7237.
For sa le -used Ditch Witch
4010 trencher and used
John Deere back hoe .
1-614-694-7842.

Upright piano, New York
grand , 8126. Call 446·
4177altor6 .

Hoover portable washer$76 . Westing houte auto ~
matic waaher-$86. Electric
dryer . 866 . 614· 742-2362.

Conn Trombone. callaHer 4
on Monday~Friday , ~04 ·
773-9606.

Trucks for Sale

1961 F· 600Ford16ft. flat .
Call 446-2757.
1948 Chevy Pick-up. 360
engine, 3 speed, good cond .
614-992-7332.
1952 Chevy truck, 81200
or tl'lldl for car, equal value.
304·458·1926 .
1968 International truck,
automatic, radio and heater.
body and engine. in excellent condition, $600 .
304-895-3654.

Autos for Sale

For sale 1979 Ford Fiesta
excellent shape, 4 spd .. 4
cyl. Call 448· 9769 alter
6PM .

73

Vans

1980 VW Vanagon , 4 spd,
auKII . heater, good gas
mileage , 26,000 actual
miles. 86,000. Call 614246-9182 .

1973 VW Baetla, ex. cond.
Call 614-245·9182.

1977 Jeep Wagoneer,
auto .. PS . PB. 4 wheel
drive . , Quadra track,
82.900 . Call 446 -4670
alter 6:30.

75 Corvette P S, PB. AC ,
Auto, T·top, AM-FM radio,
new tires. 86 , 000. Call
614-387-0894.

1978 CJ ·7 auto .. PS. PB, 4
wheel drive .. Ouadre track,
83.900. Call 446-4570
after 6 :30.

1970BuickleSabrebodyis
In lair con d .. no rull. engine
d
1
d Akl
goo
con · 1 ng
1350.runn
Call ng
446-3077.

1979 Jaep· CJ-6, 13.500.
614· 742· 2238.
76 Dodge Von , 6 cyl. auto.
63 Ford engine . 6 cyl.
standord . Cheap. 614·9492266.

1----------.l...---------.j
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OVE~
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(4

I

.

BORN LOSER

LOJEl.'/1 19l1fiH IT
~10~

7:30

B€toiJiA. F~JL'/

8 :00

.,J GUE55 THE REAL ESTATE

LOOKS LIKE

PEOPLE RE!ffE() THE
GATEHOUGE TO HELP PAY

50MEONE'5
OUT IN TH'

THE TIIKES WHILE I WA5
... UM •• Fllfl..llfCIIILLY[

'lARD, 'OAOOY"

~IIIUl/155£0...

AI.I. EY OOP

rhas no riqht
to be sittin'
in this chair!

doesn't
know
beans
'bout bein'
a ma4or!

ROOFING. repair or installation . Building &amp; remodelin·
g. interior or BKtBrior. Free
e&amp;timates. 304-676-2440.

11 :00 U
IF LISA COOPER 15
WE SHOULD, BUT
ORVILLE'S '5PY/' WHY WINNIE'S AFRAID
DON'T WE JUST
IT MIGHT BlOW
FIRE HER?
HER COVER,

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3808 or 446 4477

---~-- ·
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

'

SEWING Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales S. Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

:;;:=:::;==;:::;::::::=85 General Hauling ;
'1
WATER

JONES BOY$
SERVICE. Cell 614-367·
? 471 or 614-367-0691 .

Nead ,omethlng haulad
•way or something moved?
We'll do k. C.ll448·3169or
814-.2 11· 1967 alter 6 .
Now Ha,..tlng house cool.
,lump or_!l okar ·up to Jl ton.
top .,u, 1111 dirt. •

u,....,.,

c•1 11~4-387 - 7101 .

We!., heu'ling . Cistern.
w.-o . etc. ,John Bloke .
8t..II82·BII8.
.

'

Jl~8 Wate~lco. Cell'

JIM L8nilf,

.

•739'1,

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

-::::;--:r:-::-:---~-

87

Me or
Leave Me•
(}) Tic Toe Dough
(!) Future Sport
(I) Carol Burnett
(I) Ill (I) ® G ® News
Cil Newo/Sporta/Waather
(I) &lt;Ill 3 ·2· 1, Contact
II Cil Cil NBC Newa
Cil Rascal Dazzle This
compilation of film clips
catche_s, the 'little Rascals '
at the1r best. Narrated by
Jerry lewis.
(}) MOVIE: ' Riot In Cell
Block 11'
(!) ESPN Sportsforum
(I) Bob Newhart Show
(I) Ill CBI ABC News
Ill (I) ® CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
&lt;Ill Over Easy
II Cil P.M. Magazine
(!) Thio Weak In The
NBA
(I) Gomer Pyle
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Cil Charlie' 1 Angels
Ill (I) Tic lac Dough
(]) (jj) MacNeil-lehrer
Report
®News
Ill CBI People's Court
II Cil ®You Asked For
It
(!) ESPN Sports Center
(I) Andy Griffith
(I) Ill (I) Family Feud
(]) Business Report
&lt;Ill This Old Housa
Ill CBI Entertainment
Tonight
U Cil Cil Father Murphy
One of the orphans is kidnapped in an attempt to
s top her from claiming her
inheritance. (60 min.)
Cil MOVIE: 'Ice C.stles'
Cil MOVIE: 'Southern
Comfort•
(})I Spy
(!) NCAA Football: Houston at Texas
~
(I) MOVIE: 'The Moun tain·
(I) Ill ® Happy Days A
former crybaby holds a
chi ldhood grudge against
Fonzie. !Closed Captioned)
Ill (I) ® MOVIE:
'Scarlet Pimpernel'
(]) (jj) Nova 'Here's Look ing at You. Kid .' Tonight' s
program tells the story of a
young boy's fight to recover from severe burns .
160 min .) !Closed Cap-

tioned!
(I) Gl ® Laverne &amp;
Shirley laverne decides to
become a Playboy Bunny.
Guest starring Hugh Hefner
and Carrie Fisher: !Closed
Captioned!
9 :00 U Cil Cil Gavilan Gavilan
and an associate are taken
hostage by modern-day
pirates. (60 min .l
(]) 700 Club
(I)
01 ® Three's
Company Janet and Terri
help Jack cook up a recipe
to salvage his chance to
operate his own restaurant .
(]) (jj) Myateryl 'The Head
of Ceasar.' Father Brown
comes to the aid of a
woman who has s tolen a
priceless coin. (60 min.)
)Closed Captioned)
9:30 (]) Ill ® 9 to 5
10:00 U Cil Cil St. Elsewhere
Dr. Morrison 's feelings are
in conflict when he mus t
treat a terrorist. (60 min .)
Cil MOVIE: 'So Fine'
Cil MOVIE: ' Ordinary
People'
(I) Gl CBI Hart to Hart
(]) Firing Une
. &lt;Ill Newawatch
10:15 (I) TBS Evening News
10:30 (}) Star Time
(jj) Inside Washington
Mark Shields hos ts thi s
look at behind the scenes
in the nation 's capital.

PAINTING Interior &amp; exterior, free estimates, 304·
676-1128 .

84

II Cil Newecenter
Cil MOVIE: ' Love

•

Upholstery. '
'
---------'

TRISTATE
'
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
J
11111 Soc. Aw~._. Getilpolla. •
441·7833 or 4-1133. • .

-:::=-:::-:----'-&gt;-___;·_.

MOWREY I Upholetory Rt " '
1 BoJI 124, Pt. Piouent' •
304·171·4114.
•

I OATAR
I I I

ITECKOPI

(]

I KJ

WHAT THOSE TH IN6S
THAT HIT THE
AC.TORS

MAYLIF

(J

Answer here:
Yeslerday·s

II

I

j

IT FEELS
50 GOOD
AND
COMFORTING/

Cil Newacenter

(!) ESPN Sports Center
(I) Ill (I) ® ID (l2i News

Cil News/Sports/Weather
(]) Dave Allen at Large
11 :16 (I) All In the Family
11:30 U Cil Cil Tonight Show
Johnny is joined by Ricky
Schroder and Tony Tra bert. 160 min.)
Cil MOVIE: 'True Confessions'
(}) Another lile
(I) Benny Hill Show
Ill (]) ® Quincy
(I) PBS Late Night
01 ~ Nighttine
11 :45 (I) MOVIE: 'The Trap '
12:00 (}) Bums &amp; Allen
(!) NCAA Football: LSU
at Alabama
(]) Nightline
® MOVIE: ' How the
West Was Won'
Ill ~ Last Word
12:16 Cil MOVIE: 'Emily'
12:30 tJ (I) (!) Late Night with
David Letterman David is
joined by Jay Leno . (60
min.l
(}) Jack Benny Show
(I) Last Word
Ill (]) MOVIE: ' McMillan
&amp; Wife: The Fine Art ol
Staying Alive'
(]) Captioned ABC News
1 :00 ' (}) I Married Joan
• CBI Nowa
1:15 (])MOVIE: 'Cutte,. Way'
1 :30 II
(I)
NBC
Newt
Overnight
(}) My little Margia
(I) ,MOVIE: 'Under the
Red Rpba·
(!) Newa/Sign Off
•
CB1 CNN Haedllne
Newa
·
1 :46 (J) MOVIE: 'Are You In
the Hob10 Alone?'
2:00 (}) Bllchelor Father
'Ill (I) ® CBS News
Nlghtwatch
2:30 (J) Ufe of Rllay
(!) ESPN Sports Center
3:00 Cil MOVIE; ' Petemlty'
(I) 700 Club
3:16 (J) MOVIE: •Southern

WER:E.

Now arrange the circled leners to
form tbe surprise answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon

t I I I ) ATTHE r I I I)

(Answers lomorrow)
Jumbles: DOGMA MOURN BUTION ADR OIT
Answer· Fl')wers may be appropri ate when the
rc 1ance Is lhls - A " BUDDING" ONE

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby arid James Jacoby

The ARCH of triumph
contract?
Now put yourself in the
East seat for today . Your
partner leads the deuce of
diamonds and your ace tops
dummy's king.
Ana lysis shows thai your
partner has led fourth best

NOR Tit
l l-9-82
+ 10 53
'10 8 6 4
t K7
+ K Q J 10
WEST
EAST
+Q 9l
+J76 2
' J 93
tJ 8 5 2
t AQI 0 4
+9 6543
+ As

so dec lar er
dia monds.

'5

~ore

SOUTH
+ AK8
' AK Q 7 2
t 963

than a minimum open-

Co unt of your winners
show s that yo u hold three.

Where can a fourth winner
come from?

Vulnerable. East -West
Dealero South
:" iortb

thr ee

mg.

+12
West

has

Revie w of the bidding
indi cates that South holds

If your partner hold s th e
spade ki ng a spade shift Wi ll
be your best play. Sti ll 1t
looks as if So uth . wh o has

E.&gt; I

no th1 ng in di amonds or

Pass
Pass
Pass

cl ubs. is lik ely to hold both
to p spa des
~ow

8:30

ADVANCED Seamleu
Gutter - Doors . Offering
continua&amp; guttering, seamleiS siding, roofing. garage
doors. free estimates·.
614-698, 8206.

&amp; 4 W . O.

7:00

AMERICAH5
PRISONER!

You did
fine at the
swearinq-in!

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes .
Pumps Sales and Service .
304-895-3802.

82

71

Firewood for sale S 35 a
load. Call614-367 -2644.

Hay &amp; Grain

TAI&lt;ETHE~

Autos for Sale

1976 Plymouth 4dr Sedln,
PS. AC. auto. Omnl trona·
mission parts. Call 4481978 JEEP CJ 7 , herd top,
1216 .
-'-- - - - - - - - - 304· 675· 3123.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoopl~ 1981 Dodge Arias K Cor,
front wheat drive. bucket
J~~~;.}..
· ON~C~E0
....._
1e1U, maroon interior and 74 Mot~rcyclei
1?. _,.,,._,/ i~ :·~ ~~i· ~E Wflo,~
ro~·i 5WEP..i IT!'- exterior. 4 spd. men'ual
1~1""
•oUT! I KE.I&lt;c
l PON'T WP..Ni NO
tren1mlaaion, AM r•dio .
OF Coy~·
MORE F/'.ii!.WEI&gt;iTt~ER Ulke over balonco owed. Cell
1974 Yomeho Enduro dirt
~INVE'~iOR~ Wl\0
814·2811·1409 efler ISPM.
bike. ·2, 900 mllot: Cell
~~~~NOT '-''"' '~"" t\1
"EI'1'~E WINNIN:S
458· 1897.
M ~
11\!:N WIMP OUT
19711 Mustang 4 cyl ..
standerd. 2 dr., hetchback, 19711 su~ukl 550 has belin
good tlr11, exo. cond., ro~ked • .meke ollor. Celt
GOOD
USED
APPLIANCES
:~~:~oX~'pf""
~~...
'&gt;o:
1EMI.OPq~~&gt;.!
RY
- waahe ... dryers, mrlgera·
'"
••; .:.•
.,.,
48.000 · "'llu, uklng 458-1887.
tors, rengoa. Skegga Ap· I r
/
"-e1.400. Cell 814·388·
pllancea. Uppar Rlvar Rd..
· ·~z~~~;.
v
·
1 ,.,.
· 8808.
bulde Stone Crest Motet. ._ ~
h "'-;...
76
Boata arid
448·7388.
1'-"'
I'
I '
1877 Corvette. excellent
Moton for Sele
condition. T·top •. lota of
II ','"',
1
Gene ret Electric wether &amp; ,11
~ •
ex"""· prlco reducied lrom --~.=---------dryai, e100 each. Whirlpool 1
prevlouo lilting. Coli 814·
.
w~thor &amp; dryar, eso eech.
~
· 388·8773.
187118••• Traclter 111. Uke ·
---------....:...·--~ - ~~· · big motor, n . . do
Guarenteed 30 dey . Cell .
'
(I r 1
1/
"
1875 Chevrolet Mellbu, ..pa~r. 114·1111·4338 lifter
61-4·258·1207.
,• ''
350, otd. ; Uoo or b .. t I p.m.
.
olfer. Calll14· 387·0317.
12-I•Kingwlth-..
11181 Cutleu Supreme !!!.'.•-·~~~·e~d holder end
DIHel '!'hl! ·-rythlng. Wll 11_.on-:--:·-r.,.
on I new turtle
conoid• older car ••- trade l ·:!tuo~~~ I~
er. Cell
ln. 1114·742·2411.
··~·

l;

6 :00

Su nrooh installed from
8226 . Auto Trim Cent or,
446-1968.
--------Byerly and Felts Automatic
1979 AMC Spirit . 36 ,000 Transmission . Rebuilt or
mil~ • - EKe . cond . Asking
eKchanged. All work guaran 83,200. 614-949-2696.
teed. reasonbla prices. Call
446-6639.
1977 Skytarl&lt;. 305 V-8, p.a ..
p.b.. automatic, positraction rear end. no rust. good
interior. 82,600 . Call
lee love
614· 247-3931 alter 4 p.m.
letart Falla.
81
Home
76 Ford Granada, &amp;tick shift.
Improvements
6 cyl., good tires . good
shapa. t860 . Also 77 Ford
Granade. 4 speed. 6 cyl. ,
good cond .. 81460. 614- STUCCO PLASTERING teKtured ceilings commer742·2362.
cial and residential. free
HARTS Used Cars, Now a&amp;timates. Call 614-266Haven West Virginia . Over 1182 .
20 less eKpansive cars In
stock .
PAINTING - interior and
uterior, plumbing, roofing ,
JEEPS. Cart. Trucks under some remodeling . 20 yrs .
8100 avaMabla at local gov't .. p. Call 614-388 -9662.
sales In yO'Ur area . Call
(refundable) 1 -714-569 - Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout0241 ext. 1866 for direc - ing . 30 years eKper~ence , ·
tory on how to purchase . 24
specializing in built up roof .
hrs.
Call 614 - 388 - 9622 or
614-388-9857.
1971 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill,
V- 8. automatic. radio , CAPTAIN STEEMER Ca!'Pe1
power steering , power Cleaning featured by Halfolt
brakes. air conditioning , Breathers Custom Cerputs.
304-882-2428 .
Free estimates . Call 446·
2107.
1977 SKYLARK 306 V-8,
power steering . power Masonary work . Logue
brakes, automatic. positrac· Contracting, At. 1, Ewing tion. no rust. good interior. ton . Call 614· 388-9939,
82600. Call614· 247-3931
altar 4 p.m. Latart Falla.
CHRtSTI.&lt;\N'S CON ·
STRUCTION . Conatr ..
1976 FORD 4 door sedan, roofing , aiding, spouting,
ps, pb, air conditioning , fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
cheap, good condition. cleaning . 446-2000. call
8'?96 . 304 - 458 - 1864 balore Band after 6 :30 .
· evenli1ga.
RON ' S Television Service.
1969 NOVA Super· Sport. Specializing in Zenith and
motor needs minor work, Motorola . Ouazar . and
good 4 tpeed transmiuton, house calla. Call 676-2398
8100. 30--876-1703.
or 448·2464.
71

The Dail Sentinel- Page-9

; 1/9/82

Two 14 Inch studded snow
radial s, like new or trade for
13 Inch snow radials .
304-676-2680.

J-c:&gt;

Metal sheets for all building 61 Farm Equipment
purpose s . Flat porcelian - - - - - - - - - enamel coated. 4x8 thru 4 K JIVIDEN'S FARM
12 . Prices. $7.00 to 89 .60. EQUIPMENT
614-667-3086.
446-1676
long tractors, Vermeer
balers S. hay equipment.
56 Pets for Sale
Bale movers S. feeders.
wagons, rotary tillers,
rotary cunera, aeedera ,
HILLCREST KENNEL - blades. gates. disc, plows.
Boarding all breeds . A KC cultivators S. wood burners.
Reg . Dober mans pups and And aee us to get a complete
Doberman Stud Service . line of part &amp; servk:el
USED:
Call 446-7796 .
I H hrdro 70, Ford Jubilee,
POODLE GROOMING . Call 600 Ford, Ferguson 30. 70
Judy Taylor at 614-367· Oliver, Maasey Harris Pony,
8 · N Ford , cornplanter,
7220.
plows, disc, rounjl balar, JD
REG . QUARTER HORSES manu ra spreaaer. goose
Training, s howing , breed- nects grain wagon, and u~ed
ing, sa les end boarding . woodburnera.
•Contact Dan Beam. Gallipo- Wo Buy Usad Equipment!
lis, 446-0183.
International Cub Cadet
DRAGDNWYND CATIERY model 128, 12 horae ,
· KENNEL . A KC Chow electric &amp;Uirt, headlights, 44
puppies. CFA Himalayan . in . mower. Calli 614-379Persian and Siamese kit - 2144 after 5 .
tens. Call 446-3844 after I- - - - - - - - - 4PM .

Baby high chair, good
condition . Call 458-1997.

...
Television
Viewing
' -

EVENING

Complete enamel
~~:'.,::~:':" ':·..======:;;:::=========~ SPECIAL
paint jobs from $300 .

FIREWOOD. 826 . pickup
load , 304-896 -3999 . Ask
for Jim .

For sale Peavey 400 miK er
PA and speakers, $500firm .
Call 675 - 3515 betw ee n
5 :00-7 :00.

I

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Auto Parts

USED LP gaa furnace , good
condition. phone 304-6764164.

Instruments
COATS. 2020 tire changer,
n e w condition . Electric
welder. like new . Two l Gibson Lea Paul Deluxe
78K15 tires. new . 2 G guitar. eKcellent condition,
7BK15 M&amp;S tires, new. 2 H sunburst finish with dimar78K14 M&amp;S tires. new . zio pickup, 304-676·7198.
304-676-3364.

Wood burning add on
furnance . Still in fa cto ry
crate. S460 . Ca ll 1-614256 -1216.

2 story doll house , hand made log cabin style ,
furnished . nice Chris tman
gift, $80. Also small tables.
coffee tables bargain pri ced .
Call 446-4630.

&gt;

&amp; Accessories

Set of 13 inch Goodyear
studded snow tires on rims ,
like new . Call "aftar 6 ,
304· 676-3146 .

Road . Open
only
1:00-7:00
route
2 1 - I nd
a pen
dance
p . m . Friday , Saturday ,
Sunday , (Monday even ings) . Phone 304-676-3334
before10 :00 a .m .

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved . 1.000
gel. tank, price $340. Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup truck . Call 614-286·
5930 , Jackson . Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

Galvanized chin link fenc ing. 300 ft . All materials
plus 2 gates, 14ft b1. 12ft
double gate. Call446-1570.

.

0

54 Misc . Merchandise

Hou se coal for sale $24 ton .
C a ll 614 -2 56 - 6816 or
614-256-6747.

'

2 Michelin tires . Size H
226-76 , 16 in . Practically
now. 614-992· 2666.

CAMOUFALGED Army
field jackets with liner $61 .,
lined garblne jackets $13 ..
coveralls · 822 .. bibs 816 ..
'~
14 oz. denim jeans e1 0 .. all
new items. Sam Some - ~~
rville ' s Army War Surplus,
New Era, 7 miles east
Ravenswood , junction old

Set of bunk beds complete
with mattress &amp; bunkes ,
eKc. cond . Round wooden
table on pedestal bas e with
4 ladder back chairs . Call
446-4179.

Waterline For Sale lf4 inc h
160 PSI $17 .96per100ft ..
1' 160 PSI $28 .95 per 100
ft .. 1'1.. 160PSIS47 .50per
1 00 ft . Ron Evans Enter prises . 4 miles South. of
Jackson on St . Rt. 93.
614-286-5930.

.,
'

Tuetcla r Novembar9 ,1982

• . 9, 1982

76

'

Have several alternators GM
and some water pumps S.
luel pumps. Use d will 1011
reasonble . Call 614 6694166.

BUYING and selling used
heavy equipment (agricultural. cons truction . mining ,
chemical industry , etc . )
through consignment for a
national company. Starting
at 815,000. value . Call
Robert l Harper. 304-6761293.

and
S25
. Gas. or
electric
ranges
, $325
Baby
ma·
tresses , $26 S. $36, bed
frames 620. $26 . &amp; $30 .
Used Furniture -- bookcase.
ra nges , chairs. and tables ,
recliners and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Ad . Open 9am
t o 6 pm, Mon . th ru Fn· ., 9 am
to 5pm, Sat.
446-0322

Firewood . Cut to length .
De livered in dump truck
loads or may be picked up in
yard . Crown City , Oh
Junction 653 &amp; 218 . Call
614-266-6245.

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

•

~-

you can find a way to

retain the spade opll on if
South holds 5·3·3·2 distribu-

tion You take your dia mond
queen and lead another dia -

mond to forr e dummy to
rull

By Oswald JK&gt;l!b~
and Jam es J .....C~

\ ow declarer" s goose is
cooked to a turn. He has no
trump entry to dumm y any
more He draws yo ur trumPs

The acr onml ARCH " an
important code word lor
both declarer.; and defend· ers. A for .4na lyze the lead.
R for Re,·1 e..- tlle b1ddmg. C
for Count ~mner s and
losers.. H for How can I
ma ke or def eat the

and leads a club. You du ck

one club. take the second
an d fi na lly lead a spade.

Your partn e r ·s quee n
becomes the sett 1ng tnck

f - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - --

by TI+OMAS JOSfP'H

ACROSS

OOWS

I Bastinado
1 ·'Tu randot ..
5 Loafer's Slll
hero
10 Chinese tSland ! Amen ca n
11 Nut
soprano
13 Tardy
3 Nosiree !
14 Stick fas1
4 Watch
15 Nigerian
5 Terrified
16 "Chances - " 6 Put on car go
17 Blue Hen
7 Kirghiz,
State (abbr.)
U.S.S. R. city
18 Imaginary
8 Be 20 Superlative
1tickle the
ending
fancy)
21 "The Longest 9 Toasting
phrase
22 Detest
12 RoU about
16 Englis h river
23 Cross
home plate
25 Drive
26 Stentorian
27 Son of Ham

Yesterday 's Answer
19 Ca llin g 22 Man of
the
house
23 Slanted
24 Crown
25 Ponder
27 Calling

29 Stringe d
ins trument
30 Underworld
fi gure
31 Grotesquerie
36 Satan 's
joy
37 Kind of code

28 Hockey
retiree
Discard
29
32 City Hall
figure
33 Before
34 French iron
35 Isolate
37 Torrid
or Frigid
38 PoUute
39 Peruvian
Indian
40 Choir
member
41 Look
furtively
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter. aimply stands for anothe•. In this sample A· ia

uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Singl e letters
opoatrophee, the length and formation of the words are ali
· hlnta. E&lt;lch dey the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
T

p

z J K T , Tl'\i

~~

TP

'

CEAPTY;

D Q PAX;

T P

ZJQH ·
'
TP

RAP M M,

TP

' CEPAT,

D J . O Q,
T P

T

p

RAPS T . _

SKQQKJH
ZYTT
. Yeaterdey'a Cryploqaote: YOU MAY SEND ~y TO THE
(I) MO\I!E: 'How to Stuff
RICH;
TO POOR MEN GIVE SJlilUANTIAL·:
a Wild Bikini•
~. -MARTIAL
•·
3:30 (!) Futt,lre Sport

Comfort'

v
' ..

�Page= 1~The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths

'

Donl\ld Turnbull

Donald Curtis Turnbull, n , died
Sunday morning In Lancas ter. He
was the so n of the late Rev . Thomas
Turnbull and Helen Reed Turnbu U
of Pomeroy.
He was a gradua te of Pomeroy
High Scoool and Ohio State Univprslty, College ofLaw . Whileastudent
at Ohio State Uni ve rsit y, hP re·
celved man y academic honors. He
was the first Director of Activities.
Ohio State Universit y Student UnIon; Business Manager of Makio 19'l7; Past Preside nt of Student
Union, Ohio State Unive rsity . He
was a me mber of Phi Beta Kappa,
honorary frat ernity, and Phi Delta
Theta, socia l fra te rnit y.
Mr. Turnbull spent hisentirepro
fesslonal ca r ee r in La ncaste r. He
served as the Cit y Solicitor 194:&gt;1948; Assis tant Prosecutor of Fairfield County 1954 until time of his
retireme nt, 1981. He a lso served as
forme r Municipal Court Judge City of Lancaster .
He was trustee of Maywood Mission a nd me m ber of First Presbyte rian Church of Lancaster.
He was recipient of m any award s

from both the La ncaster Bar Association. Ohio House of Representa tives; Cha irm a n of Republi can
Party, Failiield Count y, 10 year s.
He Is surv ived by his wife, Lucy
Taylor Tumbull : two da ughters.
Dr. Lucy Cw1is Turnbull. Professor
of Archeology, Unlversit y of Miss is·
sippi; Katherin e Tay lor Turnbull,
professional artist; three sons, Rev.
Thomas K. Tumbull , Rector of
Church ofTra nsfif:Urat ion, Vai l, Co
lorado; Warren Ta,·ior Turnbull.

·1

Director of Person nel, Ve rri e n
County, Michigan; Dr. Edward
Reed Tumbull, Professor of Philo
sophy, Ohio State Unive rsity; one
brother. Edward D. Turnbull,
Clarks Summit , Pa .. and many
gra ndchildre n.
Me morial services will be a n·
nounced later in La ncaste r .

Lawrence Russell
Lawrence H. Russell, 79, West Columbia, died Monday in Pleasa nt
Va lley Hospita l.
Born June 16, 1!XXl. in West Columbia , he was the son of the late He nry
a nd Ma ry Dodd Russell .
He was a boile rmake r and welder
for thf' New York Central Railroad
prior 1o his re t ircme nt .
Surviving are his wife. Beatrice
B. Young Russell; five daughters .
Dorothy J . Russell , Pomeroy; Joseph ine B. VanMe ter. Warren; Donna
C. Schwartz and Patricia A. Knapp,
both of Lorain, Ohio. and Ca rolyn S.
Roush, Sharpes, Fla.; four sons,
Lawrence E. , Shar(X'S. Fla .; J o
seph L., Wic hita. Ka n.: Robert L.
a nd Ronald W., bot h of Lorain; a
sister, Naomi Edwards, Mason;
two brothers, Clay ton Russell, Wes t
Columbia. a nd Lester Russell,
Pomeroy; 25 grandc hildre n and
four grea t ·grandc hildren.
Funeral servi ces will be conducted at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday a t
the Foglesong Fune ral Home in Ma·
son with the Rev. George Hoschar
officiating. Burial will follow in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
home from 3-5 p.m. and 7-9 p.m .
Tuesday.

Meigs County happenings ...
Plan benefit game

Damage moderate

The Meigs Warriors will meet the
Meigs High Alumni football tea m in
a contest at the Meigs Stadium in
Pome roy a t 2 p.m . Sunday. Proceeds will go to the Meigs At hletic
Booste rs to help pay for a thletic
eouioment.

Modera te damages were incurred to twovehicles lnan acc ide nt
on E. Main St., Tuesday afternoon,
Pomeroy Police report.
Police sa id a truck driven by Wll·
lia m Lavende r, Middleport, had
stopped in the la ne of traffic which it
was struck in the rea r by a car
driven by Thomas Pullins, Eagle
Ridge Road. Thc rewcre no injuries.
Police arc also inves tiga ting the
theft of five motor vehicle batteries
from the Simmons-Olds-Cadillac
Agency, E . Main St.

Middleport offices to
dose for ohst•n a net•
All Middlepo11 ,;u ageoffices will
be closed on Thursda)·. :&lt;ov. 11. in
observance of Veterans· Day. No r·
mal business hou rs will be res umed
on Friday, Nov. 12.

McARTHUR - Authorities have
te ntatively Identified the body- the
second to be found In Vinton County

Gas ...

Pomeroy man cited
A Pome roy ma n was cilrd b)' the
Gallia·Meigs post of the State Hig h·
way Patrol after an ,II'Cidr ·nt on
Ohio 7 in Meigs Count\ \1onday
afternoon.
Carl Hall, 38. Pomeroy, wasc iled
for failure to keep assured clea r
distance.
According to the patrol, Hall was
northbound a t 1:50 p.m . and could
not stop to avoid colliding wit h
another northbound ca r driven by
Howard Norris. 74, Racine.
Norris' car sustained mode rate
damage .and Ha ll's tractor -traile r
was not damaged.

Local residmts ar('
due tax funds - IRS
The Inte rnal Revenue Service is
trying to locate sevrral local resi·
dents whoare due a tax refund from
their 1982 federa l income tax
returns.
The following Pomeroy reside nts
are owed refunds: Douglas A. and
Sharon C. Burns; a nd J oel M.
Cordis h.
According to a n rRS offici al. thr
taxpayers may ha ve moved or
changed their last names during the
year and failed to notify the IRS, or
the handwriting may simply be
Ulegfble.
The taxpayers listed above
should call the IRS at 1-fW-582-1700
!D claim their refund .

woods since August -of a woman
discovered In the northwestern sec·
Uon of the county, but they have not

released the woman's name or
cause of death.
The fully clothed body - appar·

(Continued from page 1)
____:..::..::.___:_::_::~~-----------

include planning the moving of a storm ~nd sanitary
sewer. a study to determine the feasibility of separat·
ing the two a nd a plan for earth fill and grading needed
for the village owned lot of some five acres.

Attending were Mayor Hoffman, Clel'k·Treasurer
Jon Buck, and councilmen Dewey Horton, Carl
Horky, Jack Satterfield and William Walters.

Board votes in favor of proposed contrac-t
The Gallla·Jackson·Meigs 648
board voted una nimously Tuesday
in favor of a proposed contract between the &amp;18 board and the tri·
county mental health center .
The action was taken at a regular
meeting of the 648 board, which was
moved up a week so members could
discuss recent controversies sur·
rounding the operations of the 648
board and the cente r .
The proposed contract approved
Tuesday must now be accepted by
the mental health center's board for
it to take effect.
Malchom Orebaugh, director of
operations at the mental health center, said center board members
have indicated they would agree to
this proposed contract.
In the meantime, the two agen·
cies are operating under an emer·
gency contract which wlll allow the
&amp;18 board to release federal block
grant funds to the center.

I

The center and the 648 board have
operated without a contract since
the beginning of the fiscal year July
1, which has caused at least two
funding crises for !he center.
In September, the center tl!rea·
tened !D lay off ~ to 100 employees
because the648 board was withhold·
ing a $137,&amp;Xl federal block grant
earmarked for the center.
648 board officials said they could
not release the funds because of the
lack of a contract, but turned the
funds over before lavoffs occurred.
Most recently, the 648 board held
back a $139,713 grant to thecenter. lt
was released shortly after theemer·
gency contract was signed Oct. 'll.
The 648 board ls still withholding
$62,4n in state funds , according !D
Dan Schwendeman, 648 board ad·
minlstrator. He said these funds will
be released when the proposed con·
tract Is approved.
The contract would only be In ef·

Property transfers

Agnes Dixon, Herbert V. Dixon to
Agnes Dixon, Susan Jane Pullins,
Parcels, Salisbury.
Roger Adams, deceased by Exec·
utor to Valene J . Hanstlne , Parcels,
Chester .
Leda Mae Kraeuter to Eldon R.
Kraeuter, Lot 5, Sutton.
Eleanor R. Hooper to Michael E.
Hooper, Mary L. Hooper, 4 acres,
Bedford.
Texaco Inc. fka Texas Company,
to Hartley Marine Corp., 3. 74 acres,
Salisbury.
Dale L. Little, J ennie L. Little to
Royal Petroleum Properties, Inc.,
Right of Way, Salisbury.
Eva Schreiber to Royal Petro
leum Prop., Inc ., Right of Way,
Salisbury.
Ronald E . Riffle, Linda L. Rlffl e
to Roya l Petroleum Prop. Inc.,

Meigs high band earns
awards at recent festival
The Meigs High School marc hing
ba nd. und e r the direc tionofMarilyn
Goodnite, brought home three troph ies Sa tu rday from the Putnam
Invitational Ba nd Festival held at
Hurticane. W. Va.
Honors received included second
place in class C ba nds: second place
in class C flags a nd third over overa ll in the rifle corps. Jud gescompli·

Tuesday, November 9, 1982

Vinton County authorities identify body

Emergency runs
Two calls were a nswe red by local
units Monday, the Meigs Coun ty
Emergency Medical Service reports. Rutla nd a t 8: m p.m . took
Lawrence Scarberry of Langsville
to Vete rans Memoria l Hospital a nd
the Tuppers Plains Unit at 10: 13
p.m . took Ca thy Barringe r of
Tuppers Pla ins to St . .Joseph Hospt·
ta l in Parkersburg.

,

mented each section of the band
especially noting the unlfomnlty of
the marc hing style used.
After the invitational, the band
stopped a I Pizza Hut for a victory
celebration and upon returning
home received a pollee escort
through Middleport and Pomeroy in
recognition of its accomplishments
earlier in the day.

r

Right of Way, Salisbury.
Anthony Corsi, Helen Corsi to
Royal Petroleum Prop. Inc., Right
of Way, Bedford.
Robert E. MUler, Judy M. MUler
to Robert E . Miller, Judy M. Miller,
Parcels, Rutland.
Robert E. Miller, Judy M. MUler
to Robert E. Mlller,JudyM. Miller,
Parcels, Rutland.
Robert E. MUler, Judy M. MUler
to Robert E. Miller, Judy M. MUle r,
Parcels, Rutland.
~bert E . MUler, Judy M. MUler
to Robert E. Miller, Judy M. Miller,
Parcels, Sutton.
Marcia Karr to John T . Grueser,
Juanita P. Grueser, Part of Section
31, Sutton.
Ida Cowdery aka Ida May
Cowdery to George 0. Myers, Betty
A. Myers, Parcel, Olive.
Ida Cowdery aka Ida May
Cowdery to Richard E. Cowdery,
Corazon B. Cowdery, 40 acres,
Olive.

feet until Dec. 31 and not !Dtheendof
the fiscal year next June, Schwendeman said.
A negotiating team of center and
648 board members are currently
working on a contract for the remainder of the fiscal year, Schwen·
demansaid.
He said he expects the contract
wiU beslmllartotheonelne!fectlast
year.
Under state law, the 648 board
channels state and federal funds
a nd monitors operation of the men·
tal health center and the center provides direct service to clients.
Contract negotiations between
the two agencies were stalled this
yearbecauseoftheconfllctbetween
the center and the 648 board.
Center officials charged that the
648 board was attempting to take
overcontrolofthecenterbymaklng
substantial changes from previous
contracts.
However, 648 board officials
claimed the center was not allowing
the board !D properly monitor its
operations.

ently that of a female in her late~
- was found Saturday by a hunter
not far from an Eagle Township
road near the Hocking County line;
Vin!Dn County Sherltf Delno
McClure, inastatementreleasedat
noon yesterday, said the woman's
name would not be revealed until It
is positively identified and the next
of kin notified.
The body has been sent !D ~
Franklin County Coroner's otflce
for an autopsy; and, according !D a
published statement by Vln!Dn
County Deputy Larry Brooks, foul
play has not been ruled out.
Authorities said It was hard toctetemnlne how long the body had been
in the area, but speculate lt had not
been there for more than two weeks.
Brooks said authorities have
found no apparent connection between thedlscoveryofthewoman's
body and the death of an unldenti·
fled man, whose remains were dls·
covered in August in a rural area of
the county.

The Forecast For 7 a.m. EST

M

me•c.haro,.., tone ''""' oo •u!oO"

~lliet.omoty_,.ot,o ltobllpwchu.,.J••

,,,.

(""'P&lt;!

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&lt;ablit •filucloon .. P&lt;o:•

199 Save22%
Ou r Reg . 2.57

•

Christmas Gift Wrap

3 rolls; each 30" wide.

1 97 Save33%

•
Box - Our 2.97
Festive Holiday Cards
Choice of seasonal designs.

2 4 '7I Save 28%
1

Our Reg. 3.47
Chrtstmas Greellng Cards

Sale Starts Wed.; Ends Sat., Nov. 13, 1982

"Country C hristmas" designs.

I Na,t,on,af

Wealher Serv•c c
S Dept of

Fronts:

...., Warm-

-

••

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weatller Service, tire.
casts snow Ounies for Wednesday for the northern Plains changing to
rain over Mbmesota and lheupperGreatLakes.Showersareexpeded In
southern California and lhe Soulhwesl. Cold weather Is forecast .,r lhe
Wesl and Northeast. Oilier areaswlll be warm. (AP LaserphoUIMap) .

. ·-}

BENSON &amp;HEDGES·

VHS VIdeo CasseHe
Blank. Records 2-6 hrs.

Save45%
12 97 Save35%
19.97
177
3.27
9·pc. Bakeware Set
•

Our

Nott-stlck; plated steel.

•

Our

Soft White Light Bulbs
Our 1.84, 3-way Bulb, 1.17

$

99

52·1nch Ceiling Fan With Light
Four blades with cane-look inserts. Variable speed contro l. reversible motor.

Available At Your Neighborhood K mart "'

Only 6 mg yet rich enough to be called deluxe.
Regu~r and Menthol.
0~ a bat toda):
\

,,

ELBERFELDS.IN POMEROY

•

Raon Check (&gt;n leQUoOSI

!Ia" ~~''"'
""-•• ··~~ "' .........
c.,.,_ ..,.,. QuaO!y ,,.,.,., "'"

•

He 'll go to the
head o f th e class
wearing Wrangler
shirts and jeans!
This western shirt
of yorn dyed plold
Is available In red,
brown or blue.
Student sizes 8·18 . .
He'll get extra
credit polrlns It up
with Wrangler No
Fault. Jeans • •·
of 100% cotton
denim for a neat,
easy to care for
took . The bock
pockets feature
added interest
with red-orange
decorative trim
and the Wrangler
logo. Sizes 8-t6
regular and slim.
Also avalleble In
student sizes
2f&gt;.30.

MEN'S DEPT.-ht fLOOR

,

dua to any ynlo•esun ... ,on

...,.r!""" &lt;uue •

1o&lt; '"-

Snow [';':':'l
t:::.:.:J

Nove mber 10

11 an

OOv•orlt-..J tltm •• "01 ~•ldal,&gt;le lot P&lt;l'

ELBERFELDS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admltted .. Lols Cornell, Pomeroy; Sally Pierce, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Joseph Ohlinger,
Yoland Satterfield, CecU Frazier.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGE'&gt; NOV. 8
Chartie Cox, Margaret Geiger,
Amber McCalllster, Garnet
McFann, Pamela Pennington,
Ethel Shively, Amanda WiUiams,
Dorothy Young.

Joseph Brubaker, daughter, JacklOll; Mr. and Mrs. Sam Holstein,
1011, BldweU; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
· MlJier, son, Lucasvllle.

Ou• t~m .,l..,hor• '" 1o ,,... ••ery a&lt;J&gt;e&lt;
hsed &gt;111m ., siOC k on "'" ..,.!veo
c ~n•

The body found Saturday was not
near where that partially dlsmemebered corpse was located. 1bal
body had been dismembered and
was located near Dundas. The body
found Saturday was not
dismembered.
The sheriffs department ls continuing to investigate the death of
the unidentified man.' Brooks salil
heexpectsareportsoononananalysis of the body parts found some
time later near where the man's
decapitated torso was discovered.

Hospital News

BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Barton,
daughter, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.

Copyrlghl 1982 by K mort• Corporation

Watning: The Surgeon.Gener~l Has Determined
T"-t Cigamte Smoijlgls D"gerous to Your Health.
8 ing '!tlfi' 0.8 mg nicotini IV. ptiCiQIIIIII, ~ f1C ~.
·l

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