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                  <text>New York firm buys PoinTView Cable
WINTHROP

bvDi

•

Cablentertalmnent Inc. of New
Yark bu acquired Point View Cable
TV, the cable system that serves the
Bill Bend Area, Pt. Pleasant and

GaWpolla.
Point ~iew was one of the 21 cable
syatems prevloualy owned by the

Midw~ Corporation that Cablen~irunen' bu purchased.

'lbe Midwest systeJN included
Point View, Setter Vision Cable TV,

and Flannery and Dingus Cable
Clmpany. All 21 systems will

change their name to "Cablentertalnrnent.
Cablentertalnment's operational
headquarters are in Zanelville and
their marketing and llnanclal offices
are·in New York City.
The Midwest aqulsition brings the
total nwnber of basic cable subscribers manal!ed by Cablen-

tertalnment to 70,000, making whicb will Include the systems
Cablentertatnment one of the top 50 located in Shinnston, Fannington,
cable system operators in the United . Flemington, Salem, West Mlllord,
States.
Phllllpi, Pennsboro, Pine Grove and
The Point Pleasant office will Cairb.
remain the headquarters for the ' Cablentertainment will keep of.
southern cable systems.
!ices in White Sulpher Springs,
A new office ill planned in Mount Hope, Madison and BuckhanClarksburg, W.Va. The Clarbburg non, W.Va.
office will be the headquarters for
A new 24-hour movie channel,
the northern West Vil"l!inia systems Clnemax, will be offered startin~

•

enttne

No.92

Ohio, Monday, August 24, 1981

1981

A L05eR 16 A KID WHO L..IVE6 IN
NE6RASKA WHQOE: FAN\ILY &amp;IVE5
HIM A 6LJRFf!SQARD R:l&lt;! CHRI5TN\A5.

· o.

•.• .AND H5 l-IVES IN 5r, PAUl-.

approximately 1900 people In the
Spring Valley area west of
Galtipolis, White Sulpher Springs,
Pt. Pleasant, Ravenswood, Ripley
and Buckhannon, W.Va.
Cablentertainment also has
systems In Zanesville, New Concord,
Dresden and Trinway, Ohio; Pulaski
and Dublin, Va.; and New Castle,
Neschannock and Rochester, Pa.

•

at

e

late September in systems that
currently have sattelite service.
Home Box Office will continue to
be available.
Cinemax and HBO will be offered
for the first time to West Milford,
Flemington, Salem, Pine Grove and
Pennsboro, W.Va.
Cablentertainment anticipates
making cable service available to

Police
storm

..

Commission will probe matter

Priscilla's Pop

by Ed Sulliva
I'LL
CAPTU~

HIM.'

EACH THING IN
N.A.TURE DEPENDS ON
"50\\ETHI NG ELSE.'

COLUMBUS- Electricity and gas companies don't always tell consmners about partial payment plans that can avoid disconnection,
says Consmners' Counsel William Spratley.
His comments came in a letter to Jon F. Kelly, newly appointed
chainnan of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
PUCO rules, effective in March 1980, provide that ratepayers In
December, January and February won't be dillconnected if they can
pay eacb month a third of the total amount due or an amount
equivalent to 15 percent of their household incomP, whichever is less.
Spratley made a similar appeal in February to Kelly's predecessor,
Willlilm Newcomb, saying utilities always didn't spell out these options for ratepayers who got behind on their bills. But the counsel said
Newcomb did not pursue the illsue.
A PUCO spokesman said Friday that the commission will investigate the matter if a specific complaint is filed against a utility.

. Hostage uninjured in incident
SOMERVILLE, Mass. - A police sharpshooter shot and killed a 27year-old man who was trying to get past police by holding a gun to the
back of a holltage Sunday, officials said.
'I An officer outside the il!IUSj! saw an opening and shot him dead
through a window," said policei.!pokesman Richard Gilchrist.
The hostage was uninjured.
Awoman and a ·3-year-old child who were in the house during the incident were not banned. The identities of the hostage, the woman and
child were not released immediately.
Ford was shot at 8:15 p.m. and pronounced dead at Srmervllle
Hospital about 15 minutes later, said Gilchrist.

t.;otedtucallton not their cup of tea

WHO KNOWS WHA.T WOOLD

HAPPEN 10 OJR PI...ANET
IF '10U DESTROYED
HIM.'~:--

GQTCHA!

t-eN

LET HIM GO

~S :'

PITTSFIE!J&gt;, Msss. - Six years after allowing boys past their
school's i\'Y-covered walls, trustees of one of New England's oldest
girls' boarding schools have decided coeducation is not their cup of
~.
"Attitudes have changed since the big rush towards coeducation in
the 1970s," says Robert Bussey, headmaster of Mills Hall's prep
school. "It seems incongruous in these times of modernism, but there
haa been qll'te a s)Ving back towards the single-sex schools.
"We decided it was tlme for Miss Hall's to resume its historical role
In the edl\cation of females."
· Nancy Hinsdale started the boarding school, the lint for girls in
Mssajlch~, in 1M&amp;. Mter her departure, a subsequent owner of the
property clQ&amp;ed it. The school was revived in 1898 by her great-niece
Myra HaU.It became Miss Hall'sSchool.
Pown to \28 students when trustees decided to go coed in 1975, Miss
Hall's now has an enrollment of 200 from 21 states and 17 countries.
The school, where tuition is $7,450 a year for boarders, will not actually
becOme aU-glrl!j·unti11984, or until the last of the dozen boys currently
enrolled leave,llussey said.

Louisiana approves insurance plan
NEW ORLEANS - l.Duisiana has become the first state to approve
the American Bankers Insurance Co.'s plan to seU anti-mugging insurance.
The company fUed its "violent crime victima insurance" proposal in
all 50 stales, but Louisiana apparently became the lint to approve it,
said Vice President B.C. Young. Policies go into effect next Sunday.
· Pollcyholde.., victimized by a robber or rapist get up to $1,000 COJDo
pensatlon for property loss, t2,000 for hospitalization and tl!,OOO for
rehabilitation. If you're laid up, you get 85 percent of the income lost with a limit of $1li0 a.week for 13 weeks.
The 'annual premium was Set in Louisiana at t37 for an Individual,
t55 for a couple arid rt3 for a faniily policy - except In New Orleans.
'l'hoiMI rates are fl9lndlvidiaal, $139 couple and $200 family.

Embassy
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Riot police stormed the Iranian Embassy today to end its occupation by
30 Iranian students who were
holding the amb&amp;ssador and his wife
hos.t age to protest "fascist
executions" in Iran, authorities
said.
"No one was hurt," said police
spokesman Lennart Lindgren. "The
students gave up without a struggle
MEIGS' SECOND FATALITY- George A. Hill, 42, eastbound when his car dropped off the right side of the
but they had caused considerable
Rt. 2, Racine, died wbeo his car crashed against an em- road on a curve, came back onto the road and went left,
damage to embassy facilities.''
bankment and overturned 00 Rt. 124 near Syracuse at striking the embankment. Hill's death was the s""ood
He said "some 30 students" were
10 p.m. Sunday. The state highway patrol said Hill was traffic fatality of the year in Meigs County.
arrested after the police helmeted, anned and accompanied
by police dogs - took back control of
the embassy. The charges were not
inunediately disclosed.
A spokesman for the students
earlier had phoned The Associated
Press from the occupied embassy
and said, "We want to protest against the fascist executions that have
Meigs County's s""ond traffic sheriff's deputy was injured in a both cars and Cochran was cited for
been going on in Iran the last
fatality of the year was recorded two-vehtcle crash near Holzer assured clear distance.
weeks."
The patrol investigated two ac· rran's Islamic f~ntaliBt ' elate Sunday'· night in a one,cac. 'lc- .Medical Center early Sunday mnr·
cidents in Meigs County over the
ning.
regime has executed hW\dreds of clctent on Ri.' 124.
Carl E . Stewart, 28, Rt. 2, Patriot. weekend.
Dead is George A. Hill, 42, Rt. 2.
govenunent foes in recent weeks in
Bobby J. Adams, 30, Pomeroy,
a crackdown on leftists and other Racine, according to the Gallia- was treated and released from HMC
was
southbound on Rt. 7. one mile
fur
neck
strain.
Meigs
Post
of
the
state
highway
supporters of ousted President
south
of Tuppers Plains, at 12 :05
The
report
said
Stewart
had
stoppatrol.
Abolhassan Bani-&amp;dr.
a.rn
.
Saturday
when an unknown
ped
for
another
vehicle
at
6:45a.m.
The
patrol
said
Hill
was
driving
Pollee said the students stonned
northbound
auto
came left of center
which
made
a
left
turn
from
U.S.
35
eastbound
at
10
p.m.
when
his
· into the embassy and residence at
and
sideswiped
Adams'
car, causing
into
the
HMC
parking
lot.
Stewart
Lidlngo, an island suburb of vehicle dropped off the right side of
slight
damage.
then
accelerated
to
go
eastbound.
Stockhobn, at about 9 a.m. - 2 a.m. the road on a curve.
The report said a car driven by
Another eastbound auto driven by
The vehicle then came back onto
EDT - taking Ambassador Abdol
Jerry
M. Johnson Jr., 22, Syracuse,
Jeffrey
E.
Cochran,
26,
Columbus,
the road, went left and struck an emRahim Gavahl and his wife hostage.
was
southbound
on Bedford Twp .
then came up behind Stewart's
The students said they planned to bankment. then overturning.
Rd.
247
.
a
mile
south
of Rt. 681, at
Dr. R.R. Pickens, Meigs County cruiser and struck ito; rPar. forcing it
hold a news conference later today
6:25
p.m.
Sunday
when
his vehicle
to "tell about conditions in Iran," coroner, could not be reached this off the right side of the road into a
collided
on
a
curve
with
a nor·
but they gave no indication of other morning for the exact cause of Hill's fence.
thbound
auto
driven
by
Allan
E.
Cochran's vehicle then continued
death . The body was later removed
plans.
A recent occupation of the Iranian to the Ewing Funeral Home in on , out of control, and went off the Young , 17, Pomeroy.
Moderate damage was reported to
Embassy in Oslo, Norway by Pomeroy by the Syracuse emergen- left side of the road before coming to
both
cars and there were no citations
a
stop.
Iranian leftist students from Sweden cy squad.
issued
.
Moderate
damage
was
reported
to
The
patrol
said
a
GaHia
County
ended peacefully after the students
held a news conference.
That group called on Norway to
support their struggle against the
Tehran regime, and surrendered to
pollee who sent them back to
Texas at Arlington was released are so overcrowded they have been
By MICHAELJ. SNIFFEN
Sweden. No legal action was taken
ruled in violation of constitutional
Associated Press Writer
Sunday.
against them.
In addition, large prisons produce guarantees against cruel and
WASIDNGTON (APl - At a tlme
The student spokesman at the
Stockholm embassy said they were when the Reagan administration much more severe physical and unusual punishment.
But the Supreme Court ruled
not the same people who occupied wants to put more criminals behind psychological ill effects than small
earlier
th1s year, in a case involving
institutions,
the
researchers
said.
bars,
a
new
(ederaily
financed
study
the embassy in Oslo.
The study concluded that the ideal Ohio prisons, that it is not
says private cells and smaller
prisons would curb rising inmate prison for avoiding these problems automatically unconstitutional to
would house about 500 inmates in put twu prisoners in a cell designed
violence.
for one.
single
rooms or cubicles.
The study, done for the Justice
The reports comes in a year in
Department'~ National Institute of
Despite sharp federal budget cuts,
Justice, found · that long-tenn in- which violence has erupted in state
Attorney
General William French
mates of overcrowded prisons die, prisons 10 Florida, Hawaii ,
Smith's
·task
force on violent crime
are killed, commit suicide, become . Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey and
recommended
last week that the
ill and create disciplinary problems New York and a year after 33 infedera
1
government
provide $2
more frequently than those confined mates were killed in a New Mexico
billion
in
aid
to
help
build state
in private cells of at least 50 square prison riot.
prisons
over
the
next
four
years.
Twenty-four state
feet. The study by the University of
NEW YORK (AP) - Frank Fitzsinunons, the late Teamsters
·.·
&gt;\';1
president, told .IRS agents that for·
'
"
mer President Richard t:ixon had
ordered him ~from government lnv!lStiglitors, Time magazlile
',
says.
Fi~ons ~~ f.o r the Internal Revenue ServJce _. a' goVern!JII!IIt Wanner~ J~ Hoffa,
his ~191', -'fline 1111ld In Its
_,........,.

George Hill, 42, Racine,
dies in Sunday car crash

Study supports small prisons

Tinie says

Fitzsimmons
protected

.

......
i

••

·' ~··

''

..

"111

.

.

.... ,

.,....-

•

AYI Fltulnilnona,

~ ,boa of the

his son,

LOCAL:UJN IEBiAHl' .....Midlm Saller, Raclae,
wu - al ... liltal t;.,.•outa Ia tbe IIIRWY com, ,.Uifw. lrae..:. jllll al tile Met;. Ceaaty Fair. The
!l

'

'

event packed 'em Ia al· tbe ,falrp'ewldi .&amp;illllnlay
evealog, tbe clelllac .Digbt ol tbe 1111'•.(See 11ary • .
Page10).

�.
.
Page-2- The Daily sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, AUQU5t 24, 1981

Commentar

r

For the record. •
w

William F. Buckley Jr.

Thatcher
Out San Francisco way resides
Herb Caen, a gifted verbalist who
presides over the city's thought,
gossip and fashion as totally as ever
Walter Winchell did during the days
that Ogden Nash dubbed Walter
Winchell the Monday morning
EssencheiL Mr. Caen is a gentleman
of pronounced political views, not all
of them equally informed, and when
he buzzed off to England to cover the
royal wedding his colorful column
teemed with obiter dicta, one of
them representative of a regnant
superstition which could affect
American public policy.
Caen wrote that he had asked a
London Tory over dinner, " 'Who
will be the next prime minister'' He
put his head in his hands. 'It won't
make any difference,' he said. 'The
real prime minister of England is
your Milton Friedman,' whose
economic theories are being
followed slavishly by Thatcher. I
was impressed. Little Millie running
England fr&lt;m his apartment on
Russian Hill in San Franci&gt;co 1 Not
so impressed: Britain's three
million unemployed, most doleful
rpcurd since the Great Depression .''
It lakes a lot of doing to unravel a

misconstruction so impacted, but let
us attempt it, with the aid of
Professor John Burton of the
University of Birmingham in Great
Britain, whose monograph, "The
Thatcher Experiment: A
Requiem'" I'd be glad to send Mr.
Caen, inscribed by this genuine admirer of his stylistic pizzazz.
The whole business of monetarism
can be made to sound very complicated, but it isn't that complicated, actually. Consider a formula that looks terribly intimidating: G equals T plus C plus
Delta B plus Delta M to the H power.
G is the volume of government spending. We can understand that, easily
enough. How do you measure it ?
You take all tax revenues, direct and
indirect (T I, add government
charges for services, for instance
social security tax I Cl; you add the
addition to government borrowmg

.'

H a nation is suffering a 10 percent

rise in inflation, and the following
year increases its productivity by 10
percent, then the one will cancel out
the other, and inflation will be
eliminated. At the other end. the
monetizing of devt by the relevant
institution 1the Bank of England, in
the case under consideration) ,
causes inflation.
Professor Friedman is associated
with the proposition that erratic and
prufude infusions of money created
by the government are inflationary
tn effect . Ths is not only correct, it is
obviously so. But Mr. Friedman's
policies neither call fur unemployment nor are a guarantee against it. unemployment be ing
something that is affected only in
part by inflation. If in Great Britain
the workers could make automobiles
as good as the Japanese
automobiles. at a cheaper price, it
would not matter that they had
double-digit inflation - employment
would increase. As a matter of fact ,
the cheapened pound would increase
the competitiveness of the product.
Now, Mrs. Thatcher announced
" Medium Term Financial Strategy "
early in her administration. In March 1980 the target ranges fur the
growth of the money supply were
published for the four forthcoming
years. Sterling M3 I the term used
for monetary aggregate! was
targeted to grow in the range of 7
percent to 11 percent for 19IID-81 ; 6
percent to 10 percent in 1931~2; 5
percent to 9 percent in 1932-113 and
percent to 5 percent in 1983-M .
Present calculations are that the
measured growth of M3 has been at
roughly double its target: i.e .. 20

percent at a per annwn rate, as
against 7 percent to 11 percent.
How so' Mrs. Thatcher's government is either unable or unwilling
(there is a technical debate on the
subject 1 to prevent commercial
banks from lending money and
creating credit, provided there were
those around willing to pay the interest. Switzerland overcame this
when it was facing inflation a dozen
years ago by requiring banks to
charge customers for depositing
money in Switzerland , and to good
effect . In Great Britain a number li
circwnventions have been used .
Professor Burton gives an example :
"One device was by means of
banker's acceptances, whereby the
eurrunecial banks in effect lent to
burrowers without this appearinl( to
convert overt trading between

•

The Daily Sentinel

Publls h~ r

PAT WHITEHEAD
&lt;\ssi:&lt;~Lanl

BOB HOEFLICH

Pabllsher/Coatroller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nrws F..dltor

A MEMBER of 11M' A11ociatftl Press, lnlaDd Dally PmJs Assoda lion and the
Amertcao Newsp~~per P1lbllsben Anocialloo.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION an welcome4. Tt.ey should be less than 300 words ion~~:. All
letten are •ubjed to edi&amp;ID,K aod mu11 be slrned with name, addrn!i aud ll"lephone numbfor. No u111lped telten will br I'Ubllsbed. IA'IIen !iihoold De In good taste, addrnslog
lu~ , uot penonaiJtln.
'

Property Transfers
Henry C. Turner, Affidavit, Middleport.
Billy W. West, Teresa A. West to
Whitman Oil and Gas Corp., Right of
Way, Olive.
Dale Adams, Bonnie Adams to
Whiynan Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Wa~, Olive.
Buel K. Ridenour, M. Pauline
Ridenour to Buel K. Ridenour,
Pauline Ridenour, Parcels, Chester.
Guy H. Neigler, dec., Hilton Wolfe,
Sr., Adms ., to Terry R. Phillips,
Marie E. Phillips, Lot 22, Racine.
Ronald Manning, Sharon Manning, Glendon Mynes, Catherine
Mynes to Oron Dungee, Dana
Dungee, 8 acres, Columbia.
Carl Vincent Ghenn, Carol Marie
Gheen to Herald Oil and Gas, Right
of Way, Scipio.
William Richard Coleman to Ella
Jane Coleman, Cert. of Trans.,
Lebanon.
Ella Jane Coleman to Charles W.

.429

.417

l
2"'
2'1:

9
7

s

.6t3
.131

...

.531

11,11

Duncan, parcel, Lebanon.
Bernetla Davis Fair, H. E. Fair to
Patrick Soulsby, Carla J ea n
Soulsby, Lot, Pomeroy.
Alan Wayne Sheppard, Julia E.
Sheppard, Alan N. Sheppard.
Dorothy M. Sheppard to Venture Oil
and Gas, Right of Way, Sutton.
Ella Vatella, Billy McClure
Vatella to Ronald S. Rife, ''• acre,
Salem.
Alva Swick, Adra Swick to Anthony E. Cardello, I acre, Salem.
Ethel Marie Morlan to Columbus
and Southern Ohio Elec. Co.,
Easement, Orange.
Larry L. Holter, Mary L. Holter to
Venture Oil and Gas Co., Storage
Lease, Sutton.
Larry L. Holter, Mary L. Holter to
Venture Oil and Gas Co., Right or
Way, Pomeroy.
Cecil Moore, Tiny Moore to John
Moore, Lenora Moore, 4 acres. Bedford.

TodJJy in history.

••

Today Is Monday, Aug. 24, the 236th day of 1981 . There are 129 days left
in the year.
Today's highlights in hiiltory:
On Aug. 24 in tbe year 79, Mount Vesuvius erupted and buried the
Italian cities of Pompeii and Herculanewn.
On this date:
In 1814, British forces Invaded Washington, D.C., and burned the U.S.
capital's main buildings.
. ,
in 1922, an Atab Congress at Nablus rejected the British mandate for... ':1

PBlestlne. • '
' ..
. .
In 1984, a fhtworks explosion in .Atlatahuca, Mexico, during a religious
c:eJebntlon killed 45 people and and Injured 33.
And In ~8811. France uploded a hydroi!en bomb at a South Pacific
tettinfi ground te becometheworld'a fifth1hennCHJuclearpower.

The latest anununition provided to
critics of the old seadog has come
from une of the nation's biggest
defense cuntradors, General
Dynamics Corp., whose Electric
Boat Division manufactures our
nucl ear subma rines. Rickover has
never been shy about criticizing con-

tractors who don't meet his exacting
standards.
In a private letter to Adrn. Thomas
Hayward , chief of naval operations.
Electric Boat's general manager, P.

.131
.1110
.214

•
11

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"-*1'• Gl.mel
!Eichelberger

at

6-4)

cago rKrukow U 1
Atlanta

IBotuui

3-IOi

IC1uilttnson ~~ In!

at

TOI'&lt;JIIto

~

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Cbi·

Philadelphia

Los Arlgtles !Hooton H 1 al Pilla burgh

IJonea 1.0), lnt
New YIM'k IScott 3-61 at
tBerenyi )...3), lnl
San
Francbco
1Aluander
StLouis !MArtinez Ml, fnl
Only games scheduled
Tuadly'a Gamn

Cincinnati

6-51

11l

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6
I

6
7

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.131
.131
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3
4

...
, ...
2...

New York 8, Kansaa City 0
Mllw•ukee I, Minnesota 5
Clevoland • • Collfomla 3
BaltlmOI'&lt; 7, O.kland 4
Boston 1, Seattle 5
Moaday's Gamet
Texas 1Jenkins f.41l at Toronto
en~j:ller 2-0)
K.tnills City I Jones
iSchau.eder ~~. lnl

1-1J

at

Minnesota ! Havens G-31 at
rJutm 6-41, m 1
Chica)CO

{I&gt;otson

8-31

1 Ber-

Oetrvit

New York
Milw.Hukee

;at

tVuckuvich l-31, lnl
Bostoo rTana.r111 ~ 1 al California 1Ren-

&amp;in Diego at Chicago

ClnctnnaU at Mootreal,

I
3
3

6

7
7

~

SeatUe
KanauCIIy

.100

9

7
6
!
WI!ZT

x-NewYork
Clevoland

Collfomla

AU..!a I , MmdJul I
New York S. ctnctnn.t.i 2, 10 iMlngs
St.IMila II, Los Allfleles 7
Chicaao I, San Francilco s
Philadelphia I, HOI&amp;IIon 0

s.n

-

Balllmoft

.417
2'-:1
7
.4 J1
2~
Te111
~
7
.286
41.&gt;.!
Minnnlota
4 10
t ·Find.-half diviaton wlnntr
s.t.nlly'1 GllmH
Detroit 2, Tnu 0
New Yorlt S, Kansas City 0
Chicao~~:o I, Toronto ll
O.kland I, Baltimore 0
Milwaukee 4, Minnesota 3, 10 innings
C.lifumia 3, Cleveland 2, 10 innings
Boston 5, Su~ 3
Sud.y'• O.mes
Chic~o 13, Toronto 2
Dtlnlrt &amp;, Te~ 4

l

.....,.•• Games

ko f)-3) , IR )
Cleveland
!Walls
}6 )
at
Oakland
1Keou~h 7-3 ), 1n1
Btt.lltmore m .Martinez 8-41 at Sealtlt!
d..t!a ch ~~. l nl

n1

AUanta II Philadelphia, ! n I

l.m ~eles al Plt\.sbu.rgh, 1 n 1
Howrton at New York, lnl
San Franci:sco at St.Louis, tn 1

'J'\Ieaday'sGamt'5

Tt&gt;xas 1:11 Turmttl

Clevelalld at O.akland

Transactions

Kansa!l City at Detruil,

1

Minne:wta al New York,
Chicat!o al

Milwuult~ .

n1
1

ni

1n 1

Bl..lliton 1:11 Ca lifornia , tnl

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In other NL gal'l)eS, Pittsb!'rgh play.
line drive despite crashing into the
By WILLIAM R. BARNARD
beat San Diego ~2. New York tripAlthough Butler is only 3-for-18 in wall.
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AP Sporll Writer
his first five major league games, he
CanliDal.lll, Dodgen 1
Atlanta's pennant hopes are ped Cincinnati 3-2 in 10 inqings', St.
St. Louis, held to a total of eight · '
usually gon~ ~th the wind by this Louis ouUasted Los Angeles ' 11-7, has scored four runs and knocked in
hits in two previous losses to Los ·
time of year, but the split season and Chicago edged San fr-ancisco 6-5 two.
Mels 3, Reds 2
Angeles, erupted for 20 hits, insome clutch baseball from players and Philadelphia blanked Houston 6·
Bob Bailor starred at the plate and eluding four by Keith Hbasemanernandezha. d
like Brett BuUer are raising hopes . o.
The Braves ~both their runs in the field in the loth inning as New
The Cardinals first
a
for the Braves.
two-run homer , a double and two
The Braves, 9\'z games behind Los in the sixth inning off Steve Rogers, York trimmed Cincinnati.
Bailor hit a sacrifice fly in the top
singles to improve his second season
Angeles In the National League West ~. the loser altho\lgh he allowed
average to .433.
when the players' strike began June only three hits in nine innings . of the inning to break a 2-2 tie and
Bob Shirley pitched 42-3 innings
12, are 9-li and In ·first place after Benedict led off with an infield then made a leaping, over-thesingle
and
reached
second
on
Larry
shoulder
catch
in
left
field
to
end
the
for
his fifth victory in eight
Sunday's 2-1 victory over the MonParrish's
throwing
error
on
the
game.
He
held
on
to
George
Foster's
decisions.
treal Expos.
Butler, who was leading the ln. ternational League in hitting with a
.335 average when hi. was called to
the Braves after the · strike, , Is
greeted by the theme from "Gone
With the Wind" whenever he comes
to bat in Atlanta. His natural
popularity based on the similarity of
his name to Southern legend Rhett
Butler can only increase if he keeps
contributing to Braves' ·victories.
On Sunday, his groundout knocked
in the winning run in the sixth inning
and his throw from left field cut
down the potential tying run at the
plate an inning later.
Butler's throw after a single by
Gary Carter carried all the way in
the air, and was a little to the left of
ther, Regina Nance, and Becky Adkins. Back row AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL-STARS - Outthe plate, but catcher Bruce
Coach
Pat Dent, Julie Roush, Diana Wblte, Sandy Matstanding softbal layers chosen to compete on the
Benedict speared it and made a
tox,
Roberta
Greene, Kim Eblin, Charlie Lilly, SamanAmerican League all-star team were, front, 1-r,
diving tag on Montreal runner Terry
tha
Roush,
Kim
Stewart, Cindy Riffle, Nancy Rolllus,
Daphne Dillard, Kim Dent, Gina Follrod, Tracy
Francona, who was trying to score
and Rhonda Edwards.
Beegle, Dreama Honaker, Lynn Arthur, Anita Guinfrom second.

..

BASEBALL
AmerkuW.-

T. Veliotis has now accused
Rickover of reckless seamanship
while at the controls of the new
nuclear sub La Jolla last month .
Every submarine delivered to the
Navy is given a personal test run by
Rickover. A routine part of each
shakedown cruise is a maneuver
ealled the "crashback" exercise is
over - or at least it should be. But
according to Veliotis. Rickover left
the engine in reverse too long. For a
full three minutes, the La Jolla went
backwards at 11.6 knots, plunging
down at a 4(klegree angle. It sank
240 feel before Rickover finally took
it out

or reverse.

"At the time of the incident,"
Veliotis wrote, "the ship's basic
safety system had not been tested
under at-sea conditions and a large
percentage of the crew had not had
experience in operating a submarine
at sea. Given these circwnstance. a
relatively minor personnel error under what can only be described as a
hil(hly stressful situation could have
resulted in disastrous con-

parently, is that no junior officer is
going to challenge the fearsome
Rickover. Last January, Rickuver's
sea-trial coordinator gathered ship's
officers . together and explicitly
authorized them to countennand the
admiral if the sub was going out of
control.
"He very clearly advised the skipper that the executive officer if they
had any concern relative to safety ...
that they should feel no hesitation in
giving an order prior tn or countennanding Rickuver's," em internal Electric Boat memo states.
But overruling Rickover is eas&amp;er
advised than done. One Navy officer
told a company official that " nobody
ca n control Rickover," according to
the memo. By the time someone did
sununon enough

coura~e

lu coun-

termand the old adrniral. "the tilne
available fur recovery may be msufficient," the memo slates.
Fear of Rickover's wrath apparently extends to the upper
echelons uf the Navy as well. Adm.
Hayward's response to Electric
Boat's complaint said only that the

sequences .~ ·

Navy is "taking steps to insure im-

Despite an untested safety system
and a green crew, there were no
disastrous consequences. But a souree at General Dynamics told my
associate John Dillon, "This is not
the first time a sub has gone out of
control during this maneuver" with
Rickover at the helm.
A big part of the problem. ap-

proved cunununicotions in future
sea trials whereby ship's speed will
be more closely monitored ."
That hardly addressed the company's complaint.
DANGEROUS
DEMONSTRATION : The air traffic controllers have complained fur years
that their reports of unsafe con-

alone details, of all - focus on the
criminal justice system and
procedural revisions that would
ma jor lea ~ u es are well into Season strengthen the authority ·of lawenforcement agencies and-the courts
II .
You probably also have an idea of and limit some existing privileges of
the top 10 or even 20 TV programs if defendants. It also calls 'for feder~l
you are a reader of the en- aid to the states in the construction
tertainment pages with their of more penitentiaries.
If for no other reason, the report is
periodic bulletins from the network
ratings wars. And you may even notable as a proposal for heavy adhave heard of the Big Apple's 13 best ditional expenditures at a tlnie of
bagel bakers if you are among the much-publicized budget cutting, .The
readers of New York magazine, a proposed new prisons alone add up
contemporary cult by no means con- to an estimated $2 billion. .
fined to Manhattan.
Whether the entire report adds up
But do you know 64 ways to com- to an effective assault upon the
bat violent crime?
crime problem is, however, another
The Attorney General 's Task For- case upon which the jury may be out
ce on Violent Crime says it &lt;foes. It for some time to come.
lays them -a ll out in a report that
It is being presented to the public
wraps up four months of hearings in as a response to the public's own getsix cities and delivers, or at least tough mood, something "the 11C9Ple
makes a voluminous start, on At- want done" in the words of Griffin
torney General William French Bell, task force cO'Chail'll!an and
Smith's pledge to make the problem hiJnself a former attorney general.
of violent cr1me his "highest
But in the first place, .there Is
priority" during his service in the reason to question wlwither" the
Reagan administration.
report is addressing the realities of
The report's major provisions the actual crime problem or 01\IY
space dues not permit mention, let what is perceived as tl1!i ¢9bleni.
You certainly know, asswning you

•

Plllll&gt;urJb I, Soil Diego 2

DETROIT
TJGERS- Option~d
Marty
Cast iUu. infielder. tu Evo~tru;ville .
MINNESOTA
TWINS- Tr~:~det1
Ron
J acksun. inflrldt!r-ou\.fielder, tu lht' Ot!truil Til(er:; ltJr 1:1 player· tu bt! 1\ilffied lat·
er .

TORONTO BI.UE JAYS- Placed Dam-

asu Gatt"ili . second ba:iernan. 00 \he I~
d&lt;'y di:-oabled lisl. RecHIIed FrW Man·
rique~ . infielt.k!r, frum Knoxvillt! uf lht•
Sou\~·rn

l.c.HI(UC.

NatloMI Lea~~:ue
NEW YORK METS- Sil(ned John Christl'nst•n, uulfiellkr. omd Dave Cochrane,

ditions have fallen on deaf ears at
the F'cde ral Aviation Administration . Here's an example

that shows F' AA officials themselves
&lt;tddt·d unmx·es~ aril y lo the conln1llers' burdens.

lhinJ

baseln&lt;tl'l .

BASKF.TBAU.

Natioul8a1letb8U AtuWt.. lioo
ROS'I'ON CEI.TI~SiKncd ir.1cy

Jack·

sun. funv111rd .

FOOTBAlL
NaUoul Foebll l..nKue"
AT I. ANi A
FALCONS-Cut
Ml·Kinrlt!ly. Uu.:klc ; OH1ck Correa].

Ptlil

cen-

Tttlle}·. punln ; Allen Archie.
dt.o fl!lt'lin
t.ck ; Mike Hi~ins , runninl(
lMn:k, e~nd Pelt&gt;r Walters. j!uard.
ter : Stolin

Last January 16. over protests
from controllers on duly at the busy
Washington Control Center in
burg, Va .. supervisors insisted on
demonstrating a new backup radar
system to a few visiting officials.
The oew system, called " Direct
Across Radar Channel," or DARC,
was in the testing stage - and still
is. According to the · contr.ollers,
DARC l1as a crucial flaw: Wheh two ;
planes overlap on the radar screen
'
important information yn speed and
:dtitude of the aircraft is lost. The
I ""'burg controllers on duty pointed
out the risks involved in switching to
the DARC system on a Friday
t•vening with moderately heavy traffic.
·
Rut the FAA officials insisted on
their demonstration for lhe VIPs.
One controller told my reporter
Donald Goldberg that because of
DARC's inadequacies, he monenta rily " lost" all of the five planes he
was trying to direct to safe landings.
But when the controller turned in a
repurt on the episode, all he got for
his pt.tins wH s a reprimand.
Pootnote · FAA officials say the ·
flARC system has been improved ·

tees-

sinet' then .

By the numberso..L.________D_on_G_ra_ff
follow the sports pages, baseball's
four di vision leaders now that the

7
6
3

...

Now Yor1&amp; 7, ClneinnaU 4
San Dl&lt;l• 7. P l l - 6
Los Aqeles 3, St.LoUia I

Rickover is accused of nearly
sinking a SU.AJbL,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J._ac_k_A_nde_rs_o"'""p

doesn't suffer fools gladly. He knows
how to cultivate the media and how
to use his political clout in Congress.
In the process, he has made a lot of
enemies, both inside and outside the
Pentagon.
Now the sharks are circling the
crusty old adm iral once again. At 81 ,
he is long past retirement age, but
he is " reactivated" every two years
by special nomination of the
president and approval from

I

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~·- So-y··-

plight. mure next time.

test run .
Rickover is on acerbic man who

I

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MootreJI S.J, Atlanta 1-9

Mr. Friedman's monelary poli cies
in Great Britain, concerning whose

WASHINGTON - Adm. Hyman
Rickover is the father of the nuclear
navy . He fought long, hard and successfully to drag his beribboned
Pentagon colleagues into the
nuclear age. Now, it is alleged, he
almost sank a nuclear sub during a

.Ill
.100
.162

W L Prt GB
.ltt
10 3

Oeii'&lt;Jit
MUwallktt

.Ill

. · - - I, Houston 4
San FnnclJco 2, Chicago 1

willing buyers and sellers into a con-

ch ends next January , and pressure
&amp;
s building to get him beached permanently this tune around.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

......

GB

4
I
I
7
I
1

x-Ftrst:Mlf divWon winner

cell led activity. In other words, the
effect of the ·corset' was to conceal
the true rate of money stock growth,
and not to suppress it. "
So that, pace Caen. we haven'l had

Congress. His current two-year hit-

111 Court Strttt
Pomeroy, Ohio
lli-9Sz.2: 156
DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

San Dltilo

Pd.

L
7
I
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I

WDT

(i.e., the increase in the national
debt - Della Bi, and, finally, you
add Delta M to the H power, which is
the increase in the money stock used
to finance government spending, or
a part of it.
Now the rate of price inflation I Pl
is equal to the rate of the growth of
the money supply I MI less the rate
of growth of real output in the
economy (Ql.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

NATIONAL LEAGUE

ltABr

I Atlanta remains on top in NL West

•

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Why? Because it is a myth that as those demanded by a crime ex-'
" crime in the nation is rising by plosion .
And in the second place, · the
leaps and bounds."
Who says so? The Justice Depart- measures now proposed raise the old .ment. In " Myths and Realities question as to the relationship bi!About Crime," a study by the depar- tween cure and ailment. Proposals '
lrnent's OI,Vn researchers that the at- that would restrict bail, p'ermit ·
tomey general's task force apears to preventive detention, admit in ~urt ··
have overlooked, the reality is found Illegally obtained evidence and limit
to be that "the incidence of certain appeals affect constitutionally··
major crimes of violence and com- guaranteed rights. If this is wlllit the ·:
mon theft isjust about keeping pace public as well as the task force wan-''
with population growth."
ts, 11 suggests that once more we ai'e
Do not misunderstand. There is a overlooking the fundamental )lUi-problem. If anything, crime is pose of such fll(hts : They are there
higher than reported figures would to protect the innocent, but to ;be ef- '
indicate·because· roughly one out of fective they must also apply to· the
three incidentS are not reported to or suspected and · even actual
by police. · It is, ~we.ver, the. wrongdoer.
·
problem of a high but relatively
Griffin . Bell observes that, th~. ,
stable rate-: and til!! more serious . report .ts m large part ' 'symbQlic ,, ,
the -crime, the more stable the rate ~ r':"tore public faith in the crlmin~l ·tenlls to be. It is n&lt;1 thai of · ··crime JUSilee system. More to the ~~oirii it -;
mor~ . 'Is polltipal, a response to publici\' ·
explosion, as pictured in
celebrated ·
, pressures. rather th,an to tJie.· ri.liJ ~, ·
of t,IJC FBI
,
,natureofthe.probl'm·
·
-... · .·
. IIIUiuaJ!y on tJie
:',' it,wi)l be.a cosUy, srmbol .if.it.must.~ ''·.
to total lawlessness
l!e
. for, with i~roads illll?- the ,: ·
rights·of that S8me public. . ,. ,, ,
Measures to deal
would tJe doing a number on
with a high but .
crime are not ,necessarily
• •
·
··

COU.f~'..GE

PmSBURGH ~ Annuunced
that
Dick
lkde:ct:m h11s juinetl lhl&gt; fnotb~d! coachl~
staff as tt &gt;Johmll-er ilm~ist.aml.

Sports
briefs ...

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Gol(

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GRAND BLANC, Mich. (AP) Two-time U.S. Open champion Hale
Irwin shot a '2-undfl'illlr 34 on the
front side to increase his lead to two
strokes over the rest of the field in
the final round of the $350,000 Buick
Open golf championship.
Irwin, who started the final round
at 11-under 205 on the 7,001-yard,
par-72 Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club, had birdies on three of the
first seven holes but took three putts
at the 41~yard, par-4 ninth hole from
about 40 feet for a bogey.
YORK, England ( APJ - Tom
Weiskopf of the United States shot a
69 for a 16-under-par 272 total to win
the $175.000 Benson and Hedges international golf tournament.
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio lAP)Beth Daniel knocked in a two-foot
birdie putt on the 71st hole to win the
richest first prize ever of $50,000 and
capture her second consecutive
World Championship or Women's
Golf title.
Daniel, 24, a South Carolinian,
needed the birdie putt to snap a tie
with Jan Stephenson and post a 1under-Pjlr 71 for a total of 284, 4 under par in this exclusive $150,000
toufllllJJlent.
TOI{VO I APl - Seiichi Kanai, a
16-year Japanese pro, beat Yutaka
Hagawa in a sudden death playoff
and won the 1981 East Japan
Professional Golf Association Tournament in Shizuoka Prefecture,

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S100 MINIMUM

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15.65 OJo

.-.r'

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COMPOUNDED DAILY
TO YIELD ANNUALLY

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0/o

1'7.1

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Tennis
MASON, Ohio (APl - John
McEnroe captured the finals of the
Association of Tennis Professionals
and also bagged a $32,000 purse and
the approvdl of·the fans in defeating
ChrlB Lewis of New Zealand.
McEnroe beat Lewis 6-3, 6-4, and
delighted the crowd wben he gave
Lewis several points In a batue
which McEnroe controlled most of
the way.
TORONTO (AP) - Tracy Austin,
capping her comeback from a back
injury, upset lo!Heeded Olrla Evert
UO)'d 6-l, H for the singles tiU~ of
the PAJO,OOO Player:s ~Yence

WCJIIMlii'S tennla t~.
It wu onlY lhe leCOIId 1011 of1he)

Take advantage of high money market
rates with a minimum investment
of only_$100! Yo,ur int~rest is guaranteed
,for ,~1/iyears and your ,im(estment
.
is insured by tbe.Fe.d~ral Government.
.
. .
Your monlhly interest checks·can be aut~mat1cally depos1ted 1nto any
BANK·OfJE account. NO. risk, big interest, small investment. The 2112 year
Supet ! means you don't have to have a lot of money to make money
when times fire tough.

,

. Rate is e~tatmshed bi-weekly by the bank al

year for Uoyd, the~ cham- 1 •
pion,ln-48 m1tdleL For AUitini win·
nln8 lhe fi',O!IO flrllt ~ .ewer a
f.'
field that lllcluded lt qf tlie tap 211
'
~~ In the -kl~ the
l

.flnallllep back rnm tt llllllltha,an
the lidlllna fore.d of tilt loWer
blc:kallmentlllt .......
Tile ~ ClllfGrDiln 11M!'
ICIIt ullin ._ !he llllfdlllln tile ·
ioumamlnt. In
lhe had been
tlliNJIIICL

"'*

Rate 10 ettectthrough August 31. 1981.
• s~ljstantial

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.2S'o or more below the av13rage 2 ''r year yield on U. S. Treasury se cur,tttes
' 0: l,

p~nany for Early Wilhdrawa,t..
,:;
t 11.,
, ~

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BANK ONE .. -Member FDIC Pomeroy - Rutland - Tuppers P.lains

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�Monday, August 24, 1981

, ""' _ .... ,., ... ... oi ii H '-' 1

MONDAY
REVIVAL, Ash St . Freewill Baptist
Church, Middleport, with evangelist
Joseph Gwinn , Leon Starts Aug. 24,
7 30 p.m . each night ; special singing
first week , Dan Hayman and Hymntimers; Second, Joint Heirs; and
Gospel Messengers .

12 to 18 months ; back, I to r, Cheryl Lynn Jewell with
mother, Sharon Jewell, Harrisonville; Patsy Aelker
held by Cindy Aeiker, Pomeroy; Katie Sanders, with
mother, Susan Sanders, Pomeroy. Mrs. AlwHda Wer ner beaded the contest on behalf of the Middleport
Business and Professiona l Women 's Club. Presenting
awards " 'ert' Crickett Roush and Christi Maidens. Lillie Mr. and Lillie Miss Meigs County.

VETERAN- Long time volunteer worker with the Meigs Unit of the
American Cancer Soc iety, Mrs . Clara Lochary of Pomeroy, is pictured
taking her tour of duty at the society's county lair educa tiona l exhibit.

Couple observes anniversary
Mr. a nd Mrs. Wayne Ritchie
celebrated their 53rd wedding an·
nivcrsary recently at the residence
of their son-m-law and da u~ hle r , Mr
and Mrs. Forrest 1Bmma l Rhodes
at Navarre. All seven children of the

Rite hies were the re.
At the celebration were Mr. and
Mrs . Carll Eileen l Kuhn, Louisville,
and sons, Richard and Kenny,
Columbus; their son-in-law and
daughter , Mr. and Mrs. Randy Fox
and son , Derek, Canton; Mr. and
Mrs . Jack Ritchie, Pataskala, their
da ughte r-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Ritchie a nd children, Patrick and
Michell e, Centerburg.
Mr a nd Mrs. Elton Ritchie and
children . Beth Ann, Kenny an d
Ja yne. Coo lville; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Ritc hie and c hild re n. Kathy ,

· 11JESDAY
LADIES AUXIU.ARY, Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at post home.
AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXILIARY , Racine Post 602, annual picnic Tuesday at 6:30p.m . at
the Shrine Park in Racine . Dues are
now payable.
SPECIAL MEETING , Middleport
IJ&gt;dge 363, F . and A. M. Tuesday, 7
p.m . Work in the F . C. degree.
Refreshments
following
the
meeting . All members urged to attend.
MEIGS COUNTY Budget Commission, meeting , 10 a .m. Tueday at
the office of the County Auditor to
review budget requests of all subdivisions

HOYS - The boy winners of the annual pretty baby
&lt;· untest of the Meigs County Fair selected Saturday
afternoon are pictured. They are, front, I to r, Jared
Woods, with Janie Woods , Middleport, birth to three
months; Justin DeLaCruz, with Angie DeLaCruz,
RL'fdsville. three to six months; Jason Mora with
Denise Mora, Pomeroy, six to 12 months : Christopher
Buchanan, with Pam Buchanan, Reedsville, 12 to t8

months: back . I to r , Adam Moodispaugh and Julia
Moodispaugh, Pomeroy, 18 months to two years;
Daryl Bowers, with mother, Chris Bowers, Middleport,
two to three year old class: Donald Gheen with Terry
Gheen, Middleport, three to four. Mrs. Janet Korn
emceed the coolest and winners received $5 gilt certificates from Elberlclds. All participants received a

Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Shamblin. Mr . and Mrs . James
Ashley. Lancaster ; Robert Ashley,
Bub Ashley. Mr. a nd Mrs. David
Ashley a nd Ki m. Belpre ; Lisa

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SPECIAL RECOGNITION - One seoul from each
level of Girl Scouting In Meigs County was selected as
outstanding and awarded a trophy at the youth night
program. They are, left to right, front, Susan Jett,
seruor scout of Troop 1208 ; Brenda White, cadetle seoul
of Troop 1180 ; Lisa Pullins, junior scout of Troop 1100;
and JennHer Buck, Brownie of Troop 1271. Others

Melissa, Arlene April and Wayne
Earl. Long Bottom ; Bill Ritchie,
Coolville ; Joe Ritchie, Col umbus; , - - -- - - - - - - - -

selected outstanding iD their respeclive troops were,
hack, left to right, Angle Chapman, Chester Browple;
Kim Cogar, Troop 1204; Rebecca Bauer, Troop 1049;
Melanie Beegle, Troop 1220, and Latischa Price, Troop
1293. Those not present lor the picture were Dawnelte
Norris, HarrisonvlUe cadette, and Kim Stewart, Middleport Troop 1039.

Tbe County Council of Ministries
of . the Meigs County United
Methodist Cooperative Parish met
August 9 at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church . Rev. Richard
Rothemich , host pastor, led the
evening devotions with Mrs. Pearl
Carsey as pianist. "The Ten Commandments are still relevant for
today," stated Rev. Rothemich.
"Love God and love your neighbor these cover everything."
Following prayer, the business
session was led. by Mrs. Cordelia
Bentz, vice president. Mrs . Bentz
thanked the Rock Springs Church
for hosting the event. Th e
secretary 's report and treasurer's
report were accepted , with all bills
paid.
Rev. Florence Smith, evangelism
coordinator, noted the cancellation
of the county-wide revival in August.
Rev. Bondourant IS willing ,
however, to come for a meeting ln
1982.
Rev . Robert Robinson, social concerns chairperson, offered a review
of the Meigs County Food Bank. The
food bank, since inspection in

Rhodes and son. Le e. and their sonsin-law and daughte rs. Mr and Mrs.
John 1Na ncy 1 Bucher a nd son, Eric.
and Mr. a nd Mrs. George !Sandra!

Hail . Mr a nd Mrs. Parton and
c hildren, Sha nna and .Jeff. Mr . and
Mrs. Brya n Steele, Mr a nd Mrs.
David Stee le a nd c hi ldren. l.ee and
Michael, Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
Hay Miller and daughter . Sandy and
twins , T re~v i s and Tracy. Kidron,
and Beth of Co lumbus.
Films of pa.st re unions were shown
during lhc day e~ nd games and swim·
rning 111 the Rhodes puul were en·
joyed

531 JACKSON PIKE · Rt. 35 WEST

Pf1one 446· 4524
BARGAIN IIA riNEES ON s.Ar a SUIV
AlL $EA1"S JUSr S I .SO
ADMISSIOIV !VERY rUfSOAY &amp; 1 50

r: FRIDAY thru THURSDAY! :1
~ST

Ashier. Mr . a nd Mrs. Dw1ght Sham·
blin and Chad, St. Albans. W. Va ;
c;L'orgl' Sahmbl in II. Mason; Mr .
and Mr s . .Je rry Hall. .J udi a nd Brian
Ja1 . Add iSllll: Mr and Mrs . Buddy
Moure . Ji ll a mi Brent. Middletown ;
Mrs. Crcssa Mill er. MISty. Halley
ond Derrick, l..anra.s ter; Jame.s
As hley II. I «ncastcr . and Mr. a nd
Mrs. Wilbur Ashley

21 thru 27J

MIDDLEPORT-A birthday party
for Mrs . Florence Hannay was held
at the recent meeting of the Dorcas
Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society, Middleport First Baptist Church .
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Beulah White, gifts were presented
to Mrs. Hannay, a shutin, by the
members. Mrs. White served cake
and ice cream asisted by Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman and Mrs. Gwinnie White.

Birthday party guest

CAIIPfJIHI~ ~...:

POMEROY-Carl G. Bailey was
guest of honor at a surprise party in
celebration of his 80th birthday,
Aug. 16, at the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Bailey , Sr., Wolf Pen.
Attending were all his children
and grandchildren, except Rita
Bailey Ball , who was on her
honeymoon .
A decorated birthday cake and
homemade ice cream were served to
Mr. Bailey and his wife, Dorothy
Bailey, and to Mr. and Mrs . James
Enunit, Jinuny and Juli , Columbus ;
Mr . and Mrs. William Bailey, Rodney Bailey, Middleport; Miss Sherry
Barnhart, Bradbury ; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Johnson, Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Bailey, Jr., Wolf P en, Jennifer Neal,
Ad&lt;lison, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bailey, Sr.

ll!.iiill_

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\AT &amp; 5UN MATirt [l ~ 1: 00 ~ ) : 1

blu1• ribbon.

Patient at HMC
FOOD AND CWTHING STATE FAIR PARTICIPANTS - These 4-H me mbers were selected in
food and clothing for participation at the Ohio Slate
Fair, and at the Meigs County Fair youth night were
recognized and presented trophies. Included iD the
.were, front, left to right, Carrie Karr, Joe
Pa:rker_Mary Edwards, and Terri StOut, and back row,

the county council in September.
The youth coordinator, Rev. Mark
F lynn. reminded churches there is
still time to sign up to take part in
the next county " Bible Bowl" il11
August 30 at the St. Paul United
Methodist Church in Tuppers Plalll.s
at 2 p.m . The quiz wiU be on
Romans . Participating groups
should notify Rev . Flynn at 94!1-2895.
The dales of September 19-20 were
announced fur the Athens District
Youth Convention , to be held at
Camp Asbury near Rio Grande .
County council voted to approve
the establis hment of a separatge
youth counc il for the county . The
youth committee. as presently constituted, will continue to function .
Mrs . Thelma Dill reported on the
school of missions , held at Ohio Northern University.
Mrs . Janice McGee. who a lso attend ed the school of missions,
displayed the new program booklet
for the U.M.W. The three I.'s arc :
" listen ," " learn,' ' and " love _,. Mrs.
McGee noted that scholarshi ps are
available annually through the
Athens Di strict for the school uf
missions.

February, has assisted a total of 17
families facing emergency loud
needs. Twenty churches responded
to the initial appeal for food items ,
with the average size of family
assisted included four persons .
Suggested proposals included the
following : duster food banks to
decentralize responsibilities; each
cluster should have a cluster chair·
person ; the county council, through
its socia l concerns committee, will
name a responsible person and
make needed suggestions.
It was noted that the food c&lt;&gt;-op is
functionin g smoothly . Spe cial
thanks was expressed to the Meigs
Tire Center for its recent donatiOn of
two tires for the prish van.
Rev . Richard Thomas . com·
munications coordinator. reminded
churches to update names and addresses of persons who have moved
away or relocated. Please notify
Mrs. Janice McGee of changes for
the contact mailing lists.
Concern was noted for the possible
closing of the county infinnary . The
social concerns cununi ttec will Ill·
vestigate the s ituation and report to

Becky Loftis, Carla Rife, Angle Spencer, and April
Parker. Also awarded trophies but not present for the
recognition were Klla Young, Tammy Calaway, Leah
Danner, Usa Collins, Terrie Starcher, Beth Ritchie ,
Susan Danner, David Rice, Sherry Arnold and Krlsti
Haynes .

Mrs . is
Louis
e Rose
nb aatum,
Pomeroy,
a surgical
patient
the
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Cards may be sent to her at Room

308.

Revival to begin
A revival will begin Monda y at the
Carleton Church located on the
Kingsbury Road. Services will be
held at 7:30p.m. each evening. The
evangelist will be Miles Trout of
Poplar Ridge . On Tuesday night the
Soul Finders of Cheshire will
provide special music.
Other
singers are invited.

The group sang " Happy Birthday."
Mrs. While had devotions using a
conunentary on the 23rd Psalm by
Dr. Charles Allen. Plans were made
to remember Vivian Titus and Eddie
Demoskey on their birthdays. Attending were those named and Mrs .
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Helen
Bodimer, Mrs. Eva Hartley , Mrs .
Freda Edwards, Mrs. Sarah Dawn
Owen, a nd Mrs . Sarah Fowler .

Insurance Package

New arrival
Sayre
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. John
Sayre, Reynoldsburg, are announcing the birth of a daughter,
Jodi Lynn, on Aug. 17 at Univers ity
Hosp ital, Columbus. She weighed
six pounds, 15 ounces and was 18 ineheslong .
Paternal grandparents a re Mr.
and Mrs. Charles P. Bailey, Por·
tland, and the late Oliver Sayre.
Maternal grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Kenneth Fosnaugh, Lancaster .
Paternal great-grandmother is Mrs .
Ethel Johnson of Portland, and the
maternal great-grandmother is Mrs .
Mary Winkler , Columbus. Mr. and
Mrs. Sayre have a son, Justin
Gerald, 18 months old.

D o you own or operate a
s mall or medium
size
r c l ail store, office . apart·
mentor c hur c h ?
Then - you m ay quai ·
il y
t or
Sta t e
Auto
Mutur a l' s ~ERIES ONE
Busin e ss
Policy .
.a
mod e rn
as
tomorrow
pa c kag e p la n th at com ·
b .n e s a n array of broad
prQp c rty
ilnd li a bility
cov r r age s
required to
s a fc c1uard your opera ·
t1on s A li tor a ve ry a ttracti ve. a ffordabl e pr e mium
Le t
us expla in th e
sup e flo r
features
of
~f. Rti'S ONE ... the short
t i m e we s p e n d together
c oul d prove inte resting
and rewar din g to you.
Ju st giv e us a call or
mail the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNER
IN SURA NCE

r-;::=:::===:;;:=====~i

'· I

Hattie Frederick

I'OOPF.D - Too pooped to take in any more sights at the Meigs County fair. thrtt' month old John Thomas White, son of Robert and Dove
Whitt'. Coolville. na pped on a luneh sta nd counter as the fair artivities
movt"&lt;l right a lon~ .

Jo Ann Tewks bary. R.N .. Meigs
County tuberculosis nurse . will be
cDnduct ing a community skin
tes lln ~ clinic at the Middleport Fire
Departmen t on Tuesday. 6 to 8 p.m .
All re rsons who rece ive the tes t on
Tuesday must return on Thursday
during the sa me hours to have th~
resulls read . This is a free service
and everyone is urged to take advantage of the opportunity.

The lhil1 Sentinel
I L:SPS 14&gt;9&amp;01
A ()i\·il'inn nl Multimt'dia . l nt•
Pu lll t~ ht'd t''" l'r~ Cl (lt· rn•&gt;~ •n . Mundo-i ~ th r t • u ~ h

f' ndltY. 111 Court Sln•t•t IJy till' Olun \' a l i t· ~
P\Jbh s lun~ Cnm pt~n ~ · Mulllllll'tll~t . l n 1.' .
Pumt•rt•~ . Oh111 45169. !Hl-21:ifi St•1'UII1I r l;t s....;
!)l•sla l!l' paul il l Pl'lllt'n' \ . Oh1u

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Mt•mbo.•r T lw •\ S.'-!N.'I;th'tl P rt'.~ ~ - ln l a nt!IJ ~ 1 , .
1! P r "-~ lh sot 't,tln •ll ;uN.I lht• Alll t'rt &lt;"it ll
J'l; ,• o,~ :-. Pilpt.·r Puhll ~ h· · r ~ -\ .~ .-...~ l&lt;t l l, rl . N illl" no~ l
Ad n• rl i." lll'" l~qn•· ' t ' ll l all \ t ' . Branh;tlll
Nt•o,~-s fl&lt;lpt.'T S;dt•-., 7:1:1 Tlunl ,\n•nut•. :'&gt;t•w
Ynrk . N t•wY nrk IOOI J

'

Ptll llt' ru_r . Ohi u 4:i769 ·

SL RS( "RIIP'J"ION

RATf::.~

8)· farrirrtlr Motor Ro1.11r
Ont· o,~· t·l'k
Ont · M"nl h
Out• \'t•;tr

$1 00
$~

-10

~2 . 80

srw;r.f:rorv
J'KICI-:S

l!i C t' IIL'!
Su b :'l· nlwr ~

uut de s 1nn~ to j)il)' llw earn er
advann• dirn·t t u Tht.• D111ly
Sl&gt;nt 1nt&gt;l on a l . 6 nr 12 munth ba!lts . Cr~ 1 t
w•lll:k• )(IVell rarrkr t'Ht' h month.
llllt) Tl'ml l 111

Nu s u~: ript i ort.'l by uwil pennitt~ in towns
"''lwn• hom e urr ier service iliiiVIIillblt&gt;.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

Olllo •Dd Wt•t \'lr11aJa
· ] Munth
Siunonth

... ltC.!iO
t1 ;,50

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

I Year ... "b~(h.'~i.kOtih...... $3.1.00
•ad Wr•l Vlrcinll
. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . lli.OO ,
. .......... .. ..... $20.00 ·
6Month . .
J Month .

) Year . . . ... . . . . _

.., __ ... S38.Cit

i·

we·re your hometown POWer compliJiy
But we're also part Of American Electric Power
one Of tile most effiCient alectrlc systems In '
the country.
wnen you tum on a Nght switch, or an
~elei@CICb~tc appliance, you probably don't care
where the eleCtricitY comes from. As long as It
QetStnere.
·
.
· aut we care, because the cost.Of making
electrlcltv can vary from plant to plant at

different times of the day. And, since we·re ·
part of the 7-state AEP System we can tap 'h
best combination of generation and ti'ansrtu;.
slon efficiency to get the most economical
power to you Instantly from anvwnere ll't the
svstem.
Being part of tnls POwer svstem and Its
split-second ~ltlencv 1s one reason whv.we·v
bBj!h able ,to keep vour electriC rates below th:
national average .~
·

OHIO POWER COMPANY

'

' f ''

.

-

Friendly Circle meets here.
.

POMEROY-A program on use of
time wu preaetJted by Miss Enna

Smith When

Friendly Circle met
Tueltlay evanin&amp; at ~ty Cb~.

., Sci'JJili!re On tln\e, u ·~~

e, vene 2,

and DonJIIe, (&gt;oldie F~rick, Kay.
Frederl~ Jerry, ·Diane, . Mellaaa
·
.
, ·
· ,' and Brtap l"nide.riek, Mae and VanYoung, was given by Mlli
'V . '' ce ~ Eltlielr· ~ · ~ Van .
. Rei!'tl .. and , inclUded ~plqre, , · M~r, Mr.~ Mri.
Spencer
poems, a penO;nal tribute and unl!son ' Keith and Kelly, Avis Blnc Mr_and
prayers by ll)elll~ In a:triendlhiP. · r.f,s_ ·'i't'ald Spencer ..-a Ray, Mr.
eircle, '
¥r'· . Jl,onald I Jlauck,• • and r.trs. rRullleU ~.and Mr . .
; ~• .~a silent lluc:- . anciMn.O.ytonspe'ncet. '

Ma"'

aanY

";Be~ld no,. )a the acceptabh time" in the · pi'Cgt'lql, , tlotl follo'l!-~11 j the .I September •
'
"Wait a Minute" ~ted Oitt the, meeting. A11*11k;v~u note from the . To meet Tuesday
~

· ~ •SOUrce U .! SUtlltal 'INf'Oooi: PfO ., MOUI C»if 1
I
I
. •

we give It our.best

'

'

A party honoring Hattie Frederick
on her 9lst birthday was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Spencer, Chester.
Mrs. Frederick is a resident of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center . Her
granddaughter brought her to the
Spencer home which was fonnerly
Mrs. Frederick's home. Cards and
gifts were presented to Mrs.
Frederick . who a~ talked by
talephone to two nieces in Colorado.
Russell, Wald and Sarah Spe~r entertalll,l!li wltll music. Cake, Ice

QANCING' WAS ONE of the hlghlfghta,of ,ibe afle!'JIIMiil 'l'lnlrl4!8y1at
the Seulor Clttzeu' tent, as .SeDior CJtlzeDI'
cream, potato chips, icecl tea and
. Day was' olltlen&gt;ed at ibe
Melp County Fair. Eojoyluc a alow twtMijep were Mr. and Mn1 Sam
coffee were served. ·
Mlc~eJ; Porllaad. A lutreheon, 'musical e~te'r\ofnmeat, aDd a visit from ' ·
Attending were Mr. and Mn. ArvH
Flower Seed the clown were a few more of the activities enjoyed by the
Holter, Lii:cy Spencer, Mr. and,Mrs
maay alleadln3
the spec:lal event.
.
.
EI,!IOII spencer, Jom Henry Speiicer:
Mr. and Mrs. RIJ!I Sjlencet, ,Triaha

I'OSTMASTI-:11 S•:ml ;tddn •:-., 1" Tht· Oa 1h·
&amp; ·ntult' l. Il l Cuu rt St

McNickle decorated
Tech . Sgt. Robert C. McNickle ,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell McNickle of Racine has been decorated
with the U. S. Air Force Commendation Meda l a t Wurtsmith Air
Force Base, Mich.
The Air Force Conunendation
Medal is awarded to those individuals who demonstrate outstanding achievement or
meritorious service in the perfonnance ol their duties on behalf of
the Air Force.
McNickle, an aircraft maintenance technician with' the 379th
Bombardment Wing, is a 1963
graduate of Southern High School, .
Racine.

Celebrates birthday

(amlly ~ df ' Mrs. ,' Young was .•· .
aclulowl~. . 1 , ·.• ' •
. ' • . POME;RO:Y ,- , . l'he. ·L adles
pi'olralt). ' .1 \. , . ,,.., 1\ llla'ti ~ was tteryec1 to 12 .· AW!illary of ~w We~ Post 38,
llil'vlc:e 1n $lliiiOrY ol memll;eri- ~::t.fla· Ellla~ Fl~ Amm~ · ~\11\.
meet at 7:30
·.-nber, ~ Davia ..and Mia. Opha Olfvt,
· p.m. 'J'tlellday at the poet home.

tliJIItnl. of

.

·

falllfu1

~lion.

~

and,Obey'' 8114 pnye~

DALE HILL

,nu

fi.H • ruAL

t "l i ·.l \ f' t f' ll nu· more .1bou t th e
"
lot' II ~ · ON I
H u &lt;; .nes c; POliCy

215 W. Main
Pomeroy

; . on ~o·F ~...,

992-2668

i~ H (i N f

Homeowner Loans

than City Loan.
~dOn't

have to tell you about
the high cost of living these days Rut
prices aren't all that's going up. The
value of vour house is, too. In fact, it's
worth far' more today than ever before.
At City Loan, we can help you
tum that increasing value into the
money you need to meet major
wants or needs. Like a college
education. Or remodeling the
house. Or to make a special
dream come true. With a
Homeowner Loan of up to
$50,000 or more.
When it comes to solving a big
.
money problem, Ohio people
know where to l\ll'l1,'To City Loan. Because nobody
kn&lt;r.vS you-· and.your need&lt;i- like we dO.

CITYLO\N

COMPANY

l[NO£R

f I

IN \ l , RAN(t
(OM t ' {J N y

RD TRACTORS

G)
,.......

{J

f , p I OMOI ~ Il t

Nobody knows
more about

Co nducts skin
test clinic

y,t...

Dorcas Circle honors birthday
of Florence Hannay, shut-in

Mr. cmd \'irs. Forrest (E mma I

Ashley reunion success
The third annua l reunion of the
Wi lbur Ashl ey family was held Sun·
da y at the fann home of Mr . and
Mrs. George Shamblin. Chester .

..

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT LIO.
NS CLUB . regular meeting, Wednesday noon a t the Meigs Inn. Zone
cha irman will visit.

Bennington.
Others attending were Mrs. Zana

...

County Council of Ministries meet

SOCIAL
CALENDAR

GIRLS - These are tbe girl winners of the annual
pretty baby contest staged at the Meigs County Fair
Saturday afternoon. They are, front. I to r, JenoHer
Rose Starcher with Gilberta Starcher, Pomeroy, birth
to three months; Stephanie Hlad, with mother, Joyce
Hlad, Pomeroy,threeto six months; Alyson Patterson,
with mother, Teresa Patterson, Pomeroy, six to 12
months ; Staeey Warden, with Bunny Wa rden, Racine,

1

.....--.,

. . . . CON1D.OO.TA~TION

�Monday, August 24.

UMW hears Mrs. Edward
Carolyn Edwards, wife of the
supermtendent of the Athens
District of the Untied Methodist
Church, Benjamin Edwards, was
~ speaker at the recent meeting
of the Uruted Methodist Women at
the Pomeroy Umted Methodtst
Church.
Her talk followed a dinner held m
the soctal room wtth the Rev Edwards givmg the table grace Guests
were from the Asbury Um ted
Methodist Church d Syracuse.
~1inersvtlle Umted Methodtst Church, the Forest Run Umted Methodtst
Church and the Chester Umted
Methodist Church
Followtng the dmner Mrs Robert
McGee, prestdent. welcomed th e
guests and the members present
and mtroduced Mrs Edwards. who
talked about btbhography on
meditatiOn and hohsttc health. state
of consctousness, medttalton tdeas
meditatiOn as a means to melt poun

ds away, exerctses to help release
tenston She also talked on ho&gt;~
relaxatiOn and medttatwn can
reheve stress and some health
problems and the power of hohshc
healtnR

Mrs
Edwards noted that
medttatton wtth stlent prayers,
quotation of Bible verses and even
verses of hymns help stress and
health problems m ttmes of trouble
She gave a lesson on relaxallon and
meditation and told how to prepare
the body and nund to reheve stress,
pam and Improve some Illnesses
Some of those attending told of thetr
reaction to the expenence dunng the
med1tahon
Books on
med1tatton
and
relaxation were hsted by Mrs Ed\\ards who displayed rnatenals on
the s ubjects
Dunng the busmess meetmg Mrs
Mc-&lt;:ee told of her v1s1t w1th Mrs

Announce wmners
Flower show wmners for Metgs 4H were Carne Karr, grand champiOn and Susan Wolle, reserve
champ1on, m the 13 and under age
group and Vtckte Wtse, grand
champ1on and reserve champwn m
the over 13 age group Janet Bolm,
an accredtled JUdge of the Ohio
Assoc1atton of Garden Clubs, JUdged
the show

BARBARA'S

Society meets

satooL

OF
DANCE
SIGN u

Mrs. Betty Spencer hosted the
Tuesday rught meebng ri the
Evangehne MissiOnary Society of
the Pomeroy Church of Christ
Mrs. Eileen Bowers prestded at
the meetmg which opened With Mrs
Janet Venoy usmg as her devoltonal
toptc, " How Does Your Garden

P FOR
F 1 1Cl111" I n
'
•TAP
•JAZZ
•LADlES JAZZERCISE

EMS AT FAIR - Local emergency squads representing the Meigs
County Emergency Service alternated eacb day, ID case an emergency
developed at tbe annual Meigs Coonty Fatr. Tbe volunteer oquads took
blood (lreSilures aud accepted douatlons !0. new bearl monitors to be put
on the squads. The volunteer units are ~'0 urging area voters to vote yes
on the upeomlng emergency levy, November 3. On tbe opening day of the
fair the Racine unll was dtspatehed to the fair. Pldnred are squad members Shelba Wicklloe, Dorothy Rlffie, Ltuda Diddle, Dolores Wolle, and
Charlotte Wamsley.

MIDDLEPORT A spec1al
meetmg of Mtddieport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, w1ll be held at 7 p m
Tuesday There w1U be work m the
F C Degree and refreshments will
be served followmg the meetmg

CONCURRENT
NOTICE
NOTICE TO PUBLIC OF
NO SIGNIFICANT EF
FECT ON THE ENIIIRON
MENT ANO NOTICE TO
PUBLIC OF REQUEST
FOR RElEASE OF FUN
DS
Date August 7, 1981

VIllage ot Pomeroy , Oh•o
Village Hall. Pomeroy

OhiO 45769, 992 2246
TO All INTERESTED
AGENCIES ,
GROUPS
AND PERSONS
On or about 1date l the
above named wt lt request
ttle u S Department ot
Houstng and
Urban
Development to release
Federal funds under T1t1e 1
of the Houstng and Com
muntty Development Ac t of
1974 1PL93 3831 for The
followtng pro1ect
Santtary Sewer E)(
tensron
water
Ma tn
Replacement
Publr c
Factlrty
v llag e
of
Pomeroy, Ohto
It has been deferm tned
th a t such request tor
release of funds wtll not
constrtute
an
acf ton
srgntfrcant!y affecttng the
qualtty of the human en
vironment and accordmgly
the above named Vtllage
has decrded not to prepare
an Emnronmental Impact
St a temen t under
the
Nattonal Envrronmental
Poltcy Act of \969 ( PL 91
1901
An

Env.ronmental
Revrew Record respectmg
ttle wtth 1n pro1ect has been
made by the above na med
VIllage wh tch documl"nls
the env rronm e ntal revtew
of the pr,ect and more fully
sets forth the reasons why
such Statement 1S not
rfQI,ltr(d Thts Env1ron

I

btd
s tn
response lo
to
~;~;;;~~~~~§~~~;;;;;~~ submtt
afforded
fult
opportumty
fhts
tnvttatton
and w t/1 not

~

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

. LARGE SELECTION OF REMNANTS
JUI800 and up
CARPET

RUBBER BACK

$1 2

$1395

r---------------------1

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savel II

Green and Brown

Dnve A Ltttle- Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Mam 51.

WANT AD INfORMATION

eANNOUNCEMENTS
l-AIIfMM.!numents
4-Giv•.. way
J-- Happy •ds
._LO'st aMI Found
7-Yarttsate
1-Pubhc S.llt
I Auctton

RENTAlS
41 - HOUIIII!Or llltnl
42-Motule Homes
for Rent
••-Ap•rtmenlt tor RenT
~~Furn.shed

R"m'

46--Space for Rent
41- W.antM to Rent
41-Equtpmentlor Rent

eMERCHANDISE
eEMPlOYMENT
SERVICES
'• - HeiDWantt&gt;e~

20

U- ltltur•nce
14- Butlnon Tratnlng
IJ-5choel&amp;lnstructto"
16-R,.dlo TV
&amp; CB Rep.atr
11-Wanled To Do

Real Estate

t - au""'"''

n-LIYtUock

Public Noltce
Sharon K Wtlson formerly
Sharon K Mount. Deten
da nt Thts actton has been
ass1gned Case No 17938
and 1S pend tn g tn t!)e Court
of Common Pleas of Metgs
Cou nty
Pomeory, Ohto
45769

The ob,ect of the co m
pia tnt •s th e ob latn1ng ot a
d tvor ce and the ter
mtnatton of a marnage
c ontract between the par
ttes and the settlement of
the property nghts of the
partt es
You are r equtred to an
swer the comp!atnl wtt htn
28 days t"' fter the last
pub!t catton of th1S notJce,
whtch will be publ tshed on
ce each wee k for St X sue
cess•ve weeks The last
publt cat ton wtll be made on
September 4 1981. and the
2B days for answer wtll
commence on lhnt date
In case of your tallurc to
n nsw er
or
o th erw tse
respond as r equtrcd by the
OhtO Rules of
CtVII
Procedure
the
f1na l
hea r tng on fht s maHe r Wtll
be&gt; held a ft e r hte exp~ra tton
of 78 days after the last day
of publtcat1on ot fht s not tee
o r as soon thereafter a s can
bf' sc hed ul e d by the Court
Real Estate

~

Garden" and prayer
Reports were gtven by Charldene
Atkms, secretary; Mrs. Spencer, '
treasurer, and Mrs Veooy, Rower
fund report
Members responded
wtth something on gardens for roll
call Mrs LaDonna Clark presented
rnatenal on Eve carrymg out the
"Ladies of the Bible" theme. Mrs.
Spencer gave ltps on the B1ble and
Annabelle DavidsOn gave the
missions report
Mrs Clark WID
host the September meeting.
Refreshments were served to those
named and Eltzabeth Ohlinger, Mrs.
Helen Mtller, Naonu Ohlmger, Gertrude Bass, and Eva Dessauer.

eREAl ESTATE
_ Homtsto,. 5a 1e
Mobilt Home1
tor Saht
n - Fums tor Sale
l4- ButltlltU Bvlld•not
U - Lots &amp; Acreave
li-Re Estalt Wnted

l2-1

29

37- Reattors

JO

_ _ __

32 _ _ _··-- 33 _ _

W~ni· Ad AdvertiSing
De~dlines

MOnclar I II 11111 Saturday
Tu..•ay tflru Friday 2 :top M
thetlar INI.,.eiKIItllullon
Sunday t • PM Frtlar

J&lt;j _ __

35 _ _ __ __

'

Velma NICinsky, Assoc
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 3111
General

' wtth
'
Mail This Coupon
Rem•trance
The Daily Sentinel

729

Pomeroy, Ohto 45769

---------r-------·-·-·---..,,-

7l-V•ns &amp; t w D
7._Motorcycles
75-Auto
&amp; •cces•ortel
71-Auto Rt!NIIr

p.,,,

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

....
nOll

R.C.S. Rf;ALfY~ 'INC•

17 00

,•

Bl Lk CHILDS, Mgr:.
F&gt;fione 992"6312 ' 1

''" P:oriieroy, Ohlo "l!1

::..c~~·:.~rd c = u.:o

For of such Is lhe Kingdom
of God . 51
Mellhew
19:14.Thou shall be mlned
1 Samuel 20 18 . to be wllh
Chris! Is far beller
Phlllpplans 1 23. For to me
to live Is Christ, and to die
Is gain. Philippians 1 21
We love you Ed, Dezra and
Mandy

c:::,E::~~

T ras h p·IC k up I n

Call

V. C. YOUNG 111
992-6215 or992 7314
Pomeroy, Oh

ATTENTION Come tn and

-P!r~r;,~,!.:~k

Mtddleport, Oh.
Ph . 992·5016
or 992-7505

Rd

SPECIAl SALES New
never been shot, display
models·salesman samples
Special pr.ce on this group
Bear Whlletall Hunter,
$69 14 Bear LTD Polar
$129 95
Brown
Bear,
Slol9 95 Bear Mint Mag,
549.95
Kodiak spelcal,
$99 95
Spring Valley
Trading co, Spring \/alley
Plaza, oU6 8025

-Acldons •nd
remodeling
d
1
-R
oofing an gut er
work
- Concrete work
1FreeEst1malesl

4 17 Tfc

1

Old Bu1ldings
Free Est1mates
Ph. 247-3534
8 61 mo

O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

or

3 11 lfc

VINYL
SIDING

111 5erYtet

985-3561
PARTS AND5ER\IICE

ALSO ALARM WORK
PH. 247-3534

ALL MAIC£S
• WUhf/rl
• D11po.. 11

• Dr vert
•lhntu

• D•thw.aMn
•HotW•ttrT•nk•

, ColA l.•undrtts
.,.. Rtnt.al Praperttn
.; Apt Houu Owners
, Mobtle Home P.arlu

'"

8 6 1 mo

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all of your WTrTng needs .
Let George
Mtller
check your present elec
trical system
Res•dentlat
&amp; Commerceal

ROBERT MASH
992-6323
72Almopd

OGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS
Stdtng

~

-Auto and Truck
Repa•r
-Transmtsston
Repatr
Hrs.: Mon .-Fri.
9a.m.-5:30p.m.

EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates
Coli Collect
Ph 843 3322
7132mo pd

10 1 He

2 8 lie

For buld deltvery of
gasoline, heating 011 and
d1uel fuel, call Landmark,
992 2181, Pomeroy, Oh
Cht ld care center opentng
soon al Rtgg!tresl Manor
Ch1ld mu•t be potty
tratned For tnformatton
call Becky Drenner, 985
4138 or Sally Kaldwell, 6lJ7

POMEROY, OHIO

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

All types of roof work

And Home Matntenance
e Rooftng of all types
e Stdtng
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs expenence

new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts, guHer
cleantng and patnttng
All work guaranteed

PH~ 992-2259

Fret Estimates
Reasonable Pnces
Cilll Howard
949 2861
949 1160
2 4 ttc

PH 949 2160

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

POOLS
• Vinyl
• Fiberglass
• Stamless Steel

•
•
•
•

Stzes h·om 4x6 to 12•40

NEW liSTING - SYRACUSE - A huge
room, equtpped kttchen uf tltty room, 2 bedrooms,
centra l a tr front porch and a 50Xl00 lot Very neat
$24 900 00

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl 3,Box54
Raetne Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 15 lfc

NEW liSTING - 16 acres - Five Po 1nts area
water and electric avatlable, s mall stream pasture'
somef1mber $15,000 oo
'

Ph ( 304 ) 77 3-5634

C. L KITCHEN
Mason.

For Information Call
9491710•or949 2886
8 21 mo

7 5 tfc

PERSONALIZEO

Farm Buildings
Utility Buildings

Now Tak1ng
Enrollment For
September Classes 1n
Ractne and M1ddteport
Ages land Up
AdulT Classes Offered

TOM HOSKINS

All STEEl

SlleS
· From lOxJO
SMAll

CARPENTER
DANCE STUDIO

w. Va.

Backhoe
Excavattng
Sept ic Systems
Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Ltnes
eOump Truck
• Trencher
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992-7201

8 6 1 mo

5 21 lfc

''

NICE PRICE - and .an ce 4 room 2 bedroom home
wtth a 2 car garage under Has a level lot, storage
bu•ldtng, and ts cute at S15 500 00
ENGLISH TUDOR - A never before ltved 1n home
wtth a split entry, famt iY room large ltvmg room
separate dtntng room , 3 bedrooms 21/ J baths arid
wo•k•hop $54,900 oo
•

a

*1/

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

•

I ''

)P1RIGE REDUCED - Fully c arpeted and panel~
,. central cur, full basement and n 1ce k 1tchen , 5 th~
real way to descnbe thts 3 bed room homp A REAL
' BARGAIN $18.900 00
p,
!' ~"
i~,DNE FLOOR PLAN HOME IN rHE COUN (R'i' ~
'\ Has a big lot w1th a shed and workshop ~ The ~
·~drpom home has be.aut• ful knotty pine Walls 1n i~e
~ltctien adn ltvmg room , and there 1s a full
tiasef1lent with a woodburner Roo uced To S1B.900 00
'
'
LET
THE RENTER PAY FOR fHIS _ 2 ~~~~~~~1·. 1
t home wtth a large uttlity room dtntng room
porch, garage, and approx p~ acres 0f
grou~d

I

Wlter-S..,.r·Etectrec
G.. Ltn.-DIIches
water Ltne Haok-ups
Septic Tonks
Counly Cerlified
RoushL~n•

Cheshire, Oh
Ph.H77MO
17111&lt;

THE PH010
;I
PLACE
'

BARNETT'S
WELD• Alumtnum
SHOP
• Sleet
e CasTing e Trailer Hll·

ches • Metal Fabric•·
ttons
Monday Fr1doy
4pm tollpm.
All DIY SIIUrdly

..

-MMI

NOWt

•n

-

Ph. 949-2285

Located II MaptewL•tte tn Racine
7 17 1 mo

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph HJ-2174
H lie

PUbliC NOilCI

SALES &amp;

Calico Cat lost In the
vlclnlly of Road Side Park,
Upper River Rd Call .u.l9479
FOUND SeT of keys In the
Arcade at The fair Friday
Claim at Dally Sentinel
LOST Red Cocker Span1el
'Prtnce' Pet of elderly
couple a! Slaffhouse Road
On collar Mike Ba1fey 675
4116
REESE hitch head w1lh
ball
Lost between
Gallipolis Ferry, P 0 a. Rl
2 PI Pleasant 304 675 4874
7

VardSale

Yard Sale Furniture, bed
spreads, curtatns, small
appliances,
sheets,
chlldrens clothes, small
womens clothes, odds &amp; en
ds Grove R d between
Turkey Run a. Little Kyger
Rd Watch for Stgns
Garage Sale Aug 25 &amp; 26Th,
9 5 541 4th Ave , Gallipolis
Btkes, toys carpet, and
clothmg
Yard Sale 118 English
Road, Pt PI Monday and
Tuesday August 24 and 25 9
to 4 Children's clothmg
YARD sale Tuesday, 25Th
1912 Morquette Ave 9 4
CloThing a. mise
8

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

Gtveawav

4

ANY PERSON who has
anything to gtve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thtno for
sale may place an ad tn th1s
column There will be no
charge to the advertiser

B mo

old female,
Sheep dog oU6 1316

put

4 mo old wh1te rabbtt Call
4411 46.59

4 KITTENS 304 675 26l!5

General

Housi11y
H e. ~rlqu, ute r.\

1::.~~~ tJi,
216 E. Second Slrul

Phone
H614l-992·3325
NEW LISTING - Coun
try home of J bedrooms,
full basement modern
bath, F A
furnace
storm drs, &amp; w1ndows
Large lot for a garden or
ch1ldren Asktng S30 000
SPANISH DESIGN Stucco J bedroom home
1111 baths, paneling, car
pettng, large hVinQ w1th
woodburning ftreplace
Full basement, 2 lots
and 3 car garages Only
18 500
OHIO \/AllEY FRONT
- N•ce 1 room frame
w•lh 4 bedrooms, 2 full
batns, nat gas F A fur
nace, full basement,
palto, 2 porches and
large level loT
2.65 ACRES - Of !ruck
farm Large barn for
packing and storage
Modern 7 room home
Large family room, ntce
kitchen wttll stove and
dishwasher $43,000
TI'AllER lOT- W1lh
all ulllllles level w1lh
v1ew of the Ohio Rtver
$6,500
COUNTRY LAND - 90
acres with good hunlmg
Lois of woods, 12 yr old
tjedrooms,
full
3
basement, furnace and
woodburner Mall and
sc1111q1 rts

Hnu',lfU/

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old flit'
ntture and Anttques of all
k1nds, call Kenneth Swa1n
256 1967 m the evenmgs
CASH PAID for clean, late
mOdel used cars Smith
Buick Pontiac, GAI!tpolts
Oh 10 Call446 2282
WANTED To buy Junk
cars, scrap metal. and bat
ler.es Ca 11 388 9303
WE BUY FURNITURE
We sell furntture Sagraves
Furniture 446 4775
Late model farm wagon
good cond Call 446 7838 or
256 6474
BEDS IRON BRASS, old
furmture, gold, Stiver
dollars, wood tee boxes
stone 1ars, antiques, etc
Complete
households
Write M D Mtller, Rt 4.
Pomeroy, Oh Or 992 116f!
CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 14 on 'largest
end $12 SOper ton Bundled
slab
$10 50 per ton
Deltverd to Ohto Pallet Co ,
Rock Sprtngs
Rd,
Pomeroy 992 2689
Gold, Stiver
sterltng,
1ewelry, rtngs, old corns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop, MiddleporT 992
3476
No ttem to large or small
w •ll buy 1 ptece or compl~te
household New, used, and
anTique Call992 6370
Scrap metals, battenes,
rad1ators, gmseng, yellow
root, and merchandtse
brokenng Harper Halste
ad Salvage Company, 300
ElevenTh STreet 675 5808
Also Flea Market open
dally
Open
Monday
Fr.day 1 5pm
Farm land acreage 1n
Mason County 5 6f! acres,
good access Owner ftnan
ced, have good down
payment Write Acreage,
Box 479, New Haven, WV
25265
TOBACCO siJcks, call
675 3&amp;1

30~

Help Wanted

11

$180 per week part lime al
home Webster, Americe,s
foremost dictionary com
pant need5 home workers
to update local mailing
IIS!s All ages, experience
unnecessary Ca/11716 842
6000 Ext 6423

work from home No sales
Send resume to Box 30:2, C
0 Gallipolis Dally Tnbune
825 3rd Ave, Gallipolis, Oh
45631

Babysitter tn AddiSOn DISI
Call before 1PM 367 0120
Subslllue teacher for
Guiding Hand School Mus!
have vahd teachtng cer
llf•cal•on trom Dept 01
Education In teachers ab
sence , responstble for
prov1d1ng
educattonal
programllng for groups of
students Salary S35 per
day Contact Mr Dav1d
Ratliff, Pr.nclpal, P 0 Box
14 Cheshire Oh &amp;120,
(614)367 0102
POSITION AVAILABLE
Subslllule school bus
driver Must pass phys1ca1
examinatton and hold
current bus drtvers license
for school bus operator 1n
drtver'~
absence betng
respon s 1b I e
to
d n ve
assigned bus route Salary
$J 35 per hr
Available
August 24,1981 Contact Mr
Davtd Ratltff Prtnctpal,
P 0 Box 14, Cheshtre Oh
45620. (6141367 0102
Kentucky Fned Chtcken
will be accepttng ap
pltcattons on Thursday
Aug 27 between SAM and
4PM at the local Kentucky
Fned ChiCken STore 1S28
Eastern Ave, Galltpol!s
Part time , weekend, relief
Housemanager for grotJp
home tn Btdwe!! OH to
work wtth persons wtth
mental retardatton A htgh
school degree tS requtred
expertence tn worktng wtth
persons handtcapped wtth
mental retardatton tS
preferred Send resume to
John Mercer R t 1 Box
398, B1dwell Oh 45614
Buckeye Communtty Ser
vtces ts an equal op
portun1ty employer
GET VALUABLE lra1n1ng
as a young bustness person
and earn good money plus
some great Qtfts as a Sen
tmel route ear ner Phone
us nght away and get on
the eliQtblltty itst at 992
2156 or 992 2157
The Metgs County Board of
Mental Retardatton ts now
accepttng apphcat tons tor
a tull time Teacher/home

:~~~ne~s~~g~•f•~~~~~~~~ fa~

Bachelor Degree tn Spectal
Educatton and must be
eiiQtbl e for M S P R cer
ttf 1cat10n w1th Department
of Educa1 ton All resumes
Will
be accepted untti
AugusT 31, al 346 EasT Ma•n
St Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
The Metgs County Board of
Mental Retardation ts now
accepttng appltcat tons for
Subsltlule Teachers All
teachers quallflcattons '"
elude certtf,catton from the
Department of Educatton
111 M S P R Send all ap
pl1cattons and resumes to
346 East Ma1n Sl
Pomeroy Ohto 45769
The Metgs County Board of
Mental Retardatton tS now
acceptmg applications for
Substttue Bus Dnvers All
applicants mus t have 4
years drtvtng expenence
w~ltd bus dnvers license
and current Amencan Red
Cross certificate, also a
work tng knowledge of
Me tgs County roads Send
all
appl1cat1on
and
resumes to 346 East Matn
Sl, Pomeroy. 0h•o45769
Part Ttme Employment
Person w1th car wanted for
1 hour dallY to ptck up lab
speetmens at local doctors
offtces tn late afternoon
Must be neat and reliable
Write Btll Brown, P 0
Bo)( 506, Columbus Oh1o
43346
lnformatton on ALASKAN
and OVERSEAS
em
ployment
Excellent '"
come potential Call 312
7419780exl 917
SOMEONE To do fall house
cleaning 304 675 4596

r.lassified Paget! cover the
ft~llml•ing telephone exchanl(es . ..
Galhil Co Area code
614
446-GalllpolJS
3"-Cheshere
388- \linton
24S-Rto Grande
2S,-Guyan Dtsf
,..,l-Arab1a Dist

l_l _

31

___l:l_!l p Wanled

lnformallon on AlASKAN
and
OVERSEAS
em
Excellent in
c~;~ ~.aC''~~~Ii!l
Call 312
7• 9
Ex! 4061
11

S•lu~llons

Wanted

Dependable ride To and
from Rio Grande
fall
quater Ltve tn town Call
Don alTer 4PM «6 2627

Need additional mcome.,
Self starter? Girl Fnd.ay

Metgs Co Areif Code
614
Y92- Middleporl
Pomeroy
'185-Chester
343- Porlland
147- Lelart Falls
949- Rac•ne
742- Ruttand

Mason Co, W Va
Area Code 304
67S-PI. PleasanT
U8-Leon
576-Appte Grove
173-Mason
812-New Haven
195-Lelarl
937-Buffalo

Will care for elderly tn my
boarding home
Room ,
board,
and
laundry
Reasonable 992 6022
Expertenced secretary
needs work
Executive
level
Shorthand
and
typtng
Has
word
processtno expenence
Call 304 882 2554
13

Insurance
SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
services for ftre ~nsurance
coverage m Gallta County
for almost a century
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
avatlable to meet 1n
dtvtdual needs
Contact
Foster Lewts, agent Phone
379 2204
AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been can
celled"
Lost
your
operator's L1cense? Phone
992 2143

--=::::::;:;:=:;=;=.=::::;:::==

15 Schools Instruction
"---'==:::.:=='C"=-

SPECIAl JOB SKILLS
TRAINING PROGRAM for
housewives a nd those who
are unemployed and need
10b sktlls tn order to get a
JOb
CALL
446 4367
TODAY GAll Bus Coli
Reg No 750204728
Guitar
lesso ns
now
available tn Galltpolts wtth
after
sc hool
hours
a vat lable for stude nts Call
245 9378
l..=8_ _..:W
= a,_,
nt,_,e:-dc:l.::
o.:D"'o

Baby s tfttng tn my home,
anyttme tnc!ud1ng weeken
ds, on Raccoon Creek Rd
Ca ll 4411 4499
Expertcened mother Will
do baby s tfttng tn my home
on Rt 35 tn the R10 Drande
and Thurman area Call
245 9110
9 yr old boy wants to clean

garages walk pets
tobs etc Call446 6327

Homes for Sale

• •

29 ~cres , 1 rm house, all
mineral riles, Ernest
Woodruff Rd, Allee, Oh
Call614 m 0890 alter 5
3 bedrroms, 2 fireplaces,
family room, large llvln!l'
room, 1 full , 2 half baths, ,
wall lo-wall carpet, full
basemen!, central air. '
swtmmtng paoi, 112 acre ,
lot CITY SCHOOLS 4461731 alter 6PM
For sale on land contract
House and 2 mobtfe homes
located at Bulav1t1e W1/l
sell separately OJ" toge the r
Call446 3437
6 rm

house &amp; lot, 14x70
mobile home &amp; two lots 4
mtles from HMC on Rl 16f!
Phone oU6 1339

3 bdr , 1 112 baThS, LR Wllh
ftreplace, family room with
woodburner, kitchen and
dln1ng room City schools
Call 4411 2003
L1fe Estate ConsiSting of•
farmhouse wtth acreage
Further tnformat1on call
992 6747 alTer • 00 p m
House tor sale tn Mtd
dleport
Owner wt l l
sacrtftce 992 2917 or 992
2606

IMMEDIATE POSSESSIO
3 bedroom, stone, two
story home With lar9f'
walk m closets
formal
dtntng
room , newly
remodeled kttchen wtth
built ms tncludtng dish
washer, basement W1th
workshop, large garae With
workshop, garden plot, cor
ner lot Pnced to settle
eSiale $59,500 Call 16141
384 6309 for appotntment
548 Grant St Middleport,
Oh
N

Ntce mstde and out Two
bedroom, bath, carpeted
Dtshwasher, fuel 011 fur .
nace Full basement wood
burner
shower
shelf..
space, laundry Workshop
attached shed Two mtles
from Ractne
S28,900
owner will help ftnance ·
'
Cleland Really 992 2259
Mason, 4 bedroom 2,500
square feet plus basement
1 acre sao s 773 5867 .after
5p m
•
4 room house wtth bath and
furntture Ntce lot 992
53 19

odd

Responstb le lady would
like to baby stt tn your
home 3 112 mtles out
Bulaville Rd close to Ad
dtson Rd Ca ll446 7399

Total electrtc J bedroom
home wtfh garage ut11tty'
room on large lot 81f:.%v
loan posstble 742 2047
Ractne 6 room, 2 story
house Bath, garden star
ms Phone 1 235 6569

TV servtce calls Call 992
sale

MASON 4 bedroom. 2500
sq tt plus t)asement 1
acre 80's 304 773 5867

Mother w1th expenence
babysitting and nurstng
wtll babystt tn my home
References If needed 667
3323

32

203.4 Also used color TV for

MOTHER of two year old
nurstng expenence babystt
1n my home near Moun
ta 1neer Plant 304 882 3446

Flnanelal
11

Bus1ness
Opportuntty

$180 Per week part ttme at
home Webster, Amenca s
foremost dtcftonary com
pany needs home workers
to update local malltng
ltsts All ages, expenence
unnecessary Call 1 716 842
6000 Ex! 6611
22

Money to Loan

FHA VA Conventta l Home

Loans . Columbus Ftrst
Mortgage Co , 463 Second
Ave , Ga lltpol ts Oh 446
1112

23

Profess•onal
Servtces
COMMERCIAL and tn
dustnal
photography
Phone 446 2909 or 446 7226
after 4 p m
Ptano tuntng and repa tr
Love your ne tghbor tune
your Ptano Btll Ward
wards Keyboard 446 4312
Ga lltpohs

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

Prtees reduced on afl
mobtle homes and travel $
TrOllers
TRISTATE
MOBILE
HOMES
GaJ J,polis CALL 446 1512
CLEAN ~ USED MOBIL!;
HOMES
KESSEl ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE'
HOME SALES, • Ml •
WEST , GAlliPOliS RT
35 PHONE 446 3868 or 446
7274
1978 70x14 2 bdr 1 112
bath front den w1th wOOd
burntng ftrepl.ace, pafto
awtng, sktrttng, ap
pliances, dtntng room table
and chatrs No other, like ~
new turntture $10,000 .
Johnson Mobtle HomeBrokers, new ltsttng 446 •

,•

3541

-

-

----:-'

1975 Cameron 12x60 2 bdr

,t

front kttchen, refrtg an"
range, gas furnance, e&gt;Ctra"
door off kttchen, carpet,:;
Johnson Moblr.,.
$5,995
Homes Brokers 446 35~7 :\~
1978 Fesftvat furntshed~
14x70, 3 bdr, 1!. 2 balh!t·
$10 000 Call collecT 61• 86:J&gt;
0111
----------------~ .
1914 2bdr mob1le home ~

14x65, centra I a, r, new shag;
carpel Call afTer 6PM 1
742 2040
I

..

---'- •
I

GA LL I A Clean1ng and
Rent A Ma1d Serv1ce Inc
Free Esttmates, bonded
1nsured ,
phone 245 9234
Cleantng by the week mon
thor contractual
Your P1ano rusttng tn sum
mer Humidity? Free '"
spec 1ton with tuntng Lane
Damets 742 2951 or 992
2082
INTERIOR &amp; e)(tertor
pa tntmg , cal l30.4 675 1339

31

Homes for Sale

NEW CABIN or small
home, completely fur
nlshed $3900 Call446 0390
House wtth acreage for
sale, 3 or 4 bdrs, fully car
peted, 2 barns, 379 2123
New 3 bdr house With
garage and full basement
s.IS,OOO Call «6 0390

19 73 Crown Haven. l4x6S;
Three bedroom, new &lt;i'O
pet 1971 Cameron, 14x6iff
two bedroom new carf:W_t
1912 Champ,on, 12x6Q, t';jJ
bedroom, new carpet 19ta
Cameron,
12x60. l~cf
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, . _
carpel 1970 PMC, 12X60t
two bedroom, new carpet
B &amp; S Sales, Inc 2nd anl
Vtand Street, Pt Pleasanf1
wv Phone 615 ••24
1

-

--

I

1980 24x52 doublew,de ~
bedrooms 2 baths one w1ttl;
sunken tub , ufthty room
lots of closet space 2 por 1
ches 1150 sq ft of hvlng\
space 992 3041
1

'

USED Mob1le Home 576 (
2711
1971 Danan 12 x 65, 3:
bedrooms
1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 W1lh 8 x 101
expando, 3 bedrooms 19731
UTopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms I
1972 1nvader 14 x 70, 31
bedrooms 1972 Nashau, 141
x 60, 2 bedrooms B If• S \
Soles, Inc 2nd and Vland i
SIS PI PleasanT, WV l
Phone 675 «24
I

- - - - - -- 1
Mobile hotne located lnf
Camp Conley, Exira nlcea
and clean Phone 304 895 I
3967 •
I

aob. Charlene

''

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Lost •nd Found

9

l-It ·, 11 htu.IT ft•r \

BOGGS

im·

anciJaynt •

HotiiiCh

;.,• H..lfiiSI.• llo!l!•[::,
6-..

"'e

Radtator Spectaltst
NATHAN BIGGS
JS Yrs Experience

1 -PortraitS
-Wedcltnts
-Anniverurtes

_,., ,..,.

COMPLE'TE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Care to
Largest RadiaTor

German Shepherd pupptes
Allhe Y, Rt 2 and 62 First
trailer park on right Judy
Stover's residence

AMWAY diSirtbulor For
the wonderful products of
Amway call304 773 5040

Real Estate

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

2 WHITE rabbtls, female, B
weeks old, 30-4 675 4156 af
torS 30

Neals Auctton Hogsett ,
WVA Rl 2 Every Sal 1 00
PM
(Consignments
taken) (Wtll buy furn1ture)
Lonn1e Neal367 7101

•I

608 E. MAIN

KITTENS JO.I675 1138

REDUCE safe &amp; fast with
GoBese Tablets or capsules
a. E Vap •waTer pillS'
Fruth Pharmacy

3 k1ttens Call446 4173

Rooting/GuHer
Remodeling
Serveng Your Are• for
20 Years

992 5682

Co, Sprmg Valley
Plaza, 446 8025

:1644

Soffitt,
Gutter,
Rooftng, Remodelmg. Room Addt·
t1ons, Drywall and
Repatr. ,
Call

1 5 He

Call742-3195

-R~~~~at~- Genera l= =- _ ____ _

"Beaufltul, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free Stdmg
estimates, 949 2801 or
949·2160
No Sunday Calls

Ciilll&lt;en Young

15 Years
Exper1ence
Reasonable Rates

•
'

Tr~lng

• Building
Mamtenance
• Removal of

9 montlls old German
Shephard pup Male, frlen
dly wlhl kuds 992 7837 or
be - n al 2« Sycamore
Sl , Middleport

6

I
Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and

r::rJ:i Creek

''YOUNG'S

pr.sseve, co.nplete line
1 of wedcllnt and anniYtr·
I 11 ry lnYlllllenl and ICCHIOI'Jel. fiiH-ble,
pr.ICed. quid Hrvlce.
- L - w - 1 ollllfl· •

17- Uphohftr'r

S...tlnel
TM Pt.lbfiiMr rHtrvn thl rltht to tel it ar reftct any Ids dftmN
OltlectiONI TIM Pu ..lsher will not 1M ret,...sl.._ for 111 ore ttt.n OM
IMarNC:t lnJtrttoft

•STorm Doors
•Siorm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph 992·2772

j

lt-M H Rtprilr

MMUe Home,,...., ti'MI Y:.rdHIKare •cct.teCI on I, wlttl cast\ W1ttl
order t5 c:tnt CHrtt ftr ads carrrlq lo• Num ..r lilt C•re •t , ..

Middleport, Oh1o

(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)
Top prtces pa1d 1or au 10
bod
and
tes, scrap tron
metals.
I
m•le
wesl
of
Faorgrounds on Old Rl
33
i.lon ·Fn 1 30 To4 oa
Alter Aug 3
Ph. H2-6564

I

r~~§~~~~~~~*~===~~~~==~~=~~~~~~=~~:
Tall
register
Contesl
for longest
our Squ.rrel
gray
tall wins 22 rille Longest
n m
A
m
I
V
I
&amp;
1
J&amp;L
my
u
u
red I all wins 22 rifle Spring
L&amp;M
IHION
Mal"ntenance
SIDING
valley Trading co, Spring
INSUIJU
BISSELL
Valley Plaza, oU6 8025
Vinyl &amp;
d' Demolit'1011
586 S a. W new"'! l frame
Aluminum Siding
an
SIDING
co.
now In stock Spnng Valley
•I nsulat1on

Mtnors
CASE NO 22755 F orsl
and Ftn.al Account of
Lawre nce F K letn, Guar
d1an of the Estate of Robert
K le tn ,
Mary
K letn
Trmothy Kletn
Larry '
Klem Rodney Kletn Ktm
ber ly Kletn Angela Kletn
a nd Penny KJe•n. all
mtnors
CASE NO 22254 Second
Curr ent Account of Ken :
neth Welsh Guard tan of 1
the Guardtansh tp Estate of
Adnenne French
Unless excepttons are ,
tiled thereto, sa1d accounts
wtll be for hea rtng before
satd Court on the 24th day
01 SepTember, 1981, al
wh tCh t1 me scud accounts
Wtll be constdered and con
ttnued from day to day un
ttl f1nally dtsposed of
Any person mterested
may 1le wr:ttten except tons
to satd accounts or to mat
ters pert a'"' ng to the!
executton of the tru!i.t, not
less than ftve days pnor to
the date set for heanng.
t
Robert E Buck 1

a

eSERIIICES

169 N 2nd

The Village of

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
992·7656
8 20·tfc

- "'--"="--"==-- ·

MODERN RANCH - wolh a Jlarge k:!~h::~~t~~~l
bedrooms, uttllty room, an attac ~ed gar e
detached garage Large yard that 1s ave 9
and partly fenced S39,900 00
r an

••-HomttmproYtmtnh
13-Piumblntl E~~:u.,.. tlng
a-eu.. .,allttg
M-Eittdrlcal
I Rtfrlttrallon
IJ-G•n.nt H•ullnt

BEAUTY SALON

heatmg

t

•TRANSPORTATION
71 - Auro• for S.alt

"

C. R. MASH
CONSTRutnON

PubliC NOtiCe

J 1m my Chnstopher Wolfe,

K•y•s

WANTING TO BUY
SCRAP

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

......

delivery, Davis
=~~~=~8~14~1~m~o~~~===;~~8~6~1~m~o~~~=:;;;7;2;6;l;m§o~pd~~ sopplles
Pick Vacuum
up and
Cleaner, one half mile up

Custom k1tchens and appllances,
custom
bathrooms, remodehng,
plumbtn, electnc, and

Pubhc NOtiCe
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT .
PROBATE DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN fHE MATTER OF SET
flEMENT
OF AC
COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers
of the lollowmg named
ftducta rt es have been flied
tn the Probate Court Me1gs
Cou nty Ohto for .approva l
and settlement
CASE NO 23351 F •nal
Account of Gene Yost Ad
mtntstrafor Wtth Wtll An
nexed of Hatt1e H Paynter
Deceased
CASE NO 23070 Fmal
Account of Carter P Fren
ch Executor of the Es tate
of Cat her~n e
French
Deceased
111nr;F=
CASE NO 22704 F1na1
Account of James B Palm
.COMMON PlEAS COURT,
QUtSt, Attorney fo r Ed na N
PROBA I t UIIIISJON •
Wood Adm tnts frator of the
' MEIG S COUNTY,
Estate of Ida M Chrtst 1e
I
OHIO
Deceased
18)24 ltc
CASE NO 20677 FourTh
Annual Accou nt of Lawren
ce E Kle tn Guardta n of
Thomas Glenn Waite
Char les Brvan Wolfe nnd

General

NEW liSTING
RACINE Love ly '2
story remodeled home
4 bedrooms, 2 baths
ltvmg room
family
room recreatwn room
new kttchen btg yard
$32,500 00
POMEROY
Pnce
Reduced Nt ce A
frame butld1ng on Matn
StreeT $17 50000
LAND CONTRACT $3500 00 down buys lh1s 5
bedroom
remodeled
home on large lot
Owner Wtll tmance at
10% 1nterest Call tor
more del a tis
ACRES - Approx 211•
wtlh a 3 bedroom home,
11" mtle off St
Rt 7
$16,000 00
HYSELL RUN RD N1ce 3 bedroom ranch
home. 2 baThs, full
basement, on 1 acre
Possible loan assump
I 1011 $42,000 00
BUt LDI NG, lOTS
Very n1ce 1 acre lots, ap
prox 3 &lt;"m tles from
Route 7 on i Leadmg
Creek Rd Call•for mfo
FARM 196 acres
m/ less wtth mmerals,
old farm house, 2 barns,
former beef c;:att le farm
Askmg S55,opo oo

U-S.od &amp; Ftrtiluer

OMditylnHt'lleft
"""day lnnrtlon
llkdayslnltrflon
(A!!ra .. 41 worcrs ,., line I

Larry Spencer
Clerk of Court
of Met gS County Ohto
181 10 17 24 31 1917 14

OFFICE 742 2003
George Hobstetter Jr
B,-oker

..-tNyl Grikl

Rates and Other Information
UprolswOrdl
Up to 1!1 words
Up to 15 wordl

PubliC NOtiCe

HOBSTETTER REALTY

Ser11•ces

28

f

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
W1111 am R Wtlson
P latnttft
vs
Sha ron K Wilson fo rmerly
Sharon K Mount
Defendant
Case No 17938
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO Sharon K W1lson
formerly Sharon K Mount,
last known address 1100
South Oil kwood Avenue
Detro1t, Mt chtgan, present
address unknown
You are hereby nottftect
that you have been named
a defendant •n a legal ac
tton entttled Wtlltam R
Wttson,
Platnttff , vs

e FARM SUPPliES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

e FINANCIAL
11- MOftf/Y to LOAn
ll- PrllfltU!OII•I

23
24
25
26
27

Bo~

St-HoUIIti\Gid Goocb
Equ1pmtnt
Jl- Antlquu
S4- Mtsc Merch•ndne
SJ--Butld'"g Supptlel
,._Pets tor sate
n~ ce TV R•d•o

' 1- Farm Equipment
U-W..,fedl to Bu.,
72- Trucks lor Sale

Opportunity

22

31 _

lJ-S•tuated Wantecl

1

21

177~AVb?r}-Effd~

Public Nollce

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
l - In Memoriam

18
19

days pnor To the dale set
for open.ng btds tn ac
cordancee wtth Chapter
5525 Oh •o Rev1sed Code
Plans and spectftcattons
are on fde tn the Depart
ment of Transportation and
the off1ce of the Dtstnct
Deputy D~rector
The D~rector reserves

Rev 8

or Wrtte Datly Sentmel Classthed Dept
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

1- c.a,.-d ot Thull'

11

~~~ 1 ,fF[~f;~~ a~or1';;ist ~~~

PHONE 992-2156

INam•-------------------1IAddreu,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

These cash rates
tnt lude d1scount

for ';'~,~~~~6i'ect'~~~e r;::~
predelermmed as required
by la w and are set forth m
The b1d proposal "
The date set for com
plellon of lh1s work sha ll be
set forth tn the btdd ng
proposa l
Each bidder shal l be
requtred to file wtth h1s btd
.a certtfted check or
cash1er s check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of h•s btd , but'" no
event more than ftfty
Thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cenT of hiS bid,
payable to the Dtrector
B&lt;dders musT apply on

18124 31 21c

~

~hone~------------

742-2211

be dtscnmtnated agatnst
on the grounds of race
color or nollonal or.gm Ill
constderafton of an award

nght to re1ect any and
~===:;;:;:;::;==;:=========~ I alltheb1ds

Write your own ad and order by mall wtth thts
coupon Cancet your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

) wanrea
l For Sale
) Announcement
) For Rent •

Public Not1ce
Sea led proposals wtll be
rece•ved at the off 1ce of the
Dtrector of the Ohto Depar
tment of Transportation,
Columbus Ohto, unttllO 00
AM , Oh1o Standard Ttme,
Tuesday September 15
1981 for tmprovements '"
Me1gs County, Ohto, Sec
l10n MEG 124 2790 Slate
Route No 124 '" Sutton
Townshtp
by 9rad1ng,
dratn1ng and pavmg wtth
asphalt concrete on .a
b1tu mmous
aggregate
base
Pavement Wtdth - 2.4
teet
Protect
lengTh 2 200 00 feet or 0 416 m tle
work LengTh - 2,778 00
feet or 0 526 mile
The Ohto Department of
Transportation
hereby
nottftes a/t btdders that 1t
wtll .affirmatively 1nsure
that tn any contract en
tered tnto pursuant to th •s
adverttsement, mtnortty
bust ness enterpnses Wt ll be

PERM SALE
NOW THRU AUG 31
no.oa
NoWS17.50
ns.oa
Nown2.50
uo.oa
Nowi27.50
GWEN'S SPECIAL ,
Wavelength Perm
For longer Hair S29 50
Ph. H2 2725

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992· 3282

Grow", w1th a poem, uThe Master's

to meet

Pubhc Nottce
Pubhc Not1ce
Pubhc No.-''==-c""e- .,...,
mental Rev tew Record tS of the certtfc.atton tS that Street. Columbus, Ohto
file at the above address
upon tfs
approval the 43215
Village ot Pomeroy may
and s availa ble for publ1c
Ob1ecttons to the release
exn m•natt on a nd copymg use the Block Grant funds of funds on bases other
\Jpon request at V •ll age
and HUD Wtl l have than those stated above
Hall between the hours of 9 sat1sfted tts responstb tlttJes wtll not be constdered by
AM and 4 30 PM
under the Nattona! En HUO
No
ObieCfton
vtronmental PoliCY Act of recetved after 8 24 81 Will
No
turrner
en
1969
HUD
wtll
accept
an
vtronmenta l revtew of ~urh
be constdered by HUD
Pro1 ect •s proposed to be objectton to tts approva l
Clarence Andrews
conaucTea pr1or to the on y 1f tt 15 on one of the
Mayor
reque st
for release of fo!lowtn~ bases (a) that
Vtllage Hall
Federal Funds
the certtf1 ca tton was not tn
Pomeroy Oh•o 45769
All tnt erested age nctes
tact executed by the cer
gro ups
and
per sons fttymg offtcer or other of
181 10 ltp
dtsa~re e tng
wlfh
lhtS ftcer of appltcant approved
dects on a re tnv ted to sub
br HUD . or (b) thai ap
Public Nottce
mtf wrtften comments for p •ca nt' s e nvtronmental
constderafton
by
the revtew record for the
NOTICE TO
Vtllage to fhe Mayor s Of
pro1ec t 1nd1 cates omtsston
CONTRACTORS
ftce Such wrt tten com of a reQurred dect ston ftn
STATE OF OHIO
men rs shou ld be rec e tved dtng or step appliCable to
DEPARTMENT OF
at Pomeroy Vt llage Hall on the pro1ect '" the e nv~ron
TRANSPORTATION
or before R ?.4 81 All such mental revtew process Ob
Columbus, Ohio
comments so rece •ved will tec ttons m ust be prepared
August 14, 1981
be cons tdered and the and submttted •n ac
Contract Sales Lega 1
Village wtll not request the cord.ance Wtth the requtred
Copy No 81·758
re lease of Federal funds or procedure (2.4 CFR Part UNIT PRICE
take any admmtstratn'e S8J and may be addressed
CONTRACT
ac tton on the wt thtn prolecl to HUD at 200 N H&gt;gh
F 11(301
prtor to the date spect ted
1n the precedmg sentence
The V tl lage of Pomeroy
wtl l undertake the pro 1ect
descr•bed above wttfl Block
Grant funds from the U S
Depart ment of Housmg
Ur ban Development
(HUO) under Tttle lot the
Hous.tng and Commun•'v
.._.
Development Act of 1974
The Vtll age of Pomeroy tS
3 ROLLS
cert1fy 1ng to HUD that
McGee Carpel
Cla re nce Andrews'" htS of
W/Pa ddtng
Cash n Carry
(Ex..tra Good)
ft ctal ca pactty as Mayor
Installed
1 Roll Each
Reg $16 95 sq
conse nt to acce pt the
Starttng
Brown
Blue
turtsd tctton of the Federal
Green
Installed vd
courts tf an ac tton 1S
95sq yo
Sl:95
brought to enforce respon
·;.~ sq yd
Now
sq
stbtltftes m relatton to en
L.._ _ __:::....:._._ _ _ _.:_:_-J._ _ _:._yd
vtronmenta l
rev tews
dects tonmaktng and ac
GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
hon a nd that these respon
Buy Now &amp; Save S2-S6 Per Yard
St btlt t1 es h ave been
sattsfted The !eQal effec t
25 rolls carpet tn StOCk tO ptCk from .
Regular backed, carpet tnstalled free
wtth pad Good select1on Roll Ends Rem nants S2 50 up . Grass carpet S4 99 yd .

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

r-=~~~;~;;:=;-,;:==;~;:::;===~r:========:::ii'NNicolememorv
Smltll Suffer
!he Ill·
of Healher

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Not1ce

r-omvroy- MJDDieporr, unto

Business Services

Evangeline

Clara Thomas and of her delight
wtth the sunshine box sent during
her tllness. She also asked that
members save proof of purchase or
electronlc labels on bags and boxes
of merchandise to be used for
rrusston work
Preparaltons of sunshine boxes
was discussed and Sept 9 was set as
a work day on the boxes at the chlll'ch Members are to take a sack lunch and gifts to be used m the boxes
E1ghly-&lt;!1ght stck and shutln calls
were reported
Mrs
Dorothy
Dowrue presented Mrs McGee wtth
a birthday gift from her secret
prayer pal Mrs. McGee announced
the names of the 111 and elderly
havmg btrthdays m August and Se~
tember for which there w1ll be card
showers

F~AM

Monoay , Augusr 24, 1981

1981

~

'

.
.

.,

..
.., I

'
'

12x5S, 3 bedroom
home, 304 895 3885

mobile~

~

�Page-B-The Daily Sentinel
44

tor Sate
68

Apartmemt
for Rent

Moon 12x50 2 1 bedroom apts. available
bedroom. underpinning &amp; at Riverside Apts. Equal
blocks, exc . cond. Call 256- Opportunity Housing. Call
6836.
'I'IH721 .
F~rms

for Sale

Farm For Sale by Owner
.Cl acres more or less
located A 1/2 miles out on
Rt . 218 . Tobacco base . Call
after 6 '00 2-15-9222.
Farm tor sale. Call 256·

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apartments. 992 · S.O.t or 992·
5914 or 882·2566.
Unfurnished apartment . 2
bedrooms, carpeted in
Pomeroy . Has stove. SlSO.
month plus
deposit.
Utilities extra . 992·6678.

6560 .

lS

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS · Real nice campsi te
on Raccoon Creek, all
utilities avatlable, $300.
down, owner will finance ,
ca ll after 3 p .m ., 2.56·6.. 13.
2 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd .
c lose to Rt 160. 54,000 .
Phone 446·0390.
Lots by Owner . t 114 A to5
acres, leveL rural water ,
city schools, tO per cen t
down Ca ll379·2196.
Apartment for sa le, land
contract 9%, 4 units, 2 bdr .
each. Total rent $740.,
$49,000. Cal l ~ 3937 .
BY owner, 3 apartmen t
house on approx. 1 acre .
Live 1n one, re nt others to
make your pay men' . Ca n
be converted single home
Cit y water , will cons1der
land contr act 675 1883 9-5
p.m .
20 ACRES on black top
road, timber . Phone 1-61-4·
263·8322 or 263 2669

7 ACRES of Kanawha
River land, 1·614 ·263·8322
or I 614 263 2669 .

Rentals
41

Houses tor Rent

sma ll f urnished house in
the city, adults only Ca ll
~ - 0338 .

House for rent on Georges
C reek Rd . 3 bdr ., $200 per

mo .. SIOO . deposit . Ca l l 446·
3824 .
2 bedroom home, ref .,
deposi t, r easonable rent .
Wn t e to P 0 . Box 10,
Ga ll 1pOII S, Oh 4563 1.
3 bdr house in town nice
locat ion , no pets, dep .
required . Ca ll4.46·2404
4 bdr . house unfurn ., I
block tram C1ty school, $300
mo., S100 dep .. 6 mo. lease .
446·3667 aHer 5, ava ilab le
Sept . 1.
9rm ., 2 bath hom e 1n
Ga llipoli s Located near
c ity schools &amp; park front .
Call4&lt;111·7265 or 4&lt;1110644 .
Furn 1shed cabin for 1 per·
son S75 month, utilities
pa1d . A lso 1 frailer space
at Henderson
Trailer
Cou rt. No pets . References
required. 675 2946 .
THREE bedroom house 1n
the cou ntry with fireplace .
$200 .00 mo . $50.00 deposit .
304-675·4433 or 675 2136.
3 BEDROOM house tor
rent Sl15 10J 8th . St. Point
Pleasant . Depos•t a nd
re ferences r equ ired . Can
be seen even ings 6 to 8 p.m .
Through A ugust 26th .
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr, 3 bdr ., mobile
homes . Ca /1-4-46·01 75.
12x60 tull y turn . mobil e
hom e, with air . Call 446·
4110.
3 bdr . mobile home con·
venient location on Rt . 7.
Sec. dep ., no pets Call 245·
5818 .
60x l2, 2bdr ., 1 1/ 2 baths, in
town, small depostt req .
Ca ll446·0318 .
Part . turn ., 2 bdr trailer .
L oca ted on 160, SISO mo.
plus utilities, S100 de p . Call
388·8275 .
2 bedroom trailer for r ent.
'1'12 3860.
OR RENT · a lmost new 1A x
70, 3 bedroom, 1 ih baths,
sining on ni ce lot, ready to
move into . Phone 30A·576·
2711 .

One bedroom garage apar·
tment . Low maintaince.
Good location. 514 S. Four
th Ave ., Middl eport, Oh
Ca ll 614-384-6309 for ap·
pointment .
'
2 very nice 1 bedroom a par
tments in Middleport . 1 fur ·
nished with utilities in·
eluded and 1 unfurnished .
'1'12 ·3190 .
Remodeled 1 bedroom
apartment in Middleport
Utilities included . $180 plus
deposit. No pets. Ca ll 992
7177after6p.m .
NOW RENTING : Senior
citizens and handicapped
ap t. community opening.
Featuring 1 bedroom un·
furni5hed with wall to wall
ca rpetin g, wall ·tex wall s,
built in bookcase, appliances, smoKe detectors,
air conditioned, prtvate
patio, stora ge facilities,
sing le stor y with no stairs
to cli mb, private entrances
w1th undiv idua l laundry
facil i ties on pre m ises with
recrea ti on and me-eting
ro oms .
Pro fe ssio nal
reside nt m a n ager
on
prem1ses . Stonewoods Apts , Rt. 7, Middleport . For
ren tal informa ti on phone
614·843 ·234 1
2 bed r oom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy . Par·
tially turn1shed. S170 you
p.3y ut iliti es . Ca ll 992·2288
after 6 p .m .
Apart men ts. 675·5548.
2 BEDROOM, unfurnished
apartment and 2 bedroom
furnished apilrtment, 304·
675·5571.
1, 2 &amp; 3 bed r oom apart ·
ments now avai lable at Pt .
Pleasant Scott ish Inn . Also
a honeymoon suti e. All
utilities paid . Apartments
as low as Sl40. a week .
Honey moon su tie S45 . a
night Ca ll 304·675·6276.
2·bedroom all electr ic,
Henderson S150. deposit.
$150 . per month . No Pets
1nqu1re 61-4·367 · l'J57 after 5
APART MEN T for rent, 1m·
mediate possession , no
pets, ground floor , f ul l s1ze
basement, 304-6751198 .
Furn ished, 2 bdr. apart·
ment, deposi t &amp; ref er ences
required, adults only . pa y
elec tri c onl y. 992·3647 .
3 room furn ished a pt.
Utilities pai d, adults only,
1185 .00 per month, $60 .00
deposit . 94 Locust St .,
Gallipolis. 4-46· 1340 or 446
3870
Second fl oor effi ency apt .,
adults only , no pets, 729
Second Ave . Call4&lt;1110957 .
Delu x 6 rm . house, good
locat ton Ca ll 675·510.4 or
675·5386.

- -- - - - - ·
RE GE NCY APT . INC . 2
bedroo m , kitchen fur
nished, carpeted , bills par·
tially paid . S200 mo. Ex
ce llent neighborhood, 675 6722 or 675 5104 .
Furnished apts 3 bdr .,
S220., water paid , children
acceptable Ca ll A-46·4416
after 7PM
First floor apt . par t ia ll y
furnished, ret . requ ired
Call at 63 1 4th Ave .,
Ga llipoli s.
Furn . apt., 3 rms . &amp; bath .
Corner of Court and 2nd ..
Ga llipoli s. S185 .00 per mo .
Ca ll 4.46· 1615 or 4.46· 1243.
Furnished Rooms
45
SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt ..
Park Central Hotel.
46

51
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

New

ll

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBI LE Home
Park . Rout e 33 , North ol
Pomer oy . La r ge lots. Call
992 7479.

Roomate, clean , to share
expenses . S125 mon t h. all
utilities paid . Cal l after 4
pm . J0&lt;-882-3536

Sofa,

chair,

rocker, ot·
loman, 3 tables, SSOO. Solo,
chair and loveseal, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from 5285. to $195 . Tables.
$38 and up to $109. Hlde-abeds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, $115 . to $295.,
Lomps from $18 . to $65. 5
pc. dinelles from $19 ., to
$385. 1 pc .• $189. and up.
WOOd table with " cha irs,
$219 up to 5495. Hutches.
$300 . and $375 ., maple or
pine finish . Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak , $675..
Basse!! Cherry, $795. Bunk
bed complete with mat·
tresses. $250. and up to
$350. Capta in's beds, $275.
complete. Baby beds, $99.
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, ssa., firm, $68 .
and S78. Queen sets. $195 . 5
dr . chests, S-49. 4 dr. c hests,

S-12 . Bed frames, S20 .and
$25 ., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
SJSO ., dinette c hairs S20.
and $25 . Gas or electric
ranges, $295 . Orthopedic
super fi rm . $95 . sofa bed
w ith c hair , $165.. baby
matresses. $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames$20, $25 , &amp; $30 .
Ranges,
U sed,

2 TRAILER S lor n:n t 'J
bedroom turn1~t1r.•d,
3
bedroom
furni'lhed .
Gallipolis
Ferry,
WV
Phone 675·6851 .

t4

Ap.rtmemt
for Rent

Apartment for rent 2 bdr.,
water and garage, $175.
Call-1-16-3937.
Apartment &amp; house for
rent. Countrv Store for
lease. Call 245-9315.

by larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"
Compound Bow Special PSE sizzler laminated limbs, magnesium handle, so
lb. pull . Special $39 .95 .
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Vi!!lley Plazi!l , 446·
8025.

smission. 304-773-5110.
1979 FORD long bed, 6 cyl .
automatic, 20,000 miles,
$45,000,. Excellent condition: Call 30.-675--18-18
before -1 p.m.
1970 Chevrolet Longhorn
pickup truck , 3/4 ton. • spd .
with extras, looks good.
ta ll '1'12·5275 .

1&lt;.11. fishing boat &amp; trailer ,
S-100.00. 22 fl . camper
trailor. $2000 . Electri c
guitar &amp; amp, $190 . Phone
388·9087 .

73

4· wheel d riv e, In·
ternational Scout, Sl ,500.
Ca II 256-1427 .

'

Firewood, split, stacked &amp;
delivered . Mi xed wood $65
per cord, $35 one-ha lf cord .
Green or seasoned . All har ·
dwood S5.00 more. Also w ill
buy sta nding wood. Call
245·5478 .

refrigerators, and TV's,
J miles out Bulavill e Rd .

RESTAURANT &amp; STORE
EQUIP. Exc. cond . Ca ll
RADCO 304-523-1378.

GOOD
U SED
AP ·
PLIAN CES
washers.
dryers,
refrigera,ors,
r a ng es.
Skaggs
Ap ·
plian ces, 1918 Eas t ern
Ave ., 446-7398.

Bees. vellow &amp; m idnite.
Honey 1 lb or case. Call 2.56·
6866.

Case K nives 20% off all
case knives Spring Va lley
Trading Co., Sp nng Valley
Plaza. 4&lt;111-8025
USED FUR N IT URE 36 in .
gas range, sp lit ca ne cha 1r,
walnut bedroom sui te. Cor ·
bin &amp;. Snyder Furn ., 955
Second , Gallipolis, Oh, 61-4·
446-1171.
For sa le 2 pi ece living room
su 1te and 1 cha ir with ot·
toman . Ca ll 4.46· 4001 after
5, 00 PM .
Hotpoint
stave
and
retrigator . 2 single beds , 2
dressers, stereo, girls bike,
k1 tchen tabl e, and stroller .
'1'12· 7805 .
ONE dinette set, 8 cha1rs,
good cond ition. 1 bedstead ,
good cond ition. 1 toveseat,
good condition . 2 fuel oil
stov-es. 3·275 gal. fuel oil
tanks . 304 576 2859
LIVING room su it, 3 p1ece.
$75 . Phone 304·675·4335
I DOUBLE bowl kitchen
s1 nk , 304-675·1198 .
15 CU FT . harvest gold
refrigerator . Phone 675·
4683 . S250.
C8,TV , Radio
Equipment

52

Fender
pifier
speaker
monitor
8436 .

Super tw1n am·
with ex t ern a l
cabi net, Peavey
system Ca ll 388·

6CRYSTALsca nner , Bear·
cat 6, SSO. 304-773·5860 .
SJ

S4

Bricks, blocks, &amp; lumber
!Cherry &amp; Walnutl Call
256·6866 .
Sof a and cha ir , boys 20 in .
bicycle . Ca l l4-46·4 l34 .
10,000 BTU Admi ral air
con d.. good cond.. $200.
Ca ll 446· 1425 before 2 PM or
4&lt;111· 1764.
Co uc h, c ha ir , wooden
rocker. good cond , $150.
Electri c stove, good cond .,
1150. Call 379 2411.
Velvet li ving room turn., 1
full size &amp; 1 twin size bed , 2
desk, and refrig . Call 446·
1316.
Sansui reciever G901, 160
watts RMS and 2 SPX 9700
speakers, 280 watts, $1.000 .
Call 379·211 5.
SW IMMIN G
POOLS '
PRE · SEASON
SALE'
$999 .00 INST AL LED! ! !
Above ground pool COM ·
PLETELY INSTALLED
sta rting at $999 .00 . Price in ·
el udes pool. deck, fence,
filter , liner , and in ·
sta llation under normal
ground co ndition . Free
shop at home service. Call
1·800·624-8511 .
EASY credit available now
to pu rc ha se fu r niture ,
televisions, or appliances .
V ill age Furniture 2605
Ja cks on Ave., 675·1773.
Yellow Freestone canning
peaches. Now thru Sept . 20 .
Any quantity available .
Retail &amp; wholesale . Bob's
Market, Mason . Phone 773·
5721. Open daily till9 p.m .
Round oak table &amp; 6 chairs.
Call992-3647 .

Antiques

ATTENT ION '
I IM
PORTANT TO YOU J Will
pay cash or certi f ied check
for antiques and coll ec ·
t ibl es or entire estat es.
Noth ing too large. A lso,
gun s, poc ket watches. and
coin co llect ions. Call 557 ·
3411.
M1sc . Merchandice

Wh i te metal detec tors ·
Opening Special 20% off on
all wh 1te metal detec tors
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spri ng Valley Plaza, 446·
8025 .
l ~o
oH
Buck Knives .
Spring Valley Tra ding Co ,
Spring Valley Plaza, 4-46·
8025 .

Like new, warm morn ing

gas hea ter. with blower. all
auto. 87 V1 ne St ., Gallipolis .
Remington Thunderbolt 22
LR Ammo, $1 .39 per box,
S13 00 per carton . Spring
Val ley Trading Co Spring
Valley Plaza, 446 ·8025.
Eclipse 12 ga game loads
-6-shot, 20 shells per box,
$3 .95 box . Spring Valley
Traind Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, «6·8025.
Crossman B·B's ' Milk Car·
ton ' box of 1500 Spec ial
$1.09 box. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
PLaza, «6·7025.

Show saddle, 14 112 in .
brid le, breast strap, halter
&amp; lead, $450. English sad ·
die. 150 Cal l 742·2844.
8 ft . Ford truck topper ,
Nanny goat, whole house
air con d., 4 Sears ra dia l all
season t1res ( 14 in . 2), stud·
ded mud &amp; snow ti res ( 14
in) Ca ll '1'12 ·2779 .

- · - - - --

-

For Sa fe: Tournament SIZe
pool tabl e. 992 ·3860.
Kitchenaid dish washer .
Exc. cond . See at Bill
Wtnebrenner Residence,
Co llege Rd .. Syracuse, Oh .

Beau tiful. si ze 14x l6 lad1es
clot hes never worn. In·
eluding gray flanne l sui t,
silk b louses, dresses, all
desig ner labels, also Estate
Jewe lry , 14k gold . '1'12·3283 .
Rowboat with Oars, 3 piece
sectional couch , 1973 Olds
Cutlass Sport Coupe, and
fl oor model radio. 992·7749.
NE E D several items of fur·
nitur e,
appliances,
1elev isions. Big discounts
fo r quanity purchase .
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave . 675· 1773.

PAl NT guns. l nearly new
Sink s, model 62, $125. 1
used Devilbiss, $65. Both 1980 Chevette. A·l con ·
for $175. 304·882·3376 after 5 dition. Can be seen across
p .m .
from Gallia Academy on
State Street.
ONE 6000 BTU air con ·
ditioner ,
$50 .
., 1971 Corvette convertible,
dehumidif ier, S40. 304·675· white with red interior . In ·
6730
eluding white hardtop, 350
engine, ralley wheels. Call
Air Compressors. new 4&lt;111·9692 .
Ingersoll · Rand 5 hp, single
and 3 phase, truck load 74 AMC Sportabout Station ·
sale From $1,245.00 . Ca ll wagon, 6 c yl. , auto., good
collect 304-766·6244.
cond ., will trade. CaH 446·
1-152.
Myers Submersible pump,
1 horsepower, brand new, 1976 Dodge Stationwagon
has neve r been used. $250. Cornette, 3 seats, good
Call after 5 pm 304 -882-2952. tires, no rust, exc . cond .
Call446.0519 or 446·0181 .
1h
runner green beans .
Pick your own . Racine 949· 73 Malibu 2 dr. hardtop,
2602.
S550. Ca II 446-2459 .
55

Building Supplies

- - - - -- -

Farm Equipment

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens. Ohio. $3,000 .00
each. Phone 1·304-422-2781 .

1972 CHRYSLER Newport ,
20 -HT, fair condition, new
tires. Two dogs to give
away . Come see. Richard
Hussell, Rayburn Road .
1978 TRANS-AM, T-Top,
priced to sell, will consider
trade, low mileage, sharp .
Phone 675-2247 or 675-5'1'15.

...... . .....
., ,
. . . ···•·. ......
~

with city water , Phone 30...
773·5825 after 6 p .m .
71
wanted to Rent

Household Goods

LARGE upright Kenmore
freezer with malntalnance
warrenty, $125. Phone :11).4·
675·2200.

!!!;CARY.

es

Television
•
•
vtewmg

REAL.

KIDS!

Tl-l~f; TICKS'T'S SACH.

CIJ. PMIIAGAZINE
(I)
A GREAT DAY TO
RI!IIEIIII!R
&lt;Jii. ,AIItLY FEUO
QHIOSTATI!FAIR
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
(I) ®
IIACNEIL-l.EHRER
REPORT
®)NEWS
7:0&amp; ~ ~INTHEFAIIILY
7:30
• BULLSEYE
ANOTHER LIFE
.(J) JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
DICK CAVETT SHOW
®)
RICHARD StilliON&amp;
SHOW
® DICK CAVETT SHOW

i

'

75 Harley Davidson Super
Glide, low mites, exc.
cond., belt dri ve, $2,500 or
will t rade for tou ri ng bike .
Call256·1295.

Gene's Carpet Cleanirtc;j,
deep stream ext ractio,.~
Free estimates, reasonab.lt!
r ates. Scothguard , '1'12 -6309.

76 Kawasaki KZ400, 4
stroke engine, 4,000 orginal
mil es and 1 helmet, both in
exc. cond . Call446 ·6656
78 Honda 750, 3,900 miles.
e)(Cellent conditon, $1,600.
Ca ll379·2411.
1975 Honda Goldwing 1000 ,
11 .500. Call379-2115
1978 Harley Sportsfer 1.000
cc, clean, A · I shape, 5,800
m iles. S2,900. Call742·2844.
1978 Honda CR 250. good
condition. 675· 1969.

liJI.S TER~V !
JeFFR~'(~

LO CKSMITH
Servi ce.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency serv 1ce. Calf
882·2079.
RON 'S Tel ev ision Service .
Specializing 1n Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and ..
house ca lls. Phone 576 · 2398~ ..
or 446·2454.
·

.._

Auto tor Sale

1973 1 ton Ford, 25.000
miles, no rust, $2,200. Call
367-7533.

' 1974
- .GMC
- -314-T-truck With

1976 Buick Limited tully Insulated camper top on
equipped . One -ner, 1- trUCk, aura PS, PB, llOOd 8
mlleage, good cond. , $3,-495. ply tires '!"lth spar!', heevv
Call-4-46-15-16.
duty, goOd c:ond., $2,100.
Call ~--1630 .
For sale 1979 Buick R
complelelv l!)aded.
1974 Chevv·plckup for sate.
446-7-497.
. Caii367-0S.1 .
1977 Olds Cutlass S. Call
256·14:11 .
1975 Dodge Dart, low
mllea!Jl!. standard, 6 cyl.,
S1,095. Call256•1968.

1968 17 fl. travel trailer,
good con'd illon. Sleeps 6.
$1500 firm. Call '1'12·5709 af·
ter6 p.m .
CAMPER, 20 fl ., self con ta ined, call 304·675·2453 af·
ter 5.

ser"•ees

Brand new 1980 and 1981
Ford plckur. Metal ~
only. 7G-221 •

81

Home
Improvements

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway . Call 61•·446·
2096.
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
~-4208

JIM MARCUM Rooting
spouting ' and . sldlng, 30
year~
eKperlence. Free
estimates . Remodelln~
Cell318-9857 . .
· '

.

.

STUCcO PLI,I,ST,ERING co,.,.
merclel anet rHiclenflal
free estimates. Call 254:
1182. .
textur~ . ~elllniJI,

ANNIE

YOUR. FOitllJNE IG
BEIMG AAPIDI. Y
DEPLETED BY THe

F &amp; K Tr ee Tr1mming,
stump re mova l. 675·1331 .

~CUIMATIOM EF FORT..
VEI!.V SOON YOU I'/ILL
NO REGillR.CES!

RINGLE'S SE RVICE -experienced ma son, roofef'i"''
carpenter , elec tric ian,-;:_
general re pa ir s and:;•
r emode ling. Phone 304 ·675· ~
2088 or 615 · 4560.
:

.,•

ALLEYOOP
At.l' I'LL GIVE 'tOU TO TH' COUNT
OF THREE T'DROP THESE NETS
AN' LET US PASS!

He usualh~ comes down
about this time anywaLJ.

to knocle.

the trash
cans!

('
I

·, ...,.v

-~

BIUYPECit;FS
TrJSERRM
W17N CONNflf.

'

YOU'~ GOIII/6

OUT TO PINNER
WITH ME •• ;

WHE7/fER

)'0{1

LIKE-/TOR

IT'5 A80UT
11ME '&gt;QJGOT
SOME SOl/P
FIXJI1 INTO

NOW

)()(.1

GET

l. 171PN'T REAUZE

HE COULD BE 50

RE'AOY WHILE'
L COM8 MY

i=OI?CEFUL !II.
THAT IN A

HAl~/

~R

'

-- ·- - ··- - -

Electrical, Air Condition ,.
Heating , Hot water tanks:.,;;
Service all makes . Pho(le .,
379·2196. Charles Kiesling, :;:
----~-c..

''

""

SE~ING Machine repaii s:-.t~:

- -

- - - - -~-

~h~~e ~-~-~~- .

. : ·:· ::

l'li.: '61VE VOU FIFTY CENT
.IIF VOU'LL

LCJAD OF

THIS

BODACIOUS

COIN LAUNDRY

.

JIM 'S
DEPENDABLE::
water dellverv . Call 256- o
9368 anytime.
, -~
NOW HAULING house~-oal ;.~
&amp; limestone for driVeways. ~
Call for estlmates367·710h 1

--::--=------'--'- &lt;I
.-

JONES BOYS WAT fi R- •
SERVICE . Call 367-7.71 or :
367-0591 .
...__

17

Upllolslery

MOWREY$ Ullholatery R ~
1 Boi(124, Pt. Pleasant,.....:
t75-41~ .
.
'"'7. .
•

•

l

---~----~~~ ·#

·""'

1-

NORTH

EAST

WEST
• 10 2

+K 8 64
•8 3

• 54
tA86513

• 10 7 2

• 863

+KH2

SOUTH
+Q9
• A Q 10 6
t K Q9
+A Q74

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South

West

Nortll

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1+
4 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

s•

Soalb
1+
2•
s•

P...

Opening lead :• A

Alan: "I regret to say that
East fell for the swindle. He
thought and thought and
thought , but finally ducked.
South made his spade nine
and the rest of the tricks
came in easily."
Oswald: " East really
shouldn't have fallen for it.
He knew that South held the

king of diamonds. That
would allow South to dis&lt;:ard
one club from dummy. He
also knew tbat hearts • ...,
going to break evenly. He
held two In his own band.
The only chance for a serond ·.
trick would be to find South \
with another spade."

t!l~~:ar•~• ,(
by THOMAS JOSEI'H

ACROSS
I Quote
5 Winner at
Saratoga
10 Pallid
II Asian
wild sheep
12 Redshank
13 Sap
14 Big deal!
15 Unresolved
score
16 Heckler's
missile
17 Renowned
19 French
dance
20 Wor k

37 Property
owned
absolutely
l8 Strange ( sl. )
39 Volcano
DOWN
1 Hidden suppi;·
2 A major faith
3 Poem by Noyes
4 Watch
5 Bid welcome
6 Moslem
ruler
7 Fight
offensi vely
8 Cultured
9 Living alone
II Overwhehnin~

crew

Yesterday's Answer
18 Spad
21 Lucie's
brother
%2 Famous

27 My
goodness •
zs Grecian
playhouse

tenor
Z9 Leoncavallo
23 Brood heroine
24 Ornament 34 Printer's
25 Voracious
product

eel

15 Bivouac item

35 " Nonna -"

21 Force unit
22 Note
23 Shopping
list item
24 Rose or
Cotton
25 Volume
26 Pitcher's
stat
27 Historian,
Samuel
Eliot30 Susan 31 Before
32 Hoosier
hwnorist
33 New York
city
35 Lamented

341 He •
the boom"
DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE Is

Here's how
AXYOLB ·AAXR
LONC.FELLOW

to work It :

"l'llluiP Oft 1111" 1B73

One lener simply stands for another. In this sample A II
u sed f or 1he lhree L's, X for 1he 1wo O's, elc. Single leners,
apostrophes, the length and formati ?n of lhe wnrds ore all
hin1s. Ea ·h day the code letters are d1llerent.

!ACtwM'MbyTed Kopp4tl.

CllYPTOQUOTES

MA) ••

(!1). QCNIWSMGttniNE

•l·

tJ
+ 10 5

queen ."

()) QCC:Y~NEWS

"

8·24-81

+AJ1S3
.KJ9 72

Oswald: " There are lots of
ways to bid today 's hand, but
after South rebid two hearts,
North just Blackwooded his
way to six ."
Alan: "The slam depends
on the spade finesse , but if
South held the king instead
ol the queen of spades and a
weaker holding in diamonds
there
would
be
no
· problems."
Oswald: "West opened the
ace of diamonds and after
mature deliberation, shifted
to the 10 of spades. South,
who had been thinking along
with West, was ready. He
went right up with dummy's
ace of spades and played his
queen. Then he led dummy's
three of spades. His reasoning was that West just would
not lead from king-10 of
spades so that East was sure
to have the king and just
might play South for having
been dealt a singleton

tt:,S ()) IIOVI~,~~~::..•,\Iu It
~· ..... - ''ft!ll7
• ta:Oo .(J)
. . . IAUY ltiOW
()) ' ABC MWI NIOHfLiNE

'

WM VI

(!I). PA•TA'Y IILAND A
Um6d man .....wtktld 10 prove
8hciltl a'xllllin,dlo terror
awaiting him •• he,•••k• to
tutritl hia tantaay; and a wOIHn
yiarni to ae't thl Illegitimate
1W1n1ltla ga. . up for adoPtiOn

y oar• bilofe.

tR--'=•·.

'·

'

'

HTLRGPML

OG

IRTOXL

~itd lw Titd Koppel.

TRISTATE .
UPHOLSTERY SHOP ,
1163 Sec . -'!ve., Gallipolis.
446-7833 or -4-46·183~.
~

Jumbles ' PURGE CIV IL KENNEL PULPIT
Answer : What business was for the private garbage
collecting service - PICKING UP

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

go on the delenaive when the
Trlb Ia accused of being
anti·buaineeeln ita coverage of'
a factory tire while Ignoring
labor problema of ita own .
(~epeat; 60 mins .)
(I) EXCHANGE 'No Excuoo,
Sir' The myths and realities of
the wor l d's moat tamoua
military inatilution are explored
in this film, which de:ecribea the
co nfl ic t that reaufts when
tradition ia confronted with
changing social mores. (80
mine.)
10:05 C1J TIS EVENING NEWS
10:28 (I) C8NUPOATENEWS
10:30 (I) I'_UBLIC ENEMIES ·
II :00 CIJ. (J) CIJ. (J) CJai (ft) tD
NEWS
(J) DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE
® HITCHCOCK This program
reviewathtt career ot the gritat
Hollywoocl director Aft red
Hitchcock, whoae fllma have
sent chilli up the eplnee of
millions of movie·ooera all over
the world lor mora than 50
are·. (80 mina.)
11 :05 .
NIGHT GALLERY
11:28
CBN UPOATE NEWS
11 :30 (])ti(!)THITONIGHTSHOW
Gueatt'loat: BiiiCoaby. Gueata:
Sugar Ray Leonard ,,Robert
Culp, lrlen1 · Mendrell. (80

(Ill IIPVIE·OC

....

(Answere tomorrow)

Spade finesse makes slam

mini.)

FER ME,

I

I I ] [ XI )

BRIDGE

(I) ANOTHER LIFE
(J) AFTER BI!NNY
• (J) CBS !;ATE IIO.VIE
'QUINCY. M.E.: Double Oea1h'
Quincy's boll ruin a an autopay
and the raault&amp;.comP,liCIII thl
w'ork t?t the.~ whb'tlelleve
lhe d01th of a nightclub own1r
w11 hottllc·tda . (Repeat)
' HARRY 0 : The Madonnl
L. Qaby'.AA eJt·Cop ia found
dlldlnd ·eYerj:ona but H1rry
beliave.a lfto 'be a caaa or
1ulclcle. (R-1)

•}=~ ~intirl~~g= ~--· ~

Mobile homes moveci~
licensed, and bonded. 57~2711 or 675-.1398.
·

Saturday's

~

servtc e. Authorized SinQer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Sc issors . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy . 992·2284. •
JACK'S REFRIGER-ATlO- . :.
N . air condition service, ~
commer cia l. industrial ,

Print answer here: [

"F•m•, 1880
D(J)®l LOU GRANTLou muol

WINNIE

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, u sug·
gesled by the above cartoon.

· J I I

(ft). FACE THE MUSIC
7:31 (I) BASEBALL Atllnta Bravu
VI Phifadelphil Phillitl
7:&amp;1 (I) I;BN UPDATI! NEWS
8:00 ffi • CIJ LITTLE HOUSE ON
THI! PRAUU! Angered by Mra .
Oleaon ' alnterterence in her
claaeroom, Laura qulta her job
a a a teacher and Mrs. Oteaon
gate to create what she calla a
'modal school' lnWalnutGro\le .
(Repeat; 69 mins.) (Closed ·
Cap11onod; U.S.A .)
(I) AMERICAN CATHOLIC
I]) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •••
"Giorll" 1880
(I) (ft). ABC MONOAY
COMEDT SPECIAL 'Nuto And
Bolts' Rich Little portrays a
computer engineer who tria a to
raise two children with the help
of hie Inventions, a robot and 1
tin man. (60 mine.)
.(J)IB) WKRPINCINCINNA·
Tl A surprise telephone call
I rom his former wife has Dr .
Johnny Fever believing he's
going to be tree ol alimony
payments at last and on hi away
to a fun ·tlllad vacation with
Bailey Oartera. (Repeal)
(J) GREAT PERFORMANCES
' Life on the Misalaaippl '
Starring Robert Lansing and
Da&gt;.JidKnell, Mark Twain's story
recounts the author's youthful
experiences as ariverboat pilot
from the small town of Hannibal.
Missouri.
(ll] GOLDEN AGE OF TELEV~
SION ' Marty ' Paddy
Chaye f aky' aewerd·winn ing
acriptdeals with a Bronx
butcher who haa given up all
hope of finding lo&gt;.Je , but
aomehowatumbleauponit. Rod
Steiger and Nancy Marchand
atar In this priginal teleplay .
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
8:30 (I)
SHOW
Ill (J) i!Dl THE TIM CONWAY
SHOWComedyandvarietywlth
Tim Conway, Harvey Korman,
Maggie Roswell, Miriam Flynn.
Bert Berdia and Dick Orkin.
8 :18 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :00 ClleCIJ MONDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Death Penalty '
1980 Stars: Colleen Dewhurst ,
Dana Elcar.
(I) 7001:LU8
(I) (ft) tD MONDAY NIGHT
~~_11E ·w~en She ~a, _s.u ·
1979 Stare : Robert Urich .
91!!1'1 L1dd.
IIIKI.I®&gt;M.A.S.H. A letter from
R • dar brighten a Colonel
Potter's day until Klinger
accidentally break a hi a
!r_eglaeaes. (Repeat)
l1lJ GREAT PERFORMANCES
·Lite on the Mississippi'
Starring Robert Lansing and
David Knell, Mark Twaln'aatory
recounts the author's youthful
exparler~Cea a1 a riverboat pilot
from the small town of Hannibal,
Missouri.
8 :30 D (J) HOUSE CALLS A man
claiming to be I rom various
governmental agencies
deac ends on Kensington
Hospital and insists on seeing
One of Dr. Michaela' seriously ifl
e!lienta. (Repeat)
1W STATE FAIR
10:00 I]) MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) •••

I'LL BeT IT

(]
OL.D IIMS
L..ONDON.

Gueat: Opera alar Leontyne
Price.

1981 Yamaha M idnight
Max im 650 CC, black
silver, 1600 miles.
Call6756871.

1976 12ft. Star Craft pop up
camper, sleeps 6, exc .
cond ., $1,600. Caii.W.-3192.

r

I I

~

BING' S CO NCRETE CON•
STR UCTI ON · Specia lizing
in concrete driveways~.
sidewalks,
patip-.
basement, gar age floors
and etc . Free estimates. n
years e)(perience . Call 3677891

Home building, home
remodeling and repair,
Cus tom work from start to
finish . Call 388·8711.

tour ordinary words.

7:00

PAINTING
interior and
ex t erior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Ca ll 388·9652.

New mopeQs, last years
model, 5% over cost, 1.50
MPG . Ideal tor college
student . Call446-4626

Unaeramble lhne four JumbiH,
one letter to each oquare. lo torm

EVI!HtNG

WEATHERALL
CON - ~
CRETE · quality and service. call675 ·1582.

1978 Harley Davison el ~ ­
tric glide, like new, $4,000.
Ca ll after 5 446-0122.

i}jt~N) fe}'il 1jl THATSCAAMBLEDWOROQAIIE
~ ~~ ~
byHentiAmoldondBoblM

f:!J

AUG.24,11111

WOODSHOP - Cablnefs;
picnic
tabfes,
porch
swings, most wood produc_ts. 101 Cour t St .• Gallipolis. •
Call-«6·2572.
~:·

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SE RVI CE Home
ma1ntainance
and
re model ing. Phone 388·
9326.

Trucks lor Sale

HAY for sale, 304-675-225-1
1980 Tovota. long bed, 5
&amp; 675·1302 .
spd .. Pioneer AM -F M
200 BUSHELS barlev, cassette deck, new topper,
22.000 mi ., $5,800 . Call «6phone 30-1-675-5086.
7504.

TRAILER space . in coun·

51

JT1S GONNA

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car· ·:
pet Cleaning featured by ~
Haffelt Brothers custom · ;
carpets . Free estimates . . .
Call446·2107.
•

POODLE GROOMING .
Dave's A ppli ance Repair .·.,
Ca ll Judy Tay lor at 367 _ 77 Monte Carlo 62.000
Wash ers, dryers, plum· ~:
_
miles, AC, PS, PB , new
7220
bing, elec tric, gener al han·
tires, and new paint . Ca ll
dyman. Phone 304·576-2921
388·8769 .
·
ORAGONWYND
CAT · - - -- - · -- 1980 KAWASAKI KDX 175 . or 675·5689.
TE RY
KENNEL . AKC
Best
offer,
phone
304-6751969 Z28, excel lent cond .
black Chow puppies, Sep1.
Lucas Builders. Room ad·
5350
Call992·3647.
I. CFA Himalayan , Per
dition s,
garages ,
sian and Siamese k ittens.
remodel ing, and cement
75
Boats
and
1971
VW
Squareback
4
sp,
New Lilac , blue, and cho.
work. 675 ·5022.
Motors for Sale
Siam ese
and
Blue sun roof , clean . 446·21 49
Himalayan k ittens. Call evenings, 949·2504 days.
14FT . Lowe L ine Lake Jon,
440·3844 after 4 p.m
Swive l seats, depth finder,
1977 Plymouth Volare 6· Evinrude trolling motor , 15 82
Plumbing
H P E vinrude motor and _ __ ,&amp;_,H
_::e,_,a,_,t,_,
in,gL-_ _
cyl . AC, Automatic . Very
HILLCRE ST KENNEL
Board ing all breeds, clean clean . Call 992·3798 after 5 Oilly trailer $1,500 .00
CA RTER 'S PLUMBING
indoor-outdoor facilities . p.m .
Phone3046752039.
AND HEATING
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
Cor. Fourth and Pine
mans . Call446·7795.
1980 Starfire SX, H at· 76
Phone 446-3888 or 446·-1-177
Auto Parts
chback . Black on black, V -6
&amp; Accessories
BRIARPATCH KENNELS auto ., a.c. , 18.000 miles .
J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
CHARLIE 'S SALVAGE
Boarding and grooming. S5,650 . 992·7054 .
Auto par ts, auto r epai r, Rt. 1 Gallipolis. 367·7853.
AKC
Gordon
setters,
wr
ec ker service, buy
English Coc k er ,Spaniels. 1968 Mustang . P.S .• auto.,
automobiles, radiators and D. C. Contractors Plum·
Call4&lt;111·4191
vinyl roof, new paint , batt e ri e~ 446 7717 .
bing, elec trical, heating, '
chrome. E xc . cond. Serious
roofing. a lum inum, vinyl
inquiries
only
.
992·3952.
Jeanie's Pet Shop 1 mi!e
siding, and home painting.
77
Auto
Repair
West of Ga llipolis on Rf.
675·3376 or 675· 12-10.
141 . Open Monday lhru Sat. MORRISON 'S Auto sales .
ROBERTS
BROTHER
S
.==~==:c====:
9·5. Call ~ - 7920 .
Henderson, WV . Phone 675- GARAGE 24 hr . wrecker 8J
E Kcavat"in3 g.___-: :
1574or675·2881 .
service. "B ig or small" we
tow them all! 2332 Eastern Back Hoe &amp; Ditcher Ser· ' '·
Reg istered Cock er Spaniel
pups . Call ~ - 1 2 62 .
1967 MUS TANG , V·8 289 Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day vi ce, water lines, ditches, .- ,
engine, collec tors item, - 4&lt;111-2445 or Night - «6- se ptic systems. footer~ -· 1:
Call 4&lt;111 -9340 or 675-6898. • • '
MOVIN G
TO
NEW priced on inspec tion, good '4792.
..;
LOCATION . Fish Tank and condition. 314 Staff House
Rd,
Pt.
Pleasant.
Near
Pel Shop 241 3 Jackson
Auto Paintmg &amp; Sanding Dozer , loaded, and ditchie. l
Ave ., Pt . Pleasa nt . Across fairgrounds.
S175, any color.free pickup work. Basements, laf1··"~­
from Wester n Auto. Call
&amp; delivery in Galfipolis dscaping, gas, electric, and
675·2063 . Closed Friday and 1964 CORVAIR, $1,000. 30-1- a r ea, Hammond Body water lines . Charles R.
S aturda~ . Open Monday
Shop, 221 Mill St. 379·2782.
Hatfield, Rutland, Ohio ..
675·2622 after 5 p.m.
742·2903
August
17th
at
new
loca tion . sa me hours
Camping
1973 Pinto Runabout. new 78
- - - -· - - EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Equipment
paint, excellent condition .
AKC
Dachshund, 675·1969 .
Dozer Service. Specializing
Rod
&amp;
Reel
Combo
·
Zebco
in septic tan k. 675· 123-4.
Pomeranian an Poodle
600 reel, Pfleuger S-250 rod
pups 895 3958 .
1979 Mustang Ghia , 4 cy l,
Special $9.'1'1 . Spring
sun roof. silver, ac, low Valley Trading Co.• Spring BACK HOE and Se ptic tank
Serv1 ce . La rry Side-n-·
mileage, $5300 . CAll 675- Valley Pliua, 446·8025.
59 ~ Sale or Trade
stricker . 675-sseo .
4480 ext . 71 or 675-4528 .
Pick your own half-runner
1968 Leisure time 18ft.
beans
A ndrew Cross, 1979 CUTLASS Supreme, travel trailer, good cond . 84
Electrical
Lelart Falls. Oh .
&amp; Refrigeration
PS, PB , air. AM ·8-track, with bottle gas tank, sleeps
velour interior, 304·675·6643 4, $1,495. Call Johns Mobile Fuller Electric Co. Com·
Winter potatoes, canning alter 5 ,00 .
Home 446· 35-17 .
plete rewiring , commercia l
tom atoes. peppers. Charles
or residential, and elec ·
R. Harr is, Portland. Ohio. 1967 DODGE Dart, 6 cy l. 1979 35 fl. Bonanza park
trical maintainance, also·
843·2693 .
automatic , $300. gOOd con - model trailer. Call ~ - 8183 on cal l . Ph . 446·2171;
dition. Phone 304-675-1175.
or 4&lt;111-0038 .
Gallipolis.
·

61

BI G discounts for cash and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.

1979 Pontiac Formula
Firebird silver and slate,
T-fop. 56.000 . Call 4&lt;111·9228
afte r 4PM.

Building materi als, block,
br ick, sewer pipes , win ·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, o.
Call245·5121.
63 Corvet Road ster, 4 spd. ,
exc. cond . Call evenings
4-1&lt;12075
56
Pets for Sale

try. 1 mite from Mason

01
troI

.....

-·

The Daily Sen

Ohio

,.

Open 9am to 7pm, M on .
thru Fri., 9am to Spm, SaT.
4&lt;111·0322

BUSINESS locatton , 509
Main St Pt . Pleasant, WV
304·882·3356.

. '.I o
, ',,
.., • ...,, ... '' "'

1979 Ford F -150, 4-wheel
dr ive truck . Auto, air, AM·
FM tape, loaded, exc .
con d., $5,495.00 Call 4&lt;111·
3732.

1981

Hoove r Sweepers repaired
at Empire Furniture, M
Second Ave, Gal lipolis, OH.

72

Student teacher seeking 1
bdr ..
preferabi.Y
unfurnished for fall of 1981 .
Call collect Laura 592·6198.

Vans&amp;4W.O.

75
Ratliff Pools &amp; Service .
Complete sa les, service,
pool covers, and win terization kits. Call 4&lt;111·1324

1971 SUPER Beetle, good
condition. SHOO. 304-8822019 or 882-2326.

47

1973 34 ton Chevy pickup

has ps, pb, /automatic fran·

Enclosed utility trailer,
exc . cond, w ill not leak .
Call388-8-136.

2 bedroom mobile home in
New Haven, WV . Adu Its
only . No pels. 6751452 or
675·2996.
T w dbedroom trailer ,- f~r ­
n ished, 1t• mile out Sandhill
R:d. air conditioned, ca rpet,
washer and dryer , S200.
month, S100 depos1t. 304·
675·2195 .

Monday, Augus124,•1981

Pomeroy-Middlepor1, Ohio

RAVYJLM'G

DMOACG

A\'

VALGLTW .

ZLMONLZ

LNOT

FJOXJ

RZNRAYR CL

YV

XOXLMV

Ywlenlay'1 Cr~: HE W~TO BEOOME A'l'JiEE.
COVI.DN'T STAND THE -SIGHT OF'.
SAP..-SOURCE UNKNOWN
·
·
SUMEON, B

••

�Page-1D-The Dally Sentinel

Council moves ahead with housing project

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.)

f

Cars damaged in

Area deaths

George Hill
Funeral services for George
Albert Hill, 42, Route 2, Racine,
killed in an auto accident Sunday
night will be held at I p.m. Thursday
at the Ewing Funeral Home.
Mr. Hill was a member of the
Letart United Methodist Church,
Racine Masonic Lodge F&amp;AM, Aladdin Temple and Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order of Eagles.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, Jerry and Florence Elliott
Hill, and a brother. James Ray Hill.
Surviving are his wife, Reta Jo ; a

son, Er ic. and two daughters,
Teresa and Mandy. all at home ; two
brothers, Dave and Clarence, both of
Racme ; three nephews and a niece.
Officiatmg at services will be the
Rev . Bill Sullivan. Burial will be in
the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
rnay cal l at the funeral home
an)1nne after I p.m. Tuesday.

Glenn P. Weaver
Glenn Paul Weaver, 53, New
Haven, died Saturday afternoon.
He was born February 2, 1928 in
New Haven to Luferna Moore
Weaver, New Haven and the late

Char les D. Weaver.
He was employed as a crane
operator at the Kyger Creek Power

1

Plant and a member 0t the Fil'!ll
Church of God, New Haven.
Surviving, in addition to his
mother, are his wife, Hester Ueving
Weaver of New Haven; one
daughter, Mrs. Joe (Jenniferl Cundiff of West Columbia; four sons,
Fred, Jeff, Rodney and Racer of
New Haven; one brother, Charles A.
Weaver, NeW Haven; five sisters,
Mrs. Wyllis (Eleanor I Davis, Jr.,
Mrs. David (0rpha) Fields, Jr.,
Mrs. Dexter (Mary Susan) Erwin,
all of New Haven, Mrs. Robert (Erma) Beach, Allen Park, Mich., and
Mrs. Lester (Vera I Dodson, Mason;
and one granddaughter.
Services will be held at the First
Church of God, New Haven, on
Tuesday al1 :30 p.m. with the Rev .
Robert Ball officiating. Burial will
follow in the Union Cemetery, New
Haven.
Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home today from 2 p.m. until4 p.m. and from 7 p.m. until9 p.m
The body will be taken to the church
one hour prior to services.

Cathern Ward
Mrs. Cathern Johnson Ward, 61, of
New Cumberland and formerly of
Mason, died Sunday at the Weirton
General Hospital.
She was born April 23, 1920, to the
late Fred C. and Delilah Sue Tate
Johnson.
Surviving are her husband, Ralph
Ward, two children and two grandchildren, all of New Cumberland;
two sisters, Eulah Redman Mason
and Mrs. Frances Gehri~g, Ne,.:
Cumberland; three brothers, Robert
Johnson, Toronto, Ohio, Franklin
and Donald Johnson, Mason.
He was preceded in death by two
brothers Homer Ray and Howard
Johnson.
Services will be held Wednesday
at 2 p.m. at the New Cumberland
Methodist Church. Friends may call
at the Fields Funeral Home in New
Cwnberland on Tuesday from 2 p.m.
until 4 p.m. and from 7 p.m. until 9
p.m.

Announce tractor and
truck pull winners
The annual tractor and truck pull
wrapped up the 118th Meigs County
Fair Saturday night.
Prizes were paid in seven classes

for the modified and in six classes in
field stock tractors.
First through third places in eac h
of the categories went to: 5,000
modified Virgil Kranz, Bethel ;
Harold Ford, Route I, Coolville;
Clarence Bauerback, Brundy ; 7,200
modified,
Charles Milton,
Washington C. H., Virgil Kranz,

Harold Ford, Coolville; 6,000 field,
Robert ELliott, Edison; John S1ouse,
Somerset; Lester St. Clair, Logan;
8,000 field stock, Marty Morarity,
Racine; John Stevens, Point
Pleasant, Huck Wagner, Racine;
9,500 field stock, Don Battrell,
Albany: Charles Mathews, Racine;
Mike McClain, Nelsonville.
The top three winners in the
modified truck division were Jack
Gaston, Stewart; Clayton Johnson,
Coolville, and Randy Stewart,
Wellston.

.fc-q1 rt&gt;CIIVt'rt&gt;d
,, 1980 Jeep Wagoneer reported
stolen Friday at midnight at Meigs
Mine nwnber two was recovered

Saturday afternoon off the Flood
Road, just outside Pomeroy CorporatiOn Limits, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.
The vehicle, owned by Gary
Basham. Rt. 2, Coolville, had been
stripped.
·

St-eks divorct&gt;
Sara Marie Seyler, Middleport,
flied suit for divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against
Richard D. Seyler. II, Pomeroy.
Marriages dissolved were Violet
L., Neff and JackS. Neff; Sheila A.
Birchfiled and James C. Birchfield·
Charles Frederick Sayre and Pa~
Jean Sayre.

Chester Rd. wreck
Three cars were damaged in an
accident on Chester Road at 1 :10
a.m. Sunday Pomeroy Pollee report.
Pollee said that the accident ~
curred when a car driven by Don
Stobart, Jr., Pomeroy, struck a car
driven by Roger B. Dillon, Route 1,
Long Bottom, which in tum struck a
car owned by Thomas Wilson,

Rutland.
The Dillons were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment of minor injuries by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
Medium damages were incurred
to all three vehicles. Pollee said that
Stobart left the scene of the accident
on foot and will be charged. Investigation is continuing, pollee concluded.

Eight emergency runs were made
by local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
At I p.m. Sunday, the Middleport
Unit took Georgia Fraley, S. Fifth
Ave., to Holzer Medical Center; the
Pomeroy Unit at 1:41 a.m. took Tom
Wilson, Ruth Dillon and Roger
Dillon from the scene of an auto accident near the Beacon Service
Station to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Unit at 8:51 a.m.,
Christine Kirkpatrick from Beech
Grove
Road to Veterans
and Syracuse
at 6:53 Memorial,
p.m. took
Beatrice Blake fr(J'Jl Route 124 to
Veterans Memorial.
On Saturday the Middleport Unit
at 2:04p.m. took Ernest Wells, South
Third Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and at 7:53p.m. took George E.
King, Leading Creek Road, to
Veterans Memorial. Pomeroy at
10:46 p.m. treated Edna Smith at the
Eagles Cl~b and Ruland at 9:43p.m.
took Wendell Barrett from Salem
Center to Veterans Memorial.

SHOW WINNERS- These seven animals
took top honors in their respective classes at Friday's
Melg:I County Fair Pet Show, sponsored by the three
chapters of Meigs FHA. Pictured left to right are
Patricia Cleland, Langsville, with UUie Britches, a
miniature cblmpamee, most unusual; and Amy Rouse,
Shade, with Polka Dot, best cat, in the front row. In the
second row, left to rigbt, are Amy Luckeydoo, Middleport, with Tiffany, most talented, 12 and under
division; Pam Lawrence, Minersville, with Jo Bo,
most talented, over 12 division; Manuel Francis, wttb

best rodent; and Usa Patterson, Pomeroy, with . ·
Snoopy, wbo received honors as best dressed and best
overall pel Twenty participated with plaques awarded ·
to first place winDers, and ribbons golog to second aod
third places. Judge for the contest was Rita Lewis,
Humane Educator for the Humane Society of the
United States, and a charter member of the Meigs
County Humane Society, and Lynn Slater, Pomeroy, of
the Meigs FHA, was announcer.

A meeting for all children of the
Eastern Local School District entering kindergarten this rall wm be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
Requirements
entering kinwill for
be discussed
and
dergarten
there will be conference time. Baby
sitters will be provided and refreshments will be served.

STURDY CONSTRUCTION
FINI FINISH
BEAUTY AND VALUE
CHOOSI MAPLE OR

EVERY h$SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!
For Just
Dinner
•Dining Room Only

PASADENA, Calif. - Voyager 2, America 's mechanical emissary
to distant worlds, swooped past battered, frozen moons and glimmering rings today as it neared its closest approach to Saturn's pastel
surface.
On the eve of the encounter, the 1-ton Voyager was pronounced "in
excellent health," with everything working smoothly both on the
spaceship and at the Jet Propulsion Lahoratory here, where nearly 500
scientists, engineers and technicians were making final preparations.
Mission director Richard Laeser said last-minute. changes were still
being made Monday in some of Voyager's assignments.
·
The ship cruises just 63,000 miles above Saturn's cloud tops at 11:24
p.m. EDT. l)lews of the fly-by won't reach Earth, however, until the
radio signals arrive at 12:50 a.m·. Wednesday.
Its television eyes shifting frantically from one mystifying sight to
the ne:xt, the robot explorer was giving earthlings their best look at an
exotic kingdom 967 million miles away- a giant, gaseous world swaddled in delicately painted clouds.

On~

Served with:
Whipped
Poatoes, Chicken Gravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.
Sorry, No Substitutions, Except
which have an additional price.

croW S Fam I•• y
f

228 W. MAIN

Beverages

Resf aUra n f

.PH. 992-5432

POMEROY, OHIO

rI~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WASHINGTON - Postal Service employees overwhelmingly
ratified new contracts providing a typical worker with a $2,100 pay
raise over three years plus unlimited cost-of-living increases, union officials announced today.
They said the voting was not influenced by the Reagan administration's tough stance against striking air traffic controllers.
Members of the National Association of Letter Carriers voted
124,316 to 20,856 to ratify the tentative contract reached July 21 after
an all-night bargaining session, said union president Vincent Sombrotto.
The American Postal Workers Union was still counting votes early
today when its president, Moe Biller, left the suburban Maryland
motel where the tally was conducted.

FBI says pair had jewelery
INDIANAPOUS - Arraignment was scheduled today for Drucilla
Merida, 20, Milan, Ind., charged with possession and interstate transportation of property taken from a suburban Cincinnati home in
which a man, his wife, son and brother-in-law were found shot to
death, the FBI said.
Also charged with possessing and taking the stolen property across
a state line was Richard L. Weston, 42, Brookville, Ind.
Miss Merida was scheduled to appear before a U,S. magistrate in Indianapolis today. Weston, who has been in the Marion County Jail since his arrest by the FBI on July 14 for parole violation, is expected to
have ·a hearing later this week.
The bodies of WiUiam F . Stevenson, his wife and son and brother-inlaw Edward Dowell were found in the Stevensous' Bethel, Ohio, home
July 6. The house had been set afire, the FBI said.

A new car loan from
the Farmers Bank
can put you in the
driver's seat.

Students flock to banks for loans
WASIDNGTON- Students are flocking to banks in record numbers
to take out federally subsidized loans for college before a new law
makes them harder to get. Because of that, the administration says it
may need more money for the program it wants to cut back.
Since 1978 the loans have been available to aU coiners, regardless of
their need or family income. But as of. Oct. 1, students from families
with adjusted gross income of $30,000 or more wi)J haveto pass a needs
testto get a loan. ·
Student aid experts say banks and Jendihg agencies have done a
booming business in Guaranteed Shldent Loans this swnmer.
Some 3.&amp; million students are expected to bOrrow ilearly $II billion
uilder the program In the f~l year ending Sept. 30, ujl from $4.8
billion a year ago and S1 .9 bllllon three years ago.

This Week Onlyf

Stop by the Farmers Bank and talk
to us about a new car loan.

Lottery winners

of '149
And Get A

..'

ClEVELAND - T~ wlnnlng ·number drawn Monday. night In the
01\io Lottery's (Ially game "The Number" was 013.
Thillotteey ~ ,earhlngs ,of $489,8811.~on the drawing. The earnihi!S came on sales of $11&amp;1,154, while holders of winning ticketa are
entitled to share ~.266.50, Jottecy officials said.
·
'

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CRIB MATTRESS·
PREEI

Farmers

'

·.ELBERFElDS IN POMEROY

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sections. 16 Pages

1S Cents

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said appeared to be "abrupt fraud" have been completed, the com·
and asked Secretary of State An· mittee 's validation rate was running
thony J . Celebrezze Jr. to see that at about 84 percent.
the . signatures are scrutinized
The rate was lower in some of the
closely across the state.
big counties, including Franklin at
Riffe said he hoped the apparent 72 percent and Cuyahoga at aimost
fraud in his home county is an 70, Elton said.
isolated case.
Elton said all signatures should be
''If we' re doing 70 percent in the
urban areas and 85 percent in the
checked.
"That's what the local boards of rural areas, I think we're in great
election are now doing," he said. shape," he said.
"Apparently, they are doing a great
The corrunittee needs 284,334 valid
joL in Scioto County."
But most ci FAIR's 439,031 signatures to get Issue 2 certified for
signatures will prove valid, Elton · the ballot. Technically, it needs 10
said. He said he checked with percent of the total vote in the last
Celebrezze's office Friday and found gubernatorial election.
In a Jetter to Celebrezze, Riffe, !).
that in 58 coWJties where the checks
New Boston, said "a number of
petitions circulated in Scioto County
have P.en invalidated due to what
appears to the local board of elections to be forged signatures, including signatures of deceased per-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
spokesman for the group backing
Issue 2 on Ohio's Nov. 3 ballot says
he agrees there should be a thorough
check of the signatures which put it
there.
JD8eph Elton, campaign coordinator for the Ohio Fair and Impartial 'Redistricting Conunittee,
was asked Monday about reports
that some petitions from Scioto
County had been forged, in some
cases with the names of dead people.
Issue 2 would change the method
used to draw new election districts
for the Legislature and. Ohio
congressmen.
Earlier in the day, House Speaker
.Vernal G. Riffe Jr. reported what he

sons."

The speaker did not mention

'

names or indicate if any charg~s
have been filed, although Elton said
each petition is supposed to be
signed by the person who circulated
it
FAIR. a mostly Republican group ,
is seeking a new districtmg system
which would abolish the stale Apportionment Board.
The board currently is controlled
3-2 by Democrats. It will draw new
districts for the OhiO House and
Senate for use throughout the 1980s
unless Issue 2 is approved.
Under Issue 2, all citizens would
have the opportunity to draw the
districts based on 1980 census
figures. The one which best reflected
equality of population, compactness
and other criteria would be chosen.
The same process would be used to
draw new districts for Congress,
redistricted under current law after
each decennial census by the
Legislature.

Dwarf breathes
fire at fair
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Postal workers ratify new contracts
·•-

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meeting with the Envirorunental
Protection Agency representatives
at 1 p.m. on Sept. 9 at which time a
combined sewage overflow situation
will be discussed.
The mayor also read a letter from
Village Solicitor Bernard Fultz pointing out that the 1980 natural gas contract provides a minimum charge of
$4.6!i a month and that gas used
during a month is added to that
charge. The letter pointed out that a
prior contract provided a $3.75
(Continued on page 10)

•

•

Voyager 2 •in excellent health'

DARK PINE

Buy This Quali~J Crib
at Our Low Regular Price

NEW YORK - Mark David Chapman, sentenced to 20 years to life
in prison for gwming down ex-Beatle John Lennon,!Jias taken a "vow
of silence," his lawyer says.
·
Chapman was sentenced Monday by acting Justice Dennis Edwards, who said he should receive psychiatric treatment during his
imprisonment. Chapman was to be taken tQ!Iay to Sing Sing prison in
Ossining, N.Y., to await a final prison ass.igtunent.
During Monday's senten~ing, Chapman, protected in a bulletproof
vest, read aloud what he called "my final spoken words" - a passage
from J.D. Salinger's book "Catcher In The Rye." Marks said Chapman has taken a "vow of silence."

,--,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday
Admissions--Fred
Tuckennan, Pomeroy; Doyle Ord,
Mason; Jerry Runyon, Middleport ;
George King, Middleport.
Saturday
Discharges--Rose
Genheimer, Vona Gillenwater
'
Ralph Ballard.
Sunday
Admissions--Lowell
Collins, Syracuse; Beatrice Blake,
Racine; Sara Jarrell, Langsville.
Sunday Discharges-Bernard Diddle, George King.

LDL
Chapman gets 20 years to life

~Combination

out that the Middleport Church of
the Nazarene had filed an objection
to the transfer at an earlier time and
possibly wo!lld file one thts time
again requesting a hearing. The
church has until Sept. 6 to file an otr
jection with the state.
Mayor Hoffman said that a visit
recently by a flood insurance
representative had disclosed that
many were not informed on the
regulatious. He said that he has a
copy of the rules at this time.
Mayor Hcffman announced a

Elton wants Issue 2 petitions checked

Tina, best dog; Debbie Shrieves, Darwin, with Peter, :

A revival will be held at 7:30 each
evening starting Thursday at the
Keno Church of Christ with George
Pickens speaking. The revival will
continue through next Monday.

and that was action to establish at
village hall a community development office which will have one employe. That office 'will work with tlie
rehabilitation project as well as handle other aspects of the $715,000 HUD
grant. Mayor Hoffman said last
night that an employe has been
secured to staff the new office.
Council went on record as otr
jecting, but not requesting a hearing
for the transfer of a C-2 carry out
liquor license from one location to
another on Locust St. It was pointed

Pomerov-:-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 25, 1981

·'pET

project.
The Akroo firm will inspect the
homes, determine · what improvements are needed, handle the
specifications and assist and award
contracts and will see that uie work
is properly done on the home. The
firm will be responsible to village
council. The contract between the
village and the firm will be for
$18,500.
Council also took another
progressive step in conjunction with
the housing rehabilitation program

'1

Voi.30,No.9l
Copyrighled 1981

Revival scheduled

Meeting set Tuesday

followed In providing the improvements of the homes. Council
members are to study the list of
requirements and at the next
meeting will provide their own input
to the requirement provlsious.
Council authorized Mayor Hoffman to enter into a contract with R.
and R. International, Inc., Akron,
for rehabilitation of the some 20
homes. The firm wiUbe respousible
to council but wlli carry out the
numerous steps which must be
followed in the home rehabilitation

e

Squads make eight
runs over weekend

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
••Beauty
is in the Making
for a safe,
beautiful Nursery'

Middleport Village Council, in
regular session Monday night, took
steps to Initiate a $167,000 housing
rehabilitation program in the community.
The program, which will bring
about the improvement of some 20 to
24 homes in the community, is being
funded as a part of the HUD grant of
$715,000.
Mayor Fred Hoffman distributed
to council members sample forms to
be used in the project as well as
eligibility requirements to be

OUTSTANDING SENIOR CITIZENS - Leooa· Swan Hensley and
Mae McPeak, Long Bottom sister~, have been selected Meigs County's
Outstanding Senior CIUzens and recognized at the Ohio State Fair. Both
members of the Retired Senior Volnnteer Program and active in many
civic and community programs, Mrs. Hensley and Mrs. McPeak were
presented a framed certificate. Attending the presentation from here
were Mrs. Hensley and Mrs. McPeak's sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Bissell, and another sister, Mrs. Leota Ferrell of Dayton. Mrs.
McPeak was the recipient of a similar award from Wood C.ounty, W. Va.
in 1972.

COLUMBUS, Ohio I APl - Pete
Terhune may be only 3-foot-4, but no
matter. He doesn't flinch when it
comes to eating fire .
The dwarf, weighing 116 pounds,
has been performing his fire-eating
act for 27 years.
For the past few weeks, he's been
at the Ohio State Fair, which entered
its 12th day today .
Terhune, 51, places a burning colton swab in front of his mouth and
for a moment, names dance from
his tongue. With a gust of breath, he
blows out the name, closes his
mouth and smiles to the crowd.
The flame act still scares him at
limes, but over the years he's adjusted to the danger, he said.
"Somelin\es I get burned, but only
once in awhile," he said.
He was attra cted to carnival life in
his hometown of Breckenridge,
Minn. When a fair arrived in the
town, Terhune paid 50 cents to get in
and saw his first Ride show in years.
Several days later, he went back
to ask for a job -,. his first. And he' s

kept it ever since.

Terhune travels with four other
sideshow entertainers billed as a
quarter man, lecturer, knife thrower
and human blockhead. They see
about 6,000 miles of countryside
during their annual five or SIXmonth tour, which ends in January.
He resides during winters in Gitr
sonton, Fla.
Monday's fair events were
highlighted by the Sale of Champions, in which younJ,.\sters' winning

animals - junior fair grand and
reserve champion chickens, lambs,
barrows and steers -

were auc..

boned off to such area businesses as
Bob Evans Farm and Wendy's international.
Bob Evans bought the grand
champion barrow from Craig
Meranda, 17, of Georgetown, for
$13,000. Wendy's paid $25,256 for the
grand champion steer. raised by
Rhonda Shane, 9, of Fostoria .
AtJout 3,000 people and a statewide
television audience watched the
proceedings at Cooper Arena .

Brown offers assistance in probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - The
state attorney general today offered
his assistance in the investigation of
$1.3 million in unaccounted for state
funds from the state treasurer's office.
Attorney General William J.
Brown said the Bureau of Criminal
Idlmtification and Investigation and
accountants working for his office
would be available to Franklin County ProsecutorS. Michael Miller.
Miller began a pl'!lbe of state
Treasurer Gertrude Donahey's office after the state auditor last week

reported that Mrs. Donahey's records showed the state had deposited
$1.3 million more money in its al~
count at BancOhio National Bank
than the bank's records showed.
Brown said today he has asked
slate Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
for any information showing that
public records in the treasurer's office were "removed, destroyed,
mutilated, transferred or otherwise
disposed of" in violation of the law.
The attorney general has legal
power to seek civil penalties of $500
per violation for removed or

destroyed public documents.
·'My uffice is very interested Ill
pursuing this possible violation of
state law," said Brown. "The
examiner's report simply stated
that 56 days of records were
missing, possibly never kept as they
should have been. But if evidence of
tampering e&lt;ists, then that is
something new, and clearly ground,;
for legal action."
Brown said he cannot conduct an
independent investigation, but can
assist the prosecutor if requested.
Dave Johnon, who investigates

white-colla r cmnc for the
prosecutor, said Monday the probe
presented major problems to the office because of its limited staff.
Johnson said he was apprehensive
about his ability to check state
records, because there are millions
of them and he has no experts at his
disposal other than stale auditor's
examiner~.

Meanwhil e. Mrs. Donahey said
Monday she will lure an m-huuse
·auditor tu 111ake sure thal such

discrepancie:-; rl11 not

ti&lt;' Cur aJ!ain .

Legal
clinics
challenging
small
firms
-

.
.
AKRON, Ohio (API - Legal
clinics are giving smaU traditional
law !Inns a run for their mQney,
says the founder of the largest such
cOnic in Ohio.
The cUnles can offer. services lor
lower fees more becauSe they Umit
· themselves to the basic servlees
. ~ by middle-class people, Joel
Hyatt said.
, \') thJijJt lt'_s a. pol!tive ~p
bec:aWJe a lot of people have acres&amp; •
to legal services who never did
. bef~." ~ 31-y~ldHyatt said.
· . Hyatt ·~ 8erVlOes- a chain of
llw '~ !OIIIIdeillil Cleveland by
' ~tt aDd' bued in KlriS!I8 City· Nldll¥ Qnllll, llowevjr,lhl\t It does
ll!it pro;;~~e alepl eurHU. .
'' · ~ lhe ~ ol ~ llaniU.ed

t--..l~~..,...;:;..,;;;:.~~~~-=-----~~,..._-~-' ~ llf•tt \lawyep ..-e. divorce and

.

'

Hyatt has expanded to Toledo,
cases are referred elsewhere. He
Dayton,
Columbus, Cincinnati, Pitcited. a recent adoption of a child
tsburgh
and Philadelphia with 28
from El Salvador.
A standard adoption would be no Hyatt offices and 68 lawyers. Hyatt
problem, Croyle said, but one that expects to to have more than 70 ofinvolved international arrangemen- fices in eight states next year.
That will put Hyatt in the same
ts was more complex than the Hyatt
league as the 8-year-old Legal Clinic
office wished to handle.
Hyatt, son-in-law of U.S. Sen. of Jacoby &amp; Meyers, one of the
Howard M. Metzenhaum, D-Ohio, largest law chains in the country. It
opened his first cllnic office in down- had 49 offices in New York and
The clinics offer legal ~rvlces to town Cleveland in November 1977 af- California in 1980 and plans to ex·
people who previously believed they ter the U.S. Supreme Court ap- . pand to 79 offices this year .
cOii1d not afford legal help, · said proved advertising by lawyers.
The Hyatt expansion is keyed
Hyatt's successful argument
Gary Hunt of .the Ohio State Bar
to a deal with H&amp;R Block
largely
before the Ohio Supreme Court led
Association in Columbus.
Inc.,
reached
in the spring of 19110, (o
"For the first time, you'v~ got nor- the way for Ohio to beCOme the first
open
clinics
nationwide over the
ina!; legal servl~ being :dellvered , state to allow television and radio
next
five
years
and house them ad·
to middle-income people," Hunt advertising by lawyers. Thirty-elg~
jacent
to
Block's
tax preparation ,,f ·
said. . .
.
' states now have approved lawyer
fites.·
Croyle said tf1e tough or compleJ; advertising.

dissolution, wills and estates,
bankruptcies, some criminal cases
and some personal-injury cases,
said Robert Croyle, manager of the
'RolliN! Acres MaD office in Akron.
For the standard services, Hyatt
la!VYers quotes fees tq potential
clients in person or by telephone.
The initial consul\ation cests $15,
whi~ can be applied to the later fee.

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