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                  <text>Page-12-The Daily sentinel

Area deaths
Shelly Ward
Shelly Denise Ward, 22, Portland,
died Wednesday evening at St.
Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg.
She is survived by a son, Zachery
Paul Ward, Portland; her parents,
Andy and Linda Ward, also of Portland ; and several aunts and uncles.
F.un~ral services will be held
!A.turday at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel,
with interment at the Browning
Cemetary, Portland. Rev .Don
Walker will officiate.
Friends and relatives may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home anytime
after 7 p.m. tonight.

F. C. Tuckerman
Frederick Carlton Tuckerman, 76,
Pomeroy, Route 143, died Wednesday night at Veterans Memorial
HospitaL

·1·

Mr. Tuckennan was a son of the
late Howard and Effie Russell
Tuckennan.
Surviving are his wife, Gladys
Knox Tuckennan; three daughters,
Mrs. James (Dorothy} Reeves, Mrs.
Eugene (Viola) Haning and · Mrs.
Jack (Freda) Elam, all of Pomeroy;
six grandchildren ; six greatgrandchildren; a brother, Guy of
Springfield, and several nieces and
nephews.
Mr. Tuckennan was a member of
the Zion Church of Christ and had
served as a deacon of that church for
several years. He was a retired
worker of the Meigs County Department of Highways.
Services will be held at 3 p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Robert E. Purtell of.
ficiating. Burial will be in Wells
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime after 7 this
evening.

Meigs County. I just hope that'bet·

A driver was injured in a one-car

crash near Rutland early Wednesday morning, according to the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the state highway patroL
Christine A. Green, 39, Middleport, was not irrunediately
treated for her injuries.
The patrol said Green was southbound on Meigs County Rd. 3 at 7:3()
a.m. when her vehicle dropped off
the right side of the road, crossed to
the left and slid around in a yard,
striking a house owned by Harold
Hanson, Rutland.

ween now and the time we receive
t1ie moni~ to implement the
facilities · plan we have ·some un'
derstandlngandparticipatiori.inthe '

r-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

public meetings. We

PITI'SBURGH (AP) - A delay in
repairs to the Emsworth Locks is
causing river traffic to back up on
the Ohio River to and from Pittsburgh, the nation's busiest inland
port.
Installation of new $1.5 million
gates at the locks has slipped behind
schedule at least a week, authorities
said.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
has closed the largest of two lock
chambers near Sewickley, Pa.,
while workers install the gates on
the downstream side of the lock.
But crews have encountered
problem• with the 5(}.year-old fittings on the lock and have had to
modify the gates, which were constructed in Georgia .

Her vehicle was moderately
damaged and Green was cited for
e&lt;cessive speed.
Troopers said Mark D. Smith, 20,
Gallipolis, escaped injury when his
car struck and killed a horse on Rt.
588, less than a mile east of Mitchell
Road, early Wednesday.
Smith was westbound at 5:3() a.m.
when he topped a hillcrest and saw
two horses owned by Jay Simms,
Gallipolis, standing in the road.
He was unable to avoid collision
and struck one of the horses, causing
moderate damage to his vehicle.

_;,_ _......:.--....,.up ~ date on the progress
aild heai;og opinions on the stage.
So, mucb,to the relief of the area. it
looks as if Tuppers Plains is going to
find a much overdue sollitlon to I
dec8de-oldproblem.
·

your in-

put."
·
.. At least two public meetings and a·
pubU hearing will ' be' bei(J 'during

~~no ·l2mont.hri'wlillefa'cillties

p1aruiing ·1s goJn8 on,' keepilig the

Lock repair
delaying traffic

Driver not seriously hurt

"It's been a long time since we put
in new gates this large," said John
Reed of the Corps of Engineers. "We
just didn't realize the complexity
and problems with confonning to the
old original design."
During the closing, barges must ·
pass through a smaller chamber
used to·raise or lower boats from one
level to another. The smaller lock is
haH the size of the closed larger one.
Richard Nissley, vice president
and general manager of Moo River
Towing, said delays could be more
troublesome later this week when
" jwnbo tows" are expected to
arrive from New Orleans.
The Corps says U1e large lock may
be opened next Monday.

Fun Flyer "Free" with
any pair of Morgan Quinn®
Armadillos casuals for
guys al)d gals. Great For
Back To
School.

..,BANK ONE ..- .

-E~NT
=TO BUSINESt INDUSTRY,

fMortan Qllimb

AND THE PROFESSIONS
BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

MARGUERITE SHOES

614/992-2133

Pomeroy, OH.

______

,_

-

•
I

~

IGHT TIL 8:00

SPECIAL SALE!
MEN'S VAN HEUSEN

Back To School Sale

Back To School Specials

SEE OUR NEW SELECTION .

KNIT SPORT SHIRTS

TUBE SOCKS

MEN'S AND BOYS DEPT.

MEN'S WORK GLOVES

Boys sizes 7 to 11 , men 's si1es 9 to

Siz es S, M. L and XL . Lon g
slee ves . New fa ll co lors.

15. White with multi -c ol or tops .

Good selec tion of schoo l colors

Regula r price $1 .59 . St retch tube
socks made by Springf oo t .

'16.00 SPLENDOR KNITS ....'12.99
'20.00 QUIANA KNITS ....... '15.99
BACK TO SCHOOL

CORDUROY JEANS

~
~

Oak, Pecan, Pine and Walnut Finishes .

1-•

.,,..

Check our
Back to School Savings on:

LJS.T PRICE.I249.0U . ,
SPECIAL
.

CLOSEOUT SALE!
HOME FUR
1St I'":L.V'U'O&lt;

TAPES • TRIMS • ZIPPERS
.Made by J&amp;P Coat!&gt;. Reg. price

WA LLP A'PER 20% OFF

35c to $ 1. 40 .

in ·

$}499

NOTE BOO~ PAPER

6 FOR 11.00
COATS and CLARK

eluded

SPECIAL

CALCULATOR SPECIAL
Perfect for high school and college
use.
Double zero key
Non -add Date Print key
Uses standard paper and ribbon
12 digit capacity
'

S21.9S Corduroy. Fashion Jeans 517.88

- cream or brown finish
- ad justable goose neck
tube

BACK TO SCHOOL

Made by Wrangler.
Choose boys sizes 8 to 16 in ;
slims
or
regulars .
Students sizes 26 to 30
waist, 'lengths 28 to 36 .

ment of solid colors . Wais t sizes
'1 6 to 42, l eng th s 30 to 36 . Ba si c
style back to school sale.

20% OFF
DESK
LAMP

Boys short sleeve shirts,
men's basic denim jeans,
boys denim jeans, men's
stretch denim
jea ns,
men's and boys Hanes un ·
de rwear .

CORDUROY JEANS

Straight leg stvl e in a b tg assort -

ROLLTOP DESKS, KNEE HOLE
DESKS AND SECRETARIE~

Pigskins, cowhide leathers,
lined or unlined, leather and
c loth c ombinations, jersey
gloves, chore gloves, neoprene
coated gloves. Hush Puppy and
Wells Tomcat brands.

' BOYS

Men's $19.95 Wrangler

DESK SALE

- f lourescenf

Reg. Sl.38 ...... .. &gt;a le 79c Pkg.
f'Y PING PAP F.. R, 100 Sheet Pkg .
Reg. S1.45 . . ... . .. &gt;•le 89c Pkg.
f'~chage of 10 lEAD PENCILS

SEWING THREAD

Reg. 98c ......... Sale 49c f'foig.
Papermate Write Bro1hen

En tir e s-tock ot rnreaos on sa le - assorted colors.

Back To School Sle

CHILDREN'S JEANS

Sale Prices!
.

MEN'S.
UGHlWEIGHT JACKETS
'

Denim jeans, corduroys
and knit slacks for little
boys and girls. Sizes : 6 to
24 mos. 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to

14.
REg . $6.00 ..... Sale$5.09
Reg. $8.50 ..... Sale $7. 19
Reg. $13.00 ... Sale$11.09
Reg . 518.00
Sale S1S.29
Reg ..S26.oo • , . sate s22.09

Speoia l or·d er paper in a big selec tion of
pattern's - · solid colors - - rex rured
pa per. - viny ls . Make your selec tion

now

'

Ideal for back·to·schoo l and
early fall wear. Sizes S, M, L
·and XL .. some are llghtty lined·.

.

CHILDREN'S

COAT SALE

"

Congressmen propose competition

-·

'

' .....

""·

- den -

p aTio - pool

One Gallia County man was killed
and another hospitalized in a one-car
accident at Rio Grande early today.
Dead is Mark E. Daniels, 24, Bidwell, according to the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the state highway patrol.
Robert A. Wood, 24, Bidwell, was
taken to Holzer Medical Center by
the Gallia EMS, where he was reported in fair condition this morning.
The patrol said Daniels was a
passenger in a car driven by Wood
which was westbound at a high rate
of speed at 12:25 a.m. on U.S. 35.
The car then turned to go northbound onto Rt. 325, lost control,
went over a guard rall and an embankment, and then overturned
against a pole.
Daniels died of multiple head and
chest injuries, Dr. Donald
Warehime, Gallla CountY coroner,

'•

Several bus route changes will
take place Tuesday when students of
the Eastern Local School District
return to classes to begin the 1981-82
school year, Supt. Richard Roberts
reports.
The changes include:
Paul Baer' s bus route will he the
same as last year during the morning except the children on Route 7

MARIETIA - Bids for construction 2,200 feet of Ohio 124
pavement on improved alignment
and adjusted grade and a
replacement drainage facility to
carry Bowman Run beneath the new
pavement to the Ohio River In Sutton
Twp., Meigs County', will be opened
in Colwnbus, Sept. 15, by the Ohio
Department of Transportation.
Project will be financed with
Federal-Aid Primary Roads
Program and state funds.
Plans for the Improvement call for
24-foot pavement with four-foot,
paved shoulden northwesterly and
southeasterly of CR 34 and include a
new connection for CR 34.

LEBANON - The man alaln in a shootout with Ohio Hlgilway
Patrolmen on Monday was wanted for a service station holdup in
Wibnlngton and another robbery in lndlanapolls, according Ill OHP
Post 113 Commander Dennis Bueno.
.
Bueno Identified the man Thursday as OUver Wllson Jr. 38 Indianapolis, Ind.
• •
Bueno said Wll!on was identified at the Hamilton County Fore~~~~lc
Cenler In Cincinnati from fingerprints and pllol.osrapha.
"Wilson convnltted an anned tobbery earUer that day in Indianapolla. The pistol he fired at our troop4irs was traced to that robbery," said lfueno.

A tentative agreement with the
, Meigs Local Unit of the Ohio
Aaaoclation of Public School Employes was approved Friday when
the Meigs Local School Dl!trict
Board of Education met in special
session at the Meigs Junior High in
Middleport.
Negot1at10111 have been going on
for several 111011ths ' between the
board and the ilon-certifled employes. T'- tentative agreement
wu approved thla liiGmlng by. the
board and the contract of the group
extended Until Oct. 31 to allow time
for 11JYi ebangu and for ratification

CLEVELAND -Tile winning nwnber dnjwn Thunday night in the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The l'fllll!ber" ,._ 722.
In the weekly "Pyramid" game, the wiMIIlg numberll were 08; 3'19;

1264,
.
In the weekly "Piclt f" game, the wtnnlng inanber wu 81118.
The lottery reported eamiJtp of •.na c+1t1 dlll7 pme drawing.
Tile earnlnp Clllll on Ill• of eea,M.IO, ;wbl1e bolden of winning
tlcketa are entitled to lhare
offlcllllllllkl.
In tbe&lt;weelilY. jlarlmutUiel "Plclt 4" gime .... totaled ~JDJO.
~ of ~ ~are IIIUtled to ., jliliUIIt, ur $1JO,S3UO.
A4Y Wlilnlnl $1 ~ tlqket- ti.IID, and 1117 Wlnnlnc $1 baled
::.~
A wqer of eo
lllowabl• m1n1mwn

$281,8111.10,13·

ceiltllar

br~=~oyed~Uoyd

Weather forecast' .

P an elnentary teldler for one
jell"~ ~·the reei&amp;Rition of

ar

intbelow~mlll-"' ~lliliellljrtn"tli

•·

'

1

.,.w,...-...

• • t.

'

"

1 '

....

·\.t ) 1 -

!:".,
~~:. ~
- - Oiwn ~ coo11

·. lnetnere.Ellle Blllit¥iar, a,'bjg'll
ldloill ~ ' f«it , one Ytll':

L-------;...,.-....;._,_·-~-+-------.J..,
I

20.

Randall M. Vansickle, 16,
Gallipolis, was approaching a bridge
when he observed a westbound auto
driven by Michael C. Osborn, 33,
Newark. Vansickle applied his
brakes, went left and struck the
Osborn vehicle. Moderate dallllige
was reported to both autos.
The patrol said a car driven by
Teresa L. Erit, 2G, Gallipolis, was
reportedly oul of control on
Springfield Twp. Rd. 22.at Bp.m. and
collided with a westbound car driven
by James E. Young, 60, Bidwell.
Moderate damage was reported to
both cars.

will not meet his bus. When the bus
reaches Chester, he will unload and
proceed to the Oak Hill area, east of
Chester. In the evening he will go
directly to Five Points to begin his
unloading and run the route back:
wards. Children living past the old
Chester goH course will be unloaded
last as in the past but their home
arrival time should be earller.

The former Charles E'step route
will run as usual including all
students this year on county road 82
from the Flatwoods Road and to and
including the Emerson Pooler home.
The evening route will be reverses
and will include those students living
on Route 7 between Chester and
county road 82.
AHred WoHe will begin his route

on the New Hope Road in the mornings and proceed the same as last
year. Mter he returns from the
Emerson Pooler road, off county
road 82, he will proceed down that
road from the Pooler residence, tum
left across that township road to
county road 25 and students from
there will be transported to the
(Continued on page 10)

Existing deficient concrete and
stone arch culvert carrying
Bowman Run will be replaced with
218 feet of 14-foot, structural plate
corrugated steel pipe or 12-foot, reinforced concrete circular pipe on new
location approximately 200 feet northwest of the existing culvert.
Improvement also includes guardrall erection, necessary drainage
work, signing and pavement
marking.
Traffic will be maintained through
the construction area on existing,
temporary and new pavement.
Estimated completion date is June
30, 1982.

Tentative agreement

Lottery winners

~s.turda,Y; Wiodi*':''' ' b~»lllpll
' Bl 'qdOW.r,iccat:;;. •Mv ' TjllldiJ: lea~
lbowa1urthir••. l;i .. ...,rlllll\lc 'r MT ; lly. 1. . ..

In other action Thursday, the
patrol said a driver was not
seriously injured in a two-car accident near Cheshire.
The report said a vehicle driven by
Douglas L. Johnson, 28, Cheshire,
pulled from a private driveway on
County Rd. 20 at 8:4li p.m. and
collided with an auto driven by
Carolyn K. Taylor, 20, Rt. 2,
Cheshire.
Taylor was injured, but not
treated immediately. Both vehicles
were moderalely damaged and

Johnson was cited for failure to
yield.
Another accident was investigated
earlier by the patrol on County Rd.

project on September 15

Police id~ntify slain man

e

Julie M. Price, 18, Marietta, died
shortly after midnight July 21 from
injw:ieuufferecl in a one-car crash
July 20 oh Lake Drive in Rio Grande.

Ricky L. Martin, 23, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
died in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., on Aug. 3 after being
severely hurt in a two-car collision
in Kanauga Aug. 2.
The patrol said it is still investigating the Daniels accident.

Will open bids on Rt. 124

KINGS ISLAND - Four-year-old Carrie Elizabeth Wllson of Urbana, Dl., has been honored as the 25 millionth visitor to Kings Island
family entertainlllent center since the park opened in 1m.
Carrie, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. PBul Wilson, and her sister
Kathryn Brooke were on their first visit to the park Thursday morning
when they were greeted by F .R. Bush, vice president and general
manager, and the Yogi Bear and Scooby Doo Hanna Barbera characters.
The family was presented with season passes for 1982. They were
treated to seating on rides and for live shows with no waiting in lines.

Vartable clolldlnrr · ~ a clllnce of
tc1n111a- Lon Iii the ...... ~ wcin
. daf. a,blln tile low ... ctwincttfrilla.

reported this morning.
The EMS was reportedly on the
scene for nearly two hours trying to
get Daniels out of the wreckage, and
the "Jaws of Life" extraction unit
from the Point Pleasant Fire Department was called in, but it could not
be confirmed this morning if it was
used.
Daniels' death is the fourth
fatality In Gallia in two months. The
first occurred June 11 when Johnny
White, 85, Scottown, apparently suffered a heart attack at the wheel of
his car and collided with a milk
truck at the intersection of Rt. 218
and Rt. 553 near Crown City.

List changes in Eastern bus routes

Honor millionth customer

•1·•·

Daniels was a passenger. Wood was taken to Holzer Medical Center by
the Gallla EMS. The state blgbway patrol Is still Investigating tbe accident. (Pboto by Keith WDson) .

Gallia man dies in accident

CINCINNATI - A congressman from Cincinnati says both the
government and Medicare recipienl.!! can save money if private insurance companies are allowed to compete for the health care service.
U.S. Rep. Willis D. Gradison Jr., R-Ohio, said he will submit a bill
Monday in Washington to establish a voucher system for the nation's
28 milllon Medicare recipients . .
Gradison's proposal would give recipients the option of taking the
government program or vouchers, worth an average of $1,700 per person per year.
With the vouchers, recipients could shop for their own !nsurance
from private companies, whose plans would have to be certified by the
government. They would have to offer the same services currently
provided for the elderly and disabled under Medicare, said Gradison's
administrative assistant, Ron Roberts.
Roberta said private Insurers already compete for sales of insurance that cover deductible payments not paid by Medicare.
Medicare paid out $41 billion this year, Roberts said. That figure
should double in five or six years if cost-cutting measures are not implemented, he said.

.

TRAW RUGS

~~::~·:,:,~~r~g~:

10 COUNT PENS
R · S2.90 .,. , ,, , S•le11.39 Pkg,
'

.

ONE DEAD, ONE INJURED - Mark E. Daniels, !4, Bidwell, died
wben lblB car went out of control a' the IDtenet!tlon of U.S, 35 and Rt. 325
early today. The car was driven by Robert A. Wood, 24, Bidwell, In wblcb

trend that began foil~ the year's lovi of 7.8 percent in April.
The lateat statewide figures from the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services on jobless Ohioans showed unemployment at 9.4 -percent in
July, the highest since February's 10 percent.
Unemployment in the state usually Ia a few percentage points above
the national rate. The diHerence between the two amounts narrowed
to 0.6 percent in April and 0. 7 percent in JUne.
'!be nationwide and statewide figures were the same in March 1980.
The bureau said Thl:l'llday that nationwide unemployment dropped
to 7.3 percent in July, compared to 7.7percent the previous month.

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

PEN FRIDAY

Market report

PO. LOS
'2.49
R SHIRTS
.
'7.99

COLUMBUS - Fot farmers who have it, now's a goocUime to make
hay.
.
But tho8e who are into com or soybeans know they're in trouble.
The sun, which hid behind rain cloud&amp; that turned cropland Into mud
and delayed spring planting in May, has been out in abundance the
past three weeks. There were weeks when fanners would have a~
preciated more rain to help maturing crops along, however.
"Most of Ohio's extensive agricultural areas have not had normal
rainfall since July," the Ohio Crop Reporting Service said. "In
general, only lJ;;; northeast quadrant of Ohio, which received rain the
weekend of Aug. 15-16, had adequate topsoil moisture last Friday; the
weekend of the 22nd-23rd was dry."
The agency's crop statistician, Harry DeLOng, said the weather
hasn't been good for Ohio crops.
"We started the season with excessive rain which delayed the planting of com and soybeans, and then it seemed that just about the time
when planting should have been finished, rain just about stopped
altogether," he said. "And in particular, the last three weeks have
been extremely dry."
Farmers had an abundance of soil moisture earlier in the growing
season, DeLong said. That' worked to farmers' detriment by delaying
the planting of grain corn and soybeans, the state's chief crops.

to 9.4 percent in July from the month before, continuing an upward

Shade River Lodge 453, F x AM,
will hold a work session at 6:3() p.m.
Friday at the lodge hall in Chester.

SGIDGt DA1S

Lack of rain hurts farm crops

~-

Adrnissions- - Hilah Jones, Middleport ; Judith Martin, Shade;
Timothy Chaffee, Pomeroy; Mary
Pickens, Racine; Ge rtrud e
Pellegrino, Middleport.
Discharges- - Robert Rupe,
Stella Pigott, F'red Mack, Sarah
Jarrell, Fred Tuckerman.

IS c ·ents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

".C()LUMBUS
. . . .... -· - .-.... .
- Unemployment ill Ohio rose a full per&amp;l)tage point

Plan work session

Feeder Stt&gt;ers: Good a nd Choice 250 to 300 lbs .
~ . 50 ; 300 lo 400 lbs. 52~ ; 400 to 500 lbs . 5()..{)7 :
~ to 6110 lhs. 5:;..(.6 ; 60(' to 700 lbs . 5Ht4.SCJ : 700 to
800 lbs. 55--6 1, IOl and over 52.!i0-4t
Fmer Heifer : Good and Choke 250 to 300 lbs .
~~ - 50 : lOO to -400 lb!l . +4 . ~ . 50 : 100 to 500 lb:i
43-57 ; 500 tu fiOO Ills . 44.f10..56.50 : 6()() lu 700 lhs .
H . ~ : 700 to 800 lbs. 4146: 800 &lt;tnd over 4649 .50
Ft&gt;eder Bulls : Good und Choi ce 250 \o 300 lbs.
51-58.!10: .100 to 400 Ills . 57 - ~9 : 400 to 500 lbs. U-57 :
:iOO Lo 000 lbs . 4 7 -~ ; 700 to 800 lbs. 43-50 ; IK)() and
uver 41.W-48
H ubt~in Strtrs and bulls 300 toOOO lbs. 43-G\
Blllls l.OOJ &lt;md up 41LJ()..Sol! .?li.
S lau~hlt&gt;r co~· s, utilit ie~ 40.5(}..44; c ann~r s 11 nd
cutten; .0 down.
Sprin ~er c:ows by the head 235-410.
Cows and c11 lve s by the headJ40..S1tl
Veal cal ves - Choice and PTime 67 . ~ 7 ;
Good;u.l
Baby Ca lves 1)..9()_
Lambs 1 Clips I 90-110 lbs . 52.51}-f)4.
Lamb:; J Woolt!d 1 90-115lbs. 4~ 1 .
Stttrs : Choice and Prime \ , 000--1.~ lbs. 606.3.25 : Good 850--l ,100 S9 down.
Top Hogs 210 lO 23CI Ibs . 49.:;o..50.!i0.
BOHrs JS..38 . ~
Pigs by tht&gt; heHd 17.50-32.50
Sows 400 lbs . and up43-48

I Section, 10 Pages

I/OI.lQ,N0.96
. Copyrighted 1911

Unemployment fucreases
in Ohio
.
'

Hospital news

en tine

Armadillos

The Meigs Emergency Medical
Service reports two calls were answered by area emergency units
Wednesday. The first was at 12:41
p.m., when the Middleport squad
was called to Stiffler's to treat Opal
Pugh of Middleport for injuries
sustained in a bicycle accident.
Then at 1:17 p.m., Kevin Gallagher
was transported from Meigs Mine I
to Holzer Medical Center by the
Rutland emergency unit.

!&gt;66.

at y

Get an

Squads answer
2 calls Wednesday

OHIO \ 'ALI.E\' LIVESTOCK CO.
Markf't Repon
Pnc~s l.uken from the auctton of Sa turda v.
Au~&lt;!. Z2 . Trends: Veal cu lves sleady, eows s"tSJ .j() lowt'r. Fet!der n dlle $4-$6 h.i ghtr. total head

.e

P'~eand
g
VIz•ctru
ltty·.. • •----------------.......l(Con~tin~u~ed~f~rorn~.~pa~ge~t'L.)
~~
need
CitizenS
Jones said, "This is probably the
best residential development area in

•

Thursday, August 27, 1911.1.

Pomeroy-Middleport, ghio

Dundltouy.u~advlaor.
•.l!_d ..aiilit.te Hlirtllon, a

paraprofessional, as junior high
cheerleader advisor.
Lunch prices for the new school
year were approved and they are increased as they are throughout
Meigs County due to the cutback on
federal funds and commodities. The
new prices are: lreakfast, kindergarten through grade 8, 50 cents;
reduced breakfast, 30 cents; high
school lunch, 90 cents; kindergarten
through elghtb grade lunch, 80 cents; reduced lunch, 40 centa; elrtra
milk, 20 cents; idult breakfast, 75
cents; adultlunch,$1.25; adultlunch
with milk, $1.511; adult extra mllk, 25
cents.
The board transferred $1030.04
from TIUe I to the general !und.
~

Attending the special meeting this
moming were Supt. David L.
Gleuon; Aut Supt. Dan Morris;
n--rer J~ ,Wagner, and board
members, Robert Snowden, Dick
Vai!Khan, Larry Powell and Bob

Batton.

TE11fYS- Voyager Z oblabaed thb Image of Tethys on Aug. Z5 wbea
lbe opacecral' wu 381,1011 mnes (5M,008 tm) from lhi• satellite v1
Satunl. Tellys lhoWI lwo dlltlnct types of terrain - bright, densely
cratered J'ellons; and relatively dart, Ugbtly Cl'lltered planes that ex(ead
ID a broad beltacnJII the AteDite. Ailo clearly seeu Ill a trougb that MIDI
~ello the da)'-lllcbt boundary at rigbt. 'I'bU treugh Is an exte01loa vi
abage cuyaa obaerved by Voyager I last filii, Tbe system extends nearly
lw&amp;.lblrda the dlltance lmllllld Tethyl, (AP Laserpboto) .

Southern classes to start Tuesday
The Southern Local School
District will begin the 1981-«1 school
year nm week, with teachers
meeting Monday and classes commencing on Thunsday,
Superintendent of Schools Bob Ord
reported that teachers are to check
in for registration between 8:30 and
9 a.m., Monday at Southern High
School, with a general meeting to

follow at 9 a.m. Mter this session,
educators will go to their respective
schools from 10 a.m to 11:30, to
prepare for the next day's classes.
Students are to report to 'school
Tuesday morning at the usuallilne~~,
which are the same as last year.
Also, school bus scheduled are the
same as previously.

�-

Friday, Augusf28, 1981

Commentar

Valenzuela blanks Chicubs, 6-0

Today's

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, August 28, 1981

Sports World

Garry Will$

whatever - behind this vague fervor; but the moving Jorce, out
among the people who must do the
actual fighting and dying, is usually
psychological. A nation's governors
may calculate; but the people have
to want war in order to wage it.
And we are beginning to want it.
There was a positively gleeful reaction to the downing of Libyan
fighters, a reaction symbolized by
the naval recruiter who put a sign in

announced war aim.

We want to beat up on Ubyans, or
somebody. It was not a very great
victory after all - on the scale of
Notre Dame 59, Slippery Rock 3 but we had to win something
somewhere. Anything, anywhere.
We sought the occasion by entering the Gulf of Sidra. This is a
huge, shallow bay, but one surrounded on three sides by Libyan
Territory. It is ridiculous to say that

Why did we go to war with Germany' Japan's attack on u.s,
historians seem to agree, was more
an excuse for war with Gennany
than a direct cause of it. Usually, a
nation goes to war because it has
worked itself up to it, in various
ways, till it positively wants to fight.
Historians try to find the "real"
motive - economic or political or

hi:; window, "Libya 0, America 2."

•

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Sbftl

Pomern)' , Oblo
U4-tn-Z15i
DEVOTED TO TilE lNTEREST OFTHF: MEI(lS-.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

Gt-neral Manager

Assistant PublbhPr{Cunlroller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

Ubya •s claim to this direct line between its western and eastern shores
is the first step toward claiming ever
bigger chunks of the Mediterranean.
How would we feel if Russia began
naval exercilleS between Florida and
the Virgin Islands? What great principle did we defend by entering the
gulf' None. We were looking for the
chance to flex some muscle.
Messrs. Kissinger and Haig have
long been presenting the case for hitting out, taking a piece off the board,
showing our toughness. But the
macho urge rarely stops at one blow
- indeed, one sophisticated warmonger tells us it should not.
William Satire of The New York
Times claims that Ubya won this
first round - that Colonel Khadafy
wanted his planes downed, as a way
of rallying Russian and Arab support and making America seem the
bully. Safire's cure for this defeat on
our part is to prove that we are a
bully by well and truly taking
Khadafy himself entirely off the
board.
A little bit of warlike gesturing
does not satisfy the wannongers.
Satire wants to prosecute CIA Director William Casey's plans for "the
solution of the Ubyan problem." We

must strike now to keep us out of
even bigger wars: "If the Soviets
guarantee Colonel Khadafy's safety
against United States 'aggression,'
Cold War II will be sharply

escalated."
The appetite is whetted. Two
downed planes will not sate it. Satire
wants more: "If that troublesome
piece Is to be taken off the board, the

United States should talk less and
get on with· the game." Chess has
replaced dominoes as the warmongers' metaphor; but either way
it means kllllng.

A MEMBER of Tht&gt; Associated Prts s, Inland Daily PrMs Association and thf'
Ameri('an Nf'WBpaper Publlsheri Aasoriatlon.

lEITERS 01&lt;' OPrNION an&gt; weltomed . They shoold ~ le~s than 300 wurds long. All
ltlkn are subje-tt to edltiag and must be slgnt'd with namf', addms and lf'lephonf' num~r.

No uruilgned letters w!ll be published. L.dters should ~ In good l.aste, addressing
lssllf'S, nflt penumalltles.
i

Economic future
"What are the possibilities for the future' " Howard Ruff asked
rhetorically during a discussion of the economy. He listed the possibilities
as he saw them : "Inflation, deflation, stability."
"The most likely'" he was asked. "Inflation," he said, throwing in the
observation that the likelihood of stability was near zero - a mere accident if it occurred.
He is a reasoning person, he said, and inflation seems to be supported
by plenty of reasons. Such as big spending for a military buildup and for
Social Security and government pensions and loan guarantees.
And then he reasons, the Federal Reserve Board, now on a relentless
campaign to root out inflation, even at the expense of temporarily ruining
the housing and automotive industries, will have to re-inflate.
Ruff is a strong supporter of President Reagan, and says Reagan "got
elected president of the Titanic.''
Ruff believes in each individual working toward a decent future, but he
isn't at aU sure that the country as a whole can work things out.
" I support Reagan," he said. "Just because I think its a loot cause
doesn't mean 1 quit. What I look for is not to keep the Titanic from hitting
the ice but to see that the watertight doors work and that it doesn't sink."
It seems near to despair. It isn't, he says. He distrusts but he hopes; he
says he will will work to preserve personal freedoms and free enterprise
whatever lies in store for the economy .
And of his advice : "Do put the bulk of your portfolio in tangible, imperishable items or in paper that _re_presents sue~. items, such as gold or
silver certificates or shares of a mmmg company.
The advice to put your money into hard assets that tend to hold some
value regardless of aberrant fiscal or monetary policies is a cornerstone
of the Ruff philosophy, and a source of controversy too.
The controversy arises from the way hard assets were treated in the
tax law, specifically in the way they were excluded from tax deferance in
individual retirement accounts.
The exclusion angered Ruff, and perhaps caused him to regress to
earlier days when, he reflects, he might have overstated some things.
Now, he said, ''My presentation is more reasonable and balanced."

Berry's World

" ... But enough about the risks of nuclear pro/ifBrat/on- IBt's talk about guacamoiB dips!"

Tothy in history.

••

Today is Friday, Aug. 28, the 24llth day of 1981 . There are I~ days left in
the year.
Today' s highlight in history :
On Aug. 28,1833, the British Parliament banned slavery throughout the
British Empire.
On this date :
In 1973, an earthquake struck southwest of Me•ico City, killing 500
people and injuring 1,000.
In 1974, two orbiting Soviet spacemen cut short their mission and returned to earth without making a planned space-station linkup.
•. And in 19'17, Syria's President Hafez Assad said he was ready to sign a
:: peace agreement ending the stateofwarwith Israel.
·· Ten yean ago: a Greek ferryboat caught fire in the Adriatic Sea,
, klUing at least 25 of the I,000 passengers who abandoned ship.
:: .. Five yean ago: Two U.S. Air Force Starliner transport planes crashed
In separate accidents while trying to land in Britain ~nd Greenland.
(

•

j

WASHINGTON- The Reagan administration's determination to
rebuild the nation's stockpile of
strategic materials has helped to
open up lucrative opportwtities for
fly-by-night operators preying on unwary investors.
Working out of "boiler rooms" of
telephone banks, these smoothtalking hucksters make a beguiling
pitch to individuals with a few
thousand dollars to invest: They explain to the victim that the administration's plan to spend $100
million to restore the dwindling
strategic stockpile will soon drive up
world prices for the various commodities.
In a typical case, the investor will
send the persuasive pitchman $5,000
or $10,000 for a certain quantity of
some scarce material. In return, the
customer gets a warehouse receipt
showing the stuff is being stored in
Amsterdam, along with a document
indicating the purchase is insured by
Uoyd's of London. The investor is instructed to wait six months, then can
back either to take delivery of the
commodity or collect the profit from
rising prices.
But when the unwitting victim
calls at the end of the six-month
period, he discovers that the
telephone has been disconnected.
The supposed investment house has
disappeared. The investor then
discovers that both the warehouse
receipt and the mpressive insurance
policy are fakes.

It wu eight years and 10 months
ago - almost to the day - that the
great Jaclde Robinson was laid to
rest In the Cypress Hills Cemetery in
New York's borough of Brooklyn.
The eortege moved past the site of
old Ebbets Field, which had been
leveled and turned Into an apartThe Dodgers had gone also, 14

Nt'WS Edilor

Authorities have uncovered six of
these holler-room operations recenUy in New York City and Miami.
There are also problems with the
strategic stockpile itself :
- General Services Administration inspectors reported
that the government doesn't seem
interested in getting the best
possible price for the sale of surplus
material from the stockpile. A
recent audit showed that between
1975 and 1979, out of 57 contracts for
the sale of surplus tin, manganese
and tungsten, all but seven were
awarded oo the basis of noncompetitive ''sole source" offers.

To make matters worse, the GSI
investigators and sleuths for Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, found that
buyers of surplus materials are
regularly given discounts that are
not justified by contract records.
For example, in one 43-montfi
period, $3 million in unjustified
discounts and allowances were granted to 14 purchasers of surplus
mangenese.
"This practice of granting
discounts fails to guard against windfall profits by the purchaser," says
an internal GSH report reviewed by
my reporters Tony Capaccio and
Vivian Marino.
-In a June 30 GSA audit, marked
"Official Use Only,'' investigators
concluded that there are serious
deficiencies in the stockpiling of synthatic ruby and sapphire jewel

bearings, which are critical in the million; they asked that it be refunmanufacture of many weapons and ded.
precision instruments.
- Over a six-year period, the
This is despite the fact that the Illinois Institute of Technology got
William Langer Jewel Bearing $14 million from the federal governPlant in North Dakota has been tur- ment. The auditors could not deterrung out bearings by the millions sin- mine whether more than $10 million
ce the 1950s. The trouble, auditors was "reasonable or acceptable."
found, is that "of 68.7 million stock- Texas Tech University in Lubpiled jewel bearings, as many as 53.4 bock charged nearly $10 million to
million may be obsolete or sub- the federal govenunent between
standard." Furthermore, the North September 1975 and August 19'17. But
Dakota plant is entirely dependent government auditors concluded that
on foreign suppliers for its basic raw , the school's. ~kkeeping w~s so
materials - the very situation the sloppy that 1t did not proVIde a
strategic stockpile was designed to material degree of certainty" that
prevent.
costs charged to the taxpayers were
"reasonable and allowable." The
auditors
questioned $5.2 million of
UNIVERSITY FOULUPS: As the
the
$10
million
provided by Uncle
nation's college students head back
Sam.
to campus next month, it might be
worthwhile for their universities' ac- The University of Nebraska at
countants to join them in the classLincoln
charged the feds $20 million
room. Recent audits by the
from
1976
to 1978. But because the
Education Department's inspector
· general show that some of the most school "had not established the
prestigious schools in the land have necessary accounting controls,'' the
been managing the money they get auditors decided that $426,576 had
from Uncle Sam in ways that can been improperly billed. They
charitably be described as slipshod. couldn't make up their minds about
another $2.6 million.
Here are a few examples.
-Harvard University: Out of $37
All the wtiversities accused of
million Harvard's public bealth poor bookkeeping practices have
school charged the govenunent for assured the govenunent they're
salaries and supplies from 1975 to taking steps to bnprove - with one
1977, the auditors found they were predictable exception: Harvard
unable to "express an opinion as to responded to the criticism with the
the reasonable or unreasonableness huffy statement that Its systems
of $15.5 million. The auditors did were "adequate" and not in need of
make up their minds about nearly $2 any improvement.

years earUer - from Brooklyn to
Los Angeles.
"When Jackie went and the
Dodgers went, Brooklyn died, too,"
said Joel Siegel as be watched the
first rehearsal In a fourth floor
studio for a Broadway musical
ahned at reviving the spirit and
soctallinpact of a great man and his
era.
"~ belonga to the ages," the Rev.
Dr. Jesse Jackson had aald of Robinson In his moving eulogy that bleak
day Oct. 'ZT,1m.
Now, thanks to Siegel and some of
the theatre's most gifted taleni.IJ, the
spirit of Jackie Robinson - what he
lived and stood for - will be rekindled in Broadway llghts.
The name of the show Is simply
"The First."
The cast was assembled and in, troduced Wednesday. The opening is
set for Nov. 12 at the Martin Beck
Theatre.
"It Isn't a light fantasy - it Is a
musical depictloo of the times," said
Rachel Robinson, the widow, a gentle, sensitive woman with flecks of
gray in her hair.
She was on band for the occasion.
So was Red Barber, the "Voice of
the Dodgers," whose mlcrophooe
magic will be resurrected for the
stage. Costume sketches festooning

By The Alloclated Pren
Here's a llat of good places to fish
this week In Ohio. The state Depart· ment of Natural Resources has
speclflcinformationat614-486-6329.
CENTRAL
Scioto River - The secUon of the
stre8rn from Marioo Cowity, down' stream to Columbus is a good spot
'for smaUmouth bass, rock bass and
· ·channel catfish.
Hargus Lake - Big deep-nmnlng
· lures are good balls for the big
· 'mWlkle and lafgemouth bass in this
'small lake near Clrclevllle. Cooling
temperiltures shoUld lriljlrove the ·
flshlngtllroliMIIMdnmth.
NORTHWESt
Findlay Reservoir 2 - Most
yellow perch are caught in this Hancock County upground reservoir
with minnows, wonns and soft
craws.
SOU'I'IIEAST
Ohio River - Some of the best

-Hire blacks to fill!OO blue-collar
openings over the next year and increase its percentage of black
managers from 5 percent to 12 percent (or about 200 people). Jackson
estimated the value of these jobs at
$5.2million.
The workers who will fill these
jobs, the colleges that will receive
scholarships and the businesses that
will profit from the agreement owe
Jackson a vote of thanks.
But many others ought to be

grateful, too.
Jackson has revived a potent
weapon and made it available to
every black man and woman in the
United States. He has breathed new
life into the boycott.
It was 26 years ago that the Rev.
Leon Sullivan of Philadephia
organized 400 black ministers in his
city. They used their pulpits to withdraw patronage from businesses
that were . heavily dependent on
black dollars.
Others have tried to do the same in
other cities. Often they have met
with Uttle fanfare and less success.
But not unW 1981 did blacks again
use the boycott as eHectively as they
had in Montgomery.
Donald Keough, the president of
Coca.Cola, aald that tile boycott
threat had no effect on his company.
In fact, ·he said that it was Ronald
Reagan, not Jesse Jackson, who inspired the "moral covenant."
Reagan told tile NAACP em-

Nf1Je. PA/P IN

MY
R.U.I~. IJIIJF

I

A ~year-old Detrolter out of the
University of Michigan, David Alan
Grier, was chosen for the Jackie
Robinson role. Another Detroit
native, willowy Lonette McKee, was
given the part of Rachel.
Darrln McGavin, long one of
Hollywood's leading actors, was surprised when he got the part of crusty
Branch Rickey, who gave Jackie the
chance to play at Brooklyn.

tbesame11e811011.
The sensational Mexican leftbander toad been mired In a terrible
slwnp after 'pltehing five shutouts
and compiling an ~ record and a
0.50 earned nm average in his first
eight starts this year. But in his next
eight outings, his figures were 1-4
with a 6.51 ERA.
Now he is pltehing again like he
did in April, winning his last two
starts, Including a ~. four-hit victory over the Chicago cubs Thur~
sday night. He also had 10
strikeouts, giving him 137 for the
season, the most in the majors, as he
Improved his record to 11-4.
"He was outstanding,'' said
Dodgers catcher Mike SciOIICia. "He
had outstanding stuff tonight just
like every game he's pitched. Alot of
reporters may have wondered
(during his slwnp), but he never lost
it."
"I was trying not to waste any pitches and everything I was throwing
was working,'' Valenzuela, the
major leagues' first 11-game winner, said through an interpreter. "I
probably surprised them, I used
more fast balls tonight."
In other NL games, New York
edged Houston 3-2, Montreal bombed Cincinnati 12-4, St. Louis nipped
San Diego 3-2 in 13 innings and San
Francisco trinuned Pittsburgh 5-4 in
13innlngs.
Valenzuela may have slwnped a
bit after his tremendous start, but he
never lagged as a drawing card.
Thursday night's game was his
eighth start at Dodger Stadlwn, and
his eighth sellout crowd at home,
with 48,191 attending. Valenzuela is
~1 pitching at home.
Ron Cey drove in three runs with a
bases-loaded triple in the seventh in-

fishing is for bass and crappie in the
tributary embayments along the
river, as conditions should continue
to improve through autwnn. Channel catfish and sauger also can be
caught.
Lake Rupert - The best bass
fishing in this small Vinton County
lake usually is in rooming or evening
in shoreline areas along deep water.
Northern pike also can be taken by
trolling with dee(HIIving lures and
still fishing with Uve miMows.

-

SOU'111WF21T
Caesar Creek Lake -largemouth
and smallmouth bass are good

Calllornlo
S..ltle

targets In this lake near
Waynesville, especially around offshore hwnps, creek channels and
shoreline areas adjacent to deep
water.
Rocky Fork Lake - Long, deep
pools are good spots for muskle in
this Highland Cowity stream. Big
smallmouth bass are caught in the
rocky riffle areas.
Wcmen's high game- Tina CoUIJ&gt;I 2%3; Cindy

1111; Mor1ha G.....,.. II(); Tiny WhiUakh

Mayle
110.

Total

TEAM
Jelf'aCarryOut
Pl&lt;llltl'a Gro.
Ole Uberty

W. L. Plu
14 It 1111
32 IS 1500
12 18 1476

Team3

•

Zl

1111

211 :II 1512
Team high !Oriea- Felty Tree Servtco 1~12;
Prtllfllt'a G'ro. 1500; Jeff'a CarTy Out 1111.
Teom lUI&gt; game - -Pro11111'1 Gro. m: Jeff's
Carry Out Ill: Fetty Tree SerlleeliO'I.
w......·~ high oer1ea- Cilldy Mayle 460; Tina

Fetty Tree Service

Colllnltsl; JennyWhiUaldl401.

Womon'aiUh oer1ea- Cilldy Mayle183; .lenIll' Whilloldllll; T1na CoUinl m.

Mell3, Aatros 2

New York rallied for two runs in
the eighth Inning on a run-scoring
single by Frank Taveras and a
game-winning double by Hubie
Brooks to beat Houston.
Alex Trevino started the Mets
rally with a ooe-out single off
Houston started Joe Niekro, who
was replaced by Joe Sambito.
Trevino stole secol!d and came home
when Taveras singled, tying the
game, before Brooks' double.
Tony Scott and Klko Garcia
singled home Houston's runs in the
third inning.
Expos IZ, Reds o

Montreal
wonoutscoring
its third the
straight
over
Cincinnati,
Reds 1~p;·-~~~!!iiiiiiiiiiii;ii;ii;;;~;ii;ii;iiilijilijilijilijilijjjjjjilijilijil
27-1 in the series, as Ray Burris pitched a one-hitter for eight innings.
Cincinnati's only hit was a seventh-inning single by Ken Griffey, and
Burris went on to his sixth victory in
. II decisions, although Jeff Reardon
pitehed the ninth.
Rookie Terry Francona knocked
in the first three runs of his major
Creative, Imaginative Porleague career with two singles, and
traiture.
.In Studio or
John Milner hit a two-run homer and
beautiful outdoor settings.
Warren Cromartie a two-run single
in Montreal's six-run third lruling.
Cards 3, Padres 2
George Hendrick gave St. Louis an
early lead with a two-run double and
then won the game with his 15th
homer in the top of the 13th.
"The Photography of Larry Baker"
Hendrick's climactic homer came
992-5523
Middleport
off San Diego's John Curtis, U. Jim

SENIORS

MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT NOW!

BAKER
PHOTOGRAPHY

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Baltl!nor'e 8, CIIUII'Jiia 2
Cleveland 12, SeaWe 2

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New York

New York 3, Houston 2

Texaa 5, MUwaukee 1
Chleqo 3, New York 1, I innings, rain
Mlnneoota 4, DetlOII 3
FridaJ'• Gamel
Kansu City (Gale W) at Tllnlfllo (Leal

Tezu

• •

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Pet.

6

Joe Morgan's on&amp;aut homer in
Kaat, &amp;-2, pitched the final 21-3 in·
nlngs for the Cardinals, allowing one seventh had snapped a 3-3 tie, but
the Pirates tied it In the ninth oo
hit.
St. Louis had a 2.j) lead and Bob Jason Thompson's single, two
Forsch had a three-hit shutout after groundouts and a single by Omar
seven innings, but the Padres selt Moreno.
the game into extra innings with . - - - - - - - - - - - runs in the eighth and ninth on runLEGAL NOTICE
scoring singles by Randy Bass and
The
Public Utilities ComBroderick Perkins.
mission
of Ohio has set
Giants 5, Pirates t
for public hearing Case
Jack Clark knocked in four runs
No. 81 ·302-EL-EFC. lo
with a three-run double and a solo
review the fuel procurehomer. The home run won the game
ment practices and poli·
in the 13th lruling. Clark hit a 3-1 pitcies of The Ohio Power
ch from Don Robinson, 0-2, over the
Company. the operation
center-field fence for his II th homer,
of its Electric Fuel Comhanding Pittsburgh its fourth
ponent Clause. and related
straight loss.
'
matters . This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
1:00 p.m. on Monday,
August 31, 1981, al the
City Council Chambers,
218 Cleveland Ave .. S.W .
Canton. Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further information may be obtained
by contacting the Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: David M. Polk.
Secretary

ning and Steve Garvey, who has
seven RBI in two games, knocked in
two with a pair of singles.
Randy Martz, H , pitched the first
five Innings and absorbed the loss.
Valenzuela, allowed only one runner past first in Improving his
overall ERA to 2.63.
The Dodgers took a I~ lead in the
second when Bill Russell doubled,
took third on the first of Valenzuela's
two singles and scored on an infield
out.
In the fifth, Garvey singled home
two runs after an error by Cubs shortstop Ivan DeJesus.

For the record.

at

(De~

Milwaukee

lllaaa 7-4), (n)

New Yorll: (Guidry ~) at Chicago
!Trout 7-4), (n)
Detroit (WUcex 1-3) at MiMesOtl (Ar-royo +-8), fn)

vention in June that his economic
plans would allow businesses to take
over many functions that were being
perfonned by the government.
Keough called the PUSH-Coke
agreement "the free enterprise
system - unleashed."
Whether Jackson or Reagan was
the motivating factor, the results
are what counls. The ·millions of
dollars won from Coca-Cola point
the way toward millions more.
Jackson says that he now plans to
move against other soft-drink finns.
Through careful research and the
demonstration of black buying
potential, he has shown what can be
• done.
"The pause that refreshes" ·Coca-Cola's old · slogan - cim
become the pause ,that reinvigorates
a movement that badly needs victories and badly needs to learn how
to win them.
·
rll'drinka Coke to that.

cessful''Annie.''

the nmn1ng for NaUonal League
Rookie ol the Year, the Cy Young
Award iand Most Valuable Player,
could· even mallie a C88e for
CGmel!Bck Player of the Year lf that
award aUowed tumarounds within

·Local bowling~------

The pause that invigorates.L,____
-Award an $8 million account for
one of its product lines to a blackowned advertising agency.
- Boost its deposits in blackowned banks from $250,000 to an
estimated $2 million
- Increase its contributions to
black organizations and institutions,
including endowing scholarships at
black colleges and wtiversities.
- Increase to $14 million its
minority purchasing program.

one wall were reflections of the
producers' determlnatioo to adhere
to the slightest detall.
There, too, Willi the famed Dodger
Sym-Phony (musical quartet) in
baggy pants, top hats and spllttalls,
which will be reenacted. A note on
the late Branch Rickey sketch
reminded: "Heavy framea on
gla••es. Cigar. Note crooked part In
his hair."
"I don't consider It a baseball
show," adl;l!ld Rachel Robinson.
"It's a celebration of an event. It
covers only two years of Jackie's life
- 1946 and 1947, the struggle against
racial Injustice. Our pei'sOnal
problems. The pain that went into it. ·
''The show will carry the JDelllllge
that where there's qlpOI'tunlty
there's hope. There Is so much
misery - even today - among the
blacks and the poor."
Rachel is serving as creative consultant. Siegel, a theatre and movie
critic for ABC, has written the
script.
The producer Is Zev Bufman,
producer of "The Utile Foxes" with
E;lizabeth Taylor. The lyricist Is
Martin Charnin, who directed and
wrote the lyrics for the highly suc-

Weekend fishing report

1 1
"_ia_n_B_on_d

Jesse Jackson has done black
America a real favor.
The president of Operation PUSH
has negotiated what he calls "a
moral covenant" with the giant of
the U.S. soft-drink industry, the
Coca-Cola Co.
The company - after nine months
of secret meetings and the threat of
a black boycott of its products agreed to do the following:
- Establish a $1.8 million venture
capital fund for loans to blacks in
businesses associated with the softdrink industry.
- Appoint 32 black fountain
wholesalers and wine distributors by
August 1982. They will be provided
with special training and lists of
prospectlve customers worth an
estimated $1.3 million.
-Double its advertising in blackowned newspapers and magazines
and increase to $2 million its advertising oo black-owned radio
stations.

F~oval~m.~~in

APCwa..,....,.

ment complex.

'Boiler rooms' pro-s per as federal
Stockpile grOWS...~,...___ _ _ _ _ _ _J_ac_k_A_nde_rs_o_n

By WILLIAM R.IIARNARD
AP 8partl Writer

.,. wm GrlladeJ

~arrnongertirne-~----~------------------------Why do people go to war? There is
always some retrospective mystery
to the process, since motives are
discovered or invented during and
after the war itself. Many people are
now convinced that we fought Hitler
because of his savagery toward the
Jews - which is entirely false . What
we knew of the Holocaust came
during the war, and was resisted
even then, as Walter Laqueur has
demonstrated. Dissolution of the
Concentration camps was never an

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Satarday'• Games
KaJIIU City at TOI'OIU
Ookland II Teua at MUwautee
CaiUomla at Balllmore, (n)
Sealllo II Clevellnd, (n)
New Yorll: at Odcago, (n)
Delr&lt;ll II (n)

St.Louis 3, San Diego 2, 13 inning3
Los Ansele!J fl, Chlcal!!o o
San Francisco 5, Pittsburgh 4. 13 innings
Only games scheduled

Atlanta

Fridly'1 G1mes
(MontefWICO z-.3) at

Montreal

flea 4-4), (D)

Clnclnnati (Seaver 8-2)
!Lynch W I, In)
Philadelphia (CarllQ'I
(Knepper 8-3) , fn)

ChfCago {Krukow

at

New

York

10-3)

at

Houston

at

ILI'I

Angeles

4-6)

(Welch 4-5 ), (n )
Pittsburgh f ScurTy 3-4 )
c!..,. fWhl....., 4-$ ), (n)

at

San

Fran-

Onl)l gumes scheduled
S.turd8y's G.mes
Pittaburgh at San Francisco

Philadelphia at Houston, 2, fnJ
Clnclnnatl at New York, (n)

AUanta at Montreal, In)
st.Louis at San Diego, 2, In)

Chicaf!o at Los Angeles, 1n )
Swldl)''l Games

AUanta at Montreal

Clnctnnati at New York
Chicago at Los Angeles
st.Louta at San Diego
Pillaburgh al Sin Franctsc&lt;&gt;
P1111adelphia at Houstoo, In)

-Y'IGomeo

Kanaas CIIY at Toronto
Oakland al Bcloloo
Calllomla at Balllmore
5eollle at Clovellnd
New Yorll ol Ollcl&amp;•
Delt'oll al M . _
Tuu 11 MUnukee

Save our RC, RC-100, Nehi, Upper 10, Dief Rite
and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps for charity.

D·TIME OFFER

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BUY YOUR NEW C~R TODAYI
THIS OFFER EXPIR_
ES MON., AUG. 31, 1981

SIM·MONS OLDS.·CAD.-CHEV., INC.
POMEROY, OHIO
Mon.-Fri·. 9 a.m. to 8

PHONE 992-6614
9a.m.to5
,,

"

,,,

�.

..
., .

' ' ..,.:f.,.. "\)I n o;:sa::LT•
~.

(

l'l ... ~~.,... ~k

'·

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

'

NO: THf JOY Of RELIGION ~

Mrs. JCirt Olevaller gave a denJon.

.

stratlon on "What's A Dlab?", all

about dilll prdenl, at a ~t
meet1oc ol tbe Chester Garden Club
held at the home ol Mrs. Fred
Rayburn.
Assi.tlog Mrs. ChevaUer was Mn.
Robert Wood. They noted that aand
art, terrariums, or any planter
where there II cmly one plant uaed
with dried or Uve flowers 1.1 a dish
garden. Mrs. CbevaUer dilplayed
various gardens for tbe group.

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

.

~

- ~:...-..

~

Phone 992 -6304

Mrs. Dale Machlr, vice prealdent,
conducted the meeting during which
.time a report wa.s given on the Melga
County Fair flower show. An open
meeting ol the Rutland Garden Club
Monday night waa announced and It

St. Rl.

NEW YORK
KERMIT' S KORNER

A picture of the late Walter
Vaughan delivering groceries from
a horse-drawn wagon in Pomeroy in
the early 1900s inspired the Vaughan
family of Vaughan's Cardinal, Middleport, to bring back a part of that

early grocery store image and
history .
An old wagon similar to those used
at that time was recenUy purchased
by the Vaughans at a fann auction
near Salem Center and is currently

undergoing restoration.
It has been taken completely apart
in the side yard of the Richard
Vaughan home of South Third Sl in
Middleport and as Don Vaughan put
it "is undergoing lots of cieanin~.

which will end the end of September.
Middleport Library will also
have new Adult Basic Education
I ABE) instructors. Susie Pullins
and Gail Eichinger will have an
open house with coffee and
cookies on September 8 from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. They hope you will
stop in with your friends to
celebrate International Literacy
Day and find out how ABE can
help you.
At Pomeroy Public Library ,
the "crew" will be down one.
Drenda Cunningham, who was on
a Community Action Agency
work training program lor
August, will he going back to high
school.
In spite of having fewer
workers, we'll he open longer
hours. As a courtesy to students
and working folks, Pomeroy
Public Library will be open three

Legionaires attend convention
A report on the 61st annual Department of Ohio, American Legion
Auxliary, Convention held in
Cleveland recently was given by
Mrs. Catherine Welsh at Tuesday
night's meeting of the Auxiliary or
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy .
Awards made to the unit at the
convention were Mary Martin, first
place on publicity scrapbook and
honorable mention on tbe senior
energy scrapbook; Betty Wiles, certificate for outstanding contributions in the foreign relations
program; Unit 39, trophy for best
all-aroWld program on foreign
relations; and Frankie Hunnel, first
place on education and scholarship.
Junior awards included Anita
Smith, fll'St place on energy scrapbook; special citation to Veda Davis
for tbe Junior narrative report; and
Laura Smith, honorable mention on
the energy scrapbook.
During the meeting held in the
newly redecorated post home, plans
were floallzed for serving the
Dl.ltrict Conference on Sept. 20.
Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins requested
donations from tbe members.
Mrs. Jenkins presided at the

meeting with reports llemg given by
the secretary and treasurer. Mrs .
Veda Davis gave the second reading
or the budget. The unit received a
note of appreciation from Doris
Hurd, Volunteer Service, Chillicothe
Veterans Hospital, for contributions
to the birthday party.
Mrs. Jenkins also reportd that
Mike Williams had donated a garbage disposal for the kitchen at the
hall. Auxiliary dues are payable and
members were encouraged to pay
now since dues will be increased in
November. These can be mailed to
Mrs. Jenkins, at 38 Hudson St., Middleport. Mrs. Jenkins, membership
chainnan , announced a luncheon
meeting for Sept. 16 at 1 p.m. at
Crow's Steak House.
Guest at the meeting was Mrs.
Alma Johnson, Springfield, and she
assisted Mrs. Davis in serving
refreshments. The traveling prize
donated by Mrs. Davis was won by
Mrs. Knapp.
Group singing of
"America" closed the meeting.
Next meeting will be Sept. 22 with
Patty Might and Mrs. Jenkins to ser·
ve refreshments.

T!

0

Your Library Changes For Fall
By ELLEN BElL
Swnmer is drawing to a close
and the school year is about to
hegirl. That means there will be
some changes at your libraries.
One of the most visible changes
will be the absence of Brian
Bauer. Brian bas been working at
Middleport Public Library (and
sometimes at Pomeroy Public
Library) for three years. He was
employed by the Community Action Agency and was at the
libraries for job training. Brian
graduates from Meigs High
School in June, which makes him
no longer eligible for the program
after August. Brian is hardworking and highly reliable, so he
will be sorely missed.
Middleport Library will stiU
have a Community Action worker
in September, however, Carla
Teaford is on a different Com·
munity Action Agency program

scraping and scrubbing."
Once the restoration is completed,
the wagon is expected to become a
part of the store image.
It will he used in this fall's store
promotions to take boys and girls on

s

d

"The Way America
sends L.o\le''

is~~;;;~~~=

"-o-~

Round

531 JACKSON PIC.E · RI .35 WEST
Phone 44e- 4524
SAROAA'I

~TMES

ON SAT. SUN

Diamond

All SEATS JUST $1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESOCY I UO

cluster

All around town ... all around
the nation ttte rouml diamond
cluster ring leads the sty le parade . She'll lovingly agree now
. . and for many years to come.

A Meigs Countian, Edith
Reiser, was among the first place
winners whose crafts were selected at the Buckeye Hills Regional
Cran Show in Marietta for
· display at the Ohio State Fair.
Reiser placed first in em·
broidery work . A winner was
chosen by a qualified judge in
each of 10 categories of the
marietta show held at the Hermann Fine Arts Center on the
Marietta College Campus.

Carerutlv crafted - with 7

8EP3

DIAMOND CLUSTERS

f/u •u/f e"

l99.95

liS LOW AS

~~f'J +~
~~

5th WEEK: 7: 00. g.:10 P.M.
SAl I S~N KAliN ES 1:00' 3:1

" COLO\' · .
Jt

quality diamond!- to give the
big diamond look everyone
wants . In diamond total we ights
and l)rlces l9r all budgets

SUN • THUR AUG 30 •

111 F

N'IAtN

POMEROY

•

Burt~

Now thru Sept. 3

/fagMMoore
Fa•eh liltt cen
DomDel• .••

20% OFF
SALE
ON
WESTERN WEAR

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS .

Cam del\_

•LEATHER VESTS
ACME, DINGO

Camden Park
will be

reserved
Saturday, Aaplt 29 lor an
outlnl of Amher•t Coal
Co. antll 4 pm.

111

vou-. DIAllllil . , . ,

@natton@m~
MilLING DIVISION

at.MWnt Raatlapoa, w.v..

seeds - BirC! Seeds- Oyster Shells and Grit · Fertilizers- Lime , Ce'
menland Mortar· Stack Soli · Water Softener· Remedies Sail·, Ll'lers
- vaccine - Rooting • Paints · Red Brand 'Fencing· Baler and Binder
Twine· Sprays · Gales· Hay · Straw

SUGAR RUN .MILLS
.
.

Mulberry

'

992-2119

, 'soil,......, .. .

'

.

..

Pets- SJabln- Lll'tl and Small AniMills
r

uwns1-Ga.,..,.•
I

.
&gt;

•

school

:1

.

T

~·
20:7-12

Friday

Sltulllay

""

~·
Z8HO

""

22:17-21

.....,.,.

rust

"'"''"II·

.

·~·~· :

i•

'

'fJ 'l"7 •

.

'!·"'·

I

In s.

Co.

f

ot Columbu s, 0 .
804 W . Mam
99'2 · 2318 Pome r oy

I Lo.a n

Pomeroy

m
·•.

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

c:aD!¥It buJ.

nae

be

to

to

latta. Only

Lord'.•

.399 w. Main ~tr"t
• tf2~21M
· Pomeroy, Oh.
The Stwe with" All KindiOfStuff" '
·
.
•

9 :00

N 100 would, !hen you 811 filrtJ moat people. Everyone
needle,..,..,, af manetJ18. And B\18fy'0'18 haa one lit isn't•
mount/lin cabin or a oo111ge -but HIs a place rar
bellor a-ll&gt; proyw onrJ contemplation, • placo 10 SOtf out
old "'""" tllld mlll&lt;e ne• - · · r ill your place of

1~11 · 20

: tim.

. .·MOPER~; SUPPlf.,,; .'I
.

School,

PtOI&gt;Iema?

Thu"""

greater

PRICES R~QU&amp;~D THRU SEPT. 5, 1911

For

Church

-""'could be- -

Wednesday

""' ....
-plac., . , _ you could unfallgte your
)'0111'
1floughtB
- .
a plaCe

w

•WESTERN BOOTS
e BELTS &amp; BUCKLES
e WESltRN HATS
•
PRE-SEASON SAl£
-,' ·,t'

~?D~L~PORT ,

THE

)'OU IIIII lObe lble lOgo l O a - lllrl flU whert

Sermonette

e FRINGE COATS

'Par~

OF

education.
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN, Wor ship Service. 9 a .m .; Church School,

-

w

in Any Circle

Bonnie Francisco,
Bob James

CHURCH

~ .av ings

Nalionwide

Cou nt ~

~

Serv1 ce

Rutl a nd. Oh10 45775
J . Wm . "Bill " Brown , Ow n er
Phone ( 61 4) 747 7177

1:11). -

Mft!IOdlll Olurdlee, 'l\ap!)erl

f.AitGs

"'

lliE DAILY
SENTINEL

Complete
Automot•ve
Serv1ce
locu st &amp; Beech
992· 99 21 M 1dd l eport

a .m . , Morning worship. 10:15
SYRACUSE
FIRST
UNITED
NAZARENE : Corner Union and Mulberry ,
PRESBYTERIAN Church. Church Schoo l,
LeiN be your ....:t~Wy. Go 10 Hwhen you ""' troubled.
Rev. Clyde V. Henderson. pastor . Sun' , 11 : 30 a.m .
1:
0 15 a. m. ; orshtp
You wilflnd wfllinlfa wals )'0111''""'"""' of peaceiiiKI you
day school , 9:30 a .m . . G Ien McC Iung.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD. Rendall
wilwallr out -the _,II'JIIin hJr boltef oble to mllke lfle
sup!. ; morning worship , 10 :30 a .m .;
Bailey . pastor . Sunday schoo l. 10 a .m .;
111011 of"""' life.
evening service. 7 :30; mid -week ser·
Sunday worship . 11 a .m .; Children 's
vice , Wednesday . 7 :30p .m.
church . 11 a.m. ; Sunday evening serGRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH ~ 326 E.
vice , 7:30 p.m .: Wednesday evening
Main Sl .. Pomeroy . Sunday services at
young ladies au)(iliarv . b p.m. Wednes 10:30 a.m. Holy Communion on the fint
day family worship . 7 :00p.m .
Sunday of each month , and combined
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Near
with morning prayer on the third Sun ·
Long Bottom , Edsel Hart , pastor . Sunday
lO:OOo . m ~u n . Tue s. Evening Ser v1ce s
ST . PAUl, (Tuppers Plains) Sundov
day . Morning prayer and sermon on all
sc hoo.
1 10 a .m .; Ch u,-c h , 7 : 30 p .m .;
7:30 p.m . Friday Prover Meeting 7 30
School 9:00 a .m . Morning Worship at
h
Ch
h
I
h
other Sundays o I e mont ·
urc
prover meeting, 7·30p.m Thursday
10:00 a .m . Bible Study, 7:30p.m. Tues p.m .
School and nursery core pro...,ided . Cot MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL,
Third
LIBERTY Christian Church . 4 L1b ertv
day .
· fee hour in the Parish Hall immediately
Ave ., the Rev William Knittel , pastor .
SOUTH BETHEL (Silver Ridge) : Sunday
Ave .. Pomeroy . Sunday School 10 o .m .;
, following t he service.
Carl Nottingham, Sunday School Sup!.
Wor ship 7:30 . Wednesday Serv ice, 7 30
School 9:00 a.m. Morning Woship 10:00
Sunday 'ichool . 10 a .m . Classes for oil
POMEROYCHURCHOFCHRIST. 212W .
a .m. Wednesday Bible Study, 7:30p.m.
• p .m
" Main St . Neil Proudfoot. pastor , Bible
ages: evening se,-vice, 7:30; Bible study,
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD. Rev R. E.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver
, school, 9 :30 a .m .· morning worship ,
Wednesday . 7 :30 p.m .. youth services.
Hobinson pastor. Sunday school 9:30
Swain, Superintendent . Sunday school
Fn' doy . 7 : JOp .m.
- 10:30 a.m. ; Youth meetings , 6:30p .m .:
a .m ., wor ship ser'llice , 11 a .m .; evening
9:30 every week .
evening wors h ip. 7 :30 _We d nesdoy nigh 1
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST . Cor ·
sei'vice. 7:00 - youth serv ice . Wednes HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev .
prover meeting and Bible study , 7:30
ne r Ash and Plum; Rolph Butcher,
Keith Eblin, pastor. Sunday School , 9 :30
dav . 7 :00p .m .
· p .m.
pastor . Saturday even ing service. 7:30
lANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
o.m .: Leonard Gilmore. first elder;
'
THE SALVATION ARMY , 1tS Butternut
p .m .: Sunday School . 10 a .m . Sunday
Robert E. Musser , poster . Sundov school .
evening service, 7:30 p.m Wednesday
. Ave . ,Pomeroy . EnvoyandMrs.RayWin ·
Worship Service. 11 a.m .: Bible Study
9:30a .m .: Pau l Musser . supt .; morning
prayer meeting . 7:30p.m .
ing , officers in charge . Sunday -holiness
We d.. 7 :'¥:1 p .m ., Noel Herrmann ,
worship , 10:30: Sunday evening serv ice ,
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
meeting, 10 a .m .; Sunday School. 10:30
teacher .
7 :00: mid - week ser'llice . Wednesday . 7
CHRIST. Ouone Worden . minister. Bible
· a .m . Sunday schoolleoder , YPSM . Eloise
MEIGS
p .m .
class, 9:30a .m .; morning worship , 10:30
Adams . 7:30 p.m., solvation meeting .
COOPERATIVE PARISH
a.m .: evening worship . 6 :30 p .m .
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
1 various speakers and music specials .
METHODIST CHURCH
NAZARENE, Rev . James B. Kitde , pastor ;
Wednesday Bible study. 6:30p.m .
· Thursdoy- 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. ladies
RichardW. Thomas, Director
Norman Presley . Sunday
School
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
Home League. all women invited; 7:30
POMEROY CLUSTER
Superint endent
Sunday school 9:30
Church, Sunday School service, 9 :.45
p .m . prayer meeting and Bible study .
Rev . Robert McGee
o .m .: morning worship , 10:45 a .m .:
a .m ..
Worship
service.
10:30:
Rev . Noel Hermon, teocher.
POMEROY, Sunday Sc.,_oal 9:15 o.m
evangelistic service. 7 p .m _ Prayer ond
Evangeli stic Service, 7:30 p.m. Wednes BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
Worship service 10:30 a.m. Choir
Prai se We dnesday , 7 p.m .: vouth
day, Prayer meeting, 7:30.
CHAPEL, Route 1, Shade. Bible school , 7
rehearsal, Wednesday , 7 p.m . Rev .
meeting. 7 p.m .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy p.m . Thursday. worship servic~. 8 p.m .
Robert McGee, pastor.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST .
Harrisonville Rd.: Robert Purtell . pastor:
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
ENTERPRISE, Worship 9 a.m. Church
Elden R. Bloke , pas lor . Sunday School 10
Bill McElroy , Sunday school supt . Sunday
CHRIST. 200W . Main St.. 992·5235. Vocal
Schoo iiOo.m . RichaRothemich , pastor .
o .m .; Robert Reed , sup!. ; Mornmg se r school. 9:30a .m. ; morning worship and
ROCK SPRINGS, Sunday Schooi9:1S a
music . Sunday worship. 10 a.m. : Bible
mon . 11 a .m .; Sunday night services
communion . 10:30 a.m .; Su nday worship
m . Worship service, 10 o. m .. Richard
study . 11 a.m .. worship , 6 p.m. Wednes Chr istian Endeavor , 7:30p.m ; Song se r ser'llice. 7 p .m . Wednesday evening
day Bible study, 7 p.m.
Rothemich , pastor .
'llice . 8 p.m , Preaching 8·30 p .m
prayer meeting and Bible study , 7 p.m .
OLD DEXTER
BIBLE CHRISTIAN
FlATWOODS . Chu"h School 10 a.m .
Midweek Prayer meeting , Wednesday . 7
ST . JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
CHURCH , Rev .Ralph Smith , pastor. Sun ·
Wor ship 11 a.m .. Richard Rothemich.
p .m _; Alv in Reed. lay leader .
Grove . The Rev . William Middlesworth .
doy school . 9:30 a.m ., Mrs. Worlev
pa stor .
CH URCH OF JESUS CHRIST . Loc a ted ot
Pos lor . Church services 9:30 a .m . Sun MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Francis . superintendenl . Preaching ser Rutland an New lima Rood . next to
day Schoo110:30a.m.
vices lint &amp; third Sundays follow ing Sun HEATH. Church School9:30 a.m . War Fore st Acre Pork , Rev. Roy Rou se,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIS T. Je&lt;ry
day School.
ship 10:30 c .m . UMYF 6 p .m . Robert
pastor : Robert Mus ser . Sunday School
Pingley , pastor . Sunday school . 9 :30
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST ,
Robinson . Pastor.
supt . Sundoy school. 10 :30o .m .; worship
a.m . : morning worsh ip, 10:30 o .m ..
RUTLAND. Church School 9:30 a .m .
Preaching 9:30 a .m .. first and second
7:30 p.m .Bible Study Wednesday 7:30
Wednesday evening service, 7:30
Sundays of eoch month; third and lourth
Worship 10:30 a.m .
p .m .; Saturday n1ght prayer !.ervice . 7: 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST . Rev. Earl Shuler,
Sundays each month , worship service at
SALEM CENTER. Worship 9 a.m .
p .rn .
pastor . Sundoy school9:30 o .m .; Church
7:30p.m. Wednesday evenings at 7 :30.
Church School 9:45a.m .
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , Roger
service , 7 p .m .; youth meeting, 6
Prayer and 9ible Study ·
SYRACUSE ClUSTER
Watson . pastor : Mildred Ziegler . Sunday
p.m.Tuesdav BibleStudy , 7 p.m .
Rev . stanley Merrified, Minister
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mulberry
schoo l !.upt . Mor ning wor ship, 9 :30 a m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Heights Rood. Pomeroy. Pastor. Albert
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 a .m . Churc h
Sundoyschool 10:30 a.m .. evening ser·
Rev . John A . Coffman, pastor. Mortha
Dittes: Sabbath School Superintendent,
School10 a.m.
'lliCE , 7:30.
Wolfe, Chairman ol the Boord ol Chris RHo Whit!~!' . Sobbcth School. Saturday
MINERSVILLE. Church School 9 a .m.
MT UNION BAPTIST . Merlin Teets.
tian Life . Sundoy Sc hool. q :30 a.m ; morafternoon at 2:00 , with Worship Service
poster : Joe Sayre , Sunday School
Warsh ip .IOo.m.
ning worship , 10:30; Sunday evening
fol lowing at 3: 15.
ASBURY : Church School 9:50 a .m .
Superinlenenl . Sunday school . 9:45
worship , 7:30 p.m . Prayer meeting.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Worship 11 a .m . Bible Study 7:30 p .m .
a .m .; evening worship. 7:30p.m Pray er
,
Wednesdav . 7 :30p.m.
Sister Harriett Warner , Supt. Sundav
Thursday . UMW fist Tuesday .
meeting , 7:30p .m . Wednesday
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Don\ · Walker .
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
School , 9 :30 a .m .; morning worship ,
TUPPERS PlAIN S CHURCH OF CHRIST .
Pastor . Robert Smith, Sunday school
IO :.C5o .m .
Rev . Oa'llid Harris
Vincent C. Wate rs. Ill . minister ; Hermon
sup! .; Sunday school. 9:30a.m .; morning
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST . David
Rev . Mark Flynn
Block , superin tenden t. Sunday School
worship , 10:410 o .m .; Sunday evening
_ Mann, minister; William Watson , Sundav
Rev Florence Smith
9:30 a .m .: evening service . 7 p .m ..
worship . 7:30; Wednesday evening Bible
schOol supt . Sunday school. 9:30a .m .;
Hilton Wolfe
Wedne!.doy Bible Study , 7 p.m .
study , 7:30.
morning worship I 0:30a.m .
BETHANY . (Dorcas) . Worship 9:00
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev . R D.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST.
282
o .m . Church School 10:00 a.m. Sible
Rev. Herbert Grote . pdstor . Fronk Riffle .
Brown, pastor . Sunday School , 9:30
Mulberry Ave . . Pomeroy, Rev. William
study . 1st. 2nd . 3rd and Sth Tuesdays
sup! . Su nday SchooL 9:30a.m . Wo rs hi p
a.m.: morning worship 10:45; youth ser R. Newman, r,stor; Hershel McClure ,
7: 15p.m.; youth fellowship, 2nd and .Cth
service , 11 a .m . and 7:30 p.m . Pray er
vice , 6:415 p .m .; evening worship , 7:30
Sunday sctloo superintendent. Sunday
Tuesd ays. 6 : 00 p.m .
meeting. Wednesday . 7:30p.m .
p.m. ; prayer and praise, Wednesday ,
sch ooI , 9 :30 a.m .; morning wars h ip ,
CARMEL and SUTTON (Warship, Sun LAUREL
CLIFF FREE METHODIST
7:30p.m .
day School and most other events held
10:30; tNenlng worship, 7:30 p .m .
CHURCH. Rev . Floyd F. Shook . pastor :
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Rev. Mar·
Midweek prayer service, 7:30p.m .
jointly.) Sunday Schooi9: .. S and Worship
Ll oyd Wright , Director of Chri stian
vin Markin. pastor; Steve little Sunday
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH . Dex ·
11 :00 ot Sutton first and third Sundays
Education . Sunday School . 9 :30 o . m .:
school supt . Sunday school. 10 am .:
r ter Rd ., Rd . , langsville, Rev . A. A .
and at Carmel second and fourth Sun ·
Morning Worship , 10:30 a. m .; Choir
morning worship, 11 o.m. Sundov even HUghe•. Po•tor . Sunday School 10 o .m .
days . Bible Study second , fourth and
Practice . Sundov . 6:30 p .m .; Evening
ing worship , 7:30 . Prayer meeting and
Services on Tuesday, Thursday and Sun fifth Thursdays, 7: 15p.m. Family Night
Worship , 7:30 p.m . Wedne'iday Prayer
Bible study , Thursday, 7:30p.m .; youth
and Bible Study, 7:30p.m.
day, 7:30p.m .
Fellowship Dinner third Thursday , 6:30
service. 6 p .m . Sunday.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Boiley
p .m .
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST . Charl es
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH . J8J
APPLE GltO'v'E . Sunday School 9:30
Run Rood, Rev . Emmett Rowson , pastor.
N . :1nd Ave .. Mlddleport.Sundoy School .
Handley DUnn, supt. Sunday school , 10
a.m . Worship 7:30p .m . 1st and 3rd Sun a .m . ~unday evening service 7:30; Bible
, days ; Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30
teach1ng, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
p.m . Fellowship su"/cer first Saturday 6
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
·p.m . UMW 2nd Tues oy 7 : 30 p .m .
CHRISTIAN UNION , Lawrence Manley ,
EAST lETART, Chruch School 9 o .m .
pastor; Mn. Runell Young , Sunday
Worship service 10 a .m . Prayer meeting
School Supt. Sundoy School 9:30 a .m .
7:30 p .m . Wednesday . UMW second
'· Evening worship , 7:30, Wednesday
Tuesdo y 7 ;30 p.m.
prayer meeting, 7:30p.m.
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD .
10 a .m .: warship . 11 a .m. Chair practice.
Roclntt- Rev. James ,Satterfield, pastor.
Th uri do y, s·p.m.
d
No one II more impoverished than the one who feels he bas no need
Morning won hlp, 9 ;.o4 5 a.m.; Sun °Y
LET ART FALLs-- Worship service 9
a .m. Church schoollO a .m.
school, 10:•5 a.m.; evening wor&amp;hip . 7 .
for God. Such an attitude may seem foolhardy to some. Yet there are
Tueadoy. 7:30 p.m.. ladies prayer
MORNING STAR, Worship 9:30 o.m .:
many today whose primary goal consl.lts in laying up treasures on earmeellng: Wednesday, 7:30p.m. YPE.
Church School10:30 a.m .
th, where moth and
corrupt and where thieves break through and
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
MORSE CHAPEl, Church School 9:30
·
5h•tJ, ond Palmer, rhe Rev.· Mark Me..~..
a.m. ors h ip 11 a."'.
steal.
Clung. Sun do Y sc h oo I . 9 : I 5 o.m.: Ron~,
PORTlAND Sunday School 6·30 p m
On one occuion, Jesus told the revealing parable of the rich fool
· '
• "
•• Hayes, Sun-'-·
......, School.. su-rlntendent.
,.-Evening Worship,
7:30 p.m·. Youth
(Luke
12: 16-21). In that simple parable, the Maater Implies there are
•·' Dan Rt-s,
out.
aupl.
Mornl119
Worai11p.
Fell
hi
w-"
-'-·
7
30
••
•
~
..
ows p, .... nos-,, : p.m.
• 10: 15 a.m. Youln ,_ling, 7:30 p .m.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
thlnp a1 far
importance In life than money and the ·ac~ · Wednesday. 'lnciu'dlll9 -tots, ttpger
Rev . Rlchord.W.ooflfl!llrcit
CIUIIUlaUon
of
wealth.
'l1le
danger Is that.of placing so much emphasis
_Duone.S,der;'lst.-lcker, Sr.
• , beQy.,.s, 1tvntor osrrono':JII, and 1'-inlor
Clll
the
materia1111de
olllfethaUhe
spiritual aspect olllfe withers away
•·, and _,lor h1gh IVF: choir practice, 8:30
John w. Douglas
Wedn1~ prayer mwtlng and II·
Charles Damigan
· and ftnally dies..In the parable, God fiiiY8 to the rich man, "You fool!
.; Oltudy,.WeCinetc!oy, 7:30p.m . .
JOfPI', Worship 9:00 a.m. Church
Thill ldght your • i(t required ol you; and the things you have
,•. '· • OtUIICH 01'
~-' CHRIST, Mlddle!"1"1. 5th
Sc hool10 :00 a.m.
~"'-will they be?" (LUke 12:20).
; and Main. - .Mello&lt;!, mlnlsler, Scotl
c;HESTER, Worship 9 o.m.. Church
lfllhookl obriOUI ua that there are things In life which money
_tate mlnlsle" • llble
10
Chqlr Reh09nol 7 p.m ..
• . ~· ,9 :30 o .. m .: 'molnlng worl!hlp, · · Thurodoys, libleStudy, Thuildaya.
.'
In our materialllltic age, let ua look beyond mere "things"
10:30 a. m.: evening Mrvlce, •7:00 jl.m .
7:iJOp.m..
· •. ·
lncliWIIIve
Qbeythe eounaell ol Christ. The klllgdoms of this world
, ; ·W~ llble Sludy all!! Y"l"h •group • , LONG 114ilTTOM. Sun!loy Sc~l al9:30
llld '!111011 fall~ Only God's Kln&amp;dorn
God's riches abide
' · meetingt, :oOp.m .. a.m . Ev~lng Worohlp at 7:30. p.m •.
: : •• ~lfJEL"OU CHURCH OF, . HE
Thu=llbieslu~7: 30p.m .
.'
fOrevei'.
I
'• JV\UUII~:NE . lev. ~~oom•, pq•t.~r ;
· I-DS lllE 5u
School 9 30
Let ~
advice: "Seek ye first the Kingdom of~
• 1111 while, Sunday
oupj. 5uf1dOV
McJ::'tng wor'.hlp 10:3o a .m. 'Ev~i~
~~
.
Bllf!l, and all tbele tblnga shall be added uilto you.
• ichool, 9:30 .a.m.; mor~ """"hlp,
w..,oohp ' 7:30 ~.m. Bible Study
~· 10:30 . o~ m : ; tun~
. evong•ll•tl.c
w ..wu~s
-~ a t7: p1m.
,
(ilittlleW
. ~ Rev. Rl~ 'l'bQmu, minister,
. '1' Pr
;, - l n g , 7:00 P:"'· .. ~
AlFRED. 5unciCiy sa-1 01 9:4 •.111. .•
aa.ter United
Plali1a.
'• WednoodaJ, 7 p:m.
'
-..lng Warahip at 11 a.m. Youth, ~ :30
UN11ID I'II!IIV'riRtAH MIIISTIY OF
p.m. &amp;Uftdoys, W~ Night rreyer
.
.COUNT'f 1 ~· WandO Johftoan,
-ling, UO'j&gt;:m.
.
•

Fashionable

Reiser wins

I'

NePaOseM. EROY

A th e n \

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

director: Harold Jonnson, director of

10

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Loan Co.

F.-.~ m P rlv

216 S. Second
Pomeroy
992-3325

. ...

l'om*"f
TRINITY CHURCH, Re..- . W . H . Perrin ,

461 S. Th i rd , M1ddl f' p nr1
99'2 -21 96

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR. Brown's Fire &amp; Safety
Equipment s a 1es ·' " " ~

Gil0

GroceriesGeneral Mer-chandise
Racine 949-2SSO

pastor; Roy Mayer, Sunday sch~l supt.
Church School. 9:15 a.m.; worship service. 10:30 a .m. Choir reheorsol. Tuesday . 7:30p.m . under direction ol Alice

c..:_t "

992-6655

WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE

Baker-s of
Good Bread

I
Mr . and Mrs . John Edwards of
Mason, W. Va., are announcing the
marriage of their daughter, Bonnie
Francisco, to Bob James, the son of
Betty James, Clifton, W.Va.
Miss Francisco is a 1981 graduate

214 E. Main

992·5110 Pomeroy

HEINER'S BAKERY

Flllw•SIIop

~
216 E. Main

Finest
Modular Homes
Pomeroy, 1100 E. Main

cuuLQ.A

School, and
currently employed at the Falcon's
Roost in Mason. Her fiance is a 1979
graduate of Wahama, and is an employee at Doug's Marine Sales in
Pomeroy .
The open church wedding will be
held tonight at 7 p.m., with the
ceremony to he perfonned by the
R~v. R&lt;&gt;n.W..lk'l.r~First Baptl.lt
Church of Racine.
Foilowing the honeymoon, the
couple plans to reside in Mason, W.
Va .

nights a week: Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday until 8
p.m. From September through
May. barring catastrophes, you
will have a library to visit four
nights a week. That's because
Middleport Library is open on
Monday nights ail year long, except for holidays such as Labor
Day .
The ABE center at Pomeroy
l.Jbra ry will be opening on September 8, too. Kathy Manicke,
who taught ABE last year, will
also have an open house. The
Pomeroy ABE center will beopen
from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. with free
coffee and cookies for everyone
who is interested in learning
more about ABE.
Check out the changes at your
libraries. And while you're there,
check out a book, a record, or a
toy. They're part of what's happening at your libraries.

~~'5:~::-"':"

The

Homelite Saw~

in~

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

Diamond Savings &amp;

Reuter-Brogan Insurance
Services

FURNI~!e~~RDWARl

992-2039 or 992·5721

ma"y on aof~?2m~-?:igh

'/

RIDENOUR

pearlng in Wednesday's Sentinel
was in error.

rides around the block. Mark Thornpson, an employee, will be providing
the work horse to pull the wagon.
The Vaughans also plan to use the
restored wagon in parades from
time to time.

-:.

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

The aMual Weaver reunion was
held last Sunday, Aug. 23, at New
Haven. The &amp;Mouncement of the
reunion for thil Sunday, Aug. 31, a~

Local businessman restores horse-drawn .wagon

Phone 992 -3480

Pomeroy

'~ ·· ~

aJJTHING HOUSE ·1~'' J

Correction
Thompson, and Marc Fry, all employed at Vaogbao's
CanlloaL Don Vaughan, foartb generation Vaogbao In
tbe grocery business, bas charge of the restoration of
!be wagon.

Prescriptions

992·1955

MARK V SIORE
Middleport r "'

1

hostess.:

UNDERGOING RESTORATION --; TbllJ old-Ume
grocery wagon Is being restored and wiU he used by
Vaughan's Cardinal In fall grocery promotions. Pictured as tbey work on tbe wagon are, left to right,
James Gheen, Don Vaughan, Jerry Oldaker, Mark

·s

~~~~

Church &amp; Office Supplies
GIFTS
"Mill 51.
Middleport

~.

Pom f' r lly

.!i

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK SlORE

was noted that Mn. Pat Holter will
be the demonstrator.
Mrs. Paul Barnett and Mrs. Joan
Vaughan were guests at the
meeting. TwUa Buckley won the
door prize. Refreshment were served by Mrs. Rayburn and Mrs.
Leonard Erwin, asslatlng

TilE INSPIRATION - Richard Vaughan displays here tbe picture of bl8 grandfather, Walter Vaughan, among several others, on a
horse-drawn wa~~:oo UBed to deUver groceries around Pomeroy many
years ago.

.. ~_'§)

Ea t tn or
ca rr y Ou t

-(P

Northeast

.

" lor A Real Auction
t'tllllla-'~ Call the Real McCoy"
t. 0 . "Mac" McCoy
Rt . 1, Reedsville, Otl .
985 ·3944
Rus!ioell. Sr
min is ter Ri ck Macomber
sup!. Sunday sc hoo l. 9:30a .m ., w or !. hip
ser vice 10:30 a .m . Bible Study . Tu esday .
7:30 p.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF
LATTER
DAY
SAINTS.
Portland Racine Rood _ Wil liam Rou sh.
pa sto r . Ph y llt ::. Stoborl . Sunday Schoot
Supt Sunday School. 9_30 o.m . Mornin g
w or ship . 10:30 a .m .: Sunday evening
ser vice 7 p .m . Wedne sday evening
pray er ser v 1ces . 7:30p .m
BETHL EHEM BAPTI ST, Re"' . Eorl Shule r.
pa stor . Wo rship ~ er v ic e , 9 .30 o.m Sun day sc hool . 10:30 a .m . Bible Sludy and
pray er se r v ice Thu rs day , 7:30p .m
CARLETON CHURCH , Kingsbury Rood
Gory King . postor Sunday "&gt;choo l , q -30
o m Ro lph Carl. wpe r in tendent , even
ing wo rs hip 7·30 p .m Prayer mee t ing
W edne sdov . 7·30 p .m
LONG BOTTOM CHRIST IAN
Tom
Ric heso n. pa stor: Wallace Dam ew ood,
Sundov Schoo l Superint endent . Wor sh1p
ser vice ot 9 a .m . Bible SchoollO o .m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH . Rev .
Theron Durham . pa stor . Sundov School
at 9 ·30 a _m _; Morning worship at 10:30
o . m . Thursday services at 7:30 p . m .
FREEDOM GOSPEl MISSION at Bald
Knob . located on County Rood 31 . Rev .
lawrence G luesencomp. poslor : Rev
Roger Wi iHoass istont pastor. Preaching
se rv1ce s. Sunday 7:30 p.rn . prover
me elin g . W ednesday , 7:30p .m . Gory
Grilfith , leod eYouth g roups, Sunday
e veing . 6:30pm . w1th Roger and Violet
Will ford a s le ader s. Communion se r
vices l in.l Sunday eac h month
WHITE 'S CHAPE L. Coolvill e RD . Rev .
Ro y Deeter pastor _ Sundav school 9:30
a .m .: w or ship serv ice. 10:30 a .m . Bibl e
'51udy and proye1 H~l vi ce . Wedne sday .
7:30p .m .
RUTlAND CHUR CH OF CHRIST Bob
Buckingham . pastor . Herb Elli o tt Sun ·
day !io c hool sup l. Sund ay sc hool 9-30
a .m .; mornm g wo rsh1p and comunion .
J0:30a m .
RU TLAND etBLE METHOD IST CHURCH .
Amos Tilli s pa stor . Donny Tilli s. Sunday
Sc hool Supt . Sunday School , q :30 o.m ,
followed by morning worship . Sunday
evemng serv1 ce . 7 :00 p.m
Prayer
me et ing . W edn esday, 7 :00p .m .
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE . Rev . Ll oyd D. Grimm Jr ,
pastor . Sunday sc hool . q :JO a.m .. wo r
sh1p se r v ice 10:30 o .m . Broadca st li ve
o ve r WMPO. young people's service , 7
p .m . Ev ang eli sti c se r .... ice . 7 :30 p.m
Wedne sday se rvice, 7 :30p .m .
FIRST SO UTHERN BAPTIST. Co rne r o l
Second and APa sto r Frank Lowth er Sun
doy sc hoo l . 9:45a .m .. w ors hip se r v1ce .
I I a .m . and 7:]0 p .m . Weekly Bible
Studv . Wednes day . 7 :30p .m .
MA SON CHURCH OF CHRIST . Miller
St. Ma son . W . Vo . Eugene L. Conger .
mini st er . Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m .
Wor ship 11 a .m . and 7 p.m . Wednesday
Bible Study . vocal music 7 p.m .
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - 12 Nmlh
Thi rd St .. Chesh 1re Independent fun ·
domentol ser vices . Sundov evening 7: 30
p.m Pa stor Re\1 Dr . Robert Per sons .
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO, Dudding
lone . Mason . W. Vo . Rev . Ronnie 8
Rose . Pastor . Sunday School 9 :45a .m .
Morning Wor ship 11 a.m . Evening 5er·
vice 7:30 p .m. Wedn esdav Women 's
Ministri es q a .m. (meeting and prayer.
Prayer an d Bibl e Study 7 p.m .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , The Re v. W itl iom
Campbell . pa stor . Sunday School. q :JO
a.m .; James Hughes. supt ., e vening ser vi ce. 7:30 p .m . Wednesdav e'llening
pray er meeting. 7:30p .m . Youth prayer
ser'llice ea ch Tuesdav .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , letart , W
Vo .. Rt . 1. Mork Irw in . pastor . Worship
serv1 ces. 9 :30a.m.: Sunday school. 11
o.m. : ev ening wors hip, 7:30 p.m . lues
day cottage prayer meeting and Bible
study . 9:30 a.m. Worship serv1ce,
Wednesday . 7:30p .m .
CAL VARY BIBLE CHURCH, now located
on Pomeroy Pik e. Countv Road 25 . near
Flatwood s. Rev. !lockwood , pastor. Ser vices on Sunday ol 10:30 a .m . and 7:30
p.m. with Sunday school . 9:30a .m . Bible
study , Wednesday . 7:30p .m .
INDEPENDENl HOLINESS CHURCH .
INC . Pearl St.. Middleport . Rev .
O 'Dell Mantey , pastor ; Sunday school.
9:30 o .m .: Morning worsh ip 10:30 a .m .:
evening worship . 7:30 p.m . Tuesday.
12:30 p.m . Women 's prayer meeting:
Prayer and praise service, Wednesday .
7:30p. m .
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC ,CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST . Elder James Miller. Bible
study, Wedne&amp;day , 7:30 p.m .; Sunday
School , 10 d .m. Sunday night service.
7:30p.m .
POMEROY WESlEYAN HOLINESS Harrisonville Rood ; Dewey King . pastor;
Henry Eblin , Jr ., · Sunday School Supt .
Sunday School9:30 o . m ., Morning Wor ship 11 o . m .: Sundov ev ening seNice.
7 :30 .m . : Prover Meeting, Thursday , 7:30
p .m .

M iddl ep ort
Pl'l m Cr oy , 0

..,_,

·. ~ ·::

.~·h~t:1

SYRACUSE FIRST CHU RC H O f GOD
No t Pent ecos ta l Rev George O• lc •
pastor Wor ship se rv1ce Sunc-loy 9 45
o.m , Sun dav sc hool . t 1 o m wo rsh 1p
ser v1ce 7 30 p . m
Thur sday 1--11 oyc1
meet ing 7 JO p.m
MT HERMON Uniled Brethr en 111
Chr1SI Chu rch Rev Robe r I ~ond e r ~
po~ l o t Do n Wdl loy leader located 111
T el( o ~ Commu n1ty ott CR l:rl
~u ndoy
sc hool 9 30 a .m .: Morning worsh1p ser
v1ce . 10 .45 o m . evemng pr e-oc h 1n g S"''
v1ce second and lourth Su ndays 7 JO
p m Ch r 1s tian Endeavo r . hrst and th11d
Su n day ~ . 7·30 p .m . Wed nesday prOfL'I
mee~~ng an d Bibl e sludy. 7 30 p . m
J[HQV AH 'S WITNE SSES. 37319 Stot&lt;-Ro ul e 1:2 4 (O ne md e Po st ol Rul lon rl ,
Sunday Bib le le clur e 9·30 a m ., Wo t
chlo we r stud y 10 ·/0 a m l ul"~do~· l!-1
ble 5ludy . 7 30 p m
l hur sdoy
Th eocrati c Sr hoo l 7 30 D 1n
Sf'rv •cc
Mee• mg ll :.!O p.m
RUlLAND fR EI::WILL BAPli ST Chu r r h
So le m 51 Rutlond . Dona ld Korr '::.r
po sto1 Burl Stewart super mlendcnr
Sunday Sc hool 10 c .m . evcn•nq wo1
'&gt; hrp 7 :m p _n • Wedn e5day everr1 r1g '&gt; t:'r
v1ce 7 :.mp m
CHURCH O F GOD ol P10ph ecy lorat r- rl
on the 0 J Wh rl e Ro od oil h 1g hwoy 160
Sunday Sc h oo l 10 o .m _ Su p e r lll h~ nrlP nl
John Loveda y f 1r sl Wednes d ay n1ght ol
month CPM A serv1ces . seco nd Wedne o;,
rlay WMB mee t1n g t hud lht ough l d th
youth ser viCe Georg e Croy le pm!or
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL
5 70 G ran t
St .. Middleport: Sunday Scho ol 10 o m
morning wor ship. II a. rn even rng wor
shrp . 7 p m Wed nes day eve-n inq B1 bi E'
study and prayer mee ting 7 p rn AI
hl1ated w 1th South ern Boplr sl Conve r1
t1on
BRA D ~OR D
CHURCH 0~ CH RI ST
RICky Gilb ert p astor Steve l-'1l ll r&gt;ns
supermt en d en t Sundoy Sc h oo l 9 :JO a
rn Church Serv1ce~ 10 JO a m
JUBILEE
C H~I S TIAN
CI: NHR
Georg e's Creek Ro ad . Rev ( J Leml r&gt;y
pa stor John Fe ll ur e. super in t endent
Church schoo l. 9·30 a m . mo r nmg w or
sh1p tO·JO evenm g serv1ce 7 p rn . B1bl,..,
Sturl y Thu r s 7 p m Cla sses f or otl ogr!&lt;;
Nurse ry prov1dE&gt;d lor wo rsh •p sco r v•rE&gt;s
ST PAUL LU THERAN CHURCH Corn ~· r
o t Sy&lt;o mor e and SE&gt;ro nd Sl o; Pomeroy
l he Rc-. W1l l1am M1ddleswo rth Pastor
Sunrloy School a1 9 45 o m and Chur ch
Serv rces 11 o m
SAn t: o HI:ART Rev Fo! hflr Pau l D
We lton pastor 1-'hone 4'-1'2 '2U:l5 So tur
rloy r&gt; ven1rrg Mass 7 JO Sunrl ny IV'nc,s H
onrl 10 am
Co nhooss10n
Sa turday
I 7 :JOp m
VICTORY BAPli J1
S:l~ N :lnd J l
M1rldlepor t Ja me ~ 1: Keest-&gt;l~ po..,l o'
Jundoy mo •n1 ng wor ~ h•p IU am . rven
1n9 se rvrce 7 Wf'dncsd ay f"VL'IHn g woo
&lt;_, h1p 7 p m V151 IOI •On Thu rsrlo y 6 30
p

Il l

TRI NII V Ch r• sl 1an A s~em bl y l oolv di P
Su nday
Gdberl Jpencet pas l or
'..( hoo t 9 JO om morn 1ng w ors h1p. I I
om Sunday e ven1ng ~er-. . c,. 7 30 p m
m1rlwee k proyP r sprv•C(-' WednP.sd ay
7 :JO p.m
MOUNT Ol •vv Comm un •ly Church
lowrenc e Bu ~ h pastor Mo l( l" olrne 1 Sr
Super1ntenden1 )unda y School a nd mar
n •nq wors h1 p 4 30 a IT' Sunrloy evF2rr1n q
serv1ce 7 p.m You 1h rnec11119 and ~ 1 bk:
study . Werlnes rloy ? p rn
UNITED fAITH ( HUIKH
Ro ul8 7 on
l'omeroy b ypo ~s Rev Rob er I Sm i th Sr
pa stor , Re-v Jo mr&gt;~ Cunrl ,lt OSS i&lt;, l ont
pastor Sund ay Schoo l 4&lt;30 a m rn 01 n
1119 wor sh1p 1() 30 a m f''Jf'n1 n g wor
sho p. 7 :JO
Wolnl"' tl s f-Pi i ow ~ h 11 ,
T u c~ rio v " 10 n m
w,--.dnP&lt;; rl oy n 1qh 1
p royer se rv 1CC' -, JU p fl'
FAITH MAP T I ~l ChuH h Mason lll ~"'r&gt;l
ot Un1 terl Stee l Wor kPt &lt;.. Un1on Hall
Noi lroor-1 Stt cel Ma~o n f'a slor
Dr
Jo mes 0 f'Mtuhl Mor n1119 worc;h,p lJ JO
am Sunci oy ~r h ool 10 30 o rn fvf&gt;n1n q
Scrvt&lt;e 7 p ll' f'toyc1 111('PI111Q Wf'dn e..,
rloy 7 :.lO p rn M1ci Wt"P ~ B·blP St urly
Thursda y 7 p 111
13AI-'11Sl
RP-. Nyi f'
(otn PI•u&lt;~u n c h
s uperint e ndt~ n1
'J unrla y "r hool rr ~lO
a .m : secon&lt;i nnrl lourth Su nr1 ay s w01
•
sh 1p SE'I ViC t:o Ql ') J0 p.m
MT. MORIAH BAPTI ST
..= our l h o~d
Ma in St M1rldl er ort Rev Ca l v111 M1n
n rs . po slor Mr ~ l:t vm Hu 1n g arcln ~ ,
sup! Su nday sc hool 9.30 a m wo1 sh1p
serv ice . 10 :45 o m
NORTH BU HH Un 1ted M et hod 1.-, 1
Church . Re .... . Chorl eo.; Dom rgan . pas1ot
Sunday School . 9 30 o m Wo rs h1p Se t
vrce , 10:45 a .m Sunday Bi ble Sl udy
7:00 p.m .. W edn esday pray e r me-r.l~r1q
7:30p .m .
BURLINGHAM SOUTH ERN BA I' li;T
CHURCH . Rou 1e 1 Sh od(' Po ~ l o• n on
Block. AH iliot e&lt;1 w1 t h Soul hP r n BOIJ I I ~I
Con venti on Sunrioy sc h oo l l ·:JO p&gt;~n
Sunday w orsh ip 4! :30 p .m Th u r&lt;,d(JV
evening Bibl e studv . 7 p .m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY
Ro( 1d('
Route 114. William Hoback . pa sto r ~ U n
doyschool. 10om .. Sunday eve 11in ~s~ r
vi ce, 6:30 p ,m . Wednesdoy cening &amp; ~r vl ce. 7.
,
CARPENTER BAPTIST , Re-v f reP I ~ n rl
Norr is. pa st o1. Don Chearllf' Supt SUn
day School . Q ~ :.JO om . Mon1 ur q './l r.,·,hlr ,
10:30 o .m . Prayer Ser v1r(• oiiP1nul ··
Sundoys .
~ O R I:S T

Bord en

~UN

po~to•

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

F r iday, Augus t 28, 1981

Pomer oy- Miclclleport, Ohio

OhiO

·Hypertension and pregnancY.--~-------Speclflcaliy, a systolic number of at
least 140 or a diastolic number of at
least 90 Ia COI18idered to be " high
blood pressure." Alllo, a rise of at
least 30 in the systolic or at least 15
in the dlaatollc is a sign rl hyper-

By Edward W. 8elnedi, D.O.
Alllltut Pnfeuor of
F amlly Medlelae

Obfo UDivenlty CGIJele
'
al O.teopalblc
' Medlcl•
QUESTION :
My slater had to
deliver her baby

t ension.

blood

pressure

dication of a problem.

early beca1111e of
toxemia . Could

you explain this to
me and could it
happen to me with
my pregnancy?

Such

readings must occur on at least two
different occasions to be truly an inSecond, preeclampsia is the
development during pregnancy of
hypertension accompanied by
proteinuria and/or edema. This condition may develop any time after

Dr. Schreck

QUESTION: Are these pi'Oblems
COOliDOII?

preeclampsia and also has convulsions is said to have eclampsia
Wlless the convulsions are due to a
pre-existing disease such as epilepsy. Fortunately, most women with
preeclampsia don't have eclampsia
with its convulsions.
PreeclampsiB and eclampsia are
most conunon in a woman's first
pr egnancy. These disorders are
possible in later pregnancies, but in
these cases, a coexisting problem
such as diabetes, multiple features,
placental abnormalities or, perhaps,
a genetic predisposition as usually
present.

involving conditions such as hyper·
tension (high blood pressure) ,
proteinuria (protein in the urine )
and edema (swelling) . The tenn
toxemia, however is not recorn. ,mended by the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists. InStead, this group has developed
specific definitions of the hypertensive dis orde rs re lated to
pregnancy.
Fin~t, hypertension itself has been
deflned in terms of the upper
. (systolic) a nd lower (diastolic)
· blood
pr ess ure
numb e r s.

of the moet Important unsolved
pi'Oblems In obstetrics.
QUESTION: What can I do, doctor, to prevent these pi'Oblems from
occurriJtc during m,y pregnancy?

ANSWER: . Hypertensive di.sorden! are one ol the most conunon
complications ol Jll'I!8II8IICY and are
frequent causes of serious problems
in newborns. These conditions
reduce the blood
through the
placenta which Is the fetus' Ufe support base. Despite being a frequent
problem, we really do not know the
cause of hypertensive disorders
during pregnancy. '!bey remain one

Jerry and Susan Lanning Well,
Shade, are 8I1IIOUIIdng the birth ala
son, Ryan Matthew, born on Aug. 8
at the Holzer Medical Center.
'!be infant weighed six pounds, 15
ounces and WM 20 Inches long.

ANSWER: Good prenatal care
that begins early, alq with appropriate treatment, can IIIIU8!ly
lower the hypertenalon sufficiently
that the mother's health u well as

now

Matemal grandparenls are Mr. and

Mrs. Donald Lanning, Pomeroy, and
the patemal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Vern Well, Shade. Mater·
nal great-grandmother is Mrs. Edith

Ga llia Co. Area c6de
614

~-

can

be a.sliured during
pregnancy and afterwards.

the baby's

Melli co. Area COde
'614

446-Gallipoli s
.367-Cheshlre
388- Vinton
245-Rio Grande
2S6- Guyan Disl.
64 3-Ara bia Dl st .

992-Middleport
Pomeroy

915-Chester
343- Portland
247- Letart Falls

Mas on Co. , W. Va .
Area COde 304

Th e M eigs County Budget Comm iss ion ha5 co~pl e~ed its ap~r·

SEASON'S ALMOST OVER
SPECIALS!

LOCAL GOVERN ME NT
40%

COUN TY
TOWN SHIP S
CORPORA TI ON S

675- Pt . Pleasant

4S8-Leon
576-AppleGrove
773- M.son

30%

7.18
9.98
4.79
9.78
7.78
9.18
10.19
S.99
7.99
6.79

Columbia
Lebanon
Letart

Olive
Orange
Rutland
Sa lem

FOR SOME GREAT BUYS

Sa lis bury
Scipio
Sutton

ON WHEEL HORSE

3, 680.10
S,476.58
3,231.00
4,491 .00

8.18
11.17

2, 228.40

4,401.00
J, S01.00

4, 131 .00
4,S8S.50
2.695.SO
3,S95.50
3 055.50

sd.ooo.oo

100.00

CORPORATION S
38.80
39.01
S.79
7.93
8.47
100.00

Pomeroy
Middleport
Racine
Rutl a nd

be made'" l:ly- caumg W'.HitiOI. The
clinic will be held in the quarters of
the Meigs County Department of
Health located in the multi-purpose
building,
Mulberry
Heights ,
Pomeroy. Hours of the clinic will be

Syracu se

.00

TO

Monlhly
300.68
456.38
269 .25
374 .25
185.67
366 .75
291.15
344 .2S
382 .13
224.63
299 .63
254.63

Tot a l

Pet.

Chester

COME IN AND SEE US

5150,

100%

1,455 .00
1.462.86
217 .13
297 .38

3,811 5Q

lll 62

446-2342

In Meigs CouDty

In Mason tounty

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

_,.,

~····· ·

3
Announcement•
A mlnl·ftea market will be
held at the Gaflla Hills
Card otThanks
Family Festival at the
Thanks to the Meigs Inn Raccoon Creek County
for purchasing my steer at· Park thiS Saturday a. Sun·
sthe Meigs co. Fair. Randy day, August 29th a. 30th,
from 1 p.m . untlfl dark.
Ki ng.
Thank You. To my many For buld dell very of
friends for cards, flowers gasoline. heallng oil and
and prayers during my diesel fuel, call Landmark,
long Illness. JoAnn CWhltel 992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.
Golden.
Safe of fishing tackle. Store
closlng.Seplember 12. 20%u
3
Announcements
off all sales. 25%u off sales
SWEEPER and sewing over $20. 6 Inch rlngworms,
machine repair, parts, and assorted colors S.5 each.
supplies.
Pick up and Assorted marlbou IJgs,
delivery, Davis Vac uum Sl .OO for 12. 10'l6u off craft
Cleaner, one half mile up Items. Tackle Box, SR124,
Georges Creek Rd . Call Syracuse, Ohio. Monday
through Saturday 910 5.
446·0294..

HOWARD E. FRANK

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Opening

Augusl

31

for

classes. Jean's and Nan·

Public Notice
- -·- - - - 27
Heavy d uty brake
8 - 9,ooo lbs. 1 beam
Me igs County
booste r with 7" rea r
trent
ax
le.
Commissione rs
akes.
9 - 18.500 lbs, 2 speed br28
~ Heavy duty bum pe r
·· Notice to Motor V ehicle
rear a" le.
and
trent
tow hooks.
Deal er s:
10 - 5 speed sy ncr omesh
, 1n accord ance w ith Sec
29 - L.H . a nd R.H.
tra
nsmt
SS
tOn,
d
1
r
ec
t
in
fi
fti on 307.86 at the O ~to
Senior west coas t mirrors .
lh.
Rev i sed Cod e, 5ea led btds
30 77 a mp battery
11
360
c
u
.
in.
V
-8
gas
w ill be rece ived b y the
hea v y duty .
en
gine
or
larger
· M eigs Count y B oard of
3 1 - 60 a m p or l ar ge r
12 - Ste p fuel tanks lett alternator
· Com m isst oners, '"th eir of.
a
n
d
right
m
ount
ed
;
fi ce. l oca ted in the C ou ~ t
32 - Cab gr ab hand les.
mi
nimu
m
ca
pac
it
y
100
House. Po m er oy.
Oht o
L.&amp; R
gil l ions.
45769, unt i l 12:00 noon on
33 V ik ing T bar
13
4,000
lbs.
m
ini
mum
Sept 8. 198 1; th e bids w i ll
dri ver 's seat .
front
sprif!g
cap
ac
ity
.
be opened a t 2: 00 P.M .
34
In d i v i d u a l
14 - 11.000 lbs . minimum passenger
Sept 8, 1981 and r ea d a loud
seat.
r
ea
r
spr
ing
ca
paci
ty
.
tor The foll owin g ve hicle .
- Heavy du t y f actory
15 Au x ili ary r ear re 35
Eac h bid t o mee t th e con·
inforced fra m es
ings.
spr
d iti ons and spec if .ca nons
36 Co lo r : Omaha
16 - Com binati on front Orange.
CIS fOil OWS :
and
rear
dir
ec
ti
ona
l
sig
nal
1 One 1981 or 1982
37 - The front of the e n·
hts
· model d um p truck wi th lig17
vel ope enclosing the bid
Tra
ffi
c
haza
rd
sw
i1·
Pea b o d y
Ga l io n or c h.
m usl be mark ed " DUMP
equ iva lent dump body 120"
TRUCK
BID ."
18 - Dual e lectri c horn s.
x 84" x 30", head and tai_ l 38 - Bidder to furnish
19
H
ea
t
e
r
a
nd
ga te w ith center door m def r os ter
the ir own bid form s, listing
gate, mi _
n imum siz e 16" x
bid price as indi c ~ted_ on
20
_
Two
speed
w
in·
10" open•ng .
the l 1ne item spec ,flcattons
ds ht e l d
w 1p e r s
a nd sheet
2 - Front m ounted 12 ton washers.
as advertised .
· t elescop ic hoist.
39 - Deliver y must be
21
Power
St
eerin
g
.
m ade by the successful b id·
3 - 31 4 Cab Pro tec tor
22 - 10.00 X 20 10 p ly or der,
120 days after bids are
wiJ!J. 4 ·:,Wings .
be
tter
front
tires,
hig
hway
J · Cab I ights, 4 corner t read, 7" ri m s.
aw arded, or b id is VOided .
lights and 6 refl ectors
40 - The M e igs County
23 ~ 10.00 X 20 11 ply r ea r Com
5 - Mud f laps
missioner s may ac·
t1
r
es.
on
and
off
road
tr
ead.
6 - · Wh eel base 8.d" cab
cept the lowest bid, or
14
One
additi
onal
7"
to axle or su i table tor body rim and ring .
se lect the best bid for the
( 10 toot dump body )
tnt e nded purpose, and
25
Cas
t
spok
e
whee
ls.
7 - 24.000 lbs G.V W. or
rese rve th e r ight to accept
26
Heavy
duty
clutch
heavier
or r ej ect any or all bids,
and/or any part ther eof.
Public Noti ce

Publi c N oti ce
- - - - - -·
Bo.1rd of

-

Public Notice

Her Favorite Wrap

PROBATE COU RT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

,_,Atls
S'llTISI'Y YOVR NEEDS

rewlts. Money nol refundable .

fntAea B~
What lun to go places '"
th iS smart and striped jackel
II' ~ a wrap with smart shawl

6-L.CJI&amp;Iand

FCM~ncl

7- Yartl Salt
t-- Pubtlc Salt

Probate Judge/C lerk

S4

l wanrea

17.

1 For Sale

18.
19.

l Announcem ent

l For Rent •

20.

21 .
22 .
23.
2&lt; .
25.
26.
27 .
211.
29 .
30.

eFlNANCIAL

2 1- &amp;uslfttlll

52- Ca, TV, Racno Equipment
U - Antiquts

J4-MII( . Mft-cflllndln
.!5- lluildlng Suppuu

M-Pt tstorSalt

Opporfun lh

Strvkft

61 - Farm ECWIJKntnl
62- Win,.,toluy

72- Trudla tor Salt

JI- HGmflfO,s&amp;ll

--

7._Motorcydu
&amp; Accnaor111
17- AutaR....,Ir

Went· Ad Advertlolng

31 . _ _ _ __

...._ ~oadflnto

'· Mottller.J:ltMS•IurUy

32 . _ __ _ __

Tu..,.yWWv ~rtHy2 : .P . M .
ttlt ,.., ....... PVblketkllt

3J. _ _

SunNy- J: M P.M . llrtcllly

eSERVICES

RACINE Lovely 2
story r emode led home.
4 bedrooms , 2 baths ,
living room , family
room , recr eation room ,
new kitc hen, bi g yar d .

$32,500.00 .
Pri ce
Reduced Nic e A ·
fram e buil d ing on Main
POMEROY

1.::.~~~- ~~~.1
Phone
1-(614) · 992-3325
NEW LISTING - Coun·
t ry home of J bedrooms,
full basement, modern
bath , F .A . f urnace,
storm drs. , &amp; windows.
Lar ge lot for a garden or

bedroom

r e modele d

home

la rge

Jlh baths, paneling, car ·
peting, large living with
woodburning f ir eplace.
Full basement, 2 lots

lot .

516,000.00 .
HYSELL RUN RD . Nice 3 bedroom ranch
home, 2 ba t hs, full
basement, on I acre .
Possible loan assump-

lion. $42 ,000.00 .
BUILDING LOTS

neat .

$24.900 .00 .
NEW LI STING -

16

acres Five Points
area, water and electric
available, sm a ll stream
pas ture, some timber.

-Look wilhout obllga·

SIS,OOO .OO

tion

and a

~

and 3 car garages. Only
?R..SOO .

OHIO RIV E R F RONf·
t: D- Nice 7 room f r ame

with 4 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, nat . gas F .A. fur ·

nace,

full basement,
2 porches and
large level 101.
US ACRES - Of t r uck
farm . Large barn for
patio,

never betore lived in
home with a split entry ,
tamil y room , large
living room , separate
dining
room ,
J
bedrooms, 21'J baths,
and
a
w ork s hop .

S :"''Yn,

Phone 742·3092

Lots of wOOds, 12 yr . old
3 bedrooms ,
full

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .

basement, furnace and

Phone 742·3171

wOOdburner. Mall and
school rts.

Misc. Merchandice

Housi11y

.Q

AMWAY dlslrlbutor. Fbr
lhe wonderful products of
Amway call304·773·SO«J.
DEE'S Child Care Cenler
In Mason opening Sep·
lember lsi. Hours·7: 30
a .m .·6:00 p.m . Monday
lhrough Friday. Weekly
rates. 304· m -5302. Call for
reservallons.
Giveaway
ANY PERSON Who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or •"emptio
offer any olher th ing for
sale may place an ad In thiS
column . There will be no
charge to the adverllser.

4

3 kl"ens to a good nome.
Call 256·6639.
4 puppies part collie . Call
256-1525.

Pups 6 wks . old, will. be
small doga, make nice pets.
Call416·9535.
Part Co llie genlle male dog
about 1 yr. old. Call 367·

0&lt;191.
Lovable mate kittens, to
good homes. Litter trained .
614· ~9479 .

TINY, tovlng, male puppy,
looks like part shepherd·
part husky, found ol the
s ide of lhe road . Moving,
con' I keep. 304·675-5774.
FREE to gOOd nome·older,
very small house dog,
female, 304·675·4510.
Lost and Found
Reward $50 for the return
of o blac.k Labrador
Retrelver. lost In the Bob
McCormick Rd . area. Very
friendly dog answers to the
name Mldnlghl. Call 446·
&lt;1959.

6

LOST : 1 pair of glasses,
black case. Lost aboutl :30
Monday. Between Third
St., Middleport a. Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Went
by way of bypass. Reward
$20. 992·2716 .
"'===:;;::s~;;;===
7;y rd Sale
·- - --'-"1=="--- Yard Sate Picnic table,
clothing, and misc. Items.
Apt. 63, Buck Ridge Rd.
Friday a. Salurday . Blo8.
Garage Sale 4 mi. from
HMC Rt. 160. Thurs., Fri. &amp;
Sat. Large clothing 24 112
and size 10· 12 like new.
Ceramics, flowers, wi cker
chair, and lots more.

Yard Sale Household,
automotive, clothing, tools,
a. furniture. Aug. 27 a. 28
6PM Ill dark and 29 lOAM
til dark. 190 Brentwood Dr.
Follow signs .

U.S . Rt. SG Easl
Guysville, Oh.
Phone 614-462-3121
. Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm
Eq~lpment
Dealer
FARM EQUI.PMENT
PARTS/SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
1-No. IHO Diesel Ford
Tractor w/Cab
1-Model 275 Diesel
M.F.
1-Model479 Hay Bind
7·3·Hc
N.H .

home .
A
REAL
BARGAIN $18 ,900.00.
ONE FLOOR PLAN
HOME IN TH E COUN ·
TRY - Has a big lot,
wit h a sh e d and
work s hop .
The 2
bedroom hom e has
bea utifUl knotty pine
walls in the kitc hen adn
living room , and there is
a full base ment with a
woodburner . Reduced to

J&amp;L IUMN

INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
•insulation
•Sioi'm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Rewpt,acdement
n owo
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. "2·2772

L&amp;M
Maintenance
anct ·Demolition
• Building
Maintenance
• Removal of
Old Buildings
Free Estimates
Ph. 247 • 3534
8·6· 1 mo.

J&amp;F

OONTRACTING
•e Excavating
BackhOe
• Seplic Syslems
• Wafer, Sewer a.
Gas Lines
• Dump Truck
• Trencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992·7201
5· 2l·Hc

Cash·n·Corry
1 Roll Each
Brown, Blue,
Green

SI:.IS
.., sq. yd.

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Yard S1te

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes • extensive
remodel·
ing.
• E ·lectrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph .992· 7583

J&amp;c
:fiON
SANITA'
In

SERVICE

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh .
Ph.992·5016
or992· 7505

POOLS

•• Vinyl
Fiberglass

.
• Stainless Steel

C. L KITCHEN
M ason , W · V a.

&amp;Refrltorlfton

11- UpMh....y

.

.-4 ,

TM ............. reMt'Vtl tN rllflt to Mit .. reled e11y ICIS ........
eltfecttMII. ht ,.~ ....... Willi net t. rn,...ll.lt fer lftOI'I ftt.an tftt

'

'

'

. .i:RUTLANQ' FURNITUR~ ,
Ma

St.

742~2211

1

House, 5 rooms, bath. 5
above Appl e Grove, OH .
$18, 500 . 1-61&lt;-247·224.5.

Westerman Church.

9

wanted to Buy

21
Bus iness
Opportunity
WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
nllure and Anllques of all Minimum investment with
kinds, call Kefnelh Swain , max ium return. Income
256· 1967 In the evenings.
Tax Preparation Franchise
ava ilable in Pomeroy &amp; Pl.
Yard Sale 4'16 Oak Dr . Mon·
areas . E x ·
day· Tuesday . 9 to 4. CASH PAID for clean, late Pleasant
model used cars . Smith per ien ced p er sons inClothes and misc.
Buick· Pontiac, GAllipoli s , terested may write : DanTax, Inc .. 33 court St..
Ohio.
Call 416·2282 .
6 Family Yard Sale SaturGallipoli s, OH 45631.
day In Palrlol. Baby Items,
bicycles (all sizes) and WANTED to buy · Junk
cars, scrap melal, and bat· 2:::2_ - 'M
= o"'
ne,_,y"'t"'o_,L00o"'
a"'
n __
clothing.
lerles. Calf 388·9303.
FHA·VA·Conventlal Home
HousehOld Sale. Florence
Loans, Columbus F irst
Bush Rhodes residence, :Ul WE BUY FURNITURE Mortgage Co .• A63 Second
s. 2nd St., Middleport . Fur· We sell furniture . Sagraves Ave., Gallipol is, Oh., «6·
nllure, rugs &amp; household Furniture. «6·4775 .
7172
Items. Thurs., Fri. &amp; sat.
10· ?.
Buying Gold . Paying cash ~23:;==~
P:::ro;;t::es~s:;:io~n~a:;:1=::.
for anylhlng stamped lOK,
s
·
ervtees
Yard .Sale. Boys clothes, 14K. 18K. and dental gold .
oak chairs, 2 motorcycles, Class ring , wedding rings, COMMERCIAL and in·

Yard Sale Thurs. · Sal . 9·?
554
Jackson
Pike,
Gallipolis . Clothes ,
glassware, and misc .

shredder,

watches. Clarks' Jewelry

dustrial

paper
backs ,
plants,
sheets. 2 miles norlh of
Chester, MOdel Log Home .
Aug. 28· 29.

Store, Gallipolis, 446·2691 ,
Pomeroy, 992-2561 .

Phone 446·2909 or 4-16· 7226
after_. p .m.

75 or up Suburban gOOd
cond .. AC, PS , PB. Call446·
2712 afler 5.

Piano tuning a nd repair ,
Love your neighbor tune
your Piano. Bill Ward,

mower,

l eaf

YARD SALE, Aug. 31 ,
Sept. 1 and 2, Monday thru
Wed ., 9 a .m . III dark. Davis
residence, Rose Hill. Baby ,
boys, girls, men and
women's clothing, dishes,
knlck·knacks, odds and en·
ds and many misc. items.
YARD SALE
Sunday
evening, Aug . 30, 5 :311-8:30
p.m . Rose Hill , Pomeroy .

-.
......

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

11

Part·llme, weekend, relief
Housemanager for oroup

home In Bidwell , OH lo
work

with

persons with

menial retardation . A high
school degree is requi r ed ;

more Information call 446·

7807 .

shirts, new homemade bed·

experience in worKing with
persons handicapped with
mental relardation Is

spreads,

moving,

preferred. Send resume to

everything real cheap. Sat.
29, Sun. 30. St. Rl. 124, 3
miles out of Racine at
Bradford' s General Store.

John Mercer, Rt. 1, Box
398, Bidwell, Oh 45614.
Buckeye Community Ser·

810 South Second, Mid·
dleport . Aug. 29· Sept. 4.
Collection salt· peppers,
Silverstone, toys, linens,
bedding,
dishes,
ap·
pi lances,
furniture,
clolhlng, curtains, lots
1

op-

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·

Needed 1 babysmer In my
home. Call afler 6:30p .m .
992·6233. Middleport area .
Part lime babysmer. 10·20
hours per week. Daytime,

tor 3 year old in north end
of Pl. Pleasant . Start Sept
2. Call675-4334.
12

Situations wanted

Dependable ride to and
from Rio Grande, fall
quater. Live in town . Call
Don after 4PM 446·2627 .

rugs,
Will care for elderly In my
home .

surance Co . has offered
services for fire Insurance

15 Years
Experience
Reasonable Rates

coverage In Galfla County
for almost a century.
Farm , home and personal

Foster Lewis, agent . Phone

379·2204.

8

Public Sole
&amp; Auction

AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE
been
celled ?
Lost

IN ·
can ·
your

operator' s License? Phone

992·2103
Neals Aucllon Hogse",
WVA. Rl. 2. Every Sal . 7:00
PM.
(ConsIgnments 1S Schools Instruction
taken). Cwlfl buy furnllureJG~'-u-t"'a~r=~l~e~
sso_n_s__n_o_w
1
Lonnie Neal367·7101 .
available In Gallipolis with
after

school

hours

available tor studefls. Calf
245·9378 .

Henry E . Clela nd , Jr .

992·6191
~

Plano lessons on Lower
River Rd ., for complete
details call Eileen Gordon,
446·2164.

Jc .ln Trusse\1949· 2660
Oortie Turner 992-5692
P oger Turner 992· 569 2

11

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 14" on largest
end. Sl2.SO per ton . Bundled
slab . SlO .~O per ton .
Delfverd to Ohio Pallet co.,
Rock Springs Rd .,
Pomeroy. 992·2689.
Gold, silver , sterling,
jewelry, rtngs, otd coins a.
c~rrency . Ed Burkett Ba.r·
bet SJ10p, Middleport. 992·

3416.

Your Piano rusting in sum·
mer Humidity? Free inspection with tuning . Lane

Daniel s. 742·2951 or 992·
2082 .
INTERIOR &amp; e xterior
painling, call 304·675· 1339.

tlnel route carrier. Phone

us right away and get on
the eligibility list al 992·
2156or992· 2157.

Wanted to Do

Will do house cleaning. Call
256·6095.

3.cl~,_':'""'"m"::"e":s"to,_,r_,s,a,le'-~

NEW

CABIN

home,

or

small

completely

House with acreage for
sale, 3 or 4 bdrs., fully car·

New 3 bdr. house with
garage and full basement
$45,000. Cal1446·0390 .
BY OWNER : 4 bdr ., splitlevel, living room &amp; dining

OVERl-OOKING THI!. OHIO RI,V ER ON FRONT
STREET lNMIDDLI!PORT - Large9 room house
A lotof·postlbllltln. Oniy 115,000.00.
•

I[CiSe REALTY, INC.
'

BILL CHILDS, Mor.
. ·Phont992'6312
Pomerov, Ohio .

&lt;:Rtpeir

_ ,

·

-Transmission

,, .....r I
' •,
Hn.: Mon'.· Fn.
'e.m.· S: 30 p.m.
·'

•

••

" '

•

IUIIliHS
OJI!IOI11!nfty

.

or 1971 MaveriCk cor
liOdY. 1 sa.t ICIYI- and
Ol&lt;~ boltl". Phone otter
6 pm :104-675-39&lt;48.

••

c arpeted, underpinned, set
up on large rental lot, lolls
available, good cond., close
to school, located on Ad·
dlson · Bulaville Rd . Ca ll
367-0455 .
1974 2bdr. mobile home,
14x65, central a i re, new
shag carpet. Call afte r
6PM, 1·742·2041J .

two bedroom , new carpet,
B &amp; s Sales, lnc., 2nd and

Viand Slreel. Pl. Pleasanl,
wv Phone 675·&lt;4424.
USED Mobile Home. !i/6·
2711.
1971 Darien 12 &lt; 65, 3
bedrooms. 1972 crown
Haven, 1_. x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 1&lt;4 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B ,;_. s
Sales, lnc . 2nd and VIand
Sis. Pl. Pleasant, WV.
Phone 67H424.
Mobile home located In
and clean. Phone 304-895·
3967.
1980 12 x 55 all electri c, fur·
nished $7000. Musl sell,
moving out of state . Phone

304·!i/6·2637 '
1976 KIRKWOOD, custom

29 acres, 7 rm . house. all

33

WOOdruff Rd., Allee, Oh .
Call614·299·0890 after S.

Farm tor sale . Call 256·
6560.

3 bedrroms, 2 fireplaces,
family room, Iaroe living

43 almost level acres with
old farm house with new
aluminum siding and new
root.
needs
inside

kitchen, lg . tamlly rm ., 2 building, $9,000. 304·773·
112 baths, located In Tara 5572.
Estates, Club hnuse and
pool privileges, $75,000 BY owner , 3 bedroom .
firm . Kyger Creek School br ick, basement, larger
District. Shown by eppt. corner lot, central air &amp;
only ca11446·9403 .
heat. Phone 304·675· 716-4.
mineral

rites ,

Ernest-

room , 1 full , 2 half baths,
wall ·lo-wall carpet, full
basement, central air,
swimming pool. 1/ 2 acre

lot. CITY SCHOOL S. 446·
1731 afler6PM .
For sale on land contra ct .

House and 2 mobile homes
located at Bulavll le. Will
self separately or together .
Call 446-3&lt;437.
3 bdr., 11/2 balhs, LR with
fireplace. family room with
woodburner,

kitchen and

Form• for Sale

~--'-'=="'-=~­

remodeling, free gas for

dwelling, within walking
distance of Elementary
School. Under Fifty. Con·
lac! Gordon H. Caldwell,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
34
Buolness Building•
BUSINESS location, S09
Main St. Pt. Pleasant, wv
304·882·3356.
35

Lots &amp; Acreape

dining room . City schools.
Call446·2003.

LOTS · Real ni ce camqslle
on Raccoon Creek, all

3 bedroom secllonal. 2 acre
wOOded lot . F am lly room,
wOOdburner, tully equlped
kitchen with Island cooking
cenler. 2 full baths, walk· In
closets. 1550 sq . ft. living
space. On State Rl., Green
School. Call 379·2514.

down, owner will finance,
call after 3 p.m., 256·6413 .

utilities

Life

Estate.

Home

and

MASON, .C bedroom , 2SOO
sq. ft. plus · .,.sement, 1
acre, IO's304·n3-5867 .

SALE OR LEASE. Packing
houH, fully equipped . 2 BEDROOM llouH, full
BUilding can 1110 be COil-'
verted · Into
other basement, on two acres
more or tess, 304-576·2372.
I!Uslnesses. 675·123'4.

'

bdr ., washer &amp; dryer area,

room combination, eat-in

4 rooms, bath, Langsville .
John Sheets 31'&gt; miles south
Middleport Rt. 7.

...
0&amp;

For sale 1976 1lx60
Freedom mobile home, 2

built, 1Ax7Q, washer, dryer,
air conditioner, porch &amp; out

acreage. Property value
$45,250. Life estate value
wanted to do general $8,701.58. Call\192·6747 after
housework, have referen - 4:00p.m.
ces. Call 446·9279, between
lOom and 3pm .
Modular home on Silver
Ridge. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
Mother of two ll"fe girls all electric. One acre with
will beby sit part time or large slorage building.
full time. Prefer ll"le girl . Small mobile home op·
Caii~0696.
tlonat. Edgar Pullins, 985·

..... '

2 bedroom 12x60, 12&gt;&lt;24
front porch, 8 fl . utility
room on back , 1 ac re level
ground, 2nd traile r hookup.
Call 256·1669 or 446·3243.

peted, 2 barns, 379·2123.

.-so.
""--luto tlld Truck,

l ot

Cl!lmp Conley , Extra nice

TV service colts. can 992·
203&lt;1. Also Used color TV for 24 acres, 4 room house with
sate.
300 tt. river frontage . 5 mile
from • Ravenswood Bridge.
Will take care of children Kalf · Victor Wolfe 614-94'1·
2, 3, and 4. Call 675· 2216 after 5 p.m .

•

turn .,

available . Call675·4087 .

fur ·

nlshed, 13900. Call 446·0J&lt;/0.

3589.

'•

12&lt;65 mobil e home , tota l
ele c tri c,

1973 Crown Haven, 1.4x65,
three bedroom, new carpet, 1971 Cameron, 14x64,
two bedroom, new carpet .
1972 Champion , 12x60, two
thor contr11ctual.
bedroom, new carpet. 1976
cameron , 12x60, lwo
Ex pert Tree &amp; Shrub care . bedrooms, bath a. 112, new
Firewood delivered for carpel. 1970 PMC, 12M60,

niture,
appliances ,
clothing, cushions, sweat

vices is an equal
portunity employer.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOM ES
KESSEL 'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SA LES, 4 Ml .
WEST , GALL IPOLIS, RT .
35. PHONE 416·3868 or 446·
7274.

GALLIA Cleaning and
Reni-A·Maid Serv ice Inc.,
Free Esllmales, bonded,
insured, phone 245-9234.
Cleaning by the week, mon·

3 family yard sale. Fur·

Insurance
13
SANDY AND BEAVER In·

Reef Estale - General

photogr aphy .

wards Keyboard. 446·&lt;4372,
Gallipolis.

Room,sboard, and laundry .
Reasonable. 992·6022 .

H e, lfiCJIIilfturs

Mobile Home•
for Sole

32

board i ng

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

lot. F ull basement, 2 cor
garage. Bee&lt;:h Sl.. Mid·
dle port. 992-7209.
acr es more or less. 1 mi le

property coverages are
available to meet In ·
dlvldual needs . Contact

LE f THE RENTER
PAY FOR THIS - 2

7 rooms &amp; bath on double

Yard Sale at McCormick
Re5ldence In Bidwell near
P .O. Tues.• Wed ., &amp; Thurs.

NowSl'lllsq.
~ -

.....

1 acre. $80's. 773·5867 after
S p.m .

Yard Sale Friday a. Satur·
day, 5 m i. past HMC on 160.
Chlldrens a. adults clothes,
coffee table, &amp; etc . Raln
cencels.

Ir~:;::;:~~~~8~..2~7~-1~m~o~.~~=~~~~;:;4~·;17=·H=c~~~~~~~~8~-6~·~1~m~o~.~ terns,
glassware,
much more
.

3 ROLLS
McGeeCupet
CExtra Goodl
eg. 116.95 sq.
i nsta II eel v!l.

GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy Now &amp; Save lH6 Per Yard
,
25 roils carpet ill&lt; stock to pick from.:·
Regular backed, carpet Installed fr.ee
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Rem·
nants $2.50 ·up. Grass carpet S4.99 yd.
Green and Brown. .. ...:
Drive A t,iHie- Save A Lot

Mason, 4 bedroom. 2,500

glider, waffle Iron, t oys,

L-~~~==~~=:=:~~=:~~~~· rd

H-Gtntr•t Heullnt
M-M.H. R.... 1,.

2606.

antiques. clothes slze 18 1
20 and olher slze5 a ll In exc.
cond ., with lots of mise·.

$28 ,900 .00 .

.A S SO C IA"f F.

House tor ••1• In Mid·
d l e po rt . Ow n er wi ll
sa crifice . 992·291 7 or 992·

SIDE WALK YARD SALE
Corner of 3rd and Olive at
Swain's Auction - Barn .
Saturday August 29th, BAM
to4PM. 3 piece dining room
suite with 6 chain, 1 metal

3 family garage sale. Thur·
sday, Friday, Salurday .
August27,28,29. 9til? End
of Roush · Ferrell Dr .,
camp
Conley,
Pt.
Pleasant .
Adult
and
children' s clothtfg, loys,
latest paper bacKs, pat·

Ph. (304) 773·5634

Homeolor Sa le

square feet pi us basement .

Yard Sale at 630 Main
Street, Pt. Pl. August
27,28,29 . Baby clolhes,
basine", liKe new bathlnet·
te,new car seat,s2 carriers,
womens.
boys,
girls
clolhing, books.

PERSONALIZED

31

2 Fomny Yard sale sot.
Aug. 29, 9·4. Clothing,
ladles 10 a. c hlldrens,
household Ite ms, games a.
toya. 910 w . College Ave.,
1325 South ) Rio Grinde.

r
~~====~;;~~8~-1~4-~l~m~o~.~~================~~~~~~~~~~~~
m-~sc~·------

and up

RUBB£R BACK
cl

90

acres with gOOd hunting .

S4

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PRICE RE OUCEO -

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

~t~"~rage .

Moder· ..0. 1 ..n orne.

$6,500.
COUNTRY LAND -

BOGGS

Fully ca rpe t ed and
paneled, centr a l air, full
basement , and nice kit·
chen i s th e r eal way to
descr ibe this 3 bedroom

Yes, We Mount

Asking $55 ,000.00 .

and

and Javne
HOeflich
109 High St ., Pomeroy
6·28· 1 mo .

ENGLISH TUDOR - A

RE ALTOR

packing

Bob, Charlene

nice --4 r oo m , 2 bedroom
home with a 2 car
garage under . Ha s a
lev e l
lot ,
st orag e
building, and is cute at

all utilities. Level with
view of the Ohio River .

-

- Annivers aries
- Passports
- and Now. an im·
pressive, complete line
of wedding and anniver·
sary invitations and accessories. Reasonable
priced, quick service.

$54.900 .00 .

children . Asking $30,000.
SPANISH DESIGN Slucco 3 bedroom home.

on

- Weddings

515.500 00

Street . $17,500.00.
LAND CONTRACT $3500.00 down buy s thi s 5
Owner will financ e at
10% inter est . Call for
mor e details.
ACRES - Appro)(_ 2114
w iftl a 3 bedroom home,
1 '4 mile off St . Rt. 7.

V er y

m / less with minerals,
old farm house, 2 barns ,
former beef cattle farm .

•

Me* It MHNI NIH .... Y, ... Mia lrt K-ttd Oflly Wltl tiM WI . . ,
........ · IS ant chlrwe fer Ml carryl"' lex NUMIIH lit Ctrl et Tftt

IManwe111U0rtt.l. •

Housing
He;1dquarters

216 E . Second Street

LISTING

lot .

AT LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

fl295 .v

D-I XICI Vafl"'
IM-•tectrkal

UptoUWOI'ft••. IIXHysiiiMf'flon , . , , , . , • ., . , , •.• , , , ...... 17 .•

'""'""'

George Hobstetter Jr .
Broker

General

- Portraits

tron1 porc h and a 50&lt;100

NICE PRICE
Real Estate

THE PHOTO
PLACE

living room , equipped
kitch en, utility room , 2
bedrooms, central air,

dishwasher . $03,000.
TRJI.ILER LOT - With

ft-Pivmtling&amp; EJccav•ting

·

the righ to bid at this sale,

and to withdraw the above
vehi cle prior to sa le. Fur t her , th e Farmers Bank
and Savings Co mpany
r eserves the right to re ject
an_y or all b ids submitted.
Further , vehicles a re
sold in th e condit ion th ey
ar e in with no expressed or
implied warranties g iven .

Creek Rd. Call tor into.
FARM 196 acres

Starting

•• - Hom•ln~provemllftts

jA.!!!'!W!!!!!!!!~ II,.) ·.-

The Farmers Ban k and
Savings
Co mp a n y,
Pomeror, Ohio, reserves

Large
nice
kitchen with stove, and

W/ Paddlng
tnllalled

Upto.1sw«•a•.. onedayln..n-. . . ..... . •.... . ... . . ,, , , ... U .II
UptoUWIII"IIs .. . th.-..daylnHrtiOII . • , • . • , .. ,,. , .,,, , . , , ,,, 1&lt;4.11

. ~· : .

1980 Ford P into, Seria l
No. OTlOA 126590

We are now taking orders
for pole beans and half run·
ners. 675-5723.

7

----------,r----------T"----------,----------1

E . Maitl. . . . .
POMEROY , O .
992· 2259
N E W LISTING
SYRACUS E - A huge

bedroom home with a
large uti li ty room ,
dining room, front por ·
ch, ga rage, and appro x.
P 4 ac r es of l ev e l
ground .

CARPET

Rates and Other I nformatlon

(

10 5
Union A ve nu e.
Pomeroy , Oh io, to sel l for
cas h
the
fo llo wing
co llateral, to-wit :

STOLE.N· New
motor
driven Murphy
lawn
mower. Motor black, red
body, Reward. 304·675· 1302.

The Mason County
Regional State Farm
Museum will be closed
saturday and sunday,
August 29 and 30 for
vacatl!lfl.

4
GIYHway
Block half Douchsund dog.
Ca1136H J.46.

Business Services

29, 1981 , al 10:00 a .m .
public sa le will be held

Very nice 1 acre lots, appro&gt;C. . 3 miles from
Route 7 on Leading

'48•

34 .~--

35. _ _ _ _~

OFFICE 742·2003

- ----·

71-Auto Pan,

lS--Lets&amp;Acru•
»-RHIIst•te Wlnttcl
37- RHIIOrl

General

REALTY

Misc . Merchandice

7J-Vans &amp; 4 W. D.

lotSIIe
ll-Farms fw S•lo
M--lusll!fls luUdlats

shopp ln11 sprees

NEW

Notice is hereby
i
that on Saturday , Auousll

LARGE SELECTION OF REMNANTS

1I- A.,toSIGrSIIt

Jl- MobBe Homet

extra cash
ror

Real Estate

cy' s ceramic Shop, Clifton,
wv. 304· 773·5989.

181 23. 26. 28. 3tc

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

e TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

Classified Ads
brln11 you

and Balance.
Buy Now &amp;Save.

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

o -u vastod:
64-Hay &amp; Grlln
65-- SHd&amp; Fertllin r

n - MONy to Le.aa
'JJ-Proltlllonll

Robert E . Buck
Probat e Judge/
Clerk

.

eMERCHANDISE

I
I
I
I
- - - - - 1I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I.
I

(8) 14 , 21. 28. 3tc

BIG TIRE
-- SALE

SI- HoUUhold Goods
11 - HtiPWtntld
12- Situat.d W•nl..:l
I)- Insurance
14-BusiiNII Tra ining
15--- Scttoolslnslndien
It-Radio. TV ,
&amp; Cll Re pair
11-Wa•ttd To Do

Robert E . Buc k

103-15 Qoilb ... ,....,

for Rtnl

Str ee t,

pointed E xe cutri x of . the
estate of Jesse G amer ,
decea;ed, late of 234 Union
Ave nue. Pomeroy , Ohio

&amp; Auctlor~

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Main

appointed Adm ini strator of
the estat e of Roy Gorby ,
dece ased, late of Route No .
1, L angsville, Ohio 45741.

104-lnstanl llant!

RENTALS

Probate

Rut land. Oh io 45775, was

Sq..,.

l or Rent
41-Furnls"-d Rooms
46--Spacetor Rent
47- Wantt4 to Rtnl
41-Equlpment lor R~nl

t--Happy Ads

Walk er ,

AU CRAFT BOOIIS••$2.00 11th
All llaab 111d tllllot-ldd ~
ucb for poollat 1nd b~ndlina.
135-llalb &amp; Clolbos On Pltldt
134-14 Quicl MKhint Qu~b
ll:J.fllh1111 Hamt Quiltin1
132-QuiH Orilitllb
131-Add • Blacli Quilb
I 29-Quicli '1' Easy Tlllllfm
1!8-Enwlope Patchm Quilb
126-Tllrittr Crlfty Flowon
121-Pillow Sllow.otfs
111-CrocMt with
117-E.., llrt of Needlepoint
114-Complttt Allflans
112-Pria Aflh*a
lll·bsr llrt of Htirpin CtO&lt;het
1111-16 litlr Rup
108-lnstanl Mlcrlme
107-instant .S..ill
IIJ6.ins11111 Fabion

~AtNrfmtnh

4-GiVIIW&amp;y

Count y

Court, Ca se No . 23&lt;91. Ja ck

collar - her favorite style.
Crochet of lluffy medrum- we~ght ,
2-ply sport yarn in 2 colors.
Note smart de~gn . Paltern
7347: Sizes 4. 6, 8. 10 incl.
$2.00 lor each paltern Add
50! each paltern lor postage
and handlin g Send to:
Alite lllooU
.. 4 "'
'
Needlecr1ft Dopl 0
The Daily Sentinel
1101 163, Old Ch- S._,, Now
YR. NY 10113. Print' N1me,
Address, Zip, Plltom Numbof
-1982 Neodle&lt;11ft C.tafoc; 3
free palterns inside. 170 best
jackets. dolls, quilts. more'
Kn rt. Crochet, Embroider. $1.50

41 - HOUIIstOf lltnl
42-Mobllt Homes

J-Annovn,tmt nls

PUBLIC NOTICE

M eig s

18) 28 , 19 ) 4, 11 , 3tc

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
'l- In Mtmorlam

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Aug . 10, 1981. in the

On August 24, 1981, in the
M ei gs Coun t y Probate
Cour t. Case No. 23522,
Ge r a ldine Sm i th , 1603
Washington Ave., Pa rk er s·

45769 .

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St .. Pomerqy, 0., 45769

1-cari!OfThllnk s

Public Notice

burg. WV 26101 , was ap

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

J ES SE

OF FIOUCIAR Y

INFORMATION

Write your own ad and order by ma i l w ith thi s
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you oet

OF

APPOINTM E NT

M ar y Hobstett er,
Cle rk
Board of
M ei gs County
Commiss ioner s

18 1 21. 28. 2tc

~ TATE

f..

GAINER, DECEAS E D
Case No . 23522
NOTICE OF

Public Notice

992·2156

675-1333

M eigs county Audito..Cie r k o l Meigs Co. Budget Commission

lto5p.m.

AD CALL

In Gall ia County

51,750.00

17,460.00
17,5S4.SO
2,605.50
l,S68.50

PL ~ C E_ AN

ATT ENTION Come In and
register tor our Squirrel
Tall Contest. Longest gray
toll w ins 22 rifle. Lonoest
red tall wins 22 rifle. Spring
Valley Tradlilg co., Spring
Valley Plaza, 446-1025.
586 S a. W newnt L frame
now In stock. Spring Valley
Tr ading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, ~8025. •

895-Letart
937- Buttalo

f$,1,00

30%

TWPS.
Bedford

an- New Haven

560,000.00
45,000.00·

3
Anft041nc-ents
' SPECIAL . SALES New
never been lhot, display
moelell-lalesman samples.
Special price on th is group
Bear Whlleian Hunter,
S69.14. Bear L TO F'Oior
$129.95 . Brown Bear,
SU9.95. Bear Mint Mag,
S-49.95. KOdtek speucal,
$" .95 . Spring Valley
Trading co., Spring Valley
Plaza, ~1025.

94.9- Rildne

742- Rulland

F ollowing is a comple te b reak dow n :

Cancer clinic to be held
Meigs County women wishing to
· take advantage of a free cancer
· · clinic being held on Sept. 10 by the
Meigs Unit of the American Cancer
Society s h ould r e gister im·
mediately.
The clinic will include free pap
a nd breast tests a nd reg_istration can

· Cla11si{ied Pages cover the
fr!llowing telephone exchanges • ••

t ionments of local Government money to th e subdiVISIOns ot M e1gs
County.

the 20th week of pregnancy. A
woman who fulfills the criteria for

ANSWER: Toxemia, as the tenn
is used in pregnancy, has been applied to a wide variety of disorders

Wells announce birth

available,

$300.

2 acres on Floyd · Clark Rd.
close to Rt. 160, $4,000.
Phone 446·0390.
Lois by Owner . 1 114 A lOS
acres, level, rural water,

city schools, 10 per cent
down. Ca ll379·2196.
Apartment tor sale, land
contiact 9%, 4 units, 2 bdr.
each . Tolal rent S140 ..
$49,000. Call ~3937.
Lot SOx120wllh drilled well .
'h down &amp; balance land

contract 247·21141 otter 7
p.m .
Acreage suitable for house
or house traller. Water
avollable. Free gas. Con·
tact Gordon H. Caldwell ,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
BY owner, 3 aportrTtent
house on opprox. 1 acre.
Live In one, rent others to
make your payment. t:an
be .converted stnvle nome.
City wa111r, will constder
tend contract. 67.5-1183. 9·5
p .m .
20 ACRES on black .top
road, llmbr!r. Phone l·n•·
263-8322 or 263·2669. · ·

'

�Pa e-8-The Dall Sentinel

rt Ohio

44
Apartmemt
CB,TV, Radio
J5
Lots&amp;Acrqp
52
for Ronl
Equipment
7 ACRES of KanaWha
River land, 1-614-243-1322
REGENCY APT. INC. 2 Fender Super twin amor 1-6U-2d3-2669.
bedroom, kitchen fu r- Pil ler With external
nished, carpeted, bills par- speaker cabinet, Peavey
tially paid. 1200. mo. Ex- monitor system . Call 388cellent neighborhOOd, 675- 11436.
6722 or 675-5104.
41

Hou••• for Rent

NOW RENTING : Senior
citizens and handucapped
apt. community opening.
Featuring 1 bedroom · unfurnished with wall to wall
3 bdr. house in town nice carpeting, wall·te• walls,
location, no pets, dep. bull! In bookcase, appliances, smoke detector$,
required. Call446·2..o.l.
a ir conditioned, private
patio, storage facilities,
9rm ., 2 bath home In single story with no stairs
GalliPOlis. Located near to climb, private entrances
city schools &amp; park front . with undlvldual laundry
Call446·7265 or 446-1)6,j.j_
takllllles on premises with
re-creation and meeting
Profession a 1
Unfurnished 6 room home, rooms .
manager
on
1 112 bath, gas furnace, resident
storm windows, garage, premises . Slonewoods Apadults only, no pels, dep . ts., Rl. 7, MiddlePOrt. For
req. Personal and financial rental Information phone
ret . required. Kall446-25-13. 614·1143-23-41.
Small furnished house In
the city, adults only. Call
446-0338.

Unfurnished

house.

6

2 bedroom apartment on

Spring Ave, Pomeroy . Par·

rooms. NeighborhOOd Rd .•
$2~.
Call 446· 4416 after lially furnished. $170 you
pay utilities. Call 992-2288
7PM.
afler6p.m .
S rm . house on river close
to town, private, S250 mo.
plus sec. dep. &amp; ref . Call
446-4922 .

roomss &amp; bath. No inside
pets. Deposit required . 992-

4

Apartments. 615·5548 .

~-

675-5571 .

3090.

2618 Madison Avenue, Pt.
Pl . S275 per month plus
utilities and deposit. No
drinking or indoor pets. Ph·
bne 304·863·5995 . No collect
calls please.
electric

home

with

garage and
fulls lze
basement. $300 month . 615·
3217
4 room house, Neal Road,

Pt. Pleasant . 675·6832 after
5pm .
Mobile Homes
lor Rent

42

Part . furn. , 2 bdr . trailer.
Located on 11&gt;0. $150 mo.
plus utilities, $100 dep . Call
388·8275.
2 bdr., furnished

tra i ler,

gas and water turn .• $225.
per mo., $100 dep., no pets.
Call 446-4745 or 446· 1630.
12x60 mobile home at Rod·

ney . Call388-8368 .
2 bdr . mobile home clean,
complete
furn .,
city
utilities, Centenary , $180.
Ca II 446-0939.
3 trailers adults only,
Riverview, air cond . Call

446·6642 .
2

bdr.,

all

Remington Thunderbolt 22
LR Ammo, S1.39 per box,
$13.00 per carton. Spring
Valley Trading Co. Spring
Valley Plaza. 446·8025.
Eclipse 12 ga . game loads
16-shot, 20 shells per box,
$3.95 box . Spring Valley
Traind Co., Spring Valley
Plaza. 446·8025.
Crossman B· B's ' Milk Carton' box of 1500 - Special
$1 .09 box. Spring Valley

Compound Bow Special
PSE suzzler laminated lim ·
bs, magnesium hl!lndle, 50

3

bdr .,

Middleport, Rl . 7.

sitting on nice lot, ready to
move into. Phone 3041·576·

271 1.
2 bedroom tlailer, fur ·
nished, free water and gar·
den. 2 miles out of Pt.

Pleasant. 675-2894 .
2 !IEDROOM noose trailer.
S1So. a month plus deposit
8. utilities, 304·675· 4088.
TWO bedroom trailer, fur ·
nished, lf• mile our Sandhill
Rd. air conditioned, carpet,

washer and dryer. $200. a
month, $100. deposit. 304·
675·2195.
2 TRAILERS for rent. 2
bedroom furnished . 3

bedroom

furnished .

Gallipolis Ferry , WV 304·
675-6851.
Apartmemt
lor Rent

Furnished, 2 bdr. apart·
ment, deposit &amp; references

required, adults only. pay
electric only . 992·3647 .
3 room furnished apt.
Utilities paid, adults only,
$185.00 per month, 560.00
dePOSit . 94 Locust St.,
Gallipolis. 446-1340 or 446·
3870.

camper

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.

SWIMMING
POOLS :
PRE - SEASON SALE:
$999 .00 INSTALLED!!!
Above ground POOl COM·
PLETELY INSTALLED

TRAILER space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
Old Y, Pt. Pleasant, 6753248.
One tr ailer space. Hen·
derson Trailer Court. 675-

2946.
R. D. Mobile Home Park ,
Rt. 33 between Rt. 2 &amp; Cottageville, wv . Lots tor sale
or rent.

New park with

starting at $999.00. Price includes pobl, deck., fence,
filter,
liner , and in ·
stallation under normal
ground condition . Free
shop at home service. Call

1·800-624·8511.
EASY credit available now
to purchase furniture,
televisions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave., 675· 1773.
Yellow Freestone canning

peaches. Now thru Sept . 20.
Any quantity available.
Retail &amp; wholesale . Bob' s

47

Wanted to Rent

Responsible
married
couple wants to rent 2 to 3
bdr. home. Preferably in

Country . Call 446· 4338.

...................-.
o

51

~

o-'

' ' .I -"

0 • I 0-1 •

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa,

chair,

rocker,

ot-

chair and loveseat, $275.

Sofas and chaurs priced
from S285. to S795 . Tables,
S38 and up to $109 . Hide-a beds,$340., queen size, S380.
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
pc. difettes from $79., to
$385. 7 pc., $189 . and up.

Market, Mason. Phone 7735721. Open dally 11119 p .m .
Round oak table &amp; 6 chairs.

Call992-3647 .

pine finish. Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak, $675 .,

Bassett Cherry, $795. Bunk
bed complete with mat·

tresses, $250. and up to
$350. Captain' s beds, S275.
complete. Baby beds. $99 .
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, S58 .• firm, $68 .
-4 dr. chests,

$42 . Bed frames, S20.and
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350., dinette chairs $20.

and $25. Gas or electric
ranges, S295. Orthopedic
with chair, $165 ., baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20, $25, &amp; $30.
Used,
Ranges ,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.

Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
lhru Fri., 9am to 5pm, Sat.
446-0322
GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES - washers,
ranges .

homes ,

cabins ,

buildings or commercial
bulldlngs.Lannes William·
son Pallets, Southside, WV .
Phone 304-675·2727. Phone
304·675·2098 .

2845 ·

a
Q---~--k-...-L.------l
r~=;.~~~~~~==r:==~;~~~==1

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
TERY - KENNEL.
black Chow puppies,
1. CFA Himalayan,

HILLCREST

refrigerators,

Skaggs · Appliances. 1918 Eastern
Ave., 446-7398.

ff

Farm Equipment

Gehl lnsulage wagon, $500.
Grain drill , $300 . Call 4467322 .

Pets tor Sale

56

Gravely tractor &amp; hog,
rebuilt motor. Phone 4463254.

CAT ·
AKC
Sept.
Per·

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at

Athens, Ohio. $3,000 .00
each . Phone 1-304-422-2781.
Minneapolis Moline tractor

with Sherman backhoe and
loader . S800. 667-3974.

KENNEL

BoardIng all breeds, clean
indoor -outdoor facilities.

GRAVELY tractor With attachments, 304·576-2372.

Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans . Call 446-7795 .

Jeanie' s Pel Shop 1 mile
West of Gallipolis on Rt.
141. Open Monday thru Sat.
9·5. Call 446-7920.

63

Livestock

3 Hereford cows &amp; calves.

247·2841 after 7 p.m.
AKC Registered Doberman

pups. 3 months old. Red
and rust. $150.00 Call 446·
1562.

registered
Yorkshire Hog.

6896.

For sale 4 months old, AKC

TENNESEE
Walking
Mare, 304-675·2098.

registered Cocker Spaniel.

Call 446·7903or 446-2134 .

64

puppies,

Pomerania

parrots and other birds.
Call286·1429.

Fresh eggs and grain feed.

HAY for sale, 304-675-2254

black -and-tan coon

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

Fish Tank and Pet Shop

71

2413 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasant. 675-2063. Special

Air conditioner. 1 year old,
Never been used. $175. 992·

pups 304·895-3958.

3379.

3 AKC Doberman puppies,
6 weeks old, tails bobbed,

NEED seiJeral items of fur·
niture,
appl i ances ,
televisions. Big discounts
for quanity purchase .
Village Furniture 2605

wormed, claws removed,
ex guard and shbw qualify .
Black and rust . $150. 304-

an

new

BIG discounts for cash and
c:arrv at VIllage Furniture
2605 Jackson A\lenue, 675·

wormed, 304-773-5125 .

Boston Terrier,

extra

1974

Olds.

98

12

weeks old, female, shots &amp;

57

1773.
Compressors,

new

Ingersoll· Rand 5 hp, single
and 3 phase, truck load
sale. From $1,245.00. Call
collect 304· 766-6244.
Green Machine . Model
«100. Attachments : cord ,
weed. and grass trimmer,
brush blade and saw blade .

Plus
$300.

attachment
675·2979.

tools .

General

Electric

used

1976 Mustang. Very gOOd
no oil . 30 m.p.g.
$2,500 firm . Leonard Bass,
Syracuse, 992·5006.
cond. Uses

Musical
Instruments

For sale trumpet in good

MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV . Phone 6751574 or 675-2881.

cond . Call 446-3175.
Trumpet, $175.00. Call 388·
9689 alter 4:00.
58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

formation .

PICK
YOUR
OWN
Tomatoes $6.00 a bushel .

1973 Pinto Runabout, new

New patch half runners,

paint, excellent condition.
675·1969 .

$6.00 bushel. Raynor Peach
Orchard, 5 miles below
Gallipolis on Rl . 7. 446-4807 .

dryer. 675-2415.

1979 CUTLASS Supreme,
PS, PB, air, AM·8·track,
velour Interior. 304-675·6643
after 5:00.

White half runner beans,

3 KEG. draft beer cooler,
304· 773-9527 .
BABY crib, balhinette

a.

$6.00 bu . Pick yoor own,
$10.00 already picked.
Phone 256· 1376.

highchair, phone 304·675·
5569.

Winter potatoes, canning
tomatoes, peppers. Charles
R. Harris, Portland, Ohio.

KOEHLER Whealllghts,
leather leads, leather

843·2693.

collars

59

with

free

brass

1978 TRANS-AM, T·Top,
priced to sell, will conSider
trade, low mileage, sharp.
Phone 675-2247 or 675-5995.
1971 SUPER Beetle, gOOd
condition, $1100. 304-8822019 or 882·2326.

For Sale or Trade

nameplate. Breaking scents , train i ng
scents, 73 DODGE Polara, good
dogteed.
Phone
304-675· motor, new slicker, for sale
1969 Volkswagen Beetle.
Delux 6 rm . house, gOOd
for parts, phone 304·458- 304-576·2578.
location. Call 675·5104 or Case Knlves-20% ott all 2098 .
1524
675-5386.
: :·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
case knl ves. Sprl ng valley 1
Trading Co., Spring Valley
1975 Camero, 350 engine, 3
Plaza,446-8025.
They'll Do It Every Time
speed, new tires, no rust,
Furnished apts . 3 bdr.,
runs good. 12000 . . 304-895S220., water paid, children
3654.
acceptable. Call 446-4416 Green couch, good cond.,
$30. Call 446·4885.
alter 7PM.
1970 Maverick, 6 cyl, standard shift, 2 extra studded
Full size couch and chair,
First floor apt. partially
snow !Ires. $400. 675-5103.
plaid. Call 446·5118 or no
furnished, ref. required.
ans«6-6677
.
Call at d31 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis.
1973 PONTIAC Venturi hat·
chback, very good conHolpolnt
stove
and
dillon, a bargain at 1695.
refrlgator. 2 single beds, 2
Apartment &amp; house for
304-675--1656.
dressers,
stereo,
girls
bike,
rent. Coontry Store lor
kitchen table, and stroller.
lease. Call245-9315.
992·7805.
1m CHRYSLER Cordoba,
excellent
condition, air,
2 bdr. apartment unturn.,
power steering, power
OINNETTE set, table with
In Crown City, Ohio. Call
brakn, electric HBtl &amp;
6 chairs, coii3Ci4-675-4014.
256-6474.
windOWS, tilt wheel; 13,000.
304-67.5-2474. 304·576-2490 af2 bdr. upstairs apt.,
ter 5.
52
CB, TV, RadiO
utlllfln paid. Adults and no
Equipment
pets. Cell.u.s--1457.
1971 MAVERICK,Iltcellent
LIKE
NEWI
Stereo
work car, 1350. :IOA-675-:149.
system,
Sansul
AM·FM
1 INdo-~ apts. available · receiver, 85 wam per chanott Rlwrtlde Apts, Equal nel, 2 iuc speakers, IOwans
1978 HONDA Civic', brown,
. = r n l t y . H-lng. Call per chanl)fl, fllller tumgood condition, t2.3DO. 304675-3711-.
table, microphone and
albums. Great for home or
1 &amp; 2 bed.--n furnished night club. Ltll tnan half
78 FORD Fairmont, 11C10C1
apartmtn". P92-541 or 992· price, SB50.00. call 30H73·
condition, good mileage,
"14 or 112·2W.
5667.
reasonable, 304-882·3145 •.

r.::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::.JL=

Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola,

K Tree Trimming,

or small"

we

ditions,
tow them all! 2332 Eastern remodeling,

1976 Olds 98 . 304·773·5013 .

garages .
and cement

1976 Fleetwlng truck cam · 83
Excavating
per. 11 fl., self-contained,
e&gt;Cc. cond. Information 614· Back Hoe &amp; Dllcher Ser·
742·2586.
vice, water lines, ditches,

many

extras, good cond. $2,000.
Will trl!lde for smaller car.

septic

949·2025.

systems,

tooters.

Star travel trl!liler, self con·

Dozer. loaded, and ditcher

talned, exc. cond . Price
reduced . Phone 992·29d3.
Located at Royal Oak
Park.

work .

Basements,

Hatfield,
742·2903.

CAMPER, 20 fl., self con ·
tained, call 304-675-2453 af·
ter 5.

wear a

collal'!

WHY 50 GLUM!'

WHERE IS Tt&gt;'\T

GOING OUT 10

I'QI?C/!flfl.

)OUNG MAN WHO
IN51STEI' WE
&lt;SO OUT, DESPITE

171NNEI&lt;. lt:lHI&lt;SHT

WA9 YOI'lR
I~A,

"'5COVEREC'
lOU WERE

TRY
ME .

TO 1&lt;1 5 5
NOT EVE N

ON THE

INlO THE

CH/!EK/

~P/flr/6
SCE~, 11 5JS~!

MY COLC' SORE
.ANC' ALL?

REMEM8ERr

HIWIIM ... HE
(7117N ' T EVEN

MORE UKE A
IT'S GETTING
!i'AIJ81T !'17
LATE ... I 'C'
S AYl ALL
BETTER CALL
THOSE c&gt;t.lfL!N'5_1'~'- IT A N&lt;S HT.

THAT WAS
NFOREI

lan-

Rutland,
.

Ohio.

EDWARD' S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing

in septic tank. 675· 1234.
1977 18 ft. Nomad travel
trailer, sleeps 6, self contained, awning, TV antenna, very gOOd condition.
phone 304-675-6419.

STREET

10,aa

446-2171,

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen

Scissors. Fabric
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

Shop,

Mark's Appliance Service.
Specializing In Frigidaire
pr"!!ucls. Backed by ex ·
perlence. 667 ·332l . Save
this ad.
JACK' S REF!IIGERATIO·
N: air tondillon servlce,
commercial, Industrial.
P""!"' 8p2:2079 ,

WOODSHOP • Cabinets,
Pl~nlc . .tables,
por~h
swl~. moet wood prod\ic•
"· 101 court 51., Galllpol,s.
Caii416-W2._
.'I .
·,
WEA TH E'RPIL.L CON CREl:E •· queii.V and iser·
vice, cell ~75:.1 . ..-'

1979 _FORD F150 pickup,
automatic, P ;S., Poelttve
traction, AM·FM, l·track,
29,1100 miles, excellent con·
dillon, call after 6:00, 304895-3371.

'

PAl P(tlP(G • l_ntet;lor ahd
13
Y~noA4W.D.
plumbing,
1 e ·, xterlor,
75 ~-.,heel drive, In•·· I'Oollrll!• lOme romCJC!elfRQ.
ternatlonel Scout, 11.500. · ,c 20 V~ el!JI, C:lll-- -.'652·
Ceii256-U27.
•
'
,
'
~r SWt~J II'S ~Ired
at IE!I)P.Ire • ~uriolture, ec

JIM'S : DEPENDABLE
. water delivery c 11 256 .
.
- a
9368 .anyt1me.
--------NOW HAUL,ING housecoat
&amp; llme~tone· for'df;lvew~ys.
Call tor ~stim~tes .367· 7101

UIO ltJ •

ro IDle

C1J C'MON ALONG

CIJ HI!RITAG! SING!RS
(1)

VI! ALLENATLAAGE
HT GALlERY

1 UIG

STAR

au..thoet : BIIICoaby. Gueatt:
Arethe Frenklll\. Suaan Seint
Jamea. (IOmina.)

CIJ ANOn.R LIFE

(]) AfTER B!NNY
.(]) CU LATE MOVIE 'THE
• NIGHT STALKER: The Knightly
MLirde{l' Kolchak ktvestlgates
1 ' ' ' ' " of murdera. all done
with weapon a from medieval
tlm... (RifMII) 'Stfngray ' 1878
Start : Chrlatopher Mitchum,
Sharry Jackaon. Two crlmlnala
1t11t1 monaygalnadfrom a drug
deal in an unattended car; when
they return to claim the ceeh,
they eea two y011ng man driving
ll'te car away. (Reput; :z rwa.)

CJai M.A.S.H.

()I) MOVIe 'Cur11 of the Fly '
11i~ll5 Gaorae Balcer, carole
Qrey . 2) 'Creature From·tha
Haunted See· I ae 1 Anthony

tiii·MC---

a,:IO

Cll C'MON AI.ONG
(]) KENTIICKYBLUEORAIII'
IICUtllfAMILYP!InVAL
IBJIATE PAOli
illl
0:00 C1J (I) IATURDAY IIICIIfT
AT THI MOVIES 'lolurdor In

Jonee -

Mor... nd. (2 two., 30 mlfto.)

...c
!Ill•

!!!~.... .~xcel""' concl.

'

m1. •

•• •

· ·

~ •w SATURDAY NIGHT

1

D

I'OO'I"aAU.tto.etonOHerevd
~CDIIbO,I

(])
MOVII •(MYITEIIY)
••
•._Ciootr"
,_

ltooloborgand I he Mere hall

(Ropeol; 70

1)1) . . .NIUCII

.

IOLID OOLO Holi '

-

tTAUNER
I] I

porloml

-

to • Movie Wlt~llakel •nd

--·101'"'•-.

R

I Bo•124, Pt. PteaS.ihtV.:.J:
61H154.
•
• '

' ----~------:_--~l_

ortlka~ l 'MIItd aa he W81GMI I

•••olal tolliwl Qafta

--flotllr-uthoy

••

,

.,

tMo
-l

... "'' OO"fHY "llil ll•ck
~·

tor u.e Ht'at ttwll I rid

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

ftr.~=lllAIID~.
Gt'IAIIDI1111' I' IWUAM •
11ttderpald ••• ltrtlll.aftt Wall

Shetle r.
12:30 • ())MOVIE · (HORROR} •
"Tarrorln the We• Muset.~m''
1D73
(IJ) IIOVI! -(DRAMA) •• ''This
Property 11 Condemned''

1018
(Ill. MOYIE -(MYSTERY) ••
"lnwlalble Terror" 1M3
·

1:00

([1. MOVIE -(WESTERN)
... .,. "3:10To Yuma " 1857

1IJ ClUB 700 (SPANISH)
(j) TO TEU THII! TRUTH

1: 11 (]) MOYI! ·(COMEDY) ••
"Grand Theft Auto'' 1877

2'00 C1J WESTBROOK HOSPITAL
2:05

9.ABCNEWS
ATLANTA BRAVES 8ASEBALLREPLAYAtlanta
Bravasva Montreal Expo&amp;

CIJ

I

.V-.loy'o l-'
•

1 ,

61~1M1tl t

,r

lor THOMAS JOSII'H
ACROSS
39 Homesteader
1 After
40 Hairdo
vivi or bi
DOWN
5 Mitigates
1 Muffler
II Colwnbian
2 Atelier item
city
3 Speak badly
4 Spanish km
t2 Comport

oneself

5 Inane

13 Gunther
subject

6 One of
Jughead's

14 Becam e trite
crowd
IS Cravat fabric 7 Gotcha!
16 Road hazard 8 Be over17 Swnatran ape wrought
18 Florid; fancy 9 Actor,
to Hanoi
- Sloane

holiday

Ye!i tf' rday's Amwer

19 Skin growths 2fi Ca lling
22 Celestial body 28 Pooh 's
2.1 Kingly
creator
24 FoWllain
favorite

l9 Spanish title

30 Get go ing

tO Tranquil Z5 Fonner
16 Willis
Japanese
or Donna
militarist

35 Ch ild of
" Hi and Lois"
36 Health haunt

21 Require
22 Speck
23 Afford
!4 Chimney
problem
25 Soap-frame
bar
2&amp; - 's age
27 " - Sweet
It Is"
28 Derangement
31 Yoko 32 Ulster underground
group
'&lt;abbr.)
:13 Comprehend b+-1f-~
34 Encircle
36 On the way
:17 Incomplete
38 Scenario

""""+-+-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:

()

11

A ~UrT you MIISHT
FIN!:' IN A C'IET
FOrt AN6EL.5.

One leller simply stands for anothe r. In thi s s ample A 11
three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc . Singl e letters
the length and formation of the words are ali
hmta. Each day the code letten are differen t.
CRVPTOQUOTES

WXRQR ' N

IECSDF

I I II)"
(~biOIOW)

VOCAl DOUSE MARKUP

FLAXEN

Antwer: What cover girls often mosiJy areUNCOYERE

AXYDI. BAAXR
I. ONGFELLOW

used for the
a~ostrophet,

DY

~--,_: "(I

••• •owla1 How doe a he
Thll

([) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
12:05 (I) MASTERS WATER SKI
TOURNAMENT Invitational
weterakicompal ition , taped at
Ca llawey Gardens in Pine
~ounta i n , Georgia ; hosted by
Bol:l Neal and Liz Allen

rl I

""

.e:IO Ilbelt'"-A•
-··"WhltiHI·•IftantOYte

•;(!p!iol,s !!ry

AND AOLL, PART VI

12""' eCJJIBJ NI!WS

r1 I I I

I I (

TiWLOVIIOAT
C1liiiNI'L-. .A -

ICTY · -

PENPERGRASS

(JI). THE ROOTS OF ROCK

.=,.,"=-!,.-"' - - ..

1111•
CD MOYII ·(DRAMA) n•
"1110

~ PRIDAYI Gua111: DIYid

Guest a:Janialan ,Billy Preston.
(Repeat; 90 mine.)
(J) 700CLUB
([) BLUE JEA~ NETWORK
PRESENTS:
TEDDY

JY.TET

G~

11.-oti (]) ---A~ POOTULL
Ta•p• lay lucoanaara va

LIV! Hoat · G florge Carlin .

itfltJ~ ID~ ~ TMATSCRAIIBLEO WORD GAME
~ \Y ~~·
byHennAmoldendBoblee

DIOMt WMWick . Gold record

~m.m. ..."... flloclrS ' . '' . . • ' .tfc. Fr.i ·..,lf\'lltn. -11 ,MOWREYS ·upnotsta.

- ·. .itli
y..n~ltld. Cell '47·

11,:10

cw•••a

BING'S'CONCRElE CON: ·
· TRIST-ATE
STiiUCTION • s-tilllllntJ
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
tn · ~reiW drl-ey.; 11d3 ,Sec. Ave., CletiiPOiis. ,
sl'dewelks, . "' paflo, «6-7133or«6-1133. '
.

.

MOYII! ·(COM!DY) •• ~
"'TM ltu.a Brothera" 1880
(JJ MY8TI!RYI 'Sergeant
Cribb : Swing. Swing Together'
Elfrida College in 1889
demand• the hiOheet stan ·
dardtolbehevtortrom ita young
tadlaa . When Harriet Shaw
break a thole rultl to taka a
midnight dip In the Th1m11, aha
become a a wltntle to murder.
Oied · Captloned ; U.S.A.)
TUIR_tl
11:01

Bofto, L.. Put'oel. ·
Cll U.l. WOMEN'IILIT!

ml~tt.)

&lt;D

H!RIT AGE SINGERS

MAlo ctty• 1878 Stere: lonny

Stelilbergandthe Marahall
TUOICer · Band. (Aep4tet; 70

11:10 Cll.

10:00 ~ TQ_W!!KEND NEWS
11,00
eC1lffiilll. NEWS

_.,GAMe-

Anollofod I!YTod KOfiPOI .
"'~' ~ IIOIIIAGUY·
i.AITOI' TltWWILD
11,00
NIWI IIIGHTLINE
AnciiOtodbyTadKOfiPOI.
,_AYacl.oata: Dowkl

till.

~...~~Jr~~lllpolla,OH,, , l7

LoW

(ID GOLDIN AQI OF' TELIVtIION 'Marty ' Paddy
Chayefaky "aaward · wlnning
ecrlptdtlll with a Bronx
butcher who t-tea given up all
hope ol finding loY a, but
tomehowatumble"uponlt .Rod
Steiger end Nancy Mercnand
ttar In thla priglnal tel.,lay .

(]) MOYI! ·(MYITIRYI*'
"Fro1:en Oltoll" 1Ma

Atlant. ll'lloOnl

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367-7471 or
¥7-0591 .
. .
·~--~-'----

.

lands a big modelinli aaeign·
ment In Lot Angetea, but hat
second thou(l/'ta when tt.a
lee rna It calla for nudlt~: and
Elizat»..h uaee aH her feminine
wll .. to win ttle affac:tlonl ol e
guy who only llkee her lor her
intellect. (Repeal: 80 mine .)
(&lt;;lolld·Ceptlonld: U.S.A.)
•([li!N08Enosplungaalhe
entire Me fro SQutd In 'hot
water' when he lnaiata on
erreatlng the wile of the Deputy
Chlel of Police . (Repaet; eo
mina.)

TH!TONIOHTIHOW

Belly

80 YOU WA.NNA 1M A

Cl) I!IQHT 18 ENOUGH Nancy

UPDAT!Nf:WS

Cll'bOftl:

(!) BARBARA MAN-

DR!LL AND THE IIANOR!ll
SISTERS The M1ndrell8latert
will be joined by g•e•t alert
Dottle weat end Jim Stafford
{Repeat ; 80 mint.)

U!'!)AT! NEWS
C1l rn •
CJal

11:21
11:30

Electrical, Air Condition,
Healing, Hot water tanks .
Service all makes. Phone
379-2196. Charles Kiesling.

AUCI. Je, 1881

()) IIOYII! ·(DRAMA) ••••
"Gocttather, Pert:J" 1874

trical maintainance, aiso

on call. Ph.
Gallipolis .

~

NNI .

plete rewir ing, commercial
or residential, and elec-

. IS. ' General Hauling

132.5.

'Sunael Song: The Unlurrowttd
Field"lewla Granic Qlbbon ·s
Scottish novel deal a with a
young girl growing up ee the
world movea lowarda the flrat
bel war.

noo ~ •

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Streetanalyet, whowantetobe
waellhy, and a ri ch ollant who
wanUI to live modeatly ; end e
phyaiclan who wantato reatore
h1a standing in the medica l
world by proving he can bring
ba cktl"'e dead, leatunnedwhen
hia firat aubiec t turne out to be
hia daughter. (RIIfleal ; eo
mlna.)
(JJ NATIONAl GEOGRAPHIC
'Myaterlea ol the Mind ' Thla
program del'lealntoaome ot the
Intriguing reaeerch being done
to unlock the ucreta ofhowthe
brain functlona .
(IIJ MOYIE w(MUSICAL) ••
"Down
Araenune
Way"
tl40

4:00 ~700 CLUB
&amp;,20
RATPATROL
&amp;:30
ANOTH!R LFE

I])) MASTERPIECE TliEATRE

Fuller Electri c Co. Com ·

Chevarie! 112 T
Home
pickup, 6 cyt., aufo., 53,000 81
Improvements
miles, S2,875. Call446·7322.
FOR BEST In Carpel
1976 Chevy Luv. $400. or Cleaning - Call Smeltzer's
parts. 992-2771.
Sleamway. Call 614·4462096 .
1972 Chevy Pickup. Short
bed . 247-3824.
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446-4208
1968 GMC Tractor Semi,
cab over, 238 Datroll diesel,
10speed Road Ranger tran- JIM MARCUM Roofung
smission. 985-J5.17.d _
SPQUIIng and siding . 30
SURPLUS JEEPS, Cars, years experience. Free
trucks Car·lnY. valueS2143. estimates. Remodeling .
sold for SlCIO. For In- Call :188-9857.
formation on purchasing
similar bargains, call. 602- STUCCO PLASTERING ·
941·1014 Ext. 4796. Phone textured ceilings, com·
call refundable.
mercia! and residential,
free estimates. Call ~1979 FORO long bed, 6 cyl. 1182.
automatic, ;20,000 miles,
$4,500. Excellent cOndition. SANDE .RS
CON ·
Call 30H75-48ol8 before 4 TRA~TI _NG, Carpentry
p .m.
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping',_4-16-2787.
1970 Ford pickup with topper, runs good. S5SO. 675-

Evening television listings---------

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . Larry Siden·
Stricker. 675· 5580.

1978

.. , ··

If IP.I're a puppi.j, you
should

dscaping, gas, electric, and
Wl!lter lines . Charles R.

Trucks for Sale

JHP

•

GASOUNE ALLEY

Want To Do Backhoe work.
Call379-2468 or 379·2411.

84

.

CHAMBER .1

1976 21' Starcrafl Wonder

1971 Chevelle Malibu, 307
automatic with cragers &amp;
headers, runs gOOd, 1973
Ford Pinto, good cond. &amp;
gas mileage. m-7029.

197a
1],.00. Mlc. .l
Lambert. 742·1.452.
··

~E

Call446-9340 or 675-6898.

1973 25' Troutwood Camper
trailer. AC-pertect tor
river bank. $1,800. 992-7727.

H lgh performance 1972
Fury I, Good shape. SBOO.
992 ·5700.
.

' l

IT WI LL BE, BY THE T IM E
't'OU GET DINNV INTO

dyman. Phone 304-576-2921
or 675·5689.

'I-"'

(

and

Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day work . 675·5022.
: 446-2445 or Night - 446·
1979 Ford Granada 6 cyt., 4792.
Plumbing
82
fully equipped . See at 19
&amp; Heating
Mill Creekor446·2432 .
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
CARTER'S PLUMBING
$175, any color,lree pickup
AND HEATING
&amp;
delivery
in
GalliPOlis
1976 Pontiac Venture, 2 dr.
Cor
. FCMJrth and Pine
coupe, PS, PB, AC, cruise, area, Hammond Body
Phone 446-3888 or 446·4477
exc. cond. , $1,950. Call 388· Shop, 221 Mill St. 379·2782.
8769 .
J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
78
Camping
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367-7853 .
Equipment
For sale 1978 Honda Accord
exc . milage, new radial Rod &amp; Reel Combo · Zebco
D. c. Contractors Plumtires. Call 446-2055 after 6.
600 reel, Pfleuger S-250 rod bing, electrical, heating,
· Special $9.99. Spring roofing, aluminum, vinyl
1969 Z28, excellent cond. Valley Trading Co., Spring
siding, and home painting.
Call992-3647.
Valley Plaza, 446 -8025.
675·3376 or675-1240.

-----------------·
-~

Quazar,

house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446-2454.

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker Lucas Builders. Room ad·

7723 .

'

6TEEL PUTE!

All E6EW

RINGLE'S SERVICE-exp-

Auto Repair

service. "Big

.........

TH' IW.

15 R.EIHFO/ltE() 11'1 '
TH' P!tlJII6 HEINY

bing, electric, general han·

For sale 1975 Camero, 6
cyt ., exc. cond. Call 367-

.
.
1972 Jtep S.W. ilx4.

DOOHO -. Pt.UG~

70 Camoro front end $100
and motor $50. Call 446- Dave's Appliance Repair.
Washers, dryers, plum·
7835.
77

72

FER-l

Auto parts, auto repair, erienced mason, roofer,
wrecker service, buy carpenter , electrician,
autom.o blles, radiators and general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304·675batteries. 446· 7717 .
2088 or 67 5·•51&gt;0.

1974 Monte carlo tor sale.
Call after 5:00 446·7948.

roof, am·fm stereo radio

~HUT

stump removal. 675-1331 .

Auto Parts

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

73 Ford LTO, 2 dr., Hardtop, good cond., 351 eng.
and 73 Plymouth Fury 318
engine. Call446-7572 or 4461522.

1978 Ford Fiesta Ghla, sun

- All' SHE'GCAR&amp;YIN' Ill 1(1"1!;
lf' ELECTIUJNIC EQUfPIIEiff.'

IIILLI()N!; AltE EiaNG TV BE
UGEO 1lJ PVT BIIC/1. 6M CF
if!AT HE TOOII. !

THIS E!IKTH
116 Blll.D AS

iMSOC~SI

UMf

- !fElL, 1011 reM M CW'S

-IF 1£ IW1
1116 1'111¥, HE'll
IW'II!; lEFT

Hl6 T'(PE liE M\Y I
00 I MY OWN FllTIIEft
11115 Alt08m 8oiROI4

&amp; Accessories

owner. Call446-6576eve.

With CB. $3,500. 949·2493.
SURPLUS jeeps, cars, and
!trucks available. Many
sell under $200. Call 1-312742-1143 ext. 3940 for in-

Will do all kinds of car·
penter work, pa Inl jobs,
anything . 992-6293 .

1974 Pontiac Grand Prix

1980 Pontiac Phoenix. 20,
PS, PB, AM-FM radio, AC,
Bucket seats. console. 6700
miles. 992-2849.

liM YOU OO'fT l(ll()lj

house

-=
=;:
ts=a=n=d= = =
75;=:==::B=oa

76

Regency.

trol , air, lull POWer . GOOd
cond . Does not use oi I. $750.
985-4395.

general

repair. 992·5126 or 992·39•1.

F &amp;

plete. Call675-4087 .

1975 Thunderbird,

Regular gas, cruise con·

Cleaning,

RON'S Television Service.

sharp.

1979 Mercury Capri. Looks
like a Mustang. 3,200 miles,
lots of extras. New li res.
gOOd gas mileage. $4,300.
992·2803.

576·2738 .
AKC

top,

$5,200. 992-5190.

Poodle

Jackson Ave. 675· 1773.

Auto for Sale

1969 Corvette convertible.
350 rebuilt engine. New
paint, new transmission,

Dachshund ,

Pomerani an

at

&amp; 675-1302.

dog type, male. Meigs
County Humane Society .
992·6505.

AKC

for sale

Michaels. Call 985-4237 or
985-3956.

collie type, female, blackand-while chest lab type,

tress with frame . 992-3517 .

Hay&amp; Grain

Beef cattle

Available for adoption
long-haired
miniature
male

male
614-698-

I

Gene's Carpet

deep stream extraction .
Free estimates, reasonable

1981 HONDA 900 F $2900.
304-675-5851 .

1979 15 II. Ski boat, 70 hp
Mercury outboard, new
stainless steel propellors,
all skiing equipment included. Must sell. 675·5120.

Broogham,

Call 446·4191.

setters,

Southern

Motors tor Sale
14 FT . Lowe Line Lake Jon,
Service.
Swivel seats, depth tinder, LOCKSMITH
Evlnrude trolling motor, 15 Residential. automotive.
HP Evlnrude motor and Emergency service . Cawl
Dilly trailer · $1,500 .00 882-2079.
Phone 304-675-2039.

d3 Carvel Roadster, 4 spd .,
exc. cond . Call evenings
446-2075.

auto., air cond ., loaded·,
good mechanical cond, one

Gordon

English Cocker Spaniels.

Serving

TIME.

W~ cAN'T L&amp;T THAT ~IAN

Ohio&amp; WeS!ern W. VA. Call
David Dobbins Sr., 3889856. If no answer call 388·
9964.

painting,

73 Chevorlel Malibu hardtop, 2 dr., 8 cyl., auto. Call
446·1452.

1973 JOHN Deere, 450 B
Bulldozer G. C with 6 way
blade. $9300. 304 675·2786.

AKC

grooming .

years)

we GOT NO

~T nEM 90 ~

NCJ,.. WS 6ET AWAV!

KAWASAKI, 175 motor- rates. scothguard . m ·d309 .
cycle, 3300 miles. 55 mpg,
30-1-675-3639 .
Wi 11 dO carpentry work,

1971 Corvette convertible,
white with red Interior. Ineluding while hardtop, 350
engine, ralley wheels. Call
446-9692.

GRAVELY tractor , brush
hog, snow blade 8. sulky,
phone 304-458· 1854.

purchase of food and bed·
ding.

Air

Auto for Sale

79 CUTLASS

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

1971 Honda 350 Scrambler.
chopped, runs gOOd, $350.
Phone 304-773-5835.

1976 Buick Limited tully
equipped. One owner, low
mileage, good cond ., $3,195.
Call 446·1546.

loaded with exfras com-

Boarding and

1980 KAWASAKI KDX 175.
Best offer, phone 304-6755350.

f ·l&amp;

61

after 7 p. m .

super firm, $95, sofa bed

dryers,

LOGS and Log siding tor
log

free gerbil or mouse with

and S78. Queen sets, $195. 5
~9 .

dows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. 0 .
Call245·5121.

Kennabec potatos . 2-47·2841

WOOd table With 4 chairs,

$219 up to $495 . Hutches,
$300 . and $375., maple or

dr. chests,

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

.-.
•-::•: ___:B:::u:::l::ld,tn,o._s,u,p.,p,t,le:::s_
Building materials, block,

New box springs 8. mat·

Household Goods

toman, 3 tables, $500 . Sofa,
OR RENT · almostnew1•x
70, 3 bedroom, 1 111 baths,

fl .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park . Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479.

Space for Rent

Call388-8436.

446·38«atter 4p.m .

22

traitor, $2000 . Electri c
guitar I amp , S190 . Phone

FireWOOd, split, slacked I
delivered. Mixed wood S65
per cord. S35 one-halt cord .
Green or seasoned . All hardwood $5.00 more. Also will
buy stafding wood . Call 2455478.

46

troller,

14ft. fishing boat 1 trailer,

Modern office suite for
rent, downtown, Business

and Professional Building.

utility

exc . cond, wlllsnot leak.

$400.00.

Ratliff Pools I Service.
Complete sales, service,
pool covers, and win·
terization k its. Call 446·1324

Call or see Morris Haskins.

Enclosed

. Homo
1mprovements

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet Cleaning featured by
New mOIIeds. last years Hallett Brothers Custom
model, ~ over cost, 150 Carpets. Free estimates.
MPG. Ideal lor college Call446-2107 .
student. Call«6-4626.
FERREL~s
WINDON
1975 Honda GoldWing 1000, GLASS SERVICE Home
$1 ,500. Call379-2115.
malnta l nance
and
remodeling . Phone 388For
sale
motorcyCle 9326.
trailer. wired tor ·turn
signals and stop light w ith Home building , home
hitch . Call446-1578.
remodeling and repair.
Custom work from start to
1978 Honda CR 2.50, good finish. Call388·8711.
condition. 675· 1969.
DOBBINS &amp; SONS CON1981 Yamaha Midnight TRACTORS Remodeling·
Maxim 650 CC, black and Inside and out-electrlal
sliver, 1600 miles. $2200. work-heatlng·plumblng·sidin
g-room additions. &lt;ex Call675-6871 .
perienced carpenter·28

10" off Buck Knives. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza, 446-8025.

sian and Siamese kittens.
New Lilac, blue, and cho.
Siamese
and
Blue
Humalayan kittens. Call

388-9087.

dlePOrt. 992·3590.
Mobile home . 1 child ac ·

$39.95 .

Park Central Hotel .

2 bedroom trailer in Mid-

cepted . No pets . John
Sheets, 3'11 miles south

Special

Spring Valley Trading Co.,

mobile

2 bedroom trailer, fur ·
nished, in Chester . Room
tor rent. 985·3839.

pull .

Spring Valley Plaza. 4468025.

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light noosekeeping apt ..

Motercyctn
74
1971 Harley Dlvlson electric glide, like , _ , $4,000.
Call attar 5 4-16-0122.

by l..any Wright

While metal detectors·
Opening Special 20* off on
all white metal detectors.
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, 4-168025.

$300
. per, thousand,
304-675ROUGH
cherry lumber,

electric ,

future plans . Phone 304·372·
8405between5 &amp; 7 p .m .

homes. Call 446·0175.

44

Misc. Merchandice

Henderson $150. dePOSit.
$150. per month. No Pets.
lnquire614-367·7257 after 5.
:==~:;:::;:::;::::::;:;;:::::=::::==
4..
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KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

brick, sewer pipes, win·

lb.
2-bedroom

All

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tiblea or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns. POCket watches, and
coin collections. Call 557 .
3411 .

Trading Co., Spring Valley
PLaza, 446-7025 .

2 BEDROOM, unfurnished
apartment and 2 bedroom
furnished apartment,

Antiques

53

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Yesterday's Ceypl&lt;oquofe: THE QUAUTY OF A TEACHER'S
!JFE IS A PART OF HIS PROFFSSIONAL EQUIPMENT - A
TOMPKINS
. .
C&gt;llll J-: iog futur u Syfl(h(: lte. Inc:

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Fridily, Auguat28, 1981' •

Round Meigs Local
By SUPT. DAVJD L. GLEASON
It's time to start up our
educational system and bring the
youngsters back to schooL Man~
schools througOO.
ut the state started last week with
the remainder to
begin classes this
next week . In
Meigs Local, the
first day of school
for students wiD
he Tuesday' September I. On that day aU classes will
meet for a fuU day except the kindergarten cllll!Ses which will meet
on their regular half-day schedules.
Bus routes will he the same as last
year with a few minor turnaround
changes. Breakfasts and lunches
will he served the first day

the preparation of the
stadiwn.

football

A recent report on school districts
with low attendance during the 197~
IKl school year publicized by the
Citizens Council for Ohio &amp;boola
certainly points out a serious side ef·
feet of employee strikes. The report
shows Meigs Loeal had the lowest
average daily attendance in the
state in every category. The overaU
attendance percentage for Meigs
was 81.7 percent which was five per·
centage points lower than the next
school district (Cleveland - which
also had a strike in 79-80).
This report does not help us
alleviate the problems but it does
point out some of the side effects of
the 79 strike. Again, the students suffer the consequences.
HopefuUy, these situations will not
occur in the future and we can get on
providing the positive learning atmosphere our kids desperately need.

Much work stiU needs to be done to
our buildmgs. We wiU continue to
pursue many of the fix-up, paint-up,
and replace projects right on as if
school had not started.
The money to he used for these
"fix it" projects has not come into
the district as of yet. However, we
believe we will have the money
available by mid to late September.
Hopefully , that will be the situation
and we can continue to fix and repair
the many needs of the district's
facilities.
Projects that are going on right
now include the Bradbury roof,
Salisbury roof. Salem Center roof,
the fence at Pomeroy, the boiler at
Pomeroy. the roof patched at
Pomeroy, the septic tank at
Salisbury, the ditches and front area
at Salisbury, the painting of
Rutland's hallways and ceilings, and

Parents of junior high football
players had a work day at the junior
high football stadium in Middleport.
The bleachers on the stadium are in
terrible shape and wiU require a
great deal of work. Steps are presently being taken to help correct the
dangerous conditions that exist
there. Within the next couple of
weeks we hope to have the situation
corrected. If you can help remove
the old seats and steel pegs, contact
John Arnott or Mick Childs (junior
high coaches) and volunteer your
services. We need the help!
If I can be of any assistance,
please feel free to contact me at~2103.

Area deaths

•

Senate to study medical hill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
House-passed bill beefing up
regulation of the medical profession
in Ohio is to andergo clOI!Ie scrutiny
in the Senate, probably in October,
says Sen. John R. Kasich.
The RepubHcan !run Columbus
chairman of the health and
resources committee, was asked
about the bill Thursday after one
health care group said it would work
fervently for the measure's defeat.
The National Health Action Committee, headed by John
Yiamouyiannis of the central Ohio
town of Delaware, said provisions to
license practitioners of preventive
health care would deprive Ohioans
of needed services and escalate

tuunar:

Chester Elementary &amp;boo!. Tile
evening route wiU he done directly
opposite.
Anyone needing further information should contact the
superintendent's office between 8
a.m. and 4 p.m. week days.
The bus route of Mary Rose will be
the same as last year except she wiU
pick up the students between Five
Points and Chester, formerly transported by Paul Baer, except for
those right in the Five Points area.
they will ride the Baer bus.
The Eastern District Board of
Education met Wednesday night and
set lunch prices for the new school
year and as in other districts
throughout Ohio a considerable increase has been noted over last
year. Increases were made
necessary through the reduction of
federal funds and the cutdown on
federal commodities not only in the
number of deliveries made during
the year but the amount, particularly, meat, to be delivered.
Lunch prices for this year include:
elementary, 80 cents; reduced lunches, 40 cents; high school, 90 cents;

1

Leonard Stearns

Mary M. Childers, 67, Hartford,
died Thursday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Born Dec. 23, 1913, in Roane County, W.Va .. she was the daughter of
the late George and Virginia Goades
Carney. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Wesley
Childers.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
Nadine Justice, Hartford, Mrs.
Lorene Bratcher, Hartford; two
sisters, Mrs . Ada Hackworth,
Charleston, Mrs. Faye Brunning,
Gauley Bridge, W.Va. ; three grandchildren.
Services will be held at the Hartford Church of Christ in Christian
Union with the Rev. Earl Oiler officiating . Burial will follow in the
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may caD at the Foglesong
Funeral Home in Mason from 2 to 4
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m . Saturday, and
one hour prior to the service at the
church.

Leonard Earl (Pop) Stearns, 116,
Point Pleasant, died at 12:45 a.m. Man citt&gt;d
this morning in Pleasant Valley
Sheriff James J . Proffitt reports
Hospital after a long illness.
He was born Oct. 3, 11194, at Leon to the arrest of William Watson, 51,
.the late John Stearns and Mary Route I, Reedsville, following the
shooting of Craig Foley, Watson's
McGraw Stearns.
He was a retired New York Cen- stepson.
According to the sheriff Foley was ·
lral Railroad worker and attended
shot
in the lower left side just below
the Church of Christ in Christian
the
rib
cage with a .22 caliber pistol
Union, Point Pleasant.
at
his
Owl
Hollow residence, ReedHe was preceded in death by his
sville,
about
11:37 p.m. Thursday.
wife, Ullie Mae Huffman Stearns in
Foley
was
taken to the St. Joseph
1938, and by three daughters and
Parkersburg
by the TupHospital
in
four sons.
Surviving are three daughters, pers Plains Emergency Squad. His
Mrs. Margaret Holcomb, Mrs. condition is reported as poor.
Russell Cottrill and Mrs. Eleta Charges are expected to be filed
Roach, aU of Point Pleasant; two against Watson in the Meigs County
sons, Leo Stearns and Leonard Court today.
Stearns, of Point Pleasant; one
sister, Ethel Steams, of Ambrosia;
Boosters to meet
one brother, John Stearns, Am·
brosia; 30 grandchildren; and 16
The Meigs Marauder Band
great grandchildren.
Boosters wiD meet at 7 p.m. WedServices will he Sunday at 2 p.m. nesday at the high school band room
at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home with to plan a band invitational to be held
the Rev. William Bridges and Rev. Sept. 12 at Marauder Stadium in
Herman H. Jordan officiating. Pomeroy .
Burial will follow in the Lone Oak
The group will discuss the upCemetery.
coming football season and
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen chaperons and concession stand
Funeral Home after 4 p.m. on Satur- workers will be assigned.
The
day .
boosters are also cleaning up the
football concession stands in
preparation for the season.

Lasch J . Douglas, 73, died Thursday at his Route I , Shade residence.
He was a son of the late Herbert
Edgar and Amanda Bell Douglas.
He was also preceded in death by
two brothers, Harold and Everett.
A veteran of World War II, he is
survived by his wife, Bessie; two
stepsons, four stepdaughters,
several step- grandchildren and
a
s tep-grea !-grande hildren;
brother, Clinton Douglas, Albany,
and four sisters, Lydia Cain, Athens
Route 5; Audrey Sauters, Athens;
Grace Frazier and Edith Smith, both
of Springfield and Edna Smith of
Columbus.
Graveside rites will be held at 11
a.m. Saturday at the Burlingham
Cemetery with the Rev. John
Elswick officiating. Friends may
call at the Ewing Funeral Home after 7 this evening.

Answer four calls

Four emergency calls were answered by local units on Thursday,
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports.
At 9:25 a.m., the Pomeroy Unit
took Stanley Trussell from Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Tuppers
Plains Unit at 10:10 a.m. took Wayne
Gilland from Owl Hollow Road to
Veterans Memorial; at 4:42 p.m.
took Leonard Smith from Rushville
Hill to Veterans Memorial and at
11 :37 p.m. took Craig Foley from
Owl Hollow Road to St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.

ther.
Kasich said he's willing to llaten to

the concerns ~ committee members
and others who may object to aU or
part of the measure. He :lllld he
probably will begin llearipg$ In ()c.

lOber.
The senator said he believes in the
freedom of citizens to ~ the
types of health care they want.
There also should be some state
regulation, he said.

"For instance, midwives," he
said. "I think midwives should have
to have some training, what kind I'm
not sure, before they can go around
delivering babies and charging for
it. tt

Suffers heart attack
Larry Napper suffered a heart attack in Lancaster and is confined to
the intensive care unit of the hospital
there. His mother, Bessie Napper,
129 Butttemut Ave., went to Lancaster Sunday evening to be there
during his hospitalization.

reduced price, 40 cents; adult tunches, $1 .25; extra milk for students,
20 cents; adults, 25 cents. At the
Riverview School, the only one in the
district where breakfast is served,
the new price is 50 cents for students, 25 cents for reduced price, and 75
cents for adults.
Although students of the district
wiU not he reporting to classes until
Tuesday, teachers of the district will
put in a full day on Monday. At 8:30
a.m. they
will into
meetgroups
at the
school
and move
withhigh
the
respective head teachers from 9 to
10 a .m. At 10 a.m. there wiU be a
general session for all teachers and
at II a.m. teachers will meet to
discuss ratification of their new contract. Following a luncheon at 12
noon, the teachers will move to their
respective buildings in the district to
prepare for the Tuesday beginnlng
of classes. Lunch will be served at
all of the schools on Tuesday and
there will also be breakfast at the
Riverview School.

.

.Vol. 15 No ..29

Friday in the school bus routing d
the Eastern Local School District.
According to the changes the Paul
Baer bus will pick up students from
the Five Points service station to the
county road 32 turnoff. Students
living on Route 7 and in the Baum
additional from county road 32 to
Chester will be transported by the
Mary Rose bus. The last minute
changes were made in the interest
and safety and convenience for all,

t.e.m how.

="',:'ror,...,

...., 1m1c5 howtobMs ~o&gt;&lt;ng
oroe.
!hel~

back'""'

81

.:::~~'".=:·

llndoutluquundlwhollhls
book..., do
Willy.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
~~·c;h~oo~l~o;ff~ic~ia~ls~sa~id~t~oda;y~.N~i:::.;jj~~~~~~~~~~~~

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
We are now making appointments for your
color senior portraits. Your preview set will
include not only photos before traditional oil
backdrops but photos in attractive outdoor
settings
GIVE US A CALL
EVENINGS &amp; WEEKENDS

THE PHOTO PLACE
•

109 High St., Pomeroy
Bob &amp; Charlene Hoeflich

rLj~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ELBERFELDS.
BACK-lO-SC"OOL
SALE
CONTINUES

Deputies probe B and E
GALUPOUS - The Gallia County Sheriff's Department is investigaUng a breaking and entering and theft which occurred in Vinton
Thursday night.
According to reports, the door of a trailer owned by John MuUins was
broken down to gain entry.
A wood burning st0ve, an air conditioner, two lawn chairs and a lantern
are missing, Mullins told deputies.
Sandra McFarland, Bidwell, told Gallipolis City Pollee her pocketbook
was stolen while she was working at Gallipolis Developmental Center
ThurSday. ·
The incident occurred about noon, she told police.
A set of keys and an undetennined amount of cash were in the pocketboo(!, the police report stated.

IN POMEROY

OAPSE meeting Monday

Vaughan's

MIDDLEPORT - The Ohio Association of Public School Employees
(OAPSE), Chapter 17, will have a meeting at the Meigs Junior High
&amp;hool Monday at 7:30p.m. Joe Rugola, field representativ~. will be at
the meeting, and aU members are urged to attend.

OPEN 7 DAYS
8 AM TlllO PM
CORNER Of LOCUST
&amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Liquor license suspended
GALUPOUS- Kenny's Carryout, SR 7, Crown City, has been found
guilty of three liquor law violations by the Ohio Liquor Control Commission and will have Its penni! ~uapended for 14 days.
.
The commission found the permit -holder, Fred Jay Wray, guilt.Y of
charges of improper conduct (possession of marijuana), possession of
gambling devices and Sunday sale of malt Hquor.
The commission wder:ed 1.4 days suspensillD on each violation, to be
served concurrent!fbeginning at noon Sept. :iOIIJld ending noon Oct. 4.

•

EMS reports three runs

· Trustees to meet

.......

. Sudur'i'OWIIIhip Trustes will meet
··at I p.m. "--ay at the 'SyraCU!e
Mlln!r!P'I Bulldlng.
'

- - .. .

-~ ~

.

....

.•

PHONE: 949-2710

~~

..

'

~

CUT, WRAPPED AND FROZEN· FOR THE FREEZER
I

WE HAVI

A''

Sunday, Aug. 30, 1981

GALLIA HILLS
FAMILY FESTIVAL
CONTINUES -- These
youn~ters were only
two of many children
and adults who enjoyed
·the Gallia Hills Family
Festival under the sunI!Y skies at Raccoon
Creek County Park
Saturday. On the left is
Danielle Neal, 3, Bidwell. She is the daughter
of Danny~ and Grenna
Neal. Holding the
balloon is Aaron"Petrie,
4, Vinton. He is the son
of Bill and Jean Petrie.
The family festival,
sponsored lly the 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District1
kicked off on Friday ana
will conclude today .
Many activities were
held during the festival,
including an A.S.A sanctioned women's softball
tournament, a horseshoe tournament,
Coppertone
frisbee
sc fair. , a threerriile
and a nlini-f!e.a
marke A family campout,was also -held at the
patk Saturday' ni ht as
. part of.the ,festiv~. Activities began at 5 p.m.
.and inclu&lt;fed hiking, entertainment
and
stargazing.

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'

!rith ~ttered ~n -~ ihUntler:'storma.

ijlgh~y!n the lowiOi.TI!e.~ of rain iii~ percent today. ·
Edeilded Foreea.t- For MOnclaythrOuih Wednlleday- achince of th~oriils Tueliday. Fatr Mollda)' llild Wednesilay. Hip in
the upper 70. and.aQI•.I.!AlwB iri the upper liGii iDd 1!111. '

·.

. .

:

contliluedill~· A:..· .

..·

Mason judge reluctantly allows sale
of beer at conc,e rt; dismisses action

LiNE OF

commission shvuld have the right to
control actions on the property it

Watt based his decision on the
county commission's psst policy of
allowing the Mason County Fair
Board to rent the property without
prior permission from the commission.

POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Circuit Court Judge Clarence Watt reluctantly gave his approval to sell beer at a rock concert
at the Mason County Fairgrounds
this weekend by dismissing Friday a
petition for an injunction against the
sale of beer.
The Mason County Commission
had asked 'the court for the injunction to prevent John McClure of
Blue Mountain Productions from
seUlng beer at three-day event ending today which features many
local rock and roll bands.

Powers expressed his displeasure
with the judge's ruling after the
hearing ended Friday afternoon.
"What used to be known as the
Mason County Fairgrounds,"
Powers said, " is now the Mason
County Open Beer Garden. It's ·a
pitiful situation for the taxpayers."

owns.
The judge also warned that if
trouble arose at the event, an injunction would be issued to end the
concert.
By SatUrday, no problems had surfaced. A spokesman for the Mason
County Sheriff's Department said
Saturday morning the concert began
Friday nigla as planned and
"everything went ~ery smoothly."
Mason County Conunissioner Bob

Because McClure had already
signed a lease agreement with the
fair board that did not rule out the
sale of beer, Watt said he had no
choice but to dismiss the petition for
the injunction.
Despite the official ruUng, Watt
said that in his personal opinion, the

Conunission President Charles
Fowler blamed the fair board for the
confusion.
" We trusted the judgment of the
fair board," Fowler said, Hand we
were let down."

Ohio treasurer, auditor differ on
details of missing $1.3 million
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State · 1978, she said.
Treasurer. Gertrude . W. Dc1naheY .
However, Fred Knippenburg,
FC!'gU8911'S communications aide,
and Auditor. Thomas E. fet:guson
are at ocida over aome ~ ~ details said that before the results of the
concerning a
rnliilon mystery in 1978 audit were released, the
her office;
~ had been given oral
I~ appeared minor Friday" 1\frs.
asaurances that the $837,000 ~as a
. D&lt;illa!le19plajned it to a 1!1!1f8 c;on- . deposit in transit. "We found that it
ference, Ud the filet remained that wasn't," he said. '
the state's replar checkln8 ac:count
Mrs. Donahey said "this is one
ltillia olit of balanc:e by that ~t. area of concern I hope will be
. MrL ~ ,fJ. questions raolvedbytheindependentaudlt."
(Of. ~~~ aa boult, ~ abe bU.
She·
the eunilrier's report
Hall;q"?';t~.;.•t~enlthen , · ~ijd ~~ ~· Wfl no
bN I . . . . •
&gt; and, that....
~ &gt; manual' in her Office,
aa ~aUdit Ol .her ',''l'hW didn't ask me if I had a
prvcedllr,a IIIIUIIIal," she said,
' llftk:eiJY.PrtceWatertiOllleCO.
· ' • lllltl ,.. ~d ..:~uon,' .a , ~~ to the ~I'll. She ad.' Dw• .. tlllj8 ._ ' 'f,o ~ ded "l~·,had one ev~ since I've

'1.3

"*-

HIND QUARTERS

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

19

•

---ttqMEMADE .SA LAOS,
&amp;ROASTED 'CHIC~EN, HOMEMADE SUBS,.
AND- . FRESH SLICED LUNCH MEATS

· ·TAP
•JAZZ

Job Corps Ia not a miUtary
program, but is sponsored by the
Department of Labor. Residents
wi.lhlng more information may caU
toll free, l.aoH2t-9ltl.

POMEROY - The Meigs County Emergency .Medical Service reporta three.runs were 1118\le by 8l'ell sqll!lda Friday.
The fi1'llt was at 2:23a.m., wben the J(utland unit was called to Meigs
I ·Mllne No 2. C!Jal;les Musser was transported from there to Holzer
Medical Center. Tile. Mlddl~ Emergency Squad answered a secood
call at a':~ j;l.ln.• ~It tool~ Roy Boggs fnm lila l,)iamond St. reeldence
\!~
ijospitai.AilO: 04 p.m., the final call was taken by
syr,cuse squad, whlcl! transported Cathy Francia from her !lome at
6th ~Qqlltll~ Streets, to HolZer Ml!dlcal Center. .
.

FROM OUR DELl

• BALLET

IOOareas.

..

WHOLE

10 Sections, 90 Pages 35 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

flY.!flg!i'

EVERYTHING YOU NEED
FOR THE NEW SCHOOL
YEAR IS HERE.

GROUND BEEF.................~~~.~l

Agas3 &amp; Up

ttdint

tmts

Local news briefs

::'..~::;:",!;;:;-~

Where Friendliness &amp; Savings Go Hand. in Hand

IN
RACINE
AND
MIDDLEPORT

•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Copyrighted 1911

Michael Perry Zirkle and Edith
Iris Zirkle, both of Middleport, have
been granted a dissolution of
marriage in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

FALL CLASSES

c-6

.

unba

________________

Granted dissolution

ENROLLMENT ·FOR

irst GAHS title recalled, C-1
Soft sculpture dolls, B-1

D-l

Accept applications
Job Corps, a federal program for
job training for youth, will have a
screening representative accepting
applications from 9 a.m. to 12 noon
and from I to 4 p.m., Wednesday at
the council chambers of Pomeroy
Village Hall.
Training slots are available for
young women, 1&amp;-21 to learn clerical
skills, nursing assistance, carpentry, welding, auto mechanics
and other job skills. Young men also
may apply for Job Corps.
Job Corps offers free vocational
training and basic education to
young men and women who are out
uf school and need job training. Corpa members are provided with free
housing, food, medical and dental
care and with a monthly spending
aUowance while they are in training.
Skill training Ia available In nearly

'Mr. October,'

•

Two defendents, Steve Sellers and

Velera011 Memorial Hospital
Admitted--Stanley
Trussell,
Pomeroy; Wayne GiUand, Reedsville; April Smith, Reedsville;
George Smith, Reedsville .
Discharged--Grace
Jividen
George Starcher, Patricia Cleland'
Ray Ungaro, Maude Bailey, Harold
Triplett, Timothy Chaffee .

Christian
Family

that.' '

Found guilty

Hospital news

Buckwald 's gnu merger' A-2

r~

Kasich said hP ~...ows personally
of Oil" :::...: m which· a doctor was
convicted twice in Columbus of
charges stemming from the abuse of
his practice.
"The medical board suspended
him for one year and indicated that's
all it is going to do," he said. "We're
going to be looking into things like

Due to last minute adjustments
additional changes were announced

Ricky Miller, after pleading guilty to
charges of breaking and entering,
were found guilty of that fourth
degree felony by Judge John C.
Bacon, Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
The case dealt with the breaking
and entering of the Charles Hyatt
residence, a crime with a maximum
penalty of two to five years in the
proper state penal institution, and a
fine of not more than $2,500.
Both Sellers and MiUer have been
released on U ,000 personal
recognizance bonds, and await sentencing.

Hinckley ·competent,

Kasich said other parta of the
measure also concern him- The bill
doesn't go far enough in spelling out
what lsi required of the medical
board In terms of enforcement, he
said.
" It gives them (board members )
too much discretion," he sai~ .

iSist. • •------------------------~(~Om==Un=u=ed~f~ro=m~~~g~e~l)

Mary Childers

Lasch j. Douglas

soaring health care CllSta even fur-

.

.

..._ •'·• 'IIi tile accvw-'
Jllr,;. . . ln 1111 nc.tl ._....,,
,...It to
llfl. 'lbe 'padod

tlli.C:

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tbtoulb_.Jww 18fJ. :

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Iliad illftli her
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"11

'

Referring to Miss Boerger, who
reportedly emerged from her illness
with amnesia, Mrs . Donahey said
she had been unsuccessful in trying
to talk. to her about some missing
records
"Her family will not let me talk to
her on the telephone. Her family win
. not let me visit her," she said.

State treasurer Ger·
trude
Donahey said ·
sa14
Friday she had "no in·
· tentitm of running or
hiding from ~he respon·
.sibilities. that are mine in .
this matier... nor
i be
by
the
political
cowered
lieenlntl!boffice." ·
Mrs. Donahey .reiterated that w rhetoric that alreJ~dy is in .
~the d1pepancy Ia a result
full sUJing, and Which I
ef ~~oe•llfC'lllnol e~rotdttlibuiable
:expect .,ill contiriue for
-~. ::~~~= an indefinite period of
time."
iii January IIIII.
' •
·
·'-" tpqKiu~4 c:onfidence that the

'J

matter will be cleared up, and she
said she had "no intention of running
or hiding from the responsiblHtles
that are mine in this matter."
"Nor wiU I be cowered by the
political rhetoric that already is in
full swing, and which I ell)lfct wiU
continue for an indefinite period of
time," she said.

li
-'l I

.

.
.'

r.

.

.

will

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