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&lt;

•

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Monday, August 31, 1981· ~

Eight die
on Ohio
highways

STUCK- This bulldozer, owned by the Three R's Indusl11es of Langsville, Carl Shenefield, pres ident, was
moved to a wooded area near the scene

or a plane {'rash

near Salem Center Sunday . However, the equipmrnt
became hogged down in quicksand and Rex Shenefield,
pictured with the equipment, said thai other heavy

equipment had to be secured to free it. The department
of Sheriff James J. Proffitt, the Slate Highway Palrol,
the Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department, and
the Middleport Fire Department and Emergency
Squad was on the scene for hours as the plane burned ·
killing its pilot, Donald Stoneburner, 55, Naples, Fla.

By The Alsoclloled PreA
At least eight people were killed in
traffic accidents In Ohio during the
weekend, including three In a on&amp;car crash In Fulton County on Satur·
day , according to the Highway
PatroL
Troopers counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
PIQUA - Joan M. Spillers, 25, of
Piqua, In a tw~r crash on Ohio 48
in Miami County.
CINCINNATI - Paul F. Sabo, 47,
of Fairfax, In a one-car accident on a
city street.
XEmA - David A. Hornick, 24, of
Xenia, In a one-car crash on a rural
road in Greene County.
AKRON - John M. Roth, 31, of
Akron, in a motorcyle accident on
Ohio619in Summit County.
SATURDAY
TOLEDO - John M. Bach, 20, of
Morenci, Mich.; Steven R. Hart, 20,
or Uberty Center, and James H. Tippy, 20, of Wauseon, in a one-car accident U.S. 20 In Fulton County.
WOOSTER - James E. Hut·
chison, 23, of Wooster, in a two-car
collision on U.S. 250 In Wayne Coun·
ty.

Florida
(Continued from paRe I l
to stop in time to avoid the collision.
While no arrests have been made
in conjunction with the accident at
this time, charges are pending.
Damage to Price's truck was
estimated at $800; Simpkins' 1971
Harley-Davidson motorcycle was
declared a total loss.

Revival continues

SEARCH PARTY-This truckload of volunteers including two State Highway Patrolmen was organized
Sunday afternoon near the site of the crash of a Cessan
421 Golden Eagle twin engine plane, off County Road 1,
near Salem Center in Meigs County to search for the

pilot who was believed at flnil to have bailed out of the
plane. The truck was taking the volunteers to various
sections around the crash where they combed the
heavily wooded area looking for the pilot, Donald
Stoneburner, 55, who died In the crash.

A revival is continuing this week
at the Ash St. Freewill Baptist Chur·
ch in Middleport with services at
7:30 each evening.
Evangelist is Joseph Gwinn, Leon,
W. Va. Special vocal music is
featured each evening. Appearing
tonight through Thursday will be the
Joint Aires and on Friday the Gospel .
Messengers will be on hand to
present the musical program.

Area deaths

·:

Hennan H. London, 68, widely
known Syracuse resident and mayor
of that community for over 18 years,
died Saturday evening at the Lancaster-Fairfield Hospital In Lan-

Kennedy wa s treated on the sce ne.
Middleport was called out again at
Meet the team night will be nl&gt;- 5:37p.m., to transport Isa bel Powell
served by Sou them High School at 7 from her residence to Veterans
p.m. Thursday at the Southern fi eld. Memoria l.
The public is invited.
ill 6:36 p.m., the Syracuse squad
look Ricky Se llers to Pleasant
Va ll ey: 7 02 p.m ., Pomeroy,
Henrietta Jenkins to Veterans
Memorial from Pomeroy Health
The Meigs County Em ergency Care Center and 9:5() J~hn Cook
Medical Service re port~ nine runs
from PHCC to Veterans Memoria l.

Emergency runs

made ove r t he wee kend by area

squads. Saturday , three ca lis were
answered . Rutland unit al 8:24 a.m.,
transported Evelyn Maynard from
her La ngsville residence to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At II :57 a.m ,
the M1ddlepnrt squad look Eleanor
Zeiher from her homee to Holzer
Medica l Ce nter, and at 9:37 p.m ,
was smnmoned to the city jail to
transport Frank !Ieiker to Veterans
Memorial.
Sunday at 1:20 p.m., the Rutland
Emergency Squad took Mark Salt-

Mr. London waa a 11011 of the late
Jooeph and Mollie Hall London. He
waa abo preceded In death by two
brothers, Joseph London and Fred
Quillen, and four sisters, Iva Roush
Winnie Hood, Lola Blrtcher and
Nina Slaugeribaut.
Mr. London had served the
Syracuse conununity In various
capacities for 31 years. He was
mayor lor 18\lo years. The swimming pool in the community, London
Pool, was named in his honor. He
was an honorary member of both the
Syracuse Fire Department and
Emergency Squad and was a member of the Syracuse Presbyterian
Church.
Surviving are his wife, Naomi K.;
three daughters, Mrs. James
(Mary) Guinther, Syracuse; Mrs.
Douglas (Sandra) Moore, Lan·
caster, and Mrs. Jack (Patricia )
Koeller, West Alexandria; six gran·
dchildren, Lori, Carrie, Christy,
Briton, Toby and Jana; three
sisters, Mary EUen Dye, New
Haven; Annie Stillwagner. Wooster.

LOS ANGELES (AP)- President palatable.
,
programs wOuld leave $44 billion
Reaga.n will slice up to $30 .billion off
AdrniniBtration officials have said more to be found In social programs.
his military spending buildup and ' Reagan must find at least $74 billion
Bater said Reagan would propose
may have to go even deeper to in savings in fiscal 1983 and 1984 to $20 billion to $30 billion in defense
balance the budget by 1984, a top fuHill his pledge of balancing the · cuts In 1983 and 1984 - between 4
White House aide says.
budget within three years task percent and 7 percent - and could
White House chief of !!laff James already made harder by record in- seek more reductions.
A. Bater III said In an ·Interview terest rates that are driving up
Bater gave no Indication what
Monday that the cuts in planned in· govenunent spending and by a programs would be affected by the
creases In the defenl!l! budget are sluggish economy that could cut cuts and deputy White House press
necessary ~roUe additional reduc- revenues.
secretary Lorry Speakes said
tion.s m socilll programs polilically
Cutting $30 billion from defense separately that Reagan will get fur·
!her information on the defense
budget later this week.
Reagan has called for spending
more than $1.6 trillion over the next
five years, the largest military
buildup in U.S. history. The administration's most recent plans call
for defense outlays of $225 billion In
fiscali983 and $254 billion in 1984.
Baker said Reagan's 1962 defense
budget Is $48 billion higher than former President Carter's fiscal 1981
defense proposal, a difference or 19
percent after adjusting for inflation.
Using that 1981 budget proposal
DENVER - A lightning bolt knocked out electrical power Monday
for
comparison, Baker said he
to more than 150,000 customers in most of Montana, southern Idaho,
believes
Reagan will be able to fuHill
northern Wyoming and one Colorado town, utility spokesmen said.
his
commitment
to increase defense
An estimated 150,000 Montana Power Co. customers east of the Con·
spending
by
7
percent
.:.. even after
tinental Divide lost electricity when lightning hit a 34().kllovolt line bet·
the
cuts.
ween Four Comers, N.M., .and Pinto, Utah, ·Montana Power
The Washington Post, meanwhile,
spokesman Russ Cox said.
reported
today that Defense
The blackout just after midnight also affected I ,800 people in
Secretary
Caspar
W. Weinberger,
southern Idaho and 1100 In southwestern Colorado. An undetennined
has
ordered
the
military
services to ·
number were affected In Wyoming's Big Horn Basin.
prepare detailed lists of programs
that would be delayed, forces that
· would be cut and purchases that
would be stretched out if Reagan's
flv&amp;-year defense spending program
COLUMBUS, Ohio- The city's public teachers voted Monday night
is cut.
to extend their current master agreement on a day·t&lt;Hiay basis, a'lerQuoting Pentagon sources, the
ting a strike for Tue$day's start of classes.
newspaper said the Defense ResourBetw~n 2,100 and 2,200 teachers attended the meeting at Veterans'
ces Board met Monday to compile
Memorial in Columbus, standing to register their votes. The tally was
the lists into one that could serve as
nearly unanimous, said John Grossman, president or the Columbus
a
guide In any presidential budget
Education Association.
decision.
The teachers agreed to a four-day notice of tennination of talks by
The Air Force said it would have ·
either party. The membership also empowered the CEA's leaders to
to phase.out old B-li2D bombers and
cau a strike, if necessary.
close two Sli'l!~ic Air Conunand
bases if its planned 1983 budget were
cut by more than $3 billion, according to the Post.
The newspaper also said the Air
WASHINGTON - The Internal Revenue Service is looking at the
(Continued on page 12)
lull range of investment programs tied to the new tax-free All Savers
Certificates to detennine whether they skirt congressional guidelines.
Officials said there is no indication when the IRS will issue a final
ruling on the tax consequences of the advance Investments programs,
which 'offer high Interest rates or cash bonuses for money put into an
institution prior to establishment of the savings certificate on Oct. I.

Herman H. London

a

and Josephine Rickie, Meadeville,
Pa ., and several nieces and
nephews.
Services wiU be held at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Wanda Johnson
officiating. Burial will be In Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime.

Meets Tuesday
Meets Tuesday
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, will met Tuesday at 8 p.m.
at the legion hall.

A regular meeting of Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be
held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday. Refreslf.
ments will be served following the
meeting.
..

150,000 without electricity

ELBERFELD$
CLOSE-OUT SALE!

TAPES • TRIMS • BRAID
BINDING • THREAD

Teachers vote to extend pact

J and P COATES - STRETCH LACE - BIAS TAPE
KNIT BRAID - SEAM BINDING, ETC. PLUS COATS
AND CLARK SEWING THREAD.

6

FOR

$}00

HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT., 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

IRS checks investment plans

curing in the area, acco rding to Lt.

E. W. Wigglesworth , corrunander of
the Ga llia-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol.
Last week , the patrol investigated
sma n frum his residence on County two fatality accidents. Whil e one is
Road 55 to O'B ienness Hospi tal. and still under investigation, both show
the Middleport unit was called to an sca tbelt s were no t used,
auto accident at Cooks Ga p Hill, Wigglesworth said.
Rutland. at 2:40 p.m. , where Vick i
In fact, in all of the area fatalities

Family hit by second tragedy
TOLEDO, Ohio - The shooting death of an unanned 1!0-year-old
grocery store guard is the second tragedy to befall his family , whic~
saw a daughter murdered In 1969, relatives said Monday.
Scott Simpson of Toledo was shot in the chest about 5:30 p.m. Sunday
In a scuffle with a man SUSJ&gt;I!Cted of shoplifting a bottle of wine, i
package of cl\ewing gwn and a pair or sunglasses.
Simpson allegedly was shot by a man presumed to be the accomplice or the shoplifter, said Detective William Knapp. '

'

I!

Ir

U.S. vetoes resolution
UNITED NATIONS - Thirteen members of the Security Council
voted to condemn South Africa's Invasion of Angola, but the Unitect
States vetoed the resolution because it did not blame the Cubans and
Soviets also.
·
Ambassador Charles M. Uchenstem, the deputy American
representative at the United Nations, told the council the United States
could not support a resolution that pisces "blame solely on ·South
Africa for the escalation of violence."

Keep your savings
•
In a safe place.

continue to be our nwnber one enforcement priority, " he said.

Students occupy Iranian office
·ROME,,... Several Iranian student~~ ·occupied a COIIBuiar office today

EVERY tU~SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!~

In the bulldiqg housing Iran's embassy to the Vatican and demanded
to meet with the Italian press, police reported.
Pollee BUITOunded the building In the Parloll section of Rome.
The ltali8n news agency ANSA said pollee believed the group might
be anned. ·But a man identifying ·himself as orie of the students called
The AiiBOciated Press to IU1IIOIIIICe "a peaceful occupation" to protest
executions of political prisoners In Irim.
·
·

The Farmers Bank is the safest place for your
savings. Your savings is insured up to $100,000, and
you'll also earn high interest.
Put your savings in a safe place, a savings account
at the Farmers Bank ....

For Just

Winning Ohio ·tottery n,umber
·'I

.

••Combination Dinner Only
•Dining Room Only

Sorry, No Substitutions, Except
which have an additional price.

Beverages

PH. 992·5432

.,

'

Farmers

Bank

•

Crow's Family Restaurant
228 W. MAIN

. -'

POMEROY, O.HIO

t • •e•a~
Your Comrnunit)· Owned Bank

.,.

.\h·mht·r I Ull'

.

'·

• CIEVEL.AND - The winning number drawn Monday nlilbt In the
Ob(o ~·a dally game "The Number'"was'91i.
.
·
':file'~ reported ~ of $4&amp;,766 ·on the draivlng. The eaJV
· nings cama on ~esof. ~0,234.50, while boldersofwinillhg tickets are
'

Served
with:
Whipped
Poatoes, Chicken Gravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.

Pupils
return
to classes
THOSE DEAR OLD
GOWEN RULE DAYS
are In session once again,
marking an end to the funfilled, carefree days of
summer recess. Scenes
such as this were repeated
all over Meigs County
today as another school
year got underway. At hot·
tom, Uttle MeUssa Neut·
zllng was alltsmlles this
morning as she thought
about second grade.
·Ardy,lng .a Uttle early thil!
first clay of s~hool, she en·
joyed a twirl around on the
merry-go-round.

Controlling .board okays school loan

Saturday
Admissions--John
Aeiker, Cheshire : Charles Humphrey, New Haven.
Sat urday
Discharges--Terry
Barrett , Hilah Jones, Beatrice
Blake, Floyd Williams.
Sunday Admissions-Carl Antherson, Syracuse; Isabella Powell, Middl eport;
Henrietta
Jenkins
Pomeroy; George Knapp, Mid:
dleport ; John Cook, Mason.
Sunday Discharged-Doyle Ord,
Jolm McDaniel, April Smith.

- four in Gallia, two in Meigs seatbelts were not being used, he ad·
vised.
Wigglesworth said drinking was a
factor in some of the accidents, and
he asked residents to use their belts
and to curb alcohol consumption and
driving for safety's sake.
" Driving under the influence will

3 Sections, 16 Pages
15 C-ents
· A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 1, 1981

Reagan slices
military budget

Drinking, non-seat belt usage
leads to GalliR-Meigs fatalities
Fatal accidents involving drinkmg
and non-use of scatbell• are still or-

en tine

caster.

Velt'rans Memorial

m et'! team

at y

VOI.30,N0.91 ·
Copyrighted 1981

Meigs County happenings
Will

•

e

--·I·

; ~lttdto~t406.488.50,l~offlclafs~d.

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - For the
second time since the new fiscal
year began July I, the state Con·
trolling Board has approved a loan
to help keep a money-short Ohio
school district open.
Controllers approved a $597,000
loan Monday t.o the Paulding Exem·
pted Village School District. The
system Is to repay the borrowed
money starting Jan. 30, 1982, at a 10
percent Interest rate.
Herbert D. Brum, director of the
division of school finance in the state
Department of Education, said
payments will he deducted from the
district's monthly state aid allot·
ment.
Conlrollers released $394,198 In
loan funds to the Port Clinton City
School District on July 2».
The controlling board, meanwhile,
was told Ohio's fiscal picture did not
brighten in August, with tax

revenues lagging behind expectations.
William D. Keip, head of the Office
of Budget and Management, said
final figures for August were
unavailable. But preliminary
estimates show the month's revenue
shortfall may total $45 million, he
said.
Keip said an early review of
August reports showed the corporate and personal income- taxes
were "pretty close" to what they
were expected to produce under the
state's current interim budget. He
traced much of the shortfall to lessthan-expected revenue from the
sales tax .
The net shortfall to date would
total about $30 million because the
state took in $16 million more than
expected during July, the finil month of the new fiscal year, he said.
The state's temporary spending

plan expires Oct. 31. Gov. James A.
Rhodes is expected to present a tax
increase proposal to the General
Assembly on Sept. 8.
In other action Monday, the con·
trolling board:
- Approved spending $927 ,li91 for
the Stilwell Hall Renovation Project
at Cleveland State University.
-Transferred $li20, 396 In
emergency funds to the crime victim compensation program to cover
higher-than-expected costs.
- Released $399,312 to the Ohio
Exposition Commission to repair the
almost 411-year-old grand.•tand roof
at the state fairgrounds .
- Approved an education depart·
ment request to approve $1.1 million
in pacts with non-profit educationw
television corporations in Ohio. The
money will cover the costs of transmitting instructional television
programs to school districts.

- Approved an economic and community development department
contract, not to exceed $36,600, with
Frederick A. Sexton. Sexton, fonner
head of the agency's international
trade division , will act as a consultant on trade bet)"een Ohio companies and China.
- Released $42,000 to the Department of Natural Resources to buy 16
acres of land in Wood County from
Allyn and Beverly Euler.
- Approved the natural resources
department's purchase or 29.9 acres
of land in Wayne County from Dean
and Verena Bricker for $35,987.
- Approved a Department. of
Transportation consultant pact
totaling $105,076 with El'il&lt;&amp;'lon
Engineering Limited of Columbus.
The finn is to prepare designs for
the replacement or two deficient
bridges on Ohio 122 in Butler and
Preble counties.

State auditor welcomes firm's probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson says
he welcomes a private accounting
finn's iitvestigatlon into a $1.3
million discrepancy In Ohio's main
checking account, !Nt predicts It
won't produee much~
The state Controllll)g Board ap.proved Monday a f55,000 contract
l'ith Price Waterhoule &amp;: Co. to
lea!'ll why recor;dS kept by Ohio
· TreasUrer Gertrude vi. Donahey
and BancOhto National Bank could
not !iii l)alanced.

"I welcome a second opinion on Patrol to spend $19,200 to look into
the quality and integrity of our any possible Indication of criminal
audit," Ferguson said. But an in- impropriety in the case. Minority
dependent audit only will confirm Democrats called the patrol's infindings in his office's earlier report, volvement premature.
Both the hiring of Price
he said.
"And for the private accounting Waterhouse and the use of the patrol
finn, Price Waterhouse &amp;: Co., to were requested by Gov. James A.
reach that conclusion, It will have Rhodes. The Franklin County
spent additional tboilsands of dollars prosecutor's office also is probing
of taxpayers' money," Ferguson the $1.3 million discrepancy at
Rhodes' request.
said.
The investigations stem from
The board voted 4-3 along party
lines to allow the Ohio Highway Ferguson's earlier report that his

examiners could not account for · a ·
$1.3 million difference between the
treasurer's daily report and the
balance in the state's regular account at BancOhio as of June 30,.
1900.

Complicating matters was of:
ficials' inability to locate key recOI'-' .
ds from t!te office of treasurer'• · ·
cashier .Elizabeth J . Boerger. Mlsa
Boerger, directly responsible for the : ·
records, reportedly has suffered
from amnesia since she came out of
·a 11).daycomaJan. l7, 1980.

F61 arrests 'two,- seeks two in area robbery
aiTest of Issac E. Hoyd, 31, and
Lorett8 Glbbll, 31, both of 80 ~ - Burton st., Manllfleld.
·
Alfred Sl!lith, special FBI ag~t in
charge of lnvestlgatiort in Clnclmai,
said Pritt and Gillenwater will appear1hi!loril a magistrate in Columbua today for al!ol)d hearing.
''
fi!oyd and Gibbs remain at large
and · a fugitive from jtlstice lnve.tlgattun Is continuing, Smith
~d.
.
Two l!'llled bandits robbed the
VintOn bank just before It opened at

9a.m. onJune27.
One man pulled a handgun on the
two tellers in the bank, while the
other took an undisclosed amount of
cash from the bank vault.

ch of the FBI assisted in the in· ·
vestigation.
Sheriff's deputies found a bag of: . :
money and a pistol reportedly used .
In the crjme on SR 325, about two · ...
rnilelllrom the bank on the day of the :
robbery .

After locking the tellers In the
vault, the men reportedly ran on foot
down Main Street before escaping In
Officials of the Central Trust Co. : '
a getaway car.
aMounced recenUy the Vinton bran- .'~:t
The tellers called the Gallia Coun· ch will' be closing in a few months, ,...: '
ty Sheriff's .Department from a partly because It Is In a "high-risk ·
phone In the vault.
.
·location~ " •
Officers from the Ohio State , Tbe.baJJt has.been rObbed twice in
.Hlgway Patrol. and the Athena bran-. ~ .~ -le!Jyears • .
I

·

�Commentary
,

Tuesday, September 1,1981
'

Vail, Knight pace Reds'win

Page-2-TheDallySHtlnel

.

H

~~:SuY,s!i~:!:7;:~o

~an bites do~--------------------------------~-m_~_J._.K_a_p_m__
ck
RICHMOND, Va. - Back in 1857, against a white worker could be san· in the famous case of Scott vs. Sand- ctioned, even though it patently
ford, Chief Juslice Taney recalled violated the Civil Rights Act,
the status of Negroes at the time the because it was "private"
Constitution was adopted. They discrimination. A year later in the
were then regarded as beings of an Fullilove case, a sharply divided
Inferior. order, he said, "so far in· court held that white contractors
· terior that they had no rights which could be denied a right to bid on'$400
·the white man was bound to million in federal public works. A
program to encourage minority
: respect.''
We come full circle. Uttle by little business enterprise, even though it
the federal courts are creeping up on was racially disc~tory, was
an answer to the flip-side of Taney's "limited in extent and duration" and
observation. In such areas as of "transitory economic impact."
education, employment and voting
rights, we approach the reverse of
A different aspect of the same
the proposition: Do whiles have no basic question is heading for the
rights that blacks are bound to courts in a nicely ironical case from
respect?
Richmond. Here the issue arises unThe Supreme Court ran into the der the Voting · Rights Act. It
issue of reverse discrimination in qualifies as news under the old
higher education in the DeFunis definition of dog bites man, and man
case from Washington in 1974, but bites dog. The plaintiffs are not
escaped a decision by scooting down black folks, alleging invidious
the path named " mootness." The shenanigans. Here the plaintiffs are
·same issue could not be avoided in white folks, making the identical
the Bakke case from California in allegations that black folks have
!978, but the court's :H decision had been making in recent years.
the decisive impact of moonbeams Discrimination'
on goose down.
It would take pages to recount the
[n 1979 the court waffled again in tangled history of Richmond's City
the Weber case, holding that Council over the past decade. It may
discrimination in employment suffice to say that in 1977, after

The Daily Sentinel
lllCourtStreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sl4-~%1SI

DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
~~niMaoager

Ass istaDI Publisber/ConttlliiP-t

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nr•·s Edltor
.&lt;\ MEMBER of Tbe Anoclaled Pre.s, lnlaod DaOy Preas AS!IOCiaUon &amp;lid the
American Newspaper Publishen Associatloo.

LETI'ERS OF OPrNION art welcomed. They dtoald be less thao SCIO wonb lone. All
lt"tkrs are subjet'l to editJog and must be signed wUII111.me. addrni am:ltelephf!ne numhPr_ Nn unsigned leU~rs wiD be published. Ltttel'! 11hoold I» lo good taste, add~11Dg
iSSUf'S , DOl JM'r!lOnaJitles.

0

Reagan~ s

woes

President Reagan has received some setbacks recently in his battle to
make substantial cuts in the federal bureaucracy by the beginning of the
new fiscal year on Oct. I.
First came the release of government figures showing that full-time
covolian employment rose - by 8,205 - in May for the second consecutive
month.
The Office of Personnel Management has tried to portray these
statistics in the best possible light. For example, the Defense Department
now is being listed as a separate category on the basis that the cuts were not
intended to extend to the Pentagon.
Thus, the agency's figures indicate that full-time civilian employment
actually now is being listed as a separate category on the basis that the cuts
were not intended to extend to the Pentagon.
Thus. the agency's figures indicate that full-time civilian employment
actually went down by 7&gt;!1 in May. This figure was obtained by eliminating
the 9,967 new positions at the Defense Department as well as major in·Creases that were said to be "seasonal'' at the Interior and Agriculture
.departments.
On the heels of the release of these figures came Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger's announcement of his plans to add at least 75,000 fulltime civilian employees to the Pentagon payroll.
Then the U. S. court of appeals issued a ruling that challenged the
legality of the hiring freeze that Reagan signed as his first official act as
president. This could pave the way for the addition of as many as 20,000
.workers to the federal payroll, retroactive to January.
. The administration said that the freeze rescinded the job commitments
given to thousands of people who had not actually begun work for the federal
:government by Inauguration Day. Some of those denied jobs and several
·unions that represent federal workers sued on the growtils that Reagan did
not have the power to rescind the commitments.
· The U. S. district court sided with the administraiton. It said that the
would-be employees had received not "commitments" but "job offers" that
:could be rescinded at any time before they began work. The court of appeals
reversed that decision on an unanimous vote.
,
The higher court said that the administration had "played hide-and-seek
' with job seekers" and had withdrawn commitments "with little or no regard
to the consequences of its actions." The case was sent back to the district
court with orders to review whether such agency that rescinded a job offer
.had the authority to do so under its personal regulations.
The decision may mean that those who received unconditional letters of
·commitment will be entitled to their jobs retroactive to the hiring date con.tained in their notification letter.
Lawyers for the would-be employees say that the ruling could mean that
·as many as 20,000 people will get the jobs that they had been denied. Justice
Department lawyers contend, however, that only about 2,000 people had
· ('eceived formal commitments by the date of the president's order.
Both sides agree that a case-by-ease review will take a long time and
.
ihat the decision opens the way for more litigation. That includes damage
:claims from those denied positions '- and especially from those who quit
:their previous jobs and moved tn different cities.
. · There may also be a personnel battle coming up in Congress. The ad·Dlinistration quietly added an amendment to the Senate's Department of
;fjousing and Urhan Development funding bill that would eliminate overtbne
pay for the approximately 680,000 federal workers above the Gs-9 level (that
is, tbo8e who earn more than about $20,000 a year).
.
The battle over this amendment wW be fought ill the conference com:iniltee reconciling the House and Senate versions of the HUD funding bill.
·Federal employees' unions are up in anns over the amendment, and their
·8wes In the House will fight to see that it is stripped from the bill.

Today in history• ••

' .·
:: TodQ is Tuesday, Sept. 1, the 24-tth day of 1981 . There are 121 days left

: ... ,.w..

Tiiday's highlight In history :

.t'

,.

On Sept. 1, 11146, Japan surrendered aboard the U.S. batl:leshlp Missouri
theendofWorldWarD.

seven years in which there had been
no electi0118 at all, a federal court at
last approved a ward system in
which four wards were heavily
black, four were heavily white, and
one was intended to be a swing ward
reflecting the city's 56-00 racial composition. Under this system, blacks
elected five and whites four, and so
the council has remained ever since.
But the census of 1980 disclosed
significant changes. Because of
population shifts; · one of the safe
black wards was becoming unsafe.
Heaven forfend! The black majority
in City Council sprang Into action.
With the accelerated speed that may
be commendable in railroads, but
not in parliamentary chambers, the
black council members in June
rigged up a gerrymandered scheme
of new wards. No one bothers to
deny that the scheme is designed intentionally to guarantee a black
majority into the foreseeable future.
The racial motivation is conceded.
The question is, is it constitutional? The four white councilmen, plaintiffs in the proceeding,
have taken every stock phrase off
the shelf of black plaintiffs in the
past. The rights of the city's while
minority will be "denied and
abridged." Their voting strength
will be "diluted." The new plan
would create five wards at least 68
percent black. Assuming bloc voting

by blacks, whites would be ef·
fectively frozen out ol any realistic
possibility of winning a majority In
the council.
If any such blatantly
dlscrlmlnatory plan were proposed
by whites, in an effort to disfranchise blacks, the U. S. attorney
general would reject it In an instant. ·

But the 15th Amendment of 1870, on
which the Voting Rights Act o£11165
is based, clearly was Intended for
the benefit ol the "unfortWI8te race"
so vividly described by Taney in the
Dred Scott Clllle.
Three members ol the present
court - Marsball, Brennan and
Blackmon - wannly support rever-

se discrimination.

WASHINGTON (AP) - While
labor leaders deny it, President
Reagan· s firing of illegally slriking
air traffic controllers is certain to
force members of other public employee unions to think twice before
walking out.
The shock waves caused by the administration's mass firing of 12,000
air controllers were evident in last
week's overwhelming ratification by
postal union members of a new
three-year contract with the Postal
Service.
The most significant impact of
Reagan's hard line toward the air
controllers union may be seen this
autumn when local goverrunenl
leaders - facing shrinking federal
funds - must cope with increasingly
militant teachers' unions.

CINCINNATI (AP) -Mike Vall

and Ray Knight are two unlikelY
bench mates. Vallhuwatehldmore
games than he's played tills year,
and Knight almo8t never lets
anything keep him out of the lineup.
Consecutive, two-out singles by
Vail and Knight ln the bottom of the
ninth lnn,lng_ Monday salvaged a 9-8
· vir;tory for Cincinnati after the Reds
had wuted a live-run lead over the
Montreal Expos.
Manager John McNamara went to
Vail as his second choice Ill! a pinch
hitter after Johnny Bench flied out
with a runner on base.
"We know Mite can hit, and we
aren't afraid lo use him,'' McNamara said. "With tills funny
season, he hasn't gotten lo play that
much. It probably hasn't been fair to

nne otbln -

Burger, White and Powell-IIUIIIIOri
it reluctantly. Rebnqul.st and
Stevens stand fast for colorblindness. The Riclunond case, llllCe
it matures with Mrs. O'Connor on
the bench, wW offer a splendid test
of changing times, and ~
judges.

him."

Howser replaces
Royals' manager
David Denholm, president of a
conservative Washington lobby
group, said he thinks Reagan's actions will embolden school superintendents and other local officiaLs to
deal more stemly with strikes by
public employees, which are legal in
only eight stales.
The American Federation of
Teachers, saying some 44,000 of its
members face layoffs as public
schools reopen this fall, forecast dif.
ficult contract negotiations in such
cities as Boston and Philadelphia. It
said teachers are threatening
strikes in both cities.
But tough talk is being tempered
with a recognition of reality within
the public employee uni0118.
Linda Lampkin, research director
for the American Federation of

State, County and Municipal Employees, which recently Jed Minnesota state employees through a 22·
day strike, said she feels state and
local government leaders will now
"use everything they can and the
impact of public opinion. The swing
to the right will cause major
problems for us."
Labor peace at all levels of government; Ironically, may hinge more
on Reagan adrninislration budget
policies than on the president's stem
response to the air controllers'
strike.
State . and local government
leaders likely will be forced into
bard-line stands with unions because
of limited funds for education and a
host of other services.
Union leaders are reluctant to

discuss the impact of the air contrOllers' strike.
On the record, top labor Jeeders
charge that Reagan's hanclllllc of
the strike by the PrGfessklnll Air
Traffic Controllers Organization
smacks ol union-busting 111111 tbey
assert that it will only make
organized workers In the public
work force more militant than l!'ftr.
The Reagan White House bristles
at assertions by PAT.&lt;JO Prelident
Robert E. Poll, the AFVCIO and
others that the adminlatraUun is
engaging in a c:ampaJp to brellk up
federal employee uni-.
"This is not a uni~ administration,'' said White House adviser Robert A. Bonltati. "This is not
a union-busting president."

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - It
remains to be seen whether
Manager Dick Howser will be the
spark needed to rekindle the fortunes of the Kansas City Royals.
·1M Jim Frey's efforts, in the
epinion ol many of the Royals, had
been as effective as a book of wet
matches.
·
"Hopefully this wW turn us around
aDd get us playing the way we're
~pable of playing," said pitcher
Rich Gale. "Because we haven't
l;leen playing like champions, the
wpy we can."
.
Howser, fired by the New York
Yankees apter losing three straight
games to Kansas City in the 1980
Ainerlcan League playoffs, was
nemed manager of the Royals on

Monday.
He promised a more aggressive
offense than the Royals had shown
under Frey, who was fired after the
defending AL champions had stumbled to a a 20-30 mark before the
players' strike and were 10.10 since
play resumed.
·
"I like the speed on the ballciub,"
said Howser, 45. "One thing this
ballclub is going to have to do to win,
I think, is run, run, run. They can
run clubs out of the ballpark - if
they get on base."
Howser was given a ~year
contract, the longest any Royals
manager has ever received. Frey,
who was hired In October 1979, had
been given a new one-year pact shor·
Uy before the end of last season.

Letters to editor------------Proud parents
Well, I've sure got something to be
proud of as of Friday, August 14. My
wife was expecting a baby any week.
But sure enough while I was at work,
it happened despite all our plans.
But with the dial of the telephone our
emergency crew was on the way.
Well, this is a long thank-you note
from my wife and me. We would like
to say we feel safe in your ambulance any day, so once again,
thank you, Rutland EMS. May God
ride with you always. - Floyd and
Elberta Christeen Cleland.

Equal treabnent
Dear Editor:
It's not what you know, but who
you know.
Last week on my way to work, I

was stopped by the stale highway
patrol for speeding; my foot is
small, but heavy. It's not the first
time I've been stopped, and no
doubt, not the last. As most of you
do, we pay the fine, and let everyone
read it in the paper.
I'm going to have to get on the
good side of the judge, as a guy just
recently was picked up for D. W.1., a
good friend of Judge O'Brien's, and
for health reasons his name was not
in the paper. lf his health is that bad,
how can he work every day and
drink? My health isn't that good
either, but my name was in the
paper just the same. I am the first to
admit speeding is dangerous, but
D.W.l. is more dangerous. I think
one is as good as another and all
should be treated alike. Your name

in the paper is not news, only idle
gossip. - Barbara Sargent.
Ed's Note - This accusation was
checked by the Sentinel staff and it
was found to be true. According to a
court spokesman, a man whose
name was excluded from the court
records was ill and, therefore, .his
name was not given to the newspaper.

Someone'.s lying
Someone is lieing about Band
Camp.

The sleeping quarters our
daughter was assigned to were a
basemenhmder a bam.
It was dark and damp which made

it musty and moldy. '1be beds were
rusty with mold on tbe mattresa.
There were big rat holes and
spiders. The sbowen were moldy
with sewn on.the floors.
Mr. HW stated at a recent board
meeting tbat if he had a choice he
would take the kids back g this
camp next year.
OUr dalll!bter couldn't sleep ill the
bam so we brougbt ber PM and
she was kicked out ol tlle band. I am
sure we are not sending her back to

up, and that she would break Into
tears right there under the clock.
It never happened, but I was
prepared if it did. Every weekend I took a seat in the lobby waiting for
a dumb jock from Hilrvard, Princeton, Yale or West Point to stand up
one of those perfect creatures so I
could make my move.
My plan was quite simple. I would
get out of my chair and saunter over
to the sobbing lady and offer her a
clean handkerchief. "First,'' I would
say, "you need this, and then I
believe you need a drink."
I was prepared for an answer.
"But I don'tknow you." To which I
would reply: "I am the man who
winds the BUtmore clock every time
it stops when a virgin stands underneath it. Nowforthatdrink."
The way I had it worked out she
would say, "Well, just one plDk lady

- but I insist we go Dutch." I would
grin and say, "I like a girl with
pride.''

From there lt would be just a matter of time before we told each other
our llfe's stories. She would reveal
her father was the chainnan of the
New York Central Railroad (don't
laugh - it was a big deal In those
days), and I would tell her my
family was In textiles (my father
made draperies and slipcovers, so I
really wasn't making thlnp up) .
She would then tell me the boy she
was waiting for was really a dunderhead and the only reuon she had
made a date with him was to get
away from schooL

"I would teU ber.I "Ill just killing
time In the lobby of the BUbnore unW 1 got niy acceptance papera from
the RoYal Canadian Air Force. I
would explain tbat although the u. s.

FromAPWlres
The hustle of a player such as Pete
Rose can make a big difference in a
ballgame, even when the ball is
flying out of the park all night.
The Philadelphia PhUII~ blasted
four home runs in their 11~ victory
over Atlanta Monday night, while
the Braves got a grand slam from
Glenn Hubbard. One of the slug&amp;ers
was Mike Schmidt, who clubbed his
23rd homer of the season, a threerun blast in the fifth inning that put
the Pbillies ahead to stay.
But Schmidt said a seemingly insignificant play by Rose set up his
big home run.
With the Phlllies trailing 4-2, Rose
and Bake McBride hit consecutive
singles with one out, aDd Rose
hustled to third when center fielder
t...!e Murphy bobbled the ball. With
H runner on third with one out, Sellmidi felt free to swing from the
heels.
Schmidt's blast gave the Phlllies a
5-4 lead, and Keith Moreland im·
mediately followed with another
homer.
Lonnie Smith and Luis Aguayo
also hit solo homers as the Pbillies
pounded out 17 bits and stopped a
six-game losing streak, their longest
since 1976.
In other National League games,
Cincinnati edged Montreal 9-8,
Houston tripped the New Yort Mets
6-1, San Diego beat Chicago 4-1 and
Pittsburgh nipped Los Angeles 5-4 in
10innings.
The Phlllles needed all the
hustling and slugging they could get
because their starter, All..'ll.llr Dick
Ruthven, 10-5, was strugglinc.
Dallas Green celebrated his

NEW YORK (AP)- Muhanunad
Ali, the 39-year-old former
heavyweight Champion, will hold a
news conference Tuesday to announce plans for his first flsht since
Larry Holmes battered him II months ago, a spokesman for a
Bahamas-based group that will
promote the fight said · Monday
night.
Ali, the only man to win the
heavyweight championship three
times, wW appear at the conference
in a New York hotel along with the
still unnamed opponent, said Paul
Dotseth, a spokesman for the
promoters. Dotseth did not say when
the fight would be scheduled, but
said "It was a sharp BS5URlption"

this camp next year.
I read tbe report Mr. Hlll had in
Tuesday's paper is why I am writing
this~

Why would he say it waa clean?
Anyone who waa there knows better.
- Carl and Sue DeLong.

hadn't gotten Into the war yet, It
would just be a matter ol time, and
then America would need every
trained fighter pilot it could get."
Obviously, In my fantasy wben she
heard I was about to go off to • war,
all reason would leave her Md we
would both felllember the BUtmore
Hotel (Rown 345) for the rest ol our
lives.
As I said before, nothing like this
ever happened, but the fantaly did
manage to get me through 111111e hot
days and cold nigbta ln-.the )'firs
thatfollowed.
So, when I read about the Biltmore
Hotel clock being torn dOWII and
destroyed, It really teed ine off...:. not
. just becalllle they Wiec:W · niy
teenage dreams, but I aiWIYI boped
to get back to the lllltmrri ·lobby
when I litlrted co!Jtctl.. 8Gcia1
Security and try my luctlllal!l.

wanted to play," Knight said. He got
in when McNamara made a doublesubst!tution in the sixth inning to
relieve starting pitcher MarioSoto.
second.
Torn Hwne would have been the
"I know I can hit and I know I can
second
batter up for the Reds in the
PlaY if I'm ever given the chance,"
said Vail, who was acquired last seventh, and McNamara didn't want
winter from the Chicago Cubs. "I do to pinch hit for his No.I stopper so
have a .290 career batting average, soon. Putting Hume in Junior Kenbut this year I've been put into a nedy's spot In the batting order strange situation after having the and Knight in the pitcher's spot best year ( .2911ln 312 Urnes at bat) of made McNamara look pretty good in
the ninth when Knight was available
my life. It's like a chronic case of
being In the wrong place at the to provide the game-winning hit.
"I just wanted to get a good pitch
wrong time."
No Reds player has been In more to hit," Knight said. "!had been hitgames this year than Knight, who ting the ball well to right field, and I
fouled a ball off his left foot in a decided to go that way.
"I've been hitting the ball hard
game Saturday and didn't play Sunday. By Monday night, he was it- and not having any luck. I didn't hit

second anniversary as the Phillies'

manager with the victory, only the
seventh In 20 games in the second
season for the PhUlles, who were
division winners in the first half.
Gaylord Perry, 6-5, who gave up
the homers to Smith, Schmidt and
Moreland, made his fifth unsuccessful attempt for his seventh
victory of the season and the :!!16th of
his career.
Aguayo ignited a three-run
Philadelphia sixth with his home run
off John Montefusco, who also gave
up a sacrWce fly to McBride and a
run-scoring single to Moreland.
Altros 6, Mt!ts I

Houston took over sole possession
of first place In the NL West, taking
advantage of three COI!tly New York
errors and getting a complete game
from Don Sutton.
After Jose Cruz doubled home a
run in the first, the Astros added two
unearned runs in that inning on consecutive errors by Mets first
baseman Dave Kingman.
New York made it 3-1 in the third
on Lee Mazzilll's solo horner, but an
error by second bueman Doug
Flynn gave Houston another unearned run in the fifth .
Sutton, 7-7, scattered nine hits and
struck out eight.
Padres 4, Clllllll
Steve Mura pitched the first complete game for San Diego in 25
games (since June 7), hurling a six·
hitter and .striking out nine Chicago
batters.
Dave Edwards knocked in two
runs with a horner and a sacrifice fly
as the Padres won for only the fifth
time in 22 games since the second
season started.

that it would be held in the
Bahamas.
Ali, who was granted a license to
box in South CarollrB two weeks
ago, has not fought since Holmes
stopped him \JI the eleventh round
Oct. 2, 19M in their World Boxing
Council tiUe bout.
Ail has won 56 bouts in his 20 year
professional boxing career, losing
three times by decision and once by
knockout.
Dotseth identified Sports lntemationale of the Bahamas as the
promoting group.
Ail arrived in New York on Monday, but was W18Va1Jable for comment.

..YO.UR .POLICY
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record, was hit on the right ann by a
pitch in the first and left the game
after six innings . X-rays showed the
injury was not serious, and Garvey
was expected to be in the lineup
tonight.

Ovett posts win
LONDON (AP) - Olympic champion Steve Ovett of Britain pulled
away to win the IIO().meter event in
tbe Amoco International Games
with a time of I minute, 411.40 secon·
ds.

Ovett's triumph helped Britain to
victory over Poland and Switzerland. England collected 100 points to Poland's 76 and Switzerland's
43.

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SAT l S MATiNEES 1:00 &amp; 3:1

AN EVENING WITII
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Also Appearing "LIGHT"

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The game was the first locally
televised home game in Padres
hislory. Only 3,997 fans went to the
park, the smallest San Diego crowd
ofthe year.
Pirates 5, Dodgers 4
Bill Madlock, the NL's leading hitter at .346, hit a sacrifice fly in the
top of the loth inning to snap Pittsburgh's seven-game losing streak.
Willie Montanez led off the winning rally with a pinch-hit single,
went to second when third baseman
Derrel Thomas fwnbled Ornar
Moreno's bunt and advanced to third
when Lee Lacy, also attempting to
sacrifice, heat out his bunt for a
single to fill the bases. Madlock
followed with his fly to right off Dave
Stewart, 4-2.
Mike Easler knocked in two runs
for the Pirates with a double and a
single and Madlock also had an RBI
single.
Steve Garvey, playing his 913th
consecutive game for the Dodgers,
the fifth longest playing streak on

'

joyltlekal

·r

this one hard - it was right off the
end of the bat - but it fell in there."
Doug Bair, H. was the winner in
relief.
"We just didn't play well," said
Montreal Manager Dick Williams,
who planned tn revamp his lineup
for tonight's game. "Defensive
problems and basenmning, that was
the difference."
Andre Dawson homered twice lot
Montreal, and Tim Raines drove In
three runs. But four unearned Cincinnati runs in the fifth, when third
baseman Larry Parrish committed
two errors, killed the Expos.
"Ray (starter Ray Burris) wasn't
sharp, but then he .had some bad
plays behind him that added to
that," Williams said. " We'll have
some changes tonight."

•vR
COMPUTER
KBO

jillt _ . li!Cludlng tlw bonus .

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cbing tn get back In action.
"It's still real sore, but I tnld Mac I

Muhammad Ali returning???

The Biltmore clock_____Art_B_uc_:.._ha_·_ld
Well, they went and tore down the
Biltmore Hotel lobby in New York
the other day - clock and all. For
you young whippersnappers, the
Biltmore was the most preppie place
in the whole wide world, and this
was when it REALLY counted to be
a preppie.
I wasn't a preppie in those days
but I used to sit in the lobby of the
Biltmore and pretend I was, which
was the next best thing.
What happened was that all those
gorgeous young Barbie dolls used to
come in from Smith and Vassar, and
Mount Holyoke and heaven knows
where and meet their dates under
the clock. The co-eds wore fuzzy
angora sweaters, and tartan skirts
and silk stockings and high heels and
pearls around their necks. A guy
could just die in the lobby of the Biltmore staring at them and dreaming
a Barbie doll's' date would not show

When Vall went to tile plate, against Montreal reliever Bob Lee, 2-4, It
Will' for only the 2IDd time this
season. He stroked a line single into
left field, moving Roo Oester over to

Phils hustle, outslug Braves, 11-8

DISPUTED Pl.AY - Claclimatl Reda third baseman Juulor Keuuedy
sits on Montreal Espos basenmuer RodDey Scott as be tags blm ID tbe first IDniDg of a game Monday ln CiuclllllaU. Home plate umpire Lee Weyer
later nled time bad already been called OD the play, and allowed Scott 18
remaiD on third base. Tbe call drew an argument from Reda manager
John McNamara. (AP Laserpbole).

Firing may make other workers .think

The Daily Sentinei-Paae-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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�.•

Page-4- The Da ily Sentinel

Tuesday·, september 1, 191~

Pomeroy- Middleport Ohio
1

Bengals will trim .roster today
CINCINNATI

(APJ

-

Wblle

preparations went on as usual for
the opening of the National Football
League regular season, the real
game for the Cincinnati Bengals was

Cleveland Browns ; Elvis Peacock, Los Angeles Rams ;
and Tim Mazzetti of lbe Allanla Falcons. (AP Laser·
photo) .

CUTS - Among the oldtlmers cut from Na tional
Football League teams Monday were, fr om left : Dan
Pastorinl of the Oakland Raiders; Don Cockroft,

Cockroft, Pastorini
get walking papers
By Associa ted Press
Don Cockroft and Dan Pastorini
saw the " you' re expenda ble"
writing the on wall earl y. So d1d
Fred Dryer , but a funny thing happened to Drye r's message . Som eone
erased it.
Coc kroft, who holds many of the
Clevela nd Browns kicking records,
a nd Pasto rini, the Oakland Ra iders
veteran reserve qua rterback, were
two of the more notable players who
received their wa lking papers Mon·
day as the National Football
League's 28 teams cut their rosters
to the openmg day 45-man limit.
Dryer was a little luckier. The 3:i·
yea r-old defensive end had said last
week he ha d been told by Los
Angeles Rams Coach Ra y Ma lavasi
that he would be cut. He wasn't.
Cockr oft was one of three players
wa ived by Cleveland . Sam
Rutigliano termed it, "One of the
ha rdest things I've had to do since I
became head coach."
But the move didn' t surpnse
Cockroft , who missed 3-of.jj extra
points and 3-of-4 fi eld goal atte mpts
during tills pr eseason a nd was m ade

expenda ble by the fine kicking of
free agent Dave Jacobs.
Cockroft missed a crucial field
goa l attempt in the second-round
playoff game against Oakland last
season and the Browns elected to go
for a touchdown la te in the fourth
qua rter instead of letting Cockroft
kick a potential game-winning three
pointer. The Raiders eventually won
the game played in bitter cold
weathe r 14-12.
The Browns also released fourthyea r running back Terry Miller , who
gained over 1,000 yards one of those
seasons with Buffalo.
Pastorini , who was acquired by
the Raiders last season in a straight
dea l for Kenny Stabler, played just
five game with Oa kland last year
before breaking a leg. Jim Plunkett
the n took over and led the Raiders to
the Super Bowl title.
That made Pastorini , in his lith
season, expendable.
"I guess I'll just wait and see if
somebody picks me up," sa id
Pastorini , told of the move by
Ra iders Coach Torn F lores Monday.

The Raiders also released veteran
wide receiver Rich Martini and
line backer Greg Br9celin .
In Anaheim, Calif., ;where Drye r
will remain for the time being , the
Rams released former No.I draft
pick Elvis Peacock, the Oklahoma
running back, and three other
play ers.
But Dryer , who was told he was
staying on Sunday, was the story.
' 'Why would they order me back to
a team that bas openly and blatantly
stated they don 't want me here .
These people are insensitive and
inhuman to allow this to happen in
the first place, " said Dryer.
While Dryer was blowing off some
steam, trade winds were filtering
through other parts of the country .
The New Or leans Saints shipped
fullback Tony Galbreath to the MiN·
nesota Vikings, the San Francisco
49ers sent veteran signalcaller Steve
DeBerg to the Denver Broncos and
the Miami Dolphins traded punter
George Roberts to the San Diegu
CMrgers - all for future draft
choices.

first 6 1-3 innings and combined with

Underwood to snap a five-game
Clevela nd winning streak.
" I've never been comfortable in
the bullpen, but I'm more com·
fortable in this bullpen," Underwood
said. " Number one, we are in the
playoffs, and second, we ha ve four
starting pitchers as good as on any

one team .''
The Indians opened the scoring
with a run in the fourth on Pat
Kelly's REI-double.
But Oa kla nd wiped out the 1-il
deficit with their four-run fifth . Dave
McKay Jed off with a single and was
forced at second on Fred Stanley's
bouncer . Stanle)· then moved to
second as Rickey Henderson singled
and the runners scored on Murphy's
home run. Wayne Gross then walked
and scored as Tony Armas doubled.
Cleveland cut the margin to 4-2 in
the fifth with the help of an error by
Stanley at short. Kelly made it 4-3
when he slugged his first home run
of the season leading off the Indians '
s ixth.
Cleveland fans roa red in the
seventh, when home plate umpire
Don Denkinger ejected Langford

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Ame rican league
Ea st

N ati onal L ea gue
East

W.
Sf . LOUiS

Mont real
Ch icago
New York
x Ph il ade lph ia

Pi ttsburg h

12 6
11 8
)1
9
11 10
7 13

.Mol
579
.550
524
.350
6 IS .286

11 '7

2
')1/]

6
7'/•

L.

Det roit
Mi lwa ukee

13 8
13 9

Ba lt imor e
Boston

11

9

11
11
9
10

9
10
10
12

&gt;&lt; N ew Yo r k

Toronto
Cleveland

Pet .

GB

619
.591

lf1

from the scene when the pitcher
tossed his jacket in the dugout after
Oakland Manager Billy Martin took
Langford from the game.
Martin yanked Langford after a
wa lk to Jorge Orta. Martin argued
with Denkinger about Langford's
ejection, and the umpire then sent
Ma rtin to the showers.
Ma rtin explained t he con frontation with the umpire this way :
" I said, ' You didn't see him throw
the jacket. It could have been
a nyone. Rick just was mad because
he thought the pitch was a strike .'
He was good about it and said, ' Billy,
I had to do it, and honestly, I thought
the pitch was a ball.' So I said, 'I
thought it was a strike,' and he said,
'Billy, you're arguing balls and
strikes and you' re out of the game.'"

13 8 61 9
•,,..,;,
12 8 .600
12 8 600
12 9 .571 I
A tl a nta
10 )Q 500 2\f-J
C1 nc innati
• )7 190 9
Sa n Diego
x- F irst -h a lf d ivision w inner
( L ate g am es no t included i

Hou ston
:x · Los Angeles
sa n Franc isco

..474
.455

x·Oak la nd

10 9 .526

Chicago
Ka n sas C it y
Ca l if orni a
Te xas

10 10 .500
10 11 .476
9 10 47 4
9 10 .47 4

H--.

..I&amp;PAa
U.YIAIS

,..$119

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Charles
Woods Jr. rode two winners in River
Downs' nine-race card Monday .
Woods was aboard Justom Boy in
the second race and Buffalo Skhot in
the seventh.
Piece Of Class, ridden by Perry
Ouzts, led wire-to-wire for a 3t·
length victory in the $4,900 featured
eighth and paid $3.20, $3 and $2.60.
Sir Who was second for $5.80 and
$2.60 and Step Aboard was third for

$2.80.

0nCWl'tk .

Ooe Month . .

...

......
....__,ur
sru

IMAI.SID

COFFEE

FILTERS

.__ 59c . . . - .... __55c
l.eJ.SiliiMI

ZI'LOC
~IAIS

-

.
.
.
.
.
99c
..... .....

-

···-·--

~
-,,~ T
BRACER .· . .:~~
5101

,.._

..... -U.71

On~ Y eil r .

..... ..

. $1 .00
. .. .. .. .. $4.4ll •
$02.110

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
~ ily .

IS Cent:J

Sub.o;cribers not dt:sirin~o: to p.~~ y tht! ClUT ier
nwy remi t rn t~ d vctnce diri!Cl to The Ol:ti! y
Sent ind on a 3, 6 or 12 mt111 lh ba.'lis. Credit
will be given carrier eac h month.
No sub.'!Cfiplion.'l by ma il pennitled in towns
· where home carrier !iervice U! available.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Ohio and West VlrJinla
3 Mnnth .
. . $10.50
Si ~ month . . . . . . .... ............. tt ~. 50

I V ee~r

The 2-2 double of Rainbow's Hope
and J ustom Boy paid $31.80 and the
crowd Of 3,169 bet $416,102.
The tr~ck was closed today.

• . • DIU-

SAUDI

·. =-~.. s2''
.....s11' __
,_

..... ........ . .. , . .. . ..
Rota O.lllde Ollk&gt;
aod Wnt VlrJinb
3 Montll
.. ... .. ..
6 Month ...... . . .... .. .......... ..
I Yea r . . ... . .. ··· ~ · · · · ··: ~ ~ ·· ···

t33.00
$ll .OO
$20.00
$38 .1)0_

----

....

M innesota

9 13

.409

1
1
l
'l

Sea ttle

8 13 - .381

4

x - F irst -ha lf d ivision wi nner

Monday's Games

D e t ro it 3, Chica go 1

New York 7, Minnesota 0

-..- ...

By Gary Clark
Shawn Paugh's pass interception
midway through the third quarter
Saturday night proved to be the key
play of lbe game as the Wahama
White Falcons turned back a
stubborn Clay County eleven by a
21-4 score In the season opener for
both grid squads .
Paugh, a S'll" 182 pound senior,
spearheaded a White Falcon
defenalve effort · in the bend area
teams ·Initial outing of the 1981
campaign. The local defensive unit
scored one touchdown and set up
another In gaining their second
consecutive season victory over the
Panthers. .
, Altho!l:gh the White Falcon
margin Of V1ctbry was two touchdoWM and the successive points
after the contest remained in doubt
until the 4: 4S mark of the final
period when junior running back
Todd Troy scored from two yards
out to cap the Wabama scoring for
lbe evening. Troy also scored the
g1111,1es first six points on a 90 yard
11111 with a blocked field goal at·
tempt with 33 seconds remaining in
the opening quarter.
. .
Wabama found the going tough
offensively throughout the first half
except for two sMtained drives on
their first and last possessions of
lbe baH. Both drives ended however
without the benefit of a score with
penaiUes and the clock being the
major factors in kUling the Falcon
scoring hopes.
The Panthers kept the pressure
on the bend area defense
throughout the first half and were
on lbelr way for six points on their
second poesession. Starting at their
own 29 yard line Clay moved the
ball down field to the Wahama six .
followlllg a 32 yard pass play from
Robert Murphy to Garland Carver.
Faced with a first and goal at the
six the Wahama defense gave up
just lour yards In three plays to set
up 8 fourth &amp;!ld two situation. Clay
Co. elected tO attempt a -field goal
which was blocked by Wahama's
Brad Layne. Todd troy scooped the
plgskll) up "~~ r. s!lil .99 yards to
paydlrt befC;I!~ a stunned Clay
County following. Donnli! Van·
meter's ema point kick spnt the
u~ for 8 7-ll Falcon lead.
. wati.ma, just before the half,

went from their own 20 yard line to
the Panther 16 only to have time run
out on the clock with the White
Falcons holding · a narrow 7-il ad·
vantage at intennission .
Clay Co. came ou~ fired up in the
second half and following a short
Falcon punt moved 37 yards in
seven plays to close the gap to
within one at 7-4 . Allen King capped
the drive with an eleven yard run at
the 6:11 mark of the third quarter .
The extra point attempt went wide
to the left.
On their next possession the
Panthers began 1o move once again
only to have Shawn Paugh intercept
a R9bert Murphy aerial and return
it 23 yards to the Clay 39--yard line.
Five plays later Wabama had six
more points aided by two Kevin
James passes to Travis Gray. Gray
made a spectacular catch on the
first pass which went for 28 yards
and then hauled In a 13 yard touch·
down strike-from James atthe 10:35
mark .of the final period. Once again
VanMeter's boot was true giving
Wahama a 14-' edge.
A 25 yard punt return by Kevin
James got the Falcons rolling for
thei r touchdown drive which
covered 50 yards in eight plays.
Troy went the final two yards with
4:45 left to play and VanMeter
continued true to form with the PAT
to make it 21~. The Wahama
defense took over from then on out
to preserve the triumph.
Statistics show the White Falcons
with a 12·9 edge In first downs and a
227·153 advantage in total yardage.
Wahama rushed lor 159 yards and
received 68 more through the air
while Clay Co. managed just 71
yards rushing and 82 paMlng.
Wahama completed 4 of 7 aerials
while Clay.Co. was connecting on 7
of 24 with one pass being intercepted. Each team fumbled
twiee losin~ none with the loc$
being .penallzect eight times for li5
yards. · Clay was penalized four
times for 28 yards. The White
Falcons ran S8 offensive plays to 57
for the hosts.
Individually Wahama's Kevin
Devincenzo was the games leading
· rusher with 67 yards in 17 carries
while Todd Troy and Travis Gray
netted 44 and 39 · yards, respec-

Phil ade lphia !Carlton 10·3) al
Atlanta (Mahler H) , 7:35p.m.
at Cin ·

cinnati (Pastore 3·6) , 7:35p.m .
·New York t Falcone 2·3) at
Houston (J . Niekro 7·71 , 8:35p.m.
Chicago (Martz 4·6) at San Diego
I Wise 2-51 , 10 :05 P·m Pittsburgh !Solomon 5·41 at Los
' Ange les (Va lenzue la 11-4) , 10 :35
p.m .
.'I St. Louis 1Forsch 7·3) at San Fran:'cisco 1Biue 6·51. 10 :35 P,m.

DID RITE, RC100

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$ 29

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PAPER TOWELS ••••••••••.•••R.o;~.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

·
s
79~
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PAPER
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3/$100
BREAD _
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FAVORITE

16 OZ. LOAF

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HUGGIES

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~.nft~~o.~

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2% MILK ••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~ ••••

9
BUTTERMILK ••••••••••••.•~ ~!L~~".•..
VIII EY

GALLON

. GRADE BLARGE
'

. .DOZEN
EGGS ·~······························
.

.

.BANANAS

. Downs cin Monday nigbl

3 LBS..FOR

Willow Burst wt111aecond for$11.40
and f.l.OO•.SlapdUh was ~rd (or

.

$139

BB1 FEST. ~

.
CREAM
,
CE
I
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ROYAL CREST
HOM·O· VIT. D MILK ••••~:!~~~...

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - Sen~ utional 'Sid, driven by .Joe Adam' lky, li'GII the featured eighth race by
.lialf a length In 2:00.2 at Scioto

. .

•
.

Tile rintt-i'ace trlfecta, 4-lo-6, paid

.....40.

g~

VALLEY BELL

' Sciot_o Downs results

' jl ~--

99

$169

BROUGHTON

. t4.4o..
I

79~

SCOTT

· .The winner paid t$.40, $3.40 and

606 E. Main
Ph . 992·2094
Pomeroy, Ohio
Front End Allgnment- SI2.5G Most Passenger Cars
Brake Service

69e·

GENERIC (30 GAL) 2 PLY 10 BAGS

· Gertner's resignation forCed the
cancellaUon of a meelinl! set for
J"rlday during which jUdges were to
dlscuas dlsclpllnlng the referee.

.

89~

RC COLA

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Franklin County mwlicipal court
referee who came under lire for
suspending Ohio State quarterback
Art Schlichter's fines for traffic
violationr, has submitted his
resignation.
Irving Gertner, 68 , resigned el·
fective Sept. 1S. His notice was accepted Monday" by acting Ad·
ministrative Judge Marvin
Komanoff.
"His letter is confidential,"
Komanoff said of Gertner's
resig~~ation notice . "l guess we'll be
looking for a referee after the ef·
fectlve da\e.''
Geriner, contacted at his home,
r efused to comment on his
resignation. But his attorney, Paul
Scott, said the referee resigned
because of the media's total interference into Gertner's private
life.
Scott said his client probably will
return to private law practice.
Geriner twice suspended fines and
court costs for Schlichter in the past
four months.
On April 21, Gertner f~und the
senior quarterback guilty of failure
to yield and suspended a $25 fine .
The referee on Aug. 10 found
Schlichter guilty of speeding and
suspended a $50 fine.
The speeding charge on which
Schlichter was · 100victed after
pleading no contest before Gertner
on Aug. 10 was described as his third
moving violation in less than a year
and could have subjected him to a .
fine of up to $500 and up to 60 days In
jail.

olprokssion.Js. Get tl!eStih/0/SL.

Tuesday's Games

CHUCK BOLOGNA··········

Referee
•
res1gns

Toronto 3, Texas a

Californi a (Forsch 10·51 at Boston
!Stanley 7·41. 7:30p.m.
s eattle (Abbott 2·41 at Baltimore
1Stone2·4l. 7:30p.m .
OaKland 1Norri s 9·51 at Cleveland
!Denny 5·41. 7:35p.m.
Detroit 1Petry 6·61 at Chicago
( Burns 8·2), 8:30p.m.
New York 1Reuschel 1-1) at Min·
nesota I Redfern H) , 8:35p.m.
Mi !waukee (Haas 8·4) at Kansas
City tHammakerO·Ol.8 :35p.m.
Toronto (Leaf 4·9) at Texas (Oa r·
win 8·6), 8:35p.m.

LB.

tivley. Kevin James completed four
of seven passes for 68 yards and a
touclldown with Gray being the
leading reciever for the White
Falcons with three catches for 43
yards.
King and Nutter each rushed for
24 yards for Clay Co. with Robert
Murphy completing six of 18 passes
for 71 yards. Marty Carver was the
Panthers top reciever with three
receptions for 56 yards.
Wahama returns to action on
Friday night when they entertain
Southwestern in the bend area
teams home opener. Kick-off time
is 7:30p.m .

Mi lw aukee 5, Kansas Ci tv 1

Pittsbur gh at Los Angel es, In )

SUPERIOR

Stout defense keys
•
Falcons' first WID ·

--TheStihl ' 0/SLis the
homeownerSsaw withd pro
~&lt;wsr:. herit.ge. And like oilStihl
JHW:S you can count on J.t time Mter
time4/ter lime. So when you~
• sow 10 keep your own bres buming, toke the odviceol thJu.sonds

29

as

CATrn-Wahama's Travis Gray (No. !5), sboWD above,
be makes a spectaealar eateb
SPEerACULARWHS
rte_._ __ t Kevin James. Gray scored oa the play u the White Falcoua weat oa 1o post a
oauaerlalfrom
qua '"""
- -· ·
G
Clak)
le&amp;OOD opeablg wiD over tbe Clay County P anthers by a score of %1-6. I Photo by ary
r ·

1!1

Oa kland 5, Clevel and 3

only games scheduled
Tuesday' s Games
(Rogers 9-6)

....
·"c
......
-·-LUX

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

Riverdowns results

1112
2
3
J lh

Boston 4, Ca l ifornia 1

Ci ncinna t i 9, M ont r eal 8
Houston 6, New York 1
Chicago at San· Diego, (n)

MIRIIT

Member : The Asst&gt;Ciatcd Pres.&lt;;, Inland Dai·
ly Pres.'! A.'iliOCII:Ition 1:1 nd lh~ Am l! ri e~m
NewspaPer Publ is~rs As.'\oc'ialltm, National
Adv ertisin !l: Reprcsl'nlat1ve , Branh.H m
N!;!wspaper Sa les , 733 Third Avenue, New
York , Nel'o' York 1001 7.
POOTMASTE R: Send address to The Daily
Sentinel. 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio4!i769.

::::~.~~...............~.~.,

~~~~~~~~;;;;;~On~A~R~eg~u~la;;r;;B~a~s~ls;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::~;;~~

Publishing Company · Mullil!Hiia, Inc.,
Pmner lly, Ohio 4$769, 992--21 56, Second CIHSS
pl&amp;ajle paid &lt;I t Pumeroy, Ohio.

550 11/7
.550
524

Sea tt le 4, Baltimore 3

Monday's Ga m es
Ph ilade lphi a 11 , Atlanta 8

We Serve Meigs , Gallia and Mason Counties

The Dail y Sentinel
Publish«! every afternoon, Monday tllro11gh
Frida y, Il l Court Street. by the Ohio Valley

·1·~.

Phone (6I4r59.J-3571

r-- - - - - -- - -- ---j
IUSPS 115-910)
A Olvitlon of MlliUmedia, lnc.

,.

For H~aring Aid
St&gt; l ~rtion . St- r.iee, or Cons ultati!ID .
Rn•t•d On 32 \' ears E.,,., ri~ ncc­
And/Or Rderral To AJopn•t•riate
, Medical S pecialists: .•.

Gregg said Curtis was hit in the
face with a helmet while catching a
pass on the 15-yard line.
Quarterback Jack Thompson, who
suffered a sprained ankle, also was
back but not ready to play. He did
not limp but he did not work out
either.
"Kenny Anderson will start at
quarterback . How come nobody's
asked me that," joked Gregg. There
had been much speculation about
whether Thompson would take ove r
from the veteran Anderson . Satur·
day's injury to Thompson seemitigly
decided the question .

Fans and students attending a
meet the team night to be held at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Meigs
Stadium in Pomeroy will see the bir·
th of the " Marauder spirit." The
special activity is being planned by
Paul ette Harrison to remind
residents of the need for team support . According to plans the "spirit"
will be appearing at Meigs football
ga mes this fall. The Meigs
Marauder band will be on hand for
the evening's activities.

,R OUND
STEAK

444 W. Union St. - Athens, Oh.

face. 11

West

w est

Montreal

said
the right
Mike place
Brown,
at assistant
lbe rightgeneral
time,"
manager.
The Bengals can bring back up to
four players they place on waivers
todsy. They don't want lbe players
involved to know If they've been
waived and reclaimed, Brown said.
" Don't bother counting them,"
Brown said of the players at Mon·
day's practice. "Everybody's here. "
The Bengals got some good news
Monday . Veteran wide receiver
Isaac Curtis, who underwent
surgery over the weekend for a
cheekbone fracture suffered in
Saturday's final exhibition game
with the Denver Broncos, will be ·
a vailable for this week's opening
game with the Seattle Seahawks.
" He said he felt like he could
play,'' Gregg said. " He's much bet·
ter than we anticipated. We'll fix up
some protection for that side of his

Nothln' Fancy·Just Good Foods at Better Prices!

Hearing Aid Center

Spirit birth set

Murphy paces A's past Cleveland
CLEVE LAND ( API The
Cleveland Indian's winningest pit·
cher, Bert Bl yleven, has discovered
why the Oa kland A's consider
Dwayne Murphy a clutch hitter.
Murp hy drove in four runs, three
with a homer in the fifth ilming, and
Tom Underwood pitched two and
two thi rds innings of hitless relief to
pace the Oakland A's to a 5-3 victory
over Blyleven and the Indians Monday night.
Murph y's homer off Blyl even, !Hi,
was his lith of the season a nd
highlighted a fou r-run fifth tha t gave
the A's a 4-1 lead . Murphy a lso
singled home a run in the moth.
"This year I' ve been hitting in a
Jot uf clutch situations," Murphy
said. " I'm a lways getting tha t cha nce. I fee l comfortable in those
situations.
•·] was s urprised tha t he
1Blyleven ) came in with a fastball.
He's got such a nasty breaking ball .
But I don't think he had the control
of it that he usually does."
Underwood gained his first save of
the season in support of starter and
wi nner Rick Langford, !Hl. Langford
a llowed nine Clevela nd hits over the

going on In the front office.
"There will be no 81111ouncement
today," said Coach Forrest Gregg
on Monday about who will be cut to
get down to the 45-man roster
required by the NFL.
The Bengals won't decide until
they have to at 4 p.m . today. The
reason is that the Bengals want to
search through the waiver lists of
players being dropped by other
teams in case they want to claim
them.
" As in most busineBSes, opportunity means a lot - just being in

DILES .

Tile ,crowd ' Gf 3,082 wagered

-.m. , -

.,

I

age·
6
g~

.

�Tuesday. September 1, 1911

Shade Valley meets

Social
Calendar

A nower allow was planned fer .··Meigs County Libraries.
It Will repolted that Mn. Sbella
Oct. 31 at Eutern lflch School ID
Curtla, Mn. Betty Dean, llld Mrs.
Meigs c-ty by Region 11 of the
Pat Holter attended the .tate ce&amp;
Ohio AalloclatlCII Ill Garden CluliiiWll¢ion and an Willi ribbolll for Jl8l'"
The Shade Valley Council Ill Floral
tlcipatliln In the convention_nower
Arts meetiDg . , bel~ at the home
allow_ Five llll!lllberB elblbited In
Of Mrs. JennyM!Ichlr.
the Meiga County Fair nower allow,
MrL Janet Koblentz Ill the Shade
Mrs. Alice 'l'lloJnpaQn judged 44
Valley Council is general chalnnan
junior
fair projecll on gardening ID
of the allow with all club members to
Ga111a
County and Mn. · Holter
be responsible for atagini detaiiB of
judged
the
August l16wer allow of the
the allow.

SPARSE CROWDS - Although Monday was the
final day of summer vacation lor Meigs youngsters,

The artistic arrangement
schedule was COII1JI).eted during the
evening and will be malled to all
clubs ID the f!!ilon thi5 monthMrs. Jackie Frvst reviewed
program plana for the coming year.
Included will be the monthly therapY
programs at the Chester school with
publicity to be handled by the Individual therapy chalnnan each
month.
The flower show of the Rutland
Garden Club, to be held Sept. 12 and
13, was announced. Invitational
classes are "SunriSe, Sunset" and
"IndianSwruner."
The meeting of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association was announced for Sept. 21 at 7 p.m. Plans
were also made during the meeting
to have an open meeting at the
Chester Methodist Church on Sept.
16 at 7:30p.m. All clubs are being Invited. Mrs. Mace! Barton, Chester
Garden Club president, and regional
horticulture chainnan, will be the

and a realscorcberwltb temperatures ID tbe!JOo,-oaly a
handful took advantage of the Middleport Pool to cool
off.

lV o t e s - - - - - - - - - - Holter visits sister

Members picnic
Members of the Racine United
:11 ethodist Women and their families
rnet recently at the home of Margie
and Gordon West for a picnic. The
group enjoyed the ducks on the pond
end a tame fawn which came into
the yard.
During the business meeting con·
uucted by Mrs Etta Mae Hill, it was
decided to change the next meeting
to Sept. 21. At that time plans will be
made to make and sell apple butter.
Quilt blocks were turned in for a
friendship quilt which will be sold at
the Christmas bazaar. A silent auc·
lion followed the meeting with the
money being designated for kitchen
furnishings for the new church.

Celebration set
Final plans were made for the
!50th anniversary celebration of the
Racine Wesleyan United Methodist
C hurc~. on Sept. 20.
Regular worship service will be at
II a .m. followed by a potluck dinner
3t 12 :30 p.m. In the afternooon a
program will be presented with former ministers being invited to give
remarks. The afternoon speaker
will be the Rev. Wesley Clark.
A history of the church has been
compiled and will be available to
those attending.
Donations for
flowers in memory of family members or friends are being accepted
for the service by Mrs. Marlene
Fisher.
A welcome party for the new
minister, the Rev . James Clark, his
wife and son, will be held on Wednesday at 7 p.m. with all members of
the church being invited to attend.

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter recently
visited her sister, Mrs. Mary Fulton,
at Dodd Hall, University Hospital in
Columbus. Injured in an automobile
accident many weeks ago, Mrs.
Fulton has received treatment at St.
Mary's in Huntington and Holzer in
Gallipolis before being transferred
to University Hospital for further
treatment and therapy.

Slinderella meets
Betty Barker was top loser for the
past two weeks of the Chester class
of Slinderella with Melissa Barker
as runner-up. At the Pomeroy class,
. Sa yre lost the most weight
J uamta
and Isabel Lewis and Donna Elliott
were runners-up while at the Mason
class, Helen Grimm lost the moo,t
· ht an d rece1v
· ed her 35 pound
we1g
weight loss ribbon, and Pearl Briles
and Ruby Queen were runners-up.
Information on Slinderella may be

guest speaker.
The club voted to send contributions to the state treasurer for
the Victor Ries FeUowship Fund, the
Walkeena
Fund ,
Public
Beautification, the Horticulture
Scholarship Fund and the Wright
University Garden of the Senses.
Mrs. Sheila Taykor will purchase a
gardening related book for the

Three nights
for Christ
Three nights for Christ will be held
at the Vanderhoof Baptist Church,
Route 2, Coolville Thursday, Friday
and Saturday with the Rev. Charles
Norris as evangelist. There will be
special music each evening under
the direction of Duane Wolfe. The
Rev. Cecil Morrison, pastor, invites
the public.

Members
honored

will

be

Evangeline chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, will meet in Middleport, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
hall · Twenty -fi·ve year members will
be honored. Officers are to wear
chapter dresses and take bazaar
items.

Tuesday
. -.

MIDI;llEPORT LODGE Ill, F
"AM, will meet Tueeday -. 7:30
pm. at the temple.~
will follow the
MARY LOU Pritdlard of
Famlly PllnDinc will be tile
spel!ker at the 'l'lielday liNn
meeting of the . ll(etp c.ty
Hwnan Resoorl:e Council il&amp; the
Meigs Inn. The publiC Ia invllll.

"'"*'•·

Wilkesville Club In Vinton County.

c.tol Erwin sJiowed 51 alleles of
and modern · tiower
arrangements seCured tllrou&amp;b the
Ohio Assoclatien of Gardell Clubs.
Mrs. Holter had a dllplay and
program on roses, expJalnlng bow
they should be selected, cut 111¥1
groomed for show specimens. She
talked about the size of the bloom fOr
different varieties, the balance of
bloom, the strength and slralgime811
traditional

of the stem which should have at
least two sets of five leaves, and be
free from disease, weather and Insect damage.
When preparing a specimen for
exhibit, Mrs. Holter said all dirt and
insecticide residue must be
removed, that leaves and thorns
should be left on, and thaf the plant
should be placed ID just enough
water to keep it fresh without submerging the foliage. The specimen
should be placed In the refrigerator
for at least 24 hours before a show.
She suggested that one of the best
ways to learn about exhibiting Is to
llsten to the judges and other
exhibitors.
Attending besides those named
were Debbie Grueser, Renee Stone,
and Joan Frances, and guests, Mike
and Debliie Frost, Doona and Alvan
Curtis, Angela an Tone Chapman,
Lisa and Jeff Stethem, Dale Machir,
Sarah and Shannon.

MEIGS COUNTY SCHOOL
BUS DRIVERS wtillltld 1 -'«y
meeting Tuelday at 7:30 p.a at
the Melga Inn. Rleblrd Gr.~,
Supervisor Ill PupU Tnnaportatlon for the Oblo lllfertment Ill EducatiCII will IP!'IL

Wednesday

The break station will be located
on the southbound roadside park 011
Route 33, one mile south of Darwin.
REAcr members will be at the sta te
on an around the clock basis to
provide free coffee and soft drinks
for motorists traveling over the
holidaYweekend·
Anyone interested is Invited to attend Wednesday night's meeting.

school -band room. ·. Upclllling
football season and Sept. 12 band
Invitational to be ~;
chaperons and concession atand
workers to be assigned.

FIBERA TED ..................'9"
.NON-FIBERATED·········'9"

A SQUARE

$

ALUMINUM MOBIL£ HOME

MASONARY PRODUCTS
94 LB. BAG PORTLAND CEMENT ......... PER BAG •soo

!AWNIMUM

5"

85

GUTTER
(WHITE)

49~

1h"x20' PCS. REINFORCEMENT ROD ••• .PER PIECE •350

L/F

10'x20' SECTIONS AVAILABLE
Revival in progress
A revival ill still in progress at the
Ash St. Free Will Baptist Church ID
Middleport.
. It begins 7, 30 nightly and the
evangelist ill Joseph GwiM, '11lere
Wi11 be special singing Ibis week by
the JoiDt Heirs and _the Gtlepel
Messengers.

r--..

I

CRESTLINE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SC)S3
BRAMBLE ••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••• SC)S3

PER SHEET
PER SHEET

SANDY BEIGE • •• •• • • • • •• • • • • • ••• • •• SC)33 PE~ SHEET
GARRISON PECAN ••••••••••••••• '11 OS PER SHEET
ETOILE •• •••••••••••••• ••• •• • • ••••••~~
··1

. 31h"x15" KRAFT FACED

1 4 ~ PER SQUARE FOOT

H'----....::/

88.12 SQ. FT. PER ROLL

FURRING STRIPS
1~ PER LINEAL FOOT

I

Ours reunion set

I

We beat selected

The Ours reunion will be held Sunday at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Dinner will be held at 1 p.m.

LENGTHS: 8', 10', 12', 14', 16'

~~y•145to•1l38

import

RUBBER-BACKED CARPET
(Do It Yourself)

Ford and

in base sticker prices~ flow we're out
to beat them in clea~W~C~
too!

PLASTIC WATER LINE
100 FOOT ROLLS

SUPERSTAR··················· '2~~YD.
TRADEWINDS .•••••••••.•..•
.

-

W' 100 LB. WATER PRESSURE
1" 100 LB. WATER PRESSURE
1" 160 LB. WATER PRESSURE

1W' 160 LB. WATER PRESSURE

10.20 PER
116.16 PER
128.16 PER ROLL
51.76 PER ROLl
1

.

'

·3··

SQ. YD.

(SCULPTURED SHAG)

~=R CARPET·················
ARMSTRONG CUSHIONED

4" PLASTIC ·DRAIN PIPE

-VINYL FLOOR COVERING

10 FOOT SECTION
SOLID
.&amp;
.PERFORATED

·········'3

99
SQ. YD.

ECONOMY GRADE NO.4
2"x4"x8' 8f EACH
PRE-CUT'
STUDS
EACH

PER PIECE

894

BffiTHDAY GREETINGS - Thill unusual baooer, created by Bal'
bara Riggs aod Sue Zirkle, has been on display ID front of the bome of
Pomeroy pharmacist Kenneth (Butch) MeCulloogb, as a surprise bJrtb.
day prank. Formerly bung on lbe Pomeroy partiDg lot, the IDrge sign was
moved to the MeCullongh residence about noon Monday.

~"cox

Contest plans set
Orientation for candidates for the senior girl interested in the Junior
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss, Inc. Miss program may enter by atpageant to be staged In Meigs Coun- tending the practice on Sunday or by
ty_ thi5 fall was held Sunday contacting the Southeast Ohio Junior
following a cookout at the Mindy Hill Miss, lnc., P. 0. Box 104, Pomeroy,
residence.
before Sunday_
The various divisions were ex·
Those attending the orientation
plplned and the rules and and cookout were Betsy Herald and
~!Ions read. The first practice
Lynne Oliver of Meigs High School;
saislon was set for Sunday at 2 p_m. Sherry Beegle, Alicia Evans, Kim
at.the Meigs Inn.
FoUrod, and Denise Riffle
&lt;t ~t.ant co-chainnen, Janis Southern Higb School.
!
(]IU1lllhan and Bobbi Hill, announced
on the Junior MJ.ols board
:deadJIDe for entering the Junior areServing
Miss Carnahan, Bobbl Hill, Minprogram to be that day.
dy Hill, Joyce QullJen and Ralph
Any Meigs County high school Werry.

I

-..................................
.........,....... ..,.. ..... .., -...

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

· Base sticker price Peludlng title, toes. and ootlonll
equ~l.

l.ewels of standard ~uipment ..,..,.

· ·Price compariSOr'lt baled on COITIC)II~ tqUII)pecll)lctcups.
!Use EPA est mpg numbers tor coml)trison. Vour mi!Nge mty varr
dep8ndlng on speed, weather and trip length. Hlgtlway mi~NQB
Pf008~ lOwer.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE-.
GALLIPOUS, OHIO.
I

.

,.

r •

PLYWOOD

·. ·$ 99
EACH

95

ROOF COATING .5.~~~•••• 19

70 LB. BAG BRIXMENT MORTAR--···· ...
3
150'x5' ROLL WIRE MESH• •••,•.••••••••• PER RoLL'45 00

Don't miss your Doclp dealer's and-of.tha·JI• _

The Evangeline Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star, will sponsor a rummage sale and country store Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, Sept. 3, 4
and 5, in the basement of the Middleport Masonic Temple. Fresh
vegetables, canned and baked
goods, and homemade items will be
featured in the country store section
The sale will run from 10 a.m. to j
p.m. each day.

I'

PER BAG 1

obtained by calling Jo Ann .----------------_:-----------~------------------,-Newsome, lecturer, 992-3382.
I

Rummage sale
and country store

99

AVAILABLE IN: e WHITE
eDUAL BROWN
eDUAL BLACK
RAINBOW

MEIGS BAND . Boosters
meeting, 7 p.m- Wednesday, 111gb

REACT Plans Safety Break
Members of Meigs County REACT
will meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday in
its office located in the front
basement of the fonner children's
home building on Mulberry Heights.
All members are asked to be
present to make final plans for the
REACI' Safety Break to be held
from Friday • Sept. 4, beginning at 6
p.m. on a 24-hour basis to 7 p.m. on
Sept. 7, Labor Day.

'21

SUTTON · TOWNSHIP
1RUSTEES will l'llllllt Tuelday at
8 p.m. at the SyraCWJe Municipal
Building_

Poets ' corner

ASPHALT ROOF COATINGS

·IKO -ASPHALT OR FIBERGLAS

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS COMPANY
PH. 773-5554 .

.

-

MASON,_W. VA.

�Pag-8-The Daily Sentinel

ISex question answered I
By James Hall, Ph.D.
Assoelate Professor of
Psychology 111111
Famfiy Medlcllle
Ohio UDlvenlty College
of Osteopathic Medlcllle
(Editor's note: Or. Ed Schreck
has asked Dr. James Hall, a clinical
psychologist, to answer this week's
question. Dr. Schreck will return
next week.)
QUESTION: I'm over 70 and still
active sexually. My wife's uncle has
told her that this isn't healthy for a
man my age and I should abstain. As
a result my wife has been refusing to
have sex with me recently. Are my
wife and her uncle right?
ANSWER: A number of popular
mytbs have grown up about sexual
activity and the eldelry. These
myths tend to desexualize older per·
sons and slate that they aren't in·
terested in sex or that there is
something dangerous or healththreatemng in having sex. Research
on interest in sex shows that about 80
percent of the men more than 65
years old and 70 percent of the
women in that same age group
report an active interest 10 sex. In
studies of people 78 and older about
70 percent of the men and 40 percent
of the women remained sexually inleresled. These studies show that Interes! in sexua l activity certainly
remams high in a large percentage
of people as they grow older.
The statement by your w1fe's un-

cle that sex is unhealthy for a person
of 70 is an eumple of another myth.
Although there are some physical
changes with aging that influence
our sexual behaviOr, these changes
do ~ have to lead to a decrease in
actiVIty or the pleasure gained from
sex. There is little or no evidence
that sexual activity itself is
unhealthy for the older person. Even
when one must temporarily stop
sexual activity due to illness or eel'lain types of medication, most individuals can return to their nonnal
sex life in a short perido of time
without threat to physical health.
Remammg sexually active may in
fact have a positive effect on health.
Thesatisfactionandpleasuregained
from sex can help a person retain a
healthy . psychological . state, avoid
depresswn and rnamtam an interest
mall aspects of life. In order to
clanfy the questions your wife has
about sex, the two of you should talk
to your fam1ly phys1c1an who can
provide mfonnation and counseling
to reduce her concerns. Aging is not
a necessary reason for foregoing an
acllVlty that can provide profound
personal gratifJcatwn.
(Editor's note · Although he can·
not answer letters personally, Dr.
Schreck will discuss questions of
general mterest m the column.
Please address correspondence to :
Ed Schreck, D.. 0., College of
Osteopathic Medicme, Oh.io University. Athens, Ohio 45701. )

Pamphlets on
cancer available
By S. Michael,
Public IDlormatlon
Chairman
American Cancer Society

Ohio Division
Meigs County Unit
Facts that men should know
about prostate and testicular cancer are detailed in two new
American Cancer Society leaflets
wh1 ch are available to the public
Without charge .
Both are titled "For Men
Only," but have separate sulr
l1tles: " What you should know
about Prostate Cancer" and
·· What you should know about
Tesllcular Cancer.''
The publicatiOn on prostate
cancer mdicates that most men
who get thiS disease are 55 years

of age or older and that the risk
increases with age. Incidence
rates are h.igher among blacks
than among whites and more
married men that singles develop
prostate cancer .

The pamphlet also pomts out
that the most common symptom
of prostate cancer
enlarg ement of the gland '' does not in itself mean cancer,''

but that the accompanying
urmary problems should be JDvestJga ted promptly. A digital
rectal exanunation should be
part of every man's regular

health checkup every year after
the age of 40. There are severa l
met hod• of treating the disease,
depending on Its stage of development and the mdividual's age and
health.
" TI1ere is an exce llent chance
that surgery can cure prostate

Tuesday, September 1, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

cancer if it is treated in an early
localized stage," the pamphlet
says. Other methods mclude
radiation, hormones and drugs .
Currently up to 70 percent of
patients are survlVlng five years
after treatment for early
localized prostate cancer.
Cancer of the testes (the male
reproductive glands) is one of the
most corrunon cancers in men 15
to 34 years of age, accounting for
12 percent of all cancer deaths in
this group.
The pamphlet on testicular
cancer prov1des assurance that if
"discovered in its early stages,
testicular cancer can be treated
promptly and effectively." A
slight enlargement of one of the
testes. a dull ache in the lower abdomen and groin, or a sensation

of dragging or heaviness are
symptoms to be watched.
The pracllce of a simple three
m~nute monthly self-examination
is explained and detailed in the
publication. One's doctor should
be consulted promptly if a lump
or nodule is detected.
Surgery is usually th e
preferred treatment for
testicular cancer, and surgery
may also be used in combination
w1th
rad ia tion
and
chemotherapy . The five-year survival rate for the most common
type - seminoma - approaches
100 percent 10 ca ncers detected
and treated early.
Both leaflets are available
locally from the Meigs County
Unit, Mulberry Hts. The
telephone number is 992-7531.

Christ-centered school
shows large growth
HARRISON, Ohio (AP) - The people are alarmed at the way they
Christ-Centered School, which perceive the things going on in the
began with five kindergarten pupils public schools. I think these kinds of
six years ago, has grown beyond the schools are a backlash from that."
Private schools can reject or expel
expectations of the Christian Church
students
with behavioral problems
of Harrison.
"It was very small. It was a new who don 't meet standards for adidea to our community and new to mission or cannot keep up with the
our church," said Beverly Kraemer. curriculum.
Christ-Centered has adopted the
the school's former director.
This year, the southwestern Ohio " A Beka" curriculum published by
school has 87 students in grades kin· Pensacola Christian College. All
dergarten through six and another subjects include references to
103 in the pre-school program. A Christian beliefs. The science book
seventh and an eighth grade are for example, is titled "Explonng
God's World."
planned for next year.
Jerri Bell, the present director.
Teachers must be accredited by
said the Ohio Department of
Education granted a charter to the the state and be Christian by the
school , the smallest in the state, last church's standards, Mrs. Kraemer
said.
April.
Twtion ranges from $20 to $45 per
"Our educational standards at last
month,
depending on how many·
meet the state standards,' ' Mrs. Bell
children
in one family attend.
said. But the standards at ChristMembers
of the congregation
Centered are higher, designed for
leadership
and do mainprovide
hetter students at an accelerated
tenance
work
at
no
cost. A sixpace, she said.
member
school
board
adopts
Mrs. Bell, a former learning
policies,
which
are
reviewed
by the
disabilities teacher at Three River
church elders.
Local School District, said parents
Parents provide the impetus for
decide to enroll their children in
the
school, according to Mrs.
Christian schools for many of the
Kraemer.
aame reasons that Catholic parents
"They feel that they want to have
send their student&amp; to parochial
their
children involved in a school
faellitles.
has
Chrlst as the center of it and
that
'' "They want discipline, a strucwhere
peer
pressure comes from a
tured envirorunent that includes
majority
of
children
who have been
'teligious principles In the teachings,
raised in Chrlstlan homes," she
and they want the moral atsaid.
mosphere," she said. "A lot of

... ..............
-...........,

Mrs. Herbert Roush held a party

Roush, grandchildren; Kim Roush,
Jenny Roush and niece, Nancy
Russell, who were aU celebrating
birthdays Saturday evening ln her
home ln Letart Falls.
They were presented a cake
decorated with white icing, red roses
and ~pleaves, and inscribed with
"Happy Birthday Herbert, Kim .

Gerald Rought, Uncoln Hill,
Pomeroy, has bene lnstaned as
the conunander ~the Ore~ Webster Post 39 Amencan Leg1on.
. Other officers ~eel were
first-vice, PaulL. Casc1 ; secondvice, Elza Gilmore; adjutan~
Charles W. Hayes; finance offleer . Charles E. Swatzel;
chaplain, Jim Gilmore, and
sergeant-at-anns, Edgar Veninwagen. Trustees are Clarence
Schmucker, Rodd Karr, George
Nesselroad and Joe Zwilling.
The post . will sponsor the
E1ghth Distnct Fall Conf~rence
at the Post home on Mam St.,
Pome~y, Sept. 20. The executJVe
cvmnuttee ~ill meet at II a.m.,
and lunch Will be served at 11 :30.
Past c om man de r s . w111
congregate atl2 :30p.m., w1ththe
busmess sesswn to start at 1 p.m.
Guest s.peaker for the conterence will be Dan Bohn, past
department eommander, Department of OhJO, and aU members
are urged to attend.

Jenny and Nancy."
They each received cards, money
and gifts.
Attending were Howard and Betty
Roush, Mrs. Gladys Shields of
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade of Troy, Ohio; Lester Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rowsh and
daughters, Kim and Jenny, Bessie
Parsons, Sharon Hupp and her son,
Jeremy, Ronald and Nancy Russell

and their children, Michael arid
Mandy; Mr. and Mrs. Russell

1
Card at Thank•
1 would like to thank Si m·
mons Oldsmobile-Cadillac·

Roush, Cindy Roush, Edward
Roush, Dana and Roberta Lewis,
. Isaac Lewis, aD ol Clifton, W. Va.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush.

for buying my hog this year
allhe Meigs County Fair,
Rand Armes. Rl 1, Miner·
svllle.

Refreshments of cake, ice cre&amp;ql.
hot dogs, mints, coffee and iced tea
were served. The evening was spent
socially and taking pictures.

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

fOr Rent
42- Mobile Homes
tor Rent
... - Apartments lor Rent
•s-Furn•~hed Rooms
46----Space for Rent
~7 - Wante&lt;l to Rent
4i- Equipmenl for Rent

Near Racine, ni ce home
with full basement and
plenty of yard space for
the k 1ds. Forget the
banks and buy this
secluded two bedroom
home. It's in excellent
cond1tion and ha s e1
pn ce tag that' s just

•MERCHANDISE

52 - CB, TV, Rad10 Equipment
U - Ant1ques
54-M•sc Merch•.whse
55--8uddl n!l 5uppi ii!S
S6-Pets for S• le

l J- HeiP Wuted
tl-Situate&lt;l W•nted
U - t n suun&lt;:e

14- Bus •ness Training
Is-Schools lns trucl •on

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

l ft--R,ll d!O, TV,
Repiltr
11- W•nted To Do
&amp; C8

61 -Farm Equtpment
•2-W• nted to Buy

• FINANCIAL

72- Trucks for Sale
u-L•.,.estock
••-Hay &amp; Gr•ln
•s-Seed &amp; Fu hluer

l 1- Bus•nen1

OpporttJn•ly
22 - Monev to loan
n - Prolentona I
Serv•ces

•TRANSPORTATI ON

36--Re4111':~14lle

W4lnted

t.,-/1-.. .... -/l.l.....s
Couldn t be EASIER- juSJ 1wo ,

• SERVICES

l?- Rullon

81 - Hom e Improvements
82- P1umb1ng&amp; Exc•.,.ahng
U-Exu,.atlnt
14- EieCfriU I
&amp; Rt!fng eral•on
B S- G ~n~n t Haultng
U - M. H. Re p•lr
17- Upholsler&gt;t

Want-Ad Advertismg
Deadlines
MOndiV -t lG on S01turd.ty
Tuesday thru Friday 2. 11!1 P M
the day befor e pubhcahon
Sund•y 2· 3(1 PM. Fr1ctay

Rates and Other Information

....
. ..

Upto15wOrds . one day•n ~er l•on
suo
Up to 15 words .. three day tnsertion ..... ."
UptolSwortts .. succt•ys•n~ertion
.. .
I Average 4 wora s IK! r l•n el
NIOitlle Homt S,lllts and YMd la-IH are ICUp ltO only With Calh With ~
order 25 unt ch•rt• tor •ds ca rr vmv lox Numbtr In Care el nte
Sentinel
Ttle Pubhshtr r eserves the right to ed •t or re 1ect any ;~ds deemed
ob1 ect ion~l . The Publi ,her ..-,u notiH responSible tor more th•n one
1ncorrect 1nse rtton

Friendship
club meets
The Vinton Friendship Club met
recently at the home of Mrs. Victor
George.
President Mrs. Chester White
called the meeting to order. Mrs.
George gave the devotions reading
from Micah, chapter four. All
repeated the club prayer. Roll call
was answered by naming a bulb we
would like to plant this fall .
Mrs. Avery Adkins read the
secretary 's report, which was approved
The program was on planting
bulbs in the fall for early spring
blooming by Mrs. White .
Small bulbs should be planted
early because they make their root
growth in September and October.
An •deal place for the bulbs is in a
rock garden, at the edge of shrubbery, or close to a walkway. These
include snowdrop, crocus, Glory of
the Snow, grape hyacinth, fragrant
iris and Spanish bluebells. There are
many more. For more infonnation
about the bulbs any club member
can find it in the Summer 1981 issue
of The Garden Path.
The highlight of the meeting was
the installation of officers for the
coming year. Mrs. Max Barnes was
the installing past president. She
used candles on a plaster of paris
base with flowers and figurines added. She used colors pertaining to
each office. The president is Mrs.
White; vice president, Esta
Downard; secretary, Mrs. Avery '
Adkins, and treasurer, Mrs. Lonrue
Burger.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess. Next meeting will be at
Esta Downard's.

Me~ting changed
The Bedford Township Trustees
meeting has been pcstponed from
Saturday. Sept. 5, to Saturday. Sept.
12, due to the holiday weekend.

Write -your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon . Cancel vour ad bv phone when you get
results. Money not refundab~ .

Nam•~----------------ddreu __________________

S11es 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 S11e
11 (busl 34) Jakes 2~ ya&lt;ds

G().mch fabnc
$2.00 too eKh paltem. Md 504
lor each pattem 101 postal!!
and handlin1. Send to:

A1111t Adlms

A

~

Pottem Depl
.. 1
The Daily Sentinel
243 Welt II Sl, New TaR, NY
10011. Print NAME, AOORESS,
ZIP, SIZE, ond STYLE NUMBER.
54

BIG TIRE
SALE
. AT LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION
Yes, We Mount
and Balance.
Buy Now &amp; Save.
21

Business
Opportunity

YOUNG WOMEN 16·21
You Can Be ...

• a welder
assistant

mechanic

• nurse
eauto

• secretary

• keypunch

operator

• carpenter
assistant

• medical

JOB CORPS

will teach you the skills
you need to get a 10b!
Free framing, pa1d living
expenses. Other
tratning areas available
for young men and
women ...
At.: Pomeroy C•tv Hall,
Council Chamber, 2nd

floor, phone 992·2246, 110

MIDDLE PORT -

The

• Building
Maintenance
e Removal of
Old Buildings
Free Estimates
Ph · 247· 3534
8·6·1 mo.

BARBARA'S
1.-N..Inftl

""""""-

r

o

ir

SIGN UP FOR
Fall Classes In :
•TAP

•JAZZ
•LADIES JAZZERCISE
Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3282

Three -year old, excellent c ondition , r anch
stv le home with 1.8
acres of nic~ laying

8·14-l .mo.

land, fully equipped k1l·

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

·c hen, three b~drooms.
two ~at h s and famHy
ro o"',
plus
other
fe a lure s.
Only

$36,900.00.

Custom kitchens and appliances ,
cu s tom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbm, electnc, and
heating.

MAIN

ST . Beaut1fu l thr~
bedroom home with
river view, wood burning ftrepiace , full
basement with garagf!
and workshp, garden
ar ea. large lot, and
man-y other f ea tures:.
Assume thi s 13%, APR

$29,800.00

loan,

DANCE

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

with

$5,000 down. approx . 29
yrs to pay . Pnnci pal
and
1nterest, $330.20
month - Total Pri ce is

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

just $34,500.00.

HAR RJS'ONVILLE - 21

CPomeroy

Scrap
Iron &amp;'Metal)

acres of farm to h•de
away from the world on.
Seclusion is the key
word . Remodeled home,
barn, implement shed,
chtcken house, hog shed
and plent-y of fenctng.
This hid e-away has
bedrooms,
t hre e
l1brary, l iving room,
dtn1ng room, kitchen
and bath . If you want a
r etreat where only the
crows can find you, this
is it! Owner will help
fmance $39,900.00.

Top prices paid for auto
bodies, scrap iron and
metals.
1
mile
west
of
Fatrgrounds on Old Rt.

33.

Mon. -Fri . 8 : 30 to4:00

Alter Aug. 3
Ph. 992·6564
8·30·1 mo. pd.

STANDARD
OIL CO.
(SOH lOt

REALTOR
Henr y E . Cleland, Jr.

992·6191
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES

We are now serving all

of Meigs Co, with
Heating Oil , Diesel

Jean Trussell949-2660
oott1e Turner992· S692
Roger Turner "2·5692

Supreme,
Gasoline.
comlete
lin e
of
.l:Ubricants
for
the

farms 8.1ndustry.
PH. 992·3460

·u long distance, call col-

A Publl~ Sen•te of the AFl-CIO
App.alachi•n Council tor the u.s.
Departmenl of Labor

lect:

Larry E. Miller, Dealer

8·30·1 mo.

) For Sale
) Announcement

) For Rent

17.
18
19

2. _ _ _ __

3.
- -- -- 4. _ _ _ __

'•

ANO
ALL MAKES
~•W•••s
• Dl1pes.a1s
• • Dry•r•
• Olshweth•n
· ,•Riftltt
eHotwartrTenln

24.

•... can

----- ~-

~... RllltaiP,.,.,-tl•s

28

~ .........H0wAIH'S

29 .

8.
9.
Jll.~-----

,.IMMIIe """• Parlls

•

30.
31 . _ _ _ __

11 .

32. _ _ _ __

12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

J;J. _ _
34. ~~-~

35. _ __ _..:_

a.m. ·6:oo p.m .

Stately Brlcll HO!IIa - LOcated on Rulhlncl St: In .
Middleport• They Just ~·t. -bulfd .them · like tills
anymore. Central · helt "and, air . conclllliiilno. 7 1,
room-3 bedrooma.l.._ ~tbs,. basem&amp;nl, garage, 1
.large private lot. S5Q,uw. , · .
1

...------------'!!"-~------··•

R.c.s: REALTY-· IN~
IJ'LL CHILDS, 'Mgr.

Run

Sportsmen

Club .

Sunday. Factory
guns only .

choked

through

Monday

.,
I

I rlsh

Friday.

Weekly

CARPENTER
DANCE STUDIO

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

•Backhoe

• Excavat1ng
Sept1c Systems
• Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
e Dump Tru ck
• Trencher

•

Now Taking
Enrollment For
September Classes in
Rac1ne and Middleport
Ages J and Up

Licensed 8. Bonded

Adult Classes Offered

Ph , 992•7201

For Information Call

Water· Sewer-E iectric
Gas line--Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups

Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire. Oh.
Ph. 367·7560

949-2710 or 949·2806
8·2·1 mo.

O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC
SE RVICE

PER!Il SALE
NOW THR U AUG. 31
520.00
Now $17 .so
525.00
Now $22 .50

NOW$27 .50

GWEN' S SPECIAL

•

Wave Lenglh Perm

15 Years

For longer Hair $29.50
Ph. 992· 2725

Experience

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, Ohio
8-6·1 mo

PERSONALIZED

POOLS
• Vinyl
• Fiberglass
• Stainless Steel
Ph. (304) 773· 5634

C. L KITCHEN
Mason, W.Va.

US,ooo . Coll446·0390 .
BY OWNER :

mixed.

742·2139.

bdr., split·

only call 446·9403.

3 kittens, 3 months old,
good mousers. Call 245·

5804.

4

leveL living room &amp; dining
room combtnatlon. eat-in
kitchen. tg . fam 1IY rm .• 2
112 baths, locat ed in Tara
Estates, Cl.,ub house and
pool priv ileges, $75,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt .

Cats and kiHens. BlueGray in co lor . Lovable.
Good with children . •call

.

29 acres, 7 rm h ouse, all
mineral rites,
Ernest
Woodruff Rd., Alice, Oh .

3 black long-haired kittens

ro good home . Caii2S6-6783.

Call614 299·0890 after 5

6 mo. old black pup. Ger
man Shepard and mix . give

to good home Call446·4885.

6~_ _,L,o~s,_t,_an,_,d"-'=F~o~u,_,nd~_

between
600
ns
LostWt
Angus
heifer 500
with&amp; hor
lbs If seen pl ease ca ll 361 -

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

Siding
Roofing/Gutter
Remodeling
Servtng Your Area for
20 Years

EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates

Call Collect
Ph. 843-3322
7·13·2 mo. pd.·

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling.
• E lectrica I work
• Rooting work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph.992-7583
8·27·1 mo.

- Portraits

AlARM WORK
PH. 247-3534
8·6 1 mo

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all t-ypes
• S1d1ng
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs. experience

TOM HOSKINS
l ' h 949ll40 or992·61H

1·5 tt c

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the
Smallest
Heater Core to the
la r gest Radiator .
Radtator Specta l ist

NATHAN BIGGS

JS Yrs. EX pertence

an

1m·

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

OHIO VALLEY
ROORNG

r.

BOGGS

from HMC on Rl . 160

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u.s. Rl. 50 Easl

Guysv•lle, Oh.
Phone 614-662- 3821
Authoriled John Deer.
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm
Equipment
Dealer

FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS/SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT

1- No. 8600 Diesel Ford
Tractor w / Cab
1- Model 27 s Diesel

M.F.

1- Model479 Hay Btnd
N .H.
73 -tfc

LO ST Brown white Chihu ahua Real small. Answers
to name 'Honey'. Very ill on m edica tion. Del 's Appliance, Pt. Pleasant area.

Garage Sa le Wed.· Thurs
Fri
at Walter
Lane
residence, 2 1/ 2 mi le from
Rt . 7 on Georges Creek Rd.

2193

Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

BISSELL
..
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built G•rages"

Call far free Siding
•stimatu, ,..t-2101 or
t4t·2UO . .
No Sunday Calls
3·1

Farm Buildings
Sizes
"From 30x3G"

SMALL

Utility Buildings
Sizes f_fom 4x610 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3,

Box~

Racln~, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591
6·1

GARAGE

Lei .George Miller
chtck your present eltc·
.trlcal 'YII,am.
~esldentlal '
'
&amp;' COin mercia I
Call742·3195

- Auto and Truck
Rep;~ir

;-rra"smlssion .
Repair
Hrs.-. Mon.-Fri.
t a.m.·S: 30 p.m.

992·5612
1G-7-IIc

Herbert Mathen -y 3 miles
east of Tupper Plains.
CR319. Follow signs. Lam -

furn iture ,

Near M e igs and Gal ira line.
Start at 9

Garage sale, Sept 5, 9/lo 5.

JlfAlTOII

216 E. Second Stre&amp;t
Phone
1-(614)-992-3325
NEW LISTING - Large
4 bedroom home with
furnace, hot water heat .
Ni ce kitchen. fireplace,

Sept. 2·3, 10 to 6. Lots of

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Neals

Auction

6Jh, Middleport .

10 family yard sale. Clothes
and coats . Lots of to-ys and
dolls. Knicks Knacks and
Maytag washer. At Mary

Layne, Cheshire on RT 7.

bedrooms, 2 full baths,

nat. gas furnace and
chain link fenced yard.

Only $31,000.
NEW LISTING

Remodeled 3 bedroom
home In the country , 1'12
baths.
stove,\
refrigerator, dri lied
well, furnace heat ,and

large garage. U9,900.
NEW LISTING - Clean
3 bedroom home on !he
outskirts 'Of town, v iew

of Rl. 7. New bath and
fixtures, large living
and Leading Cr. water .

Only S18,500.
NEW LISTING - Smar·
tly · designed 3 bedroom
frame home, 2 full
baths, hot water heat,
stove, disposal , full
basement and 2
bedroom coarage ,apt. A
real good , property lor

$69,900. ' .
WE ' HAVE MANY
OTHERS FOR YOU TO
SEE.
·,

If· 1!/\/fli!
',Jiil / lf,/1(:'1\

9

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
niture and Antique s of all
k1nds, ca lt Ketneth Swain,
256· 1967 in the evenings

CAS H PAl D for clean, Iare
model used cars. Smtth
Bu ick-Pontiac, GA IIipolt s,

Yard sale, Sept . 4. Si lent
auction. Not r esponsible

WE

Yard sale . Tue. 1, Wed. 2.
Lasle-y St. Bab-y clothes,
chatrs, TV, stereo, t.res.
cloth ing . Ram ca ncels

Grove.

BUY

4 rms &amp; bath 1056 2nd
Ave., Ga llipOl iS. Ca ll 446

7617

2 MON T H old part Wtre
ha~r e d Terrier to a good
hom e, 304-675·4664

2 year old 3 bedroom home,
2 acres, plenty water and
fru1t trees, .4 m11es from
town , ctt y school Ca ll 446

2663

Insurance

13

ser vices for fire insurance
coverage in Gallta County
for a lmost a century .
Farm, home and personal
property cove ra ges are
availa bl e to meet indiv idual needs
Contact
Foster L ewis, agent . Phone

379·2204.

AUTOM OB ILE

IN

SURAN CE
been
ca n ·
celled?
L ost
-your
operator's Li cense? Phone

Li fe Estate Farm, proper
ty va lue.$45,250 00
Ltfe
esta te value $8.70 1 58 Cal l
992 6747 eve n tngs
House tor sa le •n Mtd
dleport
Owner
Wtll
sacnftce 992 29 17 or 992

2606

7 rooms &amp; bath on doubl e
tot. Full basement, 2 car
garage. Beech St , M •d
dleport 992 72rJY
House, 5 rooms , bath 5
acres m ore or less 1 m1 1e
above Appl e Grove , O H

$18,500 1·614 247 2245.

18

4 roo ms, ba th, Langsv tlie
John Sheets 3112 miles south
Mtddleport Rt . 7

14K, 18K. and dental gold.

Class ring, wedding rings,
watches Clarks' Jewel ry
Store, Ga II ipolis, 446 -2691.
Pomeroy, 992 -2561.

TOY

TRAINS

Lionel,

American Flyer, and lves.
Also m etal figurines . Call

Sept 5 8. 6 446·0668 .
BEDS·IRON , BRA SS, Old
futniture , gol d, silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone Iars, antiques, etc.,

households

diameter 14"

Schools Instruction

245 9378.

Wanted to Do

Baby sitt i ng in m-y home,
l ive tn ci ty , have 2 small

children . Call446·6220.
TV service calls Call 992 ·
2034 . A lso used color TV for
sale.

HOU SEC LEANIN G. Two
sisters would like to clean
houses . Reasonable rates.
Pt. Pleasant , Ga llipol iS,
and surrounding areas

675·4109

on largest

fiRaAelal

end. Sl2.50 per ton . Bundled
slab. SIO.SO per ton
Friday. 81il? Plants, dolls, Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co, 2,_,2c....._M
= o"'n"ey'-"lo,_L::.Oil=n, ___
Springs Rd ., FHA-VA -Convential Home
furniture, 8 boxes baby Ro ck
clothes. 2218 Jefferson Ave . Pomeroy. 992·2689.
Loan s, Co lumbus F trst
Pt. Pleasant.

Gold, silver, sterling,
jewel ry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·

Mortgage Co., .463 Second
Ave., Ga llipol is, Oh., 446·

7172

ber Shop, Middleport. 992· 2c=3===P=r=0=10=5=s=
io=n=a=J==

3476.

Serv•ces

CIAL and in·
YARD SALE , Aug. 3i, No item to large or small COMMER
dustrial
photogr aphy
will
buy
1
piece
or
complete
Sept. I and 2, Monday thru
Phone
446·2909
or 446·7226
household
.
New,
used
and
Wed., 9 a.m . Ill dark. Davis
after 4 p.m.
residence, Rose Hill. B3by, antique. Call992·6370.
men

2 story bn ck on upper four
th . Fu ll y eq uipped k itchen ,
formal d1ning, 2 or 3
bedrooms ,
ca rp ett ng
thr oughout
Storm w1n
dows, gas furn ace. and cen
tr al air Assumabl e loan at
9 112% 446 7448

Will do babys11t1ng i n my
home in Syracuse area .

Huge 5 family yard sale.
Wednesday,
Thursday ,

girls,

FOR SALE BY OW NER 3
bdr. home located at 123
Garfi eld Ave 2 acres runs
from SR 7 to Ohto R 1ver
Full basement, f tntshed
rec. room , 2 ftreplaces, 2
1/2 baths , in ground con ·
crete pooL all new carpet,
new paint inside and out
Will consider vour home or
mobt le ho m e in tr ade
Owner wd l cons tder f.nan
cmg at 10% APR af ter
reasonable down payment,
tf interested ca ll 446 1546
for an appointment

Buying Gold. Pay ing cash
for anythtng stamped lOK ,

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.

boys,

Sc hool Ca ll 379·2514

2.4 acres, 4 room house wtth
300 ft . ri ver frontage . 5 mtle
fro m Ravenswood Bndge
Ka ll Victor Wolfe 614·949
2286 after 5 p m

Frank lin

4PM on Sept. 2 8. 3.

3 bedroom sect tona I 2 ac r e
wooded lot. Family room,
wood burner, full y equtped
k ttchen w11h island cook •ng
center 2 full baths, wa l k tn
c losets. 1550 sq ft . livmg
space On State Rt ., Green

l essons
now
Gu •t ar
avai lable i n Gal l ipolis with
a fter
schoo l
hour s
ava ilable for studefts. Call

Avenue, Pt. Pleasant .

Baby clothes, refrigerator,

3 bdr ., 1 112 baths, LR with
firep lace, family r oo m with
woodburner , kttchen and
dm1ng roo m Ctty schools
Call 446 2003

lS

Write: M .D Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh Or 992-7760 .

television. 3 miles west of
Holzer, just ott 35. lOAM to

Ca ll 446 3437

Ca ll667·6329.

FURNITURE

Complete
3305

Sttuat10ns Wanted

For sa le on la nd contract .
House and 2 mobil e homes
loc ated at Bulaville . Wil l
sell separately or together

We sell furn iture Sag r aves
Furniture. 446·4775

Four famil-y garage sate.
Wed, Thur, Fri . September

2,3,4 .

12

Wt ll care for elderl-y in my
private home Reasonable
ra tes . Good exp ierence

992 2143

in

Clothes,

OPE N ING for M ed•ca l
Sec r etar y, avatlable •m ·
m ed iatly Write to Box P31,% Pt Pleasant Register,
200 M atn St. Pt . Pleasant .

Hogsett,

PM .
(Consignments
taken&gt;. (Wtll bu-y furniture)
Lonnie Neal367 1101.

Ohio. Call 446·2282

and ends, lounger, coffee
table, and other Items.

Part ttm e bar t ender Ap·
ply in person at Mei gs Inn,
Pomeroy. No phone ca lls

SA NDY AND BEAVER in
WVA . Rt. 2. Every Sat. 7:00 surance
Co. has off ered

Sept 3, ..,5.and 6.

tor acc&lt;dents. Kralls, odd

Wan ted Someone to live in
with elder l y gentl ema n.
So m e house cleani ng . 949 ·

Yard sale. 75Ei m St. Sepr 992-7636

school c lothing. Teen bo-ys
and girls . Some new, also
winter . Kitchen sink, cur tains, lots of mise 365 s.

2 full barns, 2 oul·
and shop or business
rooms In the country . 4

Wed . Fr i 8·00 6 00 West·
brook Sub 114 mile out
Bu laville Rd . Clothing ,
coats, crib mattress, and
misc.

1.2,and 3. 9 to ? Jeans, n ice
clean clothing, all sizes

All week 91o?

If,

First t1m e sale Rtverside
Or. Chesi re, Oh
Sept.
3,4,&amp;5 Men and womens
c lothing, some furn iture,
and misc. items

Dal e Hart residence. Jl/2
mile from Leg1on Hall on
Yellowbush Rd, Racine .

books, lamps, new bedspread s, new dresses &amp;
tops, dresser with mirror .

buildi ngs, and 3 acres of
levelland . $32,500.

ALL STEEL

Garage sale Sept. 2,3,4.

bicyc le,

HMC on old Rt . 160

3 Family Yard Sale at Net·
tie Ca rt er residence on 160.
Wed.- Fr i.

Yard Sale

ple

RGIL B. SR.

Part time Employmen1.
Person with car wanted for
1 hour dail-y to pick up lab
spec imen s at loca l doctor s
off•ce , tn late after noon
Must be neat and reliable.
Write · Bill Brown, P.O.
Box 506, Co lumbus, Oh io

43346.

INDOOR rummage sale, 6
miles out Jerrys Run at Ap -

EAFORDrn

Needed 1 babysitter in my
home. Ca ll after 6:30 p. m .
992 -6233. Middleport area .

2 famtl-y Yard Sale Thur s
&amp; Fr1 . 9 to .4 . Clothes and
misc. items. 3 mi les from

Yard sale. Sept. 2, 9 to 4,
Chester . Watch for signs.

5 7· 1tc

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and ear n good m oney plus
some great gifts as a Sen tinel route carrier . Phone
us r ight away and get on
the eligibi lit-y li st at 992
2156or992·2157

LOST
vrcinity of Ow l
Hollow and Sandhill Roads.
One black and whit e
Holstein H eif er . Call 675 6043 Lou 1e Pl ants.

Building supplies, clothing,
household goods.

Ph. 992·2174

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement

day . Slate Route 218. 1/2
mile oil Route 7, 9AM·5PM.

Garage Sale Sept . 3. 2 mi.

=======·==·J=m=o=·~~ St.
Tr!
Yard
iler sale.
acrossWed,
from Thurs.
Salem
gas station In Rutland .

Pomeroy, Oh.

Aluminum Siding

Yard Sa le Friday &amp; Satur·

7846
White with black.
About 6 months old.

109 High St .• Pomeroy
6 28

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

J&amp;L
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

Garage Sa te Fri &amp; Sat. E .
College, Rio Grande. Odds
&amp; ends from m ov ing. What
nots!

btrd
h 1m , w•Phone
th a fl
eacollar1nReward
992

dog Wilh some

1 day yard sa le, Sept. 2.

pressive, complete lme
of wedding and anntversary mvitations and ac ·
cessones.
Reasonable
priced, quick serv1ce.
- Look without obliga tiOn

li"L.~U

items . Phone 256·6206.

cloth•ng, and toys.

- Anntversanes
- Passports

Now,

7. 10;00 til ? Asscorted

Kitchen furniture. di shwasher, lawn mowers.
electrotux sweeper, m1sc .
clothing, Chdirs, and etc

ps,

- Weddings
- and

Yard Sa le Wed. &amp; Thurs. 2
mi. N. of Crown Cit-y, on Rt .

Two kittens. Call 675-2665.

Reward. 304-773·5118.

THE PHOTO
PLACE

Reasonable Rates

8 61 mo

For .. u of your wiri'ng'needs .

'
!
., I

Setter

Call742·2139.

Three 8 week old kittens .
304 882 3596

STOLEN - N ew
motor
dr iven
Murphy
lawn
mower. Motor black, red

rates. 304-773·5302. Call for

OGER HYSELL'
S
.

t.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance ·
The Daily sentinel
801729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Shooting match, Forked

NEW LISTING - Home

22.
23.

25.
26.
27.

992-2156

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

21 .
I.

In Mason opening Sep·
tember tst . Hours-7:30

Real Estate- General

20

New 3 bdr. house wtth
garage and tun basement

items. Tackle Box, SR124,

Syracuse, Ohio. Monday
through Saturday 91o 5.

Beginning Sept. 6. E.very

J&amp;f
CONTRACTING

$30.00

peted. 2 barns, 379·2123.

Puppies 7 wks. old. Collie
and

Homes for Sale

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

does not offer or, attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

r~~~~~~~~==~~~==~~~~~5·~1~1·~rf~c~~k===~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::~J~7~·1~rt~c~~ 7

BYPASS

POMEROY

In Mrtso n Cou nty

L&amp; M
Maintenance
anct Demolition

2nd St., Pomeroy, Ohio9

} Wanreo

red !all wins 22 rille. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza, .W.-8025.

In Me1gs Count-y

__

31

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and

Business
Services
~::!· Coon
r-:::::::~~;:==:::;Ji::::::::::::;::;;:::::::::::;r;:::~~~:::::::::::::=:::;-r;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::j

possibility of home
ownershtp is your s with
the rental income from
the one b edroom apart·
ment upsta irs while -you
live in the lower floor,
two bedroom apart·
ment Rooms are car·
peted, original wood·
w ork.
utility room.
Look.s neat with a ll the
r emode ling that 's been
done. $33,000.00.

NEAR

Givelway

4

ATTENTION Come In and SJ.oo for 12. 10%u off craft

register for our Squirrel
Tail Contest. Longest gray
tail wins 22 rifle. Longest

-

a.m .- 12 N. &amp; 1 p.m.-4
p.m. Sepl. 2, 1981.

7.

DISCHARGES AUG. U
Clifford Bruce, Wilbert Flint,
Nona Gunther, Mrs. John Halley and
daughter, Mary Howard, Pamela
Kapp, Clifford Messer, Debbie New,
Nellie Parks, Emma Searles, Bren·
da Stegall, Shari Tipton.

Pnnted Pattern 4625· MISses

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for .
Claulfleds and
Savell I

6.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

mam parts lor th1 s sl 1m shapmg
wtth the new soft shoulder
pleats St ttch 1! up now m lmen,
dacron blend, neat kn1ts

-----------""----------

s.

HOSPITAL NEWS

SIZES 8-18

14- Motorcycleli
H - Aute Parts
&amp; Accessanes
H-A uto Rep••r

ll-Mob•le Home~
tor S• le
U - Farmslor Sal e
l4- Busutess Buildings
lS-lots &amp; Acreage

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Coleman,
Rutland, hosted a haynde and
wiener roast for the Golden Rule
Class members and guests, Middleport First Baptist Church.
In the group were Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Dav1s, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Imboden, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz and
Marc, the Rev. and Mrs. Mark McClung, and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Coleman and Jeremy.

4625

11 - Auto' far S•le
1J-Vans&amp;4W D

•REAL ESTATE

Rutland

I

For buld deliver-y of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel , ca ll Landmark,

________;__

LAND CONTRACT Thi s large home has one
of the grandest mastef
b ed rooms available .
Total ot four bedrooms,
kitchen, hvtng room ;
room, sewing
music
r oom
plus a
fu ll
b ase ment , House is
large, nice and con·
veniently loc ated , with
wood
burner
tri
basement $28,.500 00.

now In stock . Spring Valley

Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.

675-1333 '
body, Reward . 304-675·1302.
reserv ations .
---------..J~---------..l----------.J.
~

righl $28,900.00.

~ 1 - Househo ld Goods

11 _ HomeJ lor Sill le

Stairs, son, Gallipolis.

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
LAND CONTRACT -

41 - HOuse~

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

446-2342

608
E. Main

586 S &amp; W newest l frame

Ohio

assorted colors s.s each.
Assorted marlbou jigs,

Co., w . Va

In Ga llia County

bee._

sewing 992·21BJ. Pomeroy, Oh.
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
deliver-y, Davis Vacuum Sale of fishing tackle. Store
Cleaner, one h a lf m i le up closing September 12. 20%u
Georges Creek Rd . Call off all sales. 2S%u off sales
over $20~ 6 inch ri ngworms,
446·0294

DEE'S Child Care Center

RENTALS

3--Announce ments
4--G iveiWiiY
5--Hilppy Ads
6--Lo''if • nd Found
7-Y ari:IS,lllf
t--PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction
9--W•nted te Buy

and

TO PLACE AN AD CA LL

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
1-c.rdofTh,liAkS

Announcements

SWEEPER

675- Pt. Pleasant
4'ili- Leon
S76-A pple Grove
773-Mason
1:182-New H a\len
89S- Leta.-t
YJ7 - Buffalo

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

2- lnM e mor~•m

3

Pomeroy
Y8.S -C hester
343- Portl and
247- Letart Falls
Y4Y- Rac ine
142- R uti and

SPECIAL SALES New
never
shot, display
models-salesman samples.
Special price on this group
Bear Whitetail Hunter,
169.14. Bear LTD Polar
$129.95. Brown Bear
$149.95. Bear Mini Mag:
549.95. Kodiak speucal,
S99.95. Spr ing Valley
Trading co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.

of

grande hi ldren .

~"':l - Middleport

M~son

PHONE 992-2156

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

lovi ng memories

ll rea Code 304

Real Estate- General

WANT AD INFORMATION

In

614

446-Gallipolis
367-Cheshire
388-Vinton
24S-Rto Grande
2S6- Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia 01st .

'

In Memoriam

Eliza\)elh Riebel who
passed away September 1,
1975. Sadly missed by
husband and children and

Metgs Co Area Code

614

The Sunday School of the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Church recently enjoyed an old fashioned hayride
and wiener roast.
On the r1de, which traveled along
the Ohio River to the manna and
back to the residence of Mr. and
Mrs. James Brewer where the
w1ener roast was held, were Amy,
Shellie. Sue and Rick Metzger, Sam
and Judy Cowan, Marybeth, Mary
and Jim Brewer, Rita Casto
Katheryn and John Metzger, Kenn~
and Ellen Lewis, Sue and KeMeth
Imboden, Debb1e, Dodie and Carroll
Cleland, Jennifer and Debbie Fink,
Michael and Michelle Frash, Gwin·
nig White, Beulah White, Keith Darst, Mark and Mary Ann McClung,
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McClung,
Tracy Walker, Jerry Kirkham,
M1ssy and Cheryl Spencer,
Elizabeth Slavin, Jim Tracy and
Donna Grueser.

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pawn, daughter,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen

Classified Pages cover the
ft!llowing telephone exchanges . ..
Gallla Co. Ar-ea cOde

Middleport

BIR111S

Ch&amp;vorlet Corp, Pomeroy,

2

Announcements

3

- " '" '

Rought named Roush family celebrates birthdays
commander
in honor of her husband, Herbert

ldd

5 roo m house .n Sy ra cuse .

992·3981.

Level IO I ,s55SVE U X 132. 4
rooms and bath, carpeted ,
stove ,
refrtgator .
Posess i o n
anyt t me.
Reasonab le. 992 7244
MASON, 4 bedroom, 2500
sq . ft plus basement, 1

acre, BO's 304·773· 5867.

2 BEDROOM house, full
basement, on two acres
more or less, 304-576·2372 .
THIS handyman's drea m
sets on over 2 acres . House
loca ted on hill side with a
lovel y view, on Sandhtll
Rd . in Letart. Owner w111
be at site Sept ember 5 &amp; 6
W ill help finance .
COMPL E TELY remodele ·
d, 4 bedroom , 2 story house .
1.2 acres, loca ted off Rt. 2,
I mile up T homas R1 dge

Rd. Ca ll 304 895·3672

and

women's clothing, dishes,
knick-knacks, odds and en·
ds and m~ny misc. Items.
Yard Sale. Tues., Sept. I 8.
Weds., Sept. 2. AI Arthur
Miller's on Whiles Hill Rd.,
Rutland, Oh. From 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. each day. Rain

Scrap metals, baneries.
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise

brokerlng . Yarper·Halsle·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 67S·5868.
Also Flea Markel open
daily. Open Monday·
Friday 1·5 pm .

c3ncels.

Yard Sale. 3 days. Sept.
3,4,5. I terns to numerous to
mention. Some antiques.
Salem St., Rutland, Oh.

.

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

.. ' ..... .
······ -~

Piano tun ing and repair,
Love your neighbor tune

By owner, 3 bedroom
brick, b asement, large cor'
ner lot Central air and
heat. Phone675-7164

GALL IA Cleaning and
Rent·A·Mald Service Inc.,
Free Estimates, bonded,
insured, phone 245·9234.

32

your Plano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard. 446·4372,
Gallipolis.

Cleaning by the week, month or contractual.
Your Plano rustlno in sum-

mer Humidity? Free In·
Help Wanted
specllon with tuning. Lane
Garage Sale. Aug. 31-Sept. Nallona I Cosmetic Com· Daniels. 742·29S1 or 992·
4. 9-5. South of Jack's Club pany Is looking tor in· 2082.
ott Rt. 7 bypass on old Rl. terested people to teach
._ ... ._ .... ._ , ,
143. Many new Items, skin care, glamour ,
clothing, hOuse paint, paint avi!rage $10 per hour,
unlimited earning polen·
.
supply.
llal, opportunity to own 31
Homes lor Sale
your own bUsiness. send
Yard sale. sept. ,2,3,4. 238 resume
to
Brenda
Young,
NEW
CABIN or small
Condor St. Back ot Land·
mark, Pomerov.. Each day Box 106 Rt. 1, Thurman, Oh home, completely fur·
45615.
9 to? . Variety of lteft]S.
nlshed, S39CIO· can '*·0390.
11

..... . . ... -·· ..

Mobile Hom es
for Sale

Prices r educed on all
mobile homes and travel
trailers .
TRI - STATE

MOBI LE
HOMES
Gallipolis. CA LL 446·7572 .
CLEAN USED MO BILE
HOME S
KESSEL'S
QUA L ITY
MOB ILE
HOME SA LES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLI S, RT
35. PHON E 446·3868 or 446:
7274.
.
2bdr. mobile home,
central

alr.e, new

carpel. Call alter

I-7~2 - 2Q.40 .

't

�The Dai
Page- lo-The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

42

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
tor Rent

1976 mobile home 12x.SO, 2
bdr ., exc. cond ., $4.800 . Call
4.46·0234

1973 Crown Haven, J.4x.6S,
three bedroo m , new car-·
pet, 197 1 Ca meron. 14x64.

two bedroom , new ca rpet .
1972 Champ1on, 12x60. two
bedroom, new carpet . 1976

Cameron .
12x60 ,
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
carpet_ 1970 PMC. 12x60,

two bedroom , ne w carpet,
B &amp; S Sa les, Inc., 2nd and
Viand Street. Pt . Pleasant.

Mobile home. 1 child ac -

cepted . No pets. John
Sheets, Jlh m i les south
Middleport, Rt. 7.
2 bedroom house trailer in
Racine. $175 month . $75
deposit . You pay utilities .
3677811 .

OR RENT · almost new 14x
70, 3 bedroom , 1 112 baths,
sitting on nice lot, ready to
move into. Phone 304·576-

2711.

WV Phone 675 · 4424.

1980 24x52 doub tewicte .
Cathedral cei ling , 2 J:M)r·
c hes, underpinning, 4 years
warranty , A· l cond 992 ·
3041 or 965 As h St ., M id d leport .
1972

New

tra i ler .

Moon

12 x 70, 3 bedroom . CR 1. 1117

2 BEDROOM house tra i ler,
Sl.SO. a month plus deposit
&amp; utilities,304-675·-4088 .
T railer , part i ally fur
nished . $175 per month .

6751724 .
SMALL. 2 bedroom, fur ·
nished tra i ler, 95 Burdette,
air condi ti oned, $150 month
plus utillties, 304-675·4600
between 9:00 a.m . 8. 4: 00
p .m . Deposit required .

ou t of Sa lem Cen t er Good
co n dit ion . 669·5092 .
U SED M obi le Home . 576·

17 11
Trailer . Completely fur ·
f ished, washer , dryer, and
ai r condi tion er . All utilities

1971 Da r ia n 12 x 65, 3
b ed rooms . 1972 Crown
H rlV f' n, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
ex p ando, 3 bed room s. 1973
Uto pia 17 x 65, 2 bedrooms .
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bed rooms . 1972 Nasha u, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms . B 1.• S
Sa les, 1nc 2nd an d V iand
Sts
Pt
Pleasa nt, WV
Phone 6? 5 4424 .

paid. No pets . Call 773·5751
or 773 ·9520 Mason, WV .
Apartmemt
for Rent

44

3 r oom furnished apt.
Utilities paid, adults only,

$185.00 per month, $60.00
deposit . 94 Locust St .,
Ga l lipolis . 446 · 1340 or 446·

M obil e hOm e loca ted in
Cf! m p Con ley , Ex tra n ice
(• nd clean. Phone 304·895·
3967

3870.

19/ 6 KIRK WOOD, cust om
t.Ju lit . 14x70. w a s.her , dryer,
,w· con dit io ne r , porch &amp; out
tJulio• ng, $9 ,000
30 4·773 ·

be droo m , kit c hen
nished, c arpeted, bill s
tially paid $200. mo .
ce llent ne ig hborhood,
6722 or 675·5104.

REGEN CY AP T. IN C. 2
fu r ·
pa r
Ex ·
675·

5571
Furnished apts. 3 bdr .,
$220., water pa id, children
acceptab le Cal l 446·4416
after 7PM .

196! 12 &gt;&lt; 60 com pl e tely fur n •shed. CH r conditioned,
co lor·ed T V , stereo. dryer,
nn d etc , only $5500 . 304 576·
12.&lt;15 or 5?6 2235 .
33

2 bdr . apartment unfurn .,
in Crown City, Ohi o. Ca ll

Farms tor Sale

256·6474 .

F arm tor S&lt;:lle . Ci=tll 256·
3 rm. apt . utilities paid .
Call675·5104 or 675 ·5366.

6560
3-1

Bus.ncss B~:t~di ~

Unfurn . 4 rm. apar tm ent,
$250 mo ., $100 dep ., ut i lities
pd ., no children, no pets.

Ca ll446·3437 .

Lots &amp; Acreage

F or rent upstairs f urn .,
downtown apt ., carpeted,
air cond .. $100 dep., adu lts

LO T S Rea l nice ca mq site
on Rac coon Creek , al l
ul •l•t• cs avai la b le, $300
do wn , owner wi II f inan ce.
c al l rifler 3 p.m ., 256·6413 .

only. Ca ll446· 1788

l &amp; 2 bedroom f urni shed
apartme nts. 992 ·5434 or 99 2·
591tl or 882·2566 .

LOIS by Owner
1/ d A to5
acrf's, le vel. rural water ,
c •t v schoo ls, 10 per cen t
down Cnll 379 2196.
Apa rlment l or sale . land
co nt1a ct 9°o , 4 u n its, 2 bdr .
ea ch . Tot a l ren t $740 .,

$J 9.000 Call4463937 .
Lo t 50x 1?0 with dri l led w e ll .
• 1 do·wn &amp;
ba l ance land
co ntra ct 247 2841 ilfter 7

p m
B y owner , 3 a partment
house on approx . 1 acre.
L 1ve in one, rent others to
rn nke your payment . Can
be convert ed si ngle home.
C dy w ater , wi ll co nsider
la nd co ntra ct . 675·1883 9·5
p m
20 ;'\ ( RE S on b l ack top
r o!'ld. t•m ber . Phone 1·614 ·
763 8322 or 26 3·2669 .
A CRES of
Ka nawh a
R 1vp r land, 1614-263·8322
or 1 614 263 ·2669 .
1

=Rentals
Hou s~s

for- Rent

NOW RENTING : Se nior
c itizens and handuca pped
a pt . commun ity open i ng
F eaturing 1 bedroom un·
furnished w ith wall to wal l
c arpeting , wall ·tex walls,
bui If in bookcase,
ap·
pliances, sm oke detectors,
air co nditioned, private
patio, sto rage fac i lities,
single story with no sta ir s
to c limb, private entranc es
with undividual laundry
f akilitie s on premises with
recreation and meeting
rooms.
Professiona I
r esi d e nt
manager
on
pr em 1ses. St onewoods Ap·
ts ., Rt . 7, Midd leport . For
rental information phone

614 8U2341.
2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave , Pomeroy . Par ·
tialty fu r nished . S170 you
pay utiliti es . Call 992·2288
after 6 p.m .

446 0338 .

2 bedroom furnished apart ·
ment in Midd leport . $175
month, plus ut i l i ti es. 992·
5545 , Man · Fri. , between
7a .m .·3 p .m .

Un lurn i shed
house .
6
roo ms, Neig hborhood Rd .,
S275 Cnll 446 -4416 after
7P M .
6 r m house in cou ntry, ref .
&amp; dep. req Call 388 ·9756.

Apartments . 675· 5548 .
2 BEDROOM, unfurnished
apartment and 2 bedroom
furnished apartment, 30-4·
675 5571.
2·bedroom
Henderson

all e lec tri c,
$150 deposit,

$150. per month. No Pets.

Ca ll 256 9363 .

Inquire 614 ·367· 7257 after 5.

FURNISHED. 1 bedroom

3 bdr . hom C' On Rt. 141, Cen
tenary Ca ll .dA6·6566.

apartment in Pt . Pleasant .
E&gt;&lt;tra ni ce, phone 304-675·

1386

Ou t si de Ches t e r
Far ·
mhouse wi th la nd. $250
month
plus
damage
depos it . Farmhouse, cou ld
be used for hunting . $100
month. Contac t Walter J .
McCarthy ,
Real tor ,
Marietta, 373 · 1523. Ask for
Mike .

3 room furnished
ment .
Utilities
Adults . 615 ·4351 .

apart ·
paid .

Apart m ent, Mason, wv . 1
bedroom furnished .
No

•

..... . ....

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa,

chair,

rock@r,

ot-

toman, 3 lables. $500. Sola.

45

ROOMS and

light housekeeping
Park Cen tral Hotel.

apt .,

Modern off Ice suite for
rent, downtown, Business
and Professional Building .
Call or see Morris Haskins.

Mobile Homes

lor Renl
2 bdr., 3 bdr ., mobile
homes . Call"-46·0175.
--~~~~ I

tN

Space for Rent

I'

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
fur · i
9'12· 7479.

2 bedroom trailer,
nished, in Chester . Room

torrent. 985· 3839 .
12 X60 trailer with expando '

1

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Soufhern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
9'12· 3954.
TRAILER space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y, Pt. Pleasant, 675·
3248.

11

1973 Jeep 11.800. Michael
Lambert. 742·2452.

Home
lmpfovements

concrete

drivewav.s·,

1971 VW Van, good con·
ditlon. no rust , rebuilt
engine . $1895. Call675·1213.
74

Molorcycles

1975 Honda Goldwlng 1000,
$1,500. Call379·2115 .

7791.

~

•

Home

building,

197&lt; 580 B Case Backhoe W.
Extenahoe. 114.500 .00 614
643· 0012 .

Suzuki' s, good sellection of
used bikes, parts, and ac ·
ces. Suzuk i of Jackson, Rt.
35 North Jackson, Oh, 286·
4956.

David

Bassett

Oak,

bed com pl ete with mat·
and up to
$350. Captain's beds, $275 .
complete . Baby beds, $9'1.
Mattresses or bo:w: springs,
tull or twin, $58 ., firm, $68.

ZigZllg Sewing machine.
Makes button holes, sews

t resses, $250.

and $78 . Queen sets, $195. 5
dr . ches ts, $49. 4 d r. chests,

$42 . Bed frames, S20.and
$25. , 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350. , dineHe chairs $20.
and $25 . Gas or electric
ranges, $295 . Orthopedic
super firm , $95, sofa bed
with chair, $165., baby
matresses, 525 &amp; $35, bed
frames S20, S25, &amp; $30 .
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bula"Ville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
t hru Fri ., 9am to 5pm , Sat.
446 ~ 0322
-- ~--~~~-

GOOD

78 Honda 750, 9,00 miles,
windshield, saddle bags,
and saddle seat. $1,600.00 .
Call388· 7800.

USED

AP ·

PLIANCES
washers,
dry ers ,
refrigerators.
r an ge s .
Skaggs
Ap ·
plian ces,
1918 Eastern
Ave., 446·7398 .
Case Knives-20% oft all
case knives. Spring Va lley
Trading Co ., Spring Valley
Plaza , 446·8025 .
Electric double oven range
coppertone, $200. Twin bed
wti h mattress, $20 . Call446·
5725 .

stitches, and monograms,
on buttons, tarns, fancy
$38.00 . Free call, ca ll
collec11 · 3041· 736 -9241 .

SWIMM I NG
POOLS :
PR E · SEASON SA LE :
H99 .00 INSTALLED'!!
Above ground pool COM
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting at$999.00. Price in·
e tudes pobl, deck, fence,
filter ,
liner , and
in ·
stallation under norma l
ground condition.
Free
shop at home service . Call

1·800·62&lt;-8511.

r~==~~o;·~-~-~-~·~~===:r::=========1 KAWASAKI,

175 motor ·
cycle, 3300 miles, 55 mpg,

56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·

Yellow Freest one canning
peaches. Now th ru Sept. 20 .
Any qua nti ty avai lable.
Retail &amp; who lesale . Bob's
Market, Mason . Phone 773·
5121. Open daily till9 p.m .
Kennabec potatos. 247 ·2841
aft er 7 p .m .
Air co nditioner. l year old .
Never been used $175. 992 ·

3379.

For sa le Whirlpool washer,
like new. $90 .00. Ca ll 446

8181.
Elect ri c Ca l oric
co ok
range Like new. Phone

cycl e, tra\lel trunks and
saddle bags . 2146 miles,

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL . AKC

1971 VW square back, 4

$1500.00, 614· 446·9254 alter
6:00p .m .

black Chow puppies, Sept.
1. CFA Himalayan, Persian and Si amese kiHens.
New Lilac, blue. and cho.
S i amese
and
Blue
Humalayan kittens. Call

HILLCREST

KENNEL

949 2336or992 6714 .
CB,TV, Radio

742 2491.

Equipment
Fender
pit ier
speaker
monitor

spd., sun roof, clean. Must

sell. Call -146~2149 .
One owner 1977 Buick
Saber, -4 dr ., sale due to

1981 Honda 750, tully chop·
ped, drag

in good cond .• 327 motor.

lrame . S1600. Lots
chrome. Call675·4210 .

great work car, $325. Call

614·245·5422.

Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans . Call 4-46·1795.

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix,
electric moon roof, posi
traction, heavy duty police
suspension. AM· FM 8track, AC, AT, PW, PS, PB,
8. more . $5,300 . Call 379·

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

75

2449.

Call 446·4191.
1976 Grand · Pri x,
Jeanie' s Pet Shop 1 mile
West of Gallipolis on Rt.

141. Open Monday lhru Sat.
9 5. Call446·7920.

$1.600.

Call446·2666.
1973 Montery Zenith color

TV, 21', 2 yr . old . Call 446·
6324 anytime.

Reg . Cocker Spaniel pups,

57

Trumpet. $175 .00. Call

1976 Olds98. 304· 7n5013 .
1975

Musical
Instruments

Thunderbird.

many

extras, good cond. $2,(XJ().
Will trade for sma ller car.
3 88 ~

949· 2025.

8436.
53 ______A
~
n~
ti~
q~
ue
~•~---ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and co ll ectibles or entire estates
Nothing too large . Also,
guns, poc ket watches , a nd
coin col lec ti ons . Ca l l 557

F i re wood for sa le . Any
lengths. Call 667 ·63 29 or

New c larinet for sal e. Ca ll

66n402 .

446·0157.

NEED several item s of fur ·
niture ,
appliances,
te l ev isions. Big discounts
for quanity purchase .
Village Furniture 2605
Jackso n Ave. 675·1773.

Bundy Clarinet used 112
sc hool year . Call379·2340.

BIG discounts f or cas h and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 J ackson Avenue, 675·

58

FruLt

&amp; Vegetables

-~-----

98

Regency.

965·4395.

Remington Thunderbolt 22
LR A mmo, $1.39 per box ,
$13.00 per ca rton . Spr ing
Val ley Trading Co. Spri ng
Valley Plaza, 446·8025.
Ec l ipse 12 ga . game loads
N6·sh ot, 20 shells per box ,
$3.95 bo"X . Spr ing Va l ley
Traind Co ., Spr ing Va ll ey

Plaza.

446 ~ 8025.

Crossman 8 - B's 'Mi lk Car ·
ton' box of 1500
Special
$1 09 box . Spr ing Valley
Trad ing Co ., Spr ing Va l ley
PLaza, 446 ·7025 .
Compound Bow Special
PSE suzz ler laminated l im·
bs, magnes ium handle•

lb

pull.

Special

.so

-

50,000 B TU floor furnace,
S50. 2300 Jef ferson Ave . 304 675 2396 .

Call 388·6436.
Ratliff Pools I Service.
Complete sates, servi ce,
and win·
pool covers,
ter iza tion kits . Ca i iA.,U,· l324

1 Ford 3 point hayrake.

$450 . Call 985 ·3301 or see al
Baum Lumber, Chester .

I Ford 501 mower. $550.
Call 985·3301 or see at
Baum Lumber. Chester.
GRAVELY tractor, brush

hog, snow blade e. sulky,
phone 304·458· 1854.

Call 145·5121 .
ROUGH, cherry lumber,
$300 . per thousand , 304·675·
2845 .

s.
;== =P; t=t=s::;lo=r= ;Sa=l=e=:__
Fish Tank and Pet Shop
Jackson

Ave. ,

Pt.

Pleasant. 675 2063 . Special
free gerbi 1 or mouse with
purchase of food and bed ding .

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

5478.

AKC

Dachshund,

Pomeranian

an

Poodle

pups 304-895·3958.
AKC

Boston

Terrier,

'!liE I'RINTEF&lt;
CUA-S '!liE S&lt;IHK
I'd&lt; PR!&gt;mNG NAMES
~ CHECI&lt;S SO '!liE

~t-~~":.:•F&lt;t;;=E::S:....tl:::)'-.;_:~..-._

MORR ISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV . Phone 675·

1973 PONTIAC Venluri hat ·
chback, very good con ·
dition, a bargain at $695 .
304·675· 4656 .

1978 CHRYSLER Cordoba,
excel len t condition, air,
power steering, power
brakes, electric seats &amp;
windows, tilt wheel, $3,000 .
ter 5.

service . "Big or small" we
tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gall ipolis, Oh io. Day

· -146·2445 or Night
4792.

4-46·

- -- - - - - --

-

good

Farm Sa le-September 4. body, 304-773·5351.
Case tra ctor, 6 ft . disc,
farm wagen, top and bot· 1966 396 CID $250., 1967 SS
tom
mechanic
boxes Nova, $1,000. Ca ll 304·675·
loaded with tools, air tools, ·2383 alter 5 p.m .
much more . 79 Jim Hill

600 reel, Pfleuger S·250 rod

$9 .9'1 .

Spring

1971

Volkswagen

Super

Beetle, needs minor body
work, exCellent running

condition.
2468.

$650 .

304·882·

awning and poles, $20 .00.

Evening

388 ~ 9335 .

675·3376 or 675· 1240.

1976 F l eetwing truck cam·
per . 11 It .• self ·contained,
exc. cond. Information 614·

742 2586.
trailer . AC · p erfec t for
river bank . $1,800 . 992 -7727 .

CAMPER. 20 ft .. sell con ·
tained , call 304 675 ~ 2453 at·
ter 5.
1977 18 ft . Nomad travel
tra i ler, sleeps 6, se lf con·
rained , awning, TV an·
tenna, very good condition,

phone 30H75·6489.
1974 Volkswagen camper,
sink, refrigerator, pop up
top. Also Datsun topper .

Home
Improvements

FOR

BEST

In

Carpet

Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's

Steamway .
2096.

Call

614·4-46·

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning

446·4208
JIM MARCUM Roolung
spouting and siding. 30
Ca ll 388·9857.

Registered

textured ceilings,
com·
mercial and residential,

Hereford bull. 30 4.895 . 3595 _ 1975 L TO, CB radio and an ·
tenna. Phone675· 2614.

379 ~ 2540 .

STUCCO PLASTERING
tree estimates. Call 256·
1162.

1978 Ford Granada,? door,
6 cyl, automatic tran ·
smlssion, ps, pb, ac, am·fm
stereo, excellent condition,

SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING, Carpenlry
work &amp; pa~nting, concrete,
landscaping, 4-46· 2787.

·

Back Hoe &amp; Ditcher Ser ·
vice, water lines, ditches, ... '
septic systems, footer:s. · i •
Ca II 446·9340 or 675·6898.
·::

He wants to

sleep in the
hall with the

----------------~~ • ,1 I I

Dozer, loaded, and ditcher · -;~ • •
work .. Base ments,
lah· . , :
dscapmg , gas, electric, &amp;nd.· · · ,
water lines. Charles R. r..,. •

Hatfield.
742· 291l3.

Rulland,

Loclt. him

out there!

11:30

EDWARD'S Backhoe and · ' "

'

in septic tank. 675·1234.

""

"

~·.:

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . Larry
Siden·
Stricker. 615 ·5580.

'"
'"
.

call.

Ph.

446· 2171,

Gallipo lis.

'

AFTER AN ~MS' BOUT
OF CAU5THENICS, CONNIE
•

..

.-.·.·•I

Electrical, Air Condition.: . ~
Heating, Hot water tank!, .;
Service all makes. Phon~ .,.
379· 2196. Charles Kiesling . ~ : :
-------------------0~

. . ..

IMACH/!5 AM'TNm ~aWE•..

ADI05 P...;;IU.~5i.¥;. ;5
..1:sl
POTJON9 ... n

1

OF PARTING
p0UNI79/

71flf!l I'U. CSET
RIP dF!! I'l7
AATHER 91:

H£AI.'rHY THAN

lf«!K£P/

Phone 882 ·2079 .

73 Ford L TO, 2 dr .. Hard·
top, good cond., 351 eng.
and 73 Plymouth Fury 318
engine. Cllll 446·7572 or 446·

1978 Ford ·courier lruck
w: /h topper, excellent con·
dillon, 40,0oo miles, $3500
firm . Phone 30otll82·29'19.

1522.

73
For sale 1978 Honda Accord
exc. milage, new radial
tires. Call446-2055 alter 6.

Vans &amp; 4 W.D.

1972 Jeep S.W. 4X4. ' Low
mileage. Excellent cond.
985-4209.

PAINTING • Interior· and
exterior , . plu.mbjng,
roofing·, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388· 9652.
FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
malntaln.ance
and
remodeling. Phone 388·
9326.

productive , the economy Ia
generally good . Hal the
Mlnneaota myth become a

, ...

..

oalf·lulfllllng pi'Of)hoey'l

10:si
11:00

.

l

•

NIWI

ft AUIII AT I.AIIOI!

tt:ot

IIITHIPAIIILY

1 t:ll

THITOI. . rTBHOW
Oueota: Dovldlrannar, Tony
a.-tt.,~nilna.l

RUNNY
·
117~'
1-0JIINtiCHJGifT8

THE NiXf TIME I
IWIEM8ER rr. I'LL

CIS &amp;porto pr. .anlalapod
t.... IB)IIO ollhl My'O lcllon of
u.s. Oplfl Tennlt Chlm·
piOiiahlpe; &amp;rant Muobargor
hoeto IJ'om Flullllf\9 Meadowo,

8E IN COLLEGE

.''

1

Pus

Pua

Opening lead: +4

ing in a dream world be I
could have risen with the
club ace at trick one, cashed
the ace and king of spades
lost the diamond finesse but .
been absolutely sure of bll ' .
contract.
\

is its
capital

2 Chabas
palnUng

Yesterday'• Allllwer
8 Fig crate
31 Wine
3 Presidential 9 'Unassembled and dine
nickname
10 Famous
32 Foreann
4 Letter
Boston
bnnes
after psi
family
33 Conspiracy
5 Alpine
IS Warbler
members
region
20 Aspect
34 French
6 Edible
22 Liveliness
pupil
tuber
25 Arctic
tO Supplement
7 Walter
base
42 What tbe
Huston
7 Ortlinary
dr. ordered

-r

recordir.'o'

! Spoliation

rabbr. )

24Fur
:~&amp;Exclude

29Break
bread
30Russian
river
31Heat
source
35 Legislator
(abbr.)

36Shadetree
37 Actor
Holbrook
~

38-- Lanka
S8 Celebes
beast

IJ Deplore

· 13 Chalcedony

...._...._..~.-_.__

·' DAILY CRY.PTOQUOTE- Here's how to work lt:
I
AXYDLBAAXa
Ia

LONGFELLOW

One leller limply otands for another. In thla sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin11e letters
. apootrophea, the lenllh and formation of the worda are eli
, hinta. Each day the code lettera are different

.

'

CltYPTOQUOTES

~~ciAPnaNID~

CUGE'O

WN

11
'llf't 1171
ABC..wiiiKitiT1.IItl .
'-lfChorH b; Tad K..,.P.I.
IS (J) MOYII·(DIIAMAI 00 141
''1)1mn TIIIDIIIIIiil'' 1~

3NT

I Yerevan

WN

"CrliMAnd'«

PaS8
Pass

48 Shelf
DOWN

CUG P 0

~J)·

Soallo
INT

factlon
45 Conduce

u.

iiMOYII·(DIIAIIAI 0 141

Eosl
Pass

t+

fonner
23 Outside
part

UI'DATIIeWI

11:10

Nortb

44 Seek satili-

18 Across,

Cll m•w am®•

''HonepuokleRoee'' 1810

TRI STA1E
UPHOLSTERY SHOP ,
1163 SeC'.' Ave!, Gaiiii'OIIs.'
-146·7833 or ~~1833 .
.' :
.

18 See 21
Across
19 Food
U With

ftiT('.IICOCIC
C!lll!! UPD~ NEWS

(I)
PROGRAM
'U!IAJIIIOUNCI!D
C!JIIOVII·(DRAMAI ••

.,

MQWREYS Upholstery Rl.•
1 Be~x 1:14, Pt. P.~asant,"""'
675-4154.
.
~·

money
on it
15 Tar
17 "}figh - ..

HART TO HART

lila In lhlo otol'elo called lhe
good ltla . llo paopla oro

''
------------------.-- :'
~

14 Put

Proud and the Frozen' Awry
lookatwhyMinneaotanaarathe
way they are : what make a
Mlnneaohna tick? The
environ m ant Ia hostile, the
wlnt•• are long and aevere, yet

N. air condition service',
commercial, industr.iat. ,;

HAY lor sale, 304·675·2254 low mileage. 675·2-4011.
General Haulin~
185
8.675·1302.
'
72
Trucks for Stle
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car· JIM'S
DEPENDABLE '
pet Cleaning featured by waler delivery . Call 256· .
65
Seed &amp; Ferlilizer
1965 Oodge 3/4 ton pickup
.
Haffelt Brolhers ·Custom 9368 anytime .
.·
truck, slan.t 6, 4 spd., flat· ·
Carpels. Free estimates.
2.000 bushel ear corn . 882·
bed, exc. cond .. S400 firm. Call446· 2107.
2662.
Call -146· 7697.
NOW HAULING house CQ~I . •
&amp; limestone for driveways. · :
WOODSHOP · Cabinets. Call tor estimates 367·7 101 · •
1968 GMC Tractor Semi, picnic · tables,
porch
cab over. 238 Delrolt diesel, swings, most wOOd produc· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -' \. I
10 speed Road Ranger Iran· ts. 101 Court Sl., Gallipolis. JONES BOYS WATER· 71
smlnlon. 985·3547.d __
Auto tor Sale
SERVICE. Call 367· 7471 or
Call4-46·2572.
36l-0591.
1h ton.
1964
Chevy
truck
1
1971 corvette converllble,
white with red Interior. In· Good condition, 6 prac· WEATHERALL CON · ------~---------- ·
eluding white hardtop, 350 llcally ,_tires. $450. Nor· CRETE · quality and ser· Mobile homes moved, ;
llcen$ed. a"d bonded . 576- •
engine, ralley Whee ls . Call ::;'~~- ,. Evans, Porlland, vice, call675-1582.
2711' or 675·4398,
,-'"
446-9692.
. '

~-;,•:it

Guam

S"lembar.
10:28~ CBN UPDATE NI!WS
10;30
WI!EKINDOARDENER
.
U.S. CHRONICLE II 'Tho

THEY WIND UP
· ALL OVER CREATION

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO· ,

Col&gt;!!oned; U.S.A.) (60 mlna.)
TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT Henry and Muriel

C1J lfll.

Anna Ueara highlight the
upcoming movlea, aport a and
apeciala
on
HBO
In

- -------------- ....
·· ' ·

10 Soft and
smooth
11 Hold
12 More
spacious
13- Harbor,

(Repeat; 80 mlna.) (Cioaod·
Copllonad ; U.S.A.)
(J) BHERLOCK HOLMES ANO
01\. WATSON
()J) NEWS
· 10:116 (I) n&amp; EVENING NEWS
-10:15 (]) HBO SNEA'k PREVIEW:
SIPTI!MBER Jorry Stiller and

Mark's Appliance Service.'
Specia lizing In Frigidaire
this ad .

mountain

glamorouaworldofhlghfaehlon
raaulteln aha and Jonathan
modeling clothes lor a world ·
famoua photographer while
trying to diiCover who Ia
murdering beautiful modele.

SEWING Machine repai rS: :~
service. Authorized Singer. ~ •
Sa les &amp; Service. Sharper)~
Scissors.
Fabric ShOpf.&gt;',
Pomeroy . 992· 228-t.
• • ::-::

producls . Backed by ex·
perience. 667·3323. Sa~ ..

ACRO&amp;
I Neckwear
I Thessalian

Jennifer' a article on the

WINNIE

Fuller Electric Co. Com·
plete rewiring, commercial
or residential, and elec·
trical maintainance, also

on

t();OO

WHt

by THOMAS JOSEPH

return home una ~epectedly
when their akllng trip ia ruined,
and find an unwanted houaagueat in klutZ)" Monroe, who
haa rlotoualy turned their
apartment Into a ahamblaa.

Dozer Service. Specializing· : - ,

t64
.KJ7
SOUTH
.QJH
.J86
t AJ92
.96

~~u.... ~tl~
n

Cribb' Mlllavolanland danger·
oua practical Jokta are ruining
the careera of VIctorian muaic
hall art lata, ao Cribb and
Conatabla Thackary d8ctde to
get Into the act. (Cioaad-

doq;

;
1

.K743

\

&lt;ftee!al; 2 hra.l
CI)(JI) MY8TIRYI'Sergeanl

Ohio.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

700 CLUB

iflle THRI!I!'SCOMPANY

EAST
• 10 8 6 4

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

We don' t know just why
West hit on the four or clubs.
butbeledit.
South looked at that with
visions or sugar plums. It
had to be a fourth best from
K J 7 so South let it run to
his nine. East produced the
jack and shifted to lbe three
of hearts. South played low
and when West played the 10
it was allowed to hold that
trick. West's queen was
aJiowed to hold the next
trick and then West led a
second club. · Now the
defense wound up with two
hearts, two clubs, one diamond and a smaJI, but very
satiSfactory plus score.
U South had not been liv-

dramatic epactal that tells the
atory of a happ61)" married man
who Ia drawn Into 1 romance
with a younger woman .

ALLEY

WEST
• 932
.Q 102
tK8H
• 432

notrump.

propoeal. (Repeat) (Cioood·
Co~d; U.S.A.)
• (() llDi THEF AMIL Y MAN
Edwlrd Aaur and Meredith
BaJttar Birney a tar In thla

l:.:l____-=E:..:x,_,c:.::acov_,a,_,li,_,n,.g___

84

&amp;er•plees
81

Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 3677853 .

NORTH
1-1·81
.AK
• A~&gt;
• Q 10 3
.AQ108o

We like a diamond
response with the South
hand, but would not really
crltlci·• anyone who
respondw one spade. We
. thoroughly disapprove or
South's selection of one
notrump.
This South had a reason.
He was one of those players
who feel divinely appointed
to play all bands at notrump
and who bid notrump at every opportunity to keep their
partners from playing

Accldent prone Cindy appears
to have taken the ultimata
mleatap when ehe atarta
collecting maternity clothae ..
leading Jack to make an
eatonlahlngly funny marriage

Phone 446·3888 or 446· 4477

D. C. Contractors Plum ·.
bing, electrica l, heating,. .
r-oofing, aluminum, vinyl'·
siding, and home painting.: ,

8 track stereo,
3 GOATS, phone 304·458·
34,000 miles . $3000 . 675·
1882.
6884.
Polled

11:011

For Sa le Mansfield R.V .,

toi le t. used, $45 .00. 12 ft .

By Oswald Jacoby
ud Alu Soatag

the hoat ot 1 new dramatic
comedy that axamlneaa
honeymoon hotel hexed by a
haunt.
8:58~ CBNUPDATENEWS

I

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,

HOMAGE

Don't always bid notrump

deeperately In need of a splint

ALLEVOOP

Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza, 446·8025

BASKET

BRIDGE

(D).

..

&amp; Heating

AISLE

JumbM Book No. 18, cont1lnlng 110 puzzln,ls •nlllbleforS1.15 ~lpaid
kom Jumble, cJo this rHNtSpiiJ*I, Bo• 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848.1ncfudeyour
name, addreu, zt coda 1nd m•k• eMeks
1bl1 to N.ws
•·

(Qiooed·Coplloned; U.S.A.)

Rod 8. Reel Combo · Zebco

1979 Ford Pinto. 4 speed,

Miller

. ....

Wal lpapering. lnterior-- Ex ·~~,'.'i;
terior
painting .
Ex · "''=
perienced. Free estimates. ~ •

Plumbing

(Answaf!l tomorrow)

Jumbles : SNORT

-A LOAN SHARK

Special Correapondent Wetter
Cronkite hoata thla aclence
magazine eerleathat tKamlnea
tha full scope ol aclentlflc
activit~ Involving the wldaat
poaalble range ol human
curloaity.
())NOVA 'RoadloHapplneea·
Henry Ford'a nama Ia aynony·
mo111 with Ingenuity, progreaa,
and the American dream of
proaperlty and mobility. Thla
program aaaeaaaa theimage of
the man whose Modal T put
Amerk:a on wheels. (Closed·
Captioned; U.S.A.) (60 mine.)
i}l) WORLD TURNED UPSIDE
.
DOWN
8:30 (]) Q.OOO NEWS
I])
LAVERNE AND
SHIRL!Y Laverne breaks her
leg at Cowboy Bill' a, and Ia tater

- - - - . . . . , .•.·:1!

Cor. Fourth and Pine

am·fm

Straw for sale . Call Jack

OFF/

'--

..,. ·

fiVII5T.' llt'

-ctd· "\~

CARTER'S PLUMBINGAND HEATING

years experience.
Free
estimates . Remodel ing .

Hay &amp; Gr.-in

ANYl'IAY, THE IW
60T Tit: ME66A6E!
THEY'ItE ~!N6

d 1t1ons,
g·arages,* "' ,
remodeling, and cemento ' ~
work. 675~5022 .
. . ;.:

Camping

mileage,

75 TR IUMPH TR7, 4Speed,
4 cyl., good tires, good

247 ·2841 alter 7 p.m .

- ------------L~c~s Builders. Room

I

I I I I I I l

AnSwer : He takes great Interest in one 's difficulties

ralu@. (Ropeatl
liJ llDi WALTER CRON·
KITE'S UNIVERSE CBS Newo

Dave's Appliance Repair. " ' '
Washers, dryers, plum· ~ .
bing, electric, general han· . '
dyman. Phone 304·576·2921 ' -:'

or 675·5689.

Yesterday·•

rI

•

ANNIE

Equipment

78 FORD Fairmont, good

lor sale . 675 ~ 1234.

Livesfock

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker

675 5704.
reasonable , 304 ·882· 3145.

63

Auto Repair

1574 or 675·2881.

condition,

Road. Henderson, WV. 675~
5174 .

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

1973 25' Troutwood Camper

12

weeks old. female, shots 8.
wormed, 304·773·5125 .

They'll Do It Every Time

9'12 ~

Backhoe, lowboys, dump
tru ck, excavating business

3 Herefor-d cows &amp; cal\les.
Firewood, split, stacked 1
deli\lered . Mixed wOOd $65
per cord, $35 one-half cord.
Green or seasoned. All har·
dwood $5 .00 more. Also will
buy staf d ing wood. Cal l 245·

1975 Cadi ll ac . $3100.
3981 .

304·675·2474. 304· 576·2490 al ·

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

2413

eac h. Phone 1·304·.422: 2781.

Building Supplies

$39.9l .

Enc losed uti li t y t ra iler ,
exc. cond, willsnot leak .

$3,000.00

- - ----

3 KEG , draft beer cooler ,
304 173-952 7.

SS

Ohio.

Service .

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675· 1331 .

Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker
service,
buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 446· 7717 .

Special

Farm Equipment

Athens.

anything. 992·6293.

78

Olds.

Regular gas, c ruise con ·
trol, air, full power. Good
cond. Does not use oi l . $750.

sale. Fro m $1,245.00 . Call
Ceramic kiln's for sale . Fit ·
ty dollars ($50) each . Need
some repair . Call Gallco
Sheltered Workshop a t 367 ·
0102 between 8: 00a .m . and
4:00 p .m . Monday through
Friday .

and Aooer join forces to eave
Chachl from a emooth·talklng
college acout who olfere the
budding baeketball a tar a
ahady acholarahlp he can't

Will do all kinds of car·
penter work, paint jobs.

882·2079.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Pr1ntenswerhere:

Caine. Donald Sulhorland.
(I) HI!RITAOE SINGERS
CilMOV II! ·(WESTERN I ••
"FialtuiOtOrnamlll"11172
CIJ(JJI. HAPPYDAYSFonzlo

Will do carpentry work,
painting, general house
repair. 992·5126 or 992 ·3941 .

or 4-46· 2454.

gested ~Y the above cartoon

Landed' 1877 Stara: Michael

BORN LOSER

1974

10• off Buc k Knives. Spring
Valley Trading Co ., Spr i ng

Four 15,000 ga llon tanks
located above ground at

rates. Scolhguard. 9'12 ~ 6309 .

with CB. $3,500. 949· 2493.

==:=c========
Misc. Merchandice

co llect JOA · 766·6244.

()J) DICKCAVI!TTIHOW 'Ride
'Em ~wbovo. Port II'
·
(JJ)e FACE Till! IIUSIC
7:31 (J) BASI!BALL AUanla Bravaa
.
vo Phlladalphla Phllllea
7:1S (J)~UPDATINEWS
8:QO l])eCIJ TUESDAYNIOHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Tho Eagle Hat

Gene's Carpet Cleaning, .
deep stream extraction.
Free estimates, reasonable

Dilly trailer $1,500.00
Phone 304-675· 2039 .

Now arrange the cirded letters 10
form the surprise answer, as sug-

8HOW

7160.

RON'S Television service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398

t

ICANTIGj
[) [

HOLLYWOOOIOUARE$
DICKCAftTT8HOW
RICHARD SIMMONS

;

French
City
Painting
Residential, commercial/
interior, e)(terior, paper
hanging,
and texured
ceili ngs. Ph . 367·7784or367-

82

telescopic wheel, all power,
new tires. Runs good. 773·
5013 anytime.

Valley Plaza. 4468025

.(J) JOKER'S WILD

Shop, 221 Mill St. 379 2782 .

1978 Ford Fiesta Ghia, sun
roof . am ·fm stereo radio

Air Compressors. new
I ngersoll · Rand 5 hp , single
and 3 phase, truck load
61

.

.

• (J) llDi COMEDY OF HOR·
RORS Patrick t.Aacnaa atar111

1773.

3411 .

PINIIAMT

HOME
building
8.
remodelingd 304-675·2440 .

SALE OR TRADE . 19M
Olds 98 Regency . AM· FM 8
track, cru ise control. tilt &amp;

=c
54

3U8·

141FT. Lowe Line Lake Jon,
Swivel seats, depth finder,
Evinrude troll i ng motor, 15
HP Evinrude motor and

77

7:011 ()) CA110L BURNETT AND
FRI!IIDB
. 7:30 ~- BULLKY!
AJIO'ntER UFI
·
RACE FOR THE

9856. If no answer call 388:

LOCKSMITH

tTADISS

rlll•ws

Residential, automoti\le. ·
Emergency service. Cawl

Boats and
Motors for- Sale

76

UIWII'OUNCID
. I ] ) nCTACDOUOH
CIJ i}l) MACNEIL.U:HRER
REPORT

Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any color,free pi ckup
&amp; delivery in Gallipolis
area, Hammond Body

Winter potatoes, canning 1980 Toyota Ce lica . A.C..
tomatoes, peppers. Charles auto. 992·5454 or 9'12·7356.
R . Harr is, Portland, Ohio.

843·2693 .

of

I ()]

PROGRAM

675 ·5211.

automatic with cragers &amp;
headers, runs good. 1973
Ford Pinto, good cond. &amp;
gas mileage. 992·7029

6144469461

Super twin am
with
ex t erna l
cab inet , Peavey
sys tem . Call 388 -

pipes, san ·tee

.

for h• broken spirit at the very
moment a riotoua angel
provide a her with a aurprialng
view ot what theworld would be
like without her . (Repeat)

96B9 after 4:00.
Magic Gen ie organ would
I ike for someone to take
over payments. S250 kit,
bench, and earphones . Call

675·6823.

For sale 68 Chevy I mpa Ia

Boarding all breeds, clean
i ndoor-outdoor facilities.

Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.

1972 Harley Davidson 1200
Super Glide. S2000. Phone

death, $4,000. Call379·2461.

1971 Chevelle Malibu . 307
1·3 pc . bedroom suite with
mattress &amp; box spri ngs.
$175 1 ste reo stand . $.35.

1980 750K HONDA motor ·

1220.

8 wks. old. buff . Ca ll 446·
1262 .

tops
S5 .00 ,
dresse ~ · $10 .,
Jeans and
slacks $10. and up. Boys
sh irts and jeans to size 1B at
outlet prices. The Water melon Pa1ch, New Haven .

1979 Buick Rivera loaded,

$8,300. Call -146· 7497.

446 ·3844 alter 4 p. m

EASY cre di t a"Vai tab le now
to purc hase furniture ,
televisions, or appl iances.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave .• 675 -1773.

30H75~ 3639.

Auto for Sale

71

CIJ

g-room
additions . (ex·
perienced carpenter ·28
years) Serving Southern
Ohio &amp; Western W.VA. Call

Dobbins Sr..

PM MAGAZINE
.10HN AHKERBERO

SHOW

out·electrlal ·

9'164.

Gun cabinet. Call even ings
4-46· 3201.

S675 ..

Bassett Cherry, $795. Bunk

and

~:=::;..,.a.-r-•-- -

(J)(1te FAIIIILYFIUD

--------------------:~

Lamps from $18 . to $65. 5
WOOd table with ~ chairs,
$219 up to S495. Hutches,
$300 . and $375 ., maple or
pine finish . Bedroom suit@s

I])

DOBBINS &amp; SONS CON'·· ~­
TRACTORS Remodelin!J, · :""
Inside

1]).

• . ._

remodeling and rep• it."" .... ....,
Custom work from start Jfi!".~
finish. Call388·8711 .
:-.-

work·heating·ptumbing·sldin·

$385. 1 pc .• S189. and up .

.

7:00

hom~ - ..'~~

Rock bottom clearance
prices on selected 1981

pc: . difettes from $19 ., to

l

J

r)

1

. : .~

. ' "'

Call 446·3411.

12x16.5 super mud luggers
on white spoke, 8 hOles .

•

"

1976 GMC Van. Insulated, sidewalks,
patio ,
paneled, carpeted, 2 bunks, basement, garage floors
covered foam manress. and etc. Free estimate&amp; . ll
)2,150. 9'12· 7207 after 5.
years experience. Call 367·

·.i .

·'

•
•
VIewmg

BING'S CONCRETE COl'{:- . '
STRUCTION ·Specializing .. , :

In

11

Television

·· -

~""'~

8xU flat bed trailer Tantam with 10 ply tires, tour

Furnished Rooms

SLEEP ING

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

73

chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and chaurs priced
trom $285 . to $795 . Ta bles,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·a·
bedS,$3-40., queen size, S380 .
Recliners, $175. to $295 .,

pets. Deposit. 304 882 ·3356 .

2 bedroom house in coun ·
try , Ga ll ipolis Ferry, WV
area. Only responsible
people need ca ll675· 1234.

)

51

-1

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ""

64

4 room house with bath.
Letart Fal ls, Oh. Deposit
req ui red . 247· 2097

.

For Sale 8 yr. old gentle
pony. saddle, briddle. and
everything, $170. Also com ·
pound bow equipped with
sights, Qu ickie qu i ver, and
arrows, $160. Call after 5
-146·9744.

•• • •

8025 .

J bdr . home in country, c ity
sc hools, $2 50 mo. plus dep .

nei g hborhood
In Mid ·
dleport. Adults only. no
pets . Ava II abe lm ·
mediately . Call 9'12·2101 or
992·2319.

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

Spring Valley Trading Co ..
Spri ng Valley Plaza, ~~ -

- - - - - --

living room. L oc ated on
large corner lot In a nice

White metal detectors·
Opening Special 20' off on
all wl11te metal detectors.
Spring Volley Trading Co .•
Spring Valley Plaza, 4-46·
1!025.

--~-----

I bedroom apartment in
Middleport . Sl80 utiliti es
i ncluded . Deposit. no pets.
~2 · 7177 af ter 6 p .m .

Sma ll f urn is hed house in
th e c ity , adults on ly . Ca ll

42

Misc. Merchandlce

R.D. Mobile Home Park,
Rt. 33 between Rt. 2 &amp; Cot·
tagevllle. wv. Lots for sale
or rent. New park with
future plans. Pnone 304-372·
8405 between 5 &amp; 7 p.m .

52

1 bedroom apt s. avai lab le
a l River side Apts. EQua l
Oppo rtunit y Housing . Call
992 7721 .

2 ~ 1 c r es on F lo yd · Cl ark Rd .
c lose lo Rt
160, S4,000 .
Phon e d46 0390

41

54

for Rent

Maternity

BUSI NES S l oca tion , 509
Ma•n St . Pt . Pleasant, WV
304 882 3356
35

S~ce

Ill&amp;

Mobile Homes

Tuesday, September 1, 1981

MWI L
MWIL

N W L V N B C q V L Z!
JWZCVLGCM!

-- YWUP
SIGPHM
BFBXZ
,
YeslerdaJ"a Crypl8quo1e: ... wrrrv SAVINGS ARE AS·&amp;\81- •.o
LV l.aiT AS 1:HE PEARUI SI,JPPING FROM A BROKEN
STRING.--G.D.PRENTISS
.·

.

II

�FAIR denounces opponents
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
spokesman for the group backing
Issue 2 on Novembe~'s ballot ha.s accused its opponents of mud slinging
for political purposes.
Joseph Elton, campaign manager
for the election redistricting
proposal, referred Monday to comments by House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr. , [).New Boston.
In a news release, Riffe said
evidence of fraud in the circulation
of petitions for Issue 2 had been
found in Clinton County , the second
county in the past week to report
evidence of fraud . Scioto County was
the fi rst.
" We are not concerned about the
speaker's press releases or his attempts to sling mud," Elton said.
There are always these type of
probl ems with statewide signature
dnves, he said.
Election boards across the slate
are checking the petitions in an "efficient and timely" manner. Elton
said. The sponsoring Fair and Impartial Redistricting Conunittee
would be glad to join in the
prosecution of any election fraud

that is turned up, he said.
Riffe criticized the redistricting
committee for spending $129,000 to
pay its circulators 25 cents for each
signature gathered. But the FAIR
spokesman said there are reasons
other than money that can prompt
petitioners to break the law.
·
. "There are any number of
motivations these people can have, "
Elton said. " You don't have control
over it. But I don't think ij's right to
attack the process."
As of Friday, the FAIR committee
had 151 ,000 signatures from 74 counties validated, Elton said. It needs
285,000 from 44 counties to be certified for the Nov. 3 ballot.
In checks of the committee's other
250,000 signatures in the 14
remaining, mostly urban counties,
the validation rate is running at
least 68 percent. " We're in great
shape," Elton said.
Riffe said the Clinton County
evidence was the same kind as uncovered in Scioto County and involved signatures of deceased
people and other forgeries . The data
in each case was given to
prosecutors, he said .

Issue 2, generally backed by
Republicans and opposed by
Democrats, would prevent political
mischief in the drawing of new election districts for members of the
General Assembly and U.S. House.
But Riffe and other opponeniB said
it would transfer most of the ablllty
to gerrymander, or draw districts to
one party's advantage, from the
Democrat-controlled state Apportionment Board to GOP Gov.
Jiunes A. Rhodes.
Renewing his attack on the FAIR
committee for paying its petitioners,
Riffe said "paying people who are
not personally committed to an issue
based on the number of signatures
they gather only encourages
problems as bave been fowtd in
Scioto and Clinton COWJty."
One name in Clinton County
allegedly was that of a deceased
county commissioner, Riffe said. Mter it was discovered, election board
members began calling people
whose names were on petitions, Riffe said.
"They fowtd a number of the
people contacted denied signing the
petitions," he said.

Reagan official stockman
will address governors
MJ LWAUKEE IAP I - Reagan
administration budget chi ef David
A. Stockman was to address the Midwestern

Governors'

Confer ence

today foll owing an other aa ministralion spokesman who got
some negative reaction Monday.
Richard Wil lia ms on , a dmini strati ve assista nt to the
president on intergovernmental affairs, heard Gov. Christopher Bond
of Missouri express concern a bout

· an Internal Revenue Service ruling
which checks indtL'il rial

revenue

bonds.
Bond sa id the states were ·· blindsided" by the Aug. 24 decision. He
sa id it 'apparently knocks out our
abtlity to issue tax-exempt bonds for
sma ll la r me r s an d sma ll
busi nesses_··

·· we unde rsta nd that th e
bureaucracy is proposing a further
attack on other tax-exempt financing for housing and industrial
development," Bond said.
He satd he presumed President
Reaga n was una wa re of the ruling,
which would impose a sev ere burden

on the sta tes.
··1 can assure you the president is

una ware

of

th is,

(Treasury

Sec reta ry ) Donald Regan is
unaware of this and as of last night I
was wtaware of this, " Williamson
said.
"We've just learned about it,"
Williamson said. "We will bring it to
the attention of Secretary Regan and
try to have him look at it, especially
with respect to the industrial bonds. ''

Gov. James Thompson of Illinois,
chairman of the 20th annual
meeting, said a letter to Reagan on
the bond issue was being drafted and
would be considered for approval by
the governors, whose conference
was to conclude today.
Gov. Albert Quie of Minnesota
pressed Williamson concerning the
federal budget.
" I know the people of this country
want us to strengthen our defense
capabiliti es, but the interest rate
problem is so crucial to us that I
think it is absolutely necessary to
scale down the defense expenditures
and some other expenditures as
well," Quie said.
He said interest rates would not
come down wttil there is hope that
federal fiscal policies can prevent

SAFE - Houston fireman Danny Cochran carries
Billy Smith, 5, to high ground Monday after be and
about 50 pre-school cblldren were evacuated from a

Shade Jaycees

heavy deficit spending.
Williamson said he would relay
Quie's request to the White House.
Ten governors were at the conference Monday, with another,
James Rhodes of Ohio, to arrive
today.
The governors Monday agreed to
establish a task force to study water
management and its relationship to
economic development.
Resolutions on agriculture in·
eluded a call for a cooperative effort
of stale departments of agriculture
to protect the fertility of soil.
Republican Gov. Robert D. Orr of
Indiana and John Carlin of Kansas,
the only Democratic governor at the
conference, emphasized that
agreement on agricultural exports
was a primary way for the Midwestern slates to join together to
develop the region's economy.
"There is a growing realization
that exportation helps the economic
well-being of the state," Charles
Thone of Nebraska added.
"Frankly, we are seeing a lot of
foreign business out our way, from
every comer of the globe, almost on
a weekly basis," he said.

Terrorists~

bomb injures
17. at German air base
RAMSTEI N AJR BASE, West Ger·
many 1AP I- A bomb believed planted by terrorists exploded outside
the joint U.S.-NATO air command
headquarters here Monday, woundJng a U.S. general, 17 other
Americans and two West Germa ns.

The blast came at a time of
growing opposition by many West
Germans to U.S. defense policies.
Two

weeks

ago

an

Amerlcan

mili tary facility in Berlin was bombed, but there were no lDJuri es.

Funds received
August gasoline excise tax checks
totaling $9,874,455 were distributed
Monday by Stale Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's offi ce to Ohjo counties,

townships, cities, and villages.
Meigs County received $6,982 as
its share of the funds, which were
divided as follow s: Pomeroy, $2,656;
Middleport, $2,297 ; Syracuse, $751 ;
Racine, 696. and Rutland, $582.

No one claimed responsibility for
Monday morning's explosion. West
German sources said it was believed
to have come from a bomb placed in
a Volkswagen sedan in a parking lui
outside the headquarters buildings
of the U.S. Air Force Europe and the
NATO air command.
The explosion, which occurred at
7: 20 a.m., catching early arrivals
for work , hurled passersby to the

OSP cites motorist
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the slate
highway patrol cited a Middleport
man in a minor two-car accident in
Meigs Cowtty early Monday.
The patrol said Woodrow W.
Engle, 68, was northbound on Rt. 7 at
12:15 a.m . when he failed to stop for
a stopped vehicle driven by Lawrence R. Yeauger, 52, Cheshire.
The accident caused moderate
damage to both vehicles and Engle
was cited for assured clear distance.

Reagan ...
(Continued from page I)
Force, citlflg high maintenance
costs, indicated that it might have to
begin phasing out its old Titan II intercontinental missiles if $12 billion
a year were cut from its budget.
To accommodate Reagan's goal of
a balanced budget and increased
military spending, social programs
have been reduced by $35 billion for
fiscall982 , which begins Oct I.

Tuesday, September 1, 1981

ground, shattered windows and interior walls up to 100 yardssses said.
A tered other cars across the lot in
flames, witnesses said. A car engine
was flung onto the roof of a fivestory building, police said.

Marriage licenses
The Meigs County Probate Court
has issued marriage licenses to
Homer Brice! Smith, Jr., 22,
Pomeroy, and Rita Diane Vining, 20,
Rutland; James Kenneth Amsbary,
'!I, Pomeroy, and Merri Christine
Ault, 22, Middleport; Steven Gale
Barber, 19, Reedsville, and Laurie
Ann Lance, 16, Parkersburg, W. Va.

To end marriages
•'

Kenneth Lea Yeauger, Route 2,
Cheshire, and Ruth Ann Yeauger,
Pomeroy, have filed for dissolution
of marriage in the Meigs Cowtty
Common Pleas Court.

will sponsor
annual barbecue
The Shade River Jaycees and the
Chester Volunteer Fire Department
will join to stage the annual Labor
Day celebration in Chester.
A chicken barbecue sponsored by
the fire department will get underway in the morning .. Homemade
ice cream and desserts will be offered for sale.
The Jaycees will stage a number
of events during the day inclu&lt;)ing a
basketball free throw shooting contest throughout the afternoon with
prizes being awarded in five different age categories. There will be
a greased pole climbing contest for
all children 16 and under. A $20 prize
will be gained by the ~rst youngster
able to climb the pole and claim it.
A parade will be staged at 1:30
p.m. Any groups or individuals who
would like to take part with a float or
other entry should call Pat Clifford,
985-4398, or Jim Wilhelm at 9115-4379
so that proper space reservations
maybe made.
The Jaycees are also laking orders for pickup loads of wood with
Labor Day being the final time to order. Residents can order by calling
Al Holter at 992-5010.
During the afternoon Monday, the
use tractor pulling and chain saw
contests will take part in the square.

A Job Corps representative will be
at Pomeroy Village Hall, the council
chambers, from 9 a.m. to 12 noon
and from Ito 4 p.m. Wednesday.
Training slots in the federal·
program for job training, are
available now for young women 1&amp;21 to learn clerical skills, nursing
assistance, carpentry, welding, auto
mechanics and other job skills,
Young men may also apply for Jobs
Corps.
The program offers free
vocational training and basic
education to young men and women
who are out of school but need job
training. Corps members are
provided free housing, food, medical
and dental care and with a monthly
spending allowance while they are in
training. Skill training is available
in nearly !OOareas.

BAKED STEAK DINNER
SERVED WITH MASHED POTATOES, CHOICE OF SALAD, ROU AND DRINK.

:

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:

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

•

i,.

'

.

•

.i

.

·..·....

'f'&gt;'l.' •

S8VI

Open DailY 10-9 .
Sund~y 1-6

:

Because to~gh
customers come in all sizes.'M

Emergency runs

Crow's Family Restaurant
Ph. 992-5U2

Pomeroy, Ohio ·
1

•

,.j' '

I

.Save 12o/o to 45°/o . .

wardrobe basics at low sale prices! Choose from Jeans w1th ~~~h~
. detailing or western-look styles. In cotton or polyester I cottar(, of&gt; .

Classic western
coordinates for
your "young
trailblazer".
Durable
poly I cotton

··" snaps. All in
sizes. 4-7.

'•

228 W. Main

DUTTON DRUG CO.

with pt:arl

Dining Room Only

Admissions-William Easterday,
Racine; Lori Curtis, Pomeroy;
Maltilda Rowley, Pomeroy;
Discharges-Gertrude Pellegrino,
Charles Friley, Charles Humphrey,
Vona Gil!inwater.

Medical Service reports one call was
answered Monday, at 12:118 p:m.,
yJIIIIf' the Pomeroy squad tranip!lrted Robert McLaughlin from
SPring 4venue to Veterans
emorial Hospital.

Thurs., Fri., Sat.

.~
~;fz::J

•

denim jean
stands up to all
the wear and
tear a llid can
dish out.
Straight leg In
regular and slim,
with leather
logo patch.
Metching' vest
. snaps closed.
Mlldtas plaid ·
authentic
western shirt

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

The Meigs County Emergency

Wed.~

Our Jirm rnlenliOI'I rs to have every advertised Item rn stock on oor shelves II an .
· adver1•sed rlem rs not available lor PIJT·
chase dtJe lo any unloreseen reason, ·
t&lt; mer1 wilt ISSue a Rarn Check on request
IOf the meiC:harldrse (one rtem 01 reasot1able famrly quarlhly) to bt purchased_at the .
sale pnce wt~er~~Wer available or wtl sen .
you a comparat&gt;le quality rte m Ill a comparable reductmln pnce

• .

•:

MD

.

f

•I
••
•~-

THE SHOE BOX

'

Job corps official
will visit Pomeroy

Every Wednesday Night A f

Veterans Memorial

••
•e

·~

The Saving Place ""

I
:COLUMBIA GAS COJ
•
••
:
CUSTOMERS
I.:i
YOU CAN NOW PAY YOUR
GAS BILL QUICKLY AND
EFFICIENTLY AT:

·- "'

c::.r-1r

day care center In Nortbwest H01111ton. Houston was
drenched by several Inches of raiD from a dying
tropical depression. (AP Laserpbolo).

:··········~
·
············
:
ATTENTION

:
:
:

...

-

'

0 our 7 97 Glrls' 2-4 .. _f_1~~-~- .. 55
b. our 7.96' Girls' 7-14 , .. ...... S6
·
· 'eovs' a•14 .. c1011 .. S6
c.Our8.'17,

·And

Not Shown: our 5.97, JuniOr Boys'
Ho" lk&gt;xers 1n 4-7 .. , , , 0021 .. S4
'

'

Thank You For Shopping. At Kmart
'

.

.

®

.&gt;

~

,.;.- ·

d.Our 12.00 Chall~nger .... :;
e. Our 10.96, Mls~es . . ... ..... .
1. Our· 8.00, Mens Sizes c104} . . s7
Not Shown: Our 5.96. LIHie Glr~~
Jeans In 4-6X- ............... ·

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