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                  <text>Iran has new prime minister; 55 executed
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)- Iran's
Parliament elected Ayatollah
Mohammad Reza Mahdavl Kani
prime minister today, and Tehran
Television announced the e~tecution
li 55 more leftists since the
••sa•sination of Kani's predecessor
and President Mohammad AU Rajai
two days ago.
Pars, the official Iranian news
agency, said the Mallis endorsed

Kant, a ~year-old religious and
political leader, by a vote of 1711-10
with eight abstentions. However,
Tehran Radio reported a vote of 17110, with 10 absentees and eight abstentionS.
Kani llllceeeds Mohanunad Javad
Bahonar, who was killed with Raja!
Sunday by a fire bomb at the prime
mlnlBtry in Tehran. Babonar succeeded Raja! as prime minister, and

e

Kant wllli interior minister in both
their cabinets.
Meanwhile, Tehran Television announced 55 more opponents of the
government from the leftist
Mujahedeen Khalq had been
executed in 10 cities since the
assassinations Sunday. 1be announcement gave no details.
This raised the total nwnber of announced executions to 531 since the

underground guerrilla organization
Ia unched a campaign of
assassination and sabotage
following the ouster of President
Abolhassan Bani-8adr on June 22.
But Mujahedeen leader Massoud
Rajavi, who escaped to France with
Bani-8adr July 29, claims that more
than 700 of his guerrillas have been
executed.
1be Majlis vote was never in doubt

•

at y

since Kani was the choice of the
clergy-dominat ed
Islamic
Republican Party, which has an
overwhelming majority in
Parliament and the full support of
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the
supreme leader of the revolutionary
regime.
Kani studied theology under
Khomeini and was jailed and
banished during the reign of the late

.Ends Sat.

...,

24,000 report to classrooms ·
TOLEDO, Ohio - Although public bus servire wasn't up to full
speed, about 24,000 elementary pupils reported to class Tuesday as the
Toledo Public School system began its 1901-82 year with no rewrts of
serious problems.
The pupils make up more than half the system's student body. They
reported for a half day of classes Tuesday, and officials said aU
students would be attending full-day classes on Thursday.

SAVE ON THESE
Glwm· HEALTH

AND BEAUTY AIDS

Tavern owners faces lawsuit

Check Out These Beautiful World Of
Miss America Savings Now At Kmort•

FREMONT, Ohio- The father of a Fremont 1)180 who was shot to
death March 1 outside a bar has filed a $650,000 lawsuit against the
owner of the tavern.
In the suit, former Fremont mayor Fred Stetzel alleges that Daniel
Chudzinski, operator of Chud's Tavern, was negligent in serving
alcohol to Stephen Stetzel, 30, and Isaac Mines, whc was charged in the
shooting.
Mines, 38, Fremont, subsequently was found guilty of felonious
assault and sentenced the three to five years in prison.

Conservatives push compromise
WASHINGTON - Senate conservatives, hoping to hasten a halt to
legalized abortions, are pushing a compromise constitutional amendment that would allow each state to set its own guidelines on when or if- a woman would be permitted to end a pregnancy.
The new proposal, which the source said will be introduced by Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, before the congressional recess ends Sept. 9, is
likely to become the focus of the abortion debate this fall, in part
because Hatch chairs a Senate Judiciary subconunittee on the Constitution.

Dance marks coming of spring
LOBAMBA, Swaziland - Five thousand teen-age girls danced
barefoot around a royal cattle pen to mark the coming of spring and
King Sobhuza IT's 60th year on the throne.
The Reed Dance, an annual, two-day ceremony in this mountain
monarchy in the southern hemisphere, opened a week-long
celebration of the first royal Diamond Jubilee since Queen Victoria's
in 1897.
Sobhuza, 82 and in frail health, drove up in a Lincoln limousine for
the start of the dancing Tuesday.

Nazi slave labor boss dies
LONDON - Albert Speer, the Nazi slave-labor boss who spurred
German war production despite massive Allied air raids, died during
a visit tc London, the city bUtzed by the bombs and rockets of the war
machine he ran. He was 76.
Speer, whose post-war memoirs provided the most detailed account
of the inner working of the Third Reich and made him a rich man, died
Tuesday or an apparent stroke.
The man who once sajd he was "mesmerized" by Adolf Hi tier and
served him as chief architect and production chief, was tn Britain for a
television interview with the British Broadcasting Corp.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber drawn Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 640.
1be lottery reported earnings of $566,480.50 on the drawing. The earningll came on sales of $890,919, while holders Df winning tickets are
entitled to share $330.458.50,lottery officials said.

Weather forecast
Hwnld with ~rs and thunderstorms likely through Thursday.
Highs Thuraday in the low 80s. Lows tonight in the ml~. Chance of
rain (I()
t •~•nht d 70
Thursda
percen ~- .. an
percent
y. Winds southerly &gt;15
mph tonight.
·
EXtended Oblo Forerut
Frklll ...;.;....., ........
y ....,.,....,.~y:
Coatlillie_d 'iran!! WU!I a ~bance of showers or tlnmde!'ltonu Friday
udSatUroay, thea clearln&amp;ind aotaeQI'IDSanday. HJciu llltbe low
to mA 811 Friday 111111 Sainnlly 111111 lbtimld io upper 7111 Saaday. ~
Ia tlae 811 Friday ud Salllrday and the mkHIII to low • Sallday.

Thank you For Shopping AI K mart·

2 Sections , 16 Pages

Street
•
repru.r
begins
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
announced today that the annual
street resurfacing program is underway this week.
Approltimate cost of the resurfacing this year is $35,000 with
$17,000 of this being paid from the
current expense levy which was
recently renewed by village voters.
The balance of $18,000 is being paid
from HUD funds as a continued improvement effort in the Marina West
area.
Work is being done on portions of
the following streets: Dock Street,
North Second Ave., Locust Street,
Mill Street, Railroad Street and Elm
Street.
There will be slight traffic interruptions and possible dust in
areas where work is being done.
Cooperation of residents is
requested in coos!ruction areas.
This represents a continued effort
by village officials to improve the
community appearance and is made
possiblt by taxes paid by village
residents.

Man changes
court plea
A Reedsville man who had earlier
entered a guilty plea to a felonious
assault charge in connection with
the alleged shooting of his stepson
was permitted to change his plea in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
cQlp'l. Tuesday.
·
WIUiam A. Watson, 51, Owl Hollow
ROad, Reedsville, was charged
following the shooting" of his stepson,
Craig Folley, on Aug. '0.
Watson appeared before Judge
John C. Bacon in the Meigs County
Conunon Pleas Court last Friday
and entered a plea of guilty to the
cluirge on a bill of iiuonnaUon
prepared by the office of Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney Fred
W. Crow Ill. Watson was Sentenced
by Judge Bacon to .a term of not less
than two years nor more than 15
years in prison. Felonious assault is
felony of the second degree.
Tuesday, Watson was permitted to
withdraw his guilty plea and was
released from custody. The case
must now proceed through indictment and trial in the common
pleas court.
Folley is in stable condition at a
Parkersburg hospital.

Enrolhnents down
Eastern Local School District
enrollment was down approltimately
50 students on the opening day li
school Tuesday·
Enrollment for the various schools
of the district Included : Chester
Elementary, 179; Eastern, sev.enth
through twelfth grade, 490; Tuppers
.
Ri rv1
1°'
Plains, 42 and ve ew. ...
1be enrollment figure does not Inelude klndergarte~ . Normally
enrolbnent runs slightly mroe than
opening day
enrollment was down more than 100
lltudei1ts in the Meigs Local School
bislrtet when c~ opened for the

new IICbool year 011 Tueiday ..
. Eilrolinlenf totaled 2,519 which ln. dudell bJch sChool, 7(6; Jwilor high
schqol,' "7;

·,

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

~==;;=====::::::::;;:::::::p;t;;;fji~;;t;;~ .1,000.·
·· Meanwhile,
~

The MajliB empowered him to
form a new cabinet that will
schedule the election of a new
president not later than Oct. 19, 50
days after Rajai's death. Meanwhile, the new prime .minister
becomes a member of the Presidency Counci\, which is exercising the
presidentili powers.

en tine

Vol.lD,No.99
Copyrighted 1981

Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 1· 6.

Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

Bradbuey,

107;

HBniloiiVIUe, 122; Mlddlegort, 237;
P\Jqlt!lOJ, ·343; Rutland, 288; Salem

Centet,138, al1d Sallebury,181.
·~t

on the first day of

~lutyear totaled~,825.

..

Funds received

MONEY TALK - llllDols Gov. James Thompson,
left, makes a point with David Stockman, director of
the office of management and budget, right, before the

opeolDg of the final dliy of the Midwestern Governors
Couferencen Milwaukee. Lookiag on are Minnesota
Gov. Albert Qule and Nebraska Gov. Charles Thone.
( AP Laserpboto).

Reagan orders more cuts
LOS ANGELES (AP)- President
Reagan, struggling to control the
federal deficit in the face of persistent high interest rates, is ordering a new wave of budget cuts
which may wipe out whole government agencies.
The new cuts for the 1!182 fiscal
year, which starts next month,
would be over and above $35.2 billion
in reductions already approved by
Congress, $14 billion still being
sought by the administration and $75
billion planned for 1903 and 1984 in
the drive to balance the federal
budget.
And that still may not be enough to
hold the 1902 deficit to the $42.5
billJon promised by Reagan, administration officials say.
"That is still our goal," deputy
White House press secretary Larry
Speakes said Tuesday as Reagan
prepared to end his month-long
California vacation and fly east
today. "But we have In face
reality."

Some senior administration officials, who declined to be identified,
said that without further cuts the
deficit could soar above $60 billion.
In Milwaukee, budget director
David A. Stockman said the administration would unveil its latest
plan in a week or so.
He said a possibility was the
wholesale elimination of federal
agencies and further cuts in the
federal work force. CBS reported
Tuesday that 70,000 to 80,000 federal
jobs would be eliminated. ·
Responding to a question from
South Dakota Gov. Bill Janklow at a
Midwestern governors meeting.
Stockman said, "We are going to announce some changes in federal employment levels and agency termination levels that will warm your
hearts, even in the middle of winter
in South Dakota."
Ed Dale, an Office of Management
and Budget spokesman, refused to
say how much more would be cut
from the budget but said every agen-

cy would be vulnerable.

"The president is gomg to take a
sharp knife on these 1982 budgets in
order to hold the line, '· Speakes said.
"We realize it's going tu be a dif- . •
ficultjob."
·
He said Reagan would be looking
for further savings in already hardhit social programs and probably
would make cuts "across the heard"
in every department and agency.
Earlier, White House chief of staff ·
James A. Baker III said Reagan had
agreed to trim $20 billion to $30.
billion from his record military
spending plans for 1983 and 1984.
Another $45 billion would be cut iri
those years from already-pared
SU('ial programs.
Spoakes said Reagan will hold a
Cs&gt; binet meeting in Washington on
Sept. 10 to consider the budget cuts.
The flaw in Reagan 's budge!
plans, Speakes said, is the persistence of higher-than-&lt;!xpected inh~rest

rates .

Pair given prison terms,
probation by Judge Bacon
Twenty-four hours before they
were scheduled for trial in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on
charges of teceiving stolen property, two defendants entered guilty
pleas.
They were Roy Jack Neff, Middleport, and Vincent Stone,
Pomeroy. BoUl were charged with
receiving stolen property in connection with two chain saws taken
earlier this year from the wilkinson
Machine Shop in Middleport.
In addition, Neff had another
receiving stolen property charge
against him involving a diamond
ring and Stone had an escape charge
against him, the office li Meigs
Prolleeutor Frederick W. Crow Ill
reports.

Judge John C. Bacon sentenced
each of the defendants to a term of
six months to five years in prison.
However, the sentences were
suspended and both men were
placed on probation for two years. It
was a condition of probation that
Neff serve an additional90 day term
in the county jail and Stone will ser, ve80days.
Pat Fowler, Middleport, charged
with selling beer to minors, was
found innocent by a jury during a
hearing In the county court.
Fowler, a bartender at a Route 7
night club, was charged as a result
of an incident in June which
allegedly involved the sale of beer to
minors.
The stste presented six witnesses

including three of the minors. );
Carson Crow, assistant prosecutor:
represented !he state and Attorney
Steven Story, the defendant. Judge :
Patrick O'Brien presided.
·
. '.

Two defendants, Richard Van :
Meter, 18, Reedsville, and Scoli ·
Sprague, 18, Tuppers Plains, have .
entered guilty pleas to breaking aricJ :
entering charges contained in bilb :
of informations filed by Prosecutot ·
Crow. The charges came as a resuit ~
of an incident at a Route 7 night c!Uir:
onAug. 27.
j!:
Sentencing has been deferred. . :
Prosecutor Crow reports Vlii\::
Meter was placed on probation, 11r:
July on a stolen property charge alii'·
that Sprague has no previous recor-d: :
r&lt; .-

Commissioners buy snow plow
Even thoQgh current tern·
peratures are fll!u1lng in the eo•s, the
Meigs ·County Conlmlssloners are

"playlile It cool".

Meeting In regull!l' session
Tuellday, ccmmllllone~ved a

request by Mj!lgl County engineer
for the purcbue of a "!!" I!I10W plow,
at a CGit of $3850, for -.e by the blgbway clepartnlent'thia win~J
The

boilnl .held

a aeneral

discussion on the establlshnlent of a
new county landfill. It was reported
tha\ a decision on the newly selected
location should be forthcoming
within the next 30 days.
Chris Layh, administrator of the
Melga County Community School,
discusaed progress on the new
training center uilder cUlstructlilil
in Syracuse.
Commissioners went on record as

..... .

' .'

'

.•J•.

favoring the appoinbnent of E!~" .
:!'~"'
Plummer to the Rio Grande~
munity College Board of Trustee. 16; •
fective Oct. 2, 1901, for a five ~ .
period.
. A discussion was held on the lteW:: :
acx:ess road which Is being Gllii.'': ·:
strueted from Mulberry Heigldf ._; : ~:
Union Ave. and satlsfac~r . ·
progress is reported.
t -ji : ·

I . ... :-

I;; ...... : .

I

�,

Commentar
It's

For the
record. •

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesda , Se tember 2 1981 ,

stillbolo~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-h_m_~_J_.K_u_
~-~~~·

WASIUNGTON - When nell! you
hear that politicians are all alike,
and there's not a dime's worth of diffeence among them , consider the
hwnble hot dog and observe the
salubrious salami. Because of
Ronald Reagan, both the meatprocessing industry and the meatconsuming public will soon be better
off.
The story goes back some 35
years, to the time that machinery
was invented for deboning fish . In
the mid-'50s a machine came along
for deboning poultry. Nobody objected to the products that emerged
from this process. But four or five
years ago, machinerY was perfected
for deboning beef, veal, pork and
Jamb, and at about the same time
Jimmy Carter becamse president of
the United States.
It is a fair asswnption that Mr.
Carter himself had no passionate
feelings on the matter of deboned
beef. He did not campaign on the
issues. But Mr. Carter brought to the
administration Mrs. Carol Tucker
Foreman to serve as assistant
secretary of agriculture for food and

consumer services, and Mrs.
Foreman, as events would prove,
felt passionately indeed.
The deboning process works this
way: A beef carcass, for example, is
first hand-trimmed to remove the
meat. then the remaining carcass is
broken up and pushed under high
pressure through equipment with
pinpoint openings. The remaining
meat passes through the openings but then comes the problem: A
small amowtt of finely powdered
bone also passes through. Individual
particles of the powder are almost
micruscopic - less than 18/1000th of
an inch in size. Mrs. Foreman took
wnhrage at the powder.
The meat industcy was eager to
put its fine new machinecy to use.
The produce that emerged from the
pinpoint holes was in no way a conlaminated or adulterated product; it
could be used in sausage, hot dogs,
bologna and other conswner produl'ts for which there is a continuing
demand. Mrs. Foreman, a long-time
conswner activist, had other ideas.
Thus in October 1977 she approved
a proposed regulation agreeing that

Political education
You can learn a lot from politics.
Such as how rapidly the fruits of a victory can go to seed.
Today's lesson concerns the United States Department of Education, the
newest Cabinet-level agency and, if its chief has his way, the one likely to
have the briefest history.
Education Secretary Terrel Bell is recommending that the department
be demoted to a less-exalted level, thereby fulfilling the pledge exacted from
him at the time of his appointment by Ronald Reagan. To wit : to carry out
candidate Reagan's campaign promise to downgrade the federal government's role in education.
Politics, you see. But this is not the beginning of our lesson.
The Education Department has been politically tainted from the very
start. It was spun off from the old Department of Health, Education and
Welfare and pushed through Congress by President Carter as a payoff for
the endorsement of candidate Carter in the 1976 election by the National
Education Association, the largest teachers' union.
And push the White House really had to. The enabling legislation barely
cleared Congress. And almost immediately thereafter proposals to reverse
the vote were being dropped into the hopper, Education may have been the
first Cabinet department to have been threatened with abolition before it had
had time to begin operations.
The primary objections were that the consolidation of federal education
programs that the department represented was a questionable step toward
greater federal control over education on a national scale. Further. it was
less in the interests of education itself than of the education establislunenl.
The authority of professional educators, working through a centralized
federal agency with a multi-billion-dollar budget, would be greatly enhanced. The voice of the public, as traditionally expressed through its community school boards, in determining educational policies and standards
would be correspondingly diminished.
Critics viewed the new department as essentially the elevation of a lobby
to Cabinet status and awarded it "The Special Interest Memorial Prize of
1979." They were to be found not only in Congress but also in the profession
itself. The NEA's major rival, the American Federation of Teachers, opposed the department. What has turned out to be even more important, so
did Ronald Reagan, who described it during the 1980 campaign as "a first
step toward federalizing education in this land."
Never mind that it was far from being the first step in that direction, it
made a good campaign issue and he is now in a position to take that step
back. How far hack is the question.
Congress must legislate education out of the Cabinet. But Capitol Hili,
whi ch so far has not found it politic to deny the master poiilician in the White
House much else of significance that he wants, has already let him know that
it prefers a cautious retreat on education.
ll demurred to an earlier White House request to package $4 biiiion in
existing programs into a single block grant - the preferred Reagan approach to de-federalization, turning over to state authorities actual
allocation of funds . Congress preferred to maintain fund-allocation for the
major programs, including remedial education and handicapped aid, at the
federal level. The administration had to settle for $600 million in block grants
and mostly smaller programs.
The Department of Education itself does not, however, have as many
friends on Capitol Hill as do the federal education programs. The ad. ministration would appear to have a good chance of getting what it asks,
within reason.

meat packers could use the deboned
product, all right, but only if they
packaged their hot dogs with a label
reading "Hot Dogs," and in large
type immediately thereunder "Contains Tissue from Ground Bone."
The packers were nonplussed. The
Dragon Lady might as well have
required a boxed notice warning
buyers that they were likely to choke
to death on jagged bones. Who would
buy such hot dogs •
To make a long stocy short, Mrs.
Foreman relented slightly and the
final regulation demanded a less
alanning label. Even so, other
provisions of the regulation were so
burdensome that the industry gave
up. The fine saw machinery bas
been idle ever since.
Came the Reagan landslide, Came
a new secretacy of agriculture.
Farewell the Dragon Lady. And a
few days ago there emerged from
the department a proposed new
regulation on the use of deboned
meat products. This proposal fully
infonns the consumer of the calcium
content. Nothing is relaxed in terms
of particle size. A panel of experts
has cleared the processed product of
any danger to consumers. The newly
authorized label will require only
that buyers know that their salami

••

The Daily Sentinel

...

_

edible meat from every steer
eracass and three to four poWlds
from evecy hog carcass. This adds
up to perhaps a billion powtda of red
meat a year that will go into produl'ts widely purchased by families in
lower- and middle-income brackets.

And - no promises! - perbaps the
price wiii be lower.
So we return to the point of beglrining. Is it contended tllat there's no
real difference between Democrats
and Republicans? Ten 'em for the
meat packers, that's baloney.

Chicago

New York'
x· Philadelphia
Pittsburgh

Houston
San Francisco
x·Los Angeles
Atlanta
Cincinnati
San Diego

W. L. Pet. GB
12 6 .667
12 8 .600 1
11 10 524 2'1' .

SlOR£ HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

7 15 .318 7

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

11 1 .soo 3
8 13 .381 5'1&gt; '

West

14 8 .636
12 8 600 1
12 9 ,571 1'12
12 10 .545 2
10 11 . ~76 3'12
s 11 .227 9

Philadelphia 3, Atlanta 0

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES
-------GOOD- --THRU
---

Houston 3, New York 2
Chicago at San Diego, (n)
PittSburgh at Los Angeles, (nl
St. Louis at San Francisco. (nl

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
No.oo Editor

-N-porl'llllllkn--

A III'M8Bit II Tile - I N ...... -

7
.
W1eners............. :~G~.

FRENCH CITY

Detroit

Baltimore
x·New York
Boston

-~

---

can distort, they can reflect al'curate observations too.
These are some of the observations: Car sales are dismally
poor, well below industry expectations. Housing is sinking into
an abandoned cellar hole. Small
business, wtable to absorb costs and
often unable to raise prices is in a
bad way. Companies of all sizes are
closing plants and laying off
workers, often in wholesale lots.
This is hardly the mood that was
expected to follow a massive
realignment of federal priorities, expressed in budget and tax cuts and
designed to spur confidence, inspire
investors, and encourage savers
risk-takers and business to conunit
themselves to the economic future .

The Nixon bust was one of several
in the Senate Reception Room, an
area just off the floor that is frequented by lobbyists but visited by
relatively few tourists. Others included the busts of John Nance Garner and Heney Wallace, who served
as vice presidents wtder Franklin
Roosevelt.
The Nixon bust's new location is
near a bank of elevators in a
corridor through which many
visitors pass on their way to the
Senate gallery. The Garner and
Wallace busts were moved to a
corridor on the other side of the
Senate chamber.

Wan Street, not as reresentative of
random opinions as it used to be but
still an indicator of attitudes, has
had a fainting spell, produced in part
by the shocking realization that it
had been listening to its own and
Washington's advertisements rather
than to the marketplace.
The most serious intrusion into
this reverie was the realization that
the Federal Reserve Board means to
take a stand - a stand so strong that
hopes of a sharp decline in interest
rates have been abandoned.
The typical comment from
analysts a week or so ago went
something like this:
"This is a new beginning. The tax
and budget bills weren't the very
best, but they'll accomplish a lot.
The country finally is pointed in the

Toronto
Cleveland

West

x·Oakland
Kansas City

10

9
11 II

.526

Sandwich Spread!!:

1

~~:~~~ia

~g ~~ ~~

I '12

Texas
MinneSota
Seattle

9 11 450
9 14 391
8 14 .364

1112
3
3112

x·First-half division winner
Tuesday's Games

right direction again, and that's
good news for investors.''
Today, the mood is decidely more
reserved, and the once-confident
voice of your broker may have a
quiver in it as he observes:
"Things will get better, that's for ·
sure, but first ive're going to have to
get by the Fed, which is hell-bent on
having its way, Soon as those Interest rates come down we'll be
okay. When? I don't know."
The country is being torn two
ways, the analysts are saying. Whipped into submission by a Federal
Reserve that feels the nation has
been too soft on itself, and exhorted
to be tough and confident by a
president who declares the future is
there to be conquered for the good of
ali.

New York 11, M innesota 6
Kansas City 3, Milwaukee 1
Toronto 9, Texas J
WedneSday's Games

Seattle (Beattie 1·1} at Baltimore

(D. Martinez, 10· ~). 7:30p.m.
Oakland Keough 8·4) at Cleveland
(Waits 6-7) , 7:35p.m.
Detroit &lt;t.:Opez 5·2) at Chicago
(Trout 7·'5), 8:30p.m.
New York (Guidry 9·3) at Min·
nesota (Jackson 2·2&gt;. A:35 p.m.

_,_11dl&lt;..,.,__

J.m'DIIIPOPINJON .,.. .... ,• • ftey IINoldloe leoo ...... - - A D
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~fer. Ne ......... JeUen wi'D lle,,....hhd. Letten ..._..be JDIOIII tale, ldllrell......
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Milwaukee; (Lerch 4· 7) at 1&lt; ansas

· City (Gole 5·4, 8:35p.m.

Toronto I Berenguer 2·6} at Texas

&lt;Honeycutt 8·31, 8:35p.m.

Thl.{rsday's Games

Milwauk~ at Minnesota, 2: 15 p ..

Seattle at roston. 7:30p.m.

Oakland a Baltimore, 7·30 p.m .
Californi~at Cleveland. 7:35p.m.

Toronto ai Chicago, 8:30p.m.

Ground

$}39
Beef...... ~8~
••

New York at Kansas City, 8:35

Detl"oit at Texas. 8:35p.m .

Berry's World

.Tra,sactions
B4SEBALL
Amerl&lt;u ........
CHICAGO WHITE SOX - \Valved Franclico
·Barrios, pilcher, for the purpose of giving him
his unconditional release.
DETROIT TIGERS n.a.Ued Larry
Rolhochlld, Denrus Kinney and Jerry UjW", pil·
&lt;Mn: ~lallf CUUllo. Ullrd baseman, and

$}59

Ground Chuck ... ~s~..

.

Darrell Bnnm, "outfielder, from EviWAville of

lbe American ..-uon.

' AcUvatedOwnpSwnmers, O!Aflelder.
MILWAU!iEE BREWERS - Acllvaled Larry
· Hlole, deolpaled hiller, and Bol&gt; McCI,..., pll· ·

-·

"It 's cal/6d a 'Qaddafi.' One drink, and you
become an Irresponsible troublemaker."

ranch~_Ju_lia_n_Bo_n_d

Nalloaol ......
. PITISBURGH PIHATES - Traded PhU Gal'ner, secOnd bueman, to the Houston Astros for
Johnny Ray, infielder, and two minor league
players to be l\8llltd iater.
fOOI'IIALL
Nalloaool Foalllall ._..1""
BALTIMORE COLTS - Placed Ed Simonlni,
Unebecker, oo the injured reserve list. Waived
. Loaird
McCreary ,
tight
end .
CIUCAGO BEARS - Placed Jeri")' Muckenst.urm, lineblcker, on the lnluted reserve list.
fle.caUed Brian Cabral, linebacker, after he
' cleared waivers.
CINCINNATI BENGALS - W~ived Mike
LevenseUer, wide receiver, and Luther Henson,
defensive tackle. Placed Ron Simpkins,
linebacker; John Simmonl, defensive back, and
Jim Hannula,JIIJll(eroofferudve tackle, on the ln-

CeIery................~!~.

jur.d reserve list.

DENVER BRON&lt;::OO - W1ived Jim Jensen,

While some critics will always see
Reagan as the proper foil for a chimpanzee (as in his movie "Bedtime
for Bonzo"), many more derive
their image from his role on
"General Electric Theater" and
"Death Valley Days" as a genial
guidetoeachweek'sadventure.
As president, Reagan has returned to the role of host and guide in
his carefully orchestrated television
appearances. He welcomes~ to
view their government throug)l his
eyes, warning them , of its
treacheries and waste, enliJting

••

p,m.

Let's keep him on the
solute mastery of the Congress and ·
his national constituency was not
learned in his only prior public post
as governor of California. That is no
small job, but surely it is not comparable to rwtning the United
Stales.
'
Rather, his success is the product
of personality, a self-proclaimed
mandate and the demise of party
politics in the 1980s,

$} 29

FRESH

California 3, Boston 2
Baltimore 1, SeallleO
Oakland at Cleveland, ppd., rain
Detroit 2. Chicago 1

California (Wilt 5·6) al Boston
(Ojeda 3·1), 7:30p.m.

~

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east .
W. L. Pet. GB
14 8 .636
12 9 .571 l'h
12 10 545 2
11 10' 52~ 2 112
10 10 500 3
10 12 .455 4

them as soldiers in the battle against
bloat and corruption.
His much-publicized "mandate"
is largely an illusion. The popularvote difference between Reagan and
Jimmy Carter was narrower than
the difference in their electoral
votes. The November results surely
were not permission to erase 40
years of government growth.
Reagan, however, sees things dif.
ferently. If the good guys won the
election, he seems to be saying, why
not let them sit in the saddle and
lead the wagon train? After all
didn't the other fellows lead us int~
swamps and tilickets - when they
bothered to lead us at all?
The temporary demise of the party syalem - particularly on the
Democratic side or the aisle - has
completed Reagan's success. There
are 43$ political parties in the House
of Representatives today; tllat aome
members still lll8lst on callln&amp; themselves Democrats and Republleans
is Irrelevant.

In his first six months in office
Reagan conquered Congress
reversed four decades of government growth, especially in human
services.
He began to erase 25 years of civilrights protections for racial
minorities and to review 10 years of
affinnative-action gains for women.
He slashed corporate taxes, arid
shredded the safety net he pledged
·
toerect.

~·-R'l:ck-·o.;,',;;Ki,i•";,;

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· HOUSTON OilERS - Woived Riel&gt; Casler
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Th'e"')uily Sent i;,ci "iviiP8i....i

A DfvW. el M..Umedill, t..

He replaced human rights with
mineral rights and Cold war
rhetoric.
In the first six days of his summer
vacation, Reagan chopped some
wood, rode horseback with the
missus, telephoned congratulatiolis
to baseball player Pete Rose - aJid
signed his tax and budget bills.
•
I'd vote to have this vacation
tended unW at least Novl!lllber 198il.
I feel a lot .iafer with ~an on tl)e
ranch than with ~g~ 10 the Oval
"Office.

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1981

American League

BOB HOEFIJCH

Aillltutriblllber/CIIIInller

~.

Wednesday's Games

ROBERT L. WINGETI
PAT WHITEHEAD

BER

St. Louis (Sorenson 6·5l at San
Francisco (Whitson 5·5), 3:05p.m.
. Philadelphia (Davis o-21 at Allan·
ta (Boggs 3·1Jll,l: 35 p.m :
Montreal (Sanderson Hl at Cincinnati (Seaver 9·2), 7:35p.m.
New York (Leach O·Ol at Houston
(Knapper 6·3), 8 :3!! p.m .
Chicago (Krukow 4-7) at San
Diego &lt;we1Sh5·6) , 10.;05p.m.
Pittsburgh (BibbY 5·3l at Los
Angeles (Welch 5·5&gt;. 10:35 p.m.

Nixon's bust
•
given new spot
WASIUNGTON (AP)- A marble
bust of Richard Nixon, tucked into
an out-of-the-way Senate anteroom
for the past two years, is in a new
spot where more visitors can see it
now that Republicans are in power.
But Elliott Carroll, assistant architect of the Capitol, says the move
had at least as much to do with
aesthetics as it did with politics.
Carroll said Nixon's bust was one
of 10 that were moved about a month
ago at tbe request of the Senate
Rules Committee, headed by Sen.
Charles McC. Mathias Jr., R-Md.
He said the Senate Commission on
Arts and Antiquities concurred in
the changes.

St. Louis
Montreal

Montreal4, Cincinnati 3

August bad month for all indicators
NEW YORK (AP) - The
economic forecast index dropped
just one-tenth of I percent in July not a bad performance in view of the
widespread feeling it will take a
while to get the economy moving
again.
But that was m July, a month or so
ago.
Something worse than that
probably occurred in August. There
aren't many nwnbers to docwnent
the feeling, and whatever figures
exist are subject to revisions. But
the feeling is strong: August wasn't
good,
Feelings can't be ignored, because
they come from the same source as
the numbers. Feelings are measures
of economic activity. And while they

National League
East

x-First·half division winner
Tuesday's Games

'

Secretary Bell is reported to favor restructuring federal education activities as an autonomous foundation, similar to the National Science Foundation, with eventually some programs transferred to other departments or
to the states.
President Reagan reportedly toils
There are other possibilities that may also merit consideration but one only from nine to five on weekdays
that definitely does not. Dealing with educatjon on a purely political basis.
and spends most weeken&lt;W at our
There has already been too much of that.
cowttry's rural estate in the
Maryiandmountains.
He seldom takes work home from
the office. He frequently escorts the
tittle woman out to dinner or to a
party at a friend's home. And he entertains in the people's mansion at
Today is Wednesday. Sept. 2, the 245th day of 1981. There are 120 days
least
once a week.
left in the year.
When
the Washington weather turToday' s highlight in history :
ns so moggy that the air conditioners
On Sept. 2, 1945, the Independent Vietnam Republic was proclaimed by
surrender, the Reagans fly crossHo Chi Minh, who became president.
cowttcy to spend a month at their
rustic retreat in the California hills.
Are you worn out yet?
Reagan isn't - but the rest of the
• United States should be.
Despite this schedule, the oldest
man to have been elected president
Ill Court Sln!t!t
of the United States has swiftly and
Pomnty, OIIM
radically altered government's
ll..Jit.!l$1
DEVOTED T0111E INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
:-elation with the governed more
than any of his predecessors since
Franklin Roosevelt.
The president's ability to win ab-

Today in history.

or
whatever,
contains
"Mechanically Recovered Beef" or
"Mechanically Deboned Pork."
The American Meat Institute,
naturally gratified at this turn of
events, says the new rule will permit
the recovery of 12 to 16 pow;KIB of

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Wednesday, Septem,ber 2, 1981

thing," said Lea,~ . "Now, I'm on a

roll with this team. The whole team
is playing well. Even when we were
down, our whole team thought we
were going to come back.''
The Expos rallied for three runs two of them unearned - in the
seventh inning, with Warren
Cromartie delivering the gamewinning single to dnve in Tim
Raines.
Lea was lifted for a pinch hitter

during the Expo rally, but stayed on
the bench to watch Montreal tie the
game 3·3 on Gary Carter's
sacrificefly and then go ahead on
Cromartie's single.
"I was the biggest cheerleader on
the bench about then," Lea said.
Manager Dick Williams had expected Lea to pitch five innings and
was elated that Lea was so strong so
long.
"He deserved a better fate than
being down 3-1 when we took him
out," Williams said. "I'm glad we
got those runs for him and he got the
win. He pitched an outstanding
game."

Jeff Reardon notched his fourth
save by retiring all nine Reds he
faced in the final three innings. ·
Montreal scored in the third inning
on a single by Rodney Scott. Cin-

cinnati took the lead in the fourth on
sn unearned run and Dan Driessen's
RBI single, then added a run in the
sixth on Ken Griffey's triple and
George Foster's sacrifice fly.
Reds starter Frank Pastore
aUowed four hils and two runs in six
innings before Manager John MoNamara took him out in the seventh.
"I had a man on first and got
behind a batter (pinch hitter Tommy
Hutton) 3-1. I didn't think that was so
awful,'' Pastore said.

McNamara thought it was time for
a change.
"He wasn't himself all night," MoNamara said. "He was wUd, he had
men on base every inning. We just
thought he had had enough."
McNamara brought on Joe Price,
and Williams countered with Tim
Wallach for Hutton. Wallach singled

and Raines reached base on an error
llr third baseman Ray Knight's
error. that allowed a run.
B:t the end of the inning, Cincinnati had ~ f~ur pitchers. Joe
Price, 4-1; was ctlat'ged with the loss,
but McNamara refused to fault any
of his relievers.
"The bullpen dldJl't do such a bad
job," McNamara said. "Tbe thing
that changed the complexion of the
inning was that etror at third base."
Cromartie credited a near-brawl
In the sixth inning with firing up the
Expos. Players from both benches
stormed onto the field when John
Milner charged the mound after hit·
ling the dirt on a Pastore pitch.
Pastore received a warning from
plate wnpire Harry Wendelstedt, order was restored without any pun·
ches being thrown and play reswned
in a couple minutes.

By DALE J\0111GEB, Jr.
It may not feel Uke It weathe~
•wise, but football season iB upon us

North Gallia finished 8--2 last year
with Its only 10118e8 to Eastern and
Hannan Trace, both league oponcesch ~gam. Whilek West VirgJnla ponents.
00 open a wee ago, Ohio high
At Oleshlre, Coach Deryl Well, in
schools will see action for the first his sophomon! season, hopes for bet·
time Friday evening.
ter thinga the second time around.
In the Southern Valley Athletic His Bobcats finished with a 4-6
Confennce when! a wide open race overall record in 191M!, well out of the
is expected, early pre-season running for the SVAC championship.
favo~te Eastern opens ~t WaterKyger Creek has 10 returning letford, Nonh Gallla vjs1ts Paint termen which fonn the foundation
Valley; Kyger Creek hosts Federal , for this year's team. They Include
Hocking; Southwestern plays at TimBarr,l~undfullback; Mike
Wahama; · Hannan Trace meets Elkins, 181-pound guard; Ed
Symml.ses D~-lley and Southern Ha1fhlll, D-pound tackle; Mark
trave to""""Southeastern.
Lee,J37-pound back; Ed Moore,157·
Eastern and Southwestern shared pound back; .Craig Richards, 127·
the league championship last fall pound wingback; David Sands, 137·
while Hannan Trace, the 1979 champ pound end· Jeff Ward 178-pound
and Nonh Gallia finished In a tie for center; Rob Waugh, 16JI..Pound quarsecond place.
.
terback, all seniors, and Roger
~ wl~ rookie mentor Ar- Stroud, 189-pound junior tackle.
chie Rose gwdlng 25 returning let·
Waugh will serve as the team's
terrnen seeme to be everyone's signal caller while two sophomores
choice 88 the top·club in the league. J.D. Bradbury and Greg Sheets, will
. However, some league coaches and provide backup support.
fansalsogfvethenodtoNonhGallia
Kyger Creek is expected to run

BEGINNING OF A'BENm
plate~ !Wry
Wendelstedt and Clucbmatl Reds catcher Mike O'Berry restrain MOittreal Expos batter Jobu Mllner as Milner charges the mound ~ tbe ll1ldh
iDDlDg of a game Tuesday lu Clucbmatl. Milner was foreed to !be dirt by a
Fnmk Pastore pitch and wben he got to his feet, headed toward tbe
DIOUIId. Both dugou18 cleared, but tbe situation was brought under control
by the umpires on the fleld. (AP Laserphoto).

,-----------------

Houston takes
sixth straight
From AP wires
Mike Marshall didn't want to
make the pitch too good - and it
wasn't.

With Houston and the New York
Mets tied 2-2 in the bottom of the nin·
th inning Tuesday night, the Astros
had pinch-runner Scott Loucks on
third base with two outs, with Marshall on the mound for the Mets.
"I had two open bases and I wanted to make certain I didn't throw it
down t11e middle if the plate," said
MarshalL "I wasn't worried about
throwing strikes; I just wanted to
make quality pitches."
Not only was his fourth pitch to
Harry Spilman not down the middle,
It was low and far outside, and
Loucks scored easily when the ball
rolled away from catcher Alex
Trevino. The run gave the Astros a 32 victory, their sixth in a row, all at
home.

In other National League games,
Philadelphia blanked Atlanta 3-&lt;l,
Montreal edged Cincinnati 4--3, San
Diego trinuned Chicago 3-2, San
Francisc&lt;J beat St. Louis 4--2 and Los
Angeles edged Pittsburgh 3-2 in 14
innings.
Joe Sambito, 4--5, who lost twice to
the Mets and Marshall last week,
was ·lhe winner with two innings of
one-hit pitching.

and
Kyger
Creeklettermen.
since both
sev~ral
returning

Houston took a 2-{) lead in the fourth inning when Art Howe doubled
home a run and Luis Pujols got
credit for an RBI when Howe scored
as third baseman Hubie Brooks
booted Pujols' grounder.
Houston starter Joe Niekro baffled
the Mets on two hits through six innings, but he yielded two runs in the
seventh_
Niekro walked Brooks to open the
seventh and left the game after Lee
Mazzilli's double to center field
scored Brooks from first base.
Dave Smith replaced Niekro and
yielded a run-scoring single lo pinchhitter Rusty Staub.
Phlllies 3, Brnves 0
Steve Carlton pitched a threehitter for his first shutout of the
season and Gary Matthews drove in
all of Philadelphia's runs with a tw&lt;&gt;run single and a homer.
Carlton, 11-3, didn't allow a
baserunner past first after the first
inning, when Rufino Linares drew
the only walk of the game off the
veteran left·hander and went to
second on a sacrifice. Linares went
on to get two of the three hits by the
Braves.
Matthews drove in the Phillies' first two runs with a single in the third
inning and the other with his third
homer of the year leading off the sixth.

McEnroe returns
with tennis win
NEW YORK (AP ) - Defending
champion John McEnroe welcomed
himself home. He won his match.
And then he chasti zed his
hometown audience, saying it didn't
know how to treat an American
hero.
McEnroe, who won Wimbledon
and is ranked No.I in the world, beat
little--known Juan Nunez of Chile
Tuesday, 6-'7, 6-1. 6-3, 6-1. They
played around two rain delays, so 4
hours and 34 minutes passed between the start and finish of their
match.

Open title against Kathrin Keil
tonight.

The frequently embattled and
always batlling McEnroe made his
return to the National Tennis Center
in Flushing Meadow in a not·
unexpected manner. He argued with
officials, and he upbraided a
television sound man.
And, in a new twist on temper tantrums, he scolded the children sit·
ting behind him.
Their offense: they were cheering
for his opponent.
In other openers, third-seeded
Tracy Austin, the 1979 champion,
defeated Anne Hobbs of Great
Britain 6-1, 6-2; fourth-seeded Jim·
my Connors downed John Lloyd of
Great Britain 6-0, 6-0, 6-2; No.3 Ivan
Lend! of Czechoslovakia beat Hans
Simonsson of Sweden 6-2, 6-2, 6-2.
In a night match, fifth-seeded
Hana Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia
scraped by Mary Lou Piatek, winning 6-7, 7.0, 6-3. Piatek had a match
point against Mandlikova in the
second set.
Mandlikova, who was the runnerup to Chris Evert Lloyd here last
year and at Wimbledon this summer has been incensed at her low
seedmg this year. And her ire was
further provoked Tuesday night by
line calls that went against her.
Jose Luill Clerc of Argentina, the
fifth see.d, easily defeated
Australian Brad Drewett 11-4, 6-3,6-3.
Bjorn Borg, who is seeded second,
will play Marcus Gunthardt of Swlt·
zerland today. Borg, who had won
five Wimbledons In a row, lost there
to McEnroe In the final this year
also ctropped to No.2 in the
puterized rankings, if not In
majority of mJnc!a.
-xn,en'sl1\\
Lloyd, I I the defending "'
champiOII, opens her fight for a •ldh -

J

Pruitt back with Indians
that Pruitt "would never wear an In·
dians' uniform again."
Tuesday night, before Cleveland's
game with the Oakland A's was
rained out, Pruitt arrived in the
Cleveland dressing room and put on
his old No. 13.
Pruitt was a utility player for
Cleveland for several seasons until
he was traded last swnmer to the
Chicago White Sox, who released
him this season. Paul then signed
Pruitt.
But Pruitt had a bad arm and did
not tell the Indians management
when he signed. He could not be used
in game action, and an infuriated
Paul shipped him off to Charleston,
alleging that Pruitt had lied In order
to get a major league job with his old
team.

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Monday, September 7·Johnny Rodrl1uez
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Berbick said at his home in
Hallfu, Nova Scotia, he had been
told the date depended on television
conunllmenla.
~
27-year-old Jamaica-born
fighter said that All W88 a hero of his
youth, and added: "Yes, I am really
go\1lg to fight the man. It's for real."
' Dec. 2 Is 8lx weeks before AU's
401:11 birthday and exactly 14 months
after he waa stopped In 11 rounds by
WOfld B!lDng Council champion
Larry Holmes. Six montha after
beatJng All, Holmes oiltpointed Ber·
blck Iii another title fight.
The 11118 to ll:olmes seemed to
finish All. He looked bad and was
unable to get a ucenle fi-ml any
!b!te boslng conunl.salon until late
laa\ mOnth, when South Cilrollna
~ ane to biJn. But now he Is
~· IP,In, driven by the desire to
win tllll title ,or a fourth Ume.
••pecpe give up too euy. They
quit too euy," he . said. "I love
cbllleiJcel. Don't tell me It can't ~
r out to pron It can be,"
In a thick wloe, Allllid
1NIIIII itt pounds .00 would
bl!~ Dl fGr llerblck, a C.nec!'•n

wli(l - · 'JM.t..--r-ecOrd
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exceUent according to head coaches
Bill Porter and Darrell Dugan.
The Tornadoes will run fl'OII') a

pro-set offensively and play a S--4
defense.
Last year, Southern recorded a 2--8
record.

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LAIIOII OAY SKCIALS
LADIES ASSORTED STYLES

SPECIAL PURCHASE

THREE PIECE-FALL

M ISSES AND JUNIORS

PANTSUITS
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LADIES LONG SLEEVE

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MEN 'S AND BOYS

SOLID COLOR ACRYLIC

LONG SLEEVE PLAID

BLUE NYLON SUEDE

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21 "•36" AND 24 " •42" SIZE

ASSORTED PAINTED TERRY

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Sllllier"a Labor Day
S4tlclaJI Sale. S.V.I

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RUGS

F~R '5

-u-IIA¥

- WillA¥

lnclud&lt;:d in this special low price are many exctting
extras, so you can personalize your own ring with ·
features such as:
• Your first name
• Your initial or school monogram encrusted
In the stone
• Your initial, mascot or favorite symbol set
beneath the stone ·
·
• Your full riame .;.graved inside the ring ·

school seem somewhat optimistic
this season as a new bom attitude
may help the Tornadoes regain
some gridiron respectability.
Southern's Une has been listed 88 a
major stronghold since it averages
213 pounds. The team's oversize is

FABULOUS FALL

~
pt-a :::•WIISIJ !II

NEW YORK (AP) - Muhammad
Ali, the best friend a travel agent
ever had, has the boxing crowd on
the road again.
The globe-trotting three-time
heavyweight champ plans to return
to the ring·once more, this time for a
Dec. 2 dale In Nassau, the Bahamas,
an Island vacation· stop he had
somehow missed until nOw.
For the announcement of liia latest
comeback, AU chose a Biblical·
sounding quotation.
"He who Is not courageous enough
to lake a risk," the ex-champ said,
"will accomplish nothing in life."
Ali, who has acctmpllahed plenty,
Is ready to do some risking again.
,Although fonnal contracts have
not been signed, All and Bahamian
officials said Canadian Trevor Berbick has agreed verbally to the Dec.
2fi1Jht.

Labor Day
Weekend

Coach Jack James, entering his
second year at Southwestern, has
been beset with a multitude of
problems to start the new football
season. He has been hit by the injury
bug, has lost one player who moved
fnm the district and two other
veterans have left the squad due to
personal problems.
Returning lettermen from last
year's 8--2 squad are Scott Lewis, 190
poundseniorlineman; DonCarr,l45
pound junior halfback; Ron Carr,
145 pound junior halfback; Joe
Gilbert, 145 (Mlund end; Randy Hammond, 140 pound junill' quarterback; Jerome Potter, 135 pound
junior halfback; Greg Terry, 150
pound junior Uneman, and Randy
Layton, 195 pound sophomore
Uneman.
Hammond will run the offense
while the Carr brothers are expected
to carry the bulk of the running attack.
Coach James feels his team is so
young he must take a wait and see
approach.

....,.
Coach Larry Cm.neens
entering
his sixth year 88 head of the footbaU
program at Hannan Trace High
School iB taking a walt-and-see approach on the 1981-82 campaign.
Hannan Trace finished with an 11'2
overall record and 3-2 loop slate but
lacks overall experience this fall.
A big loss, of course, was Todd
Sibley, co-most valuable buck last
season. Gone Is his outside
quickness which netted J,300.ilards.
Sibieyoftenturnedwhatappearedto
be a short gain into along touchdown
run.
In order to revise the Wildcat offense, the Hal\ll8II Trace coaching
staff has switched Greg Webb from
his quarterback position of last fall
to halfball. KeUy Petrte will now call
signals.· Other returning lettermen
include Keith Campbell, 141)-pounds;
Toby Sheets, 155 pounds; Ed Lester,
180 pounds; Mike Waugh, 175 pounds; Mike Beaver, 225 pounds; and
MarkBeaver,170 pounds.
Hannan Trace will operate from a

JUN IORS &amp; MISSES

S...C t

Ali returns
•
•
to nng
agam

YOU CAN HAVE AN EXCITING CAREER THAT'S
WELL PAID AND OFFERS ADVANCEMENT OP·
POTUNITIES. HOW? BY BEING SKILLED IN THE
FIELD OF BUSINESS. WHY WAIT FOR YOUR
FUTURE? CALL TODAY FOR INFORMATION ON
OUR CAREER PROGRAMS, FINANCIAL AIDS &amp;
PLACEMENT SERVICE.

will play a multiple .....enae.

~1'".&amp;1i:" !~!~!~4
THURS , FRI &amp; SAT -SEPT. 3rd, 4th Be 5th

fense.

Ca~ndel\_'Par~

Freddie Hart

Page-5

CALL (614)-992-21 04
Of (304)-675-1244
have r~fro=m::.:a~po=w:e:r~l~o:r~T~f:o:nna::t:io:n:.:an:d:_~v:an:·:et~y~o:f~l:an:d~p:·ro~fo:nna:::ti:o:ns:·____F:..:::oo:t:ba:U:..:f:ans=-~a~t~S=o=uth=ern~~Hi:'g:hJ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

Last season, the Eagles guided to
a a _7, 3 mark under Buddy Moore
who has since departed to Monroe
High &amp;:boo!.
Forty'three prospects are out for
footblill this year at Eastern. The
club has overall good size and ex·
perience. Team leadership Is ex·
Jli!Cled to be provided by Mike
Bissell, senior quarterback; Jobu
Riebel and Mark Holter, halfbacks;
Troy Gutherie, sophomore fullback;
P.G. Riffle and Rob Smith, senior
ends; Nick Leonard, senior center;
guards, Mike Hauber and Ray Spen·
cer and tackles, Charlie Massar and
Dave Gaul.
Coach John Blake, entering his
lith season at Nonh Gallia, hllli
come close during his 10 year
career, but has never won an SVAC
championship.
The Pirates have nine returning
lettennen including co-captains J.J.
JUBilee and Gregg Dee!, both senior
linemen; Barry Marcum, !55-pound
lineman; Bruce Shriver, senior
qUarterback; Steve Franklin, 21~
pound lineman; Jeff Smith, 135pound back; all seniors; Bob
Adkins, l~d junior running
back; and two sophomore, Matt
Kemper, 25~und lineman and
Eric Pennick, l~und back.
Shriver and sophomore Scott
Pickens will handle the Pirate of·

EVERYBODY TO TilE MOUND- AU of tbe Montreal Expos and
Cineilwatl Reds fUe toward the mound during a beocb clearing argument
in the slxth inning of a game Tuesday In Clocbmatl. It all started when
Ex(Mls hatter John Milner was forced to the dirt by a Frank Pastore pitch,
and came to his feet headed toward the mound. The situation was quickly
brought under control by the umpires. (AP Laserphotol.

CLEVELAND ( AP) - Just three
months ago, the boss of the
Cleveland Indians said Ron Pruitt
would never again wear an Indians
uniform. Now Pruitt is back and
wearing the Cleveland red, white
and blue.
Because Cleveland is short on
righthanded hitting, Pruitt was
recalled this week from Class AAA
Charleston, where he hit .316.
"I am happy and stunned to be
here," Pruitt said. "I knew I would
play in the majors again, but you get
to wondering after a while.
"Certainly I never figured to be
back with the Indians. I am still pin·
ching myself. I am just glad
everyone is willing to forgive and
start over.''
Three months ago, Gab.. Paul,
president of the Indians, proclaimed

The Daily Se1finel

Football returns to the SVAC this Friday

Unea1·ned runs beat Reds
CINCINNATI (AP)- &lt;llarlie Lea
was embarrassed by the pounding
he got the last time he pitched in
Riverfront Stadlwn. He erased that
memory Tuesday night by limiting
the Cincinnati Reds to five hits and
two earned runs in six innings as the
Montreal Expos edged the Reds 4-3.
"Nothing went right for me that
last time here in June, not one

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MEN'S 'BLUE BELL'

[COMPLETE WITH BATTERIES]

15"X15" SIZE ASSORTED

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ONE SIZE FITS ALL

, l.IGiM u"t -owu"' ""ton
oanty

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toll O•IIOWI. 1..11~ ,,..•
15•· StU. $aYt !\OW fNt .

•n9 owr Labor Da,

TAKE YOUR CHOICE
1 INCH. 1 'h INCH. 2. INCH, 3 INCH

SPECIAL-TWO PIECE SET
NINE INCH PAINT

STR£TCH SOCKS PAINT 8RUSH£S ROLL£R l P
_,... .

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FOR

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�fl2.:10, $1.110 and ...
Stork finished second, paying
cOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Big f12.40 and ~.:Ill, and Joan Coy wu
Sam, driven. by John Wiseman, won third, paying f3.1Ml.
1be 9th trifecta of 6-1-7 paid
the 8th featured race at Scioto
DoWilll 1n z:m Tuesday, paying f969.90.

Scioto Downs results

FREE. ~IUL @W triXlrn:~~
A. WHITE GOLD
B. SUNBURST
C. ENCRUSTING
D. DESIGN UNDER STONE
E. FULL NAME ENGRAVING
F. ACHIEVEMENT PANEL
G. SCHOOLS COLORS

Sj'!J95

· WINNERS- Visiting winners In the annuallnvllatloualtournament
of the Women's Association of the Jaymar Golf Club held Tuesday are
pictured. They are, front, I to r, Mary Arnold, closest to pin; Bessie
Wilson, low putts; Delma Arnold, longest drive; Ulllan Green, second
low net, third OJgbt; Diana Karr,llrstlow net, third OJgbl; Louise Rousb,
low gross, third OJgbt; back, Ito r, Norma Stanley, second low net, second

CANDY'S CLASSIC
COLLECTIONS

OJgbt; Belly Flsber, first low net, second OJgbl; Allee Icard, low IJGIIS,
•econd OJght; Lillian Hyer, second low net, lint rught; Mary Adtlna, Ifni
low net, lint OJgbl; Dorothy Karr, low groos, lint OJgbl. Forty-eight
women teed off In the annual event with clubs represented tnclodlng Hidden VaUey, Point Pleasant; GniUpolls, Riverside, Mason, and Southern
Hills, Parkersburg.

INGELS FURN. &amp; JEWELRY
IMiddleport, Oh.
992·263S

Cam del\,.

SJ'arl\.

Decorated Cakes
For All Occasions

HOUSEL CONFECTIONERY

Camden Park
will be
reMrved
Saturday, Septembers lor
an outln1 of Laborer• Local
I3S3 until 4 pm.
Rt. 60 WHt

Huntln!Jton, W.Va.

Ph. 992-6342
317 N. 2nd
Middlepor.
Sandy Koenig, closest to pin; Margaret FoUrod, low
putt; back, Ito r, Lois Pauley, fll1it low net and longest
drive; Norma Custer, low gross and Kuthy Gard,

LOCAL WINNERS - Winners from the Women's
Association of the Jaymar Golf Club in Tuesday's annual lnvllalluual are pictured. They are, front, I to r,

second low net.

Questions Stahler
HOUSTON ( AP )- Warren Welsh,
National Football League director of
security, questioned Houston Oilers
quarterback Ken Stabler Tuesday
concerning Stabler's alleged
. association with a convicted gambling figure.
Oilers General Manager Ladd
Herzeg and head Coach Ed Biles
joined Stabler lor the inverview and
said Welsh returned to New York
following the session.
" Kenny answered the questions
without hesitation or reservation,"
Hel"leg said. " Welsh was here as a
routine lollowup to Sunday's story in
the New York Times."
The Times story reported that
Stabler had been seen with Nicholas
Dudich of Perth Amboy, N.J., on a
number of occasions beginning in

Going
Somewhere?
JUMBO BOLOGNA ••.•••••••• ~~~ SI.79
Eckrich

12 oz.

MINUTE MAID LEMONADE:.a.n••.87~
12 Inch

REYNOLDS FOIL WRAP. ••••••• ~~:.S9'
14'12 oz.

ALPO DOG FOOD. .••.•••••• .Jcan s1.29
12'12 oz.

Morton House Sliced Pork,
Sliced Turkey &amp;Gravy &amp;Sliced

BeefJ/S1.29

10 oz. Vienna

HOT DOG SAUCE ••••.•••••••••••••• 99'
7'12 oz.

.

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CARNATION
'

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SPREADABLES~::$1.19

4 Ol.

When you leave on your vacation, let us pack
a pak for yc.u. Let us save your newspapers
for you .until you return home, and at that
time we will deliver every back issue so that
you can catch up on the news that you
missed while you were away.
If you prefer to take your paper with you on
your vacation, we can arrange that too.
Call our circulation department or mail this
handy coupon to our circulation department
today.

N~:~------------7-----~
ADDRESS:~
· ----'-----,.-=::-----

16 Q~. Lucky Leaf

APPLESAUCE•••••••••••••••••••• 2/9f

Correspondence

Bible Bowl
winners chosen

but they have only tested the cyclic
variations on two women through
two menstrual cycles each.
The reason, they said, is that it
lakes six months to analyze the daily
samples obtained from one patient
during one menstrual cycle.
The next step in the research,
Preti said, is to repeat the tests on
many more women, to get more accurate measurements of the connection between the chemical
changes in the mouth and the
reproductive cycle.
Once that is done, Preti said, it
would be relatively easy to develop a
home test to measure the chemical
changes.

CancerAnswerline
A regular feature prepared by
the American Cancer Society to
help'save your life lrom cancer.
QUESTION: Can I bave cancer
without being aware of It?
ANSWEJRline: Yea. Until a
cancer has grown, or has Invaded
tissues, symptoms tend not to appear. However, cancer can
sometimes be detected by certain
tests before symptoms beCome
obvious. Examples are the Pap
test for cervical cancer or the
''procto" for coloreclal cancer.
Researchers are working on the
possibility of developing more
sophisticated tests, either for
speclfic kinds of cancer or for the
disease generally - but so far
none of these tests has yet proved
practical for universal use.
QUESTION : What is the purpose of breast self-examination?
ANSWERline: The aim of monthly BSE is to teach women how
their breasts nonnally feel and
look, so that in the case of any
change they can consult their
doclors. Every woman should
take time to examine her breasts
for signs of cancer. Once a month
Is often enough, and the best time
is right after menstruation. Alter
the menopause, any convenient
day, such as the first of the month, Is a good time to do BSE
regularly . II a woman has had a
hysterectomy, she should check
with her doctor for a recommended lime. Aller a breast has
been removed for cancer, a
woman should examine her
remaining breast regularly, as
well as the area around the incision. She should also make appointments with her physician for
periodic checkups. For infonnation on how to do BSE, contact your local American Cancer
Society or ask your doctor.
QUESTION: I have several
friends who are terrified of getling cancer. What can I tell
them•
ANSWERline: You should
suggest that they get infonnalton

992-7531.

: located at the south bound park 011
; ~ 33, one ll)l)e south of Darwin;
· and REACI' memben will be on
: hand M.hourl! a day to serve free col. . lee and soft driPb to iiiOtOi'lats.'

..

'

•

··.
~------~~~~--~~~-------------~~ -

{'
. PLAYIWL '
I AJWthooii'IW--

.

) AIWihiJ-~~-_.•

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1

A dinner preceded the meeting
with guests including Lindsay
Howes, Eighth District conunander,
Harold Brown, first vice president,
Robert Cornelius, second vice
president, James Hampson, department historian, and Dick King and
Greg Bush, Buckeye Boys' State
delegates who reported on mock
govenunent during the meeting.
Fred Hanel, corrunander, presented a special plaque and lifetime
membership to Dale AUensworth, a
charter member, for his outstanding
conununity and civic contributions.

ROLL ROOFING
55, 65 &amp; 90 LB. WEIGHTS

e ROOF CEMENT
e NAILS
e All ACCESSORIES
FOR ROOFING

ICKENS HARDWAR
I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~

McGrath of Logan.
Mrs. Nonna Lee visited a week
with Mr. and Mrs. Jim Arnold,
Newark, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
McKnight, Jolutstown, and attended
the Lee reunion.

Mrs. Lola
Sunday
al- ~
ternoon
withClark
Mr. visited
and Mrs.
Clinton
Gilkey, Albany. Also visiting at the
Gilkeys were the fanner Wilma and
NeUie Landaker and husbands and
their brother, Howdy Landaker of
Washiuglon C. H.
Mrs. SleUa Atkins visited three
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gilkey,
days with Mr. and Mrs. Thunnan Columbus, and Mrs. Jackie Davis
Edwards of Canton.
and daughter, Gallipolis, visited
recenlly with Frances Alkire and
Lola Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Updegraff, Birmingham,
Ala. spent a few days
Doss, Plain City, Ohio; Keith
with
Mr.
and
Mrs. Bob Alkire and
Alan Jones, Columbus; Gerald C.
visited
other
relatives,
Folden and Heather Ann Folden,
Mrs. Nellie Burgan held a birthRaleigh, N.C.; Hazel Swan !'randay dinner In honor of her daughter,
cis, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
Rosella Birchfield Sunday. AtVaughn McKnight, Dee
tending were Mr. and Mrs. James
McKnight Brown, Charleston, W.
·
Burgan, Mr. and Mrs. Tony Borgan
Va.; Susan Moseley, Columbus;
Hilah M. Snowden, Akron, and
Borgan
and family
andMrs.
Mr. and
Mrs.
the hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Mr. and
Jimmy
and
baby,
ADen Burgan and family of LanShenefield and Anna Ogdin.
caster and Terry Burgan of ColumMarilyn McLean Grim,
bus. They all went to Mrs. BirchPhoenix, Ariz., only daughter of
field's daughter Debbie's for supper
the late Bertha Folden McLead
and were joined by Larry, Ruth and
was unable, to attend. The late
Jell Birchfield.
Finley Folden left no children.

JOHNNY A. BRAWNER, M.D.
ANNOUNCES THE RE-LOCATION
OF HIS PRACTICE TO
FAIRVIEW PARK, OHIO
EFFECTIVE SEPT. 15, 1981

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AT

HARTLEY SHOES
9-S Daily Til8 Friday

POMEROY, OHIO

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

FISH SQUARE •••••••• •••

69~

WITH FRIES··············· •1
ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

Comfort never
looked so good
Enjoy every fall activity in perfect comfort.

09

Soft soles and special detailing give a
stylish blend to that Cover Girl look.

992-2SS6
Pomeroy, OH.
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

'; '

servtces
The Meigs County REAcr Teani

The Cora Bennett Memorial
Scholarship was awarded to Robert
Lemley at the Wednesday night
meeting of the American Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Middleport. Lemley will attend the
Hocking Technical Institute at
Nelsonville.
Plnns were made during the
meeting for the monthly parties at
Arcacia Nursing Home. Going for
the one in August were Etta Will, Er·
rna Hendricks, Mary Madden,
Sherry Roush, Lois Roush, Mildred
Parsons and Gerry Parsons. The
next one will be held on Sept. 28.
Anyone wishing to donate may contact Mrs. Parsons at 992-7007. Roberta Kail, a guest at the meeting, made
a donation. A bake sale was planned
for Sept. 19 at the Central Trust
Bank in Middleport.

MASON, W. VA.

oldens hold reunion
Descendants of the late John
and Ernaline Folden, who were
the parents of three sons, Finley,
Clate and Elmer, and three
daughten, Clara, Anna and Ber·
tha, gathered for a reunion at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Shenefield In Wilkesville recently. The affair was hosted by the
only two surviving children of
Mr. and Mrs. Folden, Clara
Shenefield and Anna Ogdin.
Those enjoying a day of
fellowship and a bountiful dinner
were Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Shenefield, son and daughter-inlaw of Mr. and Mrs. Carl (Clara
Folden) Shenefield, Langsville;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Maxine
Ogdin) Griffith, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert (Janet
Ogdin) Jones, Columbus,
daughters and sons-In-law of Anna Folden Ogdin; Mr. and Mrs.
John Folden, Mrs. Ruth Folden,
Spartanburg, S. C., and Mr. and
Mrs. C. Lee Folden, Riverside,
m., sons and daughters-in-law of
the late Elmer Folden; Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Folden, Akron, only
son olthe late Clate Folden; Mrs.
Linda ·shenefield Vaughan,
Crystal l..ynn Vaughan, Bridget
Marie Vaughan, Langav!Ue; Mr.
and Mrs. · Carl £. Shenefie~.
Laurie A. Shenefield, Denise M.
Shenefield, Langavllle; Karen
LYI)II Grllfith, , Columbus I Mr.
and ' Mrs.. Jo!D! (~e Jones)

about cancer from their local
American Cancer Society. Encourage them to consult their
doctors about any condition they
might fear. Tell them that early
delecllon is one of the best
weapons against cancer.
QUESTION: I have recently
read that certain cancen are on
the rise among black Americans.
Wbat causes this? Is it a
biological factor?
ANSWERline: Sbarp increases
among blacks in cancer of the
lungs, esophagus, oral cavity,
and bladder may possibly be
related to cigarette smoking, or
cigarette smoking combined with
alcohol intake. Dietary, occupational, genetic, and other
!acton may be implicated, but
reasons such as these are still
speculative and may take many
years of diligent research to
prove or refute scientifically.
QUESTION : My mother, who
is 45, had has a mastectomy. Is
she likely to bave cancer in her
other breast?
ANSWERJine: There is evidence that some patients with breast
or ovarian cancer are at increased risk of developing the
disease in the paired organ, but
the prportion of such cases is
relatively small.
For further information call

•

: F'riday at 6 p.m. and lasting
: Monday at 7 p.m. 'l'he ataUon will

,•'

Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Epple were Mr. and Mrs. Ron
BroWn of Ray, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Waldeck and children,
Loudonville, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Epple and children, Middleport, and
Frances Yowtg.
Mrs. Minnie McGrath spent the
weekend with her sister, Mrs. Mollie

I '

;• Weekend
will he conducting
a. La:bo!:r::Da:y: ,
Safety Break,

lam~~celvingthe--~
.,,.....__ _ _:.-.__ _ _ by

..-MoTOR RoutE

They next found a similar
chemical change took place in
women's sallva.
The most dramatic change was
seen in a substance found in the
saliva called n-dodecanol. They
fowtd that levels of n-dodecanol
were 10 times as high at ovulation as
they were at other times, regardless
of the patients' health or diet.
They are now trying to discover
exactly what happens in the mouth
to cause the Increase in this substance, Kostelc said.
"It makes no difference what the
oral health of the woman is," said
Kostelc. "And diet has very little to
do with it."
The researchers have done
thousands of measurements of such
chemicals in saliva and the breath,

YORK (AP) - It's possible
to tell when a woman is ovulating,
and therefore able to get pregnant,
by analyzing her breath or saliva,
researchers contend.
The finding, presented Tuesday at
a meeting of the American Chemical
Society, could lead to a simple home
test to tell women when they are ferble, they said.
James Kostelc and George Preti,
chemists at the Monell Chemical
Sense Center in Philadelphia, stumbled onto the result while they were
studying the causes of bad breath.
They began to suspect the amounts of certain sulfur-containing
chemicals, the prime source of bad
breath, varied with the reproductive
· cycle. Their suspicions were confinned.
l't;W

i

TOWN . ~.---------------~--~-'--

-NEWSPAPER CARRIER
• •

Ovulation detected by measurements
of women's breath and saliva. . .

~ REACT

Please H\le my papen in a handy \lacation pak and
deliver them to me when I return f~in my vacation.
I will be _
leaving
tumingon
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __and re-

PORK-N-BEANS .•••••.••••••••••. 2/89'

1be office Is open fl'llln 8:30a.m. to 4
p.m. weel!days. J,sma Arnett Is a
clinical aide, and Helen Blackston Is .
receplloalat at the weekly clinics.
Mrs. Norma Torres presided at .
the meeting held at the Meiga Inn.
Attending the ..,..;on were Ellen
Bell, Meigs County Ubrary, Unda
LevenSon, Uz Most, Community
Mental Health, Sandy Brown, Head ·
Start; Nonna Torres, Frank Petrie,
Meiga County Health Departments;
Laraine Newsome, Crlsisline; Ann
BlackweU and Phyllis Bearhs, Planned Parenthood and Cbarlene
Hoefilch.
The medical services included at
the clinic include providing
laboratory tests for cancer, venereal
disease, pregnancy, urinalysis, and
blood; pelvic and breast
examination; providing contraceptive method or prescription;
and referring for service in cases of
related health problems including
prenatal care.
Pre-maritnl counseling, teenage
pregnancies and the alternatives,
and contraceptive methods are In-

Page-7

Lemley receives
scholarship

'

·--------~---------------

16 oz. Van Camp

agency and 259 who came for annual
checkups. Forty-four cHnic sessions
were held during the year with 73
percent of those receiving treatment
falling 150 percent below the poverty
level.
The weekly clinics are conducted
by Dr. Wilma Mansfield and Dr.
James Witherall, assisted occaslonaUy by Dr. Leland Randalls of
Athens, the medical director of
Planned Parenthood.
Appointments for the cHnics are
made through the Planned Parenthood office on the street level of the
Meigs County Courthouse. The
charge for services Is based on the
income of the individuals involved,
but no patient is refused service
because of the Inability to pay. Approximately 25 persons are seen at
each cHnic.
eluded in the services offered
through Planned Parenthood.
Federal, slate and local monies go
into the operation along with private
donations. Mrs. Phyllis Bearhs Is the
Meigs community worker and Ann
Blackwell, R.N., is the staff nurse.

'

The Daily Sentinel

I would like to· take my paper with me on my vacation. Ple;-se tranefer my•ub.c:rlption to - - - - - - - - - . ; _·_ onthedayof _ _.___ .. _
P I - reaume my horMdeliYery - - - -

INSTANT NESTEA ••••••••••••~~~.s2.89

PIBIUied Parenthood, that agency
which provides educational and
cHnical services to women of childbearing age, was the subject for
discussion at the Tuesday luncheon
meeting of the Meigs County Human
Resource Council.
K~athie Stevenson, a services coordinator for Planned Parenthood,
was speaker at the meeting and
discussed the three elements of the
program - Information and counseling on family planning, child
spacing and birth control and infertility.
Emphasizing that everything is
confidential, Ms. Stevenson talked
about the need for family plaMing
services, which are administered in
Southeul Ohio through a board of
directors, local members of which
are Mary O'Brien, Hank Cleland,
Jr., Margie Lawson and Kermit
Walton.
_
..
She noted ·that In Meigs County
last year 534 women were given
'BOI!le service. This included 175 who
:had their first examination through
the weekly cHnics sponsored by the

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

Parenthood topic of discussion

The youth of the Morning Star
United Methodist Church, near
Racine, were again first place winners in the "Bible'Bowl" sponsored
by the Meigs County United
Methodist Churches.
Second place winnen were the
. youth from the St. Paul's United
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains.
A total of five teams were was entered in the "Bible Bowl" contest
· held on the Book of Romans. They
: were: Alfred, Portland, llethany, St.
: Paul, and Morning Star. There were
55 persons attending the event, held
. Sunday afternoon at the St. Paul
. United ·Methodist Church, Tuppers
· Plains.
· The host minister, Rev. Richard
.Thomas, welcomed those attending
and offered prayer. Congregational
· singing was accompanied by Mrs.
Betty Chevalier at the piano.
Rev. Mark Flynn, county youth
t'OOrdinator, conducted a brief introduction. The emcee was the Rev.
James Clark, new minister of the
RBcine Charge of the United
Methodist Church.
: FoUowing the event, refreshments
· were served by the St. Paul's
: women, with ice cream provided by
the Alfred U.M. Y.F.
Quiz sheets for the next "Bible .
Bowl" will be available soon. The
· next Bible Bowl is scheduled for Oc: toher 25 at the Bethany United
: Methodist Church, Dorcas. This will
: cover Joshua, Judges, Ruth, Esther
and I and II Chronicles. For further
: lnfonnatlon or clarification, please
: contact Rev. Merk Flynn, county
. yough coordln~tor at 94!1-2896.

1976.

Hel"leg said Stabler had been offended by the article and did not
want to talk about the situation.
"The most unfortunate part about
lhis situation is that when Kenny
throws an interception inside the 21).
yard line, these questions will pop
up," Hel"leg said. "It's extremely
unfortunate."
llerzeg said an earlier investigation of Stabler's associations
had turned up no improprieties.
" Kenny 's extremely hurt by the
insinuations and allgations," Herzeg
·said. "He feels he's contributed an
:awful lot during his football career
·and now his image has been tarnished somewhat.''
Hel"leg added that Stabler did not
. want to talk about the allegations.

Pomeroy

Wednesday. September 2, 1981

Brown
and Camel

�Wednesday , September2, 1981

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.

\ In and Around Meigs

40 children attend Bible s~hool
at First United Presbyterian

I

Local women return from western tour
stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl have
returned from a month's trip west.
They visited in Red Oak, Iowa , with
some cousins before going on to Salt
Lake City, Utah, and Seattle, Wash.,
where they were guests of Mrs.
Atkins' son, Gordon, and his fmaily ,
on Mercer Island.
While there they toured Carnations Gardens, visited MI.
Rainier, the Japanese Gardens, and
attended a baseball game at the
King Dome where they saw the
Mariners and the California Angels.
they also went to the Sea Fair where
the Blue Angels presented an air
show.
' Others visited were Dr. and Mrs.
Robert Siberling. Mrs. Siberllng is
the former Alice Bailey of Meigs
County. while at the Gordon Atkins'
cousins, Charles Pickens and his

SyraCIIII! Cmununlty Bible School
was held Aucust 17 through 21 at the
First United Presbyterian Church,
SyraCIIII!, with a total of 40 children

three sons ol Florida stopped while
making a western tour.
Mrs. Atkins and Miss Diehl
travellng by bus returned via Mon-

attending.
Ages ranged fmn nursery to fifth

tana and North Dakota, enjoying
especially the huge fields of sunflowers .

grade level, with 20 teachers and
helpers assisting with the crafts and
Bible study sessions.
1be school wound up with a picnic
Aug. 21 at the Syracuse Part.

Tennis Shoe Special

Garden dub buying
table for park
Plans to purchase a picnic table
for the Rulland Community park
were made when the Rutland Friendly Gardeners met recently at the
home of Joan Fetty.
Club members are selling bulbs
now and will use some for a planting
at the RuUand school. Marjorie
Bishop gave devotions and members
responded to roll caU by naming
their favorite houseplant. The open
meeting of the Rutland Garden Club
as well as the flower show to be held
Sept. 12 and 13 were announced.
Flower arrangements using
animal figurines were won by Janet
Bolln and Joan Stewart. Flower
arranging games were played. Mrs.
Bishop and Margaret Johnson were
welcomed into membership. Officers' reports were given.

for Baclc-To-School

SELECT GROUP OF
CONVERSE, AAU, ASPEN, OSAGE
and BROOKS

WE IESUft TIE
IIIIT TO UIIT
IIUITITIEI

20% OFF
CHAPMAN'S SHOES

KEEPING A COOL HEAD- Michell Ford, 11, found the last days of
summer to he a sticky problem as the relative humidity hovered above 110
percent She came up with a crowning cool touch as she put a sprinkler on
her head while playtug near her Milwaukee home. (AP Laserphotol.

lUSTER

"Next to llberfelds In Pomeroy"

IPEOIIL

BOlUS
SPECIALS

IIIIIIIYI'

I REIDWID CUI

Sara Erwin

MEIGS BAND Boosters
meeting, 7 p.m. Wednesday, high
school band room. Upcoming
football season and Sept. 12 band
invitational to be discussed;
chaperons and concession stand
workers to be assigned.

Thursday
MEIGS MARAUDER Band
Boosters will meet at the football
concession stand 2 p.m. Thursday
to clean up for the season. For
more infonnation, phone 992·2277
after5p.m.
MEET THE TEAM NIGHT will
be held for the Southern High
School football learn Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Southern football
£ield. The public is invited.
REVIVAL at Ash St. Freewill
Baptist Church in Middleport,
7:30 each evening for rest of
week ; Joseph Gwinn, Leon, W.
Va., evangellst; music by Jointalres, through Thursday, and
Gospel Messengers on Friday.

Family visits
Visiting Mrs. Marie steiner, Middleport, over the weekend of Aug. 20
were her son and hi.s wlte, Mr. llld
Mrs. Earle Steiner, Warren, who
had been vacationing in Savannah,
Ga., andMyrtleBeach,S. C.

Bohr reunion Sunday
The ann..r Bahr rewJ1011 wtn he
held at 12:30 p.m. Swlday at the
Fortced Run State Part.

Ill 1 lru I'IIICE ILISTEI 1111111
utu outlflute frtt• •r Nllllen.

4

Prenlll 011 1111111 I'IIICE IUSTEI

lAIII "I"
MiliUM 1111

(

lf•p IIYIF Olrtlfiolll It fill
011hlll' for 11oh I'IIICE IUSTEI
SPECIAL JOI 11l1ot.

~--

FRESH

U.S.D.I.

IIIIID BIIF

•I•!
FREICH CITY

Grange inspection

Wednesday

'S HOW IT WORKS .......................
Fll' 11011 Sl JOI 1111111 111 1 I'IIICE
I'IIICE ILISTEI 1ta111p1 filii 11oh
3 31oertlflo111.
1. IUSTD
.... Ita.,.
.

2

Mr. and Mrs. Howard (Buddy) Er·
win, Jr. , Racine, recently entertained with a party honoring their
daughter, Sara Beth, on her first birthday.
A Raggedy Ann cake, baked by
her aunt, Sandy Needs, was served
with homemade ice cream and punch to her brother, B. J ., her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin, Sr., Mrs. Frances Carleton, and
Mrs. Sharon Hubbard, Jamey and
Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. James Carleton,
Mrs. Rhonda Dailey and Shawn, Mr.
and Mrs. David Sheets, Mandi and
Betsy, Mr. and Mrs. Herb Ervin and
Josh, Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Needs,
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Wilson, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Ervin.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Willford, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Needs, and Tammy Ervin.

SOCIAL
CALENDAR

PRICE
lUSTER SPECIAL

1

Erwins cekbrate
first birthday

Annual inspection will be held and
the fifth degree performed at the
Friday, Sept. 4, meeting of the Meigs
County Pomona Grange, to be held
at the Rock Springs Grange Hall.
State sewing, baking, crocheting,
and craft projects will be judged at
the 8 p.m. session, and refreshments
will be served by the Columbia
Grange.
All members are urged to attend.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

PIIOE
IU$TEI
SPEC IlL

SCOT UD

$100

24 DZ

I.LII

m

16.25%

14$

. ' .. oz

COMPOUNDED DAILY

II

10$
.. ' .. oz

I ILL

TO YIELD ANNUALLY

I CIT

IIIII
DR CIT

17.91%

11$
az

............ cu
Take advantage of high money market
rates with a minimum investment
of only $100! Your interest is guaranteed
for 2% years and your investment
is insured by the Federal Government.
Your monthly interest checks can be automatically deposited into any
BANK ONE account. No risk, big interest, small investment. The 2% year
Super T means you don't have to have a lot of money to make money
when times are tough.

84$
E..................az

121$
............ IT

UIIES'
UE SIZE

....
,...
r-

''' ..

IIIL

c
I

Rate is established bi-weekly by the bank at .25% or more below the average 2'1r year yield on U. S. Treasury securities.
Rate in eff•ct through September 14, 1981 .

.,

When you thll* olhllh money rata,
cu nane comes -. flrd.

·B~N~ ~NE.M
j

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Member FDIC Pomer~y • Rutland- Tuppers l"l•tns
•

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Substantial Penalty tor Early Withdrawal .

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Wednesday, September 2, 1981
Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 2, 1981

Poml!roy-Middleport, Ohio

Cook until aU vegetables are tender-crisp.
At the last minute add cubes of
colby or other cheeses. Toss
vegetables briefly with the cheese so
that it just begins to melt. Serve im·
mediately.
Here's another recipe that uses
leftover mashed pol&lt;!toes as well as
leftover meat. Call it Super Potat~r
Meal Patties and serve with a green
vegetable.
Super Potaii&gt;-Meat Patties
6 servings, I patty each. Calories
per serving : Aboutl75
2 cups leftover mashed potatoes,
seasoned
I cup leftover meat, finely choj&gt;ped
2 tablespoons onion, finely chOj&gt;ped
2eggyolks
2Ia blespoons milk
1/8 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons oil
Mix potatoes, meat, omon, egg
yolks, milk, and pepper.
Shape into six patties, using about
one-half cup potato mixture for
each.
Heal fat in frypan over moderate
heat.
Cook patties until tightly browned
on one side; tum and brown the
other side. Serve hot.

Leftovers, leftovers everywhere'
What do you do with one leftover
ear of corn, half of a zucchini, part of
an onion, a couple of not-so-perfect
tomatoes, a handful of green beans
and some odds and ends of broccoli?
This time of year there are often
bits of vegetables that may be
thrown away or reluctanUy eaten as
leftovers. Instead, turn them into a
garden vegetable dish that is quick
to make and tastes wonderful!
In my house, we actually look forward to vegetable odds and ends
because we like the stir fried dish so
much. The beauty of the dish is that
you can put in 11 whatever you have
on hand or want to add. I almost
always include tomatoes and cheese
- this is a super combination.
Here's how to make " Vegetable
Odds and Ends."
In a large pan, melt 3 tablespoons
margarine.
Add : onion- as much as you like,
chopped or in rings; zucchini - 2 or
3 cups; corn - cut the kernels off
one or two ears; pol&lt;! toes - cube one
or two cooked ; green beans - '&gt; cup
of beans, if you like: broccoli - I
cup, more or less, in pieces
Stir these around, healing them
well.
Add: tomatoes - 2·3 peeled, choj&gt;ped tomatoes

COLUMBUS - State Development Director James A. Duerk announced today the opening of a
second skllb-tralnlng center for employees of Ohio's Weatherization
Assistance Program. The center,
located In The Plains near Athens
will provide weatherization training
to .an estimated roo program

dinner

A Men's Fellowship diruter was
held Sunday evening at the Middleport First Baptist Church with
Fred Klein doing the cooking.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Hudson, James, Donna, Jim and
Tracy Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. Lacey
Barton, Mr. and Mrs. Alien Williams
and Holly, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Klein
and Van, Mrs. Marjorie Walburn,
the Rev. and Mrs. Mark McClung
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Searles.
Aslo attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Kloes and Lynn, Angie
Houchins, Jayne Hoefllch, Craig
Darst, Randy Osborne, Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Davis and Phyllis, Nancy
Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Dan While,
Eric and Adam, Dan and Cathy
Riggs and Davis, Randy and Joann
Hayes and Amanda, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Coleman, Elizabeth Slavin,
Ethel Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Metzger, Amy and Sheltie, Bob, Rob
and Cindy Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
John Werner, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Cleland and Dodie, George M. Freeland, Carolyn Young, Janice Gibbs,
Beulah White, Kilty Darst, Gwinnie
White, Pearl Hoffman, Alice Mills,
Nora Mills, Joy Hudson and Paul
Smith.

•

10 bl
avlillbAe for ule in ..::h Kroger SiOI't, t11eept M
' ....... , nowt ., 0. ad. If .w do run out of . , .t e1iwd
iltfn, we will otflr vou your chOice ot • ~ebte 1tem,
..,..,., IYIIillble, rtfltct1ng lhl ume llvingt or 1 r1inchect
Wlf\lch wiU .,_trtt. 'fOU to purcNM
_ 1ht ldl.off'lilecl 11tm It the
·
pnc:11 wtthin :I) dlvs

Cremeens reunion
The Cremeans family reunion will
be held Sunday at the Bellville Locks
and Dam, Reedsville. Dinner will be
served at 12 noon.
·

Pomeroy VFD
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department will sponsor a chicken
barbecue Sunday, behind the fire
station. Serving will begin at II
a.m., and the price of onediMer will
be$3.

Mr. and Mrs . Mark Clay,
Syracuse, •re announcing the birth
of their first child, Jerrod Anthony,
born Saturday, August 15, at Holzer
Center.
The infant weighed nine pounds,
14., ounces, and was 2llnches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Don Hubhard, Syracuse, and Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Clay, Rutland .
Great-grandparents are Mrs. Albert
Hubbard, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wilt, aU of Syracuse, and Mrs. Orpha Rouse, Rutland. Great-greatgrandfather is Donald Grimm of
New Haven, W.Va .

Householder
Jeff and
Edna Householder,
Route
7, Reedsville,
announceState
the
birth of an eight pound, two ounce
daughter, Sarah Elizabeth, born
July 26 at the Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs. Berl Boggs, Route 2,
Coolville. Paternal grandparents
are Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Householder, also of Coolville.

20% OFF
SALE
ON
WESTERN WEAR

FALL CLASSES

ACME, DINGO

• BALLET
•.•TAP"
.
• JAZZ
CARPENTER'S
'·

DANcl ·s. :ruoao- '

'

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•'

·"·~ 4 PHONEi
'9 49-2710
~·
••

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•WESTERN BOOTS
e BELTS &amp; BUCKLES
e WESTERN HATS
PRE-SEASON SAL£ ..
'

'

•

· -

·--

•

Brown, Carroll, Coshocton, Gallia,
Guernsey , Harrison, Highland ,
Hocking, Holmes, Jackson , Jef.
ferson, Knox, Lawrence, Meigs,
Monroe , Morga n, Muskingum,
Noble , Pike , Perry, Ross ,
Tuscarawas, Vinton and Washington
counties.

The center is capable of taking 15
program workers each week. It will
service 15 local program operators
representing Community Action
Agencies in the 28 counties of Aj&gt;palachian Ohio.
Personnel trained by the project
will serve low-income residents of
Adams, Ashland, Athens, Belmont,

Dinner guests

TO

..,'
J

.

Gunnoe's
Country Sausage

1-1~1:19 .

"

-·
~

MODERN SUPPLY

399 W. Main Street
992·2164
Po-mer~y. Oh.
The SJore with "AI~ Kinds of Stuff"
._ .
For Pets- Stables- Large and Small Animals,
Lawns- Ga~dens
.
.1 · ...

•

I

I

I"

•

Df

liMIT ONE COUI'ON PII FAMII y

.,

-

-~~~ - IIC. lllll SIP!. ! . 1111

IIII!CIIIIIPIIC.IILIIIIIIIIIICII lAIII

"

'

C~TFISH

.
~.

Fillets ........... lb.

FlESH FARM RAISED

~.&gt; .·Catf1sh.

-

....

Next to Elberfelds In Pome

~;~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

:;

$
l-'1 ·Gil.

KROOEI

Course: ACC 105 SEC 021 Fundamentals of Accounting
Days : Tuesdays &amp; Thursdays
Time : 7: 00·9:30 p.m.
Date: September 10 to November 19
Instructor: Keith Ashley

.

I

'

"

'

.

,'

2

Kroger Brea d.. .. .. .. .. 16·01.
Lool
QUARTERS ILUE IONNET
• ....... .. .. . Pkg.
1-lb.
Margar1ne

95
. SJ 09

,:f
....

••

P~9

KliO C.ER

IUN GOlO . . NOWICH

Hot Dog
8
URI

H•

••• ·

KELLOCG'S

Special K 15 ·o•
Cereal. .. •••
COLD CREST

Marsh·
mallows
Pear
Halves .

lib

•••

, . 01

c.,

04

auck•t

$149

59c
49c
Maraschino
.
• •.
Ch emes
'•·
AVONDALE

Mandarin
Oranges
Vienna

SWEET 01 CllAMY
SHUDDID

69C
·

gc
99 C
s·

NIW CRol' GOlD 01

LAIGI • SIZE

tidHIYDIW

·

.

159

$

Melons ............ Each
l...,.,z.·nool
Blue Plums ........ lb.

age
--a·go

. . ., .. ~ ...... ~.lit~ I

··

ggc

5 -oa

''"

KltOGIA

limo
Beans

lb.

Cheese Cake . c~'l.'!'

''"

Sausage

lb.

$299

I I O•

KROGER

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.

79c

C

HlllOIHT

S399
Chicken ...
87
Potato Salad .. .. .. .
87C
Cole Slaw .. .. .........
AMERICAN 01 MUST AID

Fresh
Broccoli ... lunch
fiiSH .
. .
2-lb.
Carrots .......... 1ae
~ID DIUCIOUS
3lb
Apples ........... .;.,·

C ll't ~l

$149

4

F"~i;d

7

,,,

I~ 0 1

'"

$ 59

69c

Food
cAngel
.... $129
ake

ll 01

Pepperidge Farm
Layer Cake

I'LAIN 01 FIUIT TOI'I'ED
SAIALEI

l ·lb

Marshmallow
Creme

AV AILAILE ONLY IN
~~~~ ~
HOIISWITH
DELl DEI'TS.
HOT FOODS
AVAILABLE llam
TIL 7pm

C

.,,

COUN TRY 0\lt:N

FROZE I\!

7.9

·Toothpaste .. .'t~::·

... .•...

ClOVU VAllE'!'

Corn Oil
Morgnrine

AVONCAll

. IMIIIIS
· AIM

C

Kroger
16 ••
Dressing.. "''

GOl D

66c
sgc

SPECIAL FORMULA

ICiOGII YAC I'AK

Course: ACC 114 SEC 024 Principles of Accounting 1
Days: Wednesdays
Time: 6:00·10:00 p.m .
Date: September9to November 18
Instructor : Keith Ashley

Course :' SP 104 SEC 766 Fundanlentals"oi Speech
Days: .Mondays
.
. '
Time:.6:0-IO:OOp.m.
·" "
'
!t '
A·
Date: Sep,tember 14 to NovemiMir 16
'
Instructor: Eilien Gordon

'/c:;~··

$138

c.
Grade A
Large Eggs. Doz.
3-lb. ssee
•CoHee ..... .. .... can
10 SJ39
Charcoal ...... la·~b.

FALL QUARTER

fRINCH OR

$129

(til.

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL ·

Course: ED 234 SEC 282 Introduction to Exceptional'·
\of
Learner
Days: Tuesdays
Time: 6:00·10:00 p.m.
Date: September 15 to November 17
Instructor: Virginia Strong

i;i~~oFrish

3 $129
White Bread ....... ~~~~-

28

1~lANO

ITALIAN liQUID

Flake
Coconut

Orange Juice

Ice Cream

1000

"'" 89 c
95

. . P kg

FROZENKROGER

$299

Count.., Club

12 ·01
1&gt;1

Pick Of The Chix ... lb.
2 $279
Fried Chicken ... s~~·

KROGER

"'

Course: BM 273 SEC 221 Real Estate Appraisal
Days: Wednesdays
Time: 7:00·10:00 p.m .
Date: September9to November 18
Instructor: Hank Cleland, Jr.

...... lb.

49

HOLLY FARMS, U.S .D.A INSPECTED
GRADE A

s119

$199

c

MLi~;r U.S.D .A.INSPECTED

Fryer Parts ...... lb.

C

... ,.

Avondale
Catsup
Bolting
Mix

I

99

3 ·01

JIFH

51.1C:ID fill INTO ONI CONVENIENT TA.ICI
HOMI I'ACKAGE

~~~ DIE5SlD0

....
....

.

Avondale
Gelatin ..

$ 29

99 c

A BLEND OF BEEF &amp; HYDRATED TEXTURED
VEGETABLE PROTEIN KROGER'S PRO

,.,. _
,.,

IIEirDIIlOW PIICE

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

OLD CAROLINA

Pork Loin.... lb.
flESH FAIM RAISED

Dill
Slices

KROGER MEAT

•••••••••••••••••••
:.Wh~I;GFresh $13 9
; Smoked Ham .... . lb.

KROGER HA.M8UR G fR

I

• ' .

.

Boneless Boston $19 9
Roll Roast .... lb.
•
l -Ib. ggc
W1eners
.... ........ Pkg.
Sliced Bacon .. .. ~~~: ggc
Beef Patty Mix. . lb.

·:~~ $149

Teo
Bogs

U.S . GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE .
BEEF CHUCK ARM

DFA.UI~ .

. 1~·17-ll. AVG. WHOLE
. SEMI ·IONELESS

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

r-

PRICES REDUCED THRU SEPT. 5, 1981 .,..

Fox De luxe
II '"
•
P1na
Pk!l

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Roll
I
LIMIT 3 POUNDS WITH COUPON . I

•

COMPLETE RANGE OF SIZES IN
LEAlHER, SUEDE &amp; NYLON &amp; CANVAS
FOR lliE ENTIRE FAMILY.

.

CLOVER VALl£¥

Grape
Jelly
fRO UN

(2-ll. ROLL. .. SV7)

WE NOW HAVE A

Grande

99

$

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

IN,.POMEROY AND GAlli POll$ !i IOttn

Emerson Jones, Middleport, Mr. ..,
and Mrs. KeMeth Russell, Racine, ""
and Mrs. Dorothy Dandakis, Athens,::;
were diruter guests of Mr. and MrS.-::%
Floyd T. Chapman and daughters, :'
Shetley and Kimberly, Pickerington,. "
on Sw1(Jay, August 30. Mr. Jones, ·•
Mr. and Mrs. Russell. and Mrs. Dan- •
dakis also visited Mrs. Emerson '::
(Beulah) Jones, a patient at Unlver- .,
sity Hospital, Columbus.
...

College
and
Commun11y College

I

COIPH£D TO OTHER IUNDS • AT KROGER.

"FII ME IIGP£1 CIST CmliS. •o DTMU IIA.DS All STOUEO

Sirloin Steak

llSli\I'E THE liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE

I

--

CdPVIIGHT 1tl1 fHl MIOGII CO . ITEMS AI~D P•ICU
GOOD SUNDAY AUG . :110 THIU SATU.DAY SEI'T S ltll

)
,

R•·o

SAYI Ult TO 40% 011
SOO.IR COST CU'I'TIRS

f\Pd.

Course: ART 103 SEC 162 Sketching
Days: Mondays
Time: 6:00·9:00 p.m .
Date·: September 14 to November 16
Instructor: Jack Slavin

• FRINGE COATS
• LEAlliER VESTS

Ages3 &amp; Up

These measures are applied
routinely as part of the
Weatherization Assistance Program
funded by the U. S. Department of
Energy. The program is designed to
save energy and reduce heating
costs by weatherizing homes of lowincome persons, particularly the
elderly and handicapped.

Etervming VOU ~w 11 KrOQtf t1 guar1Mieed fOr' )'OUr total
lljtilfe.;:tion ~ of manuf1e1urer . If you 1re M~t 11111·
Krogtf wil r.pltce yoor 1t~ ~h rhe ume D1'1nc:l Of •
~-- br.nd or refund your purcha• pr•ce .

JUST RECEIVED
NEW SHIPMENT OF
TENNIS SHOES

Clay

ENROLLMENT FOR

.~·

~

.•

r-------------======.::....::.:.::.:.=::.:.__--1

IN
RACINE
' AND
MIDDLEPORT

at the tops of their tieada. Doetors decided thai they
Irrevocably shared a blood stream and could ool be
separated. (AP Laserpboto).

PEOPLE ARE CURIOUS- Siamese twins Yvonne aod Yvette Jones were born May 14, 1949 In Los
Aogeles aod are described as craolopltWIIwlns, joined

Lipscomb graduate

'

The training c~nter offers
program workers a four-day
weatherization or!entatloo and skill
course In Insulating attics, sidewalls
and foundations; caulklng; weather·
stripping windows and doors; wraj&gt;ping heating ducts and water
heaters ; and installing stonn win·
dows.

Boneless Top

i ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
ot "'- ~ lltml •• ,~,ld

·'Canon to speak

NASHVILLE - Davie Robert
Hannum, a business management
major from Long Bottom, was a warded the bachelor of science degree
from David Lipscomb College
. during commencement exercises
August22.
Lipscomb President Willard
Collins conferred degrees on more
ihan 90 seniors during the 6 p.m.

worlters by December 31, 1981.
Duerk said training center
operations are made possible
through a sulrgrant provided by the
Ohio Department of Economic and
Conununity Development as a portion of the Weatherization Assistance Program's training and technical
assistance component. ·

•

Bffths_____________

tuned to CBS.
The rating for "M-A.S.H" was 24.
Nielsen says that means of all the
nation 's TV~uipped homes, 24 percent saw at least part of the No. I
show.
NBC had three of the week 's five
lowest-rated shows. An ABC movie,
"FM," was No. 61, followed by
"NBC Magazine" and two movies
from the same network, "Two
Reelers" and "24 Hours of the
Rebel," and a "CBS Reports"
presentation, "The Best Little
Statehouse in Texas."
Here are the week's 10 highestLightfoot
rated programs:
Butch and Bonnie Lightfoot, Route
"M-A.S.H," with a rating of 24
I,
Mmersville, announce the birth of
representing 19.2 million homes,
a
daughter, Kelli Dawn, born on
CBS; '"Diff'rent Strokes," 21.9 or
August
5 at the Holzer Medical Cen17.5 million, NBC; "Hart to Hart,"
ter.
21.6 or 17.3 million, ABC; "The JefKetti weighed eight pounds, 11
fersons ," 21.3 or 17 million, CBS;
ounces,
and was 22 incbes long.
"Three's Company," 21.2 or 16.9
Maternal
grandparents are Mr.
million, and "Too Close for Comand
Mrs.
Homer
Banks, Route 2,
fort," 21.1 or 16.8 million, both ABC;
Pomeroy,
and
paternal
grand"Facts of Life," 20.9 or 16.7 million,
parents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Everett
NBC; "House Calls," 20.4 or 16.3
Lightfoot, Route 4, Pomeroy. Matermillion, and " Dukes of Hazzard,"
20.3 or 16.2 million, both CBS, and nal great-grandparents are Mr. and
"Qwncy, M.E.," 19.8 or 15.8 million, Mrs. Albert Cadle, and p1ternal
great-grandfather is Lester
NBC.
Walburn.
The next 10 shows :
Mr. and Mrs. Lightfoot also have a
"Trapper John, M.D.," and
"Alice," both CBS, · lie; "Re•l son, Jerry Wayne, age six.
People," NBC; ~~so Minutes," CBS;
"CHiPs," NBC; "Laverne and
Shirley" and "20-20," both ABC;
"Magnum, P.I." CBS, and "Bosom
Buddies" and Movie-"When She
The Pomeroy Grace Ep1scopal
Was Bad," both ABC, tie.
Church has announced that Canon
Atkinson of the Diocese will speak
and ' deliver Holy Communion Sunday, Sept. 6, at 10:30 a.m. Church
school classes will be conducted at
the same hour.
ceremonies. Howard A. White,
president of Pepperdine University,
Malibu, Calli., was the com·
mencement speaker.
Hannum is the son of Roy Robert
Hannum, 51025 SR 248, Long Bottom.
David Lipscomb College is a four
year liberal arts institution affiliated with churches of Christ.

The Daily Sentinel- Paqe-11

Shop Kroger For ..•

Nielson ratings
NEW YORK (AP) - With the
start of the 1981-82 prime-time
season still at least a month away,
CBS continues to hold fast to the No.
I position in the three-way competition, figures from the A.C.
Nielsen Co. show.
ABC's "World News Tonight,"
. meanwhile, finished ahead of CBS'
: "Evening News" for only the second
time. The triumph for ABC in the
week through Aug. 30 came with
· Lestie Stahl pinch-hitting for Dan
RBther as CBS anchor.
A measure of CBS ' strength in
prime-lime is in a half-dozen consistently successful programs, in·
cluding "M-AS-H" - No. I for the
latest week surveyed - " The Jeffersons," "Dukes of Hazzard" and
"House Calls. 11
CBS' first-place finish was the network's 15th straight, and was accomplished with help from only six
. first-run programs, notably a pre.season professional football game
between Houston and Dallas, in 38th
place.
ABC's "20-20," No. 17 for the
week, was the highest-rated of the
week's original programs. Prime
lime will be dominated by reruns unW at least the first week of October,
when the 1961-82 season is scheduled
to begin . .
· CBS' rating for the week was 14.8
'to 14.6 for ABC and 13.1 for NBC. The
networks say that means in an
_average prime-time minute during
·the week, 14.8 percent of the homes
:in the country with television were

...

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Second. skills training center located in The Plains

Group
What's
holds
Cooking?
Dale StoU,
Meigs Couly
ExteDBlon Agent,
Home Economies

.

111

0 1

''"

IYUIDll ltW 'IICI

63c
49c
43c
39:c

DA'tTIMf

Comfort
Diapers .
KIOGU

...(. S479
"'•·

Worcestershire
" ·01 .

Sauce ......

••I

KIOGIR

Steak

10·01 .

S.uc1 ....... ""

age
ggc

a.~·N~~· SJ 09
110 VALUE

Vanilla
Wafers .
KIIIOGU

·Tomato

PQltt

6 · 01.

..... c••

:!o~ Rings 'c:~ 59~

IIIOGIIIPIGZIN

lpplpetl

WilT

•·••

op Ill · . ""'·

u

5·9'.:

�;

\
Page-12-The Da11y Sentmel

Pomeroy

1981

Wednesday, SeDtember 2, 1981

Middleport, Dhto

Small investment, large ·returns, Sen-t inel Want Ads
Public Notice
TO DEFENDANT GWEN
DOLYN F
HUDNELL,
WHOSE
RESIDENCE
AND
WHEREABOUTS
ARE UNKNOWN
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COU NT Y
OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
COURTHOUSE
POMEROY OHIO
Fl RST
BANI&lt;
OF
MARIETTA

off the cen ter line of State
Route No 143 at nght
angles) thence south 67
deg 13 20 east 254 05feet
the tru e po1nt of begmnmg
for the followmg lracl
Beolnn'"g South 38 deg 05
40' w est 100 feel !hence
South 67 deg 13 20 east 25
tee t thenc e south 57 deg
20 20 east 175 feet thence
north 38 deg OS 40 east
100 f eet thence north 57
deg 20 20 West 175 feet
thence north 67 deg 13 20
easT 25 f eet to The pomt of
begmn tng contatntng 046
acre more or less Deed
Reference
Volume 253
Page 449 Meog s County
Deed Records
Parcel No 2
Solualed'" Sec l oon No 7
Scopoo Townsh p
Me ogs

Plamttff,

VS

HAROLD N HUDNELL et
al
Defendants
CASE NO 11748
NOTICE
Platnftff Ftrst Bank of

Mart e tta ha s brought th•s
act• on tn the above court

nam mg you as one at the
defendants by flltng
ts

more
parl• c ularly
desc rt bedOh1oas and
follows
County
be1 ng
Be
g
nntng
at
the
tersectton of the east me•nof

Comp l amt '" F o rec lose on

F e brua ry 4 1981 and a Ft r
st Am ended Comola tnt '"
Forec losure on July 9 1981
You r last known addr ess ts

BARNE.ll'S
WELD SHOP

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Sma ll est
Heater Core to the
largest Radtator

• Stee l
• Alum•num
c 1
T
1 H
• as mg • rater •t
ches • Metal Fabrtca
I •ons
Monday Fndav
4pm tollpm
All Day Saturday

Radtator Spectal15t
NATHAN BIGGS
35Yrs Expertence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC•

Ph. 949-2285

Pomeroy, Oh
Ph 992 2174

Pomeroy

J&amp;l

Public Nottce

INSUlATION
Vmyl

Aluminum Siding
•Insula lion
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wtndows
•Replacement
Windows
F
E t
I

ree

mo
ALL STEEL

Farm Buildmgs
Sues
From JO xJO
SMALL

Utihty Buildings
Stzcs from 4Jc6 to 12&gt;:.40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3 Box 54
Racme Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 IS Ti c

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

LARGE SELECTION OF REMNANTS

• Backhoe
• Exca~Jattng
• Sepltc Systems
• Water Sewer &amp;
Gas L tnes
• Dump Truck
• Trencher
Lt ce nsed &amp; Bonded

RUBBER BACK Mc :0~~~:pet

ss95

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Maon 51

742 2211

( Note
T hts Nott ce
ossued and publoshed

Ph. 992·7201

r----------------------

I))

IS

e ANNOUNCEMENTS
1--- c.ard ot Tt••nlcs

--+---11---t--+--~

1-PubiiC Sille
I Auchon

- -- + - - t -- +---+--:!

9-W.an ted to

---+--t--+--+--1

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Buy

eMERCHANDISE

51- HoUsehold Goods
52- CB TV R•dtG EqUIIHIU!nl
SJ- Anh~tu~s

S4- Mlst Mercra•nd.so
Sl-Bu ldtng Supplies

Wanted

12-SUu.ate&lt;l W o~ ntecl

U- Pets for

ll-tnsur•nce

Sill~

14-- Busmen Tril nm'!l
15---Schooh lnstru cllon

16--- AoldiG

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCk

TV

I CB A~pa1r
It-Wanted To Do

'' - F•rm Equ•pmeflt
62-Wilhted tc Buy
n - Trucks tcr S•t•
U - l•vestock
~ - H.ay I Gr• •"
U - Seed &amp; Ferttllzer

eFINANCIAL

21- Bus•"ent

Opportlmity

21
72
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30

u - Money tc Loa"
2l-Proles.s cn.al
Serv•ces

eTRANSPORTATION
1!--- Autollor S.la
71- V.ans I I W 0

e REAL ESTATE
31 _ Hcm~ stor s••e

U - Mctorcycl~s

n - Moblle Hom ts
lor Sollie

Js-Auto Puts
I Ac:ceuones

Jl-F•rms tor S.lt

17-A uto Repair

:14-Busineu luikllngs
n - Lots&amp; Aunt•
:M-AUl Est•te Wlnft'd

eSERVICES

31-Aeillton

If-Hom• Improvements
12- PiumbiAI &amp; Eu•v•tlnv

Want Ad Adverllsong
Deadlines

31
_

JJ _ _

U-Excav•tlnt

Mcnc:~u 1 lD on S.turd•y
Tutld•'f "'ru Frtd•'f 2 H P M
tnt d•v Mfort public•tlon
Sunct.y 1 30 PM Frld•y

14-Eiectrlc•l
&amp; ._,lrlgtntlon
lf-OttMr•l Haulll'l
N-MH R • lr
11- UpMistery

3~ · -~--

35 _ _ _ __

_

Rates and Other Information
UpiiO Is .,orell
UploiS wonb

16

Up to u wonts

ont daylnurtlon

tnrl!ed•y lnMrtlon
•

o~ 'lll nHrtiH

l-----~~m:~!~~~~~~----801&lt; 729

MMUI " "

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

..
\lets lnd V :tr• Nlttlrt fCCI,ttd II'IIY wl"' Ultt wttft

--

I Averattl wonts •r Unt)

Mao I ThiS Coupon wtth Rem1ttance
The Da1ly Sentinel

Faorgrounds on Old Rt
33
Man Fro 8 30 to4 00
Af1er Aug 3
Ph 9:~~ 5 6 ~ pd

Matntenance
eRemovalof
Old Buildings
Free Estimates
Ph. 247-3534

1 0

CONSTRUCTION
New

Homes

tens tv e

ex

remodel

ong
• E lectncal work
e Rooftng work
12 Years

Ex p enence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

STANDARD
0 IL CO•
(SOHIO)

we are now servtng all
of Metgs Co
wtth
0
1
Healong
II
Doese
Supreme
Gasol•ne
com t e te
It n e
of
Lubncants
for
th e
farms&amp;lndustry
PH 992 3460
If long dostance, call col

8 27 1 mo
Vmyl &amp; Alummum
SIDING

lect
Larry E M1ller Dealer
8 30 1 mo
Ktep Thu Ad tor Fuh.trt Rtlertnce

-

-

Call Ken Young
or ast Servtce
985-3561

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PARTSAHOS&amp;IilVI CE
ALL MAKES
•W •s h~n

Beauttful, custom
But It Garages
Call tor free stdmg
est. mates 949 281)1 or
949 2860
No Sunday Calls
3 11

-

APPLIANCE SERVICE

•Dryers

•lil a "v~s

•Ouponh

•

Dllnw.un~trs

• Met W.ater T .a nks

ttc

75

MILlER ElECTRIC
SERVICE
For all of your wor
ong needs
L et
George
Miller
check your prese nt elec
tncal system
Res1dent1a1
&amp; Commerc1al
Call742 3195

ttc

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"
•a
d

A
- remodelmg
"onsan
-R oofmg and gutter
work
-concrete work
-Piumbmg and
eleclroal work
!Free Estomales)

v• c• YOUNG

BAR' BARA'S
lli'Uftftl
~
t"tr
Uf

DANCE

SIGN
UPFOR
Fall Classes In
•TAP
•JAZZ
•LADIES JAZZERCISE
Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3282
8 14 1 mo

PERM SALE
NOW THRU AUG 31
no oo
Now 517 so
525 00
Now $22 50
no 00
Now U7 50
GWEN'S SPECIAL
Wa ~e Length Perm
For longer Hatr $29 SO
Ph 992 2725

Ill

992 621Sor992 7314

169 N 2nd
Moddleport, Ohoo
1 mo

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kttchens and ap
PIta n ces
custom
bathrooms remodeling
plumbm electrtc and
heatmg
FRE E
ESTIMATES
PH 992 6011
99 2 7656

OGER HYSEj.l.'S
GARAGE

- Auto and Truck
Repaor
,
-Transmtssoon
Repaor
H rs • Mon -Fro
9 am 5 30 p m
992 5682
10 7 tfc

THE PHOTO
PlACE

- Portratts
- Weddmgs
- AAnlversanes
- Passports
-a nd Now
an tm
presstve complete hne
of weddmg and ann111er
sary tnv•tattons and ac
cessortes
Reasonable
pnced qu1ck servtce
- Look Without obhga
lion

PERSONALIZED

POOLS
• Vonyl
• Fiberglass
• Staonless Steel
Ph (304) 773 -5634

C. L KITCHEN
Mason, W Va
8 6 1 mo

c eorge ~

REALTY

Hobs.tetter Jr
Hroker
OFFICE 742 200J

l l Sfi NG
'2
bedroom log home on
Scccond St
tn Mtd
d leport Love l y ru st• c
deco r and n1ce s•n " tan
dsca ped lot sells tor
$16 500 Q{l
POMEROY - La r ge I
story home wtth J
bedroom s Wrap aro und
por ch and ntr e back
yard The f ull basemen t
...-oul d be convert ed 1nto
nt cC I1 1J 1nQ r oom SellS
lor $26 500 00
Rll fLANO L ovely
tot a electn c 3 bedroom
on 4 acres
Modern
equtpped k ttt hen L arge
garage Only $46 500 00
RUfLAND
Large
br1ck home w1th 5
bedrooms modern ktt
che n
d 1n1ng
room
w/ ftr ep lace New forced
a•r gas fur nace Home
has been 1ns ut ated
Ask•ng on l y $30 000 00
49 ACREs w / co m
fo r t ab le 3 bedroom
hom e
Pl e nty
of
bu 1ld 1 ngs a nd pond
Pr~ce
r educe d f r om
S42 000 oo lo $32,500 00 lo
settl e estate
Velma N1cmsto:y, Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl L emley, Assoc
Phone 742 3171

f'.lrt at rwo E st.1tes 1971 - 18 se lf contr11ned ca m
p1nq tr ailer { m•n•mum btdl 1913 Ford L TO Sl iUton
wagon lmtn tmum btd ) 2 el ectnc re fngera tor s 1
qrt s r c lngerato r , 1 gas dryer .1utomat1c washer
cln tr. c range 7 pc d1nette set dtshwasher power
mower rotedo m ea t sca les new Bmm Bell &amp;
Howe ll mov1e pro ,ector conso le stereo record
plrtycr wt th .1m tm rildto 8 track pl.wer/ r ecordc r
l-3.u stools rue m•lk c.ln lamps new hangtng light
1.1 wn ch.11rs dt shes ch.:urs t.lbl e w1th several an
t1qu es Plu s 1tem s too numererm s Cash or Check
wtth postttvc 1D Refreshments avntlilble For tn
tormatton c 111 614 742 2600 )04 773 54 71 Howud
Heas l ey Aucttoneer

-

~

order 21 c
"'"' ' tor Ida carryll'lt ••• Numo.r •• care 01 TN
ltnflntt
TM Pultlllttfr rntrwts 1tt1 rltllt to"" or rtltct any HI d•mecl
objHtiOHI The
will not 1M rnpansllttt tor mere ttun OM
Incorrect lnstrtlon

'"'"•her

PUBLIC AUCTION
Locahon Follow U s JS Northwest of Pomeroy or
go about s mtles South of Athens on U S 33 turn on
lo Alh ens Co Rd 98 go about one half mole to Lodo
Townshtp Rd 84 travel less than 1 m11e and make a
nght turn onto Co Rd 2S and go one ha lf mtle 1o
tarm Stgns wtll be posted
LABOR DAY, MONDAY SEPTEMBER 7 1981
ATliOOAM
The understgned tS movtng, therefore must sell at
public auctton the below listed 1tems Thts listing 1S
very brtef
ANTIOUE &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS Noce large two
p1ece kttchen cabtnet w / pull out work surface
lower flour &amp; meal btns and pull out work table, cen
ter upper drawers between two doors fancy Oak
mant el w/gtngerbread &amp; bevel mirror can
dleholders supported by columns, Cherry wardrobe
w/mtrror door , Oak dresser w / m1rror, (2) Oak
beds floor model Vtctro la two door Walnut war
drobe set 4 cane seat chatrs. dresser w/marble
top Oak lobrary table, round Oak table (as os)
Nazt co1ns, large Oak storage cabmet w / 4 drawers
&amp; smgle door old chest of drawers, dovetailed and
needs r epatr , Oak rope 1wtst rocker and mlltching
slralght chair
T annhauser German HIFI
Shortwave FM Radoo, M C Lolley engraved sword
1n fancy scabbard large fancy Oak frame mirror ,
Organ Stool ladder back rush seat chair Oak
dresser base, flat top trunk1 Tom &amp; Jerry set, Plus
Much Not Losted
ALSO· sears 22x10 Metal Building to be removed by
buyer Thos bulldmg Is full of tool• and mise Items
wnoch will also be sold on thiS date Contents
unknown at this ttme, quite a few tools Also small
otems such as New heating salamander, farge bag
of rparbles, stan\ps, large s.l of stereo speakers,
NafJonal Geographies from 192J, cabinet Magna vox
stereow/am tm, Plus Much Not listed
Terms: Cash Day ot Sale or Check with Positive
[ D lunch
•
OWNER•CHARLESKORNMEYER
AUCTIONEER . OTTIE OPPERMAN

Hs-7195 or 147-4142

Real Estate

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, •nd
supplies
Pick up •nd
delivery D•vls Vacuum
Cle•ner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446 02'14

Metgs Co Area Code
614
YY2-Middleport
Pomeroy
YBS-Chester
343- Portland
24l - Le1art Falls
Y4Y- RaCine
141 - Rutland

SPECIAL SALES New
never been shot, dtsplay
mOdels salesman samples
Special price on this group
Bear Whitetail Hunter,
$69 14 Bear LTD Polar
$129 95
Brown
Bear,
$149 95 Bear Mini Mag,
$.49 95
KOdiak speucal,
$99 95
Spring
Valley
Trad ing co , Sprong Valley
Plaza, &lt;1&lt;46 8025

Mason Co w Va
/l rea Code 304
~7S - Pt Pleasant
458- Leon
576- J:'pple Grove
773- Mason
HU-New Haven
895- Lelart
Yl7- Buftalo

15 Years
Ex per1ence
Reasonable Rates

ALSO ALARM WORK
PH , 247 -3534

8 6 1 mo

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

Spect•l A.at~s For
,. c.,.., l.aundr.e s
..... Rent• I Proputtes
.... Apt House Owners
,. MobiiiP Home Paru

H - wanted to Rent
41- Equ•pment tor Rent

J- Y.ar115.ale

IJ - H ~ IJI

tor R~ nt
41-Mobtle Homes

u - Ap.artmenn for Rent
H- Furntshecl Rocms
4t--S~c~ tor Rent

s-- M.appy Ads

These cash rates
•nc luded •scount

RENl;ALS
4! - HOu s~s

tor Rent

t-- Lo'!l l•"d Found

9

~~

Call Collect
Ph 843 3322
7 13 2 mo pd

of

PUBliC AU C fiON SATURDAY SEPT SrH
11 00 A M Sa te to be held at Forest Acres Park
N ew l•ma Rd 3 mtles No of Rvtland Ohto

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

worclsl

_ __

Free Estomate•

west

Publtc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

o r Wrote Daoly Sentonel Class1f1ed Dept
111 Court St , Pomeroy, 0 , 45769

•- G n•w•v

32 _ _

7 5 ttc

PHONE 992-2156

2--- ln Memor..am

20

10..__ _ _ __

TOM HOSKINS
h 94Y 116U or99161JS

WANT AD INFORMATION

l-- A n"ounce m 1mt~

17
18
19

6
7
8

EUGENE LONG

~et~s•le

e Building

I'll W

P r nf one word •n each

s

20Years

Iron &amp;• Metal)

and Jayne
Hoeflich
109 Htgh St, Pomeroy
6 28 1 mo

!Phone·--------------------

3
4

Top prtces paid for au 1o
bodieS, scrap 1ron and

(Pomeroy Scrap

ATTENTION Come In and
register for our Squirrel
Tall Contesl Longest gray
tall wins 22 nile L ongest
red tall wins 22 nile Sprong
Valley Tradong Co, Sprong
Valley Plaza, &lt;1&lt;46 8025

TO PLACE AN .&gt;D CALL
1n

8 6 1 mo

Ga llta County

tn Metgs County

446-2342

CARPENTER
DANCE STUDIO

tn Mflson County

992-2156

581&gt; S a. W newest L frame

now In stock Sprmg Valley
Trading Co, Sprong Valley
Plaza, 446 8025

675-1333

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

_, '

NowTakmg
Enrollment For
September Classes 1n
Racine and Middleport
Ages 3 and Up
Adult Classes Offered

,..

Card of Thanks
We want to thank all the
friends and neoghbors who
assisted us In any way
during the lllnessond death
of our father and grand
father, Leonllrd Earl Stear
ns Especially do we want
to thank Dr Mark Cheng
and the nursing stall at
Ple•sanl Valley Hospital
and the Nursmg Care Unot
We are grateful for the kind
words of Rev Herman Jor
dan and the Rev William
Bridges Special thanks to
all the donors c:l the
beautiful flowers and The
Flower Nook's services for
the prayers and sympathy
extended to us, and the k1n
dly services rendered by
Wilcoxen Funeral Home
Signed
The Famoly of
' Pop' Stearns

For lnformahon Call
949 2710 or 949 2806
8 2 1 mo

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Water Sewer Electnc
Gas lme-D•tches
Water L.ne Hook ups
Sept1c Tanks
County Certofled
Roush lane
Chesh.re, Oh
Ph 367-7560
17 1

2
In Memoriam
In memory of my father,
Edward Young who lefl us
16 years ago Sept 2
Sweet to remember the one
who was here, •n thought
absent tS tust as dear
Sadly mossed by daughter
and son In law Elva and
Lew1s

Reduce safe &amp; fast Wilh
GoBese Capsules
E vap
'Water p 11ls' Fruth Phar
macy

Announcements

Sale of tosnong ta ck le Slore
closong September 12 20%u
off all sales 25%u off sales
over $20 6 1nch nngworms,
ossorted colors $
each
Assorted marlbou tt gs
Sl 00 for 12 10%u off craft
otems Tackle Box SR124
Syracuse a.io Monday
through Saturday 9 to s

3

a.

For buld de l1very of
gasoline, heattng oil and
diesel fuel, ca ll Landmark,
992 2181 Pomeroy, Oh

LOST
tn Chester area
Black cocker spantel
While stripe down front
Gentle I year old 985 4340

s

LOST
vlclnoty of Owl
Hollow and Sa ndholl Roads
One black and whole
Holsleon Heofer Call 675
60-43 Lou1e Plants

Shootmg match, Forked
Run Sportsmen Club
Beg1nnong Sept 6 Every
Sunday Factory choked
guns only

LOST Brown while Chohu
ahua Real small Answers
to name 'Honey Very til
on med1catoon Del s Ap
pllance Pt Pleasant area
Reward 304 773 5118

sTOLEN New
motor
driven
Murphy
lawn
mower Motor black, red
body, Reward 304 675 1302

BOGGS

DEE S Ch ol d Care Center
on Mason epenong Sep
!ember 1st
Hours 7 30
a m 6 00 p m
Monday
through Friday Weekly
rates 304 773 5302 Call for
reservations

SALES &amp; SERVICE

u s Rt so Easl
Guysv111e, Oh
Phone6146623821
Authortzed John Deer
New Holland Bush Hot
Fa r m
E q u t p men t
Dealer
FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS/SERVICE

BIG TIRE
SALE

USED EQUIPMENT
1- No 8600 Doesel Ford
Traclorw/ Cab

7

N H

Real Estate

3

LAND CONTRACT Near Racme, ntce home
woth full basement and
plenty of yard space for
the kods Forget the
banks and buy this
secluded two bedroom
home It's m excellent
condltton and has a
pnce tag that's lust
roght $28,900 00

ttc

General

l:~~~w
Phone

1-(614)-992-3325
NEW LISTING - Large
4 bedroom home wtth
furn ace hot water heat
Nt ce k1tchen ftreplace
2 lull ba ths, 2 out
bUI Id•ngs and 3 acres of
l evel land $32 500
NEW LISTING - Home
and shop or bus~ness
r ooms tn t he country 4
bedrooms 2 full baths,
nat gas furnace and
chc11n ltnk fenced yard
On ly $31 000
N ~ W
LISTING
RemOd el ed 3 bedroom
homt .n the country l'h
barh s
s tov e
r efrtg eraTo r
drtlled
well tu rn(l ce heat and
l arge garage $49 900
NEW LISTING - Clean
3 bedroo m home on the
outsktrts ot town vtew
of Rl 7 New bath and
fi xtu res
l arge hvmg
a nd Leadtng Cr water
Only $18 500
NEW Ll STING - Smar
fly desog ned 3 bedroom
frame nome
2 full
bath s hot water heat
s1ov e
d tsposal
full
b ase m ent
and
2
bedroom garage apt A
real good property for
$69 900
WE
HAVE
MANY
OTH E RS FOR YOU TO
SEE , t t

General

-= - - --

HARRISONVILLE - 21
acres of larm to hide
the world on,
Is the key

home,

shed,
hOUse, hog shed
plenty of fencing
hide away has
bedrooms,
living room,
room, kitchen

,:';r~~i'::O
u vouonly
want
a
r
, the
whe~e

R.C.S. REALtY INC~
BILL CHILDS. Mgr.
Phone992-6312 "'
Phone -tf2-6312

'

3 black long ha 1red ktttens
to good home Caii2S6 6783

Cape Plus!

Free Kottens Call &lt;1&lt;46 n63
K ottens dropped at my
house Please help find a
home for yellow stroped 8
wks old Ca ll446 9572
6 mo old black pup Ger
man Shepard and mtx g ive
to gOOd nome Call446 .OS8S

3 ktHens IIMer bo&gt;&lt; tratned
Call &lt;1&lt;46 0675
4 ktttens 2 mo
446 4152

crows can lind yoa, thii'
II Ill owner Will help
flnl!fl&lt;'.e S39,900 00
'
REALTOR
Henry E. C..lanci,Jr '

"2-6191

•

l

REALTOR
ASIOCIATill

m-:m

~Nn r,.....nH11-2uo

Dottle Tui'ftlr

ol d Ca ll

S1x tovety kottens (four all
whole ) Call 446 9344 or
may be seen at 139 Lower
Garfie ld Ave, Gallipolis
on

2 ktttens house pets must
provtde good home e1ther
as a house pets or home m
country Call &lt;1&lt;46 m6
Ltvtng room sutte
cond 992 7869

NEAR
BYPASS
Three year old, ex
celt ent condit1on ranch
style home wllh 1 8
acres of n1ce lay 1ng
land tully equopped k ot
chen, three bedrooms
two baths and famoly
room
plus
other
features
Only
$36,900 00

H o using
Headquilrters

.

ANY PERSON who has
anythtng to gtve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any o1her thong for
sale may place an ad in th1s
column There wtll be no
charge to the advert1ser

MIDDLEPORT - The
posstbtltty of home
ownershtp ts yours wtth
the rental tncom e from
the one bedroom apart
ment upstairs whtle you
hve tn the lower floor
lwo bedroom apart
ment Rooms are car
peled orlgonal wOOd
work
utility room
Looks neat wo lh all t he
remodelmg that' s been
done $33,000 00

POMEROY
MAIN
ST Beautoful three
bedroom home with
riVer v•ew, wood bur
nlng fireplace, full
basement with garage
and workshp, garden
area, large lot, and
many other features
Assume this 13% APR
$29,800 00 loan, with
$5,000 down approx 29
yrs to pay Pronclpal
and Interest, $330 20
month - Total Proce Is
iUS! $34,500 00

Gtveaway

4

LAND CONTRACT Thos large home has one
of the grandest master
bedrooms avaolable
Total of four bedrooms
kttchen, ltvtng room ,
muste room
sew1ng
room
plus a fu ll
basement
House ts
large n1ce and con
venoenlly located wllh
wood
burner
1n
basement $28,500 00

216 E Second Street

SMALL HOt,\E on nice lot in Middleport rTwo
bedroom, bath, living room up, family room, kit
chen, laundr y rm down 122 500 .00
1
~

Earn extra moneysm your
spare ''me S2S to S50 lor 2
hours worl&lt;. Trt Chem Inc
Ca II now 304 895 3823

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

E
POMEROY,O.
992-2259

Housing
H e;1dquarter s

Real Estate- General

I

2

Stdsng
RooflngtGuner
Remodeling
ser vtng Your Area tor

O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

L&amp;M
Maintenance
anct Demolition

Bob, Charlene

Nam•-------------------Addreu_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1

And Home Ma.ntenance
• Roohng of all types
• Stdmg
• Remodeling
• Free es t•mates
• 20 Yrs expenence

29 18 ) 5 12 19 26 (9) 2

Wrtte your own ad and order by mad w•th th1s
coupon cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refund ablt!'

) wamea
For Sa le
l Announcement
) For R ~ nt '

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

1S

8ur

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savell I

space be low Each •n
ftal or group of ftgures
counts as a word Coun t
name and address or
phone number If used
You II get better results
1f you desc rtbe fully
gtve pr• ce The Sent1nel
r eser ves th e n ght to
cla ss •f Y ed •f or re 1ec t
any ad Your ad w dl be
puf
n Th e prbper
clastlr ca t• on tf you II
chec k the proper box
below

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

MF
27S Doesel
~~~~~~~~5~2~1~1~fc~t~~~~~~~~2~8~t~lc~~~=~P~o§m~e§r~o~y,~O§h~=~~;:::;:::;:::;:::;::::::18~20~t~f~c~ji1-Model
1- Model479 Hay Bond

'-===========+==========~sva
nt to
4 ot the h o
_
Rules
of Rule
Ctv I 4Procedure)

12
13

5 1m a e

James Keesee
Ph 992-2772

'48oo and up

11

&amp;

Rutland ~urniture Carpet Shop
CARPET

Gallla Co Area code
614
446-Galhpoles
367-Chcshlre
Jlt8- V1nton
145- R to Grande
256- Guyan D1St
64l- J:'rablil D15t

~~==~~~~~~5~7=1~1~c~~~~~~~~~9~2~1~m~o~rt~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===i~==~~~~~~~~~~

a 1 45 acre lot recorded 1n
Deed Book No 222 Page
No 189 Deed Records of
Meogs County On o and a
po.nt 12 feet at nght ang les
from the centerline of St ate
Roule No 143 thence south
st200f ItO
4o
83 d
po •n~g then~~ souftl ~~ dega
50 east 175 feet to a po1nf
the nce sou th 78 deg 00
east 208 2 feet to a po tnl ln
the cen ter of th e south con
cr ete bndge ra 1t1ng ( 12 teet
011 th e centerline of 5 R
143 al ngh! angles) and the
true potnl of beg 1nn 1 ng fo r
the follow 1ng descrtbed
trac t Thence south 67 deg
13 20 ea st 254 05 feet
then ce sou th 38 deg 05 40
west 100 feet thence south
67 deg 13 20 east 25 feet
thence south 57 deg 20 20
east 175 teet thence south
38 deg
05
40
wes t
{ passmg an •ron ptn at 89 46
feet) for a tota l d1stance of
225 68 feet to an •.-on pm
thence north 73 deg 56 40
west 246 01 feet t o an 1ron
p1n thence north 2 deg
16 10 east 222 88 feet to an
.ron ptn thence north 44
deg AO west 90 0 teet to an
.ron ptn thence north 44
deg 40 west 90 0 fee t to an
1ron ptn thence north 07

Oh•o

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRQDUCJS

Located al Maplewood
Lake'" Rae one

deg 15 east 120 o feet to
the poonl of beg onno ng con
45769
taonong 2 192 acres Deed
The ob1 ect of the com
refer ence
Vo lume 252
p ta nt •s to obtam a m oney
Page 811
Me1gs Deed
tudg ment agamst you and
Records
cert am other defendants
and to term•nate any ngtlfs
to forec lose a mortgage
you and certatn other
aga nst the
fo ll owmg
defenda nts may have or
dese rt bed real esta te
cl atm •n a 1970 Rtchardson
Sil uated 1n the Tow nsh 1p
Mobole Home seroa l num
of Sc 1p10 County Of Me1g s
ber 40713 wh•ch ts th e sub
and State at Ohto to wtt
1ect ol thos acto on and that
P a rcel No I
Sttuate tn Sectt on 7
Defendant Wolloam M Mot
chell be found to own th e
Sc pt a Tow nshtp
Me1gs
enttre tnterest •n Parcel
Town shtp
Ohto
be tn g
No
1 of
the abov e
m or e
parttcular l y
descnbed rea l estate
descr 1bed as follow s
Beg tn ntng at the tn
The prayer of th e Ftrst
ter sectton of the east ltne of
Amended Compla•nt also
a 1 45 acre lot at tne m
prays for the foreclosure of
ter sec tt on of th e cast lt ne of
Pla1 ntttf s mortgage on the
a 1 45 ac r e tot recorded tn
above descr bed property
Volume 222
Page 189
Parcel No 2 hav ng been
Me •gs County Deed Reco r
tran sferr ed to Jou and
ds and a potnt 12 fee t a t
Defendant Harol N Hud
r ght angles tram th e ce-n
ne ll bv deed dated March
ler l tne at St ate Route No
31 1915 for a termtnat •on
143 then ce South 83 deg
of any rtQ hts you or certatn
40 east 200 teet to a potnt
ot her nam ed defendants
thence South 81 deg 50
may have or cia m tn a 1970
ea st 175 fee t to a oo tnt
R •chardson Mobil e Home
th ence South 78 deg 00
se rtal number 40713 for a
east 208 2 feet to a potnl n
court order that possess•on
th e center of the South con
of sa1d mobile home be
cre te br •dqe ratltng ( 12 tee t
delivered t o Pla.nt 1ff that
the named defen dants be
r equ1 red fa set up t he1r m
------------'------------1 teres t 1n t he real esta te or
be for ever barred th at th e
S4
M1sc Merchandtce
- - - - - - - -- - - . , - - - - - - - - - - --1• ens be marshalled that
the rea l property be sold
accord tng to law th at t he
t.tt e to the real esta te be
qu1 eted .n t he purchaser
and for reasonable at
torneys fees and costs
You are r equtred to an
swer the F tr st Amended
Compla tnt w tt hm twenty
3
e•ght days after the last
publ ca ftan of th s not•ce
W/ Pa ddtng
Cash n Carry
{EICtja Good)
wh• ch Wt ll be pub •shed on
ce eac h week for s•x sue
Installed
I Roll Each
Reg !ill! 95 sq
cess1v e weeks and the last
Startmg
Brown
Blue
In stall ed vd
oubl ca t•on w It be made on
September '2 191:11
S}295sa y d Green
In ca se of your f a1lure to
sq yd NowS}3!1'isq
a nsw er
or
otherwts e
L-----~~~~~~~~~~~Yd
respond as permt t ted bY.
GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
the Oh o Rules of C•v ll
Pr ocedure w•thtn the t1m e
Buy Now &amp; Save $2 $6 Per Yard
stated
\udgment
by
25 rolls carpet on stock to pock from
default w• I be rendered
aga •nst you fo r the r eli ef
Regular backed , carpet onstalled free
demanded m the com
woth pad Good select1on Roll Ends Rem pl a•n t
nants 52 50 up Grass carpet $4.99 yd
Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Court
Green and Brown
of Common Pleas
Me gs Cou nty OhtO
Dnve A Lottie- Save A Lot
M e•gs Coun ty
Courthouse
Pomeroy
Oh10
45769

Route 4

ClRssified Pages cr~ver the
follmeing telephone exchanges . ..

Business Services

Pubhc Nohce

Oh10

Three 8 week old k tttens
304 882 3596
1 female Beagle 6 months
old Phone 675 4154

Happy Birthday to a won
derlul person
6

Lost and Found

Lost Angus heofer with hor
ns WI between 500
600
lbs If seen please call 367

a.

7S76
New golfing putter Lost
between Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza and 1~1
Reward Call &lt;1&lt;46 2741

They re SEW EASY we surges!
you take these lwo to toavel
Finlei!IP Clpe has IT8It dash
abowe pulkln P'nls Goeat on
kaots, hnen-hke blends tweed
Pnnted Pattern 4848 Mosses
S1zes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 18 20
Sore 12 (bust 341 Clpe, P'nts
lllil 3 5/8 yards S4-il\ch llbnc

l
~he D~lly

I

Y•rd Sale Wed
Thurs 2
ml N of Crown City, on Rt
7 10 00 Ill ? Asscorted
olems F'hone 2$6 6206

10 FamilY Yard Sale 76
Aspen car 4 dr Auto, baby
clothes, girls and boys
clolhlng up to size 16,
women s
and
men's
clothing
all
sizes
g la ssware,
toys,
babybuggy, flowerpots,
bOok shelves, dtshes, shoes,
lewelry, and k 1lchen sink
September 4th and Sth
from 9 00 AM to6 00 PM at
W1lbur Denn1s reSidence
446 3872
Yard Sale
Curtams,
drapes,
off Route
CreeK Rd

a.

Sepl
bed
1eans
7 on

3 and 4
spreads,
1/4 m11e
Georges

a.

Yard Sa le Thurs Fro ,
Sat
Thurman
Ohto
Across fro m Methodist
Church
Rocckmg chat r
and clothes
3 Famoly Yard Sale Froday
Sal Sept 4&amp;5 Kanauga
at ra1troad tressel Look f or
s1gns

a.

Yard Sale 1/.4 m1l e out
Bulavolle off 160 Thurs
Fr1 &amp; Sat Co• ns scanner,
saxaphone, co llec t ables,
and c lothes
Yard Sale Corner of F1rst
and Pone Salurday 9 lo 5
Clothes household •tems
and et c Peggy Evans &amp;
Jan Thaler
Clothtng &amp; m•sc 1tems
Sept 4
5th 511 Oak Dr
Sprong Valley Estates
Ratn or shtne

a.

Garage Sa le 1 1/2 m11e
from Hospotal on Rt 160
3rd and 4th 9 S F orsl one
thts year
Yard Sale Sept 3 4 &amp;S
Turn roght off 218 to Lillie
Bull Sktn 4 m t turn on
Hamilton
Appliances
machtnery, and clothes
Huge Yard Sale Sept 2 s
In V1ntonn on Htgh St
Chtldrens stze 2 5, womens
clothes stze S 10 and mtsc
9 30 to&gt;
Yard Sate Bulavlll e Town
House Lots of maturn•ty
and baby clothes, 1eans and
school clothes

5 Famoly Yard Sept 2 8
One mile from Centenary
on Rt 141
3 Famtly Yard Sale Thurs
Fro 6 moles Easl of Par
ter

a.

a.s

Yard Sale Se pt 3 4
Loren Neal r es tdence 1/2
mtle south of Porter on old
160
YARD SALE, Aug 31
Sept 1 and 2, Monday tnru
Wed 9 a m ttl dark Davts
restdence, Rose Htll Baby ,
boys, gtrls, men and
women s clothing, dtshes,
kntck knacks, odds and en
ds and many mtsc 1tems

Garage sa le Sept 2 3,4
Herbert Matheny 3 mtles
east of Tupper Plaons
CR319 Follow signs Lam
ps
biCycle
furntture ,
clolhong, and toys
Garage sale Sept S, 9 to 5
Dale Hart r es td ence l l/2
mtle from LegiOn Hall on
Yellowbush Rd Rac 1ne
Sept 2 3 10 to 6 Lots of
school clothong Teen boys
and gtrls Some new also
w1nter K 1tchefl stnk, cur
tams, tots of m tsc 365 S
6th Moddleporl
Yard sate Wed, Thurs
Trailer across from Salem
51 gas slaloon on Rutland
Buoldlng supplies, clothong
household goods
10 famoly yard sale Clothes
and coats Lots of toys and
dolls knt cks Knacks and
Maylag washer At Mary
Layne. Chesh~re on R T 7
Sept 3,4 and 6

4 famlly yard sale Thurs
&amp; Frl Rl 338 2 moles
above Ra c tne
Shaln's
Residence
Baby,
cho ldren's &amp; adults clothes
3 lamoly yard sale Sept 3
4 s 133 Butternut Ave
Chest of drawers, chatrs,
drop leaf table, bike Many
collectables&amp; mise

a.

Yard Sale Thurs
Fro 2
2110 moles 1-43 Pomeroy
Yard Sale Chester Fire
House Boys clothing size
4, lots of leans &amp; m1sc
Thurs
Frl , Sepl 3 4 9 S

Yard Sale

Yard Sale Sept 4
5
college Rd , Syr•cuse 10 s
Boys coats &amp; m lsc

o-

a.

INDOOR rummage sale, 6
miles out Jerrys Run at Ap
pie
Grove
Clothes ,
books, lamps, new bedsp~eads, new dresses &amp;
topS, dresser With mirror
AIIW"k9to?

491
Sentinel

2Q
IIIIIl"riil
17 ~=
· IIY
1.11.

ZIP,$1Zt . .

Yard Sale

a.

By owner, 3 bedroom
bnck, basement, large cor
ner lot Central atr and
heat Phone 675 7164

Garage Sale Sept 3 2 mo
from HM C on Rl 160

Pnces reduced on all
mobile homes and travel
tra ol ers
TRISTATE
MOBILE
HOMES

2 famtly Yard Sa le Thurs
&amp; Fro 9 to 4 Clothes and

mtsc •terns 3 mtles from
HMC on old Rt 160
Garage Sale Wed Thurs
F ro
at Waller Lane
restdence 2 112 m1le from
Rl 7 on Georges Creek Rd
3 Famtly Yard Sa le at Net
tte Carter restdence on 160
Wed Fn

F.rst t 1me sale R1vers1de
Dr
CheSire, Oh
Sept
3A,&amp;S Men end womens
clothing som e furntture,
and m tsc ttems
Wed Fro 8 00 6 00 West
brook Sub 1/4 m ole out
Bulavoll e Rd
Clothong
coats, cnb m attress, and
m•sc
Baby c lothes refngerator
televtsaon 3 m ties west of
Holzer iUS! off 35 lOAM l o
4PM on Sept 2 3

a.

Froday Sal , and Monday
Sept4 5 &amp;7 On Eno Vonlon
Rd off 554 Goldoe M1lchell
388 8744
Group Yard Sale Th urs
and Fro 303 Sprong Vall ey
Green Apl Assorted 1t ems
Canceled 1f ratn
s .egler fuel stove home
comfort comb wood
gas
cook stove anttques, and
mosc Sept 5 &amp; 7 Cora on

a.

liftif
Ats ~'=

lliob-~-lddSOC ,

lld1 llr . . lnd llinlfllll

•

....

•lid

~;:::::::;~~~~::::;¥:~~~~~~~~~,
11

Help Wanted

Nattonat Cosmet iC Com
pany ts lookmg for tn
terested people to teach
sk tn care
glamour
average $10 per hour,
un1tm1ted earntng paten
ttal opportuntty to own
your own busmess Send
resume to Brenda Young,
Box 106 Rt 1 Thurman Oh
45685

Auc1ton Thursday 7 pm
Th 1s week we have new
mer ch andtse, plus other
constgnments
Mt
Alto
Auction and Sales Ken
Cole Auc10neer
AUCTION Fro Sept 4
6PM
Located at W•st
Columbta WVA at John
Albnght re stdence 2 truck
loads of new merchandtse
from Athen s, Oh Auc
ttoneer Bill Brown Not
responstble for acctdents
Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur
nlture and Ant1ques of all
km ds cll ll Kefneth Swatn
256 1967 on the evenongs

as a young bustness person
and earn good money plus
some great gtfts as a Sen
t tnel route ea rn er Phone
us nght away and get on
th e eh gtbtht y lt st at 992
2156 or 992 2157
Needed 1 babyst tfe r •n my
home Call afler 6 30 p m
992 6233 Middleport area
Wanted Someone to liv e 1n
w1th elderly gentleman
Some house clean tn g 949
21 93
Part t1me bar t ender Ap
ply m person at Me 1gs Inn
Pomeroy No phone call s

12

Sttuattons wanted

Wtll care tor elderl y tn my
pnvate home Reasonab le
ra t es Good exp1er ence
Call667 6329
Wtll do babysttttng •n my
home tn Syracuse area
992 7636
2 MONTH Old part w&lt;re
ha •red Terrter to a good
hOme, 304 675 4664
car pool to M ars hal l
Un•vers•tY on Tuesday
noght 6 30 to 9 00 Call 675
5688 after 5 pm
13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
CASH PAID for clean late serv1ces for ftre tn surance
model used cars Smtth coverage n Ga!lta County
BUtCk Pontt aC, GAlliPOliS, tor a lmost a century
Ohoo Ca ll 446 2282
Farm home and persona l
property coverages are
WE BUY FURNITURE ava ilable to meet 1n
Con tact
We sell furntture Sagraves dtvtdua l needs
Foster Lewts agent Phone
Furniture 446 4775
379 2204
Buytng Gold Pay1ng cash
IN
for anylhong stamped 10K, AUTOMOBILE
can
b een
14K 18K and dental gold SURAN CE
your
Lo st
Class rong, wedding rings, ce lf e d '
watches Clarks Jewelry operator s Lt cense? Phone
Store Gallopolos 446 2691 992 2143
Pomeroy 992 2561
15
Schools lnstruct1on
TOY
TRAINS
Loonel
lesson s
n ow
Am encan Fl yer and lves Guttar
Also melal frgurones Call avtatlable tn Ga llipolis w tth
af t e r
school
hour s
Sept S 6 446 0668
avatlable for studetts Call
245 9378
BEDS IRON BRASS, old
furn•ture
gold, Stiver
Wanted to Do
dollars wood 1ce boxes 18
stone rars, an1tques etc ,
Baby st11 tng tn my home
Complete
households
ltve 1n c tty have 2 smal l
Wnt e M 0 Mtller, Rt 4, ch ildren Call446 6220
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7l60

a.

CHIP WOOO Pol es max
d1ameter 14
on largest
end $12 50 per lon Bundled
slab
$10 SO per ton
Deloverd lo Ohoo Pallet Co
Rock
Spr~ngs
Rd ,
Pomeroy 992 2689
Gold, Silver
sterltng
1ewelry, rings, old cotns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop, Moddleport 992
3476
No 1tem to large or small
will buy 1 piece or complete
household New, used and
anflque Ca11992 6370
Scrap metals, batteries.
radoalors, ginseng, yellow
roo!, and merchandise
brokerlng Yarper Halstead Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street 675 5868
AlSO Flea Markel open
dally
Open
Mond•Y
Friday 1-5 pm

'

11

Help Wanted

OPENING tor Med.lc•l
secretarv, available lm
rriec:lla•h Wr&lt; • to Bo~ P
31,% Pt :~ l ee ~ 1t F agister,
200Matn ,t P Ple asant

23

Professional
Serv1ces

Ptano tuntng and repa tr
Love your netghbor tune
your Ptano
Btll Ward
Wards Keyboard 446 4372
Ga lltpolt s

31

NEW CA BIN or small
Mature responstble lady to hom e, comp let el y fur
babystt 1 yr old son tn my mshed S3900 Ca ll446 0390
home Ref r eq Call after
4PM 245 5808
House wtth acreage t or
sa le, 3 or 4 bdrs fully car
Lady to ltve tn age 62 or peted 2 barns 379 2123
over wtth some tn come
New 3 bdr house wtth
Catl446 0627
garage and fu ll basement
GET VALUABLE tramong $45 000 Ca II &lt;1&lt;46 0390

We need one man or
woman •n the Pt Pl easant
area to se ll and service our
to
ou r
Neals Auct•on Hogsett e qu1pm e nt
F or
tn
WVA Rl 2 Ev ery Sat 7 00 customers
PM
(Constgnment s format•on ca ll Electrolux
taken) (woll buy turn!lure) 304 428 9661 ask for Mr
Ht ckman
Lonn~e Neal367 7101

ouo NEW FAI.l-WINT£R PAMRN

14

32

:===:;::.=.;:;:;:= = =
a
Public sate
&amp; Auction

....... ' "'
..., ..........

Rummage Sale
Wed·'
IIHday, Thurlday, Friday
Clothes, all slz~ large and
small,blll MlectiOn men's
-'&lt; clolhn, lo'fS, Whetnot.. Jfll'lt Church 01 God,
2o101 •effenon Ave, Pf.
PINMnt,WV,

COMPLETELY remodele
d, 4 bedroom , 2 story house
1 2 acres located off Rt 2
1 mtle up Thomas R1dge
Rd Cal l 304 895 3672

Yard Sale Friday
Satur
day State Route 218 112
mole oft Route7, 9AM SPM
Kttchen furn ttur e, d1sh
washer, lawn mowers
electrolux sweeper m•sc
c1oth 1ng, cha~rs, and etc

._

lll.c.r .-s .. we•

s a.

Garage Sale Frt &amp; Sat E
College, R lo Grande Odds
&amp; ends from mov1ng What
notsl

Used
boat
Wood ,
toberglass, or metal 304
576 2026

Yard Sale Sep~. J &amp;41
Couch, coo(le ta~le,dlnlog
table, !Ires
wheels.
baby walker, exerslse bike,
clothes, and etc Tupper
Plains, 681 west, turn right
at first road Gordon
Ridenour

Homes for Sale

THIS handyman' s dream
sets on over 2 •cres House
localed on hill side wllh •
lovely voew, on Sandhill
Rd In Letart Owner will
be at Site September
6
Wtll help ftnance

Carport Sale 167 WOOdland
Dr 9 5, Sat Sth Lots of
GOOdies

Bus, IJOIIIIII? *Rill _,.,.,
Oms IGr lesS. spe!fd less !itne
work-cit-. I Wi!ll!lllll I!On1

CATAI.Il6 Coupo!J fur Free $2
lliltlm illidt: Sllld $1.50

l1

a.

9
Yard sale Sept 2 3 4 238
condor St Back of Land
mark. Pomeroy Each day
9to? Var •etyof•tems

Lost Coon dog with some
bird In him, woth a flea
collar Reward Phone 992
7846 While with black
About6 months old

7

'IISINII:

.........
,...._

Yard Sale FridaY and Sat,
95
Plantz Subdivision,
Bulavllle Rd
Clothing,
drapes bedspre•ds, and
mlsc t Items

a.

Wlllr ............ .
IIi ........... llr,...
_..

7

s

Happy Ads

5

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

'~----v~a~~~s~a~•·~---

Fatr

Two klllens Caii67S 2665

13

Wtll take care of patt ents tn
the tr homes or wtll live In
or reletve people for days
off Ca ll 367 0394
TV serv1ce ca ll s Ca ll 992
2034 Also used colo r TV for
sale
HOUSECLEANIN G
Two
ststers would l1ke to clean
houses Reasonabl e rates
PI
Pleasant, Ga llopoliS
and surroundtng "reas
675 4109
Wtll do bays1t1tng m mv
home on weekdays Cal l
675 1169

fiHIHEI31
22

Money to Loan

FHA VA Convenllal Home
Loans, Columbus First
Mortg•ge Co , &lt;163 Second
Ave , Gallipolis, Oh , 446
1172
23

Professional
Services

GALLIA Cleaning and
Rent A Maid Service Inc ,
Free Estomates, bonded,
lnsuredr phOne 245 9234
Cleaning by the week, mon
thor contr•ctua I
Your Pl•no rusting In sum
mer Humidity? Free In
spectlon with tuning Lane
Daniels 742 2951 or 992

2082.

BY OWNER 4 bdr splot
level ltvtng room &amp; dtn•n g
room co m btnatton eat 1n
kttchen lg family rm 2
112 bath s l ocated tn Tara
Estates Club house and
pool pnvoleges
$75 000
firm Kyger Creek Schoo l
Dostrocl Shown by appt
only call446 9403
29 acres 7 rm house a l l
mmerat rttes
Ernest
Woodruff Rd
A loce Oh
Call614 299 0890 after 5
3 bedrroms 2 fireplaces
famtly room large ltv tng
room 1 full 2 half baths
wall to wall carpet
full
basement
cen tral atr
swtmm1ng pool 112 acre
lot CITY SCHOOLS 446
1731 afler 6PM

For sale on land contra ct
House and 2 mob1le homes
located at Bulavtlle Wtll
sell separately or tog eth er
Cal l 446 3437
3 bdr 1 1/ 2 baths LR w ol h
ftreptace t am11y room w 1th
woodburner k1tchen and
dmtng room Ctty schools
Call 446 2003
3 bed roo m sect •onal 2 acre
wooded lot Fam1ly roo m,
woodbu rne.- fully equtped
k•tchen wtth tsland cook tng
center 2 full bath s walk tn
closets 1550 sq fl lt vmg
space On State Rt Gree n
Schoof Call379 2514
FOR SALE BY OWNER 3
bdr home located at 123
Garfteld Ave 2 acres run s
tram SR 7 to Ohto Rtver
Full basement fln1shed
rec room 2 f ~rep la ces 2
112 baths tn ground con
crete pool all new carpet,
new patnt nst de and out
W tll constder your home or
mobile hom e m trade
OWner wtll cons1der ftnan
clng at 10% APR after
reasonable down paymen t ,
1f tnterested ca ll 4.46 1546
for an appomtment
2 story bn ck on upper four
th Fully equopped ki t chen
format dm1ng
2 or 3
bedroom s
ca rpet 1ng
throughout
Storm wtn
dows gas furnace and cen
tral a•r Assumable loan at
9112% &lt;1&lt;46 7448
4 rm s &amp; bath 1056 2nd
Ave Gall •polt s Call 446
7617
2 year old 3 bedroom home,
2 acres plenty water and
frutt trees 4 mtles from
town, city school Call 446

2663
Ltfe Estate Farm proper
ly value $45 250 00
Life
estate value S8 701 S8 Call
992 6747 eventngs
House for sale tn Mid
dleport
Own er
will
sacrtftce 992 2917 or 992
2606

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Gall opol os CALL 446 7572 •,
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 PHONE 446 3868 or 446
7274
1974 2bdr .mobile home
14x65 central atre new
shag carpet Cal l after
6PM 1 742 2040
1976 mobtle home 12x50 2
bd r exc cond $4 BOO Call
446 0234
12x60
1972
Arlo ngton
mobtle home centra l a.r
fur n
swtmm tng pool,
IOxiOstor age Call367 7175
1973 Cr own Haven 14x65,
three bedroo m new car
pet 1971 Ca mer on 14x64#
two bedroom new ca rpet
1972 Champ•on 12x60 two
bedroom new ca rpet 1976
Cameron
12x60
two
bedrooms bath &amp; 112 new
carpet 1970 PM C 12x60,
two bedroom new carpet,
B &amp; S Sales Inc 2nd and
V1and Street Pt Pleasant,
WV Phone 675 4424
1980 24x52 doublewode
Cathedr al cetltng 2 por
ches underp 1nnmg, 4 years
warranty A 1 cond 992
3041 or 965 Ash St, Mod
dleporl

1972 New Moon trailer
12 X 70 J bedroom CR 1, l'h
out of Sa lem Center Good
cond1t1on 669 5092
USED Mobole Home 576
271 1

- - -- - - -

Danan 12 x 65 3
bedrooms
1972 Crown
Haven 14 x 65 wtth 8 x 10
expando 3 bedrooms 1973
Utop •a 12 )( 65 2 bedroom s
1972 Invader 14 x 70 3
bedrooms 19 72 Na shau, 14
x 60 2 bedrooms B 'I• s
Sal es In c 2nd and Vtand
Sis PI
Pleasant wv
Phone675 4424
1971

Mob1 l e home located tn
Camp Conl ey Extra mce
and clean Phone 304 895
3967
1976 KIRKWOOD custom
bvt lt l4x70 washer dryer
a r cond•t•oner porch &amp; out
bu1ldong
$9 000
304 773

5572
196712 x 60 com plete ly f ur
ntshed
at r condtt• oned
co lored TV stereo dryer,
and etc onl y $5500 304 S76
2245..!!(_576 2235
1972 12 x 65 Schultz
2907
33

Farms for Sale

Farm tor sa le
6560

3_!_

675

Call 256

Bustness Buildings

BU SINE SS loca toon, 509
Ma n St Pt Pl easant, WV
304 882 33 56
3_5_ _Lot s &amp; Acreage
LOTS Rea l n tce camqstte
on Rac coon Creek, all
uttl.ttes available
S30o
down owner Wtll ftnance
ca ll aller 3 p m 256 6413
2 acr es on Floyd Clark Rd
close to Rt 160, $4,000
Phone 446 0390
Lots by Owner 1 1/4 A tos
acr es level, rural water,
cttv schools 10 per cent
down Call 379 2196
Apartm ent tor sal e, land
cont 1act 9% 4 untts 2 bdr
each Total rent S7.4Q
$49 000 Ca l l 446 3937
'

7 rooms &amp; bath on double
lot Full basement, 2 car Lot 50x120 w1th dnlled well
garage Beech St
Mtd 'I J down &amp; balance land
contr ac t 247 2841 after 7
dleport 992 7209
pm
24 acres, 4 room house wtth
JOO ft nver frontage S m1le GY owner J apartment
from Ravenswood Brodge house on approx 1 acre.
Kall Vo ct or Wol fe 614 949 Ltve tn one rent others to
make your payment Can
2286 after 5 p m
be converted stngle home
water Will consider
4 rooms, bath, L angsville C1ty
land contract 675 1883 9-5
John Sheets 3112 mt les south pm
Moddleporl Rl 7

5 room house tn Syracuse
992 3981
Level lot s55SVEU x 132 4
rooms and bath, carpeted,
stove,
refr lg ator
Pose ss ton
anytime
Reasonable 992 7244
Syracuse, 3 bedroom 2
baths, equipped kolchen ,
fully carpeted
2 car
garage, high $30's 992 2638
MASON, 4 bedroom, 2500
sq It plus basement, 1
acre, 80's 3CW 773 581&gt;7

S acres plus on R 1 87
Mason Jackson line ~ •
372 8729
•

Rentals
41

Houses tor Renl

Small furnished house II(
the city, adults only Cal(
&lt;1&lt;46 0338
Unfurno shed house
4
rooms NeighborhOOd 8Ct..
S225 Call &lt;1&lt;46 4416 lifte~
7PM
--------~- .

2 BEDROOM house, full

basement, on two acres
more or less, :104 576 2372

3 bdr home In country, ClfYJ
sehools, S250 mo plus dep.
Caii2S6 9363

•
l

�Page--14- The Dail sentinel
Houses for Rent

41

w. Cen·

3bdr. nome on Rt.
tenary . Call .w6·6566.
~

bdr ., bric k home In Ri o
Grande, Oh. 2 full, 2 112
baths, F R w· WB , 2 c ar

garage, city school. ref.
anddep. C all2~ · 5-452 .

Outsi de Che ster . Far mhouse with land. $250
month plus
damage
deposit . Farmhouse, could

be used for hunting . $100
month . Contact Walter J .

McCarthy ,
Realt o r ,
Marietta. 373- I 523. Ask for
Mike.
Unfurnish ed
house . 4
rooms . and Oath. Com ·
pletely c arpefed . Ni ce and
clean . 992·3090 .
.4 room house w ith ba t h.

Letart Falls, Oh . Depos it
247· 2097 .

2 bedroom house in coun·
1ry, Gallipoli s Ferry , WV
area . Only r esponsible

people need call675~ 1234.
42
2

Mobile Homes
for Rent
bd r. ,

J

bdr .,

53

44

Apartmemt
for Rent
Furnished apts. 3 bdr.,
$220 .• water pa id, children
acceptable. Call 446·.UI6
after 7PM.
2 bedroom f urni shed apart·

ment in Middleport . $175

mobil e

homes. Call oU6·0175.
Mobile home. 1 chil d accepted. No pets . John
Sheets, 3'h mites south
Middleport , Rt . 7 .
12 x 60 trailer with expando
living room . Located on
large corner lot in a ni ce
neighborh ood
in Mid ·
dleport. Adults only , no
p e t s . A va i!abe im ·
mediatel y. Call 992·2101 or

'192·2JJ 9.
2 bedroom house trailer in
Racine . $175 month. $75
deposit. You pay utiliti es.

367-7811 .
2 bedroom trailer fur ·
nished . Pa i d utiliti es
Adult s only . No pets .
Depo sit &amp;
referen ces
required . Location is 2 21 10
miles out 143 in Pomeroy

'192·3647 '
OR RENT · almost new 14 x
70, 3 bedroo m . 1 111 baths.
sitt ing on nice lot, ready to
move into. Phone 304·576·

2711

5545, Mon .- F r i.,
7a .m .· 3 p .m .

betwee-n

no

included. Deposit,

pets.

'1'12· 7177 after 6 p.m .

living room &amp; bath . Com plet ely furnished , fully carpeted . Newly decor ated .

2 bedroom bottom apt . fur nished . Must pa y elec t r ic
only . Adult s only . No pets.
Deposit
&amp;
r ef er ences
requ ired . 2 2/ 10 mil es out

SMALL. 2 bedroom , lur·

Tra iler . Completely fu r ·
fished, washer, dryer , and
air condi t ioner . All util i tie s

paid . No pets. Call 773 5751
or 773·9520 Mason, wv .
2 bedroom mobile home in
New Haven, WV . Adults
only . No pets . 675· l452 or
675·2'1'16 after 5 pm .

Seasoned firewood , oak
and wild cherry . Split,
sta cked, and delivered ,
cheap. Ca ll 379-2321.

Apartments. 675 5546 .

2 BEDROOM , unfu r ni shed 79 MF 200B Bulldoze r
apar t ment and 2 bed room · diesel, 7' blade, wench like
new, $16,000 . Ca ll256· 1345.
furni shed apartm ent, 304
675·5571.
POOLS :
S WIMMING
PRE · SEASON SALE :
2·bedr oom a II elec tri c.
$999 .00 INSTALLED!! !
Henderson $150 . deposi t,
Above ground pool COM·
$150. per month . No Pets .
PLETELY INSTALLED
Inquire 614 367 7257 after 5.
starting at $999 .00. Price in·
eludes pobl, deck , fence,
filter , liner, and
in·
FURNI SHE D. 1 bed room
stallation under normal
apart m ent in Pt . Pl easant .
g r ound condition . Free
E xtra ni ce. phone 304·675·
shop at hom e serv ice _ Call
1396
1·900·624·8511.
-- ·--3 room furni shed apart
m ent
Ut ili ti es
paid .
Adults. 675-4351.

EASY credit available now
to purc hase furniture ,
t elevis ions, or appliances.
Villag e Furniture 2605

Apa r tment, M ason , wv . 1
bedroo m
f urni shed. No
pets. Deposit . 304·882·3356 .

Market, Mason . Phone 773·
5721. Open da i ly fill9 p.m .

3450.

K ennabec potatos. 2.47 ·2841
after 7 p. m

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING

ROOM S a nd

I ight housekeepi rig
Park Central Hotel .

apt _,

A ir conditioner . 1 year old .
Never been used . $175 . 992 ·

3J79 .

46

Maternity

Modern offi ce suit e t or
rent , downtown , Bu siness·
and Professional Bui lding .
Ca ll or see Morri s Hask ins.

3 room furnished apt.
Utilities paid , adults only ,

$185.00 per month, $60 .00
deposit . 94 Locust St .,
Gallipoli s. 446 · 1340 or 446-

3870.

992 7479 .

REG E NCY APT . INC. 2
bedroom , kitchen fur ·
nished. carpeted, bills par·
tially pai d. S200. mo . E x ·

celient ne,ghborhood. 675·
6722 or 675•5104.
2 bdr . apartment unfurn .,
in Crown City , Ohio . Call

256·6474.

742 ~ 2491.

TRAILE R spaces tor r ent .
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Pa r k, Cheshire, Oh.

Fire wood for sale . Any

lengths . Call 667 ·6329 or
66n402 .

'192 3954 '
TRAILER space 3 m iles
from town junc tion 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y , Pt . Plea sant, 675·

New 14 ft . fiberglass
garage door . Paid $375. will

sell for S200. Call Lionel
Boggs. 992·3892.

3241! .
R.D . Mobi le Home Park ,
R1 . 33 between Rt. 2 &amp; Cotta gevil le, WV Lot s for sale
or rent . New park w ith
future plan s. Phone :104· J72 ·
8405 between 5 &amp; 7 p.m

Cheap to early callers.
Plumbing fixtures , win·
dows, some with screens
and storm sashes, doors,
mantel etc . From old house
being dismantled. Call 992·

2639.

Merebaedlse

Rt. 143 Pomeroy . '1'12·3647 .

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

NEED several items of fur ·
niture ,
app l ian c es ,
televisions. Big discounts
for qua n ity purchase .
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Av e. 675-1773

Sofa , chair , r oc ker , ot·
tom an, J tables, SSOO . Sofa,
chair and toveseat, S275.
Sofas and chaurs priced
lrom $285 . to $795 . Tables,
beds,S340. , queen size, $380.

Rec liners , $175 . to $295 ..
Lamps from S18 . to S65. 5
pc . dil ettes from $79 ., to
S385 . 7 pc ., $189 . and up.

BIG discounts f or c ash and
carr y at Village Furni t ure
2605 Jac kson Avenue, 67 5·
1773.

Wood table w ith 4 cha irs,

$219 up to S49S . Hutches,
$300. and $375., maple or

Air Compressors, new
Ingersoll · Rand 5 hp, single
and 3 phase, truck load
sale . From $1 ,245.00. Call

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

utilities paid .

collect 3006662« .

bed complete with mattresses, $250 . and up to
S350. Captain' s beds, 5275.

Ceramic kiln 's tor sale. Fifty dollars ($50) each. Need
some repair. Call Gallco
Sheltered Work. shop at 367-

complete . Baby beds. $'1'1 .
Unfurn . 4 rm . apartment,
$250 mo., $100 dep., utilities
pd ., no children, no pets.

Call .u6·3437 .
For rent upstairs turn.,
downtown apt ., carpeted,
air cond., $100 dep., adults

only . Call oU6· 1789 .

Mattresses or box springs,
ful l or twin, $58 ., firm, $68 .
and $78 . Queen sets, $195 . 5
dr . chests, S49. 4 dr . chests,
$42 . Bed frames, S20.and
S25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
S350., d inette chairs S20.
and S25. Gas or electric
ranges, S295. Or thoped ic

1 rm . efficiency , turn .,
apartment in Rio Grande .
Utilites included . Call 1·

682·7056 .
F irst floor apt . partially
furnished , ref. requ ired .

at

631

4th

cha ir ,

4:00 p.m . Mondav through
Friday .

3 KEG, draft beer cooler .
304· 773·9527 '

1 bedroom apts. available
at R iverside Apts. Equal

Opportun ity Housing. Call
'1'12· 7721.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apartments. 992-54J4 or 992·

5914 or 882·2566.
NOW RENTING : Senior
citizens and handucapped
apt. community opening .

50,000 BTU floor furnace,

baby

$50. 2300 J eff e rson Ave. 304·
675·2396 .

matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20, $25, 8. $30.
Used.
Ranges.
refrigerators, and TV' s,

Firewood .

3 miles out Bulav ille Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .

delivered . $35 pickup load .
Call after 5 pm 675·6575.

Split

and

thru Fri. , 9am to5pm , Sat .

446·0322

Ave ..

Gallipolis .

$165. ,

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
ranges .

refrigerators,
Skaggs
Ap ·

pi iances,
1918
Ave
.. 446· 7398.

En cl osed utility trailer,
exc. cond, willsnot leak.
Cail388 · 8~ .

Service.

Complete sales, service,
pool covers, and winterization kits. Call446-1324
Firewood. split, stacked I
delivered. Mixed wOOd $65
per cord, S35 one· half cord.
Green or seasoned. AU har·

dwood $5.00 more. Also will
buy stafding wood . Call245
5478 .

roof, am-fm stereo radio
with CB. $3,500 . 94'1·2493.

Trumpet. Good cond . like
new. $150 . 985·4395.

19H

58
Fruit
_ __.&amp;..._,V"e"'g00e_,ta,_,b,l:::.
es::.__ _
p 1c K
y 0 u R OWN

Tomatoes $6.00 a bushel .

.u6· 97.U .

R. Harris, Portland, Ohio.
843·2693.

2 piece living room suite, 6

with undlvlduai laundry
lakllltles on premises with
recreation and meeting

mos. old, $160. Call .w6·
~719.

rooms .
resident

Electric

Professional
manager
on

cook
range. Like new. Phone
949-2336 or 992·6714.

premises. Stonewoods Apts .• Rt. 7, Middleport. For .
ren1al Information phone
52
614-143·23-41.
2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy. Par·
tlaily furnished . $170 you.
pay utilities. Call 992·2288
after6p.m.

Caloric

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

Fender Super twin am·
pifler with external
speaker· cabinet. Peilvey
monitor system. Call 388·

8436.

1990 Toyota Cellca . A.C .•
auto. 992· 5454 or 992· 7356.

1975 Cadillac. $3100. 992·
3981 '

-····--···.... . . .

8x14 flat bed trailer Tan·
tam with 10 ply tires, four
12&gt;&lt;16.5 super mud luggers
on white spoke, 8 holes.

- . .... .

.

,

..

1

.... .

&amp; bi estaell

1980 VW Rabbit. Real good
cond. $4,700 . firm . 742· 3017

Caii446·J.411.
61
Exlenahoe. $14.500.00 614·
643·0012 .
Gun cabinet. Call evenings
,j,(6~ J20l.

Farm Equipment

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at

Athens, Ohio. $3,000 .00
each . Phone 1·304·422· 2781 .
GRAVELY tractor, brush
hog, snow blade &amp; sulky,

phone 304 · 458 · 18~ .

Building Supplies

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer p1pes, win dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, R lo Grande, 0 .
Call2~ · 5121 .

1973 JOHN Deere. 450 B
Bulldozer G. C with 6 way
blade, $9300 304·675·2786.
Backhoe, lowboys, dump
truck, excavating business

for sale. 675· 1234.

56

lumber,
304 ·675 ~

Pets for Sale

Farm Sale-September 4.
Case tractor, 6 ft. disc,
farm wagen, top and bot·
tom
mechanic
boxes
loaded with tools, air foo1s,
much more . 79 Jim Hill
Road. Henderson , WV. 615 ·

POODLE GROOMING.
Ca ll Judy Taylor a1 367·
7220 .

5774.

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KEI-INEL. AKC

63

black Ch1w puppies, Sept.
I. CFA Himalayan. Per·
sian and Siamese kittens.
New Lilac, blue. and cho.
Siamese
and
Blue
Humalayan kittens. Call

Livestock

3 Hereford cows &amp; calves.
247 ·2841 after 7 p.m .

3 GOATS, phone
1882.

304 · ~8 ·

446·3844 after 4 p. m
Registered

HILLCREST

KENNEL ·

Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor·outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg . Dober -

mans. Call446·7795.

Hereford bull. 304-895·3595 .
Apaloosa Mare with colt by

side $750. Also Yearling
Apaloosa for sale. Valley
Haven

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Board ing and groom ing .
AKC
Gordon
setters.
English Cocker Spaniels.

Call oU6·4191.

Polle d

Stables,

New

Haven, WV . Call after 5 pm
882·2335.
Horses. Two 3 year old

Geldings, very gentle . Call
675· 1234.

Jeanie's Pet Shop 1 mile
West of Gallipolis on Rt.

64

141. Open Monday thru Sal.
9-5. Call446· 7920.

Straw for sale. Call Jack

Reg . Cocker Span iel pups,

e wks .
1262 .

old, butt . Call 446·

Hay &amp; Grain

Miller 379·2540.
HAY for sale,

304·675· 22~

evenings.

Uses

gas

not

diesel fuel.
1969 Z28 . Exc. cond . No

7S

years)

1980 Bomber Classic, tully
equipped bass boat con·
verts to pleasure-ski boat.
90 H P motor, $6,500.00
Phone 367-0690.
canopy,

skis,

trailer.

Motorola. Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or.u6 · 2~.

Swivel seats, depth finder,
Evinrude trolling motor, IS
HP Evinrude motor and

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

Washers.

dryers.

plum·

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

~ - 576 · 2921

Wallpapering. Interior-Ex·

Auto Repair

terior
painting.
Ex perienced. Free estimates .

service. "Big or small" we

1978 CHRYSLER Cordoba.

Auto Painting 8. Sanding
$175. any color.free pickup
8. delivery In Gallipolis

building
, HOME
1remodeling, 304·675· 2.UO.

Shop, 221 Mill St . 379· 2782 .

7'~B;====;:c;:a:;:m~p~i::n::g===
Equipment

1966 396 CID $250., 1967 SS For Sale Mansfield R.V .,
Nova, $1,000. Call 304·675· toilet, used, ~.00 . 12 ft .
238J after 5 p.m .
awning and poles, $20 .00.
Evening 388·9335.
1976 Fleetwing lruck cam ·
per. 11 ft., self·contained,
exc . cond. lnforma11on 6U·
742· 2586.

1979 Ford Pln1o, 4 speed, 1973 25' TroutwOOd Camper
am ·fm 8 track s1ereo, trailer. AC· perfect for
34,000 miles. $3000. 675· river bank. $1,800. 992·7727.
6884.
1977 18 fl . Nomad travel

1975 L TO, CB radio and an· trailer, sleeps 6, self con ·
tenna. Phone675·2614 .
tained, awning, TV an tenna. very good condition,

ete housebullding services

(l) 700CLUB

1liERE...

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

!h'! ~U .*h.,....J!_o_d~~ -T

an

Poodle

pups 304·895·3958 .
AKC

Boston Terrier, 12

weeks old, female, shots &amp;

wormed.

30~· 773 ~ 5125 .

like for someone to take
over payments. $2SO kit,
bench, and earphones. Call

1.==-====...:....:.:.::.L=========~
They'll Do It Every Time

milage, new radial
tires. Call .u6·20S5 after 6.

Back Hoe &amp; Ditcher Ser·
vice, water lines. ditches.
septic systems, looters.
Call 446·9340 or 675·6898 .

water lines. Charles R.
Hatfield, Rutland, Ohio.

1979 Buick Rivera loaded, 10 speed Road Ranger !ran·
smisslon . 985·3547.d _
$8,300. Call .w6·7497.
1964 Chevy truck l'h ton .
1971 VW square back, 4 GOOd condition. 6 prac·
spd., sun roof, clean. Must

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix,

STANLEY STEEMER
carpet Cleaning

(!)MOVIE · (COMEDY)
Dozer Service . Specializing

in septic tank.

(J)IH&gt;a DYNASTY Michaella

675· 123~.

brutally beaten by a pair of
unknown attackers alter the
resumption ol hie affair with
Fallon, and Blake is overjoyed
when he learn a or Steven'a
lnvolvem ent with Claudia
~tladel . (Fiapeat; 80 mine.)

BACKHOE and Septic tank . ·•
Service .

Larry

.w6 · ~208

JIM MARCUM Roolung
spouting and siding. 30
years

estimates. Remodeling.
Call388·9857.

1978 Ford Courier truck

with topper, excellent con·
dillon, 40,000 miles, $3500
firm. Ph0ne30~·8il2·2999 .

2.w9 .

73
1975

experience.

Free

STUCCO PLASTERING
te•tured ceilings, com·
mercia! ond· residential.
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

vans&amp;4W.O,

Siden ·

:
..

...

Electrical

C1J MASTERPIECE THEATAE

&amp; Refrigeration

WINNIE

Fuller Electric Co. Com·

... 8/t.J.Y COMES TO
QuiTE AN07NIR/

446· 2171 ,

Dodge

window van,

Tradesman
$500, turn.

Cali 367·0172.

SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING, Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, .w6·2787.

1972 Jeep s . W. ~x~. Low
mileage. Excellent cond.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
985 ·~209.
Haffelt Brothers Custom
. Carpets . . Free estimates.
For sale 1976 Ford L TO PS, 1973 Jeep $1,800. Michael call..w6-2107.
PB, cruise control, 4 new Lambert. 742 · 2~2.
tires, good cond. Call after
WOODSI'fOP · Cabinets~·
6-w6·9486.
1971 VW. Van, good con· picniC, · tables,
porcl'i
dillon, no rust, rebuilt swinDs, ·most Wood produc·
68 Mustang will sell for par· engine. $1895. Call 675·1213.
ts. 101 Court St., Gallipolis.
ts. 56 Buick, good cond.
call .w6·2572.
Callolo46-7575.
1970 Volkswagen Van, new
tires, gOOd condition. 675· WEATHERALL CON'·
1973 Nova 350, he,ders, 61166.
CRETI!i '• quality and ler·
side pipes, al r shocks,
vice, ca!l·675·1512.
chrome wheels, new . tires,
Motorcycle•
S1,500 or best offer. Call 74
PAINTING · . Interior and
.w6-3736.
1981 Yamaha 650 Maxim, el(terl9r, plill!'b'ln(j,,
only 1,800 miles. S2,595. 992· roofing, 101M' emodlll'11! .. ·
1976 Olda98. 304· 773·5013.
6130 after 6 p.m.
20 yrs. exp. Cai.-.Mtl, . ..
-~··~·-·~"-'~·-,'f.''r-"''...,
, ~:•. pi(
' .'
~~
"f ••
.

. ..

TliEONLY WAY
TO El'WE CONNIE
~~0

·.•1 .~·,.!
....i:.

'1

SCARE

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

EXTENSION '
267 If

PLEASE!••

SEWING Machine repairs,

.,

Mark's Appliance Service.
Specializing in Frigidaire · , .; :
products . Backed by ex·
perlence . 667 ·3323. Save
this ad.
JACK'S REFRIGERATIO'

(I) AFTER BENNY
DCilU.8.0PeNHIGHUGHT8
CBS Sporta provldeo toped

BARNEY

highllghla oft he day' a action of
the U.S. Open Tennis Champlonahlpa; Brent Muaberger
hoata from Flushing Meadowa,
NewYorit.

Ot: JANIE

Phone 882 ·2079.

?

Cll AIC CAPTIONED NEWS
&lt;!llMOVIE-(DIIAMAj 00 " F -

General Hauling

In" 1811
aliD AIC NI!WI NIGHTUNI!
Anchored by Tod Koppel.
11:31 (I) MOVIE -iWESTBRNj••IO
"King And Four OHena"
11158
12:00 (I) 110881AGLI!Y IIIOW
(I) AIC NIWI NIGHTLINI!
Anchored by 'l:ed K-1.
DCJ) CBIL4TI! MDVII! 'HIIIIII

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery. Call 256·
9368 anytime.
NOW HAULING house coal
8. limestone for driveways, ·
Call for estim.ates367·7101 ·
JONES iOYS WATER '
SERVICE. Call 367-7~71 or ~
367·0591 .

Move•' 1875 Stera : Gene
·Heckmln. Melenie Griffith.

I XJ'T XI J-ITJ''
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterday 's

I

Jumbles: CRUSH

SOUSE

SA DIST

ACTING

Answer: When they get together they 're very cuttin g

- SCISSORS

Jumbll Book No. 17; conl•lnlng 110 pu:ales , Is n•llsble fOI" $1.95 post,-ld
trom Jumble, cJo I his newsp•per, Box 34, Norwood, N.J . 01548. include your
n•m•, addre11, zl code •nd make checks • able to News • rbookt.

BRIDGE
NORTH

H-lll

• 875

South migbt have opened
a shaded two notrump in
which case North would
raise to three and make his
nine tricks after a dlamood
lead. Or be mlgltt have
raised his partner's ootrump
response to game. Ill that
case East would orn a club
and North woul
be one
down at the notrump game.
As it was, South held a
hundred honors in spades
and since the game was rulr
ber bridge be wanted to get
that small but nice bonus.
Also, his three-spade call did
not shut out tlu'ee notrump.
U North went to three
ootrump, South was willing
to let him play there .
However, North raised to
four spades.
South won the diamond
lead In dummy and irnmedl·
ately led a trump to bla
queen. West let the queen
hold without any fanfare,
but South did not irnmedl·
ately lead a second diamond
to dummy to repeat the
trump flDesse. U he bad
done this he would have
wound up in the soup. But
South simply led his ace of
trumps and conUnued with
the jack, keeping the second
diamond as an entry for the
club flDesse.

•us 4
• A K63

+u
'WEST
+K62

EAST

+43

•u

• 10 7 3 2

+74

• Q J 10 y
+J7 54

+KJ0832

.

soum

+AQJ 109
.KQJ

•u2

+AQ

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
W01t

Nortll

Eut

Soa

Pass
Pass
p ...

JNT
4+

Pass
Pass

3+

••

Pus

Opening lead: +Q

South's reasoning was
twofold. He wanted to guard
against both a 5·1 diamond
break and the possibility
that West bad ducked.
Furthennore, the ace play
mlgbl drop the king.
And in all it was both successful and good play .

Mobile homes moved ,.
licensed, and bonded. 576·
2711 or 675·4398.
·

~

MDW.R EYS UPI!Oisterv Rt

• ,

l.7c.4154
IIOx-124, pt, Pii"awnt 14l "
· •, - ,·
'
&lt;'
.,..t'-,

.

'.'

1•

111,

""':1·-' ,

1

;b 'rl .
•• ~~' t/';r' •r
1

t , +-~ '
'?
.
•.

\0

..

end then Ia confronted with

hiving to perform orilloll

Upl!o1atery
·
TRISTATE ·
., •
UPHOLSTERY S!iOP
!~
11~ Sec. Ave., Gollfpollo!J::..
4-46-7833 or .w6·1133.
,.t;;;

~

br JHOMAS JOSEPH
38 Disagreeable

ACROSS

1 Fish
5 Jewish

39 Status quo

philosopher DOWN
10 - Napoleon 1 Teddy
11 Withdraw
Roosevelt's

dog

fonnally

1% Capp or
Williams
13 Tranquil
1t Flat (mus. )

ll-IArs ll!E SEaET ro

LII=E ••• REPLACE ~
WORRY laNTH ~ ...

_ dlv~llllllllllforlllo­

wlle'a oltomey.' (Repeat; 70
rolno.l
·
12:11 (I) MOVIE •(DIIAMAl •••
' !114!!!11" 1110
11:30 ()) D (!) TOMOIIROW
COAIT·TCH:OAITO.ry U.S.
Bond a, Chrio Cootello,
·dought•r ol Lou Cool olio,
R-0·~·

(I) LOVE IDAT Doc bafrlenda
an older marrild couple and
lhenlooonlrontedwlthhovlngto
porlonn crftlcolourgery on lh•
woman ·

2 Esteem
3 Confused
4 Actress,
Susan -

v .. terday's Aoa•er
11 Bogart
23 Suffix with

role
two or four
15 Man of
UAnnymedlc
18 Japanese
beauty
the hour
%5 Famous
river
8 Fiddler
18 Quezon - ,
tenor
17 Antedate
crab
Philippines %7 ltsy-bitsy
19 Dreasler
7 Master
capital
Z8 Turn aside
film role
8 Working 21 Barter
Z9Shade
%8 UllllPOakable with ross. 2% Famous
34 Destiny
%1 Mailed
9 Household
Seminole
35 Health
Z% Bismarck
pest
Indian
resort
23 Booty

15 Holbrook

5 Soclal

24 Losing
color
%5 Incite

ZS Suffix
with
coward
27 Fierce
tumult

30 Moisture
31 Dutch
couunune
3% Greek
letter
3S Slaved

35Benwnb

1-rr--t--t--

M Hamburg's
port

37 Highpitched

BOUnd

'•

·.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: :
Ia

lriendo on older ntlrrled c011p1•
aurgery on the women; and a

c:;

17

(SS,,,.,~.q(

IBJ D LOVE IOAT Doc b•

•

~~--~------~ t ~

\,

I ,~ ,'

Guaat: Joan Rivera . (eo mine .)
(I) ANOTHER LIFE

PORE

N . air condition service,
commercial, indt.Jstrlal.

'Duchell or Duke Street: Plain
Sailing' Louisa decldealo buy a
seaside cottage where aha and
her friends can relax, but
unfortunately, her new
netghbors have objections. (60
mine.)

()]) NEWS
10:06 (I) TIS EVENING NEWS
10:28 (l) CBNUPOATI!NEWS
10:30 Cil LARRY JONES
liD HITCHCOCK
10:58 (I) CBN UPOATE NEWS
11 :oo m• Cll rn • Cll ()D) wm
NEWS
(I) THIS IS THE LIFE
Cll DAV!ALLI!NATLARGE
1t:06 (I) AUINTHI!FAMILY
1 t:28 Cil CBNUPOATI!NEWS
11:30 C1lDliJTHETONIGHTSHOW

H~··

BEFORE IT'S
TOO tATE!

service. Authorized Singer
Sales 8. Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,

85

••10

''The Bluaa Brothers'' 1880

Pomeroy . 992 · 228~.

man Evans.
Ohio.

electric moon root, posl ·
traction, heavy duty pollee
suspension, AM· FM 8·
!rack, AC, AT, PW, PS, PB,
8. more . $5,300. Call 379·

accidentally diacovera that the
easaastnatlon of a government
oflicial is planned and he races
egainat time to thwart the plot .
(R_epeat; 80 mine.)

t'RUGS IS TO

tically new tires . $450. Nor·

Portland,

RACE FOR THE
PENNANT
10:00 (]) D (!)QUINCY Quincy

EDWARD'S Backhoe and

dition . 675 · 1~2 or 675·2996 .

1968 GMC Tractor Semi,

QD

7~2 · 2903 .

84

exc.

sell. Call oU6·2149.

l?elax ~ He won't
last out there
minutes!

Dozer, loaded, and ditcher
work. Basements, lan ·
dscaping, gas, electric, and

6 cyl, automatic tran·
smission, ps, pb, ac, am -fm 1974 Volkswagen camper.
stereo, excellent condition, sink, refrigerlttor, pop up

cab over, 238 Detroit diesel ,

Mre. Garrett Iinde herself in the
difficult position of having to
explain the facta or relatione
between boy a andgirla tooneof
her students , who ' s already
in-volvedwUh a boy. (Repeat)

Excavating

on call. Ph .
Gallipolis .

Dachshund,

Answer here: [

Now arrange the circled Letters to
form the surpfise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

11:30 (])DliJTHEFACTSOFLIFE
83

Stricker . 675·5580.

73 Ford L TO, 2 dr ., Hard~
81
Home
top. gOOd cond ., 351 eng . 7;;;2,---,T"'r=u::c:;:k;:s•to~r:;-;sa=l;e-=
:
1
mprovemen1s
and 73 Plymouth Fury 318
engine. Call 446·7572 or 446- 81 Dautsun PU long bed,
FOR BEST In Carpet
1522.
step bumper. AM ~ FM · Cleaning Call Smeltzer's
radio, S spd. trans., $6,100. Steamway . Call 61~·-w6·
2096.
For sale 1978 Honda Accord Call oU6·3608 otter 5.

~~!

Jmterftfa on wheela. (CioaedCa~tioned; U.S.A.) (60 mine.)

J 8. P Plumbing 8. Heating,
Rt . I Gallipolis, 367·7853.

1973 Pinto wagen, good con·

Pomeranian

hell bent on tracklniiJ down two
rapists who use a hideous
scheme to lure their first two
victims and then Sea into their
monstrous lrap. (Repeat: 60
mine.)
CID NOVA 'RoadtoHappinesa'
Henry Ford'a name Ia aynonymoua with ingenuity, progress,
and thE' American dream ol
prosperity and mobility . This
program aaaeasealhe image of

SUPPOSE WE AU. 00
EJACK 10 10'Wt'l! 1 tJw:Ni
A FINE RESTALIRNIIT

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

241J Jackson Ave.. Pt.
Pl easant . 675· 2063 . Special
Auto for Sale

(1)$01 VEGA$ Dan lonna Ia

ALLEYOOP

remodeling. Call H. S.
Roclevitch. ~~576 ~ 2730 .

Fish Tank and Pet Shop

71

U.S.A.)

references will build to any
stage or cbmple1e job. Also
room
additions
and

1978 Ford Granada , 2 door, phone 304·675·6489.

top. Also Datsun topper.
675·5704.

SOUNDSTAGE 'Chicago

from foundation to root.
Local builder with best

-------

HOMEBU I LOING·Compl·

Phone .w6·3888 or 446· .U77

Rod &amp; Reel Combo · Zebco
600 reel, Pfleuger S·250 rod
Special $9 .'1'1 . Spring
Valley Trading co .• Spring
valley Plaza • .w6·8025.

01

By O.wald Jacoby
ud Alu Sonlag

STROKES Arnold and Willie'
cookie busineaa crumblea
when they get too greedy .
(Repeat} (Closed-Captioned;

Body

I

supercharged killer car run by a
ctrug kingpin, who is out to stop
a beautlfulahowgirl from
teat ifylng agaIn at him. provee to
be a spectacular challenge for
reluctant superhero Ralph and
Bill Maxwell. (Repeat; 80
minU
D CIJ ()D) CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'The Memory 01
Eva Ryker' 1980 Stars: Natalie
Wood, Robert Foxworth .

()]) ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL
8:&amp;8 (I) CBNUPOATENEWS
11:00 (]) D lil DIFF'RENT

675·5211 .

'

'BRUNKE

VOU C:AN i&amp;ET UP'
AT IHE EN17 OF
iHI6 ILLNE66.

South shows good play

Jazz Featl'llal : A Soundstage
Special' Live "Via satellite,
Soundstagepreaentakeyboar·
diet and composer Herbie
Hancock, voce lie! Carmen
McRaeandtheSunAaArkeatra
In concert at the Chicago Jazz
Festival.

bing, electric, general han-

dyman. Phone
or67S·S689 .

t

(!)MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••
"Biuln.t.Saddleo" 11174
(I) ali Ul THE GREATEST
AMERICAN HERO A terrifying

Cil

Dave's Appliance Repair.

plete rewiring, commercial
or residential, and elec ·
trical maintainance, also

free gerbil or mouse with
purchase of food and bed ding .

ANNIE

F 8. K Tree Trimming.
stump removal. 675· 1331.

FT. Lowe Line Lake Jon,

Hammond

Service .

RON'S Television Service.

2849.

excellent condition, air,
power steering, power
brakes, electric seats &amp;
windows, tilt wheel, $3,000 .

low mileage. 675·2408 .

house

Specializing In Zenith and

992-

tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio . Day
446 ~ 2.US or Night · .w6·
4792.

304 · 882~

profile of America ' s top lady
wrestler, t visit to a Harlem
ballet achool, a look alan artist
who creates maalerplecea on
the aidewalka of Boston, and a
segment on women who ski in
bikinis. (Repeat; 60 mine .)
(I) SPECIALS

882 2079.

Mercury outboard. 2 sets of

1973 PONTIAC Venturi hat·

$650.

BORN LOSER

Residential, automotive .
Emergency service. Cawl

80

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 2~ hr. wrecker

condition.
2468 .

LOCKSMITH

16 ft . Starcraft. Open bow .
W indshield,

77

1971 Volkswagen Super
Beetle, needs minor body
work, excellent running

8:00 (]) D liJ REAL PEOPLE A

repair. '192· 5126 or 992 · 39~1.

MORRISON ' S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV . Phone675·
1574 or 675· 2881.

75 TRIUMPH .TR7, 4 speed,
4 cyl., good tires, good
body, 304-773 ·5351.

general

SIMMONS

va Philadelphia PhiiUea
7:68 (I) C!IN UPDATE NEWS

Will do carpentry work,
painting,

RICHARD

BHOW
IH&gt;D FACE THE MUSIC
7:3&amp; CIJ BASEBALL Atlanta Braves

rates. Scothguard. 992·6309.

.w6· 1021 '

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

78 FORD Fairmont, good
condition, good mileage,
reasonable, 304-882·3145.

&lt;Ill

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

equipment included. Call

IYATAPH

Gueat:
Gunther
Gebel·
Williams, animal trainer.

hanging, and texured
ceilings. Ph . 367·77U or 367·
7160.

Boats and

area.

Southern

French City Painting
Residential, commercial,
interior, exterior, paper

1971 17ft. Caravello, 140 HP
In board out board, good
running cond., all skiing

I~

out-electrlal

Serving

Funn~

CllaliD FAMILY FI!UO
lil WILD KINGDOM
DCil TICTACOOUGH
Cll . ()])
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
&lt;Ill NEWS
7:0&amp; (I) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
7:30 (]) D BULLSEYE
Cll ANOTHER LIFE
CllDCil JOKER'S WILD
liJ HOUYWOOO SQUARES
Cil ()]) DICK CAVETT SHOW

CAPTAIN EASY

Oh io &amp; Western W.VA. Call
David Dobbins Sr.. 388·
9856. If no answer call 388·
'1964.

Motors lor Sale

water

and

' Red Skelton's More
Facea'

wcrk·heatlng· plumblng-sldln·
g· room additions. (experienced carpenter · 28

1972 Harley Davidson 1200
Super Glide. $2000. Phone
675·6823.
- - - - -- - - - 1981 Honda·750, fully. chop·
ped, drag pipes, san-tee
frame. $1600 . Lots of
chrome. Call675- ~210 .

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

304·675·2474. 304·576·2490 at ·
fer 5.

home ·

OOBB INS 8. SONS CON ~
TRACTORS Remodeling·

seen 2 2110 miles. Rt. 143 in
Pomeroy . $2,500 . '1'12 ·3647.

304-675·4656.

7:00 (])D PM MAGAZINE
(])
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
(!) STANDING ROOM ONLY

KAWASAKI. 175 motor·
cycle, 3300 miles, 55 mpg,
304·675·3639.

Inside

'

EVENING

repal r : :

and

We 'll have you out of
here in no time

RPT. 2, 11181

custom work lrom start 1&lt;! ·:
finish . Call388·8711 .
·

rust. New engine. Can be

chback, very good condition. a bargain at S69S .

building ,

remodelIng

1975 El Camino. 1976
Harley 1000 . 675·5450 .

AKC

Television
•
•
VIewmg

1021.

76

8. 675·1302.

1973 Montery Zenith color
TV, 21', 2 yr. old . Call .w6·
63U anytime.

to climb. private entrances

985·4395.

telescopic wheel, all power,
new tires . Runs good . 7735013 anytime.

pound boW equipped with
sights, quickie quiver, and
arrows, Sl60. Call after 5

$300. per thousand,
2945.

Home

bike,

cond . Does not use oil. $750 .

Winter po1atoes, canning
tomatoes, peppers. Charles

everything, $170. Also com·

f&gt;elow

pll ~nces. smoke detectors, . For sale Whirlpool washer,
air conditioned, private like new, $90.00. Call .w6·

paflo, storage laciiltles.
single story with no stairs

Regency .

SALE OR TRADE. 1976
Dlds 98 Regency . AM· FM 8
track, cruise control, tilt &amp;

S miles

1976 Grand Prix, $1,600.
Cai1446·2666.

818l .

98

OldS.

Regular gas, cruise con·

trol, air, full power . GOOd

copper1one, $200. Twin bed
wtih mattress, $20. Cali .w6·
5725.

Featuring I bedroom un·
furnished with wall to wall
carpeting. wall·1ex walls.
built In bookcase, ap-

1978 Ford Fiesta Ghia, sun

Gallipolis on Rt. 7 . .w6·4007.

614· 446·9461.

Electric double oven range

headers, runs g
·
Ford Pinto, good cond . 8.
gas mileage. '1'12·7029.

Orchard,

Phone 30~ · 675 · 4154 .

CHAIR A SKS A
QUESTioN ....

1971 Chevelle Malibu, 307

automatic with cragers
&amp;
OOd 1973

For Sale 8 yr . old gentle

Mag ic Genie organ would

THE MC.E TIIIIG's
A BOtfT O VER··· TilE

Auto lor Sale

pony, saddle, briddle, and

30 inch belt driven exhaust
fan ,
l ik e
new ,
no
reasonable offer refused .
Mowrey's
Upholstery .

Trading Co .• Spring Valley
Plaza • .u6·902S.

71

Bundy Clarinet used 1/2
school year . Call 379·2340.

New patch half runners,

Eastern ~

Case Knives·20% off all
case knives. Spr ing Valley

New clarinet for sale . Call
,j,(6 ~ 0J57 .

0102 betwee n 8:00a.m . and

super tirm , $95, sofa bed
with

. . ------.:

~~;;;~~~~;;:r;::::;~~;~::~1

ss

m ini

1980 750K HONDA motor·
cvcle, travel trunks and
saddle bags. 2146 miles,
$1500.00, 6U · .w6·92~ after
6:00p.m .

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

bs,
handle,lim·
50
PSEmagnesium
suzzler laminated
lb . pull . Special $39 .95 .
Spring Valley Trading co .• 57
Musical
Sp r ing Valley Plaza, .w6·
Instruments
8025.
Trumpet. $175.00. Call 388 ·
9689 after 4:00.

ROUGH , cherry

Bassett Cherry, $795. Bunk

Call675·5104 or 675·5386 .

Call

S5 . 00 ,

$175 . 1 ste reo stand. $35 .

$38 and up to $109 . Hide-a

J rm . apr

tops

dresses·$10 ., Jeans and
slack s $10 . and up. Boys
shirts and jeans to size 18 at
outlet pri ces. The Water·
melon Patch. New Haven.
----·-1·3 pc . bedroom suite with
mattress &amp; box springs.

Park, Rout e 33, North ot
Pomeroy . L arge lots. Cal l

S1

r·c

1974 580 8 Case Backhoe W.

Space for Rent

BING' S CONCRETE CON ·
STRUCTION · Specializing

good
cond ., reasonable. Call 446·

$6.00 bushel. Raynor Peach

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

Furnished effi c ienc y cJ par t ·
ment.
downtown
Pt.
PleBsant. All utiliti es paid .
Deposit required . 304 ·B95·

45

Sears

Compound Bow Special ·

Pools &amp;

1981

DICK TRACY

Improvements

Rock bottom clearance In concrete driveways,
patio , .
prices on selected 1981 s i dewalks .
basement,
garage
floors
suzuki' s, good sellectlon of and etc . Free estimates.
II
used bikes, parts, and ac·
ces. suzuki of Jackson, Rt. years experience. Call 367·
35 North Jackson. Oh, 286· 7891.
4956.
FERRELL ' S
WINDON
SERVICE Home
78 Honda 750, 9,00 miles. GLASS
and
windshield, saddle bags, malntalnan.ce
rem
odell
ng
.
Phone
388:
and saddle seat. $1,600.00.
9326.
Call388·7800 .

Crossman B ~ B's 'Milk Car·
ton ' bo• of 1500 · Special
$1 .09 box. Spring Valley
Trading Co. , Spring Valley
PLaza • .w6·7025.

Ralliit

ber

Home

II

Motorcycles

74

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

Jac kson Ave., 6751773 .

Antiqu e round oak table &amp; 6
chair s. 2 2/ 10 miles out on

Apartmemt
for Rent

44

boxes for
lb. shipment
trailer hitch

Call .u6·8136.

&amp; utiliti es, 304·6754099 .

nished trailer , 95 Burdette,
air conditioned, $150 month
plus utili t ies , 304-675·4600
between 9:00 a .m . 8. 4:00
p.m . Deposit required .

$40, packing

4 rims jets blazer 15' S170.

COU NTRY MOBIL E Hom e

2 BEDROOM house trail er ,
$150. a month plus deposit

8,000 B1'\l air cond. $125,
large room divider $15,

Eclipse 12 ga . game loads
#6·shot. 20 shells per box,
$3.95 box. Spring Valley
Tralnd Co., Spring Valley
Plaza , 446·8025.

call

$125, (5) tires 11 .50xl5 $100,

on 143 Pomero y. 992·3647.

by Larry Wright

10• off Buck Knives. Spring
Valley Trading Co .. Spring
Valley Plaza • .w6·8025.
Remington Thunderbolt 22
LR Ammo, $1 .39 per box,
SJJ .OO per carton. Spring
Valley Trading Co. Spring
Valley Plozil • .w6·8025.

electric range
material &amp;
moving 10,000
$50, stablizer

$175. month . '192·2362 or 992·
2815.

Wednesda

KIT 'N' CARLYLE""

While metal detectors·
Opening Special 20• off on
all while metal detectors.
Spring Valley Trading Co .•
Spring Valley Plaza. 4-468025.

ZigZag Sewing machine.
Makes button holes, sews
on buttons, tarns, fancy
stitches, and monograms, .

$38 .00 . Free call.
collect 1·304 ·736·9241.

apt. Kitchen.

rt, Ohio

Misc . Merchandice

54

1 bedroom apar tment in
Middleport. $180 utilities

I bedroop

Misc. MorciNincllco

Antiques

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
llbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pOCket watches. and
coin collect ions. Call 557·
3-411.

month, plus utili ti es. 992 -

S rm . house on r iver close
to town. Private, $250 mo.
plus dep 8. r e f . Call oU6·
4922 .

requi r~ u .

Pomero - Middle

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

.. ,

One letter . aim ply atonds lor anolher. In thla sample A Ia · •
used for the three L 's, X lor lhe two O's, etc. Sinrle 1elten. · '
opootropltea, the 1en1th and formation of the words ore aD ,
hlrtla. Each doy the code letlera are dlf'lerent.
.,'.;

.,. .

CRYPTOQl.lOTES

KZGUML
SZRWITU;
FM

OP

SZGXFSLFZG
LKU

FM

..

OP,l'

SZGMLFLRLFZG '

TRFJU . - IGJWUH

0'

CZKGMZQ

Yesterday'aCryp&amp;oqpte: 111INKOF YOUR FOREFATHERS!
TIUNKOFYOOI\I'OSTERITY!-JOHNQUINCY ADAMS 'i'

�Page-16

The Daily sentinel

Pomeroy

. Wednesday, september 2, 198! ::

Middleport, Ohio

.

"~

Grocery shoppers find lower prices

'

From AP wlreo
Shoppers are finding lower prices
at the supermarket - particularly
for pork chops, according to an
Associated Press marketbasket sur·
vey which shows grocery bills dropped by six-tenths of a percent during
August.
More than one-fifth of the items
checked by the AP declined in price
last month and many of the
decreases were substantial. In part,
the price trends at the supermarket
reflect what's happening on the
nation's farms : The U.S. Depart·
ment of Agriculture says farmers
are getting paid less lor many key
crops than they were a year ago.
The AP drew up a random list of 14

Predict 480-580
Labor Day deaths
CHICAGO ( AP ) - The National
Safety Council estimates that between 480 and 580 people will die
when millions of motorists take to
the nation's roads this Labor Day
weekend for summer's last holiday .
The Labor Day weekend period
starts at 6 p.m. Friday and ends at
midnight Monday .

commonly purehased food aod nonfood Items and checlted the price at
one supennarket In each of 13 cities
on March 1, 19'13. Prices have been
rechecked on or about the start of
each succeeding month.
The latest SID'Vey showed that the
marketbasket bill Increased at the
checklist store In four cities last
month and decreased In eight cities.
It was unchanged In the 13th city.
Overall, the marketbasket bills
decreased an average of six-tenths
of a percent.
The marketbasket bill measured
by the AP has declined In five of the
first eight months of 1981, dropping
In February, March, April and May,
as well as In August. It Increased in
January, June and July.
Looking at prices for the past
year, the AP found that the market·
basket went up at the checkilst store
In five cities over the las! 12 months

Director Clifford Reich of the Ohio
Department of Liquor Control today
announced that all state liquor
stores, agencies and departmental
offices will be closed Labor Day,
Monday, Sept. 7, a legal holiday for
state employees.

Emergency calls

Infant unhurt

Four calls were answered by
area emergency units, according
to the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service. The first was at
4:11 a.m., when the Pomeroy
squad was called to East Main
Street, from where Jack Stivers
was taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
Pomeroy answered a second
call at 10 :45 a.m .. to transport
Stanley Aleshire from his Maple
Place residence to Veterans
Memorial. At 2:33 p.m ., the
Pomeroy unit was summoned once again to the scene of an
automobile accident in front of
the Meigs Tire Center.
Dale Rime was taken from
there to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 10:19 p.m ., Sarah
McCarty was taken from her
Main St. home to Veterans
Memorial by the Middleport
Emergency Squad.

An infant escaped serious injury in a two-car accident in
Meigs County Tuesday.
The Gallia·Meigs Post of the
state highway patrol said Rebecca S. Wolfe, eight months, did not
require treatment at the scene.
The report said the child was a
passenger in a vehicle driven by
Penny S. Wolfe, 17, Racine, which
was eastbound on Letart Twp.
Rd. 98 at 4: 30 p.m.
The vehicle then met a westbound auto driven by Roger E.
Hill, 34, Racine, which was reportedly left of center on a curve,
forcing Wolfe to go into a ditch to
avoid collision.
No damage was reported to
either car and no citation was
issued.

Admissions-Dorothy Nichols&lt;&gt;"· Middleport; Jack Stivers.
Pomeroy ; Fay Dunleavy, Middleport; Stanley Aleshire,
Pomeroy ; Dale Riffle. Racine ;
Cheryl Clark, Cheshire ; Sarah
McCarty, Middleport .
Discharges-George Knapp ,
Wayne Gillen, Beatrice Rairden,
Carl Autherson, George Starcher.

To end marriage
Ronnie D. Johnson, Route 1,
Portland, has filed for divorce, on
grounds of gross neglect of duty ,
from Gina M. Johnson, Long Bottom, in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

penditures. Standard brands and
sizes or comparable sublltitutes
were selected. The AP did not compare actual prices from city to city.
The only comparisons were made In
tenns of percentages of Increase or

A

.

'

...-

'

-

..

..

.-..-.

decrease.
The Items In the AP survey are:
chopped chuck, center-cut pork
chops, frozen orange juice CODo
centrale, coffee, paper towels, but·
ter, Grad&amp;-A mediwn white eggs,
creamy peanut butter, laundry
detergent, fabric softener, tomato
sauce, milk, frankfurters and sugar.
A 15th Item, chocolate chip cookies,
was dropped from the list when the
manufacturer discontinued the
package size used In the survey.
The cities checked were :
Albuquerque, N.M., Atlanta, Boston,
Chicago, Dallas , Detroit , Los
Angeles, Miami, New York,
Philadelphia, Providence, R.I., Salt
Lake City and Seattle.

'

.•

'

'•

Man hurt in wreck
Dale Riffle. Racine, was admitted to Veterans Memorial
Hospital Tuesday afternoon for
treatment of injuries received
when his car went out of control
and struck an abutment on West
Main St., Pomeroy Police report.
Riffle was taken to the hsopital
by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad. Police said there was
heavy damage to the car and that
Riffle will be charged with
reckless operation.

Ask to w«~d
The Meigs County Probate
Court has granted a marriage
license to Okey Harrison Cart, n,
Route 1, Bidwell, and Odessa lola
Roush, 59, Route 4, Pomeroy .

the marina; Howard Ferguson, Middlepori, $100 and costs, possession of
marijuana ; Perry Hall, Middleport,
$50 and costs, trespassing at the
marina; Lance Hennan , Gallipolis,
$50 and costs, trespassing at the
marina; Jerry Massie, Gallipolis,

Band invitational
set this Saturday
The first annual Meigs High
School Band Invitational will be held
at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 12, at the
Meigs High School Stadium.
Bands participating will include
Eastern High, directed by Jim
Wilhem; Federal Hocking, directed
by Peter Angelo; Jackson High,
directed by Jack Delaney ; Wahama
High, directed by Jeanette Oldaker ;
Kyger Creek, directed by Clarence
Barber.
The Meigs Marauder Band, directed by Doug Hill, assisted by T. Ed·
win Harkless, will he the host unit.
All of the bands will present a halftime show during the invitational.
Admission will he $2 for adults and
$1 lor students. Stadium gates will
open at 7 p.m. and the concession
stands will be operated by the Meigs
Band Boosters.

Eight of 11 defendants forfeiting
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
night were charged with speeding.
Charged with the offense and the
amount of bond forfeited include Jef·
frey Curtis, Delaware, $27; Diane
Smith, Pomeroy, $29; Hazel Wiener,
Tuppers Plains, $32; Richard
Grimm, Athens, $30; Tim Demosky,
Pomeroy, ~9; Donna Johnson,
Racine, $29; Danny Pritt, Sissonville, $30; Maurie Miller, Route 4,
Pomeroy, $24.
Others foreiting In the court were
Keith Aeiker, Pomeroy, $100, intoxication; William Guthrie, Middleport, $30, assured clear distance,
and Ronald Jones, Syracuse, $153,
reckless operation.

r

t
t
t
t
t

•

NOW SERVING

1 section, 1'l Pages

\IOI .lO,No.100

Rt. 124 Syracuse
FROM 4 TIL 11 SIX NIGHTS A WEEK
CLOSED AT 6 P.M. WED.
7 items to choose from . All
homemade from our crust to
Ron's own delicious sauce. Call
orders in, 992·5049.
13 inch - 15 inch

weapons."
During his term In office, Carter held up deployment of the neutron ·
warhead. He said that three countries Including the Unitec! States and
the Soviet Union have developed the weapon, but did not name the
third country.

Fewer Ohioans die in wrecks
COLUMBUS, Ohio - State traffic officials report that 109 fewer
people have died In Ohio traffic accidents than were killed during the
same period a year ago.
Director Earl Reich and other officials in the Ohio Department of
Highway Safety said they hoped the trend would continue through the
Labor Day weekend.
"For a lot of families, the Labor Day weekend means a last fling at
summertime activities like boating and camping," Reich said. "That
ll\e&amp;IIS highways lllld seconclary roads will be especially crowded near
take'Erie and othet reereal:ional areas."
.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SPECIAL SALE
Limited Quantity - Excellent Selection of

•

•

L .

;.\

Fair paid attendance record set

DiKontlnued Styles, Patterns and Colors. .Buy

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Even though the 1981 Ohio State Fair set at·
tendarice records, only one out of four falrgoers actually paid admission, according to records.
Paid attendance at this year's fair was M0,862, while estimated attendance was 3,215,312, fair officials said Tuesday.
Estimated attendance for the 17-day event was determined dally by
fair officials. They used a fonnula that Included everyone on the
grounds, Including ride and concession employees, exhibitors and
dellverymen.
In 1980, paid attendance was 500,103 and estimated attendance
2,724,87. The highest previous paid attendance was 794,746 in 1973.

Yours Early and Save
SIZE 60x70 IN. ••••• ••••• ••• •••••• , REG. ?' .99, •••• •• ,SALE '4.99
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Non-Slip

Jury indicts jail warden, wife

•

NEWARK, Ohio- A Licking County jail warden, his wife and sisterin-law have been Indicted after a month-long probe of the disappearance of confiscated drugs, according to Sheriff Gerry Billy.
Billy said Lt. John Swick, 46, his wife Juanita, and his sister-in-law,
Lynn Apn Swick, were indicted by the Licking County grand jury after
Billy presented evidence Wednesday.
The·indictments charge Swick, 46, with complicity to aggravated
drug trafficking and theft in office. The charges resulted after drugs
confiscJted from patrons attending a concert at Legend Valley were
found to be missing from the sheriff's office.

Winning Ohio lottery number
ClEVELAI'tD - 'lbe winning number drawn Wednesday night In

% - 50%

URETHANE

••

•

r--~-~~~ ·

FRINGED
ALL AROUND

ALL SALES FINAL

PROTECTS YOUR
FURNITURE

CASH ONLY

.

,. .__

MOORES AMERICAN HARDWARE
124 W. MAIN

992-2848
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POMEROY
'

the Ohio Lottery's dally game "TheNwnher" was319.
The lottery reported earnings of f25(),668.50 on the drawing. The ear·
n!J\gs came on sales of $890,6ll5.50, while holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share ~.987, lottery offlclals said.

FOAM BACK

NO IRONING
NEEDED

10 foes
killed

OSAKA, Japan- Former President Jinuny Carter said today he did
"not disagree" with the decision of his successor, Ronald Reagan, to
deploy the neutron weapon.
At an airport news conft•rence after arriving from China, Carter indicated that Reagan's decision to deploy the weapon was the right one
because "I recognized as president that the Soviet Union was in- .
creasing Its threat both in strategic and short-range nuclear

SYRACUSE DAIRY BAR

Weather forecast

'Moetly. cloudy with acatteied showers tonight. Lows In the upper 80s.

Chance of showen tonight ani1 becoming partly cloudy Friday. Highs
In the mld-7011. Chance of rain to percent tonight and 30 percent
l"rlday. Winds light and southeasterly to southerly tonight.
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1S Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Carter agrees with Reagan

Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

MACHINE
WASHABLE

enttne

NEW YORK - The Rev. Norman VIncent Peale euluglzed
newscaster Lowell Thomas as "one of the most remarkable men or
our time; or,Plclflld, of anytime.
.
Thomas, 89, whO had an evening news program on CBS radio for
nearly 46 yean, died of a heart attack Saturday at his home In
Pawling, N.Y. Another service was to be held at Christ Church there
today, with blirlal near his home.
Among the MO JQOilrners at St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church
Wednesd!iy were VIce President George Bush and his wi(e, Barbara;
former President Gerald Ford and his wife, Betty; Secretary of State
Alexander M. Halg Jr.; Sen. John Glenn of Ohio; former heavyweight
champion Jack Dempsey; and fonner New York Mayor John Lindsay.

.

EVERYTHING REDUCED

at

Copyrighted 1981

MARKETBASKET COMPARISON- Grocery bills dlppetllut moo- th after two moutlu uf price IDereases, dropplug jut over baH a perrent
Ill August, an A11octated Prell markelbalket sarvey shows. The latest
decUue meant tbat the average Wit of the marketbasket of Items prleed ·
by the AP wu lower at the start of September tllaD It wu a year earlier. ·
The above chart ~ompares prlres for three food Items Ill 13 clUes. (AP .
Laserpboto).

$225 and costs, 3 days imprisonment,
driving while intoxicated; Tom
Miller, Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner.

• •

•

Peale eulogizes newscaster

Mayor.,s Court
Five defendants forfeited bonds
and nine were fined Tuesday in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
fman. Court.
Forfeiting bonds were John T.
Ambereacht, Gallipolis, $27 ,
speeding; Matthew Dillard, Route 1,
Pomeroy, $300 lor driving while intoxicated, $100 for possession of
marijuana; Amanda Wells,
Gallipolis, $25, speeding ; Tony E.
Thompson, Point Pleasant, $27,
speeding; Leonard Van Meter,
Pomeroy, $200, obstruction of of.
ficial business.
Paying lines were Joe Harris,
GaWpolis, $100 and costs for
destruction of property, $50 and
costs for disorderly manner, and $SO
and costs for profanity; Paul
Pullins, Middleport, $100 and costs,
reckless operation; Charles Aeiker,
Route 1, Middleport, $50 and costs
for disorderly manner, $SO and costs
for trespassing; Kevin L. Barr, Bid·
well, $50 and costs, trespassing at

•

e

~

Closed Monday

Meigs County happenings

Veterans Memorial

and decreased In eight cities.
Overall, it was an average of 1.6 percent lower at the start of September
than it was a year earlier.
Pork prices were responsible for
much of the August drop. The price
of a pound of center-cut pork chops
decreased at the checklist store In
nine of the cities surveyed. Special
sales added to the declines ;
decreases ranged up to 50 percent.
Large grain crops have helped
keep meat prices - and therefore
food prices - down. The good news
for shoppers, however, Is bad for
fanners. The USDA said that prices
paid to farmers for all items dropped 2.1 percent from mid-July to
mid-August, while the prices far·
mers have to pay to cover their expenses rose seven-tenths of a per·
cent in the same period.
The AP did not try to weight survey results according to population
density or actual family ex·

Annual football ta·b loid in today's edition.

-..•

ELECTED SECRETARY-GENERAL- Hojatoleslan AU Khameoel,
the fiery orator of Ayatollah Rubollab KhomeiDl's Islamic revolution,
was elected secretary-general of the Islamic Republican Party by a party
congress Monday Ill Beirut. Khameoells still recuperating from hmg and
throat wounds he received Ill an assassination attempt June 21. fAP
Luerpboto).

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Iran's
revolutionary guards fought two gun
battles with leftists in Tehran today,
killing 10 foes of Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomelni's regime , Tehran Radio
said. It said one guardsman was
killed.
The broadcast said guardsmen
and guerrillas ci. the IslamicMarxist Mujahadeen Khalq battled
for eight hours in south Tehran while
other guardsmen fought with " three
armed terrorist agents" in north
Tehran.
The state radio said all three
terrorists riding in a car were kiUed
in the south Tehran battle and seven
Mujahedeen Khalq guerrillas died
and three were wounded in north
Tehran.
One guardsmen was reported
killed In the north Tehran fight, but..
the radio gave no account of
casualties among the guardsmen in
south Tehran.
Tehran Radio called the eighthour shootout as "one of the most
important operations against counterrevolutionary mini-groups" in
recent days .
The radio said the guardsmen
raided a guerrilla hideout in the
south Tehran fight and seized a
large cache of arms and partially
burned maps of the prime ministry.

Today' s announcement appeared
to signal that the government was
preparing to blame the Islamic
Marxist organization 'for the big
bomb blast Sunday at the prime
minister's office that killed Prime
Minister Mohammad Bahonar and
President Mohammed Ali Rajai.
Earlier, Iranian television reported that the fudamentalist regime,
struggling to recover from Sunday's
assassinations, had executed 101
''counter-revolutionaries'' this
week.
Meanwhile , Iran's Parliament
today overwhelmingly endorsed a
22-man Cabinet under newlyappointed Prime Minister Ayatollah
Mohammad Reza Mahdavi Kani, a
Parliament spokesman said.
Reached by telephone by The
Associated Press from Beirut, the
spokesman, who declined to he
named, said Kani's Cabinet was approved by a vote of 170 to 4. Four
other deputies abstained and nine
did not cast votes, he said.
Kani was elected Wednesday by
Parliament to replace Bahonar.
The 5()-year-old Kani retained all
20 of Bahonar's ministers and ex·
panded the Cabinet to 22.
Under Iran's constitution, the new
Cabinet will now have 50 days to
arrange for elections

Prosecutors prepare case for jury
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - As Barker in the entertainment
prosecutors prepare the case inbusiness, is a fonner cashier for the
volving $1.3 million in unaccount.P.,
state treasurer and is at the root of a
for state funds for a Frankiln Cowfty" · $1.3 million state money mystery.
grand jury, a lawyer for the
She left the state treasurer's office
mysterious Elizabeth J. Boerger in January 1980, after an apparent
said he doesn't think she took any mental breakdown and before the
money.
state auditor's discovery of the
"Given the way this is unexplained $1.3 million deficit in
progressing, I anticipate presenting state accounts. Miss Boerger had
evidence to the grand jury at some been In charge of the bank accounts.
She owns property that her partpoint; there Is something there, I
think," David Johnson , an assistant ner, Robert Yeazell, used as quarprosecutor on the case, said Wed· ters for two companies, according to
nesday. The Plain Dealer reported Clark County records. The properthat Johnson said the grand jury ties are listed in various directories
as the headquarters of an electrical
phase is two to three weeks away .
Miss Boerger, known as Liz contracting business and an en-

Four hurt in
Meigs accident
A Syracuse woman was
hospitalized and three others Injured
In a tw(H)ar collision on Rt. 143 in
Meigs County Wednesday.
Susan K. Hubbard, 27, was admitted for observation after being
treated for her injuries In the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
emergency room, a hospital
spokesman said.
The Gallla-Melgs Post of the state
highway patrol said Hubbard was a
passenger In a car driven by
Michael R. Hubbl!rd, 33, Syracuse,
which was southbound at 3:35 p.m.
when It went off the right side of the
road.
Thf vehicle then came back onto
the road, then off the left side, back
onto the road and collided head-on
with an auto driven by Patricia G.
Hwnphrey, 42, Pomeroy.

Also injured were Michael Hubbard, Humphrey and Linda S.
Grover, 25, Pomeroy, a passenger in
Hwnphrey's car. All were taken to
Veterans by the Meigs EMS and the
patrol, where Michael Hubbard,
Hwnphrey and Grover were treated
and released for their Injuries.
Severe damage was reported to
Hwnphrey's vehicle and slight to the
Hubbard auto. Michael Hubbard
was cited for DWI.
The patrol investigated a one-car
accident early today In Gallia County.
Joanne L. Wellington, 21, Vinton,
was southbound on Rt. 325 at 5:40
a.m. when she lost control of her
vehicle on wet pavement and drove
Into a ditch.
Wellington escaped injury and her
auto was slightly dama~ed.

tertainment agency, Creative En·
tertainment, both run by Yeazell.
According to the county records,
Miss Boerger bought the property
for $34,000 in 1978. The Columbus
Dispatch reported Wednesday that it
now appears vacant. Another financial dealing between Miss Boerger
and Yeazell was her purchase of a
Springfield house from him in 1975.
She sold it in 1980.

The first revelation of Miss
·Boerger's life outside her work for
the state came when it was reported
this week that she and Yeazell, a
bandleader known professionally as
Buddy Young, unsuccessfully tried
to buy the John M. Moore Agency
Inc., a theatrical agency in 1978.
Doctors say she is suffering from
amnesia and can't remember her
i Continued on Page 71

Head Start students
gzven examznattons
I

e

e

The Meigs County Health Department on Mulberry Heights has
had wall-t&lt;&gt;-wall children this week as some 80 Head Start Program
youngsters underwent an extensive physical examination and immunization procedure.
Department personnel have been joined by workers from other
agencies in order to handle the many fa cets outlined by the slate as
requiremenl$ for chldren participating in the Head Start Program.
Dr. James Witherell has been on hand to conduct physical
examinations for the children ranging from three to live years old.
Health department personnel gave immunizations, tests for anemia,
urinalysis, developmental screening, sickle-cell testing and lead level
screening, only as indicated, and urine cultures and laboratory tests
for intestinal parasites as indicated.
Follow-up work is planned in cases where special problems are indicated through this week's examinati"ns.
Children were transported through today to the health department
quarters by Head Start personnel.
Others working with the department to complete the annual
requirement are Mrs. Joan Tewksbary , R.N., county tuberculosis nurse, who administered tuberculin skin testing to each child and per·
sonnel of the mental health department's speech and hearing clinic
who did testing in those areas.
The Head Start training center is In Racine. The program is carried
out through the Gallia·Meigs Community Action Agency .

GOvem·ors will tour locks
toor

Gov. James A. Rhodes iriD"
the Galllpolls Lock.s and Dam Sept.
!lin an.effort to drive home the Imof Improving traffic .condltlona gq the O!Jio River, a river acUmgroap IBid~· .
~ . will · jolp. Gov. Jay
'Rockefeller of West VIrginia and
GoV. Ricllard Thornburgh Ill Penlll)'lVanla for the tour, lpDIIiOI'ed by

Portance

inland water system," DINAMO
said.
The dam, opened In June 1937, is
considered one of the stumbling
blocks to BJDooth river traffic
on
the Ohio due to Its size and frequency of barge accidents.

now

Mi

fi

d

mNAMO. (Jilsoelsti411l felt Oie9e!CIP' _ n,or . re amage
nllilit ol. lll~te, Navtpblllty m
•Ollmages were set at Sl,OOO as the
th8 ~~. ·~ 'and' result ,of a fire at the Pomeroy Cilff
Ohio).

·

.

Thl IOV~ DJNAMO and ol.·
. . . . from 'the ~ di.trtct '
of the U.S. An1IY .COrpl of •
Eql~. _who over,a ell . he
Qtlllp!UI faellity, wlll.llol4 • Jll'l!ll!
~ aaat lbe cllnlat na.m.

*~
t111t .~

''Apaftmentl,
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Union

Ave.,

Wed-

rolnero7

firemer! kepl the blaze
~toad«/setln'theapartment
of. Jerlile ~d. OCcUpants of
all clothe apanmenta of the compleX
were ev8c:Uated u a precauUmunW

the~wasutinplahed.
. _ ~IG " " ' "
· Tbere was lnauraJK:e Coverage on
. }lire~~M Ill •
· ~ :The · the lltl'uctllre damBge but none on
Qaii'P'!Ja dam was ~ bilca~~~e the c:loset contents, firemen reporlt "tJplftel ~ ~ Ill America's ted. '

·'1'1111 wiD IIlio

WAITING- 'l1lele liar tall tr.. the Melp Head 81ait ~
wait Ill lllelr wldte IMJipltal-&amp;ypl•- fat the uext iepult,lfllleir
pby!ikal euadi!IUollllllllmiJ!I"1'iuillit ~eall .. •liillway Ill

tile Melcl CGilllty Depertmeilt 'af Healtii.Mallierry Hei«bll,

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