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                  <text>Tuppers Plains man electrocuted
A Tuppers Plains man was elec·
trocuted Swiday morning at approximately 11 a.m. while taking
pictures of an accident that had occurred earlier in the day on SR. 7 the
Meigs County Sherifrs Department
reported.
Killed was Terry D. Talbott, 44,
Tuppers Plains, owner of the Talbott
Drilling Company.
According to the report, Talbott
along with Bob Murphy of Murphy
Oil Co., Racine, were traveling south

on SR 7 enroute to the Rutland area
to check a well site where Talbott
was to set up a drilling rig this morning.
'I'Ijey came upon the accident
(which had occurred 15 minutes af·
ter midnight Sunday l. Talbott told
Murphy that since he had his
camera he was going to take some
pictures of the demolished truck.
Murphy also got out and went over
the guardrail to make sure that no
one was in the vehicle. Murphy

heard a noise and looked up and saw
Talbott fall.
Several people ran to aasist and
began CPR treatm~t.omeroy
ER Squad was
d transported Talbott
Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was
pronounced dead on arrival.
Talbott's right shoulder carne into
contact with a
Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Electric tine carrying
7,200 volts of electricty. The tine was
approximately five feet off the

ground near the guardrail the
sheriff's department reported . At
the scene were members of the
sherifrs department and Ohio State
Patrol units.
Meanwhile, the Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol charged the
driver of the pickup, Elvis Peck, 24,
Racine, for OWl .
Peck. was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment of
minor injuries.
According to investigating

•

troopers, Peck, going south, lost control of hia truck which ran off the
right side of the highway, struck a
signal pole, then went over a guardrail, flipped over and struck the electric pole.
In another Meigs County incident,
two persons claimed injuries in an

accident on County Road 29 in
Lebanon Twp. Troopers said an auto
driven by Vicky L. Barber, 16, Portland, slid on the loose gravel and
struck a vehicle operated by Saun-

dra K. Folmer, 30, Pomeroy. Both
drivers claimed injuries but neither
was treated. Leota M. Johnson , 50,
Portsmouth, a passenger in the
Folmer vehicle was also injured.
A Bidwell man was injured in a
one-ear accident in Galli&amp; County
Saturday night, according to the
patrol.
Jeffrey A. Wolfe, 18, was treated
and released from Holzer Medical
Center for a fractured clavicle.
(Continued on page 10}

•

at y . . . . . enttne

e
Voi.30,NO.I06

1 Section, 10 Pages
lS Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middlep_o rt, Ohio, Monday, September 14,1981

Copyrighted 1981

Defense budget
could get cut
Reagan decided Saturday to
reduce the defense budget by $2
billion next year, $a billion in 1983
and $6 billion in 1984.
The size of the Pentagon spending
reduction was the key element on
which hinged other cuts Reagan will
propose as he tries to keep the 1982
budget deficit close to his target of
$42.5 billion and keep alive chances
of a balanced budget by 1984.
After returning to the White House
on Sunday from Camp David, Md.,
Reagan said that domestic spending
in fiscal year 1982 would be cut
"something like" $9 billion to $14
billion.
Asked whether he let the Defense
Department off the hook, Reagan

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Despite
President Reagan's request that the
defense budget no longer be treated
like a "poor relative," there are in-

Apprehend two jail escapees

Priscilla's Pop

GOODMAN, Mo. - Two convicts who had remained at large after
their escape' from the Kansas State Penitentiary a week ago were captured Sunday after jwnping from a freight train, authorities said.
The capture of Everett L. Cameron, 32, of Wichita, Kan. , and John
E. Kitchell, 28, of Annapolis, Mo., followed an intense manhunt by law
enforcement authorities from four states, the FBI and the Missouri
National Guard.
Cameron and Kitchell, who escaped from the Lansing, Kan., prison
Sept. 6 with five other inmates, were held at the McDonald CoWlty Jail
in Pineville.
McDonald County Sheriff Lou Keeling said the two convicts were
captured after a Lanagan, Mo., man saw two men in a northbound
boxcar about 3:30p.m. and reported the sighting to authorities at a
nearby roadblock.

b

NBC show takes eight Emmys

dications that Congress may want to
cut defense spending by more than
double the $13 billion, three-year
package proposed by the administration.
"I feel that the overall cuts in
defense should be more in the neighborhood of $30 billion," said Sen.
Pete V. Oomenici, R,N,M., chairman of the Senate Budget Committee.
Senate Democratic Whip Alan
Cranston of California said Sunday
that the president's proposals for
defense spending earlier this year
11
Were excessive and therefore I
don't think that the rather modest
reductions now proposed are going
to be very significant."

replied, 11 No, not really."

LOS ANGELES - "Hill Street Blues," the NBC police slation
drain&amp; in serious ratings trouble, scored a record eight Emmys Sun-

day night, including best drama series and top performers, at the 33rd
Television Academy awards.
"Taxi," ABC's raucous picture of life inside a Manhattan cabbie
station, collected six Emmys, including best comedy series and best
lead actor, Judd Hirsch.
NBC, whicQ has lingered long in the No. 3 ratings [J08iti9n, cQU~
the most Emmys- 20. CBS, which broadcast the marathon three-hour
Emmycast, collected 18, ABC received 12, PBS got eight, and there
was one Emmy presented to a syndicated show.

-c

Influential publisher Loeb dies
MANCHESTER, N.H. - William Loeb, the acerbic publisher of the
Manchester Union Leader and New Hampshire Sunday News who in·
fluenced state and national politics for a generation, died of cancer
Sunday.
.
Loeb, 75, died at the Leahy Clinic in Burlington, Mass., shortly after
noon, said Paul Tr cy, editor-IIH!hief of the Loeb newspapers.
Loeb was well-khown for hiS conservative views, often delivered in
stinging prose, but in recent months he had stopped writing the front·
page editorials for which he had become famous.

Officials face more questions
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Colwnbia Gas Co. officials face another round
of questioning this week when an Ohio House committee opens its
·
hearings.
The Public Utilities Corrunission of Ohio heard three days of
testimony on the issue last week, and there's a joint probe being done
by the Ohio Conswners' Counsel and the PUCO.
The probe comes in the tight of anticipated rate increases this fall
and winter. The company says average customer bills will jwnp by 23
percent in September because costs for the company's supplier,
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., escalated sharply in 1981.
Lawmakers have expressed concern the Colwnbia Gas is buying expensive out-&lt;~f-state gas while ignoring Ohio gas producers.

U.S. has weapon evidence
BONN West Gennany- The U.S. government has evidence for the

first tim~ that lethal chemical weapons have been used in Southeast
Asia, says Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.
·
· Halg in·a televised speech in West Bertin Sunday said there have
been "continuing reports" thst such weapons have been used by the
Soviets alld their allies In taos, Cambodia and Afghanistan.
He said the use of these tox!Jis, which are chemicals produced
through biological means, is prohibited by the 1925 Geneva Protocol
and that their manufacture is forbidden by the 19'15 Biological
Weapons Convention:

Won't share broadcasts

-unist

WARS.\W Poland- The chief of Poland's state television said Sunday the
government would never sh8re control over radio
and televllion bro4dcasts with Solidarity, as the Independent union is
~~

.

.

.

"·!

.

.

Soiidlrlty leader Lecli Wtllesa waajiiBI .. adamant in hla demands
in a"ipeecb in Gnlezno, the rellgioua capital where Roman Catholic Archb~JCIIef Glemp WBil installed formally Sunday 811 the primate of
Pollutd-

.

•

.

The ~ldAlaen agency PAP said W!llt~~~~.told a raUr Saturday that
radio III!CI television l!eJoltg to the people and "" ahould speak in our

Ownvoice.•"

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By The Associated Press
At least 10 people were killed four in motorcycle accidents - on
Ohio highways this weekend, according to the Highway Patrol.
Troopers count traffic deaths from
6 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
' Tbedead:
SUNDAY
DAYTON - Michael D. Harri,s, 29,
of Detroit, Mich., and Harold 0:
Kendall, 76, of Greenville, in a twocar accident on Interstate 70 ln Montgomery County.
COLUMBUS - Anthony Wilson,
21, of Columbus, In a one-car accident on a Columbus city street.
SATIJRDAY
LANCASTER - Michael B. Vancil, 22, of Lancaster, in a motorcycle
accident on Ohio 188 in Fairfield
County just west of Lancaster.
CANTON - Clare!!Ce D. Ruff, 59,
of Canton, in a two-car .accident on
Ohio 21 in stark Co1iJ1ty,
PAINESVIlLE - WiiUam A.

Moyer, ·28, of Kirtland, In a car~le accident on Interstate

In I.iake CoU!Ity.
~A\' _
· UJ'PER SAND~Y -

oo

Jl!rry
:18, Nevld81 Ohio, In a
mot0rcye1e accident cn a Wyanc!ot
............
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WAUSEON :.... t'li8ioiM ·T. J~
W&amp;~P~~.

tO. ,ot ~~ Tft.,J!t .a_ CJr· ....-rill! accident on•Ohio 1118 JD
~~. imrtocll;htm !he , · · ~ il'1itCift tililnty, • · ·· " , .'

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Accidents
claim 10

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forecast
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BUDGET TALK - Senator
Pete Domeulcl, R·New Mexico,
chairman of the Seoate Budget
Committee prior lo his a~
· pearance on the CBS·Television
show "Face the Nation" Sunday
in Washington. (AP Laserphoto).

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"The 2 ($2 billion cut from the !982
proposal), I think, is all that could be
asked when you stop to think that
domestically, we're cutting a budget
that has been overgrown - just extravagant spending - over the
years while over those same years
defense has been the poor relative in
the act," Reagan said.
"We have not been keeping pace
as we should," he said.
BUag"~' dlreetor •David ·A. Stock·
man reportedly sought defense cuts
of $30 billion over the three years,
while Defense Secretary Caspar W.
Weinberger held out for no cuts. Under Reagan's new plan, defense
spending over the three years would
be $639.3 billion.
"There was complete agreement
between the three of us ... that these
outlays could be reduced by this
amoWlt without setting us back
mililarily," Reagan said.
However, Oomenici said the Pen·
tagon still has not made its case for
large increases, adding that the
even proposed reductions would
make it difficult to reach Reagan's
goal of a balanced budget in 1984.
"I believe the cuts will make it
very difficult to get where we have
to go," Domencic said. " And I fur·
ther believe that a majority of my
committee and a majority of the
Congress are looking for larger cuts
than that."
Domenici was interviewed on
·CBS' "Face the Nation." Cranston
made his comments on ABC's
''Issues and Answers.''

Reagan is tentatively scheduled to
meet with his Cabinet on Tuesday or
Wednesday to discuss his decisions
for additional cuts in domestic

"'l--

-.;~

MISS AND MOTHER - Elizabeth Ward, the newly crowned Miss
America is pictured with her mother Patri cia in Atlantic City on Sundaf,
I AP Laserphoto i.

Miss America
'plain person'
ATLANTIC CITY, N'J. (APl The woman who whooped out a long
and loud Arkansas Razorback cheer
after she was crowned the new Miss
America says she is just a " very
down-t&lt;&gt;-earth " person .
People often have a "preconceived notion ol what a Miss
Arkansas or a Miss America is like.
They're surprised to find out I'm a
real person," 2().year-&lt;~ld Elizabeth
Ward said Sunday.
Minutes after she won the title,
Miss Ward vented her joy backstage
by shouting: "Wooooo-pig-sooiee'"
" I hope I can always do that," she
confessed later.
She said her hometown of
Russellville, Ark ., a commWlity of
!3,000 where poultry is the main industry, was staging celebrations in
her honor.
But she beca me quit e
sophisticated in her refusal to talk
about her personal life or stir up controversy.
Gracefully dodging questions on
her opinions or habits, she said : "I
don't want to say anything controversial that might embarrass

someone. I'm not saying I have any
opinions that are controversial.''

She did say, however, that she supported President Reagan 's
economic polices and thought the
nomination of Sandra Day O'Connor
to the U.S. Supreme Court was
"great ."
She also said she doesn't think the
Equal Rights Amendment is neede~ .
"I support equal rights . But I believe
the Constitution protects my rights
and I don:~ believe ratification

f

necessary .

When asked whether she calle,d
her boyfriend after she was
crowned, she hesitated, smiled alld
then said: "That 's kind of persorul't.
I'm Miss America, and that' s wbht
I'm going to do this year."
'
Miss Ward said she couldn't
remember the last time she was
angry and said what upsets most hllr
is seeing people being. taken a~vantage of.
Her mother, Patricia Hampe, put
it this way : "She's sweet. She's
honest. You've got the most interesting , beautiful and talented
Miss America you 'll ever come
across."

FBI joins stamp collection search
Wl!aAI!ll' Ull..,- Ralph

Welker, promlaeot Meigs County
RepllbUcao leader, died Suoday
at tile Holler Medial Ceoter. AcUve • - Repahlleu clreles,

·•beriff

weller wM formmy
of
Me1p Cowlly ud -for a 1111111ber
ol yean .... tl!e Melp County
aepteaealltive te the General
AllemNy ef Ollie. _He later

became

Repre~.,..Uve lo tile

Ge~~eral

AIIIJ!IIIIy. for Meigs,
Glllllo, ~wnsee , 1J111! a ·al!l8ll
sedlee If· Atlillll C..ty. Mr;

Weib"

.m..-

~ted

_a • poultry

b 1 1 i la M C9lull&amp;y leu
,If i-n. He raided at
:111 ~· •. ~~; ~· .
~l)lswh,Piari;·,· ' ' .

vestigation because lhe items stolen
CLEVELAND (AP} - The FBI
has joined Oeveland in a search for are believed to be worth more ttwin
a valuable stamp and coin collection $50,000 and would likely be takeoi.91it
,
discovered missing last week from a of state.
"We're working on it as a major
West Side home.
David K. Hobus, 42, owner of the theft with the possibility that t~
collection, told police the stamps, would be interstate transportati~
coins and several historical letters stolen property, which is !I f.ederal
· ' ;:
were worth more than $30 million. offense," he said.
OWlne
said
he
did
not
He said one of his chldren came
"home from school last Friday to find wheiher Hobus' estimate of
.
they ht!d been taken from a second- cvalue of the collection
~
Hobus
said
he
began
floor lillng cabinel
Polieil said they wanted to when he was 8. He said his
question a former tenant who lived tion, which was not
in the basement of Hobus' home but eluded stamps worth '
$2,500 worth of Eisenhpww
moved out Friday.
.
and silver half-dollars datlntl to
~Bl wesman John Dunne said
today .ilie 'tBI is involved in the in'
-" :
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�Monday, September 14, 1981

.''·-

Commentar

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 14, 1981

William F. Buckley Jr.

St. Giamatti and the moral majorityL_ _ _ _ _ _ __
disagree with their authoritarian

Well now, that was a close one.
Moreover, " they
The 1,267 members of the freslunan positions ."
presume
to
know
what God alone
class of Yale University have been
is
when
hwnan life
knows,
which
warned against the Moral Majority
begins
.
~~
by President A. Bartlett Giamatti.
E nough.
And what a speech it was: Dr . Jerry
I) On the latter point: How is it
Falwell, head of the Moral Majority,
that
the president of a distinguished
is said to be quite a fulminator himand
cosmopolitan
university tells us
self. He ought to go to Yale. To study
under Bart Giamatti. Learn a thing that God alone knows when human
or two about how one fulminates in life begins' II you penetrate this
rhetorical formulation, you have a
the big league.
What's going on' To be lectured dimly obscured invitation .to
against the perils of the Moral nescience.
"God-a lone-knows" is the safest
Majority on entering Yale is on the
order of being lectured on the way to say, "That-is-unknowable."
danger of bedbugs on entering a Because inasmuch as God is not inbrothel. What is it that exercised Dr. vited to teach a regular course at
Giamatti, a man of great urbanity Yale, Mr. Giamatti is saying in ef·
who has some lovely and incisive feet that the search for the answer
things to say about many issues, as (" When does life begin'" ) should be
witness his forthcoming book of abandoned - because no one can
tell. Why not? II you grant the
essays?
Well, he says the Moral Majority metaphorical extravagancies (Life
are " peddlers of coercion" and that Begins at Forty) you can indeed ask
they have made " a radical assault" scientists to malie sound judgments
on pluralism, civil rights and on when life begins. Or moralists. Or
religious and political freedoms in theologians. And in any case, the
question is ultimately decided by
the United States. How so'
Because they are "angry at civic action . But civic action is
change, rigid in the applicaiton of regularly informed by theological
chauvinistic slogans, absolutistic in insights.
Thus we had for many years a
morality." Thus, " they threaten
through political pressure or public group known as Clergy and Laity
denunciation whoever dares to Concerned. They used to be Con-

cerned About Vietnam, but lately
they are just Concerned. That concern regularly focuses on the sins of
everyone who wants AIJierica to be
strong militarily or wants to develop
nuclear energy. These people are
very big on denunciation, and it is interesting that Mr. Giamatti hasn't
gone after them . Is it really his
position that people reading the
Bible are not free to enjoin its
messages? Its messages as they
read them?
Mr. Giamatti said he had no
quarrel with the values of the Moral
Majority, defined in the paraphrase
of The New York Times as "love of
country, a regard lor the sanctity of
life, the importance of the family
and high standards of personal conduct." But " the point is," said the
president of Yale, "the rest of us
hold to ideas of family,-country,
belief in God, in different ways. The
right to differ, and to see things differently, is our concern."
Well , so is it the concern of the
Moral Majority, isn't it' They are
saying that certain values should
govern Americans . Aren't we free to
disagree? And why should they not
say so, believing such values to be
true? It is quaintly interesting that
there isn't a single tenet of the Moral
Majority (so far as I know) that

Ill Court Strtel
Pom.roy, Ohio
'14-99f..21~

DEVOTED TO THE rNTERF.ST OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

a~

--r I ~ c::~.F==ll

r-T"""L-..J ..._

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsher

HOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

Gt'oen~l

Managt'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ne~u

--~

·~

~-

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'OK,WAif- ~O~'D IT RJGHTMR~!'

Impoundment could make comeback

The Daily Sentinel

cs:m~
~v

to be angry'' And he said, 'I do well
"angry at change?" But anger was
to be a ngry, even unto death.' "
officially cultivated, by Yale among
Dr . Glamatti should leciure the
other institutions, quite recently m
kids against the dangers of
the matter of such things as civil
gonorrhea and gnosticism, and let
rights and the Vietnam War . " And
God said to Jonah, 'Does! thou well the Moral Majority alone.

hasn't officially been held by Yale
University over a century or more of
its life, and more or less unofficially
since then . So what on earth is exciting Dr. Giamatti?
That the Moral Majority are

Editor

A ME:MHER of The AssCK'Ialed Press, Inland Dally Press AssCK'iatlon aad tht'
American News~per Publishers Asliocllltlon
Ui.TfERS OF OPINION are Wf'lromt'd. T~)' 1h011ld ~ ln:1 thao 3110 •onl1 loDJ. AU
are 1ubje't't 1o edJUq add m••t be 11~ wltllume, address nd telepbone number. No unsigoed leiters will be published. L.euen t hoold be io sood taste, addri'Hing
is5oes, n11t pt'fliooallUes.
•
l~!tkn

Of fish
and federalism
The Reagan administration's " new federalism" requires states and
dties to start helping themselves and to stop relying on the federal government.
This idea has met with no small measure of skepticism - especially
among big-city mayors, who doubt that their communities can survive
without the continued substantial involvement of the federal government.
on their next trip to Washington, the doubting mayors might detour 40
miles to the north to visit Baltimore's National Aquarium, a spectacular new
attraction built without a cent from the U. S. treasury.
The aquarium is the capstone to Baltimore's Inner Harbor project,
which over the past 10 years has transformed an area of rundown
warehouses into one of this country's more glorious examples of urban
renewal.
The ultra-modern aquarium soars 200 feet above the old Pier 3. Even·
tually it will house more than 5,000 fish, birds and mammals. Visitors travel
through its exhibits on escalators that rise from the dolphin pool on the main
level to the glass-roofed Amazon rain forest at the top of the structure.
"We looked at every major aquarium in the world while we were
designing this one," says Kathy Cloyd, a National Aquarium official, "and
we feel we have taken the best of what we have seen and combined it here.
This is absolutely the state of the art."
The financing of the aquarium is as interesting as its architecture and
exhibits, for it provides a textbook example of cooperation between a city's
public and private sectors.
The city fathers saw the need for a major tourist attraction to be the centerpiece of their new Harborplace. Mayor William Schaefer and others hit
upon the idea of an aquarium and set out to build what they called "the best
that has ever been built."
The cost of the structure was first estimated at $16 million. The city had
$8 million in the bank from the sale of a large parcel of land; a bond issue
provided another $8 million. But as ~lans for the aquarium were upgraded,
the construction costs rose to $22 rmll10n.
So the city set out to persuade the Baltimore business community of the
value ~I the project. The balance of the construction funds was obtained
from businesses and private foundations .
For years the Smithsonian had been lobbying Congress for money to
build a new aquarium in Washington as part of the National Zoo. But
Maryland congressmen inste~d got their colleagues . to ?,esignate the
Baltimore attraction "The National Aquarium m Baltunore although no
federal money had been used in its construction.
"We are much more than simply an exhibit," says Ms. Cloyd. "We are
major educational and research facility. As we become better established
:inanciaUy we will begin to stress these functions more."
Once the structure was built, the city turned day·t.O'day oper~tions over
to Baltimore Aquarium Inc., a not-for-profit corporation. Operating_costsabout f.l.5 million for the first year- will be met through admwnon fees
($4.50 for adults and $2.50 lor children) and through foondatlorr and corporate granlll.
Part of the fund-raising effort is the "aquadopt program, which enables
a corporaUon or an individual to "adopt" a marine creature. Prices range
from p,OOO for a shark down to $15 for an angelflah, a rock crab, a purple sea
urchlrror one of 100 other speciments.

The NaUO!IIIl Aquarium Is a sight not to ml!lllf you visit the Washington&lt;/ Baltlmonl area. It Ia !\01 only a fascinaUng attraction but aflonwnent to
,What a Community cmi\chieve without help from Waablngton.

WASHINGTON ( AP) Impoundment is a fancy way of saying
what happens when Congress appropriates money and the president
refuses to spend it. That made
congressmen angry, so they banned
it by law.
But the practice could make a
comeback as President Reagan bat·
ties for new spending cuts in his effort to get the federal budget balanced by 1984.
" I think there's a fair possibility
we might adopt some sort of temporary impoundment or deferral
authority that the president could
exercise in the case of budget
overruns ," Senate Republican
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. said at
the White House the other day.
Rep. Robert H. Michel of Illinois,
the House Republican leader, envisions a system under which the

he said.
Presidents have been impounding
appropriations since the time of
Thomas Jefferson, but it didn't
cause much fuss until Richard M.
Nixon blocked billions in spending
voted by a Democratic Congress.
Nixon used impoundment just as
Reagan might, to block spending for
the sake of budget restraint and inflation control. Congressional
Democrats fought back, first by
challenging his authority in court,
then by passing legislation that forbids impoundments. Under that law.

president could refuse to spend up to
10 percent of any appropriation
during the budget year that begins
Oct. 1. He said that might be made
subject to congressional veto, which
would mean that a majority in either
branch of Congress could overrule
Reagan and order the money spent.
Whatever the details, it won't happen without controversy.
Congressional Democrats have bat·
tied Republican presidents before to
make them spend appropriated funds.
''It's not something new, and it's
something that needs to be carefully
examined,'' Baker said.
Sen. Ernest F. Holllngs, D-S. C.,
said any impoundment proposal
should be filibustered to death if
that's the only way to block it. "We
must not start down the road of
relinquishing our responsibilities,"

Today in history.

• •

Today is Monday, Sept. 14, the 257th day of 1981. There are 108 days left ·
in the year.
Today's highlight m history:
OnSept.14,1613, Turkey invaded Hungary.
On this date:
In 1812, Napoleon Bonaparte entered Moscow, and Russians set fires
throughout the city.
In 1829, the Russo-Turkish war ended with the Treaty of Adrianople.
In 1847, United States forces under Gen. Winfield Scott occupied Mexico
City.
In 1962, the Soviet government said it would accept, with reservations,
a U.S. declaration that no American military intervention in Cuba was
planned.
Ten years ago: U.N. Secretary General U Than! accepted Conununist
China's declaration that it would refuse membership in the world body as
long as the Chinese nationalists remained.
Five years ago: With the U.S. ready to cast a veto, the United Nations
Security Council postponed consideration of Vietnam's bid for U.N. mem·
bership.
,
One year ago: Turkey's new military leaders said they had arrested 182
terrorists in an eastern province as door-to-door searches continued.

Letter to the editor
Needlargers~s--------------II the highway department could
save injuries and quite possibly lives
by spending only a lew thousand
dollars, would they' The Ohio
D.O.T. has an opportunity to do that
along Rt. 33 at Darwin.
It's awful to regularly see fresh
evidence of the highway's poor
marking, the skidmarks and

appropriated funds cannot lit
withheld by the executive branch
unless both the House and Senate approve. And if a president tries to
defer expenditures, a majority in
either branch can order the money
spent.
The bill was passed in 1974, after
Nixon blocked or put off spending on
soc1al, environmental and public
works programs approved by
Congress - and dear to the
Democrats who then ran both
houses .

damaged guardrail. Most of the
people killed and injured at Darwin
were from out-of-town .
Why does this continue - why do
motorists keep getting surprised?
Because they are not adequately
warned! Please, D.O.T., put some
larger signs and reflectors on Rt. 33.
Surely it's worth the cost.

•

Dawson's bat ·s,m okes
as Expos whip Cubs
By Assoetated Press
Cardinals added an insurance run tn
Andre Dawson is swinging a hot the eighth on an RBI single .by Tombat- and it couldn't have come at a
my Herr.
better time for the Montreal Expos.
New York tied it in the fifth again"I believe that I have to swing the st Joaquin Andujar, 5-4, on Mike
bat good for us to slay in con· Howard's two-run single.
tention," Dawson said after his four
In the Cardinals' sixth, Dane lorg
hits helped the Expos beat the led off with St. I..Aluis' sixth walk.
Chicago Cubs I~ Sunday.
Iorg was replaced by Landrum on
The victory sent Montreal home first before Oberkfell singled &amp;If
for a big five-game series with the Terry Leach,l-1.
'
St. Louis Cardinals starting Tuesday
Dodgen 4, Reds 2
night. The Expos stayed 2\io games
Bob Castillo drove in one run with
behind St. Louis in the National an infield hit and pitched strong rnidLeague East after the Cardinals ·dJe-inillng relief, pacing Los Angeles
beat the New York Mets 4-2 Sunday.
over Cincinnati. Castillo, 2-4, took
Dawson's four hits, which in· over in the fifth for ~gers starter
eluded two doubles and accounted Bob Welch, who struggled
for three RBI, boosted his batting throughout. Castillo needed late
a verage to .323.
relief help himself, and Dave
In other NL action, the Los Stewart finally shut the door on the
Angeles Dodgers defeated the Cin- Reds in the eighth to gain his fifth
cinnati Reds 4-2, the Pittsburgh save.
Pirates stopped the Phiuidelphla
Frank Pastore, 3-7, was the loser.
Phillies 3-2, the San Diego Padres
Pirates 3, PbiWes 2
turned back the Atlanta Braves S-4
Pinch-hitter Jason Thompson rapin 10 innings and the Houston Astros ped a two-run single in the eighth inwhipped the San Francisco Giants 3- 'ning off reliever Ron Reed to lift Pittsburgh over Philadelphia.
0.
Phillies starter Mark Davis had
CardiDals t, Mets 2
Relief pitcher Jesse Orosco balked checked Pittsburgh on six hits and
Tito Landrum borne from third base led 2-1 going into the eighth before
in the sixth inning to snap a 2·2 tie the Pirates rallied against Reed.
and help St. Louis beat New York.
Kent Tekulve pitched the ninth for
The balk by Orosco came with his third save.
Gene Tenace at home plate. The
Davis fell behind 1.0 in the fifth on
an
RBI single by Ornar Moreno. The
New York right-hander was atPhillies
scored twice in the sixth off
tempting to pick Ken Oberkfell off
first base after he had singled. The

Odell Jones, 4-2, on an RBI double by
Gary Matthews and run-scoring
base hit by Keith Moreland.
Padres f, Braves 4
Juan Bontlla lined a run-scoring
single and Luis Salazar tripled for
two more runs in the top of the loth
inning to lead San Diego over Atlan·
ta.
Bonilla's single off loser Rick
Camp, 9-3, broke a 3-3 tie and
Salazar followed with his triple off
reliever AI Hrabosky to score the
clinching runs. John Lucas, 6-7 , was
the winner with relief help in the bottom of the loth, when the Braves
scored on a double-play grounder by
Bill Pocoroba.
The Braves tied the game at 3-3 in
the ninth on an RBI double by Jerry
Royster .
Alltros 3, Giants 0
Bob Knepper and Frank LaCorte
combined on a niJie.hitter, and Craig
Reynolds smashed three hits as
Houston blanked San Francisco.
Knepper, &amp;-3, gave up six hits,
struck out six and walked three in
seven innings before LaCorte came
in to earn his fifth save.
The Astros scored a run in the first
when Phil Garner came home on a
wild pitch by loser Doyle Alexander ,
8-7. The Astros added a run in the
seventh on a single by Reynolds and
Danny Heep's pinch-hit double.
Reynolds delivered an RBI single
for the Astros in the eighth.

Brewers up Sunday record
with 5-0 win over Orioles
By Associated Press
If the Milwaukee Brewers continue to win on Sundays, they may
have to follow the example of the
Chicago Cubs and play only day
games at home.
Or, as General Manager Harry
Dalton said, "go to a seven-day
chapel service schedule."
The Brewers improved their Sunday record to 14-1 with a S-11 shutout
of the Baltimore Orioles.
"I doubt if anyone can come up
with an explanation for it," said winning pitcher Pete Vuck9vich, wlw
himself has a H record and a I. 78
earned run average on Sundays.
"But I'm glad it's not the other way
around. We really needed this

game.''
Milwaukee Manager Bob Rodgers
offered the possibility that the
Brewers' strong hitting improves
their chances of winning on Sundays.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

''Since most Sunday games are afternoon games, our type of hitters
seem to see the ball better during the
day," Rodgers said. "I think any
NFL team would love to have our
Sunday record."
In other American League games,
Detroit outlasted Cleveland 8-6, New
York whipped Boston 10-6, Minnesota rallied to beat Chicago 7-6,
California edged Texas 8-7 in 12 Innings and Kansas City nipped
Oakland &amp;-:i in 12 innings.
Vuckovich, 12-4, became the AL's
third 12-game winner ...,- joining the
Tigers' Jack Morris and Dennis
Martinez of the Orioles. He gave up
only three hits and struck out seven
in seven innings, but he failed to
become the first Milwaukee hurler
this year to pitch a complete-game
shutout because of an injured wrist.
Tlgen 8, IDdlaos 6
Detroit completed a three-game
sweep of Cleveland as. ouUielder

Ricky Peters took advantage of a
rare start with three hits, including
a go-ahead single during the Tigers'
four-run sixth inning.
Peters broke a 4-4 tie with h1s
single off loser Dan Spillner, 2-4,
before Kirk Gibson blooped a tworun double and Steve Kemp singled
in the fourth run.
Von Hayes knocked in three runs
with a double and a triple for
Cleveland.
Yankees 10, Red Sox 6
Ron Guidry won his seventh game
in a row and sixth straight in the
second season, getting plenty of support from Willie Randolph, Dave
Wiofield and Bob Watson as New
York whipped Boston.
Randolph drove in three runs and
Winfield and Watson hit homers .
Watson's blast cleared the center
field fence at the 417-foot mark.
Guidry , 11-3 overall, lasted only
five innings.

Meet the Eastern Eagles

JOE SAYRE
265lb. Sr.
Uneman

Pirates bomb Huntsmen
RICHMONDALE - A 47-yard
touchdown run by North Gallia 's
Bruce Shriver was the beginning of
the Pirates' first win of the season,
43-14 over Huntington of Ross County Saturday.
North - Gallia tied with Paint
Valley, 14-14, in its opener Sept. 4.
That contest and Saturday's win
were both non-league games.
Facing a sputtering Huntington
defense, the Pirates took command
of the situation with 6:08 remaining

NATIONAL I.EAGUE
EAST
W L
Pet GB
18 12
.OX\ .516
2"'l
16
"
.485
3l,;
16 17

St . Louis

Montreal
Chicago ,
New York
x-Phlladelptlia

Pittsburgh

secretary would say nothing out of
the ordinary. The same information
was given to representatives of
South Africa and several black
African countries.
Instead, Crocker delivered a
major policy address that went far
beyond anything that had been said
previously and that sent shock
waves through the diplomatic eommunity here and abroad.
The speech dwelled at length on
the strategic importance of South
Africa to the West. "It is not our task
to choose between black and white,"
Crocker said. "In this rich land
(South Africa) of talented and diver·
se peoples, important Western
economic, strategic, moral and
political interests are at stake ... We
have no Intention of destabilizing
South Africa in order to curry favor
elsewhere.''
Corning on · the heels of South
Africa's invasion of Angola and of
statements in which South Mrican
leaders backed off promises to
modify their apartheid policies, the
speech was viewed In Pretoria.
Washington and black Mrica as en

P/CJ(:.
DICJ(,

endorsement of the new get·tough
policy of Prime Minister P . W.
Botha and his white minority
government.
The State Department sources say
that Crocker originally drafted a
"moderate" speech for delivery to
the Legionnaires. Major changes
were dictated to Crocker following
review of the text by State Department officials, including Secretary
of Slate Alexander Haig.
Haig reportedly insisted that the
speech contain certain specific
language, including references to
the presence of Cuban troops in
Angola. He is also said to have
brushed aside objections frornl}ll\1dle-level Slate Department officials
that the timing of the speech was all
wrong given that South African
troops were still in Angola and that
the United Nations was about to
debate Independence for South
African-ruled Namibia. In fact, the
changes were dictaied after Haig
had agreed to meet with the foreign
ministers of five black Mrican countries on their way to New York for
the U. N. meeting.

The speech also apparently caught
the U. S. Embassy in Pretoria by
surprise. When the wire services
began reporting on Crocker's
speech, embassy officials were
besieged by telephone calls and had
to frantically cable Washington for a
copy. The final text bore little
resemblance to the preliminary
draft that they had received earlier.
State Department officials now
are trying to downplay the speech as
having been no more than a
restatement of existing policy. They
reportedly are surprised at the reaction it bas received, especially from
officials of several Western countries (including Canada, West
Gemany and Britain, all of whom
have been working with the United
States to arrange a negotiated settlement in Namibia) .
t Is generally held that South·
Africa Is dragging its feet on its
promises of Namibian in·
dependence. Some allied officials
have warned the State Department
that Crocker's speech may have
only encouraged the South Mricarui
to greater intransigence.

l&amp;

IB

.455

.t l,&lt;z

13
11
WEST

19
21

....
.400

6

12

11

l!t
18
17
17

W
l1
15
15

.667
.576
.563
.531
531

San Diego

10

34

.291

~-Los

6~

~~:-Fin~t-hall division winn~r
'. '1 • - r Set.,..,..I Gtuaa

3'-l
4: ¥.!
4'-1
L2~

Houston 5, San Francisco 2
Suoday'sG•met

Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 2
San Diego 6, Atlanta 4, 10 innings
Los Anseles 4, Cincinnati 2
st.Louis f, New York 2
Montreal 10, Olicagu 6

Houston 3, San Francisco 0
Mooday'sG•mes
Cincinnati fBereny i 7-5) at HOU5Ion
(Ruhle 3-3 1, l nl
Los Angeles !Hooton lD-S J at Sa n Diego
(Welah ~ l . In)
Atlanta I McWilliams IHJ at San r rancisco !Griffin 7~1. (n l
Only tj:ames .sd•eduled
T\lesday '&amp;Games
Pittsburgh at Chicaso
Cincinnati at HoWiton, In l
St.Louis at Montreal, (n)
Philadelphia Bl New York, (n )
1.Al"' Anf!ele.s at San Diego, in l
Atlanta al San Francisco, r n 1

"' "

Toronto
Kansas Cily

Minnesota
Teus
OUcaso
Seattle

4 1~

17

13

"'

.531
.Ia

6

15
WEST
Ul
15
16
14

16

....

6

15

... '

17

Cleveland

t:l

13
12

16
l8
17
al
:II
19

Ca:lifornia
x-First-half divi.si011 winner
Saturday's Games

.545

-

.471

2~

-~2

3
5
5
5

394
.394
.3$7

Toronto 3, Seattle 0

Boston 2, New York 1
Ottroit II, Cleveland 9, 12 innmJ.!a
Kansas Oty 4, Oakland 0
Mllwallkee 6, Daltimure 3

Minnesota 3, Chicago I
Texas 3, Califomla 2
SIIDdly's Games
Dtt.roit a, Cleveland 6
New Yod 1{1, Boston 6
Minnesota 7, Chicago 6

Philadelphia
N.Y. Gtant!:l
St. Louis
Washington

Monday's Ganlel'l
(n )

Mlnnesola
(Ha vens
2-4)
at
Toronto
IC'lancy 5-91, (n)
New York (John 8-5) at Milwaube
(Caldwell 11-7), (n)
Oaklarll (Langford U) at Texas (Medlch 8-4 ), (n)
Karur.as City /Wright 1-1 l at C&amp;Ufomla
~1 .

(n)

Chlcayo (lamp WJ at Seattlr (8aMl&amp;ler6-7), (nl

-----College results--~-St. 28, Woke Fonst 23
Duke 13

WillcGnsin

l

0
0

''

"'

Zl

"17

50
&lt;1

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1.000
1000

.r.oo
000

.000

Atlanta

I

I

0

1

1

04541

I

J

OZI44

""
""

0 2 0 ! 7 5 0 .000
Su•day'11 Games
Atlant.a 31. Green Bay 17
Houston 9, Cleveland 3
New Orlean." Zl, Los Angeles 17
New York Gumt!:l 17, Wash ington 7
Kansas City 19, Tampa B~ty 10

Buffalo 35, &amp;ltimort 3
San Francisco 28, Chica~o 17
Cincinnati :n, New York .Jel~ 30
Seatlle 13, Denver 10
San Diego 28, Detroit 23
Philadelphia 13, New England :J
Dallas 30. SU..outs 17

nter cept ion s
Fumbl es
Pena l ti es
Score bY qu an cr s .

Mooday 'sGamt'
Oakland a t Minn esota, (n I

Boston,

.333;

Harsrove,

Oeveland ,

54.

0

Huntingt on

0

0

8

a.'

Buffalo

Mloml
Baltimore
NewEnglnd
N.Y. Jeta

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21

PA PeL
WL
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3 J.OOO
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20 072!'1 1.000
2 0 0 5 8 0 1.000
1 1 0 3 1 ! ' 1 .100
I I O I I Z JIO
0 I 0 7 I .om

6

IIU9INESS PCIJCY

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112; Lal'l:l(Ord, Boston, 111 ; P11c11~
rtk, Seattle, Ill; Cooper , Milwaukee, 100;

Texa.'\,

Bude~n. California , 109.
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Cooper,
Mt lwaukee ,
2:9;
Paciurek, Seattle, 25; Ohver, Tex&amp; s, ~4;
Winfield, New- York, 22; Halehe r, Mmnesota, 22.
.
c .
TRIPLES: Hames, Chtca~:~o, 7:
a!;ttno,
Minnesota 7: Lernun, 01kllgo, 6 ; Mumphry, NeW York, 5; Griffin, Toronto, 5;
arett Kansas City, fl ; Wilson , KanS&lt;Js
Citv. ' 5: Henderson. Oakl~tnd_ ~

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RBI : Annas, Oakland, 64 ; Oghvte, Mt lwaukee, 62; Winfie ld, New York, 60; Mur·
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HITS: Henderson, Oakland , 119; Ohv~r.

Ont!Ve~tr .

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Chicago at Seattle, Cn )

12

15
83
5
I
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North Ga ll ia

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RUNS : Henderson, Oa kland , 77 ; Evans,
Boston, 63; Cooper, Milwaukee, 60 ; . Harfllh, Cleveland. ~; Bumbry, Balllmure,

On~ Wet!k ...
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NaU...I Foa«MU lape

3
6

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (Z25 at bots): Zisk, Seattle,
.336; Hendcrnon, Oakland, .335; Lansford,

Oakland at Teus, ( n J
Kansas City at Calilomia , ( n )

Mickle Tenn. It
17

15
320
13

f001'BALL
Canadian football League
MONTREAL ALOUEITES Fired Joe
Scannella, head coach .
COlLEGE
TEXAS-EL PASO - Fired BiU Michae l,
head football coach. Na met! Billy Alton,
head football coach ..

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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Transactions

BaltimOre at Cleveland, (n)

N.ew York at MUwaukee, (nl

DEPARTM E NT
First Downs
'tards Rushin g
Passe s Attempt ed
Yards Passing
1

POSTMASTER · Send ~tddr~s.~ to The Daily
Sentinel, Ill CuurtSI.. Potneruy, Ohio 457611 .

'hetdly•s Games
Detroit at Bostoo, (n)
Minne50LI at Toronto, (n )

Huntmgton' s Johnson h1t Lane ·
with 3:14 remaining on a nine--yard
pass.
With five seconds left in the first
hall , Pickens passed to Deel for North Gallia's fourth touchdown. Erir
Pennick completed the conversion,
placing the score at 28-6 in North
Gallia's favor at the half.
Coach John Blake then retired his
first string fo r the remainder of the •
game.
~
Huntington kicked off at the •
Pirates at the opening of third quar- '
ter, and 17:;..pound Pennick carried
the ball for 75 yards fo r another sue- :
cessful invasion of Huntington's ~
territory. Jumor Paul Hollingshead \
kicked the extra pmnt.
:'·
Huntmgton rallied briefly in the '
fourth ca nto when McCluskey ',
recovered on a fumble with 2:30 left ~
a nd ran for the Pirate end zone. •
Johnson completed the conversion.
Pennick took top rushing honors
for running 117 yards on seven
carries, and Shriver tallied 102 yards fo r 10 carries. Huntington's McCluskey had four on one carry .
The Pirates a re home Friday '
when they host Southeastern of Ross
County.

Passes Complet ed

The Duily Sentinel

Detroit IPttry 8-61 at Bostoo (Torrez 8-

(Kilon

0

47 "-S :,00
33 40 .:&gt;00
I I O 'U32.500
01
01321
.000
0 2
0 :Ji -M .000
Wetilem Dlvh;iuu
2 0 0 5 8 1 7 1.000

San Fran cs
New Orlens
Lo&amp;IAngele•

a,

the flnt lDDblg of Sunday's game at Tiger Stadium. Ortawas leadoff batter. Detroit won the game 8-e.

0

0
0
Central DIYislon
1 1
0

Minnesota
Chicago

California
Teua 7, 12 innlngs
Kansas CUy 6, Oakland 5, 12 tnnings

. PICKED OFF · - Detroit Tlgen' pikher Milt
Wilcox picked off Cleveland !Ddtaos' Jorge Orta
( rtgbt) wllh.a toss. to flnt baseman Riehle Hebner tn

l
0

Detruit

MUwaukft 5, Baltimore 0

21,

''

Dallus

Tampa Bay
l

Montreal 2, Chicago 0
Cincinnati 6, Los Angeles :;, II innings
Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 2
Allanta 5, San Dieso 4, II innings
St.Louis 4, New York 2, IJ innings

&amp;.too

NMtlunal Confe~o~
Easlcm Di\lisloo
0
0

Green Bay

AnJ!!eles
Allanla
Cincinnati
San Franclsco

HOU.'llUn

x-Oakland

WASHINGTON (NEAl - The
Reagan administration has been
criticized in recent months for its apparent lack of a coherent foreign
policy - or, at least , of a clearly
enunciated one - beyond cries of,
"The Russians are coming everywhere." President Reagan
himself brushed aside such criticism
at a news conference by saying that
he was satisfied that hia administration did indeed have a
foreign policy.
But the issue has arisen anew
following a recent speech by Chester
Crocker, assistant secretary of slate
for African affairs, to the 8JUiual
convention of the American Legion.
State Department sources say that
Crocker was only one of a number of
rniddle4evel administration officials
who were to make courtesy appearances before a group that had
supported Reagan's election. His
speech was to have been a simple
restatement of policy toward
Southern Africa. ·
As late as the day before the
speech, Crocker's office was telllng
reporters that the assistant

in the first quarter when Shriver
made his run. Scott Pickens , 144pound back, made good on the conversion for the extra point.
Shriver again got the ball on the
first play of the second canto and ran
one yard for a TD. The conversion
failed. The third touchdown came
when Pickens passed to Mike Mays
on an 11-yardplay .
Huntington after the kickoff, then
rolled to its first TD.

IFor the record. • ·I

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pet. GB
22 ll
.667 Detroit
x-NewYork
19 14
.576
3
.571
J
MJiwaukee
.545
•
Ballimore
18 "'

Furor over African speech..____R_o_be_rt_w._agma_n

ROGER BtSSEU..
140 lb. Jr .
Hack

TROYBEARHS
185lb. Sr.
Lineman

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Monday, September 14, 1 81

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Rogers, Saints startle Rams, 2~_:~!_,
From AP Wires
Bobby Scott, the New Orleans
Saints' second-string quarterback,
had just watched rookie running
back George Rogers pound through
the Los Angeles Rams' line for 162
yards on 29 carries - and he was
duly impressed.
" I think George Rogers showed
that he has the potential to be as
great as anybody in the National
Football (League)," Scott said Sun·
day after the 1980 Heisman Trophy
winner from South CarolillB had
sparked the Saints to a 2:!-17 upset
victory over the Rams.
Rogers' potential was exactly why
the downtrodden Saints had made
him the No.1 pick in the NFL draft
last spring. New Orleans suffered
through a dismal 1980 season, winning only one of 16 games. Their 15
losses were an NFL record .
His potential was in full evidence

BOUNCED BENGAL - The Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Ken
Anderson, just releases the pass before the hit by Mark Gastineau of the
New York Jets, Sunday, during the first quarter at New York's Shea
Stadium. tAP Laserphoto 1.

Bengals rally
to nip NY Jets
NEW YORK tAP I - "The defense
rose up and kept the pressure on,"
Cincinnati Coach Forrest Gregg
said. " They didn 't want to get
behind again ."

And ultimately, it was the defense
which scored the winning touchdown

tered defensive t&lt;lckle Marty J.yons .
" Pena lties and mental mistakes ,
they killed us."
The J ets conunitted H penalties,
matching a team record, for 111 yards . " Whenever you have that many
penalties ... yo u don't deserve to win

as the Bengals beat the New York
J ets 31-30 m a NatiOnal Football
League game Sunday .

111 the NFL," fumed Jets Coach Walt
Michaels.
The Jets had taken a 2:!-17 lead
Ken Anderson's second scoring with 7:26 remaining on Pat Leahy's
pass, a :l-yardcr to Archie Griffin , third field goa l, a 27-yarder.
a nd Jim Breech's extra point gave
But Anderson drove the Bengals 67
the Bengals a 24-23 lead with 3:34 to yards in eight plays, hooking up with
play. And when Richard Todd tried Griffin on an ll -yard pass, with Cris
to rally the Jets, Ross Browner and Collinsowrth on a 26-yarder and with
Mike Sl. Claire teamed to throttle Isaac Curtis for 22 yards before finding Griffin open on the right side of
them.
Browner swarmed in nn the New

York quarterback , knocking the ball
loose. St. Claire picked it up and ran
1?. ya rds mto the end zone. That
score, 31 seconds afte r Griffin's
touchdown, and another conversion
by Breech, offset the Jets' fina l TD,
Todd's third scoring pass and second
to Jerome Barkum, an ll-yarder wi th
1:03 toplay .
" Ross, he made the play," sa id St.
Clatre, a G-foot-5 , 254-pound defensive end. " He put the pressure on

Todd. He sacked him . He forced the
fumbl e. I just happened to be in the
rtght place at the right time. My JOb
is to cover the line, looking for the
run , the draw ... I just saw the ball
and that's all there was to it."
There was more to it, the Jets felt.
" We kept giving them ftrst downs,
kept Cincinnati Ill the game ," mut-

the end zone.

After the game's final TD, the Jets
tried an onside kick. But the Ben gals
recovered a nd ran out the clock to
raise the ir record to 2-0 and drop the

.J ets to ()-2 .

Thistledown results
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio 1AP I Antonio Graell rode Ohio Sugar to
vt ctory in the featured Ohi o
Debut&lt;lnte Handicap at Thistledown
on Sunda y, covering the mile and
one-sixteenth in 1:44 4-5.

The winner returned $4.60, $2.80
and $2 40
Peggy' s Plwnper was second.
paying $2.80 and $2.40, while Vena
Cava returned 12.80 for corning in
third .

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against the usually powerful but now
struggling Rams, who suffered their
second Joss in tw&lt;»games during the
young season. Rogers powered over
for a 5-yard touchdown in the second
quarter, and after spemling much of
the second half on the bench with
muscle cramps, he returned late in
the game. He ran for a cruc1al first
down as the Sa ints were trymg to
rWl out the clock .
"1 was very pleased with George
Rogers' perfonnance, naturally ,"
sa id Coach Bwn Phillips, who was
hired last January to try and
rejuvenate the team.
Scott completed only 4 of 15 passes
and was intercepted on three
straight attempts, but he tossed a 23yard scoring strike to Wes Chandler.
Benny Ricardo kicked field goals of
4:;, 46 and 34 yards as the Saints matched their victory tol&lt;ll of the entire
1980 season.

Pat Haden, the Rams' harried
quarterback was under constant
pressure from the New Orleans
defense and was sacked three times,
but managed scoring passes of 9 and
15 yards to Preston Dennard in the
second half.
In other NFL games Sunday, it
was: San Diego Chargers 28, Detroit
Lions 23; Atlanta Falcons 31, Green
Bay Packers 17; Houston Oilers 9,
Cleveland Browns 3; Buffalo Bills
3!i, Ba ltimore Colts 3; Dallas
Cowboys 30, St.Lows Cardinals 17 ;
Philadelphia Eagles 13, New
Engla nd Patriots 3; Sea ttle
Seahawks 13, Denver Broncos 10;
Cincinnati Bengals 31, New York
Jets 30; San Francisco 49ers 28,
Chicago Bears 17; Kansas City
Chiefs 19, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
10, and New York Giants 17,
Washington Redskins 7.
Tonight, it's the Oakland Raiders
at the Minnesol&lt;l Vikings.
Thursday night, the Miami
Dolphins beat the Pittsburgh
Steelers 3()-10.
Chargers 28, Lions 23
Detroit dominated the Chargers
unlike few teams in recent years.
The Lions kept possession for 38 :19
to San Diego's 21 :4I, but John Cappelletti 's 2-yard TD run with 56
seconds left boosted the Chargers to
their second straight victory.
The Chargers' Dan Fouts com·
pleted 18 of 2!i passes for 316 yards
and became the 29th player in NFL

history to surpass the 20,000-yard
mark in passing.
Falcons 31, Packers 17
"We've had come-from-behind
victories before, but I can't remember anything like this," Atlanta's
Fulton KuykendaU said after the
Falcons had rallied from a 17~
deficit with 31 points in the fourth
quarter.
Kuykendall, a linebacker, got the
touchdown that broke a 17-17 tie,
racing 20 yards with an intercepted
pass with 7:53 remaining .
Linebacker Joel Williams sealed the
victory, dashing 57 yards for a TD
with a fwnble recovery with 1:34
left.
OUen 9, Browns 3
Cleveland held three-time NFL
rushing champion Earl Campbell to
42 yards, but Toni Fritsch's field
goals of Tl, 36 and 42 yards lifted
Houston over the winless BroWI1l!.
While Fritsch was 3-for-3 on field
goal attempts, Cleveland's Dave
Jacobs missed three of four tries.
Jacobs, who beat out veteran Don
Cockroft for the Browns'
placekicking job, had two of his
kicks blocked by Elvin Bethea.
Bills 35, Colts 3
Joe Ferguson connected on 16 of 28
passes for 261 yards and four TDs
while Buffalo's smothering defense,
best in the NFL last season, limited
the Colts to 147 yards.
Among Ferguson's scoring strikes
were a 54-yarder to Jerry Butler and
a 33-yarder to Joe Cribbs.
Cowboys 30, Cardinals 17
Ron Springs scored three times on
short runs for Dallas, Rafael Septien
kicked three field goals and Tony
Dorsett carried 16 times for 129 yar·
ds.
The Cowboys, 2~. have won 11
consecutive regular-season games
at home and have beaten the Cards
seven straight times.
Eagles 13, Patriots 3
Kicker Tony Franklin and
fullback Perry Harrington, who had
been under criticism from
Philadelphia Coach Dick Vermeil,
led the Eagles, 2~. over winless New
England.
Franklin, who had drawn Vermeil's wrath because of his attitude
and lifestyle, kicked field goals of 46
and 22 yards. Harrington, criticized
by the coach for poor blockmg and
inconsistent pass receiving, ran 6
yards for the Eagles' only TD .
Seahawks 13, Broncos 10
Seattle's first victory at home since 1979 triggered a celebration by
the Kingdome crowd of 58,513. The
fans reacted as if the Seahawks had
won the Super Bowl.
"You don't think I'm happy ?"
Sea ttle Coach Jack Patera asked
rhetorically after the Seahawks had
ended an overall losing streak of 10
games.
Efren Herrera's 22-yard field goal
in the third quarter was the margin
of victory.
t9ers 28, Bears 17
Chicago's Walter Payton rushed
for '¥/ yards against San Francisco,
putting him only 33 yards behind former Green Bay star Jim Taylor, the
fourth leading rusher in NFL
history . But Payton also lost two
critical fumbles, one at the 49ers' 2yard line.

The 49ers took .advantage of
Payton's misfortunes and rode Joe
Montana's three TD passes to VJetory.

Fwnble recoveries by linebacker
Frank Marion and defensive end
George Martin paved the way lor
New York's victory over winless
Washington. Marion's recovery at
the Redskins'13set up Billy Taylor's
r.-yard TD run and Martin raced 8
yards for a score with his recovery.

Chiefs 19, Bucs 10
Kansa.! City's Nick Lowery fought
a bad cold aU week, but he appeared
healthy against Tampa Bay, kicking
field goals of 20, 20, tJ and 42 yards.
In defeat, Washington quarThe Chiefs, 2~. are off to their best
terback
Joe Theismann set personal
start since their Super Bowl chamhighs with Tl pass completions for
pionship season of 1969.
318 yards.
Although Lowery appeared to kick
!\is field goals with ease, he sa1d 11
wasn't easy. "I try not to look up and
see those big goriUas coming at
me," he said.
The Chiefs' tough defense limited
Tampa Bay to 23 yards rushing.
;

Clippers post win
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Wayne
Harer singled in Dave Stegman in
the bottom of tl)e 12th inning SWiday
to give the Colwn~ Clippers a 6-5
victory over the Riclunond Braves
in the opening game of the best-of·
seven International League championship playoff series.
Stegman opened the 12th with a
double, moved to third on an infield
single by Otis Nixon and scored on
Harer's infield hit to second base.
Richmond, which had trailed W
after the first inning, chipped away
at the Clipper lead, scoring a run in
the ninth to tie the game at 5-6. Kent
Smith doubled to lead off that inning,
went to third on a groundout and
scored on a wild pitch by Clipper
reliever Jim Lewis.
Bill Castro was the winner in relief
for Columbus. Carlos Diaz took the
Joss.

ment from St. Lawrence and is goin!l
to work for a living. But I owe him a
lot.
Renner, winner of only one PGA
tournament two years ago, fired
three consecutive 68s, but had only a
tie with Tommy Valentine for the
lead starting the final round .
He broke the deadlock quickly,
going in front to stay on the first hole
with a par while Valentine took a
bogey.
He went :l-up with a birdie on his
57th hole, added another birdie on
the 59th and protecled his lead with
pars the rest of the way, finishing
with a 69 for273, 11-under-par.
" I didn't realize that I hadn't
made a bogey since the first two
holes of the second round Friday WI·
till reached the last green," ReMer
said. " That's pretty dam good on
II

Social
Calendar"

Church
welcomes
pastor

Monday
SOUTHERN Junior High At.~etic
lloosten will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at the achool. Parents of all
seventh and eighth grade
cheerleaders and players are in- •
· Vited.
MEIGS COUNTY Coupon Redemption Club will meet at 6:30 p.m:
Monday at the Riverboat Room of
the Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
UNITED METHODIST WOMEN,
7:30 Monday night at the Heath
United Methodist Church. Maxine
Philson to present a program.
' Hostesses, Dorothy RoUer, Juanita
Bachtel, Kay RaU and Kathryn
Knight.
A SPECI~L ·· MEETING ·of
· Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal Arch
Masons, will be held at 7:30 p.m .
Monday. Work will be in the mark
master and past master degree.
·· MEIGS COUNTY Co upon
. · Redeemers Club meeting 6:30 p:m.
Monday at Riverboat Room,
Diamond Savings and Loan, W.
· Main, Pomeroy.
SOUTHERN JUNIOR .High
· Athletic Boosters meeting at 7:30
p.m. Monday; parents of all seventh
and eighth grade players and cheerleaders invited.

REPTILES - Rutland Elementary students vtew reptiles as a part
of an assembly program. From the left Lisa Miller, Stepbanle Milam,
Kim Laudermllt, Jodi Brown, holding turtle; Ranger Anderson and Scott
Bishop.

Spends weekend at Beverly
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rought spent
the Labor Day weekend on tlje river
at Beverly. Visiting them were their
children, Mr. and Mrs. Brian
Hamilton and daughter, Jessica
Ann, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Barnett

GETI'ING IT IRONED OUT - Jack ReDDer of San Diego, CaW.,
foUows the fllgbt of an lnNHirlven baD Sunday on his way to a S$4,000 victory at the Jimmy Fond Classic Professional GoU Association tour·
IUIDient ID Sutton, Mass. (AP Laserphoto I.

and son, J. R., and Mr. and Mrs.
Neale Knight. On Labor Day, Mr .
a nd Mrs. Lanny Jenkins and Mrs.
George Nesselroad , Sr., joined them
fortheday .

The congregation of the Racine
United MethoQist Church held a
welcome night for the new
pastor, the Rev. and Mrs. James
Clark and son recently.
The corrunittee planning the affair was Mrs. Etta Mae Hill, Mrs.
Dorothy McKenzie, Mrs. Ruth
Smith and Mn. Louise Stewart.
Mrs. Betty Roush, chairperson of
the administrative board, gave
the official welcome to the
family. Pete Shields welcomed
the minister on behalf of the
men's prayer breakfast group.
Readings were given by
Margaret West, Bob Hill, Martha
Dudding and BlU Stewart. Paula
Sayre presented a solo and the
Rev . Mr. Clark played piano and
sang. Paul Sayre was in charge of
a group which provided instrwnental music. There was
group singing with Mrs. Marlene
Fisher at the piano. A money tree
was presented the Clark family.
Refreshments of homemade ice
cream and cake were served.

Sentinel-Page-S

Bable honored by Auxiliary
RACINE - Tbe Ladies Auxiliary
of the Mt. Moriah Church of God,
Racine, recently honored Tammy
Bable with a layette shower.
The baby theme was carried out in
the decorations and games were
played with prizes going to Mrs. Patti Laudermilt, Mrs. Shirley Williams
and Mrs. M. Walker, with Mrs.
Marie Harris winning the door prize.
Refreshments were served to Lori

Simpson, Diana Simpson, Shirley
Sil npson, Mildred Williams, Janelle
Williams, Mary Newell, ~y
Newell, Mina Walker, Terry Curtis ~
Dixie Beair, Goldie Ingels, Lon
Laudermilt, Shirley Williams, Marie
Harris, Shelly Harris, Barbie
Laudermilt, Hedy Laudermilt,
Mayla Yoachim, Audra Ours, Amy
Williams, Patti Laudermilt, and
Nancy Yoachim.

Meadows celebrates birthday
CROWN CITY-Ruby Meadows,
Crown City, was entertained Sunday
with a surprise birthday party given
by her eight chldrcn . All were
present except a son, Richard, confined to the Holzer Medical Center .
The group sang "Happy Bir·
thday" and gifts were presented to
Mrs. Meadows. AttendinR were Garnet Elliott, Gallipolis; Howard and
Shirley Meadows, Cincinnati; Fred
and Ruth Smith, Racine; Mrs.
Richard (Bette I Meadows, Crown
City; Archie and Betty Meadow s,
Crown City, Charles and Betty
Meadows. Ga llip oli s; Dou g

Meadows, Gallipolis; Leo and Nancy James, Crown City; Frances,
Ann, Robbie , John , Gina and Jarod
Elliott Patriot; Ron, Betty and Ronnie St; phen Wagner, Jerry, Gail and
J ennifer Rowe, Donald Shaffer and
Donald Wayne Shaffer, and James
Smith, all of Racine ; Carol and Dick
Meadows, Earnest Meadows, Crown
City ; Tammy and Tommy
Meadows, Ellen and Tim Meadows,
Gallipolis ; Brenda Bayles, Tuppers
Plains, and Steve Beaver, Mer·
cerville.
Mrs. Meadows has 27 grand·
chi ldren and 23 great-grandchildren .

TEACHERS AND THE STAFF
will be recognized when the
Salisbury PTO Meets at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at the school. Refreshments will be served.

Engagement

3 LINES ARE APPROXIMATELY
15 WORDS - USE THE BLANK

In a daze over the funny things
happening to your dollars these days? Get
in on our Dollar Daze Sale and ease the pain in your budget!

•
VICfORY DANCE - New Orleans wide receiver Wes Chandler, lefl,
does a little celebrating after he scored a touchdown In the f&lt;Nrth quarter
as teammate Ike Harris (82) looks on Sunday in the Superdome In New
Orleans. The Saints beat the Rams 23-17. I AP Laserpholo).

this course, which I consider darn
tough even though I've done good
here since 1977 when I shot a final
round 64 and made some money.''
Renner collected his biggest
check, $54,000, and boosted his earnings for the year more than
$177,000.
" I felt I had a good year before I
came here, now it's a pretty darn
good year," he said. " It may sound
goofy, but I'm past the point of
playing for money.
"I just enjoy playing, even though
I don't show much emotion on the
course. My goal is to keep getting
better. [ don 't wanttostop here."
Simpson turned the finish into an
all-southern California affair. He
scored a birdie on the 72nd hole for
second place, worth $32,400, at 63275.

"There's going to be a lot of money
going to San Diego this week," Simspon said with a grin. " Jack has
been playing so good he was
destined to win. He and I have been
playing against each other since we
were 9 or 10. I'm just delighted I did
so well here."
,
Tom' Kite, the most consistent low
scorer on the tour this year, cl~
w1th a 70 for T/6 and third place. .
With $20,400, Kite moved into fiJ\ort
place among,the year's money wihners with $355,724. He displaced R.ty
Floyd, who earned only $1,291 after a
283. Floyd has won $347,676 this
year.
Gary Trivisonno was fourth at m
t!lanks to a . final toWid 69, The~
came Don Pooley, Mark Lye and
Gibby Gilbert at 278. Valentine slipped to 75 and a seven-way tie at 279.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. George
Yonker, Route I, Racine, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Melissa Ann, to Timothy
Vaughn Sauters, son of Mr. and Mrs.
V. Leroy Sauters, Route 3, Pomeroy .
The open church wedding will be
an event of Saturday, Oct. 10, at 2:30
p.m. at the new Racine United
Methodist Church. A reception
foUowing the wedding will take
place at the American Legion Post
Home in R.tcine.
The bride-elett is a 1981 Southern
High School graduate. Her fiance, a
1961 graduate of Meigs High School,
is employed at !,he J~ .Boys in
Pomeroy.

Two months ago at Wimbledon
Borg, who has tried 10 times, chboard at the National Tenpis CenMcEnroe put a period to Borg's making it to the final four limes, has ter. Borg left with his coach, Len·
string of five Wimbledon victories. . never won the Open.
nart Bergelin_ Borg's wife, Mariana;
And he assumed the No. 1 [J06ilion in
"I'd like to join in commiserating who had watched the match !tom
the computer rankings.
with Bjorn because he's a great court.side, did nptleave with him. ,
Sunday, McEnroe refused to share champion," McEnroe said to the "- It I!"BS
SI!C!lnd day iD 8 ,row he;
the wealth. He built momentum in crowd as he accepted the winner's nad been tlireiieneil. . .·
the third set and steamed past Borg trophy and check for f66,000. " I
It was not dazzliN!
and eeC:
in the next.
think he's going to win this damn taWy it was not ·of the caliber of
Now McEnroe has an enviable vic- tournament someday, but hopefully their Wimbledon final, which
tory string of his own. He won the not when I'm here."
McEnroe won~ 7-6 7-:6 H "
Open for the third lim~in
" row, the
Borg wasn't around to hear. the
With aU ~ !.teEm,;. said,
first such streak since ill Tilden consoling words.
this wasn't as touih
last y••s
won his sixth Ameri -" chamHe made a hasty retreat to the . final, In which he beat llorg7-t, 8-1,
pionship in 1925.
dressing I'OQm. There he quickly 8-7, 5-7,6-4.
.
·
,
He had to get by si!Ch unknowns as showered and was rushed by plainFor two weeks he~. this
Juan NWiez of Chile and Ramesh clothes policemen down a grimy Borg had ~ed of hOW. ~ eJuiiive
Krishnan of India In four setters, back ~ay, past garbage from Open was now his big .,.,.:I, •.
and a resurging Vilas Gerulallillin a concesillon standa and. into a walling
"He's put so ,niucli
'
,.~preflr~Ure on
five-set semifinal. Borg had to beat
car.
illmself
to Win this that If be ~'t
tougli,Roscoe Tanner in lour sets In
The reason for the quick getaway he~s haH a bad year," Mcl'fnroe ~a~~~:
the quarterfinals and beat Jimmy waaa telephoneddeaththteatagaln- "l don't thlnlt he should have doae' . ·
Connors in the semifinals.
st Borg, deliVered to the malo a,Mt· that."
-, ,. • . r ·,

t¥

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McEnroe tops Borg for Open cha11Jtpionship .
NEW YORK (API - No offense,
Bjorn, John McEnroe seemed to be
saying.
But all swruner long, the 22-yearold New Yorker has been spoiling
things for Bjorn Borg. And SWiday
he leveled the crowning blow by
beating Borg ~. 6-2, 6-4, 6-3 in the
final of the U.S. Open tennis championships.
It's not that McEnroe has ceased
to appreciate Borg's artistry or his
[J06ition in the game. It's just that he
knows he is on a level with one of the
best men ever to play tennis.
Tracy Austin had the op[J06ite
view after she defeated Martina
Navratilova 1-G, 7-G, 7-6 Saturday in
the women's final. Austin was only
16 when she won in 1979, and she
thinks now she was too young to appreciate it. This one meant more to
her, shesaid.

The Dai

Ohio

Tuesday

Renner wins Jimmy Fund Classic
SUTTON, Mass. lAP) - Young
Jack Renner sent his caddy into
early retirement in grand fashion a victory in the $300,000 Pleasant
Valley Jimmy Fund GoU Classic.
Renner, a five-year veteran on the
PGA tour although only 2!i, came
through for caddy Brian Edwards,
just turned 24, with a 2-stroke victory over Scott Simpson SWlday
before a whopping crowd officially
estima ted at 51,500.
.. Brian and I met at nearby Hartford !Conn.) in 1'¥19 and he caddied
for me in tournaments around here
until he joined me on the tour full
time this year," Renner said.
·· He's been telling me I was going
to win for several weeks," Renner
added. "He finally was right, in his
last tournament with me before
retiring . He got his degree in govern-

• Monday, Septem~ 14, 1981

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LIMITED-TIME ONLY - SALE ENDS SEPTEMBER 30TH

�Page--6 The DailY Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Meigs County property transfers
Oyde R. Durst, Gladys L. Durst to
Benjamin Boggess, Zelpha Boggess,
Parcell, Letart
Robert I. Knapp, Donna R. Knapp
to Orion W. Roush , DlXle Kate
Roush, 2 acres, Sutton.
Budd Jr. Darst, dec . to Lawrence
Elmer Darst, Davtd Lyn Dar:,,, Rex
Allen Darst, Patricia Lou Sm1th,
Emma Ellen, McOure, Cert of
trans., Rutland.
Frances A Bearha to Emma Jean
Webster ( Ltfe Est ) , Kit Neal, Kun
Neal, PI of Lot, Middleport.
Francis H. Andrew, Affidavtt,
Ohve
Earl W R1ggs, Mane Riggs to
Mmme K R1ggs, 1.06 acres, Salem.
James P1erce to Ter1 Stackhouse .

Parcels, Rutland.
Dottie Pierce Jones, fonnerl y Dot·
be Pierce, Larry Jones to Teri
Stackhouse, Parcels, Rutland.
Earl E . Knight, Kathryn W.
Kmght to Paul E . Hoffman, Maune
Hoffman, 7.91 acres, Chester.
Kenneth Eldon Mankin , Deed., to
Betty Mankin, Cert of traM ,
Pomeroy
Grace M. Jones to Rtchard E.
Jones, Donna W Jones, Parcel,
Salisbury .
Dav1d Yates, Donna Yates to
Harry L. Coleman, Carol A.
Coleman, 1.57 acres, Olive.
Frances C. Roush, Admrx. Est.,
Paul H. Ours, dec. to Richard B
Hayman, Virgima Lou Hayman, 3
acres, Lebanon

Orion Roush, Kate Roush, Orton
Roush, Oris Roush, Dorothy Roush
to Walter G. Tomblin, Jr., Mary
Tomblin, .87 acre, Salem.
Nita Jean Ritchie to Blauser Well
Servtce, Inc. , Right of Way, Orange
Realmark Developments, Inc to
Kroger Company, 4.97 acres,
Pomeroy.
Hester V. Blackwood to Etleen
Mees, Uoyd E. Blackwood, Vernal
E. Blackwood, Phyllis V. Handley,
Martlyn H. Poultn, Parce ls,
Pomeroy.
Emmet McCaskey, Evelyn McCaskey to Talbott OJ! and Gas Com·
pany, Right of way, Pomeroy
William E. Moms, Sandra K.
MorriS to Steven H. Eblm, Wanda L.
E blm, .993 acre, SaliSbury.

Carpenter Personals _________
Mr and Mrs Dale Jordan, Ka lle
and kara, Alta Monte Sprmgs,
Flonda, are spending some tJme
here w1th theJr parents, Mr and
Mrs Cllftun Fraley, Sr, a nd Mr a nd
Mrs . Clay Jotdan a nd other
relat tvcs
Mrs CecJI Dwe lley, Umallla ,
F lortda, ts vtsttlng here wtlh her
daug hters, Mrs Clay J ordan and
Mrs GranvJile Stout and thelf
fam1 hes.
:'vir. and Mrs. Arthur Woody ard,
Col wnbus, and Mr and Mrs . Carl
Caste r , _Dayton, ca lled on Mr a nd
Mrs Earl Starkey They were 1n the

guests of her parents , Mr and Mrs
Clay Jordan, and VISited w1th her
brother, Dale Jordan and failllly

"" ho are vaca honmg here

Mrs.

Cassell spent a week here.
Mrs. Noble Hamon has been returned to her home and ts somewhat

unproved
Mr and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree
vtsJted her brother-m-law and stsler,
Mr and Mrs Jtm Rutan, Colwnbus,
after attendmg the State Fa1r.
Mr and Mrs W1lllam Culwell,
Slas uma , Fla ., are spendmg a few
days here wtth Lhm son-m-law a nd
daug hter, Mr a nd Mrs Dwame Jordan and famtly
Nellie Duncan, Medina, spent

area for the Wnod)ard re uniOn
wh1ch was held a t the farm of the
late Ca r y a nd Myrta Woodyard
Mr a nd Mrs. Torn Cassell and
Chnstme, Ada, OhiO, were weekend

Albanv On Saturday the group we re
m Er{glewood where they vtstted
w1th another cousm, Dr Wtlham
Hanntng
They stopped Ill
Spnngfleld as they were enroute
home and called on a cousm, Paul
Combs. Mrs Duncan ret urned home
on Tuesday .
Delores Hoyd and tnotlwr Mrs
(enl Ho~d. took Mrs Fr eda Smith
and gra nddaughter. 1\.nna Stanley,
lo Edi:-;un, "heH~ the y we t t' guests of
A1111a'~ pa r ~ nt~. Mr &lt;Jnd Mr :-, L.1rry
StaniL·:-- on Sunda:-- Anrw hrtd spent
till' pi:l sl ~CL'k here ~1th her gra ndmo t he r

some tune here w1th her cousms,
Mrs Freda Sm1th, local, and Mr.
and Mrs Denver Rawlings near

September 14, 1981

Mond~y, September 14, 1981

Busilf,ess Services

Apple Grove News Notes------By Mn. Herbert R0111b
Mrs. Eileen Buck and father,
Early Roush, visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Greene at Colwnbus and
attended the Ohio State Fair, and
also visited a good friend, Mrs. Kitty
Allen Skeels on Saturday.
Ronald Russell, Edward Roush
and Dana Lewis helped Dave Roush
move his mobile home from Manchester, W. Va . to Bedford, Ky .
where Dave is now employed.
Mr. and Mrs. Woody Brown of
Fort Pierce, Fla . and Etha Warner
were dinner guests Thursday of Mrs.
Pearl NoJTts. They all went to their
shlter's, Mr . and Mrs
Hoyt
Ferguson at Point Pleasant Thursday and spent the evening. Mrs.
Ferguson ts unprovmg satisfactorily
from a recent heart attack.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
children, Mandy and Michael, spent
a week's vacation wtth Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Durst at Niles, Ohio. On
Tuesday accompanied by Chester
Durst, Melame and Kelly Reeder,
they vistted Sea World. They also
vtsited Mrs. Elsie Durst at Warren ;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Durst and Mr.
and Mrs Shennan Reeder and
family. On Wedensday evening they
went to Medina, Ohio and visited Mr.
and Mrs Tom Susmmerfield and
daughte rs, Candy, Wendy and
Crystal. On Frtday, accompamed by
the Swrunerllelds they v1s1ted the
Oeveland Zoo returning home
Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Benny Boggess have
purchased the residence of Clyde
Durst a nd moved there from Stringburg.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mr.
and Mrs . Eddie Hupp, son Jeremy,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush, Mrs.
Nancy Russell, chtldren Mandy and

dleport visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Miller Wednesday.
Bruce and Lama Hart of ColWllbus spent a week's vacation at Black
Falls, W. Va. and visited Mr. and
Mrs. Don Bell and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hart at their camp site at
Great Bend enroute home.
Tressa Hill is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Bertha Barnhart of Huntington, W, Va. vistted Mrs. Owen
Anderson Weclnesday.
Don and Lots Ball, Raymond and
Dons Hensler were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. David Hensler and
children Labor Day at Racine.

Michael, Cindy Roush and Darla
Kelly attended the Durst reunion at
the park at the Racine Dam Saturday evening and later attended an
lee cream social at the Community
Center at Baden, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
children Mandy and Michael, spent
SWlday afternoon with Mr . and Mrs.
Bob Russell at Wolf Pen.
Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Roush accompamed Rev. and Mrs. 0 . G.
McKinney of Maplewood Lake to
Athens Sunday evening a nd at·
tended church services at the
Wesleyan Methodlst Church where
the Rev. McKinney is holding
revtval servtces for a week.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wheeler, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Morris and children of
Bowling Green, Ohio, Mrs. Frankie
Foster and children of Columbus
spent a recent weekend with Mrs.
Anna Wheeler.
A family reuruon was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs Jack Ables
Sunday, Sept. 6 for the descendants
of Alice Balser and the late Henry
Balser. Attending were Mrs. ASlice
Balser, Letart; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Ables, Vickie Ables, son Michael ,
Mr and Mrs. Carroll Balser of
Mansfield ; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Balser, son Roger, and Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Miller, all of Tuppers Pla1ns;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ables and Mr
and Mrs. Lanry Ables, aU of Colunr
bus.
Mr and Mrs. Herbert Roush were
visttors at Point Pleasant Tuesday.
Mr Roush cons ulted his doctor a t
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Mr. and Mrs Dorsa Parsons
vis1ted Mrs. Jessie HusseU at
Pleasant Valley Hospital Sunday.
Mrs. Hussell had heart surgery.
Mr and Mrs . Jeff Miller of Mid-

WANTED TO BUY

(Pomeroy Scrap
lron&amp;' Metall
Top pn ces paid for auto
bodies, scrap iron and
metals.
t
mile
west
of
Fatrgrounds on Old R:t.
l3.
Mon.·Fn 8:30 to 4:00
Aller Aug. 3
P h. 992-6564
8 30-1 mo pd

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex-

Mr. a nd Mrs. Barney Randolph of
Indianapolis, Ind . were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Srruth, Sr
Mr. and Mrs Dorsa Parsons spent
Sunday evenmg wtth Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Mugrage a nd sons a t Oak

tens! ve remodel·
in g.
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph.99:l.·J58a

Grove.
Mrs . Dorothy Greathouse of
Racme vistted Mr and Mrs. Herbert
Roush recently Other guests of the
Roushes were Mrs Nancy Chapman
of Albany who also v1s1ted Mrs.
Kathryn Hunt
Mr and Mrs Edwm Cross and son
of Chillicothe, Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Cross of Collms, Ohto, Mrs. Cannen
Lanede of East Ltverpool were
guests of Mr and Mrs Andrew
Cross Wednesday and Thursday and
a !tended funeral servtces for George
Albert Hill at t11e Ewing Funeral
Home Thursday .
Fnends a nd rela t1ves of the Letart
Falls commumty were sorry to lose

a 27

Notte~

PUBLIC NOTICE
T he
CETA
programs
li STed be low are comm tft ed

ro Equal E mp loymenl Op
portunlt•e s

pl, cn nts

for

all

ap

p ar t•c•rant s and

f'mp loye es •n al face t s ot
thc1r
op er a tton s,
and
wh e r e defl c tenues dre

no ted to tak e aff tr mat1ve
&lt;lCit on to corr ecT suc:h
d c t•c ~c n c , es fn add tl ton, 1t
t5 rh e1 r poltcy to recru1 1,
ll1rc and promote 1n a ll 10b
c lets&lt;;dtcal lons
Without
rcqMd to race , color ,
rc ltqton, na l1onat ort gtn,
-:.c )( le•cep t wher e se• 1S a
bonn l1 de occup a t1 onat
qu~llii!CdtiOn)
ancestry,
rtqe , poltlt ca l a lfl lla t!Qn or
be l•e ls
or
hand• c ap
I prOVid€'d
PhYSt C UI
,,m,rat ,on doe~ not prevent
ob performa nce)
Par
tCtpnnts shall not be
d• scr tmlnated aqa1 nst on
The ba~ 1 s of c tft zens htp
11 •S th etr pollry to ta ke
rl lli rmattve ac tt on to en
s ure tha t a ll t ra tntng
programs a nd all pe rsonne l
rl Ct1 ons suc h as r ate of com
prno:;nlton be nCIII S, !r uns

l

Public Notice

Publ1c Not1ce

promottons, tay ott s
nnd ter m 1n a tt ons are ad
m 1n1stered wtth out rega rd
to race, color re ltgton,
n&lt;lt,onal or1 gt n, sex , a n
ccstry age, politiCal at
liltdtton, c •t• zensh 1p ha n
d1c r1p or be l• els
1 he
d trectors !•Sle d
t)C iow w•ll have the overall
rcs ponstbillly
of
ad
rntn lstertng the progr am
II rl prog ram parltC ipant or
&lt;lPP it ca nt lee ls he / s he ha s
been d1scrtm tnated agatnst
1n emplo yment s.eek.ng
f'mptovmen t a nd t o r
tr a tntnq wtl h these agen
CICS, he/ st1 e shou ld 1rn
medta le ly c ontnct th e
EE O/ Comp la• nt Oft 1cer
ltSIE'd to pu rsue the proper
dtscrtmtnat ,on comp la.n l
proce.-J ure
Oh ' o
Co nf e re nce o f
Teamste rs Serv 1ce Bureau
Na nc y
Al bert Pul eo
Proqram Otrec lor
Jonn Joy ce, EEO/ Com
pta 1nt Offi cer (2 16) 861
1456

The M1am1 Val ley
J a cque
She l e y,
E)(ec utt ve Dtrec tor
fhomas
Putnam ,
E E 0 / Compl(ltnt Otft cer
(513) 298 2900

tcrs

Hom e
A SS0&lt;1ilt10n o f

Butlders

Dayton a rd

r----------------------~

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savel II

- - --'P,-u,b.,h-cc Not• ce

Ha ncock Coun ty E m
ploy me n! and Tra1n1ng Ser
VIC E:' S
L a rry
E
Mu sse r ,
E)(ec uttve Dtrec tor
Pame l a
D ya r ,
EEO ; Comp la tnl Offi ce r
( 419 J 423 2qso

Shn t on K Mount
Dcfe ndanl
Case

No

17938

NOf! CE BY
PUBLI CA f i ON
10
Shnron K \Nilson
forme rly Shnron K Mount

ln st known address 1100
South Oakwood Avenue,
De trotT, Mtch•Qan presen T
aodrcss unk nown
You are hereb y nottl 1ed
Thill you hrl vP been na med
Dave y Env tro nm en ta l n de fe ndan t tn a legal ac
Serv tces
110n entil led Wtllturn R
Rt c ha rd
Abb.ptl, Wil so n
Pl,l ln ttll
vc.,
Progr.Jm D1r ec tor
ShMon
K Wil son tormerly
Dav td Staats, EEO/ Com
plat o! Off tcer (2 16) 673 9511 ~hnron K Moun! Deten
dclnt Tt11s ac t1o 11 t1.=ts bee n
R 10 Grande Co ll ege
, ss q ncd cnse No 119 J 8
Dav td Black, Proqram 1 1
rllld IS pf' nci tng In The CourT
D1rector
Ro n a ld
E&lt;"sley , at Common Plc,1 s of Mc 1gs
, Ponwory
OtHo
E EO / Compla •nf Offi ce r County
(614) 245 5353
4 ~1 611
Th e ob 1ect ot the com
Ho usecrew 1nc
Plr11n 1 tS The ob t,11 n1nq ol rl
R 1C k Jone s, Program d tvo r c c nnd th r IN
D1rector
m .n,l lt on ot n mnrr 1 nqc
R 1c k Jones , E EO/ Co m
r nnlr,l c t bCIW('f'rl lh£1 Pc1 (
platntOfflc er (6 14 l 633 1487
Ttf' S ,111d !lit' '=&gt;C' Itl crlcnt 0 1
(9) 1tl , ll c
The • pr o per!,; r•Q illS at tt1 r

IN fH E CO URfOF

COM M O N PLEAS ,
Mf IG~ C OUN fY . O H IO

W1lso n

R

Pl .=~tn lttf

"

Shnron

K

r-----------.,
Check Thl's Dutl.

Prinled Paltern

Public Not1ce
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not rce IS hereby g1ven
tha t on Saturday, Sep
tem ber 19th, 1981, at 10 00
am a public sa le will be
he ld at 105 Umon Avenue,
Pomeroy, Oh iO, to sell for
c ash the following
collate rat ·
1980 Chevrolet Monza.
Sen at No 1R07VA7177610 ,
1979 Plymouth Volare
Sen a I No H L29D9B269230,
and
1976 Ford Ptnto, Seria l
No 6X11Y11877 3
The Farmers Bank and
Sav •n gs
Company,
Pome roy , Oh10 , reserves
the n gh t to btd af fh 1S sale,
and to wtfhdraw fhe above
veh iCles pnor to sale. Further, The Farme rs Bank &amp;
Sav1ngs Company reserves
the r tght to retect any or all
b•dssubmit1ed .
Furthe r, vehiCles are
sold tn 1he cond1tion they
are tn w•th no expressetl or
1mpl1ed warrant res g1ven
(9) 11 , 14, 15, 16, 17 , 18, 6tc

p ,)r!t('S

-

PubltC NOtiCe
-

Wtlltn rn

PubliC Notice
JH flny s to r nnswe r wtll
commence on tha t date
1n case ot your la 1lure to
,1nswcr
or
o t hcrw tse
rPspo nd iiS requ 1red by the
Ohto
Rult• s 0 1 ( IVtl
Proccc1urc
!he
fin a l
he;mnq on rh 1s ma He r will
lw tre 1ct ;1t1cr hte ex p1r nt 1on
ot JM d.w s nttrr The last dny
ot puhl• r .lt ,on at lht s nott re
~&gt;r &lt;~',soon thrrf' ntt cr ns can
IJ' c..c hr dui Pd by thf' Cour t
LMry ~pc n cer ,
Clerk ol Court
nt Mf' tq sCoun tr O h 1o
K Ht 11 ) ,J 31 c!f! 1 14

Rad tator Spec1allst
NATHAN BIGGS
3S Yrs. Exper.ence

BARNETrS
WELD SHOP

You rlrr rf'Qu, rcrl I n nn
r,w r-r lh r' rnmpl clln l Wtlh1n
JH d.ws rt ltc r lhl
losT
jluiJit Crl l• on ot lt1t S nolt Cf'
wh•c t1 w tlf be publtshcd on
• t ' t .lch we ek to r St&gt;o sur
C('S':, iVf'

Wilson to rrner ly

Wf'f'k S

f hc

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk

Ptl l11t(Aiton wtll be mclde on
)f'p tembc r &lt;1 1~81 n nd ttw

...

"Tha-t 's the dumbest optmon I
ever heard 1 Wily don't you let
me put you m the undec1ded

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh . 45769

~.: olumn ~"

E. MAIN

Phone---------------Pr1nt one word tn each
space below Each ~n ­
trf•al or group of f1gures
counts as a wo rd Count
name a nd add r ess or
phone number d used
You' ll get better resu lts --+--+-4--'--t---i
tf you desc nbe tull y,
g•ve pn ce The Senftne l
reserves the r1ght to - --+--+--lf---+--t
c lass d y, edt l or re 1ec t
any ad Yo ur ad Will be
put •n the p rope r -~:_~~~~':f~~~~'j
c ta sstf•ca t• on II you'll
check the prope r box
These cash rates
be low
tnc lude dtscount

--+..C.:-+--l--+---!

)Wanted
)For Sa le
! Announcement
)For Rent

2

17
18
19 .
20
21

3

22

1

'5
6
7

8 - -- --9
10 - - - - -- --

11

12
13 - - - - - - -14 - - -- - - - 15.
16

23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31.

32

Real Estate
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS
t - (~ rd ol T hAnk s
1- l nM e mortam
3- Anrtoun ce m cnh
, - H app y Ad\
• - Lo~la nd

Fo"nd

1- VardSollt

1- Put:tttc ~.li l t
I AlJdt O
n
• - Wiin!ed !o Bur

992-2259

SERVICES"
- Adclons and
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbtng and
electnal work
(Free E sttma1es)

PRICED TO ENJOY - Cut.," r-oom garage apart
men r wtth 2 full gar a&lt; SOLD ; tor age bulld tng and
a level tot Would r _.... d n1ce renta l property
$15,500 00
MIDDLE POl"~
- PENDING .e has a tan
lasl tc mlen&lt;SALE
Conventent
$15,900 00

SALES

S 1-

H 0 u Se llotd Gooch
52 - CB TIJ , Radoo EQt.topmen1
B - Ant oques
S&lt;I- MoH Mer c h,.ndo~e
B - Bu tlclon g SLtpplt(&gt;~
~It- Pl'h lor Sol ie
H - MusoC.lllnSirumenl

SERVICES
11 - HelpW ;,.n!t&gt;d
11- So luallon Wan It'd
u - &amp;v st .us Tr•m •n9
I S- Sc::hool~ I n !&gt;lru c '''"

h - Rad.o TV
I C8 R ~ lhl~r
11- W• nled To Do

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

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

F n.J &lt; I ~

S9~

For Sot le or Tr otdl'

&amp;

Vegt&gt;tilble~

6t- F"rm £q ut Pm en l
61- Wantt&gt;cl 10 Buy
63- Low e\ toc k
S• le
•~ - H .l\11 Gratn
65- Setd &amp; Fertoltl•r

O ppor lu noT ~

12- Mon l.&gt;y to loiln

11- Prole H tOil&lt;ll
Se rvtc e~

eTRANSPORTATION

•REAL ESTATE

11 - Au)(ll iOr Sate

J 1- Hom ts fGr Sill'

n - Tr uck ~

lor Sa le
ll- Van i &amp; • W D
14- Molorcvclu
H- Bo.ts a Molo n
16- Auto P.l rU I

H o m e~

lor &lt;;;~ t e
JJ- F.ums lor Sa te
l4- Busoneu Butldrno;n
H - LOI!&gt; &amp; AcrtiQt
R('ll l E !&gt; lo!IP

Sl-

A cceuone~

W,tlll('(l

37 - Reanors

Want-Ad Adve-rt•smg
Oeactlmes
Monrli'ly 1 00 on 5Arura.t'f
I"'

M

the dily be lore publtc•tton
Sunday) 00 PM Frod1y

onf' da., on sert ton
three dav msertoon

RelaKed, slender, even easy to
sew (no shoulder or wa1st seams)
Now a d1ess tS des1Qned that s
e¥erythmQ you want for thts
m1nute and on and on
Pnnted Pattern 4886 M1sses
SJZes 8, 10. 12 14 , 16, 18, 10
SJZe 11 (bust 34) ta kes 2~ yards
60-Jnch labnc
$2.00 lor each patte••· Add ~
lor each pattern lor postqe

handllna. Send to:

Anne Adomt

PaHom Dopl

'l

1 l
The Daily Sentinel
243 West I 7 Sl,
Yilt, NY

SERVICES
H0 mr I mPrDvl'menh
8"2- P it.tmbtng &amp; HU itrl'il

11 -

In

u - E•c~va ttng

10011 . Print NAME, ADDRESS,

114 - E ieCt nc;a! &amp;

ZIP, SIZ£, and STYLE NUMBER.

Rt!rtg~ri'lloon

H1uhng
U - M H Rep.a1r
17- Upl'loluery
~~- Ge neral

Rates and Other Information
IS words
Is words
upto ts wc.aras
Up to
Up to

r..,--fh,_ -/1.1--~

an~

71- Auto Repo11r
/1- Ca mptng EQutpmtl"lt

tu es day thru Frtday 1 oo

SIZES 8-20

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

• FINANCIAL

36

Phone
1-(614)· 992·3325

SJ 00
S4 00

S•• davsmser toon
( A Yl!r~ge 4 wordi per ltnel
Mob1le Hom P l all'~ ~nd Y.lrd sales ue IICCe pl ~d onl y w11n usn
wllh order H cen t (h.lrge for ilds carrvll"l!l Bow Number tn CArt! ol
1 h e Sen11ne1
Tf'l e Publisher resl'rves ll"le roghlto ed tt or n~!t'C t .any • ds d eemed
OO ,t&gt;cltonoill The Pu blt sn er Wol t not be rf!PQnl oblt&gt; tor morl' 111;an one
tn correct o n~e rttCJn

'"'

Busy woman7 Worhtng woman?
Dress lor less. spend less t1me,
wOJk- choose a wardrobe from
our NEW fAll-WINTER PAnERN
CATAlOG Coupon for Free $2
pattern mSJde. Send $1 50
All CfWTIOOIS •. $2.00 IKlr

135-16 DafiiiiHI Clatfrll

134-14 Quldt ~Ills

133-fasfllOJ'l """' QllltlnJ

130-S-IIn-Sba 31-54i
Books and C,uiog - add 504
each for poslage and handlmf.

NEW LISTING - Near
coa l mrnes and Salem
Cente r New 3 bedroom
lrame home Ba1h, niCe
c arpettng,
e lec .
baseboard heat and 4 8
acres fronttng on 2
roads Only $39,000
15S9 SQ. FT. - 3 yr old
ra nch 3 bedrooms, 1'12
baths {ceram1cl, fur
nt s hed krtchen , '"
clud•ng diShwasher,
central a1r and heat .
Over 3 acres, Ohio
Power Asktng S57,000.
7 LG. ROOMS - Bnck 3
or 4 bedrooms, central
atr and heat, 11h baths,
copper plumbing, solid
oak floor! , carpeting,
porches,
basemenft
garage with s1orage
011er. Businessman's
yard S59, 900
MODERN &amp; 3 ACRES
- Near new bridge, 18
yrs old, 3 bedrooms, l'l2
bafhs. full basement
with garage in, equipped birch kitchen, with
stove and refrtoerator _2
porches and 1011ely view
of the Ohio River .
Asktng 565,000.
.52 OF AN ACRE - Excellent 3 n1ce size
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
full basement, central
a1r &amp; gas furnace . Birch
kitchen with s1ove and
refrigerator. Nice c:er·
peling, famlly room encj
copper
pi u mbl ng ,

Guysville, Oh
Phone 614-662·3821
Author. led John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm
Equ1pment
Dealer
FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS/SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
1-No. a.ao Diesel Ford
Tractor- w/Cab
!-Model 275 0Jesel
M. F.
. ...J . I'
1-Model479 Hay Bind
N.H.
7-3 lie

R UTLANO - Remodeled 2 hPrir,............. '" - ne With new
cabt nets. ne~ SALE PENDING : Iosed troot
porch
K1tc
.... .vvm, 11111ng room
S2Ul00 00

A BIG LOT w 1th 1'/:.;r s1ory home Mode r n ktt
chenette, front and rear porch, and 2 bedrooms
$2'/,900 00.
HAPPY HOLLOW Rr
prox . 15 acres land 11 S

0

&amp; SERVICE

Oh.

16 ACRES- F1ve Pc · '
Water and electr•c
ava•lable. Stream, SOLD md some rtm ber
$15,000.00.

'

.

/42 -1003

'48•

'

, CARPET
W/Paddlng
Installed

Starflng~

THIS 5 BEDROOM In excellent condi!Jon, can be
yours. Neor the new ·"·o
• •-L D I has n1ce kitchen,
spacious living ro
osed sun porch,
basement. Nice lot. S3.,uuu.oo.

S

LARGE TW"s"A.~L-E..
bedrooms. V
$20,900.00.

p'

ENDING 'g lots and 4
.
:&gt;r Chtldren
.

LOST Blac k and white
Chihua . Lost on Th ird Ave ,
Gallipolis Please call 446
1211

CALL:

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614·992·2181
For Farm and
Home Dehvery of
Gas
Diesel
Heattng Oil.

PRICED RIGHT.
CALL lODAY!

43 ACRES SALE PENDING JOSStbiltttes

$20,000.00.

T,UPPERS Ps' a·L
·· P -ENDING ne w•th car·
port on nlce1 ,.. 1
. . J.OO

R.C~S.

'REALJY INC•.'·

.,

3

'5

Now$J~:::

:RUTLAND' FURNITURE

BILL CHILDS, Mgr.
Pli0nt99H312
Ohio

$75,000.

and up

-GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy Now&amp; savei:i-$6 Per Yard
'
~
'
I
'
25 rolls· carpet. In stock to pick from;
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. GOod selection Roll Ends Rem·
ri,a ntil $2.50 up.- Grass carpet $4.99 yd.
Green and Brown.
,
.
Drive A LiHle- Save A Lot
.
.
.

Stately Bride Home on Rutland St. ln
Middleport. They lust &lt;!,on't l!¥11d them \ like 1his
anymore. control heat and, alr t""dlt onlng. 7
room-3 bedroom$, 2 ~alhS, basement, garage,
large private tot, SSO,OC!O '

Main St•.

"'

Lost and Found

At1n Patnc k Allan Found
wh1te
Samoyd
name
Snowbal l Call 446 9476 or
446·4549

RUBBERBACK Mc G~~~~:pet
Cash·n· Corry
(E•Ira Good)
1 Roll Each
Reg. 516.95 sq.
' ' ~~:~· Blue, Installed v~.
95
ycl.
sq. yd.

,L7o,.

G1veaway to good home 4
month old Cocker-Terrier.
Fema le puppy 238 1/ 2
Walnut Sl , Middleport,
OhiO.

Lost Keys on metal c lip
Vlncm1ty of 2nd &amp; Spruce,
Gallipolis. Please call 2455474.

- LARGE ' SE(ECTION .OF REMNANTS

llf2 STORY FRAME .,$
... OLD s, 2 bedrooms. N•ce
rental property. S16,90

Ca ll 256 1932 after 4·00

LOST TOM CAT Whtte
with spots of black &amp;
brown, 7 mos old 34
Mad ison Ave Call 446 2839.
REWARD'

General

3-4 BEDROOM HOME In excellent condtt1on New
furniture goes wlth house. NIce lot . $42,600 oo

Two tiger kittens, 6 wks
old, litter tratned . Call 446
4693.

6

Rutland -Furniture Carpet Shop

72 ACRES - vaca SOLD Naler a nd electnc
available, near R'
utld
subdrv•de
$25,375.00.

Kittens 6 wks. old, 4 male
and 1 female, 111ter tra1ned
Call 256 6368 or 256 6056 .

Free krndl1ng wood you
haul Contact Wayne Kincard or Don Double. 6755150 or 675·2450.

NEW LISTING - 1980
Lrbe rt y, 2 bedroom
mob1 le ho m e. 14'x52',
can rent lot
Only
!9500 00
PRICE REDUCED Bradbury Road , leve l
one acre lot, now
14500 00
LAND CONTRACT R•ver Vtew on Front
Str eet, two story home,
remode led, new fur
nace
$4,000 00 down
payment, wtth 10~ tn le res t
As ktn g
$26 ,500 00
PRICE REDUCED - to
$25. 000 00 on large two
story , brt ck home •n
Pome roy , tow utll•t•es
Poss1bdtly of conver ttn g
•nto two ren ta ls Owner
frnanc rng to qual1f1ed
buyer
RUTLAND
Two
story , 3 bedroom home,
wtth b•g back ya rd .
Good re nfal property .
$10,000 00
Velma Nic1nsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3111

I.

-LDlroom house w1th ap
ine floors $19,500 00

3 k•ttens, 3 mo . old Cal l
245-5804

puppies. Full blooded
Alaskran Sptiz 1 black k•tlen See at 307-lOih Sl , Pl.
Pleasant , WV

REALTY
Hobstettcr Jr
tl rok cr

Real Estate- General

446-4635.

4

l ~·orqe...,

we are now servrng all
of Me,igs Co
wi1h
Hea ting 011 , D1 ese1
Supreme,
Gasol•ne,
comlete
l•n e
of
Lubrtcants for the
farm s &amp; industry
PH. 992-3460
If long dtstance, call colfeet :
Larry E. Miller, Dealer
8-30-1 mo.

5 frying size roosters Call

1 mce puppy Call367-7743

tWantAd

OIL CO.
-- (S.OHIO)

For buld de l1very of
gasoltne, heat1ng 011 and
d•esel fuel, call Landmark ,
992 2181, Pomeroy, Oh

brtng you
extra cash
for
shopp1ng sprees

\ G£T YOIJR-..WITHA

STANDARD

Donated plano wanted The
Gu1ding Hand School is in
need of a piano. Anyone
wishing to donate, please
call 367·0102 Tax deductable Contact : Loren D
Phelps, Po
Box 14,
Cheshire, Oh 45620

2 puppoes part sheep dog

Ph . 614-843·2591
6 15 ttc

Off t ( I

Announcements

Classified Ads

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. J, Box 54

814-lmo

u.s. Rt. so East

SECLUDED AT EDGF n11= T,._ ...... - l'h story
trame home SALE PENDING .r,IJty room,
patro, 2 outbl _... ~ ... u"'-' o..,..,,ox b acres $29,500 00

Utility Buildings

Real Estate

3

$250 r e ward for
information
leadtng
to
whereabouts of black border collie with white
ma r kings . Dead or alive
Ca11614-378 6152
FOUND Tape cartridges.
Call304-882 2754
7

Oh , 44.6

Professional
Serv1ces
P 1a no tun1ng and repa1r.
Love your ne1ghbor tun e
your P1ano 8111 War d,
Wards Keyboard 446 4372,
Gall tpolls
23

7 k11tens . Call446-9542

Sues from 4x6 to llx40

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992·3282

BOGGS

BRADBURY - RemOdeled, 3 bedroom home wtth
r
G., and doors,
new Vtnyl Stdtnn .......
new plumbinSALE PENDIN
Is, new ap
pi ranees and .. o, t-~~nng. Ntce yard and a ga rden
area $35,000 00

Spec1a1· Cold Waves S15.
Helen' s Beauty Shop 675
2222 .

Sues
" From lOxJO''
SMALL

SIGN UP FOR
Fall Classes In :
•TAP
•JAZZ
•LADIES JAZZERCISE

Ill

No hunting or trespass~ng
on our land Marie Myers &amp;
Mane Beave r .

Farm Buildings

BARBARA'S
SCHOOL
OF DANCE

V. C. YOUNG
992-6215 or 992 73r4
Pomeroy, Oh _

NO HUNTING Allowed,
day or n1ght on any land on
Cheshtre Twp. &lt;Gallla Co )
owned by J Arthur Evans

ALL STEEL

Rac~ne,

Ave
rI~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~~
7172 , Ga ll•pol• s.
7
Yard Sale
11
He lp Wanted

4,___ _..:G
=iv,_,e"a"w"a'"yc___ _
ANY PERSON who has
anything to gtve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other lhlng for
sale may place an ad In thts
586 S &amp; W newest L frame column There wrH be no
now in stock. Spring Val ley charge to the adver11ser.
Trading Co., Spring Val ley
Plaza, 446 8025
7 kttlens. Call446-4877.

5 21 lie

EUGENE LONG
Free Esttmates
Call Collect
Ph. 143-3322
7-13-2 mo pd -

CARPENTER

SPECIAL SALES New
never been sho1, display
models-salesman samples.
Specral pnce on th1S group
Bear Whitetatl
Hunter ,
$69.14. Bear LTD Polar
$129.95
Brown
Bear,
$149 95. Bear Min 1 Mag,
$49.9S. Kodiak speucal,
$99 95.
Spring
Valley
Trading co., Sprtng Valley
Plaza, 4.46-8025.

Ph. 992-7201

Roofmg/Gutter
Remodeling
Ser11ing Your Area tor
20 Years

"YOUNG'S

Announcemen1s

SWEEPER and sew1ng
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half m1!e up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446-02'14 ..

Backhoe
Excavat1ng
Sept1c Systems
Water , Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
eDump Truck
• Trenc her
L1censed &amp; Bonded

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS
·
Siding

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT - N•'"" ......... · .•. -- -.00 ft lot and
a 4 room tSALE PENDING 2 storage
bu11d1ngs, '=-"'' Cl'.:::l'=• t.drpon, and a fir epl ace
$14,900 00 .

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOY ME NT

31- MoDde

e RENTALS
41 - Houses for Renl
42- Mobol!' Hom l!s
lor Rent
U - Ap•rtm e n ls tor R£nl
4~ - l=urntthed Room s
U - Space for Rent
H - W,.I"ltCd to Ren l
48- Eq u opment lor Rent
4• - t=or Leil\ l'

4- G•veo~~way

33 .

34 .
35

General

•
•
•
•

9 4· 1 mo

• A ..

Address---------

Custom k•1chen s a nd appl.ances ,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbm , electnc, and
heatmg

307 Wetzgall St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

3

4-1 mo

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

FRANCES HEWETSON

_, _,

lie

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Now Taking Enrollment For Fall
Day or Evening
Clases.
· ' ' • '

.... "' . ·-· "

Money to Loan

FHA VA Conventlal Hom e
Loans, Co lu mbus F 1rst
Mortgage Co , 463 Second

992-2156

- ' I l l • " o ' I 0 0 - . - . 0 I 0 ... 1 0 f'

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph, 992·2772

B-20·tfc

22

675-1333

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Stor-m Windows
•Replacement
Windows

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992·6011
992-7656

S180 Per Week Part Ttme
at
Home
Webster ;
Amenca's foremost dtc
t•onary company needs
home workers to update
local ma11Tng 11sts All
ages, experrence
un necessary Call 1 716 842 ·
6000 ext 6671

In Mason County

Aluminum Siding

Gas line-D•tches
Water Ltne Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Cert1hed
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·7560
17· 111c

MAKE
$500 - $100 0
WEEKLY 1n a small part
time bus mess of your own
CillT J1m Marfm 1-800-238·
5329

In Me1gs County

446·2342

J&amp;L
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

tlti/

FRAN'S
CERAMICS

EVERYBODY
Shops the
WANT AD WAY

3 11

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water·Sewer-E lectnc

Located at Ma plewood
Lake 1n Rac.ne.
- 9 2 1 mo

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

-

7 5 lie

614

992- Middleport
Pomeroy
985-Ches1er
343- Porttand
247-Letart Falls
949-Racine
742-Rutland

In Galha County

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free s1dtng
est•mates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.
No SundaY. Calls

"Special Rat•s F IH'
... colrt l11undr ..,
... Rental Properlte~
..,. Ap~ House Owners
.-'MObile Homl' P,lriU

Ph. 949-2285

APPROX . 12 ACREe:., .... - - OWN - W1th severa l
nr ce places to butld o SOLD rler , also has an olderhome $8,500 00

1,l S1

PHONE 992-2156

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Public Not1ce
thereby A hea r mg on rhe
applicat.on wtll be held
Sept 24, 1981 at 10 00
o'clock A.M
Persons
know1ng a ny reasons why
the appl ic ation should not
be granted should appear
and 1nform the Court . The
Court 1s located at Me rgs
Coun1y
Courthouse,
Pome roy , Oh1o

So you th1nk WE ar-e not sellmg pr-operty?

WANT AD INFORMATION

Wnte your own ad and order by mat l w1th th1s
coupon Ca nce l your ad by phone when you get
res ults Money no t relundab le

608

PH.

LAFF- A· DAY

• Steel
• Alumtnum
• Casting • Tra11er H1T
ches •Metal Fabr1cat1ons.
Monda y- Fnday
4 p.m . to 11 p m.
All Day Saturday

Re.1 t Estate.: Gelliril -

-- -- -

985·3561
PARTS ljND SERVICE
ALL ~AKES
•Washers
eOISPOSats
• Dryers
• O•Sftwuners
• RoilngeJ
• Hot Watl'r Tanks

ll
Bus1ness
_ __OJ&gt;l&gt;Ortunity

MCIQS Co Area Code

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

For Fatf l'r\'ICe

5 I 1Jc

were held Thursday at Letart Falls
Cemete ry

TOM HOSKINS
Y4Y-'J. 16U or YY2 -612S
7-5 ltc

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

PPLIANCE SERVIC~
Call Ken Young

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Mason Co., W Va .
Area C,ode 304
67S-Pt. Pleasant
458- Leon
576- Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Ha ven
89S- Letart
937- Bulfalo

h

t

~eep Th l~d fcw Fui •re Ref!!.ence

MOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. '1'12-2174

rt:!cent Sunday m a car acctdent.
Funeral services and mlennent

(9114, ltc

Call742·3195

SMITH NELSON

Gallla Co. Area Code
614
446--GallJpohs
367-Cheshire
388-Vlnton
145-R •o Grande
156-Guyan 01st.
643--Arabia D1st

And Home Matntenance
• Rooting of all types
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
elO Yrs. experience

Let George Mtller
check your presenf electncal system.
Res1dent1.11
&amp; Commerc1al

1 mo

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
Fr-om the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator

one of lhClr promment cttizens a

Publtc Notice
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ESTATE OF JOHN M.
GRUESER , OECEASEO
Case No. 23533
PUBLICATION
OF NOTICE
TO ALL PER SONS IN
TERESTED
IN
THE
ESTATE OF JOHN M
GRUESER, DE CEASE D,
LATE OF
BOX 48,
SYRACUSE.
OHIO,
MEIGS
COUNTY
PROBATE COURT , CAS E
NO 23533 An appl•ca t•on
has bee n fried ask.ng to
relieve the estate from ad
m.nrstratron, say.ng that
the asse ts do not exceed
$ 15, 000 and the cred rtors
will not be pre tudlced

For all of your wtring needs.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-7

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

SERVICE

SCRAP

Small investment, large ·returns, Sentinel Want Ads
P ubli c

Ohio

Yard Sale

Tues. Sept. 15 9:30AM till?
Tappan electric range,
whirlpool refrigera1or, 3match•ng lighted display
cases. Set of (4) 15' chrome
wheels &amp; rims . Fireplace
blower- insert, assorted
women &amp; mens clothes.
Located on Rl 35, 400 II
past MitChell Rd .
Two family yard sale
Baby, boys, teens, ladles,
mens clo1hing, other i1ems.
Behind Johnson's Market,
1 Henderson. September 16
and 17.
Several yard sales. Staffhouse Road, Pt. Pleasant,
next to Fairgrounds. Watch
for signs. Toys, children's
clothes, tools. go cart
frame, coats, pli!!ypen,
port-o-crib, dressing table,
carrier, men's suits, tadle's
clothes. Tuesday ond Wed·
nesoay, September 15· 16. 9

to&lt;.
-;:herokee Homemakers
Garage Sole Thurs . &amp; Frld.
Sept. 17 &amp; 18. lOAM. 1609
Mayo Or. New Haven,
WVA.
&amp;

R10 Gra nde Co llege ts
curren tl y seektng ap
p!icants tor a Heavy Equrp
ment Operatmg Engineer
Apprent1cesh1p T ratntng
Program
Th1s tra1 ning
program 1S to be CETA
T1Ti e VI I funded by the
State of Oh10 Appltca nts
must be economtcally
2 yard sales Sa me nergh diSadvantaged and have
borhood Sept 14 18 9 ?
been une mpl oyed for at
Warren Connolly and least 7 days to m eet CETA
Eunice Gilland r-eside nce, T1tle VI I eligibility In
Osborne Rd., jus1 off Sue
teres ted person should con
cess Rd Sewing machine, ta c t therr local Oh1o
black and wh1te TV
Bureau of E mploy ment Ac
clothes, n1ce g1rls clothes, tton Agency for further
used c ouch and charr , det ar ls
Equal
Em
needs recover ed
ployme nt Opportuntty Employ er

YARD SALE Sept . 16· 18,
SR 554 1'12 mi. from
Cheshire, 9-6 8' camper top
&amp; camper, sleeps 6, Window
fa n, dishes, cloth •ng, all
s1zes, Avon doll s, drapes,
mise items

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Neals

Auct•on Hogsett,
Rt 2 E very Sal 7 00
PM
(C o nsignm e nt s
taken) , ( wt ll buy furnitur-e )
Lonnie Neal367-7101.

GALLIA Cleantng ants
Rent A Ma1d Servrce Inc,
Free Estrm ates, bonded,
msured , phone 245 9234
Cleani ng by the week, mon
1h or contractua l
PIANO TUN IN G &amp; Repa tr ,
Lane Da nr e ls 7.42 2951 or
992 2082 Have you hugged
your pta no today?

HARPER Adult Care Cen
fer provtd•ng the personal
care your e lderly need tn a
Secretary pa rt trme 614 home like atmosphere
992 6009 For Wednesday Vacanc•es now ava ll1 ble
afternoon a pp!t cat •ons
call304 675 1293

WVA

wanted to Buy

lnformaf •on on ALASKAN
and
OV ER SEAS e m
ploym ent
Excellent m
come potentral Call 312
741 9780, Ext 4061

WANT TO BUY Old fur
n1ture and Antiques of all
krnds, call Kenneth Swain,
256-1967 in the evenmgs

Electr ic ia n needs work any
{ype-15 yrs exper 1ence
Ca li89S-3826

9

CASH PAID for c lea n, late
model used c ars. Smi1h
Bu rc k Pontiac, GAllipOliS,
Ohio Call446 2282.
WE BUY FURNITURE
We se ll furn1ture Sagraves
Furniture 446-4775

Needed ba bysrtter for 3
year old 304 458 1598

Person needed for Fuller
Brush tn Ma son County
area Wnte to Rt 1 Box
243, Ra venswood, WV

euymg Gold Pay.ng cash
for anythmg stamped IOK ,
14K, 18K , and dental gold
Class rmg, weddtng nngs,
watches Clarks' Jewe lry
Store, Gall1polis, 446 269 1,
Pomeroy, 992 2561

Hostesses wa nt ed for Out
chm a •d tashton show You
ca n ear n free Dutchma1d
fash1ons of your cho tce
Call co llec 1614 574 5062

Wanted to buy 400 lbs of
•lnsh Cobbler potatoes Call
446 3658 or stop at 76 Cour t

12

51.

Curent set of Encyclopedta
Britannic. Call 446-4602.
BEDS· IRON , BRAS S, old
furn11ur e, gold, St iver
dollars, wood rce boxes ,
stone jars, antrques, etc ,
Complete
household s
Wnte MD Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Oh Or 992 7760
CHIP WOOD Poles max
diame1er 14" on largest
end . $12 50 per ton Bund led
slab . $10.50 pe r ton .
Dellverd to Oh10 Pa llet Co ,
Ro c k
Spr1ngs
Rd,
Pomeroy 992-2689
Gold, silver, ster ling ,
Jewelry , rtngs, old corns 8..
cutrency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop, Middleport 992
3476.
No 1tem to large or small
will buy 1 p1ece or complete
household New, used and
ant1que. Call992 -6370
use d mOdule type color TV
for parts 992-6259

Situations Wanted

Wanted fema le to sha re
apartment w• th same 1
ch1ld accep tabl e Ca ll 245
5B35
Someone to care for me m
my home 992 2686
Elt m Resthome Care tor
hafdt capped, aged, or bed
pa t. en t
Temporary or
lrmit ed ca re Or confrnuous
home wrth us Equipped lor
wheel c harr 742 2266
Will do babys tttmg 1n my
home Ca ll 367-7292
Nurses a1d Day 1rme Ex
penenced Good referen
ces Call742 2288
Room Board for sen~r
c rt1zens
Reaso na b le
Home away from home
References Ca ll Polly 742 2266 T L C

Will car e fo r e lderly man •n
your home
Expterence
and refer ences 614 9n
5740 days or n1ghts
Will do babys ttftng tn my
own home weekdays L•ve
1n Mtddlepor t area along
RT 7 Call614-992 3872

Scrap meta ls, battenes,
rad1ators, Qt nseng , yellow
root, and m e rchandtse
broker-ing Yarper Halstead Salvage Company, 300 1.~3.__ _ _::ln;:cs,_,u,_,r_,ac:;n:oc-ce_ __
Eleventh Street. 675 5868 SA NDY AND BEAVER In
Also Flea Ma rke t open su rance Co has offered
da11y.
Ope n Monday
serv1ces for f1re 1nsurance
Friday 1 5 pm
coverage tn Gallra Count y
tor a 1most a cent ury
Farm , home and personal
property coverages are
avatlable to meet in
d111 1dua l needs Contact
Ray Wedemeyer, agent
11
Help Wanted
Phone 388 8249
$40,000·$50,000 Per Year
IN
Nattonal Company lookrng AUTOMOBILE
tor Distributors in 16 West SUR A NCE been can
L os t
your
Vtrginia Count1es Par t celled?
time or full time Call Bob operator's Lrcense? Phone
'1'12 2143
McNeilll 800·238·S329
Heavy
equipment 18
WantedtoOo
mechanic . Some weldmg, "'--- -====='-mln1mum 5 yrs . ex Expenenced baby s•tter
perlence. Must have tools Will babv sit in my home,
and truck Call 61-4 274-2301 all shifts, large yard. Call
446 8194 .
Reliable woman to baby si1
in my home 15 hrs. per Electrician needs work a ny
week tor baby PhOne 446· type-15 vrs expenence
Call895-3826.
7571
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right owoy and get on
the ellglbllily list at 9922156 or '1'12·2157 .

Brick and Bloc k laymg,
f1rep1aces , all work
guaranteed Call379-2123
Will do baby silting ln my
home. 446·3186.
Would like 1o babysit for
children 2 and over in my
home. Ref. Phone 446·3354.

Local firm needs qualified
front - end
alignment
mechanic Full·tlme work TV service call s Call 992wlth paid vacation and
other benefits. Guaranteed 2034 Also used color TV for
salary, plus commission. sale .
High volume bay with com·
puterlted alignment equip· Will do babys i1tmg m my
ment. Schooling available. home Have references
Must hove own tools. 675·5618.
References needed. Send
application to P .O. Box 534, NEED help in tobacco?
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769.
I Todd 304-675-4828.

Ortlllng water we ll s Com
merc1al a nd Domest tc
Test holes Pumps Sa les
a nd Servtce 304 895 3802

Real Estate
31

Homes tor Sale

NE W CA BI N or smal l
ho me, com pl ete ly fur
ni shed, $3900 Ca ll-446 0390
New 3 bdr house wrt h
ga rage and full basement
S45,000 Call 446 0390
BY OWNER 4 bdr, split
level , ll v.ng roo m &amp; dminQ
room combmatron, eat 1n
krtc he n, Jg fam 1I Y r m, 2
1/2 baths, located 1n Ta ra
Esta tes, Clu b house and
pool pr1vdeges, $75,000
frrm Kyger Creek School
D1strtct Shown by appt
on ly ca ll446 9403
For sale on land contract
House and 2 mob 1le homes
loca ted a t Bulav lll e Wd l
se ll se parately or together
Ca ll 446 3437
FOR SALE BY OWNER l
bd r home located at 123
Garfte ld Ave 2 acres run5
from SR 7 to Oh1 o Rrver
Full basement, f1nishe d
rec room, 2 f1rep1aces , 7
112 baths, tn ground con
cre te pool, all new carpet,
new pa .nt tnS tde and out
Will cons tde r your home or
mob1f e home 1n tr ade
Owner w•ll cons tde r f1nan
ctng at 10% APR after
reasonable down payment,
'' tnferested call 446 1546
for an appo tn tment
In Tara Estates 7rn1,
cedar rus ttc sty le ra nc h
2100 ft of l1vtng space 3
bdr , 2 baths den, d 1n1ng
room, k1tchen1 l1v1 ng room ,
foyer en tr acne, 2 car
garage Wt th au ro opener,
fron t &amp; back pat10, heated
dn veway, e lectriC heat,
cent ra l atr Call367-0284
For sa te by ow ner , 3 bdr ,
large lr v1 ng room, full
baseme nt, centra l arr, ex
cond , on nrce flat lot.
located tn Syracuse, M1d\
50's Ca ll a lter 5, 992 5870 oo
256 6,77
FARM tor SA L E by
OWNER 2 m1 North of
Wrlksv tlle, 100 acres, 80
trllable, far m house, out
burtdtngs, flow mg stream,
surrou nded by good roads,
good la nd , S50,000 cash or
land contract 10 per cent
down balance a t 10 per cent
•nleresl Ca ll 606-266 4654
after 4PM and a nytrme
Saturday
2 story bnck, 994 4th Ave

Fully equ• pped kttc hen,
form a l drn1ng , 2 or 3
b e dro oms,
ca rpet1ng
through out Storm wtn
dows, gas furnac e, and cen
tra l a tr Assumable loan at
9 l /2% $40,000 446 7448
53 1 4fh Ave ~ bdr, central
atr &amp; neat1ng, large gar
de n Ftnancmg available
M•d$40's Call446-2158
Life Estate. Farm, proper
ty va lue,$.45,250.00
L1fe
estate value $8,701 58 Ca ll
992 -6747 evenings

'

3 bedroom !'louse, 2 acres, ~
baths. tam•IY room Ful'
basement, ga rage
949-'
2079.

4 bedroomn near sc hool &amp;'·
hOsplral $27,000 '1'12-6060. '
4 rooms and bath. CheaJ)..
down pay ment, land con-:
trac t John Sheets, 3 112'
mile south Middleport. Rt:
7

Sandhill Road, PI, Pl. , 3'
bedrooms, 1 1h baths~
double garage. Owner w11 1
finance . Immediate oc 1
cupancy . 675·5817,
•

- -- - - -.
•

•

'

I

),

•

�Page-8-:The Daily Sentinel
31

HOmes lor.Sale

41

HOUSE·Moadowbrook Ad·
dillon. 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement. JO.I-675·
1542.
~

ACRES, nice 5 room
house, 2 bedroom mobile
home, gOOd water supply,
located

Call

in

Leon. S3S,OOO .

304-675· 3030 or

31

reduced

on

all

trailers .
TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES .
Gallipolis. CALL 446 7572.
CLEAN USEO MOBI LE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUAL I TY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST , GALLI POLIS, RT .
35. PHONE 446 3868 or 446 ·
7274 .
For Ren t or Sa le 1979 14x70
mobi le home in Middleport
on large lot. Unfurnished,
range, refrigerator. cen tral air . Owner will help
finance with suitable down

payment or rent $250 mo .
pl us utilities pl us $250 . dep .

Call 992-6173 or 446·0963

2 bedroom bottom apt. fur·

Furnished house In Mid·
dleport.
References &amp;

nished . Must pay electric

only . Adults only . No pets.

deposit required. 992· 2606
or 992·2917 .

Deposit

air, econi cal utilities. Ex
ce llenf condition, priced to

required. 2 2110 miles out

Sma l l furn i shed house in
the city , adults only . Call

Available. 1 bedroom apt.
for rent . Contact Village

446·0338.

Manor Apts .• Middleport.
992·7787 .

SEPTEMBER ' S do it mon ·
th for homebuyer s at Fren ·
c h Ci ty Mobile Homes, 266
Upper
River
Rd .,
Ga l lipolis . 446-9340
Buy
during Sep t ember and get
ce ntra l air or wa sher and
dryer free . Register tor ex pense paid weekend for 2 in
La s Vegas .
1973 Crown Haven , 1Ax65,
three bedroom, new car
pe t , 19 71 Cameron , 1Ax6-4 ,
two bedroom, new ca rpet .
1972 Champion, 12x60, two
bedroom, new carpet . 1976
Camero n ,
12x60 ,
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
c arpet. 1970 PMC , 12x60,
two bedroom, new carpet,
B &amp; s Sa les, Inc , 2nd and
Viand Str eet, Pt . Pleasant ,

wv Phone 675 4424 .
10x50 'l bedroom mobil e
home. Near Racine . 99'1 ·

5858
USED MOb i le Home. 576

2711
197 1 Darian 12 x 65, 3
bed r oom s .
1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 wi th B x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms . 1973
Utopia 12 x 65 , 2 bedrooms .
1972 Invader 14 x 70 , 3
bedrooms . 1972 Nashau , l d
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B 114 5
Sales, Inc . 2nd and V i and
St s . Pt
P leasant, WV
Phone 675·4.424.
Mobile home loca ted in
Camp Con ley, E x tra nice
and clean Phone 304·895

3967

Farms for Sale

30 acre farm for sa le 7
room hOuse, garage and
several sma ll buildi1~Qs.
For more information ca ll ·
61d·949·2109 a ny time after
5 p .m . week l y or Su nday af
ternoon .

Lots &amp; Acreag e

LOTS · Rea l nice ca mqsi t e
on Raccoon Cr eek, a ll
utilities avai lab l e, SJOO.
down, owner will fi nance ,
ca ll after 3 p.m ., 2.56·6413 .

3 bdr . house in nice s ub ·

3411.

BIG discou nts for cash and

d i vision,

family

room ,.

large lo t,
7942 .

$300. Call 446· ·
A PARTMENTS , mobile
hom es.
houses ,
Pt.
P 1e a san t and G a 11i poli s.
614·.4.46·8221 or 61.4·245 ·948.4 .

Unfurn i shed
house ,
6
r ooms, Neighborhood Rd.
Private large yard, $225. i

Call446·4416 after 7PM .

' 2 bedroom a part m ent at
ga l lipoli s

42

2 bedroom apar tm ent, 205
Popl ar St .. Pt. Pt. Deposit
and ref e r ence s. 1·61-4 ·263·

One bed r oo m furni shed
apartme nt, Ut 11ities pa id .
Phone675 ·1897.

Mobile home par ti a ll y
turn . re f and dep . Upper
Riv er Rd . Ca ii446·J760 .

FURNISH E D apartment, 3
r oom s &amp; bath , utilities
pa id, adu l ts only , phone

For re nt 2 bedroom mobile
home . $150 .00 month plus
ut i lities 446· 4544 after 3
3bdr .

304 ·675·4351.
-

--

·---~---

F urni shed Rooms

SL E EP IN G

mob il e

ROOMS and

li ght housekeeping
Pa r k Centr al Hote l.

') bdr . mobi le hom e on Rt .
7. Depos i t &amp; ref er ence
r eq ui red · C a 11256 · 19'12 ·

apt .,

M-o d_ e_ r_n=o
"'f"'f'i-'c"'e"-"s"'u"'
i t-'-e- 1-or
rent , downtown, Business
and Professiona l BuiM/ong .
Call o r see Morri s H ask ins.
7mileso utRt 141 Ca ll446

4053.

2 bedroom tr a iler f ur ·
n is hed .
Pa id u til it ies .
Adul t s only . No pets .
Deposit
&amp;
refe r e nces
required . Loc at ion is 2 2/ 10
m i les out 143 in Pom eroy .

Ce mentary lot s in M ount
Hill. Cal l 446·2281

Park . 992 ·3324 .

flat. trees, rural water, c ity

$15,000 ea . 379·

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx . 1 acre.
Live in one, rent others to
make your payment . Can
be converted single home .
Cify water, will consider
land contra c t . 675·1883 9·5
p . m.

One bedroom house In Rio
Grande . Call ~-0157 .

Ratliff Pools &amp; Service .
Complete sales, service,
pool cover s, and win terizat ion k i t s. Call446· 1324
Firewood , spli t , stacked I
de livered . Mi xe d wood S65
per co rd , $35 one· half cord .
G r ee n or sea son ed . A II h a r .
dwood $5 .00 more. A lso wi II
buy st afdi ng woad . Ca ll 245·

5478 .
Firewood f o r sale Oak.
hi cko r y, c herry, or mi xed
woods, seasoned . Cal l 2.45·
9264 a sk for Ja mie .
Snow pl ow c omp leted for
pi ckup t ruck . Ca l l388·9848 .
For Sa le New 1981 model
sewing machine, zig -zag,
m onograms, sews on but·
tons, makes bu tton hol es,
da rns, m end ing , fancy stit·
ch . Reg . pric e $'1 69.95 now
on l y $99.50 . F r ee p hone
ca ll. Ca ll co ll ect 1-304·736·

For sale Sears fi rep l ace,
used 1 wi nte r . Ca ll 379 ·2584 .

TRA ILER spa ce 3 miles
from town j unction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y, Pt Pleasant, 675

Ten speed bicycle-needs
sl ight r ep air . Ca ll 446· 1642,
ext. 202, ask for Mary
Roll i ns, da y tim e

miles ea st of 5 Points. 614·
Trai ler lots. 675·1076 .

949·246 1

For sale Sear s 18,000 BTU
a ir condi tioner, $150. Cal l

446 ·3933 .
47
Tr a i l e r
f or
r e nt
tn
Syracu se. Ca l l6 14·992 ·2906 .

44

Wr~nt ed

to Rent

Wan t to r ent space to stor e
car Cal l 446-0057 or 4.46·
181 3 . Ask for Danny .
R e s p onsib l e
married
co up le wa nts t o r en t 2 or 3
bdr house in Ga lli pol is·
Pomeroy ar ea. Preferably
in co untry . Ca ll 446·4338 al
ter 6.

Apartmemt
for Rent

Sl

LAYNE'S FUR NITUR E
Sof a, chai r , rock er , ot ·
taman, 3 tab les, $500 . Sof a,
cna i r a nd lovesea t, $275 .
Sofa s and c hau r s priced

2 bdr . apartment unturn .,
in Crown City , Ohio . Call

fr om $285. !o $795. Tables,
$38 a nd up t o $109 . Hide-a·
beds,$340 ., queen si ze, $380.
Rec li ners, $175 . to $295.,
Lam ps from $18. to $65. 5
pc . di fettes from S79 ., to

256·6474 .
3 rm . ap t

-- - Household Goods

.~-c-:-=-:c~

Fur ni shed apts . 2 bd r ,
$230 ., u tilities paid, near
HMC , adu lts Call 446 .Ul6
af ter 7PM .

ut ilities paid .

Ca ll675 5104 or 675 ·5386 .

$385 . 7 pc., $189
S219 up to $495.

F irst f loor apt . partially
lurn ished , r ef . r equ ired .
Ca ll a t 63 1 4th Ave .,
Ga ll ipoli s.
Deluxe furnished apa r t ·
ment cen tr a l air and heat.
exce l len t location, adu lts
only, lease, dep ., upper
bracket, reference . 446

and $7 8. Quee n se ts . $195 . 5
dr . c hes ts, $49 . 4 dr . ches ts,
$42 . Bed frames, $20 a nd
$25 ., 10 g un · Gun cabine t s,
$350., d l nelte cha ir s S20 .
and $25. Gas or electri c
ranges, $295 . Orthopedic
supe r firm, $95, sofa bed
wi th chai r , $165 ., baby
m atresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
lra m es $20, $25, &amp; $30 .
Used,
Ra n ges,
r efri ger ator s, and TV 's,
3 m iles out Bu laville Rd .
Ope n 9am to 7pm , Mon .
th ru Fri ., 9am to 5pm, Sa t .

0338 .
Mobile ho m e in c ity ce ntra l
ai r and heat, ad ul ts only ,

dep 446·0338 .
1 BEDROOM apar tment,

6756722.

1.

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furni shed
apart men ts . 992· 5A34 or 992 ·

Hutc he s.

$300 . and $375 ., m a pl e or
pine finish . Bedroom su ites
Bassett Oak, $675 . ,
Bassett Cherry, $795. Bunk
bed com pl ete wi t h mat ·
tresses, $250 . a nd up to
$350 . Captain's beds, $275.
co mplet e. Baby beds, $99 .
M attr esses or oox spr ings,
ful l or twin, $58., firm , $68.

Ca ll446 3437 .

HUD accepted.
675·5104.

and up.

Wood ta bl e wi th d cha irs,

U nfu r n . 4 rm . apartmen t ,
$250 mo ., $100 dep ., uti l i t ies
pd ., no c hildren, no pets.

446 0322

APARTM E NTS AVA I LA B·

Outdoorsman truck toppe r,
$100. Firepl ac e insert , $100.

Call446 2222 .
For sa le SH P riding lawn
Yardma n mower, electric
start, good cond ., $350 . Ca l l

446·4053.
TABLE SAW · Rockwell10 ',
1.5 HP motor . Has unisaw
fen ce . $600 .00 . Cal l 446·7865 .
2·275 ga l. fu el oil ta nks,
exc . cond ., 1 Zeg!er fuel oil
spa ce heater , good cond ..
and fue l oi I tank . Call after

4, 256·1932 .
- - - --

--

WE ARE ce lebr ating our
12t h A nn iver sary with a
spe cia l sa fe d uri ng Sep ·
tember . Reg ister for an ex·
pense paid weekend for 2 in
L as Vegas. Specia l pri ces
and free washer a nd dryer
or cen tral air with pur ·
chase . Stop i n t oday . Fren·
ch City Mobile Homes, 266
Upper River Rd . 446 -9340 .

SW IMMIN G
POOLS .
PRE SEASO N SALE :
$999 .00 IN STA LLED ! ! !
Above gr ou nd pool COM·

PLETELY

LE : Seni or c iti zens and
handucapPed a pt. com mun ity o pe ning . Featuring
1 bedroom unfurn ished
with wall to w a ll carpet ing ,
wall-tex wall s, built in·
bookcase,
appliances,
smoke detectors, air con·
d itioned,
priva te patio,
storage facilities. single
story with no stairs to
cli mb, private entrances
with u ndi vidua l l au ndry
fakil ities on premises with
recreation and meeting
rooms .
Profe ss ional
resid e nt
manager
on
premises. Stonewood s Ap·
t s., Rt . 7, Middleport . For
renta l i nfo rm at ion phone

2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy. Partially furnished. $170 you
pay utilities. Call 992·2288
after6p.m .

\

WOOD, a t farm , only $25 .00
pickup load . phone 304 ·895·
3395.

F 1REWOOD, seasoned , c ut
304·895·

3994.
2 AM ·FM 8·track i n dash
stereos, model 14 Sm ith &amp;
Wesson pistol , Case Kn ife,

304·675·6439

ts. 101 Court St., Gallipolis,
Call446-2572.

_,.
B"u'-'
i l,_
d i,_n"g'-'S,_,u,..p,.poclicoe.e.
s-

Build ing materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win ·
dows, l inte ls, etc. Claude
Wint ers, Rio G rande , 0 .

Call245 5 121.

star ting at $999.00. Pri ce in·
el udes pobl, deck, f ence,
f il t er ,
li ner,
and
in
sta ll ation unde r norm a l
ground co ndi tion . Free
shop at home se rvi ce . Ca l l

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

Jackson Ave .• 675· 1773.
Yellow Freestone canning

Work horse, 2 saddles, 1 set
harness $.400 .00 . Farm
Model H tra ctor with

mower $700.00 . 388·9092 or
388·9007 .
1973 John Deere, d50
bul ldozer, good condition
with 6 way blade. $8400 .

quantity

avail ab le.

Auto for Sale

MORRI SON'S Auto sal es.
Henderson, WV . Phone 675·

15740r 675·2881.
1978 Cordoba, 56,000 mil es,

P .B , Air , A M · FM Ster eo,
Excellent Condit ion . 304·

Simm ent al

For Sale : Holstein Heife r ,
to freshen in Dec. Was .4· H
Project, out of No. 1 dairy

POODLE GROO MIN G
Call Judy T ay lor al 367 ·
7220.

Jumbo Bobwhite Quai l , 1
week old to ad ult si zes

DRA GO NWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
blac k Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese k ittens. Call 446·
384.4 aft er 4 p. m .

1614} 985· 4345.

576·2865.

2630 .

Boardi ng all breeds, c lean
indoor -outdoor fa c iliti es .
Also AKC Reg . Dober ·
mans. Ca l l 446· 7795.

BRIARPAT C H KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
G ordon
sett ers,
English Cocker Spaniels .

Call446·4191.
Jeanie's Pet Shop Rt. 141,
West of Gallipolis. 446·7920.
Special Fancy and An gora
ha m sters, $2.00 eac h.
Stud Serv ice, have 3 male
Cocker Spani e ls to breed . 2
Blondes and 1 red, ex ·
ce llent blood line . AKC
registered . Call 4.46 ·9372 for
more information .

AKC Reg istered White·
head old English Sheep
dog s , 7 wks . old . Call 256·
1786 .

A beautiful AKC gol den
brown
Boston Terri er .

Ma le . $200.614· 446·7432 .
Fi sh Tan k and Pet Shop
2413 J ackson Ave., F't.

Pleasant. 675 2063 . Special
tr ee gerbil or mouse with
purchase of food and bed·
ding
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomera nian an Pood le

pups 304-895· 3958.
AKC Doberman puppies,
show quality , ta i Is bobbed,
wormed
and
claw s

304· 576·

Coon hound, Plot, 2t years.
$200 . leaving for school .

Phone 304-882· 2211 .
57

304· 882·2910.

Detr iot

1300· 1soo lbs . 614-742 ·2880 .

Diese l ,

tandem

axe l. 1·614-694-7842 .
1973 For d 1 ton truck, ex c.
con d. 1979 J eep 4·whee t

Honcho 110. Call36 7·7533 .

4 short horn heifer calves, 1
shor t horn cow and calf. 1
purebred short horn bull

tru c k , good con d . 18 MPG .
Call446 ·3331.

ca ll . Ca ll61078·6152.

79 Chevy L uv, 4·wheel dr.
26.000 miles, roll bars,
brush guad, m ag whee l s.

Phone 446·4276.
1964

Chevr ol et

p i ckup

truck . $225. 992-7580.
64

Hay &amp; Grain

LA RGE, ro und bales of
hay, $10 . 304 458· 1656 or 304·
675· 1722 .

1ranspotiatlan
71

Auto for Sale

1939

7-4 Luv with topper . Phon e

304 576·2865.
73

vans &amp; 4 W. O.

1977 GMC passenger van,
J,;. ton . Sea ts B. Excellen t
c ondition .
PS,
AC ,
A utoma tic . $4500. 614· 7.42 ·

Chysler 2149 .

Antique

1972 Plymouth Scamp, 21 74
Motorcycles
dr .. $550. Call 446·9638 . 1949
1981 Hond a XR 500, less
Chrys le r Coupe.
74 Ford Grand Torino
stat ion wagon, good cond.

Call446·4602.

73 Chevrolet Nova, 6 cy l.
std. t ran s., $595 firm . Ca ll

245·5893.
1975 Grande Pri x, loaded,
must sell. Call 446 ·6313 af ·
ter 4.
1968 Pontiac Lemans. For
sa le or trade for small ca r

or !ru ck, $500. Cal l 446 4730.

Cal l 446·0648 alter 5 p.m .
1980 Kawasaki KZ 250 L TD ,
2,000 miles. excellent c on ·
dition . Ca ll -446· 0648 after
pm .

s

1978 Harl ey Davidson . Sale
or t rade
$3,500. Steve

BASS

BOAT· 15'

Fisher

mar ine
alumunum.
Pedesta l sea t s, trollong
motor, ext ras . Moody

76

$150 .00 Ca ll675·2776.

p.m .

For sale Kimball Piano·
like new. Beautiful fane,
beautiful
finish ,
and
reasonable. Cal1446·2474.

1969 128. Exc. cond . No
rust. New e ngine. Can be
seen 2 2/10 m i les. Rt. 143 in

CHARLIE'S

SALVAGE

Auto parts, auto repair ,
wrecker
service,
buy
automobiles, radiators and

batteries. 446· 7717.

Pome roy . $2,500.992-3647 .

78

Equipment

1978

jocks, ownll)g, A· l
dition . 304·773·5058 .

Fo rd

Specia l

Thunderbird,

F=ruit
&amp; Vegetables

Tomatoes. S5 a bushel. 67S·
3308.

1979 Ford Fairmont. 4 door
sedan. P .S., p.b., a.c .. vinyl
top, rear window defroster .

Like new. 614·992· 2849.

Fitz·

patrick Orc hard , St. Rt. 1978 Chevy Chevet hat·
689 . Phone 669·3785.
chback coupe . .4f sp. trans.,
bucket seats, rear window
defogger, new pelnt. 992·
Sweet potatoes, red, white, 2849 .
yellow. Robert W. Lewis,
Rl. 2, Rac ine, Ohio. 614-8~·
2432.
1972 Chevy pick·up wlht
topper , 1970 Olds Cutlass
S., AT, PS, PB. Call614·992·
-_ -.,• -&gt; _ ...
, .....
,,,,,...,...
:i897 .

---

61

.....

· · ~···
~ ·

Farm Equipment

For sale ·978 John Deere,
336 Hay baler, like new.
Call446·91'\) or 446· 1909.

Wallpapering, Interior -Ex ·
te rior
Paunting ,
Ex ·
perienced. Free Estimates .

Plumbing

8 :58 (}) CBN UPDATE NEWS
9 :00 Cil iJ(I) MONOAYNIGHTAT

CAR TER'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING

THE MOVIES 'Family Plot'
19 78 S tars : Bru ce Dern ,
Barbara Ha rr is .

Cor . Fourth and P ine

Phone 446·3888 or 446· 4477

(}) 700CLUB
CIJ il}} 01 MONDAY NIGHT
FOOTBALL Minnesota Vikings
at Oakland Raiders
DCil ®l M,A.S.H. Hawkeye

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heat i ng,
Rt. 1 Ga ll ipoliS, 367· 7853.

bets B.J. he can go an entire day
without telling a j o ke, and
Charles gears up tor a confron tati on with the officer wh o
' ex iled '
h im
to
Korea .
(Repeal)

Excavating

·•

Call446·9340 or 675·6898.

9 :30 C!J MOVIE ·(COMEDY}"'\;
"AI~Iane" 1881
GliJ~ HOUSE CALLS When

Dozer Work . Mobile home
sites and driveways, small

jobs a specially. Phone 742·
2753.
Dozer Service. Specializi~
4
in septic tank . 675· 1'13.4.
"'~ Wf!'·

Con·

Home
Improvements

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway. Call 614· 446·
2096 ,
STANLEY STEEMER
carpet &lt;;leaning
446-4208
JIM MARCUM Rootung
spouting and ' siding, 30
years experience . Free
estimates. . RemOdeling.
Call388·9857.

S&lt;!\NDERS
CON ·
New Idea No.7, corn automatic, abf?.\le average TRACTING, Carpentry :
picker. good •hope. 304·576· · condition. Low mileage: work II. painting, concrete,
2623.
304· 773·5694.
.
landscaping, 446-2787. ·

IT15

A SEYE!l£ CASE. SHE'S
SEEN LITERALLY STMII/NI5

------"'~
BACKHOE and Septic ta nk
Larry

1 ~ 11/i.I.MAN
l TELLS WINNIE

Si den ·

stricker. 675·5580 .

j

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

'

call.

Ph .

4462171 ,....
. '" %

H~5ELF

70 DEATH .'

SEWING Mac hine

JACK ' S RE FRIGER ATIO ·
N . a i r cond iti on service,
commrrc ia l ,

C'JIIRE/

}J ~,

!f .
'
." .
IIPl

Phone 882 ·2079.
BS

TATER!! .

·\

PULL!!

General Hauling

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways ,
Call for estimates 367·7101

-

87

10:00 Ill (I) ®J LOU GRANT Rossi

gate a real insider' s repor1 on an
GM.ploslve labor dispute when
he's asked to publlcite the
plighl ot striking farm workers
and w i nd s up behind bar s
h imself. (Repeat : 80 mine .)
10:28 (I} CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 (I} THIS IS THE LIFE
Cil BASEBALL Atlanta Braves
vs San Francisco Glanta
1 ! :00 ClJII(I)IlJCililD! NEWS
C1J
PRIORITY
ONE
INTERNATIONAL
C!J MOVIE ·(COMEDY)"
"Bluing Soddloa" 1974
(]) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
CID HITCHCOCK
11:2B ffi CBNUPOATENEWS
11 :30 CI&gt;IICIJTHETONIGHTSHOW
' The Best Of Caraon ' Guests :
Barry Menilow, Jean Marsh ,
Fernando lamas, Ray Johnson . (Repeat; 60 mins .)

(I} ANOTHER LIFE
0 (I) CBS LATE MOVIE
' QUIN CY, M.E.: The Hot Dog
Murder'Whanapriaonardlasof
asp hy .a:ia tion c aused by a
froz:en hot dog, Quincy sets out
to prove thalli was homicide .

'
&gt;•

&amp;

••

•

.

Upholstery

(8epeat)
(I) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®J
MOVIE
· (COMEDY· AOVENTURE}
··~ "Our Man Fllnt

11

1186

11:45 (l)ll}). NEWS
12:00 ffi ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
I 2:15 (I) SOLID GOLD Hoot: Dionne
Warwick. Gold record winners

cw•

l!!_rform their hit 1ong1.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 sec . Ave., Gallipoli s
446· 7833 or 446·1833.
·

AICNEWINIGHTUNE
Anchored by Ted Koppel.
12:30 (I). Cll TOMO.RROW
COAST· TO·COAST Guoole :

NBCnewacorreepOnden"t e

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt
1 Box 124; F&gt;t. Pleasant 304:
'
675· 4154 .

E!IETWEEN iHEM.

I

tiNQUAT

J I I

Now arrange the cirCled leners to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the abOve canoon.

"r I

PrintBnswarhare:
Saturday"s

I I I I )"

(Answers tomorrow )
SYLPH ALIGHT BAFFLE
Answer . What he sa1d when he fina lly found a
sh oemaker~ AT .. LAST"" !

I Jumbles · TEA SE

BRIDGE
Contract is six clubs
By Oswald Jacoby
ud Alu Sonlag

NORTH

• 8 43
• 9 54 2
Q8 7

+
WEST

In this simple hand from
'The Drawing of Trumps and
I ts Postponement', Fred
Karpin just says the con·
tract is six clubs."
Alan: "This is the second
hand in his book designed to
show when you must preserve a high trump as an
entry to dummy. It IS a sim·
pie hand, but it clearlY.
shows why South can t
afford to draw all W~st's
trumps before going after

EAST

• 9643

+ A }0 8 2

.QJ 10
tJ 73
+94 2

• 9 7 52
• Q 10 8 6
+5
SOUTH

+ 75

• A K6

tAK
+AKJIO G&gt;
Vulnerable: North-Sou lh
Dealer: South
West

No.-th

F...a!it

spades. ''

Pass

2 NT

Pass

Oswald: " He wins the
heart lead and plays ace and
jack of trumps. East shows
out so West is still left with
the nine spot. Now South
must go after spades. East
will probably duck tbe first
spade, but will have to win

Pass
Pass

3+
4•

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead

Alan: "Now if East can
lead a red card and West can
ruff it, South will be down
one. Or if West started with
just two spades, a third
spade led by ),;ast will defeat

the slam."
Oswald: "Our bidding gets

\

South to the slam, but even
in five clubs the same play
would be made. Incidentally
six notrump is a Iayden
and many pia yers would get
to that contract."

37 Moorish
drum

ACROSS
1 Lion
portrayer
5 African
republic
10 British

38 Hashanah
39 Arrested
40 l!efore,
to Caesar

&lt;~really!''

II Title for an
Italian
nobleman
12 Inverness
13 Napoleonic
battle site

14 Pixie
15 As easy as
16 Novelist
Buntline
17 Novelist
Caldwell
19 "Lucky

DOWN
I Lawful
Yesterday's Answer
2 Japanese
volcano
9 Goaded
24 Cassette
3 Early
11 Noted
material
comic
puppeteer
26 Waterway
strip
15 President
29 Minimal
4 Deli bread
James Knox 30 Oblivion
5 Beware (F r .)
stream
6 Jeanne d' 18 Diving bird 327 Merry
21 Clammy
even keel
1riend
2% Identical
35 Where
8 Away
231n pr~
(Latin )
from duty
portion
36 " - Diavolo"

Lindy's"
monogram
20 Grip
21 Bird sent
from the

Ark
22 Ghost
24 Subdued
25 Wrought -

26 Surruner
fun spot
27 Flat (mus. )

1=-+--+--1-

28 Dismay
31 Bela's son
32 " Just Those

or

Things"
33 Born

(Fr . )
34 - Beach,
Calif.
36 Sanction

q.t,.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
Ia

work It:

One letter simply stands for another. In lhis sample A ia
u sed for the three L's, X lor the two O's, •tc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and !ormation ol I he worda ore all
hints. Each day the code letters are. dilrerent.

CRYPTOQUOTI!S
V

TADHCHWGK

LWAK

JWE

VFVBAJHJC

VFVBAJ

XVHJ

-

1m•

to

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

HJ

12:45
BIONIC WOMAN
11:118 (J) CBN IPOATS REPORT

•Q

by JHOMAS JOSEPH

tador': grammy eward·winnlng

Julla" .1877

34

4t
6+

.

NVK

11

2+

~~ ..,.~

DWXA

tOl"mer tennle ac• Athur Aehe.
'12:311 (])MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••••

South

the second one."

EW

~lb

9-14 -81

+ K QJ

Oswald: "One of the diffi·
culties of writing a book on
play is to find a logical way
to get to the final contract.

and Bernard Kolb,
authors o·f 'The laat Ambaa-

Marvin

jill atyllet Georg• B•nton ,

!

iHIUARE
SA ID ARE PUT

THINcm

1

(Repeat) 'HARRY 0: Confetti

- - - - -·--

I imestone
grbvel. 992 ·2772.
of

PULL HARDER!!

Charley breaks a date with Ann
for a baseball game and then
breska another date to go to a
p o ker party, Ann be c omes
interested in a handsome
e!tient. (Repeat)

People ' An ex -menta l patient
who tears he haa kllhpd hie
brother comes to Harry tor help.

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367·0591.
Hauling

BARNEY

VOU GOT HIM,

industria 1.

FOJ;t SO'riE liME •.•
AND THEN NEEP

/.OVINt5

THA7 CONNIE's

re~air~: ..;,~

serv tce . Authorized Singel""' ....
Sa les &amp; 5('rvi ce . Sharpen
Sc i sso r s. Fabric Shop,

5HE'LL HAVE 10
6E HOSPITALIZE!:'
A LOT OF hiT/£~

.:..

self-contained ,

1978 Chrysler LeBaron. 4
dr.
Vinyl
rdof ,
AC , STUCCO PLASTERING
automatic, PS, PB, am·lm . textured ceilings, com·
Excellent condition. 3C4· merclal and residential,
free estimates. Cell 256773·569~.
1182.
1967 Ford ,Mustang. 6 cyl,

&amp; Heating

Service.

rJ

Cil MOVIE · (MUSICAL}'"

British mans erva nt named
Br e ntw oo d i s h ire d b y a
disorganized tel evision
p e rson a lity to assist her in
organizing her c haoti c
household. (Repeat)

304 ·675·52 11 .

82

IMASHATI

" Carou1el" 1956
8 :30 (I}
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
Q CAJ IJID THE TWO OF US A

Pome roy 99? 2284.
81 ·

'Henry VIII' This play tel ls th e
sto ry of the rise a nd fall o f
queens a nd King s, duke s,
ca rdinals and b is hops, and
their lives of power, envy and
greed. John Stride actathet ille
,.ole , Timothy Waet pi aye
Card inal Wolsey, and Kather ine is p o rtrayed by C l aire
Bloom. (3 hrs.)

2088 or 675·4560 .

on

Edition. Loaded .

Exc. cond. 992·7467 or 742·
3154.

Tl Or . Bob Halyers, a prea cher
who hea d s up a med ia ta sk
for ce ca l le d CURB . mak es
WKRP his first Cincinnat i stop
and receives a mixed welcome
from the staff. (R epeat)

8 :05

Gallipolis

Trailer,

hat ·

llJ CAJ~ WKRPINCINCINNA·

p erienced mason, roofer ,
ca rpenter ,
electrician,
ge neral
repairs and
remodeling , Phone 304-675·

1976 21 Ft. Starcrafl Travel

6, PS , AC, till wheel. S5600 .
992 ·7054.

SX,

MAfi:K!
trs, .. IT's

HE SAID IT WAS
URGENT THII.T HE
SEE '\'OU, DOC!

675·2602 .

304-882 3433 .

Startire

(jflOIJNO,

CIJ!ilJ SHAKESPEARE PLAYS

I
Fuller Electric Co. Com ·
I
plete rewiring, commercial
r
or residential , and elec ·
trical m a intainance, also · ,

25ft. Starcraft deluxe cam per. Priced on inspection .

Market, Mason . Phon e 773·
5721. Open daily till9 p .m .

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

81: HURT ··

lo br eak an arrow as is speeds
by him at 130 mi les per hour; a
yo ung man wh ose unborn twin
brother was discovered lodged
in his brain; a deep sea-diving
l it eaavin~;~ robot; people who
died, but came back to reveal
whatheppenedtothem;an
i nv e nti on that enab les blind
people to te elthe lett ers on the
page : people who surl on snow
and a horse that wears contact
lenses . (Repeat; 80 mins .)

TH'

ALLEYOOP

dyman. Phone 304·576·2921
or675·5689 .

84

1980

at

.,

Dave' s Appliance Repair .
Washers, dryers , plum b ing, electric, general han·

Camping

chback, black on black, V·

now

'"

..IT'S

EDWARD'S Backhoe and

Auto Parts

TRUMPET &amp; stand, ex ·

ava ilable

1 DON'T THIHH. 50- HE
LOOk:G 100 IW'PY TO

F &amp; K Tree Trimm ing,
stu m p re m ova l. 675·1331.

Back Hoe &amp; Oltcher Ser·
vice, wate r lines, ditches,
septic systems, footers .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

$2,195 . Ca ll 256· 1968.

tran s., immacu late con ·
di tion . Ca ll 4.46·0648 after 5

APPLES. Grimes Golden

ANNIE

'

75

tra iler . $1 ,200.00. Ca ll 446·
7865.

For Sa le Used Yamaha
tr umpet in e)(c. cond. ,

58

"Avalanche EKprell" 1979
Cil il}} ID THAT'S INCREDI·
BLE Akarate e~pert attempts

RON'S Te lev is ion Servi ce.
Spec ializi ng i n Zenith and
,.
Motorola, Qu aza r . and
1'
house ca lls . Pnone 5/6-2398 ..~~
,.
or 446·2454 .

83

ce llent condition, $150. cal l

They'll Do It Every Time

(I}
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
ffi MOVIE ·(ADVENTUREI"

LOCKSMITH
Ser v i ce . .'! ~
Res ide nti a l,
automo tive .
'
E m ergency se r vice. Caw I :J

Boso . 843·2241.

1976 Pontiac 2 dr., A M · FM
stero ta pe, AC, sport
wheel s, c rui se, tilt whee l,
low m ilea ge, ex . cond .,

396, 350 H P, p .s., p.b ., auto.

stand. $195 . 304·675·6766.

7160.

th a n 200 miles, like new.

Retail &amp; wholesale . Bob's

t

abandoned he{ OS a child, to
attempt a reconci liat ion, butthe
young pa inter angrily refuses .
(Repeat ; 60 mins.) (Cl osed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)

RINGLES'S SERVICE ·ex ·

Crown Royal Sedan . Only a
few built. reasonable . See 176 Ft•rd 11-"indnU' h m. $3()()().
at 6J14th Ave., Gallipolis. , fi7.'i-M29.

1969 Chevelle Super Sport,

NEW Bundy flute, book &amp;

THE PRAIRIE A blind artist's
s uc cess leads her mother. who

882· 2079.

19 76 Dodge 1/2 ton pick up

20
Hol st ein
Spring e r
H e ifers. TeB ay Dairy ,
Parkersburg, WV . Phone
863 ·3705 .

ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
7:35 Cil SANFORD AND SON
7:58 (}) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 Cll8 {I) LITTLE HOUSE ON

French
Ci t y
Painting ·
Residential, commer cial,
i nterior, ex t erior, paper
hanging , and te x ured
ce ilings . Ph . 367 ·7784 or 367·

Trucks tor Sale

1972 GMC 7500 d ump t ru ck,

·em Into trouble

j

1m 01

9964.
- - - - - - --

Gen e's Carpet Cleaning;.:
WANTED : Volk swagen
str eam extra ction . • ..
1 deep
Beetl e body, 1969 and up, in Free esti ma tes, reasonable
good cond ition . 446 ·2072.
rates. Sc othguard. 992·6309.

&amp; Accessories

Musical
1nstruments

ReXAt.. FL.U51-1!

Dobbins Sr .• 388·

Wallpaper,
painting ,
general ca rpenter work . AI
Tromm, 614 ·742-2328.

I I [

Guest: Author, physi c ian ,
director Jonathan Miller . Part
I.

I DeAl-T M'&lt;~L-F A

.. ~

Black A ngus Herdford bull.

KENNEL

1973 Chev rol et Ca pri ce
stationwagen , 3 seater,
rebuilt engine and fr an ·
smiss ion, 454 en g in e. SSOO.

All thallalk gets

, II

(]) Q (I) FAMILY FEUO
(!) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
CiJ OICK CAVETT SHOW
®l
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(JD DICK CAVETT SHOW

BORN LOSER

! nside and out·electriat
work ·heat ing-plumbing-sidi.n· •
g -room additions . (ex·
perien ced
ca rpenter -28
years) Servi ng Southern
Ohio &amp; Western W .VA. Call

David

Unscramble these fou r Jum~es ,
one letter 10 each square, to form
four ordinary words.

career.

·• .:

____ _ _ _ _ 4.._•. ,

9856. If no answer ca tl 388·

or 882· 2947.

72
Ewe lambs to r sa le. Suffo lk
and Finn crossed . 614-992·

.

documentaryexplorea
MacArthur's powerful char·
acter, onethat both cr,ated and
destroyed his brilliant m!lltary

- - -- - · ·".. ~,.

DOBBINS &amp; SO NS CON ·· ·•.
TRACTORS Remodeling·

For
sa l e grad e app .
gielding, well broke and
1250 l b . work hares . Call

Registered

-

NU$,.,

16
PORIAN THOMAS&lt;,
I WAi II M&amp;MIIEI'.
OF r~e RE~IGt0iJ6
COMMJJNITY Of&lt;
llltOTHE.Ot LAMIIeRT.
THAT~ WHERE
I eor TH15'
. IIRAIIIDI

Home
building, home- ....,,
remodeling and repair . ' .. ;
Custom work from start to.. .:..

pm.

78 L TO II. automatic, P .S,

CON~IOU"-

GLASS SERVICE Home::,
maintainance
and...re m odeling .
Phone 388:. :~
~u.
: -

finish . Ca ll388 ·8711.

6c=lc__ _,L_o
,_,·v_e"
, st,_,o"c"'k_ __

bull , 1, 400 lbs .. 4 yrs o ld ,
$750.00 . Ca ll446 3845.

WINDON ·-'

exce lle nt condit ion . $2900.
576·2490 or 675·2474 a lter 5

1978 Ford LTD II. $3100.
6756429 .

peac hes. Now thru Se pt . 20.
A ny

71

304-675·2786.

herd . 256·1259 befor e 12:00.

I 800 ·62 4 8511.
EA SY c redit availab le now
to purchase fu rnitur e,
telev isi on s, or appliances
Vi ll age Furnitu r e 2605

Farm Equipment

,. LATeR THAT
NIGHT, THE
MV.,Tiilt10LI6
WOMAN HAll
ReeAINIOP

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

t::::~~~~;;~:;:;:=-r===~;:::;:;::;:;;;:;==-1
HONDA 360 1974, S4SO.OO .

~YIIIAME

~'

FERRELL's

by Henri Arnold andBobLoe

CIJ O PM MAGAZINE

(})
A GREAT DAY TO
REMEMBER
({}
ENT!RTAINMENT
TONIGHT
(!)
NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
0 ({} TIC TAC DOUGH
Cll CID MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
®l NEWS
ID!8 MUPPET SHOW
7:05 ({} CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
7:30 Cll . BULLSEYE
(}) ANOTHER UFE
(]) DOUGLAS MACARTHUR:
THE DEFIANT GENERAL
Narrated by Ha·l Holbrook, this

driveway~ ,

7891.

O •tiiiiJ~A. onc

s6
Pets for Sale
=---:...:::="'-= =---

$100.

7:00

patiq ,
basement, garage floo~!;
and etc . Free estimates. 11 ~
years experience . Ca ll 367-.:J;

ir

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

EVENING

BING'S CONCRETE CON : , .~
STR UC T ION · Specializi ng-in concrete
sidewa l ks ,

lliiiJNl IDll

~ ~ ~~ ®

8EI'T. 14,1881

PAINTING
interior and' . r
exterior,
plumbing, ~
roofing , some remodeling. ~· '
20 yrs. e&gt;&lt;p. Ca ll388·9652 . ~ , ~

1972 Volkeswagen, 675·2864

removed.
7738

'1''

•r
r

379·276 1.

HILLCRE ST

Television
•
•
VIeWing

9

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser· · f
vice. call675· 1582.
1

61

Good used baby stroller.
Phone 675-5558 .

s,s_

DICK TRACY

picn i c
tables,
porc h ·
swings, most wood proctuc·

Air Compressors, new
Ingersoll · Ra nd 5 hp, single
and 3 phase, truck load

desri ed ,

The Paily Sentinei-Page-9

Cabinets. ~..­

WOODSHOP

2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.

length

September 14, 1981

I '

IN STALL ED

1 _:==========-l=========~

7NA7 'ALL PALS
106E7HER'
Av1IJ Tilt!' ··.,

mt&gt; m:; Pflpt;R .

Jackson Ave. 675·1773.

59 14 or 882 2566.

614·992·3055.

Houses lor Rent

Cross man B · B 's ' Mi lk Car·
ton' box of 1500 · Special
$1.09 box. Spring Va ll e y
Trad i ng Co., Spr i ng Val ley
PLaza , 446· 7025 .

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . L arge lots . Call
992 ·7-479.

3248 .

2 bedroom mobile hom e. 2

·

3 Fumettes, 5 acres, eac h

P laza. 446 8025.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

2 bedroom trailer Adu lts
only . Brown's
Tr a il er

Opportu
992
772 nity Housing . Ca ll

9 acres in morgan Town ·
ship on White Oak Rd. Ha s
trailer hoo kup &amp; som e out building . Tobacco base.
$7,500. Call446 ·0951.

Ecl ipse 12 ga . game loads
N6-shot, 20 she l ls per bO)( ,
S3.95 box. Spring Val ley
Trading Co ., Spri ng Valley

9241.

992 3647 .

CIAPPIOO Rl':CIP€~ ~ t\~

NEED severa l itemsoffur·

sale.
$1,245 .00. Call
collectFrom
30d -766·62.4.4.

Space for Rent

'1 6

Mobi le
home·2bdr . fu r ·
n ished, in ches hire . Ref &amp;
deposit required. Ca l l 446
4229 .

Phone 446·0390.

41

----·

45

homes . Ca ll446 3371.

1 bedroom ap ts. avai lable
at Riverside Apts. Equal

SIO,OOO Ca ll388 ·8437 .

White metal detectors ·
Opening Specia l 20* off on
a ll wh ite metal detectors.
Spring Vall ey Tr ading Co.,
Spring Vall ey Plaza , 446 ·

8322 or 61 4-263· 2669

T railer at upper end of
Kerr, 2 bdr ., unfurn ., dep,
and r ef . req . Ca11245·9170

&amp;

S~4c__cM~is,.c:.c
. M=e"-r,.ch..,a,_,n"d"'ic, e'--

Home
I mproveritents

•.,...::i
- - - - ----.-,
,,..

carry at Village Furniture

8025 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

bdr .

304·675·

3 ROOM apartm ent, kit·
chen fu rn ished, ca r pe t,
p r ivate parking , all
uti li t i es paid,
deposit
r equired, close to Fruths &amp;
Pennyfare, $225 .00 month,
304·675·1219 or 2509 Jet ·
fer son Av e Pt . Plea sant.

2 bdr ., 3 bdr .. mob ile
names . Call-446 ·0175 .

'l

F erry .

2548 or 304-675· 5783 .

C heshire river front house,
4 bdr., 2 baths, l arge kit
c hen with dishwasher, full
b asement ,
f i replace ,
$275.00 month, depos it &amp;
ref . required . Call 1·614·
448 3821.9 5 Mon Fri.

CoMI&gt;~AIIt ,a.~l /f\OM

Sat .. Sun . Reedsville, Ohio
614·378·6319.

Antiques

53

0%1&gt; lo

11

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Halfelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call446·2107.

t'lCiN I UNl&gt;82SIM[&gt; Y-liW \)\b

For sate : showcases, cash
registers, used refrigator,
canoes, motor, etc . Fri .•

Apartmen t, Mason , WV . I
bedroom
furn ished . No
pe ts. Deposit. 304·882·33.56.

2 acres on Floyd· Clark Rd .
c lose to Rl . 160. $4,000 .

Three 1 ac r e lots on 160
$.4,250 each or all 3 for

$100. Loveseat $75 . ca ll 304·
675 ·6535.

niture ,
appliances,
televisions. Big discounts
for quanity purchase.
Vil lage Furniture 2605

Merchandise

6756 111

AM·FX Console stereo with
8 tra c k recorder , l ike new

by Larry Wright

'N' CARLYLE '"

This &amp; That Shop. Used fur·
nii\Jre, appliances, 2000
paper backs. Salem St.,
Rutland. 742· 2266.

pay cash or c ertified check
for antiques and co llec ·
tibles or entire estates .
Noth ing too large . Also,
guns, pocke t watches, and
coin colle c t ion s. Call 557 ·

367 0164 .

1980 1'1 x 60 tr ai ler, 2
bedroom, complet e wit h 40
gal lon water hea ter, new
de lu xe fu r n iture an d cur ·
ta ins, underp inning, new
materials to cover trail er
wit h a dr ain, r edwood par
c h , fuse box , washer and
dryer , and every thi ng you
need. Cal l everythin g for
appointm en 1. 675· 1882 o r

Ave., 446· 7398 .

675·5571. '

NICE 2 bedroom mobi le
home wit h por ch &amp; large
lot , 30-4 ·675 ·3030 or 675· 3431 .

1969 Buddy house trail er . 12
x 60. 2 bedroom . 675 ·6312 .

refrigerator s ,
Skagg s
Ap ·
1918 Easte rn

A T T ENTION :
(1M ·
PORTANT TO YOU } Will

1971 Schultz 2 bedroom 12 x
60, very good condit ion .
Cal! for appoin tm ent . 61-4·

$15. 000. 304 576 ·2738 .

drvers ,
ranges .
pliances ,

KIT

Antique round oak table &amp; 6
chairs. 2 2/10 miles out on
Rt. 143 Pomeroy , 992·3647 .

apartment and 2 bedroom
furnished apartment, 304-

4544 .

12 x 60 mobile home with 10
x 20 add·a·room. on 75 x ISO
ft . lot in Gle nwood on Rt 1

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PL IANCES
washer s ,

Misc. Merchandlce

Unf urnished 2 bdr . houe in
c ity , adults only , no pets,
deposit&amp; ref . Cal l at 54 14th
Ave . Gallipolis.

OR RENT · a lmost new 14 x
70 , 3 bedroom , 1 1h baths,
sitting on n ice lot , ready to
m ove into. Phone 304·576 ·
2711

1973 Victorian 14 x 65, 2
bedroom,
woodb urnin g
firepla ce, ext r a ni ce , on
beautifu l renta l lot . 304 675·

Household Goods

Apartments 675·5548.
2 BEDROOM, unfurnished

sell . 256 -6033 or 256·6461 .

schools,
2196.

references

&amp;

on 143 Pomeroy . 992· 3647 .

1973 Elcona 12x60, 2 bdr .,

JS

51

446·0254.

mobile homes and travel

33

Apartmeml
for Rent

Small 2 bdr . house . Located
i" Gallipolis. Security dep.
and ref . req . Call after 5PM

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Pr ices

44

Houses for Rent

675·

~41 .

Monday, September 14, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ENA

FNHSN

KDAAMAT

VTWGKAL

QAKKVUOJ

NHU
FAKE

HE CONTINUED TO BE AN INLONG AFTER HE CEAS~D TO BE A

Yttlterday'a Cryptoquote:

FAN]'

GENftJS.-ROBERTMOSES

.

�•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohib

• Monday,Septe~ber14,

Meigs County happenings
To end marriages
TWo dissolutions of marriage have
been filed In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Filing were John Bentz, Rt I,
Minersville, and Undo Bentz, Rt. I,
Minersville; Russell Ray Bums, Rt.
I, Long Bottom, and Jennie Rosa
Bums, Rt. I, Long Bottom.
The marriage of Joyce Gayle
Johnston and Cecil Eugene Johnston
· was dissolved.

""'

"

parking lot over the weekend.
Pomeroy Police said a car driven by
Charles Landers, Minersville,
backed Into the Staats vehicle. Landers will be charged with leaving the
scene of an accident, pollee said.
Pollee also reported that a motorcycle owned by Michael Todd Smith,
caught fire in the driveway of the
Smith home on Uncoln Heights.
Damages were set at $1200.

'

'

Meet Tonight

'

The Southern Athletic Boosters
will meet at 7 this evening for a short
business meeting which will be
followed by a work session.

'

'

Degree work set
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, wiii
meet in special session at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Work will be In the EA
degree and refreshments will be served following the meeting.

Will meet Tuesday
Chester Council323, Daughters of
America,at will
meetQuarterly
at 8 p.m.
Tuesday
the haiL
bir·
thdays for July, August and Se!&gt;-

I

...

Terry D. Talbott
FUneral services for Terry D.
Talbott, 44, Tuppers Plains, who was
electrocuted Sunday will be held
Wednesday at I p.m . at Ewing
Chapel with Vincent Waters and
Harold Jeffers officiating. Burial
will be in Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home after 7
p.m. this evening.
Mr. Talbott was born Oct. 28, 1936.

. T~~n~~~ro~!~:~s
r The patrol said Wolfe was south-

He was preceded in death by his
father, Clark Talbott.
He was the owner and operator of
the Talbott Drilling Co. He served
with the U. S. Armed Forces from
l96Ito 1963.
He is surived by his wife, Mary
Jane Talbott: two sons, Bryan Clark
Talbott, and Kyle K. Talbott, both of
Marietta ; one daughter, Teresa Jan
Talbott, Marietta ; three stepdaughters, Lisa Pierce, Darwm ;
Rubin Herald and Betsy Herald both
of Tuppers Plains; one ste!&gt;'
gnHldson, Travis Pierce, Darwin;
hi s mother, Deiva Talbott,
Ches terhill : one sister, Twiia
Cherubini, Zanesville; one niece and
one nephew.

RALPH Q. WELKER
RaiphQ . Weiker, 70, widely known
Meigs County reSident , dted Sunday
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Weike r was a former sheriff of
Mei~s County. He served in the U.S.
Navy during World War II. He
owned and operated the Maple Lawn
Poultry.
He served as a sla te
representative to the Ohio General
Assembly for four tenns. He served
as Chtef of the Otviswn, Department
of Agriculture, and retired from that
pust on Aug . 1, 1980.
Mr. Welker was a member of the
Pmncruy Ch urch of Christ, Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion,
and was a Grand Croake r of the
Sttcie ty fo r the Prumotion of Bull

Frugs. He was an Honorary Kentucky Colonel.
Surviving Mr. Welker &lt;:~ re hi s wife,
J . Pearl Weiker at home at 163
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; three
sons , Jerry Weiker, Fresno, Calif.:
Jack Weiker , Hemlock Grove, and
Joe Weiker, Fresno, Calif.: grandchildren , .Julte, .Jodi, .]ami and Joei
of California : Jena . and Jackie
Weiker , Hemlock Grove; hi s
mother, Eula Weiker, Pomeroy; two
sisters, Genevieve Well, Pomeroy,
a nd Eileen Weiker, Coiun1bus.
Preceding him in death were his
father, Delbert Ward Weiker, and
two brothers, Wilham Weiker and
Gerald Weiker .
Graveside memorial servit'es will
be announced later.

Mid

~~ ·

AUTHORIZED DEALER

fOR

strength
•Spring steel

Alheu U~atockSale1
58.~.50;

•65~.

wire

frame

keeps bog In shape
•Easy slide1 extra

strong

aluminum zippers
Good

~55.

Shel l with
Flannel lining.
•Snap Front

•2 Side Pockets
•S-M-L-)(l

NILSON'IHG. M.H

•~ l uxe molded handles .
•High dome protective setdown studs

Ju·

MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUSE

Lost pony found
A pony was discovered on Route 7
below Middleport over the weekend .
The animal was caught and has been
tied at a home nearby. Whoever lost
the anim•l can call 992-5795.

It's time for the Farmers Bank's
Dress-A-Doll, Design-A-Toy
Contest.

The Farmers Bank's Dress·A·Doll, Design-A-Toy
Contest is now open. If you'd like to enter, stop by
the Farmers Bank and pick.up your materials and
information.
The winners will be on display in the Farmers
Bank lobby before Christmas. All .dolls and toys
will go to deserving area children at Christmas.

For Just
·Combination Dinner
•Dining Room On~

On~

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

Beverages

Crow's Family Restaurant
POMEROY, OHIQ

\

.FB

Farn1e.
rs
'
'

Ba•..•k

·

[I

1

.'

l

,

Your Commu~i !y , Owned B'ank
,j

.

.\ 1&lt;·mlwr Hli(.'
, · ,.
'

~

!

Dacron

35°/. Co«on
•Heavy duty material that
withstands excessive use.
•Wot&amp;r resistant and scuffproof
•St&amp;el side bars for maximum

Market report
Saturday, Sept. 1!, 1981
Feeder Steers (4CXJ...fDJ lbs. l

16'' YIIYL SPORT BA&amp;

·-·•'

bound on County Rd. 5 in Green Twp.
Feeder Heifers 1«10-700 lbs. ) Chuice 43-M :
:•
Goo&lt;134.fl0...47 .61J.
at 7:46 p.m . when he attempted to
Feeder Bulls 14!MHIOO lbs. J Choice 60-{ifi; Good
pass another vehicle, went off the
~""'
Sit~u~hter Bulls (Over I ,000 lbs . J 47-52. 7:i.
right side of the rnad, lost control of
Slautlhlcr Cows Ulililif&gt;s 3l.SO-i2;Canners and
the car and went across the road.
Cult~trs 41 .50-00.75.
Veals fChoiee and Prime I ~9.
The car overturned and slid into a
Baby Calves I By the Head i37.50-105.
Buck St t ll't· ~_., ;~ rcgi·&gt;!t.•rt•d 1raJt.•nwrk .
fence, the report said, demolishing
Ho111
~~~ l i.JHU Smt 1k~ M1ntnt ;tin E ntc rp r i .-.t.· .~. Inc
HU!{S
I
Nu
.
I,
Barrows
arxl
Gi
lts,
200-230
lbs.
l
the car.
4!1.50-411 .75
The patrol investigated another
SuW!S 40.25-51.25
Boors -41 _5(}..42.25.
jury accident early Saturday.
Pigs 1By Lhe Headli2·26.
Harold L. Denney, 29, Crown City,
Lambti
Slc!U~hler Lambs :iG-51.~ .
was southbound on Rt. 7 at 7:25a.m.
Feeder Lambs «1-43.
when he attempted to turn left and
was struck by another southbound ~-----------_!------------------------­
auto driven by Ira Sheets, 83, Crown
City, who was attempting to pass
Denney.
Sheets was not seriously injured
and was not treated at the scene.
There was slight damage to Den·
ney's car and severe to the Sheets
vehicle.
Troopers said Carl L Randolph,
30, Gallipolis, was southbound on Rt.
218 at 3:35a.m. Sunday when a cow
crossed the path of his vehicle and
collided, demolishing the car. Randolph was injured, but not treated.
Troopers investigated two minor
accidents over the weekend.
The patrol said a car driven by
Helen K. Williams, 71, Clifton,
W.Va., turned from Meigs County
Rd. 9 onto U.S. 33 at 2:38p.m. Sunday and collided with a southbound
vehicle driven by Mark A. Donnaker , 17, Yellow Springs.
Donnaker's car continued on after
the collision and struck a guard rall .
Both vehicles were moderately
damaged and Williams was cited for
fat lure to yield.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
James D. Hailey, 26, Crown City,
was southbound on Rl. 218 at 4:20
p.m. Sunday when he encountered a
northbound vehicle driven by Dean·
na L. Waugh, 18, Crown City, which
was left of center, forcing Hailey to
swerve off the right side of the road
to avoid collision.
Hailey's car then struck an embankment, causing slight damage.

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!

'.

a

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.:·

Medium damages were incurred
to a parked car owned by Connie
Staats, Syracuse, on the Kroger

EVERY TU.SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

228 w.

Tuppers Plains, Wayne Gilliand
M
· 1

'

Area deaths
Dora 0. Stevens, 73, Rl. I, Shade,
died Sunday morning at her residence following and extended illness.
Mrs. Stevens was born in Lodi
Township in Athens County the
daughter of the late Delano F . and
Carrie Wood Burleigh. She was also
preceded in death by an infant son,
Charles Larry Cha ppell , one
brother, Charles D. Burleigh, four
sisters, Edyth Love, Edna Buck,
Ada McCrum and Hazel Rodehaver .
Mrs. Stevens was reared on the
farm that the Burleigh ancestors
had homesteaded. She graduated
from Shade High School in 1926 and
0. U. in 1933. She taught business
education at Shade High School for
16 years and also taught high school
at Harrisonville and Carpenter. She
was a former member of the Central
Avenue United Methodist Church,
Athens and at the lime of her death
was a member of the Shade Umted
Me.hodist Church. She was a member of the United Methodist Women,
Ohio Retired Teachers AssociatiOn
and National Ret1red Teachers
Association.
She is surived by her husban d,
Everett Stevens; one son, Robert K.
Chappell, Dayton; two stepdaughters, Pauline Chappell,
Zanesville, and Norma Reid , Denver, Colo.; three grandchildren and
three step-grandchildren: one
sister, Neil Williams, Shade.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at I p.m. at the Shade United
Methodist Church with the Rev.
Charles McVey and the Rev. John
Elswick officiating. Burial will be in
Clarks Chapel Cemetery. Friends
may call at the Hughes Funeral
Home, Athens, Tuesday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 and at the church one hour
prior to services on Wednesday .

Shade.
Sunday Discharge-Cheryl Clark.

Medium damages

CODY CONFRONTED - Archbishop John Car· JNestchester near Chicago Sunday. Cody is under indina! Cody is confronted by the news media after ad- vestigation for alleged misuse of church funds. (AP
Laserphoto).
dressing members of the Divine Providence Church in

Dora 0. Stewns

saturday Admissions-Pamela
Craddock Racine; John Klein,
Reeds vii!~; Hazel Smith, Pomeroy;
William Eakins, Racine; Wayne
Gilliand, Reedsville; Penny Smith,
Pomeroy; Pauline Taylor, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges-Helen Wal·
son, Cledith King, Bessie Molden.
Sunday Admissions-Eivis Peck,
Racine; Sally Good, Pomeroy; Betty Imboden, Minersville; Jolian Hof·
!man, Pomeroy ; Joan Morris,
Pomeroy ; Joan Carnahan, Long
Bottom; Harold Sauer, Middleport;
Geneva Clark , Racine; Mary
Warren, Pomeroy; Wilbur Whaley,

;'!

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:~V~e:te:ra~n:s~e~m;;or~Ja;;.;;;;;;;;~:·~;·

tember,
will be observed
. The
kitchen
committee
will serve
refreshments.

.~

Local emergency units were-k' '
on the move with many calls WI
the weekend. 1 ·:,:
Sunday calls included:
~
dleport Unit, Nancy Griffith, ~
Uncoln Heights, Pomeroy, to Ho~
Medical Center; Pllmeroy U . Elvis Beck, from Route 7 a~dei~J
Veterans Memorial Hosplt ,
Pomeroy Unit, Sally Good, Pome
Health Care Center to VeteranJ
Memorial Hosplital; Pomern.t:
Julian · Hoffman from residence
Veterans Memorial; Pomer~!!
Terry Talbert, from Route 7, Iilli
cident to Veterai'L'I Memoria(•
syracuse, Mary Warren, Poma
Health Care Center, to Vete
Memorial; Racine, Geneva Cl!j
fromRaclnetoVeteransMemoriliUi
Saturday calls : Middlepor.J;
Rebecca Smith treated at
station- Middleport, Pauline Tay •
from h~me to Veter~~ Memo · . ·
Middleport, Eugene Boyles,.l'eldd~
ce to veterans Memorial; P~~
Shannon Caudill, Meigs Stadlum, :fll
Veterans Memorial; Syrac~
Helen Jeffers from home to HolzQ!
Medical Center; Syracuse,
Duerr from residence to Veterai!§
Memorial ; Syracuse, Gail lmbod~
home to Holzer Medical Cen~j

Veterans Memorial

~~.

1

RUBBERMAJD FREE'Roli OF
SHELF LINER OFFER BUY 4 ROLLS.
·GET A REFUND ON 1 BY MAIL
Rubbermaia wi ll refund your full purchase price
of one rol l with proof-of•purchase of four rolls of
Rubbermaid Shelf Liner. Refund by mall (up to $1.59).
Get complete details at our store display.

YOUR CHOICE

OF STYLES

NILSON'I 110.
tl.ll

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