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en tine

Vo1.30,No.107

DESK TOP

Copyrighted 1981

CALCULATOR
NILSON'S RIG •

WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate
Republicans are urging the administration to reduce spending on
Social Security, food stamp and
Medicaid programs, cuts that the
White House says President Reagan
now is considering.
Deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes said Monday that Reagan would look into the
possibility of cutting government
benefit, or entitlement, programs as
he tries to trim federal spending by
almost $18 billion next year.
Republican congressional leaders
were invited to the White House this
morning, and such cuts were on the
agenda, officials said.
Speakes was forced Monday to
reverse an earlier statement that
there were no plans "right now" to
touch entitlements after White
House chief of staff James A. Baker
III conferred with the Republican
leaders in the Senate. Baker agreed
to consider such areas for possible
cuts because there is "some sentiment" on Capitol Hill lor them,
Speakes said.
Senate Republican leaders also
planned to bring to today's meeting

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OE:CESI~IN AHEAD - President Ronald Reagan Is expected to
unveil bls new plans for additional cuts to reduce spending. Prior to bls
election last November, Reagan said no cut would be made In the Social
Security program. Now bls advisors as well as some Senate Republicans
are advocating reduce spending on Social Security, food stamp and the
medicaid programs.

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D

Prank turns into tragic event
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - A mldnight prank by 10 girls at a
slumber party turned into tragedy when a homeowner who had recently been burglarized fired a shot as they spread toilet paper over trees
in his posh neighborhood.
One of the girls, 13-year-old Julie Lewis, was in serious condition
Monday at St. Francis Hospital, where she was brought after a bullet
from a .~liber pistol lodged in her back early Sunday.
Charles Kublman, 65, was arrested after the shooting, hooked for in·
vestigation of first-degree assault and released when he posted $8,000
bond, said police Detective Sgt. Norman Short.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Guidelines for the operation of a
$167,000 housing rehabilitation
program were adopted when Middleport Village Council met in
regular session Monday night.
Council had studied guidelines lor
participation in the program over
the past two weeks.
Last night it unanimously adopted
the measures which will determine
who will be eligible to participate in
the program. Mayor Fred Hoffman
safit tluit a ·~~st 01 the ;ullleiiJMiil. wui ·
be published in The Daily Sentinel in
the near future so that residents can
determine if they are eligible to apply for having rehabilitation work
done to their homes under the
program.
The guidelines do establish a
maximum expenditure of $9500 to be
spent on any one home. It was ooin,
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$299
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SAN LUES OBffiPO, Calif. - A blockade of the $2.3 billion Diablo
Canyon nuclear power plant by an estimated 2,000 people camped here
· will begin TUesday, aspokeSII)llll for the protesters said Monday.
Kallbach said no decision had been reached on what time the
blockade )'I'OI!,id Jlegin, but.._td It would inchllle both land and water
apprOaches to the seaside piiWer plant, wtilch IS iiot yet in operation.
The Call(oriJia Hlghw!IY Patrol had.estllilated up to 3,000 people had
gathered ~t the protesten' tent ~ty 12 miles IIOi1h of the plant and
. other lodgings in the ~· but reduced that estllllate late Monday.

Winn~ng Ohio lottery number
,CJ,;EVELAND - 'lbe Jrinn1r!J ni!Diber drawn MQnday night IIi the

Ohio Lottery's dallyglll)le "The 1'1ilmber" was m.
·
The lottery reporteil eamil1ll!l c'i • • • Clll the drawing. '1be ear- '
Dings came on sal~ 'Of ..,1,~, ,whUe l!Qklers of wtnnlng tickets are .

entitled to share $218,310,lottery officlala said.

·. W~ih~r foreca~t

ted out that some expenditures will
not go that high per home. Any exceeding that amount will have to be
reviewed by council. Only those exceeding the maximwn expenditure
or " problem" cases will come
before council.
Funds for the program designed to
fix up homes are being provided by a
HUD grant. Council has employed
R. and R. International Inc., Akron,
to be in charge of the program. The
company will ins]M!Ct . homes ·for

providing that the clerk in that office
be paid $3.50 per hour. Opal Kauff is
serving in the position.
Mayor Hoffman reported he has
complete details of a rate hike
request filed by Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Electric with the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
and that report is available lor study
by council members.
A letter was presented from
Solicitor Bernard Fultz concerning
whether the mimimum charge for

work to be done, award contracts
and see that the work is properly
done.
Mayor Hoffman and some council
members reported they have
already received calls from some
residents who are interested in par·
ticipating in the program.
Council has established a com·
munity development office.
· Monday night, under emergency
measures, passed an ordinance

should include -some amounl of' gas
used or not. Fultz indicated that any
action should be determined by
whether council understood the
provisions of a contract signed with
the company. He also suggested
council might want to pass an ordinante providing garbage must be
kept in plastic or metal garbage
cans with lids. The ordinance would
provide fines for unnecessary ac·
cumulations of garbage. Council will
study the matter until the next

.;hlcha~-~~filed. t
It will draw specifications for the

Six people suffered minor injuries
in a crash between a village police
cruiser and a van in Rutland early
Monday.
The Gallia·Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said four children
who were passengers in the van
were all taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Pomeroy EMS, but
were all treated and released.
The patrol said Ricky L. Johnson,
33, Rutland, the village police chief,
was parked on the benn on Rt. 124 at
8:15 a.m. when he pulled off to go
west.

Trio shot during staged battle

2, ()()(}join nuke demonstration

The GOP senators also were expected to suggest that ap·
propriations lor operations of the
federal government be reduced and
that the president make a nationally
broadcast address to explain why
the cuts are necessary.
But the " biggest disagreement"
between the senators and the administration is over whether entitlement programs should be cut,
the source said.
One senior White House aide, who
asked noi to be be identified, sought
to dampen speculation that the entitlement programs would be cut.
" The president has not been in·
clined to go that way. He is willing to
listen to the arguments. He hasn't
been persuaded," the official said .
Asked repeatedly whether he
would rule out cuts in Social Security
payments. Speakes avoided a direct
answer.
"We are working with Congress to
work out a program that will restore
fiscal integrity to Social Security,"
he said. " There are problems with
Social Security."
The administration has said that
unless contributions to the Social

Security fund are increased or its
payments reduced , it will fa ce a
shortfall by the end of next year .
The prospect of the 1982 budget
deficit growing far beyond Reagan's
target of $42.5 billion has forced the
president to search for additional
ways to reduce spending and stay on
track toward his goat of a balan ced
budget in 1984.
" We face the choice of taking
drastic action or inviting economi c
calamity," Reagan said Monday.
But, he said, the reductions ran be
achieved "without any damage to
any of government' s vital services."

Asked whether Reagan was
aiming for $18 billion in ruts in the
1982 budget, Speakes said the figure
was "a little high."
Speakes said it was unlikely that
the Reagan budget decisions would
be fonnally announced until next
week. The earli est a Cabinet
meeting will be held to discuss the
proposed changes, as well as those
for fiscal 1983 and 1984, is Wednesday . Last week, it was anticipated the presid ent's decisiOns
would be unveiled this week.

"!!turaJ gas' ,t&gt;.yrA&gt;J~.Gasat'Ohio

meeting .
Council agreed to draw up an
amended appropnations resolution
so that $712,000 from a HUD block
grant can be appropriated {or
various uses. Several council members reported on a conference with a

representative
of Cablentertairunent which has purchased
PointView Cable.
A refund will be made to senior
citizens at the new apartment com·
plex for installation of the cable servi~, ·some $12.:10 each and program
lm"""""""nt plsm as well as expansion of service to outlying areas
are planned, officials said.
Councilman Carl Horky reported
that a study on the efficiency of two
types of street hghting by Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric is un·
derway and Mayor Hoilman reported that the fall street resurfacing
program is about wrapped up.
Many motorists noted the improvement on N. Second Ave. Mon1Continued on page 141

Six people suffer minor injuries

SEATTLE - A one-time New England organized crime chief who
became an informant for the U.S. government more than a decade ago
now is facing new criminal charges.
After Vincent "The Fat Man" Teresa became an informant in 1969,
his testimony helped indict or convict more than 50 organized crime
bosses.
Under the federal witness protection program, the government gave
Teresa a new identity as Charles Cantino and relocated him and his
family in Federal Way, south of Seattle.

WESTLAKE VILLAGE, Calif. - An 11-yeaMld girl and two other
people were shot dwing a staging of a Western-style gunfight at a
shopping plaza after ,~meone loaded a six-shooter with live ammunition instead of blanks, authorities said Monday.
After'the shootout at 3:30p.m. Sunday, witnesses told dt!~!uties that
actors were running in every direction. They ·had been hired to
promote the opening of the Westlake Hills Plaza in tbls affluent suburb
of Los ~eles.
,
·
Ve~ura County sheriff's detectives were investigating whether the
shooting wiiB an accident or intentional.

a set of "proposed ideas" about cutting interest rates, a congressional
source said.
The source, who asked not to be
identified, said the senators were
suggesting that Reagan consider
forming a presidential commission
on interest rates to monitor the
situation.
However, the source added, the
senators also fell there "should be
no effort to overreact" by taking
such steps as imposing credit con·
trots.
Some legis Ia tors, Republicans as
well as Democrats, indicated last
week that they may seek enactment
of credit controls if interest rates do
not soon decline significantly.
In addition, the senators agreed to
ask Reagan to increase his proposed
1982 defense spending reductions to
$4 billion to $5 billion. Reagan has
proposed reducing defense spending
next year by $2 billion as part of his
plan to trim the overall military
budget by $13 billion over the next
three fiscal years.
The source said there are indications the president "may accept
more defense cuts."

Council adopts project guidelines

Informant faces new charges

Just push d.o wn on han.
dle .. . mop heod fold• in
hoi f. ..
wring•
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ts Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Senate Republicans
back additional cuts

•&amp;4''
.....,

.,

1 section, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 15,1981

DR. MALCOLM LENTZ

The cruiser then went into the path
of the eastbound van, driven by Debbie L. Howard, 32, Rutland, and
collided, forcing Johnson to drive
right and strike a fire hydrant,
causing moderate damage to both
vehicles.
The drivers were not treated at the
scene, and the passengers were
identified as Tahnee J. Johnson, 13,
Brad G. Johnson, 10, and Diana L.
Magers, 15, all of Rutland, and Mary
M. Miller, 12, Pomeroy.
Ricky Johnson was cited for
failure to yield.

The patrol Investigated a minor
tw&lt;&gt;-ear accident in the Kyger Creek
High School parking lot on Gravel
Hill Road Monday.
According to the report, a car
driven by John A. Martin, 16, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, pulled into the lot and was
followed by a car driven by Marrie
L. Paxton, 32, Rt. I, Gallipolis, who
attempted to pull around Martin
when he drove left.
Martin then turned right again
and the cars collided, causing
moderate damage. There were no
citations issued.

Dr. Lentz joins
Veterans Memorial
Dr. Malcolm W. Lentz, M.D., a
surgeon, has been named to the staff
of Veterans Memorial Hospital.
A resident of Gallipolis, Dr. Lentz
is a Fellow in the American College
of Surgeons. He was certified with
the American Board of Surgery in
1970; 'the American Board of
Thoracic Surgery in 1971 and the
American Board of Orthopedic
Surgery in September,l9110. ·
He is a member of the Gallia County Medical Society, .Gallipolis; the
Mason County Medical Society,
Point Pleasant, W. Va., the
American Medical Association and
the American Thoracic Society. He
enjoys full staff privileges at tile
Holzer Medical Oelller and Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
A native .c'i York, Pennsylvania,
Dr. .Lentz. graduated · from the
Unlve.rstty of Peunlylvanla and the
medical school of that IUiivenity in
19!58: He. did hla in~p at
Hospital Uriiverstty ci Pamaylvanla ·
in, PbllacleJphia and ~ residencY at
Pqmeroy, a member
Holpltal,Unjvenit)' a('~tlln
llle. l'ftlpleat ol a
lboi IICic 1111'111!0'. and HoiPftrl ,of lbe Oldo Wildlife
Carl L M0111ey1 Jr.,
lllll'lll'llt7 11in or- i "WikiUfe "-'Ward" )lnlle81ed
Clllef ol the Olllo llepu1ineat c'i Natural ~
thapedlc l!lll'IIIII'Y.
•·
Dl~ c'i .WDdllfe at a . ~ meetm; ol tbe Oblo
Dr. Len1a and Ilia wife, Kathryn
AM,
tliree cbtldren..
WDdllfe CGimcO. "WDdllle Awards" are presented to
IDdlwldaala or IJ'I1IIPI ID recopiUoo of dlstlugulsbed
Dr. i.eDtz II ._ aYilllable at the
service to wDdllfe CGIIIervuUu in lbe Slate c'i Olllo.
loeal hoipttll for IUqlCIII pro!)l~.
'
.

ancumau

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.

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.

Karr baa had 1 IUeiOD&amp; luterest ID wildlife conservation. In addltioo to a career witb the Karr eoa.
strueUu Co., Karr Is a· dlredor of tbe Soutbeutem
Oblo J&gt;olled Het;eford Auo., aad.aa.acllve member o1 the Masonic Ledge. 1be e!Jbt member wticuite C.W.C11 :
aids Ia the establllllmleat of ' hunllng lllld fillllinc ·
regulations and &amp;e8110111.
••
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�•
Tuesday, September 15, 1981

Corilmentar
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£

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, September 15, 1981

k

Meet the Eastern Eagles

William F. Buckley Jr.

Jleyd ay •or t e s ep.t:=. .=: ti=c=--=-s _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _--,--_
The editorial world is up in anns
over the Reagan crisis. "The
·panic," observed Mr. Tom Wicker of
·lfhe New York Times, "is the panic
of those who have followed Mr .
Reagan not wisely but too well."
And, opposite, the editorial page
"" said, "And how ungrateful it is for
"recent tax favors done. How un"mindful of the Republican debacles
to come . Socko! It's aU very silly, of
·course, but understandable. After
-passing the largest tax and spending
..-cuts in history a month ago, the
'· Republicans were popping with
"pride and already counting next
year's election victories. But the
- prospect of ever-larger budget
deficits could not be hidden from investors. Now, with the financial
markets depressed, inflationary expectations still high and interest
rates threatening recession, the
·president's party is seized wtth
panic."
Well, well.
.The record of the Reagan administration has yet to be made, and
there are certainly visible pitfalls
ahead. But the record of The New
York Times about how to go about
economic reform is, unfortunately
for it, very much a matter of public
· record.
. During 1978, for instance, the
Times vigorously opposed a
dimunition in the capital gains tax
rate. Congress nevertheless acted . A
year la ter, on Dec. 4, 1979, The New
York Times published an editorial:
"Capital Gains Tax Cu t to
Nowhere."

And the text?

" Remember all the clamor for the
cut in the capital gains tax last
year 7 Its sponsors insisted a reduction would send investors rushing to
risk their money on new business
plants and equipment, stimulate the
stock market and promote economic
recovery. Despite widespread skepticism, their logic prevailed and the
tax on capital gains - the profit for
long-term investment - was
reduced from 50 to 40 percent.
"Well, it didn't work. The proportion of America's resources devoted
to investment has not increased
during 1979, and it is expected to
decline in the coming recession.

Contrary to the predictions about
venture capital flowing to new and
riskier businesses, there has been no
increase in the number of newly incorporated firms . No one knows
whether extra capital is flowing into
small businesses, but as yet there is
no sign that these businesses are expanding plant and equipment."
That was almost two years ago .
We now have the figures. Remember that small firms (under 20 employees) provide 66 percent of all
new jobs. Indeed, 81.5 percent of new
jobs are created by firms with 100 or
fewer employees:
1977 I under the old law ): $-42.6
million in equity capital raised by
small companies. Number of companies that went public: 13.
1979 Inew law l : $183 million: 46
public offerings.
1980 : $821 million: 135 public offerings .
1981 Iannualized ): $2.2 billion; 348
public offerings.

Berry's World

Let us hope that the critics of the
1981 tax reduction prove as incompetent as the critics of the 1978
tax reduction.
Still, keep your eyes on the central
facts :
I l The great Reagan budget cut
was only about 5 percent of the
budget. That.is good as a trend - but
only if it is to be a trend.
2) The tax cut, at $80 biWon, is less
than the tax increase would have
been through inflation.
3) The sum of No. I and No. 2
above sends out to the market the
stgnal: This isn 't enough. The
market is the best judge of the
situation .
4) To lower interest rates right
now, by the Fed, would mean to accelerate those forces of skepticism
that are now deserting the equity
market. In very short order, interest
rates would be higher than ever.
What is at stake isn't whether a
sound economy is pleasing to investors, but whether a democracy
will give us a sound economy.

recess.
It was basically a matter of poor

timing for both Senate Majority
Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., and
Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd, 0W.Va.
Baker came into the Senate chamber early to hold his daily news conference, but found Byrd was already

HOUSTON (AP) -

Mark Holter
175lb. Jr.
Lineman

there , talking to ado-Len or so reporters.
Since Byrd was lashing into
President Reagan's economic
program with such force, Baker's
entrance went all but unnoticed.
Finally, the two eyed each other and
both broke into broad grins.
Mocking his own news conference,
Byrd made a digging gesture with
an imaginary shovel. "How are you

Howard?"
" All right - so far," Baker said as
the troop of reporters moved as a
unit from Byrd to Baker.
Later, Byrd struggled to divide
among fellow Democrats the 25

minutes they had been allotted for
speeches. But no matter how he
figured it, it didn't come out.
Firs! of all, Sen. Ernest F.
Hollings, 0-S.C., wanted 15 minutes
and Sens. William Proxmire, 0Wisc., and Wendell Ford wanted
four minutes between them. So far
so good.
Then Sen. John Stennis, 0-Miss.,
indicated he too wanted to speak.
For how long? Byrd inquired. Twen·
ty minutes, Stennis responded .
Byrd looked perplexed. Baker
finally came to his rescue, winning

Senate approva l to

give

the

Democrats an additional 20 minutes
for their speech making.
Baker ~nded a fiery speech by
warning that economic chaos might
result unless Wall Street rallies
behind Reagan's economic policies.
"I have just been handed a note
th• t is more distressing than
anything else we have discussed this
morning," Baker told the Senate.
"I have a note from my wife
saying that I ran off with the car
keys this morning ."
As the Senate waited, Baker went
through his pockets.
"With my apologies to my wife, I
do not have the car keys," he said.

Does economic program have contradictions?
NEW YORK (AP) - The question
before the pubtic is whether the new
economic program that's supposed
to th.r .-31: America into a new era has

'"Whenever I think of that Pentagon phrase
'Window of vulnerability,' I have trouble getting
to sleep!"

Today in history.

within it some inherent contradictions that might make tl
nusfire.
Nobody has offered incontestable
evidence of this because, alas, all
theories of economics past or
present can be and are debated. In
fact, economics may have contributed more to debate than to understanding.
Seldom has the debate heated up
so quickly as it has in the past month
or so, a period in which the president
rested on his laurels after an impressive public relations and
marketing campaign for his
program.
The second thoughts suddenly

grew like weeds in an untended garden, and now they mar the public's
image of the program. The critics
now say the program isn't as
unified, as neatly tied together, as
was supposed. "Reagan is beating
the horse and pulling the reins at the
same time," announced Richard
Day, a University of Southern
California economist. High interest
and continued inflation are partly
the fault of the president, said Day
last Friday, when the debate
reached a peak.
What Day means is that the
president is seeking to stimulate
growth and productivity through tax
cuts, but that he hasn't yet compensated for the expected lower
revenues through comparable spending cuts.
In some respects, critics are

saying, the president seeks both a
conservative and a liberal economic
stance: that is, he wants to cut and
he wants to spend too, especially in
r.egard to the military.
Reagan has now promised further
spending cuts, but it is probably a little late to quiet the critics. They've
been examining his plan for the past
month, ·convinced that it couldn't be
as good as he had led them to
believe. Now they have found
ground on which to take a stand.
From campuses, businesses,
Democratic think tanks and ordinary citizens, the questions are
asked :
- Does Reagan frustrate his own
goals when he s upports the Federal
Reserve's tight money policy?
-Can the economic recovery
begin quickly and positively, or is

• •

-Today is Tuesday. Sept. 15, the 258th day of 1981. There a re 107 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
- On Sept. 15. 1917, the Russtan Republic was proclaimed under Alexander Kerensky.
On this date:
In 1777, Polish Count Casimir Pulaski was commissioned a major
general in the American Revolutionary Army .
In 1935, a banner wtlh a swastika on it was proclaimed the official flag
of Germany.
In 1942, German armies attacked the Soviet city of Stalingrad in World
War II .
In 1970, all 156 people aboard survived when an Italian ietliner snl it
apart on landing at New York's Kennedy International Airport.
· Ten years ago: In a policy switch, U.S. officials urged a return to the
use of ecologically damaging phosphate detergents because they were
less dangerous than cleaners using caustic soda or the chemical NTA.
One year ago: President Carter criticized his Republican challenger,
Ronald Heagan, for corrunenting publicly about the Iran hostage
negotiations durmg the pres1denttal campaign .
Today's birthdays : Singer-pianist Bobby Short is 57 years old. Singer
Jessye Nonnan is 36.
. 'l'houghtfortoday : We must beware oftrying to build a society in which
nobody counts for anything except a politician or an official. - Sir Win:rtun Churchill, British statesman (]874-1965) .

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Cour1 Strttl
Pomt roy, ot.lo
11&amp;-tf!..!l!il

DEVC11'ED TO mE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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The new airlines----------------------------------------Jane," he said.
"No ," I told him. " I'll take the
flight and you marry Jane. She
really loves you. "
''How do you know ?'' he asked.
"Because she begged me not to let
you take the flight. "
"Why didn't she say something to
me? "
11
Because she was afrald you'd do

something stupid like knock me out,
and then take the flight so we could
get married."

"Okay, you take the flight and I'll
marry Jane. If the marriage doesn't
work out, I'll take the next flight and
you marry her if I don 'I make it."
When we got to the airport, I
checked in my luggage. The man
behind the counter was wearing a
sharp blue unifonn with four Stripes
on it.
"You counter people have snappy
unifonns," I said.
"What do you mean counter
people?" he said. ''I'm the pilot." He
weighed my baggage and then he
asked me how much I weighed.
I lied and said 190. He wrote down
200.

·'People always lie by 10 pounds, '' my place and I'll marry Jane."
"Are you crazy?" Peter said. " If
he said. Then he gave me a boarding
card . "The heavy people will sit up you make it to Boston you can marry
front - the li ghter ones in the back anybody you want. "
The passengers walked towards
of the plane."
the
tiny plane and before climbing
As flight time approached I stood
the
two
steps, the pilot took our boar-'
outside with Stone. Suddenly Jane
ding
passes.
Then he crawled in
drove up. " I've changed my mind, "
she said, throwing her arms around behind us, closed the door and
me. " I want Peter to take the flight crawled down to his seat.
"Welcome to Cwnulus Airlines "
and I want to marry you.•'
We went back inside but the pilot he said; "On behalf of the enti~e
said it was too late. He had to load c ~ew we hope you have an enjoyable
the luggage on the plane. He picked fltght . Government regulations
up his microphone and said, require me to tell you in the unlikely
" Cuniulus Airliners' Flight 1786 is event of any trouble your seat is
now boarding for Boston with in- your flotation jacket, so please don't
termediate stops in Hyannisport, forget it when going out .the
emergency exit door, whi ch is the
Provincetown and Woods Hole."
same door you came in."
" But," I protested, " there are
eight of us already, and with two
The pilot got out of the plane, turpilots that makes 10. Why do we
ned both propellers by hand, retur-:
have to stop?"
ned to the plane, and then we were'
"Who said anything about two
barrelling down the runway.
;
pilots?" he replied. "We have room
I looked out the tiny window of the.·
for one more passenger in the co- plane and saw Peter and Jane;
pilot's seat, and we may get lucky
waving. This didn't shake me. What':
and pick up one at an intermediate shook me was that the pilot took his:
stop."
hands off the throttle and was:
" Look," I said to Peter, "You take waving back.

Publlther

A UK/fl,Y

BOBHOEFUCH
Gaerai Mllaqer

Aulltut Plllllalter/Centnller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
"New.Edttar

A IIEMIIER ol Tloe Alo«tof&lt;d Praa, blood Don, ..._
AalerieiiN........ P""'!''
•AAwlltML
.

-ttoo _. the

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...., . . ~ teellldM IDIIIImut lie slped rill ..-eo,...._ ... tella • • •
. ..... ~ ........ dJ beJIIIbloW. ........ ........ -. · ...,._.,

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

.'

Dave Gaul
205lb. Jr.
Lineman

Troy Guthrie
154! lb. Soph.
Back

Leonard-Hearns showdown
offers big money purse
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - All the
cards are on the table for one of the
biggest games of showdown this
town has seen.
Sugar Ray Leonard and Thomas
Hearns are set to meet in the biggest
money fight ever for the undisputed
welterweight championship Wednesday night at Caesars Palace.
The stakes are high and both
fighters know it. Hearns, who
figures to make about $5 million,
says : "Ray has had everything.
Now I want everything.''
And Leonard, who will make at
least $8 million and possibly as much
as $13 million, lets it be known he intends not only to keep what he has,
but add Hearns' World Boxing
Association welterweight titie to his
own World Boxing Council version.
"Those that say I'm not a hungry
fighter don't know Sugar Ray
Leonard," he says.
Leonard's stategy will be to move

laterally and use his speed to try to
out-box Hearns. "I'm capable of
fighting any way, " Leonard said
Monday. " Hearns can only fight me

one way."
He said he is "going to make Tommy Hearns think and when Tommy
Hearns starts to think he is in
trouble."
Hearns is a power puncher and his
manager, Emanuel Steward, said;
"Thomas has the ability to end this
fight with one punch, and that is a lot
of danger to face for 45 minutes. "
But Leonard is prepared to face
that danger . "He tries to knock you
out with every punch," he said. "I
don't think Hearns can box."
Both camps are predicting the
fight will end by a knockout.
Steward predicted a fifth round
knockout by Hearns, who already
has a painting of himself standing
over a fallen Leonard. Leonard said,
"It won't go past lP. I promise that."

The bookmakers here have the
betting line on the fight even. To bet
either champion requires a $6 bet to
win$5.
Promoters say the fight already
has grossed more than $32 miWon,
and they expect to take in between
$35 million and $40 million , far surpassing the previous record gross of
$29 million for the first LeonardRoberto Duran fight.
In addition to the 24,382 seats at
Caesars, there are 298 closed circuit
television locations around the
United States and 24 cities where it
will be available on at-home pay
television . The welterweight
showdown will be televised live in
about 40 countries and, although no
announcements have been made, it
is believed that ABC owns the
delayed rights.
Whichever fighter wins will own
only the second unified title in the
divided world of boxing.

" put up or shut up" time for the
Reds, and it was Bench who " put
up" against the National League
West-leading Houston Astro8 Monday night.
Bench backed Bruce Berenyi's
four-hit gem by knocking in three
runs with three hits in the Reds' 4-2
triumph in the Astrodome.
"There's only 19 games to go, so
we've got to put up or shut up, " Bench said. " We can't afford to let this
thing slip away or we could wind up
like we did in the first half."
In baseball's "first" season, Cincinnatti closed strong to finish a
half-game behind Los Angeles, but
every one started with a clean slate
in the second half.
Monday's win allowed the Reds to
pull within 3'f. games of the Astros.
A loss would have dropped Cincinnati 5'f. games back with 12 more
·road games on the current trip.
"We've had our ups and downs,
but we better be on an up-swing now
or we'U be watching the playoffs on
TV," Bench said.
Bench wasn't the only Cincinnati
player putting up good nwnbers
Monday. Berenyi, 8-5, was supersharp, striking out 12 and walking
one while retiring 21 batters in a
row.
" This was a big game," Berenyi
said. "If we lost this one it might
have hurt us the rest of the road
trip, II

Bench's single up the middle in the
first inning brought in Ken Griffey
and Dave Concepcion to giv~ the
Reds a 2-&lt;llead, but the Astros matched that in the bottom of the inning
on Phil Gamer's walk , a double by
Terry Puhl, an error by Bench and
Denny Walling 's run-scoring ground
out.
Berenyi , whose fast ball was

'

STfR'f.

clocked at 98 mph, bore down at that
point to retire 25 of the last 28 batters.
The Reds taWed an unearned run
in the fourth to take the lead. Ray
Knight reacQed base on a ground
out, went to second on Joe Nolan 's
single, and scored on WaWng's
error.
Loser Vern Ruhle, s-4, retired II
batters in a row after that, but gave
up a double to Concepcion in the
eighth. Bench's third hit brought
Concepcion home to make it 4-2.
In other NL games, Davey Lopes
hopes to steal back the hearts of Los
AngeLes Dodger fans with his fast
hat and quick feet.
He showed both to good advantage
Monday night while helping the
Dodgers beat the San Diego Padres
1()-5.

"He looks like the Lopes of old,"
said Dodger Manager Tommy
Lasorda after watching Lopes belt
four hils, including a three-run
homer, and drive in four runs. "He
can beat you so many ways - base
hils, stolen bases and hitting the baU
out ofthe park."
After strugling below the .200
mark for most of the season and incurring the wrath of Dodger fans,
Lopes has come to life in September
as a hitter. Corning off a groin injury
that sidelined him for two weeks, the
3!&gt;-year-old veteran has collected 14
hits in his last 35 at bats for a .400
clip.
"I wanted him to know he wasn't
going to lose his job when he was on
the disabled list," said Lasorda. " I
told Davey when he was ready to
come back, he was our second
baseman.''

Lopes: " I never lost confidence in
myself. There has been no pressure.
Pressure is when you are afraid of

failure. It makes me believe · in
myself even more. I felt given the
opportunity I would produce, regardless of what other people think., .
Lopes' homer keyed a six-run
seventh inning for the Dodgers. The
game was tied 4-4 when Mike
Sciascia and Mike Marshall each
stroked twiHlut pinch singles .off
reliever Eric Show, (}..2, to start the
rally before Lopes blasted his fifth
homer of the year. Lopes, hitting
just .202 at the start of the game, led
a 17-hit Dodger attack against six
Padre pitchers and also stole a base.
Rookie Ted Power, 1-1, got the viotory, working 22-3 innings in relief of
Dodger starter Burt Hooton.
Giants 4, Braves 2
Jerry Martin capped a three-run
first-inning outburst with a tw&lt;&gt;-run
single, sparking San Francisco over
Atlanta . Martin's single off loser
Tonuny Boggs, 3-11, followed two
Atlanta errors and two walks, the
second one a base-loaded pass· to
Milt May that gave the Giants tlieir
first run .
The Giants increased their lead to
4-{) in the fourth when Martin tripled
and scored on Johnnie LeMaster's
squeeze bunt. The Braves scored
their runs off Tom Griffin, s-6, in the
fifth on an RBI single by Bob Horner
and a sacrifice fly by Chris Chambliss.

U.S. finishes third
sKOPJE, Yugoslavia (AP) - The
!(}..man United States team finished
third behind the Soviet Union and
Bulgaria in the four-day Worl~
Freestyle Wrestling Championships:
The Americans collected 28 points i
while the Soviets crowned five in,
dividual champions and scored 42
points - nine more than Bulgaria. '

The IJuily Scntiud
I USPS 145-MO J

A OlviiiODof M11IUmedla , Inc.
Publi!!ht!d ev~ry Mflemoon, Mundlly lhmll)!h
Friday, lH Court Sl~L. by lh~ Ohio Vw.lley
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Griffey will become free agent

POSTMASTER . Stond ii t.ldr~s.., In The D~t dy
! l l Cuu rt St., Purn~ ruy, Ohio45769.

S4!ntln~l.

CINCINNATI - Ken Griffey says
it's definite that he will become a
free agent rather than sign another
contract with the Cincinnati Reds.
It's nothing personal, he says, just
time to look out for himself and his
family .
"I've always been proud to be in
this uniform," Griffey said. "But
now is the time when I've got to look
for security for my family and
myself.
"The chances I took for the Reds,!
took for eight years. I think I've performed well. I don 't think I owe them
anything."
Griffey came up through the Reds'
farm organization. It's the only
major league team the .311/ career
hitter has ever played for.
"I've enjoyed this organization. I
wouldn't have been where I am
today if it weren't for certain people
here," Griffey said. "It's just that it
seems time for me to go.
"It seems definitely that I haven't

been wanted," he added. " I respect
their feelings. That's what they want

to do, I guess."
Griffey, 31, does not get a lot of
publicity despite his consistent good
performance on the field. His comments are intelligent and incisive,
but he is soft-spoken by nature and
has always taken a back seat to
more flamboyant teanunates, such
as Tony Perez, Pete Rose, Joe
Morgan and Johnny Bench.
"I'm not going to discuss how my
family feels, except that the only
thing I can say is that they are for
what 's best for me," Griffey said. " I
am going into the re-entry draft. H
the Reds want to talk to me after the
draft, I will give them every opportunity to do so."

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PACES REDS WIN- Veteran
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Bench led ClnciDnatl's 4-2 win
over Houston Monday night with
three bits and three RBI'S.

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LBI'I'IIIS.OF OPINION on

Cincinnati

Su~de

~v

PAT WHITEHEAD

there one big, difficult and painful
economic reality that must first be
faced 7
- What ca n be done about the
federal debt, the refinancing of
which is a major factor in continuance of high interest rates'
Meanwhile, because interest rates
are high the cost of maintaining the
federal debt is now more costly than
ever. By itself it can destroy the
president's budget-balance plans.
And finally , the greatest irony of
all: Because there is so much debt to
finance it is keeping interest rates
high. A dilenuna : Rates are high
because of the debt, and the debt
grows higher because of the rates.
Like weeds, these questions and
problems have moved into the garden while the president was away.

Art Buchwald

As more and more major airlines
eli rrunate cities and towns from
their schedules, the slack is being
taken up by tiny , struggling cornmuter lines.
What makes this exciting is that
the new airlines are flying everything from World War II DC-3's to
little planes that carry no more than
six passengers at one time.s The
planes have none of the frills of a
Boeing or a Lockheed jetliner, but
there is a sense of adventure about
flying one that makes you think
you're in a time warp, and i&gt;art of
the early days of flight, before they
had stewardesses and in-flight
movies.
We have such an airline on Martha's Vineyard which provides service between the Vineyard, Boston
and New York. Every trip off and on
the island is an experience that none
of the major airlines can provide.
My friend Peter Stone took me to
the airport for a flight to Boston. Since we both had flown the route
before, we discussed it as if he were
Spencer Tracy and I was Clark
Gable.
''I'll take the flight, and you marry

Bench says it's time
to put up or shut up
1

Reds catcher Johnny Bench says it's

Things aren't always smooth after vacations
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Everything doesn 't always go
smoothly when Congress first returns from its summer vacation.
And so it was last week when both
the House and the Senate resumed
business after their month-long

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

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oj,en Dally lG-9; Sunday 1-6

�Pag~t--6- The

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, SeptemberlS, ~~~~

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Raiders rip Vikings, 36-10 ·

~

THE VIKINGS ARE COM ING! - Oakland Raid~rs runnin? ~c~
Kenny King is brought down after a one yard gam by M1nnesota Vikings
safely Kurt Knoff 1251 with Tommy Hannon 1151 and Matt Blair 159)
ready to lend assistance during first quarter football action Monday
night.

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. lAP) Balanced scoring doesn't always
mean the running-passing ratio. At
times it can be an offensivedefensive ratio. Whatever, the
Oakland Raiders have it.
That balance between offense and
defense was evident in the Raiders'
36-10 romp over the struggling and
injury-plagued Minnesota Vikings in
the National Football League's Monday night showcase event.
"For a time there I wasn't sure
whether our defense might not outscore the offense ," said quarterback
Jim Plunkett, who tossed two touchdown passes but also watched his
teammates scored a pair of touchdowns on an interception return and
a fwnble return .
Burgess Owens picked off a Steve
Dils screen pass and sprinted 30 yards for Oakland's first touchdown in
the second quarter for a IM lead.
Midway through the fourth quarter
12-year veteran Cedric Hardman
scooped up a fumble by rookie quar·
terback Wade Wilson and rumbled
52 yards untouched into the end zone
to give the inspired Raiders a 31HO
lead.

"They teach us from day one that
you pick up the ball and go," said
Hardman, who grabbed the ball after a hit by teammate Howard Long
forced Wilson's fumble.
The defending Super Bowl champion Raiders were coming off a 9-7
loss to Denver last week and were
~!ermined to get back on the track
to the playoffs. Oakland also kept intact its incredible success record for
'Monday night games, recording Its
13th consecutive victory and raising
its overall record to 17-1-1 since 1970.
"We kept our Monday night record
alive with a powerful perfonnance
both offensively and defensively,"

:
·
:
.

SOUTH BEND, Ind . (API - U!st
fall, Jerry Faust was coaching high
school football in Cincinnati and now
he finds him,.lf coaching a Notre
Dame team ranked No . 1 in college
foot ball .
Faust had his debut with the
Fighting Irish Saturday and his
team jumped to the top spot in The
Associated Press college football
poll this week after defeating
Louisiana State 27-9.
"I think I'll retire now. At leas t I
can say I was No. l once in my life,"

the coach said Monday after lear. ning the Irish had taken over first
place in the AP poll.
Notre Dame's climb to the top was
helped by a pair of upsets of
Michigan and Alabama, last week's
: top two teams. Michigan , wh1ch
· meets Notre Dame this Saturday,
· fell from the top spot after losing its

Big Ten opener to Wisconsm .

"Seriously, it's great, a rea l
honor , but it will be tough to stay
there. It's really too early in the
season to worry about being No. I ,
but we'll take it," said Faust, 46,
who left Cincinnati's Moeller High
School after last season to take over
the reins at Notre Dame from Dan
Devine. "The end of the year is when
it really counts. The pressure of
being No. I doesn't bother me."
Notre Dame, Southern California,
Oklahoma, Georgia and Penn State
are the top five teams in this week's
AP poll while Michigan, Alabama
and Nebraska dropped to l ith , 12th
and 17th, respectively . Nebraska,
ranked No. 7 last week, also was an
upset victim last Saturday.
Notre Dame, fourth a week ago,
hurdled to the top with 24 of 65 firstplace votes and 1,233 of a possible

1,300 points. Southern Cal, which
buned Tennessee 43-7, jumped from
fifth to second with 12 first-place
votes and 1,181 points.
Oklahoma, a 37-20 winner over
Wyoming; held onto third with 12 first-place ballots and 1,153 points. The
defend ing champion Georgia
Bulldogs climbed from sixth to fourth and received 12 firsts and 1,113
points following a 27-13 triumph over
California.
The fifth-and sixth-place teams.
Penn State and Texas, each received
one first-place vote. Penn State
crushed Cincinnati 52-0 and jumped
from a ninth-place tie to fifth with
996 points while Texas trounced Rice
31-3 and shot from eighth to sixth
with 963 points.
Pitt, idle last weekend, went from
a tie for ninth to seventh place with
763 points whil e Ohi o State whipped

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Renees
Bobbie, driven by Dan Ater, won the
featured eighth race in 2:04 1-5 Monday at Scioto Downs, paying $18.80,
$8.60and$4.60.

over the Detroit Tigers.

Jerry Remy won 't win any runs-

batted-in titles. but he's not such a
. bad guy to have at the plate in a
crucial situation.
The diminutive Boston second
: baseman never has had more than
46 RBI in a year and has averaged
. only one home run for each of his
seven major·league seasons .

However, he is hitting .325 this
: year and has a .Ill average with
· men on ba se. And his tw&lt;&gt;-run single
: with the bases loaded and two outs in
: the sixth inning Monday night
: propelled the Red Sox to a 5-2 victory

Boston's victory was particularly

.. I wish I knew the secret because
I'd do it for the next five or six years.
I've just been lucky ," said Remy,

who has 28 RBI in 71 games thi s
year. " I concentrate as hard as I can
every time. I'm a leadoff man and
my job is to get on base. I'm just
lucky the guys on the bottom of the
lineup are getting on base. "
In other American League games,
Minnesota beat Toronto 6-3, New
York blasted Milwaukee 10-2,
Oakland defeated Texas 5-2, Kansas
City edged Callform a 4-3 and
Chicago tripped Seattle 5-2.

,---··~- .--...,

•

n

crucial because the Tigers are in first place in the AL East. With three
games left in the series with Detroit,
the Red Sox, now 3'o games behind ,
can make up ground or fall far off
the pace in the race.
Bob Stanley, who won his ninth
game in 15 decisions with 31-3 innings of shutout relief Monday, said
the Red Sox are feeling far less
pressure under new Manager Ralph
Houk this season than in past years
whe n

co ntrove r sy

su rrounded

Manager Don Zimmer.
With the score tied 2-2 in the sixth,
Remy lined his tw(}-()ut si ngle to leftcenter off Dan Petry, 11-7, after Tony
Perez and Rich Gedman singled and
pinch-hitler Dave Stapleton walked
to load the bases. The Red Sox added
a run in the seventh on Perez's RBI
single.
Steve Kemp knocked in both
Detroit runs off starter Mike Torrez
with a groundout in the first and his
ninth home run of the year in the six·
th.
Boston tied the game 1-1 in the first when Carney Lansford singled in
a run and went ahead 2-1 in the third
on Jim Rice's 14th homer.
Yankees 10, Brewers 2
Reggie Jackson hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run
homer and an RBI double and
knocked in a fourth run with a ground out as New York pounded
Milwaukee.
Lou Piniella and Bob Watson also
homered for the Yankees, who cut
Detroit's lead in the East to two

HANICS(IAR ME IALLOM

Duke and climbed from li th to
eighth with 710 points.
UCLA and North Carolina, 12th
and 13th a week ago, rose to ninth
and lOth, respectively. UCLA
re~~ 6!lO.,pQinl'! followj.rlg .~ 35-18
triumph over Arizona while North
Carolina mauled East Carolina 56-0
and received 661 points.
Michigan and Alabama head the
Second Ten this week after leading
the Top Ten one week earlier.
Michigan lost to Wisconsin 21-14
while Alabama was shocked 24-21 by
Georgia Tech.
Rounding out the Top Twenty are
Brigham Young, Mississippi State,
Washington, Miami of Florida,
Nebraska , Arizona State, Florida
State and Wisconsin, which appears
in the rankings for the first time in

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games.
Tommy .John won his ninth game
in 14 decisions with a nine-hit complete game. One of the hits was
Cha rlie Moore's first homer of the
season .
Twins 6, Blue Jays 3
Minnesota continued to play well,
winning its seventh game in a row
behind Brad Havens' three-hit pitching for seven innings.
The Twins scored three runs in the
eighth inning to break a 3-3 tie. The
first run came home when Roy Lee
Jackson issued a bases-loaded walk
to Glenn Adams, and then Ron
Washington, a 29-year-old rookie,
picked up his first major-league RBI
with a two-run single.
Hosken Powell homered in the
third inning for the Twins.
A's5, Rnngers 2
Cliff Johnson doubled and scored a
run in the first inning and added a
tw&lt;&gt;-run single in the second as
Oakland took control early and
coasted to victory over Texas behind
the seven-hit pitching of Rick
Langford.
The A's right-hander had trouble
only in the second inning when he
gave up singles to Buddy Bell. Pat
Putnam and J 1m Sundberg, plus an
RBI grounder by Tom P&lt; &lt;Juette.
Langford improved his record to 9-9
in pitching his 15th complete game.
White Sox 5, Mariners 2
Dennis [.amp pitched a five-hitter
to improve his record to 6-4 and Jim
Morrison homered for Chicago
a•ainst s. ttle.

99

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idd

DAR

Constitution week

chapter
passes
resolutions
A report on the 1981 Continental
Congress of the Daughters of the
American Revolution and the
nwnerous resolutions passed by
Mrs. Lee Gibbs highlighted the
Friday meeting &lt;1 the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter DAR held
at'the Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Gibbs, regent of Col. Charles
Lewis Chapter at Pnint Pleasant and
the author of two books, the History
of Hartford and the History of
Mason, gave highlights of her trip to
Washington, D. C. and detailed the
resolution contents.
: Among the resolutions adopted by
t)le national organization discussed
~Y the guest speaker at the meeting
were:
: ...,. That the individual members of
~ National Society, DAR,' insist
lhat a full scale investigation be
made into the fate of all u. s.
j)risoners of war and those missing
in action emphasizing tha( this is the
oountry's responsibility to every •erViceman.
- That the National Society, DAR,
as individuals set an example for all
American people by supporting the
president's efforts to rebuild the
military strength of the nation.
- That the National Society, DAR,
as individuals support the expressed
will of the electorate calling for the
adoption &lt;1 the proposed economic
recovery program.
- That the National Society study
the United Nations charter and
covenants to understand the consequences of continuing encroachment on the U. S. policies,
and alert the country to the dangers
Of ratifying the United Nations
~venant which would supersede the
freedoms guaranteed by the U. S.
Constitution; and as individuals,
cantact elected representatives and
urge them to terminate support for
the United Nations .
-That the National Society, DAR,
recommend the reinstatement of the
mandatory death penalty for crimes
involving assassination, murder of
law enforcement offic.!rs and public
!&gt;fficials, and for multiple murders;
and calling for the effective supervision over parole laws and indeterminate sentencing
and
cooperation by individuals in
strengthening the local law enforcement agencies for the protection of the innocent.

One hundred and ninety-four years ago, strong-willed men
gathered in Philadelphia to mend and remold a divided land. The Articles of Confederation which bad gone into effect in 1781 had failed,
an\1 the task of creating a new national government was inunense. The
Daughters of the American Revolution remind you that the week &lt;1
September 17 through 23 Is Constitution Week, and urge you to know
and to use lhe liberties provided for you by our Constitution. Read your
Constitution. This announcement was sponsored by the National
Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution.

DILES
. _ Q~.1~g fti.~ C-:.~ter
444 W. Un.i!on St.- Athens, Oh.
'
I-' or Ht•nrin~: Aid
~t·lt·f·lion. St•r\il•t•. or (:onsult.alion.
H.a ... t·d On 32 \ •·nr,; · E.~luorit·m·• ·­

..\nti/IJr Rt•fo·rral Tu Appropriolt~lo·oliral Spo·rialist"
DAR - Mn. Lee Gibbs, center, reported oa the
1981 Contlnenlal Congress of lhe NatiOIIIII Society,
Daughten of Amertca, beld Ill Wasblnglon, D. C. at
- That the National Society, DAR,
government
continue tothe
support
as
individualsto encourage
U. S.
El Salvador with economic aid and
advisors. realizing that a communist
victory
in of
El Central
Salvador
would and
endanger all
America
Mexico, cause a potential refugee
problem, endanger strategic oil
shipping lanes in the Caribbean and
the Gulf of Mexico, and advance the
goal of community enslavement.
- That the members of the
National Society, DAR, as individuals stand firm for the preservation of the Holy Scriptures and
strongly oppose the writing of the
"uni-sex" Bible by feminists and
those who would interject their godlessideologyintotheWordofGod.
- That the National Society, DAR,
as individuals call for a permanent
halt to the sale of technology and
other aid to all communist countries.
The meeting opened in ritualistic
fonn with Mrs. Clyde Ingels, regent,
presiding. She also reported on the
convention held in Colwnbus which
she and June Ashley attended. Sandy Luckeydoo announced Sept. 17-23
as Constitution Week and stressed
its observance.
The national defense report was
given by Mary Kay Yost and it was
voted to give a memorial to the
National Society in honor of Nancy
Reed.
It was noted that three honors
were received by the chapter, a gold
award for honor roll for the National
Society, certificate for 100 percent
dues from the National Society, and
the Continental Congress award for
conservatin of printing costs.

Open Meeting attracts
seven garden clubs
Seven visiting Meigs County Gar!len Clubs were represented at the
Rutland Garden Club's open
meeting held recently at the Rutland
United Methodist Church.
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, president, extended greetings to the members
and guests. Devotions were given by
Mrs. Carl Denison from the autumn
' ' Ideal.s."
· "It was amiounced that the regional
ineeting will be held in October. The
Shade Valley Council will hold an
ppen meeting, Sept. 16, 7:30 p.m. at
the Chester United Methodist Church. Mrs. Macel Barton will speak
concerning houseplants.
· Mrs. Roy Holter was guest demonStrator and displayed a moonflower
brought by Mrs. Chris DiehL Mrs.
flolter made arrangements for use
!hr;ougliout the home. She used dried
materials as well as seasonal '
blooms .
Mrs . Holter showed 15
arrang~ments,
one a dried
arrangement in a hat, uaother in a
blue glass basket on a blue goblet.
·She made a matching dining table
,mass design using blue Fenton glass
·for the container with asters, roses,
·field flowers, small zinnias, and iron
weed for filler. She also used some
,Queen Anne's lace ·and baby's
.breath in lavender, purple, pink,

rose and white.
The entrance arrangement which
she created was of goldenrod,
daisies and cattails in a metal pipe.
Her television arrangement was
made in black vases of different
heights and featured black painted
wood branches, all on a marble slab.
A four-section arrangement was
use d for the coffee table
arrangement, while a high, round
white container was used on the
piano, and a low dish container in
black in the kitchen, both using
gladioli.
Hen and rooster figures were used
with yellow roses for a counter
arrangement. For the patio, Mrs.
Holter used a black woodel\ stump
with sunflowers. All of the
arrangements were displayed for
viewing .
Refreshments were senied from a
table covered in yellow and centered
with a mass arrangement of mixed
silk flowers. Mrs. Jack Robson, Mrs.
,Carl Denison, Mrs . Everett Colwell,
and Mrs. Marie Bishop were
hostesses.
Mrs. Robson, chainnan of the fall
flower show to be held this weekend
at the Rutland United Methodist
Church distributed programs and
conunented on plans for the open
competition.
·

Friday's meeting of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Pictured wllh ber are left, Mrs. Clyde Ingels, local
regent, and Mrs. June Asbley, program chairman.

Hostesses were Mrs. Ingels, Mrs.

Phone

~614l594-3571

\li ,. St·rw Meigs. Gal lin and Masun &lt;.:uunties
On A Re!(ular Has is

George Morris, and Mrs. Harold

riG~eo~r~g~e~W~.;;;Ha~c~k~e~tt~,~Jr~·=·~Mr~s·~~Sa~rg~e~n~t.;;;;;;;:=====~~§~~~~~~~~~~i~;~;;;~~~~~~
WE HA V£ FREE

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.lg~ • ~ t he lerm u~ed rn lht pa~r 11 ·5 an
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w~

Mon.-Sat.
8 AM to
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IO'II' rncrd tiiCt of these problems·~ ~tople who

IOda~

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ann

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have drels ulaltvely llrQh w lrbtr However
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a ltttr ng ~l t v ll ness so d+eltl~ ltnd Ihem helpl,l
C•re mvst be Ia hen not to ltllrbtl dornrn are
trot drtl howev~ r leo much mav rntfrtue wul'l

eHofr removal or

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tr om t~t ono~ ntaO rnq less
nrr blOOd yr,!oel~ IW• rr rJif her¥ lht
rr• rrrl lor oJ(JtQua lt 'l!oll ~r 1 fo1 tlu~ ruson •I
rnav ltssen ltl t chi! nc.:
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other d r~oro e• ~ sucn
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Sunday
11 AM to
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lrtlr• ~ UMtO Starn Recommende~ Oa rl~
AUowai\Ce has been set because lilt 1~11 role of

d•~frlo r ul()l • ~

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arn ero~cle•os"

s Abrtnv to ao ~or o esseorrat mrner ~Is
as calc tum uon and /111C

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naw

Jnd

St"!lres hHe l o"M a

Trtert

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retrntc

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wr &amp;re nrrn9 more

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BOX

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HOW CAN WE SAVE YOU
MONEY ON AUTO INSURANCE?
Just to name a few, we save two car families,
good students, and low mileage drivers.
But how much money can we save you?
Why not call today so we can get working on it
right away .

$

CEPACOL
MOUTHWASH

AllY. COt.OIS

FffiES FOR TWO - Houston Astra's short stop Craig Reynolds fires
for the double play as Cincinnati Reds' Joe Nolan is forced in the second
Inning of the Nalfonal League game at Houston Monday night. Nolan was
forced as teammate Ron Oester grounded to second to start the double
play. (AP Laserphoto i.

$6.60 and $5.20, and Marlellen
Melvin was third, paying $3.60.
The first trifecta of 11-4-10 (&gt;IIi&lt;!
$1,933.50
The crowd of 2,875 wagered

said
"Andlast
weSunday.''
needed it after r~Sai;;.l;in~Su~e~f~in~is;h;e;d;s;ec;o;nd;·;p~a;y;in~g;;;$;2;7;1,;;45~2;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
losingFlores.
to Denver
Plunkett fired scoring passes of 21
yards to Todd Christensen and 12
yards to Morris Bradshaw. Chris
Bahr added a 21-yard field goal and
backup Marc Wilson lofted a 61-yard
TD (&gt;IISS to Malcolm Barnwell with
just 1:14 to play to round out the·
scoring.
Minnesota's only touchdown came
courtesy of Eddie Payton, who
returned a Bahr kickoff 99 yards for
a TD late in the first half to cut

Remy leads Boston to win Monday
By Associated Press

possession late in the game - but
had to overcome 12t yards in
penalties.
"There were a lot of flags,
especially ours,'' Plunkett admitted.
Oakland lost safety Mike Davis in
the first three minutes of the game
with a broken leg.

Scioto Downs results _____________

Faust's Fighting Irish rated No. 1
.
·
:
:
:
·

- 'l/ of those in the Vikings' final

Oakland's lead to 16-7.
" We played the world champions
and they kicked our butts, no matter
how you spell it," said Minnesota
Coach Bud Grant, whose club drO[&gt;ped to ll-2, the Vikings' worst start
since 1967.
The Raiders sacked Minnesota
quarterbacks eight times and held
the Vikings to just 42 yards rushing

1981

IGA Self Rising

FLOUR

4
59

21 LB . BAG

•3 19

"

$149

• ~•·n.

Camden Park
will be
opea latardqs alter 4 piD aad
10 •• to 10 p• Saada~• aatll
Oetober4o

at... West

Baatlapea, W.Va.

i1

.

oxr.

.

·QuantitY Rilhts· Reserved
.Prices Good thoa ·sat., sipt. 19, 1981

1. _

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a.,t.·II.

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"":•~ · SJ89

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IIIIJ Crocker
··~

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79¢
.............

I
I

IJOII11-••f-,

NESTLE'S
l Chocolate •
1 QUIK .............. ~li
1I

ll

........

IYIUP
....." ITi.
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21 9

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�Tuesday, September 15, 1981

Pa

The

Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sen•inel

Page-9

nel

Atkins and Nicholson share honors

I

Pomeroy

·Zerpha Blue cuts records and shatters glass

•~s . . .

~\t. on•afOODDOLLAR
..

'

SLICED

BACON
I

FALL'S GOLDEN COWRS was the theme of the
show judged by Mrs. Janet Bolio, second from left, an
accredited judge of the Ohio Association of Garden

Clubs. She is pictured with Reva Snowden, one of the
top horticulture ribbon winners, Mrs. Eva Robson, the
show chairman. and Mrs. Ruth Erlewine, clerk, left to
right.

POLISH
SAUSAGE ...................L!~

HAM

Pauline Atkins and Neva
Nicholson shared top honors in ar·
ttstic arrangements at the Rutland
Garden Club's ' 'Fall's Golden
Colors" flower show staged over the
weekend at the Rutland United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Atkins, president of the club,
took the "best of show" wtth Mrs.
Nicholson being awarded the" reserve best of show" by Janet Bolin, who
judged the show . There were 50 artistic arrangements displayed in the
excelleht show which also featured
numerous specimens and special
exhibits.
Ribbons were awarded in four
places in each classes . In the art isti c
arrangement classes the winners
were, listed first through fourth
respectively , as follows:
"We Give Thanks," a favorite
design featuring a religious accessory : Pauline Atkins. Eva Robson, Pearle Canaday, and Reva
Snowden.
"Woodland Tranquility, " in cluding weathered wood: Eva Rotr
son , Pearle Canaday , Pauline
Atktns, Anna Turner.
''Majestic Hill," mass design in
bold colors of fall, in three divistons :
first diviston, Margaret Weber, Binda Diehl, Oeta Ward. Erruna Ledlic;

SANDWICHES....... JS}

19

1

FRANK IES.............. ?.~~ ..

ZERPHA BLUE - Ray Frank of Racine is lead
guitarist with Zerpha Blue which gained wide attention
recently when lead singer, Darrell Shephard, hit a no~

Plans completed

RC COLA
DIET RITE. RC1 00
8 PACK

$ 29

Succulents: Anna Turner, Reva
Snowden, Ruby Diehl, and Octa
Ward.
JUNIOR DIVISION
Foliage potted plant: Lisa Riggs,
Linda Riggs, Amy Elliott, and Angie
Elliott.
"Swimm ing is Over," an
arrangement with water showing:
Angela Elliott, Janet Lambert, Amy
Elliott, and Robie Rider.
" Autumn Treasures," basket container using wayside materials:
Lisa Riggs, Linda Riggs, Angela
Rider, and Janet Lambert.
There were educational displays
of labeled evergreens and mulches
and a special display of 79
publications, books, magazines,
publications, and other materials
belonging to members and the club.
The juniors also displayed wayside
flowers , 15 entries, which were not
judged.

T vesday
TEACHERS AND THE STAFF
will be recognized when the
Salisbury PTO Meets at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at the school. Refresh·
rnents will be served.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America, 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. Birthdays in
July, August and September will
be observed; kitchen committee
will serve refreshments.
SPECIAL MEETING, Mid·
dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, 7 this
evening; work in EA degree;
refreshments following meeting.

ALL WfEK

Coke - Sprite . Tab
8 PACK *1.29
COKE-12 PACK CANS .......... 53.49

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-

DAIRY

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DAIRY

Wednesday
THIRD
WEDNESDAY
Homemakers Club, 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Wednesday at Syracuse
Municipal Building; those at· ·
tending take covered dish and
own table service.
ALL CAPTAINS and workers
of cystic fibrosis fund drive invited to Meigs Inn at II a.m. Wednesday lor !ibn by Mrs. Jan
Looman, Ohio Cystic Fibrosis
· and a coffee hour.

JUMBO ROLL

79~EACH

69eBOX

DAIRY

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69

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2% MILK •••••••••••••••••••••• ~!~0.".. 1
HOMO. VIT. D MILK•••••• :.~A!~0!.. 89~
BUTTERMILK.
gge

Fairview
News Notes

ROYAL CREST

By Mn. Herbert Roush
Arthur and Janet Warner took his
mother, Mrs. Etha Warner, to
Crow's steak House Sunday for din·

BROUGHTON

Yz GALLoN

.

.

.

•••••••••••••••••••••••

VALLEY BELL

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ICE MILK BAR •••••••••••••••••••
12 PAK

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RED AND
GOLDEN DELICIOUS I
Hamm, Lori Casto, Cluts Smitltt; tlttlrd, llo r, Shelly
WoUe, Shelly Slobart, John BrUtoa, TwU1a Lee, Jalla
Baity, S~ve Tracy, Duanoa Heaclel'IGII; foartltt, I tor,
Usa Pattenoa, Dmmia Rena, Judy FreemaJi, James
NOI'IIWI, Belluda Whitlatch. Also a member, ba• 1101
present for the plclure, Is Barry McCoy. Pomeroy
Pollee Chief George Stitt swore In memhen o1 tltte
patrol Mooday night.

APPLfS
4 LB. BAG

·.

ner.
r

Eric Lawson of Syracuse spent
• :Tuesday till Sunday with his aunt,
, Wilda Lawson. He also celebrated
:- his birthday.

1

VALLEY BELL

SAFETY - Tbele Pomeroy Elementary School
studeDIII are ilelpiJII to look after lbe welfare of fellow·
studeDII •• die ~lMI by workbtg u memben ollbe
tllllety pacnt 'CWI'~bOol year. Beeky Triplett Ia lbe advilar. ~ P'Wf mrhldes: fi'Oilt, I to r, Weadl Swau,
Mayreae nom., Usa Newmaa, Wendi Kioet!, Joe
Hall, Todd Aekermaa, Mike MuHord, Dell8 Mauley,
eape-ta; leHIIII, 1 to r, Jolumy SwaiiiOo, ChldJ ne.
aey, Tuuay Wrllbt, Kim Calvert, T011ba O'NeiL Kim

of themselves .

The Rock Spring Better Health
.Club will meet Thursday at 1: 15 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Phyllis Skinner
with Mrs. Nancy Morris, program
chatnnan. Susie Pullins will have
charge of the contest.

Alfred United Methodist Church
will hold its homecoming Sunday,
Sept. 20, with a basket dinner at

Middleport Child Conservation
League, 7:30p.m. Thursday will be
at the home of Mrs. Roger Abbott .
Members are to take baby pictures

Mary Moore Young, Springfield
Lake, (formerly of Pomeroy) is a
patient at St. Thomas H~pital, N.
Main St., Akron. Cards may be sent
to her in care of the hospital.

noon.
I

Syracuse PTO meets
Purchase ol Weekly Readers for
all students at the Syracuse E lementary School was approved at Thursday night's meeting of the Syracuse

PTO.
The group also disc11ssed the pur·
chase of paint for the hallways and
set Oct. 31 as the date for the annual
fall carnival. A donation of $50 was
made to the Southern kindergarten .
Soup labels and R. C. bottle caps will
be saved again this year for redem(&gt;lion. Cookbooks are still for sale and
are now at a reduced price. Those
atttending were reminded that dues
are payable now for the 1981-83
school year . Work toward completing a backstop is continuing, it
was noted.
The teachers were introduced by
Mrs. Ruth Stearns. Committees
for the year were named and include
Kayle Mullen , Pat Phlson. Debbie
Triplett, Hilda Weaver, Linda
Friend, and Jeanie Connolly, ways
and means; Kathy Curru11ings and

Jocelyn Bailey, program; Barbara
Bea rhs, publiCity ; Chris Jacks and
Shirley Sayre, membershiup.
Named as room mothers were:
First grade: Rose Ann Jenkins,
April Harmon, Jeanie Allen, Jeanie
Connolly, Martha McPhail, and
Faith Hayman
Second grade: Kayle Mulen, Mar·
sha Russell, Jeani e Buckley, Kathy
Cwrumngs, Carol Baker, Janice
Lisle, and Sally Ebersbach .
Third grade: Corky David, Diane
Lawson, Donna Nease, Marsha
Russell, and Judy Pape.
Fourth grade: Sharon Stewart.
Fifth grade: Janice Lisle, Susan
Winebrenner, and Judy Pape .
Sixth grade: Martha McPhail,
Debbie Triplett , Sharon Conningham, Marsha Arnold, Stefanie
Arnott, and Juamta Grueser.
Meetings will be held the second
Thursday of each month. Refreshments were served by the officers.

Rush party planned
The rush party was announced for
Oct. 27 at the residence of Patty
Pickens with a hayrtde a nd weiner
roast when the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met
recently at the Meigs Inn .
Jenelle Haptonstall had charge of
the m eeting. It was noted that the
chapter received a three-star ra ting

for the gulden anmversary year of
the soronty. Members decided not to
have a Christmas bake sale this
year. The annual couples' Christmas party was set for Dec. 18 at the
Metgs Inn .
Vicky Ault was elected valentine
queen. Refrestunents were served
by the 1980-81 pledges.

Social
calendar

TOP Wl'INERS- Pauline Atkins, left, president of the Rutland Gar·
den Club, received the "best of show" award for artistic arrangements in
the club's flower show staged over the weekend. Taking the "reserve best
of show" was Neva Nicholson.
·

son, Margaret Ella Lew1s, Octa
Ward .
Marigold · r:va Robson. Octa
Ward. Margaret Ella Lewis, Reva
Snowden .
Dahlia : Eva Robson, Margaret
Ella Lew is. Emma l.edlie, Neva
Nrcholson.
Chrysanthemmn · Eva Robson,
Pauline Atktns, Rev a Snowden, and
Binda Diehl
African violets: Octa Ward, first.
no other awards .
Foliage plants . Reva Snowden,
first and second, Emma Ledlie, and
Eva Robson.
Fern : Marcia Denison , Reva
Snowden. Ruby Diehl. and Binda
Diehl.
Bloomtng plants : Erruna Ledlie,
Anna Turner, Enuna Ledlie, Reva
Snowden .
Cactus: Pauline Atkins, Reva
Snowden. Emma Ledlie, third and
fourth.

Ray Frank, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Frank of Racine, is a member of the country-rock band, Zerpha
Blue, which gained wide attention
after one of its singers sang a note so
high that it shattered a glass table
and ash tray at Howard Jolmson's
Ocean Front Resort, Myrtle Beach,
. S.C.
The band is now playing in
Parkersburg, W. Va., and was the
subject of a feature story in a
Parkersburg newspaper.
Singing the high note which
brought the group so much attention
was Darrell Shephard, a Parkersburg resident, who was presenting
"Hurt" as part of his Elvis Presley
impression when he raised his voice
to hit the note that made the glass
crack. Shephard has a four octave
range.
Operators of the Howard Johnson
establishment were pleased by the
incident and they have forwarded
testimony of the feat to the Guiness
Book of World Records in England.
The group tours motel and hotel
loun ges twice a year while
remaining based in this area. Bass
player, Rocky Linhart is from
Marietta; Shephard is from
Parkersburg; Frank, lead guitarist,
is from Racine, and Steve Richards,
drummer, is also of Parkersburg.
Their act includes a floor show,
dance music from the country and
rock 'n roll charts and original songs
by Shephard who does impessions of
Presley, Willie Nelson, Kenny
Rogers and Conway Twitty . They've
recorded four singles on the Varsity
Record label , out of Nashville,
Tenn ., and have another single due
out in January.
Ray Frank's father is Howard
Frank, Meigs County Auditor. The
group will be at The Stables in
Parkersburg, Sept. 15 to Oct.3.

Final plans have been completed
for the Sept. 2oth wedding of Odessa
. RoushandO. H. Cart.
The wedding will be held at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church with the
Rev. Theron Durham officiating.
Music will begin at I :30 p.m. for the
!! p.m. ceremony. A reception will be
'held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
David Davis on Hysell Run Road im·
mediately following the wedding .

second division, Eva Robson , Anna

Turner, Paultne Atkins, Ruth
Erlewtne; thtrd divtston, Neva
Nicholson, Pearle Canaday, Rev a
Snowden, Eva Robson .
"Fruits of Our Labors" :
traditional usmg fruiLs and/or
vegetables : Eva Robson, Binda
Diehl, Anna Turner, Pearle
Canaday .
" As the Goldenrod Turns,"
modern featuring yellow: Neva
Nicholson, Pauline Atkins, Binda
Diehl. Eva Robson .
"Sunrise-Sunset," tnterpretive :
Eva Robson, Allegra Will. Pat
Holter, Shelia Curtis.
"Indian Surruner," modern using
bright colors : Pearle Canaday ,
Alice Thompson, Eva Robson, Neva
Nicholson.
In the horticulture division the
winners, listed first through fourth
respectively, were:
Hybrid tea, red : Ruby Diehl , Eva
Robson, Lisa Riggs, Binda Diehl.
Hybrid tea , other colors: Linda
Riggs, Oeta Ward , Stella Atkins .
Gloria Riggs.
Rose, other than hybrid tea:
Pauline Atkins, Octa Ward, E""
Robson. Margaret Ella Lewis.
Zinnia: Reva Showden, Eva Rot&gt;-

which shattered a glass table and ash tray. The group
includes: front, left, clockwise, Frank, Steve Richards,
Darrell Shephard and Rocky Linhart.

Meigs County notes

.

.

,

: : A cookout was enjoyed at the

::hOme o1 Mr. and Mrs. Joe Man.uel 1

:·Sunday by their daugh~r-in-law,
, : [)enile' ~u!ll lit honor of Edith
•: Manuel who was celebrating her 'blr: lthday..~w&amp;s presented a~
:. fcake by be~ id8ter, Jean and li8rrY

~~ROiillh ' Of ~Ue. Attelldlpg
"' .we Joe, Sid and Tim Manuel·,

l ~~ .oo. 'Jean .Roush, · ,J:Iol1lta
• TaiJ!IiU, MattheW Evans, Denise
•• TJIIic;lt. .00 the lmOn!l[ guest,
·~ r.tanae1.

on Saturday Emeat'

'.and J'l!llile ,au.~~ Yl.?ltsd,Edith; 011
• """dij Joyce MpUel and Robin.

'Sunda1 '~ Betty .... Regina
' lleQuP'e, Lynn Aiml (Uld J~
..-.YIIItori.

.

)

Open Daily
10-9
Sunday 1-6
Similar titles
as pictured are
available in
Kmarf Sto

. $

For

Or

sse

Each

• K marf has bought over 3 mllllon books for this special event
• You'll find publlsner's overstocks and closeouts, mostly hard·
cover
• Choose fiction, non·llctlon, academic, reference and
children's books
• Many selections by well·knawn authors and best sellers ol their
time
• These books were originally sold from 3.95 to 12.95 In book
stores
• You'll lind hundreds of tHies to choose !rom, Including some
large paperbacks on cooking ond 'how•to" books
• Look for our midway displays and special signs at your favorite
Kmarf
• Hurry In to K marr for the best selection ·limited quantities of
any one title.
• Sorry, we can not give ralnchecks on specific titles as we have
distributed all quantities to our stores

�1981

Racine Social Events~---------

Chester Garden
Club meets
ParticipatiOn of members 1n the
Oh1o Assoc1atton of Garden Club's
annual convent1on held rece ntly at
Demson University was disrussed
durmg a meetmg of the Chester Garden Club held at the home of Mrs
K1 rk Chevaher Wednesday mglll.
It was noted that Mrs Richard
Barton, assisted by Mrs . Buel
R1denour and Mrs Wyatt Chadwell,
ha d prov(ded an educatwnal
dis pla y Besides wmnmg nbbons a t
the state flower show w1th art1stLc
des1gns, Mrs. Roy Holter and Mrs
Ea rl Dean helped stage the show
and t ook part m the oll1ce rs' tea
prog ram.
The Chester club also contnbuted
to the Silent a uctwn held a t the conventiOn Mrs. Barton presented to
Mrs P earl Mora the state award for
pubhc1ty books g1ven at the con\ entwn A charter member of
Cheste r Club, Mrs. Mora handled
the pubhc1ty and prepared the book
winc h won a supenor award 1n the
state
Plans were discussed fo r the
Reg wn II meetmg to be held at
Easte rn H1gh School on Oct. 31 and
the responstbth!Les of the club members for that meetmg Also anno unced was the flower show of the
Rutla nd Garden Club to be staged
thJS weekend at the Rutland Uruted
MethodiSt Church and the Metgs
County Garden Club Ass oc1a!Lon
111eetmg scheduled for Se pt 21 at
Tn mty Church
Mrs Marvm Taylor mv1ted the
club to a ttend an open meetmg of the
Shade Valley Counc1l of Floral Arts
on Sept 16 at the Che•ter Umted
Methodis t Churc h at whi ch Mrs
llarton, regtonal hort1culture chairma n, wtll have the program New
yea rbooks we re dJStrtbuted by Mrs.
Ra yburn
A re port on CIV IC and cornmumty
proJects was g1ven It "as noted that
Mrs Erwm provided two rose
a rran gements for the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Stgma Phi
Snr onty , and roses which Mrs.
R1denour used m arrangeme nts for
u1 alumm cl.ass reumon, that Mrs.
E rwm and Mrs Fred Rayburn had
made fl owe r a rrangements each
Sunday for the Chester Methodist
Church dun ng August, and had also
ta ken 15 artiStic arra ngeme nts to
the P omeroy Health Care Center
Mr s Barton also prov1ded a rose
a nd mum a rrangement for the
Ches ter Churc h of the Nazarene, and
Mrs Roy Holtt:r, arrangements lor
Trtmly Church the entJre s ummer
" tlh the flowers be1ng taken to the
stek a nd shut-ms followmg church
:-ier\ 1c es

Preceptor Beta
Beta meets
last

y.eek 's

rneetmg

of Laureate

p, eceptor Beta Beta he ld m the
Rive rboat Room of the D1amond
Savm gs and Loa n Co
A cookout, a pool party , and the
1J eg 1nmng Day Luncheon hosted by
the suc1al conumttee and held at the
ho me of Margaret Follrod were
noted , along w1th a dance g1 ven at

t he Semor Ctllzens Cente r
A gulf party and scotch fouu;ome
wtl l be held 10 September and 10 Octobe r the group w11l have a ··come as
)O U a r e'' wemer roast
A rommum cataon was read regardtng the 1982 convenhon to be held m
Ma y 10 C10cmnatt Ann Rupe "Ill
t hcck on r eservation s Thirteen
members ans wered roll call Offi cers' reports wer e given

Jane

Walton. wa ys and means cha1rman
gave her r eport

Members were

gtve n alwmnum kmves and forks to
sell
The progra m books, " Ctrcle the
World w1th Yellow Roses" were
dtstrt butcd by Jure Van Vranken,
program chairman
Bett~ Ohhnger gave the serv1ce
com nuttee report, notmg that
Ltlhan Moore has been gJVlng a halfda~ to the Semor C1!tzens Center . It
was dec1ded to serve the bloodmobile canteen and donate blood m
the name of the soronty, to work on
the tuberculosis levy renewal and to
send a boy or gtrl to Buckeye Boys or
Gtrls' State
The program by Mrs Van
Vra nken wa~ en!ttled " Have You
Ever Received a Yellow Rose?"
Several of the members responded
nohng the thoughtfulness and
gratitutde felt through knowmg that
other members are remembering.
Refreshments were served by
Ruby Baer and Clance Krautter in
the absence of Theresa Swatzel who
was 111

Reedsville
Mr and Mrs. Larry Barton and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Stephenson and Mr. and Mrs. John
Null and larruly have returned home
alter a vacation trip through the
Smokey Mountains.
Sarah Frydman of Hyland Park,
Ill. visited with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.

slsters. They are Cora Wallilce;
Dt&gt;lla Branch, Gladys Swink, Edith
Hoppes and Mae Hubbard.
Mr and Mrs. Robert Hal't and
Bnce spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Hart, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs Robert Feuerbacher
of Morrtstown, Te nn. spent several
days ove r the weekend With her
mother, Mrs . Addle Petrel.
Mr and Mrs Clarence Freeman
and sons moved from Vine Street to
thet r ne w tra1ler home at Oak

Mrs. Editn Hoppes, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Dunaway and children,
Elaine, Jennie and John of Phoenix,
Am., spent two weeks with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Wallace. other visitors
10cluded Mrs. Della Branch of
Columbus ; Mrs. Gladys Swink of
Brady Lake; Mrs. Mae Hubbard,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Walker Edmiston and her daughter Dawn, of
Akron.
On August 16 a famimly reunion
was held at the Wallace home when
51 were present, mcludlng the f1ve

By Mn. Francia MorTis
Mr. and Mrs. 'Kelly Weller and
daughters, Jennifer and ~ulie, of
Stone Mountain, Ga., spent two
weeks with her parents, Mr and
Mrs. Clarence Bradford.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Jordon, Montca
and Matt, of Pataskala spent a week
wtth her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Bradford and his mother,
Mrs. Kathryn Oliver of Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wallace spent
a day recently with Mr and Mrs.
Ha rlow Swink at Brady Lake.

BARBARA'S

We are now ser v tng all
of Me1gs Co
wtth
Hea1ing Ot l. Ot ese l
Gasolme ,
Supre m e,
c:o ml e t e
ltn e
of
Lubrt c an ts fo r
the
f arms &amp; tndu str y

Of DANCE

PH . 992-3460
If long dtstance, call col
teet :
Larry E Mtller, Dealer
830· 1mo

SCHooL
SIGN UP FOR
Fall Classes In :
•TAP

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

au

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

- Addonsand

remodeltng
- ROOfing and gutter
work
- concrete work
- Piumbtng and
electna I work

!Free Esttmates)

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Datly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

OAGC SUPERIOR AWARD - The Chester Garden Club's superior
award for publicity book accepted by Mrs. Richard Barton at the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs' s annual convention held at GranviUe, is
presented here by Mrs. Barton, right, to Mrs Pearl Mora who handled
the publicity and prepared the book for the club. Mrs. Mora is a charte r
member of the Chester Club.
Mrs Holte r a lso reported on
g nn ng demonstrations at two
meetmgs , an open meellng of the
Rutla nd Garden Club, and The
Platns Garden Club, and JUdgmg the
Wtlkesvtlle Ga rden Club's flower
show
Dunng the meetmg ptclures of the
Lodwt ck Greenhouse taken durmg a
recent tour were shown. Members
responded to roll call by dtsplaymg a
fall leaf and tdenbfymg the tree
from which 1t came
"'The Helpful Herbs" was the
program topiC presented by Mrs
Leonard Erw10 and Mrs . Fred
Rayburn They had an educallonal
display and talked about the
growmg and usmg of herbs m the
da1ly d1et Mrs . Erw10 noted that she
has 25 dtfferent vartelles m her
cuhnary herb garden which s he
established th1s year She sa1d the
garden JS m a sunny locatton w1th
poor to very good sotl. A herb mformatwn wheel on the history of the
plantmg and care procedures and
cuhnary uses of the va nous herbs
was shown by Mrs. Erwm, who
diSplayed parsley, chives, oregano,
basil, wmter savory , t~rragon, marJOram, lemon balm, peppermm~
fenml , and comfrey whtch she had
dned m her own pantry .
Mrs. Rayburn displayed herb
vmegar a nd explamed that baSLI and

Vtllage of Pomeroy

Vollage Hall

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•ANNOUNCEMENTS
J- card ol Thanks
l - In Memonam
3- Anr.ounct'menls
4- Gtve&amp;Willf
S- Happy AG S
....- Loti and Found
1- Y;u d Sill!
1- PubltC Soli e
&amp; Auchon
9- W•nled to Buv

tarragon should set tor lour days m
vmegar and then be stramed and
preserved She also had made peppermmt Jelly which she noted IS
good w1th meats, espee1ally lamb.
F or herb butter, she suggested
nuxmg fresh basil and savory.
The program leaders served samples of oregano and rosemary butter
on crackers, along w1th herb lea.
they noted that comfrey, from which
a tea can be made, IS called a
" mtracle herb" smce 1t contams
allantom, good for resptratory
diseases, ulcers and repamng
broken bones Follow10g thetr
presentatwn Mrs Erwm and Mrs
Rayburn held a drawmg for many of
thetr exh1b1ts.
Mrs. Orts Fredertck gave the
s mps of w1sdom about English 1vy.
She noted that 1t makes an excellent
grourd cover and suggested plantmg the plants 12 to 15 mches apart
and fert1hzmg in the spring
Devottons were by Mrs Woodrow
Mora who used " Trusting m God IS a
Way for Inner Peace for the Busy
Homemaker" as her topic. She
spoke of fear, Jealousy, envy and
hatred as detnments to peace and
spoke of turmng negattve thoughts
mto happy constructive feelings.
Mrs Chevalier and the co-hostess
Mrs CurtiS Kmg, served refresh~
m ents followmg the meetmg

(614)992-2246

41 - Houses for Re nt
42- Mob•le Hom es
lor Renl
U - Apartme nls for REnt
45- Furntshed Room s
U - Space for A en!
41- W•nlecl to ~ e n I
48- Eql.!tpmeflt lor Renf
49- For Lease

II. 1981. the above named

Vtllage wtll request the U
S Department of Housmg
and Urban Development to
r elease federal funds under
Trfl e 1 of t he houstng and
commun •tJ
de\lelopment

act of 197

• MERCHANDISE

11 - Help Wanted
12-S •tuatton Wo1ntecl
1J- tn1tJrance
14- BUS!ftCU Tra!lt!ltCJ
n- Sc:hool~olnst r uc:t J on

U - RadiO TV ,
&amp; CB Re pa•r
18- Wanh•c:l To Do

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

• FINANCIAL

, 1_ Farm Equ 1Pm e nt
• 2- Wa nled to Buy
• J- Ltvn loc:k
5ale
u - H.ly &amp; Gram

11 - Bu51ness
OpportuntiY
1'l - Money to Lo.1n
23- P r oleH •onal

•s- Seed &amp; Feriii•Ut

se rv• ce~

• TRANSPORTATION

• REAL ESTATE

An envrronmental revtew
rec or d r e spe cttng th e
Wtfhtn pro1ect has been
m ade by the above named
v tllage whtch documents
th e env 1ronmental rev tew
of the protect and more
fully sets forth reasons why
such statement 1s not
Th1s env tron
requ tred
menta l rev1ew record IS on
f1l e at the above address
and ts avat l abl e for publ•c
exammat1on and copy tng
upon request at the Vtllage
Hall between the hours of

13 -V an~&amp;4WO

14 - Motorcycles
75- Boats &amp; Molon
76 - AuiO P.arts &amp;
Accu,ortes
71 - Aulo Repa~r
78 - Campmg E qu•pment

SERVICES
Want· Ad Adverhs1ng
Oeadhnes
Mondily 1 00 on S illi.Jrctily

I Ui'Sdity lllru Fnday 1 Ull f' M
tile day be iOf"e publ •cat.on
S undo~y 1 00 PM Frtdit lf

H0 me lmprov e meru ~
Piumll•ng &amp; Heat1nlj
Excavalmq
E. Iec tnul &amp;
Rdnge r af•On
u - Gf' nl!r.il l H.aulmg
U - M H Repa•r
81 - Upllolstery

, l11al14-

8 00 AM and 4"00 PM

992-6215 or 992-7314

Seroal No HL29D9B269230;
and
1976 Ford P1nlo, Serial
No 6X11Y118773

Pomeroy, Oh.

Up to 1 ~ words
up to I~ word ~

one day •nsertton
u 00
tllr!!e day lltSI!rlton
54 00
Uptol§woard s SIWd.1tysmserl•on
51 00
I Averag e ~ word \ per h ru.•l
Morutt' Home Ult'~ .tnd Yard u tes o11re accepte d only w11ll c.nn
wdll order 2S ce nt charge lor ad s c•rrv•ng Bow Number'" Care of
Thl' Senhoel
1 h!! Putll tSht'r r e se rves Ihe nghl 10 ed ''or rl! 1ec 1 any ads deem e ll
obtecltonill Th e Publi sher w•li nol bt res ponsoble lor m Qre than ont:
tOCQrr ec:l m s ~rlton

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

The Farmers Bank and
Savtngs
Company ,
Pomeroy , Oh 10, reserves

the nght lo bod al lhls sale,
and to w1thdraw the above
veh•cles pnor to sale. Fur·
!her, The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savtngs Company reserves
the nght to re1ect any or all
brds submt«ed
Further, veh1cles are
sold tn the condition they
are .n wrth no expressed or
1mp1ted warrant1es given

And Home Ma1ntenance
• Roohng of all types
eStding
• Remodelmg
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs expenence

TOM HOSKINS

(9) 11, 14, 15. 16, 17, )8, 61c

• "

Public No1ite

Case

No

4'1 160 or 9916"'
7 5 11c

f

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Mr and Mrs J effrey Bable are
announctng the btrth of a son, Dame I
Scott, born Sept 4 at the Holzer
Medtcal Center. He weighed six
pounds, II ounces and was 21 mches
long
HIS grandparents are Mr and
Mrs. Larry Laudermtlt of Ra cme,
Mrs AILee Curt1ss, Tuppers Plams ,
and Larry Curt1ss , Chester.
Great-grandpare nts are Mrs
Carne Bable, Columbus , Mr. and
Mrs
Marvm Walker , Tuppers
Plams, Mrs Ruth Long, Waldo, and
Denver Curtiss, Ches ter

109

Address:---------

Williams
RACINE - Chuck and Alice
Wtlhams, Racme, announce the btrth of thetr third son, July 13, at the
Holzer Medical Center.
The mfant weighed siX pounds,
e1ght ounces and has been named
Adam Charles. Mr. and Mrs.
Williams' other sons are Shannon
'
mne, and Corey, 16 months.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Cleland, Racme,
and the maternal great grandmother LS Mrs. Mabel Roush
Columbus Paternal grandparen~
are Mr. and Mrs. C1sco W1lhams
Albany, and Mrs. Mol11e Glispte:
Ironton. Mrs. Mary Cooper, Albany,
1s a paternal great-grandmother

Phone __________________

Daniel Scott and
Mrs. Sable

23532

Robert F Harbrecht, 347
Blandford Avenue, Wor

th1ngton, Ohto 43085 was
appotnted Admmistrator of
the estate of Anna Louise
Harbrecht, deceased, late
of
Mulberry
Avenue,

Probate Judge

BARNETT'S
WElD SHOP

(9) 15, 22, 29. 3tc

Pubhc Nottce

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On September 8, 1981, on

• Steel
• Alum1num
• Casttng • Trailer H1t
ch cs eMetal FabrtcatiDn s.
Monda v· F nday
4 p m to 11 p m
All Day Saturday

the Me1gs County Probate

court,

case

No .

23529,

Datsy M. Saunders, 6751J2
Sycamore 51 , Mtddleport,
OhtO 45760, was appointed
Executrix of the estate of
Theodore R Saunders, Sr ,
deceased, late of 6JS1J2
Sycamore St, Mrddleport,

Ph. 949-2285
~

Located at Maplewood
Lake .n Rac1ne.
- 9 2 I mo

~:}j~~~~~~~~

) For Rent

Adam Charles Williams ,

Chester News Notes
Mr and Mrs. W1lham Krackomberger and daughter, Mary, Mrs
Iva Rayburn and son,all of New Jersey, spent a week wtth Mrs Opal
Hollon .
M1ss Fatth Ann McCam, Marietta,
was an overnight guest of her aunt,
Erma Cleland
Mrs. Elma Reuter and son
George, Akron, and Mrs. Rick
Frietag and daughters, Mary and
Susan, Canton, were visitors of Mtss
Lucille Smith. Mrs. Reuter and
Mary remained for a twO&gt;week vt•
D. D. Cleland, Colwnbus, v1 r
Sunday with Denzel Cleland a •
and Mrs . Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. John Pecona,
Rocheser, N.Y., and Mrs. Barbara
Jo Pellegrini, Albany, N.Y. spent a

or

)Wanted

few days with Mrs. Jess1e Weber
and other relallves.
Mrs Freda Miller and Mtss
Lenora Belzing spent Surday wtth
Mr and Mrs Joseph Masters, ReedSVIlle
M1ss Suzannah Eichinger, Columbus, spent a week with Mrs. Opal
Etchinger and Laura Jean.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Keller and
Mrs. Marcia Keller visited in Columbus wtth Mr. and Mrs. Don Williams
and attended the Slate Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles LeDeaux
an~ sons have moved from Chester
to Marietta .
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Ireland are
announcing the birth of a son at
Camden Clark Hospital, Parker·
sburg, Saturday.

2
3. _ _

_ __

_

------_
____

~- _
5.

6. _ _ __

_

_

7.

8. _ _ _ __ _
9. _ _ __ __

10. - - -- - 11.--12. _ __
__- _-

17
18
19,
20
21. -

-

-

--

22. _ __

23. _

_

_

_ __

_

Ob1ectiohs to the release
of funds on bases other

than those staled above
Wi ll nol be considered by
No
Ob)eclton
H UD .
recetved afler September
28, 1981 will be considered
by HUD.

24. - - - -- 25. _ _ __ _
26. _ _ __ _
27. - - - - - 28. _ _ _ __

Clarence Andrews,

Mayor
Village Hall,
Pomeroy, Ohio
45169

29. - - -- - ,30. _ _ __ _
(9)

31. - - - - - :32. - - - - -- -

13. - - -- - 14.
--15. _- -_- '_
__
_ ' 33. _~--16.

35. _ _ __

_

Mall This Coupon ~th Remittence
The Dally entlnel'

·st.

111 cou
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

.

I·

~-----------~----------J

I

Mortgage Co , 463 Second

Pomeroy
98s-Chester

J;..ve , Ga lhpol 1s, Oh , 446

7172

343- Portland
247- Lelart Falls

Mlu.ER ElECTR
SERVICE

For all of your wirtng needs .
Let George Mtller
check your present elec·
tncal system.
Restdenflat
&amp; Com mereta I

Ca 11 742 -3195

~eep lh•• Ad tor Fu~·r!_~ef!!.ence

CE SERVICE
pPLIAN
Calli&lt; en Young
Forfli11Servt(!t

985-3561

•••M••••

• Wuhers
• Dryers
• Ro1nges

• DtSpo••••
• Dishwa s her s
• Hot W•ter To1nk s

· ~p!K t &amp;l A ales For
.... COin L.11undr1e'
.... Rent•t Properttes
.,.. Apt House o.,.men
.... Mobtle Home P•rks

742- Rulland

P1ano tu nmg and repa tr,
Love your ne1ghbor tune
your Ptano
Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard 4A6 4372 ,
Gal llpolr s

Mason Co., W. Va .
67 5- Pt Pleasant
4S8- Leon
S76- Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven

307 Wetzgall St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
9 .. 1 mo

GALLIA Clean tn g and
Rent A M atd Ser vtee Inc,
Free Est1mates, bonded,
msu r ed, phone 145 9234
Cleanmg by th e week , men
thor contractu al

937- Butfalo

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In Galha County

In Me1gs County

446-2342

• Backhoe

• Excavattng
• Septic Systems
eWater, Sewer&amp;
GasLtnes
• Dump Truck
• Trencher
L1censed e, Bonded

992-2156
In Mason County

675-1333

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP
1 Pomeroy Scrap

33
Mon .· Fro.8 :30io4 oo
Aller Aug 3
Ph. 992-6564

Announcements

SWEEPER and sew1ng
machine rep•"
· parts. and
supphes
Ptck up and
delivery, DaviS Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446 -0294.
SPECIAL SALES New
never been shot, dtsplay
models·salesman samples
Specialpriceonthisgroup
Bear Whitetatl
Hunter,
$69 14. Bear LTD Polar

$129 .95
Brown
Bear,
$149 95 Bear M1n1 Mag,
$49 95
~odlak
speucal,

Vinyl &amp; Alumtnum
SIDING

BISSEU
SIDING co•

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

949-2860.
No Sunday Calls

3 II He

custom kitChens and ap·
pl•ances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbtn, electnc, and
heattng

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water·Sewer· E lectrtc

FREE

Wafer Lone Hook-ups

ESTIMATES
PH. 992-601 I
_
992 7656

county Certof 1ed
Roush Lane
Cheshore, Oh

No huntmg or trespasstng
on our land Marie Myers &amp;
Mane Beaver
Donated
Guidrng
need of
wishing

p1ano wanted The
Hand School is tn

a plano

Anyone

to donate, please

call 367 0102 Tax deduc ·
fable . contact Loren D
Phelps , P 0
Box 1&lt;,
Chesh~re, Oh 45620

For buld delivery of
gasoline, heating 011 and
dtesel fuel , call Landmark,

Gas ltne-Dttches
Septic Tanks

992-2181, Pomeroy , Oh

Ph. 367· 7560

IVIRIBODY

Book · Choldcrafl

Spectal

back

to

school

savings on ell bindings
Terms available
Phone
304·882·2485

WAIT AD WAY

does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad tn th•s
column There will be no
charge to the advertiser

731fc

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From 1he Smitllest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator.
Rad1ator Spec1ahst

NATHAN BIGGS
l5 Yrs . Exptnence

CALL:

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614-992-2181
For
Farm
and
• Home Dell very of
Gas
Diesel
Heattng Oil.
-

PRICED RIGHT.
CAU. lODAY!

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, Oh.

Ph 992-2174

5-7 lie

tract It down
flsttr
II th I

IUCh

WANT AD

Real Estate- General

look slimmer m thts t110. .
Pnnted Pattern 4745 Worn, ·
en's S11es are 34 (38-mch bust '
wtth 40-tnch htp), 36 (40 bust; :
42 htp) 38 (42 bust, 44 htp), 40 :
(44 bost, 46 htp), 42 (46 bust •
48 htp), 44 (48 bust, 50 hip), 46 ;
(50 bust. 52 htp), 48 (52 bust; .

54 hip)

$2.00 lor ..... )lllllnJ. Add 50( :
lor ucil )lllllnJ I lor )lGIIIcl '
1141 NN!i... ,... Ill:
.'

.... .._

........ o.t
SMALL HOME on nice Jot In Middleport Two
bedroom, both, living room up, lat!)liY room, kitchen, laundry rm. down. 522,500.00 '

IS. lie

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereliy given
that on Saturday, September 191h, 19111, at 10:00
a .m • public sale will be
held at 105 Union All&amp;ntie,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell tor
eash the following
collateral :
•
1980 Chevrolet Monza,
Serial No. IR07VA7177610;
1979 Plymouth Volare

R.C.S. REALTY INC.
BILL CHILI)S, Mgr.
Phone 992-6312
Phone '992·63 12

--

l

.,

.'

7
YardSale
YARD SALE Sept . 1618,
SR 554 1'h mi
from
Cheshire, 9·6 8' camper top
&amp; camper, sleeps 6, window
fan, dtshes, clothmg, all
stzes, Avon dolls, drapes,
mtsc 1tems

Fn.9-5
Yard Sale Wed , Thurs , &amp;
Fn 10 00 lo • 2018 1/2
Eastern Ave. Ntce Wtnter
coats, chl ldrens clo1hes,
dishes, and Avon
Sale

Sepl 16, 9 to 3 379 Debby
Dr

SOUTHERN DISTRICT
con·

Spactous.

3

bedrooms, 2 story, per·
mastone
exterior,

120x110 fl . lot, familY
room, 2 baths, 2 car

garage ,
finiShed
basemen! S58, 900 00
APPROX . 50 ACRES
tillable. and appro)(. 30
acres timber. Older 2
story home with 4
bedrooms Needs some
work but a good buy at
$.42,000.00.

12

Wanted
- -S1tuattons
- -- -

BEDS IRON, BR ASS, ol d
furniture, gold, Sliver
dollars, wood Ke boxes,
stone 1ars, ant rques, etc ,
Complete
household s
Wnte M D Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy. Oh Dr 992 7760

Gold , Stiver , st erling,
1ewelry, rmgs, old cams &amp;
currency Ed Burkert Bar

ber Shop. Middleport 992
3476
No ttem to large or small
Wtll buy 1 piece or complete
household New. used and

anlique Call992 6370

Wanted female to sha r e
apartment wtth sa m e 1
c hrld acceptabl e Call 245

5835
Someon e to care for m e m

my home 992 2686
E ltm Resthome Care fo r
hatdtc apped, aged, or bed
patrent
Temporary or
hmtted care Or contmuous
home wtth us. Equ1pped tor
wheel cha1r. 742·2266

home Call 367 7292
- - - -- - Nurses atd Day ttm e E x
pen enced Good r efer en

ces Call742 2288
Room Board for se ntr
c 1t rzen s
Reasonabl e
Home away from home
References Ca ll Polly 742

14 18 9 ?

and

while

TV

tor paris . 992 6259
Scrap metals, battenes,
rad1ators, g tnseng, vellow
root, and merchandise
brokenng Yarper Halste

ad Sa lvage Company, 300
Eleventh Slreel 675 5868
A lso

Flea

Market open

daily
Open
Fnday I 5 pm

Monday

Will car e f or elder l y man tn
your home
E xpt er ence
and reference s 614 992
5740 days or n1 ghts

Wtll do babystttmg 1n my
own home weekday s L rve
1n Middleport area along

Rl 7 Ca ll614 992 3872
13

Large Yard Sale Clothmg,

l::.~~s~.

18, 19 IO·dark Raon can
eels tlll24,25,26

"'"0'

Phone
1-(614)-992·3325
NEW LISTING - Near
coat mtnes and Salem

Center New 3 bedroom

B1g 4 tamtiY yard sate.
Sept 17 &amp; 18 Thurs &amp; Fn. ,
at Charles k ing's House on

Wolf Pen Rd Follow signs
Mov1ng Sa le Weds , Sept.
16 Corner of Matn &amp; Tyree,
Ractne. Dennts Manuel
Residence.

frame home Bath, nice

5 famoty . Sepl 17,18, 19. 9 4.

carpet1ng,
elec
baseboard heat and 4.8

tor Signs 949-2479

acres

frontmg

on

2

roads. Only 539,000.
1559 SQ. FT. - 3 yr . Old
ranch 3 bedrooms. Ph
bllths (ceramic). fur
n1shed k1tchen, 1n·
eluding dishwasher,
central air and hea1

Over 3 acres, Ohio
Power. Asking $57,000.
1 LG . ROOMS- Bnck 3
or 4 bedrooms. central
atr and heat, 1112 baths,

copper plumbing, solid
oak floors, carpeting,
porches,

garage
over.

basement,

with

stornge

Businessman's

yard. $59.900
MODERN &amp; 3 ACRES
- Near new bridge, 18
yrs. old, 3 bedrooms, l'h
~ths,
full basement
with garage In, equipped birch kitchen. with
stove and refrigerator. 2
porches and lovely view
of the Ohio River.
Asking $65,000,
.5Z OF AN ACRE- Excellent l nice size
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
full basem&amp;nt, central
olr &amp; gas fur~ace. Birch
kitchen with stove and
refrlverator. Nice car·
petlng1 farrolly room and
c~pper .
plum,lllng.
$75,000.

Morning Star area, watch

1.~1_

_ .-:H
= el,.pc:W=a,.nl.,e_,.d,__

s.w.ooo $50,000 Per Year

Natrona! Company looking
for Otstributors m 16 West
Vlrg1nia Count1es. Part

11me or full t1me . Call Bob
McNeilll -800·238 5329
Hosresses wanted tor Dut
chmald fashion show You
can earn free Dutchmatd
tashtons of your chotce

Call collect 614·574 5062
Heavy
equ1pment
mechantc Some welding,
m1nlmum 5 yrs
ex
perlence Must have tool s

Yard Sale. Wed. Thurs. 681 and truck. Call61074 2301
W. 331 m11e follow sign. Pol
RN's and LPN ' s needed for
belly stove
new upcom1ng IC-CCU 1n
lull or parlllme positions
Two family yard sale
Baby, boys, teens, ladles,
mens clothing, other Items

Evening and nigh1 shtfts

Also Assistant Head Nurse
needed in OR -R R Mus! be

Behind Johnson's Market, RN with prevrous OR ex ·
Henderson. September 16 perience . Contact Per
and 17.
sonnel Dept. , O'Bieness
YARD sale Tuesday &amp;
Wednesdny, September
151h. &amp; 16th. 2810 Maple
Ave. 9-3, Boys-chlldrens
clothes.

Memorial

Ho s pita l,

Hospital Dr , Athens. Oh
EOE

GET VALUABLE lralnmg
as a young bUsiness person
end earn good money plus
Yard Sate. 140'1 Elm 51., Pl. some great gills as a Sen ·
Pl . Wed and Thurs. Sept. tinel route carrier. Phone
16·17. Clolhes-all sizes, us right away and gel on
misc. curlalns, hardback the ellglblllly lis! al 992and paperback books. 9 to 2156 or 9'12 2157

5.

Lorge
Girl's
13·14
leans.
tape

4 family yard sale.

ll'!ocl clothing, size

lnctudlng lots of
three olrls bicycles,
players,
tapes,

ceramics.,

bedapreads,

baby clothel, lots of misc.
Turn right at top of Hart
ford Hill, brick house on
hill. watch for signs. Thur~ay· Frlday September 1711. lOam .

Drt!ltn g wa ter we ll s Com
m erc 1al a nd Dom es t1 c
Test holes Pumps Sal es
and Serv1 ce 304 B95 3802

Rt!al
31

Estat~

Hom es for Sa l e

NE W

ho me,

CA BIN or sm al l
co m p let ely f u r

n1 shed, $3900 Ca ll 446 0390
New 3 bd r
house w1th
garage and full base ment

$45,000 Ca ll 446 0390
BYOWN ER

4bdr , sp lot

leve l, 1t v1 ng room &amp; dt ntng
room com b rnat1on , ea t rn
k1tchen, lg famtl y rm 2
1/ 2 baths, loc ated tn Tar o
Est ates, Club house and
poo l pn v il eges, $75,000
f1 r m K yg er Cree k Sc hool
D •stn ct Shown b y app1
only ca tl 4.46 9403
For sate on land contr act
House and 2 mob ile homes
loca ted at Bula vtll e Will
sell separ ately or together

Ca ll 446 3437

Local firm needs qualified
front-end
alignment
mechanic. Full-time work
with paid vacation and
ot~er benellls Guaranteed
salary, plus commission .
High volume bay with computerized alignment equipment. Schooling available.
have r:JNn tools.
ROil"•••nro.. needed Send
to P.O. Box 534,
III\'!,~~~~;~~~~Ohio
45769.

FO R SALE BY OWN ER 3
bdr horn e loca ted at 123
Ga rf 1eld Ave 2 acr es run s
from SR 7 t o Oh to Rrv er
F ull basem ent, fini Shed
r ec room , 7 ftrepl aces 2
112 baths, rn grou nd con
cr ele pool. all new ca r pe t,
new pa1n t mstde and out
Will con stder you r home or
mobile ho m e 1n tra de
Owner w ill cons 1der fm an
c rng at 10% A PR after
r easonable down pa ym ent
tf 1nter est ed call 446 1546
for an appo1ntm ent
In Tara Estat es 7r m .
cedar r ustr c st y le ra nch
:2 100 ft of 11vmg space, 3
bdr, 2 baths, den, d1ning
room, kitchen, living room,
foyer entracne, 2 car
garage wtth auto opener ,
fr ont &amp; ba ck pat1o, heated
dn veway , electr rc hea t,
central arr Cal l 367 0284
For sale by owner, 3 bdr ,
large hvtng room, full
basement, central atr, e)(
cond, on n•ce flat tot,
located 1n Syra cuse, M1d
SO's Cal l aft er 5, 992 5870 or

FA RM for SA L E b y
OWNER 2 m t North of
Wtlksvtl le, 100 acr es, 80
t1 liabl e, f arm house, out
but ld1ngs, flowtng stream,
surrounded by good road s,
good land , $50,000 cash or
land contract 10 per cent
down bal ance at 10 per cent
rnt erest Ca ll 606 266 4654
after 4PM and anyt.me
Saturd ay

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In
mtsc , some anttques,
F lor.ence Sidders residen
ce, Rt 33, Darwin Sepl 17,

ca ll 304 675 1293

256 6477

Used modul e type color TV

clo1hes, nice o•rls clothes,
used couch " and chair,
needs recovered .

216 E. Second Street

2 bedroom home, new
alumtnum Std1ng, new
roof, bath, carpet, over

Outstanding

Sepl

Osborne Rd , iust ott Sue
black

HUNTING SEASON IS

d1tionl

Wednesday

Warren
Connolly and
Eun rce Gilland residence,

$8500 00

LANGSVILLE AREA -

51

Wtll do babystttlng m my

3 klltens lo good home, all
colors Call 379 2435

merc1a1 , residenttal, or
mobtle home site Want

$8,000.00

4072

Wed &amp; Thur

2 yard sales Same netgh·

NEW LISTING
POMEROY - 4 Lois,
oul of floods. stone
butld.ng Cou ld be com·

here! And thts 13 acres
near Forked Run 1s 1ust
what the serious hunter
needs
All wooded

Part t rm e baby srtt er for 6
month ol d '" my hom e 675

Wanted to buy 400 lbs of
lrtsh Cobb ler pot atoes Call
«6 3658 or stop at 76 Court

CHIP WOOD Poles max

Subdtvlston Hazel St Wed

HAR P ER Adult Care Cen ·
fer prov1dtng the per sonal
ca r e your elde rl y need 1n a
home lt k. e atm ospher e
Vacanctes now ava il rbl e

Pomeroy . 992 2561

17, 2 dtameter 14" on largest
m tles from HMC on Rt 160 end $12 50 per ton Bundl ed
Newttems.
slab
$10 SO pe r
ton
Dellverd to Oh10 Pallet Co ,
Sprtngs
Rd. ,
Yard sale Country Air Rock
E siS. off Georges Creek Pomeroy. 992 2689

cess Rd Sewtng machme,

RENTAL PROPERTY
Is an excellent tax
shelter! This 3 unll
apartment house wllh 2
bedrooms each nas
alwnys been rented.
Each unit has Its own
utlllly meters and
heating units. As an lnvestinent against Inflation you can't beat
this price at $24,500.00.

•

67S 4622 or 895

borhood
E.Mainlo.IIM
POMEROY,O.
992·2259

an acre land S2S,900 00

Yau'll

Reward.
3450

1 n1ce puppy Cal l 367 7743

1-Model479 Hay Bmd

NH

Austral lt an Blue Heeler
dog, sa lt and pepper color,
answers
to
Queente

Garage

2 puppoes pari sheep dog
Call256 1932 after 4:00

Doesel

Help Wanted

2266TLC

7 klllens Call «6 9542

1-No. 8600 D1ese1 Ford
Tractor w/Cab

LOST Lelarl area Female

Yard Sale 3 Family, Plantz

Giveaway

ANY PERSDN who has
anythtng to give away and

Shops the

11

R1 o Grande College •s
cu rr entl y seeking a p
pl1cants for a Heavy EQUIP
4
Giveaway
ment Operatmg Eng inee r
A pprentt cesh lp Tra1n1ng
fable
Sept
17,18,19
ID-S
I full blooded female
Progr am
Th1s tr amtng
beeglew puppy 6 weeks mi off Rl 33 on Cly Rd 18
program 1s to be CET A
old 949 2455
T ttle VII funded by th e
State ot Oh 10 A pp liCa nts
8
Publoc Sale
2 beagle pups, 7 weeks old
must be econo m rcal ty
&amp; AUCtiOn
Phone675 5164
dtsadvanlaged and hav e
Neals Auct1on has moved been unemployed t or at
S on Rl 2 Gallipolis Ferry least 7 days to m eet CET A
W Va Every Sat 7PM
6
Lost and Found
T1tle VII eltOtbtl!ty In
Buy and Sell Lonnte Nea l terested person should con
LOST·TOM CAT Wh1le 367 7101
t ac t thetr local Oht o
w1lh spots of black &amp;
Bureau of Employm ent Ac
brown , 7 mos old 34
t1 on Agenc y for furth er
Madison Ave Call 446 2839 9
Wanted to Buy
det a rl s
Equal
Em
REWARD!
plovment Oppor t un .ty Em
WANT TO BUY Old lur
ntture and Ant1ques of all plover
LOST Black and whtte kinds, call Kenneth swatn ,
Chtnua Lost on Third Ave , 256 196710 theevenrng s
Secret ary part t1 me 614
GallipoliS . Please call 446
992 6009 F or Wednesda y
1211
CASH PA I D for clean, late af ternoon ap pl tea tt ons
model used cars Smtth
S250 reward
for
tn
Help wanted A pply rn per
BUICk Ponttac, GAII tpoli s,
formation
lead1ng
to OhiO Call 446 2a2
s on
St eamboa t
whereabou1s of black bor
Resta ura nt, Rac •ne, Ohto
der collie wtth whtte
WE BUY FURNITUR E 4pm7pm
markings Dead or alive
We sell furn1ture Sa graves
Call614·378·6152
Elecfrt c tan needs wor k a ny
Furntture 446 477 5
type 15 yr s exper. ence
LOST Brown and yellow
Call895 3826
small dog Reward Last Buy1ng Gold Pay,ng cash
for anythmg stamped IQK ,
seen at Twm Towers
Person needed for F ull er
Ch1l&lt;{s pet 675 · ~704 or 12 14K , 18K , and dental gold
Brush •n Ma son County
Class nng, weddmg rmgs,
Mam Street
watches Clarks' Jewelry area Wr 1te to R t 1 Box
Store, Galllpolt s, 4461691 , 243, Ravenswood, WV

Garage Sale Sept

World

4

USED EQUIPMENT
275

586 S &amp; W newest L frame
now in stock. Spnng Valley

S1zeable reward for tn
formatton
leading
to
recovery of stolen ant1ques
from Gallla residence
Het rlooms 446 3650

~~;::;~~~~;;8~-~2~0~-t~f~c~+========l=-7=-1==~

t- Model
M.F

Plaza, 446 8015

Tradmg Co, Spring Valley
Plaza, 446 8025

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free stdmg
esttmates, 949·2801 or

Yard Sale

'I•

l

Iron &amp;' Metal)
Top prtces patd for auto
bod•es, scrap tron and
metals.
1
mtle
west
of
Fa.rgrounds on Old R1

7

3 fami l Y yard sale LrvtnQ
room su1te, rug s (room
stze). clothing, lot of mise ,
BW TV , antique beds and

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

''
_,,,,, . , .,,,., .. ,,, .,,,ro

Ph. 992·7201

7 51fc

Pr ofeniona l
Ser vtces

23

949- Racine

Area Code 304

FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS/SERVICE

Public Nolice

,:u. ______

Rl. l, Box 5~
Oh.
PhRacme,
614 _ 8 ~ 3 . 2591

BOGGS

to lhe

procedure (24 CFR Pari
58) and may be addressed
to HUD at 200 N. Htgh
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Guysv111e, Oh
Phone 614·662·1821
Authoru:ed John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm
Equ1pment
Dealer

That ap-

~lep ~pphcable

S1zes from 4x6 to 12x40

U.S. Rl. 50 East

(a) Thai

pro1ect tn the environ·
mental review process. Ob·
1ect1ons must be prepared
and subm11ted in ac ·
cordance with the requtred

Utility Buildings

SALES &amp; SERVICE

P 1cant's envtronmental
revtew record for the pro
1ect lndtcates om1SS1on ot a
requtred decision finding

These cash rates
tnclude discount
) For Sale
) Announcement

(b)

Now Taking Enrollment For Fa 11
Day or Evening
Clases .

Robert E Buck

the certificl!ltton was not in
fact executed by the cer
ttfymg Offtcer or other of
ftcer of applicant approved

br HUD: or

SMALL

8 27 1 mo

Pome roy , OHi045769

All such comments so
rece1ved wt ll be cons1dered
and the Village will not
request the release of
federal funds or toke any
admtn1strat1ve actron on
the wtfh!n protect pnor to
the date spec tfl ed '" the
preced1ng sentence
The Village of Pomeroy
wtll undertake the prorect
descnbed above w1th Block

followmg bases

S1zes
" From 30xlO"

PollRTSANDURVICE

• E.lectrocal work
• Roof mg work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph.992-7583

Department of Housmg
and Urban Development
( HU D) under TJIIe I of lhe
Hous.ng and Community
Development Act of 1974.
The Vtllage of Pomeroy rs
cerftfytng to HUD that
Mayor Clarence Andrews
.n h1s offtcta l capactty as
Mayor consent fo accept
the /UrtSd!Cfton of the
Federal Courts tf an act ton
ts brouQht to enforce
responsrbtltttes m relat•on
to envtronmental rev1ews,
dec ts1ons makmg and ac
tton, and that these respon
S1b111t tes
have
been
sahsf ted The legal effect
of the certtftcatton is that
upon tfs approval the
Village of Pomeroy may
use the Block Grant Funds
and HUD
will
have
sattsf ted tts responstbtllttes
under the National En
vtronmental Polley Act of
1969. HUD wtll accept an
Oblectton to tts approval
on y tf rt ts on one of the

Name·----------

Farm Buildings

remodel -

Gran! Funds from lhe u s

Write your own ad and order by mad with this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money no1 refundable

ALL STEEL

New Homes - ex tenstve

Go Everywhere!

,----------------------~

446-Galltpolts
l61- Chesh1re
liB- VInton
345-RtoGrande
256-Guyan D•st
643- Arabta Dtst.

Money to Loan

F HA VA·Con venttal Home
Loa ns, Colu mbus Fi r st

614
997- Mtddleport

Tractfng
co .• Spring Valley
Valley
==~~~~f~~~H~~~§.~~~~~~~====~8~30~1~m~o=pd~~ $99
95/Spring

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE
OF
ANNA
LOUISE HARBRECHT,
DECEASED
case No. 23532 Docket 12
Page 267
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On September 9, 1981, '"
the Metgs County Probate

Court,

0

before September 28, 1981

Bable

Meegs Co Area Cod e

614

~=:~~~~~~~~f1~~~~~~~6~15~1f~c~~:==:=:=:=:::~~~~
j

No
further
en
vtronmental rev1ew of such
pro1ect 1s proposed to be
conducted pr1or to the Ohoo45760
request for release of
Rober! E Buck
federal funds.
Probate Judge/ Clerk
A ll tnterested agencres,
groups
and
persons ' (9) 15. 22 29
dtSaQreetng w1th thrs
dec•s1on are tnv1 ted to sub
mrt written comments for
•
consrderatton
by
th e
Vt llage Such wntten com
m ents should be rece1ved
at the Mayor's ott1ce on or

Rates and Other Information

Birth announcements

V, C. YOUNG Ill

Public Notice

190)

11 - Autcl1 tor S.il te
n - Trucks to r Sale

3 •- Homeslor Sale
l1- Mott•le Homes
for Sale
13- Farms tor Sale
H - Bus+ne s' Butld•ng s
H - Lot~ &amp; Ac:reaqe
l o Relit E'&gt; liiiPW an teo
37- Reallor i

( PL 93 383) for

the followrng pro1ect.
Santtary
sewer
ex
tens1on .
water
marn
replacem ent a senous
def •c •en c y
rn publtc
faclltttes affectmg health
and safety
V1llage of Pomeroy ,
M e1gs County , Oh to
It has been determ1ned
that such request for
r elease of funds wtll not
an actt on
const1tut e
s•gnrf•cantly affecftn g the
qualttY of the human en
vt r onment and ac cordmgly
th e above named vtl l age
has dec tded not to prepare
an envtronmental tmpact
st a te ment
under
the
natronal envtronmental
p o lt c y a c t of 1969 ( PL 91

S1- H0 u$e holcl Gooch
S:Z- CB T\1 ll.td!O Equ•pmt&gt;nl
S3- Anltques
S4- Mnc: Merc:hand.se
H - Butldtng Suppli es
S6--- Pets lor Sale
S7- Mus.tcallnsl r umeol
SI- Frutls &amp; vegetatttes
59- For Sal e or Trade

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

I

To all enterested agenCies. groups and Persons
On or about September

• RENTALS

1 mo

Galha Co. Area Code

895- Letart

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
WANT AD INFORMATION

CI1111Si{ied Pages cover the
following te lephone exchange11.,,

FRAN'S
CERAMICS

Grove

Public Nollce
CONCURRENl
NOTICE
NOTICE TO PUBLIC OF
NO SIGNIFICANT EFFECT ON THE ENVIRONMENT AND NOTICE TO
PUBLIC OF REQUEST
FOR RELEASE OF FUNDS
September II, 1981

Sent m e l-

22

STANDARD
OIL CO.
(SOHIO)

'S

Sununer activities \\ ere rev u~wed

a nd several fall ones planned dunng

Business Services

Monday, September 15, 198!,

Page- 1o-The Daily Sentinel

Oh io

surance co has offered
servtces for ftre 1nsurance
coverage tn Gall•a County
for almost a century
Farm, home and personal
prope r ty cover ages are
available to meet tn
d1V1dua1 needs
Conta ct
Ray Wedemeyer, agent

Phone 388 8249

2 stor y bnc k, 994 4th Ave
F ully equrpped k1tchen;
formal dtnmg , 2 or 3
be droom s,
c a rp et 1ng
through out Storm wm
dews, gas furnac e, and cen
tra l arr Assumable loan at
9 1/ 2% $40,000 446 7448

i:.:,

4 room s and ba(h Cheap
down paym ent land con

lrac1 John Sheets. 3 1/2
AUTOMOBI L E

IN

SURANCE
b een
c an
c ell e d?
Lo s t
your
operator's L 1cense, Phone

992 2143
18

Witnted to Do

E xpenenced baby sttter
W1ll baby sit 1n my home,
all shtfts, large yard Call

446 8194

mil e south Midd leport Rt
7
Sa le or rent on 1and con
tract Modern 1 floor r an
ch , compl etely remodeled,
3 bedroom , forced atr, cen
tr al
atr
Unattach ed
garage 1 ac re Shady level
lot Rent to r espons1ble
p a rt '(
or
se ll
Wt t h
r easonabl e down paym en t
Close to sc hools &amp; stor es
Tuppers Pla tn s
614 423

Electrictan needs work any
type 15 yrs. ex per 1ence

8491

Call 895 3826

Spr •nQ water &amp; farm pond
Pnce reduced for qut ck

Bnck and Block lay1ng,

sale lo $32.500 Hobsleller
Rea lly, 742 2003

frrepla c e s , all work
guaranteed Call379· 212;,

Sa ndhil l Roa d. Pt
W11t do baby s1tftng tn m y

't'

PI , 3

home 446 3186

bedrooms, 1
bath s,
double ga r age Owner wtll
f.nance
lmmedtate oc

Would like lo babYSit lor

cupancv 675 581 7

Children 2 and over In my

home Ref Phone 446-3354

HOU SE Meadowbrook Ad

Day care tor elderly lad1es

dtt1on 3 bedroom. famil y
room wtth f rrepla ce, cen
tral em , basem ent 304 675

while you shop or work
Room for rent with board

Call4463074

TV service calls Call 9922034. Also used color TV for
sale.

Five siring banJo &amp; guilar
lessons available. Personal, private Instruction.

Phone 614 367-7729 afler 1
p.m.
NEED help In tobacco?
call Todd 304-675--41128.

,

1542
43 ACR E S, nt ce 5 r oom
house. 2 bedroom mob1te

home, good water supply,
located rn Leon $35,000
Call JOA 675 3030 or 675
4341
Milton Road, Camp Conley.
2 year old 3 bedroom home,
tully carpeted with I full
bath and 2 half baths, yard
landscaped, with large
ulilll y bU1Id1ng. Assume a
'? pe rcent loan 675·6275. ·

�15, 981

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel
31

&gt;Jl 4th Ave. 2 bdr., c~otral
air &amp; healing, large gar.den . Financing available.
M i ~ $40'5 Call446·2158 .
Life Estate. Farm, pr~r ­
ty value,W,250 .00. Lite
estate value S8,701.S8 . Call
992·6747 evenings .A.

3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths. family room . Full
basement, garage.
9-49·
2079 .
4 ~oomn near school &amp;

hospita l. $27 .000 . 992·6060 .

•

12

44

Homes tor Salt

Mobile Homes
for Sale

4,_,1c___,H"-o::u,s,e"'s__,f,;or'--"R-"en"-t,__
Small furnished house in
the city, adults only . Call
446-0338.
Small2 bdr . house. Locate-d
in Gallipolis. Se-curity dep .
and ref. req. Call after SPM
446-0254.
Unfurn ished 2 bdr . houe in
city, adults only , no pets,
deposit&amp; ret . Call at 54 14th
Ave. Gallipolis.
3 bdr . house in nice sub ·
d ivision, family room ,
large lot, $300. Cal l 446·
7942 .

Pri ces reduced on all
mobile homes and travel
trailers .
TRISTATE
MOBILE
HOMES .
Gallipolis . CALL 446-7572.

Unfurnished
house,
6
rooms, Neighborhood Rd .
Private large yard, 5225 .
Caii446·4A16 after 7PM .

CL EAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL 'S
QUALITY
MOBI L E
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT .
35 . PHONE 446-3868 or 446-

Cheshire r i ver front house,
4 bdr. , 2 baths, large kit·
chen with d ishwasher, full
b ase ment,
fireplace ,
$275.00 month, deposit &amp;
ret required . Call 1·614·
448·3821. 9·SMon· Fr i.

7274
For Rent or Sale 1979 l.4'JI70
mobile home in Middleport

on large tof _ Unfurnished ,
range, refrigerator , cen tral air . Owner will help
finan ce with suitable down
payment or rent $250 mo.
plus util itie s plus 5250 . dep .
Call992·6173 or 4.46 -0963

1973 Elcona 12x60, 2 bdr .•
air , econ i cal utilities. Ex
cellent condition, priced to
se ll. 256-6033 or 256 6461 .

SEPTEMBER'S do it mon
th for homebuyers at Fren ·

ch City Mobile Homes, 266
Uppe r
River
Rd . ,
Ga lli polis, 446 9340 . Buy
during Sep tember and get
central air or washer and
dryer fr ee. Register for ex·
pense pai d weekend for 2 in
Las Vegas .

- --

5 rm . with bath, 2 acres of
bottom land, located on
Hannan Tra ce Rd . I mile
off 775 . 256 ·6836 .

1973 Crow n Haven , 14x65,
three bedroom, new ca r ·
pet , !971 Cameron, l4x64,
two bedroom, new ca rpet
1972 Champion, 12xlJO, two
bedroom, new car pet . 1976
Cameron,
12x60 ,
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
carpet . 1970 PMC, 12x60,
two bedroom , new ca rpet,
B &amp; S Sales, Inc., 1nd and
V iand Street, Pt . Pleasant ,
WV Phone 675 ·4424
Mobile home . 1975 Concord
10x40 . All elec tri c, new ap·
pliances. Phone 882 ·3374
Harttord, W. V.
1967 12x60 . 1 bedroom , 11!1
baths . For more info . call
985-4210.
USED Mobile Home . 576
2711
1971 Oarian 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, J bedrooms . 1973
Utopia 12 x 65,2 bedrooms
1972 1nvader 14 x 70, 3
bedroom s. 1972 Nashau , 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B 1 •.. s
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt . Pleasa nt, WV .
Phone 675·4.424 .
Mobile home located in
Camp Conley, Extra nice
and c lean . Phone 30.4·895·

- - ---'--,
1980 12 x 60 traile r , 2
bedroom, complete with 40
ga ll on water heater , new
deluxe furniture and cur ·
ta ins, underpinning, new
materials to cover trailer
with a drain, redwood par ·
ch, fuse box, washer and
dryer, and everything you
need. Call for appointment .
675· 1882 or 67 5·6113
33

Farms for Sale

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS · Real nice camqsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
utilities available, $300.
down, owner will finance,
call after 3 p .m ., 256-6413 .
2 acres on Floyd -Clark Rd
close to Rt. 160, 54,000.
Phone 446-0390 .
Three 1 acre lots on 160
$4,250 each or all 3 tor
$10,000. Call 388-8437
9 acres in morgan Town ·
ship on White Oak Rd. Has
trailor hookup &amp; some out·
building . Tobacco base .
$7,500. Ca ll 4.46-0951.
3 FarmeHes, 5 ~Gtes , each
flat. trees, rural water. city
schools, S15,000 ea . 3792196.
BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx . 1 acre.
Live In one, rent others to
make your payment. can
. be converted single home.
CIIV water, will consider
land contract. 675-1883 9-5
. p.m .

2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave. Pomeroy . Par ·
fially furnished. $170 you
pay util i ties. Call 992 228S
after 6 p.m .
Available . 1 bedroom apt .
tor rent . Contact Village
Manor Apts., Middleport .
992 -7787 .

ll\0'£ W~'f UW!b~ ,
CAia..~~~

IH/'11' W~ MY

\

For sale oas stove &amp; kit·
chen sink, good cond . Call
446-1216.

ATTENTION :
l iM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pav cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,
guns. JX&gt;Cket watches, and
coin collections. Cal l 557·
3&lt;11 .

1978 Chrysler LeBaron. 4
dr .
Vinyl
roof,
AC,
automatic, PS, PB , am ·tm .
Excellent condition . ~ 773-5694.

1967 Ford Mustang. 6 cyl,
automatic, above average
condition . Low mileage.
304-773 -5694.

LAFF-A-DAY

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

2 BEDROOM. unfurnished
apartment and 2 bedroom
furnished apartment. 304·
675-5571.

~

~~~~~::;:::;:::~=r:;::::::;~:;:§~~~~ excellent
1978 cordoba,
56,000. S2900
miles,
condition
.

..
.....

M'1sc. M ere h an d 1ce
'

8 rms . .i.. 2 baths . Located in
Ci ty , 'io..&gt;xl. 1 month , deposit
required Call4..46·2380.

2 bedroom apartment at
gallipolis Ferry . 304-675·
2548 or 304-675-5783.

Furnished house in Mid ·
dlepor t
Referen c es &amp; One bedroom furnished
deposit required . 992 · 2606 apartment, Uti lities paid .
Phone 675- 1897
or 992·2917 .
3 bedroom
unfurnished
home . Walking distance ro
shopping &amp; M iddleport
Schools. 992-2598 .

FURNISHED apartment, 3
rooms &amp; bath, utilities
paid, adults only, phone
304-675-4351 .

2 bedroom house, 1 111 mites
from downtown Ga ll ipolis
$275 month . Deposit and
references . 675·3655 .

4c-S_ ---'F
:___u
:::rcn
::..:i:::
sh"'e=--:R
d "-o:::o=:m=•SLEEPING ROOMS and
light hou~ekeeping apt.,
Park Centf'al Hotel.
46

2 bdr ., 3 bdr ., mobile
homes. Call 446 ·0175

Tra iler at upper end of
Kerr, 2 bdr., unfurn ., dep,
and ref req Call 245·9170.
Mobile home partially
furn . ref and dep. Upper
River Rd . Call 446 ·3760.
For rent 2 bedroom mobile
home . $150 00 month plus
ulilities. 446·4.54.4 after 3.
2 bdr . mobile home on Rt.
7. Deposit &amp; ref erence
required . Call 256· 1922.
Mobile home·2bdr.
fur ·
nished, in cheshire. Ref. &amp;
deposit required . Call 446·
4229 .

'1 bedroom tra iler . A.Oults
only
Brown's --T'F'ailer
P.ark . 992 ·3374 :-·

2 bedroom mobi ie home 2
miles east of 5 Points. 614·
949 ·2461

Trailer for
rent
in
Syracuse Ca ll6l4 ·992 ·2906 .
OR RENT · almost new 1.4 x
70, 3 bedroom, 1 lf1 baths,
sitting on nice lot, ready to
move into. Phone 304·576·
2711
NICE 2 bedroom mobile
home with porch &amp; large
lot, 30.0 -675 3030 or 675-3431

44

Apartmemt
for Rent

Furnished apts . 2 bdr .,
S130., utilities paid , near
HMC, adults. Cal l 446-4-416
after 7PM .
2 bdr. apartment unfurn .,
in Crown City, Ohio. Ca ll
256-6474 .
Deluxe furnished apart ·
ment central air and heat,
excellent location, adults
only , lease, dep., upper
bracket, reference . 4-46·
0338

Space for Rent

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

7 miles out Rt. 141 Ca ll -446 ·
4053 .
Cementary Jots in Mount
Hill. Call446 2281 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , RouTe 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large Jots. Call
992 -7479

TRAILER space 3 m i les
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y , Pt . Pleasant, 675 ·
3248
Trai ler lots 675 · 1076.
4c_7_ _W
=a"n '-'
le,_,d'--'t'-=o-'R'-'e"n"l-~
Want to rent space to store
car Ca ll 446 ·0057 or ~ 1813. Ask for D~nny .
Respon s ible
marri e d
coupl e wants to rent 2 or 3
bdr . house in Ga ll ipolis·
Pomerov area. Preferably
in country . Ca ll 446·4338 af ·
ter 6.

=::=MtFEb3bdiSe
Sl

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocl&lt;.er, at·
loman, 3 tables. $500. Sola,
chair and Joveseat, $275.
Sofas and chaurs priced
from S285 . to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide-a beds,$340., queen size, $380 .
Recliners. $175 . to $295 .,
Lamps from $18 . to $65. 5
pc. difettes from S79 ., to
$385. 7 pc., $189 . and up .
Wood table with .4 chairs,
$219 up to S495. Hutches,
$300. and $375 ., maple or
pine finish . Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak, $675.,
Bassett Cherry , $795. Bunk
bed complete with mat ·
tresses, S250 . and up to
1350. Captain's beds, $275 .
complete . Baby beds, $9'1 .
Mattresses or box spring s,
full or twin, $58 .. firm. $68 .
and $78 . Queen sets, $195. 5
dr. chests, $49 . 4 dr. chests,
$42 . Bed frames, $20.and
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$3.50., dinette chairs $20.
and $25 . Gas or electric
ra nges, $295. Orthopedic
super firm, $95, sofa bed
with chair, $165., baby
matresses. $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20,$25, &amp; $30.
Used,
Ranges ,
refrigerators. and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri., 9am to 5pm, Sat.
446-0322

Furnished apt., 3 r . private
bath, 2nd floor. 845 2nd.
Ave . Ca ll-4.46·2215

White metal detectors·
Opening Special 20• off on
all white metal detectors.
Spring Valley Trading Co .,
Spring Valley Plaza, 446·
8025.
Eclipse 12 ga. game loads
N6·shot, 20 shells per bOx,
$3.95 box. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, .4.46·8025 .
Crossman B· B's 'Mi lk Car·
ton' box ot 1500
Spec ial
$1.09 box . Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
PLaza, 4-46·7025 .
Ratliff Pools &amp; Service.
Complete sa les, service,
pool covers, and win·
terization k its. Ca ll 446·1324
Firewood, sp lit, stacked I
delivered . Mixed w~d $65
per cord, $35 one-half cord.
Green or seasoned. A ll har·
dwood $500 more. A lso will
buy stafding wood . Ca ii 245547B.

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apartments. 99'2·5434 or 992·
5914 or 882-2566.
APARTMENTS AVAILAB LE : Senior citizens and
handucapped apt. community opening . Featuring
1 bedroom unfurnished
with wall to wall carpeting,
wall -lex walls, buill In
bookcase,
appliances,
smoke detectors, air conditioned, private patio,
storage facilities, single
story with no stairs to
climb, private entrances
with undlvldual laundry
fakllllies on premiSM with
recreation and meeting
rooms.
Professional
ldent
manager
on
mises . Stonewood&gt; Ap' ·ttt.· 7, Middleport. For
renta l information phone
614-'192 -3055.

57

Muso'cal
Instruments

Alto Saxaphone .
cond. S200. 985-4117.

.576-2490 or 675-2474 after 5
pm.
Good

TRUMPET &amp; stand, excellent condition, Sl.SO. call
304-882-3433.
NEW Bundy flute, book &amp;
stand . $195. 304-675-6766.

sa

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

APPLES. Grimes Golden
NEED several items ot fur · avsilable now at Fitz·
niture,
appliances,
patrick Orchard, 51. Rt.
televisions. Big discounts 689 . Phone 669-3785 .
for quanity purchase.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675· 1773.
Sweet potatoes, red, white,
yellow. Robert W. Lewis,
BIG discourKs tQr cash and Rt. 2, Racine, Ohio. 614 -843carry at Village 'F1ll'nl&lt;w:~ 2432.
2605 Jackson Avenue. 675 ·
1773.

Farm supplies

Air Compressors, new
Ingersoll -Rand 5 hp, single
and 3 phase, truck load
sale. From S1,245.00. Call
collect304-766-6244.
WOOD. at farm , only $25.00
p1ckup load. phone 304 -8953395.
FIREWOOD, seasoned, cut
length desried,
J04·8Y5·
3994_

&amp;
61

bl' estaek

Farm Equipment

HONDA 360 1974, $450.00.
Work horse, 2 saddles, 1 set
harness $400.00. Farm
Model H tractor with
mower $700.00. 388-9092 or
388-9007 _
1973 John Deere, 450
bulldozer, good condition
with 6 way blade. $8400.
304675-2786.

Firewood for sale Oak,
hickory, cherry, or m ixed
woods, seasoned. Call 245·
9264 ask for Jamie

2 AM· FM 8-track in dash
mreos, model 14 Smith &amp;
Wesson pistol, Case knife,
304 675-6439.

For Sa le New 1981 model
sewing machine, zig-zag,
monograms, sews on but·
tons, makes button holes,
darns, mending, fancy stit·
ch . Reg . price $269 .95 now
on ly $99.50. Free phone
call. Call collect 1·304·736·

1978 XL175 Honda. 7 hp
John Deere riding mower.
675-5124.

bed. Fuel oil stove and
tank. 304-576 -2403 .

$25 each . 304·882·3236.

9241.

8 pc living room suite, e lec·
tric stove, frost free
refrigerator with 17 cu.ft.
freezer, automatic washer
and electric dryer, 2 pc
bedroom suite with twin
bed, 2 pc maple bedroom
suite with full bed, Singer
zig zag sewing machine in
Cherry wood cabinet, 3 odd
tables, 1 kitchen table 6
chairs, extra leaf and por·
table protector . 304-8822593.

6,3_ _ __,L:::ic:v_,e=--sl:.:o:=c:..:
k_ _ ~
For sale grade app.
gielding, well broke and
1250 lb . work heres. Call
:179-2761 .

For sa le Sears fireplace,
used 1 winter. Call 379·258.4.
For sa le 8HP Jtding lawn
Yardman ('ROWer, el ectric
start, good"cond .. $350. Ca ll
4-46 -405f.

WE ARE ce lebrating our

12th Anniversary with a
special sa le during Sep·
!ember. Register for an ex ·
pense paid weekend for 2 in
Las Vegas. Special prices
and free washer and dryer
or central air with pur·
chase. Stop in today . Fren ch City Mobile Homes, 266
Upper River Rd . 446-9340 .
For sale 2, 3,000 gal. fuel
tanks and 3, 4,000 gal fuel
tanks, good cond . Ca ll 446 ·
7903 .
Resturant equipment
reconditioned by RADCO.
Cal l 304 523-1378 . Hgtn _,
WVA .
POOLS :
SWIMM I NG
PRE - SEASON
SALE :
$999 .00
IN STALLED!!!
Above ground pool COM ·
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting at$999 .00. Price in ·
eludes pobl. deck. lence,
filter,
liner,
and In ·
sta llation under normal
ground condition. Free
shop at home service. Call
1·800-624-85 11.
EASY credit available now
to purchase furniture,
televisions, or appliances .
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave., 675 -1773.
Yellow Freestone canning
peaches . Now thru Sept. 20 .
Any quantity avai lable .
Retail &amp; wholesale. Bob's
Market, Mason . Phone 7735721. Open daily till9 p.m .

They'll Do It Every Time

1 bedroom apts. available
at Riverside Aprs. Equal
Opportunity Housing . Ca ll
992-7721.

This &amp; That Shop. Used fur niture, app liances, 2000
paper backs. Salem St.,
R~tland . 742-2266.

New Idea No.7, corn
picker. good shape. 304-5762623
SN Ford set turn plows . Set
cultivators. Phone 675·6-473.

2 piece truck topper, makes 2 tractor tires, size 10 x 38,

Troy -Bilt roto til ler, ex ·
cellent condition. Call af ·
ter 5 pm 675-3011 .

5.5

Building Supplies

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Ca ll245-5121.
56

Pets tor Sale

POODLE GROOM ING .
Ca ll Judy Tayl or at 367
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT TERY
KENNEL. AKC
black Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian snd
Siamese kittens. Call 446 ·
3844 after 4 p.m .

For Sale: Holstein Heifer,
to freshen in Dec. Was 4-H
Project, out of No. 1 dairy
herd. 256-1259 before 12:00.
Jumbo Bobwhite Quail, 1
week old to adult sizes.
(614 ) 985 -045.

Ewe lambs for sale. Suffolk
and Finn crossed. 614·992·
2630 .

Black Angus Herdford bull.
1300-1500 lbs. 614-742-2880 .

4 short horn heifer calves, 1
short horn cow and calf . 1
purebred short horn bull
call. Call614 378 -6152.
Registered
horned
hereford bull. 5 years old.
992-HIS.
Quarter horse gelding. 2
years training at Meridith
Manor . $750. Registered
American Saddle Bred tor
sale or stud ser\fice. 614·
949-2455.

HILLCRE ST KENNfi'L
Boarding al l breeds, clean
indoor· outdoor facilitie ~
Holstein
Springer
A lso AKC Reg . Dober- 20
mans. Ca ll446·7795 .
Heifers . TeBay Dairy ,
Parkersburg, WV _ Phone
BRIARPATCH KENNELS 863-3705 .
Boarding and grooming.
A K C Gordon
setters,
... ~~· ,.'
,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call446-4 191 .

.............
·......
. ..........

Jeanie's Pet Shop Rt. 141,
West of Gallipolis . 446-7920.
Special Fancy and Angora
hamsters. $2.00 each.

11

Hom•

1mprovements

DICKTRACV
CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpel Cleaning featured bt
Hallelt Brother. custom
carpets. Free estimates-.
Caii446·21G7 .

Television
•
•
VIeWing

1978 Chevy Chevel hatchback coupe . 4 sp. trans.. WOODSHOP - Cabinets.
bucket seats. rear window picnic
tables ,
por ch
defogger, new paint. 992 swings, most wood produc·
2a.c9 .
ts . 101 Court St., Gallipolis.
Call446-2572.

Antiques

Sl

Ca ll256 1413.

Mobile Hames
for Rent

sedan . P.S., p.p., a.c ., vinyl
tOP, rear window defroster.
Like new . 614-'1'12-2a.c9.

~NNE~&lt;:-(

"Since my operation I feel like I 2·275 gal. fuel oil tanks,
exc. cond., 1 Zegler fuel oil
did twenty-five years ago
space heater, gOOd cond.,
absolutely penniless .··
and fuel oil tank. Call after
4, 256·1932.
54
Misc. Me:-rccccchcca-::nd
= ic:-:e-

&amp; dep. required . No pets

!979 Ford Fairmont. 4 dOOr

Apartments. 675-5548 .

5 rm . house in Eureka, ref . home s,

30 acre farm tor sa le. 7 Mobile home in city central
room house, garage and
air and heat, adults only,
severa l small buildings dep 446-0338.
For more informa t ion call :
614·949·2109 any tim e after
5 p.m . week IV or Sunda y at· 2 BEDROOM apartment,
HUD accepted . 675-6722,
ternoon .
675-5104.
35

First floor apt . partially
furnished , ref . required.
Call at 631 4th Ave .,
Galli polls.

GOOD
USED
AP PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap pliances , 1918 Ea5lern
Ave .. 446-7398 .

APARTMENTS, mobil e
house s.
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis .
614-446-8221 or 614-2459484 .

One bedroom house in Rio
Grande. Call 446·0157 .

3967.

1969 Buddy hou5etrailer, 12
x 60, 2 bedroom 675·6322

Unfurn . 4 rm. apartment,
$250 mo .• $100 dep., utilities
pd. , no children, no- pets.
Call 446-3437 .

KIT 'N' CARL VLE "'
by Larry Wright
r---------------------------~--~--~., 1 7~~----~A~u~to~fo~r~S~a~le~--

HousehOld G-s

TABLE SAW ·Rockwell10',
1.5 HP motor . Has unisaw
fence. $600.00. Call"-46·7865.

42

- - - - --

3 rm . apt. utilities paid.
Call675-5104 or 675-5386.

sT

Apartment, Mason, WV . 1
bedroom furnished.
No
pets . Deposit. 304-882-3356 .

1975 trailer for sale or rent
Call256 1650.

For sale 3 bdr . trailer ap·
prox . 3 acres wooded lot .
City schools, $25,000 . Ca ll
379-2196

Apartmemt
tor Rent

71

Auto for Siile

1939
Antique
Chysier
Crown Royal Sedan. Only a
few built, reasonable. ·see
at6314fh Ave., Gallipolis.

Stud Service, have 3 male
Cocker Spaniels to breed. 2 1972 Plymouth Scamp, 2
Blondes and 1 red, ex· dr. , $550. Call 446-9638. 1949
ce llent blOod line. AKC Chrysler Coupe.
·
'
registered. Call 446-9372 for
more information.
73 Chevrolet Nova, 6 cy l.
std. trans. , $5'15 firm. Call
AKC Registered White- 245-5893.
head old English Sheep
dogs, 7 wks. old. Call 2561968 Pontiac Lemans. For
1786.
sale or trade for small car
or truck, S.SOO. Call 446-4730.
AKC Registerd 3 month old
pups. Male 2 yrs. proven,
female 2 yrs. bred. Call 446- 1969 Chevelle Super Sport.
396,350 HP, p .s., p.b .. auto.
1562.
trans., Immaculate ' condition. Call 446-06-18 alter 5
Fish Tank and Pet Shop p.m.
2~13 Jackson Ave.,
pt_
Pleasant. 675-2063. Special
free gerbil or mouse with 1979 Buick Rivera. Ex.
cond., loaded. Caii446-7.W7:
purchase of fOod and bedding.
1973 El Camino 3.50 engine,
$1,«&gt;0. Caii:US-5611.
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian an P-te
1976 Vega $7,000 miles, new
pups 304-895·3958.
tires, 28 MPG, g4!0d cond.
Call466-Mo56.
.
57
Muslc•l
t nslruments
1978 Ford Thunderbird,
For Sale Used Yemahl Special Edition. Loaded.
trumpet In exc. cond., Exc . cond. 992-7-467 or 7&lt;12$150.00. Call675-2776.
315-4.

1978 Ford L TO II . $3100.
675-6429 .
1972 Volkeswagen, 675-2864
or 882-2947 _
1973 Chevrolet Caprice
stationwagen, 3 seater,
rebuilt engine and fran·
smission, 454 engine. $800.
304-882-2910.
WANTED : Volkswagen
Beetle body, 1969 and up, in
good condition. 4A6·2072.
1971 Mercedes 250 Coupe, 4
speed automatic, air, ps,
pb, em maculate SS99S . .458·
1630 or 458-1752.
1973' Pontiac Gran Prix.
$400. Phone 675· 3934 after 4
pm .
1973 Capri, I owner. good
condition, new paint, runs
good, low mileage . $1000.
Phone458-1074.
1977 Ford Thunderbird,
very good condition. S3300.
615 -4496.
7-"2----:-T'-r'-'u'-'c"'k"'s-'t~or'-5=--a=--tc.=e_ _

1972 GMC 7500 dump truck,
Detriot Diesel, tandem
axel. 1-614-694-7842 .

79 Chevy Luv, 4·whee1 dr.
26,000 miles, roll bars,
brush guad, mag wheels.
Phone 446-4276.
1964 Chevro let pickup
truck. $225. 992-7580.

73

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

SIEPT.16,1881
EVENING

WEATHERALL
CON CRETE - quality and ser·
vice, caii67S-1582.

7:00

PAINTING
interior and
exterior, plumbing ,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388-9652 .

CAPrAIN EASY'
AFTER THEY KILLED MY
. PATHER,THEY THR!OW
Mt= IN .JAIL.

BING'S CONCRETE CON STRUCTION - Specializing
in concrete driveways.
sidewa lks ,
patio.
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimstes. 11
years experience. Call 367·
7891.

7:30

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
maintainance
and
remodeling.
Phone 388·
9326.
Home building , home
remodeling and repair.
Custom work from start to
tirish . Call388-8711 .
DOBBINS &amp; SONS CON TRACTORS Remodeling Inside and out·electrial
work·heatlng·plumbing·sidin·
g-room additions. &lt;.ex ·
perienced carpenter -28
years) Serving Southern
Oh10 &amp; Western W.VA . Call
David Dobbins Sr., 388 ·
9856 . If no answer call 388 ·
9964.

Fr en c h City
Painting
Residential, co mmercial ,
interior , exterior , paper
hal'lging , and te x ured
ceilings. Ph . 367 -7784or367 ·
7160.

PIWBABLY GOME I'OT
G!'RIN$ UHDE~GROIJND
QR •. 1 OOH'T 1/.NOO-

THEKE ISN'T EVEN
ICE.!!Eofi:t;S~?.'j 5Uf'I'OSEO W ~ AHY
LAHV IN Tl115 AREA~

Wallpaper,
paint ing,
general carpenter work. AI
Tromm, 614-742-2328.
LOCK SM lT H
Service .
Residential, automotive .
Emergency service. Cawl
882·2079.
RON'S Television Service. :
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone S76-2 398 :
or 4.46-2454.
.ALLEYOOP

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

176 Ford Window Von . $.3000.
675 -6419

RINGLES'S SERVICE e• perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician.
general repairs and
remodeling _ Phone 304-675208S or 675-4560.

1981 Honda XR 500, less
than 200 miles, I ike new.
Cal1446-0648 after 5 p.m .
1980 Kawasaki KZ 250 L TO,
2.000 miles. excellent con·
dition. Call 446·0648 after 5
p.m .
1978 Harley Davidson . Sa le
or trade. $3,500 . Steve
Boso. 843-2241.
1971 350 Honda Chopper,
runs good . $200. 304-773 5835.
1975 Yamaha 6.50 , low rider
chopper, show bike .$975.
Ca ll after 6 pm . 304-8822066.
1972 Harley Davidson, 1200
super glide . $2000. 675·6823 .
Boats and
Motors for Sale

7.5

78

Camping
Equipment

25ft. Starcraft deluxe camper. Priced on inspection.
675-2602.

11

Home

Improvements
FOR BEST tn Carpet
Cleaning - Call Smeltzer's
Steamwey. Call 614-446-

2096.

Wallpapering, lnterior· E)( ·
terior
Paunting,
E)( ·
perienced. Free Estimates.
304 675 -521 '82

4-46-~208

CBS TUESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Portrait Of A
Stripper' 198 t Stars: lesley
Ann Warren, Edward Herrmann,
Vic Tayback . A young widow
lries to maintain a decent lite for
herself and her pre ·teenage
son while working a a a dancer In
a night club. (Repeat; 2 hrs .)
II)
UNDER THIS SKV
' Eiizabelh Cady Slanton in
Kansas' Irene Worth is
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the
dynem~c lead er ot the 19th
cen tu ry women"s rights
movemenl , and Collin Wilcox Paxton playa Susan B. Anthony,
Stanton's friend and co·
f!Qitator . (60 mine.)

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis. 367-7853 .
8ce3c__ ___,E,_,x~c~a.!v~at!.'i!.'nl!.g_ _
Back Hoe &amp; Ditcher Ser ·
vice. water lines, ditches,
septic systems, footers .
Call 446 -93 40 or 675-6898.
Dozer Work. Mobile home
sites and driveways . Small
jobs a specialty. Phone 742 2753.

(]j) NOVA 'A Is for Atom. B Is tor

·wiNNIE
THE R:lOI&lt;
GIRL IS
LITERALLY

WHAT'!/ DR.
131LLMP.N
SAY? 15 _.. IS
SHE GONNA
8E. OKAYr

PY!f60F
MA!.NQJRI5H ·

MENT!

13UT DR_ BILLMAN
THINK~ 5HE'LL

MAKE

THAT5

WHEI&lt;E
WI1CAN

IT... WITH THE PROPER
HELP
TRfAiMENT, ANP A
t:::tt= 7ENI?ER Hfl&lt; ..JWHT,

t.or

/.O'ItfiG CARE/

MOM?

Bomb ' The 'fa th er of the
H· b'lmb', Or Edward Teller,
discusses his controversial
theoriea.(Cio sed·Captioned;
U.S.A.)(80mino.)
8:30 CIJ COUNTOOWN TO THE
SHOWDOWN:
LEONARDHEARNS HBO Sports looks at
the 'fight -,: the century' as
hoatsBarry Tompkins and Larry
MerchAnt preview the world
welterweight championship
bc.ut between WBC titleholder
Sugar Ray Leonard and

Electrical
&amp; R efrigerafion

Fu ller Electric Co. Coni ·
plete rewiring, commercra1
or residential, and elec ~
trical maintainance. also
on ca lL Ph. 446 -2171,
Gallipolis.
SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen .
Scissors. Fabric Shop, ·
Pomeroy. 992-2284 .

.' BARNEY

10:00

OH,THAT'S
GOODNEWS

.

General Hauling

'IEP·· HE'S

HIS

OL' SELF AG'IN

THAT NEWS
AIN'T SO GOOD

NOW

JACK 'S REFRIGERATION , air condition service,
commercial, industrial. :
Phone 882-2079.
·
-

10:05
10:28
10:30

NOW HAULING hOU$ecoal"
&amp; limestone for orlveways;
Call tor estlmates.367-7J01 •
'

JIM MARCUM Rootuno
•pouting and siding. 30
years exj)erlence. Free
estimates. Remodeling.
Cati388-98S7,
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, commercial and residential,
free Hllmales. Call 256·
1182. ·
SANDERS
CON TRACTING, Carpentry
work &amp; patnting, concrete,
landscaping, 446-2787 .

JONES BOYS WATERSERVICE . Cell 367-7471 ·o(
367-0591.
:
Hauling of limestone
gravel. '1'12·2772.

&amp;

'·
PEANUTS.

1,7~_____,u,.,p,IIO,;I.,s~te,_rLy__~
TRt STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 ' Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
446-7833or446-1833.
'

10:35

HOW CAN I 6fT TJ.IE
. SLIVER OUT OF 'fOUR
·AN6ER IF '1'0V WON'T ·
LET ME NEAR '(OU? .'

10:11

WBAchampion
Tommy
Hearns.
(1)1]2) CD TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT When Sara corrals
everyone into a seance. Henry
is plunged into hot water when a
voice from the put announces
that Henry kept company with a
beautiful blonde while Murial
was away. (Repeat)
C!J MOVIE -(COMEDY) •""
"CoaatToCoaat" 1881
()] 1]2). HART TO HART
Jennifer' a death scene in a
communily play cou ld be the
real thing when her director
replaces a stage gun 's blanks
with real bullate. (Repeat; 60
mine.)
II) SHERLOCK HOLMES AND
DR. WATSON
®NEWS
II&gt; TBS EVENING NEWS
()) CBN UPDATE NEWS
(J] WEEKEND GARDENER
()] U.S. CHRONICLE II
'Working Smarter' This
labor·productlvily documen·
tary atarta with a Japaneae
ownedandmanagadatMiplant
In upatate New York, and
diacueaee altuatlonaln which
producthlity lo both hlg~ and
low.
(]!) HITCHCOCK
Cll IASIEBALL Atlanta Bravoo
va San Franclac~o Giant•
()) e-N UPDATE NEWS

tt:oo Ill • &lt;J&gt; rn •~IHJa&gt; ®•
.())

MOWREYS Upholstery Rl.
1 Box 124, Pl. Pleasant, 30.1·
675-4154.
•:
.

.,

PIIOORAM
NNOUNCIED
va ALLIN AT LARGE
UPDATIE N!WS

1 t :U
t 1:30
~TONIQHTSHOW
· Gueeta: Martlil Mull, Kenny
Rogero. (80 mlno.)

()) ANOTM!II Ut'!

Ill AFTIER BENNY

,,

,

rJ r

J

I DOAGIA I
r) I
I

'

IJ

tJ

I

tBELTOG

I

WHeREIHE

ELI01~LE YOUN&lt;S~R'OKER' C:AME

FROM.
Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surpr1se answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

Prlntanswerhere:(

:r I

I I I Jr I

I J

(Answers tomorrow)
Yesterday 5

I Jumbles

MOUNT GLUEY ASTHMA QUAINT
Answer · Things that are said are put between them
~" QUOTES "

Jumble Book No. 16, containing 110 putnes , is available lor S1 .95 postpaid
from Jumble, cJa this newspaper, Bo x34, Norwood, N.J . 07648.1ncludeyour
name. addreaa, zi code and ma~e checks a able to News
rbooka.

BRIDGE
Communication is vital
By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Sontag
NORTU
• 83
'l'AK97&gt;

Here is Fred Karpin 's
example of a hand where it
is vital that dummy's and
declarer·s trumps be used as
lines of communication.
South bid a trifle too much
in getting to seven diamonds
but there he was against the
normal best lead of a club.
South is looking at 12 easy
tricks with a spade finesse
for his 13th. but South can
develop a slight extra
chance by using dummy's
three trumps as entries.
He takes the club and
leads a trump to dummy's
eigbt. Then he ruffs
dummy's five of hearts.
Next back to dummy's nine
of trumps to lead and ruff
another low heart.
Now he returns to dummy
with the jack of trumps. All
adverse trumps have been
drawn so South proceeds to
cash the ace and king of
hearts in order to get two
spade discards. La and
behold, it turns out that
hearts have broken 4-4 so
dummy's nine of hearts has

become a winner .

9-15-81

tJ98
• 9i 2
WEST

EAST
+764

'l'J642

'l'Qt0B 3

+ K 9 52
t7

• 54

+ Q J 10 5

+86 4 3

SOUTH
+AQJIO
'l' ---tAK Q10632

+AK
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Norlb

East

Pass

2'1

Pass

Pass

3t

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: 4oQ

South discards his queen
of spades and has 13 tricks
without the spade finesse.

~~W"t..-'
b,- IHOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

42

Gaseous

element
I Paired off
6 Doubl~uick 43 Prairie
tree
llEmulate
Demosthenes
clump
44 Gaggle
12 Sheeplike
members
13 Spoken for
45
Alleviated
It 8eMy
Goodman's
DOWN
I Drive
"Let's-"
2 Turkish
15 Mesabi
mountain
Range
3Goon
product

16 Siamese
18 Hide

the

8 Tippler"s
visions
9 Carve
10 Intensify
17 Conunon

wagon
verb
4 Saint-Saens'
23 Pitcher's
swruner
stat
5 "Third set"

19 Snitch

ZO Coffee
holder

21 Suffill
22

Yesterday's Answer

for Japan
"Halt! Who

goes-?"

of teeth
6 French

24 Gypsy

sculptor
7 Polynesian

26 Ronald, as

Z4Valley
25- long

drink

horse
in Ronald
Reagan, e.g.

27 Beveragemaker

28 Attract
29 Intimidate
30 Cylindrical

32 David.
John
or Anthony
34 Nuzzled
39 JohnPassos
41 Tibetan

animal

26 Opposite
of "post"

27 Mulberry
fabric

29 Archaeolog- '
ical find

31 Edifice
addition

32 Sorrow
33 Plymouth
Rock, e .g.
35 IM order

36 Beard
of grain
37 Nigerian
38 Holly of
Rock
fame

40 One of the
DeMilles

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how to work

it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters.
ap&lt;Wirophes, the length and formati~n of the words are all
hints. Each day the code tellers are d•ft'erent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
AWY

EFW

PRNW

DY

HENPURFDYM

RNW

YWMOWPGCEO

NIEWI

·'
'

Ill II&gt;®)

I picked that can
squea~4 clean last
niqht, sonn4!

Plumbing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourt h and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

84

Closed·

evildoers . (Repeat ; 2 hrs .)

&amp; Heating

IS

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning

dessert. (Repeat ;
Captioned, U.S.A.)

8:58 CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 Cil 700 CLUB
(I)&lt;HJOITHREE'SCOMPANV
Jack poses as his own twin
brother to romance Furlev' a
attractive visiting neice, only to
have Furtey name botf1 the
Trippers ae gue•teothonorat a
frantic bash . (Repeat ;
Closed-Captioned, U.S.A.)
CD TUESDAY NIGHT AT THE
MOVIES 'Legend Ot The
Golden Gun' 1979 Stare: Hal
Holbrook, Jell Oeterhege, Cerl
Franklin . A famous gunfighter
agrees to teach a young farmer
to become proficient with a gun
alter he promises to dedicate
his life to the pursuit or

BASS BOAT-15' Fisher
marine
alumunum.
Pedestal seats, trollong i EDWARD'S Backhoe and·
motor, extras.
Moody Dozer Service. Specializing:
trailer. $1,200 .00 . Call 4.46- in septic tank. 675· 1234.
7865.
BACKHOE and Septic tank
76
Auto Parts
Service. Larry Siden.&amp; Accessories
stricker. 675-5580.
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker
service,
buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 446· 7717.

Plimplon and Caren Kaye are
co-hosts for special broadcast
that expolores the horizons tor
the year 2000, inveestigatlng
new technology that will
drastically alter our everyday
lives. (60 mine .)
(I) NOVA 'A lefor Atom , Blslor
Bomb' The 'fathe r of the
H-bomb ' , Dr . Edward Teller,
discusses his controverai a!
l h eories. {Closed -Captioned;
U.SA)(60 min a .)
(jj) MYSTERIES OF THE
GREAT PYRAMID
8:05 II)
MOVIE
- ~WESTERN-COMEDY) •••
"The Appalooea" 1966
8:30 CIJ GOOD NEWS
(j) il2J 01 LAVERNE AND
SHIRLEY Laverne and Shirley
come to grips with lwo wise
guys whO think Ihat paying tor an
expensive meal means the girls
owe theme world of attention tor

ANNIE

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free estimates, reasonable
rates . Scothguard, 992·6309 .

I

I OCTEM
(J I .............(J

UJ D PM MAGAZINE
CII
JOHN ANKERBERG

WHAT'S NEXT? George

Dave 's Appliance Repair .
Washers, dryers, ·plum ·
bing, electric, general han ·
dyman Phone 304- 576-29~1
or 675-5689 .

Motorcycles

7:38
7 :58
8:00

BORN LOSER

1977 GMC passenger van,
3J" ton . Seats 8. Excellent
condition.
PS,
AC,
Automatic. $4500 . 614· 742·
2149.

74

7:06

Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary worcll .

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

SHOW
()]
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
(I)
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
8 ()] TIC TAC DOUGH
()] (jj)
MACNEIL-LEHRER
R!PORT
®J NEWS
1]2). MUPPET SHOW
()] CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(J). BULLSEYE
CIJ ANOTHER LIFE
CD
RACE FOR THE
PENNANT
()JG!Il FAMILY FEUD
ffi HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
({) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
Guest: Jonathan Miller . Part II.
(i2) 8
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
(() SANFORD AND SON
CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
(J) D CD CRASH ISLAND A
plane carrying members of a
swim teem to a meet in Hawaii
crashes on an uncharted
Pacific island. and one of the
athletes is 'c aptured" by a
Japeneee soldier lett over from
WW 11. (Repeat; 60 mlrts.)
(J] HERITAGE SINGERS
C!J MOVIE -(ROMANCE)
•• •
"It'• Ml..!urn 11 1980
()] ®JUI HAPPY DAYS The
F onz Ia knocked for a loop when
hedisco\lersthat a waitressin a
r oadside diner bears a
remarkable resemblance to his
long·losl mother. (Repeat)
0 iil ®J THE FUTURE :

•

~ft\fi;'Ml \'j)lf ~THAT SCAAMILED WORD GAM1E
~ ~ ~~ $
byHenii"""*'IIICIBobLM

••

R

UQNFW,

RYJ

DY PUQQFDYM CNDWYJF .- VQUY AEON
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A REUGIOUS AWAKENING
WIDCH OOFJi NOT AWAKEN THE SlEEPER TO WVE HAS
AROUSED HIM INVAIN.-JESSAMYN WEST

'

,,

�14-The

•

Third annual country festival set
Tile Mason County Regional Stale
Fann Museum will hold its third annual Country Festival this weekend
- Sept. t!}-20. A numher of pioneer
crafts and activities will be demonstrated, including goat milking,
goose plucking, cider making, corn
meal grinding, apple butter l•lllking,
buller churning and oats threshing .
Frontiersmen Camping Frater-

nity of West Virginia, under the
direction of Bob Davis of Hurricane,
assisted by Paul Fitzgerald of Point
Pleasant, will set up camp on the
Museum grounds on Friday evening.
During the Festival they will
demonstrate frontier crafts, such as
tomahawk throwing, knife throwing,
and starting a fire with flint. On
Saturday, the fraternity will hold a

Meigs County happenings
Bus driver classes

will begin Sept. 21
Scl.ool bus driving training classes
will begin Monday, Sept. 21, from 7
p.m. to 10 p.m. at Meigs High School
John Riebel, instructor announced
today.
The program is designed for persons who are interested in becoming
a school bus driver. There will be 12
hours of classroom instruction and
approximately eight hours on a
school bus, Riebel said.
ln order to enroll persons must
contact the superintendent or transpportatlon supervisor of their
respective school district.
Requirements are that the applicant be reconunended by the
superintendent or transportatiOn
supervisor, Wldergo a medical
examination and agree to a
background investigation.

Marriagt• licc'nse
A marriage license was issued to
Timothy Theodore Thomas, 24,
Pomeroy, and Jeanette Lynn
freeman, 16, Pomeroy .

To end marriagt'
Janet Smith, Pomeroy, and Larry
Smith, Pomeroy , filed for
dissolution of marriage in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.

Emergency runs
four runs were made by local
emergency units on Monday. They
include Middleport, 12 :14 p.m. to the
Salis bury School for Russell
Eshelman. taking to Veterans
Memorial Hospital ; 10:53, Pomeroy,
Cave St. for Bonetta Alger, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
Syrac use, Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Evelyn Carson, taken to
Ve t e rans Memorial Hospital;
Racine Unit, 9:28p.m., Mike Johnston from fire station to O'Bleness
Hospital in Athens.

Surgical patient
Minnie Clark, North Fourth Ave .,
Middleport, is a surgical patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant, W. Va . Cards may be sent
to room 105.

Meigs County Democrats will
meet at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Carpenters' Union Hall, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Carl Autherson,
Syracuse; Alice Spearry, Wellston;
Clarence Longstreth , Middleport ;
Albert Schultz, Pomeroy ; Russell
Eshelman, Pomeroy; Sybil R1ffle,
Racine.
Discharged-Hazel Smith .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES SEPT. U
Freda Bass, Toni Day, Mrs. Ray
Fields and daughter, Joy Holsinger,
Katherine Hughes, Beatrice Kuhn,
Robert McElhinny, Jeremy
Matheny, Mrs. Dayton Milhoan and
son, Mrs. Richard Mollohan and son,
Mrs. Floyd Rose and son, Jennifer
Shulman, Barbara Sims, ·Karen
Smith, Stanford Stockton, Ronald
Voreh, Mindi Walker, Ora Walker,
Ryan Well, Amber Williams.
BIRTH

Mr . and Mrs. Mark Landrum,
Jackson, son.

tertain visitors at various times
during the festival. All of the
museum's buildings will be open for
visitation . There is no admission
charge. The farm Museum is
located four miles north of Point
Pleasant just off Route 62.

Surgical patient
Phillip R1chmond , a fifth grader at
the Bradford Elementary School, is
a s urgical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center. Cards may be sent
to room 524. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Richmond , Mid·
dleport .

OHIO VALLEY
LIVESTOCK &lt;.:0 .
1\olARKET REPORT
~ l e evl!ry Saturday at l p.m . Prices Lllken
from the eudion of Saturday. Sept. 12. Trends :
Vl'HI c·alves ~ll'ady, euws $1 to $2 higher , Fl'eder

eat Ill' s teady . Total head 706 .

F'ct.'tler Steers : Good and Choice 250 to 300100.
300 to 400 lb.s. ~ ; 400 to ::.00 lbs. 50M.SC : 50) tt• 600 lbs. ~ . 50; 600 to 700 lbs. 52·
61.75 : 700 Ill 800 lbs . M.SG-60; 800 and over ~2 . 5(}..

"'

F'et&gt;der Heelers : Good and 010ice ~to 300 lbs .
48-56 .50 ; JOO to 400 lbs. 44 . :i0-56 . ~ ; 400 to 500 lb:i.
4+-54 .50 ; 500 to liOO lb.s . 4~. 50 ; 600 to 700 lb.oi . H·
~2 .50: 700 lo IVlG IUs. 40 5(1..43; 800 and over 0.51}..

5I

Feeder Bull.s : Good and Choice 250 to JOO lb.s.
300 to 400 lbs . 54-61 , 400 to 500 lbs. 43.5()...57:
:;oo to 600 lbs. 48-SS: 600 to 700 lbs. 4! .)0.51 : 700 to
800 lb::i . 4~ : 800 a nd over41.50-48.
I lolstein steers and bulls 300 to 600 lbs. 42~ . 75
B u lls 1,000 lbs. a nd up 4&amp;-52.~ .
S lau~hler cm~;.s - Utilities 37 .;;Q...44.50; Canners
and c utters38 . ~dow n .
SprinfSer cuws by the twlld 2to-..1JO
C.lws and calves by t he head 2M-42V.
~:

Ve.al calves - c hoicl' and prime 63 .50-73: !,lOOt.!
:)3 ,5(Hi2.5&lt;1.

Bel by cHives 4~75 .
L&lt;un~ 1 Oips l 00 to 110 1bs . 45.50-49.25 .
l.ambs Wooled ) 90 to II~ lbs . U-46 .:&gt;0.
Steer:;• Cho1ce and Prime I.OCMl-1,250 lbs.
li5 .50 : Go1Jd II.'M).J ,lOOlb.'i. lil duw11
Tup Hogs 210 to 2J.O lbs. 49-51 .
Boars 3li.S0-42 .50.

i------------------------i

: Area Deaths
I

1
I

Herman H. Will

Market report

~ . 50:

To med Thursday

muzzle loading rifle shoot. Mr. Fit·
zgerald urges everyone in the area
who owns an old muzzle loading rille
to join in the shoot.
Also on Saturday Floyd Rayburn
and Walden Roush will conduct two
square dances, one at 3 p.m. and one
at 7 p.m.
St. Peter's Lutheran Church of
Point Pleasant and St. Mark's
Lutheran Church at Upper Flats will
hold a church service in the old log
church on Sunday beginning at 9:30
a .m. The service will be conducted
by Pastor George Weirick of
Ravenswood. The public is invited to
attend .
On Sunday afternoon at 2 p.m. the
Ruffles and Flourishes Balon
Twirling group of Mason, under the
d!rection of Mary Smith, will
present a colorful program. This
group of youngsters has won many
first places in contests.
The Blacksmith Shop will be in
operation during the Festival.
George Nichols, the museum's
blacksmith-in-residence will demonstrate a number of blacksmith
techniques.
Nichols is sponsored through
financial assistance from the Depar·
tment of Culture and History and the
National Endowment for the Arts.
The Country Kitchen will be ser·
ving cornbread and beans, and other
"goodies" both days of the festival.
A number of musicians will en·

1

61 .~

P1 gs by the head 17.50-32.50.
Sows 4001bs. and up 47·50.60

Councilman shot
CLEVELAND (APl - City Councilman Lonnie L. Burien was taken
to a hospital emergency room today
after he was shot through the leg by
a man ~ ho went to his home to ask
for a job, his aide said.
Beatrice Hunt, spokeswoman for
St. Vincent Charity Hospital, said
one or more bullets passed through
Burien's right thigh. She said he was
in stable condition and would
probably not require surgery .
The incident occurred at Burien's
home on East 38th Street.

Herman H. Will, 72, 36443 Peach
Fork Road, Pomeroy, died Monday
evening at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Will was the son of the late
Harry and Cora Goeglein Will. His
wife, Cora 0. Will preceded him in
death in 1980. He was also preceded
in death by one brother and one
sister.
He was a member of the Lutheran
Church.
He is surivied by one sister, Clara
Williams, Burlingham, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Wilbur Perrin of·
ficiating. Burial will be in carleton
Cemetery, Kingsbury. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 7 p.m .
this evening . In lieu of flowers the
family asks that donations be made
to the cancer society.

Council •••
(Continued from page I )
day evening. A sewer problem for a
couple of homes near the Powell St.
·., project was discussed and Mayor
Hoffman reported that a plan is
being worked out to provide sewage
service for those two homes .
· Council approved the August
' report of Mayor Hoffman showing
· receipts of $4398 in fines and fees.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck and
Councilmen Horky, Jack Satterfield,
William Walter, Dewey Horton and
Marvin Kelly .

I

VOI .JO,No. 108

enttne

at

e

I

•

•

Sentinel

Protestors regroup
despite 500 arrests
GERMANS PROTEST HAIG VISIT - German
protesting the vfsfl of United Slates Secretary of Stale
Alexander M. Haig demonstrate In the old city In Bonn,

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (AP) Undaunted by the arrests of more
than 500 of their comrades, antinuclear protesters regrouped to
reinforce their blockade of the
Diablo Canyon atomic power plant .
About 300 protesters ~sed
homemade wooden siege ladders
Tuesday to scale six-foot barbed·
wire-topped fences around the outside of the plant site, with one man
carried over in a wheelchair. Others
landed at the station's beachfront in
rubber rafts .
More than 700 construction
workers, their exit blocked by · the
demonstrators, had to be taken
away from the plant by helicopter.
Police estimated that about 2,000
people took part in the protest
altogether, including some who
stayed off plant property to avoid

Monday. One of the demonstrators carries .a pi&amp;canl
reading: "Haig visits the colony be hal condemned lo.
atomic death." IAP Laserpholo 1.
·

Report shooting victims
in good condition today
Two local Gallia County law enforcement officers injured during an
early Saturday morning incident
that led to the death of a man being
processed for incarceraton in the
Gallia County jail were listed in good
condition this morning at Holzer
Medical Center.
A man arrested for drunken
driving reportedly grabbed jailer
Oliver (Bud) Raygo's gun and shot
him and dispatcher Tony Haner
early Saturday before being killed
by police.
The Oh10 Bureau of Criminal Identification joined local authorities in
investigating the incident that
resulted in the death of Byron D.
Redmon, 22, Gallipolis.
Raygo, 60, and Haner, 18, were
both hospitalized for treatment of
gunshot wounds. Capt. Silas
Hamilton, 56, was released after
being treated for cuts suffered when
he was beaten over the head with a
gun.
Redmon had been arrested on the
drunken driving charge at Rio Grande, the stale highway patrol said.
The trooper who arrested him about
12:30 a.m. took him to the county
jail, where Raygo was working
alone, then left after filing his
papers.
The sheriff's department said as
Raygo was processing Redmon, the
prisoner assaulted and cut him.
"The jailer managed to get the
prisoner under control and was
taking him to the main sheriff's of·
fice to get assistance," the depart·

ment said in a statement. "During
this process, the jaile~ was again
assaulted, overpowered and his
weapon was taken. The jaller was
shot in the leg and wounded."
Haner, the dispatcher, was shot in
both legs after he had radloed for
help.
The Associated Press Monday
quoted deputy Pal Bailey as saying
that Redmon had fired all six shots
from Raygo's gun before Hamilton
arrived. He said the prisoner, whom
he described as "some kind of
karate expert," proceeded to beat
Hamilton with the gun.
Two Gallipolis police officers,
Keith Elliott anmd Jack Owen,
arrived at the sheriff's office, one of
them armed with a shotgun. Bailey
said Redmon grabbed the barrel of
the shotgun and struggled to wrest it
away from the officer.
He said as Redmon was swinging
his other ann to hit Elliott with a
blackjack he had taken from one of
the county deputies, Owen shot him
with a .38 pistol.
Redmon, hit in the abdomen, died
at 3:15a.m. at Holzer Medical Center.
No action is being taken against
Owen, City Manager Chris Morris

advised today, because he was "ao- ·
ling in the line of duty and was :
responding to a call for assistance." ;
City Solicitor William Eachus is
looking into the matter to·insure all ·
procedures in the investigation are
being followed, but Morris said
"every procedure has been carried ·

TAKEN AWAY- An anti-nuke demoustrator is dragged away from
the front gate of the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant Tuesday after
refusing to leave the property. Hundreds of demonstrators attempted to
blockade the gate to prevent the opening of the pla!lt. lAP Laserphoto f.

out."

The sheriff's department said
today it's still checking into Red- ,
man's background and liad some in·
formation, but none of it was
verified.
'
_...

I

STRONGSVILLE - Members of
Milk Marketing, Inc. ( MMI) District
10 Local 6, 7 and 6 will hold their
fourth annual membership meeting
Monday, Sept. 21, at Salisbury
Elementary School, near Pomeroy.
The 7:30 p.m. dinner meeting will
feature a slide presentation report
from Board President Norman
Alger and Gordon Riehl, general
manager of MMI, according to
District 10 Board Member Harold P.
Rawn, of Canal Winchester.
After the local report from Board
Member Rawn, featured speaker for
the evening will be Donald Zehr,

-·'fh ;
• t!

'

His body was later taken to the ·,
Jones-O'Brien-Kenney Funer11'1' ;
Home in Springfield, with graveside i
services to be held at the family'~

.

prison, where they were booked and
released on their own recognizan ce
or on bail of up to $630 .
The ma in wave of protesters ,
several hundred strong , marched
1''2 m1les from Avila Beach to the
plant's locked main gate early 10 the
afternoon.
After scaling the fence, nearly 200
of them planted lhems~lves inside
the property .
As quickly as the ladders went up,
authorities began to dismantle th em

Demonstrators vowed to return to
the $2.3 billion Pacific Gas &amp; Electric complex today with more people
as police promised to keep arresting
the trespassers.
"Our action will continue
tomorrow," Jef£ Kalbach of the
Abalone Alliance said Tuesday night
after the demonstrators were
arrested. The alliance is a coalition
of anti-nuclear groups participating

Meeting in regular session Monday night, the Southern Local School
District Board of Education hired
Columbus attorney Robert Baker to
work with Meigs Prosecutor
Frederick W. Crow III in conjunction with a federal court action
filed against the board.
Baker will serve in a co-counsel
position wi.t)l Crow in the $200,000
civil rights action filed last week in
the federal court, Columbus, by the
Ohio Education Association on
behalf of Bill Baer.

Baer, formerly head teacher at
the Syracuse Elementary School,
was not rehired for that post this
year, but remains as a teacher at the
school. The civil rights action stems
from failure to the board to rehire
·
Baer as head teacher.
In other action, the board named
Angela Sisson, Linda Fisher and
Debora Harris to the list of substiiUte teachers.
It acknowledged and extended
thanks- to individuals and groups
which have been beneficial to the

quantity of paint for a project which
is underway at that sc hool now .
Thanks were also extended to the
Racine PTO which purchased equipment for the Racine Elementary
School and has provided each
teacher with money for use in purchasing supplies this year .
All board members, Supt. Bobby
Ord, Treasurer Nancy Carnahan
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Beegle at·
tended the meeting which was
recessed and Will be resumed at a
la ter lime.

district recently.
The board thanked the junior hi gh
athletic boosters for purchasing
paint for the junior high gymnasium, lockers, and the lower floor
hall, and to those who did the pain·
ting including Carol Jean Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri, Mrs .
Sue Grueser, James Lawrence, Mrs.
Beverly Wickline and Scott.
The board thanked Dennie Evans
fo~ his help in ·refinishing the Por·
tland gymnasium floor and the
Syracuse P'l'O for purchasing a

h

'Flu' epidemic hits Gallia deputies
An outbreak of "black-and-grey"

·"

- Dependable GE microwave ovens
-- Save time and energy.
·
- Three popular models to choose from.

"

R 1
EG. 369 ............ ., ............ SPECIAL '339
REG 1439
•
• " .. • · " .... • • • .... • • • .. • SPECIAL 1409
REG. 1469 ........... _
............... SPECIAL 1419

.'

·-

ELBERFELDS WAREHO' usE

~-

POMEROY

flu swept through the Gallia County
Sheriff's Office yesterday afternoon
shortly after the board of com·
missioners refused to recognize or
meet with a committee representing
the department's deputies.
Beginning with the 4 p.m. to mid·
night shift, the six officers scheduled
for duly called in sick. Two of the
three deputies scheduled · for the
midnight to 8 a.m . shift reported in
with illness. All six officers slated
for this morning's duty roster called
in with reported illnesses.
The station is currently being
manned, on rotating schedules, by
the department's supervisory per·
sonnel - Sheriff James M. Mon·
tgomery, Chief Deputy Robert Har·
tenbach and Matron Norena Montgomery .
A five-member committee appointed by employees of the sheriff's
department was turned away at the
door of the commissioner's office

Tuesday when they attempted to
meet with the county officials.
Sheriff Montgomery had earlier
been told by the corrunissioners that
they would not talk to the department 's employees about grievances.
The commission told Montgomery
that dealing with the disaslisfied
deputies was not their responsibility.
"You're the elected official,"
Commissioner Lonnie Burger told
the sheriff, "we'll work through
you ... strictly through you ... they are
your employees."
Later in the morning, a fivemember committee elected to
represent the deputies and Michael
Hunter of the American Federation
of State, County and Municipal Em·
ployees (AFSCME) attempted to attend the commissions regular, full·
day Tuesday meeting.
They were told at the door that the
commission was "too busy" to meet
with them.

offs, a ma jority of the employ ees
signed authorization cards with AFSCME. They are currently seeking
recognition uf the uni on as the
legitimate bargaining agent for the
departmcn personnel.
In a related matter, Sheriff Montgomery moved Tuesday afternoon
to close the Gall ia County Jail. Shor·
tl v after noon, the sheriff ord ered
tlie facility closed and locked.
Twu prisoners who had been
housed in the jai l were transported
to the .Jackson County .Jail fur in-

" It 's el&lt;lrernely arrogant on the
part of the county commissioners to
say they are too busy to meet with
us," Hunter said afterwards. "If we
can't even open a dialogue with the
elected officials of the community,
then we feel they basically have tur·
ned their backs on the community.''
" Anything that takes place from
this point forward is basically their
responsibility .·' He added.
Commissioner Lonnie Burger
reacted to that statement by
charging "its the sheriff's department that is turning its back on the
community."
Both corruniS'ioners James Saun·
ders and Paul· Niday asserted the
commission had supplied the de part·
ment with adequate funds to protect
the public.
Last week, m the wake of a refusal
by the commission to grant a
requested $68,200 supplemental appropnation to the department and
the subsequent issuanc~e of 16 lay·

carceration.
" I don't hav e any jailers so I ca n' t
operate a jail," Mo!tlgom ery sa id
last night.
The fa cili ty was re-opened th1s
morning to allow workmen who are
completin g a $62,000 repair and
renovation project on the facility to
continue.
" Until 1 can sa fely and legally
staff the jail, 1t will remain closed ...
the Gallia Sheriff asserted.

'

_;,,;{

r~te~rm~.~--------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~'-~...
'

~

..

-,.uceawa attempt&amp; to reach blm b)' cUmblug lbroagh

228 w.

Barringto n D. Parker . A court schedule requires them to decide about

an insanity plea by Sept. 26.

Terrorist attempt unsuccessful
FRANKFURT, West Germany - Terrorists made an unsuccessful
attempt Wednesday to bomb the U S flhein-Ma in military air base at
frankfurt, one day aft er the commander of the U.S. Army m Europe
was wounded slightly in an ambush, West German p0l1ce reported .
A police spokesman said two fire exlmguish,ers r igged as a bomb
were found at the base adjoining frankfurt's Rhem-Main a1rport , one
of Europe's busiest.
The cylinders were filled with an umdentified explosive, tied with
ca bl e and equipped with a timer, the spokesman repo1ted.

CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber drawn Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number " was Ill.
The lottery reported earnings of $339,092 on the drawing. The earnings came on sales of $836,317, while holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $497,225, lottery officials said .

• \f.r'
N

Been have ... to have legitimate concel'118 is one thlog - lo refuse to
lbMe concei'IIIIB ln'elpoulble ... If we can't open a dialogue with
tbe i:olmillltloil, we feel they are IUnllng their back on the community,"
Hllllter ..Jd. CoiiiiDIAioaer Loaale Burger reacted lo that statement by
·ebaii1J11 ''It'• tbe sberlff'a department that is turning Us back on the
' MD!MDIC)'," iloth qomDiiuloaen James Saunders and Paul Niday
... e ted tlliat tbe Ct&gt;mm!uton bad iupplied the depamnent with adequate
fllildl til pntect tile J!UIIIIc. ~lurKer labeled tile sheriffs current financial
prvblem u one of "ml11-11181111lenient."
·

.u.-

I

WASHINGTON - U!wyc rs fo r John W. H1nckl ey .Jr . say they need
to know what he told prosecuti on ps ychia trists in order to decide
whether to us e insanity as a defense aga1nst char t:-:l's he tried to kill
President Reagan .
In a moti on fi led Tuesday in U.S . District Court. Vmcent J. Fuller
and Gregory B. Craig sa id proseculors hav e refused to hand over the
mformation that may include Hinckley sta tements about h1s fantasy
r omance with teenage actress Jodie Foster .
The lawyers asked for a hear ing Sept. 21 or Sept. 22 before Judge

Winning Ohio lottery number

'

I··

Lawyers seek informatio11

The holdup was one of the biggest in London th1s yea r . It follows a
major crackdown on organized cnme by Scotland Yard that netted
dozens of gangland fi gures.

• . . ,t.

an opeulog In tile CI'OWII. 'Ibe man lhmr le.Otti
II
write-In campalp for mayor before pollee.palled blm
up and arrested blm. (AP Laaerpbolel.

CINCINNATI - A 6&amp;-year-old man who complained there was not
enough meat in the beans is on trial for murder in the Jan. 12 shooting
of his wife.
William Robinson of C1ncinnati has pleaded innocent in Hamilton
County Corrunon Pleas Court in the slaying of his 62-year-old wife,
Hazel Robmson.
Defense attorney Thomas Miller told the jury Tu esday that the
couple was seated at the supper table when his client asked. "Babe,
where's the meat in these beans')"
Miller sa1d Mrs. Robin son left the dining r oom. A few m1nutes later .
her husba nd saw her sittmg at the kitchen table w1lh a .32 ca liber
pistol in he r lap. He said the gun went off when Robmson grab!Jed for
it.

two sedans.

SERVED WITH MASHED POTATOES, CHOICE OF SALAD, ROLL AND DRINK.

STA11JE CLIMBER - A mao Identified by tile
Servlte u At111ar Allen 1111 Oil tile
erOW!I Ill tile Statue of Uberty wblle a New York City

Meatless beans shooting motive

LONDON - Six gunm en held up an armored security truck on London's southwest outskirts today, cut into it w1th a chain saw and
escaped with an estimated $2.77 million in cash, police reported.
A spokesman for Kent County police reported that the raiders.
carrying nfles and shotguns, slopped the annored truck near
Chatham as it was delivering cash to local banks . The gunmen fled in

BAKED STEAK DINNER.
Dining Room
Only
.
'

HAPPY PGE WORKERS- Keith Baker, left, and Larry Kathka, middle, both PGE workers jeer at arrested anti-nuclear protesters at the
Diablo Canyon Nuclear reactor site Tuesday afternoon. tAP Laser·
photo I.

Six gunmen made large haul

.••--j.,
.&lt;

Every Wednesday Night At

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAUR·ANT

couragement fr om just off the
PG&amp;E property where they could
nut be arrested as more than 200
n~wsmen recorded the event.

outer fence to a nearby men's

.-- '.

MICROWAVE OVENS

with chain saws.
Cheerfully singing anti-nuclear
songs, other demonstrators began
their sit-in on plant property outside
the gate . Still others shouted en-

Southern board hires Attorney Baker

However, an obituary in Sunday's,
edition of the Springfield News-Sun "
showed Redmon, a , Springfield I,
native, graduated from Nor;
thea stern High School in[C!ark Cqunf ,ty and had recently bee'l discharg~ ,
from the U.S. Navy. He was repor. '.
tedly staying with a sister, Cindy, il\ i. •
Gallipolis.
.

convenience.

in the demonstration.
"The whol e world is watchmg,"
chanted many of the protesters as
they were arrested for trespassing
by an army of law officers. The
demonstrators went peacefully,
some allowin g police to lead them
away, others forcing officers to dra g
them.
The demonstrators cons1der the
plant unsafe because it is three
mil es from an offshore earthquake
fault. PG&amp;E is awaiting approval
from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Monday to start lowpower testing at the plant, located
about ha lfway between Los Angeles
and San Francisco.
Those arrested were taken from a
holding facility inside the plant's

arrest.

Annual meeting
slated Sept. 21

MMI
Columbus
Following
the Division
reports,Manager.
voting
delegates will be elected to
represent their district for the 1982

Nau-1 Pa'rt

2 Sections, 16 Pages
15 Cents
/l Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 16, 1981

Copv•ighled 1981

It} ..
I~

Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy and cool with scattered showers today through Thursday. Lows tonight 45-50. Highs Thursday in the upper ~Os. Chance of
rain 40 percent tonight and 50 percent Thursday . Winds northerly lll-15
mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Friday through Suuday:
Fair aud cool through the period. Highs around 60 Friday, warming
to near70 by Sunday. Lows In the mtd-30s to mld-405.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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</item>
