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                  <text>· Page-1G-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 11, 1981

District governor Kramer
will visit here Friday

Area deaths
Irene Jackson
Mrs. James !Irene) Jackson of
Wellston, well known in Meogs County for the numerous flower
arranging workshops which she conducted here, died Saturday .t her
home.
Active in the Garden Clubs of Ohio
for the past 50 years and a past
regional director of the Ohto
Association of Garden Clubs, Mrs.
Jackson was an honorary member
of the Shade Valley Council of Floral
Arts in Mason County.
Friends may call at the Jenkins
Funeral Home in Wellston from I to
3 p.m. and !rum 7 to 9 p.m. today .
Funeral services will be held at 10
a.m. Tuesday at the Holy Trinity
Catholic Church m Wellston.

Ewlyn B. Corson
Funera l services for Evelyn B.
Corson, 73, of Morgantown , W. Va .,
mother uf Mrs. Hugh (Martha 1 McPhail, Syracuse, were held Friday at
Morgantown.
Mrs. Corson, a patient at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center fur the
past several months, died Sept. 14 at
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital,
Pomeroy.
Borr Dec. 5, 1907 at Bloomsburg,
Pa., and a resident of Morgantown
since 1937, she was a member of the
Wesley United Methodist Church.
the Ladles of the Scottish Rile, lhe
White Shrine of Jerusa lem, and the
American Leg ion Auxiliary .
For many years in Monongalia

County, she was a substitute
teacher. Besides Mrs. McPhail, she
is survived by a son, George E. Cor-

son, Lakewood, Colo.; four gra ndchildren, and a sister. Mary
Wilhelm , Allentown , Pa . She was
preceded in death by her husband,
Roland Corson, in 1975, and an infant
son, Roland Bomboy Corson.

Fred Carl Mack
Fred Carl Mack. 87, Cheshire, died
at his home Sunday at 2:40p.m. He
had been a stationary engmecr and
auto mechnic prior to retirement.
He also had worked as a foreman
with the Marietta Manufacturing
Company in Point Pleasant.

He was born at Kyger, April 14,
1894, to the late Charles and Harriett
Tate Mack.
He i.s survived by hJs wife, Ruth
Roush Mack whom he married September 29, 1916; a son, Harold of
Cheshire; a sister, Grace Bradbury
of Gallipolis.
A brother, Ivan, preceded hlm.
There are also two grand and five
great-grandchildren surviving.
He was a memher of the Kyger
Methodist Church and Masonic
Lodge456 of Cheshire.
Last rites will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Willis Funeral
Home with Rev . Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in Gravel
·Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be
held at the funeral home alter 3: 30
p.m. Tuesday.

Meigs County happenings

William R. Kemper

George F. Kramer

William Raymond Kemper, 64, a
resident of Eureka Star Rt..
Gallipolis, died at his residence at
6:30p.m. Sa turday . He was a retired
employee of the Gallipolis Develop.
mental Center and had been in
failing hea lth for one year.
He was born June 8, 1917 in Gallia
County, to the late George Kemper
Sr. and Ethel Josephi ne Haner Kemper.
Surv1vmg are h1s wife, Donna
Eve lyn Bennett Kemper ; a
daughter, Mrs. Orville (Velma I
Johnson of Cheshire; fi ve grandchildren and one great-grandson ;
five brothers, Charles of Eureka
Star Rt.; John of Columbus; George
Kemper, Jr .. Gallipolis; Thomas of
Austin, Texas, and Gordon of
Gallipolis.
A sister, Mary Jo Kemper,
Gallipolis, also survives. He had served as a specia l Gallia County
sheriff' s deputy under James Saunders, Oscar Baird and James Montgomery.
He was also active in the Gallia
County Ctvil Defense.
Funeral services will be coJr
dueled at I p.m. Tuesday at Willis
Funeral Home with Rev. Alfred
Holley and Rev . Monte Sheets officiating. BU1 1al will be in Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 79 p.m.today.

Ada, in a two-car accident on Ohio
235 in Hardin County.
AKRON - Sherry A. Merrill, 19,
Akron, in a one-car accident on a
Swnmit County road.
MARION - Ronald J . DeLancy,
16, Galion, in a one-.car accident on a
Marion County road.
LEBANON - Vertie M. Hopkins,
75, of Franklin m a lwo-car accident
on a Warren County road .
BATAVIA - Frank Wilson Jr., 24,
of Milford, in a motorcycle accident
on U.S. 5() in Clermont County.
URBANA - Walter Cain, 45, of
Westville and Deloris Cain, 45 , of
Westville in a two-car accident on
U.S. 36 in Champaign County .
FRIDAY
MEDINA - Sandra L_ Geiniman,
18, of Valley City , in a two-car accident on a Medina County road .
LANCASTER - Ryan E. Manson,
7, uf Carroll, in a two-car accident on
a Fairfield County road.
IJSBON - Robert A. Bear, 29, or
Richfield, in a two--car accident on
Ohio 11 in Columbiana County.
AtbeOBlJn~docllSaiH

Sliltunlay, Stpt. 9, 1981
tCaltle 1
Feedt&gt;r Steers ( 4{)(HIOO lbs.l rtlOice

~ - 5!).6.4 .50:

Good 4847.
G:~ Heifers 1400-700 lh!i .J Choice 51..)8 ;

7

Feeder Bulls !41J0..800 lbs.J Choice~ ; Good
42-52.
Slaughter Dulls rOver l ,lm\b;_I 43.35-.'lO.ZJ.
Slaughter Cuws, Utilities 31l.l().43.2!i ; Canners
1:1nd Cu tters 3 1 -36.~ .
Veals (ChoiceandPnrne) ~ .

Bilby Ca lves (By the Head) 2S-95
Hog1
Ho.;s ( N.:&gt;. I, &amp;rruws omd Gilts,

487~9

Sows 36.75-46.25 .

Pigs ! By the Head ) s.:;o.,18.

Lombo
Slaughter Lambs 4.&gt;47.

2()..234)

lbs . 1

Deputies
check

Saturday
Admissions--Esta
David, Middleport; Otto Lohn,
Pomeroy;
Helen Lochary ,
Pomeroy; Mary Qualls, Pomeroy.

Hill,David.
Ida Young, Hester
Clarence
Mondry, Esta

complaints
A breaking and entering at the Dr.
J . Ph illip Jones residence ,
Woodyard, Road, Rt. 2, Albany, that
occurred Sunday is being investigated by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.
According to the report when Dr.
Jones and hi.s wife returned from
church at approximately 12 :30 p.m.
they found the front door of their
home kicked open.
Mrs. Jones ' purse had been taken
along with a can containing two
gallon of gas.
Sunday at 12:25 p.m. Elizabeth
Collins, 16, Rt. I, Reedsville was at
Cline's Fruit Farm and as she
backed her truck it stuck a vehicle
that had pulled in behind her driven
by Fred R. Sandman, Belpre. Mrs.
Collins was unable to see the small
vehicle since it was parked on an in-

cline.
There were damages to the Sandman vehicle but no damage to the
Collins truck. No citation was
issued.
Saturday at 9:40a.m. Robert Clonch, Middleport was parked in the
driveway at the Arvil Holter
residence at Bashan.

(

Meet Tuesday
The Pomeroy Past Matr ons Club
will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
home Mrs. Thelma McMurray.

Saturday Discha.rges--Harold
Sauer, Elsie Roush, Amber Lohn,

member of the Zanesville Rotary
Club, one of more than 19,000 such
clubs around the world. He was elec.
ted to office at the Rotary In·
temational Convention in San Paulo,
Brazil in June 1!Mil, took office July
1 and will serve unW June 30, 19112.
'Kramer is president of Rankin arid
Rankin, Inc., a Zanesvllle lnsilranc:e.
and real estate agency. He Is
president of the Musklngwn ln..
surance Agents Association, and has
been chairman and president of the
local Easter Seal Society and ~
Muskingwn Valley Boy Scout Coun-cil.

8: Zl p.m. for John Powell, West
Main St., to Veterans Memorial.

Veterans Memorial

19 die on Ohio highways
By The Associated Press
Traffic accidents around Ohio
over the weekend killed 19 people,
eight of them teen-age or younger,
the Highway Patrol said. The victims included three motorcycle
riders, two pedestrians and a
bicycl ist.
The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead :
SUNDAY
fl UCYRUS - Krenella K. Plott, 11 ,
of Galion, when her bicycle was
struck by a car on a Crawford County road.
XEN IA - Shawn 0 . McClain, 15,
of Kettering, m a one-car accident
on a Greene County road .
CINCINNATI - Carl E. Fleischman, 56, of Cincinnati, when his auto
crashed into a bridge abutme nt.
LANCASTER - Gary E. Deible,
44, of Lancaster, in a two-ca r accident on U.S. 33 in Fairfield County .
VALLEY VIEW - Douglas S.
Harshbarger. 19, of Garfield
Heights, in a one-car accident on a
Valley View street.
TALLMADGE - Keith Brown Jr.,
24, of Mogadore , in a car-pedestrian
accident in Tallmadge.
TOLEDO - Lawrence Berkel, no
age ~iven , of Toledo and Loris Ga rdener, no age given, of Phoenix.
Ariz. , in a car-motorcycle accident
on a Toledo street.
SATIJRDAY
ASHTABULA - Jajuan A. Pollard ,
9, of Ashtabula, when struck by a car
in Ashtabula .
FINDLAY - John J. F:vans, 26, of

Kramer Is one of 391 Rotary governors throughout the world who are
representatives of Rotary In.
temational in districts composed of
member clubs. As governor of
District 669, which includes the en.
tire southeast quarter of Ohio, he
will supervise and coordinate 35
Rotary clubs with more than 2,900
members.
A Rotarian since 1947, aud a Paul
Harris Fellow, George Kramer is a

" You and Rotary" will be the subject of an address by George F.
Kramer, ROV~rnor of this Rotarv
district, to the members of the Midleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club at
their weekly dinner llll!\'ting, 6 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 25, at the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport.
Kramer, of Zanesville, will also confer with James R. Sheets, president
of the local club, and clu6 officers on
the group's service activities for the
year.

e

A World War II veteran, Kramer
served 38 months in the Sout!l'
Pacific with the 25th Infant!')'
Division. He has completed 36 years,
active and reserve duty and Is il
retired U. Colonel.
.
A graduate of Meredith College,
where he earned hJs Associate
Degree in Accounting, Kramer has
also attended the Zanesville branch
of Ohio University.

r-;~~~~~~;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

ELBERFELD$

Sunday Admissioryr-Edna Roush,
Racine; Shirley Harris, Reedsville;
A. J. Willbarger, Racine.
Sunday Discharges-Nellie Perry,
Jay Wilson, Mabel Swan.

'

Emergency runs
A number of ca lls were answered
over the weekend by local emergency units , the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service reports.

carhar"tt
caPhar'tt-

BROWN DUCK
BLANKET -LIN ED
COAT

Sunday runs included: Middleport, 12 :06 p.m., Middleport Unit,
Harley Gilmore from High St., to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy
Unit, II: 13 p.m. Brandy Fortune
from Mulberry Ave., to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine Unit, Edna
Roush from Racine residence to
Veterans Memorial.
Saturday runs : Middleport Unit,
10:22 a.m., Mary McCarty,
Sycamore St., to Holzer Medical
Center ; Middleport, 12:24 p.m.,
Charles McDaniel from Route 7 to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy
Umt, II: II a.m., Ruth Martin,
Powell St., Middleport, to Veterers
Memorial Hospital; 4:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Unit, High St., Pomeroy,
for Helen Lochary, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy Unit,

Bi-swing action back. Warm .
Weather proof.
Snaps for
matching hood.

Keep your savings
•
ID a safe place.

Marriage licenses were Issued to
Martm J. Chasteen, 26, Vinton , and
Alice Yvonne Mullins, 24, Vinton;
Donald Verne VanMeter, 41,
Chester, and Dona Ricard , 30,
Pomeroy.

EVERY tU.SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

Farmers Bank is the safest place for your
savings. Your savings is insured up t:&gt; $100,000, and
you'll also earn high interest.

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!

•

Put your savings in a safe place, a savings account
at the Farmers Bank ....

For Just

By BOB HOEFUCH
(ion and Barton gave a second to the
In the only split vote of the motion.
evening, 3-2, the Meigs Local Board
Snowden, Barton and Richard
of Education instructed Treasurer Vaughan voted that Mrs. Wagner
Jane Wa'gner to place ap- place the money in the textbook fund
proximately $13,000 raised this sum- with other board members, Larry
mer through the sale of property and Powell and Carol Pierce, voting
vehicles into the textbook fund at a against the motion.
regular meeting Monday night.
Dan Morris, assistant superinThe $13,000 matter was brought tendent, pointed out that there is a
before the board by member, Robert five year plan on the purchase of texBarton, who asked .that the an.Junt tbooks, but pointed out there have
be placed in the textbook fund.
been few funds for the first two
Supt. David L. Gleason said it was years with which to put the plan into
too early to tell if the amount could effect. The discussion brought out
be put in the textbook fund because that a 1968 text in being used in the
of the uncertain financial condition area of social studies.
of the district. Robert Snowden,
The board hired substitutes Yvonboard member, said that textbooks ne Young, secretary, aide; Tonya
are outdate and that the textbook Davis, secretary, aide, and Carl L.
fund is constantiy being robbed for Weimann, custodian and granted
other payments. Both Barton and professional leave to John Redovian
Snowden indicated they felt the and Martha Vennari so they can atboard is obligated to see that text- tend a guidance workshop. It agreed
books are updated.
to congratulate John W. Blaettnar
Treasurer Wagner said she would via letter for being named cokeep in mind that the board mem- chairpersons of the district 13, Ohio
bers wanted the $13,000 put into the Distribution Education Clubs of
textbook fund when she makes up an America and gave him professional
interim
budget.
However, leave to attend to meetings on Sept.
Snowden moved that the board in- 22 and Oct. 8.
struct Mrs. Wagner to take that ac(Continued on page 10)

LD
Informational picketing coming

•

Marriage licenses

Pom!!roy

.

..

MENToR, ohlo - Teachers in the Mentor school district remain at
odds with the school board over contract negotiations and plan to go
public with the dispute by staging informational picketing.
The 443-member Mentor Teachers Association decided Sunday night
to picket rather than strike and shut down the 10,000-pupil Lake County
school system.
James K. Smith, association president, said teachers will picket
before and after school hours. Picketing, however, won't begin until
students and parents are informed of the situation.
Both sides haye been negotiating with the help !If a federal mediator
since federal mediator since February, bul they've been unable to
agree on base salary and Several grievance issues.

Plant gets go approval
WASHINGTON- The Nuclear Regulatory Conunission on Monday
gave a California nuclear power plant that has been the target of a
week-long protest an OK to load fuel and begin lqw-power operation.
The NRC spent less than 15 minutes on discuSsion before voting f&gt;.O
to grant a low-power operating permit for the Diablo Canyon nuclear
power plant near San Luis Obispo.
In granting the penni!, the five conunissioners said a more irn.
portant decision on allowing the plant to go to full power will not be
made until after further hearings are completed over the next several
months.

Declares war on communism
WARSAW, Poland - The Polish government's chief labor
pegotiator says Solidarity declared war on communism in Poland and
killed the partnership thst was developing between the government
and the independent labor federation.
"The funeral of this idea has already taken place," said Deputy
Premier Mieczyslaw Rakowski. " And it wasn't me that put it in the
grave. ·u had a solemn funeral in Gdansk."
Rakowski said the first half of Solidarity's first national congress in
Gdansk two weeks ago " apparently declared war on the authorities
and the (communist) system." He said the statements of some union
leaders had gone from "stupid" to "criminal."

Inaugurates fastest tr~in
PARIS - President Francois Mitterrand inaugurates the world's
fa.l!test train sei'vice tonight, riding alongside the engirieer at 160 miles
an hour.
French officiBls see it as the beginnjng of a new era of travel th&amp;t
could spread across Europe and cut into the airlines' business.
Mittetrand is making.the.264-mile trip north ftom Lyon to Paris in
one oi the new TGVs, that being the 'acronym for "k'aih a grande
vitesse," or high-speed train.

~.

•

'

•Combination Uinner
•Dining Room On~

Winning Ohio lottery number

On~

CLEVELAND - 'nle winning miinber drawn Monday night'in the
Ohio Lottet:y's dally game ''The-Number" waa 361.
· . The lo\tery re~ earninglljlf ~~502 on the drawing. The earnioP came on saleB olt885,343, \ri1lle holders of winnlJ)g tickets are
entlll!"' to shire $560,8tl,IOttery offl&amp;li said.

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

Crow•s Family
Res,aurant .
-- ..

221 W. MAIN

.

PH. 992·5432

Fo. Farmers

Beverages

POMEROY, OHIO

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Your Communit~· Owned Bank
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3 Sect tons , 18 Pages

Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 22, 1981

15 Cents

A Multimediil Inc. New sp aper

Meigs hoard
puts $13,000
in textbooks

We have the complete line of Carhart! Brown Duck
work Clothes - Jackets · Vests · Coats .. Coveralls Hoods. Regular and extra large size. Stop in now and
buy what you need while selection is best.

The vehicle apparently jumped .-------------1-------------------------::::out of gear, coasted out of the
driveway, went over a hill , struck a
tree and then turned over on its side.
There was moderate property
damage. No one was in the vehicle at
the lime of the incident.
Saturday at approximatley 10 :20
p.m. Randy Forbes discovered
several large bales of hay burning
along SR 681 near Cherry Ridge
Road.
The hay was owned by Jin1 Robinson, RD. Pomeroy. The Pomeroy
Fire Department was summoned .
The incident is under investigation.
Two hitskips are under investigation by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department that occurred
Friday and Saturday night.
James Meredith, RD, Pomeroy,
reported that his fence al Five Points was damaged by an unknown
vehicle that ran off the road.
Also, Charlie Smith, Wolfe Pen,
reported that approximately 121l feet
of fence near his pasture field on
Peach Fork Road was damaged
Saturday night.

•

Voi.JO,No . 112

Copyrig htect.l 981

AVAILABLE IN REGULARS
AND LONGS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

President
refigures
proposal

. MINISTERS - Ministers taking part in the
program Sunday when the 150th anniversary of the
I
Racine Wesleyan United Methodist Church was observed include, I tor, Dave Harris , former pastor now
profram director lor the Athens District, James Clark,

present pastor; Benjamin Edwards, dlstrict superintendent; Wesley Clarke, executive director, Wesley
Glen United Methodist Church Retirement Center;
Dale McClurg, former pastor, and Robert McGee,
pastor of the Pomeroy United Methodist Church. !See
story and pictures on Page 4) .

Pomeroy council studies
proposal on free rnete~s
By KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council last ni ght
discussed the possibility of freeing
the parking meters on Thursday and
Saturday afternoons.
Bill Youn g, co un c ilman ,
suggested that freeing meters on
Sat4rday could generate business in
downtown Pomeroy.
It was suggested that councilman
John Anderson take the proposal to
the Pomeroy Chamber of ·~om­
merce. It was suggested that the
chamber contact merchants for
donations (a minimal charge per
month) . Council tabled the matter
until Anderson meets with the chamber.
Council, under emerge ncy
measure, passed an ordinance
providing for the Issuance of bonds
in the amount of $100,000 for the improvement of the village hall.
Mayor Clarence Andrews said the
village has now completed all the
work necessary in order to borrow
funds from FmHA to proceed with
the project on the former senior high
building.
Council is in the process of converting the senior high building into
a city hall. The mayor stated that
water, sewer, plumbing, heating and
roofing is needed to be completed in
order to move into the complex. Andrews believes council will be able of

occupy the new quarters by
January.
Tom
Goe tt ,
Pomeroy
buSinessman, met with council concerning several issues.
Goett first reviewed dean-up at
Sacred Heart Cemetery following
the digging of a grave. It was pointed out that the village di gs graves
at Sacred Heart Cemetery (a
pnvate owned cemetery ) out of
goodwill at the same cosl il digs
graves at Beech Grove I village
owned cemetery) .
Goett asked what council would
charge for ex tra cleanup . Council
agreed to go back after burial and
cleanup the ar ea for an ad4itional
$25.
Goetl also emphasized that work
on the streets on East l'vlain Street
(where sewer line were la id) ttas not
been completed a nd a manhole was
left open.
Mayor Andrews said he reported
the open manhole to the contractor.
He also informed Goett that he (the
mayor) has been informed by the
engineers that work on the project
will be completed by Oct. 5. He also
added that it has been six weeks since any work has been done in the
area.
Goell also asked why the lift
station could not have been placed
on his property rather that prop&lt;Ity

joining his. The reason Goett asked
the question was due to the fact that
all residents had been asked except
him.
Mayor Andrews stated that the
deris ion to place the lift station was
up to the engineering firm of
Burgess and Niple. The mayor
suggested that Goett contact the
engineers .

Goett also questioned the fact that
a man allegedly caught stealing
goods in his place of business was
walking the streets .
Mayor Andrews pointed out that
the charge was a felony charge and
had to be heard in Meigs County
Court.
Steve Hartenbach, meterman,
told council that from Sept. I, to
Sept. 21, 773 parking tickets were
issued and he had made a $251
deposit Sept. 2.
Harten!Jdch aiso said he made
several calls regardning the
securing of a list of license plate
owners. Hartenbach stated that he
will be receiving the information in a
few days. The list of license plate
owners is necessary in order to
collect past due parking meter fines .
At the suggestion of Bruce Reed,
council commended Hartenba ch for
lhe fine job he is doing for the
village.
1Continued on page 10 )

WASHINGTON lAP) - Presidem
Reagan is refiguring his latest round
of spending cuts after being told by
Republican leaders that it is "not
realistically possible" to pass a
package that would delay Social
Secunty cost-&lt;&gt;f-living increases.
As one alternative, congressional
leaders are considering delaying
next year's insta llment of the record
personal income tax cut enacted just
last month.
Senate Majority Leader Howard
H. Baker Jr., R·Telin., and House
GOP leader Robert H. Michel of
Illinois told Reagan on Monday that
his new package of Social Sec urity
and other spending cuts would face
likely defea t in Congress.
"At the very least it 's not an impossible fight, but it's a judgment
only lhe president can make and
we' ll give him our best pro£essional

judgment on his prospects in the
Congress, " Baker sa 1d.
The message was gleaned from a
private meeting ea rlier Monday at
which key House and Senate
Republicans agreed Reagan should
be told that "linker;ng with Social
Security" was " just not reahsticall)
possible," said one participant, who
asked not to be identified.
He said the gr oup did not directly
suggest that Reagan cha&lt;1ge his
plans but discussed possible alternatives. including:
-Deferring for three mo nths the
10 pt!rcenl cut in personal income
taxes scheduled to take effect on
July I of next year.
- Cuts in military spending deeper
than the $2 billion for 1982 that
Reagan has recommended tied to
other budget reductions.
- Making no further cuts at this
time . Senate Republican Whip Ted
Stevens of Alaska suggested last
week that Congress should wail until
next Ma rch until considering any
new spending plans.
White House aides said Reagan.
who had been reported ready this
week to ask for $16 .3 billion in cuts
for 1982, now is likelv to review the
situtation and search for a more
Mlatable pla n.
"We're goi(Jg to refigure it with
what they told us today," sa id one
White House aide, who asked not tu
be identifi ed.
However, deputy White House
press secretary Larry Speakes said
Reagan still intends to deliver a
nationally tel evised speech later this
week.
Sources sa id much of the op.
!Contmued on page 10)

First woman· judge takes oath Friday
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sandra
Day O'Connor, confirmed by a
unanimous Senate as the first
woman justice on the Supreme
Court, promises to be "very busy,
very fast" after she is sworn in later
this week .
There is no clear indi cation,
however, how she will vote on social
and constitutional issues th~ t come
before the court.
The 51-year1&gt;1d Arizona appeals
judge won a m endorsement in the
Senate on Monday as the 102nd
justice in the 191-year history of the
nation's highest court. She will be
youngest of the nine members.
Mrs. O'Connor will be sworn in for
the lifetime appointment in
ceremonies Friday in the Supreme
Court building, and White House officials said President Reagan may
attend.
'
"My hope Is that 10' years from
now; after I've been across the
street and worked for a while, that
they'll all feel glad for the wonderful
vote they gave me today," a smiling
Mrs. O'Connor said at an appearance on the Capitol steps with
Vice President George Bush and
Senate leaders. ·
Once instaUecj on the court, which
opens its 1981-32 term 0!:1. 5, "I'm
going to get very busy, very fi!St,"
Mrs. O'Connor laid.
· Reagan .haqed 'a . '.'happy and
·hlstellic · day" anc:l· said in . a
statement that Mrs. O'Connor's eOnflnnallon' "symbolizes the richness
ol oppOi-tlputy 'that atill abides in '.
~al- opportunity that pennlts )
· perlons,Of any·sew,, age or race, from
evenr Mctlon· and walk. of Ufe, to
asptre and ·~~chleve ' in a manner
never before even Clfearned about in
hwnanhlllory." ·
' '1'l1e vute, f9llowilll four houn o(
· Jaa4atory .apeeches by con• ·iervatiWII al1il u~ lllke, W!IS. a

. ·tm
S\ljlrelil•
' ',..
,,....~ - decision.

that

legalized abortion.
victory for Reagan as well as Mrs.
O'Connor.
Opposition to Mrs. O'Connor's
views on abortion melted when Sen.
Jesse Helms, R-N .C., leader of the
most conservative wing of lhe
Senate, said he would support the
nomination "because I have Faith in
the president."
Helms said he believed Reagan's
views against legalized abortion
were too strong to permit him to
nominate someone who supports the

Sen. J eremiah Denton, R-Ala.,
who abstained from an otherwis~
unanimous Judiciary Committee
vote for confirmation last week, sa id
he didn't want to be the spoiler MoJr
day.
Mrs. O'Connor steadfastly refused
to indica te how she might rule on
any specific issue, although she expressed personal dislike of abortion
and busing for school integration
and support for the death penalty .
But she also said a judge must
only change existing law if conf

'

SaJIIIn Day O'Coiulor waves 11
IJ!e U.S. Capitol ill WasbillgtoD Monday,

CONFIRM!;D ~~ arrlv,es at

shortly alter her aoallnaUon to the Supreme Court was
collflrmed by the SeDate. From left are: Sen. Barry
0

0

{'

%

i!

f

:;%

.~

vinced that earlier court decisions
are seriously flawed.
Sen. Joseph Biden, [).Del., the
ranking Democrat on the Judi ciary
Conuniltee, said all Supreme Court
nominees are unpredictable.
''Once a justice dons the rohes and
enters that inner sanctum, we have
no control," Biden said. " All bets
are ofF."
Nevertheless, he predicted tha1
Mrs . O'Connor will join the
"moderate·' wing among the nine
justices.

.f""

\!.

Goldwiter, R·Arll., Attorney Geaeral William Frencll
Smith, O'Connor lUid Sea. Strom Thurmolld, R-s.c.,
who chal11 the Seute .ll!dlclary C~mmlttee. (AP
Laserphoto).

�Tue_'s day, Sej)tember22, 1981

Commentar

f,

Pag:e 1 2- The Dally s~ntinel : j
Poro~roy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesdil , Se tember 22 1981

.

_,
'

'

United In hypocrisyfi________________Ja_m~~+·;_J._K_ilpa_._m_·c_k
ttmately and directly concerned in
the matter : South Africa.
The purpose of the assembly's
most recent resolution was to condemn South Africa for an incursion
into Angola. Very well. But i! King
Hypocrisy were not presiding over
this mummery, the assembly would
equally have condemned Angola for
harboring forces of SWAPO 1South
West
African
People's
Organization), whose purpose is to
seize power in Namibia by force of
arms.
Hypocrisy is defined as " a
feigning to believe what one does
not." It is "the fal se assumption of
an appearance of virtue." In the
matter of Namibia , the assembly
feigns to believe that the United
Nations has some valid authority to
dictate the future of South-West
Africa. But this is not so, and any
person capa ble of tracing the last
days o! the old League of Nations
knows it is not so. The notion that the
league formally transferred its mandates to the U. N. is a notion spun

What others say...
Excerpts from some editorials that appeared in newspapers around Ohio
last week :'
AKRON BEACON JOURNAL - "Despite all the 'gene tinkering' scientific work that has been done through recent years and all the exciting news
accounts it has generated - the most recent about the introduction of a rabbit gene into mice by a team of biologists working at Ohio University and at a
laboratory in Maine - science is still groping in almost total darkness in the
field of genetic tailoring.
"So far , at least, we are still a long, long way from the power to do the sort
of ·genetic eng ineering ' in human beings that causes an almost superstitious
uneasiness in most of us. In fa ct, none of the hWldreds working in this field
has yet achieved any demonstrable success in decreasing proneness to even
one hereditary abnormality or weakness in humans, animals or plants - the
prime purpose of geneticlmgineering.
" The biologist who heads the rabbit-mouse experiment, Dr. Thomas
Wagner of Ohio U., foresees a Iinne when we will be able, through gene insertion, to give beef and dairy cattle a bison's ability to convert into meat
and milk coarser forage than any on which cattle can now thrive.
" And Dr. Joseph Jollick of Ohio U., a c()-worker on the project, says
researchers can probably achieve this kind of gene transplant among farm
antmals within the next five years.
" ... But though the outcome of this experiment - transferring rabbit
hemoglobin genes into mouse sperm cells just a(ter their penetration of
mouse egg cells - may foreshadow much wider-ranging powers later, it did
nothing to improve the breed. Two of the 46 'doctored' mice born merely
transmitted to their young and their young's young a slight anemia
traceable to the rabbit gene.
" ... The rabbit-mouse experiment apparently did at least two things that
are new and different :
" - It focused on a fleeting moment in the reproductive process when cells
are the least likely to attack and destroy anything foreign coming at them :
the moment when both egg and sperm cells must be ready to tolerate
something alien to do their job.
" - And it succeeded, for the first time, in transferring a traceable trait
that would 'breed true' for three or more generations.
" But we remain a long, long way from a time when gene scientists can
manufacture human geniuses or monsters in their laboratories, or wipe out
any of the thousands of human ailments and abnormalities known to be
linked to heredity.
"What we have is a very preliminary basis for hope, not fear."
THE (CLEVELAND) PLAIN DEALER "There appears to be no good reason to turn publicly owned hospitals into
hiding places. But that could be the result of a bill that would further whittle
away at the public's right-t()-know law as upheld by the Ohio Supreme Court.
" The bill, introduced by State Rep. Dale Locker, D-80, of Anna, would
prevent public hospitals from releasing information about admission or
discharge without the patient's consent. Locker's office said private
hospitals were given that authority in 1971 Ohio privacy law.
"On public hospital records, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled in 1978 that admission and discharge records of public hospitals are open for public inspection. In another issue in the same case the court said police information
compiled in reasonable anticipation of a fOUrt proceeding may be withheld.
"The court juggled Ohio's public disclosure law with the privacy law,
saying the public's right to know must be balanced against an individual 's
right o! personal privacy.
" The Locker bill would amend the disclosure law by forbidding what the
court approved. Many newspapers in smaller communities report all
hospital admissions and discharges as news, something lor which
newspapers in larger cities do not have the space. It is valid community
news, especially when the hospital is owned by a city, township or county.
The Locker bill should be killed in committee''
THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER "The recent gasoline tax boost on Ohioans was all but painless, thanks to
the world oil glut that had pump prices stable or dropping .
" ... But in boosting the gasoline tax, the Ohio General Assembly let stand
user taxes on trucks that haven't been changed since 1953. What lawmakers
did, instead, was direct the state departments of Taxation and Transportation to conduct a highway-user study. The laudable aim is to determine to the extent possible the fair share different users should pay to build
and maintain roads and highways. An interim report is due next Jan . I, the
final report next July I.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Strffi
Pomno)·, Ohio
114-IW!·2151

DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON A.REA

~~
csm~
'qjv

~L--r·~o. ~=~

ROBERT L. WINGETI

from moonbeams. The chain of title
is not there. No such testamentary
proof exists.
The assembly also feigns to
believe that all acts of international
meddling are bad, but this appearance of virtue is false . The
SWAPO terrorists are armed by the
Soviet Union. No one denies it. The
terrorists are supported and trained
by thousands of Cuban troops. No
one denies it. In the assembly, the
rna Iter is siply not discussed.
Here at the U. N. the notion is
carefully fostered that only one outfit embodies the longing of all the
people ~f Namibia for independence,
and that outfit is SWAPO. The notion
is fatuous . The guerrillas of SW APO
seek power for the Ovambo, who
make ¥P something less than half of
the population. But the Ovambo are
themselves divided into seven Bantu
tribes ; and beyond the Ovambo are
such tribes as the Damara, the
Herero, the Kavango and the Nama.
There is no "Namibian people."
There is no sense of national loyalty,
no universal hunger on the part of
"Namibians" for a flag to call their
own. There is only a hWlger on the
part of a relatively few ambitious
men for wealth and power.
It is all dumbshow. The assembly's resolutions, devqid of the
slightest power even to influence or
persuade, are no more than tales
told by idiots, lull o! sound and fury,
signifying nothing . No selfre!pecting nation - not South
Africa, not Israel in other contexts,
nut any of the great powers - will

wurrender its national interest to the
vaporings of an irilpotent body. It is
lunacy to suppose that South Africa
will accept any imposed "solution"
that .-eates a Marxist state upon its
northern border and jeopardi2es access to Walvis Bay. If the old mandated territory of South-West Africa
is to be cut loose, it will have to be

been •.1uced to a nullity. Its portento demands have less weight
than
esolution of the Maryland
Audubqji Society demanding the
resignation ci Secretary Watt.
Per~~"we should carry news of the
U _ N. ~ck on. the comic pages to
dwelljw1th Doonesbury and his frien-

cut loose with strings still attached.
In the 20 years that the Namibian
question has been debated , no one
yet has mastered such a feat of
legerdemain.
Reading an inch-thick stack of
windy resolutions, I wonder anew:
Why the United Nations? Seriously,
why? Its purpose as a forum has

a

ds.

~

FromAPWires
There is no joy in Mudville... ar .d
Manager Jim Fanning warns the ·•
will be no music in Montreal, elth
unless the ~xpos wip.
"Casey At The 8at," in this c;
was Expos outfielder _,r •
D~wspn, and Monday night :e
re ~e the classic Ernest L. Th. ~r
~ '· ~ghtly by not striking oul
I ~ National League's longest
gam
year, Dawson's grounder
in tH !IDth inning scored Rodney
Scott .~1\01" third, giving Montreal a
1-0 v1qloty over the Philadelphia
Phillies:·
·
The victory allowed the Expos to
keep pace with St. Louis in the race
for the ' National League East's
second-season title. The Cardinals,
who blanked the Chicago Cubs 2-ll in
an afternoon game, lead the Expos
, by II'.! games. The New York Mets,
-~who beat Pittsburgh 4-3 in 13 in;nings, trail by 21'.! games.
bThrough 10 innings, Steve Carlton
&gt;O( , theiillies and· Ray Burris of
1'4onti, , were locked In a pitchers
duel. , .• on, who yielded just three
liits.- fa·,,.\ . , 12 to become the NL's
all;time ·s.ft.ikeout leader with 3,128,
rk '
''· '•
,
rep)~cing·H~!I. of Farner Bob Gibson. )Burris also gave up just three
hjts: I.
:~.

~-WOJNM«)

!. By As..,.,iatetl Press

For~ he third week in a row college

AT L'EAST IT'S

terthansex.''

Responded

Agriculture

Com-

mittee Chairman Jesse Helms, RN.C., one of the Senate's most outspoken tobacco-subsidy advocates,
"I say to the senator that I do not
remember ."
In the end, the Senate voted to
keep the tobacco subsidy intact.
Rep. Jonathan Bingham, D-N.Y.,
issued a news release the other day
to announce he was filing a bill to

desig~te the fourth Sunday in Octoberas
"Mother-in-Law Dav."
&lt;J '
,...
Bin~ham said he wanted to
cor..-~ "the image of the med·
dl~o!fle mother-in-law, the battle ax
mql!!er-in-law, the domineering
niiltlier-in-law. The term mother-inlaw:iias
become one of ridicule ...
~-·1
tsi!'gham said he's sure it will pass
an~ will be signed into law.
';i

On 'nervous Nellies' and 'Chicken .L ittles'
Lyndon Johnson called them " nervous Nellies" and now Ronald
Reagan refers to them as "Chicken Littles." In each case they refer to
those of little faith in presidential programs.
President Reagim's criticism seems directed at the financial community '.which indeed has expressed horror at the possiblity of the sky
fallmg, I.e., of the economy collapsing.
Establishment institutions cannot come right out and say so, but they
have been actmg that way some of the time. Nobody seems to want
stocks; they want bonds even less. Few lenders are willing to conunit
themselves for long terms; short-term permits them to run.
But as Wall Street already has replied, ''We do not set interest rates nor
do we produce markets." The market makes interest rates they contend
and the dominant market !actors now are the enormous federal debt and
the realization that more will be added.
Wall Street is very aware of this debt, which in a couple of months will
total $1 tnllion on which more than $100 billion a year must be paid in interest. It 1s aware also that from now on each additional cut in federal
spending will be opposed by a growing constituency.
And so, there are doubts about whether the job of paring can be done,
and there are doubts about the consequences if the job is done.
"I hope the people on Wall Street will pay attenticn to the folks on Main
Street," ':"id President Reaga~ last Friday in Denver. "II they do, they'll
see there sa nsmg !ide of confidence in the future of America."
On that statement the president probably is correct. Various polls, in-

eluding last November's election, shoJtthe president has generated enthusiasm for his new beginning.
'{ ·
Soon, however, it seems likely that pepj&gt;le will begin talking more about
the unemployment rate, interest rates,, the inflation rate - the present
rather
than the future - and that.they
.
. might not be happy with what they
wttness.
~
Reagan's response to such speculation, in which the wizards of Wall
Street love to immerse themselves, their fortunes being involved with
forecasting the future, is that his prosram doesn't even begin until Oct. I,
and that any broad impact can't be felt until after that.
And that again brings up the big question :
If Reagan's program is doubted 81)~ critici2ed before it begins, and by
important fiQilncial circles that ca~ probably hinder it badly, how much
time does the president really have to;t\lfll the trick?
.
Followed by one almost or equally. ~ big:
How long will Main Street stay with the president on the basis of hopes
and promises - on faith in the presi~nt himself - before theJ too begin
asking for concrete evidence of su~?
He has given his promise: "As I ;ve said before and I'll say again,
America now has an economic plall&lt;for her future . We know where we're
going- we're going onward, we're gqing upward, and we're not leaving
anyone b,ehind."
But, he could have added, "Give us a break, you Chicken UtUes, give
us a little time."
~

Good news from R ussi~a___A_n_B_uc_h_wa_td ::
"Are you crazy, Misha? "
"I didn't say I'd mail the letter. I
said I'd just write it."
"But somebody c~uld find it and
then you would be in serious
trouble."
"Maybe you're right. I think l'U
bring it up ·at our next union
meeting.''
"We don't have unions, Misha."
"Well, we can't just sit here and
let the slate double the price of
gasoline without saying anything."
''Why not, Misha?':
"Because this is a&gt; free country
and Lenin said every worker must
speak his mind.' '
"Misha, how many times have I
told you Lenin is dead?"
"No.matter, his teachings live on.
How can the average person in the
Soviet Union live if they keep raising
the prices on everything?"
"By not saying anything, Mlsha,
that's how."
" I'll leU you why we have in·
flation. It's because of aU the money

they're spending on weapons. The
military gets anything it wants. No
one questions any request the
military makes. The Pilitburo thinks
it can solve every defense problem
by throwing money at it. I think we
should organize a protest meeting in
front of the Kremlin and demand a
large cutin mililary spending."
"Why don't you do that, Misha?
You've never seen Lubianka
prison."
"Make fun of me, woman, but I'll
tell you something. The leaders of
the Communist Party are a hunch of
idiots. They haven't been able to
deliver on one thing they've
promised us. I say in the next electionwethrowtherascalsout."
"Misha, that's. your second bottle
of vodka. At the new ,prices you've
just druJ.lk up two weeks' salary."
"That's it. We'll send a message to
Moscow. H they can't manage the
economy, we'll find somebody who
can."
"Misha, have you been llatening to

With one out in the 17th, Scott
singled ancntole second. Reliever
Jerry Reed then walked Warren
Cromartie aNI Terry Francona to
load t1Je bases.
DeWSOI! followed · with a hard
grounder tp third baseman Mike
Schmidt, whose throw to home
narrowly mis.led getting'Scott. ·
In tbe night's only other NL game,
San Diego blanked Cincinnati 6-0.
Cardlaala Z, Cubit
Joaquin Andujar and Bruce Sutter
combined on a three-hit shutout that
helped St. Louis reboWld from three
straight losses at New York.
Andujar left after he pulled a hamstring muscle in his right leg while
batting in the ninth, and Sutter pitched a hitless final inning for his
23rdsave.
Darrell Porter and Keith Hernandez each drove in a run for the
Cardinals.
Mets 4, Pirates 3
Mark Lee, Pittsburgh's fifth pitcher, let loose a wild pitch in the 13th
inning tllat allowed John Stearns to
score New York's winning run, extending the Mets winning streak to
four games.
With one out, Lee walked Steams,
and Ron Gardenhire's single sent
the Mets catcher to third. With a G-2

count on rookie Brian Giles, Lee
threw a low and outside pitch that
catcher Tony Pena was unable to
handle.
Lee Mazzilli drove in a pair of New
York runs, one with a single in the
eighth that gave the Mets a }!lead.
Pittsburgh rebounded with two runs
in the top of the ninth on a single by
Mike Easler and Johnny Ray's
sacrifice fly .
Jason Thompson homered for the
Pirates in the second.
Padres &amp;, Reds 0
Chris Welsh tossed a three-hit
shutout, and San Diego scored all six .
of its runs in the sixth inning to halt
Cincinnati's winning streak at lour
games and drop the Reds three
games behind Houston in the NL
Robert Maison
West.
150 lb. Sopb.
Singles by Barry Evans, Juan
Uneman
Bonilla, Gene Richards and Luis
Salazar drove in runs, and the others
scored on a bases-loaded walk by
Charlie Leibrandt and a sacrifice fly
by OZZie Smith.
Welsh allowed just one runner to
reach second base in pitching only
By Asscwiated Press
his second shutout. The 26-year-old
Ralph Houk is having trouble
rookie southpaw, acquired in a
preseason deal with the New York playing the ever-popular game of
Yankees, walked four and struck out pennant-race scoreboard. But his
Boston Red Sox are having very few
three.
problems playing baseball, and that
might make Houk's scoreboard watching unnecessary.
The Red Sox stayed a half-game
behind the first·place Detroit Tigers
of Cincinnati and UCLA vaulted in the tight American League East
from ninth to sixth with 912 points af· second half race Monday night with
a 9-3 romp over the Milwaukee
ter trimming Wisconsin 31-13.
Brewers, who dropped I I;, games off
the pace. The victory was Boston's
Next came Michigan with 903 poin- seventh in the last eight games, all
ts, followed by Ohio State with 832, at home . TheRedSoxare24-16inthe
North Carolina with 806 and second season.
"I keep looking at the scoreboard
Alabama with 556. Ohio State, also
and
I don't really know who to root
No.8 last week, beat Michigan State
for,
Detroit or Baltimore," said
27-13; North Carolina, up from loth,
Houk,
who saw the Tigers beating
crushed Miami of Ohio 4H and
the
Orioles
!;-1 on the Fenway Park
Alabama, No .l2 a week ago, turned
" But you can be sure I'll
scoreboard.
back Kentucky 19-10.
be pulling for the Orioles
tomorroYf. ''
Houk didn't need to do much
The Second Ten consists o!
managing
Monday. He just turned
Brigham Young , Mississippi State ,
Dave
Stapleton,
Jim Rice, Jerry
Notre Dame, Miami of Florida,
Remy, Carl Yastrzemski, Carney
Nebraska , Washington, Georgia,
Lansford,
Tony Perez and Rick
Arizona State, Clemson and
Miller
loose
and each had two hits in
Southern Methodist ..This week also
Boston's
14-hit
attack. Stapleton
marks the first 1981 appearance for
slammed
a
homer
in the five-run fifSMU , which walloped Grambling
th
inning
and
added
a single, while
State 59-27.

the 'Voice of America' without · :
telling me?"
'' You know what's wrong with this ,
country? You have a bunch of bureaucrats sitting on their tails,
telling everybOdy what's good for
them. Well, they don't know beans · :
about what's good for us. Govern- '
ment spemJing is what's C!lusing in- _
flation and aU those socialist ex· periiDerits where people are rewarded for:lloingnothing." _
"Misiia;jsthereanotherwomanin
your!ifelshouldknowabout?"
"No, why do you ask?"·
"Because you sound like you want
to leave me and go somewhere to
worklnalaborcamp.:•
"All right. So what_you're really
saying is that we shou\d~do nothing
libout double-digit ·Inflation and
mlsei'able salaries, and 'a bunch of
stupid plimners who could lead us into the greatest depressiOn in Russian .
history."
. , ·. ·
"Not necessarily, We could move
to Siberia."
·•

foottljii\ has a new No.I team.
thl!&gt;'~ojans of Southern California r'\\plijced Notre Dame at the top
of Th l,£ssociated Press poll today,
settiriRj ~P a 1-2 shootout with runneru~i'Qklahoma on Saturday in Los
AngeiM..
Michigan, the preseason leader,
was bumped from the top after
losing to Wisconsin on Sept.l2. And
the Wolverines in turn bounced
Notre Dame out by trouncing the
Irish 2:&gt;-7 this past weekend.
That opened the way for Southern
Cal and Oklahoma, last week's No.23 teams, to move up. USC, a 21-0 win·
ner over Indiana, received 46 of 6li
first-place vot~s and 1,258 of a
possible 1,300 points !rom a nation.
wide panel of sports writers and
sportscasters.
Oklahoma, Idle over the weekend,
received 15 first-place ballots and

1,203 points. The Sooners return to
action against Southern Cal Satur·
day afternoon in the Los Angeles
Coliseum. ·
Meanwhile, Notre Dame skidded
from first place to 13th, while
Michigan climbed back into the Top
10, jumping from lith to seventh.
The Wolverines also received a firstplace ballot.
Georgia's defending national
champions wrre defeated by Clemson 13-3, ending a lf&gt;-game winning
streak, and fell from fourth to 17th,
while Clemson made the Top Twenty
for the first time this season.
-Penn State, idle last weekend, rose
from fifth to third with two firstplace votes and 1,092 points, while
Texas, a 23-10 victor over North
Texas State, jwnped from sixth to
fourth with one first-place vote and
!,038 points.
Pitt went from seventh to fifth
with 978 points following a 33-7 rout

•

DorseU paces 35-21 Dallas wzn
FOXBORO, Mass. (APl - Tony
Dorsett regained the National
ball League rushing lead by rollins
up 162 yards, 75 on a touchdown bur-st, and Danny White threw two
scoring passes to spark the unbeaten
Dallas Cowboys to a ~21 victory
over the error-plagued New England
PatMots Monday night.
Dorsett, off to the best start of his
five-year pro career, had rushed fill'
132 and 129 yards in the first hro
games of the season, and his It
carries in this one boost~ his sea9CJII

.-lfOI.

total to 423 yards before he was forced to leave the game midway
through the fourth quarter with
braised ribs.
His touchdown gave O..IIas, 3-0, a
17-7 lead with $:56 left in the first
half. Dersett started left, then cut
back across the field and outran cornef'back Ray Clayborn to the end

zone.
The Patriots, winless in three
games, elosed the halftime gap to 1714 when rookie Tony Collins capped
an 116-yard drivo:, with a )-yard burst

.,

t
Phil Eagle
170 lb. Freshman
Lineman

Mike Jones
135 lb. Soph.
Running Back

Red Sox continue streak

·:.:·o uthern Cal tops ratings

"~ .-r If lT''

just plain patriotic - even in these
days olfinancial austerity.
It was just too much for program
critic Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore.,
who protested, "After listening
about the benefits of tobacco to this
nation, I have almost come to the
conclusion that tobacco must be bet-

Meet the Eastern Eagles

'

i

;.

The only good news story I could
find in the paper last week was that
the Russians are suffering from twodigit inflation also.
The state informed the people that
it was making dramatic price rides,
doubling the price of gasoline," informally rationing food, increasing
by 17 to 25 percent the price of tobacco and vodka and raising the cost on
many consumer goods, so it would
be impossible for the average Soviet
citizen to buy them.
You can Imagine what the Soviets
are saying in the confines of iheir
homes.
•'Minka, did you hear what
Comrade Glushkov, chainnan of the
State Pricing Conunission, said in
his speech on television tonight?"
"I fell asleep after the first three
hours. What did he say?"
'
" They're raising prices on
everything because of inflation. It's
outrageous. I think I'll write a letter
to Comrade Brezlmev and give him
a piece of my mind." •

€Malton sets record;
Expos .defeat ·Phils
' lms

Farm subsidies battles are
WASHINGTON (API - Few
legislative battles are as brutal as
those fought over federal fal-m subsidies. Each time a major farm bill
comes to the House or Senate floor,
party labels fall aside as members
realign themselves in sugar, peanut,
tobacco, corn and soybean camps.
Tobacco-state senators spun their
perennial arguments that federal
tobacoo subsidies are necessary and

The OaiiV Sentlnei-Page-3

f

/

•

NEW YORK - The General
Assembly pf the United Nations, that
monument to imbecility, acted in
character again the other day. By a
vote of 117-0, the assembly adopted
another o! its resolutions against
South Africa, and once again the
assembly violated the most elementary principles of lair play and
parliamentary privilege.
Such expressions o! hypocritical
unanimity have become commonplace in these gaudy realms o!
make-believe. In theory, member
nations subscribe to the original purpose o!,the United Nations. That was
to prov.ide a forwn in which all
nations ~ repeat, all nations could be heard. In theory, member
nations also subscribe to the principle that all nations should respect
the borders of all other natiOns.
In practice, and notably in the
matter o! South-West Africa, also
known as Namibia, these theories
disappear into the gaseous clouds.
Here the rule is that all nations may
be heard 1n the forum - all nations,
that is, except the nation most in-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

off right tackle.
New England grabbed its only
lead on the first series of the second
half. Mosi Tatupu broke two tackles
en route to a 33-yard touchdown run,
the longest gain of his (our-year NFL
career.
The Cowboys were forced to punt
on their next series,_ but Roland
James fumbled White's kick and
Angelo King recovered at the
Patriots' !!. Seven plays later,
White found Billy Joe DuPree with a
!-yard lob to give Dallas a 24-21lead.

knocking in lour runs.
The Yankees, who already have
qualified for the playoffs by winning
the first-half racP., had their secondhalf hopes set back a bit by Rick
Waits, who blanked them 1&gt;-0.
Elsewhere, it was Minnesota 7,
Kansas City 2 and California 6,
Chicago 3. The Oakland A's game at
Toronto was rained out.

Rivers and Buddy B•ll and Pat Putnam's double, and added its final
run in the eighth on AI Oliver's RBI
single.
Indians 5, Yankees 0
Rick Waits pitched a six-hitter and
Rick Manning had two hits, stole
three bases and scored twice for
Cleveland. Mike Fischlin contributed a two-run double in the fifth
inning.
"I haven't pitched a decent game
since the strike," said Waits, who
had a 1-5 record with a 9.44 earned
run average in the second season
before Monday's game.

Tigers 5, Orioles 1
Milt Wilcox hurled a six-hitter for
his first win ever over the Orioles.
John Wockenluss drove in Iwo runs
with an RBI single in the fourth and
a sacrifice fly in the sixth.

Twins 7, Royals 2
Rookie ~hortstop Ron Washington,
who earned a .205 average into the
game, had three hits and two RBI
and scored twice as Minnesota
moved within 2't games of the firstplace Royals in the West.
John Castino added a tw()-run
triple and Dave Engle a tw()-run
double for the Twins. Minnesota
starter AI Williams, 6-8, gave up 10
hits, struck out five and walking
four.

Orioles starter Scott McGregor entered the game with an 11-2 lifetime
record against the Tigers. He ha s a
7-2 record at home this season, with
both losses against Detroit.
It was the third straight win for
the Tigers after five consecutive
losses to open their current road
trip.

Rangers 4, \lariners I
Danny Darwin t .. rew a threehitter, striking out seven. Texa"
built a :Hl lead in the fourth on
single! by Bump Wills, Mickey

Angels 6, White Sox 3
Joe Ferguson 's tw()-run single in
the second inning paced the victory
which saw Don Baylor hit his 116th
homer as an Angel, setting a team
record. California broke a six-game
losing streak with the victory, only
the Angels' second in the last 16
games.

Cincinnati Moeller
retains No. 1 spot
COLUMBUS, Ohiu '(API - Even
Wider a new man, Cincinnati
Moeller shows no signs of tailing off
in Ohio prep football. Neither does
Youngstown Mooney, coached ~y
veteran Don Bucci.
The Associated Press' opening
poll of the Ohio high school season
proved it Monday.

Moeller, riding a 36-game winning
streak, easily led the Class AAA
Rafael Septien kicked a 2&amp;-yard rankings. The Crusaders, with 251
field goal, one of four in the game, points, were Ill points ahead of
with I~: 06 left in the game to stretch second-ranked Upper Arlington .
Moeller has prolonged its victory
the margin to 27-21. The Cowboys
by defeating Centerville,
string
then added a safety when New
Hampton,
Va., . Bethel and
England quarterback Matt
Massillon,
despite
the loss of its
Cavanaugh, starting in place of
Steve Grogan, was called for in- program founder, Gerry Faust, to
tentiON!lly grounding a pass from Notre Dame. Ted Bacigalupo now
his end zone. &amp;eptien field goals of 27 guides the Crusaders.
Mooney, matching Moeller's :HHl
and ~ yards In the fourth quarter,
the last with exactly one minute to start, owned a 196-148 point edge
over No. 2 Cleveland Bendictine in
play, closed the scoring.
White's first'touchdown pass, a 211- ClassAA.
yarder to Butch Johnson, put Dallas
Am&lt;lng Mooney 's three opening
on top 7.0 witb.5:19 left inthe first
quarter. Jut Don Calhoun's f.-yard triumphs were decisions over defenrun tied the g8111e late .in the period ding Michigan champion Birbefore SeJ)tien booted his first field mingham Brother Rice and Pitgoal, a 26-yarder, 5:05 Into the tsburgh Penn Hills, a ' perennial
power in western Pennsylvania .
second period.
Moeller has won five of the past
Cavanaugh threw four in- six playoff champiooships, while
terceptions, three. of which led to Mooney prevailed over the Ohio
Dallas scores, and the Patriots lost eliminations in 1973 and 1980.
three fwnbles, .including one that
Newark Catholic, the Class A fronp~ed the second D!llla• touchtrunner, is no stranger at the top of
down.
·
' the AP poU either. The Green Wave,

the 1978 playoff champion, has won
the regular season poll crown
several times.
Newark Catholic collected 170
points from a statewide panel of
sports writers and broadcasters,
more than No.2 Tiffin Calvert in the
small school classification.
Moeller, Orrville in Class AA and
Mogadore in Class A won the AP
title trophies last season. This week,
Orrville was tied for 17th, while
Mogadore was deadlocked for 11th
in the polls.
In Class AAA, Canton McKinley
was third, Lakewood St. Edward
fourth, Massillon fifth, Cincinnati
Princeton sixth, Cleveland St.
Joseph seventh, Fremont Ross
eighth, Mansfield Malabar ninth and
Centerville loth.
in Class AA, Hamilton Badin was
third with Ironton fourth, Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary fifth, Dayton Roth
sixth, New Concord John Glenn
seventh, Urbana eighth, Struthers
, ninth and Warren John F. Kennedy
No.IO.
Runiring tbird in Class A was McDonald, followed by Cadiz,
Ashtabula £1. John, Williamsburg,
Lorain Clearview. Strasburg,
Waynesville and Crooksville.

l'~rli~!~~~~ii,~
5.31 JACKSON AKE ·RL35 WEST

Pnone 446-4524
SAI.QGAII'j WATIHEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AU SEATS JUST S 1.50

ADMISSION EVERY TVf"SD.I.Y $ 1.50

r

FRIDAY lhru THURSDAY!

l

L_ SEPT 18 thru 24 _

I

'·'

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The 028 Wood Boss Is lor the homeownet whn:'i
.

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AndsinceitSrtStJhJ. it S not only tlrebest t!I V'• .'Sfl l lr&gt;rr t you o ur
mrikein

lt's cUsoonrro! fh [· ho.&lt;;t you
y ow horrlf'

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~­

PAT WHITEHEAD

I

,.Usll'ltant Publllhtr/Cn•tnJII•r

i.

I,.

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'

BOB HOEFLICH

..It ."\.- ..

~~~~nl M-Jft'

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.
'Nr•• Edlkw
A MEMBER of t'br A110ellled Preu, 11111..:1 DilDy Pftlt A.uociltt.a ... tbt
Amerku Newtpeper hbllahen AtiOC!taUon.

I...ETJERSOFOPINION •reweltemnl.. They aiMRid be leutUDMwordlleq. All
1etieft 1re •bJect to ftlltlq aDd mutt bf tiJed with ume,ICidna ud lelepltotae ~am­
brr. Nt
ltll«&lt; will be publltlted. l.etttrs abould be 111.-.&amp;aate, lddrtul•«

••I&amp;Hd

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�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 22, 1981

home now stands. The present chur·
ch was ready for use in 1855.
The first board of trustees was
organized sometime about the year
ISS! and on Feb. 16, 1852, lot 87, the
present location of the church, was
purchased from Adam and
Catherine Lallance, Lucius and
Thirza Cross and Adam Harpold for
the sum of $50. The original trustees
were Rev. Isaac Reynolds, Lucius
Cross, Anthony Roush, Thomas
Pickens, John WoHe, Jr., J . R.
Philson, Silas Jones, Lewis Jones
and Peter Harpold.
Until the year 1864, this church
was a part of the Letart Falls charge
with the minister being located
there. The Ohio Annual Conference
m session at Chillicothe on Sept. 8,
1864, made Racine and Syracuse a
separate charge with the minister
located at Racine.
The Sunday school was orgamzed
in 1848. John R. ELlis became the
first superintendent and served until
his death in 1889.
In spite of the many face liftings
the framework of the church has
been standing for over 100 years.
Originally. it w only one room downstairs with two rows of posts in it. It
contained a Masonic Lodge room upstairs.

The first major change came under the leadership of Joseph Clark
from 1891 to 1894. At this time the
posts were removed and trusses
placed in the upstairs to support the
ceiling. New siding and a new roof
were part of the renovation. The
seating of the sanctuary wsa rever·
·sed putting the pulpit at the east end
and building a vestibule on the west
end.
In 1934, the annex was built. Ralph
Neigler supervised the building and,
as did other men, donated his ser·
vices. The Bouman's Run School
was used as material for part of the
annex.
The church survived flood waters
in 1884, 1913 and 1937. In 1913 the
waters reached a depth of two feet
above the floor .
Over the years, such im·
provements as carpeting, paneling,
painting and bathrooms have been.
completed. The congregation is an·
ticipating the completion of a new
church for which the ground·
breaking was held on Aug. 24, 1980.
Men of the church have donated long
hours of labor for completion of the
church. The new building is ex·
peeled to be finished this December
with the official dedication to be held
early in 1982.

LOAOED WITH GOOD FOOD BUYS 1
WHOLE

FRYING
CHICKENS

Garden club meets
A program on corn husk dolls by

Kathryn Johnson highlighted
Tuesday night's meeting of the Fernwood Garden Club held at the Johnson home .
Johnson noted that in the early
da ys of America, these were used
for tree ornaments at ChristmC:Is
tune and given to the children as gifts. She said that after the husks are
dry they are put together with wire
whi ch is used in shaping the dolls.
The husks form the head and body.
as well as the clothing with the silks
being used for the hair.
Read at the meeting were invitations to open meetings of the
Shade Vall ey Garden Club held last
week, and one to the Winding Trail
Garden Club to be held on Sept. 29 at
the Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
with William Middleswarth to show
slides on domestic and wild plants.
Memberhip dues are payable by
Oct. I. Program books will be
distributed at the next meeting. Mrs .

Murphy gave out sheets to each
member listing all the gardening
books in the club library and also
owned by members who will share
them. Plans were made for a trip to
Fenton Glass Co. on Oct. 20.
Thelma Giles presided at the
meeting with Ida Murphy giving
devotions on " God Provides the
Rain ", Duet. 28, verse 12, and two
poems, "Prelude to a Day's Work"
and "The Smallest Prayer." For roll
call members named their favorite
corn. The officers' reports were
given . The Lord's Prayer closed the
meeting. Refreshments were served by the hostrss to those named
and Helen Jobn:, un, Evelyn Thoma
and Marge Purtell.
Next meeting will be Oct. 27 with
Thoma as hostess. Sus1e Warner will
give the program on " How to
Prepare Weathered Wood " , and for
roll call members are to lake a
" piece" of nature .

Riverview PTO holds meeting
The annual school carnival was
set for Oct. 10 and committees were
appointed at the recent meeting of
the Riverview PTO held at the
school.
Presiding at the first meeting of
the year were the officers, Marlene
Putman, president; Lucille Kimes,
vice president; Yvonne Sisson,
secretary; and Geraldine Holsinger ,
treasurer. Grace Weber, head
teacher, introduced the faculty ,
Doris Well. first grade ; Martie
Baum, second grade; Patricia
Shrivers, third grade; Fred
Kessinger, fourth grade; Gary
Reed, fifth grade, and Weber, sixth
grade.
Other personnel providing student
services are Jim Rogers,
psychologist; Sandy Sayre, speech;
Mary Price, nurse; Jim Wilhelm,

Harvest Festival
The annual harvest home festival
of the St. John Lutheran Church,
Pine Grove, was held Sunday.
The worship service was conducted at 11 am. with the Rev. Paul
R. Gerlach, now retired, as guest
speaker. The combined choirs of St.
Paul and St. John Lutheran Chur·
ches sang "I Thank You Lord", and
Louise Michael and Lenora Leifheit
sang "Thank You for Your
Blessings."
On display at the church were
flowers and a variety of fresh fruit
and vegetables as well as home can·
ned goods.
There was a covered dish dinner
at noon. During the afternoon ser·
vice there was congregational
singing, flannel stories by the
children of St. John Lutheran Sun·
day School, and a duet by Miss
Michael and Mrs. Leifheit along
with selections by the choir.
Chaplain Arthur Lund of the Holzer
Medical Center spoke on Lutheran
social services that touch the lives of
Meigs Countians.

Dorcas Circle meets

Plans for providing Halloween
treats for residents of the Meigs
band ; Maxine Whitehead, vocal County Infirmary were made when
music; Pam Douthitt, physical the Dorcas Circle of the B. H. Saneducation; Cindy Bolden, develop- born Missionary Society met recen·
mental reading; and Margaret .tly at the Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Cauthorn, librarian.
The circle also will save cents-off
Well's first grade won the atcoupons
for the scholarship student.
tendance banner and gift for having
Janice
Gibbs
was hostess for the
the highest percentage of parents in
with
Mrs.
Roma Hawkins
meeting
attendance.
Room mothers named were Nancy as a contributor. Gibbs used "An UnBuckley, Betty Dill and Geralding conscious Radiation" for her
Holsinger, first grade; Jill Holter, devotional topic. Thank you notes
Glenda Hunt and Avis Spencer, were read from Beulah White and
second grade; Garcia Adams, Eddie Demoskey and Freda EdLucille Kimes and Cathy Spencer, wards distributed the white cross
third grade; Shiela Fields, Edna quota.

Johnson, fourth grade; Charlotte
Keen, Teddy Mundry, and Marlene
Putman, fifth grade; and Margaret
Cauthorn, Shirley Johnson and
Virginia Newlun, sixth grade.

FAMILY CLINIC

6 7 5-6971
PoiDCI'Ialaal
New Hours Now in Effect
Monday-Friday, 9 am. to 10 p.m.
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Allergy &amp; Dermatology Patients by Appointment Only.
Monday·Friday 12:30.p,m. to4:30 p.m.
Sorry Closed Sunday
Will. Accept Medicare, Medicaid, U.M. W.A.

Burton birthday

"The Monster Mountain" Summer
Reading Program was a great sue·
cess at the Mason City Public
l.1brary in _Mason with 80 children
registered in the reading program
and the Read·t~Me.
At the completion of the program
a party was given by the staff em·
ployees, Joan Varian and Earlene
Bumgardner, at the library .
Assisting the staff were voluliteers
Susie Michael, Cheryl Lake and
Jayne Varian.
Those receiving certificates were:
Tessie Bradshaw, Barry Hollis,
Patricia Smith, Misty Clendenen,
Kari Beth Miller, Larry Grinun,
Ethel Ro.jue, Amy Grimm, Chris
Staats, Frederick Heldreth, Brian
Heldreth, Mike Test, Michael Van
Maire, Heather Schwarz, · Dusun
Roush, Michael Harmon, Jeremy
Michael, James Parsons, Misty Parsons, Roger Young, Mark Minshall,
Michael Mattox, Kimberly Mattox,
Scott DeWees, Emily Bumgardner,
Lori Redman, Stacey Reed, Agatha
Gibbs, Harold Gibbs, Chris Noble,
Jeff Noble, Tanuny Elliot, Betty
Lake, Patricia Hollis, Stacie
Grimm, Gary Gibbs, Troy
Meadows, Tracy DeWees, Stacie
Hall, David Hall, Dawn Blake, Bar·
bie Laudermilt, Stephanie Sayre,
Timothy Sayure, Jackie Wolf, Alana
Sayre, April Miller, Shawn Petry,
Eric Petry, Ray Redman, Samantha
Maynard, Elizabeth Roque, Rusty
Maynard, Billy Rowley, Ellen
Roque, Stephanie Gibbs, Annette
Gibbs, Charlie Meadows, Alex
Varian, Tonia WoHe, Diana Gray,
Stephanie Tulloh, John Troy, Tim
Troy, Sherry Johnson, Lisa
Lawhorn, Terri WoH, Janine Varian,
Billy Marshall, Bobby Marshall,
James Priddy, Mike SIJlith, Jay
Buskirk, Sherry Hickrnhn, Amy
Roush, Lori VanMeter, Heidi Smith,
Eileen Roque, Jim Gray and Shawn
Minshall.
Refreshments were provided by
Patty Maynard, Cheryl Lake, Susie
Michael, Jayne Varian, Peggy
DeWees, Earlene Gumgardner and
Joan Varian.

Pomeroy acting chief of police,
George Stilts.
A welcome to the parents ,
teachers and school board candidates by Barton opened the
meeting. New officers were in·
troduced and Ida Diehi and her
second graders led in the pledge.
Devotions were given by Rev .
Wilbur Perrin of Trinity Church.
The sixth grade won the room count.
At the October 12 meeting , "Meet
the Teachers Night" will be observed.
Refreshments :Vere served by the
third grade room mothers.

DILES
Hearing Aid Center
S.·l~rtion. S.·r~iro··. or l:im~ultntinn.
lin soil On :i2 l 1'0"' · t:xjlr.rio·nN•And/Ur Rl"(c•;,.al To Ap~_r&lt;&gt;JII'iot ..
Medil'al StM"C"ialiot•:

Phone (614) 594-3571
..
w.. Sene Me!li!, Galliaand ~~n'Counlleci 1~ 1
. . on A1\"fular Biele ' ' ; : .' ,. -~

PublishN

cv~ry aH~mooo.

Monday throUJ(h

F'riiliiy, IB Court Street, by thl:! Ohio Vwlley

Publishi!Ltt Comp11ny · Mullirnediu. Inc .,
Pmneroy, Ohiu 4&amp;769, 992-.21543. Second das.'l
po.~U!)(e p.Hid

ttl Pntneruy, Ohio.

Mcmbt:r : Thl'

As:mciat~

Pres.'l. lnhsnd Dai-

ly Pres."i As..o;uci11liou ami the Amerh:~m

Birth!..,. .,....,.
announcements

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Ry Carrlt!-r or Motor Roo~

One week
One Month .
01Jt' Yt•&lt;tr .

.. . ... .. $1.00
. .... $4.48
$52.&amp;0
SINGLE COPY

PRICES

Daily

. UCenLs

Subscnbers nut desirin~ lo pay lhe earner
IIlii)" remit m advanno: direr.' ! tu Tht' Daily
S.mtinel nn a J, 6 or 12 month bas1s. Credit
w1ll be ~ J ven earrit'r each month.
Nu ~ullseriptiu11s by nU:til pennillt!d ill towns
wlwrl' hume c.:!lrrier service is tW!!ilable .
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Ohlu and West VlrKinia
3 Munth . .
. . .. SIC .50
Six 11111nlh
. . . . . . .. 117.50
I Year .
. .. $3:1 00
Rakli Outllkfto Ohio
.nd Wt'!lt Vlrglnl11
J Mmllh .
.. . 111.1)1)
6Mmllh .
I Year .

ounces.

Hlll.

BOILED HAM ...................................~~:.

$2

49

BONELESS

$}99

SLICED

HAM STEAKS ..................................~.~·..... .

Plans were made for a new contest
to begin next week. Rules and
requirements for this will be presented at the next meeting. Lynda
Adkins and Barbara Alkire were
welcomed back into membership.
Mrs. Gloria Oiler, leader, discussed
plans for traveling to the workshop
at Jackson on Sept. 28. She and Mrs.
Haggy will attend. She also asked
that clubs in the area write the area
coordinator to inquire about dlseontinuance of AID. A letter regarding
this will be at the next meeting for
members to sign. AnyonP. wishing to
join the club or get information may
call742..J062.

RC COLA
DIET RITE, RC100
8 PACK

$ 29

21 years as Master

The paternal gt'!lndparents are

Mrs. Gwenda Ferguson, Pomeroy,
and the late Kenneth SwBIUI, and the
pa\emat great-grandparenta are
Mr. and·Mrs. A. t.. Swann, Oak Hill,
and Mr. and Mrs. John Morris, Oak

.. .. 120.00

CHURCH OF CHRIST
200 WEST MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

Boosters sell jackets

After 21 years as master of the
Rock Springs · Grange, Fred
Goeglein has stepped down. Now
that's a long time for anyone to
serve in that position and a sure
sign that he was doing it right.

Meigs Band Boosters are
. selling ja~kets. Anyone in·
terested may call Sharon Wise at
99U224. The jackets are $17 and
require a deposit of $10.

Coke - Sprite - Tab
8 PACK '1.29

Know your
meter reader.

: Paternal grandparents are Mr.
Mrs. Lawrence Boyd, Middleport. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. AHred Cordell,
Qidwell.

COKE-12 PACK CANS. ... ....... $3.49

SALTINE

TRASH CAN

CRACKERS

LINERS

~d

EACH EVENINGAT7:30
Sunday Services: Morning 10:00, Evening 6:00
Evangelist: Maurice Barnett
Phoenix, Arizona

EVERYONE WELCOME

PUBLIC NOTIC E

\

Social
:Calendar

lden~tiQn
(wilhpho/XJJ

Tuesday

SUNDAY ONLYl
OVER 10,000 PAIRS
Drapery&amp; _
Bedspread

SALE

rruckloads Of Draperies,
Bedspreads, Cu$tom·Pieated
Sheers, Su~er·Wide Panels,
Kitchen Curtains.
All Merchandise ·Must Be Sold At
·· Mill Wholesale Prices
Save Up To 70% Below Retail On
ht Quality • Factorv Closeouts And
J=actory lrregulai's.

•Brand Names "
Si~lf. &amp; ~olo~

MEETING, Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM Tuesday, 7 p.m. ;
work in -FC degree; ' refreslunents
following meeting.
:pmo ETA Pm Tuesday at Meigs
IJtll. Social hour from 7 to·7::!1J p.m.
fC!llowed by a meeting.
JOlLY BUNCH Sewing Club
Tuesd!ty with a picnic at noon at
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber. Bring
table service and covered dish. Meal
will be provided. · ·
·'fAsr MATRONS of Pomeroy
Cbapter, order of the Eastern Star,
will meet at 7:30p.m. TueBday at the
bdme of Mrs. J. w. McMurray,

t:~ROY
PAST ~TRON~
'l'lleadaY .at 7:1111 p.m. at
,

,

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~ub.

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I

Jomeot-Mn. Thelma McMurray.
' KAR;\1\1: ~
will be

l)el4'1f.MelP'JUDior

tlleport r-dlly and.

· ~ill ~d- ­
y ~~

4p.m. for infoi'mation
call 992'lloot. . .
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firsda .
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·· · Direct From ·
Factory To. You. ' , ·. ·. .

..fAil(

'l'lluntlliy

-w.c. Slpt.M, .

eo.:=,

..~m.;..:!. lhe

., .Dati: SUNDAY, SEPTEM.ER 27TH
Time: 10 ,A,M. TO $ P:M. , ~ ·. . .
Pl~ce: 'POINT PLEASANT NATIO~A~ , QtllRD A~MORY .
.Rt. 62 Nc,th
• , ~ietPI•If••~ W.
·
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PllnMoy.
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LB.

69~

BOX

10
COUNT

SOFT PLY

TOWELS

69e

49e

ROLL

SOFT PLY

LIFEBUOY

GENERIC

TOILET PAPER

SOAP

TEA BAGS
.

6 ROLLS

~PECIAL

GIGANTIC

•OPEN TO

ALL WEEK

Mr. and Mrs. David Boyd
(Janice Dotson), Middleport, an·
nounce the birth of a son, Justin
Michael on Sept. 15 at Holzer
Medical Center The infant
weighed eight pounds and 12 ounces and measured 21 inches in

ltmgth.

DATE: SEPT. 20 thru 25

'

:Mr. and Mrs. Mark Alan Swann ol
Japan are 81Ulowtcing the birth ol
their first child, a son, Jullian
Hirollhi, born on Sept. 3 at the U. S.
Naval Base Hospital near Tokyo.
The baby weighed eight pounds, 12

Nellie Haggy was honored as tha·
best loser of the week, a total of
seven pounds, eight ounces, at the
Wednesday night meeting of TOPS
1466, Rutland . .
She was presented a dollar and
ribbon and members sang in her
honor. Runner-up was Shorty
Wright, who was the best loser for
the previous week, with Mrs. Haggy
as runner-up that week.
Mrs. Wright was also the winner of
the "shape up for me" contest and
for losing the most inches. She will
be required to maintain the loss for
one more week and then will be
presented a hanging basket by the
club.

TAVERN HAMS.~.~?!~.?!.~?!! ...............~~~. $}

69

. .. • . $38.{10

AT

.

John Powell is corifmed to the
Holzer Medical Center, Room
.3011, for treatment of injuries suf·
fered in a motorcycle accident.

POSTMASTER ;. Send 1:1ddress h1 The D1d!y
St&gt;ntu1el. Ill Cuurt St. . Pomt'ruy, Ohio 45769 .

GOSPEL MEETING

, . ·PARKING'

Pastor Wesley Jenkins. The
dedication and prayer will be given
by Rev . Charles Norris. At 3 p.m. the
cornerstone will be laid by Martin
Wilcoxen, Billy C!1lart, and Frank
Cleland. The closing prayer will be
by Rev . Jerry Neal.
Homemade ice cream and cake
will be served following the
dedication. The public is invited to
attend the services.

TOPS meets, .Haggy honored

.Confined to HMC

NationW

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

•

RACINE- The "Inner Prize," il
gospel group from Columbus, will be
the featured singers when the cor·
nerstone of the First Baptist Church
of Racine is laid Sunday.
An alloday dedication is being
planned with Sunday School starting
at 9:30 -a .m. and 10:30 the morning
worship service will begin with the
Ijmer Prize singers, followed by the

Rt'"pres!!Oliltivl!, Branh111n
Newspaper &amp;. Jes , 733 ThinJ Avenue, New'
Yurk, New York 10017.

Mrs. Edith Biggs, Porismouth,
district president of Alpha Delta
Kappa, was a guest at the recent
meeting of the local chapter held at
the home of Mrs. Jeanette Thomas,
Middleport.
The 27 members enjoyed a potluck
picnic. Mrs. Biggs spoke briefly and
congratulated members on their en·
thusiastic approach to the new year
of meetings.
Debbie Roush, vice president,
presided at the meeting during
which time the district meeting was
announced for Oct. 10 to be held in
Columbos. Alpha Delta Kappa Week
was announced for Oct. 1H 7. Committees were appointed and
program booklets distributed to the
members.

'

BONELESS

morning message by Pastor Don
Walker. Dinner will begin at 11:30
and at 12:30 the Inner Prize will ·
sing.
At I p.m. messages from former
pastors of the church will speak.
they jnclude the widow of the Rev.
Charles O'Conner, Rev. Earl Shuler,
Rev. William Rollyson and Rev.
Charles Norris. The dedication
message will be given by former

I USPS 14$-1101

Atl v ~rtisin~o:

, .•An

ENTERTAIN- Tbis vocal group, Inner Prize, will entertain nexi Sunday when a comentone laying Is observed at the Racine Flnt Baptist Church.

4 Division Qf MuiUm~cUa, lrlf .

•Made In Amerii:a
'

'4 •

The Dailv Sent ind

Nt!WSpl:l.()l:!r Publi.~hers A.~.~l)( :iatit)ll,

Ir;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;i

Fur H~orin11 A'ld

Edith Burton will observe her 88th
birthday Thursday. A former Middleport resident, she resides at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center ·and
cards may be sent to her there, 36759
Rock Springs Road, Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769.

Alpha Delta Kappa

444 W. Union St.- Athens, Oh.
znuaeuoaAve.

Crill Bradford, Beulah Bradford, Lavinia Simpson,
Maxine Wingett and E. A. (Bud) WiogeU. Mr. and Mrs.
Wingett donated land for a Dew church now UDder construction.

Candidates meet Pomeroy PTA

Mason
Library
news
nJversary committee; Etta Mae HUI, president of the
United Methodist Women; Bob Hill,' chairman of the
building committee; Harold Roush, president of the
trustees, and Howard Roush, official board member.

14
CUBE STEAKS ................................. ~~:. $2 29
PORK CHOPS ..................................~~ ..

I

WNGEST MEMBiRS- Pictured are some of the
loog·tlme members of the Racine Wesleyan UnJted
Methodist Church attending the observance of the
church's !50th aonlversary Sunday. From tbe left are

9

$

FAMILY PACK

POMEROY -Candidates for the
Meigs Local School Distict Board of
Education were introduced and
spoke briefly at the Monday night
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA.
Present to share their views about
district affairs were Bob Freed, Bob
Snowden, Martha King on behalf of
her husband, Arland, candidate,
Paul Thomas, Bob Fox, Ellen Bell,
·
andBobBarton .
Barton presided at the meeting
during which time plans were made
for the annual Halloween carnival
on Oct. 31. Becky Triplett presented
the school safety patrol and the
members were sworn in and presented identification certificates by

PLANNED - These officials of the Racine
Wesleyan UnJted Methodist Church planned the !50th
anniversary observance held Sunday. From the left
are Betty Roush, chairman of the admlnJstratlve
board ; Emma Jane McClintock, chairman of the an-

TheDa

Church dedication will be·held.

Church observes !50th anniversary
A day-long observance Sunday
marked the !50th anniversary of the
Racine Wesleyan United Methodist
Church.
The observance featured a num·
ber of speakers, special music, a
history of the church and a potluck
dinner for members and guests over
the noon hour.
According to the history,
Methodism in Racine was organized
in the typical manner of the circuit
rider era . Ministers traveled
throughout the settlements
preaching in homes, schools, stores,
or any place they could get an
audience. Converts would then
organize socteties for Bible study.
These societies would grow into full
churches in many settlements.
The Racine Society was organized
in the year 1831 at the home of Adam
Lallance w1th three charter mem·
bers. They were B. B. Gibbs, Bar·
bara Wolfe and Caroh~e Circle. Af.
ter holding meetings for some time
in the Lallance home, their place of
meeting was changed to the school
house which used to stand where the
Miles Cross home 1s now located . Af.
ter worshpping at the school for
some 2tl years, they later worshipped in the Presbyterian Church
which stood where Grace Krider's

T.uesday, September 22, 1981

'119

REG.

29e

100
COUNT

99~

$

BROUGHTON

2% MILK .....................G!~~ ..
i

Regul!lr gas meter' readings provide a.ccurate billing. informa~ion 1;1nd help assure
the i:qntinued safe operation of your ho~e'l!
gas system. But before you let anyone mto
you~ \home, be sure ·you ·know who he or
she is: :
. ·
·
·~\~!a. G~ employ~ are easy to spot.
· Thear.&lt;lj.stmctl've ~lue'unaforms are clearly
marked·':with the ,Golumb1a Gatf"emb)em.
·And ·a P8r8onal identification card ... with
, a photograph ... is prominently displayed
em the meter reader's shirt or 1acke.t: If a'
· · . .person ,doesJa't have' thiji ID card. he or she
. , " doeen't''work for Columbia Gas.
., , •For. accuracy~
· · safety, youl\ .mete~
. ,. · .. :~~teade . twomonths:Thei\AteY

'· ·

·

a

' , of~=acb
readbagill'indicated· ··; .
lihbe '
ofyourmonthlygasbil,I.J»)~ .
·•, ~fAliQake ~ntsf.o letyourmeter

reader in on thaaday: Ifyou have anyqUes. ti0111- or if you need to m~e apeCi~ ar·
" hiiJlljelnt!~'I~:-;;': Cill)) \18.
.. -·

1

79

VALLEY BELL

BUTTERMILK ••••••••••••• ~.G!~~~. 99~

VALI,EY BELL PREMIUM

,

ROYAL CREST

,

JCE CREAM •••••••••••••• ~.G!~L~~ ..

1

C:OTTAGE CHEESE ••••••• ~ .~•••• 1
4

69

29

�Tuesday,
Tuesday, September 22, 1911

Date for pulpit exchange se"-_ _.....__ ___.;_ _ _ __
Rev. Mark FlyM, Southern
CIIL'!ter II, will conduct services oo
the Racine Charce.
Rev. Flerence Smith, Morningstar, will preach on the
Syraeuse United Methodist Church.
Rev. Robert Rider of the Rutland
Charge wiU be at Southern Cluster
II: JWtwny, Cannel-Sutton, and
Portland United Methodist Chur·

Rev; Richard l\olhemlch will be at
the Morning Star Ullied Methodist
Church, near RadDe.
Rev. James. Gllirk ollhe Racine
Circuli will preach on the Rutland
Cbarce:

Sale~~~

Center,

Pearl

a-pel, Snowville and 1\utlalld
United Methodist Churches.

Rev. Richard Thomas ol the Northeast CIIISter I will be at the Enletpiise, Reck Sprlnp and Flat·

Gallia Co. Area Code

Pomeroy Ullited Methodist Church.

the Notional F lshing and
Hunting day tor children at
Royol Oak Park, Saturdav
Sept. 26 with help and
donations form Ohio Dept.

991- Middleport
Pomeroy
~nn- e hester
343- Portland
247- Letart Falls
949-Racine
742-Rutland

Natural

of

Resources ,

Meigs co. Fish and Game
Club, Racine Gun Club,
Gold Ridge Gun Club and

ping, gun safety and trap
shootIng .
Everyone
welcome .

.

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

DENTAL HEALTil- Dr. Craig Mathews, D.D.S.,
Middleport, presented a program on dental health and
instructed the first, second and third graders at the
Salisbury Elementary School on proper brushing Monday morning. The school provided each child with a
· toothbrush and the toothpaste was 11rovlded by the

. .

Curb Inflation l
I
I
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and

PTO. The items will be kept at the school and each day
after lunch the classroom teacher wiU supervtse the
bnJSbing of teeth. Dr. Mathews wUI retum to the school
later this fall to reinforce the brushing technique and
check the children's teeth. Pictured with the loul dentist are Betty Withrow, Connie Sauters and Gary King,
Jr., left to right.

.

'

Savell
- I
.

Write your own ad i!!lnd order bv mail with this

coupon . cancel your ad bv

~hone

when you get

results. Money not refundabl e.

Plllllic Nettce

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE
OF
ANNA
LOUISE HAIIBRECHT,
DECEASED
Cue No. 23532 Docket 12
Page 267
. NOTICEOF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
on September 9, 1981, In
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 23532"
Robert F. Harbrechl, 34t
Blandford Avenue. WOf'·

thington, Ohio 43085 was
appointed Administrator of
the estate of Anna Louise

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On September 8, 1981. in
the Meigs county Probate
Court, Case No. 23529,

Daisy M. Saunders, 675112

Sycamore St., Middleport,
Ohio 45760, was appointed
Executrix of the estate of
Theodore R. Saunders, Sr ..
deceased, lote of 675'17
Sycamore St., Middleport,
Ohlo45760.
Robert E . Buck

3

Food and nursing homes ... two
topics where each of us may make
our own choices. Both are included
as topics for the 1981 District Health
Conference, " We Make Our Own
ChOices, " to be held at the Jackson
Area Extension Center on Wednesday. Sept. 30, from 10 a .m . to 3
p.m .
Dr . Virginia Vivian, Chairman of
the Hwnan Nutrition and Food
Management Department, School of
Home Economics, The Ohw State
University, will be the keynote
speaker. She will lead the discussion
on current hot spots in nutrition fiber, sugar, vitamins and mineral
supplements. cholesterol, weight
control , and others.
Dr. VIvian wiU be followed by
Christine Goodall, a nutritionist for
the Ohio Department of Health, who
will continue the discussion of basics

in nutriton - why do we eat what we
do and what we need to kno about

nutrients .
To choose a nursing home. what do
we look for ' What s hould be consider' John Rollins, Area Agency on
Aging. Rio Grande College, will lead
the afternoon discussion.
The program will conclude with a
discussion of the results of a computer · D1etcheck" for each in·
div1dual atten&lt;Jmg the conference .
Registration fee is $2. Reservations should be made by Sept. 23 to
Pal Glass , P . 0. Box 32, Jackson,
Ohio 4:;&amp;40. Dietcheck forms can be
gotten from any CoWlly Extension
Office in the area . Cl!ll 286-2177 or
your County Extension Office for
more mfonnation.
This program is open to a nyone interested in learning more about the
announced topic.

of

Day on
the district
a success

SWEEPER

and

sewing

machine repair, parts, and

supplies.
delivery,

Pick up and
Davis

Vacuum

·m -2181. Pomeroy , Oh .

The Chester United Methodist
Church announces plans for a
special "Rally Day " Celebration on
Sept. 'rl to mark the payment of the
debt on the educational addition to
the church.
There will be a churclrw1de dmne r
at 12 :30 p.m . in the churc h social
room. followed by a n afternoon
"Service of Celebration" scheduled
for 2 p.m. Former minister. Rev.
Robert Hayden, now of Bremen,
Ohio, will deliver the afternoon ad-

participation from our county
schools." Charles E. lllakeslee,
local society president, comments,
"and we hope to see another good
year in 1911.
Teachers and parents wishing
more infonn.otion should contact the
society or the contest chairman, Dr.
Marvin Fletcher, History Department. Bentley Hall , Ohio University,
phone61~!16 .

dress. Special music will be by
" Russ and the Gospel Tones." The
public is cordially invited to attend .
Regular Sunday morning services
will be held as usual with morning
worship at 9 a.m. Rev. Robert
McGee , pastor of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. w11l speak
as part of the County-Wide Pulpit
Exchange. Sunday Church School
will be held at 10 a .m.
The public is invited to attend.
Rev. Richard Thomas is the pastor.

need of equipment on a loan basis is
asked to contact Mrs . Iva Powell at
992-57110. The birthday of Mrs. Nellie
Tracy was acknowledged.
Readings were by Jean Wright,
" Family Affairs"; Ruby Frick.
"Sc hool Days" ; Mrs . Fetty.
"Bequeath"; Mrs. Powell, "One
Room School"; and Bertha Parker,
''For Gentlemen Friends.''
Prizes for games went lo Scott
Miller, Bob Miller, Lloyd Wright and
Ann Mash. Besides those named,
Della Curtis attended.

REEDSVIlLE
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown spent
a weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
William Thomas and family at
Springfield.
Barbara Henderson recently
vacationed through Michigan and
Canada .
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
spent a weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Edward G. Hensch at Mayfield
Village .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sams of
Weston, W. Va . and Mr. and Mrs.
Gail Sams and Adam Lee of Jane
Lew, W. Va. were weekend gu"ts of
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson.
Mrs. Helen Archer has been
visiting with her son and family , Mr.
and Mrs. Don Coleman of Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. BiU Congrove visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Roger Chancy
and Angela at Tuppers Plains.
Weekend guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whiteheai!
were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hensch rJ.
Cuyahoga Falls and Mr. and Mrs.
Wall Hensch of CircleviUe.
Chester Mundry Sr. is a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Walker of
Racine and Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Dougl8ll of Coolville visited with
their parents recently, Mr. and M111.
C. Ed Hwnphrey.
- Mrs. L. Balderson

Orange Township auxiliary meets
Sevetll fund raising activities
ll't!l'e dlacuaaed during a recent
: nettinl Ill the t.dlft Allltlliary of

dleOnlllt TOWIIIhlp Volunteer Fire

.oe,anmem

held at the headquar·
. ten in TupperS Plains.
Vera Weber presided at the
rneettn&amp; with the pledge, the
Mc:retary's report by Pam Hager,
~ the lrealllfer's report by

'

IWanted

2.

21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
lt.
29.
30.
31.
32 .
l3 .
34.
lJ.

4.

s.
6.

7. --· -- ~-

10.

Correspondence

Celebration planned
Plans for the observance of the
45th anniversary of the Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club were made
following the club's annual family
· picnic held at the home of Mrs . Marjorie Fetty.
The anniversary celebration will
be held on Oct. awith a potluck supper at a place to be annoWJced. SWl·
shine sisters will be revealed at that
time and new names drawn.
During the meeting Mary Miller
was welcomed as a new member. An
. inventory was taken of the club's
hospital equipment and anyone in

H2·225f

3.

Elizabeth

Lyons,

openinc

the

meeting.
A.uiatance with the Se,t. f1
chicken IIU'beeue olthe f ' - ._
planned. On Nov. 21 at 4:30
the
aMual turkey supper will be held
and on Dec. 5, a holiday bazaar will
be held. Anyone Wishing to rent
space to reD iteml at the bazaar are
asked to contact Pam Haler, 11'1·

,.m.

&amp;, . I a

NEW LISTING- MID·
DLEPORT - Eye cat·
clli ng hOme on an eye
catching street. The two
story ttome h•s its
original woodwork ilnd
its own hardwood floors.

Three

CALL:

POMEJOY

IMDMIRK
614 ·992·2181
tor
Farm
~nd
Home Oeli•erv ot
&lt;: '"
Diesel
He~ ling Oil.

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write D1ily Sentinel Classified DeJt.
111 CourtS!., P'omeroy, 011. 45769

CLASSIFIED .AD .NDIX
1-co~rtl

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

eiiENTAlS

· ~-

ol Tflnks

,.,.

•...

U-Meltile M-.es

l - 111 M~MOfloiWI
J-AIIIIMIIICOMOIII\
4- Gi~o~eoiWol't

44-•INrt"'Htt fee- REnt

t-HoiliiiiiY Atls
6--LMt Inti F1111n11

45-ll"uriltiltttf . . .,..,
4t-51NCI t.,- Rtttt'\.

47-*."'",.
it ... t
41-lfllfi,Mut f•r Rnt

7-Y•r dSo~le

1--~ublic

S•le

.,_,., L••••

&amp; AUC: Iieft

· " ' fl• '

t!ob'ltettl·r Jr
rol•t•r

I I t I' '

742 ·200 :1

LOG HOME -

in Mid·

dl eport. 6"d" treated,
white pine logs . 2
bedrooms, equipped kit·
chen, nice loft. Good
size lot wi th 2 water and

2 gas taps .
$26.900 .00 .
LOVELY

ONLY
1972

Marlette. 24'x60' Total
electric. 3 bedrooms, 1111

baths ,

large

tamitv

room .
Georgous
firep lace to sit by on

eMEIICHANDISI

ei!M,.LOYMI!NT
SERVICES

sl-w.u...IWN ....•
n-ca. tv, •

toll
evenings. Situated on 6

»-AIItlfiUft

nice acres . Look at this
one today! I Asking

.,,.E,.,i.,.nt

'$4-Misc. M.,.cMfi4HH
SS --r luUtllnt su.- 11 ue ~
S6-Pets fer Solt.
SJ- Musicattnstrument
st-frutts 1 Vetet•btes

ll-Sihlltil" Woiiilltftl
IJ- 111suranc:e
14--ltusi•~ss

T r•tni•l
17--Scltooh lnstruclien
16-R.ttio, TV,
&amp; Cl ftejNir
11- Woiiintfll To Do

It- For Sol i• or Tnd~

eFARM SU,.,.LIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

,, _ ,arm EauiPmeftt

11 - Rusl"~ss

n - wutH to luy

o,,.,,unlty
to Lliln

U-LI¥1SfOCII

ll- MitU~Y

SJie
H - Hu I Or• in
U-5..- &amp; F..-tihJir

1J- ~reteUIIINII

Serwtc:es

e TRANS,.OIITATION
11 - A • .-s fer S.~

e~IALESTATE
Jl - ... ,_•s!Gr hM
n - Mittile HoMes
lerS.M
U-F.UMS I., "S•M
J4- lt~SiltH&amp; luiNiints
U- Leh&amp; Acrtl"
36· j;lefll Est•te Wo~t~ted

72-TrKIII t ..- h ..

JJ-VI111&amp;4W .D .
14--MtNrC&gt;tC:ItS

Jt-luts I Moten
lt-Aute Parts&amp;.
AcctiMr~l

formation .

s

Friday . Phone 675-1652.
Dottie Campbell.

custom kitchens and appliances,
custom
bathrooms. remodeling,
ptumbin, electric, and
heating.

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings
SflOS
SMALL

"From 30x 30"

Utility Buildings
5 ites from 4x6 to 12,.40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

....

lb -..

Beverly
and Edna
HOWJeholder. Doria Koenlf aerved
refreshments: Next meetlltl wlll be
on Oct. 12 at 7 p.m. Otheni attendinc·
nre Elisabeth Ly0111, Loll
Sltirley llal8er.
I
•
I'

Detim; ·

,.. .. ., ...... ,...k..

.

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

'~'!'jN. il~ I

I•"''
I

'
tiiSI
•. I ;

U,taU-- ... .... , . . . . . . .. . ~ ... ,,,,,, ,, ,,,,,,,. ~ .....

Upttu..,., ... ...,n .., ....,.,.. ,. , , .. . .. .. . .. 1.. ..... . .....

Upttii5WMnll ... 111ttllyii11Wf16tlll ., .. ... ... , : , , . 1 ........ : 17 .•
(AvtrJI'4w.rti&amp;,...IIMl
• ·
MMUe Netne tales 1M Ylnl &amp;lttl •rt ICC~ lillY Witll cJUi
with ..-ftr. 25 te~~l dtlr" '-!111ft u..,.._ •• .._. . I" Clft'flf
T.M. i.t!IIHI.
,
ot
'
TN ,_..iiiiMrr...,.,.. ,..,...... .. _.. • .,........, . . . . . .
. . jHtfeMI. TM flt~lNIIMr. WiH _, IIIIi r ..peQ II 1w _ . .......
NICWf"IC:f ltt'Mrtiell .
'
I

f •

'----------..-------.J
~·

.

Sandhill

Road,

Oashchund,

phone 304-675-4468 .

been spayed, 304-458 ·1605 .

12

1 cat, 1 yr . old excellent

barn cal. Call446·4027 .

All organic moose cat·
chers. 2 models ava i lab It
fuzzy or extra fuzzy . Cal l

11

7____Y:..:aoorcd::.:S::.:a,_,t.,_
e _ _~
3 Family Yard Sale 4 112

446-7763.

miles out 141. Wed .· Sat .
Clothes all size, what nots,
mens clothes , jeans, and
misc . items.

box

7, 6 wks . old puppies half

Porch Sale McCormick Rd .

Mixed breed puppies and
dogs. 675·6170llfter4pm .

Black and while male dog. 0675-message phone, 3 Gar· Sept. 23,
Call evenings 675·5419 .
field Ave ., Gallipolis.
C Iothes,

Nurses aid . Day ti me. E x
perienced . Good r efer en ·
Private Duty Nursing, ex· ces Call742 ·2266 .
perienced a ide, LPN or RN
for
male
patient
at
Pinecrest. 304-675-1524 or Have vacan cy in boarding
home tor elderly per sons.
304-675-5941.
Pri ces star t a t S175. 614·992 ·

24 Grape St.
bedspreads,

6022.

Applications are now being
accepted at Bob Evans
General Store for parttime Would like to babysit for
sales cler k. Apply in per· sma ll ch ildren in my home
1n Syracuse . 614·992 ·3242 .
son . Rio Grande, Ohio.

Huge basement sale 3
miles north of Chester .
Roger Coates residence

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

F

or all of your wir·
ing needs.

-Addons and
remodeling

- Roofing anclgufter
work
-Concrete work

Let
George
Miller
check
your present elec.
tncalsvstem .

-Plumbing and

etectnal work

Residential

(Free Estimates)

&amp; commercial

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Ca 11742-3195
H ·lfc

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

tuil

parts of Meigs Co. We
want new customers.
Larry E. Miller-Dealer

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some grea t gifts as a Sen·
tine I route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992 ·

4 family yard sa le, wesley
Youngs,
Depot
St . ,
Rutland. Wed, Thur. and
Fri. Children and adults
clothi ng. Mise items. Ra in
cancels.

or best offer.

Would li ke an older lady or
girl to liv e iil.
Light

·

housework . 992-3704.

-

Ment

tember 24. 2308 Jefferson

ana

these

chilly

$49.500.00.
4 ACRES - Total electric 3 bedroom home,
equipped kitchen, bath.
Nice 24'X24' garage.. Ex·.
cellent condition. Sells

tor $46,5\)0.00.
PA"EVILLE -

Lovely

2 story solid built home.

6 " bedrooms, format
room . t.ove!y
!~'!"~".':_k thro~.
II reside an~
· too~lng ·out tile
bar windOW. or
on
~111ue
wroO··:OrOUtld
porch.
hcettent
'"'"nQ $50,000.00.

•Wahen
•Dryers
•Ranges
•Disposals
•Dishwashers
•Hot Water Tanks.

NEW LISTING- FIVE
POINTS Are you

Three bedrooms, bath,
water softener •nd full
bese-ment. It has Perma
~ayne windows, carprRt,

baseboird

NEW LISTING
&gt;YRACUSE
Ex·
celtent care is what this
three ltedroom home
features, plus a low In ·

teres! assumable to.n .
What a terrific com bination. Range and

PERM SALE
SEPT. 21thru OCT. 24
$20.00
Now 517.50
,$25.00 . Now $22.50
530.00 . Now 527
535.00 . Now $29.50

.so

wave Length For
Longer Hair

FRAN'S
CERAMICS
Now Taking Enrollment For Fall
Day or
Evening
Clases.

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

FRANCES HEWETSON

Middleport, Ohio

307 Wetzgall St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PH . 992-2725
169 N. 2nd

9·20·1 mo .

9· 4· 1 mo.

retrig. Included along
with

storm

windows,

patio and carport. Utili·
ty room in the kitchen,

no more running

up and

down basement steps to
do laundry. $37,500.00 .
NEW LISTING
CHESTER - Do you
find yourself wishing for

more closet., and a
WOf'kshop for your hus·
band's tools? .Let us
show You this home,
that has some new plush'

carpet. There are many
extra features In this
oile fl&lt;ior plan. Give us a
call. $43,500.00.
COAL MINING COUN·
TIIY Ranch type
nome on 2.5, acres Of
ltvatlte' ground. tt has
!Miat s)or~oe" bullding,
ce'llar

houSe,

' j

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949-2801 or

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES

garage. That's a lot of
Jlf-rty tor the price.
139' 900.110.

looking for a six year old
home, en one acre of
oround that has a weod
burner aM air COfltdi ·
tioning? Well, thi! is it.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

two .car

949·2860.
No Sunday Calls

~~~

IRGIL ·B. SR.
216 E. Second Street

H

new ranch, 4 bedroom s.
Jl/2 baths, centra l heat,

117.50,

BARN En'S
WELD SHO~

(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp;' Metal)

• Steel
• AlUminum
• Casting • Trailer Hitches e'Metal Fabrications.
Monday · Friday

Top prices paid for auto
bodies, scrap iron and
metals.
1
mile
west
of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt.
33.

Mon.·F rl . 8:30 to 4:00
Aller Aug. 3
Ph. 992-6564
8·30·1 mo. pd.

4 p.m. to 11 p.m.
All Day Saturday

Ph. 949-2285
Located at Maplewood
Lake in Racin~.

9·2·1 mo.

Real Estale- General

water. 2 car garage . All

JS Yrs . Experience

NEW LISTING - Fami -

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

ly room 12~19, flue for
woodburner . lberty 2
bedroom trailer, air
conditioner. porch and
level lot. Only $9,600 .

copper
$37,500.

pipes .

Bl

'

S-7-ltc

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Only

•Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
• Water, Sewer &amp;

modern

Gas Lines
eOumpTruck
• Trencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded

Trailer on small house.
Have a 3 bedroom &lt;:ountrv home with furnace,

kitchen,

Ml

bltsement and Iaroe lot .

Only $30,000.
YOUR CHANCE
Good woodburning
fireplace, full base·
ment, gas furnace . 3
bedrooms, 111:1 baths,
patio and 3 car garages.
2IOIS. Only $27,500.

bedrooms,

4

THE

Quiet,

WOODS

renewed,

one

bedroom, ·tedar lined
clOsets, modern kltcllen,
nat. gas furnace, city
water and nice shady
lot, JUSI$21,500.
Associates: GOrdCIII a ••
Heltri L. atlll sue Murphy.
•

Earn

Ph. 992·7201

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S . Rt. SO Eut
Guysville, Ob.
Phone 614·662·3121
Aulhorlled John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm · Equlpmenf
Dealer
FARM EQU t PME NT
PARTS/SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
1-No. NOO Dlnet Ford
Troctor )¥/Cab
1-Modtl 275 Diesel
M.F.
1-M'oclet 479 Hay Bind
N.H.
7·3·1tc

en · Too busy to hold a yard

9

wanted to Buy
WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
n iture and Ant iques of all

60625.
MANAGEMENT
OP ·
PORTUNITY . We are
seeking
qualtf ied
in ·
d1vidua1s to train for
management positions in
Hard mans Home Centers if
you are highly motivated,
desire responsibility , per·
sonal
growth,
professionalism, and are
willing to re· loc ate, send
your resume in confidence
to Stan Hardman, Hard·
man's Home Center, Gen

CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Buick -Pontiac, GAllipolis,

Ohio. Call 446-2282.
WE

BUY

FURNITURE

We sell furniture . Sagraves
Furniture. 446· 4775.

Buying Gold . Paying cash
for anything stamped lOK ,

14K. 16K , and dental gold .
Class ring, wedding rings,
watches . Clarks' Jewelry
Pomeroy, 992·2561.

Junk cars with or with out
motors, scrap metal, and

batteries. Call 388-9303 .
BEOS· IRON. BRASS, old
furniture, gold, Silver
dollars, wood Ice bo&gt;&lt;es,
stone jars, antiques. etc .•

Complete
households .
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 9'12-7760.

wrile :CRF., INC., Box 121,
Dept. 289, Doniphan, Mo
63935. For taster reply send
self-addressed envelope.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
on largest

Need a Job? Ever thought

of working on a tow boat?
The river industry employs
thousands of men·women.
They receive good pav and

Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock Springs Rd,
Pomeroy. 992·2689.

many fringe benefits . Work
30 days·stay home 30. For
Gold. silver, sterling, details write CRS Inc .• Box
jewelry, rings, Old coins &amp; 121. Dept. 289, Doniphan,
currency. Ed Burkett Bar· Mo. 63935 . For faster reply
ber ShOp, Middleport. 9'12- send setf·addressed en3476.
velope.
----------------

I

No Item to Iaroe or small Now ti!!iking applications
wliLIIIIY 1 piece or complete for
Tractor - Trailer
household. New, used and
drivers. 304-773·5825 offer .~
antique. Call992·6370.
pm .
Scrap metals, batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and m&amp;rchandlse
brOkerlng. Yorper·Hotslead Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675·5868.
Also Flea Markel open
dally . Open Mo.ndov ·
FrldayHpm.

Call 446·8581 .
Wou ld li ke to do babysit
ting in my home in Rio
Grande. Call anytime, 245·

FARM

for

SALE

by

OWNER 2 mi. North of
Wilksville, 100 acres, 80
tillable , tarm house , out·
buildings, flow ing stream,
surrounded by good roads,
good land , sso,ooo cash or
l and contrac t 10 per cent
down balance at 10 per cent
interest . Ca ll 606·266· 4654
after 4PM and anytime
Saturday .

531 4th Ave . 2 bdr .• central
air &amp; heating, large gar·
den Financing available

Mid $40'S Ca ll 446·2156.
By owner 3 bdr., brick ran ·
ch m city close to stores &amp;
schools. A ll modern con·
ven1ences. Pri ced to se ll.

446·9863 .
20 3/ 4 ACRES MORE OR
LE SS: Block. house, elec ·
tric , gas. phone, dril led
well,
bath,
cis tern,
basement, large garage,
mail ro ut e, school bus . 5
miles from Buffalo . Owner
will finan ce See Elmer
Gr1mes,
Robertsburg,
WVA . on 18 Mi. Creek..
2 year old , 6 rooms and
bath , ba se ment, 2 acres, 4
miles from town, city
sc hool s.
Price reduced

$37,900 .00 Call 446·2663.
J bdr . hom e for sa le by
owner. Reasonable down
payment
take
over
payments . Locc~ t ed off
Patriot·Cadmus Rd . Ca l l

379-2784.
Life Estate . Farm , proper
ty value,$45,250.00
Life
estate value $8,701 .58 Call
992-67 47 even mgs

J bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths, f amily room . Full
basement, garage. 949·

2079
4 bedioom house in
Rutland. Will sell on land
con tra ct . 614-742·2173 .
5 room house with r iver
frontag e on SR338 at An·
tiquuty , Ohio. Call 614·949·
2010 or 614·247-2424 for
more Inf ormation .
55 ACRE FARM. House,
exce ll ent bank barn, ad
ja cent Pomeroy . Bui ld ing
lots available . Possible
land contract . Make offer.

614-385 6740

56&lt;&gt;2.
Wanted to do : Babysitting
my home or yours . Ex·
perien ced .
Referen ces
avai lab le. Phone anytime

245 ·5855.
TV service ca ll s. Ca ll 992·
2034. Also used color TV tor
sale.

11
Business
Opportunity
PRIVATE duty nurses , ex·
perienced aids, LPN ' s or
Own your own Jean Shop.
RN's for male patient at Offering all the nationally
Pinecrest Care Center. 304·
known brands such as Jor·
'6755941 or675-1524.
dache, Vanderbilt, Calvin
Klein, Sedgefield, Levi and
NEED A JOB? Ever over 70 other brands.
thought of working on a S12,SOO.oo includes begintowboat? The river in· ning inventory. airfare for
dustrry employs thousands 1 to the apparel center,
of
men -women . They train ing , fixtures and
recieve good pay and many Grand
Opening
fringe benefits . work 30 Promotions. Call Mr .
days · stay
home 30 Kosfecky at Mademoiselle
days . For
details Fashions Fashions 612· 432·

Store. Galli pol is , 446·2691.

di!meter U "

sale? Let us do it for you .

Office, PO Box 140, Spencer, WV 25276.

~~~;~~~5~·2~1~-t~fc~~ stab.
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
$10 .50 per ton.

~

1300/ 1000

velopes/ possible with our
proven envelope program .
Free detai l s. Enclose stam ·
ped envelope . Fulk Endy,
Bo)( 25339 Chicago , I llinois

367-7101.

~~~~~~~~~~~WANTED:
Tobacco Slicks.
Cati24S·5,593 or 245·5485.

wi't:.L TAKE TRADE -

IN

R.C~t ~ R~LTY, INC.'

Ph . 992-2174

nace, full basement and

ONLY $35,000.00 - Nice
6 room 2 story, frame
with 3 bedrooms, elec.
baseboard heat.. in·
sulated, large porch,
patio, and nlte lot. \/lew
of river. Only $35,000.
OVERLOOKING THE OHIO Rtii.R ON FRONT
STREET IN MIDDLEPORT- L.Mge9 1'0011\ tJpuse:
A tot elf possibilities. Oni.YS15,110t).OO.
,

Pomeroy, Oh.

- 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms,
lV:i! stohes, nat . gas fur ·

carpeting, cttv water.
central air and heat,
equipped kitchen, basemenf and .66 of an acre.

'a

NATHAN BIGGS

very nice. $46,000.

or

spot, front and side
tpOrch ' and fruit trees
All ot this plus three
beclreiom home, with
!lookup for wood burner.
132,000.00.
.

Radiator Specialist

T. P .

RT. 124 HOUSE AND
LOT - 8 room home, 3

garden

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SER\IICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Lar9est Radiator.

NEW LISTING- Like
budget

Neals Auction has moved
S. on Rt. 2 Gallipolis Ferry
W .Va. Every Sat . 7PM
Buy and Sell . Lonnie Neal

~=====~3:1:1:-l:lc~~ 256-1967
kinds, ca ll Kenneth Swain,
in the evenings.

Phone
614 1·992·3325

HIGHWAY LOCATION

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

~

l~B==~w;=an:::;:te=d~t=o~O~o==

The Mei gs County Board of
Mental Retardation is now
accepting applications for Would like to do baby s1t·
the position of Secretary- ting in my home Rodney ·
Schoo l Clerk . This position Cora Area . Ca ll anyt ime
reQuires a person with a 379 2706 .
minimum of 5 years ex·
perience. This experience HILLTOP
SHARPING
should include public con· SERV ICE Circular saws 6
ta ct , typing, and some 112 to 44 in . Chainsaws,
bookkeeping. Please send blades of all kin ds, and
resume' to 346 East Main electric drill bits . Phone
St ., Pomeroy, OH 45769.
388-6564

Ave, Pl. Pl. 675-6145.

bur""'· lull toase·

SANDY AND BEAVER In

Brick. and Bloc k laying,
fi replaces,
al l work.
guaranteed . Ca ll J79·2123.

Yard Sale. Thursday Sep·

8

Insurance

13

surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverag e in Gallia County
for almost a century .
Farm , home and personal
2156 or 992·2157 .
property coverages are
avai lable to meet in ·
dividua l needs . Contact
Rio Grande College is Ray Wedemeyer, agent.
currently seeking ap· Phone 388·8249.
pH cants tor a Heavy Equip·
ment Operating Engineer Group Medical Coverage
Apprenticeship Training for smal l business, as wel l
Program. Thi s train ing an individuals
Major
program is to be CETA medical, basic hospital. &amp;
Title VII funded by the group life insurance r:om·
State of Ohio . Applicants bined to give you one of the
must be economically best programs available.
disadvantag ed and have Very compet at ive rates.
been unemployed for at For more
information :
least 7 days to meet CETA Steve McGhee, 446·0818 or
Titl e V II el igibi lity . In· 446 0552 .
terested person shou ld con ·
tact their local Ohio
IN Bureau of Employment Ac · AUTOMOBILE
been
can ·
tion Agency for further SURA NCE
Lo st
your
details . EQual
Em · c e lled?
ployment Opportunity Em · operator 's License? Phone
992-2143
play er .

Garage sale Fr i. 25, sat . 26.
718
Broadway, Racine.
Electr ic stove, refrigator,
wood burner, gas heaters,
bed, household items. 614·
949
2337

Pooh nursery items, Motoi·
cvcle·Honda 350. 73, $650.00

992-3460

Elim Resthome . Care f or
hafdicapped , aged, or bed
patient . Temporary or
limited care. Or continuous
home with us . Equipped for
wheel cha ir . 742·2206 .

Ave., Gallipolis, Oh 45631.

Lab. 1, 1 yr . old Lab . Sept . 23-24 , 9AM-4PM .
I female I. Call 388·8253 .
Baby
items,
children
clothing, toys &amp; misc.
6 kittens, long hair, all lit·
ter box tra ined. Call 446· Last Yard Sale This Year.

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Help Wanted

Widow lady (early sixties)
to share my home, prefer
lady who can drive .
References
exchange .
Write box 304, Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 3rd

Black rabbit and cage. Full
size mattress and
springs. 675·7142 .

Situations Wanted

Someone to care for me in
my home . 992 · 2686.

winnie · the~

ll-E•uwatiAt
M-EtK"k,. &amp;
!ftlllfli •Mel!

• ·etes ... Oihlr-

LOST·on

red, female,

(5-7),

.

Men&lt;lly 2:00 on S•furdlw
TltHllly HI;• •r~IY1 : • I".M.
lelll
IMhrt:ll ,.,M, flriU't'

Call 446-3437.

Wednesday , September
;=========~Pr=========~t======~~~~t==~~~~~==~GARAGE
sa te. 507
Monday·
21,22 . 23. 9 a.m
Chan·
dler Drive. Summer Win·
THE STANDARD
ter clothing, womens small
OHIO VAu.EY
mens medium (32·
REESE~
34), infants to 2t. coats,
OIL CO.
ROOFING
bOVS {14-16), household
TRENCHING bedding,
mise, table s, storm door,
(SOHIO)
curtains. toys,
We are now delivering
baby swing, stroller, play
SERVICE
home heating oil in all
yard , complete

•'-:-".-'"'
....,.. .,......"
n- .-tumltlq&amp; MtJtlnt

Deadlines

BLACK. female Chow, has

Rt. J, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591
6·15-lfc

J7r-lhle Retylr
~C...-p+!tf E4tUIINfttttl

J7- •i•lton

Lost : male Doberman pupPY. Long ears, 4 months

stripped cat. Call 446-7340 FOUND-black and while
male dog at Lakin, WV .
after 4:30.
Ca II evenings 675-5419 .

pin and cute as a button.
No more dishpan h•nds,
tadfe!. K ltcl\en h•s a
dishwasher, microwave
even and r..-..e. This 111:1
story home sits on si::.:
Kres, five of which are
WOM:ted . Storm win·
dews. s1erm dGer!.,

•nd elec.
heat.

f-.WantHI to luy

11 - HetiiWUtft

For sale on land contract .
House -and 2 mobile homes
located at Bula ville. Will
sell separately or together .

NEW LISTING- MID·
OLE PORT- Neal as a

PRICED llafT.
~----------------------· tAU. 'IOCIY!
WANT AD INFOIIMAnON

eANNOUNCEMENTS

bedrooms,

INsement, front and
rear porches help make
this older home a rea l
treasure. $32,000.00.

Mail This coupen with lllell'liHa.-ce
Tlte Dally Stntlnel
Ill Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 457"

W•nt-AII Allvtrtlsint

fltlld ·llllt( fw~-·

"*
Wilford

U . -------

15.
16.

in ·

SERVICE'S

12111 or St.plwnie Yclke, 11'7411•.
A dilnltlcln • • m.di le'~ r.th7
lntlll . . . f 5J PI
were.nec 11a
l

12.
13.

949-2320 or 949·27 44.

&amp;

POMEROY,O.

a.
••

'·

Rally Day will be celebrated

'
~

t

E.M.oii•W

II .
the preliminary roWld of this year's
American History Contest. That per·
son will be presented a copy of the
Meigs County History. published by
the society in 1979. The student and
the h1ghest scorer in other county
h1gh schools will all receive certificates of corrunendation from the
society.
·'Ove r the last three years we ha ve
been very pleased with the leve l of

: C. R. MASH
f CONSTRUCTION

8·20·1fc

20.

District . Shown by appl .
only ca ll 446·9403.

Letart area . Found or seen

;:::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::;=~~;=~~~::::~;:;;:;~::::~Sept. 24and25.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992-6011
992-7656

I.

female v,:alker fox hound.

Slipped her collar . in E.

old . Lost between Rutland
and Dexter . Has chain and
flea co llar. Reward . 614·

Giveaway

Business Services

,

19,

Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75 ,000
firm . Kyger Creek School

brown

::::::::::::::::::::_!.;~~~~~~~~~~_;~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::~dishes. Everything cheap .

~

18.

tor

Children's Day Care. Ages
3 to years. Monday thru

a

17 .

614 · 992 -6342

614·843 -2933.

Call

Confectionarv

For buld delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,

Avenue,

Misc. Merchandice

)For Sale
)Announcement
I I" or Rent

soon .

Carousel

No hunting of any kind on
the 3 Vance farms on Van·
ce Rd . Hunters will be
fined.

Prob8te Judge/ Clerk
IY J 1.5. 12, 29

Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge
19) 15, 22. 29, 31c

The annual " Day on the District"
for United Methodists of the Athens
District was held Sept. 14 at the First
UM Church, Athens. Persons at·
tending were given an overview of
District and Conference programs
for 1981-1982, along with glimpses of
specialized ministries presented
through 10 learning centers. The
climax of the day was the Concluding Worship, which featured
Bishop Dwight E. Loder of the West
Ohio Conference UM Church, who
spol&lt;e on the topic, "Getting It All
Together."
Those in attendaD&lt;.-e from the North Cluster included the following :
Nina Robinson and Thelma Henderson. both of Alfred; Jane Ann
Karr. Chester ; and Rev. Richard
Thomas, pastor, Northeast Cluster
I.

classes

· Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446·0294 ..

Pomeroy , OHiH5769.

Third annual contest will be held
The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society is announcing the
thiru an nua l Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society contest.
An award will be given to a Me1gs
County high school senior ente ring
Ohio University 's American History
Contest.
The society will make two sets of
awards this year. F1rst place w1ll go
to the person scoring the highest on

Mulberry

starting

Announcements

Giveaway

AI&lt;C
registered male
Pomeranian. 10 years old .
To family with no children.

Announcements

Cake decorating

Harbrecht, deceased, late

Nutrition and nursing
home choices planned

4

675-1333
3

Redd iS h

LOST:

1/2 bathS, located In Tara

J mate black kiHens, 1 gray

t n Mason County

~ .

1-----------1
sale may place an ad in this
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser,

In Meigs County

• ••

BY OWNER : 4 bdr., splitlevel , living room &amp; d ining
room combination, eat-in
kitchen, lg . family rm ., 2

FOUND : 2 sets of keys.
Can be claimed at DaiiV
Sentinel Office. 992·2156.

PERSON who has 742 ·2316 evenings, 614-593collect days. Black
does not offer or attempt to 7007
and fan .
offer any other thing for

992-2156

.1

Lost : 2 cows, 2 calves, Mill
Creek or Bullvolle Rd.
Reward . Call 446·2222 or
«6-o49l.

anything to give away and

446-2342

P J

Homes for S•le

Lost and Found

9·21 -lfc

ANY

In Gallia County

. .. 0

Middleport, Ohio

4

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

1 . ~

276 Sycamore St .

archery , fly l ishing, trap-

937- Suffalo

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

992-6259

several events of canoeing ,

895-Letarl

• •

NEW PHONE NO .

start at9 a .m. There will be

1158-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882- New Haven

_

Sale.

several merchants and. per·
sons. Registration will

67S- PI. Pleasant

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN
Used Color TV Sets lor

The lzoak .Watton League

Mason Co. , w. va .
Area Code 304

Rev. Staaley Merrifield of the
S)'I'HU8e O.rce wiU preach at the
Heatll United Methodist Church in
MWdl pott.

r-.,.----------1,

of Meigs co. will sponsor

614

446-Gallipolis
l67-Cheshire
388-Vinton
245- Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dtst .
643-Arabia DisT .

Announcements

3

Meigs Co. Area Code

114

ches.

nods Unite~~ Methoclllt Churches.
Rev. Robert ~ ol lllkldleport will be preaching lit the

Ohio

C/nssified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges .. .

H

The third aMual County-Wide
Pulpit Exchange ollhe Meigs County United Methodiat Churches will
take place on Sunday, ~ - '¥1.
This unique form ol Christian wit·
neu is to dememtrate the many
-ys ill whlch Uftited Methodists
share rommon ministry In Meigs
County. This is the third consecutive
year for the pUlpit exchange. The
schedule will be as follows :
Rev. Robert McGee will be
preadlinc on the Northeast CIIL'Iter
I: the Chester, st. Paul, AUred and
Long Bottom Methodist Churches.

1981

0676.

RACINE , 4 bedroom home,
2 baths , new kitchen
cabine t s.
in s ulated ,

$32,500 00 ,

Mr . Parry 304-342-8161 0&lt;
Mr . Osburne 8:30 I~ 4PM .
Money to Loan

FHA·VA-Convential Home
Loans, Columbus First

Hobsletter

Rea lty, Phone 742·2003 .

By owner on Brick St .
Rutland, n1ce 2 bedroom
house on large lot. 614·742 ·
2569.
HOUSE-Meadowbrook Ad·
dition 3 bedroom, family
room w1th fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement . 304·675·

1542.
Older 7 room 2 story home
on Main Street, Pt . Pl.
Shown by appointment

only . 675 ·1723 .

32

Prim e Service Station
Prop. for Lease. 1st Ave.,
low rental, Investment req .
For into &amp; interview call

22

7 room s and bath , 4 lots.
Needs some repair . Finan
c mg avail abl e. $25000 . Call
after 5, 614·992· 7284 .

Mobile Hom es

for Sale
CLEAN US.ED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALL IPOLIS, RT .
35. PHONE 446·3868 or 446·
7274 .
1977 70x14 gas, 3bdr., bath
&amp; 1/2, part. turn., windOW

Mortgage Co., 463 Second awnings, $10.000. Johnson's
Ave., Gallipolis, Oh ., 446- Mobile Home Brokers. 4467172
3547.
23

Professional
Services

Piano tuning and repi!!lir,
Love you'r neighbor tune
your Piano . Bill Ward,

Ladles, port lime sales Wards KeybOard . 446·4372.
from your home. No long Gallipolis.
training period . Earn im ·
PIANO TUNING &amp; Repair.
medlot~ Income. For in·
Lone Daniels . 742·29S1 or
tervi~w and appointment
phone 304-882·3433 or 614- 9'12·2082. Have you hugged
your plano today?
992·3'141 .

HARPER Adult Care Cen·
12
Situations Wanted
ter·provldlng the personal
WANT to buy standing tim· Wanted female to shore care your elderly need in a
ber, 5 acres or more. Rockv apartment wtth same. 1 home like atmosphere.
Wooldridge, 614-289·2476 or child acceptable. Coli 245· Vacancies now avallible.
614-493· 2591 .
S835.
call 304-675-1293.

56xU 1980 m&lt;idet, total etec·
tric, completely furn. ,
delivered and set up on

your tot. $8,995. Johnsons
Mobile Home, Inc. 446·3547.
1973 Crown Haven, Ux65,
three bedroom, new car-

pet, 1971 Cameron, Ux64,
two bedroom, new carpet.

1972 Champion, 12x60, two
bedroom, new corpet. 1976
Cameron, 12x60 , two
bedrooms, bath a. 1/2, new
carpet . 1970 PMC, 12x60,
two bedroom, new carpet,
B &amp; S Sates, Inc ., 2nd and
VIand Street, Pt. Pleasant,
wv Phone675-4424.

�32

Mobile Homes

41

for Sale
Prices

reduced

on

all

mobile homes and travel
trailers .
TRI -STATE
MOBILE
HOMES .
Gallipolis. CALL 406· 7S72 .
1973 12x65 two bedrooms,
new carpet, large living

room

with woodburner,
very good cond. Call 446·

7380.

•

Mobile, Modular trade· ins .
19 72 Torcel 12 x 65 , 2
bedroom , ba lcony front kit·
chen, 2 air conditioners ,
washer and dryer . 58900 .
1972 Baron 12 x 60, 2
bedroom, balcony front
living room, central air
condit ion , $7450. 1971 Shul tz
12 X60. 2 bedroom, $6450 .

3
bedroom. $6450. 1974 Rich ·
craft 14 X 70, 3 bedroom ,
S8900 . 1971 Be lmont 12 X65,
1974

Cas tl e

12 x60,

2 bedroom , balcony front
k itchen, $7450 . 1 67 Utopia
ax 16 campier has shower
and toilet, $1250 . All pri ces
on mobile homes include
delivery and set up. Ki n·
sbury Home Sa les, 400 E .

Main St ., Pomeroy . 614·992 7034 .
2 bedroom mobi le home ,
utilit ies pa id, adults onl y ,
deposit and referen ces
required . No pets . 614·992 ·
3647 .

USED Mobi le Home . 576·
2711 .
197 1 Dar i an 12 x 65, 3
bedroom s. 1972 Crown
Haven , 14 x 65 wi th 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms . 1973
Utopia l2 x 65. 2 bedrooms.
1972 1nvader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B 11.t S
Sa les, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts . Pt . Pleasant, WV
Phone675· 4424 .
Mobile home located in
Camp Con ley, Extra nice
and clea n Phone 304·8953967 .
1977 Vi ct orian 14x70, 2
bedroom . l ami ly room , fur ·
ni shcd, centr a l air, unde r penning, awnings. ca ll
afler 5:00 p.m . 304 675·3987 .
12x65, TOTAL elec t ri c, 304675 · 4087
14x70 MOBILE home, very
good condi t ion , 304·895346 7
74 12x60, in Camp Conley ,
air conditioni ng, carpet,
stove, good shape, 304·6752560
1972 3 bedroom Crown
Haven , 14 x 70 w ith 8 x 10
ex pando, unfurni shed, un·
derpinning included . $8900.
675 4377 .
1973 14 x 70 , 3 bedroom .
675· 4064

- - - - - - - -·
1966 12 x 55 trai ler, 2
bedr oom . $3500 . Phone 675·
N39

- - -Farms
- - -f or
-Sale

33

FARM HOUSE and appro xi m ate ly 10 ac r es,
m oslly tillabl e. Ex c . warer .
Good out buildings, freshly
painted, new gutters &amp;
root in g
4 bedrooms ,
Kitc h e n
&amp;
m od e rn
bathroom . Pr ett y se ttin g
on private lane, nea r Meigs
mines $39,000 . Qhone 742 ·
2795.
JS

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS · Real nice camqsi te
on Raccoon Creek, all
ut ilit ies available, S300 .
down, owner wi ll f inance,
cal l after 3 p.m .. 256·641 3.
BY owner, 3 apcrt m ent
house on appro x. 1 acre .
Live in one, rent others to
make your payment. Can
be conver ted single home .
City wa ter , wi ll consider
lend con t r ac t 675· 1883 9·5
p.m .

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

Sma ll fu rn ished house in
t he city , ad u lts only . Cal l
446·0338 .
Unf urni shed
hous e,
6
rooms, Neighborhood Rd .
Private large yard, $225 .
Ca l l 446· 4416 aft er 7PM

4 bdr ., I 112 bath, living
room with woodburner,
dining room &amp; kitchen .
washington Sc hool district .
Dep. req. Ca ll 446-4167 after
6PM .

Houses tor Rent

5 Room house, mOdern In
every way . 367· 7350.

_46

4 bdr . home, free gas heat,

month .
Call
446-3643
Wiseman Real Estate.

3 bdr . home with f ireplace
&amp; 1 acre, $300. a month .
Ca ll446 3643 Wiseman Real
Est ate.

2 bd r. MH in Cheshire. Cal l
304· 773 5882
2 bdr . mobile home ref .
required . Ca ll 256· 1Y22.
2 bedroom trai ler . Adu lts
o nly
Brown's Trailer
Park. 992·3324.
3 bed room
t ra i l er,
Cheshire, $175, $7.5 deposit ,
you pay util it ies . Ca l l 614367 ·781 1.
12x60 trailer with expando
living room . Located on
large corner lot in a nice
ne igborhood in Middl eport .
Ad ult s only , no pets .
Ava ilabl e immediate l y .
Call992·2101 or 992·2319 .

2 bedroom mobile home.
Reference r equired . 614·
965·3839 .
FURNISHED, 2 bedroom
mob il e home in New
Haven . Ad ults only , no
pels. 304 675 1452 or 675·
2996.

Trailer lot s and mobile
home. Married couple on ly,
one sm all child accepted .
References requ ir ed . 6751076 .

44

Apartmemt
for Rent

Furnished apts . 2 bdr ..
$230 ., uti l ities paid , nea r
HM C. adults Ca ll 446 4416
after 7PM .
2 bdr . apartment unfurn .,
in Crow n City , Ohio. Ca ll
256·6520.
3 rm . apt utilities pa id.
Ca ll675 ·5104 or 675·5366 .
Unfurn. 4 rm . apartment,
$250 mo ., $100 dep., util ities

pd .. no children, no pets
Ca ll 446-3437 .
Oelu:w:e furni shed apart·
ment cent ral air and heat,
e)(ce llent location, adults
only, lease, dep., upper
bracKet, reference . 446·
0338 .
Mobile home in ci ty cen tral
ai r and heat, adu lts onl y,
dep . 446·0338 .
2 BEDROOM apartment,
H u o accepted. 675·6722,
675·5104 .
For rent 'l bdr . upst airs
turn . apt . Pri va te en·
tra nce . Ca ll 446·2374 or 446·
0284 .
1 bedroom apts. availabl e
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing . Call
992 · 7721.
2 bedroom apartment on
Sp ring Ave, Pomeroy . Par·
tially furnished . $170 you
pay utilities. Call 992·2288
after 6 p.m.

2 bed room house furnished
overlooking Ohio River .
Browns Trail er Park 614992·3324.

2 bedroom apt.. upsta irs, in
Ra cine . Call614·423-8257 af·
fer 4 p.m . If no answer call
614-949·2121.

Large house for rent in
Letart Falls, Ohio. Must
have
references
and
depo s it. Contact Fred W.
Crqw Ill, Pomeroy, Ohio,
day , telephone 992· 6059
night. telephone 992·7511.

Apartments. 675·5548 .

Rent or sale. 4 bedroom
brick home In Mlddleporl.
614-992-3457.

S WIMMING
POOLS :
PRE -SEASO N SALE :
$99900 INSTAL LED !!!
Above ground pool COM·
P LE T ELY INSTALLED
start ing ct $999 .00 . Pr ice in·
eludes pobl, deck, fence,
filter,
liner,
and in ·
stallafion under normal
ground condition . Free
shop at home service. Call
1800·624 8511.

NEED seve ral items of fur ·
DINNING room set , made nitur e ,
appliances,
by Haywood Wak efield , 4 telev isions. Big discounts
chairs, twtch, drt sink, fo r quanity purcha se .
cost over $2500.00, l ike new Village Furniture 2605
$950.00. 304·675·2195.
Jac kson Ave . 675 -1773.

ATT EN T IO N :
l iM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,
guns, pocK et watches. and
coin collect ions. Call 5.57·
3411.

S4

Misc. Merchandice

Ratliff Pools &amp; Serv ice .
Complete sa l es. serv ice,
pool covers, and winterizction kits. Call446·1324
Firewood for sale Oak .
hi ckory , cherry , or mi xed
woods, seasoned. Call 245·
Y264 ask for Ja mie.
For sa le Sears firepla ce,
used 1 winter . Call379 ·2584.

72

ltl •W1 11JIOIEA. WIC

~=====::::::==;:::=::========.!
55

Building Supplies

SCA FFOLD boards. trim.
&amp; misc. tools. 41 1 Lewis St .•
Pt. Pleasa nt .

56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROO MING .
Ca ll Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL . AKC
black Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persicn and
Siamese k ittens. Call 446·
3844 afler 4 p. m .
HILLCREST KE NNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor·outdoor fa cilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans . Call .446· 7795 .
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon
se tters,
Eng l ish Cot.: ker Spaniels.
Ca ll446·419l.
Jeanie's Pet Shop Rt . 141,
West of Gallipolis. 446-7920.
Special Fancy and Angora
tlcmstcrs, $2.00 each .

Reg . Cocker Spaniel pups,
10 wks. old, butt . Call 446
1262.

Used R·40 Ditch Witch
Trencher. 61~-694 · 7842 .

Reg. Cocker Spaniel, 11
wks. old, buff . Call446 ·1262.

Fi sh Tank and Pe l Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pl easa nt . 675 ·2063. F in
ches, singing canaries and
small parrot.

BIG d iscounts f or cash and
ca rry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 6751773.

AKC
D ac hshund ,
Pomerania n an Poodle
pups 304·895·3958.

Air Compressors, new
Inger so ll · Rand 5 hp, sing le
and 3 phase, tru c k load
sal e. From $1,245.00 . Call
co llec 1304-766 6244 .

100 AMP shut off -box; S50.
Leblanc trumpet , good
shape.
5150 .
Eureka
ca nister sweeper , li ke new,
S75.00 . Call304-675· 2065 .

Bundy trumpet. Call 4461897.

&amp; LlyestatM

61

.:=========J.:=========-1
RPST VISfT 70

me WJ~.~N&amp;sreRS

/1113 YliARS ----

2 BEDROOM. unfurnished
apartment and 2 bedroom
furnished apartment, 30-4·

VOA""' 7HIS IS

THE CUT-GLASS BoW~
I G&gt;&lt;IVE 'IOU .. ·ANI&gt;"''I'
SI~VEoR TK'AY.. UH .. ·Bv
'Tl&lt;E WAY, WHERt!S 1HE
BL6.HI'SR I (?AVe
'70U LAST
CHRISTMAS?

Farm Equipment

John Deere 3300 combine.
Massie
Ferguson
bine . New
ldea300
-2 comrow
picker, Oliver 2 row picker .
New Idea 1 row picker .
Super M Farman and 2 row
mounted picker . Russ
Brothers Farm Machinery.
Sf. Rl. 139, 6 miles South of
Jackson. Call286·2731 .
Goose neck trailer frame,
landam axels 20 fl . long &amp; 6
fl . high, S450. Call446·0183.

2 Used Choppers, 2 new
New Holland Choppers,
new and used fools, all kin·
·ds. Formerly Jim's Farm
EQuipment. 446·3592.

~75· 5571 .

Apartment, Mason, wv . 1
bedroom furnished . No
pets. Deposit. 304-882·3:\56.

Black. Angus Herd bull.
13001500 lbs. 614-742· 2880.
Quarter horse gelding. 2
years training at Meridith
Manor . $750 . Registered
Ameri can Saddle Bred for
sale or stud service. 614949·2455 .

PIGS. purebred Durocs,
championship bloodline for
breeding, 8 weeks old. SSO.
each 304·675·6662 .

Television

WOODSHOP · Cabinets,
picnic
tables,
porch
swings, most wood produc~ - 101 court 51., Gallipolis.
Call•46·2572.

•

I!V!IIINQ
7:00

...... .......
•• • I

71

or-

I

'

~

... ....

•••

~·· · ·
0 0 •• "

1979 Buick Riviera . Ex.
cond.,loaded. Call446·7497.

Suzuki
750CC ,
water
cooled, fully dressed.
$1,500, firm . Call446·1210.

77 Thunderbird , 34,000
miles, $3,000 also 69 Copra
slide-in truck camper, $900.
Cal l 367·7238.

For sale Honda
cond. Call 446-1806.

1971 Buick Electra very
low miles. Full power, fully
equiped, good cond. inside
andoul. $1,450.00. 446· 4630.

1981 Yamaha 650 Special.
Low mileage, extended
front forks, extra new
chain, 2 yelmets, also have
new drag pipes th~t will fit .
All for $1975 firm. 614·992·
3247.

1977 Nova 6 cyl., PS, PB,
exc. cond .• S2395. Call 388·
8769 .

1976 Olds 98 Regency . Sale
or trade. All power. fill and
telescopic wheel, am-fm 8
track stereo, new tires,
body in good shape. Runs
good, uses no oil. Call 304·
773· 5013 anytime.
19:ql Mercury Zepher . Low
mileage, a .c., exc . cond .
992·3090.
1974 Pontiac LeMans Sport
Coupe, AC, Automatic,
AM -FM, radials, gOOd con·
dilion. $700 . 614·992·6726
evenings.
1973 Camero. 350, 2 barrel
automatic . Sun roof and
rocket mags. 614·992· 7768
or6U·992·5671 .

1974 Dodge Dart, 318
engine, 4 dr ., AC, PS, PB ,
low mileage. 614992-5427
after6p.m.

1976 Lincoln Continental
Town car . Reasonable. 614·
992·7742 .

MORRISON ' S Auto sales.
Henderson, wv . Phone 675·
1574 or 675· 2881.
1972 Volkeswagen, 675·2864
or 882·2947 .
WANTED : Volkswagen
Beetle body, 1969 and up, In
good condition . 406· 2()72.

so

exc.

1978 Kawasaki SR 650,
cruise control, sissy bar,
highway pets, king-queen
seat. 992·7582 .
1972 Harley Davidson, 1200
super glide . $2000. 675·6823.
1981 YAMAHA 550 cc
Maxim, 1800 miles. like
new, $2150 . 304·882·3297.
1976 SUZUKI 500, exce llent
condition. call304·895-3467.
1979 KAWASAKI
KXBO
with helmet , $450 ., excellent condition, 304-7735649.
1981 Yamaha Midnight
Maxim 650 CC. black and
silver, 1600 miles . $2,200.
Call675·6871 .

BROTHER LAMIJEil.T
ANYONE

!ll~U6HTEfi.ED

WHO ReSISTED HIS
IF SOME·

COMMAN~.

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

12 fl. v bonom boat, 2
decks ,
storage
com ·
partment, life iackeiS a.
oars. 4Ut-45.44 ca ll after
3:00.
1979 Bass Tracker II bass
boa!. 992· 7810.
1978 Creslliner 775. 198 h.p.
Mercruise r 1-0. tow . Low
trailer. Low hrs. $9000 . Call
614-992 7354 afler 7 p .m .

16

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker
serv l ce ~
buy
automobiles, radiators and
ba11eries. 446· 7717 .

FOR HIM.

1970 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill,
8 cyl., automatic, air condllloner. call after 4 p .m .
304-675· 2492.

11

79 OLDS Cutlass Supreme,
loaded, 304-675· 4087.

2096.

1977

DODGE

Monaco,

o4

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpel Cleaning
446·4208

door, air, PS,

PB, $1500.00, 304-675-2195.

1 SILAGE blower, $100.
phone 304-675·3456.

1979 VW RABBIT, lots of
extras, 304·675-1226.

NICE , furnished, 3 room
apartment, 7th . Street,
adults, 304·675·3811 .

MASSEY Ferguson 25S
diesel tractor. excellent
condition, 304·675-4230.

j974 WV Super Beetle, 304-

675-3308.

3 room furnished co11age,
ulilllles furnished, adults.
675·2812 or 675· 1580.

1975 GRAVELY wllh al·
tachments, Phone 304·895-

6-auto, runs good, win- .

Improvements

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Sleamway. Call 614· 446-

Royal

2. 16ft. BU 710 Gehl Forage
Wagons, good cond. Call
379·2601 or 379-2350.

Home .

JIM MARCUM Roolung
spouting ' and. sldlng. 30
years experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling.
Call311·9857.
\
I

illl. MUPPET 8t10W

CIJ.

BORN LOSER

1'1'E'D 8E TTER (iET BAC" 10

TH' 80IIT, SANOY! TH' WHALER'$
LAHDIHE, PRR.TY IG SUR.E T' 5l'OT
THAT flE() PYE YOU'RE
TRACKIN' •·

8 CIJ iliJ

SPECIAL MOYIE
PRESENTATION' Salem'o Lol'
1979 Stara: Jamea Mason,
David Soul, Lance Kerwin.
CJ) NOVA 'BIIndneta: Five
Potnta of View' Although aome
serloua eye diaeaHa can now
be treated through medicine
and aurgery, once vlalon ialoat,
11 ia rarely restored. NOV Alooka

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675-1331.
- - - -··Dave's 'Appliance Repair .
Washers. dryers, plum ·
bing, electric, general handyman. Phone 304·576·2921
or 675·5689.

SEE 'IOU
NIGHT DOWN I&gt;.T

8:05

8:30

lH' LAB. DOC.'10R
1B'E9!

RINGLES'S SERVICE-ex·
perienced mason. roofer,
car·penter, electrician ,
general
repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675· 4560 .

8:35
1:58

11:00

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304·895· 3802 .

GLORY BE!!

Stark's Tree Trimming. In ·
sured. 304 ·576·2010.

DID \fOU SAil
JUGGV WAS

Painting . Interior· Exterio·
r. Small carpenter work.
odd jobs. Free estimates.
6756219.

mo.

te, iZ~. Caii61H-16·3375 '11fter5:30pm.

A surprise vlall by the battling
Ropera turn a into 1 rlotoua
romantic triangle when Helen,
infuriated by lneenaltlve
Stan ley eeeke solace from
Jack and Janet and Iandt in the
arms of a moat unlikely other
man , meek apartment manager
RalphFurley . :Repeat)
«:losed·Copllonod; U.S.A.)
CID NOVA 'BIIndneaa : Five
Pointe of View' Ahhough eome
aerioua eye dlaea~ea cen now
be treated through medicine
and surgery , once vltion Ia loll.
it iararalyreet orad. NOV A looke
at Hve peopla atrugglinQ to 11111
their threatened vlalon ualng
druga, aurgery, counaeling and

NOT

''HONOR~
LOWEEZV- -

Plumbing
&amp; Healing

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

determln.tlon.

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

WINNIF.

_!,,..,,.
IF WINNIE WINKLE
TiiiNKS SHE CAN
MEDOLE IN .MY

Dozer Work . Mobile home .
sites and driveways . Small
jobs a specialty. Phone 7422753 .

AFfi4/K5. .. 51-!E's
IN FORA

RUN

AWAKENING!

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank . 675· 1234.

:;HE'5M77'GOING
TO ~TCH CONNIE

AWAY FROM f./E.

WHENIMON
THE 'vSWEOF

Mf"ANWHILE

W·WfNflY/
IS IT

REAllY

YOU?'

MAKING HER

A VER.Y
!JAI.ASI.E
COMMOPYTY!

pertormancebaaedonaRobert

' ... '
BACKHOE and Septic lank .· •

Froat poem. Thla program will
lntroducehearlno audlencu to
the expraaslve pdwM of tiGA
language.
10:00 C1J ITANDING ROOM ONLY:
THI! MAGIC OF THIITARI
MIRon Berte hOIII thla,maglcal
comedy tpeclal, taped live et
the Metrotapt We at in Loe
Angeles; featuring Lucille BaH,
Jack Lammon, Walter Matthau
and Dick VenPaHei'l performtno
magical lllualono •'f comedy

Slden- ~~ ,
l-

~~-

E lectrica I
&amp; Refrigeration

'

'' '

SEWING Machin~ repairs,
service . Authorized Singer
Sales a. Service . Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop, ;.~·
Pomeroy. 992·:n84.
,.
JACK'S REFRIGERA T IO
N. air condition service,
commercial, ·Industrial.
Phone 882·2079.
15

General Hauling

BARNEY

routine!:..

(I) (!I). l:IAIITTD Ho\IIT The
Herta' romantic waoetlon In .
Hawaii turna into a myatertoua
cooooflnterna,lonoluplonage
when Jennifer occldent•lly
cepturea • murder Oft tHm tnd
Jonothan hiPIIItlt upon a ~ey
thlt wil l unlock 1he victim' a
oecreto. (Repeot; eo 111101.)
«:loaed·C.ptloned; U.S.A.I
(I) -!LOCK HOUII!I AND

:-::

~".:_

i:'

.':·.
.,.

NOW 11AULING house coal '&amp;limestone for drlveweys.
Call for estimates 367·7101

011

10:18~-::-:,.TI!,.WI

JONES BOYS WATER · '
SERVICE. Call 367·7471 or '
367-0591.
MOBILE homes moved,
licensed. and bonded . ;J04·
576·2711 or30H76·2866.

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

(Cloud·

Coplloned; U.S .A.I (90 mint.)
8:30 (I) Gil. TOO CLOII! FOR
COMFORT ComiCII ChiOI
erupts when Henry edda eorne
aharp politica l satire to hit
cartoon atrip by giving Coamlc
Cow the run of the Whlte Hoi.IH
to fix the economy tnd run
foreign affaire. (Repeat)
(I)FESnVALOFHANDS:THI!
SILKEN TENT Th is unique
coil abo rat lo n b etw a en
acctaimed ector Je eon
Rob,rda, Jr. and the Theatre ol
the t)eaf creates a moving

Excavating

10:30

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon.

(I I XI I I J ITJ IT

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles SAUTE WHOOP SYSTEM POWD ER
Anewer : Why a barefoot kid might remind yo u of an
arctic explorer-HE WEARS NO SHOES
(wears snowshoes)

West opened a diamond
rather than a nolrump
because he used lhe rather
popular 15-17 point nolrump
range.
He lias a !rille shocked to
lind his opponents arriv ing
at three notrump against his
18 high -card polnls. but did
not double because he was
~ure his partner had nothing
and because he had no idea
whal to open .

He did elecl lo open the
king ol sp~de•lo gel a look at
dummy before getting on to
trick two .
one gOOd look at dummy
and West saw some hope of
defeating three notrump .
There was a play known as
lhe
Deschapelles
coup
named after a great games
player ol the i91h century.

Th e Deschapelles coup 1s
the sacrifice of a sure trick to
kill an entry to dummy .

At Irick two West led h is
"'ing of heart s. South ptayed
low from dummy, but Wes t
merety led anoth er spade
.:.nd dummy was moribund .

NORTH
9· 22·01
+ 753
• AB
t 7
+KQJ 10911
WEST
EAST
tAK6
• 98 4
9KJ4
.10763 2
• QJ 8 5
tl09 43

+;

+A62

SOUTH
• Q J 10 2
• Q9 5
t AK62

• 83

Vulnerable : Both
!Jealer: West
West

North

Easl

1•
Pass

2+
Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

South
3 NT

•K

Of course. Wes t ducked
QOe club but did w in lhe
second one and poor South
wound up with just seven
tricks and a mild heada che.

"''"....,
lly THOMAS JOSEPH
ACR09S

DOWN

Antique cbest 1 S.A. Indian
5 Flctlollal tea 2 Teheran
party goer
native
1

11 Ionia

sea SUit

3 Tingle
4 Thrash

5 _ eggs
1 English
ford film
river
28 Lodg
14 SwllllJI
32 Pres .
7 'lbrice (Lat.) •• o· e
1i Hospice
.., tverse
Pinochel's
8
11 Prohibition
~
U Manage
country
11 - gtatle
I Perfume
%5 Football 33 Fervent
11 Famous clock
Dw It
stalwarts 35 Mexican
ze Tlghl spot 18 e
2t African
dollar
11 Bar order
21 Roulette
ravine
311 Sterling
19 Leafllke
color
28 Fur
actress
Z! Fonnerly
part
31 Custom 39 Coal scuttle
Zl Hellacal
~F--~~~~'
ze Carried on
21 Heroic

12 Unwilling
13 Joan Craw·

poem
Z8 Disfeature
Z8 Flue
•ette
34 Before
IS Snoop

•Shinto
temple
:n Airplane
engine

:It U.S. sec'y
a! state
41Reluing

n Glrl-watcb
USinglng
slltera

u lrqJaJla

q .n

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

to

work it:

A:IYDLIIAAXa
Ia LONGFELLOW
Oae lett,er almpt, »Ianda for another. In this sample A is
for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Sin1le letters .
apo~tropllu, the ltnlth alld formation of the words are all

llllltl

WI!I!ICIIIO GAIIDI!,.II

U.I •.CH119IIICLI H ' Pot
Ewing: AJ' A.lllldDII Orel"''
TNif.a , .... atpryof. JeMIIDift
lnlmlgrtiiltllflll cladlllhl-

. ·,

lllllll.ltaell day the eocle !etten are different.

:

hlglltciiOolbellkellialfpla~ln

STUCCO PLASTERING ,
textured' celllllgs, com·
Upholstery
m•rclal , and l'ftldentlal, 17
free estimates. Call 256-. ,
TRISTATE
1182.
.
.
. UPHOL$T~RY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis
·
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car· 446-7833' or 44&amp;· 1833.
pet Cleaning featured by
Hoffelt Brothers Custom MOWREY$ Upholstery Rl
Carpets. Free estimates. 1 &amp;ox 124, Pt. Pleasant 304:
Ctll4-16·2107. .
675· 4154.
'

the c-.y, end ru~ld.

he II

l-~~·
~~=
·r
HIOG~
~

..

,...~-

i

I

()) illl.

AN HONOR
STUDENT?

I

(

atflvepeopleatruggllngtoNve
their threatened 11ialon ualng
druga, turgery, counaeltno and
determination .
(CioaedCaptioned; U.S.A.) (110 mint.)
1BJ SAY GOODBYE
CIJ AU IN THE FAMILY
&lt;1J GOOD NI!WS
LAVERNE o\ND
SHIRLEYLaverneandShirley'a
neighbor, Rhonda Lee, goadt
them Into a g,me of 'truth' that
result a in a riotous round of
zingers. (Repeet) (CioeedC!II&gt;IiOfled; U.S.A.)
C1J BA8EIIAU Allan! a Bravea
ve Houeton ·Aatroa
C1J CBN UPOATl! NI!WS
CIJ.CIJ TUI!IDAYNIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Oh, Godl' tll77
Stare: George Burns, John
Denver.
(l) 700CLU8

(l)llll. THili!E'ICOMPAIIY

r;ASOI.INF. ALLEY

MI~OR:.

ON A

THE DESCHAP.ELLES'I'
COUP
I·

Howard' 1 new p ulnar ,
flirtatious Fern Flagg, decide a
Howard it right up her alley and
triaatoaddhimtohercollectlon
ol romantic trophlea. (Repeat)

ALlEY OOP

L01'5 OF MONEY

BY OSWALD JACOBY AND ALAN SONTAG

(])MOYlE 1DRAMA) ' ' "Fro111
Hell To VIctory" 111711
(1)(!1). HAPPYDAYSWhefl
an embarrautno back InJury
knocks Marion out of the
Leopard Lodge bowling finale.

ANNIE

I

15ETTEFC DO l'HI€&gt;
15EFO~E 6P'ENI/IN 6

BRIDGE

(I) HERITAG! SltGI!RB

RON'S Television Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446· 2454.

Service . Larry
slricker. 675·5580.

vestetday·a

in thie mueical-comedy epeclel
that lakee a took at the
mannere, language and logic ot
the 'adullt in train ing· krloW('IIt
children. (80 mine.)

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential , automotive .
Emergenc y service. Ccwl
882·2079 .

83

Answer here:

7:05 (I) CAROL IIUIINI!TT AND
FRIEND I
. 7:30
YOUAIKI!DFORIT
(I) ANOTHI!R UFE
CIJ
RACE FOR THI!
PENNANT
(1).(1) FAMILY FEUD
CIJ LAVERNE AND BHliiLEY
AND COMPANY
C1J DICK CA YETT SHOW
&lt;liJ
RICHARD 8fii1110NS
SHOW
())) DICK CAVETT SHOW
' Gueat : British actor John
Gielgud, Part I.
&lt;Hi •
ENTI!RTAINIII!NT
TONIGHT
7:3S (I) SANFORD AND SON
7:58 &lt;1J CBN UPDAT! NEWS
8:00 (})IICIJPIIOJI!ctPI!ACOCII
'How To Eat Like A Child' Dicit
Van Dyke a tare. a a the only
a dull, along with 1 5youngatera,

I

1970 Maverick SPOrt Coupe,

I ENGRYTt
( l) )

lli!POIIT

.•.

72 MALIBU. 304·675· 1506.

(I)
I!NT£11TAINIII!NT
TOIItGHT
HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
(I) TIC TAC DOUGH
IBJ MACNI!IL-LI!HIII!R

&lt;ill NI!WI

Wa l lpaper,
painting ,
general carpenter work . AI
Tromm , 614·742· 2328.

84

TWO Crager wheels. two L·
60 tires &amp; adapter, 14 in .
304-675·3968 .

career.

IBLOUFE
I
I K)
(J

i

Ollll I!AGI&lt;ED DUT, IT
11\EANT LE!I.S iloONEY

J

I I

documentary explore•
MacA.rthur'a powerlul ch.er·
acter, onethatbothcreated and·"
destroyed hla brilliant military

Home building, home
remodeling and repair .
Custom work from start to
finish . Call388 ·87ll.

82

ANKI!IIII!IIG

Narrated by Hal Ho&amp;brook, thla

Custom
built
Pole
Bui ldings tailored for your
needs.
Bui ldings
are
' available for your viewing.
For free estimate phone
1965 C·J 5 Jeep, c loth top Byerly Const. Co. 446·6639.
and metal top, S1,000.
Phone 675· 1564.

Auto for Sale

JOHN

lll~ouGLAIMACAIITHUII:

DOBBINS 8. SONS CON ·
TRACTORS Remodeling·
Inside and out-electrial
work· heating-plumbing-sidin1971 Ford dump truck. g-room additions. (ex ·
Good condition. S3200. 614· perien ced carpenter ·28
years&gt; Serving Southern
985·4395.
Ohio&amp; Western W.VA. Call
David Dobbins Sr.. 386·
98.56 . If no answer call 388·
1972 Ford 4-wheel dr. 9964.
Green and while . $1200. 614·
742·2105 .
French Ctty Pa i nting
Residential , commercial,
1975 Dodge Ram Charger. 4 interior, ex terior, paper
wheel drive, 46,000 miles, hanging , and texured
$1500. 675· 5356 .
ceilings. Ph . 367 -7784 or 367 ·
7160 .
1967 GMC half ton truck. - -- - - · - 1970 Chrysler Newport. Call 446-2801 for termite,
Phone 304-895·3426.
roach, bird, rodent. spider ,
and fleas control. Free
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
estimates. Bill Thomas.

New mopeds, last years
model, 5% over cost, 150
MPG. Ideal for college
students. Call446-4626 .

CIJ. PIIIIIAGAZINI!

!1J

THI! DEFIANT GI!NEIIAL

1978 Ford pick-up, 4x4, 351V8, PS, radio, $3,000 firm .
1445 Eastern Ave. 446· 4296
after6PM.

Motorcvcles

•

TUIIDAY
IIPT. U,1fllt

S~le

76 Ford 100, 6 cyl .. 61ires,
new tool carrier. good
cond ., 52,000, $2,350 . Call 1·
245-9118 .

•

VIewmg

WEATHERALL
CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice, caii 67S-1582.

1975 F-600 1 ton Ford flat· BING'S CONCRETE CON ·
bed, body rough. good STRUCT ION · Specializing
engine &amp; 8-2Sx20 tires, in concrete driveways,
asking $2,700. Call 446·2641, sidewalks,
plltio,
8·5.
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
19751nternatlonal Tri -Axle. years experience. Call 367·
238 Detrlol. 13speed. good. 7891.
cond. Call256·6520.
FERRELL ' s
WINDON
1979 4x4 Chevy Luv truck GLASS SERVICE Home
AM· FM stero,lopper &amp; tool maintainan ce
and
box. Call 406· 49&lt;4.
remOdeling . Phone 3889326.

74

.973 CHEVROLET Caprice
Jtatlon wagon, 3 -ter,
rebuilt engine and Iran·
smlsslon, As. engine, $100,
304·882· 2910.
.

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614· 406·1m1 or614·245·9484.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

1·omc

fJI C'K TRACY

1979 Jeep CJ ·5. 304 with
Grade Suffolk Ewe lambs. headman headers, canvas
$45·$65 . Nice Suffolk Ram •top, very low mllellge, good
shape. 614· 247·2961.
lamb $60. 614-985-4295.

For sale
1974
Ford
Maverick . Call 446-4200.

Musical
Instruments

--· ...............
........ . . .

MOM·IN·I.AwS

Jumbo Bobwhite Qua il, 1
week old to adult sizes.
(614) 985·4345.

57

WO ODB URN I NG Franklin .
Stove, used very litt le. $75 . TRUMPET &amp; stand in excellent condition, $150. Mcy
304·882·3202 .
check with band di rector,
304·675 ·2776.
Squires Bingham 22 L .R. PIGS S20.00 , firewoo d
ammo Sl.19 per box. Eclip· S25 .00. brown e ggs 85 ce nts. 58
Fruit
se 12 gage game loades, 6 at f a rm , Phone 304·895&amp; Vegetables
3395
.
shot , 20 shells per box S3. Y5.
Spring Vall ey Trad ing Co.,
Spr ing Va ll ey Plaza, 446· TIMBER for sale. Contact Sweet potatoes, red, white,
Audrey McC lure on cow yellow. Robert W. Lewis,
8025.
River Road. or Caii304·372 - Rl. 2. Ra c ine . Ohio. ~14- 843·
2432 .
4 dozen fox traps in good 0S9 1 if interested .
cond . 1/2 price. Bweecher
59
For Sate or Trade
300 amp electric welder.
poling. Ca ll 256·6233 .
675·3753 .
Trade: Regulation pool
580 B Case Hoe. 643·0012.
table for 1 smeller or bumWedding dress . size 11 , ex - per pool table . Call 446·
870 Remington 12 gauge, cellent condition . Call 304 - 6564 .
Robyn Base CB with super 882·2337 anyt ime .
scanner antenna, power
_ .,
~·· · ·
SS
Building Supplies
microphone. 992·3822 .

They'll Do It Every Time

2 Registered
Polled
Her e ford
bulls ,
2
Registered Heifers, 3 Club
Calves. Call 256·6524 or 446·
2684.

1975 TR ·6 classic convertible. exc. cond .• 73.000.
two tops, cover, two snow
fires. $3.285. 245·9118.

Ludwig : Clear 11istalite oct a plus, prof essional drum
set . Mi nt condition col lector ' s item . Only $1,500appoinlmenls 1614) 245·
5630.

SA TOH 650G and eq u ip ·
ment. end loader for Ford
or Fergu son, Honda XL 100
motor cyc le, new tires &amp;
rim s for small pi ckup, 1974
Ford Cour ier. 304·895 -3441.

Livestock

Holstein &amp; " hereford cow
wilh 3001bs . calf . $500 . Call
367·7238.

ALL
AKC
Yorkshire
Terrier, Creamputf ·chocol·
ate Poodle puppy, Toy
Pomeranian ,
Boxer,
Cocker, must sell, 1-304·
743·8002 .

Trumpet &amp; st and , exc.
con d ., $150. May check with
band director. Call 6752776.

4 NEW fire stone tir es size
H·78x14, $40 . each . World
Book encyclopedia $65. 304882·265 4.

Building materials, block ,
brick, sewer pipes, win dows, Hntels , etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
Call245·512l.

63

AKC Dobermans J month
old pups Male 2 yrs.
proven , female 2 yrs. bred.
Ca ll446· 1562.

New woodburning furnace
heats large house, still in
factory car ton. $450 . Call
256· 1216.

FUEL oil furna ce complete
with 275 gal. tank and
gauge, duct·work , thermoslal . 245·9369.

Trucks for

Tuesday, September 22; 1981

Home
Improvements

PAINTING · Interior and
1972 GMC 7500 series t ruck, ext-erior, plumbing ,
Delrio! Diesel. tandem roofing , some remodeling .
axel. 1·614·694-7842.
2Q yrs. exp. Call388· 9652.

For Sa le new 1981 model
sewi ng machine , zio· zags,
monograms, sews on buttons, makes button holes,
darns, mends, fancy Stich.
Reg. price $249 .9~ now only
$99 .59. Free phone call .
Ca ll co llect 1·304· 736-9241 .

Electric double oven range
coppertone, S200 . Call 446·
7525.

Available
1 bedroom
apt. 1i
for
rent. . Contact
Village
Manor Apts., Middleport.
992 7787.

2 bedroom
house in
Pomeroy. near school . Gas
furnace, new kitchen . 614992·2918.

1978
Mercury
Grand
Marquis. Exkellent con·
dillon, low mileage. 614·
992· l348 or see Tom An·
derson .

LAY NE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chai r, rocker, ot·
toman , 3 tabl es, $500. Sofa ,
chai r and loveseat, $275 .
Sofas and chai r s priced
from S285 . to S795. Tabies,
$38 and up to $109 . Hide-a·
beds.$340 .• queen size, S380.
Rec li ners, S175 . to S295.,
Lamps from $18 . to S65. 5
pc . difettes f rom $79. , to
$385. 7 pc.. $189 . a nd up.
Wood tabl e with 4 chairs, EASY cr edit cva il able now
S219 up to $495 . Desk $110. to pu rc hase furn iture,
Hutc hes. SJOO . a nd $375 .. televi sibns, or appliances.
maple or pine fi nish . V illage Furn i t ur e 2605
Bedroom suites - Bassett Jac kson Ave., 675· 177 3.
Oak, S675 .. Basset! Cherry ;
$795. Bunk bed co mplete
with mattresses, S250. and Suburban wood &amp; coa l
stove . With blower &amp; tripl e
up Ia S350 . Captain's beds, wall chimney. 2 years old,
$275. complete. Bcby beds, exc . cond . 992 ·5348.
S99. Mattresses or bo)(
springs, full or twin, $58. ,
firm , $68 . and $78. Queen Twenty gauge 4')(8' , 4'x12'
sets, $195 . 5 dr . chests, $49 metal sheets won't rust ,
~
dr . cnests, $42. Bed many uses , hom e, out ·
frames, S20.and S25 .. 10 gun building, etc. ; 4' x8', S5 .50 ;
- Gun cabinets, $350., dinet· 4'x 12' , $7.60 each. Tupper s
te chairs $20 . and S25. Gas Plains. Ohio. 614667 3065or
or electric ranges, S295. Or· 614·667· 307 4.
thopedic super firm , $95,
baby malresses, S25 a. SJ5,
G.E . r efrigerator , 1
bed frames S20, $25, S. S30
sew ing maching, girls
Used ,
Range s , c lothing 10· 12. 992·5090.
refr igerators, and TV's,
3 mi les out Bu laville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon . Log spl itler. 882· 3242.
thru Fri .. 9am to5pm , Sat.
446·0322
36 in . cut riding lawn
mower . 882·3242.
GOOD
U SED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers. 7 h.p . Wheelhorse garden
drye r s,
refr i gerators, tra ct or . 36" mower , snow
rang es .
Skaggs
Ap
bl ade. Very good cond . 992plian ces , 1918 Easter n 6375.
Ave., 446· 7398 .

Antiques

81

Auto for Sale

Firewood-spill, . delivered
and stacked. Mixed wood
S65 per cord or $35 per half
cord. · Hardwood $75 per
cord or S40 per half cord.
Call tor quotes on large
quanities. Phone 2t5·.5478 .

Leather Overcoat size 38 &amp;
suit size 38, both l ike new.
Ca ll 304·458·1854 .

53

71

1973 Gremlin, 6 cyl., stan·
dard shift . Runs gOOd. 985·
43-16.

Trailer, 3 bedroom, fur ·
nished, private lot , no pets,
1 child, $17.5 per month .
Deposit required. 675 -6599 .

2 bedroom mobil e home,
$50 a week., all utiliti es
paid, adults only, no pets,
r ef er ences r equired . Phone
675·6530.

by Larry W ; ight

For Sale, Trailer size wood
burner stove . S3.50. 446·1425.

TRA I LER space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y, Pl . Pleasant. 675·
3248.

Household Goods

Tuesday, S!!ptember 22, 1981

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

Misc . Merchandice

For Sa le Co lonial type
Franklin fireplace woodburning stove, S150.00 Call
2-1.5·9280.

51

Unfurnished
hou se,
4
room s and bath, com pletely carpeted, ni ce and
clean . 614·992 -3090.

2 bedroom unfurnished
$190. 1 bedroom furnished
apartemnt. $125. Naylors
Run. Security deposit. Call
614-992·2288.

S4

COU NT RY MOBILE Home
Park, Rou te 33, ~orlh of
Pomeroy . Liuge lots. Ca ll
992·7479.

Trailer space-Letart Rt. 2.
Ca ll 895·3526 .

Furn ished hotl'l".e In Midd l eport . References &amp;
deposit requ ired . 992· 2606
or 992-29 17.

2 bdr ., 3 bdr ., mobile
homes . Ca ll 446-0175 .

Spice for Rent

MOdern off ice suite . tor
rent, downtown, Business
and PrOfessional Building.
Call or see Morris Haskins.

2 acres, very nice, S360. a

Mobile .Homes
for Rent .

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light ttousekeeplng apt ..
Park Central Hotel.

For rent 3 bdr . house. 2
story, full basement. 35
Hinkle Ave. No pels. Call
446·37 48 or 256· 1903 .

EXECU TI VE HOME . New
brick and wood. 4 bedroom,
2 bath. a11ached garage.
finished famil y room, gas
heat, elec tri c air . Possible
option to buy . References.
Call614593 -557l or 614·992·
6312 for appo intment .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

45

3 bdr . house In nice sub·
division, family room ,
large lot, SJOO . call «6-7942.

42

•

•

Page-8-The Dail Sentinel

·'

o
x. :.'•

ucu.tz

TUIUJNQSB

JUTUIUJNQSBI.- F .

~,011'

till
NIWIY .
.
VI ALLIN AT~
11:01
. •
IVI. . . . NRWI
11:U
UI'DATI!NRWI
· 11:30
,.TOIIIGHTIIIOW

,,

. . . CI')JI 1

.

*'. A SWOJID,

LDMJTUBI

'
A SPADE, AND A

'l'HOOGU1' SHOULD NEVER BE ALLOWED TO RUST .

- . JAMEs STEPHENS
'.

'

0 .

I UU AL

�Page-10- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 22, 198l

Lawmakers complaint about
tax-hike budget bill push
COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP) - Some
House members are comp.aining
about the speed with which they are
being asked to vote on Gov . James
A. Rhodes' tax hike-state budget
bill .
Rep. Pete Crossland, [}-Akron.
chainnan of the human resources
section of the House Finance Committee, said solutions to state budget
problems " should not be thrown
together hastily."

·'There are grave inadequacies in
the current proposal which would affect Ohioans in all walks of life,"
Crossland said.
But as hearings on the $13 .8 bilhon
spending plan resumed today,
Finance Chairman Myrl H .
Shoemaker, [}-Bourneville, said he
planned to stick to his plan to get the
bill out of his committee by Thursday. The voluminous measure, with
$1.6 bilhon 111 temporary tax hikes,

Meigs board
Supt. Gleason reported Leo Morns
has been transferred to a regular
bus route and hired as substitute
teachers were Angela Sisson, Andrew Lyles a nd Bonn1e Sue CantrelL
Rebecca Triplett was named as
Pomeroy Elementary school patrol
leader.
At the request of Gordon Fisher.
athletic director, the board created
the position of assistant volley hall
instructor and named Gary Walker
to the post at a salary of $319 per
year. F1sher reported 37 girls are
out fur this year's team .
It was agreed to pay Ed Baer 33
cents per mile for transporting
special students. Baer transports
special students to Rio Grande and
Jackson, six hours a day, a nd
receives no pay beyond the mileage
figure. Mitchell Stanley and Prenttlce Hess were named as substitute
bus drivers. A six weeks leave of a~
sence was granted to Debra McCall,
a teacher.
APPROVF.STAX RATE
The board approved the budget
commissions approved tax rate for
the district. This is 3.8 mills inside
the 10 mill hmitahon; 16.2, outs1de ,
and 4 mills bond retirement. The
board discussed an apparent reduction in the DDPF funds through the
month of October. but it was felt that
no action on layoffs should be taken
at this time since the amount could
later increase.
Larry Powell was named delegate
to the annual Ohio State School
Boards meeting in Columbus on
Nov . 9 with Vaughan being named
alternate. Three reservations from
the board will be made for the fall
reg10nal meetmg of the OhiO School
Boards Assn . to be held Sept. 30 in
Athens.
Supt. Gleason reported enrollment
of 2594 students in the district thi s
school year, a decrease of about 60
under last year.
The board heard presentallons
from John and Marc Fultz of the
Meigs 'fire Cente r and the J ess

1conunuedfrompageli

Malone of the Motire Tire Co.,
Athens, and awarded the contract
for s upply tires for the year to the
Meigs Tire Center.
Supt. Gleason, reviewed a t length.
problems with the (urnace at the
Pomeroy Elementary School and
the steps that are being carried out
to correct the problems .
Charles Holli&lt;'ay, principal of the
Salem Center School, outlined
positive actions which are taking
place at that school and extended
thanks for the board's plan for
possibly addmg two rooms tu that
school. He extended thanks fur pa1n·

ting: and other improvemL·nts rnw..le
at the school over the summer. The
board reviewed policies deahng with
the1r sessions, but made no changes.
Snowden suggested that additional Items from board members
be added to agendas with a vote of
the majority of the board and that
such items be placed at the front of
the agenda so they can be discussed
before the three hour time limitation
on rneetings expires.
Treasurer Wagner reported the

receipt of money from the nCK:ost
bond issued passed by voters this
summer and pointed out that
negotialwns will be underway with
banks to mvest the million dollars at
a high interest rate. The board appropriated the money to the per-

manent improvement fund .
Treasurer Wagner was authorized
to seek an advance draw from the
county auditor and it was agreed to
pay parents of two children being
transported on weekends to and
from a school in Columbus, 12 cents
a mile.
The board concluded with a
rletailed discussion on goa ls for the
distnct and goals •Jf the superintendent. presented by Supt. Gleason
and job descriptions for variOLLS
s upervisory personnel. About 15 persons attended the meeting in addillon to the board members and ad-

rruni stralive personnel.

p 0 me roy ... ____

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roc:.:m:.!pa=gec..:l:.ci_ _

Acting Pollee Chief George Stitt
told council that the cruiser purchased from the state highway
patrol was performmg very well.
Harold Brown, councilman, asked
if any contact had been made with
the Board of Public Affairs concerning the quality of water
Pomeroy is receiving. He also
inquired about the company's stand
on fluoridati on. Brown suggested information be obtained from the
water company by the next meeting .
Brown also asked if it would be
possible to secure the cost of placing
unbreakable windows in the new city
building (former senior h1gh 1.
Larry Wehrung noted the street
committee had met and set up
guidlines for the street department
regaring a work schedule and
priority list of work to be done .
Wehrung also reported the committee suggested calicum be used
downtown this winter rather than
cinders due to the costly cleanup in
the spring.
The comm1tlee, according to
Wehrung, a lso asked that raincoats,

hats, boots, tires and safety equiJr
ment be purchased for the street
department. Council allocated $1.200
for the purchase .
Young reported that new h1gh
sodium lights have been installed at
the new city hall site .
Mrs. Brenda Neutzling met with
council concerning water seeping
from an old mine on Peacock Ave .,
that is causing property damage .
Council agreed to contact the soil
conservation service .
In other business, council agreed
to purchase four sheets of exterior
plywood for use at the cemetery,
severa l meter hoods, and to transfer
$7,000 from the general fund to the
street fund.
Donnie Ward, employe of the
street department, gave a detailed
account of the work done by the
department since the last meeting of
council .
The rna yor' s rep .. _howing
receipts in the amount of $4,252.75
for the month of August was aJr
proved. Following the meeting coun-

cil went into executive session.

President ...
(Continued from page II
position to a new round of cuts centered on Reagan's reported decis ion
to seek a three-month delay in the
cost-of-living increases scheduled
for next July I in Social Security and
eight other benefit programs, including veterans' retirement, unemployment compensation, food stamps and school lunches.
''The House people clearly told the
Senate people that they didn't think
they could get anything through,"
said one aide, who asked to remain

probably then would be reprinted
and readied for a House floor vote
next week.
Rhodes asked the Legislature to
enact the bill by Oct. I so the new tax
revenues would start to come in
sooner. The state would lose $2
million in new tax revenue for every
day of delay, he said.
The measure still must be con- 1
sidered by the Senate, where its
reception is expected to be cool
among GOP conservatives who
dislike Rhodes' tax package.
Crossland, in a prepared critique
of the bill, said the panel should be
allowed to hear testimony from
department Hea"il!; and affected .
citizens. He said the measure is
deficient in education and mental
'health, doesn't fund the public ern'
ployee
pay raise it purports to
provide and ignores an estimated
$300 million in federal funds the
state will lose becaus e of
congressional budget cuts.
otherwise, more testimony w:1...;
being heard by the Senate Finance
Committee today on a bill g1ving pay
raises to all judges in Ohio. The
hikes for justices on the Ohio
Supreme Court and the state aJr
pellate courts would total $30,000
over the next three years.
The panel, headed by Sen. Stanley
J. Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, was
reviewing for the first time today a
bill giving pay hikes - based on
county populations - to Ohio's 88
county auditors. They now earn
from $18,000 to $33,000 a year, rising
to $28,1133 to $45,156 over five years
under the measure.

to--

Our
tised,.,
item- in stockison our shelves adver, If an
advertised item is not 8'Vailable for purchaM doe to any unlOfeseen reason ,
I&lt; l'nll1 will is&amp;ue a Rain Check on request
tor lhe met'chanlisa (one item or reason-l..,;iy quanlity)lo bo putehased at 1ho
&amp;ale price whanev8f availab'e or Mil sefl
vou a comparable quUty item at a c:omp~·
rable reduction in prot

PASSIVE RESISTANCE - Abalone AUlance
demonstrator Is bodily carried from the site of the
Diablo Canyon ~ockade Monday following her arrest. •
Alliance members, because of their non-violent
training, allow their bodies to go limp in passive

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

: Area Deaths :
I

I

,Jt-,,it· N. Evans
Jessie Nicole Evans, infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Ricky
Evans of 41591 Edgehill Drive,
Elyna, died Thursday at Allen
Memorial Hospital, one day after
birth.
In addition to he r parents, she is
survived by maternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Lee, Elyria;
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilham Evans, Jr , Elyria;
maternal great-grandparents, Edward Howell, Flushing, Ohio, and
Belly Templeton, Pomeroy; paternal great-grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Gogslin, Beckley, W.
Va.; maternal great-greatgrandmother, Mrs. Margaret Johnson, Racine; paternal gteat-greatgran dmothc r. Mrs. Ida Cooke,
Toledo
Graveside services were held at
9·30 a.m Saturday at Baby Land ,
Brookdale Cemetery. The Rev .
Elmer Muncy of the Free Will BaJr
list Church officiated. The Wainwright Funeral Home was in charge
of arrangements.

Meigs County happenings •.•
To end marriages

Veterans Memorial

Emergency runs

Ernest L. Jones, Jr., Dexter, and
Shirley Marie Jones, Dexter flied for
dissolution of marriage in Meigs
CountyCommonPieasCourt.
Marriages dissolved were Sue A.
Ervin and Donald W. Ervin; Robert
L. Wood and Victoria L. Wood ; Jeffrey A. Grueser and Latona Darlene
Grueser. Latona Darlene Grueser
was restored to her former name of

Admitted--William Morris,
Pomeroy;
Clarence
Hanin g,
Albany;
Rudolph
Gordon,
Gallipolis;
Nancy
Jeffers,
Pomeroy; Adam Barton, Syracuse;
Rhonda Jeffers, Pomeroy .
Discharged-Martha Roush , Sherwooil Collier, H. A. Willbarger,
Pearl Garnes, Shirley Harris.

Two calls were answered Monday
by .local emergency units, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Service reports . The Syracuse Unit at 5:31p.m.
took Adam Barton from the fire
station to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and the Tuppers Plains
Unit transported a Janes infant from
State Route 7 to Holzer Medical Center.

Sisk.
Latona
DianeD.Caruthers
and Cindy Hartenbach Were appointed deputy
clerks of the clerk of courts.

fire causes damage

r-;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

ELBERFELD$

Damages were set at nearly $1,000
as the result of a fire in a restroom at
the Excelsior Service Station on E.
Main St, Pomeroy, Monday afternoon. The Pomeroy Fire Department extinguished the blaze. There
was smoke damage to a second
restroom. Cause of the fire was not
determined.

Will show slides
Harley E. Gilmort·
Harley Edwin Gilmore. 68, Rose
Hill, Pomeroy, died Tuesday morning at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr . Gilmore was a son of the late
John and Myrtle Gilmore. He was
also preceded in death by four
sisters and three brothers.
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy
Call Gilmore; a daughter, Yvonne
Wilson, Middleport; a grandson, Eddie Wilson, Middleport; a greatgrandson, Harley Edwin Wilson, and
several nieces and nephews.
Mr. Gilmore was a retired employe of the Royal Crown Bottling
Co.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday af the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev . Mark McClung
officiating. Burial will be in Rack
Springs Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime after 7lhis evening.

The Rev. Jack Armstrong ,
missionary from Uruguay will be at
Chester Nazarene Church this
eveing at 7:30p.m. to show slides of
his work in the missionary field .

Boosters to meet
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
meet at 7:30 this evening at the high
school. Films of the Me~gs-Wahama
game will be shown. Ways and
meani projects will be discussed.
All interested persons are invited.

Underpinning a must
All trailers in Middleport, according to village ordinance, must
be underpinned within 30 days after
they are set, officials reminded
residents today . Also a warning was
issued that cars on village streets
without current license tags will be
towed away.

Every Wednesday Night At

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

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

Dining Room

On~

anonymous.
In the Republican-run Senate, the
message to Reagan was: "If push
came to shove, you might be able to
get them through," said one source.
In the Senate on Monday,
Republicans who control the Finance Conunittee postponed drafting a
Social Security rescue bill, and
several leglalators said it was increasingly likely that Congress
would paas only a stopgap measure
this year to avert a crisis in the
program's old-age fund In late 1982.

re.istance to arresting officers. Local sheriff's
deputies National Guard and CHP officers, slmllarly
trained in non-violent techniques, also use pressure
points to Induce palo and encourage techniques, also
use pressure points to induce pain and encourage
cooperation. (AP Laserphoto).

'

: Wbe'n a worklug eowboy laeeft; the eold
wluter.dayt!i be needs* wa~Dil ft;lalrt and
Wrangler bltl!i the shirt lor ·you. This authentic work western plaid shirt of 100% cotton
heavyweight flannel willkeeprou down right wurm1'
on the winter ti·atl.
· -·
., _ .

Crow's Family Restaurant
228 W. Main

Ph. 992-5432

'

'

__

••

.

Be sure to see all the other patterns and colors in men's
flannel shirts - all arranged for your ea$y selection.
.•

' Ohio
Pomeroy,

ELBE~FELDS

l

-·-

IN .POMEROY

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