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                  <text>Downward deficit biggest concern
WINTHROP

THE DE::PL~TICN OF THE

In a airing of broadcast appearances over the weekend,
Democrats said Reagan sbould roll
back the 25 percent, tJ!ree.year tu
cut that takes effect Thursday instead of seeking d~r cuts in social

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Stockman, interviewed oo CBS'
Reagan's chief budget cutter, · "Face the Natioo," said Reagan is
declaring that the administration detennlned to keep the 11182 deficit
doesn't have to be right on the from ballooning above S50 bllllon
money with a f43.1 bllllon d~ficit in agllln.
1982, aays the bottom line Ia just "to
ABked if he would be aatlsfled with
keep the deficit movlng down."
M8 bllllon or f49 biJiioo, he replied,
"You don't have to hit $42 (blllloo) "U the deficit 18 coming down, I feel
. or ~ (bllllon)," budget director that we have achieved our goal."
David A. Stockman said Sunday.
To do that, though, si.oi:Ianan said
all
$13 bllllon in new 1982 spending
"The larger point is the dlrectloo of
the deficit haa to be steadily down cuts and $3 bllllon in tu in.creases
this coming year and in subsequent Prwosed by Reagan last Thursday
are necesaar)' as a cushion against
years.''
Reagan had aimed at holding the future bulges in the budget.
"AB we move through the year,
fiscal 11182 deficit to $42.~ bllllon to
stay on track toward a balanced we're going to find further elWilples
budget in. 1984. But faced with of unplanned spending, overruns,
sptrallng interest rates that drive up bills coming due ... and so we have to
the cost of government borrowing, have a margin of error in this," he
be raised that figure to f43.1 bllllon said. "The only thing that we do
know is that every month, every
18stweek.
The Congressioll81 Budget Office quarter the estimates get bigger and
estimated earlier this month that the lliilt if we sit on our hands and
deficit for fiscal 1981, which ends 11cquiesce, the problem will get out
of control."
Wednesday, will total $511.05 billion.

eARTH!5

NA'l1JRAL RE50LIRCE:5 AND

7HE: SP/ RAL.It-6- C06TG OF THE
ONES "THAT WE 5TIL.L HAVE: •••

programs.

Democratic Sens. Ernest F.
i:lollings of South
and
Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New
York Said on ABC's "Issues and Answers" that Congress will not go
along with the latest spending cuts
anyway, partly because moderate
Republicans believe Reagan is
reneging on earlier promises.
. "I think given the kind of fiscal
situation that we face + a budget
that just haa enormous momentum
+ that we never can promise that a
program will not be cut next year or
the year after," StockmaJ\ said.
Hollings and Moynihan aaid the
best way to reduce the deficit is to
have smaller' personal income tax
cuts and to rescind ·some S12 billion

carouna

in new tu breaks for the oil industry.
House Majority Leader James
Wright of Te1as, in a Democratic
reply to Reagan on CBS Saturday
said the president appears "totall~
unaware that the one overriding
cause of those expected deficits is

the enormous ... tax cut on which his
administration insisted."
Economist John Kenneth
Galbraith said the military budget
aiso could be cut more than the $2
billion proposed by Reagan.
Stockman rejected all those
arguments Sunday.

Advisors will remain in country
WASIUNGTON - American military advisers wiU remain in El
Salvador for the "forseeable future" as that country's civiliallmilitary junta continues its war against leftist guerrillas, a Pentagon
spokesman says.
·
U . Col. Jerry Grohowski said 31 norH:ombat U.S. advisers are now
in the Central American country, compared with 56 sent there in March when the Reagan administration vowed to ''draw the line" against
"communist aggression" in El Salvador.
The continued U.S. military presence comes despite a Defense
Department statement last March that the advisers would he brought
home by September. In that statement, however, the Pentagon did
leave open the possibility that "some others might be sent in."

BUDGET TALK - David
Slo&lt;!kman, Director of the Office
of Management and Budget
before his appearance on the CBS
Television

show 'Face tbe
Nation" Sunday In Washington.
1

(AP Laserphoto) .

FAMINE AND FOVS::RTY A~~~
MENACE, DOU6L.E-DtaiT INFLATtGN

AT HOME:

ANDA&amp;~D....

at

e

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Voi.JO,No.116
1981

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pages

Ohio, Monday, September 28, 1981

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

11 die
on Ohio
D ·highways
Priscilla's Pop

By Tbe Associated Press
A tw()-CBr smashup in Lorain
County that killed two teen-agers
was the only multiple-fatality traffic
accident in Ohio over the weekend.
In all, 11 Ohioans died in weekend
accidents, the Highway Patrol aaid.
The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead ,.
SUNDAY
DELAWARE - Ann M. Brake, 77,
of Delaware, in a tw()-CBr collision
on U.S. 23 in Delaware County.
CElJNA - · Laverne E. Alexander, 48, of Kettlersville, a pasaenger,
in a two-car accident on Ohio 29 In
Mercer County.
ELYRIA- Gary Gonzalez, 17, of
Lorain, and Yvette Rodriguez, 15,
addreaa unknown, a passenger in his
car, in a twG-Car accident on lnterstste 90 in Lorain County.
DELAWARE- Craig E. Shelton,
W, of Columbus, a passenger, in a
One-car accident on a Delaware
County road.
SAniRDAY
BATAVIA- Emma K. Carney, 56,
of Wllllamsburg, in a three-car accident on U.S. 50 in Clermont County.
WARREN- Walter B. Hodge, 28,
of Warren, in a one-car accident on a
Trwnbull County road.
CALDWELL - Keith A. Hesson,
22, of Caldwell, a pedestrian struck
(Continued on page 10)

75,000 watch Jagger prance

Ed Sullivan

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. - Leaping, prancing and posturing, Mick
Jagger led the Rolling Stones in a hard-driving rock'n'roll show Sunday as 75,000 fans danced in the rain.
The performance, at Rich Stadium in.this Buffalo suburb, included
songs from the group's latest album, "Tattoo You," as well as songs
that were hits in the 1960s- about the time many in the audience were
born.
First appearing on stage in high, bright-red socks, tight powder-blue
pants and a yellow jacket, lead singer Jagger peeled off the jacket and
drew a cheer when he removed the last of several shirts, despite the
chilly autwnn air.

1 THRILLED THAT
BEEN
INVITED TO THE BACHELORS'
CLUB [71SCU5510N GROUP.'

Ward~n faces petty theft charge

......
...-..... ...
.. - ATLANTA - The warden of the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary was
charged with shoplifting Sunday after a grocery store security guard
aaid be saw him steal a hairbrush, police said.
·
Jack Hanberry was charged with theft by shoplifting, which is a
misdemeanor, said David Yood, Atlanta Pollee Bureau spokesman.
Willie ~dwell, security guard at the southeast Atlanta grocery
store, said be aaw Hanberry pull a packaged hairbrush off a rack, take
It out of ils package and put the brush in his pocket, Yood said. Caldwell said he stopped Hanberry at the door and called the police.
,~

HOW r;;o lrDU
~EEL ABOUT IT.

STUART&lt;'

WELL,

CAN ELIMINATE ·

A e:::::o:;7 BtT CF IT IF WE STUFF UP
TI-lE CRACKS AROUND Tl-IE DOOR
AND WINP'OW$.'

President cracks down on drugs
W¥fliNGTON - President Reagan is calling for a new crackdown
on drug trafficking, an overhaul of federal criminal laws and changes
to make It tougher for some defendants to get out of jail.
Opening a week in which be also faces two key decisions on military
issues, Reagan was to fly to New Orleans today to address the aMual
convention of the International Association of Chiefs of Pollee.
The meeting provided Reagan a forum to respond for the first time
to proposals from a special task force on crime, which issued 64
reconune!ldations last August to battle violent crime.

London stock prices plunge

A 17-year old Wilkesville youth
was arrested Sunday afternQiln and
charged in the Meigs Coliilty
Juvenile Court for stealing gasoline
from a Southern Ohio Coal Company
vehicle parked at the mine office at
Point Rock the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.
Two Southern Ohio Coal Co., e~
ployes caught the subject and
detsined him tintila deputy from the
sheriff's office arrived.
The juvenile wss taken to the
Meigs County Jail and was released
to the custody of his parents pendtng
a bearing at a later date in the Meigs
County Juvenile Court.

Battle lt~aves several dead
' BEIRUT, ~b8non - GuerillaS' firlrig machine guns and rocketpropelled grenades battled official forces In Iran's capital 'Sunday in
street cliaahes that \eft sevenf people dead and dozens wounded, ac-

'

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clasheS absOlutely everywhere lri centril'Te)lr8n,'' aaid
one ·..e.tCient ~hi!cf by tel~hone li)' .The ~'!l ~ here.
"~re Is noposallili1
to know bOw many pecple are IWJO!ved... .
. The aource sail! anti1Jov~nt' ~ &lt; were '.";very well
· C!l'llanlzed. ~Y have formed themselves In commando. groups,
~yle, and lhe)' are 1!ltting With macNf!e 8U1JI and anti;taJ*
roCkets" desert~ !II ish/iuldet-earried, rocket!propelled grenades. ·

way

'

"LET'S GO IN AND SEE WHAT TUC:'\1'1:1•
STUFF THEY BOOOHT AT OUR QAAA

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' ~calli froiil Jieaple olferirig duel ih dl4! ahootlng dfialh cl real
.;• alate deteloper Peter S.wldd,'N- ollhe caul, bowever,llave been

h•••lf•Un~tbejllpt,ui:rime. ' .
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Mlcbael O'Brien, parents ol tbe honoree, DOIIald Allen
O'Brien, and Donald's grandparents, Mn;, William
O'Brien, Columbllli, and Vernon and Frances Cady,
West Jefferson. Mr. and Mn. Cady are former Meigs
County resldeniB.

PARTICIPANTS - CouductiDg an Eagle Scout
ceremllll)' Sunday were these leaders and members ol
Pomeroy Boy &amp;out Troop 2t9. 'lbe hlgbest rank In
scoutiDg was bestowed upo!l Donald ADen O'Brien of
Apple Grove, soa of Mr. and Mrs. Michael O'Brien.
From the left are William Weaver, Middleport, a former scoutmaster of O'Brien in GaUlpolis; Patrick

Woods, who delivered the Eagle charge; Danny WUI,
who served as master of ceremonies and he Is also an
aoslslant scoutmaster of Troop 2t9; Donald Allen
O'Brien, the honoree; Bob Mathews, Point Pleasant,
advancement chairman of the MelgHlallia-Mason
district, and Bob Workman, Pomeroy, scoutmaster of

Wilkesville youth
faces theft charges

LONDON - A two-week slide on the London Stock Exchange turned
into a rout today With stock prices plummeting as trading began and
dealers describing the sell-off as "mass hystei'U!."
The Financial Times ordinary share index of 500 leading issues was
down 23.8 points to 451.1 after the first hour of tnidlitg. The worst oneday ,all in the history of the index was 2t points on March 1, 1974 in the
midst ol a government
crisis. ·
f
•
~r&lt;ikers 88ld.the main cause was fear that interest rates, pushed up
by the Bank ol Engljuld to 14 percent earlier this month, would rise
even fw1her, perhaps as ~gh as19 percent.

CQI'ding to reporta from Tehran.

HIQiqj\ST - Tbe hlgbeaf bonoi'bestowed In Boy •
&amp;outiDg, the rank of Eagle Scout, was conferred upon
Donald Allen O'Brien In ceremonies conducted at
Camp Klashuta near Cbester S~day afternoon. Sbown
at the ceremonies from tbe left are Mr. and Mn;,

I I,

Troop 2t9.

Accident leaves one hurt
A driver was slightly injured in a
two-car accident in Gallia County
Sunday night.
The Gallla-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Helen PJ:untey,
43, Vinton, was southbound on Perry
rwp. Rd. 3il (AdamsviU..Cora
Road) at 7:36p.m. when her vehicle
met another car driven by Barbara
A Edwards, 17, Gallipolis, on a curve..
.
. .The vebidlas collided, causing
811ght damlige to•both. Pnmtey was '
not treated it 'the ICI!ne .for her in·•jury;'ancl'l!:~wucitedforleft
li.centeJ\,
·
The patrol ii1Veatigated aeveral
••
minor acclclents in the l!1'eB
over the weelltlld.
{I\'ooller;a l,ild;James. D. Council,
. D, ~. was northllound on
· Rt. '7·in Melli County at 12:12 a.m.
S8tunW' when the left front wheel of
!1111 veliicle broke oft .. ~ liolted t&lt;Aa turn onto County Rd. 5. ·
~;s vehicle Wll! moderately
.. duqaged, the report said
The~ •Ida vehicle driven by

Thomas A. Miklovitch, 34, Atherui,
was southbound on Meigs County
Rd. 10 at 4 a .m. Sunday when he lost
control, went off the right side of the
road, struck a fence and overturned.
The car was demolished and
Mildovitch escaped without injury.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
Ruth A. Milhoan, 29, Rio Grande,
was eastbound on Gallia County Rd .
46 at 3 p.m. Suild&amp;y when she braked
for an oncomtrig car driven by Eddie
R. Fleming, 33, Bidwell.
Milhoan's car then went left ans
struck the Fleming vehicle, causing
moderate damage to both cars .

According to the report, Mi§ha
D. Oiler, 24, Langsville, was drivin
westbound on Rt. 124 in Meigs
ty at 8:50p.m. Sunday when his ca
struck and killed a deer, causin
slight damage to the car.
·

Check complaints

Tom Westen, Minersville, informed the Meigs County sbeMff's
department Sunday afternoon that
his [980 Datsun four wheel drive
pickup had been stolen.
·
The vehicle was !~ted later in
the day by the Pomeroy Police
Department parked off the flOOd
road. Apparently the vehicle wad
Takes fint place
driven around a gate that blocked
The auxiliary uftit of ,the Meigs
the road off the flOOd ~hpll was
High School' Band, directed by Doug
driv~n over a mound ~ earth .' The
HID, placed first In Its class Satur- vehicle came to rest with the 'frame
day night when the band took pli1 in · on the mow\d, No toOls were m1sa1ng
the annual Jackson Apple Festival
from the truck.
,
,
Parade;
.
A bicycle was found lying along
Making up the auxiliary unit are
t!ie t:O&amp;d al Minersville near wh!!re
the special twirlers, flag corps and
\be truck was stolen. '1'll!l ~i ill
rifle team.
· undl!f investigation. · , I . , !
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�The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
Sen. Goldwater and the new
I am perhaps disqualifi~ from
writing a coiWM to detach myself
from probably my favorite person in
all this world, but I have been
traveling, and everywhere I go I
hear quoted Senator Goldwater's
views on the desirable division betwqeen religion and politics. It was
last week that Senator Goldwater
blasted the New Right, saying " I
don't think what they're talking
about is 'conservatism.' ... The
religious issue of these groups (abor·
tion, school prayer) has little or
nothing to do with conservative or
liberal politics," said the senator.
"One of the great strengths of our
political seystem always has been
our tendency to keep religious issues
in the background."
Here, I think, is where the senator
is mistaken.
"Religious issues" are of two kin·
ds, denominational and universal.
Catholics may argue on and on
whether the clergy should he perrrutted to marry, and J ews on
whether this practice or that
violates kosher standards. These are
probably denominational issues, and
one would not expect the disputants
to take them before Congress
(although suppression of Mormon

bigamy in ,the 19th century was an
interesting exception) ,
But other concerns of religion are
universal in character, Jews - and
Christians - believe in the integrity
of man, and in his derivative
unassallability. Accordingly they
concert to construct a society in
which these beliefs are reflected. If
one's religion teaches that murder is
wrong, its mandate against murder
extends beyond its own flock. It
becomes, then, not only morally
wrong but criminally wrong for a
Christian to murder another
Christian - or for a Christian to
murder a Hindu, or for a Moslem to
murder an atheist.
Now the whole of the movement
toward emancipstion in the 19th century was ultimately grounded in
religious understanding. It isn't that
a non-believer can't come out against slavery. The ethical autonomy of
the skeptics is perfectly capable of
coming up with congruent moral·
civil detenninations. But those who
believed in God and devoted them·
selves to attempting to understand
his Gospels came - however slowly
- to the conclusion that slavery was
incompatible with God's work. John

Letters to the editor
Don't give up!

.,

For goodness sake! Don't give up
too easy. It's either follow President
Reagan over the proverbial moW!·
lain or sink into the valley of doubt
and misery with that disorganized
bunch of socialists headed by Tip
O'Neal.
I got Irish blood in me veins begorry. My great grand-{!addy
helped steely eyed old Dan Morgan
moWJt his white horse at the hattie of
King's Mountain and then they
followed him to victory with nothing
to fight with but their squirrel rifles
and guts. Those mountaineers gave
us a breath of freedom that I can still
smell floating in my nostrils. The
very wind fluttering the leaves and
sometimes howling over the top of
this old house plays the sweet
melody of freedom and the likes of
them won it that day. Those patriots
lived on cold corn pone which they
washed down with their own brand
of fresh stilled mountain dew.
What was tt that fired up those
mountain men' Somebody told them
it was easy to give away public
money because it didn't belong to
anybody. I think you are a lot like
me. You never did like to wear
shoes. Democrat shoes, that •s.
I ain't worried though. Never
worry. Self-&lt;loubt brings on premature old age. Did you note, that
bad English contraction' I learned
that from Teddy Roosevelt. He said
when you want to do something don't
waste time.
There's lots of good news lately.
The air pilots are happier than for
years since the Palco sore heads are
gone. The controllers on the job
don't ball out the pilots for every bat
of the eye now. Getting nd of that
. money hungry bunch of air controllers was the best thing the
President has done. The price of
gasoline has stabilized and the
Arabs have fallen to quarreling
among
themselves
since
deregulation. Did you ever see such
activity in the gas fields' The best
thing yet though is the nice roads we

got here in Meigs County this fall. To
do it though, Jim Rhodes had to
build a fence aroWJd those pesky
Democrats up in Columbus which
were keeping everything out of
Meigs County. Come see. You won't
believe it. I promise you won't have
to play Tarzan and swing in on a
sour grapevine. What's more, down
here in these hills a fellow won't get
the bellyache from eating out of his
own garden. No one is complaining
because somebody is not carrying
quality grub in to them like those
sore-heads marching in Washington.
They ought to take the money they
are wasting and give it to their

" pore."
My Aunty told me to prepare for a
rainy day and I can't remember my
kin ever asking for Government support. Those liberals marching in
Washington are rightly named
liberals. Liberal with everybody
else's stuff but keeping their own
knapsack well filled.
When l ws young my Irish Mam
set me on her knee and told me
stories. There was this little hen who
scratched around and found some
grains of wheat. She asked some of
her new-fangled neighbors who were
always complaining to help her
plant, reap the harvest and then
grind the grain into flour. No I 1 , Not
I!, Not I! they chorused. "It's a
capitalist's trick, I am on WJernployment, where is the overtime, unfair to minorities" and so on were
their reasons. So the litUe hen baked
the bread herself. Then she said,
"Who will help eat this bread?" "We
will," the neighbors rimed. They
claimed they were poor, dissd·
vantaged, discriminated agamst by
tax-sheltered people and being taken
advantage of by greedy rich people
and monster corporations.
So the benevolent litUe hen with
goodness in her heart gave them
some of her sweet smelling loaves
all wrapped up in tinsel.
G. H. Price
Racine

For consolidation
Since I came to live in Meigs County, I have been watching the con. dition of the high schools and the
quality of education the children
receive. While casually discussing
the problem with a few people, I
found there are two main problelllS,
lack of proper funds, and a power
struggle between the members of
the different school boards.
To solve problem " one," my
suggestion would be to have one consolidated high school instead of
three that we have now. My understanding is that Southern and
Eastern district schools are the worst sufferers while Meigs Local is a
bit better off. So why not get the
schools together in one bigger
building in a central location and
:: thereby improve all conditions.
.·
About the second problem, I have
no specific suggestion. If there
really is a power struggle, my
request to the members is to forget
about power and think about the
quality of education for the future
generation.

Today

•
IR

The standard of education judged
in our country is not by a straight
"A" or "A" average in high schools
but by the scores in the "SAT"
(Scholastic Aptitude Test) and the
number of students going to the
universities or colleges to obtain a
bachelor's degree (not dr~uts) .
l have full confidence in the
teachers and the educationists that
if they sincerely wish to educate the
children they can do it if given the
opportunity and a broader choice of
subjects.
Last, but not least, I would like to
mention that by having one consolidated high school this sports
oriented county will certainly have
better football, basketball, and baseball teams; at the same time they
will produce responsible American
citizens, professionals and in·
tellectuals.
At least a high school graduate
will know that Iran and Mghanistan
are not Arab countries.

favorite compulslons of Senator
Goldwater.
Abortion either does or does not
klli human beings, even as Southern
chains did or did not fetter hwnan
beings. The decision that blacks
were hwnan required the last word
in political struggles: a civil war.
The abortion fight will, everyone
hopes, stop short of that. But to say
that it is purely a religious issue, in
the sense that eating fish on Friday
is purely a religious issue, underestimates the obligations of the
moral man to seek an answer to a

question that's troubling him today
as the issue of slavery was yesterday.
I happen to know BG very well,
and when he says, "I'm frankly sick
and tired of the political preachers
across this country· telling me as a
citizen that if I want to be a moral
person I must believe in A, B, C and
D - just who do they think they
are?" the senator is reacting to that
kind of overbearing morill smugness
that often brings out the cantankerous in one. The kind of thing
that brings fQrth "Nuke the Whales"

buttons in young people sick and
tired, to use the sei)Stor's phrase, 11
the rodomontade rl the fashionable
moralists. Every time I see the Rev.
Wllliam Sloane Coffin Jr. I am tempted to pubUcly regret that we didn't
use the atom bomb in South VIetnam. So the morally bombastic set
should take note of the threslwld of
hWnan Irritability, which is" lower
than they suppose. But Senator
Goldwater, God bless him (and this
is a universal, not a denominational
injunction), should cautiously
retreat from the line he has taken.

®ltliii'UIII'~ --~.;~

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tt.£JI,

WAGE RATIO FOR

WOMEN REMAI
UNCHANGEl&gt;e-UJome-n ?aid. s~

~rce~ a~ mu"'
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Somehow, logic was lost in debate
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Somewhere, logic got lost in the
debate over Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor's appointment to the
Supreme Court. She is, after all, a
conservative Republican, her conservative detractors not withstanding.
She takes to the court a conservative's reverence for precedent
and letter-of-the Constitutioninterpretation of the law. Yet conservatives who claim to share that
philosophy were critical of her
nomination, and some remained
skeptical even as they joined in
unanimous Senate confirmation of
the first woman justice.
Single-issue politics - in this case,
the issue was abortion - can distort
a debate that way.
Mter failing to get Mrs. O'Connor's assurance that she would act to
overturn the 1973 Supreme Court
decision legalizing abortion, Sen.
Jesse Helms, R-N.C., said he
assumed she would, and voted for
her.
That is hardly a strict construction
of Justice O'Connor's testimony, She

said she personally opposes abortion
but would not prejudge issues that
might come before her on the court.
Helms noted that President
Reagan opposes abortion and said,
"It is fair to assume, therefore, that
Mrs. O'Connor agrees with his
position on abortion, which is to
overturn the Supreme Court's
decision . ...
"lithe president is mistaken, then
he must confront the fact that his
judgment on this nomination is a
contradiction of aU that he has said
on countless occasions in connection
with the abortion issue," Helms
said.
But no one, including the presidents who appointed them, ever has
been able to tell in advance how a
Supreme Court justice will judge an
issue from the bench. President
Eisenhower appointed Earl Warren,
a moderate Republican politician
who became a liberal, activist chief
justice.
Mrs. O'Connor's philosophy is far
more conservative and presumably
will remain so. But there's no
guarantee. Justices are appointed

for life. And they are not appointed
to do errands for politicians. Issues
come and go far more often than
justices of the Supreme Court.
_."No one, in the approximately 200

years of the court, has been accurately able to predict what a
justice of the Supreme Court would
be like," said Sen. Joseph R. Biden
Jr., 0-Del.

The Daily Sentinel
lllCourtStreet
Pomeroy, Ohio
tl4-ttz..!J51
DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGETT
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PAT WHITEHEAD

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A!lSi IiLII nt Publ boher /Cvnlrulkr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
"News Edllor
A MEMBER of The AsHCiated Preas, lollod Dally Preu An&lt;M:t.tloo aod lbe
Amet1cao New11paper Publi&amp;htn AuoclaUoo.

I.E'ITERS OF OPINION are weleomed. Tbey should be leu tbla . . wo.... loDg. AU
leUen are eubjed to ediUog a-d must bt signed wllb ume, addreu aDd te~phne oumber. No uulped letters wW be pultllabed. Letten 1Hukl be ill 1ood tute, addreulo&amp;
Issues, aot ptnooalltles.

FromAP Wtre .
While some of his big-name counterparts spent much of the day in a
horizontal position, Craig Morton
wa~ staying upright and giving the
San Djego Chargers the tr~atment
they usually dish out.
The 38-year-old quarterback
threw four touchdown passes for the
second week in a row Sunday as the
Denver Broncos raced to a 3f&gt;..() lead
and then coasted to a 42-24 victory
over the previously unbeaten
Chargers. Morton completed a clubrecord 17 of 18 passes for 308 yards
and engineered the Broncos to a
whopping 453 yards in total offense.
Meanwhile, San Diego's National
Football League-leading attack, led
by Dan Fouts, gained 349 yards, but
Denver's Orange Crush defense
sacked him five times and in·
tercepted three of his paSiles.
In fact, Sunday was a rough afternoon for several NFL quarterbacks.
Detroit compiled six sacks in a 160 victory over Super Bowl champion
Oakland and Jim Plunkett; the New
York Jets got their first victory, 3317, over the Houston Oilers with
GETTING HIS KICKS - Cincilmatl Beugals field goal kicker Jim
seven sacks of Ken Stabler (eight
Breech Is lifted into the air by teammate Tom Dinkel after be booted a %8
overall) , and the Minnesota Vikings
yard field goal with five minutes and 2'7 seasons left in sudden death overdumped Green Bay QBs Lynn
time to beat the Buffalo BIIIB %7-%4 in a game Sunday In Cincinnati. (AP
Dickey and David Whitehurst eight
Laserpboto),
times in a 3tf-13 romp.
In other games, Cleveland beat
Atlanta 28-17, Cincinnati outlasted
Buffalo 27-24 in overtime, Pittsburgh
beat New England 27-21 in overtime,
Philadelphia blasted Washington 3613, Miami outscored Baltimore 31%8, Kansas City edged Seattle 2~14 ,
San Francisco shaded New Orleans
21-14, Dallas stopped the New York
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ken An· drives of 94 and 91 yards, hitting
Giants 18-10 and Tampa Bay beat St.
derson, a veteran quarterback scor- Steve Kreider from 16 yards out for
Louis~IO.
ned, showed Sunday why he's not both touchdowns. The second one
Los Angeles visits Chicago
about to retire.
came with just 1:53 to play to give
tonight.
Anderson, fighting for his starting Cincinnati a 24-2llead.
. job just two weeks ago, scuttled one
"The big thing is that we didn't
of the National Football League's quit," said nengals Coach Forrest
most impregnable defenses, passing Gregg. "We beat a good football
for three touchdOWD,'l in the Cin- team. Everything we got, we earcinnati Bengals' 27·24 overtime vic- ned."
tory against the Buffalo Bills. .
Ferguson, who completed 25 of 45
"We knew going in that when he's for 'lK1 yards, hit on four of 10 tosses
hot, he's hot," said Buffalo Coach to move in range for Nick MikeChuck Knox. "He can throw the ball Mayer's 46-yard field goal with one .
PINEHURST, N.C. (AP)- It was
as well as any quarterback in the second remaining to send it into
career high for Morris Hatalsky,
a
NFL, when given time."
overtime.
and
a season-ending low for Jack
It was vintage Anderson . as he
Buffalo took the overtime kickoff
Nicklaus
and Ray Floyd.
directed two long touchdown drives and marched to the Cincinnati 39"Who
would have thought,"
in the fourth quarter after Buffalo, yard line, punting after losing a yard
Hatalsky
shouted,
"that a skinny litleadi,ng. 21-10, threatened to put the on third down aild two. The Bengals
tle
Jewish
boy
from
San Diego would
game away.
did the rest.
win
the
golf
tournament?"
Anderson, benched earUer this
Breech, who bad made just four of
His front-running, two-stroke vic·
season and often booed lustily, later eight field goal attempts before Suntory
- his first on the tour after five
connected on four of five passes to day, said he talked to Bengals
years of frustration - in the
long
set up Jim Breech's winning 28-yard linebacker Tom Dinkel to relax
Fame Classic left Hatalsky,
Hall
of
field goal with 5:27 left in the over- during a Buffalo timeout before his
29,
counting
up the things that will
time period.
game-winning kick.
be,
while
Nicklaus
and Floyd had
All counted, the 32-year-old An·
"I told him they were cutting into
time
to
consider
what
might have
derson completed 28 of 40 passes for our drinking time, we'd have to take
been.
:J%8 yards without an interception, care of it," Breech joked.
"This is all of it," said Hatalsky.
The victory put Cincinnati, 3-1,
the most yards passing against Buf·
Hatalsky led by at least two shots
falo since 1979. The Bengals alone atop the AFC Central Division
all
the way and won it by that
amassed 429 yards agaiust the third while Buffalo fell to 2-2 with its
margin
with a 275 total, if-under-par
ranked defense in the AFC.
second consecutive loss.
on
the
famed
No. 2 course at the
"I didn't think anybody could
Pinehurst
CoWJtry
Club. He started
us \lie way they
move the ball
Oldo Hilh Sehool Foolball
counting
off
the
pluses.
By The Alaocllited Prall
did," said Bllls nose tackle Fred
Ansonia 28, Miaaissinawa Val. 0
"Most of all, there's no more
Smerlas. "They played good as
Austintown-Fitch 20, Young. Ursuline 6
said Hatalsky, who had
qualifying,"
much as we played bad."
Ayersville 20, Antwerp 14
Bellaire St. John 30, Buckeye S . 12
trauma
of the Monday
faced
the
Both teams m.oved the ball well in
Bowling Green 13, Sylvania SOuthview 8
morning
qualifying
rounds
the first half, with Buffalo asswning
Buclceye W. 11, C&lt;&gt;ootton Val. 14
Canton
Central
Cath..
18,
canton
Timken
throughout
his
career.
a 14-10 halftime lead. Ferguson 7
"And I get to play in the Masters.
tossed a 9-yard TD pass to .Frank
canton McKinley 28, LouiBvllle o
Chardon
1,
Rictvnond
Ht.l.
8
And I get to play in the Tournament
Lewis and a 4-yarder to tight end
Cin. Wyoming II, Cin. McN1cholas e
of Champions back near my
. Mark Brammer, sandwiched betCleve. Hawken 6, E. Palestine 0
Cleve. Holy Name 7, Mentor lAke Cath.
hometown, San Diego.
ween Anderson's 13-yard touchdown
2
"I guess all the work and faith
.pas., to Cris Collinsworth and
aeve. Kermedy 20, AUlanee 6
RM®a
lt, Cleve. Uncoln-Wnt 7
finally
paid off. This is very nice,
• Breech's 23-yard field goal.
Sl. lgnaUus 31, Padua 3
very,
very
sweet.
·
Buffalo seemed to have things well
St. JOoepb rl, Barberton II
Trinlt)
!13,
I.&lt;raln
C.lh.
0
"What
a
great world it is!"
.,, · in hand when Ferguson tossed his
Univenity 3!, Gibnour 0
Nicklsus
and Floyd were not quite
third TD pass of the game and loth
24, , Tiffin calvert lt
(!llch.)
Rlco
18,
To1.
Bowoher
so
pleased,
however,
· · of the season; a 5-yarder to Lewis
Nicklaus, who had hoped to break
just 11 seconds Into !he fourth quar- ·
CIOIIeiaJld Sbaw 15.._ VaUey Por1e 7 ·
freD
20,
ueve.
Eut
e
a
year-long
winless string in his final
,. ter~
--· .
Albtohula Etfcowood e
But
iAcllltmOOI 0
stsrt of the season, took himself out

One of this city's most outspoken
proponents of a strong military
establishment, Benjamin F. &amp;hemmer, editor of the Armed Fqrces
Journal, recounts the sorry story of
the Icelandic airport in a recent
issue of that magazine.
Shortly after Jimmy Carter was
sworn in as president, he rejected a
Defense Department request to
build, at a cost of $6.5 million, a new
civilian air terrninsl at Keflavik so
Icelandic Airlines' passengers
would no longer have to use the U. S.
Navy's small and somewhat dingy
tenninal building.
lf Iceland wanted a new tenninal
for its airline, Carter/reasoned, that
country was certainly free to construct such a facility. If not, what
was good enough for the U. S. Navy
ought to be good enough for the
airline's passengers.
Less than a year later, Defense
Secretary Harold Brown renewed
the request - but the cost had
almost doubled, to $11.5 mllllon.
Again, carter turned down the

proposal.
A third request, carrying a price
.tag of $23 mllllon, also was rejected

by the White House. But in the final
months of his presidency, Carter
succumbed to Pentagon harrassment and approved the scheme - at
a price of almost $40 million.
The cost of operating the Pentagon's dining room represents a
very trivial portion of the Defense
Department's budget but it
typifies the military establishment's
penchantforextravagantspending.
The average price paid by diners
is $2.87 per lunch - but the dining
room is so heavily overstaffed and
inefficiently operated that each
meal must be subsidized with $12.06
in public fWlds, according to Rep.
Les Aspin, 0-Wis.
In other words, the average IWlch
costs $14.93 but those who consume
the food pay less than 20 per:cent
while the taxpayers pick up the tab
for more than 80 peJ;Cent:
In the fiscal yeai' about to begin,
the Defense Department is expected
to purchase more than $100 Qillion ·
worth of goods and services from in·
dividuals and compal)ies outside the
government .under a C!IJllbersome,
outdated procurement program that .
discourages competition and enCO\II"ages waste.

The department's various components have compiled more '·than
30,000 pages of procurement
regulations that, according to the
Congressional" Budget Office, "add
20 percent to 100 percent to the cost
of goods for Uttle or no gain in ef·

fectiveness."
Major weapons systems continue
to produce massive . cost overruns.
The General Accounting Office
notes, for example, that the Army's
M·l tank was estimated to cost
slightly more than $500,000 in 1972
but now is priced at $2.8 million.
Although those serving on active
duty in the anned forces remaill
generally underpaid, military pension progran\s have become a
national scandal. The 1.2 million
·men ant;l )Nomen wbo retired after
serving at least ;10 years , on .active
duty will receive'aPo,u't"$13 billion
. worth of pensions this year. " '
Reagan could perfonn a major
public service by · aPplying to the
military budget the smile standards

of ruthless econOrnlzing,he ~yed

lfhen dealing with dlmeltic social .
,'J1l'081'81iltt- bit he apjJerenily ts unwiiJlng to do so. 1

"This is one of the best games I've
ever played," said Morton. "We had
a couple of long drives, and we were
lucky enough to get a couple of
breaks. You lu!ve to be happy any
time you score 42 points on San
Diego."
" Craig did a good job, and he also
had great protection," said Denver
Coach Dan Reeves. "If you give him
enough time, he can do a super job."
While Reeves was pleased with the
protection given Morton , who is not
known for his mobility, San Diego
Cbach Don Coryell said the Denver
defense "played very, very well . I
have the utmost respect for (Denver
defensive coordinator) Joe Collier."
Morton threw "I:D passes of 93 and
21 yards to wide receiver Steve Watson, a 19-yarder to tight end Riley
OdolllS and a 2-yarder to reserve
tight end Jim Wright. When Morton
left the game with 8:52 left in the
third quarter, the Broncos had a 35-0
lead.
Fouts then came alive and flipped
two touchdown passes to John Cappelletti and scored another TD him·
sell.
The victories by Denver and Kansas City left them tied with San
Diego in the AFC West, all with 3-1
records.
Uons II, Raiders 0
Oakland was shut out for the first
time since 1966 and Detroit got three
field goals from Eddie Murray and a
key turnover on a kickoff.
Murray gave the Lions a IHI lead
with a 39-yard field goal with 7:21
left In the game and Luther Bradley
recovered a fumble on Oakland's 3
on the ensuing kickoff . On the first
play , Billy SilllS clinched the victory
with a 3-yard TD.
The Lions' Silver Rush defense, in
addition to its six sacks for 57 yards,
held the defending champion

of it almost immediately. From a
position five shots back and very
much in the hunt, he bogeyed two of
the first three holes, played the front
in 40 and finished with a 75 that left
him at 284. It marked only the
second time in his career that he'd
gone through the season without a
title.
The deeply frustrated Floyd, who
had hoped to make some important
gains on absent rivals in the chase
for leading money-winner and
Player of the Year honors, fell short
of his goals, too.
Floyd had a fourth consecutive
round of 70 and, with a 280 total, tied
for eighth. His check of $7,250 left
him short of the leading Tom Kite,
who did not play here. Floyd finished
his American season - he said he
has foreign commitments for the
rest, of
year - towith
at least
Kite,
whothe
is expected
play$354,926.
one or two more tournaments, still
leads with $355,724.
Hatalsky's check of $45,000 from
the total purse of $250,1100 pushed his
season's earnings to $71 ,186, by far
his best on the tour.
Jerry Pate and D.A. Weibring tied
for second at 277. Pate, troubled by a
stomach ailment, had a closing 72
and Weibrlng shot 70.
Keith Fergus was next at 68-278
with Bobby Wadkins, Ed Sneed and
Mike Reid at 279. Wadkins and
Sneed closed up with 67s in the
wann, sunny weather, and Reid shot
69.

'

•

Raiders to 131 total yards.
"I thought it was an outstanding
defensive performance and the
players and coaches deserve a lot of
credit," said Detroit Coach Monte
Oark. " We had as good a ·special
tealllS performance as I've ever
seen here or anywhere. And we did it
against the world champions, which
makes it all the more meaningful."
Jets 33, Oilers 17
New York won its first game as
Richard Todd completed 25 of 39
passes for 312 yards and three touchdowns, while Stabler spent a
frustrating day on the Shea Stadium
turf.
Todd hit Wesley Walker on 28 and
3if-yard TD passes, the second on a
nea flicker, and Kevin Long scored
on two short runs.
The Jets had a darker side to the
victory - 15 penalties for 116 yards.
Vikings 30 Packers 13
TOnuny Kramer threw two touchdown passes and the Minnesota
defense recovered two fumbles in
addition to the eight sacks of Dickey
and Whitehurst.
The Packers took a 1()..() lead, but
the Vikings scored 20 points in the
second quarter, highlighted by Randy Holloway's 45-yard run for a
touchdown with a fumble recoverv.
Steelers 27, Palriols 21
In the day's other overtime game,
Terry Bradshaw threw a 24-yard
scoring pass to Lynn Swann 3:19 af·
ter regulation time ended.
Winless New England tied the
score at 21 with 24 seconds left when
Matt Cavanaugh threw a 12-yard
touchdown pass to Stanley Morean.
Browns 26, Falcons 17
Cleveland knocked Atlanta from
the unbeaten ranks as Brian Sipe
ran for a touchdown and passed for

The Uuily Scniincl
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two more in the first hall to erase a,
1()..() deficit.
Sipe hit 21 of 34 passes for 215 yal'ds while Mike Pruitt rushed for 98
yards and two touchdowns.
Dolphlus 31, Colts %8
Baltimore outgained Miami 514
yards to 4%8, but the Dolphins improved their record to ~ when Uwe
von Schamann kicked a 28-yard field
goal with 1:02 remaining .
David Woodley passed for two
touchdowns and rookie Andra
Franklin ran for two more for the
Dolphins.
Bert Jones, booed before the game
by the hometown fans, turned the
jeers to cheers with 357 yards
passing and three TD tosses.

'

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B. G.

history• • •

•

•

Hatalsky takes
golf tournament

oo

How to save defense dollars&gt;J___R_ob_ert_W._a_lte_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) If
President Reagan is willing to supplant his symbolic gestures toward
reducing .wasteful military spending
with a serious budget-cutting campaign, he'll discover hundreds of opportWJities to save money.
Even the Republican chairman of
the Senate Budget Committee, Sen.
Pete V. Domenici of New Mexico,
has rejected as inadequate the
president's virtually meaningless
initial proposal to trim $13 b111ion
from the Defense Department
budget during the next three fiscal
years.
Reagan's own Office of
Management and Budget, the
Congressional Budget Office, the
General Accounting Office, scores of
members of Congress and a host of
other authorities can identify for the
president areas where countless
billions of dollars' worth of additional reductions can be made.
From the airport at Keflavik,
Iceland, to the Pentagon's executive
dining room, the Defense Department's far-flung operations are
replete with examples of ill·
conceived, ineffective, overpriced
and Wljustified programs.

..

Anderson leads
•
•
overtzme wzn

"Still life with disparity"

•

post zmpresszve vzctorzes

right~.-______
Wi_illUJ_·m_F._._Buc_k_ley_
· J_r.

•

sub...Tibers oot deairing to PlY the carrier
tnl)' remit In adv~ c1irect tu the O.Uy
Sent!nel t11n a J, • ur 11 munlh bui1. Credit
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Syracuse

Today is Monday, Sept. 211, the 27lst day of 1981. There are 94 days left.
intheyear.
.
Today's highlight In hlatory:
On Seplember_ 211, 1924, two U.S. Anny planes landed In SeatUe, Wash.,
comJ)letlng the first round-the-world fngtit.
.
On this date:
.
In 19110, Indonesia was admitted to the tlnited
. Nations.

{

Brown, swinging on a sour apple
tree, may (like Nat Turner) have
profoundly misjudged what methods
the Bible enjoins, or tolerates. But
he was moved by the Bible and gave
his life in pursuit of his vision.
There has seldom been an age in
which "the religious issue" has been
more pointedly directed at social
policy. When Senator Goldwater in
1964 courageously voted against the
civil rights bill he did so profoundly
believing that sections of it were unconstitutional in that the bill gave to
the government powers reserved under the Ninth and loth Amendments
for the state and for the people. But
the denunciations of Senator Gold·
water were sharpest from men of
the cloth, notably the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr., who in his exhortations to racial equality relied
primarily, even as Abraham Lincoln
had done, on the word of God.
Now what is an American citizen
to do when confronted, as he was 20
years ago, with a Supreme Court
that forbids prayer in the public
schools notwithstanding that the
prayer in question had previously
been approved by Protestant,
Catholic and Jewish leaders? This
affront - defended by liberals, opposed by conservatives - on the
liberty of the people to inject the
presence of religion in the schoolroom isn't the kind of issue we're
supposed to leave to God to settle.
The rebuke of the Supreme Court
for its arrogation of power, and its
distortion of the First Amendment,
is something that only the people,
acting through Congress and if
necessary through a constitutional
amendment, can handle. And the
need occasionally to discipline the
Supreme Court used to be one of the

Denver, Cleveland, Eagles

Page-2-The' DaUy Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 28, 1981

. NuKUblk.'flpti~ by. rnaiJ penni\ted In towN!

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'

�· - Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Ricbard Dugan
135pound
Junior back

Terry Patterson
188pound
Junior back

Sutton two hits Dodgers
By Assoclaled Pre8s
After watching Nolan Ryan pitch a
n()-hitter on Saturday, Don Sutton
said he was "stupid enough to think
about back·t()-back n()-hitters."
For a while there Sunday, it
almost happened.
Sutton held Los Angeles hitless for
six innings before finishing with a
more-than-respectable tw()-hitter as
the Houston Astros defeated the
Dodgers 4-1.
" I felt strong and under complete
control and I probably had the best
fastball of the year," Sutton said. " It
felt quick and alive."
Asked if the enthusiasm of the
near-capa city cro wd at the
Astrodome helped him, Sutton
replied, " No, they probably made
me make a stupid pitch to (Steve)
Sax. 1 thought I was quicker than I
was.

.

Sax homered in the ninth inning
for the only Dodger run and their
second hit Ken Landreaux had
singled leading off the seventh to
break Sutton's n()-hit spell and snap
a hitless Dodger drought that lasted
161-3 innings .
Sutton, 1H, said he should have
known better than to offer Sax a fastball , but was still thinking about a
n()-hitter.
"I even thought about it last night
and when I came to the park today."
Sutton said. "Then, when things
started off nght. I thought maybe
this would be my day."
Ryan's :;.o n()-hitter Saturday, incidentally. was a record fifth for his
career , breaking a tie with Sandy
Koufax .
Elsewhere in the National League,
Cincinnati beat Atlanta 4-2; New
York edged Montreal 2·1; St. Louis
Pittsburgh
7-5 ;
ou t scored
Philadelphia beat Chicago :&gt;-2 in the
opener of a doubleheader before
Iosmg the second game 1-HI, and San
Franctsco stopped San Diego 7-3 .
Sutton struck out nine, while pitching his ninth career tw()-hitter.
The vtctory allowed the Astros to
maintain their It-game lead over
Cincinnati in the NL West
Mets 2 Expos I
Rusty Staub and Ellis Valentine
hit run-scoring doubles and Mike
Scott tossed a three-hitter over six
innings to help New York stop Mon·
treal 's seven-game winning streak.

The defeat , combined with the
Cardinals' victory, cut the Expos'
first place margin to II'.! games in
the NLEast
Scott, !&gt;-10, left the game with
tightness in his right elbow in the
seventh. He was replaced by Neil
Alien. who gave up a run-scoring
bouncer in the ninth to Terry Franrona before gaining his 18th save.
The Mets took a I~ lead against
Steve Rogers, 11-11, in the second
when Dave Kingman tripled and
scored on Staub's double. Rogers
allowed the Mets' second run in the
seventh when Lee Mazzilli singled,
took second on Alex Trevino's
sacrifice bunt and scored on Vaien·
tine's double.
Cardinals 7, Pirates 5
Tommy Herr broke out of a 1-for21 slump will, a bases-loaded triple
in the fourth inning, leading St.
Louis over Pittsburgh. The loss of·
ficialiy eliminated Pittsburgh from
the second-baH title race in the NL

East
Herr's triple , one of only two C..rdinal hits off Pascual Perez, 2·7,
followed two walks and an error.
Herr then stole home, capping a
four-run uprising in support of pit·
cher Dave LaP-oint, making his first
NL start. Bruce Sutter gained his
25th save for the Cardinals.
Dave Parker hit a three-run
homer for Pittsburgh in the sixth
and a tw()-run double in the eighth.
Pbllllet~ !HI Cubs Z.14
Bake McBride slugged a three-run
homer and a double and Steve
Carlton pitched a six-hitter as
Philadelphia beat Chicago in the first game of their doubleheader.
Carlton. 13-4, struck out 11 and tur·
ned in his loth complete game of the
season while surrending solo homers
to rookie Ty Waller and Bill
Buckner.
Pat Tabler blasted a three-run
homer and Ty Waller's bases-loaded
triple keyed a seven·run fourth inning to lead the Cubs to victory in the
second game. Buckner had two
homers for the Cubs in the second
game, giving him 10 for the season.
Giant. 7, Padres 3
Jack Clark homered and pitcher
Doyle Alexander stroked a three-run
double to key a six-run fourth inning
as San Francisco beat San Diego.
Alexander, 11}-7, scattered 10 hits in

62-3 innings to help the Padres con·
elude their 1981 home season with a
five-game losing streak.
The game was tied 1-1 when the
Giants staged their fourth-inning
rally, sending 11 IT'en to the plate
against Chris Welsh, f&gt;.7, and
reliever Dan Boone.

13)" Tht' Anuclated Pres•

EAST
Army lJ, Brown 17

Ca lifornia , Pa . 16, Shppery R"'.' k 0
Colgate 34, Cornell 10
Delaw11re 61 , Print.'elon 8

W L

19
"'
..

.565

1

Baltimore

24
24

!I

.533

!I;

2!

!3

24

.522
.4119

3
...

.465

5~

x-New York
Cleveland
Toronto

"'
WF.';T
25
!3
!3

Kansas Ci ty
1-0ak!and
Minnesota
Seattle
Tex.a.s
Chicago
california

!1
19
"'
17

Michigan 21, Navy lfi
Michigan St. 10, Bowling Green 7
Minne!Ota 42, Oregon St. 12
MiMOUri :54, LouisVIlle 3
N. t1llnois 40. UUnois St. 1

.41Ji
.3116

Otllo St. 'U, Stanford 19
San Jose St. Z7, caurornta 24

SOuthern C&amp;J 21, Oklahoma 24

Washington 17, Oregon 3
Washington St. 24, Arizona St. 21

:;~,&lt;:z

7

SOCCER
merger ,lf the
Oallu Tornado.
At-eepted the voluntary tenniiLIItioo n~
tires JlTOVided by the Atlanta Chiefs, Cah·
fomia Surf and Washington Diplomats.

SeatUe 4, Kansas City 2
Suaday'• Game~
Detroit 2. Milwallkee 1
Cleveland 8, Boston 7. 11 innings
Ne"'' York :;, &amp;!timon:! 2

Minne!lota 5, Texas 2
Kansas Clty 1~. Seattle 3
Chlca!olo 9-10, Oakland &amp;-3,
Toronto 4, California 3
Muaday'• G•mn
City

rLeoruml

11·11l

(Havens ~ l
New York ( Reuschel 4--2J
1Brennan 1..0 1 In )

at

Min-

n~ota

at Cleveland

Baltimore /Palmer HI at Detroit
puzzello H I l nl
Bostm ITttllantt 3-41
ton

~l

tn)

&lt;~1

C Ca~

Milwauk~

ISlB·

Tex:as !Honeyc:utt 10-91 at Seattle

CAb-

0

TODAV'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BA TI1NG 12G5 ol bolo I, Lanstord. B"'·
ton, .3311; 2hk, SeatU!!, .326; Pllciorek,
Seattle, .326; Gibson, Detroit, .325; Henderson, Oakland, .324.
RUNS : HeRderson, Oakland, 116; Evans,
BostDn, 79; Cooper, Milwaukee, 69; Harrah, Cleveland. 13; Lansford, Boston, Gl .
RBI : Arma s, Oakland. 71; ()glivle, Milwa.Llkee, 19;
Murray , Baltimore, 68;
Evans, Boston, 87; Winfield , New York,
s;,
HITS : Hender~o n, Oakland, 131 : Lan·
sfonl, Boston, 130; OKiper, Milwauk«.
126; Oliver, Texu. 126; PaciDrek, Seattle,

California I Whitt 6-91 at
8-7) In 1
Only ~arnt!!i

Chica~

Kcmsa.!l City st Mimlf!!:lota
Toronto sl Oakland
California at Chicago, 2 (n 1

Eooiys..dllylollud

&amp;wllo&amp;Leaflv•

New York at CleveLand r n)
Ba ltimore at Detroit lnl
Boston at Milwaukee lnl
TcxH s at Seatlil! fn)

T~m

NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST
W L

Montreal
).(luis
Chit:ago

"'
21

21
!1
21
II
WEST

!3

x-Philadelphill
New York

Pitlsburl(11
Houston

16

28

l7

GR

565

.533
.477
.WI
.457
391

24
25
31

l'l

Ange le:~

Poiotll
2:0

18

Roach'sGunShop

14

Royal Crown

12
6

Friendly Tavern

Pel

&gt;;
24

St.

Sept 13, 1181
Stalllllq

66Powell'aSuperValu
Jaym~r Coal Co.

652
.fi22
.&gt;78

.S22
.467

m

JJ,I,

4

41;
'

a

G. and J. Auto Parta
2
~Ugh series men- Bob Hedrlcks D · Bob He~

sley 493; Bill C..nwell491 .
'
High series 111r0men - Marlene Wilaon 511 ·
Helen Pbelpo!04; ~Uy Wh1Ual&lt;h417.
'
Hiah game men - BW CarswtU Z21; Brian

11,;
31;
G
I I&gt;
11 ~

rain

0

Philidelphla :MI, Chicago 2·14

:~~3~~~:i.~. . )~)~ :~~~=~
\M~~~~~~~)nderson

Nl

a\

San Diego ( Elclielberger ~7)
Lon rKnewer t-4) (n)

T..,.

---Glerles
llepl. II, 1•1

14

No.~

10
8

4

Simmons Olds, Cadillac
and C'hrvrolet
2
Hblh tn4. game- Louise Eado IIIIi, 18\1 : June
Llnibett I 75.
,
Hblh Ind. lhree-tlomes - LoWae Eada 141;

tAsr cHANcl. ,a.,a

Sl. l.oo~

at Hous-

'·

1

- ··{ t

'··'

~l(c

• .. ·~

1

•

1.' •

·

·

• • .,

,

•

·~· ;· \ '!,
rt~
r 1'
1

··

\

SUMMER 'fiLL•UP' 'SPECIAL -,'
.~~ ~.• ·,1 .
~

&amp;•

.\

.

•

,

'

,

BElt 1 &amp;.2 .FUEL. 'Oil
S1 14 gai. N9: f . FuEt·v•~o::\:jl- 1
;

'

' '

'

.:,'n~~·~~~:.~i·'~itrt

'

'

'

t'

•

~AL l}OARD MEETING
oftMeigs·County Cancer Society
· M~y
a p.m. In east-west
dlni!ll r~om ~t Veterans
'MeJnorlal HOIIJll~. . Public in- ,
vl~ to attend.
·

at

Allergy &amp; Dermatology Patients by Appoinhrient·Only.
Mon~av·Friday 12:30 l!.'m; to4:aO,'p,m. ',
Sor('y Closed S.unda · · · ;: ·' ·"; '.
Medicare, Medi,c a
Accepted.
· Will Make
' ·

riP;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~ii~~iii
' •' -h

'

New Hours Now in Eff~cf · ·
Monday-Friday, 9 am. to lO p.m.
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

1)

Max's Inc.

Meigs

served at the meeting of the
Harrisonville OES Monday, Sept.
28, at 7:30p.m. Members are to
brlilg Sllndwtches and jello salad.

2124 JacbonAve.

PuiDlB

No. I
C. and D. Pelli'I!Oll

FromAPWlre
fifth, 4'f.. games out.
Uing each other this week.
,
"We haven't quit all year and
The Tigers moved out front by
On Sunday, Jorge Ort!l doubled,
we're not going to quit now."
edging Milwaukee 2-1 Sunday. In and scored on a double by Bo Diaz it) .
That was Boston's Carl Yastr- other AL East games, Cleveland nip- the 11th Inning as the Ji'kiJaq(
zemski's promise, but it probably ped Boston ll-71n lllnnings and New squeezed by Boston. The IIICilanS '
was offered with variations in at ,York stopped Baltimore :&gt;-2.
pull~ out the victory lifter ~
·
)east five American League East
In the AL West, Minnesota Sol batUed back from
flv'e•riut"
dressing rooms Sunday.
defeated Texas :&gt;-2, Kansas City deficit, knotting the ~re 7·7
As baseball enten:its final week of shelled SeatUe IW and Chicago took Dwight Evans' tw!Miu~. two·nil't:C'
this unique seuon, Detroit leads the a doubleheader from Oakland, 9-li ninth-Inning homer.
AL East, Mllnukee ts In aecond ~y and 1~. 1'oroJ1to slipped by CallforOrta had a solo homer !Jl\1;11\i_lfirid~ l•l\
one-half game; Bostoo ts third, one , nia 4-3 In an lnterdivlslCIIal clash..
Inning, while Bctllton~a
game belilnd; BaltimOre is thlrd, 2'&gt;io
With an almoet perfec( IICrlpt, the . aiammed ':~18~th: ~home;:=J::~~~
back; New York is fourth, three exciting second - - eDdlng finila year In the
.
games off the pace, ¥Jd Cleveland is the top six teami ln,the :AL Eait'bst·

a.

HARRISONVILlE -

FAMILY
6 7 5-69~7~j~~-~.,:;:1~:U.aa

l'ameroy IJowllq Luet

San Franclaco (Griffin a.8) at Cincln-

lllltl (Pastore ..._,, (n)

992-2668

'

Hblh teom·pme- No. 1,114,1111; C. and D.
l'l!nnloll'ID.
lfi&amp;hlnm--No. l23\ll;C. andD.
l'ennloll2221; No. fZIII\.

Chicaji!o !Griffin 2-4 and Martz $-&amp;) •t
PitLsburgll (Bibby
6-3 •nd Rhoden 8-4) , 2
MHUysGuaH

Pomeroy

County Friend's Night will be ob-

June Lambtrt4111iiaon Mcllnlalt. Pat454.

San Franci:sco 7, San Diego 3
HOWiton 4, l.os An~eles 1

215 W. Main

_.Hiflh pmc women - M.rlent Wilson 230·

No. 3

ppd,

HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star, will
hOst Friend's Night and a rece~&gt;­
tion for Chester King, grand
page, on Monday at 7:30p.m. at
the Harrisonville Masonic Temple. A program will be presented ·
by the chapters of Meigs County.
All Eastern Star members are invited to attend.

.

Hanillton :m; Terry Sendenabel:tiiO.

stephanie Barnett .
_ ,; Helen Phelps lt7.

-

DALE·
. . HILL
, ..
JRACTORS

Ohio University has asswned sole
control of the Mid-American Conference football lead by winning
twice at ~orne, but now the Bobcats
take their show on the road to Toledo
Saturday ni~'lt.
And Ohio Coach Brian Burke
realizes his fine-passing team must
muster some ground support if the
Bobcats are to push their league
record to 3-0. They managed just 105
yards rushing in a 36-27 victory
Saturday over Ball State.

Local bowling

Tueaday'- Game~~

UONS CLUB will observe
ladies night Monday at 6:30p.m.
at the Meigs Inn.

OU takes lead

!Trout

~heduled

REVIVAL now In progress
through Oct. 2 at Bradford Church of Christ with Ray Russell as
evangelist. Rick Gilbert is the
minister. Get-acquainted night
Monday and Thursday youth
night. Services at 7 p.m.

HOLDING HIS OWN - Pblladelphla Pblllles' Pete Rose holds b1s
helmet wblie being forced at second as Cblcsgo Cuba' Pat Tabler goes to
first to pick oH Pblllies' Gary Matthews ,to complete tbe third innlng
double play Sunday in Chicago. Cblcago won the aecoad game of the
double-header,lf-0. (AP Laserpboto).

bot! 4--71 tnl

Tigers maintain lead in AL East

'. '

Monday

l!!i.

DRJ!:I!S.A·DOIL OR DESIGN-A-TOY- JOIUUie Williams and Jobn
Kanelllla are eo-clullrmeD for tbe Fumen Balik and Savings Co. an1111111 proJeet of prowtdiJig dolls and toys for needy YOIIIIlllters. The toy ldtll
aud tbe dol to be coatumed are avaBable at the bauk and can be picked up
any Ume. 'Jbe flDlsbed products will be judged and bonda awarded to the
winDers.
·

club will be Carpenter, Bolin and
Birchfield. The club will assist Bot.
Thomas, demonstrator.
Joan Fetty reported on donations
fo~ the picnic table for the park. It
was noted that the Gardeners Day
Out was a success. Attending from
the club were Bolin, Snowden,
Davis, Birchfield and Willford.
Arrangements using the theme
"Bringing the Outdoors In" are to be
brought by Birchfield, Bishop, Edwards and Stewart. Display
arrangements on "School Days"
were Willford, Joan Fetty and Car·
penter.
Bishop presented the program on
pinecone use, displaying several
things she had made. Fetty presided
at the meeting.

April Lynn Hudson, seven-yearold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bryant
Hudson, Albany, was awarded first
place In special beginner Miss
Belpre Marjorette Queen in a recent
competition held at Belpre. .
She also won third place In fancy
best appearing and fifth place In
baton solo at the same competition.
Throughout the year she has competed In competitions and several
parades in both Ohio 11nd West
Virginia winnln 12 trophies and over
20medals.
She is a member of the Riggs
Rangerettes Baton Corps directed
by Mrs. Judy Riggs. The Rangerettes have participated in several
parades this year taking first place
In Gallipolis on July 4, and at Pennsboro, and second place at the Parade
of the Hills in Nelsonville. they
recently performed In Huntington,
W. Va. and Saturday night will be
the Apple Festival in Jackson.

Social
-Calendar

North Amerkaa Soccer Leape

NASL-Annowu~
the
Tampa Ba)' Rcwdles and

Sundlly'•Games

Hawaii 21, Idaho 6
Nev.·Las Vegas 32, Lont~ Beach St. 31
New Mex.lco 'll, Air Force 10

NEW
YORK
METS-Suspendetl
Ron
Hodge:~, catcher, and Oyar M!Uer, Jlil.cher. without pay for three days.

Oakland 5, Chicago l
New York 6, Baltimore 4

KaJl!!l.lts

Waived Ter-

BASEBALL
NaltOIIII Lellgur

Calilomi.l:l 6, Toruntu 3

Houston 5, Loo

FARWOT

FOOTBALL

21;
•
'

_

Hudson
awarded

Committees appointed Include
Charlotte Willford, program; Suzy
Carpenter, publicity; Lois Walker
and Carpenter, publicity book;
Margie Davis, tours; Janet Bolin,
finance; Willford, sunshine; Joan
Stew.a rl and Margaret Johnson,

NadoDII FtoO.II Lope

SEAITI..E SEAHAWKS ry Miller, running back.

telephone; Birchfield and Carpenter, civic; Davis and Judy
Snowden, open meeting.
The Meigs County Garden Club
Association meeting held this week
was reported on at the meeting and
Bolin distributed schedules for the
Christmas flower show, Nov. 28 and
29. Club members to make
arrangements are Joan Fetty, Bolin,
Bishop,Snowden, Carpenter, Johnson, Davis and Stewart. There are
also claases for children, it was
noted. A donation of $1 per member
was made for show expenses.
The Region 11 meeting to be held
at Eastern High School on Oct. 31
was announced. Delegates from the

Program.

WedleDd Sporte TnDII~t:doDII

I

Cincmnati 2. AtlanLI 0

W. TcKas St. 3:1, Teus-Arlin!{lon 31

Wastlinl((on 17, Pacific, Ore.

~

x-F'irst-h.alf division winner
Saturday's C.IDell
Minnesota 7, Texas 3
Cleveland 7, Boston 5
Milwaukee &lt;1 , Detroit J

St.Louis 5, PiU.Sbur~h 3
Phii&lt;Jdelphia at Chicago,

Texas A&amp;M 43, Louisian.a Tech 7

San Franciscu 11l Cincinnati ( n I
Montreal at St.Loui! (n)
San Diego at Houston (n1

-

.4119
.457
.432

New York 2, Montreal 1
Cincinnati 4, Atlant. 2
St.Louis 7, Pitlsburgh '

Cent.

Miami, Ohio 18, E . Michigan 12

.543
.523

!1
24
25
25
'll
'l1

San Diego St. 23, Oklahoma St. 16
S. IUinoU 36, Tuba 34
Southern Meth. 20, Tent5 Christian 9
SW Tens St. 24, Lamar 7
Texas 14, Miami. Fla. 7

Iowa 20, UCLA 7

Iowa St. Z8, Kent St. It
Kal\88.!1 21, Kentucky t&amp;

!3
!\

San Francisco 6, San Diego :;

Arilooa 37, Fullerton St. 16
Brigham Young 41, Colorado 20

Oticago at Pittsburgh In)

PeL GB
_51f/ .574

'll
'll
&gt;;

WISl'flnsin 21, W. Michigan 10
SOlJTJIWttr
Baylor Zl, Texas Tech 15
Houston ~. Utah St. 7

Holy Crets.'t 33, Harvard 19
l..ufa)·ette 28. Columbia 13
Le high :;8 , Penn 0
Massachusetts 10, Dartmouth 8
Syracuse 21, Indiana 7
W. Virginia 49, Colorado St. 3
Yale 'l7, Connecticut 18
MIDWEST
Arkansas St. 26, Cent. Michl~an 23
Cincinnati 10, Rutgen 0
Drake 18, Kansas Sl. 17
Indiana St. 14, Wichita St. 14, tie

RUTLAND-Therapy programs at
the Rutland Elementary School will
be reswned this year by the Rutland
Friendly' Gardeners, it was decided
when the members met Wednesday
night at the home of Marie Birchfield.
Margie Bishop and Margaret
Jolmson will meet with teachers at
the school and plan the therapy
programs. Another project taken
on by the club is one of remembering
others with flplver arrangements.
Each montll, three m~rs ·will
bring In airangemerits for ciisplay at
the meeting. Afterward one will be
.taken to the school, one ' to' the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, and
the third to someone ill or shutin or
in need of remembrance.
Again this year the club will par.
ticipate In the Victor Reis Award

I

April Hudson

Two $25 donations, one in memory
of deceased members sent to the
district treasurer, and the other to
the Cathy Spencer Fund, were made
by the Joppa United Methodist
Women at a meeting held recently at
the home of Lavina Brannon.
It was decided not to make a
change In the pledge. A total of
$45.50 was turned over to the
treasurer for supplies which had
been sold. Officers for the year will
be retained, it was decided. Prayer
by Connie Johnson and Dorothy
Warner opened the meeting. Mrs.
Brannon read scripture from
Psalms 1 and gave th call to worship. Roll call was answered with
calendar scripture.

"I
\

.

"

This Eureka Upright hils
the pow. to make your
cleaning ehofes essler.

50% Extra
Suction
Power

Model
2068

•Triple filter system for dust

free cleaning .
•Vibra-Groomer C~J II

beater bar
brush roll loosens deep gri1
and graund·in dirt .

.• 6 position Diai -A-Nap r_•l
cleans carr9tS from low
naps to high shags .
•Bright headlight to see in

dark 81eas. FREE

FREE 6 piece toolset .

A tots! of 53 shutin calls was reported. Cards were signed for Chester
Mundry and Rev. and Mrs. Freeland
Norris. "Wisdom" was the program
topic with the leader giving readings
and conducting a quiz. The October
meeting will be held at the home of
Opal Harris with Mrs. Johnson to be
co-leader.

Helen Kibble gave the blessing.
Sale items were displayed.

Birth announcement

NOW ONLY

$15995

CUFTON-Mr. and Mr. Randy
Smith of Clifton Hre announcing the
birth of a daughter, Ashley Jill, born
on Sept. 13 at the Holzer Medical
Center. She weighed seven pounds,
!I ounces and was 2llnches long.
Grandparents are Mrs. Billie
Valentine, Mason, W. Va., and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert D. Ashley, Route 2,
Racine. Mrs. Smith is the fonner
Heidi Ashley of near Racine.

-INGELS
· FURN. &amp; JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY STORE

Pomeroy Store

· A birthday party was held recen- with the party were Crystal's aunt,
tly In observance of the 12th bir· Dorcas Manley, and Pat and Kim
thday of Crystal Dawn Manley, Hudson ..
Others attending were Mary Buddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert 0.
Manley.
son, SU:ve Manley, Donns Manley,
Games were played with prizes Tracy Manley, Cristina Manley,
going til Amy Might, Penny Clark, Tracy Wright, Becky Wise, Tam!
and Donna Manley. A cake inscribed - Jones, Brenda Hawley, Tins Kauff,
· "Happy Birthday, Crystal" with Darlene Eblin, Lisa and Debbie
pink and violet flowers baked by her Snyder. Sending gifts were Crystal's
mother, was served with Ice creani, grandparents, Rev. and Mrs. Odell
potato chipS, and 1\oolaid Assisting Manley, and Mrs. Leona Eblin.

Astrograph
September 29, ltii take-charge individual, today you
Personal '· amblllons may bring
can see ways that elude others of
oot the more forceful you this
accomplishing goals. You mBY be
coming year; although yoti'll still
forced toassum" the helm.
lind ways to be diplomatic at th"
Aill E5 (March 21-Aprll 191 If
same tim.,. Others will respect
you'r" willing to change, you
and admire this and do•all they
could take advantage Of a 1100&lt;1
~an to s_up~rt you.
·
opportunity today to transform
LIBRA 15tpt. 23·0ct. 231 ·Your
something you'v" disliked. The
personality may be a !Ill like: a
results cao be beneficial .
cha!Tielton, ,chan;lng., -ltl· .colcr
TAURuS I April .. :ao-May 201
' · right befot~ every!&gt;!ldy's · eye~. . This miQI\t be the day you've
~
, Yet, anv toht you choOse con· waited for to do a little
tinues to remain a""'allng:
negotiating with one who can
· 'SCORPIO (Oct; 2•Nov. 22.1 By ,make your lOb a bl! easier, Play
appealing to his or her imotiOIIa vour ec:n wiselY.
today you'll lie able to;uelanotller' _ GEMI~IIM•V 21·June 201 You
to agree to gllle · you ·somethl~g might get,the chanc" todaY to fell
you'd like to have on vour twm$. , ~ Of w!JOm you're quite
SAGITT~RIUI (Nov. »-Dec.
101\d
hOW you fHI. Don't be
21t Todah ,-.men dMIIng with aurpr sed I! theftelln(l !ill!utuel.
otherS trY TO their II!IIII!S 01
CANCIR (June 21-July 221 The
view. Bend,CIIIel' bec:kWar.CI tii•Ul" ·curious Gbaervtr may bt baffled
dlntancl , !lltlr c:oncapts ; end by tht circuitous routil you are
they'll rHdlly 11ecet JOUI'I!.
• . using to ruc:h .your -Is today.
Jo you, t~Go!i•...,.; It all mak~
CAPRICORN' lbic. 22-.1111. 1,1
Wilt,. you htVJ IUthorlfY today, ~:
. · ,
, ·YI.!u ' con~uct yourielf . U·
LIO (JUI\'..~3-Au" 221 SOmeone
IJI!PtiOII!IUY ~II. -You'.r- ~
may ~· IIIV. ti!C!Uant IVo'
table. fai,t end I~· ytf iJrm Wllell . hly 01 mJa~t do 110mef\llng
~~«•••rv.
~
y tntf wllfurve VIII' cause to
, o\OUAAtus IJ~n.' . ....._ ·ttl ~ your mlnclaoout nlm or
Thtfl II ®thing _.,lngjl IIIOut · .....
, .
· ~r IM!Ing ' .ble to ~JeReiV., tht
ViRGO IAU11. 23-s.;t. · h1
outcome -Of evenfl1 .,._ dO tills Tlllre Is nollllng Wt;ong with y:Otlr
· naturally. 10CIIy, thllllftiUwn IIIIHn.. to htndlt flnenclal mat·
. ' Mtlldly: ~wr.lt may take
rnoreiJiedonlll'llllt.
PIIC.. (fl...
Milito MJ· 1 illll..,_ to ·lrllll' your In·
not ,.,e! 111rlly e, •. McurttV.
·
- ·

TDYLA.
IS OPEN
TH~

81GGUT ASSORTM~NT OF
TOYS IN SOUTH£AST~RN OHIO
LAY-AWAY NOW

·

........

EUREKA ESP
UPRIGHT

Zandra Vaughan, honored queen
of Bethel 62, International f Job's
Daughters, reported on the recent
"Job-A·Rama" held In Akron at the
Sept. 14 meeting of Bethel 62 held at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
She noted that the Meigs County
Bethel received a gold medallion for
being the first Bethel to register In
for the event. Dixie Dugan reported
on the various sports in the Job-A·
Olympic games and noted that of all
the Bethels which had made their
own flags, Bethel62 had the largest.
A report on the arts and crafts was
given by Beth Mayer who noted that
they made God's eyes, kleeneK
boxes, ceramic pumpkins, and lady
bugs. A bronze medallion was won
by the Meigs County Bethel for being
in the ritual competition.
Twila Childs, past honored queen,
wsa escorted to the East and given
Bethel honors. A note was read from
Shirley Ulmer, Bethel 46, Riverdale,
lli., grand representative to Ohio
from Illinois, with Patti Neutzling to
answer the note. Terry Roush repor·
ted on the swinuning party and picnic with the Meigs Chapter, Order of
DeMolay.
Members were reminded that Oct
II at 2 p.m. there is practice for the
Masonic and Eastern Star Night;
Oct. 12, the observance with a dinner
at 6 p.m. and Oct. 18, 2 p.m. practice
for initiation.
The Bethel guardian, Linda
Mayer, asked the girls to turn In
monies from dish cloths, calendars,
shows, rituals and dues at the Sept
28 meeting. The librarian gave a
reading on "The Altar."
Members sang "Happy Birthday"
to mandy Hill, Theresa Starr, and
Patti Neutziing. A thank you note
was received from the George A.
Hill family for nowers and for the
visit to the Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy .

12th birthday observed

Tuesday

.·...
~·.
-•,
•

merle Evans and Paul Dean on
Saturday.
Mrs. Anne Tipton and daughters,
Joyce and Patty, Coiwnbus, were
guests of Mrs. Goldie Clendenin,
several days recently.

Bethel 62 meets

Gardeners resume .therapy programs Joppa
UMW

New York at Philadelphia I nl

Detroit
Milwaukee
Boston

Mrs. Fannie Durst visited the past
week with her daughter and family ,
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkinson, Shawn
and Kevin, In Colwnbus.
Mrs. Lucille Ridenour, Chester,
and Mr. and Mrs. Van Meter and
Ruby, Long Bottom, called on Mrs.

ty lnflnnary.
The costwneddolls wiD be judged
In the categories of fancy, lmit 81111
crochet, aenslble, cllartcter, 15
yearsandyounger,an4nttiooallty.
In the toy category there ill only
one clsss, fann tractor and wagon• .
The prizes are $50 bonds for first
place In each categm:y, aiid •lll(l ·
bond for the best overall in the dreMa-doll and design-a-toy categories.
Dolls and toys must be corilpleted
by Nov. 3. they will be judged and
then put on display In the foyer of the
bank.

otflcers elected at this wekk's · Middleport Girl Scout Troop 1039
meeting were Penny Clark, Tins
has reorganized for the 1981-112 year
Hendricks, Rose Bailey and Kenda
with f01,1rth, fifth and sixth graders
Carsey, patrol leaders; Susie Castle - sflllbelngacceptedlntothetrpop,
and Vlnda Biggs, refreshment comMeetings are held 'l'uesday'at 3:30
. mlttee; Elise Meier, dues collector,
to 4:45p.m. at the tune of Mrs. Joy
and Tammy Hawley, attendance
Clark, advlsor,lll2 Pai'k Street, Midtaker.
dleport. Thereglstrationfeels$3per
girl

I"''

'

·

""'*""VOl!',. a

.

Page-S

Stivers ville News Notes

''

Girl Scouts elect officers · .

Los Anl(eleN at Atlanta ( n I

AMERICAN LEAGUE
FAS!'

Salurday'11 Gamftl
Montreal 4, New York 2

Ohio U. 30, Ball St. 'll
Penn St. 30, Nebrask11 2~
Purdue 1~ . Notre Dame 14
Ut.ah 42, Northwestern 0

The Farmeri! Bank and Savings
Company's Dress-A-Doll · and
Design-A-Toy Program offtii'B . the
opportunity for residents to put' joy
· Into - Christmas for Meigs un· · derprivlleged.
Dolla.to becostwned and toys to be
constructed are avallabie at the
· - bank. Joanne Wllllams and John
KarBcbnill are co-chalnnen for the
-: project wiili'the.tQys and dolls to be
· given to the Salvation Anny and the
· - Melgl Jaycees for distribution at
· Chriatmastlme. Dolls will alB() be
given to residents of the Meigs C.un-

play closer to the foul lines, "but
they keep drifting away from the
lin es. ..
"This game was very Important to
me," he said. "I j811l!lled- F.QSter
l!ood, and he popped up. I ~
that was an easy out. Then the thing
to left field, another out, It goes for a
double."
'
Lacoss gave up Dale Murphy's
12th home of the year In the seventh
when "IllY foot got caught on the
rubber and I slipped. I shouldn't
have (brown the pitch. It was belt
high-and didl\'t have anything on it."
Sunday's loss Willi the Braves' lith
in their last 14 games, officially
taking them ~ut of the ~nt raee
for another year.
Cox was quick to defend his~
against Perry's attack.
"I wish these guys who are rippmg
other players would say It to my face
so'l would know who they are talking
about," Cox said. "I disagree entirely with Gaylord when he says we
are not giving our best. I don't know
- who he is referring to."

1'1Ktlll111y'11 Gamet~

Major LeagueBasebiU

Cincinnati

I

short

The Daily Sentinel

Christmas program -·

jFor the record. • .j

San FratlCisco
2ti 19
X·I.MI Angeles
24 Z!
Atlanta
21 zt
San Diego
IJ :M
x·Fir!:lt-half dlvi:don winner

College scores

Meanwhile, Atlanta pitcher
Gaylord Perry, after falling agaiil to
get career win No. 2117, wasted no
time in pinning the blame on his
teanunates.
Perry ripped his young outfield
corps, saying they cost him all four
runs. The 43-year-old pitcher also
accused his teanunates of not
trying.
The worst blow to Perry's effort
was Ken GriH~Jy's bases-loaded
double In the second inning, which
left fielder Rufino Linares
misplayed, allowing three runs to
score. The fourth Reds' rwt came in
on a George Foster pop to
center that Dale Murphy didn't reach.
"!shouldn't have given up a run,"
said Perry, who allowed eight hits
over six innings while striking out
five. "He (Linares) probably lost the
ball, but ali of us out there are not
pushing ourselves. When you just go .
through the motions ... "
·
Perry said tb!lt when the season
slatted, with Manager Bobby Cox's
permission, he asked the outfield to

ATLANTA (AP) - Right-hander
Torn Seaver says he doesn't believe
his thigh injury will have any effect
on the Cincinnati Reds' drive for a
berth in the National League piayof·
fs.
"! couldn't pitch but one more
time anyway," he said Sunday atter
winning his 14th game of the season
against two losses in a 4-2 victory
over Atlanta, "so now I can just wait
and pitch Sunday."
Seaver pulled a thigh muscle in
the sixth inning while running out an
Infield hit. He had retired 13 hatters
In a row since he gave up the only
two hits and the only run he allowed
in the first Inning.
·
"I felt the muscle pull when I was
two or three steps out of the box,"
Seaver said. "It was on my right
thigh, near the groin area. I didn't
feel it pop, but I did feel it hurt."
The next batter made the final out
of the inning and Seaver returned to
the mound.
"I took four or five warmup pitches, and realized I couldn't pit·
ch,"he said. "When I tried to drive
the bali, I definitely could feel it. I'd
never felt anything like that in 15
years - or in 36 years depending on
how you look at it."
Seaver said he didn't hesitate to
tell Manager John McNamara he
needed to le_ave the game.
"To stay in just to see if I could pit·
ch and then get us in a hole would
have been senseless," he said.
Mike LaCoss finished the game,
earning his first save.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ba~k.- sponsors

Seaver feels he '11 pitch
against Braves on Sunday

Southern's varsity squad

Dave Talbott
156 pound
Junior back

MQnday, September 28, 1981

Monday, Septem~r21,J911 .

Pomeroy-MiddlepQrt, Ohio

e.

\

NO

CHAIG~

f08 LAY-AWAYS

YOU ALUJAY$ DO liniR AT

STIFFL~R'S

�Page-6-The Daily sentinel

Monday,' September 28,
. 1911

"
Monday, september 28·, 198)

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Busin~ss

·Minersville homecoming held
· Homecoming was held at the were the Rev. and Mrs. Richard Jar·
Minersville United Methodist Chur- vis, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. Harch Sept. 20 with the all-day service . vey Kock, Ansonia; and the Rev.
including recognition of fonner and Mrs. Carl Hicks, local.
pastors and senior c itizens and a
Wiggins, Mrs. Wray Bentz and
program of music by The daughter, Dreama, presented Miss
Redeemers, Bremen.
Eleanor Robson with a corsage.
Services began at 9 a .m . with Rolland Rununel sang " Thank You
Superintendent Kenneth Wiggins Lord for Your Blessings" and
presenting an attendance pin to Mrs. " When Jesus Signed My Pardon."
Stella Grueser, 13 years. A 29 year
Greeters for the day were Esther
pin was also presented to Wiggins, Joseph, Marie Amberger, and
and a gift went to Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dorothy Forbes. Flowers were
Abraham, Lansing, Mich., who donated by the Pomeroy Flower
Shop, and in memory by the family
traveled the farthest.
The senior citlzens were of Bradford Maag, a long with Mrs.
recognized and presented gifts, a nd Bentz and Dreama and Mr. a nd Mrs.
the group sang " Happy Birthday" to Hiram Fisher.
Those from out of the county atEsther Joseph. The c hurch services
opened with congregational singing tending were Dr. and Mrs. John
of "Near to the Hearl of God" and Wickham. Detroi t ; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
the choir sang " There is Room at the Abraham, Lansing, Mich.; Mr. and
Cross for You" followed by a sennon Mrs . Edward Farley. Monroe,
by the Rev . Stanley Merifield. Mrs. Mich.; the Rev . and Mrs. Harvey
Myrna Lowe sang ''My Desire."
Cook, Ansonia; the Rev. and Mrs.
The afternoon service opened with Richard Jarvis, Lancaster; Mr. and
singing of '' America the Beautifu l" Mrs. Richard Lowe. Pickerington ;
and the invocation by the ministe r . Mr . and Mrs. Otis Parker, Waverly;
There were selections by the choir of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Farley,
the Forest Run and Syracuse Chur- Cheylon, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Del·
ches. Paula Swatzel and Mrs. Lowe ner Roush, Jr., Mason, W. Va .;
sang "Someone Bigger Than You Rolland Rwnmel, Columbus; Mrs .
and !" a nd Wiggi ns had a memorial Paula Swatzel, Marietta; Mr. and
for Sadie Brown a nd Zana Withrow Mrs. Bill Parker, and Jeannie Hines,
who have died since the las! both of Colwnbus.
Members of the Pomeroy,
- homecoming .
Fonner pastors were w~lcomed Syracuse. Racine. Forest Run and
and each res ponded. In the gro up Mo rni ng Star churches a ttended .

_ Roofing oni:l gutter

work

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992-6011
992·7656

~

(FrH Eatlmotea)

V . C. YOUNG Ill
992.6215 or 992-731•
l"omeroy . Ohio

KNp This Ad for

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

APPLIANCE
SERViCE

eBackhoe
e Excavating
e Septic Systems
e Water, Sewer &amp;
GIS Lines
eDumpT.(UCk
eTrencher
Licensed a. Bonded

Call Ken Young
For Fost Service

9

-3561

PARTS AND SERVICE
All MAKES
•Woshers

•Dryera

•Ro,.ges
•DisPosals
•Dishwashers
•Hot Water Tonk.

9-S-tfc

HAIR REMEDIES
Styllot: Mark Mora. Dove
Cuthbertwn, Cindy Cuthbertson .

Notice

-

- -Public
- Notice
- --~

--

-

ORD INAN CE

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY . OHIO
ESTATE OF EDGAR VAN
!NWAGEN, DE CEASED
case No. 23S34

NOTIC E OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

on September 11. 198 1, 1n
th e Meigs Coun ty Probate
Court. case No. 23534,
Phyllis L . Va n lnwagen,
Linco ln Heig hts, Pomeroy ,
OH10 45769, was appo1nted
Ex ecu trix ot the esla te of
Edg ar
Va n
l nwa qen ,
deceased. l ate of Ltn coln
He1ghts, Pomeroy. Oh1o

45769
Rober ! E . Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
(9)1_1,28( \Q) 5.J l c

NO . 121

ORDINANCE AMENDING
ORDINANCE NO . 905.99

OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY.OHIO
BE IT ORDAINED by

I he Cou ncil of th e Vlllaqe ot
Pom eroy , OH1 0, all mem
b~er'&gt; concurnny ther eto
( 1) That Ordinance No.
QOS YQ be amended to r ead
iiS follows
(AI Whoever VIOlates
ilnv prov1S1ons at t111s chap ·
ter, tor wh tch n9 penalty is
ot hPr-w i Se pro vtded, shall
be t. nect not mor e I han tlfry
doll ur s ($50.00) .
(8/
Whoever v1o lntes
Sec t10n 905 07 sha ll be I ~n e d
nor more than two hundred
ftft y do llars (S250.00l or 1m
pr 1soncd not more th an
lhtrlr days, or bo th
(C
Whoever v1ol ates
Sect ton 905 03 sha ll be It ned
not rn ore th an five hundred

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I
Wr ite you r own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Can cel your ad by phone when you get
resu lts . Money not refundable .

Mon. 11:007:00
Tues. 11 :0().5:00
Weds . 10:0().8:00

Meigs Genealogical Society receives charter

Public Notice
dol lars ($500.00) or 1m
pn soned not more I han six
ly days or both .
{D) Wh oever violat es
Sec t ion 905 06 shal l be fined
not more than one hundred
dol l ars ($1 00.00 ).
Clar ence Andrews
Mayor
Larry Wehru ng
Pr es ident
Jane Wa lton
Clerk
(9) 21 , 2B, 2tc
Public Notice
-~~- - ---~- -

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS

Bids wi ll be r eceived al
the off 1ce of the Leadi ng
Creek
Cons e rvancJ
Distn ct. S. R 124, Rutla n
Oh10, unld 12 ·00 Noon on
the 61h day of Oc tobe r
1981. f or the fo llowi ng :
'
Painting lhe following
water s1orage tanks:
Item I : Water stor a 9 e
lank at
Horn er
H 111
location .
Item 2 Water storage
ta nk
at
Wilkesvill e
1ocat 1on .
It em 3: Water stor age
Tank at beltl1ne loca tioo.
Item 4: Water stor age

Public Notice
tank at Danville tocat1on.

Pub I ic Notice
~ ~t. n ample sec urity~ con·
d1t10ned th e carrying out of
the contr ac t, and to g ive a
good and approved proot ot
covera ge of Workm en' s
Compensation.
Bids will be opened at the
office of th e L eading Cr eek
Conservancy Dist r ict at
above addr ess on Noon
2:00 on t he 6th day of Oc ~
tober, 1981.

Let

llrtlon Ave .
Pomeroy_!_Qhio.

lrlcalsystem .
Resldontlol

SPEC IFI CAT IONS :

Tank s to be washed
by power washer to remove
ox id 1zed paint &lt;c halky
f ilm) at t ank locations 1. 2
and 3. Thi s clea ni ng i s not
r equ1red at location 4.
(2) Remove all ru sted
areas by scrapers and wire
brushes on all t anks and
primer
as needed with
E . P A. approved primer .
(3) All tank s above t o
co mpletely pa inted with
m il ls fil m th1 ck ness
paint . Paint to be used
R ust ·ol eum Br and, o
equiva lent . Repatnt letters
on Danv ille tank .
( 4) Two tanks at trea t·
ment J' lant to be sand·
b l aste
t o comme r cia l
blast . Appl y 1 coa t of
E .P.A ap proved primer to
both t.:mK s and st andpipe
after sa ndblasting . Com ·
pl etely paint tank s and
st andpipe w ith Rust·olcum
paint .
(5) Sandb la sti ng and
painting must be com·
ple ted wit hin 45 days from
the- date of bid acceptance.
Payment for above w ill
be made after the job is ap·
proved by Le~ding Creek
Conservancy D1stri ct . Th e
r1ght I S reserved to re jec t
any and a ll bi ds.
Bidder s r eQuired to oi ve
a good ana appro ved bond
( !)

4-GilltiWIY
S-HIPPY Ads
6- LOit •nd Found
7-V~rd S.!e
&amp;- Publ ic Slle
&amp; Auc t iOn
9-W•ntec:lto Bu y

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11- Htl p Wanted
12- SIIUIIIOn Wlnlecl

IJ- In 1unn ce
U- Bu1onns Tr1in1ng
IS-SthQOIS ln,tn.ot hon
16- fi:lclio . T V.
&amp; CB Rt'pim

18- Wantecl To Do

e FINANCIAL
17

18. ~-----19, _ _ _ _ __

lt- lus•neu
Opportunity
11- Money t o L.o•n

1l-Proten10n11
StriiiCtl

20. - - - - - 21. - -- - -22.

23.
24.

6. - - - - - -

1. - - - - - - a. _ _
9.
10. - - - - - -

25.-----26. - - - - - 27 .
28 . - - - - - 29. - - - - - -

11. - -

30.

12.

31.
32.
33. _ __ __

13.

lol. - - - - - ~ 15.-~---

_..:.." -~--

1' 16.

)ol. - - - - - 35.------

"1.' . '' ,, ~· ~ ~ 1.,
.
'
I· ·Mall This·Coupon with Remittance
I

1

I

·

,

i,

The Dally ~entlnel
111 Courf'St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

a..-------....J.------------·-·~.:1

eREAL ESTATE
l1 - Homt slor S11o1 e
U-MC!bi"! HOm tl
lor S.ie

U-FarmlforS•Ie
14- Busmen Butldtngs
JS- LOIII AtrU IIIe
l6- Relll E1tate Wan led

J1- R.ra llors

An Ordmance to lncre,ase
Appropriation in ttl e HUD
Fund .
Sec. I. That addi tiona l

funds of S712. 000 be ap·

pr opr i atea in the HUD
Fund for 1981
SEC II . That thi s or
LEA DING CRE EK
CONSE RVA NC Y dinance is d ec lared to be an
DI STR IC T emergency in th at 198 1 ap·
propriations in the HUD
,;:.:;'-~---l fund are inadequat e and
f unds arc ava i lable.
Sec I ll . Th is Ordinance
shall t ake eff ec t and be in
force fr om and after September 1.1, 1981.
Passed t he 14th day of
September 198 1

·;-t-'-'.:..::..:.:...;;;..:-':"'-

Attes t ·
Jon Buck
Clerk
M . L. Kelly
Pre sident
of Counc il

i91 lB. I 10) 5, lie
Public Notice

eMERCHANDISE

~1 - Mus•ut

tn1trument

Miller

&amp; Commercial

SALES&amp;SERVICE

Horse s,

Real Estate

FRAN'S
CERAMICS
.Now Taking En·
rollment For Fall
Day or Evening
crases.

FRANCES H£WETSON
307 Wetzgall St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·4· 1 mo .

6l - ll llel fOCk
~illll

64 - Har I Gr.in
'S- Seed I Fert iltter

e TRANSPORTATION

71- Autosforhle

12- Truclu lor Sale
1J-VI n5 &amp; ~W . O .
711- Motorcvc•••
7S-Bo.a ts &amp; Moton
76- Auto Parh &amp;

Acnuoritl
71- Ca mping Equipmtrtt

Deadlines

11-Piumbing &amp; Hlatint

the d1v btfort~K~bllution
SuncfiY 2:10 , ,M. Frlda'f

Jon

U- Eitu~atlnt

14- E ltctriul &amp;
Rel ri e enlion
as-General Haul tnt
,.._M ,H . Repair

·- -r---.- SIZES 8-18

M. L.

./IJ.._,

Rates and Other Information
Up ton words ... on1 cl•y insertion , , . , . . . . .
. . u.oo
up ton words ... Ill ret dliY lllllrtion .... ..... ..... , . , , 1 . .,1 . t~. OO
1
1
Upton wOIIrdt ... tl• diYI inttrtion .•... , .... , .. , , ., .. .. , 1•, , 11.00 '
.
(A't'ltrlte4wordsper lirtel
Mobile HDml Ylll lnG Volrd s•ltl oltl ICCIPttd Gnl'f with Ulh
wiUI orct.r. U CtiU cNr,. for o1d1 Clrrylng 11011 NwmiMr in CaR 'ot
The Stntlflel.
The Pubtistltr reservn ltle ritht la ftlil or rtttct ll'l'f •as Clttmtd
oblt&lt;t•GMI. Tile Publlttltr wm 1101 Dt rn ponslble lor mort ttt1 n one

·

~efly

President of

(9128, (10) 5, 21c

Account of Frank W . Por·
ter, Jr., Guardian of
Patr icia A . Wyatt, a minor

CASE NO . 21119 Sixth

Annual Ac count of Verlin
Howery , Trustee of the

Trust

Created

by

wi ll be for hear ing before
said Court on the 26th day

FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT

M.F.
1-Model 479 Hay Bind
N.H.
.
7-3-lfc

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC
PPUES

SIO,OOO.OO from the utility

fund toperating expenses}
to the general fund .
This Resolution passed ·
Se ptember 1981
Clarence Andrews
M ayor

co~,~ncil

Gel ahead of the new season
with !hi! deficiou~y demure
shirtdress. Gathered shoulders, V
iOke, puffy sleeves. No waist
seam, no fitting complications.
Printed Pattern 4945: Misses

General

9-2~

1 mo .

WANTED

THE STANDARD
OIL CO.

WALNUTS

(SOHIO)

Bring Your Walhuts

we are now delivering
home heating oil in all

To
EXCELSIOR SALT
WORKS INC .

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

Pomeroy, Ohio

614 ·992-3891

992·3460

PAYING
SB.OO Per Hundred Lbs .
Aller they are hulled

11 Long Distance,

Call Collect
9·21 ·1 mo.

Starting October 1st

refrigerator, carpeting,

and forced a 1r heat.
New roof, stleds, on approx. 1'12 acre land.

$29,500.

NEW LISTING
POINT ROCK - Ap·

STANDARD
OIL1 CO.
(SOHIO.
We areonow.s;ervlng all
of Meigs Co. IIVith
Heating Oil• Diesel
Supreme ,
Gasoline,
cO·mlete

... lilt!-

I ine

of

Lubricants tor the
far.ms&amp; Industry.
PH. 992·3460
II long distance, call col·
lect:
Llirry ·E. Miller,Oealer
. 8-30· 1 mo.

STREET IN MIDDLEPORT- Large 9 room house.
A lot of possibilities. Only~15,000. 00 .

INC~
1

•

. Pomeroy, Ohio

0

with

3

'

I

REMNANTS
.

'

'j.

'

with
and

bldg..

Home

tensive remodel ·
in g.
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph.992·7583
8·27·1 mo.

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

NOW

OPEN
Used Color TV Sets tor
Sale.
· NEW PHONE NO.

a

,.

· TOM -HOSKINS'...
' Ph. HH1H

orm-•m'

7·5:11~

9
Wonted to Buy
WANT TO BUY Old fur·

Water Pills. Fruth Phar·

nlture and Antiques of all

macy .

kinds, call Kenneth Swain,

Scony Soladean .

dining room, kitchen,
bath . All carpeted and
really

will

neat. You

want to see it at this
price. $39,900.

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does

not offer or attempt to

offer any other thing for
sale mav place an ad in this

rec. room, · attactled
garage, then this is it.
And owner is asking

only $43,000 .

Citrus tree 6 ft . tall. Nice
for a Malt or decorations.

RENTAL
IN ·
VESTMENT - 3 room
house with fireplace on
almost an acre of land, ·
other buildings. $14,000.
OVER 200 ACRES Plus a l1J2 story home
with 2·3 bedrooms,
dining, living and kit·
chen. Forced air heat.

barn and other out·
buildings. Approx. 75
acres tillable, 75 acres

so

acres

pasture. $9(1,000.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-61t1
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·2660

Part Poodle puppies. Calf
4&lt;16·0861.
Collie dog, real long hair .

Female, likes kids. Call
4&lt;16·3732.
J kinens. 614·985·4120.
Long haired kittens. 1
male, 1 female . Grey and
white . 7 weeks old . Utter

box trained. 614·992-2531 at·
ter 5 p.m .
Lost and Found

6

HAVE you lost a young
beautiful Australian Blue

Friendly,

smart. Call 245-5248 after

6:30.

Am

c:m:

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614·992-2181
Farm and
1 For
Home Delivery of
· Gas
Diesel
Heafin!l.Oil.
;.

LOST : White pcny, in the
vicinity of Lincoln Pike and

PRIC~J-IGHT. ,

CALL iODAY!
FO, SAI.I

STORE BuiiJliNG
. I•

DOWNTOWN
. MIDDLEPORT
PRICE: 512.sQo
''

•,

.

·59N •.2ndAYI •..
.Middleport, Ohid
Form.rly · · o~dtey 's
Florist &amp;· Drehel
C~r'amlcs. . '

Phone ·
1-(614)·992·3325
NEW

LISTING -

bedroom

2

reasonable

home with bath and fur·
nlture. Even wasner
and dryer. Will consider
trailer o~ other propertY
as dow~ payment or
$17,000.0Q cash .
NEW LISTING - Very
reasonable 2 bedroom
frame with coal fur·
nace, all utilities, bath,
full llas;emenl a~d 3 lots
foonly $12,000.00 or good
Offer.
POSSIBILITIES ;
· Large country home,
nicely carpeted, 2· lull
baths, furnace, wood·

burner, flue,

. '
4~l

Hannan Trace Rd. Call 446-

tm==• ":

UNawlai 'w 11-!11
BoOks ·and i:mloc - add 50$
.each lor postap and haRdlina.

Furniture. 446-4775.

person, Pl. Pleasant .

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

batteries . Call388·9303 .
to

NOW taking applications at
Pickens Cab Co. apply in

buy

used

N EE D reliable baybsitter

in my home. Call between 8
a.m.-12 noon, 304-675·2042.
RECE PTIONIS T

clarinet. Call-446-0614.

pr ivate

doctor's

tor
offic~

needed. Reply with com

Wanted to buy bunk beds or
twin bed. Call 388·9655 or
386-8192.

salary to box C·25 % The

BE DS-1RON, BRASS, old

1'~2;==;;=
Si~tu=acct;;'io:=n:=s=;W;;::an==l:e=::;==
d

plete resume and required
Pt. Pleasant Register.

furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood ice bo)(es,
stone i ars. antiques. etc .•

Complete
households . child acceptable. Call 245·
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt . 4, 5835 .
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992-1760.
Ambious boy needs work

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter W' on largest
end. $12.50 per ton . Bundled
slab. $10.50 per ton.
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet co.,
Rock Springs Rd .•
Pomeroy. 992· 2689.
Gold, silver , sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
curre'ncy . Ed Burkett Bar·

ber Shop, Middleport. 9'12
3476.

badly . Windows washed,
yards cleaned, &amp; odd jobs.
After school &amp; on Sats. Call
446-2116.

antique. Call992 ·6370 .

area. No collar. Please call

614-9&lt;19·2360 or 614-949·2194.
Yard Sale

root,

and

merchandise

patient. Temporary or
limited care . Or continuous

Nurses aiC: . Day time. Ex·
perienced . Good referen·

Have room board for
disabled person, also have
vac ancy
for
bedfast

.Yard Sale Del. I, 9-4:30, ·343
LeGrande Blvd . off loll.

Private duty nursing for
the elderly in their home.

Clothes, women's, men's
and boys, other items .

992·2055.

Help Wonted
11
3 family . Mon.-Wed . Sept. Hostesses wanted for Out·
28·30. Good clothing, kids ch Maid Fashions Show . In·
and adults. Misc. Items . Rt. vite friends, neighbors,

13

33,

3

miles

north

of

fairgrounds . Follow signs.
Garage sale 264 Rutland
St., Mlddlepcrt . Sept. 20·30.

YARD sale 2007 North
Main St. Monday thru Wed·
nesday, September 28, 29,
30, 10 ·till ? Household
Items, good clothing and

call collect 1-614·574·5062.

lnsvrance

Group Medical Coverage
for small business, as well
an individuals. Major
medical, basic hospital, &amp;
group life insurance com-

misc. cancel if rain .

Gallla Co.
Volunteer
Squad . Rummage Sale.
oct. 1,2,&amp;3. Old Rt. 160
Volunteer Squad building
9:00 till??

You can have a pleasant
and profitable ca reer
selling
custommade
lubricants to Industrial,
commercial and farm accounts in vour area. com·

best programs available.
Very competative rates.
For more information :

pany

AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been
celled?
Lost

bined to give you one ot the

Steve McGhee, 446-0818 or
4&lt;16·0552 .

training

program. No investment or

overnight travel. Cal11 ·800·
1193. 8:30 a .m .·4:30
c.s. t.
Neals Auction has moved
S. on Rt. 2 Gallipolis Ferry
W.Va. Every Sat. 7PM. MANAGEMENT
OP ·
Buy and Sell. Lonnie Neal PORTUNITY . We are
·367·7101.
seeking
qualified
in·
dlvlduals to train for
management positions In
9
Wonted to Buy
Hardmans Home Centers If
WANT to buy standing tim· you are highlY motivated,
ber, 5acresor more. Rocky desire respcnslblllty, perWooldridge, 61o1·289-2476 or sonal
growth, ·
prOfessionalism, and are
6lol·ol93·2591 .
willing to re·iocale, send
PL. YWOOO half Inch &amp; your resume In confidence
three eights, must be good to Stan Hardman, Hardman 's Home Center, Gen
on one side, paneling quar· Office,
PO Box 140, Spenter Inch, the same. 30.4-375·
cer, WV 25276.
5220.

IN ·
can·
your

operator's License? Phone

992 2l.c:l
18

Wanted to Do

Brick and Block laying,
fireplaces,

all

work

guaranteed. Call379-2123.
HILLTOP , SHARPING
SERVICE Circulllr saws 6
112 to olo4 ln. Chalnsaws,
blades of all kinds, and

electric drill bits. Phone
388·856-4.
Wanted to do: Babysitting
my home or yours. Ex ·
perlenced.
References

available. Phone anytime
245·5855.

Gallia co. Area Code
614
446-Gollipolis

Would like 10 do babysit·
tlng

367~ Cheshire

381-VInton
245-Rio Grande
256-Giryan Dlst.
64'- Arabia Dlst.

614
992- Middleporl
Pomeroy
985- Che!ter

Sand blasting on trailer,
old cars, small Items. Call
-U6· 827~ after 5 :30.

Will do. babyslnlng In my
home near Mercerville.
Call 256·6783.

Mason Co., W.va .
Area Code 304
675-Pt. Piusant
·4st--Leon
$76-Apple Grove
77!-Muon
·
112-New Haven
195-Letart
t37-Bullalo •

Real
31

Estate

Homes for Sale

New 3 bdr. house with

garage and full basement
$45,000. Caii446-039C.

Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
District . Shown by appt.
only cafl446·9403.
For sale on land contract.
House and 2 mobile homes

located at Bu laville . Will
sell separately or tog ether.

Ca II 4&lt;16· 3437 .
FOR SALE BY OWNER 3
bdr . home located at 123
Garfield Ave. 2 acres runs
from SR 1 to Ohio River .
Full basement, finished
r ec. room, 2 fireplaces, 2

1/2 baths, in ground con·
crete pool, all new carpet,
new paint inside and out.
Will consider your home or
mobile home In trade.
Owner will consider finan·

cing at 10% APR after
down payment,

2 year old, 6 rooms and
bath, basement, 2 acres, 4
miles from town, city
schools. Pr ice reduced

$37,900.00 Call446·2663 .
3 bdr . home for sate by
owner . Rellsonable down
payment
take
over
payments. Located off

Patriot·Cadmus Rd. Call
379-2784.
House for rent or sale on
land contract or rent with

option to buy. Home In
Eureka on State Rt. 1 on
Riverfront . Call 388·8711 or
388·9692.
New 3 bedroom ho~,
tam1fy room, 1'4 bath,. 2
car garage. Central heat
and air. 2 miles fr·om

Holzer Hospital . Rl. J!i. -U&lt;I·
3617.
Lite Estate. Farm, proper·
ly value,Sol.5,250.00. Life
estate value $8,701.58. Call
9'12·6747 evenings
J bedroom house, 2 acres; 2
baths, family room. Full
basement, garage. 9&lt;19·
2079.

7 rooms and bath, o1 lots.
Needs some repair. Finlln·
cing available. $2.5000. C•ll
after 5, 614-992·7284.
For sale or trade, house
and business building on
two lots, also 2 Vllcant lots

with well and septic . Phone
614-378-6339.
Sale by owner, 3 bedroom
electric home, city water,

wall to wall carpet. Lot
100 x 400. Pletny shrubery.
Level lot . $38500. Will trade
for acreage. Empty ready
10 move In to. Call Eleanor
Reynolds, 614-667-6648 al"'f
6p.m.
Racine, ol bedroom home, 2
baths,
new
kitchen
cabinets, Insulated,
132500.00 . Hobstetter
Realty, Phone 742·2003.
Hous;e and lot. ~ rooms and
bath, part basement, com-.
ptetely furnished, natural
gas, city ~ater and
sewage, Ohio Power,
·walking distance 10 iown.
Reduced price. 614-992·
5282 .

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
1n Mel IS County

992~2156

446-;2342

area .

Will give plano lessons In
your home. Call -U6·807ol by
September 30.
.

J43-Portland
247- Letart Falls
949- Raclne
742-Rutland

In Gallia County

Rodney -Cora

Call379·2706 anytime.

Meigs co. Area Code

call304-6751293.

for an appointment.

Box 25339 Chicago, Illinois
60625.

l:lassified Pages cover the
ft~llt~wing telephone exchanges ...

HARPER Adult Care Cen·
fer -providing the personal
cere your elderly need In a
hom e like atmosphere.
Va cancies now avalllble.

~easonable

Ray Wedemeyer, agent.
Phone 388-8249.

en ·

velopes/possible with our
proven envelope program.
Free details. Enclose stam·
ped envelope. Fulk Endy,

paid

your piano toda·t?

1f Interested call -U&lt;I-1546

surance Co. has offered
services for fire insur ance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a centurv.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet ind ividual needs. Contact

10 to 4. Rain or shine.

$300/1000

PIANO TUNING &amp; Repair .
Lane Dan iels 742·2951 or
992-2082 . Have you hugged

SANDY AND BEAVER In-

relatives, and aqualn ·
tances and earn free Dutch
Ma id Fashions of your
choice . Interested parties

Earn

Ward.

firm . Kyger Creek School

brokering. Yarper· Halste- patient . 992 ·6022 .
ad Salvage Company , 300
Eleventh Street. 675-5868.
Also Flea Market open Will take care of 2 elderly
daily. Open Monday · ladies in our home. l.4 mile
east of Darwin . 992·3888 .
Friday 1-5 pm .

7

batteries,

Bill

Ellm Resthome. Care for

hafdicapped, aged , or bed

ces . Call742·2288.

radiators, gins;eng, yellow

Piano.

my hOme. 992·2686.

Someone to care for me in

home with us . Equipped tor
wheel chalr . 7ol2·2266 .

household. New, used and

your

Wards Keyboard. «6·.c:l72,
Gallipclis.

BY OWNER: 4 bdr., split·
level, living room &amp; dining
room combination. eat-fn
kitchen, lg . family rm ., 2
1/2 baths. located in Tara

No item to large or ·s mall

metals,

Piano tuning and repair,

Wanted female to share
apartment with same. 1

Lost : Medium size black
female dog in the Bashan

The Daily Senti~
·e
24i-llwt 17 ~' ~ · IY
111011. l'tllt
llP, SIZE, ...
IIUMRI.,

1JS.11 IIIII 1M Clllllll

We sell furniture . Sagraves

wanted

Protessional
Services

Love your neighbor tune

FURNITURE

modern

·kitchen· wltn stove and
'refrigerator. Af!lo a
large business building
!or hobby or country
store. 'Asking only .
$31,000.
COUNTRY
On

23

Scrl!lp

',

our ~EW FAt1WINTER PAfTERN
CATALOG. Coulioil far free $2
paHern'i!llidJ. Sind $1.50 . '
ALL CUfT lOIIlS , 11$!M•.cll

BUY

Columbus · First

tlnel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

8261 or 446-9424.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

B. SA .
216 E . Second Street

WE

Loans,

some great gifts as a Sen·
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

will buy 1 piece or complete

Sind II: .

An!ll AdltM ' .
Plttlm Dlpl,

very

Roger &amp; DoHie Turner

992-5692 '
Otflce 992·2259

model used car s. Smittl
Buick · Pontiac, GAllipolis,

Call379·2ol08.

Heeler?

1 acre. $6,500 .

CASH PAID tor clean, late

children. Call446·0167.

$35,000.

kitchen , basement with

un -

Mortgage Co., ol63 Second
Ave., Galllpcfls, Oh., «&lt;!·
11n

as a young business person
and earn gooct money plus

Ohio. Call446-2282.

.4 yrs old Chinese Shizu dog.
House
broken,
loves

bedrooms, living room,

GET VALUABLE training

Giveaway

4

A ~•. OF
OWN - . •A

YOUR
newly
remodeled home on 21
acres of land. Four

experience

22
Money 1o Loan
FHA·VA ·Conventlal Home

Help Wanted

11

256-19671n the evenings.
NO trespassing on Bryan's
propertv in Henlerson .
Violaters will be proscuted.

$30,000.

spacious living room,
dining room, beautiful

992-6259

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21-.lfc

CONTROL hunger and lose
weight wltn New Shape
Diet Plan and Yydrex

column. There will be no
ctlarge to the advertiser .

THIS RANCH STYLE
IS FOR YOU - If you
want
3 bedrooms ,

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes · ex ·

·BISSELL

e FrH till malls
e 20 \' ri.,'xpe~ltnct

has

beautiful
wooden
ceilings,
hardwood
floors and bay window.

Farm Buildings

·ROOFING
And Home Mal~ltnance
eRooflag olalt to;pes
elldtnt

another

township
frontage
available. Top price for

A
SIDING

'

ba r',

garage,

ALL ST _E EL

OHIO VAllEY
e Retr~Dcltllnt ·

ClrpeJ

For Info &amp; Interview call

·Mr. Parry :lOol-3.42·8161 or
Mr. Osburne 8:30 10 oiPM .

necessary . Call 1·716·8o12·
6000. Ext. 6671 .

pro)( . 1 acre of level

ground,

BUILDING LOTS IN
RACINE FOR YOUR
NEW
HOME
OR
MOBILE HOME
Utilities are available.
State road frontage or

Real Estate- Geneial

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

Business
Opportunity
Prime Service Statt on
Prop. for Lease. 1st Ave.,
low rental, Investment reQ.

ages,

NEW LISTING- Size is
Right ThJ~
two
bedroom hom~ ffi•ets
all the needs of your
family .
Range,

por~h.

At. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591
6·15-tfc

oa..w

home workers to update
local mailing lists. All

roof, nice front sitting

· 9·2·1 mo .

•

21

horse

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

llf2 story, 3 bedrooms,

Loca1ed r1t Maplewood
Lake .n Racine.

._,

America's foremost die·
tlonary company needs

full basement, large lot,
new vinyl siding, new

WELD SHOP

•

$180 PER Week Part Time
at
Home .
Webster,

timber, and

BLACK

-

No trapping on our proper·
ty. By owners, Maxine Did·
die Sellers, Roy and Lillian
Qroffill, and
Freda
Fergu'IQn .

IN TOWN AND CON·
RIVER
, VENIENT VIEW IN POMEROY -

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
&amp;

I I

Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size
I2 (bust 34) takes 2 718 yards

9·20·1 mo.

Utility Buildinp

.-~"7.==:-:--=~-

Ph~ri·992-6312 .

Middleport, Ohia

Sizes from 4X6 to 12x411

(9) 21. 26. 2tc

BILL CHILOS,.Mgr.

PH. 992-2725
169 N. 2nd

Sizes

Attest:
Jane walton
Clerk

R.C.S. REALTY,

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

SMALL

of October, 1981, at which 9
Wanted to Buy
time said accounts will be ,.==::::::=:::=::=:=~===,
considered and continued
from day to day until
fi nally disposed of.
person intE"rested
may ile written exceptions
to said accounts or to mat·
ters ' pertaining to the
e)(ecut1on of the trust, not
less than five days prior to
the date set for hear mg .

..

Wave Length For
Longer Hair

"From l0x30"

Larry Wehrung
President of
Council

Any

$20.00 Now $17.50
$25.00 . Now $22.50
$30.00 . Now $27.50
$35.00 . Now $29 .50

Ph. 949-2285

1- No. 8600 Diesel Ford
Tractor w / Cob
1- Model 275 Diesel

the Council at the Village of
Pomeroy, a II members
ther eto concurrl ng:
That t he Clerk· Treasurer
of th e Village of Pomeroy
tr a n sfe r th e sur'n of

Item

Second of the Last Will and
Testament of Eddie Lou
Howery , Deceased
Unless exceptions are
filed thereto, sa id accounts

,

Busy woiNn?· woninl! WOI!IIIl? '
Dress far lm, spend las timi, .
work- choose a wardrobi hoili

17- Upholllt ry

Bud~

Clerk

$2.00 "' ... ,....,._ Add SOt .
far !lldl flllllm far ,.....

a1- .H,me lmprollemants

Mond.av ~ :OOon Saturday

4945

60-inch fabric.

17- Auto Repair

CASE NO. 22184 Third

PERM·SALE
SEPT . 2llhru OCT . 24

• Steel
• Aluminum
• C.1sting • ·rrailer Hitche s eMetal Fabrtca·
t10n s.
Mondav- Friday
4 p.m. to 11 p.m.
All Day Saturday

Authorized Jotln Deer
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Public Notice
RESOLUTION
BE IT RESOLVED, by

ponies,

-............ .

trailer, riding lessons. Hoof
.Hollow 614·698-3290.

33.
Mon.- Fri. 8: JO to 4:00
A.fter Aug . 3
Ph. 992·6564
8·30·1 mo: pd .

BARNETT'S

OVERLOO~ING THE .,OHIO RWER ON FRONT

ATTEST :

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Want· Ad Advertlsin,g

incorrect lnU&gt;rtion.

Announcemenh

1 m i le
west
of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt.

2·8·tfc

September 1981

st- Fruits I Vettl.ablel
59- For hit ar Tr.ade

6t-F"rm E quiPm tnl
61-Wanted to Buy

CASE NO. 22947 Final

and Dist ri buti ve Account of
Barbara J . Brutvan, Ad·
m inistratrix With Will An ·
nexed of the Estate of
Vashti Grimm, Deceased

An Or dinance to Amend
Ord . No. 1103-80, an Or·
din,an ce to es tablish Village
JObs and wag e rates, ilnd (9 ) 26, lie
es t,ablishing legal holidays,
vaciltion nnd sick leave.
Be it ordained by th e
Council of the Vill,age of
Middleport as follows :
Sec. 1. That the following
classification and pay r,ate
be added to Section 1.
Office of 'c ommunity
Development , Executive
Secretary, U .SO per hour
St&gt;c. 11 . That thi s ordinance is declared to be an
emergency in tha t council
has authorized the hiring of
such employee, and no pay
scal e ex ists for this
position.
Sec. Ill. This Ordinance ·
shall take effect and be in
force from and after September 14, 1981.
Passed the 4th day ot

' 1- Hous es for Rent
41- Mobile Hom es
lor Re nt
U - .4~artm er11s for R Ent
45- Fvrnhhed Room s
4•-Sp~ee for Rent
41-WAn t@'(IIO Rt nt
41-Eqvi pment lor Renl
49-For Le ue
S1- H0 utehold Gooels
Sl- CB, TV, R1dio Equipment
SJ- Antiqvtl
S4-Milc. Merchindist
B - Bu ll ding Suppti u
56- Pe ts tor S1te

Ethel Smith, Executrix of
th e Estate of George
Dewey Pullins, Deceased

Robert E . Buck
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS
PROBATE COURT
DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

ORDINANCE
NO. 1114·81

eRENTALS

SERVICES

lUitSdiV lhru Frid•y 1:ot ... .M .

Public Notice- -

_Public Notice

ORDINANCE
NO . 1113·81

PHONE 992-2156

•- c,rd of Th1nks
1- tn Memort1m
3-A nnovncemenh

) Announcement
) For Rent

George

check vour present elec·

U. S. Rf . 50 Easl
Guysville, Ohio ·

~ -

~-

WANT AD INFORMATION

eANNOUNCEMENTS

) For Sale

MILLER ElECTRIC
SERVICE

Thurs. 11 :-8:00

PHONE 9'12"3021

treasurer; Beverly Shumacher who is presenting the charter as
district representative; Keith Ashley secretary ; June Ashley,
president ; Maxme Marshall, member; Mrs. Dean Cuckler, member;
and Mr. Dean Cuckler, member ; The Meigs County Genealogicaal
Soc iety was orgamzed October 28, 1979, at the Meigs Museum in
Pomeroy.
·

Al the recent convention of the Ohio Genealogical Society held at the
Carrousel Inn in Columbus, the Meigs County Genealogical Society
received its charter as a chapte r of the state Society. To obtain a charter at least15 local society m embers must belong to the state society.
Pictured are the Me igs County members present at the convention
when the c harter wsa presented; from left to l'ight, Margaret Parker,

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

)Wanted

metals.

5-21·tfc

Call 742·3195

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

These cash rates
incl ude discount

Ph. 992-7201

For all of your wlr·
ing needs .

New Hours:

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
_.P
~u,_.b,._lic

Top prices paid tor auto
bodies, scrap iron and

'
'' ""

For buld delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
PER and sewing diesel fuel, call Landmark, ·
repair, parts, and 9'12·2181, Pomeroy, On.
Pick up a~d
Davis vacuum No hunting of any kind on·
o"e half mile up the 3 Vance farms on Van· 111'~1'1'1,~·
creek Rd. call ce Rd. Hunters will be
fined .

kitchen

Phone 614-662-3821

_ _

· (Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp;' Metal}

"

'

bedrooms, fam ily room,

Fri. 10:00-5:00

night to see Billy Squires a nd
Foreigner at the Civic Center.
Mr . and Mrs. Alex Mills, Steuben·
ville, visited last week with Mrs.
Nell M1ddleswart.
Victor .Durst and sons, Scott and
Jason, The Plains, visited Mr. and
Mrs . Robert Durst a recent
weekend .

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

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

- "

E-. Main.,

Future Aef.rence

Stiversville News Notes
Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert Wilson and
Joshua, Hammondsville, s pent the
weekend with Rev. and Mrs .
Lawrence Glueseneamp, a nd other
relatives in the community.
Mrs. Mary Dailey, Long Bottom,
visited Wednesday with Mrs. Gussie
Dailey and Mrs. Betty Triple tt.
Debra Bryant and Scott Bryson
· were in Charleston, W. Va . Tuesday

custom kitchens and appl ia nces, _ custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin, electric, and
healing.
·

.....Ac:k:lons and ·
rwmodellng

_ Concret work
J lumblng and
electrlaf work

Se..Vices

C. R~ MASH
CONSTRUCTION

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-7

Ohio

TV service calls. Call 992· . SANDHILL Road, Pt.
2034. Also used color TV for Pteasent, 3 bedroom•,
sale.
baths, double garage.
Owner witt ftnllnee. ' fm·
Would ltkt 10 rent tractor. · media"' occupancy. ·304· with backhoe. 614-909-2112. 675-5117.

w..

In Masoii County

675-i333

..

�Page--8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Ohi~;~

M~;~nday, _s~~tt!mber

28, 1981

'

31

Hames far Stle·

HOUSE -Meadowbrook Ad·
dillon. 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral olr. basement. 304·675·
1542.
Two story frame at 120
Highland. Three bedrooms,
sleeping porch, Iaroe living
and dining rooms, Kreened
porch kltchensand pantly .
Full basement with laundry hookup. Needs some
repair . Possible owner
finonc ing . Call 304·273·9533
or 273·3426 .

d

LAFF-A-DAY

·--------

42

Prices

reduced

on

··How can you sleep when ABC ,
CBS and NBC are vying for your

BY

56x141980 model, t ot a l elec-

tric, co mpletely furn .•
delivered and set up on

your lot . $8,995. Johnsons
Mobile Home , Inc. 446· 35.d7

l 4x70 mobile home fur ·
nished, 3 bdr ., 2 bath, skir·
ting inc luded, $9,500 . Call

61H82 ·8205.
74trailer&amp; IO acrestorsa le
by owner . Call 388-9949 .
For sa leon land contract or
rent with option to buy . 2

mobile homes on separa te
lots at Tycoon Lake . 1 with
large family room, with

fireplace . Ca ll 388·8711 or
388·9692.
Add ison 12x60 trai ler, cen·

tral

air,

Add ison

Kyger

Creek. Plant area . Ca ll 367·

0416.
Mobi le hom e, 2 bdr ., 3
acres of land, garage, &amp;
large front porc h. Must sell
immediate ly .

388-8747 ,

$8000.
Torcet

12 X 65,

2

bedroom . balcony front kit chen, 2 air conditioner s,
washer a nd dryer . $8900 .
1972 B aron 12 x 60 , 2
bedroom, balcony fron t
livi ng room , centra l air
condition, $7450. 1971 Shultz
12 x 60 , 2 bedroom , $6450.

19 74

Castl e

12 X60,

3

bedroom, $6450. 1974 Rich·
craft 14 x 70, 3 bedroom,

$13900. 1971 Belmont 12 X65,
2 bedroom , balcony front
kitchen, $7450. I 67 Utopia
Bx 16 ca mpter has shower
and toilet, $1250. All pri ces
on mob ile homes include
del ivery and se t up . Kin·
sbury Ho me Sa les, 400 E
Main St ., Pomeroy . 614·992·

3647 .
12X 40 mobile home, 1
bedroom . good condition .
$3500. Phone 614·985· 4133 or

614-985· 439 5.

TRAILeR space 3 miles

requ ired .

old Y. Pt . Pleasant, 675·
32411.

bedr o om

house on approx. 1 acre .
Live in one, rent others to

FURNISHED, 2 bedroom

make vour payment . Can

mobi le home
Haven. Ad ults

in New
only, no
pets. 304·675·1452 or 675 ·

be converted single home.

Cit'V water, w ill consider
!and contra ct . 675· 1883 9· 5

2996 .

p. m .
Trailer lots and mobile
home. Married couple only,
one smal l ch i ld accepted .
References reQuired . 675-

Rentals

1076 .
4'~1--cH
cco=uc:sc::e-::s-;fo=r:cR
=
en::ct;-­

For sale or rent 1 bdr .
trailer. Ga llipolis Ferry,

Sma ll furni shed house in
the city , adults on ly _ Cal l

WVA.304-675· 1867.

446·0338 .
Apartmemt

44

4 bdr .• 1 1/ 2 bath, living

for Rent
- - - ---'-"'~'""-----

room with woodburner ,
dini ng room &amp; ki tchen .
Washington Sch ool district.

Furnished

a pts . 2 bdr .•

$230., utilities paid, near

HMC, adults. Call 4.46·4416

Dep. req. Call446 ·4167 after
6PM.

after 7PM.

4 bdr. home, free gas heat,
2 acres, very nice, $360. a
mon th.
Call
446-3643
Wiseman Real Estate.

Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
taman, 3 tabl es, SSOO. Sofa ,
chair and lovesea t, $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to $795 . Tables,

S3B and up to $109. Hide-a ·
·
••on
be d s, $ 340.. queen SIZe,
~·
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from $18. to $65 . 5
pc . difettes from $79.• to
$385 . 7 pc .• $189 . and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
$2 19 up to $495 . Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375..
maple or pine fin ish .
Bedroom suites . Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
$795 . Bunk bed complele
with mattresses, $250 . and
up to $350. Captai n's beds,

$275 . comp lete . Baby beds,

House for rent 15 min. from

CaiiA-46·3437 .

Ga ll ipolis on Rt. 7. Ca ll256 ·
1198.
2 bdr. house unfurn. in
E ureka. $200 mo. dep. req .
Ca ll 256·1413.
Sma ll home. Prefer retired
or singles. Rent negotiabl e,
references
&amp;
deposit
required . Msg . no. 256-6200
even ings.

te c hai r s $20. a nd $25. Gas

0338 .

pliances ,

19 18

Ave .. 446-7398.

GOOD

U SED

PLIANCES

AP ·
Ap ·

Eastern

Twin sof a bed. Like new .
Message number 256 ·6200

afte r 9PM .

S4

1 room f urni shed eff . with
bath , utiliti es included in
Rio Gra nde Ca ll 1·682-7056.

Ratliff Pools &amp; Servi ce.
Compl et e sa les, se rvi ce,
pool cover s, and win ter ization kits. Call 446-1324

dep. &amp; ref . Call4.46·4206

1 bedroom apts . available
at Riverside Ap ts. Equal
Oppor t uni t y Housing . Ca ll

4 bdr . 2 112 bath bi level

with pool off Rl. 35. Ca ll
Wiseman Real
Age ncy . 446-3643.

9'12·7721.

Estate
2 bedroom apartment on
Spring /l,ve, Pomeroy. Par·
tially furni shed . $170 you
pay util iti es. Call 992-2288
after 6 P.m .

2 bdr . home in Thurma n,
Oh . Completely remodeled .
Rents $175 . a month. Ref .
required . CallJ79·2298 .

For r en t 4 bdr . house
across
from
Cl i ni c,
Ga llipolis. $250 . mo. plus

Avai lable. 1 bedroom apt .
f ar r ent . Con ta ct V i llage

Mano r Ap ts .. Midd lepo rt .
992 ·7787 .

de p. CaiiA-46·7844 .
3 bd r., 2 baths near HM C.

Dar ian 12 x 65, 3

bedrooms . 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expa ndo, 3 bedrooms . 1973
Utopi a 12 ·x 65.2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3

bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14

x 60, 2 bedrooms . B v_. S
Sa les, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt. Pleasant, wv
Phone 675-4424 .
Mobil e home loca t ed in
Camp Conley , E)(tr a nice
and c lean . Phone 304·895-

3967.

Small 4 rm . &amp; bath, fur nished, located 735 rear Jrd
Ave ., Gallipoli s. $1.50 per
mo., S65 deposit. Cal! 446 -

3870 or 446·1340 .
For r ent 4 bdr . hou se on
Bulavitle Rd . $160 . mo. &amp;

dep. $100. Ca ll 4.46·3437 .
1 story ,· 3 bdr . house,
fireplace, in Vinton. Large
lot, garage, no inside pets,

$300. a month . Sec . deposit
&amp; reference req uired . Call

1976 MIDAS travel trailer,
self contained, very goad

condition, $2500.00 304·458·
1630, 458-1752 evenings.

' 1966 12x55, 3 bedrooms,
: $2800.00 . With lot 512.500.00.
304-895·3885
33

Farms for Sale

FARM HOUSE and a p·
. prox imately lD acres,
mostly tillable . E)(C . water .

Good outbuildings, freshly
painted , new gutters &amp;
roofing .
4
bedrooms.
modern
kitchen
&amp;
bathroom . Pretty setting
. on private lane , near Meigs

mines. $39.000. Qhone 742·
: 2795.

388·8795.

Apartments. 675 -5548
Apartment. Mason. WV . 1
bedr oom furnished . No

pets. Depos it. 304-882·3356.
APARTMENTS,
h o m es,
Pleasa nt

mobil e

houses,
Pt .
and Gallipolis.

614·446·8221 or 614·245·9484 .
3 room furnished cottage,
ut ilities f urni shed, ad ults.

Misc. Merchandice

Resta ura nt
eq uipmen t
recondit ioned by RADCO .

Call 304 523· 1378.
WVA .

New woodburning f urnace
hea ts la rge house, still in
fa ctory car ton . $450. Ca ll

Pt. Pleasa nt. Deposit &amp;
referenc es,
1-614·263-8322

or 263·2669 .

furni shed except range and
refrig . N eig hborh ood
Road . .446-4-416 after 7 p .m .

2 BR house, State Rt. 7. 2566520, 4.46·4292 .
Large house tor rent in
Letart Falls, Ohio. Must
have
references
and
deposit. Contact Fred W .
Crow lit, Pomeroy, Ohio,

day . telephone 992·6059
night. telephone 99H511.
2 bedroom unfurnished
$190. 1 bedroom furnished
apartemnt. $125 . Naylors
Run . Security deposit. Call
61499n2BB .

5 ROOM unfurnished a par·
tm ent. adults, no pets, ca ll

304·675·1415.
2 BEDROOM a part ment in
Henderson, partially fur·

nished. 304·675· 1972.

$100.

$225.00

a

m onth,

light

housek eeping

Park Central Hotel.

a pt.,

Nice

used

co lor

TV 's.
Harrison's TV 992·6259, 276
Sycamore St., Middleport.
Stecim Jenny, good shape,

JOO gallon fuel oi l tank with
hand pu mp, sao . 304·576·
2782 .

utilities

available,

all

$300.

down, owner will finance ,

Rent or sale . 4 bedroom

br ick home
614·9'12·3457 .

in, ffiiddl~-1 .

lots

In

Ohio

Valley

Memor y Gardens, $600. Ph .

614·992·5694.

9 acres, Morgan Township,
on While Oak Rd . Has
trailer hook-up some out
buildings, tobacco base,
.$7,500. Call offer 4:00. 4.46·
0951.

42

10 acres near Porter on old
160. Idea! for home or home
sites or trailer park. Road
· ·fron .t age ,

no

down

pajlment;
assumable
morgage, low Interest. 388·
. 9060.

i'h

ocres on river Jn Henderson, 614-~r9264.

ThrwfOurtha

acre lewl lot
,·,. at ll!f• 2 APPle Grove, wv
$10,000 576-,2. ..

For Sa le new 1981 model
sew ing mac hine, zig-zags,
monogra ms, sews on but ·
rons, makes button hol es,
darns, mends, fancy st ich .
Reg . price $249 .95 now only
$99 .50 Free phone cal l.

SEA RS s teel garage door.
30467H1 33.

61

fir ewood-d eliv er ed , call
and pl ace your order now.

304 67H&gt;662 .

'•

..

exterior,
plumbing ,
roofing, some remodeling .

Caii304·45B·1882.

Call 379·2264.

Call245·5121.

POO DLE G ROOMING .
Ca ll Ju dy Taylor at 367 ·
7220.

Persi an

Siamese kittens. Call 446·
3844 after 4 p .m .

12x 6
utilit y
trailer,
Frigida ire e lectri c stove,
275 gal fuel oi l dru m with

HIL LCRE ST

KENNEL

building, etc ; 4'x8', $5.50;
4'x12', $7.60 each . Tuppers
Pla ins, Ohio. 614·667 -3085 or

614·667·3074.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

They'll Do It Every Time

English Cocker Spaniels .
Call446·4191.
Jeanie's Pet Shop New
hours 11 ·5, closed Wed . &amp;
sun. Call446·7920.

Call446· 1562.

·

Caii ·446·7920.
.-Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Aye·. , Pt .
Pleasant. · 675·2063. '.' Nevi
hOurs·Mon., .T hurs., &amp;· Fnll.
'
11·6. ·TUO$., Wed
! lo 5atl •&gt; •
4.
r

1

.

'•

'

,

Residential, automotive .
Emergency service. tawl

7.c3;===;v:;ca;;:n;;:s~&amp;;=';4';;w~."i=0;"_=

RINGLES'S SERVICE-ex·

69 FORD 3000 diesel farm
tractor, good condition .

Call446·2957.

chain saw,

=

1979 Jeep CJ5 Renegade,
304 V·B, new headers, lift
kit, 14135 Gumbo mudders.
exc. cond . Call 446·0515
1970 Volkswagon Van, new
tires, good cond . Call 675 ·

Stark's Tree Trimming. In· .

CHEROKEE

Jeep,

Motorcycles

MPG . Ideal for college
slu\lents . Call 4.46·4626 .

.

Suzuki
750CC ,
water
cooled, fully dressed,
$1,500, firm . Call446·1210.
, 1980 Suzuki GN400X, 3,700
c ond . Call 388·9311 after
5:00on weekdays.

69 Chevrolet &amp; 2·715 tires on

Call 446·

0969.

1978 H·D Electra Glide75th
Annlverslty
model.
Chrome. light bars. and
many extras . $5,000.00 or
besl offer, Call 446·8530 at·
ter6PM.

77 Noova 4 dr ., 6 cyl ., auto.,
PS, PB, air. , $1,950. Call
388·9754 . .

1981 Harley Davidson Wide
. $500, and take over
79 Chevetle 26,000 mi. , 4 . Gil~
payments.
949· 2048.
spd., 4 dr., $3,650. Call 388·
9754.

·r
"

-

'

•

j

9:30

10:00

Excavating

83

750 and 1000 gallon ,.
PLASTIC septic tanks.
State and County ~!11' .
proved. Total weight 301,1 ~.
lbs . Haul in ·your plcku~~·
truck. Ron Evans Backh~ '
Service, located 3 miles t~
south ~f Jackson on St. Rl: :
93. 2116 5930.
··'1

75
'

.

:

'

'

'r

16 ft . .Kingfisher bass boat
with 50·tiil Evlnrude ,motor,
sliver· trolf•trolllng motor,
nuxm.i ng:capth finder •
galveiJIZed drive an trailer
with spare tire. 13000. 304·
451·17-IJ.
'·

..,

YOU
WHEN ':O.J'RE

I 1YE HAP

NOTWAIVffiP!/

LOT50F17ME
10 1'NWK.1 I
REAliZE NON

10:28
t0:30

lliAl WINNIE
ANP HER
f'AMILY ARE

' (

.

.~

MY 'TRI.Itl
Ff(fENP5.

.

~. ·,o~~t,

•

EDWARD'S Backhoe anlli;:Dozer Service. SpeclallzlnOr:
In septic tank. 675· 123~ .
·~ ·

t1:00

--------~--~--~--··

BACK-HOE and Septto I anti · ·
Ser· vic~.

Larry

Siden·

strlcker. 675·5580 .

.=:=====:::;::=:=:;::=.====:;"
E lecfrical
,.

SE,WJ.NG Mac.hlne repat_rs.:
serVIce. Authorized Slng'lt;..
Sales &amp; Service-' Sharpen ',
Scissors . . Fa!&gt;ric · S~op,: · .
Pomeroy . m -2284. · . ' :.

' ,

ONLVONE
WAVTO

GITTATER
OFF 'MY '

BACK

·as

./·

•

1t:21
N UPDATI! NI!WS
11:30
THETONIOHTSHOW
' Ouaat Hqat: Joan Riwara .
Mark RUIIIII. (eD mini.)
Cll M!OTHI!R UFI!
• (I) CB·a LAT! MQVIE

gene~al Ha~llng

:.
NQW,HAUMNG hooJHcoal:
&amp; ,limestone tar driveway+!1
· &lt;;ail for .Sthp~tes 367·7101, '

Quincy , M.E..: 'The Money
Plogve' A lkyjockor'l body 11
tound aix year a altar ha

dlnppeoredwlln •600,000;
loon, QolnCydllcovero1htt hi
died ot U1hrox frlol to word all
anepldomlc. (Repeot) Htny 0 :
'Gvordlon At Tht Goteo ' A
brlllloniArohhactcolla an Htny
to neip 1\im atop on u11a11n .
epeot)

I

.

'1H&amp; ewe:,

' CINCINNATI,

· 01110

Musical
.
.
_
_.:
l
.:.;
n•::.:t.:.:ry.::;m,_,!ll
:r;.:.:11
;
---;1967
For~M~fa~
. .-cyl.
,
Automat!~, low mileage,
Trumpet a. stand, exc. above 11ver- condition,
cond" $1~. May CI\Kk wl.t h Selling for · feu th.J1
,band . dlr~pr. . Call 675· ·current mlit:l(et. P,ll&lt;:!!\e 304' .
_2776,
•
. .'
773· 569~. '
" ,,
. ,·,,_.

'

rn

:::.;.~- N '

'

't

i

AIC CAPTIONI!D N!WB
MOVIII! •(DIIA~A) •• ~

.........

the ~tl" 1111

11 :38 ({) MOVII • (DRAMA1••
"~......... 1817
U:41 ~~~~
N!WI
ti:OO
110881AOU!Y SHOW
MOVII·(ORAMA) ••••

"Patton" 1170

h

-

I TOSOP
(X)

• ...., ""

tROHORRt

J I I J

A WEL-L-KNOWN

WE€&gt;IE~
&amp;EITL.e:R.
Now arrange the circled letterJ: to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the sbove cartoon .

Answer.

THE(

I I )-( I I I I I I ]
(Answers tomorrow)

Saturday's

I

Jumbles PAYEE

MANGE

CAMPUS

SALOON

Answer : Some women make good pos tmistresses
because they know how to d o thi s-

MANAGE THE " MALES ..

Jumble Book No. 17; containing 110 puzzles, lsa~allable tor S1.95 postpaid
hom Jumble, clo thla newspaper, Box 3•. Norwood, N.J. 0764S.Include your
namer, address. zi code and make checks payable to News a rbook s.

·BRIDGE
...

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Go with percentage play

t -28-81

NORm
.Q9 7 3
9 AQ 10

Alan : " Fred Karpl n' s book

us

on trump management in-'

eludes a couple of chapter s
Involving safely and olher
percentage plays In lhe
trump suit. Why don 't we
devote some articles to th is
subject?"
Oswald : " We can start
with a hand taken d ir ectly
from his book as played by

.Q612

WPm

EAST

. ....

.KJ6

•uHt

"J6s2

• 10 63 2

.10753

• 8 74

.H8
SOUTH
10!112

.A
"K

Mary Jane Farell, one of the

tAKQJ
.AK

really great lady bridge
players."
Alan : "The bidding was
s imple and excellent. If
North had shown a king II

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

wouiQ have been the king of
lrumps and Mary Jane
would have bid seven. As it
was, she settled for six ."

P...
P...

West

Nortb

Eul

Soot~

S+

P...
P8M

SNT

Pus

Pa.JL~J

s•

Pus~

Pu,

Oswald: "Tt,e careless
declarer would win I he heart

z•INT

Pass~

Opening lead: •9

lead wllh his king and lay
down the ace of trumps . If
the king dropp ed , he would
make seven . When West
showed out he would m ake
just five ."

she simpl y played he r ace at
trumps and made si x ."

Alan: " Mary Jane won the
heart with dummy 's ace.

Alan : " This was a pe rfe ct

safety play . If East had been

Then she led dummy 's three
of

trump's

and

voi d of trumps, she would
play her ace and lose just one
trump to West."

covered

East's six with her e ight .
Then when West showed out

t'l~•e•"•r
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

39 Enumerate

40 Attack

I Festal
5 Laugh at
10 Rainer
film role
II Family of

41 Word in
a threat

DOWN
I St. Andrews

the hibiscus

specialty

13 Whisk broom
removal
14 Indian city

2 Name not
a name
3 Epithet

IS Craze

for England

4 Hill dweUer
5 Showed

16 Tankard
17
18
20

21
22

23

9 Anticipate
12 Type of

river
publication 27 Conceal
16 State as true 30 Ringlet
pleasure
3% - Alto,
6 Chaplin prop 19 Vigilant
Calif.
7 Traditional 20 "Lorna - "
34 "Vissi d j-"
8 Baudelaire Z3 Malt
vinegar
poem
38 Lab animal
24 Wild ones
coUection
37 Corrida cry

beverage
J;'lnt-£ized
Italian wine
Place for
a clerk
Absconded
Russian city
Mlchaelmas
daisy
Officious

25
26 "Oz" lion
27 Chinese

(comb. form)
28 Salamander
29

Chin

31

feature
Civil War
org.

32 Prefix
of priority

33 Memorable

period
35 Attica 's
market-

places
37 Finished

38 Used car
deal

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXB .

Gveoto: Richerd Slmmone ,

I

ol

BEAGLES, ' Elmer .Kapp.
B,llhlnd Krodel Parki Pl.
Pleasant; WV.

70x14 new mobile home. 3
bdr .• partly furnished, a
mi . from Holzer Hosp. on
north 160. Call 388-8711 or
388·9692.

eCIJ®JM.A.S.H. The 1951
New Year· a celebration kicks
off another 12 months of simple
joy a and nagging hardships tor
the 4077th. (Repeat)
CIJ MOVIE ~DRAMA) " "CIIy
That Navar Sleapa'' 1853
8 C1J ®J HOUSE CALLS A
psychiatric patient holds Ann
and Mr . Peckler hoatagewith a
stolen ~n . (Repeat)
8CiliW LOUGRANTBillia
can' t believe it when she goea
on a story and falls in lowe with
her new a source, aprofesaional
baseball player wh o ia hawing
an unauccaaatul season .
(Repeat; 60 min a.)
Cll CBN UPDATE NEWS
CIJ THIS IS THE LIFE
(IJ TUNING UP: LA TRAVIATA
This preview of 'LI\Ie From The
Met :La Traviata' deacribeatha
proceaa or preparing for the
production and presents
information and background to
heighten the viewers understanding of the opera, 'La
Trawiala' .
(lJ) NEWS
Cll.CIJ.(J)®J NEWS
Cll
PRIORITY
ONE
INTERNATIONAL
(!) 8TANDINO ROOM ON~ Y-'
THE MAGIC OF THE STARS
Milton Berle hosta this magical
comedy apaclal, taped live at
the Met rot ape Weat In Loa
Angelea; featuring Lucille Ball ,
Jack Lammon, Walter Matthau
and Dick Van Patten performing
magical lllualona and comedy
routine a.
(J) DAVI! ALU!N ~ T LAROE
(D) ALFREO ..TCHCOCK

PRI!II!NTS
11:05 =-LLIN .TlleFAMI~Y

JAC.K'S REFRIGERATICil~·
N. air condition servlce ~ ­
commerclal. Industrial :,·
Phone 882: 2079.
;, 1
l

·,

)f)/1/!

170~'T

Dozer Work. Mobile homa_t
sites and ·driveway$, Smal, .:
jobs a specia lty . Phone 742.- .
2753.
I ·

&amp; Refrigeration ·

1976 Olds 98 Reaency . Sale
·or trade. Alf power, till anq
telescopic wheel; am·fm a
track stereo, nitW tires,
. body In ·llbocl shape. Runs
,gcl9&lt;1, ~ses no,off . ,c , ll .304• 76"
'1~·5013 anytlma.
. , 1
f

8:05

8-4

1972 Chevy 4 dr .• station·
wagon, 3 seats, Call 256-

'\ ·

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Phone 446·3888 or 446 ·4477

miles, maroon color, exc.

, I •

82

Cor. Fourth and Pine

New mopeds, last years
model. 5% over cost, 1-50

.. -..... ····· ......

Dodge wheels.

••v.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEAT ING

14

7.-1'' - --"
A_,u_,to,_f:oOe.r.!S,ae:le:c__
1979 Sulek Riv iera . Ex .
cond ., loaded. Call446·7497.

7 :00 [J). PM MAGAZINE
(I)
A GREAT DAY TO
REMEMBER
(I)
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
(IJ HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
G (J) TIC TAC DOUGH
(J) liD
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
®J NEWS
(jl) 18 MUPPET SHOW
7 :05 ({) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
Guest:
Steve
Lawrence .
7 :30 [J). YOUASKEDFORIT
CIJ ANOTHER UFE
(J)e(() FAMILY FEUD
Cil LAVERNE ANO SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
Cll (lJ) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(jJ) •
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
.
7 :315 (I) BASEBALL Atlanla Braves
va Loa Angeles Dodgen•
7 :58 (I) CBNUPDATE NEWS
8:00 [J). Cil THE HOYT AXTON
SHOW Singer Hoyt Axton plays
a widowered c ountry -weat ern
singer who returns alter years
of touring to raise his three
daughters and must face, tor
the fir at time , the problema of
being a tether . (60 mine .)
(l]
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
(!) GLEN WITH TANYA Gle•
CampbellandTanyaTuckerare
together again at Harrah'aln
Las Vegas for an e..-ening of
mu sica l e nterta i nment
performing such hits aa 'Gentle
On My Mind ,' ' Galveston,'
'Delta Dawn,' end 'Tennessee
Woman.'
CIJ (jJ) 8 THAT'S INCREDI·
BLE Young achievers are
featured in this 'Incredible Kids'
edition; among them area three
y ear old wire walker, a ten year
old girl with an operatic voice,
and a herioc handicapped
wrestler who Ia a champion at
sixteen. (60 mine.)
8CIJ®J WKRP INCINCINNA·
Tl A WKRP office break -in has
the staff jittery enough to take
extra__p_recautlona. (Repeat)
(IJ Cl1l
GREAT PERFQR·
MANCES 'Willie Stark'
Produced by theHouston Grand
Opera and the John F. Kennedy
Center. and directed b y Harold
Prince, ' Willie Stark· i a a
muical drama baaed on the
Pulitzer Prize -winning novel ,
'All The King's Men' . ll stars
Timothy Nolan In the title role,
and leatureslowell Thomas
adding voice -over narration. (2
hrs ., 30 mine .)
8:30 (I)
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
Q(J)®J THE TWO OF USNaA
is beside hersell when old Alf ,
Brentwood's senile soccer
referee, follows her hom eon the
day other mo at importan t
interview. (Repeat)
8:68 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 Cll.CIJMONDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'The SecretLo&lt;e
Of Marilyn Monroe' 1980Stars :
Constance Foratund, Lloyd
Bridgea, Norman Fell. The story
of the relationship between 22
yearoldMarllynMonroeandher
53yearoldagent,JohnnyHyde,
who failed In hie desire to marry
her but managed to launch her
career as America 's sex
QQ_ddeas . (2 hra .)
•
llJ 700CLUB
(!) MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE)
"Evary Which Way But
Looaa" 1878
CIJ(jl). MONDAY NIGHT
FOOTBALL AB C Sport a will
provide live c overage of the
gamebetweentheLosAngelea
Rama at the Chicago Beare .

sured. 304-576·2010.

5215 .

Registered
Polled
Here ford Bull . 304·895·3595 .
..

Pumps Sales and Service . .

304·895·3802 .

assume payments, 304·675-

~

Water · wells. Commercial

and Domestic. Test holes.

I

PERIT

~ loaed -Captioned)

Polled
Hereford herd bull, S years
old, phone 304·675-3435.

~.._

He ouqht to
be span keel!

anytime.

REGISTERED

·~

I SUAE WISH I II.NEW WELL, AT I.BI.ST I GOT HIS
WKV DOC TEPES DIDN'T RING! I GUESS I BETTER TR'f
MAKE IT BACK Ht:RE
IW' FIND 11-IA'T COUNTt:SS HE
WITH ME!
WAS GONNI&gt;. LOOK UP!

remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675·4560 ,

6866 .

·

AU.EYOOP

perienced mason, roofer,
Diesel Scout, 4-wheel drive carpenter , electrician,
pickup. 22.000 actual miles . ' general r~pairs and

Registered
Polled
Hereford bull. 3 years old .
1750. 614-985·3891.

------'----''~:--.
197~ . Oapge . [)art, · 311
AKC
Dachshund ; engine, 4 jlr., AC • .f'S, PB,
Pomeranian an Poodle low mileage. 614-992·sq7
pups 304·895·3951.

12x60 2 BR . furnished
trailer. Call446·6583

Service.

t r a i 1or, rot at iII e r. rota
plow, $1,795.00 256·6582.

CFA Registered Flame·
Point Himalayan kittens. 1974 .Ford Mustang, 30:i
Call304·523· 77~9 .
motor. Call446-420o.,
:
Silver Poodle, female, $60.

LOCKSMITH

dyman. Phone 304·576·2921
or 675· 5689.

6735.

For rent 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
mobile home. Call-446-3371.

XLT

house calls. Phone 576·2398
61 FORD pick up, phone .or 4.46·245~.
304·576·2592.
F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
1977 DATSUN King Cab stump removal . 675- 1331.
truck with a topper 3G4·882·
2940.
Dave's Appliance Repair .

74 Super Beetle, 4 spd.,
$2, 150. Call388·9754.

Boarding and grooming.
AI&lt;C
Gordon
setters,

pa i nting,

der, standard, $1,650. Call
304·576·2752 .

Boarding all breeds, c lean
indoor-outdoor facilities .

Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call4.46·7795.

1980 Chevel le, automatic ,
low mileage. 1980 Chevette,
automati c. Bike exer c iser .

Fl50

675·6958.

and

For sale House coal pickup
or del iver ed. Ca ll 2.56 ·6816.

Wallpaper .

76 FORD pickup, 6 cylin·

.£.. . . . . .

MUST BE ...·

Call 446·2801 f or termite,
roach, bird, r0den1, spider,
and flea s control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomas.

Washers, dryers, plum ·
bing, electric, general han-

•

••AHJ SO FIIST!
SOMETHINet

ceilings. Ph . 367 ·7734or367·
7160 .

RON'S Television Service.
Speciali2ing in Zenith and
Mo1orola, Quazar, and

blade,

ANNIE

French City
Painting
Resi dential. commercial,
inferior, exterior, paper
hanging, and t exured · :

1976 Ford Courier pickup, 4

DRA GO NWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
black Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan,

Hom e building, home
remodeling and repair. ·
Custom work from start to

cylinder, rebu i It motor .

1980

Pets tor Sale

9326 .

882·2079.

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

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

and
388 -·

992 ·5682.

-;===;:~~:;~==
-il,_____.L,.Iv-:e~s._.to..,c,_,k:.__ _

Building Supplies

S6

Ford

$3500 firm 304·675·6052.

AIR compressor, asking
$500. car lift for garage,
asking $400. 304·576·2602 .

mainta ina nce
remodeli ng . Phone

Massie Ferguson 300 combine . New ldea· 2 row
picker, Oliver 2 row picker.
New Idea 1 row picker.
Super M Farmall and 2 row

Wagons, good c ond . Call

2 Goats and cherry lumber.

W I NDON
SE RVICE Home

John Deere 3300 combine.

2.1611. BU 710Gehl Forage

$100. Call304·576·2403.

FER~ELL's

GLASS

general carpenter work . AI

Ranger Pickup . New fires,
paint job, low mileage, lots
of extras. $2,500. 992· 5388 or

Farm Equipment

snow

BORN LOSER

Tromm, 614·742·2328.

St . Rt. 139, 6 miles South of
Jackson. Call286'2731.

Weight benc h &amp; weights in
e)(C. con d. Call 446-7048.

L iv ing room couch in good

in. 614·992·7841 .

mounted picker . Russ
Bro1hers Farm Machinery.

55

Lazy Boy rocker recliner
upholstery in ti ght blue
ve lvet . Ca ll367 -0657.

AM- FM,
white
spoke
wheels, 5 speed, still under
warranty. Will accept an
older small truck as trade

9x7, like new . $150.00 Phone

Ca ll collec1 1·30036·9241.

A lm os t new Queen size
bedroom suite &amp; wheel
chair . Ca ll446 -4604.

1981 Datsun pick-up. AC ,

1975

Fuel Oil stoove w ith blower,

2 bdr ., 3 bdr .. mobile
homes. Cal1446·0175.

rm. hou~. Ref.·&amp; dep. req : . ,
Cafl ol46-0571.
' ·
·

PAIN TING · interior and

256·6753.

F arii-supplies
&amp; Lhestaert

Leather Overcoat size 3B &amp;
sui t siz e 38, both like new .

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

.
Very nice mobile home &amp; 5

of

pickup

Gravely with brush hog,

3 bedroom home partially
furnished ,
d ep o si t
required. Available Oct. 1.

446·1628.

~­

wheel-drive

ca ll 304·675·6773.

coli after 3 p.m .• 256·6413 .
· 2

low miles, exc. cond . Call

379·2601 or 379·2350.

Ca ll304·458· 1854 .

1975 Chevy pickup, 6 cyl.,

For Sale or Trade

$1.000 or will trade for

773·5918.

Trucks for Sale

1978 Ford p lck ·up, 4x4, 351 ·
VB, PS. radio. $3.000 firm .
1445 Eastern Ave . 446·4296
after6PM.

WARDS furepl ace, c om equivalent value. 304-675·
plete with tripl e pipe, 6321.
mobil e home approved .
Roto-t ill er wifh pl ow . 304-

LOTS · Real nice campsite ·
Creek,

seater,

finish . Call388 ·8711.

77 Monte carlo, loaded ,
yigh mileage, new radials,

proven, female 2 yrs . bred .

Raccoon

2

1975 F -600 1 ton Ford tlal·
bed, body rough. good
engine &amp; 8-25x20 tires,
asking $2.700 . Call446· 2641.
8·5.

Apples, Honey and sweet
cider. Grimes Golden
Delicious
and
Re .d

59

AKC Dobermans 3 month
old pups. Male 2 yrs .

on

Rt. 2. Racine, Ohio. 614·843·
2432 .

Del iclous. F itzpatrlck Or·
chard, S. R . 689. 614·669·
1 WE ST INGHOUSE air 3785.
compressor, twin cyl. ·1
motor, 3HP, 220·440 volts. 3 1,000 bushel old corn .
phase . Large receiver Charles E. Yost. Oak
tank, never used . $700. 304 - Grove Rd., Racine.
576·2782.

Lots &amp; Acreage

35

Caprice

1972 GMC 7500 series truck ,
Detriot Diesel, tandem
axel. 1·614·694 ·7842.

Sweet pototoes, red, white,
yellow. Robert W . Lewis,

WEDDING dress &amp; vail.
$50. for more information

Twenty gauge 4' )(8', 4')( 12'
metal sheets w on' t rust,
many uses, home, out-

ROOMS and

2659.

co rd. Hardwood $75 per
cord or $40 per half cord .
Call for quotes on large
quaniti es. Phone 245-5478 .

call614·446·7526.

SLEEPING

Chevrolet

1975 Camara, 350 engine, 3· 20 yrs . ex p. Caii388·9652.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

SO
Kitchen cabinets, electri c
range, range hood. 949 -

Milton 304-743·3109.

388·8304.

Furnished Rooms

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice. cal l675·1582.

ts. 101 Court St .• Gallipolis.
Call446· 2572 .

speed, new tires, no rust,

Call985·4386.

$65 per cord or $35 per ha lf

prefer work ing couple, no
children, for infor m a tion

45

- - - - -- - - - - -

rebuilt engine and tran·
smlsslon, ~ engine, S600.
304-882·2910.

TRUMPET &amp; stand in ex·
cellent condition, $150. May

F ir ewood-split, delivered
and st acked. Mixed wood

legs attac hed . 446·0230.
ONE bedroom apartment,
ful l y fu rn i shed, New Haven
area , water paid, deposi t

swings, mos1 wood produc-

stationwagon,

Spring Vall ey Plaza, 446·
8025.

WOODSHOP
Cab inets.
pi c niC
tables,
porch

ljaw, Landju rood, factory
mags, -"'·'0 es, excellent
condllloil,$36phone304·576·
2865.
1973

Bundy alto saxaphone.
good cond. Call 446·4658,
$225.00.

FURNITURE s tripping &amp;
r ef inishing . This month
special-furni shed chairs
$6.00 (regular $8.00) Pick
up &amp; delivery available.
The Country Strippers,

256· 121 6.

COnd .

6 Room House, SlOO un-

Hgtn .,

675 28 12 or 675· 1580.
2 BEDROOM a pa rtm e nt in

Musical

Instruments

Squires Bingham 22 L.R .
ammo $1 .19 per box. Eclipse 12 gage game toades, 6
shot. 20 s hells per box $3.95.
Spring Valle y Trading Co .•

asking $1000. 576·2602.

Skaggs

$155 monthlv . Ca ll446· 2055.

57

YOU'

Caii446·2107.

7891.

Bed

$42 .

r a n ges .

Modern 1 bdr . apt . lease &amp;
secu rity deposit required.

Misc. Merchandice

54

iiTHiiR OF

Carpets. Free estimates.

72

chests,

HUD accepted . 675·6722,
675·5104.

For Rent W ith Option To
Buy! 4 bed ., 2 1/2 baths,
li vi ngroom, family room, 2
w .b . firepla ces, 2·car
garage, city schools. Sec .

r~~;c~..,:;~~,.~·~ft~~~§~:;:=r~~~~~~~~~~,

THE MICHEI.IN 6UIOE, DIP

in concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
pa-tio ,
baSement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
years experierice. Call 367-

dry ers,

dep . &amp; fer . req . Call 446
1519.

AC, AMbstereo, cruise con-

-t.-

"'

CAPTAIN EASY
I PIPI.J'T 9&amp;10 THI7 P~ACE IN

1971 Super Beetl e, good
condition, $1100. 304·882·
2019 or 882·2326.

washers,
refr i gerat ors ,

3 rm . &amp; bath , turn ., no pets ,

.q

78 LTO II 2, door, 302
engine. automltlc, PS, PB.

CAPTAIN STEE MER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom

Firewood for sale. All har- GOOD used clairnet $125 .
dwood, split and delivered . 304·675·4014.

Delu xe furnished apart·
ment cen tral a ir and hea t ,
excellent location, adults
only , lease, dep. , upper
bracket , r efer ence. 446·

dep. 446·0338.

1979 Mustang Ghla, 4 cyl.
sun roof, silver, AC, low
mileage, $5,300. Call 675·
4480 ext. 11 or 675·4528.

sets, $195. 5 dr. chests. $49.

446·0322

Mobile home in c ity central
air and heat , adults onl y,

STUCCO PLASTERING

free estimates. Call 256·;:
1182 .
.

tour ordinary words.

EVENING

textured ceilings, commercial and residential, , ..

BING'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION · Specializing

or electric ranges, $295. orthoped ic su per firm, $95,
baby m atresses, $25 &amp; · S3S,
bed fram es S10, $25, &amp; $30.
Used ,
Ranges ,
refrigera tors. and TV ' s,
J miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
fhru Fri., 9am to 5pm, Sat .

Unf urn . 4 rm . apa r tment ,
$250 mo., $ 100 dep., utiliti es
pd ., no children, no pets.

Free :··

runs good. $2,000. 304·895·
3654.

256·6520 .

Ca ll 446·3643 Wiseman Real
Estate.

experience.

Unlfcramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square , to form

II!PT. 28, Ul8t

estim ates. Remodeling.
Call388 ·9857.

Used R·40 Ditch Witc h check with band director,
Trencher . 614·694·7842.
304·675·2776.

- Gun cabinets, $350., dinet-

&amp; 1 acre, $300 . a month .

years

lftf}~rulfi)1} ~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME
~ ~ ~~ "
byHenriArnoldaodBob t:.ee·

MONDAY

JIM MARCUM Roofung
spouting and siding. 30 .

$99 . Mattresses or box.
spr ings, fu ll or twin, $58.,
fi rm, S68. and $78. Queen

2 bdr . apartment unfurn .•
in Crown Ci ty, Ohio. Ca ll

Ca ll675·5104 or 675·5386.

3 bdr . home with fireplace

New 4 rms &amp; ba th, su n
deck., overlooking Racoon
Cr eek, adults only, no pets,
r easonable . Caii 2S6·6472 .

SURPLUS JEEPS, CARS,
TRUCKS, Car· lnv. value
$2143 sold for $100. For In·
formation on purchasing
similar bargains, Call 602·
941-8014 Ext. 7965, Phone
call refundable.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

4 dr .

3 rm . apt . uti lities pa id .

Television
•
•
VIeWing

Household Goods

frames. S20.and $25 .• lG gun

5 rms. house in Eureka full
si ze base ment. fuel oil fur nance . Ref.&amp;. dep. req . Call
256·6547 .

1972-Volkeswagen, 675-2864
or 882·.2947 .

from town i unction 2 &amp; 62 at

51

DICK TRACY

___.A-"u"'
to:.:f:=;
or:..:5"'t""'
le___

l574ar67~2881 .

trailer ,

3839 or 985·3371.

owner, 3 apartment

Caii.W.-2957 .
1971

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North ot
992·7479 .

7._,_1_

The Daily sentineJ--Page-9

1971 podge Om 'II ~ dr .• hat·
' chllick, automatic, power a·"1,......----;-:
H~
o=m::e--steerll19. excellent cond.
Improvements
Ph. 245·5617after 5PM.
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Hendenon, wv. Phone67S·
446·4208

Located 4 miles from town .
Phone 446-4999.
·

home on large
private lot. Phone 446-2676
after 6:00 PM. Deposit

Mobile Home in Chester .
Nice &amp; clean . 2 bedrooms.
Reference required . 985·

7034
2 bed room mobile home ,
utilities paid, adults only,
deposit and references
r equired . No pets. 614-992

by Lany Wright

rent _

2 BEDROOM apar t m ent,

Mobile, M odula r trade-ins.
19 72

for

Cheshire, $175, S75 deposit,
you pay utilities. Call 61.4·
36H811.

Lots &amp; Acreage

trailers .
TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES .
Gal lipol is. CALL 446·7572.

3547.

space

Three bedroom &amp; two baths

3

attention 9 "

"..&lt;..- -====== '--

Mobile Hom e Brokers , 446·

Trailer

mobile

mobile homes and travel

1977 70x14 gas, 3bdr., bath
&amp; 1/ 2, par t . furn ., w i ndow
awnings, $10,000. Johnson' s

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

Space far Rent

Pomeroy . Large lots. Cl!lll

all JS

CLEA N USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
M OB I LE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALL IPOLI S, RT .
35. PHONE 446·3868 or 4.46·
7274.

46

2 bdr . mobile horne In vln·
cinty of Bidwell on private
lot $140. a month, $100
deposit plus util ities. 3888887.

Mabile Homes
far Sale

32

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Monday; September 28, 1981

.'

II

LONGFELLOW

One letter olmply atondl for another. In this sample A II
usee! for the three L's, X tor the two O's, etc . Single letters •
apoatrophea, the lengUI and formation of the words are •II
hlnll. Earll day the code letters ore dUYerent.,

CllYPTOQt101'1!8

y X AH F N AF

VXXKCHF
IXK
PC

Y X TV U N'W A F
HXKF

'

CltRXZ

-

F DC

XI

FDC

NUU

WH

VNZ

YXTIXKF!i
•

IKNAMUWA

LCA

nltMr

Yetlerday'a CryploqDOte: THE ART OF APEOPlE IS A
MIRROROFTHEIRMINDS.-NEHRU
. · , · t
\'

.,

)~

'

ll'

·!

~·

�lQ-The Daily Sen.t inel

Meigs library gets $5,000 grant
The Meigs CoWJty PubUc Ubrary
annoWJced that it will receive a
$5,000 grant to present a series IX
children's programs in Meigs,
Jackson, and Vinton coWJties.
Brinton Turkle,
renowned
children's author and illustrator will
visit Middleport, Jackson, WJ!llston,
and McArthur's libraries in Novem·
ber as part or the series.

''The libraries will have a series of
programs in October and November" explained Meigs County's
librarian, Ellen Bell. "The first four
programs will give children the opportunity to hear stories, discuss
how illustrations enhance the
stories, and experiment with things
like pen and ink drawings, collage

1

Area deaths
Frt&gt;eland S. Norris
Freeland S. Norris, 74 , prominent
fulcine resident, died Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Norris, a son of the late
S.muel and Arrninta Pounds Norris,
was also preceded in death by three
brothers and two sisters.

He was a fonner president of the
ful cinc Home-National Bank a nd
continued to serve on the bank's
board of directors. He was a school
teacher for 16 years and was
associated with the fulc ine bank for
30 years. He pastored churches in
both Gallia and Mc1gs Counties and
was pastor of the Carpenter Baptist
Church at the time of his death.
Mr.Norris served on the Meigs
County Hospital Corrunission and
the Meigs County Jury Commission .
He and Mrs. Norris observed thelf
50th wedding anniversa r y in August

of th1s year.
S Urvi V IIl ~ are his w1fe, Lucille
Allen Norris; a son. Charles Norris,
also a pa stor of Charleston , W. Va .

a daughte r, Lucille Diehl 1 Racine ; a

grandson, Brian D1ehl; fo•r grand·
daughters, Diana !hie, Sandra
Baldingn. Debra McKnight and
Lind a

Norr i s;

two

great·

grand c hild re n, Charles J ason
McKmght and Nicole Lynn lhle; a
brother, Fern Nom s, fulcine; two
sistt!rs,

Mrs

Florence

Adams,

fulcin e, and Mrs . Frances Cady,
West Jefferson, and severa l nieces
~ nd

nephews.

Services will be held at 2 p.m.

Tuesday at the fulcine Baptist Church with the Rev . Pearl Casto, the
Rev. Don Walker and the Rev . Cecil
Cox officiating. Burial will be in
the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call at the Ewing Funeral
Home from 7 to 9 this evening. The
body will be taken to the church at 12
noon Tuesday .
•.

H.A. Embleton
H.A. I Buddy) Embleton, 70, New
Haven, died Saturday in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
He was born July 5, 1911. in Mason
to the late Robert and Hattie Stone
Embleton .
He was a retired employee or
Goodyear in Akron .
Surviving are one son, Donald W.
Embl eton and daughter·in-iaw,
Patricia Embleton, New Haven; one
daughter, Miss Jo Ann Embleton,
Cuyahoga Falls; three sisters, Mrs .
Harriett Rockwell, Huntington,
W.Va .. Mrs. Mary Harper, Chester,
W.Va . and Miss Lena Embleton,
Pomt Pleasant; two brothers ,
Robert Embleton, Point Pleasant
and Paul Embleton, Richmond,
Ind.; three grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday I :30 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funera l Home in Mason with the
Rev. John Campbell officiating.
Burial will be in the Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
home tonight from 7 p.m. until 9
p. m.

Meigs County happenings
Mt•t•ts tonight
The OH KAN Coin Club will meet
this evenin g in the River Boat Room
at Dianmond Sav in ~s and Loan.
A social hour, with out-of-town
coin dea lers for trading and selling ,
will preceed the 8 p.m. meeting.
A 25 Jot coin auction will be held
cmd refres hments will be served.
Area residents interested in coins or

paper currency are invited to at·
tend .

Bank to ('lm;p
fulcinc Home National Bank will
close at 1. 30 Tuesday in order tha t
t-&gt;mployes may a ttend the fun eral of
Freeland S. Norris, director and fo r·
mer president or the bank.

Will YiPw film
A fi~n of the Athens· Meigs game
will be shown at a meeting or the
Meigs Athletic Boosters to be held at
7::30 p.m. Tue,day at Meigs High
School. The public is invited to any
of the booster mectmgs which arc
held eac h Tuesday evening during

the footba ll season .

Vl'lt-ran~

Memorial

Saturday Admi ssion s--Gladys
Shannon , Reedsv ille ; Harold Sauer,
Middleport: Chester Mundry , Reedsville ; Dame! Young. Pomeroy : Eva
Conkl e, Pomeroy: Lena Fox , Clif·
ton , W. Va ., a nd James Harris,
Pomeroy.
&amp; turday Dtscharges- Rhonda Jef·
fcrs. Sarah Koush, Bertha Diehl.
Bett y Imbod en. Tyler Wolfe,
Jacquelyn Poston, Curtis Riffle,
Gladys Shannon.
Sunday Adinissions-Alice Mills,
Middl eport ; Mabel Kester son,

and other ways CJf illustrating
stories. The children's art work Will
be displayed at the four libraries."
Reading motivator Patty Asbeck
will lead the program in Middleport
and train Uz Walton, children's
librarian in Wellston, to lead the
programs in Wellston, Jackson, and
McArthur.
"The fifth program will have
children making and illustrating
their own books," said Patty. "Then
they'll really appreciate Brinton
Turkle's work when they see II."
The series of six programs is being
made possible by a grant from NEH
Youth Projects of the National Endowment for the Hwnanities, a
Federal agency established by
Congress to promote research,
education, and public activity in the
hwnanities. This grant is the third
Federal grant to the Meigs Counly
Public Ubrary since January 1919.
Dr. Jack Matthews, Distinguished
Professor of English at Ohio University, will serve as consultant for the
project.

Rutland ; Robin Imboden, fulcine .
Discharges--William
Sunday
Morris, Carl fulirden, Alice Osborne, William Smith.

Actions filed
Foreclosure suit was filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by The Fanners Bank and Savings
Co., against Ronald Richards, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, ct al.
Filing for divorce were Lance
Elda Chapman, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
against Marilyn Virginia Chapman,
Rt. 4, Athens; Rita J. Hysell,
Pomeroy, against Harold Hysell, Rt.
3, Pomeroy : Judy Constance Neace ,
Rutland, against Freddie Joe Neace,
Lost Creek, Ky .

4.AlJW mePiing set
The Middleport·Pomeroy Area
Branch of the American Association
of University Women will meet at
7 30 Tuesday evening at the Meigs
Inn .
Theme of the meeting will be
" Reunion and Recruitment". In·
vited to attend are all area women
who are graduates of a four year accredited coilege or university.
Hostesses for the meeting will be of.
ficers, Fay Sauer, president ; Helen
Smith, vice president, program;
Rosalie Story, vice president, membership : Lee Lee, secretary and
Kathryn Kmght, treasurer.

Plan alumni band
Doug Hill , Meigs band director ,
reports he is planning to have an
alumni band for the annual
homecoming on Oct. 9. There wilt be
only one rehearsal on Oct. 8 and all
alwnni interested in taking part are
to contact Hiil at 992-7141 or leave
word for him at 992-2158.

Juvenile justice
struggle continues
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
power struggle is WJder way in the
Ohio Senate over a House-approved
bill that would overhaul the state's
system of juvenile justice.
The proposal, up for a hearing in
the Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, basically p1ts the Ohio

11 die
(Continued from page I)
by a car on Ohio564 in Noble County.
DAYTON - Joseph H. Gehle, 32,
of Carrollton, in a two-car accident
on Interstate 75 in Montgomery
County .
CIRCLEVILLE - Dorothy V.
Alkire, 67, of Stoutsville, in a two-car
accident on a Pickaway County
road.
FRIDAY
AUSTINTOWN - George W.
Kurak, 39, of Boardman, in a one-car
accident on an Austintown city
street.

at Intervals. Mr. and Mrs. Hank Douglu were at tile
helm when Ibis Seatlnal pboto was taken. The free
wagon rides were part all well all other novel features
were Included fD lbe VaugbaD store weetead
promolloo of beef roundup days.

YESTERYEAR - Area youugsten were given a
yesteryear experience Saturday afternoon when they
visited Vaughan's Cardinal In Middleport. This wagon
wall loaded with cblldren throughout the afternoon
taking rides with a team owned by Hank Douglas
pulling the wagon. Douglas and his son, Richard, drove

Youth Commission against juvenile
judges from around the state.
· Rep. Thomas A. Pottenger's bill
takes away from the commission
and gives juvenile courts authority
to control " after care" programs those designed to rehabilitate
youngsters following release from
correctional institutions.
Pottenger, R-Cincinnati, and
others have expressed displeasure
over high recidivism rates among
youths let go by the commission,
saying their constituents demand
improvements in the system.
The conunission claims many
judges would not take time to render
adequate care and that many would
wind up spending state subsidies
contained in the bill for other pur·
poses.
Joseph White, a former director of
the commission who testified on the
bill last week without formally
taking sides, swruned up the intense
struggle which marks the
deliberations.

ELECTRIC BLANKETS

-Twin, Full, Queen or King Size
-Automatic Controls

-

-Machine Washable

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Emergency runs
Local emergencv units were kept
busy with weekend calls, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
reports.
SWlday calls included:
Middleport Unit, 12 :47 a.m. Ronnie
Powell treated at home on Brownell
Ave.; 6:01a.m., Roy Sinbuy treated
at Lazy Day Cafe; 12 :24 a.m., Carl
Stewart from Route 7 to Hol2er
Medical Center; 9:20p.m., Florence
Musser from Harrisonville Road to
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy Unit,
4:45 p.m ., Carolyn Reeves,
Pomeroy. to Veterans Memorial and
then to Hol2er Medical Center·
fulcine Unit, 9:29 p.m., Robin Im~
boden, Fifth St., to Veterans
Memorial; Rutland, 1:58 p.m.,
James Birchfield from Rutland
home to Veterans Memorial.
Saturday-Middleport Unit, 6: 15
p.m., Russell McDaniel from Pearl
St. to Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy,
10 :07 a.m., Eva Conkle, Condor St.,
to Veterans Memorial; Racine Unit,
I :07 a.m., Mark Proffitt, Apple
Grove, to Veterans Memorial; 12:26
p.m., Paul Milliron, Blind Hollow
Road, to Veterans Memorial; Tuppers Plains, I :34 a.m., Gladys Shannon, Eagle Ridge, to Veterans
Memorial, and 9:06 a.m. , Pearl
Niday, from intersection on Route
124 and 681 to Camden-Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg.

Services set
Masonic services will be held this
evening at 6 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home for Freeland Norris by fulcine
Lodge
461 .

EVERY tU.SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!
For Just

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

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

"Combination Dinner
•Dining Room On~

On~

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

Beverages
•

I·

.

'·

:'1&gt;\t'iilht•r i'Ot&lt;: '.

Crow's Family Restaurant .
228 W. MAIN

PH. 992·5432
'·

POMEROY, OHIO
.(

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