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Tuesday, $ept$Mber~, 1981

N-ation's index continues to fall

Reagan crime pla"'s under attack:
WASHINGTON (AP) - The tactics President Reagan propoi!eS to
use in an attack on "an American
epidemic" of violent crime are under challenge by civil libertarians,
lawyers and some members of
Congress.
The American Civil Uberties
Union decried many of the
president's major pnlp011818 Monday
as a threat to constitutional rights
· and said independent studies show
they have no chance of being effective.
The American Bar Allsll!!iatlon
said It oppoSed some of the key
planks in Reagan's anti-crime platfonn, Including "preventive detention" by which judges could keep
suspects in jail without ball if they
appeared to be a danger to the community.
And Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass. , said the administration was
trying to fight crime "on the cheap"
- without spending money to improve local law enforcement or build
new prisons.
Addressing the International
Association of Chiefs of Police in
New Orleans, Reagan said: "It's
time for honest talk, for plain talk.
There has been a breakdown in the
criminal justice system in America.
It just plain isn't working_
"All too often, repeat offenders,
habitual law-breakers, career
criminals - call them what you will
- are robbing, raping, and beating
with impunity and ...quite literally
getting away wlth murder. The
people are sickened and outraged.
They demand that we put a stop to

'
LEANING AND LOOKING - Pres ident Ronald
Reagan bends down to look down the sld~ of Air Force
One apparently trying to find someone below as he was
getting aboard the plane for his flight back to

Washington. Reagan spent lour hours in New Orleallli
Munday where he addresst"d a convention of police

&lt;'hi cis and a Republican luncheon. (AP Laserphoto).

Discrepancy can be resolved but
probe will cost state $500,000
COLUMBUS, Ohi o I API - A $1.3
million discrepa ncy in Ohio's ma in
checking account probably can be
resolved , but the probe could cost
the st&lt;lte nearly $500.000. audllors
say.
The stale Controlling Board
agreed to spend another $216,000 on
a n investigatiOn by Price,
Waterhouse Co. after the finn said it
believed there was a "conscious effort" at a cover-up in the matter.

Auditors from Price, Waterhouse
began work Aug. 31 to reconcile a
$1.3 million discrepancy in records
kept by state Treasurer Gertrude W.
Donahey's offi ce and BancOhio.
Fred B. Miller, a partner in Price
Waterhouse, told controll ers the
company concluded there was a
·'conscious effo rt by someone in the
st&lt;lte treasurer's office to cover up
a n unreconciled

difference"

in-

volving $837 ,1!32 of the to!&lt;! I.
Although Miller did not identify
who might have been responstble, he
said he anllctpates being able to explain the $837,832 at a controllers'
meeting in November. The com-

pany's renewed contract expire~
Nov. 30.
Mlller did not elaborate on why a
cover-up is suspected. "That's our

professional judgement based on
what we 've seen," he sa id.
Pric'&lt;!, Waterhouse had started the
probe under a one-month, $55.000
contract that expires Sept. 30.
Mtller satd he expects to be able to
explain the $837,832 discrepancy by

late ~ovember. He will recorrunend
at that time whether to proceed with
a tltird phase of the investigation
which would cost another $220,000
and conclude Feb. I, 1982.
That would bring the tow! cost to
$491,000, not counting expenses incurred by the st&lt;lte Highway Patrol
a nd th e Franklin Co unt y
prosecutor's office in related probes.
Miller said it is possible to reconcile the causes of the $1.3 million
discrepar.cy for an audit period ending D&lt;&gt;c. 31, 1978, by using existing
1nfonnati on to reconstruct missing
records.

Miller sa id auditors determined
the $837,1!32 discrepancy existed
.Jan. 7, 1979, and that there may have
been a difference as far back as the
end or 1977.
He sa id 13 ledger pages of cash
receipts and di sbursements
covering I ,300 checks in 15 different
months of 1978, 1979, and 1980 are
missing from the treasurer •s office.

Also missing are 102 cancelled
checks written by the treasurer's offlee over a 29-month pertod.
The investigation ~terns from a
report by st&lt;lte Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson last July that there was a
discrepancy o[ $1.3 million between
records kept by Ms. Donahey's offi ce and those of BancOhio.
A key figure in the matter is
Elizabeth J. Boerger. a fonncr swte
cashier who became ill in January
1980. She reportedly has amnesia
and has taken early retirement from

Area deaths
Garrt'll G, Christy

her state job.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R·
Ashland, questioned why Ferguson,
a Democrat, had not discovered the
problem earlier.
"I just wonder if we're appropriating money for a JOb that
should have been done by somebody
else," Van Meter sa id.

it. II

He proposed a sweeping overhaul
or federal criminal laws which the
Senate Judiciary Committee coincidentally be~an to review Monday
at about the same time Reagan was
speaking.

Rio Grande man
hurt in accident

Library will host
educational
program

for assured clear distance.

The patrol cited a driver in
another tw~ca r crash Monday .

The report said Steven F.
Shoemaker, 23, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
pulled off Rt. 7 onto the U.S. 35 inter~ection in Kanauga at 2:40p.m.
into the path of a southbound vehicle
driven by Gary M. Altier, 21, Ad·
dison. and collided.

1

c~rs

were severely damaged

and Shoemaker was cited for failure
to yield.

l'hri st ian wake services will be held
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 7 p.m. this
cvcnmg.

Announce new

Funeral sen tees for Garrett G.
Christy, 84 , Grove City, will be held
copy deadline
Thursday at 10 a.m . at the Grove
for Sunday paper
City Church of Christ in Christtan
Union, Grove City . Graveside serAll farm and business ne•ws
items for the Sunday Timesvices will be held at 1:30 p.m .• at Otto C. Lohn
· St
Sentinel must be In the Tribune or
Athe ns Cemetery, Wes t Umon
' ··
Ott 0 C L0 h 73 101 Stat St
Athens.
·
n, ·
· e ··
Sentinel offices by t p.m. Wednes day for 1oc1us1on In that
Friends may call today from 7 to 9 Pomeroy, d1ed Monday at Veterans
and Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Memorial Hospit&lt;ll.
week's edition of the TimesMr. Lohn was the son of the late
at the the Miller Funeral Home, 2696
Sentinel.
Columbus St. , Grove City.
Otto and Laura Spurlock Lohn. He
Memorials may be given to Grove was also preceded in death by one
. in Christian brother, Edward Lohn and one
City Ch urc h of Ch rast
"'
stster, Margaret Peeples.
Union or South Bethel United
He was a member of the Laurel
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains.
.
Three calls were answered MonMr. Chr1sty
was associated with Cliff Free Methodist Church.
Grove City Church of Christ in
He is survived by his wife, Amber;
day by local units, the Meigs County
Christian Union, member of Modern brother and sister-in-law, Raymond Emergency Medical Services reporWoodman or America, Allred, and a
and Elizabeth Lohn, Westerville, ts. At 7:37p.m., the Middleport Unit
and several nieces and nephews.
took Wi' lll'am Russe11 from S· Se cond
Veteran of World War L
Funeral
services
will
be
held
W
edAvo
· I
He is survived by his wife, Violet
' ·• to Vet erans Memona
Christy; daughter and son-in-law, ncsday at 2 p.m. at the Laurel Cliff Hospit&lt;ll; Pomeroy at 10:40 a.m.
Janet and John Chamberlin, . Church with the Rev . Robert Miller took Dora Wood from the Pomeroy
BowlingChamberlin
Green, Ky .;granddaughter,
officiating.
Burial Friends
will be may
in Beech
Care
to Veterans
Christy
three brothers, Grove
Cemetery.
call Health
Memorial,
andCenter
the Racine
Unit at
Delphin and Orville of Columbus and
at the funeral home today from 2 to 4 4:37 p.m. took Carol Sayre from
Howard or Madison, Ind.; tilree "nd7to9.
Vine St.toHolzerMedlcalCenter.
sisters, Ada Swank, Akron, Mildred ~r-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
Martin, Athens and ·Hazel Barnhill, I

Emergency run"'

conswner goods and materials, the Ccnmerce DepartWASHINGTON (AP) - 'l1le govta iliuedt's Index of
ment report said
LeiKIIJig ECOIICII!llc Indlcalo!'ll declined 0;5 percent in
Other Indicators that showed negaUve resulta in
A~ oftlclals reported lilday.' lt was tile third drop
Augllll included building pennlta for future housing
in four months and a new qn of contlnulag
constructton, the prices of raw materials and the lnaluggishlness In the natlonal econoffiy.
·
Oatlon-adjusted value of new conlracta and orders for
The Index, which Is ~ to forecast future '
economic ln!nds, had fallen I.7 percent In May allll 0.8 , plant and equipment.
Indicators sbowlng Improvement, though not enough
percent in June before rising 0.4 percent in July.
to balance the negative signs, included stock prices,
July's figure earlier had been reported as a 0.1 perdelivery performance, by business vendors, an Incent decUne, and the new Augllll result 18 also snbject
crease in total liquid useta, a rl.!e in the aver~~ge workto later revision when more infurmatlonla available.
week and an increaBe in the money supply.
The biggest factors in tlMi AugUst~ were at.$ perThe index for Augllll stood at 133.8 percent of the 1987
cent Increase in the labor layoff rate anll a 5.3 percent
average.
decline in inflation-adjusted new fectoty ·on1ers for
' · '. '

The Middleport Library, 178 S.
Third Ave., Middleport, will host a
program on the benefits of higher
education to be presented by
Gallipolis Business College at 10
a.m. Thursday.
Represent&lt;ltives from the college
will stress the importance or
education beyond the secondary
level and point out the steps
necessary to attain marketable
skills in today's business world.
There will be emphasis on
motivation of individuals desiring
more education regardless of
whether a high school diploma has
been received. Represen!J!tives will
show the importance or additional
education and how this can be accomplished. Individuals in adult
basic education programs are encouraged to attend and explore their
options.
There IS no charge for this
workshop which is open to the
public. Residents wishing more information may cont&lt;lct Ruth Powers
at992--5713.

Willard Ohlinger and Carolyn Lee
Ohlinger; Sharon M. Darst and Danny Darst and Drema Diane Stitt and
James Allen Still. Drema Diane Stitt
was restored to her maiden name of
Drema D. Hovatter.

Katy Justice, Middleport, on the
lower parking lot in Pomeroy Monday afternoon. Driver of the car
striking the Justice car did not
report the incident.

Hospital patient

Veterans Memorial

Warren Black, Rutland, is a
patient at University Hospital;
Room S 1168, Colwnbus, Ohio. Persons may send cards to him in care
of the hospital.

Admitted--Mary
Wippel,
Pomeroy; Dora Wood, Pomeroy;
Emily Kuhn, Pomeroy; Harold
~mith, Pomeroy; Jerry Owens, Middleport; Harold Demosky, Middleport.
Discharged-James Harris, Lucy
Spencer, Amber Lohn and Gea'trude
Pellegrino.

Probe theft case
Pomeroy Police are investigating
a breaking and entering at the
Spring Ave., garage of the Ohio
Power Co. which occurred Monday.
A box of tools andapproximately 33
gallons of gasoline were taken. Entrance was gained through a side
door.
Police reported also damage to the
right front fender of a car owned by

Pregnant inmate gets freedom
OOliTH GATE, Call£. - A judge who jailed a pregnant woman for
shortchanging a customer by $10 set her free after six days Tuesday.
because she Is almost ready to deliver her baby. He said he was only
trying to "shock" her.
Defendant Mirna Delfllia Gaitan told Municipal Judge John R. HopsOil that she was sorry about the petty theft incident four montha ago
and said It would never happen again.

Police seek missing girls
OKLAHOMA CITY - Police searched Tuellday for two 13-year-old
girls who disappeared during the weekend after telllng their parents
they had been offered jobs unloading stuffed animals at the State Fair.
Blond, biiiM!yed Charlotte Kinley and her brown-eyed, brunette
friend, Clnda L. Pallett, bot1l or Oklahoma City, were last )Ieard from
at 7 p:m. Saturday when they celled their rmDilles tO report the job oJfer. They pi'OI)iised to call home again at 9 p.m. Saturday to arrange
rides home from the fair, police said.
The second call was never made. Police said they were looking for a
man, age to to 50, wbo offered the jobs to the girls and two young friends.

Trustees to meet
A regular meeting of the Salisbury
Township Trustees will be held at 7
p.m. Friday at the borne or the clerk,
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road.

· Former policeman, wife indicted
NEW PIDLADELPiflA, Ohio - Patrie Creager, a fonner
policeman wbo tried to ride a modem-day gold rush to riches, and his
wife have been Indicted on 618 criminal charges,
After spending several monlha investigating Creager Enterprises
Inc., a ~rawas County grand jury returned the indicbnent
Tuesday naming Creager and his wife, Kathleen, on each count. Most
charges P'aced to sale of interests in a gold, silver and coin venture.
·
~ger was listed as presideqt, and his wife as Vice preSI~nt of
Creager Enterprises.
·
'

-AUTOMATIC
-ARVIN QUALITY
,/

Agree to.contract changes

1ST FLOOR - HOUSEWARES DEPT.

ELBERfELD$ IN POMEROY

r-i.M~a;m;·;ag~es~d~iS!~SO~l~ved~w~e~re~J~am~e~s~~;;;;;;;.;;;;~~;;5~;:i- ;;;;~~~~~~·~,~~

~~~:~:~ns; and many nieces
Eleanor B. Borham

Eleanor B. Borham, 68, Syracuse,
died Monday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Borham was preceded in
death by her parents, John W. and
Clara Killingsworth Carroll, two
brothers, Thomas and Rollin
Carroll, one sister, Mary Butcher
and orie nephew, James CarrolL
She was a member of the Pomeroy
Sacred Heart Church.
She is survived by her husband,
John Carroll; one sister, Margaret
Jtose, Minersville; one brother, John
Carroll, Charleston, and several
nieces and nephews.
' •Funeral services will be held
''11!ursday at 11 a.m. at the Sacred
Heart Church with the Rev. Paul·
WeltOn officiating. Burial will be in
~llC:/t' tte Sacred Heart Cemetery.

I

FOR

BAKED STEAK DINNER

WINTER W-EATHER

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mid til .... 'lllf bat liirlllnC cooler.; Willdl .~ ~~~~-

lolilihl '

but not pictured, Is Patty Duffy.

Shoemaker, 0-Bourneville, tried to
encourage state-assisted colleges
and universities to roll back higher
student fees imposed this fall. It
adopted an amendment creating a
$50 million fund from which the
schools can recoup part of the
revenue they would lose by reducing
tuition.
The Board of Regents would determine how much each institution
received for cutting fees, based on a
fonnula spelled out in the bill.
Some of the liveliest debate came
on an unsuccessful bid by Rep.
Michael A. Fox, R·Hamilton, to win
approval of an amendment
requiring public schools to set aside
10 minutes daily for voluntary
student prayer or meditation. The
measure also would have required
minimum pupil compentency
testing and provided disability
retirement for employees hurt whUe
trying to maintein discipline at
school.
Fox picked up Shoemaker's support for the school prayer pari or the
measure, at least in the early going.
"I belon:; to a fundamentalist
church and believe In prayer,"
Shoemaker said. "I believe all
prayers are answered ... either yes,
or no, or wait a whUe.
"I'll probably vote for this amendment, (b!Jt) I'm l!l:g!ng otlle~ mem:_

bers to wait a whUe."
A motion to teble Fox'$ ~onend­
ment failed, and Shoemaker, ol"
posed to most or it, postponed a final
vote. He later ruled the amendment
was out of order.
But a list or other amendments
was adopted by the committee,
which would:

. - Authorize

the Ohio Building
Authority to borrow fWlds to plan
and construct a proposed $Ito
million state office building at State
and High streets In Colwnbus. Bonds
sold to finance the project would be
paid off with rent.
- Impose general revenue fWld
reduCtions of $3.7 million in fiscal
1982 and $2 million In flscal!983, affecting the Ohio Development
Financing Conunlssion, the Department of Energy and the Ohio Arts
Council's program subsidies.
-Add $300,000 a year for each
year of the blenniwn to the Ohio
Commission on Aging for senior
citizen multi-purpose centers.
-Appropriate an additional $8
million to the Department of Mental
Health for community mental health
and drug treabnent programs.
- Allocate t2.5 million from which
the Ohio Rail Transportation
Authority could buy abandoned
railroad track for re-sale later to
private businesses.

'

There was a brlefm~t of hope,
soon replaced by a .sad feeling of
deja w. ·
Or .at 1eut that wu one of the
; '-!l'be,1_ , r,epprted earntncl Ill ...,,UUO the drawing. The
. feel.infl ,pti'Vadlng tile Galli&amp; County
~!!'.;::!:_Gf~~;whillihoiderali'lriplilng_tictets
8om'd of.·ElediOIII o1.f1ce Tuellday
·
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. -. ~ ~· aa l'l!luitl of the lljleeial bolid
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. Ia 'election '. -wed· !\ had been

· ·

POLYESTER WINTER TREAD
RETREADS

rifles; Mary Hawley, featured !wirier; back, 1 tor, the
Oag corps, Amy Sluen, Joyce Stewan, Helen Slack,
ChrlaU Qulvey, Karen Spencer and Barb Chappelear.
Another featured twirler wbo was a part of the group,

Voters reject Gallia. scho~l issue

• ·\Vqther toreca~t . ~ ., ;,~: _,

Crow'$ Family Restaurant

Under the law, which took effect
Aug. 1, the tax on such transaCtions
between indivldual8 was based on
the "book value" of the vehicle instead of the actual selling price.
Originally intended as a guard
against people who defraud the state
of tax revenue by understating the
car's value, the measure brought
protests from others who said the
purchase price may be below "hook
value" for legitimate reasons.
Cqnunl~ members voted overwhelmingly for amendments
repealing the new casual sales
language and making It retroacllve
to Alijl. I, a· move that would allow
for reimbursements to those found
to have paid too much _sales tax.
In other acllon Tuesday, the finance panel, headed by Rep. Myrl H.

mills, the vote was 1,178 against and

1 &lt;Ml for
'"The ;,orts of those who took the
time and risk to champion a good
caUI!l under difficult circumstances.

oo

Dining
Room Qnly
,,

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

auditorium, theater, or amusement
park; car parklng[ees; .and services
for repair, architect-urate -Or
engineering, management or consulting, computer or data processing
and cable television.
Exemptions would continue for
food, hospitals, legal fees, barbers
and beauticians.
Legislators also adopted amendments to free themselves from
criticism·which followed enaetment
of an earlier law changing how the
sales tax is imposed on casual or
no!Hiealer sales or motor vehicles.

J • .t ·' ,t

r;

ALL WEATHER RADIALS

604 E. Main .
Ph. 992-2094
Pomeroy, Ohio
Front End Ahgnment-S12.SO Most Passenv•r Cars
Brake Service

. ....-

union, to end cost-of' IIY.fng adjutmenta at lhe:ril.ont,'lnd to cut starting hourly pay from •to

.

CHOICE OF SALAD, ROLL AND DRINK.

IN STOCK NOW

__

. Goo!Jyear

.

SERVED WITH MASHED

week

M~;.~ tt:fft ~I

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
.

, AKRON, Ohio- With the hope of attracting new jobs to Akron, and
~ without gtlal'llllleea, wOrken for two major tire companies have ap~·contract chllniles and wage concessions.
• Workerl for Goodyear Tire ;. Rubber Co. this
agreed to contracr~es '.0 the company
llli&amp;tlt
tNud
ailew·
plant
in the Akron
fOr l.ncre8iecfprod1 uetlbn 'of'"''- ~u.,....
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. Uy em~.ear curren
. ploys_about t10 ~atan 1a~ faclJifin.Akron.

area

,Ivery_ Wednesday
· Nltht At

HOT DEALS

15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

WINNERS- 'lbe auxiliary unit of the Melp HJgb
School MarcbiDg Baud, directed by Douglas M. Hill,
won flnl place In Ill class at the Apple Festival Parade
In Jackaon Saturday night. Sbown are front, lto r, L)'IUI
Epple, Jamie Acree, boldlng lroJllly, Anfta Harmon,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Majority Democrats on the House
Finance Committee have set the
stage for a vote by the fuU House on
Thursday on a $13.7 billion state
budget ·which includes the state's
largest tax hike.
The substitute . version of Gov.
James A. Rhodes' budget, with $1.8
billion in permanent taxes replacing
the $1.3 billion temporary package
he propoBej!, was· recommended for
passage Tuesday on a 14-f vote. Only
Republicans on the panel were opposed.
The committee's final vote came
after members disposed or more
than 150 amendments on topics
ranging from school prayer to
welfare. The panel repealed an
earlier law dealing with taxes paid
on casual sales or motor vehicles
and 110ught to provide tuition
rollbaCkS for students at s!J!Ieassil'led uiilv'ersities.
Another key amendment defined
the kinda of Items and services that
would be newly subject to the state's
4 ceniHn-the:&lt;lollar sales tax.
EXp8111!oo Gf the sales tax base
and a penily·hti In the amount fCirm
the cornerstone of the tax plan offered by Houae Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe·Jr., D-New Boston.
· Items .which wOuld be subject to
the ~ tax, but now eaempt, InNude tickets
. to.·
. a&gt;. stadium,

COLUMBUS; Ohio- 'Ibe cost of natural gas between now and 1985
could jwnp 25 percent each year, says the chairman and chief
executive officer of Colwnbla Distribution Co.
His finn manages Colwnbia Gas of Ohio and six other Colwnbia Gas ·
distribution flnns.
While natural gas will be decontrolled by 1985, Its price sWI will be
affected by contracts for gas from wells that were producing before
theNGPA was passedin1978,hesaid.

-FORCED AIR

f

:z Sections, 14 Pages

Democrats set stage for House vote

Surprise-gas will continue rise

-QUARTS HEATERS AND
INSTANT ELECTRIC HEATERS

Three mam·ages were dissolved
and two others were granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Allen E.. Jenkinson and Ruby P.
Jenkinson were eac h granted a
divorce and Pa u1 etta sue Ti emeyer
was granted a divorce from David
UoydTiemeyer.

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Power Co. said today it has asked for
a rate increase of just under 24 percent, a move the company announced three months ago.
If approved as requested, the increase would take effect next July,
add a total of $!&amp;'! milllon to Ohio
Power revenue and affect all or Its
615,000 customers.
· .
Ohio Power said the requ~sted increase would raise the unit price of
electricity for a typical residential
customer from the present 4.99 cents
per kilowatt hour to 6.2 cents per
kilowatt hour.
Charles A. Heller, Ohio Power
president, said the company's rates
would remain among the loweSt In
the state, "even with approval of our
fuU request by the Publia Utilities
Commission or Ohio."
He attributed the need for the added income to increased lnvestme~ts to serve customers, in·
flatlon, required spending for
pollution control devices and higher
taxes.
He said Ohio Power's revenues in
recent years have continually
lagged behind cost increases. Approval of the rate hike, he said, Is
needed to offset those costs, "and
would, hopefully, allow us to keep
future rate requests much smaller in
size.' '
HeUer said PUCO has begWl investigating Ohio Power needs and
that.he expects approval of the new
rates by next July.

HOUSTON - Two girl8 and a boy were killed Tuesday In a fire at a
day care center after they became trapped in a bathroom without windows, the fire department said.
Deputy Fire Chief Carl Hooker said 22 other chUdren escaped unhurt
and ~~!ere were no other casualties.
The dead chUdren were found in a windowless bathroom of the Learning star day care center. An employee, Sally Thomas, said she knew
the three children were still Inside the bumtng building, but heat and
smoke prevented a rescue.

ELECTRIC HEATERS

En d marnages
,

enttne

Pomeroy-Middl~port, Ohio, Wednesday, September 30, 1981

:.

Three die in day care fire

TAKE THE CHILL OFF WITH

"""e Eastern Local Board ""
'"
"'
Ed'•cation
will meet in special
"
session Thursday, Oct. I, at 7:30
p m 1'n the h1'gh schooll1'brary
· ·
·
The board will issue supplemental
contacts and approve salaries for
elementary librarians.

would undoubtedly be a mild one.
The federal govenunent, meanwhile, will be able to
continue borrOWing money to pay Its bills foUowlng
Senate approval late Tuellday of a biD Increasing the
national debt ceiling £rom $1115 bUllon to $1.0'19 billion.
With President Reagan's signature uaured, the
measure will take effect Thursday, the start or the new
fiscal year. The hike In the federal bot rowldg limit to
more than a billion doUan - a billion is a thousaild
billion - comes 65 years after II passed the billiondollar mark.
Before the 64-34 Senate vote, Sen. Russell Long, 0La., noted the new debt limit is 28 percent of the U.S.
gross national product, whereas the debt limit at the
end of World War U was 112 percent or the GNP.

Utility
seeks hike

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj
I

Special meeting

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at

VOI.3G,No.ll8

coerrlphlecl1911

. The Commerce Department report, which came as
the federal government's debt headed OYer $1 trUllon
for the first time, was generally in line with recent
forecasts - by both private analysts and Reagan administration officials - that the nationaleconon1y will
remain relatlvely sluggish through the end of the year.
The most basic measure of U.S. economic growth inflation-adjusted groas natlonal product - feU at an
annual rate of 1.6 percent in the April-Jane quarter,
and Commerce officials say very preliminary indications are It fell at a rate of 0.5 percent in the quarter ending today.
By some economists' reckoning, two straight quarters of negative GNP means a recession, though this

•

e

Meigs County happenings. •

A Rto Grande man was slightly· injured in a tw&lt;&gt;-car collision on U.S. 35
in Gallia County Monday afternoon.
fullph E. Factor, 22, was not
treated at the scene, according to
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the st&lt;lte
highway patrol.
The patrol said Factor was eastbound at I :05 p.m. when he slowed
for a t·ight turn and was struck in the
rear by another eastbound vehicle
driven by Evan C. Morgan. 66, Rt. 4,
Ironton, which was unable to stop in
time.
Severe damage was reported to
Factor's car and moderate to the
Morgan vehicle. Morgan was cited

Hnth

Refonn of the federal crlmlnaJ pl'OBilCIItlOD if freed penc!lng trial.
Reagan, following his policy of
code has been under ·COIIIIderation
since 1986 but has been bottled up for· austerity II! f. . . apendlng on nonyears in Congress, The Senate defeQ!Ie procrams, made no menticin
passed a bill in 1978, but the Houae 'of.a pl'(Jp08Il1 by his adrnlnlstration's
didn't Senate and Houae leaders btpartlaan task lor'ce on crime that
reportedly were clOIIe to reaching a called for a\Joealing t2 bUJion In
compromise last year, but still f*al granta to states to build ne:w
prisonS.
nothing passed.
Gov. James Thompson or Dllnois,
Griffin B. Bell, attorney general in
the Carter admlnlnstration, urged a Republican task force llllllllbei-,
adoption of the code In tes_tlmony called !hal pnlpllSal "the lynchpln
Monday before the Judie~ Com- on which all Our other recoqi.
mittee but said it should not Include mendations are built."
Rep.
Peter
W.
Rodino
Jr.,
D-N.J.,
a Reagan proposal to allow illegally
obtained evid$1ce to be used against chalrmalt of the Houae Judiciary
suspects in some cases. Bell said he Committee, said "America will ~
personally liked the Idea but more than a few Inspiring words
suggested It would jeopardize fl'lllll the president's 'bully pul;:~lt' io
'
passage of a ·reviled code because it stop crime In our streets." .
Kennedy said Reagan showed he
is so controversial.
In attacking the so-called ex- was trying to fight crime "on the
clusionary rule, Reagan said he Ill&gt;' cheap" by refusing to renew the
posed throwing out a case - "no defunct Law EnforcementAaslstahmatter bow guilty the defendant or ce Admlnlstratlon which once
how heinous the crime" - becau.se provided hundreds of milllons of
of "technical... law enforcement dollars for local law enforcement. :
Skeptics of Ute administration' s
error."
But John Shattuck, head of the fight on crime have noted that the
ACLU office here, said a 19'19 study federal gOYernment plays only ·a
by the General Accounting Office of small role in combating the kinds of
Congress showed that evidence was violent crime that most often come
excluded on grounds it violated con- to mind when there is talk or a crime
stitutional rights of privacy in only "epidemic."
The federal goverrunent brings
1.3 percent of 2,1184 cases checked.
only
35,000 criminal cases a year,
He said the exclusionary rule. was
most
of them for property crimes
the only surE&gt;-fire protection against
rather
than those that involve atpolice abuse and that its abolition
tacks
on
individuals. In 1979, the last
would do · practically nothing to
make law enforcement more ef- full year for which the FBI has complete figures, 1,178,540 violent
fective.
The American Bar Association crimes were reported to pollee in the
said it opposed pretrial detention of United States.
All but a relative few of .the mursuspects ''based solely upon a defendant's past conduct or upon li ders, rapes, robberies and assaults
general prediction or future conunitted each year are the responsibility of local and state law endangerousness."
Denial of bail is now based on a forcement and writers of state and
judge's belief that a suspect will flee city laws.

].

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'
.

•'

~Dotbeinvaln,"CountyScboli.Is

$fl. Gary ,Toothaker said in a

lltlltlment thii·IIICii'lllng. "The elec-

of~~lr•C911becatroiUI!l

. tionde
,
... of eventa out·
81
Toothak"'"et a""'buted
the •-·ue's
"''
""'
. t- to an anti-tax and anti· ·
~mood In the country, the
_.tatewlde fiscal crisis and bad
ecoftomtc scene local · mjsunder8taridlng of the recent real estate
l"'!!pP,,''Isa the 1088 of tile district's
pablli: Utility tax base, the.defeat of.
other levies .this year and .concern
over lh!' sheriff's dfliiBI1ment strike.
~ dl.itrict will continue to
'

•

I

deliver quality eduei't!Gn to Its
students Toothaker continued and
"every 'effort will be ma~ to
provide for the safety and health of
our students in spite of. the
unresolvedproblemstbatremain.
"Furthermore, the quality 9f our
edualtion porgnuns delivered to our

Precinct at 8 p.m. Centerville
Precinct came In last at 8:48 p.m.
School officials and volunteers
who supported the bond Issue felt
they had worked harder thl.~ time to
Inform the public on the merlta of
the bond isllue and the need to
replace !OI1le or the older grade

tonscboolaandBldin~

heatudenlaadded.sbaU _
not be dlmlnlahed,"
area11-Porter'
par11
. cularlyvtn- ·
A total of •.,434 people voted in
"~ the Issue carried
Predlct.ibly,
Tuesday's election, over 200 more nan-owlY in lhoee attendance areas,
than th011e wbo went to the polla in and wu sOundly defeated in the
April, Thlaturnoutforupeclalelec- Oleshlre, Addison and Hannan
.tlon was considered gOod, .and In- Trace areas, whole IIChool fiCillties
dlvidual poll workers reported the have been maintained.
voting covered either haU or le&amp;S · The highest v!lle for the luue
than haU of the registered voters in came in at 147 in Bidwell Ptecinct,
thelrpreclncta.
and the IIIOIIt voting agalnat was
The first area to report in after the l'!lCOI ded in Cheshire Prec~ with
7:30p.m. poD closing was Cheshire .151 votes .

�Wednesd;~y,

Commentary

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy.!...Middleport, Ohio ·
wednesday, September 30, 1911

Cards move into top spot in NL East
had a 2\la-game lead four days ago,
By Allloela&amp;edPreA
For Sl Loula thlrin!aseman Ken suffered Its third straight loss.
In other NL games Tuesday, Los
Oberkfell, the way, to the National
League Eut "Second Season" title Angeles defeated Atlanta 5-3, New
York blanked Philadelphia 7.(), PitIs simple.
"We've got to go after all our tsburgh stopped Chicago 1o-6, Cing8JIII!ll and win them," OberkfeU cinnati edged San Francisco 4-3 and
said after powering the CardinalB to San Diego nipped Houston Z.l.
"I would appreciate all the help
an 8-4 victory over the Montreal Exwe can get," said St. Louis Manager
pOll Tuesday night and back into first
Whitey Herzog of the games his club
place.
"It seems like everything is falling has left. "It'ssWla pretty big task."
Down 2.(), St. Louis bounced back
into place," Oberkfell said. "We
in
the bottom of the first inning.
went through a bad streak, but we're
Keith
Hernandez singled, George
out of It and Montreal bas to catch up
Hendrick
and Tenace doubled, and
now. It's very blg win. We needed
Oberkfell
slapped a ~run single.
it."
Tommy
Herr's
triple and Garry
Oberkfell had four hits and three
Templeton's
sacrifice
fly added
RBI in the Cards' victory. Gene
Tenace chipped in with a two-run another run in the St. Louis second.
The Cards added two insurance
double In the 13-hit St. Louis attack.
"Everything's a crucial hit at this runs in the fifth on an RBI single by
time of the year," said Tenace. Oberkfell and a sacrifice fiy by Dane
"You just have to take each hit and Iorg.
Montreal Manager Jlm Fanning
each day one at a time."
The victory, St. Louis' fourth was philosophical about the loss.
"We were 31,2 games out; now
strafght, moved the Cards back in
front of the Expos. Montreal, which we're half a game out," he said. "It

The cause of the
markef slump William F. Buckley Jr.
In my lifetime such grave respect
has not been extended to the stock
market. We were trained, in the
post-New Deal era, to think of it as a
barometer of quick profit. The
market is up ? Business is good and the great public is paying for it
all. The stock market is down?
Business is not so good - but it is
paying over some of its huge profits
to the great public, and that is transcendently good. It has been since
before I can remember that the
liberal - philanthropic - intellectual
lobby has gathered, as if at the
funeral of the boy who stood on the
burning deck, to weep over the stock
market's demise .
What is the market saying to us?
The accepted solution to that
question is that the stock market is
reacting against the tax cuts on the
grounds that they are going to push
the estimated deficit for fiscal 1982
from $40 billion to $60 billion. There
are, apparently, people who believe
this.
Now the estunated deficit for 1982
at $40 billion, rounding off the
figures, would mean to all of those
technicians surrounding Ronald
Reagan's forecast that revenues
would be less than expenses by six
percent.
Suddenly,
the
recalculations of July and August
based on continued tugh interest
rates and unemployment benefits
wrenched that figure away - and
added $20 billion to it. At this
catastrophi c misreckoning, the
stock market died of shock and
zoomed down 150 points.
Again, there are apparently
people who believe this.
My colleague William Rusher has
defined a few laws of human
behavior of which my favorite is
known as the Law of Rusher's Gap.
It is best described a posteriori. So
you want a swimming poe! and you
ca ll in the contractor and he tells you
it will cost $10,000 but - you are a
man of the world, so you know it
won't cost $10,000. It will cost
$12,:;()(). Rusher's Gap is the dif-

ning (although I think the slow
reduction in taxation at the higher
levels is precisely such a weakness),
but because of the predictable
political resistance to national
economic husbandry generated by
lobbyists for the free lunch.
The investor who believes we are
really marching away from inflation
and on the road to an increase in
productivity would not cavil at a
three percent miscalculation for the
first year. That man is listening not
to mino misforecasts in the White
House. He is listening to Lane
Kirkland, the Black Caucus, and
CBS, and the clergymen, and the
humanitarian lobby. After all, they
controlled the goveniJllent over the
past 15 years, they gave us inflation,
a negative rise in true carnmgs and
a tripled tax by bracket creep. The
Dow Jones wonders whether they
aren't, given their showing in
The stock market's price level is August, in strategic command of
not to be entirely discounted. But it public policy .
isn't three percent of the budget that
is causing the gloom of the past few
weeks. I venture to say that if investors believed that the Reagan
course of action wouid be maintained, i.e., that every year the
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Social
public sector would decrease by one Security is an issue that has nagged
percent its share of the economy President Reagan for years, and he
(Reagan proposed to take it to 21 now says he wants to take the topic
percent), the Dow Jones would
out of politics forever.
behave like a colt in springtime.
That won't happen.
What happened in that critical
Neither party is going to stop
month of August was, in my own talking, and campaigning, about the
judgment, a crystallizing lack of federal program that directly affaith. In Reagan? No. In the fects more voters than any other.
democratic system. Every night, on About 36 million people now receive
television, every channel devoted
benefits.
substantial time to how, under the
And Democrats are not about to
new dispensations, this old lady drop a subject on wtuch they conwould receive insufficient medical sider Reagan vulnerable, because of
care or that young boy insufficient his own pronouncements and
lunches or that young man in- proposals. Reagan long ago
sufficient help in going to college or disowned his early criticism of the
that baby in s ufficient im- system itself, and he has backed
munizations .
away from cost-cutting proposals
The accumulation of these discon- that were part of his federal
tents suggested that the Reagan
program was in danger, not because
of the internal weakness of its plan-

terence between $12,500 and what
the swimming pocl actually comes
in at. Say $14,000 or $15,000.
Now if Reagan's technicians prove
wrong at $40 billion by the anticipated $20 billion, then their
forecasts will have been off by three
percent of the budget - Not a very
big Rusher G• p. If anybody guaranteed that he will stay within three
percent in the forecasts of anything
at all, that man will overnight
become a massive industry. The
notion that a three per~lif
mi&amp;calculation so frightened the entire investment industry that they're
going into a taLIMJin is utterly
unrealistic. Last April 'll the Dow
Jones was at !024. Will someone
please disclose what was the Valentine sent by the Reagan administration on April 26 that sent it
to that high level?

Last weekend tough on Ivy League

austerity program.
No politician and no party has a
monopoly on the problem. Each side
blames the other for the fragile
financial state of the Social Security
fund.
Reagan is likely to gain approval
of the measures he now seeks to tide
it over, simply because he has
tailored them to the mood &lt;i
Congress. House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr. said the Democrats will
work with the administration for
legislation to permit borrowing
among the three trust funds. That
way, the financially strapped old
age insurance fund can borrow from
the disability and hospital insurance
trust funds.
Reagan called that a temporary
solution, one that will buy time while

the government figures out a way to
put the whole system on a sound
financial footing.
The president also reconunended
restoration of the $122 monthly
minimum benefit for most of the
people who get it now. Congress
voted to drop it at the behest of the
administration, but even the
Republican Senate was moving to
reinstate it. Reagan said it should be
restored for the truly needy.
In his second-round budget reduction · proposal, Reagan repeated and defended - his recommendations for cuts in the benefits of
people who retire before age 65, and
for a three-month delay in the 1982
cost of living increase in Social
Security benefits.
But he didn't push for their enact-

ment. He simply said they were
reasonable, sound ideas.
Reagan said many Americans are
concerned "and even frightened"
about the future of Social Security.
The most frightening accounts are
those that have come fnm the
Reagan administration. Reagan's
aides have called it a crisis, warned
of bankruptcy. Budget Director
David A. Stockman has said the real
question is whether the people who
depend on Social Security benefits
"can count on any check at aU" a
year from now.
The subject is a difficult one for
any president bent on curbing
federal spending. Jimmy Carter and
Gerald R. Ford both prpposed limits
on the annual cost of living Increases
in Social Security. Neither of them
got anywhere.

Rep. SturJJp joins sizable club of switchers

Ill CourtStn·l"t

WASHINGTON (AP) - Although
Rep. Bob Stump of Arizona is the
DEVOTED TO nn: INTEREST OF THE .'\1EIGS.!\.fASON AREA
most recent member of Congress to
swiicn parties, he's joining a fairly
sizable club of aisle-crossers.
After resisting invitations from
Republicans for years, Democrat
Stump announced last week that
ROBERT L. WINGETI
he'll run on the GOP ticket starting
l~ublisht• r
next year.
BOB HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
But he said he'd wait until June to
Gl'neral Man.a~ l'r
make the switch official - to preserA!'~oi~tant Puhlishrr/fontrolh'r
ve his current committee assignDALE ROTHGEB, JR.
ments.
Nl'\U Ed itor
He joins Rep. Peter Peyser, [).
N.Y ., and Sens. Strom Thurmond, RA MEMB ER of The Assoc iated Prt&gt;ss, Inland Oaily ..res5 ASSO&lt;'ia tion and thr
S.C., Donald W. Riegle, 0-Mich., EdAmnit•a n Nt"wspapu Publishers Ass~t&lt;'iatlon .
ward Zorinsky, 0-Neb., and Harry
LETTERS OF OPINION art" welrumed. They shou ld be 11'55 than 300 words long. All
F.
Byrd, I-Va . They, too, elected to
lett1·rs are subjl"&lt;'llo editing and mU!&gt;I be signt'd "''lth naml', atldrns a11d tell'phooe num·
bol·r. No uru~lgned letters will be published. l .t&gt;ltrn; should br In good tastr, addn·K.•dng
switch.
l'isu~~ . not personalities.
Peyser was a Republican from
1971-77, was out of the House for two
years after making an unsuccessful
bid for the Senate and then came
back in 1979 as a Democrat,
reclaiming his old seat.
Thurmond bolted the Democratic
Party in 1948 while governor of
South Carolina to run for president
as a third-party "States Rights"
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A bottle or wine retailing for $4 in California candidate but returned to the fold
sells for $18 in Japan - an example from the state's billion-dollar wine in. dustry of international trade barriers agatnst wine produced in the United
States.
It takes 21 pages to detail the complicated taxes, label requirements and
other roadblocks foreign countries put in the path of U.S.-made wines. The
United States, however, is virtually an open market for wines from the rest
of the world.
U.S. restrictions on wine are found in one sentence: A tariff of 37'.2 cents a
I'm writing this letter out of congallon, and a label listing the percentage of alcohol.
cern and not to be critical, this I
In contrast, here are some foreign requirements, in addition to duty and would like to make clear first off.
· taxes:
Although I have no youngster in
- The European Common Market requires an import ucense for each ship- Junior High I've watched and been
ment, and any member state may veto such a license, banning the wine for interested in the football squad. My
the other members as well.
question is why do eighth grade boys
- West Germany won't let Paul Masson use its proprietary name stand on the side lines while seventh
" Emerald Dry" on the label, which must indicate the potential alcohol of the graders play the eighth grade
games• These young boys, if you
wine.
- France does not allow the words, "produced and bottled by ... " on the ever watched them practice you'll
label unless the export license holder grows 100 percent of the grapes.
know, have to be out because of pure
- Italy demands the dale of the grape harvest on the label, in Italian.
desire to play the game. This is hard
- Wines to be sold in Qu•. ·"'C Province in Canada must be in French and work and this is their last year
English.
before high school. I have felt very
- Mexico imposes six taxes and add-()n charges, and demands three bot- sorry for these youngsters as I wattles for the Ministry of Health.
ched them. If there is a need for
U.S. winemakers look on Venezuela's rules with particular dismay. That
. South American nation requires eight certificates, a bill of lading,!8 product
· and label samples, a power of attorney, six visas, a certificate of ingredlen: ts, and 14 copies of various documents.
; California produces 70 percent ·of all wine sold In the United States and 92
::pe~nt of U.S. wine sold overseas. A record 10 million gallons of California
,.wine are expected to be shipped overseas this year.
:- But last year, while the United States exported $30 million in wines
:!oreign producers shipped nearly f700 million in wine to this country.
'
Pomuo)'. Ohio
61 ... !}!2.-2156

United States
has open market

and won election to the Senate in
1954 as a Democrat. In 1964 he switched to Republican.
Riegle served in the House as a
Republican from 1967-73 and then
became a Democrat. He won
another House term in 1974 - as a
Democrat- and in 1976 was elected
to the Senate, still as a Democrat.
Zorinsky had been a Republican
all his life when, after a tenn as
mayor of Omaha, he ran for the
Senate in 1976 - as a Democrat.
When Republicans gained control of
the Senate in !980, Zorinsky said he
might switch back.
Nebraska Republicans were unenthusiastic. Saying "I'm not accustomed to going to parties I'm not
invited to," Zorinsky decided to stay
a Democrat.
Byrd, in the Senate since 1965, is
the only political independent now in
Congress, although he meets with
the Democratic Caucus and votes
most of the time with Republicans.

Letter to the editor

Wants answe

more players then why can't the
seventh graders play when all the
eighth graders have had their chance? I can't see this building confidence or giving experience to these
boys who see younger boys do what
they want a chance at so badly. And
what about these younger boys? Is it
right to take them out of their class
and age group for a chance to play
with boys who worked two years to
get where they are(
Maybe I'm jUBt an old woman, but
I've raised klda and I feel this should
be considered and maybe changed.
Mrs. D. S. Cannan
Rt I, Pomeroy

Aisle crossers don't all end up in
Congress. The most celebrated party switcher, a one-time Democrat
who became a Republican, now occupies the White House.

authority, proceeded to list the other
three : Jack Jolmson, Sugar Ray
Robinson and Muhammad Ali.

" Joe Louis, What about Joe
Louis?" other members began
House Majority Leader Jim Wright, · shouting.
D-Texas, praised Sugar Ray
Leonard in a House floor speech as
one of boxing's "four all-time great
Wright looked pained.
champions."
'Joe Louis - I meant to say that
there are five truly outstanding,"
Wright, a high school Golden Wright said.
"I have never been good at counGloves champion who boasts of
ting,"
he apologized.
being something of a boxing

Getting the business
'

Remember participatory democracy?
It was pretty big and promising to be bigger back there in the early '70s
with the pressuring of both major parties to varying degrees to open up their
proceedings in general and the presidential nominating process in particuiar. Some changes were made and have stuck, although a nwnber could
become unstuck again by the time the major parties complete their studies
of the lessons from the 1980 campaign. But much of the steam has gone out o!
the drive for broader decision-making participation In pOlitics.
It is if anything stronger than ever, however, in another arena .
Corporate operations. Outside interest groups are intensifying efforts to
establish a presence in the boardroom, the Conference Board has concluded
from a worldwide survey.
. The most active are labor unions, cited by 71 percent of the surveyed firms. Other activist groups included business and industry associations,
political parties and religious groups demanding "in the name of the larger
public good" a say In every major aspect of company operation with the
greatest emphasis in hiring policy, plant location, financial and investment
policies, expansion and reduction of operations, corporate pay and social
welfare practices. None of management's traditional concerns, in short, are
any longer regarded as "sacrosanct or proprietary."
The New York-based economic research organization contacted 400 fir,
ms for the survey and found that while some continue to react defensively 19
the offensive by outside interests, many are developing specific strategies
for dealing with the situation. These range from arrangements for exchanging views to counter-offensives to win the outaiders' support for the
company ~lion .
, _
'
American flnns, the board foun!l, tended to opt for the fonner approach.
Europeans and Japanese, the more likely to make greater efforts to win support, were also more inclined to view conftlcts not only in the light of company interests but from the perspectives of the outside groups.
Maybe they think of them as CUBtomers.

DOONESBURY

:: on

,,

By Associated Press
It was a rough weekend for the Ivy
League. The members of the Ancient Eight all played outside opposition and the results were
calamitoUB.
THANKS FOR 11IE HELP - CIDcbmall Reds I'1UIIIef Rafael LaoMassachusetts 10, Dartmouth 8;
. destoy IB gree&amp;ed alllle dugoul by teammate Jolmlly Belich after seorlug
Anny 23, Brown 17; Holy Cross 33,
tbe winning run In the bottom of tbe ninth llllllng of a game with the San
Harvard 19; Lafayette 28, Columbia
Frandsco Giants In Clncbmatl Tuesday night. Landetltoy came Into tbe
13; Colgate 34, Cornell10; Lehigh 58,
game as a plncb ruuner for Bencb a ad acored on a single by Roo Oesler to
Penn 0; Delaware 61, Princeton 8.
give the Reds a 4-3 win over tbe Glanls. (AP Laserpholol.
Only Yale was a winner, 27-18 over
Connecticut.
Of the teams that took it out on the
Ivies, Massachusetts, Lafayette,
Lehigh and Delaware are Division 1AA schools. The Ivy League hopes to
remain in Division 1-A when the
NCAA holds its special convention
on reorganization in December, but
the question has arisen whether it
even belongs in Division 1-AA football-wise, much less 1-A? "We hope
to stay in Division 1-A," says Cornell's Bob Blackman, the dean of Ivy
football coaches, "but we have to go
up in our thinking even if we go down
Bench hit a solo homer in the fifth
CINCINNATI (AP) - "It's so exto
1-AA. All the nonleague teams we
citing, I love it. The adrenalln star- but Jeff Leonard hit a two-run
play
have spring practice and we
ted to really run," enthused Ron double in the sixth to give the Giants
just
can't
compete with the Ivy
Oester after he knocked in the win- a Z.1 lead. Dave Concepcion tied it
League's way d thinking that
ning run against the San Francisco with a bases--loaded sacrifice fly and
Giants, giving the Cincinnati Reds a George Foster hit a run-scoring doesn't permit us to have it."
The Ivy presidents have not
chance to catch the Houston Astros single to left.
allowed
spring practice since the
The
Giants
tied
the
game
3-,'l
in
the
in the National League West.
league was fonnallzed In !954.
seventh on a run-scoring double by
- - Forgive the intrusion of
· " It doesn't take a genius to figure Jack Clark.
it out. We have to sweep the Astros,"
said Reds first baseman Johnny
Bench after Cincinnati defeated the
, ,.
Giants 4-3 and moved to l'h games
behind the Astros.
The Astros open a two-game series
tonight with Cincinnati. Mario Solo,
1~9, pitches for the Reds while Vern
Ruhle, 4-6, goes for Houston. Nolan
Ryan, 1()-li, coming off his fifth
career no-hitter, is scheduled to pitch for Houston Thursday against the
Reds' Bruce Berenyi, 9-5.

Astros invade
·R iverfront for
decisive games

nlng, snapped a 1).6 tie in the seventh
with an RBI single. An intentional
walk then filled the bases for
stargell, wbo ripped a Doug Capilla
pitch into right field to break open
the game.
Dodgen 5, Braves 3
A ninth-inning triple by pinchhitter Jack Perconte scored Rick
Monday and snapped a 3-,'l tie as Los
Angeles downed Atlanta.
Trailing 3-2 going into the ninth,
the Dodgers rallied as outfielder
Mike Marshall reached second on a
throwing error by Atlanta rookie
shortstop Paul Runge, advanced to
third on Mike Scioscia's grounder
and scored the tying run on Monday's single. After driving in Monday, Perconle scored when Runge
allowed Steve Sax's pop fiy to drop
into short left field for his second
error of the inning.
Atlanta's Bob Horner snapped the
worst hitting slump of his career
with four straight hits, including a
pair of home runs. Rufino Linares
also homered for Atlanta.

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

The winner of the second half of
the season meets the Los Angeles
Dodgers in a playoff for the division.
"I can see the headlines
tomorrow: The Giants Are Dead.,"
said Giants Manager Frank Robinson, whose·team slipped 31,2 games
off the pace with only five games
left. "If the Astros lose, we have jUBt
it slim chance."
· The Giants move off to Atlanta for
11 two-game series with the Braves.
' "We just can't be swept" for two
games, sald Reds Manager John
McNamara. "It was a very big
game (Tuesday), every pitch, every
play meant It all for WI. If we lost, It
would have been a long, bard, big
hill to climb."
Oester's one-out run-scoring
single in the last of the ninth innirig
finished the season. with San Francisco, with the Reds iVlnning.nhu.! _of
the 14 games between the two.clubs: ·
· "I like it," said Oester of the race.
"We're playing goOd ball right now.
I wiBb we had more fans. We're not
getting
the crowds
I ihlnkturned
we ougbt
to draw."
Only 13,117
out
Tuesday.
. Oeater's single off ·loser Gregg
Minton, 4-5, scored Rafael · ~...an&lt;
destoy from second, who was pinchrunnlitg for Bench:
'

'

bOwllng
L OCa l~-rtyw-~--•-y
~

Team
No. t

Tony's Carry Out
No. 2
Smith'sBodySbop
k6
No. s

Sta te ol Oh .o o~llill m~~ l ot lnl~l ~ll (l' CflhhO I Pol(oi"Tipi&lt; .BC~ - lh•
under.,.~ol!&lt;l s~pe~&lt; nl ~ ndenl ol tn 1111 anr.P ()j trw StatP ot 0~~ Ml ~ lll

~~~~tb~A~FIRUCASUALTYCO ot Orl~n,o sr•t• olflmll h~·

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( th , 1a"'~ ol lh• l s tale ~Dr,r.r~h• '" ,, dM ,. ~ut1101• 1•n

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ll~ UI~II (t' 111 hna1 fll l condo l oo~ · ~sho wn bl ,, , Jnnu~l •. IJT• m•nl To
II H~ oeen J ' tolto" l on Denm tl" J l 1980 Adm&lt;l!e ~ di'V'

dnurR I

Sl~!95 ~ llOO. L~tlllllrf'S 1lg8J5'l«~oo survlu\ SI ?O?t36400
t nw.n ~ S10.464.84100 [•pendolurel 117961/GJOO tl r·t as1 rt ~

"""
·"'"' WHEREOf
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cau~~~ mv ~eai !Ohl! dlhl t'll~ IC·Jiumbu \ Oh&lt;l lh&lt;' !In anj~ate Robert
I R1+chlo•d Jr Supl ol 11; u1ance ol Oh1o
{~al 8021
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DOWNING I'UILDS
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24
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Higl\terles- CharUe Van Meter $52, Pat carson 51$; Keith Phalin fiSl, Shirley Smith 473.
Hiah game - CharUe Van Meter 2211, Pat Ca,..

IC; Tom Smith 206,1l&lt;ttySmith 171.
Team series- No. 411'99.
Teartt gamt -N o. 4 781 .

sort

A sag
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GRAPES·········.
;,

DRINK··········•········ 1'1'
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CHICKEN GUMBO SOUP •••• 2/79~
MONTREAL SCORE _ Montreal ~ WIU'I'ea
CnJmartle getuloot put Sl Loull Cardinals catcber
Durell PGrter to score durlD&amp; tile flnUnalngTae.day
nl&amp;bl al 81. Loull. Expol Rodney SeoU bll to George

Hendrick ·1n right field te seore Cro11UU11e. Porter
.etm. to bave the plate blocked but umpire Gerry
Crawford ruled tbal be gol llle foot ln. (AP Lase,.
pbolo).

r-;;·-~;;;·;;.~;;~;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.t

Lebanon results·
tiBANON, Ohio (AP)- All eight
horses In the seventh race pace mUe
at Lebanon finiahed' in the order of
their post pollltl- Tuesday niglll,
40,DO-to-one/'· Aid track

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the crowd of 1,084 blt$10UDI.

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,------------------------! un(lei
Stateol Oh111 Oe~a&lt; l mfnf ol lo\ l!l anee Cl'rtrl( l iPol Com[11anc~- I
)IRIIl'll SulJ~Iml~nd~nl of ln~urann ol tll f S tdl~ al
npr~h•

family •

"My roommates and I sincerely
• for any hann We inad-apoI0 gtze
vertently created. In our zeal to not
only show our enthusiasm and support fOr Gerry Faust in his first
game here at ND, but also to do it
cleverly, we poked fun at you. Our
banner was not meant to air a per·

h~s com Dlted with 1he l1w~ ott~•~ 5181 ~ ~ppltcable to •I and ·~ aut h OI •!~!!
o unn~ 1he c ur rent ~ ea rle tran-. act rn IhiS 1laiP rl ~ IOP' OJll •i le bu ww~; ot
•nwr1 nce II&gt; I rn1no• ~ om1•1Cln r1 1hown by ~ ~ mnual statement to
li.lv, bee~ I S IGI IOII"&gt; on [)eo;fmbt&lt; 11. 1'180 Admrtlffl a\\t l~

POTATOES ••••••·51.89

""

ar~

;

sonal grudge; we are more than
satisfied with your performance as a
coach and are looking forward to
another big season from your team.
"When we wrote ouy banner we
were thinking of Digger 'the coach'
as an 1·nstt'tutt'on here and forgot
about Dt"gger the person, fatller,
husband. As we cannot undo our
· tak e, W e apologize for any
JIUS
damage generated by our banner."

Supt unlrndenl ol lnwr ancr olthr Stair ot Ohro hfr•hl
tha t
EMPIRE GENERAL LIFE INS CO ol Brrmr~~tlam Sme ol ~IOtli!rn ~
cerlrhe~

1o Lb. Russett

spokesman ~erry Nardiello. "But It
jtappened 011ce bela,e llete, aboul
I

basketball in a football column, but
aU the media fuss about that "Does
Moeller Have a Basketball Coach•"
banner hanging from a Notre Dame
donn a few Weekends back apparently has caused Digger Phelps
some embarrassment.
In fact, the student who dreamed
·tuphasapologtz'
ed '
l
In a letter to Phelps, Kevin
O'Brien wrote that "it has been
brought to my attention ... that the
.
sign hung out my third·!Ioor WUl·
dOW ..• C8USed em barrassntent 80d
dis comf0 rt f or yourself and your

un!le r !.l~neo

....

~"The oddlaplnst lbat blpperllnc

·Today in history• ••
Today Is Wednesday, Sept.30, the 273rd day of 1981. There are 92 days
: left In the year.
·
'
·. Today' a lilghllght in history:
Septelnber 30, IHG, an international military tribunal in Nurem:: bel'l!, Geimany, found 22 top Nazi leaders guilty of war crimes and sen::tencedil of them to death.

isn't all that bleak."
Meta 7, Pblliles 0
Pete Falcone burled a four-hitter
- only his fifth complete game In
five years - hit his first major
league borne rw'l and added a tworun single to lead New York over
Philadelphia.
Dave Kingman uiso homered for
theMets.
Padres Z, Astros 1
San Diego's Rick Wise and Gary
Lucas scattered four hits, and Luis
Salazar and Barry Evans drove in
first-iming runs as San Diego edged
Houston. The loss cut the Astros' NL
West lead to just !'h games over Cincinnati.
In the Padres' first inning, Gene
Richards walked and scored on
Salazar's triple. Evans followed
with a single, scoring Salazar with
the game-winning run.
,
Pirates 10, Cubtl&amp;
Willie Stargell keyed a four-run
uprising in the seventh inning to lead
Pittsburgh over Chicago.
Dale Berra, who stole home in a
three-run Pirate rally in the third in-

S1.11e ~~ 01100 Oe parlm~nl ollnsur anl~ C~ rt rlrLofe vt ComDhonu - l h~

Social Security nagging topic for President

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel-Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

September 30, 1981

. INSTANT COFFEE •••••••• :.~:~. s4.79

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiaareporT; omv

Southern's varsity squad

Wedne5day, September 30,

"

Ohio

19~

Tyrone Brillllger

AUeaTucker

1115 pouud

206pound

Junior UnemaD

Junior llaemao

Southern's volleyballers
claim two wins over EHS

--

Southern's Tornadoettes increased their SV AC volleyball
record to HJ last week with a hardfought match over the Eastern
Eagles. Southern claimed the match
in two games, 1:&gt;-9 and :&gt;-11.
Both teams were up for the important SVAC match and as a result,
several desperate plays kept the ball
in play for lengthy volleys across the
net . Every point for both clubs was
hard-earned, reflecting the spirited
play by both clubs.
In the first game of the series the
score was tied on several occasions,
but neither team could build up a
lead.
Southern 's Mel Weese put
Southern on the scoreboard first
with two points, but Eastern's
Velvet Elkins served three points to
give Eastern the lead at 3-2. Three
more points by Eastern's Alison
i.:authom increased the Eagles' lead
to S.2, but Laren Wolfe tied the score
with four points.
The se&lt;&gt;-sa w battle continued as
Tonja Salser put the Tornadoettes
ahead 7~ before Carrie Chevalier
tied the score at 7-7. Mel Weese served two more to put Southern in the
lead at 9-7, but Velvet Elkins again
tied the score at~. Southern's Cindy Evans delivered five straight serving points, then Laren Wolfe clinched the win on her next serve, the
final being 1:&gt;-9.
In the second game, Southern
opened with an 8-1 lead, but Eastern
with good serving by Velvet Elkins,
closed the gap to 8-5. Laren Wolfe
served lhree points to put Southern
ahead 11-5, but again Elkins added
one more to make the score 11 ~.

Southern went ahead 1U, but
Eastern's Sarah Goebel brought the
Eagles one point cloo;er at 12-7.
Salser added two for Southern, then
Jackie Rapp and Car&lt;&gt;lyn Bowen added two apiece for Eastern to make
the score 14-11.
Eastern's comeback feU short after they lost their next serve and
Cindy Evans fired the winning point
for Southern, 1!&gt;-11. Southern had
balanced scoring, led by Laren
Wolfe with eight points, while Mel
Weese, Tonja Salser, and Cindy
Evans each had seven.
Eastern's scorin~ was led by
Velvet Elkins with lOpoints.
Southern's overall varsity record
is 9-0, and HJ in the SV AC.
In the reserve contest, Southern
came back after losing its first game
of the year, to post wins in the next
two games. The young Southerners
claimed the match in three games 7-

pan&gt;n~ l :

t.Ji vu;ior\8 In

CIASSAAA

1 Ciocinl\llti Moeller (1), 4-&lt;l, 304 points.
2'

Upper Arlington

m.

zu.

t-(1 ,

3: Canton McKinley Ill , ~. 202
4 Lakewood St. Edward m. 4-0, 1!0.
:;: Cleveland St. Joseph i ll . ~. 12-t.
6 Massillon Ill , J..l , 114.
7· Cincinnati Princeton il I, J-1, 9111 .
a· Cindnnati Elder Ill . 4-D. 4S.
9: Centerville m . 3-1 , 41 .
10 Austintown Fitch I I 1, 4-(}, J9 .

Other

schools

receivintr;

potnt:l : 11, Steubenville

JL

10

or

more

12, Gahanna

Jl

11 ttie l. Fremont . Ross and Toledo St.
Francis 17. 15, Mia1ru Trat--e 13.. 16, Trot·

wood-Madison
!0.

12.

17, Cmcinnal!

Colerain

a.ASSAA

1 Youn~st own Mooney fil ~ . 4-G, 256.
z' Cleveland Benedictint IIIli . 4-0, 181.

3'
4'
5:
12!1.
6

Hamilton Badin III)) , +0. 165.
Ironton IIIli , 4-G, 140.
Akroo St. Vincent-st. Ma ry Hill , +6,

Urbllna !lUI , t-0, 88.
1' Dayton Rot.h 1111 , 4-0, 85.

a'

N~w Concord Glenn ! Jill , 4-41. ~.
g' Warren Kennedy l iil i, f.() , ~ .

10.

Bell•i~ !1111. H, 2t.

The undefeated Southern Tornado
volleybaU team remained perfect at
10-0 with two victories, 1!&gt;-10, 15-li,
over SVAC foe Hannan Trace here
Tuesday evening. Southern is 8-0
within the SV AC, while Hannan
Trace is 4-5.
Southern again continued its winning ways by claiming the match in
the first two games. Laren Wolfe
gained top point honors by scoring 11
serving points. Debbie Michael added six serving points in the
Southern win. Janith Thomas of
Hannan Trace had nine serving
points.

Sports briefs ...
Tennis
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) Tracy Austin, the defending champion and No.I seed, and secondseedeQ Martina Navratilova won first-round matches at the 73rd U.S.
Women's Indoor Tennis championship.
Austin breezed past Beth Norton s.
1, 8-0 while Navratilova held off Betty Stove 6-3, 6-4. Also, No.7-seed Anne Smith defeated Rosie Casals 6-3,
7-6.
MADRID, Spain I AP) - Jose

High school ratings
COLUMBUS. Ohro I AP I - How a state~ot iUt&gt; ~J&lt;irld of !!I)Orts _writer.; and broad-eY:.1ers rates Ohio h1!i h :sch~l football
Leam-; UW; w~ek for The Assoc iated PrellS
1 10 IJ&gt;int.s for first to I pomt for loth,

1~, and 15-8. Both teams went into the game undefeated. Southern is
now ~ at the reserve level and
Eastern is 3-1. Southern was led by
Tina Hill with II, and Tina Davis
with 10. Kris Wilson had 16 markers
for Eastern.

5,

Five non-league games will serve toEutern.
st outing this season against Federal
as a final "tune-up" for SVAC teams
After 1 week's rest, Coacb Larry Hocking, KC has had just one touchf
Friday nlgbt as each program for · Cremeens' Hannan Trace WUdcats down in the last three games.
,
what Is expected to be a knock-ilown, retum to 1ctl1111 against lnlllton St.
Last Friday night, Kyger Creell
drag-out battle within the loop begin- Joe. Lut Friday, Coach Joe lost 27~ to Minford. Going into thiS
ning Oct. 9,
8cilroYtlz watched hll mistake pror - week's contest, Portsmouth East is
Eastern and North Gallia picked Flyers lllffer their !leCGC1d straWn also 1-3 having lost to Northwest last
by many to battle It out for the SVAC setbact, lU to · the unbeaten weekend.
championship, remain unbeaten LucasviUe Valley Indiana.
Coach Jack James' Southwestern
going into the fifth week of the 19111
Ironton St. Joe tumed the ball over Highlanders, 24-ll victims of the Buffootball campaign.
five times and were flagged for eight falo BisoiiS last week will try t_;·
Eastern will host tough Belpre penalties netting 88 yards.
rebound against the Hannan WU"l:
Friday while Coach John Blake's
The Flyers' only points came cats.
·r
Pirates hit the road to play the when Mlke Kinney connected on a 55
Southern, a 5(1.6 loser to Waharnli'
Waterford WUdcats.
yard bomb to David Waginger.
last Friday, hits the road again thi4
In other contests, Hannan Trace
Coach Oeryl Well's Kyger Creek weekforagameatMiUer.
~
will host Ironton St. Joe, Kyger Bobcats are on the road against
The Tornadoes, despite all their
Creek visits Portsmouth East, another Scioto County opponent this injuries and illaesses, gave thti:
Southern is at MiUer, and South- week, Portamouth East.
'White Falcons quite a battle in th¢!
western travels to Hannan, W. Va.
After scoring 25 polnts ·in their fir- first half of that non-league affair. "
Last weekend, only Eastern and
NorthGallia were victorious.
,----.,.---------------------~:
Coach Arch Rose's Eagles had
some problems but managed to hold
on for a 12-10 victory over Frontier.
Defense was the key to Eastern's
fourth straight win.
Mike Bissell and Nick Leonard,
both known for their offense, played
important roles defensively for
Eastern. With 1:03 left in the contest, Bissell went high in the air to
block a 26 yard field goal attempt by
Frontier.
Bissell scored one of the Eagles'
two touchdowns and hit Greg Cole
for 35 yards for the other.
North Gallia pushed its record to
~behind the hard running of seiuor
Ph. 992-2556
Pomeroy, OH .
Bruce Shriver and sophomore Eric
of the Pomerov·Mason Bridge"
Penick.
Shriver had two touchdowns and
74 yards rushing while Penick ac-

STORE JtOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-1 0 pm
Sunday lO.am-10 pm

PLAYER OF ··WEEK - 1be
_Meigs COUDty J1yeea bave '
ebuea Cbrh • B.urdette,
' sopbo!Dore fuUbaelr: a ad
, llaebacter, I I the "player of the
·week'' for bill worlliD last weelr:'s

sc:noolli tE'&lt;'eJVUllo( 10 or more
po1nt..s : II, Washington Court Ho11.-.e 28.
12. Strut~r.o; Z5 . ll, Rootstown 13. 14, Nelsonville- York 2:.! . 15, Columbus Watter.o;on
19. 16 , Hannibal River 18. 17 /tiel ,
Bndfield and Btollevue 17. i9, Columbu:;
DeSale~ 16. 20, We!.1 Milton Milton-Un ion 1
Hi_. 21 , Zanesville West MU3kingum 13. 22
It1e I. 8.!-llbrool!. C:tnd Swanton 12.

cu.ss•

6, Tiffin Calvert IVJ , J-1 , 82 .
7, Bealb viUe lVI . 4-0. tS.
8,
0. .Uhtabula
Way..,.-vill•St.IVJohn
). 1-&lt;l.IV ),Ill l-1 , 4-4 .

9,

Bergh&lt;&gt;~

2 1 0
1 3 0
1 J 0
0

28 1S7

4

0

27

21

22

94

31

68

Tuetday'a Sporll TraiiiM!d-.

BASKE'I'BALL
N•tiooaiBalkdb.U AuodliUea
NEW
YORK KNJCKS-Named Kevin
Kenned}' director of promoUona.
PORTLAND
TRAIL
BLAZERS-An•
nounced that Jeff Lamp, forward, hid
a~ reed to tenns on a muJtlyear contact.

FOOI'BALL
Natioul Forttballl.npe
HOUSTON OILERS-Traded Rob C....
penter, back, to the New York Giant.s for

.

Other

schools
13,

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Willianl!lburH

or

10
28.

14,

more
Croolu-

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17 !tiel , RawSOil Cory~RawSOl and Mil·
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Hawktm 19. 20, Lorain Clearvtew IS. 21
rti~\ . Miruter . St. Henry and New Wuhin~ton Buckeyt&gt; Central 14. Z4 !tie l, Fostorill St. Wendelin and I.Ut'a!Ville Valley
11. ZG ltiel, Garfield He ighb Trinity and
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Regular Hours: 8:30-4:30 Mondays through Friday
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Friday Evenings, September 18, 24, October 2, 6 p.m.- 9
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MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF ELECTIONS

ROOFING SHINGLES

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS
CO•Ph..
Mason, w. va.
.'

23

-

Ne¥' York 7, Philadelphia 0
• Plttabw'gh 10, Chicago 6
· ~lnnatJ 4, San Francisco 3

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San Francisco at A~nta, (n )
Sl.Loull at Phlladelphia, fnl

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FROM 16" SIDEWALK

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' IN STOCK.

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·W\NNER.
*

DETROIT I AP) - Billy Bolevic of
the New York Eagles was named the
American Soccer League's Most
Valuable Player for 1981, the league
announced.
Bolevic scored an ASL record 29
goals during the regular season, ad-

22
Z
Z
:Ill
29

19

.San Fnnci8CO
s ·x-Los Angeles

Also, if you move you must notify the county office. Or if you are in doubt as to whether
you are properly registered, phone the board.

undisclosed draft chokes and future ec&amp;
siderations . Waived Mack MitcheU, defe~
sive end .

Soccer

·H -

·cincinnau

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VISIT
THE BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON- OR. PHONE THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS- OR
' -MAIL THE BOARD A CARD.

ding

2
226
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McDonald
l, H, 209.
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Ill
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$289

LB.

MajorLequeBuHoU
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W L
1'&lt;1. GB
1!8 :II
.ii63

IN ORDER- TO VOTE IN THE
.NOVEMBER 3 GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCTOBER 5th

SV AC S TANDINGS
W L T P
OP
4 0 0 74 17
3 0 1 93 28

USDA CHOICE

For the
record. ••

·MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

nine assists.
Tony Suarez, who scored 15 goals
for the Carolina Lightnin', was

1, Newark Catholic !VI. 4-0. 2.'11.

· win over Athelll.

counted for two touchdowns and had ~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.
67 yards rushing .
1
Jeff Smith also contributed 65 yards rushing while Paul Hollingshead,
J. J . Justice and Bobby AdkiiiS were
each credited with a fine defensive
game.
Earlier this season, Waterford,
North Gallia's opp&lt;)nent Friday lost

T E AM
Eostern
N o rth G alli a
H nnna n Tr ace
South wes tern
K yg c r Cr e-e k
South ern

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
3, 1981

PRICES GOOD THRU

HAMBURGER············ 64~ .
.WITH FRIES .••••••••. '1.04
ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

Higueras of Spain defeated ,-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Sweden's Henlik Sumdstrom 6-3, 2~.
6-1 in the first round of the $75,000
Madrid Grand Prix Tennis Tournament.
In other matches, Ray Moore of
South Mrica, beat Balasz Taroczy of
Hungary, 6-3, 8-0; Pedro Rebolledo
of Chile, topped Jairo Velasco of
Colombia, G-7, 6-4 , 6-2; Jaime Fillol
of Chile, downed Diego Perez of
Uruguay, 6-2, 6-3; Tomas Smid of
Czechoslovakia beat Anders Jarryd
of Sweden, 6-4, ~. 6-2; Jose LopezMaeso of Spain defeated countryman Fernando Luna, S.O, 1-6, 6-3,
and Andres Gomez of Ecuador stopped Stanislav Birner of
Czechoslovakia, 6-4, S.2.

Oth~

Sentl nei- Pag.~ S .

SVAC continues non-league action

SPECIAL Of 1HE WEEKI

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• •

'

•• • ,

'!

"''·

\ .

�Pav-6-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 30, lfll

r··;; ;~·;·;;;N;;~;;;~~;;·..l .RIVER VIEW.
WEEKEND
J

Detroit regains top spot;
Royals maintain West lead ~
FromAPWirel
Oakland Manager Billy ,Martin
gave left·hander Tom Underwood
the ball - and a little Incentive.
" I told him that if we face certain
clubs in the playoffs, 1 might use him
as a starter," saldMartin.
Underwood, who only had one
previous start during the second half
of this season, responded with a
four-hitter Tuesday night to lead the
A's to a 5-1 triumph over the Toronto
Blue Jays.
The "certain clubs" referred to by
Martin are the Detroit Tigers and
New York Yankees_ two American

•

picked up five more in the siith
while Jack Morris and Dave
Rozema combined on a three-hitter
to stop Baltimore.
Morris, 14-6, gave up only one hit
while walking four and striking out
five in six innings before giving way
to Rozema, who started the seventh
and gained his third save. Baltimore
starter Scott McGregor, 12-5, didn't
last through the first inning.
RedSox7, Brewen 2
Dave Stapleton slugged four hits,
including two solo home runs, and
Mike Torrez and Mark Clear com·
bined on a five-hitter to lead Boston

groWidet off the glove of New York
second baseman Andre Robertson
scored two rWIS to break a 1-1 tie In
the eighth inning and give Cleveland
a tight victory over the Yankees.
Cleveland right-hander John Denny, 10-6, scattered nine hits, struck
out five and walked three in pitching
his sixth complete game. New York
starter Ron Guidry, 11-ii, carried a
tw()-hitter into the eighth before the
Indians rallied.
Angels 5, White Sox I
Don Baylor cracked a tw()-fUO
homer and Bobby Grieb a solo shot
in the sixth inning to lead California

ov;:;.,~:r.:~hased

~etsronChi,~c:,gtoo.thTheeshbolwasts
ers.sent

THIS

~

It
It
;

}!(:
o.· ...••.·

,..

C")

:;
,..

C"''...ll.

,..

*

i*'

Store Hours:

It

8 a.m. to 9 p.m.

MON.-SAT. '

;
,..

~

•

~v

,.

Dl:

..

!!!
BO

~

SUNDAY

i;:

11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
It

·0 !t
,..
: :

i

.'

u,ague East teams with strong leftJun
' Slaton,&lt;
Rich
:
handed hitting. But first the A's will
,.
....,
have to win the AL West playoffs, of
7, with three runs in the fourth to
Bruce Kison, 1-1, making only his
It
::lit
course.
lead~. Stapleton brought home one
second start since being reactivated
:
;a .
"We're not looking that far
of-the runs with his first homer of the
Aug. 9 following surgery in 19110, was
It
It
ahead," said Underwood. "You can
night, and ninth of the season. He hit
replaced in the eighth inning by
It
It
be assured I'm being primed forcerhis lOth in the seventh.
Steve Renko after giving up a single
:
:
Torrez, 9-3, struck out eight and
and a one-out walk.
~
lain teams, but we've got a long way
to go before worrying about Detroit
walked two, giving up the Brewers'
Rangers 6, Mariners 2
,..
,..
or New York"
runs in the ninth on Robin Yount's
Billy Sample belted a three-TWI
It
It
The A's victory kept them l'h
RBI triple and a run-scoring single
homer and Doc Medich continued
games behind Kansas City in the
by Cecil Cooper before needing
his pitching domination over Seattle
;
.
.
_
~
second-half West race. The Royals
Clear's relief help.
as Texas defeated the Mariners.
,..
_
,..
held onto their slim lead with a 4-2
lndlans3, Yankees 2
Medich, Hl-6, scattered six hits over
126 MAl N
POMEROY, OHIO
·
·
M.
ota
Miguel
Dilone's
bases-loaded
seven
innings
as
he
gained
his
lOth
,..
..._
dec1s1on over 1nnes .
Must Be 21 or Accompanied by Legal Guardian
::::
·t
ed
·
t
f.
career
victory
in
11
decillions
over
,..
Mea hil Det O
st place
a half-game
nwin the
e, East
r 1by
mov
m o 1r- r-------------"Se~a'!!:tt!:!!le"-._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____J_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:..:.:._:..:.:_:.:_..:.:.:.:..:_~.:_..:.:.:.:..:_~:-_::_::_::_:_::..:_:..:.:.::::::.
after defeating Baltimore I~ while I
Milwaukee was losing to Boston 7-2_
The results left the Red Sox in third
place, a game back.
Elsewhere in the AL, it was
Cleveland 3, New York 2; California
5, Chicago I and Texas 6, Seattle 2.
Underwood struck out 10 batters,
the most by an Oakland pitcher this
year, including the last four he
faced .
" I usually get my strikeouts
early," sa id Underwood, who hurled
his first complete game of the year.
Dave McKay backed Underwood's
pitching by driving in two runs. He
broke a !-!lie with a s uicide squeeze
bunt, scoring Keith Drumwright in
the fifth inning, then singled home a
run in the seventh.
Underwood, H, retired the firstl2
batters he faced. He walked only two
in his route-going perfonnance. The
only run he gave up was a home rWI
to John Mayberry in the fifth, hill
16th of the season.
Royals 4, Twins 2
George Brett's homer, triple a nd
two runs batted in, plus the eight-hit
pitching of Jim Wright and Dan
Quisenberry, led Kansas City over
Minnesota .
Brett slammed a fastball from AI
Williams. 6-10, some 400 feet over
the right-cenler field fence at
Metropolitan Stadium to give the
1
Royals a I~ lead in the first inning.
He also tripled home Kansas City's
last nm in the seventh.
Wright. 2-3, scattered seven hits
over 62-3 innings. He allowed two
runs and struck out three before
Quise nberry came on to earn his
lOth save .
Tigers 14, Orioles 0
Detroit scored three unearned
runs in a five-run first inning and

!!:

THE MEIGS INN

*
~

:
~

992-3629

*
**************************+*****************************

K

I

·-

PURE GRANULATED

su

1btoU9",
oc~ ~-

lnvest 1.5,860 at t~e
current Interest rate
and you
earn 5i,OOO
tax free interest in one year.
5

EAST MEIGS - Southern's reserve football team defeated Eastern's
reserves 20-6 Monday evening_
Southern took the opening kick-off
then marched the distance. The
scoring drive was capped by a pass
from Greg Nease to Wade Connolly
for the score.
Eastern mounted its only successful drive in the second quarter,
also on a passing play by Jay Carpenter. With only seconds on the
clock, a pass from Nease to Paul
Harris, who made a circus catch in a
crowd, put Southern on top IU. The
dramatic TD pass at the buzzer
allowed Southern to go into halftime
with an important lead.
The second half was dominated by
Southern, and was highlighted by
the running of Greg Nease, who
scored the third Southern TD. A pass
from Nease to Connolly was complete for the PAT.
Southern bad 162 yards rushing ·
and 140 yards passing. Eastern
statistics were not available.
Southern is now 2-1.

Training underway
The Meigs Bolling Club, Inc. is inviting all interested persons to begin
trning for the upcoming boldng

BANK ONE can now offer the new Tax Free All-Savers
Certificate that will eam tax free interest• with a minimum of
~ly $500 and a one-year maturity. The program provides
tndlvlduals up to $1,000 and those filing a joint return up to
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You can benefit from an

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IF

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you have a six-month

If you have a BANK ONE six-month Super T Certificate of Deposit,
you can most likely convert your investment to a BANK ONE Tax
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eam tax free rather than taxable interest on your investment. Bring
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p.m.
The first boxing event will be tn
Ravenswood, W. Va. Nov. 7. Firat
borne match is tentatively set for

Whenever you think.
ol saving ~.our name
con~es up first.

FRESK-RIPE

CAKE MIX

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$29.900·35.200
$60,000-85,600

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®

Nov. lf.

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THE GREAT
IGA. TRUCKLOAD
SALE CONTINUES
THRU SAT. OCT.. 3rd12/46 oz.
'
' .
·.
.

\GA C~TSUP

................~~~!!.~~.~~~~.~.98 IGA TOMATO JUICE~.~~~.5••• ~.1 0
. .IT 'OS .
24/14 OZ. CANS f
'GH.
Sp
. A ... E I . . .................... 8.20 ARGO SWEET PEAS-...~~:!~.~~.~~.s.. ~7 •70 ·
U¥ tHE
5 A
SAVEIII
- ·-

**

'

TA·BLERITE
.
- B·EEF ROUND UP
FOR lHE RIP .RMINEST TiME OF YOUR LIFE, HEAD ON UP 10 ~IVER VIEW IGA SUNDAY, OCT.·4th
REAL
TIME!! SPECIAL HOURS lHIS SUNDAY 10 TILL 2!!!

Buy Freezer Beef
and Save$$. ·
1. Must come .d••nd in western attire.
,,
"

sed on 11'1 ~ 1982 Federal Income Ta~e schedules. lnteresl rate ol 12 st•. is
equal to 70'"!. ot average rnveslm&amp;f11'field oo one-veer Treasury Bills as ollt'le most racem auci10n da!e.

Member FDIC

SALTINES

-

t Income and IIIX rates a'e _

'-BANK Of\JE™·E'

ZESTA

18 oz.

IF YOU ARE A MARRIED TAXPAYER FlUNG A JOINT RETURN:

$16.000-20.200

4/

. ., . . ·-- ..

~·

season.
Facilities . on Main Street,
Pomeroy, will be open beginning
Saturday, Sept. 26, from 4-6 p.m. and
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 8-8

BEnY CROCKER

' Ta11 free 1r11eres1 means lree lrom Federal and OfliO Stele Income Ta~
''Based on an All-Savers rate ol12 61°a
There IS a subslanha llmeresl penalty for earl y wllhdrllwal

The rile~ 1111111 um
on a lllx
ln-tment

16 oz.

1 LB. QTS.

likely benefit from the All-Savers program, because the interest is
tax free. Stop by any BANK ONE office and we will help you
determine if All-Savers is for you.
·

Mlo~lnal

BREAD

Parkay Margarine

.

IF

Tax olef

55

GALLON

4

Hyou have money in a money market fund you should probably
shift at least a portion of your investment to a Tax Free All-Savers
Certificate at BANK ONE, since your interest will be tax free rather
than taxable. The rate is fixed for a full year, and insured by '
an agency of the federal government. If you have a maturing
s1x-month money market certificate at a savings and loan or ·
other financial instiMion, bring the funds to BANK ONE to
take advantage of our Tax Free All-Savers Certificate.

Tauble lncomet

R

IGA

you have funds in a taxable
money maltcet fund.

~are~ng ·
onany
the tax rate on lOUr
1n a Allngs plan.
taxable inc0111e 11 over 1ft. ·Hyou eamInterest
taxable interest on any savings or investments you will

Because interest you're now eaming on other savings is taxable,
you would have to eam much higher rates on those savings to
better the net interest you will eam from an All-Savers Certificate.
For instance, if your tax rate is 22%, you would need to eam
16.17% annual interest to better the All-Savers net interest. •• The
higher your tax bracket, the more interest you would have to eam
on an alternative investment. The chart below will be helpful in
determining anemative rates that would have to be eamed to better
the All-Savers interest.

29

5 LB.
BAG

AU:

Tornado
reserves
•
post wzn

.

*
It

.,

It

~

.

It

...
:

The DailY Sentinei-Page-7;

Ohio

·786 SECOND STREET
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
..
-

VISIT WITH US

:

:

Pomeroy-M

September 30, 1981

·. i

1 to 4 p.m. U. Entertainment
. Chi~ UIIJ.l 1he Poor Boys
"'4:6: ,Ju~ $41.. Dlndn'
·12:&amp; p.m•.lteluebniuls-Flllurin&amp;.
~ee C'Aid P•p•l raau · ·

Available All Day

'

2. Bitween
the ages
.
. of 2 and 5.
i. Winner will be determined at random

Sunday
-

CUT FRJE WHOLE YOU WAITII
.WHOLE
$399
8 LB.
RIBEYE
.LB. AVG.
LB.
SIRLOIN TIP $219 LB• 10AVG.
'_BONEIES$
U( 6 LB.

'.

N.E_____ w_ _ _ _ _ __ _

'

It River View IGA before. Sat. 10/3/81

'

.

~/

,,

""

.;

~

�.Pag-8-The Daily Sentinel

Meigs CoWltlans attempting to

beat the rap at the grocery check out
COWlter are Invited to join the Meigs
CoWlty Food C()o()p, a project of the
Meigs United Methodist Ministry.
The c&lt;Hlp is open to all persons
regardless of income, age, religious

beliefs, etlvtic and racial heritage
and is processed through the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center.
Through the program residents
may pay $6 for a bag of fruits and
vegetables, usually five varieties ci

Casto celebrates birthday
Two parties were held recently
honoring Ronnie Lee Casto,
Pomeroy, on his fifth birthday.
A Mickey Mouse theme was
carried out for the first one held at
the Mason Park. A clown (Trina
Bachtel) visited the party .

\

\" ·

The second party was held for
Ronnie 's kinderga rten class and a
Sesame Street theme was carried
out. Games ewre played and prizes
were awarded to each of the
children. Wendi Jones and Wendi
Collins won door prizes. The
children were also taken to Camden
Park.

.

0

Ronnie L. Casto

Social
Calendar

Jones, Connie and Timmy Johnson,

and Mandy Slavin .

Wednesday
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club.
7:30 p.m. at the home of Ada
Holter. Wednesda y. Plant sale to
be he ld.

Thursday
CHILI SUPPEH , 4 tv 7 p.m ..
Tl1ur"Jay at the Middl eport
Elt•rncntary St:hool, the firs t
rwm cy-nu sinJ.!. uctiv rty of
M~t lli l&lt;• p ur t

PTO :

the

pub I ie

Wl'll 't tlll t '

A HEPRESf:NTATIVE nf t he
(~;:lllipo l i s

Business

Cn lle~t·

Attend1ng were the honored
guest's parents, Ronnie and Susie
Casto, Mary Carolyn Wylie, Trina
Kandi Bachtel, Wendi Collins, Angie
and Travis Swartz, Scottie, Lori ,
Shelly Casto, Eric Oi ler, Georgie An·
derson, Wendi, B11ly, Jamie and Van

will

be at. M1dtlieport Public Library
un ThursdCJ y, Oct. 1. at 10 t~ . IIL He
\\ i! l use s ll d t•s and othe r
audinvisuc!l aids tu shO\\' whc:tt the
HusnH•ss CniiL'gc has ttl offer . He

Sending gifts were Ronnie's grandparents, Audra Arnold and Oatho
and florida Casto, Phyllis Bearhes,
Nicki Whitlatch, Patsy Oiler, Lee
Ann Plants, Sus1e and Leslie
Me-Graft, Bill Jeffers, Lisa Oiler,
and Le oli a Miller , a grea t·
grandmother.

•

each, or $3.10 for a bag containing
two loaves of brown bread, a di1ZI!Il
large eggs and eight ounces of
American cheese. Bulk items are
available in quantity and Include 10
different kinds of cheese, frozen cod,
ocean perch, haddock, frozen orange
juice, flours and grains, brown
sugar, confectionery sugar, honey,
popcorn, pinto beans, navy beans,
rice, noodles, macaroni, and dry

Packing a good-11)-e&amp;t lWICh
doesn't mean you have to prepare
the same foods day after day. With
some creative planning you can add
a variety to any well-balanced lunch.
Be sure your menus include foods
from the four basic food groups, then
start thinking about adding variety.
Probably ooe of the easiest places to
get variety into the IWlch is with
fruits and vegetables. These foods
contribute important vitamins and
minerals to the diet. And since there
are so many to choose from, select
your choices so they 1dd te:rture and
color variety to the lWlch - as well
as good nutrition.
Take advantage of seasonal fruit
and vegetable buys for economy.
for instance, right now plwns and
grapes are plentiful. Save the apples
and bananas for later when other
fruits aren't available.
Try different forms of fruit. Instead of an apple, pack applesauce.
Need some variations to applesauce? Try these: sprinkle with
cinnamon or nutnieg; add a little

milk.
Orders may be placed and paid for
in advarice. They are processed at
the center through A;;ce Wamsley,
treasurer of the food co-op. Delivery
dates for the rest of this year are
Thursday afternoons, Oct. 8, Oct. 22,
Nov. 5, Nov. 19 and Dec. 10. All orders must be placed the week prior
to delivery date .
Anyone with questions may call
992·2161.

Meigs Band
will perform
The Meigs High School Band,
directed by Douglas M. Hill, will be
in Logan Saturday evening to take
part in the sixth annual fail festival
of bands staged by the Logan Band
Boosters.
Other area bands taking part will
include Granville High School,
Jackson High School, Licking Valley
High School and Millersport High
SchooL The host band will present
two shows during the festival which
IS held to promote good will between
bands of the school by sharing appreciation for diverse presentations
by the Individual groups.
Tickets will be available at the Bill
S• uer fi eld starting at 6 p.m. with
the fesllval to begin at 7.

The 50th w•·dding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Young, Mid·
dleport. will be celebrated during
the Sunday school hour at the Heath
United Methodist Church Sunday.
Relatives and friends of the couple
arc invited to attend.

Floyd, Mays wed
Donna Marie floyd and Jackson
Michael Mays were married Sept. 22
at Pembrooke, Va., and now reside
at Mason, W. Va . He is employed at
the Eikheim Metais Co. in Marietta,
and she at the Five Points Lounge
near Pomeroy.

What's
Cooking?
By DALE M STOLL
Mei3&amp; ~ty Exteuioa

lemon
juiceofforvanilla;
a tangymix
flavor;
a
few
drops
two add
cups
applesauce with one cup crushed
pineapple; or add raisins to applesauce.
Dried fruits are another variation,
but are more expensive. Or, serve
the fruit as a beverage. "Freeze a
can of fruit juice and pack in the lunch. It will be cold but thawed for
mealtime," says the home
economist.
For vegetable variations, pack
raw carrots and celery for crunchy
texture. Or, pack a steaming hot
vegetable soup in a vacuum thermos. Celery can be stuffed wlth
· peanut butter, sprinkle with peanuts
or raisins for added flavor.
If your IWlch "eater" needs some

Announcements
Young anniversary

Wednesday,
September30,. 1te1' · ·
.

....•.....

County food co-op formed

enticement to eat raw vegetables,

Home Ecoaomilll
bottom of a vacuwn container.
Place cold vegelables oo top and
seal. Dip and "dippers" will stay

cold unW lunchllme.
The mainstay of many IIIIICbi!a the sandwich - 111ually includes
foods from the bread-and-cerea and
the meat group. One way to add
vraiety Ia to vary the typi!S of breads
used for the sandwich, try rye, whole
wheat, com and nut breads. Or, get
out of the meat and bread rut completely and pack cheese-andcrackers.
Substitutes for the meat sandwich
filllngs can include: ilar!H:ooked
eggs in the ahell; can of !Wla flah or
other potted meat; and chWlks of
cheese. If you have vacuum thermos to keep foods hot try these
ideas: thick slice of hot meatloaf,
hot soup, macaroni and cheese,
baked beans or a hearty stew . .
An adult or older child might like a
" hot" hot dog with the hot soup.
Cook the hot dog and tie some dental
floss onto it Place it in the rim of the
thermos. Seal and pack.
A well-balanced lWlch also needs a

a

BelVlng frum tbe mUll food ~­
ServiDC milk u tbe beverqe to 8C'

~or pacldng

cottage c ' - in

notes

After you've included a aervtng
from each ol the four food gryupa,
"something estra" can be added- A

.

handful ol ralalna, nuts. popcoc n.
pretze11 are a variation fran! the
common cookies and cakea. Or, try
the following recipe for Finger
Gelatin. The squares do not melt at

Clariee Krautter presided at the
meeting which opened with the
members repeating the opening
ritual. A thank you note was read
from Pearl' Weiker and members
were invited to attend memorial
mass for Ralph Weiker, Oct. 5 at
7:30 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Church.
Donna Jones will present the
program at the Oct. 8 meeting. It
W'dS noted that hostesses who cannot
serve at the appointed time will have

COMPARED TO OTHER BRANDS" AT KROGER.

"FOR SOME SOOPER COST CUTTERS, NO OTHER BRANDS ARE STOCKED.

.

'
For your free copy of a recipe fqr
peanut butter cookies (a great id"l9
for a more nutritious treat!) contaet
the County Extension offfice at 99t-

•
•

.

~OO.

I1 -;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

·- --

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

E«h of

items !I

flqUtfec:l

10

110

ftlillbll fof lilt In uch Kroger StOfe, ex~ •
'flair¥ notld 1'1 d'il MI. tf • do run wt d an llf lftilld
item. wt will! offer VOU yeur choice of 1 comQtrebtt item,
wNn l\llillb6t. rtftlcting the lltnl Mwinga or 1 reinchecll
which ;MIIentide you to pure .... the 8dv.,il«&lt; iltm 11 me
ecMniMCI priu witf't•n ~diva.

f'NCiitt

[l(trDI! LOW PI ICE

TOTAL SA TIS FACTION GUARANTEE

~
••
••

JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

t&lt;ttOGU

E'IPIIYfhlng VOU buy II Kroger • Q\JitlniMd fOI' .,.our lOlii
llhlfiCtion rtg~rdteu of n'III"'I.JfiC tiJr• If yOu ere not 111i1·
fled , Kroger will repllc• your 1tem With tl'lt ume brlncl or 1
oompltfltile blend 01' r.t\Jnd '(OI.Ir purchlse pr1ce

Instant
Coffee .

: OCTOIEit J . 1911 . IN POMEROY AND GALLIPQ.LIUtO.H ES .

• WI IISEI\IE THE liGHT TO liMIT QUANTifiES. NONE SOLD
~ TO DIALU_s .

1t · 9j~i
I.
. c..~/
1· tO~' to~

Office Hours by Appointment Only

:~

CALL (614)-992• 2104
or (304)-675-1244

1::
I.

I~·

I :IZ
I '' Df·

. ·'

Oscar.May·er
Sliced Bologna

I
I
1

$159 :

ou'

1:

~try~pu~tt~ing~s~om=e=v~eg;e~ta~bi~ern~·p~i~n~th~e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

l-Ib.

.

I

3

Pkg.

12-0Z. PK.G ... $1.19

LIMIT

Pou::~~~~cCOUPo N
9

lti,IIT ONE COUPON PER FAI,Itl v

CIIPGI 10011111 .. sm. 21 TUU Ill .. OCT. 3. 1111
IIIIICT TO IPPUCIIlllllllllOCII IIIII ·

.I
I
I

Tea
Bags

Boneless Top
Round Roast lb .
OLE CAROLINA
• d Baeon .... .. Pk1-tb ..
511ce
9

EMIIASS Y

SliCED INTO CHOPS , FRESH

Quarter Pork Loin

lb.$1

59

Avondale
Gelatin ..

7··9-LB. AVG . HYGRADE WHOLE
BONELESS

Smoked Ham ..... lb.

Baking
Mix ..

''. I

.I

HOLt Y FARMS . U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
GRADE A

Chicken
Breast ...

$ .2 9 9

Ca nd1. Wendy and Crystal of Medina
and Mr . and Mrs. Steve Hussell and
famtly were weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Russell. Mr. and
Mrs. Honald Russe ll , Mr and Mrs.
Donald Hussell and Bertha Russell,
· Earl Russel l.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Daniel Worley ,
Stacy a nd Oan1el of Dame ls, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs . Doyle Knapp, Kev1n,
Charles were Sunday dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith. Mrs.

-.

Ill

SINGER

SAVE $2000
FABRIC SHOP
115W .2 nd

'.

Pomeroy

$

992-2284

~~~-~c~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

'3 8

Springdale
GaL $ 168
0
•
Paper
2 ~ ·Mdk , .. .. .. Ctn.
.
KROGII
3 20·01. $ 1 2 9
•
Wh1te Bread ....... Lvs.

ARE INI

CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
Ph. 992·6342
317 N. 2nd ., Middleport

Buffet Suppers ...... Pks:

LARGE 011 SMALL CUIO , KROGER
•

•

2~·01.

Angel food
Cake . . l&amp;o•
Pkg

•

•

•

KIOGU

· Flake
Coconut ';;;•
IGOlD c•IST
Marshmallow
1
Creme ..... 13·0
Jor
COUNUY OVfN

Potato
Chips ..

I ·OI .

•••

KlllOGG 'S

Special K 15 -c t .
Cereal ..
•••
FIIOZIN KIOGU

Glazed
Donuts

0

... ·01.
,lu~ .

AVONDAlE

AVAILABLE ONLY IN
STORES WITH
DEll DIPTS .
HOT FOODS
AVAILABLE 11om

4 HUSH PUPPIES

Pear

HaI¥11 ..... "·••·
Co•

sgc
SJ59

sgc

sse

HIUC.EST

s199

Maraschino
. . . •····
Cherr~es
'"'

First Mate
Fish Dinner. each
SLICED TO ORDER SANDY MAC .

Color:
Rust Suede

'

Yellow
Onions .. :..

You can tell \'our kids that
' money doesn't grow on trHs until
·you're red In t~ faee. But the best
wev to teec:h thlm aboUt money Is to
let them go out end urh some of the
reel gretn ituff thlmiiiVII.

l·lb. $149
M
. .Ul hrooms .' 'Carton
.

5;'e':i;ilatus.31•. s1
·,AppIeS· ·...· .. :.. . .. ·5 · 99 C

Ji

'

.•

'•

I

The Daily S~-~·tinel :j
..

HARTLEY ·sHOES, INC.·

Pit: 992·2156 . .
' '

'·

.

·lb.

lag

'

.,

.

GOLDIN .
Dl·1.1 CIOUS

'

Jllli'l9, ~ II.ZI MI\ONS

.

$159

Hon•yclew ... .. Each '

PLAMI.D

.

Tokay Gra~s

Ill; · ·

a·gc
,.

·

AVONOALI

69~

49c

Mandarin
Oranges .

'

KIOGII

$329

Boiled Ham .. ....... lb .
SliCED OR BV THE PIECE, lONGHORN $ 2 59
Colby Cheese .. lb.
SARA lEE FRENCH STYLE . (UNTOPPEDI$199
Cheese Cake ... ~~"kc:
PIIIH lAKED GOLDIN
Dinner Rolls .... Dol.

ggc

lb.

FIISH

JUST .CAll OUR .CIRCULATION
DEPARTMENT
' . .TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMAOON:

ONI.Y

50716 Osborn Rd .
Reedsville, Ohio

$}59

INClUDES: 2·PIECES FISH . 4-0Z . COlE SLAW &amp;

Wilton
hrbookol
Cake Decorating

·\,, SUPPU~.

~~~j

COUNTRY OVI'N

TIL 7pm

Now!

DECoRATING

Beans .

lb .

SJ39

RAVAGE

1-

Green

C

$ 59

2

DEll STYlE

AYailable

1·0 1.
.. l"l.:g .

sgc

AVONDA lE CU l

Pepperidge Farm
Layer.Cakes

FIOZIN IANQUET SLICED YURKEY , SALISIURV STEAK
011 CHICKEN &amp; OUMPLINGS
·lb $ 1 4 9

something comfortable with
Easy Street. Perforated
vamp and delicate ankle
strap add style and grace to
any wardrobe-especially
yours .

YEARBOOKS

Kroger
Pot Pies

FROZEN

RAVAGE: Slip into

1982 WILTON

ANN'S CAKE

69

Easy On Your Feet

Iva Johnson was afternoon visi tor.

•O ·OI .
. Pkg .

,.,

32·01

25c
79c
sgc
33c

Sausage ....................... .

FlESH PACIFIC SNAPPER

Club
Ice Cream .

lb.

BOBEVANSFARM

lb.

Fillets ... ..... .

$129

Young Turkey

FlESH FARM·RAISED DRESSED

Fea tures like wide zjg-zag stitching , straight stretch stitchin&amp;
for knit s and stretch r&amp;brics
and twin needle stitching for
decorative stitching make for
easy, versatile sewing.

Btl

FIOlfN

U.S.O .A. INSPECTED FROZEN .
to .. u-la . Ave.

Fillets .. .. .. .. . lb . .
f'lii-~

32 ·01 .

JiffY

Fill INTO ONl CONVENIENT TAKI HOME PKG.

Catfish ........

3-0l .
Pkg .

Avondale
Catsup ..

$189

rb.

FR!SH FARM RAISED CATFISH

.

10(1 . (1

Salad
Dressing .

~--···············
:14··17-LB. AVG. WHOlE
$139

Model833

... sgc
... $}49

EMIASSY

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

...

GENERAL ALLERGIST

'"

$379

fox De luxe
11 -o•
Piua.

ir GOOD SUNDAY , SIPJEMIEI 27 . TMIOUGH S.ATU.PAY .

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

10 -or

FIOHN

: COP'YJIGH1 1'*1 · THE KIOGU CO . ITEMS AND P'IIC:lS

Cnlkge is In-

Mr . am.l Mrs. Tom Swrunerf ie ld ,

Justis losing the most weight in the
Chester class, Betty Dill in the
Mason Class, and Betty Berkley in
the Pomeroy class with Delores ·
Donahue as runner-up. Weight loss
in the classes this past week totaled
45pounds.

lAVE UP TO 40% ON
IOOPIR COST CUnERS

1 small (3 oz. ) 1m flavor¢gelatlg'
Mill: these Ingredients thoroughly.
Add the mix to Zl&gt; cups ol bolllng
water, stirring constantly WIW mixture Ia clear and smooth. Add I&gt;
teaspoon vanilla or almond
flavoring. Pour in a pan. Cool. Chill
and cut into squares.

.,

Mr. and Mrs. Paul McE lroy and Mr.
and Mrs. Paul McE lroy, Jr ., Jeff
and J oey and J essica.

Exercise classes to begin in October were discussed at this week's
meetings of Slinderella. Plans were
also made for the Thanksgiving and
Chri!:tmas banquets and a gift exchange . Eight new members were
welcomed into the classes with Rex

::.

'

Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
Colwnbus were weeke nd vis itors of

It was noted that more paring
knives and kitchen forks have been
ordered for the members to sell. The
traveling prize was won by Lucille
Wiliiamson. Refreshment.&gt;; were ser·
ved by Vera Crow substituting for
Nonna Custer, and Nellie Brown.

Slinderella _ _ _ _ __

Flqer GebiiiD
:!
I&gt; cup sugar
;::
2 envelopes unflavored gelatin-' ::;

0

News Notes

to find their own substitutes. Velma
Rue and Jane Walton will be
hostesses for the Oct. 8 meeting .

•..

:fresh Pork Lo1n ..

Wolf Pen

The Daily SentlneJ-Page--9

9hio

.

vi ted to attend .

~ THE

Mary Morris presented a program
on the "War of Roses" at the recent
meeting of the Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta ~lgma Phi Sorority
held at the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co. Riverboat Room.
Mrs.' Morris noted that the name
refers to civil wars between the
1700s and 1800s and has no historical
values.
·

food.

room temperature.

f'.omeroy-M !dd le po~t,

Preceptor Beta

~Meeting

a vacuum CGIItllner. A bot cream
IIOIIP or bot cocoa in a the111l08 Ia
another way to pack a milk-group

tl'n'sled in le&lt;J rning &lt;Jbout the
Bu::i in~s.s

Septemblr30, 1981

••

cmJp811Y the meal II one way.
However, If you've J*Ud a ean c(
rr- fruit juice for the llever!&amp;e.
co.wicler lncludinl acme cbul*il of

will a lso te ll prospediVt! s tudents
alwut fimmcial alfL Anyo ne in(;allipo l is

.~ednesday,

(

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lOLLS AVAILAII.I ONLY AT VOUJ II.VII IJIDOI
AND ~MIIOV IIIJOGII

Vienna
.
Sa usage ... 5·01
c••

43c

JUrQGII

45c

lima
~~---== · Beans .

(~!IYDI~W PI~
DAYTIME

Comfort
Diaper~ ...

...ct

"'•·
Worce1ter•hlre
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�, Pa e-ID-The Dall Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middle

Publication on origin theories available
The new publication, "Accidents
· of Evolution? or Acts of Creation?"
is now available for general public
distribution in Meigs County. It is an
update
on
the
curent
evolution/creation controversy .
Ronald E . Nixon of Ashland, who

'

is supervising the tri-state
distribution said: "The PUll)OSe of
this special report is to expose the
growing dissension among
evolutionary scientists and new
evidence that has caused
evolutionists to retreat and the

current status of scientific
creationism.''
Nixon added : " Eight and a half
million copies are being distributed
to the academic community and the
general public. Copies are available
fomr Jehovah's Witnesses or by
calling 992-2082 or 742-2951."

New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of Hemlock Grange
2049 held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Haning .
Elected were Roland Eastman,
master ; Stan:1rd Stockton, overseer; Margaret Hamng, lecturer;
Bob Reed, steward; Wallace Bradford, assistant steward, Bernice
Hawk, chaplain; Leota Smith,
· treasurer;
Sylvia Midkiff,
secretary ; Clarence Story, gatekeeper; Muriel Bradford, Ceres;
Doris Eastman, Pomona ; Jessie
White, Flora; Goldie Reed, lady
assistant steward; George White,
executive committee; Hilber
Quivey, legislative agent; Jane
Hazelton, Hazel Qmvey, women's
activities; Rosalie Story, youth committee; Hilber Quivey, trustee; and
Ann Lambert, pianist.
The legislative agent reported on
social livmg and retirement. It was
noted that Hemlock got first in the
Meigs County Fair exhibit, and that
Naorru Reed took third with her
cake, and Helen Quivey, first, with
her applian ce covers in the Pomona
judging.
Next meetmg will be held at the
Roland Eastman home . The
program included readings "Road
to Happiness" by Rosalie Story ; a
skit, "Rivals" by Bob Reed and
Wallace Bradford; "He Stubbed His
Toe" by Jessie White; a recitation
by Ray Whaley, and songs by the
group.
Refreshments were served.

Genealogical Society
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society met September 20 at the

Athens City Recreational Building.
The Meigs society joined with the
Athens society in sponsoring a lecture by William Mcintosh, who
heads the organization known as
First Families Ohio. Mr. McintoSh
lectured on his role in the
organization, the qualifications for
membership, and the types of proof
necessary to prove descent from a
settler in Ohio before 1820. He pointed out that published genealogies
and tradition are not acceptable as
proof.
The Meigs society elected officers
for the 1981-112 year They are June
Ashley, president; Pauline Roush,
recording secretary; Keith Ashley,
corresponding secretary; Margaret

I

Parker, treasurer;

Md Frances

Roberts, first-year executive committeeman. The chapter then announced that Karen (Holter) Werry
was welcomed into membership. It
was noted that Mrs. Clara Lochary
had been accepted mto the First
Families of Ohio. She ir the first
member of the chapter to obtain this
honor.
The secretary noted that there are
presently 79 members in this
society. Fifteen states are represented in the society. He further noted
that the ancestor file project is now
m progress . Each member submits
a chart of five generations. From
this chart each person is placed on a
file card and catalogued. This card
file will allow eash research for
those wishing to locate ancestors
carrying the same surnames.
Mrs. Louise Eden was chosen to
take charge of a new project for the
society. She will clip articles from
the local new•papers and catalogue
them for future reference. This w1U
allow researchers to locate modern
data on Meigs County farrulies .

I
I
Pay Cash for
I
I
Classlflads and II
Savalll
I

I
1
I

Nam•----------1
Addres•---------

1Phon•---------

A report on the cystic fibrosiS fund
drive was given at the Monday night
meeting of the Meigs Salon 710,
Eight and Forty held at the home of
Mrs. Mary Martin.

l-In Mtmtrtam

I For Rent

A discussion was held on items to
be sold for fund raising. Jewelry,
knives, fruit cakes, candy and candy
bars, date books, and Christmas
Items will be sold. Ruby Marshall,
nurse's scholarship chairman, noted
that a donation had been made to the
fund in lieu of flowers and that that
fund now stands at $25 with the goal
being$200.
Dues are payable now. Julia
Hysell and Zuelelia Smith were
reported Ill. An mvitatwn to the
homecoming dinner-dance in honor
of Lucille Woodling, Departemental
chapeau, on Saturday, Nov. 7, 6:30
p.m., was read. Next meeting vriU be
held m October, with Mrs. Veda
Davis as the hostess.
Games were played and a salad
course was served by the hostesses,
Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Knapp.

2
3
4. - -

-----

5. - - - - - 6

7. --

-

-

--

8.

9.
10.
11 . - - - - - 12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

16-Aadia. TV.
&amp; CBIO!tpalr
11- Wantecl To Do

st-For S~lt M Trade

and Mrs. Tom Hill, Tommy and
Soma, Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Hill, Indianapolis, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Patterson, Ray and Steve, Rutland;
Lon Faulkner, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. John Hughes, Williamstown,
W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs Jeff Patterson, Eric and Alyson, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Vmce Marinacce, Tina

County area correspondence
Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Marcie Craig spent a Sunday with
Carrie Gloeckner at East Letart.
Spending a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith and attending the
wedding of Valerie Johnson Adams
and Thomas Wayne Hanstine at the
local Methodist Church Saturday
were Jim and Carol Freeman,
children Jimmie and Renee of
Jeanette, Pa., Mr . and Mrs. Tom
Klose and children Tom, Jr., Timmy
and Tammy of Valencia, Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Monges of Saxonburg ,
Pa. Marty Derouin spent Saturday
with the Srruths and also attended
the wedding.

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smith and her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kluger of
Geissen, Gennany were recent
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Smith and fami ly.
Jim Bell of Morning Star visited
his brother, Don and Lois Bell
Tuesday. Harold and Violet Grimm
of Racine and Earl and Lois Grimm
of Columbus were dinner guests
Saturday of the bells.
Mr. and Mrs. Rocky Hupp, son, R.
J . spent the weekend visiting at
Summerville, W. Va.
Mrs. Irene Hupp vsited Mrs.
Michael Alad and two daughters at
Rock Springs recently
Walter McDade, Mr. and Mrs.
David McDade, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Kelsey, Mrs. Kim Nickolas, all of
Troy were weekend guests of Mrs.
Edna Roush and Mrs. Gladys

Shields over the weekend. Othe~
guests of Mrs. Roush were Dolly
Wolfe, Rev. James Clark, Mrs.
Leora Young, Mrs. Phyllis Randolph, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Smith,
Mary Riffie, Donnie and Monte, Riffee, all of South Webster. Dick and
Joan Smith and son Travis of Middleport, Mrs. Mary Roush of Winfield, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Roush and daughters, Kim and Jennny.
Leslie Roberts returned home
Thursday after spending two
weekends with Mrs. Debbie Yates
and son, Rick, at Clearwater, Fla.
She was met at the Columbus airport
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts.
Mrs. ~ary Roush of Winfield, W.
Va., Mrs. Till Webb visited Sunday
with Mrs. Mora Pearson at Dorcas.

Astrograph
October 1. 1981

Thr s coming year vou may

have to hang a little tougher to
get what you want, but if you
don'T grve up the Ship the rewards

will be there. In fact, that e)(tra
push might give you even more

than you wanted .
LIBRA CSept. 23·0ct. 231 Guard

your possessions today . Someone
who might not have any qualms
about taking something that
doesn' t belong to him m rght have
an eve on them

SCORPIO COct. 24· Nov. 22)
Others telling you how to do

things or giving vou orders will
not rest well with you today . You
could retaliate by overreacting.

Keep a cool head.
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23· Dec.
21) If you feel someone has In·
fringed upon you somehow, chan·

ces are all you'll do about it Is
brOOd. This solves nothing either bring it out In the open or
forget II.
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22·Jan. 19)

You may haiJe to guard against
dominating the scene tOday when
among friends . Be aware of their
need to share in the conversation
or activity .
AQUARIUS CJan. 20· Feb. 19) It
isn't necessarily like you, but
today you have a tendency to be
argumentative. Ask yourself if
the issue is that tmportant and
whether you are sure you are

right
PISCES CFeb. 20·March 20)

You have a tendency to view
things as being harder than they
really are, thereby creating more
work for yourse lf than is
necessary. Get out of your own
way.

ARIES CMarch 21·AprCI 19)
What might seem like a simple
request to you m Ightappear to be
an Imposition to the one you ask It
of today. Don't lake offense If
your appeal is denied.
TAURUS CAprU 2D-May 20)
Guard against emotions running
v.our life today. If they do, things

could get blown out of proportior. .
Arguments over childish issues
coul d occur.

GEMINI CMay 21 ·June 20) Be
extra·careful today not to un·
consciously put your needs and
desires above those of your co·
workers. They won't take kindly
to it and will let you know it .

CANCER CJune 21·July 22)
You're prone today to going on a
shopping spree What's even wor·
se, the items you tend to be at·
tracted to are mostly useless, ex·
travagant lunk.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you
feel that everybody's Interest Is
being placed before yours· today,
you could react In an unbecoming

manner. Watch your temper.
VIRGO CAug, 23-Sept, 22) Don't
expect anyone else to ball you out
of a problem situation today that
was self-created. It's going to be
left to you to unravel.

&amp;

FRAN'S
CERAMICS

e TRANSPORTATION
71 - Autos tor sate
72- Trucks for Sale
7l-V.Inl&amp;4 ._, 0
74-Moforcycles
71-8NtS I Moton
76--Auto Parts a
Accenortes
17-Auto Repair
71- Camplnl Equlpmenl

Mond"Y 1 OOon S&lt;'!turdo'ly
Tun!lay lhru Frlday1·ou .- M

lht&gt; Clay before public alton
Sunday 7 00 PM Frid•v

Now Taking Enrollment For Fall
Day or Evening
Clases.

•' - Home tmpro~~e~enh
n - Ptumblng &amp; Huhng
U - EitCIV.IItA9

307 Wetzgall St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Aefr•terallon
Hauhnt

9·4·1mo

16-M.H Repatr
11-Upflolttery

Up to IS word~

onedJiy lnsertton
$J .OO
Up to I Swords . . lflree d•y tnsertion .
. . $4.00
Up to 15w0olrdt . . 1111 IBys lnt.erl•on
t.J 00
1Aver.lge4 words p•r hnel
Mobtle tiome s•les o\nd Yud utes are aueptl!d only wtlh c:uh
wtlh order 1) cent Ctl.lrte tor ads c•rrylng Bo• Number 111 C.lrf! of
The Sentinel .
Tl1e Publisher reurves the right to ll!dttor retect any .ldl deemed
Obiecuonal Tile Publtsher wtll not be responstble lor more than one ,

32
33.

tncorrecttnsert.on .

34.
35.

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF TERRY D.
TALBOTT, DECEASED
CASE No. 23546
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On September 23, 1981, in
Lane,

Ethel

May

Evans,

Probate Judge/
Clerk
(9) 30 ( 10) 7, 14, 3tc

54

Misc . Merchandtce

FOR SALE

614·1"12· 3891
PAYING
$8.00 Per Hundred Lbs.
After they are hulled
Starting October 1st

Let George Miller
check your present elec·
tricac system.
Relldentiol

Coli36Hl628.

4 kittens, I tiger stripe, 3

yellow·whlle
4120.

Guysville, Oh1o
Phone 61-C-662-382 1
Authorized John Deer.
New Holland, Bush Hog
Form Equtpment
O.Oier

Two hamsters, 1 male, 1
female. One white mouse.

FARM EQUIPMENI
PARTS &amp;SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
992· 7656
8·20 · tfc

1- No. 8600 Diesel Ford
Tractor w/ Cab
1- Model275 Diesel

:

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Call Ken Young
For Fast Service
985-3561
PARTS AND SfRVICE
ALL MAKES

•Wosl'lers

•Dryers
•Ranges
•Disposals

1- ModeiAN Hay Bind
N.H.
7-3·tfc

•Hot Water Tonks

remodeled home

PH. 992·272S
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, Ohio
9·20·1 mo

acres of land.
bedrooms,

Owner will finance
to qualified buyer.

Phone
1-( 614)-992-3325

CALL:

POMEROY
LANDMARK

No down payment,
monthly payment
around $175.00 per
month.
Real Bargain!!!
Call to see!!!
Call Collect
304-485·1631
Ask for Peyton
304·485-21 54
~rokers Welcome
&amp; Protected

NEW

bedroom
niture.

washer

spacious

we are now delivering
home heating oil 1n all
parts of Meigs co. we
want new customers.
Larry E . Miller-Dealer

992-3460

male

dining room, beautiful

6

992·6215,,. 992 731&lt;11
Pomero, Oh to
9 31Hit

5·7·llc

trailer or other prOperty
as down payment or

kitchen, basement with
rec . room, attached

kitchen with stove and
refrigerator. Also a
large business building
for hobby or country
store. Asking only
$31,000.
COUNTRY HOME On hafd road near town.
3 bedroqms, )1h baths,
nice kitchen with stove

LARGE SELECTION OF REMNANTS
· ~-and up
RUBBERBACK Mc::.'!~~~~pel

and

refrigerator,

smart. Call 245·5248 after
6:30.

Vinyl

&amp; Aluminum

garage, then this is II.

SIDING

8261 or 446·9424.

Stylist: Mark Mora , Dave

Cuthbertson
bertson.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Cindy Cuth·

Weds . 10:00·8 00

Built Girl til"
Clll for frH siding
e111moto1, 949-2141 or
949-2160 .
No Sundly COlli

Thurs. II :-8:00
Fri . 10·00-S:OO

Morgan. Call446·3226.

Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

LOST:

No oppolntm•nlt n.c•nory
rn~t,

GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy Now &amp; Save$2-$6 Per Yard
25 rolls ·carpet in stock to pick from:
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selecti.on Roll Ends ,Remnants $2.50 up. Grass carpet $4.99 yd. ;
Green and Brown.
. 1
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

hJ·IIc

For
l(ul n.l(orlll.out, 11\op
112&lt;11· 1 mo

SMALL

,·

'Queenie'.

7

Yard Sale

Gallla
Squad .

Co
Volunteer
Rummage Sa le.

Volunteer Squad building

9:001111 ??

Si1es from 4x6.to 12x40

Yard Sa le Oct. I, 9·4:30, 348
LeGrande Blvd. off 141.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Box 54

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

Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614-143·2591
6·

Yard

Sale

at

Griffin'•

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

33.
Mon .· Fri. 8:l0 to4 :00

Garage

fryer,

Sale

Fairfield

Acres Subdivision. Oct. 1 a.

Oct. 1 &amp; Oct. 2 9·5, rain or

Fn. &amp; Sat. Clothes, fur ·
patterns,

ney .
Garage Sale 1069 Second
Ave., Gallipolis. Thurs. and
Fri. 9:00·5:00. Nice clean
clothing and other misc .
items.

1 Family Yard Sale Misc.
1

R.C.S. REALTY, INC.

neighborhood Rd. 9·5.

BILL CHILDS, Mgr.
Phone 9'12-63 12
Pomeroy, Ohio

Yard sale near Clay
School. Moiling out of

State. Oct. 2,3,&amp; 4.

new clothes. Sizes 7-11 's,
lo1s of misc . items. Rf. 160 9
miles from Holzer Hasp
Yard Sale Thurs., Frt. &amp;

stove, winter clothing, all

Sat.

317

Bulavllle

Rd.

2 Family Garage Sale 607
Jackson

Pike.

Starting

Yard Sale Friday &amp; Satur·
day . Bladen, Oh Furniture.
bike exceriser, Misc.

' .. . .

'

.

NEW HOME - BI·ieVel In Gallla Co. on Rt. 554. 3
BR, ,I'h bath, beautifully carpeted throughout. Sets
. on lor~ lot, garag' and deck. Asking $62,000.
COMFORTABLE- 3 BR ranch, 1 mile off Rl. 7.
SllUOied on 3 rolling acres. There Is a separate
•garlge and other outbuildings. Priced in the ssos,

!or

,fRANCE .

some work, fruit trees, garden space. All this
$35,900.

SUPPLIES

LETART FALLS - Just reduced to $12,900. Must
see' to appreciate. good -rental Investment or com·.
lortable starter l)oine.

.

.

!~~~·~~~~:~~~::~; 1 ~t,•tltd ·In

Racine. Land con.'

'

f •

''

Yard sale on Lasley St.
Oct . 1 and 2. Stereo, am·
plifer, clothmg and lots
more. Rain cancels .

and 3 at the Rtta Hamm
residence on Walnut St ,
M iddleport 9 to 4 Men and
womens cloth1ng and mise
items .

Garage Sa le Thurs., Fri , &amp;
Sat . at Ed Kempers, 2 nd
dri11eway off 160 O.J . White

Rd .
Garage Sa te Saturday Oct .

3, 2 mi. lrom HMC on Rt .
160.

and adults. Misc . items. Rt .
3 miles north of
fairgrounds. Follow signs.

33,

Yard Sale. Chas. McLain
Residence, 3 mi. E . of
crafts,

women

clothes,

Rutland. Phone 742·2233.
Yard Sale Thurs. &amp; Fri. 8
till ? Corner of Rt. 7 and
Teens Run Rd . Household Garage sale. 3 mile off Rt. 7
bypass on Leading Creek
good &amp; clothes.
Rd. Friday, Oct. 2 only.
Welsh residence. 9-3.
Yard Sale Saturday Oc·
Iober 3rd. Only . AI Rodney
on 35, 4 miles from Holzer. Yard sale. Frldif'(, Oct. 2.
Ruland, Hutchinson Sub9-5.
.
division. 2nd hOUse on
rl~nt, on Happy Hollow Rlf.
Large Barn Sole Thurs. &amp;
Sal. everything cheap.
Motorcycle, 2 bicycles, en· Yard sale at Rowes
tiques, e. lots of clctthes. 2 residence. Thursday Oct. 1.
miles from Vinton on Roy Go to end of Broadway 51.
Holcomb Rd. Oscar Grlf· In Racine.
IIIIIs residence.
Yard sale. Oct. 1,2,3. 9to 5.
Sale112 VInton Court, In Tuppers Plains SR7. lsi
trailer below Ashland
Thurs. &amp; Fri.
station. If rains will be Oct.
First Time Yard Sale. Rt. 8,9,10.
218 In Mercerville. Thurs.
s~le. 413 Spring Ave.,
thi'IJ sat. 10 1111 s.
o.~..; •.rnv . Thursday and
to 4. Baby Items,
&lt;ici. 1&amp;2. 3 miles out Rt. 141 '''''"'no. end
tables, brass
at Green Terrace Mobile
misc. Rain can·
Home Park. Clollllng, .fur·

,,

•

Situations Wanted

Wanted female to share
apartment with same I
child acceptable. Call 245

5835 .
Ambious boy needs work

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

446 2716.
Someone to care for me in
my home. 992·2686
Elim Resthome. Care tor
hafdicapped, aged, or bed
patient
Temporary or
llmtted care . Or continuous
home with us. Equipped for
wheel chair . 7.42·2266.
Nurses aid Day ttm e. Ex
per1enced . Good referen-

Have room board for
disabled person, also have
vacancy
for
bedfast

Five family yard sale
Saturday. B miles out San
dhill
Road. Antiques,
clothing, d ishes . Starting 10

Will take care of 2 elderly
ladies in our home J;• mile
east of Darwtn 992·3888.

am.

patient. 9'12 6022 .

Will do babysitting in my
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Special
Auction
at
Pageville. Ohio 6 pm·
Saturday, October 3. Lots
of new merchand tse tor
Chr istmas shopping, as
well as new and used fur ·
niture
and
household
goods. Not respons tble tor
accidents. Ron Russell

614-698·6592

9
wanted to Buy
WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
niture and Antiques of all
ktnds, call Kenneth Swain,
256· 1967 in the evenings.

CASH PAID for clean. late
model used cars Smith
Bu ick · Pont1ac, GAllipolis,

Ohio. Call446·2282 .
Junk cars with or with out
motors, scrap metal, ii!ld

batteries Ca II 388·9303 .
BEDS· IRD'&lt;, BRASS, old

diameter

9·4, Oct. 3. Cedar St. side
door of Church

12

Yard sale Ellen Eber·
sbach restdence, Depot St ..
Rutland. Oct. 1,2,3.

children's Clothing and
adults, toys, games, odds &amp;
ends. 177 Portsmouth Rd

Rummage Sale Grace
United Methodist Church .

pm .

ces. Call742·2288

Pomeroy, Oh . Or9'12·7760

Tow Family Yard Sale Oct.
1·2-3 In Eureka, Dowie
Williams residence . Canceled if rain.

Reliable
babysitter
needed. In my home. Day
shift. Call 675·5375 before 5

Yard sale, Oct
1,2,3
Across from Minersville
ball field . Ra in or shine .

Yard Sale Oct 1&amp;2 Good

nlture, toys, misc.
!

stone jars and iugs, tools
and lots of collectibles and
misc. Reasonable prices
Held ra•n or shine .

Yard Sal e Friday &amp; Satur·
day . Bladen. Oh Furniture,
bike exceriser, Misc.

ner of College &amp; Locust in

NEW LISTING - Country home, 2 story, 4 BR,
basement, outbuilding, vinyl siding, fruit trees. Be·
lng offered at $25,000.

Also 3 old clocks, 9x 12 rug,

furniture , gold, silver
dol lars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc ,
Complete
households .
Write : M .D Miller, Rt 4,

sizes, Cora . 379·7281 . Wed .· shoes, antique dining room
sat. sept. 30, Oct. 3.
suite. Thurs. 1. Fri. 2. Elec
trlc motors, pipe fittings,
Yard Sale Oct. 1·2 Addison boot oars, 18 h.p. outboard
lsi house on rlg.ht after motor. 949·2220.
crossing tracks on old Rt. 7
toward KC Plant.
Pallo Sale. Oct ., 1,2,3. Cor·

CENTRAL REALTY

pieces of antique furniture
in oak, walnut, and mixed
woods .
Beds,
tables,
chests, chairs, rockers,
desks, and dispaly cases.

beyond the Bypass .

Racine off Rt. 124.
Wood, coal &amp; gas cook Harlequin Romance bnOks,

RHI Estate- General

.

items. Thurs. &amp; Fri. First
house past Sanders Dr .,

of 5 Points on Flatwoods
Rd. Oct. 2,3. 8 to 6. Over 40

Yard Sale Oct. 1,2,&amp;3. Rod·
ney, Oh Beside Rodney
Methodist
Church
clothing, winter coats &amp;
misc .

family Mon . Wed . Sept.
Rd . 114 mile on left Toys, 328·30.
Good clothing, kids
clothes, &amp; misc.

OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVER ON FRONT
STREET IN MIDDLEPORT- Large9 room house .
A lot of possibilities. Only $15,000.00.

Movtng sale. l V.. mile north

8

shine. Rt. 7 Georges Creek

· ~~n~,::;!~IHoME- Well kept In Racine. Comptetelv
,f
"lklno $11,000. Located on quiet street.

.

Deep

2. 9·5.

After Aug. 3
Ph. 992·6S64
8·30·1 mo. pd.

Water·Stwtt'·E lectrlc .
Gas Lln~DIIches
water J,.lne Hook·ups
·Septic T.tnk'
county Certified
ROUih Lint
Cheshire, On.
Pli. UY-75611
1-7·1 lie

10·?

cabinets, end tables, plus
other items, clothes. Rain
dale, Monday, Oct. 5.

.

...

.

to

oct. 1.2,&amp;3. Old Rt. 160

Utility Buildinp

ELECTRONIC

. .RUTLANDJU~.N~TUR~
.
742-221.1
-

female

Reward . 675 4622 or 695
3450.

•
39 ACRES .,. All mineral rights, 4 BR home needs

E' •IN

Garage Sale First Time

3377.

Sizes

fur-

. - . · ~~~~~,!~~~·f;;~: AND
'OR·

.

Walker

swers

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Ph. 992-7201

Sat. North on 160 past
Holzer, turn right on first
gravel road past O.J White
Rd, first house on left.
Follow signs.

magazines,

VardSale

3 family yard sale Oct 2

white with blue tick's. Last Sept. 30
Clothing, CB
seen on Wolf Pen Rd . Rt . radio, Fuzz buster, warm
143. Call 985·4184 or 9'12· moring heater .

PHONE 992·3021

J·ll ·llc

And oYt-ner is asking

IN·

Snire drum, flute, break·
fast set, &amp; misc . items . St.

4 Fami ly Yard Sale Lots of

LOST on Bulaville Porter
Rd. medium sized male
mixed breed dog . White
with dark spots. Last seen
wearing an orange col l ar
with
ID
fag
named

New Hours .
Mon. 11 :007:00
Tues . 11 :00·5:00

"Beautiful, Custom

only $43,000.

eBackho.
• Excavating .
• Septic systems
ewottr. Sewer &amp;
,Gal L.lnes
eOumpTruck
eTre1)cher
Licensed a. Bonded
'

&amp; priced to go.

Hannan Trace Rd . Call 446-

HAIR REMEDIES

"From 30x30"

OPEN

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·2Hic

nace, drilled Well, 5 car
garage.and 1 acre plus. .
SPOTLESS - Sxtra 8
room modern designed
home. Has 3 or 4
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
hot water gas fired hell, ·
'"asemlenal.'r, large full .
u•
and garage
rentals. Asklog

L-----~:..!..:.:L--_:____:_:.:..:_-1---=.::'...J• vd.

Lost and Found

HAVE you lost a young
beautiful Australian Blue
Heeler? Friencly, very

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Ph. 992-2174

Cocker

lit-

Farm Buildings

TGp prtces patd for auto
bOdies, scrap iron and
metals .
1
mile
west
ot
Fairgrounds on Old Rt.

992-6259

household items, banjo and
case, antique piano &amp; ben·
ch, 2 adult bicyc les, toys,
games, etc. Good condition

4 years old . 67S·

ALL STEEL

NOW

NEW PHONE NO.

shine. 266 Debby Or , off
Route
141.
Clolhing,

books. Rl. 581! E. Of Rod

__Addons and
remodel•ng
_ Roofing on&lt;J gutter
work
_ Concret work
_ Plumbing and
electnol work
{Free Estimates)

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Call Collect
9·21-1 mo.

1 Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp;·Metal!

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.

living room,

and Jryer. Will consider

baths, furnace, WOOd·
burner, flue, modern

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

.

Even

I

THIS RANCH STYLi '
IS FOR YOU - II YOU"
wont 3 bedroom i:

frame with coal fur·
nace, all utilities, bath,
full basement and 3 lots
foonly $12,000.00 or gOOd
offer.
POSSCBILIT!ES
Large country home,
nicely carpeted, 2 full

CALL lODAY!

Now,$J31isq.

reasonable

reasonable 2 bedroom

PRICED RIGHT.

'515 sq. yd.

2

$17,000.00 cash.
NEW LISTING - Very

...

CEx!(a Good)
Reg. sl6.9S sq,
·
Installed v~ .

porch. $35,000.

home with bath and fur·

614·992-2181
For
Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

Cash·n·Carry
1 Roll Each
Brown, Blue,
Green

LISTING -

roof, nice front sittinG

Huge Garage Sale Friday
9·5, Saturday 9·3. Rain or

1s,

price. $39,900.

216 E. second Street

446·3875.

Peek·a-Poo Poodle, 11
months old , black, likes

3.

HARRISON
TV SUVICE

Fri. · Sat .
Stero,
bow,
rocker, gui1ar, aquarium,

Garage Sale Thurs, Fri., &amp;

Groc. in Kanauga Sat .• Oct.

IN TOWN AND CON·
VENIENT . - RIVER
VIEW IN POMEROYl'h story, 3 bedrooms,
full basement, large lot,
new vinyl siding, new

1/4 mi. out Bulavllle Rd .

AKC Registered white 4
year old male Semoyed
Husky to goOO home.

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yn. Experience

9-5-tfc

(SOHIO)

$20.00
Now $17.50
$25.00 . Now $22.50
$30.00 . Now $27 .50
S35.00 . Now $29.50
Wave Length For

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

Yard Sale Westbrook Sub .

Avon, 7H2 GM 350 car par·

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Hea,ter Core to the
Largo11 Rodlotor.

Pomeroy, Oh.

•Dishwosl'lers

PERM SALE
SEPT. 21 thru OCT. 24

A FA~ OF YOUR·
OWN -· 'A

7

VardSale

Rt. 218. 446·1358 .

-----------------+-------------+------------------+----------------1 salt
Australian blue heeler dog,
and pepper color, an·

Longer Hair

1

30H95·3882.

Even~ngs

M.F

want to see it at this

Approx . S2 .SO per sq. fl.

stripe. 985·

reliable boybsltter

a.m. ·12 noon, 304·675·2012 .

niture, dishes, toys, games,
Keep This Ad for
Future Reference

Call 742-3195
H ·ttc

.,

I

I Siberian husky for some
one who lives in country.

U.S. Rt . 50 East

Custom kttchens and appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin, electnc, and
heating.

1&gt;1 E E 0

in my home. Call between 8

&amp;clothes.
Mother dog and 2 puppies.
Call245·9151 .

SALES&amp;SERVICE

CONSTRUcnON

TOM HOSKINS

~ coon
dog, makes good hun·
ling dogs. Call388·8253.

BOGGS

C. R. MASH

Ph. 949·2160 or 992·612S
7·Hfc

If Long Distance,

bath. All carpeted
really neat. You wl

Middleport, Ohio
Formerly
Dudley's
F lonst
&amp;
Drehel
c('ram1cs.

Main St.

• Remodeling
• Free estimates
•20 Yrs. experience

&amp; Commercial

dining room,

59 N. 2nd Ave .

$1~. yd.

LET'S GET READY TO
GO HUNTING. We' ll show
you hoW. Largest demon·
Riverside Gun Shop St. Rt.
stration
ever attempted In
7 Athalia, on. Gun repair
Irs all happening
and not tank reblulng. Cell " I've been good all day Don '! thlsarea.
Saturday, October 10.
614-1186·5194.
you want to know what I want' '' Make your plans to attend
now. Watch this newspaper
for further details.
For buld delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
A
Giveaway
diesel fuel, call Landmark, 3•_-~n!!Cn~o~u!!nc!:!e!!m!!!!en!!Ct~s__ 4
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.
ANY
PERSON
who has
Gun snoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starling anything to give away and
Horses, pontes, horse at 1 p.m . Factory choke does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
trailer, riding lessons. Hoof guns only .
~le may place an ad In this
Hollow 614·698-3290.
column . There will be no
· No hunting or trespassing charge to the advertiser .
No trapping on our proper· on the following properties,
ty , BY owners, Maxine Old· R.H. Boetrlght, Gary Dill.
die Sellers, Roy and Lillian and Jr . Hunt, Keith 3 male kittens. Call446·4987
Qrolflll, and Freda Ridenour and John Gin· in the evenings.
Ferguson.
ther. Chester Township .
I female Lab. 4 puppies, 7
wks. old, half Lab. &amp; half

LOST·Letart area, female

$30,000.

Pomeroy, Ohio

PRICE: 12,500

CARPET

all the
family .

prox. 1 acre of level
ground,
with
3
bedrooms, family room.~
kitchen
with bar,
garage, and another
bldg
Home
has
beauttful
wooden-.
ceilings,
hardwood
floors and bay window,

1

W/Paddlng
Installed
•tarlt' ng
•

bedroom

NEW LISTING
POINT ROCK - Ap·

To
EXCELSIOR SALT
WORKS INC.

DOWNTOWN
MIDDLEPORT

NEW LISTING - Size is
Right -

$29,500.

Bring Your Walnuts

STORE BU

For all of your wiring needs.

refrigerator,
and forced air heat
New roof, sheds, on ap·
prox . 1112 acre land.

WANTED
BLACK
WALNUTS

• Rooltng of all types
eSidlng

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC THE STANDARD
OIL CO.
SERVICE

pointed Administratrix of

wanted to Buy

Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
SUPPIIH.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis vacuum
Cleaner, one hall mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Cell
446·02'14 ..
I

----------------,-.,..-i------------------i----------------------+---------------------1 vicinity
LOST : White pony, in the
of Lincoln Pike and

uppers

the estate of Terry 0.
Talbott, deceased, late of
189 Arbau~h Lane, Tuppers
Plains, Ohi045783.
Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
!9) 30 CO) 7, 14, 3tc

(SOHIO)
We are now serving all
of Meigs Co
with
Heating 011, Diesel
Supreme,
GasolIne,
comlete
l1ne
of
Lubricants for
the
farms &amp; industry .

8·30·1 mo.

Plains, Ohio 45783, was ap·

deceased , late of R.D. 3,
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769.
Robert E . Buck

OIL CO.

If long distance, call collect:
Larry E. Mtller, Dealer

the Meigs County Probate

baugh

And Home Maintenance

STANDARD

PH. 992· 3460

Court, Case No. 2354&lt;1,
Mary Jane Talbott'f 189 Ar·

Public Notice

LAFF-A-DAY

'

""

---------------------f--------------------~--------------------~--------------------~~~~~1~£~~· togoodhome.304·

Rates and Other Information

28. - -- - - ' - - 29.
30.
31

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

FRANCES HEWETSON

14- E iectr•ul &amp;
IS- Genl:!r~t

"

Business Services

LIVESTOCK

,, _ Farm EqutPment
n - Wantecl to Buy
U - l.tVeiiOCII
Salt
..- Hay &amp; Gr•ln
U- Setd &amp; Fertlltler

Sate

...... .. ' .... . ....,

_

------------.L..----------1...---------..,;L._________

SERVICES

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

Maria, Scott and Ronnie Hamson,
Vicki and Rickie Ellis, Middleport;
Micah Maiden, Jenny, Benjamin
and Cathy Hoffner, Cheshire;
Blaine, Martha , Joey and Adam
Carter, Albany .

and Angie, Reynoldsburg; Mr. and
Mrs. Hiram 0 . Slawter, Paige, John
and Susan, Ft. Thomas, Ky.; Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Slawter and Kristen,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs Harry
Slawter, Amy and Lisa, Delaware.
Jack Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Hill, stationed with the U. S.
Navy m South America, was the only
one unable to attend.

675-1333

Veeetabtes

e FARM SUPPLIES

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

Slawter_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
The first reumon of the Hiram
Slawter family was geld Saturday,
Sept. 19, at Blackli ck Park, Columbus.
Attendmg were Mr. and Mrs.
Hiram Slawter, Mason, W. Va .; Mr.
and Mrs Paul Hill, David, West
Newton. Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Lonme
Eaton , Mike , Angel and Joshua, Mr .

In Mason County

51- MusiCal Instrument
SI-Fruits &amp;

J1- Reattors

24.
25.
26. - - - - -27

992-2156

St-PtfS for Sata

n-Mobtle Homes
lot Sate
U - Fums lor Sate
)4- Bus•nen Buildtngs
IS-Lois &amp; ACrii!Aile
li Re~t euateWanted

22.-- - - - 23. - - - - - -

In Meigs county

446·2342

s4-MIIC. MtrCfl&amp;fKIIll
SS - Butldln• Supplies

eREAL ESTATE

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Carter - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

In Gal Ita County

53-Antiques

S~rlliCH

17
18
19, -- - - - - 20
21. - - - - --

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Opportunily
'11- Monty to loan
U - Profe55tDNII

)Wanted

89s-Letarl
937- Buffalo

eMERCHANDISE

IJ-SCIIOCIIS IRitruction

949-Racine

576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882-New Haven

S1- H..,sefiOid Goods
52- CB, TV, Radio Equlpmtnt

'lt-Busmeu

) For Sale
) Announcement

eRENTALS
" 1- HCN.Is_. for Rent
42-Mollllt Homes

t-Wanted te Buy

l!- H 0 meslor

4

34:1-Portland
247-Letorr Falls

Area COde 304
67s-Pt. Pleasanl
4S8-Leon

U - Furnlslted Rooms

eFINANCIAL

include discount

Pomeroy

9P ~ Chester

Mason Co., W. Va.

44---Spacefar Atilt
47-Wanted to Rtnt
41-Equipmtnt for Atnt
,.,_For Lease

11 - HelpWanr.d

992- Midd!eport

742- Rutland

far Rtnl
u - Apartmtntstor REnt

3-Annout~ctmtnh

if-Gh,Hway
1-HII'PV•ds
6--Lost and Founel
7-'f ard Salt
J-PubUc Slit
I Aucnan

lif-Buslntn Training

Public NOtiCe

door prize. The potluck dinner was
attended by : Juamta Clark, New
Haven, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Parsons and Amber, Gallipolis; Jo
Ann, Bob, Steve, David and Debbie
Spaulding, Chesterhill; Mike.

eANNOUNCEMENTS

614

446- Gallipolis
167- Cheshire
l i i- Vinton
24s-R io Grande
254-Guyan Dist.
64l- Arabia Dist.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•-car4 at Thanks

Me1gs Co. Are~ Code

614

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

U-tnsuranct

These cash rates

Gallia co. Area Code

PHONE 992-2156

ll-SIIUifiOI'I Wan1H

Marjorie Fetty, chapeau, presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Pearl
Knapp giving the cystic fibrosis
report. She noted that money collected by the American Legion
Auxiliary juniors had been turned
in. Working on the project were
Anita Smith, Robin Campbell and
Kim Patterson, along with two
prospective members, Tina Riffle
and Teresa Walker.

Families gather for reunion~-----­
The Carter family reunion was
held recently at the Rt. 33 roadside
park, north of Pomeroy.
Gifts were presented to Adam and
Blaine Carter and Ronnie Harrison
with Debbte Spaulding wmmng the

I
I
I
I

Write your own ad and order bY "mall with thiS
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable .

The Daily

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

WANT AD INFORMAnON

I

1 Curb Inflation

The next meeting of the society
will be held on October 18 at 2 p.m. at
the Meigs Musewn . The speaker for
this meeting will be announced at a
later date.

Meigs Salon

1981

Sentinel
Want
Ads
,-------·--ii.---;.·_._ ________ ___

Meigs County meeting notes
Hemlock Grange

rt, Ohio

CH IP WOOD Poles max
14"

on largest

end S12.50 per ton . Bundled
slab . $10 .50 per ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pat let Co ,
Ro ck
Springs
Rd ,

Pomeroy. 992-2669
Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry , rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar

ber Shop, M1ddleport. 9'12
3476.

No item to large or small
will buy 1 piece or compl ete
household . New, used and
antique . Ca l l992-6370.
Large porcelain covered
coal heater . Old-fashioned
type, not a~r · tight . Phone

949·2696 after s p.m.
Scrap metals, batteries,
rad ia tors, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokering. Yarper·Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300

home 949·2220.
Wtll do babysitting in my
home anytime Middleport
area Call992 6349
13

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co . has offered
serv ices for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
availab l e to meet in
dividual needs . Contact
Ray Wedemeyer, agent
Phone 388·82.49
Group Medical Coverage
for small business, as well
an individua l s
Major
medical , basic hospital , &amp;
group ltfe tnsurance com
bined to give you one of the
best programs available.
Very competative rates.
For more tnformation:
Steve McGhee. 446·0818 or

446·0552

AUTOMOBILE

ber, 5 acres or more. Rcxky

Wooldridge, 61089·2476 or
614·493·2591.
PLYWOOD half inch &amp;
three eights, must be good

IN ·

SU RANCE
been can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator' s License? Phone

9'12·2143
18

Wanted to Do

Bnck and Block laying,
fireplaces,
all work

guaranteed . Ca ll 379·2123.
Babysitting in my home ,
Kanauga
area .
E )I( ·
perienced, good referen·
ces. Have fenced yard . Call
446-0696 anytime.
Will do baby sttting in my
home in R•o Grande. Call

245-9109.

TV service calls . Call 992·
2034 . Also used color TV for
sal e.
would like to rent tractor

with backhoe. 614-949·2182.

Responsible mother will do
babysitting in the Henderson

area . 675·5324.

Eleventh Street. 675-5668.
Also Flea Market open
dallY . Open Monday ·
Friday 1·5 pm .
WANT to buy stand'"g tim·

Insurance

Flnanelal
22

Money to Loan

FHA·VA ·Convential Home
Loans, Columbus First
Mortgage Co .. 463 Second

Ave ., Gallipolis, Oh., 446·
7172

on one side, paneling quarter inch, the same. 304·375·

23

5220.

Piano tuning and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your Piano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard. 446-4372,

..... .

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

-,I 0 o

I o • • • 010-. I 0

Professional

_ _ _..:S~e!!r:!.v~ic~e'!s_ __

Gallipolis.

HARPER Adull Care Cen·

11
Help Wanted
Telephone Sales. $8 to $16
per hour. Work from your

ter·providing the personal
care your elderl y nee-d in a

home part-tlme· no ex·
perlence. For immediate

Vacancies now availible .

employment call446·8371.

nome

like

atmosphere .

calllOA-675·1293.

.......
·--- .. ..,. .......,
-

Housekeeper wanted. Call
446·1578.
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person

and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrler. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 9'12·
2156 or 992-2157 .
Cook wanted. Apply In per·
son Crows Sleakhouse.

31

~

Homes for Sale

BY OWNER : 4 bdr., split·
level, living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat· ln

kitchen, lg. family rm. , 2
1/2 baths, located In Taro
Estates, Club hou• ~ and
pool privileges, $75,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
District. ShoWn by appt.
only call446·9403.

�21

Homntersa ..

U

3 bdr . house with
garage 11111 full basemen!
UJ,OOO. Coll416·0390.
Fw sate on land conlracl.
HooM and 2 mobllo homes
located at Bulavllle . Will
wll separately or t09ether .
Coli 446-3437. .
FOR SALE BY OWNER 3
bdr. home located at 123
G..-t leld Ave. 2 ac res runs
lr8m SR 7 to Ohio River .
Full basement, finished
rec . r oom, 2 fireplaces, 2
112 baths, In wround con·Ct&lt;lle Jli)OI , all new c ~rpet ,
new paint Inside and out _
Will consider yOIJr nome or
mobile home in trade.
owner will consider tinan-

clnv at I~ APR alter
reasonable down payment,
If interested call 446-1546
for an appointment .
House for rent or sale on
land contract or rent with
option to buy . Home in
!ure1&lt;a on State Rt . 7 on
~1 verfront . Call 3811-8711 or
31111-9692 .
New J bedr"""' house,
fornlly roorn. 1"" bath, 2

car garaue . Central heat

411nd air. 2 miles from
Holzer Hos~itoi. Rt. 35 . -1463617 .

Mobllo Homos
tor Solo

41

Avo .. Gallipolis. Fully
equfpped kilcnen, formal
dining, 2 ro 3 bedrooms,
carpeting , storm windows,
central air. $5,000 down .
Assume loan of S31 ,000 at 9

112%446-7-148.
Ute Estate . Farm, J'f"opo&gt;rty value,SOS,t50.00 . Life
estate v•tue $1,701.58. Cali
992-6747 ~enings
l bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths, f~mity r oom . Full
basement, garage. 949 -

2079 .

1• x 70 mobile home, 2
bt-droom, family room , Squires Bingham '22 L.R .

central air, underpinning ,
awnings. 675- 1121 or 67~ -

ammo $1.19 ptor box . Eclip·
se 12 gage game loade&amp;, 6

SLEEPING
I ight

ROOMS and

housekeeping

apt.,

Park Central Hotel.

shot, 20 shells per box $3.95. 46
"-------'S"p"'~""
ce._,_,
lo,_,r-'R"'-e"'n"l_ _
Spring Valley Trading Co., For Rent Nice large lot for
1973 Peerless mobile home , Spring Valley Plaza . «&lt;- mobile home on Bulavllle12 x 60, 2 bed room, un - 8025 .
Addison Rd. Call «0-4265.
furnished , $5000 . 675-S415
alter 4:30pm .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
42
Mobile Homes
Park, Route 33, North of
for
Rent
1962 10 x ss New Moon .
Pomeroy Large lots. Coli
S2500. Phone895·3612 .
992-7479 .
For rent 2 bdr. mobile

home in Porter area. Ref.

10 x ~5 Castle mobile home .
S2400. Phone675 - ~29 .

TRAILER space 3 miles
&amp; dep. req . Call367 -7101.
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y, Pt . Pleasant, 675Mobile Home in Chester . . 32.S .

1974 12 x 60, in Camp
Conley , air conditioning,
car pet, stove, good shape .

Nice &amp; clean . 2 bedrooms .
Reference required . 985-

675 -2560 .
F~rms

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

3839 or 985-3371.

-..·

mobile

home

In

New

Household Goods
Haven. Adults only, no 51
pets, 304-675-1452 or 67SLAYNE'S FURNITURE
2996 .
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sola,
Trailer lots and mobile chair and loveseat, $275 .

FARM

HOUSE and approximately 10 acres,
mostly tillable. Exc. water .

GOOd outbu ildings, freshly
painted, new gutters &amp;

MORRISON'S Auto &amp;ale&amp;.
Henderson, WV: Phone675·
1574or675-2881.

1975 Camero, 350 ent~tne , 3
speed, new tires, no rust,
runs good, $2,000, 304-195-

3654.

1971 Super Beetle, good
condition, S900. 304·02-2019
or 112-2326.

lf71 Volkswagen Super
Beetle. $700. 675-SOIS.

r::::::::::::::;~==~~~~~==1 automatic,
1972
Chevelle,
ps, pb, am 307,
tope
Misc. Morcflondice

54

1910 Chevelle, automatic,

tow mileage. 1980 Chevette,
automa11c . Bike exerciser .

381-8304.
1979 Chevy Camara, 212x60
used mobile homes . C•ll
446· 15~2 after 5.
New 1981 model sewing
machines .
Zig
Zags ,
monograms. sews on buttons, makes button holes ~
darns, me-nds, f•ncy stitch,
regui•r $249 .95. Now $99 .50 .

Free phone call .
collect 1·304-734-9241 .

Sofas

and chairs priced
from $28~ . to $795. Tables,

Laroe office desk with
drawers and swivel chair,
good condition. Phone .c.i0-

Firewood . Oak., Hickory
m i xed, delivered . Call
Jamie at245·9264 .

Wood table with 4 chairs,

pm .

on

Used furniture, 2 pc. Living
room suites , electric range
top, card tables, 9x12 rug.

House and tot -4 rooms and
bath, part ba1ement. com -

H

Lob &amp; Acreage

Mobile home, small. 1~
mile out Sandhill Road .

LOTS · Real nice campsite
Raccoon Creek, all
utilitie-5 available, $300.
down, owner wi II finance.
call after 3 p.m ., 256- ~13 .

Adults only . No pets. 6753834.

ges, ·c ity

w•ter
anc
Ohio
Power ,
walking distance to town.
Reduced price. 614-992-

5282 .
HOUSE -Meadowbrook Ad·
dition . 3 bedroom, family
room wi t h fireplace , cen·
trai air , basement . ~ - 67S·

1542.
S"NDHILL

Road ,

Pt .

Pleasant, 3 bectroom!, 1112
baths, double garage.
O~r will finance . Immediate occupancy 30.4-

'75-5817.

2

lots in Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens, $600. Ph .

«0-1628.
9 acres, Morgan Townsh ip,
on Wh i te Oak Rd . Has
trailer hook·up some out
buildings, tobacco base,

S7,500 . Call after 4:00, «00951 .
BY owner, 3 ap•rtment
house on approx . 1 acre.
Live in one , rent others to
make your payment. Can
be converted single home.
City water, will consider

$250 mo., SIOO dep .. utilitie5
pd., no children, no pets.

Caii«&lt;-3437.

t•nd contract. 675-1883 9-5
p.m .

Milton Road, Camp Conley.
1 year old, 3 bedroom
house, tully carpeted, with
1 full and two and a half
baths, yard landscaped
with large utili1y building .
Assume 8 1h percent loan .

67H275.
92

Mobile Homes
fer Sal•

-CLEAN USED MOBILE
1-tQMES
KESSEL'S
' ''t)·U·A.L I T Y

Deluxe furnished apartment central air ana heat,
excellent location, t~dults
only . lease , dep ., upper
bracket, reference . 446 -

1'12 acres on river in Henderson. 614·992-5264 .
Three-fourths acre level lot

ot Rt . 2 App le Grove,
SlO,OOO 576-2386.

0338 .

wv

Mobile home in city centr al
air and heat, adults only ,

Lot 60 x 300 · 32 x 32 full size
basement . West Columbia ,

dep. «&lt;-0338.

wv -773-5014 .
36

M0 BILE

2 BEDROOM apartment.
H UD accepted. 675-6722,

Rtil Est•te

67S - S10~ .

W01nted

H0ME ' SALES, 4 MI.WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT . Wanted to buy . rent, or rent
3S. PHONE «0-3868 or 446- with option to buy . 3 or 4
bedroom
house
with
if74.
basement in Pt . Pleasant.
675-7264 .
1977 70xl4 gas, 3bdr .. l&gt;&lt;lth
&amp; 1/ 2, part. furn ., window
t~wnings,

$10,000. Johnson' s
Mobile Home Brokers. ""'-46-

VERY NICE MODERN
LARGE 3 bdr. Apt . un -

Rentals

·: 3547.
.56&gt;&lt;141980 model. total elec ,ric , completely turn,
' delivere&lt;l and set up on

your lol .
· ~ue

$8.99~.

Johnsons

41

Hutches, $300. and $37.5 . ,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites - BISsett

446-0338.
House for rent 15 min . from

3 miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 91ini to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri., 9am to Spm, Sal.
446-0322
GOOD
USED
AP PLIANCES
washer~.
dryers.

refrigerators,

ranges . Skaggs Ap plionces, 1918 Eastern
Ave ., «0-7398.
Twin sofa bed . Like new.

Message number 254-6200
after 9PM .
For sale automatic washer,

S90.00 and Hoover portable
washer, SllO. Cali 446-8181.

furnished, con~o~enient it
town, quiet, carpeted has
living room , formal dining
room, 3 large bedrooms, 2
baths, kitchen, built· in
range and oven, plus dinet-

te. Call Earl Tope, 446-01&gt;90
days, «0-0161 eve.

Ratliff Pools &amp; Service.
Complete sales, service,
pool covers, and win·

1224.
54

Misc. Merchandice

J

rooms, bath centrally
located . All utilities paid ,

terilation kits. Call -146-1324

Sl\&gt;0. mo. «&lt;&gt;-05-14 , 510 3rd .

Squires Bingham 22 L. A.
ammo $1.19 per box . Eclipse 12 gage game loades, 6
shot, 20 shells per box $3.95.

Ave. after • : 30 PM .
1 bedroom apts. available

· fireplace . Call 388-8711 or
388-9692 .

Gallipolis on Rt . 7. Cali 2S6- at Riverside Apts. Equal Spring Valley Trading co.,
1198.
Opportunity Housing. Call Spring Volley Plaza, 4468025 .
992-7721 .
5 rms. house in Eureka full
size basement, fuel oil fur - 1 bedroom ipartment on
nonce . Ref . &amp; dep. req . C•ll Spring Ave, Pomeroy , Par- FirewOOd-split, delivered
and stacked. Mixed wood
256-6547 .
tially furnished . $170 you S65 per cord or $35 per half
pay utilities. Call 992·2288 cord . HardwOOd $75 per
For ~ent With Option To after 6 p.m .
cord or $40 per half cord.
Buy! 4 b,d. , 2 112 baths,
Call for quotes on large
livingroo"' , family room, 2 Available. 1 bedroom apt. quanities. Phone 24S-S478.
w.b . fireplaces, 2· car tor rent. Contact Village
garage, city schools. Sec . Manor Apts., Middleport.
Weight bench &amp; weights in
dep. &amp; ref. Call «0-4201&gt;.
9'12·7787 _
exc . cond . Cali 446 7048 .

· Addison 12x60 trailer, cen·

4 bdr pool
. 2 1/off
2 bath
bi level
With
Rt. 3S.
Call I~

741raHllr &amp; 10 acres lor sale
b~ owner. Call 3811-9949.

~- F'or s·a te on land contract or
·: ren1 with option to buy . 2
' mobile homes on separate

lot• at Tycoon Lake. I with
large famHy room, with

·. tral air, Addison Kyger
· CrHk Plant area . Call 347-

:.84"-

~=========JL.:=========~

Wi!eman

Reel

Estate

Agency . «&lt;&gt;-3643 .
For rent -4 bdr. house
across
from
ClinJc.

72 llX'O Mclbfle heme, 2
bdr.. 3 acres of land, Gallipolis. $250. mo. plus
oa•aga, &amp; tarve front por- dep. Ca II 446-71-14.
ch. Musl sell frnmedlalely _
388·17 47,
Small 4 rm . &amp; bath, furnished, locilted 735 rear 3rd
1975 trailer for sale, un· Ave., Gallipolis. SISO per
: derptnnlng, electric box mo., S6~ deposit. Call 446and porch, $4,600. Call 2S6- 3870or«&lt;-13411.

seooo.

1650.
&amp; Room House, .S200 un·

Immediate possession 1972
3 bdr. mobile home on •ere
fol, new drilled well, Davis
Rd. Call .u6-4394. _

f'et s-t. IIY Ownef". 2 'tnOCI..fll'
w11h bled&lt;
~- Tattf eteclric,

'*"'

furnished except range and
refrig . Neighborhood
Road. «&lt;·-1416 alter 7 p.m .
2 BR house, St•te Rt. 7. 254446-42'12 .

~.

• .__..,, UnfiH'nt- 3 bdr. housa
fl an ecre Ill cl• to town, $325. • man·

'(~1.!'1t' lle"""

-.tt llh illO
111111. 1x20. cOliC rote

th, dePOSit required. .u69655 or .U.-4240.

256-9333.

New Haven-2 bedroOm
nome, close to plant,
basement and large lot.
882-2405.

porch,
WOIIdbUrnl"' stove, dlshwn~~er, . garbage dlspoul,
electric colk slove and
r.frlll'•lor. ax,o storage
. bullcll119. Coli 25H246 or

RCA console color TV very

gOOd cond. Call446-1173.

Call446-1171.
New woodburning ad-on
furnance. still in fi!lctory
carton, heats large home,

$450. Caii2S.S -1216.

They'll Do It Every Time

Purebred
English
Shepherd puppies. Grul
stock and watch dogs. 2472161.
Fish Tank •nd Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pl.
Pleas•nt. 67~ -2063 . New
hOurs-Mon., Thurs., &amp; Fri.
11-6. Tues., Wed. &amp; Sal. 11 -

Used R-411 Ditch Witch
Trencher . 614-690842 .
I ,000

bushel

old

corn.

Charle-s E . Yost, Oiik
Grove Rd ., Racine. 9•9-

U KC Registered Americon
Pitt Bull pups. Phone 7735877.
57

Musical
Instruments

SPINET
CONSOLE
PIANO FOR SALE Wonted: Responsible party to
take over pt•no. Can be
seen locally. Write Mr.
Powers, Box 327, Carlyle,

111.62231.

JIM MARCUM Aoofung spout1119 and sldlnv. 30
years experience. Free
estimates . Remodeling . ,
Call 388-9857 .

twin cyl.

Delicious

and

Red

Delicious. Fitzpatrick Orchard, S.R. 619. 614-6693785.

phase .

Laroe

For Solo or Tr•de

Pontiac convertible. Phone

675-1304.

.......

-

-.........

•• I I .

I

I

t

'

"' 0

rece i ver

300 g•llon fuel oil t•nk with
hand pump, $80 _ 304-5762782 .
FIR EWOOO-DELl VE Rl! D

6.clc___,_F_,•,_r,_,m,__,l!_,q,u"lp,m,_e,n"'t'John Deere 3300 combine .
Massie Ferguson 300 com -

bine. New ldea-2 row
picker, Oliver 2 row picker.
New Ide• 1 row picker.
Super M Farmall and 2 row
mounted picker. Russ
Brothers F•rm Machinery.
St. At 139, 6 miles South of
Jackson. Call 286-2731 .

Ca II •nd ploce your order
now_ 304- 675 - ~2 .

181 Ford Diesel Tractor
selec-o-mallc, 1963 $3,000.
A I R compressor, asking 742-2421. Electric tble top
$500 . car lift for garage, range. $50.
asking $400. 304-576-2602.
69 FORD 3000 dl...,l farm
Warm .orning stove, bottle traclor, gOOd condition.
or natural gas. $100 . 30A- $3500 firm 304-675-6052.
S76-2937 .
Maytag

wringer

washer

with double rinsetubs . 20

inch girls bike, table •n&lt;! '
ch•irs. 675-5743 or 675_-63N.

CAPTAIN EASY

CAPTAIN STEEMEA Carpel Cleaning featured by
Hoffelt Brothers Custom
Corpets. Free estimates.
Call446-2107.

WW\T HAPPIONEP TO A~~
THE OToHEM WHO TURNED
A6AI~~T V()U' WHEFIE:
All!! THE OTHe~
'.JAIL!P• LAM&amp;EFITf

patio,

1975

FERRELL's
WINDOJ.I
GLASS SERVICE Home.

Ford

Fl50

XL T

Ranger Picl(up. New tires,
paint job, low mileagf', lots

of extras. $2,500. 992-5388 or
992-5682.
1972 Chevy pickup truck.
1975 550 G T Suzuki motorcycle. 949-2220.

1974 Datsun pickup with
topper. Call illter 4:30. 992 5085.

basement,

garage

malntainance

~\ ~t.I'T

.c

67H958 .

76 FORD pickup, 6 cylin-

paper

texured

ceilings. Ph . 367-7784 or 3677160.

1970 Chevy Blazer, 6 cyl,
52,000 miles, new c:utch
and front axle,

.c

Inch lift

kit, 1435 tires. Hav~ $1300
in it. $900. 675-4610 after ~
pm.
Responsible mother will do
babysiltlng In the Henderson area. 675 5324,
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

pickup, 22,000 actual miles.
Call446-2957.
1976 Ford Van, gOOd cond.,
new radials. Must sell,
$2.000. Call446-4394.
1974 Jeep CJ5, 4 wheel
wide

tires,

'runs

A

REL.I'ITIVE
OF HERS NEEDS A
POTION SHE KNOWS
HOW 10 MI'IKE •• .

RON'S Television Service .'

Specializing in Zenith and
Quazar, aru:t
house calls. Phone 576-2398
or«&lt;-2454.

created t hi a dramatic chfon lela
of an American dynaatv that

Motorola,

beginl when Rory O'Manion
and hie sister . Deirdre, are

forced to leave their lrlah
homeland by the great famineof
184i5. Stars : Pierce Brosnan .
Kale Mulgrew, Simon MacCorklndale, Linda Purl and
Nicholas Hammond . (2 hra .)
(Part one of a three· part
I!..B&amp;entation.)
8 (I)IBJ CBS WEDNESDAY

K Tree Trimming,

stump removal . 675-1331.
'

Dave's Appliance Repair ,
Washers, dryers, plum bing, eleclrlc, general handyman. Phone 304-576-2921
or 675·5619.

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .
304-1!9H802.
Stark's Tree Trimming_ Insured . 304-576-2010.

1977 Ford van, customized,
49,000 miles, excellent condition. 614-742-2878.

12

1980 CHEROKEE Jeep,
assume payments, 304-675·
5215.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
· Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3188 or 4ol6-4477

Travlata'lleana Cotrubua.
Placido Domingo and Cornell
MacNeil alar in the new

Metropolitan Opera production
of Verdi's ·La Traviata'. (2 hra ..

.....
.,·.
....

WINNIE
74

Motorcycles

Registered
Polled
Hereford bull . 3 years old.
)750. 614-985·3191.

suzuki
750CC,
water
cooled, fully dressed,
$1,500, firm. Call446-1210.

FirewOOd. 125 a load .
Delivered $35. 304-458-1097.

Laying hens. 304-458-1690.

1978 H-D Electra Glide 75th
Anniversity

model.

Chrome, light bars, and
many extras. $5,000.00 or
besl offer. Ca II 446-8530 after6PM.

Beauty shop equipment.
' ,
'
Antiqued bedroom suite .
Truck topper, insulated,
fits 8ft . bed S12S. Coli 67~ 2365.
7...:1c__ _.:A,u'-'t"o-"fo,r_,S,_,o"'lo,___
1979 Buick Riviera. Ex. 16 XL 350 Honda 5,000 miles
F i n!woPld at yard or cond., loaded. Coli -146-7497, $400, gOOd con a. Call 2561202.
delivered .
67~ 1932
1971 Dodge Omnl 4 dr., hatElectric
stove, chback, automallc, power 1981 Harley Davidson Wide
refrigerator, gas dryer, steering, excellent cond. Glide. $500. and t•ke over
payments. 949-2048,
woodburner atove ~ Conn Ph. 245-S617 after 5PM.

13

Excovating

"

Blair and Jo vie tor the auention
of a y-oung man and the outcome
teachea both of them a special
leaeon. (Repeat)

of the big celebration inhonoror
their coach, the men, who are
mostly- raapectable middle
claae citizens , renew old
acquaintances at a private
dinner party that ends with a
revalat ion the t threatens to rna r
the approaching teativltlee .(60
mine.)
(!)MOVIE -!COMEDY) ••• 'rio

i •

DOC PRITCHART

SWITCH~ Tf;'~R

Eltclrlc~l

&amp; Retr.tprolill!l

SEWING. Machine repair$ ,..
service. Authorized Singer'
Sales I. Service, Sharpen- • ;
Scissors. Fabr ic -Shop, '
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

'

' I

JACK'S REFRIGE~ATIO· II
N, air condiiiOI) service, • 1
comm&amp;rtlel,

Plione 882-2079,

•

U

•

in~ustrial.

'

1

ove~ ~;GOATs
~JLK

r·

HESH!!
NOT SO

LOUD, MAW

OL: BOSSY

·wiLL HEAR

vou

NEWS

eportawrtterrUWeaaacWTiloua

ramarluboot Loa and Lea
- l h l l t oufcide lethe 0111)'
'o aiutlolltohia.,.,...(Ropoot)
•MwdiJo'&amp;yDICIM' t87iBtoro:
ChrletopneiPiummll, Jornea
Muon. L.ogondary alooth
8harlock Hot moo ond Or .

- Genora_l H•ullnt _
J

NOW HAULING houie coal
&amp; limestone (or d{lveways.·

Call tor osllm•tes 367-71QI
.
• i•
..
•
• '"
JO~ES ~

Wotoilnoml&gt;atkOtJoHirchfor
Jook the AlPPflr, a -roh that
ceolilom in lethal do-.

l

"'' "ee,

713-569~.

.

CFA Rlllllltred Flame 1974 Nova Suporsport UO
Potnt Hlm•layan kittens. _ _,.,., $500. Good running
C•ll304·523-7749,
cond. C.ll 7-12-3116.

t t :II

In

3 Dominate

coin
18 Balkan

4 Roscoe
5 Subser·

(slang)

'

10 Eastern

name
12 Alter

vient to

18 Adam's son

(abbr.l
19 Jujube
ZO Law (Fr. )
21 Belgian

6 Stadiwn

2% Saint (Port .)
2l Forest god

cheer

7 Boxing

trainer's

24 Drink of
the gods
25 Faithful

Z8 Stiff
drink
311 Hubris
32 Attica

marketplace
33 Playwright,

Jean:!S Letter

friend
Z&amp;Condemn

38ln the

center

40 Take up
quarters
41 Raison
d'-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to

work

it :

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW
~

Oae Jetter simply •tonds for another, In this sample A Is

uaed for th• three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln1le lettero,
opoatropbel, the leafl(h ond formaUon of the words ore oil
hiall. Eoc:h day the code letters ore dllferent.

caYPTOQUOTES

YKT
SVHT

YKLFFTH
MFQLVOE

ETT

0 T M H.

I'Left ......... Guft" , ...

Yesterday's Auwer

republic

&amp;r~ ALI'MD

~orodbvTodK~.

case

South held a singleton ace of
diamonds and would have
insured defeat of the slam
against any possible South
hand.

director

2 Of a region

YV

(J) lliOVIE o{WIITI!IIN)•• 'Ho

dummy

DOWN
1 "Mr.
Deeds''

glow
17 Bulgarian

AIICCAPTIOiiiD~

·=NiwiNIOHTIJH

Opening lead: +K
kill one

IIOVII! ·(COIII!DY) •••
"IUOn• ..,., ..,...Qamplbell"

HITCHCOCK

Paso

energy
39North
Carolina
college

(]) THIS IS THE LIFE
VE ALLI!N AT LAROE
11 :oe
N THE F AIIIIILY
11:28
UPDAT.J! NI!WS
11:30
THI!TONIOHT8HOW
Guo01 Hoal: Joan Rivero. (80
mina.)
(]) ANOTHI!R UFE
(!)MOVIE o(ADVENTUR~I ••

C1J III!NNY HILL lltOW
eciJCnUTI!IIIOVII!WKRP
.lnCincllllloii:'LeaOftALodOI' A

..

Pua

acUon
37 Certain

!Ill•

"Av••ctteE•prna" 1171

POD

Puo

.35 Riotous

contemporary nurse·

;oo rn •

2t
•NT

38 Golf mentor
31 Droop
34 Make lawny

t0:118 (JJ CJ1!! UPDATE NI!WS
(J) m e (J) IBl

11

~

Pass

late aUy

midwives, educated in the
monltoringofprenatalprogreaa
and delivering the newborn, are
portray-ed in thla American Film
Feettvalaward film .

-BARNEY

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . , Larry Sidenslrlcker. 675-5580. -

S4&gt;

-"

"Airplena" 1881

''

J+
Pall

28 BeU sound
29 Fidel's

10:28 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 (]) LARRY JONES
(J) DAUGHTERS OF TillE
Three

Sooltll

entry to

standby
river
8
Uprooted,
23 Papal name
as weeds
24 Brazilian port
%6 Literary
r.--.,.--r,great
Z1 "LitUe Sir

(!)
RACE FOR THE
PENNANT
10:00 (l)eCIJ THE SOPHISTICAl·
ED OENT8, PART U On the ova

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing· {
in septic tank. 675-12:U.
--

pt•yer. Phone675-1304.

1971 .Buick Electra very 1972 H•rtey Davidson, 1200
low miles, full power tully super glide. S2000. 675-6823.
Hoover porti1ble w•sher . equlped. GOOd cond. inside
67~ ·6504 .
and out, Sl,300 . Call 446Auto Parts
'
4630.
I. Accenorlos
56
fills tor Solo
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
FOR SALE : 1976 Chevrolet Auto parts, auto repair,
POODLE GROOMING.
Malibu Classic Estale
service. buy
Call Judy Taylor at 367- Wagon. PS, PB, cruise con· wrecker
automobiles, ra!llators and .
7220.
trot, air conditioning, ballertes, 446-7717.
radio,
real
window
DRAGONWYND
CAT· del09ger, completey rustCamplnt
TEAY - KENNEL., AKC proof lis a new c•r, r,lus 11
Equlpmenl
black ChoW puppies, CFA more extras. Extr~ c ean
'Himalayan, Persl•n and and In excellent ,condition. Camper- 1973 2t It, 5th
Slam- kittens. Coli 446- S3,000. 65,il00 miles. Call Wheel camper, ,self con·
286-101' alter 6PM,
384Uiter4p.m.
lalned, hlfch lnchldod,
s-4,500, Call-alter 5PM 361·
71 LTO Ford all extras, leN(&lt; 7619 or :167-1122.
HILL.CRES'I' KENNEL.
Bo.rdlllil all
cle•n mileage, exc. cO&lt;)d. Call
Indoor-outdoor taclltlles. .u6-1351.
Also AKC 1!111. Dober·
mans. Call 416·7795,
1967 Font Mustang, 6-CYI,
Automatic, low .
average Condllloil.
Jeanie's Pei · Shop New aboV.
Selling
for ' less than
hours 11·5,- CIOied Wed ...
currenl mtrkot. ·P~~Gnt 3041
Sun. Call416-?'f20.
·

WJfi£E IN5/f7E CONNIE'S la?OM ...

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

14

trombone, antique record

IJESII7ES ... IT'S REALLY
lt)NWE!f PECI510N
AS 10 WHAT 5HE
WAN'ISTO 1?0
WllH HER LIFE!

750 and 1000 gallon
PLASTIC septic tanks.State and County approved. Total weight 300
lbs . Haul ·in your pickup
truck. Ron Evans Backhoe
Service, locoted 3 miles
South ol Jackson on St. At.
93. 286-5930.

30mlna.)
i:06 ({)MOVIE ·(DRAMA) • •
"Flame" 1847
i:30 ClleCIJTHEFACTSOFLIFE

.·.

Eut

player . It would

13ToU
14 Cling
15 Cast a

liD LIVE FROII THE MET 'La

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

N-

West , asked how he could
possibly make that shift and
they appealed to us.
Our ans"er is that the
trump shift would be
automatic for a really good

9Space
11 Bechann

permiaaiveWaatCoaatfrianda .
(~epeat; 2 hra .)

the

Well

two."

Fannie -

in love; they must choose
between the values Instilled in
them by- their upbringing and the
peer pressure from their

foot!

Vulnerable: Nortb--8outh
Dealer: South

ACROSS
42 Jewish
1 "Lone Eagle's" festival
43 Held a
monogram
session
4 Novelist,

contlictbetweentwoteenagers

rt'sthefi~t
time he
hasn't
curl eel
up at

.7....

lty THOMAS JOSEPH

NIGHT MOVIE 'Young Love,

general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304-6752088 or 675-4560.

WEST
EAST
t7 ~
.,
.KI
.76431
.KJ8
.IH3
.AKIIII
.JIBS
SOUTH
.AQJIIII
• A J 10 9

~

Firat love' 1981 Stara:TimothyHulton, Valeria Bertinetll, Arlen
Dean Snyder . The story ot the

perienced mason, rooter,
carpenter,
ele-ctrician,.

.Qi114Z

.Q 10

and

East said, "Partner, you

U.S.A.)
(]) 700CLUB
CIJ ()JIGI THE MAN IONS OF
AMERICA, PART I "gneo Ni, on

DISTANT

slam

&gt;-S0-11

should have beaten the hand
by leading a trump at trick

a defective toy locomotive .
(Repeat) (Closed -Captioned;

automotive.

game,

rubber. He ruffed, cash!!d his
ace of diamonds , led a trump
lo
dummy,
ruffed
a
diamond, led a second trump
to dummy and ruffed a
diamond . Since this dropped
the king, South was able to
gel to dummy wlfh the last
trump and discard the J -10-9
of hearts on good diamonds .

STROKES Arnold tights a store
owner in court after he sella him

Service :--

good, $2.000.992-7074.

scoring

LIVE FROII THE IIET 'La

ANDSIIALL
8:6S (]) CSN UPDATE NEWS
i :OO ilJ D CIJ DIFF'RENT

RINGLES'S SERVICE-ex -

Diesel Scout. lll· wheel drive

drive,

gamut from trauma totri umph aa
he finally achievea aomethlno·
he actually wine the school
spelling bee. (Repeat; BO
mine.)

liD ALL CREATURES GREAT

Emergency service. Cawl
882-2079.

F &amp;

both the overbidding and the
rather inappropriate use of
Blackwood. The game was
rubber bridge and North was
a rather poor playtr .
West started proceedings
for the defense by leading
the king and ace of clubs.
Now, South had no trouble

apeclalatarrlngthe 'Peanuts'
gang; Charlie Brown runs the

- AW LOOII.! TtaE
SEEMG T' BE MORE
SOLID LAHP lltiOER
THI!T ICE!.,

NORTH
tK 101
.Q8

he bid as If slams grew on
bushes.
There was a reason for

Traviata' Ileana Cotrubua,
Placido Domingo and Cornell
MacNeil star In the new
Metropolitan Opera production
ot Verdi's 'La Traviata' . (2 hra.,
30 mlna.)

LOCKSMITH

kit, 1435 tires. Have $1300
in it . S900. 675-4610 after 5
pm.

The best thing we can say .
about South ' s bidding Is that

CHARLIE BROWN Animated

rnJPPE[)!

Call -146-2801 for lermite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomas.

Residential,

Automatic trump shift

(I)@&gt; A BOY NAMED

C1J

1978 Chevy half ton truck,
good shape. 675-1402 .

Saw mill. lf75 Dodge 4
wheel drive. 304-~76- 2602 .

br-.

OH fr--6000--l'lHILE 1'/E'RE
BEIN' 5MAGHED T' BITG OH
THAT CLIFF, IT'LL BE A
CONGOI..ATIOH H.NOWIN' IT
I'IAG ALL IN F'·F'·F'UII··

Pair\llng

and

I'II-IEI'I! HE

... .

BY OSWALD J AOOBY AND ALAN SONTAG

eo mine.)

•

commercial .-

exterior,

hanging,

BRIDGE

major dl,.mond heist. (Repeat;

ANNIE

(Anoweno tomorrow )
ENTAIL GAMBIT

Irom Jumble, clo ttMs ~wspa:r.r , Boxl-4, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, 1ddre11, tl code an make checks • abla to Naws • rbooka.

Olelllusloned with his super
powered au it af1ernearly&lt;Mplng
out a buaload of tourists, Ralph
reaiata the elforu of B ill
Maxwetl to uae hie special
powere to try to atop the former
Marine captain Ma x well
idolizes from committing a

388-

TARRY

Answer : What you have to get when you want to start

l&amp;eaaon-Premlere; 80 mine .)

304·576-2752 .

New mopeds, last years
Jumbo Bobwhite Quail. 1 model, 5% over cost, ISO
week old to adult sizes. MPG . Ideal tor college
(614) 985 · -~Ui . .
students. Call .._..-4626.

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

City

Jumbles : PANSY

Jumble Book No. 17; containing 110 puzzt.a, Is n•ll•ble IOJ 11 .95 postpaid

(]) SPECIALS
CIJ ID&gt;. THE GREATEST
AMERICAN
HERO

Wallpaper,
pointing; - :
general carpenter work. A~ ::.
Tromm, 614-742-2328.
-

der, standard, $1,650 . Call

W.T

floors

Custom work from start to

French

I

maklnQ love - A LmLE "GAL-AN '-TRY "

Jereay paychologlat who
clalmshecanenlargewomen'a
breeata through hypnolll. a
school lor male hula danceraln
Hawaii, and a Florida grand·
mother who ia a stock c ar race
driver will be featured .

~BrT'STfeP~

Home building, home
remodeling and repair.

Residential,

Yes1erday .s

7:118 (]) CBNUPDATI!NEWB
8:00 CIJeCIJ REAL PEOPLE ANew

BORN LOSER

I I I XJ

Prtntanawerhera: [

ve San Franclaco Glanta

and

remodeling. , Phone
9326.

Now arrange tne cirded fetters to
lorm the aurpriae answer. as auggelled by tho above canoon.

J I I

(1).(1) FAMILY FEUD
CIJ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
CIJIID DICII:CAYI!TTSHOW
@&gt;
RICHARol BIIIIIONB
SHOW
()JI •
ENTEfiTAINIIENT
TONIGHT
7:36 CIJ BABI!BALLAtlanlaBroveo

and etc . Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 3677891 .

tnterlor,
1976 Ford Courier pickup 1
cylinder. rebuilt motor .

(1).

"White L.loft•" 1881

PAINTING , Interior alld
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call 3811-9652.

sidewalks,

I K]

.
!llle IIUPPET SHOW
7:06 (I) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
7:30
YOU ASKED FOR IT
(]) ANOTHER UFE
(!)MOYIE ·(DRAIIAI •• 'rio

'

THEY P~OVIDE A
MEAN5 OF SUPPO~
FOilt THOSe WHO
lltAISE Fl.OWE~S,

IHARTOUI

REPORT

WEATHERALL COJol ,
CRETE - quality and ser·
vice, call 675-1582.
: :

In

I I K J

\ll NEWS

TilER!:. YOU'Re FFIE:E TO 60. LOOK.
AIIYWHI!~ YOU'D LIKE, IF YOLJ
I'IND TOI':I"I)FIII! PIT.!P 0~ CI!I.L!P FULL
· 01' Rl&amp;eL\!1, LET M£ I&lt; NOW.
·

IMY&amp;e YOIJ CARTer:&gt;
THEM ALL OfF TO THAT
TMrllfll ,IT ON THI!_
OTHEit ~IPE OF THe
COMPOUND .

WOODSHOP
CabinetS;
picnic
tables,
por_tl(
swings, most wOOd produ~ ·
ts. 101 Court St .• Gallipolis.
Call -146-2572.
·

1975 F-600 1 ton Ford flat·
bed, body rough, good
engine &amp; I · 25x20 tires,
asking $2,700. Call .._..-2641.
8-5.

73

1

tank, never used . $700. 304·
576-2712.

free es11mates. Call 256.. •
1112.

driveways,

and front axle, 4 Inch lift

air

motor, 3H P, 220-440 volts, 3

residential, "'

concrete

Apples, Honey and sweet
cider. Grimes Golden

FirewOOd . $30 load . Call
992-5126 or 992-3941.

compressor,

trucks for S•le

1970 Chevy Blazer, 6 cyl,
52,000 miles, new clutch

1975 16 ft. bass boat. 1970

WESTINGHOUSE

72

7:00 CIJe Pll MAGAZINE
CIJ NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
C1J
ENTI!RTAI NilE NT
TONIGHT
CIJ HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
• C1J TlC TAC DOUGH
CIJ liD IIACNEIL.UHRER

STUCCO PLASTERING ·tex1Ured eel lings, com·.
and

I. ::;,:;,.K)
'"-·-· -- ...

EVENING

BING'S CONCRETE CO_NSTAUCTION · Specializing

Fruit
&amp; Vegelables

59

I

regular gas. Call 675-1903
between S-10 pm .

1977 DATSUN King Cab
truck with a topper 304-8822'140.

2579 .

1 size 7 .75 x 14 on rim . An tique rocker. 614-742-2524.

door, autom1tic, ac, radio,

ftDHIOAY
IIPT. 30,11181

flnl,h. Cali388-8711 .

51

refrigerators, and TV's,

Norge electric range. 30 inch, good condition . 675·

Houses for Rent

Small furnished house in
the city , adults only . Call

Home, Inc. 446-35.47 .

-14x70 mobile home fur ·
nlshed, 3 bdr ., 2 bath, skirting included, S9,500. Call
:414-882-8205.

S219 up to $495. Desk $110.

Oak, $675.. Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed completo
44
Apartmemt
with mattresses, $250. and
for Rent
up to $350. Captain's beds,
Furnished apts. 2 bdr., $275 . complete. Baby beds,
$230., utilities paid, near $99 . Mattresses or box
HMC, adults. Ca li 446--1416 springs, full or twin, $58 .•
firm , $68. and $78. Queen
after 7PM .
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49 .
4 dr . chests, $42. Bed
2 bdr. apartment unfurn., frames, $20.and S25 ., 10 gun
in Crown City, Ohio. Call · Gun cabinets, $350., dinet2S6 -6520.
te chairs S20. and S25. Gas
or electric ranges, S295. Or3 rm . apt. utilities paid. thopedic super firm, $95,
Call 675-5104 or 675 · 5386 .
baby malresses. S25 &amp; $35,
bed frames S20, $25, &amp; S30.
. Ranges,
Unfurn . 4 rm . apartment, Used,

pletely furnished, natural

sewage ,

beds,S.J.CO., queen si ze, $380.

AKC
Registered
Dachshund 16 mo. old
house broken. Call «0-1806.

WOOd lor sale. Call J .J .
Juslice 388-1246.

Recliners, SIJS. to S2'1~ .•
Lamps from $18. to $65_ 5
1 bedroom mobile home . pc . dilettes from $79., to
675-4154.
$385. 7 pc., $189. and up .

1076.

male
proven, $200. Female 2 yrs.
bred, SJOO . Cali -146-1562.

AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranlon an Poodle
pups 304-1!95-3958.

mines. $39,000. QhOne U22795.

wall to wail carpet. Lot

$38 and up to SI09. Hide-a-

Improvements
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpel Cleaning
446-4208

1971 Volkswagen Rabbit, 2

Dobermons,

4.

100 X AOO. Plenty shrubery
Level lot . $31,500. Will
trade far acreeoe. !!mpty
ready to move in to, on '11 ,
Tupperplains. Call Eleanor
Reynolds, "7-6648 after 6

Sale by owner, 3 bedroom

AKC

4712 after 5:00PM .

couple only,
one small ch i ld accepted.
References r~uired . 675·

eiKtric hotlle , city watw,

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Bo.rdlnv and grooming.
A KC Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Sponiels.
Caii«&lt;-4191.

Call

roofing .
•
bedrooms.
modern
kitchen
L
bathroom . Pretty setting
on private lllne, near Meigs

hom~ . Marri~d

Pets tor S.le

56

For sale Houso coal pickup
or delivered . Caii2S6·6116 .

player: S800 or trade. Call
675-4111 alter 4 pm .

Television
•
•
VIeWing

Home

merclal

1964 Corvoir 4 door, excellent shape, 2 spare
motors and more 12500.
1978 International Scout
pickup 4 wheel drive, 2'/,000
miles, excellent shape
SSSOO. Sears trolling motor
SliD. New tool box for 8 11.
pickup SIOO. 304-195-3477 .

O!CK~CY

,. '

·II

1972 Volkeswagen, 675-2864
or 1112-2'147.

~

FURNISHED , 2 bedroom

for Sale

- -.. -

KIT 'N' CARL.VLE "'

lor Rent

Leroe house for r ent In s room unfurnished apt.
Letart Fal ls, Ohio. Must 992·5434, 992-5914 or 304-882have
referen ces
and 2566.
deposi t. Contact Fred w.
Crow Il l. Pomer oy, Ohio, Apartments. 675-5541.
day , tel e phone 992-60S9
night, telephone 992-7511 .
APARTMENTS, mobile
2 bedroom mobIle home ,
homes
,
houses ,
Pt .
utilities paid, adults only, 2 bedroom unfurnished Pleasant
and Gallipolis.
deposit and references $190. I bedroom furnished 614-..,..·8221 or 614-245-944.
-'requ ired. No pets. 614-992- aportemnt. S1 25. Naytors
3647 _
Run. Securitv depos it. Cell
3 room furnished co"age,
614-9'12-2288.
utilities furn ished, adults.
12 &gt;&lt; 40 mobile nome, I
675·2812
or 675- 1580.
bedroom, gOOd condition . 3 bedroom home part ially
$3500. Phone 614-985-4133 or furnished ,
depos i t
614-985-4J'IS.
required. Available Oct. 1. 2 BEDROOM apartment In
Pt. Pleasant. Deposit &amp;
6U-992-S694.
references,
J-6l.j-263-8322
1971 Carlan 12 x 65, 3
or 263-2669 .
bedrooms . 1972 Crown 2 bedroom house in
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10 Pomeroy with new kitchen
expando, 3 bedr ooms. 1973 &amp; bath . Fully c arpeted. 2 BEDROOM apartment In
Henderson, partially fur Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms. Close in . 992 -2'118 .
nished, 304-675-1972.
1972 Invader U x 70, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B lf.t S 5 room house near Dan· ONE bedroom apartment,
Sales, Inc. 2nd ond VIand ville. S350 per month . 6U· fully furnished, New Haven
Sts . Pt. Pleasant, wv . 742-31.0 .
area, woter paid, depos it
Phone 675--1424.
SIOO. $225.00 a month,
2 bedroom house in Letart prefer working couple, no
1976 MIDAS travel trailer, Falls, Ohio. Dinino room
children, for information
.
wlf contained, very good and fireplac e. Range and call614-«0-7526
cond llion, $2500.00 304-458- refrigator inc luded . In·
terested inqu•nes call
1630, 458-175:l-evenlngs.
45
Furnished Rooms
collect 1·216-532-35.0 .

l3

For sale er trade, house
and business building on
two lots. also 2 Vilcant lots
with well and septic . Phone
6 I 078-633'1.

Apartmeml

HOUSII for Ronl

·wedntsdl

Prices reduced on all
mobllo homes and travel
trallorl .
TRI · STA T E
MOBI LE
HOMES .
Gallipolis. CALL .._..-7572.

3'187.

2 story brick, 994 Fourth

The Daily :;entinei- P:age-13

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiCI

12-Tite Dati sentinel

Y K 'T

Lf!;

BKTYKTH
C V E K

LIT ,

YKT

TJTHNVFT
LY

B LW W

OLWWLFAE

, Ynterda)"• Cryp&amp;oquote: YOU ARE ONLY WHAT YOO ARE

· WHEN NO ONE IS LOOKING.-ROBERT EDWARDS

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Wednl!sday, September 30, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Residents would have less punch ··
if governor terminates agencies

SCHOOL BUS ACCIDENT- Ambulunce workers
comfort youngsters who were aboard uils Flagstaff
school bus Tuesday when it ran off a road into a l~foot
drainage ditch about five miles north of Flagstaff,

Ariz. Eleven of tbe cbildren and tbe driver were
treated for Injuries. Only the driver and one child
required hospitalization. Bus was returning kindergarten students to tbeir homes at time of accident.
(AP Laserpboto).

Crash hospitalizes
Wellston motorist
A driver was hospitalized
following a one-car crash in Gallia
County early Tuesday, the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the state highway
patrol reported.
Gregory G. Dixon, 34, Rt. 2,
Wellston , was reported in satisfactory condition this morning in Holzer
Medical Center with a back injury
and cut.
The patrol said Dixon was eastbound on U.S. 35 at 6:40 a.m. when
he attempted to pass another
vehicle, lost control of his car, and
went off the left side of the road,
striking an embankment.
Dixon's car was severely
damaged, and he was taken to HMC
by the Gallia EMS.
The patrol reported another injury
accident in the area Tuesday afternoon .
According to the report , a vehicle
driven by James E. Ball, 38,
Madison, W.Va., was in the left turn
lane on Rt. 7 waiting to drive onto
the entrance ramp to the Silver
Memorial Bridge at 3:50p.m.
A southbound vehicle in the
through lane motioned to Ball to
pass through, and he collided with
another southbound auto driven by
Dawana Bush, 20, Langsville. The
crash forced Bush's car to slide
sideways and collide with another
vehicle driven by D.R. Atkins Jr., 52,
Point Pleasant.
The crash caused severe damage
to Bush's car and slight to Ball's
vehicle. Bush was injured, but
refused treatment, the report said.
A driver escaped injury in a
collision with a train Tuesday morning , the patrol said .

Troopers said Arnold B. Stump,
30, Rt. I, Gallipolis, failed to stop at
a railroad crossing on Gallia County
Rd. 2 at 6:10 a .m. and struck the
train, operated by Jack E. Morris,
40, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
Stump's vehicle was severely
damaged, the report said.
The report said a car driven by
Janet M. Neal, 43, Rio Grande, was
northbound on Bidwell-Rodney Road
at I p.m. when her car went off the
right side of the road, lost control,
travelled across the road and struck
an embankment.
The car was moderately damaged
and Neal was slightly injured, but
not treated.
The patrol investigated two other
minor accidents Tuesday.
John C. Pratt, 54, Rt. 2, Racine,
was driving on Rt. 124 east of Racine
at 9:05a.m. when his vehicle struck
a deer, causing slight damage to his
vehicle.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
Betty I. Moore, 47, Pomeroy, went
left of center on Meigs County Rd. 53
at 10:05 a.m. and struck a vehicle
driven by George G. Hart, 45, Rt. I,
Shade, which was backing from a
private driveway.
Moore was cited for left of center,
troopers said.

To end marriages
Two suits for divorce were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Filing were Lucille M. Murray,
Pomeroy, against Clifford Murray,
Mesa, Ariz., and Charles E.Young,
Rt. I, Langsville, against Mary Sue
Young, Wellston.

Drivers sought
The Meigs Local School District is
in need of driver education instructors. Instructors receive $50
per student. Those interested are to
contact the office of the superintendent, 992-2153 . Applicants must
be certified in driver's education.
Applications are also being taken
for the position of director of transportation. Salary and requirements
can be secured from the superintendent's office .

SPECIAL

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

: Area Deaths :
I

I

Murray F. Gleason
Murray F. Gleason, 63, father of
Meigs Local School District Superintendent, David L. Gleason, died
unexpectedly in
Portsmouth
Tuesday afternoon.
Recently, Mr. Gleason had undergone open heart surgery at
University Hospital in Columbus
and had been returned to his home
by Supt. Gleason Monday evening.
Mr. Gleason was rushed to a Portsmouth hospital Tuesday afternoon.
Surviving are his wife, Hilda, four
daughters, and seven sons including
David L. Gleason, the Meigs Local
Superintendent.
Mr. Gleason was a veteran of
World War II.
Funeral arrangements are being
completed at the Melcher Funeral
Home in Portsmouth.

Eleanor B. Borham
Eleanor B. Barham, 68, Syracuse,
who died Monday is survived by her
husband, John Barham not John
Carroll as was reported.

Emergency runs
Three calls were answered by the
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad
Tuesday , the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 2: 14 the unit took Sally Yates
from the Pomeroy Elementary
School to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 10: 13 p.m. took Richard
Jividen, W. Main St., to Veterans
Memorial, and at 10 :56 p.m. took
Mae Kerns from Mulberry Avenue
to Holzer· Medical Center.

Residents of Eastern a11d
Southeastern Ohio face a termination In their Involvement In
detennining and meeting their
health care needs if Governor James
A. Rhodes is successful in hia
request to tennlnate Ohio's Health
Systems Agencies.
Governor Rhodes has requested
the Department of Health and
Human Services (DHHS) to
eliminate the Health Systems Agencies under a new federal act which
allows the stste to assume the
responsibilities of the local heslth
planning agencies. Should this
request be granted, Area Six Health
Systems Agency, Inc. (ASHSA)
would not receive any funding from
DHHS after July 31.
In order to exercise this option,
Governor Rhodes has stated that the
state health planning and development agency is willing and able to
perfonn all the functions nonnally
assigned to a local Health Systems
Agency. It appears that the governor's request is based solely upon
the Agencies' Certificate of Need
review activities.
The governor has charged that
Ohio's Health Systems Agencies
have acted in an arbitrary,
capricious and politically motivated
manner in making the recommendations to the state. This
charge, according to Thomas A. Undstrom, Executive Director of
ASHSA, does not appear to be based
on fact.
The Ohio Department of Health
annually reviews the HSA's
operations and has yet to make a
recommendation or a finding that
the Certificate of Need program has
been administered locally In a less
than satisfactory manner. ASHSA
sponsors at least two public hearings
on each proposal under consideration.
ASHSA contends that the governor's request totally ignores all the
other functions and responsibilities
or the local health planning agencies. The major responsibility and
emphasis of ASHSA has been to
identify community health care
needs and then actively work with
those communities to develop
needed health care services.
It is unlikely that the state,
operating under a restricted financial base and a small staff, could
even begin to maintain the activities
that ASHSA has carried out over the
past four and a half years. Should
Secretary Schweiker grant the
governor's request, the state would

the additional activities nonnall~
assigned to an HSA.
Should the secretary and the
governor dissolve HSAs, ares
residents would Jose an important
voice In detennlning what type of
health · care services should be
available. Numerous hours are
spent by area residents and health
care providers participating In the
development of the Health Systems
Plan, Annual Implementation Plan,
the various review programs, and
provision of technical assistance to
community groups. The state does
not have a mechanism that would
focus on the unique needs of this

area.

r-----------------------:----

FAMILY CLINIC

675-6971
PoiDtPleaaant
New Hours Now in Effect
Monday-Friday, 9 am. to 10 p.m.
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

ztHJaeboaAve.

Allergy &amp; Dermatology Patients by Appointment Only.
Monday-Friday 12:30 p.m. to 4: 30p.m.
·
Sorry Closed Sunday
Medicare, Medicaid, U.M.W.A. Accepted
Will Milke House Calls.

I~jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

COUXTD.TmJBBS
700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
OCTOBER 1,2,3

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Virginia
Dean,
Pomeroy; Beulah Jones, Middleport; Rachel Rose, Portland;
Tammy Bable, Racine.
Discharged-Helen Lochary, Jerry
Owens, Alice Mills.
·

'

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

AUCTION
At Pageville, Ohio, 6
P .M. Sat ., Oct. 3rd. Lots
of new merchandise for
Chris1mas shopping, as
well as new and used
furniture and household
goods . No! responsible
for
accidents.
Ron
Russell, 614-698·6592 or
304-773· 54 71 .

not receive any add)tional money
beyond their current grant
The funds that would have been
given to Ohio'~ Health Systems
Agencies would be distributed !(/ the
Heslth Systems Ageilcles outside the
State of Ohio. Ohio would stand to
lose approximately $3,000,000.
ASHSA has been a fully
designated healtb planning and
resources development agency for
over two years. The state, on the
other hand, has yet to receive full
designation status for its health
planning activities. Thus it Is hard to
imagine that the state has demonstrated an ability not only to carry
out its own activities but to tske on

the new
fuel.
,

It:' wood. Doesn't sound like the stuff miracles are made of, does it'
lh tell the truth, it ha,n't always been a miracle fuel.
When you burn it in your fireplace, on ly 10% of it' energy
heats the mom . The rest disappears up the chimney.
In an ordmary Franklin-type wood stove, it doe.,n't do
much better.
But in the Buck Stove;t that same wood can heat your entire
house- up to 3.000 square feet. Because the Buck Stove is
designed to be a whole house heating system with a built· in blower
hot air vents and cold air returns. And it:, so inexpensive
'
to operate that, acconling to Buck Stove owners, it can save you up
to 80% on your home heating bills.
Thats the real miracle.

COKE PEPSI·DIJF
RC·TAB-SPRITE

ELBERFELDS
AUTHORIZED DEALER
_
For Meigs and Gallia Counties

PLUITAX AND

DEPOSIT

A Feminine Touch
DELICATE and PRETTY describe our collection of
J4KT gold overlay pendants from Krementz.
Many are available with matching pieces. Come in
today and see our complete line of Krementz jewelry.

~08"

'QJnelers

212 E._MIIn, Pomeroy

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