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'"

.,

J

Pa!!=12-The Daily Sentinei

,_Mayor·,-8 COUrt
.

• Two

defendant&amp; forfeited bonds
and two others were fined Tuesday
night in the court of Middleport

Mayor Fred Hoffman.
Forfeiting bonds ~ $350 each

Pomeroy-Midclteeort, Ohio
posted on chargee of driY!nc while
intoxicated were .Pimela .Granan,

MNDWNie, nine defendantl fof.
Racine, and Edd Threadgill, felled bonds, four were fined and
· Pomeroy. Fined nr. John Aelker, another was placed on pr&lt;Jbllllon In
Middleport, .. ·$50 and coats , the court of Pcmeroy Mayor Clarentrepuoing, and f50 and costa,
ce Andrews rue.day night.
derly ~.and Charlee M. CanForfeiting were Rodney ROiilh,
ter, S cuae, the aame fine on the Middleport, Pli: Tamara Cundiff

diaor:

~ • . ~; Wlllllm

Hobldr;

the rl&amp;bt of WI)'; ltrDIIh 'mbodlll,
~-.biiJiiopw~

Radne,pa; l..lreyH.Farley,I.onc

llottam, • : MUk aut. ~ Fined were Terry Watson,
til; David Wlllll, PlrUJ'Ibar-g, $8; IWaoy, ... ~ drtviDI
Donald Lambert, Pw•vt. tiD, all wNie ~; Willey lmltb.,
pooted 1111 apeedlnc charges; Dabra Pw.oy,
IIJd ..... ldun to
Dralt~. Pon.,.oy,tll,falluretoyteld pay old o-;
Lolli. COiumbul,

.........,.

... ud eGIII, tr111c 1111t .ftc• r,
and ..... .,..... OllllliN, . . llid
PlacM on line iiMIIIIi p 11111111,.
on a c:barle of jiiiiulltialdop II be
no1ay IIJd ol.fenllve wu Dl'•w
Good,
, Pomeroy.

Nation"'s u~employiD.ent rate s·o ars
Bteggar, a t.bor Oepartmeht analyst. He altrllluted
o1. the
workers"- thoee wbo have abandoned their jOI! oearcnes- grew by 1.1
problem to declining employment In alate and toc.1 govenunenta;11Ytng
millloo In the third quarter.
·
such thinp u cutbaclla in federal educ811on aid, resulting 1n teacher
TOial unemployment•waa 7,1111S,OOO, up 309,000 from the 7,657,11¥J of
layoffa, and In federal sublidlzed public -w:e job prGII1U1I.8 - J1Wlo
August.
'
•
Uday.
.
.
dated by the Reagah adJiJlni.llraUon budget cuta - caliaed non-federal
Private analysts, meanwhile, say American busineasea, facing high int.at month's 7.5 peJ'Cellt jilblea rate waalhe hJilleat since last Novemgovernment enjployment to decline by 145,11¥J.
.
· tereat ratel and riling Inventories, are showing more lncHnation to cut
ber, except for a 7.6 percent rate In May; wblcb government analyal8 at}Typifying the relative acarclty of Jobo overall was the reCord u mil)ion
prodUction and ~Y off worken despite the admini8traUon's ecGMmic
tributed to a staUatlcal fluke resulting from school lenDs endlhg earHer
people wbo accepted part-time employment last month; the department's '
program.
· -""'
th!m ln.past years. ·
,
Burea11 of t.bor Statlatlcs aaid.
Beca..., of th!B, ~ e.ooomlsfi! aaid, there is tittle likelihood of any J.m.
. The overaD unemployment rate among whltel In September jwnped
Total full..iime employment nationwide fell by 870,000 over the month to
provement in the naUonalllileJJiployment rate.
fiJW'otenths ol. a percent to 6.5 percent. At the aame time, the unema seasonally adjusted 98.3 million, compared to 98.9 millioo the month
At his nationally broadcast news conference Thlll'8day, Reagan aald his
ployment rate for blacks edged up just one-tenth of a percent, to 15.1 per- '
before. The ,entire decllrie occurred among white workers, primarily
economic program could create 1.1 million Jobo over the next several
. ·cent.
, .
.
adUlt women, the department said.
y.n..
·
For black and other ~ teen-agers, the jobless rate, which had,
Of the total JMlPIIII\boo,.56.1 .PJlrcerit llefd fiJll..Of part-tli!ie job8 m ·se~--"·~-llut..ll.ei&amp;4!1Jl.~.lalowtedged that the effects of tax and budget cuta will
Jumped to45.7 percent In Aqgusl, dropped to 37.5 percent with the atart of
!ember, the lowest leliei since December.
'
not be felt inunedlately, saying, "The mistakes of four decldee can't be
the new school year.
·
' The department also reported that the number of " discouraged
turnedaroundineightmonths."
. "Cle&amp;l'ly, tl)ere's considerable weaknemi In thj! ecoilomv." said Jack

.

.

•.

SALE! METAL STORAGE CABINETS

"NORTHERN" ·ELECTRIC BLANKETS

Vol.lO, No.J20
Copyrighted 1!81

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MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUSE

FROM 5200 TO ssoo

•

ON KROEHLER
SUITES

BIG BEN
S39.95

INSULATED COVERALLS

•

LIVING ROOM SUITES

Sizes, Small, Medium, · Large and
Extra Large. Shorts, Regulars and
Talis . Permanent Press, red quilled
nylon insulated lining . Adjustable
snaps on legs, roomy pockets. Solid
color : Brown, Navy or Olive Green.

Reg. $559 LOVE SEAT, Modern Style ........... . ........... Sale 5359'
Reg. SS69 SOFA, Traditional ........... ....... ~ .............. Sale $369
Reg. S579 SOFA, Traditional ................................. Sale $379
Reg. 5849 SOFA and CHAIR, Early American .............. Sale 5549
Reg. $1073 SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR, Trad ............. , Sale $673
Reg. $1157 SOFA &amp; CHAIR,olncliner................... : .... Sale $657
Reg. $1249 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, Modern ..,........... , ...... . .... Sale $749
Reg. $1339 SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR, Ea. Am .......... ; Sale $839

•

-.SALE I

AREA RUGS
'
A discontinued style. Big selection
of sizes and colors. Tufted · pat·
tern, non-skid · back, machine
· washable.

.

YOUR CHOIC!E

$188011

·SALE! MEN'S

TWILL JEANS
REGULARLY $14.95 to $15.95
Sizes 29 ·to 42 waist,
Lengths 30 to ·36' inches,
50% cotton, 5()% polyester
blend twill in solid colors.
ll m lted Quantity.

Reg. 57.99 Size 21 x26 ........ Sale $5.59
Reg. $11.49 Size 27x45....... Sale 58.09
Reg. 517.99 Site 34x56 ...... Sale $12.59
Reg. $26.99 Size 44x66 ...... Sale $18.89

SALE

CHILDREN'S JACKETS

••

Just .the thing for cool fall mornings
and evenings! Sweatshirt jackets,
lined jackets and rain jackets.
Full range of children's sizes.

\

"h PRICE
.'

. SALE! LADIES' SLEEPWEAR

REG. '3.00 .................. SALE 12.39
REG. 14.5L .................. SALE 13.59
REG. 18.00 .................. SALE '6.39
REG. 118.00................ SALE 114.39

Spec;ial group of gowns,
robes and pajamas.
Nylons, terrys and po,_.,._ ' ly/cottons. Sizes 5-M·LXLandXXL.

SALE! .
JUST 84 PAIRS
MEN;$

SALE! lADIES' SWEATERS

New fall colors and styles iii
quality cardigans and pull·
overs. Dotty Mann, DonnKenny and Empire. Misses
sizes 5-M-L and e,xtra sizes,
40 thru 46.

CARPENTER JEANS
Regular prices $14.95 to $19.95.
Mostly natural color. Some pre·
washed blue · denim. Broken
,....,._:sizes 27 to 34 waist.

Reg. SII.OO........ SALE sa.ao
Reg. $17.00..... .. SALE 513.60
Reg. $25.00. ...... SALE 520.00
Reg. S32.00 ....... SALE $25.60

~(/Jif:J~It'~\;\~

WHILE THEY LAST I

lh PRICE

·-----MEN'S AND BOYS'
........ _.._..,

$158
TUBE SOCKS

A big selection of col·
ors In men's sizes
(fits 9 to 15) and boys'
sizes (fits 7to m. Ex·
cellent quality by Sprlngfoot. Stock up this
weekend.

Six hurt
in wreck

TooAY

Six ....,le were Injured in a
collision~tween a Gallla County
emergency squad vehicle and a
truck on Rt. 160 Thunday night . .
FoUtpf the people were sent to the
hospital, the Gallia-Meigs Poet of
the stele highway patrol reported.
The patrol said the ambulance,
driven by Roy L. Jones, 25, ··RI. I,
Crown CitY, waS southbouhd on an
emergency run near ~orth Gallia
High School at 6:35 p.ni. foUowlng a
truck driven by Donald B. Masten,
37, Colwnbus.
Masters then began turning into a
private driveway . when the am·
bulance attempled.to pass, coUiding
with the truck.
Injured were Jones, Masten, and
Jour passengers In the ambulance:
Gerry L. Rothgeb, 37, Rl. I,
GallipoHs; Miles 9Brpenter, 58, Rt.
2, Vinton; Pautlne Carpenter, Rt. 2,
,Vinton; and Gary D. Reynolds, !9,
McArthur.
' Masters was treated at the scene
for his Injury, but a backup .EMS
unit transP9fted the others to Holzer
Medical Cen\er.
.
Jones was treated and released for
bruises, while Rothgeb was treated
.for bruises and muscle pain and
released. Miles Carpenter was

••• IN THEW

l).ragnet comes up empty
OKLAHOMA CITY - Police searching among gUttering rides and
midway bootha.have found little more than dead ends in their search
for four teen-age girls who vanished after heading for the state fair of
Oklahoma.

Livestock buildings, booths and food stands at the annual
celebration of the waning prairie. swruner bear posten with pictures
Of two of the girls - and of a 36-year-old man being sooght by'police as
a suspect in their disappearance.
Barney Hudson, wbo directs the police officers assigned to the fair,
said officen were urging girls not to attend the fair alone. On Thursday, scores of unifonned and undercover police made their way between the rides and shows.

Americans giv·e high marks

,.

71, Jackson, a passenger in a van

driven by Harry Crabtree, 75,
Jackson, Jell from the van when
Harry Crabtree stopped soddenly on
U.S. 35 near HMC for a flagman at
!2:20p.m.
According to the patrol, Jesse
Crabtree was in a wheelchair wbich
slid out the van's bock doors when
they came open. She was reported
. SHINGLE ~Ll'lTING - For tbe last tliree ,ean, Bob E - Farm Deal' Rio Graade, wllh more than 125 ' taken to HMC for ireatmelll. but
Cbealer Wood, Daytoo, bu dem-trated die ~ artluDa parllctJ-tiag. loaplred by a detlire lo keep
there was ·no infonnation available
craft of •liiD&amp;Ie •plltlliJtl at the Bob EvaJJI Farm alive the cralll of early America, Wood has been
on her this morning.
•
Feslivll. Set for tbe weelleiid of Oct. t-11 fnm ta.m. to demoDBiratlng obliigle spHtllog throughout Ohio lor
The·patrol said Julie A. Roach, 25,
5 p.m. dally, tbe Film Feallval is Iii Ill 11th year at the more than 10 yean.
Rt. I, Northup, was driving southbound on Rt.- 325, 200 feel south of
Raccoon Twp. Rd. :13 at 12:02 a.m.
today ~hen she lost control of her
vehicle on a curve.
·
The vehicle then went off the left
side ol. the road and struck an embankment, overturning, the report
said.
•
Roach · W!'S taken to HMC by
I
RIO GRANDE - See lye soap de.
citizens and school groups arriving privale vehicle, where she was
Artisans dressed in old-time attire
bolting in large, black kettlel over
at the Bob Evans Fann Festival by lrellted and released for bruises.
will
demODBtrate early American bus. No admission is charged for
open, log fires. Watch the, ApTwo minor accidents were inpalachian cloggers of North crafts and skills, such is,fW11iture such vehicles.
vestigated by the patrol Thursday.
Carolina as they kick up their heels making, candle dipping and china ,
A car owned by Gamet )II. Elliott,
There is a $1 per car admission 54, GaUipoHs, was struck by an
performing the· old-tiqle art of painting, along with dulcimer
unknown vehicle while it was parked
cl~ng.
•. making, decoupatlng and chair fee, . with primitive camping
caning. Bluegrass and country available at $10 for the weekend, at Elliott's Wrecker service and
Thb.e are just two
more IIIIIBic entertalno!rs will play con- which Includes admission. No' reser- Garage on Jackson Pike In Rodney
vations are necessary.
than 125 attractions at the 11th An- tinuously throughout the weekend.
at 5 p.m. 'l'l!.e other car left the
The Bob Eva111 Fann is located on scene . .
nual Bob EvaM Fann Festival, Oct
Friday, Oct. 9, hu been set aside
t-11, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. dally, at as bus tour day, with special ac- Route 35 one-ha,lf mile east of Rio
The patrol said a,vehicle driven by
the Bob EvB118 Fann near Rio Gran- conunodations • made for senior Grande.
(Continued on page 12)
'

Annual Bob Evans festival
offers crafts,·activities
amors

,

OK one-year airport lease on trial basis

WRANGLER $44.95

BlUE DENIM

Ali ~ent ....illl the Gallla- . annual grosa Income from
Meigs Relional Airport to Foothilis operations conducted by the 1eesee
Aviation [Qc.loran lnillllone-year pursuant to the provlalona of this

u

oz. No Fault Blue Denim with. Sherpa Lining·
snap front, waist length style. Just 36 to sell . Not
all sizes.

'22"
OPEN SATURDAY taiOTO

ELBERFELDS

.

county would, by the tern. of 1he , AI that time, the county was bolding
con~, supplement the operation bills encwntJ&lt;;red for the operation
of the airport wlth, its nonnaJ ap- ofthefacllltymexceasoff9()0 - less
trial period wu signed thla week by leaae..." .
.
propriaUon during the Initial year. U than . ,$100 m expendable .funds
the Gallll County Board of ComThe total contractual package sub- renewed after that trial period, the remamed in the joint county a1rport
mlallonera.
'
mitted by Foothllla Aviation county would no longer be obllpled , authority's !IIIII aPpropriated budget
The contract. which liatl Ken . provldea for a 16-year leue of the"- to provide funding.
of $5,400.
Whited and 0oua Cowles u the fadllty: 1 -1'11' Initial trial
Last month, faced with an overexAs a part.of the agreement entered
~ pwldenl IIJd vlwo period, with options for additional pended budget, the board of compteadent of Foathllll Aviation calli flve-,_-llldli-Y'II'nnewala.
missioners had ~ed the Into thlll week, Foothills Aviation
for the 1eue o1. the fadli&amp;J fnm lila·· A Ill I II u fer the com- powliblllty of closinl , the airport will asswne. respo!l'Jiblllty for
count, for " ...0111 (l) . . 11Uf 1111
I ?! I . . . 111!1 A*Di111 tbt t1JraU11b the remaiJ1dll' of the year. payment of those outatanding billa.

.LINED
JACKETS

No progress seen.in GalliB deputy walkout ·.
~ ·.._. ..aon repmen,....... jii'Wih1'a of 1 mUr 11tf1». . . 1tJ p 4!1 J'lid 1t11 11th
GAWPOLIS, 0111o ·(AP) -

ll&lt;rc! IIIO!iflll. a .,..

Pilr • -

'*'•oliiiiGIIIIIOoulllrtllldra

•

·- ----=~

---- ---

at till lllerUf'a deplrtment IIIII
~ ~ MOJJtcomery did lilt
llllllt11lurldl,ywlthJepre&amp;entalivJIJ
A .,......IIIIIWWIIIa IIIIJIII-ea · oftheatrlkmaahad been expected.

IPIJ.._.

,

....

Nootberllllli0111were~d
1111 volunteer,, wbo refuled to fllve_

hllitlme..

1.._ (Contlnuedoopage12)

IS C.ents

I! Multimedia Inc. Newsl)llper

Reynolds was apparently, not
treated.
The wreck caused severe' damage
to both vehicles, and Jones was cited
by the Jl!llrol for failure to give an
audible signal.
11ie patrol investigated two other
injury accidenll Thunday afternoon
and early today.
Troopers said,Jesse H. Crabtree,

'

Reg. 5269.00 to S349. 00

"

1 Section, 12 Pages

~ Ull rel'-!lll!l)l'!' .S!\1!~
bruises and PauHne u.rpenter was
treated for bruises and released.

·1 '

"'"'SALE I

Special group of 6
Kroehler and Berkline
chairs.
Waii · Away
Recliners and Rock·O·
Loungers in nylon
upholstering.
'

Half slips and full slips in Sizes:
S-M·L·XL-XXL and Sizes 32 to
52. Polyicotlon blends or 100%
nylons.

TWO
DAY
'".

CHAIR SALE

!

Pomeroy_;Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 2, 1981

... -----~---------

•.

•

en tine·

at y

$ave 20% this weekend on quality metal
chinas, utility cabinets, base cabinets ;~nd
wardrobes.

20% OFF

$59.00
$48.00
$41.00
$38.00

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"
Excellent quality, 80% polyester, 20% acrylic. Nylon binding, machine
washable. Save Friday andSaturday,
$66.99 Queen Bed, dual cont.
· $55.99 Full Bed, dual control .
$47.99 Full Bed, single .cont .. .
$44.99 Twin Bed Size .... .... ....

'

e

'

FRIDAY1 OCTOBER 2nd - SATURDAYI OCTOBER 3rd
OPEN.FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 1100
.

'

'much

. WASHINGTON (AP) - R111n1 jobl
emaOc~ ..U the
nation's unemployment rate up tbree-tentba of a pen;eit to 7.1 pezee1t In
September u the total illiiDber of people out of wen IJIII'ed amiWan more than 300,000 above August'&amp;- total, tbe t.bor Deplrtment said

NEW YORK- Despite qualms about his lalest economic proposals, .
a majority of Americans continue to give President Reagan high pel'sonal ratings, the latest Associated Press-NBC News poll says.
While I\ejlgan's overall job rating and perfonnance for handling the
economy dl'pped, respondents continued to give him solid marks lor i.JI.
spiring trust and for showing he cares about them.
' The poll, of 1,601adulta contacted Monday and Tuesday by telephone
in a scientific random sampling, said 53 percent beHeved Reagan is
doing a good or excellent job as president- the lowest approval rating
~~

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_ ,. ,_ .-...............

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Former cop remains critical
Prn'SBURGH - A former . special patrolman for the Minerva,
Ohio, police department was in serious condition after receiving' the
heart of a Pennsylvania woman.
Edwin "Soni)y'' Phillipa, 36, received the transplant in Presbyterian
University Hospital in Pittsburgh. The heart came from the body of
Yvonne Rhodes, 38, of Roaring Spring, Pa.
She died of a gunshot wound Tuesday.
Her body' was seen being dwnpl)d In a thicket north of Henrietta in . •.
Pennsylvania's Blair County. Her 36-year-old husband, Donald ...
Rltodes, died of a self·inflicted gunshot wound and wa&amp; found nearby in
his vehicle, officials said.

281 will share settlements
COVINGTON, Ky. - A federal judge has ruled that 281 people will
share in $16.9 million in settlements made so far in connection with the
~verly Hills Supper Club fire in 1977.
.
U.S. District ,Judge Carl Rubin approved Thursday a fonnula for
dispersing the remainin~ lunda .under an agreement between the court
and attorneys for those mjured in the May 28, 1977, blaze and relatives
of the 165 victims.
The actual dollar amoullts, however, won't be known until Dec. 17
when the payments are made. The courts first must set attorneys' fees
and other expenses lor management of the funds.

Major missile decision ~t
WASHINGTON - President Reagan, announcing probably the most
important military decision of his presidency, is setting a decadeslong course for defense against what he considers a growing Soviet
ability to wage all-out war.
While sources said the jteagan defense plan being unveiled todats-on
a scaled-down MX missile deployment In the West a of a new IH born. ber, the ~xact scope of the MX system and where the nuclear missiles
will be located were a closely held secret.

I

Expiosion kills 40, 247 hurt ·

I

BEIRUT, Lebanon- A car-bomb explosion ripped through the ner·
ve center of the Palestine Liberation Organization Thursday, leaving
at least 40 dead and 247 wounded, police said, Tile PLO said no ranking
guerrilla was hurt, but another group said a PLO Central Committee
member was killed.
Witnesses said the blast set off fires, reduced 60 carS to scorched
mel.al, splintered telephone poles and hurled bodies through the air as
it lore through PLQ offices on Busteni Street in M9Sie!.'l West Beirut.
0n.e exploeives experts estimated 220 pounds of TNT went off.

WinDing Ohio lottery n¥mher
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber drawn Thursday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily gllill" "The Number" was 315.
.
Ill the weekly "Pick 4" ganie, tilt winning number was 1069.
~

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f

•

Weather forecast .
'

Clear with SCI!ttered frost tonight. Lows in the upper 30s. Sunny and
not as cool Saturday. Hlsba Deal' 60. Chance ol. rain near zero percent
tonight and Saturday Winds northwesterly leas than 10 mph tonlgbt.
E&gt;&lt;l

llimdaJ ...... 'l'lielday:

te-l Olilo FOftQit

. . . ..,.... lite ....... Lows Ill die . . . . . hiP. In tbe . . Suday.
lftlla lite IJIIIier • le low . ..llid liiPo Ill die upper . . to low 'Ill
Mllitday IIJd 'l'leldaJ.
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Pomeroy..:-Middleport, Ohio

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Comme_nta_. ry-

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:::.r:;-T~t::!~:r.:.':~

Walks help. AstrQs.hike lead in..:West:
CINCINNATI (AP ) - The
Houston Altrollllterally walked to a
canqrtable 1~ lead In the

Friday, October 2.1911

llonnelVork__________~--------~~~~-------------J-•mM
___J._x_.~
_~
_'M
~·k_
- WASHINGTON ..:.. Today's tenec- ~bled woners and thole who had
tiOI!S have to do with homework, but - to care for an invalid at home.
Five months ago Labor Secretai'y
not the kind of homework that caJta
for writing a theme or 1eamlng the Raymond Donovan Bilnounced a
,eight-times table. The Department proposal to repeal the 1941
of Labor is about ready to act oo
regulati0118 all acl'008 the bOard. Hla
proposed regulations that cOuld af· announcement kicked up a stonn of
feet thousands of persons - most of 10,000 commenla pro and con. In
them women, many of them 1m- recent W«ks rumors have floated
migrants - who perform won in aroundWuhlngtonthatnotallofthe
their homes for Industries In In- seven areas would be affected.
terstate commerce.
Perhaps only · knitted outerwear
The story dstes back almost 40 would be removed from the ban. In
years, to the period soon after ad~ 1 any event, Mr. Donovan's recomtion of the Fair Labor standards Act • mendstion has gone to the Office of
of 1938. In 1941 the Department of - Management 8nd Budget, the final
Labor concluded that many em- arbiter of rules and regulati0118 unplayers, chiefly In the garment In- dertheReaganadminlstration, and
dustry, were circwnventlng the aet-acltecisi.oil is expected almost any
by contracting with women to work time.
in their homes where long hours and
sub-mlnlmwn compensation could
No one has solid figures on the
go undetected. ·
nwnber of persons ·engaged in the
The result was a sweeping bomeworl&lt; under review. In a nonprohibition on such homework In agricultural work force of 94 liiiUlon,
seven areas - women's apparel, the percentage plainly Is minute.
jewelry, knitted outerwear, gloves But under the same providence by
_and mittens, buttons and buckles, - which our Father watchea the fall ci
handkerchiefs and embroideries. a single sparrow, so the'Department
The rules exempted only elderly and
of Labor is concerned with "ex.

Redistricting ·

ploltatioo" evel'iofthevery'few.
AI spokeomen for organized labor
see it, lloonewwk 1.8 a terrible evil In
hearings early thl.s year, Mu B.
Wolf of the Gannent Workers Unloo
termed IIUCh labor "the 111081 viclOIB
means of ezploltatloo and the 111081
ruthless and unocrupul... !Ype of
. business practice ever perpetrated
on the public." Mr. Wolf termed the
employers of homewdrkers "slBve
traffickers." He painted a melancholy picture of Wegal sewing "In
dirty rat-and-cockroach-Infested kltchens and bedrooms" where "an 11·
year-&lt;~ld with whooping cough might
be walking around whlle the garmentisbelngmade."
On the other hand, practitioners of
homework regard their cottage Industry as .the very essense of the
American way. Emma Pudvah of
Hardwick, Va., testified that she...
eams up to $6 an hour by working at
home on her own klttlng maclllne.
She is thus able to look after her
three-year-old dsbghter. "I would
think the government would be glad
to see people trying to earo their
way In the world," she said. ''Would
you rather we went on welfare?"

118111ng on blm In 111'19. He wants hla
50 home knllten back. otberwlle he
wUI be obll&amp;all!d "to look for produc-

tion n!IIOIII'Cell prlmiJ'IIy 1n the

Orient." '

The Iaiiie i. not 1111 easy one.
Notblng In the hlltory of the garment indllllry suaeat. that all emplo,en are pillara of compuaion

and virtue~ Left free lo clrCwuvert
~e-and-hour provlatoaa, many
. ~oyera might reVert to the brutal
m~ctlch that once were the shame
J( ~ Industry. But there Is
~ fundamentally wrong In
;&gt;rohlblting a freeborn American
from WOrking In bl8 borneo •at
•Yhatever wage he finds 800!plable.

~--

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BAEBALL SCOREBOARD
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Baltlmore at Detroit. ppd., r•in
Milwaukee 10, Bodlton 5
Chicago 10, CalUornil 3
Tcus 3, Seattle 1
'l1nu'Niy'aGian

Kansaa C!cy at Cltvelllld, 2, ppd., rain

Balttmore S, DetrOit 4, 10 Innings
Only games scheduled
NATIONAL &amp;..ovE
EAST
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St.
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at the
interest rate
and you
am 't,OOO
tax free interest in one yea

St.Loaia: 3, Phlladtlplifa 2, 10 iMings

Mookal $, Pltlsbllrgh 2 ·
Chicago at New York, canceled, rain
San Dtego l, Loti ArJ&amp;eles 0
F'l'lct.y'J Gamet
St.Louis !LaPoint 1-0) at Pittsburgh
(Perez j-7) (n )
AU.nla (Perry 7-9) at Cincinnati f Pa s-

tqre• U ) (n )
Mon~ (Rogers
!Zacluy 7-131 (n)

ChiCI«&lt;

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lHJ fnl

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2-5 )

al

New

York

Philadelphia

Houston ( S~on ' ll.,.) at L05 Angi!les
IReuas t-4. ) fn)
San Diego (Welsh 6-7) at S..n Francisco
, IHargeaheirf!er 1-11 {n)
,
· • Sabu'dly't Gamn:
Montreal ••a&amp; New York
SU,.oo.l!l at Pltbburgh

BANK ONE can now offer t~ new Tax Free All-Savers
Certificate that wiH earn tax free 1: ote:est• with a minimum of
only $500 and a 01'18"Ytfl: maturity.~ program provides
Individuals up to $1 ,000'
those filing a joint return up to
$2,000 In tax Jree il•terest. Savers have never had this
opportunity belote. Our new Tax Free All-Savers Certificate
could give you the highest.after tax yield you've ever earned,
and It's insured by an agency of the federal government.

.

Atlanta at Clnclnn~U .
San Diego at San Francilc:o
Houston at Loa Anl!eles

•

Beagle, who works In the U. S. titrust cases to work on?"
"And if they lgn'l": the letter?"
"What's antitrust?"
"That's lt. The Justice Depart·
Department of Justice, called me
and asked, "Do you want to play ten"You know - one company men! Is not .In the buslnesa of
swallowing up li2IOther so there will harassing people."
nis thl.s mornbig?"
• "But surely, Beagle, in aplte of not
·" It's only ten o'clock," I be' less compeU!loo."
"Haven't heard of one since wanting to get Involved In too much
protested. "Don't you have any work
to do'?"
Reqan got elected, You know litigation, there _Ia aomethlng you
"Nope. We're not sUJIP(llled to do -- bigness isn't nee sarUy badness. people can fiDd to do. What about
The way we look at It here, no large white collar crime?" any work, or we gel in trouble."
"We prefer to aettle thol:e cases
"But surely someone is violating ccmpany wOuld ever do anything to
stifle
another
CCIIllpall_y,
and
even
1f
out
of court. If a guy maka a
someone's clvll rights In the counit
did,
II
would
take
too
much
work
to
..
mistake
and pro:nlaea not to do It
try."
prove
it."
again
then
there Ia no aenae In
"We've been instructed to stay
"Well, if you're not suing anyone maklnghilllfe:n!Mrable."
away from that sort of thing. We"What about organized crime?"
don't want to get Jesse Helml mad." for clvll rights violaUooa, and If
"What baa Jeaae Helma got to do you're not \liking oo any a\llllrult - ·-"That's 80IIletiUig elle. We don't
cases, ·what are y011 dotng about en- like organl2ed crime any more than
with the Justice Department?"
"He doelln't have anything too do vlrorunentsl protection vlolatl0118?" anYbodY elle. But we bavt to make
"011, we're very much Into . - sure we're·operatlnl within the law
with Justice directly, but every time
•
' we try to carry oat any fl. the civil' vlronmental prv1ect1oo laws. If we when we go aftet tboee people. We
rlghl8 laws, he IIWtiiCI'NIIIIng hill find 2III)'G2Ie Ylolallng tbem, we write can't violate their clvll rightl."
"I can aee wilY JOU want to play
head oif to the White House, and a stiff letter telling them that If they
- lhellthe ..ord II ~ down to lay don't deolst we'D be wry upaet.Jt's temdaln IIIIIIIOI'LIInll,"hald. "But I
aclually a form leltet:·but they.don't _
lbould think JIIU would feel badly
off."
_
that )'011 can't carry out the laws of
" But dO!l't )'011 . have IIOioe an- !mow it."

••

t'f'rlifiH that I:'IIOIANAt'OI.IK Lllo' t: IN•

tll:RAN(' F. CO:, of lndlanapnll• , Slate of

Pnd .. n~~ . haa co•pllltd with lit• Ia-. or

~Ia 81a1e_ ,applh.·able loU and It author•
IW durlnl tlw rurreBt J.••r lo lran~t
In lhla ..... It• approprllte b•IM..
ln.. u'ranre on I he Mutual Plan, ha Vi nan·
dal c-ondlllnn I• •h.,wn hy Itt annual
•iliii'IMIU 10 havf' bfon •• taUow1 on 1».·
C"'to.IMr 31 , nnm: AdmltWd A•••• l&amp;ut,,
.. 30.700.00: l.lahlllt .. • 1638,870:409 .00;
Murph•• 16\t.·UIOJISI.OO: I!K'Ome al31,
Jt:.!3 .~2tMMt; •: •~ndUa,_ IINI,384 ,1MUI:
00. 1!'1 WITS.:IUI 'WHt:REOF. I tllaveo
hrrftlncu 11uh!K"rl~ "'' n••• and
rau.-d •Y 1WIItolwaM1f'd 11 Cohambua,
Ohio lhla da,- and date . J•l,- 1, 11181.
llobt-n J ~ Hllt('hfBnl, .lr.,S.ptrlnt•...•nl
of lnwn~ nl' Ohio: UlgALa

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you ila.,e a siK-IIICNith
IIIOftey market CD. .
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ol111l111 money, our name
WIWI tip ftnt.

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IF YOU ARE A MARRIED TAXPAYER FILING AJOINT RETURN:

$60 .000-85 .600
'

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The rate y~u must earn

22%

16 .,17°o

33"o

18 82°o

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49°o

24.7J 0 o

,

t lncdme and t a~ rates are based on the 1982 Feder~llneome TaK schedules Interest late of 12 61 'G IS
aquatt o 70•~ ot average 1nves1mem y1eld on ona·year Treasury Btlls as of the most recent auc11on r:lllte

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' Ta• tree 1nterest me8n&amp;tree trom Feoe ral ancl Ohio State Income Tax
·
The re ISa substant1al1nleres1 penalty tor earl ~ WJ ihdraw!ll

·~eas ed on a nAII ·S•~.ersrate ol1 261°o

-·--~------~--._~---------+.)l ~--~~--~--~--'
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....... rnlktwl Ufl nw..trer ,., 1110:
AdMIUI'd A•••• ...........7 :001 U.·
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II yoU earn taxable interest on any savings or investments you will
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.

$29 .900-35.200

Free All-Savers ~te without any interest ~na!ty . You can
earn tax tree rather than taxable interest on youl'fnvestment 'Being
your 51.4Jer T to any BANK ONE; office and we will immediately
convert your Certificate to the Tax Free All-Savers program.
'

If you have money in a money market fund you should probably
shift at least a portion of your investmentlo a Tax Free All-Savers
Certrricate at BANK ONE, since your interest will be tax free, rathe&gt;
than taxable. The r11te is fixed for a full year, and insured by
an agency of the federal government. If you have a maturing
six-month money market certificate at a savings and loan or
other financial institution, bring the funds to BAN~ ONE to
take advantage of our Tax Free All-Savers Certificate.

$16 ,000·20.200 •

If you have a BANK ONE six-month Super T Celtilicate of Deposit, •
you can most likely convert your investment to a BANK ONE Tax

ITATI Df' OleO. DIP'AIITMINT Of IN·
tll".utCI : CI,.TiftCATI ~ COMIUANCI.
1'lw ....,..._... ttu.,.rtnt..-nt Of In•
.,.ra-. 011'he Mta&amp;e at Olllo he"~,..
ftrtiR.a tha ' R•:PL' BLIO SA1-IONAL
Llll't: INtll'RANl' K C.'O.. IMIIa1, lta&amp;e
o1 T•••• ru.. eo Mplkod • ·lth th• lawa or
thl• 81a&amp;e •ppllftaiJI• to It and I• 111th&lt;W•
lud durl. . the eurr.nt )'•r to I N - I
In tit.. 1\ah' II• apProprl•t• buaan... of
lft••nnH: II• ..,n•nrlal rDIIIIIala111 le

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you have funds in a taxable
money market fund.
-

•
arc ~1119
on any
1n a saVIngs plan. ·
Because inlerest y01..(re now eaming on other savings is taxable.
you would have to earn much higher rates on those savings to
better the net interest you will earn 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 llf)t interest." The'
higher your tax bracket. the more interest you would have to earn
on an alternative investment. The chart below will be helpful in determining alternative rates that would have to be earned lo better
the All-Savers interest.

STATE 0,. OHIO: DEPARTMENT 0111 IN ~
SURANC! . Cl!fiiTIPICATI Of COMPLIANCE.
n t" under•l1ntod , su,..rintendut Of In·
••r•nh Of Th• flhiLe of Ohio, hrnoby

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Ch.IC&amp;Ji£0 at Phlla~lphia (n)

or

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Houston B, Cinclnl'lltl I
San Franc~ I, Atlanta 2 . . · ·

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Kanu! City 5, Mlnneaotl 2
Oakland 3, Torvoto I

BOB HOEFLICH

DALE R0'111GEB, JR.
N.war.....
.

2
3Ya
4

'.500

J:·Flnt-half division will'lel'
y·Eilmlnal«&lt; ,...., Second lit coo\ention
&gt;Clinched playoff berth

ROBERT L WINGETt

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1-0akland.

~,..C.tifomia

-

PAT WHJTEHEAD-

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Letter to the editor

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High interest rates show n?.jalling s~n~

The Daily Sentinel _

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7

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Rebate behind Democrats' reasoning

In response to Mr. Price's " letter

J:e

but Ryan
down to end thai
threlllandanotherlnthetlgbth
"
·

. ('01.0\) '

'UP!'

to the Editor" on Septe"ber 28, I
believe Mr. Price reacted too har·
shly toward the Democrats. I do,,
however, believe he made some
very good points. Good things do
take time, but in expressing his point
he made some very unfair statements toward certain parties.
Did your "Irish Blood" Influence scene.
your bad English, Mr,. Price?
On the federal, state, or local
Evidently it has taken Jim Rhodes areas of govenunent we need a
3l -years to build his fence around change, a change for the better.
"those pesky Democrats." Or Right now some are currently purmaybe -those "Old Republican • suing the right direction to lead us.
Shoes" he has been wearing have Some are not! - T1m Brewer,
womout!
Reedsville . .•

Joe l'rlce, the third Clnc:lnnatl pit-cher, came oo with the bues lllllded
none out and HC!UIIan Duning a 1~

•

three:

of

During his past years In office
there has been little change in Meigs
County. Where is .Meigs County?
Where is the new road leading from
the "bridge to nowhere?" Nowhere!
Have you driven from Pomeroy to
Racine, or Racine to Letart lately?
Evidently not, because the condltioo
of the roads are terrible. Ironically,'
Ohio needs_new R-0-A-D-S, whether
it be. highways or on the ]lllitlcal

Atlanta three Urnes."
"II'sreallytousb lobe so high and
lhell get drained emotionally," said

Natlooal
Leque Wat on Thursday, Cblcln:lati third bueman Ray lead 'in the aeventh. He strudt oat
but
Maaagar
BW Vlrdon aays Knight.
•
Gar9 Woods walked Garner !Q force
there'a no time to relax.
·_Jhe Reds 111811811ed just one nut, in u run, ~ out Tooy Scott and
"We're 1Jti11 In first place, and on a wild pitch in the aeventh, off ..walkedJoee Cruz.
that's wballt's· all about," _Vlrdon hard-thr!lwinl! N9liln Ryan, ·11-6,
aald, aftet the Aatros wllipped the whoaUowedjuahevenhlts.
Price, ,,.ho hadn't SUITI!IIdered an
aecond-place Cincinnati Reds 8-1,
"Hehadcommandofblt!pltches," earned ru~~· lh bl8 previous 12 relief
with the i!eiP of 11 baaea oo balla. "It said Reds Manager John Me- -. appearances, was then •laMed
won'tbeeaaythereatoftheway. ·
Namara. " We said 11 he had conF dUrliij! anafgumelltwithhomeplate
"I don't lhlnll: Cincinnati will get mand of his pitches he'd be tough, · umpire Joe West. McNamara a1ao
beat here (In Its flnalthree games andhewastough."
wasejectedintheargument.
with Atlanta). We've got to win two
That W8121't the case for seven
A fielder's eholce, Knight's double
out of
Our !'ork is cut out for
Reds pitchers wllo walked 11 Aatros, and Ryan's )Vild pitch scored Reds
us. We always have a tough lime In three with the bases loaded.
catcher Joe Nolan In the seventh.
""" Angeles."
By winning two of three from the r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===-lr------------1
fint-half champion Dodgers, the
Aatros would clineh the second-half
dlvlsloo tiUe regardless of how the
•
..
flllll/1,.
Reds fare.
"I don't think it (the division race)
is over. But we're in a position to
NOWTMRU
control our destiny," said Houston
THURSDAY&lt; QCi. 8
Friday, Saturday
' second baseman Phll Garner, who
· · and sunday
drove In two runs. "That's what
we've got to do."
Whlle it didn't kill the Reds'
playoff hopes, the loss left them with
only a prayer.
"I felt we had to wln both games
(against HOWlton) -to have a chanAND
ce," aaid Reds outfielder Dave
CoUlns. " Nqw we have to hope L.A.
can knock them off while we take

My thoulhl would be to 1--md the
. ,year-old replaU. Uld ... whit
happens. U tbll rsallllin wh lmle
''exploitation," 1111 ndel caald be
reimposed. Meanwbile, many
wunen wllo 8re umrUIInc or -.bleto work In factorlel - ...,.....lly
wunen In rul'al a-. - might '
wei COllie a chanc:e to IJillk .t hoioe.

businesses as C. B. Sports In BenThe redrawing of congressional districts has become the major political- nlngton• Va. , which had been selling
battle of 1981 in state legislatures from coast to coast.
$350,000 worth of home-knitted ski
House seats are reapportioned among the states every 10 years based on caps a, year until the DOL began
the results of the latest census. The states then have to redesign their
congressional districts so that all of them are roughly equal in populatioo.
The 19110 censWl has forced states In the Northeaat and the Midwest to
give up 17 House seats to states In the South and the West.
The Republicans are waging a well-fmanced Clllllpaign to Insure that
most of thole seats move from Democratic to Republican hands.
•
This. effort centers on a Washington computer bank that provides
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - There · Riffe's bill, thl.s no longer would be ahown .that the sales tax is more ac- year starting nell! July I.
Republican state legislators with redistricting plans favorable to their parceptable to voters than the income
It also provides that no school
ty. The GOP strategy seems to emphasize adding even 'Ill!"" Democratic was a time wben it would have been the case, he says.
tax.
district
will receive leas than 10'1
almost
impossible
to
find
a
Richard G. Sberidan, director of
voters to districts that are already solidly Democratic, thus making 'heighwho
would
vote.
for
an
In"They
can
look
at
their
paychecks
~t
o1! the Illite ~d they now Democrat
the Legislative Budget Office,- told
boring districts more vulnerable to Republican takeovers.
see
lhai
the
Income
tax
was
receive,
and It raises the alate's
and
crease
in
the
state
sales
tax.
the House Finance Committee this
As expected, the RepubUcans have scored some gains In the 15 states
Now,
the
major
tax
hike
pending
taken
out:
l')iey
don't
seem
to
miss
minlmwn
salary for teachers, in
week that the J;Uffe proposal
that have already adopted redistricting plans. But it appears that they will
in
the
legislature
has
mor~
thepennies,"Meahelsald.
steps,
by
$1,000
by the end of the
"changes a regressive tax into a
fall short of their goal of shifting a dozen seats to the GOP coiUIJUI next year
Democratic
supporters
than
Gov. James A. Rhodes' 1981-1983 blennliunJune30,1983.
progressive !4X."
,
through reapportioning and redistricting.
and
in
fact
was
drafted
Republican,
budget
bW, which now containa an
The House venion of the blll adAnother
reaaon
Democrats
say
The Republicans' greatest victories so far have come in Indiana and
by House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Unprecedented - in size - $1.8 ded $150 mlllloo to a rrT4 million
they can live with the proposal Texas,
.-·-which would boost the current 4 cen- hlllion tax hike, will mean a major achool subsidy tolal in Rhode8•
In the Hoosier State, where the GOP controls the governorship and both Jr., ~New Boston.
Why
the
change
In
attitude?
ts
on the dollar to 5 cents - is that infusionofnewmoneyforschools. ' original budget blll. Moat -of thole
chambers of the state legislature, the Republicans ranuned through a plan
Riffe
and
others
aa:r
the
reasons
Although far short of $J.5•hlllion · fwlds were Uled to 1ncreaae bulc
Ohio's
tu is not as regressive u the
that is likely to change the composition of the alate's QOngresslonal
are
varied,
but
one
is
that
the
.
which
the Ohio Education aid
!all
is
In
a
-nwnber
of
other
sales
_ delegation from six Democrats and five Republicans to three Democrats
current
proposal
carries
with
It
a
taxAosociation
and some olher groups
In addltioo, the H - added 110
states.
an_d seven Republicans. (The state will lose one House seat.)
rebate
for
low
income
famlles
•
say
is
needed,
the
measure
would
Inmillion
1'111!"' than Rhodes jWIIJJDiild
For
lnslance,
the
Ohio
tax
exemp. Texas, which is currently represented in the House by 19 Democrats and
thole
earning
less
than,
$12,000
a
crease
fUnding
l;)y
more
than
$9011
for
hlgber:
education. It will be dlllrts
food
and
medicine,
along
with
five RepubUcans, will gain Another three congressiooal seatS. A coalition of
year.
million
over
the
11181-1983
blenniiDII.
buled
to
tiJI!ae·
COlletta Uld unl""'
some
other
ltema
deemed
essenUal.
Republicans and conservative Democrats pushed through a redistricting
Argumenla
aplnst
the
sales
tax
'
Sen.
Harry
Meahel,
D·
The
bill
per
pupn
grants
at
aiU..
wllldi
....~ not to iJiaioeue '
plan _that may well enable the GOP to pick up at least six oeats. Oboervers
alwaY&amp;
have
been
based
on
con$1,410.1or
the
current
fiscal
year
and
student
fee,f;'
or
those
which resCind
YoW!gstown,
although
not
yet
compredict that all three of the new seats will go Republican In 1982 and that
tentions
it
is
a
regressive
taxone
mitted
to
Riffe's
blll,
aays
polls
have
hikes them to $1,680 for the fiscal recenthike.j,1 j '. '. t
•
three moderate Democrats ~ Jim Mattox, Wllllam Patman~Martln
made · that hits hardest on the poor. Under
Frost - will be In jeopardy because their districts that have .
J . ' .)
'
mOre conservative.
•
California has been the · orily bright spot for the Democrats in the
redistricting battle. Deniocrafs currently hold 22 seats in the state's
congresslollal delegation to the Republicans' 21. 'fill,_redistricting plan enacted by the Democratic-controlled state legislature could add as many as
~~
seven Democrats to the delegation in 1982,
By Auoolated Preu
elg~year bonds bticause rates are
percent and mearis banks and lalllnlllnto a receeaion.
The Democrats are likely to_win the state's two new House .ieats in 1982.
High lntereat rates show no sign of. high and buyers of long-tenn debt savings lnstltuli0211 starting today
And ln_a ..paraJe ~the ComMoreover, the redistricting plan threatens five Republican representatives falling significantly ,any time soon are scarce.
may pay as much as 15.112 percent merce Depa1 blhlnt'a lndH of
while protecting all22 Democratic incwnbents. .
and the latest govenunent economic
The Treuury Department, given
on sll:-month aavinga certificates, up leading IDdleat!Jn allOwed a decline
For Instance, the Democratic registration in the district of Rep. Robert figures ahow an economy straining the green Ught to_lsaue new debt af.
from 14.3'19.
In buiJdb)c ~ lUlled In August
Dornan, a conservative Repnblican, will increase at least 10 percent from its under the high cost of bon-owing.
ter Congreall Increased the federal
Meanwhlle, the effect of hi8b rates for ~-cOnllltuetiQil.• The lnda Ia
current 56 percent. Republican incwnbents John Rousselot and Carlos MoorInterest rates In the credit debt ceiling al&gt;ove $1 •· trllllon on the hard-hit boualnc market wu
designed •. to' fOrecaal econoouc IIC!~d have been placed in the ;'"'Ill• district, and Republican Bobbi Fiedler markets rose Wedneaday, sup- Tuesday, paid a record-high 15.71
.
underscored ln·a pair fl. gOI'IL'IIJIIelt tlvtty . 1-,,,' ;' ;i., '
will have to run for re-election rna far more liberal district.
- ·
porting the dollar's strong position percent average annual yield at ita
reports.
M~, 'baftk.i8nd savings In- ··
•·
FuriOUS Calilornla Rep,ubllcans say they will either challenge the plan In - on foreign ezchange markets and auctioo of :Ill-year, one-month bonds. _ The Conunerce Uld the H~
aUtuUons •tlJday
aeUJnc Allcourt or try to force a state referendwn on the Subject. Party officials say pusljing some bond prices lower
The Treasury also auctioned sll:·
and Urban Development depart- Savers Certmcit~ tblt tbe Reqan
they will gather 350,000 signatures on petitions within the next 90 days to forSouthern Co., the country's la;gest month bWs at ail average discoant
ments reported sales of new llinRie- aclmlnlalra~on apef:ll to provide a ·
ce an electwn.
·
electric utWty holding company, an- rate of 14.932 percent. That was family houaes fell 14.2 percent In muc:b,needed lidlUI fl. JDGDey that
nounced It was postponing a $100 more than one-half percentage point ·-"-ugust to the lowest annual rate aln- can be Uled•to m&amp;te home ~e
million offering of Alabama Power higher than last week's rate of 14.129
ce April1•. when'the economy wu loana.
'j'
·

· A Ptice ·response

TheDa

.'

!

1

••

�-Page-4-The DOiiiY Sentinel

Ar'kanSlls 34 TCU 10·
Army 20 Harvard 18
Baylor 35 Houston 28
Boise 51.28 Montane' n
Bowling Green 27 w. l\lllchlgan 10
Brown 24 Printeton 7
B:YU oiS Utah St. 28
Cent. Michigan 22 E. Michigan 15
Clemson 26 Kentucky 22

fall·landscape.

Colgate 17 Boston University, ..

due's Boilermakers, ~4-21, in a well-

played game; Minnesota narrowly
df(eating lllinois, 21-19, and Iowa
dumping Northwestern, 27-14. .
In their 40th meeting the Aggies of
Texas A&amp;M will run their record to
ZJ-111·1 over the Texas Tech Red
Raiders with a 211-21 triumph. The
Arkansas Razorbacks will improve

-

~

Florida 28 LSU 21

Eta Phi

Kansas St. 7 Tulsa 3
L0 ng Beach St. 34 Drake 15
LOUISVille39Marshall 14

Miami&lt; Fla .) 18 Vanderbilt 14
Miami (Ohio) 28 Kent St. 1
McNeese St. 25 w. Texas St. 20
Michigan 3Sindlana , ..
Minnesota 21111lnols 19
Mississippi 22 Alabama 17
Mississippi St. 24 Missouri 20

Here's a run down·on how we are
calling some top intersectional''
ffieetingson this week'scard:

Ohio Staie will triumph 33-24, over
Penn 36 Columbia 6
Florida State, with the edge g0ing to
Penn St. 38 Temple 7
Art Schlichter's strong right arm;
PiH 29 s. Carolina 21
Portland St. 47 )daho6
Mississippi State will outlast the
Richmond 17 James Madison 13
tenacious Missouri TigerS, 24-20;
Rutgers 30 Cornell12
Nebraska, with its offense moving
Sol.othern Cal26 Oregon St. 6
again, will whip Auburn, 36-7; Pitt,
S. Mississippi 33 Texas·Arlinglon.
with Dan Marino throwing strikes, 17
' Texas A&amp; N 29 Texas Tech 21
will defeat Jim Carlen's South
Tulane 19 Rice 13
Carolina Gamecocks, 211-21; and
UCLA 36 Colorado 14
Virgini~ T.e ch 20 Memphis Sl. 17
UCLA will ad.d to Chuck Fairbankls
Wake Forest 24 Appalachian St. 20
Colorado woes as they take an easy
Washington St.~ Pacific 20
36-14 win over the Buffaloes.
Weber St. 19Montana St. 17
w. Virginia 2.7 Boston College 12
In othe~ games, we look for ClemWichita St. 33 New Mexlco2.8
son to topple Kentucky, 26-22; North
Wisconsin 24 Purdue 21
Carolina to take the measure 1\1
Wyoming 29 Nevada-Las Vegas 23
Yale 21 Navy 17
Georgia Tech, 31·24; Notre Dame to
Area High School Games
whip Michigan State, 35-13; Miami
Belpre 14 Eastern 0
(Fla.) to slide past Vanderbilt, 16North Gallia 21 Wilterfard 6
14; and BYD to blast Utah State, 45Ironton St. Joe 10 Hannan Trace 2
Pike-Eastern 22 Kyger Creek 6
26.
Miller 22 southern 6
In a mild surprise, my aima
Southwestern 14 t:t,annan 13
mater, Yale - boola-boola - will , Athens 6 Logan o
Ironton 28 J•ckson o
upend the Middies of Navy, 21-27.
Meigi
25 Go ill polls'
Har-rumph!
Waverly 21 Wellston 14
Now go on" ith my forecast :
Miltort7 Pt. Pfus•nt6
Rock Hill 22 Chesape11ke 12
Coal Grove 26'0ak Hifl t9

Saturday's Games
Arizona St . 27 Washington 21

"If we Jose again, we're out or it,"
said Schembechler this week. "That
is a great deal of pressure to play un-

Tornado volleyball team wins
came home the winner. Meigs grabbed a H lead on two serves each by
Suzie Ughtfoot and Laura Smith.
Shortly 11fler that Linda O'Brien
added two for the Tornadoettes to
pull close at 4-3. After an exchange
of serves Debbie Michael placed two,
safeties to give SHS a 6-3 advantage.
Another series of serves and
volleys resulted in two more serving
points by Meigs' Laura Smith,
locking the score at IMJ. Southern's
'Cindy Evans added two to give
Southern an 6-6lead.
' After a widely scattel:fd scoring
~1retch and several volleys across
the net, Southern built up an 11·7
lead. Mel Weese added the final
touches on four quick serves to notch
thel~win.

scorer with 17 serving points, while
Debbie Michael had eight. -For ·
Meigs Laura Smith and DeBord had
four and three respectively.
In the reserve contest, Southern
claimedthetriumphl?-7andl5-12to
remain undefeated at ~- Jenny
Bentley and Karen Hemsley led
Southern with seven points each,
while Sandy Harden added six. For
Meigs Gayla Haning had six in the
first game and Paula Swindell had
seven in the second game.
Southern has a tri-match with
Kyger Creek a~d Hannan ·'trace at
Hannan Trace tonight. Southern
hosts Southwestern in a reserve and
varsity match on Tuesday.

WJIOIIIId

Diamond races go down to wire
By Associated Priss .
Major league baseball's flrsi-ever
split season enters it's final weekend
with all. four divisional titles up 'for
grilbsc .
The American League divisional
titles could be decided in three-game
series pitting the Milwaukee
Brewers and Detroit Tigers in the
East and the Oakland A's and Kansas City Royals in the West.
The Brewers, ~21, will entertain
the Tigers, 28-21, in a three-game
series in Milwaukee's County
Stadium. If the Brewers win .two
games, they will ear.n the right to
meet the New York Yankees, the first-half division winners, in the bestof-five divisional playoff, which will
second-half
winner.at .the site of the
start
Wednesday
The Tigers can clinch or tie for the
AL East by winning two games. Atie
would result if the Boston Red Sox
swept a three-game road series from
the Cleveland 'Indians. The Tigers
and Red Sox would then meet Mon-.
day to determine the Yankees' opponent.
·
The Royals, 28-21, can win the
West title by beating the A's, the first-half winners, ill two of the games
at Kansas City. Oakland-can repeat
as divisional champ by sweeping the

while the Cards, .27-22, travel to Pit- season with three road games with
tsburgh for three games with the the Dodgers, while the Reds, 311-19, .
Pirates.
host the Atlanta Braves for three
The NL East playoffs will open games on the final weekend.
Wednesday with the Philadelphia
Phillies, the first-half winner, , - - - - - - - - - - - playing at either Montreal or
St.Louis.
In the NL West, the front-running
Houston Astros reduced their magic
number to two by downing the
second-place Cincinnati Reds 8-1
'Thursday. Any combination of
Houston wins or Cincinnati losses
equalling two will gave the Astros
the right to meet the Longeles
Dodgers,.the first-half winner in the
divisional piayoff, starting next
Tuesday.

Cam del\_
_'Pari\_
StWTlmeto
Join the Fun

However, if Oakland, ~21, should
win two games, Kansas City ' would
be forced to play makeup games
with Cleveland, a doubleheader, and
also Toronto, if the result would still
influence the standings.
·
If Oakland repeats in the West, the
divisional playoff would open
Tuesday - it might oj&gt;en Wednesday
if the Royals were forced to play the
makeups - in Kansas City, with the
next lour games in Oakland. If Kansas City wins, the Royals would host
games I and 2.
'I'h&lt;! National Leag•Je -.;•on'! ~~ve
that type of face-to-face showdown.

CamdeaPuk
wiU'be open the fall clay,
~oamto ~opm

Saturday and Sunday.

Bt. 60 Wnt Ruatlaatoa, W.Va.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
St.Louis Cardinals. However, the
between
Expos
the
T!le
Eastthe
hasMontreal
com" down
toand
a duel

Tonight's games

POMEROY-"It's Beginning to
Look a Lot Like Chrisbnas" will be
the theme of the annual Christmas
flower show of the Meigs .County
Garden Clubs AssOciation, Nov. 28
and 29 in the Royal Oak Archery
Building,
l Melanle Stethem and Jan_et
Kbblentz will be co-chairmen for the
show which will be open for public
viewing from I to 5 p.m. on Nov. 26
and I to4 p.m. on,Nov. 29.
In conjunction with the show there
will be a Christmas art exhibit by
the Meigs County Bend 0' the River
'Garden Club.

Meigs at Gallipolis
Athens at Logan
Jackson at Ironton
Waverly at Wellston.
Pt. PieasanJ at Milton
Rock Hillel Chesapeake
Coal Grove at Qak Hill
Belpre at eastern
North Gall fa at-waterford

Ironton St. Joe at Hannan Trace

Kyger Cre.k at Pike-Eastern
·Soulhorn at Miller
S()Ufhwestern at Hannan

..

Get two free crystals with the8channel,4
band Beareai 6. Or the amazing 4 band, 6
channel Beareat FoUr-six 'nl.inScan• handheld nnner.
Get your Beareat Scanner bonus now.
Offer a:pirel October 31, 1981.

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

@nation @mpany

•

lollLLII!G DIVISION

Seedl. Bird Sndl • Oyllll' SheJII ond Grit· Fortlllzor~- Lime • Co'
mont oncJ Mortar· Stock Soil· w•tor Sa-· Rtmodl_. Salt· Litters •
. vocclnt. Roollng . Points - Rill Brand F-1"1 - Bllttr and atndor,

OttLY''9900

Twine. Stlr•YI· Gatn- Hoy ·ltr•w

•

•

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry

Ambassadors
for Christ
'

A youth group, ''Ambassadors for
Christ," bas been organized as a
branch of the Langsville Christian
Church lll1der the leadership of Debbie Musser and Joanna Colll1cll
Recent activities of the group have
included an overnight at Royal Oak
Park. Attending were Jay Janey,
Jason Rupe, Timmy Geisel, Jerry
Brev.ik, Phillip Smith, Johrmy Wolfe,
Paul Council, 'Kevin Musser, Maria
Musser, Kim G•isel, Tammy Geisel,
Lisa Brevih, and Amanda ll'!usser.
·The young people were .accompanied by Paul and Gene

M""''wn•
held
join the group. ··--are ·
Saturday evenings at 7 p.m. Further
Information may be obtained from
Mrs. Musser at 7~2310 or Mrs.
Council, 742-2'125.

Job's Daughters_, __ ,... ,

class"'
1935, Chester High School,
was held I!Widay afternoon at the

Jenklno thanked those who helped
andmadedonati,OIII.
'
.,.._
untt
voted
to
accept
the
1n....,

to meet with
··'""dlnneranddance
themfor.poll"""
In November. It wu noted that the
unit WGn flnJt pia(:t on the poppy
publicity ICI'1Ipbook and that It has
~n l1l"'t on for national com""''ti
""TI.e"fl· membership committee .
·
repQrted that 56 members have paid
dues to date. Members were rem1n- ,
ded that the dues increase 111 November. Mrs. J enkins announced a
membership meeUng for Tuesday at
the home ..... barte
130
: p.m. 1
r
. ""' c
r
was draped for Mrs: Louise Harbrecht, a 56 year member of the
vltation of U--

r ""'on
~...

Ciiester firehouse,
•~-·

INGELS FURN. i

. '
'

MIDDLI!PORT,etfiO

'

•

.,

~·~~,,and

Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen, assisted tlY Marte Hauck and
Mildred Caldwell. Tables were
decorated with the school colors of
blue and white with arrangements of
faD flowers. A cake decorated with
blue-ond white and Inscribed with
"ChiSs of '35" was presented by Mr.

and Mrs. Eugene Coleman and served as the centerpiece of the buffet
table. A baked liam and covered dish
dinner was Silrved.
Picturesweretakenandthegroup
enjoyed reminiscing and looking at
old school pictures.
Auxi11ary.
Class mCoemlbers attebnndinHag rbowere
Mrs. Veda DeviB, junior activities Eugeqe
eman, Pa
r,
chalnnan, noted that the Juniors Fla.; Edith Curtis, Akron; Marie
were alten!ling the meeting. They .Hauck, Han:y ·' Bailey, Pomeroy;
later held workshop for Arcadia Evelyn Sedgwick, Mildred Caldwel)
Nursing HOrne. A donation was and Gordon Ridenour, Tuppers
made by the junior unit'to the Can- Plains; Warren Pickens, Walter
cerSociety in memory of Mrs. Gam- Brown, Reedsville; Ronald Osborne
rna Casci. They also made a and Owen Damewood, Long Botdonation to !lie Child Welfare FounVirgeneEiberfeld, Roy Christy

It was decided to make the class •
reunion an annual affair and to meet
liext year at the same time and
place.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
NOW OPEN FOR FALL

HUBBARD'S .

GREENHOUSE

-

Hanging Baskets- - Foliage
Plants - Cactus - Pumpkips
SPECIAL
Now Thru Oct. 17
10" Hanging Basket $4.50
.O pen Daily 9-5 Closed Sun .
992-5776
Syracuse, ohio

a

Final plans for the observance of
Masons and Eastern l!tar Night on
Oct. 12 were made when Bethel 112,
International Order of Job's
Daughters, met Monday night at the
Middleport Msonlc Temple.
Zandra Vaughan. honored queen, dation in memol1'_of Edgar Vaninpresided at the meeUng with Linda wagen.
Guests at the meeting were Mrs.
Mayer, Bethel guardian, and Ken* Genevieve Ward, Mrs. Eva Robson,
neth Wiggins, associate guardian,
being escorted to the East and given and Mrs. Jane Snouffer. Mrs. Robson won the traveling prize donated
Blithe! honor.
Practice was announced for 10 by Mrs. Pearl Knapp. Homecoming
a.m. on Oct. 10. The dimer on Oct.12 for the Department of Ohio
will be held at 6 p.m. with reser-. president, Mrs. Knowlton Lehoert,
vations to be made by Oct. 10 with was announced for Oct. 17 at the
Emina K. Clatworthy, m.3003; Lybarger-Grimm Post, Tontogany.
Ruby Vaughan, 9tl"k3374; Unda A moment of silent prayer was held
Mayer, 992-li954; or Barbara Dugan, at the conclusion of the. meeting in
memory of Edgar Van · Inwagen.
94&amp;-~. The cost i.s $3 per person
and the menu will C&lt;lllsist of Refreslunents were served by Mrs.
vegetable soup, sandwiches, coffee, Patty Might and Mrs. Jenkins.
ice tea and cake. ,
All Masons . and Eastern Star
ge
members are invited to lhii meeting
at 7:30p.m. All profits will go to the '
Grand Guardian of the Grand Be~
h
of Ohio project.
A practice for initiation was set for
5 p.m. on Oct. 18 with a second to he
held on Oct. 25 at 5 p.m. There will
also be a meeting on Oct. 19 lor tbe
A rummage sale Is being held at
girls who will be assisting the
the St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Gallipolis Bethel in inspection.
The librarian gave a reading, Pomeroy. Saturday hours will be
'
"The Book of Life." Members sang from9tonoon.
"Happy Birthday" to Alny Sisson,
Beth Blaine, and TerTi Roush. At the
next meeting members will vote on
There will be a riunmage and bake
amending the bylaws.
sale SaturdaY. from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at the Firit Church of God,
Syracuse, in the yard.

.

WHEELHORSE
SEASON CLOSE9UTS

Rumma
Wl'll be eld
St. Paul

ONE ONLY OF EACH
SPECIAL

$2099
BAUM TRUE VALUE

TOPS

American Legion
The Meigs High School chorus ol
Ed Harkless presented "Spiak Up",
a choral opera by Luigi Zaninelli, at
n-Jay night's meeting of the
American· Legiou Auxiliary, Drew

Webster Post39, P&lt;lmeroy.
The prosram was given in observance of·mualc month with Mrs.
Dorothy Jenkins, music chairman,
ui charge. Taking parts were Fred
.Young, I'S the father, Linda N""l as
the mother, and Clinton Turner as
the son. A d9nation t,oward purchase
of robes was given bY the Auxiliary
tothevocalmuslcinatructor.
Mrs. Jenkins presided at the
rneeUng during whih time the laU
conference and achoolli Instruction
wasannouncedlorOct.8atJunction
City.
It was noted that the Auxiliary
members Mrved the men's fall conference
·on Sept. 211, and Mrs.
.,

Comp~etion

$2549 ·
CHESTER, OH .
PH. 985·3301

GET YOUR WINTER VEHICLE NOW

Lena Hotter of Route I, Racine, is
a maternal great-grandmotherto
Ashley Jill Smith, infant daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Smith, Clifton.
Her name was nQt included in the annolli1Cement of the Sept. 13 birth of
the haby.

Stivers ville

SPECIAL
LIST
$3273

LIST
$2766

First Church

Elxercises u a part of the weekly
meeting of TOPS OH 1488, Rutland,
were held at Wednesday's meeting.
The exercises were conducted by
Gloria Oiler, leader, following the
business session. Shorty Wright was
honored as the weeklY best loser and
Wll!l presented a ribbon and members sang in her honor. Runner-up
was Barbara Alkire. The previous
week's hest loser was Lynda Aclltins.
Mrs. Oiler led the group in a
discussion on ways to lose weight
and why some members gain
weekly. Infotmation may be obtained by calling 742-3062.

Cl05 42" MOWER

i:85 36" MOWER .

'

Leota Birch, Mrs. Betty Ward and
·Troy, local, and Mrs. Icy Dailey,
Racine, called on · Mrs. Gerald
Sellers at Pomeroy on Monday afternoon.
Mrs. Ruby Bryant and Mrs. Penny
Middleswart shopped at Parkersburg, W.Va. on Wednesday.
Mrs. Ruby Frederick, Westerville,
OH visited Mrs. Audrey Brewer and
David recently.

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1981 CJ7 JEEP ...................... ,~· ..... ;,, ......... .-u 250
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: 1974 OLDS ...... ·.•••••• ,., ............. ........ '595 *
:

.
• Door , 9
1975 FORD LID .... ............... ~ ........... .. 5 5

Dinner party ,
Mr. and 1\lrs. Wesley Young entertalned with a dinner at their home
Sunday. Attending were Marjorie
Snider and Marsha, Geraldine and
Charles Hawk and son, Michael,
Randall Snider, his wife, Terry, and
their daughter, Brandi, Jimmy and
Sally Hutton, and Manford Hutton.

~

ALL RUN GOOD

RIGGS USED CARS
9

~,

985-4100

DAil.V 9-1 THURS. &amp; SAT.

Ray Riggs

Chester, Ohio
-· Residence No. 992-5200

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We Are Clearing
Away·rhe
AND

RRY«f
CAULKING

Fund raisinl projects ·were
and teacbera were lnilroduced at tha Moncily night
fmee11ng 1i the Mtddleport PTO beld
~~~the school. .
: Jolin Amott, prindpel, !lpOke
,IJriiiiJ and !hen loll flu ced tile
bat .. Parenti .... eacoarapd
to fA4JiiGii tbt l1!bool bY .,.......
oUae m11lh• Jt -llllted u.t 112

INSULAIDRS
'• YOT WATER BI.AN~ElS

SlOP IN lODAYI

;te·

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p.m. It tile ..... lldlool
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•HEAT TAPE
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• ELECTRIC SWITCH

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110 w. Main St. '
992-2111

••

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'81 PONTIAC$

Middleport PTO

., ••=•

.

'

At the Harrisonvllle Blood
Pressure Clinic that was .held at
'rown hall September 8, there were
'24 recipients and 13 attended lWlch.
Harrisonville Golden Age Clug
,sponsored a trip recently to the
Amish Community at Walnul Creek.
and back to Cambridge Glass pla!lt. ·
Forty-one members and six non•members made the journey. A wonderful time waa ~joyed by aU.

I

Pabn Harbor, · Fla.; Margaret
Bailey, Pomeroy; Ted Sedgwick, ::
Lucille
. Ridenour and Cecil Caldweu;
Tuppers Plains; Lillliln Pickens,
Margaret Brown, Reedsville; Ella
Osborne and Lora Damewood, Umg
Bottom; Margaret Christy and
Claric-e Allen, Chester.

It was,.....,.. by ·Mr. and
..............
. Mrs. Roy

Harrisonville
:BP Clinic

'10 Worth of Free
Cryatcds.

CHECK OUR PRICES BEFORE BUYING!
399 w. Main Strnf ·
· 992·2164
Pomeroy, Oh.
The Store with "A II Kinds ol Stvlf"
For Pets- Stables- Large and Small Animals
Lawns- Gardens

Meigs County
Garden
Oubs
'

Expos, 28-22, will be in New York for
a three-game series with the Mets,

~--- .

ALSO: BARBm WIRE.
~~~~=iF.d..D FENCE &amp; STEEL POSTS.

Girl Scouts

.
Lerid-A-Hand

SEED A..... D MILLING
HEADQUARTERS
.

.

Chlldawitheacbreceiving$15.
· '

Racine Legion

r_!~~~~~c~lose~s~its~re~g~ul~a~r~~~~~~~~~~~~

series.

- u..,

Middleport Legion .

r•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_________

WE STbCK STEEL PANEL

MODER8 SUPPLY

143poomd
Sophomore UneiDan

Sopllomore badi

•

Mel Weese was the ov~rallleading

FARM GATES, BULL GATES AND
CHAIN LINK.GATES..
IN

KellbCook

N .. Carolina 31 Georgia Tech 24
N. Carolina St. 24 Virginia 6
Notre Dame 35 Michigan St. 13
Ohio State Jl Florida St. 24
Ohio University 14 Toledo 1 ..~
Oklahoma 42 Iowa St. 28
Oklahoma St. 26 N. Texas St. 18

Ira. The Rev. Robert Robinson gave . Muaaer who supei"ViMd the boys,
devotions and the pledge to the flag ·while Debbie Muaaer and Joanna
· -'th
•·
Councl1 were
was led by the flnJt grade~.
'" the""
. .,.r...
_
Speaker at the meeting wu Mrs.
Devoti0111 ~ g~ven around the
Joan Tewbbary, R. N., Melp Goon- campfire followedhY
,
a welnerroast.
ty tuberculoell ~urse. She talked . Breallfast was enjoyed by the group
aboul tuberculoeia, Its fiYIIIPioms, before they returned bonie.
ways ollnfectlon and ll'eabnent and
The youth also took a~ trip In
with the -~"·noted that tubercu!OIIIs Is on the up- GaIlia County
...,.... - •
swing In Meigs County. At her being Robert E. M""'!"r, pastor;
requeat, the MlddleportJ?TO voted Paul M11811el", Jim Council, and
to endorse the levy renewal to be Robert Council. Debbie Musser an&amp;!
voted on in the November election.
Joanna Council were a1ao present.
, . amThe attendance awanl went to the All youtb """'"'"~ to be
classes of Mrs. Davis and Mrs. . bassadors for Christ are Invited to

Plans for the preferential tea to be
Officers were elected at this
held at the Oct. 13 rneeUng were , week's meeting of _ the Pomeroy
made when the Ohio Eta Phi C1lap- Junior Girt Seoul Troop 1278 held at
ter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met the J;&gt;omeroy Elementary School.
recenUy al the Meigs Im.
Elected were Kim Hamm,
Teresa Johnson,
The menu for the annual couples' treasurer;
Cbrislmaa dinner was dlsclll8ed and secretary; and Lisa Newman, reporplans made for a theatre party. The ter. Patrols were organized and the
new by-laws were read and a(&gt;' ·patrols and their leaders are "The
Butterflies" with Dreama Bentz,
proved.
1be cultural report was given liy leader, and Cindy · Denney,
Amy Hill's Dabble Shop. Dee Spen- assistant; "The Busy Bunnies" with
Shelly Triplett, leader, and Grella
cer and Brenda Hill were hostesses.
Riffle, assistant ~der; and the
'
"Daisy Du~ks" with Beth Ewing
leader, and Lisa Patte~son,
assistant
leader.
'l'hO !aU district conferenC'e to be
held on Oct. 6 at Junction City was
·announced at the recent.meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary of
Chairpersons were appointed at
Feeney-Bennett Post 126, Mid- the recent meeting of tbe An\erican
Legion Auxiliary Racine Post 602,
~.
' Several members from the unit held at the hall.
will attend the conference and are
Appointed were Betty Van Meter,
asked to be at the haU at 8 p.m. It children and youth; Louise Stewart,
was a1ao noted that the dues will be Americanism; Martha Lou Beegle,
taken to the conference and anyone conununity service; Eunie Brinker,
who has not paid Is asked to mail national security; Shirley Ab1es,
them to Mrs. Becky TYree, Route 4, foreign relations; Iietiy Van Meter,
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, this junior activitlh; Beulah Neigler,
week. Eighty-ilight have been collec- legislative bulletin; Julia Norris,
ted solar.
veterans affairs and rehabilitation;
Sandra A. Utlle was welcomed as a~d Libby Willford, poppy chair'
.
a new 8enior member, and Klmbei-ly .man.
Deem and Mindy Harris were
Leora Young presided at the
welcomed as junior membera.
meeting which opened with prayer
A party was held at the Arcadia by the chaplain, Frances Roberts.
Nursing Home Monday for residents The pledge and preamble were
there. Going up were Mrs. Etta Will, given along with a moment of silent
Mrs. Gerry Parsons, Mrs.' Mary prayer. Officers' . reports were
Clark, Mrs. Mary Madden, Mrs. presented and the unit voted to
change their meetings from the four' Sonia Parsons, Mrs. Sonja Wayland,
and Mrs. Tyree. Thlrty-eightpatien- th Tuesday of each month to the
ls attended the party, and treals thirdMonday. ,
were given to aU 60 residents.
The fall conference was an-'
It was noted that the Auxiliary
nolll1ced for Oct. 6 at Jlll1ction City.
Mrs. Ables and Mrs. Norris served
bake sale held earUer this month
refr"'!lunents.
~ a financial succeps and the unit
"
extended thanks to those who contributed money and baked goods.
Plans were made for a soup sale to
be. held on Saturday, Nov. 7·, at the
Several get-well cards to sick and
ball. Women are to meet on the day
shutins of the community were sent
before to prepare the homemade
when · the Harrisonville Church
vegetable, bean and cream of potato
Lend-a-Hand Society met at the
soup.
home of Mrs. Wilda Mae Wiseman .
Sympathy cards were sent out to
with Mrs. Nonna Lee as co-hostess.
Mr. 1111d Mrs. Raymond Baker. The
Frances Alkire presided at the
door prize brought by Mrs. Will was
meeting which 9Pfned with group
won by Mrs. P'eggy Caton. Enna
singing of "What A Friend We Have
-Hendricks presided at the meeting
in Jesus" followed by prayer led by
with Mrs. Caton giving the opening
Mis. Golda Epple. Several inprayer.
spirational readings were given.
Preceding the meeting a chicken
Mrs. Wiseman led in ·a word game
and ham dinner was served to the
with Anne Williams winning the
Awriliary members and legionprize. Stella Atkins received tlie
naires.
door prize. Refreslunents were served.

Maryland,.,. Syracuse 10

has Ohio State ' playing host to
Florida State arid Michigan State at
NotreDame.
1
der each and every . week, but we
The Iowa Hawkeyes have sanhave nobody to blame but our- dwiched upset victories over
selves."
Wisconsin and UCLA aroUnd a loss
Michigan travels to Indiana Satur- to Iowa State.
day, while Iowa, ranked No. 18 in its
Iowa Coach Hayden Fry is
first Top 20 appearance in nearly 20· worried about lightly regarded Noryears, opens its conference schedule thwestern because their coach, Denagainst winless Northwestern. ~­ nis Green, "would enjoy nothing
due, which upset Notre Dame last more than beating his abna mater.
week but was surprised by Min- In addition, Fry says, "We don't
The reason is Wisconsin's upset of nesota in its first Big Ten game, is at have the depth other teams have. We
Michigan three weeks ago when Bo "" Wisconsin and Minnesota is at got a lot of people .hurt against
Schembechler's team was ranked Illinois in other league games.
UCLA." .
Th~ Big Ten's nonconference slate
No.I.

'RACINE - In girls' volleyball action the lll1defeated Southern Tornadoettes handily defeated Meigs in
two sets, 15-3, 15-8, during an assembly match in front of Southern's
student bOdy here Wednesday afternoon.
Southern remained perfect at lH)
and thus far 1\aS claimed the match
in the first two games of the·match
every time this season. Southern is
~ in the SV AC.
· In the fir~t contest Mel Weese ser·
ved 12 straight serving points.to give
the hosts a' 12~ advantage. SHS increased its lead to 1~ before Vicki
DeBord put Meigs on the board 14-3.
Debbie Michael added the winning
point for Southern's 15-3 win.
The second match was much
closer. but Southern . eventually

Emma Paugb and Shirley Johnson
loot the ffiOIIt weight at the &lt;;hester
claN of SlindereUa this week, while
Vl.rglnla Johnson, Beverly Cobner,
Ruby Queen and COI'll Fobner, were
the lOp looers In the Maaon Clau. In
· - the Pomeroy class of SllndereUa,
~ Hickman lost the most
weight, and Joyce Haggy and Betty
Berkley tied lor I'Uill1er-up. El&lt;ercise
classes will be held over the neld
eight weeki and lor Information on
these, contact Mrs. Jo Ann
NeW110me, 992-3382.

Furman 21 Tenn .-Chatfanooga 7
Grambling 22 Prairie VIew 20
Iowa 27 Northwestern 14
Kansas 28 Arkansas St . 1t

Big Ten ready for wide open race
The Big Ten, often criticized for
being only the Big Two, may be
r~ady for its most wide-open conference race in more than a dt;!cade.
:No team besides Ohio State or
Michigan has been the Big Ten
representative in the Rose Bowl since 'Indiana won the championship in
!967. Although the Buckeyes and
Wolverines are respectively rapked
seventh and eighth nationally this
week, there are signs of hope for the
rest of the conference.

Slinderella

Nebraska' 38 Auburn~

The Daily sentinel-Page-S

Meigs Co~nty groups meet---._____ ~h~~~:~~a~~gh~~~:e~~oo~man.

Southent's varsity squad

Colorado St. 29 Air Forc;e 1

'·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,

~~~~~----------~~~~==~~--------~~~~~~- - -

Connecticut 33 New Hampshire 7
Dartmouth 18 Holy Cross 13 _
Delaware 20 Lehigh 2

their all-time margin' over host TC!i
to 36-20-2 as they romp home" 34-10
wirui'er, and the Baylor Bears .will
hold on to take a close 35-26 decision
over the Houson Cougars.

..

"

Fr_i~ay, October 2, 1911

Arizoni!t 21 Stanford U

"lly Major Amoo B. Hoople
. Offealve Expert
I'gad, .friends, the month of September was indeed upsettintl for the
football prognosticators' The underdog collegiate elevens slos'hed
the upset bucket willy-nilly over the
This Saturday, however, things
will return to normal with only a
mild upset here or there in the offing. Um-kumph!
Highlighting the week's activities
are a pair Iii important clashes in the
Pac 10 and the .Big 6. In the Pac 10,
the Arizona State Sun Devils will slip
past a fine Washington team, 27-21, .
in a down-t~&gt;-the-wire finish. In the
Big 8, Oklahoma, looking ahead to
Its big matchup with Texas next
week, will outlast thei mproving·
Iowa State Cyclones, 42-26.
Two other contests in the Pac 10,
wiD find. Southern California, with
lailback Marcus Allen leading the
charge, rambling past Oregon State,
· :!fHi, and Arizona taking disappointing Stanford, 21-14. Har-rumph.
The tough Southeastern loop
features two excellent meetings:
Alabama entertaining Mississippi
and LSU Hosting Florida. It'll be a
rough day for the home teams.
Ole Miss, coached by Steve Sloan
who played for ole master . Bear
Bryant at Alahama, wip u~set . the
Crimson Tide, 22-17. Meanwhile, at
Baton Rouge, La., the Florida
Gators will cruise past LSU. 28-21.
Principal interest in the Big 10
centers on Bloomington, Ind., where
the visiting Michigan Wolverines ·
"(ill - kaff-kaff - chew up the Indiana Fightin' Hossiers, 35-14. In
oiher Big 10 contests, the Hoople
System s~es the rejuvenated
Wisconsin Badgers whipping Pur-

•
Friday, October 2. 1,.1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Buckeyes, Bobcats will win this
weekend according to The Major

---

:HARDWAR.
E
Slncelf29
.
Pomeroy, Ohio · '
M·S 7:30 to 5:00

'81 BUICK$
BUICKS

PONT lACS
·CAlAUNA
LEMAN.S ·
GRAfll~ PRIX
T 1000 ,

ELECTRA
·PARK AVENUE
REGAL
CENTURY

SEE US ATI

. SMlTH~~~LSON MOTORS

PH. M2-2174 . .

·

POMIROT, OHIO
.,

I

�Page-6- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, OhiQ.

County happenings
I

A work session for men, women
and teenagers at both the junior high
and senior high stadiwns was set for
Saturday beginning at 9 a .m .' when
the · Meigs Athletic Boosters met
Tuesday night at the high school.
While the work will begin at 9 a.JJL
workers are encouraged to come
anytime during the day to assist,
bringing paint· brushes, brooms,
hammers and other equipment and
supplies. If enough help is avallable,
the stadium bleachers will be painted. At both places the work will include clean-up, repair and painting.
The Boosters also decided to sponsor a local punt, pass and kic~ contest beginning in mid-October for the

International Voice of
PrOphecy radio broadeast will be the
third through sixth graders, or those focus ,of attentloo at the Pomeroy
age, eight through 12. John Arnott is . Seventh-day .Adventist Church,
coordinator.
• Saturday, October 10.
~.Also to be sponsored by the
Announcing the event .J"P'astor
Boosters will be the Nov. 28 Big
Albert Dittes·said, "The broadcast is
Bend Minstrel Association variety
one of the oldest con!,inuous religious _
show at Meigs High School.
radio progri1Jil8 in tile world. H .M.S.
Program advertising Is currently
Richards Sr., Speaker Emeritus,
berng sqld by the Boosters. The coSt
started broadcasting from radio
will be '1.50 for advance tickets and station KNX-Los Angeles in 1930. His
$2atthedoor...-.
first studio was a makeehlft: a
The Boosters also voted to send a chicken coop in hia backyard In
thank you letter to !be Middleport- Walnut Park, California, Ditt.esaaid.
Pomeroy Rotary Club for the
Richards, Sr., 117, gave
posters in recognition of loo'UM.ll " 'aM' 11irecting responsibllltil!ll to llli
players. The posters will be
son, Hllrold, Jr., in INt. The
gathered up and presented to the
program is currenUy aired over 580
players on parents night.
stations in the United States and
Canada on Sundays and from 180
stations Monday through Friday.
Aroun&lt;l the world, the program is
broadcast from more than 1,100
stations each week.
ty Fairgrounds. Volunteer workers,
"Spanish speaking audiences hear
riders and sponsors are needed and
Milton Peverini regularly through
sponsor forms can lie picked at
programs prepared in the "Voice's"
Miller Bros. , the Rutland Branch of
home offices in Thousand Oaks,
Bank One, WMPO, or from Mrs.
California. Most other language
Eblin, 742-3141 or Judy Eblin, 7423148.
programs are either translated from
English or prepared within th e
language area where aired, the local
pastor reported.
Thousan&lt;ts name Harold Richards, Jr., as their radio pastor. The
program is known around the world
for its Bible based broadcasts.
ReWJ.iOIIIi
Mter h earing the report here
Here on t.'ilrth fulks have Rcunmns,
And they r ome from f11rm and nt:ar,
Saturday, members qf. .the . local
Wl11d t~ood times they lwve together,
church will have an opportunity to
For aU hearts are full uf clu:~er
Farruly members meet each other.
contribute to the support of the Voice
Part has not been seen fill' yert rs
of Prophecy progra ms for the
And they I&lt;ilk so fast logt!lher

· Social
Calendar
Saturday
THE LADIES

AUXlllARY of
the Mason Fire Dept. will hold a
chicken bilrbecue Saturday at the
fire station startillg at 11 a .m .
Dinner is $3.50 or $2.50 for onehalf chicken. .
A CARNIVAL will be he ld at
the Tuppers Pla1115 Elementary
School Saturday night. Seniing of
soup ~11 begin at 4:30p.m. with
the carnival to start at 6: 30p.m .
Admission is 2.'i cents.
"~:HE
RACINE Elementary
School will have its fall festival
on Saturday from 3 p.m. to 8 p .m.
on Third Street in Racine. It will
be sponsored by the Ractne
P .T .O.

ST. PAUL. United Methodist
Church adult Bible class will be
having a bake sale Saturday.
Starting time is 9 a .m . It will be
held at the residence of Donald
and Shirley Harris, Tuppers
Plains . The proceeds will go
toward the floor covering in the
basement.
A FALL CARNIVAL will be
held Saturday on the old bank
parking lot in downtown Racine
from
to· il p .m . under sponsorship of the Racine PTO. There
will be games, prizes, a country

··s·

store, several food booths, free
cartoons, pumpkin judging contest, and a cake decorating contest.

Sunday
THE RACINE Volunteer
Emergency Squad will sponsor a
ham and turkey dinner on Sunday
at Southern High School. Serving
will be held from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Dinners are $3 for adults ; $2 for
children age six through 12 and $1
for youngsters un~er ~ix. Take
out dinners will be available.
HOMECOMING will • be observed at the Pomeroy First Baptist Church Sunday. DiMer will
be served at noon and a gospel
group from West Virginia will
present music at the afternoon
program which starts at2 p:m.
HOMECOMING will be held at
the Hemlock Grove Christian
Church Sunday. Dinner will be at
p.l)'l. with the afternoon
progral)'l at 2 p.m. The public is
invited to attend.
HOMECOMING at the South
Bethel Church 011 Silver Ridge
will be held Sunday. Sunday
school will begin at9 a.m.; church at 10 a.m. with dinner at noon.

THE

HARMONY SINGERS
will be at the Nease Settlement
Church Sunday for a hymn sing
at 2·p.m. The public Is invited.
A SINGSPIRATION will be
held at the Hysell Run Holiness
Church on Sunday at 7:30 p .m .
with the Joint Heirs as special
sin3ers.

Monday

•

RACINE CHAPTER 134, Order
of the Eastern Star, will hold Its .
regular meellng Monday at 7;30
p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
Dues are payable at tljat time.
111e worthy matron reminds aU
members thai dues mlllt be paid
by Jan. I. Sunday 118,1 been set as
"go to churcll Sundly" at the
Racine Metllodlll awrch.
A .REVJV AL will be held at 7
each evenJna at the Middleport
C2u'dl ol the , . _ Manday
tbrotlfb Sullda,y wllb Jabn Euton
aa nange111L Tile cllireh II
located at Ill Beech St.

.,

Missiqnary will.spe~.,
Miss Evelyn Rupert, milsloaary

The

~airgrounds ·

Poet's
Corner

Of the fonner JO)'S and tcurs

coming year.

Fuutl rs spread upun the Wble,

A.ml they ea t wrth pure deh~ht,

As they W&lt;~k h the smuller children

Tho' attunes there rsso1~ fr rghl , '

lJttlc ones at plllly hlllv~ " andcred
Out of stght from others deur,
But quttc soon lht!y arc !oc&lt;~h.'ll,
And car h vmre 1:; :;wect to heur

Cum~.s !he lim ~ fur seP&lt;J ratm~.
Mill tl 'shard to SHy ~oodbyc,
But they plan to me~ I to~ ether
Same month, ncxtye~:~r, they rep ly.
M&lt;~y God blc.s.s i:l nt.l .s~:~vcca ch member,
Antl protect them by Hts love, '
frl&lt;~y they pl&lt;tn fur that Reumun
In Hts Km~o:dorn there above
There wtll be a ~ real Reunion
In thai land bt-yonu the ~ k y,
l~t u.s rnakc tht.o prcparuttun:;,
Fur the lmll! m11y be qutte m~h .
Thu' l/~ t!atc ha.s nul been )liVen,
It ts knuwn b} God above,
And H(• ~1\'es the mvttallun
Thru Hts sweet n'dccrnln~ lo\'c

On the Resurrertwn mo rnm ~.

Dead m Chrtsl ~hall all a nsc ,
Afkllllset:nd to rneet our Sav iour
On the clouds wtthm thesku!.s
All the Chnsttans who 1:1re livm~
Wt\1 be ehangL'll, and gu to meet
Our dear Sllvtuur, and thtl nwnbl!r
Who will lihare cunununlon sweet
Cum pusl&gt;d .July 29, 1981, by Mn; Riley Ptg utt.
I.on~ Bo\lum, Ohw 45743 MernMs of lhc PtKnll
fmm !y had Lhc1r ftrst reunion July 21, 1981.

I'VE HAD THE BEST OF CARE
J'vt! hi:td the very best of care
Whtle here, both day and ru~o~ ht,
Each one has been so kmd to me
'
Titeir service brmgs deh~hl

My ~ood doctor and dear nurses
Are al l so sweet 11nd ktnd,
And I Hm sure a better place
Would be quite hard to find
My kmdrt•&lt;t, fncnds and nctghbor!l
Have d9ne thetr verybe:d
To g1w tnc help and needed cheer,

T hrou ~ho ut thts time of test.
I h.-ve many pretty flowers,
Rcmmd1ng me of love,
They Wt!rt; givenlly my lo~·t.'ll ones,
Anr.i I thmk of Home abbve

to

Son and da14:htre, Rex an!I Sma,
Went down and broul(h\ mc up'
To the home I love so dear ly, •
Whert! I can ea t and su p.
Food IS brought by many loved ones,
Much more than 1can ~at,
Dear one:; come and do tht! deamn~ .
Toseethern1satreat
.

home.

•

.Astrograph~
October 3, 1981
In the year following your btr·
thday many old proble m s w ill
beg tn to dtssolve a nd fr es h, e~
C1t1ng oc c urr ~ nce s will tak e the tr
pl ace It tsn' t lik ely thi s ' pe n od
wt ll be bonnq or uneventful,
LIBRA I Sept . 2J·Oct. 23) Your
ou t look 1S we ll d1rected today
You know w hen to be senou s a nd
whe n to le t your sense of humor
tak e c harge Wtth th ts balance,
t1 fe tS good to yo u
SCORPIO (Oct 24· Nov . 22~
Material condt ti on s a re ve r y
beneftc ial tod ay, but tht s may not
be rea dily apparent beca us e your
gains might come from a lepst·
expected source
SAGITTARIUS (Noov . 23-0ec.
21) New places and ne w faces appeal to you today, but your most ·
c omfortabl e d ealings will still be
with your old p aIs. Why not com
b.ne the two?
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22 -Jan. 29)
Competittve situations won ' t
shake you up today. You feel
secure in your abtlif tes and you
sense Lacty Luck is up your
slee ve as an ace. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb . 19l
People who may have been tough
to contact are easily accessiblf
tOday . Get in touch with then1 .
You'll f tnd th~m friendly and a c·
co mmod a ting
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)
. It' ll seem like everybody wants fo

'

Sickness ls a time of t~tinK .
And Il lS WI SC and best
To enter Veterans Memorial ,
And find rehef and rest
Wtlh ~ood doctors and kind nur~l'S,
And bles.-;~gs from our Lord,
We fmd rehef and needed cheer,
Whtch Is gre1:1t reward
Compost.'d 1n Au!:(ust and September 19111 qy
Mrs Riley Pt~Otl , Long Bottom Oh10 457f3, itr.st
part while she was tn hosptl&lt;i!, la ~ l pt~rl after she
went

hel p you achieve your pu r poses
today . Eve n when you don't need
ass1stance, there \Mill be someon e
the r e mak1ng your r.oa~'&amp;aSu!r.
ARIES &lt;March 21·A')jt;;..19l
When m_aking ctec1sions today
st and so l1dly for wh at 1S right, no
matter how difficult you ttltnk the
way
will
be .
Lu ck
witt
a utomatu:p lly hop aboard
TAURUS CAprii20·May 20) 'lf's
harvest t1me for the fru1ts of your
labors. If you ftnd the pick ings
excep t1 onafly good tt's because
you r hard work 1S being re war
ded

GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) A
ftg ht a_nd ltve ly gathenng,-fust fo r
fun w1th old pals as we ll as new
ones, wtll turn out super It's just
the e nd of-the -week dtvertron you
need
CANCER (Ju~e 21-July 22l A
family · project that may have
been a "thorn in you r side will
ftnally complete itself today
Wtth t.he end tn sig ht , you won't
eve n mmd the work .
LEO &lt;July 23-Aug. 22) Today 1s
a good t tme to reciprocate for a ny
social obltgahons. You'll be in an
outgo tng , fun mood . Everyone 1n VIted will enjoy himself or her·
self

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221
Dame Fortune is smil ing your
way today . W1th he n nterve nt io n
and your ambitton, you have an
excellent chance to enhance your
secu,-ity
•.

central Africa

since

1•1,

'will

Tbe publlc Is Invited to hear
Monday night presentation.

Page-7

·•

This )iessege and Churcl,. Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This_Page.

.

Miss Rupert 's missionary service
had been Umited to the country ol
Burundi until 1979. That year sbe
went to Rwanda to serve as principal Of the Kibogora Secondary
School and there she taught six
bours of Bible each week In addition
to her respons.iblllties as principal.
In Bw:uflili, Miss Rupert taught
teachers t Kibimba Normal School
with an enrollment of330 during her
last year. Graduates teach in church
related and publlc elementary and
junior high schools across the coun-

Collins

•

•

•

!

First
Southern
revival

The

Apple butter will be made and sold
by the United Methodist Women· of
the· Racine Methodist Church again
this fall .
•
The apple butter will be made Oct.
14 at the home of Bob and Etta Mae
Hill and orders may be placed at 94!12013, 949-2462 or 94!1-2372. The price
will be $2.50 per quart with the container to be provided by the pol-chaser.
·
A friendship quilt has been placed
in frames at the church annex.
Members wil) meet on Monday and
Wednesday ~venings to quilt, and
the quilt wil ~ .¥lld..at.1he..~hurch
bazaar tn December.
•
Proceeds from the various proj..,_
Is will be used by the UMW in furnishing the kitchen of the new church .

992-2196

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Natianwlde,MY.Ca.

Rupert

of Columbus, 0 .
104W. Main '
"2·2311 Pomerav

r

"

.. '

IOONE PLAN

·· rhe Way Amer•ca
SendS l OVC "
99:1· 7039

or 997- S721

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Syracuse

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Save our RC, RC-100, Nehi, Upper. 10, Diet Rite
and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps fllr charity.

1

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ly Prt&gt;s,o; ASSUCI!lllUil Kill! the ·~~~~~~~

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•A ' four -c -olor genealogical chart showln~
family , lines and relationships of Old Testament characters .
•The 38"x25" colorful decorative poster shows
the Messianic Nne with appropriate scripture
references from ADAM and EVE to JESUS.
•Excellent for ministers, seminary students
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Middleport, Ohio

1..

K&amp;C· JEWELERS

11......

(VepeW

•

Fri&lt;/q

212 E. Main Street
992-3785, Pomeroy

511-13

.,,.,..

~FRED, Sunday School at 9:45 a .m.
Mornlnst Worship at 11 a.m. Youth. 6.30
p.m. Sundays . Wednesday Night PrO}'tlr
Meeting, 7 :30p .m.
ST. Pi'UL . (Tuppers Plotns). Sundar
School 9:00 a .m. Morning Worship ot
10:00 o.m. Bible Study, 7:30pm. lues·
day .
SOUTH BETHEL (Sil'ler Ridge): Sunday
Schot...: 9:00a.m. Morning Woship 10:00
a .m. Wodnooday Blblo Study , NO p .m.
tcENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Olt'Jer
Swain, Superintendent, Sunday sc:hool
9:30avery weak.
HOISON CHRISTIAN UNION , Rev .
Keith Eblin. pastor, Sunday School. 9:30
a.m. : Leonard Gilmore, first eld•r;
evening servli;e, 7.30 p.m W.dnetdoy
prayer m. .tlng, 7:30p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
· CHRIST, Duana Worden, minister. Bible
clots, 9 30 o .m ; morning worship, 10:30
o .m. ; eveniOQ worthtp, 6:30 p.m.
Wednetdoy Bible study, 6 :30p .m.
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
Church, Sundar School seNite, 9·.CS
a .m ; Wonhlp service,
10· 30;
Evangelistic Service, 7:30 p .m Weclnetdoy ,frav-r mHtlng , 7 :30.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy·
Harrisonville Rd .: Rolwrt Purtell . pastor:
Bill Mc:Eiroy. Sunday tchoolsupt. Sunday
school, 9 :30a.m .: moming worship and
communion, 10:30 a.m .. Sunday worship
service, 7 p.m. Wednetclay evenmg
prqyer m..ting and Bible atucty, 7 p.m .
ST. JOMN LUTHERAN CMURCH , Pine
Grove. The Rev, William Middletworth,
Pottor. Church 1ervic" 9 :30 a.m . Sun·
· day School10:30 a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH Of CHRIST, Jorry
Pfhgley , pastor., Sunday school, 9:30
a .m. : morning worship , 10:30 o.m .
Wednesday evening service , 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAP'fiST. Rev. Earl Shuler,
pottor. Sunday tthool9 .30 a ,m ,; Church
Ser'&lt;ltCe, 7 • p.m.,. )'OUt,h m . .ting , 6
p.m.Tuesday Bible Study , 7 p.m .
RACINE CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE.
Rev John A Coffman , pastor. Martha
Wolle, Choirmon of the Boord of Chris·
tlon Life. Sunday School , 9:30a.m.; mor·
ning wonhlp, 10:30; Sunday evening
wonhip, 7:30 p.m Prayer mHting.
Wodno•day. 7·30 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Don L. Walker,
Pastor, Robart Smith. Sunday school
supt.; Sunday school, 9:30a.m.; morning
worthlp. 10:40 a.m .: Sunday evening
worship, 7:30; Wednesday evening Bible ,
study, 7:30.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rov. R. D.
Brown. pcntor. Sunday School, 9 :30
a.m., morning worship 10... 5; youth ser·
vice, 6:.f5 p.m.; evening wo,..hlp, 7:30
p.m.; prayer and praise, Wednesday,
7:30p.m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Aev . Morvin Markin , postor; Steve LIHie Sunday
school tupt. Sunday sc:hool , 10 a .m. ;

:

morntng worship. 11 a .m. Sunday evitning worship 7:30. Prayer meeting and
Bible study. Thursday , 7:30p .m .. youth
servke, 6 p .m. Sunday.
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH . 383
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport.Sunday·S,hool ,
10:00 a.m. Sun~' Tues . E"&lt;~ening Services
7:30 p .m . Friday Prayer MHtlng 7:30
,p.m.' ,
LIBERTY Christian Church, " liberty
Ave.. Pomeroy Sunday School 10 O.f!! ;
Worship 7:30. Wednesday Se,...tce 7:30
p.m.

CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD , Rev. R E.
Robinson , pastor. Sunday school , 9·30
a .m.; worship ser'llce , 11 om .: evening
servit&amp;. 7 ·00; youth service, Wednesday, 7:00p .m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Robert E. Musser . pastor~ Sundoy school,
9:30a .m.: Paul Musser , tupt .; morning
worship , 10.30, Sunday •venlng service,
7:00; mid- week service , Wednetdoy, 1
p.m.
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE, Rev. James B. Kittle , pastor;
Norman Presley , Sunday School
Superintendent. , Sunday school 9:30
o.m., morning worshtp, 10·"5 a .m.;
.evongeltstic se,...lce, 1 p.m Prayer and
Praise Wednesday , 7 p .m .; youth
m"ting, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNI!ED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
Elden R. Bloke, pastor. Sunday SchooiiO
o.m.; Robert Reed , supt.: Morning aer·
mon, 11 a .m.; Su~;tday night ttrvlc•s
ChriStian Endeavor: 7:30p. m.; Song ••r·
vtc:e. 8 p.m : Preaching 8:30 p.m.
Midweek Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
p m.; Alvin Reed, lay I-ader,
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, Located ol
Rutland O'n New Lima Road, next to
forest Acre Park , Rev. Ray Rouse,
pastor. Robert Musser, Sunday School
supt. Sunday school , 10:30 a .m ., worship
7:30 p .m.Bible Study, Wednesday , 7:30
p.m. ; Saturday night prayer servke, 7.30
p .m .

,

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , Roger
Watson , pastor; Mildrltd Ziegler, Sunday
schoql.supt. Morning worship, 9 ·30 o .m.;
Sunday school , 10:30a .m.; evening ser·
"&lt;~ice . 7.30.
MT. UNION BAPTIST. Rev. Tom
Dooley: Joe Sayre , Sunday School
Superlntanent.. Sunday school. 9:45
a .m ; e"ening worship, 7:30p.m . Prayer
meeting , 7·30 p .m. Wednesday .
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST.
VIncent C. Waters , Ill , minister; Herman
Slack. superintendent. Sunday School
~ :30 a .fn. : e"&lt;~ening serv ice, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible Study , 7 p .m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
Rev Herbar1 Gr-ate, pastor. Fronk R1ffle ,
supt. Sunday School. 9.30 o.m . Worship
service, 11 a .m . and 7:30 p.m. Prayer
muting, Wednesday , 7:30p.m .
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH , ~ev. Ro.bert Miller. pastor;

Sermonette
A few montha ago. I and a group of grade-school children went to
Huntington, West Virginia, on a Friday night to tape a religious
television pJ'GIII'IUil 10 be broadcast the following Sunday morning.
During the taping
the young people sang several songs and I
preached a regular llei'1DOit We left with a real feeling of exhlllratloo!
Alter the airing ol the program on television, one of the young people
wbo applll'ld wllb me anlt made a comment that r have thought 81ot
about ever aiDce, Sbe laid that while they were slngil!t, the televillon
camera took a claee-up llhot of each of the singers. "And we didn't
1mow they were
that," sbe conunente&lt;l. Tbe cameraman alao
pictured the lddl wltb their heada bowed duril\11 the opening prayer on
the Jli'OII'II1I, IICII1IIItlllq that they alao didn't knOw wu happening at
the time. One of themuld, "I am sJad I didn't open my eyes."

-'on.

John w. lloulllat

JO/IPA, Wanhlp 9:00 a .m. Church

Sdlaal IO:OOa.111.

c10tnc

J

I . I,

McCoy's Auction

SVRACUSE FIRST CHURCH Of GOD - •
Not Pentecostai. .. Re" George Oiler,
pastor. Worshtp service Sunday , 9:45
o.m.; Sunday scl-lool, 11 om.: worship
servt(&amp;, 7:30 p.ni. Thursday prayer
meeting , 7:30p.m.
MT HERMON United Brethren In
Christ Church. Rev. Robert Sanders.
Lloyd Wrtght, Direc:tor of Chrisflon
pastor : Don Will. lay leader. Located in
Education Sunday School, 9:30 0 , m.;
Texas Community off CR 82. Sunday '
Morning Worship, 10 30 a . m ., Choir
school, 9:30a.m.; Morning worship ser·
Practice Sunday , 6·30 p . m ; Eventng
vice , 10 45 o.m ; e'tlenlhtf preaching ser· Worship, 7:30 p.m. Wednesdoy. Prayer
vice second ond fourth Sundays, 7.30
cmd Bible Study 7 30 p m
p.m. : Chrlstton Endeavor, ftrst and third
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST , Chorle 16
Sundays , 7 30 p.m . Wednesday proy•r
Russell , Sr ., minister : R.ck Matomber,
meet ing ond Sible study, 7·30 p.m
supt. Sunday school. 9:30a.m.; word·11 p
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 37319 Slate
service, 10:30o.m.BibleStudy, Tuesday ,
Route 124 (One rrHie east of Rut land).
7 30 p.m .
Sunday. Btble lec:ture 9 30 a . m .. Wat· '
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
chtower study, 10:20 o . m .: Tuesday, Bi· ,
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS,
ble study, 7 3Q p.m : Thursday,
Portland Rocme Rood. William Roush ,
Theocrattc St hool, 7:30 p .m : Serv1ca
pas lor Phyllts Stobort, Sunday School
Meeting, 8·20 p.m
Supt Sunday Sthool, 9 30 a .m .: Morning
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church worship, 10·30 a m ; Sunday evening
Salem St. Rutland . Donald Korr , Sr.
seNice 7 p.m. ~dnesdoy evening
pastor, Bud Stewart, superintendent .
proyerservices, 7·30 m.
Sunday SchooL 10 a .m .; evening wor ·
BETHLEHEM BAPTIS , Ra\1 ~arl Shuler,
sh•p. 7.30 p.m. Wednesday evening ser·
pastor. Worship service , 9 :30 o,m Su nvice , 1 30 p.m.
day 1chool 10:30 a.m. Bible Study and
CHURCt-lOFGODoiProphacy, located '
prayer seNice.Thursdoy. 7 :30 p m.
on the 0 . J. Whtte Road oft highway 160.
CARLETO~CHURCH , Ktngsbury Rood .
Sunday Stl'lool 10 a.m . Superintendent
Gory Ktng , pa1tor. Sunday school. ~ · 30
Jo~n Loveday F1rst Wednesday ntght of
o m., Rolph Ca rl, superintendant ; e"&lt;~en·
month CPMA services , second Wednet·
mg worship , 7:30 p .m. Prayer meeting ,
day WM8 meettng . third through flhh
Wednesday, 7:30 p m.
---youth servtce George Croyle. p'astor
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN. Tam
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Gront- :
Rtcha~on . pastor; Wallace Damewood ,
St .. ,Midd le port; Sunday School. 10 o m ;
Sundoy School Suptmntendent Worsh ip
mornmg worship 11 a IJ'· evening wor- '
servtca at 9 a m B1ble School1 0 a.m.
ship, 1 p', m. Wvdnesdo, evening Bible .
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH, Rev .
study and prayer meeHng, 7 p. m. AfTheton Durham , pastor . Sunday Sthool
IIl Ja ted wtth Southern Baptist Conven· .
at 9:30 a.m .. Morning worship at 100:JO
tlon.
a . m. Thursday services at 7:30 p m
BRADFORD CHURCH Of CHRISTFREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bold
Ricky Grlbert, pastor : Steve P1t kens ,
Knob, located on County Rood 31. Rev . 1 superintendent. Sunday School 9.30 o .
lawrence Glueseocamp , p1ntor. Rev
m ; Church Ser"&lt;~ices, 10·30 o.m .
Roger Willfoossislont pastor . Preoc:h lng
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER
ser"ices, Sunday 7:30 p.m .. proyer
George"s Creek Rood. Rev C. J Lemley ,
meettng, Wednesday , 7 30 p .m., Gary
pastor: John Failure . superintendent
Grtffith leadeYouth groups, Sunday
Church school, 9·30 am., morning wor·
eveing , 6 30 p.m. wtth Roger and Violet
_ship, 10:30: evening seNice. 7 p.m. Sible
Willford os leaders . Communion lirStudy Thurs., 7 p .m. Clones for all oges
'/Ices first Sunday each month
Nursery provided for '(o/Orshlp servltes.
WHITE 'S CHAPEL, Coolville RO Re'&lt;l.
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH , Corner
Ray Deeter. pastbr. Sunday school .9 -:)0
of Sycamore and Second Sts .. Pomeroy
a.m., worshtp seNice 10 ·30 a m. Blble
The Rev. William Middleswartn. Pastor.
study and prayer service , Wednesday
Sunday School ot 9:"5 a.m. and Church
730p .m.
·
S&amp;rvices 11om.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST . Eugene
SACRED HEART, Rev Father Paul 0 .
Underwood, pastor, Herb Elliott , Sunday
Welton pastor Phone 992-2825. Sotursthool supt. Sunday school. 9:30 a .m.;
day eventng Moss, 7·30; Sunday Moss , 8
morning Worsh1p and comunion , 10:30
and 10 a.m., CofJfesston , Saturday '
om.
7-730pm.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd St ,
Amos Tillis , pastor, Conny Tillis, SundaY
Middleport. Jomes E. Keesee, poster . '
Sthool Supt. Sunday School , 9 30 a .m.:
Sunday morning worsl·up. 10 am.; even .
followed by morntng worship. Sunday
' lng service, 7 Wednesday e"&lt;~ening wor·,
8\/ening ser'&lt;ltce , 7:00 p.m. Prayer
ship, 7 p m.; Visttation, Thursday , b:30
meettng, Wednesday, 7:00p .m.
p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH
OF
THE
TRINITY Chmt ion Assembly, Coolvtlle
NAZARENE, Rev. Lloyd 0 . Grimm , Jr .,
- Gilbert Spencer, pastor Sunday
pastor Sundov sc:hool , 9 30 a .m .. wor "hool. 9.30 a.m.: mornmg worship , 11
ship servke , 10:30 om. Broadcast live
om. Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m ;
over WMPO ; young people's se;vlce. 7
m1d"Pek prayer service Wednesday ,
p.m. Evangelistic S&amp;Nice , 7:30 p.m
1 30 p. m.
Wednesday seNk&amp;. 7•00 p .m
.
MOUNT Olive Community Church ,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner of
lawrence Bush , pastor; Ma x Folmer, Sr.
second and APastor Frank Lowther Sun-'
Supertntendent. Sunday School and mor·
day school, 9 45 a.m.. worship service,
ntng _worship, 9:30 o.m Sunday evening
II a .m . and 7 30 p.m. Weekly Bible
servtte, 7 p .'m Youth meetmg and Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
stuOy Wednesday , 7 p.m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST . Miller
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on ~
St., Mason, W Vo. Eugene L. Conger,
Pomeroybypon Rav. Robert Smith, Sr .,
mlntster. Sundoy Bible Study 10 a.m.;
pastor; Rev . James Cundiff, oss lstont
Worship 11 a .m. and 1 p.m. Wednesday
past!r. Sunday School. 9:30 o.m : morn .
Blble Study, vocal.mutic, 7 p. m .
ing worship. 10:30 a . m.; evening war LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - 12 North
sh•p. 7 .30. Women 's Fellowship ,
Tturd St .. Chest)jre Independent , funTuesdays, 10 o . m ., Wednesday night
domental services. Sunday evening 7.30
proyer nrvice, 1 30 p.m .
p m. Pastor Aev . Or . Robert Persons
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Mason , meet
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO, Dudding
ot United Steel Workers Union Hall , ,
Lane , Mason. W. Vo . Rev Ronn 1e 8.
Ra 1lroad Street, Mason. Pastor. Dr.
Rosa . Pastor Sunday School 9·45 a .m .
Jomes OeBrukl Morning worship 9:30 ·
Morning Worsh ip 1 I a.m. Evening Ser.
om .. Sunday School 10.30 a. m. Evening
vice 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Women 's
Service , 1 p m Prayer m"tlng Wednes Ministries 9 o,m. (meetin'g and prayer.
d'ay , 7 30 P m Mtd· Week B•ble Study ,
Prayer and Bible Study 7 p.m .
Ttlursdov , 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
FOREST RUN BAPTIST _ Rev. Nyle '
CHRISTIAN UNION ,. The Rev . WJIIIom
Borden, po stor. Cornelius Bonch
Campbell, pastor . Sunday School. 9:30
superintendent Sunday school ~ -30
o_. m.; James Hughes, tupt. , evening sera.m.: second and fourth Sunday~ w~rVIC._ 7.30 p.m . Wednesday evening
ship service at 2 30 p.m
·
proy~meetlng, 7·30 P m. Youttt prayer
MT . MORIAH BAPTIST - F rth
d
service .ach Tuesday.
M010
. St M'ddi
ou . on
1
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH L
"
eport . Rev. Calvm Min·
. etort , W ,
nls , pastor. Mrs . Elvin Bumgardn&amp;r
Va , At. I , Mark Irwin , pasfor Worship
supt Sunda.; school 9 30 am .
h.' ·
· , 930
·
'
· ·
. , wors tp
servtces
· a.m .; sundoy It hoo,l 11
service,
J0 .45o.m.
a.m., &amp;'Jenlng worship. 7:30 p.m TuesNORTH BETHEL United Methodist
day c:ottage prayer m"tln,SJ and Bible
Church Rev. Chorles Domigon po t
study. 9:30 a.m. Worship service,
Sunda•' School 9 30 a
. w ·h. '
Wed
sda 7-30
,
• ·
.m.. ors 1p 5erC:.L~AR'v aiBLtC~i.JRCH , now located ~ v~ce , 10 ~5 am., Sunday Bible St~dy,
"' R d 25
7 00 P m , Wednesday prayer meehng.
on Pomeroy Plk e , Coun.,
oo
, near
7:30p .m.
"BURLINGHAM ~soUTHERN BAPTIST
F!otwoodt. Re'&lt;l. Blockwaod , pastor. S.r.
v1ce1 on Sunday at 10:30 a .m . and 7:30
CHURCH Route 1 Shade p f 0
.op.m. with Sundo! school. 9 :30a.m . Bible
Block. Affiliated ~•th Sou.th.C:~ ~aptfs~
study, Wednesday. 7:30p.m .
Con'&lt;lention . Sunday sch 001 1·30
.•
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH ,
Sunday wocshlp ·2·30
. . .Th
1~ .. - Peorl St_.,, Middleport . Rev .
eveninG Bible study. ?p .,.!,' m.
urs or
ODell ~nley, pastor; Sunday school ,
PENT~OSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine , ·.'
9 .30 a .m ., Morning wonhlp 10:30 a.m .;
Route12... Wtlllom Hoback , po 1 tor . Sun. ·, ,
e\lanli'!O worship, 7:30 p.m, Tvetday,
.u... 1 chaal 10om . s nday
1
•·30
p
m
Women
'
I
uvr
·
· ., u
e'ten ng tar 1"'·
. .
I prayer m. .t ng;
'&lt;lice 6·30 p m Wed
day
·
Prayer~ praise Mrvlce, Wednesday ,
vice. 7.
· ·
n"
"nmg ser.
7•30p m
·
'
. RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
CARPENTER BAPTIST . Rov . frHiand .
JESUS C.MRIST Eld..-- Mlllor Blbl
Narril, paslor . Don Choodlo, Supt. Sun study, w~. 7 :30 p.m .; Sun.._~
School, 9:30a .m . Morning Wonhip ,
Schaal . 10 aa .m.
!unday I ht
_,
10.30 o.m. Pray&amp;r S.Nice, alternate
.m.
n g ..Nice,
Sundays
.,

•

'

•

P·:r·

OWSI&amp;, Wo;thlp 9 a.m .. Church
ScNal 10 • ·"'· Chair iloiiM&lt;ool 7 p.m ..
TllurMop.lllllle Study, Thundop.
7:30p.M,
LONG 101.10111. Sundoor Sdlaal ot9:30
o.m. -..ria -.hlp et 7:30 p .m.
~ . . . . ~7:30,. 111.
~II
SdiDal 9:30a.m.
Moo ••• Wonhlp 1 .30 •·"'· ht6lno
Worohp 7:30 p.111. 11~1, · r1udy
WtdludlfJIOI7:30 P· ~·
..,L-------------------~--------'

t

GrocenesGeneral MerchAndt se
Ractne 949 -7550

°'·

Thla opertence lllllllrates to me the Uilknowlng effect of one'slnOuence. How often do you ftnd yourself watchlng, someone cloeely
without their belntlaware Of It? Have you ever thought that oomeone
mfghl bewatchln8 you with 8 "c!OIIeollp" camera?
Proverba 20: llllates, "Even a child makol himself known by hill
acl8, whether wbM he does Is pun aad rflhl."
jl:adl o1 ue hal 8 unique clrde o1 Influence. Therefore, J111111
&lt;llrilt CCJITIIIIIIIdll us to "Let your ll8ht .. shine bef"\1' men, that they
may - your good works 8ft~! give glory to your tatber lirho II In
l)eaven." (Matlbawl:l8).

stldnJDhnlon

'

3

"

.,. " For A Real Auction
Call the Re al McCoy"
I. 0. " Mac" McCoy
Rt. 1, Reedsville, Oh.
985·3944

.,,.,.,

~~·-

Duano S,doowtrlckor, Sr.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

""'-~

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Middleport·
Pomeroy , 0 .

• II Cllronidn
llflJO..)J

Fettowih~~~-m,
Rov. lllchanl w. Thamao

Kings of Judah
•Kings of Israel
•Judges who ruled before the Kings·
•more than 1100 names with scripture
references.

Phone 992-3480

-•'

IS 1-&lt;l

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY , Rev. Wando Johnson,
director; Harold Johnson , director of
education .
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN . Worship S.Nice, 9 am.; Churc:h Xhool.
Alice Nease.
lO&lt;Wla . m.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
MIDDLEPORT, Church School. 9:00
NAZARENE: Corner Union and Mulberry,
a.m. , Morning worship, 10:15.
Rev . Clyde V. Hendenon , postor. SunSYRACUSE 'l. FIRST
UNITED
cloy school, 9:30 a.m ., Glen McClung,
PRESBYTERfAN Church. Church School.
supt.; morning wonhlp, 10:30 o.m.;
10:15o. m.:Worthip, 11 :30o . m.
av•dng service, 7:30; rhld-week serRUTLANO CHURCH Of GOD, Randall
vice, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Bailey. pastor. SundaY school, 10 a.m.,
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday Nrvlces ot Svndoy worship, 11 o .m.; Children's
church. 11 a.m. , Sunday e'lenlng sar·
10:30 a.m , Holy Communion on the first
vice, 7:30 p.m. , Wednesday evening
Sunday of each month , oncJ combln-.:1
young ladl" auxiliary, 6 p.m. Wednes·
with morning prayet on the third Sunday family wOrship, 7:00p.m.
day. Morning prayer ond Nrmon on all
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
other Sundays of theo month. Church
Long Bottom, Edsel Har1 , pastor Sunday
'' School and nunery core provided. Cof·
school. 10 a .m .; Church, 7:30 p.m .;
fH houf In the Porlsh Hall lmmedlotaty
proyerme.ting, 7 30p m . Thursday.
followi"irl the service.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST, Co•. POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W.
ner Ash and Plum ; Rolph Butcher,
Main St. Neil l'roudfoot, pastor, Bible
pastor. Saturday evening seNice, 7:30 1
~. 9:30 o ,m, ; morning wonhlp.
p .m ; Sundoy School , 10 a.m . Sunday
10:30 a .m.! Youth m..tlngs, 6:30 p .m.;
Worship S.Nic.e, 11 o .m.: Bible Study
evening worship, 7 :30. Wednetday night
prayer m"tlng and Bible studY, 7:30 Wed , 7:30 ' p.m. , Noel Herrmann.
teacher.
p.m.
MEIGS
THE SALVATfON ARMY, 115 Bullernut
COOPlRATIVE PAR&lt;SH
A"&lt;~e., Pomeroy. Envoy and Mrt. Roy Wln· .,'
METHODIST CHURCH
lng;, officers In c~ Sllftclay·hOIIneu
Rev. Robart MeG. ., interim director
m--'lng, 10 a.m.; Sunday Schaal, 10:30
POMEROY CLUSTER
q.rn. Sunday •chooll-. YPSM, Elal•o
Rev. Rober1 McGH
Adams. 7:30 p.m. , tol\latlon m"tlng,
POMEROY, Sunday School 9 :15 a .m.
various tptakers and music specials.
Worship service 10:30 a .m. Choir
thursclay-10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Ladles
reheonol , Wedn. .day , 7 p.m . Rev.
Hon\e league, all women Invited; 7:30
Robar1McGM. pastor.
p_. m. prayer m-tlng and Bible study.
ENTERPRISE, WorshiP' 9 o.m. cnurch
Rev. NoafHarman, teacher.
School 10 a m. Richard Rothemlch,
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN • BAPTIST
pastor. ·
CHAPEL, Route 1, Shade. Bible school, 7
ROCK SPRINGS, Sunday School 9:15 o.
p.m. Thunday: wonhlp service, 8 p.m.
m. Worship Mrvlce, 10 a. m. , Rlthard
· POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH Of
Aothamlch, pastor.
CHRIST, 2001W.. Main St.. 992-5235. Vocal
FLATWOOOS, Church School 10 o . m.
'fiUslc .. Svnday wonhip, 10 a.m .; Bible
Worthip II a.m. , Rlchord Rothemlch,
study, 11 a 1m., wonhlp, 6 p.m . Wadnw·
pastor.
d9Y llble otudy, 7 p.m.
MIDDLE~ORT CLUSTER
' OLD DEXTER . BilLE CHRISTIAN
HEATH, Church Sc:hool9:30 o.m , WorO,URCH, Rav.ROiph Smith, pastor. Sun·
ship 10:30 a.m. UMYF 6 p.m. Robert
school. 9.30 a .m., Mn. Worley
Robinson, Pastor.
F..r:anclt, suparintenct.nt. Praoching ser·
RUTLAND , Chur&lt;h School 9:30 a .m.
vj!Milrstl ll1lrd Sunda,olallawlng SunWorship 10:30a.m. Robeh Rider, pastor.
ClOy School.
SALEM CENTER, Wonhlp 9 a.m.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Church School fl:.f5 a .m. Robert Alder,
pr.ochlngf9:30 a .m. , fint and second
pastor.
Sundoyt of each month, third and fourth
PEARl CHAPEL, Sunday School 9·30
jundayt each month, worship service ol
a.m. Worthip 7:30p .m.
7:30 p.m. Wednesday evenings at 7:30.
SNOWVILLE, Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Pray..- and llblo Study.
Worship 11 :00 a .m.
·
SEV£NTH·DAY ADVENTIST, Mulberry
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Kolghll Road. PamO&lt;ay. P01tar, Albert
Rev. Stanley Merrlflad, Minister
J)tttfl; Sabbath School Superintendent,
FOREST RUN: Worthp 9 a .m Churth
·IIIIo Whlto. Sobbalf1 Schaal , SatuO'day
Schooi10.a.m
qfMt noon ot 2:00, with Wanhlp Service
MINERSVILLE, Church School 9 a .m.
lqllowlngat3: 15.
Worship 10 a .m.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHASBURV: Church School 9:50 a.m.
$fster Harr,.tt Warner, Supt. Sunday
Worship 11 a.m. Bible Study 7:30p.m.
School, 9:30 o.m.; morning wonhlp,
Thunday. UMW fist Tuetdor,
SOUTHERN CLUsTER
FIRST BAPTIST. David
Rev, Jomes Clark
Mann, minister; William Wotton, Sunday
Rev. Mark Flynn
~l 1up1. Su')Ciay ochool, 9:30 o.m.:
Rev . Florine• Smith
mornlngwonhlll 10:30a.m.
Rev. Carl Hicks
FlRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 282
BETHANY, (Dorcat), Worship 9.00
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Rev. William
a.m. Church School 10:00 o.m . Bible
R;. Newman, paator; Henhel McClure,
study. ht. 2nd , 3rd and 5th Tuesdays
Sunday school superintendant. Sunday
7:15p.m. : youth fellowship, 2nd and .. th
echoctl, 9:30 ' a .m .; morning worship,
Tundoys . 6:00p.m.
r1D;30; eVening worship, 7.30 p.m.
CARMEL and SUTTON (War1hlp , Sun·
Midweek prayer aervice, 7:30p.m. ·
dcJy School ond molt other e"&lt;~anlt held
· MIDWAY COMMUNIN CHURCH. Dox't&lt; lid., lid.. Laoeovlllo, aov. A. A. jointly.) Sunday School 9:o5 and Warohlp
11 :00 at 5jltton flrot and 111lrd Sundayo
Hughft, Paotar. Sundav School 10 a .m.
Gnd ol Carmel sec:ond and fourth Sun·
· Sorvkot on Tuetday, Thul'lday and Sunday•. llblo Study 1ocond, fourth and
do¥, 7:30p.m.
"' '
fifth lhul'lday• . 7:15p.m. Family Night
~AITH TAIIERNACLE CHURCH , Balloy
Fellowship Dinner third Thursday, 6:30
J"Aun Rood, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor .
p.m .
· tfandiO'f Dunn, 1upt. Sunday ochool , 10
APPLE GROVE, Sunday School 9:30
a
.M,
Sunday
evening
tervke
7:30p
Bible
1
a.m. Worship 7:30 p.m . ht and 3rd Sun·
IMchlng, 7:30p.m. Thurtday.
days: Prayer m"tlng Wednasday 7:30
. MIDDlEI'OtiT CHURCH oF CHRIST IN
p .m. FelloWihlp tupper flnt Saturday 6
CHIIISTIAN UNION, Law,_o ManlO'f,
p.m
. UMW 2nd Tuetday 7:30p.m .
ptor; Mrs. Rustell Young-; Sunday
EAST LETART. Chwch School 9 a.m.
ldlaol Supt. Sunday School 9::10 a.m.
bwol'l(l Wonhlp. 7::10, Wodnooday · Worship ...-vice 10 a.m. Prayer meeting
7:30 p.m. W-.lay. UMW -and
ptppo&lt; mH!lng, 7:30p.m.
.
Tunclay7:30p.m.
MT: MORIAH CJ!URCH Of GOD •
IIAC(NE WESI.EYAN - Sunday ochaal
laclne ..-v. Jamel Satterfield. pastor.
IOa.m.; worship, 11 a.m. Cholrproctlce,
flo\eoulne worwhlp. 9':45 a.m.; Sunday
n.u....-..ap.m.
Kllaal. 10:45
.... - " ' · 7.
LET~ FAU5- Wonhlp IO&lt;ylco 9
~-vi?"' a.m. Churd1Schooi10o.m.
~ STAR. Wonhlp 9 ·30 a .m.:
Cam..ChurdoSchaoll0:30a.m.
M01111 CHAPEL, Church Schaal 9:30
a .m. WOrship 11 a.m.
POIITLANII, Sunday Sdlaal 6:30p.m.,
e-Ing Wonhlp, 7:30 p.m . Youth

,_,;

tA! '

MARK VSTORE ~·
Middleport J?".~

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

T""""•

.EN
RANKUN•

J.D-~E~OY

\

'I

·-..

RALl'S

m

Ohio.

Subsl'rtbt!f'!ol nut
may ~IIIII lll l:ldVI!IIC~
Sentmd on a 3, 6 or 12 month
Will be I(IV CII Cllrrtt!r t'I;I.Ch lllOOlh

In a world SQI"ely troublt.od by tht: divi·
sions of me n, c~ensh this SIICT'ed e•p res~on uf the unity Cod mspire5.

88 J.ll

Pubh:.hed ev l! r~ Mflernooo, MunWty Ulruugh
Fndlty, lll Court Slreet, by the Ohto Ywlley
Publi!shml( Comp.~ ny • Multimed111, Inc.,
Puuueruy, Ohio 45769, 1192-2156 Second ch11u

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Car rier or Mutor RDUlt
One week . .
OncMonth .
. ... ......... .. .
One Year
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SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally

• I Petn
2,18-!l.'i

~·.W.v

•

Eallnor
Carry Out
Phone 992-6304
126 E .' Ma in
Pomeroy

TltiNITY CHURCH, Rev . W , H. Perrtn,
~stor; Otbbie Buck, 5\lnday school
sUpt. Church School, 9:15a.m ., wontliF.
service, 10:30 o.m. Choir reheorso .
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . under dlr~tlon of

!USPS lt5-MGt

Pnm~ruy,

40.1-4

Evervwhere on World Commumon
Sunday the Chnshans of our own hme
wtll be remembe nng hi! wonh . cele·
brahng Hol y Commun ion

S.tvn/oy

y Sentinel

JNUd at

MIU.

Mill Work ~
Cab1net Mak,ng

A Dtvl•lon of Multfmedll. Int.

postal( ~

Pomeroy
992·66SS

'

lllc

"""""Cownty

S•vlnp &amp; L0o1n

' 216 e. M1in

.,.,_
"'...,.•

~ll

t.o.1Co.

Ft~•"'lflv

PIZZA SHACK

11'&lt;:. ,

Dinlnd Savi~ &amp;

'

~

~

461 S. Th1rd, Middleport

~a~~:~ tota::ati~?bl~u:"J

music ; served as mission secretary;
mission and conference auditor and
treasurer for the Burundi Literature
Council. A new edition of her Kirondo cookbook has been printed and
she has also edited a language text
a nd a teacher's manual. Earlier
Miss Rupert served as principal of a
primary
school, a girls' Jiome
Michael R . Collins, Churclreconomics
school and a normal
'Development Division Director for
school.
She
graduated
from Clarion
the State Convention of Baptists in
State
College
in
Pennsylvania
and
Ohio, wlll be preaching revival, Oct.
did
graduate
work
at
Seattle
Pacific
H1, at the First Southern Baptist
University.
Church, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Special music will begin at 7 p.m.
nightly and preaching services will
begin at 7:30p.m .
Rev. Collins was previously state
Sunday School School Director and
is a well-known speaker throughout
Ohio. He has also served in Texas,
Florida, and TeMessee.
The public is invited to come and
share in the music, fellowship, and
preaching. Interpretation for the
deaf will be provided. For further information call Rev. Newman at 9923426.

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Pat Hill Ford, Int.

try.

The Genealo&amp;J Of
.JESUS CHRIST

/

..

on

her

Methodist Church at 7:30p.m. Monday.

NOW A VAI&amp;.ABI.E

"MILL ST.

~--,;)

speak. at the Laurel CUff Free

Church plaris
butter sale

C&lt;ird and letters com~ tocher me,
They l'lelp make bn~ ht thetlH),
And I feel my debt 111 greater
T1111 n 1can ever pay.
I'm now al home. and rnut•h ~lter
F'rom ailments I ha'lt! had,
And I always Wi ll remembt&gt;r
F.d:!Ch one whn make~ me ~lad .

.

The Daily sentinei-

;II

""'ealdnc

Bike-A-Thon at
A bike-a-thon, " Wheels for Ufe",
with proceedS ttl go to the St. Jude's
Research Hospital founded by entertainer DaMy Thomas, has been
planned by the RuUand fund drive
chainnan, Mrs. Melva Eblin.
The bike-a-thon will be held on
Oct. 17 at 10 a.m. at the Me igs Coun-

Friday, October 2, 1981

Voice of Prop!Jecy
will be subject

Boosters will hold work session

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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do!

7

'~y WESI.EYAN HOLINESS Horrltor"lvllleo Rood: Earl Fields poltor ·
Henry Eblin, Jr., Sunday k~l Su , ·
Sunday Sc:hool9:30 a . m.; Morning w:r:
ship 11 a. m.; Sunday evening Mf"tice,
7:30 .m .; ProyerMMting, Thunday 7·30 •
p .m.
' ·

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSYAL , Th;,d
Ave., the Rev Clark Bdker , pastor . Carl
NoHinghom , Sunday School Supt. Sun.
day Schaal lO 0 m . - clattet lor oil
ages: ~venlng services, 7:30: Bible
Study, 7.30 P m. Wadnesdoy :·youth ter.
vtc... 7:30p.m. Friday.

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Pag-1-The Dally Sentinel

Meigs
Property
Transfers

&lt;
I

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Nellie Myers, Andrew Myers to
Leading Creek Conservaocy 'Dist.,
Easement, Salem.
R. Gene Brasel, Ellen L. Brasel to
Leading Creek Conservancy Dist.,
Ease., Rutland.
Chflord Murray to Lucille
Murray, Lot 400, Pomeroy.
Estil Johnson, Reva Johnson to
Estil Johnson, Reva Johnson, Parcels, Salem.
'
Clifford L. Adams, Juditl], D10ne
Adartis to Gladys Dillon, !.Ill acres,
Olive.
Eddie A. Hupp, Sharon E. Hupp,
Arnold J . Hupp, Iona v. Hupp to
Dav1d Edward Ball, Rebecca Sue
Ball, I acre, Lebanon.
Davtd Eynon, Dec'd., Emma
Eynon, Dec'd. to Syracl&amp;e-Racme
"Reg10nal Sewer Dis!., Syracuse.
GladyS Tuckennan, Affldavtt,
SaliSbury.
Charles Stotts, Terry Lynne Stotts
to Alfred M. Conard, Sally Ann
Conard, 3.3 acre&amp;, Bedford.
Mary Nesselroad to Bnan D.
Hamilton, Gem Ann tfamiltoo, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Eddie A. Hupp, Sharon E. Hupp,
Arnold Hupp, Iona V. Hupp to
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co., Ease., Lellanon.
Rocky R. Hupp aka Rocky Ray
Hupp, Carol Hupp aka Carol June
Hupp to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., Ease., Lebanon.
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. to William S. Cole, Release
of Ease:; Orange
Dale Rockhold, Diane Rockhold to

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tom J. Reed, 0111!-d~hth JICre, Olive.
James P . Lambert, Wanda J.
Lambert to Kramer Exploration Co.
and Delta Reaourcea, Meter Site
Agree., Salisbury.

John- E. Werry, Margaret J.
Werry to Murphy Oil Co., Right of
Way, Bedford.
,
Mark Werry, Sharon Werry to
Murphy Oil €o., Right of Way, Bedford.

James J . Smith, Wilma R. Smith
to Lee Cameron Smith, Kathryn
Jane Smith, 5.02 acres, Lel!anon.
Lorena A. Frecker to Columbus
and Southern Ohio Elec. Co., Ease.,
Orange.

First Fed. SaVIngs and Loan to
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elec.
Co., Ease., Orange.
Johil T. Smith to Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co., Ease.,
Orange.
Richard B. Hsyman, V~rginia
Hayman to Monongahela Power Co.,
l:ase., Olive.
David T. Decker, Glotla C. Decker
to Blauser Energy Corp., Ease.,
Olb{e.

Nine Right of Way, Carl E. Srruth,
Inc., Pomeroy.
Neva R. Nicholson to B1Uy L
Williamson, Janet Williamson, .28
acre, Rutland.

Gladys Sigler to Jesse MorriS,
Dorothy Moms, Parcel, Middleport
Walter V. Swett, Jeao H. Swett to
Tony Udvardy, Beulah Udvardy, 1
acre, Columb1a.
.
Sutton Twp. Trus. to Murphy Oil
Co., Right ofWay,Sutton.
Clara E. Heines to Murphy 011 Co.,
Right of Way, Bedford.
Robert Hawk, Ramona Hawk to
Murphy Oil Co., R1ght of Way, Bed·
ford
Bedford Town Trustees, Stanford
Stockton, Helen Swartz, Clerk,
Charles·Williams to Murphy OU Co.,
R1ght of Way, Bedford.

Friday, October 2. 198l

James S. Lipscomb, VadaS. UpRoberti.. Wingett 1o Bd. of Meigs_
seomb, William H. Ltpst!Smb, Co. Comm., Eaae., Syracuse.
Gratbel M. Upscomb, Cebert W.
ArciUe E. Lee, Jwie P. Lee 1o
UJIO&lt;OIIlb, Flora M. Lipscomb, Rooald K. Ash, Mary I. Ash, 1.0106
Right of Way, Pomeroy.
aeres,1.1089 acres, Suttoo.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Charles
William P . Lochllry, Clara .
Cheadle, et at to Richard H. ' lAlchary to Florence L. Smith, 5 off
Rudolph,. Robert L. Rudolph, Par- E. Side No. 12, Burnap's Addn.,
ce~. Scipio.
Pomeroy,
•
David Yates, Norma Yates to
Agnes Widner to Carolyn Y.
Ricky Lee Hsuber, Deborah L. Willison, .5bcre, Oraoge.
Hauber, Parcels, Olive.
William Fred Smith, Sr., Beatrice
Clarice Erwin to Qonald E E. Smith to Jolm E. Lyons, Janice ·
Nelson, Maurlsha A. Nelson, Pis of M. Lyons, one-fourth acre,
Lota 168-169, Middleport.
Salisbury.
'George Christy, Eunice Christy to . Carl Buckley, Agnes Buckley to
Dennis M. Wolfe, Cindy T. Wolfe,. Duane Duffield Jean Duffield Par. '
Syracuse.
eels, Salisbury.
•
Jolm J. Rose, Mary K. Rose to
Frank E. Chaney, dec. to Clara P.
Central Coal Co., Ease., Chester.
Chailey, eert. of trans., Bedford.
LaiTY E. MlJy to Leading Creek
Fred W. Crow, Atty. for Thomas
Cons. Dis!., H1ght otWay, Rutland. E. Mankin, Rebecca L. Mankin, AfB!!tty J. Fultz, Bernard Fultz, Jay fldiiVll, Tuppers Plains.
Hall, Jr., Marlene Hall to Ohio
Ina B. Massar, dec'd., to tho1Jl8S
Power Co., Ease., Salisbury.
E. Mankin, Jr., Rebecca L. Mankin,
Harrison Srruth, Ruth Smith to Cert. of Trans., Tuppers Plains.
Ohio Power Co., Ease., Sutton.
Thomas-E. Mankin, Jr., Rebecca
Danny Silvers, Rene S!lvers to L. Mankin to Thomas E. Mankin,
Ohio Power Co , Ease., Salem.
Jr , Rebecca L. Mankin, Deed, TupJames D. W1cklme, Shelba J. pers Plains.
Wickline to Ohio Power Co., Ease.,
Charles H. Connor, Karen s. COnSutton.
nor to Lanny R. Jenkins, Janet I.
Robert A Hunnel, Martha L. Hun- Jenkins, Pt. Lot 98, Middleport.
nel to Robert A. Hunnel; Martha L.
Howard thoma, Evelyn Thoma to
HWlDel, Lois, Middleport.
Herald Oil and Gas Co., Salisbury.
Lorene Wolfe to Tim B. Wolfe, 7
James P. Lambert, Wanda J .
acres, Olive.
Lambert to Kramer Exploration
Bobby Joe Werry, Karen L. Werry Co., Ease., Salisblll')'.
,
to Ronald Clonch, Debra Clonch,1.08
Walter H. Hellman, Lelia Heilman
acres, Chester.
to Kramer Exploration Co., Ease.,
Eldred Hess, Mane Hess, Dorren· SalisQury.
ce Hess, Donna Hess to Prentice
Warren D. B!ack, Esther M. Black
Hess, Carol Hess, 80 acres, Bedford. to Brynda Faye Faulk Clinton ljanJohil Bentz, Unda Bentz to dall Faulk, 308 acre, Rutland.
Michael A. Bentz, Ethel F . Bentz,
Ruby P J enkirulon to Allen E.
Parcels, Chester
Jenkinson Q/C Deed, (2 Parcels),
V1ctoria L. WOOd to Robert L. Middleport.
Wood, Parcels, Sutton.
Donald E. Kelly, dec' d. to Pamella
Naorru K. London, Affldav1t, McEldovoney Kelly, Cert. of Trans.,
Syracuse.
Pomeroy.

.

Joaeph W. Pullins, Alma Jane
PuiUnl to Emell Holbert Calany,
Patricia LY.Jm Calaway, Parcels, ·

Ol'anle·

Carmel News ~
BytheDay .
and Mn. Robert Watson lind ,

Jane M. Nicbola, Robert E.
' Mr.
Nicbola, WUllam Morrlley, Frances
Morrlaey, Gilbert E. McDade, •. family of Kent, Ohio ,spent the : •
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ed.s4itl :
~bel McDade, Mary Loulie Ours
.
to Trus. of Racllle Gun Club, Pal'- Roush.
Betty Van Meter and Sheryl JoluJ. :
cela, Sultlln. •
Ohio Valley Manufacturing Co. to - spent Sunday afternoon at ~ I
WIWiilll CareltOn home In Raclrii. I
Carl E. Smith Petroleum Co., Right
Dorothy Hat'den, Pam, Sandy arud
of Way, Orange.
8aJPh of Momlne Star were at the :
Carl M. Matlack, LoiJi8e M.
home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Qrcle 1
Matladl:, Joe C. Ritchie to Ca"' E.
:
Smith Petroleum, Inc., Right of and Vema on Sunday.
Way,Orange.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Circle and
son Crls of Morning Star, Mr. and
Mrs. Jeff Circle and daughter from
{l:eno Road apent a recent Monday 1
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Homer

Galli&lt;~

Co, Area COde
614

JII-Vinton

742-Ruttand

(

Mr. aod Mrs. Faye Countryman,
Greenfield, spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Eblin,
daughter Becky, and Mrs. Janene
Jolmson tool a tour through the New
England states recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey visited
recently with Mrs. Della Stahl.
Mrs. Jesme White, Cheater, reCently called on Ms, Bertha Parker.
Sunday, Sept. 27, was rally day at
the Free Methodist Church. Sunday
school attendaoce was 124. Morning
semce attendance was 140. Choir
members present were 12.
Mrs. Bertha Parker has received
newspaper clipping and pictures of
her gt;andchildren stating that her
granodaughter, M1ss Tamara
Talley, has passed hl:r state board
test for RN and is employed at the
Jones Hospital, Sermao, Texas, and
her grandson, Mark Talley, has
rece1ved his Eagle Scout badge.

r

In Galha Count'f

WlliJam Carelton of Ractne apent :
Sunday evening With Arthur John-

_L

Mother dov and 2
Call2-15-9151.

99~-2156
In Mason County

Mason Area
News
Notes
Dr. and Mrs. Edward Spencer of

675-1333

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

_

Bluefield, W. Va. visited their
daughter, Dawn, sophomore at
Marshall University, and his ,
mother, Mrs. Sarah Spencer at the
latter's home over the weekend.
Dr. and Mrs. Spencer after
leaving Mason went to Poughkeepsie, N. Y. where they visited his
sister and husband, Mr. aod Mrs.
Ron Pierson.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jeffers, Mr.
aod Mrs. L. R. Gress, aU of Bellaire,
were bere to attend the funeral of
Miss Stella Gress. Many relal!ves
frpm Pomeroy and MiddlepOrt also
attended.
·
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Stewart of Pt.
Pleasant were Sunday dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. MarshaU.

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Announcements_

SWEEPER and sewlnv
. machine repair, parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, DaviS Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georves Crl!fk Rd. Call
446·0294..
Riverside Gun Shop St. Rt.
7 Athalia. Oh. Gun repair
and hot tank reblulng. Call
614-1186·5194
'
For buld delivery of
gasoline, tteatlr:ag oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.
Horses, ponies, hors,
trailer, riding lessons Hoof
Hollow61H98-3290.

3

AnrtGuiR:ements

1 Siberian huskY for some
one who lives In c:ountrv.
Call 367-0628.

Found : 1 large Lab
Retrelver dOll. small spot
on neck . Found In Spring
Ave., Naylors Run Area.
Call992·2561 .

2 Kittens &amp; 2 cats long hair,
one of cat spad&lt;Q Mess.
phone 411HJ675 ,.. see al 3
Garfield fl.v., Gallipolis

FOUND In Alfr&lt;Q area
Black dov, part poodwe
985 4189

·--'-_..:,:====----

LET'S GET READY TO
GO HUNTING. We'll ShOW
you how. Largest demon·
stratlon ever attempted 1n
this area Irs all happening
Saturday, October 10
Make your plans to attend
now. Watch this newspaper
for further details.

Free Kittens 773·5936

A Family Yord Sale. Big
variety of nice things, plus

Male blue gray kitten, lit
ter trained. 675 3834.

baby Items. Oct. 5,6,&amp;7,
1152 ' Second .
Ave.
Gallipolis.

,,
'

Dl's Craft Supply, ,Spring
Valley Plaza Just weSI of
Holzer Hospitol. Count&lt;Q
cross stlch, DMC floss
AIDA clolt1 In all colors,
call for free lessons. 614
416 2134

L.os1 ilnd Found

Lost Foxhound White with
black spots, about 26 ln.
tall, brown head, $25.
Reword, Russel Barr Call
304·895·3323.

Huge Garage Sale Friday
9 5, Saturday 9 3 Rain or
shine. 266 Debby Dr.. off
Route
141.
Clothing,
household Items, banjo and
case, antique ptano &amp; ben·
ch, 2 adult bicycles, toys,
games. etc . Good condition
&amp; priced to go.

'Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

ROUSH
Public Notice

EMERGENCY
VILLAGE OF
· POMEROY
ORDINANCE
NO. 522
PROVIDING FOR THE
ISSUANCE OF BONDS BY
THE VILLAGE
OF
POMEROY, OHIO, IN
THE
PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT OF $100,000 FOR
THE
PURPOSE
OF
VILLAGE HALL
IM·
PROVEMENTS
AND
DECLARING
AN
EMERGENCY. 1

WHEREAS, thts council
has heretofore requested
the. VIllage Clerk, as frscat
Officer, to certrfy the
maxtmum matunty of the
bonds herein authorized,
and such frscal offrcer has
estimated the life of the 1m
provements as at least frve
(5) years and has cerllf1ed
the maxim~m maturlt¥ ol
such bondS as f'.Nenty 1Ve

125) years,
BE IT ORDAINED by
the Counc11 of the Village of
Pomeroy State of Ohio
SECTII6N 1 Th,ot rt IS
necessary to rssue bonds of

Public Nottce
the Vtllage ot Pomerov,
Ohto, m the pnncipal
amount of $100,000, for the
purpose of vrllage hall tm
provements,
under
authonty of the U nrfor m
Bond Law of the Revtsed
Code
SECTION 2 That bonds
of the Vtllage of Pomeroy,
OhiO, be ISSUed tn the prin
crpal amount of 5100,000 for
the purpose aforesa•d Sa1d
bOnds shall be dated Oc
faber 1, 1981 of the
denomtnatlon or $1,000
each, numbered from 1 to
100, mcluslve, and shalt
bear mterest at the rate of
five per centum (5 percent)
per annum, payable June 1,
1982, and semtannually
tnereafter on June 1 and
December 1 of each year
until the pnnctpal sum is
patd, as evidenced by
couPQns thereto attached.
Provided, however, that If
sa1d bonds are sold beartng
a different rate of tnferest
from that heretnbefore
speetfted, sa1d bonds shall
bear such rate of interest
as may be provtded for tn

r----·-------------------1

I

Curb Inflation I
I
Pay Cash for
I
I
Classlfleds and
Savell
.
- I

Public Nottce

the resolutton ot counc•l a~·
proving the award thereof
Satd bOnds shaft mature '"
the~r consec!,Jttve serial or·
der on December 1 of each
year as folloWs. $4,000
from 1983 to 2007, 'tnclusive
SECTION 3. Sa1d bonds
shalt express upon the•r
face the purpose for whrch
they are issued and that
they are Issued pursuant to
thtS ordtnance and Chapter
133 of the Oh10 Rev1sed
Code
They sha II be
executed by the Mayor and
by the V1llage Clerk, and
shall bear the facs•mlle
Signature of satd VIllage
Clerk
prtnted
or
lithographed thereon they
shall be
destgnafed
"Village
Hall
lm ·
provement Bonds,'' and
shall be pavable as to both
prinG1pa1 and 1nterest m
1awtut money ot rne unuea
States of Amenca at the of·
f1ce of the Village
Treasurer or at such othe~t
place..,. as
shall
be
des•gnated by the ortgmal
purchaser
SECTION 4. For the pur
pose of provtdrng the
necessary funds to pay the
tnterest on the foregorng
tssue of bonds promptly
when and as the same falls
due, and also to prov1de for
the dtscharge of sa•d sertal
bonds at maturrty , there
shall be and ts hereby
1ev1ed on all the taxable
property 10 the Village of
Pomeroy, m addit1on to all
other taxes, a d1rect tax an
nually dunng the penod

'

'PHONE 992-2156

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court 51., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
!

Addr•••---------

Phone-------------

SECTION 5 Sa1d bonds
shall be f1rst offered at par
and accrued ~nterest to the
Bond Rettrement Fund of
satd VIllage, and so many
of the same as shall not be
taken by said
Bond
Rettrement Fund shall be
sold
•n the
manner

WANT AD INFORMATION

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

Nam•----------~--------

Public Notu::e
satd bonds are to run, in an
amount
suff1c1ent
to
provtde for the payment of
satd mterest, wnen and as
the same shall fall due, and
also to dlschaq~e the prtn
CJP&amp;I of sa1d sen a I bonds at
matunty, which tax shall
not be less than the Interest
and StOking fund tax
required by Sect•on 11 of
Art1cle XII of the Con·
st.tuf1on of Ohio
Satd tax shall be and 1S
hereby ordered computed,
certified, levied and ex
tended upon the tax
duplicate and collected by
the same off1cers. tn the
same manner and at the
same time that taxes for
general purposes for each
of said years are certified,
extended and collected
Satd tax shall be placed
before and in~ preference to
all other rtems and for the
full amount thereof The
funds derrved from satd tax
levtes hereby requrred
shall be placed tn a
separate and d1st1nct fund
Wh1ch, together with the m
teres t collected on the
same. shall be Irrevocably
pledged for the payment of
prtnc•pal of and mterest on
sa1d bonds when as as the
samefalldue

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
e ANNOUNCEMENTS
1- c•rd ot Tho~nks
l- In Memortlm

J-Announumenfs
4--GrlltiWIY
5-Ho~ppw Ads
6-Losunct Found
1- Yard Silt

t-Pubhc SIIIL'
&amp;

Auction

Publtc Notice
prov1ded by law, but not for
less than their par value
and accrued rnterest,
anyone desu·ing to do so
may present a b1d or btds
for sa1d bonds based upon
the~r bearrng a different
rate of tnterest from that
here•nb e fore
ftxed,
prov•ded, however, that
where a fracftonal tnter est
rate 1S btd, such fract1on
shall be one e1ghtl'l 'Of one
per centum or a multiple
thereof, the proceeds from
the sale of sa td bonds, ex
cept the prem1um and ac·
crued mterest, 1f any, shall
be used for the purpose
aforestud and'1or no other
purpose; am:f'atly premium
and accrued
tnteest
rece•ved from such sale
shall be transferred .to the
Bond Ret~rement Fund to
be applied to the payment
of the princip-al of and m
teres1 on sa1d bonds rn the
manner provtded by law
SECTfON 6 ThtS COUOC!I,
for an on behalf of the
Vtllage of Pomeroy, Mergs
County, Oh10,
hereby
covenants that it Wtll
restnct the use of the
proceeds of the bonds
hereby authortzed tn such
manner and to such extent,
•f any, as may
be
necessary, after taktng 1nfo
account reasonable ex
pectat1ons at the ftme the
debt is incurred , so that
they w111 not constttute "ar·
bitrage bonds" under Sec·
lion 103ic) of the Internal
Revenue Code and the
regulations
prescnbed
thereunder The V11tage
Clerk, or any other officer

54

Public Notece

Publtc Notece
respons1btllty with Pomeroy tn that bonds
respect to the tssuance of herein author~zed must be
sa1d bonds, ts authorized authorized and Issued Jm·
and directed to giVe an ap· mediately 1n order to sup;
proprtate certificate on port construction con·
behalf of the village, on the tracts, and it shall take ef
date of del1very of satd bon· feet upon tts passage .
ds, for rnclusron 10 the fran·
Passed Sept 21, 1981
sgipt of proceedings, set
Clarence Andrews
t•ng forth the facts.
Mayor
estimates and c1r
Attest
cumstances
and .Jane Walton
reasonable expectations Clerk
pertamtng to the use of the (10) 2, 9, 21c
proceeds thereof and the
Publtc Notice
provisions of said Section
103(c) and regulations
PROBATE 1COURT
thereunder
OF MEIGS
SECTION 7 That 1t Is
COUNTY, OHIO
found and determined that ESTATE OF WILLIAM
all formal actions of this ALLEN
HUGHES,
Council concerning and OECEASEO
trelattnQ to the passage of Case No. 23548
this ordinance were adop
NOTICE OF
ted '" an open meettng Of
APPOINTMENT
thrs council; and tha_t.Lall
OF FIDUCIARY
dellbert1ons of thts counc1l
On September 28, 1981, In
and of any of Its com· the Met~ County Probate
mtttees th.at resulted in Court, Cose No. 23548,
such forma I act1on, were 1n Mary E. Hughes, 782 Hlah
meeftngs open to the Street, Middleport, OhiO
public, in compltance with 45760, was appointed
all legal requ1rement~1 in· Executrix of the estate of
eluding Section 121 22 or the Wtlllam Allen Hughes,
Oh•o Rev1sed Code.
deceased, late of 782 Htgh
SECTION 8. The VIllage Street,
Middleport, Ohio
Clerk 1s hereby authorized
and directed to certify a
copy of th•s ordinance to
the Countv Audttor of
Me1gs County, Ohio, ac
cording to law.
SECTION 9 This or·
dtnance is hereby declared
to be an emergency
AI Pageville, Oh10, 6
measure necessary for the
P.M. Sat .• Oct. Jrd. Lots
preservatton of the publiC
peac~t.. health, safety, com
of new merchandise for
fort and welfare Of the
Chrtstmas shopping, a&amp;
peoPle of ths Village of
well as new and used
furniture and household
Misc. Merchandr!:e
goods. Not responstble
lor accidents.
Ron
Rusoell, 614-691·6592 or
304-773·5471.
hav~ng

SPECIAL
AUCTION

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop
. LARGE SELECTIOR OF REMNANTS
· '48ao and up

eRENTALS

Homes

lor Rent
•• - A,o~rtments

'

r

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
110) 2. 9, 16, ltc
Clerk

I

for A Ent

4f--Furnlshed Rooms
46-SpiiCl' torR enr
47-Wanted to Rent
U - EQ111Pm11nl tor Rent

9-W.nltcllo Buy

E . Miltn

'

POMEROY,O,

''
'I

992·2259

I.

NEW LISTING- Size is

Right Th" two
bedroom honie lfiftts
all the needs of your
family
Range,
refngerator, carpeting,
and forced air heat
New roof, sheds, on ap
prox 11h acre . land
' $29,500

I
'
J'
'

A fiAIIM OF YOUR
OWN - ' 'A newly
remodeled home on 21
acres of land Four
bedrooms, living room,
dining room, kitchen,
bath All carpeted and
really neat. YOU VIlli
want to see it at this
price. $39,900

•

FRAN'S
CERAMICS

•
Now Taking Enrollment For Fall
pay or Evening
pases.

F,RANCESJ(EWETSON
, 307 Wetzgall 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio

NEW LISTING
POINT ROCK - Ap·
pi-ox 1 acre of level
ground,
With
3
bedrooms, family room,
kttchen w1th bar ,
garag~,
and another
bldg
Home
has
beautiful
wooden
celltngs,
hardwood
floors and bay window
$30,000

9 4 1 mo

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC
SUPPLIES
'*Televisions
•Aneennos

(

* Mastlnq
(bath
teleKQj:Mng &amp; tower)
* CamP.Q:nenl Systems
* PortQble Radios
'*Automobile Radios
•Topell«&lt;&lt;s
*Tubes &amp; S1m1·

1

canduttors

1

j

j

~II ty~s

of batterres &amp;
Chor1141ri •
I
PRONE 992 2276 9-2•
Bradbury Road

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 62lSor 992 7314
Po meroy ot.lo
9 30 tfc

ec,,sfmg • rrculer H1t
c.h ~&lt;;

• Met ill filbncn

hans..
Mondo1y Frtday
4 p m. to 11 p m
All Ony Saturday

Ph. 949-2285

Ph. 992·7201

l oc.1ted olf Maplewood
l nke '" R acme
9 2 1 mo

5 21 lfc

SALES&amp;SERVICE
U 5. Rt 50 Ea1t

Guysv•lle. Ohio

Phone 614·662·3821
Authorized John Deer
New HOlland, Bush Hog
Farm Equtpment
Dealer

Keep Thts Ad for

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Coli

Ken Young
For Fast Service ·
985-3561
PARTS AND SERVICE

FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
1- No 8600 Oie~&amp;l Ford
Tractor w / Cob
,
I ~Model275 O•esel
MF
1- Model ,.79 Hoy Bind
NH
7 3-t(t

•Dishwashers
•Hot Water Tanks

lHE STANDARD
OIL CO.

Styhst Mark Mora Dove
Cuthbertson . Ctndy Cuth·
bertson.

(SOHIO)
We are now dellvertng
home hea1tng oil •n all
parts of Me1gs Co. We
want new customers.
Larry E Miller-Dealer

992-3460
If Long D1stance,

•Call Collect
9 21 1 mo

OHIO VALLEY
. ROOFING

Future Reference

All MAKES

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
eSid1ng
• Remodeling
• Free •st•matei
•20 Yrs. expenence

•Wastlers
•Dryers

•Runges
•01sposals

TOM HOSKINS
Ph . 949·2160 or99H125
7·5 tfc

9 S· tfc

HAIR REMEDIE~
New Hours
Mon . II 00700
Tues 11 ·00-5 00
Weds 10.00·8 00
Thurs 11 800

Former~:

Fn 10 00·5 00

Unton Ave
Pomeroy. Ohto

KINGS ARMS

PHONE 992 3021
No appo•n•mef'\1$ necenor\'
merlr Kilt n Kurl Beall!¥ •hop

For

CALL

9 211 I mQ

54

Mtsc. Merchandice

MIUER ElECTRIC
SERVICE
•

t

'For Ill of your wiring needs.

I

I

I

'Let George Miller
check your prestnt elec·
trlcalsyltem.
'
Reildtnllol
&amp; Commercial

.

Call74H195
HHc

CALL:

1

J

AIIOCIA TE5
JIN!nT....U,...._
Roger &amp; DOttle Turner

'

Vinyl&amp; Aluminum

F1rm Bulldinp

SIDING

•

I

ttH1tl

ALL STEEL

IIIII

"Fr0111J01W'
SMALL

. Utlllr .Bvillimll
111ft """"••• ttl tlx40

tft-MH

Offlct .,.UB
I

•

PI$ JUILPINGS
• ....... 14
....... 011.

1"11.614-IOurl

6·15·ftc

l&gt;

BISEl

SIDING CO.
"IHIIIIfql, CIIIIOrn

lullt oar....·~

C*ll fer fl'tf 11111n1
llllrnotu,
or
Ne lundly C11t1

........ ""*'.

3·11 ·ftc

SEPT. 21 tllru

szo.oo .

24

Now Sl .so
525.00 • Now $22.50
$30.00 • Now$27.50
S35.00 • NowS29.50
wa~ Lenalll For
Lon. .rHair

KAY'S

BEAUTY SALON
""·"2-272~

" ' N. 2nd
MldlllllpOrt, Ohio
9-20· 1 mo

~

door of Church.
4, Oct 3 Cedar St side

Chester Ftrehouse, Oct 3,
10·4. Clothing o1 all sizes,
odds &amp; ends, dtshes,
biCYCle

Garage Sale Thurs , Fri , &amp;
Sat at Ed Kempers, 2 nd
dnveway off 160 O ~J . White
Rd.
.
Yard Sale. 2 ml. nortn ol
Chester on Rl. 7, Oct 5,6
Garage Sale Saturday Oct Clothes, occastonal chairs,
3, 2 mt. from HMC on Rt push mower, albums,
games, dishes, mise 9 i
160.
Garage Sale Fnday &amp; Craft Sale Halloween 1$.
Saturday . October 2&amp;3, 9 Christmas decorations
10·~
, AM to ? 435 Lariat Dr. Monday &amp; lues
College Road, Syracuse
bes1de ttolzer Hospital.

11

HelpWani&lt;Q

Telephone Sales S8 to S16
per hour. Work from your
home part·tH.n e no e.x
perlence. For Immediate
employment call446 8371
Hqusekeeper wantecl Call
446·1578
Community
Services
Worker to work w1th tn
.d.J.y1dua1s With mental
retardat1on
Part time
positron Send resume to
John Lehew, P 0 Box 906,
Gallipolis,
Oh
456~1
Buckeye Communrty Ser·
vices 1S an equal op·
portun1ty employer

GET-.V ALUAB LE framing
as a young busmess person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great gtfts ~s a Sen
tlnel route carrier Phone
us nght away and get on
the eliglbtllty l•st at 992·
2156 or '192 2157.
Cook wanted Apply in per·
son Crows Steakhouse.
Work
at
home
lobs
avallable! Substant1al ear
nings possible. Call504·641
8003 ext. 1110 for tn
tormatron

MANAGEMENT
OP
PORTUNlTY
We are
seekmg
qualified
tn·
dtVIduals to train tor
management positions in
Hardmans Home Centers If
you are highly motivated,
desire responsibility, per
sonai
growth ,
professionalism, and are
willing to relocate, send
your resume 1n conttdence
to Stan Hardman , Hard
man's Home Center, Gen
Office, PO Box l40, Spen
cer, WV 25276.

Firehouse
in
Garage Sale 598 Jay Dr .. Beside
Chester
Children
&amp;
adults
Park Lane Terrace. Oct. 3,
1981 9AM·APM. Clothes ol clothing, baby seat. fur·
various s1zes, sewing nllure, Ocl 3, 1D·4. "
machine, LPN student
uniforms, sport coats, and Garage Sale Oct 5 9 Open
9 5 South of JacK's Club on
w1nter coats.
old Rt. 143 oft Rt 7 bypass.
Gtgantfc _. Family Yard Pa1nt supply, follow signs
Sale Bulaville·Porter ,__ Rd
4110 mile olf Rt. 160. Starts 3 family yard sale Oct. 2 &amp;
3 at the Rita Hamm
9 OOAMSaturdayonly.
residence on Walnut St,
Yard Sale ~I S. 2nd Mid· Middleport 9 4 Men &amp;
f or
dleporl, OH. IR&lt;Qovlan'sl women's clothing, m1sc. RECEPTIONIST
private doctor's offt ce
Chlldrens. men's, small &amp; 1tems
·needed Reply with com
large stze, ladies: clothes.
Five tam1IV yard sale plefe resume anq requtfed
Oct 2&amp;3
salary to boX C· 25 % The
Saturday 8 miles out San
Pt Pleasant Reg tster
dhill
Road
Antiques,
115 Vlnlon Court. Oct. 5 &amp; 6.
clothing,
dishes.
Starting
10
Four Family 9·5
·
am
Rel1able
babys1tter
needed In my home Day
Yard Sale Sal. &amp; sun. Oct.
shift ~all 675 5375 or 675
3rd &amp; 4th lOAM to 4PM. 821 Yard Sale 2614 Madison 5628
Ave
Oct
1·2
3
lO
:DO
AM
to
Carman Or. 1ro. house rn
Tara Estates, Addison 5 OOPM E lectnc meat grtn· '-==;;:,=;:;::=;;=::c:=T.;:::C;=::;=
der and salad maker, 12
Sl1ua1•ons wanted
Oh10
loasler. coffee pot, fry pan,
Lady
SUnbeam shaver, Someone to care for me in
Yard Sale mise 1tems. portable TV. vinyl fold1ng my home 992 2686.
Saturday Oct. 3, 9 to 5.30, door, vinyl bean bag chair,
134 State St. Gallipolis.
clothing, winter coats and Ellm Resthome Care for
boots, ladys' shorts 50 cents hafdicapped, aged, or bed
pattent . Temporary or
Porch Sale Sat 9 4 Ap per pair New studed
limited care Or contmuous
plllances. TV. clothes. toys, tires G-78·14. m1sc 1tems.
home wrth us Equ1pped for
mtsc. 260 Portsmouth Rd
wheel chair 742 2266
IR•. 141). Corner of 9
Willnttd to Buy
LeGrande
WANT TO BUY Old fur Nurses a•d . Day ttme Ex
Yard Sale oct. 2 &amp; 3, 9AM to niture and Antiques of all perienced Good referen·
5PM Rain or shine at old kinds, call Kenneth Swain, ces Coll742 2288
Galha School . Bake sale 256·1967 tn the evenings
Oct 3 sponsered by Gall Ia
Will take care of 2 elderly
CASH PAID for clean, late ladtes m our home J;.,. m1~e
Buccaneers .4 H club
model used cars. Smtth east of Darwin 992 _}888
Yard Sale l'rl &amp; Sat 9 Buick· Pont1ac, GAIItpolrs,
SPM. Jackson Sf , V1nton, Oh10 , Call446 2282
W1il do day work or cleat
Oh
olflces 742 2297
Junk cars with or wtth out
motors. scrap metal, and
Garage Sale Saturclay Oct battenes
Call388 9303
1:.::3_ __,1,_,ns,u,_,r,an::;c:.:e:___
3, 8 OOAM A93 Maple Dr
SANDY AND BEAVER In·
Spring Valley, Oh
BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER surance Co has offered
paymg cash for anythtng services for· fire tnsurance
stamped lOK, lAK, 18K artd coverage tn Gallia county
dental gold Class rrngs, for almost a century.
wedding rings, silver corns Farm, home and personal
or
anything
stamped property coverages are
sterling Clarks .:Jewelry ava1lable to meet •n·
~lore Galllpoli~ 446 }691 or
drvidual needs
Contac1
992 20.54 tn POmeroy
Ray Wedemeyer, agent
Phone 388·8249
BEDS IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, sliver Group Medtcai Coverage
dollars, woott ice boxes, for small busmess ~ as well
stone jars, antiques, etc , an •nd,ivlduals . Major
Complete
households. medical. basic hosptfal , &amp;
Write. M.D Miller, Rt. 4, groUp ltfe msurance com·
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992 7760
blnecl to grve you one of the
best programs available.
CHIP WOOD. Poles ma• . Very com~tative rates.
diameter 1~" on largest For more lnformatton.
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundlect Steve McGhee, «6 0818 or
slab . $10 .50 per ton. 416 OS52
De)lverd to Ohio Pollet Co,
Rock
Springs Rd . ,
MOBILE
IN
Pomeroy. 992 2689
).SIU RA,&lt;CIE
been can·
Yard sale on Lasley St.
Lost
your
Oct. 1 and 2. Stereo, am
~:~~~~r 's Ulcense? Phone
pilfer, clothing and lois
more. Rain cancels.

II

POMEROY
LANDMARK

•

614-992-2111

Farm and
1 For
Home Delivery Of
Gas

HARPER Adult Care &lt;len ·
ter· providtng the personal
care your elderly need in a
home like atmosphere
Vac~ncles now availible.
calllOH/5·1293

co....-'======---

FOR SALE
OR LEASE

custom kitchet'ls and apPitances~
custom
ba1hrooms, re010delrng,
,plumbtn, electnc, and
hea1tng

OVER 2~ ACRES j
Plus a 1'12 stor-y hOme
with 2·3 bedrooms, !
dining, ll~lng and kit·
chen. Forced air heat,
barn and other out1 buildings Appro• 75
acres tllioble, 75 acrea
,timber, and 50 acres j
pasture 190,000.
REALTOR
Henry I . C..l. .d, Jr.
'

AW

I mo.

BOGGS

CONSTRUCTION

IN· •
VESTMENT ' - 3 room ;
house with fireplace on 1
almost an acre Of land, •1
other buildings. Sl4,000

I

&lt;electrial work
(Free Estlmat.. )

Bock hoe
Excavating
Septic Systems
Water, Sewer&amp;:
GaU-Ines
eOumpTruck
eTrencher
Lrcensed &amp; Bonded

C. R.

RENTAL

'

_ Plumbing and

• •
•
•
•

WELDeAiumrnum
SHOP

•~•eel

614-446-3332

BUILDING LOTS IN
RACINE FOR YOUR
NEW
HOME
OR • •
MOBILE HOME '
Utllllles are llvollable. ,
State road frontage or
township
frontage' 1
available Top price for
1 acre 16,500.

(

......Addonsond
remodehng
_ Roofing onct gUtter
work
_ Concret work

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

1

601

THIS RANCH STYLE ,
IS FOR YOU - If you
want 3
bedrooms,
spactous living room,
dintng room, b@autlful
kitchen, basement with
rec. room, attached
garage, then this Is 1t.
And owner Is asking
only $43.000

49-For Le1se

New Homes - extensive remodeling.
•Electrical work
•Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
10 2 1 mo

IN TQWN AND CON·
VENIENT , _ RIVER
VIEW lN POMEROY11h story, 3 bedrooms,
full basement, large lot,
new vinyl siding, new
roof, nice front sitting ,
porch $35,000

CARPET

41 -Houu' lor Rent

~2-Moblle

CONSTRUtnON

Public Notice

45760.

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

Servtees

4 Family Yard Sale Lots ol
new clothes. Sizes 7-ll's,
lots of mlsc. lf1!ms. Rt. 1609 Garage sale. Saturday,
Oct 3. 9 to 5. Hunter
miles from Holzer Hosp.
residence, Y&lt;~ mile north of
Chester on SRI at CR82,
Yard Sale Thurs .. Fri . &amp; Texas Rd
Sat, 317 Bulevllle Rd.
beyond the Bypaso
Carport sale Monday, Oct
~ 10 111 ? Helens Beauty
2 Family Garage Sale 607 Shop, 862 E Main Sl ,
Jackson Pike Starting Pomeroy.
Sept. 30. Clothing, CB
radio, Fuzz buster, warm
810 S. 2nd Sl , Middleport
morlng heater.
Oct 1 thru 10 Clothing,
bedding, flnens, dishes,
Yard Sale Friday &amp; Satur Silverstone, toys, toots, fur
day Bladen, Oh Furniture, niture, small appliances,
bike excerlser, Mise
lots of m1sc Somethiog fOr
everyone.
Yard Sale Friday &amp; Satur·
day. Bladen, Oh Furfllture, Yard Sale. 640 Grant St,
bike exc~rlser, Misc.
Middleport
Clothing,
jewelry, books, pots. what
Tow Family Vard Sale Oct nots . 95. 0ct 5&amp;6
1-2 3 In Eureka, Dowie
Williams residence Can· Yard Sale Oct 3 Color TV,
gas heattng stove, ap
c_e_le_d_l_fr_a_ln_ .______________ pltarices, C B 's, furniture,
Rummage sale Grace dishes, other mise Phone
United Methodist Church. 742 2257 Long 51 , Rulland.

•neSs servlces
• .
Busl
;========~r,~========::l;:===:::::===:::-t::::====== 9
----~----------::~~----~~----------J---~~------------.!------------------~

1

1T~~~~~I7172
2~3~===pt~.~••~.~s~.o~n~.~.====

31
H~mes for Sale
New 3 bdr house with
garage and full basement
$45,000 Call 446·0390

5 kittens. 1 black, 1'grey, 3
striped Gooct and healthy. 1
992 6345.
Yard Slife at Griffin's
Groc. ln Kanauga Sat , Oct
10?
Deep fryer.
Peek a · Poo Poodle, 11 3
months old, black, likes cablne)s, end tables, plus
children, to good home. 3U- other Items, clothes. Rain
date, Moriday, OCt. 5.
118l!·2805.

Shoot Racine Gun
Club Every sun. slartlng
at 1 p.m Factory choke
guns only.

Money to Loon

FHA·VA•Convenlial Home
Loans. Columbus First
Mortgage Co , oi6J Second
Ave., Gallipolis, Oh , .4.t6

Goraoe Sale Thurs, Fri., &amp;
Sat North on 160 post
Holzer, turn right on first
vrovel road pasl O.J While
·-" "" Rd, first hou"'! ' on left.
4- GlveiWIY
"I don't care 1f a fool and his Follow SIQnS ~
ANY PI:RSON who has tm&lt;neyaresoonparled--1
anything to (five away and
"
does not offer or anempt to
offer any other thing for
sale m.y place an Ill in this
column. There will be no
choroe 10 the advertiser.

In Metgs county

446-2342

~family and Betty VanMeter. '

;12

making at Mason County
Farm MUseux on SaturdaY
Oc~ 3rd. Phone 675-28J.f
or67H737.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

1

Finl Time Yard Sale. Rt.
211 In Mercerville Thun.
lhru Sat. 1011115.

Sorgum molasses and slder

Mason co., W va,
Area Code 304
675-Pt Pleasant
458-leon
576-Apple (;rove
7)3-Moson
882-New Haven
895-Letarl
937-Butlalo

I

Circle and Vema.

" 949-Ractne•

"

R.H. Boalrl9ht, Gary Dill,
and Jr. Hu~t, Kellh
RidenOur end John Gin
IIMtr. CheSter Township.

tiS-Chester
343- Portland
247- Letart Falls

245-RtoGrande
256-Guyan Dtst.
643-Arabra Dtst.

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

LAFF-A-OAV

-ctrntnts

No hunting or lrelpeUIIIO
on the fol'-lno proPerties,

Me1gs Co. Area Code
614
•
992--MICidlfi&gt;Orl
Pomeroy

446-Galfipolis
167-ChHhlre

I

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

3

Cla111ifjed Pagea cover the
followi"'! leleph~me exch~nge1 ,,,,

Yard .ule. Ellen Eber·
sbach residence, Depot St.,
Ruttan~ . Qct. 1,2,3
Yant &amp;Ale. saturday, Oct.
3. 91o 4. 208 s . 2nd " , Middleport, Ohio.

Diesel

Heattng 011.

PRICED RIGHt.
I

CM1. TODAY!

3 III!IIIY yaM! sole. Frl~ay
and Sltuntev. Oct 2 and 3.
Oorklll. Grover Seller Jr.
residence SR124

'

Wanted to Do

Brick and Block laying,
fireplaces, all work
guaranteed. Call379 2123.
W111 give plano lesson&amp; In
your home. Call446 8074 af·
"r6:00PM

.

service calls. Call 992·
Also used color TV for

BY OWNER. 4 bdr .. spill
level, livtng room &amp; dining
room combtnat1on, eat·1n
k•tchen, tg fam11y rm , 2. 1
112 baths, located tn ta,·a
Estates, Club house and
pool pnvrleges, 575,000
frrm . Kyger Creek School
D1strlct Shown by appt
only call446 9403
FOR SALE SY OWNER 3
bdr. home located at 123
Garfield Ave. 2 acres runs.
from ..S R 7 to Ohio Rtver
Fu II basel'f'ent, fili1shect
rec room, 2 fireplaces, 2
112 baths, in ground con
crete pool, all new carpet,
new patnt lnstde and out
Will cons1der your home or
mobile home in trade
Owner will consider ftnan
cing at 10o/o APR after
reasonable down payment ~
I ~ Interested call 446 1546
for an appo.ntment
HO\Jse for rent or sa le on
land contract Qr rent wtth
optton to buy. Home '"
Eureka on State Rt 7 on
R tverfront Call 388 8711 or
388 9692
New 3 bedroom house;
famtly room, tl!... bath, 2
car garage Central heat
and atr 2 mrles from
Holzer Hospital Rt 35 446
3617
2 story brick, 994 Fourth

Ave, Ga ll1p0I1 S Full y
equipped kttchen, formal
drn1ng, 2 ro 3 bedrooms,
carpettng, storm windows,
central atr $5,000· down
Assume loan of $31 ,000 at9
1/2% 446 1448
For sale or rent house , 6
rms , with bath, carpeted, 5
112 acres, 5 ml frqm park
front Call 446· 6697 or 4.46
2516
L tfe Estate Farm , proper
IY value,$45,250 00
~lfe
estate_ value S8,701 58 Cat!
992 6747 evenrngs

.,

'

bedroom house, 2 acres, 1
baths-, famtly room Full
basement, garage
949
2019
j

For sale or trade, house
and busmess building on
two lots, also 2 va cant lots
w1th well and septJc Phone
614 378 6339
HOU SE Meadowbrook Ad
drtion 3 bedroom, fam ily
room wi th f~re p lace, cen
tral a~r, base m ent 304 6751542

SA NDHILL Road, PI
Pleasant, 3 bed room s, JIJ2
baths, doubl e garage
Owner Wtll fmance lm
' m ediate occupancy 304
675·5817
Mtlfon Road: Camp Conley
2 year old, 3 bedroom
flouse. fullY carpeted, w1th
1 full and two and a ha lf
baths, yard landscaped
w•th large utthty butldlng
Assume 8 112 p ercent loan
675 6275

32

Mobtle Homes
for Sale

C~EAN

USED MOBILE
HOM ES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SAL.ES, 4 Mi
WEST, GA~LI POLIS, RT
35 PHONE 446· 3868 or 416
727-4
14x70 mobrle home fur
mshed, 3 bdr , 2 bath, skrr '
tjng tncluded, $9,500 Call
614 882 8205
74 trailer &amp; 10 a.cres fo r sa le
by owner Cail388 9949

For sale on land cont~act or
rent Wtth option to buy 2'
mobrle homes on separate
lots at Tycoon Lake 1 with'
large famtiY room. wit h
frreplace Call 388·8711 or
388 9692

72 12x60 Mobfle home, 21
bi:lr , 3 acres of land,
garage, ~ large front porch Must sell immed iately ,
388 8747, $8000
•
lmm~tate passession 1972'
3 bdr mobile home on acreJ

lot, new drilled well, Davis
Rd Call446 4394
For Sale 9y Owner 24x60,
modular home With block
foundation Total elec:tric •
I~) full oaths, 3 beoroom: ·
set on 8/ 10 of an acre of
land . a.:u concre1e porch,
woodbUrnlng stove, dish
washer, garbage d1sposal 1
electric cOOk stove and ,
refrigerator .. IX20 storage•
building . Call 256-62-46 or.
256 9333

'
'

•'

.

�The Dai
MobUo Ha,..os
IarS. to
Prices reduced 011 all
mobile homes and travel
trailer&amp; .
TRI · STA"J:E
MOBI· ~E
HOMES .
Gallipolis. CA~~ «6·7572.

Kirkwood 2 bedroom .
R:utlend . Furnished, air
conditioned, large porch,
underpinning . Very good
cond. Ptione 992·2490.
1971 Carlan 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms. 19'72 Crown
Haven, U x 6S with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bidrcioms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, T 6eai'Ooms. B 1/A S
Sates, Inc. 2nd and Vll'nd
SIS. . Pt. Pleasant, . WV .
....,. ~~one 675·4424.

''

U x 70 mObile home, 2
bedroom, family room,
central air, un~e,.pinnlng ,
awnings. 675-1121 ,or: ·675·
3987.

1974 12 x 60, In Camp
Conley, air conditioning,

carpet, ·stove, good shape.
675·2560.
l-4 x 70 mobile home, un-

derpinned . 675·4064.

Aflllrtm...,l

HousoslorROIII

bedroom
to plant,
large lot.
Firewood . Mixed hardwood. S35 per face cord,
clellvered. Peaslee; Lakin,
W'il. 675·1810:-'- ~4 bedroOm house on Jef·
ferson Avenue. 5350 month.
675·31n.

42

Mobile Homes
tOr Rent

Misc. Mtrc""ndlco
RCA console color TV very
PGOd cOM. Call «6· 1173.

lor Rent

3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fully
carpeted, 1 year leaH~
deposit sames as flnt mon·
thl rent, morrlect wwklng
couple. others need not apply, nalllrol . gao hoot,
Meigs L.ocal
School
OIStrlcl. 61H'I3-1507, 614·
698·4040.

Lorge ~ bedroom aport·
m~t. furnished, in Pt.
Pleasant. 675·6020.
,

Available modern 1 bdr.
apt. convenient to town &amp;
HMC. Call «6·2055.
45

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light houoekeeplng· apt.,
Park Central Hole!.

snow
Gravelyblade,
with chain
brush saw.
hog,
trailer,·rototiller, rotoplow.
Call 256·6582 .

51

Professional meat slicer,
fancy show cases with
light, 1· yr. old National
Cash Register can be
programm.ed,
counts
change &amp; numbers light up,
model 97 Winchester
shotgun, 12 gage 32' barrel
full choke, model 700 170
cjeluxe Remington riffle,
11HP Murry riding mower,
Waterbury antique clock,
oak cabinet, 1 reg. quarter.
horse fillY 3 yrs. old broke,
1 reg. Appatossa 3 yrs. old
gelding broke ox. good sad·
die &amp; bridle. Call256·6413.

Household Goods

i:;t;i;;;:-;;;,;;;---;;:;jl,-;.,

.

.....

1

mile below
Eure~a.
2 bclr., bath,
garage, yard, S150 per mo.
$100 -dep, and ref. Call 614·
'
643·2916.

Apartments. 675-55-48.

.•

2 bedroom unfurnished
5190. 1 bedroom fur~lshea
apartemnl. $125. Naylors
Run. Security deposii.-Call
61A-993·,2288 .
2 bedroom house in
pomeroy with , _ kllchen
&amp; balh. Fully carpeted.
ct-ln. ~-2918.

5 room hoUse near Qon·
ville. $350 per monlh. 614·
742·31-13 . .
2. bedroom In ~etart
F•lll, Ohio. Dining rOCim
•"" flrepiaa, R•ngo •nd
,..,rlg810r lncludld. In·
twrHied lnqulrln call
. col teet 1·21t-532·3SI3.

:O.PARTMENTS', mobile
home.s,
houst!s 1'- Pt .
Plia'iant ancl Gallipolis.
614·«6·1221 or 614·245- ~44 . ·
3 room furnished cottage,
utllltiH furnished, odults.
675-2812 or 675·1580.
2 BEDROOM apartment In
HeflderiGI1, portlolly fur ·
nlthed, 304-675-1972.

•

..

l

••

.

1.

Control hunger 8nd lose
weight with New Shape
Diet Plan and Hydrex
water Pills. For Weight
cOnlrol splrullna now
available at Fruth Phar·
macv .

~~~~~~~~~~;~~;~~~~~~~~~
Misc. Merchandlce

54

Split hickory firewood , S40
a load.' Call245·9443. ·
Portable sewing machine,
like new. Call379·2728.
used R·40 Ditch Witch
Trencher. 614·694-7842.
Firewood. S30 load. Call
992·5126 or 992·3941.
2 size 7.75 X 14 snow tires on
rim. Antique rocker. 614·
742·2524 .

Girl SCout uniform. Size 10·
12. '192·7288.
New e lectric dryej . $165.
614-667·3566.
Blonde Duncan Phyfe
cjinifg table with matching
ch"airs &amp; buffet. May be
seen at 121 7th · Ave., Mid·
cjleport, Ohio. ·
26' T.ROUTWOOD !ravel
trailer and camp ·site on·
Raccon Creek. Close to
Ohio River.· SSOO down.
Owner will finance . 614·256·
1216.
Firewood-Oetive;.ed

Call and place your orcjer
now. 304'675·6662.
AIR compreSSOr, asking
SSOO. car lift for garage,
asking $400. 304·576·2602.
Maytag wringer washer
with double rinsetubs. · 20
Inch girls bike, table and 4
chairs. 675·5743 or 675-6386.

- - - - - -·

.saw mill . 1975 Dodge 4
wlleel drive. 304·576·2602.
FirewOOd. $25 a toad.
Delivered $35. 304-458· 1097.

Firewood at
delivered .

yard or
675 · l932

Electric ,
stove,
refrigerator; gas dryer,
woodburner stove, Conn
trombone, antique record
player. Phone675· 13(14.
Hoover portable V:asher.
675.11504.

Far~ Equipment

72 Chevy pickup for sole
S800 or trade tor small car. WEATHERA~L CON ··
·CRETE · quality and serCallafler 4 PM 446·4730.
vice, coll675· 1582.

•I

1975

'

Ford

F150

XL T

PAINTING : Interior and
exterior,
plumbing ,
paint
Ranger
lob,Pickup.
low mileage,
New tires,
lots roofing, some remodeling.
of extras. $2,500. 992·5388 or 20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.
992-5682.

JOhn Deer~ 3300 combine · 1976·Ford Courier pickup, 4 BING' S CONCRETE CON·
Massie FergUson 300 com~ cylinder, rebuilt motor.
STRUCTION · SpecialiZing
in concrete driveways,
bine . New ldea ·2 row 675·6958. •
sidewalks ,
patio ;
Alto Saxapl10ne. $150. Hon· picker. Oliver 2 row picker.
basement.
floors
New
Idea ~ 1 row picker.
1garaoe
1977
DATSUN
King
Cab
do mlnl·lroil $300 , Phone
Super M Farmall and 2 row truck with a topper 304-882· and etc. Free estimates. 11
675·4034.
' .
years experience. Call 367·
mounted picker. Run 2940.
7891.
.,
Brothers Farm Machinery.
Two 10 ln. H·beams, 31 ·1t. Sl. Rt. 139,6 miles South of
1978 Chevy half ton !ruck,
RREL~'s WINOON 1
long, Hy-Oynamlc O,y na· Jackson. Call286·2731 .
goodshape.675·1402.
IG,~A:SS SERVICE Home
Hoe, 140 Series B. Pnone
675·3762 or 446·8247.
'.
-'~emodeiaiioiijn_ance
.and
Massey Ferguson M-50
I
Phcine 388·
t~actor,
power steering, 197.0 Ch~vy Blazer. 6 cyl, 11
disk. bush hog, plows, 52,000 miles, new clu!ch
55
Building Supplies
harrow boom, must sell and fronl axle, 4 lncli 1111
building, home
Building materials, block due to heath. For cash onlv kit. 14-35 fires . Have 51300
brick, sewer pipes, win~ price$4,500. Call245·9105.
In lt. $900, 675·4610 offer 5 ~~~~~~~~~ and repair.
,m.
l1
work from start tO,
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
- -- - - - - ---- lflnls.h . Call388·8711 .
Wi nter~ Rio Grande, 0 .
Call245·5121. .
.,
1970 Chevy Blazer, 6 cyl,
52.000 . miles, new clutch French &lt;;::lty
P·ainting.
and front axle, o4 inch -lift Residential, commercial(
kit, 14-35 tires. Have $1300 l:~~~~~~~~exterlor, paper
in II. $900. 675·4610 afler 5
and lexured
pm.
367· 7784or367·
2 pc sofa Witri queen size
hld·a·bed. _Phone 675·1786.

Trailer awning, 12x5, $75.
Call after 3;30 PM. «6·
1658.
New a ir conditioner, 2
freezers with food, 2
sweepers new, dryer, antique dining room suite, antique plano, &amp; cornish
chickens. Phon~ 446--4656.

61

Trucks for Sale

.Pets lor Sale

56

POODLE GROOMING. I
Call Judy Taylor al 367·
7220.

2 block sawmill, 48 inch
saw blade. $900. firm. 9926035.

"'"

- - .. - ·

69 FORD 3000 diesel farm
tractor. good condition.
$3500 firm 304·675·6052.

r

They'll

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

Do It

Every Tt'me

l'ftONG mf• IT'LL
PI!OSA8l'I i!EI'ERSE
l'ft'I:HllE TVE

60E5 OUT-

- 6UT LOO~ i1J TKE 1(IP OF
TIIAT CLIFF! ARE TI'OSE
PALl! TREES?! I\IIIBE I'IE
CAH 00 A BIT OF EtPI.I)#llnti
~H ILE I'IE'I\E I'IAITIHG ••
ARE '!VU
AHHIE?

,.

..

1972 Chevy pickup, 6 cylln·
der standard, 8 fl. bed, no
battery. S675. Phone 576·
2670 . .
1969 Chevrolet tf2 ton
pickup truck, ne¥Y ) tres,
gOOd condition. 882·2969 or
882·2'153.

ORAGONWYNO
CAT'
TERY · KENNE~ . AKC
block Chow puppies, CFA 6,3c....,._ _,L,_iv,e,s,_,loc,k_ _~
H lmalavan, Persian and Registered Quarter Horses
Slam@se kittens. Call «6· for sate. QuaHty show hor·
J8.Uafter4p.m.
ses, boarding &amp; training.
Dan or Karen Beam,
Gallipolis. «6·0183.
HILLCREST KENNEL'
Boarding !"II breeds, clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities. Horse for sale. Call256·6505
Also Akc Reg. Dober· after 7PM.
mans. Call-446-7795.
Jumbo Bobwhite Quail, 1
BRIARPATCH KENNELS week old to adult sizes.
Boarding and grooming .. 16141985-4345.
AKC Gordon setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
'
Call «6·4191 .
"

HO"C®\EIIT'o
Ra!NIH&lt;:; TIE

1979 Ford F250, " &gt;4 ton, 4
speed, 300 engine, lock out
hubs. 36.000 mlies, 1 owner. I roac11.
$4000 llrm. 675·6252.

'

.

.

.

•

GASO!JNE AllEY
)

Kickin' tra5h can5
. is PUPP4 5tuff!

Wallpaper,
painting,
1974 Jeep CJ5, 4 wheel general carpenter work. AI
drive, wide tires, runs Tromm, 614·742·2328.
gOOd. $2,000. 992·7074.
LOCKSMITH · Service .
1977 Fqrd van, customized, Residential, automOtive.
49,000 hliles. excellent con- Emergency service. Cawl
882·2079.
dillon. 61j742· 2878.

..

'•

RON'S Television Service.

1980 CHE;ROKEE Jeep,
assume payments, 30.4·675· Specializing in Zenith . and
Motorola, Quazar, and
5215.
house calls. Phone 576-2398'
or 446-2-'54.
Vans&amp;4W.D.
73
1976 Ford Van, good cond. , F &amp; 1&lt;. Tree Trimming,
Jeanie's Pet ShOp New
Auto tor Sale
.1
new radials. Must sell, stumpremoval . 675·1331 .
hours 11 ·5, closed Wed . &amp; ,11
$2,000. Call «6·-1394.
sun. Coll446·71120.
'1978 Dodge ,( )mni 4 dr., hat·
Dave's Appliance R~palr .
chtiack, .automa~lc, power
Washers, dryers, plum· l
CFA Reg rstered Flame steering, excellent cond. 74
Motortycles
bing, electric, general hanPoint Himalayan kittens. Ph. 245·5611after 5PM.
dyman. Phone 304·576·2921
1978 H·O l;lectro Glide 751h or
Call304-523-77 49.
675·5689.
A:nniverSity · model.
1971 Buick Electra very. Chrome, light bars, · an(t ---------~-- ~
AKC Dobermans, male low miles, full power fully
SEiRVICE·ex.•.
proven, S200. Female 2 yrs. equlped . Good cond. Inside many extras. $5,000.00 or RINGLES'Smason,
roofer,
besl oiler. Call «6·8530 at·
bred, $300. Call «6·1562. ,
and out, S1 ,300. Call -'46:- ler4PM.
;m.ni,;,
_
electrician,
·~.
general -repairs and
AKC
Registered
remodeling. 'Phone 30&lt;4·67$-''
1978
Honda
Moped,
300
Dachshund 16 · mo. old FPR SALE : 1976 Chevrolet
,,:
2088or67HS60. •
miles,
$250.
Call367·0482.
house broken. Call-444· 1806. Malibu Classic Estate
Wagon. PS, PB, cruise con·
Water wells. Commerchtl
2 young nanny' s milk stock. trot, a)r concjltloning, Kawasaki KOX«&lt;I. 325 and Domestic. Test holes.
miles,
like
new.
$1,100.
992·
radio.
real
window
Call 245·5844.
Pumps Sales and Servlce·,::7191.
def~~er, _ completey rust·
304-895·3802.
...
prbof as a new car, plus
1 Walker Coon Dog male, 3 mOre extras. Extra clean
1972 Harley Davidson, 1200
yrs. old. Call614·388·9809.
·
..,.,., .. _____ _
an(j In excellent cortclttlon. super glide. S:zooo. 67 5.6823 . Stark's Tree Trimming. tn__~ .
sured. 304·576-'2010.
$3,000. 65,000 miles. Call
Fish Tank and Pel Shop 286-1016 after 6PM .
75
Boats and
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt .
Plumbing
82
Motors tor Sale
Pleasant. 675·2063. New 78'\.. TO Ford all extras, low
a Hullng
,
hours·Mon ., Thurs., &amp; Fri. mileage, eXc. cond. Call 14 fl. V·haul, 10 fl. John
.
CARTE~'S
PLUMBING·'·
11·6. Tues., Wed. II. Sat. 11 ·
boal. Call367·a482.
416\1358.
ANOHEATING
;;·
4.
Cor. Fourth and Pine ···
1980 VW Scircco AC, 5· SP, 197919112 fl. Baja ski bOal. Phone «6·3888 or 416·4477
AKC
Dactlshund, $6,500. Call 367·a482 or 446' 150 Mercury with stainle·s s
Pomeranian an Poodle 2240.
steel prop, trailer and
Excavating
.,
pups 304-895·3958.
acessor., payoff. Call 675· 13
1
afler 5PM.
750
and
1000
galloin
79 Chevetle 26,000 mi. 4
UKC Reglstereo American spd., 4 dr., e)(C. cond.,
P~ASTIC septic
tanks. i
PIM Bull pups . Phone 773· · $3,6~. 78 Ford Mustang; .15 fl. ChrySler Chor9er State and County ap-J
5877.
48.000 mi.. 4 spd., exc . boat with frailer. 80 hp proved. Total weigh! 300.
conq.. $3.5'/5. 73 Pontiac Mercury, Some extras. 992· lbl. Haul In your pickup.
truck . Ron Evans Ba ckhoe
ventura 54.000 mi., auto 3S724p.m. lo9p.m.
Service, located 3 miles.
Irons, exc. con&lt;!.. $1,250.
South ot . Jackso~ ·on Sl. Rl.
Eurell .Auto Sales· cr05s 16
Auto Parts
93. ~-5930 . .
• -roads Of Rt. 554 &amp; 160. Hrs.
&amp; Accenorles
' Elmer Kapp 9-5.
Rabbit dog'S.',
CHAR~IE'S SA~VAGE
Dozer Work. Mobile home
behilld1&lt;rbde1 ·Park.
Auto parts, auto repair, sites and driveways. SmaH
1967 Ford Mustang. 6-cyl . wrecker s6rvlce, buy
jobs a specialty. Phone-742..;
Auto{nallc, tow mileage, automobiles, radiators and 2753.
.
.
obovt avera1111 condition. batterieS. ~- n17 . ,
57
Musical
Selling lor 'less than
Instruments
current market. Phone 304·
EDWARD'S Backhoe and
SP 1 E T
CONSOLE 773·s.!94.
DOzer Service. Specializing
Clmplng
71
PIAN9 FOR ,SALE WanIn septic lank. 675· 1234.
Equipment
ted : ~esponslble party to
take over plano. Can be 1974 Nl)lla Supenporl 150 camper 1973 28 fl. 5th
BACKHOE and Septic tank
- n locally. Write Mr. engine, $500. Good running wheel camper. SOli con· Service. Larry Siden ·~
cond.
Coll742·3116.
talnod,
hitch
Included,
Powers, Box 327, Cerlvle,
54,500. Call alter 5PM 367· slrlcker. 675·,5580.
111.62231 .
·
1969 VW. 42,000 miles on 7689 or 367-7m.
Electric• I
rebulll
engine,
new
tires,
Yamaha acoustic guitar.
a Relr!veratlan
new exhaust, new shocks. 1976 Slarcrofl fold down
675·2668.
SS!OIIrm. C'!ll992·6081 .1.
cimper,, like new •cond. SEWING Machine repairs,
$1,600. Coll367·a482.
'
le~VI~'!; AuthoriZed Singer ·
F.rull
SUrplus' Jeeps, cars, trucks
Sales &amp; Strvlce. Shai'pen
&amp;Vop!IDIII
Car·ln'l. value 1214 sold 1975 Choteau 28 fl. 'sen- Scissors. FabriC Shop,
Apples, Honey ancl awt for ·l100. For .fnformatuon contained travel trailer Pomeroy. 992·2214.
elder . Grimes Golden on pu'rch•slng similar wllh air and owning. 1979
Delicious and
Rod bargalno, Call 602·941·11014 · Ford super cab ptd!up,
Delicious . .Fittpatrlck Or· ext. 4796. Phone call refun· · 22,000 miles, a.c 1, trailer JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition HrYice,
c""rd, S.R. 689. 614-669' .d able. 1•
tow PIICkage. BOih $9,500, c:ommerclal,· Industrial .
3785.
' MaY ba-n at lot 14 ROY I\ Phone A2·2079.
. ·,
MORRISON'S Auto sales. Oak Park or 992·3700. ·
Henderson,
wv.
Phone
675·
John Cleek, Parilancl, 843·
IS
Genent H•ullng
2285. "('urnlps $3.00 bushel . 1574111'675-2881.
Timberlake trailer cam·
Bring conlol,.r. You pull.
per. 14 ft. Slllepl 4. Goad NOW HAU~ING house coal
1972 Votkeswaaon, 675·2164 can&lt;lltlon. 1600. Call 614· II. limestone lor driveway$,
667-6164 . .
Coli IO[OStlmatas367·7101
59
For Site or Tror112-19f

-....... . . . ....
...............
~

'

.,

WOULI'N'T

CONNIE GOT COC'AINE

TNATMI\KE

FROM ONE OF )OUR
Ma:&gt;eLS... ~

INTERE5TI~

CONNIE, TflL HER
IT IMt'T TRri£!

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HER.'

lifi'O·

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..,

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.,

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..

1m

Evening television listings-----rn-··~-,~-~~":"·~-·;-.":.-·~-·:-q.-.-..---liD-••

1975 16 fl. ball boel. 1970
Pontiac con-.rtiDie. Phone
675· 1304.
'

ffttOAY
OCT . Z,1M1

- -:::---......
.
- .. ..
,,,

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c.,.,.....

3454.

000!'·

I

11 lt. camPtf:, ....,. 6, ...
contained, tiDOd condition,
owning, IPIIrt tlrt with
carrier. 112.!11. 1'73-5134. .

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. CaH 367·7.01 or
367-US91.
.
- -· I

'

.. .

HAZZAADOela)'moonllghtaaa
a reporter lor I he Hau a rei
Heraldandget.-aby-llneatory
whenBouHoggoverlookathe
poweroi"thepreaadurlng one ol
h i. ne te r I 0 u. IC hem.. .
(B_apeat;&amp;Omlna.)
·
(]) Ni!XTQUI!SnON
CiD ENTERPRISI! 'Wil dcatter'
In I h Ia I ira I o I a I a II en
document a r I e I on hoW
Amurican butlneu work a,
Enterp rlu chronlclelthe
dr!lllng of a gu well and
!lluatratu how drilling Ia
planned. llnanc ed and carried
out

, TONIGHT

~PPVDAYIAQAIN

.
I
i

(() TICTAC.OOUQH
(fi)
MACNI!Il Li!HRI!.R
~ RlltORT
•
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f;Oe
WINNI!R8
_
f::ID
YOUAIKI!D,-ORIT
ANQ:ntER LIFE

e

•()) PAMILVFI!UD
..
LAVI!RN!: AND Sklllii:LEV
AND COIIPAHV
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(!I_OINIDINI'ftOOR!88)

1:01 (J)POOTBALLIATURDAYOM

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SATURDAY NIQHT AT
THE M0¥111
Cil C'MONALONG
([l .AlrR!O HITCHCOCK

"•a•herehl11nte"1tl0

4:10 (() . .HIOfiiiiiPOMIBLII!

5~ (() ANOTHfiiLifll

·

8ATURD.\Y

10:00 (]) R~KCHURCH

(1)(1}) . FANTA9't'ISL.ANDA
night watch min dreama ol
beingatoughprivattteye lnthe
romanllc 1940'atradllion:anda ~

wom~t. nwho toveshoraarldlng
makea themoattamoua rlde ot
alias Ladr Qodlva'satand·in.
{repeat: .80 mlna.) (Cioae·
CapUoned: U.S. A.)d
(I) THI! WAR ATH ME
CID W"R AT HOME Through
pera on alaccounutrom
parUclpantaand ararearchlval
footage , ttlla program acrutln·
iln how 1 u fatl midweauun
town •uu transformed Int o a
ballleoroundwheraAmerican
torelgn policy in Vlatnam and
American val~ea et home were
challenlilitd, and changed . (90
mina.)
10:01 Cl) TIIWi!'IKENDNEWI

lSI~.... "J .(
ACROSS
1 Pisces sign
5 Poet.
Sylvia 10 Zone
11 Used a whip
13 Nllan weight
14 Slick
15 Up (prefix I

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. _ BLACKWOOD

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=-~.:.ow

(I) CISLAft 110¥11! 'TN
Lut Wave' 1117 &amp;tara :
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....,.. tiM
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florpl'~1177 Patrick war••·

22 Eins, zwei ,

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maneuver 38 Freight or
'!7 Ordinance
dining 29 lAng bailie 31 Pagoda

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39 Cognate
"tG Circus rlngs,
by nwnber
llFictional

1"111

II

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AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter aimp)y stands f~r another. ln this sample A ll
used ror the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten
apottrophes, the lenph •m'- formation of the wprda; are ad
hints. Eath day the code leUen •~ different.

IUNISCOj
t I K

CRYPTOQUOTES

OF

SDYJYWFF

1:10 .

AQN W

OQKDYM

HWQHOW

Yeatenlly's Cryploqllll\0: 1liE FLAME OF'ANGER, BRIGHI'
AND BRIEF, $1lARPENS 1liE BARB OF LOVE.-WALTER
·s . LANDOR

1:011

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the - "
31 Actress,

of love ... "

Pawr' .1170 .foaONin P.,n•
bt(lei,HitOertM.,_..._. (t

- 1t1U ~IIOYI •CADYINTUitl,

30 ''The sky's

31 Hlre

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11 oM W=r1D..'!ftMft1' . , _ .

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

23 Stimulate
24 ne'rry
for jeUy
Z5 Sub

valley
27 Reduce
28 Hockey great
29 Spanish city b--l--+32 Bolivian
Indian
33 Fr01&lt;t
140PEC
money.maker

Do- MCCiura. I) 'Hinde of

•

• Yesterday's ADiwtr

DAILY C~Yf70QUOTE - Here's how lo work It:

Gu . .t : Cava Thon~aa, Lorna

1-ttnwtttf.

'

. '•

dog

,...TONIQHT..OW
G•ooiHool ' David Letterman.

~ •OVII·CHOIIIIORt •••

.·.

ean prince
5 Earth
6 Burdened
1 Bal malerial

• %1 Blue-pencil

Wlit
23 Performed
25 Dehydrated
2'German

...

4 Shakespeai'"·

12 Cnunpled
11 Between
19 German river

'"A'Ja.NIWI

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1 Lethal
2 Mid-Easterner
3 Give an assist

18 Football '
stalwarts
·zo small isle
~Force

"

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DOWN

16 Dookey,
8 Seemingly
tn France..
9 Female
11 Bore the pillm protagonist

INTMIPAIIILY

11111

..

by THOMAS JOSEPH

l7 "Speak -

I!YENING
7·.00

Aoge r Ebert andGeneSiskel
r•vlewlng the new movies In
town wUh lull -l ength scenes
from : ·Mommle Oea r eet ,'
atarrirtgFayeOunawayaaJoan
c rawford; 'Only Whun 1Laugh,'
B Ne II Si mon comedy w ith
Me nha Maao n and t&lt;rlaty
t-tcNichol 61 mother and
daughle r; and 'Co nl ln ental
Dlvlda,·a"romantic com edywllh
John Beluahl.

35U.F.O.

OCT.3, 1011

I

Prevlewa'returrjlwilhco·hoS111

v,.. •

11:01

atttii'IIPI to MrthM ......,....,
he hal ........... AMiffrM•·
lf:are: ~~a..A,Kale

lttfiii.ePIIOI',1Nf•..-.:

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FATHIRMAIIIIING
61 IIIUIVI
2:21 (I) CBNIPOIITIM~T .
2:30 (I) 11011 UGLIYIHOW
2:41 (!) MOYII! •(COMIDY)
· "PitiiPIIfttet'" 11ft
··3:&amp;8 ~ CINIPORTIRf]t()RT
•:00
700CLUI
• :to
RATPAT1101.
4:30 ())?OVII! ·(ROMANCII!) ••

e··~OII~HOUie ~

IMIIoiY,..__...,
MllllfiW,KiilhleltleHar,
-MMCoototadllti,L _ ,
,._..... lloooL (ltn.l ;.

Ultlmale Gtm•' 19&amp;1 Stare.:
Barry Boatwlck, Joan Van A.rk,
WilHam Deva n.a . A fictional
acc o un t of ttla l nc redlbiy
riiUaticwar.,gameaconducted
l!l the U.S. ftir Force. {2 hra.)

me NI!WI

.(1)

brotlter apptart, A a
•I
tit a waaDNQAaftlattMrtllkof
her own lila h'l Ill dooperato

ONE bedroom aportl'f'lenl,
fully tvrnllhtet, N.,., Haven
.,..., Wlttr plld, cleposlt
1100. t22.!.00 • monlh,
pnter wwklng couple, no
~lldran, for Information
call414'446-7526. .
· -~-~--

......

1~:(1)CB!!.U~~ftcC~~-

tMQiftltaltOQefharand coma
.,wtttt,cruyptulohetl)thllr
!2Ye_:ct60ktnend. (AI.peat)
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.. te
' ottera ta oook dlnMt tOt a man

ffiiA.TURDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES 'Tilt' 1978 Sltrl ·
Brook• Shield I , Charles
•ourn(l)lng.Grr. CIS SATUROlY
NI.'HT'ii""'tl! 'Red Flag: The

(]) 30 MINUTE 8 WITH

10:30 (() . THII WIIK ON WALL

lawtaheal~nwllhloveand
after

2:00

anlllilillaenlanceforhlaroleln
It'll ·-.alan 011 Scand•l.'
(Rapall; 00 l'flina.)
(J) OF'PMY ROCICfR
(ll) NIWI
10:21 (]) CBN UPDATI NII!WI

(J) INTf.RPRISI
·
tiJ)IIAIT!APII!CITHUTRI
'Suft. . t Song : The .Sono ' AI
home on leave, Ewan cru•lly
bonia ol hia inlid•lltlaa. Chfia
1811 him 81 a • ru I 1 I 1 I ranger'
and I hey part WHh bllletiMiaa .

em CI"I'CCOU..,...V

8:06 ()) NAIHVILL!ALIYfl
• 1:00 (]) WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING iiaglar va Hamaho ;
W11verva Tillis
'
.
(J) THE LOVIIOAT

parlorminoauchMaai 'Gtlntle
on My Mind ,· 'Gtlvetton , • .
·oatla Dawn,' and 'Tanhe11ee
Woman.' .

. . (JJ MOYII ·(COMEDY)•••
...... , Ulce Okl 11m. ."
Ul81 .
eCIJ®J DALLAS J.R. facaa
lh&lt;I!.POIIibl• loa• ol Ewing Oil

In 'fno" 1 -

anenaton

12:158 (]) CBN SPORTSRI!POAT
1:00 (I)
WAAAIN ROII!RTS.
PRI!.NTI
1:30 ()II. NIWS
1:40 (J) ATLANTA IIRAYI!I lA·
&amp;I! BALL RIPLAY Atlan'ta
BraveavaCincil'lnaiiRM•
1:•5 (]) OLI!N W1TH TANYA Glen
CampWIIandTanyiTuokerare
togtHtler again at Harrah'aln
L.u Veg . . lor an avanlno of
m u 8 1 cat entertainment

1:015 (])MOVI!o(ORAMA)•• "L..d'f
PoaNIHd" 11152 ~
1:30 ([l(fi) B!NWATTINII!AGAT
LARGE 'Specter Haunting
Communism : Polilh Workers'
Wittenberg vialtaPoland, and
talksw ithlrvlngBrown ,.the
AFL ·CIO"alegendarr man in
Europa, about wOfki~Q otaaa

I N .ON Kraue

AND
THI
MANDRELL
SIITIRS
e(l)t'il WALTDIIH!V 'The
Love Bu!iJ' 1a69 Stan : Du.n
Jonea,Michele.Lee.
(J) GOLDI!NAQI OFTELEVIliON: 'Bang ttia Drum Slowly'

(jill

' acitl·communlam.

7:61 (f) Cllt_UPI)ATINIWI
.
1:00 t]).(!) MIC MAGAZINE
wtTM DAVID lfiiNKLIY Tt-t la
w. .kly aerlea oHaraa blend ot
current newa atorlea. topleal
reportund'prolllea.tiaatDavlci
BrltMtteylatolnedbycontributing reporter a Garrick Ullay ,
Jack Parkin a, Douglaa Kiker

.

••V. "Ever,. Whlc:h Wey But
Laoee"11i171
·•·
12:00 ()) ROIIIAGL!YSHOW
()) AIIC NEWS NIOIHTLINE
Ar~choredbyTedKoppel .
FRIDAYS
12:30 (]) (J) &amp;CTYN!TWORK to
OuaMa: TheTubea.(Aepeat ;QO
mina.)
(]) PRIDAY8

John W![ne . Ja·n etLeigh.
CJ CI)llQJ THEDIJKESOF

EYE,.NG
f:oo CIJ~. PM MAGAZINE
f]) GOOONI!W8
(j) INIIDI THE NFL
(I)
ENTI!RTAINiriENT

.

1975
150 _,,., 3
sptld, ~ tires, no ruat,
runs
$2,000. 304·895-

-w-.-.••-..-,

-:.-·:.-T:-.R£--V••

fl

1 ::::::::::::::::::_~~~~~~~~~~~ ·-------------------

5 room unfurrilshed apt.
992·5434, 992-5914 or 304·882·
2566.

,

J

72

2 bdr. mobile home deposit
&amp;..reference. Call256-1922.

Available. 1 bedroom apt.
for . rent. Contact VIllage
Manor Apls., Middleport.
992·7781.

JlM MARCUM Roaluntr ·
IIPOUIIng and siding. 30
vean · experience ~ Free
estltnates. Remodeling.
Call388·9157.
STUCCO PLASTERING I
textureG ceilings, com·
merclal and residential,
free estimates . «;all 256·
1182.
.

Almost new Sei~ler fuel ofl
heater, gas stove, break·
fast set, living room suite,
all In good cond. Call 367·
.0242.
.

mobile home . 3
bdr .~. partly furnishe&lt;l , 8
mi. from Holzer Hosp. on
north 160. Call 388·8711 or
388·9692 . ~
•.

alter6p.m.

'

New apt. size refrigerator,
Sl25. GraVely tractor and
mower, S750. Snapper
r iding mower 32 ln. cut,
$275. GOOd seletllon ot
hand guns. call367·0482.

Furnished Rooms

~AYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, atnished, vinyl underpinning, 14x7o Winsor modern, loman. 3 tables, $500 . Sola,
must be moved . 14500. 685· clean. 1 1/ 2 bath, 2 bdr .• chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
6036 or 675·1843.
convenient location. sec. from
$285. to $795. Tables,
dep . .and ref .. no pets. Call $38 and
up to $109. Hlde·a ·
245·5818.
be-ds,S:UO., queen size, $380.
Business Buildings
'34
Recliners, $175. lo $295 .,
Building If Syracuse, can For rent 2 bdr. mobile Lamps from S18. to $65. 5
be used as church, ~torage, horrie in Porter area . Ref . pc. dlfettes from $79., to
store, etc . Cusler Manning. II. dep. req . Coll367-7101.
S38S. 7 pc. , $189 . and up.
992·5249.
Wood t(Jble with 4 chairs.
l4x70 3 bdr. total electric $219 up lo $495. Desk $110.
Lots &amp; Acreage
35
trailer 10 minutes from Hutches, $300. and S3.75 .,
town on private lot. $200 a maple or pine finish.
LOTS - Real nice campsite month plus deposit &amp; Bedroom suites · Bassett
on Raccoon Creek, all utilities. Ref. required. C:all Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
utilities available, $300. 256· 1393.
$195. Bunk bed complete
down, owner will finance,
with mattresses, $250. and
call after 3 p.m., 256-6413.
up lo $350. Captain's' beds,
12x60 mob ile home 3 miles $275. complete. Baby beds,
south or Gall ipolis. Adults,
2 lots in Ohio Valley ref . and dep. required .· $99. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, S58 .,
Memory Gardens, $600. Ph . Phone 446·7326.
firm,. $68. and $78. Queen
«6·1628.
se!S, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
dr. chests, S42. Bed
Mobile Home in Chester.
' 10 acres near Porter on old Nice II. clean. 2 bedrooms; l ·fo·on1e•. $20.and$25., 10gun
160. I de a I for !'lome or home Reference required. 985- · 1GUn cabinets, $350., dinet·
sites, o·r tra iler park. Road 3839 or 985·3311.
·
le chairs $20. and $25. Gas
frontage , no down
or electric ranges, S295. orpayment, assumeable morsuper firm, $95,
tgage, low interest. Call 2 bedroom fra iler, adults ll)ppedic
baby matresse!. $25 II. $35,
only.
Browns
Trailer
Court
3~8:9060.
.
bed frames $20, $25, II. $30.
992·3324.
used ,
Ranges,
3 flat. 5 a cre lots. 15,000 &amp;
refrigerators, and TV's. ·
18,000. City schools. Call Partially furnished trailer . 3 miles oul Butaville Rd.
$150. a month, cjeposit S100. Qpen 9am to 7pm. Mon .
379·2196 after &lt;4 :30.
You pay utilities. Mid· thru Fri ., 9am to5pm, Sat.
dleport, 992·2772.
446·0322
Would you like to own a.
home of your · Qwn. We
didn't have $10,000 for a 1' bedroom mobile home. GOOO
USED
AP ·
down payment nor SS,OO 675·4154.
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers.
refrigerators,
nor even Sl,OOO. Do what we 1
did Call 513-592-9175.
f"
~ome, small, -v..
r anges . S_kaggs · ·Ap mile out Sandhill Road. . pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave., «6· 7398.
BY owner, 3 apartment Adults only . No pels. 675'I
house on apprmc I acre . 3834.
Live in' one, rent others to
USED
FUR ·
RAY 'S
make your payment. Can
NITURE WOOd II. coal cook
be converted single home . 44
stove, etectrlc heaters, fuel
Apartinemt
City water, will c'onslder
Qil heaters, coal heaters,
for Rent
land contract. 675-1883 9-5
liospilal bed, electrl{
Furnished apts." 2 bdr., dryer. Call367 0637.
p.m .
$230.. utilities paid, near
HMC, adults. Call 444·4416
1112 acres on river in Hen· after
Norge e lectric range, 30 in·
7PM.
derson, 61&lt;4·992·5264.
ch, good condition . 675·
1224.
2 bdr . apartment unfurn .,
Real Estate
36
in Crown City, Ohio. Call
Wanted
54
Misc. Merchandlce
2566520.
wanted to buy, rent, or rent
Ratliff Pools &amp; Service.
with option to buy . 3 or .t '3 rm . apt. utilities paid . Complete sales, service,
· bedroom
house
with
Call675·5104 or 675·5386.
pool covers, and winbasement In Pt. Pleasant .
terization kits. Call446-1324
675-7264.
Unfurn. 4 rm. apartment •
$250 mo .. $100 dep., utilities R'estaurant equipment
pd ,, no children, no pets.
reconditioned by RADCO.
Call «6·3437.
Call .. 304-523·1378. Hgtn.,
WVA . .
Deluxe
furnished
apart·
Houses for Rent
41
ment central air and heat, Squires Bingham 22 L.R .
excellt:nt location, adults ammo $1 .19 per box. Eclip·
Small fur'nished house In
only, le~se. dep. , upper se 12 gage game loades, 6
the city, ad lilts only. Call
bracket, reference. 446- shot, 20 shells per box $3.95.
446·0338.
0338.
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, .«6House for rent 15 min. from
Mobile home in c.:lty central 8025.
Gallipolis on Rt. 7. Call256·
air and heat, acjults only,
1198.
dep. 446·0338.
Firewoocl·spl It, cjelivered
and stacked . Mixed wood
For Rent With Option To
2 BEDROOM apartment, $65 per cord or S35 per half
Buy! 4 bed., 2 112 baths,
HUO accepted. 675-6722, cord. Hardwood $75 per
livlngroom. family room, 2
cord or. UO per half cord.
w . b . fireplaces, 2·car 675·5104.
Call for quotes on large1
garage, city sctlools. Sec .
quanities.
PhoneUS-5478 .
dep. II. rei . Call446·4206. ·
APARTMENTS
One
bedroom starts at $152.00
per month. Two bedroom For sale House coal pickup
4 lidr. 2 1/2 bath bi level
starts at $188.00 per month. or delivered. Call256·6816.
with pool off. Rl. 35. Call
Oeposll $21J9 . Call416:2745.
Wiseman Real Estate
Agency. &lt;W6·3643.
1979 Chevy Camara, 212X60
Upstairs deplux 2bdr., dep. used mobile homes. Call
&amp; ref. req. For 1 or 2 «6·1552 afler 5.
small 4 rm. ·&amp; bath, fur·
people. Call «6·3949 or «6·
nisned, located 735 rear 3rd
2419.
Ave .. Gall ipolis. $150 per
New 1981 model sewing
mo ., $65 deposit. Call «6·
machines .
Zig
Zags,
3870 or 446·1340.
1 bedroom apts; available mon()grams, sews on butat Riverside Apts. Equal tons, makes button holes,
Opportunity Housing. Coli darns, mends, la~cvstllch,
6 Room House, $200 un·
992·7721 .
furnlshed .except range and
regular SU9:95. Now $99 •.50.
refrig . Neighborhood
Free phone call. ) :ail
Road . .ut.-""'16 after 7 p.m .
2 bedr00111 apartment on collecll-304·736' 9241.
SprlngAv~. Pomeroy . Par·
tially furnished. S170 you ·wood for" sale. Call J.J .
2 BR nouse. Stole Rl. 7. 256·
pay utilities. Call 992·2288 Jusllce388·8246.
6520, «6· 4292.

tfouse

1968 Ford Mustang, 289 4
speed. Call 675-6968 alter 5
pm.

The-Dally

Furnfshed ettiency apl. New woodburnlno ad·on
Down town pt, Pleasant. furnanc~.
still In factory
All utilities paid, dep. req . · carton, heats
large home,
Callla4·895·3450.
$.450. Call256·1216.

1966 New Moon 12 x 52, fur -

unfurnished 3 bdr. house
close to town, $325. a month. deposit reqVfred. «6·
· 9655 or «6·4240.

1974 Plymoulll Ou&amp;ter. 6755172.

I

1911

by 1.ury Wright 7~1_ _.!;A!!!ut.!!..!:""!!!...!S~al!!.•_ _

UsectJurnllure, 2 pc. ~ lYi ng
room suites, electric range
top, card tables, 9x12 rug.
Call«6·1171.
·

new

2 bdr. trailer in
of
Evergreen, S150. a month
plus dep. all electi-ic. Call
245·1970.

October

Firewood Oak, Hickory
mixed, dtllvered . Call
Jamie at 245·9264.

Effiency .a,:partment,
mature person ·' with good
relerent:o,. • All ullllles
paid . M5 month. Htn·
derson, wv. 675•2946.

2 bdr., 3 bdr., mobile
homes. Call -'"·0175 .
70x14

1962 1a x 55 New Moon .
$2500. Phone 895·3612.

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WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Reagan is threatenil)g.to use his veto
powe~; to mate scalet.-down spen.
ding 1a111ets stick In Congress, but
evo!t1 hiS allies concede he is unlikely
to getaU the budget cuts he wants.
"11~.will sign no legislatioo that
would. bust the budget and violate
our c~l}llllitment to ·hold doWn
!edera\'~pendlng, '' Reagan deolared
Thursdai' 't a nationaDy broadcast ··
news coriference. . ,
Shortly . afterward, however,
House Republican leader Robert H.
·Michel of Illinois said he doubted
Congress would give Reagan his elltire package o( '13 billion in 1982
spending cuts and $3 billion in lax illcreases.
The new package of cuts and tax
, Increases &lt;&gt;~ed last week, irl;.:
· ~ tended to hold the 1982 budget deficir
' '' to $43.1 billion, comes on top bl the
·\ ' ~. billion In spending reductions
' · that Congress voted earlier.
· . , At his news conference, Reagan
declined to say in advance what
legislation he had In mind when he
said he was ready to veto money
biDs.
Speaking on the day his first round
of budget cuts went into effect,
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Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio

Page-12- The Dally sentinel

.R .eagan

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Reagan aaid his econmc program when the Houle debates leglal•tloo
irould take lime to achieve reaults. providing fundi for the \leP&amp;rtmenb
But be vowed,- "We will not I.e of Labor, H~)h and Hwnan Serswayed from our plan by every vices and Ed11C81lon.
.
changing current, every pualng
H.- Republican aides say the
trend or every. short·tenn ftucmeasure is about f2 billion over
tuatioo."
Reagan's budget larget, buJ PurRJ:agan said that ~pitethe cuts, seD's aide aaid the group of
the government would continue to moderate Republicans vowed to
lake care of people who "are totally fight anticipated ainendments to ·
. make~ts.
dependent" on aasl.stsnce.
.
"What we aaJl the salety net is still
Stockman ran into criticism
in place," he said.
before the House Buqget .ComWhile.Reagan ~randished his veto mittee. where he appealed for more
threat, buqget director David A. ' ~Is but provided few details of the
Stocknian pressed the case for presidnt's new package.
deeper spending ~Is and a group of
"Those of us who do not disagree
moderate and liberal House with your goals, but have disagreed
Republians reaffinned their ob- with some of the specifics of your
jection to deeper cuts in social· policy are troubled by the fact that
program:i without more reductions before this last round of cuts even
goes · into effect, we are already
than Reagan wants in defense.
"We. don't .want to take round two faced with another set," said Rep.
of l)omestic without round one of James Jones, l).()kJa,, the panel's
defense, .. aaid an aide to Rep. carl chairman.
Pursell, R-Mich., the leader of the
Stockman sald more than half the
self-described "gypsy moth" group job' remains to be done if Congress is
of GOP House members.
to achieve Reagan's larget of a
The first test of Reagan's abiUty to balanced budget in 1984.
prevail on his new round of budget
"The current budget outlook - In
cuts ·is likely to come next week. the absence pf further policy.actio~
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about

. - 11 r. budget deficits "'
~
billloo in each of the years lJID.
liM," he Bald.
The White Howe, meanwhile,
aaked Concrea on 'lburaday , to
wltbbold spending $737.2mllllon for
a vulety ol. ~. Including the
Appalacblan ~liilal Cmuniulon,
a synthetic fuel pl.snt and funds unclalnted by partldpants In the
govermnent's Infamous .Tuskegee
syphiilsstudy.
.._
Congress can overturri' the
pniliident's decisloo if either the.
Senate or Hourre approves an ImpoUndment resolution.
AU but four ol. the 26 pr'Opoi!ed ·
spendlnc deferrals were carryovel'l
fi'&lt;IJI the fiscal year that ended
Thursday.
Also deferred were ~.340 which
could be used to cover the government's liability for survivors and
·clependents of the Tuskegee syphllla
study- a 441-year project of the U.S.
Public Health Service In which 623
poor black men were denied treat·
ment aa doctors studied the effects
of the disease. Attorneys have said
they cannot find four of the men, and

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tmts
Vol. 15 No. 34
Copyrighted 1911

Minnie L.

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By LARRY EWING

u. s. in re~essio:h .

J~ckson

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M..S. Mirutie L. Jackson, 89, Mid·dieport, died ThUrsday at Holzer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP.)- Here is a !')lfldown qn the $1.8 billion hike In consumer and other !axes as
By Aaaoclated Press
In Jlnother sign. / of sagging Y
Medical Center following a lingering
approved by the Ohio House Thursday and sent to the Senate.
President Reagan expects a con- economic activity, tommercft'
illness.
Some of the Ohio Legislative Budget Office's revenue estimates are based on an assumption the
Mrs. Jackson was · born June' 5, llnued fluctuation of unennployment Department reported coni~on
higher taxes '!'ould be In effect by Oct. I, and therefore wiU be high for the current fiscal year.
1892 at Clllton Forge, Va., a and inflation figes, and a Wall street spending ln":August dropped t:6 per·
-One cent boost in the pre~nt four-cents-o11-the-dollar sales lax, to yield $278.3 million In the fiscal
daughter of the iate Frank and Katie , eponomisl says the nation Is slipplifg cent fJ'Oill July. .
year ending next June 30, and $419.6 million the followjllg fiscal year.
~
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tinders Fink. · She waa ·also Iiiio a recession that mlrTopr •
-Extend the sales lax to certain services, such as parking and auto repairs, to become effective
In other economic developments
preceded in death by her ilusband, Britain's financial pllsht.
Nov. 1and yield PIS million this fiscal year; ~.5 million next year.
Thursday:
VoWing
be
•'
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j¥1)1
not
be
swayed"
in
Robert Jackson, and a son, Robert
-Extend the five&lt;ent aaies lax to cigarettes; $55.9million and~.5 million.
-Banks and savings Institutions
Jackson, in World War · II. Also his drive to cut federalndlng and
-Impose a surcharge on the corporate franchise'income tax;·$74 million and $89 million. The bill
preceding her In death were four reduce laxes, Reagan Bald at a news began selling lax-exempt AU Savers
would levy a pennanent 15 percent surcharge oo aU corporations. Corporations showing a profit
sisters, two brothers and two grand- conference Thursday he . expects Certificates with an Interest rate of
would pay a surcharge of ·20.22 percent for the next three 11\X filing 'periods while being permitted to
major ecooomic indicators to fluc- 12.61 percent. - Many people,
children.
tske advantage of accelerated federal lax depreciation schedules. Revenue estimates were not
Surviving are six daughters and tuate lor the next several montlia. · however, waited for the reslllts of
available.
··
Wall Street ecooornlsts said they thoi government's auction· of one· sons-ill-law, Stella and Richard
-Increase tax on wine conlaining 7 to 14 percent alcohol by 18 cents per gallon; on wine with 14 to
expect
a small Increase In the year Treasury biDs tb!lt deterrplried .
Coleman, Long Bottom; Edith and
21 percent alcohol conte!Jt by 20 cents per gallon; raise the tax on high-powered beer by II-&amp; cents per
unemployment rate for Sep- the AU .Savers Certificate , rate to
nation's
Daniel Pooler, Chesterhill; Csnnen
12 ounce container, and"!hree eights of one cent on low beer. Veld '15 miUion this year and $22.5
tember,
scheduled to be released lake effect Monday. Tha( new rate
and Everett McManaway, Bucyrus;
million in fi•call982·1983.
today.
July's
rate was 7 percent;and will be 12.14 percent, nearly one.haif
Esther and Fred Johnson,
point lower than the current rate.
August's
was
7.2 percent.
Delaware: Betty imd Earl
On
Tharsday,
the
government
Foresman, Columbus; Mary and
-Assets of money market mutual
Kenneth Stanley, Mason; a step- reported a 1.9 'pe~nt drop in
daughter, ~jessie Ralph, Bucyrus; August orders for new manufa" funds rose $732 million to •160.7
two sons and daughters-in-law, Uo lured goods. That was the first moll- biUion In the week ended Sept. 30, ac(Continued from page 1) . ..
E. and Mary Jackson, Columbus, thly decline since January and sup- coro the Investment Company InThe sheriff's department issued a and William E.· and Barbara Jean ported some analysts' belief the stitute, the trade association of the
Veterans· Memorial
economy is growing weaker.
mutual fund indir.stry.
news release Wednesday night, Jackson, Wide Field, Colorado.
Twenty-nine
grandchildren
also
surAdmitted··Trenton Qualls, saying "a major breakthrough is ex·
Pomeroy; Julia Gibbs, Pomeroy; peeled by 4 p.m. Th~y con- vive.
Services wiU be beld at~ p.m. Sun·
, ceming. the strike." Both sides met
The !ina Garrett, Pomeroy.
Meigs County· ,sheriff's deputies
day
at the Rawlings- Coats-Blower
Oischarged:-Homer Powell, Tren- Wednesday. ·
report two accidents were in· ton QuaDs.
Funel'll
Home with Mr. Robert
T'Wenty-seven sheriff's depart·
vestlgated department Thursday
•
Melton
officiating.
Burial will be In
ment employees, including deputies,
'
evening.
.
Graham
Cemetery
at Graham
dispatchers and jailers, walked off
HQmecoming.set
At 7:25 p.m. on State Route 338
Station, W. Va. Friends may call at
the job shortly after noon Sept. 22.
near Great Bend, a deer ran into the
the funeral home fnm 2 to 4 and 71D
The aMual homecomiltg of the That left Montgomery, his wife,
side of an eastbound pickup tritck . South Bethel United Methodist Chur- Norena, a chief deputy aJ¥1 volun- 9'p.m. Saturday.
.•
driven by Carolyn Triplett, Route 2, ch at Silver Ridge wiU be held Sun- : teers in charge of the southern Ohio
Racine. The deer was killed but Ms. day. There will be a diMer served at county,-which covers approximately
Triplett was'not Injured. Tl)ere were . noon. The afternoon program star- 474 square miles and represents
Special Sale of quality
slight damages to the vehicle.
about
30,000
residents.
• • Douglas Marc Sport·
ting at 1:30 p.m. will feature music
At 9 p.m. on County Road 34 at by "Sunrise". Duane Sydenstricker,
The job action followed a regular
swear in misses sizes.
(Continued from pag~ 1)
Nease Settlement, a westbound the pastor, extends an Invitation to county commissioners' meeting
Fashionable · brown
vehicle went off the roadway and the public.
during which commissioners James E·. Uvernier, 39, . Rt. 3,
tweeds or s.o lid gray
· . damaged a mailboax owned by
refused to recognize the deputies' Gallipolis, was unable io stop for a
,
polyester .
. William Edwards. The vehicle con·
newly fonned union, said Lt. Alva stopped vehicle driven by Trudy G.
tinued traveling some 200 feet in a
SuUivan, a spokesman for the Stinsori, 24, Rt. 1, Bidwell, on U.S. 35
' ditch before gelling back onto the
SLACKS,
SKIRTS,
strikers. Commissioners said they at 5:30p.m., slid on wet pavement
coordinators
Name
road. ' Driver of the vehicle is I
also would not honor the union's and struck Stinson's car.
JACKETS and COOR·
unknown since the vehicle, believed
~ Slight &lt;jamage was done to both
Two Galiia educators have been requests, he said.
DINATING BLOUSES.
to be heavily damaged, did not stop. named as district coordinators to
Deputies voted Sept. 8 to organize vehicles and Uvernler was cited for
work with students in the Talented under the American Federation of assured clear distance.
Marriage license
and Gifted (TAG) program in 1981· State, County and Municipal EmSATURDAY ON I. Y .
ployees. The vote precelled layoffs Retail taxes down;
82.·
Thomas Edward Bali, 27,
They are Patricia Brenneman of of t5 deputies in September. Three
vehicle ta.xes up ·
Pomeroy, and Deborah Lee Gallipolis City Schools and Robert others were to be laid off today.
Graham, 28, New Haven.
Lanning of the Gallla County Local
Relaii sales tax receipts for
School District.
' · August, this year, were down 18.82
Dan Morris lias been appointed To conduct canvass
,.
percent under the same month last
coordinator in the Meigs Local
year, bui motor vehicle sales tax
In conjunctibn with National Fire receipts were up 13.94 percent, acOn grounds of gross neglect of Schools.
A
TAG
coordinator
is
named
to
act
Prevenllon
Week the Pomeroy Fire cording to the report of State
duty and extreme cnrelty, Harriet J.
as
a
conlact
person,
·resot.urce
agent
Department
will make a bouse-t&lt;&gt;c Treasurer Gertrude Donahey.
Smith was granted a divorce from
and
coordinator
for
·a
school
house
canvass
of the territory 1it
Retail sales lax receipts for
Harold Eugene Smith in the Meigs
I
district's
efforts
to
develop
special
covers
with
handouts
concerning
August,
this year, IQialed "1,831.03
County Common Rieas Court. The
for
talented
and
gifted
home
fire
prevention.
The
depart·
while
receipts
for
last
August
totaled
programs
plaintiff was granted custody of two
students.
ment will also accept donations to $76,167.92. Motor vehiclea-aales tax
minor children.
Coordinators
will
attend
inservice
help eliminate debts incurred in for August, this year, amounted to
In the same court, the marriage of
education
programs
conducted
by
·
~pgradingtheirtankertrunk.
$42,484.57 compared to receipts of
Leota Young and Reid Young was
.
Department
members
will
can•
.., .,., 251n A ust 1980
the
Southeastern
Ohio
Voluntary
dissolved. In a divorce action, the
VBBS In Bed!ord Townshi p and parts
judge rules the defendant, Reid Education Cooperative, a public os Salisbury
Township starting Monschoolagency.
·
Young, innocent of gross neglect d.
day.
duty and denied the plaintiff a divor·'
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·1 Middl~port· Pomeroy-Gi!ltip.olis-Point
PleasaJ1f_'

Time• Be lbwlStaff

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.GAUJEOIJS - Gallla ~·s
already strapped budget for t!ie:! will
be further complicated by Implementation Of the Agricultural
Land Use Exemption, resulting In an
additional $3.8 million reduction in
the county's evaluation - lor pur·
poses Ill taxation - it was learned
this week.
· That loss in lax base falls in the
shadow of a $74.6 mllllon reduction
armounced in late ~uly that will occur with the reapportionment of 30
percent of the real property located
in Cheshire and the dl.strlbullon of

the full v.alue of the transmlsslon
llnes serving the Gavin Power Ptant,
as ordered
by .the state l8r! corn-•
.
.
mission.
' Applli'Stion of the exemption,
which affects land used exclusively
for agrlcyltural purpoaes, Is reflected by an exclusion of . approximately '10 million In true
market value of such property for
purposes of taxation - the assessed
value losS represents 35 percent of
market value; or, the $3.8 million
figure.
According to Gallirf Auditor
Dorothy Condee, the reduced

News briefs

. . Mdgs County happenings. • • No progress
Deputies check
minor accidents

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

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
.

SPORTSWEAR ·SALE /

Six injured

20%

SAVE

'End marriages

CHECK OUT OUR FAll SALE PRICES ON
QUALITY MERQIANDISE .
:tHROUGHOUT lHE STORE

·ELBERFELDS
.IN POMEROY
.
r~~~··~-~-~~ug~~·~·;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~~;;~~

ce but neglect,
ruled thethus
plaintiff
guiltythe
of -;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~~~;::;::;::;::;::;:::;~~;~
gross
ordering
.tnarraige contrad dlsaolved.

YOUR HEADQUARTERS
Emergency runs
· Five caDs were answered ·by local
: emergency units on Thursday, _the
: Meigs County Emergency Medical
··Service reports.
:_ Middleportatl:31 a.m. went to the
: Rulland Elementary School for Guy
:•Monaon. Injured in a faU on the
: 1roumb, · taken to Veterans
, M--' HOBpltal; Middleport,
: 11:• a.na., Melp Junior lflcb
: School fir CJery1 R D, 1 llludllll
:,....Ill. till.- te Hllllr Medlcel

&amp;. · t;_IJ_..!.m.
: Devkl G~ from ""'"" . 7
' HDiaer Medlclll Center; Middleport,
: lO::Mp.m., WUillmWeaver,MJIISt.,
: Qlltlr; MMc' ;

: taHa to veter•• Memorial

· 1fG1p191 and l)rK- Unl&amp;, 12::M
' pm
'Loal.le DeLonl fram
~·s Run ID Jlolaer Medical
Center.

FOR

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EVERY MONDAY NIGHT AT
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CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT·

SPAGHETTI
DINNER
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CAR.H ARn
WORK AND

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Chaice CJf Saladl Roll &amp; Bllfera&amp;e
DINING

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lfADD - Harvy eqalpmelll of Shelly aad SudA ...,tlnaet oa the
lite· tllhe _.t !rom Mulberry Hetgllll to Ualoo Ave. In
r-,.. 1be ..,.nay, wlrlcli wOl opea some 1U acres of COWity-owraed
laDd In Pom~roy, ,11 stroll:ed 111111 wOl he ,.ved. C01l of tbe project,

••m.u, comes frama federal HUD graat to Meigs c-ty.

Marshal, firemen seek youth
RIO GRANDE - Volunteers in the Rio Grande Fire Department
· and vlDage marshals searched until late Friday night lor a lll·year-old
West Virginia youth who disappeared earlier In the afternoon.
Robby HaUey, exact address not known, reportedly was mtaSing
from the Bob Evans Sausage Shop around 5p.m.
Striking Gallla County sheriff's deputies assisted In the search. A
spokesman Bald they were asked to help, and they parllct,.ted as part
of their asr-nent to aasisl ill emergency situations while on strike.

Poll says welfare not needed
NEW YORK - A majority of Americana thlnka that most people
who receive money from welfare could. gel along with~t It if they
tried; according to the latest Associated Press-NBC News poll.
The poD aald 5li percent believe welfare ·recipients could get along
without II if they tried, while 32 percent aaid !hey really need the help .
Thirteen percent aaid they ,were not aure.
The poll contacted 1,601 adulta by telephone Monday a~d Tuesday ln
a nationwide scientific random sampllng.
·
The results of the iatest poll remained consilient with the last lime
the 111111 question waa ulted In an.NBC News poll in 117/'1, when 118 per"cent Bald welfare reciplenll could get along without it, 30 percent aaid
. they really need the help and 11 perce~t were unsure. .

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ONLY

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Sunday,

1 Sections , 70 Pages 35 Cents

o,t. 4, 198t

A Multimedia l'n c . Newsp.11per

valuation will represent an
estimated '10,000 loss to the county's
general fl!nd. That reduction will
proportionately impact on the
revenues generated by all "inside''
millage levied in the county. 'Jbe
land use reduction Will not effect
voted "outside" millage.
The county governrnent, township
governments and operations of both
the county and city sehoul systems
wiU receive lax·based funding on the
new lower value, rather than the
current, higher value.
As a result of both the
redistributioo of the Gayjn Plant
value and 1,\)e appHcallon of the.
agricultural land use exemption and ~,l!e an ~~ted 43 percent
(a county·wid'f.average) increase in
the appraised value of personal·
property throughout lll!l county,
GaUls's total value will be approximately $32 million lower :next
year.
The figures work out along these
lines: )ast year, the .countY's lola!
evaluatioo was ~18 million; the illcrease in value due to the reappraisal is expected to appl'&lt;}llch ~7
million; the county, however, will
lose far in exceia of $70 rnilllon due
to the power' llii8 distribution and
Mal'ly ~ ml111011 lbroUJ!h the land '
u9e exemplioo.
•
( Parlldorirally, applicallon,of the
agrlr:ulb!ral uae emnptton, which
belpi reduce the county's overaD
value, was triggered by the re~
pralsal which ral.sed the county's .
value to a level-that· Jlllde Gallia's
fanners eligible for the exempllOI!.)
The result: the county's total·
RESCUE EFFORT &amp;... GeWpollo City Firemen
evaluation for next year will be apwort:
to exlrlld Floyd F. Blaler, U, Galllpolll,lrom his
proxlmately $3811 million, compared
auto
followiJII
a lw•veblcle accident Friday morning
to this year's total of~l8mllllon .

oa . . .ville Rd. Blazer was ooe rl five people Injured
in the bead-on crash. (See accident report on page A·
8).

Columbia .Gas uses 'a. smokescreen
. '
to conceal profits, Counsel charges

•

:

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'*"

·

.,,

Gallia. ,County's valq.e
drops by $3.8 millio

COMING DOWN - Work to rue lilt aaeclllde .. openy lllU wp
Street, Pomeny, bepa Tllllnday. The home afllle late VIda lble II bela&amp;
tom c1tnn1 to IIIIR way for a aew bomo apected to let UDder
alnaclloa t1r1a falL 1be property II owaed by Floreace Smllll, Pameroy.

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E
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I
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-------------------------conom1sts
c
urn·
·
.
Area Deaths
I

Gallia's Senior Center, B-1 ·
·The Pennant ·Race, .C-1
.The.Nixon Library, A-2
'

the dea~ has passed.

,. I

Present Ohio House tax package

GaUipolU victory C-7

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Con·
sumers' Counsel William A.
Spratley said Friday that Colwnbia
Gas of Ohio is using "a
smokescreen'' to conceal issues involving its aUeged excess monOpoly
profits and price discriminallon.
Columbia Gas spokeswoman
Carol McBurney said she didn't
know what Sprallcy meant by a ·
smokescreen, however, and denied
that the company had excessive
mdnopoly profits In 1979 or 1980. .
Spratley aaid his office wrote Rep,
Ron James, ().ProctorviUe~:;mr·
man ol. the House Public
'ties
Committee, a response to a request
from Rep. Ron Amstub, R-Wooster,
to clarify Colwnbla Gas of Ohio's
profits. The utillty is trying to "ex·
plain away" excess monopoly

books," the coun.t~el said.

Ms. McBurney said the matter to
which Spratley referred .was
testimony requested by James.
"Our explanations show we did not
have excessive monoply profits, and
Mr. Spratley is ignoring the essential facts in interpreting those finan·
cia! statements," she ilaid.
Spratley aaid In a news release
that Columbia lias evaded slatewide
regulation. Its "average rate base"
was a figure allegedly invented by
the utillty that never was verified by
state or lclcal regulators, he said.
"If Columbia can now piece

tugether an 'average rate base' for proprlate, and that is applied to the
its statewide operatioo, then why rate base to calculate Columbia's
does the company refuse to publicly · dllowed earnings or return.''
disclose the returns earned on each
As for its average rate base, Ms.
of the 751 different rate areas at one McBurney said Columbia has
time?," Spratley asked.
separate negotiations going on with
"We explaiQed that the problem of • many conununities.
measuring

our financial per-

formance Is t,o examine the return
on the rate base and not the return
on ·equity as the Ohio .Consumers'
Counsel has contended," Ms. McBurney said. "The correct
measurement of our financial per·
formance involve investment in
property ... In plant and equipment

"They are all on different time
lables, and different economic COJI·
ditlons impact on different rates,"
she said. "If be (Spratley) wants
specific information on any cOJJlo
munity,

the

ordinances

are

available at the commission and
'each community with which we
negotiate is made aware of its rate
"In each rate proceeding that of return at the time of the
comes before the corrunission ... negotiation with the company. · ·
they assign a rate of return which .'
"I don't feel we are withholding in·
the commission considers to be ap- ~onnation from our customers."

Reagan calls for MX deployme~t,
bomber development in .defen~e
WASHlNGTON (AP) - Despite
criticism that President Reagan's .
plan for deploying the MX miaaUe
would leave the system "enor- ·
moualy vulnerabl,," a key leiJitor II
pndlctlng that lha admlnl.itratlon's
fiiO.I lfWCII cjefeMe program 'triJJ
be apprOved by
Reapn oo Friday t!alled for
deployment ol IQO MX .m taetlu,
productl011 of tbe OIICMCNpped 11-1
bOmblt ll!d davalCIJIIIIIIII rlli radarevadlne ~ alnnlt u pm'l of
lrll ~ to Jll!)demlle lbe

eonar-.

aaUm'1 defali11.

Sucli I

......

profits; Spratley said.
"Their explanations, however, do
not contradict the basic facts that
these were the profitS shown on their

Jll'llll'llll, he aaid, WQI]d

"revltllllt- *-lflle f - ll1llntiiD ~·· lbllltr to bep
1111 peace welllallllbe.-1 CllllurJ"
IIIII ad "as I ~II tnlill\aplnlt 1117
ScMit I1CIIaal db Ill ti apinlt lha

AIIW' ............."
Bl!t ...... Arlllld ~ Ol!rDmlttee ~,..H. Tower, R-

Texas, aaid Reagan's plan to base
the yet-undeveloped MX in underground silos now occupied by
Titan and Minuteman ml.sailes
"doesn't give us enough additional
capability for the increased coat and
-leaves .us - -with an enormously
vulnerable syatem,"
To-.ter, noting lb!lt Congress could
velD any MX baaing systell)
proposed by the preaidenl, said he
doea not believe Reqan's system
will be aCceptable to 111011 member's
ot hia committee or the House Ar-:
med SeiYices Committee.
Neverthele&amp;f, Senate Majority
~ Howard H. llaJJer Jr., RTerrn., predlclld tbat the plan would
he approved by Cqrell "ballca!Jy
In the form pr 1rted "
. Rep. BID Alewmder, ().Ark., uld
be app1 oved of the dar:llion lei pal
the MX inlo THall IIIla., some ol.
which are In lrllltata.

"delighted" that Reagan decided
against rotating th-. MX missiles
among shelters in western deserts.
But she said Reagan's decision to
build the B-1 bomber, which was
shelved by Jimmy Carter in 1977,
(ContinuedonA-4)

Alexander said replacement of the
aging Tilans waa "long overdue. The
Titan has been obaolele for a long
lime, bordering on dangerous.''
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, !).Colo.,
a member of the House Anned Ser·
vices Coounittee, aald she was

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