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enttne
President ·Anwar Sadat wounded
•.

Voi.30.No.122

CAIRO, E8YP1 (AP) - President rifle, a Foreiio Ministry official
Anwar Sadat was wounded In the
said.
ann today. by two Egyptian soldiers
Sadat, 62, Ullderwent medical
who jwnped out of a Jeep during a ' treatment, and security officials
military parade, charged the
said he was expected back at hJs
reviewing stand, threw a grenade
residence shortly. Many others were
and opened fire with an automatic
reported hit and aUeall two ldlled In

the attack which occurred during a also said the situation In Cairo
jetlighter flyby. Thousands of spec- seems to be under control.
'
tators fled In panlc.
At the White House, President
The State 'Department In Reagan, who waatold of the shooting
Washington said Sadat's condition about 7:30a.m. EDT- about a half
was not believed to be serioUB. An of· · hour after It took place - said he
flclal, who asked not to be identified, was shocked by the attack. Reagan
told Sadat In a letter, "I am praying
for your safety and that of the Egyptian leadenhlp." .
Fonner President Jlrruny Carter
told ABC's "Good Morning
America" that the state Depart·
ment told him Sadat's condition was.
DOt·critical."
·
The State Departinent said a u.s.
Marine major, an Army lieutanent
colonel and an Air Force captain
also were hit but only slightly wounded. The Egyptian official, who
requested anonymity, said many
Foreign Mlalstry officials and
others were .wounded, Including the
Belgian ambasaador and first
secretary of the Australian Embassy.
Cairo Radio gaye this account of
theattack:
,
.
"At 1240 this afternoon - 6:40
a.m. EDT - during the military
parade, a group of people fired at the
main grandstand which resulted In
the Injury' of the president of the
1HII were
Sadat
lbe grounds by heUcopter.
republic, and some 'of those acThe pleture obowlng Sadal and VIce Preoldenl Hoshi
c&lt;impanylng
him. His excellency has
Mullaracl&lt;, who was alsa 1U,blly lDjured, was taken
been
moved
to where he iB being
Monday lDGlza.IAP Luerpbol&lt;lj.
11

Special Purchalel
WOOD MAGAZINE

RACK
'

OILY

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room _
4

••• 11'Ao" •

SHOT - Egyptian oaldlen parlklpallq lD a
milllary parade sbot Preoldenl Anwar s.•t wltb
. au-lie rlfleo 'l'llelday, oakl 1 report from cairo.
Sadat ,...t Defe111e Mlalater Abele! HaUm Abo G'l•rel!e
were bit Pretldent Sadat alii! otber Egypllu !eden

.

During month of December

ToDAY

GROCERY UST,.

W•LL

RACK

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plngMidlwlhtllll
dlwiall¥1 ... _

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Due to eo~ldltlona t.,011d our COI?bol, we may run out of
IICii.ertraalf..,eclal during cuSIIe.' lfthluhoqld .....
pen to your~ 8llc fora Rain Checkwhictlprantaee yoU 'thiSale price when ltam beCOinee 8¥111~

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Pencil 18 con.,.._

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••• IN THEW
•

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
will UBe $5(1,000 of federal money to eliminate a fire hazard at an
Ashtabula tannery which iB in receivership.
Ohio EPA Director Wayne S. Nichols said the money comes from a
u.s. EPA Superfund to remove the hazard from Raser Taonery, a cen-

t1JrY'OidcfacllltyWhich.w.nlinloftcelvera!!III~R¥Jlllla-· lll!uldJI '

' is on a list of 20 sites in Ohio for which Superfund money was
requested.

ONLY

..

Banks drop prime lending rate

Taallanlprlcel

•

NEW YORK- A, cut In the prime lending rate to 19 percent from
19.5 percent spread through the banking Industry Monday amid continued signs of a weakening economy, Including a report by U.S.
automakers of sluggish late-September sales.
Economists predicted the prime rate would continue to !aU. .
A drop In demand for credit as a result of slump~g econ01ruc C\)Dditions contribute&lt;l to the decline In the prime rate to 1ts lowest le~el m
five months and to a slide in other interest rates as welL A reduction m
the cost of funds for banks was also a factor.

Narcotic arrests decrease

·'

TOLEDO, Ohio - The number of narcotics arrests in ,the Toledo
area bas been dropping since 1977, but authorities say the decline
reflects a. change in enforcement efforts toward llirger·volwner UBers
and suppliers.
.
Astudy by the Metro Drug Unit shows that arrests dropped from 9M
In 1977 to 4471n 1980. Arrests totaled 218 through May of this year.
, Toledo Police Chief John Mason said the shift In enforcement toward
lll«her links in the drug distributum chain can be attributed to reduced
criminal penalties for crimes such as possession of small amounts of
marijuana.
·

995

Thil·
bllk:her
block 1DP .....
.....
with lhelf
llldaal.for,.U
Mk:cc-«MMii ... &amp;!lrftlllna

lodclng. ,....... ~ . . . . ~
whlnl you need It the inolt

-

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Key GOP senators want report

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By BOB HOEFLICH
Shoppers in Pomeroy will enjoy
free parking in the bUBiness section
every Saturday through December.
The free parking at meters was an
action taken by Pomeroy Village
Council at.., .,..w.r, meeting •
day night. · ·
Council recently originated the
idea of free parking on Saturday after It had received comments from ·
merchants that the business section
is practically empty afler noon on
Saturdays.
~
Council passed the free ,parllhg
measure last night, flve-tCH&gt;ne, last
night In the hopes that it will encourage shoppers to be In the
business sectioo on Saturdays.
Voting for the measure were council

Gal~ia

WinDbtg Ohio lottery number

Weather forecast

, treated by specialists. The vice
president of the republic is personally following up on what
procedures the doctors are taking."
Sadat was evacuated by helicopter
and believed taken to Maadi
., military hospital. Sadat, who made
peace with Israel and angered most
of the Arab world in '!he process, also
had n~U~~eroUB enemies 011 the
homefront becaUBe of his crackdown ·
on Moslem-Christian strife.
Defense Minister Abdel 'Halim
·Abu Ghszalla and Vice. President
Hosni Mubarak, who was on the
other side of Sadat in !be reviewing ·
stand, were unharmed, Egyptian of.
ficials said. First reports said the
defense minister was w,ounded
during the shooting.
.... AP reporter Lisette Balouny saw
an armored persoonel. carrier pull
up In front of Sadat's home in Giza, a
suburb about four miles from the
center after the attack. She said the
walled residence was ringed with
special "presidential guards, aU ar·
med with automatic weapons.
Security guards at the gate said
Sadal's wile, Jihan, had returned to
the residence from the parade in a
helicopter, picked up other family
members and left again in the
helicopter.
Sadat took over after the death of
Gamel Abdel Nasser in 1970. Within

.

members, Dr. Harold Brown, Bill Sts.
Police Chief George Stitt was
Young, Bruce Reed, John Anderson
and Betty Baronick with Larry authorized to order winter uniforms
for members of the police departWehrung casting a dissenting vote.
Council voted last night to pur- ment.
A cliscussion was held on the·use of
chase 25 tons of salt for snow ,and ice
plllllrooj. ~t ~1 'a ton, from-.. """"""ln"' 1111* In tbo eonu1lw\ily,
Salt Works · in Pomeroy and raiher than the present type of street
lighting, particularly in the parking
~ the traffic light at the Inlotareas.
'
tersectlon of Court and Main Sts.
Clerk Jane Walton was authorized
A pole holding wires to the light
needs replaced at a cost of $560.45. to contact Columbus and Southern
The traffic light is hanging low as a Ohio Electric Co. to -secure prices
result of the present leaning pole, and advantages of the new type
but will be raised so that it wiU not lighting, Council agreed to contact a
be hit by the tops of semis with the property owner on Seventh St.
replacement pole to be set by the regarding a tree which needs trimOhio Power Co. Council will look Into ming.
TABLE REQUESTS
a similar problem at the inCouncil tabled two requests for the
tersection of Sycamore and Main
transfer of permits issued by the
Ohio Department of LiquorControl.
One is a 1).2 permit with the transfer
requested to Tom Goett, who will be
doing
business as "Sexy" from Tom
.
Goett, E. Main St., doing business as
Tom's Carry Out. The second
request is for a C-2 pennit to be transferred from Jennings Wayland
doing business as Simon's Market to
Municipal Employees. The vote
preceded layoffs issued when the
board of county commissioners
refUBed to grant a supplemental appropriation to the sheriff for
operations through to the end of ~hi'!

sheriff
denies firings
~

Sheriff James M. Montgomery
labeled reports that he had fired
several of his striking employees
over the weekend as "nunors" just
before noon today.
"Things are pretty tough ... they
always are In negotiations, I guelis,"
WAS!llNGTON - In a rare congressionai victory for liberal
the sheriff said. Montgomery denied
Democrats and civil rights leaders, the House gave overwhelming aphowever there had been any formal
proval Monday night to an indefinite extension of the 1965 Voting , action to dismiss any of his emRights Act.
ployees.
The 38S-24 vote sent the extension to the Republican-controlled
Reports clrculated, however,
Senate where a much tougher fight iB , expected on legislation
throughout the county courthoUBe
described by supporters as the most successful civil rights 'law ever
and along the picket line this mor·
enacted.
ning that the sheriff had apparently
reversed a previoUBiy stated "sympathy" lor his .striking depu!ies by
reportedly isswng verbal fonngs to
several employees of his depart·
WASHINGTON - Key Republican senators, questioning the adment.
ministration's strategic weapons prograni, are demanding a repof'l
Striking officers said this,morning
prepared specifically for Preoident Reagan and UBed in hJs decision to
the
sheti1f cailed a special meeting
put MX missiles In existing silos and resurrect the B-1 bomber.
of all delfartment personnel at mid· Bu,t Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger says because he
night Saturday. Accompanying the
report was directed to Reagan, "I don't think I have the authority jUBt
aunoUIICI)lent of the meeting was a
to release it."
•
,
warning that any employee who did
The exchange came at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing
not
attend the session would be fired.
Monday on Reagan's six-year, $180.3 bllllon ltrateglc weapons
One strlklng member estimated
program, which Weinberger said would "create a deterrent that Is far
this morning that appt11Ximately 15
more stable andHCUre than exists today."
of the .department's 27 employees attended the meeting.
On Sept. 22, the aheri!f's department personnel, lncludil)g deputies,
'lllspatchers and jallers, walked oil
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber drawn Monday night In the
the Job over grlev~ centering on
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" wu 241. The lottery reporunion represenu:tlon andlayoffa.
ted eam1np of '!30,546.110 from the waeerlne on tile drawing. EarThe deputies voted Sept. 8 to
ningll came on sales of .,819.110, willie balclen of winning tickets are
organize under the Amerlca'l
entitled to·share-I.N,Iottery o!flclalll said.
Federation o( state, County and
•

House okays'\'oting Rights Act

MICROWAVE OVEN TABLE

IS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

three ·years he crushed one Internal
revolt against him, expelled 15,000
Soviet ·advisers and started turning ·
Egypt's 6rientation from the Soviet
Union to the United States.

A1TEMPT

ON SADAT- Gun-

lire stopped a mllltary parade

Tuesday being reviewed by
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat, the government radio
said. Sadat and the vice president
were Injured. ( AP Laserpboto I.

(

·P omeroy Christmas shoppers to
get free parking in business district

EPA will eliminate fire hazard

tall and 5 Inches
wlda.

3 Sections, 24 Pages

• Pom•roy-Middleport, Ohio, Tu•sday, October 6, 1981

COpyrlghlecll911

Jef\llings Way land and Tom Goett at
830 E. Main St. Council felt that they

need more public input on the transfers and ask interested persons to
contact membtjrs of the council on·
the two transfers .

.Tbe--..- -o(~OT

treat night in the community was set
fo•· Oct. 29, from 6:30 to 7:30p.m.
The observance is for children 12
and under and sirens will mark the
ope~ing and closing of the event.
A Union Ave. resident appeared
before council to discuss the lack of
underpinning under mobile homes
and was told that village ordinances
do require such underpinning. Also
discussed was one mobile home
which bas an open sewer and a
charge that fireanns are being fired
within the village limits. B'oth
situations are in violation of village ·
ordinances, the resident was told,
The Meigs Jaycees were given
pennission to stage a snake dance
from the upper parking lot to the
rear of the former Pomeroy Junior
Higlo School Thursday evening.·The
dance and bonfire will be held in con(Continued on page 10)

•

year.

· During the special midnight
meeting, according to officers In at·
tendance, the sheriff advised the
eight employees not affected by the
layoffs that a work schedule for
them had been set, and, if they did
report for duty, they too would be
fired, '

Although the . information could
not be directly confirmed, striking
deputies said this morning, no more
than three employees reported for
work on the sl!lfts scheduled,
Those employees stressed that the
alleged "firings" were verbal and
that no written notification of termination had been given to the per·
sonnel who violated the meeting
l)landate, or the order to return to
work.
A nwnber of employees, however,'
prepared formal appeals to the
National Labor Relations Board
protesting the firings over the

weelleild.
As the strike entered its Hth day,
today, a certified letter from
Michael Hunter, District Represen·
tative for AFSCME, was received
this morning In the offices of the
county CGIIIIIll.uloners requesting a
Tuesday IJ!Mtlng with the board,

Death reports are unconfirmed
•

' reported that E&amp;YP'
NEW YQRK (AP) -ABC, NBC and CBS Nnl

tian freS!denl Anwar Sadat diad toda)&lt;Jrom WGWidl he lllffered when
EiYPtian soldiers jumped hun a jeep and opened tire on a reviewing

stand. There waa no bldependent confirmation Ill the 'report&amp; and the
U.S. State Department and the Egyptian government said Sadat was
liCit dead.

JI'OIWoTnCN .utT - 8lu WbiiiJIC. Pltllborgb, an•ally dem,.,.
otnW tile .-rly f.. IUUn art of coiOidal coopertq It lbe Bob EVBDI
,...... Fatlval. Set lor Od. t-11, from 8 1.m. to 5 p.m. dafiy, IIIla y011" 1

festival wOJ be tbe lltb beld 11 tbe Bob EVBDI Farm aear Rio .GriDde.
W?lltlq, no mUel cedlr illll'nll IUid cub from melll boepl IIJid
111m1, IIepa Mm Jaotnotlllg tbe llerllll&amp;e cnft Gl coopertq In the early
me., ... tnwll to - n u feotlvalt In Oblo, Pe-ylvanla llld the
WulllqiDJJ, D.C. IJ'$8·
,I I

�•
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Commentary

Tuesday. October6,1911

•

•

would surprtse moat historians if where 15 years ago we spent six perMcCarthylsm and the Ku KIUJ: Klan cent. Was"he, now In such a state of
had very mueh In commoo, or for agitation; then hysterieal? Was it
that matter America First. If it Ia neceaaary to phyatcaily pold him
Father Healy's point that aU those · down because of his resentment over
who become angry ·are like the Ku spending priorities, back under
KIUJ: Klan, then he might as well President Johnson? Eleven years
throw in Jesus, who got very angry ago we were spending practicaUy
at the moneychaagers.
nothing on school lunches; under
What'' going on1 Father Healy Reagan it is propooed to spend
emerges as representative of the almost $4 bilUon. Is F•ther Healy
ultinnate' liberal, here .defined as
someone who is either Incapable of
serious analysis or else finds thought
so inhibiting that he ia given rather
to bloviation. AmeriCa, ....ays the
president of Georgetown, is showing
a new face abroad. How? It Is our
"bitter set of new 118tional priorities
(that) puts military hardware above
the promises we've made to the old,
gulls children out of school lunches
.. . • In our haste to balance the
budget, we seem to ride roughshot
over the human considerations ...
We're spending six percent of the
gross national product to defend ouiselves and the free world against a
world of Gulag. Where was Father
Healy when we were spending not
six percent, but eight percent, nine
percent and 14 percent for the same
purpose -wider Pre.!ident Eisen-

'•

The Daily Sentinel
IIICourtSt~Wt

Purneroy,Obio
&amp;14-lm-!lsti

DE\IOTE:DTO 111E rNTERESTOFTHE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~
.·
~~ - ~.~-,-ln-t:=d·~
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD·

BOB HOEFLICH

Ass lslanl Publisher/Cunlrollrr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
·News Editor
A MEMBE R of Thl' As~~ Pr~u. Inland Dally PreiR Auodatioo altd l.ht:
American New1paper Publisben AaedaUon.

LEITERS OF OPINION arr \U:IMmed, Thl"y shOllld be lell thin 310 wo~ long. All
lcners are subject tu edlllug aocl mu&amp;t be signed wltb name, addi'HIII and telephooe number . Nu uDJigoed lellen wUI be published. I.I.Ue:ni should be In good L18te, addreuln.l!

.1;.;..'_
""'_·"''..,_".._·""·_·
· - - - - - - : - - - - - - - r:

Coach is upset
Wall Street seems to have been caught at an old habit, that of talking a
better game than it plays, and Coach Reagan is upset. His pep talks don't
seem to work. Wall Street just can't seem to score.
Oh, it talks about scoring. Any' day of the week you can interview an
an~lyst who expects his favorite dozens stocks to soar, and you can even
find a few who are talking about a 2,000-point Dow Jones average.
: People on Wall Street even send letters of support to the president,
telting him how he has saved ·capitalism from disaster. And some have
publicly advertised their undying support. But money's another thing.
. Why has the investment community faile!l to risk money on rebuilding
.: America? Why have the stock lllllrket averages failed to nse along with
.· the rhetoric• How can there be such a split between words and action?
: Some possibilities present themselves.
.
I. Invest~rs really don't believe. They approve of spending cuts and the
·. return of power to ·the private sector, but they question whether it is
; Possible without setJere financial and social upheavals first.
: 2. Few seem willing to take risks. In every investment there is risk, but
·. some institutional investors today seem to be waiting for the sure thing.
:; They seem to prefer riskless mediocrity. They act timid. "We're not
:: looking for big gaills,"·tltey say. ''We're happy if we stay even."
: . 3. The short-term syndrome is everywhere about us. TaJt·free cer. ' !ificates for 15 months. Three-year home mortgages. Money market
: mutual funds that are liquid and so allow you to jump into other in. vestments if they appear at the moment to offer something more. The
:• country seems unable to handle long-term investments. It is playing safe,
.: lor now at least.
:· 4. Just blame it aU on interest rates. Why invest in stocks and other
:: equities when debt securities offer such high returns? Why invest in a
· new plant when the cost of borrowing shrinks or devours future profit..?
· . 5. Investors and business people haven't fully appreciated the new tax
incentives provided to them. Rehabilitate a 46-year-old factory, for exam: pie, and take an income tax credit of 20 percent of the cost. Depreciate a
,. structure in just 15 years, rather tl)an 25 years or more.
:· WhateYer the reason - and there may be some of all these reasons and
.: many others too- the behavior of the moment isn't the kind that buill the
:great American economy.
.. Or that that can rebuild it either.
•

'

[If -you have, an
"

::accidental fire

fiOI1!l8) people. If Sen. McCarthy
ever spoke so categorically and 10
spiWully agalnat any American
group as Father Healy baa spoken
against .the Moral Majority, I'd like
to see thet statement and blush for
him. And oh yea, wben I quole
Father Healy I'm on sale ground,
slnce-..llen he says Catholic (if ever
he 00..),1 want everyone to know it

By Auoctated Press
Southern California, Penn State,
Texas and Pittsburgh held onto the ·
top four positions In The Associated
'Press college football poll while
Mlsaourl made the ratings for the
first time this season, vaulting to
13th place.
North ~ moved up from
sixth to fifth today, replacing
Oklahoma, which slipped to lOth.
And Alabama climbed back into the
Top Ten, rising from lith to seventh.
The Trojans of Southern Cal, 5&amp;-22
winners over Oregon Slate, received
58 of 65 first-place votes and 1,293 d.
a possible 1,300 points from a 118tionwide panel of aporls writel'8 and
sportscasters. The seven bnard
members who ·did not vote the
Trojans No.I listed them second.·
Penn State, which blanked Temple
:10-4, received six first-place votes
and 1,20!; points. The other first·

dOesn't mean me.

•

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Two
Interceptions and a fumble s.t
up three Tony Franklin field goals
and quarterbaCk Ron Jaworakl
pasS

•

Southern

a

-!hi.•

threw a 36-yard touchdown pass as
the unbe!iten Philadelphia Eagles
beat the Atlanta Falcons 111-13 MondBynight.

1

'tll'll~....,...

Dairy price supports will cost half
of original government prediction
WASHINGTON (AP) - An
Agriculture Department official
said Monday that last week's increase in dairy price supports will
probably cost the gove1'111n4int only
about half the original estimate of at
least$! riilluon a day.
But Don Friedly of the department's dairy branch also said the
cost could hit original estimates if
the higher price support level
remains in effect too long.
The Howle bas already approved
legislation to roll federal milk suP.

ports back to their September level
of $13.10 per hundred pounds. But
that bill must still pasS the Senate,
where Sen. William Proxmire, !)..
Wis., has staunchly opposed it.
Officials also remain concerned
that the s~ort-term support increase
to $13.49 a hundred pounds will
trigger boosts in consumer prices
that will never be rolled back.
The support price automatically
increased last Thursday because
CongresS bas yet to pass a new milk

support program to replace the one government buys non-fat dry milk,
\hat expired then. A Jast..millute at- butter and cheese from manufactempt to head off the increase In turers at the support price so the
Congress was also blocked.
supply of milk remaining will bring
Approval of either the emergency • dairymen a price near the support
roil-back legislation or the Jarm bill level.
will return the support price to the
Friedly said the goverrunent
$13!10 level. But Friedly said that in received five offers to seU non-fat
the meantime department analysts dry milk at the higher support level
estimate the higher price level will on Thursday and m&lt;ire on Friday.
add about $400,000 a day to the Off\cials eKpecllhose offers to congovernment's milk support bill,
tinue coming in today along with of.
Under the dairy program, the fers to sell butter as well.

Reagan ·wants board·to loose money belt
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan administratlon, concerned that the
nation's money and credit supply may be pinched too tightly with a recession
looming, wants the Federal Reserve Board to loosen Its grip a bit to get the
economy moving again.
Treasury Deparlment spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said Sunday that the
administration Is not calling for an "easy-money policy" or asking that the
Fed change its policy.
.
Rather, he said, the board should not clamp down any harder than it had
. said it would'.
National industrial production Is stagnant and housing and other creditsensitive Industries - including thousands of auto dealers and other small
businessmen - are mired in some' of their worst times ever. Economist.. In
and out of government blame the hard times on high inter..lt rates resulting
from a scarcity of money to fill credit demands.
· ..
'
"We are coming to a time here when a change has to be made,'' Treasury
Secretary Donald T. Regan said in an interview published Sunday in The
Washington Post
Regan said the Fed in the past has "held on too ti~htly to the monetary

llilwadeep GIJIIUI~
155pouad
JIIDior Uaeman

The Eagles, however, had to \OOuld have given the Falcons the
withstand a furious Atlanta second- , lead, but the play was wiped out
half raUy In which English import "" when rookie tackle Eric Sanders
~r.k Luckhurst kicked' a 35-yard was caught holding on the play.
field goal and,l2 seconds later, corThe Falcons almost picked up the
nerback Kenny Johnson returned a touchdown again on a pass from
fumbled kickoff return 20 yards to Bartkowski to wide receiver
bring the Falcons within 13-10 with Wallace Francis, but the pass was
4:OS left In the thit'd period.
knocked away at the last moment by
The Eagles, who are !HI and own cornerback Roynell Young.
the National Football League's only
That brought on Luckhurst, who in
umblemished record, now lead the the second quarter had missed on IllDallas Cowboys by one game in the yard chip shot. He appeared to be
National Conference East. It was the the victim of a bad snap that boonsecond straight loss for AUanta, 3-2 ced Into the hands of bolder John
and in a three-lfay tie lor the lead James. This time, however,
with the Los Angeles .Rams and San Luckhurst, who was signed as a free
Francisco 49ers in the NFC West.
agent, connected with a 43-yarder to
Philadelphia's actual winning make it 16-13 with 6:45 left in the
points came with II :46 left in the game.
fourth quarter on Franklin's third
The Falcons had one more chance
field goal and lOth in 12 attempts this to get the ball .~ith less than three
season. Atlanta still refused to quit, minutes to go but James Mayberry
driving from Its own 22 to a flrst ran into Eagles punter Max Runager
down at the Eagles !8 with the help and Philadelphia ran out the clock.
of a i3-yard eompletion from quarThe Eagles attained a iHl record
terback Steve Bartkowski to AHred for the first time in the history of the
Jenkins and 26 yards to fullback NFL franchise.
WUilam Andrews.
Atlanta took the opening kickoff
Bartkowski then threw to Jenkins and drove from its 20 to the Eagles
In the end zone for a touchdown that 16 oo ~0 plays. Bartkowski com-·

reins," exacerbating recessionary periods.
"What we are trying to do !his time, and I know the Fed is as sensitive to
this as I am, is to anticipate that and not stay in a low-aupply mode any
longer than is necessary In the downturn,'' he said.
"I'm not going to try to tell the Fed ...exactly what mechanlsm8 to use In
order Indo this,'' be added. But he said the result "would be a sufficiency of
money to enable the economy to recover nicely from lis current flat period."
Fitzwater said Regan's comments suggested only that "the Fed slick to Its
policy of steady monetary growth.... We are not calling for an easy-money
policy, simply that the Fed should stay within the target range of monetary
policy that it has cllosen."
. The money supply actually has been growing more slowly than the Fed intended.
The Federal Reserve has been trying to manipulate the money supply so
that the measure known as M-IB - cash and most checking accounts grows at an annual rate o( 3.5 percent to 6 percent this year.
During the first six months of the year, however, it grew at an annual rate
of only 2.2 percent. It feU !&gt;Y $1.3 bilUon last week.

'

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'(

·",'" P .•,,,

CELEBRATE SECOND FlEW GOAL - Eagles quarterback Ron
Jawol'8ki elaps in approval foilGwiDg barefoot field goal kick by Tooy
Fra~ (I) Monday algbt In game agalast Atlanta FalcoDS in
Pblladelphla. Fraoklln booted this 34 yarder aod another for 3f yards In
theflnthaU. (AP Laserpholo).

Turner will give Cox final

else in the :.vorld has. The only thing
"The Pentagon knows it's in a
, we coUld come up with, that we pickle, but .we've come up with a
hadn't sold anybody else, was the solution."
AWACS."
"Whalhaveyoudone?"
. "What about the neutron bomb?"
"It's a matter of compromise.
',!asked,
. -~ We're trying to persuade the Saudis
"It's not showy enough. An to take the AWACS, providing they
·AWACS plane stands out on an air- only U8e them to show in-flight
field and everyone can admire it. movies."
·
' Also tile Royal Family can use it to
"WW that satisfy them?"
·fly around the country. When .you
"We've also promised to equip
every plane with a jJot tub, hi-li
1havethatkindofmoney,youwantto
flaunt it."
stereo, a powder room with gold' "Why did you promise the Saudis plated fixtures, and bullet-proof
:you would sell them AWACB without water beds."
·
first checking with the Senate?"
"lf I were a Saudi, I'd rather have
. "It's like selling a car.lf you have that.klnd of AWACS, than one with a
a live customer on the hook, who's lot of electronic gear on it."
: hot for one of your . high-priced
"Frankly, so would most of the
models, and is willing to pay cash, crewslntheU.S.AirForce."
'you g•t him to sign on the dotted line
"If the Saudis ga for the new con' and w!ll'IY about the delivery later." figuration; do you think the Senate
, "Well, it appeara you got youraelf wlllotaytheaaleoftheplanes?" •
into a jam. U you don't deUver,
"I hope 10. We're bringing one In
·you've lost one of your best miUtary next week that the senaton can look
c:ustomers, and if you persuade the at. If they can't see the argument
, Senate the plane · ~a a lemon, you that thla plane will protect our
won't get any more money to buy llltlonal Interests In the t41ddle
i new ones for youraelf."
East, then nothing we say will Dy."

day in court·before firing
ATLANTA ' ( AP) - Atlanta
·Braves owner Ted Turner says he
will give Manager Bobby Cox a linal
chance· to state his case belore
' deciding whether to fire him.
"It's a very, very difficult thing to
decide, wbatever I do," Turner said
in an interview with baseball writer
Tim Tucker In Monday's editions of
-The Atlanta Journal.
Turner said Cos could be fired
.because the Braves coilapaeij late in

the season.
"Obviously this goes back to the
last three weeks, when we pulled a
choke," Turner said. "But you can't ·
nece8sarlly blame It on the
manager. The players are the ones
who choked. But then, the manager
is suppooed to keep them calmed
down. That's part of his job, isn't it?
But that's not to say he can always
dolt.

Debbie
Michael
the score
to IHI, but
Kyger tightened
Creek increased
its
lead to 12-6 on serving by Loretta
Gllmore and Hope Baird. Southern
rallied with five points on serves by
Mel Wees,e, the score 21-11. Amy
Roush, Cindy Swisher, and Chris
Beebe then added consecutive
scores for the Kyger Creek win.
In the pressure packed third
game, SoutMrn went ahead on

MADE EASY

Fro~

sagg

~ver

Falcons

•

pleted live passes,., one 'for 17 to outran Johnson l·or the score.

The Eagles survived Atlanta's
Allred Jackson for a first down at
ga111e as the Falcons ran
bail-control
the Eagles 33, and 13 to Jenkins lor
76
plays
to
just
52 for Phil8delphia.
another first dowil at the 20.
Jaworski
completed
17-ol- 2~
But after Andrews carried to the
passes
for
161
yards,
while
Oliver
Phhiladelphia 16, linebacker AI
ran
fo
68
and
Wilbert
Montgomery
Chesley intercepted lor the Eagles
for 44 to lead a·weak running game.
at his 8 and returned it 31 yards.
Bartkowski connected on 23-of-46
It took the Eagles just five plays to
passes
for 232 yards, while Andrews
gain a 3-0 lead. Jaworski connected
bore
tl)e
brunt of the running with 84'
with Harold Cannlchael on a 3&amp;-yard
yards
on
21 carries.
·
pass play to the Falcons 23. Mter
Jl,nkins
caught
eight
passes
lor 8!
three plays netted four yards,
yards
lor
the
losers,
while
Smith.
Fraoklin kicked a 36-yard field goal
for a 3-0 lead with 6: II left 'in the grabbed five for 59 yards , including
his 36-yard TO reception.
·
quarter.
Mter the· kickoff, AUanta m o v e d , - - - - - - - - - --:
to a first down at the Falcons 35, but
· two plays netted six yards and Bartkowski was then intercepted by
Reggie Wilkes, who returned the
ball seven yards 10 the Falcons 38.
Again it took Philadelphia just five
plays to notch another Franklin field
goal. The .barefoot kicker from
Texas A&amp;M split the uprights with a
34-yarder for a &lt;Hl lead.
The Eagles boosted the lead to 13-0
on a six-play, 72-yard drive, capped
by Jaworski's 3G-yard TO pass to
Charlie Smith in the end zone. Smith

I~&lt;

DOONESBURY

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,. '

''•

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" ' ' "' h '"'

tonight with Southwestern.

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Oetuls Tealord

153pouud

Laren Wolfe. Kyger scored its .final seven straight points by Mel Weese,
point before Mel Weese served the ..Cindy Evans, and Jenny Bentley.
last three points, the score 1;.2.
Southern built a commanding 13-0
In the secOnd game Kyger Creek lead before Beebe put Kyger on the
handed the Tornadoettes their first bnard 13-7. Mter each team traded
loss of the year with the Bobcats points Cindy Evans served the winwinning !5-12. Southern grabbed a 4- ning point, the final score 15-11.
0 lead on Mel Weese serves before
Southern was led in scoring by an
Kyger quickly lied the score on two outstanding effort by Mel Weese
serves each by Kelly Nibert and with 19 points, and Tonja Salser, CinTamrny Proctor. •
dy Evans with six each. K. C. was
Southern then found itself behi"" led by Loretta Gilmore with nine
8-4 on four perfect serves by Beebe. points and.Chris Beebe six.

The Southern Tornadoette volleyball team won Its third triangular
match of the year with victories over
host Hannan Trace and Kyger
Creek. Southern now leads the SVAC
leagae with a 10.0 record, 13-10
overall.
Kyger creek remained in second
place in the SVAC with an 11-3 mark ,
11-3 overall. Ha1Ul8n Trace's SVAC
record and overall mark is 4-7.
In the firsl march of the evening
Kyger C~k claimed the win in two
sets over Hannan Trace, 1;.10 and
~. Chris Beebe' led K. C. with I
points and Patti Neal led Hannan
Trace with four.
The second match of the evening
was an exciting contest between
Southern and Kyger Creek, the first
and second place teams in the SVAC.
Southern, In the first game, Jumped to an early lead on five serving
points by Tonja Salser and four by

U you hear a loud roaring, popping noise, -sparks and flamea 111oot1ng

: - a.ct ,_.roof for &amp;pll'b.

W•de CoanoUy

Southern wins triangular match

A tough sell....___ _----=-_ _ _ _.;trt_._Buc_h_wa_ld
Straphanger, a lobbyist for Pen- to buy them, you have to persuade
tagon sales, has one of the toughest them no superpower can fight a war
jobs in Washington. He has to per- without AWACS. When you're
suade the Saudi Arabians that the testifying in the Senate about selling
AWACS plane Is the top of the line~ them to the Middle East, the line you
far as our military arsenal goes. At have to iake is the AWACS is just a
the same time, he has to convince broken-down 707 •· filled with
the U. S. Senate the plane Is just a Japanese television sets; and a giant
lrtsbee on the top."
piece of junk.
"The Israelis think it's a pretty
"How did you people get in' such a
rness?"l asked him.
I
good plane and could · change the
"It was easy,'' he replled. "The
balance of power in the Middle
AWACS cost a bundle to build, and East."
we had it figured out if we could talk . "It isn't the aircraft but what you
the Saudis into ordering them, we put in' II that counts. The American
could afford tliein for ourselves. Our model bas a lot of v~ry lop-secret,
problem was we oversold them. We electronic gear that can monitor
told . the American people the every plane within 200 mil~. Our exAWACS was the greatest lhlnj! to port model has been modifltd so that
come along since star Wan. We allyoucangetontheTVscreensls'l
were so convincing that now the Love Lucy' reruns."
'
,Senate is afraid if we sell them, the
"Why should the Saudis want a
planes could eventually fall Into un- plane to watch 'I Love Lucy' at
friendly hands."
35,000 feet?"
"Well, is the AWACB as good as • "It's a question of prestige. The
Saudis feel since they've been
the Air Force says It Ia? '.'
"It depends oa whether you're leading the light to keep the price of
selling or buying. When you're OPEC oil down, that they should
trying to get money fnJm the Senate bave a mllltary weapon that nobody

Sout~~m's v~rsity squ~d

place ballot ·went to Texas. The climbed hun lOth to eighth with 735
Longhorns, Idle last weekend, points. Clennson cracked the Top
totaled I,:IJlli points to 1,134 for Pitt, Ten, moving from 14th to ninth with
which trimmed South Carolina 42-28. lllil points alter defeating Kentucky
Last week, with 66 votera par- 21-3. The Tigers are followed by
ticipating, the point totals were 1,311 Oklahoma with 607,. points.
Ohio State feU from seventh to 18th
for Southern Cal, 1,2011 for Penn
by
looing to Florida State 3&amp;-27 and
State, 1.101 for Texas and 1,027 for
Mississippi
State skidded lrom.nlnth
Pitt. usc led Penn Slate 57\0-6\0 in
to 19th in the wake of a 14-3 loss to
·first-place votes.
Missouri. .
.
Oklahoma ~ from the fifth
spot when the Sooners ,)Vel'\! held to a · The Second Ten consists of
7-7 tie by Iowa State. Ironically, the Georgi!!, Iowa State, Missouri,
Methodiat, Iowa, Miami
deadlock served to mbved · the
(Fla.),
UCLA,
Ohio State, MississipCyclones from 20th to 12th.
pi
State
and
Florida
State: .
North Carolina took over fifth
·
Last
week,
It
was Alabama,
place with 1,017 point.. after downing
Washington,
Georgia,
Clemson,
Georgia Tech :I.S-7. Michigan, a 3&amp;-17
SMU,
UCLA,
Miami,
Iowa,
Arkan·
winner over Indiana, jumped froffi
sas
and
Iowa
State.
However,
eighth to sixth with 901 point...
Alabama rose to selienth with 7&amp;'! Washington lost to Arizona State 26-7
points following
3&amp;-7 rout of while Arkansas was beaten by Texas
Mississippi while Brigham Young, Christian :I.S-24.
F)orida State returned to the Top
which defeated Utah state 32-28,
20aftera two-week absence.

Vl!lf/ll

,.

The Daily Sentinel-Pag-3

Eagles _remain ·unbea.ten with 16-13 win
~~~=~;::~~~::==-----

hower,
Kennedy
andbitter
Johnson?
Was
he railing
about the
priorities
we were showing abroad?
We are spending 13 perceni of the
gross national product on weUare,
....-

capable of understanding ihe trend?
Is he capable of understanding thei-e
Ia SOllie relation between budget and
the fl&amp;ht againstln!latlon, which Ia
the primary domestic enemy of the
people?
I mean, of course - eKcept for the
Moral Majority. Really, I am perversely grateful for that
organization for bri!Jtling out the hidden spook in otherwlae apparently

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
I
.

Soutli.erR Cal remainS
No •.I . College team·.

Page--2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, October 6, 1911

Father 'Healy on the Moral Majority"-.- ·---,-_.,----_w._m_ia_l.m,_F.,--B_uck_ler_J_r.
The Rev. Timothy Healy, who is only of her own." Or Sen. William
the president of Georgetown Unlver- Fulbright's relatively recent
sity, said a strange thing In a speech declaration that "lrisofar.as a nation
conunemoratii)g the opening of a is content to practice its doctrines
new campus in Washington. He within it.. own frontiers, that nation,
spoke of "the new religiosity that's . however. repugnant its ideology, is
sweeping the nation" from which he •· one with which we have no 'proper
wished to detach himself. "I'm on quarrel."
safe ground, since .when the Moral
It would be interesting to go back
Majority says 'Christian,' it doesn't . to see whether Father ~ealy was a
mean me. The new righteousness fervent supporter of the war against
runs counter to Western religion."
North Vietnam, to test his theory
· Since Father Healy is a trsined that U. S.. lorejgn policy always
priest, one would assume that his stood "against aggression and
knowledgeofWesternreligionwould tyranny." I say it would he inbe sound. Sounder, lor instsnce, terestlng, but I lear It wouldn't be,
than his knowledge of American really, because Father Healy
history. Father Healy went on to say betcays himself as a man of (earful
that the "new righteoUsness" has temper and little intellectual
also done damage by "it assault on equilibrium.
the classic American idea (that)
The grav81Tllrn ri America's
tined up (U.s. foreign policy) again- current " bout of meanness" is, one
st oppression) , tyranny and hwnan gathers, America's toleration of the
cruelty, wherever found."
Moral Majority. In an absolutely
One wonders whether the breathtaking act of historical juxseminary Father Realty attended taposition, Father Healy advised his
duripg the Second World War had (needless to say) enthusj,astic
him so cloistered that he was never audience that "America is in a raninformed that the United States en- corous mood these days, and our
tered into a formal alliance with meanness tracks not escalating inJoseph Stalin's Sovi.t Union to teres! rates, but a sinking Dow Jones
defeat Hitler. It is doubtful that (I don't really know what that
Father Healy ever read the ad- means, but maybe it makes sense in
monition of President John Quincy Latin.) These moods have found &lt;iiiAdams when he declared that lerent names: nativism, KnowAmerica "is the well-wisher to the Nothingism, America First, the Ku
freedom and independence of all. Klux Klan, McCarthyism. Now we
She is the champion and vindicator have the .. . Moral Majority." It

-

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�--Tuesday, October 6, 1981

Pomeroy MiddlePort, Ohio •
•

• •

•

'..·-

.~···~"'''"'"''·

FIRST- pavld Hubbard, S)'111cuse, is pictured with the ffrsl

dee~

ldlled wilb a bow and llmlW on the opening day of bow and arrow seasou
on Salunlay. He bagged the elgbl pofllt, 200 pound deer at 8 Saturday mOl'
nfDg back of Rae~

Students file suit
......

•

•

•

•

to stop mznz serzes
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Saying
Two learns, the Mj)waukee
the expanded playoffs threaten the Brewers and Oakland A's, were not
. Integrity of major league baseball, named in the suit because they had
~ three Ohio S~te University law
the best overall records in their
:· students have asked a federal judge divisions, and the eighth team in the
to stop the post-season games.
playoffs, the Montreal Expos, was
Tbe suit filed Monday in U.S. ·- not included because the federal
District Court here contends thatthe court does not have jurisdiction in
playoff schedule devised after the Canada.
basebaU players' strike ended is unNo hearing has been scheduled on
. fair because some teams withothe the suit.
: best overall records in their
In their suit, the three students
divisions did not reach the playoffs.
say, ;:_plaintiffs have been fans of
Named as defendants in tbe action major league baseball for 20 years
-· are baseball Commissioner Bowi~ and have relied on the past practice
Kulm and five teams headed for the of major league baseball teams that
pliyoffs.
only the teams with the best records
The students, James G. Neary, over an entire season be permitted
Robert S. Kiss an!! Randy Freking, to play in post-season play.
all 24, said the five teams were • "Plainmfs have relied on the pasi
named because they did not have the decisions of Commissioner Bowie
· -best overall records. The' teams are ·Kuhn which have emphasized the in::the Houston Astros, Los Angeles tegrity of baseball never be
:Dodgers, Kansas City Royals, New sacrificed by the whiU)s of finanYork Yankees and Philadelphia cially oriented owners who have !if: Phillies.
tie concern for theirlegions offans."

High school grid

'

COLUMBUS. Ohio .i AP&gt; - How a state-

10, Bellaire (III ), rMJ, 51.
Other schools rec~iving 10 or more
points : 1\, Burton Berk.shJre 38. 12, Nel·
sonville-York 35. !3'. Zanesville West MUJ.- ·
kingwn 28. 14, Colwnbw Watterson 'J:l.
15, Rootstown ?.5. 16. Struthers 19. 17,
Bellevue 18. IB, Swanton 14. 19 (tiel,
Uma Bath, New Concord J ohn Glenn and
Columb~ DeSales n
Zl {tie), Canton
Cenlrdl CathoUt\ SL Macys, Chagrin
Falls Kenston, Brookfield and 8ellbroolt
10.

wide panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates Ohio · high school football
teams 'this week for The Associated Press
i JO points for first · to I point fur loth,
divisions in parentheses) :
CUSSAAA

I,
2,
3,
4;
5,

ClnclnnaU Moeller (1), D-(1, 294 points.
Upper Arlington fl) ~. 226.
canton McKinley rl\, ~. 196.
Lakewood St. Edward (!), ;'i-G, 112.
Cleveland, St. Joseph fl), 5-0, 1~.
G, Massillon ( I ), ~1. 120.
7, CinciMBU Elder (JJ, ~. 93.

CLASS A

242.
2, Cadiz ilVl, ~. 240.
l , Strasbur~ (Yl, ~. 196.
4. Waynesvlili! (Vl, $-{), 152.
5, Beallsville (V), &gt;0, 113.
6, Tiftin Calvt!rt iV). 4-l, 101 .
7, McDonald (VJ, ~1 , 7S.
I , New Phihlde\phia Tuscarawas CothoJic (V1, ~. 74
9, Maria Stein Marion iV~. 5-0, 59.
10. Bert::hOli Springfield (VJ. -M, ~­
Other schools rece iving 10 or more
points: 11. Ashtabuls St. John 43. 12, Pandora-Gilboa 32. 13 (tiel, Leipsic and Oak
Hi_U 29. 15, Reedsville Eastern 24. 16,
Crooksville 211. 17, Milford Center . Fl!.lr·
banksl8. 18 Hie l. Fostoria St. Wenddin,
Jackson-Miltoo and Lorain Clearview 11
21, lklphati Jelfe!'llon 11 . 22 •ftle l, Lucasvill e Valley and Gales Mills Hawken 10.
1, Newark Calho1ic (V), 5-0,

8, Cincinnati Prinffion (!), 4-1 , 82.
~.

9 ftie!, Steubenville /JII,

hanna (II, 6-0, 52.

and Ga-

Other schools receivil\: 10 or more
points: II , Centerville 44. 12, Trotwood
Maillsal 23. 13, Colwnbus Eastmoor 17.
14, Toledo St. Francis 18. 15, Oover 12. 16
Hie), Elida and Sto~ Walsh Je!u.it 10.
CLASSAA

I, Youngstown Mooney (IJ), ·:;.o, 260.
2, Cleveland BenedictlnC (fl), &amp;.o, 219.
3, Hamilton Badin (IIJ), 5-0, 166.
4, Ironton (Jill,$.(!, 143.
[1, Akron st. Vincent..St Mary (III ), 5-0,
112.
6, Urbana (III I, 3-0, 110.
7 (tiel , Dayton Roth (IJ),"' 5-41, and
Washington Court HOUliC ( Ill ) , ::..0, 60.
9. Warren Kennedy

iiiiJ.

rating~

~. ~.

Local bowling
~rlySuo~y

J

Mixed Bowlluglngue
Sept. 27, 1111
Staodlaga
PU.

Powell's SUper Vatu
Jarm.u Coat Co .

30
16

Rovar c rown
18
Ro~h ''!l Gun Shop
18
FriendlY Tavern
14
G. andJ . AutoPart5o
\
11
Hig h series men - Darrel l Oug!!n 511 ; Rar
Roach SAJ ; Joe Ektick 5«l .
High series ·women - Steprutnie Barnett 52 1;

Roach's Gw1Shop
16
Royal Crown
1~
Frl_endly Tavern
10
G.andJ.AutoParts
7
Hilolh series men - Larry jDuuan 614 ;
Raymond Roach 600; Bill C.arswell534.
High series. women ·- M)rrtle St. Clai r S33 ·
Becky Kloes511 ; Betty Wh!tlatch503 .
'
High game men - BiU Carswell Ut; Raymond
Roach238: l.arry0ugan236. ~·
• High game women- Becky Kloes 201; Sharon
Hensley207; Betty S., Betty W. all .
Tri-C01111ty Bowllq League

Sept%!. 1981
Team
•
Pta.
Toler Jruurance Co.
16
Roach'sGunShop
H
Fralemal Order of Eagles
12
Smith's Body Shop
12
H. and R. Firestone
10
' Co.a.l Buckets
1
High team tlt'rlea - Smith's ~Y Shop ii20;
Roach's GunShop2&amp;14 ; H. and R. Firestone2532.
Pt11.
High team game - Roach's Gun Shop !HI;
19 Smith's BodyShOJ)9JI. H. and R. Fil'fl\One906.
16
High lnd. series- Roy HOhler 582: Mose Nor12 man~7S;HenryClatworth)'511L
ll
HLgh lnd. game- Henry Cl,atworthy 237 : Moae

Bettr Smith .4S2 ; Becky Kloe5 411.

Htgh game men - Darrell Dugan 213; Joe
l;klick 109 ; Rll'l' R., D.vrell D. 194.
High gam~ women - Slepl'lan fe Bar nell 230;
8~111/Smlfh IJT : Ger r i.H .• Sharon H. 112.
POMEROY BOWUNG LANES

r ..m

\

·

Mlmliag Glor1ea
Sept. tt. 1981

G. and J . Auto Parts
No, 5
.

C. .i."nd D. PeiUIZoi\

No.3

Mas:'slnc.
8
Nonnan216: BIIISmlth216.
SimmOI"L'l Olds, Cadillac
and Chevrolel
6
High il)d. game ...._ AM Grover 216; ~tty
· WhiU..kh D ; Pi t Dent191.
•
Hjgh tnd. three-games - Betty Whitlatch ~a:; ;
Ann Grover 50ll; JWle Lambert 419.
Hl£h team game - G. and J. Auto Parts 1112;
No. 3, 715, 7111.
High team lhree-pmea - C. and J . Auto Parts
.... APt.,Tweoly
2272; No. 5 22+1; Simmons Olds, CadillMc and
Chevrolet me.
The Top Twent)' team~ in · The AssoclTlleoday TrtplkaW Leogu&lt;
~led Pnu coUege footbaU poll, with lll'lt·
Sept. II I.}
place votea in ~~.
seaaon'a
'
S\1....
record and total
b. Jlolntll bued on

By AuocfatedPrea
Cincinnati Reda Manager Jolin
McNIIJll8ra called It "the .....,n.
that WBSII't," ,but for eight teams
that mastered baseball's patchwoli&lt;
playoff scheme, it not only was, It
stillis.
Baseball's intradivision playoffs
~ a post;.eason mutant spawned by
the two-month-long mldseason
players' strike - were set to begl!)
today, marlllng the start of the
longest postSeason in baseball
history.
Under baseball's plan, this socalled miniseries will be a best-of- five games between the first-and
second-half winners of the two
divisions in each league.
The Los Angeles Dodgers and
Houston Astros in the National
League West and the Oakland ~·s
and Kansas City Royals in the
Ameri~n League West got it rolling
today.
.
'The four East Diviilion teams in
the two leagues begin play on Wednesday - Philadelphia at Montreal
in · the NL and New York at
Milw8Jli&lt;ee in the AL.
Only after the division winners are
decided through this process will the
league champi'!ll5hip series begin,
scheduled for Oct. 13-18. The World
Series is scheduled for Oct. 26-28,
assuming the weather is
cooperative. And that's a rather
large assumption in some of the
more northern cities at that time of
year.
By way of comparison, the 1949
World Series ended in victory after
five games for the New York
Yankees over Brooklyn on Oct.9. In
1969, the first year of the league
championship playoffs, the World
Series ended Oct.19 with the New

Taua

.. . Meig.IIM
..... : No.I
ForatRunBiock
No. 5
No. &amp;
No.3
High

CarOl•
tit,

· w.L
2SI
21
20
19

11
11 '
20
21
16 24
15 25

lndlvldual game - Pat Caraon 201, IIIII;

- . m.

. . - - PltCartOP521 ; Sharon Hensley

roiynsachner···

Team hi&amp;h p1M- MelplM ~ .
TeomlliCh- - ......... !...

,,

20-Jt-11-17·16-lfl.-14·1 ·12·lt.lo.9-I-7+H·3 ·2·

I. Southern Col (58 )
2. Per..St. ,(6)
3. Texu (II
4. Pitt8burgtl

6. Michigan
7. Allbama
a. Brtgtwn Young

e.a..-

12. JOWl St.

•
D

1,1(15
1,134

1,101

5. Norih Carolina

10. Oklahoml
II. G&lt;Gtllla

1'111.

1,2113

IJ.aa-rl
14. So. MethodUa
lJ. lOWI
lt MIEU, Pll.
II. UCLA

"·-··
11.

"'"'"r.' St.

·-~ .

1,047

101
..

•

113
7311

.I

gaJIIa.

that made it have shown no less eo- •
thuiiasm for getting on with the
playoffs.
"Rigbt ·now, I don't tee!
anything," .the l&gt;hWfes' Lonnie
Smith'said earlier in the week, "bill
when the day , comes, I'll be excited."
·
The A's and Royaiil were given the
honor of starting baseball's historic
miniseries with a scheduled 3:10
p.m.; EDT, start in Kansas City.
Royals right-hander Jeff Leoliil'd,
!:HI, was picked to oppose Oakland
right-hander Mike Norris, 12-11.
At night in Houston, one of this

season's best poasible pllchlnc matchups is sdleduled to tab place.
HoUston's Nolan Ryan, 11-6; who pltcbed his fifth no-hitter lhfl l!e880il,
will. pitch agam,t rookie Dodgers
left-'hander Fernando Valenzuela,
13-7.
•
'

·. Feeney-Bennett

The real dichotllmy of this season,
however, is not 00w lang the teams
will play, but which will play.
For instance, none of the four
teams Involved· In the National
League playoffs would have made it
On Wednesday, Steve Carlton, 13past Sunday if won-loot records were
4,
iii set to go for Philadelphia againnot split.
st
the JO:xpos' Steve Rogers, lU, and
Neither Houston nor Los Angeles
the Yankees will send Ron Guidry,
had the.best overall record in the NL
11-6, against Brewers right-hander
West. That diStinctloo belonged to
M006e Haas, 11-7. The Phfla-E:tpos
Cincinnati, which had the best
and
A's-Royals series also i:ontlnue
record in baseball this year, t!IH2.
Wednesday
. .
Since the Reds . finished second in
both halves, however, they mlased r;::;;;;;;iiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;::;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:~
the playoffs, which prompted McNamara's remali&lt;.
·
The St. Louis Cardinala found
themselves iif similar circumstances, flnishiag with the best
overall record in the NL East, ss-43,
but, again, a second-place finisher In
both halves.
"I don't feel any compassion for
the Reds,'-' Houston third baseman
Art Howe said, "and anybody 'who
sa.Ys we backed into the pliyoffs is
crazy. We outplayed them (the
Reds) in the second half of the
season. Sure, they had a good
streak, but we must have done
spmething right because they
couldn't catch us."
What Howe, and others who
reached the round of eight, have said
in essence is that the ground rules
were set and accepted by the tfuiyers
before play was resumed on Aug.IO.
The split season was part of the
labor agreement the players
negotiated with management over
the issue of free agency.
Still, it's baseball. With bats and
balls. With gloves and white chalkmarked diamonds. And the teams

Tigers release ·
'Bird'.Fidrych
DETROIT (AP) - Mark Fidrych pitchers.
His popularity was reflected in
is just an ordiriary citizen today, but
he'll always be unique to the millions Tiger Stadium attendance figures
of baseball fans who followed his which showed that for the 18 games
meteoric rise and fall with the he ~tarled at home in 1976, an
Detroit Tigers.
average of 33,649 seats were filled.
Fidrych, whose storybook pitching With his 11 starts on the road - lncareer was devastated by injuries, duding a game In Yankee Stadium
was placed on waivers Monday by which drew 52,707 fans - Fidrych
. the Tigers for the purpose of giving pitched before 901,239 In hia rookie
season.
h1m his unconditional release.
The Tigers paid him only $19,000
· That means any major league.
team that wants him can have that year, the major league
minimum, but Fidrych said that was
Fidrych for the bargain price of·$1.
It means the end, which both the plenty of money. He had one of the
Tigers and Fidrych put off long as best arms in baseball and his future
possible, finally has come for one of looked unlimited.
the baseball's brightest beginnings.
However, his world came crashing
It is sad to think that we may down the following spring when
never see his likes again.
Fidrych, playfully shagging fly balls
" Mark is special," Detroit in the outfield at the Tigers' training
General Manager Jim Campbell camp at Lakeland, Fla., injured his
noted. "He was more than just a left knee and underwent sursery for
great young_pitcher. He brought a repair of a torn catmage.
breath of fresh air to the entire game r - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - 1
of baseball when it was sorely

Social
Calendar·

SOFT PUFFS

.73c

•

"""' IIIlAY£

TABLm

KE BLUE

IERRK • .·. A.A YELY

R.,.R•UMUcr
100'•

$519 . ;,;,.H n.u $1 09
.....,_

needed. "

Nicknamed "The Bird" by a
minor league coach who saw a
resemblance to the Sesame Street
character, Fidrych was perhaps the
first baSeball player truly born for
television.
The date was June 28, 1976. Tbe
Tigers hosted the J'iew York
Yankees in a nationally televised
game. Fidrych, a rookie righthander, pitched a seven-hitter as the
Tigers won 5-l and a baseball
phenomenon was born.
His enthusiastic performances
created a ''Birdmania'' in Detroit as
the 1976 season progressed.
·
The gangly 6-foot..J, curly-haired
Fidrych was a delight to watch on
the mound, ·where he talked to the
baseball, patted the dirt to his own
liking and cheered the play of his

'
and · witnessed
E. Miller has an- site development
nounced approval of a f21'7,000 grant initiation of consthietlon.
for funding of the third phase of conUpon completion of the Phase m
structing and equippin&amp; a stadent
and community center for con- construction; which is projected for
tinuing education at Rio Grande June,llll12, the center will benefit the
College. The first and second phases college's'p,rimary "!'rvice 'a rea In the
which were also ARC assisted counties Of GoUla, Mefl!s, Jackson
provided for land acquisition and andVinton. .
Con~n

Pr~s..-c A~

Fidrych started the Ali.Star game
that swmner, only the secilnd rookie
to earn 'that honor, and went on to a
19--9 season and rookie-of-the-year
honors in the American League, His
earned run average of 2.34 was the
lowest iii both major leagues for
starting pitchers that year, while his
24 complete games and 1.000 fielding
average both were tops In the AL for

__

POSTMASTER : St!nLl11dtlre~-. to Tht! 01111}'
Sen lind, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769.

Nu sub!;rriptioru1 by lnMiiJWnnitted In
when• huu11: curier llft'Vic~ iAIIVMilllbh:.

.

Olllulill Wrll VlrJIIIIa

lMnnth . ... . ................ . .• ,
Sis: munth .. . , , , , ... , , ........... .
I Ye11r ........ .. .. .......... , , ,
l\ala0u11ki&lt;Ohlo

"

·....C:.vJ

You may not want to be alone today,
but don't go so f~r as to pick up
everyone's tab tust to keep them
· around you. This could never. bring
you happiness.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2o-Feb. 19)
Don't 1hlnk you must babble sen·

SMOKED

PICNIC HAMS
.
'

·89e LB.
COLBY
LONGHORN CHEESE

'1

... 49c

' listener.
PISCES !Feb. 2o-Morch 20) _The

,.

'RC COLA
DID RITE, RClOO

SPACK

$ 29

a ni.ce person could get you thrown
together with someone everyone
else is trying to avoid . Speak up so
they don't palm him or her off on
GEMINI CMay 21-June 20) You're

COMPlETE
BEDROOM
-SUITE

in a sociable mood today , which
might be just the reason you can't
concentrate. It's best not to begin
things which, once begun, must be
finished .

CANCER ·(·June 21-July 22) Gel·
tlng along with o1hers will be no
everything abOveboard. If anyone
feels he or she is being talked abOUt,
hurtfeelingswill res~lt.
'

LEO (July 23·Aug. 23) Keep busy

today. Avoid geHino into discussions
which mlgh1 be 1ouchy, especially
with family members. Why spoil

COFFEE
13 oz.
CAN

BAKER

FURNITURE

what could be a pleasant day?
VIRGO CAug. 23-Stpl. 22) Mental

Middleport. Ohio

.LAST CHANCE FOR A
SUMMER fiLL•UP SPECIAL

•
'

..

'

,....$159

.... .,
NAIUIIIIIADI

.,.9

6 PACK
REG. 11.49
•

•'

.*'•'~"

MIDDLIPOIJ. OHIO

Ill
IIIII
112

.••.
•
-~~

M2·2145

'

;

I

ill

..••

'

,,

•
~

.,

/

,.

00

NESCAFE INSTANT

'COFFEE
10 oz.
JAR

.

10 LB. BAG
,..

I

Ill

4 LOAVES_. ,

...

'399
99e

PARTY
ICE

.

10'1\1

BREAD

..

2 LITER BOTTlES

CITY ICE AND FUEL CO.

l

...

COKE-SPRITE-TAB

I

YRMUII ·I

'139

FAVORITE

'109

NUMBER 1 &amp; 2 FUEL OIL
No. 2 FUEL OIL $1 14 gal. No. 1 FUEL OIL $1 11 gal.

•

GALLON

ICE· CREAM
.DRUM
STICKS
.
.

992-3307

'
1hlngswhi ch arerou 11 ne.

PLASTIC

.5% MILK
ELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND

. sssaoo

~eep

CokJt •· Sprite • Tab
8 PACK •1.29
0

AT
BAKER FURNITURE

you.

ALL WEEK

ROYAL CREST

. aDd Wttl Vlt'llllla

•

LB.

•

Mrs. Sandra Luckeydoo, Mlddleport, has undergone ber third
operation at Pleasant Valley
HOilpital,PointPleaaant, W.Va.

TAURUS (April 2o-Moy 20) Being

problem today, so long as you

89

·Ruby Hysell is a patient at
Pleasant Valley H011pital In Point
Pleasant. Cards may be sent to
Room216.

selessly iust so others will know pursuits won't necessarily be your
you're around. Most of the time.l strono suit todavj so If you find your
peopl~ prefer the company of a - concentration straylno stop and do

3Munth . . . , , , , , ............. . ... .
.Month ......................... .
.JYe•r ...........• .... .. ... ·., .. .. .

.....
No one is _ ever•
prepared for' a tragi_
c
fire, but you can
financially safeguard·
ed. Talk to Us!

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22·Jan. 19)

.

•

.' .'

your opinions to yourself toelay,
especially if they l!lre demeaning
tOW'ard another. You could find your·
self in hot water If you voice th~m .

"Insiders" information which may
be given to you today must be
treated with the secrecy It deserves.
Tell no tales and you can't be ac·
cused of )he leak.

IIAYIR

, -lw

only ,person who is thinking down

coming year Involving the security
you want for yourself and vour
family . You'll be given the opportunity just don't let friends talk
you out of if.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 231 You've .
heard the expression, •• You are what
you think." Well, thi~ could be applied to you today concerning what
you think your worth Is In this world.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 211

•24'••

i" :---, ......

MAILSUBSCRJP'nONS

I

about you today is yourself. You

and good humor work well for you ,
so don't give in to being argumen·
tative, ev@n when provoked . Keep
your wits about you and laugh every ·
thing off.

,,_,,

SALi ,
PRICES
.... '21.50

tt

h

..

There could be some very pleasant

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Charm

NORELCO
SPEED RAZOIII

By Carrier or Mo&amp;or Route
One·week . . .. . ...... . .. -f· ....... , •
Om~ Munl.h , .....·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
One Ye11r . . .... .. .. ....... . .... .
SINGLEf..'OPY
PRICES
O.Hy .. ...•...• . . . .•.. . ........ 15C.n10J

'229

The Farmers Home AdmiJJistration office in Pomeroy was
closed todaY and will be closed all
day Wednesday due to an out-oftown meeting for staff members.

yourself rlg»t intp being
things happening for you this -mlgh1talk
miserable by negative . · self·
judgment.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Keep

.•

1-~---·· SUBSCRIPTION RATES

1

Oc1ober 7, 1981

__,. . 99c

~;i~;~~;~~;~H

teammates.

A st

41''QI U41'/f .h
1 6 1 "".Y

WillOW lEAL TAPE, FOAM DOOR SIAL,
WEATHER SIAL TAPE, PLUG I SWITCH
ounET SIAl.EJIS

Mt!mlwr: r~~:;~~~,'~,~t~
Newlij)Mptr Publi11~rt&gt; · :'
ly
A.tlvertlsin~
Represe nt11tive ,
Newspapt!r Sil l~. 733 Third Avenue,
Yurk, NewYurk 10017.
'

BUCKET
STEAKS

--~----~·~Announcemen~~---------

"-g.

•

• . .YSAYIRS

IUSPSl...... l
ADlvl1ioa ol M.abledla, lac.

WHOLE

'

NATURE MADE

The Daily Sc111i1!CI

.

•

FHA

SUPER

__: -.;_. . ;...~~:. $140

.

carol

' CUIIITY

BABY
SHAJJIPOO

Community
Builders

Homemakers

~R-H$!.21

JOHNION'I

:Third wednesday

Pwwoy Drew Webller Post 39
llild FHile)'-BenneU P01t Ill, Middleport, co-hosled a dinner for the
The Caaulllnlty S.llldon Club
Molp Legion Buelillll te.tn and
An afteploon of barley weaving
met reCently II the 1-. of Mr. and
their parent. Tuesday niCbt at the was enjo7ed by members cl the
Mrs. Ronald Olbonle for a cookout
Legion Post Home on MUI Street.
Third Wednesday HOIIIfJIIIIken and picnic IIIIPI*'· Attending were
Comhlanders Gerald Rought, POIII Club held at the Syracuse vfllage Mr. and Mrs. Donald. ~ Mr.
'll Pomeroy, and Fred Hanel, POit hall recenUy.
· and Mrs. Walter Brown, Mr. and
128, Middleport, and wives were
Cundiff presided at the -Mrs. Hlrlila FrUik, and Mr, and
preRnt. Invocation was given by meetinC which opeaed with the Mrs. Warren Picke111.
James Gilmore, POit 38 chaplain.
pledge to the flag and devotiOIII by
Presellt at the dinner were Legion Irene Parker from Guidepolta and
baseball commissioners from scripture from Romans a using the
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Norman theme "When the Bible Speaks to
- VanMeter and wife; from the Me."
·
Pou... II)' Post 38, George Neaael- · Mrs. Parlier gave the secretary's
roadJr. and wife; Homer Smith and report. Mrs. Virginia Saller, the
wife. a.ymooc1 Jewell was unable to treasurer's report. For roll call
attend. .
members told what they have done
Tues&lt;fuy
A short talk was given by Robert during the summer. Mrs. Cundiff
Roberts, a well,known school had a program on generic foods and
SUTTON Township~. 8
teacher who is very active In the food additives. ·
p.m. Tuesday In the Syracuse
sports program In Meigs County
Barbara Lawrence of Barban'o
Municipal Building.
area. ft9berts introduced the guest School of Dance gave a demon.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, D. of
speaker for the evening, Jim Ven- · stration on exerclaes to music with
A., meeting,'7:30 p.m. Tuesday;
nari, scout for the Clnelnnati Reds. members joining her. There was a
all officers asked to be present to
He spoke on what makes a true potluck dinner at noon. Attending
prllctice
for inlpedlon.
athlete.
besides those named were Elma
George Nesselroad Jr., coach of Louks, Janice LaWson, Pauline
POMEROY CHAPI'ER 1116,
the Meigs Legion Team, Introduced Morarity, Margaret Efchin8er, Jean
OES,
7:45 p.m. Tuesday, re8)11ar
the boys and their parenta and Coats, Gle1U18 Davis, Uncia FerreU,
meeting.
recoplzed the asaiiltant coach, Donna Smith, Genevieve Sclmelder,
HOO!er Smith. Neaselroad thanked Ura Largent, Eleanor Bochan, and
Wednesday
the boya for their dedication for the .Esther Harden. •;,
,
season. Michael Nesseltoad,
MIDDLEPORT Uterary Club, '
asaiiltant coach, was W18ble to atWednesday,
2 p.m. at the home ol ·
tend.
'
Mrs.
Nan
Moore. The book
Commander Rouglt and Art
review
will
be given by Faye
Stobart presented certllicates to the
Wallace.
foDowing boys; Zane Beegle, Robert
New members were welcomed at
Cunningham, ·Jerry Fields, Joe Bob
Thursday
Hemsley, ROger Kovalchik, MICk a· recent meeting of the Eastern
THE MEIGS Association for
Leoriard, Tony Riffle, Terry Future Homemakers of America
Citizens will meet 7:30
Retarded
WayiBnd and Kent Wolfe. Gary held at the school.
p.m.
Thursday
at the Meigs ComThey are l\llll Jones, Judy Jones,
Wayland accepted for his son, Jeff,
munt';y
School.
who could not be present. other Sherr! Driggs, Beth Hayman, Kim
players for the Legion team who Weiner. Tammy Wells, Frankie
SYRACUSE PTO, regular .
were oot present were Robert Wells, and Mandy WllliaJlls. Other
meeting,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Foster, Rotlert Brown, Randy members attending were Sberri
Program
to
be presented by Scott
Murray and Roger Gaul. A cer- Myers, president; Karen Jacks,
Woodring.
Refreshments.
tificate was presented to Homer Robyn Pitzer, Pam Davis, and Mary
Smith jr, for helpbig with the equip- Hibbs.
ROCK SPlUNGS Grange will
Officers' reports were given and
ment and for dedication to the team.
meet
at 7:30p.m. Thursday for a
The dinner was prepared by Elza the group discussed their Meigs
joint
installation
of officers with
Gilmore, ~rd Jewell, and County Fair booth and the pet show.
Hemlock
Grange.
George Horak. Middleport Post -128 They also discussed a project for the
Children's H011pital and the election
will host the dinner next year.
THE LAUREL CUFF Better
The next meeting for the Drew of district and state representatives.
Club will hold its 45th anHealth
Next meeting will be held on Oct.
Webster Post 39 is TueM&amp;y. A meal
niversary
potluck dinner at 8
will be served and all members are 12 from 7 to 9 p.m. in the home
p.m. Thursday at the home of
economics room at the Eastern High
asked to attend.
Mary
Miller.
Sehool.-

as

Top Twenty
., ..............,.,..

..

Yort Meta beatlnc Baltimore in five

•

Meigs County groups meet

Baseball's mm1 senes hegi.p.s today
•

- OPEN OILY 9 m10 P.M..
SliiDAY .9 10 10
._. 111e RtM To linit

•
'

�•
Page-6--The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,,OI!io

Churches hold functions

·

Tuesday, October 6, 1911

October

Senior Friends offer service~
Senior Frlenda are lelliar citizens
who Offer a variety ol. services to
people In Mflp County who are ilver
liO yean of age: bune vlalta; visits
to lllll'8ing bomea IDd othel' ln-

·Middlepdit Church of the Nazarene

stitdons to provide recreational
and craft actlvltlea, companiOillhip
and converaaUon; ari'angiDg tran&amp;portation to medlc'al appointments,
grocery stores and for other
necesSary errands and IIB8istance in

locating social service agencia and

Businless Services

Frleiiai Program.

"~y

1aatiJi8
throuclt ,

COiiliDUnity JI'OUil8 when further aid friendships are formed
· Senior Friends," she said.
Ia needed.
Jl'lr more jn{Ol'IDJUOD ·about
"One of the Important things !be'
$enior Frlellda can provide Ia care ~vlnl Senior Friends aervlcea
and aaslalance that may enable fGr yOurself, or a friend, family
C&lt;l11101Wlily residents to remain in member or other older periiGII, 'CGIItheir own homes, i'ather lll)on be pei'- tact the Senior Friends ~ at
manenUy IIIDOed . to

a

nuralng

home," nplained Pam ll!nle, M~igs
~ Coordinator of the •Senior

CARPENTER
' SERVICE"
-line

Styl),t; Man. More, ao...
C u - , Cindy Culh·
borl&gt;on.

NewHoun :

Mon. 11,007;00

.

Tuea. 11:00.5:00

_RoOfing ana gutt•r

the Conunw!lty M10nta1 Health Cen- ,
.ter on Mulbepy, Heights b) J'91Jleroy"
ot.can:~y12; . . . · ·
··

_ Concret work
-

Wodo. 10;00.8'00
. Thurs. II :•8:00

I

· Fri. 10:00·5:00

Jlumblng and
elilctrlol work

Unlon..,..ve, ~
Pomeroy, Ohio.

(F,.. Eot&amp;W-oJ

PHONE 992•3021

V: C. YOUNG Ill
~

·s~all
invesiment,
large
--

• r:
•

~eturns, Sentinel ·Want Ads

·t

· 992-6215orft2.731&lt;1
' - o y. Ohlo

No llpf:IOintm.nt• r-••-..y. For.
merly Kul·n·Kurlleaufy •hop .

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•Backhoe
·• Excavotlng
• Septic Systems
Gas Lines

• Trencher

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992·7201
5·2l·lfc;

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

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

'

Mr. and Mrs. Monid Good were
bosts for. a Saturday hayride of the
Middleport Church of the Nazarene.
llefd!"e the hayride, the group enjoyed a cookout.
'Dorothy Kenny, judged the most
active hay thrower during the
evening, was presented a bag of hay
at the Sunday service by Bill White,

superintendent. The wagon was
provided by Mr. and Mrs, 1\layford
Harris.
Attending were the hosts'
children, Jayne, Deana, and
Darlene Good, Elma linlloden, the
Rev. James Broome, his wife, Judy,
and their children, Stanley, Brian
and Kara, Bill White, Judy White,

the youth director, and their
'children, Angie and Amy, Marjorie,
Betty and Mark Taylor, Mark
Smith, Nellie Cox, Diane, Heidi and
Steve Caruthers, David and Aleaslui
Custer, Dorothy Kenny, Sheila
Harris, Tracy and Jeff McMahon,
Teresa Little and the children's
director, Tammy ·Searles with her
·
family,KennyandAngie,

Pomeroy Nazarene Church
A Sunday School picnic was held
recently by the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene with each family contributing a covered dish, cake and
pies. The affair welcomed the chur•
ch's new pastor, the Rev. Virgil
Byrer, and his wife. He gave the
blessing before the picnic.
· Attendins were the new minister

41

t--In MemOriam

42-Mobtlt Ho'"''
for ltnl
U-AputmentsiDr REnt

)-Announcements
+-Giveawly

Stephanie and' David, Shari Blackwell and daughter, Amber, Dorothy
Bentz.
Nancy Aeilter and qaughler,
Carla, Connie Conde, Brenda Neul·
zling and children, Missy, Andrea
and David, Amber Davis, Tirmny
Cobner, Nora Nllz, Brian and DoiJ.
n;e, Richard Davidson, Larry
Davidson, and Mike Reynolds,

5-Happy Ads

45-- Ftlrnlshed Rooms

-.-space tor Aet~t
.41- Wanted to R4Hit
41-EqulpmttU lor lhnt

: 1-Pu•llc Sate
•-wanted to Buy

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl - H0 u•enold GoOds

Approximately 50 members and
friends of the Forest Run United
·Methodist Church enjoyed a hayride
and weiner roast Saturday ni~ht,
staged as a " welcome back" party
for Rev , Stanley Merrifield who has
l)een reassigned as pastor for
another year, and his family,
Dan Nease drove the tractor on

Attending' Were Rev. and ·Mrs.

which was hitched two large wagons

Stanley Merrifield, Marcia, Tndd
and Buffie; Mrs. Fred Nease and
Dan, Mrs. David Nease and Roger,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hollon and
Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hollon,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins, Kimberly and Rochelle, Mrs. Faye

'Hml after an l10ur's ride, the group

Hamilton and Sandi, Mrs. Henry

1·ciurned to the church where a bon-

rire was burning to roast weiners

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Warner, Mrs.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Ann Watson,
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Yeauger, ·Mr,
and Mrs. Vernal Blackwood, Mrs.
Jennings

Beegle,

David

S4-MIIC. Merctt•l1clin
H-·Bullclint Supplies
S6-Ptll for S•le

Salser, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hauber,
Mrs. Stacie Arnold and Jennifer,

St. Paul United Methodist Church
. The book of Exndus was the study
' topic at the recent meeting oflhe
AdWI Bible Class of St Paul United
Methodist Church held at the home
of Mrs. Edith Harper, Tuppers
Plains.
Exploring Exodus I, the Rev.
Richard Thomas noted that Gnd
always prepared His people for
things to come, be they gond or evil.
He noted that Gnd Is always working
leading his people onto the promised
,land, and concluded with a "wishing
well" when members wrote down
their wishes for themselves, their
church and their country.
During the business meeting
presided over by Mrs, Evelyn Spen-

Stylettes

the entire church.
Inspirational readings were a
"Love Letter from Jesus" by Mrs ..

r~cruiting

Chevalier,

11

Money

versus

eFINANCIAL

'1- W•nltd to Buy

Qppoi'tunily
22-Money to Loan
2l- Proleutonal
Services

s•••
64- Ha'll &amp; Gr•in
6J-S.td &amp; Fertitiler

eTRANSPORTATfON

e-REAL ESTATE

71 -lo.u,Os lor S•le
n-Tnn;ks tor Sate
71- VIns&amp; .. W. O.
,,._Motorc'llctes
75- Boats A Moton
16-Auto Parts &amp;
Ac:ceuories
n-Auto lltepair
71- C•mplnt E"uipm~mt

U-Mobile Homti
tor 5.ate
U-l"arms lor S11e
l4-Busineu Builllin11
Js- Loh &amp; Acreaqe
R.efll Estate Wanted

U-Piumbint &amp; H1t1tint
l l- E liCIVIIiq

Monaa'II 2:DOon saturday
TuuCiav tPiru Frlaav 2:110 t'.M.
Thedaybelorepublicaflon , '
Sunday 2:.00 P .M. l"ridly

M-Eiec:trica!A

Relrigeration
Is-General Hauling
N-M.H. Rt!Hiir

e1- Uitft011Mr't'

Rates and Other I nlormation
Up To IS word1 ... one d.w Insert ton ..... ~ .
. .. . .. , .. . . , . . 13.00
Up to 1~ woi'Gs ... thret,day lnnrtlon ... , .. , .. , . . . . . .
lol.ta

valuations for the current
vear are completed. The
new valuations will• reflect
onlv the new construction
completed in the year 1981.
The valuations
are ',
opened for publi~ in ·
spection attthe Meigs Coun · :·
tv Auditor's Office.
Howard E . Franks
Meigs County
· Auditor
(91 2'1 (1016, 2tc

examined at the following
locations:

Richards, on the 27th day of
Oc;tober, 1981 at 2:·30 p,m.

Office of the Mayor

Municipal Buildtng
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169

Tne PuDtisher reserves"'' rignt to edit or retKiany illlb 1ttemecl
Otljectionat . The Publisher will not De respons,Die lor more th•n one

1IO) 6, 13 , 21c

. .

--- . ...-.
'
.
,--~---------------~~----.

resulis. Money not refundable.

By Edward Sebreck, D.O.
Aulslaut Profesoor of

Family Medlciue
OhJo,UJilvenity C..Uege
,

ul Osteopathic

Medlciue

,;.- QUESTION:
My doctor recently told me the
:bleeding and pain
I have had in my
rectum are due to
hemorrholda. Could • you tell me
Sellreck
just exactly what hemoiThoidsare?
; ANSWER: Hemorrhoids are
·either Internal or eztemal IIWo.llen
veins In the tissue · ol the canal
JeadiDg from the rectum to the anus
(an«eCtal canal).. Tile dlltlnctlan Ia
build an their loc:atlon In the caual
wbleb eatendl abaat one and fld lncbelinllde the IDUI.Ifenlarl'

, boldlln the lower half ollhll Clllll

9 · 4· 1 mo.

BOGGS
SALES&amp;SERVICE
U.S. Rt. 50 East
Guysvill•. Ohio

Phone 614·662-3821

Aut~rlz~

I

Deal.,

I
1

;

FOR SALE

The James H. Lawrence
real estate in Lebanon
Township, Meigs County,,
c.onsistlng of 106 acres. n
f1ve parcels, with house
and bern, for not less than
the . appraised value of

Address~-----~--~

The real estate '
entirety and also by parcel, ,
lh~ highest
prlc;e ob·

tatnable provided it Is not
less than the appraised
va!ue, will. be acceptecl.
Sa1d sale w111 be at the or-

lice of O'Brien

&amp;

!)'Brien,

A ttorn~ys, llO'It Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio at
1P:OO a.m., Saturday, Oc·
faber 10. Fur further in·
formation call 992·2720 or

munication between them. When the
veina become dilated, the IIU'I'OIID. ding lluue neillllld produces the
bulge WI! ceJJ I beniOI I lould.
~N; ll the only treatment

( ) Announcement

ol ~boldlllii'gli'J!

ANSWER: No, ,lull beca- you
have ben101ill0idl doel nat mean
you have to have IIIU'Kery. Un-

17. ~---'--18 . ...,-- - - - 19, - - - - - - - - -

! )For Rent

1

1. _ _ _ __

_

I

20, --.....:........:...._

_

21 . _
- -_
-_
- -_
'22.
_ -

3,

4, _ _ _ __

23.------2~- -----25. - - - - - 26.
27.

5, _ _ _ __
6.

7,

a.
9.

21.

10.

29.
30. ~~---

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

31.
32. _ _ _ _.;..__

3:1.----34.

1~.

15.
16.

35.

Mall Tills Coupon wltfl Ramlttanct
Tilt Dally ltntlntl

1t1 Court lt.
l'o)n.,oy, 011. 457"

···-·- -----------------'

\'

·

614-992-3891

For

ss.oo Per Hundred Lbs.
After they are hulled
Starting October 1st

Mlu.ER ElECTRIC
SERVICE

•Washers
•Dryers

•Diaposols
eDI1hwoshen
•Hot Water Tonks

q.s.tfc

If long distance, call collecT:
Larry E. Miller, Dealer
8·30-1 mo.

---------4---------]

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
And Home M1intenance

• Roollng of oil types ,
•Siding
• Romodollng

• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs. experience

TOM HOSKINS

Ph, 949·2160 or 992-6125
7-S·Ifc

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater core to the
. Lariest Radiator.

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS ,
35 Yrt. Experience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Pemeroy, Oh.
Ph. "2-2174
5·7·11c

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC
SUPPLIES

PLEASANT VALia HOSPITAL
is currently seeking
qualified

PRICED RIGHT.

lrcodl&gt;vry Road

anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ae in this
column. There wi 11 be no
charge to the advertiser.

NEW LISTING -

White &amp; black, calico kit·

1974

A

)'OU choose for ·your favorite soft
shirtdress? Easy-sew, fit-no

waist seam. Send,
Printed Pattern 4895: Half
SilOS 1011, 12\1, 14\!, !6\!,
18\!, 10\!, 11\!. Size 14\1 (bust
37) takes 2 518 1ards 60-inch.
$2.00 lor Nth paltont. Add 504
lor ueh palllrn lor pas!Jp
ond h1ndlin~o Send to:
Alt .. Adaats
"'
hlllm Dl9l
~ .:.t
The Daily Sentinel
243 West 17 Sl, ... Yarl. NY
10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, 1rHI IDLE NUMBER.
Busy woman? Worktn&amp; woman?
Dress lor I"" spend less lime,
woriH:hoase a wardrobe from
our NEW FAll·WlNTER PATIERN
CATALOG. Coupon for Free S2
pattern inside. Send $1.50
M1 CIAfT IOOilS •. $2.10 oadl
135-15 Dalls iltld Clothe '
134-14 llotlcl Qlllltl
UUoohlott 1flmt Quillin&amp;
130-SW.IIt&gt; Sizss 31-5&amp;
Books and Ca1al01 - add 501
eac;h for postage and handling.

NEW LISTING- MID·
OLE PORT- One story
frame home with 5
rooms . Two bedrooms,
large bath, built· in
china cabinet in dinig
room , part basement,
garage and a nice lot .

$19 , 750 .
LAND CONTRACT Approx . S acres with a
12x70 mob ile home with
an addition built on,
small pond, redwood
porch, centra l air and
many more extras . Ask·
ing $26,900 .

tens. Caii2~5·58M .
6 Simease kittens to give
away to good home . Call

i

large
kitchen ,
3
bedrooms 1 porch, could
have full basement and
is approx . 6 yrs. old .

$19,500.

REALTOR
Henrv E. Cleland, Jr.

HH191
ASSOCIATES

Roger Turner 992-5692
Dottie Turner tn-5692
Jean Trussedll.49-2660

Olfice 992-2259

Aba

Real Estale- c;,eneral

Sizes from 4x6 to 12X40

I

(SOHIO)
we are now dellverint

llame ltHiillll all In all
parts of Mtllt ca. we

Fre&lt;f to good home 2. 7 wk
old puppies. Call4of6·2089,
Lovable· male kittens to
good homes, litter trained .

Call446·9479.

1 cat &amp; 2 kittens. Call 4.46·
33~5 .

5 . kittens, niaie,
h·aired. Call367·7626 .

long

Free while they last . 3 very
healthy puppies. 6 wks. old.

want new custorntrl.

Lerry E. Mllier·Deller

5 pups,

part German
shephard. Also mother dog ,
Male dog·blakk &amp; brown .

949·2402 ,

992-3460
If LAt1ii DISIIIICe,
tall collect
9·21·1 mo.

lullleora~.,.

---

N olu.UyCIIII
3·11·11C

ces. Call742·2288,

Will do day work or
offices . 742·2297 .

"'

Lady or girl to cook &amp; do
light housework . 992·3704 .

Wanted to Buy

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER

EAFORD

dental goJd. Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or anything
stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store , Galli.Polis 446·2691 or
992·2()54 in Pomeroy.

services for fire ~ nsurance
coverage in Gallla Covntv
for almost a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverag~ are
available to meet In·
dividual needs. Contact
Harry Pitchford , aqent .

stamped lOK, 14K , 18K and surance Co. has offere9

BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old

furniture, gold , silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiqUes, etc .,
complete
households.

Write: M,D. Miller, Rl.

4,

Pomeroy, Oh. Or -992-776/J.

CHIP WOOD. Poles m,ax.

diameter 1_., on largest
end. $12.50 per ton . Bundled
slab. $10.50 per ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co .•
Rock
Springs
Rd.,
Pomeroy. 992·2689.

Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry. rings, ole coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Bar·

Family Garage Sale
Tues . &amp; Wed . 9·_., Mitchell

Rd .

Gigantic Family Sale Rod~
ney Communrty Center.
Oct. 8, 9, &amp; 10. From 9 to 5.
several FamiJy Yare Sale

standing fire place, 2 man
raft , bedding, wedding
dress, adult children &amp;
maternity clothes. Plenty
of goodies. •
4 Family Garage Sale Wee·
nesday and Thursday. Lin·
wood Dr. Rio Grande, Oh.
Toys, clothing, &amp; household
items.

Phone
H 614 )·992·332 5

stove.
Y
_a_r_d_s_a-le_O
_c_t__-8--9--1-0.- ,-,-27

·

NEW LISTING
Garage/apartment w ilh
stove and refrigerator,
bath. natural gas fur·
nace and double garage.
Near school and stores.

2nd. Ave. 1st&amp; last sale.
Garage Sale . Oct. 5·9. Open
9·5. South of Jack' s Club on
Paint supply, follow signs.

NICE &amp; LARGE - '81
heat budget $88 ,00.

Yard Sale. Wed .• Oct. 7. 10·
s. Drapes, bedspread ,
dishes, children's &amp; adults
winter coats, sweaters,
misc . items. 606 Main St. ,
Racine. Carroll Teaford's .

estate.

In Middleport.
REALLY LikE NEW-

LAND , -

3

338.

4of6·0552.

AUTOMOBILE

IN ·

SURANCE
been can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's LiCense? Phone

992·2143

No item to · large or small
will buy 1 pjece or complete
household. New, used and

.Brick and Block laying,
fireplaces,
all worl&lt;
guaranteed. Call ~79· :2123 .

.....
~

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

18

Wanted to Do

Responsible woman pn
Bulaville Rd . would like to
baby sit In my home In Ad ·
divil/e School district: 446·
7399 .
TV service calls. Call 99~ ·
2034. Also used color TV for
sale.
Respons ible mother will do
babysitting in the Hen ·
eerson area. 67S·S324 .

Women, men. childr.e·n
clothes, misc. items. Co.
Rd.
lO · Dex·ter
Rd .
Tuesday-Sat. 10·?.

Yard sale. Dc;t.

11

Community
Services
Worker to work with in ·
div iduals with mental
retardation .
Part· f ime
position. Send resume to
John Lehew, P.O. Box 906,
Gallipolis ,
Oh
45631.
Buckeye Community Ser·
vices is an equal op·
portunity employer.
Housemanager ,
part-timg (weekends. and
holidaysr for group home
in Bidwell, Ohio to work
with persons with mental
retardation. A high school
degree is required; experience in working with
persons with mental redar·
dat ion is preferred. Send
resume to John Mercer,
Route 1, Box 398 , Bidwell ,
Ohio 45614 . Buckeye Com ·
munlty Serv ices is an equal
opportunity employer.
Cook wanted. Apply in per·
son Crows Steakhouse .
ParT· time help. 2 salesmen,
1 installer, $11S . weekly, 10·
12 hours per .week, 2
positions now available.
Must be married , and em·
ployed in the area . 304·428·

2744.

seeking

qualified
in ·
to train for
management positions in
Hardmans Home Centers if
you are highly motivated ,
desire responsibility , per·
sonal
growth ,
professionalism , and are
willing to re-locate, send
your resume In confidence
to Stan Hardman, Hard·
man's Home Center, Gen
Office, PO Box 140, Spen ·

cer. WV• 25276.
DISTRIBUTOR
RAND McNally Maps·Up

FrontS!., Middleport.

6 FAMILY garage sale. Oc·

835·22.46, ext. 112, or write

ment. Call toll tree 1·800·

3010 S.E.I. Inc .• 811 Atlanta
Road, Cumming, Ga. 30130

baby c;lothes, all sizes,
m05tly new items..

Mndlca.Md

WILL do house cleaning

304-675-4264.

f IRaHEI:11
22

Money to

Lo;~~n

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

Ave., Gallipolis, Oh., Mo·
7172

23
Professional
-----~s~e~rv~l~c~es~---­
Plano tuning and rep~lr .
Love your neighbor tUne
your Piano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard. 446·43?2,
Gallipolis.
HARPER Adult Care Cen·
ter·provldlng the personal
care your elderly need In a
home like atmosphere.
Vacancies now availible.

caii30H75·1293 ,

,.,--..,..----,,--,-,,.-_;,·.
31
Homes for Sale
&gt;.!.._.!!C~~~~~--,.
.

New J ber . house with
garage and full basement

S-45,000 , Call 446·0390.

MANAGEMENT
OP · BY OWNER : ~ bdr., split·
PORTUNITY . We are level, living room &amp; dining

to 150% Profit-no selling.
Service pre-established ac·
counts,
mlnimun
in·
vestment $3,975. Secured
by inventory and equip-

Kathnor
Lane,
Pt.
Pleasant. Aeults, children,

or

patient care, In your home,
part time, have e)(perience
and references . 304·458·

1552.

6 9 to 5,
Leaf machine, camp cot,
clothing In good condition.
Womens size 20'h. 185 s.

taiJer 5,6,7·9 io •

ELDERLY

Help Wanted

Old Rl. loll off Rl. 7 bypass. dividuals

Only, S17,500 to settle

Large front and b8ck
porches. 3 car garage
large hobby or shop,
garden, full basement,
hot water heal, nice
carpeting, dishwasher,
disposal and·3 bedrooms

Group Medical Coverag-e
for small business, as welt
an indlvfduals . Major
medical, basfc hospital , &amp;
group Ill~ Insurance com·
bined to give you one of the
best programs available .
Very competative rates·.
For more
information :
Steve McGhee. 446·0818 or

ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
3476.

Oct. 7 &amp; 8th. Mitchell Rd. 9
ti 11 ? Phone 446· 1806. Relief
BiCycles, furl')iture, free

216 E. Second Street

L

Phone 4of6· U27.

6ltl-~3-259\.

1-....ll Rummage' Sale at Clarence

B. SR . lit

1n5urance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·

Yard Sale

Halley's Criner·Sandhollo·
w Rd. Thurs. &amp; Fri.
Clothes, refrigerator. cook

&gt;.ulGIIL

ll

paying cash for " anythlng

room combination, eat· in

kitchen, ig. (amlly rm ., 2
112 baths, located In T ar:a
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, S75,DOO
firm. Kyger Creek School
District. Shewn by appt.

only call446·9403.

.

FOR SAL,E BY OWNER '3

bdr. home located at 123
Garfield Ave. 2 acres runs
from SR 7 to Ohio River .
Full basement, finished '
rec , room, 2 fireplaces, 2
112 baths, in ground con '
crete pool, all new carpet,
new paint inside and out .
Will consider your home or
mobile home In trade.
Owner will consider flnan·
clng at lOCH. APR after
reasonable eown payment,
if interested call -U6·1s.t6
for an appointment.
House for rent or sale 'on .
land contract or rent with
option to buy . Home In
Eureka on State Rt. 7 on

Riverfront. Call 388·8711 or
388·9692.

I

·-

SMALL HOME on nice lot in Middleport. Two
bedroom. bath, living room up, family room , kit·
chen, lau'n drv rm. down. 522,500.00. ·

R~C.S.

REALTY INC:

BILL CHILDS. Mgr.
Phone 992-6312
Phone 9t2-6312
•

CASH PAl D for clean, late
model used cart. · Smltil
Buick·Pontlac, GAllipolis,
CHUa. Call4of6·2282,
Junk can with or wttii.Out
motors, scrap met•l, and

baHIIri",'Call388·9303.

New 3 bedroom house,
family room , w.. bath, 2
car garage . Central heat
and air , 2 miles from

Holzer Hospital. Rt. 35. 4of6·
3617.
·.

For sate or rent house, ·6
rms ., with bath, c~rPeted ; 5
1/2 acres, 5 mi . tfQm perk

fr'onl, Call
2516.

I

'

c;leef

Have vacancy In boarding
home
for
elderly .
Reasonable 61,.·992·6022.

Eleventh Street. 675·5868 ,

Garage Sale - Westbrook
Sub. 1/" mile out Bulaville
Rd . Wed .· Fri. Aquarium ,
hunting bow. &amp; guitar.

water heat. 2 full baths,
corpeiing and on 51. Rl.

VInyl&amp; Aluminum
SIDING

toll 1tr fret lllllnt
nllnlllll. f4t-H01' or

or

Nurses ald . Oay time. Ex·
perienced. Good referen-

Also Flea Market open
6
Lost and Found'
daily.
Open
Monday ·
Lost· Foxhound White with Fr iday 1· 5 pm .
black spots, about 26 ln.
tall, bi"own head, $25. WANT to buy stand ing tim ·
Reward, Russel Barr Call ber, 5 acres or more. Rocky
304-895·3323,
Wooldridge, 614·289·2476 or

Call379·2796,

land, Ideal for vegetable
growing. Nice large 8

"lnullful, Custom

Temporary

limited care, Or contlnUOIIs
home with us , Equipped for
wheel chair. 7~2·2266.

Scrap metals, batteries,
Happy birthday to the radi.;.tors, ginseng , yellow
only . woman· f have ever root, and merchandise
brokering. Yar-per · Halste·
loved.
ad Salvage Company, 300
Your Baby

I

acrn Of • level fertile

SIDING CO.

patient.

antique, Call992·6370.

Happy Ads

.4

TRUCK

Ph,

1 black &amp; white, 3 wh ite
long haired J&lt;itfens. 949·
2270.

682·6944.

baths, 3 bedrooms. lois

Racine,

9

Backyard &amp; Porch Sale
Monday thru Thurs. Old
jars plus more. Texas Rd.
10 1115,

of closets in this ranch
hOme. Dbf . ·garage.

Rl, I, loK

Giveaway

To give away to a good
,-,orne
part
German
Shephj!rd &amp; Doberman.
Female 2 months old . Call

Large family room with
woodburning fireplace
on a level lot in the coun·
fry. Kitchen has range
ar'ld refrigerator, 2 full

Utility Buildings

BISSELL

Elim Resthome. Clre for

hafdicapped. aljed; or bed

• 675-1333

7

ONE FLOOR - And a

1 mo.

THE STANDARD
OIL CO.

my home. 992·26N.

992-2156

388·8-420.
,.,

room home with hot

IC/CCU
1
MedlcaVSurglcal
EXCELLENT SALARY AND
. BENEFITS
Contact: -Directorof Nursing
Pl111ant Valley Hospital
Valley Drive
Point Plunnt, wv 25150 '
Aftoq.. l opportunity emplover
I

long and c;uffed or soH elbow
puff with lie-whic;h ~eeve will

Someone to car• for me in

ANY PERSON who has Dear Baby,

an ax12 expando and all
underpinnfng . Hom·e
tlas 2·3 bedrooms, huge
living room ,· equipped
k itchen , window air
cond ., 2 porches and
other e.xtras . S9,000 .

6'1-/1.,~ -1/.1.....,

446-234.2

Siiuatlant Wanllti

12

In Meigs County

In Gallia County

5

Giveawiy

4

NEW LISTING- Hun·
ting acreage or rustic
homesite. Approx.. 13
acres, gas, electric at
site . Southern district.
$8,000 .

NEW LISTING -

SIZES
10'4-22¥..

elll]iblllly list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

R"acine Volunt~ry Fire
Dept. sponsors a · shotgun 6 kittens, 3 yellow, 1 grey, 2
and rifle match every mixed. 6 weeks old. Part
Saturday night at 6:30p.m. Siameese. Call614:992·6505.
Starting Oct. 10. It will be
at their
building
In
Basham. Factory choke 12 3 vellow kittens, litter
gauge shotgun and open~ trained. Call985·4120.
sight 22 rifles only.
6 month old gold and white
Dl's Craft S~pply, Spring kitten . House broken . To
good home. 4th house on
V~;~lley Plaza. Just we~t of
HOlzer . Hospital. Counted left past Post Office In
cross stlch , D~C floss Rutland .
AIDA cloth In all colors,
call for free lessons . 614· PUPPIES part Irish SetTer
446·2134
&amp; part Cocker Spaniei,SSOl
Burdette, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
A clean furnace saves 675·6311.
money. Have your furnace
cleaned. Call675·2158 .
SMALL female pup, has
had all shots, 304·458 ·1552 .
NO
hunt i ng
&amp;
no
trespassing w i thout wr itten We're moving and have to
permission on Woolhan give away our 8 year old
Farms at Apple Grove .
neutered Siamese cat .
Woute prefer older mature
NO hunting &amp; Trespassing couple. ~75 · 5774.
on Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Woolhan 6 wks old kittens, long hair.
Farms.
Call773·5936. ·

$17,000 .

4895

~

4

I

All ,types o1 battorloo &amp;
ChaPSe992-2276 9-24

for

0. B.

*Tubet
I Simi ·
conductors

Sizes
"From 30x30' 1

.

•Maatlng {bolh ·
telescoping &amp; tower)
Componenl Systems ·
*Portable Radios
*Automobile Radios

*T-Docl&lt;•

. Farm BuHdinp
SMALL

*

REGIStERED MURSES .
Nursing Care Unit
!primarily geriatrics)
and I
Acu.te Care NursjJ)g Units
inclUding full and part-time
positions
for

**"""nnas
Televltk»ns

ALL STE

diesel fuel, call Landmark,

992·2181, Pomeroy. o~.

Racine Gun Club Dues are
due. $25. Must be paid
before 1·1·82.

to stores and Middleport
Park. This two bedroom
home would make a
good rental~ first home,
or just right for retired
Rersons . Neat interior
and on a 100'xll1 ' lot .

2-B·Ifc

PH. 992·3460

of

NO huntlng'* or trespassing
on the following properties,
. R: .H. Boatright, Gary 0111,
and Jr. Hunt, Keith
R ldenour and John ·Gin·
ther. Chester Township.

NEW LISTING- Close

Miller

U$

In Mason County

$11,000 .

STANDARD

Call Ken Young
For Fast Servke
9115-3561
PARTS ANO SERVICE
ALL MAKES

delivery

Gun Shoot Ra~lne Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting
at 1 p.m. Factory choke
gunsorlly .
.

mobile home and ap·
prox . 21h acres . Two
bedrooms, garage and
pond . o&amp;ovthern district.

For all of your wir·
ing needs.

we are now serving all
of Meigs Co. with
Heating oi,i, Diesel
.Supreme,
Gasoline,
c:omlete
line -t. of
Lubricants for the
farms &amp; ineusTry .

buld

tlnel uroute carrier. Phone .
right away: and 9et on

614

992- Middleport
Pomeroy
985- Chesler
J43-Portland
247- Letart Falls
949-Racine
.. 742-Rutland

Mason Co., W, va .
Area Cod• 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
458- Leon
576-Apple Grove
173-Mason
1:182-New Haven
&amp;9s-Let•rt
937-Buffalo

Horses, ponies, horse
trailer, riding lessons. Hoof

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

'216 Sycamore Sf,
Middleport, OhTo
9·2l ·tfc

GET VALUABLE irolnlnv
as a younv buol- person
and eom good money plus
some great glib as • Sen·

Me igs Co. Area COde

r"

/

gasoline, heating oil and

PAYING

I

E. Main

992-6259

OIL CO.
. (SOHIO)

C.ll

Pomeroy, Oh10

~~

NEW PHONE NO .

George

446--:-Ga IIi__polis
367-Cheshire
318-Vinton
245-Rio Gnnde
'256-Guyan Dist .
643-Ar(Jbia Dist.-

614-186 : 519~ .

"614·992-1181
For Farm and
Home · Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Healing Oil.

·HARRISON
1V SERVICE
NOW
OPEN for
Color
TV Sets

614

and hot tank reblulng. Call

POMEROY
lANDMARK

2 Sleeve Versions

(10) 4, S,,,J, 8, 9, 6tc

12.
13.

To
EXCELSIOR SALT
,WORKS INC_.

10·2· 1 mo.

FREE
ESTIMATES
pH. 992·60 II
992·7656

Used

GaUia Co. Area Code

Riverside Gun Shop St. At.
7 Athalia,. Oh. Gun repair

Bring Yuur Walnuts

tensive remodeling.
,•Electrical work
• Roofing work
14Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

Custom kitchens and appliances.
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin. electric, and
heating,

7 -3 - ~c

992·3589.

11,

WALNUTS

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex-

Cali 742·3195

•Range~

(10) 5,6, 7, 3tc
~-..!P:.-u'.!b'!'li~c_o:N~o!!tl!!'c.".e__

2. _ __

Georges Creek Rd.

4of6·029~ ..

ROOSH

. C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Sale.

Pick up and

dellverv, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, Qne half mile up

'

11

machine repair~ parts, and

HOllO)¥ 614-698·3290.

check your present etec·
tricalsysttm.
Rtsidtntial
&amp; Commercial .

APPUANCE
SERVICE

( )For Sale

ANSWER: Mild aymptonq of
hemorrhoida.. IIUch .. intennlttent
bleeding, mild pain or a bulge that
disappears when praasure Ia placed
against It, can often ~ be
remedied by having regular boH
movementa and by addiDtl man
bulk - in the fonu of raw fruita illld
vegelabll!ll - to the diet. Anotber
Important pi tUiiilatlve and INI&amp;mpt plan Ia to awld Jll'lllanlld
llrabq aDd liiiiDc • !be made. Such ae~~... lner .. !be
pi'l I I I IIIII ,C"'IIIill... Ia !be
anorectal C8llll veJD.. and canllld
&amp;o heniCII 1boida.

Water linl Hoak·ups
Septic 'ranks
County Certiflet;l
Roustt Lane
Cheshir&amp;, Oh.
Ph. 167-7560

Lei

K"P This Ad for
Futur• Reference

! )Wanted

menta?

o..r'

FARM EQUIPMENT
. PARTS &amp; SERVICE
. USED EQUIPMENT

I

wil be offered for sale in ffs ,

fortunately, many patients· avoid
medical treatment because they
believe ooly surgery can cure them.
However, depending 911 the aevi!Hty
of the problem, other treatmenta are
often recommended.
QliESTION: What aruome of the
nonsurgical hemorrhoid treat-

PH. H2·2725
169 N. 2nd
Middleport' OhiO

and sewlnv

supplies.

lh60 mobile home with

The Central Trust co.,
NA Mlddl.epqrt,,Ohio reser·
ves the rtght to bid at this ,
sale.
.

form at festivals and twirling con- Baton Twirling Association, the U.
tests,
S. Twirling Association, InMrs. Wilhelm, a former dance and ternational Academy of Twirltng
baton teacher for 25 years, instructs Teachers, · and are registered
the beginners, while Mrs. Gillespie, teachers with Twirling Unlimited.
a former head majorette at Pleasant
Cles•es are being held each WedHigh School and contest twirler, wUI . nesctay at 6 p.m. at the Meigs Senior
work with intermediate classes.
Citizens Ce.n ter on Mulberry
F~ the past six years, the two
Heights, Pomeroy. WonnatiQO on
have been teaclpng the Stylettes. classes may obtained by caUing 671&gt;They are members of the National 1999 or 94f.2068.

are caUed external and those in the
upper half are termed internal. Interestingly, the lower half Is much
more sensitive to painful 111n1u1J
than the upper half. This is due to the
· many sensory nerve endings which
are present In thla regloo o1 the
canal.
NonnaUy there are hemorrhoidal
veins In the walls ol the llllorectal
canal. 'l'boae in the upper half are
caUed. superior hemoJThoidaJ veina
and thooe in the lower half, Inferior
hemOITholdal veina. Both 1e11 have
very distinctive patterns ·of
drainage, but there Ia IIOIIIe com-

John

New Holloncf, Bush Hog
Form Equipment

!-Model 479 Hoy Bind

. NOTICE OF .
PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given
that on OCTOBER IS, 1981
atlO AM a public sale will
be held aline ofilces of The
Central Trust Co., NA of
Mladleport, Ohio to sell for .
cash the following '
collateral to wit: •
I 1976 Ford F aso 1 ton
truck
Ser
No
F37MUAS2372

Curb Inflation l
I
Pay Cash for
1
Clalslfleds and ~ II
•caval_I _I
dI

coupon. Cancel your ld by phone when you get

307 Wetzgall St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

M.F.
N.H.

Courthouse

us1ooo,oo.

Farllily Medicine

BEAUTY SALON

Public Notice

I

Write your own ad and order by moll with this

FRANCES HEWETSON

1- No. 8600 Dleael Ford
Tractor w/Cab
1- Mode/ :275 Diesel

at. the Meigs County Court·
house.
Meigs County

I

mcorrect '•uertion.

Now Taking En·
rollment For Fall
Day or Evening
Clases.

NOTICE

Notice is hereby given ,
that the Meigs county
B9ard of Commissioners
Wtll hear the petition of
Junius and Josephine
Marks to vacate and 'ban·
don the township riHid rn ·
Section No. 30 In Scipio
Township wtlich separates
pro~rty owned by Junius
Marks and Jam15 P .

,•

The Stylettes Twirling Corps is
now accepting students ages four
through senior high, Mrs, Dolores
Wilhelm and Peggy Wilhelm
CiUespie, instructors, announced.
They report that all classes are
divided by age and twirltng ability,
'with the beginners to learn basic
twirls and have the opportunity to
march in local parades, whle the intermediate students wiU also march
·in parades plus learn routines to per-

LolirS"

Public Notice

, TM
CONTRACT
DOCUME;NTS may be

Up to 15 woard$ .. . 11• diVS irt'sertlon . . . .
. . . . ......... . ·tJ.eo
(AIIientt4 words per line!)
Mobile Homt lilt~ and Yard Ules ilrt accepte-d only with cuP!
WiT PI order . 25 cent Chlrge tor "d' carryintl Bo• Number in Care of
The Sentinel.
f

Phone ______________

new members

5715.16 and 5715.17, the tal&lt;

ber 5, 1981, and then at said
office publicly 'opened and
reae a roue.
The work covered by the
plans and specifications in·
eludes the following ap·
pro&gt;&lt;imale quantities:
11
Contract
81 · 1"
Wilsfewater
Collection
System Extension
1500 l.f of 8" sewer pipe, 9
each manholes
600 l.f. of 4" force mainJ
and one each sewage pum·
ping station together with
neQessary appertaining
work.

,t- H0mt lmprovemtnn

FRAN'S
CERAMICS

PUBLIC NOTICE

. ~ollowing
the Ohio
Revised Code Sections

the Village of Pom~rov.
Ohio at The office 01 Tile
Mayor until 12;00 o'clock
noon (locattllne), Novem ~

SERVICES

Want-Ad Adverti5ing
Deadlines

I

Village of Pomeroy
Municl~l Building
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Sealed bids for fhe con·
structlon of Wastewater
Co!l~ctlon System
Ex ·
tens1on Will be received by

6J- Livtstock

ll-Homlls lor 511!

Public Notice

ADVER]iiSEMENT
FOR BIOS

,, _ ,.rm EquiPnu~nt

2t-Busln~n

Con-

tentment" by Mrs. Edith Harper,
"Two Weeks Without Gnd" by Mrs.
Brooks, and "A Breath of Prayer"
by Mrs. Vercia Stout.
Mrs, Linda Damewood conducted
games Qll things from the Bible and
hymn titles. Refreshments were ser·
ved to those named and Mrs, Doris
Koenig, Mrs. Louise Chaffee, Mrs.
Thelma Henderson, Miss Linda
Gorrell, Floyd Stout, Mindy and
Missy Harris, Guy Spencer, Mrs.
Richard Thomas, Mrs. Edna Har·
mon.

Public Notice

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCk-

- - ·- ·- ·

cer, the Thanksgiving dinner for the
church was set for Nov. 17 al6. p.m,
Mrs. Lorean Gorrell reported on
turkeys purchased for the dinner.
Th~ secretary's report was given by
Mrs. Shirley Harris, the treasurer's
report by Mrs. MOdred Brooks, The
class is selling dale books at $2 each
and purchases can be made from
Mrs, Betty Chevalier, Mrs. Gorrell,
Mrs. Harris, Mrs. Mildred Brooks or
Mrs. Spencer.
The class expressed thanks to the
St Paul UMW and others for the tile
installed in the church basement.
Next meeting was set for Oct '0 at
the home of Mr, and Mrs. Chester
Gorrell and will be a weiner roast for

WANTED
BlACK

Clauified Pages cuver the
following telephone excha~ges ...

Announcemtmt

SWEEPER

57-Muslc•llnllrumtflt

SI-FruiiiA v.,et•blu
n-For hie or Tr.ft

and

Melanie, Mr. and Mrs, Ted Russell,
Michelle and Michael, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Rayburn and Jonathan; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Davis and Tina,
Vernon Nease, Miss Mellisa
Thomas, Paul Collins, Mrs, Selma
Cali and Bill, and Miss Millissa
Miller.

olt

Maplewood
li\ke in Racine .
,
· 9·2· 1 mo.

si- Antl•utl

n - Re•non

and marshmallows.

Ph. 949-2285
LOCAICd

S2-C8, TV, R•dio E 11111 1'm'"'

11-Hetp w•nted
U-Sitv.tlon W•nted
l l - tnsur•nce
tt-Busine•s Trelning
15-SCtiOOIIIIUtruCIIon

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

I

.. , _ Ftr Lt•ll·

&amp; Auction

le-

Forest Run United Methodist Church

• Sleel
• Aluminum
ecasting eTrailer Hit·
chcs •Metal Fabrica·
Tions. .,... ,...
Monday- Friday

-Houset for Rent

t-Lost•nd Found
7-V•rd Sate

16-R•dio, T._,,
&amp; CB Rt!Nir
11-W•nted ToOo

and his wife and children, Sherrie
and Richard, Glen McClung, Kenny
Lunsford, Missy Maynard, Tammy
Johnson and son, J. C., Nancy Whit·
tekind and sons, Shawn and Daniel,
Paulette Farley and family, Ricky,
Davy and Jamie, Iona Brickles and
son,' Bruce, Virginia Smith, Mamie
Stephenson, Randy Snider, Jimmie
Snider, Larry and Carolyn Banks,

WElD SHOP

eRENTALS

eANNOUNCEMENTS
t-c•rd of Th.n~s

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE
water·Sewer·Eiectric
Gas Line· Ditches

Du~p Tr~~&lt;;~

•

PHON.E992-2156
MIDDLEPORT Church of lhe Nazarene hayride.

Wave Lenwfh For

-------'·-"'-"'.:.·.J IL-------':::·'::~:.;'-::::.·.J I''------9.:.·20-·l_mo_·-'-'

eWater, Se\¥tr &amp;

WANT AD INFORMAnON ·

•

SEPT. 21 tilru
. 2f
$20.00 • Now $17.50
$25.00 • Now $22.50
$30.00 • Now S27 .50
$35.00 . Now S29.50

-""''

3

HAIR REMEDIES

"YOUNG'S
__Aclltons Ol)d

'

. . . ".....
. ' ". ". ....
.'

Waniedtvluy

'

'

~- 6697

or .w,.
' '

�•

Pomero -Middleport, Ohio
42

LAFF-A·DAY

MObile Homes

12x60 mobile home 3 miles

south of Gelllpolls.. Adults,
ref.

Lli. Estate. Farm, proper,
1'1' v•~&lt;.i,,S.U,25!1.eo. .uti
IC!ate value $1,701 .58. can ·
99Q.67•7 evanlngs
.

and

dep:

Yequlred .

Phone 446-7326.

with well and septic .

~hone

more room?

Need

But

afraid you cannot alford
tho Interest. / This brand
new brick and wood 4
bedroom, ~ bath, bl-level
home can be vours at only 8

LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all

18,000. City schools . Call
379·2196 afleJ: 4 ,30.

675-4154.
AfN~rtmemt

44

Furnished apts. 2 bdr. ,
$230., utilities paid , near

4 bdr. 2 1/2 bath bi level

HMC, adults. Call 446·4416
after. 7PM.

Estat~

2 bdr . apartmerlt unfurn.,
in Crown City, Ohio. Call

Small .t rm . &amp; bath, fur·
nished , located 735 rear 3rd
Ave., Gallipolis. $150 per
mo., $6.5 deposit. Call .ull-

256·6520.

.

3 rm . apt. utilities paid .
Call 675·5104 or 675 ·5386.

3870or~ - 1~ .

~; 1572.

Beautiful wa"ter front
Q.~AN USED MOBILE home, dlshw ~sher , car-fi.OMES
KESSEL ' S port, sun deck, shelterQ!;!ALITY
MOBILE houae, adults only. S225.
t-U)ME SALES, 4 MI. Deposit~. 256·6-&lt;72.

Ux70 mobile home fur·
l'lishe&lt;l. 3 bdr .• 2 bath, skirting included, $9,500. Call

6IH82-8205.

,., .

Fati sale on land contract or

r~ITI

APARTMENTS

with option to buy . 2

nlaobile homes on separate
lob' at Tycoon Lake. 1 with
t6i''ge familY roofT'I, with
fireplace. Call 388-8711 or

...

•·9692.
,.
· 191~

furnished mobile
home, central air, dishwasher, washer &amp; dryer,
building, pool. Call 367·

7f15. .

Deposi!S200. Call U6·2745 •.
I

Small 3 bdr. house located
in Gallipolis. ·Dep. &amp; ref.
req. Call-446-0254 after 5.

2 bdr. apt., unfurnished, ex·
cept range &amp; refrig.
Deposit r e(luired . Call 446-

ol303.
For rent house near
Gallipolis. Call after 3PM,·
3 b&lt;lr. house·h~lly carpete&lt;l,

2 baths, $300 plus deposit,

or oU6·2605.

35 Hinkle Ave .., no pets.

Call U6·3741 or 256·]903 .
l bedroom apts . available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call

For rent 3 bedroom, brick
&amp; frame, yr. old ranch in
Green Schools area, $325.
mo. Call ~ - 36.0 .
2 bedroom unfurnisheQ
$190. 1 bedroom furnished
apartemnt. $125. Naylors
Run. Security deposit. Call

1980" doublewlde 2.tx52. .t
year warranty, A-1 cond .

997'3041 . $19,500.
i971 Darlan 12 x 65, 3
-bedrooms .

1972

Crown

'fiaven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
BpandO. 3 bedrooms. 1973
epia l2 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
:l Invader l.t x 70, 3
rooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
)&lt;.40. 2 bedrooms . B If• 5
&lt;$ales. 1nc. 2nd and Viand

$.15. Pt. Pleasant,
Phone 67H42•.

WV .

e

j_974 ·12 x 60, In Camp
~pmley,

air conditioning,
carpet, stove, good shape.

~lH560.

·i

l~
70 mobile home,
~erplnned. 675·ol(l6oj.

two

un·

repossessed mobile

flo.,es, . brand new 1 81
'rnocte:ls, (previous dealer

,l..tlloorplan m..,.yJ, Save

:t'blg$$$1$. Must sell
~~

,~ ....

qulc~1y.

.

K &amp; K Mobile Homes
Pt. PleaS&amp;nt, WV, .

675-3000
MOBILE hOme located In

and clean. phone 304·e95·
3967.

:=oom,

· 1973 Peerless 17 . x 60, 2
unfurnlahed.

• 675-5615 after • :30.
l"resantiY on K and K Park.
Pt:!&gt;l.

, , mobile home 8

'

u· ,

.

x .cs.

L!flaAc!!!p

" _.. ' " llllllle home.
· Cl"' IRtlr will CCifllldlr

,p..'ll

Apartments. 675·55411.
APARTMENTS,

homes,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614· ~·8221

'

2 bedroom .house with
besement, in Henderson,
$165 month, $100 deposit
and references. 675-1118.

contr.:ct. 61$-1113 1'-5

,

1978 Dodge Omnl • dr.. hat·
chbac~. automatic, power

Firewood Oak, Hlc~ory
mixed, delivered. ·call
Jamleot245·92~ .

Misc. Morcho'ndlce

or 614·2o15·9&lt;18•.

3 room furnished cottage,
utilities furnished, adults.

675·2812 or 675· 1580.
Large 1 bedroom apartment, furnished, In Pt.
F'leasant. 675-6020.

Cali446· 1171 .

·~

Split hickory firewood. S40

a load. Call 245·9443.

1216.

17 cu. 11.
Whirlpool 1980 Must•ng, automatic,
refrigerator, gold, 3 years :36,000 mi., exc . cond.,
$5,500 or best offer. Call •f·
old, $300. 675·6870.
Pigs S20. Brown eggs 85
cents dolen. F lrewood S25 80 Chevelle 267 cu. ln. V·8,
at firm only. Phone 895· $5,500. Call388 · ~ .
3395.
"E:~~~~!2j!!!~
51
Building Supplies
Building materials. block,
brick, sewer pipes. win·
dows·, lifltels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
Call2o15·5121.

7

Diesel Farm tractor, 56
Chevorlet station wagon,
wood stove, 1 16 ft. tilt
equipment trailer with
wench, 16ft. utility trailer,
1979 Jeep 10 Honcho, lots of
misc. Call367-7533.
Sint.er.Sewing machine for
sell, like new, Zig-zags,
sews on buttons, .darns,
fancy stitch, makes button

holes, $50 . Call collect 1·
304-736·9241.

F'ORTABLE washer, $100 .

For sale cOuch, recliner, &amp;

chair. Call256·9393.

SERTA box spring·s &amp; mat- Hannan Trace senior Class
is · taking orders for
tress $50. 304-675·4014.
Homemade Apple Buftlr .
Anyone wanting to......,uy
CB,TV, Radio
52
some cont t wan ita Craig
Equipment
256·6660 erbl Waugh 256·
toroly~ Chapman
19" RCA black &amp; white TV, 2680,
excellent condition, $75 . 256·. 9.
For sale 2 wood &amp; coal burning stoves, 1300 ea. Call

256· 1.27.

56

POODLE

GROOMING.

Call Judy Taylor at 367-

7220.
ORAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
black Chow pupp ies, CFA
Himalayln,

Persian and

Siamese kittens. Call oU6·
3844 alter 4 p.m.

light, 1 yr . old National

deluxe Remington ,riffle;
11HP Murry riding mower,
Waterbury antique clock,
oak cabinet, 1 reg. quarter

horse lilly 3 yrs. old broke,
1 reg. Appalossa 3 yrs. old
gelding broke ex. gOOd saddle &amp; bridle. Call 256~13.

f----------•----------1

Firewood

at

delivered.

yard

or

675 · 1932

Two 10 in. H-beams, ·31 ft.
long 1 Hy-Oynamlc Dvna-

Hoe, 140 Series B. PhOne
675·3762oroU6·8247.
'

68 CAMARO, engine, fuel
heater, 304(·675·5125.
-----------------GAS heating stove, 55,000
BTU, propane. $75. Robyn
CB radio $25.00, phone 304;
458·1042.
------------------------ '
Pears. 1970 Chevy plc~up.
Best offer. 175-4373 or 675·
6283.

lor Rent
2 bdr., 3 bdr ., mobile
homes. !:all oU6·0175.

Call ~- 4191.
hours 11 ·5, closed Wed . &amp;

Sun. Call U6·7920.
Available for Adoption ..
Small Ben[i type female,.-1 month old female mixed·
breed
gently. · Meigs
Humane Society 992·6.505 .

BeeS\~. ~i!IY1

Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave. , Pt.

675·2063.

New

hours·Mon., Thurs ., &amp; Fri.
11-6. Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. II·

...

AKC

Dachshund,

F'omeranlan

an

Poodle

pups 30H95·3958.
2 AKC registered poodle
pups and female Siamese
~I lien.

614--1&lt;16·9720.

I]) HlAITAGE liNGERS

(]) il2l It

8 (]) \lliJ

VICE Steam &amp; or pressure
trucks,

trailers,

~UM ,, ~ELL,

mobile homes, farm equipment, etc. Phone 388·9376
or oU6·3829.

5WEET HATI.IRE, SUT BETI'ftN
us- HE'S HOr I'EIGHTED ~tl
~ITH BR.IIIH'I CAH'T EXPECT
HIM 10 HAllE

Wallpape'r,
painting,
general carpenter work . A.l

GENGE OF ......,

Clee~. Porlfand, e.l·
headboerd with hollywood 2285. Turnips S3.00 bushel.
rails, and regular size box· Bring container. You po~ll.
springs and mottrtts, 111
lor $775.00. 'Also chest of
drawers W .95 to S69.95. Centennlll SwHtpotatoes
Swivel roc~ers ,$139.95 to .25, Pontiac Pot•toes .15,
Cecil
$1.,.95. 1·queen size hid-a· Small potatO.s
bed SJ.I9. 95.
:1311 MaIn Toben. 992·51WS alter 6 p.m .
Street, Pt. Plea11nt. 675·
2608 .
•
For Solt or Trede

-·

In the budtolreethelruncle .(80
mine.)
([) COSMOS 'One Voicelnthe

~LLY,l

COULV EATA
()ti{()SIII.Il !

I
J

'

I!:DX.OO .

''Moment to Moment'' tiOe

m

8:30 (]) GOOD NIIWS
IIOYIE ·!ROIIANCEI''
'SomewherefnTkne" t880
8:58 ~ CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00
700CWB
IHlQI THREE'SCOIIPANY
When a brainy and beaut/lui

RON'S Television Service.

Specializing In Zenltl1 and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house Calls. Phone 576-2398 •·

or 446·2ol54.

~~~~e:n~pJ!~~~?~Vn~~c~:~~

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

mate andglvea Jack the needle .
inmorewayathanone,heaeeka
sweet revenge at a going away
bash tor Cindy, who a ofl to the
OCLA dor.ma . (Season

water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps sales and Service.

Premiere: BO mlna.l (CIOMd·
Captioned; U.S.A.)
G (])@) CBS TUEBDAY
NIGHT MOVIE '_Beturn Of The
BeverlyHillbllliel' 1981 Starr.
BuddV Ebaen , Nancy Kulp,
Canna Douglas. Remembering
theamning propertiea of
Granny 's ' whitellghtnin,' Jane
Hathaway, now amember oflhe
National Energy Commlaslon ,
trac:lcs downs aample of
Gra nn:t' a all-purpola mixtureto
aLjbmit lor c;hemicalanalyale a a
a poaalble energy aubatltute .
lSeaaon Premiere; 2 hrt.)

GASOLINE ALLEY

,304·895·3802.
325

1975 CB 360T Hondo $700. CARPENTRY.
home
6,000 miles. Good cond. Ex· building &amp; remodelln9,~·
tended for~ &amp; headers, 675·2440.
regular pipes Included. '192·
2717 or 992·2684.
Plumbing
&amp;Haatlnp _
1972 Harley Davidson, 1200
CARTER'S PLUMBING
super glide. $2000. 675-6823.
AND HEATING
cor. Fourth and Pine
75
Boefl•nd
Phone ~· 3888 or '"6-Un
·
Motors for Sale

&lt;.-----p
Auto parts, auto rttpalr, 2753.
wrecker service, buy
,EDWARD'S Bac~hoe and
1 automobiles, radl•tors and
batteries. ~·7717.
Dozer Service. Specializing'

;::==;::::;;:=;:;:::::::::;::==
i7
Auto Repair

'.!..----1=~=='-'--For sale Ford Ace. lilt coil
springs, brush guard, roll
bar, sliding rear window.
Coii446-«U&lt;&lt;.

71

1ft. camper, 1700. include~

stove &amp; ref., sleeps 4. Call
oU6·11661.

'.

1975 Choteau 28 ft. Mil·
conlllned travel tran...
with air and ow~lng. 1979
Fol'!l super cab plcttup,
22.000
miles. · I.e.,
trill.,
tow pac~age.
Both 19,500.
Mly b e - at lot e. Royal
0.~ Porkor992-3700.

667-61~.

(BOmlno_J

10:00 I]) 1!2le HART TO HART

· 5HE ALSO lORE UP C~IE'e
CCINTAACT. I DON'T THINK

WE'LL HAVE ANY MORE TR:JU8LE
WITH HSf/

FUNNY,

THERE'5NO
~WEI? AT
Hl5 i\IOTHER'9
H~E

ltffAT
HAPPEN£/??
MJIRINKA TORE
OUT OF HERE LIKE
A MT OUT OF
HELL/

... ANP

I'IIE BEEN
TRYIN&lt;S

·

&amp;Joctrlcol

DEF~N51VE

I!!IACK WA&amp;.

tLUFNIX
~
I XJ

.

.'
..
~_;

Now at!'ltlgO lhO drcllcl illtOfl 10
form lhO ourpriM .,._, 11 aug. , .•
gooltd by lhe lbovo .,.._,_

XI I I I I I I t

(MIWetl tomon"ow) :
Jumbleo: POKER CURVE SHANT¥ FOIBLE
Answer : Little Bo--Peep lost her sheep bec1use the•. ,

I'

had this-A "CROOK" WITH HER

,:

umble ICk.III;Mt, 11, contalntng 110puuiM, IIIVIIIab&amp;eloriU!i PDitpl.. ' :
-.. from Jurflble.cJo thllntWtptpef, Box34, HOIWOOd., N.J. 07141.1neiueleycu
•
nMM addre 11 code and m•k• cheda • able to ,.._
a. ~ ~-

Narrated by Hal Holbrook, thle
do cu menta r v ax pI ore 1
MacArlhur'a powerful char·

acl er, one that both crettedtnd
destroyed his brilliant mil/lacy
careet.
10::10 (]) 1118 EVENING NEWB

.•

BRIDGE

I ] ) . CIJ @J 1!2le NEWS

CIJ DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
t1::10 (]) ALLINTHEPAIIILY
t1:21 Cii !:BNU-DATENEWS
NI!Wa
11:30
(]) ANOTHER LIFE
CIJ BENNYHLLSHOW
eCIJ CBSLATEIIOV1~ Allee:

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Aulhorlllld Slngor.
Soles &amp; Service. Shorpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·221&lt;1.

rn•rn

'--------JACK'S REFRIGERATIG-

'Call To' Anna' Alice Ia plagued
by late night phone calla and
tura that the caller f1'lay toon
pay her a vi all. (Repetl)
McCioud :'ButchCaaeidyRidee
Again' Mt:Cioud Ia publicly
humiliated when he atageaa

N. air condition Mrvlce,
commorclol, lnclustrlal.
PhoMII2·2079.

I·,~::!!!!r.!!~~~=

IS
G111eral Haullnp
JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367-l,fl'l or
367·0591.

bank robbery, only to hive tour
genuine crooks, dreued In
frontier garb, 1\okl him up.

i

M. H. lt•tr

I

675--

lj)tlll

AIC CAPTIDNID NEwt
MOYIE ·(CRIIII'DRAIIAI,
""
;'The ~ 11
' 1g71
.
\lii.MC-~
Anchored by Ttd Koppel .
11:10 CIJ MDYII·(·YITIRYI ••

DON'T THINK IT

''!44!!1!d-" , _.

MEANS

11100 w.IlT'IIn'O-iiiHln-IIICIWW
Guoolo: DlonooWIIWicl&lt;. EHiol
lci.IIO mini. I
.

r!Ill··

":
11
• ·_ __;t!l!!l!!m&amp;I!L_
111
81
f! ~A
JIM MARCUM ltaaluntl •
iipOUIIIII lnd •ldlllll. 10

IIOIIIIAIILIY- ·

AIC NIWI NIGHTLINE
AnoM&lt;odbyTtdK-'.
PANTAIY IILAND A
pretty llulnl... pmat.- II
d81per•t• to oriCk tier flrtt

yan ,....,..,_, l'ree
Remodtllllll.

OIIM, butMffentpytufM klto

terror

I'

, I'

.

" .

All-time hard luck hand
By Oswald Ja...,y
.... Alu Soalal

.

...A!,

N,ORTU

The unlucky e1pert bad
cornered us for the first
time in montba.
.
"Have I 10t the bard luck
band of all·tlme lor you,"
wu lila alart.

..·'

I
tQIOUI
tQIO$
EAST tiU

'

,,

'!'ben be showed us today's

t AI Jill ..
tKU

band and remarked lbat all
South playen Ia the lJeekly
duplicate bad bid llld made
four hearts. The play started
wllb a diamond WOII by Eut
u cbeaolr u DOIIible and
the leacf of the illamond ace ·
at trick two. All SouthJ
ruffed and all Wests, but
one, overruffed and led their
remalnln£ trump. South
would Jose the spade finesse,
. but could then ruff lila two
lollaf spades with dummy's
lut wo trumps and make
four.
Aaalllllt our bero, oa trick
two 'Weat played a low club
without any apparent

SOtrrH
tAQ71
.QJIOII71

ts .

tA

..

,

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Eut

....Pau

•.

N.... Eul
It

p.,.

sootlo

Pus

Opening lead'

tf: :,. '

•·-..

tz

t!u&gt;u&amp;!&gt;t. In fact there was no

tbouib!. West hadn't oeen his

I

kln.l-of bearta at that point

iatTme.
Now South led the queen

of hearts and rooe with
dummy's ace. After all Eut
wu ailrlted with that kln.l

aa41lc.lllllea .......... n
not, South could IWT'take the
apade f1neue and make four

or five depending on
·whether or not It worked. So

' ,

~

he led a spade from dummy ·,
and llnmed his queen. Wl'lt
too1t lila kin&amp; and Said "Look"
wbat ~;:ound.''
lit
,t.l Ilia
of~TIIat ·
..... tile
trklt.
and the unlucky e1pert coulf
only ruff one lollnl spade:
and was down one for a zerO.·

I

Tbeii

tlo!14u
••"'
lty fHOMAS JOSEPH
a Gen. Rommel's
babltat

· ACIUll!lll
1 Sllclpplng

a

area
5Talk
to ooeaelf
llKazan
U Free
fnm doubt
U Ceremony

Legal paper

DOWN
I Have comlnl

ZB. Toldas
sUquld

nwaaure

14 Slyle

,{ ,New Guinea
lown
5 Of the sea
• Olstom;

of furniture
11 Bartender's

rocU

11 Ruaaian jet

Yeoterdly'a AMwff , •·
lJ

7 Quiet!
I Schooled
I Error's

(sulfa)

II Earthly

uncommon • Potenttaf:
Jl Lay oddl ·

I!! "Private

Benjamin"

star

convenUoa

17 Full of

Z3 Condea·

31 French.,·. •
river

32Scandl; ,: ~

cended
Z4

'rv oet style

Z5 Electra's
aftermath
brother
• Pentan
llllaclted out
or Oriental 11 Mother (Fr. J Zll Make out
Zl EJilt
(arcbalc J

navlan
33 Avarice . ·

38 NeranW):.;

greettq . ·
38 But (La•• )

ZZStartr#.u

epitaph

23 Ol'dlealrate

b......+--+.-1--

Zll Dluppeered b-~+-­
Z'I Sundered
!I Statute

2111e-on
31 Admonition

:ww.w.n

spy 11roup
35 Suffix

lor doctor
JISpanilh

cunpoeer

Loon"1 78

&amp; Rlfrll!!l'lll!l! '

wv

can•·9157.

liD NEWS
10:15 (]) DOUGLABIIACARTHUR:
THE DEFIANT GENERAL

••"' "Ew:ry Which Way But

mo.

HtiiiiiMI.

Jennifer Hart become• a target
for murder when , a a one olllve
contestants. she is stalked by
an envious and pavchollc
leading judge of one of the moat
pre stigioua roae c ante at a.
(Season Premiere ; 60 mine .)
(Cioaed-Captionad; U.S.A.)
(I) FIRING LfNE 'What Hat
Happened to Llbtnl Repub·
l i canism?' Qu8st : Charlet
Mathias , Rep., Maryland .Hoal:
William F. Buckley, Jr.. (60
mlns.)

t0:2B CII CBN UPDATE NEWS
t0:30 CII WEEKEND OAADII~R
' liD ALFRED HITCHCOCK
PREBENTB
10:118 ' CII CBN UPDATE NEWB
t t:OO Cii
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCI!D
(]) IIOVIE •(ADYENTUREI

MOBILE homt lkirtlng,
to 1495.
Clmper, sleeps ,, Mlf con- 70XU from
.
K .1( MObllt H Ill ned. Phone "5·3135.
Pt. Pleallnl,

..

AJ.l

Nf()RNING •1

BACKHOE «nd Septic iank
Service. Larry · Sidon··
strlc~er . 675·5580.

Tlmberloka treller cam·
1• ft. SIMPS 4. Good
-Ilion. MOO. Coli 61~ . S6

P''·

Cowboy Trail' RtvHolmea. one
of the last true cowboyt, still
ridea herd in Montana, but new
farming techniquea and
strip·mining threaten the time
honOfed tradiliona of ranching.
(Closed ·Captl6ne d ;U.S.A .)

_,.,,i

--

In septic tan~ . 675·1234.

Camping

___,....!!E:!ql!u~lp~m!!!;en~tc_____

CIJ CID ODYSSIY 'On the

More
like a
normal
child
everLJ
day,
Gramps!

sured. 304·576·2010.

7191.

Cosmic Fugue ' In search of life
on other planets, Or. Carl Sagan
explores the origin, evolution,
diversity and underlying
similarity of all plant a and
animals on earth. (Closed·
Captioned; U.S.A.) (80 min a.)

8:05 (])MOYIE ·IIIYSTERYI" \1o

RINGLES'S SERVICE·ex·

Motorcycles

Kawasaki

THE DUKEI Of

HAZZARD Uncle Jeaee gell
arrested lor helping a pretty
fugitive escape from Boll
Hogg 'a and Rasco 's clutchea,
and the Duke clan has to nip

Hogg'a latest get-rich tcheme

MUST 8E 5ffiR:Vif'l6!

Tromm, 61H•2·2328.

l

•=

•

••BUT COME~ YOJ

PTEI&lt;RY HA5 A

Detsun pickup true~ perienced mason, rooter,
with topper. Call alter 4:30. carpenter, electrician,
general repairs and
992·5085.
remodeling. Phone 304·6752088 or 675·~ .

74

HAPPY DAYB

Fon1ie'a momentous reunion
with his Iarmer gang leada to an
outrageous i-umblt with lhtl~
old arch rivals, and Lori Betti
shocks thelamlly by announc·
ing ahe'a pregnant. CSeaeon
Premier~ 60 mine.)

ceilings. Ph: 367-778olor 367·
7160.

EXCIVIIInp
197919112 II. Bala ski boll. 13
150
Mercury
with
sl1inless
AKC Apricot poodle, male,
, 750
and 1000 gallon ·
1 year old, $100. Phone 675- ' steel prop, troller and PLASTIC septic tan~s.
acessor
.,
payoff.
Call
675·
5591.
State and County ap·
7392 alter 5PM.
proved. Total weight 300 •
lbs. Haul In your plc~up
57
Muslcll
20 ft. pontoon cabin board truck. Ron Evans Backhoe
_____!.!ln!!s~tru.!!!m!!en!!!!!ll!...:..
' ___
trailer &amp; motor &amp; ac- Service, located 3 miles
SPINET
CONSOLE cessories, Cheap. Call 367· South of Jlckson·on st. Rt.
PIANO FOR SALE Wan· 7533.
93. 286-5930.
ted: Responsible party to
take over plano. Can be 76
Auto P•rts
Dozer Wor~. Mobile home
seen locelly. Write Mr.
&amp; Accessories
sites and driveways. Small,
Powers, Box 327, Carlyle,
lobsa specialty. Phone7o12-l
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Ill. 62231.

City
Fu , nll ure.
bassett bedroom suite· 3785.
includes triple dresser, hutch mirror, 5 drawer chest. John

8

RMidentlat, comi'Tlerclal,
interior, exterior, peper
hanging, and texured

dyman. Phane 30H76-2921
or 675·5689.

dition. 614-7•2·2878 .

THE

Y!!tslerday's

in thla dlviaional playoff aerlea;
team a to be announced.

Painting

miles, like new . St, 100. 992- Stark's Tree Trimming. In-

"

(

City

Dave's Appliance Repair.
Washers, dryers, plum1 bing, electric, general han-

1977 Ford van, customized,
.t9,000 miles, excellent con-

WHA"T 5HE 11'11Ne.,.

LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
'aND COMPANY '
()) DICK CAVETT SHOW
iJal
RICHARD "· IIIIIONS
8HOW
"

ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
7:36 I]) SANFORD AND SON ·
7:68 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 (]).CIJ NATIONAL LEAGUE
DIVISION SERIES NBC Spono
will provide coveragrtof Game1

$lie ~'{S IO.V cw
~ t&lt;; tc; IJ0\!6 OF

Call 304-675·1213 between

Trucks for Sale

IVEECALt

il2l •

m•

Frcult
5I
' _____.!A!_.'V!,!!I!J!!OI'!'I.'!.bll=l____
Apples, Haney and sweet
'elder. Grimes Golden
Delicious and
Red
Deliclous. Fitzpatrick Or·
New chard, S.R . 689. 61•·669·

*"'•

FM, R· DEF. new radial

1971 Buick ·S kylark,
owner, S350. 675·5951.

-------

r'et. req:.
256-1393.

condition, no rust, air, AM·

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

~·

tolx70 3 bdr. total electric .
trill., tO · mlnuttt from
town an PI'IVI!e lot. $200 I I
montfl
us de
It &amp;
ulllltl".
Call

1979 FORD Zepher, good

8:00a.m.· 9:00•.m.

--------·
- . ...

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

back, good condition, call

alter 5, 30H75-5152 .

Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans . Call U6·7795.

1972 F250 compar IPIICial,
City Furniture. Special on AC, PB, PS . For llle or
new couch lnd chairs, trade lor cliltle of equal
Ear.ly American, prices volue.416-1052.
from $229.95 to $619.95.
Bring In this ad ond rK~In
on oddltlonol uo.eo aff.
. _,
Plus - toke trode Ins. :1311
Mlln Street, l"t. ~laaaont.
675,2601.
1'1rm l!!!lp!!l!!!t
City 'f'urnlture . C'- out
IPIICIII. an now IPPiilnctt. Tra"-' discs, 3 bafforn
.,. Almond 30 Inch elactrlc plows, ~l""olorl, J.D.
$unrlly ... stove with con- earn pMnlw, waaon. hly
r1ke, M.l'. No. 9 baler, 5'
tinuous cleen - · only
1319.95. 1 Gibson IS cu. ft. lorillh hog, N.H. 7' mowing
. chttllreezer, o n l y . £ IIIKIIIne, 3 pt. hltcll, post
1 20 Inch Sunray tiMifJ!: 11a1e dl...,., a ·pt. hitch
range Ud.OO. I 20 lntlt lllede, New lclet No. f corn
Sunr•v ges
IIM.95. Dlcktr, 1974 165 M.l'. dlnel
Sell an new W lllllhDI•t lriCIOr. CIII7CI·2M5.
heovy duty II . JlfUnd
wlllher and
..,,fl. 2 blOCk IIIWIIIIII, .. Inch
J30 M1ln Street, ~. blede. 119110. firm. 9t2·
Pl-n1. 675-:NOI.

70x1• new moblle . home. 3
bdr.. partly furnished. 8
mi. trbm Hol.ler Hoop. on
north 160. can 388-8711 or
:jll-9692.

1970 VOLKSWAGEN last·

....

Answer here: VERY (

"An ..l On My Shoulder"
1a.6

Phone · 388·

finish. Call-·8711.

wash

rx

CONC!RT Supergroup 'The
Commodore•' In a live concert
performance from the Aladdin
Hotel in L.. Veaaa.
CJJeCJJ F-LY FEUD

{fi) MOVIE · (FANTASY) u•

and • .

Home building, home
remodeling and repair,
1 Custom work from st•rt to

French

1

CIJ

47,000 miles, light blue
Service.·
metalic. slightlY damaged LOCKSMITH
front end. Call 675-1655 Residential, automot.i ve.
anytime, 675-6633 alter 5 Emergency service. Cawl .
882·2079.
pm.

tires, .w,ooo miles, $4,100.

.rn,

Mobile Homes

IWH4T ltiNf) DI'I'LIIC6 TNI*
IC6ALLV 1#1

· Call 446-2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rode"nt, spider,
and fleas control. Free
Automatic, AC,PS,PB, 10'99 estimates, Bill Thoma!.
mileage. Will accept trade.
Sharp. Call 614·992-3517 or H &amp; M CLEANING SER·

Boarding all breeds, dean
indoor-oUtdoor facilities.

Boar-dlhg and gr-ooming.
AKC
Gordon
sef.ters,
English C~ker Spaniels.

IIUPPET SHOW
7:00
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS'
. 7:30 ~. YOU ASIIID FOR IT
.
ANOTHER LIFE
THE COIIIIODORESIN

1917 Dodg• Aspen station
wagon. Special edition.

1979 Camaro, 350 engine,

Pets for S•le

Pleasant.

.

Cash Register can · be
programmed ,
counts
change &amp; numbers light up,
model 97
Winchester
shotgun, 12 gage 32' barrel

1977 Camaro 305, air cond.,

AM·FM stero cassette. Call
379·2686.

or 882·2947 .

HILLCREST KENNEL.

304-675·5510.

Misc. Merchandice

excellent cond.

ENTI!RTAINIIENT

•

.

remodeling ,
9326.

•

ANKEIIIIERG

. III!WS

BI!CAU!fll " .,. .0 ~CK TO CIVIIJ• .
ZATION AHD SAY 1ft PID!tT ~AllY
TOimiRII PIT!f.tftJMII'Y WII.L IIIIIH

Ph . 245·5617 after 5PM.

Tweny gauge mild steel ' 614· ~· 03.2 .
sheeting .
Enamel ,
procelltln coated. Many . MORRISON'S Auto soles.
building uses. Will not rust. Henderson. WV. Phone 675·
8181 or 388·9794 .
Slles 4ft. by B ft., $5.60.• fl.
.by 10ft., $7.00 .• fl. by 12ft., 1574 or 675·2811.
For sale beige sofa, exc. $8 .00. Tuppers P!ains,
condition. Call ~·o4303.
. ·~~~~ !1•·667·3085 or 61•· 1972 Volkeswagen, 675-2864

onlr.

Call alter 4:00, 304-675-Sol34 .

stHrlnQ,

For
sale
Kenmore
automatic washer, like
new, guaranteed, $110. 446-

For sale new 1981 model
sewing machine, zig -zags,
GOOD
USED
AP · monograms, sews on butPLIANCES - washers, tons, makes button holes,
drvers 1
refrlgerttors, darns, mends, fancy stitch .
ranges . Skaggs.. 11 Ap · Reg. price $2-49.95 now
pliances, 1918 Eastern $99.50. Ft"ee phone cal .
Call collect 1·304-736-92•1.
Ave., 446·7398 .

They'll OQ It Every Time

I

sidewalks ,
patio,
b•sement, garage floors

ma1ntalnance

JOHN

= Y.DAY8 AGAIN
()) TIC TAC DOUGH
CID IIACNEIL-LI!HRER
R!PORT

FERRELL's - WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home

Auto for S•l•

(])

~W

ler 6PM 682·7252. ·

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

U6·0322

lull choke, model 700 270

4 bedroom house on Jefferson Avenue. $350 month.

6U·992· 7352.

mobile

.

PAINTING · Interior and
exterior,
pJUmblrig,

7891 .

traHer and camp site on
Raccon Creek. Close to
Ohio River. S500 down .
OWner will finance. 6U·256·

2 beOroom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy. Par·
tially furnished . S170 you
pay utilities. Call 992-2288
after 6 p.m.

Ux70 Winsor modern,
clnn. 1 11~ both. 2 bdr ..
convenient location, MC.
dep. ond ref., no pets. Call
.2ol$-5111.
.

IY , - · 3 1111rtment
.., • ....,.,.. I acre.
Live
Ill
- · ~yment.
Ant otllencan
to
~ ~

~

Executive home, New
brick &amp; wood, 4 bedrooms,
2 baths, attached garage,
finished family room, gas
heat, electric air, possible
option to buy . Call 614-593·
5571 or '14-992-6312 for ·appointment.
J

3 ROOM house for rent, furnished, In the heart of
Mason. $150. per month .

WOOd table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to $495 . Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375., 1
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites
Bassett
Oak, $675 ., Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm, $68 . and $78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr. chests, $42. Bed
frames, $20.and $25., 10 gun
- Gun cabinets, $350., dlnet·
te chairs $20. and $25 . Gas
or elect-ric ranges, $295. Orthopedic super firm , $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; S35,
bed frames $20 ,$25, &amp; $30.
U se d ,
Ranges,
refrigerators,_and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavllte· Rd.
.Open 9am. to 7pm_, Mon.
thruFrl ., 9amto5pm,Sat. -

Firewood-split, delivered
and stacked. Mixed wood
S65 per cord or $35 per half
1 bedroom furnished apart- · cord. Hardwood $75 per
ment
in
Middleport. cord or S-40 per half cord .
Utilities included. $185 per Ca II for quotes on large
month, plus deposit, no quanltles. F'hone 2.t5·547B.
pets. Call 614-992-7177 after
6p.m .
Professional meat slicer ,
fancy show case,s with

District. 614·593·3507, 61•·
698·4040.

42

cOinp Conley, extra nice

451-1125.

1 year lease,
deposit sames•as first mon·.
ths rent, marr ied working
couple, others need not aPply, natural gas heat,
Meigs Local
School

675·3177.

,;.

,

992·5434, 992·5914 or 304-882·
2566.

carpet~.

IYI!T:OO (]). PIIIIAQAZI~

years experience. Call 367·

or delivered . Call256·6816.
Wood for sale. Call J.J.
Justice 388-82-'6.

2 bedroom furnished apt.

3 bedrooms. 2 baths. fully

CAPTAIN STEEMEA'Car- :
pel Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brotflors Custom
Carpels. Free estimates.
Call -"6-2107.

and etc. Free estimates. 11

"

,

71

New woodburnlng ad-on
$38 and up to $109. Hide-a· furnance,
stfll in factor'(
beds,$3.40., ctueen size, $380. oearton, heats large home,
Recliners, $175. to $295., $oi31l. .C all256-1216.
Lamps from $18. to $65 . 5

8025.

.-· ...... ... ......... ...

26' TROUTWOOD travel

Ratliff Pools &amp; Service.
Complete sales, service, Firewood. $30 load . Call
pool covers, and win- 992-5126 or 992·3941.
terization kits . Call4-46· 1324
2 7.75 1.4 ln. snow tires on
Squires Bingham 22 L.R . rim . Antique rocker. 7.t2·
ammo $1.19 per box. Eclip- 252 • .
se 12 gage game loades, 6
shot, 20 shells per box $3 .95 .
Firewood-Delivered
Spring Valley Trading Co., Call and pta.ce your order
.Spring Valley Plaza, 446· now. 30H75·6662.

992-7787 .

'

·

For sale House coal pickup

· 54

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

615-5114.

54

992-7721.

614-9'12·2288.

Assorted ducks $1 each.

Misc. Merchlndlce
54
&gt;!..__...!~~~=""-'~,.._,.

Jeanie's Pet Shop . New

I duplex 74 Court St. Includes range &amp; refrig.
Fully carpeted off street
parking. Can be s~own
anytime by calling 446·4-428

1968 l2x60 mobile hoine, 1 5 room h'Ouse near Danor 2 bdr, with or w ithout ville . $350 per month . 614two add·a· rooms, exc . 742·3UJ.

cond. 367-7610.

One

bedroom starts at $152.00
per month. Two bedroom
starts at $188.00 per month,

~ - 0571 .

74&gt;traller &amp; 10 acres for sale
bv·owner. Caii3B8-99.t9.

free gas, wafer and tHeetrlc, plus advertisement.

pc. dllett~s from $79., to
$385. 7 pc ,, $l89. and up.

for Rent

K::.;..a:.:.-·--I J . ()

fret
11t2. """'"'"· Clll 256-

Ewelombs lot: sale. Suffol~ , 20 yrs. exp. Caii38H652 . .
and Finn crOSSed. Call61•·
992·2630.
· Bl NG'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION · Specializing
Exotic chickens $3 each. In concrete drlveways,

._.

..

to wall carpet, built in kit·
' then, 1 1cre of level land, 1
~~~!)'linum build ill!! 28 x 32, ~6 Room House, $200 un· . Deluxe furnished apart·
ment central air anq heat,
·•1 ~ car garage. Will take 3 furnished except range and
1
pedroom late model trailer refrlg . NeighbOrhood excellent location, adults
1
only, lease, dep., upper
.0n property as part Road . -«6·4416 after 7 p.m .
bracl&lt;et, reference . 446payment. f"hone 576-2634.
2 BR house, State Rt.' 7. 256- 0338.
6520,
U6·4292.
G2
Mobile Homes
Mobile home in city central
· ------2·~··~s~o~l~e_______
_
House 1 mile below air and heat, adults only,
:rRI·STATE MOBILE Eureka, 2 bdr .., bath, dep. 446·0338.
liOMES . Gallipolis . Year garage, yard, $150 per mo.
end sale, pric;:e . reduced, $100 dep. and ref. Call 614· 2 BEDROOM apar.tment,
used mobile homes. CALL ~ - 2916 .
H U D accepted. 675·5104.

'.

dleporl. Phone 992·6370. All

I~~e=-="=-=-======:;:=========!..

Mid·

.1 bedroom mobile home .

with pool off Rt. 35 . Call

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

......

ftom $285. to $795. Tables,

'l»irths; double garage. llv ingroom, family room, 2
:owner will finance. I m· w.b . fireplaces, 2-car
1
medlate occupancy. 30.t· garage, city schools . Sec .
1
~75·5117 .
.... dep. &amp; ref . Call oU6·4206.

Wiseman Real
Agency . 446-36-q.

1

door- flea
market
spaces.
Martin
Ge-neral
Store,
Mid-·

=

•
VIewmg
•

STUCCO .PLASTERING
te•turecl cellllltll. com· ,,
merclol and rttiantlal,

roofing, some remodeling.

992·2319.

'SJ;NOHILL Road , Pl.. For Rent With Option To
Pleasant, 3 bedrooms, 1•12 Buy! 4 bed., 2 1/2 baths,

~7• .

Hens tor sale S1.50 each.
Fryers S2.00 aach. con-.
9535 or 682-7672.
·

4-46·0963.
12x60 trailer witH •expando
11vlng room . Located on
large corner lot In a nice ·

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

Television
'

STANLEY STeEMER
Carpel Claanlno
-"6-.aal

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice, cau 675·1.582.

Llvestec:k

dleport. Adults only , no 1 FULL size lot for trailer,
pets . Available
i m · In Henderson , wv. All
mediately. Call 992·2101 or hookups. 304-675·3216.

HOUSE-Meadowbrook Ad·
dltion. 3 bedroom, family 4'.!1c___...!H~o~u~se!!s'-'l-"or'--"R-"'en"'t'--­
room with fireplace. cen· Small furnished house in
.~air. basement. J(M-675· the city, adults only . Call
)s.2.
U6·0338 .

WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT.
3!1; PHONE ~- 311611 or -"6-

busll hog, .plows,
harrow boom, most sell
duo to heath. 'For cash only
price ~.500. Caii:Z.CS.9105.

Space for Rent

12 X 60 mobile home. 2
,
bedroom, bath and half.
==~~~~~===
ApP.roxlmately 5 miles
from F'omeroy and Mid - "----~--~~~~--Household Goods
dleport on Rt. 1.43. Call61.t- 51
992·5858 .
.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker, otbedroom
furnished toman, 3 tables, SSOO. SOfa,
trailer, adults only, you chair and loveseat, $275.
pay utilities. 675-2535.
Sofas and chairs priced

M·50

dlslt,

Park, ROIJte 33, North .of
Pomeroy. Large lofs. Call
992-7479.
-----------------Now aailable for rent. In-

In

Ferguson

tractor, pdwer stHrlng,

range, refrigerator. $250 '
per mo. plus utilities, $2.50
dep. req. or owner will help
finance with suitable down
payment. Call 992-6173 or

neighborhood

Meigs Co. 91 acres. 3
bedroom house . Secluded. did Caii513-S92-9175.
Lots of wood &amp; some
tillable. 614-596-4577 or 992· 1
R!Rials
2865.

'··------------------:J"wo bedroom house, wall

MIIMY

apt.

3bdr., located In Mid·
dleport on large lot, AC, COUNTRY MOBILE Home

down payment nor $5,00
norevenS1 ,000 . Do what we

~75-0275 .

2 bedroom apartment In Pt.

elflency

All utilities paid, dep, req.
Coii304·89Hol50. .
.

For sale or rent 1979 l.tx70 · 46

utllltln available, $300 .
down, owner will finance.
call after 3 p.m ., 256 · ~13 .

didn't have $10,000 for a

Milton Road, Camp Conley .
2 · year old , 3 bedroom
.house, fully carpeted, with
1 full ilnd two cind a ha If
1
,baths, yard landscaped
with large utility building ~
•~ssume 8 112 percent loan .

nolfurnlsyed, 30H75· 1302.

Furnished

Down tow·n Pt. Pleasant.

The

"••P!••c•fl

,II

Form Equlfl!!!ll!l

John Deere 3300 c""'biM.
Mllule Ferguson 3GD com·
blne. 'lew ldea·2 • picker, \JIIver 2· rrNi pl1=ktr.
Now ldaa 1 rtNI plc~tr•.
Super M For""' II and 2 raw
mounted · picker. Rull
ln!lhon Form MochiMry.
Sl. At. 139, 6 milts south of
Jackson . Coll216-2731. •

Park Central HoteL

basement. Garage 36x42, ·
on 1 acre lot. Located on Would you like to own 111
route 7 in Tuppers Plains. home Of your own . We

Cali992·2201 .

61

Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Slreel. $200 month plus
'"Oh! What malr;ee you IJUnlli the' 12x60 2 bedroom propane deposit. 1·614·263·8322 or
nep.rtment o( .Urieulture is gas heat, 5 miles from city, 61.·263·2669.
on Raccoon Creek Rd. No
checllin&amp; up on ua?-"
pets, reference requl red~
Furnlshtd Roomt
$165. per month plus 45
deposit. No utilities paid. SLEEPING ROOMS and
446:-0822. Mav rent with ·op-- light housekeeping apt.,
lt;Sc__-1L~o~ts:o.:&amp;~A::;c!:re,a,.g,o___
tion tobuv.

pet. Interest with flC\ money
down If you have enough
equity In your existing 2 lots in Ohio Valley
hqqle, have 5 or more Memory Gardens, S600. Ph.
family members and earn ~ - 1628 .
frOm $24,500 to $27,500. For
further Information call.. 3 flat, 5 acre lots. 15,000 &amp;

61•' 593·5571 or 6U·992·4312.
~ bedroom house with

by lArry Wright

FOr rent nice furrilshed 2 3 ROOM furnished aport·
bdr. trailer. Private lot. ment. also 1 farm house,
Bob McCormick Rd. $)95. a
month plus utliilies. Water
paid. Coli -"6-Uil alter
5PM.

614·371-6339.

KIT 'N' CARlYlE"'

Aportmemt
torRent

tor Rent

5 rm. an Chlllcotho
Rd., t:J.oao. Call -"6-«138 or
._1615or41612G.

FOJ" sale or · trade, house
and business building on
- 1we lots, also 2 vacant lots

. .-

-

The Deily Sentinel

37 1111ck SOilp
»Withered

fllloc&lt;.'er
IIIIDiber
. UG~eUc

· DAILY CRYPl'OQUOTE AXYDL
II

Here's

how to

aAAXI

work

It:~
'""
' .... ,

.

L 0 N G F I L .L 0 W

.'
One teller simply atando for another. In this sample A I( :·
IIMd for the t"- L's, X for lhe lwo O's, etc. Single letlerll ::

opaotrophes, the lonJilh ond formation of the word• l!l't 1 1 hlnlo. Bach da7 the rode lotio"' are dilerent.
· ·

~- ,..,"""I' .

c&amp;YPTOQVO'J'I8

THH

I P F

IPF

NJLHS

ZWP

HFQZWHTlZJU
NZHH

VZWWZUQ. -

UJ I

FHZUJL

T M J n::~:

QnX.:U.

.... '.
' '
'

Yal . ,•• 0 = k: TAKE 1lfE DIN OUT OF DINNER.\
AHDPUT1lfE
IN RESTAURANT.-HENRy SPOONE
t

'

�Consumer co"u ncil enlists
five out-of-state firms·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) '- Five
out«-state consultants have
enllsted to help the Office Dl ConSUfllers' Counsel deal with tate In·
crease n:quests from two utilities.
The stale Cootrolling BQIInl approved plallB Monday to spe11d
.,106,000 for the eonsWtants In connection with pending rate cases !Ued
~th the Public Utilities Commission
Dl Ohio by United Telephone Co. and
Toledo Edison Co.
1'1\ree of the consultants will assist
In a $28 million rate Increase request
filed by United Telephone on Aug.
31. The company has about 200,000
customers across the state. Two
other companies will help the OCC in
a request filed by Toledo J;:dlson on
Aug. 22 for a $45 million rate hike.
The utility, which operates in 10 nor·
thwestern Ohio counties and Toledo,
has about 240,000 customers.
One pact approved by the board is
with Transcomm Inc. of Falls Chur·
ch, Va., at a maximum cost of
~,810. The company will study aqd
evaluate rate design material filed
by United Telephone, the PUCO and
"any other parties In the
proceeding," OCC officials said In
their request.

been

1Jso approved for the same case . began two montha ago. A separate
were cootracts Dl '16,788 with campaign Involving smaller pDIIers
willialn w. Dunkel of PIWant placed Inside 760 vehiclea used by
Plains, Ill., for jurisdictional the transit systems had been under
separatioos issues, and $19,1165 with wayforoneyear, he said.
Waugh said II was coincidental
Dr. Matityahu Marcus Dl Cranford,
.N.J. , for help In rate-of-return that the requeat lD renew the camisSues.
·
paign carne wetkll before voters go
J .W. Wilson &amp; Associates ' Dl to the polls to decide a statewide
Washingtoo, D.C., will provide ballot issue affecting the syalem.
. technical aid oo rate of return in the "We were started on thia before
Toledo Edison case at a cost not lD Issue I was a major thing," he llld.
exceed ~.080. Technical Associale9
If approved, Issue I would allow
Inc. of Richmond, Va., will assiSt In
rate design issues under a $28,532 private insurance companies to aen
worken' compensation coverage In
·contract.
Ohio.
Such coverage now is provided
In other action Monday, conexclusively
through a state-operated
trollers extended an Ohio Bureau of
system.
·
Workers' Compensation advertising
GOP
boanl
members
Rep.
Robert
campaign despite charges it was an
effort to help defeat Issue I. The E. Netzley of L8ura and Sen.
GOP-(:ontrolled board approved an Thomas A. Van Meter of Ashland
agency request to continue at a cost voted against the agency's request.
of $9,870 a pact with the Winston Net· "Of course that's nothing but a
work for placing posters on buses In political attempt by the bureaucfl!ts
to help defeatlssue 1," Netzley said.
Ohio's majo.,-cities.
• Waugh said the ads were aimemd
at informing employees ~d emForrest D. Waugh, the bureau's
ployers of their rights and respondirector of public affairs, said ads on
sibilities under the plan. Funds from
buses' exteriors in Akron,
Youngstown Cleveland, Canton"' employers - not state taxes - will
pay for the posters.
·Toledo, Cincinnati and Columbus
1

Veto 'irresponsible' Haig says
.

WASIUNGTON (AP ) - Secretary
of State Alexander M,.,H!lig Jr. said
today it would be "irresponsible in
the extreme" for Congress to veto
President Reagan's proposed sale of
AWACS radar planes to Saudi
Arabia_
Haig called Sen. John Glenn's call
for joint U.S.-Saudi command of the
planes " imaginary" and said the
Ohio Democrat's condition cannot
bernet.
Haig, who testified last week and
was summoned hack · for more
. testimony today, told the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee that a·

congresslonal veto of the $8.5 billion
arms package could do irreparable
damage to u.s..saudi relations.
Before Haig spoke, !lie committee
delayed its preliminary vote on the
president's proposal. Sentiment was
running against the deal.
While Reagan tried to drum up
support at a White House luncheon
for congressional leaders, the committee decided not to vote before
Congress starts a week-long recess
on· Wednesday, meaning that a vote
could not come before Oct. 14 at the
earliest.
Tbe anns package, which includes

Meigs County happenings.
Emergency runs
Five calls were answered by units
of the Meigs County Emergency

Medical Service Monday.
At 6:58 a.m. tbe Tuppers Plains
transported Grace Kuhn from her
residence at Tuppers Plains to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; al
10:54 a.m. the Rutland unit took
Roger Finnearty from Meigs Mine 2
to the O'Bieness Hospital;at 12:37
p.m. the Rutland unit took Christine
Vinson from her Bailey Run Road
residence to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; at 4:24p.m. Dana Eynon
was taken from Eastern High School
to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the Tuppers Plains unit, and at II: 04
p.m. the Pomeroy unit look Grace
Stohart from her Dark Hollow Road
resident to Holzer Medical Center.
· Tbe Middleport Fire Departl)lent
answered a call to the Herman
Taylor residence on Locust Street at
3:17 p.m. Monday to extinguish a
mattress fire .

/

Local units answered four calls on
Sunday, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports.
At I :50 p.m., the Middleport Unit
took Carter French from the corner
of Sixth and Palmer Sts. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 8:36a.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Julian Hoffman
of near Pomeroy to veterans
Memorial; the Racine Unit at 1:24
· p.m. took Sheila Spencer from
Bashan Road to Camden-Clark
· Hospital in Parkersburg; Racine at
6:06 p.m. took Brian Diehl, Yellow
Bush Road, to Veterans Memorial.
Four calls were also answered by
local units on Saturday. At 4: 19 p.m.,
· Middleport took Yvonne Wright
· from Belt Line Road to Holzer
Medical Center and at 7:35 p.m. took
Sarah Seyler, Middleport, to Holzer.
Medical Center; Syracuse at 8:14
' a.m. took Mark Hubbard from
: Syracuse to Veterans Memorial and
the Tuppers Plains Unit at 1:26 p.m.,
took Sally· Pooler, Route 7, to Holzer
' Medical Center.

\"eels Sunday
.The

Meigs County Pioneer and
HJstorical Society will meet at I p.m.
Sunday at the Meigs Museum for a
potluck diMer at I p.m. followed by
a business meeting. The speaker
will be Ray Swick, director of tbe
. Ohio Blennerhasset Island Cornmission and he wiD talk on Buf·
• fington Island. The meet(!lg Is open
!0 the public. '
;

••

Invite all alumni
All alumni are invited lD take part
in an alumni band being organized In
the Meigs Local School District as a
part of homecoming activities on
Friday night, Band D1rector Doug
Hill said today.
·
All interested alumni are to meet
at the Meigs High School at 4:30p.m.
Thursday for a rehearsal. The
alumni will he guests at a wiener
roast following the rehearsal and
then are invited to go to Pomeroy to
take part in a homecoming pep
rally.

To end marriages
;Edna Stewart, Pomeroy and Ross
E. Stewart, Middleport filed for an·
nulrnent of marriage in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
David Ray, Rt. 3, Albany, filed
suit for divore against Connie F.
Ray, Zanesville, and DannyM. Bar·
ber, Reedsville, and Vickie Lee Bar·
)ler, Parkersburg, filed for
dissolution of marriage.,
Raymond J. Michael was granted
a divorce from Diane M. Michael on
charges of gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruetly. The marriage of
Linda Dianne Hubbard and Ronnie
K. Hubbard was dissolved and the
plaintiff (Linda Hubbard) was awar·
ded custody of one minor child.

To end marriage
In the court, the marriage of Kenneth Lee Yeauger and Ruth Ann
Yeauger wa• dissolved and . a
petition of dissolution has been filed
by Robert D. Deeter, Route 3,
Racine, and Mary Kay Deeter,
Syracuse. Edna Stewart, Pomeroy,
has filed an action requesting the annulment 'of her marriage to Ross
Stewart, 'Bradbury RQIId, Middleport.

Marriage license
Marriage licenses were issued lD
Kenneth Bernard Lawson, 69,
Syracuse, and Wilda Theora Corn,
64, Lancaster, and Michael Clinton
Warner, 21, Rutiand, Sheila Gay
Crouch, 21, Pomeroy,

~ UqUIW Control antGc1aY tmt-.11 state Uquor
....... .,.ad• and deplrtmenlal
Gftl- wiD be ci-' Moaday, ()().
tiOber 12, In o1J1erVa11Ce ~ Colwnbul

. liOIIICICI

O.y.

21112, Letart Falla, will meet at the
hall at 7:30p.m. '1'lulday to dJacuu
:whether or not to diilbud the

Eva Jane Bibhee, 91, Alfred, died
Monday morning at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
Mrs. Bibbee was born Nov. l2, !889
In Roane County, W. Va., the
daughter of the late Ekana and
Melissia Damewood Summerfield.
In 1975 her husband, Elmer
preceded her in death. She was also
preceded In death by one brother,
one sister and two half-brothers.
She was a housewife and a member of'the Success Church of Christ.
Survivors inclu!k! two daughters,
Mrs. Robert (Glada Anne) Fair·
child, San Bernardino, Calif., and
Mrs. Donald (Wilma) Pratt,
Alba'ny; one son, Done! Bibbee at
home; one brother, Fred Sum·
merfield, Hendersonville, N. C., six
grandchildren and 10 great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be beld
Thursday at 1 p.m. at White Funeral
Horne, Coolville with Evangelist
Ron Hennen officiating. Burial will
be In Success Church of Chirst
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Wednesday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 and Thursday until time Dl

#

Mary Ellen Kelly
- Funeral services will be helo
t2:10 p.m. in Yarnel, Ariz. for Mal)
Ellen (Norris) Kelly, 52, formerly of
Racine, wbo died Oct. 3 in a Califor·
nia hospital following a lengthy
illness.
Born Nov. 23, 1928 In Meigs County, she was the daughter of the late
Clyde and Ada (Ripley) Norris. ·
Surviving are her husband, Ralph
Kelly of Yarnel, Ariz.; a daughter,
Marsha Schindler of Lorain; a son,
Edward Moran Dl Washington, D.
C.; four grandchildren, Dawn Schindler, David, Jimmy and Chris
Moran; two sisters, Elsie Davis,
Parkersburg, W. Va; Margaret
Gloeckner of Racine; two brothers,
Richard of Carroll, and Alonzo of

"The Joy of Revival" is the topic
for revival services that will be held
at the Syracuse Nazarene Church
beginning this evening through Oct.
11, at 7 p.m. nightly.
Evangelists, s\ngers and
children's workers will be Randy
and 'Mary Jane James of Kansas
City, Missouri.
Pastor Jemes Kittle Invites the·
·public lD attend.

Meets Thursday
Preceptor Beta Beta Sorority will

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ndLoan
•

Sa ·

• 2 autt.-thftl Pockets
• Long T•ll
• Full Cut

BIG
SELECTIONS
r

TO

'1995
Ye.,.auncl"utonelrAnll,.uu

ELBERFELDS IN. POMEROY

'Mdw.- anll-frewze/amner

dlaeUIIId the

•

Andrew•

Craw's Family Restaurant

ua w. ••

Ph. 992-5432
I

'

•

.

~.

coo~c:~•. Guards

agalllll radlola l\lllaut, OOIIOIIOIL 1 gal.

'

Dining Room Only

I
\

L (1~15'h)
L (16-16'h)
XL (17-17'h)

SERVED WI'DI MASHED POTATOES, CHOICE OF SALAD, ROLL AND DRINK.

presided over the -.ion.

•

PLAID
FLANNEL SHIRT

BAKED. STEAK DI'NNER

1Jnco1n lWciD n111 valr and the
wort! IIIII llllllt be done there. I t poln!ecl OUI thllllppllcaUCII hu been
ltlad for alederal put wldcb would
provide fundi for a ._ . _ valr at

.......

s (14-14',2)

CHOW'S FAMILY' RESTAURANT

I

Tone• Mollfllllzlng lallllan AI lawlngl
Contains soothing. l1'lOis1u!lmg cocoa but·
ter to smooth yoor skin as you bathe. 411H&gt;z.'

Our Reg.
31C:
Each .

~;;vmg~s~a~~;;·;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;I;;;::;;;:::;::::::::::::;:;~:;~~~
Every Wednesday Night At

Friday evening.

.r

'•

a:

(CooUnued from page 1)
junction with the aMual Meigs High
School bomecoming acheduled. lor

-

Oulcteans othlr·leadiiG powQir del~ lis
.on Iough. Qr8CIIV. oily dtrt. 20-lb. ~wt.

Rivival set

Pomeroy ••••

proved_ Tbe two

Conn •.ra dAr. Lallnclry Detaosnl

several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her
parents, two sisters, Goldie Story
and Mildred Le Goullon and her first
husband, Robert Moran.

Jessie Lambert Guyer, 81, LaDcaster, former resident of Pomeroy,
died Mooday at the Valley VIew Nur·
sing Home, Lancaster·
Mn. Guyer was born Apri121,1920
at Pomeroy the daughter of the late
J
d Fl
Sta
esse an
orence
rkey Lambert. Sbe was also preceded in death
by her husband, Ray Guyer and ooe
sister, Mrs. Melba L. Nleser.
She was a rnem be r of the Middleport First Baptist Church and
was a retired beautician. ·
She is survived by several cousins
including the Rev. James Burnell

Grove Cemetery with the Rev.

(503)

Tucson, Ariz; one· aunt, Margaret
Roush, Dl . Baltimore, Md., and

Jessie L. Guyer

s'rir=~~~~~·will

.Pl~e"'
.

,T

....

be held
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m'. at Beech

Th6 savr

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Striking from the Ohio Bureau of Ernair traffic cootroUers plan to appeal ployment Services denying them
the state's decision · to deny them benefits, said G11ry Tovey, president
jobless benefits, says an official Dl of the PATCO local at Dayton In·
·James Burnell Stephenson of- the Professional Air Traffic Con- ternational Airport.
ficiating . · The Halteman-Fett trollers Organization.
The controllers will golD court if
F\llleral Home, Lancaster is in
At least 400 striking PATCO mern- . their administrative appeal is
·n bers In Ohio ha.ve recelvid letters denied, ovey said.
Th
of
wt
charge
arrangements.
ere
be no calling hours.
I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Eva Jane Bibbee

services.

.--:1'
··ng

·r (:ontrollers will appeal den:ial .

Area deaths

gruse. Deputy and Mrs. Mendall theloeatlaa.
Mayor Clarence
Jordan will be pment for the
seasfon.

I

five AWACS radar planes, faces
riear-(:Crlaln rejection by the corn- •
mittee unless terms of the sale are
modified.
Reagan aiso called all Senate
Republicans to the White House on
Tuesday to launch a perSOnal push lD
save the deal.

E.F .R.oblnaon and Dale Smith,
memben of the board ol public af.
lain, appeared before council to
. discuss the quality D1 water ,In tbe
town. The two represenllltfve reporVeterans Memorial
ted they have been adviaed that the
quality ol water will not be Improved
· Admitted: Grace Kuhn, Tuppen
Plains; . Victoria Fink, Rutllnd; even with a new well. However,
Kathy Crite~, Reedsville;· and Cllf· council did request the board ct
public lfflirllD drill a .-lelt well
. ford Young, Pomeroy.
·
lD
IDMe ablolulely certain that the
Discharged: Mary Wippel.
quality of the water .Hn nat be Im-

· Closed ~t. 12
session ·•
· ·Dlieclor Clllford Reich of the Ohio Thursday
Memben ol Ohio Vlllley Grance

: J)lpm'lllllllt

.

SWING - Square dancers from a IIIIJDber of
area communities SW111lg
Into action Sunday af· •
ternoon at tbe parking Jot
of the Riverview IGA
Sto~ when beef roundup
activities were held. At
bottom, the Charlie Lilley
Band presented a program
of country and western
music Sunday at the
Riverview IGA Store, between Pomeroy and Middleport asli part of several
acti\'lties staged by tbe
store as II o6served beef
roundup days.

.'
'

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