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Meigs .co~mi·s.sioners
is·s ue revenue .b onds
aaoumoN
- .tl
111e SIGN
•
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b

~r:u;n:rt~·====
111111 •s 5 5
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reo- :..:. ftr tile npesd~~a of tile X....,......,

POIIHII'Of, wu olpod 1'uoldtly II)' . . - - ~ ... the ......-uac ... ., ... ~
auditor. SIIOWII !ell, P.r, Fred Lo-ry,

•Sit) ,..

,•·.

Pi i a, '· ' 1 ud Dem,...,, boeed eD,ellel, ud
....,. 'toot11!t,.....,udileolryWeJia,Jft1ld!Diof
liee-.nJ " ................ -ted; rtpt..W, fnled
.. :.et, IUebant J - ud O.vld Kobleatz, comr'ni n, tla•iiDI froDI te ._ek, Rick en.W,
pa Ae:U.'hl attemey 8Dd Howard FTank, couty
MIOIItar:

WhiM Or ,
CUllom Tlnh

at

Voi.30,No. 128

(643)

approximately 17 percent. The in- • Associates, Inc. (the butldiilg was
terest received by the bond hol4ers formerly leased). in addition, the
is tax exempt according to Fred Kroger Company purchased the
Leyy of Squires, Sanders and l&gt;eJn.. buDding which formerly hoUBed the
psey, bond counsel.
Meigs Tire Center.
The action taken by the commissioners Tuesday wsa the same
Conunissioners streaaed that the
means by which the Pomeroy Health purpose of their action Is to create
Care Center wsa financed. The fact new jobe. Commi.ssioners sUpulated·
that the commissioners issued the that local contractors be given the
bonds does not, in any way, make opportunity to bid on the prject. The
the cornmi.ssioners liable.
date when the project will get underway ii undetermined. Howeve,
The Kroger Store has been pur- the project Is to be completed by
chased from Eugene F. Imbrogno June,!982.

•

•

e

,...

The first step in the expansion of
the Kroger Store in Pomeroy was
taken Tuesday when Meigs County
Commissioners, Henry Wells,
Richard Jones and David Koblentz,
county prosecutor, and Howard
Frank, county auditor, sillJied a
resolution authorizing the issuance
of industrial development revenue
bonds totaling $2,800,000. Purpose of
the i.ssuance is to assist the Kroger
Co., in the filvlncing of cOsts on the
project.
The interest rate for the 30 year
bonds will be 141'• percent opposed to

•

enttne
2 Sections, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 14, 1981

Copyrighted 1981

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Gallia commissioners
won't accept union

LD

By LARRY EWING

"My advice to you... " Gallia County Commission President
James . Saunders told striking employees of the sheriff's
department Tuesday morning, "is that those of you who can
return to work, do ·so ... and take care of your faffiilies ...
those who can't should draw your unemployment ... fill up
Mr. Hunter's tank ... and send him home."
That suggestion, which Saunders labeled as "fatherly ads
vice," came in response to a request voiced by Michael HuiJs
ter, District Representative of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) that the
co11ltlljssion ratify the acceptance of the Union granted last
week by Sheriff James M. Montgomery.

. Squash counterfeit watches
.

.

LOS ANGELES - U.S. Customs officials squashed 4,000 lake Cartier watches worth $1 million TueSday, running back and forth over
them with an eight-ton steamroller until springs and gears popped
from lhe twisted casings.
·

The watches were the first counterfeit merchandise destroyed by
Customs under a law that went into effect in 1978. Previously,
manufacturers were able to have the counterfeit merchandise returned aller the irademark was removed.
The fake Cartiers were seized in December 1978 by Customs agent
John Bedart at San Ysidro, Calli., a U.S. croasing point to Mexico. Officials sald parts for the watch were made in Italy and assembled in
Switzerland.

Conrail wants to end 53 lines
drying,

(645)

$2
-

~~\1 kit wllh roller.
pan. _,.. extension pale. ScM.

•

COller,

'

WASHINGTON - Consolidated Rail Corp. says it wants to abandon
53 unprofitable rail frejgbt lines covering 361 miles in Ohio - much
·more than had been_Indicated in earlier plans.
.
• The $3 are liJilOIItl 385 linea lialed by the government-subaidized
syalem in ab8ndonment plana that are to be submitted to the ·111r
terstaie Canunerce Commi.nlon.
.
Last May, Conrail Uated 15 Ohio !JOgnlenta totaling 231 miles which·it
said were candidates for abandomnent.
'
ConraU sald it withdrew the U..ts submitted to &lt;the iCC on May I. It
plans to submit abandonment applications by Dec. I under the Northeast Rail Service Act, passed by Congress this year.

Officers face three counts
•

COWMBUS, Ohio - A Colwnbus policeman has been charged with
three couniB of public indecency after allegedly exposing himself to
three girls.
.
Officer Richard II. Smith, a 14-year veteran of the police force, is to
be arraigned Oct. 21, according to affidavits filed with the Franklin
County Municipal Court clerk's office. The affidavits were filed Monday by a woman who alleged that Smith exposed himself Friday to her
two daughters and her niece.
The alleged incident occUrr_ed about t p.m., one of three such cases
reported to pollee in that an!ll Friday.ln each instance, witnesses said
a man in a green car exposed himself'&amp;!id that the auto's rear license
plate was covered with cardboard.

(646)

Former hostage has no scars
'
'
CINCINNATI
- After nearly nine months
of freedom, fonner
hostege Kathryn Koob says there are no scars from her 444-day captivity in Iran with SJ other Americans.
"It (the captivity) was something that was part of my Ufe, like going
to college or growing up on a !ann," Miss Koob told a group of St. Ursula Academy students this week. "I've put lt behind me."
There was concern when the hoetagee were released on Jan. 20 that
some of them would suffer psychological acars from lhe ordeal. Miss
Koob, now a press officer with the Foreign Press Service in New York
City, said she has no such dlfflcu!ty.
'

Derailnfentcausesconcern
!'

'-'

Thank You ForS

At Kmart
',

MADISON, Ohio - Police, fire and envirorunental off1eials were
working today with Conrail crews on the derailment of 23 freight cars
- two of which carried exploeive materials.
Aspokeawoman for the Madlaon pollee said no material was leaking
from the cars. She aald ao one wqjnjured in the accident.
Safely officials had said a potenUally hazardous situation was
created when the 38-c.ar train derailed at 6:30'p.m. Tuesday in a sparsely populated aectian of this eastern Lake County community.
One car contained metalilc IIOdium and aoother, although marked
"empty," was beUeved to have some JIS'OPill8 In it.

Winning Ohio lottery number
ClEVELAND - The wtnniDg nwnber drawn Tuesday night in the
OhioiAtlery'a dally pme "The Number" wu533.
Tbe lottery reported earnlnp of
on the drawing. The earnlnga came on ·aalee of
whr!e holders of winning tickets are
enUUed to share $290,t&amp;UO, lottery officials said.

.-.942, ••JO

Weather forecast
MOIIIy cloudy taalght. Lowa iD the !ow 11011. Ma.lly cloudy with a
clwlce of . . _ . 'l1lu1ltlay. HJglta iD lise leer '1111.
o( rain 20
peeeesst tonilht IIIII • pa• 111 1'tw let. WiiiiPI 111 ttwr?y to

a-

-u...lerlylll'llqtll ... ,
.
'
·
7
'!MP I
FrldaJ tleanP B , Ji
•••• J

I

p.Je .... ..,, . . . . . . . . . . .,.. . . "~'llll'rldaJ

ud!allee . . .. . . , . . . . , ,,._ltlflld18fiii•H•t.
sa'' .. -to rrtday,
t. tile ~~~~~~~~rill .. e IIi bJ -to._

..,, .

*"'•

I'

...

~

.

CAND1J).Al'J!:.S.,-J'beie three terllor lldl bave ~ 018med by their

c.._.. ;..-illllliiee. .... 11111 ..._..., queeD of Biolera High

School. HOSIIecO!IIIa&amp; aetMUea wiU be be!d ·at haUUme Frjday at the
Soalb-tem pme. Tbe ellire a1Ude110 body wl21 vile liD the queen. The
candidates from the left are Caaate Sbeets, TIDa Beaver IUid Melaale
BaDey, 1be Eastem8tudentC01101cU Ia iD cllrge of lbefesUv!Uea.

The result of Tuesday morning's
exchange between Hunter, the coun- legitimate bargaining agent for his
ty cornmi.ssion, and a delegation of department's employees.
half a dozen employees of the
Registering his negative reaction
sheriff's department is that the to Hunter's request, Commi.sslorier
recognition sought was denied and Lonnie Burger said, "I don't think
that the three-week old sfrike con- this county is any place for a union."
tinues.
"We are not necessarily asking
"W&amp; request of you that you that you change your opinion," HW&gt;affirm the sherifrs recognition," ter countered, "but we do ask you to
"We are not asking you to in- accept the reality that exists...that
terfere," Hunter said, "but to affirm we have reached agreement with the
the relationship lhl!t now exists
sheriff."
'
within the department."
"Just wliy are you here1" Niday
Last week, on the 16th day of the asked mid-way through the half hour
strike, Sheriff Montgomeu meeting.
recognized AFSCME as the
(Continued on page 14)

Record breaking storm claims four;
4eavy flooding
hits
Oklahoma-Texas
•
'

'

'

,By Associated Pres~
day and night."
The worst of the rain is over,
The Red River, which fonns most
weathennen say, but runoff from of the Oklahoma-Texas border, its
three days of record breaking slor- tributaries, and ·other rivers and
ms in parts of flklahoma and Texas
streams gushed Tuesday over the
is gorging creeks and rivers and DaUands and hills of Southenl
threatening to add to the floods that Oklahoma and central and·northern
washed away homes and bridges , Texas.
and drowned four people.
~- The weather service said the Red
"We're not looking for another River would crest at mid-day today
siege like we had .today," National at between'!/ feet and 281eet north
Weather Service spokesman Gene of Gainesville, Texas. The record is
Hafele said Tuesday after up to 18 in- 26\'.!feet on May 21, 1951. Flood stage
ches of rain had fallen in the three· ·is 25 feet. day period. "But we are carrying a
The Muddy Boggy Creek at
20 percent probability of thun- Farris, Okla., a small community in
derstonns (Wednesday) during the Atoka County on the Texas border;
reached H\2 feet Tuesday night but
, was expected to hit 45 feet today,
threatening seven hilly counties
southeast of Oklahoma City,
forecasters said. Flood stage is 37
feet.
The storm was the dying gasp of

Village
accepts
company

Racine Viu8ge will soon be m the
unique position of operating Its own
gas company as well as Its own
water seNice for the town.
Meeting in pcial session Monday
night, members of Racine Council
voted 3-2 to ·accept the Racine Gas
Co., absolutely free of charge fromI
its present owners, Gerald Simpson,
Gretta Simplon and Billllay:nan.
The company il presently valued
at a litue over $150,000 and Simpson
has indicated he prefers giving it to
the village rather than seUing it to
an outside lndividua5 or group. Sims
Jl60!l has slated that he will serve as
a &amp;.ultent for the town untU
routines are taken up by. the village
and Hayman will continue to work
as 1 mainterllllce man lor the
v!Dati8'"MIIild utillty.
Voting in favor al accepting the
company were council members
Earl Cleland, Ben Petrel and Harry
Wllfwd with Q\elllbera · Clarence
Bradlard Bad Jeanette Lawrence
caatlng cllaDiint volei.

which came

15 inches of rain respectively. About

ashore Sunday on the west coast of
Mexico.
,
Three people died Tuesday when
floodwaters swept their vehicles off
the road near Fort Worth. A fourth
person drowned Monday.
In Oklahoma, 60 bridges were
washed !\Way. No injuries or deaths
were repOrted In that state fronrthe
floods or a tornado that struck a
small town and caused minor
damage to farm buildings.
Abilene, which is west of Fort
Worth and below the panhandle,
received up to 15 inches of rain as
about 300 people left their homes to
escape rising water. An estimated 18
inches of rain fell in the nearby-city
of Breckenridge over the last three
days. ·
Decatur and Gainesville, north of
Fort Worth and not far from the
Oklaholl)a border, got 13 inches and

200 people were evacuated in the

HUrricane Nonna,

,.
~-~''' -~-

~'~J:';,

t~'r:~ :);~

t

~

.&lt;

.J

STREET FLOODED - A plet-ap traet II .....
wayo by tile lwirltal llood waten lil Jlreekn.
rklp, , _ Tnetday liiOnlbrtl- Twee:ty .... "' rail:
llde

&lt;,I,'

Gainesville area.
A car was swept off a bridge
Tuesday near Fort Worth, killing
1\!elody Nelson, 22, and Tony Lee
Price, 30. Joseph Frankenburger,
19, the driver, clung to a tree and
was rescued. Homer Lewis, 77, of
Newark, Texas drowned Tuesday
when his car was swept off a road.
John Mack WeU.. drowned after he
slipped on his front porch and fell W&gt;conscious into seven inches of water,
said Justice of the Peace Olie
Carriker of Montague County.
Mack's body was recovered Monday.
High winds knocked out power for
about two hours and caused an
estimated $2_8 million in damage to
churches and businesses in Waco,
Texas. Four people were slightly injured.

�I

•

'

t .

Commentary

··-

•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 14, 1911

· For the
record• ..

1

Turkish upr~d=a=t~e~------------------------\____W~_m_u_m_F_.~_~_k_ey_J_~
ISTANBUL
The former
diPlomat (he is oow relin!d) said, ui
aniwer to the question, that Turkey
. wuuld send ii:J foreign minister to
cairo lor the funeraL "Beyond that,
we haven't made any public
statement. We've been .pro-Israel
rigbl aloog, I ~ we voted almost
riglll away to recognize IsraeL But
we need good rotations witll the
Arabs, and we have not very
pleasant neighbors. What witll the
fall of Iran, ihere isn' t all that much
between us and the Soviet Union,
what with Rwnania and Bulgaria
right next door, and of course Iraq. I
thW Begin goes too far, and if Begin
!alters now, w,ithout the charismatic
Sadat to smootll things over, it migtt
gel pretty rough. Nobody is secure
Ulesedays, nobody.
"!used to tell that - not inexactly
that language - to the shah. Maybe
be&lt;ause Turkey hasn't been a superpower for a couple of hundred years
he felt he could speak to me his
private thoughts, and he did. And I
would tell him mine. It used to annoy
me, Ulough, because every time he'd
send for me, I'd have to go in a mor·
niDg coat, no matter how hot it was,
anti sometimes he received me in a
terrycloth batllrohe. Another thing,
when you Ordered tea or coffee, they
brought his in a solid gold cup, mine
in a pewter mug. So, after'! while,
I'd say: 'No thanks, your majesty,'
and let him have the gold cup all to
himself,
"He couldn't understand the free
press. One or two of our papers were
giving him a very hard tillle, and he
said to me, 'Mr. AmbasSador, w~y

~erger
-

do you permit this toward the head
of a friendly country?' And I said to
him, 'Your majesty, we have a free
press in Turkey.' and he would nod,
but I knew he didn't believe it. A
montll or so tater there was a great
attack on our 01m prime minister in
the press, so I collected the cartoons
and the editorials, translated them,
and gave them to him. He read, but
he simply couldn't Wlderstand. I
said to him. 'Your majesty, why not
give them freedom of the press, in
• one gulp?' And he said, 'It took you
ISO years of gradual evolution. I'll do
mine in two quick ones of 75 years
eaci) - in my li!etime.' He believed
it. What he couldn't believe was that
he was valnetable.
"Everybody is vulnerable.
General Evren took over last Sept.
12. The leftists had planned a civil
war for ~pt. 21· They had huge
deposits of arrununition and explosives. I and my wi!e couldn't
drive home during Ulose past months after 5 o'clock because the
terrorists were there, and they
didn't care whom they hit. A!ter tile
general struck, we found out they
had fully developed ptans for a civil
war. They would begin by declaring
tile eastern part of Turkey an independent state, then that in·
dependent stale would sign a defense treaty with the Soviet Union. You
can imagine where they would have
left Turkey.
,
''How many prisoners?
" About 10,000. And we're not

Ulrough looking for tllem all, tlley're
still around, but terrorism is
finished. Gone. Executed? A total of

means

'

changes ahead
NEW YORK (AP)- Any time fourmajorfinns from a single industry are
snapped up in mergers within a lew months, it's safe to conclude that big
ch&amp;nges are afoot in that business.
That's exactly what has happened since last spring in the securities industry.
The nation's largest retailer, the targest insurance company, the biggest
credit-eard company and a giant international commodities finn all have
gone to Wall Street wooing brokerage finns. And each has come awaJ witll
wtiat it considers a prize catch.
Prudential Insurance paid $385 million for Bache Gniup, American Ex·
pr~ss about $1 billion for Shearson Loeb Rhoades, Phibro about~ million
for Salomon Brothers. And last week Sears Roebuck struck a $807 million
deal lor Dean Witter Reynolds.
Sears' aMouncement came only three days after it reached agreement to
buy a large real estate and mortgage broker, Coldwell Ban1&lt;er, for about
$1~ million:
Even by Wall Street standards, that's a lot of money being Ulrown around.
The recent barrage of deals has been heralded as the opening salvo in a
revolution in the financial-services business ...: potentially opening the way
to an era of money supennarkets catering to just about every conceivable
financial need.
~ers, wbo have been effectively kept out of the action until now by laws
that restrict their operations, may soon charge into tile fray themselves.
oOnakJ Regan, the longtime Wall Street executive who is now Treasury
seCretary, has called for a sweeping review of those laws.
San. Jake Gam, R-Utah, chainnan of the Senate Banking Committee, introduced a bill a lew days ago to change or remove some of tile existing
regulations ccvering banks and savings institutions.
It would, for example, let savings institutions move into banks' territory to
JMke commercial loans and at the same time permit banks to invade
lrikers' turf to underwrite municipal revenue boilds.
·
At the moment, the various, segmented parts of the financial-services
bUSiness are in sharply contrasting states of healtll. Savings and loans are
suffering from an interest-rate squeeze, while brokers are comins off their
1
belli year ever in 1980.
So it's no surprise that brokerage finns are the prime target for
acquiJitions right now. Some observers, in fact, are at least casually wondering if the buyers aren't committing a classic Wall St~t error- buying
atlhetop.

Letters to the editor
ADC benefits gone
To President Reagan:
i am a mother of five children. I
was receiving ADC because my
husband has no work. Now Uley took
my cbeck away because my
·husband is living in the home. I want
to: know what you are going to do
about the people that have no work
roid can't get help. You are_starving
my children and taking their home

away from them. Now they want
tlleir father to leave before tlley help
me. You want to tak~ their father
away.
I want you to answer this not
anyqne else. Not the vice president,
only you, because of you, this is hal&gt;'
pening. - Carol Lambert, 35437
Sheets Rd., Dexter, Ohio.~726.

The Dai_ly Sentinel
Ill c..n Strefl
PlmH'O)','*'o
0 ....

!1.

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTEIIESTOF 111E IIEIGMWION AR£A

~lb

'

Bm~ t"T"\.-.1~~. r"T'&amp;itd·~ ,

eight, so far, and it's been 13 months dustrialize everything at one time
now. There are IIXII'e who've ' alter tile war ,..: bad miJtake. Last

received deatll sentences. Bli year we had 125 percent inflation,
everyone shot ns found guilty, by now it's down to 40 percent. The in-military courts. Sure, that's the kind vasion of Cyprus - a silly miJtake,
of court you have when the military wish .we could crawl back from it.
takes over, but the trials were But America's help Ia tile lllOit ;m.··
public, and everyone got a defense portant thing, the feellnc Ia pnlty
attorney - everyone who was
ezecuted had killed people himself,
in acts of terrorism. Now a special
board has been convened to review
tile sentences of .the people sentenced to death. and I think they are
going to recommend clemency. I
thinlt it'~ much better that way,
myself.
"But the military has saved
Turkey several times in the last 100
years from chaos. We've done some
dumb things diplomatically, and,
well, aesthetically. S.., that rotunda
over there, yes, tile marble thing so
hideous? Well, we built it in honor of
tile Gennan emperor when he carne
over in 1912 on a stale visit. That was
bad enough, but then we joined the
war on Jlis side, ended up witll the occupation. Got ourselves a republic,
and modernism Wider Ataturlt.
But the anny was there when we
needed it, several times, and always
they have given power back to the
civilians when Ulings got in better
shape.
uOh my gO(Jdness. how we need
time. We tried: you know, to in- ,

good on U.t acore.
"That palace? It was built by

Murat IV, eztraordinary rul~, died
in 1640 when he Wll!l 30. Truly ex-

traonllnary man." ·
He certainly was. '.'Strotllng
TlirOugb Iatanbul" qUCIUs a friend of
the Y')Wig, emperor; "Sultan Mural

IV happened once Ill he

NoUoulllocley .......

waae.c.rereaee
Palrldi-

readlnc at .

w

P~iladelphlo

[)olmahance {Palace) the utlrlcal

NYialanden
Pltbburlh

work "Schami" by Nefil Efendl,
when the IJghtnlng struck the ground
near him; being terrified he threw
the boOit Into the aea, and then pve
ordeno to Ba)'l81!1 Pau lo ltrtulcJe
tile author Nelli Efendi."

WashJneton

-

oso

Montreal

Buffalo
H.artfonl

Sm!tllo Dlrioloo

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2

13

18

1
14

t

l

10

12

3

1 2 o
0 .2 1
ru~r'• Game

9

14
13

2
1

C&amp;.lgary

1

Los Angeles
Colorado

stead.

secretary."

He was told to so right in. Instead
of finding Lewis behind the ·door,
DuM found an astonished Treasury
Secretary Donald T. Regan- who
was having a private breakfast with
Federal Reserve Board Chalnnan

Legislation status
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP)- Here is
the status of major legislation pending in the 114th Ohio General
Assem)&gt;ly: •
STATE BUDGET- A$13.8 billion
budget to flnarice state sovenunent
operations for the rest of tile current
fiscal biennium that started July I,
including a $1.9 billion pennanent
tax increase. Passed the House;·
hearings all week in the Senate
Finance, Ways and Means, and
Education committees.
INTEREST RATES - Removes
current ceiling on the amount of interest that financial institutions and
retailers may charge for certain
loans, credit cards and instalbnent
payments. Passed House; hearing
Tuesday in Senate Elections, Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee.
JUVEN1LE JUSTICE - Giv"'!
county juvenile court judges iii'llre~

NY Islanders at pftt!Jburgh

-

Philadelphia at Washington

Quebec at Buffalo

Minnesota at Toronto
Baston at Chicago
Winni!)eK at Edmonlon
Montreal at Hartford
Washington at Phlladelphla
Vancouver at NV Islanders
WinnipeJI at Calgary
Colorado at Los Angeles

Natlenal BuketbiU AU&lt;N!illdoa
Ed&gt;lbllloa . . . . .
. Tuesday'1Gameta
SeatUe 107, Phoenix •
Utah 109, Kansas City 92

Wa'sh!ngtoo

vs. Chicago

Paul Volclier.
"But be wasn't going to let the opportunity pass, and being a building
contractor, he had quite an earful to
say to Mr. Volcker about high interest rates," recounted Dunn aide
Michael Barnhart.
After his impromptu chat with
Regan and Volker, DUIUI went
across town to the Transportation
Department for a serond breakfast
with the secretary who had invited
him in the first plaCe.

1b~y'•Gamet

Doublet.!ader at Boulder; Colo.: Golden
State vs. Sin r;Hego; Phoenix vs. Denver

Byrd, 0-W.Va. The
majority leader when the
Democrat. rim the place, Byrd wu
on his feet and ready to fill the

Los

center?"

"Because it obviously makes Sense. The people who construct those
ptants know what tlley're doing. U
you've been listening to the nice,
clean-cut men in white shirta, ties,
and dark sults, you would know that

the power company ilas done
exhaustive teats, and the ·nuclear
plant can withatand any earthquake
shock known to man. Besides, we
have a Nuclear Regulatory Commission that has the -last word on
whether a plant is ate or not. They
would never have given their okay to
open one, if there waa the sllgiJtest
question that buildlns 1 nUke plant
nen to an earthquake fault could
hurt the envirGnment." ·
'"l'beol why are the people in the
ICtUffy ctothea wWing to be arrested
to cl-down the plant?" she uked.
''Because they have an inrelllistlc
fear of nuclear power. They don't
Wlderstand it and, therefore, they're
apinot it. Many fi them are studeota who enjoy setting Involved in civil
~. But they're willing to
go lo jail for their beliefs."
••Wboae aide are you oo?''

"I'm afraid I have to he on the side

"A few years ago you would have
been on tile side of the unwuhed."
"II!Uess age does that to you. At
some point in time you have lo say
that just because a person needs a
shave doesn't make him right- and
just because a person has ohort hair
and m
properly doesn't make .

him WTOI'II·"

• "Thai's a stupid reason lor taking
one side over tha other.''
"There is~ lo it than !hal The
people who bUild nuclear planta are
scientists, trained in our llnest
technical JnstllutiiJIII. They work
wtth compulerl and CCIIIIUit wltll
f8IDOUII npel1a who have an answer
for every problem. The englneera
and designen take l!ldnonlinlry
steps to aee that not one bolt Ia put in
wrong. U they uy a IIIICIMr plant
CIIIIIIUI'Vive an tll'lbquake, I have to
accepttheirwordforll
"That Ia not to say I am WIaympathetlc with the poououla who

·

vs.

Angele:~

Qeveland

at
'

'

A.shlar1d,

vs. Detroit at E.L.ansing,

GRADE A WHOLE

.

New York vs. Milwaukee at Green Bay,

Chickens..........;.. ~~.5

Wis.

Hou.ston vs.

vacuwn.

Kansas

City

at Omaha,

Neb.

vs. S.n Antonto

Atlanta

at Lubbock,

Texas

All the moment of truth ap
proached, Sen. Charles McC.
Mathias Jr., R·Md., casuall;r.
stroUed onto the noor. He seeme4
surprised there were no othe~
Republicans there.

Local bowling

.'

Early SlllDday
Mind Howling Ll'11gue
Od. 4,' 1.1
SlaDdi.Dgs
Pb.

T~am

Powell 'sSupcr VBlu
Roach'sGunShop
.IayrruwCoa\ Co .

ptane frun New York Cit)'l'

30

26

. 26

Royal Crown

23

Friendly T11vern

. 20

G. and,J . Aula Parlll

19

High t~t!l'ies m ~ n - Ray R01:1ch ~Zi ; JoeEklkh
all; Dar!'!! II Du~a~ 491.
.
HiMh series women - Debbie Hensley 5~ ;
Helen Phclps&amp;4l ; Betty Smith 529.
High ~-:am~ m~n - Bob H~nsley 192; T~rry
St&gt;idenabel!M' JoeEkli&lt;:h 183.
Hi~h ~11mc

HerU&gt;It~y 200;

w(lmen - Becky K loes 21l'.i; Dellble

Helen Phel~ 194.

Tri-Cua~~ty Bowllq l..eque

Ot:ll, lMl

T~

Ft¥.

Coal Buckets

and:

of those wearing the ties and coats.
A!ter all tlley've been dealing witll
nuclear power all their lives and
they should know ifit'safeor not."

at Dallas

!;eaUJe

Mich.

the:

amused Senate Minority 48der

it

Washingtoo
Ohio

Robert C.

Control of the U.S. Senate almost where ba gave a speech, wa!j
temporarily slipped back into . delayed, forcing him to mill ~
Democratic hands the other day, Or . White House meeting, he told reporso it seemed.
ters.
•
President Reagan had invited tile
Mathias, however, didn't have to&gt;
entire Republican membership to do all the work himself after aiL
the White House to proimite his sale
Senate Republican Whip T..,
of of AWACS radar pJaves to Saudi Stevens, R'Alaska, arrived from
Arabia. Just minutes before the 11 White House, dubing onto the floor
a.m. convening time, there wasn't a with about one minute to spare.
single RepubUcan in the chamber.
With Stevena in Baker's spot
Mathiaa presiding, the .Senate con.
'·
As the majority party, It's up to vened.
the Republican to have at least two
people in tile chamher whenever the
But it stiU wasn't quite busine88 aS;
Senate convenes - one to preaide usual. Apparently no one told either,and one to control the floor, either Mathias or Stevena what was on tlw
Majority Leader Howard Baker, R- agenda.
TeM., or a designated stand-in.
The lack of any GOP members to
start the session was not lost on an

fryer ·Parts.......... ~~4

at lAGrange,

Philadelphia at H0115t.on

Ph i lade~

24

T'ler'slnsurance Co.
FraternalOrderofEagles
H. and R. Firestone
Roach'sGunShop

22
· 20

20
16

Bill's Body Shop

16

Team high series - H. and R. Fim:tone 3814:
Fraternal Order crt Eagles 2633; Toler's I~
suranee Co. 2467.
Team h4Jh game-. H. and R. Firestone 901:
Coal Buckets894; H.andR. Fireatone871.
.
Ind. high series- Blaine carter 1110; Raymond
Smith570; Bill"Radford567.

Ground Beef....... ~
USDA CHOICE

$119
8
•••

$ 99

Round Steak.......'!~.1
SUPERIOR

Frankie

Ind. high game "" Blaine Carter 244; Bill Radford 231; Raymofl!ISmlth212.

An awkward few moments of vere
bal Jwnbling foUowect stevens'

query lo Mathias: "What Ia the or:
der
for ihJs morning?"

sureotOI110, Oepart'"enltll rnsuiiM! Ctrll!lcate DIComplllnCe -J•e

'9&gt;usiness

undff~ln~ . Su~enntertclenl ollns~ranc e o1 IM State Gl Ot!IG, btltby
cer!tl1e1 H••l
AMEIItcAN llltlFEftlltED INS 00 oll~dtll"llpolll, Sllleot lnd,.rll,
hs complttd 'lltth !lie lll¥l ~llhll SlUt IDPIICib~ 10 tt I nil IS 1LJIID"11f11
dYrnlll the cunent yur 1o lriJltael ,., lh1s dlle •lupproprtale bu g~~t~s ul
lnSUIIIICf II! ftniMIII (OA(liron IS !flown by ~~ IIIRUII Sllttrrrtfli!O

have bun

011 Oecl!mbtl 31. 191!0:

Mmlll~

aue\1,

S22. 17U1 1 00; CIPIIIl'JI , 1~CIXt. OO .

~'"'

IN WITNESS 'MIEII[ . l liiYe htrtvniO Wllscrtbfd mtl"llmt IIIII
uustd m,so lto M1f~•ed 11Columbw\.0!111. tiHs dlyl!lddi!t Robl!t
l

I
1

Rlltftll'lld Jr .. Supl

~

lmllf.-.ct ol

~

.

(SHI

s.&amp;~

Lettuce;......... ~~~- 2I $1

S!Jtf cl Oh11, Lltp1~11111ill otIMUflnct. Cet•hctlt Ill Complri!!Ge ~ lilt
u nd~!llntd , S;rpennl~ndr!!l ol lns•r lrlet cl lilt Stitt ol h
. llfr"r
Ctr1rl., !!Ill
QUINe-( MUTUAL fl ..EINI CO crl Qulnc.y, Sli!UI MasSIC~•setll

are willing to go to jail becaWJe they
lack faith in _our great acientific
"""'bliBiment. But in this case, I
believe they're l'lllking a mountabj;
out of a molehill. I would bet my AD'
Savers Bank Account lhat they aret
wrong."
Well, you can ima~ my surpriae
when a week later, the evening news ·
announced that the Diablo Canyon
nuclear reactor ccl!d not go into ser·
vice because someone lilld gotten the ·
drawings all mixed up, and the ;
wrong pipes had been instaUed in the'
wrong sections of tile plant. · ·

h.u r;or~plled dh tht IIIIlS oil~ Sble •ppllab-lo 11 llltltsl\lllloru..e
dUIIftl IM l:ljffellyur to lranucl irll-11 slllt I!Upplllpnilt b.UfltU ol

iriSUifnct 0~ lilt lltUIUI[PIIII liS frRinctll Clllldlflllllll shllllln.., ill
JnrJUII stllemt"llll hmbft~ II lolio'IIISO!I Ofcefttllef Jl. J980: Ad~~
ted amb, li00.830Jl6.00; liiW.~tJ. $42.91U05.tm: Su~.

$57 ,912. 11 .00: Income. U4 .Sii1 .961 00 : E•pendilurtl ,
~6.783. 130.00

IN WitNESS WHEMOf. llllrt r.r-11 iUbstnbtd ,., 11111'111 n

causM mt Ul llo Malfiledll Columll!.r,, OtJio, 1~1 ., •llddtle. Roblft
L. Rllt~lorC A.. Slrp1, ollmUriiiCt cl ~(Sui ~7 1 1

Cottage
CARNATION

It waa ,diseovered that It dldn,'t 1
belong there.
.
I
A man in a nice white shirt, tie and
blue suit from tile power ~ny
etqJialned It wun't a very. aerlous
mistake and could have happened to

12 PAK

$1 09

HOT CHOCOLATE MIX •••.

DARI ·FRESH •

2% Mllk .............G~

.••

1

'

·

JENO'S

They didn't put on any aeruff
people fariiDtilL I -'-L
Y
had,
'''"
,...,, they

w11ere~!:t ~ ~find ~t
llutAc:l:oul)t.
my
Saver 1,

Frozen

•'

•'

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
_,~

;,
h

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nenu&amp;.
ks kMNe

lZilL

2 5 • '!:

IWC~f'Dt'ION . .

--==:::;"..._.......
=:.;;:-

.

-

w*

S'

I

5

7

•
.. '
.
.1'
,.

• .._ •

..,

l

.,.."';1.._.. .. ._._ ......I' -.,.u
...

3

II........ ....

. . . - ........... ·I

J Llllln ...... "

.

10 ~z.,

'

A

. . .

. . --... ........ _ . .

INSTANT COFFEE·

h

rreu; ..._. DdJ rre.

·~

MAXWELL HOUSE

l'

GaeniMa. .er

~aw

.

'

hbllollor

2

'

$
109
Cheese.2!~~~ .
.
·,
$ 6.9

ROBERT L. WINGETr

" • en .r , . •

1

FLAVORITE OR LITE LINE

·u meant that every pipe had to be
111*110118DY inlpected and replaced if. ·

anybody.

a$ ~

$23,757,47!.00!· ~~ ~~-~115 . SI.S80,1SHIO: SUI!IIUS. S20.926.621 00
Ex~ndilurts . Jl.247,114.00; Net nlttt,

· tr.c ... e, 122.r !.919 00.

~v

__.

''

MIXED

PhHadelphla 99, San Antonio 01
Wedaeldlr'•O.mn

New York al New Jersey

$ 29

FRESH PORK

Indiana 129, Detroit 99

COU~lryL..~------.-----Art-Buc_h_wa_l,__,d.

I pride myself on having a very
open mind on things, such as nuclear
energy, as long 8s they don't build a
pianl near my home.
So when I saw the Diablo Canyon
demonstration in Cali!ornta last
month I watched tllem witll the calm
ifllPartiality whicb I reserve for all
things that don't affect me personally.
On one side were scruffy, lUIshaven, unshod protestors. On the
other side, were weD-dressed state
troopers, and clean, good-looking
spokesmen lor the power company,
The dispute, as I Wlderstood it, was
the scruffy unbalhed people claimed
the people in the white hats didn't
know what they were doing. They
had built a billion-dollar nuclear
plant 6n the San Andreas fault,
wf)icb everyone says is solng to
cause an earthquake in Calliornla
- o r later.
My wUe, who doesn't know the fir.
st thing about nuclear energy, uked
me one evening as we Wlltdled the
scrufflfs befrii hauled offinlherUf's
vans, "Why would they build a
nuclear ptant ~ to an Ml'tbquate

.
Shoulder Steak ....L:.1

• 1bund.y'1 Gamet

st.Louis al Detroit

...

His

control over delinquent youths,
reducing role of the Ohio Youtll
Commission. Passed the House;
hearing Wednesday in Senate
Judiciary Committee.
PRISON CONSTRUCTION Authorizes use of Ohio Building
Authority bonding powe" to borrow
money for building new state
prisons. Paased the House; pending
in the Senate Finance Conunlttee.
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS Gov. James A. Rhodes' proposed
$729 million state govenunent construction ptan lor tile next five
years. Passed tile House; pending in
the Senate Finance Committee.
VfOLENT CRIME - Provides
martlatory, eight-year sentences for
conunitting a crime while in
possession of a fireann. Passed
Sehate, penhing in the House
Judiciary Conunittee.

a

PRICES GOOD THRU OClOBER 17, 1981

Vancouver at NY Ranyera

Bostoo

He strode into the building,
followed the signa to tile executive
suite and announced to tile receptiOIIist that he 'was tile congt "*"""n
invited to breakfast with "the

2

11

Los Angeles 4, calgary 3
·
Wedaelda)l1 GamoH

Rep. ·Dunn in wrong pla~e at the wrong time
WASHINGTON (AP) - It was a
simple case of being in the wrong
place at the wrong time, .but Rep.
Jim Dunn was ablatolum confusion
to his advantage.
,The freshman Republican
congressman from Michigan had
been invited to breakfast with Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis,
but he got his buildings confused and
went to the Treasury Department iJi.

s

t4

0

2.&amp; 0

2• 1

Edmontoo

.. ·-·-

-

1 11

..-f l l ' " 1 0 1 0 3
.--.,. 1 a · o 10
a 2
110992

Vancouver

POMEROY, 0.

o 1 14 .. o· 5

~r

'

298 SECOND ST.

1 0 1 ..11121

2
1

'

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

/ .

N-Dh1oioo

Winnipeg

-

s•o

eamp10e11 c..,.,_.

ChiC8j!O
Detroit
St. IAuls

-

S'IORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

Adami Dlvll'2 2 0 II • 18 4
1011463
11111113
1117143
012lll22

..

Toronto
M"""""'

-

TGFGAP&amp;I

12012142

NYRangm

Quebl!c_

L

1011043
101 · 133
11111:103

Ill.

Diablo

•

Wednesday, October 14, 1981

•

~ Limit One

;

•

·'

(

t!

$359

Per Customer
Good Only at.Powell's
Otter Expires Oct. 17, 1981.

•

2

•

.

.I

CRISCO,
SHORTENING

:3 LB.
CAN

$199

LIBBY'S

·TIDE
DETJRGENT
,.
171 Of

'

$599

.
Lim It One Per Customer
·Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 17, 1981

PUMPKIN
. '
•

29

oz.

2/$1

#20+07
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's •
Ofler Expires Oct. 11, 1981

,,

,•

..

•

�•

•

I

..

•

Page-:.4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

2

Wednesday, October 14, 1981

•

Pirates, Eagles continue
march toward SVAC title

Wednesday, October 14, 1981

The Daily Sentinel- Page-)

•••
SIYE

lOW!

Eastern, North Gallia and Hannan Ding, North Gallia kepis Its long win- capped a 5$ yard march with a three
Tra&lt;;e,posted opening night victories Ding streak intack against the -, yard run.
last Friday In the Southern Valley
Highlanders.
Webb bit Toby Shee~or the extra
Athletic Conference,
North Gallia broke a scoreless points and a l!Hl victory.
Eastern, ~. hosts Southwestern game open in the second period on a · StaUstlcally, both teams play
Friday nigh\ while in the other two one yard run by senior Bruce nearly even.
_
league games, North Gallia, ~I Shriver. Later, following a blocked _ John Porter; junior quarterback,
goes to Hannan Trace and Kyger punt, quarterback Scott Pickens led Southern's offense with 88 yards
Creek plays at Southern.
found Mike Mays for a 13 yard while Rex Thornton had 74 yards in
Last Friday at Cheshire, Eastern aerial. In the third quarter, Pickens 13 carries.
rolled to a 3f.ll victory behind a hard • connected with Kenny Neal for the
Defensively, Keith Campbell and
hitting defense and big play offense.
Pirates' third score.
Mike Beaver led Hannan Trace
Dave Wolfe who finished with 82
North Gallia added two more 'While Dennis Teaford, C.T. Chapyards for the evening, scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter manandTryoneBrinagerhadlot.sof
touchdowns while quarterback Mike when Jeff Smith ran over from the dO!ensive points for the Tornadoes. ·
Bissell scored one and passed for three and Eri~ Penick, sophomore
SVAC STANDINGS
another. John Reibel alSo added a back rambled in from the 10
ALL GAMES
'
.
.'
TEAM
W L T P OP
six pointer.
Hannan Trace won tis third game Eastern
6 o 'o 122 25
The Bobcats' only points came of the season and first ·against North Gallja
5 0 1 171 28
late in the fourth stanza on a five league competition, 15-0 over Hannan T~ace . 3 2 0 40 61
Kyger Creek
2 4 0 5'1 106
yard run · by senior tailback Ed Sonthern. ·
southwestern
2 4 0 50 13"
Moore,
Coach Larry Cremeans' Wildcats soufhern
o 6 o 411 213
Eastern's defense grabbed three ' got on the scoreboard at the 6:51
svAc ONL v
· the
d
·
he
TEAM
W L P OP
interceptions and recovered one mark m
secon pen00 w n North Gallia
1 0 34 0
fwnble.
·
Kelly Petrie went over from the two. Eastern
1 o 34 8
At North Gallia, the Pirates of Greg Webb connected for the EP for Hannan Trace
1 0 15 o
0 1 0 15
7~ I d
Southern
Coach John Blake kept pace with a
a
ea ·
KygerCreek
0 1 8 34
~ blitzing of Southwestern. In winIn the tblrd period, Jeff Barnes southwestern
0 1 0 34

200
COlIT

~~.

,~/. ~­

IOTEBOOK

:

FILLIR

.

DYIJII IJIW

..~ 88""

OZ CQ

VAHSITY VOILEYBALLERS - Members of the
1981 Euteru Blgb Sebool VolleybaU 1eam are, !root,·
1-r, MaDBger Tammy Capehart, Coach Debbie Weber,
Kris Wllaon, Kelly Wbltlateh, Lee ADo Gaul, Jack.le

101

'"

Rapp, and Tammy Hudson, nuioager. Back row JaneUe Ely, Velvet Elkins, Darlene Barton, Sarah
Goebel, Alison Cauthorn, and Carolyn Bo~en.

Cey, Hooten ·pace Dodgers
to 5-1 win over Houston
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rnn Cey
returned to the Los Angeles lineup
after more than a month of inactivity, showed nary a trace of rust in
his swing and played a key role as
the Dodgers won the first game of
the National U!ague Championship
Series.
Cey's performance Tuesday made
Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda's
decision to reactivate the third
baseman look good. Lasorda activaled and started Cey, who had
been idle since sustaining a broken
bone in his left foreanri when hit by
a pitch Sept. 8.
Cev doubled home a run and
sconid another in the serond inning
and started a three-run, tw&lt;&gt;-out
rally in the eighth with a single. The
Dodgers scored a f&gt;-1 victory over
the Montreal Expos in the opener of
the best-of-five series.
Lasorda now tests his conviction

that sensational rookie pitcher Fernando Valenzuela will he able to pit·
ch well again after only three days'
rest. The 20-year old Mexican will
star! tonight's second game.
. Valenzuela, who beat Houston on
three days rest last Saturday night,
said he was ready. The left·hander
also discounted reports of an injured
middle finger on his throwing )land,
• showed the small cut and shrugged
to indicate it was nothing.
Valenzuela doesn't speak much
English, but gets his points across
nevertheless. He does the same with
his screwball, fastball and curveball.
"He's the best thing that has happened to the Dodgers in years," said
Lasorda of the bulky youngster, who
led the NL in strikeouts, shutouts, innings pitched and complete games.
Lasorda'sldecision on Cey was one
of two moves that paid off. With Cey

back, the manager had to decide
whether to move Pedro Guerrero,
who had been brought in from the
outfield when Cey was injured, back
to right field or stay with Rick Monday, who had hit well as a
replacement in right field for
Guerrero.
Lasorda went with Guerrero, who
started a double play by making a
fine catch of a sinking liner hit by
Chris Speier in the seventh, and
blasted a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer in tlie
-eighth.
Expos Manager Jim Fanning, who
nominated right·hander Ray Burris
to face Valenzuela tonight, said he
thought his team was in the first
game until the eighth inning, which
he termed the turning point.
Burris was !1-7 dur!Dg the regular
season and the loser to Philadelphia
in the tblrd game of the NL East
playoffs.

HOW IT WORKS ...
eaoh $1 rou ape11d,
1 PIIICE
bonua atamp.
1 ForBLISTER
Jllllf

1

Bet free PRICE lUSTER at••P si"r
2I certificate
from our c11hlars.
PRICE BUSTER 1fa11pa fills 110h
3 38oertificata.
1

1

EASTERN RESERVE'&gt;- Members of tbls year's
Eastern Volleyball Reserve squad are, front, 1-r, Tammy Capehart, maaager; Pam Riebel, Lori Hudson,
Rhonda Beard, Krull Gaddis, Krill WUson, and Tam·

4.

my Hudson, Manager. Back row - Coach Debbie
Weber, Tara Guthrie, Lee Ann Gaul, Tina Beaver, Kim
Ireland, Doana Jacka, Kelly Wbltlateh and Renee
Back!ey.

NEW YORK (API - With Billy
in the visitor's dugout and
G~rge SteinbreMer in the owner's
box, controversy in the American
l.Alague Championship series bel·
ween the Oakland A's and New York
Yankees was a near-certainty
sooner or later.
It turned out to be sooner, not
lat)!r.
For seven innings Tuesday night,
Yankee Stadiwn was a sea of
serenity. Then, with New York
moving toward a 3-1 victory, the
light touch of Martin's hand seemed
to surface.
41 issue was a tO-minute at-bat for
Oakland designate.d hitter Cliff
Johnson, who toured the area
around home plate while Yankee
reliever Ron Davis stewed on the
mound. When Johnson got around to
batting, Davis, obviously rattled by
~ delay, walked him, That forced
Yankee Manager Bob ~Almon to
reach into his bullpen for relief ace
Rich Gossage, who might not other·
wise have been used.
"Billy won the battle, but we won
the war,'' seethed Steinbrenner. ' He
rrujde us use Gossage. The umpires
lost control of Ibis game."
Martin, of course, was the picture
1

of innocence. He said he is not
beneath the use of delaying tactics,
but denied he had ordered Johnson
to stall.
Plate wnpire Nick Bremigan
pleaded innocent to involvement in
the plot which seemed designed to
distract Davis. And it worked per·
fectly.
First J.obnson found a chip in his ·
bat and had to return to the dugout
for a replacement. Then· he dilly. dallied around home plate when he
returned. But Bremigan said his
hands were tied.
'
"The rule book says the wnpire
can order the pitcher to pitch if the
batter refuses to get into the batter's
box ," Bremigatt said.

11

Johnson

didn't nefuse to gel in. He just took
his sweet time about doing it."
When the wnpire tried to hurry
him up, Johnson said, "I can take
my time, can'II?" Then ~did exactly that.
Davis had struck out three
straight hatters and was cruising
along until the pace slowed, courtesy
of Johnson. The pitcher was obviously distracted and seemed to
lose his concentration during the
episode.
"Johnson has a right to get out all

•

he wants,' ' Davis said .. ''Who cares?
It's the wnpire's right to let him. But
he has to allow me to throw when I
want to. H it's gonna take Johnson
five to eight minutes to get ready,
then I should be allowed to throw." .
Yankee Manager Bob Lemon
thought so, too.
"The A's .were taking too much
time," said Lemon, "All he has to do
is tell blm to get in and bit. I tblnk
the wnpire wasn't in control."
.That, according to Steinbrenner,
was because the league's best wnpirea are not working Ibis series.
"The American League knows it is
not going with its best umpires," he
said. "We are playing for the chanr
pionsblp, We should have the best
_l!ffipires. II

Pre11nt ana fillad PRICE BUSTER
1ta11p "'" cartifioate hi the oaahiar
for 110h PRICE BLISTER SPECIAL JOI
Ill tot.

•

~

Controversy surrounds, Yankees' 3-1 win over Athletics
M~rtin

be assigned in exchange for the
higher revenue. The six-man wnpiring crew is paid $39,000 for the
ALCS, a drop in the bucket compared to the revenues generated by
the series.
"I just thougli (catcher Rick)
Cerone and Lemon did a good job
getting Goose ready," Martin said
when asked for his assessment of the
controversy.
Gossage, however, suspected
some surrepticious behavior oh the
part of the Oakland manager.
"I know Billy has got tactics to try
and upset the pitcher," he said. "I
just made up my mind that I was
golnj! to go out there and not let it

bother me."

Umpires for the playoffs and
World Series are assigned on a
rotation basis. Besides Brernigan,
the wnps for the ALCS are Russ
Goetz, Jerry Neudecker, Marty
Springstead, Durwood Merrill and
Vic Vollaggio.
"One member of that crew is ex- ·
cellent,'' ~!d Steinbrenner. "But
the others".
Steinbrenner said the league
should inct;ease the payment townCLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland
pires and force the best officialS to Indians outfielder Joe Charboneau,
American League rookie of the year
in 111110, is to undergo back surgery
Thursday for two herniated disci.
The American League club said
Tuesday that Cbarbooeau, who en.
tered Lutheran Medical Center
Hospltallast week for tests, has had
back pains since spring training.
The 26-year-old lost power Ibis
season and was banished late in the
season to the Indians' minor league
team, the Charleston Charlies, at
Charleston, W.Va.
Charboneau batted .210 .with four
homers for Cleveland in 1881, C&lt;Jill.
pared with .288 and 23 homers last

Charboneau ,

will undergo
hack surgery

Marauders

The Yankees grabbed the lead in
the first inning against Oakland
starter Mike Norris. Larry Milbourne, who had three hits, singled with
one out and Dave Winfield walked.
Reggie Jackaon forced Winfield and
then stole second. Oscar Gamble
walked, and the bases were loaded.
Graig Nelles then drilled a double up
the alley in left-center field, chasing
all three runners hoine. That was all
starter Tolll)1ly John and relievers
Davis and Gossage needed .

BUSTER
SPECIAL

BROUIHTOI OR
HAWTHORIE IELLODI

"I don't o~n hit to left field," he
said. "That's a stroke Billy taught
me a long time ago."
The A's had John in trouble in the
tblrd when they loaded the bases
with two out. But cleanup hitter
Tony Armas bounced into,an inningending force out. They got their only
run in the fifth on a single by :Sob
Picciolo, Rickey Henderson's
second double of the game and an infield out. But the Yankees held them
off after that.

CITTIII

Series at-a-glance_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:,_ _

......_

w,.:·cumpMuld~d'" StbenJH
By Tilt Aa.t
Pnw

AMERICAN LEAGUE
n.e.day'aGa•
New York 3, Oakland 1, New York
leads aeries I_.
Wedlteldly'aGame
Oakland (McCatty 14-7) at New York
!May fl.ll )
n.r.d8y'• Game
New York {Rilhetti 8-4) at Oakland
r~onl I:HOJ. lnl
FrldataGame
New York (Guidry lt-5) at O.kland
(Keough 10-6), If neceual')'

S.~f'•Game

New Yoril: 1:1t 1Jak1an&lt;1. if necessary
NATION~LEAGUE

.

·

n.e.dar'•Gaaac

1M AJtieiH 5, Moatn.l I. 1M Aqtlel
iftlda aerie~ l.f
Wed&amp;eld.y'1 Game
Montrul {BWTia t-7) at L.c:a Angeles
!Valenzuela 13-7), (nl
Frilly' a Game
la Angeles tReuss liJ..t) at Montreal

IRosers 12-IJ, &lt;nl

.._.,Game

.._,.,,GliiM!

Loa AJ11eles at Montreat, If DeCeS&amp;Iry
Loa AnJtles at Montreal, If •

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PDRII 1111

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$1 i!l

LB
LB

season.

Players of week
COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP) - ·Mlaml

tallliack Greg, Jolies and Western

I

,

''

I

Mlchlpn l1neblcker John Sehuster
are the Playen of the Week in Ml&lt;J.
Amer1f;an Conference football.
Jones, a WOOI-I, I~ lelllor .
from Elyria, Ohio, carried a achool
reconl 4$ Um01 lor I88 yards and
11.'11l'ed Mlaml'a IGUchdown Ia a 7·7
tie at llolrltns Green oo Saturday. ·
lldluslft', a H, 8 pi"IDd aenlor
frCim Saginaw, Mlell., had II 10!0
1kklel and alllaied oo uolher
tadde Ia Wlllem Mlchlpn'a 16-IJ
.- .to Central Mlchlpn. Hil 1J
IIICidel were laar 111111'11 IbM be
[llllted In hll flnt
In 188I.

c

,_llarta

lOlL .................
II WIll lET.

IlL·...................... liT

�..

Page--6

::;

Wednesday, October 14, 1961

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Oa'i ly Sentinel

Wednesday, October 14, 1981

•

•

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Frank
Howafd, despite being fired as
manager after the San Diego Padres
!intshed last in the National League
West for the second straight year,
believes he helped stabilize the
youngclub.
·
_"1 do think I got the team going in
the right direction," Howard said by

Jacbon was fourth with a 374, with a 39-38-77.
Rick Harden, Logan, tied for third
followed by Meigs with a 379.
Waverly was sixth at 407. Ironton with a 42-4i-83. Waverly's Lane
Patrick was fifth with a 42-42-84.
was last with a 408.
In the final standings (which ln. . On the year, Logan is 311-1; Athens
eludes regular-season and ' toilr· / 20-4; Gallipolis 43-7; JackSon 31·19;
nament p)ay) Logan finished with a Meigs 12-17; Waverly 7-'ll and Iron17-1 mark. Athens was second at 15- ton 1·32.
.
·GallipoliS will participate in the
3; GARS third, 1U; Jackson fourth,
Class AA District Tournament at
~; Meigs fifth, 6-12; Waverly, sixth
at 3-15, and Ironton last at 0-18.
Chillicothe Friday lfith Hillsboro
Wellston did not field a team this and Portsmouth. Logan"will take
part in the Class AAA.. Tournament.
fall.
Other GAHS scores Tuesday were
Gallia's Mark Allen placed third in
individual play with a 3!H6-83. Tom Moore, 88; T)m Madison, 94;
Logan's Chip Patterson was second Steve Runyon, 107 and Kev Carty,

'50UTHERf

•

'.!lUTHER¥

s

12

Hemsley, Jenny Bentley, Tina Hill, Becky Michael and
Tina Davis. Absent was Sandy Harden.

wiDs to just one loss. L-r, Coach Suzanne WoHe, Karen

RACINE - Southern's little Tor·
nadoes and the young North Gallla
Pirates lhrilled the crowd Monday
evening with an exciting reserve
football contcest at Tornado Stadiwn
which ended in a 6-6 tie.
The visiting Pirates dominated the
first baH with a well balanced of·
tense that put six points on the board
for a IHl haHtime lead. Southern had
a good drive In the half, spear
headed bJ&lt; the hard running of fresJi.. ·
man Greg Nease, but the drive
stalled on a lost fwnble. ·
The second half was all Southern's
as Wade ·coMolly led the way by
scoring on a 32 yard run up the middle.

Training for the Meigs Boxing
Club Inc. is now under way at their
facilities at 128 West Main Street In ·
Pomeroy. Practice is every Tuesday
and Thursday evening from 6-6 and
Saturdays from 4-6 p.m. All boys
ages 10 lnd up are invited to par·
ticipate.
The boxing club will travel to
Ravenswood, W.Va. Novembe'; 7 for
their first llljltcii, and will have their
first home match, November 14, at
the Meigs High School.

Southern remains unbeaten
JACKSONVILLE- The Southern
TornadoeUes of Coach Suzanne
Wolle remained unbeaten Monday
evening, raising lts record to an im~
pressive 17-&lt;l after defeating the
Trimble Tomcats in two games.
In the initial match, both teams
played a close contest as Trimble
shot into a 5-3 lead. Southern went
ahead on the next serve when Cindy
Evans made four safeties.
The Tomcats came clawing back
wlth three points on its next .serve to
take an S-7 command, but the Tor·
nadoettes rallied for six straight to
take a commanding 13-a lead.
Southern took the lead on the fine
serving of Laren Wolfe. After Trim·
ble scored their final two points,
Tonja Salser served the final two
points for Southern to win the game
at 15-10.
After the first game warm-up
Southern rallied to a &gt;-0 lead initially
in the second game. With Southern
leading · by live Sonja Johnson of
Trimble scored her team's only

point of the game.
Debbie Michael in~eased
Southern's lead to Il-l and Tonja
Salder, with a fine serving effort,
wrapped up the game and match for
Southern with the final seven points,
the final score being If&gt;..I.
Southern's leading servers were
Tonja Salser with 10 points and Cin·
Lly Evans with seven.
Trimble wa s led by Lori Bycofski
with three.
Southern's reserves won their
seventh match of the year as they
defeaied the Trimble reserves 15-7
and 15-6. Southern's leading server
was Linda O'Brien with 15 points.

'DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
AGENCY
ll5 N. 2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT

Baseball

The Meigs High · School
Auditorium will be the scene of the
Meigs Boxing Club's firat home mat·
.
'
ch
o~ November 14.
eight of which came in the first
Several area clubs will particliNite
game. Tina Hill added eight for
Southern. Tina Stephenson led the · arid a good boxing card is guaranteed. Different weight, age and ex·
Trimble reserves with four . .
Southern's next home game is perience classes are matched which
allows for competitive contests.
Thursday with North Gallia.

r===========111
I

992-2342

The 6-foot~. 'l/0-pound Howard
said he thought Padre management
decided to fire him one month ago,
with three weeks left in the regular
season and then re-evaluated before
mc.kin~

•

their deciSion.

..•

•'

-..

·,,

While the scoring ended the ex·
citement did not. North Gallia mounted one drive that was halted on
another lost fumble. The host Tornadoes also stalled two drives on a
penalty and a pass on the three yard
line at the end of the game.
Keith Cook had 31 yards on six
carries, while Wade Coimolly ram·

'

bled 161 yards on just 10 carries.
Greg Nease racked up 64 yards on .
11 carries. Paul Harris, Eugene Jef·
fers, and Wade Connally each
caught one pass each for a 74 yard
total. The Southern reserves are
"coming on strong" with ~ 3-0-1
record in the SVAC for the best
record of the year.

•oneless Top
Sirloin Steak
-

(mnNILtw rtltl)

Hockey____a-------------~---------NEW YORK (AP,) - Goalie Gilles
Meloche of the Minnesota. North
Stars, who led his team to twQ victories and a tie, was named the
National Hockey League's player of
the week.
Meloche stopped 88 of the 93 shots
he faced and compiled a 1.67 goals-

Inatant
CoHee ....

against average in the North Stars'
three games during the Oct.li-12
period.
Also receiving consideration for
the award were Meloche's teammate Bobby Smith, Toronto's John
Anderaon and Denis Savard of the
Chicago Black Hawks. ,
/

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tract as Padre manager on Oct. 8, w.
19M, replacing Jerry Coleman, who ~
was fired after one year.
~;

Pirates-Tornadoes tie 6-6

Boxing date set

•

Reached at his home in Green
Bay, Wis., Howard said he was not
surprised at becoming ttie loth
major league manager to lose his
job this season and the ninth to be
fired. Toronto's · Bobby Matlick
resigned (o join lhe Blue Jays' _front
office.
Howard, 45, signed a two-year con-

.

Training underway

TORNADOE'ITE RESERVES - The Southern
volleyball team 15 also enjoying a fine season of seven

sense what's coming," said Howlird,
who coached four years with
Milwaukee and played 15 years with
the Los Angeles Dodgers and
Washington Sena,tors.
Club President Ballard Smith said
the Padres are looiUng for a
replacement to.manage a team that

fif\lshed" the 1981 season· with a
cwnulative 41-llll record and ended
both halves of the strike-split season
in last place.
~cKeon deriled a puj)llshed report
in . the San Diego Tribune that he
would replace Howard on the field.
He "didn't rule out that possibility,
however.

·.

'

with just three gameS- remaining. Members of the
championship team are Coach SuzaBBe Wolle, Linda
O'Brien, Michelle Johnson, Laren Wolle, Cindy Evans,
Debbie Michael, Tonja Salser, and Mel Weese.

.

husinesa as long u I have, you can

TH
'

em

telephone from hli Gret!ll Bay, Wis.,
home after leamJng Tuesday of his
dismissal. "We had two position
playera when I got there, now there
aresix." ·
But Howard said the an·
nouncement did not come as a surprise.
"When you've been in this

SIIOP KROGER FOR MORE COST cunER SAVINGS DURING OUR ...

111.

REMAIN UNBEATEN - The South
Tor·
nadoette volleyball team recently defeated Trimble
Monday evening to lncreasz Its perfecl record to 17-11.
The Tornadoettes are currenUy ~ within the SV AC
and are guaranteed aoleast a share of tbz league crown

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

San Diego fires manager Howard, entire coaching staff ............

Athens
wins
.golf·tourney;
.
Logan captures loop title
Athens captured the 1981
Southeastern Ohio League Golf tournament 0(1 the Athens course
Tuesday, ~ut it wasn't enough as
Logan's 'Chieftains placed second to
win all the marbles.
Coach John Milhoan's Gallipolis
Blue Devils fmished third In the
tournament with a 372 effort. On the
year, GAHS placed third In the final
league standings.
Athens' Judd Stevenson's 37·
39-76 was good enough for rnedallst
honors this fall.
The Bulldogs finished with a 319
total. Logan was second with 34S.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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'
Page-a-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

.•

,

Wednesday, October 14, 1911

The Daily Sentinel

By The ·Bend

,•

Wednesday, October 14, 1981
Page-9

'

E~p.ergy

efficiency
analysis
.
ayailable at fair S~turday

By DALE M. STOIJ.
MelpCowdy
' Exteaal.., Service
Have you ever wondered just how
you coWd Improve the energy .efficiencx of your home? How much
will it Cost? How mucy money will
the imJJhwements save?
\

Farm support compromise out
...•.

WASHINGTON (1\P) - The
Reagan administration, though suffering a setback during initial House
action on a new farm bill, is still
refusing to compromise on i,ts
demand for major cuts in the pending commodity support proposal.
"It's a budget buster," said David
A. Stockman, President Reagan's
chief budget cutter. "He (Reagan)
has indicated he would not sign any
budget busters."
But after several hours of
meetings Tuesday with House
Repuli!icarfleaders and GOP members of the Agriculture,Conunittee,
Stockman said no strategy had been
devised to ensure House acceptance
of a less-costly four-year plan.
Some Republicans were searching
for compromises to make cutbacks
more palatable to their colleagues.
B~t none had solidified as the House
prepared to resume action on the bill
today.
The new farm bill, replacing commodity support programs that expired two weeks ago, sets up a com·
plex system of government loans,
direct payments and purchases to
maintain farm prices. Thus,
producers are encouraged to stay in
business.wlth assurances of some in·
come protection and consumers are
assured adequate food supplies.
With the pending House version
estimated at as much as $10 billion
over spending ceilings during the
next four years, Stockman said cuts
must be made "in almost all the
majorconunodityareas.''

•

Rep. Paul Findley, IHll., said he

would try to reverse last week's

defeat of Reagan's plan to effectively freeze dairy price supports, offering another proposal that
would have "roughly the same ef·

feet."

.

,~

Dairy price supports have become
a central issue in the farm bill
debate because of the massive expenditures and huge dairy stock accumulations they have forced on the
government.
'
Mter rejecting Reagan's milk support plan last week, the House tentatively endorsed a "compromise"
offered by Rep. Berkley Bedell, !).
Iowa, with the support of the
National Milk · Producers
Federation.
Backers say the compromise will
solve the problem of overproduction
without imposing a financial bardship on dairy farmers. The ad·
ministration says the Bedell
proposal will exceed budget limits
over the next four years by more
than $500 million.
In the past 12 months, the government has spent some $2 billion for
about 13 billion pounds of dairy
products in an attempt to maintain
fann milk prices.
The Reagan proposal would have

LA$_1 CHANCE fOR A

rr===========J
V D EDWARDS INS
•

'

NUMBER 1 &amp; 2 FUEL OIL
•
·No. 2 FUEL OIL s1 14 gal. No. 1 FUEL OIL s1 18 gal.

Pomeroy

CITY ICE AND FUEL CO.

All MAIL MUST BE
MAILED TO
.
.
P. 0. Box 547, POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
. 992-2145

'

'

Due to delivery charges by
postal service.

.

CD or Tina Will Take Your Call-Budget Rates Available on Request

Night set
Trick or treat night in Middleport
will be observed ' from 6:30 to 7:30

p.m. on Oct. 29, Mayor Fred Hoffman announced today. A siren will
sound to mark the opening and
closing of the annual event.

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

CAM2 .MOTOR OIL-

.

SALE PRICE 99t QUART

0 ~\'\

59' ::e:te

(Limit 12)

buy 6 quarts of CAM 2 10W40
geta$2.00 REBATE from

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

$1.99

CAL~ (614)-992-2104

$2.33

BATTERY

·.

'----~ CHA~C:,!_R

•

s27~~Vol,t
. ~T., QCt. 17

1011

•

LOCTITI

HUNTING LICENSE
SOLD HERE!
•

..
•

FORM·A·
GASKET

Port•t:zao
LIMIT 2

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$3.29

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$3.69

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*AMMO
.PICKENS -~~~I)WARE
IIASOII, W. VA.

(

G&amp; J AU10 PARtS
144 W. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone1 "2·2189

G&amp; J AU10 PARTS
Route33

M•son.w:va.

Phone1 304-773-5511

A~TPN~T~;'•

S-26~.!.

NO.I ZOO

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"·

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lneUnt
GMTank
AeiNIIr Patch

BOOSTER
CABLES

•

lnte,..ll a Motorala
$38.1111 oxchango

i

The members of the Meigs
D.E.C.A. Club attended the District
13 D.E.C.A. Fall Delegates Conference Thursday, October 8, at the
lodge at Old Man's Cave near Logan.
This conference was in
preparation for the State Delegates
Conference which the officers of
Meigs D.E.C.A. will attend in
Columbus on November 13 and 14. At
the · district conference the Meigs

Thbmas .will speak at Regton
.
-11 ,Garden ·Clubs'' meeting
beginatl0:30.
New officers will be installed
during )he morning business
meefing and awards will be presented. There will be a luncheon at noon
with door and attendance prizes to
be awarded.
A buffet luncheon will be served
from II :30 a.m, to 1 p.m. Advan~e
reservations of $6 including the melll
are to be sent to Mrs. Wyatt Childwell, Route 3, Pomeroy. Without the
luncheon, the charge is $4. The
deadline for reservations is Oct. 23.
Invitations have been sent to all
garden clubs in the regional ~long
with garden clubs. in Regions 9, 10 ·
and 121n West Virginia.
The day wUI open with a weleome
from Marjorie Fetty, Meigs Counly
contact chairman, with devotions by
Mrs. Pearl Mora. Pat Holter,
Pomeroy, regional director, will
preside at the b~in~ss meeting.
New officers t&lt;i be inslaUed will be
Dorothy Bender, direCtor; Mary Lou
Capps, 8ecretary; and Gezela ·
Thomas, treasurer.
Meigs County garden clubs will
host the regional meeting with
Chester handllng hospltallty; Star,
the registration; Rutland, the name
tags; Middleport, the favors; Fernwood and Middleport Amateuni,
uie coffee hour; Rutland Friendly, .
the demonstration as helpers; the
Bend 0' the River and Wildwopd, the

Terry Waylaod, BJII Cogar, Dave Reuter, Dale
Brickles, David lanuareW, Jim Boyer, Scott Johuson,
Brent Houdasbelt, John Cremeaos.
'

D.E.C.A. members attend conference

door prizes; the Winding Trall sales
tables; the Shade Valley Council of
Floral Arts, the flower sbow staging.
All clubs in the region will be par·
ticipatlng in the flower show through
assigned classes according to the
number of members in each club.
Mrs. Richard Koblenlz is general
chainnan for the show and. the
judges will be accredited ,judges of
theOAGC.

D.E.C.A. members partiCipated in
choosing the District 13 chairpersons and recorder for the 1981-32
school year. Also chosen at the conference was the Miss Ohio D.E.C.A.
candidate and parliamentary law
contestant to the State Conference
from the district.
The Distributive Education Clubs
of America - otherwise known as
D.E.C.A. - is an organization whose

program of leadership and development is designed specifically lor
students enrolled in Distributive
Education. D.E.C.A. is the only
national youth organization
operating in the nation 's schools to
attract young people to careers in
mark~ting and distributing. Meigs
D.E.C.A. is one of 15 D.E .C.A. Clubs
in 12 schools in the Southeastern part
of Ohio.

Meeting notes._·_ _ _ __
Salvation Army
Rev. Jeff Butcher was speaker at
the Salvation Army in Pomeroy Sunday evening.

In observance of Columbus Day,
Jackie Justis presented a trwnpet

Young Adult Class

solo,

1

'America, the Beautiful. "

A potluck cookout..;.. held rcenUy Major Glenna · Rwnmell, retired,
by the Young Adult Claas o1 the Mid- spoke o~ Harvest FesUval Day and
• dleport First Baptist Church at the _ an offenng of $100 was. taken and
home of Short and Vicky Russell. wttl go to the home ffi!Ss~onsfor the
The group enjoyed viden games school for offtcers trammg m New
during the evening.
Y.ork. Elev~n persons from the
Cathy Riggs had devotions. Cleveland Dtv~ston. ~~d four from
During the ·bualltess meeting plana the Cmcmnall Dtvtston are unwere made for a halloween party on dergoing training there to become
Oct. 31 at 7:30 p.m at the home of Salvation Army offtL'ers, The school
Steve and Cindy Hartenbach. It will serves .11 eastern states mcludmg
be a costume party.
Ohw.
Attending were Short, . Vicky,
Angie and Roy Russell, Nancy,
Officers were elected at the MonJamie and Tndd Anderson, Carolyn
day
rilght meeting of the United
and Jeff Sl)Of'den, Kathy and David
Methodist
Women of the Heath
Riggs, DaMy and Debbie Fink, Cindy Hartenbach, James, Donna, Jim Church, Middleport.
Elected were Betty Fultz,
and Tracey Grueser, Jerry and
Susan Coleman, and Manami president; Euvetta Bechtle, vice
·president; Clara Criswell,
Shimlger.
secretary; Beulah McComas,
treasurer; Juanita Bachtel,
'
Christian social involvement;
"• ''
.
Maxine Philson, Christian global
•
concerns; Elizabeth Moutning,
Christian personhood; Nan Moore,
program resource; Mary Rinehart,
The 45th anniversary of the Laurel membership chairman; Donna
CUff Better Health Club was ob- Byer, supportive community; Lettie
. served recently with a potluck din- Young, public relations and
ner at the home of Mrs. Mary Miller. historian; Beulah Jones, mission
Yvonn~ Young spoke to the group
coordinator; and PauUne Horton,
on the renewal of the tuberculosis Elizabeth Mourning, and. Kathryn
levy with the club endorsing it Swanson, nominating committee.
following her talk. Officers' reports
Mrs. Fullz presided :at the meeting
were given and a donation and welcomed the members and one
acknowledged. Sunshine sisters guest, Becky Fultz. She read a
were revealed and new names poem, "The Scene of Beauty,"
drawn.
Mrs. Moore reported on the sick
and read an article which Mrs.
Readings included "No Prsyers
Jones had writien.
Go Unheard," by Mrs. Jean Wright,
Mrs. Bechtle, program leader,
"Roadside Stand," by Marjorie Fet- gave scripture from Isaiah with the
ty, "The Touch of the Master's
thought "Seek Ye God" and gave an
Hand," by Bertha Parker, "The article
"Reluctant about
Flowers of Frlendahlp," by Mrs.
Freeroom." There was a Bible quiz
Miller, "God Ia Near," by Donna and 'a reading "How Big is God."
Gilmore, and "Night of EnMrs. McComas talked on the men,,
chantment." by Mrs. Ann Mash.
tal health renewal levy and'
Others attending the meeting were
distributed literature. Programs for
I Mrs. Della Curtis, Mrs. Ruby Frick,
the new year were disc~.
Mrs. Betty Stewart, Robin CampRefresluiwnts were served by
bell, Mrs. Iva Powell, Mrs. Leona Donna Dyer, Pauline Horton,
KarT, and a guest, Mrs. Ejmma Fox.
Muine Phlison, a'nd Jane GOkey.
The November meeting will be held
Seventy shutln calla wer.e reported.
at the home ol Polly Eiclllnger.
It w88 noted that peeans are for sale.

U meeting will be held at the

Eastern High School on Oct. 31. The
Chester Garden Club will be host
with Bob Thomas as .the demonstrator.
New year books will be provided ·
and distributed at the November
meeting by the committee composed
of Mrs. Louise Thompson, Niss
Nellie Zirkle, Mrs. Dorothy_ Roller,
Mrs. Dorothy Morrla, Mrs. Nanc:r
Hill and Mrs. Ruth Arnold. Atl committees ·for the coming year were

'Middleport Garden

Slinderella ·"

Fall l'l!lllonal meeting plans were
A ,.;.,.. ol51 P9IJlldl wu recorded in discussed during the Monday night
the Sltnderella diet cluiM con- meeting o1 the Middleport Gr;rden
ducted this week. At the Cbeater Club held at'the ho!ne of Mrs. Jeanclul Monday n)ght, Beth Hayman ne Bowen, Syracuse.
lost the moat wei8hl an there wu a · Mrs. Mary Skinner presided at the
tie for I'WIIIei'-UII betweeD Betty meeting. It was noted that Mrs.
Michael Fry will be Ute we!c=lng
Newell and Karla a.v.IJer.
Ruby Queen wu lbe top laser at chairman for the fall regional
the MaP! marniDC clua, and at the meeting with the Midilleport club to
provide 200 lavon to ~ ol
Pa.IWfO)' clua, llralda P.eWt lost
Dower
bulbi 118!1 with netting. Memthe moat weJabl, and KatbJ Ellu
bers
are
to meet at tbe Middlepert
-the~ Tin- 1111111Pnlbyterlall
Church on Oct. II at
bernere IUen IIIIo the cia 11.
1:30 for a'work .-ton. The Retllon·
J

named by Mrs. Skinner. Mrs. Morris
gave a report on the plans for the
Meigs County Christmas flower
show to be held at Royal Oak Park,
Nov.28and29.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Bowen and Mrs. Dana
Kessinger, with flower arrangemen·
Is being displayed by Miss Nellie
Zirkle, Miss HaWe Zirkle, Mrs. SkiJJ.,
ner, Mrs. Thompson, and Mrs. Hill.
Mrs. Faye Wallace was a guest.

What's

Cooking?

Health UMW

anru'.rersary

(304~75-1244

MUFFLER

'

i&gt;.E.C.A.- Gary Glntber, TriDa Hayman, Sberry
Hollz, Vicky DeBord, Tammy P~ttlt, Ed DalllelB,

Laurel Cliff

Two New W•ya To Clean Up.Witll G0-.10
REMOVE
CLOUT
Pumice
Huvy duty
I H11nd Cleaner
Hand Cle-r

Offlce .Hours by Appointment Only

or

.

I

' of St. Petersburg,
Bob' Th01Il$S
Fla., international instructor and
demonstrator' on the artistic design
of flower arl-anging, wiU be the
featured l'peaker at the Region 11,
Ohio A&amp;Jociatjon of Garden Clubs,
fall meeting to.be held Oci. 31 at the
Esstem High School.
Founder and director of the
American Guild of Flower
Arrangers which copvenes each
February in Tampa, Fla., Thomas is
well knO)Nn in Ohio for his instruction at lhl' state judges and
exhibitors schools and the demon·
strations at stat~ conventions.
He has conducted workshops in
mndem, traditibnal and Japanese
arranging in all !areas pf the United
States and twice a year comes to
Marietta for speCial workshops.
The America~ Guild of Flower
Arrangers convenes each February
in Tampa and is followed by tours to
famous gardens in the Caribbean,
Central and South America . Several
members of gar,den clubs in this
area are members of the American
Guild.
i
Thomas will speak and demon·
strate at the fall meeling from 1 to 3
p.m. in the afternoon.
The regional meeting will also
feature a flower show entitled
"Magic with Metaphors."
Coffee hour will 1be from 9 to 10
p.m. with the flower show judging to

•

JliY

115 E. lnd St.

I

'

SUMMER FILL-UP SPECIAL

•

•

At the Woodburners' Fair and
Energy \ Day Saturday, October 17
from 10\a.ni. to 4 p.m. at the Meig~
County '1Fairgrounda, you wlll be
able to apalyze your home through a
free computer analysis.
.
The Meigs County Cooperstlve
Extension Service will be ~erlng
the free energy analysis tlu'ough a
computer terminal to be located in
the Juniot Fair Building. The computer terminal will be operated by
computer ', programmer, VIrginia
Devine. IDterested persons may fill
·out a sim~le form concerning the
square footage, insulation, window
sizes, etc.,/n their house. The computer than ~nalyzesthat information

and tells the participant what types at the Woodburners' Fair and
of billd he might expect at the Energy Day for the prizeli. You need
current level of energy efficiency. not be present to win.
The computer will also tell the parAnother hlghllglt of the day will ·
ticipant what types or Improvements be the display of 4-H Utter posters as
wlll8ll9ist in the energy-efficiency of well as the awards ceremony at I
the home, what the costs might be p.m.
A beans and cornbread lunch will
and the pay bek period.
Sam Crawford, Area Extension be provided by the Meigs County
Agent, will be present atthe W®d- Senior Citizens. Hot dogs, elder and
butners' Day and Energy Fair to aid soft dri\lks will also be available.
participants 88 they fill out the for·
The Meflls Counly 4-H Committee
ms and to assist in interpreting In- • is sponsOring coffeecake and coffee
formation from the computer.
to be avallable I!Jroughout the day.
Other groups participating are
The Woodburners' Fair and ColumbUs and Southern Electric
Energy Day will also feature Company, Ohio ·Power Company,
displays by local businesses, in- and Division of Forestry. There will
cluding Landmark, Foreman and also be displays featuring safe inAbbott, Appalachian Stove Com- stallation of woodbw'ners and chain
pany, J and L Insulation, Tracy Fire saws, and information of all types of
and Safety Equipment, Zion Heat energy-!18ving inaterlals and ideaa.
Company, and Cunningham and
The event is sponsored by the
Riteway Stoves.
Meigs County Cooperative ExDoor prizes of split hardwood and tension Service. For additional ininsulated fireplace gloves. will be fonnation, contact the Extension Of• awarded at 4 p.m. You must register fice at 992-6696.

By DALE M. STOLL
Meigs County E&lt;tension
Home EconomJst

By DALE M. STOLL
Meigs County Extension
Home Economist
Since the first day that we began
heating our house with wood heat
from our woodbuming stove, I have
been eyeing the toasty stove as a
potential cooking area.
This '~cooking area" would utilize
heat already being produced in the
house. I wouldn't have to use any
electricity or gas to cook my dinner.
Being basically logical as well as
thrifty, I couldn't pass it up.
I've got to admit that my husband
wasn't entirely thrilled when I announcoo that I planned to cook our
whole dinner on top of the woodburner. I'm sure that he had visions
of gooey gobs burbling out of the
pots, leaving irreparable scars on
his lovely new stove.
Of course, I convinced him that I
wasn't a total nincompoop and that I
had plans that would absolutely
eliminate any risk to the stove, not to
mention the food.
1 developed a list of rules for
cooking on a wood burner :
I. Use a heavy pot or pan (cast
iron or other with no plastic or
wood).
2. Be sure the pot or pan is large
enough so that nothing will creep
over the edge as it cooks.
3. Watch e.verything closely. Stir
frequently.
4. Use heavy potholders. The stove
gets hot and the pot gets hot.
5. Be sure the woodburner is hot
enough to use for cooking.
6. Be sure the woodburner is not
too hot.
My favorite foods to cook on top of
the woodbumer are baked potatoes,
soups, stews, roasts, chicken and
other meata. I usually choose foods
that cook for a fairly long· time. I
avoid milk, cheese, and egg based
dishee because high temperatures
do liasty things to these foods.
To bake potatoes, scrub well and
rub with oil or butter. Wrap well in
aluminum foll. Place on a rack on
top of the woodbw'ner or on a rack In
a covered C88 Iron sklllet or pan.
Add a litue water to the pot, if

desired. Tum the•potatoes every 10
minutes or so, squeezing occasionally until they give a little.
Then they're done.
Soup has become a favorite in our
house, Soup cooked over the woodburning siQve seems extra special to
me. Th• following soup can be
cooked in the usual way , too.
Sausage Spill Pea Soup
2 cups dry split peas (I pound) •
2 quarts cold water

I% cups chopped onion
%cup chopped celery
2-3 teaspoons salt
% teaspoon dried . marjoram,
crushed
v, teaspoon pepper
6 medium polatoes peeled and cut
incubes
.._
1 pound sausage links
Wash split peas. Drain. Combine
peas, water, onion, celery, and
seasonings in a large cast iron pot.
Cover and sinuner until peas are
tender. (This may take as littie 88
one hour or as much as three hours.)
Do not drain.
Cut sausage links in one-half inch
slices. Fry until .brown. Drain. Add
to soup along with pol;ltoes. Cover
and sinuner until potatOes are done.
Uncover and cook until desired
thickness. (Again, you may want to
cook it quite a while.) Correct
seasonings. Be sure to stir frequenUy. Serves 1~12 .
Leam more about cooking over a
woodbuming 5\ove as well as woodburning safety and energy efficiency
at our Woodburners' Fair and
Energy -Day on Saturday, Ociober
17, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds. There
wlll be displays of woodburning
stoves, chain saws, and smoke and
heat detectors from local merchants. Door prizes of wood and fireplace gloves will be awarded at 4
p.m. Come and visit with us! Come
see· our computer terminal in
operation. (It's fascinating!)
For your free copy of Easy
Scalloped Potatoes, contact the
Meigs County Ellenslon Office at
99UII96.

•
l

�'
Skinner will be in charge of the
program and Nancy Morris in
charge iJI the contest. The Sunshine Sisters will be revealed.

Friday
HEAD START meeting at the
Racine Fire House, Friday at I
p.m.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

Lions Club, regular meeting, 12
noon Wednesday at Meigs Inn.

' ednesday

REVIVAL now in progress

tllepclrl Amateur Garat 8 p.m. Wedat the home of Miss

with Mrs. David

as co-hostess.

through Oct. 25 at Pomeroy

MEETING of Meigs County
Democrat Central Conunittee-- ·
and Executive Committee,
Thursday, 8 p.rp. at Carpenters'
Union kall, E . Main St.,

Wesleyan Holiness Church,
Harrillonville Road at 7:30 p.m.
nightly. The Rev. Ernest Plemmons, BelviUe, Mich., is the ·
evangelist. S~ial singing each
evening. The Rev. Earl Fields is
the pastor.

Pomeroy.
now being held at
U. B. Church
Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
. Thursday the "Sunrise"
be featured and SaturlhE: "llar-ve:siTrio." The Rev.
Nutter is the evan·gelist and
Rev. Bob Sandets is the
The public is invited to at-

REGULAR
MEETING ,
Southern Local Board of
Education, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
in high school cafeteria.

THE ANGELAIRES Gospel
·team iJI Sugar Grove will be
featured at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Friday, Satur·
day; and Sunday at 7:30 i1f:m
nighUy. Making up the group are
Mr. and Mrs. Tom · Dupler,
Maril)'ll Thacker, Dave Hughes
and Dave Jackson. Accompani~i
is Na01ni CUrrunings. The public
is invited to attend.

MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League, 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Mrs. John
Seidenable.
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Women, Thursday, 12:30 p.m .
saGk lunch followed by Blondwyn
Stewart talking on world hunger.

..

UIW'/1
A. S t_..,...
f V 6 f Co+rph

Evel)'ll
on
leave from
Rwana, was
speaker at a recent meeting of the
Women's Mlulonary Fellowahlp International, Laurel ClU! Free
Methodist Church beld at the home
of Mrs. Iva Powell.
Rupert told of her work there,
showed slides and displayed several
articles from the cowrtry. Sbe also
commented .on the need for bandages and exjlressed appreciation to
the group for thooe sent. Brenda

•

october 15. 1911
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0(1. 23) Avoid
letting yourself be drawn into
financial complications of a
friend who is a poor manager of
his resources. You may have to

pav for his mistakes.

Haggy was the program chaJnnan
Mrs. Evel)'ll Young had devot10111
from Psalm 11: Mrs. Janice Haggy
read "A River that Never Runs
Dry." There will be a work sesakln
at the church on Oct. :Ml and on NCJV.
10 there will be a meeting at the
home ill Mrs. Jean Wright. Mary
Mlller will have devotions and Ann
Mash and Ivaeen will have the
refresluneniB.
rs attending the
meeting 10ere
ron Folmer, Linda
Foster, Donna Gilmore, Betty
Stewart, Ann Mash, Karen Stanley,
and guesiB, Eva Ro'lfon and
Genevieve Ward.

good, flow with events todav.
Something you're fighting may
prove best for 1ou in the long• run~

S

l.lassified Pages cover the
[1JIIowing telephone exchanges ...

ARIES (March 21-Aprll If) Be
cautious in money matters tOdaf

Gallia Co. Area Code

.

speculative ventures.

614

machine

su)llillos.

Be sure persons lo whom vou

scORPIO (Oct. 2.4-Nov. 221 It

aS51Qn things have the abilities to

may later cause problems if you
let assoc.ates make important

carry them out..
GEMINI &lt;M•v 21·June 20)

dectsions today affecting your
personal Interests. Thank for
yourself .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.
21l Be hopeful «~nd optimistic
today t:Jut also be realistic regar din4"What you hope to achieve. it
requires more ttian wishing to
make it so.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1f)
Accept friends for what they are
tOday, not for what they ca~ ,clo
for you If your motives aren t UP
to your'usual standards, relationships could be jeopardized .
AOUAR IUS (Jan. 20*eb. ~9)
Family members maY be pu111ng
in different directions today
regarding a matter which is
collectively Important. Try to get
them all1o tug together.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar(h 20) IM·
stead of resisting changes which
CCjiUid work for your ultimate

You'll perform well todav if left
to your own devices, but when
others pressure Yc;tU into tasks not
of vour .own choosing your workmanshlpcouldbe.faultY.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) In
the purchase of essential gOI)ds
you're capable of making shrewd
buys today,,. However, with
nonessential Items vo,u may pay
morethanthe"Creworth.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Success
could be denied you today If your
methods are too impulsive or
erratic . Plan y_.gur moves
carefully ~nd .tJe cognizant of
timing. ,t
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Don't.
take unyielding stands tOday on
issues where you may not be too
well -informed. Your lack of
knowledge could cause em barrass'ment ' if
you'rl;!'
challenged.

Meigs Co. Area Code

Mason Co., w.

~epatr,

23

sewing

parts, and

Coli

Gallipolis.

ATTENTION DEER HUN·
TERS. Come In and
register now far our Big

Buck Contest. Spring
Valley Trading Co .• Spring
Volley Plaza, 446-8025.

va .

!)Nit line of trapping sup·

675-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon
576---Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven
895-letarl
937-Buffalo

Public Notice

thence EaM 84 chains 75
links to the Northeast cor·
ner of said lot; · thence
south 19 chains and 90 links
to the Southeast corner of
said Jot; thence West a..
chains 75 links to the place
of beginning, containing
171 -121100 acres. Also 4
acres described as follows:
Beginning 8 chains East Df
the Southwest corner of 160
acre lot No. 1203, Town 2.
Range 12, Ohio Company's
Purchase; ttlence East s
chains and 50 links; thence
North 10 degrees East 5
chains and 7.S links; th~nce
North t cha1n and 61 links
to a post; thence West 5
chains and 29 links; thence
South 10 degrees West 7
chains and 30 links to the
place of beginning containing four acres, more or
less. The coal, oil and all
minerals underlving said
real estate is hereby reser·
ved. Also, in the mining tor
coal, drilling for oil or other
mineral or removing the
same any surface of the
above described premises
is required; tfle sa1d
Adaline Wolfe, her heirs or
assigns, sha 11 pay to the
said Albert H . Theiss, his
heirs or assigns, $100.00 per
acre for the land so taken

and also the right to haul
coal through end under
said premises from any adjacent premises. Also except all the land lying East
of the Portland Road and
Racine formally deeded to
Flora Allison.
Deed Reference: Volume
96, Page 599, Meigs County
Deed Records.
You are required to answer the Complaint within
28 days after the last
publication of this notice
which will be published once each week for six con·
secutive weeks. The last
publication will be made on
November 18, 1981 and the
28 days for answer will
commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as required by the
Oh1o
Rules of
Civil
Procedure, iudgment by
default will be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in the Com·
plaint.

LAFF ·A· DAY

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
• COUNTY,OHIO
ESTATE OF ETHEL MAY
.£VANS. DECEASED
ease No. 23,234

" '

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Sepl. 24, 1981, in the

Mel gs County · Probate
,c.::ourt, Case No. 23,234.
Douglas W. Little1 '213 East
SEcond Street, PomerOy,
Ohio 45169, was aP.pointed
Administralor W1fh Wil l
Annexed of the estate of
E-$hel
Mav
Evans ,
deceased, late of R D. 3,
.Poll'leroy, Ohio 45769.
Robert E . Suck
Probate Judge/
Clerk

(9) 30 (10) 7, 14, 3tc

• -·-- . . . .- - ·
•·" She's more of a doctor's hmd.
ranee than she IS a nu~se s
a1de! "
1----------~

Public Notice

-- -PUbtic~NDiiee --

..
INTHECDURT
• · OF COMMON PLEAS
" • OF MEIGS COUNTY,
,
OHIO
SHARP·
"EUZABETH

plaint is to quiet the title of
the Plaintiffs as against the
Defendants in the following
described real estate, to·
wit:
NACKetal.
Situated in the Township
··
P'aintiffs,
of Sutton.£. County of Meigs,
" ~ vs ·
State of uhio and known as
,fhe ur,known heirs and the Wolfe estate described
devisees
of
IDA
P.
follows : Beginning at
·WOLFE, et al.
Southwest corner of 160
Defendants.
Lot No 1204, Town 2,
'" :
Case No. 18001 1- Ran&lt;&gt;e 12; thence 20 t:hains
NOTICE BY
Northwe~t corner;
PUBLICATION
To the unknown heirs and
II
devisees of Ida P . Wolfe;
the unknown heirs and
devisees of James R.
WANTED
Wolfe; the unknown heirs
The
Tuppers
Plains
ilnd devisees of Belle
Chester Water District
-weaver; and the unknown
39561 Bar 30 Road,
heirs and devisees of JenReedsville, Ohio 45772,
nte Rees:
· You are hereby notified
is seekmg a full time
ttiat you have been named
class 2 operator for the
~ ~ oetendants in a legal actreatment plant and
''flon enfitled Elizabeth
facilities.
Please call
Sharpnack et ai., Plaincollect "4·985-3315 for
• tiffs, vs. the unknown heirs
interview or questions.
and devisees of Ida P.
Must live in water
:Wolfe, et al ., Defendants.
- - 'This action has been
district which covers
assigned case number
parts of Meigs and
18001 and is pending in the
Athens Counties. Salary
Court of Common Pleas. of
to
be based on your eJtM 'eigs County, Pomeroy,
perience
and
'ohio 45769.
ualiflcat1ons.
·~ The object of the Com-

Larrv E. SR_encer
Clerk of Courts

Meigs County

Common Pleas Court

(10) 14, 21, 28, (11) 4, 11,18,
6tc

1------.,----,--'-.,.--.,--------1
54

Misc. Merchandice

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop
FALL CARPET SALE
GET READY FOR WINTER
SHAG CARPE RUBBER BAC
3 ROL(S
3 Rolls to
Pick From

'12"

Cash-n-Carry
1 Green Tweed
1 Rust Tweed

sq. yd. installed

,5 ••
sq. yd.

1 Blue Frost
1 Creek Bed

•12~yd

For October

Good selection of carpet thru the 30th of October.

Buy Now &amp; Save Si·S6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpel in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Rem·
nants 52.50 up.

Real

Public Notice

Estate- General

_ _.. _II New 3 bdr. house wltll

plies. Traps. dye, wax, and

garage and full basement

lures.
Spring Valley
Trading Co .• Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.

$45,000. Call-146·0390.

TO PLACE•AN AD CALL
In Gallia County

In Meigs County

446-2342

992-2156

I'm curious Bobby, when did you ~l.ut indudin)l; ",,tip"

into my re2n1h ly papt&gt;r bill?

In Mason County

•

'

3 bdr . home located at 123
Garfield Ave. 2 acres lc~t
runs from SR 7 to Ohio
River. Full bastlt'lenf,
finished rec . room. '2
fireplaces, 2 112 baths, concrete pool, new c::erpet and
paint. Will consldtr your

HOBSTEmR REALTY
OFFICE 742·2003
GeorgeS. Hobstetler Jr.
Broker

. NEW

LISTING

Benut1ful two story
home, features large
11vmg room wt corner
fir'eplace, formal di ing
room w/ built·in china
cabinet, family room ,
sun parlor . 3 bedrooms,
2 full
baths, full
br~sem e nt , garaap . EX·

CELLENT L•X ATION .
near sehoul, hospital
and walk1ng distance to
tov:n Call for more
deta1ls.
REDUCED
Large
two story brick, six
rooms, 11/1 bath home .
Could be converted 1nto
two or three apart·
A-lents Close to shop·
ping 1n Pomeroy Sells
$12,500 00 .
PAGEVILLE - Lovely
two story horne, six
bedrooms, large living
room, formal dining
room, modern kitchen,
utility room, garage,
situated on 4 acres.
Ast-: ing $50,000.00

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF TERRY D.
TALBOTT, DECEASED
CASE No. 23546
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
9

s:~~~t

$38.500 00
COZY ...- Close to Mid·
dleport. Five room
home surrounded by
fruit trees and grape ar
bor on 21o1 acres .

$16.000 00 .
FARM __.__ 196 acres m/ 1,
W1fh two story \ farm
home, barn. mineral
r•ghts, near Meigs
M•nes S55,000 .00.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·G092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 142-3171

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
I

ANNOUNCEMENTS

1-c 1 rd of Th•nkl
1- 1n Memoriam

44--Ap.ulments lor REnt
4~Furnlsnec~

Room•
u-s~ce !or Rent
U-WutM to Rent

41---Equipmenr for Relit

4J-For Lease

I

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11- Help Wanted
12-Situalion Wanted

54- MIIC. MarciNindiH
U-Bultdltll SIIIIUIIel

»-AnflqUU
~Pell

)Announcement

51- Fn.tlfS ~ - Ytte'llt&gt;lel
It-For Salt ~r Trade

( ) For Rent

I C6 Ae~1r
11-Want&amp;d To Do

17. - - - - - 18.
19,-----20.
21.-----22. _ _ _ _ __
23.
24.
25.
26 .
27.
28.
2'1.
30.
31.
32.

33. ----~34. - - - - - 35.

1

I FINANCIAL
lJ-8UIInMI

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

.,_Farm EQuiPmtnl
n-wanted kl Buy
U - LIYftiOCk

....

Opportun1ty
· l2-Monay lo Loan

n - Proteulonal

s....... , ••

aREAL ESTATE

34- luslntll lulllllnts

n-Lols&amp;AcrM"'

]6~ Rf&lt;'ll Estate wantf'd
17 - RUitors

Deadlines

e 1 -Hemtl~~t,.w1MIIIh

f

MOntMv 2 :aoon Saturday

Tut&amp;CI.ty ttlru flriGIY 1:M ... M
ttw day bet•• puDIIcaHon
SYndiY I:ID P .M. frlclliy

7

room house and nice 2
bedroom trailer on Rt. 7
near eastern School. 18
acres, $32,000.

NEW LISTING
Gravel Hill property of 2
lots, bath, new nat. oas
F.A. furnace, Iaroe
basement near stores
and schools. only

$21,11110.
COUNTRY RANCH -

Brick with over 3 acres.
3 bedrooms, 1112 baths,
central air and heat.
Quiet location near Mid·
dleport.

NEAR COAL MINESNew home with , 4.8
acres on two good country roads. Total alec.
with 6 rooms and
garage, Fresh air and

sunshine lor $39,000 .
MIDDLEPORT BRICK
- Stalely s-c•se 7
room home In the heart

Central air end llllel,

SERVICES
Wani·Ad Advtrllslng

LISTING -

•TRANSPOWTATION

J4-Motercyclat
7~1Ntsl MaJOrs
76-Auto Paris I
ACCIIIOI'III
17-Au._ • .,.ir
71-CIM ... IIOUIP~Iftt

Sale

NEW

of town. roes 3 or 4

11-Yanlll W.O.

tor hie

CAMPSITES - 1 acre
only $1800. Has State
owned hunting land on
three sides. Forked Run
Lake near. Select your
site now.

14-Hay&amp; Guln
U-SHd I FlrHiiiM'

11-.t.utos for Sate
n-Trvdislor Sala

31-Hom•• tor Solie
32-Mobile Home•
U-Fant~slor

tor Sill

SJ-Muslcal Instrument

16-Radio, TV ,

C

MERCHANDISE

51-H 0vtettolcl Goodt
S2- C8, TV, Radio Equ1pm .. t

u - 1nsurance
14-8uti'1MI Train1ng
I~ScttooiS Instruction

.

41 -HoustS !Of' Rent
42- Motllle Home~
for Rent

3-Announcemenh
4-GIYtiWIY
J-H•PP¥' .6.d1
...... LOIIIncl Found
7-YardSI ..
I - Public S.le
&amp; AuctiM
t-Wanted to auy

( )Wanled
(· )FqrSale

RENTALS

I

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325

11-P'JulftDI.. &amp; Htattnt
U-lllcavatlnt
11--Etectrlcal&amp;
•alr ...raHM

I.,.._OeMrll Maull"'
...... M.H.• Ijlllr
11-UJhttsMry

Rates and Other trlformation

bedrooms,

l'h

baths.

garage with storage.

2 HOUSES - May sell
separate. One with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. mod.
kit., full basement, nat.,
gas furnace, swimming

pool,

acres.

garavo
2nd

bedrooms.
besemont,

and

3

has

2

both,, full
gn, city

water end one acre.

IAUMS SUI-DIY.
Very nicely cor...lld 3
bldroom brick. 2 full
balM, full bllement
wllll lemllv room and
fireplace, octulfiPOII kll.
Large Hvlng, vorage
ond welt landlc:Oid 101.
ASSOC:! ATIS

~ -T..Ieni,Gordu

T..-,-lutMw-

IIIIY•

23546,

serv•ce, Colman Ajr
conditioning, Ark(a Servel Gas Air Conditioning, Sheet Metal
Work

. . Robert E. Buck

baugh Lane, Tuppers
Plains, Ohio 45793, was ~p·
pointed Adminlsttatrix of

54

WANTED
BLACK
WALNUTS

Probate Judge/ . 1

(9) 30 (0) 7, 14, 3tc

Clerk

614-698-6791

Misc. Merchandice

Mlu.ER ElECTRIC
SERVICE

2 bedroom, balcony front living room, central air
condition.

1971 SHULTZ 12x60 ...... ?.~~~~~!'! .. '6'50
1,974 CASRE 12x60.:..... ?.~~~~'::'~ .. '6450
1971 .BELMONT 12x65 ............... '7450
2 bedroom, balcOny front kitchen.
1976 OAKWOOD 12x52 .............. '7395
Furn•shed with central air.
1976 ELCONA 10x50 •.. ~'!~.':~~~~....'.3450

To
EXCELSIOR SALT
WORKS INC .
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-3891
PAYING
se.oo Per Hundred lbs.
After they are hulled
Starting October 1sf

For all of your wiring needs.
Let
George Miller
check your present elec·
trical system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Call 742-3195
H·llc

PRICeS ON MOBILE HOMES
INCLUDE DELIVERY AND SET UP

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
992-7034

1100 MAIN

_ _ _ _ ___.B_!al Estate

E.M&lt;IIn. .
POMEROY,o:

iliJ/

POMEROV

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water-Sewer·Eiectrlc

General

·992-2259
NEW
NEAR

LISTING
CHESTER

~

Appx. 2 acres of nice
laving land with a 4
yr.old beautiful ranch.
LargE.&gt; utility room,
gorgeous large master

'

with

Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks

County certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

Ph. 367-1560
H -11fc

bedroom, bright pretty
kitchen.

I Pomeroy

Scrap

HARRISON
1V SERVJCE

Iron

&amp; Meta II

we are now delivering
home heating oil in all
parts of Me1gs Co. We
want new customers.
Larry e. Miller- Dealer

Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals.
1 mile west of Fair-

OPEN

Used Color TV Sets tor
Sale.

NEW PHONE! NO.

992-6259

992-3460

grounds on Old R I. 33.

Mon.-Fri. 1:30 to 4:00

9 21-ltc

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE
Box 65, Portland, Oh.

U.S. Rl SO Eul

Guysville, OhiO
Auletor11H John Deer!.',

Serving the following

Farm EQulpmrnt '

Duler

work

townships: Lebanon,
SuHon, Letart, Olive,
Orange, Salisbury, Bed·
ford, Chester, Salem,
Scipio,
Rutland,
Harrisonville and Mid-

_Concn~t

work
_ Plumbing and
electriol work
(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
m - &amp;~l,or99:01 - 7ll4

dleport.

Pomeroy, otllo

FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
VSEOEOUIPMENT

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

DEAN'S AUTOMATIC

Call Ken Young
FQr Fast Service
- 985·
1
PARTS AND SERVICE

Transmission Specialist
Rebuilts·RePairs
Seal Jobs
Open Sat. &amp; Sundays
Located 5 miles north of
Albany on N 681, on the
Dale scott Farm.

AllMA~ES

664-6370

If no Ans. call742·2070
10·8· 1 mo . pd.

9-5-tfc

Vinyl
OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVER ON FRONT
STREET IN MIDDLEPORT-, Large9room house.
A lot of possibilities. Only $15,000.00.

R.C.S. REALTY, INC.
BILL CHILDS, Mgr .
Phone 992·6312

NEW
LISTING
SYRACUSE
3

3·11·1fc

Tuclor wt C.Jb
MOD-•110 Diesel J D . Tr.Jclor

MOD-32) l Row New IIIN corn

cleaned. Call675-2158.
NO
hunting &amp;
no
trespassing without written
permission on Woolhan
Farms at Apple Grove.
NO hunting &amp; trespassing
on Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Wool han
Farms.

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION

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

october Special. furniture
Upholstering-25 percent off
on labOr. 1 month only.
MoWrey's
Upholstery.
Phone 1-:JO.f-,75-4154.
Furnitrue stripping. Coun-

lry Strippers 304-743-310'1.
No Hunting or Trespassing
on former
Ferguson·
Walkup farm, back Of West
Columbia,· WV. Vlolaters

will

STANDARD
OIL CO.
(SOHIO·)

SEPT. 21
520.00
525.00 •
530.00 •
535.00 •

· we are now serving all
of Me1gs Co. with
Heating Oil, Diesel
Supreme,
Gasoline,
comlete
line
of
Lubricants for
the
t•ms &amp; industry.

lhru OCT. 24
NowS17.50
Now S22.50
Now S27 .50
Now 529.50

wave Length For
Longer Hair

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

PH.99H460

1f long distance, call col·

PH. 992-2725

lect:
Larry E. Miller, Dealer
8-30· 1 mo.

169 N. 2nd
Middleport, Ohio
9-20· 1 mo.

.J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

PRICE · ~EDUCED
On this 3 bedroom

AlUminum Siding
•Insulation
• Storm Doors
e Storm Windows
e Replacement
Windows

graceful home with the

loOk you will love. Low
utility bills wilt make It
even more comfortable.
Sunny kltcheli,
H7
baths, . basement, nice
lot
in
Middleport.

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
lo-7·1 mo.

$42,000.
MOVE IN BEFORE
WINTER This 3

S&amp;W .

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

GUNSMITHING

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC .
, SUPPLIES

**.A.mtennos
Tele\llslons

i'Mosting (both
telescoping &amp; tower)
•ComP.O;nenl Sy1tams
*Portable Radios
• Automobile Radios
'If Tope Decks
Tubvs &amp; Slrhiconductors
All types of batteries &amp;

*

Chargers .

PHONE m ·2276 9.2..
Bradbury Rood
I mo.

HAIR REMEDIES
Stylist; Mark Mora, Dove
Cuthbertson, C1ndy Cuthbertson.

Custom k•tchens and appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin. electric, and
heating.

AND CUSTOMIZING
Re-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock, parts, etc.
Buy Guns 10%
AJ)ove Wholesale

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
992-7656

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS
Call Aller 4 P.M.
992-7656

10-9-1 mo.

8·20-tfc

New Hours:

Mon . 11 :007:00
Tues . 11 .00-5:00
11 :-8·00
Fri , 10:00-5:00

Thurs .

Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

PHONE 9'12·3021

For

II·U · Imo

•

bedroom newly con·
structed home
Is
welting for you. Near
town with a rustle 1.75
acre lot. New fireplac::e,

;:=========i;:::::====;===;-J-;:~~=-~;;.:;,~;:::;1 S4

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

full
basement;
1'h
boms. and only $42,000.
PRICE REDUCED Cute 2 bedroom nome In
Pomeroy wlm a nice kit·

• Backhoe

...

~..-

• Water, Sewer a.

NEW LilTING ........ Count;y home, 2 story, .. BR,

Gas Lines
'
a Dump Truck

basement, outbuilding, vlny~ siding, lrull trees.
Being offered at 125,000.

• Trencher

COMFORTABLE- 3 BR ranch, 1 mile off Rt. 7: '
Situated on 3 rolling acre•. Tllere Is • separate
garavo end Oilier. outbuildings. Priced In "$50s.

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992-7201

be

prosecuted

by

No Hunting or Trespassing
on the following: Dana C.
Durst and Pat Oshel.
4

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attemptJo
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In this
column. There will be no
c~arge to tne aclvertiser.
4 kittens, 2 black &amp; 1 calico,

1 yellow &amp; while. Call 446·
9542.

"'

•
I

'

,

MOBILE HOME -'Well kept I Reel~. Com·
plotwly furnished. t-•klng sn,ooo. Locatld
quiet street.

And Home Malnten•nce
1 Rooflot of all types

aSidinl
• Rtmodollnt

ACRES-

DoHleT.._fll.. . .

• rtueestlm•tes
e20 vn. txperience

~[8

10M

~SKINS

Pft. 949-2160 or 949-2412

'

Yard Sale Clbrf&lt;. Chapel
Rd. mi. from 160. Thurs.
thru Monday . . Antiques,
small appliances, &amp; misc.

Utility Buildinp

Tr1~1er

sites
&amp;
Driveways. Small jobs a

SiltS from 4x6 to 12X40

Thursday 9·3. Marilyn
Powell's. Vine St., Racine.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
lOX 54

JIM LUCAS

Oh.

Ph. 742-2753

D&amp;M

cQNTRIDORS

Reword. Caii.W.8182 '

1 Remodeling

eAiuminum&amp;

Rt~laMr

eAwnlng

Speclolist
NATHAN IIGGS
u Yrs.lxperlonct

a Roofing
a Pointing

SMITH NELSON

VInyl Sltllot
1 K lichen Cabinets

MO'IOISINC.
,_ai'IY, Oh.

Ph. 304-773-5131
Moson.w. vo.
10·8·1 mo. pd.

. P'ft. fll.l114

H ·11c

,,

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614-H2-2181
For Farm end
Home Delivery of
Gas
. Diesel
Heating 011.

13·14.

12
Wanted to Buy

9

WANT TO BUY Old fur·
niture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth swai.O,
256-1967 in the evenings.

CASH PAl D for clean, Iale
model used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, GAllipolis,

Ohio. Call446·2282.
Junk cars with or with out
motors, scrap metal, and
batteries. Call388-9303.

BUYING GOLD&amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything

stamped 10K, 14K, 18K and
dental golcl. Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or
anything stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis ...f.46-2691 or
992-205ot in Pomeroy.

BEDS· I RON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold. silver
dollars. ,wood ice boxes.
stone jars. antiques, etc .•

Complete
hOuseholds.
Write: M.D. Miller. Rl. 4.
Pomerov. Oh.·OrJ9H760.
.•&lt;
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 14" on largest
end. S12.SO per ton. Bundled
slab. $10.50 per ton.
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Springs
Rd.,
Pomeroy. 992-2689.
Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burke« Barber Shop, Middleport. 992·

3476.
furniture. New, used or an tique. Also buying glass,
china, gold, silver, coins,
watches. chains, etc. Martin's General Store, Mid-

PRICED RIGHT.

Rlnky

Dink

Basketball

FOUND: Big block dog.
Coli and ldentlly . 247-35&lt;11:
FOUND-White female Ger·

late Nov. and March. Musf
be over
ond hove some

:n

man Shepherd with red

supervisory or tel!chlng ex-

collar. Call675-2375.
--~----'----·•
REWARD-Ton billfold,
vlcl~lty of Pt. Pleasant.

perlence .
Apply
II
Gallipolis
Recreation
Dept., 518 Second Ave., by
Oct. 21.

Very Important ID. Phone
19.5-3586 evening&amp;.

Someone to live In &amp; care

Black, white and tan collie,

erea·off

Road,

on

Sandhill

medication.

Phone 895·3433.
Ylrd Sole
Garave Sole OCt. 12 thru 18
7

at Gilmer Kndtts rnldence
off 160 on Kerr Harrisburg
Rd. yellow houiO on lett.

lor christian man. Call 446·
4170 tor details or apply In
person ot «2 Jerrv St.,
Gallipolis.
Need baby . sifter around
Centenary. Coli beiWeen
9AM·2PM. .W.1081.
Nelli relief lady helper,
must stev over night. Call

1930.

'

financing

home for

1 betwt!en 6 end 1 .

3 bedroom house, 2 acreS,:,
baths, family room. Full
basement, garage. 9~·

2079.
On

Land

contract wtth

sm~ll down payment with

12 pet. interest on bale~ .
36'x.C2' garage. On Rt. ',1.,

Tuppers Plains. 992·2201.
LEADING

Creek

P...~­

Near Rutland feature~ )
cablns-15 dev. campsites, 3
shelter houses, 2112 acre
stocked lake, ALL on 12
acres! Gorgeous land on
paved
road.
$39,900.
POSSIBLE
no down
payment-Bargain priced!
Owner wants qu ir.k sale II
55 acre farm-House, bank
barn, nice land-Building

lots. 1 acre and up. AND In·

vestor's dream of 50 acrh

already platted tor building
lots. All adlacent Pomerqy
near intersection 7 &amp; 33.

Situations Wanted

E lim Resthome. Care for
handicapped, aged, or bed f;or more Information ·or
patient. Temporary or appointment call collect
limited care. Or continuous Thalma at Thelma Monhome with us. Equipped for lgomery Realty, Inc. l -6U3115-6740 or 385-7419.
wheel chair. 742·2266.

Will babysit in my home 1n
Racine area. Daytime
preferred. 9o49 -2079.
13

Small 'house in Harrlsei,(l-

vllle. $8,iloo. Owner wlll

llnance. Sl.OOO down, 12
pet. Interest. RemOdelid
inside. 61.4·928-4417. · ...

..
j

Insurance

...,

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage In Gallia county
tOr almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet Individual needs. Contact
Harry Pitchford, ,agent.
Phone.u&amp;-1..27 .

~

Milton Road, CarnA Conl~y.
2 year old, 3 bedcqpm

house, fully carpeted,
1 full and two and

baths,

yard

~

a half

landscaped

with large utility bulldlifg.
Assume 8 lfl percent loan.
675·6275.
.

Or rent-3 bedroom furnished home on Bud Chat-;~~M.®;;!(;~;;;.
. IJ&amp;";,. f]~~ on big level lot.
Group
Medical
for small business. as well
an individuals. Major 2 bedroom house on 1 ac~.
medical, basic hospital, &amp;
mites back of New Havin
group life Insurance compaved road, fully carbined to give you one of the
peted, self contained wat~r
best programs available.
and septic system. 882-3267.
very competative r.ates.
For more information:
Steve McGhee, ....ut-0818 or House-2 lots In Pomerov. ,
Ohio. $4000. Needs some •
446-0SS2,
repairs. 675-1186.

AUTO.MOBILE
SURANCE been

IN·
can- 32

celled?
Lost
your
operator' s License? Phone

9'12-2143
18

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI · STATE MOBILJ:
HOMES. Gallipolis. Yeor
end sale, price reduced,
used mobile homes. CAL,"L

Wanted to Do

446·7S72.

Will do babysitting in my
home, school children or
pre-school children, Rio 1968 12x60 mobile home, · 1
Grande school district. or 2 bdr, with or without
two add-a-rooms, exc.
Phone-446·3042 .
cond. 367-7610.
TV service calls. Call 99~
2034. Also used color TV for NEW LISTING 63Xl2 Vl~­
dale wllh 7•12 e•pen~o
sale.
living room. Like MW inside and out, carpeted
WILL do house cleaning throughtout, like new w04ct
304·675-4264.
burner, silver top awning,..2

bdr. Priced to sell last. Call
Will do babysitting. 675'
41192.

Johnson Mobile
Brokers, 446·35.47.

Experienced babysitter
will babysit In her home,
any age, any time. Phone

FRENCH CIT.Y MOBILE
HOME BROKERAGE
SERVICES Let us sell
YOUR mobile home. C'll
446·9340 or 675-6898 .

675-6201.

-·_, .........
....... .

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

Supervlsor·Mu&amp;.1'
have
basketball
knowledge,
should
be free most
evenings and Seturdeys

Letart

We are now accepting applications for waitresses
and
cashiers.
Apply
Hayseeds Resturant or call

675·3853 Mr. Lukacs.

Lost and Found

Rd. and Burkhart Lane.

1 446·80112.

MANAGEMENT
OP ·
PORTUNITY . We are

21

10-12-1

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From fht Smollost
H..,tor Cort to lilt
Llrl"f Rodlttor.

3 BEDROOM

north al 'Y'. Plenty of
children's clothes. Tuesday
and Wednesday, October

vlnclnty of 31 Portsmoulh

specialty.
Gu &amp; Water Lines

RN or LPN. r1 ·7 shift, full
or part tlme. Competitive
salaries, excellent fringe
benefits. Call Nancy Van·
Meter Mon.- Fri. 9·4:30. 992-

cons,lder

an appointment.

Office. PO Bo• 140, Spen·
cer. WV 25276.

2 kittens, 1 calico and 1
grey llger, 4 mo. old, litter Scrap metals, batteries,
trained. Call-446·3897.
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
Free kittens to good home, brokering. Yarper-Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
992-5367.
Eleventh Street. 675-5868.
Small female dog. Half Also Flea Market open
Welch Corgy. House broke, dally . Open MondayLoves children. 104 Spring Friday 1-5 pm.
Ave., Pomeroy.
8 week old Angora kittens,
and mother cat. Phone 675-

with $10,11110 down ond $500
per month. Call-446·1546 tor

will

seeking
qualified
in dividuals to train for
management positions In
Hard mans Home Centers if
Garage Sale Sat Oct. 17. 2
you are highly motivated,
mi. from HMC on Rt. 160.
New items, sweet potatoes, desire responsibility, per·
son a I
growth,
turnips.
professionalism, and are
willing to re-locate, send
Basement Sale. Delores M . your: resume in confidence
Aeiker .
1669
Lincoln to Stan Hardman. Hard·
Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio. 9- man's Home Center. Gen

NEED MONEY? I need

2 kittens, 2 cats, 1 spade,
long hair, all litter box
trained. Mess. phone «6·
0675 or see at 3 Garfield.

property In trade1 OWner

Bodyman needed to work
in Rutland. Apply in person
across from old Rutland
high school.

6606 .

Care Center .needs attendant for evening shift.
Prefer lady 30 or older. ApWhite Himlayan cat lost In ply In person. ,
·

All mineral rights, 4 'BR
, _ s some work, fruit trees garden space.
m1s tor $35,900. •

to

Call388·9075.

6

J9 ACRES -

OHIO
ROOFING

appliances.

Help Wanted
Haired kittens. 304· 11
Spring Valley Clothing

5-21·tlc

LETART
FALLS- Juit
~::
see
eppreclele,
llOOdrf&lt;luced
renlal to~~:~~~~-;;f'~~
in
comfortable starter lloftlo.

Male Plckense, 3 yrs. old.

Sizes
"From 30x30"

Ph.

Dishwasher.
some clothes.

1202 or 675-293S.

Farm Buildings
SMALL

1 Septic Systems

'

Misc. Merchandice

ALL STEEL

• E)(.C:avatlng

15, Friday Oct. 16. 10:00
AM to 4:00 PM. 33 neil Ave.

dleporl, Ohio. 992-6370.

Weds. 10,110·8.00

No oppo lnlm.nh nec:••10ry
m•rl~ llul -n ICurl S.Outy 1hop

Garage Sale Thursdav Oct.

? . Oct. 1318.

- - - - ---

·

JNnT,_. .........

sight 22 rifles.

Clothes, mostly coats,
dresses. Call «6·.4992 or 60
------------------4-------------------r------------------i------------------,Madl~n.

own farm of 21 acres
with a newly remodeled
4 bedroom home near
HarrisonvHie. Barn &amp;
other
buildings.

AI~ATIS ·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Colt tor frH siding
tsllmotos, 949·2101 or
949-2160.
No sundov Colla

COUNTRY LIVING IS
THE BEST, - On your

REALTOR
H.,ry E. Clllond, Jr.
ftW1tl

&amp; A lumlnum
SIDING

•• ltlutlful, Custom
lullt Gar1g11"

Pomeroy, Ohio·

bedroom home with new
gas furnace &amp; water
heater. Chain link fence
around yard at this
price. $19,.500.

A WORKING FARM Appx. 142 IICres w1m o
nice 3 bldroom home
plus a smell rentol unit.
All minerals except 3rd
coal. Appx. 60 acres
tillable. Bern &amp; out·
.jlulldlnvs.

at Bashan. Factory choke
12 guage shotgun &amp; open

A clean furnace saves
monE.&gt;Y, Ha.v e your furnace

1- No a.oo Die-sQI Ford

PICker

Fully Guarantited
22 Yrs. Experience
American and Most
Foreign Cars
TransmiSsion Exchange

Keep This Ad for
Future Reference

Fire

Garage Sale Friday SR 141,
2 houses beyond the Cen·
tenary sign on left, new and
used Items.

__..,....'----.:..--- ? ' 3 family yard sale. Rt. 2

9-JO.tk

10.12·1 mo.

Vol.

owner.

NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE - A neat

BUILDING '
OR
TRAILII!R LOT
Eastern Dls.t rlcl 1110'X2GO' with water,
electric. ond septic.
$6,000.

6747. Dally after 1 p.m.

No hunting or trespassing
on the pro~rty of E sta
Roberts, l!ong Hollow Rd.,
Rocksprings.

New Holl•nd, Bush Hog

bedrooms. $.49,000.

chen, patio and porch,
and cctllar area. S2.C,900.

supplies. Gene H lnes,
Amesville, Ohio. 614-448·

6:30 p.m. at lhelr building

SALES &amp; SERVICE

_Addon1ond
remodeling
_ Roollng onCI gutter

Ph. 843-4912

ss.oo Monthly

•Was hera
•Dryers
•Ranges
•Disposals
•Dishwashers
•Hot Woter Tonks

BOGGS

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

walk· in

-

due. S25. Must be paid
before H ·82.

match every Sat. night at

pantry, 1'h baths &amp; 3

prlvacy.$39,900.

Racine Gun Club Dues are

TRAPS and TRAPPING

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio

If Long Distance,
can Collect
9·21·1 mo.

Aller Aug. 3
Ph. 992-6564
10.12-tlc

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every s·un. starting
at 1 p.m. Factorv choke
guns only .

NOW

(SOHIO)

Dept.
sponsors a shotgun &amp; rifle

1972 BARON 12160.................. '7450

Bring Your Walnuts

THE STANDARD
OIL CO•.

WANT£0 TO BUY
SCRAP

Horses, ponies, horse
trailer, riding lessons. Hoof
Hollow 614-698-3290.

Racine

MOBILE HOMES
MODULAR TRADE-INS

$32,000.
IRGIL B. SR.~~
216 E. Stcor)d Street

No.

Rt. 2, Albany, Ohio

double wide home with
equipped kitchen plus
dishwasher, elec. heat,
storage building, woocl
burner, and nice tot.

General

Case

Mary Jane Talbott, 189 Ar·

Wanted to Buy

Great Location - Nice 3
bedroom home, largE.&gt;
li ving room w/ fireplace.
' dining room, kitchen.
enclosed front porch
pictu;:

lhe Meigs County Probate

SUNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING

MIDDLEPORT

~~'n

the estate of Terry 0.
Talbott, deceased, late of
189 Arbaugh Lane, Tuppers
Plains, Ohio 45783 .

OF FIDUCIARY

On Septemb&lt;!r 23, 1981, in

Court,

SUNRISE
HEATING&amp; '
COOLING
Tappan Recuperative

Public NofiCI

Public Notice

Homes for S1l1

31

TRAPPER We have a com·

· A'rea Code 304

Small investment, large returns, ·Sentinel Want, Ads
Public Notice

Profosslllrllll
Sorvlces

Plano tuning and repair~
Love vour neighbor tune
your Plano. Bill Ward',
Wards Keyboard . .-.. ..on,

Pick up onct

.Georges Creek Rd .
446-0294•.

Pomeroy
985-Chester
34J-Porttat1d
247-Letart Falls
949- Racine
742- Rutland

•

end

delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

614
m - Middleport

446-Gallipolis
' 167-Cheshire
lii-Vinton
24~Rio Grande
2S6--Guyan Dist.
643-Arabia Dlst.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You're a good organizer today,
but you may be a poor delegater.

Announctments

SWEEPER

or

yoU mav involve yourself In
something whict'l has hidden
cpsts. You should also avoid

'

Ohio

~

Public Notice

. -.

14, 1981

Business

delivered, $5,500. Frenoh

City

320 acres oil &amp; gas lease for
sale In Athens County, Oh.
3 wells in Clinton, 1 well In
Berea, 1 well has rods &amp;
tubing, make some oil from

Clinton. 1 well has lublog,
all Wf!lls have 4 1/2 casing,

2·100 barrel oil tanks. 1 oil
&amp; gas separator . Full
working interest lease,
lease has space for 4 more

· Mobile 1 Homes

Brokerage Services,

9340 or 675-6898.

44-

1981 PATRIOT (Ne"')
14•70, 3 bdr .• garden tub,
front klfchen, total electriC,

furnished,

WARRANTY,

delivered and set, $13,995.

French City Mobile Hom••
Brokerage Services, 446·

9340 or 675·6898.

;

Call502·68~·1055.

Profitable retall·hardWare
store for

sate.

For

ilf-

formetlon ca II 614-373-4283.
22

~

1968 NEW ENGLAND
12x60 2 bdr., 1112 balh•.·olr
cond . , total eletrl~.

Opportunity

wells.

Honte

Money to Loan

CLEAN USED MOBIL};
HOMES
KESSEL'IS
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST. GALLI POLIS, R:f
35. PHONE 446·3868.
,

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA-VA Fln'ancina Loan Rep. Cookie

1971 MASTERCRAF:T
12x65, 2 bdr., 2 full bath&amp;,
gas completely furnished,
dellvtred $6,995. Fre~h
city
Mobile
Homos

23

'1340 or 675-6898.

Kr a utter (304)67S.:U73.
Proflstlonel
Services

HARPER Adull Care Cen·
ter-provldl11g lhe personal
care your elderly need In a
home like atmosphere.
Vacancies now avalllble.
304-675-12'13.

Brokerage

Services ..,..

;

1975 PENTHOUSE 12x70,' 2

bdr., electric, patio door,
furnished, front llvlrJ:g

room. French city MabQe
Homes Brokera91 Strvlces

446·9340 or 675-6898.

,

�Pa e--12-The Dally Sentinel
32

' MObile Homes

41

tor Sill

1972

Arlington

home.

good

mobile

cond..

fur·

nlture included practically

· new, 55.500. tall
alter6PM.

2-I.H~

bdr., gas heat, turn:, $4,900.

Call388-9692.
1977 70xl .., Govenor mobile

home. 3 bdr., 1 112 baths,
oWner has moved to
Florida priced to sell quick.
Mobile

Home

Brokers, 446·3547.
1976 New Moon 65x14, gas,
2 bdr .• 2 window a'ir con·
ditloners, skirting and
steps, extra clean, $7,995.
Johnson Mobile Home

Brokers, 446·3s.t7.
12x60 mobile home $4,900 in
Jackson. Call 1-61.4-2863258 .

12 12x60 mobile home, 2
bdr., 3 acres of land,
garage &amp; front porch. Must
sell immediately. 388·9747,

510.000.
New 81 model selling at in·
voice. Used 1-4x64, 2 &amp; 3

bdr., $7,000 .
Mobile Home,
Oh .. ~ · 9662.

44

Houses for Rtnt

Kanauga
Kanauga,

Did you know 1het yotrcan
still own your own home for
less than SlSO: a month?
We're not talking abOut e
mobile home but an Ohio
Building Code approved
house. See our All
American Model at AmPak
Plaza or Rt. 50 West of
Athens or call 992·1034 or
698-8111 for information.
For those hard to find
Mobile Home &amp; camper
parts and accessories. see
our large inventory . (We
carry Coleman Furnace
Filters). At Rt. 124 Miner·
sville. Kingsbury Home
Sales tnc. or call 992-5587 .
1971 Oarian 1:2 x 65, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
ex:par'\.10. 3 bedrooms. 1973
utopiiJ 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B •11 S
Sales, tnc . 2nd and ··viand
Sts. Pt . Pleasant, WV.
Phone 675-.U24.

House In Centervi lle, newly
remOcleled, ref. regulred,

Pleasant ond Gallipolis.
614·4441-8221 or 614·245·94-l.

2

bedroom

,•

2 bedroom h'bme in· Letart
Falls, dining room and
fireplace, carpeted. range,
refrigerator included·. $145.

HOME.

1969 trailer 12 x 65 with 1973
2 room addition, dishwasher, bar stools, underpinning, 2 porches. 882-

2416.
1966 New Moon 2 beclroom
trailer. 12 x 55. Phone 615·

2439 .
1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, un·
derplnned. 675-4064 .
1959 mobile home, 8
must sell. 458-1825.
JS

&gt;C

45,

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS· Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
utilities available, $300.
down, owner will finance,
call after 3 p.m ., 256·6413.
Would vou l ike tD own a
home of your own. We

didn' t have 510,000 .for a

down payment nor $5,000
nor even S1 ,000. Do what we

41

Houses for Rent

4 bdr. 2 112 bath bl level
with pool off Rt . 35. Call
Wiseman

Real

Estate

Agency . .u6·3643 .

Furnished Rooms

Space for Rent

from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide-abeds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, S175. lo $295 ..

Lamps from $18. to 565. 5
pc. difettes from $79 .. to
$385, 7 pc .. $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs.

$219 up to $495. Desk mo.
Hutches, 5300. and $375.,

446·0322

dryers,
ranges.
pliances,

Furnished, adults only, no
pets. You pay utilities.
Phone 675·2535.

Ave., 446-7398.
FOR SALE : Dinette set
$45, good cond.; window wcaslnQ $20; Call ~ · 03'11 at·
ter4p.m.

2 bedroom mobile hDme.

675"6512.
2 bedroom mobile hDnle.

675·4045,
:===:====::;==

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

256·6520.

use'd

refrigerator,

$50.

Phone 67.5-3541.
Mobile home in city central
air and heat, adults Dnly,

10ft. x 6ft. brand new farm

dep. 446·0338.

trailer. 5250.675-5774.

2 BEDROOM apartment,
HUD accepted. 675·5104.

16 horse power Sears riding
mower, e&gt;&lt;. cond. Ca II 256-

Western pony saddle, like
new. Ptlone 675·1314.

Full size bed with dresser.
very reasonable. Call 388·

Livestock

992·7104 after 7PM.
Caii256·M13 . .

Discontinued cabinets. top,
stove. hood, sink. $1200.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 675·

Gravely tractor &amp; mower,

5750. Call alter SPM 367·

2318.

truck.

0482.

Jumbo Bobwhite Quajl, 6
week old tQ adult slzes.·614-

1975 Chevy

v,

ton truck

Bred Herford Cows for
sale. Contact Harley Rice.

1977 F· lOO Ford Ranger lh
ton. new tires, original
59,000 miles. Had excellent
care. 302 automatic. Power
steering·.brakes. 698·6275 .

firewOOd.

Single

toad 535.00. 4 toads $100,
and 10 load $200. tall 256·
1471.

667-3369.

Club Calf Show
Quality steers
F FA, or fre&lt;izer
Friday, OctOber
at 6:00 pm.

---;;:=====:-Building supplies

5:;5

Building materials, block.
sewer pipes, wln1
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.

Firewood $40 truck load or
$35 truck load you pick It
up. S60 cord delivered. Cal!
446·4745 or 446·1630.

Wells, WV. By Wood CO&lt;Jnty

For sale wood &amp; coal stove.

Raccon

site on

Creek. Close to

Ohio River. $500 clown.
Owner will finance. 614-256-

1216.

Beef • Improvement

Assoc. 304·485-6032.

Call245·512l.

with topper. 6 cylinder, fair

Scottsdale , 10 1977 model
Chevy pickup, VB engine,
one owner, good tires,
automatic:. new brakes.

in · concrete

driveways,

sidewalks,

~atlo,

1977

Chevy

pickup,

Auto for Sale

. 1979

Scolsdale

x

4

I

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home

(jj) 'iJI

City

Painting

Ford

Pinto

one

owner.3 dr. runabOut with
sport package, 4 spd., AM·

POODLE GROOMING :
Call Judy Taylor at' 367·
7220.

FM 6·track, 36,000 miles.
Asking 53,400 or deal for
Cutlass or Monte Carlo.

Call367-0478

DRAGONWYND
CATTERY · .KENNEL. AKC
black Chow puppies, CFA

75 MU$tana4cyl, AM·FM 8·
track, 62,000 miles, $1,800.
Call4.j6·4886.

Himalayan, F'ersian and
Siamese kittens. Call 4463844 after 4 p.m.

1976 Dodge Aspen standard
transmission, 2 dr.• 6 cyl .•

HILLCREST KENNEL

make me an otter. Call4-16·
4328.

Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.

DOber·

mans. Call446·n95 .

1971

Buick,

good cond.,

fully equlped, very

Call ~·4191.

----------

Jeanie's Pel Shop New
hours 11 -5, closed Wed. &amp;

4.j6·46JO.

.

Sun. Call44&lt;1·7920.
l4 ft. aluminum bass boat,
15 hp motor. trailer,
trolling motor, swivel
seats, best offer. Phone 675·

For sale poddle dog, gray &amp;
black. Call4.j6·1945.
'

2039.

1 walker coon clog. 3 yrs.

low

miles, price S1, 150. Phone

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

old, male, 5100. Call 388·
9809.

Purebred
English
Shepherd puppies. Great
watch and stock dogs. Call

614-247·2161.
Toggenburg Mubbln doe,
will kid March 1982. Phone
45lH514.

Trumpet

Wltn

case, excellent condition,

$125. Call4.j6·4327.

915-.a56.
;

'{qu H/&gt;116

Bnd fleas control. Free ·
estimates, Bill ThomaS.

CA'Jin6S
~

VICE Steam &amp; or pressure
wash · trucks, trailers,
mobile homes, farm equip·
ment, etc. Phone 388-9376

I

•

or 4441·3829.

ANNIE
Service.

•••
'

Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl

882-2079.
RON'S Television Service.

'MEU.,NOT K&amp;UY,

THE PliYSI06HOMY OF
~T l'liVILE5 AHD INLYIJO~I
tS SUOt lliAT IT

' '

Specializing In Zenith and

IINMIE~I

UH.E A

•
'

l

-S'fiLL, YOU
HOI'! flti'IOHE Hl'6
THEHS/RT TO
THE6E 6EIIT!.E
CR.EAnJKEG ••

..'
.,.

l

.,'
•

stump removal. 675·1331.
Dave's Appliance Repair.
dryers, plumbing, electric, general han-

4, Washers,

.,'

dyman. Phone 30H76·m1
or67H689.

ALLEYOOP

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
For sale 1978 Chevy van perlenced mason, rooter.

WELL, wa.L! VOU

EIAIIUER ~y I AAD A RUN· IN
· ~ "COUPU: OF TURKS, AN' l
11)01( ONE OF lli~IR OUTFlTSf
'1WCI'S HOW Z....
.

partlcally

$4,000. Phone 4-16·9357.

MUST BE MADAME
EPURE!

(
'

1980 Jeep, excellent con· .s ured. 304-576·2010.
dillon. 675-5643.
CARPENTRY,
home
building &amp; remodeling, 304·
74
Motorcycles
675-2440.
All used bikes drastically
reaucea tor Immediate MOBILE .
HOMEs'
clearance. Betz Honda MOVED, REASONABLE.
Sales, Upper· Rt. 7, 576·2711 or 576-2866.
Gallipolis. 44&lt;1·22Ml.

I'm just not
readll

Are . high Interest rates
motorcycle, keeping yqv from a new

up

m.LJ

\
'

10:21
10:30

75

CARTER'S PLUMBING
Motors for Sale
AND HEATING
tor. Fourth and Pine
$2,800. alter 4:00PM. 379· u ft. John Boat, 57" beam,
2726.
4.5 h.p. Mercury Motor, Phone ~·3888 or 4-16·4477
trolling motor &amp; battery,
Excavating
1978 Chevrolet Chevette, 4 oars &amp; life jackets. Like 13
spd .. $2,400. Phone 367-0262. new. $1,000. Phone 742-2131. 750 and 1000 gallon
PLASTIC septic tanks.
Auto Perts
State and County ap·
1976 Grand Prix. Call 4441· 76
&amp; Accessories
proved. Total weight 300
2666.
,tHARLIE'S SALVAGE ·· lbs. ·Haul In your pickup

miles. $4,500. 949·2608.

I MORRI,SON'S Auto sales.
HendersoncWV. Phone 675·
1574 or 675-2881.

1978 Mustang I h • cylinder,
4 speed, am·lm radio tape
deck, ac, 38,500 , mllea,
$2500. 304·937-3244.
1979 01&lt;11 CuHass Supreme,
loaded. 67.5-4017.

1974 Dort Swinger, gooc1
condition, 1100. Aller 5 pm
4511·1728.
1978 Novo. 1981 Harley
Davidson. 675-4824.
·

77

pur-

1975 Comet 102, -.1 condillon. Call AJ•IGS. 1ft
Bob LIWit. Camp C-y.

'

A60l

~LL TOOK
ME 10 LUNCH.
15 AIIYTHING
WIWNG W11H

fromaatereo
wllh aeam'a like a good
one until the store It held up
during the broadceat. (Repeat)
'The Bin go Long Traveling
All -Stare And Motor Kings'
1976 Stars: BIRy Dee Williams,
Jamea Earl Jon ea. A pitcher for
the Negro National League in
the1030'slaaveahlateamand
triea to aet up hit own team.
epeat)
; ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
MOVIE ~DAAIIAI"' "Tlle

THAT"

Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric ShOp,
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

.

Duality ,Au-y &amp; Point
Gener•l H1ulln1.
wor)&lt;. Insurance work 15
welcome. Sunroofs In· JONES BOYS WATER
stalled from $200-$230. Auto SERVICE. Call 367·7471 or
Trim Centwr, 4.j6·1HII.
367·0591.
::===:=:::::=::;:::===
71
Callllllnt
M. H. Rel!!llr
IN
lqulp1111111
MOBILE home skirting,
Shalla travel traitor, $700. 70&gt;&lt;14 from $220. to $495.
St~. rtf, &amp; alnk Included.
K &amp; K Mobile Hom.,
Call-9025. ·
Pt. PINoanf, WV
675-3000

(j)). ABC NI!WBNIGHTUNE
Anchotod by Tad Kopper.
11:35 (I) MOVIE •(ADVENTURE)

BARNEY

'

FALL SPECIAL Hove a
machlfle polished &amp; wax JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
lob. $50, wax only S30. Auto N. air condition service,
commercial, lnduatrlal .
Trim Clnt.r, .u.l-lHII.
Phone •2·2079.

DID I{OU KNOW
VORE APERN WUZ.
ON BACK'ARDS,

ZELDV?

•• ~

MV LITTLE
B.ESSIE 15
TERRIBLE
SHV

'IEP ·- I ALWAVS
TIE IT THAT·A·WAY
COMPANY
COMES,

Guett: Sammy Davia, Jr., Jean

~

,.h.(60mlnl.)

MCHAL.f'B NAVY
MOVIE ·!ROMANCE I "

~-wherein Time"

1180

,_

-~

.

Yesterday's I Jumbles : UNITY ABBOT O~POSE WALNUT
AnsWer: The king decided to have se~eral court
lasters so he could keep this - .

•''

-·

..
....

HIS WITS ABOUT HIM

.,·

,..
.

BRIDGE
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Here Is a badly bid hand
lrom 1he1980 Olympiad . The
bidding in the box occurred
when France held th~ NorthSouth cards.
Hamilton, si1tlng West.
made a rather unusual
vulnerable heart overcall

and Passel I. sitting Easl , got
into the act by bidding two
diamonds.
This really should have
helped the French since it
gave their South player a
chance to bid three clubs
competitively. From tl'\en on
bidding proceeded to five
clubs with North cue-bidding
in both red suits. North
might well have bid the club
slam. but the East-We::;t
bidding caused _lilm to tear
bad breaks In ali suits, so he
settled tor game .
South won the diamond
lead in dummy, played ace-·
king of trumps to find that
suit breaking . Then he went
after spades and wound up

laking all 13 tricks .
This represented one IMP
gain for France . At the other
table, Wolff and Hamman
had one of their rare. bidding
misunderstandings
and
landed in four spades, with

NOB TH

I 0· U-81

+AI08S4

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tAKH
+9 4

.'

EAST
+QJ 7
10
tQIOI876

WEST
"QI16132

"K

+QJ

+as

+963

tt

SOUTH
+K2

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• 32

+H107132

Vulnerable: East·West

Dealer: South
We1l

Nortb

• ·
Eall

.... -...

' 2+

'"
Pa,.

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

'

' " '

Opening lea~: tt

South as declarer . A
diamond was opened and
Hamman
played
three
rounds of trumps . The suit
broke and a heart came
back . He won and proceeded ·· ·' ·
to duck a club to guard
•·
against a 3-1 club break and , , . ··~
wound up making lust four
spades.

t - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - -... .

~Sit•"•,(
by THOMAS JOSEPH

·ACROSS

Z Slaughter

I Turn inlonner
8 Line to the
audience
11 Provide lrith
a quallly

3 Totes up
4 Mouthful
for bossy

5 A Greek
furniture

12 Hinder
13 Walk
like baby
15 Tee's
predecessor

!&amp;Harry-

of ''The

. ' -. ·,

'&amp;Style of

7 Discrimi·
. nati!)g

&amp;Japanese
slalesman 21 Saucy

33 Particle

9 Study
ZZ Caligula's
10 Work unit
robe
14 One. (Ger.) 23 Russian
17 Topic for
river

Judge
Sirica
19 Pelt
20 Nelsse

tributary

34 Austen novel

35 Pace

,
38 French wave • •
37 Shea
·

.Z4 Pumice
Stadiwn
Z7 Fruit medley athlete
29 "Folsom
Prison"

singer

.

38 Nigerian
39 Traitor
40 Nothing

'.•

..

Z8 111 -at
. the office"
Z9 Secret
30 Winglike

31 French soul lo.+-t--'
3Z FriGht
sound
34 The big "I"
37 Dustin

Hoffman
film (1976)

41 Muse
of poetry
4Z Fearful
a Tribal
symbol
44 Gladden

DOWN'
1 Folksinger
Seeger

~cM&lt;od by Ted Koppel.

(jJ).

LOVE BOAT Two

awtngera vfe lor crutae director
JulleMcCoy'aafteetlon; and an
ownwofelforapairehopeteela
outclaued when he meet a a
movie etar who hat long been
lcloi.(R-t; 70mlno.)o

12:10
.\ .

form th$ surprise answer, as suggested by the above ~rtoon .

(I) ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE

LOWEEZV

.,

l

.JACK lENNY

LOVI! lOAT Two owlnoero

vie tor crulee director Jutlt
McCo~·· affection; tnd an
owntrofeutorepatrthopefMII
outolaaaed when he Matta a
rncwle atar who haalong been

~

PEANUTS

MIdol. (Aipeal; 70 •lno.).
1:;: 11) ca'~=OW

014, NO!

1•

I mP'OWMiientl
11
"-·
JIM MARCUM Roofing
-'lng and aiding, 3D
y.., IICPtf'l.-. Free MOWRIYS Ur.:lslory Rt.
esllmatn. RemOdeling. 18011124. Pf. IN~nt, 304·
675-4154.
.
Ca11MI·NS7.

•

1:~
a:DO

'

'

A' X Y D L B A A X R
LONGFELLOW

.

II

One loiter simply otandJ for ano1her. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters. •
apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all · •
hints. Each day the code letters are dil!erent.
, •
.•

coma doru'1naltveconoert

QJNBDC

.....

MSGVD

Nl OOIIMODDRIIIN

E

naelromtlloAia-

LaiY-1.
OP IIILI'f

IILIIYI

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8ACHILOII PATIII11

CONCIII'I' Buperllfoup 'Tha

'...
.

CRYPT.OQUOTES

n

11Y UTTLIIIIAliGII!

· t:tD

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It;'

VAGQQDJC

T•TI)(:OABT

Ul!!!!!l•l!a
.
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTE.Y SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Golllpolls.
446-7133 or 4.j6·1133.

I

"D1rby'1 Rang.,."

12:00 .TMETONIGHTSHOW

17

under 1300. Call 1-71&lt;1-Nf.

holllr to

Auto Rll!!'lr

LEFT SOME TIME

tJ

Now arrange the circled leMers lo

(Answers tomorTow)

ZZ Univ.in La.
Z5 Low, neap
or ebb
Z8 Spellbind
Z7 Apple juice

Qr&lt;!liJI" t -

SEWING Machine repairs,
Fiberglass topper for Dat- service. AuthoriZed Singer

sun, $100. 675·1186.

l 71fi£P CALLING
YOU THEK'E, BUT
CONNIE' SAIP YOU

93. 286·5930.

4, Bx15 In white steel spoke EDWARD'S Backhoe and
rims, 6 tugs, exc. cond., fit 'Dozer Service Specializing
leep or Chevrolet, 5125. In septic tank. 675·1234.
tall4.j6·9465.
BACKHOE and Septic tank
Car lift for garage, $.400. 202 Service. LIK'ry Slden·
angle plug turbo heads fOij. Stricker. 675-SSIO.
small block, SlOOD. 197J
Ollis for parts, $110. Phone 84
Electrical
576·2602.
&amp; Refrll!r•tion

1t1r0u1111 oowrnment ......
d l - y on
chaM.

WHERE ON

EIIR111 ·HAVE
)t)IJ """N ?

).uto pa~ts, auto repair, truck. Ron ,Evans Backhoe
wrec:ker ..., ser:t.~ce, buy Service, located 3 miles
automobiles, radiators and South of Jackson on St. Rt.

-nment surplus can
lind trucks available

0241. OpenU lloUra for.,_

W!IINIE/

....
.' .
,...
"

II Karate-

11:05
11:18
11:30

WINNIE

,.

IOLP 'TO lAKE
A REA~ SEAl.

t I I I JK I I I I I I)

AnsWer:

Third. Man''

10:18
11:00

Boatulld

batteries. 4.j6·7717.

IROTTA~

17 Cyst

&amp; HNting

WHAi He DIP
WHEN HE WAf&gt;

.(D

Slara : Jaclyn Smith. Jam~a
Franclacua.
.(l)llm MR. MERLIN
(I) JUST ANOTMER MISSING
KIDian Parker Investigate&amp; the
gr'ualing ordeal of an ~ttawa
family' a attempt to find their
miaalng eon. After determining
hla death, and finding hi a killer.
they"' confronted with &amp;he
woret horrorDfall, the A.merk:an
k:lal syatem. (90 mlna.)
IIAMBUN'
8:05
MOVIE ·(COMEDY!'"
11
AIJJ..Wedn..clay"1166
8:30 .llJIJmWKRPINCINCINNATI Johnny get I carried away
when tie mluea out on an
Important bet and smashes the
tranemilterthathaaaterrorrst's
bomb
planted
In
it.
onclualon)
8:88
CBN UPDATE NEWS
g:OO
700 CLUB
.
THE COMMODORES IN
CONCERT Supergroup 'The
Commodores' In a live concert
performence from the A.laddJn
l:ktt.Un!Jia Veo••• llJ CIGl SPECIAL MDVIE
PRESENTATION 'Tha Two
Llvel Ot CarDiletner' 1981
Stere: Meredlth.Bex:ter Birney.
Don Johnson. Robert Webber.
A. fDrmer call girlie manipulated
by the pollee Into resuming her
old protaaaion. (2 hra.)
1HJ ON IEINCI HUMAN Hollad
· byEricSevaried,thiadocumentary tocuaea on the behavioral
attrlbuttl ofman:kind. Queeta
inc:lude Judith Blegen of the
Metropolitan Opera, E'la
Fitzgerald, paychlatrlst David
Hambtro and Llnua Pauling,
chemiat and Nobel Laureate.
(1_0 mine.)
0:30 C1J BOARD AND CARE Two
mentally handicapped young
people, played by vlcima of
Down'aSyndrome, reach out to
each other for companionship
only to tie aeparatt.d by their
fam/Uaa, In thia award winning
c;lr_amaz.
10:00 CJ) MOVIE ·!COMEDY)"
"North Dlllllo Forty" 1170
(I) JOHN CALLAWAY INTER·
VIEWS 'Or. Armand Hammer',
82, talks about how he madehla
varloua fortunes, and about hie
&amp;·year aojourn in the Soviet
Union In the ~01. when he
:
~be•r:~:,-:-Lenen. (80 mlns.)
10 20

'•

H &amp; M CLEANING SER·

·1978 Honda
,350, low mileage, like new. home? Then put a new look
Call 304-372-6390, Ripley, on your present one. We do
1981 Plymouth Horlzen yYVA.
all types of custom building
Miser, 4 dr., 4 spd. trans.,
and
remodeling.
For
AM radio, exc. cond, 55:200. 197~ Honda ..SO, good con- quality,
professional ser·
4.j6·Q.499 ask for Phil.
dition. 5600. 4511·1931.
vices call: Terry Gray 895·
3386 or John Wamsley 773·
1910 Cutlass Brougham all 1973·350 Honda Scrambtef. 5527.
'!Xtra's, exc. cond. eall 444- good condltiO(I . .S450. After
1
1970.
I
5:30 call675· 1780.
12
Plumbing
1978 Plymouth Volare, 6
cvl ., automatic, power
steering, air condition. Call

IFIRMONj
I KX:

NATIONAL LEAGUE
CHAIIliiDNSHIP SERIES NBC

~~·
JACQUELINE
BOU~ERKENNEDY1~81

~

).,

' ' ~· I

f '

llJ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

30~

_,'

~j=ORD
A~ SDN
~JtUPOATE NEWS
Sport a Jf'ro~ldea coverage of
Game lin the National League
Championship Series from the
home atadlum of the Weatern
Ohtlakm Chempion; teametobe
mno..nced. (3 hra., 30 mine.)

lHA.T

vans&amp;4W.D.

198:: Buick Century exc.

WANTED·Late'
model
Volkswagen Bottle In gOOd
condition. 4.j6·2072.

Farm Equipment

73

cond. Call ~U310 after 5.

Toggenburg Mubbln doe, ·
Lumber. 1 x 8 inch x 8 ft. -16 1 will kid March 1982. Phone
1976 Ford Torino, very
ft. poplar sheathing, air- 458-1514.
!lood cond. $1,500. 1974 vw
Daaher, exc. ~ond. $1,500.
dried. Millwood Inc . Near :===~;==:;==:;::::==
742-2134.
the intersection of US 33 s7
Musical
and WV 2. 304·273-2522
lns.truments
days, or 273-5398 evenings.
1 ,1978 Sclrocco VW. 26,000

BUNDY

lock out's.s67H397.

(;0 'lbU
K~

toll ~·2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rbdent, spider,

custonized, carpenter, , electrician,
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304-6751977 Ford Van. 6 cyl. auto. 2088 or 67HS60.
·trans. am-fm-tape, good
cond. 52,500: 992·3743.
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
1979 Bronco. Low mileage. Pumps Siiles and Service.
A. C., c.c., p.b., p.s., am-fm, 311H9s.3802.
CB. 949-2196 alter 4.
Stark's Tree Trimming. ln-

Boarding and grooming.
AKC Gordon
setters.
English Cocker Spaniels.

lN'VU-'

ceilings. Ph. 367-7784 or 367·
7160.

5;';6c==::;P"'ec:;t=sf;:o=r~S::;:a;:le==

Reg.

BORN LOSER

305 F &amp; K Tree Trimming,

am-fm,

7:38
7:88
8:00

Reslclentlal, commercial,
Interior, exterior, paper
hanging, and texured

LOCKSMITH

DCDWANY
DICK CAVETT SHOW
RICHARD SIMM!)NS

~LTING
ENTERTAINMENT

9326.

1978 Dodge Omnl4 dr., hat·
ft.. $7.00, 4 ft. by 12 fl., chback, automatic, power
$8.00. Tuppers Plains, steering, excellent cond.
O~io . 614·667-3085 or 614· . Ph. 245·5617 alter 5PM.
66].3302.
1979

air,

~rv~ASKEDFORIT
ANOTHI!RUfE

7891.

French

&amp;!tow Q, • .,,

~or Borge.

loftlll"
'Ill
FAMILY FEUD
~ILAVERNE
AND SHIRLEY

maintalnance
and
remodeling. Phone 388-

.......

tJ

() (

MDVII·(DliAMA)"

$2295.00. Phone 67.5-3054.
71

!SlYMIIOLlll

basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 367-

automatic,

Also AKC

WHAT HE HAS 111/TI

priced below blue book Motorola, Quazar, ana
listing, Lionel L. Smith, 905 house calls. Phone 576·2398
or44&lt;1-2454.
Mossman Circle. 675·3222.

engine, ps, pb, .autamatlc,

:.:-:.;..~: :o~t: ~:: :: ,

Twenty
gauge
metal
Girls clothing in good sheets. Enamel, porcelain
cond ., Junior size 7 and 9. coated. Many building
Priced reasonable. Call uses. Will not rust. Sizes 4
·u. by 8 ft .. $5.60. 4 ft. by 10
388·9809.

Call256-1427.

and Sale.
for 4·H,
projects.
16th, 1981
United

Livestock Market, Mineral

bric~.

JOiln DHre GO Dozer comDiet.ly 1'8bullt with 6 way
hydraulic b l - and winch.

f

dump

Reduce safe and fast with
GoBese tablets or capsules
and E-Vap water pills at
Fruth Pharmacy.

For sale Ford tractor, 101
Power Maat.r. First Clshape. Call388-11909.

For rent
very
nice 2 cen·
bdr. 2 bedroom furnished ·~·~
lloUM,
fUllY
carpeted,
tral air, gas, garage•. .u.&gt;- 992·S.CU, 992-5914 or 304· .
1492 be!WM·' 12 noon 2.W.
Thun. &amp; 12 .-n Sal. Thl' ·
_
-"only.
~rtmenll. 675-SSoll.

.'

For'd

For sale G.E . automatic
washer, real nice, $90.00.
Hoover washer &amp; spin

For sale HN Ford trac·
tors, set of 217 plows
&amp;cultlvarors with thltldt.
Can be seen at Oak Hill
VIllage Trading Past or
caii61&lt;1-612-70U aft.r 7PM.

I

1971

cond. 949-2608.

John Deere 3300 combine.
Massie Ferguson 300 com·
blne. New ldea·2 row
picker, Oliver 2 row picker.
Now Idea '1 row picker.
Super M Farmall and 2 row
mountea picker. Ru"
Brothers Farm Machinery.
St. Rt. 139, 6 mlln South of
Jackson. Call286·2731.

Lovely country home, con-

tires, $1,900. Phone 388·
9809.

98H34.5.

41

venient to Gallipolis &amp; Rio Available. 1 bedroom opt.
Grande, dep. req., 216-734· lor rent. Contact VIllage
Manor Apts., Middleport • .
3734.
992·7787.

57,000 actual miles. new

Firm $10. tall675·3638.

They'll Do It Every Time

1

ton new tires, orglnal 59,000
miles, had excellent care,
302 automatic, power
steering &amp; brakes. Call698·

53200. Caii61H85·4395.

1972 Volkeswagen, 67.5-2864
or882·2Ul.

pay utilities. Ca.ll 992·2288 ,

1977 F·lOO Ford Ranger 112

Fuel oil stove &amp; 200 gal.

Fruit
&amp; V!!!etOblas

peted. drapes, air con- 1 bedroom apts. ~Vam•'ble·
ditioning,
furna ·ce, at Riverside Apts. Equal/
basement, well Insulated, Opportunity Housing. Call
storm doors &amp; windows, 997'7721.
large , lawn, stove and
refrlg., furnished, wood
burning stove, 1 mi. fr:om 2: bedroom apartment on ·
Gallipolis. Ref . and Dep. Spring Ave, Pomeroy. Par-~
reQuired. $250.00 month. tlally furnished. $170 you

·

tankl Call256·6413 .

One

St.,

· ' ·304-372,6390,
"" ' "·
Cell
Ripley,·
WVA

Lamp and lamp repair. An·
tiques and reprOductions.

hitch. Paid 5800, will sell
for $550. 675-5774.

2 bdr. upstairs duplex,
stove · &amp; refrigerator ln-

dump
ft.
bed, twin holst, well equipped low mlle•ge eu cond

16

1976 Chevy •·wheel drive,

511. bus hog partially new.

9932.

Brand new disc for 3 point

2nd floor furn. efflcency
apt., adults only, no pel~.
Call446·0957.

ll:i ton

bull. Gentle, $600. Phone 6275.

feed. 67H098 .

Grande. Call 1-682·7056.

after6p.m.

er steer, in",
•
hog, plows,

3 yr. old pruebred Hereford

Kor.: _r whelJtllghts, leather
clog collar, leads, training
scents, breaking scents,
brass name plates, dog

for rent In R:lo

VIne

paN

63

6413.

beclroom starts at S152.00
per month. Two bedroom
starts at $188.00 per month.

bdi. apt.

M-50

1 oak fir.lshed desk. Call

delights. Bob's Market,
Mason, wv. Open 7 dayt.
Phone 773·5721.

'"-::""====="--

after 7PM.

Ferguson

256·6413.

RCA Whirlpool washer and'
dryer. Phone 675·1393 .

7941.

Furnished apts. 2 bdr ..
$230., utilities paid, near
Hli!C, adults. Call 446·4-416

Massey

Chevy 2

truck, hea'vy duty

harrow boom, must sell
due to heath. For casb only
price $4,500. Caii245·910S.

--::::::;;::;::::::;;~~;;~=
MisC ~ Merch"andlce

.25 in . color- TV console
Quaszar, SJOO. Call 446-

Farm Equipment

breakers, other misc. Call
675-5873.

si

CB.TV. Radio
Equipment

61

tractor,
disk, bush

New Crop Apples· Red and
Golden Delicious, Winesap,
Rome Beauty, Grimes
Golden and JohnathanRetail and Wholesale, any
quanlty available. Also
fresh Apple Cider, Pumpkins, homemade Apple
Butter and more produce

52

Apartmemt
tor Rent

in Gallipolis. Dep. &amp; ref.
req. Call ~-025.&lt; after 5.
'cluded. 15
"-411polls.
NICE HOME, fully car·

fl

refrigerators,
Skaggs
Ap 1918 Eastern

Misc. Merchandlce

Horse mowing machine.
Maytag wringer washer.
100 amp fuse box with

For sate 19' color TV, $125.
4 cu. ft. cement mixer with
motor. $215. 300 gal . fu~J
tank, ' $20. 6 HP mini bike
motor, sso. :20' boys bike,

52,850 . Caii44&lt;1·928S.

1~;::~::::;:;:::~~~==T;:::~;:~~~~§1 1976

For sale Sears fireplace,
used 1 winter . Call379-2584.

26' TROUTWOOD travel

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCIOS - washers,

New Haven, WV. Ca ll 882·
2793.

o .. ..,,.., • .

54

trailer and camp

House trailer, 2 bedroom.

3

4-16·0239.

for
tall fireplace
446·3934. screen, $75.

maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry, · Fiat Allis model 6E dozer
$795. Bunk bed complete with cargo wench, Fiat
with mattresses, $250. and Allis moclel 545 rubber tire
up to $350. Captain's beds, enclloader 2 1/4 yd. bucket.
$275. complete. Baby beds, completely overhauled
$99. Mattresses or box with new engine, .both
springs, full or twin, S58., iterns in exc. condition.
firm, $68. ancl $78. Queen Blaine King 304-372-6390,
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests. $49. Ripley, WVA.
4 dr . . chests. $42. Bed
frames, S20.and $25.; 10 gun Firewood split &amp; delivered.
- Gun cabinets, $350., dinet- $35. truck. load, or $65. a
te chal rs $20. and $25. Gas cord. Call 614-8..0·2933 or
or electric ranges, $295 . Or- 61H43·2452.
thopedic super firm, $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
Firewoocl $30. pickup load.
bed frames $20,$25, &amp; 530.
Used,
Ranges, 949-2870 after s p.m.
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Buiavlile Rd.
25,000 BTU air conditioner.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon. 61H67 ·6636.
thru Fri., 9am to5pm, Sat.

Road . 675·3834.

APARTMENTS

Tubular grate' with blower

dryer, $110. Call ~ · 8181 .

Household Goods

Auto. 4-wheel drlvtt, new
tires, fiberglass topper,

()

$10. Phone 675&lt;l645.

Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas. and chairs priced

Sandhill

lwe., Gallipolis. $110 per
mo., S60 deposit. Call ~·
3870 or .u.l-13-40.

Small 3 bdr. house located

a toad . Caii245·9.W .

51

town on 'Rt. 2: $100 deposit,
$205.00 per month plus
utilities. 675·3000 or 6756277.

Deposit$200. tall416·2745.

6520, ~· 4292.

675·1972.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Small • rm . &amp; bath, furnished, located 735 rear 3rd

2 BR house, State Rt . 7. 2.56·

7:30

New woodburnlng ad-on
furnanc.e, still in factory
carton, heats large home.

Mixed

Two mobile homes, 10 x 50,
2 bedroom. 2 miles out of

IePPEr

------- '

.'.!-!~-:.:-~.: ::.~-

pets. 675·1452 or 675-2996.

...

IT'!' NOT THI!
MAN, IT\!P HI f.

IT'S NOT Till! NAN- THAT
LAMeiRT AAI~5&lt;,;, IT'S.

-IL.UHRER

BING'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION · Specializing

For Lease
" - - -"-='-=="'--4 bdr. home with basement
on · 2 acres near Gavin
Plant,
$360.
inclucles
heating_Cal1446-3643.

2 bedroom mobile homes in
bend area, adults only, no

CAPTAIN EASY

1976 Ford Explorer 250,

49

cepted. 675·1076.

ffJ

DAYSAGAIN
TlCTACDOUGH

•

Split hickory firewood, $40

-===:::==:=====

Unfurnished
trailer,
married couples, 1 child ac-

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·

2 bedroom. apartment in
Hender.son. Sl.SOper month.

Trailer lots. CDII675·1076.•

dleport on Rt. 143. Call614·
992-5858.

PM MAGAZINE
PROGilAM
UIIANNOOIICED
(I)
ENTEIITAINIIENT

. •'

Call446·2107.

....-'.
'' '

(I)

vice, call675-1582.

Trucks for Sale

7Z

(1).

7:00

,,'•

'

;.

·

!VI! NINO

7:01 llJ CAROL BURNETT AND

992 ·7479.

12x60 mobile home. 2
bedroom, bath and half .
Approximately 5 miles
from Pomeroy and Mid-

•

.''

'•'
~ ~-.

pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
carpets. Free estimates.

...

~

~

20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.

Pomeroy. Large lot$. Call

Furnished trailer also nice
trailer space. Call379·2-469.

1971 Ford . Maverick, new
front eng, new radiator,
runs good. 5300. 895·3828.

••

CAPTAIN STIOEMER C.~r·

'

OCT.14, ltfl1

1805.

2 bdr. $100. month &amp; 5100.
dep. Call alter 5, 446·4002.

44

and stacked. Mixed wood
$65 per cord or S35 J&gt;(!:r half
cord . Hardwood S15 per
cord ofJ $.40 per half cord .
Cali for quotes on large
quanlties. Phone 245·5478.

WIOIII!IDAY

$.150. Call 256· 1~16.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of

For rent mobile home
60)(12, 2 bdr., 1 1/2 baths in
town,
small
deposit
required. 446·0318 .

3983.
delivered

'

'

I YAFOMj

I

,.!

PAl NTI NG · Interior and

46

per mo. 4.j6·3S47.

22,000 miles, air, excellent

four onllnory -

.
..

byHonriAmoldandllol&gt;lM

one -lo HCh - ·· ID lonn

VIeWing

..

textured celllhgs, commercial and residential,
'free estimates. Call 2.56·

•

exterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodell!"'g.

"--'-"'=====-

3 bdr., double wide, con venient location In City
limits, furnished, new car pet &amp; drapery ttiroughout,
all utilities paid except
elect_rlc, no pets, no more
than 4, Ref. &amp; dep reg. Sl.SO

•

1973 Chevy pickup truck,

SLEEPING ,ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
F'ark Central Hotel.

.u6·0963.

Spring Valley Trading Co. ,
Spring alley Plaza, .446-

~THATICIWIBLEDWORDOAII!

--10\JrJU-.

exc. cond., low mileage ;l07
engine, 51,700. Call 4.46·

45

range, refrigerator, $250
per mo. plus utilities, $250
dep. req . or owner will help
flnCVlce with suitable down
payment. Call 992-6113 or

ammo $1.19 per box. Eclip·

se 12 gage game IMdes, 6

\lfljiruf fii)'il

~ ~ ~~~

STUCCO PLASTERING

1976 brown Moverlck, Oood
condition, $2100. 615· 1636.

Flrewoo&lt;hPIIt,

675·1972.

dleport on large lot, AC,

on

condition. If YO&lt;J're seriO&lt;Js
about owning a Porscht,
then call about tnls one.
675-2415.

All utilities pajd, dep. req.
Call 30H9H450 .

1 bedroom apartment in
Henderson, $150 per month.

F.or sale or rent 1979 14x70
Jbclr ·• located in Mid-

'DICK TRACY

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
4-16·4208

Condition, $4700 firm. 675·

One bedroom furnished
apartment, $125 per month,
1 small child allowed. Call
675·2074 before~ pm.

month pluS'. deposit &amp;
utilities. Ref. required. Call
256·1393.

excellent

8025.

tage. Phone 675·1453.

14x70 3 bdr. total electric,
furnished tralier, washer
and dryer, 10 minutes from
town on private lot. $200 a

bedroom

Ratliff Pools &amp; Service.
Complete sales, service,
pool covers, and win·
terizatlon kits. Call ~- 1324

Porsche,

Home

Furnished effiencv apt.
Down town Pt. Pleasant.

;=~;;:;:;;:;::;;::=

2

1913

The Daily Sentinei-Page-,.13 ..:. ~.;

October 14,

Improvements

1980 VOiksWa!llh Rabbit, !1182.

4 room unfurnished cot-

Mobile Homes
for Rent

11

·by Lany Wright 7._,1_ ----'A"'u!!to,_t,or,_,sa!!le,.__

·KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

shOt, 20 shells per box 53.95,

3 'bedroom home with 2 car
garege, full basement, nice
neighborhOOd. Close to
town. 675-4506.
42

Misc. Merchandice

rt, Ohio

-Middle

675·2812 or 67.5-1580.

Pt. Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Street. $200 month plus
deposit. 1&lt;61063-8322 or
614·263·2669.

J5.Q .

• did Caii513·59H175.

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approX. 1 acre.
Live in one, rent others to
make vour payment. Can
be converted single home.
CitY water. w!ll consider
land contract. 675-1883 9-5
p.m .

Pt .

2 bedroom twin single in

Plus deposit. Call 1·216·532·

Large trailer ih country
with add on room for wOOdburner.
Also
smaller
trailer in country, bottle
gas heat. 1 2 story house
with coal furnace. 992-2272.

3967.

houses,

3 room furnished Cottage,
utilities furnished, adults.

apartemnt. S125. Naylors
Run. Security deposit. Call

61 H92: 2288.

mobile

Pomero

October 14 19 1

Squires Bingham 22 L. R.

$190. 1 bedroom lurnlshea

K &amp; K Mobile Homes
Pt. Pleasant, WV

USED MOBILE
576·2711.

l;'lomes ,

unfurnished

3 bedroom
furnished
Mobile Home wlfh washer
&amp; dryer. No pets . Deposit
requir«:d. 949-2851 .

MOB t LE home&lt; located In
Camp Conley, extra nice
and clean, phone 304-895-

54

APARTMENTS ,

TWO repossessed mobile
homes, brand new 1 81
models, (previous dealer
tostfloorpian money) . Save
big$$$$$. Must sell quickly.

675·3000

Apartmemt
for Rent

S rm. house In Gallipolis.
Call4.j6-3945.

$150 mo. Cal1379·2m.

1972 New Moon 12x50, 2

Johnson

• · wednesda

· MSDFJ

WJFHD

MSD
NJD

v

AG M

WGVFMFGA.

GT
L J

I

. -. -··
o· ·

.

-QDJMGA ..

y_...,., Cr)ptaqaole: TO HAVE GREAT POETS 'mERE":·;.:
MUST Bit GREAT AUDIENCES TOO.-WALTWHITMAN

.,

•
,,

�•
q

-·

Page-14- The Daily Sentinel

Area deaths

.l Senate .:votes on .

William A. Yeagt;r
~

William A. Yeager, 63, Kent, former Middleport resident, died
Tll,esday at Robinson Memorial
Hospital in Ravenna.
Mr. YeagerwasbomNov.IO,I917
in Mason County, W. Va., a son of the
late Willlam E. and Claudia Swan
Yeager. He was also preceded in
death by his wife, Vivian Vance
Yeager in 1978.
·
.
He was a member of the MiGdleport Church of Christ and worked
for 22 years at Kent State University
retiring in t975.
- Surviving are a brother, James,
Fort Myers, Fla., and two sisters-in- ·
law, Mrs. Leah Whitlock, Kent, and
ltrs. Della Mae Sorruners, Ravenna.
DEAD- Rlcllard Cbambera,
Services will be beld at 2 p.m.
welllmown Middleport resident,
Friday at the Rawlings-Coatsdied Tuetday at hll Middleport
Blower Funeral Home with Mr.
Robert Melton officiating.· Burial
home. Arrangemenll are being
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery at · colllpleled al ths RawUng..CoatsCheshire. Friends may call at the . Blower Fwieral Home in Midfuneral home from 10 a.m. Friday
dleport.
until time of services.

. piggy ·back tax

...

cOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio'• county governmenta aoon may bave
a new tool to help them deal with their fLtcal problems.
Vp for a vote today in the Senate was a Hou..paaaed measure allOwing
county commlaaionen to levy a "piggyback" saleltax of up to I percent:
They Currently may lmpoae, without voter approval, a maximum 0.5 percent addition to the state's 4 eent~t-on-the&lt;lollar tax.
Under the bill, as under -current law, voters would have the right to
repeal the t01 in a referendum election.
•
The measure Wl\S to haVe been voted on by the Senate on Tuesday, hut
debate over a proposed change in repeal procedures prompted Sen.
Richard H. Finan, R-Cinclnnati, and other sponsors to pull It back. They
said they were confident the senators' differences could be worked out
and the measure passed.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, ·R·Ashland, offered lhe amendment that
touched off the debate. The measute proposed that if voters rejected a
move to double an existing tax, the effect would be to repeal the existing
lax and prohibit County commissioners from imposing it again for two
years.
Sen. Kenneth R. Cox, D-Barberton, said those Countlea whlch already
hav~ a piggyback should not have it jeopardized by a vote to boost the
rate. Voters have adequate recourse if they feel commissioners bave
raised taxes unfairly or without need, he said.
"They can vote them out of office," said Cox, a fonner Barberton
mayor. "They (voters) !lave the referendwn, and that's enough."
In other business Tuesday, the Senate approved 17-14 a measure which
would help coqntles collect delinquent property taxes more efficiently by
encouraging late taxpayers to act more promptly.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Paul R Malia, R-Westlake, would halve the
current, lfne-time 10 percent penalty. A 2 percent additional penalty
would be added, however, for each month a bill remained delinquent.
disorderly manner charge.
Sen. Marigene Valiquette, D-Toledo, and other Demoorats said.some
Eleven defendants forleited bonds
hard-presSed homeowriers could end up paying a 24 percent penalty if
posted on speeding charges in the
they could not pay (or a.whole ta• year.
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Following the debate, Matta's bill went to the House after receiving a
Andrews Tuesday night.
bare constitutional majority in the 33-member Senate.
They are Charles L. Russell, Long
Sen. Paul pfeifer, R·Bucyrus, tried to soften opposition with an amendBottom, $29; Robert Quillen, Mason, · ment whlch would put an 18 percent limit ori the penalty. After being
$28; Paullne Brewer, Reedsville,
ruled out of order on a procedural point, pfeifer said he will try to get the
$31; Timothy Unn, Zanesville, $33;
House to adopt his amendment.
Lance Chapman, Pomeroy, $31; •
By a 2!).~ vote, the Senate added Its approval to a House measure afSh,lrry Tackett, Pomeroy, $31;
fecting hoineowner assessments by municipalities for public imMelanie Sinunon.s, Pomeroy, $33;
provements.
Donald Gardner, . Patriot, $3(1; ·
·The measure removes a statutory ceiling of 5 cents per front foot for
Leonard Fitzpatrick, Middleport,
improvements which include the planting, removal arid maintenance of
$33; Orland Floyd, Pomeroy, $29;
shade trees and the construction and maintenance of ditches.
Dan Follrod, Pomeroy, $32. Fined
Ms. Valiquette, the Senate sponsor, said the ceiling is unrealistic in
$172 and costs on a contempt of courtview of Inflation. It had not been changed since 1967, she said.
charge was Dwanne Bright, Middleport.

Unemployment declining

Meigs Co':ffilY happenings.·••
"

Emergency runs

Revelators coming

Four calls were answered by local·
emergency units on Tuesday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Service
reports.
AI 5:20a.m., the Rutland Unit took
John Daniels from Meigs Mine 2 to
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens;
Syracuse at 11 :22 a.m. took Richard
Kern from Racine to Holzer Medical
Center; Racine at 8:33 p.m. took
Bessie Stitt from .Eim St., to
Veterans Memorial and Tuppers
Plains at 5:13 p.nt t®k James
Smith, Success Road, to CamdenClark Hospital in Parkersburg.

. The Revelators of McArthur will
he featured at the Hysell Run
Holiness Church Sunday, Oct. 18, at
7:30p.m. The public is invited to attend.

Marri11ge licenses
Marriage licenses were issued to
Paul Meadows Reed, 2'l, Pomeroy,
and Rarpona Jayne Criss, 22, Mid-

dleport; Kenneth Bulah Bragg, 32,
Anstead, W. Va., and Amy Marie
Fisher; 19, Gallipolis.

MichigaJ:),

;

CAROUSR COftfEtnONERY

NEW YORK - The man Invaded a convent, raped and robbed 1 nun.
Then '11 times, he IJC1'1ltche.J crouea oo ber body, introducing thalllgn
of beaven Into ber private bell.
' ·
The JO.yeal'Oid nun, who was not identified, wu being treated Wednesday at St. Vincent's Hosplial. She W}1l apecled to Uve, but residents of her Eut Harlem neighborhood
lbaken and angey'
. .
Angry pollee vowed to track down the man who, with an a~ce.
robbed the Sisters of Cbarlty conve11t Saturday. Pollee hav' oniy a
vague deacrlptllll! of the two, they say.

were

'

570 w. Main ·
Ph. 992-2556- ·
Pomero~: o~.
"Located at the End of the. Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

•.

t

NEW SELECTION

t
t

t
t

t

~ee

't

FU~NISHI_~~~ht FLOOR

t

the new pattern,s and fashion colors. All are
":'achine washable · - have non-skid back. Popular
SIZeS.

.,

LELBERFELDS IN POMEROY J

Minnesota, · North

r---------------------::-1

Admitted--Gladys Tuckerman,
Pomeroy.
Discharged--Barbara James,
Clara Haning, Margaret Bland,
Thomas Hawley, Floyd Reynolds,
· Rodney Neigler, Roy Mullins.

The loth anniversary of the Mason
Rescue Squad will be observed with
an open house Sunday, Oct. 18, at the
rescue building from 2 p.m. to5 p.m.

There will be a hymn sing at tbe
Nease Settlement Church Sunday,
Oct. 18, at 2 p.m. featuring The Har·
mony Singers. The public is invited
to attend.

Hunter responded,

0ur concern is to represent the em: ployees within the department, not
to attempt to interlere in the
litical process."
poSaunders questioned the union's
role in suggesting budgetary
measures be enacted to aid the
sheriff's department's dwindling
budget.
''Yoo and your committee .were
out of order to ask this commissioo
to supplement the sheriff's budget,''
he said.
"Our thrust was not to questioo
your budgetary decisions;' Hunter
11

Homemade

HAM SALAD••••••••••.•••••• ~ ••~~~.s1.39

ALSO APPEARING
LEFT OVER 1911
RABBITS AND TRUCKS
CLEARANCE PRICED

14

Gallia ••..----~--~---

assistance~"

ROLL ·SAUSAGE ••••••••• ~ ..... ~:~~!2.09

THE HIGHEST EPA MILEAGE CAR
FOR THE FIFTH STRAIGHT YEAR.

(Continued from page I)

"What good are you going to do
them?" Conunissioner Burger continued the query, " ... there are only
s0 many dollars ... and, we all are
going to have to cut back."
_ "The sheriff's employees called us
in ... they organized and asked for our ·

1 lb. Fresh

1982 VOLKSWAGEN
RABBITS

Hyrrin sing slated

Plan open house

or Thick
"Pkg $ 99
BOLOGNA Regular
1
·····················~···· · .

RIVERSIDE V.W.

The Robert Grubb family · of
Gallipolis will be at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church, Middleport, Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.

Quarters

Emporer

2/$1.19

New

CABBAGE •••••••••••.••~~: 19'

CHEESE ...••~~· 5

2.19

RIVERSIDE V.W.
f-;========:=:;::;;;::=~=;;;;;;;;:;::=====~
1
1

......... ~.~~-'1.29,

GRAPES •..•••..••••••• ~~;. 89'

Clearfield Old &amp; Sharp

responded, 11 ••• our concern was with
the level of law enforcement in the
county.''
Duringquickly
the meeting,
commissioo
elllllllinedthe
a copy
of
a contract signed last week by the
sheriff.
"There is no way I can go with
this," Niday said, handing the
document back to Hunter, "again, I
will nol interlere with the sheriff's
employees."

Dn.'ver"'.. continue nouotiations
"'e ·
'

CLEVELAND .,. Negotiations continued Wednetday to avert a
strike threatened for Thursday by 462 Cleveland public school bus
drivers.
,
The school board called a special meeting to discuss the pouible
strike.

School district attorney, Robert P. Duvin, said talks so far bave been
''generallyconstructive."
.
But the issue of a wage reopener in

tbe present contract and a"' . .

cwnulated grievances, Including the use of public transportation for
students, still were blockinl! ""ttlement.
The wage reopener became effective June 30, but school officials
maintain there '- no money for raises. The drivers' contract expires In
llune 11182.

Old mansion back on market •

excess

NOW. SHOWINC

To sing Saturday

•

1 lb. Cello Pack

CARRO'fS •••

I •••••• I ••

~~~:.1'1

9 oz. LARGE COOL wHIP... ;........................ 97*
10V2 oz. Campbell's

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP. ••••• ~ 2/~'

" Frankly/' Hunter responded,

14 oz.

"your position is contradictory .... you say you won't in·
tenere with the sheriff: but, what
Hunter said at the beginnilig of the
meeting.
Commissioner Paul Niday responded that the potltlon of the board had
not changed - that ~ woilld not interlere with the employees of
another elected official.

u

Government will open talks
•
WAfl8AW, Poland - The govenunent announced today It would
open Ialka with Solldarity on the natloo's food crisis hut criticized the
Independent union's rejection of a joint commission with Poland's ofl
!Ictal union JIIO'lement.
SoUdarlty said Wednesday It Is ready to baWe the crisis shoulder-toshoulder with the goveniment, but not alongside Its rivala in·the official uniona controlled by the Communist Party.
The government's announcement said the talks would Involve
"working teams." It added, however, that Solidarity was
"outrageous" for attaching polltical conditlona to its offer of
cooperation.
-

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Wednetday night in
the.Ohib Lottery's dally game "The Number" wui'IO.
The lottery reported earnings of $'118,21 on the drawing. The earnings caine on gles of fl61,572, while holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share 'a5,444, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast

12 OZ. OlD ORCHARD APPLE JUICE ....:.. 2/'1.59

WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Reagan, chiJlllii!C · away It opo
position to hla AWACS aale to Saudi
Arabia, Is getting an extra week to
try to aalvage the deal in the Senate
lifter an overwhelming defeat In tbe
HOUBe.
The flouse rejected the $1.5 bUilon
arms sale - the largest in U.s .'
history- 301·111 Wednesday, a vote
that Reagan shrugged off by saying,
"That wu expected. We knew that."
And Reagan, who convinced two
SeJiate RepubUcan opponenta and a
previously uncommitted GOP
leader to back the Saudi deal WeGnesday, added: "II takes both
houses to say no."
~ Wblte House lllready had
, ·focused its attention on the crucial

FREEPORT, Texaa - A sixth worker died Wednesday from bums
IIUffered from an eiploeion and fire in a chemical container that had
. recenUy been shut down for maintenance at a Dow Chemical USA
plant.
Five workers were killed in the blut and fire Tuetday night.
The sixth employee, Glenn Savant., 29, of Lake Jackaon, died Wed-.
neaday mondng after having been transfen ed by hellcopter to ,
HOuston's Hennann Hospital with burns over 90percent of his body.
· ' showdown 'in the Republlcan-nm
Two other employees and four contract workers who were repairing
~first Senate action was due
equipmentat the plant were injured. ·
today, with the administration ex-

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The old governor's manaion, which the state
auctioned off In lfl7, II back on the seller's block.
Sam Powers, a real estate apprailer wbo bought the 77·l(WoGld
boule for commercial development, is advertlalng It for aale. He's
uldni$1)0,1100.
.
L~il!~u: ,-.G)II! lp :~I"'!! . IJ!'!I ,JO\' ~ ~l·roo»:n mansi'!'l. ~
' I:BI'l'UII'I
and 2.2 acres of land at!JM
Braid St. He'llpeat
more lhan '' tniUloo renovating the boule for 111e u office II)Jilce and a
l'l!lllaural1t, twice bis original eattmate.
lnterest rates in
of ~ percent on renovalioo money one
reason he wants to sell the nlana.lon, Powers saict

AT

Veterans Memorial

Burns kill sixth worker

t

ELBERFELD$

':

15tctloft, tiPo. .s
lSConl$.
A MUitlmecll• Inc. Newlplper .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursdly, October 15, 1911

THE WIIKI

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

't

enttne

at

e

House overwhelmingly

CHUCKWAGON •••••••••• 89$
.
• .. 29
WITH FRIES............. •

r

•

•

Voi.JO, No . 1~
· Copyrlwhlod 1911

Ph. 992·6342
317 N. 2nd., Middleport

SPft;IAL OF

' .· . HOME.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Unem- Carolina, Oklahoma, Vennont and
ployment rates were down in 30 West Virginia.
states this August compared to the
It reported the Ohlo figure for
same month last year, higher in 15 August at 9.4 percent, unchanged
states and the District of Columbia from July but up from 8.9 percent in
and the same in five states, a"' August, 198G. The bureau has since
cording tO Labor Department reported the September unemfigures,
ployment in Ohlo reached 10.0 perThe Bureau of Labor Statistics cent.
reported Tuesday that unemThe latter figure was noted in
ployment rates declined by a full Columbus by the Ohio Bureau of
percentage point or more from Employment Services as being conAugust 1980 to August 1981 in 13 Jra-seasonal and the hlghest for a
states: Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, September since the state office
Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine,
began keeping such records in 1960.

THE 1912 WILTON
YEARBOOKS
'ARE INI

Lut week in tbe court of Mid. ~Mayor Fred Hoffman, 1 man
idenMfylng blmlelf u Paul L. Lee,
Wheelersburg, forfeited bond on a
charge of driving while intoxicated.
Thla week It was disclosed that the
defendant gave the name and ad- ,
dress of Lee but not Lee. The
real Identification of the defendant
has not been determined at thla
time.
•

•'

.. .

Wrong name given

Mayor's Court
Four defendants forleited bonds, a
filth was fined and a sixth was given
a jail sentence in the court of Middleport- Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forleiting bonds were Darold ( cq)
D: Clark, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.,
$350, posted on a driving l)'hile intoxicated charge; Max Geary, Middleport, $200, leaving the scene of an
accident, and $50, failure to maintain control; William E. Swan,
Columbus, $50, disorderly manner;
Sidney Wise, Middleport, $140,
reckless operation.
Cindy Mayle, Rutland, was fined
$50 and costs on a disorderly manner
charge. Don Lovett, Middleport,
was given a 15 day jail sentence on a

'

Wednesday, October 14, 1911

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cloudy with a cllance of shOwers tonlghl. Lows In the low 50s. Moatly
cloudJ Friday. Higha in lbe low 80&amp;. Chance of rain 40 percent tonight
and 3l pet ceid Friday. Wlndlw.tefly IG-:IJIIqlb tonight.

Ea' t f Oldo Ftl'Halt

81turdlly lbr&lt;Ju&amp;h ~=
RUI clemeplq wal¥•• Oblo 8llardey ud rata likely ea11n Illata
Saaday. a-tq Mladey. llflltlln the ... l.nlla the ...

' peeling a split decision: endorsement by the Armed Services
Conunlttee and rejection by the
Foreign Relati0111 Committee. .
Reagan gained more time when
Senate leaders decided to postpone
their vote from nezt Tuesday, aa
originally scheduled, unW 10111etlme
the following week.
•
Tom GrisCom, an aide to Senal!!_
Republlcan leader Howard H. Baker
Jr., said Baker and Democratic
ie8der Robert C. Byrd agreed on the
delay because Reagan is to be in
Mexico nezt week for an economic
swnmit.

ville in wblcb lbe Houae ovel"'l'he!mlllgly rejected
President Reagu's propooed aale of AWACS radar
planes to Saudi Arabia. Zabloclll cbaln lbe Houae
Forel£n ,ufalra Committee, and Broomfield Ia Ita
raoldag ~q~oortty member. (AP Laaerpholo)

AWACS VOTE - H0111e Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill ·Jr. of Mugcbtllettl meeta wllb Rep. Clement
ZaiJiocld, J)-WII., rtpt, and Rep. WUUam S. Broomfield, R·Mich. Wednetday oo Capital IIIII, prior to a

OSP issues citations after accide~Jts
'

Two drivers were cited in ""P¥"te
accldenta inveltigated Wednesday
night by the Gallia-Meiga Post of the
t11ate highway .-t.rol.
.
!l! the report, the II'IIU~r-.
on
·~ b7 • I I !'I A.
Norris, , Portland, was left of oentar on a CUJ'IIe on Sutton Twp. R)l. 131
in 1\leiga County at 8 p.m. and struck
a northbound , auto driven· by
Dwayne c. Morris, I&amp;, Rt. I, Racine.
There was moderate damage
reported to Morria' vehicle and
Norris wu cited for left of center.
The patrol said Roy R. McCarty,
·'SI, oak Hill, was making a right turn
into a private driveway on U.S. 35,
three-tenths of a mile south of Rt.
279, at 7:30p.m. and was struck by a

.

vehicle driven by Mark A. Spohn, 18,
Oak Hill.

Spqhn was attempting to paas M~
c,arty when the accldant occurred.

7.hiri ,WIIS .•moderate

~e to

~·· ~ 8DdhJi.u,Jl&amp; tocltedlbt ~

.ty vehicle. Spo was
.or ••~
proper passing.
Troopers said a Pomertl)' man was
not sertouaty injured In a one-car a!lddent in Meigs County Wednesday
night.
Roy M. Eichinger, 75, was driving
eastbound on Rt. 881 at 7:50 p.m.
wben a cow ran from the left side ci
the road, forcing Eichinger to
collide.
·The cow .ran away, but

Eichlnger's car went off the right
side of the road and drove over an
embankment. Eichinger was Injured, but not treated at the sce~e,
and thei'e was mnderate damage to
JUc8,1', •". i',:

'

I

A ooe-car aCcident in Bidwell was
also probed by the patrol late WeGnesday.
Judy A. Lewis, 23, RJ. I, Thunnan,
was westbound on RJ. 1'&gt;54 when she .
failed to negotiate a sharp right curve, went straight and &lt;!rove onto the
raUroad tracka in the village. The
vehicle was slightly damaged.
Three car-4eer accidents were
reported by the patrol during the
day.
Rick L. Pullen, 23, Gallipolis, was

southbound oo Rt. 7, near the
Gallipolls city limits, at 2:45 a.m.
Wednesday when his .vehicle atru~k
and killed a deer, Moderate damage
was reported toPullen's car,'"'
't

'

,, '

' A deer ran frcliD tile ilde of Rt. 7
near Glillipolis at 1:58 p.m. and was
struck and killed by a car driven by
Alice M. Clary, 32, Rt. 2, Crown City.
The wreck caused moderate
damage to ber car.
Robert D. Rider, 57, Wellston, was
westbound oo U.S. 35 near the
Gallia-Jackaon county line at 7:35
p.m.' wben a .deer ran into the path of
his cat. Rider was unable to stop in
time and struck the deer. His vehicle
received moderate damage.

School plan hackers may have votes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Backers of a new, major tax reformschool flmding plan in the Ohio
Senate gy It may belp attract the
votes needed to pass a permanent
state budget bill.
· Drafted by a special bipartlaan
committee, the comprehenslv~
:meuure would have to be approved
by Ohio voters next June.
Supporters concede some kind ot
intertm tax increue Is needed to
' solve the state's mounting financial
woes linW the plan, asawnlng
passage at the polls •. could lake effect.
Senate Prelldent Paul E. GIUmor,
Jt.Porl Clinton, gfd Wednesday that
the propoaal offers the state's best
chance for tax refonn.

"You've bad significant imput together ... in the time that we
fnim both sides of the aiSle on the have," he said.
Ohlo now is operating under an in'
proposal," he said.
terim
budget which e~plres Oct. 31.
SelL Paul E. Pfeifer, It-Bucyrus, a
Although the Houae has passed its
member of the ad hoc panel, said the
plan could be part of the solution to version of a '13.8 tillloo budget and
a.$1.9 bUilon tax hike, the Senate virthe state's budget problem.
"Some of the Democrats indicated tually haa abandoned it in drawing
.
to ua .,. that they wanted along-term upan~ltematlveproposal.
But
Senate
Finance
Chairman
school funding proposal In place, at
least put on the ballot, before they stanley J. Aronoff, R-Cinclnnatl,
would aupport a permanent '" Said some consensus may start forming over the weekend.
.
budget," he laid.
"I
thln1t
a
combination
package,
The mechanics of putting the
package together may prove to be a the ingredients of which are still
toqper problem than reaching helng developed, is the .only way to
agreement in concept on its con- pick up a sufficient pumber of
votes," .UOnoff said.
tenia, pfeifer said.
As introduced Wednetday, the
"The biggest problem Is just the
proposal
would scrap aU existing
staff Job of getting it physically put

property tax levies for school
operating expenses. Instead, it. ..
would impose a levy of 15 miUa on;.
residential-agricultural property ··
and 25 mills on conunerclal, fir.'
dustrial and other business property.
Revenue from both, which would
total $639.9 millioo from the 15 milia
and $9111.7 million from the 25 milia.
in liscal 1983, would be retained by
local diatricta. In addition, a .50 percent surcharge would be imposed on
tile state personal Income tax. The
extra $'140 million in revenuo
generated would be collected by tbe
state but returned to a taxpayer's
county of residence for distribution
to school systems.

DEL MONTE KETCHUP..-•••••••~:':. 6gt
3 oz. Armour

POTTED MEAT•••••••••••• :•••• 4/$1.00 1oCount Northern

LUNCH NAPKINS••••••••••••••• l/7'
B.J.'s.

16 oz. Armour

CHILl w/BEANS ••••••••••. .'••. 2/s1.59

'

PORTRAI
TRANSFERS TO:

e I-SHIRTS e PUZZLE~ .
.e CALENDARS e POSTERS
I

'

WILL BE AT

THE JONES BOYS
Pomeroy, OH.
FRI. &amp; SAT., OCT. ·16 &amp; 17 .
.ll:OOA.M.-7:00

•

WOLVI'DIB ~NUG&amp; OU"I"I'D£
P1JBB ~ IDIDI

6'114 oz.

J.ELLO INST~NT PUDDING. 2/$1.19

we b..ct the optl'lt e1 t h e - tnto .,ory pair 01 t11.o UAI.WUallV
, comJOrtablo actiOn bocll.

011·-ant -ootoo lloi wllen yt&gt;U do. Supple cowllldo

11 oz. Stokelv

---·-··---·

APPLE SAUCE.".••••••••••••••••••,2/89'
I

O,aNt-S DAILYtTILI PRINY

BEEF STEW•••••;••••••-•••••••• ~::. '1.59

leathtn and a deep CUihton'M\Ioleswroundl your tool tn cornfor1.
Dllcovorthe ~ INI cl ,.,anng a boat thai !!!!!!r, ft•.

'

24 oz. Dlnty Moore

HARTLEY
SHOES, INC.
.
'
210 a. MAl N

........

POME.OY

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•

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